<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7239" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7239?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T13:13:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17647">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/8718ad88b24a84f9e3f813ae6e1cf58a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>25986bc1c53e7756500ca62e58c31a10</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23660">
                  <text>Wednesday, November 20, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

Q

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

#-I
- h.
~Mth

ACROSS

I I 2 ~ .0 l

A K Q 3 :t

+

.

"' 'J

.. .... ,J

"' ~"'

f:ut
A A

•

•

•

J 10 B 1
A J -; G

... K 10 II~

....._

1 Reach
maturity
6 Mort
sporting

40

11 Telescope

44

13
14

II II ~

'

K 9!

15

t: Q n 2
. Q B6 3 Z

16

!'auth

A ,I I 0 !I II i fi 1
• A t 6 3

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

f A

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

Care

'We Tailor Our Services to Your Individual Needs"

• There is ntll ll ng wrong wit.h
{ viewing things on a grand

· Skilled Nursing Services • · Short-Term Rehab Services ,
Solarium ond Courtyard Areos
Physical, Occupafional and Speech Theropy
Theropeufic Activities and Community Outings • Hospice Services

scale toUay, be,ausc that
wh ich you ~:on cep t ua lilc at
thi s Itme wil l be bot h lo!!it.:al
;md promisin~. Think ... big,
g ~lin bi!!.
~
. ._
ta!! !incKnow whe re tu
look ft1r romance and yoli'l l
fin d it. The A~tro-Uraph
Matchmaker in stantl y reveal s
which ·sigl)s arc romantici.llly
perrw for you . Mail $2.75 10

Certified by Medicare/Medicaid • Private Pay Insurances
·Long- Term ond Short-Term Core Facility

.

M:Jtchmakcr. c/o this nc wspi.!·
per. P.O. llox 167. W ic klilt'c,
OH 44W2Aog linc

(740) 446·5001 .

Located
'

•

west of Holzer Medical Center on Jackson Pike

,,

'
;

'

SENIOR CARE
Discov~r th~Bolzer Difference
I

www.holzer.org
•

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, Nov. 22

ol Columbuo 135'13~' I

C 2002 AccuWeather, Inc.

.. ~~·~·
. ..
..
·0 .~ -~ "~

Showers

Cloudy

T-stotms

Rain

Flurries

~, ,.~ ,,. ~ ~

~ "

Snow

Ice

Via A.s!Joc~N«i Pl'ess

Snow possible Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tonight, rain showers.
across the northern half of the
region may mix with snow
showers through the night as
lows drop back into the lower
and middle 30s.
Precipitation will change
over to all · snow. across the
area Friday as temperatures
struggle to get out of the 30s.
Little or no accumulation is
expected. Snow showers will
gradually taper off across
most of the area Friday night
as high pressure builds into
the Ohio Valley. Lows in the
20s are expected.
.
.
Partly cloudy skies are
expected Saturday. Highs
over ·the weekend will stay
cold, ranging from the mid
30s into the lower 40s.

Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Mostly cloudY.
with a chance of showers unttl
midnight, then rain showers
likely after midnight. Lows
near 40. Southwest winds
around 10 mph. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
· Friday... Rain showers like·
ly, becoming mixed with
snow showers early in the
afternoon. Little or no accumulation.
Colder.

10,000

OCT

8,623.0t

NOV •

7,OOO

Nov. 20, 2002

1,600

Nasdaq
compos1t

1.400

..
- ~~r

1,200

~~~

+3.26

SEP
Law
1,375.41

1,000
OCT
NOV
Rocord high: 5,048.82
March 10, 2000

Nov. 20, 2002

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's

900

BOO

p(t''·i.i :;

. t,17,'1!!1'''
AUG

914.15
f'&lt;:l. change
lfom previous

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
judge took pity on a man
who got drunk and left his 4·
year-old son strapped in a car
seat for 15 hours and sentenced him to three years
probation.
.
Richard Poulin had pleaded for mercy and asked for
· help with his alcohol prob·
!em so he could be part of his
little boy's life again.
"I love my little boy more
than anything in the world,"
Richard Poulin told Franklin
County Common Pleas
Judge Nodine Miller on
Wednesday.
"And I hope you have
mercy on me to get me the
help that I need so that I can

Rocord high: 11,722.98
· · Jan. 14, 2000

Pd. change

kom p!O'IIouo: +1•75

llgh
1,419.64

High .
915.01

+1.94

SEP
Low

OCT •

NOV

Bob E.vans - 24.17
BorgWarner- 44.09
Champion- 2.74
Chwming Shops- 4.18
City Holding - 29.45
Col - 21 .84
DG -14.22
DuPont - 42.62

nos, because we' re loSing all .
that money to other states. I .
would' rather keep the money
in our state."
Ohioans twice have voted
do'Wn allowinl! casinos.
•
Kathy We1senberger, 49, ·
Cincinnati, said she loves slots .
and would like to see them in
Oh!o, but she prefers playi!_lg at
casmos over racetracks.

Federal Mogul - .51
USB-21 .98
Gannett- 75.65 · .
General Electric - 24.80
GKNLY- 3.45
Ha~ey Davidson - 49.50
Kmart- .58
Kroger- 15.10
Ltd. -16.05
NSC -19.99
Oak Hil Financial- 20.97
OVB-20.50
BBT- 37 .45
Peoples- 27.14
Pepsico - 43.75
Premier- 7.02
·•

•·WIN • ·

2 FREE ncurs

......

SPIIN8 VALlO
CINEMIJ

be his father as soon as possible."
As a condition of his pro·
bation, Poulin, 35, must get a
job and spend 120 days in
work-release. That means
he' II be in jail when not at
work and will be subject to
daily screeningdor alcohol.
Poulin then will be con·
fined for six months to a
community-based correctional facility, where he will
receive intensive alcohol·
rehabilitation treatment.
If Poulin slips up, he faces
four years in prison , Miller
said,
Poulin pleaded guilty to
felony child endangering in
September.
·

FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'$ CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WINI Ll.l...f.;;a.;;;;;j;j,:iiii~

March 24, 2000

200lG

Rockwell- 19.77
Rocky Boots- 5.22
RD Shell- 43.99
Sears - 24.61
.
Wai·Mart- 54.40
Wendy's - 27.71
Worthlng1on - 17
Dally stock reports are
the · 4 p.m. closing
q~~tes of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smnh Partners
at Advest Inc . of
Gallipolis.

~lllttli!Mitfi~­

~:J:tC:'·" li~i!ti'L:I\.'!M~:t'~~~

-1111!111•·'1!1'--

--~···•"'·~~li!l:

a

He was ·
member of
Carpenter Baptist Church.
He was survived by his
wife and sister, Freda Mae
Smith, also of Albany.
· He was preceded in death
by his parents, and a son ,
Frederick E. Rawling s, in
1998.
Services will be ll a.m.
Saturday, Nov. 23, 2002, at
Bigony-Jordan
Funeral
Home in Albany. Pastor
Edward Brown will offici·
ate. Calling hours are from
6 pto 8 p.m. on Friday,
November 22, 2002, at the
funeral home . Burial will be
at Alexander Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may
be
made
to
Appalachian VNA, Hospice
&amp; Health Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 768, Athens , Ohio
45701-0768.

· RACINE Paul 0
PuUins Jr., 67 , of Hors~
Cave Road , Racine, died
Tue sday, November 19,
2002, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
He was born October 4
1935; in Chester, son of
Olga Virginia Queen Pullins
of Racine , and the the late
Paul· 0 . Pullins Sr.
He was a veteran of the
U.S. Army, an employee of
the U.S. Postal Service, and
a lifetime member of the
Elks of Columbus .
Surviving in addition to
his mother are his wife of
37 years, Ruth Pullins of
Racine; and a brother and
sister-in-law, Roger and
Nancy Pullins of· Racine . .
Services will be held at I
p.m. Friday. November 22,
2002, at Ewing Funeral
~orn e in Pomeroy, with bur·
1al to follow at Meigs
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from I 0 a.m.
Friday, November 22, 2002,
until the time of service.

- Paid notice

Virginia
N. Blowers
GALLIPOLIS·. Virginia
N.
Blowers,
78,
of
Gallipolis, passed away
unexpectedly at 10:46 p.m.
Tuesday, .November 19,
2002,
at
her
Green
Township residence.
She was born August 20,
1924, in Scioto County,
daughter of the late Charles
and Etta Baldwin Webb.
She was a homemaker.
She is survived by h~r
husband,
Raymond
H.
Blowers Jr., whom she mar·
ried December 24, 1951, in
Portsmouth; a son, Steve
Blowers and his wife, Tami,
of Terrace Park, Ohio; two
granddaughters, Meredith
Blowers and
Michelle
Blowers, both of Terrace
Park; and a sister-in-law,
Frances Colvin.
In addition to her parents,
she was preceded in death
by
a
sister,
Belva
Armst~ong. .
~erv1ces w1ll be I p.m.
~nday, November 22, 2002,
m the Cremeens Funeral
Chap~! . in . Gallipolis .
Offic1atmg Will be Pastor
Robert P. Fulton. Interment
will follow in Moun~ H_ill
Ce_metery at Galhpohs.
Fnends may call at the
chapel from 6 to 8 p.m,
Thursday, November 21,
2002 .

- Paid notice

Robert .
McKenzie
COLUMBUS _ . Robert
McKenzie,
79,
died
Wednesday, November 20,
2002, at Doctors Hospital
West in Columbus.
Born in Pomeroy, he was
a retired First Sergeant with
the U.S. Army, with 20
years service, and a retired
employee
of
Buckeye
I~surance with 18 years ser·
v1ce.
He served in the Army
during World War II and the
Korean Conflict.
He was a member of the
Magnolia Lodge No. 20.
F&amp;AM, Aladdin Temple•
Shrine, Knights of Pytb1an
and Grove City Senior
Citizens Club.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Michael and
Bertha
McKenzie ·
his
brothers, James, Joh~ny and
Don; and his sister, Theria.
Surviving are his wife of
55 years, Mary; and numer·
OIJS nieces, nephews and
friends.
.
Friends may call at the
Jerry Spears Funeral Home,
V'f. Broad St.,
2693
Columbus, from 2 to 4 and 6
to 8 p.m. Sunday, November
24, 2002, with services at
10 a.m. Monday; November
25, 2002, with the Rev.
Gerald Koster officiating.
Interment will be in Sunset
Cemetery.

- Paid notice

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

- Ptzid notice

Denver
Rawl'ings

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 5·2·5
Pick 4: 1·8·5· 2

ALBANY
Denver
Rawlings, 86, of Albany,
died Thursday, November
21, 2002, at his residence.
He was born April4, 1916
in Harrisonville, to the late
Alva and Daisy Combs
Rawlings. He was married
to his wife, Erva Tubbs
Rawlings, for 61 years.
He was a 1936 graduate of
Columbia High ·School, a
farmer, and retired in 1978
from the Athens County
Engineer Road Department.

You've coptured
her heart.

Record high: 1,527.46

894.93

Local Stocks

BLI- t2.30

when we wanted to .go races,
too," said Fred McGuire, 65.
If Ohio allows slots, the
Indiana casinos probably
would lose customer Beula
Lawson, of Springdale, Ohio,
in suburban Cmcinnati.
"I would play the slots in
Ohio to keep the money there,"
she said. "Ohioans should
never have voted down casi·

700

AP

AEP -26 .70
Arch Coal -' 18.69
Akzo - 29.05
AmTechiSBC - 26 .20
As~land Inc. - 26 .18
AT&amp;T - 27.66
Bank One - 38.37

Sisters April Flowers, left, and Alaysia Flowers of Cincinnati
are interviewed outside the entrance to the Argosy Casino in ·
Lawrenceburg, Ind . The Ohio legislature is scheduled to ho.ld
the first hearing on a bill Thursday morning that would allow
slot machines at race tracks in Ohio . (AP)
·

for Timothy Thomas, 19, Rhine neighborhood because that officers "deployed bean· ·
whose shooting by a white - of a report of a disorderly bag rounds ... in response to ·
officer sparked protests by crowd that was blocking an hostile crowd action after
black activists. Several people intersection and prohibiting observing law violations."
·
complained that they were traffic flow.
.
Five of the six officers and
The officers reported using one Ohio State Highway
peacefully protesting or con·
gregating and had done noth· verbal commands and hand . Patrol trooper fired a Iota! of
ing to antagonize police when gestures to disperse the crowd, 20 beanbag rounds at the
officers fired beanbags into but none of the witnesses crowd, the report said.
the group without warning or reported hearing or seeing
''The officers' actions conprovocalton.
those commands.
· formed to policy and proce·
According to a report
The 48-page report by the dure that existed in April
released Wednesday, six police department's Risk 2001," the report.concluded. It .
Cincinnati police officers Management Team deter· recommended that the officers
all SWAT-team members mined that the crowd refused he exonerated of any wrongresponded to the Over-the· to disperse when ordered, and doing.

Man who left son in
car gets probation

Dow
Jones

Pd. clwlge
from pmvklus:

dnjws a lot of Ohioans daily,
and some who gambled there
Wednesday
agreed
slot
machines are the big draw.
While few of them said they
would desert out-of-state casi·
nos if Ohio allows slots at racetracks, most said they would
divide their time between the
racetracks an&lt;icasinos.
"I probably would do both,"
said Alaysia Aowers, 27, of
Cincinnati. "I might go to the
racetracks in Cincinnati more
because they are closer, btit I
~ouldn't stop coming here.
The best thing would be if they
got casinos in Ohio, too, but
that's never going to happen.
Ohio is just too .conServative."
Fred and Sue McGuire, of
Harrison, Ohio, just west of
Cincinnati, said they would
play slots in Ohio and Indiana,
although the Argosy still would
get a lot of their business.
"This is closer because it's
only about 15 minutes from
our home. while the Cincinnati
· racetrack is about 25 or 30
minutes away," said Sue
McGuire, 64.
"We probably wouldn't go to
the track just because of the
slots, but we would go there

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Paul 0.
Pullins Jr.

Officers complied with policy
on fi-ring beanbags, repo.rt says .

Nov. 20, 2002

AUG

LAWRENCEBURG, Ind.
(AP) - Linda Lange travels
from her central Ohio home to
Indiana,
West
Virginia,
Michigan and Canada to play
slot machines. She says it
would be great if she could
enjoy that hobby without leav·
ing her statec
"I hope that Ohio does put
slot machines at the racetracks," said Lange, 56, of
Howard, Ohio, who spent p;lrt
of Wednesday gambling at the
Argosy Casino in this Indiana
city along the Ohio River. ''I'm
sure I wouldn't come here as
much if I could go to one of the
tracks in Columbus to play the
machines."
Sen. Lou Blessing, a
Cincinnati Republican, is
counting on other Ohio gambiers having the same attitude.
He · has introduced a bill that
would authorize the inslallation
of electronic slot machines at
Ohio's seven racetracks.
BIessing said he figures
Ohioans mostly travel .to out·
of-state casinos for the slot
machines and would stay in
Ohio if they had the chance.
The Argosy Casino near the
Kentucky-Ohio state · · line

Temperatures steady or slow·
ly falling into the mid 30s.
Northwest winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of precipitation
60 percent.
Friday night...Snow likely
early, then mostly cloudy. with
a chance of snow showers.
Little or no ace umulation
expected. Lows 25 to 30.
Chance of snow 60 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday.. .Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 40s. ·
Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows near 30.
Sunday... Partly sunny. A
CINCINNATI (AP) chance of showers lllte. Highs
Police officers who fired bean·
45 to 50.
bags to disperse a crowd durMonday... Mostly cloudy
ing protests and rioting in
with a chance of showers dur.
April 2001 were complying
w1th department policies,
ing the day, then a chance of
snow or rain showers during · according to a department
the night. Lows in the lower · investigation.
At the time, the mayor had
30s and highs in the lower
declared a civil emergency
40s.
and
imposed a nighttime cur·
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy
.
few
after three days looting,
with a slight chance of snow
attacks on motorists and
or rain showers. Lows in the
police confrOntations.
upper 20s and highs in the
The Aprill4, 2(X}l, incident
lower 40s.
occurred
following the funeral
Wednesday... Paitly cloudy
and continued cold. Lows in
the upper 20s and highs 35 to
40.

A DAY ON WALL STREET

t,419.35

Thursday, November 21, 2002 •

Ohio debates gambling

Ohio weather

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

PageA2 :

•
Thursday, November 21, 2002

UATES •••

Superlotto: 3-&amp;t4-ll-2S41
Bonus Ball: 35

Kicker: 9·2·9·5·1·0

Buckeye 5: 5·9· 16·17· 32
Pick 3 night: 9-B-4
Pick 4 night: 6· 7.g..3

W.lfA.

Daily 3: 6·6·9
Daily 4: o-4· 2·9
Powetball: 14-21·22-29-44 t3)

Now for her ears ...

Contrary to what you may have been told, now Is
t!Q! the time to order your Graduation Announar
ments &amp; Supplies • but it IS the time to stop in
and compare our selection and price. Why pay
your deposit now when you can wait till February
or Match to order? Plus, you can custom taylor
your order to suit your style instead of settling for
what everyone has. Stop in today and see.

Group dedicates musical
to Chester-area family
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor
TUPPERS PLAINS
Jayne Ann Collins and her
family, of the Chester
community, will be this
· year' s recipients of the
"gift of encouragement"
from · the
Coolville
Community Choir.
As in past years, the 50·
member choir will contin·
ue its custom of making a
love offering to a friend or
neighbor at the choir 's
first concert of the holiday
season. The audience will
be invited to join them in a
free will offering .
This year, the choir is

performing "Repeat the Tom Reuter of Pomeroy,
Sounding Joy." The first who has been singing with
pe rformance will be pre· the group for a dozen or
sented at 7 p.m. Sunday, more years.
Dec .
I,
in Eastern
Re uter sa id that prac·
Ele mentary School's cafe· tices usually begin in mid·
torium.
0 ctober and go righl
It will be dedicated to through until the concert
.Mrs.
Collins,
who season . is over.
He
received serious injuries .
in an automobile accident . describes the practices and
several months ago.
performances as a hi gh·
Sue Matheny is director light of his year - "some·
of the choral group, which thing I really e njoy."
is composed of singers
Two other concert s have
from Meigs, Athens and been scheduled.
Hocking counties, and the
At 7 p.m., the choir will'
Parkersburg-Belpre area.
perform at the Belpre
The music of this year's Heights Methodi st Church
concert is traditional and in Belpre, and on Dec . 8 al
contemporary with some Coolville
Ele mentary
spiritual , according to School.

Meigs included in new
marketing program
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce
with
its
tourism and economic
development programs has
already expressed interest
in joining a regional initiative to get the .word out
about what Meigs county
has · to offer, said Mindy
· Morris, assistant tourism
direct.o r.
. Counties in Appalachian
Ohio are working to pro·
mote their businesses,

prospective
industrial
sites , tourism acuvaues,
and quality of life.
The challenge, said
Amy Harries, Community
Enrepreneurship
Development manager for
the Appalachian Regional
Entrepreneurship
Initiative, is to get the
message out beyond county borders without incur·
ring considerable expense.
A universal site - or
Web ·portal - will use

strength · in numbers to
provide economic. de vel·
opment , tourism, . and
other information for the
· of.
29
counties
Appalachian Ohio to anyone searching the Web,
said Harries. It is sched·
uled to launch in Jun e
2003 .
Initial funding to launch
AppalachianOhio.com is
being provided by the
Governor's Office for
Appalachia.

Jury deliberates whether rabbi
will be executed in wife's slaying
FREEHOLD, . N.J. (AP)
- The same jury that convicted a New Jersey rabbi
of hiring two men to kill
his wife so he could carry
on an affair must now
decide if he should be e'x e·
cuted for the 1994 murder.
The penalty phase of the
of Rabbi Fred
trial
Neulander, 61, was set to
begin Thursday with the
jury of seven men and five
women listening to arguments on whether he
should die by lethal injec·
tion or iipend life in prison.
Jurors deliberated for 27
hours over four days
before
convicting
Neulander on Wednesday
of capital murder, felony
murder and conspiracy in
the Nov. I, 1994, slaying
of Carol N eularider, 52, in
their
suburban
Philadelphia home.
The verdict came nearly
a year after his first trial
ended in a hung jury.
Defense
attorney
Michael E. Riley said the
penalty phase would likely
last only a few days, and
that he would argue against
the death penalty based on
Neulander's age and his
lack of a prior record.
He also said the rabbi
will take the stand to ask
the jury to spare his life.
"He's a very courageous,

strong man," Riley said,
the bloody scene of his
Though he did not testify mother's death and
at his
second
trial, seeing that his father
Neulander .took the stand failed to register any emo·
Iast year to deny any role tion.
In 1998, Neulander was
in the slaying, saying he
and his wafe had an open charged with conspiracy
marriage in which they to murder and being an
agreed to see other people. accessory to murder.
The
charges
were
"I was selfish and am~­
gant. I went beyond the upgraded to murder after
bounds of the marriage," private investigator Len
Neulander testified then. Jenoff came forward two
"I betrayed Carol. I years ago and said he and
betrayed my family. I his roommate ktlled Carol
betrayed my synagogue. I Neulander at the rabbi' s
asking for $30,000.
betrayed my religion."
Members of M'Kor
Shalom, the synagogue .
Neulander helped found, •
released
a
staterne.nt
Wednesday: "During this
long and difficult period,
Congregation
M' Kor
Shalom
persevered
through times of profound
sadness and confusion,
often in the harsh spot·
light of the media."
"We have reiterated
'throughout this ordeal our
embrace of both justice
and compassion," it said.
Riley did not know if
an;y of Neulander's three
chaldren will testify on
behalf of their father.
Some
jurors
were .,,
moved to tears during the
testimony of the couple's
son, Matthew Neulander,
who described arriving at

Keep WARM this winter!
· with FIBERGLASS
INSULATION

Princess Cut Diamond Studs

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Fair board
officers
elected
Bv CHARLENE

HoEFUCH

News editor
0

POMEROY - Eddie Holte'r
has been re-elected president of
the Meigs County Agricultural
Society, the organi1&lt;1tion which
annually stages the Meigs
County Fair.
This will be Holter's lhird
year in the leadership role.
Other officers elected were
Kenny Buckley, vice president;
Debbie Watson, secretary; and
Bob Calloway, treasurer.
Elected for three-year terms
beginning in 2003 were the five
incumbents, David Watson ,
Jennings Beegle, Mike Parker,
Bob Calaway and Kenny
.
' Buckley.
Elected for a one-year unexpired term beginning nexl year
•was Brian Wmdon.
Other members of the board
are Buddy Ervin, Jim Watson,
West Karr, Dave Burt, Karen
Werry, Brenda Johnson, Jane
Fitch and Brent Rose.

Route 7
'

from PageA1
fie, getting it done in a timely
fashion and the performance of
the work.
·
''But we' ve had very efficient contractors work with us,
so we' ve been very fortunate
there," she added.
The
Gallipolis
City
Commission approved an
emergency ordinance Tuesday
authorizing the city manager to
enter into contract with OOOT
for the repaving. The city's por·
tion of the job involves 0.26
miles, officials said.

All AGES , All TIMES $4.00

The D~ily Sentinel
Reader Serv1ces

.

(USPs 213·960)

·

Correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Since 1948.. .

Our main concern in all stories is 10 be
accurate. 11 you know of an error in a
story,·can the newsroom at (740) 99.2·
21&amp;&gt;.

The Quality Print Shop, Inc.

Our main number Is

Published
every
afternoon ,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
class pos1age paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association .
Postmaster: Send address correc1ions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Starting at

$199 (1/4 ct. TDW)

(740) 992·21 56.

255 Mill Street
Middleport, OH 45760
(740) 992-3345
Fax: (740) 992-3394

Department extensions are:

AND THE SURVEY SAYS•••
\

• You pll 2 m onth~ $17 eQ~ipment credifs ~total S204l, rna~ in( yoor syste11 FRU!
• Plu , recfiv! FREE Sl:and~rd Prol essiOBaii~Jtallatjon~
·
toAm.orids loo Ill paeka&amp;e ftr one lor on~
!IIIHII~

.

J

All of the s1urveys should be returned on or before Monday, December 2, 2002 .
Your involvement is truly appreciated and will assist us in better serving you · our patients.
•. --· --·

-··------

Ill

be picked-up in the

Office Building or visit us at http:jjsurvey.ccsd.wvu'.edujpvh.

Attic Insulation

• You lluy a Dish30l $y~tem with a second rectiwr f11 $199. .

P_lease complete a community survey by sharing your opinions, ideas, questions

tolbving locations: Main Lobby, Emergency Car, Center, Wellness Center, Medical

Upgrade Your

Get 2 Satellite TV receivers for FREE!

Pleasant Valley Hospital is planning for the future and ne~;ds your assistance!
and/or concerns regarding health cate and our facility. Surveys can

News

FREE 2-Room Satellite TV System
FREE Installation
FREE From Contracts
FREE Yourself frQm Cable

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

lif ,.,., ,.,~

~~== I
-

~......
,. ."'~""'
..

~~- ~

t'::l. Midtllpo1t,QIIOII

w ~ . ~401 112-2631
PICTURE

a

.JEWELRY, INC.

. . --...~
____ _
,

Reporter: Kris Scouten , Ext. 13
Sports: Ext 14
·

One month ....... ·. , . • .'9.95
One year . .. . .... . . . .'119.40
Advertising
Daily ......... . ..... ...50'
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext 15
Subscribers sho uld remit In
Outside Sates: Jessica Evans, Ext . 16 advance direct to The Daily
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, EX!. 10
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
ClusJCirc.:. Cynthia Sw~sher, Ext. 11 permitted in ·areas where home
carrier service is available.

Circulation

d~

q.n~ou

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

,

Dlolrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins , Ext 17

.

1111 Nol1l! So:orollio.,

Editor: Charlene Hoefl ich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14

General Manager
Charlene

Ho~II(Ch,

Ext. 12

E·mall:
news @mydailysentinel.com
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.chm

Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ....... , .. . . ' 30.15
26 Weeks ........... .. '60 .00
52 Weeks .......... ..' 11 8.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
· 13 Weeks .. .... .... . . ' 50 .05
26 Weeks ........... ' 100.10
52 Weeks . ....... ....'200.20

�Page A~_

0 inion

The Daily Sentinel

Great american smokeout
is opportunity for fresh start

_,•
TI-l~

:
LOQ':
. '

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

'

..Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

SIGI-1..

L(~uers

to the editor are H'elcame. They should be less than
300 words. All lerrers are snhjen w editing mrd mL4SI he
signed and include addrt's.\· ami telephone t~ttm~er. No
llll.l'iRI!ed letters will he published. l.ellers should be 111 good

rrute. mitiressin!-: issues.

fl O!

personalities.

TJu~

opinions expressed in the colttmn below are tire co11- ·
sensus of rl" Ohio Valley Puhlishing Co. editorial hoard.
tmle.H otherwise nnted.

s

NATIONAL VIEW

..

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

,..

·Increase in syphilis not an ·
indication CDC is failing job
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on the increase in
syphilis cases: Federal health officials who launched a mission to eliminate syphi li s by 2005 had reason to be opllmistic.
In 1999, the sex ually transmitted disease had !lit the lowest rate si nce the goveniment began tracking it in 1941.
Since syphilis is a cyclical disease , attacking it aggressively wlien the number of infections are low is a strategy that
shoulq work ....
But last year. the number of syphilis cases went up
instead of down for the first time in a decade. The increase
itself is small , 6. I 03 cas~s in 200 I compared with 5,979
cases in 2000. But health officials attribute the reversal to
infec[ions in gay and bi se xual men ....
The CDC, which had beeri focusing on groups at high
risk for syphilis , didn't ex.pecllo see the disease increase in
big cities with large populations of gay and bisexual people. But once that trend became apparent , the agency sent
teams to Chicago, Los Angeles , Miami , New York and San
Francisco.
The. uptick doesn't necessarily-mean that efforts to eradicate syphilis are doomed. The fact that the CDC recognized .the trend early and is responding to it aggressively is
·
reassuring.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Nov. 21, the 325th day of 2002. There
are 40 days left in the year. .
Today's Highlight in History :
On No'v. 21, 1922, Rebecca L. ·Felton of Georgia was sworn
in as the first woman to serve· in the U.S. Senate. (Felton, a
Democrat appointed, by Gov. Thomas Hardwick to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of Thomas E.· Watson, served
only a day before Watson's elected successor, Walter F
George, took office.)
On this date:
In 1789, North Carolina became the 12th state to ratify .the
U.S . Constitution.
·
In 1877, inventor Thomas A. Edison announced the invention of his phonograph.
In 1899, Vice President Garret A. Hobart, serving under
President McKinley, died in Paterson, N.J .. at age 55 ,
In 1942, the Alaska highway across Canada was formally
opened.
In 1964, New York's Verrazano Narrows Bridge opened.
In 1969, the Senate voted dow n the Supreme Court nomination of Clement F. Hayn sworth , the first such rejection since
1930.
In 1973, President Nixon's attorney, J. Fred Buzhardt;
revealed the existence of an I 8-and-a-half-minute gap in one
of the White House tape recordings related to Waterg&lt;~le.
In 1979. a mob attacked the U.S . Embassy in Islamabad,
Pakistan, killing two Americans.
·
: In 1980. 87 people died in a fire at the MGM Grand HotelCasin'o in Las Vegas, Nev.
'In 1991 , th·e UN Security Council chose Boutros BoutrosGhali of Egypt to be the new Secretary-General.
Ten years ago: Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore. , issued an apology but refu sed to discuss allegation ~ that he 'd made unwelcome sexual advances toward I0 women over the years. . ·
Five year~ ago: 'UN arms in spectors returned to Iraq after
Saddam Hussein 's three-week standoff with the United
Nations over the presence of Americans on the team. ·
President Clinton signed a Jaw giving the FDA new powers to
· speed the approval of drugs to combat a host of killer diseases,
including cancer .and AIDS .
One year ago: Ottilie Lundgren. a 94-year-old resident of
Oxford, Conn., died of inhalation anthrax in a case that baffl ed investigato rs. Actor-turned-author Gardner McKay died
in Honolulu at age 69.
.
Today\ Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Famer Stan Musial is
82. Country singer Jean Shepard is 69. Actor Laurence
Lt1ckinbill is 6~ . Actress Marlo Thomas is 65. Actor Rick
Lenl. is 63. Ballet dancer Natalia Makarova is 62. Singer Dr.
John is 62. Actress Juliet Mills is 61. Comedian-director
Harold Ramis is 58. Tele vision producer Marcy Carsey is 58.
Actress Goldie Hawn is 57. Rock musician Lonnie Jordan
(War) is 54. Singer Livingston Taylor is 52. Actress-singer
Lorna Luft is 50. Actress Cherry Jones is 46. Rock musician
Brian Ritchie (The Violent Femmes) is 42. Gospel singer
Ste ve n Curtis Chapman is 40. Actress Niq~llette Sheridan, is ·
39. Singer-actress Bjork is 37. Football player Troy Aikman is
36. Rh yt hm-and-blues sin ge r . Chauncey Hann ibal ·
(BLACKstreet) is 34. Rock musician Alex James (B lur) is 34.
Baseball playe r Ken Griffe y Jr. "33. Rapper Preuy Lou (Lost
Boyz ) is 31. Country ' inger J&lt;elsi Osborn (SHeDA ISY) is 28.
Actress Jena Malone is 18.
T,houghl for Tod~y: "Never confuse motion with action ." Erne~l Hemingway. American author (I 899- 1961 ).

Powell deserves praise for Iraq polic~ . as do (hawks' ··
Europeans, U.S . newspaper~ and
Democrats are anointing Secretary of
State Colin Powell as the clear winner of
the Bush administration's inner struggle
over Iraq policy. He is- but only tactically.
Strategically, the winners are the
administration's hawks, including Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and
Vice President Cheney, who urged that
· eliminating the Iraqi threat be the top priority of the Bush administration.
Of course, the jury is still out on
whether President Bush's Iraq policy will
be a success or a failure. Diplomacy and
inspections are unlikely to disarm
Saddam Hussein, and war could be catastrophic.
But at the moment Bush has mucli' of
the wmld on his side regarding the elimi. nation of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction as the world's leading problem.
That's a · triumph for Bush, and his
many adversaries ought to be impressed
with his ability to absorb drastically C!1nflicting advice from strong-minded aides
and fashion a policy that works.
The idea - widespread among foreigners, Democrats and the media - · that
Bush is some kind of idiot frat boy (or
"boy king," as New ,York Times columnist Maureen Dowd often jibes) ought to
be thrown in the trash.
A reassessment is justified by Bush's
victories in last week's elections as well as
.the unanimous U.N. vote demanding Iraqi
disarniament.
After the Security Council vote, both
The Washington Post and The New York
Times carried glowing accounts of how
Powell had both convinced Bush to take
his case against Iraq to the United Nations
and had successfully negotiated the final
resolution.
The implication was that Powell had
finally triumphed over the administration's "unilateralist" · hawks, led by
Cheney, Wolfowitz and Secretary ·of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who have
often e'xpressed distrust with the United
Nations and international inspections and
have advocated "regime change" as th~
qqly solution to the Iraq menace.
, Thts attitude also was reflected in
· Senate' Majority Leader Thomas
Daschle's (D-S.D.) statement "commend-

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST

Afghanistan.
... •
He lost that battle, but only temporarily,
as Bush decided - and sensibly -· td
fight one war at a time, Afghanistan first:
But once it was clear the Afghan war wag
won, a battle royal unfolded in the Bush
administration over Iraq, with the State
Department arguing for containment and
deterrence and the hawks - with Cheney
and Wolfowitz in the lead - urging
preparation for war.
The hawks won on Jan. 29 with Bush's
State of the Union speech, declaring that
nations comprising the "axis of evil" -;-·
chiefly, Iraq - would not be pennitted tq
develop nuclear weapons.
•·
Ever since then, Iraq has been the prime
focus of U.S. forei gn policy - a position
it never would have occupied but tortM
hawks. •
·
In the spring, Arab nations insisted that
the Arab-Israeli dispute had to take precedence over Iraq. Powell succeeded · in
making it so, temporarily, but Bush even'
tually decided - as the hawks maintaineq
- that there was no solving that crisis a&amp;
long as Yasser Arafat remained the leadet
of the Palestinians.
'
According to administration officials,
there was never a qt~estion whether Bush
would seek Congressional authorization
for the use of force against Iraq. There,
however, was a question of whether lo go
through·the United Nations ahd accept a
renewed inspections regime.
..
Bush's decision to do so was a victory
for Powell. But the successful framing ot
the issue - as a challenge to the United.
Nations to prove its relevance in the mod:
em world - was Cheney's idea.
Serious questions remain about whether
Hussein can evade or delay inspections
past the winter war season and hope that
the world community loses its resolve to
make him disarm.
Blish does not seem inclined to let thjs
happen. The Pentagon is preparing for
war and Powell, too, is talking tough. The
big test is yello come, but at this moment;
Bush deserves credit for )?eing a forcefuf
world leader.
·

ing" Bush and Powell for "rejecting the
unilateralist approach originally espoused
by some in his admii1istration."
Daschle didn't do so, but other
Democrats have claimed that, had it not
been for their irt\;istence last summer,
Bush might have ignored both Congress
and the United .Nations in pursuing his
Iraq policy.
In the overseas press. Malaysia's
English-language New Straits limes gave
·the balanced view that the U.N. resolution
giving Iraq a "last chance to disanm" was
"a triumph for Anglo-American diplomacy" and also "a triumph for the international community, which has been against
any unilateral American military action
against Iraq."
But here and abroad, the question not
getting asked is: Who pul disanning
and/or ousting Hussein ai the top of the
world's agenda in the first place? li1e
answer: the hawks, especially Wolfowitz.
In the early days of the Bush administration, Powell advocated a strategy of
"smart sanctions" against Iraq - that is,
attempting to cut ·off imports of military
equipment .while allowing in food and
medicine.
Essentially, the State Department view
was that the Clinton administration policy
of sanctions, containment and occasional
punitive aii strikes could work if the sanctions regimen were altered to counter
Iraq's international propaganda campaign
that it was killing lraqi children.
Preoccupied by China and domestic
issues, the Bush administration basicallr.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor
paid little high-level attention to Iraq until of Roll Call. the newspaper of Capitgl
after Sept. II, 2001. Then Wolfowitz Hill.)
·
•
argued for attacking both Iraq and
'
&gt;o

..

DEAR ABBY: I lost my
spouse - the love of my life
- to lung cancer. It is unbe•
lievable what a person has to
endure with this disease. The
biopsy, diagnosis, rounds of
chemo, X-rays, scans, needles, poking and prodding.
The prognosis is usually poor
unless it is caught early
enough to be surgically treated.
When I see people smoking, I want to stop and tell
tHem what my husband went
through: struggling to breathe
- ·even on oxygen. Being
dependent on someone else ·
for care. Difficulty walking
distances -even to the bathroom. My husband endured
multiple
hospitalizations,
fighting off pneumonia, being
tethered to an IV. All the caregiver can do is watch someone he or she adores die a little more one day at a time.
Why can't smokers understand that one puff isn't worth
the heavy pnce? There are
plenty of other things that can
make you ill or kill you.
Please don't add cigarettes something you CAN control.
Toss the sniokes! Give them
up, or beiter yet, NEVER
START. You may think you
h.ave plenty ?f time, but the
love of my ltfe was only 49.
Do this for yourself and for
those who love and care about
you. - K.O. IN MISSOURI
. .DEAR K.O.: Please accept
my deepest sympathy for
you~ loss. Your letter is . a
timely one because today
marks the 26th annual Great

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Community Calendar
club's social hour.
Public Meetings
Monday, Nov. 25
Church services
POMEROY- Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m. Monday at
Friday, Nov. 22 ·
the 117 Memorial Drive office.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival services will. be held at the Hope
· d
Baptist Church , 570 Grant St.,
Cl
. Ub S an
Middleport, at 7 p.m. through
Friday, and 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Organl'zatJ'OnS
Sunday. Ths Rev. Cliff Coleman will
Thuraday, Nov. 21
, be preaching and special singing
·POMEROY _ Ewings Chaptar will be featured each night.
Sona of the American Revolution
Sllurday, Nov. 23
8:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT _ A goepel alng
Museum In Pomeroy. Dinner by
reservation only, loll owed 7:30 p.m. will . be held at 7 p.m. at the
meeting. speaker from the groYp, Middleport Church of tht Nazarane
'Friends of Ft. Lauran'a.' dlscuulng with · the 'Gioryland Bell avera.
the praaervatlQn work at Ohio' only Pastor Allan Mldcap Invitee the
F,levolutlonary . War Fort Ft. · public. Refrashmenta. .
l:.aurena, at Bollver. Election of offlSunday, Nov. 24
cera.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
POMEROY - Meigs County Community Thanklglvlng earvlce,
Democratic Executive Committee, 7 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church.
Sponsored by the Middleport
7 p.m., Carpenters Hall.
Ministerial Association. Take
"REEDSVILLE - Riverview canned goods and other non·perGardan Club, 7:30 p.m. at the lahable items lor ·the needy to be
Reedsville United Methodist distributed through the food bank at
Church. A Christmas workshop will the Rejoicing Life Church.
be directed by Margaret
.
.
Grossnickle and Sylvia Webb. RACINE- Rev1valserv1ces will
Members are to take gifts for nurs· be held 7 p.m. Sunday and
ing homes. and finger foods .for lhe . Monday at the Dorcas Bethany

.,-•

:;

,.

~~
-·
women don't see it as a problem. Of

To achieve real representation) women must get angry
."

Bv JOAN RYAN
with Slovakia).
. .
Among mayors 6r the lop I00 cities,
I came across a photo spread last week
of the 16 people who likely will head up only 15 percent are women. When last
the Senate's major committees when the week's winning candidates are installed,
Republicans take control of . the I 08th California will have no women in any
Congress.
statewide constitutional office.
Only one of the 16 wore lipstick.
Countries that are, supposedly, less proThis could strike a temale American cit- gressive than the United States already
izen as monumentally depressing. It's have had women presidents. We can't get
2002. Women represent 51 percent of the a woman nominated. My goodness, we
population. We run Fortune 500 compa- still run polls asking if America is "ready"
nies, repair space stations, transplant for a female president, as if it were a radhearts. And still men get 15 committees in ical notion.
the most powerful legislative body in the
Yes, the past week brollght some good
land, aj]d we get one.
news. Ten women ran robusl .cmnpaigns
But this is what's really depressing:
tor governorships. Four won, raising t11e
The one female committee chair would number of female governors in the United
represent a notable increase over the num- States to six, the most ever. And San
ber of female committee chairs in the Francisco's Nancy Pelosi became House
Senate now (which is zero). (The chair- minority leader, the highest congressional
man ships are ba&lt;;ed on seniority, so don't position a woman has ever held.
·look for much improvement any lime . "The whole story of women in
soon.)
•
American politics over the last 30 years
lfs been 10 years since the much-her- has been ~w. steady progress," · says
aided Year of the Woman, when 24 Debbie Walsh, director of the Center for
women were elected to Congress, nearly American Women anq Politics at Rutgers
doubling the female population on University. "It's not about overnight transCapitol HilL There are now 72 women in fonnation. "
Congress, an improvement in memberYet, when I look at the slowly risi ng
ship that sti ll accounts for less than 14 . number of women in Congress, l'stlll feel
percent of the House and 13 per.cenl of the . as if I've walked into a party antl, expeCtSenate, To gai n some perspective, these ing to see more tiuniliar ti1ces, wondered,
percentages rank the United Stales as "Where is everybody?"
52nd in the world _in terms of female repPerhaps the biggest problem in getti ng
resentation in national legislatures (tied more women in oftice is that too many
0.

V'.

r!

maybe they are simply willing to be mo~
patient than I am. I get angry when I loqjt
at the numbers of women in high office.•I
want others to be angry, too. Anger fue~
action. It 's an .essential precondition f&lt;Sr
change.
·
· ·!
Our anger ·will make us relentless ill
recruiting women to run for oflice, ill
pressuring our political parties to rea~
out to potenual female cand1dates. . :, ·
Women have many friends among ·~
men in Congress and in statehous~~
across the country. They champion issu~s
that are important to us. But our govell'l:
rnent can never be truly representative .if
the female half of the popul ation as loflil
a'&gt; nearly all of the decision-makers ha~
never been working mothers. choosilld
between decent child care and deceaj
housing, never whacked their heads on :a
~lass ceilin&amp;,never sat in a bathroom stat:
tng at a postttve pregnancy lest .
••
In the world of politics, we are still oul' ·
siders. and the status quo protects itself
against out siders. It will ta ke angry;
activist women working together ttl
achieve real representation. In order ~
lead the country. we first have to lead out·
selves.
•

(Joan Ryan is' a colwmrist for the San
Francisco Chronicle. Send comments !iJ
her in mre of this new.1paper or send her
e-mail at joani')'cm@;fdtnmicle.com.)

-

'

'

. ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 5

Church, Racine. Speaker will be
Lloyd Middleton. Special music
Sunday will be by Beverly
•
Cunningham and on Monday by
Jerry Powell.
Support Groups
Thul'lday, Nov. 21
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing· Support Group, 1 p.m. at
the Melg~ Senior Citizens Canter.
Topic will be •Alzhelmere - It's
More than Memory Lose.'
Other events
·Thul'lday, Nov. 21
RACINE~ Leal collection, 8:30
a.m. to 2 p.m. from Main Street to
Yellowbuah Road In Racine.
· Leaves are to be moved to the
·curb.
.
Monday, Nov. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS - Flu vaccine will be administered to all
ages, 9 Io 11 a.m., at the Eaatern
Library. Cost Is $15. If a Medicare
or Medicaid card Is prasented at
the time of service, there will be no
charge.

Holiday flower show .
participation planned
RUTLAND - Plans for
p\ll'ticipating in the annual
~6hristmas flower show of the
Meigs County Gardens Club
Association were made when
the Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the home of Joy
Combs.
The show will be held
Satunlay and Sunday at the
Senior Citizens
Center.
Members were reminded that
setup for the show will take
lace at 6 p.m Friday. A canteen
will be held on the show days
and members were asked til
provide sandwiches and cooktes. Membeio were · also
reminded to take a handmade
decoration to hang on the tree
which will be a feature display
at the show, Arrangements are
to be in 'place by noon on
Satunlay, and not to removed
before 4 p.m. on Sunday.
New officers installed at the

meeting were Pauline Atkins,
president; Dorothy Woodard,
secretary; Belt¥ Lowery, secretary, and Marjorie Rice, !reasurer.
.
It was reported that the club
Won-awards for program book
and panicipationjn last year's
Christmas flower show and
Meigs County Fair Cltristmas
shows. Reports were given on
the recent regional meeting at
Belpre where .the progrnm was
on bonsai trees.
· A program on fall was fea·
lured with Combs reporting on
Canadian geese and their flight
pattems. She said it's apparent
that geese know the importance
of team work. They always
have a leader and seem instinc. lively to know how best to
work togetherto get where they
are going. She suggested there
is much for humans to learn
from geese.

Mmjorie Rice talked about
autunm spender which ~urs
when mother nature si~ the
trees to prepare for wmter and
the beauty of trees in fat).
Chelcie Steams discusse4
how to divide perennials. She
said it should be done evetr.
three to five years because tf
the root system gets too big the
flowering slows down.-it is also
a cost effective way of doing
perennial gardening, she said.
Her hint for caring for perennials was to cover them with
evergreen boughs, oak leaves ·
or mulch for good wintering
since their ',"OI'St enemy is the
freezing and thawing that takes
place in winter.
Marjorie Rice will host the
November meeting. The traveling prize furnished by Lowery
was won by Combs. For roll
call members named bulbs
they will be planting this fall.

Club reviews sci-fi novel
MIDDLEPORT - Betsy many talents and skills of the
Parsons reviewed the science other colonists, enable the
fiction novel, "Freedom's group to survive.
Challenge"
by
Anne
Pilrsons told of how the origMcCaffrey at Wednesday:s inal colonists of this planet are
meeting of the Middleport later joined by more shiploads
Literary Club held at the home . of slaves and gradually discovof Pauline Horton.
· er more about the planet they
Parsons noted the book is the are colonizing and the mystenthird in a series .by this author, ous race that owns and fanns it,
"Freedom's but does not live. on it. They
succeeding
Landini!" and "Freedom's become strong enough to join
Choice."'' •
.
with others, including the
She asked the group to figu- ·Catteni, to challenge the evil
ratively enter a nt:w universe Eosi who~ the real masters
. created by the wnter for her of the Catteru.
series, a continuing story of Throughout . the well-cra~ed
slaves ·forced to settle a new plot spannmg the senes,
planet by ihe Catteni, who have Parsons said, McCaffrey shows
captured hll!ldreds of people .on her skill in creating characters
earth as well as a variety of who become very real to the
aliens from other 'planets, and reader. The colonists meet the
have left them on an uninhabit- challenges they face and,
ed planet to survive or die.
although they eventually have
Their survival is largely due the opportunity to return to
the lead hip of a young Earth most of them decide to
to
ers · Earth, Kris remain
' at their new home
woman from
Bjomsen, and a Catteni Noble, Called Botany.
Zainal. Their leadership and the
Parsons
said
Anne

McCaffrey is an American
author who has lived in Ireland
for over 30 years. Her many
books have earned her most of
the awards given to writers of
fantasy and science fiction.
Popular with both adult and
teen readers, she has written
almost 70 books, and is still
writing at the .age of 76.
Parsons said she thought the
author did a good job of crealing such a different ·kind of
world with its fantastic characters and situations.
The roll call topics for the
year have been centered on
Ohio during its Bicentennial.
Each member mentioned a
favorite Ohio sports team or
individual.
Parsons and Dana Kessinger
were ~ to the nominating
comnnttee.
· The next meebn·g of the club
will be on Dec. 4 at the home of
Olita Heighton in Middleport

Birthday
and Anna
Wolfe;
Wendy,
Z an e ,
Brett, Zac,
and Joey
Beegle,
Amanda,

Baylee Ann Wolfe
RACINE - Baylee Ann
· Wolfe, daughter of Joe and
BettyAnn Wolfe, celebrated
. her first birthday with a party
at her home on Sept. 21.
The celebration was shared
with her brothers, Kody,
Tristen and Conner. A pink
doll theme was used for the
party. Others attending were
her ·grandparents Joe and
Alberta Loftis and Wilson

Bryan and Dylan Schwarze!,
Candi Heer, Stephanie and
Dani King, Ann Thomas,
Ray Priddy, Judy Porter ,
Joyce,
Danielle
. and
Samantha Cline, and -John
Priddy.

~UALtrY Pf&lt;£SU&lt;tPrtON

•

RYAN'S VIEW

Join the Great American
Smo1ceout ·ant:! quit today.
For more information about
how to get involved in the
Great American Smokeout
and to learn about tobacco
cessation strate$ies, call .(800)
227-2345 or visit www.cancer.org. ·
DEAR
ABBY:
My
boyfriend and I have been
together for I 0' years. We
have decided to elope.
I want to let my family
know about the marriage, but
I'm not sure how to go about
it. Are announcements OK, or
do they seem like a request
for presents? I am clueless
about the proper thing to do.
Thanks a bunch! - WONDERING IN
SOUTH
ELGIN, ILL.
DEAR . WONDERING:
Wedding
announcements
after your elopement are a
perfectly acceptable way to
let friends and family members know the happy news.
Only those who accept wedding INVITATIONS are
expc;cted to give gifts.
However, relatives and close
friends will probably want to
present you with a "token"
gift o~ some kind to mark the
occas1on.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her trWther, Pauline . Phillips. Write
Abby
at
Dear

American Smokeout. For
those who do not already
know, the American Cancer
Society's Great American
Smokeout is the day that
smokers can challenge themselves to quit smoking - if
only for just one day.
Smoking is the most preventable cause of death in our
society, yet an estimated 47
million adults in the United
States currently smoke. And
youth smoking seems to be on
the rise. (Between 1991 and
1999, smoking among high
school students rose substantially from 28 perc~nt to 35
percent.)
This year approximately
169,400 new cases of lung
cancer will be diagnosed in
the U.S., and 154,000 will die
of the disease. Research has
also brought to light other
tobacco-related
cancers,
including cancer of the
mouth, pharynx, larynx,
esophagus, pancreas, uterine
cervix, kidney and bladder.
So, Dear Readers, if you're
hooked on tobacco and have
been saying, "One of tliese www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
days I've got to quit," please Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
take my advice and start now. .90069.

..••

I

W··

Advocacy. Action. Answers on Aging

November is National Family
Caregiver Month
The Area Agency on Aging would
like to thank our nations caregivers
for all their contribution~.

S£f&lt;VtC£
Ar COE\1\Pt:rtrtV£ Pf&lt;tC£S.
.We honor most third party
prescription plans.
Your Swisher &amp;Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and Ken ·
are here to fill your
prescription needs.

If you are a.caregiver, contact us for
information and assistance.
(800) 331-2644 or (740) 373-6400
Serving Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble,
Perry and WashingtoPl Counties
II Program of
• •• f/11

'

.
.

I
I
/

www.mydallysentlnel.com

0

Thursday, November 21, 200~

The Daily Sentinel
•

Thursday, November 21, 2002

Kenneth McCullouvh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph.
Prescription ~h. 992-2955
112EastMalnStreel
Pomeroy, Ohio

IIOURS
Mon - Frl8am -9pm
·Sat. 8am- 5pm

Sun. CLOSED

"What do yo_u mean,
I should be thiRKing about
pre-arrangement planning?" ·

People in the prime of their life are the people, who
should be thinking about pre-arrangement planning. It is the
time when you are making all sorts of decisions about your
future, and·this needs to be one of them, because you are
best prepared to make a financial investment.
By investing in tomorrow's expenses at today's prices,
you are saving your family money. that they made need
down the road. You are also relieving them of difficult decisions art1:1 unexpected expenses. By making arrangements
· now, you are lening your preferences be.known in advance.
There are just two easy sleps to give you and your family
peace of mind: pre-arranging and pre-financing.
Please call

(7 40) 992-5141 for more information.

•

�.The Daily Sentinel

.
Page A~

Down on the Farm

.

Thursday, November 21, 2002

I

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
'NBA roundup, Page 82

Get decorating tips for the holiday season ~
POMEROY- Need to get
some ideas for decorating the
home this holiday season?
Plan to attend "Home For
The Holidays" presented by
the Meigs County Garden
Clubs on November 23 and
24 at the Meigs County
Senior Center, Mulberry
Heights. Hours for the public
are I to 5 p.m. on Saturday
and I to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Arrangements of dried flow ers, fresh flowers and evergreens will be on display.
View handmade Christmas
ornaments made from natural materials.
Want to try your hand at
arranging? You are·invited to
rriake an arrangement on the
theme of "Shiny New Year, a
reflective design. These
arrangements need to be in

Hal
Kneen
Extension agent

place by noon on November
Junior gardeners get to
display their talents in three
classes which include artistic
design and horticulture .
Garden club members will
also be judged in horticulture
classes for houseplants,
foli age,
cactus,
berried
branches and evergreen s..
The
· Meigs
County
Extension's
· Master
Gardeners will have an edu-

43.

cational display on "How to
Care For Your Special
Christmas Plants. " The public is invited to this event and
admittance is free.

•••
Vegetable growers, mark
December II and January 15
to 17 on your calendar to
attend growers' meetings to
improve your operations.
Our local "Winter Vegetable
School" will be held from
9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on
December 11 at the Meigs
County Annex,' Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. This
event is planned by Ohio
State University Extension
Meigs/Washington Counties'
staff and includes: "How
does your farm's worker protection procedures stack up,"
"What's new in sweet corn,

peppers, and pumpkins,"
"Need workers, how can the
Department of Jobs and
Family Services help,"
"What insect pests to expect
and what pesticides are on
the horizon ," · "Marketing
· Your Product" and "How can
we reduce our risk crop
insurance." The public is
invited. Reservations are
reques ted. C;~ll 992-6696.
The
Ohio
Fruit
and
Vegetable Growers Congress
is being held in conjunction
with the Direct Marketing
Conference on January 15 to
17 at the SeaGate Centre in
Congress
Toledo.
The
includes program sessions on
sweet corn, pepper, 9abbage, ·
cucumber, squash, potatoes,
Indian corn and pumpkins.
Concurrent sessions on

greenhouse vegetable production will be held along
with how to direct market
your product. A trade show
sponsored by the major horticultural suppliers to the
industry will be open from 3
to 7 p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m . Thursday, and 9
a.m. to I :30 p.m. Friday.
Program booklets and registration may be 'obtained from
our local extension office or
by contacting Ohio Fruit and
Vegetable Growers at (614)
246-8292.

•••

Area farmers, you are cordially invited to attend the
annual "Field Crops· Year In
Review" luncheon being ·
held from II a.m. to 2 p.m.,
on November 22 at the
Meigs
County
Annex

Page Bl
Thursday, November 21, 2002

•

Building. This event is spol(sored by Shade River Ag an~
Pioneer. This year's crop$
have been affected by a wet
spring, late spring frost,
drought and late frost-free
fall . What does this .mean to
you and your anticipatecl
Spring 2003 planting plans_?
Get some of the facts and
insights before you make
your decisions. Admission -i~
free, but reservations are
requested by calling Shad~
River Ag at 985-2831.

.

Hal Kneen is the. Meigs
County
Agriculture
&amp;
.,
Natural Resources Agelft,
The Ohio Stale Universi!J
Extension.
•·
t

Boys hoop
preview Friday
THE PLAINS The
annual
Athens County ·
Shrine Club boys' basketball
preview has been set for
Friday night with three
· Meigs County teams vying
for victory in the two-quar- ,
ter exhibitions. Showcasing
area talent among lO area
teams, the shrine preview
begins with a 5:30p.m. contest in Athens High School's
McAfee Gymnasium. At
5:30, Logan opens up with
Meigs . Southern faces
Nelsonville- York at 7:45
and it 8:30 Eastern squares
off against Athens . Tickets
will be available at the door.

Expos to play
in Puerto Rico

•

•

Maine farmers looking for regionat
Bill limits could.cost peanut
.
growers thousands·of dollars contract to boost milk prices

.,

PLAINS. Ga. (AP) Brothers Neil and Boyd
Hagerson expected the government's new peanut commodity
program to infuse their farm
with elitra cash and to help
them pay bills. but instead they
stand to lose about $60,000
because of new regulations
that weren't in place when they
planted their crops.
"It's not just pocket change
for us," said Neil Hagerson,
52. "We need that to pay our
bills."
One fourth of Georgia's
4,800 peanut growers, and
many others in Florida,
Alabama,
Mississippi,
Louisiana and west Texas, are
like! y to share the Hagersons •
problem, said Don Koehler.
executive director of the
GciJrgia Peanut Commission,
The ·new payment limits are
especially hard on growers
who incorporated family farms
or
formed
partnerships,
because they are considered
one entity under the new farm
bill, which limits subsidy payments to each peanut farm. The
regulations,
. signed
by
President Bush op May 13,
have been a· shock to many
growers.
The new limitations are similar to those that have applied
for years to cotton, com and
wheat. There is now a $40,000
limit on guaranteed subsidies
known as direct payments and
a $65,000 cap on a market-driven subsidies known as countercyclical payments.
Since growers began the season under the old regulations,
their farms were organir;d to
comply with them. They could
not adjust for payment limita·
tions.
"They changed the rules as
the game was played," said
Boyd Hagerson, 50. "If we had
known the rules up front, we
wouldn't have planted so

many."
the government agreed to buy
His brother said a grower out quota holders at a rate of 55
with a "decent yield" could cents per pound.
exceed the payment limit with
That
should
net · the
just 300 acres. The Hagersons, Hagerson's about $220,000 for
who also farm with three of their 400,000 pounds of quota.
their sons, will harvest 600 to But because they had incorpo650 acres.
rated their family farm, they
If the Hagersons were not figure the payment limitations
incorporated, each of the will cost them $60,000.
brothers and their sons could
Farmers have to boO'OW and ·
split up the 3,000-acre Triple H spend huge sums to grow
Farm - just north of Plains, crops. Growers invest between
where former President Jimmy $551 and $690 just to grow an
Carter farmed peanuts - and acre of peanuts.
avoid most of the limitations. · "A farmer that's growing
."There has never been a lim- 1,700 acres ... is probably boritation issue with peanuts until rowing $1 million or more just
the 2002 farm bill," said to be able to farm," said
Tommy Weldon, an Athens- Koehler. "That's a recuning
based program specialist with thing."
Farm Service Agel)cy, which
FSA officials have been
administers the Agriculture working overtime to work out
Department's farm rrograms. kinks in the new program and
"I guess for 2003, i they can to impletrlent its complex forfigure a le~itimate way to reor- mulas and policies, so some
ganize thetr farming operation, payments have been delayed
they may be able to avoid a this fall.
payment limitation problem."
"The county offices are totalKoehler said many farmers
learned about the limitations ly inundated," said Weldon.
recently when they visited "With all this transition, the
local FSA offices to sign up for payments and subsidies have
benefits, while their fields not been coming like they did
were too wet to harvest.
in the past. We're trying to edu"Farmers have been farming cate the farmers and we can't
and they dido 't have time to find the time to process the
read," he said. "All of a sudden paperwork and make paywe got some wet weather and ments. The farmers and
they had time. That's when bankers are in desperate need
farmers got the shock."
of these payments."
Peanuts are grown from
Boyd Hagerson said his tamVirginia to New Mellico, but ily win have to seriously conthey are a $2' billion industry in sider their options n~xt year.
Georgia, the nation's largest
''They keep telling us we're
producer.
·•. going to get $495 a ton, but if
The 2002farm bill revamped we can't get all the payments
the Depression-era "quota sys- that are due, we're not going
tern" that had guaranteed some get that," he said. "We're just a
farmers $610 per ton for family farm. We're incorporatpeanuts, more than double the ed, but we're not a big conprice they would have received glomerate that can afford to
m the world market. They're lose $1 million. We need to get
guaranteed $495 under the new all that we're eligible to get,
law.
and we don't want anything
Since the quota was an asset, that's not due us.".

WATERVILLE, Maine
(AP) - A Maine dairyman
who helped to organize a
weekend
milk-dumping
protest said farmers in the
Northeast need a contract
for higher milk prices.
Konrad Bailey was a
leader of a demonstration in
·Fairfield in which I 0,000
gallons on milk were
dumped from a truck into a
manure pit to .draw attention to plummeting milk
prices.
·
He said the contract,
which seeks to raise the
minimum t;&gt;llyment to Jariners for thetr milk, could be
successful if-at least 30 percent of the dairy farmers in
the Northeast sign it.
"I think 30 percent will

do it to start," said Bailey,
of Farmington. "Weneed to
challenge people."
.
Bailey ts working with
National
Farmers
the
Organization, which is circulating a contract proposal
to farmers in New York and
New Englimd.
The contract seeks a minimum price of $15 r.er hundredweight, but Batley said
it actually would fetch
farmers closer to $17 per
hundredweight
because
they would get extra money
for byprodlicts such as butterfat and protein.•
Farmers say they now are
losing money on the $12
per hundredweight they ate
getting.
Farmers said they are

feeling the effects of falliJUl ·
prices resulting from l~t
year's expiration of t)!t
Northeast Interstate Dairyo
Compact.
Most owners of larger
dairy farms . stayed away
from Saturday's milk dump.
Galen Larrabee, who milkS
350 cows in Knox, said
milk dump is not the way t9
make changes.
.'
"Get to Augusta or get IQ
Washington and spin yoar
wheels there," Larrabee
said. "I just don't feel I cal)
afford to dump milk tO
make a point. And it's not
the right thing to do, for
another thing. There are
people starving."

a

IRVING, Texas (AP) - .
The Montreal Expos will
play 22 of their 81 home
games in Puerto Rico next
· year; and the Oakland
Athletics
and
Seattle
· Mariners will start the season with the major leagues'
second opening in Japan.•
Expos president Tony
Tavares said that with the .
guaranteed income from the
: games in San Juan, his team
wil I not have to conduct a
"fire sale" of players such as
Vladimir Guerrero and
Bartolo Colon.
Oakland and Seattle will
· become the second pair of
major league teams to open
the season in Japan, playing
a two-game· series March 22
and 23 at the Tokyo Dome
against the Yomiuri. Giants
and the Seibu Lions. The
Mariners and Athletics will
then play each other the fol lowing two days.

Se.ua forms
·mil( force .,.-,,, '"'

i,.

IRVING, Texas (AP) - A
special marketing task force
formed by baseball .commissioner Bud Selig will try to
address drops in regular-sea. son · 'attendance and World
.Series television ratings.

Wells taunted
.before.Jiittack
NEW YORK (AP) David Wells' personal trainer testified that a man taunted the New York Yankees
pitcher about ordering an
. egg-white omelet before
punching Wells at a
Manhattan diner.

.'

OVer 100
beautifully
decorated
Christmas

tHEY'RE
HERE!!!

College football

Clarke leads in
Dunlop Phoenix
MIYAZAKI, Japan (AP)
- Tiger Woods struggled to
save par while DaTFen
Clarke shrugged off rainy
conditions for a 7-under 64
and a two-stroke lead in the
Dunlop Phoenix.
.
England's Justin Rose and
Japan's Kaname Yokoo and
Tsukasa Watanabe opened
with 66s, and Spanish star
Sergio Garcia topped a five- ·
player group at 67 .

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel talks with quarterback Craig Krenzel (16) during the second
quarter of their 13-7 victory over Penn State, in this Oct. 26 photo in Columbus. When Ohio
· State plays Michigan the rivaly i? so lntenst that the match up is simply called "The Game."
The two teams square off on Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

Woody, Bo fueled
IYilctJ,iga"q~O§,U rivalry
t

COLUMBUS (AP)- The
last time Ohio State won a
national
championship,
· Woody Hayes wasn't taking
chances.·
A coach who fancied himself a general, Hayes sent his
· starters back in for the final
minutes of the 1968 game
with Michigan, even though
the top-ranked Buckeyes
were ahead 44-14. He later
said he didn't feel comfortable against powerful offenses without his team scoring
50 points.
And after fullback Jim Otis
scored with 1:23 remaining,
Hayes went for two pointson a pass, no less. When
asked why he went for two,
Hayes reportedly said,
"Because we couldn't go for
three!"
Michigan
coach
Bo
Schembechler, a former
Hayes assistant, never forgot
or forgave his old boss. The
next spring, a sign in the
Wolverines' ·dressing room

•

said, "What the mind can Ohio State will be looking
conceive and believe, the for another shot at a national
mind can achieve. Those that title. This time, a win over
stay will be Champions!"
Michigan would send Ohio
During the 1969 season, State to the Fiesta Bowl to
Ohio State was winning with play in the BCS n.ational title
ease, and Hayes called his game on Jan. 3. So once
top-ranked Buckeyes "prob- again, it's simply "The
ably the best team that ever Game."
played college football."
ES PN .com rated the I0
They took a 22-game win- greatest rivalries of the 20th
ning streak into Ann Arbor century recently. Ahead of
for the season finale, and Ali-Frazier,
Red
SoxMichigan pounced. The Yankees and ChamberlainWolverines shut down the Russell was Michigan-Ohio
triple . option, · and the State.
Buckeyes ended up ihrowing
"When you grow up in
six
interceptions·
in Ohio, it's kind of in your
blood," former . Buckeyes ·
Michigan's 24-12 victory.
"This is the greatest victo- linebacker Chris Spielman
ry in the history of the said. "It's a game that means
world!" Michi~an fullback so much: When.you lose, tt ts
Garvie Craw srud.
· devastatmg and stays wtth
And another chapter was you all year. When you win,
added io this glorious rivalry. there is no feeling like it. You
When the second-ranked are on air until you play them
Buckeyes (12-0) and 12th- again."
.
ranked Wolverines (9-2)
This is a rivalry where
Please see OSU Bl
meet for the . 99th time
Saturday at Ohm Stadmm,
'

Ohio State fans rev up for
biggest game of season

West Virginia topples
Virginia Tech 21 ~1 8
BLACKSBURG,
Va.
· (AP) West Virginia
came to Virginia Tech on
Wednesday night with a
chance to stay in the Big
East championship race.
The Mountaineers left
with more than that after
combining a running game
that went over and around
the No. 13 Hokies with
ease with two stout defensive stands in the last five
minutes that preserved ·a
stirring 21-18 victory.
To so!)le, it was proof
that West Virginia is back
after a 3-8 season a year
a~o that left the team in
disarray and needing a
spark.
"People may start to
notice us," second-year
coach Rich Rodriguez said.
"We can't go out and trumpet our own horn. We just
have to play well when we
. have the ofportunity, and
playing wei on TV helps.
"This ought to get us
some national ellposure:"
The
way
the
Mountaineers won won't
hurt, either. They ran for
263 yards against a defense
ranked fifth in the nation
· against the run, and held up
under pressure with the
game on the line as the
clock wound down.
First, West Virginia (8-3,
5- I Big East) stopped the
Hokies' "Untouchables"
running game on three
straight tries from inside
.the .1-yard line; stopping
them on downs. Then,
Brian King intercepted
Bryan Randall 's seconddown pass into the end
zone with 12 seconds to
play, sending the Hokies
(8-3, 3-3) to their third
heartbreaker loss in a row.
"This is a big thing,"
West Virginia linebacker
James Davis said. "We
needed to show everybody
around . the world that
we've got a .good team.:·
· West Vtrgtma can gam a·
share of the Big East title if
No. 17 Pittsburgh beats
top-ranked
Miami
on
Thursday
night,
the
Mountaineers then beat the
Panthers on Nov. 30 and
everything else goes as
expected .
"We're still in contention, as crazy as that
sounds," Rodriguez said. ·
And they are playing as
well as most anybody, having won five of six games
behind the nation's No. 2
rushing offense and an
improving defense .
. Quincy Wilson ran for
.125 yards on just II carries, including a 42-yard
touchdown run, and the
Mountaineers gained 263
yards on the ground.
West Virginia also struck
quickly, with touchdown
drives covering 80 yards m
five plays, 70 yards in five
plays and 86 yards in six
plays.
That all ·set it up for the
defense, and it also came
through .
"I've never been so

proud of a defense,"
Rodriguez said.
"The
crowd was pushing them.
They had all the momentum.... To win it like we
won it has got toJive our
defense a great de of confidence."
Wilson's big run, with
4:09 left in the third quarter, gave West Virginia ~
21- I 0 lead, and .s ome
breathing room it sorely.
needed.
"I · was tired," . ·. starter
Avon Cobourne said. "I
said 'Go ahead, Q. Get hi
there.' Then the 'first play,
he busts . it. I was like,
'Thank you, Jesus.' A lot of
people saw this game. It
was a program-builder.".:·-:
On the goal-line stand;
set up when Lee Suggs ritl .
8 yards on first-and-goal
from the 9, West Virginia
stopped Suggs on second
and fourth down. Sugg~
said he ~ot his arm in, bitt
the offictals didn't agree:: ·
After gaining only 2 .
yards on : three straight
rushes,
West Virginia
punter Mark · Fazzolaii
stepped out of the end zone
for a safety with 2:3\)
remaining. pulling the ·
Hokies within a field goal
of forcing overtime .
The Mountaineers' strategy almost backfired when
Todd James' free kick went
out of bounds, . giving the
Hokies the ball at midfietg · ·
with 2:26 left, and Randa
quickly drove his team to
the II with a chance tti
wm.
.
Randall's first pass was
low . and incomplete. He
dropped back to pass again.
scrambled around and.
threw for Ernest Wilford in
the left corner of the end
zone. King was there, and
the Mountaineers' victory
was secured. ·
Tech
coach
Frank
Beamer
didn't · b\ame
Randall for the play, saying
he told the ·sophomore, "If
you feel like you've got a
play, take it. ... I made sure
he was going to throw it in
the end zone. If it wasn't
there, I wanted· him · to
throw it away and let's kick
the field goal and go into
OT.
"I don ' t fault him a bit.
We lost this together,"
Beamer said.
Earlier, Suggs made history because of his ability
to get into the end zone,
running 28 yards down the
left sideline for the fir~t
touchdown. It gave him at
least one TD in 24 straiglit
games, breaking an NCAA
Division I reco(d he shared.
with Bill Burnett of
Arkapsas, who did it in
1968-70.
Suggs also had a 27-yard·
scorin~ run called back by
a holdmg penalty.
"That' s a bad time to be
holding," Beamer said.
·
"It just seems like a lot of ·
stuff, and we can't get over
the hump ," Beamer saiq.
"We're just missing a littl~
bit right now."

•

LPGA leans
on Augusta

* Added
Double Stitched Seams For
Strength
* Double
Zippered Bottom For
Security
* Designed For Ultimate Comfort
* Lifetime Warranty
Against
of Double Stitched sec.rms

Bulk r"".,n.,,
Gourmet cootu1ef
~ AII!IO Arriving This Weekend:·

Live Trees
·Cut Trees
· Poinsettias
Live Wreat~

_, .... ..,""

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio ·
Phone (740) 446-1711
Watch Friday's paper for 10% OFF coupon good
Garden Center on
11/23/02 Gall

...

WEST PALM BEACH,
Fla. (AP) - LPGA Tour
commissioner Ty.,_ Votaw
urged Augusta National to
admit a female member,
saying its obligation to golf
outweighs its rights as a private club.

Australian Open
suspended
MELBOURNE, Australia
(AP) - . The first round of
the Australian Open was
suspended because the dry
greens at Victoria Golf Club
were · too fast, and the tournament was reduced to 54
holes. r,1ayers complained .
that their balls would not
stay on the putting surface.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
dow'ntown theater occasionally flashes ''Beat Michigan"
on its marquee between
event promotions. Hospital
patients - most in wheelchairs form "Script
Ohio." The Buckeye Corner,
which sells Ohio State memorabilia, had to add extra
cash registers to handle lines
of fans .
It's the week of "The
Game," the · annual football
matchup of Ohio State and
Michigan;
Every year, Ohio State and
Michigan fans begin talking
about their teams' meeting at
.the season's
inception,
although ·the matchup has
been the final game on both
teams' Big Ten schedules
since the 1935. But this year,
the second-ranked Buckeyes
have so much riding on the
outcome, there is no. escaping the hype.
.. . ... I

'

A victory Saturday for the
Bruce Harlan, general
Buckeyes means a trip to the manager of The Buckeye .
Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 3 and the . Corner, says people have
chance to play for their first been lining up outside his
mitional title since 1968.
four central Ohio stores wait- ·
"It's all everyone is talking ing to get in.
about," Ohio Staie freshman
"This is a special year.
Monica Caine said. "We There is no question about it,
even have our outfits already the fans and our customers
planned for Saturday' s are very excited," he said.
game."
Harlan says the Ohio
Caine says she is resisting State-Michigan rivalry Tthe temptation to sell her shirt by Nike is a big seller,
ticket. The best seats are as well as the No . 13 jersey
going for $1,000- despite of Ohio State's freshman
their face value of $45.
running
back
Maurice
Buckeye fever is sweeping Clarett.
.
But the pre-game1 hype is
the state.
Fans are decorating their most prevalent on campus.
cars and themselves in scarThe annual Beat Michigan
let
and
gray. . Some Week started Sunday when
Columbus offices play the more than 500 people
Ohio State fight song when showed · up for the Beat
pladng calls on hold . Michigan 5K run. Students
Johnson's Real Ice Cream in signed a banner forth~ team
suburban Bexley is selling outside the student umon on
scarlet-and-gray-colored
Please see Fens, 81
scoops.

.

.

West Virginia quarterback Rasheed Marshall (2) celebrate~ ·
with fans and Lewis Daniels, left, after their 21-18 win over
Virginia Tech Wednesday at Lane stadium in Blacksburg,
Va. (AP)
'

....

�-------.. --------w·w-w.

Thursday, November 21 ,2002
Thursday, November 21, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

.

•

NBA

-

~:·
~

Pacers 97
Raptors 95

At Denver, Karl Malone
scored 2 I points, including
16 in the second half, and
Utah handed the ~uggets
their fifth straight loss.
Juwan Howard led the
Nuggets with 17 points and
13 rebounds.

Spurs 95
Lakers 88

,.

osu

from Page 81
ordinary players become
heroes.
"When you have a grea't
rivalry, it has a focus like
nothing else ... no one forgets
what happens that day," said
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr.
"That's what legend and tradition is all about."
"A for.mer walk-on, Todd
Plate was almost an after. thought on the
1989
Michigan team. Used sparingly as a fifth defensive
· back, Plate broke up a sure
touchdown pass just before
halftime and intercepted
passes to set .up Michigan's
last two TDs in a 28-18 victory.
· Ohio State was ranked second and Michigan was 13th,
when the teams met at The
Big House in Ann Arbor on
Nov. 17, 1979.
· With the Wolverines ahead
by three points and just over

Fans
from Page 81

.I

Monday.
Rehabilitation patients at
The Ohio State University
Medical Center held a Beat
Michigan rally Wednesday,
lining up to form the word
"Ohio" in the gym with the
OSU Alumni Band.
Sophomore Brett Mack
said he wi II •be one of the
hundreds of students to jlfmp
in Mirror Lake on campus
Thursday night - despite
predicted temperatures in the
30s - as a way to show support for the team.
For many Ohio State fans,
half of the fun of Michigan
week is verbally bashing the
Wolverines.

Pistons 79
Heat 68

four minutes left, Michigan
punted deep in its own territory. Little-known linebacker
Jim Laughlin blocked the
punt. and Todd Bell recovered and ran 18 yards for the
winning TD.
"If you don't win the
Michigan-Ohio State game,
that's a problem. You're · not
going to be recognized for
too much success," said Earle·
Bruce, who coached the 1979
Ohio State team. "We've had
11 -1 and 10-1 football teams
that lost to Michigan they' re not even mentioned
in the second breath."
The Game is also about
characters.
Michigan quarterback Jim
Harbaugh predicted victory
in 1985, and backed it up.
Ohio State wide receiver
Terry Glenn said before the
'95 game that he didn't think
Michigan was any good; the
Wolverines beat the secondranked Buckeyes 31-23.
Michigan's
Desmond
Howard returned a punt for a
TO-in the '91 game, struck a
Heisman pose in the end zone

~o

"If animosity killed, Ann
Arbor would be a ghost
town," said Dan Greenberg, a
22-year-old OSU law student.
Greenberg said he even
bought toilet paper that reads
"flush twice to get to
Michigan."
OSU law student Brent
Jamicki said he saw some
Ohio State fans
buy
Michigan merchandise they
planned to burn as an offerIn¥, to the Buckeyes.
'That goes beyorid not
being polite," he said.
Jam1cki said the pre-game
parties already have started
on campus.
"We were at the bars last
night and they were playing
'Hang On Sloopy' and people
were doing a lot of 0-H-I-0
cheers," he said. "It's festive
already."

Jarnic ki said some parties
will start about 4:30 a.m. on
game day with "kegs and
eggs."
"Some people find it hard
to believe that people get up
at five o'clock to drink before
a game, but they do it here."
University and city officials are taking steps to
ensure chaos does not erupt
after the game .
In 1996 after Ohio State
had an unbeaten season
ruined by Michigan at Ohio
Stadium. police used pepper
spray and Mace to keep fans
off the field. The game also
led to some property damage
and bonfires bemg ·set in the
campus area.
Police plan to have riot
gear ready and -are banning
parking on streets where
there has been trouble in the
past.

m:rtbune

Place

(7~~~ To99~;~~~6
Disolay Ad·s

Word Ads
Da l ly In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5-:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE

AN A0.

In Next Day ' s Paper
Sunday In - Column : . l : OO p .m.

I

\'\ '\ (ll '\(I \JI '\IS

..,t___

l

1110

llo.PWANTED

11'10

1-IEU&gt;WAN!Dl

PE_RSO_N_AL'i
_ _... Clerk position: Please sub· The Athans·Maigs Educa-

Why wait? Start meeting
· Ohio singles tonight. call toll
free 1-800-766-2623 ext
1621 .

r

~NNOUNCEMF.NfS

.__ _

I
•

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
tor sale , Chester Tow nship,
Meigs COunt(, send letters
of interest to : The Daily
Sentinel, PO Box 729 -20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

·

-

Western Paperba cks to
trade
or
e.~echange.
(304)67 5-5864

.

-.

·-------pJ1
~r~------..,
·GIVEAWAY

•

....,

Young inside male and te-

mit letter ot interest andresume to the Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer District,
P.O. Box 175, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45783. Deadline December 9, 2002 .
The TPRSD is an equaVop portunity employer/prov ider
Ananclal Freedom. International Company growing
rapidly. Internet work from
home. PT/FT positions. Full
training. 1·888·202-6321
Foster Parents. Local Agency in Ohio seeking qualified couples to be·
come Foster parents in
Lawrence. Gama. Jackson ,
Meigs areas. Ther~.. witl be
5 to 10 families chQsen to
become par at the pilot
project Qualified applicants
may receive up to $40.00
per ·day reimbursement. Intereste; d
parties
Call
(740)709~9062. If ')IOU have

male cats to good homes.
Orange &amp; white and Tan ti17401446. previously called, please
,:~.;..~.;..;..._ __, call again .
Full-time AN
Losr AND
FOUND
L~-------,..1 Scenic Hills Nursing Center
'
is now accepting applicaFOUND- Small female pup tions for a full time AN. We
found- near GDG...approx, -3 are the areas premier Afz.
Weeks ago. Call &amp; give de· heimer's care facility. We ofscriplion . (740)441-9220
fer very competitive pay and
exc·enent benefits. If you
.
.
Found
Smal I Wh 1te 8 111y wou ld like to join our dediGoat with Blue Cqllar Call cated team of caregivers,
(740) 992-6273
you may apply in person at
'--':---,--.;._--~ Scenic Hills or call Diane
LOST- 2 year Chocolate Thompson tor more intorLab lost in the Northup matio n al (740)446 ·7 150.
area. If found please call We are an equal opportunity
(740)446 -8 706 after 4pm
employer. EOE

~:~~t~W!; ;~~e

r

For Sundays Paper

tional Service , Center is
seeking a COOK at the Hiland Road Head Start site in
Meigs County. Must have
high schOol diploma or
equivalent. Previous experience In inventory, plan-·
ning, preparation and handling of food in a schooVinstitulional setting. Must be
able to llfl and carry up to
lbs, Experience in large
group food preparation. Experience in large group food
preparation. Experience in
completing USDA reim bursemenl forms preferred .
Preference given to quali_lied present or past ·Head
Start parents and employees. · Th is position has
board-approved benefits.
Submit letter of interest. re sume and references to
John D. Costanzo, Superintendent of Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center,

so

6~·10 ~~; 6:84 • A P~!"e;.oy,

r

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE

I ~.,r.·o-·FO·"·~·RENT-··-""1 t

S650

12 used homes under
$3,000 . Will help with deliv·
ery. Call Harold, 740-3859948.

All re•t estill sdvertl&amp;lng
In this fllwlplll)er tl
aub)ect to the Fedenl
F•lr HouatngAct of 1968
whk:h maket II Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, llmlli,Uon or
dtac:rlmlnallon baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
f•mlllal 1tatu1 or n~tlon•l
origin, or any Intention to
make any 1uc:h
preference, llrriltatlon or
discrimination."

~21160 . 2 bedroom mobile
home on rented tot in Middleport with view of river,
S4500. (740)992-3194
.
~ 4x65 Shu ltz w/O i shwa~her
&amp; I rant deck. $6 ,500
(3041675-6295

FREE INSPECTION

Ho•JES

=-:-:::-:------,--,-.

i

I

I:..:..:..:........,______
~~2 b~:in~~~=nt~e~osp~:\i

r.

1180

Applications will be taken
for part- time cter~. par t-lime
registered nurse, and fulltime registered nurse at the
Mason County Hea IIh Department. Please send resume to 216 5th Streel,
Attn: Diana Riddle

'

..

...

·•

Are you interesled In a rewarding and exciting career
as a. dedicated care-giver?
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
has the job tor you. If you
are ·a stale tested nursing
aide, and would ll~e to join
our team, please call and
tal~ to Dianna Thompson or
stop by and apply in person .
Be sure to asK about our
new sta rting wage l Our
number is (740)448-7150 .
EOE
Are you 1n1eres1ed in be·
coming a Slate Tested
Nurse Aide? If you would
like an exciting, rewarding
career in heallh care, we
have the answer. for ')IOU
·scenic Hilts Nursing Center
is oflerinQ a nurse aide
class 11 will beg in in De ·
cember. You must apply. in
person at Scenic Hills. Contact Stacey Wright or Dia nna Thompson. EOE

WANTED
TRUCK DRIVERS
Longhaul Teams We lcome.
Call(304l675 4005
·
·
Point Service XPress
:...::::::.:::::.::::::.::..:.:::::.___
Quality Aaaurance
M•negar I
·
Part-.time (20 hours/Week)
"!'
ed
Rio
1n 0ur .
POSI lon 6a~
G ande othce to prov •de
r , .
mon!tonng and evaluation of
prov1d8f ag~ncles ~o assure
quality serVIce delivery and
cllenl care within programs
offered by the Area Agency
on Aging . Succesaful ·c~ndl·
date must be Registered
Nurse of Li censed Social
Wor~er, or h·ave a Bachelor's Degree In Health and
Human Services or related
field, piUs two years prior
e.~eperlence in community
health care with the elderly
and/or disabled adults,
medical social work, or relevant substilute. Fami liarit')l
with Medicaid/ Medicare re·
imbursement helpfu l. Salary: $13.94/hr. Travel re quired with reimbursement
Submit resume. Proof of Licensure and Reference s to·
Human Resources
Are_a Agency on Aging
District 7, Inc
F32, URG, P.O. Box 500
Rio Gra nde, Ohio 45674
email· jshong@aaa7 .org

Bass player and drummer
needed lor new band in Rio
Grande area , Call Morgan Equal Opportunity Employer
740-245-9241 or Terry
(740)992·0739
Seeking energet ic candiHelp wanted caring tor the dates to trai t:~ as dental assistants , compute r e)(peri~lderly, Darst Group Home,
ence
preferred . Interested
now paying minimum wage,
new shifts: 7am -3pm, 7am- persons send res ume to PO
Sp m, 3pm-1 tpm, 11.pm- Bo.~e 704, Pomeroy, Oh
45769
7am. call740·992·5023.

=

·
Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
mlll1"ust call 304-675·1957.
Mothheor ~ef 2P~illatbeabpy~syil :;;
my
nv
lin" (3041895 3277
"'·
.•
Will repair aulomobiles. All
types of repairs. ASE certifled, 16 yean~ experience.
Galt (740 )441 •0199

For Sale by owner - 3 bed rooms, 1 bath, 1 floor plan,
carport. 135 Klneon Drive,
(7401446 2776
··.::.:.:.;...:.:.."::._.;.__ _ _ _
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
tract. $500 down to qu~lified
buyers. Call (740)446 -3570
for a quick sale.
:.::..:...c:,.:.:.::.=...
____
Land home packages. No
·payments while under construction.
Little
or no
down payment required .

•·.:.::;.:.::..:==----..,..-448 321 8
~4°)

r1Q

BUSINESS

OPPOR11JNTJY

I NOTICE!
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH·
JNG co. recommends that
you do business with people
you ~now, and NOT to send
money th rough lhe mail until
you have Investigated " the ·
offering.

~:-;..:=::-----....,
PROFF.SSIONAL

SER\1CES
L.--i;;;:o;;liiil-._.1
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 15.517
No Fee Unless We Winl
1·888·582·3345

riO

HOMES
FOR SALE

New 2000 sq ft home, 10
minUles tram Hospital.
Complete above grou nd
pool with porch, driveway
and garage loundation.
Pri ce
below
appraisal.
(7401446-3384

:

Out Sandhill Rd. New win·
dows , plumbing. electrical,
roof,
Rei. and
stove.
$49 .900. (304)675-5636

~~~E

L--.lilliiiiillliil;..;..l

·-------pJ
•

.

1.,

FOR

SAU:

1996 Cla')lton 14x60 2br,
glamour bath; all electric,
cen1ral air. Call (30;4 )675·
81 so
--------MUST SELL BY THE END
OF OCTOBER! COLE'S
MOBILE HOME, Athens ,
Ohio(740 592 -1972 • 0noceasion we have a display
home tha"t doesn't sell . We
have one such home now
New 16 X 80 three bed·
room, 2 Bath home at a
used heme price come see
Lyn n or Ernie today and
check ou t your savings
Re member, we musl sell by
the end of October!

l

,

2 _bedroom mobile h?me m

~ldd:popor\$
J~ ~~ ~~~:
51 1 0 91 2
8
2

pus
'
l"
·
2 Bedroom trailer new car ·
1
1 ~ G II"
~e ' near a•rpor 10 a lpo115 · $ 250 month, no pets.

~740)367-7760

r

APART'MENTS
F~R RENT

r

Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
LM:SrtlCK
ques, ,24 East Main on L~-------;..1
SA 124 E. Pome·roy, 740- · 992 -2526. Russ Moore: 3 · Nanny Goats. an bred .
owner.
APHA Palomino Stud, 2- 1/2
years otq, broke. 2 Pain Fit ~llscELLANF.OUS
lies with
Blue
Eyes
MJ.:RCIIANDL"E
(740)367-7221

1.,-------·

15 inch Computer monitor.
I ({ \:'ISI~t({T.\TION
$50. Se at 9 computer
games.
SJO .
Phone flO
(740)446-2316
·
Atn"Ui
· HJR SALE
1991 Dodge Ca ra va.n new · - - - - - - - "
computer $1500. 7uP Can 1980·90 's Cars/ Trucks
pop Machine S75 2 AJC from $500. Police Impounds
120- $25. 220-$50·., Ret for sate For li sting 1-800$25,
12.5-H P
30~-cut 719-300 1 8111 . 390 1
Craftsman riding lawl_}mower. $350., 1989 Dodge ram 1985 Dodge Lanser. runs
pi ckup , Rally
wheels. good.
S1 75 .
Phone
52,000. (304)675 -6512
(740)446-2316
,
25" Zenith Cabinet. floor 1991 Honda Civic, good
model color TV, 540 .00 condition, runs great , Red
Phone (740)446-2316
wit!"! CD player, $1500 060
7401256 81 16
· Evenings: 740-367- · BURN Fat. BLOCK crav - . (
.
0502.
ings, and ·BOOST Energy · 1992 Chevrolet
Lumina
UKe You Have Never E)( - Euro. 4 door sedan, $1,500 .
Twin Ri\ters Tower for eld - perienced.
_Phone (740)446-3479 after
WEIGHT LOSS
5pm
erlyt disabled.
•
-'---''- - - - - - Now accepting
· appllcat1
· ·ons
REVOLUTION
1997 Grana Am. 2D. GT.
~or 1 br, an u1ili\ies p~id New23product
launch Octo- S3,995; 1996 Sunfire, 20.
200
HUO -assisted, carpeted ber
•
2. Call Trac\1 at . GT. $3 .6~5: 1995 Grand
740 44 1 1982
apartment. rent is 30% of (
1 AM, 20.' GT. $3,495; 199 1
your adjusled income
call Ch
· 1mas Na1·1v1., y ce ne, Probe
,. GT. $1,295 . COOK
.
. r1s
30 4-675-6679 between 8- $125. (740)256 -6012
MOTORS, (740)446,0103
4.30 pm weeKdays EHO
2000 PontiaCGrand AMI GT
.
·
.
Country Kitchen table with 2
unturmshed apartment, also chairs, pole ta mps, table Auto rna tic V-6 . .4· door Huntsmall trailer close_to ~rocery lamp, antique cream and er!Green Loaded. Good
Condition, one owner 992&amp; downtown Ga_lllpolls. Ref- sugar bowl set (appro:oc. 75
0840
erence &amp; Deposit. (740)446 - yearS old) (740)446-4647
1
1 58
.
.
.
91 Pontia c Grand Am. 4 cyl
DmeHe set w1lh 6 chairs,
Gracio us living. 1 ·and 2 36.~e72 table. $50. Call be- 5 sp. ale, new l1res. high
miles. (740)742·2558
bedroom apartments at V•l- tween
10am -8pm
lage Manor and _RIVerside (304)675-4861
96 Grand Am GT, 125,000
Apartments In M•ddleport . ::.:c.::.:.:..:...:.::.;._____ dr1ven daily, $3500 negotia·
From
. $27B·S348 . Call 740· Go- Ca11 lor sale 1 year old
992·5064, Equal Housing 6.5 H P Paid S1 ,300. Sell ble 1740)44 1·9317

s

Ii

·1. and 2 bedroom apart ments, furnished and unfurnished, security deposit required. no pets. 740·992·
2218
__ _ _
· ------:1 bedroom apartment, stove
&amp; refrigerato r included, utili!ies included. (740)245-5859
1 Bedroom Apartments
Starting at $289/mo, Wash-

:~d ~~f~rge~a~~~u&amp;4o1:~:
1519.

.:.::.~------,...
2 bedroon: _apartme~nt in

!::;:::;.__ _ _ _ _ _

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PAl·
CES AT JACKSON ES·
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $297 to $383. Wa lk to
shop &amp; movies. Call f740·
446-2568 . Equal Hous ing
Opportunity.
·

sPACE

FOR

·v

I

j

I=----...;.;;;;.;.,

2 bedroom, all electric, AC,
very ni ce, in Gallipolis.
(740)446 2003 or (740)446
•
•
1409
Beautiful River View Ideal
For 1 or 2 People, ReterenDe
., N Pel F
ces,
POSI • 0
s, os,
t
1i ·1 p k 740 441
er ra• er ar ·
·
·
0181
·
Opportunities.
for $650. willing to trade.
CaII (304)675 · 1935 It no I
Clean 3 Bedroom Mobi le
Home in the Country. ~. mall f~rnished apt. A_ll utit- home call (304)675-2682
1740)256 6574
1t1es pa1d e)(cepl ElectriC No ..:...:..:...:..:..=...:.:..:..==·
P,als. • Securily· Deposit Re - Grubb's Piano - Tu ning &amp;
Mobile home for rent, no quired .
$275.
Monlh. Repairs. Probl ems? Nee d
pets. (740)992-5858
(304)675-1365
Tuned ? Call The P1ano Dr.
1740A46·4525 .

Gallipolis. Air washer, 01 dry·
er hoo~-u p, .no pets, water
paid, $ 350/mo. plus deposit.
Call after 6pm, {740)446 '
-'40:.4;.:3_,17:..4..:0"13:.;3:,9·.::.3.:.06:.;3_ _
-:Subdivision. For more infor- 2br. Apartment at Gallipolis
3:,
04;.:1.:.
67.::.5_.2:.;54
mation call (740)388 -9851
:.Fe:::r:.:rY.::.I.:.
:.
. 8:::·--,-_
acre wooded lot. . 4 rooms and bath, stove/ re ·
5118
2 112
·
cleared tor building . Porte' !rigerator. Utilities paid ,
' $400 month. 46 Olive
area . No Sing le wides,
6
$10,500. call (740)446-45~4 .:Sc.tree=t.:,17':'4-'0~14':'47·.:.39:..4:.:5_-:fro m 8-5.
ApplicatiOns being taken for
very nice 2 bedroom in
Patriot area , 20 wooded
t
tf
t 1
1
acres , county water &amp; elec· coun ry se •ng ye -; ose. 0
1 n Washer Or er Stove
tric, homes ite. Borders ow ·
' Y '
'
Wayne National Forrest, e.~e- Frig, DiShwasher provided
celle~t hunting, $ 3S,OOO Large Kitchen. LOIS of closet space. Total electric with
17401379 •9141
Central A/C. Garbage picK·
Prime lots tor sate on Slate Up and water provided. Ten Route 554- 1 mile tfom Ri o · ant pays electric. No pels.
Grande.
(740)388-0173 Non smokers only. $400 de(740)367-7187
posit,
$450
month,
(7401446-9585 or (74 01 446 ·
0 " ' · ..,_
JV..AL ~•i\lE
2205. 1743
Centenary
WANTED
R_o~d, Gallipolis. As~ for Vir • gm 1a.

Wante dl Good ere d.,1 cus·
tamers I o pureh ase new
home w!land. SO dOwn to
qualified cus tomers . 1-5
acre
tracts
ava ilable . Will pay lop dollar tor p r~me
(740)446-3093
land . New home builder.
MOBilE HO'·IF.S
(740) 44 6·3093

Honeysuckle Hills Apart·
·ments_located behind Colonial Drive behind Highwa')l
Patrol . ~st. 1 BR now available Rent starts $245/
month. Low &amp; moderate income. Equal Housing Oppprtunity. {740)446-3344 or
TOO 1·800·750·0750.
'------.....,.--Large 2br, ApPliances furnished . Deposit required .
HUO
accepted.
$285.
(,.3::0::4::16,::75:.·:..77::8=3---Now Tak ing Appli cations35 West 2 Bedroom Townhouse Apa rtme nts. Includes
Water
Sewage, Trash,
S35 0/Mo .• 740 ·446 ·0008 ·
Tara Townho1.,1se Apartments, Very Spacious. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Palio, Start $37S/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus security Deposit
Required, Days: 740-446-

A~,lQUL~

1- \U:\1 sn•1•1 u .s
&amp; 11\fSIO( K

I

roR RENT

I

· ..,___;,;;._,;._,.1.

Sponsored by CreditXpn:ss
in the Pomeroy parking lot on
Nov. 19th from 9am to 7 pm!

i

r
r

A::n= Ir

RENr

lira 1
·1er space lor rent . $125
per month, plus depos it.
Priest's Trailer Park . Wa ter
~
-

,.,,.....------~

10

HOUSEIIOIJ)
GOOilS

...__ _ _ _ _ __.!
Almond Whirlpool electric
stove, $75: Almond refrigerator, $75 : Whirlpool &amp; Kenmore .washers, $65 each.
Call alter 6pm, (740)4469066
B d
h
It ..
d
e s couc co ee en Ia
. abed m1
:
bles ·dresser' htd
·
. •.
· •
crowave, recliner, drop leal
table .. (740 l446 · 9742
Debbie Wa')lland
740·992-3872

Congralulatlon~l -.:au have
1
twhon 2 ~eevm 0v e hcGkelll~ to
. e 5 p~~ng a e~
a •PO·
lis Call the Senl•nel for d
:
eta11s. (740}992·2155)
For Sale : Recond itioned

1 7

washers, dryers and retrig·
erators . Thompsons Applianee 3407 Jackson A'"e
·
" •
nue, (304)675·7388.
Good Used Appliances, Re-'
conditioned and Guaranleed
Was h.ers, Dryers,
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Some start at $95. Skaggs
Appliances , 76 Vine St.,
(740)446-7398

97 Avenger ES. 53495, 96
Stratus, $2695, 95 Grand
Pri)(, 52695: 92 Grand Am ,
$1895, 92 Firebird $2495,
9i Camr1 , 52695,91 Escort ,
$1450, 90 Esco rt , $995, 88
Cavalie r z,24 , 51695: 87
Celica GT, $1895 . Rome
Auto Sales, Proc torvill e.
JET
OH. Over 35 cars &amp; tru cks
AERATION MOTOR"S
Repaired , New &amp; Rebu ilt In to choose from (740)886Stock. Call Ron Evan s. 1- 1343
800-537 -9528.
99 Ford Taurus SE, must
111
NEW AND USED STEEL se (740)339-0213
B
p·
R b
992 Model (LLAI Chr ysle1
teet ea ms, 1pe e ar
For Concrete. Angle , Chan- LeBaron. \16, 3.0 engine,
nel, Flat Bar. Steel Grati ng loaded , clean {740)446For Drains, Driveways &amp; 151.1
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met- Las! Addi!IOn 97 Ford Thunals Open Monday. Tuesday, derbird , VS. 2 Door. tully
Wednesday &amp; Fnday, Sam - loaded, 23,000 Miles, Excellent Condition. 992-3158
Clos:d
a ur ay
un ay. MUST SELl'
(740)446-7300
1987 Plym outh Re liant
New Wooel masler. 18" pia· $500.00 cash has 134,000
ner molde r, 4 year warrarity actual.. mites for more info,
lett, dust collector $2700. call 99 2-2230 or 992-1195.
0 80 can b8 seen at Pt. Leave Name &amp; Number will
Pleasanl Hardware for more ca n bacl&lt;
304 675 8958
1010
·
call
·
Walerline Special: 3/4 200
PSI $21 .00 Per 100: 1" 200 1':!:::--~----.,
PSI $35.00 P8r 100: All
TtUICKS
Brass Compres' sion Fittings
FOR SALE
In StocK.
·
RON EVANS ENTEAPRIS- 1983 Freight Liner cab over
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-800- 350 Cummings . 13spd in
537 9528
great shape, too many new
::::..:·
Wheel Chair with Wheele parts to mention Must sell
d~1e to health
Spen t over
Bars asking S:BO Beside the $t3 ,000, ask•ng $5800
bed chair asking $30. Both
(740) 388 -9325
in Excellent CondiliOn
(304)895 -3577 (304)675- 1988 Ford Ranger. goOd
::69~6:;;8-~-----, body, new, used en gine .
rl&lt;
S1 .000. (740)388·9305

s

~-3tOp~.

T~urs~ay.

20

=:.___:___

BUU.DING

L---Siiolii.IJ'I'i.iii.IEIIOO.:S"_ _.~

1991 Ford Ranger 5 sp ,
Low Rider. Tinted Windows.
A c Snarp A ns G·o d
Mollohan Carpet . 202 Clark Bl_ock, brick, sewer pipes,
· ·
.
u
o
S2500 ·00 (7401 992 •3253
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohl·o. w1n. dows. hn_tels. e1c. Claude
(740)446 -7444 1-877-830- Winters, R•o Grande, OH - - - - - - - - 1992 Chev\1 pickup, 4)(4 ,
9162. Free Estimates, Easy Call 740-245·512t
350 V-8, low mileage, Masfinancing, 90 days same as
PJ..I'S
sey Ferguson Tractor, 35
ca~h . Vis.a/ M~ster Card
FOR SAlE
Deluxe. call (740)245-5628
Dnve- a- little save alai.
__
•
.

r

RCA 27in Console TV with 2 AKC niale registered Gerremote; DarK Maple desk, 4 man Sheppard 6 wks old
drawers and chair; Burgan- pups, solid blac~ &amp; black
dy rocker/ recliner. All in e)(· and brow n $200 00 call
cellent condition. (740)388 -· 992-3972 after s p.m
Furnished 3 rooms + bath , 8997
•
upstairs, clean, no pels.
f'-.unlture store, 130 Full blooded Cocker Spaniel
R~leren ce S. deposit re- Used
BulaiJille Pi~e . We sell mat- puppies BlacK &amp; White and
qui red . (740)446-1519
,;,.::=c.::.=....:.....:.=- - tresses, bunK beds, dress- Grey ·s· While Pare~JI S on
Furn1shed Efliciencies, all ers, couches, appt1ance s, premises . Sh ots~ 1so.
utilities paid, 1share bath , much more. Grave manu7 4 0 44 6 2 9 8 6
$1 35 month, 919 2nd Ave - ments, (740}446-4782 Gal - ~~~::1c:::::·::::::=_ _ _ _
nue, (740)446-3945
,..l
ip:;o:;:lis:;.
:O
:;;,;H;..
. - - - - - . Lab puppies , yellow or
£
black, $75. (740)256-6733
Gatlia Manor Apa rtments,
~"
;.,..,
138
Bu hl
Morton Rd .,
1 Aatl Fox Terrier puppy, 1
male lei!, 52500, (740)379·
Gallipolis now accep11ng ap 25 15. Cell phone (740)645 plications lor a 1 Bedroom,
HUD, Subsidized apartment Carolina Ant ique &amp; Cralt 2070 {740)645·2599
lor elderly and handicap- Mall 312 6th. St. Pl. Plees- :::::.::.c.:=;:::::.::::::___
ped . (740)446-4639. Equal ant , WV. Antique &amp; Cra t1 ROTIWEILEA .14 wks. old,
Vendors Wel come.
Female 5200 00 773-5873
Hous1ng Opportunity

::======:::I
r10

HOUSES
RE

FOR

.

NT

1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From S~99/Mo . , 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For Ustings, 800-31933_23_E_''_· _17_0_9_
. ---_
1 bedro om furnished hOuse
in Gallipolis. Good localion,
no smokers, no pets. References
required
(740 )446- ~ 162
~::;.:.::.::..;..;.:;:::...._ ___
i
bedroo m
house.
(740)388 -8547

•

I

~a~~ge, i~~g~ yardde~~~: . , 3~81 :

=.:..:.;::..:,:______

r

786 N. 2nd, Middl~port

5 room
hOuse, near
schools.
and
stores.
(740)446-0974 .
5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St.
$3 25 mo. (7 401446 .3945

Mobile
Ferment
1994
14X50 Central Air, Smooth
2 Bedroom,· living rm ., den,
Top Range. Side-By-Side
ri:lfrigerator, was.ter &amp; Dryer dining rm., kitchen, 1 bath, 2
porches, 2 stor')l· house,
$6500(740)696·0105
newly decorated. Close to
$435.00/mo.
1994 Schult 16x72 MObile downtown,
Home Priced to sell Quick plus utilities. $350.00 Deposit. (304)675-2651
Caii(740J 385·2434
.
3br. full SIZe basement &amp;
Must Sell Immediately! 3
year old 1999 Oakwood
16x80, 3 bedrooms, 2 13041675. 4 .-9
~
baths, LA, Kitchen {appllan·
··
ces included), laundry room .
MooUE HOMES
Serious Inquires onlyl!! Call

I

.:. .==-=-=-=------

FRUTH PHARMACY

3 bedroom house In Gallipo·
lis,
monthly rent plus
deposit No pels. One
month deposit and reterences required . Taking applications. Call (740)645-2088
For appointment to view.
Will be available Dec. 1 ·
--------3 bedroom house, $450
month pl us deposit. No
pets. (740)446·43~3

1980 Hill Crest ,4x70, 2
bedroom, 2 bath. appliances, 2 A/C units, $2500. LP
Gas. (3041675-7633

.
·
PP •ca •on
deadlme:
. TheNovember
AMESC is 21
an' rlO
,.
2002
E
"ly E
FOR
SALE
qua1 0. pportun•
mp 1(!'{· ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.J.
·er/Prov•der
(304 )675-7347 or
1 400 square fl . home, 3 after 67p,
75:..·6
8_ _ _ _
Truok Drivers, Immediate" bedroom, 2 full" bath, 2 car ::P::04
=c1=:.:
::9::0::
.hire, class A COL required, garage, 1 acre lot In coun- Must sell! Owner moved,
e)(cellent pay, experience try, Racine, asking $80,000 2001 Oakwood t4x70, JBR,
required, Earn _up to OBO. (7401949·1353 ·
2 bath, all appliances,
$1,000. per week.Call304washer ·&amp; dryer included,
:,67..:5:..·40,.::0:,5_ _ _ _..,.-- 3 bedroom, 2 bath Brick central air w1lh deck, ·Make
hallie in Centenary area . down payment &amp; take 0\ler
URGENTLY
NEEDED- 1/2 acre lot ·and additional $370 month mortage payplasma donors, earn $50 Ia 24x24 building. For more in- ment.s, {216)351-7086
.
$60 per week tor 2 or 3 formation or appointment
hOurs weekly. Call Bio Lite call
(740)645 -2088
or New 2003 14 wide. Only
Plasma Service, ·740 -592- (740)388-9851
$799 down and only
66 51.
$159.45 . Call NiKki, 740Woman's
pres cription LOOKING FOR A FUN ::.;.;.__ _ _ _ _ _ 3 bedroom, Garfield Ave· 385-7671 .
,~!f95:5c~C:::~~ni~yt fc~:~~-. JOB? THIS IS ITI OFFICE AVON 1 All Areas! To Bu')l or nue, Gallipolis, OH . Owner
ENVIRONMENT so POSI- Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- financing, 549,000. $4,000 N1ce lots available for up to
Silver
Br idge
Plaza TIONS AVAILABLE. 1·888- 675-1429.
down,
$365
month . "16x80 mobile homes, $115
·
17401446 •1018
4-JOBS
·
(3041988·0664
water Included, (74019 92 ·
97
Veteran• Outreach
O
=2:ii16~7--~----,
Lookinn ror LPN. Monday- ..
_1-888 -2-V ET _NET
3 or 4 bedrooms, 2'""balhs, t p
YARD SAlli
FARMS
1 Friday,·~no weekends or Hoi- "Bus~ness- p ub1 1c AeIa- b asemen I . New wInd ows,
FOR SALE
idays. Apply in person, 936 lions I Stale &amp; Federa_lly siding, root HVAC, plumb:'l'r_':':'_"::"_ __, State Route 160 . 17401446• Registered : Excellent 1n- ing, wiring. Garage , covered
L--~::::~::0::;.._.1
.
r,072 · YARD SALE·
9620
come and Security Some patio, large yard. Gonven. travel required . Prefer vet· ien't Grape Street. (740)446· VICKI WEAVER
~.oo-..,;GiiiALLoiiiiiiiii'OiiiiiLiiiSiioo_.l LPT, LPTA for home health eranst Vel's Retat_ionship. 3108 after 6:00pm
Congratulations! You have
...,
svcs. ChOICeS available for Send resume to Businesswon 2 tree movie ticKets to
Re lations524 BricK Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2 the Spring Valley 7. in Ga tthe counties or areas Public
Inside &amp; Out, 1699 McCor·d
bath , garage, on river, 5 11"pol1"s. Call the Reg1"ster to·
.
11
C
d
urren y provt e Youngstown Poland Rd .. miles south of Gallipolis.
mick Ad, ·4 families . 3 rooms serve
day for details.(304 )675 "
lull , 1.992 Chrysler LeBaron , services in Jackson, Meigs, Struthers , OH 44471 . Fax 740 44 88 17
) ,.
~333
V6 carl Lot or variely. No- Athens, Gallia, Vinton; and 330-755-5930 Attn : Adam (
southern Washington coun- Dolan Sr.
$65,000 OBO, in Ohio, 3
BuslNFS'i
·vember 21.22,23 10am-?
ties. Call (740) 286-6631
=:;::::.:.;::::.:.;_ _ _ _ _
. - bedroom , 2 car garage, gas
B
WAN'IED
Work From Home . Could
AND UIIJ)JNGS
TO BUY
MaKe extra money for You Use EXTRA Income?_ fireplace, wood floors , 1.47 - .
Christmas. Sell
Avon. $500 to $1000 per Mo acre. (304)67 5-2364
•
- - - - - - - - - Large Commercial Retail
(740)446-3358 ·
· We 'll tra in you step-by- 59 .000 Foreclosure! 3 BR Office or Building on 1 to 5
4
Absolute Top" Dollar: U.S.
step. Call
(740)446- 208 home won 't last! For t"st·
1 1ng acres .tor sate . rent or tease
'
Silver, Gold Coins, Proof - Mason Co. 9t 1 is accepting 6pm-Bpm, or visit:
call 1-800-7,9-3001
E)(l So.me owner financing availsets,
Diamonds,
Gold applications for lull &amp; part www.tovourphysicalwealth .com F 144
able. In Rio Grande area.
Rings.
u:s. Currency,- time Dispatching Posilion~· ~t40
B
740 245-5747
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- Pick up App lica1ions at 91 1
· USINESS
1 story brick house, 3 BA, if:~~~~---.,
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740Center.
TRAINING
446·2842 .
McCl ure's Restaurant now
(
7401446 2290
hiring all 3 locations, full or Gallipolis Career College
t ~11'1.0\" ME'i" l
rt-time, .pick up appl ica - (Careers Close To Home) . Cottage style home. 2 bed· 1/2 acre lot on -Tycoon Lake
pa
•oda 1740 446 4367
1 2 BOT ·1 r$16 500 oo
SER\IOS
~;..;,;_..;;;..;,;_.;..._,
lion allocation &amp; bring back CaII ' ' Y
•
•
· room, full basement, 2 car w 1 x ' 3 500
ra1 e00 •
·
1· Boo · 214 ·0452 •
between ·
9:30am
&amp;
garage, road frontage. 10 now $ ' .
.
110
10:00am, Monda')llhrU satReg #90-05-1274B.
acres, welt ma1n1a1ned, calli,7_4..::01:..:2:..4..::7...:·1_10:_0:__ _~
1-IEI.J' WAN'lED
urday.
u.1ANTED
Danny Brown for appoint- 1
n.
2 lois close to Gallipolis on
9 9 89
40
17:::
,, OWNER OPERATORS
·
'fo Do
~m;.:e;.:nt"-.;.:
:.:1:,4;;_c" 00:.__;__ old Rouse 35 in Sunkist

I

1not

any ka11 or expenM lhllt re~utt. from thl publatlon Ot omlaalan ot an advertiMI'MnL Correction will be made In the rtrsl nallabla edition. • Box nu:,~;.~:
are alwllys confldenta.l, • Cwrent nt. eft appfln. • AN rHI nhlte ad'lfertlsements are aubject to the Federal Fair Houslnv Ac t ol 1968. • Thls n
eccepts onl~ help want.ct llde meeting EQE lt.ndlrclt. We will not
.ccept •nv
In vlolttlon of the ltw,

til

Thll newspaper will not
knowingly accept
.tvertlsernents for real
estate which Is in
violation cif the law. Our
readers are hereby .
Informed that all
dwellings tdvertlaed In
thll newspaper sre ·
av•llable on an equal
opportunity basel.

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

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Buslne:s:s Oavs Prior To
.Publication
Sunday Display : 1 : 00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundays Pa

POLICIES: Ohio Ydey Publishing ,.....,. . tfw right to edit, rwject, or cancel an.- ad 11 any lime. ErTOrl must be repof1ed Ofl the first day
Trlbune-S.nllnet-Reglstet will bl l't'IPQMiblt lOr no ~ tMn 1M colt of the space occupied by the .,or and only the flrll insertion . We

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • 1-:"~Ciude Complete
Oescrlptlon • Include A Price • Avo id Abbreviations
• Include Pho r) e Number And Addres s Whe n Needed
• Ads Should. R1,1n 7 Days

·Successful Ad·s
Should Inclu·de These Items
To He I Get Response ...

Trail Blazers 911
Magic 84

~1J7?7?1J

675-5234

Oecul/;irM

At Memphis, Tenn., Allen
Iverson scored 33 points as
Philadelphia
kept
the
Grizzlies the NBA's only
winless team at 0-12.
Stromile Swift set a
Memphis record by blocking
eight shots, and he also had
12 points and 16 rebounds.
Rookie Drew Gooden led the
Grizzlies with 21 points.

CreditXpress is celebrating it's NEW Outdoor Loan program
by inviting you to come see the Richard English Live Deer
Show! If you're looking for a loan to
finance your outdoor lifestyle come to
CreditXpress in Pomeroy. We have
special loan programs in place for
4-wheelers, RV's, 4 X 4 trucks and
much more. Our Customer Service
Reps. will work with
you to make sure you
get the loan you need . ,
C•ll Nowt

~egister
(304) ·675-1333

Sentinel

,ca 1f;~::v... (7!~~ To~!~;!~~2

CliNIC

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

~.

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

FRIDft HOVEMBER 2Znd l:Oo-4:00 PM
and won the award three
weeks later.
Yet it was Schembechler
and Hayes who stoked the
fires of the rivalry.
·
Schembechler, a native
Ohioan, stocked "his roster
with homegrown players, so
the game frequent! y pitted
teamJl.late·s and · friends
against each other.
Hayes once said that he ran
out of gas while on a recruiting trip · and pushed the car
south on 1-75 rather than
spend his money on gas m
That State. Up Nonh:
For one Saturday in
November, almost everyone
·in Michigan or Ohio has a
rooting interest. No one is
neuiral. Everything stands
still.
"This is a big game and
there 's a Jot at stake for both
teams," said Ohio State linebacker Cie Grant. "When you
throw it into a .rivalry game,
this is probably one of the
biggest weeks in Ohio State
history. I'm just glad to be a
part of it."

..

'

In one week With us

76ers 95
Grizzlies 88

At Portland, Ore., Rasheed
Wallace had 26 points and 14
rebounds.
and
Derek
Anderson added 26 points as
the Trail Blazers won consecutive games for the first time
this season.
.
Orlando's Tracy McGrady
had 33 points, the seventh
consecutive game he's scored
at least. 30 points - a franchise record and the nitith
time this season.

'

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

Jazz 96
Nuggets 79

I

T-wolves 103
Hawks 93

. _ _ _~_r_ih_u_ne Sentinel - l\egister

CLASSIFIED

Celtics breeze pas~ Nets in playoff rematch
BOSTON (AP) - The
Boston Celtics and New
Jersey Nets are waiting until
the playoffs to officially
renew one of the NBA's bud·
ding rivalries.
. "It doesn't mean nothing,"
Celtics guard Paul Pierce said
Wednesday night
after
Boston's 96-79 home victory.
"This game doesn't put us
into the NBA Finals. It's a
regular-season game."
The teams met in the
Eastern Conference finals last
season and became bitter
opponents when New Jersey .
obJected to how Boston celebrated after the Nets blew a
26-point lead in Game 3.
Celtics fans ·also taunted
Jason Kidd 's wife and son
during the series, which the
Nets won in six games.
"The rivalry started in the
playoffs, and it will have to
continue in the playoffs, not
the regular season," Kidd
said .
Tony Delk and Shammond
Wi II iams each scored 21
points - the "first time this
season that neither Pierce nor
Antoine Walker led the
Celtics in scoring. Pierce had
18 points and 13 rebounds.
and Walker added 16 points
as the Celtics snapped a twogame losing streak.
"The big two didn't have
their 'A' game tonight," said
Kidd, who scored 19 points.
"So it shows they're different
Boston Celtics' Tony Battie, left, and New Jersey Nets' Dikemt&gt;e Mutomtlo, right, grapple for control of the ball in the first quar·from last year."
. ,_In other NBA games, it ter of NBA play Wednesday in Boston. The Celtics beat the Nets 96-79. (AP)
was: Indiana 97, Toronto 95;
28 points, including eight 3- Ben Wallace had
19 ing from the floor, but had a
San Antonio 95, the Los
pointers,
as
the
Spurs
overrebounds,
a
season-best
12 game-high 12 rebounds for
Angeles Lakers · 88; Detroit
came
an
early
shooting
.
points
and
tied
a
franchise
the Timberwolves, who beat
79, Miami 68; Minnesota
slump.
high with 10 blocks to lead the Hawks for the sixth
l03 , Atlanta 93; Utah 96,
straight time.
At
Toronto,
AI
Harrington
The
Spurs
made
only
one
Detroit
over Miami.
· Denver 79; Philadelphia 95,
Glenn Robinson scored 33
Chucky Atkins scored a
Memphis 88; Portland 98, scored 16 of his 22 points in of their first 19 shots from the
Orlando . 84; Golden State the seconp half as Indiana field and fell behind by 12 in season-best 21 points in place points and Shareef Abdur100, Chicago 94; and improved to 9-1 to match its the opening period. But of the injured Chauncey Rahim had 23 points and II ·
Jackson ca.me off the bench Billups.
rebounds for Atlanta, which
Sacramento 93, the Los best start.
Jermaine O'Neal added 20 · and made three 3-pointers . Eddie Jones scored 15 had won three . straight and
Angeles Clippers 89.
The Celucs took control points for .the Pacers, who late in the quarter to start San points . for Miami, which was 4-0 at home.
with a pair of 11-0 runs in the tied the team record set in the Antonio's comeback.
failed to reach 70 points for
Kobe Bryant led theLakers the second time in three
third quarter, with the Nets 1969-70ABA season.
scoring just 14 points on 4Vashon Lenard had 22 with 24 points, but scored games.
only nine in the second half.
for-22 shooting in the period.
poin.
t
s,
and
Alvin
Williams
21
Injured center . Shaquille
"We were terrible IOnight,"
Nets coach Byron Scott said. for the shorthanded Raptors, 0 Neal plans to make his sea"I don't understand how you who have lost three straight. son debut Friday night at
home against Chicago.
can come in here, especially
At Atlanta, Troy Hudson
against a team that you know
scored 20 points and Marc
is going to play you extreme.Jackson added 18 · for
ly hard, that wants to beat you
Minnesota. ·
badly · ... and we come out
At
San
Antonio,
Stephen
Kevin Garnett was held to
with a lackadaisical effort."
At Auburn Hills. Mich .. · 15. points on 5-for-19 shoot. Jackson scored a career-high

l

m..;.y•d•a•ily;.s.e•n•t•in•e•l•.c.;o.m--------------~T~h;e;.:Daily Sentinel. • Page B 3

s

ANTIQl
i"-------_.1
·

"

... , -•.,. ,. r.,., . . ......

-

1996 GMC blended Cab
V-8. automatiC, air, lil t,
cruise. remote control s1art.
Excellent Condition. $9,250.
(304)675· 79 46
1998 Chevy S-10. 4 C')lhn-.
aer. 5-speed, Silve.r. sport
s1"de bed. AC. $5 .500. ·200 1
CBR 600F41. (7 40) 4469769

:.:..:cc..._ _ ____,__ __

95 Chevy S1lverado Z-21,
EMI Cab, 1500. V-8. auto.
e)(Cellent cond1!ton S9995 ,
(74014 46·2927
Tamml Brabham
Congratulations! You have
won 2 tree movie l!ckels
to the Spring Valley 7 In
Gallipolis Call the Tnbune
for detailS. (740)446-2342

~- ----·-- .. --1~-

- --,..

�Thursday, November 21, 2002

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydallysentlnel.com

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

1987 Chevy Van. mechan1c
owned Luxury Van (wi1h
wmk) or work van. S1 200
firm Kelly (7 40)446·9961

JUST launched!!!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Nalurai/Doctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740·992-7996
or visil website:
www.herbsndlet.corn

89 Chev-y Blazer, 4WO,
loaded, 172,000 miles
(740)446·7399 or (740)423·
5141
95 Dodge .Caravan, sligh
damaQe.

Good

vehicle.

(740)245·5589
C~ti'Jo:RS &amp;
MmnR 1lo~u:-;
1996 Dutchman 2611 fifth wheel travel tr&lt;iiler, sleeps
6. LP gas, electnc. refngeralor, a•r cond1t1oner. stereo,
and microwave ' Good co n·
dilion

OPEN HOUSE
12pm-6pm
Fri. &amp; Sat. November 22 &amp; 23
Juanita G rueser
44320 Forest Run Rd. Racine

MillS
FllllY
CIISTiiCDOI

f'olurth

Footers, Foundation.
Add-Ons, New Homes.
Pole Barns, Concrc:le.

EJ.ectri£.-PLumbing

LARRY SCHEY

/cH,VRO,~Tj

~

..

I

ROBERT
..
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NIMHomes
•Gaages
•Cot; I 1: Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

TIME TO
PAINT T\4'

HOUSE_,

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

WV000306, 304·675· 1786.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Ope n 9am-~pm
Pr.ll a.h~. fr. in hom&amp; piekup
Cllll 111 1or .:n )'OUt ~er ~tt&lt;ll

(740) 446-1812

\.

flJi f

Str\!irt PlnnsJ

Baseball, Racing,
Football, Basketball
241 Lincoln Street
Middleport

Longaberger/Dresden

GREENHOUSE
~~~ SUE's
Quality, Variety, Low Prices
Righ&amp; Dry Grave Blankets $S.Oo-$25.00

Bus Trip
Sat .. November 30, 2002
$65.00· Space Limi1ed
Deadline' CX;t. 20. 2002

992-5815 '

Everyone recei ves a

basket!!! Call:

i 7

•

.

Wreaths $10 Ei up

Self-Storage

7

lAMM'S

33795 Hiland Rd.
· Pomeroy, Ohio.

CONSTRUCTION

.....
... o.

.

. Gooa Selection of Shrubs

740-992-5232

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions

•

Silk Poinsettias 94¢ ea
Swags $5.00 Ei up
1·740-949-2115

•

uhCadeC &amp; Gravely

Owner:
Terry Lamm
(740) 992·0739

TilE BORN LOSER
~---...;......,

j

Morning Star Road- CR 30 • Racine, Ohio •

'

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; S.ervice
• Tonneue Cover •

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR.

Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Other Accessorie,s·
\[,l~

KICK .OFF
~~~~~~~
r

ttoaseholds
In Meigs

CountyI
.. .

~dvertising

Deadline
Monday, November 25th
Call Dave or Jessica
992-2155

Monday-Friday 8·5PM • Saturday B-2pm

. PLUmBJDG
Jim Ruark
Electric, Plumbing,
• 8nd Small Home
Maintenance Job•

~4

~4

lbe
Deals
We

DillY
IIIIIU
Clllllll

(340 773·54, 2
Cell 304 674·3082

I-IAPPV

TllNIK56IVIN6,

01-'PAL!
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
~

i • Patio and Porch O.Ck8

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

iliJ

P0rr11roy, Ohio
I

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x20')

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
Ira vou Laid ani»

-y., ~·u·,. It •• cll/1', .1'
Skin, Cut, Wrop

6:30

&amp;Freeze

lsi Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

CAll

'DIWIII bacilli
Wlrl

17401

FDIMOIE
IMRIIIITIOI CIU
BIIIIIIMIIII

29670 Boshan Road

992·
2155

YOU CIUid bl 11111bllllrfBUhlll

....

B. D. COnSTRUCTIOn
992-297

$45.00
3164SSR32S
Lon~;~svllle,

OH

740-742-2076

BETTY

BUILDERS IDC.

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
mo. pa

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
Factory Authori zed
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

II}()() St. Ri. 7 Sowlt
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363

,.

Bv

-

~SIT ~\1ER

'(oU W\.IE\-1 I.

992-5479

i/t..lK. oUT

· )..oU1)?

TFN

l ..

~·

~·

3 ..
Allpall

BERNICE BooE OsoL

'

you'll get involved in the year
ahead could tur n ou1 1o Le
rather substantial. You may
tei.lm up with someone who
will add imagin ati on and
.
creativity to your project.
SCORPIO !Oct . 24-Nov.
22 1 .. Should an opportunity
develop for you toda~ from
an area or source yo u d least
expec1. you'll immediately
recognize it for whal it is and
jump at 1he chance to lake advantage of it.

TilE GRIZZWELLS

Ins~

P1u

F.1111t

An enterprise with Which

"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer'

Jeff Warner

Dbl .
••

...

Friday. Nov. 22. 2002

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

Cellular

North

30 Brook'l

10Uncl '
32 Greyllh
brown

34 Round
Toblo quoit
35 Nell
.
36 FICIIontl
goveme11

37 Putftn'o kin
36 Aock
membllr

42 Ftr Eat
20 Curler
ntnny
21 Air thlft
22 Htlt-moQn 43 Wind
.. lndlcttor
Udo
23 Brotkfttl 44 CtiTteh

1 Bellow
2 Competent
3 Cauu, 11
htvoc
4 Romlndioo
ohon

47~1.

Item

24 Conflct.nt
5 Prickly HOd 25 Sty the
rotary
6 Jacque•' pol

11ut1y

48 Ctutttobe
uneasy
4t Pllchol
lawn

28 ·Cot'e-paw

7 FIOII
a Actrou Rtlnoe
9 Rell,.ln
10 Jolt ol
tlectrlcHy
11 Rellful
12 Wrench or
hammtr
17 RN
employer

29' Erupt

51 CTRL
31 Surround
33 Beloro
ne~hbor
35 Nlckntmod 52- arct
tribe
37 Fortaaor
54 Btllpolnt
Vlgodt
400rilhe
point .
horizon

41 Bull-riding
event

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa

.

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms ""' c"'all&lt;l Irom quotetlono bY tamouo

people, peat and present. Each letter In the cipher stands ror another.

Today's clue: Y equsls L

"XTXMO

.

740-992·7599

DEPOYSAG
. PARTS

cHact.l
23 Cltlrvoy·
ence ·
26 Singer
Yoko27 Sptrko and

vvzx
K B P

PXBWVAW

WN

S. N E Y P

PNGWNM

J X

V·B R V P X

X T X M 0

UDNWNCMKUDXM

V R

UKVBWXM

WMOVBC

NEW."

UK J

Y N

K

WN

c xw

UVOKAAN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I was never a natural athlete, but I
paid my dues In sweat and concentration.".- Chuck Norris

I1---..:,
.

I

A RMU A T
I,:...;l~:.,l.;2..:..rl...:..'l__,
. . . . .

I

~==~==~::-_,

c A MC E
1---..;.
•...;,;....;.;,.,..:....,--i
. 1
. . 1
_ 1
_ .

:====::=:;::;Njl!

During a~v~e:';ry?:~~r
counsel meeting one voice
__,~..;.,;...;;.,.--n,.qrl:, could be heard above the rest.
My friend made this observation,
. . .
~
~.:._--------------, "People who are wrong usually
0 NI L I V
talk-----· ."
·
·

D R U 0 N;

, .
1-.

I I I

_

I I· Is 16 I I Ie
. .

Complete the chuckle quoted
bv filling in the misling word•

L...L--.l.-...L.-L-...L.--1 you develop from step No. 3 be low.
ll:l. PR INT NUMBERED LUTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

UNSOAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER .

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Enroll -Igloo • Waltz • Growth - THA TLONG

"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 THAT LONG."

-----li=-~----..;.....

1-800-822-0417

Hours

W~1t

DOWN

vagottble

19 Moltow

BY PHIWP ALliER
In most deals, one
side or the other can
make at least a game.
However, in a few
deals, both sides can
make a game. Then
there is the potential
for a double gameswing in a team event.
-- as in this example
from a tournament in
Australia.
At the first table,
the bidding was traditionaL North's twospade cue-bid announced at least 12
high-card points.
West's four -s pade
raise was brave -- but
it is fun to bid with a
Yarborough. After
North raised to five
. clubs, East . passed,
thinking he might
have sufficient defense to defeat that
contract. However, he
was wrong. After a
spade lead, South lost
only one heart trick
and scored plus 620.
At the other table,
..
'"I East opened two
UKt:t-\l&gt;l.~fli.t{(':, Ul&gt;, 5'\0Ctc:.'.) · "'u f€. WI&gt;..":&gt; MUCH MO~
spades, showing
~\MPI..E. F~ OJ~ ~IY'
some eight winners
1'$£ OOW~, CR.It&lt;\t: I~ I&lt;: I~ lNG&gt;,
with a strong suit but
N.J... Tf'e'&lt; 1-\,.._0 TO FE,.._;::.
\)\PLOt&lt;\~'{'~ fjl.,.ll.l NC.,
limited
high-card valW~fE.M
f\Ef&gt;..L\1-1 f\"-1;
ues. South made a
~ C.w..ilt-IG. ...
II~Lr! .
takeout double. And
West jumped to four
spades. This gave
North a three-aspirin
headache. He might
have bid five clubs,
but he thought he saw~
a guaranteed plus
score, so doubled.
Maybe South, with a
UNLESS!
UNl.E~S
spade void, shouldn' 1
YOU'RE
have passed. If the
THREE·
vulnerable
opponents
Tti11NG~
were
to
be
believed,
I
North couldn't have
powerful spades; he
rated to have his
high-c:;ard values elsewhere . So, South
could have continued
with either four notrump, general takeout, orfive clubs. But
he passed. And note
IN 1-IONOR OF TI-lE
.that four spades could
OCCASION. I USED MV
not be bealefl! East
FIN6ER TO DRAW A TURI&lt;EV
ruffed a club 'to get
IN '(OUR D06 FOOD..
into the dummy, then
twice finessed in
spades through North.
East won seven
spades, two hearts
and one club ruff for
plus 790.
If there is a danger
of a double gameswing, it is usually
right to bid -- try to
buy the contract.

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

.GAUFIELD

.~

1/1411

For all your Home
Improvement needs
"No Job To Small"

All this for only

Racine, Ohio
45771
74Q-849·2217

CemmullltV At:llen
740-992·2222 or
740-446-1018

BISSEll

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
.Ooors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Hill's Self
Storage

ADS

-.
PEANUTS

New Garages '
1
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
' • Roofing &amp; Gutters
\ • VInyl Siding &amp; Painting ·

L

THE :!&gt;&lt;HOOL

J&amp;S flfCTRIC &amp;

~ifi~~i~i·i~~i:!l
Insured .

N-"'TE, I'VE
REAt&gt;

JUST

NEWSP!"f'E~!

•

Y

TIE

6.000

(740) 992-5822

Got&gt;.I.I/IN!

Remodeling

11101

Over

(740) 446-1044

1 • Room Addition~ 8t

We
Are
Nuts

~teach

-:

MR .

CARPENTER
1 SERVICE
• 1\

Wednesday, November 27th

YOUNG'S

. ti I,

\l1dd lq,n11. { Jl li t~

•4 Free Estimates

::

6IG NATE

1

SEfiSOtt!

5
Dail Sentinel

i{d

~l c~~:~~~~~~~~ht!J
:: Decorating. :l·

HOLIDAY

~~·

\1111111 1• 1

•~xx:::xx::::::::::::::;;

TtiE

With your business,~~
advertised in the li

\.,hi,

lener

J 1i a
QJ • 5

Soulh.

rllct

55 Flohermon
56 Slimmed
down
57 Avis rival
58 Soldlor'o
olloe

18 Oronge

Tricks count

JONES'

co mmercial
wiring , new se~vice or repa irs · Master Licensed electrician Ridenour . Electrical,

j

Openinllead : • 10

j

740.992-1671

Best Service at
the Best Price

Mol: IIJ llbold

.. -

Sor.uh

10

maybe
53 Motorcycle

bird

Dultt: EM•t
Vulner~tble : Both

PAW!!

THE CARD SHOP

•

50 Tomorrow,

15 Copa 16 Frttornlty

AQJ6~'2

~ AQJIO~

750 East State Street Phone (740)593 -6671 : ;
Athens, Ohio
:
Email: bl•desOzaplink.com
~==========~ L--~--·~
· A~~~~~~~----~ ·:

(740) 992·3320

Dump Truck
Delivery Call &amp;
Leave message

1

'

mo.
48 Klutzto

colored

¥ AK

91 ~ ~2

•

Res•dentla l or

rANNOWOMF~

. ..
•

10 II 1
' ~ l l

•

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

Eu;CIRJC\1/
REI'IUGERATION

A

•

I

6323

Eu1

l11n'1111rt ~tot l flf"iulkd

l:~~~~~~:~:e

Q IU I
,\ K .

Wnl
•

I

c&amp;c General Home Malnt6 nence · Painti ng , vinyl sid·
lng, carpentry, doors, win dows .. baths. mob•le home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chel. 740 -992 ·

I I l l · U1

... I( ':t 1 ~ :l

B11ilding ova 30 ytars

Call
The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

1 Bored
raaponee
5 Infanta
10 Striped
onlmalo
12 Rocket
13 AtHr1
14 Brightly

A K I :S
•
• •

39 Mo,.dlngy
42 Wlct. St.
45 Groundhog

ACROSS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. '23Dec. 21 ) •. Don' t hes i1ate to
accept i nvitutions that come
your way today. Good 1hin~s
can happen · for you at this
time through persons with
whom you'll be involved socially. ,
,
,
.
CA~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn.
19) -- Pcr&lt;ons in important
posts or posi tions nre more
apt to be receptive to your
ideas today thtm usual. If you
need a special favor or someone's &lt;upport, present your
thoughts at this tune ,
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20-Feb.
19) •• There is a chance you
could get involved in 11 situation todu~' with u person
you'd like to gel to know be1 -

tcr. The co mmunication will
be qui1e effective.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- A development tha1 has
caused you· some anxiety
looks like it will take a turn
for the better today . Sunshine
could start to filter in where
you previously saw only
shadows.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-- Do things for friend s 10day
that indicate to them that you
care. Any good gestures you

make now will serve as the

seeds. for a future bountiful
harvest.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Focu s on endeavors or
projects that you find enJoy- .
able to perform and your pro,.
duclivity will be impressive
today. When you devote your
efforts· io labors of love, the
haid jops become easy , ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
--You ' ll huve a gi ftloday of
being able to make everyone
with whom you gel involved
feel 1hey ore someone eKtra
special. This attribute will
brigh1en up the lives of all
those around you.

·

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
·• Give priority today to all
those dnmestic muueu und 1
tas~s you've been neglecting.
It is one of those days when

miy1hing you do for your family will be done wi1h a light
hand nnd a happy hean .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Look for plensan1 tidings to;
day from so meone who is
very dear to you . The news
this person is eager to share
with you may involve you as
well and bring joy to your
heart.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- There is a poSsibility that
you may be able to increase
your per!iional earnings today
from an existing source. It
may come in the form of a
bonus or raise in appreciation
of a job well done.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) •
• It may fall to you today to
put together a snl'ial situation
thnt your friends aren' t quite
able · to get a handle on.
They"ll be thankful and
pleased that you are able to do
so.
1aglineGet a jump on life
by understanding the innuences thnt'll govern you in lhe
yeur ahead. Send for your As tro-Gruph prediclions by
mailing $2 to Amo·Graph, .
c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
167. Wickliffe. OH 44092. Be
sure to state your zodiac
sign./tagtine

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 21, 2110a

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Michigan, OSU hope to avoid loss. B1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

22, 2002·..~·

-w.mydailysentl~e

Court denies appeal sought by Qualls Cheshire dissolution
Pomeroy/
Middleport

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer
POMEROY
The
Fourth District Court . of
Appeals has denied Eric
Qualls' motion to appeal
his murder conviction.
Qualls filed the motion
last month , asking the court
to allow him to appeal his
conviction after the law's
30-day deadline.
In August, Qualls was
sentenced to 33 )'ears to life

for the · March murder of
Rebecca Ackerman of
Middleport.
State law ·allows the
appeals court to accept and
rule on appeals after the 30day filing deadline, if it
chooses to do so, but Judge
David T. Evans, in his court
entry · denying Qualls'
motiOn, said Qualls failed
to show sufficient reason
, for his failure to file before
the deadline.
In his motion, Qualls said
he did not know that an

appeal from his conviction
was possible , but Evans
said the record "belies this
assertion ."
"Qualls signed a P.etition
•to enter a plea of guilty that
stated, ·'I have the right to
appeal this conviction by
filtng notice of appeal within three days of sentencing,"' Evans wrote .
Qualls pleaded guilty to ·
one count of aggravated
murder without a death
penalty specification, but
with a firearm specifica-

tion , and one count of kidnapping .
A three-judge panel, consisting of Meigs County's
Fred w. Crow III, · Morgan
County 's Dan Favreau and
Lawrence
County's
R'
1chard Walton, sentenced
Qualls to at term of at least .
20 years on the murder
charge ·and I 0 years on the
k1dnappmg charge, and a
three-~ar mandatory sentence on the firearm speci- '
fication.

'

'

Fitness delays changes f~r s:eniors
extremely important to
News editor
senior citizens, and in the
_ _;_;.,:___ _ _ _ _ _ long run cap help them stay
BY CHARLENE. HOERJCH

'p()MEROY _So '•ou've healthier and independent ·
J
by · improving . their
been encouraged to slow $1n~urance, strength, flexidown. After all, you've bility and balance.
worked hard all your .life,
The supervised fitness
now you 're retired and it's center at the Meigs County
time to rest.
Senior Citizens Center, with
·rowing
But the more you sit, the treadmiiJs,
more out of shape you get, machines, cardio-riders, stuand the longer it goes on, tionary bikes, an abdominal
the harder it is to get moti- machine, and weights, is
vated to do something about open for use to anyone 50 or
it.
over for a minimal charge. ·
Many older adults just
A doctor's medical state. keep putting off beginning a m¢nt of approval is required
regular exercise program · when a senior enrolls, and a
even though they may lmow fitness assessment is done
thpt it's one of the healthiest by Joy Bentley, director, ·
things they can do for them- before seniors move into a
selves. .Others .are afraid
~xercise program.'
they
just aggravate
is there from 7:30
theJt
to
i;ll(il&lt;e;S and
_t)ley

going to special vote
Bv KEVIN

KEUY

· News editor
GALLIPOLIS - Cheshire
Village Council's first IW()
ordinances of 2002 addressed
appropriations and the local
government budget.
Its third was to go on the
ballot to dissolve itself and
the village:' .
In an emergency session
Thursday, council approved
action placing the q_uestion of
ending Cheshire's mcorporation before village voters in a
special election on Feb. 4,
2

og~~ncil

tures of at least 40 percent of
those who voted in the last
village election are required.
In the November 200 I election, 76 people cast ballots in
Cheshire Precinct,' which constitute s the village. Officials
needed 31 signatures to qual.1f ~
h
Y or 1 e 40 percent rule,
and obtained 39 between :
Nov. 9 and 13 , Jennifer
Harrison said.
Assistant Gallia .. County
Prosecutor · . Jeff Adkins,
retained by council . to
research the dissolution of the
village 's local authority,
drafted language that will

approved waiving appear on the ballot in
February.
.
.
the normal three readings of
The wording will be suban ordinance before acting, mitted to the Ohio secretary
and as soon as the meeting held in the Gallia Coun(y of state for approval, and if
Courthouse ~ was over, ()bjectio~s are mised, the ian- .
Village
Clerk
Jennifer . guage Will be rev1sed, Adkms
Harrison took the ordinance saJd.
. .
.
.
and supporting petitions to
Cheshire IS lookmg to disthe county Board of Elections band after Amencan Electn_c
for filing.
Power announced Sept. 24 11 .
The issue had to be accepted buyout offers fro_m
approved and submitted 10 abo~t 90 per~ent of the vtlthe board by Ttmrsday to fall Jage s 22 I residents.
.
within the requirement to file
The buyout, ~egollated
ballot issues 75 days before between AEP and VIllage offithe election.
c1als, means the Columbus"lt's just something you · based ut1hty gmnt w1ll obtam
have to do" Councilman Jim property for expansiOn of the
Neal said. '
ne1ghbonng Gen. James M .
Neal joined four other Gavm Power Plant.
councilmen
Chuck
The sale IS also expe~te d to
Bradbury, Herbert Clarke, quell v1llage re~1d~nts conRon Hammond and Randy cern~ about emtssJOn~ from
Lucas- in a unanimous vote Gavm ~nd a syntheuc coal
approving the ordinance. producuon plant on the plant
Councilman Steve Harrison Site. . ·
. .
was unable to attend.
The 1ssue first flared two
Under Ohio Revised Code years ago when . AEP
Section 703.20, a municipali" . announced the mstallat10n of .
.ty'·lookinjto "surrender-fits~,..J.ecbnology to red,uce mtrogen
corporate owers and Jegisla- mude emJssJons from coal
tive autho ity" must put the burned at Gav1~.
question · before
voters.
Gavm IS AEP s largest coalPetitions containing signaPlease see Cheshire, AJ
,,

Mountaineer to.
host climate change
research project
Staff report

Bill and Maxine Little know that many agirelated changes can be -minimized, delayed, and even reversed. through a pro. gram of regular exercise. That's why at 7:30a.m., five mornings a week, you find them using exercise equipment in' the
Meigs Senior Citizens fitness room. (Charlene HoeHich)

Portsmouth

Parkersburg
· Index

''Private Journeys'

2 Sections - 16 Plges

·-'~&amp;;··~bit at The Art Center,

8725 Market St. is
. "frlv~Jpumeys," fealll$g Michael Cpmfeld, L. Hurst
anq J~er Boggess; The exliibit ru,tiSIthrough
J~: ~~~~3. ~or more' infon'nation call 3~5-3859 Qr
at www.wvfinearts.com. .
. ViSltlllle website
.
'

&lt;·

''

'

'

• On exhibit at the Souihem Obio l'vJII$elllll, 825 Gallia St., ~ be
"FamilyCircles (~Other ~ye Geometries)," featu!:ing_lO ~
from Ohio and one.from Massach~, :1flrough M~t:Dec. JQ.
. Hours are I0 a.m. tO S p.fl.l:-'fllesdlly$ duoogh Fridays and I''to 5 p.m.
· SatUrdays and Sundays. Admission is $1 for adults, 75 centS, for chi!·dren and students, except Frida~ when it's always free. GaiJebi·!liJmi~c •
is free to museum members. For infotmation call 740-354-5629. ·

80•

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

"'

'i~~ "''

. -l:

' ·'

A4
BS-7
BB

A4
A6
A3
A3
Bl-4
A2

Cl 2002 Oh io Valley Publishing Co.

DEAL IN TOWN

_Intervention making a:
difference for Meigs students
Bv

KRIS ScouTEN

Staff writer
POMEROY - When Nathan "Nate"
Grant, an 18-year-old senior at Meigs High
School was a freshman, "he was heavy into
drugs, alcohol and gang activity."
·
Two years later, his grades are great, he's
clean and sober, and he will be attending
the top welding school in the country.

"The only reason I went to school at· al)
was to do drugs and meet girls," Grant
says.
After failing ninth grade once, and passing by the skin of his teeth the second time,
he met Daniel Romuno and his wife Sue,
both certified prevention specialists working in prevention and intervention programs in Meigs Local School s.

Please see Meigs, A3

injecting carbon dioxide deep ·
into the earth, where it will be
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - An absorbed and permanently
18-month study by American captured, AEP announced
Electric Power and Battelle Thursday. ·
researching climate change
A seismic study will be contechnology will be conducted ducted and a well drilled on
at AEP's Mountaineer Plant in Mountaineer property to check
New Haven. .
geologic formations in the
The study will examine the area. Data will be used for any
possibility of capturin~ and ru~ure_ steps planned for the
disposing of carbon dioxide m~ect10n technology, AEP
produced by coal burned at . srud.
.
power plants as one way of
No injection is planned durc
reducing global
climate · ing the current study and no
change, commonly known as decisions will be made until
the "greenhouse effect."
the study's results are "carefulThe concept is one of sever- Jy evaluated," AEP officials
aJ technologies under study by said.
"
scientists worldwide. The $4.2 . Battelle and AEP pledged to
. million Mountaineer study is keep the public informed about
funded by the U.S. Department the study's results and if a deciofEi:Iergy.
sian to proceed'with the tech"Our goaJ is to develop a nology is made. Public input
suite of carbon management will be sought.
"Continued development of
options that we ·know are safe,
affordable and effective," U.S. renewable energy technologies
Energy · Secretary Spencer . is important, but the new techAbraham said.
nologies will not displace fos"'!/e want to have thes_e sil fuels as the primary energy
opuons ready should the sct- source in the forseeable
ence tell us that large-scale car- future," said E. Linn Draper
bon reductions are necessary in Jr., AEP's chairman, president
the future," he added.
and chief executive officer.
"That's why it is important
Columbus-based research
agency Battelle w1ll examme to develop climate change
geology around 1'1ou~tmneer solutions for existing energy
to determme 1ts suJtab1hty for technologies," he added.

Norris Northup Dodge

252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

446-0842
TIRE ROTATIO.N
OIL CHANGE
BALANCING
Oil &amp; Filler • Lube Chassis
·
Seve Money and
Chock All Fluid• • Chock Chanio
Keep Your Family s.r.

51795 .

. On "led: models

1/4 mite north ol
Pomeroy -Maaon Bridge
Moton. Weal VIrginia ·
Pho,. (304) 773-5721

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

95

November is National Home Care and Hospice Month
.

.

We are the .Caring People of. Holzer Home Care, Hospice and Extra Care
CrQw's Family Restaur-a nt
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
228 Main St.

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

~

'

j

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Willdow

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

- - -··- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -------- ..-

---

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

r-

..
www .holzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="471">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9919">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23662">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23661">
              <text>November 21, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4523">
      <name>blowers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2339">
      <name>mckenzie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4299">
      <name>rawlings</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
