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Pomer9y • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • 611Map 1ttmn-6mttnd

'

.

Sunday, November 24, 2002"

ClevelaJ~d

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

MOLLOHAN 'S CARPET
Has~ alii
From Commercial to Residential
V.C.T. Tile, Ceramic Tile, Laminate,
Hardwood, Berber, Plush and Vinyl
446-7444

• Full time, 4Q..hour per week

• Required an outgoing and profes-

FIREWOOD

sional iridividual with excellent oral
and written cOmmunications skills and,
good computer skills.
• Will work with Board on fund raising
and grnt wri~ing
• Responsible for daily operations ,
such as marketing. volunteer coordination , concert production/preparation
Bachelor's degree pi"eferred and/or 35 years exp.erience with non-profit
organization. Preferably in the arts .
Send resume and salary requirements
to P.O.Box 424 Gallipolis, OH 45631

5112 St. At. 588
$100.00 a Cord
Not Delivered 441-9831 .

446-2342 OR 992-2155 • 675-1333
Large Assortment of
Christmas Gift Books
Are you looking for an instruction
book on haw to ive your life?
Only at
Good News Bible
Bookstore

The Gathering Place
Antiques &amp; Country
HOLIDAY OPEN
HOUSE
November 30
10-6

441-9603

Buy 1 book at regular price, Get
a 2nd book of equal or less value
1/2 off (in-siock items only)

FERRELLS
DEER PROCESSING
1 Day Processing Available
33 Henkle Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio

4 .50%
Invest with us.
You'll always receive
original DEPOSIT
PLUS INTEREST
Guaranteed
We've never lost a penny .
r orour
clients.
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 SecondAvenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8235
1-800-447-8235

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8235
1·800-447-8235

'

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 71

"Christmas In The
Country"

.

Aunt Clara's
Annual Christmas
will be Saturday,
November 30th.

10 am till 5 pm

Free Thanksgiving
Dinner
at Mercerville Elementary School
November 27 ·
Serving will be 5:00 thru 8:00pm
Sponsored by the following churches
··
Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist
Mercerville Baptist
Good Hope Baptist
Kings Chapel .
Everyone Welcome

AUNT CLARA'S
COLLECTION
State At. 141
4 miles west of Gallipolis
7 40-446-0205

Annual holi~ay
flower show ·
displays talent

12-?
Bring this coupon to
COUNTRY
BOUTIQUE
160 Flea Market-Porter
$10.00 off any item in
•

shop. Drawing on

Bv CHARLENE HOEFliCH

Dec. 21 , 02
Open every weekend
. Thurs-Sun (11-5 pm)
Crafts, Gifts, Candes &amp; more
Lid'l Dolly dresses

OPEN HOUSE;
Sat. Nov. 30
8 am- 5 pm
Gloria Oiler
31645 St. Rt. 325
Langsville, Ohio
7 40-7 42-2076

446-2673

SAVE AD

2 Avg. size rooms cleaned
$29.99 ea. rm.

For More/nfo...

WOODYARDS MINI MALL .
Has just been licensed to sell
Middleton dolls. We just
received a load in time for
Christmas

Captain Steamer Carpe1 Cleaner
446-6784
Save ad Exp. 12/15/02

446-2342i•
992-2156
.
I
.
• 675-1333
Lane Daniels, who has been in the business of tuning pianos for 37 years, is shown tuning his 10.000th piano at the
Meigs Mu.seum in Pomeroy. Daniels donated this tune-up free of charge for the museum 's Wurlltzer plano. (Krls Scouten)

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-Frequent Flyer Magazine

Deeanna Sayre. left, and Breanna Manuel , members of the
Rock Springs Junior Garden Club, hang homemade Christmas
ornaments 'using ·natural materials on the flower show
Christmas tree which was surrounded with wrapped packages
enhanced with live plant material. (Charlene Hoefl ich)
!

.

•

Bv

DAN HERMES .

Staff writer
ALBANY _ "W.on•t you
give me a home, where the
buffalo roam, and the skies,
are not cloudy all day ... "
The Lawson family knows
that song well, having 70-plus
head of buffalo after years of
cattle ranching on their 400acre spread.
·"We spent three years
checking them out," said
Patrick Law son about the
decision he and his father,
Bill, made in 1996 to switch
over to buffalo. "We started
with two calves, a bull and
.
.
female,
and then bou~ht
A bull bison can tip the scales at 2,400 pounds. The meat is
more.
I told dad I'd hke
seven
low in fat and recommended by the American heart
to raise these things and after
Association as a healthy alternative to t&gt;eef. (Dan Hermes)

having a prime rib dinner, it
was a love affair."
"It was the best prime rib I
ever ate in my life ," Bill
Lawson said.
On paper, the switcli from
cattle to bison came naturally.
Cows eat two-thirds more,
according to Patrick, and a
fully mature male bison will
weigh in at 2,300 pounds,
compared to 1,000 pounds for
a male cow. Realistically
however, the change from cattie to bison came with several
variances.
"They look like a truck,"
Patrick said with a laugh
about bison. "They are a lot
. easier on pasture and they
don't · stick !heir heads
through fences. But you can't
use wood fences, you have to

use steel. Even with steel, if
:'You'll see them out there
they want to busi through it, in I00-degree temperatures
they can."
sitting in the middle of the
Patrick said that the bison,
Please see Bison, A3
despite lookin~ like docile
animals, are wtld and dan- .---------.....;..,
gerous to work with.
"They' II kill anything on
four legs, or two legs, that
come into their pasture," he
2 Sections- 12 l'llses
said. ':You have to keep an
eye on them. You can tell by Youth &amp; Education
AS
their tail what kind of mood
Classifieds
B4-5
they are in."
Comics
B6
Buffalo have a unique
A6
built-in radiator system . Kids Scoop
A4
They have I0 more hair fol - Editorials
licles per-square-inch than Movies
A3
cattle. In the heat of the Obituaries
A3
summer, they don' t seek Sports
B1-3
shade and in the winter, they Weather
A2
will go into semi-hiberna0 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
tion to save energy and heat.

Index

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

we ar~ the .Cari~g People ofHolzer Home Care, Hospice and Extra Care

.,.Golf Digest consumer survey

rooms de signed to wow any the world."
traveler.

·

Daniels says the most popular pianos
,are the spinets because they are small and
inexpensive.
.
"But the sound is lousy," Daniels said.
He says the peak of his business was
around 1987 and 1988. In 1990, most
piano makers discontinued making the
instruments. These days it's down to a

November is National Home Care and Hospice Month

golf destination•
and tastefully-

more."

choice of Baldwins or Stein ways.
His tuning sessions vary, but he averages an hour and a half per visit.
"Dep_t:nding on the condition of the
pian? aKd Whether r mruning"or ~sfflng'
mg. It could be as short as 40 miJ!utes or
two to three hours," he says.
According to Daniels, pianos generally
last&lt; up to I00 years when taken care of
properly. He also adds that temperature
changes and moving a piano from one
rooin to another may change the sound of
.
_
a piano.
Daniels himself enjoys tickling the
ivories occasionally.
.
"It's a scientific system- you have to
train your ears to know what you're listening for," he says.
He took piano lessons as a child for
eight years.
"It sure helps," he adds.
· Daniels has been manied 36 years this
month to his .wife Dortna, and has two
children, Erek and Leah, and three pet
miniature goats that "help eat the grass."
He is a Jehovah's Witness.

Our new weekday three-day,

Autumn breezes

··

RUTLAND - Lane Daniels recently
tuned his IO,OOOth piano, and after 37
years, he's still•going strong.
People aren'l buying pianos like they
used to, Daniels says. He says that kids
today are more into electric pianos and
computers.
...
"What the parents don't realize is the
dedication and motivation has to come
from them," he says. "One lady in New
Haven said her daughter put on a scene
and didn't want to play."
Daniels says the woman then sat on the
bench with her daughter and encouraged
. her. Now, as an adult, she thanks her
mother.
"I've never met anyone who said
they're glad they quit playing piano," he
adds. "And I'.ve never met anyone who
regretted learning to play."
As much as he loves his job and the
pianos themselves, it's in the people he's
. met over the years '\here he finds his

fondest memories:
"I tuned a piano for a man in Athe~."
he continues, "and he actually recorded a
CD with it.Jt's really cool. I can listen to
these 1940's jozz songnriit irs5atisfyltig
to know thatll've been tuning his pi~o
for 20 years.' ·
Daniels says out of all the pianos he's
worked on, the most difficult to tune are
the square grands because they were
made around the Civil War era and the
design is poor.
'.'I lilce consoles, but the performers like
grands because the sound is richer and
the mechanism is more reliable," he says.
"I .also like the verticals. especially the
Everetts, but !hey don't make them any-

Please see Fl-ers, AJ

.Raising·bison a natural fit tOr lawson family

~Golf Magazine

Value over all

or some of
our 378 holes of

'

Bv KRIS ScoUTEN
Staff wri.ter

public golf on earth."

THE LODGE
C

golf... very affordable ·
of quality and affordability. ~
'(')~
\\ ~rrloH look the award. h . . ( }~tllld '·:lfr!/rl ,11\U
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prices... multiple courses... easy
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The Grand European Spa, an
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to get to ... famous Southern
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eye-popping $6 million pool
. Places to Play. If you're perhospitality and service.

Daniels .tunes 1O,OOOth piano

.• :' some of the best

This fall, THE LODGE AND

golf bliss until you reach the

li a leaves and ting-ling
sprayed si lver.
Reserve best of show went
POMEROY _ The ere- to Judy Bunger for her
.
arrangement in the interpreatJve talent of local gardeners tive class, "Gliding Through
was well displayed in hun- the Snow." Using a plexiglass
dreds of exhibits including container sprayed with artifiartistic arrangements. holiday cia! snow, she enhanced her
wreaths and swags, fireside arrangement with alium and
baskets, and gtft :wrappmgs at . canna leaves painted red.
The creative award went to
the annual hohday flower
show of the Meigs &lt;;:ounty Melanie Stethem for her red
Garden Clubs Association.
and gold "Shopping the Net"
Held at the Semor Citizens arrangement accented with a
Center Saturday and Sunday, computed
mouse . The
~?e exhibits earned out th~ modem tninsparency includ~ome for the Holidays ed magnolia leaves painted
t erne with arranged 11owers red and green holly branches.
and other . plant matenal
Evelyn Hollon was the barenhanced WIIh c~lorful bulbs ticulture sweepstakes award
and baubl~s. ca.ndles. a~d winner in the senior division,
comfers, glitter and arttfictal and junior winners were
snow. The exhibits were Deeanna Sayre, best of show,
JUdged by Dottte Bates of and Destiny Sayre, horticuiColumbus. at! acc redited ture sweepst!lkes.
JUdge of the OhiO Association
Winning ribbons in the
artistic design classes, listed
of Garden Clubs.
Award_ed bes~ of show was first through third respectivea ref)ecttve ~esign created by ly were:
:
~he~Ia Curtts fo~, the class
"Thanksgiving Buffet", a
Shmy ~ew Year. The mod- table arrangement: Melanie
ern crea!tve arrangement_ fea- Stethem Shelia Curtis Peggy
tured mtrrored accent pteces
'
'
with silver bulbs, and magnaNews editor

Home Decorating

Robyn at Headquarters
can get you ready for the holidays
with a manicure, pedicure, acrylic
nails or gift certificate.
Christmas specials now!

www.mydailysentinel.com

MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 2002

458-1526

Open House

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

/Slug S.hoot
Gallia Co.
Gun Club
Sunday,
Nov. 24

Leon Baden Ad Leon, WV

.

7 40·446-7936

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

beats New Orleans 24-15, B 1

1.800.949.4444
www. rtjgolj. com

Paula Gaul, RN, Holzer 1-{ospice
Faye Steinmetz, PCA, Holzer Extra Care
.
""
Kim Mitchell, CNA, Holzer Hospice
Robin Haning, PCA, Hol zer Extra Care
Amy Baker, RN, Holzer Home Care
Sandra Peyton, HHA, Holzer Home Care

www .holzer.org
I

••

•

�PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 25, 200l

Reception Campus gone wild
tums
bloody

Ohio weather
Tuesday, Nov. 26

TOLEDO (AP) - A
man who was shot in the
head in a confrontation at
a wedding reception over
the weekend remained
hospitalized in critical
condition Monday mom- ·
in g.
Aaron Nolath, 22, of
Holland, was taken to the
Medical College of Ohio
Hospital after he was shot
Saturday night as he came
out of the restroom at a
VFW Post where the
reception was being held,
Lucas County sheriff's
Deputy Tammy Rowan
said.
Authorities believe the
shooting was gang related.
Several hours after the
Phonsauan
shooting,
Photseevong, . 19,
of
Toledo, was arrested and
charged with attempteq
murder.
.
An accomplice who
police have not identified
created a diversion before
Photseevong entered and
shot Nolath, Rowan said.
She did not know if the
bride and groom knew
Photseevong.

120"130' I •

ol Columbus 123'/34' I

KY.

ri.l 2002 AcaiWeathel, Inc.
..

o ••· '*-·· ~- ·~~~

S~nny

Pt. Clou&lt;tt Clou&lt;lj

v. AssOOatod,.,..,

51-..e~

T-storms

Aa~

Flurries

Snow

k:e

.

Chance of sprinkles

•
Weather Forecast
Wednesday ... Mostly
Today.. .Becoming mostly cloudy with a chance of
cloudy . wi'th a chance of snow showers. Highs in the
sprinkles this afternoon. mid 30s. Chance of snow
Highs 45 to 50. Southwest 40 percent.
Wednesday
night ... A
winds 5 to 10 mph llec·oming northwest early this slight chance of snow
afternoon.
·
showers in the evening ...
Tonigh1. . . Considerably . Otherwise partly cloudy.
cloudy. Lows in the upper Lows 20 to 25 . Chance of
20s. North winds 5 to 10 snow 20 percent.
mph.
. Thanksgiving ... Partly
·
Extended Forecast
cloudy. Highs in the upper
Tuesday... Partly cloudy in 30s.
the morning ... Then mostly
Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
cloudy with a chance of Lows in the lower 20s and
rain in the afternoon. Highs highs in the mid 40s.
near 40. Light northeast
Saturday... Partly. cloudy.
winds. Chance of rain 40 A slight chance of rain or
percent.
snow showers during the
Tuesday night ... Snow or night. Lows near 30 and
rain likely until mid· highs in the upper 40s.
night ... Then snow likely · Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
after midnight. Several chance of snow or rain
inches possible. Lows 25 to showers. Lows in the lower
29. Chance of precipitation 30s and highs in the lower
60 percent. ·
40s.

Seven shot when
house hit by gunfire
LIMA (AP)- Seven peo- 3:30 a.m. Sunday on the
· pie attending a party were city's south side, possibly
wounded when the house. came from a passmg car,
was sprayed with bullets, Maj. Larry Winegardner
police said.
.
said.
·
One
victim,
Laron \ Winegardner did
not
Johnson, 19, was hit in the know how many bullets
chest and remained in criti- were fired or how many
cal ·condition early Tuesday guns were used.
No one has been arrested
at St. Rita's Medical Center.
Three other people were and police have not identihospitalized. Titus Brown fied any suspects.
Police searched a house
was in fair condition and
Sonnesha Jones was in seri· on the' same side of town
ous condition, both at St. about 12:30 p.m. Sunday
Rita's .
Rotisha
Smith after receiving a tip that
remained in serious condi- someone involved m the
tion at Lima Memorial shooting was there. But the
Hospital.
house was empty when the
The shots, fired about SWAT team arrived.

· City to take another
·look at panhandling law

.

.•

CINCINNATI (AP) Some city· officials and
dowritown merchants say
panhandling has become
more of a problem since
March, when th'e City
Council passed an ordinance that bars asking for
money near an ATM, bus
sto p, crosswalk or after
dark.
The law also makes it a
crime to beg under false
pretenses, such as falsely
claiming to be a stranded
· motorist or an injured veteran.
A police unit of 15 officers was formed to enforce
the law. But police say itlegal panhandlers are difficult
to catch and even more difficult to prosecute.
"The volume of complaints that I've gotten
about panhandling in the
past year have in fact
increased," sai&lt;l David
Ginsburg, interim president

of Downtown Cincinnati
Inc.
Councilman Pat DeWine·,
who sponsored the panhandl'
1
h' k
·
mg aw, t m s aggressJve
street begging is still a
problem.
·
"What I want to figure out
is why it's still a problem
and w~at are we going to do
to solve it," said DeWine,
who has scheduled a Dec . 3
hearing in his Law and
Public Safety Committee.
'Mayor Charlie Luken said
h
.
people w o g1ve money to
panhandlers
often
are
enabling alcoholism, drug
. li~e and homelesmess.
"I tAittli:: it's a probiem. It's
ba~ for the community, and
it's bad for the panhan - .
dlers ," Luken said. "If pea-

A young man kicks in the glass door of Long's Bookstore early Sunday, in Columbus. Crow~s
celebrating Ohio State's victory over Michigan set fires and damaged cars early Sunday 111
areas south and east of campus, at one point burning a pile of about nine cars, poli,~:e said.
(AP)

American Jews shop to support Israeli
.
.

.

BEACHWOOD (AP)
With tourism revenue falling
because of violence in Israel,
some Israeli artisans are
·sending their wares to U.S.
markets.
At the Mandel Jewish
Community Center in this
Cleveland suburb on Sunday,
local Jews bought everything
from fine an and jewelry to
tee shirts from thetr brethren
in the Middle East.
"If tourists are not coming,
we want to give a gasp of
oxygen to these enterprises
that are collapsing," said
Sami Ghatan, who works
with American groups to

bring the . products from
Israel. "It's another way for
Jewish people to fight back."
Shoppers lined up before
doors opened Sunday morning, and organizers estimated
that more than 3,000 people
attended, spending about
$125,000 on the first day of
the two-day sale.
"We are doing everything
we r.ossi)lly can to help
Israe ," said Dvora Millstone
of suburban Shaker Heights,
who was shopping with her
husband, Davtd.
Some
estimates
say
tourism revenue in Israel has
fallen by more than $2 billion

pan of a very intensive ongoing effort reach out to the
people of Israel."
· "We just want to come
together as a community
when our homeland is so
beleaguered," he said.
Organizers, aided by 700
voluntec;rs, hoped to draw
4,000-5,000
people
to
browse. the more than 60
tables of products.
"The Jewish state is in distress and the Jewish people
have ·come to help," said
Edith Greenberg of the Stand
Up for Israel Committee.

over the last few months
because of ongoing violence.
For some artists, one sale
totaled more than they made
at home over the last several
months, said Adina Porate of
the Etzion Judaica Center in
Gush Etzion.
Joel Fox, executive vice
president of the Jewish
Community Federation of
Cleveland, said the Israeli
community
has · been
destroyed by the loss of
tourism, whtch has forced
about 50,000 businesses to
shut down in the last two
years.
Fox called the market "just

Insurance companies blamed for rising malpractice rates
COLUMBUS (AP)
work for the insurance comSenate lawmakers heard tes· panies," said Sen. Ben Espy,
timony last week that insur- a Columbus Democrat who
ance companies pay $1.62 in opposes the legislation.
medical malpractice claims
Insurance companies disfor every $1 they take in from agree and say they are being
premiums.
blamed for a problem The
source:
Donald higher and higher claims Palmisano, the president of out of their control.
Medical
"Increasing medical malthe
American
Association.
. practice claim costs, on the
Opponents of legislation rise for over three decades,
cappmg pain-and-suffering have finally reached the level
awards for patients injured where the rates insurers must
~y medical malpr~ctice sa~ chffargdedcbandno longderh be
OS·
msurance compantes aren t a or e Y octors an
being held responsible for pitals," Lawrence Smarr,
soaring rates.
president of the Physician
They say the companies are Insurers Association
of
refusing to own up to their American, told the Senate
role in the problem by letting Insurance, Commerce and
doctors and Republican law- Labor Committee on Nov.
12.
makers speak for them.
"We are doing .t he dirty
The Republican-controlled

Obituaries
·Robert Lee
Ross
•

I

llllnsfleld

Monday, November 25, 2002

Senate approved a bill
Thursday capping pain-andsuffering
awards
at
$750,000. The House Civil
Commercial
Law
and
Committee was to continue
hearings on its version of the
bill Monda~.
Many witnesses testifying
for the bill this fall were doctors stung by high rates. They
cite a study that says the
median jury a 'Yard increased
43 ~rcent between 1999 and
2000.
Morrow County physician
Brian Bachelder, for exam-

pie, has testified that his rates
will jump $20,000 to $57,000:
next year.
Opponents of the bill
include defense lawyers .a nd
patients injured by medical
malpractice.
Deborah Dick, of Kenton,
told lawmakers last week that
she had both leg~ amputated
after two · emergency room
physicians
misdiagnosed
blood clots in 1999. She was
awarded $6 million,· includ·
ing $3.6 million for pain and
suffering, following a jury
trial that ended Nov. 7.

r;::;:;;:;:;~--~------------..;..;;....
I,

unlimited night and weekend minutes
you might even talk In your sleep.

1

: BIDWEll - Robert Lee
Ross, born Nov. 11, 1932, left
¢is life on earth and joined his
tpaker on Nov. 23, 2002.
• Robert was the son of the late
"omer and Josephine Martin
Ross. He was one of . seven
c:)lildren, with tliree brothers
&lt;Jlld three sisters. One brother
and one sister preceded him in
death, Larry Allen Ross, and
:t&gt;ixie Darlene Ross Henriksen.
Two' brothers and two sisters
liurvive: Richard Stanley Ross
and wife Jean of Bidwell, and
Billy Gene Ross and wife Judy
~f Delaware, OH; CarOlyn Sue .
and husband John C. Barry of
Sidwell, and Sharon Rose and
llusband Bill Cummons of
I;lilliard, OH.
.
· On January 13, 1951 he marned Anna Louise Mooney, who
. aied on Sept. 28, 1972. They
1-tere the parents of two daughters: Leanna Sue, the wife of
Donald Kingery · of Crown
&lt;:ity, and Brenda Lou, the wife
Of Richard Sydenstrickcr from
~outhside, W.Va. Both of his
looving daughters survive, along
with six grandchildren, three
great-grandchildren, one greatgrandson deceased, and four
step great-grandchildren.
' Mr. Ross was well known
throughout the tri -county area.
His work career included his
association with the V.N.
Holderman &amp; Sons, contractors out of Columbus;
Williamson's Ford garage on
State St.; Waugh-Halley-Wood
funeral · home; The Gallipolis
State Institute; Thaler Ford,
Turnpike Ford, Barnett Ford,
Pat Hill Ford, and most recent·Jy Tri-County Ford, where he
was manager and from which
he retire&lt;j due to failing health.
He was the top sales person for
the Ford Motor Company in
the Southern Ohio District for
ttu"ee consecutive years.
Mr. Ross lived in Ohio
Township and Gallipolis his
entire life. He was a Master
Nl:ason for the Morning Dawn
Lodge #7, and a member of the
Eastern Star. He had a number
of hobbies, including collecting
and refurbishing antiques ·and
~wing. roses. He was a member of the First Ch\rrch of God
on Garfield Ave.
Robert Ross will be sadly
missed by his family, particularly his daughters, and their
families, and his many friends.
Funeral services will be 11
a:m. Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2002 at
the
Waugh-Halley-Wood
ft,meral home with Pastor Paul
Voss officiating. Burial will follow in Swan Creek Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday (today) from
6,9 p.m. Masonic services will
be conducted at 8:30 p.m.
Monday at the funeral home.
Pall Bea~::rs . will be: Jack
Angell, Wayne Angell, CeaJay
Ross, David Cummons, Steve
Buck and Rick SydenStricker.
: www.TIMEFORMEMORY.com/WHW

- Paill notice

..

Local Briefs
Meeting
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• Unlimited night end
weekend minute•
• 550 Anytime minutee
- - - - - 1'1 .. ...,...._
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POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners will
meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday
· due to Thanksgiving Day.
The courthouse will be
c losed Friday.

To close

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$0

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eflet $50

.POMEROY
Meigs
Coun ty Health Department
will be closed Thursday and
Friday
due
to
the
Thanksgiving Day holiday.
Norma l business hou rs will
resume at 8 a.m. on Dec . 2.

The room where FOR
tracked World War ·11
WASHINGTON CAP)- One look at the Winston ChUJchill when he visited the
walls in FranJ,Iin D. Roosevelt's top-secret White House sho rtl y after Pearl Harbor.
World War II Map Room was enough to Impressed, FOR ordered one for himself.
On a later visit in May 1943, Churchill
convey an accurate sense of the worldwide
ebb and flow of the land and naval forces of asked for an update on the ·submarine war
the United States. its allies and their ene- in .the Atlantic . "I just removed three black
pins ," Elsey replied, referring to the
mtes.
Formerly a place where presidential gifts destruction of three German subs. To his
were unwrapped, the White House Map astonishment, Churchill began leaping
Room was lined with large-scale military around the room crying, "We've got him!"
maps. Troop positions were marked i'n We've got him!"
grease pencil on the clear-plastic overlays.
Once, . in the qui et hours before dawn,
Black pushpins located German ships. Churchill walked in unannounced to find
Orange, gray, blue and red pins charted the an embarrasst:d Army .captain standing at
positions ·of Japanese, Italian, U.S. and attention in his underwear. Late at night,
British vessels.
when no visitors were expected, the captain
The Map Room is etched in the memory often removed and hung up his uniform to
of George Elsey, an 84-year-old veteran of keep it' unwrinkled. The prime minister,
three presidential administrations. Sixty intent on the maps. paid no attention.
years ago, Navy Lt. Elsey and a team of
Elsey recalls showing Roosevelt a report
JUnior Navy and Army officers staffed the from Gen. Dwight Eisenhower that force s
Map Room 24 hours a day. With the presi- commanded by Gen. George Patton, one of
dent as their chief diem, the room became the Army's roost flamboyant officers, were
a · quiet center of American power in the just 25 miles from Pari s.
midst of history's greatest war.
The president read the cable, looked at
From her~, FOR followed American El
d ·
troops adva\Jcing up the boot of Italy,
sey ;~n said: 'The next thing we'll see.is
picture of old George on a white horse
Punching through France and landing on awith
on , riding . under the Arc de
the sandy beaches of Pacific islands.
T · spurs
h H
"One glance at the map showing. the connomp e. e's almost as good as old Doug
f f·
MacArthur· at getting publicity."
.
voys heading toward the coast 0 A nca . "We were a group with direct, intimate
would tell the story," Elsey said earlier this ..
month as he shared his memories at a con- . contact with two presidents and their advisference conyened ' by the White House ers during the greatest war in history," .
Historical Association.
Elsey said. "We ran a primitive operation
Because of the room's secret nature no by today's standards. There were no secure
communications. There were no scrambler
photographs or diari's were P.e rmined. telephones." Cables were delivered by
Discarded
papers . were
burned.
Unauthorized visitors were barred. That 'courier frotn the War and Navy departincluded the president's Secret Service ments.
"It was closer in technology to
agents and the valet who pushed his wheel
chair. .
McKinley's M~ar roo~ o~ 189.8 than it w~s
Arranged with the president's needs in . to G~.orge W.Bush s s1tuatton room tn
mind the room in .the vaulted basement 2002, Elsey satd.
A.! though the name has survived, the
corridor was near the elevator FDR used to
reach his private quarters. Desks and filing ~nee utilitarian_Map Room now compa~es
cabinets were centered to allow his wheel- tn elegance Wtth the res.t of the Whtte
chair to range the walls.
House. The bare floor FOR's wheelchair
"When the president arrived,. a watch rolled across ts covered w1th ~n onental
officer would take .over and carefully- but carpet Crystal sconc.es throw hght across
very nervously - push the president the Chippendale fumtture.
.
around the room so he could see the maps
But over the Map Room fireplace hangs
he wanted to study," Elsey said. "Then he the last map Roosevelt asked for before he
would push him over to a desk where he died at Warm Springs, Ga., on April 12,
could review cables and reports." .
1945. It shows allied and enemy positions
The room had roots in 'the 1898 war room in Europe as they were projected for May 1,
established for President McKinley during 1945.
the . Spanish~American War. But its direct
Elsey tucked it away after the war ended.
inspiration came from the portable map Decades later, he presented it to the White
room installed by British Prime Minister House.

Bison
from Page A1
sitting in the middle of the
pasture," Patrick said.
'They'll shed in the summer and they make
sweaters and coats out the
fur. "
The Lawsons· utilize as
much of the bison as they
can, besides the meat.
Heads of bulls are mounted and sold, as are winter
pelts .
"The
nutntton and
health aspects with buffalo meat are great," Bill
said. It's a healthy substitute for beef."
·A 3.5 ounc'e buffalo
steak has 141.9 calories
and 2.4 grams of fat, compared to the same-sized
serving of skinless, roasted chicken, which has
237.2 calories and I 3. 1
grams of fat. A 3.5 ounce
serving of beef has 331.4
calories and 24 .&lt;) grams of
fat. · Venison aud turkey
come in at 156.8/3.2 and
155.8/3 .2 respecti ve ly.
Before white man took
over the West, you never
saw
a
fat
Native
A me ric an," B iII said.
"The bigges t problem
'with bison is that they are
nomadic," Patrick &gt;aid .
"On small farms like ours,
they pick up parasites."
The animals are treat ed
twic e yearly and moni tored on a-daily basis. The
· meat is USDA in spec ted
and very lean .
Bison are butchered at

lladle /haeM

HOURS:

DEALER

Mon. Thes., Wed.

You'\lt: got questions. We've got answers®
S
.
N econd Ave. • M1ddlepor1 , OH 45760

&amp; .Fri. 9:00-6:00

740..992·2825

Sat 9:()()..4:00

B'Lay·A·Ways

I06

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Best ()f show ·

Sheli a Curtis' reflective design in "Shiny New Year" took best
of show in the Meigs County Garden Club's annual ho li day
flower show held Saturday and Sunday at the Senior Citizens
Center. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Flowers·

Natasha Mohler, Breeanna
Manual. Deanna Sayre,
Ethan Nottingham.
from Page A1
"Decking
the Halls" :
indoor wreaths, Susie Parker,
Chelsie Steams, and Janet
Crane .
"Harvest Home", including Theiss; outdoor wreaths,
fruits · and/or vegetables: ·chelsie Steams, Janet Theiss,
Peggy Crane, Joy Bentley, and Bentley; indoor wall or
door
h;mging.
Evelyn
and Stethetn.
Bentley, Debbie
"Shopping the Net", · a Hollon,
transparency:
Stethem, Bullington.
Curtis, Bentley.
Winning first, second and
"Gliding Through th e third place ribbons for gift
Snow", interpretive: Bunger, wrapping accented with plant
Crane, Stethem. ·
materials were: packages for
''Follow the Star", a sta - children, Betty Dean, Marge
bile: Curtis, Bunger, and Fetty, Chelsie Combs-Steams
Betty Dean.
in one class, and Melanie
"Candlelight
Service" Stethem, Evelyn Hollon and
including
candles: Eva Shelia Taylor in the second
Robson, Curtis, Marge Fetty. class.
"Blessed By an Angel",
In the division for adult
including a figurine : Evelyn package wrappings, the wjnHollon, Alice Thompson. ners were · Curtis, Stethem, ·
Stethem.
and Chelsie Combs-Steams,
"Chestnuts Roasting", a in. the first class, and Dean,
fireside basket: Janet Theiss,
Hollon, and Alice,TIJompson
Crane, Stethem.
" Shiny New Year", a in the second cla~S.
In the horti culture division,
reflective desig n Curtis,
the blue ribbon winners
Dean, and Bunger.
"Filling . the Stocking", a were:
oe·anna Sayre, dr) ed roadfavorite design (junior class):
Deanna Sayre, Destiny side material; Ada Titus,
Sayre, and Breeanna Manual. Christmas cactus; Joyce
"What 's Under the Tree for Manual, African violets;
Me", a design including a toy Bentley and Manual. cacti;
(junior class): Deanna Sayre, Peggy Crane, berried branch ;
Destiny Sayre, and Breeanna Hollon, broadlead evergreen ;
Hollon, three blues, Stethem,
Manual.
·
"Trimming the Tree", tree and Thompson, narrow leaf
orna ment made with natural evergreen; and Hollon, natumaterials (junior class) : rally dried plant material.

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• Thursday, December 5, 2002
FREE GIFT TO
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24 to 30 months of age healthcare programs for
and the Lawsons don ' t the
American
Heart
use grain. The bison are Association
Midwest
grass finished.
affiliate .
·• ·
"Grass has three amino
The Lawsons se ll buffaacids that are good for lo meat wholesale and
you," Bill said. "Grain retail, with prices varying
creates bad cholesterol." . from $4 per-pound for
Another unique charac- ground meat to $10 to $16
teristic about bison is that per-pound for steal\s,
they are one of only two depending on the cut
.
mammals that have .never
"We sell whole and half ·
contracted cancer, with animals," Patrick said.
the other being sharks.
For more information,
. "They don't know why, you can call the Lawsons at
but it inust be good for (740) 698-7104, or via esome reason," Patrick mqil at: lawsonbi son· said.
ranch @dragonbbs.com.
"Wi ld game and less
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venison, buffalo, rabbit,
emu , ostric h and pheasant
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The Daily Sentinel

~The

Monday, November 25, 2002

Winner In
contest

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
'
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
·

POMEROY - Michael A.
Will of Pomeroy, a student at
Eastern High School, is a preliminary·round winner of Ohio
University's Annual American
History contest. The final round
of the contest will be judged
Dec. 5..
•
The winner of the contest will
receive a full four-year scholarship and $100. other students
will receive more than $600 in
cash awards and more than
$10,000 in scholarships.
More than 8,800 students
from 270 Ohio high schools
took the preliminary m~Itiple­
choice examination in October.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co:
Den Dickerson
· Publisher
Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

'

Letters to the editor ure welcome. The\' should be less than
300 1ronls. All lerters are subject to etliting and must be
signed and .illclude address and telephone number No
uns1g ned leiters wi/1 be published. Leuers Sium /d be in good
uute. addressing issues, not persomrfitie:~·.
Th e opinions expressed in the cuhmm below are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. editorial board,
unles.\· otherwise noted.

s

'"'

Present awards

NATIONAL VIEW

MIDDLEPORT -- Awards
were recently presented to stu·
dents at River Valley Christian
Academy of Middleport.
Angel Large and Valerie
Kapp were presented trophies
for Academic Achievement,
and Kelsey Sauters, Casey
McConnell and Kedrick
Konkle
· for
Scholastic
Achievement. Certificates for
"A" honor mll were presented
to Jennifer Kapp. Valerie Kapp.
Briaunna Kmg, Kednck
Konkle. Angel Large, Casey
McConnell, Anthony Rowe,
l(iesha Rowe and Kelsey
Sauters.
"B" honor roll certificates
were presented to Ashley
Large, Jash Nottingham,
{Jriaunna King and Jennifer
Kap~. Briauanna King and
Jenmfer Kapp were .recognized
for completing the most paces.
I
.

•

Too long
Delay in naming .9I 11 '
commission should end soon
.

.

• The. Cincinnati Post: The White House and
Congress have finally reached an acceptable compromise on a 9/11 commission. It was too long in coming.
The biggest objection, mostly froin the ·White
House, was that an independent probe might become
a political blame game. While the commission has a
clear mandate to assign blame for security and intelli"
gence lapses, there are sufficient safeguards to prevent
a partisan witch-hunt. ·
There are I0 members, evenly divided .between
Republicans and Democrats, and P,resident Bush gets
to name the chairman. Six votes •are needed to issue
subpoenas, meaning each party has an effective veto
over the direction of the investigation. As part of a
compromise reached Thursday night, Sen. John
McCain, perhaps the commission's most zealous
booster, gets to name one of the members. Lawmakers
took that as a guarantee the commission would be
aggressive in its probe.
•
The panel . has a broad mandate that its members
should fully exploit - to examine the intelligence
agencies, immigration system, law enforcement and
the foreign service. The president and Congress should
name the commission members as soon as possible.
They have a lot of work ahead of them.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. Today is Monday, Nov. 25, the 329th day pf 2002. There are
36 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Nov. 25, 1963, the body of President Kennedy was laid
to rest at Arlington National Cemetery.
On this date:
•
··
·
.
· .J
In 1758, m the French and Indian War, the British capt4red
Fort Duquesne in present-day Pittsburgh.
In 1783. the British evacuated New York, their last military
position in the United States during the Revolutionary War.
In 1835, American industrialist Andrew Carnegie was born
in Dunfermline, Scotland.
.. ln 1881 , Pope John XXIll was born Angelo Roncalli near
Bergamo , Italy.
~ In 1957. President Eisenhower suffered a slight stroke.
In 1973, Greek President George Papadopoulos was ousted
in a bloodless military coup:
·
.
In 1974, former U.N. Secretary-General U Thant died in
New York at age 65 ,·
·
In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair erupted as President Reagan
and Attorney General Edwin Meese revealed that profits from
secret arms sales to Iran had been diverted to Nicaraguan
rebels.
In 1987, Harold Washington, the first black mayor of
Chicago, died in office at age 65. ·
In 1990, Poland held its first popular presidential election.
(Solidarity founder Lech Walesa, who received a plurality of
votes, won a runoff the following month.)
Ten years a$o: The Commerce D~&gt;partment reported that the
gross domestic product had advanced at a brisk 3.9 percent
seasonally adjusted annual rate during the third quarter of
1992.
Five years ago: President Clinton and Pacific Rim leaders
meeting in Vancouver. British Columbia, approved a rescue
strategy for Asian economies shaken by plunging currencies,
bank failures and bankruptcies. Teamsters President Ron
· Carey announced he was taking an unpaid leave of absence to
fight an election overseer's decision barring him from a rerun.
One year ago: As the war in Afghanis'tan entered its eighth
week, CIA officer Johnny "Mike" Spann was killed during a
prison upri sing in Mazar-e-S harif, becoming America's first
combat casualty of the conflict. Scientists in Worcester, Mass.,
claimed to have created the first early human embry1ones,
none of which survived . .
Todafs Birthdays: Former Chi lean dictator eneral
Augusto Pinochet is 87. Actor Ricardo Montalban is 82.
Actress Kathryn Crosby is 69. Actor Matt Clark is 66. Singer
Percy Sledge is 62. Actor Tracey Walter is 60. Author. actor ·
and game show host Ben Stein is 58. Singer Bob Lind is 58.
Actor John Larroquette is 55. Movie di rec tor Jonathan Kaplan
is 55. Singer Amy Grant is 42. Football player Bernie Kosar
is 39. Rock singer Mark Lanegan (Screaming Trees) is 38.
Singer Stacy Lattisaw is 36. Rock musiciaiJ Rodney Sheppard
(S ugar Ray ) is 36, Rapper-producer Erick Sermon is 34.
Actre~' Jill Hennessy is 3l Actress Christina Applegate is 31 .
Thought for Today: "My theology, briefly, is that the unive rse was dictated but not signed." - Christopher Morley,
American author and journalist ( 1890-1957).

Youth • Edu

Notebook

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Daily Sentinel

HENTOFF'S VIEW

· Crnsad~rs' quest for
Bv NAT HENTOFF

On at least 40 campuses nationwide,
professors and students have mounted
campaigns to force colleges and universllies to divest themselves from
their holdings in any corporations or
firms that do business with IsraeL
In October, hundreds of these crusaders - including many from campuses not yet involved in the campaign- gathered at the University of
Michigan for the Second National
Student Conference of the Palestine
Solidarity Movement. Addressing the
throng was Eric Reichenberger.
spokesman for Students Allied for
Freedom and Equality (SAFE), the
Universit,Y of Michigan group that
hosted th1s jeremiad against IsraeL
Reichenberger proclaimed that
"Israel. is the prime example of human
rights violators in the world." There
were no objections in the crowd. The
tyrannical crushers of human rights in
Zambia, Liberia, . Kazakstan and
China would have been relieved at
getting a pass from these paladins of
freedom and equality.
In case some independent humanrights activists mij::ht ·have ·asked
about the relationship of Palestinian
suicide bombers to the shining principles of this human-rights conference,
there was this revealing section of the
divestment' s guidin~
principles
(included in the event s· promotional
material):
"As a solidarity movement, it is not
our place to dictate the strategies or
tactics adopted by the Palestinian
people in their struggle for Iiberation."
It's a pity no one there quoted
Hanan Ashrawi, one of the most visible and persistent advocates of
Palestinian liberation, from what she
repeatedly describes as "the occupation.'' As quoted in the Village Voice,

moral superiority is questionable

.

Ashwari has called the suicide bomb- "the human rights community, comi
ings "morally reprehensible." And in posed mostly of compassionate white
The Progressive magazine, she people, (which) feels a special duty to
denounced .those Palestinians who protest evil done by those who are
interpreted "Israeli military attacks on · like 'us.' ... , But when we see evil
innocent Palestinian lives as license done by 'others,' we tend to shy away;
to do the same to their civilians.
"Though we claim to have a single
Where ate those (Palestinian) voices standard for all human conduct , ~
and forces that should have stood up Jacobs continues, "we don't. We feat
for the sanctity of human lives (ours the charge of hypocrisy: We
·and theirs) instead of allowing the Westerners, after all, had slav.es. We
horror of our own suffering to silence napalmed Vietnam. We live on Nati\•e
us?"
American land. Who are we to judge
Those voices were absent at the 'others?' ... The biggest victims of
Second National Student Conference this complex are not the Jews who are
on
the
Palestine
Solidarity obsessively criticized but the victims
Movement.
of genocide, enslavement. rdigiou5
I'm puzzled by the hordes of facul- persecution and ethnic cleansing wh6
ty members at distinguished universi- are murderously ignored: the
ues around the country who have Christian slaves of Sudan, the Muslim
enthusiastically signed these divest- slaves of Mauritania, the Tibetans, the
ment petitions in the name of human Kurds, the Christians in Pakistan,
rights. For many years, in Sudan, Indonesia, Egypt."
southern black Chnstians and tradiJacobs notes that .t~e singling .out ,of
tionalists have been subjected to slav- Israel for condemnation on these cam.
ery, women have been gang raped, puses is not ·.predominantly anti;
~nd genocide has persisted (however, Semitism. It is ihe "abandonment of
President Bush and Con~ress have those around the world ... whose:
now officially condemned 1t). •
oppressions we find beside the point.''
Yet, there have been few rallies,
But in some of the anti-Israel
de~c;mstrations or. ur~ent anti-~lavery demonstrations on campuses, copies
pet1t10ns at Amenca s mstltu!lons of of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion
higher learning. On the other hand, are being circulated. Swastikas appear
schoolchildren around the country· on places where Jewish students gath;
sold their toys and held bake sales to er. The great majorit{ of the divestraise money to redeem slaves in ment crusaders are not anti-Semites.
Sudan.
· There are Jews among them. But there
Charles Jacobs, president · of the are also Jew-haters amonj:: them, gathBoston-based Amencan Anti-Slavery ering sustenance from th1s demoniza~
Group - a group . instrumental .in tion of a country as if it were not try;
awakening thousands of Americans, ing to defend its very existence from
most of them without PhDs, to join those who send suicide bombers, 11
the New Abolitionist Ca,mpaign weapon that destroys any claim of
attempted to dissect, in an Oct. 5 moral equivalency in this deadly conr
Boston Globe article, this selective flict.
targeting of Israel on so many nation's
campuses. He describes "a human
(Nat Hentoff is a national/it
rights complex" on the part of some in renowned authority on the Firsi

.· POMEROY

'

been the backbone of the economy dur- for possible war with Iraq. ·
·
ing the dismal last two years, are starting
There's hope that the upswing in capi:
to pull back a bit.
·
tal spending will only improve in the Yfar :
It would .be tough for the economy to ahead. At least that's what Federal
ride out a slump in business and con- Reserve was banking gn when it slashed
sumer spending at the same time.
interest rates another half percentage! ·
There are some encouragin~ signs that point in early November to 1.25 percent;
buying by businesses is startmg to pick
With interest rates now so low, borrow• .
up.
ing costs are running below the inflation
The Commerce Department in its gross . rate. That means in many cases it may be;
domestic product report last month said cheaper to borrow money for investments ;
that business investment in new equip· than hold on to cash.
·
:
ment and software grew at a brisk 6.5
Companies may also be tempted t6
percent annual rate in the third quaner.
spend because of falling prices, especial:
That was the best showing since the ly in the technology sector.
·
second quaner of 2000 and was up from
Since many businesses haven't
a 3.3 percent pace in the second quarter. replaced much of anything in the last few · · ·,
The gains in the last two quaners contrast years, they might see this as a good time
with steep declines seen in the previous to buy new goods for a fraction of the
six quaners.
cost. ·
Year-over-year spending on equipment
Still, it's far too soon to call this a fulland software is now up I .I . percent, blown resurgence in capital spending. .
Silvia said.
While companies have again started
"Equipment and software investments buying new printing presses and upgrad!
were among the strongest components of ing to super-quick Internet 'COnnections',
GDP in the third quaner," said · Gary they are holding off on most big projects~
Thayer, chief economist at St. LouisSpending on new factories, ·office
based A.G. Edwards &amp; Sons. "It is per- buildings and other structures fell at a rate
forming very well when other sectors are of 16 percent in the third quaner. That
really struggling."
follows a 17.6 percent rate of decline l~iiiO
In fact, it was the third-largest contrib- the second quaner.
, .,,;;;,:;:;
utor . to GDP beh ind spending by con-· But while capital spending may not
sumers pn durable goods, such as houses surging, there ar~ signs it's coming back.
and cars, and services, including medical And every little ~it counts.
care.
And it even topped ·government expen· &lt; (Rachel Beck is the national business
ditures on defense equipment, which rose colwtmistfor Th e Associated Press. Write
at a 5.1 percent annual rate in preparation to her at rbeck@ap.org)
·~

..

POMEROY - The following local students have been
named to the National Dean's
List, recognizing achievement
among college . students:
Sabrinna Ennis. Albany, Ohio .
University; Christopher W.
Cross, Langsville, . West
Virginia
University
at
Parkersburg;· Jeremiah G.
Smith, Langsville, · Ohio
University;
Amanda · L.
Northrup, Long Bottom,
Universl!y of Rio Grande; April
Kiser, Pomeroy, University of
Rio Grande; Kell~ A. Neerls,
Reedsville, Washmgton State
Jonathan Community College. ·

Eastern Elementary
School

Some bright spots start to appear in ~apital spending

- ..

-·

TUPPERS . PLAINS
Eastern · Elementary School
has issued its honor roll for
the first nine-week grading
period: Grade 1: Tyler Barber,
Latham Bissell, Zachary
Browning, Jenna Burdette,
Paige Cline, Samantha Cline,
Chase Cook, Molly Dunlap,
David Frank, ·Aliyah Gantt,
Meredith
Gaul, Tanner
Jenkins, Katie Keller, Jessica
Sampson, Erin Swatzel, Karl
Wilson, all A's; Sarah
Anderson, Nicholas Burke,
Haileigh
Bush, · Garrett
Caldwell, Cassidy . Cleland,
Chesley Curtis, Monique
Dugan, Austin Gheen, Joshua
Justis, Jordan Koblentz.
Jonathan
Kuhn,
Keri
Lawrence, Sarah Lawrence,
Whitley
Leach.
Brett
Milhoan, Emily Moore,
Dakota O'Brien, Joshua
Parker, Jordan Parker, Cody
Rayburn, Madison Ri_gsb,Y,
Joshua Robinson, Ben)amm
Sampson, Jasmine Smith,
Alex
Brianna
Teaford,
Victory, Heather Wells,
Christopher Yeater.
Grade
2:
Marshall
Aanestad. Randall Armes,
Maxwell Carnahan, Rebecca
Chadwell, Breanna Hayman,
Alexandria Henddrix, Jason
. Kelley, Larissa Riddle, Kyle
Young, all A' s; Hannah
j'\dams, Alex Amos, Dalton
Boso,
Samuel
Collins,
Larissa Cunningham, Victoria
Goble, Garrett Hall, Kayla
', Hawthorne. Zakkary Heaton,
· Addie
Hill,
Rachael
· Markworth, Dylan Milam.
Krista
Miller,
Timothy
Minear, Christopher Morris,
Mallory Nicodemus, Ethan
Nottingham, Derik Powell ,
J'homas Pullil)s, Maria Sharp,
.Savannah Speelman-Hawley,
Shanda
Welch, . Emily
Wheeler, Emily Wilson .
Grade 3: Christopher
Bissell, Seth Bond, Janae
Boyles,
Tyler
Cline,
Cheyenne Doczi, Krist~n
Fink, Jacob Parker, Man.e
·;powell, Shalaina Robinson,
Courtney Thomas, all A's ;
Christian Amsbary, .Damelle
Cline, Emily Davis , Scout
Facemyer, Leslea Frank,
Goh, Justin Hill,
.............. Ht&gt;ttiOF,

' Pamel:i
Johnston, Kayte
Savannah Moore, Kelsey
Myers, Jessica Powell, Cassie
Randolph. Robert Reel II,
Jenah Sampson, Shelby
Smith, Matthew Spurlock,
Aimee
Watson.
Jacob

II

It's time to get a ·college degree
It is time to stop making excuses as to
why you can't get a college degree.
.r have heard adults give many reasons
for not attending college. From not
enough time to attend classes, to the
cost of tuition, to the am.ount of classroom work required, the excuses cover
all of the bases. I believe that there is
no excuse for not improving your life
. by obtaining a college degree . Most
adults can return or enroll in college for
the first time if they put their mind to it.
Let's look at and eliminate a few of the
popular reasons that adults give for not
attending college.
One of the most popular excuses that
I hear is "No one in my family has ever
gone to colle~e . " While thi s may be
true for a maJority of the residents in
our area, it doesn' t mean ,you shouldn 't
be courageous and be the first in your
family to earn your degree. As we know
from reading the paper about job layoffs
and plant closings in our area, gone are
the days where an individual can get a
high-paying job right out of high school
and plan on retiring from that job 30
years later. Being the first in your fami ly to obtain a college degree will likely
be an enonnous source of pride for your
family. Graduation day will bring your
family to the ceremony to cheer at full
. volume as you walk across the stage

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VIEW
•

and accept your diploma.
A second popular excuse is "College
is too expensive and I can't afford to get
my degree".
Last year the average
annual tuition for Ohio's community
and technical colleges year was $1,935.
If we calculate the cost of obtaining an
Associate Degree, which is normally
completed in two years of full time
study. the tuition cost is approximately
$3.870. When you compare thi s cost to
Ohio's average annual salary for
Associate Degree graduates of approxi ~
mately $33.000. the long-tern1 financial
gain is obvious. Most student s will also
be eligible for financial aid to offset the
direct costs of tuition and books and
some of the indirect costs such as transportation expenses.
Another one that I hear often is "I am

Zuspan.
Grade 4: Jonathan Barrett,
Devon Baum, Brandy Bissell,
Megan Carnahan, Ashleigh
Duffy, Scott Gilbride, Allie
Rawson, Robert Warner, all
A's; Hayley Aaoestad, Ryan
Amos, Chantel Bauer, Jessica
Cleland, Briar Dill, Morgan
Hall, Rachel Kille, Timothy
Markworth, Danielle Maxey,
Beverly Maxson, Ashley
Miller, Britney Morrison,
Brayden Pratt, Jennifer Reed, .
Sheena Riffle, Zari Roush,
John Tenaglia,
Morgan
Windon.
Grade 5: Breea Buckley,
Wade Collins, Matthew
Friend, Hannah Hysell.
Kimberly Minear, Audnonna
Pullins, Whitney Puman,
Breanna Taylor, .Jordan
Wood, all f.'s; William Ayres;
Brenda Barber, Darci Bissell,
Jacob
Boston.
Andrea
Buckley, Lawrence Collins,
Karissa Connolly, Samantha
Cummins,
Erin
Dunn,
Samuel
Evans,
Denise
Hannum, Phillip Morehead,
Devin Riggs, Amanda Roush,
Deanna
Sebo,
Katie
Sheparad, Hannah West,
Amanda Wolfe, Joshua
Young.
Grade 6: Alexis Hirzel,
Michael
Moore,
Kayla
Russell, Karlyn Sauvage,
Amber White, Katie Wilfong,
all A's; Keith Aeiker,
Samantha Baker, Danielle
Barnhart, Matthew Barringer,
Morgan
Burt,
Zachary
Carson, Brittany Casto,
Hannah Cozart, Tina Drake,
Brenda Eddy, Herben Grate
III, Mallory Guthrie, Casey .
Hannum, Zachary Hendrix,
Matthew Hosken, Benjamin'
Hudson, Kaylee Milam,
Anthony Putman, Kyle
Sargent.
Grade 7: Andrew Bissei!,
Nathan Carroll, Ryan Davis,
Kelsey Holter. Tyler Keams,
Kyle Rawson, Morgan Werry,
all .A's; Megan Broderick,
Collins,
Kyle
Joshua
Edwards. Cassie Hauber,
Jared
Russell,
Heaven
Westfall, Nikita Young.
Grade 8: Brittany Bissell,
Sarah Boston, ~an Davis,
Dane Eichinger, Nathaniel
McGrath, Derek Putman,
Cory Shaffer, all A's; Jessica
AIIIO&amp;, St~ Sarber,
Alyssa Baker, 5amantha ·
Brown, Kimberly Castor,
Anthony Crites, Evan Dunn, .
Steven Hudson, Tyler Lee,
Jason Marcinko, William
Owen, Hollie Richard, Trista
Simmons, Erin Weber, Derek
Weber, Amber Willbarger.

Mold found in schoots
causes health,
financial ·problems
NASHVILLE,
Tenn.
(AP) - To protest a menace in their school, nearly
1,000 ,students at East High
School
in
Memphis
skipped homeroom one
day.
Across the state, another
1,000 students spent a
month at Bristol Motor
Speedway - not· watching
NASCAR races, but studying in the skyboxes while a
threat was removed at
Sullivan East High School.
In each case, the problem
was the same: mold.
Nationwide, school districts are finding allergy·
inducing mold in walls, c;m
carpets and near ventilation
systems. While one repon

not smart enough to go to college or I
have been out of high school for too
many years." This is a common, but
unwarranted fear that most college students have on their first 'day of classes.
Adult students who make the deci sion
to obtain a college degree and make the
commitment to study are easily successful in their quest. Also, most col leges offer a variety of academic support services to students. including
tutoring in subjects that the student may
find challenging, access to computer
labs. and fully equipped libraries.
Students can find the academic support
that they need to be successful. You
will never know if you can be successful until you try.
As you can imagine. there are many
more excuses that people give for not
attending college. ~ believe that any
person, r~gardless of their individual
situation. can find a way to go to college. Call your local communfty college today and put college in your
futur~.
'·
(Luanne. Rase Bowman is vice presidem for jinfmcial and ·administrative
affairs at Rio Grande Communitv
Co llege.. · P.O. Box 326. Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674, 740-245-7236.)

blames aging buildings and
mold-promoting construction techniques. one expert
says it's due to a lack of
proper ventilation in newer
schools.
''It's a growing problem,
and i(s one of the more
high-priority issues that
schools are dealing with,"
said Ericlea Plater, indoor
air quality rnanagerfor the
American- Association of
School Administrators.
Mold has forced · some
administrators to shut down
schools and make millions
of dollars in repairs. Others
face lawsuits from students
and staff who· claim moldy
buildings caused long-tenn
healt~ problems.

'Hands are for service'

The November theme for Galli a County Schools ·on the Right
Trac~" was "Hands are for Service." Pictured here · are
Southwestern OTRT advisers Amy Stanley and Della Wolfe with
OTRT student Helen Hatfield.

.Students get first hand account of firefighting
MERCERVILLE
Students in the Living
Skills/Career
Education
Classes at South Gallia High
had a first hand account of
firefighting from Guyan
Fire Chief, Tom Wright and
Firemen .Josh Staton on
Tuesday Nov. 19th.
· Chief Wright displayed
the pump trucks, ladder
truck, and rescue boat.
Several students also had an
opportunity to try on over

50 lbs. of bunker gear.
Chief Wright explained to
the students that anyone
with training can serve their
community as a volunteer
firemen.
He emphasized the
importance of the extensive
ti'aming and experience the
22
Guyan
Volunteer
Firefighters use in their
runs .
Firemen Staton
helped students to try on the
oxygen tanks and t!Xplore

the equipment carried on the
trucks that are used for some
70 calls per year in Guyan
·
and Ohio Townships.
South Gallia student
Kenny Wroten not only got
to try on the ~ear, he also
made an inqmry and dis·
cussed with the Chief how
to become a Junior Firemen.
The tour and demonstration
allowed students an inside
look at the career of a firefighter. · The students who

wore the gear definitely
gained a greater appreciation for the firemen! The
students reported being
extremely hot and that the
weight of all the gear with
the heat, was somewhat
overwhelming.
.
· Studen'ts
in
Mrs.
Johnson's, Mrs. McClung's,
and Mrs ..Barnes fifth period
classes participated in the
demonstration.

I

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Meigs County
Health Department

Advocacy. Action. Answers on Aging

says ·

THANK YOU, VOTERS!
To show its appreciation
for voter passage of the replacement tax levy
on 11-05·02,
the Meigs County Board of Health
is waiving fees (effective 11-15-0l) for the
following
nursing services:
Blood Pressure Screenings
Blood Sugar Tests
Head Lice Screenings
Urinalysis
Immunization Administration

November is National Family
Caregiver Month
The Area Agency on Aging would
like to 'thank our nations caregivers
for all their contributions.
If you are a caregiver, contact us for

information and assistance.

(a S5.00 donation is appr~iat@d , but is not r~uired for Immunizat ion Adm inistration)

·

Blood Iron Tests
Hemoccult Tests

(800)331~2644

or (740) 373-6400

Like you, we have th!:l. !lealth anci well-being of all
Meigs County residents in our hearts and hands!

Sen·i118 A1he11s, Hockillg, Meig .\', Monme, Morgun , Noble,
Perry and Wnshi11g rm1 Counties

Meigs Co. Health Dept.

A Pmgrmn t~f

112 E. Memorial

.

..

__

......

.

.

•

(740) 992-6616
FAX : (?~~ 992·0836

Ema1l:

..

Drive

Pomeroy, OH 45769

- - -- - - - - : - - -- --------·--·-··-·----·--- _
'

Monday, November 25, 2002

Named on list

Roll Call

Amendment and the Bill of Rights.)

u'

Diddle, Jason Murdock, and
Trenton Randolf, all panicipat·
ing students at Meigs High
School and in their senior/ year,
~ad a very different and excitmgsummer.
Instead of working locally,
enjoying fishing, boating, all
the fur\ things of summer, the
three young men spent their
time at Fort Jackson, S.C., in
Basic Combat Training, learning the Army's seven values
and how to tight and protect
their fellow countrymen.
They are now soldiers of the
United States Anny Reserves.
The split.,Qption program the
Army offers, enables them to
complete basic training before
graduating from high school.
During their senior year, along
with studying and extra-cunicular activities, they must attend .
military unit activities once a
month. After graduating .from
high school the soldiers will
attend military school for their
Advanced Individual Training
(AIT) where each will receive
training for their job that they
will perfonn for the United
States Army.

Complete training

ALL BUSINESS

Bv RACHEL BECK
NEW YORK - It looks like the
rebuilding of the economy is happening
with just one new computer at a time.
Or one new drill press.
Or one new forkl1ft.
Or one new software upgrade.
Companies may not be pouring money
irtto big projects, like new warehouses or
factories, but they .are slowly and surely
stepping u~ their spending on all sons of
smaller thmgs important to how their
businesses are run.
And at least they are buying something,
which may help ease some fears that corporate America remains on a spending .
freeze and the stinging effect that has on
the economy.
Already the renewed buying has given
the economy a much-needed lift.
"There is a sense that something may
finally be happening in capital investments that's good," said John · Silvia,
chief economist at Wachovia Securities
in Charlotie, N.C.
When the stock -market boom went
bust and the economy weakened, businesses curbed their spending and haven't
resumed much buying since.
Those deep cut ~ were a key factor in
pushing the economy into a recession in
March 2001 , and companies' continued
unwillingness to spend has been a major
hurdle in getting the economy healthy
agam.
But increasing capital investment is
crucial right no:.v; That's because there
are concerns that consumers, who have

•

Page AS

I

�November

Inside:

2002

Epstein to be Red Sox GM, Page 82
NFL roundup, Page 83

WleldVWrlllll!?

Corner - Write On! -~ ~

Jell Schinkel, Designer/Illustrator

The Daily Sentinel
Page Bl

11

Monday November 25, 2002

Music Reporter
'

Write a news report about a
musician. Provide three or more
facts about that musician. Be sure
your news article tells who, what,
when, where and why.

Sherman
confronts Sapp
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Green Bay coach Mike
Sherman angrily confronted
Tampa Bay 's Warren Sapp
after the Packers ' Ioss to the
Buccaneers; complaining that
the All-Pro defensive tackle
knocked offensive tackle
Chad Clifton out of the game
with a cheap shot.
·
Sapp demed the accusation
and said he was stunned
Sherman came up to him and
fnitiated an obscenity-laced
eltchange after the player finished a televi sion interview
on the field.
Clifton injured his right hip
and was taken to hospitaL

Deadline: December 22, 2002
Published: Week ofJanuary 19, 2003
Send your story to:
Den Dickerson

cl9allipoli!i Dailp m:ribune

Which would make a better - - - of the United States .- a bald eagle or a
turkey?

825 Third Avenue, GalliJ&gt;Oiis, OH 45631

Please include your school and grade.

More than 200 years ago, the Founding
Fathers wanted to choose an animal for
the great se,al of the United States. They
wanted an animal that would _ __
what ·the newly formed United States of
America was all about.

,Ty Somerville

For six years,
bitterly debated
which animal would be the country's
symbol. Finally in 1782 the bald eagle
was selected.
•

AriMrkMI Electric PoWer - Gnln Pllnt
Cheshire, OH
.

'

'

'
'l

State F•nn Insurance
Point pteasant. WV
:
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ooeffinger's lrd *fede dass
North Point Elementary
Point pteasant. WV
Hornil National a.nk
Radne, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. M cNickle's .Jrd grade dass.
Southern Elementary
Racine, OH

Elam misses
extra point

Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's .Jrd sn1de dau
AddaviUe Elementary
Addison. OH
~
t ij. (

'

,.

Hi

.

'

)

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

-

:~~:.

.Tim Tlilrkey ,

. removed
Not everyone thought the bald eagle was
some of tne·
the right animal. Benjamin Franklin
'WQrds In tbltt
thought the turkey was a better symbol. ' story. Can

.

DENVER (AP) - . Denver
Broncos kicker Jason Elam
hit the left upright with · an
elttra-point attempt, ending
his NFL-record streak at 371 .
. lt was only the second missed
· elttra point of his career and
the first since Nov. 14, 1993.

Insurance sei'Ykes ·
Gallipolis, OH
,
•
Sponsors of: Mrs. Pe~ry's Jrd grade. dass

.

Rio Grande Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

Do allturllevs uobbleP
Unscramble the letters in each leaf pile to discover the
answer (four words).

Franklin wrote to his daughter, referring
to the eagle!s "bad moral character,"
saying, "/ wish the bald eagle had not

been chosen as the representative of
our country! The turkey is a much more
respectable bird, and withal a true ·
original native ofAmerica."
'•

Skyline lAines
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sandra Walke(s 3rd srade
Pomeroy Elementary
Pomeroy, Ohio

dass

Bettis beats
Simpson

Buckeyt~ Rurel Etectrk Co-op
Rio Gri!!ode, OH
Sponsors of: Becky Woodyard's 3rd gr11de cl~ss
Southwestem Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

..

Ilia n ..
Rio Gr11nde, OH
Sponsors of: Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd sr11de dass
Washington Elementary
G11lllpolls, OH .

·~¥~iii~~~~:~~

The bald eagle supporters finally had
their way and it has been the national
bird of the United States since 1782,
when it was placed w i t h - - - - wings on the great seal of our country.

Standrirda Link: Reading Co:prehenslon: Follow simpl;:;;tt;;;r.;;;;;;s:- -

What does a nadonal bird doP

As the national symbol of the United States, the
bald eagle appears in many government buildings and on official
documents, making it the most pictured bird in all of America. The
eagle also appears on the President's flag and billions of bills and
cams.

But, Ben Franklin's words remind us
that the turkey is also. a special creature.
In truth, if someone calls you a turkey,
take it as a compliment!

Hob:er Oink
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Sheila Bevins' 3rd grade class
Middleport Elementary
Middleport. OH

'
•'

·Bell signscfor
$17 million

Holler Qlnlc
Gallipolis, OH
Spoosors of: Mrs. Ours~ Jrd grade class
Wilshington Elementary
·
Gallipolis, OH

PHILADEI,.PHIA (AP) Former San Francisco Giants
third baseman David Bell
agreed to a $17 -million, fourdeal
with
the
year
· Philadelphia Phillies.

Hola:er Oink
Gallipolis, OH
Spoowrs of: Mrs. Little' s 3rd &amp;rade dass
Central Elementary
Point Pleastmt, WV

Vllulhan's supermartcet

Nlcatn, IUfkiVI •
L .,i

Standllr:da Link: History: Students recognize national symbols

Middleport, OH
.
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastern Elementary
Middleport, OH

Look at these quarters. Find each matching pair.

such as the bald eagle.

Woods shoots
4-under 67
·

'hupan's Supenurket
Middleport, OH .
Sponsors of: Mrs . Stroble's 3rd grade dass
Southern Element11ry
Middleport, OH

'

MIYAZAKI, [Japan (AP)
4- Tiger Wood,s shot
under 67 for .his best round of
the Dunlop Phoenix, but finished six strokes behind winner Kaname Yokoo of Japan.
Yokoo, who played on the
PGA Tour this season, shot a
69 for a 15-under 269 total.
Sergio Garcia finished in second, one stroke back.

a

Derr•ll Norris and M.-rs... llll:oush Gr-..nhouses
Letart Fails. Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Holter's 3rd grade class
Soothern Eleme.ntary
Middleport, OH

''Look du'ough today's newspaper to
'find·

·.

. . . .. .. .·

Advanced He•rlna center

.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandri!l Mock's 3rd sri!lde class
Ohio Valley cnristian School
Gallipolis, OH

• th~ WOrd·Tbanksgavfng
• something you are thankful for
• the word turkey or a picture of one
• an interesting news story to discuss
at Tha~sgiv~n$ dinner ·'

Dr. a Mrs. Ger..d Shut.
Gallipolts, Ohio
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's Jrd srade class
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

.

~~.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors ·of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd.ara~ class
Bidwell Elemental)'
Bidwell, OH

Turkev Tidbits
Turllev Puzzle

EAGLE
NATIONAL
CGINS

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s

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A L

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s

ROASTED

GMA N

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N D 0

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GREAT

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K B T A L

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E I 0 K 0 R N E B

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WB N A N F

SEAL

T A E R G B u I T 0
L T s y M B 0 L R G

MOON
DEBATE
THANKFUL

·uo!II!UJ se 1 """'suy a1r.rryd Aa~'ll

D E T S A 0

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Standardl Link: Lener sequencing. Aecogn1z1ng 1dentrcal
words. Skim and scan .reading. Recall spelling pattems .

Look in the newspaper for information
about people helping others in your
community. Is there something you and
your friends can do to help others?
'
'
:y::JMSNV

LNrt CorporeUon
letart. OH
Sponsors of: A lrd gr11de d~
Beale Elementary
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

women's Basketb1ll Te•m
University of Rio. Cr•nde

. bald eagle is the one th at really stands for
freedom. It stands for Treedom because
I don ' t think the turkey would be a better America wants to be as strong as the bald
national bird than lhe bald eagle because the, eagle it se lf It is also a rare and beautiful bird

so it wquld mi ke a better description to
de~ cribe America. So thal s why it would
make a better national, bird.

Pomeroy, QH
Sponsors of: Marxe Gibbs' 3~d grade dass
Salisbury Elementary
Pomeroy, OH
f
Gellfa Reads
Gallipolis. OH
Sponsors of:
Juila Vaug~an's 3rd grade
Mindy Young's Jrd gra&lt;Je
Mi!!rxe Gibbs' J rd grade
Plus 9 ad dition11l
Jrd grade dasses

Allan finishes
12-under 198

Gatti wins
.over\Ward

Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price's 3rd grade class
washington Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Melp COunty Economic Development ~a

Eagle makes the best national bird
SHEREENA GIBSON
SOUTHWESTERN ELEME~TAR Y, GRADE 5

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Juila Vaughlln's 3rd grade class
Rutland Elementary
' Rutland, OH

[')

Ohio Valley Tec:h Prep
• 1
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
I'
Gallipolis, OH

·Jea6 eqnos U! Ael(ml

·•

MELBOURNE, Australia
(AP)- Steve Allan shot a 68
· to edge PGA Championship
winner Rich· Beem, Craig
Parry and Aaron Baddeley by
a shot in the Australian Open.
Allan finished the three
rounds at 12-under 198. The
tournament was shortened by
18 holes when the greens
were too dry and were ruled
unplayable Thursday.

~hlo Vall.ey Tech Prep ·
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors or: Mrs. Short's lrd srade class
Addt!l\lille Elementary
Addaville, OH

Giving Time

Standards Link: Social Science: Students recognize the

J R Morrison &amp; Assocl1te1
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade dass
Hannan Trace Elementary
Mercerville, OH

Ohio valley Tech Prep
Gallipolis, OH
Spon50rs of: Mrs. Saunders' Jrd grade c::l11ss
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

Scoc

importance of public .virtue and the role of citi zens.

Gallipolis, Ohio
,
1
Sponsors of: Mrs. sara Spurlock's Jrd grl!de class
Vinton Elementary
Vinton, OH

Jlvld•n's Power Equipment

WINGS
BALD

\l\

T N

Edwerd Jon• lndltments

SYMBOL
BILLS

Standards Link: Number Sense: Calculate sums and differences to milllorts. ·

Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Love's 3rd grade class
ROO!ieVelt Elementary
Point Pleas11nt. wv

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week's Kid Scoop
stories and activities.

TURKEY

GOBBLE

8 EY0 ND

NAPLES, Fla. (AP)- Lee
Janzen fired an 8-iron from
i 57 yards to 3 feet and teammate Rocco Mediate tapped
· it in .to win the Franklin
Templeion Shootout on the
last shot. Janzen and Mediate
finished at 31-under 185.

Jtvlden's Power Equipment

In 2001, about 272 million
turkeys were raised. About
46 million of those turkeys ,
were eaten at Thanksgiving,
22 million at Christmas and if! I .
19 million at Easter. How
many were eaten during the
rest of the year?

·

Janzen, Mediate
end 31-under 185

Jividen's Power Equipment

- " " ' UnlcJ Riladlng Cornpmhenalon. Fallow lim~ Wl'l!tan

PITTSBURGH (AP) .Jerome Bettis of the·
Pittsburgh Steelers moved
· past OJ. Simpson into II th
place among NFL career
rushers with 79 yards against
Cincinnati.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J .
(AP) ,- Junior welterweight
.Arturo ,Gatti won a unanimous decisiQll over Micky
Ward, dropping him in · the
third round and dominating
from then on to avenge an
earlier loss.

Viloria beats
Peru's Rossel
LAKE GROVE, NY. (AP)
- Undefeated Brian Viloria
of Hawaii eked out a majorj ty 12-round deci sion · over
Alberto Rosse! of Peru to
retain his North American
Boxing Fed!!ration flywe~ght
title.

·eengals fall to
Steelers 29-21
PITISBURGH (AP) they squandered a 17-point
No lead is safe with the lead and missed an extra
Pittsburgh Steelers. No field point for the second time in
goal is a certain one. Their as many home games. The
pass defense is in worse same scenario played out io
shape than their playing a 34-all tie "'ith Atlanta on
field, and it may be the Nov. I0.
· NFL's worst.
Reed · was working on a .
For all their problems, North Carohna farm then struggles and perplexing and, once he saw Heinz's
insistence on blowing big condition, probably wished
leads at home, the Steelers he were back there. But he
are in first place in the AFC was a major upgrade . from
North. Even if they' re not Todd Peterson, who missed
quite sure how they got four of his final six fieldthere- or how they 're stay- goal attempts and an extra
ing there .
point before going on the
Kordell Stewart, who may injured reserve list.
be going back to the bench,
Stewart, making his frrst
and Jerome Bettis, who was start since Sept. 29 for the .
getting tired of being on it, injured . Tommy Maddolt,
· teame,d with a rookie play- got off to a fast start &lt;1$
mg hts lirst ,NFL game to Pittsburgh scored on its first
lead !he Steelers .past the · three possessions. Ward ran
bunglmg Cmcmnali Bengals 39 yards on a reverse to lead
29-21 Sunday.
.
to the first of Bettis' two
-· ~eff Reed expenenced scoring runs, then caught a,
another adventuresome day 64-yard scoring pass froin,
for. a Steel,ers bcker· on Stewart;
H~mz Field s ternb!e turf,
Bettis, out of the lineup
mtssmg an extra pmnt that for four weeks with a sore
~a':e !he Bengals a ~hance to knee, gained 79 yards to
ue tt m the final mmute.
overtake OJ. Simpson for
But Reed also kicked field 1j th place among NFL
goals of 33, 4_3 and 45 yar~s career rushers.
·
on a torn-up held that was m
But just as he did in rallysuch bad shape, the Bengals ing the Bengals from a dou- .
passed U,P two potential 46 - ble-digit deficit to upset
yard Netl R.ackers .attempts Pittsburgh last season, Kitna
rather than nsk a m1ss.
( _ f-39 ~ 298 ards) 1 d
"It wasn' t easy, but we 22 0
or
Y
eh
won, coach Bill Cowher a comeback that ended Wit
sa· d'
h1s 20-yard touchdown pass
M~stly, the Steelers (6 _4_ to rooki~ Matt Schobel will!
I) did so because the 8 112 mmutes left.
'!"e Bengals could have
Bengals (1-10) discovered
yet another way to Jose, ral- built on their lead two ffilnlying frantically from a 17- utes. ~ater,
~ut
T.J.
point deficit to go ahead 21- Houshmand.zadeh s fumbled
20.
punt gave Plltsbu~gh the ball
."We were really in control back, and Reed kicked a goof the game," coach Dick ahead 45-yard ,field goal.
LeBeau
said. "We had a Later, .Stewart s 37-yard
Cleveland Browns wide · receiver Dennis Northcutt (86) celebrptes with team member. Ryan
one-point
lead and in pretty compl,etiOn to Ward set up
Tucker (72) after scoring a touchdown against the New Orleans Saints during first half NFL
good shape to win the game Bettis 24-yard touchdow~
action Sunday in ttie Louisiana Superdome. (AP)
·
-and we didn ' t win it"
run that would have put II
•
So what else is new?.Last o~t of reach if Reed hadn't
week, Corey Dillon couldn ' t missed. the extra pomt, .
get in from the 1 on the final.
As hts reward for wmmng
two plays of a 27-20 loss to for the first lime m h1s last
the Browns. This time, the five starts, Stewart may ~o
Bengals drove to a first back to th_e bench Sunday m
down at ' the 5 in the final Jacksonville 1f ·Maddox
minute, only to have Jon (spinal cord concussion) is .
Kitna throw four straight cleared by doctors.
"Tommy's the starter, if
incompletions.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) active roster, but spent the zone turnovers .- two inter"I say it over and over, but he's healthy and he wants to
William Green was running. game pacing the sideline ceptions and a fumble by
it's true,'.' said Bengals wide come back, he's entitled to
receiver Chad Johnson , who it," Stewart said. "I'm not
Deuce McAllister was pac- with his helmet in his hand. Aaron Brooks - and twice
made
seven catches for I52 making it any bigger than it
ing. ·
"When the game was on held the Saints to field goals.
yards . "It's just a play here . is."
Green had his second the line, I felt I could go in
"We take pride in holding ·
and
a play there ... and it * Just like the Steelers
straight big game, rushing and
be
·productive," teams down in the red zone,"
·
·
aren't making much of those
kills us."
for 114 yards and a touch- McAllister said. "I'm a play- said Cleveland safety Earl
It wasn't for lack of big leads they' re getting.
down, a'! th e-- Cleveland er and I wanted to be in Little.
·
opportunities. Remarkably,
"Whatever it is, we've got
Browns won for the fourth there."
Brooks completed 23 of 40
the St~elers were ~n danger Please see Bengals Bl
time in their last five games.
The Saints have lost three passes for 318 yards.
.
Q.f-gomg to overtime after
'
With th~ 24-15 vict~ry of four to fall into third place
Tim Couch was 12-fqr-21
over the New Orleans Saints in the NFC South.
for 182 yards and a touch-.
(7-4) Cleveland (6-5) stayed
"I was just disappointed in down for Cleveland. He was
in contention in the AFC the whole&gt; team," Saints intercepted twice.
North, trailing Pittsburgh by coach Jim Haslett said. "I
"I've got that gunslinger
a hatf-game.
really thought we would play mentality," Couch said. "No
"It felt good," Green said. better than that."
matter what happens I'm
"That's what we work hard
Without McAllister New going out there and throwing
on ali week."
Orleans had just 74 yards the balL "
McAllister, the NFC's rushing. The Saints scored
Couch's third pass of the
leading runner with 950 only one touchdown on six game was intercepted by
yards rushing , had a sprained trips inside the Cleveland 20.
Please see Browns, Bl
right ankle .. He was on the Cleveland forced three red-

Cleveland roughs up
New Orl·eans 24-15

College Football

I
I

Freshman tailback is
difference for Buckeyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- A . year ago Maurice
Clarett was scrambling to
finish up hi s high school
classwork and lamenting
another season that ended
too soon.
Now. the Ohio State freshman is at the .center of the
Buckeyes ' hopes of.a national championship .
"I don't know if I can put it
in words," Clarett said
Saturday after No. 2 Ohio
State's ten sion-filled 14-9
win over rival Mic~igan. "I
didn ' t get to win anything in
high ·school. To get a chance
to now - this is the biggest
thing next to the S~per

Bowl."
The win clinched a spot in
the Fiesta Bowl on lanuary 3
and a shot at the school's
lirst nati· ' al title si nce the
1968 season.
Clarett, who rushed for
119 yards on 20 carries,
scored on a 2-yard run and
set up the other Ohio State
touchdown with a 26-yard
pass reception. Maurice Hall
scored two plays later on an
option pitch with 4:55 left to
put the Buckeyes ahead to
I
stay.
"He was big for them,"
Michigan cornerback Marlin
Jackson said.
Clarett has lived an entire

life in the last calendar year.
The 19-year-old graduated
from Warren G. Harding
High School last December
- several months ahead of
his class - so he could start
at Ohio State in January and
play spring football.
He . won the . starting tailback job in August and rumbled for 17 5 yards and three
touchdowns in his debut
against Texas Tech. After
gaining 230 yards and scoring twice in a victory over
Washington State in his third
game, he underwent arthroscopic surgery on hi s left

Please see osu. Bl

.,'
I

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Kordell Stewart (10)
scrambles for first quarter · yardage, eluding Cincinnati
Bengals' Tony Will ia ms (94) Sunday in Pittsburgh, Stewart,
filling in for injured starter Tommy Maddox ·led the Steelers
to a 29-21 win over the Bengals. (AP)

·- - -- -·--- --·-· ·- ---·----·

�Mondav, November 25, 2002

Monday, November 25, 2002 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mvdailvsenlinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

College basketball

NFL

Maryland -rocks
Lopsided win can't make
Miami
64-49
Xavier forget one-point loss

Sapp, Bucs shut down Packers

'i

.

C INC INNATI (AP)
past that, bui it's hard to let York, walched the parade , Gillespie said. " My other
The game ended, and the that one go," said David seen Bullwinkle the moose. guys tried hard."
ac he returned. ·
West, who had 19 points and Now they 're in Cincinnati
Judging by White's proInstead _of going to New 12 rebounds Sunday. "We freezing. Where would you nounced limp as he le ft the
York for Thanksgiving know we really screwed up a rather be?
court, he 's not going to be
week, · No.· II Xavier will great opportunity for this
"Not that · we had any very
effective · against
stay home and. practice man- team, this school and this chance, but if they ' d have Cincinnati, if he can play at
to-man defense. It's just not program."
won, they 'd be looking for- alL
the same.
..
.
Un11ble to undo (he dam- ward to playing Florida
"If we . can get Moses
The Musketeers wasted a age, the Musketeers decided instead of Florida A&amp;M."
back, I think we have a
chance to play in the that the· best thing to do was
Instead; the Rattlers ' nasty chance," Gillespie said. "If
Preseason NITsemifinals by finish the weekend on an season-opening trip got nas- not, it could be a long
· losing at Stanford last upbeat note. Point guard tier. They stay in town to evening for the Rat tlers.".
Wednesday. The frustration Lionel Chalmers called the play No. 23 Cincinnati ori
They had a long afternoon
turned
iri-to
motivation team together before .it took Tuesday - two road games · against Xavier, which had ·
Sunday, setting up a 93-64 the court Sunday and insist- against ranked teams in five players in double figvictory over Florida A&amp;M.
ed on an excellent perfor- three days .
ur.es, tore through every
The Bearcats also will be defense that Florida A&amp;M
Then, Xavier (2- 1) went mance..
back to thinking about its
"We have to play hard," he looking · for a blowout to could muster; and had the
unexpectedly open week said emphatically. "We have make them feel better. game well in hand before
ahead . No Thanksgiving to bounce back." r'
Cincinnati shot only 27 .9 halftime.
parade and Madison Square · The Mu~keteers came out . percent from the field during
."My big concern was how
Garden; the Musketeers get running full-throttle, just as an unimpressive 54,48 win we were going to handle it
· layup drills at the Cintas Florida A&amp;M (0-1.) feared over Tennessee Tech on - coming off the loss, fly·Center instead.
they would.
Saturday night. .
ing back from San Francisco
All because of a one-point
Coach Mike Gillespie
"What a great road trip," and playing," Matta said . .
' turned into a big Xavier fan Gillespie said.
They handled it as well as
loss on the. West Coast.
. "I don't want them to let as
he · watched
the
It started badly. Point could be expected from a
that game go," coach Thad Musketeers' televised game ·guard Moses White sprained team still wishing it had
Matta said. "I haven't been at Stanford. He knew that if his left ankle during the other plans.
able to let it go. By no the Musketeers lost, his opening minute Sunday,
"Coming off a tough loss,
means can we forget . team would end up paying forcing him to the bench for coach
was questioning
They' re going to hear. a.bout for it.
the rest of the game.
whether we would play hard
that game for a while."
"How happy are . these
"He's one g-uy we have or' hang . our heads," West
As if the·y need reminding. guys?~' Gillespie said : ''They .vho's athletic enough to · said : "Guys just aame . out
" You kind of want to get · could bave gone . to New :ompete ·at their level," and got afler it."

Browns

Henry.
The Saints opened the second half with their only
from Page B1
touchdown of the game. The
drive was keyed by an 11.Dale Carter, who returned it yard run on a fake punt by
23 yards lo give New Orleans · Fred
McAfee.
James
the ball at the Browns' 37. Fenderson capped the drive
John Carney's 33-yard field · with a 17-yard run, but the ·
goal · gave the Saints their . Saints missed on a 2-point
· conversion and trailed 14-12.
only lead 3-0.
Cleveland went up 7-3 on a
Couch's 24-yard touch~
!"yard touchdown run by down pass to Kevin Johnson
Green.
with 4:44 left in the third
New Orleans opened the quarter made it · 21-12
second quarter with a 27- Browns.
yard field goal after their
The Saints then drove to
drive stalled at the 8. The the Cleveland . 17, but on
Saints then blew a chance to third-and-7, Brooks' pass
regain the lead when Brooks was intercepted by Little in ·
fumbled at the Cleveland 17. the .end zone.
The Saints stopped the
A 49-yard Saints field goal
Browns, but Michael Lewis made it21-15with IO:l41eft
muffed ·the punt, which in the game. A 28•yard field
Andra Davis recovered for goal by Phil Dawson with.
Cleveland. Two plays later, 3:25 remaining provided
· wide
receiver
Dennis Cleveland's final margin.
Northcutt took a handoffand
Notes: The Saints extended
ran 3~ yards for the touch- their streak of home sellouts
down, making it 14-6 with to 19. However, it was too
3:50 in the half.
late. to keep the 1game from
The Saints (11ade it 14-6 being blacked out. ... New
with a 30-yard field goaL
'Orleans entered the game as
· Late in the half, New the only team in the NFL to
Orleans drove to the 2 before have 300 or more points .... It
Brooks threw an interception was the Browns' only game
on third down to Anthony on artificial turf this season.

Bengals
from Page B1
to get it figured out," Bettis
said. "When you go up by 17,
you don ' t want to give it
back." Notes: . LB Mike
Jones, who re-signed with the
Steelers last week, wound up
playing much of the same
after LB John Fiala inJured
his ic!ft knee .... Cincinnati's
Brandon Bennett hyperex-

.OSU
from Page B1
knee and missed the next
game.
Clarett strung together four
100-yard rushing games in a
row !Jien inflamed Ohio
State '.s fans by saying in a
· magazine article that he was
considering suing the NFL to
overturn the rule that under·
classmen are not eligible .for
the draft.
Hate mail erisued. Many
questioned his ·loyalty to
Ohio State, even after he said
publicly that he ~ad no intention of leaving school early.
Then he suffered a shoulder injury against Penn State
that o'aused him to miss two

•
'

I

tended his right knee on a 52yard kickoff return to start
the second half and didn't
return .... Stewart is 35-of-43
for 360 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions
the last two · weeks.
Steelers opponents are 28-of54 in third down conversions
in the last three games. ...
Pittsburgh is 5 ~0 against the
AFC North.... The Bengals
are assured of their ninth
double-digit loss season in 12
years.

~ames

and see only s·pot duty
m two others.
.. Even though he twice left
the Michigan game because
of rain in his shoulder, h!l
stil
jump-started . the
Buckeyes' offense when he
was on the field.
"Maurice really brings a lot
of electricity to this . team,"
Hall said. "If it weren't for
him today, it would have
been hai'der for us to win."
So Ohio State's No. 13 had ·
a big game ill the Buckeyes'
13th straight~ win to put- a
smile on the faces of the
team's 13 seniors.
''I'm surrounded with a
great team," ' Claret! said.
"We might ·not go out and
~ore sd points and we might
not hold teams to I 0 yards.
But we make plays when we
have to."

COLLEGE PARK, Md. 25th season as a college
(AP) -. After unfurling the coach.
banrier celebrating their first
"You never know if
NCAA basketbaJI title, the you're going to see that durMaryland Terrapins settled ing your coaching career,"
into the unaccustomed role he said. "I was kind of
of defending national chal]l- caught up in it."
pions. ·
So much that he followed
Yet, to a large degree, the ceremony with his cus·
nothing has changed.
tomary pregame speech to
Moments after the 12th- his team.
ranked Terrapins disposed
"Then I remembered they
of Miami of Ohio 64-49 hadn't introduced the playSunday, the players spoke ers yet. So after they intro- ·
about a season in which duced the players, I had to
they will be forced to prove give the same speech again
_and they still didn't hear
themselves all over again.
"A lot of people don't ·me," Williams said. .
think we're going to be as·
Perhaps it was because
good as we think we're the players' minds were still
going to be, so we're still on last year, when the
the hunters," forward Tahj Terrapins capped a 32-4
Holden
said.
"Things season by defeating Indiana
haven't really changed in to win the NCAA title.
my mind. We're going to be
''It felt good to see the
underdogs a lot this year, so banner come down," guard .
we' re just going to have to Steve Blake said. "It sent
take that role and shove it
back in people's faces."
chills through my body for a
The Terrapins (1-0) were . couple of seconds, but then
solid favorites against the I had to make myself forget
RedHawks · (0-2), however, about that and get ready for .
and they played that way t he game."
during · · an · emotional
Playing in · front of a
evening that began with the school-record home crowd .
presentation of the champi- of 17,950, the Terrapins
onship banner at their new limited the RedHawks to
arena, the $107 million 27-percent shooting in tak- .
Gomcast Center.
ing an 11-point 'halftime · .
The scene obviously had lead, then used a 9-0. run :
an impact on Maryland's early in the second half to
Gary Williams, now in his pull away.

EPstein; 28, to be Red Sox's GM
BOSTON (AP) The
Boston Red Sox will hire
Theo Epstein as their general
manager, a team source told
The Associated Press on
Sunday night.
Epstein, 28, will be the
youngest GM in baseball history when the team makes
the announcement, which is
expected to come Monday.
~ndy Smith was 29 when he
was hired by the San Diego
Padres in 1993.
The Red Sox have been
without a permanent general
manager
since · Florida
financier John W. Henry
bought the team in spring
training and fired Dan-'
Duquette. Mike Port was
named interim GM for the
season and was a .candidate
for the long--term job that
went to Epstein.
Reached at home Sunday
night, Port said he was "in
the loop" on the decision but
declined to say what it was. ·
"I think they plan an
announcement," he said. "I
think we just need to let that
take care of it."
But a Red Sox official told
the AP on Sunday night that
· the announcement was ready,
and that it would be Epstein.
Red Sox . president Larry
Lucchino did not return

repeated calls. Henry did not of Theo.''
immediately respond to an eBeane had been Boston's
mail requesting comment.
first choice, even accepting
Executive . vice president the job before deciding to
C6aries Steinberg would nei- stay in Oakland for family
ther confirm nor deny that ali reasons. While he could not
,!lnnouncement · was sched- confirm that Epstein would
uled. But asked about the be given the job, "If it's true,
speculation that .has centered he's going to _be outstandon Epstein, Steinberg said, "I ing."
don't think there will be any
"He's really bright," Beane
surprises."
said: "With his passion and
Epstein, who was raised his intelligence and the peanear Fenway Park in the pie he will surround himself
Boston suburb of Brookline, with, he probably can't help
became director of baseball but succeed."
operations for San Diego in
Epstein worked with Port
2000, when Lucchino was to represent Boston . at the
running the Padres. Epstein recent general managers'
also spent two years each in meetings, and he also worked
San Diego's media relations on .negotiating compensation
department and as a baseball for the A's when it was
operations assistant.
'lhou~ht Beane wou19 . take
When the group headed by the JOb. But ..a day after
Henry and Luechino bought_ accepting a five-year, $13
the Red Sox in February, they million offer, Beane decided
brought Epstein to Boston as to stay in Oakla.nd.
an assistant general manager.
The announcement will
From the start, there were bring Boston's ,;lengthy and
whispers that the Ivy-educat- often meandering search for
ed Epstein would eventually a GM to an end.
take over the Red Sox reins.
After riding out the season
"There's no time like the with Port, the Red Sox purpresent," Oakland OM Billy sued Beane and Toronto's
Beane, who spoke glowingly · J.P. Ricciardi, but both opted
of his interactions with to stay with their current
Epstein, said Sunday night. teams. Also identified as can"He's a bright, passionate didates were Mets assistant
individual. I think the world GM Jim Duquette, Baltimore

adviser Mike Flanagan,·
Cincinnati director of player
personnel Leland Maddox,
former White Sox general
manager Ron Schueler, ·
Boston special assistant Lee
Thomas and Phillies assistant
GM Mike Arbuckle.
.On Nov. 14. Lucchino said:
· the ideal candidate would
have experience as a major
league GM.
"Experience in the front
office .of a baseball team, we
put that right near the top of
the list," Lucchino said. "It
does not necessarily have to
be as a GM, but it does have
to be substantial front office
experience."
.
To .make up for Epstein's
relative inexperience, the
·Red Sox are expected to surround him with GM veterans,
possibly including Thomas
and Port. Jim Duquette and .
former Montreal Expos GM
Jim Beattie were also contacted about taking a position
in the Boston front office.
"This is not a situation
where there is only one piece
to the puzz)e," Lucchino. said :.:
after being jilted by Beane.
"Billy represented one particular approach, a very strong
general manager. But there
are other approaches to this."

lakers topple Bucks
Sorenstam
toe.
finishes in style
WEST PALM BEACH,
Fla. (AP)
Annika
Sorenstam had nothing left.
She was emotionally spent
from being in contention in
almost every tournament she
played. She was physically
tired from 1working harder
than anyone in the game.
What kept her going
Sunday was a one-shot lead,
knowing she had only . three
holes left and a chance to win
her 13th tournament worldwide.
"I could almost taste the
trophr," Sorenstarn said. . "I
gave 1t all I had."
The result was some of her
bes~ golf o~ an amazing year,
which camed her to a threestroke victory over Rachel
·Teske in the season-ending
ADT Championship, a fitting
fmish to the best LPGA Tour
season in 38 years.
. With a risky shot on the
toughest hole at · Trump
International and a clUtch
swing on"'lhe dc:cisi ve 17th,

Sorenstarn closed with a · 4under 68 and won for the lith
time this year on the LPGA
Tour.
She smiled and lightly
pumped her fist several times
when her final putt of the year
fell for par. She fmished at 13under 275, leading to some of .
the 20 records she set this
year.
Her scoring average was
68.70, shattering the mark she .
set last year (~9.42) and fmishing more than a full stroke
ahead of Se Ri Pak.
She earned $215,000, giving her more than $2.8 million. A year ago, she became
the first woman in LPGA
Tour hi story to go over $2
million in one season. Now it
seems routine.
.
Sorenstaril also became the .
first player since Mickey
Wright in 1964 to win II
times in one season. Wright,
widely regarded as the best
female golfer ever, set the
record of 13 victories in 1961

LoS ANGELES (AP) Things are getting back to normal for the three-time defending NBA champion Los
Angeles Lakers.. ·
· Shaquille O'Neal scored 24
points and · grabbed II
rebounds in his second game
of the season, and Kobe
Bryant had a triple-double
Sunday night to lead the
Lakers to a lll-99 victory
over the Milwaukee Bucks.
O'Neal had 17 points and
seven rebounds in 21 minutes
as a reserve Friday night in an
86-73 victory over Chicago in
his first game since undergoipg surgery Sept. 11 on his

· .•WIN •

•

GREEN BAY. Wis. (A?)- If the
Green !;lay Packers have to come back
to Tampa Bay later this season, it sure
wi ll be a heated game.
The Buccaneers intercepted four of
Brett . Favre:s passes and beat the
Packers 2I -7 in a meeting Sunday of
the teams with the NFL's best records.
The superb effort was overshadc
owed by an obscenity-laced exchange
between Pac kers coach Mike
Sherman and Tampa · B~y defensive
hneman Warren Sapp as they walked
off the field .
Sherman was angry abour a block
Sapp put on Chad Clifton during Brian
Kelly's interception return in the third
· quarter that se t up the Bucs' go:ahead
touchdown. Sherman thought the hit
was questionable and fe lt Sapp made
11 worse by standing over Clifton. ,
"I just don' t think there's any place
in the game for that," Sherman said.
"May O..~ I overreacted to the hit. But
what I saw looked kind of cheap. But
who kn ows~"
·
Clifton , who was not near Kelly,
was knocked out of the game with a
right hip injury. Sapp was unapclo·
getic.
"I didn't clip him fro m hehind or
block .him below the waist. I didn't hit
him in the head. I didn 't hit the quar·
· terback. I didn't ~ough anybody,''
Sapp said. "I didn 't pick him up and
slam him, What 's the problem here~"
Brad Johnson threw two secondhalftouchdown passes as the Bucs (92) improved on their best start· ever
,· -.and thrust themselves into pcsition to
make a nm for home-field advantage
in the playoffs. .
·
Favre was sacked three times and
t]1e Packers (8-3) didn't score after the
first quaJter.
"We rea.fized what' was at stake and
realized it ·was another brick in the
road to the ·Super Bowl that has to
come through _Tampa,': Sapp said. ·

· · Ray Lucas: who lost his first three
starts lilling in for an injured Jay
Fiedler. threw for 194 yards and won
I'or the second straight week to k~cp
Miami (7-4) atop the AFC Ea.&gt;L
Raiders -II . Cardinals 20
·
At Temp.:. Ariz .. Rich Gamion
threw for 340 yards and three touch,
dowm and Charlie Gamer ran for 100
yards and a score as Oakland beat
Arizona.
·
·
Gannon topped 300 ya rd s passing
for the eighth time th is season - one
shy of the NFL record .
Tlie Raiders (7-4). with the NFL's
No. I offense. amassed 520 yards
agai nst the Cardinals (4-7), who lost
their fifth stra ight.

Patriots 24
Vikings 17
At Fo., boro. Mass., Tom Hrad v·s
three touchdown passes in the drst
half helped New Eng land (6-5) hand
Minnesota .its 16th strai ght road loss.
Daunte Culpepper had one of the
three fumbles Mimiesota (3-8) lost on
its first five series.
.

.

.

snowfall with 3 seconds left in regula. tion, then made a 51-yarder in overtimeas Indianapoli s (74) beat Denver
(74).

The. Colts trailed 20-17 when they
got the ball -at their 20 with _l :40 left in
regu lation. 1hey moved 44 yards in II
plays to set up Vanderjagt, who had
missed fi ve of his previous nine
attempts. Hi s kick sailed through the
.upri ghts with plenty of room to spare.
Indianapolis got the ball first . in
overtime -and moved 35 yards for
·
At Denver, Mike Vande~agt kicked Vanderjagt's winning kick.
a 54-yard fi eld goal through a 'lieavy

Colts 23 .
Bron·cos 20, OT

Redskins 20
Rains 17

At East Rutherford. N. J.. Curti s
Martin ran for 120 yards and Chad
Warner. starti ng for the first time . Pennin gton juked his way to a !-yard
since breaking his pinkie on Sep\. 29, score that clinched New York's fourth
fell to 0-5 this season.
straight vic tory. .

Dolphins 30
Chargers 3

M Landover, Md . Kurt Warner
fumbled on the Washington 6 with 17 ·.
seconds left, denying .'it Loui s (5-6) a
chance to win or tie.
With a sure fie ld goa l in sight,
At Miami. Ricky Williams ran lor
Warner was stripped by . LaVar 143 yards and two touclldowns
Anington and Dary l Gardener recov- against the NFL's third-rankcc! run
ered as the Redskin s (5-6) snapped the defense, wh ile the Dolphins limited
Rams' five-game winning streak.
NFL rus hing leader LaDai nian
Stephen Davis ran for three TDs and Tomlinson to a season-low 45 ya rds
·for the Chargers (7-4).
·
88 yards for Washington.

Ravens13
· Titans 12
At Baltimore. Tennessee turned the
ball over fourtimes and allowed rookie Ed Reed's blocked punt for the
game's only touchdown .
The Titans (6-5 ) ha ve lost fi ve
straight to the Raven s (5-6).

- OUNTY
A MUST for your business!

New! Improved!
Smaller! Mo,re convenient!

arthritic right big
He staned against the Bucks
and played 28 minutes.
Bryant had 15 points, It
rebounds and II assists for his'
. third uiple-double of the sea~
son and the sixth of his career.
· Derek Fisher had a seasonhigh 21 points and seven:
assists; Rick Fox scored Itpoints, and Rohert Horry
added I 0 as all five Los :
Angeles starters scored in dou·
ble figures.
.
Michael
Redd
le&lt;t
Milwaukee with 19 points.
Jason Caffey had season-hijh .
totals of 16 points and 12
rebounds.

1

2FREEnDKnS
111111
SPRING fiLLEY
CINEMAJ
F;tND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'$ CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN I

Contact your ~dvertising representative for more information! .
(304) 675~1333 or (740) 446-2342 or (740) 992-2155 .

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~------------------------------~
\!Crlbune - Sentinel -1\e lster

CLASSIFIED

Monday, November 25, 2002

Monday, November 25, 2002

Why
:: Chrissy? II

We Cover
Meigs,· Galli a,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else ' Can!

.·

have the answer.

Why must cancer
steal anyone's life?
Let alone a person so
young, wonderfully
. . sunny, and bright.
Everyone who
knew her. had
thoughts of her so
dear. Please Dear
Lllllli lessen our fear?
Let Pus know · you
(Our'Savior) will forever be holding her
near.
Even though none
of us are guaranteed
a_tomorrow, we cannot help feeling such
sorrow. Perhaps we
should remember
God gives us to this
Earth as only a

Your Ad,

l\egister

Sentinel

Why did Chrissy
have to be ill with

cance r? For this
question. none of us

REACH OVER 28S,DDD PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

\!tribune ·

(740)
446-2342
(740)
992-2156
(304)
675-1333
Call Today•••
· OrFaxTo
57
675-5234

borrow.

Otfftee !lowe-~
Monday thru Friday

a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN. AD

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1"

Hrn•WAN'n-J)

I~F"'10

day In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
y For Sundays Paper

-B,.I.JSINJNi-----.l

.....

01'1'0RIUNITY

L--------'

Help wanted caring lor the
etderly, Darst Group Home.
INOTICE!
Why wBII ? Start meet1ng now paying minimum wage,
Ohio singles tonight, can toll new shills: 7am·3pm. 7am- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
tree 1·800·766·2623 ext 5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· lNG CO. recommeilds that
7am. call740-992·5023.
you do business with people
1621 .
you know, and NOT to send
Join the team of quality care money through the mail until
ANNOUNCt:MFNfS
professionals at Overbook you have investigated the
Center. We are taking appli· oHerin
cations lor a lull time LPN, ~~,~~;,_ _ _ _ _.,
C· l Beer Carry Out permit shift 7 am to 7 pm Benefits
MONEY
for sale, Chester Township, package available. Please
TO LoAN
Meigs County, send letters :pme in and complete 'your
of interest to: Tile Daily
appiication today at 333 VICKI WEAVER
.
Sentinel. PO Box 729·20.
Page Street, Middleport, Congratulations! You helve
Pomeroy. Oh10 45769
OH.
. won 2 free mo~e tickets to
PUBLIC NOTICE
- - - - ' - - - - - - the Spring Valley 7 in
AnthonY Land Co .. Lid. has cOOK ING FOR A FUN Gallipolis. Call the Register
made the following changes JOB' THIS IS fTI OFFICE today for delails.(3041675·
10 Buckeye Hills Subdivision ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI· 1333
located in Gallia Co., TIONS AVAILABLE . 1·888·
I'Ron;s&lt;;~ONAL
Raccoon Twp .. due to fence 9.7·..;.•_:·J.::O.::BS=-~--line: Tract ~2· 5.267ac, Tract ERVIl."'ES
# 3· 4.882ac and Traer li4~ Looking for LPN. Monday·
5.261 ac _ Anthony Land Friday. no weekends or Revolutionary health care
~pply in person.
Company, Ltd . 531 E. Holidays.
Stale Route 160 , ptan now availabl~ in your
Broadway. Jackson. OH 936
area
Startmg
at
45640
1·800-213-8365 ::._:.::__..:_c.:.::;_
{740)446-9620 _ _ _ 19 . ~5/monthly
.
.
~or enttre
www.alcland.com
Looking for part·time to full· fam 1!y. Call K1mberly at
ti me HVAC Installers and (740)379-2634
GIVEAWAY
Tech. ·Experience is a must.
We have good pay for good
TURNED DOWN ON
L,
•
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
work done . If interested call
No Fee Unless We Winl
2 kittens, inside only, litter (740 144 1-1 236 · No answer
,~888·582~3345
trained. 1 male. and 1 leave a message.
female. (740i446·3897
.-------LPT, LPTA for t~ome health
f..o:,T Al&gt;ll
svcs. Choices available lor
the counties or areas
FOLND
served. Currently provide
seiVices in Jackson, Meigs,
FOUNO
Athens. Gallia, Vinton. and
White Dog Terrier type.
southern Washington coun· AU real eatate adverttalng
Ordnance School area
ties. Call (740) 286·6631
In thla newapaper It
(304i675·5929
aubject to the Federal
Make extra money lor Fair Housing Act of
1968
.,.,~-...,----.. · Christmas.
Se ll
Avon.
11
10
(7401446·3358
which maktt Illegal

~

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(5):
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Display Ads
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• Start Your Ads With A. K~yword • Inctud~ Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviatloni ·
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
·
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Sho ld Include These Items
T Help Get Response ...

0

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p : m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Next Day's Paper

\

L._ _ _l;,;U-B,;;:
UoiY-_.1· McClure's Reslaurant now

prefe~:~~~~~;:ronor

Wanted! Good credit custamers to purchase new
hpme wlland. $0 down to
q~alified customers. 1·5
acre
tracts
available.
(740)446·3093
Out Sandhill Ad New win·
dows, plumbin'g, electrical.
roof , Ret and stove.
$49,900. (304i675·5636

Ii

MOBILE HOM&amp;'i
•UK SALE

I

"1 ed d
12 used homes P1
c un er
$3000, will help with deli~J·
74
e.y. Call Nlk_ld o-3BS-9948
12x60, 2 bedroo m mobile
h
t d 11 ·
orne on with
renview
e oforiver,
tn
Middleport
$ 4500 ( 74 o 1992 ~ 3194
'
12x60, 3 bedr,aom, good
sh~pe , must sell I $1,000.
C 116pm (7401256 6574
a
. ,
•
14x65 Shultz wiOishwasher
&amp; front deck
$6.500.
(304)675·6295
1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile
Home Priced to sen Quick
Call (7401 385 _2434
2 bedroom mobile home
with add·on and 314 acre lot
in Vln1on. (740)388·8804
Hurricane Ck. Rd. Rent to
Own, spacious 3 bed. 2 bath
double wide + acreage. 98
model with great room &amp;
large
kitchen ,
.Only
$698./mo. With $10,000
down· . 13041562 _5840

r,--··-u-iill'-_.1 -'-'--------

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

·,;.;;,p,;..rl

4 rooms and bath, stove/
refrigerator. Utilities paid,
$400 month. 46 Olive Street
(740)446-3945

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HOUSES

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1980·90's Cars/Truckslrom
r;:o)~s
~0 ·
hone $500. Police Impounds tor
•
sale. For listing 1·800·'719·
25" zenith Cabinet lloor 3001 ext. 3901
T
$.
OO
111!X'~I ,color
V,
40.
1985 Dodge lanSS'r, runs
4
4
Ptiooe(7 0):4 6·2316
good,
. $175.
Phone
3 Wheel Disabled Scooter. (740)446·2316

$

231

Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
upstairs, clean, no pets.
Reference
&amp;
dep~sit
required. (7401446-1519
--''---'---'----.,.
.- (740)446-43~3
Furnished Elliciencies, all
utilities paid, share bath,
3
bedroom ,
reference $1.35 month, . 9,9 2nd
requi red , $450 month, Avenue, (7401446 _3945
Very _
good condition, new
(740}446-2158
ballenas. $500. (740,)388·
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· 7561.
3br. lull size basement &amp; room apartments at Village BURN
F t
BLOCK
garage. Large yard. $450. Manor
and
Riverside
.
a·
mo.
$250.
deposit. Apartments· in Middleport. Cravmgs, and BOOST
(304)6754469
From $278·$348 . Ca!l 740- Energy Like_ YC?U Have
992-5064 . Equal Housing Never Ex.pertenced.
4 bedroom, 2 bath home, Op rl T
WEIGHT- LOSS
man~ extras , no pets,
po um•es .
REVOLUTION
·
$7501month plus deposit. Honeysuckle
Hills New product launch October
S~ring
Valley
area Apartments located behind 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
~(..;.40..:.:...144.:.6::_·::_81:..:94:..:...._ _ _ _ Colonial Drive behind (740)441·1982
5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St. Highway Patrol Post LBA Grt1bb's P'lano· Tuning &amp;
now available. Rent starts
$325 mo. (740)446·3945
Repairs. · Problems? Need
$2451 month. Low &amp; mod&amp;r· Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
8011 3 bedroom homo, new ate Income. Equal Housing 740-446·4525
heat ]mp and furnace, Opportunity. (740)446·3344
double garage, chain link orTDD 1-800-750·0750.
Jacqueline's ~Livin' DollsM
fence , garden , hardwood N
1i ki
A r 11
Presenting Apple Valley
floors, rivate . (740)446·
ow 8 ng PP lOa ons- Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made
1~ 27 o (7 40)44 ~ ~951 0
35 West 2 Bedroom babies &amp; toddlers tor that
Townhouse
Apartments, speclal someone, or make
\Includes Water Sewage, your own, your way! Many
MOBILE Hou•~
Trash $350/Mo 740 446
··
· · ·laces, eye colors, hair color
n--......"=
0008 '
·
FOR~ 1
•
·
&amp; styles, skin htones, and
bod
1 10 c oose 1rom.
•
Tara
Townhouse
y s1yes
1996 14x60 Trailer 2 bed~ Apartments, Very Spacious. Clothing also available.
rooms on a rented lot 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 Compare to Middleton and
Asko·ng $375. a month. 112 Bath, Newly ca~ted.
My Twln n Cuddly Babies
.,.....
C
Deposit required . Prefer A.dull Pool &amp; Baby Pool, all for more inlorm allon.
older couple. No pets. Call Patio, Start $375/Mo. No
T
(304)675·2457 Reterences Pets, Le ase Plus Security
AERATic5~ MOTORS
required.
Deposit Required, Days: Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
_:..:...._....:.._ _ _ _ _ 740·446·3481 ; Evenings: Sloe~. Call Ron Evans, 1.
2 bedroorrt mobile home in 740·367-0502 . ·
800 _537 •9528 _
Middleport, $275 .per month - ' - - - - - - - plus deposit, (740)992-3194
------.,.--,.,.
Twin Rivera Tower lor eld· Like new chair, $300 .00
2 bedroom Mobile Home erly/ disabled.
·
near Holzer Hospital $300 Now accepting applications c(7_4_0'13_87_·_06_6_0_ _ _ _

i

month,
$250 . depQslt.
(740)441 ·6954 or (304)6752900
- - - - -· - p 2 bedroom tratle r, atrial
area. (740)379·2540
2 bedroom, all electric, AC,
.
.
G Ill ,.15
very · niCe. .on
• po ·
17401446 2003
17401446
•
or
•
1409
-------BeaUtitul River View Ideal
For 1· Or 2 People,
References •. Deposit. No
Pets, Foster Traner Park,
740-441-0181.

for 1 br, all utilities paid HUD
·assisted, carpeted apar1ment. rent is 30% of your
adjusled o
·ncome ca ll 304·
675-6679 between 8--4:30
pm weekdays.EHO
unfurnished apartment, also
smalllra·tet
grocery
t cl-·lo
VoX&gt;
&amp; downtown Gallipolis.
Reference
&amp;
Deposit.

i

_17:141"0)•4•46.·.11"!5~8---~
"-·CE
~li\

•--•FOiliiRii.iiRENriiiiiioo-'

Trailer space tor rent. $~ 25
Mobile Home Broad Aun per month, plus deposit.
Rd. 3-bedroom, newly Priest's Trailer Parte Watet
remodeled. $4.00. Deposit,
$300. Month. No Pe~s . No Paid . Call (740)446-3644
small children. Aeterence
Required . (304)882·2774

jld

M btl h
I
. -o-'-'e--'o:.:.m_e_o_'_ '_e_nt_.-n~
o
HOUSEHOlD
~ets , (740)992·5858
Trailer for ret'lt, 2 bedroom, ·--oiGooosiiiiiiiiiii--_..1
24x.32
garage,
$275, '
(740)992·0638 evenings.
Almond Whi rlpool electric
stove, $75; Almond relrigefAPARlMF..NTS
alar, $75; Whir1pQo1 &amp;
FOR lbNr
Kenmore washers $65
"--..,;oiiiioiiiiiii._.l each. Call allet' 6pm,
(7401446·9066.
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, lumished end unlur· Beds , couch, coflee end
nished , security deposit tables, dresser, hid abed,
·
requtred,
no pets, 740 ·992 • microwave, recliner, drop
22t8.
·
leal table. (7401446·9742
--------1 bedroom apartment, stove For Sale : Reconditioned
&amp; refrigerator included, utili· washers, dryers and refri gties included. (740)245· '!rators.
Thompsons
5859
Appl iance . 3407 Jackson
- -- - ' - - -- - - Avenue·. (304i675-73'88.
1 Bedroom Apartments
Starting
at
$289/mo, Good Used ·Appliances ,
Washer! Dryer Hookup , Reconditioned
and
Stove and Refrigerator. Gua ranteed .
Washers ,
(740)441 · 15H~ .
Dryers,
Ranges .
and
RefriQerators . Some start at
2 bedroom apartment In $95 . Skaggs Appliances, 76
Gallipolis. Ai r washer, &amp; Vine St, (740)446·7398
dryer hoc~· up, no pets,
water paid .. $350/mo. plus Hlde·a·bed sofa, burgundy.
deposit. Ca ll after 6pm, green &amp; navy plaid, match·
(740)446·4043 (740)339· lng pillows. very good condi·
3063
lion, $125. (740)441 -1660 ·

r

I

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y~WDs&amp;

1989 Ford· Escort LX 'good
work car. 100.000 miles.
$1100 080. {740)3j8-9325
.
1991 Honda Clv1c, good
condition, runs great, Aad
with CO player, $1500 OBO
(740)2 56-8116

Michelle R.
Knapp

--

1987 Chell¥ Van , mechaniC'
owned Lutcury Van (witt\
work) or
van, $1200
lirm. Kelly ( 40)446-9961 ·:

W,rk

199.3 Ford. Aerostar .van. Air.,·
crUise, t111, new 11re, V6~
automalic, $2500. Doors tQ
ftl 95 Camero &amp; t:lack Hatch~
(304)675-7022
~
&lt;
B4 E 350 14ft Van, new tires.
dependable,
$2800

(740)446·~205

(740)446~

4254 Eventng.
-=:...;.:::.::.~'-----'
93 Chevy Lumina van, runS
well, will need transmtssion1
work, $800, (740)992-4028 ,
.

r

BoATS &amp;

MOJ'ORS

I

"Chrissy
Walker"
noW,

WOKSunquest 1000 tanning
canopy, used little, $ 250
080 (304 1593 n830
•
v
.
BUILDING
SUPM m"

We love and miss
' you, Missy and
Virginia

i

· FOR S~

,

·
.1.980 F• 150 HalilTon truek,
V-8 302 engine, suite, ru ns
good. some rust $995 .00
(740) 992-0916

I

~

I

sewer pipes, 1983 Dodge 4x4 , $1200
, etc. Claude negotiable, (740)388.9117
OH
1988 Ford F· 150 p-up, good
shape, V8, runs good. call
(740 1985 · 3372 evenings.
'"---itiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_,.. t992 Chevy pickup, 411.4 ,
.
350 V-8, low mileage.
AKC Reg1stered Beagle Massey Ferguson Tractor
pups. 10wks old . Mother 35 Oelux.e, ca ll (740 )245 :
and lather on property. 5628
(7 40)388-8721
.::::::..._ _ _ _ _...,..._
- - - - - - - -- S·10 topper, Leonard Cus·
Lab puppies, yellow or tqm SB spoiler $350 OBO
blac;k, $75. {740)256·6733 {3o4)593-0830 '
'

in a pinch,
~heckifiut all
the bargains in the
Classifieds!

CASE NO. 02CVD91
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
dba
Beneficial Mortgage
Co.ofuhlo
Plaintiff,
YS.
William J. Enitt aka
William K. Ernst, et.
al.
Defendanta. ·

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

· TerryLamm

(740) 992·0739

Best Service at
the Best Price

$4.00 per 50!1 bag
YAUGER
FARM SUPPLY

Open 9am--~pm
fMI nliiUiel, rreo tn 11on111 pc~
Call,. '"" -!I )'&lt;11.1' romp.aer ~

IBSON
6R4PHICS
Dean HID
New&amp;Used
4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

10%

Oft

8udltP~~ C 11rd ~

1-800-822"0417

A.sJ: 111 •bout Qf/f

54'tvict"

Pif~tu!

arn•lllll m

...........

&amp; Gravely
~~· Qlh CmkC
Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service
High&amp; Dry

111111111i11 au

Seff-Storage

IIIIICI

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

'-•11111111111..
JIIIIIIIICkll
llll'k
• • •E

IIIIIMtlll
c...llltllcllll
740.992·2222 or
7411-.446-1018

Firewood
for Sale
.BALL
LOGGING &amp;
Dump Truck
Delivery Call &amp;.

Leave message

740-992-6142

304-675-2078

"

(740) 446-l81.2

1

Rt. 35 Southoldo, WV

1·740-949-2115

~RVfl

(11) 11, 11, 25,2002
(12) 2, 9, 18,2002 .

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

Morning Stttr Roid • CR 30 o Racine, Ohio

~P~CIAL

FRANK
&amp;
WOOLDRIDGI; CO.,
L.P.A. AHorneys for
Plaintiff 600 South
Peul
Street
Columbus,. Ohio
43200 614-221·1862

Advertise your
message

Gooa Selection of Shrubs

Local 843"5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
111
o Nursing Home
1o1o1:

I-IOUDAY

FIREWOOD

A complete tex·
tured feed lormu·
latad for weened
caHie on pasture,
maintenance of
horses, and all
classes of sheep
and goats.

Grave Blankets $5.00-$25.00
Wreaths ·$10 Er up
Silk Poinsettias 94¢ ea
Swags $5.00 Er up

740-992-5232

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

(740) 446-j044
Monday·Frlday 8-SPM o Saturday 8-2pm
:z::n::z:n::z:::xn:~

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

[

97 Beech St
middleport, OH

H
J:::z::n:u:z::z:::x:n:

Lonpberger/Oreodcn

Christmas Light~

Bus Trip

·a

Installation.

Decorating,
Free Estimates ·
Insured:

(740) 949-1701

B

Sot., November 30, 2002
$65 .00- Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. 20, 2002

Everyone receives.a
basket !I! Call:

•

[10'x10' 61D'x20')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

JUST launchad!ll
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All Natural/Doctor

Building ovu 30 years

Recommended

Footers. Foundalion,

Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740·9112·7996
or visit website:

Add-Ons, New Homes,

I IUS

FIMILY

ce1mumo•

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

B. D. COnSTRUCTIOn
992·297

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
.992-5479

Pole Barns, Concrete,
. I;Jectri&lt;, PluiRbing
llls11rnna 14brA: lrrl11lltd

(740) 992·3320
Emljl: btadeiOzaptinK.com

LARRY SCHEY

YOU
The Daily Sentinel

lcHrRO,~Tj

992-21 5

J&amp;S ELECTRIC &amp;

. l'LUmiiiRG

.JOlES'

·Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

If so, you qualify for a

10% Discount
on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I

shop"'
.Ping
,tqbhas
left you
.

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

CIISTIUCDON

Qual;ty, Variety, Low Prices

Delivered RIGHT to

"allipoU- Jaatlp ftribunt
Joint flta,attt lttgi~ttr
The Daily Sentinel
&amp;aturbap ·G:tme' -&amp;entintl

L Sl Addlf
97 F d
a
tan
or
Thunderblrq, VB, 2 D~or,
fully loaded, 23,_~00 Mtles,
Excellent Condllton. 9923158
=-=------MUST SELL!
1987 Plymouth Reliant
$500.00 cash has 134,000
actual miles lor more info.
call 992·2230 or 992·, 19,5
Leave Name &amp; Number wtll
call back.

._

your

everlasting.

4

TRucK5

sine~

passing. But the
memory of you is .

8

IIII!P--.,.----.,
~
I

P.ubllc Notice

S E' ~ GREE HOUSE

· 12%SweetFeed

It has been a year

·
•
1992 Mitsublshi Precis, 2 ' 1994 Javelin 379T bass
door, 4 cylinde r, runs great! , boat with 150 Johnso~
Good work vehicle, $1"200. Depth Finder. Many extru
(740)367·0119
soooo·. 740 441 ·0381
1993 Buick Park Avenue, VAutO PARTS &amp;
6, power everythii'lg, leather,
ACCF.SSORIES
car looks new. 98,000K.
$3100 (7401379-2746
1986/0idsmobi le/Cutlas•
2000 Oldsm·obile Alero; Supreme lor parts. 2/doors:
White with gray.· interior. Good tires $100.00 .
Spoiler. All power, cruise, Pinnacle
112
HPC ·
AMIFM/ Cassette. 4 new Aecovery!UniVlank. Used 1"
tires. 42 •500 miles with time. Paid$2300.will take
extended
warranty
10 . $500.00 742-3045
100,000 miles. Excellent
"\I I{\ I( I "\
condition. going to college.
.
must . sell! '
$10,000 .. rlO
HoME
,( 7
...;.4.::01:..;4.:.41::_·::_98:..;6:.:5.::a.:.lle::_r..:5;:P_;.m::_
._
IMPRo•~·-~
,
T~:o~nr..~,. • .,
2000
A 1 P'ontiacGrand
r v 6 4AMId GT
·
u oma tC
-. ,
oor
BASEMENT
Hunter/Gre~~
Loaded, .
WATERPROOFING
•
~::l, ~ndii10n, one owner Uncondilional llfetim~ guar;
a~te~. Local re!erences fur..
2002 Toyota Camry, 27,000 ntshed. Established 1975.
miles, (740 )367 . 5055
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446-0870, Rogers Basement
91 ·Pontiac Grand Am, cyl Waterproofing .
•
5 sp, ale. new tires. high
O) 2 58
--'-------miles, (74 74 "25
C&amp;C
General
Home
NEW AND USED STEEL 96 Grand Am GT, 125,000 Maintenance· Painting, vinyf
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar driven daily, $3500 neg~· siding , carpentry, doors,
For
Concrete,
Angle, liable. (740]441 ·9317
windows, baths, mobile
Ch anne 1, Fl at Bar, s tee1
ho me ropatr
· and more. For
,
Grating
For
Drains, 97 Avenger ES, $3495; 96 tree estimate call Chet, 74o-Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L .Stratus, $2695i 95 Gra nd 992 .6323 _
•
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Prix, $2695; ~2 ~rand Am,
•
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; $1895; 92. Ftreb.trd $2495;
EL·~·~·· I
~·~u.u
Friday, 8 am-4~ 30pm. Closed 91 c amn, '"69
&gt;lU;
5, 91 Escort,
o .........
G•no·nON
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; $1450.; 90 Escor1, $995; 88 L~-.ii.....,.iilil"'ilillii·~---,J.
S d
6- 300
cavalter z-24 $1695 · 87
un ay. (740)44 7
Celica GT, $1895 . R'ome Residential or 'commercial
New Woodmaster 18~ plan· Auto Sales, Proctorville, OH. wiring , new service o(
er molder, 4 year warranty Over 35 cars &amp; trucks to repairs. Master Licensed
left, dust collector $2700. choose from. (740)886-1343 electrician.
AidenouJI
080 can .be seen at Pt.
F rd • .
SE
Electrical, WV000306, 3041
oaurus
must
•
99 0
plnl eoacasa,n, t3H04a·'6d7w5a·r8e915o8r more sell! (7401339·02.13 •
675·1786.
'
Water1 ine Special: 314 200
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1" 200
PSI $35 .00 Per 100; All
Brass Compression Fittings
In Stock.
RON EVANS EN!ERPRIS·
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800537·9528
Wheel Chair with Wheele
Bars asking $80. Beside the
bed chair asking $30. Both
in E~C.cetlent Condition.
)
304 895 3577
304 675
"
1
1 1 "
8988

(11) 25, 2002
(12) 2, 2002

marahaled and their
prlorltlea determined;
that told prom!. . be
told aa upon execu·
lion and the pt oceecls
of uld tale be
applied according to
law, and tor such
other relief 11 Is jutl
equitable.
Defendants flrtt
hereinabove men·
tloned are further
notified that they a111
required lo. answer
nkl complaint on or
before January 13,
2003, which lncluctea
twenty-eight (28)
days from the 1111
date of publication,
C!r judgment may be
rendered
aa
demanded therein.

Yaugers
Farm Supply

In memory of

FOR SALE

r

Eastern
Local
School District,
50001 State RC!ute
611. Reedsville, Ohio
45n2 It accepting
bldt for a 11 pallenger achool bus .
Specifications for
bus can be obtained
by calling the super·
lntendent'a office at
7~7-eG79. ·auot..
will be oper!l!d In the
treasurer's office at
noon on Wednesday.
December 10, 2002.
The board retervea
the right to reject any
or any part ol the bid.
Bids · thould be
labeled "Bid lor
School Bus'"" and
mailed to:
Eastern
Local
School .Dlttrlct,
Treasurer 's Office,
50008 . State ·Route
611, Reedsville, Ohio
45n2

r M~mffMS

....

.
.
~
1986 Jeep Chotokoo 4x4,1 .
· transmlsston,
· ·
rebutll
rebuII&gt;
1ront end , """"
'-"• nd'
'tf""""' ....,.., a
tites, needs en~ino o~
re built. $800. (7401446·792S.

Ohio, Inc. dba
Benellclat Mortgage
Co. of Ohio flied a
Complaint for Money,
Foreclo•ure •nd
Other Equitable
Rella! on July 21,
2002, Cl3o No.
020V091, on the
prop" deacrlbed 11
follows;
Sltuated In the
State of Ohio, County
of
Meigs · and
Township of Orange
and being further
desertbed
as follows,
llelng Lot Noa. 0
and
7
In
WEATHERMAN'S
SECOND
SUBDIVISION, at
ahown In Plat Book 4,
Page 30, . Melga
County
Deed
Records.
Parcel No . 10·
00533. 000 .. 10·
00534.000
AIIC! known aa
42140 Main Street
TupP&lt;Ira Plains, Ohio
45783, and that there
remalna due and
owing $73,101.29
with lntereat at
12.207 percent per
annum from March 1,
2002, and costa: that
the
defendant•
named
In
the
Complaint may have
an lnteraat In aald
property: tharelora,
Plalnllll damandt
that II be found to
have a good, valid
and tubtllllng lien
on tald promiMI, for
the amount owing;
that the Defendant•
equity of redemption
be loracloaed; that all
the parties be
required to anawer ••
to their lnleretl In
aald promlaea or be
forever blirred from
a11ortlng any Int-I
lheraln; that al llo~•
on aold promltet be

Richard LUCII and
Unknown Spouse of
Richard Lucat WhOII
lall known addreu
II P 0 Box 15,
Tuppers Plaine, Ohio
45783, 11 hereby noll·
fled that Beneficial

I

I

riO

"

2088 For appointment to
view. Will be available Dec.
1
3 bedroom house, $ 450
month plus deposit. No pe)s.

someday we, too, can
join Chrissy in
Heaven, alongside
Our Savior.

1983 Freight Liner cab ov~~
350 Cummings , 13spd tn.
great shape, too many new
parts to mention. Must sell
due to health .. Spent over.
$13.000, asktng $5800 :
(740)388·93'25
'
1996 GMC Extended Cab V-1
8. automatic, air, till, cruise, '
remote
con_t~o l
su~g.;
Ex.cellent Condthon . $9,2 :
(304)675· 7946
..

I

L

r

~

I

MoUohan Carpet, 202 Clark Rat/ Fox Terrier puppy, 1
Chapel Road. Por1er, Ohio. mate lett. $25.00; (740)379·
(740)446-7444 1·877·830· 2515, Cell phone (740)645·
g162 . Free Estimates, Easy 2070 {740)645-2599
linsncing. 90 days same as
Applications being taken lor cash. Visa/ Master Card.· AOTTWEILER 14 w~s. old,
very nice 2 bedroom in Drive· a~ linle save alot.
Female $200.00 773-5873 •
country senlng yet close to
FOR RENT
town. Washer, Dryer, Stove, RCA 27in Console TV with
pl Frig, Dishwasher provided. remote; Dark Maple desk, 4
.
Large Kitchen. Lots o1 closet drawers
and
chair;
1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed space. Total electric with Burqandy ·rocker/ recliner.
Homes From $199/Mo., 4'.W.. Central A/C. Garbage pick· AU m excellent condition.
Down, 30 Years at .8,5% up and wate r provided. (740)388-8997
LlVESIOCK
APR. For Ustings, 800-319· Tenant pays electric. No d
3323 Ext 1709.
pets. Non smokers only. p30
~
1 2 Paint Tennessee Walker
bedroom
house
in
$400
deposit,
$450
month,
2
Waterloo, $320 month , ~~J44~1i~5 orcJ;~~~~Sry- ~
colts. 1 &amp; 2
old. lull
~- ' Included. Road, Gallipolis. Ask tor Buy or se'il . Rl venne
·
for both ·
water &amp; ga,uage
Reference a nd d8pc;!Sll.
· No Virginia.
An11
·ques, 1124 Eas1Mam
· on
pels.
(7401643-2916
SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 74Q(7401643·2644
.
BEAUTIFUL
. APART· 992·2526. Russ Moore,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET ownet.
A·~
3 bedroom house in PRICES AT JACKSON
'-'•&gt;..JO
Gallipolis. s.sso monthly ren( ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Mlscw.ANEous
FOR SALE
plus depos1t. No pets. One Drive from $297 to $383.
MEROIANDISE
lh d
·1
d 1
man
epo~t an re .e r· Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
1972 Olds Cutlass 89,000
ences requtred . . Tak1ng 740-446·2568.
Equal 15 · h c
., m•·les $1500 (740)256·6692
1
applications. Call (7401645· Hou-'ng Oppo•un·oty.
S50oncSe ooml pu9 ercommopnu•lorer'
.

·

For we belong to
Him ... Our God, Our
Jesus, Our Father.
So let us make
Chrissy proud, when
looking down from
her angelical cloud.
Have respect for
Chrissy (Our Angel)
and be on our best
behavior. For then

POLICIES: OhiO Valley PubliShing rnetVM the rigM to .:Itt. Nject. or Anee~•ny Mat MY Uma. Erion muat bli NpOrted on the ftrsl dly Of ·
Trib&amp;Jne.Sentl~lller wll ~ '"fX)Mible for no moN thM ttt. C08t of tt. .,.c~ 0CCUf*1c1 by 1M .-ror •nd Mly the first lnMI'tlon. W• -..11 not bll
.,.,. ton or HPtftM that rwu1t1 from the pubHcMICHI or omlaalon of., Hvertl..nent. CorNctlon wtllbe made In the tim av•l'-ble .ctfdon. • Bo•
.,.. .twap COI.:IdMoUII. • Cunwtt Nllll CM'd .pp!IH. • All 1M! Mille lldvMj....m. .. aubfKI Ia the ffiOtral F..r Houal"fl Act of 1181. • Th ..
ecolpts only ...,, Wlm,d ada mMtfng EOE •tancWc~a. W. will not knowlft91y acoeplany todvwlltlng In vloldon of lhe '--

New 2000 sq tt home, 10 Will pay top dollar for prime
minutes from Hospital. land . New home builder.
Complete . above ground ~
pool with porch, driveway
and garage foundation .
Price below appraisal.
(740)446·3384'.

rtO

I

Sunday Cilsplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

eo :~~ Ir ~~lE Ir ~~ I

..,
hiring all 3 locations. full or dlacrlmlnallon ba•ed on
Absolute Top Dollar: u_
s_pan-limo. pick · up applica- race, calor, religion, 1111:
Gold Coins. lion atlocati9n &amp; bring back familial statu• or national
Silver.
Proolsets, Diamond~, Gold between
9:30am
· &amp; origin, Ot anv Intention to
MUST SELL BY THE END
m•keanyauch
OF · OCTOBER I . COLE'S
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· 10:0Qam, Monday thru
prefaranc1 ,11mltatlonor
MOBILE HOME , Athens,
M.T.S . Coi r1 Shop, 1515
-•::'::ur.:.da:::yc._.- - - - dlacrlmlnallon."
Ohio 17401 592 ~ 1972 , on
Second )\venue. Gallipolis, Needed- a personal care
occasion we have 8 display
740~446·2 842 .
assistant for elderly woman
home that doesn't sell. We
Thla newlpeper wHI not
in my home , references
knowing ly accept
have one such home now.
required, (740)985·4287
I· \11'1 0\ \II ·~ I
advertlaemanta tor real
New 16 X 80 three bed·
Sl•ll\ U ·r S
· N sing Ass·stanl
Classes
..t•t• which lain
room , 2 Bath home at a
1
_:;,;.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ev~ning
ur
11
hours, beginning•
violation or the law. Our
used home price come see
110
December 2, 2002. If you
reader• are hereby
Lynn or Ernie today and
Hl:l.I,\VANTED 1 enjoy. elderly people and
Informed that ill
check out your savings
1·
·
dwelllngladvertiHd In
Remember, we mus1 sell by
want
become
member
. .
.
of
our toheallh
careateB.m,
call
lhl• nawapaper are
the en d oI Oct ober I
Appl1c~l1ons w1ll be taken lor Judy Hart. Instructor at (740)
available ori an equal
pa~ - ttme clerk, part·ttme 742 .2370 or stop by
opportunity bani.
Must Sell Immediately! 3
~g1stered nurse, and lull· Rocksprings Rehabilitation L...::::::;:;;::::::,:.::::;::;...,l year old 1999 Oakwood
ttme reg 1stered nurse at the Center and lilt out an appli~
16x80, 3 bedrooms , 2 baths,
Mas~n County Health cation lor .the classes.
LR , Kitchen '(appliances
Department. Please send EKtendicare
Health
included), la undry room.
resu_m~ to 2~6 5th Street. Services. Inc . is an equal ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Serious Inquires only! II Call
Ann. Dtana Rtddle
opportunity employer that
HOMES
alter 7p, (304)675 -7347 or
.~R SALE
(304)675-6908
AVON! All Areas! To Buy 0 ~ e~courage, s .
workplace
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· dtverslty. M/F ON
Must sell! Owner moved,
675·1429.
OWNER OPERATORS
$9,000 ·Fareclosurel 3 BR 2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BA,
WANTED
home, won't lastl For listing 2 bath, all appliances, wash·
CASE MANAGER; Galtia·
TRUCK DRIVERS · call 1·800·719·3001 E11.t . er &amp; dryer included, cenlral
F144
air with deck, Make down
Jackson· Meigs Treatment Longhaul Teams Welcome
Alternatives to Street Crime C 11 (304 )675 4005
·
payment &amp; take over $370
Pr.ogram (TASC). One (1) a.
. 1400 square ft . home, 3 month mortage payments.
position . Potnt Service XPress
bedroom, 2 full bath, 2 car (216)351 -7086
• fl]i·time
Competili'.le salary a.nd Seeking energetic candi· garage,~ acre lot in country, ' - - ' - - - - - - 3 brl2blh. Only
coun tY emp Ioyee bene I1ts. dates to train as dental Racine, asking $80,000 New 14•70
"
Bacllelor's d~gree in Social assistants. compuler experi· :O::
B::0:.:.•_:(.:_74:..:0:::l9:..:4.::9·.:.1.:.35:..;3:..:__ 5999 down and only
Work or equtvalent educa· enc~ preferred. Interested
$197.71 per monlh . Call
(ion/ experience. Certified persons send resume to PO 3 Bedroom newly remod· Karena (740)385·4367
Chemical
Dependency Bo~ 704, Pomeroy, Oh eled, In Mkklleport, call Tom Nice 1015 available tor up to
Anderson Biters p.m.
Counselor
(CCDC) ·or 45769
16xeO mobile homes, 115
eoc ensed Socia l Worker - - - - - - - - :9::92::_·.::33::_4:..:8_ _:__ _ _ _ water ·Included, (7401992•
. (L 5 W) preferred. Valid dri· Truck Drivers, Immediate
·
h.
3 bedroom, 2 bath Brick 2167
.
1
1 A COL
1 d
ver s
ICense. tre, c ass
requ re . home in Centenary area. 112
Re'sponsibllities: Screening. e){cellent pay. e)(perlence acre lot lind additional
BuslNE:Si
ASsessment, ReferraL Case required . Earn up to
F
AND BUDJJINGS
Management, Monitoring, $1,000. per week.Call 304· 24K24 building. or more
·
and Random Urinalysis lor6. 7:..:5:..·4:..:00
= 5 _ _ _ _ _ informallon or appointment
cour t reterred substance· call
(740)645·2088 or Large Commercial Retail
aousong
adults.
Send . URGENTLY NEEDED· plas· (740)388·9851
Office or ·Buildlng on t to 5
,8sumes lo G·J·M TASC. ma donors, earn $50 to $60
acres for sale, rent or lease.
3
bedroom,
Garfield
11
P.O. Box 88. Gallipolis. OH per ~eek lor .2 ~r 3 hours Avenue, Gallipolis, OH. Some owner financing ava •
able. In Alo Grande area .
4563 1 or FAX to (7 40)446 . weekly. Call Boo Ltfe Plasma
~:~b ~~~~~i;kJ~~n~: ~71;4;:.0~::2;::45~-5~7~4::,7-~--,
7894 by December 6. 2002 . Service, 740·59\·6651 .
EOE/AA Emptoyer.
"
{304)988·066 4
·
LoTs &amp;
ACREAGE
Drummer wanted lor country
BUSINE~
I Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2 ~-~,;:,:~~~~~
and rack band. Playing 140
1'RAINING
bath, garaQe, on river, 5 ~-Acre lot. (restricted) on
mus ic !rom Clint Black to 1
~---~-::,._.1. mites south of Gallipolis. Sunset Lane. Utilities avail·
Creeq, Poison , etc. Call
.,
(7401441·8817
able. 1985 eu;ck Regal low
(7401379·9290 01 (7401379- Galllpolla Career College
miles. Auto. (3041675·4317
2356
(Careers Close To Home)
Financial
Freedom . Call Today! 740·446·4~7, Cottage style home. 2 bed· 112 acre tot on Tycoon Lake
1·800·214·0452,
room. full basement, 2 car w/12K60Trailer$16,500.00
Co. mpany
International
Reg t90·05-12,74B:·
garage, road frontage. ,0 now $13,500.00·
acres, well maintained, ca ll (740) 247·1100
growi ng rapidly.' Internet
work tram home_ PT/FT
·
~------~ Danny Brown lor appointposotions. Full training. 1· 170
ment, (740)949·8900
2 lots close to Gallipolis on
886·202·632 1
ML'iCU.I.ANEOUS
::._:..;.::.~.:.:.:_.::..:.:..:.:....__ old Rouse 35 in Sllnkist
Culloden 3 bed. 1 1/2 bath 2 Subdivision . For more infer·
Foster Parents.
story. Across from Culloden mation call (740)388,9851
Local Agency in OhiO seek·
Gr. Sc Vety Nice. $110,000
n
q
allo
ed
co
pies
10
Priced
Reasona
bly
:
Rose
1n ::.r
u 1
u
or rent $800. Mo. Plus Mason Co. 5 acre lots with
become Foster parents m colored wing back chair and Depos 1t ~30 4 ) 56 2·58 4 0
easy access City water.
Lnwrence. Galha. Jackson, Maroon Swivet rocker Galt
Electric &amp; paved roads.
Meigs .areas There will be 5 ' 740l 992 ·9024
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre Close to Toyota. Owner will
to 10 families chosen to
tract, $500down loqualitied finance. $22 .000. each.
become par1 of the pilot prOJ· ,.,~--=:-:----, buyers. Celt (740)446·3570 (304)562·5840
ecr. Qualified applicants 180
WANJll)
lor a qud sale
may receive up to $40 00
TO Do
Patriot area, 20 wooded
per da y rei mbursement . L.---~---,.J Land home packages No acres, co unty water &amp; alec·
Interested parties Galt
.
payments while under con· !ric. homesite. Botders
[740)709 -9062. IJ you have Georges Portable Sawmill, struc tion
L111te
or no Wayne 1 Nationa l . Forrest ,
previously ca lled, please call don't M ul your togs to the down payment required . exceiiMt hunting. $38.000
again
mill just ca ll 304·675·1957. (740)446·3~18
(740)379·9141

"

PubllcC~tlon

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

f;;;~ln~U.~mo~;;"Y;;:-

In one week.With us
TO Place

www.mydailysentinel.com

&amp;unba!' ~ime' -i&gt;entintl
•••••••••••••
. .

I

···············--------·············
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• Subscriber's Name------~--~----I
:Address
_______________________________________

:City/State/Zip----'------------.----

•
•Phone'-------------------------------•:
.
Mill or drop off thll coupon
1 copy' of your photo ID to
1

Ohio Valley Puiiiiii1Ij)&amp;l"f.iO. Box 489, Gallipolll, OH '15631

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• Tonneue Cover •

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Shield &amp; Full Line of

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Early birds start
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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinef.com

Monday, November 25, 2002

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

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ioY, TAt.tc

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UAHNEY
I'LL TAKE A
HANCE ON
THAT TURKEY ! 1

FIFTY CENTS!!

I'M

NOW I'M .TH I ONE
TAKIN' A CHANCE!!

GOOD
FER IT
II

THE BORN LOSEH
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~

'

RUC&gt;'1', LONG TIf'/1.€. NO :XE I

1-\0W'.S II &amp;EN GOING 7

l'!:.t!~N~~SGIVIN(,"

p-!Mtu.., 11-\0RNY, Lf\.1&gt;-,\J( MY "'~
B~C&gt; ~YS 1\NC&gt; I f-\1&gt;..\JE 11\Y fPI)
01\YS I f\OW "-BOUT YOO 7

p-

.

.

"'

I f\f\\IE MY eAO 01&gt;\YS MD I
~~VE

MY WOR:X: Of&gt;.-YSI

'WA
MOUTH

REPORT
I N AN INTER·
ESTING W/&gt;.Y. SO
I WROTE IT IN
COMIC. BOOK

3 Very mild

4 Flower

21
1 Crane arm
2 Employs

bet
Abhorred · s
Card
sharps
6
like some
humor
Lira
7
successor
8
Odd job
9
Recline
lazily
10

24
25

26

parts
Group of

27

witches ,

po'"lble
Jigger of
whiskey
Regrets
deeply
Embrace
Acid rain
watchdog
Dogma
Successor
Ia Claudius
''-a dateI''
"The," to
Wolfgang
Couple
Foul up
Do batik
Actor Lugosl

successors

40 Flung
41 Reluctant
42 Weight unll
43 Exclaimed
over
44 Actor Montand
45 Speak
highly of
47 About 2.2
pounds
48 Could hear
--drop
51 PC core
53 Practiced·
Zen

Tiger
28
BY PHILLIP ALDER
37
30
Woods'
Las t September.
org.
someone was jailed in
38
Landed
31
Reverence
32
Florida for swindling
39
33
Face-to" inv es tors" out of
41
face exams 35
millions of dollars.
Guarded
He was gi ven 25
years and instru cted
1o pay back nearly 19
million dollars at the
rate of $! 00 per
·month . That means he
will have repaid the
ca sh in . the year
17,835! What is the
point of that ruling?
Now for something
unjustifiable at the
bridge table . Look at
the
North - South
hands ~ You plow into
three no-trump · via
Stayman. West leads
a fourth-highe st heart
six . Hoping he has
led away from the ace
and won· t be aware
that your king will
d rap on the second
round, you call for
CELEBRITY CIPHER
dummy 's queen.
by Luis Campos
However, East wins
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people. past aM present Each tetter in~
the cipher stal"''dS for anothe r
with the ace and reToday's clue· R eq als
turns th e heart five:
king, two, four. You
cash a top club, but
"AGXLYW
AP
K( YX EGJX
East unexpectedly
HM
TPJ
FXXU
RXZHXCHIS
discards a heart. How
would you continue?
HI
TPJGWXZM.
LITEBHIS
You might not .like
that two-no-trump
K L I
BLUUXI . ".
opening. yet it is the
best choice. To open
NXIIHMXG
KLUGHLEH
one diamond, planning · to rebid three
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Get your facts first. and then you
can distort them as much as vou please." - Mark Twain
clubs . could work
better, hut partn er
will have difficulty
WORD
vi sualizing a . prime
GAM I
2 t points with so
many aces and kings . O Rearrange letters of the
Thai 4-0 club break
four serombled words beis annoying , but you low to form four simple words.
are not behind bars
G R I WN I
ye.t. It seems that
Wesl started with five 1-rt.,.,:::....:;/_.:_.,.1:.:...:.;,....:.-,
.j--1

BETTY
THE~ES NO

JUSTIFY

POi tiT· I .:oJLD
NeVER J\IST\Fi

~ i YO\!R
INNER MOM.
TOUGH LUCK

8\J'ri~G THEM

\O V,HO? •

SUYING.

YO\J~

THEM

, ·:sSAND?

BY MILL!SS/A RUSSELL

Staff writer

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

GAitFIELD

!)

NOW, WOULP MY
I CONJECTURE BE MORE
1. CREPIBL EO IF l WERE

1

l

'

I ()

PSRI&lt;AP5, BUT WE
MAY NEVER KNOW

5 TANPING?

h1 the vcar ahc :lll vn u lll;J Y
ha\'c to ,;u t ou t !.!rcalt..•r t: lfot:t
th em wlw1 was reC1uircd or you
in the pa~ t in Prd cr to fulfill .
m1 am bit iou s requ irement. hnt

if ynu arc

d di gc~t. t ill'

rc-

w ar Us yo u reap \t·IIJ bt: suh~l&lt; t nl ial.

Si\C dTTA RI LJS

Nnv . 2J.
Dec . 2 11 --A n add iti o nal rc-

0

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0
0

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"' '

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iL~~~~:J
TilE GHIZZWELLS
NEYER MIND.
\.IE 1.\0PPEP
AINfl.'l r

~pon ..,i hi.l iJy

1

rnay hl' pil ed

·tlll

vuu \nday. hut i n..,lt'i.fd uf it ,
hcin l! a burd en. it" II be OII L'
th;ll · wil l &lt;kl ll Oil !' tr:ll e yo ur
. ; J.:d lli and ;d lllill e~. Tltc .pnw.cr'l th&lt;ll lie will hl' i m prl·~~l'd .·"

CAPRICOR N (llee. 2c ·J:on.

JI' J -- h iii dC11.:n ninat io11 am!
tcn:tc it y ll ll your p&lt;~ rl th:tl w ill
h~ r L ~ rwn s th iL' fo r &lt;tuo rn ._ pl i.; hi ng ~urn c th i n ~ tmi.Jy thm
nn o ne l' l ~c ha s heeti abl e to
r t~ l l . off.

the ki nd thac brca tt1cs success.
Set yo ur sights on objecti ves
that are tr uly meani ng ful
when: ' your efforts ctm puy
big di vi UenJs .

nal i;d ng. It c.. :o uiJ ha ve som ethi ng to do wi th heinE rom-

You'l l o.; Ju m thC'm

pc n ~ alcd

pr0 pcr n?tnun erat i(m .

. ARIES &lt;March

2 1-April 19)
:· Someon e you· ,.c been d y111 g to mee t or kn ow }1c ttc r

,\QU ,\RI US (Ja11. 20 ·Fcb.
19 ) -- T il e ~;nrc ad vi4..:l' ;m as o:; ociall,' o f fa,(v~~;
t11d;lv
.
. . lllt" ht
he :1 bitt er ptl l tn swallow at
fi r~ t. hut n tll.:c vnu d t!.!C''.t it.
\nu ' ll \altte ih. l·nnll:;ll . I (~
l_.,,,l·t ly \\ hat y1 1U ha\~..· ncelk·d
to hr;~r .
/""

PI SCES I h h. 211·:VIaoclo
20) -- Co rr.-cct i\'l• lnca'\ urc"
ttlaV ill' fi•:a ll v ta"- rt t tnda\ nn
.111 ;, Jd . ; i lll &lt; lli~, ll t l~ tl • n•..'l'(f~ fi ~
-- ------------- -· ·-----'___:.- - --

·~

;md li king what !'/he li l'CS
tY ou 'l l 11ow ba \'C a &lt;:harKc tn
l'ttlti vn tc the rr lati&lt;'tn shij'·
T AU RUS (Ap ril 2 I M;o v
20J -- R c m c m~l·r that tcdiu u·s
T a ~ k you 'v e hr..::n.. ~W Cl~pin g

whom you ' \' c dum: fu vors fur

uncr it is n' t as toug h of a j(Jb
as vout ho ug.ht it would he.
GEMI NI iMav 2 1-Junc 21li
.. Wnr k ou t tt ·Illatt cr tmla v
that ha s been of SL' I'i OUS L' Oll··
l:l'Ht for )'{ HI wit h ti l~.: persPn
w ho i ..;, dtrcr'tlv il l\'o lw d. hut

CO!H:ivi al

!11dav .

·
(J uly

C ll VtrlH1 -

t;t!.! lineA, tn)-G raph 's year.!ltcatl predicti ons &lt;tre &lt;IV&lt;ti l-

;tlllc fnr all signs ;uid mukc

. cxrclktll Xma~; 1\l,lc ki nu !'i tuft'crli for th1..· e nt ire f•un i ly~. Mai f
.~2 and a n S i\ SE to A~ tro ­
( ir:tph . ( /o · th lS nc wsp&lt;lprr.
1'.0 . Um I h7, IV ick lilk OH
..t ..f()IJ2. B e . ; lire to '\tate your
de., ired 7ml t&lt;~L' ' i ~ n s / tagli t1c

1\ illl l(.'

lHJilll'

1.1~ 0
~~ .. A u ~ . 2~ 1 -Thl.! I,\ pl' of rt.&gt;'-4.lh c ;r il d lk-t~..·r ­
rr u natt on .vm1 Juke on tntLtv
. '"'

.

'v

---- -- -

--- -- - -~·-·--

" I think it impacts retail
bu sine sses more than my
bu siness, "
said
Judy
Williams, owner of Williams
and Associates In surance on·
Main Street.
"Customers complain, but
there would have to be some
plan in place · to keep
employees and owners from
parking in front of businesses."
.
"It's perfect the way it is,"
said Chuck Riffle of
McCullough &amp; Riffle Drugs.
"For us, we have no privale parking lot, and people
need a place . to park. It' s a
.
but .... "
nmsance,
The meters, which take
nickels and dimes, allow a
maximum parking time peri od of twe ·hours. Afler that,
violators
are given a $2 tick.

GALLIPOLIS- The holiday season
has begun, and Ohioans will be hitting
the highways this weekend to visit family and friends.
-'T6 aid travelorrs, the Ohio Department
of Transportation is providing a list of
interstate construction taking place over
the Thanksgiving Day Weekend.
ODOT strongly urges motorists to
watch out for construction delays and
stopped traffic.
Drivers are encouraged to obey posted speed limits in construction zones
for the sake of safety, speeding fines in
construction zones may be doubled.
Information can be confirmed: on
ODOT's
website:
www.odotonline.org/otis
Interstate 270, Franklin County
Pavement rehabilitation on 270 from
Alum Creek Drive to U.S. Route 23
will be complete by Wednesday, Nov.

· 27 at noon. Weather permitting ~.. all
lanes and ramps will be open in both
directions for Thanksgiving.
Emergency bridge" work on 270
between U.S. Route 23 and Interstate
Route 71 will be complete by Monday,
Nov. 25, weather pennitting. All lanes
are ex.pccted to be open for
Thanksg 1ving:" -' · ,;;.. ~·-----.---c.. U.S. Route 23, Ross County
The route is reduced to one lane in
each direction from the U.S. Route 35
bypass at Chillicothe to Massieville
Road. A 45 mph speed limit is in effe.ct.
State Route 28, Highland to RiiSs
counties
The route is reduced to one lane at the
. city of Greenfield's eastern corporation
limit and the Highland/Ross County
line for a bridge project. Traffic is being
maintained with the use of temporary
traffic signals.
·
State Route 32, Jackson County
Mainline traffic on SR 32 at the inter· section of SR 327 in diverted in one
lane over ramps in both the east and

.., "'

·-·

·~-

.

~ -~- -

westbound direction in conjunction
with the construction of an interchange.
In addition, a 10-foot width restriction
has been imposed in lhe work zone, and
a 45 mph speed limit is'in effect.
State Route 327, Jackson County
State Route 327 is closed between SR
.32 an&lt;i,~qunty _I~.oute. 88, j':'st soyth_of
Wellston, m conJunction Wlth"lhe construction of an interchange. The detour
is CR 88 to CR 78 to SR 32. This closure is anticipated to be in effect
through the winter months.
·
Mainline traffic on SR 32 at the intersection of SR 327 is diverted in one
lane over ramps in both the east and
westbound direction in conjunction
with the construction of an interchange.
In addition, a 10-foot width restriction
has been imposed in the work zone, and
. a 45 mph speed. limit is in effect.
State Route 56, Hocking County
Traffic down to one Jane approximately three miles east of South
Please see Travel. A3

&lt;&gt;.1,

Happy
·.Thanksgiving
,.

et.
If 24 hours have expired
and you ' re vehicle is still in
t. he space, the ticket will cost
.
you $4.
In 200 I , $ 19,358.50 was
generated by the meters $12, 185.50 in meter coll ections; $5, 173 was fro m fines;
and $2, I 00 from park ing
permits.
The cost to pay Sandra
Thorla, a full-time parkin g
enforcement officer, is
$15,000 annuall y.
Thorl a works 40 hours a
week, collecting money from
the meters, wni ch number
around 250. and writing tickets.
Downtown parking permits cost $30 for six month s
or $50 for a year, and allo w
parking on the upper, middle
and lower parking lots.

The 1wo- hour time limit
per parking space helps to
keep a flow going for local
businesses, according to
Proffitt.
"If a perso n continually
gets tickets, it 's cheaper to
buy a permit," Proffitt said.
"With limited parking, the
meters help keep it under
control. If people use those
spaces for ei ght hours, shops
may lose that busine ss.
We've got a lot of elderly
people who shop downtown
and some of them don 't want
to walk three blocks."
"If there is .no place to
park, people' go somewhere
else." Thorla said.
The meters will be hooded
over the holidays, with free
parking starting Wednesday
and continuing until Jan. 2.

'

\

In observance . of the
· • Thanksgiving hojiday, Tbe
: Daily ,! Sentinel · office will
: close at I p.m. Wednesd~y:
: 'The office will re;-9peh, lit 8·
: a.m. F{iday. ·
' . .•
: Happy Thanksgiving to all '
· of C!ur reader&amp; from the .
: Sentinel staff.

"

Staff report

.Index
1 Section - 1o Pllces

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

Weather
C, 2002

2
8-9
10

4
3
3
5-7
2

OhioValley Publishing Co.

Judge Robert Buck and Kathy Johnson are among those to per·
form at Saturday's Seasons of Love talent revue, to be held at
the Meigs Middle School. Bob and Debbie Buck will perform a
song and dance number, and Johnson will accompany many of
the performers. (Brian J Reed)

Arts Council to
stage tatent.revue

Driver injured

'/

A Middleport man was injured when the tractor-trailer he was driving overturned Monday

on Ohio Route 124 near Rutland. Toby J. Curtis, 29. of.895 Brownell Ave ., was !fansported to Holzer Medical Center by the Rutland squad of the Meigs EMS following the
8•55 a.m. accident. The Galli a-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Curtis was
eastbound when the rig went off the right side of the road and overturned , losing its load.
The rig was heavily damaged . Curtis was cited for failure to. control and gross vehicle
overload. (David Harris)

Bri~n
Howard is the
director for this year ' s
show, and will also perform
MI DDLEPORT
in the show.
"Season s of Love" is the
. Other local mus1coan s
theme fo r a talent revue scheduled to perform in the
sponsored by the Riverbend ·
H'll
1 '
Arts Council, scheduled for show · are• Al exi s
Dim eo Jackson, Bob and
8 p.m. Saturday.
D bb' 8 k T
p
Tickets for the show are
e ' uc ' om ayne.
$5 and are av ailable at the the
Rock-N-Country
Meigs County Chamber of Cloggers, B.J . Smith, Beth
Commerce and Swi sher &amp; Sti vers, · Anna Sayre and
Pharm acy. Chad
Dodson ,
Craig
Loh se
Remaining tickets, if avail- Harrison , Erica Poole.
able, will be sold at the Je ssica Blaettnar, · Bobbi·
door.
·
Napper
and
Meagan
The revue ~'{ill be per- Dodson , Jennifer Walker
formed at the Meigs Middl e and Adam Shank, Lee
School Auditorium . and will · Morri s,
the
.Ridges,
Jeffers,
Tom
feature loc al sin gers. and Brittan y
dancers performing a num- Dooley
and
Rae
ber of mu sical . ge nres, Gwiazdowsky, Katie Reed,
in cluding holiday mu siC, Anna Wolf, a children 's
standards and pop oldi es. · choir and an ense mbl e.

Caire Center

SCORPIO (Oc t. 24·Nov .
22 ) -- St riv e for VlHJ r nh il'C ··
t i ~-cs in &lt;HI encr1!ctlc :md d'edi .'
l'atcd ma nner tOUay. tlut do so
in 'vays that \V nn' t ~mnoun cc
vour i~r r gct and plans before
\O tt gt:t a ch;l/l cc to play yn ur
bnd.

whi ..:h tn h ~nT \o ur
gc t-tngc thLT. It" II ht• lp a 1! ~ 1.
CANC lR (J um· 21· Jul y 221
.. I f yo u sho p dili g.cntl y ~l rH I
!II L'll.t ;tfraid to l w ~l! le ;1 htt
over th e p r kc~&gt;. n; u~ \l:md ~~

fl ntl itl l;!
Cxn· lk nt l'lll\'~ rur til L~

Staff writer

pn: . . s.

· men L 111

l.'llO d ,; )J ~I IIl' L' .(If

w ;.~ys

LIBR!I rScpt. 2.1-0et. 2.l ) - It hehool.·es you to stand up
an d ·he . cou nt ed shnu lcl a
fri en d of vour s l'ome und er
fire rrom ;in mlvcrsar v today.
Your loyalt y will be i.ttl mired
t"ly those you' d lik e .to ill1-

dny to ge t it l.~lll o r rh e~ way -·
Otl l'C a nd fo r al l. Y (l u·ll d i ~­

'-l

Career or' cn mmerctal ar·

in th e paq They' ll fi nd
to rl'&lt;.: iproca te.
.

unde r the rul! '.' Todav·s th e

:n t

VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Scpt. 22)

·r~m gcme nt s look except ionally pro mi s ing for you t o d :.~ y
~~.o· h e n yo u nrcr;,llr with those

m:t y be o bscrv111g y ou toda y

'I(

IUJ\\ it i" done.

for somet )u'ng ro r

\d1id1 \'u u nc\' CI' rcc c i v~d

said.

Road work may cause
delays for holiday travelers

_______ ,,.~. -Tucsduy. Nov. 20. 2002

BY DAN HERMES

POMEROY Parking
meters , or no parking
meters? That is the question.
"The purpose of the meters
is to keep traffic flowing,"
says Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark Proffitt. "If
someone parks in a metered
·space for more than two
hours, they are really hindering that parking space."
But opinions from shopkeepers on the issue vary.
One business owner, who
wishe'd · to remain anonymous, said the meters are a
hindrance and should be
:Sandra Thorla, Pomeroy's parking enforcement officer, pre- remoyed. like they have
pares to write a ticket for an expired meter. In 2001, done in Middleport.
:$19,358.50 was generated by meters , fines and parking per"Look out there . Do you
;mits. (Dan Hermes)
see a flow problem?" he

1

I I

CATLE6?

www.myd.ulp•mlin&lt;·l.&lt;om

Meters helping to keep
downtoWn traffi~ flowing

39 lPs'

I

~OW COME
T~EV NEVER
~AVE A

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 2002

36 Soothed

==·==·==·==·
I I I I·I
1

T!&lt;IE NEXT
WOLE 15 A
PAA ~OUR ..
· D06LE6TO .
TilE RI6~T

HtY I T\.I~R.E 'S A I'R\7.£
11-\ \\.liS Bo)(
01' CERE I&gt;.L !

13 Make

DOWN

29 Raises a

34

50 CENTS • Vol. 53. No. 72

19

23 Purchases
24 Armored·
car job
27 .Pharaoh's
river

30

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

. so
hearts
four clubs,
~·~.J
theand
diamond
fi- L.r
nesse is much better
A NDM0
than a 50-50 shot.
2
And if the diamond
. . . .
fine sse is working, ~=======· ~N
you can ·win nine .,
R H s A H j_;,•
A classmate was bragg ing that
!ricks via three .
·:; everyone was jealous of him .
3
· spades , one heart.
I 1
I
was taught that it is more importhree· diamonds and
- !ant to know how others va lue us
two c l u b s . ,r ---------,,than to think how valuablE!-. , -.
So , do you cash
S .E J R E T
.
• your three spad e
14
/5
Comple1o 1he chuckle quoted
tricks , then take the . . . . . .
by filling in the missing wo,ds
L-I.._,.J.._-L-..L...-1---J you develop from step No. 3 below.
diamond finesse? I
hope not! That would
LETTERS IN
be careless. Instead,
play off the diamond
ace first , just in case
West has a sinllleton
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
queen . Admittedly it
Behave -Frank - Guile - Loving -REVOLVING
is unlikely, but it canYears ago in the old west a man would wait patiently
not cost.
for a week to catch a stagecoach. Today he would get
enraged 1f he m1ssed the firs t section of a REVOLVING
door!

ll \

0

Spring
Taa: pro
Loud noite
"U,.hmm "
(2 wds.l
Gawk ot
Tax shelter
Edible root
Sell·
centered
Teacup
handle
Play
1
57. lilmdom
That lady
hockey
Sharply
58 Flop
Chaney of 59 Toddler'
horror
wamill!jl

I

FORM!

\\

! AM
NOT LAZY

43 Lyric poem
44 Dixie
pronoun
(hyph.)
46 City near
Kyooo
49 Type of
vehicle
50 Apiece
52 Big shols
54 Handy
atibr.
55 Trick
56 Kazan of

·movies

r&gt;t.aler : Snu th
\'u htt!ruUio!. ~~ ith l!r

vo O" WORe .~ ..

OSU scrapes by COppin State, 5

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'We Tailor Our Services to Your Individual Needs"

Skilled Nursing Services • Short-Term Rehab Services
Solarium ond Courtyord Areas
Physico!, Occupotionol ond Speech Therapy
Therapeutic Activities and Community Outings • Hospice·Services

Certified by Medicare/Medicaid • Private Pay Insurances
Long-Term and Short-Tenn Core Facility

(740) 446·5001
Located

west of Holzer Medical Center on Jackson Pike

SENIOR CARE
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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