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                  <text>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
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.

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228 Main St.

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Phone (740) 446-1711

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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

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�BROOKFIELD (AP) - Sl!id.
Don't know what to l&gt;UY
Auglin said 100-200
for that person who has people come out every
Sunday for his auctions,
everything?
How, about a desk that but he thinks the Traficant
. belonged to former U.S. items may draw more bidRep. James Traficant Jr.? ders than usual.
The custom-made wal"He still has people who
nut and marble desk, with think he's innocent and
the words "Property of the who voted for him,"
House of Representatives" Auglin said, adding that
inscribed on the inside, is people might want to buy
just one of the items up for items just for nostalgia. .
Traficant, 61, was conauction on Dec. I.
Jeff Auglin Auction victed on racketeering
Service will also offer a charges in April and was
wooden yoke, a collection consequently
expelled
.of federal duck stamps and from the. House. In
several church pews, as August, he began serving
well as wall art, lamps and an eight-year sentence at
end tables. The items were · the Allenwood Federal
collected from Trafiomt's Correctional Institution in
Washington, D.C., office, White Deer, Pa.
his Boardman office and
Earlier this month,
his Green Township farm- Traficant lost his jailhouse
·
campaign to retake the
house.
"The family wanted to 17th District congressionliquidate things," . Auglin al seat.

ol Columbus 127'/40' I

(/ ···· $'•·"'~:•
Cloudy

SOOwe" T-~-

Ram

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Spring is sprung

Madolene
.Chattin

A large coil of steel is sprung out Wednesday, at the intersection of U.S. 30 and state Route 115 near Lima. A truck bound
for Orick Tool and Die in Elida, Ohio lost two of the coils on the
westbound exit ramp. (AP)

For the Record

Snow shower'S will taper -off

'-·

Accident
EMS runs
Alicia Werry, Kevin Grant, Wednesday at the intersectiqn
of state routes 7 and 124.
POMEROY-According
to
POMEROY
Meigs
treated at scene;
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
will build across the area
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. Emergency Services units
4:45 p.m., West Second
Troopers said Grant was
. A cold front moved Saturday.
Proffitt,
Tony
R.
answered
the
following
calls
Street,
Pomeroy,
Shawn
southbound
on 7 at 3:38 p.m..
Weather forecast:
through the area Thursday
Collingsworth,
Pomeroy,
was
for
assistance
on
Wednesday:
Arnott,
treated;
when he was unable to slow in
night, but the colder air was
Tonight. .. Cloudy with a
CENTRAL DISPATCH · 6:56 p.m., Holzer Meigs time and struck the rear of a car
slow to reach the eastern chance of snow showers. An · driving his 19!!5 Dodge van
12:50p.m.,EastMainStreet, Clinic, Geri Walton, St. driven by Alicia D. Werry, 17,
part of the region. Snow was inc.h or less of accumula- · east on East Main Street
Wednesday.
He
stopped
in
trafmotor
vehicle accident. David · Joseph's Hospital.
fallin~ over the west with tion. Lows in the upper '20s.
789 Main St., Rutland. Werry
fie
at
12:50
p.m.
near
Spring
·
Collingswonh,
. Rebecca
Drlverdted
rain m the east. No snow North winds 10 to 15 mph.
had slowed for traffic at thf!
Avenue and his van was sttUCk Collingswonh, Terry Pooler,
MIDDLEPORT- Kevin R. time of the accident, the.report
accumulation was reported Chance of snow 50 percent.
in the rear by a vehicle driven refused treatment;
Grant, 17, 30559 Briar Ridge said.
as of early this morning.
..,. Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
·
by
Terry
.
W.
Pooler,
Long
1:
15
p.m.,
Holzer
Meigs
Road, Langsville, was cited for
Temperatures across . the Highs in the lower 40s. West
Bottom.
Clinic, Melissa Johnson, as~ clear distance by the ·Grant's pickup truck had
area were in the 30s early winds 5 to. 15 mph.
Gallia·Meigs Post of the State functional d3IIJllge, arid nonthis morning. Winds had ·saturday
night.. .Partly . Both vehicles had minor Holzer Medical Center;
damages. There . were no
3:42 p.m., with Pomeroy Highway Patrol following a functional damage was reportturned to the northwest cloudy. Lows near30.
injuries.or citations issued.
units, m01or vehicle accident. two-vehicle
accident .ed to the car driven by Werry.
across the we.st at 15 to 25
Extended forecast:
mph. Across the east, winds
Sunday... Partly cloudy.
were south Jess than 10 Highs 44 to 49.
·
mph.
Sunday
night ... Mostly
The snow.will taper off to cloudy. A chance of rain or
flurries in the west . this snow showers late. Lows in
.
.
afternoon. Raiil will mix the mid 30s. Chance of prewith then change to snow in cipitation 30 percent.
VAN WERT (AP) - Four Fostoria. 'This is probably the cleanup. He's hoping the city general expenses.
the east. Highs today will be
Monday.. ,Mostly cloudy · tornadoes bringing winds top- worst time, but this still pales in will get all of it back through
"It was voted down· on
in the 30s. Snow showers with a chance of snow or
Tuesd;!y, and on Sunday every
ping 200 mph didn't Just wipe comparison to these people the federal government.
will continue in the north- rain showers. Highs in .the
out the town's rnovte theater who lost their lives, who lost
"I'm very cautious," he said. police officer and firefighter
ea.st tonight while the rest of upper 30s. .
and industrial park.
their homes."
"I'm very concerned."
we had was working full
the area will be .mostly
Tuesday... Partly cloudy
The twisters also may have
Davoli has told aU of his
speed," the mayor said. "It's
The
tornadoes
hit
Van
Wert
. cloudy. 'Lows will be in .the with a chance of snow . wrecked the city's bud~t and department heads to documi:nt just five days after voters going to be awful hand to make
~Os. Satu(day will be partly showers and flurries. Lows
could force cuts in pollee and their spending on the storm turned down a 2.5 mill levy for it up."
cloudy with highs in the near 30 and highs in the mid
fire training. buildin$ mainte- ~e-•~
40s.
30s.
nance and other serv1ces. .· "
Early this morning low Wednesday .. . Part I y
. 'This is going to have some
pressure was over northwest Cloudy. Lows · in the upper
fairly long-tenn effects," said
Pennsylvania with a cold 20s and highs in the Iipper
Mayor Stephen Gehres.
..
front south of the low. High 30s. ·
·
· Towns in the path of the'torpressure was over the
Thanksgiving ... Panly
nadoes that struck northwest
Plains. The low and cold cloudy. Lows in the upper · Ohio on Nov. 10 already were
front will move into the 20s and highs in the upper
facing tight budgets - mainAtlantic · to11ight. The high . 30s.
ly because of the slow economy- and now they must pay
· for the disaster cleanup.
The bills include overtime
for police officers, frrefighters
ADAY ON WALL STREET
and ~ther employees whQ
worked around-the-clock in
. 10,000
Nov. 21, 2002
the days aft\:r the storm. Some
will lose tax revenues from
9,000
businesses
that
were
de~yed.
.
Most city ·leaders are looking to President Bush for help.
7,000
Earlier this .week, Bush
8,845.15
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
declared
six counties disaster
Low
H~h
Pet. change
Record high: 11,722.98
areas,
making
homeowners
8,856.57 8,625.48
1rom previous: +2.58
Jan. 14, 2000
. and business .owners eligible
to receive federal aid.
Nov. 21 , 2002
1,600
But a decision on possible
help for cities had not been
1,400
made, and most officials
aren't expecting any federal
1,200
money until next year. .
"It's critical," said Port
Clinton Mayor Tom Brown.
1,000
AUG
$EP
.1.467.55
OCT
NOV
"We really need that public
Low
Hi!!h .
assistance."
·
Pet. change
Rec.ord high: 5,048.62
1,468.72 1,430.08
from pre'lil&lt;Js: +3.40
March I 0, 2000
Through the middle of last
week, his city . had spent
$32i5QO. on overtime for city
1,000
woi-kers and $22,000 on land- .
fill cltarges to dump debris.
900
''Our cudgels are very, very
ti~t,!' .Browri said. ''It could800
n t have come at worse time."
The city already was
700
strapped fpr cash, laying off id,tjj~
933.76
SEP
OCT
NOV
AUG

Tornadoes take ton on ·tight city -budgets
.

KICK OFF
THE

HOLIDAY

SEASOtt!

Dow
Jones

Wednesday, November 27th

Reach Over

Pet. change
from previous

+2.15

H~h

Low

935.13

914.15

ing any replacements
the
workers
this year and over
not hirlast -several years. "Every #F\..&lt;:
department has squeezed
every dollar they can.over the
last couple of years," Brown
said.
I!'s the same story in
Fostoria where a tornado
ripped off a school roof and
damaged or destroyed 51
homes. ·
The city already had cut the
jobs of three police ofikers,
six dispatchers and told all
departments including police
to cut down on overtime.
Plus, a downtown · fire in
July took more money out of ·
the budget.
'We were just barely goinr,
to make it at the end year, '
said John Davoli, ·mayor of 2'$-l~!td!Wi~i

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 27.10
Arch Coal- 19.26
· Akzo- 29.55
.
AmTech/SBC- 27.48
Ashland Inc. - 27.20
AT&amp;T-28
Bank One - 39.25
BLI - 1'2.64
Bob Evans- 24.13
BorgWarner- 47:65
Champion- 2.70
Charming Shops..,- 4.37
City Holding- 29.78
Cot - .23.25
DG -14.59
DuPont- 44.16

Federal Mogul - .49
USB-22.20
Ga~nett - 74.90
G~l Eleclrlc - 26.85
GI&lt;NLY - 3.5e
Harley Oavklsal - 49.59
Kmarl-.56
Kroger - 15.50
Ltd. -16. 11
NSC - 20.11
Oak Hit F!rlBrlCial-20.7o
OVB - 20.50
BBT~37 . 86

Peoples - 26.08
Pepsico _:_ 42.19 .
Premier - 7.10

Rockwell- 19.91
Rooky l!looiB- 5.16

AD illell - .4UO
Saara- 25.24 ·
wat-Mart- 53.95
Woody's - 27.50
Worlhingl()n- 17.47
Daily stock reports 'are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions. pro·
vidod by Smilh Partners
at Advesl Inc. of
Gallipolis.
.

6.000

~~i~~~~~~UJ~~~

Record high: I ,527.46
' March 24, 2000

(,

{

.. ---- ------- - - · --+- - - - ----·- - " "-·-- . - -

...

Obituaries

Friday, Novembtlr 22, 2002

Traficant's things
up for auction

.. Ohio weather
:. Saturday,.Nov. 23

Suooy Pl Ckxldy

PageA2

Ohio

:The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 22, 2002

~~

'

Households
In_Meigs
Countyl
I

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 25th
Call Dave or Jessica
992-2155
.. . -·· -· - . . . . ..._ ..... _.,.... L ··"~- ..... -~· ---· ··- - . .•.. -·-·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Man arrested for
threatening reporter

· CLIFTON, W.Va .
Madolene Chattin, 73,
LOSANGELES(AP)-A affidavit filed by FBI-agents disparage Mr. Seagal and
:Clifton, died Thursday,
man cha(ged with threatening_ who later searched Pellicano's reads like a bad screenplay."
·November 21, 2002, at her
A federal law enfoo:ement
a reporter who was investigat- office.
ing an alleged Mafia extortion
Pellicano was arrested source also told the newspa:daughier's residence in
plot against Steven Seagal Thursday in connection with per that "at this time, other
:Hurricane , West Virginia.
told
an FBI informant the what appeared to be explosive than Proctor's uncorroborated
: She was born March 16,
actor was behind the threat. materials found during · the statements, there is no inde·1929,
in
Middleport,
court
documents show.
search, said FBI spokesman pendent evidence that &amp;agal
daughter of the late George
Alexander Proctor alleged- Matt McLaughlin. l;le was was involved in the threat
;W. and. . Hazel Butcher
ly said in secretly . recqnded . expected to appear before a
d
. riday·.
rna e to the reporter."
conversations that he was federal mamstrate F
;McHaffie.
·
,.
Prosecutors said Proctor
hired to carry out the threat by
An attorney for Seagal told
· She was a retired cook at
Anthony Pellicano, a private the Los. Angeles TJ.mes that smashed Busch's windshield
:Lakin State Hospital. She
detective
to the stars. FBI his client had no involvement in June and left a dead fish
:was a member of Clifton
·
ts
.
·d
· toId the .m
· the threat.
with
a long-stemmed rose in ·
agen S3l Proctor
.
•United Methodist Church.
· informant Seagal hired
'This uncorroborated aile- lis mouth on. the car along
; ._ She is survived ·. by a
Pellicano to threaten Los galion by someone arrested is with a sign reading "STOP,"
·daughter,
Brenda
K.
Angeles Tunes reporter Anita pure fiction and is nothing acconding to a federal grand
Chattin of Hurricane; a
Busch.
more than a transparent jury indictment.
granddaughter, Breanna L.
"He wanted to make it look attempt to divert attention · Proctor was charged with
like the Italians were putting from himself and the real per- interference with com'merce
. Chattin of Hurricane; four
.
the
hit on her so it wouldn't petrators," said attorney by threats of violence, which
· sisters, Eleanor Fulk of
reflect on Seagal," Proctor, Martin R. Pollner, who repre- carries a maximum prison
~ Middleport , Betty Carsey
59,
told · the informant, sents Seagal. 'This is part of sentence of 20 years. He has
Pomeroy, · Judith
:of
.
acconding
to a search warrant an unrelenting campaign to pleadtd innocent.
·McHaffie of Middleport,
and Doris Skidemore of
Newport News, Virginia ; · ·'
·and two brothers, Jarne s
McHaffie of Middleport,
and George McHaffie Jr. of
Lancaster.
DENVER (AP) - Many having to make very diffi- get-cutting since the Nov. 5
In addition to her parents,
state governments, already cult budget decisions, like election. But few if any
she was preceded in death
lean after two years of cutting spending and tap- areas of states ' budgets will
by her husband, Robert
falling . revenues, saw ping reserves and in some. likely avoid cuts.
Chattin, in 1982; a sister,
"It won't be easy. It will
income tumble an addition- cases raising taxes.
al $17.5 billion since July,
"It just seems to be going be painful. We will all be
Reva Smith; and a brother,
forcing
even
deeper
cuts
in
on
a long lo·ng time "
William McHaffie.
··
asked to make some sacriprograms .and payrolls, a. In the 'first four months
•· Services will be 1:30
new survey indicates. .
of fiscal year 2003 begin- fices," said Wisconsin
·p.m. Sunday, November 24,
In July, when most fiscal ning ·July 1, 33 states Gov.-elect Jim Doyle,
'2002, In Foglesong-Tucker
years begin , states had reported revenue collec- whose state faces a $2.6
Funeral Home in Mason,
taken measures including tions below what Eckl said billion · shortfall for the
West Virginia, with the
laying ' off workers and were conservative fore- two-year period beginning
·spending
reserves to ·erase casts.
July 1.
Rev. Doreen Adkins offici' most of a cumulative gap
Asked to characterize
Other states are also
.ating. Burial will be in
between revenues and bud- their -revenue outlook for struggling with shortfalls: .
.Kirkland
Memorial
geted
spending of about the remainder of this fiscal . • Kansas Gov, Bill
Gardens in PGirit Pleasant,
$49
billion,
according to year, budget officers in 29. Graves said he will ouiline
West Virginia. Friends may
the National Conference of states said they were con:
call at the funeral home
State Legislatures.
cerned. Nine were pes- · substantial cuts next week
from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday,
· Since then, 31 states face simistic, including some to deal with a projected
budget gaps !Oialling an that had raised taxes by $310 million deficit. "I'm
-No.vember 23, 2002.
additional
$17.5 billion; more than 5 percent last still weighing whether tp
- Paid notice
according to a November year.
spread the pain around
survey report released
Eight staies said they completely or try to isolate
Friday by the Denver- were expecting stable rev- it," he said.
organization. enues, while · only two,
• Virginia Gov. Mprk R. ,
based ,
Seventeen states either . Hawaii .. a!ld. Wyoming, Warner cut 1 800 state jobs
be : ·
b
reported nQ shortf;dls, or were optlm1st1c. Tyio states .
. sa1d it \\las too early :to tell d\d •(\Ot, rc:ply ..to. spme, sur- __ m_0 cto r, er~sl_ng a out
the size of budget gap.
vey quesuons, .Eckl said.
half of a$ 1.5 bllhon shprtNew governors are fall, and warned more ·Jay"It's certainly not rosy,"
report co-author Corina preparing .to take over in offs could come. He also
Eckl
said. "We've had two nearly half the states, and took a 20 percent cut in his
LETART, W.Va. -Elmer
consecutive
years of states there has been little bud- $124,855. annual salary.
·Gale Donohue, 70, Letart,
:W.Va., died Wednesday,
: Nov. .20, 2002, following
·:an automobile accident
· near New Haven, W.Va . .
Graveside ·services with
. military honors will be con: d ucted at 1 p.m. Saturday
, in the Huffman Cemetery,
:·with the Rev. Brian May
; and VFW Po'st 9926 officiSAN ANTONIO (AP) - . Thursday at her sentencing
POMEROY - Meigs
: ating. Arrangements are by
A
former
teacher
was
senhearing.
·
,
'\l
take
total
County Commissioners
: Anderson Funeral Home,
tenced
to
two
years
in
jail
responsibility
for
what
I
did.
approved transfers . of
New Haven.
·for planting fake bombs at I'm sorry for theJoung man
· funds for the Community
two schools. in 2000 and who got nabbe for it as
Correction~
program,
I .
2001.
well."
EMS, and Board of
Tania Faver pleaded no
Faver said 'she was upset
Elections
during their
· contest in September to with an administrator and
meeting Thursday.
planting five fake bombs in ·wanted to cause chaos for
. MIDDLEPORT
The board also opened
October 2000 and two in the school administration..
and approved bids for .
; Memorial services for Etta
October 200 I at the Dilley She said she had recently
bituminous materials for
· May Norton, 72, who died
High School and two others been diagnosed with bipolar
December from Asphalt
: Saturday, Nov. 2, 2002, in
at Bi~foot Alternative disorder and now has a
Materials,
Marietta, and
Schoolm
February
2000.
treatment
plan.
Belleview, Fla., will be
Middleport
Terminal,
District Judge - Olin
held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, · A new student at Dilley
Gallipolis.
was
initially
charged
with
Strauss
sentenced
Faver
to
·
Dec. 1, 2002, at the
the frrst bomb hoax, but the two years for each charge,
were
Present
Middleport Church of
charge
was
later
dismissed.
with
the
time
to
be
served
Commissioners
Jeff
· Christ.
He
dropped
out
of
school
concurrently.
Mick
Th.ornton and
.. Mrs. · Norton formerly
and obtamed a general eduFaver's lawyer, Nick
Davenport.
-~ resided in Middleport.
cational ·development cer- Rothe, said he would ask
l
- Donations in her memory
tificate.
the judge to grant Faver pro- ·
. · may be made to a local hos"I arri very sorry for what bation after she has served
: pice program.
I've done," Tania Faver .said some of the sentence:

New revenue shorHalls hit states

Deaths

:elmer
G. Donohue

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

a

Former teacher
goes to jail

·Local Briefs
Approve
transfers

Etta
-May Norton

Dan and Sue Rornuno, prevention and intervention counse lors
at Meigs High School, go over scholarship and financial aid
information forthe students they help. (Kris. Scouten)
added.
The focal point . of the
programm g is
school
Lifestyle Risk Reduction , a
from PageA1
curriculum based on mak ing healthy choices, Sue
"Dan's basically changed Romuno said.
my mind and my life,"
"We don't focus on good
Grant says . "He was the versus bad · choice s," she
father. I never had . He added .
,
showe d me I was someone
"We focus or\ the choice
instead of no one."
Grant made the decision between high risk ; which
to get off drugs and 10 clean will hurt one la1er in life.
up his act after his girl- such as the choice to use
friend gave him an ultima- tobacco, and low-risk
tuin- "me or the drugs. "
choices like good nulrition
His decision included and exercise."
flushing $15P of cocaine
Programming at the high
and other drugs down the school consists of a breaktoilet and going cold · fast club, one-on:one problem solving ~essions and
turkey;
.
"It's stories like Nate's topica:l discussion groups.
thai make the intervention
With each situation, the
and prevention program · at Romunos look at what are
MHS worth while and keep called the 40 developmental ·
us going," Dan Romuno assets. Assets are detersaid.
mined by · the students
The program leaves no checking a list of questions
stone unturned when it about their live s and sup- ·
comes to the well-being of port systems.
·
"This gives us a place to ·
students.
· It· doeslf't stop at drugs · start," Dan Romuno •said.
and alcohol at Meigs High . "Then our intervention goal
School, and with limited becomes developing more
funding and under a con- . assets to each child's life."
stant search for grant
Tl\e breakfast club meets
mo!ley, the Romunc;&gt;s take monthly at the school and is
the1r JOb and the c!nldren's designed to be an open
future very seriously.
forum for teens to share .
"Any success we 'Ne had · .. their thoughts, problems ,
• is due to the support and
·'
caring of this diStrict's concerns and advice.
administration,"
Dan
The club is designed to
Rumono says . ·
help students who are not
"Some
administrators involved . in . any other
would 'try' to find funding extracurricular activity or
for &amp;ervices like the ones club. ·
we provide, but our superIt's a support system and
intendents and principals of peers for those who may
have not only helped 4s· not have them elsewhere.
with . financing our proWithout that sy~tem ,
gramming but have person- Nathan .Grant's life likely
ally become involved in the would have coniinued on a
lives of their students," he much different path.

Meigs

Cheshire

the buyout, villa,t?e officials
began exploring 1ts drssolution in June. Cheshire was
incorporated in 1953.
from PageA1
ORC says that should the
dissolution win approval, vil burning electricity generating lage-owned property .will
plant in Ohio and the second- pass
into
Cheshire
largest in its seven-stale sys- Township's hands, and coun tem.
cil will have to pay all bills
· Although no homeowne·r and
settle . liabilities before
participating in · the buyout disbanding.
·
has yet received payment
"It's sfrnilar to when a corfrom AEP, longtime Cheshire poration ends its existence,"
residents Larry and Carolyn Adkins said.. "You have to ·
Little last week became the . wind down all of the obligafirs\ to move from the village .tions and liabilities."
to a. new home in Mason,
W.Va. ·
With few people expected
to remain in Cheshire after

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

·-

:Stepfather faces
,·charges in Maryland
.SAN DIEGO (AP)- The
· stepfather of a 2-year-old boy
-who has been missing for
'nearly seven months was
arrested for allegedly failing
: to appear in court on rnisd~ ­
meanor drug charges m
Maryland.
.
Tieray Jones was wanted by
·Frederick, Md., authorities on
·two warrants in connection
with misdemeanor marijuana
· possession charges. A bounty
hunter' made a citizen's arrest
.at Jones' San Diego apart. ment last weekend, said San
.: Diego police Lt. Mike Hurley.
I
Jpnes was taken · to
Marylimd and remainedjailed
Friday on $50,000 ball. He
·represented himself Thursday
/. at two bond hearings.

I

The charges are unrelated
to the disappearance of Jahi
Turner, who was reported
missing April 25 by Jones ,
who said he left the .boy alone
in a playground in San
Diego's Balboa Park for
about 15 minutes to· buy a
soda.
· Jones has repeatedly denied _
any involvement in the b&lt;;~y's•
disappearance, ~nd l_nvesllgators are treatmg 1t as an
abduction. Hurley wouldn't
say if Jones was a suspect.
The little boy disappeared
about three months after 7year-old Daniellp vail Dam
was taken from her suburban
San Diego home ll.nd killed . A
neighbor was convicted her
death.

Correction Polley
Our main concern In 'ali stories 1s to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom al.·(740) 992·
2156.

Our main number .Is
(740) 992-2156.,
Department exie~slons are:

News
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Kns Scouten, Ext. 13
Sports: Ext. 14

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�Page A ·4 • The Dally Sentinel

Son-in-law goes nuts Donations given
over Abby's pecan pie
DEAR ABBY: This is a
first for us, but I just had to
write after my experience
WI!~ your famous pecan pie
recipe.
, My husband read the recipe
In your column last year and
. asked me to make one for
Thanksgiving. We had our
family over for dinner, and
ADVICE
when I asked if anyone would
like dessert, ·our son-in-law
asked for the pecan pie. I whipped cream, but · even
served him a slice, and his plain, nothing tops this!
response was, "D---. this is
Serves 8 to 10.
good!"
TIP: The ori,\:inal recipe
Shortly thereafter. without stated that the pie should be
being asked ; our son"in- law baked 45 to 50 minutes in a
got up from the table and pro- preheated 3 50-de~ree GAS
ceeded· to clean up the oven. If an electnc oven is
kitchen . A first! I told him used, it may be necessary to
with that kind of reaction I' II add 15 to 20 minutes to the
make Abby's pecan pie for baking time. (Begin testing
him EVERY holiday. Thanks, the pie with a toothpick after
Abby. - DOROTHY AND 45 minutes.)
·
. JIM SMITH. LE SUEUR,
DEAR ABBY: What does
MINN .
"heavy cream" mean in
DEAR DOROTHY AND recipes? I often see the term
JIM: You' re welcome. That used, but it dciesn't say what it
wasn' t the first time this is. Thanks! NOVICE
recipe has made people do COOK IN BENTON, KY.
wonderful and unexpected
DEAR NOVICE COOK:
things. Here it is:
I checked with · Char! ice
ABBY'S
.FAMOUS Makowski of Santee Dairies
PECAN PIE .
in Los Angeles. She reports
9-inch unbaked ·pie crust
that there are actually four
I cup light com syrup
kinds of cream:
l cup firmly packed dark
• Light cream, which has
not less than 18 percent or
brown sugar
more than 30 percent butter3 eggs, slightly beaten
fat;
';, cup butter. melted
';, teaspoon salt
• Whipping cream, which
has between 34 and 36 perI teaspoon vanilla
I heaping cup pecan halves cent butterfat;
• Heavy cream, which has
Heat oven to 350 degrees .
In. a large bowl, combine between 36 and 38 percent
com syrup, sugar, eg,\:s, but- butterfat; and
• Manufacturer's cream,
ter, salt and vanilla; mix well.
Pour fillin~ into unbaked pie which contains 38 to 40J'ercrust; spnnkle with pecan cent butterfat and is use by
halves.
·
delis and bakeries for items
Bake at 350 degrees for 45 such as cream puffs.
Dear Abby is written by
to 50 minutes or until center
is set. (Toothpick inserted in Abigail Van Buren, also
center · will come out clean known as Jeanne Phillips,
when pie is done.) Cool. If and was founded by her mothcrust or pie appears to be get- er. Pauline Phillips. Write
Abby
at
ting too brown, cover with Dear
foil for the remaining baking www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
'Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
time.
You can top it with a bit of 90069.

Dear
Abby

The Modern Woodmen of America made a $2,500 contribu- .
tion to the Chester Academy renovation fund Thursday. The
money represents "matching do llars" to those raised by the
. Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, and will be
used toward the cost of putting a new roof on the structure.
Dale Colburn, representlng the Middleport/Gallipolis
Modern Woodmen, presents the check to Jo Ann Ritchie of
the DoiA. (Charlene Hoefiich)

Paul Reed, president of Farmers Bank, presents a check for
$500 to Cleo Smith, center, and JoAnn Ritchie. The money
is to be divided between the Chester-Shade Historical
Society and used for roof replacement of the Che's ter
Academy and the educational programs of the Appalachia
Cultural Center at the Chester Courthouse. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

'

Teens honored

Community Calendar
Public Meetings
. Monday, Nov. 25
POMEROY
Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.
Monday at the 117 Memorial
Drive office.

Clubs and
Organizations

Community Thanksgiving ser·
vice, 7 p.m. at the Presbyterian
Church. Sponsored by the
Middleport
Ministerial
Association. Take canned goods
and other non-perishable items
for the needy to be distributed
through the food bank at 1he
Rejoicing Life Church.

.

'

Other events

Church services

Christmas supper planed

..

People in th~ news
/

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad
(AP) - Danny Glover began
a three-day visit to Trinidad to
film an upcoming television
program on HIV-AIDS and
ctJi ldren, a U.N. spokeswoman said. ·
Glove r, ·ss, star of ''The
Royal Tenenbaums." "The
_Color Purple" and the "Lethal
Weapon" films, arrived
at
Piarco
Wednesday
International Airport, said
U.N. spokeswoman Vashty
MaharaJ .
He' II host the first of 10
episodes of "What's Going
On?" scheduled to begin air-

ing in January on the
Showtime cable netwo,rk,
Maharaj said.
The series was originally to
be called "Hot Spots," but the
title was changed after producers were given the rights
to use the title of the well.known Marvin Gaye song,
said Cannel M. Mulvaney,
project director for the U.N.
Works Pro~ram.
·
Each ep1sode will explore
the different struggles that
childrev face around the .
world . Angelina Jolie will
visit a refugee camp in
Zambia and Jeff Bridges will
host an episode looking at
hunger in. the United States.
The United Nations helJ?Cd
develop the idea for the senes.

'The Bachelor'
chooses Helene,.
and beats 'Victoria's
Secret' in ratings

c.

NEW YORK (AP)- He is Giuliani's associate, bond
''The reasonable question to
trying to rid horse-race investor David Matlin, wants ask is: Can he take on all
wagering of corruption; keep to install him as WorldCom these challenges at once?"
the painkiller OxyContin off chairman. ·
Siegel said. "And 1 don' t
the black market, and help a
Giuliani said it is premature know the answer to that."
major brokerage handle con- to talk about the chairmanDespite its high-profile
ship, but he said twice at a contracts, Giuliani Partners is
flict of interest charges.
Now Rudolph Giuliani says news conference this week a small finn of 35 staff memhe is ready to tackle the spec- that WorldCom should have a hers, many of them top aides
tacularly bankrupt World Com separate chairman and chief from Giuliani's City Hall
Inc.
executive. Michael Qtpelhis, administration, including the
Even some admirers say the a former Hewlett-Packard city's former police and fire
former New York mayor 's executive, was named chair- commissioners.
next big thing may be too man, CEO and president of
The finn is advising Merrill
much for him. But some say WorldCom only last Friday.
Lynch in addressing a state
Oiuliani - the mob-busting
Running the largest U.S. investigatian into alleged
o;x-prosecutor and Time mag- city is not the same thing as conflicts of interest by Wall
azine Mim of the Year who heading a multibillion-dollar Street analysts, and is work- ·
saw New York through the company, telecommunica- ing with Purdue Phanna in
I aftermath of Sept. 11 - sees tions analyst Drake Johnstone protecting its inventory of the
I
another opportunity to prove said. He said WorldCom pain medication OxyContin
''
he is a master of the universe needs an experien'ced indus(ry against abuse. Giuliani is also
and, perhaps, make millions executive to lead a turn- traveling to Mexico City to
• in the process.
around.
tour its violent neighborhoods.
, "He believes that he can do
"Yes, he's well-respected, and advise officials on how to
'!nything . He wants to be but he hasn't run a maJor cor- reduce crime. ,
This week, his flfm a(lreed
· Jlresident," said former Mayor poration," Johnstone said.
Ed Koch, who has alternately
But Fred Siegel, a writer to oversee the Nauonal
praised and criticized Giuliani · and history professor who has Thoroughbred
Racing
over the years.
advised Giuliani, said the for- Association's industry wager'
· G!uliani, 58, said his con- mer U.S. attorney's experi- ing system after a series of
sultmg
firm,
Giuliani ence prosecuting white-collar betting scams culminated in a
Partners, is working with a crime has made him familiar fraudulent $3 million win at
leading WorldCom investor to with corporate inner work- the Breeders' Cup.
advise the crippled telecom ings.
Andrew
Kirtzman,
a
g!ant after it emerges from the
''This is not quite the leap it WCBS-TV political reporter
b1ggest bankruptcy in U.S. appears to be,' said Siegel, who wrote a · biography of
history. He said he wants to adding Giuliani is known for · Giuliani, said it is clear why
tum the company, tarred by a· his exhaustive preparation. organizations with credibility
$9 billion accounting fraud "He's one of those guys with problems are seeking out
·
scandal, into a "model of cor- . a cast-iron rear end who will Giuliani.
porate governance," using sit down and absorb an enor"He's got a reputation for
proliity, for honesty and he's
principles he describes in his mous amount of material."
new
best-selling book,
Yet he and others wonder kind of a saint in the eyes of
· "Leadership."
. whether Giuliani is spreading the American public since
· 9/11 ," Kirtzman said.
According to news reports, himself too thin .

GOSHEN: Ind. (AP)- An
Authorities said the two after she was abducted. Later
escaped inmate wanted in a kidnapped Donovan on Nov. that evening, the sUSJ?CCis and
multistate crime spree was 14 from a Wal-Mart parking her car were seen m South
captured in Indiana, but a lot in Conway; S.C. Police Carolina, and investigators
woman he is suspected of said her ATM card had been don't believe Donovan was
abducting remained missing used near Raleigh, N.C., last with them at that time.
Thursday.
week.
Donovan's last conversaThey are also suspected of tion 'with family members
Chadnck E. Fulks. 25, was
arrested Wednesday after- abducting a · 42-year-old came about two hours after
noon after he came out of his Kentucky
man.
James she was abducted. She called
brother's house in this north- Hawkins, on Nov. 6 and leav- her daughter but didn't menem Indiana city and got into a ing him tied to a tree in south- tion being kidnapped, said
· car. He was caught by a em Indiana. Hawkins, tied Donovan's sister July Ezell,
police officer after a short with duct tape and electrical of Wiley, Colo. "She told her
chase on foot.
cord, freed himself after 'I love you' and that was pretThe car belonging to the struggling for 14 hours.
ty much it," Ezell said.
Authorities hoped that
Basham was · arrestee
missing South Carolina
woman, 44-year-old Alice Donovan also was tied to a Sunday after allegedly trying
Donovan, was found near tree somewhere, and were to hijack a car at an Ashland,
Goshen later Wednesday. But concentrating their search on Ky., mall. Without elaboratFBI spokeswom&lt;~n Kathy ·the area she was last seen , · ing, Kentucky police said
Guider said there was no evi- near
Shallotte,
N.C . Basham's arrest yielded "a lot
dence she is in Indiana, and Searchers · used helicopters of leads" in the search for
FBI agent Tom VanWormer and foot teams Thursday to Donovan.
·
said it was unclear whether comb a wooded, swampy
At the time of the escjlpe,
authorities were any closer to spot.
Basham was serving a five finding her.
·
"I still think Mrs. Donovan year sentence for writing a .
Federal agents had notified may very well be alive," bad check. He had broken out
Goshen officials that Fulks Brunswick County (N.C.) of the same jail in February
might be headed there Sheriff Ronald Hewett said but was quickly caught.
Fulks was scheduled to be
because his father and broth- Wednesday afternoon.
er live in the area.
Donovan and ' the two sus- arraigned Thursday afternoon
Fulks' ·brother and a pects were seen in the North in South Bend before U.S.
woman driving the car were Carolina county the afternoon Magistrate Judge Christopher
being questioned, and agents of Nov. 14, about 1 l/2 hours A. Nuechterlein.
were checking the car and
'home for clues.
r-:------~---------~----.,
Fulks and L. Branden
Basham, 21, broke out of the
Hopkins County jail in
K'entucky on Nov. 4.
Basham was captured
Sunday in Kentucky.

?{,u{ Casfi tillPaullrat/ll

$CASH
Ill Hllllt, liD Credll Check

death of Alta Ballard was
noted. Officer .reports were
given by Esther Smith and
Betty Young, and Goldie
Frederick read a two poems.
Charlotte Grant will make
out the hostess list for 2003.
Games were conducted by
Jean Welsh and Thelma
White. Door prizes were
won by Erma Cleland, Opal
HolLon, lnzy Newell, and
Mary
K.
Holter.
Refreshments~ were served
by Opal E1chinger. and
Esther Smith.

Shooting star

Celeb("'ff~

First Southern

Baptist Church

TV Land, which immortalized Kramden in New York in
2000 and Richards in
Minneapolis in May, will
maintain the statue. It could go
up in central Raleigh as soon
·as next fall.
The council asked TV Land
to work with the city's Arts
Commission on the details and.
return with recommendations,
including possible sites.
Griffith and Ho;vard support
the statue. sltid Rob Pellizzi,
TV Land's senior vice president of marketing and promotions for the New York-based
channel.

1be iJiwlgrass Disciples
and
]obn Slevlms
•Games

•Food

To show its appreciation
for voter passage of the replacement tax levy
on 11-05-02,
the Meigs County Board of Health
i.s waiving fees (effective 11·15-02) for the
·
following
nursing services: ·
·
. .

S~.OO donation is· appr~i~t~. but is not required for Immunization Administration)

Blood Iron Tests"
Hemoccult Tests
I

.

Ltke you, we have the health and well-being of all
Meigs County residents in our hearts and hands!

Meigs Co. Health Dept.
112 E. Memorial Drive

Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 99l-6626
FAX:5~~'2 _
992-0836
Email:

GRAdUATES •••

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and compare our selection and prlca. Why pay
your deposit now when you can walt till February
or Match to order? Plus, you can custom taylor
your orde.r to suit your style Instead of settling for
what everyone has. Stop in today and see.

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255 Mill Street
Middleport, OH 45760
(740) 882-3345
Fax: (740)992-3394

CQ/1 (740) 99U779

'

·I
•I•

A meteor burns up in the atmosphere over Rodeo Beach in Marin County, Calif., at 4 a.m.
Tuesday near San Francisco . The meteor was part of the large Leonids meteor shower which
is the remaining dust trail from comet Temple-Tuttle that passed near earth in 1866; (AP)

.

'

Authorities release.Florida man
from prison due..to lack of evidence
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. and let him stay in prison ," 'church of Scientology, say(AP) -A man sent to prison McCabe said.
ing
they couldn't depend on
.
for the 1998 death of his 8- · Peel, 22, served four years Wood's testimony.
w.eek-old son has been freed before his release Oct. 16.
In the latest case, McCabe
after a review found no evi- Peel does not have a phone asked Wood's successor to
dence of the shaken-baby lisiing and could not be re-examine the autopsy after
syndrome cited by the med- reached for comment, but his . mistakes by Wood 's office
ical examiner.
attorney, Norman Cannella led to the dismissal of .
John W. Peel, then 18, told Sr., said Peel pleaded guilty charges 10 another shaken
investigators his son died in to avoid a murder conviction baby case .
Medical Examiner Jon
1998 when he fell off a bed. and potential ·life sentence.
The former medical examinWood was at the center of Thogmartin and Dr. Stephen
er, Joan Wood, ruled the a disputed 1995 case m Nelson, Polk County's med- ·
death a homicide after say-. which Scientologist Lisa ical examiner, could find no
ing she found evidence of McPherson died after 17 evidence of hemorrhaging in
shaken-baby syndrome.
days in the care of fellow the child's eyes, on · which ·
Peel was charged with church members following a
first-degree murder and later minor car accident and men- Wood based her finding of
.
tal breakdown .
shaken-baby syndrome. ·
sentenced to I 0 years m
prison after pleading to
Wood
initially·
said
Wood, who is now a priinanslaughter.
McPherson, 36, died of a vate consultant, . said she
Bernie McCabe, the state blood clot brought on by stands by her finding.
attorney for Pinellas and severe dehydration and bed
"There are disagreements
Pasco counties, recently rest. She later dropped those in forensic medicine," Wood
asked a judge to throw out as contributing factors and said. "But I' m telling you
the conviction after doctors replaced them with psy- that that child was murdered.
who reviewed Wood 's work chosis and the minor auto No mistake. The baby was
.found no evidence of shak- accident.
shaken to death.')
en-baby syndrome.
Prosecutors ended up
McCabe said a review of
· "I don't see how we could dropping abuse and medical other rec ent shaken baby
just bury the new evidence . neglect charges against the cases found no problems. '

.

THANK YOU, VOTERS!

.

200}

•

. 992.0461
UcOftH CC700077o001l
UcOftHCl751J0400tl

•

says

· ·

I

446-2404

Musfcby:

204 W. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'I• Mile south of
the Silver Bridge

Saturday
November 23
5:008:00 pm

~-

CHECK CASHING
·· &amp; LOAN

Gallipolis, Ohio

US33&amp;SR7
· fiJmero)j OH

•

The Meigs County
Health Department

("

.211 Upper River Rd.

' ,_
uue IS
lllYUCU.
Con)e enjoy !be fim!

faced, sometimes naughty
child. - which makes the
character a natural for the
two-hour film aimed at
children.
One of India's major ani-.
mation houses plans · to,
release "Hanuman" in the
Hindi
language
ami'
English, and distribute it in
Asia, the United States and
Britain.

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

OHIO VALLEY

r?f"'Ne6f &lt;f~l

~·~ 1

BOMBAY, India (AP)Hanuman. the Hindu monkey god who soars through
the skies and beats· up enemies with a mace, is the
star of India's first animation feature film, scheduled
for release next year.
an Asian
Hanuman,
superhero revered . for his
bravery and loyalty, is usually portrayed as a chubby-

Friday, November 22, 2002

after multistate crime spree

"'~·

Hindu god subject of
Indian animated movie

Page AS

Giuliani heads to WorldCom Second jail fugitive caught

NEW YORK (AP) "It's fine," she said braveBrooke got a broken heart ly, then broke up in the lim'
but Helene got engaged .in ousine as it whisked her
the final showdown of the away. "Why didn't he know
hit romance-reality series I was the one for him?"
''The Bachelor."
...-Having whittled a field of
Dropping to one knee, 25 candidates, Buerge was
Aaron Buerge put the ring torn between ll'runette
on Helene Eksterowicz's Helene (a 27-year-old
finger in the ABC show's grade-school psychologist
closing
moments from New Jersey) and blond .
Wednesday. ·
Brooke (a 22-yea.r-old
"Will you marry me?" be senior at the University of
·asked.
Alabatna).
"Yes, I will," she replied.
To help him seal the deal,
"Without a doubt."
he took each finalist home to
"I'm really looking for- meet his family.
ward to sharing my life with
"Do you work when
you," said Buerge, a 28- you're not having a good
year-old
banker
from time?'' Grandma asked:
Springfield, Mo.
Helene.
The proposal on the twoThe next day, Buerge's
hour finale concluded dad warmly greeted Brooke.
Buerge's
eight-episode "A pretty name for a very
odyssey test-driving would- pretty girl," he said.
be partners while the audi''THANG-kewww!" she·
ence eagerly looked on.
drawled.
Then Buerge had one last,
Though blasted by critics
as a glorified escort service, laid-back date with each
the series generated buzz contender.
"You want mushroom?"
. and won viewers.
The finale attracted an
average of 26 million view~ he asked Helene, offering
her pizza.
.
·
ers, according to the
overnight ratings, and had
"What are you, reading
double the audience of ''The my mind?" she chirped.
Victoria's Secret Fashion
But there had been no
Show" on CBS when the reading Buerge's mind.
.
"I'm still on the fence," he
two programs ·went bead to
head from 9 to 10 p.m. kept telling the camera.
"Victoria's Secret" was
No one was on the fence
third-ranked in that hour, about the Victoria's Secret
also behind NBC's "The fashion show, first aired last
West Wing."
.
year by ABC, scoring higli
Many "Bachelor" fans ratings and controversy."
approached the last show That telecast was sufficient- .
wondering whether there ly provocative to prompt an ·
would even be a bride. In the investigation by the Federal
show's first edition last C o m m u n i c a t i o n s
spring, Harvard-educated Commission, which eventumanagement
consultant ally ruled the show did not
Alex Michel · picked his violate decency standards.
favorite bachelorette, but
Unassuaged,
several
held on to the ring and his women's groups and media
bachelor standing. ·
watchdog organizations this
Viewers didn' t have · to year asked CBS not to air
worry. Buerge 'not only the new special, calling it a
popped the. question, but "soft-core porn infomercial'~
also paid for the ring himself,. that degrades women.
.
-rather than let the show's
Btl! like the "fashions"
producers buy it.
. being "modeled," the broadBy then, Buerge's runner- cast had one unmistakable.
up candidate for wife had virtue: brevity. Lasting just
been sent packing.
an hour, it freed its audience"It breaks my heart Jo to join ''The Bachelor" ai
have to do · this," he told midpoint, as viewers go'
Brooke Smith moments ear- their TV tackiness botlr .
lier.
ways.

Griffith, Howard may
get statue in Raleigh
RALEIGH, N
(AP) Mary Richards has one, and so
does Ralph Kramden. Soon,
there could be a statue honoring Sheriff Andy Taylor and
his young son, Opie.
TV Land ~able network's
offer of a statue of "The Andy
Griffith Show" characters,
played by Andy Griffith and
Ron Howard, received unanimous endorsement Tuesday
from Raleigh's city council.
Andy and Opie wi II be
depicted on their way to the
fishing hole, jus! as they were
in the opening sequence of the
'60s sitcom . .

Nation • World

-The Paily sentinel

.I

Several Me1gs County teenagers were recognized for their
achievement in woodworking projects by the Pomeroy
Carpenters Local 650. Recognized were left to right,
Morgan Werry, honorable mention in measuring up; Derek
Roush, grand champion in finisfling up; Roger Chadwell,
grand champion in nailing it together; Ryan Kidder, grand
champion in measuring up; Robbie Weddle, reserve champion in nailing it together; Whitney Thoene, grand champion in making the cut and.also the clock trophy winner at the
Ohio State Fair; and Tyler Circle, reserve champion in mea. 'up.
sunng

RACINE- Revival services
will be held 7 p.m. Sunday and
Monday a1 the Dorcas Bethany
Monday, Nov. 25
RUTLAND
Rutland Church, Racine. Speaker will be
. Friendly Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Lloyd Middleton. Special music
at the home of Marjorie Davis. · Sunday will be by Beverly
Cunningham and on Monday by
MIDDLEPORT- Oh·Kan Coin ', Jerry Powell.
Club 7 p.m. at the Trolley House in
Middleport. Auction to follow the
meeting. Public welcome.
Monday, Nov. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS - Flu
vaccine will be administered to
all ages, 9 to 11 a.m., at the
Friday, Nov. 22
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ser- Eastern Library. Cost is $15. If a
vices will be held at the Hope Medicare or Medicaid card is
Baptist Church , 570 Grant St., presented at the time of service,
CHESTER - Plans for
· Middleport, at 7 p.m. through there will be no charge. ·
the
annual Christmas supper
Friday; and 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
and meeting were made at
Saturday, Nov. 23
Sunday. The Rev. Cliff Coleman
POMEROY - First Southern
will be preaching and special
· the recent meeting · of the
singing will be featured each night. Baptist Church will host a i:om- .
Past Councilors Club of
munity block party from 5 to 8 ·
Chester
Council
323,
p.m. Saturday at the church.
Saturday, Nov. 23
Daughters
of
America;
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel There will be hayrides, children's
The supper will be lleld at
sing will be held at 7 p.m.- at the train rides, bounce house, bat·
6
p.m. Dec. 11 &lt;n the
Middleport Church of the loons, games and crafts for
Masonic hall in Cllester.
Nazarene with the "Gioryland everyone. Plenty of food .
Believers. Pastor Allen Midcap Entertainment by the Bluegrass
There will be $3, gift
invites the public. Refreshments. Disciples. John Stevens and othexchange.
JiL ers from the church. There will
'Esther Smith conducted
be a bon fire. Dress warmly.
Sunday, Nov. 24
the
meeting which 9pened
MIDDLEPORT ~ Middleport Everrone invited.
with scripture, the Lord 's
Prayer and the pledge. The

Danny Glover
visits Trinidad

Friday, November 22, 200Z

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

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I

The Daily Sentinel ·

PageA6

Friday, November 22, 2002

Friday, November 22, 2002

..

The Daily Sentinel
-

•

..

111 Court Slreel • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

Church or JHUS Christ Apo!ltoUc
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.

Possible?
• The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, on planning for
an attack on Iraq : The Bush administration's warning that America will go to war with Iraq alone ifnecessary, with the goal of regime change in
Baghdad, remains on the table. Reports emerged
recently that the Defense Department planning for
such an invasion assumes a 130,000-person force ....
America's current force level is · 1.4 million,
including already activated Reserves and National
Guard; the remaining Reserve pool numbers 1.3 million. Some 235,000 of the on-duty forces.are already
committed in Germany, the Balkans, South Korea,
1apan, Colombia, Afghanistan, the Philippines and
other countries, from which it might be difficult to
extract them to augment an Iraq invasion force.
Which raises the question: Is the 130,000 figure
the Pentagon is using based to some extent on what
is avai lable without reactivating the draft, and if so,
is the United States setting itself up for a yearslong
horrible experience in Iraq?
It's a sobering question that confirms our opinion
that the best outcome of the president's threat of
force would be Iraqi compliance with "coercive ·
i'hspections" ·of its weapons capacity backed by a
-strong U.N. resolution.
•

.TODAY IN HISTORY
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Three little words can go a long way with marriage
Thou shalt not commit adultery.
(Exodus 20:14 and Deuteronomy 5: 18)
"What does this mean?
·
"We should lead a chaste and decent
life in word and deed, and each Jove and
•
l!onor hi s spouse." (Numberings and
definitions are from Martin Luther's
Small Catechism)
Most societies throughout history
have had laws and customs to deal with
sexual intercourse by a married person
with someone ·other than his or her
COLUMNIST
spouse.
In not all societies, however, has adultery been treated as_a cri':le as it was her and her partner. Ancient Jews conunder Mos~1c Law. Enghsh common sidered adultery to be a threat to family
law held that only the woman was to stability, which was a keystone of the
blame t~ an act of adultery but It ~as Jewi sh nation and culture. Adulterers,
n?t a cnme, only a mora~ wrongdomg. ·•- 1\l!lrnfQre, received the death penalty.
Fmes, wh1ppmgs _and 1. mpnson~ent "'R:ev. Joseph Fletcher, an Episcopal
were ~sed to curtail adultery "tn Puntan .. rriirilster who is known as "the father of
colontes. Statutes prov1ded for _the _death Situation Ethics," added the word "ordipenal~y but It , was rarely tnfltcted. narily" to this. commandment, as he did
Islam1c law allowed a m~n to kill his to others. Thus, in Fletcher's version, it
wlfe ll she were cau~ht tn the. act of would -read ·"Thou shalt not commit
adultery. Mere. susf1c10n that h1s w1fe adultery _' ordinarily." In this view;
had been unfauhfu ~as grounds for a th
b
me situations where
Muslim husband to d1vorce h1s w1fe.
ere rna~ e_ so
At the other end of the spectrum, adultery IS acceptable, .or, at 1east,
some societies have even sanctioned excusable. Mo~ern soctety, by and
· E ki
s a large, appears willmg to hve w1th th1s
aduItery. I n certatn _ s mo group. '
· te~retation which is reinforced by
husband may lend h1s w1fe to a v1s!tor. tn
. '
.
h'
But if the wife takes her own initiative ~not er dictum of S!tuatlOn Et . lC,~:
to do so, her husband could punish both Monogamy IS agamst human nature.

George
Plagenz

Jesus' knowledge .of human nature,
however, led him not to soften the
demands of this commandment, as the
followers of Situation Ethics have done,
but to broaden its application to include
those who "con:un1t adultery in the
heart." It was this that brought forth
President Carter's confession that there
·had been occasions when he had lusted
after a woman.
Martin Luther . extended this commandment's application even further.
He said we should lead "chaste and
decent life and each love and honor his
spouse."
.
Jack Lemmon, in "The Apartment,"
explains why he takes· his shirts to
Andre's French laundry. He says it is
because he -never has to tell Andre he
loves him when he picks up his shirts!
It is possible that one of the reasons
marriages fail - or at least fail to be
what they might be - is that spouses
have forgotten to say, "I love you." Or,
as in the case of Lemmon, it has
become -a chore. It may noi be the main
cause of husbands or wives wandering
off the marital range, but it could be a
_
contributing cause.
Try saying "I love you" more often to
you( spouse.

Today is Friday, Nov. 22, the 326th day of 2002. There are
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
~9 days left in the year.
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 22, 1%3, President Kennedy was shot to death
while riding in a motorcade in Dallas. Texas Gov. John B.
Connally, in the same limousine as Kennedy, was seriously
PERKINS; VIEW
woun&lt;;led. Lee Harvey Oswald, suspected of assassinating the
president, was arrested.
·
On this date:
In 1718. English pirate Edward Teach - better known as
"Blackbeard" - was killed during a battle off the Virginia
coast.
Less than half of Americans, accordholds had declined to the lowest rate
In 1890, French president Charles de Gaulle was born in
ing
to the latest Gallup P'oll, view
ever.
lcille, France.
·
Democrats favorably or believe that
And while women's groups are celeIn 1906, the "SOS" . distress signal was adopted at the
Democrat
leaders
on
Capitol
Hill
would
brating
that Pelosi has "broken the glass
International Radio Telegraphic Convention in Berlin.
·
move
the
country
in
the
right
direction.
ceili ng" in Congress - which ranks
In 1928, ''Bolero" by Maurice Rav.e l made its debut in Paris.
Even
a
majority
of
rank-and-file
right up there with Geraldine Ferraro's
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime·
Democrats
say
the
party
needs
to
mod·
1988 selection as Walter Mondale's
Minister Winston Churchill and Chinese leader Chiang Kaierate its liberal message.
vice
presidential running mate in a
shek met- in Cairo to discuss measures for defeating Japan.
So
what
did
House
Democrats
do
this
hopeles sly losing cause - she really is
In 1943, lyricist Lorenz Hart died in New York at age 48.
week? They selected Nancy Pelosi, the
a
just a situational feminist. How else to
In 1975, Juan Carlos was proclaimed king of Spaif\.
dyed-in-the-synthetic
wool
San
explain
her defense of former President
In 1977, regular passenger service between New York and
Francisco liberal, as their leader, pretty
Bill Clinton's adulterous sexual affair
Europe on the supersonic Concorde began on a trial basis.
COLUMNIST
much consigni11g House Democrats to
with
a White Hou se intern young
In 1980, death claimed actress Mae West at her Hollywood
minority status for the foreseeable
enough
to be his daughter?
.residence at age · 87 and former House Speaker John W.
future.
"It
's
about
sex," she said, during
McCormack in Dedham, Mass., at age 88.
Pelosi made a perfunctory effort to congresswoman also is out of step with · impeachment proceedings. "It's about a
In 1990, British Prime Mini ster Margaret Thatcher, having
ease the fears of her party's moderates mainstream Americans on issue after punishment searching for a crime that
failed to win re-election of the Conservative Party leadership
that, under her leadership, Democrats issue after issue. Her San Francisco val- doesn't exist." As if it's okay for the
on the first ballot, announced her resignation .
will spend much of the next two years ues simply do not play in Peoria. Take president to lie under oath. More recentTen years ago: Pre sident-elect Bill Clinton met in Little
clashing with the most popular presi- her opposition to Operation Desert ly, Pelosi, the false-hearted feminist
Storm back in 1991 . "While we are
Rock, Ark., with so metime-critic Jesse Jackson, who prai sed
dent in more tlian half a century.
~ravely
concerned about the loss of life defended another serial philanderer,
the fu ture chief execu.tive as a leader who could "make 'the
"We stand shoulder to shoulder with
Gary Condit, whose 24-year-old misnation whole.''
the president in support of our young from combat in the Persian Gulf War," tress was missing almost 13 months .
Five years ago: UN weapons experts returned to work in
·men and women in uniform and in the she said, "environmental ·conseq uences before turning up dead. "I know one
Iraq, searching· eight sites fo r signs the Iraqis might have
fight against terrorism," Pelosi told a of the war are as important to the people thing for sure," Pelosi told reporters,
worked on biological, chemical or other bannedarms during a
klatch of reporters this week. Of course there as the air they breathe and the "and that is Gary Condit didn' t have
three-week forced halt in inspections.
she neglected to mention that she was water they drink."
So, the future House Democrat leader anything to do with the disappearance
One year ago: With a tap on a laptop, Pope John Paul II for
alone among Democrat leaders, in bo th
the first time sent out his official word over the Internet, apol- - the House. and Senate, to oppose the thought it better that the United States of Chandra Levy. I know as a mother of
five children, four daughters."
ogizing for missionary abuses against i'ndigenous peoples of
resolution, sought by President Bush, and its allies give Saddam a free pass,
But would the congresswoman have
the South Pacific. A huge landslide swept over gold miners
authorizil)g military force against allow the despot to get away with been so sanguine about her Democrat
· ill.egally d.(gging into the side of a mountai n in western
Saddam Hussein. "Where we can find invading Kuwait, lo&lt;ik the other way colleague Condit had Levy been one of
Co lombia. killing 47 people. Cosmeucs magnate Mary Kay
common ground on the economy and on while the mass murderer used poison her own beloved daughters? As .Pelosi
Ash died in Dallas at age 83.
.
other domestic issues, we shall seek it," · gas against his own people, than risk emerged this week from a closed-door
Today's Birthdays: Forme r Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., is
said the highest-ranking woman in the harming the Gulf's environment? Then caucus with the other newly selected
there was Pelosi's opposition to bipartiR4. Comedian Rodney Dangerfield is 81 . Movie director
two-century history of Congress.
members of the House Democrat leadsan
welfare reform in 1996.
Arth ur Hiller is 79. Actor Robert Va'ughn is 70. Actor Michael
Of course, she glossed over mentionership
- all but one of whom are near"The cuts in this bill," she deClared,
Ca llan is 67. Actor Allen Garfi eld is 63 . Animator and movie"'' ing she opposed the president on both
ly
as
liberal as she - she asked
director Terry Gi lliam is 62. Actor Tom Conti is 61. Astronaut
hi s ecoqomic stimulus, which provided from the floor of the Hou se, "will reporters, "Isn't /this a picture of
Guion S. Bluford is 60. Ten ni s player Billie Jean King is 59.
much-welcomed rebate checks to near- dimini sh the quality of life for children America." Well, no one knew what
Rock mu sician Tina Weymouth (The Heads; Talking Heads;
ly I00 million taxpaying Americans, as in poor fa milies and wi ll have a devas- America she was talking about. But it
The Tom Clu b) is 52. Baseball player Greg Luzinski is 52.
well as hi s larger 10-year tax-cut pack- tating impact on the economy of our certainly wasn' t the nation that gave
cities." She was dead wrong. The
ACtor Richard Kind is 46. Actress Jamie Lee Curtis is 44.
age .
Republicans an even larger House
~ Rock singer Jason Ringenberg (Jason &amp; the Scorchers) is 44.
The problem with Pelosi is not just reform she opposed yielded a 52 per- majority this past election.
Actress Marie! Hemingway is 41. Actor Stephen Geoffreys is
that she is at odds with the Republican cent reduction in the we lfare caseloitd
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for
38. Rock musician Charlie Colin (Tra in) is 36. Act.or Nicholas
in the Oval Office - who happens to as nearly 2.3 million families left the 71te San Qiego Uu ion-Tribune and can
Rowe is 36. Ten nis. player Boris Becker is 35. Actress Scarlett
enjoy a 68 percent approval rating publ ic rolls. Meanwhile, by 1999, child be
reach1'd
at
Johansson is 18.
according lo Gallup . The eight-term poverty among fe male-headed house- Joseph.Perkins@ Union Trib.com.)

. Retd!ivllle Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study. Wednesday, 6 :30p.m.
Dexter Churdl of Chrllt
Pastor: Bill Eshelman
Sunday school9:30 a.m. '
No~ an Will, supe rintendent #
Sunday worship • I0:30 a.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services· 7 p.m.

Church or Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
EYangelist: Dennis Sargeot
Sunday Bibh: Study· 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Paslor : Arius Hu rt
Sun day School - 10 u.m.
Worship - I I a.m.

( 'hristi:1n l nion
Hartford Chun;"h of Chrbt In
Christian Ullion
Hartford, w.va;
Pulor:David Greer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services-7 :00p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middlepor1
Pastor: Re v. Gi lbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday Sch01:4- 9:]0 n.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Antiqulty Baptist ·
Sunday Schoo l -9:30a. m.
Wuuhi p- !0:45 11.m.
Sunday Even ing· 6: 00p.m.
Pastor:·Mark McCo mu5

,·

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4!5 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth • 7 p.m.

( 'httrl'h ol' ( ;od
Mt. Moriah O!un:b ot God
Mile Hill Rii., Racine
Pas10r: James Satterfield
Sunday School- 9 :4~ a.m. ·
Evenini ' 6 p.m.
Wedfiesday Services- 7 p.m.

.Rutlsnd Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland Church or God
Pastor: Ron Heath ·
Sunday Worship- 10 a.m..'6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Second RaptiAt Church
Ruvenswood, WV
Pastor: Duvid W. McClain
Su nday School 10 am, Morning worship 11 am Evening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Syracuse Flnt Churth or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Past or: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evcnina Services· 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

( 'atlwlir

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedne!iday Scr.oices- 10 a.m.

Laurel cutr Free Metbodllt Cliun;h
Rev. Les Slr8ndt and Myra L Strandl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. ·and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Cannei·Sutlon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worllhip • 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

l .altlT -D:I\ Saints
The Church of Jaus
Chrilt or Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486.. Sunday·Schooll0:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 ·

noon
Sacrament Service 9-\0:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, I st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

l .ulhl'ran
St. John Lutbenm Churcll
Pine Grove
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sundoy Sc~l - 10:0(fa.m.
Our Saviour Lutheran Churth
WalnUI and Henry SIS., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Graham United MethodbJt
Worship - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (31d &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

\a/:11'1'111'
Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30.u.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m, .
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- ll .a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chelltr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
' Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thur~day Services· 7 p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOiship· 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
WCdnesday ~e rvices - 7 p.m.

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

SynKUR Church of the Naurene
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:)0 a.m.. 6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Lona Bottom
Sunday SchOol - 9:30a.m.

Wonhlp • 10:30 o.m.
Reed..Ule

Sacl'ed Hearl Catholic: Church

Hobson. Christian Fellowship Church
Pstor. Herschel White
Sunday School- 10 am
Sunday Church service-6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restorf!lion Christian Fellowstlip
9365 Hooper Road, Ath.en s
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
Wedn 5d 7

'

i'l' llll't'OS I: II
Pentecost&amp;l Auembly
St. .Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServicC!!i · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham

Suilday • 9:30 a.~nd ~ p . m.
Wednesday . ·7 p.m. ·

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., S)·racuse
Re\1. Mike Thompson ,Pastor
SundBy School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning· 6 p'.m.
Wednesday Ser.·il.:e - 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Alfr&lt;d

Rejoicing Lire Cburc:h
500 N. 2nd A\'e., Middlepon
Pa~ t or : Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foremtm
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Harrlsonvll~ Commu~lty ChurCh '

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkne.~ s
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Northeut Cluster

Slivenvil&amp;e cOmmunity Churth
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
·Sunday Services· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.
· Thursday - 7:00 p.m.

The BeHnen' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., RutJand
Pastor: Rev. Marg.ilrel J. Rohin'son
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Faith Valley Tttbernacle Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - '7 p.m.

Me liP Cooperodn Porbh

Calnry Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Rlack wood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 ft.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Fallh Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W~nhip - 9:30a.m.' and 7 p.m.
Wednuday · 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 7 p.m.

Eut Letart
Putor. Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedn esday - 7 p.m. •

Hocklnaport Churth
Grand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Won hip • I I a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Mt. OHn Unltfd Mtthndlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • I0:30 Lm., 7 p.m._·
Thw-!iday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Fellowship Crusade tor Christ
Pas10r: Rev. Franklin Dicken~
SeJ'\·ice: Friday, 7 p.m.

Bethel Worship Ctnter
Chester SdiOOI
Pastor: Rob Barber
Assistant Pastor: Karen Davis
Sunduy Worship: 10 illl l
Clifton Tabernacle Churth
E,·ening Worship: 6 pm
Oi fton. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunday School- 10 a. m.
¥icdnesday: Pow er in Prnytr
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
and Bible ·SIUdy - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
· A5h Street Church
Ash St., Middlepon- Pastor. Glenn Rowe
New Lire Vletory Ctn1er
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
_Sunday Service-7:00 p.m.
PaStor: Bi il Staten
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.
Sunday Services- 10 a.m . &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday .· 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Agape Life Cfftter
' '
"Full -Gospel Church"
Full Gospd Chun;"h or the Llvlna Savior
Pllstors Joh.n &amp; .fatly Wade
Rt.338, Antiquity
603 Second Ave. Mason
Pastor: Jesse Morris
77]-!50 17
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m
Service time: Sunday 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday 7 pm
Salem Community Churth
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Abundant Grace R.F.I .
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
923 S. Third St., ~idd1 eport
Sunday School 9:30 lllJ)
Pastor Teresa Divis
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday servi ce 7 pm
Wednesday service; 7 p.m.

· , Momlng Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship - !Oa.m.

Bethel Churth
, Township Rd., 468C
Sunday SchoOl - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wedne ~day .Services- 10 a.m

'ldhodi~t

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
· 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen-·ices- 7 p.m.

Middleport CommuWty Churtb
575 Pearl St., Middleport
P11stor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sundlly School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tue sday Services- 7 p.m.

St Paul Ludleran Chun;"h
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second St. PomerOy

l nitl'll

~

Salem Center
Pas10r: William K. Marshall
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Worship - 9: IS a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Saowvlllt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

HyseU Run Holl""' Cburth
Rev. Mark Michrtel

Bradford Churth of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
' Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:00a.m,. 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

LanpvlUe Chrisd•n Chun:h
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Rutland
· Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 ,a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Hollne:M Churth
7!5 Pearl St., Middleport.
PaJtor: Rev. Doug Co11.
Sunday Wonhip · 9:30p.m., 7:)0 p.m.
Wednesday SerVice · 7:30p.m.

Rutland Church of Clarist
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 ~:o-m.. r p.m.

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd S1. Middleport
Pastor: Jam es E. Keesee
Worship - IOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service.s - 7 p.m.

JoseJ?h
Perkins

Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Hillside BoPdst Church
St. RL143 jusloffRt. 7
Pa.~ tor : Rc\'. James R. Acree. Sr.
·Sunday Unifi ed Service
WOrship · 10:]0 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wedncsduy Services -7 p. m.

Pelosi sascension in .House sends wrong message

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manl.ey

39558 Bradbury Road, Middkport

Old llethtl Free Will HapUst thur£h
28601 St. Rt 7, Middleport
Sund3y School - 10 u.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Th ursday Services- 7:00

..

112 mile off Rt. 32S

Rutland Cllun:b of the Na.r.arene
Pastoi': Rev. Samuel W. Basye

.

Roc:k.Sprlngs
Paslor: Keith Rader
Sunday School-9: 15a.m.
Worship -·10 a.m.
Youth Fellowstlip, Sunday · 6 p.m.

PiPe Grove Bible HoUneSs CbUrth

Bradbury Chun::h of Chrilt
Minister: Tom Runyon

IUckory Hilla Church or Chrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wepnesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pas.tor: ROO Brower
Wors hip -9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:3S a.m.

Leading Creek Rd ., ~ul1and
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p . ~ .
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

, Instrumental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10: 1!5 a.m.
Youth- .5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Bethlehem Bapdst Chu"h .
Gn:al Bend, Route 124, Racirie, OH
Pastor : Dani el Mccea
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship - I 0:30a.m. ,
Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.

a

Pomeroy

1\tppen Plain Chun:b ol. Christ

Mt. Union .Baptist
Pas10r: David.Wise man
Sunday SChool-9:45a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday ~crvices - 6:30p.m ..

Ptarl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Rose or Sharon Holiness Cburth

Lctan, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor. Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible itudy · 7:00p.m.

1

Mlnernillt
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Suqday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

••

Fairview Bible Cburth

Community or Christ
Portland- Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Heath !Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- p:OO a.m.

•
•

Chester Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orale
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7 p.m.

Other ( ' hurrlw~

Forni Run
Pastor. Bob Robi nson
Sunday School . tO a. m.
Worship · Y a.m.

C11h·•ry Plljrlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wed!lesday Service· 7:00 p.m.

Zion Chun:h of Chrbt
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.1 43)
Pa5lor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Sil\ler Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swa!lson
Sunday School- tOa.m.
Worship. \]a .m ., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:(10 p.m.

Flllwvods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Danw:llle Holineu Churtb
Suue Route 325. Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wonhip- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Whitt'• Otapel Wes&amp;e,an
Coolvi.lle Road
Pas10r: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Ponland First Church of the Nar.aftne
Pastor: William Justis ·
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday ~rvlce · 6:30p.m.

Wcmhi p - 9 a.m.

3 1~7

Worship- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Cburch of the NIZ.Irtnt
. Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunda}' School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen.·ices · 7 p.m

Wo N~ h ip

Enterprise ·
Paslor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

llolilll'SS

Bearwallow RldF Church or Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6: 30 p.m.

Radne First Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School · 9:)0 a.m.
Worshi p- 1Q:40 a.m·., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00 p.m.

Worship - I I a.m.
WedneM!ay Services · }:30 p.m.

Community Church
Pastor: Sle,·e Tomek
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worshi ~ 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servicc-7 p.m.

Wonhip -·9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
ht and 3rd Sunday

Flr:!it Baptist Church
Pustor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St .. Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship . 10:15 11.m .. 7:00p.m.
WeUnesday Sw:·icc- 7:00 p.m.

Ceotral Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Putor: Bob Robinson

Sunday School and
Holy Euc harist II :00 a.m.

Keno Cbun:h or Christ

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pasto r: E. ~a mar 0' Bryant
Sunday School · 9:) 0 a.m.
Worship - 8:15a.m., 9:4!5 am &amp; 7:00p. m.
Wcdne~day Services- 7:00 p.m

Worship - I0 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Gnoce Episcopal Churth
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy
Rev. James lkm~Kki, Rev. Katharin Foster

Mlddltpon Churdl of Cbri5t
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youlb Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worstup-' 8: IS. 10:30 a.m.. 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pomeroy First B11ptist
Pastor Jon Broclo:en
&amp;lst Main St.
Sunday Sch•Kll - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

•

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m .

Pomeroy Westsldt Church of Cluilt
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship- IOa. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Baptist

NATIONAL VIEW

--

Minister: Anthony Moni1
Sunda y School -9:30a.m.
Wonhi~ 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednr:sday Services • 7 p. m.

Hopt BaptJst Church (Southern)
570 Gram St. Middleport
Pa.~ t nr : Rev. David Bryan
Sunday school - IJ:30 a.m .
Worshi p - ll n.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedncsd;ty Service - 7 p.m.
Rutland Fii-st Haptist Churth
Sund ;ty School - 9 : ~Q a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

The opinions expressed in the column below are the consetts/ls of rite Ohio Valier Pub/ishin~ Co. s ediro rial board.
unless oihenrise noted.

1\appen Plains St. Paul

l'rlnlty Church
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Jack Noble
Worship 10:2!1 a.m.
Sunday School9:15 a.m.

Pomeroy Churtb of Chrilt
212 W. Main St.

Liberty Assembly uf God
P.O. Box. 467, Dudding Lane
Mason. W,Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sumlay..Services- 10:00 a.m. lind 7 p. m.

taste, addressing issues, not perso11alities.

Wednesday Servlcea · 7 p.m.

Hemlock Gro\'t Chrildan Churd1
Minister: Lany Brown
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study - 1 p.m.

of ( ;od

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

Worship- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month - 7:00p.m. sen-ice

Pastor: P.J. ChapRWJ
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - I I a.m.

( Utl"l'l'"aliuna l

RherValley
Aposlol il' Worship Cemer
Y73 S. 3rd A\.e .• M.iddlepon
Kevin Konkle, Pastor
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youlh Fri. 7:30p.m.

\sst&gt;mhl~

Letters ro the ediror are welcome. 71tey should be less rhan
300 words. All letters are s11bjecr tu edi1i11g and must be
signed and include iu/dren- and relep lwn~ 11umber. No
umigned leuas will be p11blished. Lel/ers should be in good

Troop strength count raises
questions about going i( alone

161 Mulberry Av.:., Pomeroy, 992-.5898
Paator: Rev. Walttr E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 :4~ -S:" p . m . : Man- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4.5-9:1.5 a.m.,
Sun. Masa - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mass· 8;30 a.m.

Emmanurl Apu!itulic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . RutJand
Serviceli: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Thu~ . 7:00p.m.
Pastor Mar1y R. Hutton

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

www.mydallysentlnel.com

l'rl'~ln

HarrisonviUe Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Rohert Crow
Wor!ihip - 9a.m.

•

Middleport Presbyterian
J'afltor: Rober Crow
Worship - 10 a. m.

Hazel Community Churth
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 u.m ., 7:30p.m.

.'it'H'IIth - lla~ \til l'lltist
Seventh-Day Adventlsi
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Lawinsky
SalUrduy Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Dyesvllle Community Chun::ti
Sunda y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

l nill'd Brl'lhrm

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday ·sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

·~

Faith Gospel Churtb
long Bottom
·sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Wo'fshlp -

tl·rian

SyraCUH First United Prnbyttrian
PaMor: Robert. Crow
Worship - II a.m.

10:4la.m., 7 30 p.m.

Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. OUn Community Chun:h
Pa.stor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday Schoo! - 9:30a.m.
Evenins- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.
I

Full Gospel L11hthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Paslor: Rby Hunter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesda)' &amp;: Thursday -7:30 p.m.

.

.ML Hermon United Brethren
l.n Christ Churth
Te~tas Community ~6411 Wickham Rd
Pastor: Raben Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worstlip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00 p.m.

Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 124, Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship · I0:00a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Youth Sen.·ice ·7:00p.m.

South Bethel Community Churth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Unda Damewood
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship Service 10 a.m.
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Rood
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship Sllrvice 10:30 a.m.
Evening Service 6 p. m.
Freedom Gospel Mliiloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3 I
Piastor: Rev. RogCr Will ford

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

-·-

7
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�Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

What in the world
are you thinking?
One reason it is so muc h
degrees of con fu sion and
fun to watch kids play
uncert ain ty. You find your. se lf tac king one ,issll!! , only
sports is because you never
know exactly what they are
to loo k up and find yourself
thinking as · the game
unfolds before them.
co nfronted with having to
Our son, Micaiah , who
c hase after one another.
fafiC
Yet the choices . we make
can run fast, played this seaca rry consequences.
so n on a youth footba ll team
GUEST VIEW
However. such are the
: in the Big Bend Area
· . League. His team did not
begin well. but finished
times we need to be patient
well .
cause the Lord to . ask , and pray. Sucli are the times
Near se ason's end. hi s "What are you thinking we need to stop long enough
team played the league's top down here ?"
·
to consider the principles of
team . With five second s left,
God's people often do God's Wore.!. Such are ihe
the score was 0-0. On fourth some
incredibly
dumb
: down with about twellt y things in the arena of life times we need to first prioryards to go for a touchdown, that absolutely do not make iti ze the · Lordship of Jesus
Micaiah ren1ained in the any sense. If there is such a Christ and the leadership of
backfield to block for hi s thing as spiri tual brain- the Holy Spirit .. Such are the
quarterback, who attempted deadness , then we often times we need to make sure
a pass .
.show the symptoms of it.
h
h
h' k'
· sad fac t Is
· exemp 1!- t at w at we are t tn 1ng
Th IS
Unfortunate ly, it was
intercepted, and, with no fied in God's Word, as in the coincides with what God is
time on the clock, the case of King Saul. Once , th inking.
defender stared a mad dash Saul erroneously took upon
It would save ourselves
for his goal line: He had a himself the role of priest to grief if we would, because,
good angle for the sideline, make an offering to the Lord "The Lord is fai thful , who
and attained a lead ahead of before an important batt le .
blockers
and
tacklers. In confronting Saul. Samuel shall establish you and keep
Parents and coaches for · asked. "What hast thou you from evil."
both sides were going nuts' done ?" . In other words,
Nonetheless,
we
left
After the game, · Terry "What in -the world were Michaiah standi ng and
asked him, "M icaiah , what you thinking?" Saul had a watching his opponent runin the world were you think- simple-mi nded
response
ing out there?" which is the when he said, "[ forced ningtoward the goal line for
the winning touchdown : It
same question posed all sea- myself."
so n by coaches to their playAnother time, Saul erred finally occurred to him what
ers when multitudinou s g ri evt;y~sly
when
he was happening.
Suddenly, he took off runerrors were made.
absolutely failed to comp ly
. Micaiah repli ed that , comp letely with God's war
·
·In structions.
·
Wh at 111
· ning. He sped through hi s
looking up after having fin- lime
ished blocking, he though it the world was he thinking to pursuing ·teammates and
was his own teammate run- defy God' Samuel said, passed the blockers. After
ning with the ball. Hmm . · "Listen, son, rebellion is as sprinting nearly 40 yards ,
Different jersey. Runnin g in the sin of witchcraft, and Micaiah .cat~ght up and
opposite direction.
stubbornness is as iniquity made the tackle at the fifNow before any of us and idolatry. "
respond to Micaiah 's onUndoubtedly, life poses us teen yard line .
With a ch uckle, Micaiah
field reasoning, we need to with circ um stances that
· remember how our spiritual involve
choices. also told hi s mother, " But, I
reasoning m.ust, in fact, Sometimes, situations carry . knew I could catch him! "

Ron

B

I .

Page AS

h

-

Religion Briefs
·Gospel sing in
Mason County

.

Revival at Rutland
Nazarene

Apostolic Tabernacle will host
their 36th Annual Hymn Sing at
·
I :30 p.m., Sunday. Nov. 24.
Brother James D. Kapp of
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Lancaster, Ohio, will be preachRUTI..AND. Ohio - Revival
- The Mason County Area mg.
services will be held at the
Choir will conduct a Gospel
Rutland Church of the
Sing at 7 p.m., Saturday, Nov.
Nazarene starting Wednesday
23 at the Church of Christ in
continuing through
and
Christian Union. The featured
Sunday. Services will be held
guest group is the Humphreys
at 7 p.m. nightly with the
family of South Charleston.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - A exce ption of Sunday when
There will be CDs and cas- community Thanksgiving ser- they will be held at 10:30 a.m.
selle tapes of the September vice is planned for 7 p.m. , and 6:30p.m .
. Gospel Sing tlvailable.
Sunday, Nov. 24, at St. · Louis
Evangelist will be Dr.
For information contact Catholic Church in Gallipolis. Nelson Perdue of Urbana arid ·
Pastor Dennis Weaver at 304- The event is sponsored by the the soloi st will be Gwen
675-5525.
·
Gallia
Area
Ministries Newbold.
Association. Donations of non\
A nursery will be provided
perishable food items for the and for transportation to the
Outreach Center of · Gallia serv ices residents may call
County will be accepte&lt;l at the 742-2202.
Pastor
Louis
··
service.
Staubs invites the public to
LEON, W.Va.- God's Will
anend.

Friday, November 22, 2002

Church settles test case on zoning
LIMA, Pa. (AP) -A small
:Baptist · congregation near
Philadelphia senled one of the
first challenges of a 2000 federal act that exempts religious
groups from most local zoning rules, unless a community
can prove they are necessary
for public safety.
Fre.edom Baptist Church
cited the act in a lawsuit after
township
Middletown

ordered it to close a small
chapel on the first floor of a
dentist 's office.
The chape l was next to a
synagogue and across the
street from a Presbyterian
church, but tow nship officials
said zoning rules limited the
otlice to commercial purposes. Township lawyers argued
that the federal act is unconstitutional.

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Subscribe today.
992-2156

The Daily Sentinel

Woods falls back, Page 82
Mavericks beat Rockets, Page 82
College football, Page 83

PageBI

Catholic church tries to reform
in wake of abuse scandal
CHICAGO
(AP)
Michael Bland said he was
molested by a Roman
Catholic priest as a child, but
his love for the church
remained and he later
became a clergyman.
He joined a religious order
and served for sevoo years
until he told church officials
what had been done to him
years before. Their response
- disbelieving and impassive, he said - sparked his
decision to leave the priesthood.
Bland now finds himself in
a unique position to change ·
how Catholic leaders handle
allegations of abuse: He is the Michael Bland, 42, a former Roman Catholic priest _and me~
sole molestation victim on the ber of the church-appointed NatiOnal Rev1ew Board, IS the only
National Review Board, a fay person on the panel who is a victim of clerical sexual abuse:
panel U.S. bishops formedbut advocacy groups )lave argued he does not represent the
this year to monitor how dio- views of the average vie,tim. The 13-member board evaluates
ceses discipline accused cler- how the church should ha"ndle sex abuse claims. (AP)
gy.
"I felt this was a different She said Bland was "a hand- challenge. He wants to show
time in the church, and the p.icked victim by the bish- that victims can heal.
church was looking to truly ops."
" I realize there's some
reform and I wanted to be part
David Clohessy, national good individuals who have
of that," Bland said.
director of I he Survivors done great things and some
Many ·other victim advo- Network of Those Abused by other individuals who have
cates had hoped to join the . Priests, called Bland "a good done horrible things," Bland
13-member board, and some man in a tough spot."
said.
questioned whether Bland
"I think that Michael must
Bland grew up in St.
was the right choice. A coun- feel some pretty awesome Joseph's Church in Carteret,
selor, Bland works for the responsibility to represent the N.J., where the priest he said
Archdiocese of Chicago help- thousands and thousands of molested him, the ReV: John
ing other abuse victims.
survivors who have seeming- Huels, was associate pastor.
Susan Archibald, president ly very, very little voice in
Bland said he considered
of the victim advocacy group the decision,making of our Huels a "role model" before
The
Linkup, wondered church leaders," Clohessy the clergyman began abuswhether a diocesan employee said.
ing him, leaving Bland conBut Bland welcomes the fused and afraid.
would challenge the system.

Muslims, Jewish leaders work
on Thanksgiving · Day readings
NEW YORK (AP) - The in conjunction with the
American Jewish Committee Islamic Supreme Council,
said it wants to promote the the NAACP, National Urban
nation's uniqueness and help League, Cuban American
unite its people through "A National Council, National
Thanks~iving .
Reader," Council of La Raza and the
which';' IS being distributtct- J'afll1nese American ~Citizens
free in print form and via the . League, among others.
Internet.
- The readings express
'fhe 16-page booklet of thanks for the United States
materials to be read before and its freedoms but note the
. Nov. 28 ~meals was published national past included black

,

slavery,
devastation
of
American Indians and the
sufferings of immigrants. .
The booklet "puts all
Americans on the same page;
marking .the Thanksgiving
holiday with a celebration of
our nation's unique democracy and diversity," said the
committee's executive director, David A. Harris.

Thanksgiving
service

Hymn sing at
Leon church

Inside:

atteirut tfie

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· ·

. A federal· judge approved
the setllement, in which the
township changed its zoning
ordinance to comply with the
federal act and paid the
$10,000
legal
church 's
ex penses.
The Becket Fund for
Religious Liberty, which
defends religions ' civil liberties, represented the Baptists.

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Friday, November 22, 2002

Shaq may make
debut tonight
EL SEGUNDO, Calif.
(AP) - Shaquille O'Neal
could make his season debut
Friday night, probably off the
bench in the Lakers' home
game against the Chicago
Bulls.
O'Neal received a shoe
support from his doctor to
ease the pressure on his
arthritic right foot, and he it
at practice.

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DOVER, Ohio (AP) ·Jerry Marlowe has crashed
the Ohio State-Michigan
game as a parachutist, a concessionaire and a cheerleader.
But he says he's waiting
on "divine guidance" from
the late Buckeyes coach
Woody Hayes before sneaking into Saturday's battle
between .the two teams.
Marlowe, of Dover, a
1961 graduate of Ohio
State's college of pharmacy,
has successfully entered
Ohio Stadium for the
Buckeyes-Wolverines game
nearly 20 times without a

Daly plays in
Asian Open
TA SHEE, Taiwan (AP) John Daly honored his mother's wishes by playing in the
BMW Asian Open following
her death in the United
States.
Daly shot a 2-over 74 for
an ·even-par 144 total, leaving
him 12 strokes behind leader
Maarten Lafeber of the
Netherlands. Lafeber shot his
second straight 6-un\ler 66 on
theTa Shee Golf and Country
Club course.

. TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) .Matt Williams will decide on
Friday whether to accept a
trade to the Colorado
Rockies .
The
Arizona
Diamondbacks have a deal in
place tha;t · would · send
Williams and three other
players to the Rockies for allstar outfielder Larry Walker.
However, Williams and
Walker must waive no-trade
clauses first.
•

Man convicted
of assult
NEW YORK (AP). A
man was convicted of assault
for punching Yankees pitcher
David Wells and knocking
out two of his teeth during an
early morning fight in a diner.
Rocco
Graziosa
was
acquitted of two other
charges after a weeklong trial
in Manhattan Criminal Court.
The jury deliberated less than
three hours. The 27-year-old
Graziosa faces up to a year in
jail when he is sentenced Jan.
!5.

Faver, Hovan
fined $5,000 .
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Packers quarterback Brett
. Favre and Vikings defensive
tackle Chris Hovan were
fined $5,000 each for their
·verbal confrontations during
Sunday's game. Both players
said they will appeal.

Fa~lk

still on
sidelines
ST. LOUIS (AP)
Marshall Faulk's availability
for this week won't be decided until the St. Louis Rams
visit
the
Washington
Redskins on Sunday. Faulk
missed Monday night's victory over the Bears with a high
sprain in his right ankle and a
strained tendon in his left
foot.

Hearst takes
back comments
SANTA CLARA, Calif.
(AP) - San Francisco 49ers
runn;ng back Garrison Hearst
acknowledged that his comment~ about. ~ay NFL players
~
were msensmve.
In an interview with the
Fresno Bee three weeks ago,
Hearst used a slur to describe
gays, and said he wouldn't
want a gay player as a teammate.

LONDON (AP) - The
IAAF has agreed with Athens
Olympic organizers that the
marathons can start at 7 a.m.
instead of 7 p.m. to avoid the
worst of Atbens' heat.

ticket by donning an array of
disguises.
For one game, he bluffed
his way into the game by
dressing as a nun .
•
"I loved that one," he said.
"It'~ the only time I went in
drag."
He's itlso entered the stadium as a band director, a
referee, a scoutmaster, a
pizza delivery man and a
television crew member.
Marlowe said he makes up
for the embarrassment to the
Ohio Stadium staff with a
donation to the school.

Please see Crasher. Bl

No. 1 Hurricanes
topples Pittsburgh

Williams to
decide on trade

Marathon times
changed

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Gate crasher
mulls sneaking
into 'The Game'

Ohio State quarterback Craig Krenzel (16) is pressured by Illinois defender Joe Bevis (33) in
the first quarter of the ir game Saturday in Champaign, Ill. (AP)

·Michigan,OSU hope
they don't have to ·
face 'what happened?'
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- B.J. Askew
had to relive last year's loss to Ohio State
over and over and over again.
Everytime the Michigan tailback
returned home, he was confronted with the
same question.
"I'm an Ohio guy.'' the Cincinnati native
said. "Man, when we lost to Ohio State, I'd
go home and hear guys talking, 'Hey what
happened?'"
· Earle Bruce, Ohio State's coach from
1979 to 1987, knows the feeling.
"It is the game, it is the big game and
sometimes people say it is the only game,"
said Bruce, now a radio analyst on
Buckeyes football . "It lets you walk the
main streets of Columbus, Ohio. Or if you
lose, you go to the alleys, buddy."
In addition to a No. 2 i'ankmg, a 12-0
record, a shot at the national championship
and a share of a Big Ten title, that's what
current Ohio State coach Jim Tressel has
riding on the outcome of Saturday's showdown with No. 12 Michigan: the ability to
be seen in public for a year. .
In his first game against'the Wolverines
as Ohio State's head coach, Jim . Tressel
won 26-20 a year ago. That victory brightened the winter for the Buckeyes ' fans,
who preferred to recall the win in Ann
· Arbor instead of a 7-5 record, a bowl defeat
and a third-place finish in the conference.

Tressel got to walk on main street. But he
knows the adulation he's getting from Ohio
State's fans only lasts until the first time he
loses to the hated Wolverines.
"We can't worry about what's going to
happen if we win or if we don't," Tressel
said. "We've got to focus on the game."
The teams are meeting for the 99th time.
Both sides carry a lot of baggage from the
past.
.
Asked what separates "The Game" from
other rivalries, Michigan coach Lloyd Carr
said, "There are a lot of guys that played at
Michigan that watch that game every year,
and I am sure it is the same for Ohio State.
They go to the ·games because it is a way
for them to relive the opportunities that ·
they had to play in the game."
Ohio State does not want to relive the
games in 1969, '9 5 and '96. Each time the
Buckeyes came into the Michigan game
with a perfect record and left with their
season in tatters.
And a year in the alleys.
With their first back-to-back wins over
f\1ichigan since I.981 and 1982, the.
Buckeyes can assure themselves a spot in
the national championship game on Jan. 3
at the Fiesta BowL The Buckeyes have surviVed several close games, including last

Please s.. Geme, BZ

MIAMI
(AP)
Pittsburgh threatened, and
Miami held on.
. Willis McGahee ran 19
times for 159 yards and
scored two touchdowns as
the top-ranked Hurricanes
·overcame another slow start
and a frantic finish to beat
the 17th-ranked Panthers
28-21 Thursday night at the
Orange Bowl.
In a nationally televised
game that gave Miami (I 00, 5-0 Big East) a chance to
showcase Heisman Trophy
teammates Ken Dorsey and
McGahee, the sophomore
running back had the majority of the highlights. 'But
Rod Rutherford had almost
as many for Pitt.
"McGahee was great. He
was the key guy in this
game," Pitt coach Walt
. Harris said.
·
McGahee had a 69-yard

touchdown run that tied the
game just before halftime
and added a leaping 4-yard
score in the fourth quarter.
After his second TD run,
McGahee placed his fingers
in the shape of a diamond ~ pop-culture symbol that
represents a dynasty.
. The gesture might have
been appropriate for the
Hurric_anes, but a bit premature.
The defending national
champions extended their
nation-best winning streak
to 32 games, their Big Eastrecord streak to 22 games
and moved two victories
away from a berth in the Jan.
3 Fiesta Bowl . They finish
the season at Syracuse and
at home against struggling
Virginia Tech. Miami also
took over sole possession of
first place in the Big East.

Miami running back Willis McGahee. center, leaps over
Pittsburgh defensive back Shawntae Spencer for a touch·
down during the second half Thursday at the Orange Bowl In
Miami. At right is ·Pittsburgh defensive lineman Dan
Stephens. No. 1 Miami beat No. 17 Pittsburgh 28-21. (AP)

•

Navarre
can
secure
his
legacy
with
win
at
Chi~ Sta~e
.
'

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) last season.
Navarre .needs eight compteThe junior has completed tions, 20 attempts, 390 yards
- John Navarre has done
enough at Michigan to have 55.7 percent of nis passes for and five touchdowns to break
his name among fonner star 2,339 yards with 20 touch- . Michigan's
single-season
quarterbacks Tom Brady, downs and just six intercep_- records set by Brady (comE! vis Grbac, Brian Griese, tions.
pletions), himself (attempts),
jim ~arbaugh and Rick
Navarre has shown the Harbaugh (yards) and Grbac
Leach in the school's record ability to throw to a second or (TDs).
books.
third option, after throwing to
The Cudahy, Wis., native,
But he hasn't done enough Marqutse Walker last season will have a good chance next
whe.ther he was covered or season to. surpass Grbac 's
. to quiet all his critics.
A win at Ohio State would not:
·
career records in all four catdo that.
The 6-foot-6, 236'pound egories.
When the 12th-ranked quarterback will not remind
"I treat that as an honor,"
Wolverines (9-2, 6-I . Big anybody of Michael Vick Navarre said. "There's a tra·
Ten) play at No.2 Ohio State or Leach but he has dition at the quarterback
(12-0, 7-0) on Saturday, they improved his agility anti foot- position here and 1 want to be
will need a performance · work enough to move in and a part of that. I want to play
somew here between solid around the pocket, after look- well enough that my name is
Michigan
John Navarre passes in the first quarter and spectacular from Navarre ing like he had cement in his meniioned in the same breath
of their Oct. 12 game against Penn State in Ann Arbor, Mich. for a victory.
cleats 1the previous two sea- with Griese, Brady, Grbac
Navarre was 27-of-41 for 244 yards . with two fourth-quarter Navarre has improved dra- · sons.
and those other great guys. It
1
Agat'nst the Buckeyes and
touchdowns. Navarre has done enough to rank among matically th.is year after colMichigan's best quarterbacks in the school's record books. lapsi ng in the second half of Michigan's bowl opponent, · Please s~ Navarre, 81

'

'

._..,....._ _ - - 6·--

- -,

i

---

.

I

�Friday, November 22, 2002
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

· Tiger Woods of the United States tees off on the 7th hole in
the second round of the Dunlop Phoenix tournament in
Miyazaki, southwestern Japan, Friday. Woods finished in19th
place at 3-under par. (AP)

MIYAZAKI, Japan (AP) out of the rough.
- Tiger Woods lost more
"I hit some good putts. but
ground in the Dunlop misread a couple · and that
Phoenix on Friday, shooting added up to a lot of missed
a 3-under 68 to fall eight chances," Woods said. "If I
strokes behind second-round . hit the ball like I did today
leader Kaname Yokoo..
and make the putts I'll be in
Woods holed a 40-foot
good shape. But a lot of it
eagle chip on the par-5
founh hole, but added only a depends on what Kaname
lone birdie on No. 16' to fin- does because he's playing
ish 36 holes at 3-under 139. very well."
"I hit the ball a lot better
He finally broke through
today," said Woods, who with the birdie on the 16th,
began the round seven hitting a sand wedge shot
strokes behind. ''The good from the fairway to 6 feet.
thing is I'm playing better First-round leader Darren
and hopefully I can play like Clarke of Northern Ireland
had five birdies and six
this on the weekend."
Yokoo had six birdies in a bogeys in a 72 that left him
bogey-free 65 that left him at five strokes behind.
II under - four strokes
Garcia birdied four of the
ahead of Spain's Sergio last si~t holes.
"If 1 play like 1 did at the
Garcia .(68), England's
Justin Rose (69) and
Myanmar's Zaw Moe (67 ).
end of today's round I like
..1 made some great putts my chances," Garcia said. "I
today," said Yokoo, a regular playe.d. pretty poorly on a
on the PGA Tour. "I'll· just few holes but am still iil
· to keep playmg
· like this good shape."
try
on the weekend."
Defending
champion
Woods missed an 8-foot David Duval shot his second
birdie putt on No. 9 after a straight 69, leaving him
solid 200-yard approac.h shot seven strokes bac'k.

Bad tooth, bad wrist, great results for Pak
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
Se Ri Pak has a hard
enough time beating Annika
Sorenstam when she's healthy,
so she was pleasantly surprised
to be tied for the lead in the season-ending
ADT
Championship.
Pak hasn't been able to eat
solid food in a week, and spent
Thursday sipping protein
·shakes under orders from her
caddie.
She has lost so much weight
that even Sorenstam jokingly
told her at one point, "Your
shorts are falling down."
If that wasn't enough, Pak
slightly injured. her right wrist
while warming up.
"It's too much pain. I shouldn't be here,'.' said Pak, who considered.withdrawing before she
got to the first tee. "However,
I'm here. I'lltrytodomybest."
Her best was a 5-under 67
that gave her a share of the lead
with · Sorenstam and Meg
Mallon at relatively tame
Trump International.
"I know her tooth is hurting,"
Sorenstam said. "For her to
play this well today in pretty
incredible."
Sorenstam, ·as usual, wasn't
too shabby.
Even though she already has
(AP) -

won I0 times this year on the her," Pak said. "She the best for
LPGA Tour- the most by any a couple of years already. •She's
player in 34 . years · such a great player. But at the
Sorenstam is .playing as though sali1e time, she helped nie to
her work is not done.
play well, too."
She was the model of consisDefending champion Karrie
tency once again, hitting fair- Webb had a 3-under 69, despite
ways and greens and making taking bogey on the 18th hole
her share of putts. That includ- and missing a 2-foot par putt on
ed an 8-foot eagle putt on the No. 14. She was joined by good
third hole that got her going, · friend Kelly Robbins, Lorie
and a slick 10-footer for birdie Kane of Canada, Rosie Jones
on the 16th to cap off a strong and Patricia Meunier-Lebouc
start.
of France.
It wasn't perfect.
Beth Bauer, the LPGA rook· Sorenstam missed only one ie of the year, was among those
greens, and continually gave· at 70.
..
herself good looks at birdie,
The scores were much better
usually in the 12- to 20-foot than a year ago, when only six
range. Her score could have players had rounds in the 60s
been lower.
under blustery conditions.
The 32-year-old Swede was
'This is probably as tame as
asked whether she was upset at this course will probably be,"
not making more putts, or Sorenstam said.
happy that she gave herself so · Pak and Mallon were the
many chances.
only piayers to reach 6-under
"It depends on what kind of par. Both bogeyed the 18th
mood you're in," she said. "I hole.
was patient on the front nine,
Pak, who made a 20-foot
but on the back nine it staned to birdie putt to pull ahead of
eat aJittle bit on the inside."
Sorenstam, hit her drive on the
Still, she was where everyone closing hole into the rough,
expected Sorenstam to be in the knocked her approach into the
season-ending event - on top bunker and then failed to conof her game, and at the top of vert the 8-foot par putt
the leaderboard.
Mallon's bogey was more
"I don't have any words for unusual, although .the same

Game
from Page 81 .
week's overtime win · at
Illinois.
"Anyone is heatable,''
. Michigan safety Charles
Drake said. "I thmk there is
a lot of competition around
the nation and that is why
the games are so close. They
, have been finding ways to
win and that is all that
counts at the end of the
day."
Ohio State strong safety
Donnie Nickey said the
Buckeyes can't be taken in
: by their ranking or record .
. "The danger lies in getting
; caught up in it," he said.

Navarre
frorri Page 81
: just motivates me to keep
pushing on to put myself in
that echelon."
While Navarre has accomplished a ·lot, some still look
at him as the quarterbac).{
who didn ··t make the necessary plays to win at Notre
Dame thts year- or last year
against Ohio State or at
Washington or Michigan
State.
· Michigan coach Lloyd
Carr, who earlier this year .
said he was finished answering Navarre's critics, tried to
take some pressure off him
this week.
''The quarterback is not out
there by himself," Carr said.
''The problem is that he is
~oing to take all of the blame
tf you lose and that is just the

"But I don't think that's
going to happen. "
Michigan (9~2, 6-1) can
possibly pick off a BCS bid,
in addition to ruining Ohio
State's hopes once again.
The Wofverines have won
·three in a row since losing at
home to Big Ten leader
Iowa.
Defense will likely rule
the day, since neither team
is ranked in the top six in
·. the conference in total
offense. The Buckeyes have
difficulty ·running the ball
without Maurice Clarett who hasn't played a full
game in more than a month
because of a shoulder injury.
And Michigan quarterback
John Navarre always seems
to save his worst for the
way it goes. But the truth is·
that everybody around him
has to play well."
While many believe the
game in Ohio Stadium will
be a huge game for Navarre's
legacy. he doesn't see it as a
.
defimng moment.
· "I do not .feel personal
pressure because I did not
have to win the game last
~ear and I do not have to win
11 this year," he said.
In the 26-20 loss to Ohio
State at home last year,
Navarre was 21-of-47 for206
yards with four interceptions,
a fumble and two touchdowns. . .
"I was trying to do too
much,"
Navarre
said.
"Looking back on it, I
ihought I had to win the game
and I did not have to do that.
I just had to manage the team,
run the offense."
Navarre admits it's tough
to manage a game - which
1

Friday, November 22, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Woods shoots 68, falls eight strokes back

biggest games, throwing
four interceptions a year ago
against Ohio State.
Still, just like Ohio State,
Michigan has won five
games decided by seven or
fewer points. And Carr has a
10-2 record against teams
ranked in the top 10.
"Everyone's looking for
·
the right answer right now
and trying to see · what's
going to happen," two-time
Ohio State All-American
strong safety Michael Doss
said. "But you really won't
know until 12: 15 kickoff on
Saturday. Once the game
gets going, that's when it all
counts."
'

is football speak for not,comniitting mistakes - while
making the difficult throws
and decisions necessary to
win a game against an undefeated team on the road.
"It is a balance," he said.
·"You want to play to win.
But at the same time, the winning strategy is to possess the
ball, manage the game, ball
control and field position. At
times those can look like passive strategies, but they are
the winning ways to do
. things," Navarre said. "If you
possess the ball, it is g~ing to
come down to who makes the
least mistakes. Tha.t makes a
difference in the game.
"You want to be aggressive, and when you get your
chances to be aggressive you
have to capitalize on them."
The Buckeyes have been
impressed with Navarre's
improvement.
"He's definitely matured

'

could be said for her round.
Having come up short ofthe
18th FO. her pitch shot hit
the pm and bounced 10 feet
away, leading to a bogey that
cost her the lead. Then again,
Mallon could not ignore her
eagle . on No. 12, when . she
holed a wedge from 89 yards
out of simd-fJ.Iled divot. ·
''That's the golf gods for
you," she said.
Sorenstam's only bogey was .
a three-putt on No. 14, the
trickiest green at the Trump.
The rest of the day, she was
splitting of the fairway and
keeping it close to the cup.
Big surprise there.
''You know she's going to
bring her best, which is why
she's No. 1," Mallon said.
"She's had bad· days sometimes, but you can't count on
that."
.
Pak wasn't sure what to
expect.
Her tooth has been a problem
for two years, but it flared up
again a few weeks ago during
the Mizuno Classic, where she
tied for third. Her dentist can't
help for a couple of weeks, so
Pak figured she might as well
return to the United States to
play
in
the
ADT
Championship.

.Crasher
from Page B1
Every
time
the
, Buckeyes pulled off a
come-from-behind victory
this season, Marlowe was
with his cousins, Larry
and Susan Smith, in !herr
. home in this community
88 miles northeast of
Columbus.
· "I'm tempted instead of
trying to crash the gate
Saturday · to go over to
Larry and Susan's to
watch the game," said
Marlowe, adding that
wearing his lucky underwear may be just as
important.

and grown up in that
Michigan program and made
some things happen for those
guys," Ohio State safety
Mtchael Doss said. "He's
been throwing the ball ~retty .
well. He only had one mterce{'tion (in Big Ten play)
gomg into last week's fame.
''There was a lot o pressure on him in the off-season
and he's stepped up to the
challenge."

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

www.mydailysentinel .com

College football

NBA

Mavericks blast
past rockets
DALLAS (AP) - Yao
Ming flipped in a short basket and turned it into a 3point play. Then he blocked
a shot, came back downcourt and turned a rebound
into a layup. His next time
on offense he grabbed a
rebound, was fouled hard
and nailed two free throws.
In his first 103 seconds
ThUrsday night, Yao showed
why he was the frrst pick of
the · draft and why the
Houston Rockets are so
excited about his future.
Then came the fourth quarter, when he · reminded
' everyone ho~· far he still
.has to go.
Yao played nine minutes
in the final period, but
scored just one point and
failed to take a shot as the
Rockets lost to the Dallas
Mavericks 103-90.
While Dallas improved to
12-0, matching the fourthbest start in NBA history
and setting a franchise
record f&lt;ir consecutive wins,
the sellout crowd at
American Airlines Center
and the national· television
audience went away talking
about the 7-foot-6 center
from China.
"A lot of people are now
aware of what he can do,"
teammate Steve Francis
said.
In the only other NBA
.game Thursday night,
Portland beat Seattle 89-85.
Yao set highs with 30
points, 16 rebounds and 33
minutes. His previous bests
were 20 points, seven
rebounds and· 24 minutes.
He was 10-of-12 from the
fiteld, niaking him 31 of his
last 35, and 10-of-12 on free
~~~ a technical stand·
point, 1 felt very good," he
said.
The Rockets were down
by 10 when he entered with
3:28 left in the first quarter,
then he went on a 7-0 ~n.
He had consecutive baskets _in the second quarter
that put Houston up 44-42,
and he ran a fine give-andj:O that Steve Francis fin1shed with a high-flying
dunk to tie the game at 62.
"We always thought he
was going to be a good
player, but not for a couple
. more years," Dallas coach
.Don Nelson said .. "He's got
the whole eackage. He is
some factor.'
But he's stillleariiing.
Yao had 21 points and
seven rebounds m 15 firsthalf minutes. Then Dallas
mixed things up, fatigue set
in and Yao wore out. His
only point in the fourth
quarter came on a free
throw. .
"I have to build up my
endurance;" Yao said.
·
Yao was glad to play .

Dallas' 7-6 Shawn Bradley. _
"I don't get many chances
to play against a player as
tall as me, so I was -very
excited," Yao said. "I know
I'm-not the skinniest player
in the NBA"
Dallas broke the 6G-all tie
with an 11-0 run and it was
never close again. The
Mavericks led by as many
as 17.
.
Michael Finley led Dallas
with a season-high 28
points, including six 3pointers, and Dirk Nowitzki
had 24 points and nine
rebounds.
The Mavs' next goal is
matching Boston's 14-0
start in 1957-58, then the
record of 15-0 set by .
Washington in 1948-49 and
matched by Houston in
1993-94. Dallas next plays
Saturday night at home .
against Seattle.
"We feel confident, but
it's goin~ to end sooner or
later," satd Steve Nash, who
had 15 points and eight
assists. "We're really not
concerned about the streak.
We just want to get better."
The Mavericks are still
scoring as much as ever, but
their defense is drastically
improved. Houston was the
·· h h tr · h
etg t s atg t opponent to
score under 100 'points.
The Rockets shot 41 percent after hitting a seasonbest 51 percent the previous
game. Francis had 22 points
and Glen Rice 16, going 5of-10 _ all on 3-pointers.
Cuttino Mobley had just
t~e points, going 0-for-8 .
"Don Nelson is no
dummy. They packed the
. zone in for all 48 minutes.
That's one of the smartest
things he' II do all season,"
Francis said.
Nelson, the third-winningest coach in NBA history, tied the longest winning
streak of his 25-year coaching career.. He had a similar
stretch wtth the 1981-82
. M!.lwaukee Buch
How many ~ifect peapie do you kn~w. Well, h~re
ts one, babr, Nelson satd, .
then p~nchmg the atr for
emphasts.

Rivalries take center stage this week
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Game and The Big Game,
The Battle of .the Palmetto
State and The Ci vii War. And
don't forget the fight for Paul
Bunyan's axe.
·
It's rivalry week in college
football , when games take on
· a different meaning and win.- ners receive such prizes as the
. Old Oaken Bucket, the Apple
:. Cup, and a tiny, gold pair of
pants. Really.
Two of the biggest rivalries
have national championship
implications this season, particularly Saturday's game
· between No. 2 Ohio State ( 120) and visiting No. 12
. Michigan (9-2).
Twice in the last seven
. . years Ohio State had title
hopes dashed by the
Wolverines .. If the Buckeyes
win, they will secure a spot in
the 'national championship
game Jan. 3 in .the Fiesta
Bowl - and players will
receive a small gold charm in
the shape of football pants.

between No. 9 Alabama and
Auburn , and the IOOth edition
of The Battle of the Palmetto
State between South Carol ina
and Clemson.
There are two other Big Ten
rivalries: Indiana and Purdue
play for the Old Oaken
Bucket, while Minnesota and
Wisconsin play for Paul
Bunyan 's axe (well, it wasn't
really his).
.
And then there are the new
rivalries. The winner of
Saturday's inaugural Division
1-AA game between Florida
Atlantic
and
Florida
International will receive the
Don Shula Award, named for
the Miami Dolphins' former
coach, a Hall of Farner.
Shula was .a mentor to FlU
coach Don Strock and FAU
coach
Howard
Schnellenberger.
In other Top 25 games, it's
No. 24 Texas Tech at No. 4
Oklahoma, Rutgers at No. 8
Notre Dame, Auburn at No. 9
Alabama, No. 10 Kansas

State at Missouri, No. 14 A&amp;M 30-26 behind a shoddy
Florida State at North performance from the secCarolina State, Michigan ondary.
,
The Sooners gave up four
State at No. 15 Penn State,
No. 18 Maryland at Virginia, touchdown passes again st the
New Mexico at No. 20 Aggies, and now play one of
Colorado State, Mississ.ippi at the nation's top quarterbacks
No. 21 LSU, No. 22 TCU at in KliffKingsbury, who guidEast Carolina, and No. 23 ed the Red Raiders (8-4, 5-2 )
Boise State at Nevada.
to a 42-38 upset of Te11,as last
The rivalry games won't week. Oklahoma has· held
end thi s weekend. Arizona Teltas Tech to 13 points in
hosts Arizona State on Nov. each of the last two years.
29 · for The Territorial
No. 7 Southern California at
Championship · Cup. Next No. 25 UCLA
week's games al so include
The Trojans have won five
The Egg Bowl between straight and are off to their
Mississippi and Mississippi best start since 1995 . Thl!y
State, No . 6 Georgia vs. have won the last three over
Georgia Tech, and. No. 19 UCLA, but only once before
( 1976-79) has USC .beaten the
Florida vs. Florida State.
· No. 24 Texas Tech at No. 4 Bruins four straight tim~s .
Oklahoma
This also is the first time sir(ce
This one's for the Big 12 1993 that both teams have
South title and a spot in the entered the game ranked.
Odds are this could be
conference
championship
game against Colorado. close. Fifteen of the last 22
Oklahoma (9-1, 5-I) looked USC-UCLA contests ha.ve
like it was in control of the been decided by seven points
league until it lost to Texas · or less. ·

· Keeping his own emotions in
check could be one of the
biggest challenges this week
·for Northern lllinois coach Joe
·Novak, whose school . is
preparing for its biggest football game iil 20 years.
· Not since 1983 have the
Huskies played a game as
.meaninsful as Saturday's con·~st agamst Toledo in DeKalb,
Ill.
A win would give the
Huskies (8-3, 7-0) the MidAmerican Conferenc~ · West
. Division title arid a spot in the
,~eague championship game sometjJing that seemed eons
away five seasons. ago when

they rejoined the league.
The last time Northern
Illinois played in such an
important game was 1983,
when it won the MAC and
defeated Cal State-Fullerton
20-13 in the California Bowl to
ca~ a 1~2 season.
'People here are excited,"
Novak said. ''There hasn't been
a lot of success in football here
over the years. Still, we've got
to get the job done this week."
The Huskies have steadily
improved since going 0-8 in
the MAC (0-11 overall) in
1997, their first season back in
the conference.
Outing the MAC coaches'

weekly
teleconference
Monday, Novak was asked
whether he thought · the
Huskies could crack the top 25
with a victory over Toledo. ·
"I see we're getting a little
bit of attention now and that's
been great, but let's win this
one frrst," Novak said. "If we
can't get it done against·
(Toledo) than I don't think we
deserve to be ranked."
Northern Illinois has beaten
a top 25 team this season. Its
26-17 win over then-No. 20
Bowling Green on Nov. 9 is the
reason why the Falcons can't
win the West Division. ~
The Rockets (7-3, 5-I) win

At Seattle, Bonzi Wells
scored 16 points, and
Portland took the lead for·
good With a 14-1 third-quarter run.
Rasheed Wallace added
13 points to help the Blazers
to their third straight victory
after a 3-6 start. ,Gary
Payton had 22 points and 14
assists for the- Sanies, who
fell a half-game behind
first-place Sacramento in
the Pacific Division .

the West - and play· in the hottest team in the league," he
conference title game Dec. 7 at . said. "All the momentum is in
the East Division ~inner - if their favor. They ~et to play on
they beat Northern Illinois and their home field m a champiBowling Green. ·
onship game. We'll get · their
Facing a team with a lot to best effort. We'll have to play
play ' for concerns Novak, our best game of the year just
whose Huskies have lost to the to stay in the game."
Rockets each of the last five
Amstutz has been impressed
seasons- by an average score by the way Northern Illinois
of 36-15.
has compensated for the loss of
· "I know this, they're the injured players such as tailback
defending league champion Thomas Hammock, who's out
and until someone takes that for the season with a heart ailaway from them, they're the ment.
team to beat," Novak said.
Michael Turner has stepped
Toledo coach Tom Amstutz in and rushed for 1,702 yards
sees the game differently.
and scored 19 touchdowns.
"Right now they are the
"This is a special team,"

Amstutz said. "On a championship team, someone has to
step up as the year goes on. ·
They're doing that."
.
The stats from two of ·
Turner's games would make a
good season for most MAC
running backs. He had 225
'yards rushing and five touchdowns in a 49-21 win over
Eastern
Michigan
last
·Saturday, and 222 yards rush,
ing and five touchdowns. in a
48-41 win over Miami of Ohio
on Oct. 12.
"He's a real power runner,"
Amstutz said. "He has great
vision and patience. He really
sees the hole."

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Salt Lake · City Olympics
figure skating scandal.
Lawyers . for Alimzhan
Tokhtakhounov contended
their client was taken ille- ·
gaily to Venice. A hearing on
extradition to the United
States will be held next
month.

Mobster In
Olympic scandal

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Biggest game in two decades for Nortl1ern Illinois :,

Trail Blazers 89
SuperSonics 85

Sports Briefs

NEW YORK (AP) Middleweight champion
Bernard Hopkins must pay
$610,000 to a former adviser, former HBO senior vice
president Lou DiBella, for
libeling him by claiming he
arranged fights while working for a cable network.

straight in the series.
The entire Pac-10 schedule
this weekend features rivalry
games . Oregon State (7 -4 l
hosts Oregon (7 -4 l in The
Civil War, No. 7 Southern
California (8-2) plays at No ..
25 UCLA (7-3) for The
Victory Bell, and California
(6-5) hosts Stanford (2-8) in
The Big Game.
The Cal-Stanford contest
comes on the 20th anniversary of The Play - when the
Bears beat the Cardinal on a
game-winning kickoff return
that went right through the
Stanford band .
Then there are two historic
·. rivalries known simply as The
Game: Harvard vs. Yale, and
Lehigh vs. Lafayette. The
138th meeting between
Lehigh and ·Lafayette is the
longest rivalry in college football, while the II 9th meeting
between Yale and Harvard is
the third longest.
Other big .rivalries Saturday
include The Iron Bowl

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Hopkins must
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The tradition started m
when
first-year
1934,
Buckeyes coach Francis
Schmidt told people asking
how Ohio State would fare
against its nemesis from Ann
Arbor: ''They put their pants
on one leg at a time just like
everybody else."
Schmidt's Buckeyes then
defeated Michigan four consecutive times, all shutouts.
''To see those gold pants in
your hands, you realize one of
your goals was to come to
Ohio State and attain one of
those," Buckeyes safety Mike
Doss said. "You look at it, and
it's a symbol of all the hard
work that you've gone
through."
Also Saturday, No. · 3
Washington State (9-l) hosts
Washington (6-5) for the
Apple Cup. A win gives the
Cougars the Pac-10 title, and
they could play for the nationa! title if No. 1 Miami or Ohio
State
slips
up.
But
Washington has won four

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[

__

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 22, 2002 .

www.my.dailysentinel.com

._,.,•l!'&gt;J·N'tH·tlft•1• ' I~.

Friday, November.22. 2002

Scoreboard

lm•.

'

.......... QQ-·5- ........ Wt

L

252 Upper
River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

College Soccer
.

Nov. 21-26
Bowling Gmon, Ky.
All times Central
.
Thuractay·a Matches
(1) AUburn Montgomory, Ala. def. (t6)
John Brown, Ark., 6·2
·
(3) Rio Grande, Ohio def. (t4) Goldey·
Beacom, Del. , 2-1
(4) Mid-COntinent, Ky. oet. (1 3) Aagler,
Fla .• 2-1
(2) Undsey Wilson, Ky. del. (t5) Martin
, Luther, Minn. (16-4-2), 9-0
Today'e Matchea
(5) Mobile, Ala. (13·4·1) v. ( t 2) Be1hel,
lnd (17·3-4), 12 p.m.
t6) Park, Mo. (18· t ·21 v. (1 1) Concordia,
Cal~ (t7-4·1), 2:30p.m.
(B) Covenant, Ga. (21·2·0) v. (9) Illinois·
Sprlng1ield (1 1-6·1);·5:30 p.m.
(7) Baker, Kan. 114·3·3) v. (tO) Simon
Fraser, B.C. (13-4.Q), 7:30p.m.
Saturday's Malchu
Quarterfinals _,
Mobile or Bethel v. Mid-Continent (18-31), 12 p.m.
.
.
Rio Grande (19.0-1) v, Concordia or
Park, 2:30p.m
·
'
Auburn Montgomery (19 -1-1) v. llllnoisSpririgfield or Covenant, 5 p.m.
Baker or Simon Fraser v. Lindsey Wilson
(20- t -1): 7:30p.m.
Monday's Matchea
Semlflnals
Quartertinal winners, 6 p.m. and 8 p.m
Tuesday'•·Match
National Champtonship
Se ~ifi nal winners ." 7 p.m

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Two for Gibbs
Tony Stewart's 2002 championship
marks team owner Joe Gibbs' second
Winston Cup title. Gibbs also won the
title in 2000 with driver Bobby Labonte.

·'I

''

Runner-up Martin happy
with comeback season
.,
Homestea!i. Fla.
or the fourth time in his 20-year·racing career,
Mark Martin finished second in the Winston
Cup championship, ttnd it ne\·er felt better.
Martin beat Tony Stewart to the finish line
Sum;l ay, fourth to Stewart's 18th in the Ford 400 at
Homestead -Miami Speedway But Stewart had
enough of a cushion to win the ch&lt;i. lnpionsh ip ·by 38
points.
Mart-in won't even cons ider how difficult it ts to
win the Winston CU:p.
" You can !criticizej me all you want to about running second and that'S·not good,"
he said. "But I'w had a great
career and I've done ali I can do.
Say what you want I didn't score
enough points this year, nor did I
in '98, nor did I in '00. I never
scored enou"gb points.
"I don't think that I'm the
greatest race car driver that ever
MARTIN
lived and I don't want anybody to
write that about me. I do what I
do ami I've been very fortunate. I have a lot of
. respect and I've got a lot of trophies. believe me, a ·
lot more trophies than most people. f've done a lot of
neat thi ngs in rTiy career and th at's all I can do."
Martin seemed proud to be a contender again
after slipping to a 12th-place fmish in the poUlts
stan dings last year. his first fmish outside the top
eight Since 1988.
·
"!never really looked at thi~ thing this year and
allowed nlysclf to th ink-that I would win it and
that'l:i a good thing because I fl;.'l;!l no letdOwn now,"
Mat·tin said.
,;BLJt l had so many people that wanted me tO; w1n
it so bad. that l almost got afraid that they were . · ·
going to be let down so bad ancJ I was going to Jet
them down. I guess what I'm trying to say is thank
you. Thank you to all the competitors who felt t hat
\vay and all the fans and all the people who I )mow. I
gave it c"v·crything I had from January testing to the
last lap today. I'm not disappointed with the out·
come."
·
Martin started 34th Sunday and needed a miracle
to take the title. But there he was in U1e closing laps,
racing t11ree-wide, trying to gain positions.
He said he felt rejuvenated by his season.
''It 's good, man. !J'he last time 1fmished second,
in '98, the championship was sewed up at
Rockingham. We had a great year. We won seven ·
races and were awesome, but Jeff Gordon won 13
and ju ~ t clobbered uS. We didn't have a chance, but
we finished second.
..
''Man, we fought fqr this one right down to the
wire. Tcan't remember back (to)1990 and don't care
to. bu't thi s may be the greatest battle that"myself
and the people arotmd me ever fought.''

F

Pl!lce Your
Cot NewJI Service

Hot Busch claims foi.lrth
win, jumps in standings
By ALLEVINE
Cox News "Service

M

"We've beeri on a torrid pace
here at the end, somewhat of a
mind-boggling pace to gather
points, and it's great to be able
to t1nish third in points," Bus_Ch
said.
'
"The third year is ahead of U8 and to say that if
we don't win a championship, it won't be a disap. pointment. I've got' many years in front of me. I
think I've got time on.my side."

Stewart l'li'Hn ruled accidental
Tony Stewart, who finished last In the,.flr~ rad.e of .
. lf'ln~ason ; captured ltle NA~CI\R. crown ~unday•., u

'ivtnot9n wrtt•s. i don't care
lmw many I!Whies the~ gl:le

~;~~~~~ c~~ -

~

=ul~~~~~::ti:

,,,.. gOing to remamber most.about

son.

'

· '"There were ttmes,that p0o.
pie wanted 'to leave be(:ause

He l3)d lj1e ~hampi(ll).\bil' ~
a gond paybaCk fot hlsteom·

mates:

,

,. , _
th.,..
·

"There are a lot of
I'm not ever gofug to be a~le to
repair with some of th"" •
guy• But theY've stood behind ·
. me, through thick and thin, fur
four years. And the.end
Is that we're Wmston Cup .
champions."

result ·

Here are Tony stewart's re&lt;:tng ChampiOn!lh_,,,
• 2002:.\lllnston Cup
·
,
· ·
,
• 2001: World of Outlaws (as owner o.l Danny l.liso&amp;kfa car)

• 1997: Indy Racing League
•
•
•
•

·

11195: National Midget
1~ National Sprint
1995: National Sliver Crown ,
11194: USAC National Mk!gel'

·

.

,

...,.

.

. ,,

• 1983: International Kllrtlng Federalfon Clliln&lt;l ChampiOn
• 1980: Rookie Junior Cl~ t&lt;arting

Nyan Newman fmished sixth in Sunday's race
in the No. I.ti'ord, slxth in th e points standings
and edged Jfmmie Johnson by 23 points for Rookie
of the Year.
"It's been a great season,"
Newman said. "Even when we
struggled, we struggled as a
team and we fough t back,
whether it was an engine failure or me punching a hole" in
the radiator, we constantly
fought back and. that's important to me as a rookie."
NEWMAN
Jobnson, who finished eighth
in the No. 48 Chevrolet, becam e
only the second rookie tn the moder n era to finish
in the top five in the final points standings. He was
. flfth. Stewart (fourth, 1999) was the first.

Anheu.ser -Busch·has renewed its contract with
NASCAR for five more years as the title sponsor of
the Busch Series.
· The Busch points fund, which was $2.5 million
in 2002,
Increase by 8400,000 per year over the
length of the contract. The series began in -1982.

·wm

ayAL~TAYS
·cox News Serv ice

.
D

Homestead, Fla.

m)'t kn ow about you. but

I aan'L wait to watch
TOn y Stewar t's first
appearance with Lena. .
· Jay: " Hey, 1bny, lwwyud~?
Saw }'Oli at Homestead. Mi iff .

take .Your picture .~ Please.
hit me."

't

Tony: "Why would )YlU WD/ll UJ
lafk about that? What part of
'get oulta my face' don't you ·

·

understand?''

~

Now that's entertain ment.
It's a scary scenario. but it
could happen. How ls Stewart
goillg to han dle being Winston
Cup champion ? ·
Stewart blows ofY the question every time Jt's asked. but
it's pertinent nonetheless. Now
th at he's wo ri the title, he's going
to have to schmooze wi th Jay
and Dave and maybe even
Conan (O'Brien, not 1lw
Barbar ian). NASCAR wants its
champion to do it and.so doefi
Stewart 's.spQnsOc Home Depot.:

CHAMP TONY STEWART

· NA$CAR spokesman?
You'll noti ce they hold the .
awards banquet in New York,
not Charlotte.
But Leno and Letterman and
O'Brien are going to ask Stewart
a lot of the same questions he's
been de;,tling with all year. And
one-thing we·ve learned ahout
Stewart is that he hates - hares

- having to repeat himself.
Stewart, like Jeff Gordon, has
the.power and personality to sell
the sport to millions of fans who
still buy the stereotype that it's
jus1 a bunch of rednecks turn·
ing left.
Oid I say Stewart has the per·
~ona\fty? Yes. he does. He can be
funny as all get-out When he
wants to be. It makes no differi"mce that he thinks spor tswr iters are, coll~ tively, dum.ber
than an intake manifold. He's
not alone in that thought.
Plenty ot athletes put on an
entirely different (phony) face
for the camera. Stewart, though,
could Start lighting Up rOOms
and still be true to himself.
There's a great personality .
there, one that other drivers
often talk about seeing. But in
Public, it seems to 00 bu-ried
under a mountain of angst.
I can't help bu( think of Sean
Pem1 when I see Stewart
squir ming through another
interview. But that might be a
good thing. If Sean can survive
Jay's couch, why not Tony?

I

Distributed

Prep Football

here Call The

OHSAA State Semifinals

Daily Sentinel for

DIVIStON I
Both games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Cin . Elder (1 2-·1) vs. Findlay (12-1 ) at
Columbus Crew Stadium
Warren Harding (13-0) vs. Massillon
Washington (11-2) at Akron Rubber Bowl
DIVISION II
Both games at7 :30 p.m. Friday
Toledo St. Francis (12-1) vs. Day.
Chaminade-Julienne (12-1) at Lima Senior
Stadium
Macedonia Nordonia .(12·1) vs. OlmSted
Falls (1 2-t) at Parma Byers Field
DIVISION Ill
Bolh games at 7 p.m. Saturday
GermantoMI Valley View (13-0) vs. Cols.
Watterson (9 -4) at Dayton Welcome
. Stadium
'" Cle, Benedictine (11-2) vs. Akr. Hoban
(12·1) at Aa~~enna Gilcrest Field
DIVISION IV
Both games a1 7:30p. m ~ Friday
Kenton (11-2) vs. KeHering.AHer {12-1) at
Piqua Alexander Stadium!Purk Field
Portsmouth West (11 ·2) vs. Youngstown
Ursuline (8-5)' at Zan'esville Sulsberger
Memorial Stadium
DIVISIONV
.
Both games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Marion Pleasant (13-0} vs. AmandaCiearcreek (1 1-2) at Lewis Center

details

Dave or
Jessica
992·2155

Rutland Bottle Gas)

Main Street1
Ruthmd, Ohm
740-742~2289

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Olen1angy Braves Field
Smithville (13.0) vs. Delphos St. John's
(1 0-3) at Mansfield Arlin Field
DIVISION VI
Both games at 7;30 p.m. FridaY
Columbus Grove (13-D) vs. Dola Hardin
Northern (13-0) at Findlay Donnell Stadium
Mogadore (12-1) vs. Newark Catholic (94) at Canton Central Catholic Stadium

College Football
AP Top 25 Schedule
Wednesday's Game
·
West Virginia 21 , No. 13 Virginia Tech 18
Thursday'a Game
No. 1 Miami 28, No. 17 .Pittsburgh 21
Saturday's Gaime•
No. 2 Ohio State v. No. 12 Michigan,
12:15 p.m. .
.
No. 3 Washington ·state v. WaShington.
6:30p.m.
No. 4 Oklahoma II.· No. 24 Te..:as Tech, 1
p.m.
No. 7 So. CalifOrnia at No. 25 UCLA, 3:30
p.m.
No. 8 Notre Dame v. Rutgers, 1 p.m.
No. 10 Kansas State ·at Missouri, 3:30
p.m. .
No. 14 Florida State at N.C. State, 3':30
p.m.
No. 15 Penn State v. Michigan State, 3:30
p.m.
No. 18 Maryland at Virginia, 5:30 p.m.
No. 20 Colorado State v. New Mexico, 6
p.m.
No. 21 LSU v. Mississippi, 8:30p.m
No.- 22 TaKas Christian at East carolina,
2 p.m.
No. 23 Boise State at Nevada, ~ : 05 p,m.

Assot:lated Press Top 25

I Miami .
.... 3.69
2. Oh10 State ..
.. ......................... 3.70
3_Washington St. ........................... 9.11
4. Oklahoma .
. .... .1 0.75

5. Georgia ..
.. ............. ...... ~ 2.16
6. Notre Dame .. ,........ .................... 13.13
7 . (QWa ..
. ........... 13.66
8. Southem Cal......
.............. 15.54
9. Michigan .. ,................................. 22.82 .
10. Texas ..... ........
........ ... 25.46
11 . KansaS$!... ..........
... ....... 29.07:
12. Florida St ......~ ................. ,........ 29.25
13. Colol'ad0 .....................................32:65
14. Florida ........ ,. .................. ;.
... 33.27
15. Penn St. ...................................... 36.48

Pro Football
National Football League
AFC

w
Miami... ...... .... 6
Buffalo ............ 5
New Engtand,.5
N.Y. Jets ..... .. ..

s

Eut
LTPctPFPA
4 0 .600 236 IB7
5 0 .500 264, 286
5 0 .500 259 222
5 0 .500 204 230

SoUih
WLTPctPF PA
lndianapolis .... 6 4 0 .600 215 183
Tennessee .. .... 6 4 0 .600 231 245
Jacksonville .... S 5 . 0 .500 214 185 .
Houston .. ....... .2 8 0 .200 .13B 255
Norlll
w LTPciPFPA
Pittsburgh .. .... 5 4 1 ,550 249 225
Ctfloveland ...... 5 5 0 .500 232 215
Baltimore ....... 4 6 0 .400 184 215
Cincinnati .. ... .1 9 0 ,100 160 279
w..t

w

LT~ciPFPA

Derwer.
....7 3 0 .700 248 213
San Diego . .... 7 3 0 .700 230 208
Oakland ...... . ..6 4 0 .600 2B7 21B
Kansas, City . ..5 5 0 ' 500 289 273
NFC
East
WL.TP&lt;:IPFPA
Philadelphia., .7 3 0 .700 272 167
N.Y. Giants ... 6 4 0 .600· 159 169
Washington . ..4 6 0 .400 179 236
Dallas .. ..... ..... 3 7 0 .300 1"18 HS

The Top Twenty Five teams in The
Associated Press co llege football poll, with
first-place votes in parentheses, records
through Nov. 16, total points based on 25
points for a first place vote through one
point for a 25th place vole and previous
ranking:
W-l
Pts ·Pvs
1
t. Miami (74) .. ...... 9·0 1,B50
2
2c0hio st . ........ ..... 12·0 1,766
South
3. Washi!'tgton St .. .. ..9- t
1,628
3
w LTPctPFPA
4
1,62 2
4. Oklahoma ........ .... .9·1
Tampa Bay ... .8 2 0 .BOO 226 119
6
5. 1owa .......... ."......... 11 -1 1,617
New Orleans .. 7 3 0 ' 700 307 257
7
6. Georgia ... ....... .... 10·1
~ ,47 2
.. .6 3 1 .650 245 1B7 ·
.7, Southern Cal. .. ..... 8·2 1,341
8 Atlanta ..
Carolina .. ....... 3 7 0 .300 145 174
a. Notre Dame .......... 9-1 . 1,284
9
Nonh
10
9. Alabama :.. ... ........ .9-2 1,264
11
W L T Pel PF PA
10. KansasSt. .
.... 9-2 1,171
11 . Texas ..
..9-2
1,124
4
Green Bay ..8 2 0 .BOO 286 209
12
12. Michigan ..
.... 9·2 "\.,060
Detroit..
.3 7 0 .300 186 291
13
13. Virginia Tech ... . .. .8·2
847
Minn8sota..... ..3 7 0 .300 237 . 27B
15
14. F!Orida St..
..8-3
796
Chicago ..... .... 2 · B 0 .200 19B 253
16
15. Penn SL ........ ... 8·3
755
Weat
17
16. Colofado..
... B-3
754
W
L T Pel PF PA .
18
17. P&gt;ttsburgh ..... .. 8·2
636
SanFrancisco7 3 ''~' (}' .700 237 197
19
1B. Maryland ,...
..,9·2
637
St. LOuis . . . 5 5 0 .500 215 · 212
'20'
19. Florida .
...8-3
5n
Arizona .
....4 6 0 .400 170 223.
21
20 . Colorado St. .. .. .... 9-2
511
Seattle .. ...... .. 3 7 · 0 .300 181 217
14
21. LSU .... .. ... ....... .. 7·3
344
25
Sunday-'• Games
22 . TCU :.
. . ..... 6·1
246
23. Boise St. ........ .. ... 10-1
212
Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, t p.m.
24: Te)(3S Tech ... .... .. .8·4
145
Detroit a·t Chicago, 1 p.m.
25. UCLA-.... ....... .... ... 7-~
121
. St. Louis at washington, 1 p.m.
Others receiving votes: Auburn 75,
San· Diego at Miami, 1 p.m.
N.C. State 43, West Virginia 33, Oregon 20,
AUanta at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Marshall 17, Arkansas 14, Virginia 14,
Jacksonville
at Callas, 1 p.m.
Washington 13, TeiCas A&amp;M 9, Tennessee
at
Pit1sburgh, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati
7, Hawaii 6, Air Fore~ 5, Kentucky 4, N .
Minnesota It New England, 1 p.m.
Illinois 4, South Florida 4, Oreg(ln St. 3.
Cleveland at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Iowa St. 2.
Tennessee at Baltimore, l p.m.
Oakland at Arizona, 4:05p.m.
Bowl Championship Series
Kansas City at Seat11e, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Houston, 4:15 p.nl.
Through games ot Nov. 16
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 4:15p.m.
acs Standlngo Llot

Atla.nta at Boston, 7:30p.m
Cleveland at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Miami, 8 p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia, 8 p.m.
Memphis at San Antonio. 8:30p.m.
Washington·at Houston, 8:30p.m.
New York at New Orleans. 8:30p.m.
Phoenix at Sacramento, .10 p.m.
Chicago at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Oefl\ler, 10:30 p.m.
MiiWa.ukee at Golden State, 10.30 p,m.

Indianapolis at Denver, 8:30p.m.
Mondly'e Gaime
Philadelphia at San Francisco, 9 p.m.

Thuraday, Nov. 28
New England at Detroit, 12:30 p.m,
Washington at Dallas, 4:05p.m.
Suncloy, Doc. 1
Miami al Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Ba~imore at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Carolina at CterJeland , 1 p.m.
Chicago at .Green Bay, 1 p.m.
PittSburgh at Jacksonville 1 p.m.
Arizona at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Mjnnesota. 1 p.m.
Tennessee at New York Giants, 1 p.m.
Houston at Indianapolis, 4:05p.m.
Denver at San Diego, 4:05p.m.
St. .Louis at .Philadelphia, 4:15p.m.
Seanle at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Ta~ Bay at New Or1ean1, 8;00 p.m.
Moncloy, Doc. 2
New York Jets at Oakland, 9 p.m.

S.turday's Games

College Basketball
Men
Thuroday'IGomoo
TOURNAMENT
BP Top ollho World Clonic
Flrll Round
Alaska-Fairbanks 78, Wls.-Green Bay 55

Prw111110n NrT
. Quarterfinal•
Florida 99, E. Illinois 65

·

Pro Basketball
National Baskatball A11soclalion
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvl1fon
W
L
Pet.
GB
New Jersey .......... 8 . 4 .667
Philadelphia .... .... 8
4
667
Boston .- ..... ...... .. ... 7
4 .636
1/2
Washington .. . ... 6
5 .545 1 1/2
Orlanda ........... .. .. 7
6 .538 t 1/2
Miami
2 • 8 .200
5
New York ............2
8
.200
5
central Divi•lon
W
L
Pet
GB
lfldiana .. :.............9
1 .900
Detroit...~ ... ... ...... ..9
3 .750
1
New Orl~ans .. ..... 8
3 .727 1 112
Atlanta ..... .. ... .. ... 6
5 .545 · 3 1/2
Milwaukee ... .-.... .. 5
5 .500
4
Toronto ..... ...... ...4
7 .364 5 112
Chicago .... ...........4
6 .333
6
Cleveland .... ......... 2 10 · .167
8
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw.st Dlvlelon
W L
Pel
GB .
Dallas
... .. 12
0 1.00
4
San Anllinlo ........ 8
4 .667
Houston ... .... . ...... 6
4 .600
Minnesota ...... ..... 7
6 .538 5 112
Utah
.. .. 6
7 .482 6 1/2
Denver ... .... ....... .. 2 . 9 .162 9 1/2
Memphis ...... ... ..... O 12 .000
12
PacHic Dlvtelon
W L Pet
GB
Sacramento ... .. .... 9
4 .692
Seattle .... ............. 6
4 .667
112
Phoenix .. .
.... 5
4 ·.556
2
I'Orttand .:.. ........... 6
6 .500 21/2
LA. Clippers .........4
8 .333 41/2
Golden State :......4
9 .308
5
LA Lakers ..........3
9 .250. 5 112

s

Thurtday's Gamat
Dallas 103, Houston 90
Portland 89, 5aat!Mr 86
Frldoy'o Oomtl
Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m.

Boston at Atlanta, 7 p.rn.
Detroit at Indiana , 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Cleveland, 7:30p.m..
Washington at Memphis, 8 p.m.
New.Jersey at Minne&amp;eta, 8 p,m.
Seattle at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Chicago at Utah, 9 p.m.
Denver at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Sacramento at Portta'nd, 10 p.m.
Sunday'&amp; G8me1
Philadelphia at TOI'"Of"1to, ·1 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m,
Miami at O~ando•.5 p,m
Seattle at San Antonio, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at New York , 7 p.m.
Milwaukee at L.A. Lakers, 9:30p.m.

Hockey

N.Y. ISlanders 7, Tampa Bay 2
San Jose 2, Philadelphia 2, tie
N.Y. Rangers 4, New Jersey 4, 11e
St Louis 3, Los Angeles 2 . OT
Nashville 1. Colorado 1, tie
Edmonton 3, Calgary 1
Friday's Games
Columbus at BUffalo, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m
. Florida at Phoeni..:, 9 p.m
Detroit at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday's Games
N.Y. Islanders at N Y. Rangers, 1 p.m.
Nashville at Minnesota , 6 p.m. ·
Buffalo .at Boston, 1 p.m.
Columbus at Otlaw'a, 7 p .IT)
Atlanta at Washington, 7 p.m.
Carohna at Montreal. 7 p.m.
Philadelph.ia at Toronto, 7 p.m.·
San Jose at Pittsburgh, 7:30 P:...m.
Tampa BaY at New Jersey, 7:·30 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 8 p.m
Chicago at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Detroit at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.
S~nd1y's Game
Florida at Anaheim, 8 p.m.

Transactions

Nallonal Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtlanUc Division
WLTOLPiaGFGA
Philadelphia .....10 3 6 0 26 54 36
NewJersey .... 1t . 5 1 0 23 47 36
N.Y. Rangers.. .. 9 10 3 0 21 56 69
Pinsourgh . ..... ..7 5 3 3 20 55 56
N.Y. Islanders ... 711 2 0 t6 ·53 70
Northeast Dlyislon
W L T OLPis GFGA
Boston
..... 12 3 3 t 2B 64 42
Montreal'. ... .. ... 9 7 4 0 22 55 60
Ottawa .. " .. . 9 ~ 2 0 20 48 44
.... ,7 10 2 0 16 55 57
Toronto
...... :i t 1 3 1 10 39 51
Buffalo
SOutheast Division
W L TOLPis GFGA
TampaBay ..... 11- 6 2 1 25 67 55
Carolina ..... · .. .8 5 4 ' 3 23 44 46
Florida .. ........... 6 7 4 4 20 49 65
Washington .:.... 8 10 2 0 18 4;3 54
Ailanta ... .......... 5 11 1 1 12 47 68
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlvlslori
W L TOLPis GFGA
St.Louis .. ....... t2 5 1
25 63 44
Detroit ...... . ..... 11 5 2 0 24 57 39
Chicago..
.9· 1 3 o 21 · 47 44
.Columbus .. ..... 8 7 2 2 20 57 54
Nastwille .. ..... .. .
9 4 4 . 12. 37 57
Northwest Division
W L T OLPis GFGA
Minnesota .. .... :12 5 4 0 28 60 44
Vancouver ...... 10 5 4 0 24 57 49
Colorado.. .... ....6 5 6 _ 3 21 55 54 .
Edmonton ..... .. 8 8 3 1 20 53 55
Calgary ....... .5 9 3 3. 16 41 55
Pacific Dlvlalon
W L' T OLPia GF GA
Dallas
.. :·.12 4 4 1 29 67 45
Anaheim .. .... .... B 6 3 3 22 50 51
L6s Angeles ....,B 6 3 3 22 '56 ss
san Jose .... .....7 9 · 2 · 2 t8 56 65
Phoenix . ...... .... 710 2 1 17 49 62
Two polnta tor • win, one point tor a tie
and overtime la11.
Thuraday'e Gam11
Boston 3, carolina 1
Ottawa 3, .Montreal 2
Mlnhesota 4, Waahington_3

o

a

BASEBALL
Amertcan League
BOSTON RED SOX-Signed RHP Paul
Stewart, AHP Justin Kaye, C-INF Chris
Coste, C Jeff Smith, INF James Lofton and
IN F Nelson castro to minor league con'
.tracts.
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Named Marty
Brown manager of Buffalo of the IL, Torey
Lovullo manager of Kinston of the Carolina
League, Luis Rivera manager of Lake
County of the South Atlantic League, and
Ted Kubiak manager of Mahoning Va!ley of
the New York-Penn league
NEW YORK YANKEES- Purchased the
cOntracts of AHP Bienvenido Rivera from
Mexico City of the Me..:ican League and C
Michel Hernandez tr.om Columbus of the
IL.
.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS,-Agreed to
terms with INF Justin Baughman, C
C h~rlie Greene, C Sandy Martinez, C
Angel Pena. OF Ryan Jackson, RHP Leslie
Brea, AHP Jeremi Gonzalez and LHP
Cedrick Bowers on minor league contracts.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Signed RB Jay
Graham .
PITTSBURGH STEELEAS-Activated
DB Erik Tonen from the practice squad.
Released DT Chris HOke.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Ciaimed OT
Chris Te·rry off waivers. Waived WR Kevin
Kasper.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CALGARY FLAMEs-Assigned D Micki
DuPont and·0 Rick Mrazik to Saint John of
the AHL.
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKET~
Activated AW . Lasse Pirjeta hom injured
reserve. Assigned c .Blake Belteteuitlo to
Syracuse at the AHL.
PHOENIX COYOTE~Assigned C .
Jason Jaspers to .Springfield of the AHL..
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-AC1ivated G
K911in Hodson from inj'ured reserve. Sent G
Evgeny Konstantinov to Springfield of the

AHL.

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Co 111111 ert i a I

Ste_wart an ambassador? That's scary

27. Jimmy Spencer, 3,187.
28. 'John Andreni,, 3,161 .
29. Johnny Benson, 3 ,132.
30. Ken Schrader, 2,954.
31 . Mike Skinner, 2,886.
32. Bobby Hamilton . 2,832
33. Steve Park, 2,694 .
34. Joe Nemectmk, 2.682 .
·35 . Casey Atwood, 2,62.1
36 . Brett Bodine. 2,276
37. Jerry Nadeau, 2,250 . .
38. Todd Bodine, 1 ,987.
39. Kenily wana
. ce, 1,868.
40. Hut Stricklin, 1,78 1.

1. Mike Bliss. 3,359.
2. Rick Crawford, 3,313.
3. Ted Musgrave. 3,308.
4. Jason Leffler, 3,156.
5 . David Starr, 3,144.
6: Dennis Setzer, 3, 132.
7. Robert Press1Eiy,·a.097. ·
B. Terry Cook, 3,070
9. Trav1s Kvapil. 3,039.
10. Coy Gibbs, 3.010.
11 . arendan Gaughan, 2,893.
12. Jon Wood, 2,782.
13. Lance.Norick, 2,574.
14. Bobby Dotter, 2.534.
15. Matt Crellon , 2,424.
16. Carlos Contreras. 2,334.
.17. Bill Lester, 2,320.
1B. Steve Portenga, 2,167.
19 ..Randy MoDonald, 2,128.
20. Lance Hooper. 2, 121.

Newman top rookie

COMMENTARY

~-----~--~----------·
---~---------------TRUCK SERIES STANDtNGS
BUSCH SERIES
20. Larry' Foyt; 3,158.
21, Casey Mears, 3, 148.
22. Kerry Earnhardt, 3, 1~5 .
23. TOdd Bodine, 3,071 .
24 . Kevin Grubb, 2,885.
25. t&lt;avin Lep a~e . 2,646.
26 . .Jimmy Spencer, 2,454.
27. Michae1 Waltrip, 2,397.
28. Ricky Hendrick, 2. 12.5,
29. Shane Hall, 1,971.
30.' Brian Vickers, 1,9 14.
31, Jeff Burton, 1,907.
32 . Mark Green, 1,896.
33. Kasey Kah.ne. t ,8B7.
34 . Joe Nemechek, 1,773
35. Chad Chaffi n, 1,643.
36. Jay Sauter. 1.525.
37. Mike Wallace, 1,506.
38. Mike Harmon , 1,321 .
39. Jeff Purvis, t ,309.
40. David Green. 1,257. ·

Tony Stewart was in a familiar position
Saturd&lt;i.y, defending himself for run~ing into a
photographer earlier in the day.
Rusty Jarrett, who works for Getty bnages,
accused Stewart of deliberately running into hlm
in the garage after.the flrial practice.
Stewart had·gotten out of his car to go back to
his hauler to confer with crew chief Greg
Zipadelli. He saw a bunch of photographers wait·
ing and began sprinting to the end of the garage
stalls and ran through an empty inspection area.
.Jar rett was standing outside the insPection ba~­
fcx:using his camera on Stewart frOm 25 feet away.
The photo grapher, 50, claimed Stewart could
h ave avoided hitn but cocked hiSforearl'tt, ran into
him directly and shouted for him tq get out of the
wa~~
.
Stewart explained that he didn't stop to talk
'"dth Jarrett initially because he thought it' Would
make matters worse.
In the end, Stewart and the ph9tographer shook
hands and cleared their differences, and NASCAR
declared the incident a non-i ssue.
·
"No one was hur t, no equipment was damaged,
and it was an accident," NA~AR spokesman Jinl
Hunter sa1d.
·~

Anheuser-Busch extends contract

,• 1987: WOrld Ka!ltng.Assoclltklh

. 13. Bill Elliott, 4,t58.
14. Michael Waltrip,· 3,985.
15. Ricky Cfaven, 3,888.
18. Bobby Labonte, 3.810.
17. Jeff Green. 3,704.
18. Sterling Marlin, 3,703.
19. Dave Blaney, 3,670.
20. Robby Gordon, 3,632.
21 . ~Vin Harvick, 3,501.
22 Kyle Petty, 3,50 1.
23. Elliott Sadler, 3, 41S.
24 Terry Laboote, 3,417c
25. Ward Burton, 3,362
· 26. Jeremy May11eld, 3,309.

.'

they didn't want to work for )
me;' Stewart said. ·'·11didn't ·
blame them, The ww my attl.
tuM was !nidseasOn;'I 'Miuld·
n't have wol'keil for me. We did
lose a oo~ple of GuY$.'!

Uvea.
9f

FINAL 2002 DRIVER STANDINGS

STANDINGS
1. Greg Biffle, 4,919.
2. Jason Kelter, 4,655.
3. Scott Wimmer, 4,488.
4. Mike Mclaughlin , 4,253.
5. Jack Sprague, 4.206.
6. Jamie McMurray, 4, 147.
7. Ken ny Wallace, 4,078.
8 . Bobby Hamilton Jr., 4,058.
9 . Stacy Compton. 4,042 .
10. Scolt Riggs, 4,023.
II . Randy LaJoie, 4,021 .
12. Ton·y Raines, 3.804.,.
13. T1m Sauter, 3,644
14. Hank Parker. Jr., 3,540.
15. Johnny Sauta r. 3,538.
16. Shan e Hmlel, 3.416.
17, Ashton Lewis , 3,279.
18. Ron Hornaday, 3,268.
19. Jeff Green. 3.209

ftayingat1heedgesatlll~·

TONY'S TITLES

Race leader .Jason Ketter's No. 57 Ford ran out
of gas on the l ast lap Saturda~ and Scott Wimmer,
dr iving the No. 23 Pontiac, breezed by to win the
Ford 300 Busch series race,. the last of the season.
Greg Biftle h~d clinched the championship last
week at Phoenix.

J arr~tt. 4,415,
10. Ricky Rudd, 4,323 .
11 . Dale Earnhardt Jr. , 4,270.
12. Jeff Burton, 4,259. ·

was

'

'

Wirrmer wins Busch race

9. Dale

gettlrig ln trouble.'\ . · ':i "" ,·.
He also credit.;. &lt;lniW chief
Greg ZJpa&lt;W!l With ~olilinf· .
!hi team toget\)er whlm' it

see a

behind Bliss. Bliss,won five times during the season.
.
" I started tingling with two [laps) to go," Bliss
said . " I owe th is all to my parents: if they hadn't
brought that quarter-midget )carl home in 1971, I
wouldn't be here."
Ron Hornaday Jr. , hired recently as Bliss' teammate for the ra:ce, won his 26th career truck event.
averaging a track·r ecord 133.248 mph at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.

8. Matt Kenselh , 4,432. :

Sllid. "IJu$f~ ~ habi~f

·thiscl!!)mpionshlp;"
· It was obVi!lus that.the other
Cup drivers
Stewart who
.Ia diff""!J)\ from the outspOken
Stewart ordered 10 undergo
A.nger management tratntng.
"Tony i&amp;a l!l"at guy and a ·
great driver," Martin said. "I
thtnk he's one of the greatest
drivers-who has ever
as
far as l&gt;einll able to.dr!V. so ·
many d!ITerent kinds race'
cars well as he has and has
the championships l!!lder·
. ilcath his belt.
"He says some thbl!lS like
(at) the press conference .
ISatutrlay], be was pretty candid about some things and we
all laugheq," l(lartin said. "I
went bac;k and told (my wife)

Ted tvJuSgravc rmished third, Sf points .

.

ltllil\Y ll\1JI$, hiM! collle~p AAd
saljl thanl&lt;•YOU fOl) !I'IYiill!.•
some1hlng that thiy wanted to
say bll(were too !lC4i'ed ' '
be&lt;&gt;!use i11•Y "'""~of
getting Ill -~ble;" ~wa"'

ing thai many l!(lys from that ·

as

,

~~:d'~ a~prjs.a hl: lio~

the
feeling
and aatlsfac·
seeing
those·guys
out

· tiitlt)y d!ITerent t&lt;:ams feel
, happy rot you AAd want to con·

in 200 1.
Friday, he was being showered in champagne··a-s ·
1
.the truck series champion.
•
l:Uiss, who finished flfth in Friday's Ford 200,
beat Rick Crawford by 46 points for the champi-

, . ' .. -

1

.,

dill$ that 'lOY 'priceless.' You

Fla.

, /G;,:;' , ,• ;;_

Arlen~. 'Thny says llUJigs'tliJo~. t,

. co!Jldn't put a price ing on hav·

Racing, theri drove the USAC SUver Cro\\'Tl serles

6. Ryan Newman, 4,593.
7. Ru sty Wallace , 4 ,574

,

there ,is more than ntoneY can
bu~ lfsllke those commer·

series to Winston Cup. That adventure last-

5·. Jim mie Johnson , 4,600.

Cox Newo SOrvice

JOHNNY CRAWFORD I

ed four races, when he was fired by car owner A.J.
Foyt. He finished the year with defunct Eel River , ! "~~

4 . Jeff Gordon , 4 ,607.

Business's Ad

mgs.

years a~o. Mike Bliss .was trying to

WINSTON CUP
·STANDINGS
1. Tony Stewart. 4,800.
2)·-ll,ark Martin, 4,762 .
3: K"urt Busch. 4,641 ,

Homestead; Fla.
ar_k Matiin's teammate., Kurt Busch, won

Sunday's Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami
Specdwa); the third win in the last five
races for the No. 97 Ford. He.
also won the pole. The victory
moved Busch from sixth to
third in the final points stand-

maKe the jump from Nf..SCAR's truck

on~hip.

Kurt Busch's No. 97 Ford finished first
Sunday, h.is third victory in five races.

Fla.

Cox News Ser.vice

T

Rio Grand~ 2, Golcley.Seacom 1.
Goldey-Beacom ..
1 0 - 1
Aio Grande ..... .
............ 1 1 - 2
Scoring- G·B: Jason McCloskey, unassisted, 23~'00; RIO: Mark Fahey from
Michael McManus, 33:00; RIO: Tom
Whittaker from Michael Swarbrick, 54:00.
Cautions- G-8 : Joe Lazorick , 8:00.

By AL.LEVINE

By ALLEVINE
Homestead,

992-5432

Stewart's long road ends with points tide .·

Bliss claims truck title
~o

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, OhiQ
Drlve-Thru Window

to first

By ALLEVINE
Cox News service

\

NAJA National Tournament

106 North Second Ave. • Mlddleoort.

·992-2825

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydailvsentlnel.com

~Y Univ~rsal Press Syndicate tOr C01( News Service. (800) 255·6734 . ' For re iJ ase the week of November 1B, 2002.

tu d

Resideutial
lluildiug
I nd

Remodcliug

fff't '11-Steel.

I

Slrul:llne.lne.
.

-"

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.

(740) 992-5009

I

~-

l..arry W. Banks,
Owner/Operator

I

Cont~ct

your advertising representative for more information!
· (304) 675-1333 or .(740) 446-2342 · or ~740) 992-2~55

I

· ------~---,_..,...,.,..,. ···--

r

.'

,.'
,I

'

----··-

.

��'

I

\
Page B 8 •"fhe Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY 001'

BRIDGE

l~

42 Clumsy
boat
1 Court order 43 Startled cry
5 Entirely
44 Brand n6me
8 Coiy home 46 Coni&lt; out

12 Woodwind 49 Waler13 August
50 Foro's

,,,.,h
A .I

sign
opposite
14 "Terrible" 52 " It'sczar
move"
15 Ughlweight 5!1 Trot or
''lY
gallop
16 "- Te
55 Bridal
Ching"
notice word
17 Druid
56 " Vogue"
18 Ballroom
rival
number
57 Pitchers' .
20 Tableau
stats
22 Flair for
58 Gennan
music
article
23 Take a meal 59 Smear
24 Stale
27 Performed
DOWN
30 Chicken1 Food
-king
31 Rand of
steamer
2 Baseball
fiction
stats
32 Young bear
3 Tad
34 Beaver's
4 Was full of
work
5 Wedding
35 Our sun
vow site
37 Unhatched
6 Grassy field
fish
7 More or less
38 Beauty8 To asalon
(exactly)
offering
9 Steady
40 Cursor
10 Mall event
mover

¥ l/JM7 f, ~.l

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ACROSS

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,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

P, . ,. _ '

"

College football: Big rivals meet today, B1

Friday, November 22, 2002

I·.,~,

'II r~~·

~~

Real life deals

-

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • November 23, lDDl

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~eigs County faces $200K shortfall A witness to history

1t' E'xploslve

40 Got
.
acquainted
41 Approved
Howl
43 Fragrant
" Brian's
compound
Song" lead
Infuriated· 44 Forest
rofu~
Viking
45 Verdi opera
namf!'
47 Falana or
P~ayer~
Montez
wheel
48 Doozie
turner
49 Before, in
Lose
combos
interest
Pantyhose 51 Service
charge
shade
Twosomes 53 CSA
defender
Honey
maker
Pup's pop
" A "'s home
Thick ropes

letters

19

21

24
25

26
27

BY BRIAN

J. REED

· Staff writer
: POMEROY, Ohio - Balancing a
$200.000 revenue shortfall with increasIng costs of )~w enforcement may be the
\&gt;iggest financial challenge facing Meigs
County officials in 2003.
With a final layoff of sheriff's
deputies pending early in December,
commissioners must begin the task of
determining how to appropriate sufficient funds in each county department's
2003 budget in light of the anticipated
cut in revenue.
This year, commissioners appropriated $3.53 million into county departmental budgets. Commissioner Jim Sheets
said Thursday the board anticipates on! y
$3 .26 million for 2003 appropriations.
."It has to be done fairly,"

BY PHILUP AlDER
28
Poet Wallace Ste29
vens wrote , "The
33
¥enui ne artist is never
FRANK &amp; EAHNEST
true tn life .· He sees
35
36
what is real. but not
39
as we are normally
r.-~~~
~~~
~~~~
aware of it. We do
nol g o storming
through life like actors in a· play. Art is
. '· .
never real life."
If you've studied
paintings by Monet.
who surely needed a
good apht ha! malogist, yc,m would agree.
Is .bridge real life?
You decide L How BARNEY
ever, I do know that
although some of my
SNUFFY,WEGOTTA
deals
are not true to
HAVE us A LI'L
BEAT ""'K'VVI•"
life. this one was
'BOUT,UM,ER,WELL ... TH' BUSH,
dealt
during a tourna'BOUT STEAL-IN'
PARSON ~~
ment. LooK. only at
II
Lhe West hand. South
opens two no-trump
(20-22 points). North
responds three diaCELEBRITY CIPHER
monds. a transfer bid
by Luis Campos
guaranteeing at least
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
(ive hearts. South
people. past and present Each leiter in the cipher stands for another.
j umps to four hearts Today's clue: Z equals P
THE BORN LOSER
a super-accept
y s
"G
WOP
XFOX
. LJLTP
I'"'
.... I'"'
.... I'"'
.... promising four-card
t Pl.(&gt;.}.I \0 :;Pm\:l Tfl.E. WtXK(Nt&gt;
f&lt;EALL'{ 7 Wfl.O
I'r-'1 /&gt;-. FN-1
NO. '{OJ KNOw,'e:,u._cfl. BLI&gt;--1\\KET
heart support. North
DIL .TGKOM
WFSHUY
C. L
f'..T TI-\E. M.CNIE.'::dfl.Eli:E:'.) 1\ .
Of Tfl.E. OLD
DO '{OJ FIWO~
Bll-l&lt;.O,''&amp;.DT lMf.. FOR. 00!-IZO,~t
uses Roman Key
CL"-~~IC. FIL~ FES1Wf'..L 1-N\:l t't&lt;\
MOVI(:)
r\1\G\COCK, FQI::D,
W/0 1\ TE£1\N£ Wf.i:E¥KlLF. 'CLJo&amp;l( Card Blackwood,
N G J L M
D
E D G T
KFOMKL
f'\'{:)C:Lfl
1\ C'&gt; \0 WFF!
Wtl.LEJ?
then bids six hearts
YLJLUSZ
D U U
X F L
when South says he
has what you -- West
X D U L M .X W
XFLP
I 0 P
F 0 J L . "
-- know to be three ·
aces and the heart
· AS F M . E .
RLMMLYP
king . What would
you lead?
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Every dentist woul d like to be a
Should you lead an
doctor and inside every photographer is a painter trying to get
out." - Pablo Picasso
tJ n s upported
ace
RIG NATE
rr-::--::==:-:o:--:rn r=--::--::-"-:7--;-;~-=-oo=-1 · against a s mai I sIam ?
NI&gt;.TE MRS . CZERWICKI
a t t&gt;otfT
·It is a real-life prnbI&gt;.ND I ARE NOT
HAVING AN AFFAIR'·
1! TO 'PR_
OVE lY! '· gains
!em, and probably it
more often than
I DEMAND .you
Reorronge letten of the
PRINT A
four scrambled words be. •
it costs. Here it is the
5.0 YOU'RE
RETRACTION'·
only winner becau se low to form foor simple .wo~ds.
i'IOT HAV ING
AN AFFI\IR
declarer must also
-~
RETRACTION~
DRAME N .' '
.YJ ITH MRC::. .
II y Iose a d1.a- T---r-rr-rr-r--r--'-1
even
tua
ClER.WICKI ~
1
mond trick.
1 1 12 1 1
At the table, the in- '---'·--'·'---'·--'·-..1..-.J
ternational ·sitting
West led his singleton
-,-C--rl,...;ATT_H"".:-1·
•
trump, trying to give
13
nothing away. But de- '---'·--L.-.1..-.1.
. .-J
clarer immediately
"'
· claimed, announcing
N E C B H ~~~' .
Secretary to psychiatrist ,
that he would cash his
"There's a man in the waiting room
top clubs and discard
. . . .
who says he is i~visible . " The .
~ psychiatrist repl ies, "So &lt;ell him I .
dummy's spade loser.
T,he repoldrterhleft thhe
HI T E
,---··see--_,
.
rea wor , ·I oug ,
when he claimed that
7
Complete the chuckle quoted
'l f West led a low
. . . _ .
by filling in rhe miss ing word3
'--l.-"--.l.-..1--l--l you develop from step No. 3 below.
spa de (and who
@ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I 2 3 •
would do that?), it
IN THE SE SO U A ~ ES
would let the contract
make because East
1111:\ UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS I
is eel
'U FOR ANSWER
.
would not .cover dummy's jack with his
BETTY
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
king. Why not? No
comprendo!
Trauma • Mecca -Round- Violin - LOUDER
· ' 1r· -=:::--- - - - - - , rO_f_rol
_ IZS
_ EN
-CTr-,1'
'M WOUI!\o.IS
·During a very heated town counsel.meettng one voice
l CAY.l: UP \11111\ A
JUST ?ICI&lt;El&gt; OIJT' ~
cou ld be heard above the rest. My friend made this obTE/IM 1\llliPOO
SNA!'l.V VIA!lM·UP
SUIT IWO WID IT
GOOC1tlNCTr
servation, "People who are wrong usually talk LOUDER"
ACT\!Ai.l.V fOilM
'-""Q~I~Rctl. &gt;M
C. .UIIIIItjrAif:N/1 Ai&gt;O\INP.

Commissioner Jeff Thornton said
Thursday. "If we lose $200,000 and
have no source of additional revenue ,
what can we do? I'm opposed to raising taxes, so we may have to cut each
office's budget."
The loss.. of income is blamed on a
combination of factors: loss of personal property tax revenue and real
estate tax revenue, both directly relating to the closing of the Southern
Ohio Coal Company 's Meigs Mines,
cuts in interest earned on inactive
public funds , and a significant decline
in sales tax revenue.
Last year, officeholders were subject to a 3 percent, across-the-board
cutin appropriations, although Sheriff
Ralph Trussell received a cut of 2.25
percent. In 200 I ; Trussell received
$610,310 for operations , and this

year. $596,000.
"The sheriJf's department has tradi tionally had the biggest budget among
all the general fund departments,"
Thornton said . "We have always
given special co nsideration to that
office because it operates 24-hours a
day, seven-days a week.
"But we on ly appropriate the
money. It's up to each officeholder as
to how the lnoney is spent. "
Trussell will begin next year with a
new financial dilemma : How to pay
$130.000 in bills from this year while
struggling to pay salaries and operating expenses for 2003. The unpaid
bills include the costs of housing prisoners in other counties, repair and
maintenance costs for cruisers, food
and medical expenses for prisoners,
and office operating expenses .

Gallia man on guard
for JFK's funeral
BY KEVIN KEUY

News editor
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - It
was a day when the world
mourned, and Bill Ginther
joined silently in the grief.
That's because Ginther was
among the honor guard at
Arlington National Cemetery
on Monday, Nov. 25, 1963,
the day .President John F.
Kennedy, assassinated the
. previous Friday, was laid to
rest.
"I thought to myself, I'm a
19-year-old man from a little
town ·in qhio standin g here
and I didn't think it was possible," said Ginther, a Meigs
County native who now
resides
on
LeGrande .
Boulevard near Gallipolis.

HAVE

0

I

1-·

1 I"

I

I Is It I ;,

I

c

0

'

S;illuday. N ov. 2J. 2002
Bv BERNICE QEDE OsoL

YOU ON~Y t&gt;A1"E
A1"H ~ETIC 1"YPE 5 "?

l HAVE
GOOt&gt; NEW~ ...

WE~~ . MA~Y.

.

Tile year uhcac.l l'nul d he i.l
f~{ nt~ll\.' SO l.'i&lt;tll v act ive cnc
tlwn 'y ou ha''C had in quit e
...,nn1r l lnl (:. Mun v nl' W, ' l' .'IL:it ~
in_!! peD pJc will b~ part of it ,
b rin g it.1~ with tl1t: 1n new oppnrtun i11CS .
SA Ci llTAIH US (Nnv . 23 Dc c. ~I ) -· Plan S~ 11 11ct hin g
sl.lci\11 I haL is diffe rent ' &lt;tJHI
new with a l"cw cill1icc fricuds
tnday '~ IHl \ C cnlllpilllY yhu
truly l'llJOY and il J1JlfCL: I&lt;ll C. It
t.:nuld tum ou t lo be a Vl' ry

. ; pcl·i al cn•n t.
Ci\ I'RI COI( N !Dec. Jo2-Jan .
!9) .. Set you r sight " l1iph tnda y. Then· isn' t any thi ng you

THE GRIZZWELLS

Washington Elementary School first grade teacher Lori Billings, in Pilgrim gart.J, helps adjust Jess ie Putney's paper hat as the
school's first-graders observed the traditional Thanksgiving feast Friday. Students, teachers and parents bring iwfood and
give thanks, much. as the first se~lers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony did on the firsHhanksgiving. (Kevin Kelly)

---lfi~--~

GAHFIELU

. I' I

I I I

I 'I

'"IS'

Staff report

c

.I I I I ·I·

L' ll\' i ' IO!l

that

V() U

1.:&lt;111'1

~ tchi l'VC wh 1.:' 11 yo·u pu t ~: our
Jn gt: nll l l Y tD wnrk tor yo u .
Don" ! he afrai d 10 U'~e

llC\V

mctiHlds n1· shnrt c ul s c ithc1·.
i \Q UA R I L: S

(.ian . 211- Fch . .

llJ) -~ In your inqJJ\emt•nt
with o th l'i'- 1ud.1y . all wil l ex~
pct:t ynu to take r har gc .. so
li u so. The man tle nf" lcuder·"h ip i ~ be ing pian·d &lt;.; quarcly

on WHir ., houldcr:-&gt; all hi " tim..: .

r'IS CI.'.S ti'd{.

~OJ

., l h e

\ ' Our

20 - M arch
l'lli11111Ll ll

"l' ll \C tnduy. Out p:1y 11L' l' ~l !n
vtlttr hu 111:hc-. ao.; \\l~J I. Your
ln tLIII I \1,,' ill\ lg llt \ , C"j)Cl.li.tl ly

·jn bu si ness or fin;.1m: i&lt;1l mut ·
tcr!\, can he rcmarkahly a ccu~
r:ue riu ht nnw .
. AR ilS (M&lt;If\'h :!l- 1\pril I Y)
·- Yuu·vc d i~~: o,· crt'd thut
sn ap .iudglllL'qt s hav e often
l!tHtcn ynu into i.1 bit of trml·
Ole. Todu y. however. dcci ·
..,inns 1' pUnt i.lncous \ y a~.:ted
upu n arc upt tu he cxccption~lllv "0(1(/ o ne s.
lXUR US . ( A pril 20-M nv
·2111 ·• Dll n." t h e&lt;~ late Ill appl y
\OU r .:rCatiVC · Jill ~lC: IIlJI I0 /1 Ull

ilw job tmlay wl;e n a ~nnd
.idea is t.:i.i lleJ fm . .il y lis 1n g.
Yllltr 11:11i ve in tclli!!Cill'C' :1ncl
s m~.,~rt s you ~:'-In tR ink youl'
\\·av to the top .

· GEMIN I (\•lny 21- Junc 20)
-· H:n c f:lith in you r jud \.! -

lliC11! ~.:ails \( lday bc~.:ausC yultr
on- the-spot a n a l ysi~ ·will ht.:
ri gllt Lin w r ~c t. espeCially
. \~ h_c n_ }lHI 11l l'C'l IICW _people.
1111" IS hct';ttl 'iC logic will play
a hi :! role .
CI\ \JCI:R Un nl' 21-Jn l) 22 )

- ~ You ~now r~-OI H r~l 'il expc I'ICIKl' t hat hctl lll!.! 111 the h!tnd
b ll'tl ;! ] ]y &lt;111 C.X~I'L'i SC Ill J\;i J ~
urc. H owc ... cr. i11 y ou r i nstant:c tDdav •. a wcll -calcu lat l.·J rl yc rrnl1 ght \\;ork nut l'Xcclll ionall ~- '' L'll.
.EO (J [d v V- Aue . 22) .. If

you arc l.·;llicd upo n-to m;tkc a

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

VIRGO (A ug. 23-Scpt. 22 )
--. You mo1y get an oprot: tu~
ntty tG n:t'-'kc un unustw l i n~
ves tment today, but it ·nwy
hn vc to be Uonc on the spot.

Depend ,upon your ins t(mt

out the otld&lt;

of "lii.:CCSS.

LillRi\ (Scpl. 2.1-0cl. 23 ) .
or friends mi1y

Ple•se see Brld1e, Al

86
AS
A4
A3
A3
8 1·3
A2

BY KEVIN KEUY

News editor
·
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Work on a federal research
project studying the possibility of safely stonng carbon
dioxide emissions will begin
. soon at Amencan Electnc
Power's Mountaineer Plant,
an AEP spokesperson said.

Ruth Sullivan of AEP's corporate communications division in Charleston said Friday
that a seismic study of geology surrounding the plant will
be among the first steps taken
• by researchers, f~llm.;ed by
the drilling of a 10 000-foot
well to gather data o~ the feasibility of the proposed injection of carbon dioxide into
rock.

The drilling is anticipated to
start early in 2003, and the
project will wrap up late in the
year with field ·tests, she
added .
AEP and Battelle Memorial
Institute of Columbus are participating in a ·study of the.
injection concept as one.-way
of reducin~ the amount of carbon dioxide emitted from
power plants by the burning

"Of fossil fuels - in this case,
coal.
The $4.2 million study was
announced Thursday by AEP
and Battelle, a research firm .
Battelle will be the project
manager.
Mountaineer, built in the
late 1970s; was chosen as the
study site because it is one of
the more modern electricity
generating stations in the

...

Ohio Valley, said Sullivan.
"They think it's an ideal
location," Sullivan said.
The study was commissioned as one of several
options the U.S. Department
of Energy and researchers
worldwide are examining to
reduce the effects of carbon
dioxide, believed to be one of

Please see Cllm1te, A3

•,

November is Nat!onal Home Care and Hospice Month

SCO RI'IO (Oc l. 2-1- Nnv.

We are the Caring People of Holzer Home Care, Hospice and Extra Care

221 -·- ll a j,prnil~ ps ovcr whk' h
yu u nw y 11.1 \'C lm le or no (.:onL_rn l \Vi ll he wo rk inl.! i n your
lavnr tt~da v. t\ Ctu;.t iTv... it will
nD I be an;a(cidcnl. L :1dv Luck .
IS tu n1 ng Yl HI i nto hCr fre-

Paula Gaul, RN, Holzer Hospice
Faye Steinmetz, PCA, Holzer Extra Care ·
Kim Mitchell, CNA, Holzer Hospice
Robin Haning, PCA, Holzer Extra Care
Amy Baker, RN, Holzer Home Care
Sandra Peyton, HHA, Holzer Home Care

q uenc y ~H th is ti111 c.
ta gl1 ncTrying to pat~.: h up a
b roken ro motnL·r '? The AstroG r&lt;q1h Mo:t t chm ~1 k c r can help

you uh dcrstand what to do to
ma ~c th e re lati on~llip wnrk .
1
Mail ~2 .75 to M:Hl·h,n :tkcr,
do thi" Ill'" "JlLI Jil'r . P.O. IJox

1(&gt;7. Wickliffe. O H ~4092 ./t n ·
gl inc

•

••

AS
84-S

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~ A. num b~: r

converge on you ill th e same
I· ~ me t!lday . all vyi ng fo r your
t1m c und au cnt iun. It won't
take long for vnu Ill rc;.lli zc
just how popula r you arc ttt
this tim c-:-

GALLIPOLIS
fERRY,
W.Va. - Officals from the
West Virginia Division of
Highways say the bridge on
West Virginia Route 2 in
Gallipolis Ferry is being
deconstructed, not for the pur- 1
pose of building a new one,
but for correcting a "design
flaw" in the current one.
Project manager George
Ramella said work began on
the bridge Nov. II after
inspectors no1iced a flaw in its
design . He said the original
beams were "underdesigned"
and did not meet DOH standards.
"We weren't getting our

money's worth," Ramella
said.
· Ramella noted the flaw was
not something intentionally
done by the designers MS
Consultants of Charleston
who have made good on correcting the flaw. While he
couldn't really speculate on
what problems could have
been caused Clue to the flaw,
Ramella said motorist were
not in danger.
"There were never any safety problems to the public,"
Ramella said.
Ramella said work to date
has involved removing the
deck, beams and peer caps.
He said workers will be

/

~.:us .

figure

Ple•se see JFK. Al

Climate change study at .Mountaineer begins soon

Index

confcs!\io n tm.lay. don"t .hc si·
tate. Y~u know that it is .!:ood
fnr the soul . but better yet, it
co.u l ~l be e.'\lrcmcl y good for
hnnging rL':tl ity into sharp fo-

"nal y&lt; is In

"He (Kennedy) was our com·
mander-in-chief,• our boss. I
knew I had to do my duty and
be professional, but it seemed
so unreal.
"That's when I realized it
was a moment in history," he
added.
·
Ginther, then a Specialist 4
in the U.S. Army's 9lst
Combat Engineers Company
Bat Fort Belvoir, Va., remembered the cool, partly cloudy
day of the president's funeral
and procession to Arlington as
eerily quiet, except for .the
crying heard among the
crowd of dignitaries and citizens who gathered at the
cemetery.
"The amazing thing about it

Bridge 'design flaw' ·
.being corrected

I

1

Bill Ginther of Gallipolis. a member of the U.S. Army honor
guard at the f1,meral of President John F. ·Kennedy .3 9 years
ago, examines a copy of the Washington Daily News' coverage
of the event, a keepsake from an experience he will never forget. (Kevin Kelly)
·

Thanksgiving celebration

~

I

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 14

www.holzer.org
'!

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