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                  <text>Page B6 • &amp;aturbap ltimtt -&amp;rntinrl

Sat~rday,

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

BETIY

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

'

~ ~&gt;

1 Urge
'4 "-,
humbug!"
7 Blacklock
11 Acid rain
watchdog
12 Mexican

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•

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Q 10 I

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A 9 82

15
16
17
19
20
21
22

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South
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Do;o:~ l f' r

IN OuR

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RELATION51il~

IIJ IT H ftT'i
'101.1 LlllltJT

I All'\ THE
NA66£R,

TO
THt N/16(,Efit,
'IOUR'OWN CHILDREN

'IOU AAE THE
NA66EE
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29
31

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

••

.. ,

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

I 1' I
I

I

I I · ~~o"':

I I·

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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6unbap cti.m -6mdntl

·News

PageAl
November 10, 2002

Patriot residents celebrate local history

Ohio weather
Sunday, Nov. 10

telephone operator E'mma
Jones at the switchboard.
"I was very responsible,:·
PATRIOT, Ohio - "You Tacke« said.
wouldn 't think so much went
James Boster, retjred code
on in such a small area," enforcement officer in
Jane Ann Miller said when Gallipolis, grew up in Patriot
reflecting on the history of on the farm of his grandparthe Perry Township commu- · ents, James L, and Mae
nity of Patriot. ·
Davis, between 1946 and
But at one time in the 19th 1958.
He recalled what seemed
century, Patriot was a
bustling village that boasted like a difficult time with
homes. shops.. businesse~, fondness.
two hotels and a doctor s
"We lived the old ways,"
· office catering to the needs Boster said. "We butchered
d
of the farm families that
either lived there or near it. hogs, owned milk cows an
Patriot remains a hub for chickens, provided our own
the area with a post office fruits, canned like crazy, and
that services a good part of it was a 'great life.
southwestern Gallia County,
"When I moved to
a Masonic lodge mare than Gallipolis, I felt sorry for
100 years old and as a gate- people who missed a great
way to Gallia's Amish com- life here," he added, "One
munity.
.
thing I'll say: Fanners really
It was that sense of time took care of things."
and place that led Miller to
Area native Henry Myers
form Patriot Pionee~Day, in said "times were harder than
honor of the community's a 5-cent bag of jaw break! 75th
anniversary,
on ers," and recalled that winter
Saturday to brief the public
and especially children on nights could be so cold. irons
the community's heritage.
heated on the stove were
"A lot of children grow up used as bedwanners.
in Patriot and have no idea
But comfon and convewho had walked here and nience eventually came to
BY

KEviN

KELLY

News editor

~

j'

I

· Ieo1um11us 166'/45' I

0 ---~-·f/ft·

Sum~ Pt. CIOUay

·Showers htoons

Cloudy

Rain

F\nTies

Snow

b!

Sunday, Nov. 10
lorecast

•

·... ..

•

•

VA.
KY.

0 2002 AocuWealher,

0 .~·····~·

Sunnv Pl. Cl~

Ooudy

Sl'lowers T·storms

Rain

AurMs

Snow

Ice

Wet ~itions to linger
Sunday will be wann, but cloudiness with a chance of
wet
showers, Highs in the mid 50s,
Temperatures should again · West winds around 10 mph.
wann mto the low 70s, More Chance of rain 30 percent
seasonal conditions can be
Monday night.,Partly cloudy
expected for the start of the .with a slight chance of showwork week, with highs ranging ers, Lows near 40, Charice of
from the upper 40s in the northc rain 20 percent
west to the mid 50s iri the east
Extended forecast:
Tuesday,,Mostly cloudy
Weather forecast:
Sunday...Mostly cloudy with with a chance of showers.
a chance of showers through Highs in the upper 40s. Chance
early afternoon, then show~ of rain 30 percent
likely with a slight chance of
Tuesday night ..Cloudy, A
thunderstorms. Highs in the slight chance of. showe~ in the
lower 70s. Southwest winds I 0 evening. Lows m the nud 30s.
to 20 mph. Chance of rain .60 · Chance of rain 20 percent
percent
·
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Sunday night, ,Showers like- · Highs near 50,
ly until midnight with a slight
Thursday ... Part1y cloudy.
chance of thunderstorms, .then Lows in the mid 30s and highs
mostly cloudy with a chance of in the mid 50s,
showers. Lows in the upper
Friday,Jncreasing clouds
40s. West winds 5 to 15 mph. with a chance of showers.
Chance of rain 70 percent ·
Lows 35 to 40 and highs in the
Veterans Day...Considerable lower 50s.

~unbap

m:tmes -~enttnel

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. !I you know of. an error in a

story, please call one of our newsrooms.

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Second-class postage paid al
Gallipolis.
·'
,
Member: The Associated Press, the
West Virgin ia Press Association, and

Our malo numb8re are:
11!:nbunr • Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446·2342

Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992-2155

. the Ohio Newspaper Associalion.
Pootmaoter: Ser\d address correc·
tions Ia the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45631 .

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. . '1 19.40
. Outolda County
t 3 Weeks.......... , ..... '50.05
26 Weeks.......
. . '100. 10
52 Weeks ..... , ........ '200.20

•

Jane Ann Miller, in historical 90stume, consulted with Adam :
Shriver, one of the tour guides at Saturday's Patriot Pioneer :
Day, where the history of the Gallia County commumty was eel- ·
e!Jrated .on its 175th anniversary. (Kevin Kelty)
·
·

shops
and ·many
wqat Patriot,
when he asreturned
his
settled there
here.were
how
Boster tonoted
1
an active place it was.' she grandparents' house one ·
said.
night in the early 1950s and
"We did this to bring our found so many people waitkids back in history to see ing to get inside he had to
where the telephone office use a ladder to enter through
was, where the doctor's the second story,
office was located, and show · . Once inside, he asked
them how every house had a
purpose," Miller added, "We someone what was going on ..
don't think a lot about pur"Don't you know your
pose these days. There was grandpa is the first in Patriot
no refrigeration, for · exam- ·to have a TV?" was the
pie, so every house had a eel- response.
lar where food could be kept
"My roots are really here,"
cooL"
said Bill Carter, who lives in
With a c(Jntingent of a restored log house south of
school childten helping out, Patriot
Miller Jed tours of the lots
He is a descendant of John
along the main drag, Patriot · Carter, one of the frrst to setRoad, showing where homes tle Perry
· Township in the
and offices stand or· once
existed.
early 1800s, and his greatVisitors were also treated grandfather, Amon Caner,
to historical memorabilia, was among the wagon mak- Henry Myers of Patriot F&amp;AM Masonic Lodge 496 points out a
some ranging from deeds ers who supplied fanners portion of the lodge's original 187 4 charter while It was held .
and the original charter of and merchants with a means by Ryan Cochran. The ,lodge was a stop on a tour of the com· :
Patriot F&amp;AM Lod~e 496 to of traveling the country munity during Patriot Pioneer Day. (Kevin Kelly)
a pair of tongs datmg back roads.
many years a resident found
Patriot also prospered
on his property. Bean soup because of it was situated
and other edib1es were also near sotne of the main coLinwell in evidence,
try roads, including Patriot,
Patriot was o~anized in Gage and Hannan Trace,
September 1827, mcorporat:And why the name
ed as a village in 1832 and
probably ·experienced its Patriot?
.
.
boom time in the 1880s,
Some folks behev~ ll was
•
when farming and nearby named for the. sh1p that
furnaces fueled its growth. -brought one of tts first setBy the early 1900s, Patriot tiers, Francois Valodin, to
had become unincorporateq · these shores in the 1790s,
again, improved roads .shif~- Others think it was based in
ed commerce to · Gall1pohs national pride.
and people moved from the
"The derivation of the
area.
.
word is 'established by the
But
the
commumty forefathers '"
Anna
remained in plac~, ·and for Simmerma~
wrote
in
many, Saturday s events "Patriot Pioneers" a history
spurred memones for those
.
. '
0
JUNE PRICE of Speedway, 2nd
who remembered Patriot as she compile~ m the. 194 s
it was.
and '50s. "I hke to thtnk that
Avenue, Gallipolis, was the 1st
Juanita Cochran Tackett, it was the answer. to 'why
winner in Ohio Valley Publishing's
now of Gallipo11s, still named Patriot' for this book
attends Patriot United is in reverence of those fore- •
Mystery Shopper Dealer Promotion
Methodist Church and owns fathers who .established the
the ·lot where . its parsonage village and the township,"
once stood.
.-------------~':':"'--:'-:::-~~------------,
Growing up in Patriot, she
"rm In Pain"
found herself caring' for her
Can Chiropractic Help Me?
neighbors' needs at a young
age in the 1930s, tending the
HOW MUCH WILL IT COST
livestock of T.T. Davis and
Wa are often asked, "What's the best way of finding out whethlir or not a doctor of
his family when they were chiropractic can help my problem?
gone, and even spelling local
We believe the answer can be found In a .complete chiropractic consultation and
examination, Including x-rays.
And to help find out for sure, we will do a complete consultation and axamlnatlon, Including
x-rays, H necessary, (procedures that nonmally .coat $128.00 or more) for $25,00.
We will make this special program available through November. The only exception to the
offer Involves personal Injury cases (workers' compensation and auto accidents) In whleh
there 'ts no charge directly to the patient.
Reg. $128.00 Program
Must present ad at time
of appointment.
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio (Expiration Date: 11/30102
YOUR INITIAL VISIT WfLL INCLUDE
.J A private consultation with the doctor.
Vict,ory Baptist Church at
~· X-rays, if necessary.
THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME
. 525 North Second Ave.,
11' A thoro ugh spinal examination including orthopedic
OF THE DANGER S.IGNALS:
&amp; neurologic test.
Middlepon, will celebrate
..J Headache
., Arm pain &amp; numbness
.J A con fidential reP9rt of our findings.
its 25th anniversary at 2
..J Arthr~ic pain by stiff n~ck
vBackache
.J An explanalion of our treatment procedure if we
p.m. today.
·
..J Loss of sleep
,J Fatigue
determine chiropractic can help you
' A REFERRAL TO THE PROPER SPECIALIST IF WE
..J Scoliosis
·
,J Tension
The church was founded
DETERMINE CHIROPRACTIC CAN'T HELP YOU .
..J Leg paio &amp; numbness
.
vWhiplash Injury
by the Rev, James E.
Keesee in 1977. He has
CERTIFICATE ~
pastored it continuously
FRENCH CITY CHIROPRACTIC
si nce then,
228 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Oh 45631, (740) 446-3836
Speaking at the celebra, This Certificate Entitle's
tion will be the Rev. Gerald
T, McCabe. There will be
To a complete, orthopedic, neurological
special music by the
Massillon Baptist College
examination, including x-rays for $25.00.
Mus!
present ad/couPon a1 time ot elCamlnalion. Explratlbo data ·11130f2002
ensemble and quartet at
Massillon.
11 you are experiencing any ol these symptoms, call our office toc;lay tor an appoin tment.
There wil'falso be special
Hours \)y appointme~t: Man • Sat • Emergency Hours Available
Christopher B.
. music and) preaching for
Stephen L,
French City Chiropractic
Wilcoxon, DC
the I0 a. m. and ll a.m.
Wilcoxon, DC
228 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 446·3836
Sunday services. A nursery
Across From Caplain D's
will be provided.

Middleport
church notes
anniversary

•

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

Livestock trade show opens at Gallia fairgrounds
BY

KEVIN

Kruv

are featured ·in Ohio at the
annual. Farm
Science
Review in London , or . in
GALLIPOLIS, Ohi6 _
Kentucky.
"If you don't have it in
The latest in equipment for
' agriculture and raising live- Ohio, it's almost a two-tostock is 'on display this three-hour drive," Graham
weekend at the Gallia said. "Having it here makes
. County J.unior Fairgrounds. it easier for local producers
A livestock trade; show and those around the area to
sponsored · by the Gallia attend.
County
Cattlemen's
"We hav~ just about every
Association has brought major name brand in equipmajor manufacturers and ment here,'' he added. "This
dealers to town, proViding also brings dealers and replocal and regional produc- resentatives in to our comers with an opportunity to munity and those are dolinspect or buy new prod- Iars that are spent here." .
ucts, ranging from fencing
Companies scheduled to
appear at the show include
to transportation,
Jamie Graham, president Apache , ~alco, Pnefert,
of the Ci!ltlemen 's associ a- · Powder River, Trut-Trust,
tion , which has a member- Big Valley, Gallagher, Forship of about 380 produc- Most, Stronghold, Lynn,
ers said the show was Pearson and W&amp;W.
bro'ught to Gallia County
The show was organized
for the first time this year to by Gri!ham and the assocJahelp acquaint farmers with tion's direciors, "who really
product in a reasonable pulled it together, :' said
.amount of driving time.
Graham. Bringing the show
Regionally, trade shOws in is part of an association
News editor

•

lllii~~;lliE~~~~~~~~~i

West Virginia weather

OHIO

I

Sunday, November 10,2002

$2.5 .00

•

'

Inlltative to spotlight agriculture in the area.
"It's the kind of thing we
try to promote," he said.
"With tobacco going out,
we ' re trying to push for
alternatives to help out producers. Raising cattle is one
of the alternatives tobacco
producers can look to help
make an income."
The show is the kind ·or
event backers of a new fairgrounds want to bring 10
Gallia County, A past proposal by the county
Agricultural Society suggested an indoor show ring,
ideal for this kind of display, Graham said.
. "This is the kind of thing
they've been pushing for in
a new fairgrounds facility,"
he said, "With an indoor
facility, the .potential for
these things is unlimited."
The
show
started
. Saturday and continues
today from I 0 a,m, until 4
p.m. Admission is free .

Gary Altizer, left, of Altizer's Farm Supply, on Ceflterpoint Road near Rio Grande, answers questions about fence posts for Alan Haley of Bidwell during the opening day of the Galha County .
Cattlemen's Livestock Trade Show on Saturday. The show continues today at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. (Kevin Kelly)
'
'

Former bankrupt steel mills
now leaner, expecting profit
CLEVELAND (AP)
vately held venture. He said
Workers who not long ago he expects to turn a profit
thought their jobs had per- 'this year with a leani!r operamanently vanished amid · a · tion, where a focus on
steel industry mired in bank- improved
managementruptcies had reason to won- worker relations includes der about some surprise pay- among other things - sharchecks recently,
· ing an occasional beer.
··
What caught their allenMost startups , in any vention, other than the dollar ture, usually take a while to
sign ,
was
that
the hit stride.
"That's not the case here,"
International Steel Group
checks in August and Ross said by telephone from
October were described as his office at WL Ross &amp; Co,
"profit sharing."
· LLC in New York.
"It's like·buying your wife
When Ross submitted a bid
flowers: She either gets sus- early this year for most of the
picious or really appreciates steel assets of LTV Corp., all
tt. It's hard to restore faith, LTV Steel production had
because of the way we were stopped, The company had
son bf thrown to the wolves filed for bankruptcy8rotecwith · LTV," said Ray tion in December 200 while
Swagonski, who codes steel losing $719 million, or $7.28
bars for processing at ISG- per share, despite sales of
Cleveland, formerly the $4.9 billion that year.
C:leveland Works ·of LTV
A U.S. Bankruptcy Court
SteeL
judge in Youngstown last
Financier Wilbur L Ross, Feb, 28 approved the Ross
who specializes in buying bid of $127 million plus
distressed businesses, six other liabilities for the LTV
· months ago resumed steel Steel mills. Ross said he and
production at the now pri- . his partners have now put

about $236 million into ISG.
There was no production
until May, when one of two
blast furnaces was restarted
at ISG-Cleveland.
"We now are one of the
100 largest privately owned
companies m the country.
We're running at a sales rate
of well over $2 billion a
year," said Ross,ISG's chairman, Ross said he hopes to
eventually' to take the company public to raise more
capitaL
·
.
John Mang, general manager at ISG-Cleveland, said
the Cleveland arm of the
company ex~cts an operating profit on9o million this
year and $175 million next
year, He said ISG-Indiana
Harbor, the companfs other
majot· revenue producer,
expects similar results.
ISG has benefited from
strong demand and steel
prices on the spot market that
have risen from about $225 a
ton a year ago to about $340,
Mang said.
The company is making

Director arrested, Hurricane
band moves to regional tourney
HURRICANE, W. Va, (AP) - When Hurricane High, He's free on $25,000 bond and
Hurricane High School's marching band strides has been suspended without pay by the Putnam
into a Scranton, Pa., stadium Sunday to compete County school board,
Band members heard of Skaggs' arrest on their
for the East regional championship, no one will
men. tio~e man who until this summer was ftrst day of band camp, when they get together to
their dir~or.
learn the season's marchmg rouune. •
It left a solemn pall over the camp, said
The fact that Kim E. Skaggs, 37, of Hurricane,
·
was arrested in August on a pornography charge Hurricane High Principal Bill Sanders. ·
Despite the hun m1d aliger: the students began
is a painful memory nOne of the musicians likes
working. Without a band director, they taught
to dredge up.
.
"We try not. to ~o to the past,". sa!d new band each other their part~.
Jonathan Richards, the 17-year-old ~m
director, Joseph Kmcmd, 23, m h1s ft~st full - tn~e
' job. "We focus on today instead of what hap- major, became the de facto camp leader, waking
up his peers in the morrnng and entorctng curfew
pened back then,"
.
.
. ·
·
·
.
.
.
Still, Skaggs' arrest left an mdeltble mark on at night. .
The work paid off: the teenagers memonzed
the band's season.
State Police said Skaggs used his home com- their l 0-minute lialftime routine, made up of
puter last year'lo transmit pornographic pictures songs from the Broadway ' musical "Jekyll &amp;
to a 15· or 16-year-old male who did not attend Hyde," in record time.
.'

.Local Bri~fs
wishing to participate in the
parade should call the
Veterans Service Office. at
446-2005 .
Vinton's Veterans Day
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio parade
and program will be
Final preparations have been
made for thi s year's Veterans Monday, Mayor Donna
Day activities, set for DeWitt announced.
Monday, Nov. ll , Gallm · The parade forms at 4:45
County Veterans SefVice p.m. at Vinton Elementary
Officer
Steve . Swords School and will be downtown
by 5 p.m. A progr.am. with
an nounced .
Activities will begin with a light refreshments Will follow
parade starting at . Second the parade in the village halL
Avenue and Spruce Street at · Anyone wishing to partiCIl 0:30 a.m. The parade will pate in the parade should be
proceed
down
Second at the school by 4:45 p.m.
Avenue to Court Street and Monday. For more infonnaturn left at First Avenue, tion, contact DeWitt at 388where the parade will dis- 8327.
perse.
·
A. ceremony will fellow at .
the Doughboy Monument m t
the City Park at II a.m. The
0
gues.t speaker is Penny
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
Wood-Coon.
Rio
Grande Board of Public
Any persons or groups

Vete.rans ·Day
activity

Board
t
mee .

Affairs ' monthly meeting is 6
p,m, Tuesday in the Rio
Grande Municipal Building.
The' meeling is open to the .
public.

Crime
watch
CADMUS,
Ohio
Walnut Township Crime
Watch meeting is 6 p.m.
Monday at ' the Cadmus
Community Center, ·
Bean soup, chili, drinks
and dessert will be available.

••
••
•

about 25 percent less steel
than LTV Steel did, but it's
producing with 48 percent
fewer hourly workers and 60
percent fewer managers. ISG
employment as of early ·
October was about 2,800,
with 1,250 in Cleveland.
Through the LTV Steel
acquisition, ISG operates
integrated flat rolled steel
plants located in Cleveland;
Indiana Harbor in East
Chicago, Ind.; and a finishing plant in Hennepin, IlL
ISG also runs a coke plant in
Warren, Ohio, In September,
ISG expanded by acquiring
Riverdale, IlL-based Acme
Steel's caster .and hot strip
mill for about $65 million.
.
fi
Ross said ISG has bene 11ed from tariffs on some
imports. ·
"We did take a gamble that
President Bush would do
something
meaningful ,"
Ross said, "Now, since there
was a little shortage period;
everybody had '! big incentive to give us a chance," ·

•

•

Stop in our Racine Office and ask
one of our friendly loan officers
Ot.lr New Home Loan Special

•
•

HOME NATIONAL BANK
Racine

tl'"..:"'lo

740-949-2210

gi

:aSYRACUSE

"After aU of the ,
curves, potholes,
and wrecks
I've learned to go
the safe route ...,.

The Three' Stone
Marriage Symbol

Diamonds &amp; Gold

For your past,
present and future

Ohio River Plltza ¥Gallipolis

(740) 446-3484

n
ce
NATIONAL HOME CARE MONTH,
November 2002;
We Say THANK YOU to the Staff of

Sonya Barnett
Annette Brown .
Brenda Burchett
" Chapman
Tammy
'
Crystal Cldnch
Alina Colwell
Teresa Culwell
"'Cheryl Daily
Elizabeth Dobbins
Brenda Ferguson
Karen Floyd
Sunday Franklin

Robin Haning
Amanda Johnson
Linda Johnson
Carolyn Jordan
Bonnie Lawson
Janice Lloyd
Billie Moss'
. Diana Neal
Amanda Russell
Melinda Sallee
Beverly Short
Lori Skidmore

Judy Spurgeon
Faye Steinmetz
Crystal Tiller
Kelley Turley
Ronalda Voreh
Stephanie Williams
Angie Wilson
Dawnine Yeauger
Stacey Jenkins, LPN
'
April Swisher, LPN

Office Manager- Peggy Fulks
Director- Vicki Nottihgha_m, RN

What Our Clients Say:
"Thanks for all your help. I couldn't have kept my husband at home as
long as I did without your setvice::
. ''This is a very helpful setvice. The staff does an excellent job. I couldn't
ask for any better. Keep up the good work. "

Library
closed
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Bossard Memorial Library
will be closed Monday for
Veterans Day.

.I . '
,.

••

•

�•

6uabal' ~tiltH -6tnttntl

•
•
0 InIOn

PageA4

Sunday,NovenBber10,2002

sunday, November 10, 2002

~~~~~~--------------~~----~.....•

Obituaries

6un1Jap ~tmtl -6enttnel

Bertha
Frasher

~AtwliNG

8~5 Third

Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio ,
(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Lim£ ComJK! ~.
AA"~OWI ...

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
·Publisher

WORKING.

Andrew Carter
Asst. Managing Editor

Managing E(:!itor·

:0ALLIPOLIS, Ohio •
B 'ertha
Frasher, 86,
0
f
Gallipolis,
d i e d
Friday,
November
8, 2002, at
her · resi-

IT~~T

Den Dickerson
Bette Pearce

dence.

Leiters 10 the editor are welco;ne. They should be less than
300 &gt;rords. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed wrd include address and telephone number. No
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in good
· taste. addressing issues, not per,l'onalities.
·
The opinion.\· expressed in the column below are the consensus of the Ohio Vallev Publishing Co. s editorial board,
unless orlzenrise _noted.

NATIONAL VIEW

Vital clue
Ballstic fingerprinting' will
give police an important ·tool.
• The Philadelphia Inquirer, on a national list of gun
''fingerprints'': Before leaving a note , the sniper terrorizing Washington and beyond hadn 't left much evidence usually a single, lethal slug of lead.
· ... And yet , those misshapen metal blobs - the bullets
that killed and wounded -could tell police so much more.
How so? Even before a gun is sold or aimed at a target,
law enforcem~nt could record the distinctive ballistic "fingerprint" it leaves upon a bullet. For all new. weapons, digital images of the unique buUet and shell markings would
be logged into a computer. That could enable police to
trace a gun back to its legal owner, posSibly providing
valuable tips.
To do so would require expanding a ballistics database
federal authorities maintain on weapons used in crimes.
Such a nationwide log would cost .millions and would be
controversial. ...
Weigh the price tag, though, against the costs of a routine
. po!'ice investigation, let alone the extraordinarily costly
sniper case. Solving cases quicker with ballistics technology could help pay for the system .
The technology isn 't foolproof. Nor would it affect 200
million weapons in circulation. But the technology is sure
to improve; eventually all weapons would be in the dat&amp;base . That would give law enforcement a valuable investigative weapon of its own.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Nov. I 0, the 314th day of 2002. There
are 51 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Twenty years ago, on Nov. I 0, 1982, Soviet leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev died at age 75.
On this date:
In 1775, the U.S. Marines were organized under authority of the c;ontinental Congress.
.
In 1871 , journalist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found ·
missing Scottish missionary David Livingstone in central
Africa. '
In 1919, the American Legion held its first national conv.ention, in Mlbneapolis.
·
In 1928, Hirohito was enthroned as Emperor of Japan.
In I 942, Winston Churchill delivered a speech in London
in which he said, " I have not become the King's First
· Minister to preside over the liquidation of the British
Empire."
. .
·
·
.
.
· In 1951, direct-dial coast-to-coast telephone service
began as Mayor M. Leslie Denning of Englewood, N.J.,
called h1s counterpart in Alameda, Calif.
·
In 1954, the lwo Jima Memorial was dedicated in
Arlington, Va.
In 1975, the UN General Assembly approved a resolution
equating Zionism with racism (the world body repealed the
resolution in December 1991).
·_
In 1975 , the ore-hauling ship Edmund Fitzgerald and its
crew of 29 vanished during a storm .in Lake Superior.
In 1982, the newly finished Vietnam Veterans Memorial
was opened to its first visitors in Washington, D.C.
Ten years ago: President Bu sh dismissed State
Department official Elizabeth Tamposi for her role. in a preel'ection search .for passport records of his rival s, Democrat
Bill Clinton and Ross Perot:
Five years ago: A judge in Cambridge, Mass. , reduced
Louise Woodward' s murder conviction · to manslaughter
and se ntenced the English au pair to the 279 day s she'd
already served in the death of 8-month-old Matthew
Eappen. A jury in Fairfax , Va., convicted Mir Aimal Kasi of
one count of capital murder, one count of first-degree murder and eight additional charges stemming from a shooting
attack o ut side CIA headquarters in January 1993.
WorldCom Inc . and MCI Communications Corp. agreed to
a $37 billion merger.
One year ago: President Bu sh, in an .address to the UN
. General Assembly, warned that ~II nations were pos si ble
targ~ts of terrori'sm and urged them to join with the United
States in a campaign to prevent more attacks.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Mackenzie Phillips is 43.
Country singer Chris Cagle is 34. Rapper-producer Warren
G is 32. Rock singer-musician Jim Adkins (Jimmy Eat
World) is 27. Actress Brittany Murphy is 25. Rap per Eve is
24. Rock musician Chris Jan nou (Silverchair) is 23 . Actor
Bryan Neai is 22. Actress Heather Matarazzo is 20.
•Thought for Today : ·.. It is a stupidity second to none, to
busy oneself with the correction of the world."· Moliere,
French dramati st ( 1622-1673 ).

'

,-,

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Racial quotas in education deserve to be shot down

James
Kilpatrick
COLUMNIST
judgment from .Judge Bernard A.
Friedman. He held that racial "diversity" is not a compelling consideration in
a state-operated law school - or at
least that a goal o\ pi versity cannot justify the state in discriminating against
white applicants . .
In a 88-page 'opinion by Judge
Martin, five judges of the 6th Circuit
resoundingly reversed the district
court. They found MiChigan 's interpretation of "diversity" fully consistent
with the Supreme Court's famously
divided opinion in the Bakke case of
1978 . The law school's policy on
admissions does not depend upon forbidden numerical qi1otas or percentages. It looks, rather, to enrolling at
least a "critical mass" of minority students.
Judge Martin like{! the idea of critical
mass. He quoted Erica Munzel, the
school's director 'of admissions , who
defined "critical mass"· as a number
"sufficient to enable underrepresented
minority students to contrib~Jte to 'classroom dialogue without feelin g isolated." In practice, minority admissions
have ranged from 12.3 .to 20.1 percent.
If rac.e could not be considered, minorities wou'ld have numbered 4 percent of
the entering class of 2000. Under the
challenged policy, they numbered 14.5
percent.

Martin made a persuasive case for.
diversity as such. It stands to reason;
that a law school benefits from the;
presence of students with widely vary,.,
ing backgrounds. In the recent past, b}'
way of example, Michigan has enrolle&lt;!,
a native of Bangladesh, an Argentinil!~
single mother, and a daughter of Gree.k•
immigrants who is fluent in three languages.
.,
Circuit Judge Danny J. Boggs filed ai
pile-clriving dissent. He began, "ThiS.
case i'nvolves a straightforward(
instance of racial discrimination by - ~
state· institution." He lashed at the term
"affirmative action," first proclaimed ·
by President Kennedy in 19~ I. The, ·
original executive order directed gm~ ,
ernment contractors to take afftrmati ve
action to ensure that applicants are ·
emplo;Yed "withou!, regard to the.ir rae~
or national ongm. By th1s cfeJmttlo[\;
the law school's policy clearly is nQ.l
"affirmative action." Far from disregarding race, Boggs said, "Michigan
considers all applicants with exquisite ·
regard for their race and national origin." The state's tender motives cannot
save unconstitutional policies.
_
When all the arguments have been
hashed and rehashed, the real-worl"d
consequences of Michigan's policy boil
down to Barbara Grutter. By evecy,
empirical measure -. her grade poinl
average, her LSAT score, her age (sh¢
is now 49) -.she was better qualified
than some of the minority applicants
who displaced her. When Michigaq
rejects her application because of he!i
race, Michigan denies her the equa).
..".
protection of its laws.
There m'ay be no wholly "right"
an.swer to the dilemma posed b1f.,
M1ch1gan cases, but a system of '*ci ~;~L:
quotas in a stat~! institution is indelensible. This is a duck that quacks to -b$
shot down .
·-·
. (James J. Kilpatrick is a co/umni.l;
for Universal Press Syndicate.)
.~

•

RYAN'S VIEW

. I

.

Mat this country needs is a stirring national anthem
BY JOAN RYAN

I am not the first to advocate scrapping "The Star-Spangled Banner" as
our national anthem. Yet despite these
many calls for change, it is still the
national anthem and there is work left to
be done.
.
.
.
I was reminded of thi~ before Game 3
of the World Series at San Francisco:s
Pac Bell Park. Instead of the national
anthem, Tony Bennett sang "America
the Beautiful." The crowd, which rarely
attempts the roller-coaster notes and
mangled syntax of "The Star-Spangled
Banner," sapg along, first in a hush then
building in waves. It was like an enormous sail filling with wind.
The song is stirring and somber, simple and poetic. a pastoral ode to beauty
and dignity and grace. "The StarSpangled Banner," by contrast. sounds
as tf tt were wntten by a lawyer on the
back of an envelope f- which it' was.
Francis Scott Key was a lawyer sent
to negotiate the release of an elderly
Amencan doctor being held on a British
·ship in Ch'esapeake Bay during the War
of 1812. Key was forced to wait on a
boat·until after the British attacked Fort
McHenry, ' near Baltimore. In the
predawn light, he saw the U.S . fla g still
flying. over f he fort, signaling that the
Amencans tiad not surrendered. Back in

\.
(

.,,

•

What does probability theory have to
say about bird watching? The rule says
that if a strange bird looks like a duck,
walks like a duck and quacks like a
duck, it probably is not a nightingale .
That bird is a duck.
Six months ago, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for .the 6th Circuit looked at
the admissions policy of the University
of Michigan Law .School. The policy
looked like a quota, it worked like a
quota, it sounded and smelled and had
all the aspects of a quota. Chief Judge
Boyce F. Martin Jr. looked at the critter
and was not persuaded.
"That is not a quota," said the judge.
"That is a criticaf mass."
·
Four judges of the 6th Circuit nodded
their heads in agreement Four other
judges shook theirs. Now the case of
Barbara Grutter is in the Supreme
Court on a petition for. review. A companion case brought by Jennifer Gratz
and Patrick Hamacher. raises the same
i'ssues at the undergraduate level.
Because it is more sharply focused,
Mrs. Grutter 's appeal offers the high
court an excellent opportunity to look
at the whole business of "affirmative
action" as it affects higher education.
The court should hear iL
'
Six years ago, Mrs. Grutter applied
for admission to Michigan 's la.w
school. She lives in Plymonth, a few
miles west of downtown Detroit, and
works as a consuhant in the field of
health care. As an honors graduate of
Michigan State in 1978, she had posted
a respectable grade point average of
3.8. She scored 161 on the standard
Law School Admission Test - a score
.that put her in the 86th percentile
nationally. If she had been black, or
Hispanic, or Indian, she very probably
would have been admitted, but Mrs.
Grutter is white. She was first put on a
waiting list, and then turned down.
She sued the law school in U.S .
District Court and won a resounding

his hotel room later, he wrote the con- of that, either.
voluted· poem that would become our
Perhaps as a compromise, several
national anthem.
members of Congress earlier this mont,h
Not only are the lyrics to our national proposed making "God Bless America"
anthem written by a lawyer, the melody the national "song," though it wouldn' t
is an En~lish pub song called "To replace "The Banner" as the official
Anacreon m Heaven."
anthem.
.·
The U.S. Congress adopted "The
But what is the purpose of a nationaf
Banner" as the national anthem in 1931 . anthem? Shouldn't it. capture the s piri~
It was a lr~ady the official anthem of the and values of a people? Shouldn't it be,·
Army an4.the Navy. which is appropri- a reminder, every time it is sung, o(
ate.
'Yhat those people are striving to be? , .
Jt is a song of war - '"the rocket's red . Katharine 'Lee Bates...,the English prq;:
glare, the bombs bursting in air ... " - lessor who wrote "America th ~
but it hardly captures, in either words or Beautiful" in 1893. gave us the wonder
mu sic, what it means to be American.
and promi se of our cou ntry. The secon&lt;,l
Still, a Baltimore woman, who was a verse calls on Ameris;a to ':co nfine th~
member of the Daughters of the War of . soul in self-control , thy liberty in law.'
181 2. began a camp&lt;iign in 191 8 to And her third stanza talks of heroeS.'
make "The Banner" the official an them " who more than self the it countr~
1
of the United States. She fi'lially sue- loved, and mercy more than life ."
ceeded when Herbert Hoover signed it
Even when we si ng only the first stan·!
into law during the Great Depression. za, as at the World Series ganie last
Critics have been trying to undo the week, we sing pQelry. And our voices
damage ever since.
ride the melody
if it were a favorite
Most recently, in the 1980s and "90s, church hymn . When you hear a whol,e
there were bills brou ght before stadium of baseball fans si nging, you
Congress to change the national anthem know we made a poor choice in 193 1'.'
to "America the Beautiful." Not one It 's time, finally, to make it right.
passed. In 1997, mo:dia mqg ul Ted
(Joan Rvcm is a. columnisr for the San'
Turner called for a national vote 011 Frttncisca·Cirronicle.•Seml comments td '
scrapping ''The Banner" in favor · of her ilr care of this ne11·spaper .or send•
''America the Beautiful. " Nothing came her e-mail arjotmnwt@sjgatt'.wnr. )

as

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point PleasanT

·

I

.t

.,

I

1.,.

She was
b o r n
Frasher
January 9,
1916, in
Wayne County, West Vrrgiliia,
daughter of the late William
David and Rebecca F.
Bartram Akers.
Mrs. Frasher was a homemaker,
and
attended
Fellowship Baptist Church
and First Baptist Church in
Gallipolis.
She is survived by four
daughters,
Doris Jean
Runyan, Neva Janice (Marlin)
Kerns, both of Gallipolis, Rita
Anne (David)
Davis of
Hilliard, ana Rebecca Jane
Lewis of Gallipolis; three
grandchildren, Steve (Megan)
Davis of Canton, T.J. Frasher
of Columbus, · and Andrea
Dawn Davis of Hilliard; a sister,
Virginia
(Johnny)
Wellman of Medway, Ohio~
and a brother, Lawrence Akers
of Gallipolis.
·
Several nieces and nephews
also survive.
Preceding her in death were
her parents; her husband,
Edward Frasher Jr., in 1988;
two sons, Dale Edward
Frasher in 1957, and Larry
Keith Frasher in 1983; a sonin-law, Douglas Runyan, in
1998; a brother, Arthur Akers;
and three ,sisters, Edith
Hersey, Leota Mae Akers and
Edna Hooser.
·Services will be 2 p.m.
Tuesday November 12, 2002,
in Will1s Funeral Horne, with
Pastor Joseph Godwin and
Pastor Phi! Walker officiating.
Burial will follow in the
Salem Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6
to 8 p.m. Monday, November
II , 2002.
- Paid notice

Lena
Juanita Basham ·
·COOLVILLE, Ohio Lena Juanita Basham, 59, of

Economy

Coolville, passed away
Thursday, November 7, 2002,
-at 0' Bleness Memorial
Hospital . in Athens, after an
extended illness.
She was born February 8,
1943, in Leewood, West
Virginia, daughter of the late
Bonita Ingles, and George
Ingles of Rutland.
She was affiliated with the
First Southern Baptist Church
of Pomeroy, the . Ladies
Auxiliary .of the Racine Post
602, American Legion, and
was fonnerly self-employed.
She was a l&lt;!ving wife,
mother and grandmother and
will be sadly missed by her
husband, Gary Basham; two
sons, Gary Basham and his
wife, Helene, of Sweet Valley,
Pennsylvania,
and
Jeff
Basham of Coolville; two
daughters, Kim Thmer and
her husband, Mike, . of
Coolville, and Raelynn Braley
and her husband, Sean, of
Pomeroy; and nine grandchildfen.
· '
Also surviving are three sis"
ters, Peggy (BJ.) Hatfield of
Streetsboro, Ohio; Janie
Michael of Chillicothe, and
Joe Ellen and Kevin Jewell of
Rutland; and a brother, Bill
(Carol) Barley of Bedford,
Ohio.
·
Besides her mother, she was
preceded in death by a brother,
Charles Barley.
·
Services will be I p.m .
Monday, November II, 2002,
in Fisher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. Burial will be in
Meigs Memory Gardens,
Pomeroy. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 5 to 8
p.m. Sunday, November 10,
2002.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Birchfield Funeral
Home of Rutland.
- · Paid notice

Meigs has also surged form of a new owner, but
ahead, producing important financial
troubles
at
ag products like hardwoods Highlander Alloys continPage AS
and soft flowers.
ue. And with those troubles
The entire county is desf
h
ignated a Rural Enterprise comes the act t at many
Gallia has been working Zone, so there are property high-paying jobs are at
with the state to help with t3Jl incentives for new and stake.
economic development.
expanding industries. With
The county has river
"We try' and maximize low taxes, low crime and a access, flat land and rail,
programs at the state level · relatively low cost of liv- but no major highway. That
to do projects that . will cre- ing, Meigs offers industry has crippled the chances of
ate jobs," Call said. "The
advantages.
big industry moving into
Rural
Industrial
Park many
"Typically,
the
problem
the area.
Program provides loans and
"We've got to get that
with that program, we've has been infrastructure,"
"
Nobody
done,"
U.S. Rep. Shelley
Varnadoe
added.
created 90 new jobs.''
comes and says they . wanl
Southern Hills .F ine to build a business on a Moore Capito said ·about
Cabinetry is one example. winding, two-lane road . making U.S. 35 a four-lane .
According to . Call, they Our best day s are ahead of roadway
into
Mason
have expanded into · an us."
County.
industrial park using the
Bringing jobs with devel"We' re going to re-authoprogram.
opment
in
the
·
Great
Bend
rize
the Transportation Act
"Whenever you utilize
money · from the feds and Area and concentrating on next year and it's a commitare also high on tee I'll be sitting on," she
slate, you have to work downtown
Varnadoe's
li st of future
inside the box to acquire goals.
said. "lt"s a great place to
funding," Call said about
Tourism sought
be when it comes to getting
applying for federal and
POINT PLEASANT _
money for roads."
state grants. "There are · Ma~on County is putting"
Capito said thai she feels
challenges, not stumbling part of lis hopes on the the expansion of U.S. 35 is
blocks, because it can be
Riverfront Park, slated to needed and feasible.
done.
" It 's got to be a matter of
"Gallia County is starting be open sometime in 2003.
The
park
will
feature
an
priority,"
Capito added.
to attract more cottage-type
businesses ," Call added . 800-seat amphitheater and "Road money is going to go
somewhere and it could
"Getting new industry is marina facilities.
Hopes
are
that
riverboats
·
very competitiv&lt;l, but ·it's filled with tourists will help with Route
35 fundtough for everybody. You
ing."
descend upon the area to
just .have to be creative.
spend t11urism dollars.
West Virginia woes
"You look at what you
· Point Pleasant .Main
State Sen.-elect · Lisa D.
have inside your own counStreet
Director
Charles
Smith
believe s · the
ty and do what's best ," Call
Mount,ain
State
needs to get
Humphreys
has
made
sevadded. "In our area, what's
good for Mason County, is era! trips to other areas pro- business friendly.
"Let 's · look at the tax
good for Meigs and Gallia moting Mason County. He
has put together a CD that structure," Smith said. "It's
counties."
·defines
the area and all that
Meigs surging on
it has to offer.
going to .cost a lot more for
POMEROY In a
Mason County recently worker 's compensation prebygone era, salt and coal brought on board Economic miums. It 's not just doctors
min~s ruled the way for
Director that have a problem with
Pomeroy
and . ·Meigs Development
April Maciver, · and many insurance . companies," ·she
County. It is no more.
other
organizations are said.
There is hope on the hori~
"Throw in a very liberal '
helping
with the cause.
zon, and it comes in the
County · court system, and people
The
Mason
form of new infrastructure.
Tourism
Committee,
a from other states and coon. "We've got $180 million
in highway and bridge pro- working group of local tries say, 'Thank you fo(
business and government
jects," said Meigs County officials,
took delivery of your time, but no thanks.'
Economic ·.Development 40,000 new brochures It's gomg to cost too much
Director Perry Varnadoe.
"Route 33, the connector in recently titled, "Can we do --to do business in West
Ravenswood, will be com- all of Mason County, Virginia. We need a new
pleted late next year and W.Va., in a day? We don't slogan, 'West . Virginia, .
open for business.' Now we
anyone · coming
from think so!"
Preece,
director
of
don ' t have that ," Smith
Homer
Columbo~ south will come
through Meigs County. It's Marshall. University 's Mid- added.
West Virginia formed an
going to change our county Ohio Valley Center and
facilitator
of
the
commitsignificantly.''
development
tee's weekly meetings , · economic
The loss of jobs at noted the brochures were plan, but it has made little ·
Southern Coal hit Meigs
designed with input from progress in its first year, a
hard.
.
aU
committee mem hers as progress report has cqn"Everybody knew the
mines were closing, ther, well as oth~r citizens of eluded.
The state's Council for
knew it was coming,' Mason County.
·
"This
is
a
Mason
County
Economic
and Community
Vamadoe said. "Still, it's a
said.
Development,
which last
brochnre,"
Preece
..
big hit."
The brochures, printed by year wrote and implementNew schools permeate the
Falcon.
Design
and ed the plan, entitled "A
Meigs County landscape
Market1ng
of
Pomeroy,
v·JSJon
· Sh are d' " ~ai'd recentand by spring, all students
highlight
not
only
the
tradi.
in the county will be in
tiona! well-known points of · ly that West V•.rgJma met
newly-built schools.
interest
such as the West only 12 of 43 cntena when
"Eastern was named one
State
Farm compared to nine other
of the top wired schools in Virginia
and
Tu-Endie-Wei
states.
Museum
the
entire
country,"
State
Park,
but
also
more
West Virginia also earned
Varnadoe said.
A new 60-unit senior cit- recent ones . such as the a "red flag" - awarded for
izen (62 and over) housing Moth man stghtmgs and poor standing or for a sharp
complex is coming to f11;ture ones such as the.,..- downturn during the past
Rutland.
R1ver Museum and Pomt year _ in 15 other cate.
.
The $3.5 million project -PleasantRJverfront Park.
Preece
said
the
committee
.
gones
•.
the
report
sa1d.
.
is being built by Indiana~ut m 19 of 30 areas m
based Legends Realty, wanted the . brochures to
have
an
old
look,
yet
be
up
·
wh1ch
trends could be meawhich is accessing funds
to
date.
sured,
the
trend is upward.
from a U.S. Department of
"The state performed well
The opening of the Lakin
Housing
and
Urban
Center
for
in
efforts to outreach, netCorrectional
Develdpment grant program. Former NBA great Women_ later this year :ovill work and build partnerships ~
Oscar Robertson is a part- · ~elp bnng 150 to 200 JObs with other public and priner in the venture.
mto .Mason . County . vate sector entities in carry. .
Varnadoe said that the Correctional offtcers wtll .
just
over
$20
000
per
mg
out
the
.
VlSlon
Shared
make
facility will be located off
year.
'
tmplementatwn
plan,"
the
Brick Street on a seven-acre
· The closing of Anierican report said .. . But, "West
parcel of land.
Alloys
in New Haven shook Vtrgtnta conttnues to lag
"If all goes well, they
hope to break ground by the the Mason County econo- the ·nation and the region in
my. New hope came in the educational attainment."
end of the year," he added.

from

He is survived by a sister,
Imogene (Don) Smith of Point
Pleasant, West Vuginia
Friends may call from 5 to 7
p.m. Wednesday, November
13, 2002, at the Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland.
lbere will be no services.
-PaidMlice
·

Robert

..

w·I"II"lam Martin
•

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Robert William Martin, 33, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday,
November 9, 2002, as a result
of an auto accident in Gallia
County.
He was born February 4,
1969, in Point Pleasant, West
VJTginia, son of the late
Donald Martin Sr., and Effie
Irene Siders Martin of
Gallipolis.
He was self-employed.
In addition to his father, he
was preceded in death by his
wife, Tracy Patterson Martin;
his grandfather, William
Siders; and his grandmother,
Goldie Manin Fisher.
Surviving in addition to his
mother are a son,. Tad Martin
of Point Pleasant; two stepsons, Matthew Patterson and
Danny Patterson, at hoine; his
grandfather, Ralph Fisher of
Point Pleasant; three daughters, Sarah alld Clara Martin
of Point Pleasant, and Jessie
Cox of Gallipolis; two stepdaughters, · Chelshey and
Karassa Patterson, at home.
Also surviving are his stepfather, Terry Johnson of
Gallipolis; three brothers,
Donald (Christy) · Martin of
Mason, West Vrrginia, Lany .
(Jessie) Martin of Gallipolis,
and Troy Fleacher of Jackson;
three sisters, Connie (Danny)
Stapleton of Gallipolis, and
Christina Martin and Liza
Wall, both of Jackson; and
.
POMEROY. Ohio - Carl several aunts uncles nieces
Casto, . 76, of Rocksprings and nephews.'
'
R&lt;?ad- Pomeroy, passed away • Services will be 1 p.m.
~nday,l N&lt;~~tD:ber 8, 2002, ~~ Thesday, November 12, 2002,
airfie d ~cal Center m in Deal Funeral Home in Point
Lancaster, Ohio. ,
PI
.th th R
He was born Septelllber 6,
easant, ~·
e . . ev.
1926, in Given, •. :" West Charles . Wdlet officJatmg.
Vrrginia. to the late Earley and Bunal will be m the Patterson
Dove Camay Casto.
Family
Cemetery
at
He was a carpenter, a mem- H~nderson, West Vrrginia.
her of Carpenters Local No. Fnends may call at the funeral
356 in Manetta, a military vet- home from noon to I p.m.
eran, and an avid horseshoe Tuesday, November 12, 2002.
pitcher.
· - Paid notice

Carl

Casto

Deaths
Services will be noon
Monday in McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home Wetherholt
"' ' Chapel, Gallipolis, with
·GALLIPOLIS · Ohio .Elder Ray Venson officialJulia ·M. Caldwell, · 91, ing. Friends may call at ~he
Gallipolis , died Saturday, funeral. home one hour pnor
Nov. 9, 2002, in . Holzer . to serv1ces Monday.
Medical Center.
I
Arrangements will be

Julia M.
Caldwell

Arnold
Clyde Smith

COOLVILLE, Ohio
Arnold Clyde Smith, 68,
Coolville, died Friday, Nov.
8, 2002 , at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
He is survived by his
}~~~~a~c~~me.by Willis ·
wife; Betty Ann Welch
Smith . .
Services will be II a.m.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio in White Funeral
Monday
Tracy M. Martin, 31,
Gallipolis, died Saturday, Home, Coolville. Pastor
Nov. 9, 2002, as a result of Keith. Kapple will officiate
BIDWELL, Ohio- Clint an auto · accident near and burial will be in the
Cemetery,
Ireland
Leroy Davis, 77, Bidwell, Gallipolis.
Friends
may call
Coolville.
be
Arrangements
will
died Saturday, Nov. 9,
2002, in Holzer Medical announced by Cremeens at the funeral home from 2
Funeral Chapel, 'Gallipolis. to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
Center.

Tracy
M. Martin

Clint
Leroy Davis

"What we want to do is see
where we are now and where
we ¥C in four years. This gives
us a goal,'' he continued.
from PageA1
"Competition at this level, if
handled properly, can tlel~ our
vide a positive life changing stuck:nts stretch their abilities
experience for students, teach- and strive for goals t would
ers and parents."
&lt;
'"" d , , 1 b d . all otherwise be ·unattainable.
ne on. t tee an IS
"We Jearn tO work together
about learrung, not ~ about toward a common goal and to
mu~1c, .but about,what 1t d~ for .. cope with each others' inadethe mdivtd~al. It s about attJtude quacies as part of the lessons of
and where 11 c~ take stude~ts as life. This competitive experithey ~velop ml&lt;! adults; the ence can help us ·realize that
band director contmued.
members of other bands are
He srud the Bands of dedicated to the same ultimate
Amenca compennon •s ~open goal; that they, too, are fellow
class contes~. Me1gs . Will be seekers of individual excelcompenng w1th 89 otfier hands Jence," Dingess concluded.
and at the end of the day on
Friday, 25 will be selected as
Auto- Owners Insurance
semi-fmalists. ·
· Those bands will come back
Ule.Home Car Business
on Saturday and compete for \a
spot in the top I0, and from that
7ie "'1/6 ·pu~~e. ;%1 )tie"'"
group a champion will be selected. Trophies will go te the top
INSURANCE PLUS
three bands.
AGENCIES, INC.
Dingess said that Meigs High
has made a four-year commit114 Court Pomeroy
ment to "grow with .~e Bands
of America P.rogram{ not m •
numbers particularly but in ·

Deer

Meigs

t
. ha
•

992-6677

Slature."

•

.,.

~

'"

...

'

from PageA6
Roben Martin was released
to Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., for
arrangements. Arrangements
for Tracy Martin are ·being
handled by
Cremeens
Funeral Chapel of Gallipolis.

The deaths marked the seventh rural traffic fatality in
Gallia County investigated
by the patrol this year. It is the
17th fatal crash, with 18
killed, for 2002 in the post's
two-county area of responsibility.
There were 10 fatal crashes
with II people killed in 200 I
in the post area, troopers said.

----------REE HEARING TESTS
.

'

COUPON

1

1

1
I~ TM HEARING AID . CENTER I
I
1
I
I
I
an
appointment. I
I Call Totl Free
I The teats wltl be given by a Licensee! Hearing Aid Speclatlst. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I
I conversation Ia Invited to have a~ ~earlng test to see If
l 'thll problem can be helped! Bring this coupon whh you for I
.
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I UMWA. UAW. ARMCO. AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS I
.
WELCOME
.I •
..
Will. be given in GALLIA COUNTY by

------------·-11111!1- '
WA~K-tNS

.. " .

PICTURE FRAMES

. We're The Store . .. ·

I

Great gift for any occasion. ~(f}J)1111U»
We 'II engrave your selection t,:.,~&lt;;}w;_IN.
for that added touch.
\;l~ g',.
·Ohio Valley Memory Gardens announces our annual
.Christmas observance dedicated to the memory of your loved
ones With a candle placed on rheir grave on December I st
with a rain date of December 8th.
Please co~e by Ohio Valley Memory Garde ns or fill out the fu nn below alld send to
us with ~our donation. minimum of SS per candle.
lf you are unable'to place the candle, Ohio Valley Memory Garde ns wi!l provide this .
service, with a minimum donation of S\0 per candle.
Ca ndles m~y be picked up at the office the week before the lst through tht: eve ning
of t~e lighting sc rvke. We will light the candles between 5 p.m. &amp; 5:30p .m.

In Memory 0£:

• Name of De&lt;eosed
Dale or neath

Donated By
Address

Please make cheCks payable to Ohio Vtllley Memory Garden ~ Ca ndle Lighting

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens
· 1229 Neighborhood· Rd.
. 446-9228
An)lone who recently lost a loved OIW during the /asJ

T\ t 'O

I
Jt'&lt;lr.\ tmd ll'ho would

like 10 receive a 1 1e w.~le tter. plea.H' t all
Please include any nc ~ address for nex t years mail ing

•

�Page A&amp;

Nation •.World

&amp;unba~ limrl -i»rntinel

Sunday. November 1o. 2002

'

Hope for Thanksgiving

Pelosi will be pragmatic,
inclusive, her supporters say

.
.
'
WASHINGTON
(AP) ~ Rep . Nancy Harold Ford of Tennessee, · who caJis be unable to win over moderate, inde-

Pelosi will try to unify House Democmts
with an inclusive style and a willingness
to confront Republicans on. the issues,
her supponers say.
Pelosi, 62, a Democrat from San
Francisco, is on the brink of becoming
the first woman to serve as a leader of
either party in the House or Senate.
She is expected to move up from
Democratic whip, the No. 2 job, to
minority leader of the GOP, Jed House,
replacing Rep. Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.,
· when DemocraLs elect their new leaders
this week.
Pelosi has one challenger: Rep.

himself a "big, big undeidog." Ford, 32,
says Pelosi is too·far from tfie center and
would lead the party !O funher defeat.
·A close ·Pelosi ally, Rep. Anna Eshoo,
D-Calif., cl~scribed her colleague this
way : "She ' is, first and foremost, pragmatic. ldeologicaJiy, is she a liberal?
Yes. But she will cast her vote and doesn't try to change someone's mind on
those .kinds of votes. She is someone
who knows how to build, knows how to
lead."
"
The liber.tl .label , which Pelosi welcomes. has been used by her opponents
and Republicans to suggest tbat she will

pendent voters.
.
.
Before' he dropped out of the race f9r
Democratic leader on Friday, Rep:
Martin Frost, D~Texas, said Pelosi 's
effectiveness would be limited becauSe
her politics "are to the left." _
·.
There is no doubt wl!ere she stands;
Pelosi represents a liberal congressional
district, taking in most of San Fnmcisco:
Her votes against the resolution authorizing the use of force in Iraq and in support of such domestic initiatives as n~:
die exchange programs for AIDS sufferers relleet her constituency.

,I

Volunte·ers seeking reasons
for elevated cancer rates
Justin Dhyani, 11, of North Potomac, Md., is comforted by
Victims' Rights Foundation President Greg Wims, after reading
a letter he wrote to Wims about his feelings following the
Washington, D.C. area sniper attacks, during a news conference in Gaithersburg, Md. The Victims' Rights Foundation , a
volunteer group, is hoping to raise $260,000 by Thanksgiving
for the families and victims of the 13 sniper attacks in· the
Washington region . (AP)
·•

Passengers evacuated
from smoky airliner
NEW YORK (AP) -.&gt;
Passengers were evacuated
from an American Airlines
!light Saturday after smoke
filtered into the cockpit and
cabin while the arriving
plane was taxiing at
LaGuardia Airport, the Port
Authority said.
Five of the plane 's 74
passengers suffered minor
injuries, said Port Authority
spokesman Allen .Morrison.
Flight 710 had just
arrived on a flight from
Dallas, Morrison said. The
MD-80 also carried a crew
of six.

He said the plane landed
without incident and was
headed to the terminal gate
when hydraulic lluid apparently leaked and dripped
onto a power unit, producing the smoke that was carried into the plane.
Rather than continue to
the gate. the pilot deployed
ihe plane' s emergency
chutes and evacuated the
passengers, he said.
The aircraft was taken out
of service for review and
repairs, said John Hotard , a
spokesman for American
Airlines.

SAN RAFAEL, Calif.
(AP) - Women living in
wealthy Marin County, set
in the wooded hills just
north of San Francisco, suffer one of the nation's highest breast cancer rates, a
cluster that has confounded
health officials.
On Saturday, about 2,000
volunteers went door-todoor through the county
asking questions that could
help point .to an answer:
How many residents have
cancer, where do they live
and do they have any idea
why rates have climbed so
high.
"My hope now is that
everybody realizes that as a
. community we can change
our statistics," said Judi
Shils, founder of the Marin
County Cancer Project.
According
to
the
Berkeley-based . Northern
California Cancer Center,
white women living in
Marin Count~ are 45 percent more tikely to develop
breast cancer than women
elsewhere in the country. A
study the center released ' in
July found cancer rates in
Marin inc-reased 37 percent
during the 1990s -even ·as
they remained flat in the
rest of the San Francisco
Bay area and California's

Doctor's
«;Uscovery may:
end obesity

HILTON HEAD, S.C. -A doctor
believes that a narurai formula containing the eKtract of a small Asian.
fruit can help cause significant"·
other urban counties.
involved.
weight loss.
.
The researchers focused
Marin County boasts a per
Anthony A. Conte, M.D. repot'led :
on white, non-Hispanic capital income more than .
in an American MediCal Journal.
women because fewer than 200 percent the U.S. averthai!
the formula, now calleci .Bio-.
10 cases of breast cancer are age, and 44 percent of its
Rex
3000®,
caused patients to lose
found
each .year in adults hold at least a bachemore
than twice as much weight as
Hispanics, blacks or other lor's
degree.
Some . those in a. control group on the
populations.
in Marin ·researchers
believe
same fat reduced diet. Neither
County, which is 80 percent .lifestyles common in those
group was instructed to decrease
white.
populat-ions
bearing
the amount of food they ate or to
On Saturday, volunteers fewer children, having them
increase their exercise levels. An
asked women residents a later in life or taking estroarticle published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutr1ti()n ·
series of questions, ranging · gen and other hormones to
says that you don't have to re-·
from age to family cancer allevi&amp;te the onset · of
duce the amount of food you eat:
history and whether they menopause -· may trigger
to lose weigh~ provided that y0u
could identify any environ- cancer.
.
limit
the,fat
•
mental factors that might
Shils said the volunteers
or.
Conte
says
that
animal
stud.
contribute to the cancer rate. hope to talk with 100,000
ies
suggest
the
mechanism
behind
While residents and people and collect donathe weight reduction is due to in~
researchers alike continuj: tions to fund an epidemiolotenuption of the "Krebs Cycle",-..,.
.·to search for ari enviroii~ gy map of cancer incidences
important step in the body's fat ·
mental cause, some scienr · based on 20 years of statis- · storage proce$8. He says it may
tists point say socio-eco- tics gathered by the cancer
work the same way in hum11115. Acnomic factors could be center.
cording to Dr. Conte. "The best
part of this unique discovery is that
it is not a drug, but a dietary food
supplement. The Asian fiui~ called
gan:inia, is similar to citrus fiuit
found in the United States with one
big exception·- it may help some
people fight obesity! While Dr. ·
Conte's study may be preliminary,
the eKclusive Nor1h American dis- ·
. M&amp;~~HI
tributOr, Phillips Gulf Corp., is call• ·
No Crttil Cord
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Volunteer
fire squad
quits
KUTZTOWN , Pa. (AP) .
- A vqlunteer fite squad
that directs traffic in emergencies quit en masse when
its chief was prohibited
from using a red light and
siren.
Kutztown Fire Pol ice
members
said
Fire
Company Chief Robert
• Hauck 's refusal to grant Lt.
Gregory Heid authority to
use the light and siren confirmed suspicions they
weren ' t being taken seriously.
"There
have
been
instances when people felt
slighted , ridiculed ," said
Dick Diehm , fire police
captain . "I just got to the
point . where my head is
softer than a brick wall. "
·Fire police , widely used
in rural. areas, are volunteers who ass ist with traffic
and crowd control at emergencies and special events.
They respond to fire s. acci dents and other call s.
Heid was allowed to !lash
a blue light. but Fire Poli ce
members said that wasn't
good enough because blue
doesn't command the same
respect as red or Jet Heid
run red traffic light s.

PROUD TO BE APART
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'

College Football, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page 83
NASCAR news, Page 84
Bengals, Browns news, Page B5
Outdoors, Page B6

iunba~ limes ·itnlintl

Page Bl
Sunday, November 10, 2002

Sonics .84
Heat82
MIAMI (AP) The
Seattle SuperSonics did not
show any fatigue despite
playing their fourth road
game in five nights, withstanding a seco.nd-half
comeback to defeat the
Miami Heat 84-82 Saturday.
Rashad Lewis had 24
point s.. I 0 rebounds and
three blocks, (\nd Gary
Payton scored 20 ~ including a key 3-pointer late in
the fouurth.
Eddie · Jones scored 23
points for the ·Heat, but in
the last five seconds he had
a ·potential game-tying shot
blocked by Desmond Mason
and then missed a 3-pointer
as time expired.
The Heat pulled within
two points with I :30
remaining, but neither team
scored the rest of the way.
Pat Riley was ejected in
third quarter after yelling at
a referee. ·

'

Mavericks 114
Pistons 75
01\LLAS
(AP)
Michael Finley !lad 25
points and Steve Nash added
17 points and I0 assists as
the Dallas Mavericks continued their franchise-best
start with a 114-75 rout of
the Detroit Pistons on
Saturday night.
Eduardo Najera scored 16
points, Shawn Bradley had
14 and Dirk Nowitzki 12 for
the Mavericks (6-0), the
league's pnly unbeaten
team.
Richard Hamilton's 19
points
and
Clifford
Robinson's 13 paced the
Pistons (5-2).
·
Mavericks coach Don
Nelson'-s emphasis on
improving
his
team's
defense has been producing
results. The Pistons shot just
36 percent (26-for-73) from
the field.
· ·

Gallia Academy's Tom Bose, left, and Zach Shawver watchthe action during the second quar-•
ter of the Blue Devils' 38-20 loss to QeSales Saturday night at Richards Memorial Reid .In
Hillsboro. (Andrew Carter)
·

GAHS.falls.to DeSales ·
Dino Razzano .was an
unstoppable force for the
Stallions (9-3). The senior
HILLSBORO
The · .· quarterback onJy threw' for 27
.
- · re IS yards in the air, but ran the ball
good high school fo_otball and I 0 times for 157 yards and two
then there ts great high school touchdowns before leaving the
football.
game in the third quarter.
Unfortunately,
Gallia
DeSales used a triple-option
A~ademy had to learn that attack that gave the Blue
bei,Dg a good football team Devils fits throughout the
1sn t always enough.
. entire first half.
Columbus St. . _Francis
"The offense they (DeSales)
DeSales, a state serrnfmalist a . run is hard for anybody to
year a~o, defeated the Blue stop, even if you match up
Devils m the serrnfinals of the with them athletically " said
Division III, Region II play- Bokovitz.
'
o~s, 38-20, S_aturd_ay ~t
Also on the ground for
Rtchards Memonal Fteld m DeSales Trevor Dickson had
Hi,~lsbor~.
82 y~' on six carries and a
I don t want to take any- touchdown, while Luther
thing away from our kids. Henderson had 10 carries for
That was a great football team 51 yards and a pair of TDs .
that ~e played," said Gallia
For Gallia Academy, 1)'
Academy head coach Matt Simmons rushed for 82 yards
Bokovitz. "Possibly the even- on 15 carries, while Travis
tual state champion. They're a McKinniss had six carries for
class act."
67 yards, including a 62-yard
BY BUTCH COOPER

Staff writer

Blazers .95
Spurs76
SAN ANTONIO (AP) ·_
Bonzi Wells came off ihe
bench to score 19 points
Saturday night and Rasheed
Wallace overcame early foul
trouble for 18 to lead the
Portland Trail Blazers to a
95-76 win over the ·San
Antonio Spurs.
11 Portland made 51 percent
of its attempts (38-for-79-), .
· while San Antonio managed ·
only 39 percent (27-for-70).
Scottie Pippen added 15
points and Zach Randolph
14 for the Trail Blazers.
Ruben Patterson led all
rebounders with 12.
Tim Duncan paced the
Spurs with 16 points, only ·
one coming in the second
half, and Stephen Jackson
· contributed 15 points. Malik
Rose had ll rebounds and
David Robinson 10:
San Antonio dug itself an
. early hOle by making only
one of its first I 0 shots, that
one a 2-footer by Duncan.

touchdown in.the closing seconds of the game. McKinniss
also had 105 yards on 13-of. 27 passing.
The first couple of minutes •
of Saturday's game spoke valumes of Saturday's gmne.
On the first play of the drive
of the game, begirming on the
Gallia 20, Gallia Academy
quarterb:wk Tmvis McK.inniss·
was stopped for a loss of nine
yards and was pressured again
for an incomplete pass.
1)' Simmons managed to
run the ball for two yards, but,
the Blue Devils were forced to
punl, giving the Stallions good
field position on the Gallia 34.
Then the Stallions struck.
On DeS ales' first offensive
play of the game, Razzano
showed the effectiveness of
the Stallions' triple-option
with a 34-yard romp for the
quick score.
Please see GAHS, 83

Bv DAN GELSTON
sprinted down the sideline
Associated Press Writer
before cutting in - for ' an
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. over-the-shoulder catch in
the end zone.
(AP)- Ohio State was trail"It's a situation 1 wish
Stanford 17 .
ing on the road and facing everybody in the world could
fourth down late in the game, feel, with that kind of exciteSTANFORD, Calif. (AP)
with not only a victory but ment, that . natural high,"
- Carson Palmer threw
the Big Ten title and a chance Krenzel said . .
four touchdown passes to
at the Fiesta Bowl berth slipKrenzel attempted only II
break a school career record
ping away.
passes but completed nine of
and
lead
I Oth-ranked
Craig Krenzel found a way them for 173 yards. He had
Southern California to a 49· to ket&lt;p il all within reach for been pressured the eniire
17 victory over struggling
the Buckeyes.
game by a bruising Purdue
Stanford on Saturday.
He threw a 37-yard touch- defense that held Ohio State
Palmer threw· two scoring
down pass to __ Michael to only 267 total yards and
passes to Keary Colbert , one
Jenkins on fourth-and- I with sacked Krenzel three times.
to Mike Williams and anothI :36 left as the third-ranked . But Krenzel, using a noer to Alex Holmes to give
Buckeyes defeated Purdue huddle offen se, called the
him 61 career TD passes,
I 0-6 Saturday to keep their game-winning play at the line
breaking Rob Johnson 's
national championship hopes of scrimmage, and Jenkins
mark of 58.
·
·
alive .
. beat Antwaun Rogers to get
Palmer completed 22 of
· The Buckeyes (6-0 Btg, open. .
.
32 passes for 317 yards,
Ten) are off l(}thetr fourtllll- · "That's what a receiver has
with eight of his comple_0 st&lt;1rt in team history, joining to do . . We have to . separate
tions to ~ williams fo r 94" the 1975, 1979 and 1995 when the ball is coming,"
yards.
teams . . More importantly, Jenkins said.
Redshirt fre shman Kyle
they probably· will remain · Purdue got the ball again,
Matter completed all 14 of
No. 2 in .the BCS standings, Qut Kyle Orton's long pass
hi s passes in the first half,
keeping the·m on course for a into double coverage '¥as
but his team only rn:maged
trip to the Tempe, Ariz., and a intercepted by Chris Gamble.
shot at the national title.
The Buckeyes though,
just I0 points.
• .The Boilermakers (4-6, 2-4 nearly were done in by . the
Matter finish~d 23 -for-35
for 165 yards ahd two touchBig· Ten) were leading 6-3 deep pass ..Two years ago it
(jowns , with one intercepwhen Krenzel dropped back was Drew Brees who did the
1 tion .
and found Jenkins - who damage, and this time it was

usc 49

Sneak Thief of Sight
Did you know that glaucoma is the second leading cause of
bli~dncss in the U.S. ? Approximately one out of two hundred
Americans over fort y have thi s condition . .What 's even worse is
that large numbers of Americans have glaucoma and don't even
know it. Just what is glaucoma?
To understand glaucoma, first realize that the eye produces and
disposes of an equal amount of internal fluid each day. With the
most common type of glaucoma. the amount of fluid produced is
greater than the amount di sposed, causing excessive pressure
within the eye. Simply put, most glaucoiT)a occurs when pressure
' becomes excessive for the individual eye. ·
. · .
Because there are usually no sfmptoms with most types o·f
' glaucoma , it is a particularly dangerous disease. A gradual loss of
peripheral or central vision can occur. Fortunately, g)aucoiT!a is
usually treated with ne wer drugs or surgery. Checking for
glaucoma is now part of a routine eye exam. Ex pens agree that
regular eye examinations by an optometrist are critical to check
for this eye condition. See your eye doctor today.
·

Inside:

1

I

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. even had its best showing in
(AP) - The motivation a.month.
Boston College had for
"I knew we were going to
Notre Dame wasn't there do well," Cobourne said,
against West Virginia. ·
"They don't have MiamiAvon Cobourne rushed type players to come back if
for 138 yards and James we could get up on them."
Davis blocked two first-half
Cobourne now has 1,409
field goal attempts as the yards this season and needs
Mountaineers
jumped 137 more to surpass -5,000
ahead 17-0 and cruised past career yards.
Boston College 24- 14
His 37-yard scamper set.
Saturday.
up his ·5-yard TD run early.
West Virginia (7-3, 4-1 in the second quarter for :&lt;\
Big East) has seven regular- 17-0 lead.
season victories for the first
Brian St. Pierre was inter~
time since 1998.
cepted twice trying to bring
The Mountaineers have the Eagles back. St. Pie~
next week off .before finish- was 28-of-50 for 284 yardS;
ing the regular season with while Boston ·College was
tough road tests at . No. 8 held to just 80 yards rqs~;
Virginia Tech and No. 22 tng.
·
.
Pittsburgh.
The Eagles' Derrick
After failing to finish Knight was held below 100
strong in its two previous yards rushing for• the fir~f
games against Miami and time in a month. He fin,
Temple, West Virginia ished with 53 yards on 1'8
played solid from start to carries.
·
finish Saturday.
. "'It felt like we playeyl
"We know·we' ve still got uphill all game," St. Pierre
a couple of tough games said. "We moved the ball;
ahead ot us, but right now but couldn't score:"
I'm j~~t tickled with ?Ur . With West Virginia ahead
effort,
..c.oa:h
Rich 17-7 late in the. third quarRodnguez said. .
ter, Anhur Harrison picked
. The Mountameers are 4-1 off a St. Pierre pass at .the
smce a 48-17 home loss to
.
.
Maryland on Oct 5
Eagles 33. F1ve plays hcter,
"During the ·Maryland Rasheed Marshall threw a
game, we had the .deer-in- bloc.k on . a . reverse that
look" sprang Ph1l Braxton for a
the-headlights
Rodriguez said. "I haven''t 1O-yard TO run.
·
seen that from them since
Marshall v.:as 12-of-18 for
then."
124 yards, mcludi!lg a 2,
After
forcing
five yard, TD to~s. to tight end
turnovers in toppling previ- Tory Johnson m the second
. . . ,
ously unbeaten Notre Dame quarter.
last week, Boston College
West Vugmm s Mark
(5-4, 0-4) looked uninspired Fazzolan. helped Boston
on the road against the College with first-half punts
Mountaineers to remain of 21 and 23 yard~, but. on
winless in the Big East.
ea~h of the _Eagles ensumg
Boston College now must drives, Davts came through
wait until next Satunday at the mt.ddl~ to block Sandra
home against Syracuse to Scwrtmo s fteld
goal
try to become bowl eligible attempts of 4? and 22 yards.
for a fourth-straight season.
West V1rgmia spe~t _the
The Eagles also have games past t:-vo weeks. working ?n
remaining at Temple and tts kick block~ng. Davis,
home against Rutgers.
who has ~ vertical leap ~f
West Virginia had no ~early 39 mches, was postturnovers and the nation's ttoned
over
Boston
top rushing offense moved C?,llege's.center.
.
.
the ball with little trouble
Any urne they tned to
against the Eagles, com pi!- m~e a field goal, we ;~ere
ing 273 yards on the gomg for the block, he
ground.
smd.
.
"We didn' t come out and
Backup Brandon Brokaw,
play solid football today," who carrie~ the ball for the .
said Eagles coach Torn first ttm~ smce ~uffenng ·a ·
O'Brien. "Our tank is on concussiOn agamst Navy
empty now. I don't think it three weeks ago, got Boston
has anything to do with .last College's first score on a 3week's game,.though."
yard run in the second quarCobourne had his 26t,h ter.
career I 00-yard effort in his
St. Pierre capped a 13final horne game, backup play drive with an 8-yard
Quincy Wilson ran for 100 TO pass to Jamal Burke
yards and West Virginia's with 39 seconds left in the
lethargic passing attack g&lt;Jme.

Brandon Kirsch, whose 59yard completion to Ray
Williams early in the fourth
quarter set up Berin Lacevic's
32-yard field goal that put the
Boilermakers ahead by three
with 7:50 left.
In that 2000 g;tme, Brees
connected. with Seth Morales
for a ·64-yard game-winning
TO that sent Purdue to its
first Rose Bowl in 34 years
and knocked the Buckeyes
out of the conference title
picture.
The Boilermakers have long
been out of title contention this
season, and they need wins in
their final . two games to
become bowl-eligible for the
sixth straight season. They' ve
lost eight straight games
against ranked teams.
"This may or may. not be
hard to believe, but the game
played out exactly as .we ·
hoped," Purdue coach Joe
Tiller said. "We just wanted to
be in position to win the game
in the fourth quarter. We just
didn't get the key stop on a
.
fourth-down play and didn't Ohio State's Michael Jenkins: top right. celebrates with Thoma,s
operate the
two-minute Matthews, top left, and Chns Gambl~ after Gamble ended· a
offense."
·
Purdue drive with an interception in the final minute of the game
in West Lafayette. Ind., Saturday. Jenkins scored Ohio State's
. Ple•s•
see
OSU,
B3
only to~chdown as they defeated Purdue 1(}6. (AP)
'
.

..

·

West Virginia
•
scores w1n over
Boston College

•

l

.,

�'
Page 82 • ilunbap m:imtli -inntinrl

Sunday, November 10, 2002

Sunday, November 10, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

College Football

Sroreboard

Penn State holds back Virgina, 35-14

Prep Football

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) Before the season, defensive tackle
Michael Haynes felt he was holding
back Penn State 's vaunted defensive
line.
That's. not the case. Haynes had
three sacks and forced a fumble that
set up.a touchdown as No. 19 Penn
State beat Virginia 35-14 Saturday.
"I felt last year that1 was the weak
link in the defensive line. I was hop. ing I could step it up," Haynes said.
"I think under the circumstances,
this was a pretty good game."
Haynes forced Virginia quarterback Mall Schaub to fumble midway through the fourth quarter Haynes' sixth forced fumble of .the
season - and Shawn Mayer recovered for Penn State (7-3). Six plays
later, Larry Johnson ran 6 yards into
the end zone for a 35-7 lead.
.
"He's a great player - not too
many players like him in the coun~ry." Vir~inia running back Wah
Lundy said. "He's just an athlete. He
gets the job done.'
Schaub completed 30 of 38 passes
for 260 yards and a touchdown .for
Virginia (6-4), but the Cavaliers
managed just 30 yards rushing.
H~nes was a big reason for that,
with seven tackles. His three sacks.
set the Cavaliers back 23 yards.
"We couldn't attempt to play a
power game against them;" Virgmia
coach AI Groh said. "They have a lot
of power on their defensive line."
Penn State's offense succeeded at
running and passing. Johnson finished with 188 yards and-one touch·
down on 31 carries. Zack Mills completed 19 of 30 passes for 227 yards
and two touchdowns, his first 200·
yard passing g_ame since . thro~ing
for 264 yards m a 27-24 overtime

High School 1101e football playoff

pairings

'fun for Virginia midway through the
fourth quarter to make it 35-14, but
the Cavaliers wouldn't score again . .
On the second play of the fourth
quarter, the Nittany Lions faked a
field goal and third-string quiuterback Chris Ganter swept around the
left side for a 30-yard touchdown
run. Mills ran in the 2-point conversion for a 28-7-lead.
Robbie Gould had two field goals
for the Nittany Lions, including a
50-yarder in the third quarter to
make it 20-7.
Billy McMullen made a spectacular play for the Cavaliers on the first ·.
play of the second half, catching a
pass over the middle, then stopping .
- causing .three Penn State defenders to collide - and spinning
toward the left sideline for a 41-yard
gain.
But the Cavaliers lost the ball two
plays later when Alvin Pearrnan
fumbled on the Penn State 39, and
Andy Ryland recovered for the
Nittany Lions.
.
Mills was 3-for-3 pass.mg on the
next possession, including a 10-yard .
shovel pass to Paul Jefferson for a
touchdown and a 17-7 lead.
Casey Williams caught a 13-yard
touchdown pass from Mills to tie the
Penn State quarterback Zack Mills (7) fumblesthe ball after being hit from behind by VIrginia linebacker Merrill . game at 7 late in the first quarter,
Robertson during the first quarter Saturday In State College, P.a. Penn State's running back Larry Robinson recov- and Gould's 33-lard fi~ld goal in the
final seconds o the second quarter
ered the ball. (AP)
·
gave the Nittany Lions a 10-7 halflead.
loss at Michigan on Oct. 12.
up for last year's season-ending 20- knocked us out of. bowl contention. time
Mills fumbled and Chris Canty
"I think he's a big-time football 14 loss at Virginia, which prevented They just re!ljy spoiled ollr season." ·recovered
at the Penn State 46 to set
player," Penn State coach Joe the Nittany Lions from becoming
It was the 334th career win for up Virg-inia's first score. Heath
Paterno said of Mills. "He's a leader, bowl eligible.
Perin State coach Joe Paterno, the Miller made two third-down catchhe's very accurate, has a lot of
"That was a huge motivating fac- winningest coach in l)lajor college es, including a !-yard touchdown
·
poise."
tor," cornerback Bryan Scott said. history.
catch that gave the Cavaliers a 7-0
The win helped Penn State make "We had guys looking at it as they
Lundy had a 4-yard touchdown lead.

Michigan State slams Indiana With 56-21 win
· BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(AP) - . The victory went to
Morris Watts. The outpouring'
of emotion went to Bobby
Williams.
"It's been like a long waitin~ period for everybody,"
said Michigan State's Damon
Dowdell, who threw four
touchdown passes Satur~ay in
a 56-21 victory over Indiana
in the ·first game for Watts as
the Spartans' interim coach.
"We've gone through tough
times around here.- It's just
)lard."
Watts was ·promoted from
offensive coordinator after
Williams was fired on
Monday - two qays after the
Spartans endured their worst
defeat since 1947 in a 49-3
·loss to Michigan. To complicate matters, suspended quarterback Jeff Smoker's family
announced he was undergoing
treatment for substance abuse,
· and leading rusher Dawan
Moss was kicked off·the team
for being arrested in a traffic
di'spute.
"This win is definitely for
coach Williams. We just
wanted to come out and show
everybody this program is

headed in the right direction," ... and that they could prove the downhill slide," Indiana
said Dowdell, starting the today they could stand up and coach Geiry DiNardo said.
third straight game in place of be counted no matter what "Once it got out of hand, we
Smoker.
.
happens in their life. .
really ~truggled."
The victory snapped a tOur- . ''I'm a happy man to say
First; the 41-yard gain by
game losing streak for the that I stood on that sideline Rogers and a 20-yard pass to
Spartans (4-6, 2-4 Big Ten), and watched a bunch of guys Jason Randall set up a !-yard
"I guarantee I felt like I was play their fannies off."
TD pass to Eric Knott for a
Indiana (3-7, 1-5) tied the 14-7lead. It took the Spartans
a preacher this week. I'm a
churchgoing guy, but I've game' at 7-7 late in the first just three plays to score again,
never prayed as much in my quarter on a 7-yard run by with Rogers leaping into the
life as I prayed this week," · Chris Taylor. But the Hoosiers . end zone for a 36-yard recepsaid the 64-year-old Watts, a went three-and-out on their tion.
head coach for the first time next three possessions and
That touchdown tied him
in his 42-year career in foot· gave up the ball on downs on with Kirk Gibson ( 1975-78)
ball. "I' ve never been in that their next series, with for the Michigan .State career
position out there, and the Michigan State scoring quick- record.
only thing I didn't want to.do ly after each one.
' The next time the Spartans
was ~omething that would
Dowdell'was 17-of-25 for got the ball, it took just two
hurt the football team."
~')3 yards, while Rogers had . plays to score, with Jaren
Dowdell also ran for one five receptions for 102 yards. Hayes scoring the first of his
touchdown, and Charles Freshman David Richard took two TDs.
Rogers set a school' record over the bulk of the ball-carAfter Richard's touchdown
with his 24th and 25th career rying and picked up 136 yards made it 35-7, Michigan State
touchdown receptions. He and one touchdown.
got the pall back when Mike
also set up two otherTDs with
Three of the Spartans' five Labinjo intercepted a pass.
end-around runs of 41 and 25 TDs in the second qu·arter The pickoff set up a 6-yard
yards during a 35-point sec- took 41 seconds or less.
TD run by Hayes to leave the
and quarter.
"Early in the game, three Spartans ahead 42-7 at the
"I appreciate so ~uch the downs and out, turning the half.
effort those young men gave ball over, when we put our
Dowdell, who also ran 8
us," Watts said. "And more defense on half the field, sta- yards for a touchdown midimportantly, the thing we tried tistically our opponents are way through the first quarter,
to sell them on this week was scoring about 78 percent. So I threw touchdown passes of 21.
they've had a lot of adversity thought that was the start of yards to Rogers and 3 yards to

Randall in the third quarter as
Michigan State took a 56-7
lead.
Indiana scored late in · the
period after Tommy Jones
replaced Gibran Hamdan at
quarterback and threw a 30yard TD pass to Glenn

STORRS, Conn. (AP) Terry Caulley ·scored four
touchdowns and ran for 174
yards, all in the first half, to
help
Connecticut close
Memorial Stadium with a
. record 63-21 win over Kent
State on Saturday.
The Huskies (4•6) move
into the new 40,000-seat
Rentshler Field in East
Hartford next season. UConn
is in its third year of Division
1-A and had to leave the much
smaller 16,200-seat stadium
as part of the upgrade.
The Huskies closed the 50·
year-old stadium with a 131102-4 record. The Huskies
broke the stadium scoring
record set last week in a 61-14
win over Florida Atlantic.
Caulleyranforscoresof 19,
30 and 60 yards and caught a
TD pass of 35 yards. The 5-

foot-7 tailba_ck has scored 13
TDs this season, setting a
freshman school record. ·
Kent State (3-7) was with·
out Joshua Cribbs, its quarterback and leading rusher, for
most of the game. Cribbs was
shaken early in the second
quarter and replaced by
Darryl Polk. Cribbs, averaging 130 yards a game, managed just 31 yards before he
left.
The Huskies also got scores
from defense and special
teams. Cathlyn Clarke ran a
blocked pun't back 31 yards
for a first-quarter TD. Safety
Chris Meyer had a 63-yard
interception return for a score
in the third-quarter.
UConn seniors made the
most of their home finale.
.Wes Timko caught 5-yard
pass . from Dan Orlovsky to
•

open the scoring with three
minutes gone in the first quarter.
Cornerback Roy Hopkins
recovered a fumble and had
an interception. His firstquarter pick on Kent State's
first possession set up the
Huskies second score. UConn
scored .three plays later on ·
Orlovsky 's !-yard sneak:.
Dwaun Black blocked Jared
Fritz's first-quarter punt to set
up Clarke's score. Joe
Villapiano caught a 28-yard
TD pass from reserve quarterback Jermell Williams to cap
the scoring.
Kent State did all its scoring
in the fourth quarter. Eddie
Beccles scored from 23 yards
out, Charles Newton had a 3yard TD run· and Joshua
· Bostick caught an 18-yard TD
pass from · Polk with just less

bbfonseel
Ohio High School Athletic
Attocletlon State Football Pairings
OIVISION I

Regional Finale
· All games Saturday. Time and·
· loc:atlon TBA
Region 1
(4) Mentor (11·1) vs. (2) Warren Harding
(12.0)
• .
Region 2
(5) Spring . South (9-3) vs. (2) Findley (11·
tI

.

.

Region 3
(B) Massillon Washington (10·2) vs. (2)
Pickerin gton (1 1·1)
Rl!gion 4 .
{1) Cin . Eider (11·1) vs. (3) Cin. Colerain
. (11-1) .
DIVISION II
Regional Finals
Att games Friday. Time and Location
. TBA
Region 5
(5) Olmsted Falls (10·2) vs. (6) Warren
Howland (9-3)
Region 6
( I ) Tol. St. Francis (11-1 ) vs. (3) Cols.
Walnut Ridge {11-1)
Region 1
{4} Macedonia Nordonia {11·1) v&amp;. (2)
·Avon Lake {1 1· 1)
Region 8
(1) Kings Mills Kings (12·0) YS. (2) bey.
Cham1nade-Julienne {11·1)
DIVISION Ill
Regional Finals
All game&amp; Saturday. Time and
LocaUonTBA
Region 9
(1) Cle. Benedictine (1 0-2) vs . (6) lisbon
Beaver Local (10-2)
Region 10
(I) AkF. Buchtel (12·0) vs. (2) Akr. Hoban
(11·1)
.
Region 11
(4) Cots. Watterson (8-4) vs. (2) Cots.
DeSales (9·3)
Region 12
(1) Urbana (12-0) vs. (2) Germantown
Valley View ( 12·0)
DIVISION IV
Regional Finals
AU games Friday. lima and location
TBA
Region 13
(8} Youngs. Ursuline (7-5) vs. (2) Girard
(11·1)
Region 14
(1) Kenton (10·2) vs. (6) Archbold (10-2)
Region 15
(1) Portsmouth (11 - 1) vs. (7) Portsmouth
w. (10·2)
Region 16
(1) Ke"ering Alter (1 1·1) vs. (2) Read ing
(12.())
OIVIS!ONV
Regional Finals
All games Saturd~Y- Time Bl)d
Location TBA
Region 17
(1 I Smi1h~lle (12·0) vs. (3) Dellon (I HI
·
Region 18
(4) Castalia Margaretta (10-2) vs. (6)
Delphos St. John's (9·3)

Region ~9
(5) Chesapeake (9-3) vs. (2) Amanda·
Ciearcreek ( 10.2)
Regk)n 20
(1) Marion Pleasant ( 12-0) vs. (2)
Gahanna Cols. Acad. (11-1}
DIVISION VI
Regkmal Final•
All gamn Frl.day. Time and LocaHon
TBA
Region 21
(1} Mogado re (11-1 ) vs. (6) Cle.
Cuy~hoga His. (9-3)
· Region 22
(1) Columbus Grove (12-0) vs : (2) Tiffin
CalVert (10-2)
•
.
Region 23
(4) Newark Cath . (8-4) vs. (2) Danville -''
I I 1-1 I
.
Region 24
·(1) Maria Stein Marion Local (11· 1) vs. (2)
Dola Hardin Northern (12·0)
Ohio High School Footbllll
OHSAA High School Football
By Th• A ..oclated Preaa
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
· DIVISION I
Cin. Colerain 28, LeDanon 7
Cln. Elder 31, Huber His. Wayne 3
Findlay 41 . Hudson 20
Massillon Washington 23, Massillon Perry
21
Mentor 24, Solon 17. 20T
Pickerington 48, Gahanna lincOln 13
Spring. S. 25, Brunswick 7
Warreri Harding 18, Lakewood St.
Edward 16
DIVISION Ill
Akr. Buchtel 47, Willard 21
Akr. Hoban 28, Oak Harbor 14
Cle. Benedictine 20, Steubenville 17, 30T
Cols. DeSates 38, Gallipolis Ga!lia 20 .
Cots . Watterson 34, Newark Licking
Valley 14
Germantown Valley View 24, Tipp 'city
Tippecanoe 1o
Lisbon Beaver local 33, Hunting Valley
University 18
Urbana 15, St. Marys Memorial 7
DIVISIONV
.
Amanda-Clearcreek 20, Sarahsville
Shenandoah 0
Castalia Margarella 21 , Delphos
Jefferson 14
Chesapeake 26, Woodstield Monroe
Cent. 7
Dalton 38, Middle1ield Cardinal 14
Delphos St. John's 28. Defiance t inora 7
Gahanna Cots. Academy 51 . Bainbridge
Paint Valley 20
Marion Pleasant 26, Morral Ridgedale o
Smithville 17, Bedford Chanel 9

Nov. 23.
No. 6 Iowa (10-1) beat Northwestern 62 10. Next at Minnesota, Saturday.
No. 7 Georgia (g.1) beat Mississippi 31·
17. Next: at Auburn . Saturday.
No. 8 Vi rginia Tech {8·2) Iosi to Syracuse
50-42, 30T. Next: vs. vs. West Virgin ia.
Nov. 20,.
No. 9 Notre Dame (9·1) beat Navy 30-23. Next: vs. Rutgers, Nov. 23.
No. 10 Southern California (7·2) beat
Stanford 49--17. Next: vs. No. 25 Arizona
State. Saturday.
No. 11 Alabama (8·2) beet Mississippi State 28-14. Next: at No. 16 LSU,
Saturday.
·
No. 12 Kansas State (8·2) beat No. 21
Iowa Slate SS.7. Next: vs. Nebraska:
Salurday,
•
No. 13 Michigan (8·2) beat Mlnneso1a
41 -24. Next: vs. Wisconsin, Saturday.
No. 14 North Carolina S~ate (9--2) lost to
Maryland 24-21 . NeKI: a1 Vlf\lln le.
Saturdav.
No. 15 Oregon (7·3) Iosito No. 5
Washington State 32-21 . Next: va.
WaShington, Saturday.
No. 16 LSU (7-2) boat KsniUCI&lt;y 33-30.
Next: vs. No. 11 Alabama, Saturday.
No. 17 Florida State (7-3) boat Georgia
Tech 21 · 13. Next: vs. North Carolina, .
Saturday.
No. 18 Colorado (7-3) beat Missouri 42·
35, OT. Next: vs. No. 21 Iowa Stale,
Saturday.
No. 19 Penn Slate (7-3) beat VIrginia 3514. NeK1: at Indiana. Saturday.
'
No. 20 Bowling Green (8·1) lost to
Northern Illinois 26-17. Next: at South
Florida, Saturday.
No. 21 Iowa Stale (7-4) losllo No. 12
K·ansas State 58-7. Next: at No. 16
Colorado, Saturday.
No. 22 Pinsburgh (8-2) beat Temple 29·
24. Next: at No. 2 Miami, Nov. 21.
No. 23 Florida (7-3) beat Val)derlli l1 21 ·
17. Next: vs. South Carolina, Saturday.
No. 24 Colorado State (8-2) did not play.
Next: at San otego Slate, Saturday.
No. 25 Ar izona State (7-4) lost to
Galifornia 55·38. Next: at No. 10 Southern
California, Saturday.

College Football
How the top 25 teams in The
Associated. Preas' college football poll
fared thla week:
No. 1 Oklahoma (8·1) Iosito TexaS A&amp;M
30-26. Next: at Baylor, Saturday.
NQ. 2 Miami (9-0) beat Tennessee 2S.3
Next: vs. No. 22 Pittsburgh, Nov. 21..
No. 3 Ohio State (11..0) beat Purdue
1Q-6. Next: at Illinois, Saturday.
No. 4 Te)Cas (~· 1) beat Baylor 41-0. NelCt
at Texas Tech , Saturday.
No. 5 Wash ington State (9-1 ) beat No.
15 Oregon 32-21 . Next: vs. Washington,

Coil- Footboll Major Score•
EAST
Air Force 49, Army 30
Cent. Connecticut St. 24, Wagl)er 17
Colgate 28, Lehigh 14
ConneCticut 63, Kent St. 2i
Cornell 2·1, Dartmouth 19
Delaware 37, Maine 13
Duquesne 42, Canisius o
Fairfield 44, St. John's, NY 21
Fordham 37, Holy Cross 27
Harvard 28, Columbia 7
Hofstra 26, Richmond 16
Lafayette 19, Bucknell3
Marist 49. La Salle 23
Monmouth, N.J. 7, St. Francis, Pa.. 0
New Hampshire 31 , Massachusetts 14 ·
Northeastern 38, Villanova 13
Notre Dame 30, Navy 23
Penn 44, Princeton 13
Penn St. 35 , Virg inia 14
Pittsburgh 29. Temple 22
Sacred Heart 32, Siena 3
St. Peter's 22, tons 14
Stony ·Brook 23. Robert Morris 13
Syracuse 50, VIrginia Tech 42. JOT
.UCF 45. Buffalo 21

.·

field-goal unit hurried onto · of Kirsch, who broke a bone
the field, and the center in his right i]and when he
snapped the ball just in time accidentally struck a wall
from Page 81
for Mike Nugent to kick a 22- during a fight at a fraternity
yarder. Tiller argued to offi- party. Orton took command
The Buckeyes barely had Cials that time had expired, early; going 6-for~9 fot 55
enough time to kick a field but television replays indicat- .Yards on the opening drive
goal as time ran out in the ed that there was one second before a pass was intercepted
first ·half to make it 3-all. showing when the ball was by cornerback Dustin Fox
I&lt;.renzel escaped pressure and snapped.
deep· in the far left corner of
scrambled 15 yards down the
Nugent has made 22 the end zone
middle to Purdue's 13. On straight field goals dating to
Buckeyes \ running back
third -and-9 from the · 12, last season and is clpsing in Maurice Claret!, who had
Krenzel ran again, this time on the NCAA Division 1-A nerve damage in his left
for seven yards but short Of .career record of 30 straight, shoulder that kept him out of
the first down.
set by Washington's Chuck the last two games, started
With no timeouts left and Nelson. · '
the game and ran 14 times for
the clock ticking down, the
·Orton got the start in place 52 yards.

than 2 minutes left.
Orlovsky completed II of
17 passes foi 128 yards and
threw for two scores. It was
his I Oth straight game with a .
TD pass.
·
Polk finished 10-of-21 for I 02
yards. He threw for one score
and was intercepted twice.
The post-game celebration
was tempered when several
students tried to storm the
goal posts and · were turned
back by police with pepper ·
spray and dogs. One fan was
taken away in handcutfs.

Congratulations,
Chuck Stowe.rs
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy
has announced
that Chuck
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
October

Jooso
CHEVROLET
740-446-3672

West Virginia 24, Bo ston College 14
Yale 31. Brown 27
SOUTH
Alabama 28, Mississippi St. 14
Appalachian St. 54, VMI1 3
Arkansas 23, Sou1h Carolina 0
Auburn 52, Louisiana-Monroe 14
Chattanooga 34, The Citadel 3t
Clemson 42. North Carolina 12
Davidson 49, Austin Peay 28
Elon 56, Liberty 35
Fla. International 35, Albany, N.Y. 26
Flotida 21 , Vanderbilt 17
Florida Atlantic 34 , Morris Brown 13
Flortda St. 21. Georgia Tech 13
Gardner-Webb 57, Char. Soutnern 15
Georgia 31 , Mississippi 17
Georgia Southern 42, Furman 21
Grambl i~ St. 34, Alabama St. 21
Hampto'n 37, Bethune-Criokman 7
Howard 23, S. Carolina St . 9
Jackson St. 13, Alabama A&amp;M 11
Jacksonville 44 , Edward Waters 31
Jacksonville St. 19,' No·rthwSstern St 10
LSU 33. Kentuct&lt;y 30
Louisiana-Lafayette 13, Arkansas St. 10
MVSU 23, Alcorn Sl. 6
Maryland 24. N.C. State 21
McNeese St. 47, SW Texas 7
Miami 26, Tennessee 3
Murray St. 51, Tennessee St. 27
N. Carolina A&amp;T 34, Delaware St. 7
Norfolk St. 17, Morgan St. 14
SE Missouri 35, E. Kentucky 21
South Florida 31 , Memphis 28
SOuthern Miss. 20, UAB 13
Southern U. 28, Miles 21
Tennessee Tech 51 , Samford 44
Troy St. 24, Florida A&amp;M 7
Will iam &amp; Mary 44, Rhode Island 6
Wofford 39, ETSU 10
MIDWEST
Colorado 42 , Mlssourt 35, OT
D~i~ylon 30, Morehead St. 20
E. Illinois 55, Tenn .-Martln 43 ,.
Illinois 37, Wisconsin 20
•
Indiana St . 21 , S. llllnois 14
Iowa 62, Northwestern to
Kansas.St. 58, Iowa St. 7
Michigan 41 , Minnesota 24
Michigan St . 56, Indiana 21
N. Illinois 26. Bowling Green 17
Nebraska 45, Ka nsas 7
Ohio 27, Akron 10 .
Oh io St. 10, Purdue 6
Quincy 37. Butler 14
Toledo 44, Cent. Michigan 17
Valparaiso 27. Lindenwood 6
W. Illinois 35, N. Iowa 12
W. Michigan 33, E. Michigan 31
Youngstown St. 24, Illinois St. 17
"
SOUTHWEST
Ark.-Pine Bluff 44, Prairie View 0
East Carolina 54, Houston 48, 20T
Nicholls St. 34, Sam Houston St . 16
North Texas 10, Idaho 0
TCU 17, Tulane 10
Texas 41 •. Baylor 0
TelCas A&amp;M 30, Oklahoma 26
TeJCas Southern 26, Clark Atlanta 3
Te)Cas Tech 49, Oklahoma St. 24
FAR WEST
BYU 35, Wyom ing 31
Boise St. 49, Alee 7
Cal Po ly-SLO~O . Humboldl Sl. 0
California 55, Arizona St. 38
Fresno St. 31, Tulsa 12
ldBha St. 46, N. Arizona 20
Montana 31, Sacramento St. 24
Montana St. 25. E. WashingJon 14

GAHS

·

Nevada 23. UTEP 17
New MexiCO 15, San -Diego St. 8
S. Oregon 31 , San Diego 10
San Jose St 42, louisiana Tech 30
Southern Cal 49, Stanford t7
St Mary·s .. CaL 46, Drake 28
Utah 28, UNLV 17
Utah St. 32 , New Mexico St. 30
Washington 41 , Oregon St. 29
Washington St. 32. Oregan 21
Weber St. 20, Pot'tland St. 14

Pro FootbaU
National Football League
AFC
Eaat
w L T Pel J'F PA
Miami............. 5 3 0 .625 200 167
BuNelo ............ 5 4 0 .556 248 269
New England .. 4 4 0 .500 206 165
N.Y. Jets ......... 3 5 0 .375 160 206
South
w LTPctPFPA
Indianapolis .... 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 LTPctPFPA
Pittsburgh ....... 5 3 0 .625 192 160
Cleveland ......04 5 0 .444 205 195
Baltimore ........ 3 5 0 .375 139 162
Cincinnati ...... .1 7 0 .125 113 214
Waat
LTPctPFPA
Oenver .......... .. 6 2 0 .750 207 170
San Diego ...... 6 2 0 .750 186 163
Kansas City .. ..4 4 0 .500 259 240
Oakl8nd .......... 4 4 0 .500 226 188
NFC
East
w L T Pet PF PA
Philadelphia .... 6 2 (I .750 221 116
N.Y. Giants ..... 4 4 0. .500 113 132
Washington .... 4 4 0 .500 155 191
Dallas ..... .' ....... 3 6 0 .333 115 155
South
W . L T Pet PF PA
Tampa Bay ..... 7 2 0 .778 203 109
New Orleans .. 6 2 o .750 256 209
Atlanta ........... 5 3 · 0 .625 187 136
Carolina .......... 3 5 0 .375 1t t 117
North
w LTPctPFPA
Green Bay ..... 7 1 0 875 227 164
Delroit. ... ...... ...3 5 0 .375 158 220
Chioago .......... 2 6 0 .250 152 t99
Minnesota ...... 2 6 0 .250 186 230
West
WLTPctPFPA
San Frarcio:x&gt;.... 6 2 0 .750 203 164
Arizona .... ..... .. 4 4 0 .500 150 158
St. LoUis ......... 3 5 a .375 166 172
Saallle ............ 2 6 0 .250 145 160
Sunday's Gamea
Houston at Tennessee. 1 p.m.
Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Atla nta at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
San Diego at St. louis, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Baltiniore, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Ar izona, 4:os p.m.
Washington at Jacksonville, 4:05p.m.
New England at Chicago, 4:15p.m.
Kansas City at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Miami at N.Y. ..,lets; 8:30p.m .

w

to a good start and that helped us stay
on a roll."
Jacoby said another factor that helped
DeSales was that several players who
had missed games due to injt~rY
returned for Sarurday's game.
"I don't want to make exouses, but
we've had some kids coming in and out
because of injuries," Jacoby said.
. "We're starting to get a little more
healthy, so hopefully, that gets us back
more on kind of an even keel."
DeSales will face the winner of the
Licking Valley Watterson game next
Saturday.

Open: Bulf8'1o, Dallas, Tampa Bay,
Cleveland
Monday's GarM
Oakland at Denver, 9 p.m
Sunday, Nov. 17
New Orleans at Atlan ta, 1 p m
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m
Dallas at IndianapoliS. 1 p.m
Buffalo at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Miami. 1 p.m.
Gfeen Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Washington at New York Giants. 1 p.m.
Arizona at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
San Franci$Co at San Diego, 4:05p.m.
Carolina at Tampa Bay, 4:05p.m.
New York Jets at Detroit, 4:15 p.m.
Jacksonville at Houston, 4:15 p.m.
Denver at Seattle. 4: 15 p.m.
. New England at Oakland, 8:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 18
Chicago at St . Louis 9 p.m.

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•
I

436 St. Rt. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio

The Saunders Insurance B~owns won the ·2002 Gal lipolis Midget Football League title with their
fourth straight undefeated season. Members of that team are, front row - left to right, Corey
Tawney, Coby Tawney,. Josh Saunders. Second row- Zack Halslop , Zeke Maher, Trevor Bryan,
Terry Smith, D.J. Hunt. Third· row- Clint Saunders, Aaron Cordell, James Green, Zac Taylor,
Scott Ferrell, ·Jake McDonald. Fourth row - Codle Lloyd, Zachary Baird, Tyler Grimm, Jesse
Peoples, Chuckle Perry; Tyler Ring. Back row- Coaches Winston Saunders, Tim Smith, David
Johnson, ~oug Browfl, Will Haislop. jContributed)
.

740-446-0'351
I

1

;

mance. It took us a series or two to get of their own, a 40-yard TD run by
rolling."
Henderson.
Another Gallia Academy drive was
-"What can I say, we had a tremen·
from Page 81
then stopped inside their own 20-yard dou~ year," said Bokovitz. "We played
line, again giving DeSales a short field. hard. We were up against a really tough
Beginning from the Gallia 32, the team. We never backed down from
In fact , Razzano imd the DeSales
offense struck early and often, possess- StaUions used short runs to move the them."
DeSales head -coach Bob Jacoby
ing strpng field position throughoul ball to the 15. From there, Dickson ran
the
ball
in
for
the
score
as
the
Stallions
credited
special teams play with helpmost of the first half.
,.. ·
"They game started out when they took a 14-0 lead midway through the ing the Stallions get off to a good start.
"We had some great field position
kicked the ball in the endzone (on the first quarter.
With
DeSales
up
31-0,
Gallia
and
they didn't get very good field posiopening kickoff) and they just got right
after us," said Bokovitz. "We haven't Academy finally put a dent on the tion," Jacoby said. "I think it was
been real fast starters. Even last week scoreboard.
caused by our kicking game. Our kick(in Gallia's 30-21 win over Circleville)
But, the Stallions countered the Blue offs went into the endzone. I think the
when we had a great off(\nsive perfor-. Devils' first sco~ &lt;if the game with one wind aided them a little bit. We got off

Johnson. The Hoosiers' final
to·uchdown came on a 4-yard
run by Yamar Washington.
."The only way we can come
back with the right attitude is
if we're tough guys. I told
them that,".DiNardo said.

..

~unbap m:illW) -~rntinel• Page 83

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osu

Connecticut blows 'Kent State aWay

•

Pomeroy • Middleport'• Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

(740) 446-2240

'.

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Page B4 • ~unbap 'QJ:nnt5 -~rntind

o:2002

Sunday, November I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

... .

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~ '

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Sunday, November 10, 2002

This Week in NASCAR

~unbap 'QJ:imr5-$rntinrl• Page BS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

· National Football League

Gordon Iivi ng ·1ife to the fu lies' Ben gals
next task:
score in
Baltimore
.

"

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,At

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Benson enjoying
long-awaited win

7 40-446-3672
CHIVY

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WI'U.IIMU'

2000 CHEVROLET IMPALA

BALTIMORE (AP) : Now that they've finally got
· their first win of the season,
the Cincinnati Bengals are
poised to end another embarrassing streak .
.The Bengals (I·7) haven't
scored in Baltimore since
September 1998, when Carl
Pickens took a pass 67 yards
for a touchdown and· Doug
P~lfry added the conversion
in a 31-24 defeat.
The quarterback on the play
.was Jeff Blake, who will
Cincinnati Bengals running back Cor.ey Dillon, right, wrestles
receive a third straight start .
with offensive coordlnatbr Bob Bratkowskl, left, during pracfor Baltimore on Sunday in a
tice, Thursday In Cincinnati. Cincinnati plays at Baltimore this
If the Ravens are to extend Sunday. (AP)
game the Ravens (3-5) must
win to retain a realistic shot at their shutout strin~ . against
a':third consecutive trip to the Cincinnati, they wtll do so from us because of our youth. year ' i": Cincinnati's 21-10
with a defense devastated by We really could have had one · home vtctory.
.playoffs.
of our best games."
· "K.itna can beal you at any
injuries.
Blake, .0-2 since replacing
Linebacker
Ray
Lewis
will
Kitna
threw
.three
intercepWhen we played there
the injuted Chris Redman, miss a fifth straight game with · tions, two into the hands of time.
last year, they beat us," lineplayed six years in Cincinnati a partially separated left Lewis, who won't be a threat backer Peter Boulware said.
before signing with New shoulder. Defensive · end this week.
"We've ¥ot to· be ready for
Orleans before the 2000 sea- Michael McCrary (knee) is
"That was a very bizarre him. He s putting up good
son. Although the Bengals questionable and cornerback game. You do · the things numbers, so we're ·going to
pushed him aside in favor of Chris McAlister was limping coaches have taught you to have to be on our toes ."
Akili Smith, Blake insists his this week with a severe left do since you were in Pop
The Ravens aren't promismotivation this week has ankle sprain.
Warner, and it turns into . ing a victory, much less
n(lthing to do with revenge.
But . history
dictates interceptions;" Kitna said. another shutout.
"! look it as I had an oppor- Cincinnati could be the cure "Sometimes those things
''I'm not guaranteeing anytunity to play, made a lot of for what ails a Baltimore team happen to you."
·
thing," McAlister said.
good friends and threw a lot that has lost two straight to
Good things happened to "They put up 38 points last
of touchdowns," he said.. "We fall into third place in the Kitna and the Bengals last week, so I can't guarant~e a
didn't win a lot of games, but AFC North.
week against the expansion ·shutout. All I can guarantee.
I have . a lot of good memoThe Bengals haven't won in Houston
Texans.
Chad is that we will go out and
ries."
Baltimore since 1996, the Johnson guaranteed a victory play hard."
That's his story, and he's year the Ravens arrived from and Kitna backed his wide
Johnson is taking a break
sticking to it. But Ravens Cleveland. The scores of the receiver by throwing a from the prediction business,
coach . Brian ·Billick knows past three defeats .are 22•0, career-high four touchdown too, perhaps because of the
differently.
37-0 and 16-0.
. . passes in a 38-3 rout.
Bengals' checkered history
~ T m concerned that Jeff is
"If you look at those num"That was my best ~arne as againstthe Ravens.
going to hyperventilate com- bers from the past, it seems a pro, no question,' Kitna
"We need to build off this
win an·d no.t get iod· relaied. ·.
.
. ing out of the tunnel, and that daunting," Bengals quarter- said.
(backup
quarterback) back Jon Kitna said. "But the
It certainly made an Everybody · needs to star,
Anthony Wright will have to past really bas no effect on impression on the Ravens, humble and start over allain, '
take .the first play,'' Billick what happens Sunday._ Last who also remember that he said. "We haven't qutt. We
said. "Seriously, Jeff is look- . ye;rr, we had some golden Kitna threw for one touch- haven' t given up. We believe
opportunities that got away down and ran for another last in ourselves."
ing forward to it."
·

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2000
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Davis: Playoffs still possible

...

Gallipolis

CHEVROLET

.

'

EKLY SPEC

'BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The. their season opener when
wear and tear of nine -tumul- linebacker Dwayne Rudd
tuous weeks showed in every stupidly threw his helmet;
corner of Butch Davis' 50- losmg at Pittsburgh in overyear-old face.
time on a freakish play; and
·As 'he massaged his tern- seeing quarterback Tim
pies in small circles, Couch suffer an emotional
Cleveland's coach pressed breakdown, the Browns
his hands tightly over his haven't. given up hope that
eyes and exhaled before · they're a playoff team.
assessing what has been· a
"I still believe there~s a
~baotic
seasoll for his chance," Davis said. "A lot of
·Browns.
it will come to fruition in the
: A 4-5 record doesn't begin next two or three weeks . .If
~ explain what has already we go 2-1 or 3-1 the next
happened in 2002 to the three or four weeks, and
Browns, whose toughest loss we're sitting at 7-6 with three
occurred with the recent games to go, then anything
d~ath of popular vowner AI can happen.
Lerner.
·
·
"One. thing we .have going
: "The bye week came at a . for us is, a. year ago at thts
perfect tinie for us," Davis time, we had put eight guys
on irijured reserve . This. year
said. "We needed it."
.For so marty reas9ns.
we have none. If we get some
. Cleveland is at a critical guys back,. we r!light be the
· .(uncture in its second season most . healthy team m the
11nder Davis, who has spent league ill December."
ffiuch of the .past week evalu- . The Browns are one of six
ating how much his club has teams in their conference
improved and how far it with four wins, and they trail
needs to go.
the Steelers by just I. 112
:·"I think there's a lot more games in tbe weak - and
tight with this team ' than very winnable- AFC North.
11Jere is wrorig," said Davis,
Bilt although they're mathcriticized by Browns"fans for ematically in the hunt, and
a:boring offense, an inconsis- might stay that way for
tent defense and undisci- another month, the Browns
plined team.
are .not close· to being the
"I know we're doing the team Davis w~nts them to be.
right things;" he said. "It ., After breakmg, down film
takes awhile to get it right of last Sunday. s loss ~o
We' re getting the right pieces Pittsburgh, Davts and hts
Qf the puzzle."
staff crunched some num: It seems so. Despite losing bers. The data sptt out some

"I believe William Green
obvious conclusions:
•
Cleveland's offense will start for this team in the
needs to run the ball better.
playoffs," Davis said. "He's
• The defense needs to ere- too big, too smart and too
ate more turnovers.
fast. We've just goi to .give
• The .Browns are taking the kid a chance."
way too many penalties.
Davis isn't shying away
• Special teams have car- from playoff talk. He shouJdc
ried them. .
.
n't. Cleveland's remaining
Davis' stated priority in the sche&lt;;lule includes games
last seven games is · to against Cincinnati (l-7),
improve Cleveland's nonex- Carolina (3-5), Jacksonville
istent running game, current- (3-5) and Baltimore (3-5).
ly averaging just 72.3,ds The . . Browns
tough~st
per game a league low
remammg matchups are wtth
"Regardless of the rore, Ne~
Orleans
(6-2).
you just can' t put yourself in ,lndtanapohs
(4-4)
and
a · posttton where it's aU Atlanta (5-3), With the latter
throw," Davis said. "We're two at home.
Davis was hired away from
going to 'get something dooe,
somehow, some way."
the University of Miami by
Davis began by digging Lerner to win a Super Bowl.
into the playbook this week It's what drives Davis, whose
and tearing out pages con- career has been one reclamataining running plays )hat tion project after another in
haven't worked. Like the one places like Pawhuska, Okla ..
where rookie back William Tulsa, Stillwater, Miami.
Green gets thrown for a 2- Dallas, and back in South
Florida again.
yard loss.
"They're gone," .Davis
Cleveland is no different.
said. "We're not goiii.g to use
The losse&lt; don't hurt Davis
them anymore."
like they used to, and neither
Green's inability to break a does the criticism.
long run and his woeful rush- . "I used to argue with the
ing totals (161 yards, 2, 3 cashier in the grocery store,"
average, I TD) througll nine he said. "They were flying
games have Cleveland fans planes over the stadium (in ·
wondering if Davis made a Miami)that said ' Fire Butch
big mistake with the No. 16 Davis' .
overall pick in this year's
"I've been through all this
draft.'
stuff."
Davis, though, remains
Just not so much in nine
Green's best blocker.
weeks .

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Go ahead, eat that deer

PageB~

Inside:
Dear Abby, Page C8

Sunday, November 10, 2()tt~

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I don :t know about you, but
just love autumn here in
southeastern Ohio.
The weather gets a little
cooler, the skies a little bluer,
and for a fleeting few weeks
the leaves change from green
to beautiful orange, yellow
and red before the trees don
their drab, gray winter coats.
Of course there is hunting.
and great college football, and
steaming hot bowls of venison chili. the spicy kind that
makes your face turn .red and
the sweat pop up on your
brow wh ile giving you that
cozy, warm-all-over feeling.
Unfonunately I have heard
from several hunters that they
will not be panaking of the
venison this year. You see,
repons of diseases affecting
the deer herd have convinced
them that deer are no longer
safe to eat.
Here in Meigs County, the
biggie
was
Epizootic
Hemorrhagic Disease, a viral
disease that affected deer primarily in western Meigs
County and portions of
Vinton and Gallia counties.

.·

Jim
Freeman
- - · - ··
In the Open

"-'---l

EHD has a very high monality rate and can have a signitl cant effect on the deer population where outbreaks occur.
Deer contract Ei-ID from
the bite of gnats which live
near water. The onset of cold
weather suppresses the disease and frosts drive the gnats
into wi nter inactivity. By now,
wi lh the onset of c·ooler
weather, most of the t:;:HD
seems to have passed from the
deer herd. ·
It is okay to eat deer taken
in those areas, according to
the Ohio Divi sion of Wildlife,
but a little common se nse
applies. State wildlife officials stress to those pl anning
on hunting in these areas this

fall that although this disease tality, does not harm the meat,
does not affect humans nor and is not known to infect
impact the safety of con- humans. However, it does
sumed deer, deer thai do not look repulsive an'd 'can make
appear "to be healthy should an otherwise fine trophy
not as a rule be taken fqr unpleasing to the eye.
human food.
·
Of course earlier this year
The dividing line in -Meigs people were worried about
County for EHD appeared to West Nile Virus.
have been U.S. 33 with the
A lot of the hysteria suroutbreak contained west of rounding that particular· bug
the highway.
seemed to have faded away in
Some people have also recent months. Cold weather
reported seeing deer with seems to have taken care of
gruesome skin tumors.
the mosquitoes that carry that
Skin tumors, or Deer particular virus.
Fibroma, are wart-like growths
So go ahead and eat that
found on the skin of whitetail deer or other wild critter, but
deer and other types of deer. use a little common sense.
An infection with fibromas is · Cattle and other animals get
called.fibromatosis.
sick, too, and we don 't intenFibromas·are randomly dis- tionally butcher or · eat sick
tributed on deer but · occur cattle , pigs or lambs. The
most freq uentl y about the same rule applies to wild anieyes, neck, face, and forelegs. mats. If you see an animal that
A heavily infected deer may is obviously ill, don't shoot it.
have 25 or more. According to
Remember, all animals wild
wildlife officials in Michigan, or domestic can carry parabucks seem to have fibro, · sites, so make sure you propmatosis more often than does. erly cook all meat before you.
Michigan wildlife officials eat it.
say .fibromatosis is not an
And while you're out
imponant cause of deer mor- enjoying that hunt, make sure

..
·'

Buckeye State.no
stranger to earthquakes
Ever felt the earth move
under your feet, but just
·thought it was your imagination or a passing truck on the ·
street'' Well, next time, think
twice and consider that it just
might have been an earth·
q~ake 1

,,

,.
'

Here in Ohio, you ask? Yes,
just talk to residents living in
the northeast corner · of. the
state who have experienced
several small earthquakes in
the past few years. While
most of our earthquakes go
unnoticed and cause no damage, our state is susceptible to
seismic activi ty, largely due
to faults located in western
and nonheast Ohio.
· Over the last two hundred
years, the Buckeye State has
experienced more than 170
earthquakes of a 2.0-magnitude or higher. In fac t, we st·
ern Ohio is the second most
active earthquake zone in the
· Midwest,
according to
Michael Hansen, senior geologist
with
the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources (ODNR) and coordinator of the Ohio Seismic
· Network.
The largest earthquake
.k now n to have originated
within
Ohio's
border,;
occurred on.March 9, 1937, in
western Ohio's
Shelby
County - measuring 5.4 in
magnitude. Residents in the
town of Anna reponed tipped
chimneys, twi sted church
organ pipes and a schoo l
building damaged so badly it
had to be torn dow n.
Fifteen of Ohio's 170 eanhquakes have caused damage,
most of which was minor. In
add ition to the 5.4 Anna
earthquake here are some of
the other "heavy- hitters" to
shake our state:
·'
• 5.0 on Jan. 31, 1986, in

Laura ·
Jones
ODNR

Painesville, Lake County
• 4.9 on March 2, 1937, in
Anna, Shelby County
• 4.8 on Sept. 19, 1884, in
Lima, Allen County
·
• 4.5 on July 12, 1986 in St.
Marys, Auglaize County
The most active seismic
area in the state is focused in
the neighboring counties of
Shelby and Auglaize, which
have been the epicenter for
more than 40 earthquakes
since 1875. Other areas prone
to getting the shakes include
northeastern and southwestern Ohio.
So what causes an eanhquake? Below the earth's surface, giant blocks of rock
move agai nst each other.
When they collide or slip past
each other, they create waves
of seism ic energy that travels
through the ground causi ng
vibrations that lead to an
earthquake. Ohio's , most
recent quake to cause damage
(though minor) occurred on
January 26. 200 I in the nonheastern portion of the state.
Resi dents of Ashtabula and
surrounding comm unities felt
an earth4uake with a magnitude of 4.5.
Did you know that one of
the largest quakes to shake the
lower 50 states happened in
New Madrid , Missouri in the
earl y 18()0s 0 II was so powerful the seism ic effects were
felt some 330 miles away in

Cincinnati, where chimneys
were toppled.
· The Ohio Seismic Network,
a system of 23 volunteeroperated earthquake monitoring stations across the state,
records·earthquakes in Ohio.
Since their installation by the
ODNR
Divi ~ ion .
of
Geological Survey in · 1999,
the monitors have. recorded
eight earthquakes within our
borders.
Hansen said it is imponant
that people not feel shy or
embarrassed about reporting
an eanhquake, even if they
think it 's their imagination.
" It isn't uncommon that our
first indication of an eanhquake comes from a person
saying they 'felt' something."
He said reports can be filed
via the Ohio Seismic Network
at
web
page
www.ohiodnr.com/OhioSeis
Expens say no pl ace in the
\lfOrld is totally free of sei smi c activity. Nationwide,
Florida and North Dakota
have the fewest number of
quakes. And, of the world's
seven continents, Antarctica
is vinually earthquake free.
My suggestion, however, is
not to worry. While no one can
guarantee a major earthquake
will not occur in the Buckeye
State, the chances - at least in
our lifetime- are slim.
Explore the Ohio Seismic
Network web page for more
information about earthqu&lt;J.kes in our state. And, coming soon to that page, you ' II
be able to order and view a
new map fea turing Ohio's 170
eanhquake epicenters.
(Laura Jones writes Ohio
Outlk10r Notebook for the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resourr:es. She can be contacted
at /aura.jon.es@dnr.state.ohus.)
'

Ohio-·state parks plan to
salute the tr~ops· in 2003
COLUMBUS, Ohio Ohio Stale Parks will continue to "Salute The Troops" in
2003 by extending the popular lodging discount program
'
fdr active military per,;onnel
th rough next year, according
. to the Ohio Depanment of
Natural Resources (ODNR).
"Salute The Troops'" offers
-f men and women currentl y
· serving in the U.S. Armed
Forces I0 ~rce nt discounts on
overnight ·stays in state park
resons. cottages &lt;~nd campgrounds. The discount also
applies to both reserve and
National Guard pcr;onnd .
'" Our Salute The Troops
special lets us say 'thank you'
to active military for their
outstanding service during the

last year," said ODNR
Director Sam Speck.· "It
allows· them the chance to
spend valuable time with their
families and loved ones away
from the pressures of duty in the qu iet. natural selling of
an Ohio State Park.'"
Menibers of the active military
have used "Salute The Troops"
discounts for more than 580
night' of lodging in · state park
faci lities since the prognun was
initiated in November 2001 .
By presenting ~ir current
military identification, active
members of the \nilitary will
continue to receive I0 percent
off all lodge, cottage and cant)l'grou nd ,stays. "Salute The
Troops" will run through the
end of-2003 and cannot be used

in combination with other lodging discounts or on holidays.
Ohio's 74 state parks offer a
variety of year-round recreational opportunities. Eight
parks feature resort lodges,
complete wit h . full -service
dining rooms, indoor pools
and lounges. Six have 18-hole
.golf courses. There are more
than 500 rental cottages and
57 campgrounds with more
ihan 9,000 campsites in the .
system. For more information
regarding Ohio State Parks,
call 1-800-BUCKEYE or the
Ohio State Park information
line at 614-265-7000. Or, visit
the ODNR web site at ohiodnr.com and link to the state
parks &amp; resons page.
i

Page Cl

.•

to take along a youngster, and ment the scheme). At the very
don 't forget to ·have some of least it is considered needlciss
that fine venison chili after- harassment of the nation '·s
wards.
millions of legitimate, law
Apparently my · column abiding gun owners.
about the .223 Remington · That being said, my main
touched a few nerves. I have argument against ballistic fin ~
received plenty of comments gerprinting is still that it just
- mostly good - about my won't work, or help reduce or
column. particu larly the few solve crime one iota.
lines I devoted to the moveLike I said earlier, the
ment to implement ballistic impression a rifled baqe!
fingerprinting.
leaves on a bullet changes
That column was spurred over the lifetime of t!!e
by ·the serial killer who firearm, or is easily altered.
recently
plagued
the . Barrels are &lt;1lso routinely
Washington. D.C. area, and altered or replaced for numer,
the bad information put out by ous legitimate and lawful reathe national media' in the sons, changing the ballistic
wake of the shooting. Of .fingerprint.
.
course by now we all know
Also, consider thi s, one of
that the alleged serial killer the most popular t~p e;; .of
has been caught.
sponmg firearm tn thts counc
Legislation requiring ballis- try leaves- absolutely no battic fingerprinting has been listie fingerprint. What kind
called everything from a of gun is that? Shotgun ~,
backdoor registration scheme which have smooth bores. ·
(where police have records of
(Jim Freeman is wildlife spewho possesses what firearms) cialist for the Meigs Soil and
to a huge plum for the police Water €onservation District.
unions (who no doubt would He can be contacted w.eekdays
represent the thousands of at 740-9924282 oratjim1ree' .
new officers needed to imple- man@oh.nacdnet:org.)
·

.

Ohio Outdoor Notebook

·-

.

Sunday, November 10,2002

.

.

.

WVDNR hopes expanded antlerles$:
deer _season will curb population · ·
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(AP) - Wildlife officials
have ex panded thi s fa ll 's
anterless deer season in
hopes that hunters will kill
enough females to curb an
exploding deer population.
The Dtvi sion of Natural
Resources had predicted
about 90,000 antlerless
deer would be killed during the 2001 season, but
only 69,112 were ki ll ed.
Wildlife officials say the
best way to · control West
Virginia's' herd is to . kill
more females.
"Currently, the deer population in many portions of
West Virginia, especially
in the northern and western
counties of the state, are at
levels which are higher
than .de sired," said Curtis
Taylor, chief of the DNR
Wildlife
Re sources
Section .
.
The state needs a "significant .increase" in antlerless deer kills during the

2002 season, Taylor said
Counties open to huntets
Friday.
·
·during the ex panded seaWest Virginia's antl er- son are : Barbour, Berkeley;
less deer season ha s been Brooke, Cabell, Calhoun, ·
expanded to 22 days in 40 Doddrid~e, Gilmer, Gran ~
countie s. Last year, the' Hampshtre,
Hancockl
antlerless season lasted 12 Hardy, Harrison, Jackson;
-days in 38 counties.
Jefferson, Lewis, Lincoln;
It will be a split season, Marion 1 Marshall, Mason,
running concurrently with Mineral,
Monongalia,
the buck gun season from Monroe, Morgan , Ohio,
Nov. 25 to Dec. 7, then Pleasants,
Pre ston,
resum ing Dec. 9- 14 and Putnam, Ritchi e, Roane,
Dec. 25-28. ·
Summers, Tl)ylor, Tyler,
Hunters are allowed to Upshur Wetzel Wirt and
kill up to four antlerless Wood. '
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deer per day. but cannot . Portion s of Greenbrier,
kill a buck and an antler- Kanawha, Pendleton and
le ss de~r on th~ same d~y . Poc ahontas counties afso
Hunttng dunng the ftrst will be open.
portion of the season will
"The liberalized deer
onl y be allowed on private season and · bag limits
lands and at th~ L~wi s which are in pl ace fo.r this
Wetze l,
Spn ngfteld , fall allows landowners and
McClintic and Hughes . fa rmers who have experiRi ver wildlife ma nagement enced deer damage over
areas. Hunters will be lim- the year an excellent
ited to one deer in the opportunity to reduce the
Lewi s Wetzel Wildlife deer popul atio n on their
Management Area:
land," Taylor said.

-Local.instructor finds ·
health, peace in yoga

·~ acklyn

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OMEROY - If you're
looking for a form of
exercise that benefits
tfie ni.ind as well as the body,
J~_y Bentley of Syracuse
tl\iflks ·yoga might be JUSt perf)lOt,for you.
\,Beptley, who oversees the
fitness center at the Meigs
Mliltipurpose Senior Center,
teaches the ancient Hindu disc'l'pline in ·a weekly class at the
q:nter, and says the combination of yoga postures, or
"asanas," and relaxation techniques is one of the most ideal
exercise forms for those of all
ages. and physical conditions.
~use it engages the whole
titrSon. It can even benefit the
htidridden .
·
·
r. ''Yoga postures take each
joint in the body through its
full range of motion, strengtheping, stretching and balanci~Jg each joint," Bentley said.
"When practi ced regularly.
ypga i:JOses and breathing tech[\iques help improve both
Pl!r,sical and mental health."
' 'Relaxation techniques and
s~il:!ri"g and . str_engthening
exercises are effecuve because
tll~ ni.ind "is·focused in a meditative· way on movements,
s~~. and muscle sensations,
ana . relaxed breathing ,"
Bentley said. "Mind and body
. work together, creating a
physiologtcal and psychological environment that opttmtzes
the potential for healing." ·
Sara Brewer of Long
Bottom is a believer in the
healing potential of thi s
ancient Indian discipline. She
attended her tirst class with
Bentley last week, and said
she felt worlds better after
only one session.
"At ftrst I thought 1 couldn't

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Sheets and Joy Bentley demonstrate the Bhujangasana pose during a recent yoga class. (Contributed)

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do it," Brewer said. "l had been
suffering neck pain, and I knew ·
I wanted something to help
improve my flexibility, but l
al so knew I ·needed to be
involved in a class, because it
offered the structure I needed to
be successful. I have books and
tapes but I don't use them.
"Let me say this: I slept bet·
ter than· I have in months, and
what's the alternative? Being
stiff as a board and aging
·quickly."
·
That, Bentley said, is because
of yoga's emphasis on the combination of mind and body.
"Yoga helps elini.inate some
of the clutter and incessant
chatter from our minds."
I Dr. Dean Ornish, a heart
specialist, recoi)\ITiends yoga
to hi s recovering patients for
just that reason, Bentley said.
"Recent studies suggest that
deep slow yoga breathing
changes the body's chemistry
and nervous system."
During her clas.ses, · Bentley
shies away from most of the
spiritual ~lemenfs of yoga,
choosmg, mstead, to emphasize the physical and mental
benefits, but the spiritual messalle is always prese~t.
·
'Yoga helps you connect to
the world aro nd you," Joy Bentley, front, leads a yoga demonstration in Middi~Port' s Dave Diles Park. The discipline emphasizes benefit to both mind ·ana
Bentley ~aid. "It helps one body, and is suitable for all ages and physical types , Bentley said. (Contributed)
realize that ni.ind and body are ·
connected, and that we are part
of a bigger universe."
.
An avid athlete herself,
'
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'•'
(
Bentley said she learned the
•'
benefits of the yoga discipline
after a spons injury left her
with an atrophted leg and
other physical problems.
"I tell people I should pay
them for doing yoga with me,
because it's been so beneficial
to me, and it's far more effec"
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tive for me to do it with others."
..&amp;! • '
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Bentley, charges on! y $1. for
lfi'
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~·~· )71;
~'&lt;·
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';t
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her i;lasses, held from 6 to 8
(
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... " i t •
p.m. on Mondays at the center.

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"Yoga helps you coQn~ct 'to.·the 'world aroundryou. I~
helps'one realize that mind a~d.-l:'ody are connected, and
ihat we·, are.pan:o(a bigger,"~xp_verse." . .
,
Sara Brewer:
I

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iunba, lhn" ·itnttntl
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Sundlly, November IO, 2002 ·

Kendi Mprris, Gallipolis, Ohio
Marybeth Pyles,
Gallipolis..F:erry, w. va:

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Marybeth fYies and Kendi Morris dis_P.Iay some

Sift together flour mixture and of tlie goodies they bake for holiday gift giving. .
BY SANDI SAMMON
Staff writer.
spices. Add to apple mixture.
Pour mixture into well greased
canning jar fillGALLIPOLIS
FERRY, wide-mouth
ing ~, full. Bake at 325 degrees
W.VA. - Nothing can keep for 45 minutes. When done,
Kendi Morris and Marybeth remove one jar at a time, wipe
Pyles from baking,
sealing edge clean with paper
The ~o friends have been towel or cloth and screw cap on
baking buddies for the last 14 tightly. The heat will ·vacuum
years - even through children .
and careers, Morris's .broken seal the jar and the cake will
hand and Pyles's bout with keep for up to one year. Makes
. 8 pints.
pneumoma.
Variations: Substitute one of
"One year, we had to buy the
the
following for apples.
cookie dough, but, by God, we
2cupsshreddedcarrots
baked!" Morris said.
I can whole berry cranberry
And they bake big.
sauce
·.
·
The women produce batch2 cups mashed bananas
es upon batches of over 18
2 cups shredded zucchini
.. types of cookies, cakes and
2 cups canned pumpkin
,candies each year for holiday
I bag whole ground fresh
gift giving. They start planning in the summer before the cranberries
I';, cups applesauce +V4 .White Chocolate Mix
ho)iday season begins.
cup
pineapple
''We sit down together and
11. cups applesauce +i, cup
figure out which recipes we're
raisins
"
going to use," Pyles said.
2
cups
chopped
fresh
peaches
"Everyone on our lists has
personal favorites, so we try.
White
to make sure they get -what
they like: ·
Chocolate Mix
Their grocery lists ·may
include 20 pounds of both flour
10 oz. mini pretzels
and sugar, 10 pounds of butter
5 cups cheerios
. itnd eight pounds of chocolate. · 5 cups corn chex
Later in the summer and on
2 cups peanuts
election day, they make the
I lb. plain m&amp;m 's
_
cookie dough and freeze it
Mix in . large bow I and set
until holiday baking time.
aside. ,
"In the beginning, we were
24 oz. white chocolate .
not this organized," Morris
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
said. "We figured out that it · ·Microwave on medium for 2
takes a lot of planning and minutes. Stir once. Continue
preparation to get out hun- stirring every 10 seconds until
dreds of cookies, candies and smooth. Pour over cereal mix.
cakes by Christmas."
Pour on waxed paper. Cool.
· Schools, day care centers, Break apart. Store in airtight
neighbors, church groups, container.
friends and family are some of
the lucky recipients of their
Lemon Dream
sweet treats.
Squares
"We add more to our lists ·
every year," Morris said.
I yellow cake mix
Marybt:th Pyles · lives in
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. , and · I stick melted butter or marteaches home economics at garine
I egg
Hannan High School. Kendi
Mix
together and then press
Morris lives in Gallipolis,
into
a
9"
x 13" x ~·baking pan.
Ohio, and teaches kindergarten
Beat
together:
at Beale Elementary School in
8oz. softened cream cheese
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
~lb. powdered sugar ·
I tsp. lemon flavoring
·. Cake-in·a~jar
2eggs
I to 2 cups coconut
1, cup shortening
Pour over pressed cake mix21, cups sugar
ture~ Bake at 350 degrees for 35 ·
4 eggs
minutes.
·
· 2 cups shredded f\Pples (vanaupns, see below)
Candy Cane
Lemon dream squares
r, cups water
•
3z, cups flour (self rising or
.Cookies
cake flour)
Roll each dough into 90
Cream margarine and sugar;
If not using self rising or cake
3 cups margarine, softened
be3t in eggs, vanilla and pep- balls. Chill until ready to use.
flour then add the · next three
With hands toll each ball into 6
3 cups sugar
penhint.
items
4eggs
Mix flour with salt and bak- inch rqpe. For each cane pinch
), teaspoon baking po,wder 2 teaSpoons vanilla
ing powder, Stir into creamed together one end of red rope
2 teaspoons baking soda
I tablespoon peppermint mixture.
and one end of white rope.
•
Divide dough in half. 1\vist ropes, Place oil
1'1, teaspoons salt
extract
Blend red food coloring into ungreased cookie sheet (curve
I teaspoon cinnamon
9 cups flour
to form candy cane shape.)
one portion.
·
2 teaspoons salt
'
I teaspoon ground cloves
Cover dough and chill at Bake at 350 degree for about
Cream shortening and sugar,
I teaspoon baking powder
12-15 minutes.
2 teaspoons red food coloring least one hour.
beat in eggs, apples and water.

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My sister-in-law Mary
Brigid is a vegetarian. I
always feel for her when
the family gets together for
dinner. You see, mr. husband and the other stblings
lire big meat-eaters. So
Mary Brigid's dinner
choices never win majority
vote, While everyo·ne else
enjoys mutton or steak,
Mary Bri~id glares at them
while eatmg her vegetable
side-dish- turned-entree.
And they wonder why
she's so 'thin.
Well, Mary Brigid is not
alone. Vegetarianism is
growing fast. More than 17
million vegetarians live
and eat in the United ·States
today, and an estimated 1
million .inore switch to a
meat-free diet every year.
Also, Time magazine
reported that one-quarter of
teenagers say that vegetari-

Sandi
Sam.mon .ON THE SIDE

fresh or frozen
.112 tsp, cinnamon
1/2 cup sugar
2 Tbsp. cornstarch
For the Topping :
1 cup flour
1/2 cup rolled oats
I cup light brown sugar
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
112 cup margarine, cut
into small pieces
Preheat oven to 375• F.
Mix the ingredients for the
fruit mixture together in a
large bowl and toss well.
anism is "in."
Spread evenly into a 9-inch
So it' s more than likely baking dish or pie pan . Mix . .
that you, like me, will have the dry ingredients for the
a vegetarian visitor during · topping together in a medithe holidays. If so, don't um bowl, then cut in the
fret, because there are plen-. margarine pieces. and · mix
ty of meat-free dishes that
will please vegetarians and with a fork or your fingers .
the most discerning of car- until the mixture resembles
nivores alike. By the way, small peas. Spread this topif you have a fervent flesh- ping evenly over the fruit
lover like my husband, mixture and bake for 30 to
don't tell them the dish is 40 minutes, until browned
meat-free uniil they ask for and bubbly. Serve warm .
with a scoop of nondairy
seconds.
vanilla "ice cream."
Make~ 6 servings
Shepherd's Pie

4 medium potatoes, diced
2 Tbsp. margarine ·
V4 cup soy milk or liquid
nondairy creamer
Salt and pepper, to taste
1 medium onion, finely
chopped
1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
12 oz. faux ground
beef-style crumbles
(try
Yves®
Veggie
Ground Round)
10.5-oz. can Franco,American mushroom gravy
(or IV4 cups prepared vegetarian gravy of your
choice)
6-oz. can mixed peas and
carrots, drained
Salt, garlic powd~r. pepper, and cayenne, to taste
Boil potatoes for 20 minutes. or until tender. Drain
and mash with margarine
and soy milk· or nondairy
creamer. Add salt and pepper, to taste. In a medium
pan, saute the onion in the
oil until translucent.
In a medium bowl, mix
the cooked onions, crumbles, mushroom gravy,
peas, can'ots, and spices.
Pour into a pie pan. Top the
crumble mixture with the
potatoes, spreading potatoes to the edges. Bake in a
350•F oven for 30 to 40
minutes, until the potatoes
are browned and the crumble mixture bubbles out the
edges.
I
Makes 4 servings

Bean &amp;
Mushroom
Amandine
2-3 cloves garlic, minced ,
1112 cups white mushrooms, sliced
,
·
. 3 Tbsp. fresh parsley,
minced
11.3 cup pearl onions
1-2 Tbsp. olive oil
112 cup vegetable or faux
chicken broth
, 21/2 cups fresh Frenchcut green beans
11.3 cup white wine
Salt and freshly cracked "
black pepper, to taste
·
112 cup slivered almonds,
toasted.
· In a skillet, saute the gar-··
lie, mushrooms, parsley, ..
and onions in the olive oil .
over medium-low heat for . several minutes until the .,
onions are translucent. Add . .
the broth, green beans, and ,
wine, cover, and simmer ,
for 5 minutes. Remove .
cover, season with salt and
pepper, and continue simmering until the beans rire
tender and the liquid is .
· evaporated. Remove from·
heat, then add a dash of
fresh olive oil and the

Orchard Crumble
3 Bartlett .pears, peeled,
cored, quartered, and
thinly sliced
2 Granny Smith apples,
peeled, cored, quartered,
and thinly sliced
J-112 cups cranberries,

toasted almonds and toss
with the. beans to coat.
Serve warm.
Makes 4 servings
-Recipes_ courtesy of ·
People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals.
PeTA offers ·a toll-free ·
hotline to help with vegetariarz guests. Call I -888- ,
VEG-FOOD - or
visit ·
VeggieVisitors.com on the ·
web.

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Come with me on a 1 . - - - - - . . ,
inhabit "Blessings" for what
steamoat trip down the
seems too short a stay,
Mississippi to visit a lonely ·
Lee Smith, that creator of
old woman living on a beautiwonderful women characters,
ful estate above the Hudson
has produced five more unforRiver, and to Kenya where a
·
gertable
women in "The Last
Beverly
brutal murder has occurred.
Girls." Based loosely on the
In A'nna Qindlen 's most
Gettles - actual . trip down the
recent novel, " Blessings," 80Mississippi when Smith was a
year-oold Lydia Blessing, the
student at Hollins University,
ON THE SIDE
last of her family, lives as a
"The Last Girls" creates a ficrecluse on the beautiful estate.
tional account of the reunion
A young couple drives month stint in the county jail of four of those "girls" on a
down a country road, looking · and recently hired by Mrs. . modem steamboat.
for "Blessings." In darkness Blessing as caretaker for her
In 1965, a dozen girls set
they place a cardboard bOx vas~ la~ns, finds the baby and out in a homemade raft with a
"captain"·
down
the
with their newborn baby dectdes to keep her.
daughter inside on the steps of
Presenting hfe at its begin- Mississippi to New Orleans.
the garag~. they no doubt ning and at its end, this story Thirty-five years later, four of
thmk the bzg house means that is basically about redemption. .them reunite to reminisce and
she wzll be well-cared fot;..i\hd · it will bring both joy and tears. to scatter the ashes of still
happy there. (Wealthy means - Realistic and believeable another rafter. the wild and
happtness, doesn't it?)
• characters and a charming beautiful classmate Margaret
The following morning, ' sense of place allow you to "Baby" Ballou. .
Skip Cuddy, cresh from a 10'
The four primary characters

BY MAX TAWNEY
Author
1
11 ·
· d
t rea Y surpnse ·me that 1
have sold over 100 books
about my world travels, and 1
am still taking orders. In
school, 1 always received A's
in geography. I loved to read
about how people looked and
lived in different part~ of the
world and hoped someday 1
would get to travel an see in
person how they lived.
The day after 1 graduated
from high school, 1 went to
work for Mr. Walls in a photo
studio at Court and Second
Avenue. ,
1 loved to
take photos, develop and
print them. My dad wanted to
~ive me a beautiful 10 acres
. tf 1 .would stay .with him on
the farm. But I said, "No dad,
. I do love you, but 1 am not
getting up at 5 a.m. every
morning to milk .the cows,
feed the horses and ho~s aild
work in the com fields. •
. When I told him that he
cried. 1 loved my dad but I
wanted to make something
else out of myself and f did.
Ten months .after I started
working for Mr. Watts, he
had a heart attack and almost
died. So he told me he would
sell everything in the studio
because he could not work.
I am not going to tell you
what I had to pay him- you
would not believe me.
Anyway, I worked day and
night taking photos, and
developing and printing piclures. I worked until 10 o't II
at ·night. I made a good
amount of money and I had
to hire a good photographer.

His name was Richard following weekend and she
Remmy from . Marietta, and said she would unless someboth of us worked I 0 to 12 thing comes up.
hours a day and this was in
I told her I wanted to be her
the time a dollar was a dollar. only boyfriend. She agreed to
I sure did not go hungry and I try it and see. Well, to make a
was surprised at the money I long story short, we got martook in every day. I took all . ried Dec. 8, 1948. We have
the· school cla~ses in Gallia, been married 54 years. Mabel
Mason and part of Meigs is 84 years old and I will be
County. I sure enjoyed it
89 on Jan. 27,
One day I was taking all the
She was taught how to
school class groups in color 8-by- 10 photos, and
Bidwell and the most beauti-. how to retouch negatives fufteacher came out with her which is hard to do - by my
eighth grade group. I dropped good friend who had a studio
the 5-by-7 film plate that in Pomeroy. Our business
goes in the camera. I was ner- doubled and we had a good
vous. One student was help- sum of money in the bank, so
ing me and I asked him what we decided to take a trip to
her name was. He told me Old Mexico. We both
· Mabel McBride. She · sure enjoyed it so much, we took
· made me nervous. I got her trips ~o foreign countries
,telephone number and called every year.
,
her on Saturday night to ask
Then she decided she did
her if she would go to the not want to travel anynw.re.
show with me. She told me She didn't like leaving home.
_ she was going to""a girl- So I still went to a foreign
friend's house to a party.
country every year by myself
I asked her about next until I traveled to 74 foreign
Saturday and she told me she countries, I learned so much
would call and let me know. I about how other people lived
stayed by the phone for two in other countries that I had
hours that day on the next to write a book I had 50
Saturday -· she did· not call. books printed and my friends
So I called her and she said were laughing at me and said
. she forgot to call me. I said I - you will be lucky to sell eight
could go get her and take her - or I0.
to the show. She said, "I don't
That really depressed me.
know, I will call you back."
So I placed an ad in the
I said, "Please let me come Tribune, and believe it or not,
and get you and take you to I sold every one of those
the show in my new car." She books in four days. I have,
said, "Yes, I would like to · placed two more -orders and
ride in your new car and you they are all gone except six. I
can pick me up at 7:30." That think those will be gone soon.
sure made my blood pressure I am going to order 200 more
go up and we both enjoyed and I only hope I will sell all
the show. I asked to go the of them in time.

I am giving a foreign coin
for e~ery book I sell. I hope
that works. I also invite any·one who wants to see my foreign photos to come to my
jewelry store at 422 Second
Ave. in Gallipolis, and I will
gladly show them to you.
The people who wrote my
. world trips left out a few stories about me alm!JSI losing
my life,_and they told me they
didn't believe what I had
written down . I _said you
don't have to believe them,
but I know the good Lord
was with me many times and
saved my life. Later, I will be
writing ·about those stories
that were not in my book.
(Longtime Gallipolis businessman Max Tawney occasionally submits articles to
the Sunday Times-Sentinel
about his world travels, and
memories of Gallipolis and
Gallia County.)

·..

LOS ANGELES (AP) granddaughter of Pooh illusThe Walt Disney Co. has trator E.H. Shepard deCided
asked a judge to setlle a new to reclaim the international
dispute over its rights to the merchandising and movie
popular Winnie the Pooh rights granted to Disney as
characters.
well as North American
The company filed a merchandising rights given
· request for declaratory judg- · to Stephen Slesinger Inc.,
ment in federal court late and grant all those rights
Tuesday asking a judge to exclusively to Disney startdecide whether an agree- ing in 2004.
ment the company reached
The new deal was reached
one day earlier with the under ttie terms of changes
heirs of the writer and illus- in the copyright law that
trator of the Pooh books is allow the heirs of creators to
valid.
reclaim their rights and
On Monday, Disney said enter new agreements,
the granddaughter of Pooh Disney said .
creator A.A. Milne and the
Attorneys representing the

Slesinger estate challenged
that claim, saying Disney
was misreading the 1998
Sonny Bono Copyright Act.
.Bertram: Fields, an attorney representing SSI ,' said
Disney's claim relies on the
wrong section of the copyright law and was an attempt
to stop paying the Sles.inger
estate royalties in two years.
··Disney and SSI are locked
in a bitter, decade-long dispute over the payment .of
royalties due under a 1961
agreement, which was renegotiated in 1983.

The office of Dr. Craig Matthews of Athens, Ohi0, will host a free educational
seminar on Dental Implants on Tuesday, November 19, from 7:30-9:00PM. The
seminar, "Dental Implant£ &amp; Decisions about Missing Teeth," will be held at the
Ohio University Inn, 331 Richland Avenue, in Athens.

Printed handouts will be available and refreshments will be served. Interested
persons are asked to call (740) 59}3!:483 or (8QO) 923-7329 to make a resfrvation . .

'

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Proctorville ,
South Charleston

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Dr. Matthews is a graduate of the Ohio S!ate University School of Dentistry and the Misch
Impiant Institute at the University of Pittsburgh. He is a Fellow of the International Congress
of Orallmplantologist; a member of the American Society of Osseointegration; tbe American
Dental Association, the Ohio Dental Association, the Academy of General Dentistry, and the
Hocking Valley Dental Society, He has practiced dentistry for 24 years, the last 14 years being
in Athens.
·
For additional information, contact:
Dr. Craig Mat~ws, 530 West Union Street, Athens, Ohio 45.701
·
·
('740) 592·1483 or: (800) 923-7329 .
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(Beverly Gettles is a retired
librarian who lives in
Gallipolis).

Winnie the Pooh the c~nter of legal battle

ihformation on these safe and proven
procedures.

..

out on a dangerous and heartbreaking journey to find her
killers. He disCovers a web of
deceit and treachery' reading
into high places, involving
pharmaceutical companies :
using Africans as guinea pigs
for testing new drugs.
Le Carre, now 71. has a
w.orldwide reputation for the
political thriller and cmoplex
intrigue. Several of his novels
have been made into films,
including
"The
Russia
House;" ''The Tailer of
Panama" and "The Little
Drummer GirL"
These novels are all available at the Bossard Library.
Good reading!

Monon Street
Jackson. IIIIo
140·286·2101

slaalewtdes

cnc

p~.
Point P16118811t

are very different women , make money).
from what they were when 1. And "Baby," the one they
they last met, and also very came to bury, is remembered
different from one another.
for her rebellion and her disreHarriet Holding is a teacher gard of rules and her wildness
who never married, still tenta- and her stealing the only man
tive and hesitant.
Harriet has ever loved .
Courtney Grey married a
Smith presents us with
wealthy mah, has four lovely believable, strong and flawed
children, a "Southern Living" women. Among her other
lifestyle, and she is "so lonely excellent novels are "Fair and
she could die." She has begun Tender Ladies" and "Sav ing
an affair with the florist from Grace." ·
her daughter's wedding and . John Le Carre 's latest, "The
plans to · meet hm in New - Contant Gardener," transports
Orleans at the end of this trip. us to Kenya. Near the birthCatherine Wtlson, a sculp- place of mankind, lovely
tor, is married to Russell (her Tessa Quayle and her driver
third "happy" marriage). She are found murdered in their
feels trapped and smothered Jeep. Missing is her traveling
by his constant attentions. companion, mentor, lover (?),
Anna Todd from West Dr. Arnold Bluhm.
Tessa's husband, Justin
Virginia has become a famous
romance novelist to escape · Quale, of the British High
her own tragedies (and to Commission in Nairobi , sets

Response
to
book
on
world
travels
surprises
author
·-.

lipoet JCtion ald more. Most anes are
ewn released the same day as the
sugary. Qd t--~o~B
\..pllipolis for

Athens
Gallipolis ,
Jackson ·

Sunday, Nove1nber 10, 2002

'

Dr. Matthews will lead a discussion on the advantages of Dental Implants over
dentures and partial dentures. He will explain the process of diagnosis and placement, using a slide presentation to illustrate specific procedural considerations.
Patients of Dr. Matthews' who are Dental Implant recipients will share their experienc~ with the group.
'

Mec!JCJI Excellence.
Local Caring-_

HOLZER

On the·booksheH

New novels deal with redemption, renewing friendships

Veggie visitors?

Baking buddies
bake big with
holiday·goodies·
Cooks of the Week ·

·''

6unba~ lim~ ·6tnttntl

Page (3

[]nibllt
Hours
Mon - Fri 9"6
Sat 9-5

1000 Monon Slreel
Jcl. Sl. Rl. 93 &amp; US 35 • Jackson, OhiO

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J~ Nort~
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�iunba~ limt~ ·ienttntl

Celebrations

·''

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Mr.
LOUISVILLE . Ky.
aNI
Mrs. Lester · ~• Russell of
Karen G. Gaskins and Daniel
New Haven will olmve their 68th
Crompton of Louisv ille were
wedling anniven;my Saturday.
married Sept. 21. 2002, at the
Heart of Gold Chapel in
The couple was married on
Gat Iin burg. T~nn .
Nov. 16, 1934 in Clifton,
Gaskin&gt;' i·s the daughter of·
W.Va., by the Rev. Gerhart.
the late James "Hap"· Gaskins
Mr. and Mrs. Russell . have
and hi s wife Liz Gaskins of
two children, a daughter, Betty
Point Pleasant.
Reid whose husband is Paul, of
Crompton is the son of
Westerville; and &lt;\ son, John
Jerry and Vergie Crompton of
Russell whose wife is Janice, of
Louisvi lle.
.
Parum,
Okla. They have seven
Rober1 W Gaskins, brother of
grandchildren, 16 great-grandthe bride. esconed her down 'the ·
children,
three great-great
aisle. There; a White was the
grandchildren,
foilr step grandmatron of honor and Sharon
children,
and
two great-great
Cox was the bridesmaid.
Mr. 8r ~rs. Daniel Crompton
step gmndchildren.
The best man was Gene
Point
Pleasant
attended
the
Clifford.
Amanda and Ky Gaskins · wedding with a few other
. were flower · girls. The y fa mily members and friends.
The couple honeymooned
placed a rose on the pew in
i11
Tennessee and North
honor of thei r father who
BIDWELL, Ohio - Fred
Carolina. They now reside in
passed away.
and Joy Stinson of Bidwell
Liz ami Laura Gaskins of Louisville.
will be celeberbrate their 40
wedding anniversary Sunday,
Nov. 10.
They ·are the parents of
Robin Pasquale of Kanauga
and Tammy Hudson of
CHARLOTTE. N.C.
Bidwell. They are the. grandMrs. Bcthanie Ann Hawks
parents
of four grandchiland Andrew David James
dren.
Suter were ·un ited in marriage ·
on Saturday, September 28.
2002 at five o'clock in the
evening. The Reverend Harry ·
Griffin officiated the outdoor
ceremony at The Ballantyne
Country- 'Cl ub in Charlotte,
N.C. The reception followed
inside the Country Club.
The bride is the. daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William Hawks of
Vinton, Ohio. She is the
grandaug hter of Christine
Hawks and the late Edgar
Hawks and the late Mr. and
Mr. &amp; Mrs. David Suter
Mrs. Don Wolford, all of
· • Vinton, OH. Rethimie Is a grad- Palace.
. Matron of Honor was Mrs,
uate of Buckeye Hi Us Career
Center and ·Circlevi lle Bible Deana Brown, sister of the
College. She resides in bride, of Bidwell, Ohio.
Charlotte, NC Where.she works Kearsten Hawks, niece of the
as a Real Estate agent and bride, was the flower girl.
works in propeny management. Best man was ian Corfei ld,
The groom is the son of Mr, best friend of the groom,
and Mrs. Alan Suter, Wales from England, now residing
U.K. Andrew received hi s in Charlotte. Dakota Hawks
bachelor of science in sports. and Ryan Hawks, nephews of
and works as a civi l engtneer. the bride, served as ring bearHe se rved in the Bri ti sh ers. Following their trip . to
Army Parach ute Regi ment Charleston, S.C., Andrew and
and is a mem ber of the Welsh Bethanie will reside in
Guards for Buckingham Charlotte, N.C.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lester Ruuon

Stinson 40th

Suter-Hawks·

.

•'

~

:·••

-..

The Police, The
Clash, Elvis
·costello will join _.:
the Rock and
~·.
Roll Hall of Fanle·

Russell 68th

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Fred .Sttnoon

NEW YORK (AP) Three British exports from
rock's "new wave" of the
late 1970s - The Police,
The Clash and Elvis
Costel lo and the Attractions
- will join the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame next year.
They'll be inducted along
wi th
the
Righteous
Brothers, blue -eyed soul
singers of "You ' ve Lost
That Lovin' Feelin ' ," and
Australian hard rockers
AC/DC.
The I ath annual Hall of
Fame induction ceremony
will be held March 10 in
New York and televised
later on VH I.
The Police's relati~ely
short career included hits
such as "Roxanne" and
"Every Breath You Take."
L~ad singer Sting maintains
•an active solo career.
The politically charged
quartet The Clash broke in
as punk rockers and expanded their sound to take in reggae and urban influences.
Their biggest radio hit was
"Rock the Casbah."
. Costello, a prolitic genrehopper with hits such as
"Aitson;" "Pump it Up" and
"Veroni ca," led the · tight

trio, the Attractions, f&lt;.if.
more than a decade. He still
· performs with two of it~
members, keyboardtst Stev!i
Nieve and drummer Pett;
Thomas.
. ~·
The Righteous Brother~
. were Southern California
crooners Bill Medley arid
Bobby Hattield, who also
sang the hits " Unchained
Melody" and "( You'~e M}'J
Soul and Inspimtion." .. !
The bone-crunchi'ni( riffs
of Angus and Malcolm
Young lead AC/DC, who
arc still active. The 1980 hit
~' You Shook Me All Night
Long" is a band highlight. · ,
As is often the case with
the rock hall, the ceremoriy&gt;
has the potential for some
tense reunions in tuxedo:;o
Costello
feuds
witb
Attractions bassist Bruce
Thomas , and both The
Police and The · Clash had
acrimonious breakups.
_
Earlier this year, Talking
Heads re-formed to perform
at their rock hall inductiO:O
after years of bitterness: _.
Additional inductees ~
the "sidemen" and lnonpeP
former categories will be
announced later.
~

.•

drt!i!{,?""f-'[t"r&gt;'~·,

....

'~.

""" ., •:Ji'!:i'

·ti
&lt;

LeHermah:'s·'Late : ;.
Show; will be aired ·
'. big~city radtci stati~_ ....
.'

~-

•J;.;r•,;;J i!!~

NEW YORK

·~'LetteTII).a n

fans

En-gagements
Thomas~ Rykowski
VINTON , Ohio - Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Thomas of Vinton
announce the the engagement
and upcoming marriage of
' their daughter, Tamara Dawn
to-Aaron Stephen Ryk~sk i ,
son of Mr and Mrs ·steve
Rykowski of Rayland, Ol1io.
The bride-to-he is a 1998
graduate of Ri ver Valley High
Schoo l and a 2003 grad uate of
the University of Rio Grande
wit h a bachelor of science
degree in psychology and a
associate 's degree in sociology. She is employed as a case
manager
at
Woodland
Centers, Jackson, Ohio.
Her fiance. is i1 1999 grad uate of St. John-Ce'ntral High
Schoo l. Bellarre . He is a

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Aaron Rykowokl &amp; Tamara ·T homlo

senior at the University of
Rio Grande and will complete · a. bachelor of science
degree in accounting in
December. He is employed at
Oak Hill Bank.
A Jan . II wedding is
planned.

Drake-Blackwood
RAC INE, Ohio- Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Drake of
Racine announce the engagement or their daughter,
Ch risty Dawn Drake, to Jay
Anthony Blackwood,. son of
Mr. and
Mrs . Lloyd
Blackwood of Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 1996
graduate of Eastern Hi gh
Schoo l and a 2002 graduate
of the Univers ity of Rio
Grande with a bachelor 's
degree in education. She is ·
emplo yed by the AthensMeigs Educational ·Service
Center Head Start program .
Her fiance is a llJ90 gradu Chrloty Drake &amp; jay Blackwood
ate nf. Easte rn High Schoo,l
An open church wedding is
and a llJ91 ·graduate of
Nashville
Auto
Diesel planned .for 2:30 p.m. on
Coll ege. He is employed by, Nov. 30 at Sacred · Heat!
Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
Eramet Mcwls in Marietta.

Health and

Sunday, November 10, 2002

Rock n Roll

Anniversaries

Weddings

Page C4

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Page CS
Sund•y. November 1o. 1002

Scientists: Tobacco causes more types Getting a flu shot is
serious business
of cancer than previously thought
COLUMBUS - An inter- tobacco-related
illnesses impact on health by organ
·. national team of. scientists world-wide.
site."
reviewing all ·significant
"The amount of infonnaScientists have known for a
studies on tobacco and cancer lion was almost overwhelm- long . time · that cigarette
over the/ast 16 years has ing," says Stoner. "Basically, smoking causes cancer of the
conclude that smoking is . we looked at every publica- lun~, pharynx, larynx, oral
related to even more types of tion since 1986, the date of cavtty, esophagus, pancreas,
cancer than prevmusly the previous IARC mono- bladder and kidney. "But the
believed.
.
graph on smoking. There exciting thing is that we have
Dr. Gary Stoner, an expert must have been thousands Of now uncovered enough eviin cancer prevention and con- them."
dence to show it's also relattrol at The Ohio State
Stoner's part of the analysis ed to stomach, liver and cerl)niversity Comprehensive focuses on animal studies. vical cancer, as well as
Cancer Center, was one of 29 "We examined only studies myeloid leukemia," · says
scientists from 12 countries where animals were directly .Stoner.
'
lnvited by the International exposed to tobacco smoke,
The panel discovered no
Agency for Research in · either directly (mainstream) evidence linking smoking to
Cancer to analyze reams of or to smoke inside a chamber breast, ute_rine, or prostate
reports about the use of (second-hand or environmen- cancer.
tobacco and the incidence of tal exposure). We tallied the . Cigarette use is at an all-

time low in the United States
at the moment - only 22 percent call themselves smokers,
and Stoner attributes that, in
part, to the visibility of so
many anti-smoking campaigns and the high cost of
· cigarettes.
Still, he points out that
smoking amons youths is on
the increase, w1th some studies showing as many as 34
percent of young men and
. women acknowledging they
light up .
"The :bottom line is that
clinicians are going to be
busy treating tobacco related
diseases for years to come,"
Stoner said.

OSU researchers begin clinical trial on cancer vaccine
COLUMBUS
Researchers at The Ohio
State
University
Comprehensive
Cancer
Center have opened a phase I
clinical trial to study a newly
· developed vaccine designed
to prevent breast and ovarian
cancer, or other cancers that
express the · HER-2 growth

Lung cancer
treatment
guidelines
published
COLUMBUS - Patients
dealing with lung cancer now
have a new tool to help them
in their fight. The Arthur G.
James Cancer Hospital and
Richard J. Solove Research
Institute, along with The
National
Comprehensive
Cancer Network and the
American Cancer Society,
announce publication of the·
new Lung Cancer Treatment
Guidelines for Patients.
· The American Cancer
Society produced the Lung
Cancer Treatment Guidelines
for Patients by translating the
NCCN's Clinical Practice
Guidelines,
originally
designed for oncologists,
into reliable, specific, easyto-understand materials for
patients with lung cancer,
their families and their caregivers. Among the topics
covered are: types of lung
cancer,- tests and exams,
types of treatment, clinical
trials information and a helpful glossary of lung cancer
terms.
· Ac.cording to the American
Cancer Society, there will be
nearly 170,000 new cases of
lung cancer this year.
Smoking is the main risk factor for the disease. Lung can. •' · ·cer is the leading cause of
cancer death in the United
States, and more people die
qf lung cancer than of colon,
~east · and prostate cancers
combined.
The
Lung
Cancer
Treatment Gui~elines for
Patients are part of a larger
informational series of booklets. Other guideline topics
include nausea and vomiting,
fever and neutropenia, · cancer-related fatigue and can:
cer. pain.
.
Other items in the senes
provide information on cancer of the prostrate, bre&lt;!st,
ovaries, colon and rectum.
These materials are free
from NCCN's Web site at
www.nccn .org and by calling
NCCN toll-free at 1-888909-NCCN - or on the
American Cancer Society's
Web site at www.cancer.org
or by calling 1-800-ACS2345.

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.

factor.
"If this ·vaccine proves to
be effective in clinical trials,
what we would have is a vaccine that could be used for
patients who are genetically
predisposed or have a family
history of cancer. They could
actually be given a vaccine
before ever developing a

tumor," said . Dr, Pravin patients not only tolerated the
Kaumaya,
a • cancer experimental drug, but develresearcher
at
the oped an immune response to
Comprehensive
Cancer lt, encouraging researchers to
Center and principal investi- refine .the vaccine approach
and launch an entirely new
gator/sponsor 9f the trial.
The trial builds upon unex- study.
pected findings from a phase
A $656,000 grant fr9m the
I trial of a similar vaccine National Cancer Institute will
two years ago in which fund the trial.

COLUMBUS -Flu is a
serious illness.
According to the Centers
for Di sease Control and
Prevention, it is estimated
that approximately ten to
twenty percent of U.S . res. idents get the flu annually,
and of those who get the
flu 1]4,000 are hospitalized for flu-related complications. An estimated
20,000 people in the U.S .
wili die this year from flu
complications.
The Ohio Academy of
Family Physicians recommends all adults age 50
and over receive a tlu shot.
tn addition, )'OU shou ld
receive the flu sh'?l if you
have a long-term health
problem such as: heart ,
lung or kidney di sease,
asthma, HIV/AIDS , diabetes, anemia, sickle ce II
and other blood disorders,
cancer or history of cancer.
Peak flu season is
January through March. In
order to have the best protection you need to get
your .flu .shot after midOctober.
There are many myths
about the flu shot. One

myth is that flu shots cause
the flu. Wrong . The
licensed flu vacci ne used
in · the U:S. is made from
killed flu viruses . It cannot
cause the flu. People who
have gmten a fl u shot may
then get sick from a different virus that causes respi.
ratory illness, .but is · misflu .
taken
for
the
Protection from the vaccine is not I00 perce nt.
Accordin g to the CDC ,
studies of healthy young
adults have shown flu vaccines to the 70 to 90 percent effective in 'preventing the tlu .
It is also important to
remember that flu viruses
are constantly changing,
therefore ; the vaccine is
changed every year and
patient s need a new tlu
shot each year. Visit' your
family physician to receive
you flu shot and have a
healthier winter. Or, call
the flu shot hot line at I888-202'-13 19 for locations and times of immunizations in.your area .

.,.

. Submitted by rhe Ohio
Academy
of
Family
Physicians.

•

•

~mmitment to family and job can be both rew~rding and
there are only 24 hours iri each day.
'

s why Elaine uses
,.,., .;.,~;~Bill

Pay with Peoples Bank.

-r

,•
l , \
'

'

WE'RE NOT JUST PEOPLE WORKING AT A BANK WE 'RE PEOPLE JUST LIKE YOU WORKING AT A BANK
Free Bill Pay from Peopl~s Bimk gives Elaine the convenience and security to pay bills and manage her finances from home:
It's easy because all she needs is an internet connection and a computer to access her accounts 24- hours a day. She has no
monthly fee and can pay all her bills by the dick of a mouse. No more checks to write, stamps to lick , return addresses to
fill out. And with all the time she is saving, she can spend her time doing the things she loves-like spending time with her
family. Elaine knew that Peoples Bank would be on the leading edge of providing banking to fit her busy lifestyle. That 's
because Elaine works at Peoples.

,.
When you app~oach banking like .you'd want it to b~ done, you come up with a lot more than just a bank. Because life
,..

deman'ds more than merely checks and deposirs . How do we know what kinds of things matter and can help the most '
Because the people who work here are no different than rh~ people who don't.

•

Every Bank Has Assets. We Named Ours After The Most Important One.

'.
1-800-37 4-6 1 23

www.peoplesbancorp.com

MORE LOCAL
.FOLKS.
"

-.

(]ISH Ne twork M.llo.•\ It Simple

CONSUMER/COMMERCIAL/INSURANCE/INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT/TRUSTS/FINANCIAL PLANNING /RETIREMENT PLANS

,

I
- t

�Page C&amp;- 6Dnllap

CtwaH ·6eatinel

Sunday, November 1

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Blues guitarist returns to play in Pomeroy

Confronting stepdad's abuse
still necessary years later

:I

,,

·'
ol

.i l

·ij
I

•' '

.

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DEAR ABBY: Three years
next-to-oldest
ago,· my
daughter became angry with
me and said, in front of my
husband, "George" (her stepfather), that he had sexually
abused her when slie was
small. I was furious that she
would accuse ·him of anything like that. I thought she ·
ADVICE
said it to get back at me.
Well , I have recently found
One night I woke to hear
out that what she said was
true! George also abused my my o.ldest son, who was 7
.oldest daughter. They ar¢ years old, sobbing his hean
now 34 and 36, and say they out. After calming him , 1
have forgiven him because he asked what was wrong. He
was drin\&lt;ing . during those replied, "Mommy, how come
nobody cried when Aunt Lois
years.
Abby. I feel terrible for my died?"
Sometime later, my daughdaughters. _t have been married to George for 31 years ters, 4 and 5, ended a converand would never have · sation in their' bedroom and
believed this in my wildest came into the kitchen. They
dreams! I'm sick about it and told me they figured out why
don't know what to do. My God had let Aunt Loi s die:
daughters have a good rela- God needed someone . in
tionship with George now. I heaven to take care 9f the
don't even want to look at babies until they were born.
' him. Should I confront him? I
.1 learned some j mportant
don't know what good it lessons that year - from my
would do now. Please help. . children. - PATRICIA IN
- FEELING NUMB IN OCEANSIDE, CALIF.
INDIANA
DEAR PATRICIA: From
DEAR
FEELING the mouths of babes ...
NUMB: What George did is Children sometimes exhibit a
unforgivable. By all means level of emotional honesty
confront your. child-molest, and genuineness from which
ing husband, but not until you adults can learn. It is imporhave first discussed ihis with tant for children to undera counselor and received stand that adults have honest
some emotional support. A~ emotions and that showing
your daughters to accompany sadn'&lt;ss is not inappropriate.
you in case they have any failing to express these kinds
unresolved issues having to of feelings can cause probdo with the abuse.
Since George has proven lems in later life. Books have .
he can't ·be trusted around been written on childhood
children, he belongs ori a list grieving and are available in
of sexual offenders so he can- bookstores and in local ·
not molest other· children libraries.
Thank you for sharing the
with whom he might come in
important
lesson you learned
contact. And that includes
from
your
-.hildren.
grandchildren. Please don't
DEAR
READERS:
w&lt;Vt.
DEAR ABBY; My sister- Children under I0 years old
·
in-law, Lois, was a loving will love this:
Q:
What
''is
stranger
than
person, especially to children. At any family gather- seeing a catfish?
A: Seeing a goldfish bowl.
ing, Lois could be found in a
Dear Abby is written by
corner with the kids, reading
stories, playing games or just Abigail Van Buren, also
talking with them . When she known as Jeanne Phillips.
died, it was hard on all of us. and was founded by her
We tried to protect the kids mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dei1r
Abby
at
by not crying in front of Write
them. Sometimes I'd have to www.,DearAbby.com or PO.
run to the bathroom to hide Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
my tears.
9()()69.•

·Abby

Staff WrHer
POMEROY - Rock and
blues
mus1c1an
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 1he
Grille. Grille owner Jackie .
Welker has pulled in other
. big names to his stage like
Jimmy Thackery, Joanna
·Connor, Eddy "The Chief'
Joe Bonamassa
Clearwater and Jonha
Kaukonen.
"I
talked
to
him fans who soakedfup every
(Bonamassa) about perform- last drop of his 90-trtinute
ing at next year's Big Bend performance.
Blues Bash, and he said he'd
The 25-year-old guitar virlove to. Now. it's just a mat- tuoso/singer/songwriter had
ter of coordinating sched- just ·gotten back from doing
ules."
' 23 shows in 25 days, the last
The concert was sold out · with Greg Allman.
and the room was filled to
"The first show I ever saw
the rafters with cheering was when I was 6 years old

•

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.

'

Page Dl
Sunday, November 10, 2002

'

'Everything has a place.'

The kitchen of Bill and Carolyn Casey will be decorated in a traditional style. Carolyn said. Vine wreaths, pine
boughs and a christmas tree will be on display. (Millissia Russell photos)

·1.

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. ....

,

•

HOME AND GARDEN WRITER

The recliner
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"Anytime minutes are like calories:
nobody wants to count them."
...

the third in the "Silence of the
Laml;ls" series, raked in $17.6
million the same W(lekend.
Critics · have
savaged
"Swept Away," in which
Madonna plays a spoiled
socialite whO goes on a
Mediterranean cruise and
becomes stranded on a deserted island with ·a sailor she'd
tormented on board.
The Associated Press called
it a "cinematic shipwreck"
and said it "completely lacks
the imagination and spark oC
(Ritchie's) two prev1ous
films."

In an effort to provide our
readership with current
news, the Sunday TimesSentinel encourages submission of weddings, anniversaries, birthdays, club meetings and reunions as soon as
possible following the date
of the event.
·
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To assist in accuracy, we
suggeSt items be typed double-spaced or neatfy printed.
For your convenience, you
can e-mail your materials to:

Classifiect ads, Pages 04-6

•

'Swept Away' won't
be·released in Britian
LONDON (AP) - The
movie "Swept Away" has
been swept aside .in a nation
that likes to think of its star.
Madonna, as one of its own.
The singer's latest film,
directed by her British husband, Guy Ritchie, won't
screen at theaters in Britain
because it flopped so badly
across the Atlantic, its distrib-.
utor said Friday.
"Following the disappointing box office results in the
U.S., Guy Ritchie's 'Swept
Away ' will not be released
theatrically in . the U.K.,"
Columbia Tristar said in a
statement.
The film , a remake of a
1974 Italian movie of the
same name, had been scheduled to open in theaters in
March. but instead will go
straight to video, the company
said.
The movie bombed on its
release in America last month,
taki.ng in $375,000 at 196 theaters on iIs tirst weekend, an
average of $1 ,913 per theater.
· By cmllrast, "Red Dragon,"

Inside:

31!d it was Greg Allman and guy," ' Bonamassa said. "He
the Allman Brothers Band," was way more generous than
Bonamassa said. "So for me he should be."
to now be up on Stajle playBonamassa is from and
ing with him, it's hke I've still lives in New York City
come full circle."
and plans to tour non-stop
Bonamassa got hi s first for the next nine months. ·
break on the television show
"I forget what my house
Prime Time Live when he looks like," he laughed.
was just twelve years old. "You know you've beeii
Withm ~5 minutes ,of his gone too long when you
performance
he
had want to · start remodeling
Columbia Records knocking your house like a Holiday.
on his door, a short time later Inn Express so you feel
Epic Records followed.
more at home ."
He has been performing
Bonamassa
recently
professionally for 13 years ·
his
new
CD
"So It's
released
and was tutored through
Like
That"
which
is
tlyirtg
most of his school career.
This young dynamo has off the shelves. The maturshared ·the stage with living ing musician shows his listener that his songwr;iting
l~gend s like B.B. King,
ability
matches his impresc
George Thorogood, Lynyrd
sive
instrumental
technique:
Skynyrd and Bad Company.
B.B. King said about · What would his fans be
Bonamassa's raw talent, surprised · to know about
"He's one of a kind -·· &lt;'leg- him?
"I'm a Republican," he
end before his time."
smiled.
"B.B. King is a super nice

BY KRIS SeOUTEN

Dear

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Face it, ladies. We. all have that one piece of furniture
in our homes that we either can't face· getting rid of, or, .
like the proverbial bad penny, just keeps coming back.
Mine is the recliner - that big, brown velveteenlooking hunk of wood and metal that serves no purpose
other than to keep my boyfriend from doing those all-·
important honey-do's that should be his number one priority.
'
Why 'should he do dishes or laundry when he can sit
in the recliner and watch 14 continuous hours of Sports
Center?
"It's broken in just right," he says.
Broken in is right.
Apparently there's nothing better than coming over to
my house, flipping on the huge 200-inch, big Screeri'
Jumbotron television and falling asleep to the lulling
sounds of power tools on Junkyard Wars.
·
·
Maybe it's because it's the first thing I see when I
open the door everyday. Maybe it's because that thing is
not only older than dirt, but the color of dirt, and it
matches nothing .else in my house. I don't know.
Either· way, I realize that this is something that I will
either have to learn to live with, or take some harsh, ·
immediate action - a trip to the dump.
Apparently, "dump" is .one of those four-letter words
that should not be mention- ' in the same S!!ntence as
"recliner." One would think that I was talking about taking his truck to the scrap heap or his dog to the pound.
There are other chairs in the world. I'm sure of it.
Granted, I'm young and poor and don't have -the
resources to go out and buy the $2,000 recliner of his
dreams with the massaging bun warmers and sub-zero
beer cooler, so maybe I'm stuck with this pre-historic
piece of foam . ·
·
I have, however, compromised.

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BY MtLLISStA RUSSELL

Home and Garden
ALLIPOLIS - .To say that Gilllipolis residents Bill and Carolyn Casey are fanatical
about Christmas would be an understatement. And being a stop on the French An
Colony's Holiday Tour of Home s this year
means the couple is going "all out" even
more than usuaL
"When she turns on the big Christmas tree in the
front room, you don't need the furnace," Bill jokes.
'The air conditioner kicks right on 1"
And !hey don ' t need to turn on any other li~ht s in the
house . "You have to sit in there with a pa1r of sun·
glasses!"
It's obvious that the Caseys take their Christmas
decorating seriously, and after almost 33 years,
Carolyn has it down to an art.
"Everythin g has a pi;Ice, and when Christmas is
over, it goes back in its original box :" she said.
"It takes three days to get the ornaments out and
sorted," Carolyn added. "And it take s four days just to
decorate the tree in the front room."
Ea&lt;.:h room has a different theme, starting with the
aforementioned front room which features the largest
of the ·home's five Christmas trees.
. Thi s tree is adorned with Carolyn's growing collection of crystal ornamentS i Egyptian perfume bottles,
. and many one-of-a-kind pieces.
The Caseys allow their grandchildren to decorate
The tree also will hold ornaments handmade by her
a tree each year. This tree is located. in the office
children and grandchildren , as well as many that have
area of the home and contains over 1,500 lights.
been passed down to her by her, and her husband's, ·
?~;---:-"L---:-;::------"1 mother and grandmothThe outside
'{1
. ' er.
of the
There will be more
than I ,800 white lights
Casey home
· will be
on the tree. So many.
' Carolyn said, it almost
decorated
doesn' t need ornaments.
with blue
The Santa Room ,
and white
which
also is known as
lights. The
the
sittin
g room the
founta in will
remaining
I0 months of
be put away
the year, is located ju st
for the
off
the kitchen and is
winter
·
t:illed
with doze ns of
mohths ,
Santa
co llectibles,
but will be
;including several of
replaced
Carolyn's prized ceram with reinic Pipka Santas, and
deer and ·
Bill 's collection of Ohio
D)her
State and Cle ve land
Christmas
Browns Santas.
decorations.
Please
see Decor, Dl
.

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Page 02 • 6ua,ap

Cll•e• -6ewthul

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POMEROY - Where do
you store your pesticides?
Both homeowners and
farmers need to take care in
storing pesticides (herbicides, insecticides. miticides
and fungicides) overwinter.
Carefully read the label panel
on the pesticide . container
that contains the storage
GUEST VIEW
information . Most pesticides
need to be protected from
doubt of the telephone solicitemperature ex tremes (too,
tation, ask for the assigned
hot or too. cold) to keep the ODA registration number. If
potency of the chemicals they are uncooperative, just
involved. Freezing tempera- hang up and feel lucky you
t ures may cause the individ- have saved yourself hundreds
ual ingredients in the pesti- .of dollars. For further inforcides to separate, thus caus- mation following a solicitaing the next trse of the pesti- tion, call the Department of
cide to be ineffective or haz- Pesticide Regulation at (800)
ardous due to usi ng too much 282- 1955. .
.
of the active ingredient.
•
•
•
Aerosol cans need to be
Are you interested in aquastored away from extreme culture (fish farming)? Do
temperatures due to being you have a building that may .
under pressure.
be converted into an indoor
Check the expiration date fish farm? This is your
of the pesticide. Some older chance to attend the 2002
pesticides may deacti vate in Ohio
~
Aquaculture
time . thus m ~king them Association Annual Meeting
harm less for the pests you are on November 15 and 16 at
auempting to get rid of. The the
Ramada
Inn
&amp;
preferred method of handling Conference Center in Lima.
pesticides is to buy only what The first dats events include
you will be needing in the classes on 'Culturing .Fish in
current year. Store the pesti - Ponds,"
"Re-circulation
cides where the temperatures System Basics," and a bus
stay above freezing and ride to the "Western Ohio
below 80 degrees F. The Aquaculture Farms Tours ."
building should be well lit, The annual banquet and
vented and have wash facili- informal gathering will be
ties. If possi ble, the building held Friday night. Saturday 's
should be away from . your events include a satellite
home, eating areas and live- workshop
designed
to
stock. Remember, if you explore the pros an&lt;! cons of
have employees you need the converting existing agriculMaterial Safety Data Sheets tural buit&lt;lings into fish facil(MSDS) available and com- ities. Conversions include
ply with Worker Protection "Converting a Hog Barn into
Siandards. For more informa- a Trout Culture, " "Convening
tion contact the Meigs a Poultry Building into ·
County Extension Office at Aquaculture Use," "Raising
and Selling Fish Using a
992-6696.
System" and ·
Recirculating
•••
Caveat emptor! Let the "Case Studies of Converting
Buildings
for
buyer beware! Once again Existing
Aquaculture
Use."
Fees
are
our area farmers are being
· targeted with telephone solic- $90 per person on Friday and
itations by dealers selling $20 per person for Saturday.
unregistered weed killer pes- For re$istration, call Laura
ticides. Many of'the pesti- Tiu wtth the Aquaculture
cides offered are premixed or Program · at Ohio State
diluted. This means you are University Extension South
paying freight on a lot of Centers at 289-2071.
Hal Kneen is the Meigs
water. All pesticides sold in
·County
Agriculture
&amp;
Ohio must be pre-registered
with the Ohio Department of Nawral Resources Agent,
State
University
Agriculture,
Pesticide Ohio
Extension.
Re gulation Division. If in

Hal
Kneen

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Tip of the week: Keep
·cutting tools sharp

..

(AP) - Here's a safelY tip.
If you love to tinker witfi" cutting tools, there is s.oniething
you should know about them .
They work best when they
are as sharp as they ca·n possibl y be. A dull power-saw
blade has a tendency to bind
and ca n cause the saw to
jump backward over some of
yo ur prec io us body parts.
Unusual pressure must be

exerted to make a dull wood
chisel cut properly. This type
of pressure makes it dangerous for al)yone standing close .
by. A dull drill bit can start a
fire and bum out your drill
motor. To keep your cutting
·tools sharp, effective and
· safe, look in the Yellow
Pages under "tool repair" or
"sharpening."

·oecor

sai&lt;l. smiling.
The Casey's 2-year-old
twins also have a tree 6f
from Page 01
their own in the office,
located at the rear of the
The room also will feature home.
some new ite ms this year,
That tree will be decoratincluding " Santas of the . ed with Veggie Tale,
World" mercury glass orna- Winnie-The-Pooh and teddy
ment s, and a 4-foot tall , bear ornaments, . and will
beau tifull y crafted Santa
hold more than 1,000 ·
Claus wi th a lighted tree and .
Christmas
lights.
flowin g ve lvet and fur coat.
Carolyn al so will be di s" I've waited a year-and-ahalf for that," Carolyn said. play ing her extensive fig· "Bil l finally found it for me, urifle collection and a cdla nd it ' s ju st beautiful." . . lection of both ·white and
The kitchen will be deco- African American angels.
rated in a "traditionally eleThe outside of the Caseys'
. gan t'' theme, with country· he me is meticuloustx land:
style items that include vine sca ped and also will be decgarlands an d candles.
All of Carolyn's I 02 orated, probably with all
Longaberger baskets also blue lights, Bill explained.
.J'he Caseys home is locat·
wi ll be feat ured throug hout
ed
at 134 Bulaville Pike and
the home .
Bill wj ll be decorating the will be available to tour
bathroom and what he calls between 6 and I 0 p.m.
the "Man Tree," located in a Friday, Dtlc . 6, and 1 to 4
spare bedroom .
p.m. Saturday, Dec . 7.
" I also call it the
Tickets for the Holiday
'Nostalgia Tree' beca use I Tour of Homes can be pur- ·
put lots of ornaments on it
representing the
Three c hased at the French Art
Stooges, Betty Boop a nd Colony for $10 in· advance
or $12 at the door.
other characters.
The tour is co-sponsored
" He decorates it afl, and it
looks really good," Carolyn by Farmer's Bank.

Drinking tea could be good for people with diabetes. There is evidence
from testing on rat cells that suggests
drinking tea might boost insulin activity. That would be good news for the 17
mill ion Americans with diabetes, as
well as the estimated 16 million who
have pre-diabetes, or "impaired glucose tolerance." ·
With Type II diabetes, the body loses
the ability to make enough insulin or
effectively use the insulin that it does
make. This allows glucose to build up
in the blood, and that's something· you
definitely don ' t want. Over time, high
blood sugar can endanger your eyes,
kidneys, blood vessels, heart and limbs.
In a study published in the Journal of
Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
researchers tested tea's effect on fat ·
cells frof" rats . Farcells are sensitive to
insulin , so they make good testi ng
materiaL The researchers mixed sugar,
insulin and various tea extracts into the
cells and watched what happened.

Becky
Collins
GUEST VIEW
Ther found that plain old black tea,
as well as green and oolong teas, boost,
ed insulin activity as much as 15 times
for up to six hours. Both caffeinated
and decaffeinated teas had the same
effect. However, adding milk, soy milk
o.r non-dairy creamer decreased that
boost in insulin activity significantly.
Lemon juice had no effect.
The reseru;chers have not tested tea's
effects in humans, but they have identified the components that seem to have
the most impact. An antioxidant called

Improving heater's efficiency

in front of the TV, so a whole
Farm Bureau writer
new era of dining culture
began. No longer was the .
kitchen or dining room table
The TV dinner. An article the only place where food
by Keith Wagner in the 2003 was served in the home.
.
Old Farmer's Almanac
· The ftrst turkey TV dinners
explains the origin of the TV
dinner, "The Far-Out Idea sold for 98 cents to $1.29.
Sales got off to a slow ·start
that Fed a Nation."
the ftrst year, but in 1953, 10
The TV dinner got its start
because of a product surplus. million . were sold. Fried
C.A. Swanson &amp; Sons of chicken, pot roast and fish
· Omaha, Neb., had too many soon became entrees.
Today, fast food and conveturkeys and leased I 0 refrigerated boxcars to hold all the nience foods are under attack.
meat. The refrigeration units Cover stories in newsonly worked when the cars magazines ·blame low cost,
were in motion so trains had abundant, convenient food
to keep hauling them between for making us fat. Critics fail
to recognize, however, that all
Omaha and the East.
this
convenience in meal
Determined to put an end.to
preparation
allowed for
the problem, the Swanson
brothers told their sales staff women to get out of the
to find a new market for house and enter the workturkey. Up until that time, force. No longer were they
most turkey meat was sold tied to the kitchen.
Fast, convenient food is
around Thanksgiving.
here
to stay and Americans
Gerry Thomas came up
have
more options than ever
with the idea for serving a
complete turkey dinner in one in making healthy choices.
(Jill Smith is organizational
package. Thomas 'sketched
director
for the Athens"
out the tray design with its
Farm
separate food compartments Lawrence-Cal/ia
Bureau.}
·
and got help with the menu.
At ftrst, it included sliced
turkey, corn bread dressing
and gravy, sweet potatoes and ·
.bu tiered peas. But after a .
year, the turkey TV dinner
was changed to white-bread
dressing and white mashed
potat1Jes. Cranberry sauce
and a fourth compartment to
hold it were added to the tray
in 1960.
. According to Wagner, one
o f the keys to the frozen TV
dinner was that each item in
the tray was blanched at a different rate so 'that when the
dinner was finally cooked to
eat, the entire meat was ready
at the same time.
Thomas, who would later
be inducted into the ' Frozen
Food Hall of . Fame, told
Wagner, a writer about popular culture, that he came up
with the name because television sets were a new thing in
American living rooms. The
packaging for the dinner was
even designed to resemble a
co~so!e televi sion.
, Many Americans assumed
TV dinners were to be eaten
BY JILl SMITH

epigallocatechin gallate seemed to
boost insulin activity the most, and it is ·
found in all three types of tea. In black
tea, tannins, theatlavins and other compounds also joined the effqrt.
· Herbal teas - which aren't true teas
at all because they don't come from the . :
tea plant Camellia senensis - had no
effect on insulin activity. The vast
majority of instant teas also had no
effect, and neither &lt;lid commercially
prepared iced teas.
This study adds to evidence gathered
over the pasi 20 years in which scientists have uncovered numerous health
benefits associated with antioxidants in ·
tea. Studies suggest tea can have positive effects on atherosclerosis, high
blood pressure, infectious diseases and
immune response.
· (Becky Collins is 9allia County's
Extension agent for famly and consumer sciences/community develop..
ment, Ohio State University.)

I

Q. Gertrude asks: Is there
something I can do to im pro ve the efficiency of my
water heater? It seems like the
hi gher my l!tility bill goes, the
longer it takes for me to get
hot water.
A . There are several things
that you can do to improve
the performance and longevity of a water heater. That
your utility bill is high , and
that you arc having trouble
ma)ntammg ho t. water, are no
doubt related.
First, it's a good idea to
drain the water heater at least
once annually - twice a year
in areas with hi gher-mineral-

Recliner
from Page Dt
I've tried camouflaging it
with slipcovers. pretty chenille 'throws, and fluffy pillows.
Of course, slipcovers and
pretty pillows interfere with
the whole reclining process
and will not be tolerated.
Those fru-fru things also
interfere with sleeping in
the recliner, eating in tne
recliner and playing with
the dog in the recliner you know, the important
things of life.
I don 't know, I guess I
should just swallow my
pride and re.alize tt;at there
1s no pomt m puttmg up a
fight.
.
.
If I could just figure out
some way to attach the
recliner to the seat of the.
riding lawnmower, then I'd
be in business.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Vaulled
· Living
15'7" X 14'
/

Dining
11'1" x8'

ASHLAND (AP) -Little roll me out of here when I
Ashland University proudly retire . ~'
All of the food in
uses a giant chocolate chunk
Ashland's
purple-and-yelcookie as its trademark.
· The cookie - mailed to low, food-court-style dining
20,000 prospective students · hall is prepared in front of
every year·- is one of the students, said Fred Geib,
signature • pro&lt;lucts of the manager of food service.
Pasta is offered daily, and
food service department that
was named best in the nation eggs are ·cooked to order,
which follows what the food
this year.
.
The private sch90l with services assoCiation calls a
about 2,000 on-campus stu- nationwide trend of "display
dents beat 650 colleges in cooking" at university din- ·
:
the United States and ing halls.
Ashland also is proud of'"
Canada to win the National
Association of College and the variety it offers. With a
University Food Services'. four-week menu cycle, the
grand pnze for residence . same meal is served only
four times a semester,
dining hall menu this year.
The school, located about except for some student
. midway between Cleveland favorites like grilled cheese
and Columbus, was judged an\! hamburgers. Once a.'
on sample menus, recip:s week the dining hall,offers a·
and promotional matenals specialty night with themes ·.
hke seafood fiesta and .
about nutrition.
"I'm thrilled, and it cer- banana split picnic.
tainly is justified," said uni"There's different stuff .
versity President G. William every da~," said freshman
Benz, adding that he eats a Brittany Fehlman, who
lot of food made at the takes the weekly menus to : .
her room and plans what she
school.
"They'll probably have to will eat.

. . . ._

I

' "-.

., •

BffiERHOMES
AND GARDENS BOOKS
FOR AP WEEKLV FEATURES

32' ' 2s·r

•
•

_

// l

Open to

x

Living
Below

· Bedroom
10'1" • 9'

Master Suite
':, 10'6' X 13'6"

Cl2002 Associated Designs. Inc.

Topeka offers its own 'magic'
Looking at the Topeka, the
~ord. "magic" springs to
mind. But it's actually quite
real and functional. The
steeply pitched gables and intricate detailing of this Gothic
revival home are so fascinating you' It want to run to your
eyes over all of its various
embellishments for a long
time, just as guest designer
Rodney Pfotenhauer intended.
With a compact 1,000
square feet of livmg area, this
home is welt-suited to the
ne.eds , of singles or small
families . It also makes a de. lighftul mother-in-law cottage, or vacation home.
Graceful turned posts support both porches. One shelters the front entry, and the
other is on .the side, accessed
via the living room. Either
porch is a great location for

space is a factor to consider.
members cook? Do they ·have
Assess your cooking need ~. a cooking hobby , such as bakDo you have mynad appli- ing o~ grilling?
.·
• Use of the kitchen. At
ances and gadgets to house?
There's no doubt about it. Or are you r .needs simpler? what time of the day is the
Kitchen remodels are at the What's the look you want to kitchen used most· frequently?
top of the list when it comes achieve?. Today's kitchens of- What other tasks are perto home remodeling. Such len have an unfitted look, formed there, such as crafts,
projects·are for your comfort with furniture-looking cabi- homework, com{luting, bill· now, as' well as for resale in . nets, a pie safe or a big har- paying or socializmg?
the future .
vest table in the ce nter of the
• Table space . Do you want
According to the National . room. In a fitted kitchen. on counter seating, table seating
Association of Home Build- the other hand, the p.eri meter or both?
. ers, residential remodeling is .of the room is ringed with
• ·cooking habits. Do you
expected to reach $167 billion floor-to-ceiling cabinets.
·
cook from scratch or buy pre' this year.
The most satisfyi ng kitch- pared foods? Do you do speThe kitchen might be the ens fit the habits, preferences, cialty cooking?
heart of the home, but we all plans and needs of those in . • Entertaimng. Do you en·
use it differently. Some use it the hou sehold. Many kitchen tertain freC]ucintly, and is it
f6r gourmet cooking, and oth- designers use a questionnaire formal or mformal? Do you
ers use it to warm up takeout
developed by the Nation al need a wet bar or a buffet
food and spread out projects. Kitchen &amp; Bath Association. area?
Before remodeling, tt 's wise
• Storage. How often do
Here's a sampling to help you
to take a look ·at your needs.
you
shop, and do you tend to
get started :
In most hou seholds, the
keep
lots of supplies on hand?
• The cooks. Who are the
kitchen becomes a gathering primary and seco.ndary ..
• Organizers. Do you need
place for families or for cooks? Are' iiley right-handed specialized storage? Do you
guests. So when it comes time or left-handed ? Do they have use many small appliances'!
to remodel, perhaps opening
any physical limitations?
up a small kitchen to a larger How many other household
BY CAROL McGARVEY

1000 SIRI!I

I!

0
CL

6SO !q.fl.
350 "' h.
1000 "].ft.

Up

1---~,..~-.11 /

Porch

. ~J

fi,illoor ·
Se&lt;ond Floor
living Area
Dime111io111

room, or whatever suits. Its
boxed bay window can be
built with window seats at
both ends, or left open. It's a
pleasant spot for a desk or
sewing machine.
Laundry appliances are upstairs, along with the ACROSS
Topeka's master suite.
1 Sticker
G Support
Amenities here incluqe a spaone
cious bathroom, walk-in 11o5 Frugal
Soft food tor babies
closet and cozy window seats. 18 Vibrant
For a review plan, including 19 Looked daggers (at)
21 Equally
'
scaled floor plans, elevations, 22
Hay bundle
section and artist's concep- 23 Jabbed .
tion, send $25 to Associated · 24 Honor
25 Snouts
Designs, 1100 Jacobs Drive, 26 School in Engl~nd
Eugene, Ore . 97402. Please 27 Tha1 girl
. Skeletal parts
specify the Topeka 42-012 28
29 Porcelain tableware
and include a return address 31 Singe r Dollywhen ordering. A catalog fea- . 33 Nobleman
Ins and ....;
turing more than 350 home 35
36 llinerary
plans is available for $1 S. For 37 Strengthen
more information, call 1-800- 38 Wood for lurni!ure
40 Bostwick or Manilow
634-0123.
41 Go slowly

suspending an old-fashioned
cushioned porch swing for
summer use.
Entering, you step into the
dining room, which is partially open to both the kitchen
and the living room. A bathroom -complete with shower
nestles into an alcove just
around the corner, convenient
to all of the ground floor
rooms.
A fireplace warms the
vaulted living room, which i~
; wo stories high at its .apex.
Light spills in tlirough ope
large multiplaned window on
the ground level, plus two oil
the upper level· that fill most
of the triangular wall spaces
on either side of the chimney.
The remaining main floor
room could be used as a bed~
room, home office, hobby

SUNDAY PUZZLER

.

Remove light bulb, the easy way

•

BY JAMES
AND MORRIS CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

:I
•.

For the best Home Equity
Une of Credit rate, : · check with

rm

. · Get a great rate with your
U.S. Bank Checking Account!

3.99~
FIXi'dRoiiE•fnt hutotllll,

There'~ never been a better time
to open a U.S. Bank EquiLinc"'
home equity line of credit.
That's because for a limited
time,"you'lrget a great rate
when you· have a U.S. Bank
Checking Account. Use your
EquiLine for debt consolidation,

5.00::
remodeling, back-to-school
tuition ...~hateverl Bur remember,
it's only for a limited time, and
only at U.S. Bank. For more
information or to apply, stof
by any U.S. Bank branch, cal
1-888-444-BANK (ext. 4100)
or visit usbank.com.

Among things that frustrate:
A hangnail; a pen that doesn't
write; sealing a check in an
envelope and then remembering you forgot to sign it -- and
ihe 'bulb is broken off in the
socket of your favorite reading night hght.
We can't assist you in dealing with most of the aggravations above, but we can help
with the light-bulb problem.
Getti'ng one out that's broken
off at the base doesn't have to
be a big production.
.
.
A natural instinct is to use
force, but that approach usually does more harm than
good. That's because the base
of the bulb and the socket are
both made of the same material - brass. And brass is
soft. Granted, the brass socket
is slightly thicker - and
therefore slightly stronger than· the bulb base , but not
much.
First things first: Before attempting to remove the bulb
base, unplug the lamp.
.
. The potato trick is the one
we like the best. Cut a potato
in half and press it down over
the socket. A slight amount of
pres sure is 'needed to cause
the')lot ato to inch its }l'ay inio
the inside of the socket and
the bulb base. While applying
downward pressure on the
spud, turn it counterclockwise
to unscrew the bulb base. An
apple works as well , as does a
green·pear.
.
·
On rare occastons you
might find ihat our potuto
trick won't do the job. When
that happens, open your tool
box. You ' II need one, two or
all of three tools:
• regular pliers
' • needlenos·e pliers
• screwdriver .
You can .use the regular pair
of pliers to create friction on

and close the cold-water valve
at the top of the tank . Connect
a garden hose to the drain
valve at the bottom of the
tank , and open the valve a
couple. of turns. You also will
want to open· at least one hotwater faucet somewhere in
the house. Thi s will let air
into the tank and help it drain.
Once the tankis ernpty, turn
on the cold-water valve at the
top of the tank and close the
drain valve (after water from
the drain appears clear). The
faucet that was opened when
draining should rernain open,
allowing ai r to escape until
water comes rushing out of it.
Then disconnect the hose and
restore power to the unit.

Planning your dream kitchen

Topeka
PLAN 42·012

Ashland University wins
national dining hall award

~

content water. Thi s will prevent the accumulation of sediment at the bottom of the
tank. a problem that greatly
inhibits lhe effectiveness of
the gas burners below. An
electric water heater also will
benefit from thi s periodic
maintenance becau se , once
it's drained, you can remove
the heating element s and
clean any debris that has accumulated on it. It is not unusual for the heating element
to corrode and become non functionaL Draining the water
heater is a relatively si mple
task that generally doesn' t require any tools.
Start by tur~ing off the gas
or electricity to tf1e appliance,

BY MORRIS
AND .lAMES CAREY
FOR IV' WEEKLY FEATURES

·.;,'

TV dinners: Food marketing
icon marks milestone

l!i:nnrs · &amp;rntinrl • Page 03

Sunday, November 10,2002 .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Store pesticides·safely Making time for tea could help diabetics
I

:!Sun~a!'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, November 10, 2002

the inside to the bulb base.
Tip: We always wife down
Simply insert the jaws of the the bulbs we instal with a
pliers into the socket and soft, clean cloth. This ensures
open them by spreading· the that oil from our skin is not
handles apart. At the same left on the bulb's glass envetime, turn the pliers counter- · lope. Believe it or not, skin oil
clockwise to loosen the base.
on an incandescent &lt;bulb can
Needle-nose pi iers come in cause it to prematurely fail.
handy when the base still has On projects where we · are
entrails. The narrow jaws can . changing many bulbs we find
easily be fitted into the base it useful to wear cotton
and around the glass nodule gloves.
When you install a light
that sits in the mtddle. Often,
a slight counterclockwise bulb, do so gently. Light
nudge is all that it takes to bulbs are fragile and a soft
touch is all'that is needed to
loosen the base.
If all else fails, try the properly seat the bulb into its
·
·
screwdriver. Here is where base.
you could cause damage to
For more home improveyour lamp if you aren't careful and gentle. Use a medium - ment tips and information
sized screwdriver blade to visit our Web s ite at
slightly pry the base away www.onthehouse.com .
•••
from the soc ket. Do this
Readers can mail questions
slowly. You don't want to
bend the socket excessively. to: On the House, APNews·
All you need is enough room Features, 50 Rockefeller
to get one of the jaws of the Plaza, New York, NY 10020,
needle-nose pliers between or e-mail Careybro(at)onthe- .
the socket and ·base. An house.com. To receive a copy
eighth- to a quarter-inch bite
is all· you should need. Hold
the pliers tightly and turn
counterclockwise.
Make sure that changing
bulbs next time doesn't become the · major pnldu. ctio~ :.
that we've just described. · · ·
a little steel wool to make
sure that everything works
smoothly.
·
Using a ball of 0000 steel
wool , rub the inside of the
tamp socket to eliminate dirt,
oxidation, corrosion and any
small burrs . The prepared
socket should be clean, shiny
and free of burrs, bumps or
tears. Do the same to the bulb
base. Be sure that it is clean
and free of dirt and debri s.
Skin oil is transferred to objects by si mply touching
them . So,, clean the base of
the bulb and screw it into the
.lamp socket without touching
either.

...

''

42
44
45
47

51
,52

53
55

56
57

58
60
62
63

65
66
67
68

69

Wa s lenient toward
Not widespread
Perishes
Leav e n ow!
Screened from light
Celestial phenomenon
Poem
Kimono sash
Declined
Culling remark
Repeate d
"Simpsons" dad
Pavlov or Turgenev
Cautioned
Gentle one
Ending '
Jewel
Eight.(ptelix )
Irides cent stone

98 Fencing sword
Powell
100 Snake
101 l owered in rank

1 Small error
2 Island gre(!tlng
3 Motorcyclist

103
1Q5
106
108
109
110
111

4 "All Abou t - "
5 Conducted
6 l o ts and lots
7 Talks wildly

Lubricated
01 cows '
At sea
Ceremony
Made healthy

Part of NVPO
Chester.- Art hur
113 A bird
114 "All in the Famil y"

,

94 Fashioned

95 Respond
96 Endorsed

10 Mental heallh
11 Wilh no oth ers
12 Ma1k in a passport

(with 'out")
14 Comeback

11 9 Hit repeatedly

15 LaBell e or LuPon e

120
124
125
126
127

16 Standoffish
17 Cent
19 Happy hunting -

Strikeb r.eaker
Delivered a speech
Squander
Safety 8nd conveyer
Exist

13 Supplement

30 Thro w

131 Tell

32 Curved line

133 Swell

34 Heavy

135 "East o1- ··

36 Coot est ol speed
37 Demon
39 En.genderett
40 Frozen desse1t

136 Slle
137 Sh allow dish
138 Love (Fr.)
139 Link s item

140 Desired. in a way
141 WoodYJind
instrum ent
142 Sports

114 Liqu efied

115 n1esaurus name
116 Wear away
11 7 Money recipi en t
118 Chili con1 19 Tranquility-

··

20 Adorn
22 Beds on a ship
28 Hissed and hoOted

128 Spanish Painter
129 Unreactive

121 Billiards shot

122 D1spute
123 H~ady drinks
125 Sob
126 Sad
130 M1l. personnel
132 Hearing organ
133 Droop
134 Act ress- Tl 1urman

42 E l ~ctri i: ra.zor

43 Canal country
44 "-Doone·
45 Condemn
46 Drunk
48 Insen sible state
49 Cain's victim
50 Exhaust

51 Gulp
52 Certain artiS t
53 Layered rock
54 Skinny
5(' Breakfas1meat
59 Red wine
61 Stri ped s1one

" Norma-~

87 Choice

B Minerals
9 - capil a

spin-off
11 5 Article copy
11 8 .Gaels

63 YPretty - "

75 Cow sound
76 Frighlen
77 Not welt
78 Clock numerals
B1 Spinet ,
83 Yeam
84 Manner _of waLking
85 Weight unit

90 Holiday song
92 Cottage roof material

88 MeKican money

89 Strikes lightly
9 1 Poin ted arch
93 -of Troy '
94 Feature f1tms
96 Holy one
97 Skeplical ones
99 Chilly
102 Wave menacingly
104 Eye part
105 8oKing matches
10'7 Plaid cloth
109 Young horse
110 Equivocate
11 2 Fib
113 Slep1

99 Secre ta ry of State -

7 1 Wet

73

OOWN

...

64
66
70
72
74
76
79
80
82
84

Submissive
Dirt
Kitchen item
Wonder1 and gi rl

Long story
Disburse money
Type s1y1e
An anti septic
Jot
Stared with open
mouth

86 Hawai ian goose
87 Spoken

Answer to Puzzle on Page 05

.

'

\

I

'

--~___.;,- .

-

....

-

�OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

• Gal

~unday, November

\lrrtbune - Sentinel -

"""t.....FOR
.~-SAu:=-.
.
,J1

CLASSIFIED

2 bath open
Ranch slyle
1\pprox 1 mlle from town on
SR 588 Approx 1500 sq ft
$91 900
(740)983 0730
(740)448-6161
badroom
~oor plan

Your Ad,

992-2156
can Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
992·2157
Or Fax To

(304) 675-1333
675-5234

t72

Otftfce #oar-.s=&gt;

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up Ta 15 \Nards, 3 Days
Over 1S \Nards 20¢ Per \Nord
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Monday thru Friday
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
110

r

.1

\ \RDSAJ.t:

HE L1 W~i'&gt;'rm

whk:h makel It lllepl to

Why wa f? Sta t meet ng
Oh o singles ton ght cal toll
flee 1 800 766 2623 e..:t Huge Ins de Mov ng Sale
1621
9am 5pm Nov91011
1124 College Ad Syracuse
F rst left past the park p c
ures rockers home nle or
baby !ems clothes urn
C 1 Bee Cay Out pemt u e etc New XMas decor a
fd sale Cheste Townsh p tons new toys Barbie
Me gs County send lette s Co lee! on appro)( 40 new
of nterest to The Daly dolls a lot of other new mer
Sent nel PO Box 729 20 Chand se porcela n dolls
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
d shes pot and pans g s
xmas dresses s ze 4 14
TUPPJ;RWARE
household m c and much
OPE~ HOUSE
more
Sa urday Nov 16th 1 4pm
W~NTED
Add son Town house
m8m
Junct on of SR 7N &amp;
Add son P ke
Tw1ce as Nice Spec als Absolute Top Do lar U S
Orde 1 Get 1 lor ~5
S lver
God
Co ns
Becky Mea ge 446 3 194
Praoisets D amends Gold
A ngs
U S Currency
MTS Con Shop 151
Second Avenue Gall poi s
740 446 2842
Back Lab Chow M xed
I \11 ' 1 0\\fl· \I
male
1 t 2 ¥681' o d
'I H\ II I S
(7401446 3890

r

r

AllrMI Hleteldvwlllling
In thle newtpel*' le
aublect: to the Federal
F•lr Houalng Act of 1181

GI\IA\~\Y

Attention
NATIONAL COMPANY
EXPANDING

Dr vers

Now h1r ng m New
Gal pol s OffiCe
2t Men and Women
needed Immediately
No e)(per ence necessary
Ira mng w II be p ov1ded
Must be 18 o over and able
to start mmed ateiy
$400 00 per week to Start!
(per ag ee ment)
Call for Inter~ ew
Monday Only
9 OOam 6 OOpm
(740)441.()352
A tn Worlo; from home• $500
$4500imo PT/ FT I 800
647 2664
www hotweb2000 com
Auto body man exper
enced n metal fabr cat ng
bodywork weld ng &amp; paint
ng call H II s Class•c Ca s
Restorat ons
7am 1Opm
(7401949 2217

110

.
1

lo&gt;oAND
FOUND
puppy
n
FOUND
Me cerv I e near Ha nnan
Trace
Elementary
few
months old (740)446 4314
eave message
Found Black &amp; Tan Puppy
sho t ha Hound On Owl
Hollow Ad Call {304)675

7740

Pomeroy (740 367 7689
LOST $100 REWARD Safe
return of Wh e 8 ack Terr er
M x P ospecl Church Road
81dwell OH (7 40)441 0215
LOST Ch d am ly pet
Yo ksh e Terr er Black
G ay &amp; Gold Cherry Ridge/
Centerpom Road a ea Did
ave Red co Ia on P ease
ca I (740)379 2282

HEl p WAN'IID

Contractor sates tremen
dous opportumty for team
11 18/02 Health Dept DON player ook1ng lor a qual f ed
to rep resent
needed 35 f ex hrs wk cand date
onally
known
products
Nat
Adm n strat ve F seal expen
p eferred for an establ shed company
e 1ce/BSN
sa e exper ience requ red
$26 000 y (740)992 6626
subm1t to Daly Senhnel
ACT NOW New b anch P: 0 Box 729 29 Pomeroy
open ng n Athens Several Oh o 45769
pas I ons ava table $300 a
Insurance Inspectors
week to sta t 1 7 40 594
6268 Thursday only
F eld wo k n Galhpo l sJ
AR EA.
D RECTORS
AND Ga I a Co and Surround ng
FRANCH SES
UN QUE R PPLY Count es woul d requ red
GROW NG PIZZA CONCEPT 20 bas c knowledge of home
measuring
YRS PROVEN H STORY OVER construct on
170 STORES N 16 STATES exter or d mens ons ob~e r v
COMPLETE
TRA N NG
&amp; ng cond t on and tak ng
photos
o
homes
MARKET NG SU PPORT I 888
Independent
contrac tor/
344 2767 EXTENSON 210
part t me bass Must be
Med Home Health agency deta I or ented have rei able
Inc seek1ng RN s (PT/FT) transport at on and 35mm
D1g tal
Came ra
and aWes V rg n a I cense d OR
Ph ys1cat Therapts for the Compute
w th
nte ne t
Gall po IS O H area We offer access a so helpful
a compel t ve sa ary bene
f ts package 40 1k and f ex P ease respond to
hme Please sent resume to
Insurance Inspector
68150
Baybe ry
D ve r
PO Box 29335
C a rsv He OH 43950 Attn
Parma Oho44129 0335
Greg Va ner Adm n slrato

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

The Holidays are Coming.

MENTAL HEALTH
Help wanted car ng for tl'le
PROFESSIONAL
elderly Darst Group Home
Fr ends/Don t Let Friends
now pay ng m mmum wage Excellent opportumty for a
Dnve JUNK
new shifts 7am 3pm 7am qualified mental health pro5pm
3pm 11pm
11pm fessiOnal to JO n a mutt d sc
That s why J 8 Hunt
phnary team In a commumty
7am call740 992 5023
mental health sett ng Th s
Transports OTR fleet Is
Lookmg for a fun Job? Th s s 40 hour pos bOn prov des
now tu lly conventiOnal In
add hon to the Fre ghtllner it• OffiCe Env ronment so the opportun ty 10 deliver
pos tions ava ab e 1 888 outpatient counsel ng' case
Century C ass tracto s
J0BS
974
management to mull need
we offer
Look.ng for' exper enced ch ldren adolescents and
-Earn ngs up to 41 cents per HVAC TechniC an/ Installer the r tam I es Prev ous expe
mle
must have 2 or more years r ence work ng w th youth a
-Home every 14 days wth
expenence 1n th iS f etd Th s plus
two days off for seven on
IS a full time pos t1on w th
the road
good salary If nterested call M n mum acceptable qual f
-New well
serv ced
(740)441 1236 f no answer cal ons graduate degree n
equ pment w th an opt1on
mental hea th related f1e d
leave message
for permanent ass gnment
w th knowledge of cou nsel
LPN Pos1t ons at M•ddleton ng techniques and psy
•Weekly payroll with direct
Estates an ICF/MR lac hty chopathology possess on of
depost
•Benef ts you custorruze to Per Diem lor all sh fts one of the io ldwmg p ov der
tit your needs choose Please contact Dorothy qua ificat ons requ1red LSW
Harper RN at (7401446 PC PCC LISW
medic al dental v sian
4914 or (740)446 8145
401kwth company match
and more
Compet t ve
Salary
McClure s Restau ran t now
Excellent benef ts Include
h•r ng all 3 locat1qns full or
We have over 70 h1r ng
health dental vis on life
part t me p1d&lt; up apphca
locations nat onw de one
nsurance pa •d vacat an
liOn at location &amp; br1ng back
near you Ce I us 7 days
paid ho1idays 401 k retirebetween
9 30a m
&amp;
a week to exped te your
ment plan and more Sen d
10 OOa m
Monday
thru
appl cation and we II prove
resume and etter of Interest
saturday
that t s good to have a
to Cou nselor 11 Gran t Fu I
fr ehd n the 1ndustr yl
The
Mason
County Human Resources 0 rector
CommiSSIOn IS now accept Tn County Mental Health
H!OO 2JB HUNT
and CounSA ng Sa vices
ng appl cat ons tor the pos
90 Hospi tal Drive
EOE
SubJeCt to drug ton of on cal part t me Inc
sc reen Exper ence reqUired cook Appl cat1on fo rms can Alhens OH 45701 EOE
be obta ned m the Mason
County Commissio n off ce Ma rchand se needed 1n
on the ground floor of the Gall a and Me gs Cou nt as
Financial
Freedom cou rthouse between the for Nat anal Company start
In ternational
Company hOurs of B 30 and 4 30 1ng pay $8 50 per hour
grow ng rap d y Interne t Monday th ough Fr day The Send esume to P 0 Sox
work irom home PT/FT Mason County Comm ss on 192 Evans lfN 25241
pos11 ons Full I am ng 1 s an equal opportu n ty
Wanted Part t me posit on
888 202 6321
employe and does not d s
c m nate due to race sex c ava lable at a commun ty
reed re IQ on or natiOnal on group home fo peop e w th
men ta l
re tardat on
m
gm
John 0
Ger ach
Ga ll a Me1gs Co mmun ty
B1dwell Hours 5 9prrl Fn
Mason
ActiOn IS acce pt ng esumes Adm1mstrator
9am 7pm Sat Bam 6p m
for the pas t on of Ex:ecuttve County Comm ss1on
Sun Requ rements High
01 ec tor
Qual I cat ons URGENTLY NEEDED plas School D ploma/ GED valid
Bachelo s Degree n rele rna donors earn $50 to $60 dnve r s hcense and good
vant f1eld 3-5 years adm n s per week for 2 or 3 hours dr v ng
record
Salary
trat ve superv sory and f s weekly Call B o L fe Plasma $7 00/hr Send res ume to
ca l
experience Serv ce 74Q..592 6651
Buckeye
Com mun ty
Understand ng oi non prof 1
Serv ces P 0 Box 604
opera! ons and com mumty
J ackson
OH
45640
act1on Send resume and
HAPPY AD
Deadl ne 11118102 Equal
three references to D rector
Opporlun ty Employer
Box 272 Chesh e Oh
45620 by November 27
Secu ty Guards lull 1 me
2002 4 30 pm GMCAA IS
$6 50
pe r
hour
Call
an
Equal
Oppo tumty
(304)926 0641 M F alter
Employe
4pm Ask for Ke1th EOE

REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

~ Prudential.

Do you have enough money?

Preferred Homes

WE CAN HELP!

lC

ReachmgThe

3 heal !!Ources and
New

k Ieben roof porch
wtrtd"" deck &amp; std&lt;

We offer a $500 stgn on bonus
up to $7/hour patd tratntng , patd
holidays and patd vacattons
We also offer complete health
benefits and a 40 1-k plan

walk $104 900 Call
J&lt;fi Mahon&lt; 800 926

A

BIRTHDAY
Love you lots
fmm your
Famrly

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

you enJ oy the energy of a
t-patced Retail envtronmenl
workmg w1th the
clcctromcs
and

•

HELP WANTED
other

lh,U mctuue

Become A Truck Dnvert
Ooe Phooe Call
Reaches 20+ Schools
Great Pay &amp; Benefits
Financing &amp; Job Placement

Bonuses Employee Discounts
401 -k Plan
Health Insurance
Prof1t Shanng
Pa1d Vacation

1-800-Truckee

Ready to h11e

SERVICES

SERVICES

Do You Have A Business, Service,
Or Product You Would Like to
Advertise to
6 MILLION READERS
With Only One Phone Csf/?

The American Community
Classified Adverllslng Network

1-800-821-8139
www.cnhi-can.com

Delivery Specialist
Manager Trainee
Customer Sales
Account Mgr.
Your ne" career starts todav'
Calllhe 24 hour R 2 0 Career L1ne al
1 -800-~26-5606 Ext Ill
or

applv onlmc at www r2o com

orslop by any of our 16 stores

rd::t~lfl•}ft!l~•

Because wa all should have mce stuff

Candidate
must0 ploma
posses or
a
H1gh
School
GED The successful cand
date w II prov de cte r ca l
support serv1ces (reception
b lllng and medical records
f 1ng) to an outpat ent ciifi~C;._
Past expen ence w th mull
p e 1ne phone data ent y
and work ng In an of 1ce set
t ng preferred Must be a e to
type 30 cwpm fam 1a w1th
off ce equ pmen t such as
co mputers
ca cu ators
pHones cop ers etc
Woodland Cen ters Inc IS a
not for profit pr vate commu
n ty menta he alth center
serv ng Galha Jackson and
Me gs count es Co mpel t1ve
sa lar as and benefits pack
age nclud ng paid vacation
and s1ck I me 13 -pa d hot
days
ret ement
plan
health I fa and d sab hty
nsurance offered Post ons
w II be filled con tingent upon
funding
Please
send
resumes to Sherry Gordon
Manager
of
Human
Resou(ces
Woodland
Centers Inc 3086 State
Route 160 Gall pol s OH
45631

The Mason County Publ o
Serv 1ce D1str ct w II accept
resumes for an operator
po s on M n mum requ1re
ments are a val d Class I
West V1rg n a PubliC Water
Operato r Cart f1cat on and
Class
West V rg m•a
Wastewater Cert ilca hon
Resumes w II be accepted
py rna I or n person unt I
Truck Drivers lmmed1ate December 2 2002 at 101
h re c ass A COL requ red
Camden
Avenue
Pt
exce lle nt pay exper ence Pleasa nt WV 25550
requ rM Earn up to $1 000
per week Ca ll 304 675
4005
AUCTION

MiftrtlH MY
,..r.renc• llm!Uitlon or
dlacrlmlndan bi!Hd on
race color religion Mx
femll•l etatut or nstlol\ll
'OI'Igln or •ny Intention to

m11ke 1ny euch
p...,.renc. limitation or

dlurlmlnltton

r:=~~~~~:J.

lnlonMd- oil
- l l n p odVoriiNd In

r

I'KOfl'SSIONAL

SERVJCF.S

thle newtpaper •re
IWIII•ble Oft 1ft lqUII

HELP WANTED

rtd

out stock at 62 01 ve Street
Gallipolis
OH
45631
(740)446 3 159

You're not just a
part of our team,
)Ou're a part of
our Household 1

r

96 Harley Dav1dson Electra
Gl de Class•c excellent con
d ton wll take pay off
(740)682 7783

Ims&amp;

ACRFAGE
Polaris 500 Sportsm an
4WD new wlnoh tires
$3500 (740)245 5824

1/2 acre lot on lVcoon Lake
wl12x60Trallar$16 500 00
now $13 500 00
(740) 247 1100

" I 1{\ II l...,

-rtunlty-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond bona lfet me guar
antee Local referen ces tur
n shed Establ shed 1975
Call
24 Hrs (740) 446
0670 Rogers Basement
Waterpro ofmg

C&amp;C
General
Home
Ma ntenence Pa1nt ng VI nyl
s d mg carpe ntry doors
w ndows baths mob•le
home repa1r and more For
tree est mate call Chet 74o992 63~3

Res1dent al or commerc al
w r ng
new serv ce or
re pa1rs Master Licensed
Ridenour
85 Ford Crown V1ctor an electr c1an
Etectr ca WV000306 304
$1 100 00 for best offer
675 1786
992 5532

AUCTION

(l)nl

••liVeII

3 lemale AKC Lab pups 2
Chocolate I black $150 2
bunnies $5 each (740)441
0931

Reedsville

I

~~~~ffi~~~~~tf~~;]~

Wtlkesvdk
farmofUS35
Take 51 Rlf 32 castro
124 easiiO WtlkesVJIIe AI \1 tlkesvtlle lake St Rte
south approx I mile 10 lhe farm

Hound

ple..e call Dan Wells al
or 740 11Q-1025(cell)

u e nne nnd gh dC I

Not responsible for accident~ or lm;~ ofproperty

AUCTION

AUCTION

located at lludlon Center on Rt. 33 In

mason, wu.

713 5l85 OR ll3 5447
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WilD,

12

used homes u nd er
$3 000 W II help w1th del v
elY Call Harold 740 385 3br House located n
9948
Mason WV $495 + Utll t1es
No Pels (3041773 5881
1973 Greenbr ar 12X65
'Mobile Home 12X16 room
5 rooms &amp; bath 50 OINe St
.bu It on must be moved $325 mo (740)446 3945
$3000 (740) 985-3673

1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile For Rent or Sale Older
Home Priced to sell Quick house ready to move Into 2
or 3 bedrooms large living
C~ ll (740) 385 2434
room din ng rm kitchen
93 Holly Par~ 3 bedroom 2 bath front and back porch
_b&amp;.th front porch &amp; m ud
(304)675 8808
·room central hear &amp; air
Urm
serious
:$15 000
Very n ce home for rent
~ nqutred only (740)256 6360
quiet neighborhood 1 room
'New 2003 14 wide Only 2 br $425 no pets no
.$799
dawn
and only smoking located at 829
i t 59 45 Call Nikki 740,. High Sl Middleport call
(7401992 5094
385 7671

Get the latest tec hnology In
active Ingredient del very for
liquid wormers Get Happy
Jack Llqu V ct @Athens
Landmark (740) 985 3700

Saturday, November 16 • 10:00 a.m '
Athens, OH

The followmg personal property of the
Estate of Sara Strawn wtll be offered at
public auctwn DIRECTIONS Auctron will
be held at the old Ctfy Recrea11on Butldmg
on East State Street watch for srgns
ANTIQUES. GLASSWARE &amp;. COLLECTIBLES Collect on of~+
cups/sauces wmc pe10o1e1 p ~es flS~rted Nor ake Meaken &amp; JohnMln
Bros DIShes Fenton &amp; dep us on dishes Capod mollie ba!ikett &amp; dash
Hull &amp;. McCoy p cce s Rook.wood vau KPM .t RO)'al Doulwo P&amp;&lt;~
nncs Bav11nan p eces, ll'ili!Orted Jad e p eccs usortmCill of st~!J!.Wate
lou of m scel aneous J l&amp;IIIWIIJ'e pe n c buket ~everal n ce arge framed
prints. Thomas Clock Co doc k se of WWII Army boolu and box of
ma'ICcllaneou• book!! 2 Lonaaberacr buke s
HOUSEHOLD &amp;. MlSCELLANEOUS oak ch na cab r'ttl curio cab
ne bookcase sofa occasional ch111rs rock ni cha coffee rablc and
&amp;Ianda several plccu of brut tab le&amp;&amp; lamp5 ampa, d nee e Ulble wn
clt11n 1weepe11i brass bed maple bed n &amp;ht stand malch na
dresser chclt or dnlwcnln gh stMnd che~t of d awcr~ painted vanlly
dresser &amp; 1 ool beddlna &amp; linens M nol a 3~ mm ca,mcra muccl anc
out recorda &amp; album• A Jcaro Tum abJe maamne rack wall racks
Chriltmu deco a ona alum num lldder and other ml.ce llaneoul leml
TERMS Cuh or ~ heck w/po11 vc I 0 Check.l o.-e SIOO'l muat hJve
b1nk au lhoriu, on of funds •vallable Food wl l be avail able Nol
rcapon alble for ou or accldcnll

ESTATE QF SARA STRAWN by
Roblrt J G&lt;JI~ Admlnl1lrotor
Ath1111 County Ca" No 021206
SHAMROCK AUCTION Sll!IVICE
AUCTIONEER l'at Sh•rlda•
,.,,t.rtlns ,tuctlon11r Chrl.r I'Ntrr
Emoll Shtlmrocl&lt;Auctlon@ool com WEB
www shamrock aucdons com

\

I

{

Auctioneers Note Due to heafth reasons Mr. Uefls has

said thefarm and haJ r/o;tded to r,nrejromjamung and
hts equpmenr busmr.'Ss Uost lftms are.field reac{y &amp; nork
mg cond non Don rmt)S rhe oppommuy to purcha.r;e used
jam1 Cf/Urpmcnt
SALEORDER l /2hr shop Items Tillage Plant
mg '!Tactors '!Tucks &amp; 'ITa lers Harvest Equ p
ment Hay Equtpmcnt Fertll zer EqUipment
MiSe MAY

SPLIT INTO T\1 0

RINGS

• Clark So td Tire 70001 for~ fl 2l
• IH 770 Off Set 16 dtsc
reach stde shtft
•
AC
2500
28
disc
hydro
fold
198llnlelnallonai358S 2+2 NEW
t 8 4 38 nres. 6 200 hrs 300 hrs on • 7000 JD 12RN No Till end lrans ltqu d • Clark fork th 20001 C1p does notrun
fen 12NEW Shoup sNo TIIICoultcrktrs • (2) Elecmc f01kl f"
rebuilt trans dutth &amp;101que
• 1953 Brookl yn sllen rratn &amp; hmst
mon
tor
l'MOCase4690 20 8R 34 Utes, lOhrs
needs 1'!0
on complelely rebuilt engme po•er • Allis Chahners 3334 row ~o Till ~anwt
• Heary Clark fo &lt;I hMasl•lstdeshth
dry fen Allts Chalmers No Till dry fen
shtfi 3hydro remo)eS
1976 Case 1570 18 4 38 "'"' 4 857 • John Deere 8300 Dnll w/Culnplanler II • 3 pt. bitch Add On f01 Case backhoe
ot dow
24:«&gt; new grass seed boxes
hrs
•
Small
Grove Hvd C1a n 6 ()I Ford
•
(3)
620
IH
dnlls
24
x
7
Gas Pans l'lacror
gas model ! 2'C FIVC)
1855 Oliver diesel wlcab heac tebutll • Kasko 8 row fen panlrr aug&lt;1
• NEW Unvedenh auge~ fit &amp; hox ex . .CIS IIID TMIUIS
engme 18 4x38
tenSion for 20 JD 75() dnll
• 1992 While 1\642 smgle axletractor
8000 AKrJPower desel 115 hp (Ar
60 se es Oeitott 320 HP 1 spd
....llfllllll
genlme fiat)
111&lt;22 5LP Hubptloted day cab
• John Deere 1217 7 hay bme• 855 New
1962 Fortl!on Super Ma1or dtcsel
1989 Whtle WIM smgle axle tractot
Holland round baler t0011 rpm
case 6JO salvage
wrs eeper Lt03011 hP Cuotnuns 9spd
• 848 Ne~ Holland round bale~ (800 lb
--:::: l.IIPiliT • IIDITY
fu ler
Bales) new cham
••~~e~~uciUIU
• 271 New Holland square baler wtre t e • 1990 Wh le WG64T Btg Cam IV 315
701 New Idea w/818 combme um' 4 • 273 New HoUand square balet
9 spd 40 rears day cab I x22 5
RW corn head
Daytona
• Vkoo square ooler
JD 443 Ht nn Corn Hea~ needs reparr • MlnneaPd~ Mol me Stde Del vcrer
• 1970 While COE sm~e axle 1/actor
801 UniHarveslel wl839 6 RN corn • snanon Btg ~ale 1'1anspone1 hauls 5
318 DET tO speed
head
• I959Dodge l!oncab&amp;chassts 354
bales hydro load &amp; unload
(2) Hydro Dump wagons on J&amp;M 10
Chi)' HL\11 mo1or 2Spd rear II 000
CIEIICIL &amp; lllllllli lQIIPIOO
ton gear
mt
• John 8lue 14 tonltmespreade1 pull type • 1%3 Diamond T 2 Ton Coe Cab &amp;
M&amp;WGraVJiy wagon
• Ag Chem ptck up sprayer 500 gal 60
DMilloltom Dump Gravtly Wagon
Chass s 6()I 5+2 ttans all btakes
b(l(&gt;ms foam markers Honda power un 1 • 1970 IH 190 F11e nuck cab over
jobn Deere 1210 AGram Bugg)
radar all conltols fat tnStde 1he truck
caldwell400 Bushel Gram Buggy
17 950 o g nal • ties complete w/6
•
Top
All Mtd Mount Sprayer w/45
FarmHand ~de dump wagon
speed
booms foam mmkm rro pump
(2) Hydro DumpwagononSIOngears
Allison AuiO truck from Gland can
Dullbar llapplevacuumgrammover on • 140 gal Chemtcaltankwill volt pump
yon Nau IPatk
&amp; meter
llanspon
• 19541HRCISO 6 cyl 5 spd W/22
• 700 gal Nurse11tnk on runnmggear wl
• Grain cteaner
Oat bed
hyd1o water pump
ftiiiiii.&amp;IIIIIHIUI
• 1953 Dooge t 112 ton 6 C)l 4spd
• 500 gallon plasnc mnk
• JD 910 9shank To!We Trip VRipper
deluxe cab
• john Deere 1700 llsbankmulch IIller • 1600 gallon smlnless lank
• 1985 Kalyn Combtne Sltng l'la ler
llx22 5 tiles pmde htoch
• Binkley Wllbelk 9shank disc chlsel(l • 10 Easy Flow L1me Sp~eader
IIII'IIICTIII ,_, letiPiliT
• 1985 Fruehauf Oalbed trailer sprmg
yrs old)
• Ollver6-16ASRplow
sltder Bud wheels
• 304 MF all lena n fork 28 masl
• Whlre 6342 5 18 Rollover plow wlon • JD 760 Asell loading pan good chain
• 1997 Molllz 20 Heavy Du~ Special
Bulle decked Inltctw&lt;enw/700111 ax
land bloch
• Dlt!!el power shift good
• 12) lH 6424 16 Rollove1 plowi
• Alii.! Chalme1 HD 16D9 dozer t2 U les
• fi(3 16 Semi Mounl plow
• 1992 Rawhide 20+6 wl top deck
blade under carriage Is decent
80011lb ~ rench NEW spnng asstsl
~amps vacuum over hydro btakes
nmut cash or Personal check w/proper phoiO lD "Announce
lO OOIIlb Axles dual brakes
ments made the dqy 1(/ the sale will take precedence over af!Y
• l%21H 2 ron uuck5spd ,. brakes
printed material
wlga~anlzed water tank
•
1962 5 wn Army Dump 'lhtck
A.IJC110N MA.NA.GE/li Melt CJimmlngs, 00. 740-335 5605
• 1989ford E350oonuuckwiNE\\ 12
VIsit our Web Site Today
Flatbed
-.IGIII'IIdenucllon colli • 1985 314 ~n Chery Suburban 41\'D
350 automallc roug1t condition

PUBLIC AUCTION I•

I'H 740·~9243/0 or 800 419 9122

•

AUCTION

AUCTION

Ill

I

2000 Honda 400 EX runs
grea1 looks g eat! $3 000
(740)441 171 6

1 and 2 bedroom apart
Office space o other pur menta furnished and unfur
pose located at 28 Cedar nlahed
security deposit
Street (740)256-6661
required no pets 740-992
2218

t

MmOKCYCL.Ii:S

3 Bedroom newly re mod
eled n M dd epa t call Tom
Anderson afteJ 5 p m
992 3348

AUCTIONEERS. R1ck Pearson #66

BENEFICIAl

40

2003 883 Custom Harley
Dav1dson w th 100 m les
Many Extras Dea lershiP
Installed Excellent condi
ton $13,200 Invested Must
sell for $9 700 (304)773
5268

$14 900 4 bedroom 4 bat ~
home Wont last For lstlng
call I 800 719 300 1 Ext
Ft44

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
l\~ WJOlnhOU8Ch Oid

r

\!I ll\

HOMES

sa l ary sc tl e co mmeu ~u ratc Wllh c lass ll lc 1
uon and ye ars o l expc ncncc

ll n\-.. 1 '111 ~ 1

FOKSALE

drum table gate leg table mah ~:~~:~l
green &amp; cream gas cook stove
baby stroller Geme double key
organ lg amount of glassware s
I
glass Fenton McCoy Haeger &amp; others
beautiful frames &amp; pnnts from
plus other Items from England 5 hi orn&lt;&gt;l'1
ventless gas healer wooden John Bci:•t'l
plus much more

240

Sale

I{ I \I I .., I \II

3 pc waterfall poster BR su1te very
ornate must seell Craftmaster sofa bed
&amp; loveseat tan leather recl1ner Queen
s1ze spindle bed mah library table
co rner what not shelves coffee

based on the Cahc ll C unt)

for

seats excel ent cond 110n
beautiful van one owner
S7 000 1740)742 2897

Ford 1983 sma I bus 1984
Chevy small bus good con
d1t on runs
good
state
nspected 992 6768

(304)675-1506

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Unless We Wml ..,
1 aaa 582 aa45
q

Owner Rory Nldav
l)au Sm rth Aucltoneer. Oluo #1344
Cash • Po~Jtne IJ) • Rf1/res!unenls

Comm l~ l n ~

Ears of Corn

1996 Ford W ndstar van

auto a r rear a r bucket

1998 GMC J mmy 4x4
65 000 m11es Leather 4
door
a1r
tilt
cruse
PW/PDL ask ng $10 000
(740)388 9217

3469

Country
Craftsman,
Furn lu re
stn pp.ng
Aeflmsh ng Repa rs Can1nQ
&amp;
Reupholstery
Also
Insurance Est mates P1ck.
up &amp; Del very Ava labl8
(304)7431100

AUCTION
1\CCOI N r I XI' L L ltV~ IS
RostoSoi l11r Morathl)

1999
L1ncoln
Townca
Signature
Seres
CD/
Cassette leather loaded
one
owner
showroom
clean
$15 700
F1rm
(740)446 1000 leave mes
sage

4-WDs

HCKmiOIJ)

AKC reg istered German
Sheppard pups sold black
&amp; black and brown $200 00
call 992-3972 alter 5 p m

HELP WANTED

J)art Quarter horse bay
gelding has been started
very QUiet $300 (740)992

It

VANS&amp;

2001 Hoods CR80 D rt B1k8
L ke New S1400 (304)675
8933

auclton the follo » mg (Iem&gt;

ab hl y to p e r form

Clusmg for
rece tpt of applications November 22 2002
(g 4 00 p 111 For m apphcalrun and co m
pkt c JOb dcscnpt tun call L s 1 Mullms 11
55H &gt;40 1

Avenue Gallipolis OH

Ohw Ro'Sy n gomg to move !JO wtll

The WV Department ot Ed ucatton has an
open tn g for a Sc hool Sec retary
11/Clossroom Instructwnol Aide al the
Barboursvtlle School (a re sJdcnual program
lor senousl) emouonally dtsturbed youth ) m
Barbo urs \llle V. V (C abell Count y)
Qualt fl catJons mdude htgh school dtpluma
or eqUJ valt:nl typmg sk11ls at 55 wpm com
puler sk11ls k now l ed ge ol specd1' bu s1ness
tcceptlo m st duue s Emp l oymcnl term

8 5pm at 1403 Eastern

9 Aeg•stered Pa nt Horses
Great Stock! Good Nature! 6
months to 6 year o d
(Business phone ) (740)367
7237

J

or

date for re cc1pt of appll ca tJon s No"\ ember
20 2002 @ 4 00 p m

Applications accepled M Fl

Auro;
FORSAU

A

Located on S! Rt 124

WV

call LISa Mulhns at (304) 558 340 I Closmg

$350 deposo $350 month

rent you pay ut1Ut1as
References
required
Ava laNe •round December
1sl located off SA 160 in
Porter Area Call (740)4464514 for more lnlormaHon

.tJ)HA Tennessee Walker
Horse Mare 12 yrs okj
black good trail horse
S900 00 (740) 742 3802 or
From $278-$348 Cell 740- storage
$85
Tappan (740) 992 1335
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Microwave w1th csrt $30
Opportunities
Call (740)446 1721
AKC Choc Lab puPJ)Ie&amp; 4-------MaJes 2 Female Parents
Firewood $35 Picl&lt;up loed on Prem ses w/ Pedigrees
Twin Rivera Tower for eld spill &amp; delivered (740)367 ,$250 00 (740) 742 3802 or
7631 (740)367 7759
&amp;llyl-dl_~ed
(740) 992 1335
Now accepting appliCations
Grubbs P ano Tuning &amp;
for 1 br all utilitieS paid HUD
Repairs Problema? Need Baby dwarf rabb ts for sale
assisted carpeted apart
Tuned? Call The P1ano Dr (740)446 4749 anyt me
ment rent IS 30% of your
740-446-4525
adjusted mcome call 304
Beagles 2 years old good
675 6679 between 8 4 30 Hotpo nt range $35 Brown rabbit
running
dogs
pm weekdays EHO
Sleeper sofa $95 Singer (740)441 1440
Portable Sewmg machine --~-----­
Unfurn shed apartment also $35 Oak dlnmg table two
Border Colle Pupp1es $100
smalltrruter close to grocery
extensions and 6 cha1rs ParJJnts work cattle mother
and downtown Galllpol s
$275 Kerosene heaters also clears Canadian Geese
Reference
&amp; deposit $1 5 each or 21$25 Apple (740)367 7287
(740)446-1 158
computer! mon1tor/ key
board/ over a dozen CO pro Full blooded Rat Terrier pupgrams $125 Portable bas ptes 4 females 1 male
kelball polel net $35 Call Wormed &amp; Ta1ts docked
Tra ler space for rent $125 ~(7_40
_:_)36
_7_-ooe_7_cc__ __ (74())367-0009

PUBLIC AUCTION

P alO Ha HQg I p

1/wvde stat e wv us/wvdc ' acamcs/

ts

,...,.. •re hereby

,
!NOTICE!
,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH•
lNG CO recommends the~'
you do bus ness w th people
you know and NOT to send,.
money th ough the ma I un(~
you have nvest gated the
offer ng
-----,-----"""'
Area
0 recto rs
anl!
Franch ses un que rap dly
grow ng P zza co ncept 20'
year prove n nlstory ave~
170 stores n 16 stateS'::
Complete Ira nmg market:
mg
and support 1 888
344 2767 Ext 210

Faclllttes Technology Instructor Teacher
of Adult Education For a comp lete JOb
annd unce m enf and applicatiOn please refe r
to t h e Department s HomePage a t

days Sa arj

Thl• newapaper will nat
knowingly accept
•dVer'IIHIMflt8 tor .... ,
..-.whlehl•ln
wloletlon ot the IIW Our

storage building no pets

a·

Gracious living 1 and 2 bed- Corner computer desk 6
room apartments at V~lage from corner (t2 a· total
Manor
and
Riverside space!) me drawer printer
Apartmenls In Middleport drawer lots o1 shelves and

2 bedroom tra•ter $250
month $100 depos t No
pets on Addison P1ke
(740)367-Q102
'--'-------2 bedroom all electric., AC
very n•ce In Gallipolis
(740)446-2003 or (7 4())446
1409
_
...:..._ _ _ _ _ __
per month plus depos t
JET
Nelsonville
3 bedroom tra&amp;ler all elec Priests Tralar Park Water
AERATION MOTORS
tnc water patd $350 month ~ Repaired New &amp; Rebult In
N1ce lots available for ._., to $100 depos t (74())387 Stock Call Ron Evans 1
8()().537 9528
16x90 mobile homes $115 0611 after 6 00 on week
water Included (740)992 days
2167
Beautiful River VIew !dear "•••liGoooiiiiiiito•-"
For 1 Or 2
People
'
References Deposit No 6 foot French Provmc•al
Pets Foster Trailer Park Couch lt Floral $375
740-441-Q181
(740)446 7124
Bu ld ng for sale with or with

!M, R1ck. iam~e,
maH and fml

correcti onal cente r f or th e State of

and ll s(.;a l l unc t wns

We

Saturday, November 16, 2002
I O:OOAM

#laptJIJ r~lrtlllllliJ
Cindljl

The WV Department of Educatton has the
lulluwmg (2) t\\O postltons available al the
Lakm CorrectiOnal Center
Wesl
Colu mbta WV (Mason County) Laktn
Correctional Ce nter IS t h e n ew fe m a l e adult

http

1-800-Trucker

Support Services Worker
Jackson

Rasp rata ~ TheraJ)lst need
ed fo r a fast g ow ng med cal
equ pment co
n our
Ga I pol s OH store Send
resume to Mad Home Ca e
PO Box 967 Gall po s OH
45631 Attn John Kearns or
stop by Med1 Home Care to
get an app •catiO n 430
Second Avenu e Gallipolis
OH 45631 17401446 3880

HAPPY AD

POSITIONS AVAIL.

Call today and start earn1ng
money for the holidays'

or stop by our oflt ce
242 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis Oh1o

HiPPY"

""'•~~e"'

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2455

---------

5@!

o 1 almost a ha f

c~ntral a1r

You Will be ou front I ne n
delver ng super or customer
sat sfact on wh le ach1ev ng
Store
ObjeCtiVeS
Respons bllltles
Include
assiSting customers n buy
ng w1re ess equ pment and
serviCe as we I as perform
ng de ly rata I store dut es
The successfu l cand date
wJU have 1 year of retail
sales ex:pe r ence e,.;cellent
wntten and verb;:ll comm un
cat on sk1l s PC prof1c ency
and HS d plGma or equ va
ant Wi reless ndustry expe
r ence Is a plus Reqwred
flex b llty to work evemngs
weekends and holidays as
neede d Your co mm tment
to total customer saiiSfact on
s rewarded Wlth an excel
tent benef ts packaga
CALLUS NOWI
Use ihe To I Free numbe
(877)661-JOBS
Calls WI I be taken fro m
8am Midnight Eastern
V s I our webs te at
www uscellular com
US Cellula sa
drug free workplace EOE

~€;€;~ Wh€; ~

)Ou II !indtlb 1 'rs
~ q ft bru:lv' nyl ranch

acre: ot 1 Oho 3
bedrooms ~fu ll baths

Super 8 Motel IS seek ng an
ntell gent
dependable
energetiC 1nd v dual lor the
pos I on of desk crerk
Computer sklls a plus but
we Will tra n NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE Must apply
n person

HAPPY AD

Near Eas em Schools

ho

Sales
At U s Cellu ar we take
pnde m our customer focus
We respect and empower
our assoc1ates to do what s
ght and do I well Come
JOin our team
Retail Wireless
Consultant Part time
Gallipolis OH

OWNER OPERATORS
WANTED
TIIUCK DRIVERS
Longhaul Teams We lcome
Call (304)675-4005
Pomt Serv ce XPress

home thai doeen1 sell

have one such home now 14x70 Mobile Home- 2 bedNew 16 X 80 three bedroom room 2 bath poJCh new
2 Bath home at a used carpe1 all electnc nice k&gt;t

:!.

~egtster

Sentinel

&amp;unbap ttimtfl·&amp;mtind • Page OS

r M~~ 1r ~.l!w()MfN 1r A:_~ 1r ~ 1~..r. . . ~~--.,.~1 r

home price oome see Lynn
or Ernie today and check out
YQUI" savmgs Remember
'3 bedroom Garf1eld Avenue we must sell by the end of
S.allipohs
OH
Owner Oc1oberl
~nanclng $49 000 $4 000
.down
$365
month Must sell! Owner moved
(304)988-o664
2001 Oakwood 14X70 3BA
year old Bnck Ranch 2 bath all appl ances wash
er &amp; dryer lnduded central
~+ sq ft 2 112 acres
air With deck, Make down
.mground pocl storage build
payment &amp; take over $370
1ng excellen1 ne ghborhood
month mortage payments
l 740)4o'&amp;0149
(2 16)351 7086
.- bedroom house with 14
acres more or less New Mob•le Home only
$14 995 all Blngl&amp;wldes on
$63 000 (74())742 9217
clearance save thousands
Dupler Sales Inc (740)7531322 At 33 south of

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

\lrrtbune

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

2 90 House w/ Full MUST SELL BY niE END 14x70 2 bedroom nice
easement on 38 acre lot in OF OCTOBER I COLES clean near Clay School
Chester Area For More MOBILE HOME Athens Water and trash InclUded
l)elalls Call Day 985-3301 Ohio (740) 592 \972 on No pets $350 month +
or Evenings 985-4449
ccca~on we have a display depool1 (740)256-1664
)

To Place

10,2002

�•

Page 06 • 6U11bap a:unn ·6mttnd

Sunday, November 10,2002

BULLETIN BOARD
TUPPERWARE
OPEN HOUSE
SAT. NOV. 16TH
1-4 PM
' Addison Townhouse-Junction of
SR 7N &amp; Addison Pike
· 'Twice as Nice" Specials
Order 1 - Get 1 for $5
Becky Meaige 740-446-3194
Ariel
Cultural and Performing
.Arts Centre
Ariel Theatre ·is currently s~ekinQ ...
• Executive Director

• Full time, 40-hour per week
• Required an outgoing and protessional individual with excellent oral
and written communications skills and,

good computer skills.
• Will work with Board on fund raising
and grnt writing
• Responsible for daily ope.rations,
such as marketing, volunteer coordination . concert production/preparation
Bachelor's degree preferred and/or 35 years experience with non-profit
organization . Preff!rably in the arts .
Send resume and salary requirements
to PO .Box 424 Gallipolis, OH 45631

SOUTHERN BAND
BOOSTERS .
for UNIFORM DRIVE
Kawasaki ATV 2003
Raffle: Tickets $1 0 •
Drawing Nov. 15
Pumpkin Roll o.rders:
$10 each, prepaid
· Pick up at Souther High
Nov. 25 or 26 Call 949-2611
or 992-7079 after 5 pm

446-8235

N~)V. 16, 6:00 pm
Basket Bingo at the school
Ticket available from students &amp; at the door
20 games - 20 baskets
Door prizes, raffles,
50-50

Gallia Co. Gun Club

Hot Dog Sale from
9 am to 3 pm
Community Welcome!
IDLETYMES BAND
Bluegrass &amp; Gospel
at the Ariel
Sat. Nov. 16
7:30 pm
Advance tickets- $10
Info: ·'740-446-2787

The Lynch Agency .

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Chili Night- 6:30 - 7:00 pm
Tuesday Nov. 12
All you can eat
$4.00 a person
Members- GuestsPublic Invited
Support your VFW

a Craft Bazaar and

Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch 'Agency

FUND .RAISER

Slug Shoot

Are .the rates ge.t.ting too
expensive on your
Plan C or Plan F?
Check out the rates
.on our Plan D.
'

VFW Post 4464

Friday, November 15th
Scenic Hills is having

4.50%
Principal 1 00%
Guaranteed
Fully in?ured by ·
A rated insurance
companies.
Deposit of $2000
or more earns 4.50%
, Ronnie Lynch

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

Bradbury Elementary School

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8235
1-.800-44 7-8235

Sunday
November 1Oth
12 pm- ??
Trap Shooting
will follow
MOLLOHAN
CARPET
Quality at a low price
Berber $5.95/yd
. Vinyl $4.95/yd
'
Call us todayl
740-446-7444
BASKET BINGO
Pt. Pleasant Middle School
November 16th 6:00 pm
·
20 games- $20
For more info or tickets
call 675-5016

Headquarters by Juanita
Attention Managing
Cosmetologists and Nail
Technicians
Headquarts by Juanita
now renting work stations.
If interested call

.

•

Headquarters by Juanita
Carrying full line Qf
Merle Norman cosmetics.
Please call for your free consultation and a preview of our new
Holiday products. Call for your
free ·Consultation today
446-2673

•

VFW Post 4464
Veteran's Day Activities at
Gallipolis VFW Post 4464
will start following the
parade &amp; ceremony inthe· ·
city pat'X. If you are a disabled veteran who needs
transportation to attend call
the Post at 446-4464 &amp;
we will transport .

With Rev. Chuck Stansbury
at the
Cheshire aaptisl Church
November 10-13Sunday 6:00 pm
Mon-Wed 7:00 pm
Pastor Craig F'Ortick

. Meigs County Bikers
Association Taking applications
for free toy give away at Meigs
County Health Department.
Nov. 7th - Nov. t 5th
to Pick up an application.

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Investigation continues; man charged
Meigs escapes
with aggravated murder . to appear . in court d~mage from
.

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor
POMEROY _

446-2673

REVIVAL

.......... to ..... B_1

Richard Michael

Warnecke II , 22, of Pomeroy, is expected to make his initial appearance in
Meigs County Court Tuesday on charges
of aggravated murder in the death of his
5-monih-old
daughter,
Morgana
Warnecke. '
·
The infant also is the daughter of Tina
Hysell. Warnecke and Hysell, resided at
255 Union Ave .

Back~' .
Nov. 15th 7 pm
"Dwight Icenhower''
Amvets Post 23
Public Welcome

"Elvis is

Charges were filed against Warnecke
Friday evening by Meigs Counly
Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story after a
telephone call was received from the
Franklin County Coroner's office where
the child's body had been sent for an
autopsy.
Infonnation received by Story in that
call apparently led to charges being filed
against Warnecke.
A spokesman at the prosecutor's office
said that the cause of the infant's death
will not be disclosed until a written
report is received from the coroner's

office.
According to an earlier report from
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Proffitt, a
.Meigs Emergency Services unil was dispatched to the· Union Avenue residence
Thursday night after a report was
received that an infant child had' ·been
injured.
Officials would not say whether the
baby died at the residence, on the way to
Holzer, or at the hospital.
Story said the investigation is continuing.
"

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

WORKAT HOME!! .
Debt Free International Company
seeks 10 Motivated people
For more info 1-866-773-5829
Webpage:
hUp://SAFEDIETING.TRIPID.COM

For More Info..•

overnight storms
''

Staff report
POMEROY . _
.

. While

many Ohio and West
Virginia areas had considerable damage, Meigs County
appeared to have escaped
the brunt of Sunday's
storms.
Meigs County EMS, however, had a fire in the squad
bay Sunday morning dl.le to a.~~erican Electric Powe(
a lightning strike about 7 spokesperson Terri Flora
a.m.
said there were no extended
The Pomeroy Volunteer power outages in Meig~
Fire Department was called County due to the storms.
to the scene shortly before
"A handful here and thel;ll
7:30 a.m. but Fire Chief maybe, but in all instances
Rick Blaettnar said that power was back on quickly
EMS personnel already had and there were no equipment
the fire . under control by problems," he said.
using fire extinguishers.
Jackson County in W.Va.
"The radio tower was had six trailer homes
. struck
by
lightning," destroyed and a dozen othets
Blaettnar said. "The ground . damaged but no one w&amp;s
'fault kicked out and when seriously hurt as thunderthe backup generator ·kicked storms packing winds up tq
on, the power panel the gen- 60 mph blew through West
erator kicks into caught on Virginia .
·
fire."

The Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department had eight

446-2342
• 992-2156 • 675-1333
•

tiremen and two trucks ori
the scene .
,
Blaettnar said the powet
supply to EMS was disrupt~
ed for a short time but com- •
munication was not compromised. Radio and telephori~
se rvice was provided to
EMS
through
the
Middleport Volunteer Fin!
Department until the phone
service was restored at 8:15

Wind, min and lightning
Please see Storms, AJ

1-800-447-8235

It's

at Youtl Do If You Could
Do ything You Want
..

e've got what you

golf bliss until you reach the

your day on the links.

want in a golf

Gulf. Or pick two or three of

MARRIOTT'S GRAND HOTEL at Point

CONFERENCE CENTER AT GRAND

vacation .. top qual-

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Clear, Alabama, overlooking

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indulge yourself with a t;a~e

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This fall, THE LODGE AND

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over- .

Times.

pnces ... mu tlp e courses ... easy

of quality and affordability. . / /
1)1 . \\. ~lir•.df look the award. h .
f f!uPm/ ':.7r,ofd.1'¥1 lUll.
5tx. of our etg
t sttes got ·
winning 54-hole course in

beyond belief...Next to

to get to .. .famous Southern

4-stars from Golf Digest's

The Grand European Spa, an

comfort and

Bethpage Black, the Judge at

Places to Play. If you're per-

eye-popping $6 million pool

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Capitol Hill offers more golf for

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l· l

hospitality and

service.

On Alabama's

fect, they give you 5

Fall is an

stars. And those

ideal time to

JONES 'GOLF

who've played

. play the Trail.

TRAiLyou

the Trail rank it

can play all

Number One in

ROBERT TRENT

or some of

Staff repo.rt
· _ . dpor. knobs in their C011)1Jluni_ _ _ _ ___:._ _ _ ties.
Saturday, they picked up
POMEROY- "We collect
the
bags filled with canned
food to help people who can't
afford to buy what they need goods and other non-perishto eal," said . I0-year-old ables and took them to the
Hannah Cleek as she helped Pomeroy Municipal Building.
The Pari sh had parked a
load canned goods into the
back of a !nick Saturday after- large· truck there to receive the
"gifts of food" from the
noon.
She was one of many Girl scouts.
.· Scouts around the county parThe holiday sea~on is a time
ticipating in the Scouts· food of such need for many residrive. an annual service pro- dents, said April Smith, _a
ject.
troop leader, and it's good for
For the past two weeks, the the girls to think of others.
Scouts have been soliciting
The I ,I03 cans of fo'od
their friends and neighbors for along with spaghetti, macanon-perishable foods which
they can pa's along to the roni, rice and other non-perMeigs County Cooperative ishables will be used in the
Parish for distribution to the Thanksgiving and Christmas
baskets which the Parish will
needy.
A ·week ago, they attached distribute in their program to
notes telling about the project make the holidays brighter for
'
to plastic bags and put them on the less fortunate.

public golf on earth:'

ANn C0NFf:Rf:Nr : E CENTER

·

Local Girl Scouts
collecting food for
Cooperative Parish:

Cooler

"The Judge is

the money than any other
course in America:·

-Golf Magazine
Our new weekday three-day,
2-night hotel and

Autumn breezes

Value over all -

golf packages for
I

our 378 holes of

other golf destina-

whisper through

Fall start at

stately pines, as

only $179.

Index

~

championship golf.
There's likely one within

. HAMI'I'ON COVE
Huntsville

tions in the

•

postcard sun-

world!

sets tell you .

now. You can begin in

of the Trail offers you

you've found

Huntsville at the top of the

exquisite comfort and

what you've been

state and meander in non-stop

luxury when you finish

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Call today and

The Resort Division

easy drive of where you are

2 Sections - 1l Pips

make your plans
to experience
CAPITOL HILL
l'ratMI/e .

missing.

Golf's Greatest
Road Trip.

People who've played
'

the Trail call it the "Nwnber

One Value In the ..wrld as a

•

designed guestrooms designed to wow any
traveler.

I

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
Catherine Cox , 44, was
found dead at her resi dence, 126 Mulberry Ave.,
Sunday.
Pomeroy Pol ice. Chief
Mark Proffitt and Meigs
County
coroner,
Dr.

had been dead for several
hours, authorities said. Her
body was fully clothed and
she was lying on a couch,
they reported .
The body was taken to
County
the
Franklin
Coroner's office for an
autopsy .

Makala McCarty, a membt?r of Pomeroy Brownie Trool?
1271, hands canned goods to Bennie Phipps, a .Scout paFent helping with the service proJect. At right is April smilh;
leader of Troop 1271 and chairman of the food driv~·;.
(Charlene Hoeflich)
;·

"

10 bips in

the ..wrld:'

-Frequent Flyer Magazine

GRAND HOTEL MARRIOTT Point Cllar

1.800.949.4444
www. rtjgolj. com

I

J

A3
A4
A2
A3
Bl -3
A3

-~-------

Douglas Hunter, said in a
joint stateme.nt the death is
being investigation.
Cox's body was discovered just before I p.m.
Sunday by her daughter,
June Cremeans , who
called an Emergency
Medical Servjces unit and
the police.
It appeared the wom~n

We are the Caring People of Holzer Hon1:e Care, H~spice and Extra Care

-Golf Digest consumer survey
..."one of the top

Q 2002

86

Staff report

November is National Ho~e Care and Hospice Month

golf destination•
and tastefully-

'

A3
83-5.

W9man's body found
at home by her daughter

&lt;·

r

Crystal Clonch, PCA, Holzer Extra Care
Irene Hesson, CNA, Holzer Hospice
· ,Melinda Sallee, PCA, Holzer Extra Care
Lisa Mulholand, RN, Holzer Hpme Care
Christie Campbell, RN, Holzer Home Care

t-jEALTH SYSTEM
'

www.holzer.org
~

.

•

' ..

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