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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 19, 2002

ALLEY OOP

. BRIDGE ,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ACROSS

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50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 68

lime?

In

61 Moulill,

zoology

DOWN

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1 Qulde
2 Comle&gt;etrlp
29 Qullel
32 Mr. Monllncl
pouum
33 - de plume 3 IINik
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tennyoon

variety

27

AllpJIII

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pentde

59 Alwoyo,to

· _.....n,

19 -Henund- 3t'Crany
41 Hot rider ·
20 M111tory
43 ~I
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22 FNIIS
44 To end 23 Kind of
45 Fury
lnceltt

24Tourne-

ment

puMI

25 Currler
end28 Ugllt In I
28 tu&amp;e
Young

41 R-""r'o

~· . Racine

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41-S.O

· Buckeyel
41 FIIIIOUI

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
News editor

-la..,tiW1c

Have you watched
hclneY
..,.,.
~
12Promlll
doubles teams play37 Ne1W011&lt;
I Strey coif
29 AddHionel 53 ~to Frltl
ing tennis? After
30 NltiiM- 54 Fiivllrl
38 Worker'oiD 9 Wilding
every point, win or
39 Flag hakler
bird
40 Bifocal
10 Tablet
31Monleo
lose, they are high41 -...tiel
·14
Fr.
hoiJ
37 FIICIII
fiving. Can you imag'l"""1r-r..,.ine bridge players doing that? Cash the
diamond ace ·- high
five. Take the diamond king ·- high
five. Give partner a
diamond ruff -· low
five under the table!
Now see if you and
your ·Partner can jus·
tify giving each other
high fives · after this
deal. How would you
defend !0. try to defeat
three no-trump?
Declarer had six top
tricks: two spades,
two hearts an(! two
clubs. With two dia. monds establishable,
South needed to find
the heart queen.
CELEBRITY .CIPHER
West decided, beby Luis Campos
cause South hadn't
·
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptogl'ams
are created from quotations by famous
rebid one spade, to
people. pasland present. Each lener In the cipher stands for another.
· lead the spa(Je jack,
Today's clue: U equals D
not a ·club. (If you
"WJBFJL
TNF
PLLVG
would lead from that
club · holding, start
DLWZJKJR
GOWBG
B F E J R. ,
with the eight, high
•.
from a long suit withONL
RZLWOLGO
ONKJR
KJ •
out an honor.)
·
When declarer won
D K S L
KG
0 F
P L LV
B FEZ
with dummy's .ace,
East signaled encourXKJ U
BFEJR."
agement
with
his
.
mne.
N L J Z B
SF Z U
Now came the dia•
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'Some people are bOrn on third
mond iack. which ran
base and g0 through llle thinking they hit a triple."
·
to West's king. He
- Former Dallas Col'ibov coach Barry Switzer
continued with the
spade 10, and East
WOlD
':~~:t~~' S@R~lA-~"B~s· GAM
I
overtook with his
-~~--Ealiod
by
CLl\'
R,
POUAN
"----~t
. ..
queen.
Declarer
Rearrange lettera cf the
ducked this trick, won
scrambled words beEast's spade-eight low four
ro form four 1imple wgrds.
continuation, and led
a diamond to dumRYPLEU
my'~ 10. After win·
ning with the ace,
most Easts would
cash · the spade five .
A XT E
Then Soutll might or
might not guess the
hearts. (He probably
would not, because he ;E R T ~~
·o~r government:" grumbled
would learn that West
•
"'
a
chap
at a political rally,"is
6
rated to be longer in
~~
based
on
not only lhe separahearts than East.) But 1 . .
. ·;:; tion .of church and state, but the
East exited with the r--:-~--:-----, separation of money and the .•
club queen.
South was suitably
-=L:,.I':'A-'Nj-1..:Y,.,Ta
tho chuckle quotod
fooled. He won in
- ' - ·......J•...;....J•...;,..J.-..L.--1.
by lilllng in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below . .
hand with the club . 'ace, cashe.d the heart
@ PRINT NUMBERED
. ace, and ran the he.art ·
LETTERS IN SQUARES
jack to East, thinking
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
that this was a no-cost f) ANSWER
.
play .. Disaster struck,
though. East won
·with the queen and
Chalet - Drill- Tinge • Advent· DIDN'T HEAR
cashed his high five.
Someone had given me a fool proof scheme lo make
money . Granny told me that whenever things sound too.
easy, 1t turns out there's a part you DIDN'T HEAR.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2002

www.mvdailysent&gt;"eLcom

seeks funding for water.project State revenue aids
Eastern schools

111111

50 lletliter-

·-

BAUNEY

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58 Ctwgod

24 Cherry

8Y PHIWP AlDER

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Drenx

.18 Sketched
17 Gold lui
18 "Snow

F.aRI

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High five

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mild

52 ~
55 SWill

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21 Rhzy rock
23 Prlmeto

Dealer: South

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58 Hldeouo

20

Vulnerable: E.llst-Weat
Wut_ NMth
P•n
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Pan I P.'T

13 OHke

White'"

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11 Long time
12 Thuo

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Tressel ready for Michigan~ B1

42 Prefix for

·
··
· .; RACINE- Funding on•Racine's $1.6
.million water treatment and tank replace·
.. :ment project was reviewed at a public
hearing and meeting of Racine Village
Council Monday night.
·
· A second hearing will be held at 6:30
on Monday, Dec. 2, said David
sp.m.
Jerk
H ·d th n1
~ncer,
c -treasurer. e sat at 0 Y
village officials attended.
Engineering on the project has been
completed with $20,000 from the
Governor's Office. of Appalachia and
$5 ;000 in village funds borrowed from a
local bank.
The village is now waiting on responses from its applications for grants. incl~d·
ing $300,000 fro111 the Appalachtan
Regional . Commission; $500,000 in
Community Development Block Grant;
monies; $375,000 from Issue 2, and

$520,720 ·from the Ohio Water
Development Association .
Spencer said that while the amount is
high, residents need lO understand that
council is not just talking about providing
the needs of the village of Racine, but
those of everyone from Portland to
Minersville, including Letart.
ed th
·
· ·
He explain
at sewage IS commg m
from allharound and that
th Racine's water
te
system as to supp1y e necessary wa r
for its treatment. That, he said, takes
about l15,000 gallons of water every
month.
Then there is the new combined school,
bringing about 900 students into Racine.
The school water use, ·said S!Jencer, is
about 500,000 gallons a month.
'The current water ~atment plant and
tankwereputmtoservtcem 1950andhas
been operating all this time without any
upgrades!" said SJX;ncer.
·. .
He agam emphasized that the proJect ts

not just about the village of Racine, .but
about the communities all around who
will benefit from the new system.
He said that Syracuse belongs to the
Syrncuse-Racine Sewage District. which
means all that waste is coming into
Racine where the SC)Vage treatment plant
is located and Racine has to supply all the
water for the treatment of the raw
sewage.
The supply of water from the wells is
not a problem, according to Spencer, but
he said if something should happen to the
old water treatnient system, it could create what he called a serious problem.
Some arrangemenis have been made by
Mayor Scott .Hill to get water from the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water System in
the event of.an emergency, Spencer said.
He noted, however, that the TP-Chester
system would be limited as to how long it
could supply the needed amount of water
to keep everything_operating in Racine.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

land are distributed to local
school di stricts in the county
where the pwject took
TUPPERS PLAINS
place, according to State
Through . the · "Trees to forester John Dorka.
. Textbooks" program of the
An additional .~0 percent
Ohio Department of Natural of revenues is allocated to
Resources
Division of the local county and town·
Forestry, Eastern Local ship governments (20 perSchool District has received cent each), while the
$1,512.
remaining 20 percent is
Eastern was one of 16 deposited in the state's genOhio school districts to era! revenue fund.
·
share in more than $500,000
Of the 20 percent assigned
from the sale of'til)1ber and to the general revenue fumj,
other products taken from $! 00,000 is automatically
state forests .
allocated to pay local fire
In addition , 13 county departments for forest fire
governments and 20 town- suppression
assistance,
ships also received a total of Dorka explained.
more than $500,000 through
Revenues generated from
the ODNR · Division of state forests also include
Forestry's program.
royalties from the produclncluded in that amount tion of minerals, such as oil
was $756 for Meigs County
government and $756 for and gas, on state land .
The ODNR Division of
Olive Township, bringing
.the total coming to Meigs to Forestry is responsible for
$3,024.
manag i ng
more f than
· Ross County received 184,000 acres o
state
$398,823
and
Vinton forests
across
Ohio.
County received $208,369 Through carefully .selected
from the $1 million disti'ib· timber management prouted.
jects. foresters have been
Under state law, 40 per- able to improve the health,
cent of revenues generated vigor and productivity of
from any timber manage- . state forest lands, Dorka
ment project on state fore st said.
News editor

Raccoon Creek pia~
ready for review

.

THE THERMOSTAT MUST
BE HIWWIRE! HAS THE
REPNRM/.N SEEN CALLED,

I

i "YES! YES! YES!" SAYS
CZERVIICKI DURING .
STEAMY INTERLUDE
WITH GALVIN

Staff report .
series of public meetings .
. " .. _.....,._,-:~~
'rheir ·concern~. as~eU as
·wiLKESVILLE
A plans for future stream
public hearing has been set re storation efforts, re outfor Tuesday, Nov. 26 from 3 lined in the plan.
to 7 p.m. at the Wilkesville
Citizens of the six coun·
Community Building for ties that house portions of
residents of Athens, Gallia, the creek are encouraged to
Hockin~, Jackson, . Meigs. be at the public meeting.
and_ Vmton counties to Community members are ..
review a draft of the urged to voice comments ·
Raccoon Creek Watershed and question s on the plan .
Management Plan .
The plan is also available
Raccoon Creek . partners for review at · the Wellston
and local communrty mem- Public Library and the
bers. developed the plan to Herbert Wescoat Memorial
outhne a ~ong-term strategy Library in McArthur, and
for restonng the creek .to a online at www .raccoonhealthy state. and educatmg creek.org through Dec . 13.
the commumty about water
After the public comment
quality concerns.
·
· b
The plan must be submit- pen~d , the plan ~Ill e
ted
to
the
Ohio finahzed and submitted to
Environmental Protection the Ohw EPA for approval.
Agency at the end of the
The_ approved plan then .
year
·
becomes the Raccoon Creek
The creek, long polluted partners' blueprint for the
by past mining ·practices, is next I 0 years of stream
one of the longest and most restoratiOn efforts . .
scenic streams in Ohio.
The plan was compiled by
Over the past two years, the Institute for Local
more than 300 area citizens Government and Rural ,
have participated in the Administration at Ohio
development
of
the University's
'Voinovich
Raccoon Creek Watershed Center for Leadership and
Management Plan through a Public Affairs . .

O

I

c

I

.I~;'3;1~;I~~;

PEANUTS

sc

ALL R161-lT, 'fOU STUPID

1 NEVER KNOW IF '' RIGI-IT
NOW'' MEANS "Ri611T NOW"
OR ''Ri61.tT NOW::.

6EA6LE, LET 60 OF TI-llS
BlANKET Rl61-lT NOW !

BETTY
1 ~ii"E11l S~V, 1 LIKE niE.
TEN!. WAIWI·UP SUITS WOMeN
Aile 1/KAAING ~E MV~

IT I/IAIIB 111&lt;.11
(.00\( ACTIV.c
ANO CAI'A0LE-'

~~I~K
Al«rni~G

AI.~,

11'5 NOf AN ILUJSICI&lt;
-11115&lt; WCMEN A~~
~fALl-~ I'I.AYING Sl'd&lt;iS

IT'S A. N\CE
ILWSION

CAN IE

I'UNIN A
S~IFFY

OUTfiT!
7i

Is I

~-.1.""~-'Mrl

to Cngagi in a socinl activity

Ioday. let go and enjoy yourself. Remember, you are there
to have fun and relax a bit,

Bv BERNICE BEDE OsoL

In the year ahead you are
likely to reap substantial re-

.:tN CAc;,E YOU

eration·, tolerance and ami -

·abiliiy both in your workday

COULDN'T
TEL~,rM

world and in . your sociul

sphere. This generosity of
spirit will be rewarded 10
times over.

l~~OR\N~

. _ _ .__

'IOU!

~~

MV&gt;~

TilE GIUZZWELLS
MY l-IFE I'!&gt;

WITHOUT MEA~INGt!

0

l TAKE IT
ALL- BACK !

0
0

not to treat it as a waste of
time.

wards from showing consid·

0
0

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --~A problem at home thnt
has been causing fruslralions
can be reerified· Ioday by
smothering it with love and
kindn~ss . No!hing can with·
staod such power.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.- 23·
Dec . 21) ·· Today 's events
muy proue thai Ihings arc
much better than you think
and wi II serve 10 brighten
your outlook and perspective ·
quite a bit. The difference will
come from eliminating nega~
tive elements.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) ·· Put forth your best cf.
forts today and don't be afraid
to osk for fair and proper
hold the purse strings will

loosen their grip for genuine

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· If you take some time

.

ARIES (Murch 11·April 19)
•· If you've been neglecting
someone you ' ve been close to

for some time, pick up lhe
phone and cull thiS person to·
day. Your old pul is hurt that
slhe hnsn"t heard from Y\)U .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ·· Somebody in a high
place wants you to k~ow how
n·.dch you are apprecmted and
today s/he may do somelhing
to reward you for a job wen
done. This·person feels you' re
due an honorarium.

compensati on. People who
a&lt;:complishm.rnts .

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) ·· Domestic responsibilities could be uppermo's! in
your lhoughts loday and vou
may not have !rue peace of
mind unless you give lhem
priority over all else, Doing
for your family gives you sol·
ace.

J

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·· You won't just talk about
big ideas or wl1at should be
accomplished. you"ll take the
· lead and show others how to
·go after them today ahd.come
out a winner.

~
.
'
· for a self-:,state\ paries and destina.
· . . . .tionfW'wi,l:hin . !lrio,:ing .!lis·
·
tanc~r
.
,
.
work : · Meiinda Morris; Meigs
hav~ to ,,tourism assistant, ~aid the
""'"rv attraction, •··office has had· an mcrease
can in a' in calls abo!lt bus tours . ;~~~d" :
get- requests for visitors' pack.·
said. ets. ,
·
IE
.
on a ... · "In years J?ast, we were , markels like
'Juckyl!!I'Ccetve l.500calls
:'We"ve •.seen
.·
· · .
for, •i;J,{I)fll1atio'il., and Ibis dous rc:sponse,
· pe~ple llf\: • year V{c;'re illteady close .to "People · have
. expfore cities. 3,000,q sqe said. "Pepple
TO.!~J
.. ,_,.,

.,,.e_ ~:;~·;•..

------- ~ ~ll!rq.-----Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2002

GAllFIELD

I

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

.. Give free rein to your
imagination today when it .
comes to your commercial or

'

r---n_;_dex----,..

1

financial involvements. An

ability to see further than lhe
· other guy is what will give
you an edge,
•
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
It's possible that you'll be
·given an opportunity today 10
reinforce a friendship that has
been a bit wobbly lateJ&gt;'. Do
your part to shore up the relo·
tionship: it'll be worth it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-· Business associates will·re-

spond in kind if you Ire~t
them in a friendly, outgoing
manner today. People always
take the time Io accept kind·
ness and a spirit of congenial·
ity.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 23) .
· The best way to turn moun·
tuins back into molehills is to
treut events philosophically
today. It's amazing how. with
an easygoing attitude, things
thut'uppearcd .bigger than life
arc dwurfed.
raglineScorpio, treat ~our·
self to a bi[lhday gift. Send
for your Amo-Graph predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and an SASE lo
Asoro-Gruph. c/o lhi's ncwspa·
per. P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe,
OH 44092 . Be sure lo state
your z(&gt;diac sign./tugline

z SKtlons -

Calendar
Classifieds
· Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
. Obituaries
· Spo~
Weather

Touch of wild stops in Pomeroy
BY KRtS ScouTEN
Staff writer

n Pllps

AS
84-S .

86

AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY- If you were
passing through downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday, your eyes
weren't deceiving you. You
did see monster bucks in the
rivei'front parking lot.
.
Credit Xpress sponsored the
visit of Richard English and
his live deer and wolf show.
English brought Thunder, a
5-year-old buck; Rag, a 7-

year-Old movie star buck; and Truck buck and haS starred in sevShadow, a timber wolf, to era! of the automaker's conuner·
town.
·
1 cials. He also starred in comedian
"I've been raising and show- Jeff Foxwonhy's movie "Return
ing bucks f~ 25 Y73fS a:r&lt;' ~the .of the Incomplete~ HWiter."
road foc 15, · E'llglish srud 1 like
English owns a farm in West
to. do small outdoor shows like Milton,Ohio,whereheoptl111lfsa
this
allows me 10 talk to urine collection business. He has ·
~'lnpeopthebig·. trao:k! shows, thou· 75 &lt;IreS and 10_ show bucks
_ on the
t:
a1
th
Afri
sands of faces walk by and it's ann ong WI one
can por·
hard 10 have oonversaflons," he cupine, one pair of servei cats, Preschoolers line up to watch the monster buck Tuesday. The
OOded.
three wolves, weasels, and a 100. live deer and wolf show was in the riverfront parking lot as a
English said Aag is the Ford year-old alligator snapping turtle. promotion for Credit X-press. {Kris Scouten)

becans;:/

·lhe Great American S111okeout
•'

. &amp;

'

.

Is ftaunclay, Novetnber 2 1
· The Tobacco Use Pr~vtntion Coalition of Galli a and Jackson
· Counties encourage you to be) smoke-free on Thursday!.

.
For more il')formation on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call ·

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

.

.

(740) 446-5940.

.

\vww .holzer.org

.

., .
••

•

�(

. .. .

•.

..

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Nov. 21

•

I - - lw.w I •

• I eoru- #M- I

w.1111.
0 2002 Aa:uWoather,lnc.

0...
. . . .~. ,..~
~.
... . . ......~~ ·

"""' l't ~

Cloudy

so-

T....,.

Aoin

Fbrioo

S...

"'

Chance for showers returns
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
the upper 30s. Chance of pre·
Skies will be partly cloudy cipitatton 50 percent.
·Extended rorecast:
this afternoon with highs in
the 50s. Tonight, the clouds
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
~ill be thickening. Overnight a chance of snow showers.
·1ows will fall into the upper Little or no accumulation
30s to the low 40s.
expected. Colder with steady
On Thursday, a low and or slowly falling daytime temcold front over the Central peratures in the upper 30s.
Lakes will move through the Chance of snow 50 percent.
Ohio Valley by late Thursday
Friday
night...Mostly
· night. The cold front will pro- cloudy with a chance of snow
duce showers out ahead of it showers. Lows in the mid 20s.
spn:ading into the Ohio Chance of snow 30 percent.
Valley in the afternoon.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Weather forecast:
Highs 38 to 43.
Tonight...lncreasing cloudi·
Sunday...Partly cloudy with
ness with a chance of showers a chance of showers until
after midnight. Lows in the midnight, then a chance of
lower 40s. Light south winds. snow or rain showers late. . ~
Chance of rain 40 percent. · Lows near 30 and highs in the
Thursday... Mostly cloudy lower 40s.
with a chance of rain showers.
Monday... Cioudy with a
Highs in the mid 50s. chance of snow showers.
.Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph. · Lows in the lower 30s and
Chance of rain 50 percent.
highs in the lower 40s. ·
·
' Thursday night ... Mostly
Tuesday...A slight chance of
cloudy with a chance of rain snow showers, otherwise
showers until midnight, then a partly cloudy. Little or . no
chance of snow showers after accumulation expected. Lows
midnight. Little or no accu- in the upper 20s and highs
·
mulation expected. Lows in near40.

8,000

-rd

8,474.78

:Low
8,405.12

7,000
hJth: 11,722.98

Jan. 14,2000

1,600
1,ol00
1,200
SEP
Low
1,387.76

. 1,000

OCT

NOV
Roconl hJth: 5,048.62

Morch tO, 2000

Nov. 19, 2002

1,000

S.tandard
&amp; Poor's

900

·3.62 .lb ..
896:74
Pet. change
from previous·

..0.40

AUG
High
905.45

OCT

SEP

Low

NOV

Rlcord hJtl1: t,527.46
March 24, 2000

893.09

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 26.83
Arch Coal - 18.20
Akzo ~ 28 .40

AmTech/SBC - 25.48
Ashland Inc. - 25.65
AT&amp;T - 27.20
Bank One- 37
jlll -12.74
.'Bob Evans- 23.63
BorgWarner- 45.60
Champion- 2.65
Cl]arming Shops - 4.11
City Holding - 28.80
Coi-21 .23
DG -13.87
DuPont - 42.23

Federal MOgul- .50.

· use -21.40

Gannett- 74.50

Ganeral BICII'Ic- 23.90
GKNLY-3.35

Hal1ey Davldlon -49.48
Kmart- .58
Kroger- 14.75
ltd. -'-14.95 .

• •

NSC ~ 20

Qak Hll FNnclal- 20.81

OVB -20.53
BBT -38.16
Peoples - 26.95

Aoc:kwell- 19.37
Rocky Boots- 5.19
AD Shell - 44.18
Sears - 22.83
Wai·Mart- 52.92
Wendy'S- 27.84
Worthlnglon- 16.83
DaUy llioci&lt; reports are
the 4 p.m. closing

quotee of 1he prevtous
day's 1ransactlons, provided by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc.
Gallipolis. .

of

Pepsico - 44.90
Premier- 7 .04

.Appeals court supports
common pleas judg~
COLUMBUS (AP)
While supporting a judge's
broad concern about the
legality of statewide construction contracts awarded
by the Ohio . School
Facilities Commission, an
appeals court said she was
wrong about one construe'· ti on contract'.
The I Oth Ohio District
Court of Appeals on
Tuesday
overturned
Franklin County Common

Pleas
Judge
Jennifer
Brunner's ruling against the
awarding of a contract by
the Tri-Village School
District in Darke County.
The court said Tri- ,
Vill.ag e' s 4eciitoll to a ward
the contract. to second· low·
est
bidder
Peterson
Construction of Wapakoneta
over low bidder Monarch
Construction of Cincinnati
was.not arbitrary.

f

The bill also would require .
those who don't get vaccinated to sign a waiver stating
that they understand the iisks
of infection.,·
"Someone has to sit down
and make a conscious deci·
sion· to not do this. I think
they'll think twice when they ·
realize the risk and get the
antibiotics," Hagan said
Thesday.
· The bill has no opposition
so far, but its passage remains
uncertain because there's little time left before the
Legislature adjourns Dec. 31.
If it doesn't pass this session,
Hagan said he would reintro,duce the measure next year.
More than a dozen · stales,
including
Pennsylvania,
Maryland,
Connecticut,
Virginia and Florida, have
passed similar legislation.
Other . states require that
incoming
students
be
informed that ·they have an
increased risk.
,
Meningococcl!l meningitis,
which includes symptoms of
fever, naus~a. confusion,
vomiting·, exhaustion and
headache, is a baCterial infection of membranes around the
brain and spinal cord. It can
be spread by coughing, kissing and sharing eating uten·
sils.
According
to
the
Meningitis Foundation of
3;000
America, ., about
Americans · a year become
infected and more than 300
die.

_. Obituaries
Margaret
Buckley
· POMEROY - Margaret
"Peg" Buckley, 78, of Texas
Road, Pomeroy, died Monday,
. November 18, 200Z, at the
. home of her daughter.
: She was born Aprill2. 1924,
· in Reedsville, daughter of Lola
: Barber of Pomeroy, and the late
' Delbert Barber.
. · She W;IS a member of the
· Reedsville United Methodist
: C~urch, and attended Full
: Gospel Lighthouse Church in
:Pomeroy.
· · Besides her mother, she is
. survived by a daughter and
· son-in-law, Pamela .and Roger
: Hoffman of Pomeroy; three ·
: grandchildren, Christi and
: David Hess, Mike and Evelyn
· Hoffman and Alyssa Hoffman.
all of Chester; six great-grand·
. children; three brothers, Jerry
: Barber of Montana, Kenneth
: Barber of Hebron, and Ronald
; Barber of Reedsville; and two ·
: sisers, Thelma Smith of
· Middleport, and Kathleen
Miles of Cbester.
Besides her father, ·she was
: preceded in death by her hus·
: band, George Garland Buckley,
· whom she married in 1941; a
: sister, Mary Rowles; a brother,
.;lW.Jbur Barber;. and two infant
:brothers. ·
: Services will be I p.m.
Friday, November 22, 2002, at
White Funeral Home in
Coolville, with the Rev. Roger
Hunter officiating. Burial will
follow at Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8.
p.m. Thursday, November 21,
.2002. .
.
-Paid notice

Martha
;Bums

.

measure.

9,6oo

AUG
High
1,394.93

'

700

Dow
Jones

1,374.51
Pet. change
-prevl&gt;ul: -1.38

Meningitis bill would
require .proof.of
.
vaccination for students

800

10,000

8,548.84

S.C.
Ohio troopers said they
believe they spoiled Fulks
late Monday sleeping in a
blue BMW parked in a rest
area along U.S. 23 in Marion
County, in north-central
Ohio. The man sped off
when the trooper ordered
him out of the car and nearly ran over another officer.
The pursuit was halted t&lt;r
make sure the officer was
OK.
"Our trooper did not see •
anyone else in the car but
we don't know if there
were possible victims or
abductions
inside the
trunk," Lewis said.
Basham was arrested
Brar'lilen L. Basham; 21, · .Chadrick Fulks, 25, is seen
Sunday after allegedly tryof, Hopkins County, Ky., in ,a Kentuck}&lt; State Pollee
ing to hijack a car from a seen· in a '·undated · handout . photo. The Ohio .
woman and her 15-year-old
Kentucky State Police . .Highway Patrol say~ it :
daughter at an Ashland,
handout was taken into chased a suspect belteved. ·
Ky.. mall. After a foot chase custody· ·S.upJjay nlg~t · to be _Fulks who escapeil
during which Basham and 't&lt; ait&lt;er poljce say he tiied.to, ' frol)l jail but a trooper broke :
an officer exchan~ed gun·
fire, police found him in the catjack two women ·1h the · off the ·pursu1t on U-S 23 ·
parking lgt of an Ashland, , last· night because he feared
Ohio River.
Ky.
mall. , (AP) •
one of his colleagues hild
Basham was being held
1
'
been hurt. (AP)
on $2 million bond on .
.
. '
charges of attempted rob, .
bery, criminal attempt to J...,.__.::..,;__.:::_..::.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:---:---:---:-....1
commit murder on an offi- tence for writing a bad of Hanson, Ky., and left
cerand fleeing or eluding a check and Fulks was him tied to a · tree in
awaiting trial on robbery Indiana on. Nov. 6.
police officer.
At the time of the charges.
Hawkins struggled for
escape, Basham was
The two allegedly kid· hours before freeing himserving a five-year sen- napped James Hawkins self.

_

Nov. 19, 2002

High

COLUMBUS (AP)- State
. ttoopers. searched street by
street for one of two Kentucky
jail escapees suspected in a
two-state crime spree in
which one kidnapping victim
remained missing.
·
Officers combed areas
near a rest slop where a man
believed to be Chadrick
Fulks fled from stale troopers
Monday
night.
Authorities believed the car
he was driving was damaged
crossing a highway median
to avoid capture. .
The State High~ay Patrol
had not found the car by
Tuesday night, and troopers
had "no idea" of Fulks'
whereabouts, said patrol
spokesman Ll. Gary Lewis.
"The best we can do is
ke_ep on his trail," Lewis
said.
Fulks, 25. and L. Branden
Basham, 21, escaped Nov. 4
from the Hopkins County jail
in western Kentucky. They
are suspected of abductin$ a
44-year-old South . Carohna
woman, who has not been
found, and a 42-year-old
Kentucky man, who escaped
after being tied to a tree and
abandoned.
Alice
Donovan
of
Galivants Ferry, S.C., vanished Thursday from a Wal·
Mart parking lot in Conway,

COLUMBUS (AP) -Erin
Estimates show that I 00 to
KrejnY,'s parents thought t!te 125. cases occur annually on
college freshman had a bad college campuses, resulting in
case · of flu when she was five to 15 deaths.
taken from her donnitory to a
hospital in the middle of the
rnght
JCPenney
Three hours later, having .
catalog
driven from their suburban
MEfiOWjf 11011 M&amp;s
Cleveland home to St. Joseph
dt:,~~d0~.;.'31
Mercy Hospital in Ann Arbor,
(740)' 44&amp;-3525
Mich., Tom and Cindy ~~~ili=: _:~~:••:;!lol~tH:!.,_J;
Krejny were told their daugh· .,
ter was dead.
· The Eastern Michigan
University student . from
Valley View had contracted
meningococcal · meningitis. .
She died in Match 1997, two
days before her 19th birthday. .
'This disease can and does.
kill before doctors even reco~ what is happening," ·
Cmdy Krejny said m a letter
to Republican Rep. John .
Hagan of Alliance.
Hagan is sponsoring a bill
that would require students
moving into on-campus housing at Ohio colleges. to provide proof that they -were vac·
cinated for.meningitis. .
Krejny is to testify before
the House Health &amp; Family
Services Committee on
Wednesday in favor of the

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Pd. change
-p!OYioos: -1.14

Wednesday, November 20, 2110;2

Ohio patrol chases suspected
escapee from Kentucky · -

Ohio weather·

,.........,_

PageA2

Ohio

\

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

KICKOFF
THE

HOLIDAY
SEASOtt!

: ' MIDDLEPO!tr - Martha
:Elizabeth · Bums, 91, · of
~Middleport, died Monday,
: November 18, 2002, at Holzer
. · Medieal Center in Gallipolis.
She was born March 2, 1911,
. in Bradbury, daughter of the
· late Earl Clinton Archer and
: Margaret Mae Burfonl Archer.
; She was a fanner sales clerk
·. and a member of the First.
: JJaptist Church, Middlepon. · ·
· : Surviving are her daughters
• ~d
sons-in-law,
Mary
Margaret and Jack Lewis of
.Pomeroy, and Carolyn and
Nathan Roush of Syracuse;
grandchildren, Sandra Kay
Lewis of Pomeroy, Jackie Lynn
(Charles) Britton Jr. of
. Kentucky, Jeffrey (Diane)
Lewis of Langsville, Roger'
{Becky) Roush of Dayton, Bill
(Sheryl) Roush of Syracuse,
:and Bob (Kim) Roush of
:Racine: five great-grandchil:dren: a sister and brother-in·
law, Betty and Delmar "Bo"
. ~otligeb of Pomeroy: and sev·
:~raJ nieces and nephews.
~ Besides her parents, she was
:preceded 'in death by her htis·
:!Jand, Elmer Burns, in 1998;
i)nd her brothers and sisters,
.freda Archer, Myrtle Archer
:Hess, Earl Clifford Archer,
, ;Charles L. Archer, Lavina
: Archer, Mary Archer Crossan
·and Julia Archer Black.
· Graveside services will be
i2:30
p.m.
Thursday,
:November 21, 2002, at
· Riverview Cemetery, with the
: Rev. Mark Morrow officiating.
:There will be no calling hours.
: ; Arrangements are under the
· ~irection of Fisher Funeral
Home of Mi_ddlepon.
•
-Paid notice
_

_,__~:....._

Wednesday, November
. 27th

Reach Over

6.000
Households
In Meigs
County!
"

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 25th
·Call D~ve or Jessica
992-2155

'l

~• Deaths
•
·Margaret
~uckley
•. POMEROY - Margaret
:''Peg" Buckley, 78, of 37244
:Texas Road, Pomeroy, died
:Monday, Nov. 18, 2002, at the
: Pomeroy residence of her
:daughter.
• Arrangements will be ·
· announced by White Funeral
Home, Coolville.

Martha
E. Burns
· MIDDLEPO!?f - Martha
: E. Archer Bums, 91,
: Middleport, died Monday,
·Nov. 18, 2002, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
· Arrangements will be
· announced by Fisher FuQCral
: Home, Middleport.
''

-----~---,..---··------- ·~.

_____

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Remains of famed soldier of fortune
'Earthquake McGoon' ·sought after 48 years
•

He Was the classic soldier of fortune
- an ex-World War II fighter ace
with nine enemy aircraft to his credit,
a hard-living, 260-pound bon vivant,
known in Asia's bars and byways as
''Earthquake McGoon," after a character in a comic strip.
Now, 48 years afte,r his cargo plane
was shot down on a desperate, lastditch supply mission over:Dien Bien
Phu, a U.S. military team is seeking to
.recover the bodies of James B.
McGovern, alias "McGoon," and his
co-pilot, Wallace A. Buford.
"Looks like this is it, son," was
McGovern's last radio message as his
crippled C-119 flying ~oxcar cartwheeled into a Laos hillside on May

6, 1954. The crash killed McGovern,
32, Buford, 28, and a French crew·
man. Two cargo handlers - a
Frenchman and a Thai - were
thrown clear and survived.
The next day, Ho Chi Minh's Vjet·
Minh revolutionary forces overran the
last French strongpoints at Dien Bien
Phu, ending a siege that had captured
world headlines for nearly three
months.
McGovern, Buford and Life magazine photographer Robert Capa killed later that same month - were
the only Americans to die in the con·
flict that doomed French colonialism
in Indochina and set the stage for
Vietnam's ·"American war" a decade

later.
The death . of swashbuckling
:'Earthquake McGoon" was big news
10 1954, h1s gnnnmg face splashed
across newspapers and magazmes.
Yet most deta1ls remamed shrouded
for decades m Cold War secrec~ -.
e_spec1aiiY. th_e fact that the pilots airhne, Civil Air Transport, or CAT,
. was
own ed by Ihe Centra I Inte II tgcnce
Agency,
But this month after numerou s
delays, a 10-member team from the
Hawaii-based Joint Task Force-Full
Accounting, assisted by Laotian officials and hired workers, began excavating the s.ite of three suspected
graves nt;ar the Laotian vi llage of Ban

Sot.
· Any remains found will go Io the
Army' s
Central
Identificat ion ·
Laboratory Hawaii (CILHI), for
foren sic study and identification - a
_process that could take months. The
lab directs JTF-FA search operations,
providing experts to its fi eld teams.
Sl owedby ·mterrru·tlen t bad wea
' ther,
h L
h
f h
· ld d
t e aos searc so ar as. yie e_
only bits of wreckage and flight-suit
remnants. U.S. officials said.-The dig
1s expected to end Nov. 26.
Pho Sai , a Laotian Foreign Mini stry
officia l fo r U.S. affairs.. sa id the
chances of finding human remains.
appeared slim after so many years.

'

For the Record·
Cases dismissed
POMEROY - The following cases have been dismissed in Meigs County
Common
Pleas
Court:
Greenland Inc., against
Village of Pomeroy ; Heidi
Skidmore against Lin'dsey
Skidmore Jr. , and Donna
Renee Barnhart against Keith
Edward Barnhart.

Emergency Service units
answered the following calls
for assistance Monday:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:27 a.m. Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Violet
Duncan , Holzer Medical
Center.
. II :34 a.m. Ohio Route
681, Dale Frazier, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
12: 13 p.m. Overbrook,
Martha
Burns,
Holzer
Marriage license
POMEROY - A marriage Medical Center.
license has been issued in
l :25
p.m.
Betty
Meigs County Probate Court McKinney, Holzer Medical
to Jeremy Lee Ross, 22, and Center.
Tammy Jo Byler, 26, both of 6:15 p.m. Dark Hollow
Pomeroy.
Road, Edward Laudermilt,
Holzer Medical Center.
· Wrecks investigated
7:31 P.-m. Edmundson
POMEROY - · Two acci- Road, Btll Varney, Holzer
dents with no injuries or cita- Medical Center.
tions and only minor d'amage
TUPPERS PLAINS
to the vehicles were investi6:44 a.m. Trailer fire,
gated by the Pomeroy )&gt;alice Martin Tucker properly,
Department over the week· assist Coolville.
end.
8:03 p.m . . Africa Road,
Chief of Police Mark .Chimney fire
Proffiu reported that Matthew
POME.ROY
C. Greene, Hartford, W.Va.,
2:03 p.m. Africa Road,
was stopped at the traffic light assisting Midllleport
on the Pomeroy-Mason
•••
Bridge when a vehicle .driven
POMEROY - Units of
by Michael E. Brewer Jr., Meigs County , Emergency
Mason, W.Va., slid into the Services answered the fol·
rear of his vebjcle.
lowing calls for assistance
The second
accident on Tuesday:
occurred on the parking lot
CENTRAL DIBPA'I'ell
pf the Meigs c;ounty 'Qi&amp;trict
7:08
a.m., . General
Public Library. ·Argyle L. Hartinger Parkway, Harry
Deeter of Racine was leaving Roush III, Holzer Medical
the lot when Urban L. Graf Center;
of Long Bottom backed into
10:34 a.m., Horse Cave
her vehicle striking the pas· Road, Paul Pullins, Holzer;
senger sid~.
4:2 1 p.m., Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
. Emergency calls
Naomi London, Holzer;
·
. Meigs
. POMEROY 6:20 p.m., Rocksprings

Local Briefs

'
caused the power outage as The charges are fourth and
of press time .
fifth-degree
felonie s.
Proffitt said.
Dr.iver cited
POMEROY - Mary A.
Fire ·call
Shoemakei-,. 41. 27233 Old . POMEROY A fire
Ohio Route 7, Cheshire, was destroyed ' · th t; Eastman
cited for failure to control by Ridge Road home of Pearl
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Smith early today.
State ·Highway Patrol fol·ddl
d
lowing a one-car . accident
Pomeroy, Ml eport an
Chester
volunteer fire
early today on Ohio Route 7. departments responded to
Troopers said Shoemaker
was southbound at 12:15 the call , but no fire report
a.m. when the car she drove was avail&lt;~:ble at presstime.
Trailer fire
Tl.iPPERS PLAINS · · ~.~;ent off the right side of the
According to Tuppers
road and struck a guardrail.
,Plains Fire Chief Greg
The car · then came back
Carpenter, there was a trail- onto the road, went across
er fire on the Martin Tucker and struck a ditch, the report P'-..~~~£i:
property at 6:44 a.m.
said·. The car had disabling
Monday.
·
' damage.
Fire personnel put the fire
out by 7:15 a.m. Carpenter
Accident reported ·
said the cause was accidenPOMEROY - Ricky D.
• ... G
dA
0.A .
Kesterson , Coolville, was
tal and he suspects a
kerosene heater. There were driving his· 1994 Chevrolet
· ..8" In Stock! '
no injuries as the inhabiCavilier eastbound on East
tants were not home.
Main St. early today when a
deer ran into his plfih. The l)l•···· lllllili'iillili•
EMS power outage
car ·received moderate damPOMEROY ·
The age' and· there \vere no
according
to
Tuppers Plains tower of injuries,
Meigs County Emergency Pomeroy Pol ice records.
Medical Services, located on
Success Road went out
Arrest made
'Ol Century Custom
around midnight Monday
POMEROY- Dwayne E.
..&amp;., In Stock!
due to a power failure.
'Qualls, Pomeroy, was arrest·
"This is t-he towerthat take ed Tuesday and charged
care of the east end of the with resisting arrest ,l!,lld dis·
county," Stacey Shank, EMS . rupting public services. He
spokesman said. "It didn't was taken to the Middleport
affect service
though, jail where he was incarcerat·
because we just dropped ed, Pomeroy Chief of Police
back and used the Pomeroy Mark Proffitt reported.
tower."
Also arrested Tuesday
There was no information were . two juveniles on
,. ., In s·tock'.
4
as to when the power came receiving stolen property
back on or details as to what and breaking and entering.
From S
Rehabilitation Center, Violet
Duncan, Holzer;
9:26 p.m., Ohio Route 7,
Nancy King, Holzer;
II :41
p.m.,
from
Middleport station, Nelli e
GroveJ, Holzer.
POMEROY
10:02 p.m., with assistance from Middleport,
Eastman Ridge Road, structure· fire, Pearl Smith residence.

ran .

m

.From '1 0 990

0

Froms1

,._........._
14 990 .

,

'

Registration
open
GALLIPOLIS - The
2003
winter quarter
schedule
of classes
· offered at Gallipolis
Career Colle$e has been
released by Its director,
Wesley R. Young .
Information about registration, financial aid, .
classes, and programs can
be obtained by calling
446-4367, 800-214-0452 ,
or by visiting the web site
at www.gallipoli scareercollege.com.

Dems
meet
POMEROY -· Mei~s
C::ounty
Democ rauc
Executive
Committee
wili meet at 7· p.m.
Thursday at Carpenters
Hall.

Carey
visits .
. POMEROY
State
· Rep . John Carey, RWell st'on, will hold an
open door session at 9
a.m. Thursday at Meigs
County Courthouse.

Plan
service
. POMEROY- A holi·
day remembrance pro·
gram will . be .held at 7
p._m. Saturday · at Fisher
Funeral
Home
in
Pomeroy. Those who
have lost loved ones and
who wish to remember
them in the · service is
invited to participate.
The program will be
led by the Rev . Rod
Brower, pastor of the
· Pomeroy
and
Heath
United
Methodist
churches. Jan Lavender
and Kathy McDaniel will
sing gospel music. A
candlelighting ceremony
will be conducted, and a
local artist will inscribe
clay 'pots with the ' names
of those who have died.
A name-reading ceremony will also be conducted, with more than
100 names to be read.
The event will be catered
by Vaughan 's, and a
keepsake gift will be pre·
sented.
Information
about the service is
available' by calling 9925541.

businesses that target visitors, like the Ohio River
Bear Co., as not only con.tributing to the economy,
from Page A1
but providing something
unique to the experience.
responded well to our web"It's that uniqueness that
site too."
attracts visitors," Butcher
Courtney Butcher, Meigs said. "And while they're
County
Chamber
of here, they are eating, dnnk·
Commerce director of oper- ing, sleeping and spending
ations, said that she sees money in our community."

Tourism

...

'Ol LeSabre Custom

..4., In Stock!
.From

'1 990

•o:z Sunfire
l Door

900
All AGES , All TIMES $4.00

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories Is to be
accurate. 11 you kno.w of an error In a
story celllhe newsroom at (740) 992·
2 t ss'.

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
·Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. t4 .
Reporter: Kris Scouten, Ext. 13
Sports: Ext.'14

Advertising
Out•lde Sale•: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outside Sales: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16
ClaaoJCirc. : Judy Clark, Ext. 1o
Claao./Cin\.: Cynthia Swisher, Ext . r r

. Circulation
nlotrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext. t 7

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12 ·
E·malf:

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l Door

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and

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•o:z Buick Regal
Leather, CD~ Loaded

'14,990

�'

. The Daily Sentinel

• •

PageA4

0 1n1on
•

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

1i 1 Court Street'&lt;' Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Abby

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Letters to rhe ediror art• wt•lcume. They should be less than
300 words. All letter&gt; are mbjecr ro . editin g a11ti must pe
signed and include address rmd telephone mtmber. No
1msigned lerrers will be published. Letters should be in good

: : : tasre. addressf11g is.w.es. nor personalities.
The opinions (~xpressed ;, the column below are the consensus o( rhe Ohio Vatter Publishing Co. :, ediTorial board,
un/e.~s oTJu' twise 1101ed .
·

.

NATIONAL VIEW

••

SenstbVe
•

DEAR ABBY: My IIIOiher: in-law allowed my 7-year-old
:daughter to use her library card.
. • Unbek'nownst to . me, my
: · daughter picke4 out a book and
•. brought it home. A few weeks
·- later, Grandma received. a late
: notice from the library. My
: daughter and I found the book
.: an&lt;!. walked it over to
ADVICE
: Grandma's house and laid it on
...,;
· . her dining room table where
:: she would be sure to See it and weddings. In fact, S9ffie sophis·return it
. ticated brides opt for "black: Later that same day, my 20- .and-white" weddings in which
.: year~ld daughter, who was aU attendants are requested to
· helpmg Grandma move some wear black.
• ~ things, inadvertently picked yp
Your dressy black suit for an
the book and put it in her car. evening wedding in December
- The book hasn't been seen seeii)S conservallve, proper and
. since.
tasteful to me.
Grandma now wants my 7DEAR ABBY: I am 13, in
year-old to pay the library $13 the eighth grade, and have been ·
for the lost book. I know we reading your column faithfully
should have taken the book for two years.
back to the library ourselves,
I .have become good friends
. but I don't think this is fair. with a freshman boy I will call
Who do you think should pay "Tad." We were in a play
for the book? Grandma, my together last year. He now plays
oldest daughter or my younger in the high school band Here is
daughter? - WHY-0-WHY- where the problem lies: The rest
OINOlDO
of my friends in the band don't
DEAR WHY-0: YOU like Thd. When I ask them why,
. should. And while you're at it, their exact won:ls are, "He's a
·you should also get your young fag" and "He's just weird."
daughter her own library card . Yes, he is gwte weird, wh_ich
and explain the rules to her. ts the reason I am drawn to him
You'll be doing her a favor by My friends thin!( I am absolute. giving her an early start in the ly nuts! Recently I revealed to
right direction. ·· Libraries are one of them that I have a slight
. treasure troves for children.
crush on Tad. She looked at me
DEAR ABBY: My mother as if I were some kind of disand I are arguing over what is jlUSting beast. I know I should
proper attire for an evening tgnore their comments, but I
wedding in December. My have the feeling there is somenephew is \leing married, and thing more I should do. What
the wedding will be beld at 5 do you think?- ODD DUCK
p.m. I want to wear a dressy IN SOUTH TEXAS
black suit with a couple of DEAR ODD DUCK: I
strands of pearls, but my moth- think: you have done enough
er is furious with.me! She feels already by defending Thd to
it would be inappropriate to go your friends. Not every teen
to a wedding dressed "like I'm would be as brave or resolute
and would knuckle under to
attending a funeral."
•
I have tried to explain that peer pressure.
Some
of
the
most
interesting
-,these days black is always
acceptable regardless of the and worthwhile people in the
occasion, as long as the dress is world are those who didn't fit
· in good taste. However, my · into the mold when they were
· mother says she will never· your age. Don't let anyone
believe that until she sees it in else choose your friends for
print. Can you help?- FASH- you.
Dear Abby is written by
ION SAVVY IN TEXAS
Van Buren, also known
Abigail
DEAR FASlDON SAVVY:
as
Jeanne
Phillips, and was
. I'll try, but yout mother is obvi. ously a member of the "old founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
school."
at www.DearAbby.com
Abby
In recent decades; the old
or
P.O.
Box 69440, Los
rules have relaxed to the point
Angeles,
CA
90069.
'
tliat black is now acceptable at

Dear

Den Dickerson
Publisher

.,

Locll News

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 20, 2002 ·

Family passes the buck Ohio DAR historian Giving to those in need
for overdue library book reviews history

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Page AS

VH 1 series raises legitimate
· questions about prison exposure
• Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, on the VH I ·series "Music
Behind Bars": Recently the cable television channel VHl

PERKINS' VIEW
aired the first of an eight-pan documeinary called "Music ·
Behind Bars." The series is an unsentimental look at the ways
in which prisoners make music in an environment .that often
crushes the spirit.
The first installment of the documentary series featured a
band called Dark Mischief. The heavy-metal band was drawn
John Walters had a great day at the
marijuana damages short-term memofrom the ranks of hard-timers at the State Correctional
po'lls
on
Nov.
5.
Voters
in
Nevada,
ry, distorts perception, impairs judg; Lnstitution"Graterford in Montgomery County outside of
Arizona, Ohio and South Dakota heedment and complex motor skills, and
· Philadelphia. Two members of Dark Mi schief are doing time
ed
calls
by
the
nation's
drug
c.
z
ar
to
.alters
the heart rate. Arid that marijuana
for murder - one for the killing of two Lehigh University stureject
putative
drug
,
"
reform"
measures
use
can
lead to severe anxiety and can
dents - but they aren't on death row.
that appeared on their state ballots.
cause paraooia and lethargy. But, then,
Some families of crime victims vehemently complained to
Nevada's
Question
.
9
would
have
the sponsors of those "medical" mariVH I executives that killers are being glamorized and given a
legalized
the
sale
and
use
of
marijuana.
juana
propositions couldn't have cared
platform to cause more pain. Some want the series to be abortless about the safety and effectiveness
Walters visited the Sagebrush State
ed because the thought of prisoners being "rewarqed" wit~ a
voters
that
pot
of
the drug. They just wanted to get
twice
this
fall,
warning
reality mu sic show is too galling for them to bear.
is
an
"addictive
gateway
drug"
that
can
their
stealth pro-drug measures enactThat request, which VH I has refused, mtght be reasonable
COLUMNIST
ed. They figured that if they could get
lead to use of cocaine and heroin.
if television exposure were somehow ennobling. But the
Arizona's
Proposition
203
would
voters to approve marijuana use for
incarcerated head-hangers in "Music Behind Bars" are anyhave
decriminalized
possession
of
up
putative· therapeutic p!Jrposes, they
thing but ·glamorous. The prisoners' chief claim to fame is
to 2 ounces of marijuana. Pen~l\i!!§ (qr ideologues on either side of the drug · could eventua!I~ get, those .same ~oters
moral failure. An extended life behind bars is hardly the stuff
getting ·caught with cannabis would war, it has been by those like M~rke1J.'s . t? approve martJUana for n,on-ther~peu­
to attract groupies or impressionable kids ....
have been reduced to mere fines, much group, like the National Orgamzation ttc purpo~es - as Nevada s Quesllon 9
. The state can be sensitive to victims without denying pris·like
like traffic tickets.
to Reform Marijuana Laws, that favor woul~ have don~. And so on, unlll they
, oners the opportunities for artistic expression. S()me families ,
· Ohio's Issue 1 would have amended scrapping the nation's drug laws. effecl!vely. l~gahzed all drug us.e. .
appealed to Gov. Schweikerto install safe~uards in the system
the
state's constitution, mandating In~eed, neither the Marijuana Policy
Th~s mstdtous pia? ~as ~he fmanctal
so no one is taken by surprise should a pnsoner unexpectedly
judges
to
send
drug
offenders
to
treatProjector
or
NORML
or
other
confectbacking
of three btlho~atres.' George
''show up" on television. In the future, Pennsylvania's Office
ment instead of jail. During an appear- erate organizations come right out an,d Soros, a New York fman~ter, . John
of the Victim Advocate must be consulted whenever reporters
ance last month in Ohio, Walters cau- tell voters that they advocate drug Sperhng, fo~n.der of the Umversny of
· tum up at one of the state's prisons to do a story. That is a reationed the ·Buckeye State voters, "It legal' ation that they would allow the Phoemx natlonwtde cham, and Peter
sonable compromise as long as prisoners aren't denied access
will weaken the tools that the institutz
'
..
b . Lewts, former CEO of Progresstve
to musical recreation.
tions have to help people get into treat- sale and use not on!~ of martJuana, u~ Insurance. Sperling, who has spent $13
ment."
also cocame, herom, f11ethampheta million to legalize drugs, is perhaps the
South Dakota's Constitutional nunes, LSD, ecstasy and every other most strident of the troika.
Amendment A would have allowed tmagmable controlled substance. ·
"The government's drug-reform polidrug offenders to argue to juries that
Instead, t~y suggest to .vo~.ers that cy is driven by a fundamentalist
drug
laws
are
unfair
and
urge
acquittals
~er,
are me!el~ mterested 111 reform- Christian sense of morality that sees
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1
on that basis. The Coyote State would ~g the natt~n s drug laws 10 help the anx of these illegal substances used as
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 20, the 324th day of 2002. There
have been the first to sanction jury nul- stck or to reheve the tax~ayers of ~he evtl," he told Time magazine. But most
: are 41 days left in the year. ·
lification, permitting juries to disregard unnecessary burden of mcl;lrceratm,g Americans are not fundament~list ·
Today 's Highlight in History:
established
law.
harmless drug off~nders. And 1t s Christians, yet the vast majority oppose
· On Nov. 20, 1947 , Britain's future queen, Princess
Drug
legalization
adyocates
were
because. drug _Iegahz.auon advocat7s drug legalization. That's because they ·
Elizabeth, married Philip Mou9tbatten , Duke of Edinburgh, in
chastened by the Election Day results, htde thetr ultenor mouve that voters 111 recognize the deadly scourge that illea ceremony broadcast worldwide from Westminster Abbey.
after passage in recent years of more mne st~tes so far have.been duped 1!lto gal drugs represent. Now that Sperling
On this date:
than a dozen ballot initiatives around . approvmg ballot mtllattves allowmg and his fe)low billionaires have been
In 1789, New Jersey became the first state to ratify the Bill
the country relaxin~ state drug laws. the sal~ and us~ of manJuana for sup- outed, now that their deceptive drug
of Rights.
.
·
"We have seen tontght how hard the posed .. medical purposes.
.
legalization crusade has been exposed,
In 1910, revolution broke out in Mexico, led by Francisco I.
drug
war
ideologues
are
willing
to
fight
Mar~Jua.na has been .held out dun!lg the public is wising up. That's why proMadero .
and how dirty they're willing to fight," those tmttau.ve campat!\ns as a palha- drug ballot measures in Nevada,
In .1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Mass.
said Bruce Merken, a spokesman for ttve for pattents suffenng from such Arizona Ohio and South Dakota failed·• .
· In 1929, the radio program "The Rise of the Goldbergs"
the Marijuana Policy Project, one of the disease.s as can.cer, AIDS and multip~e on Election Day.
debuted on the NBC Blue Network.
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for
groups coordinating the multi-state scleroSIS. DeSJ?t~e th~ fact that t~ere ts
In 1945, 24 Nazi leaders went on trial before an internacampaign.
no hard sctel)ttftc evtdence provmg the The San Diego Union-Tribu 1~e and can
tional war crimes tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany.
Merken protests too . much. For if efficacy of inedical marijuana.
be
reached
at
: · · In 1959, the United N:hion s issued its "Declaration of the
there has been any dirty fighting by
And despite research showing that Joseph. Perkins@ UnionTrib.com.)
: Rights of the Child."
' In 1967, the Census Clock at the Commerce Department
; ticked past 200 million.
! In 1969, the Nixon administration announced a halt to resiTHE VILLAGE IDIOT
; dential use ef the pesticide DDT as part of a total phaseout.
: . In 1975, after nearly four decades of abs,.olute rule, Spain's
; General Francisco Franco died, two weeks before his '83rd
l birthday.
·
.
i In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat became the first
; Arab leader to address Israel's parliament.
·
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Voters .heeded call.to reject nebulous drng law rdQrm

Josenh
Perki.r;:ns

TODAY IN HISTORY

Births·
·Thorla birth announced
RACINE

Thorla

Stacey
Talisha
Hubbard and
Robert Ernest
Thor! a, 1J r.
of
Bear
Creek, N. C.
announce the
birth of a son,
Preston
Chase Thorla,
on Oct. 18 at

Central
Carolina
the
Hospital, ·Sanford, N. C.
The infant weighed 6
pounds, nine ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Melissa (Glen) Bissell of
Racine, and Jeff (Julie)
Hubbard of . Syracuse.
Paternal grandparents are
Dave (Bert) Grindstaff of
Racine; and Bob (Penny)
Thorla of Siler City, N. C.

POMEROY - A review Defense chairman, presented
of the bicentennial com- a resolution that was passed
memorative history book of by the DAR at the !lith
Ohio counties was reviewed National
· Continental
by Roberta Roush being Congress dealing with revipublished by the Ohio sions of immigration laws
Society of the Daughters of · and refonmation of the immithe American Revolution at gration service.
the recent meeting of Return
She said that the resolution
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
calls for limiting student
Roush said that the book is visas, aavocates tightening
being publishe4 in honor of border security, and suppons
Ohio's upcoming bicentenni- the passage of the Visa Entry
a! anniversary 'in 2003, and Reform Act and the funds to
will include a history · of · implement it.
every county in Ohio.
In the effort to keep terrorAs a non-profit organiza- ists from entering our countion, she said the purpose if try, Moore said, "There is at
to create a penmanent histor- least one principle 011 which
ical .record of the history of we can all agree. There is no
Ohio's 88 counties.
absolute right, either moral
A person familiar with the or legal, for citizens of forhistory of each county was eign nations to he admitted
contacted and asked to write to the United States.
a history of their county, said
"Refusing entry to such
Roush who compiled the individuals as Mohammed
histories. She noted that Atta violates the constituMargaret Parker, president of tiona! Iiberties of no one,
the Meigs County ffistorical since the . guarantees of the
Society and Museum had Bill of Rights do not apply to
written the county's history
which Roush iead for the foreigners abroad."
.
DAR members. Photos of
Regent Abbie Stratton
historical places have also be introduced new member
included m the publication, Marilyn Wolfe whose applishe said.
cation ·papers have been
Roush talked about the accepted by the National
quality of the book which DAR Registrar General, and
will have smyth-sewn bind· welcomed her to the local
ing, high qwllity , glossy chapter. .
.
paper for durability and · Followmg the meetmg,
superior photo reproduction. brunch was served by Mary
Advance copies may be Yost, Nancy Grueser, Phylhs
ordered from the M.T. Skinner, at]\! Eileen Buck.
Publishing Company, P. 0.
Next meeting will be held
Box .6802, Evansvile, IN · on Dec. 14 at the home of
47719-6802.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Fennan
In a legislative report Moore. Members are asked
given te the DAR members, to take gifts for Veteran's
Rae
Moore, . National Home.

Ohio Cooperative
Development Center
meeting scheduled
POMEROY - The Ohio
Development
Cooperative
Center is hosting a meeting to
.discuss current marketing
opportunities for rabbit producers in Ohio with the United
Rabbit Growers Cooperative,
The meeting will be held 5 to
8 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 22, in
Jackson at the OSU South
.Centers, 017 Standpipe Road.
United Rabbit Growers was
organized to provide a cooperatively owned rabbit processing facility to benefit commer~

cia! rabbit producers throughout the United States. They
anticipate the ownership of a
processing facility in Arkansas
by the end of November. They
have incorporated as a cooperative and are currently holding
meetings in several states as
part of their membership drive.
Local rabbit producers are
invited to contact Travis West
at · (740) 289-2011 or
west.222@osu.edu for further
information, directions, or
questions about the meeting.

Community Calendar
discussing the preservation Midcap invites the public .
Ohio'
only Refreshments.
work · at
Revolutionary War Fort Ft.
Wednesday, Nov. 20
Sunday, Nov. 24
TUPPERS PLAINS · -. Laurens, at Boliver. E,lection
MIDDLEPORT
.
of
officers.
Eastern · Local Board of
Middleport
Community
Education, 6:30 p.m., conThanksgiving service, 7
ference room of the library
REEDSVILLE
at Eastern Elementary Riverview Garden Club, p.m. at the Presbyterian
School.
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Church. Sponsored by the
Ministerial
Church.
A Middleport
Methodist
RACINE _ Leaf collec- Christmas workshop will be Association. Take €anned
tion will be held from 8:30 directed
by.
Margaret goods and other non-perishGrossnickle
and
Sylvia able items for the needy to
a.m. to 2 p.m. from El m "'bb M b
t0 t k be distributed throu~h the
a e
Street to Main Street in ihe · ... e · em ers are
gifts for nursing homes, and food bank at the ReJoicing
village of Racine. Loose finger foods for the · club's Life Church.leaves are to be moved to social hour.
the curb.
RACINE - Revival services
will be held 7 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 21
Sun"'ay
and Monday at the
RACINE - Leaf collecWednesday, Nov. 20
Dorcas
Bethany Chutch,
.lion, 8:30 a.m. · to 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Speaker will be Lloyd
from Main Street to Revival services will be Racine.
Middleton.
Special music
Yellow bush Road in Racine. held ai the Hope Baptist Sunday will be by Beverly
Leaves are to be moved to Church . 570 Grant St., Cunningham and on Monday
the curb.
Middleport, at 7 p.m. by Jerry Powell.
Wednesday through Fnday,
and II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. The Rev. Cliff
Coleman will . be preaching
Thursday, Nov. 21
and special singing will be
POMEROY- Caring and
Thursday, Nov. 21
featured each night.
Sharing
Support Group, I
POMEROY Ewings
p.m.
at
the Meigs Senior
·Chapter Sons of the .
Saturday, Nov. 23
Citizens
Center.
Topic will
American Revolution 6:30
MIDDLEPORT A be "Alzheimers - . It's More
p.m. at the Meigs County gospel sing will be held at 7
Museum
in
Pomeroy. p.m. at the Middleport
Dinner by reservation only, Church of ihe Nazarene
followed 7:30p.m. meeting. with · the
"Glory land
Speaker from the group, Believers . Pastor Allen
"Friends of Ft. Lauren's,'j

Public Meetings

..

Church Services .·

Clubs and
Organizations

Support Groups

than Memory Lose."

Other Events
Wednesday, Nov. 20
POMEROY - There will
be a mission outreach dinner
from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. It will be a turkeywith-all-the-trimmings dinner. The public is invited to
attend.
POMEROY - Flu vaccine will be administered to
all residents, a11y age, from
II a.m. to I , p.m. at the
Racine Library by the Meigs
County Health Department.
Cost is $15. If a Medicare or
Medicaid card is presented
at time of service, there will
be no charge.
Monday, Nov. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS
Flu vaccine will be administered to all ages, 9 to II
a.m., at the Eastern Library.
Cost is $15. If a Medicare or
Medicaid card is presented
at the time of service, there
will be no charge. ·

The Meigs County
Health Department
.
says

Introducing the Chair: No home should be without it

THANK ·YOU, VOTERS!
To show its appreciation
for voter passage of .t he replacement tax levy
on 11-05-G2,
the Meigs County Board of Health
is waiving fees (effective 11-15-02) for the
following
nursing services:

6hops
loc:ker 219 &amp; The Shoe Plac:cr

for

Blood Pressure Screenings
Blood Sugar Tests
Head Lice Screenings
Urinalysis .
Immunization Administration

~ua~ ~'&amp;He?~...

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

. (a ,5 ,00 donation Is appreciated, but is not rtquifed for immunization Administration)

Blood Iron·Tests
Hemoccult Tests
Like you, we have the health and well-being of all
Meigs Co~nty residents in ·our hearts and hands!

rr
.

.Tk

Shoe Place

•
•

The Rutland Free Will Baptist Church's annual project of providing needy families with hol iday food baskets got a boost
Wednesday. Eli Dennison Post 467, American Legion, presented a check to the church for $500. Pastor Paul Taylpr,
right, accepts the check from Legionnaire Eugene Fink.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

...

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

o,.n 'AM

lAM

Meigs ~o- Health Dept

M"n· Tb•n

·t740&gt; ~~594d. 6333

Appl.

1-800-45!-98011

udiolo9y
earlng aids
-·.

112 E. Memorial Drive

Pomeroy, OH 45769
I . (7~~1.!?2-6626
FAX: '.'~V) 992·0836
Email :
'

�•

. Page A&amp; • The Daily Sentinel .

Inside:

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

www.mydallysentlneLc:om

Hill ready to lead Marshall, Page 82
NBA Roundup, Page 83
Scoreboard, Page 83

Racine youth take honors
· RACINE - Emily Ashley
and Carson Yost, members
of the Racine Sqbordinate
Grange, represented Meigs
County Granges as the
county prince and jrinc_pss
at the recent 132n annual
Ohio State Grange convention held at Mason, Ohio.
Ashley is the daughter of
Keith and Emma Ashley of
Rocksprings, and Yost is the
son of Chuck and Anita Yost
of Oak Grove . In the royalty competition at the state
event contestants had to
take .written tests on Grange
history, ritual , offi.cers,
operations, and legislative
affairs, and participated m
personal interviews with the
JUdges.
Ashle~, a sophomore at
Meigs h1gh School, .was first
runner-up in the state contest. Th1s was her second
year to compete. Taking part
in the presentation of contestants were past winners
including her two older sisters, Whitney Ashley and
Rachel Ashley Dennis. She

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

All-District
~ 3 volleyball
BY

ALBANY - Tri-Valley .
Hocking Division champion
Eastern dominated the AllDistrict 13 Volleyball squad at .
its recent meeting, placing
three girls on the fmt team
ballot and Coach Howie
Caldwell as Coach of the Year
in Division IV. ·
,
· Southern also placed three
hetters on the fmt team and a
number of other area volleyball players were selected for
All-district honors. The selections were made by members
of the district coaches' associ-

•

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·
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· Currently, people must provide birth or death documentation in order to ~et benefits
or a Social Secunty number.
If a person does not have the
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Soc1al
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direct!Y· But in both cases
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Woods: Augusta National issue 'frustrating'
.

MIYAZAKI, . Japan (AP)
Master s
- Tiger Woods is becoming
three years
.annoyed by the calls for him
in a row"
'
to skip next year's Masters
said Woods,
because of the all-male memwho was in
l!ership at Augusta National
Japan for
Golf Club.
this week's
"It's frustrating because
Dunlop
I'm- the only player they are
Phoenix.
asking,"
Woods
said
No one
Wednesday, two days after a
has
boyWoocls
New York Times editorial
cotted the
urged him to skip the
Masters
Masters as a gesture against
before, he
sexism.
added.
"They're asking me to give
Woods has repeatedly said
up an opportunity no one has he thinks women should be
ever had - winning the allowed to join the club, but

that he is an honorary mem- protests at the Masters if a
ber and doesn't have voting woman is not a member by
. rights on membership.
April, called the Times editoWoods
also
said rial "unfair and inconsistent"
Wednesday he is getting tired for singling out Woods.
of having to repeatedly
"I don't remember them
address the issue.
saying. to Ben Hogan and
"A tournament without Mr. Jack Nicklaus to boycott the
Woods would send a power- Masters because blacks are
ful message that discrimina- not playing," Jackson said
tion isn't *ood for the golfing Tuesday.
business, ' the · New York
Lee Elder became the first
Times editorial said.
black to play the Masters 'in
· Augusta National declined . 1975.
comment.
Still, Jackson said he
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, would encourage Woods to
who says his Rainbow/PUSH take a stronger stand,
·
Coalition will organize · "He's much too intelligent

~tion

FAMILY MEDICINE

'L-------------------~------------------------------

Scm WoLFE

Sports correspondent

First birthday celebrated

Question: Each year .when I meat. And remove the sl(in, · high-fat cheese or cream
cook Thanksgiving dinner for which contains a lot of fat. If.. sauce.
.
my family, I wonder how I can you're one of those people
Even the traditional pumpmake it a more healthy meal. who likes dark meat better kin pie for dessert can be good
During most of the year, I try than white meat, eat it only in . for you. Make the crust ;:with
very hard to prepare meals moderation.
graham crackc;rs, rather than ·
that don't have too much fat or
When it comes time to make using a traditional flour crust ·
calories, but it seems during the stuffing, I don't advise that that contains eggs. Choose a
the holidays this is a much you use Grandma's reeipe. pumpkin fillin~ that's low in
harder 'task. Can you tell me Many of those old recipes for fat, 1and ifyou want whipped
how to cook a Thanksgiving stuffing are loaded with fat, cream on top, use a fat-free
meal that is both delicious and because they contain whole variety. Other options for lownutritious?
eggs, butter, and the drippings fat desserts include frozen
. Answer: With the tradition- from the turkey. . You can yogurt, fruit sorbet or pumpat Thanksgiving feast just a make stuffing that tastes just kin custard.
·
little more than a week away, as good by using egg whites
Finally, one other part of
..lyour question is v~ry timely. or a Commercial egg substi- traditional holiday get-togeth·
So, for you and the rest of my tute, and by substituting fat ers that's not so healthy is the
readers, I'll devote today's col- free chicken broth for the cocktails and other alcoholic
urnn to offering advice on turkey drippings. To add some drinks that often are part of the
making your Thanksgiving fiber to your stuffing, make it festivities. If you do choose to
dinner a more healthful treat with whole grain bread, rather · drink, do it in moderation, and
than it might otherwise be. As than cornbread or white bread. never get behind the wheel of
you asked in your question,
Some parts ofthe traditiomil ~ car.after you've been drinkmy goal will be to give you Thanksgiving meal are fine mg. .
. .
.
tips that'll make sure your hol- ·JUSt the way they are.- Sweet
Fam1l:y Medzczne(r) zs ~
iday feast is both good tasung potatoes are loaded With fiber weekly column. To . submzt
and good for you.
and beta-carotene, and cran- questions, write to Martha A.
First, it's good to know that . berries are high in vitamins. Simpson,' D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
when
preparing
a SofT!e people also like to serve University _ College
of
Thanksgiving meal you are green beans, peas, and other Osteopathzc Medzcme, P. 0.
starting with a healthful staple healthy vegetables with their Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701.
•• turkey. Its white meat is one holiday feast. Just make sure Or, e-mail Dr. Simpson at
of the leanest meats available. you don't cancel out the posi- simpsonm@ohio.edu. Past
When you serve your turkey, tive effects of the vegetables columns are available online
cut plenty of slices of .white by covering them .with butter, at www.jhradio.org/fm.

•

Page Bl

also placed 4th in the youth Meigs C"unty Pioneer and
scrapbook contest.
Historic;~] Soci~t~, John S.
Her activities have includ- · Townsend Aux1hary #109
ed serving as master of Star Au~iliary to the Sons. f!f
Junior Grange where she Umon Veterans of the C1vil
served as master, mantle War, Chester Council #323
orator of the junior group, Daughters _of America, and
and was named a "Super Hope Baptist C~urch.
JG" the highest award given
Yost is a member of Star
a member Junior Grange.
Junior Grange where he cur· The
fourth-generation rently serves as assistant
member of Racine Grange steward
· of
Racine
now serves as lady assistant Subordinate Grange. He is
steward of the Grange and is also a fourth-generation
an active member of the member of Racine Gran!:e•
Meigs County Grange and belongs to the Me1gs
Youth, the Meigs County Jr. County Grange Youth and
Fair Board. She is an offi- the Meigs County Pomona
cer of Major Daniel Grange.
McCook Circle No. 104
His sister Hannah Yost
Ladies of the Grand Army assisted in the exemplificaof the Republic, a color tion of the Junior Grange
bearer
for
the Ohio degree in her position as
Department Daughters of Ohio State Jumor Grange
Umon Veterans of the Civil gatekeeper.
War, and president ·of the
Emma Ashley, youth
Mary
Gardner
Owen chairman of Racine Grange,
Society Children of the and
Rick
and
Jan
American Revolution. She Macomber, Meigs County
· is also a member of First Pomona Grange youth
Families of Ohio, Society of chairmen, ":ere prese.rlt for
Civil War Families of Ohio, the ceremomes.

Brian, Suzanne, and Ally
Durst, Opal, Steve, Brittany
and Courtney Mathers,
Clinton, Carissa; Breanna and
Hannah Bailey, Angie and
Colton Steger, Paula and
Derek Yonker.
Others presenting gifts
were Bob and Wilma Reiber,
Theodore and Becky Pullins,
Tom, Stacie, Audrionna, Kirk
and Laura Pullins, Martha
Parsons, Margaret Ann Wyatt,
Kent, Melissa, Jordan anq.
Kyle
Lunibatis,
Pam
Wheatley, and Amy, Riley
and Garrett Patton.
·
Steve Mathers took . the
guests on . a hayride after
refreshments were served.

The Daily Sentinel

money"

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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #2
The Village of Racine·inte~ds .to apply to the Ohio Department of Development for fund- ·
ing under the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities ·Program, a federally funded program administered by the State of Ohio.
The Village of Racine is eligible for $500,000 of Fiscal Year 2002 CDBG funding, providing the Village meets applicable program .requirements. On November 18, 2002 the Village
conducted its nrst public hearing to inform citizens about the CDBG program, how it may
be used, what activities are eligible, and other important program requirements.
Based on both citizen input and local officials' assessment of the Village's needs, the
Village is proposing to undertake the following CDBG activity for the Fiscal Year 2002:
Construct a new Water Treatment Plant, which will benefit 51 % or more low-to-moderate
income persons in the Village of Racine. The following is the anticipated project budget:
Total Project Costs: $1,626,520
CDBG Funds: $500,000
OPWC Grant $250,000
'
ARC Grant $350,000
OWDA Loan $521,520
Villnge $5,000
A second public hearing wil .. be held December 2, 2002 at 6:30 p.m. at the Municipal
Building located at 405 Main Street, Racine, Ohio to give citizens an adequate opJjortunity
to review and comment on the Village's proposed CDBG Application to construct a new
Water Treatment Plant in the Village of Racine, Ohio before. the Village submits its application to the Ohio Department of Development.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting' on D.ecember 2, 2002 at 6:30 p.m. to
express their views and comments on the Village's proposed CDBG Application. Call the
Mayor of Racine, J, Scott Hili at 740-949-2296 or Bob Allen with Ohio Rural Community
Assistance Program at 740-989-0630 with any questions regarding this notice.

Earning frrst team, All-district from Eastern .were Katie
Robertson, Alyssa Holter and
Kass LOOwick; while Deana
Pullins, Katie Sayre and
Rachel Chapman .of Southern
atso earned top honors.
. Among those receiving
Coach of the Year honors
were Jeff Skinner of Athens
and Rick Ash of Meigs, who
shared the Division II honor;
Stephanie
Breeze
of
Nelsonville-York (Division
III) and Howie Caldwell of
Eastern (Division IV). The
Division I and II teams were
.listed in last Sunday's TimesSentinel.
Selections for state all-star
representatives included Liz
Howerth of Athens (Division
II) and Traci Huck of
Waterford (Division N). Also
receiving the honor was
Candace Ferguson of Ironton •
(Division III), and Kayte
Davis of Meigs, Jayme
Nichels and Brittney McDade
of River Valley and Amy
Rauch and Erin Dutton of
Warren.
In Divisions Ill and iv,
flfst team selections in addition to Traci Huck and
Ferguson included Elizabeth
LaPorte of Alexander, My kala
Stevens of Belpre; . Katie
Robertson, Alyssa Holter and
Kass Lodwick of eastern;
Samantha Britton and Ashley
Hinkle of Miller; Jordan
Bateman, Ashleigh Fitterer
and Whitney Maiden of
Nelsonville-York;
Deana
Pullins, Katie Sayre and
of
Rachel Chapman
Southern; Terri Huck and ·
Alana Miller of Waterford and
Abbey Thomas of Wellston:
All are seniors except
LaPorte, Holter, Lodwick,
Sayre, and Pullins who . are
juniors and Bateman and
Maiden who are sophomores.
Honorable mention picks
Included Allison Downard of
Alexander and Anna Wallis of
Wellston.
. Following is a list ofAilpistrict 13 Honorees:
· Divisions III-IV flfst team:
Elizabeth LaPoite, Alexander,
Jr.; My kala Stephens, 'Belpre,
Sr,; Katie Robertson, Eastern,
Sr.; Alyssa Holter, Eastern, Jr.;
Kass Lodwick, Eastern, Jr.;
Britni Keeney, Fairland, Sr.; ·
Candace Ferguson, Ironton,
Sr.; Rachel Wyle, Ironton St.
Joe, Sr.; Samantha Britton,
Miller, Sr.; Ashley Hinkle, ·
Miller, Sr.; Jordan Bateman,
Nelsonville-York,
Soph.;
Ashleigh
Fitterer,
Nelsonville-York,
Jr.;
Whitney
Maiden,
Nelsonville-York,
Soph.;
Whitney Hale, Oak Hill, Jr.;
Deana Pullins, Southern, Jr.;
Katie Sayre, Southern, Jr.;
Rachel Chapman, Southern,
Sr.; Traci Huck, Waterford,
Sr.; Terri Huck, Waterford,
Sr.; Alana Miller, Waterford,
Sr.; and Abbey Thomas,
Wellston, Sr.
Honorable mention: Allison
Downard,
Alexander;
Samantha Best, Chesapeake;
Sarah Brammer, Coal Grove;
Britni Kenney and Alaine
Capper, F&amp;irland; Jamie Sloan
and Lindsey McNeil , Oak
Hill ; and Anna Wallis,
Wellston.
State all - st~ r reipresentatives: Candace Ferguson,
Ironton , Division I; Division
Til, Traci Huck, Waterford ,
Division IV
Coaches of the Year:
Stephanie
Breeze,
Nelsonville-York, Division
III, and Howie Caldwell,
.
Eastern, Division IV.

,,

Carr looks
.forward to
renewing
rivalry

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel addresses the media during his weekly press luncheon Tuesday, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP)

Even-keeled Tressel takes
Michigan game in stride
COLUMBUS (AP) - When Jim
Tressel was a kid, his father, the coach
at Baldwin-Wallace College, used to
invite players home to eat ~paghetti
with the family.
On any given night, by the time the
youngest· of Lee Tressel's three boys
arrived at the dinner table, there might
not be any chairs .at the table or pasta
left.
·
But the Michigan-Ohio State game
was .a time when father and sons had a
chance to bond while watching Woody
Hayes storm the sidelines and Bo
Schembechler bellow atthe officials:
"My earliest recollection would be
somewhere in my childhood that, typically my dad's season was over and the
Ohio State-Michigan game was probably the first time we had a chance to sit
down and do. anything with him
because he was a football coach," the
49-year-old Tressel said. "For sure h{
was going to be watching the Ohio
State-Michiglln game."
Those were far different times. Now
Jim Tressel is the head coach at No. 2ranked Ohio State as it prepares for its
am;mal showdown Saturday .with No. 12
Michigan.
His father died in 1981. His mother
passed away a year ago. The game
between the Buckeyes and Wolverines
remains special, a lin\&lt;: to his childhood
that conjures up many other Saturdays
in November.
The . second-year coach of the
Buckeyes is almost a block .of ice in

•
'

and too much a beneficiary
of our struggles to be neutral," Jackson said. "His
point of view does matter."
In interviews this month,
Augusta National chairman
Hootie Johnson was adamant
that a woman would not be
among the 300 members at
Augusta by the start of the
Masters in April.
Johnson's comments were
the first on the subject since
he criticized Martha Burk
and the National Council of
Women's Organizations for
trying to coerce change at the
golf course.

public - showing almost no emotion, been direct, matter-of-fact and unemospeaking in a near monotone and tiona!. It paid off in a 26-20 win a year
answering questions in a cool and ago in Ann Arbor in his first game
detached manner to sidestep controver- against the Wolverines.
sy.
"Businesslike is a good word," free
· It's not just a facade. His players see safl!ty Donnie Nickey said. "There was. the poker face and know that he's still n't any sense that coach Tressel was
on top of things.
saying, ' Hey, it's just another game.' He
"Some of the younger guys were. say- said, 'This i~Michigan.' It wasn't more
ing, 'How tight is coach Tressel going relaxed (than Cooper's approach) .
to be this week?'" linebacker Matt Maybe more urgent."
Wilhelm said. "I was like, 'He's not..'"
Tressel is old fashioned enough to
Tressel always knows how long it is require his players be clean shaven and
to the most important game on the to blush when they use foul languageschedule. A TV reporter mentioned even during the heat of a game.
Michjgan to him last spring and Tressel
It is revealing that Tressel still gives
promptly said the game was in 174 pop quizzes to his players, asking them
. days.
to list the hometown s. and high school s
"We all have idiosynchrocies and of their teammates. Old school? Sure.
mine might be keeping track of that," he But to have a team , Tressel believes,
said.
·
you have to at least know where the guy
The man who preceded Tressel, John next to you is coming from .
Cooper, came on campus with little
In his prim sweater-vests and with a
knowledge of the football program's year-round tan, he looks like the presiproud history. He knew that Michigan- dent of the chess club. None of his playOhio State was a big game but·always ers pretends to be close to him, but all
tried to soft-peddle it to his players as of them have a combination of respect,
"j ust another game."
fear and affection for him. In many
· His players saw through that ways, ,the players mirror the coach in
approach, particularly when Cooper their calm professionalism.
grew increasingly tense as he lost
"Coach Tressel is obviously always in
games to the Buckeyes' chief rival. He control," said quarterback Craig
finished his Obi State career 2- 1Q-1 Krenzel, who frequently parrots the
against the Wolven :. ,..
·
same phrases his coach uses. "We have
Tressel nev~r led his p ayers to think a lot of confidence in our team that
Michigan was a typical opponent. From we're going to p,ull ourselves out of a
the time he was a kid back in Berea, he ·
Please see Tressel,
82
knew better. Hi ~ approach has always

-...---- -··- ·-·-

ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) - Lloyd ' Carr was
calm, cool and even happy
at times to talk about the
next in stallment of the
Michigan-Ohio
State
rivalry.
.The Michigan coach' has
appeared to be tense and
irntable at times during
his weekly news conferences, but with the biggest
game on the schedule up
next, Carr even smiled a
few times.
"Where else would I
rather be ?" he as~ed
Monday.
The
12th-ranked
Wolverines (9-2, 6-1 Big
Ten) will play No. 2 Ohio
State (12-0, 7-0 Big Ten)
for the 99th time in one of
· college football's greatest
·
rivalries:
While · sophomore cornerback Marlin Jackson
said he would like to spoil
tne Buckeyes' hopes for a
national championship,
the rest of his teammates
and Carr downplayed the
spoiler role.
"We're trying to have a
great year for ourselves,"
tight end Bennie Joppru
said. "We're not trying to
ruin anything for them."
The Wolverines also
admitted, however, that
they knew better than to
incite Ohio State with
inflammatory comments.
Carr, who has been on
Michigan 's staff since
1980, said what is at stake
does not alter how he
treats the rivalry .
" I don 't care what the
circumstances are, the
. days leading up to that
game, from the time you
know it's seven days
away, you don't do anything except think about
that game," Carr said.
"You go to ·bed at night,
you're thinking about it.
You,\l'ake up in the momc
ing, you're thinking about
·it. You're eating, you're ·
thinking about it.
. "It's a consuming thing
for seven days because
you know on that day;
you're going to look
across that fie1d and
you're going to see a team
that wants this game as
much as you do."
Carr said there.'s a huge
difference between a win
and a loss against Ohio
State.
"They're at .the opposite
ends of the spectrum the agony and the ecsta•
sy," he said.
He recalled - with a
slight grin- how coaches
Bo Schembechler of
Michigan and Woody
Hayes of Ohio State
would rant and rave ·up
and down the sideline. But
Carr said no one should
expect to see him or the
Buckeyes' Jim Tressel
repeating some of those
vivid theatrics.
"The difference today is,
as a coach, you .know that
everything you say, they'll
read your hps," Carr said.
"You're under such scrutiPlease see C•rr, B2 ·
I

I ... -- --·-

•

�'
Wednesday, November 20, 2002

. \_

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, November 20, 201112

OSU officials urge Confident Hill ready to lead Marsh~ll
fans to show
sportsmanship

.

COLUMBUS
(AP) - ers said things had been
Ohio State athletic director thrown at them.
Andy Geiger and football
After Iowa clinched at least
coach Jim Tressel called on a share ofthe Big Ten title last
fans at Saturday's game with week at Minnesota, fans
Michigan to show the sports- rushed the field and tried to
.
manship that .will be evident take down the goal posts.
,
Marshall fans ran onto the
on the field.
·
"Ninety to 95 percent of the · field to celebrate a last-secfans are fabulous, but there is ond win 10 days ago over
sometimes an undercurrent," Miami of Ohio. Miami defenGeiger said Tuesday.
sive coordinator Jon Wauford
He said coaches and teains was led away in handcuffs.
will be esconed on and off the He is accused of shoving a
field. Special attention will be 36-year-old man who fell and
paid to security around the . hit his head on the artificial
Midch igan bush~s Sit amd.·ves&amp;at turf. . .
an 1eaves
10 Ia tum •Or
"There have been some
the game against No. ~ Ohio incidents that have taken
State.
wonderful games and have
"Whether we have a sue- cast a negative cloud over
cessful end to the day, apan them," Tressel said. "Just as
from who wins or loses the
game, depends upon the issue we ask our players to celeof mutual respect, human brate apJ.&gt;rOpriately and to
never derugrate someone else,
relations aitd·how well every- we have to make sure we
body behaves.~· Geiger said. encourage our fans and penHe said he was responding pie who are at Ohio Stadium
to concerns expressed by on this tremendous day to do
Lloyd Carr, coach of 12thranked Michigan, who was the same."
Geiger said there wouldn.' t
.Jasked on Monday if he ever
feared for his safety on the necessarily be more campus
field.
and city police on hand than
"Absolutely. The last time might normally be at a
we were in Columbus," Carr Michij:an-Ohio State game.
said. "Jon Falk, our equip- He satd he was speaking out
ment guy got knocked down. to make sure people underReally. it was a terrifying . stand that problems will not
expenence.
be tolerated.
"That's why when I see the
In 1996 after Ohio State
way some of these games end had an unbeaten season
and the people that · are ruined by Michigan at Ohio
allowed on those fields, I Stadium, police used pepper
think it's extremely danger- spray and Mace to keep fans
ous. It has be addressed off the field. The game has
before something happens also led to some property
that we're going to all regret." damage and bonfires being
In addition, Michigan play- set in the campus area.

0

'Tickets bring big
bucks for OSU fans
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
Hundreds of tickets for the
State's chance to play for a Michigan game are being
national championship · has offered on the Internet auction
inflated ticket 'prices for site eBay, where some sellers
Saturday's Michigan game to want $1,000 . per seat.
the point even die-hard Newspaper ads are asking for
Buckeyes fans aie selling their $500 a seat. Face value is $45.
"Every year it is crazy, but
seats.
"It is not that we are trying this is probably the worst it has
to take advantage of people," been," said Jamie Kaufman,
said Peg Matheny, who hopes president of Columbus-based
to get $1 ,000 for her two tick- Dream Seats Inc. "We are
ets and apply \he cash to next averaging about 200 calls a
year's season tickets. ''There day with most peo~le wanting
are just sG many parties that to sell their tickets. '
we want to ~o to instead."
Jeff Breece, 41,
of
Usually, tickets for an Ohio Delaware, is so confident the
State-Michigan contest are at a undefeated Buckeyes (12-0)
ptemium. The annual college will beat Michigan that he.
football rivalry is known as already has purchased airline
"The Game," and fans of both tickets and accommodations
teams count down to the kick- for the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe,
.Joff from the season's incep- Ariz. ·
tion.
"You have to take a gamble
This season, however, an and try it because if you wait
even bigger game looms for until everybody else wants to
the second-ranked Buckeyes. go the price goes up," he said.
A ¥ictory over the Wolverines
To pay · his way, Breece
means a trip to the Fiesta Bowl · wants to sell his tickets to the
on Jan. 3 and the chance to Mit:higan game for $400 on
play for Ohio · State's first eBay. A ticket broker offered
natiOnal title since 1968.
him $175 apiece.

Tressel

Lloyd Carr said. "He has had
a great career and has a great
record. He knows how to
from Page 81
coach."
How Tressel spends this
tight situation and make the week with his wife and four
kids isn't known. He says he
play when we need to."
Tressel was an assistant at has trouble getting enough
sleep this week, that he puts
1 0hio State under Earle
Bruce, then went on to win in long hours at the office
four 1-AA national champi- looking at films and planning
onships in 15 years as the for everything that his team
head coach at Youngstown might encounter on Saturday
State; He and Lee Tressel are afternooo. ·
Just like in his .youth, the
the only father and son to
ever coach team&amp;,.to national centerpiece is the game on
Saturday.
championships.
"During the week, you
And now this year's
Buckeyes have become the work like crazy to get prefirst team in the 113 years of pared and you hope when
Ohio State's program to go you walk into the game, you
can say, 'You know what?
12-0.
"He is an outstanding foot- We.'ve done all we can do.
ball coach," Michigan coach Let's go play,"' Tressel said.
(

.

Carr

Carr is 5-2 against the
Buckeyes as a head coach,
and 9-5-1 against them as a
from Page 81
Michigan assistant.
Although Carr insisted he's
not
dwelling on last year's
ny in terms of the camenis.
You're trying to- under the loss to Ohio State at home, he
greatest of ·stresses, tensions acknowledged, · "The ones
amj emot.ions - to represent that never leave you are the
the institution that you repre- ones you lose. And I don't
care to discuss those ."
sent in a positive, way."

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Some late-night,
harassing phone calls reinforced the reality that Stan
Hill was the. new - albeit
temporary leader of
Marshall's offense. ·
A few days before
Marshall and Miami of Ohio
played on Nov. 12, the
sophomore quarterback said
he received several phone
calls meant to spqok him. He
believes the callers were
Miami players.
Hill said they obtained his
phone number with the help
of a student who had gone to
Marshall and was visiting
the Oxfqrd, Ohio campus.
"They just said theY. were .
going to whip us," Htll said
Tuesday. "I JUSt blew it off
and hung on up them, basically.
"It really gave me confidence. It made me mad. I
told the players, and the
players responded well to it.
We went out there and
played hard."
·
The only calls he's getting
now are to congratulate him.
Getting his first career
start in place of the injured
Byron Leftwich, Hill threw
four touchdown passes and Marshall backup quarterback Stan Hi!l, right, starting for injured Byron Leftwicr. leaps past
scored from I yard out with a Miami, Ohio defender for a fourth-quarter touchdown Nov. 12 at Marshall Stadium in
5 seconds left for a 36-34 H~tington, W.Va. Marshall came from behind to win 36-34. (AP)
victo~r
.
Hill s performance against will knock Marshall out of shin against Akron on Nov. or Byron Leftwich," Hill
Miami was muted by an inci- the title race and render moot 2, is healthy again.
said. "I'm just going to do
dent right after the game in what he. did against Miami.
''This is Byron Leftwich's what I do best.
which Miami defensive For that reason, flill said the football team. I'm here just
''This offense is a successcoordinator Jon Wauford performance hasn't changed to · step in .while he's hun," ful offense. We put up points
was led away in handcuffs. him. The next day he was Hill said. "If he's better, it's and a lot of numbers that an;
He is accused of ·shoving a already getting ready for his job for the taking. And if ~ood for slats. Basically my
·
36-year-old man who fell Ohio.
he can't go, I'm going to step JOb is just to go out there and
and hit his head on the artifi"It's amazing what 24 in to get the job done."
execute it. I did that and- I
cial turf.
hours will do to you. I'm
His confidence was appar- was successful."
While he doesn' t possess
"I didn't see it at all. I did- basically the salne," he said. ent at a news conference
n't have a clue until the mom- "I've got a little more confi- Tuesday when he playfully the strong arms of his two
, ing," · Hill said. "I guess if dence in my players. I think tapped Marshall coach Bob predecessors, Hill already
took away from a good win, they respect me more as a Pruett on the backside with a has shown the poise that
butthat'sjust sports for you." player and as a leader."
newspaper like. they were old brought Marsha11.four league ·
The win put Marshall (7-2,
Hill's situation is some- friends.
championships
under
5-"1 Mid-American) in first what similar to that of for- · If there's pressure of fo~­ Pennington and Leftwich.
place in the East Division, mer West Virginia quarter- lowing two record-setting Hill's running ability also
and Hill is expected to · get hack Marc Bulger, who took quarterbacks, Hill doesn't brings a different weapon to
·
the start again Saturday at over the St.' Louis Rams show it. Leftwich holds Marshall 's offense.
Ohio (4-6, 4-2). A victory when starter Kurt Warner numerous league offensive
"People are going to say
can clinch the home field for was injured. Bulger went 5-0 records and four-year starter that he 's not a Byron
the Thunderin~ Herd in the as a starter but will return to Chad Pennington · was a Leftwich," defensive back
league cqamptonship game the bench next" week.
Heisman Trophy finalist in Chris Crocker said. "But he's
on Dec. 7.
Hill is ready to do the same 1999.
Stan Hill, and he did what he
Hill knows a loss this week when Leftwich, who hurt his· "I'm not Chad Pennington could."

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

NBA
•

; • DALLAS (AP) - It's time to
;" art wondering whether the Dallas
·Mavericks can do something no
:Qther NBA team has done: go 16-0
:to start the season.
· At Scallle, NBA scoring leader
: : The league's lone remaining
Tracy McGrady had 41 points, hi s
•Qnbeaten team improved to 11-0 in
sixth straig ht game with at least
:i!neressi ve f~sbion Tuesday night,
30.
:eastly defea(tng the Los Angeles
McGrady, who al so had 12
·Lakers 98-72. With five more vicrebounds
,
broke
Shaquille.
:tories, the Mavericks would break
O' Neal 's fr anchi se record of five
:!he NBA
record for consecutive,
.
·straight
games with at least 30
.'lltctones to start the season.
points.
·: The most recent teams to stan
The combination of McGrady
were the Atlanta Hawks and
1-akers in 1991-98.
shooting 16-of-29 and his team
:. The record of 15-0 is shared by
· going 11-of-22 from 3-point
·Cle 1993-94 Houston Rockets in
range helped snap Seattle' s four. t993 and the 1948-49 Washington
game winning streak.
:~apitols.
.
; "T()at's a tough thin~ to do, not
; .ust for our organization but for
ol!ny team . in . the league," said
:~ichael Finley, who had 18 points
·and a career-best 15 rebounds. "If
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
·9ou think about it, that's a lot of
had
23 points and eight rebounds
:games. We ' re going to continue to
Utah
won consecutive games
as
:build on it."
for the first time this season . .
: Steve Nash had 17 of his 21
Andrei Kirilenko returned after
points in the first half, when Dallas
missing two games with· a bad
led by as many as 15. The Mavs
back
and scored 20 for the Jazz,
stretched it to 27 on a 3-pointer by
who snapped the' Suns' four-game
Finley midway through the third
winning
streak. Heat 97, Bucks 93
quarter and the lead peaked at 28.
·Eddie Jones
At
Milwaukee,
· Dirk Nowitzki had 18 points and
scored 22 points and rookie Caron
. . tied his season-high with 17
rebounds, and Shawn Bradley had Dallas Mavericks' Dirk Nowitzki (41) looks to pass against Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant (8) and Derek Fisher, Butler had a season-high 20 as the .
Miami Heat won for the second
a season-best 16 points and 12 right during the first quarter in Dallas, Tuesday. (AP)
·-rebounds.
time this season.
Travis Best scored 19 ·points,
.
..
- Elsewhere, Minnesota edged ·
denied the Grizzlies their first win. with a game-high 38 points and Malik Allen had 16 points and 13
Memphis 110- 106 in overtime; man was also lookmg good . .
The Grizzlies, 0-11 overall and seven assists, bur he missed · a
New Orleans nipped Philadelphia
With owner Jerry Buss watching
0-3
under Hubie Brown, lost in j urn per from the top of the key in rebound s, Vladimir Stepania
99-98; Sacramento beat Chicago from the starids, Los Angeles came
added a career-high I 5 rebounds
111 -98 ; Orlando defeated Seattle . within a basket of matching their overtime for the second time this the final minute that could have and Miami set a team sea son-hi gh
Pl!t Philadelphia up by three with
· 101 -84; Utah downed Phoenix 9 9 ~ all-time lowest points total, which year.
with 23 as sists .
Anthony Peeler 's 3-pointer with 5.2 seconds left.
. 76; Miami defeated Milwaukee 97 _ was set just six games before. The
Lakers fell to 3-8, having lost two 3:05 to play in overtime gave the
.93 ; and Houston topped Chicago straight, six of seven and four in a Wolves the lead for good.
"97-90.
row on the road.
,
·•
· This was only the fifth lime
"I look around the locker room
:Dallas beat Los Angeles in 46 and " I don ' t see fire in anybody's
Bryant
said.
meetings since 1991 and it was the eyes ," . Kobe
At Sacramento, Bobby Jackson
At Hou ston, Cuttino Mobley
most lopsided of the Mavs' 19 in "Everybody is kind of dozing off a
12 of hfs 19 points in the
and
Doug
Christie
scored
22
.
scored
the series.
little bit. There 's no intensity."
At
New
Orleans,
David
Wesley
points
apiece
as
the
Kings.
easi.!J
fourth
quarter
and the Rockets
They did it by holding the Lakers
grabbed a last-second rebound in remained perfect at hb&amp;ie.', ·
·never trailed after the opening
·to a 30.8 . shooting percentage, the
the
lane
and
tossed
it
in
as
ti!lle
18
~oints
minutes.·
Chris
Webber
scored
·worst in franchise history and the
expired.
i
6
.112
·.
Steve Francis added 18 points
before
sitting
out
the
final
'best defensive effort Dallas has
The
putback
came
after
Jamal
minutes a( t()e Kings cruised to for the Rockets, while Eddie
·ever had. It's especially significant
Mashburn, who scored 37, tried to their seventh straight victory over Griffin had 17 points and 10
·Since the Mavericks have emphaAt Minneapolis. Kevin ,Gar11ett win it with a tur11around jumper.
the . Bulls, who lost their fifth rebounds. Yao Ming . had nin e
sized defense this season.
had.) 4 points. and 22 rebounds a~
Allen Iverson nearly handed straight road game. .
points and six rebounds . He sho.t
"Our zone was looking good," the Minnesota Timberwolves New Orleans its first home loss
No~,itzki said. "And our man-to4-for-5.. .

Magic 101
SuperSonics 84

..

:u-o

Jazz 99
Suns 76

Rockets 97 ·
·. Cavaliers 80

Kings 111
Bulls 98

Hornets 99
76ers 98

Timberwolves 11 0
Grizzlies 106

No.2 .Kansas dominates Holy Cross 81-57
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) 76-55 and North Carolina- stayed aggressive."
great team that plays on the
- It was just one more rea- Greensboro downed Wagner . Collison and Kirk Hinrich, run."
.
son for Kansas fans to love 84-65.
seniors being counted cin to
On Wednesday · ·night, make up for the loss of Allstoried old Allen Fieldhouse.
Known as one of the most Rutgers is at Nonh Carolina American Drew Gooden,
difficult places to play in the and No. II Xavier is at also fueled a run in the seccountry, the arena where Wilt · Stanford in second-round ond half as· the Jayhawks
Chamberlain got his ·start games, while Eastern Illinois is · won their 30th straight home
Freshman Matt Walsh had
helped make the difference · at A01ida on Thursday night.
Tuesday night when No. 2
Williams led the Jayhawks o~r~ams had cautioned his 26 points, five assists, three
Kansas beat Holy Cross 81- to Preseason NIT lltl~s in team not to forget that" Holy rebounds and four steals to
57 in the Preseason NIT.
·1989, '93 and '97.
Cross gave them a game last lead the Gators, who
improved to 7-0 in openers
"I thought the whole game March.
The
Crusaders
were
putting up a good fight, just really was our defense, par"Sometimes you get into under coach Billy Donovan. as they had done last ·March ticularly in the first half," that mode, 'Well, we'll show
Florida played without ·
when they threw a scare into Williams said. "We came out them this time,"' he said. "I senior guard Brett Nelson
the top-seeded Jayhawks in early in the second half and cautioned them not to think (foot), junior forward Bone II
the first round of the NCAA we were awful offensively. that. Holy Cross is a good Colas (groin) and freshman
tournament.
Give their defense some team ..''
.
Christian Drejer of Denmar.k
But then Nick Collison and credit. They got back to a
Ketth Langford fimshed (ankle), but the Gators didn't
Kirk Hinrich triggered a 24-4 nine- or 10-point game and with. IS points, . while · miss them as sophomore
run at the end of the half' and then after that we settled H1bnch, a 6-3 guru:d and pre- David·Lee had 10 rebounds,
the sellout crowd of more down and got back info a season ~ll_-Amencan, and five assists and three blocked ·
than 16,000 found its voice. groove defensively."
Wayne Smuen each had 13. shots while senior Justin
"It is the loudest crowd I
Williams was not panicu- ."The defense was great," H .•
ti . h
.
·
1
· t a
amt
. · h sa1·d . ''Th at' s JUS
have ever heard," Holy larly happy with how Hmnc
. ton tms ed w1th :?,1
Cross' Tim Szatko said. Collison played.
. hard team to play against. pomts. . . .
.
"When the noise got real
"I'll grant you, 20 points They play that zone, they
The VISltmg B~lldogs, wh?
loud, we just gave in. The and eight rebounds, just work their tails off. It's just a staned five semors, kept It
last 11 minutes of the first about anybody in the country tough team to play."
close for about 15 minutes,
half was the difference in the would take that and call it a
Szatko had 14 points for then . Lee, Walsh . and
game."
good night," he said. "But Holy Cross and Brian Wilson Hanulton combmed for an
Collison had 20 points and Nick just didn't play well."
added 12.
11-2 run to give the Gators a
eight rebounds as Kansas
The 6-foot-10 senior
"I think we were a little 40-26 halftime lead.
.
coach Roy Williams raised missed his first four shots intimidated by the crowd," · Antonio Meeking led ·the
his record in the Preseason before connecting early in a Holy Cross coach Ralph Bulldogs with 20 points and
NIT to 13-0. The Jayhawks 24-4 run that closed out the Willard said. ''They are a 12 rebounds.
will host North Carolina- first half and put the Big 12
Greensboro in the second preseason favorites firmly in ·
round Friday night, with the command of the . team
winner advancing to the favored in the Patriot
semifinals in New York on League.
.
"Six-of-15 (from the
N 27
. ~~- T~esday night's other field)," Collison said. "I didPreseason NIT games, No. 8 n ' l shoot the ball as well 3J&gt;
Florida beat Louisiana Tech I'd like to. But I felt lik~ I

Florida 76
La. Tech 55

•

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·;·clause 2
..(I)
"

'Los Expos' top item at owners' meeting
IRVING, Texas (AP) against the Mets (April 11 They probably will be called .• 14), Atlanta (April 15-17) and
"Los Expos" a ong with "Les Cincinnati (April 18-20), sev: Expos" next season.
era! baseball officials said
Montreal would open its Tuesday on the condition
· new part-time home in Puerto they not be idenrffied.
·Rico on April II against the
Negotiations are ongoing
·New York Mets under plans between the commissioner's
developed by the commis- office and the players' associ. ation, and it still hasn't been
. sioner's officer.
While the proposal still decided whether the Expos
·hasn' t been finalized, base- will make three trips or two
· ball offici als are discussing to Puerto Rico, where they
·ftaving the Expos play I 0 would play up to 20 of their
·games in April at San Juan's 81 home games. Owners
·Hiram . Bithorn Stadium were to be briefed on the

1-877-779-5465

for a second season in
Montreal. "It will be great to
play in front of the .people
down there. They're great
fans. I spent nine years down
there managing in winter
ball."
San Juan was the host for
its first regular-season game
in 200 I , the ; eason opener
between Texas "and Toronto.
The Expos, who became
the first franchise outside the
United States , have been at or
.!l.ear the bottom in attendance
WI recent years at Olympic

.

Stadium in Montreal. Jeffrey
t.oria sold the team to the
other 29 clubs before the
2002 season when he purchased the Florida Marlins,
and the team is operated by
the commissioner 's office,
which wants to cut losses.
Montreal drew just 81 2,000
fahs to its )lome games this
year, and baseball isn ' t ready
to decide on a permanent
move. The games in San Juan
are seen as a method to
increase revenue.
" I really don"'t think it will

affect the play of this ballclub
on the field ," Robinson said.
"They understand that they' r'e
in a very different situation
here, a unique situation. We
really have no control over
where we' re going to play the ·
games."
Baseball orticials hope to
have a permanent solut ion for
2004, and probably will hold
a bidding process. Charlotte.
N.C. , Portland, Ore., and
Washington, D.C., are among
the po·ssible contenders.

Mlnneso~ ....... 11 5 4
o 26 56 41
Vancouver .......9 5 4 0 22 52 46
Colorado......... ..6 5 5 3 20 54 53
Edmonton......... ? 8 3 1 18 50 54
Celgary ............. 5 8 3 3 16 40 52
Pacific Dlvlalon
W L T OL Pta GF GA
D~llas ..... ... ..... t2 4 3
1 28 65 43
Anaheim .. :........ 8 6 3 3 22 50 51
Los Angeles ..... 8 6 3 2 21 54 53 · ·
San Jose .......... 7 9 1· 2 17 56 63
Phoenix .:.......... 7 10 1 1 16 47 60
. TWop~intaforawln;onepolntforatle
end overtime loll.
Tueaday'e Gemea
Onawa 4, Carolina 4, tie
San Jose 3, Washington 2
N.Y. Rangers 3, Anaheim 2. OT
Philadelphia 3, Tampa Bay 2 ·
Atl anta 4, Florida 3, OT
Toronto 2. Boston 0
New Jersey 4, Buffalo 3, OT
Los Angeles 2 , Minnesota 2, tie
Edmonton 3, Chicago 1
Detroh s·, Calgary 0
Wednudoy'o G1m11
St. Louis at Columbus, 7 p.m.

abl ed list to· the major leag ue roster.
Named J ohn Castleberr y. Steve Flores,
Gary McGraw, John Poloni, Tommy Tanous
and Frankie Thon ama te~ r scouts.
National League
CINCINNATI REDS-Signed INF Ryan
Freel , RHP Sean DePaula . LHP Mark
Watson. INF Kelly Dransteldt, C' Reed
Secrist, OF E m i ~Brown , IF Felipe Crespo,

Scoreboard

.

·pro Football
National Football League
AFC

w

East

LTPciPFPA
4 0 .600 236 187
BuHalo ............ 5 5 0 500 264 286
:New England .. S 5 0 .500 259 222
N.Y. Jets ..... .. .. 5 5 0 .500 204 230
South
w LTPciPFPA
lndi811apolls .... 6 4 0 600 215 183
.lennessee :..... 6 4 0 .600 231 24,5
.ZScksonvllle .... 5 5 ·o .500 214 185
6ouston .......... 2 8 0 .200 136 255
Norlh
•
LTPciPFPA
. P.Ittsburgh ....... 5 4 t .550 249 225
·tleveland ....... ~ 5 0 .500 232 215
8 0 .400 184 215
~ eattlmore ........ 4
1so 279
:cincinnati ....... 1 9
Will
LTPctPFPA
' Oenver ............ 7 3 0 .700 248 2t3
:san Diego ..... .7 3 0 .700 230 208
Oakland .......... 8 .4 0 .800 287 2t8
~ansas Clty .... 5 5 0 .500 289 273
NFC
E11t
LTPc1PFPA
~hlladelphla .... 7 3 0 .700 272 187
N.Y. Glenll ..... 8 4 0 .800 159 189
:washington .... 4 8 0 .400 179 238
·Dallas ............. 3 7 0 .300 118 175
South
LTPctPFPA
.Tampa Bay .. .. .8 2 0 .800 228 119
·New Orleans .. 7 3 0 .700 307 257
3 1 .650 245 187
·~uonla .... ........
·carollna ..........3 7 0 1300 145 174
Norlh
w LTPctPFPA
~reen Bay ......8 2 0 .800 288 209
liilrolt ............. 3 7 0 .300 1811 291
7 0 .300 237 278
~lnnisota ....... 3
Chicago .......... 2 8 0 .200 198 253
W11l
WLTPciPFPA
San Francisco 7 3 0 .700 237 197
St.Louis ......... 5 5 0 .500 215 212

Miami.. ........ ... 6

.

w

o .too

•

'

.

High-Speed Wireless Now J\Yallable in Gallipolis
WWW.CLOH.NET WWW.CLOHWIRELESS.NET

plans
when they met
Wednesday, their first gathering since the end of the season.
.Possible games in San Juan
also include the interleague
series against . the World
Series champion Anaheim
Angel s (June 3-5) and a
matchup with Sammy Sosa
and the Chicago Cubs (Sept.
9-11 ).
"It doesn' t affect me where
we play," Expos manager
Frank Robinson said Tuesday
after agreeing to come back

Afizona ......... ..4

w
e

0 .400 170 223

Atlanta at Carolina, 1 p.m. .
Jacksonville at Dallas, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at New England, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at New Orleans. 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Oakl&amp;nd at Arizona , 4 :05p.m . .
Kansas City at Seanle, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants aJ Houston, 4:15p.m.
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 4:15p.m.
Indianapolis at Denver, 8:30 p.m.

Monday, No\1. 25
Philadelpllla at San Franc)sco, 9 p.m.

College Basketball
Men

1\leadly'a Gamea
FAR WEST
Colorado St.
Clevo[and St. 83

n,

Florida AtlantiC

ee, 20T

93,

lrid. ·Pur.~Ft.

WByn·e

TOURNAMENT

PI'I... IOn NIT
Firat Round .
Florldll, 76. Loulolana Tech 55
Kansas 81, Holy Cross 67

UNC·Greensboro 84 , Wagner 85
·
EXHIBITION
Baylor 101 . Texas ·Bius Chips 83
EA Sporta 70, UCLA 84 ·
Cleorgla Tech 81, loom Nlke 48
Iowa 79. Team Nlke C 57
Lou~lena·Monroe 98, VASDA Gold 89
SW Texll"92. Showtlme AII·Stero 72
Saint Louis 68 , Athletes In Action 58

Seton Hall 92 , One World AII·Siars 83
Syracuse 110, Upatalo AAU 88
UNLV 87, EA SporlaWest AII·Stars 67

Women
1\llldiY'I 01m11
SOUTH
New Orl eans 69, Xavier, ~0 66

New Orleans 99, Philadelphia 98
Utah 99, Phoenix 76
Orlando 101 , Seattle 84
Sacramento 111 , Chicago 98
Wednesday'a Games
New Jersey at Boston, 7 P-01·
Indiana at Toronto, 7 p.m.

EXHIBITION
Arkansas 86, Athletes in Action 76
Notre Dame 70, OG.BM Legends 60.

Pro Basketball

Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m.

St. louis at Washington, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Miami, 1 p.m.

w

w

6

Seanle .......... ..J 7 o .300 181 217
Sunday, Nov. 24
Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.

N~;~tlonal

Basketball Association

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlalon

. w

L
3
4

Pel.
.727
.606

GB

4
5
5

.600

1.5

.583

1.5

.545

2

Miami... .. ............ 2 · 7 .222
New York ............. 2
8 .200
Central Division

5
5.5

New Jersey .......... B
Philadelphia ......... 7
Boston ................. 6

· Orlando ........... .... 7
Washington ......... 6

1

WLPciQB

Miami at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Minnesota at Atlanta , 7 :30 p.m.
' L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Utah at Denver. 9 p.m.
Philadelphia at Memphis, 9 p.m.
Orlando at Portland, 10 p.m.
Chicago at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Sacramento at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

Hockey
National Hockey Leagua
EASTERN CONFERENCE

lndlana ... .. .......... .. 8

· 1

.889

Detroit... .............. 8
New Orleans ....... 8
Atlanta .. ............... 6

3
3
4

.727
.727
.600

t
1
2.5

W L T OL Pta QF.GA
Phlledelphla .... 10 3 5 0 25 52 34

Milwaukee ........... 5
Toronto ............... .4
C h~ ago .............. .4

5

.500

3.5

New Jetsey .... 11 5 0

6

.400

4.5

7 .364
5
Claveland ............. ~
10 .. 187
7.5
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mld-t Dlvlolon
WLPotGB
Dallas .•..... ......... 11
0 1.000
HouBion ............... 6
3 .6117
4
San Anton~ .........7
4 .838
.4

Mlnnesota ............ B

a 22 43 32

N.Y. Rangers .... 910 2 0 20
Pittsburgh .........1 5 3 2 19
N . Y. I~andJtro ...611 1
0 · 13
• Norlhllll Dlvlolon
W L T OL Ptl
Boston ............ 11 3 3 . 1 26
Montreal. .......... 8 8 4 0 20
onawa .............. 8 8 2 0 18
Toronto ............. 710 2 0 18
Bullalo .... .......... 311 3 1 10

52 65
53 53
43 65
GF
6t
50
45
55
39

GA
41
55
42
87
51 ·

.500

5.5

Utah .......... ...........
7 .417
Der111or ................. 2
8 .200
Memphls ............. .o 1 t .000
Ptclllc Dlvlolon
W L Pet
seattle .... ............. 8
3 · .727

8.5

Southlllt Dlvlalon

8.5

W L T OLP11 GF GA
Tampa Boy .... .1t 5 2· 1 25 85 48
Carollna ...... ...... 8 4 4 3 23 43 43
Florlda .............. 8 7 3 4 19 48 82
washington ...... 8 9 2 o 18 40 50
Atlanta .............. 51t 1 1 12 47 sa
WESTERN CONF!RENCE
Control Dlvlolon
W. L T OL Pta GF GA
Detroit.. ........... 11 5 2 o 24 57 39
St.Louls ...... ... 1t 4 1 0 23 58 39
Chlcago ............ 9 6· 3 o 21 « 39
Columbua ......... 7 7 2 2 18 54 52
Naahvlllo ........... 2 9 3 4 11 38 58
Norlhw11t Dlvloton I ·
W L T .OL Pll GF ~A

s

6

Atlantic Division

11 .
QB ·

Sacramento ......... 8

4

.667

112

Phoenl• ............... 5
Portland .............. 4
L.A. Cllppera ...... ..4
L.A. Lakera ..........3
Golden Slate ....... 3

4

.556
.400
.384
.273
.250

2

6
7
8
9

Tueeday'a Oamea

Mlaml97, Mllwau&lt;oa 93
Mlnnaaota110, Memphlo106. OT
Houston 97, Cleveland 80

Dallas 98. L.A. Lakers 72

M
4

5
5.5

LHP Lance Davis; OF Robin Jennings, INF
Jason Maxwell, RHP Carlos Almanzar,
R~P Shane Hearns." OF Mike Curry. OF
Bobby ,Deruia. RHP Kyle Stanton. AHP
Sco' MacRa e ·and C Creighton Gubanich
to minor league contracts. Signed RHP
Kyle Edens and INF Kevin Howard.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Named Russ
Nixon manager. of Lexington of the South
Atl antic League.
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Agreed to terms
with LHP Jesse Orosco and AHP

Francisco Cordova on one-ye ar contracts.
Purchased the contrBcts of AHP Michael
Nicolas. LHP Cory Stewart , INF Bernie
Castro, OF Jay Say and OF Vince Fai son.

BASKETBALL
National Baakatball Aaaoclltlon
CH ICAGO BULL8-Actlvated F Coria
~l ount from the Injured list. Placed C
Dallbor BarQarlc on the injured list.

Montreal at Pl ~burgh~ 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
Dallas at Phoenix, 9 p.m.

Chicago at Vancoul'8r. 1q p.m.

.

MINNEASOTA

TIMBERWOLVES-

Actlvated F Joe Smith from the injured li st.
Placed 0 Wally Szczerblak on the Injured

Transactions

ll.t.
FOOTBALL

BASEBALL
. Amo~con Lto;uo
ANAHEIM ANGELS- Added OF Robb
Quinlan, RHP Richard Fischer and RHP
Bobby Jenks to the 40· man roster .

NEW

YORK

YANKEES-Namod

Bucky Dent manager of Co lumbus ol
the IL. .

SEATTLE
MAR INERS- Released
RHP Paul Abbolt. Added OF Jamal
Strong, RHP Rett Johns on, RHP Aaron

looper. C Ryan Chr isti an son, and LHP
Bobby Madrltsoh to the 4o~m an roster.
TEXAS RANGERS- Relnstalod AHP
Jovanny

Ceden o,
RHP
Jeff
Zimmerman, IF Frank Catalanotto and
OF Rusty Greer from the 60·day dis-

I

. National Football

league

BUFFALO BILLS-Signed LB Greg
Favors. Re leased WR Reggie Ge r m~ ny.
CLEVEL AND BROWNS- Placed TE
Aaron Shea on injured rese rve. Sign ed FB

R.J. Bowers.
MIAMI DOLPHINs-Ao·slgned CB Paul
Miranda.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS--Relea sed
CB Jimmy Hllohcock. ·
NEW YORK G I A~TS-Re ·sig n ed WR
Tony Simmons. Waived P Tom Rouen.
P~ILADELPHIA EAGLES--Sig ned QB
Tim (Hasselbeck and s. Cli nton 'Hart 10 the
practice squad. Released OL Patrick
Venzke and S Julian Jones tram the prac·
tlce squad.

�, Page B 4. The Daily

Sen~ti~ne;l~-------------·---.m•y;.d•a•il~ysiiii·ei i ni i tli i nioe.••lco•m...----------~~W~Eidnesday,

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

November 20, 2002

\!tribune - Sentinel - ~e

F.'
. . -•f•!•uros
•s.w:
,..·... ~I ~t~~I'OR
~TR~I~sJCKS.w:~,~~l.,t.~o...~MI'RO-tloME•vn.tmi'S• -.,~
6

C L A 5 S I F .I E D

99 Foro Taurus SE, must 95 Chevy SilveradO z.21 .
Ext. Gab, 1500, V-8, auto,
992 Model (UA) Chrysler oxcelent condition. $9995,
LeBaron, V6, 3 .0 engine, (740)446-2927
loaded, ctean. (U0)446Tamml Brabham
1511
Congratulations! You have
Last Addition 97 Ford won 2 free movie tickN
Thunderbird. VB, 2 Door. to the Spring Valley 7 In
fully lolided , 23.000 Miles, Gallipolis. Call the Toibune
Eu:cnuc.uJ
Excellent Condition. 992· lor details. {740)446-2342
~ ~liON
3158
sell! (740)339-0213

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
~ lse ,Cijnl

.

.

C.alU.a C_,uty, OH

In one week With us
REACH. OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR. AD NOW ONLINE .
Your Ad,

\

M.'o nday thru Friday
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Display Ads

Dall y In-Column : 1·: 00 p.m.

All Di s play : 1 2 N o o n 2
Busines s D a y s Pri o r To
Publi c a t i o n
Sunday D is pla y: 1: 00 p .m .
Thur s d a y t or S undays

Mo n d a y - Fri da y f o r In se rt ion
In N ex t O&amp; y's Pap e r

In -Co lu m n : 1: 00 p.m .

Sundays Pape r

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

81'1.

AQ.

1992 Chevy pickup, 4x4,
350 V-8, low mileage,
Massey Ferguson Tractor,
35 Deluxe. caJI (740)245·
5628

Successful Ads
Shoul d I nclud e These Items
To Help Get Response ...

r,.

.

rWr: I

1987 Chevy Van, mechanic
owned Luxury Van (with
work) or work van, S1 200
firm. Kelly {740)446-9961

1994

Plymouth

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

or vis~ website:
www.lterbandlet.com

Al\'NOUNO~ME.NTS

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to· The Daily
Sentinel, Po Box 729-20 ,
Pomeroy. Oh io 45769.
·

Energetic. creative, tale nted
person needed to manage
new nightclub which will be
open only on weekends .
Manager to share revenue
after expenses. No salary.
Western Paperbacks to Fax letter ol interest to
trade
or
eJCchange. (740i2B6·2660
~304)675·5864
Financial
Freedom .
lnternalional
Company
.growing. rapidly. Interne t
G IVEAWAY
work from home. PTIFT
posit1ons Full tra ining. 1·
888·202·632 1
Young inside _male and
female cats to good homes. Foster Parents.
Orange &amp; white and Tan Local Agency in Ohio' seek·
t1g er
stnpe.
Phone ing qualified couples 10
(740)446 -3479 after 5pm.
become Foster parents In
LosT AND
Lawren'ce, Gal1ia, Jackson,
Meigs areas Therewillbe5
L___;F,&lt;
;,;&gt;;,;UNi'liiD--,.1 to 10 families chosen to
..,
becomepartolthepilotprot'·

r
r

WE CAN
HELP!

=

a

. We offer
$500
sign-on bonus, up
to $7/hour, paid
. .
.
'd h I'
tra1ntng, pa1
o 1"d
days. and Pal
.
W

vacations.

e

1

also offer complate health benefits and a 401-k

plan. ..

~

4'X8' pool iable new felt,
excellenl condition $300.00
G. E. WhiteM'ash~!r. L~rge
Capacity, 4 yrs.lold $50.00
304 773- 5166
WANrED

To Do

Georges Portable SawrJLill,
don't haUl your logs lo the
mill just call304-675-1 957.

All rhlntate •dvertl• lng
·In thll new•paper Is
•ubject to the Fedtr•l
F•ir Hou1lng Act of 1968
whiCh maket nu~ep~ 10
•dvertiM "any
preference, limitation or
diacrlmlnlllonbliHdon

I..ms&amp;

ACREAGE

.,

•--titiiiiiiiiliiioo~
"' pl

Large ~br. Appliances fur·
nished. Deposit required.
HUD
accepted. 5285.
(304)675·7783

Now Taking Ap plicationsf
35 West 2 Bedroom
12
' 1 acm lot on Tycoon lake Townhouse
Apa rtm ents,
w1121i60Trailer$1S,500.00
Includes Water Sewage,
~)s~:7~:
Trash. $350/Mo .. 740-4460008.

2 lots close 10 Gallipolis on
ol d Rouse 35 in Sunkist
Subdivision. For more infor·
f
II (740)388-9851
ma ton. ca
2·112 acre wood ed lot. Site

Waterline Special: _31~ 200
PSI $21.00 Per 100, 1 200
PSI $35.00 Per 100:. All
Brass Compression Fillings
1 St k
each. Call
alter 6pm, . ~N~VANS ENTERPRIS·
(740)446-9066
.
.
.
ES Jackson. Ohio, 1·600·
Couch &amp; love seat Blue w/ ..
53"7..
· 9_5_2_8_ _ _ _ _.,
Brown &amp; Beige !lowers good
BUIWING
&amp; clean c:ond. $300. 304S
773·5343
~
Almond Whirlpool electric
stove $75 . Almond refrigerator, • 57
Whirlpool &amp;
Kenmore washers. $65

5:

r

Small furnished apt. All Utili·
ties paid except Electric. No
Pets, Security Deposi t
Requ ired. $275. Md\th.
(304)675 -1365
:--'-- --..,::---Tara'
TO\oJnhoUse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
·2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
112 Bath Newly Carpeted
Adu lt P~ol &amp; . Baby Pool :
Patio, Start $375/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required, Oays :
740; 446·3461; Evenings .
740-367-0502.

Debbie Wayland .
740-992·3972
Congratulations! You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the
Spring Valley
7
Gallipolis. Call the Sentinel
lor details. (740)992-2155)
.
For Sale: Rec ond1t1oned
washers, dryers and relrig·
erat~rs.
Thompsons
Apphance .. 3407 Jackson
A\'enue (304)675-7388
·
·
Good Used Appliances,
Recond itioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers , . Ranges,
and'
TWin River• T~wer for eld· Refrigerators, Some start at
er1~/ dlsablpd.
s95 s'kar.gs Appliances 76
Now accepting applications
·
u
'
fOr 1 br, all utilities paid HUD Vine St., (740)446-7398
.I d
I d
rt
·ass•s e · carpe e apa • Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
ment. rent Is 30% of your Chapel Ro ad Porter Oh1o
adjusted irtco~e call 304 · (740)446-7444 1-87'7-830:
675·6679 between ·8-4:30 9162 Free Est·mates
Ea
1
weekda s EHO
.
..
'
sy
pm
Y·
fma,nc1ng, 90 days same as
h VI a1 M t
c
d
unfurnished apartmenl, also ca~ · ~
as er ar ·
small trailer close to grocery Dnve· a- llttl~ save atot
&amp; downtown
Gallipolis. RCA 27in Console TV with
Reference
&amp; Deposit. remote; Dark Maple desk, 4
(740)446· 11 58
drawers
and
chair;
Burgandy rocker/ mcliner.
1 bedroom apartment, stove All in excellent condition.
&amp; refrigerator included\ utili- (
)3 _
740 88 8997
ties included . (740 245- ::...::::::.::::..;:;::..._
___

I

All Steel Building 501C60 was
$11,500
Now
$7,81 5.
Others Available 1-800-292·
0111 .

Mother of 2 will baby -sit in
myhome Private pay orlink . . race,c:olor,l'llllglon, HA
(304)895-3277
familial atatu• or nation..
-----~~~~
. FOUND- Small female pup eel. Oualil ied applican ls
C II d
d
origin, or any lnltntlon IO cleared lor building. Porter
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
: wl'1.u
_ nkdsne0ar0G. DCCallap&amp;pro &gt;1
:ve3 may rdecel~o~e .upbto $40.00
a to . ay an
Will repair automobiles. All
mBa any tuch
$a;eOa,50. NocaiiS(~n gl)~ ~~d e s ,
windows, lintels. etc. Claude
9
9
9
.1:1
per ay re1m urse ment.
start earning
types of repairs. ASE cenipreference, llmltatiDn or
description. (740)44H}220 InteresTed parties Call
lied, 15 years e•perlence.
dlacrlmln•UOn."
from 8-5.
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
(740)709·9062. II you have
money for the
Ca11.(740)44Hll99
Patriot area. 20 wooded
Call 740·2 45·5 121.
LOST- 2 year Chocolate Lab pre~o~iously called. please call
holidays!
Thl• neWiptper will not
acres, county water &amp; elecr. .
I'E
lost 10 the Northup area. 11 again. ·
·
lcnowlngty .ccept
tric. hOmesite. Borders
FOR S.-JAL
'S • •
found please call (740)446·
"'
8706 alter 4pm .
Full~tlme RN
actvenlnment• for rtll
Wayne National Forrest,
scenic ·Hills Nursing Center
B~
••tete which I• In
excellent hunting, $38.000
.
OPPoRTUNIT\'
violation ol the T•w- Our
(7 40)379-9141
2 AKC male registered
is now accepting applica70
tions for a full time AN, We
reMan..,. htr.by
German S:h!:ippard 6 wks old
YA RD SALE
are · the areas premier
INOTICEI
lnroi'ITied that all
Prime lots for sale on State
pups, ·solid black &amp; black
Alzheimer's care facility. We
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
dwelling• ldv.eniHCIIn
Route 554· 1 mile from Rio
and brown 5200.00 call 992·.
offer very competitive pay or stop by our office: lNG CO. recommends rttat
thla newap~~per •re
Grande.
(740)388·01 73
3972 after 5 p.m.
you do business with people
(740i367 7187
and eJCcellent benefitS. If you
242 3rd Avenue
you know, and NOT to send
avallableon •n equ•l
·
AKC Choc. Lab puppies 4·
YARD SAl .E·
would like to join our dedi·
G II' I' Oh '
opportunity
"'-•':rn
Males, 2-Female. Parents
cated
team
ol
careg
ivers,
a
IPO
IS,
10
monev
through
the
mail
until
nrAL
.l!o.')Jn.
G ALLU'OLIS
on
Premises w/ Pedi grees
you may appjy in person at
you have investigated the
·
WAN1FJ&gt;
$200.00 (740) 742·3802 or
Scenic Hills or call Diane
Quality A1sllrance
offering.
.
Cottage style home, 2 bed·
(740) 992·1335
inside &amp; Ou t, 1699
room, lull basement, 2 car
· Manager I
PRo~
garage, ·road frontage, 10 Will pay top dollar lor prime
McCormick Ad , 4 families. 3 Thompson lor more informa·
S~ONAL
land . New homo bui lder.
Full blOOded Cocker Spaniel
rooms lull, 1992 Chrysler lion at (740) 446-7150. We Part-time (20 hours/week)
acres, well maintained, call
ERVJCES
puppies.
Black &amp; White and
equal
opportunity
position
based
in
our
Rio
·
Danny
Brown
for
appoint'~
are
an
LeBaron. V6 car! Lotp l va ri Grande oflice to provide
ment, (7401949 _8900
Grey &amp; White. Parents on
ety. November 21,22,23 employer. EOE
prem ises. Shots. $1 50.
monitoring and evaluation of
TURNED DOWN ON
10am·?
(740)446·2986
Guardsmart&lt;. w111 be accept- provider agencies It? assure SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI? For S.!l!f.§ .by owner· 3 bed· ..
roo~- 1 b~th , _1.floor plan. flO
A v F
T ·
ing applications for part time quality service. delivery and No Fee Unless we W1n!
WANTEIJ
positions for security officers client care within programs
1-888~582·3345
carport . 135 K1neon Drive.
HoUSES
m~le le~:. s e;_rb~; {J.fo~Jg~
mBuv
m Appl e Grove, WV. offered by the Area Agency
(740)446-2776
FOR RENT
1
2515 ,(Cell phone (740)645 _
Applicants must be able to on Aging. Successful candi·
.
2070 740164_::5_::·2_::5:_99:___
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Wor~ any shift. If you have a date must. be Registered mo~-~....- - - . , Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
__c..:_..::_:_
Silver. .
Gold Coins, clear police record. are at Nurse of Licen sed Social
HoMES
tract, $500 down to qualified 1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed 5859
Used furniture store, 130 ROITWEILEA t4 w~s. old,
Proolsets. Diamonds . Gold least 21 years of age and w orker,
or
have
a
FOR SALE
buyers. Call (740) 446-3570 Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Bulaville Pike. w e sell mal· Female $200.00 773 .5873
Rings .
U.S . Currency.- have a high school diploma Bachelor's Degree in Health
for a quick sale.
Down, 30 Years at 8.5% l Bedroom Apanments tresses,
bunk
beds,
M.T.S . Co1n Shop , 151 or equ1valent wilh documen- and Human Services or .
APR. For Li stings, 800-319- Starting
at
$289/mo, dressers, couchG s, applil \I!\ I " 1' 1'111'
Second Aven ue. Gallipolis. lation, apply in person related field, plus two' years $65,000 OBO, in Ohio, 3
MOBU.E Uof\.us' 1 3323 Ext. 1709.
Wa sher/ Dryer Hooku p, ances, much more. Grave
,, II\ I·SIOC K
740·446·2842
between 8:00 am and 2:00 prior experience In commu- bedroO m, 2 car garag e, gas
FOR SALE
2 bedr~m house, (740)388- (Slove and 9 Refrigerator. monuments. (740)446-4782
740
44
1
151
pm. at Main Gate , M&amp;G nity health care with the eld· fi replace, wood fl oors, 1.47 - 8547
.
Gallipolis. OH.
r.
\ LI',;,.,....;,..K
.
)
"
304 675 2364
I \ll'l.tl\ ~II \1
acre. (
)
12 .used homes under
2 bedroom apartment i&amp;n
_ _,.1,
·
SIR\ I( 1·,
after 90 days. EOE M/F
bs ·
F
1 $9,000 Foreclosure! 3 BA $3,000. Will help with delivGallipo!ls. Ai r washer,
• .. ..... QUES
•
va nt su lltuta. am 111 arty
e'ry. Call Harold, 740 . 385• 3 bedroom house in dry.er hook -up , no p'ats ,
..
""11
wi
th
'Medicaid/
Medicare
home,
won't
lastl
For
listing
Gall
ipolis
$650
monthly
rent
~-...
Help wanted carinn
for the reimburse ment water paid,
3 Nanny Goats, all bred.
"tt
helpful. call 1·800·71 9·3001 Ext. 9948.
plus depo' sit. No pets One d
C $350/mo. plus
1110
H EI..P W ANTED
elderly, Darsi ·Group Home. Salary: $13.94/hr. Trav el F144
IJ'IOnth deposil and refer- eposl t.
all a1tar 6pm , Buy or sell. Rive ri ne APHA Palomino Stud, 2-l/2
L- - - - - - - ·
· now paying minimum wage, required with reimbu rse12x60, 2 bedrOom mobile ences required. Taking (740)446·4043 (740)339- Antiques, 11 24 East Main on
old , broke. 2 Pain
·new shift s: 7am-3pm. 7am- ment. SUbmit resUme, Proof 1 story brick house, 3 BA, 1· home on rented lot In applications. Call (740)645 _ 3063
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 _
with Blue Eyes.
11
11
3
112
Are yoU interested in a Spm.
Pm· Pm ,
Pm· of
Licensure
and
bath, close to hospital , MSiddleport wlthview ofri~o~er, 2088 For appointment to 2-Small fu rno
'shed apts. All 992·2526. Russ Moore,
.
d
.,.
7am. call 740-992·5023.
low· maintenance. Call ~500 , (740)992·3194
rewa 'd 1ng an
exc1mg
References to:
v1e w. Will be available Dec. utilities paid excep t Electric . owner.
-..,aareer as a dedicated care- Johnsons Supermark9t ot·
Human Resources
(740)446 "2290
14x65 Shultz wi Dishwashef 1
No Pets,1 has a showe·r. 1 - - - - - - - - ~· · · ·? Scenic Hills Nursing Point Pleasant IS updating
Area Agency on Aging
1400 square ft home, 3 &amp; front deck. $6,500.
has a tub. Security Deposit Carolin a An tiq ue &amp; Crall·
Dis1rict 7, Inc.
bedroom, 2 full bath, 2 car (304)675·6295
3 bedroom house, $450 Required. $275. Month . Mall 312 6th. St. Pt.
Center has the job for you 11. resumes to Cashier/ Stock.
you are a state tested nurs· Apply withtn (304 )675 . 171 t
F32, URG , P.O. Box 500 garage, 1 acre lot in country, ' - - ' - -- -- - - month plus deposit No pels. (304)6 75. 1365
Pleasant, . WV. Antique &amp;
ing aidf. and Would like to
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 Racine, aski ng s8o,ooo 1980 Hill Crest 14x70, 2 (740)446·4313
Craft Vendors Welcome.
join our · team, please call Look1ng for LPN. Monday- . email: jshon g@aaa7.org 0 80 , {7 40}949·1353
bedroom, 2 bath, appli- - ' - - ' - - - - - - - 2br. Apartment at Gallipolis
1980·90'sCars/Trucks from
and
talk
to
D1anna Friday, no weekends or
artees, 2 AJC units, $2500. 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St, Ferry. (304)675·2548
MiscELLANEOUS
SSOO. Police Impounds for
. rooms and ba'". stove/
Thompson or stop by and Holida~s . Apply in person. Equal Opportunity Employer 2 . BO House w/ Full LP Gas. (304)675-7633
$325 mo. (740)446·3945
M ERCHANDISE 1. sale. For listing 1·600·719·
4
applY in person. Be sure to 936 State Route 160,
Basement on .38 acre lot in
ul
3001 eJCI. 3901
ask about our new starting (740}446-9620
Seeking energetic candi· Chestar Area. For More 1994MobileFermont 14XSO
Moi'ODR.ERJ:!.O~
relrigerator. Utilities pa l~,
_ __ ..:_:.:___ __
wage! Our number is :.:.c.:.cc...::..:.::::..._ _ _ dates to train as dental Details Call· Day 985·3301, Central · Air, Smooth Top
nr..r&lt;~t
• $400 month. 46 Olive Street. 15 inch ·Computer monitor, 1985 Dodge Lanser, runs
(740)446·7150. EOE
LPT. LPTA lor home health assis1ants, computer experi· or Evenings 995. 4449
Range, Side·B~-Sid e relrig(740)446·3945
$50. Se of 9 compute r good,
Phone
175 _
s~o~cs. Choices available lor ence preferred. Interested
orator, waster &amp; Dryer
'--'--'--'----..,-:- games,
$30.
Phone (7401446 .2316
Are you inlerested in the counties or ' areas persons send resume to PO 2 br. in New Haven wv $6500 (740) 696-Q1 05
2 80. all electric, AC, Wa1er Applications being taken lor (740) 446-2316
becoming a State Tested se!Ved. Currently provide Box io 4. Pomeroy, Oh $27,000 304·882·2890
/trash included, re ferences very nice 2 bedrOof!l in :........:.._~----- 199 1 Honda Civic, good
1994 Schult 16&gt;;72 Mobile ai1d
deposit
required country setting yet close to 25" Zenith Cabinel, floor condition, runs greal. Red
Nurse Aide ? If you would servtces in Jackson. Meigs, 4 57 6 9
like an exc111ng , rewarding Athens, Gall1a, Vin ton, and ~:.:.:::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 3 bed room, 2 bath Brick Home Priced to sell Quick $300.00 month (740) 247· town. Washer. Dryer, Stove, model color TV; · $40 .00 with CD player, $1500 OBO
0402
Frig, Dishwasher provided. Phone (740}446-2311$
-career in health care. we southern washington coun- Truek Drlvera Immediate home In Centenary area. 112 Call (740) 385·2434
(740)256·8116
hire, class A cOL req uired, acre lot and additional
Cl
br - - - - - - - - - Large Kitchen. Lots ol closet
have the answer. for you. ties. Call (740) 286-6631
14
60
2
1996
excellent pay, experience 24x24 building. For more
aylon
x
, 2 bedroom mobile home In space To tal electric wi th Affordable • Convenient 1992 Chevrolet
• Scenic Hi ll~ Nursing Center
Lumina
IS offering a nurse aide Mason Co. 911 IS accepting req uired. Earn up lo Informa tion or appointment glamour .bath, all electric, Middleport, $275 per month Central NC . Garbage pick· WOLFF TANNING BEDS Euro, 4 door sedan, $1,500.
class. It wi ll begin in applications lor lull &amp; part 51 ,000 . per week.Call 304 . call (740)645-2088 or central a~r. Call (304)675· plus deposit, (~40)992·3194 llP and ~ater provided. Low Monthly Investments Phone (740)446-3479 after
'December You must apply lime Dispatching PoSitions. 675-4005
(740)388·9851
8180
2 Bedroom trai ler, new car- Tenant pays elec tric. No
FRH
Eo
E")!'_olelclverylI
5pm.
·
in person at Scenic Hills. Pick up Applications at 911
MUST SELL BY THE END
·
G
pets. Non smokers only.
vv or a 8 OQ
URGENTLY NEEOEO- plas- 3
bedroom,
Garf1eld
pet, near airport in allipolis·. $400 deposit, $450 month, Call Today 1·800-71 1-0158 1997 Grand Am, 20. GT,
Contact Stacey Wright or Center.
=--=-~----- .ma donors; earn $50 to $60 Avenue, Gallipol is , OH. OF OCTOBER! COLE'S $250 month, no pe ts. (740)446-9585 or (740)446·
) www,np.etstan.com
$3.995; 1996 Sunfire, 2D,
Dianna Thompson. EOE .
McClure's Restaurant now per week for 2 or 3 hours Owner financing , $49,000. MOBILE HOME, Ath ans, (740) 367 •7760
2205 1743
c
t nary
GT $3695 1995G d AM
OO d
h Ohio (740) 592·1972. on·
·
~n a
BURN
Fat
BLOCK
' • •
ran
•
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or hiring all 3 locations , lull or weekly. Call Bio Ute· P~sma S4, O
own. 365 mont · occasion we have a disp1ay 2 bedroom, all electric, AC, Road , Gallipolis. Ask lor C .
· d BOOST · 20. GT. $3.495; 1991 Probe
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· part-time. pick up appHca - Service, 740-592 -6651.
(304)988-0664
hom e that doesn't sell. We very nice, in Gall ipolis. _V,cirg':.in:-:ia=-.-:::----:-:-:-::::- E~~;~g~ike an You Have M
GTO,TORS
$1,295
COOK
675-1429.
tion at locat ion :&amp;oam"'
brinn back
(740)446 •2003 or (740)446· B
c EAUTIFUL
APART· N-·er
Experl'enced.
, (740)446-0 t03
between
&amp;
Veteran
s
Outreach
3
or
4
bedrooms,
2
batl'1s,
have
one
such
home
now.
..
93
-Bass player and dru.mm~r 1o:OOam, Monday thru
1·888-2•VET NET
basement. New windows, New 16 X 80 three bed· 140
_9-:-,.-::-- . . , - -MENTS
AT
BUDGET
WEIGHT- LOSS .
1997 Saturn . $8000
'needed for new band m F11o Saturday.
"BusinessPublic siding, roof HVAC. plumb='room, 2 Bath home at a Beautiful River View Ideal PRICES AT JACKSON
REVOL'UTION
29,180 miles, fo ur door,
Grande area, call Morgan
,
Relations"!
State
&amp; ing, wiring. Garage, covered used home price come see For 1 Or . 2 Peopte, ESTATES, 52 Westwood New product Iaurich October automatic, lilt wheel, cruise,
740·245·9241
or Terry
OWNER OPERATORS
Federally
Regis1ered. patio.
large
yard. Lynn or Ernie today and References, Deposit, No Drive hom $297 to $383. 23. 2002 . Call Tracy at int8rml ttenVwipers,AC,AMIF
(740~992-0739
WANTED
Excellent
1ncome
end Convenient Grape Street. check out your savings. Pets, Foster Trailer Park, Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call (140)441·1982
M radio. Cali (740) 949-2 112
.
TRUCK DRIVERS
Security
SoiT)e
travel (740)446·3 108 .
afte r Remember. we muE!t sell by 740 _441_0181 _
740-446·2568.
Equal
.
.
COL Drivers wanted- 0 T.A Longhaul Teams Welcome. required. Prefer VeteranS! 6.00pm.
the end of October!
Housing Opportunity.
Chri stmas Nativity Scene, 91 Pontiac Grand. Am, 4 cyl
Vel's Relationship. Send
.
Clean 3 Bedroom Mobil&amp; ..,--"--'-'--...:.--$-_::12:.::5:_.(~7.C::40::1:_25:.:6:.:-6:.::0c::l2::.___ 5 sp, ale, new tires, high
flatbeds· 90% lumber/ St?me Call'(304)675 -40 05
tarping. East Coast (no New Po.nt ServiCe X Press .
resume to Business- j:)ubtlc 3 year old Brick Ranch , Must Sell Immediately! 3 H
.
h
C
F'urnished 3 rooms + bath, ,....
.
miles. (740)742-2558
·
orne 1065741 e
oun try. upsta1·rs. clean. no' pet&amp;. Country Kitchen table with 2 -.. :::.=.~::-.:_:::.:::::::::...__
York) . Must have good
Relations· 524 Youngstown .3 •000 + sq.It· 2· 112 acres
· . • yo. ar old 1999 Oa~wood (740)256
MVA HOME WEE KENDS!! The ~ son County Public Poland Ad., Struthers, OH ~nground pool, st?rage bu1ld· 16x80. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ·
Re ference
&amp;
deposit chairs. pole lamps , table 96 Grand Am GT, 125,000
Call
(888)3988-5220 Service District will accept 44471 . Fax 330 .755 . 593o mg, excellent neighbOrhood, LA, Kitchen (appliances MObile home lor rent, no required. (740)446·15t9
lamp, antique cream and dnven daily, $3500 negoJackson, OH.
resumes for an operator Attn: Adam Dolan Sr.
(740)446·0149
incl~ded) , la undry roocm . pets, (740)992-5858
::--..,-- . . , - - . . , - - - •,eugaars'ot;"d"').l( set &lt;• PP&lt;ox. 75 liable. (740)441 -9317
740 1446 4847
~sit ion. M1nimum reqwre·
enous lnqu1res only!ll a11
Gallia Manor Apartments,
Clerk poS111on: Please sub- ments are a valid Class 1 Work From Home. Could Brick Ranch, 2 bedr~om, 2 after 7p, (304}675·7347 or
APARTMENTS
1 .138
Buht
Morton Rd.,
97 Avenger ES , $3495; 96
m1t letter of interest and We st Virgin1a Pubt1c water You Use EXTRA Income? b~t~ , garage, on n ~e r,. 5 (304)675-6906
f"OR R.f..r'IT
Gallipolis now accepting Gru bb's Pigno- Tuning &amp; Stra tus, $2695; 95 Grand
resume to the t uppers Operator Cert ification and s500 tci s1oooper Mo. We'll m1les south of Gall1pol1s. '--...:..._ _ __ _ _ ·--i.iliioitiiillli.OIIIW
' appliCations. lor 8 1 RepairS. Problems? Need Pnx. $2695: 92 Grand A,; ,
Pia1ns Reg1 onal Sewer Class 11 west v 1rgin1a lrain you step-by- step. Call (740)441·6817
Must seW Owner mo\led,
Bedroom. HUO, Subsidized i'~~~ ? _~~~ The Piano Dr. $1895; 92 Fireb1rd $2495,
D1stnc1. PO. B!)JC 17 5. waslewater Certification.· (740) 446-4208 6pm-8pm, or - - -- -- - - - 2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BA, 1 and 2 bedroom apart- apanment for elderty and -,--- - - - - - - 91 Camri, $2695:·91 Escort,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783, Resumes w111 be accepted visit:
Land home packages. No 2 bath, all appliances. wash- ments, I 1rnished an d unfur- handiceppe!:;!.
(74b)446·
JET
$1450: 90 Escort. $9!&gt;5. 88
o eadlmeTh DTePceRm ber 9, by mail or 1n person until www.toyourphysicalweanhcom payments while under con- er &amp; dryer included. central nished. security depos it 4639. .Equal
Housing ' AERATION MOTORS
g:~~~erG¥.·2 4 ~ 1695R:om8e7
50 IS an December 2. 2002 at 101
:il 00 2
e
Y
slruct1on. ·u ttt e or no air with dec~. Make down required. r;~o pets, 740-992· 0 pponunlly.
Repaired, New •- Rebuilt In
•
equa IIopportun1., Y emp Ioy - Camden
Avenue ,· pI. Ma ke ex tra mone . lor down payment reqUired. payment &amp; take over $370 221 B·
Slack. Call Ron'-"~ Evans, 1· Auto Sa les, Proctorville, OH .
ertprovkler
Pteasl'l.ht, wv 25550
Christmas.
Sell
Avon. (740 )446 .32181
month mortage payments
Over 35 cars &amp; !rucks 'to
800_537 _9528.
. (740)446-3358
(2 16)351 -7086
choose from. (740)886· 1343

0

1-877·463-6247
ext 2455

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COMMON .

the southweat cornor
of Wlngttt'a parcel ••
MEIGS COUNTY,
described In the ·
OHIO
Melga County Deed
R-Illa: Volume 275,
CASE NO.
Page 811, . thence
00 cv 152
South 82 deg- 49'
22" Eaat 60 feet elong
HOME NATIONAL
the said Wingett par·
BANK,
eel and along the
PLAINTIFF
aald creek to a point;
thence South
5
.vs.
degr- 3 1' 00" Eaat
181.58 IHI along lhe
JEFF · DAVIS AKA
aald Wingett parcel
JEFFREY ~. DAVIS,
and along the aald
ET AL
creak to a point;
··N011CE OF SALE
thance South 24.
degreaa 3
5 3 "
By virtue or an Order Eaat 23 3.32 feet
Sale laauecl out of along the aald
the Common Plell Wingett parcel and
court
or
Meigs along the aald creek
County, Ohio, In the to a point; thence
caae of the Home · Soulh 3 1 degrHa 21'
National
Blnk, 3 7" Eaat175.03 IHt
Plalntlll, va. Jell along
the
aald
Davia aka Jeffrey L. Wingett parcel and
et . .I ., along the aald crHk
D av I a,
Defendants, upon a to a point at the InterJudgment therein secllon of two amall
rendered, biOing Caae creeks, aald point
No •. OO· CV- 152 In being · at the north·
aald
Court, tho west
corner · of
Sheriff of Melga Nance's parcel •• .
County, Ohio, will described In the
offer lor aale at the Meigs
County
front door of the Mortgage Recorda:
Courthouae
In Volume 155, Page
Pomero,.,
Me 1g 1 521; thence South 8
22' 35" nt
County, ,,Ohio, on the d~r-•
1Oth day of January, 115.82 IHI along the
2003 , at 10:00 a.m., creak and the weat
the following Ianda line or tho aald Nance
and
tenemanta, parcel to ' a polnl ; ·
located at 30501 thence ·aoulh I I
·Roae Vallay Road, degrHt 15' 18" East
SyracuM, OH 45n9. 69.17 feel along the
A complete legal said criek and the
deacrlptlon of lhe west line of the said
· real eatate 11 as Nance parcel to a
lollowa:
point; thence South
PARCEL NO.. 1: 19 degreet 26' 42"
Situate In Sutton West 39.53 IHt along
Townahlp,
Meigs the said creek and
County and State of the west line of the
Ohio and being In said Nance .parcaf to
1 00 Acre Lol 296, . a point; thence South
Town 3 North, Range 15 degrees 18' 20"
12 WHt of the Ohio West 124.91 feet
Company'• Purchue along the said creek
. and being ducrlbed and the welt line of
• as follows :
the said Nance parcel
:
Beginning at an to a point: thence
• Iron rod at the large South 46 degrees 44'
' bend In lhe crHk aa 34" Eaat 15 7.82 feel
called lor In Nance'a along lhe said creek
parcel aa deacrlbed ' and the woat line of
In Volume 155, Page the aald Nance parcel
521 of the Meigs to the polnl or begin·
County Mortgage nlng, containing 4.39

Volume 158, Page
127; thence eaat
110.72 feet along a aid .
Freeman parcel to a
·p oint In the creek;
paaalng an Iron rod
at 1&amp; feet for refer·
ence; thence North
48 degreea 44' 34:'
Weet 157. 12 feet
along the eald crHk
end Freeman parcel
to a point; thence
North 15 deg- t8'
20" Eaat 124.91 IHt
along the iald crHk
and Freeman parcel
to a point; thence
North 19 degrHI 28'
42" Eaat 39.53 feet
along the said crHk
and Freeman parcel
to a point; thence
North II dear•• 15'
11" Waat 89.17 IHI
along the aald crHk
and Freeman parcel
to a point; thence
North I degreu 22' 3
5 " Ealt 115.62 IHI
along the aald crHk
and Freeman parcel
to tile poll't or begin·
nlng, conttlnlng 1.69
acrea, more or 1e11,
excepting all legal
eaaementa and rights
Olway.
·
Tile bellrlnga In the
above dettcrlptlon are
baaed on the refer·
ence deed: Volume
235, Pege 39.
EXCEPTING ANO
RESERVING to the

w.

fotmer

9

a1

10 II 0 w1 :

I degrH 15 34 Wut Beginning at the
183.3 8 IHI along the Southwaat corner ol
Mid ranee line on the Wingett ' 1 parcel aa
aald weal line of the deacrlbed In the
Milia parcel to an Iron Malga County Deed
rod; thane~ N.~rth 0 Recorda:
Volume
degr- 09 54 West 275, Page 811, aald
121.DIMI along said polni ,being n . .r the
fence line to a 10 Inch lnttriectlon of two
maple tree; thenc~ small crHka; thence
North I degreea Oi Eaat about 175 IHI
44" Eaat 134.25 IHt along the South ~lne
along the aald lance of the aald Wingett
line to a point along a parcel to a point In
crttk whara aald . the centarllne of
fence line lnteraecta Townehlp Road 805 ;
aald creek, paaalng thence south I
an Iron rod at 884.25 degreea 18' t Weal
feet lor reference, · 25 1.53 real along the
. .ld point btiiiG at cenlerline of eald

Grantor~,

Homer Mille and
Goldie Milia, all coal,
Oil, Qll and other
mlnerala underlying
the above deacrlbed
real ntsle.
Reference Deed:
Volume 307, Page 33,
Melga County Deed
Recorda.
Audltor'a
Parcel
Noa.: 18·00883.001
and 18-00863.002
The
above
deacrlbed real eatete
Ia aold "aa Ia" with·

thence · acres, more or leal,

· South 9 degreaa 12' excepting all legal
: 49" Weal 110.081Ht easomonta
and
along the aald crHk rlghll1-ol·way.
to a point along aald . Tho bearlnga In the
creek directly eaat of above deacrlptlon
a pine tree aa called are basad on the ref·
lor In Rltchart 's per· orence deed: Volume .
eel •• deacrlbed In 235, Page 39.
Volume 156, Page
PARCEL NO. 2:
171 of the Molga Situated . In
the
Counly Mortgage Township of Sutton,
Recorda, aald point County of Melga and
State of Ohio and In
being tho northeaat one hundred acra lot
comer of aald Volume
·
R
158 Page 171 • thence 298 In Town 3, ange
We~: 285 _4
feet · 12 . of ,the Ohio
along the north line Company • ·
. of the said Rltchhart Purchaae, bounded
parcel to an Iron rod and deacrlbed ••
e line on
lollowa :
,
a Iong a I enc
·
Situated In Sutton
the said weat line of Township
Melga
81 county stlte of Ohio
Mills' parcel
described, In Melga and bet'ng In 100 Acre
County
Deed
Lot 296 Town 3
Records , Volume 235, North
Range 12
Page 39, paaalng lhe we at' of
Ohio
said called lor pine company'• Purchaae
trH at 18 feet lor rol· and being deacrlbed

·' .

ROBERT
BISSELL

BALL
LOGGJNG &amp;
FIREWOOD

CONSTRUCTION
•Gil &amp;gill
· •Co :;tl 1 llilltillitUdalllllllllltliQa I

Leave message

$top &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74D-992-6142

740-992·1671

Call &amp;

712211FN

JONES'

Top • Removal • Trim

.

s

glngl
1

covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS : 30501
Aoae Valley Road,
Syracuae, OH 45n9
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$33,500.00. The real
eatatt cannot be aold
lor leta than two·
thlrda the appraised
value• .
TEAMS OF SALE:
10% down day · of

111e, balance on
delivery of deed. Sold
aubject to accrued
2002 rul estate
ttxea.
ALL . SHERIFF'S
SALES OPERATE
UNDER
THE
DOCTRINE
OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TIT~E PRIOR TO
SALE.
Douglae w . Little,
Attomey lor"Pialntlff
(11) 13,

20, 27,2002

• Stump Grinding

• Bucket "Fruck
Open 9am-.5pm
f'ret•lilfi!MI, rNII ft horrol! plek\llp
Call 111 for al l )'OUr~ .-t1

(740) 446-1812
As! UJ .bow OJir
"' ~rvicr Pkuu!

Loogoberger!Drcsdeo
Bus Trip
Sat., November 30, 2002
$63.00. Space Limited

"-~~

Deadline: Oct. 20, 2002.

High&amp; Dry

Everyone receives a
basket! I! Call:

DEER
PROCESSinG

SE
Quality, Variety, Low Priw
'

Grave Blankets $5.0()-$25:00'
Wreaths $10 6- up
Silk Poinsettias 94¢ ea ·
Swags $5.00 6- up

Seff·S~rage

1

33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GOOd Selection of Shi'Ubs .

Road • CR.30 •
Ohio
Summer 740-992-5232 Morning Star1·740-949-2115
Sausage made
Ot.6 Cad«C &amp; Gravely
maplewood
Masaey Ferguson
Lake
Parte &amp; Service
Recine,

740-949-2734

• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Other.Accessories
'

i'n the:

'

I

'I

I"

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631
I

\ 11• I, II. I '•" I I t IIIII

(740) 446·1044

(740) 992·5822

Monday-Friday 11-SPM • Saturday ll-2pm

Clossifie.ds!

J6S flECTIIIC 6
PLUmDID&amp;
Jim Ru•rk

Electric, Plumbing,
•nd SrNIIf Home
Malnten•noe Jobe .

{340 n:J-5412
Cell 304 1174- 012

:\

b 1..,,..

Dally Sentinel .

·992-2155

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Finall&lt;:xpenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rolloveri;
Mortgage; Major Medical
ijg
• Nursing Home

Pomeroy, Dnlo

-=..

22 Yea 1s l ocel

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

out warranties ·o r
.

•New Hamal

Tree Service

oo·

or

erenCii th~ce" North

Firewood
_for Sale

Best Service at
the Best Price

Townahlp Road 805
to a point; thence
South 5 deg00" Eaat 200.00 IHI
to a point, aald point
being
at
the
Northeaat cornor or
Freeman•• parcel aa
deacrlbed In the
Melga
County
Mortgage Recorda:

a·

7511 East State Street Phone (740)593·(i6&lt;1Jj
Athens, Ohio

EnW! · bi.._O.taplink.com

Dump Truck

.Take.the
. .Dut .of

• Record•;

IIISIIroMr Mtwi: IMfudtJ

(740) 992-3320

t'o oo!~ l

P~EAS COURT OF

Why
Start meetmg
Ohio singles Tonight, call toll
lree 1·800· 766·2623 ext
1621 .

Pole Barns, Concrete.
Ekclri&lt;.Piumbing

Delivery

HELP W ANTFll

•
wai t?

Building O\'~' 30 ytaTs
Footers, Foundation.
Add-Ons. New H~s .

Carpet.
$1300.
Call
(304)675-2131 after 5pn&gt;.

\\\0( :\(I \II \IS

THE

CIISTIICDII

Voyager

'

IN

RillY

neeCs transmission, other·
wlsa In good condition. New

·--·I

l'r'"-"'NAL5

I IUS

740-992·7996

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFIN!l
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur· 1998 Chevy 5-10, 4 cylin· niShed. Established 1975.
: der, 5-speed, Silver, &amp;port Call 24 H... (740) 446• side bed, AC, $5,500: 2001 0870, Rogers Basement
: · CBR 600F41. (740)448-9769 . Watetproofing.

POLICIES: Oh+o Vai'-Y Publlahlng rneJVM the right to adll. rwftct. or~ any 8d at any tlm11. Errors must be reported on the ftr1t lily
Trfbune-SentiMf.Aeglatlf will be ~lblt for no moN than thll cost of the~ occupied by U,. emw •nd onlw- thll ftn~t ln...Uon. We
I
any 1oM or expenM that rMUIW from lhl publcation or omlaafon ot 111 ICflttftiMrMnL Correcdon will be medt In thl ft1'11 avtlllble ildltlon. • Bo•
.,. n.ys confldtnu.l. • eurr.nt m. eMf . , . .. • AU tMI ~ ~Mmentl _..
to the r:.ct.r.l Fltlr ~nt Act of till. • TNs
~ ontr help lfllnled
EOE s..ndMda.
In v~ of the t.w.

• Start Your Ad s With A Ke yword • Include Complete
Description • In c lude~ Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phor'le Number And Address Whe n Needed
• Ad s Should Run 7 Days

I

95 Dodge Caravan. sllgh .
damage. GOOd vehicle.
{740)245-5589

·------

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydailysen_tinel.com

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�Wednesday, November 20, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

Q

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

#-I
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~Mth

ACROSS

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A A

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A J -; G

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maturity
6 Mort
sporting

40

11 Telescope

44

13
14

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15

t: Q n 2
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16

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A ,I I 0 !I II i fi 1
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42

43

lens
Froth
ActressReynolds
Coarse, as
humor
Landacape
or portrait

17 Bouse' a at.

IOIIJI

46 Falhng star
49 Trickery
53 Go to
54 Vast desert
55 Papa
56 Shake

t;ut

IA

l 'a~s

I""

Pan

2A
Pan

I'Mu

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26 Corporate
abbr.

Pu~

Lewis Mumford, it
social philosopher,
wrote, "However far
modern sc ience and
technics have fallen
short of their inherent
possibilities , . they
have taught mankind
at . least one lesson:
Nothing is impossic
ble."
I can think of one
or two things that are
impossible, like our
living with no oneresenting another for
being from a different
race or religion.
Some bridge plays
are "impossible." In
this example, though,
the wi nnmg defense
isn't impossible to
find. You are sitting
West.: Against four
spades; you lead theheart jack and win the
first .trick . What
would you do next? If
partner's card would
make a difference,
give more than one
answer.
Although South has
only eight high-card
poi11ts, once he hears
about spade support
opposjte, the power
of his hand increases
dramatically : He is .
worth the jump to
game.
At trick one, East
would probably play
an encouraging heart
nine. He has no great
desire for a shift. But
even if he did drop
the hearr two, what
would you do? You
might continue with
another heart, but you
are more likely to
shift to the club 10,
hoping that partner
has the queen and a
trick can be established there.
However, if you
play a heart or club at
trick two , declarer
can discard a diamond from hand on
dummy ' s club ace
and lose just one
spade, one heart and
one diamond.
The only successful
trick-two lead is a ·
trump. Then, East can
win with the ace and
pu sh a diamond
through , giving your
side the first four
tricks. Not impossible
--just unlikely.

ALL. lliG~T ••• vJ~O GOT

INTO

T~e

PJ..ANT
FOOl&gt;J

BARNEY
AUNT LOWEEZY CAN'T
TALK 1 ELVINEY -SHE SAYS TO COME

BACK

""'of.\, mi\T w~

! 1\ GOO() ONE,

i

U\IE.f'

!

I

·I

LET
MY

YOU IMPLIED
THAT TtjER£'-;&gt;

READERS SOME HANKY ·
DRAW
PANKY c;oiNG
ON BETWEEN

THEil'-

~E

OWN CON-

AND 1111. .

CLU.,IONS, ~ALVIN!

MRS .
CZERWICKI.

PEANUTS
T~E

FAT 6UV
WIT!-~ THE WHITE
BEAR[) AND THE

WloiAT WAs
lollS NAME
A6AIN?

BETTY
· OTHER 1\1AN 1HO:

FACT11\AT I WITI:
JOINING ll&lt;INGS

AND Ul,a:!\IE S!'ORTS?

i!

PHIWP AlDER

salutation
28 Drill
29 Waterproof·
• lng
·
31 Rainbow
goddess
32 fhlck mud
33 Acrobat .

4 Island near
Corsica
5 Kenya's
capitol

6 Show the
way
7 Swedish

a· r.!:~,:Oup.
degree

numeral
38 Romick .o r
Trevino

9 Annex
10 Sunburned
12 Home-

39 Attorney'a

coming

41 Flying
prefix
43 Rustler's
target
45 Mountain
refrain 46 Trendy ,
slxtles-slyle
47 A Gabor
48 Koppel of
tho news
50 -Claire,
WI._
51 Capone
foe
52 Make lace

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL ·

GARFIELD
A~~ RIGHT.

I 'M UP

~~~~~~00~~@~ ;
I

~~
, - ~,~~

o n i.l tlllC -on--on&lt;; b&lt;~ s i ~ .

THE CRIZZWELLS

you

1.:m1 opr.n llic \\ &lt;IY fll f bt:llrrthun -av'cr;.Jgc cnopc r;Jl ion hy

JP.5Mil'\E \'0

treatin g othcr'i cx :Jct lv the
way yo u wn ulJ like iu be
lreat cU.
CAPRICORN {Dec . 22 -l:ln .

11-1\NK\NG .. .

'jccti\'C'~ 111

1'\0, YoU \/~'T,
. ?11:\\-\EA\/

19)--

g

!
I

II"""

well -defi ned ob-

rnind toilay and
prnccc cl tlptimi .,.ti ca ll y 1nward
achicvinl.! illl'm . CunJition..,
arc working in yo ur.f&lt;Jvur for
funhcring .yl1ur amhitious tn tercsts.
.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20 -Fcll.
· IY) ·· Try using u p()~iti vc ;Jtlit uJe toUay un proh!c tn .~ tha t
yo u bclicn~ ll;n·c no lllHlledJ -

"'"'""" m r dai l r•entinel.com

J.

REED

POMEROY - Sheriff Ralph
Trussell issued layoff notices to
four
additional
deputies
Wednesday, meaning the county
will be without road officers for
the month of December.
"I thought we might be able to
make it, but we St!U"ted putting fig·
ures together, and now I know
we're not going to make it, after
all," Trussell said Wednesday.
The layoff notices for the four

end of the year.
Commissioners tabledTrussell 's
last request for a $1,100 transfer
from various line items into the
sheriff's salaries fund, to pay the
wages of one deputy. T~e funds,
they said, were needed to pay part
of Trussell's pending and overdue
bills.
Trussell estimates at least
$130,000 in unpaid bills accumulated this year, including bills for
contracted housing of prisoners,
medical costs, food and other jailrelated expenses.
"But what's more important,

deputies remaining will take effect
Dec. 5, and will . leave Trussell
with no staffing at all fo.r the
remainder of the year.
Trussell laid off three deputies
last week, effective Nov. 28, and
laid off I 0 others in September
due to a lack of payroll funds.
Trussell and Jail Administrator
Mony Wood maintain that an addi·
tiona! appropriation of $8,500 will
pay salaries for half of Trussell's
deputies (or the remainder of the
County
year,
but
Meigs
Commissioners say no additional
funds are available through the

paying a bill or keeping a deputy
on the road ," Deputy Scott
Trussell said Wednesday.
"We keep asking if there's any
money anywhere to help provide
at least some law enforcemeht
protection to the people, but have
been told there is none."
.·In the meantime, Trussell must
face the prospect of providing 24hour law .enforcement coverage
for the county by himself. Those
seven deputies -who have been on
the job since the September layoffs have been working I 0-hour
shifts, and accumulating overtime

pay. None of the deputies who ·
were laid off claimed cash payment for accrued . vacation and
compensatory time, to which, by
law, they are entitled.
"Those of us who are left .have
not claimed any holiday pay, anti
we even come in to work sick,
becau se we have to," Wood said
Thursday.
.
" I was sick today and ended up
coming in at noon because I knew ~
they needed me.
·
"After Dec . 5, if the sheriff
needs me, I'll still come in."

It's 'cQid turkey' for some
Cancer Society's
annual Smokeo~t
being observed
BY BRIAN

J,

REED

Staff writer

- CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

by Luis Cempos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and presenJ. Each tetter In lhe Cipher stands for anolher.

·

Today's cll!e: G equals Y

cwswv

UHB

" J

IN W B

c

J

•

J

AN X

HXDZWXW ,

PG

H

C H X N V H Z

YHJ I

BUWHX

.,-c E V V

H C I

RECRWCXYHXJEC."

R 0 N R T

J

B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Anyone who keeps learning stays
· young. The greatest thing in life is to keep)our mind young.'
-Henry Ford

T~~~:t~~y

"

S© R~lA- ~ t

~se

WORD

GAM I

!daod by ClAY R. POLLAN

L 0 NRE L
12
I

I I I

I

0 G0 L I

I~ I~

I

III

Staff report

N

"You can live to be 100," the
old timer told his teenage grandson, "if you give up all the things
that make you want to live - - - -

Z A WT L

I Is I I" I If
~

"

~- ~omplere
I
I I I I' I
WHORGT

8

I

.

rhe chuckle quo1ed
by fillin g in the mis:smg word.s

you develop fro(Tl step NQ. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Purely- Exact- Crest- Mainly- TAXPAYER

ate so luti ons and wah.:h tn
wo11dcr wlwt happ~ n s. The result s wi ll both surp rise and
ama ze von .

P.JSCES &lt;Feb 20- M arc h
20) .. Don't simply WISh ror
things to happen. m ~~kc them
ho1ppcn today. You can roncl utle to your sati sfaction at
lc;JSI two mattcr.(ii that arc o,; igni(icant to ' vou if vou ' ll
mcrelv trv.
·
·

ARIES'iM&gt;~rch 21 -April.19)

-- Team ing up with uruJthcr
ft1r a joint purpose i&lt;.: l ikely 19
he luck kr fll l you todo.1 v than
attcmptin£ to ~~.:conipli .s h
some th111 g ~~~~~nc. Hav in g a
strong ally com bt: ext remely
bcnelicial.

TAU RUS

(A pnl :'0 - M:oy

20) -- By pit:c ing togct ln.:r a
number of ti dbits picb:;d up 111
L: harH.:c L·o nve rsa tions. today.

tiH.:rc's a pos.s ih ilit y tha1. co llecti vel y. they .-.;uuld ;Jdd up to

1nal..c for some \'Cry v;duat.lc
informatton: l..k a gond listener.
CiEM I:\ 1 (Mnv 2 1-Ju nc 20)
-· A person al interest uf yours
ha-. a n ex r dlent rh&lt;~1Ke of bc i n,g succe ssfu l !()(lay . It ' ll be

yo ur

~.: nt h u ~ i &lt;.I S !ll ~:o m bincd

with a pos iti Vl' &lt;ttli llttk th;H
will :. Hti':IL' t L;tdy Luck ro ) ' OUT
~.:· au ...c.

. (

CANCE il (June 21 -July 22 )
·· The h l"•ot \.V;t y to !!&lt;~in 1110-

POMEROY
"Cold
turkey" may be on Thursday's
menu for J?articipants in the
Great Amencan·Smokeout, but
the American Cancer· Society
. also is using the event this year
to promote its campaign to
strengthen smoking-related
legislation. ·
The society promotes the
annual event to shed light on
the health risks of tobacco and
tobacco smoke to smokers and
the non-smokers around them .
It has also iurned attention to
.
.
legislation designed to control
Julie Mitchell of Pomeroy (left) and Kathy Young of Rutland are smokers who find a pool room smoking in public.
·
one of the few public gathering places they ~-~ill enjoy a cigarll!te. A ~r ago, smoklng_ifL ... _"Ol!r overali..&amp;Q.al (s to conany enclosed public space in Meigs Councy was forbidden, and this year'S Great American tam toba~o l.ise as much as
Smokeout is being used, in part,.to promote legislation placing further restrictions on smoking . posstble, satd Letgh An~e
in public. (Brian J. Reed)
·
Hehr, the Cancer Soo;Jety s

cancer control director.
"Our hope is that the Great
· American Smokeout will be a
catalyst that helps some people
commit to stopping smoking,
others to never start, and still
others to pass laws to help protect Ohioans from the health
hazards posed by tobacco use
and exr,osure ~o second-hand
smoke, ' she srud.
·
· The Cancer Society usq.o; its
Grassroots Network as a political ann designed to encourage
legislators at the local, state
and federal levels to address
cancer-related issues through
legi ~lation, including smokefree policies and Food and
Drug Administration · regulation of tobacco.
"Our two greatest areas of
interest this year are promoting
clean indoor air policies and
empowering the FDA to have
regulatory authority . of the
tobacco industry," said Julie
Ellenwood, executive director
of the Cancer Society office in
Marietta.

Efforts by local boards of
health to criminalize smoking ·
in public places, including bars
and restaur.mts, were halted
earlier this year when the Ohio
Supreme Court overruled a
Lucas County smoking ban.
. That ban served as a mooel
for Meigs County's Clean
Indoor Air Act, a controversial
measure approved by the looil
health board in September ·
200 I. That ban, and others like
it approved by health boards,
were nullified by the high
court's decision.
'
The. sought-after . FDA
authority over tobacco product
sales would restrict advertising
and marketing aimed at children, crack down on illeglil
sales of tobacco, require diSclosure of ingredients and
additives in tobacco productsand require additional warning
labels on products, the Cancer
•
Society says.

Home fires flare up in winter months .Letart man dies
~ in Route 33 crash

I

--1~.~-There o.1rc inll iL·ations that in
the year :thc;ul you~ t:uu\d f&lt;lre
quile wl' ll in ·ucali ngs yo u
hav e with others comm crci~ll l v or in bu si ne!'s. Any
uocH.i :.~sso~.:i;llion YLl ll estahn sh \lv'ill have mut u;d i:lem·fi t:;; ,
.,.. SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nm.
22) -- Let the uthcr guy m;il-.e
the c:wcnurcs 'in your com mer·
"" cia! or busi ness aff::~irs today.
Th c rt:'s a chance thi.lt s/ hc
will offrr you far more than
what you would 11&lt;1\'l' asked
and vou'll f;m.:.' alut better.
SA GI'rT ,\ RI US &lt;Nuv. 23Dec. 2 1.) -- Whe n dealing
with othe rs tod ay. espct:i·all }·

Bv BRIAN

Staff wr~er

exam

' Our government," grumbled a chap at a political
rally,"1s based on not only the separation of church and
state , but the separation of money and the TAXPAYER!"

Thursday. Nov . 2 1. 2002

I \Nifll-1
I KNt:W W\.-\4T

3 Tavern

. 3! Jai37 Clock

S11LI-, I IICA"Y
L.IKS TH1' I.OOK
Of 1\lOSETEAA\
11/AIIM-vP SUITS

~----~

Bo''i,

berg

27 Street

Pus

name

19 Former
Speaker
Tip20 Pharaoh's
charm
22 Head,
slangily
23 Team spirit
24 Up and
about
25 Old an
experiment
28 Coel
atorago
30 Oahu
welcome
34 Harvests
35 Kind of

1 Fishing
ge8f
2 Floe or

THURSDA'l' . N&lt;l\IE.MB.ER 21 . 20,02

.Last of Meigs County d~puties laid off

40 "Bananas"

18 Bleak

23 Wrestler's

Sun walk?

•

13 --a-brae

DOWN

21 Pint lrectlon

Openin(llead: • J

·-·

5•0 CE-'I'TS • y,._,.J. 5 3. ~'J 69

awake

pad
Nnrth

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

eJtremes

Passos

WMII

8v

honorary
dog.
Ebbed
Cpncluslon
Toolshod
Item
Strong •

18 John-

ne:•ll•r. ~orth
\'u lntn•b l ~ : Ea!II ·West
!SftUi h

up for big game. B1

mentll rn for your i ntcrcsts today is by showing others how
the y co uld hcncfit from it.
Wiih their support yo u can
make great progress toward
completion.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) -T hi s mtg ht be a gL1od day to
sneak in a li ttle time for yourselL Doing something that is
fun ;md refreshing can help
aller your outlook, whic h. in
turh. will spur successe s in
your more Sl'riuus affuirs.
VIRGO (Aug. H-Scpt. 22)
-- T ouay could he a lucky day
for you, so it miuht behoove
yo u 10 expand upon and uevelop )'Pllr present fimmcial
g o~li s. There arc indicat iu n ~
that gooll th ings can b e mudc
better.
LlllR .~ (Se/lt. 23-0ct. 2.11-

POMEROY - December, January
and february are the leading months for
home ftres and home fire .deaths in the
· United States.
On average, more than one-third of
home frre deaths in the United States
pccur during the winter months, so taking some simple precautions now could
be the difference between a joyous holiday and a tragic one.
According to the Ohio Emergency
Management Agency, one of the best
ways tu protect-yourself and family frcil)l
a house frre is by having working smoke
detectors in your home.
By providing early warning of a fire,
smoke detectors add additional seconds
· that can make the difference between life
and death.
The OEMA offers the following tips to

1 Sections - 11 Pates

•

tip.
Place the tree away from heat sources
and exits, and water it everyday.
·
· Most Christmas tree fires happen late
in the Christmas season after the trees
have dried out, so if you plan on using a
live tree inside your home, remove it
soon after Christmas before the needles
become dry. If you purchase an artificial
tree, be sure it is labeled as frre-tetardant.
Candles are also a huge.danger during
the holiday season, be sure to always
place them in a sturdy, noncombustible
holder away from .decorations.
Don't display lightei candles in windows or near exits in case you need these
to escape, and·don't use·them to decorate
the Christmas tree.
(Editor's note: For more winter fire
safety tips, go to the Ohio EMA web
at
site
www.state.oh.usfodpsfdivision/ema.)

Staff report

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- A
Letart man died as a result of a
two-vehicle accident early
Wednesday.
Elmer Donahue, 70, died
from injuries which occurred
following an accident.
He was traveling west on
U.S : Route 33 east of New
Haven, drivin~ a 1988
Chevrolet Cavaher that went
left of center and collided
head-on
with a
1988
Chevrolet S-1 0 pickup driven
by Dennis Keller, 52, Ripley.
Keller was transported to
Jackson General Hospital with
complaints of chest pains. No

information on his conditiQn
was available at press time: '
The Mason County Sheriff's
Department rep&lt;irts that thick
fog, as well as a lack of lane
markings on the recently
paved highway, might have
been contributing factors to
the accident.
The dash is still under
investigation:
The crash is the 13th fatal
traffic acCident. in Mason
County this year. , ·
Also responding to the iJ:Jci·
dent were the Mason EMS,
Point Pleasant EMS, the New
Haven Fire Department imd
the New Haven Police
Department.

Route 7 repaving to end at county line

Index
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather ·

keep you, your family and your belong·
ings safe from fire this holiday season:
• Install a smoke detector on each level
of your home and outside each sleeping
area.
• Test detectors at least once a month to
ensure that they are working properly.
Batteries in battery-operated detectors
should be changed at least once yearly or
whenever a detector ."chirps" to- signal
low battery.
. .
• Never "borrow" a smoke detector's
battery for another use.
• Consider giving a detector as a gift or
installing one in the house of an elderly
neighbor or family in need.
There are many ftre dangers present in
the home this holiday season, including
the Christmas tree.
Ohio averages about I 0 fires per year
that have started from ignited Christmas
trees. To help prevent this, choose a fresh
tree and put it in a stand designed not to

AS
B3·4

BS
AS
A4
A3
A3

B1·2
A2

C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY KEVIN KELLY

Staff writer

d
GAlLIPOLIS - Plans are. eve1op-ing to repave Ohio Route 7 from
Gallipolis to thli! Meigs County line, perhaps as early as next year, Ohio
Department
of
Tr.msportation
spokesperson Stephanie Filson said.
The plans are expected to be filed in
March 2003 and be ready for bidding by

July, but Filson said it will be up to the
contractor who wins the contract to
decide if the project is done in next
year's paving season or in 2004.
The project calls for resurfacing,
striping and berm conditioning 9.98
miles from Upper River Road in
Gallipolis near the Subway Restaurant
north to the county line. The job picks
up from where a resurfacing of Eastern
Avenue/Upper River Road; the northern
. stretch of 7 through Gallipolis, was.con-

dueled in August 200 I.
engineer Bill Lambert. A cost estimate
"As far as the need, it's kind of a rou· is yet to be determined.
. '
tine thing," said Filson, public informaFilson said the job should be ready for
tion officer for ODOT's District 10 bid by next summer, but depending on
office in Marietta.
. how busy the contractor is, it will be the
"We base the need on the pavement contractor's decision to tackle all or patt
conditioning rating, and when that gets of the job in 2003 or the following year.
to a specific point, then repaving is nee"Basically, we leaye it up to the conessary," she said. ''The rating allows us tractor because we can't predict the jobs
the contractor needs to do," said Filson.
to rotate What We've done and to ensure "Our concern is with maintaining trafpublic safety."
Plans are being crafted by ODOT
Please see Route 7, Al

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