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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinef.com

Monday, November 25, 2002

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

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ioY, TAt.tc

Arovr
~· · , VNeTt41CAL
q·
rvSINe$.r
--~PllACTI,fS{

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

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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

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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

�..

The

io •

Sentinel
•

Ohio weather
MICH.

I News

1\JeSclay, November 26,,2002

. COLUMBUS (AP) - The insurnnce that insurance companies can't afford to them out of business or to states that cap
.
industiy operates based on risk, but that risk come to the stale of Ohio and offer insur- damages.

I

I TOledo 123'/31 ' I
I

liiWileld 122'/30" I

IND.

PageA2

Legislator blames unpredictable
malpractice awards for soaring premiums

·:..WednesdiY, Nov. 27

..

•

I

-~

•

* ••

••

1l Columbua ~4'132" I

is unfairly unpredictable for doctors' malpractice coverage, a legislator sponsoring a
bill designed to hold premiums s!eady said.
State Sen. · David Goodman, a Bex.ley
Republican, told the House .Civil and
Commercial Law Committee on Monday
that the uncertainty is driving up malpractice insurance rates.
Goodman's bill, which was approved by
the Senate last week. would cap pain-andsuffering awards for malpractice victims at
$750,&lt;XXJ. .
"I don't think you take the risk out of it I
think you create a ma-e predictable risk."
Goodman said. "It's about creating a stable
environment so that the risk isn't so great

ance to physicians."
In some states, pain-and-suffering awards
have reached tens of millions of doUm but
not in Ohio, Goodman acknowledged. No
limits would be placed on economic or
punitive damages, which insurers say are
easier to project
·.
"It's not the lawsuits, ifs the uncertainty
(that is driving up premiums)," Goodman
·
said
Critics say Goodman's biil pimishes
patients who have legitimate complain~ so
insw-ers can control their risk. Doctors hav.e
complained their malpractice premiums,
which can reach more than $1 OO,&lt;XXJ a year
for some specialists, are driving some of

Ray Mazzotta. president of Columbus-

based omc Insurance Co., said that unlike
propelt)' and life insurance, malpractice
coverage is "besieged." His company
writes policies for about 6,~ d.octors.
"I don't know whether 11 s JUSt a case
. where the trial attorneys have found us to be
more lucrative or not But it's cl~y under
siege. Physicians are really feeling the full
brurit of it," Mazzotta said
, ·
Proponents cite a federal study that says
the median jury award for pain and suffering increased 43 percent between 1999 and
200J. Oppooents of the bill include defeiJse
lawyers and patients injured by medical
malpractice.

Hunters complete education course at Easte,rn

.
I ~

__

'

··snowfall to hit region tonight
' ' BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thursday will mainly be in ·
· · Wintry weather is on the the 30s. Lows Thanksgiving
"Way. The weather over the morning will dip into the
·'region was fairly quiet teens many areas.
•overnight with no precipitaWeather foretast:
• tiqn and partly to mostly
Wednesday... Cloudy with a
:cloudy skies.
chance of snow showers.
· The quiet weather will be Additional daytime accumushort lived as an area of low lation an inch or less.
p~essure
will
rapidly Continued cold with highsj n
" ~pproach the _Ohio Valley the lower 30s. NorthWest
. later today. As 11 nears, snow winds around 10 mph.
·.will spread north and east Chance of snow 50 percent.
. •· jnto the area. The low will
Wednesday · night. .. Partly
p~ss to the southeast tonight cloudy. Lows in the upper
. ' and accumulating snow is
..
d
b
d b k teens.
expecte
Y
ay rea
Thanksgiving ... Partly
Wednesday.
.
.
. cloudy and continued ·c old.
. A~ a ~esult, wmter w~ther Highs in the lower 30s.
adVJSones have been ISS~~~
Thursday
night. .. Partly
for most of the area for. 1 cloudy. Lows in the lower
afternoon
and
tomght. 20 s ·
AccumulatiOI)S will range
· Extended forecast:
from an inch or two in the
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
northwest to up to four jnches further east and south.
chance of snow showers durFor toda, the clouds over- ing ·the night. Highs in the
head will gradually thicken. lower 40s.
Snow will move into the
.Saturday... Mostly c;loudy
southwest by evening. No with a chance of snow show. ,more than an inch of accu- ers. Continued cold. Lows in
i ·mutation is expected by sun- the u~per 20s and highs in
; '&amp;et. Highs today will be in the m1d 30s.
·
.'the 30s with lows tonight in
Sunday... Partly
cloudy
' .t.. 20s.
with a chance -of snow show: , · The snow will quickly end ers. Continued cold. Lows in
: from west to east late tonight the mid 20s and highs in the
·.'in:to
Wednesday.
On . upper 30s.
· That;~kaalvlna Day, skies will
Monday... Partly cloudy.
be partly to mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid '20s and ·
Hiaba
Wednesday
and hiaha near 40.
0

, .,e

"'

---------....---DAY ON WALL STREET

~~. A

" · ~----------~----------~------------~
Nov. 25, 2002

Dow

Jones
.: I.

"'
I'

..

........
.'

8,849.40
Pel~

from prel1ous

+0.51

AUG

SEP
Low

HI;!
8,868:87 8,756.02

Record hiGh: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000

'

••

.."

~ - -·

L'.

Nov: 25, 2002
, I ,I

I

II

.. .
1,481.90
Pel~

.0.90

from pre\bJI:
• ,l..

..

Nov. 25,2002

SEP
Law
HI;!
1,486.94 1,461 .13

Pel~

from prel1ous

..0.25

Raconlltlgh: 5,048.62
March 10, 2COO

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

1,000

900

BOO
- -AUG
- - - - SEP
- - - - -OCT
----- - - 700
NOV

HI;!

Low

937.15

923.31

RICord hiGh: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

::Local Stocks
' '

I 1 "I'

'

· '.,AEP- 30.18
• Arch Coal~ 19
Akzo -29.84
AmTech/SBC - 28.40
Ashland Inc.- 28.46
AT&amp;T- 27.99
Bank One - 39.78
Bll- 12.90
Bob Evans- 2.4.30
BorgWamer- 49.57
Champion - 2.84
.
Charming Shops- 4.57
Clly Holding- 30.16
Col-22.58
OG- 14.21
DuPonl - 43.70

examination.
certif ied
were: Marcus and Nathan Carroll,
Travis Eblin, Eric Perry, John Brauer,
Travis Cremeans, Charles W. and
Charles Fitchpatrick, Ricky Colburn
II, Rachel Blackwood, Britteny'
Mather, Mary Brauer, Eric Wood,
Jerry Colburn, Tyler Sanders, Jordan
Wood, Renee Colburn, Ronnie Eblin,
Josh Price, Zach and Devin Norman,
Wade· Woods, Nathan Wolfe, Eric
Batey, Derek Taylor, Chelsey Wood,
Aaron Lance, Carrie Bauer, Ryan

Mees, . Tyler Cline, Kevin, Br~dley
and Sean Coppick, Jay War,ner,
Joshua Starcher, Steven, Ben and
Nick Hudson, and Zach Hendri.Jl.
Instructors were Gilbert Woods,
John Riebel Sr., Mickey Bauer, Jim
Freeman and Meigs County Wildlife
Officer Keith Wood.
Completion of the .Ohio Hunter
Education Class is mandatory for
people .wanting to purchase their first
hunting license or wanting to purchase out-of-state hunting licenses.
'

Christmas event planned

Births
Zuspan birth announced
MASON,

W. VA. Donnie and
Kimberly
Zuspan . of
Mason
announce
the birth of
a daughter,
Christina
H o p e
Zuspan, on
Oct. 3 at
Zuspan
the Holzer Medical Center.

She weighed 8 pounds .
Maternal grandparents
are Ernie and · Brenda .
Haggy
of
Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents are Jim and Donna
Gilmore of Pomeroy and
Eula Odegard of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandplarents are
Kathy and Tom Edwards of
Mason and paternal great·
grandmoiher
is
Betty
Adkins of Huntington.

ALFRED - Members of prayer calendar and chose
Alfred . United Methodist Judy K. Long, who is conWomen discussed Christmas nected with Red Bird
plans during their recent Mission of Beverly, Ky. The
meeting, held at the church. society signed a birthday
Plans were made for a
Christmas meeting on Dec. card for her.
10, with a carry-in meal, . Present were ' Martha
drawing of names for pro- Poole, Osie Follrod, Pastor
grams and servings, and Jane Beattie, Fl'lrence
Christmas gifts for shut-ins. Sp;;ncer, Mary Jo Barringer,
Henderson,
Guests will be invited to the Thelma
Charlotte VanMeter, Ruth
meal.
Sarah Caldwell, secretary Brooks, Nina Robinson,
of program resources,
reported on information Mary Jo Buckley, Sharlene
Nellie
needed . for 2002 reading Cremeans, and
report. Caldwell also had the Parker.

'

Community Calendar
Public Meetings

Offering will be taken for programs of the Association.

Saturday, Nov. 30 .
LETART
Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
township building.

Seniors Groups

Clubs and
Organizations.
1\leaday, Nov. 26

Monday, Nov. 2! ·.
POMEROY - Diabetes
and Ex.ercise. I p.m. at the
Meigs Senior ·Center.

Thesday, Nov. :26
SYRACUSE Meigs
County
Ministerial
Association Thanksgiving
service, 7:30 p.m. at the
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse. Speaker
will be Rev. Jim Brady of the
St. Paul's Lutheran Church.

Friday, Nov. 29
POMEROY - · Grace
Crow Eich will observe her
90th birthday. Cards may be'
sent to 162 Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

NOTICE

Federal Mogul- .47
.USB- 21.85
GanneH- 71 .07
General Eleclrtc- 26.80
GKNLY _ 3_55

HalleylleYidlon-o49.20
KlnaFI ~ .SI
~

Aoc:kweU - 20.80
Rocky Bools- 5.20
AD Shei - 43.21
Sears - 27.01
Wai-Mart- 53.82
Wendy's- 27.50

. . . , . . ':' . ,.,.,gtaoor ... "·~
1:.41t.-·11ft "•.• , ,, . ;............ NSC- 19.6!1
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak HUI F1nanclal - 21 quotas of lhe pr 8111ous
01/B20.51
days, transa•.
,..1ons, pro·
BBT _ 37
_97
Peoples - 23.78
vlded by Smith Partners
Pepsico- 41 .48
al Advesl Inc. .of
Premier - 7
Gallipolis.

'

- Paid notice

NEW YORK CAP) paid roughly $30 for each banks that lenuhem money."
Three men have been report. and the infonnation
Corney urged consumers·to
charged with allegedly run- was then passed on to al least pay closer attention to their
BIDWELL Robert
ning a high-tech scheme to 20 other people, who set out financial · statements a:nd
· Lee Ross, born Nov. 11,
steal credit infonnation from to make money from the credit hi stories and learn how
1932, left this life on
thousands of victims, a crime stolen infonnation, prosecu- to
protect
them selves
earth and joined his maker
CHESTER ~ · Howard
authorities said represented tors said.
through th e Federal Tracte
on Nov. 23, 2002.
Homer Knight, 96, of
"every American's worst
''The potential windfall Commissi'on's Web site. ·
Robert was the son of
Chester, died Saturday
financial nightmare multi- was probably far greater than
Corney said there was no
the late Homer and
morning , November 23,
plied lens of thousands of the content of a bank vault, reason to suspect a terrorism
Josephine Martin Ross.
2002, at Holzer Medical
times."
and they didn' t even need a connection , with simple
He was one of seven chil·
Center in Gallipolis .
Losses from the scam were getaway car. All they needed
.·
·· dren, with three brothers
He was born in Chester
put at $2.7 million and could was a phone and a computer, · greed the apparent mouve.
and three sisters. One
grow as more victims are or so they thought," said FBI . He said pro~ecutors were
on October 4, 1906, son of
brother and one sister prethe late Ernest ·and Ida
identified, U.S. Attorney Assistant birector Kevin P. sendfng lette~s to the mqre
ceded him in death, Larry
Shan)&lt; Knight.
James B. Corney said Donovan .
than 30,000 victims, offeri(lg
Allen Ross, and Dixie
He
graduated
from
·Monday. He warned conMore than 15 ,000 credit help.
.
.
Darlene Ross Henriksen.
Chester High School in . sumers to check their reports were stolen from
He said the investigatipn
Two brothers and two sis1925 and Ohio University . accounts for signs of tamper- Experian, a .credit hi story was. still in its early stag~s,
ters survive: Richard
in 1932, where he played
ing.
bureau, using passwords though prosecutors h~d
Stanlel Ross and wife
baseball for two years. He
Some victims .had their belonging to Ford · Motor "found the guys who opened
Jean o Bidwell, and Billy
was a teacher m Meigs
bank accounts drained, Credit Corp., officials said.
the fire hydrant of fraud ." :
Gene Ross and wife Judy
County for 41 rears, most
addresses changed, lines of
They said thousand s of
Cummings.
33,
pf
of
Delaware,
Ohio:
of wh1ch were m Pomeroy
credit opened and new credit other credit reports were Cartersville,
Ga.,
WIIS
Carolyn Sue and husband
as Junior High School
cards
issued
without stolen from companies· such · released on $500,000 bo!ld
John C. Barry of Bidwell,
principal and Athletic
approval. ''A lot of people as
Washington
Mutual after an appearance ;in
and Sharon Rose and husDirector.
were ruined fmancially and Finance Co. in Crossville, Manhattan federal collrt
band Bill Commons of
He was a veteran of
their credit was ruined," Tenn.; Dollar . Bank in Monday at which he did not
Hilliard, Ohio.
Corney said.
Cleveland; Sarah Bush
. d'
· World War II, serving in
On Jan. 13, 1951 he
the U.S. Army, and was a
Corney said credit infor- Lincoln Health Center in speak. His lawyer dec 1me, .to
married Anna Louise
member of the Drew
mation for some 30,&lt;XXJ peo- · Ulinois; the Personal Finance comment on the charges. : If
Mooney, who died on
Webster Post No . 39,
pie was stolen and authorities Co. in Frankfort, Ind.; the convicted, Cummings coljld
Sept. 28, 1972. They were
American
Legion,
are trying to detennine how Medical
Bureau
in get up to 30 years in prison
the parents of two daughPomeroy.
many of those individuals Clearwater, Fla.; Vintage for wire fraud and millions:in
ters: Leanna Sue, the wife
He was married Octo.ber
were victimized. .
Apartments in Houston; and fines.
of Donald Kingery of
28, 1928, to Eleanor
"With a few keystrokes, Community Bank of Chaska
In addition to Cummings,
Crown City, and Brenda
Hearing, who survives.
these men essentially ficked . in Chaska, Minn.
the FBI also charged Linus
Lou, the wife of Richard
They recently celebrated
the pockets of tens o thou-..
\J(;tims .havr. reported los- Baptiste . - and
Hak~m
Sydenstricker
from
their
64th
wedding
sands of Americans and, in · ' ing ntone.y .: from....tbeir bank. Mol\ammea.in ille 'fraud.' .
Southside, W.Va. Both of
anniversary.
the process, took their identi- accoun1s, seeing their credit
Baptiste allegedly downhis loving daughters sur-·
They had three children,
ties, stole their 1110ney and cards hit with ·un authorized loaded hundreds of credit
vive, along with six
- Paid notice Ralph Knight, who preswiped
their security," charges, and havin g their reports with . Cummings'
grandchildren,
three
ceded him in death, and is ·
comey sa1'd.
··
1·d ent111es
assume d. bY access passwords. Baptiste's
great-grandchildren, orie
survived by Carol Knight
Authorities
said
the strangers. ·
lawyer declined. to co11111lCnt
great-grandson deceased,
Armstron~
(Niel) · of
scheme began about three
Corney said · one sobbing on the case. Mohammed has
and four step great-grandCincinnall , Janet Knight
· t. t 1 h d prosecu- pleaded guilty to mail fraud :
years ago w hen Ph'J'
1 1p v1c 1m e ep one
children.
Pennell (John Michael,
curnmmgs,
·
a he 1p· d es k tors to say someone s1o1e her 'or making changes to indiMr! Ross married Etta
POMEROY - · David decease d) o f C o I urn b us,
k
"' 1 d
·d · ·
d
$35 000 ''
wor er
at
•e e ata 1 enllty, opene a
'
vidual credit accounts. • ·
Jean Hutchinson Fellure Russell, 75, of Pomeroy, and Charles H. Knight
Communications,
sold
passline
.
of
credit
and
cashed
a
In ·a company statement,
on March 24, 1973, and died Monday, November (sh aron ) o f Ch ester.
words and codes for down- check for $34,000.
she preceded him in death 25, 2002. at Holzer
Also preceding him in
loading consumer credit
"So that's now on her back, Teledata officials said they
on
March
I. 2002. Medical
Center
m death was his sister of 93
reports 10 an unidentified that $34,000," he said . "The had cooperated with 'the
Surviving are ' one step Gallipolis.
years , Nola Knight Will
person. Teledala, a software people that take the hit ulti- probe over the past eight
daughter, Kathy- Johnson
He was born September (Victor, deceased) .
. company, provides banks mately will be all of us , months and were "please~' to
Stump and her husband 26, 1927, in Wellston, son
He is ·atso survived by
with computerized access to although in the short term 11 learn that it has apparenlly
Greg, and one step grand- of the late George Earn his older brother, Earl
credit information databases. will be the companies that come to a successful' con~I~son.
Russell and Elizabeth Knight
(Kathryn,
Cummings was allegedly paid on the credit cards, the s1on. "
deceased) of Middleport ;
Mr. Ross was well Talbert Russell .
Molly
known throughout the .t riHe
was
formerly grandchildren,
· VanWagenen
county area. His work employed as a laborer and Knight
(Brodie)
of
New York
career included his associ- cab driver. He was a vetCity,
New
York,
Andrew.
ation with the V.N. eran of the U.S. · Navy,
H.
Knight
of
San
Holderman &amp; Sons, con- having served
during
Francisco, California, and .
tractors out of Columbus; World War II.
Williamson's Ford garage
Surviving are his wife, Grady B. Knight of Upper
person ·at the Ravenswood
on State St.; Waugh- Annette Romine Russell Arlington ; and his greatPublic Safe ty Building, 333
Piper
Rae
gr-anddaughter,
Halley-Wood
funeral of Pomeroy; his children,
·
MIDDLE~ORT
_ .. Virginia S,t., Ravenswo od,
home; The Gallipolis Zane (Patti) Russell of VanWagenen. ·
He
is
also
survived
by
·
'ddl
·
V
'll
The offt~e ts open
State Institute; Thaler Columbus , David Russell,
1 ~ge· W.Va.
M1
~~ort
from
9
a.m. to 6:30 p.m.,
his
brother-in-law,
Ford, Turnpike Ford, Clay
Russell, . . Star
Councils regular meetmg weekdays, and 9 a,m. to I
POMEROY - . Meigs
Barnett Ford, Pat Hill Russell, Angel Russell Richard Hearing (Ruth) of
postponed
Monday
p.m.
Saturday.
County
Board of Health will
was
.
Zanesville;
sisters-in-law,
Fo_rd, . and most recently and Sky Russell, all of
evenmg
to
3
p.m.
on
SBA
gives
eligible
applimeet
at 5 p.m. on
Jean
Hatch
Tn-C9unty Ford, where Pomeroy; four gr_a ndchil- Emma
Tuesday, Dec. 3, because a cants loans of up to Wednesday, Dec. 4 for its
he :was manag.er and f:rotn ' dren : and : four great- . (Marden) of Sun City, ·
Arizona,
and
Patricta
qur.,rum
was
del;
t $200,000 fot · uninsured regular meeting The date
w~1~h he retired due to ·g randchildren.
~
on.
ay
s
mbee
damages to homes has been chang.ed due to
..
esent
(Berwin;
fathng health . He was the
Besides her parents, he Ridenour
1 mem ers• physical
"'ounct
d
t
$40 000 for unin
·
mg
were
top sales person for t~e was preceded in death by deceased) of Greenfield,
•
·
· - . bookkeeping requirements
Stephen Houchins Bob an up 0
and
Barbara
Walder .
.
d L' d , H I
sured personal property of the Meigs County auditor.
Ford Motor Co~pa!ly ;n his brother, Paul Russell.
Rob mson
an
m a . a ey, damages . Loans of as much
··
(Robert)
of
Springfield;
the Southern Oh10 D1st~1ct
Graveside services will
Mayor
Sa!ldY
lannarelh,
and
as
$1.5
million
are
available
for three consecutive be held at 11. a.m. and numerous nieces and
Clerk Susie French.
for affected businesses.
years.
Wednesday, November 27, nephews .
Services will be 11 a.m.
The deadline to apply for ll
Mr. Ross lived in Ohio . 2002, at Russell Cemetery
ALFRED
Orange
physical
damage loan is Jim.
Wednesday,
November
27,
Township and Gallipolis in Trimble, with Harry ·
Township
Trustees
will
~eel
2002,
at
Ewing
Funeral
17,
2003,
and
for
an
eco.
his entire life. He was a Hill officiating.
at
7:30p.m.;
Monday.
at
the
MIDDLEPORT- Gallia- rtomic injury loan is Aug .
Master Mason for the . Friends may call 'ftbm 6 . Home in Pomeroy, with
home of the clerk, Osie
Meigs Community Action 18, 2003.
Morning Dawn Lodge #7, to
8
p.m.
Tuesday, Rev. Jane Beattie official·
rod.
Foil
Agency
offices
will
be
ing
.
Burial
will
follow
at
· and a member of the November· 26, 2002, at
closed
Thursday
and
Friday
Eastern Star. He had a Fisher Funeral Home in Chester Cemetery.
for Thanksgiving, and will
Friends may call at the
number
of · hobbies, Pomeroy.
reopen on Monday.
funeral
home
from
4
to
9
including collecting and
_Paid notice
POMEROY -,
Meigs
Tuesday,
November
p.m.
refur~i~hing antiques and
County Health Department
26, 2002.
.
growmg roses . He was a
will provide immunization s,
- Paid notice
member of the First
. including flu shots, if vacRACINE
Ra~ine
Church
of
God
on
MIDDLEPORT
cine remains, from 10 a.m. United Methodist Church
Garfield Ave .
Middleport . Volunteer Fire to noon and I to 3 p.m. wi'll
hold
its
annual
Robert Ross will be
Department
will
begin
testTl)esday.
Christmas
Bazaar
Saturday,
RUTLAND - Bernice
sadly missed by his famiing fire hydr~tnls at 6 p.m. · Child's shot records must Dec. -7. Craft spaces ' are
L.
Hoffman, 81, of
ly, particularly his daughlie provided , and c hildren available for $10.
.
Wednesday.
ters, and their families, Rutland, died Sunday,
must be accompanied by a
For rese rvations, call Lee
November 24, 2002, at
from
Page
A
1·
and his many friends.
·
parent
or,
le~al\gu
ardian
.
A
at
949-2454 or Alice at 949Marietta
·Memorial
Funeral services will be
$15
fee
apphes
to
flu
shots
'2286.
Food will be selived
in Marietta.
11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 26, · Hospital
unless
a
Medi
care
or
and
baked
. items will : be
Born May "I O, 1921, at Bloomingville with 12-foot
RAVENSWOOD , W.Va.
2002, at the Waugh - Silver Ridge in Meigs width restriction on remain-As a result of high winds Medicaid card is presented . available fors.ale.
funeral County, to the late Charlie . ing lane. Project will be comHal)l:y- Wood
·and stonn damage in West ~---~--------'-------..:._-,
home with Pastor Paul and Edith Christy Betzing, pleted December 15, 2002 .
Virginia on Nov. 10, the
Voss · officiating. Burial she was a retired school
State Route 356, Athens
U.S.
Small
Business
will follow in Swan Creek teacher and member of the County
Administration has issued a
Cem,etery.
United Methodist Church
Traffic down to one lane
disaster declaration and will
Calling hours were held of Rutland.
Reader Services
(usPs 213-sso) :
one-half mile north of
make · available long -term,
Monday at the funeral
correc.tion Policy
Ohio VaiJey Publishing ~She was alsp a member Mineral Bridge for bridge
low-income loans to resi- Our main concern in all stories is to be Pub!1shed every afternoon,
home .
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Local Briefs

Meet.•ng c·hange

Change
:meeting ., ··

Offer shots

Our Office will be closing at 1:00
p.m. on Wednesday, November
27th and will be closed
Thursday Novem~er 28th
for Thanksgiving. !
We will open Friday
at8:00 a.m.

Christmas
bazaar

Testing begins

Bernice L.
Hoffman

Travel

Have A Happy HolidayI

The Daily Sentinel

Loans available

The Daily Sentinel

For the Record
Answer calls
POMEROY · -· Mei~s
Emergency Services umts
answered the following
calls for assistance over
the weekend:
CENTRAL
Saturday, 1:2 1 a.m.,
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
Colddy Hubbard, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
10:06 a.m., Overbrook
. Center, Kathryn Hysell,
Pleasant VaHey Hosp1tal:
1:37 p.m., Rocksprings
Rehabihtation Center, Joe
Bailey, Holzer. Medical
Center;
8:58a.m. Sunday, Bailey
Run
Rd.,
Martha ·
Cunningham, Holzer.
POMEROY
7:03 p.m. Sunday, Dark
Hollow Rd., · Edward
Laudennilt, Holzer.
REEDSVll..LE
10:4 7 p.m. Saturday,
· O~io 124, Allen Barringer,
treated.

in Rutland.

To close

Other events

Birthdays

She was a 1943 graduate
of Wahama High School,
and was a member of New
Haven United Methodist
Church. She attended St.
Paul Lutheran Church in ·
Pomeroy.
Surviving are her sons
and
daughters-in-law,
Philip F. III and Susan
Burgess of Syracuse, and.
William
Edward
and
Joann Burgess of Logan;
grandson,
Kevin
and
Angela Burgess: stepgrandchil~ren, B~ian and
Ltsa Pohng, Mtke and
Brianna Cosgrove and
Brent Poling; step-greatgrandsons, Colton · and
Damon;
and
special
cousins, Winifred and
Fred Miller.
Besides her l?·a rents, she
was preceded m death by
her husband , Philip F.
Burgess Jr.; and a brother,
Lloyd Grimm.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, November 27,
2002,
at
FogelsongTucker Funeral Home in
Mason, West Virginia;
with Pastor Jim Brady·
officiating . Burial will
follow
at
Graham
Cemetery in New Haven,
West Virginia.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 9
p.m. Tuesday, November
26, 2002.

Trustees .meet .

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Friday, Nov. 29
Eastern Star, annual inspec- POMEROY
The
tion, 7:30 p.m. at the temple. Pomeroy Church of Christ
Worthy matron of Ohio to be will have .a public "second ·
installing officer. ·
chance" Thanksgiving dinner, 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the
church.

Church services

Robert Lee
Ross

Feds break up identitY-theft ring

{:,tt

AUG

Standard
&amp; Poor's
932.88

TUPPERS PLAINS - Thirty-nine
current and prospective hunters completed a 10-hour Ohio Hunter
Education Classes sponsored by
Eastern High SchooL
The class included instruction on
hunter ethics and laws, wildlife management, firearms and firearm safety,
bowhunting, wildlife identification,
game care and special safety concerns. Students then demonstrated
their knowledge by scoring 80 percent or higher on a 100-question

'

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Tuesday, November 26, 2002

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Lotteries

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e~ (Q:JOO'a \"bRT' W0R1'14~1Ni ·'nA•&amp;P' M-

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The Daily Sentinel

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O'F "'lUR tAtU&gt;tPATE

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'

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. MeAI'tS I'T~ WOR~ING
PRO?E~L"'f ·AAt:' YOU'P.

I

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'

Epstein named
Red Sox GM

""'JD \e cou~T~

~~/

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

,

Editor

Lerta1· to the editor are welcome. They should be le.u than
3()() words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and include address and telephone 11u1pber. No
unsigned_letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste. addressing issues, not personalirit&gt;s.
Th e opinions expressed in the column below are the consells/is of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,. editorial board,
unless othemise notfd.

.

real
Increase in snowmobile use in
public park imperils intent
• The (Toledo) Blade: Despite overwhelming public opposition, and a IS-year study warning of serious noise and air pollution, President Bush is throttling up a plan that will allow significantly more snowmobiles into Yellowstone National Park.
The administrations plan, which it cunningly calls a "compromise," would reverse the outright ban imposed by .Bill Clinton
for Yellowstone .and adjacent Grand Teton National Park, set to
begin during the winter of 2003-04.
Still to be finalized by the Interior Department, the plan would
allow fewer snowmobiles each day through Yellowstones popular west entrance, where rangers already wear respirators to
ward off engine exhaust.
·
· But critics point out that traffic would simply be shifted elsewhere in the park and the net effect would be a 35 percent
increase in the number of the machines in use.
Last winter, some 70,000 snowmobiles varoomed through
Yellowstones 2.2 million acres.
·
The ban had been supponed by a recommendation of the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and 80 percent of the public
·
who commented on the issue.
But one vote outweighed all the rest, that of the International
Snowmobile Manufacturers Association, which successfully
lobbied the administration for unlimited use in the two parks.
While we acknowledge that this priceless property cannot be
protected from every ·encroachment of man and machine, reasonable steps can be taken to reduce the threat. .
Banning snowmobiles is one of them.

TODAY IN. HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday. Nov. 26, the 330th day of 2002. There are ·
35 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 26, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt ordered
nationwide gasoline rationing, beginning Dec. I .
On this date:
In 1825, the first college socilll fraternity, Kappa Alpha, was
formed at Union College in Schenectady, N.Y.
In 1832. public street~ar service began in New York City.
.
The fare: 12 1/2 cents.
In 1940, the half-million Jews ofWarsaw, Poland, were
forced by the Nazis to live within a walled ghetto.
. In 1942, the motion picture "Casablanca," starring
Humphrey Bogan and Ingrid Bergman, had its world premiere at tile Hollywood Theater in New York.
In 1943, during World War II, the HMT Rohna, a British
transport ship carrying American soldiers, was hit by a
German missile off Algeria; 1, 138 men were killed, including
I ,015 American troops. ·
In 1949, India adopted a. constitution as a republic within
the British Commonwealth.
'
In 1950, China entered the Korean conflict, launching a
counteroffensive against soldiers from the United Nations, the
United States and South Korea.
. In 1965, France launched its lirst satellite, sending a 92pound capsule into orbit.
In 1986, President Reagan appointed a commission headed
by fo~mer Sen. John Tower to investigate his National
Security Council staff in the wake of the Iran-Contra affair.
In 1990, Japanese business giant Matsushita Electric
Industrial Company agreed to acquire MCA Inc. for $6.6 billion.
Ten years ago: The British governmenr announced that
Queen Elizabeth II had volunteered to start paying taxes on
, her person al income; and would take her children off the ptlb1 lie payrolL
.
: Five years ago: Under heavy international pressure, Iraqi
'.President Saddam Hussein said he would allow visits to presidential palaces where U.N. weapons expens suspected he
might be hiding chemical and biological weapons. In a small
but symbolic step, the United States and North Korea held
high -level discussions at the State Department for the lirst
time.
One year ago: President George W. Bush appealed to
Congress to outlaw human cloning after scientists in
Wor.cester, Mass., reported they had created the first cloned
human embryo. The National Bureau of Economic Research,
the recognized arbiter of when recessions begin and end in the
United States, declared that the country had entered a downturn the previous March.
Today ' s Birthdays: Singer Robert Goulet is 69 ,
Impressionist Rich Little is 64. Singer Tina Turner is 63.
Singer Jean Terrell is 58. Pop musician John McVie is 57.
Actress Jamie Rose is 43. Country singer Linda Davis is 40.
Blues singer-musician Bernard Alli son is 37. Country singermusician Steve Gri saffe (11~iver Road) ..is 37. Actor Peter
Fac inelli ("Fastlane") is 29. Actress Maia Campbell is 26.
Actress Jessica Bowman is 22. Singer Lil Fizz (B2K) is 17.
Thought for Today : "Freedom is always and exclusively
freedom for the one who thi,nks differently." - Attributed to
Rosa Luxemburg, German socialist leader (1870-1919).

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Gore should hesitate bifore turning left on health care ...
'

., · ,·
' .

Williams signs
with St. Louis

·' .

.

. '.

. ST. LOUIS (AP)- Woody
Williams became the first of
the 157 major league free
agents to re-sign with his
team, agreeing to a $14.9
million, two-year contract
with the St. Louis Cardinals.

.· .
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1

tories in Georgia, said Republicans
were helped by strong candidates who
were lirst elected to Congress in the
mid-1990s. Those GOP candidates are
getting better at offering a · positive
message that appeals to moderate
swing voters, he said.
Don Fowler, a former national chairman of the Democratic Party from
South Carolina, said Republicans have
an edge in the II states of the old
Confederacy, but in specific Southern
states Democrats remain quite competitiye.
In states like Georgia, Louisiana and
North Carolina, Democrats can muster
the support to win statewide more easily than in some other states, like
Alabama and South Carolina.
In Louisiana, Landrieu has one of the
storied names in state/olitics, a moderate voting record an some powerful
allies , but she's having to work to rally
strong support from black voters.
Republicans, trying to paint
Landrieu as too liberal for the state, are
throwmg the1r resources_behmd Terrell
and are hopmg Bush wtll rally voters
before the runoff. Republicans have 51
seats after the November elections,
even without a victory in Louisiana.
Landrieu, a freshman senator, won
46 percent of the vote Nov. 5, bu,tthree
Republicans combmed to get 51 percent of the vote in Louisiana's uniquq
open primary. While Landrieu had a
lead in a recent poll , Republicans are
c~nfident th~y c~n rally a majority
with the presidents help.
(Will Lester covers politics and
polling for The Associated Press.)

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MEXICO CITY (AP)
Cutbacks in venues, accreditations, technology and other
services are necessary to ·
keep the Olympics from
reaching the breaking point,
an IOC panel said.
On another issue, the
International
Olympic
Committee said legal experts
have cleared the way for a
vote to go ahead this week on
whether to cut baseball, softball and modem pentathlon
from the 2008 Beijing
Games.
•
The
International
Olympic Committee postponed a vote on expelling
Indonesian
member
Mohamad ·"Bob" Hasan, who
is serving a six-year prison
term for corruption. Hasan
has been suspended from the
IOC since May 200L
• A new structure for the
International
Olympic
Committee will help streamline the world sports body.
Under a proposal approved
by an executive board meeting, the IOC will create a new
post of Olympic games executive director in January. The
holder will help coordinate
links between the IOC and
the national organizing committees that run the games,
the IOC said.

Newsome first
black NFL GM
OWINGS MILLS, Md.
(AP) Ozzie Newsome
became the first black general manager in NFL history,
signing a new five-year contract with the Baltimore
Ravens that includes an
upgrade in his title.

Gruden:Sapp
not dirty player
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Tampa Bay coach Jo_n
Gruden said Warren Sapp 1s
not a dirty player and criti• cized Green Bay coach Mike
Sherman for initiating an
obscenity -laced argument
with the Buccaneers All-Pro
defensive tackle.
Green Bay Packers offensive tackle Chad Clifton
could be out for the season
after injuring his hlp when
Sapp hit him during an mterception return .
·
Sapp will not be fined for ·
the hit by the NFL: ·.

spread," Harris said. "I
thought the spread was
dead."
·
Harri s, who doesn't
always display his sense of
~umor at the weekly session s, drew more laughs
when he said:
" I appreCiate you thinking
I have some expertise about
the spread, to even talk
about it after last year."
West Virginia is enjoying
considerably more success
with the spread than Pitt did,
yet the Mountaineers are
doing it in an unconventional way,
The spread usual! y features four wide receivers
and is a• passing-heavy
offense - Hawaii throws
out of its spread about 85
percent of the time .- yet
West Virginia is No. 2
rushing
nationally . in
offense.
"They've been able to
spread people our and run
the ball and hit the home run
with the run," Harris said.
· Avon Coboume is sixth
among Division I rushers
with 135.36 yards per game,
and quarterb~ck Rasheed

Please iee Pitt. Pace 6

Marshall trounces
Kentucky State

IOC considers
cutbacks

.'

Democrats look.to Louisiana for post-election solace
Bv WILL LESTER
nerable GOP incumbents and trendy
· WASHINGTON
Democrats' Democratic issues with voter appeal ,
hopes of making a strong comeback in like lotteries.
the South after decades of declining . Democrats Jim Hodges of South
fortunes took a beating on Election Carolina ahd Don Siegelman of
Day.
Alabama followed the lead of one-time
The party lost incumbent governors Democratic Georgia Gov. Zell Miller,
in Alabama and South Carolina, not to who started a lottery witIf proceeds
mention an incumbent governor and going solely for education. Both
senator in Georgia.
Hodges and Siegelman won in states
Now they're closely watching the that lean strongly Republican.
Senate race in Louisiana, where
"Democrats have put a lot of eggs in
Democratic .incumbent Sen. Mary the lottery scholarship basket,I said
Landrieu is trying to stem the tide of Ralph Reed, state Republican chairlosses for Southern Democrats. A man in Georgia. "Every governor tried
runoff election between Landrieu and to make the election about the lottery
Repubiican Suzanne Haik Terrell is . and scholarships , but that idea ran out
being held Dec. 7.
of steam. "
" A December win in the South
Democrats had some encouragement
would certainly bolster the spirits of in the South this year, with the vic toDemocrats nationally," said Michael ries of challenger Mark Pryor as
Meehan, a senior adviser to the Arkansas senator and Bredesen as govDemocratic National Committee.
ernor of Tennessee.
.
The party 's national chairman, Terry
But the Nov. 5 defeats of Hodges, ,
McAuliffe, boasted earlier this year Siegelman and Georgia's Gov. Roy
that people could drive from the banks Barne_s . and . Sen. Max Cleland were .
of the Mississippi River to th7 ~anks of dtspmtmg tor Democrat~, who ~aw
the Chesapeake Bay while dnvmg only much of the progress they d made m a ·
through states with Democratic govcr-• tough.regJOn ·vamsh 111 one day.
nors Mississipp.i, Alabama ,
Mel'~ Black, an Emory University
Georgia, South Carolina, North · political scientist and co-author of
"The Ri se of Southern Republicans,"
Carolina and Virginia.
They can still do that, but their route said . the region r~mains competitive
will have to shift north through despile the Republicans ' good year.
Tennessee, which elected Democrat
"Each P,llriY is capable of havin g a
Phil Bredesen as governor this year.
good year," Black said. " But the
When Democrats won the governor- Republican s do have a tremendous
ships of Alabama and South Carolina a s s~ . in President George W. Bush ,
in 1998, it was less .a sign of the party 's who ts tncredtbly popular across the
resu"rgence in the South than a sign of South ."
unusual factors in those states - vulReed, a key figure in Republican vic-

· ·

. •.

WASHINGTON TODAY

PITTSBURGH (AP) At least for thi s week,
Pittsburgh coach
Walt
Harri s is an expert again on
the spread offense.
When West Virginia
coach Rich Rodri guez's
spread offen se came up for
discussion
Monday
at
Harri s· weekly press gathering, he drew laughs by
. recalling hi s own failed flir·
tation with that system a
year ago.
The Panthers were breaking in a new set of running
backs, so Harri s hoped a nohuddle spread would open
.up running lanes and create
gaps in the defense for quarterback David Priestley.
After a disastrous half'
season that saw the Panthers
. go 1-5 and Harris brietly
endanger hi s job status, they
went back to a more conventional, pro-style offense.
· They didn't lose again that
season, winning their tina!
six, and have since won 14
of 17.
"I knol'{ a lot of you
(reporters) are experts on
t~e spread because you critiqued us in the spread, so
I'm surprised you're even
asking me about the

HOUSWN (AP)- Houstori
Astros outfielder Richard
Hidalgo sustained muscle and
nerve damage when he was shot
in the left forearm during an
attempted
carjacking
in
Venezuela last week.
Houston doctors plan additional nerve and circulatory
tests and will monitor
Hidalgo for the next I0-to-14
days.

·,

:

BOSTON (AP) - The
Boston Red Sox made 28year-old Theo Epstein the
youngest general manager in
ba~eball history, ending a
· search since spring for a
· front-office leader by promoting one of their own.

Hidalgo shot
in carjacking

'
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are

For Pitt, the
spread is back

PITTSBURGH (AP)
The Pittsburgh Pirates tilled a
long-troublesome spot in
their lineup, acquiring first
baseman Randall Sim.on from
the Detroit Tigers for three
minor leaguers.

' '

Bv MoRTON KONDRACKE
Former aides who have talked to
As a result of the cuts, doctors are
As he considers what kind of "single Gore say that he has not settled on any · increasingly avoiding new Medicare
payer" national health system to advo- specific "single payer" national health patients and some are refusing to treat
cate, former Vice President AI Gore formula and that he wants one that will Medicare patients at all.
In a survey by the California Medical
ought to look at Medicare's impending achieve consensus among doctors and
doctor crisis and be warned.
other providers, employers and con- Association, 58 percent of doctors said
· Physicians
considering abandon- sumers.
that new cuts would lead them to not
ing Medicare patients in droves . That suggests to these aides that he take new patients and 20 percent said
because the federal government is does not have in mind a system like they would drop Medicare patients. , ,
about to cut their reimbursement rate Canada's or the U.S. Medicare system
The House last week passed a bill
again and Congress' seems unwilling to for · seniors. In both, government allowing the federal Centers for
do anything about it.
decides what services and procedures Medicare and Medicaid Services to
It's a warning of what could happen will be . covered and at what cost. cancel the new doctor cuts administraif the entire U.S. health system is gov- Private insurers are basically cut out.
tively withoui fear of lawsuits from
It would be good if Gore avoids the other providers - including hospitals,
emment-dominated - and, ultimately,
politicized.
Canada-Medicare model, but it would HMOs and tlursing homes- that want
Gore told a New York audience last be a disappointment to most advocates reimbursement increases.
·
week, "I think we've reached a point of single-payer plans, who claim that
However, the Senate Finance
where the entire health .care system is government programs are more effi- Committee is not likely to pass the
in impending crisis. I have reluctantly cient than the current private-insurance measure because key senators want
come to the conclusion that we should system that! covers most Americans.
other providers, especially rural health
But their view is disputed by critics, centers, to get payment increases.
·begin drafting a single-payer national
health insurance plan."
who point out that neither Canada's
There are comprehensive alternatives
Gore's use of the term "single payer" health system nor Medicare - but to government-run medicine, which
seems to signal that on yet another : almost all private insurers - cover pre- Gore ought to consider.
issue - like Iraq, corporate corruption scnpllon drugs, the basts of much of
One is the plan proposed in 2000 by
and, lately, terrorism - the Democrats' modem medicine,
his Democratic rival, former Sen. Bill
2000 presidential nominee intends to
Critical researchers also assert that Bradley (N.J.), allowing all Americans
run in 2004 by going to the left of the Canada's system has produced long to buy into the Federal Employees
rest of the field and oL his own prior waits for elective surgery, biopsies, vis- Health Benefits Program.
record.
•
its to specialists and magnetic resoBradley 's proposal provided a tax
After the 1991 Persian Gulf War, nance imaging -and increasing travel credit to enable lower-income persons
. h
d
Gore favored toppling Saddam to the United States for car_e.
In the May-June 2002 tssue of the to participate m t e ~EHB program an
Hussein. Now he does not favor it, at
least until after the war on terrorism is journal Health Affairs, researchers eliminated the state-managed Me4icaid
won.
reported that in surveys conducted in program - · a point over which . Gore
Yet, even though he considers terror- 1988 and 1990, 56 percent of savaged him in the 2000 campaign.
ism America's top security threat, he Canadians thought their health system
The FJ;:HB program is not really a
told National Public Radio this week needed "only minor changes."
"single payer," however. It negotiates
that the Bush administration is end anBut in 200 I, 59 percent said that it with private insurance companies to
gering basic U.S. liberties to fight it.
needed "fundamental changes" - a provide· federal workers with an array
And he's served notice that he's somewhat higher percentage than in the of reduced-premium private plans to
going to press forward with the pop- United States, where 51 percent called choose from.
ulist theme of his 2000 Democratic for basic change.
With variations, the late Sen. Paul
National Convention speech, in which . The current U.S. crisis in Medicare Wellstone (D-Minn.) advocated an
he depicted American politics in class- arises from a government underesti- FEHB plan and so do many "New
warfare terms .- "the people against mate of participation on HMO rro- Democrats" and some Republicans.
the powerful."
grams and a huge miscalculation o the
Some former Gore aides think he
Gore is right to say that the current money needed to reimb\lrse doctors.
might come up with such a plan, ~o.
health system is approaching crisis,
As a result, the government cut doc- · That would be good. If he insisted on
with the ranks of the uninsured sur- .tor reimbursements by SA percent last calling it "single payer," though, it
passing 41 million, costs rising at 15 year. Another 4.4 percent cut is sched- would be populist positioning.
· percent a year and higher, and workers uled for January. Over the pext three
(Morton Kondracke is executive edi·
mcreasingly forced to pay more of their years, doctors are due for a total cut of tor of Roll Call, the newspaper of
insurance premiums themselves.
12 percent.
Capitol Hill.) ·

College basketball

Pittsburgh
aquires Simon

•

NATIONAL VIEW

.

Duquesne beats W.Va., Page 6
Maul Invitational, Page 7

" ••
..

The Daily Sentinel
Thesday, November 26, 2002

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

·Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Inside:

Thesday, November 26,2002 -·:

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

BeHe Pearce
Managing Editor

PageA4 :::

Coppin State's Larry Tucker, left. shoots over Ohio State's Terence Dials, right, and Zach
Williams (33) during the first ha lf Monday in Columbus. The Buckeyes won, 58-51. (AP) .

osu.scrapes
by Coppin State.
COL UMBUS (AP) . Copp_in Stat e had Oh io St ate
on the nm - but ran out of
gas with th e fin ish line in
sight.
"We were in a positi on
where we thoug ht we had
the game where it needed to
be ," Eag les coac h Ron
"Fang" Mitchell said.
Instead, Emont e Jerni gan
and Matt Sylves ter made
bi g pl ays in th e clos in g
minutes as Ohio Stale held
on for a 58- 5'1 seaso n-opening win Monday ni ght.
" We had some turnovers
and breakdowns down the
stretch ," Mitchell said. " I
hate turno ve rs · and I can ' t
stand brea kdow ns, but I
have to be reali stic with ,il
young crew like I have: '
Short -handed Ohi o State
·was in troub le most of th e
ni ght but never tra iled by
more th an three points.
·Earli er in th e da y, Ohio
State learned th at starting
point guard Brandon FussCheath am (knee surge ry)
and backup forward Shun
Jenkins (broke n fin ger)
would be sidel i.ncu for three
to fiv e w~e k s.
The
Buckeyes
have
ga mes in the next three
weeks agains t Alabama.
Pittsburgh and Duke -··curre ntly rank ed 4 - 5 ~ 6 in the
country. ·
" Thi s is very good fo r
us,'' Ohio State coach Jim

0 ' Brien said · of th e close
calL "I wasn't saying that a
half an ho ur ago. But it's a
nice win for us. Maybe it 's
better than winning by 18 or
20 ."
Coppin State (0-3), which
had lost at No . 13
Marque tt e 64-46 and to
Idaho St ate 63-5 5 in it s fir st
two ga mes, led 49-48 on
Dan·on Bradley's 3-pointer
with 3: 48 left.
Jerni ga n tn\nsfer red to
Ohio St ate a year ag o after
pl ay ing one season at Santa
Ro sa Juni or Colle ge and the
2000-2 00 I
season
at
Oregon State.
He followed Bradley' s 3puinter with one of his own
fr om the left wing with 3:30
left to key a I 0-0 run by the
Buckeyes .
"We were just runnin g a
pass- and -c ut o ffen se and
lhc .zone gave me a c han ce,''
said Jerni ga n. a ba ckup
shootin g guard "'ho finished with eight points. "I
fe lt good about shooting
down th e stretch."
Arter the Eagles missed
tw o shot s in side, Zach
Willi ams llit a free throw to
ma ke ir 52-49.
Bre n( Darby, wh o led th e
Buckeyes with 18 point s,
then, stol e th e ball and
Jerni ga n thre w a 40-foot
pass to Sean Conno ll y for
an et.tsy la yup with I :44 left.
Ohio
State 's
Matt

Sylvester blocked Raheem
Scott 's layup and secon!l s
later fed Jerni gan with a
crosscourt pass for a backdoor layup that made it 5649.
Darby added two free
throw s to end the surge .
Connolly scored 12 point s
and Williams had II for
Ohio State .
Larry Tucker led Coppin
State with 20 points. but
scored just two in the second half.
"Zach was re ally focu sed
on him at the half and in the
huddles," O ' Brien said. "He
was very animated in regard
to, 'Tu cker' s not scoring .
Tucker 's n6t scoring.'"
Mit chell
said
th e
'Buckeyes - and Williams
- took Tucker out of the
game .
.
· "They found him," he
said . " It was just like in
football - you keep a spy
on him . Somebody 's alw ays

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Delk, who led the Wildcats
(AP) - Getting Ronald to the 1995-96 nationl\1
Blackshear the ball has championship.
become Marshall' s mission.
"He has that type of range.
Blackshear scored 23 He can shoot from anypoints to lead Marshall to a where," Bennett said.
112-78
victory
over
Marshall held Kentucky
Division II Kentucky State State without a field goal for
on Monday night.
nearly six minutes during a
Marshall (2-0) never 20' 5 second-half run.
"Our defense in the first
trailed. The Thundering
Herd led by 16 at halftime half was not as intense,"
and shot nearly 62 percent said Marshall . coach Greg
(40 of 67) from the floor for White. "In the second half I
the game. ·
thought it was really solid,
Blackshear hit 5-of-1 0 3- and I thought we were able
pointers and is averaging to get our break going and
27 .5 points so far this sea- get on a run ."
.
son.
Marshall led by as many
· "Jhey (Kentucky State) as 39 points in the second
.
·
were trying to deny me the half.
ball all night, but my team- · "We should have blown
mates did a good job of set- them out, and eventually we
ting screens for me," he did," White said. "But dursaiu \ "Coach gives me the ing the first half, we didn' t
green light, and when I get play as well as maybe we
an inch, I take it. "
should have ."
.' '
Kentucky State coach
The Thundering Herd
Winston Bennett, a former committed 23 turnovers but . I
'player and assistant coach outrebounded
Kentucky
under Rick Pitino at State 56-28.
.
"Coach had been empha- ..
Kentucky, said Blackshear
reminds him of former
Kentucky standout Tony Please see MarshalL Pace 6

,.

near."

The Eagles came in shooting 39 percent from the
field but hit 70 percent in
the fir st half to lead 30-27
be fore the Buckeye s · bewildered by a mat chup
zone - scored six points in
the final 23 second s for a
33-30 lead .
" We' re not down on o ur-1
selves/, Darby said . " A
close game earl y in the season can help you ."

.'

Marshall 's Ron ald Blacks hear (11) gets by Kentucky State's
Kenneth Fox for a basket during the first half Monday in
Huntington, W.Va . (AP)

•I

,.

�Tuesday, November 26; 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page A 6 o The Daily Sentinel

..
Tuesday, November 2&amp;;.~Q02

Steelers don't get Monday
off - but that doesn't
bother Jones and Reed
PmSBURGH (AP) -The
Pittsburgh Steelers dido 't get
Monday off, yet that hanlly
bothered linebacker Mike Jones
and kicker Jeff Reed. After all,
they were getting tired of days
off. .
. A couple of years ago. coach
Bill Cowher began giving his
players Mondays off When they
won the day before, not JUSt as a
rewanl for winning but to give
their bodies an extra day to rest.
But it wa5 a business-as-usual
workday at the Steelers' prac:
lice complex Monday, despite
the 29-21 victory Sunday over
Cincinnati that kept them atop
the AFC Nonh by one-half
game over Cleveland.
Maybe it was because
Cowher is growing tired of
watching his team constantly
blowing 17-pointleads at home.
Or because his defense .can't
seem to stop anyone on third
down, not even the Bengals (110). The Bengals convened 7of-15 against the NFL's worst
third-down defense.
Or maybe it was because it
was a win that felt like a loss. as
the Steelers (64-1) watched a
· 17-0 lead against a one7win
team evaporate into a 21-20
deficit that required a late rnlly
to overcome.
"It wasn't easy, but we won
the game," Cowher said.
And they likely wouldn 't
have won if it hadn't been for
Jones and Reed, who didn't
practice the previous Monday,
and not because of their own
choosing.
Jones, released by Oakland
three weeks ago, went from
being unemployed early last
week to calling the Steelers'

defensive signals in the second
half after linebacker John Fiala
(knee) was hun. Fiala started
only because linebacker James
Farrior was already out with an
injury.
.
"He (Jones) was thrown in
full-blast," Cowher said. "He
was calling all the third-down
defenses - and those were
Raiders defenses, which is why
they weren't working."
·
Cowher was joking, but Jones
wasn't. He sometimes mixed up
the Raiders' temrinology with
that of the Steelers, drnwing
blank stares and shoots of
protests from his teammates in
the huddle.
Still, Jones made a contribution by recovering a fumbled
punt that led to Reed's go-ahead ·
field goal with less than five
minutes remaining. Reed, a former University of Nonh
Carofina kicker, was 3-of-4 in
his NFL debut after outkicking
three others during an early
week tryout.
That was a turnaround from
the previous tw&lt;:&gt; weeks, when
Todd Peterson missed 4-of-6
attempts, including two in a 3434 tie with Atlanta on Nov. 10 in
which the Steelers also squandered a 17-point lead.
Reed drew loud cheers when
he made his first attempt, a 33yarder, mostly . because · the
home crowd has grown so
accustomed
to
watching
Steelers kickers miss at Heinz
Field. Kris Brown missed 14
attempts last season, the most
by any NFL kicker in I0 years,
and Peterson had a league-high
nine misses befoo; going on the
injureq reserve list with a broken rib.
·

That season, No. 9 West
Virginia blew a 3 1-9 lead in
the final I 0 1/2 minutes on its
home field as No. 10 Pitt ralfrom PageS
lied for a 31-31· tie that felt
Marshall, who once attended more like a Panther victory.
Saturday's game at Heinz
Pitt's summer cam~. is a
Field
will be the first time
threat while runnmg or
both teams go into the rivalry
throwing.
game
with eight victories.
Marshall is I Oth in the Big
For
decades,.
Pitt and West
East in rushing, fifth in passing efficiency and sixth in Virginia usually met at midseason, and the recent tradipassing and total offense.
"What makes it is. tough is tion of playing at season's
·they've got good football end began only five years
players and he (Rodriguez) ago.
. Harris said playing a team
knows what he's doing in
as
talented as West Virginia
calling it," Harris said.
"There are on! y a few things forces his players to get refoyou can do (defensively) cused and get over the disapbecause they spread you out. pointment of . their · oh-soHaving a quanerback who is close 28-21 loss at No. I
a threat to take it the distance Miami on Thursday.
"I thought our players didmakes them a difficult team
n't shy away from the bigto play against."
. The rivalry known as the ness ofthe game ... they went
Backyard Brawl often pro- blow for blow, stood toe-toduces intriguing games even toe with those guys, and I
when neither team is ranked. couldn't be more · proud of
This time, both teams are that," Harris said. "But we've
ranked going into their game got · to play better than we
- Pittsbur~h (8-3-1. 5-1 in showed. With the exception
Big Eas~) IS No. 17, West of Miami, West Virginia · is
Virginia (8-3. 5-l) is No. 24 probably playing better than
- for the first time since any other team in our
league."
1989.

Pitt

Marshall
from Page 5
sizing rebounding all week,
so we were getting after it,"
said Marshall's Marvin
Black. "We just annihilated
them on the boards. We came ·
out in the second half and
boxed out."
Oklahoma State transfer
David Anderson scored 16 of
his 19 points in the second
half in just 18 minutes of
action for Marshall. He made
6-of-7 shots, all · from inside
and including two dunks.
" I thought David Anderson
showed a lot of athleticism
tonight," White said. "He
really took the ball to the hole
strongly."
Black, a junior college
transfer, finished with 17

points. Wright had I 0 points
and I 0 assists and Ardo
Armpalu also scored 10.
Freshman Mark Patton had
12 rebounds.
Marlon Walls scored 19
points to lead Kentucky
State. Alwyn Curtis added 14
and Jason McGowan scored
13.
Kentucky State was held to
41 perce!ll shooting (29 of
71).
Marshall opened up a 13-6
lead after Black dunked a lob
pass from Monty Wright
three minutes into the game.
After Kentucky State ( 1-2)
scored the riext three points,
the Thundering Herd went on
a 23-9 run, highlighted by
two Ronnie Dawn 3-pointers,
to open up a 36-19 lead with
6:50 left in the first half.
Marshall next plays at
Rutgers on Dec. 2.

NBA

Suns take down Bucks
PHOENIX
(AP)
' - injured list Monday after said . "So I just try to bring it Milwaukee 5-for-20 in ¢e
Without Ray Allen , Anthony spraining his right ankle every night."
third quaner.
.
Mason and - for half the landing
on
Shaquille
Stoudemire said he's been
''The third quarter slowed ·
game ·- Tim Thomas, the O'Neal's foot in Sunday's bothered by a sore hip the down and both teams got
Milwaukee Bucks were ill- loss to the Lakers.
last c&lt;::mple_ of weeks, and that sloppy," Karl said. "It's
equipped to end their curse at
Mason was sidelined with expl.ams h1s re&lt;:ent strugg~es. tough 10 overcome that whim
Phoenix .
a left hamstring strain. A
"I m a wamor, so I JUSt
,
h · h d d
d
Rookie Amare Stoudemire third starter, Thomas, didn't have to come out and play.- you re s ..ort- an e an on
had his first NBA double- play in the . second half hard," he said. "Now that my the road.
doubJe with career highs of because of a sore back.
hip is kind of gettipg better,
15 points and 13 rebounds as
Sam Cassell scored 22 for my game is getting better."
the Phoenix Suns beat the the Bucks. Michael· Redd,
Redd's 3-pointer cut the
shan-handed Bucks 86-81 on staning in place of Allen, lead to 80-75 with 2 minutes
Monday night.
added 21 points and I I · remammg. Kevin Ollie's
Milwaukee fell to 0-10 at rebounds.
drive to the basket wasn't
At Philadelphia, Allen
America West Arena. In all,
"We were undermanned, even
close
under
the Bucks have lost 15 in a . but we've got to keep try- Stoudemire's defense, and Iverson had 2 9 points on 1'1·
row in Phoenix and 21 of 23 ing," Redd said. "Guys are Marion's breakaway layup of-20 shooting as the 76ers.
overall.
going to be out. lt's really made it 82-75 with 1:22 to avenged an earlier loss lO
"Defensively, you can't going to be ·a test for our play.
New Orlean s and extended
complain about our game," bench now to step up."
Penny Hardaway, who thefr home record to 8-0.
.Milwaukee coach George
The Suns took a 70-62lead scored seven of his nine
The· Hornets won a 99-98
Karl said, "but you know the on Marion's 3-pointer with points in the last 4:11, sealed buzzer-beater
in
New
third quarter kind of sapped 6:50 to play.
ll with an IS-footer that gave Orleans Nov. 19, the only
our confidence. Their ability
Stoudemire, a 6-foot-10, · Phoenix an 84-77 lead with loss for the 76ers in their last
·
to rebound the ball hurt us. 245-pound first-round draft 55.5 seconds to play. The
That's probably why we lost pick out of high school who Suns won despite shooting ei~~tA~a::~Culloch had
15
1 vu
the game, with offensive turned 20 on Nov. 16, shot 38 percent and missing 12 of
rebounds."
just 4-for-13 but was a force 28 free throws.
pojnts, Keith Van Horn and
Shawn Marion had 22 inside
throughout.
He
''That's what we're doing Aaron McKie 14 apiece, and
points and 15 rebounds. The grabbed his own miss, scored right now. We just have to Eric Snow had 12 points· and
Suns outre bounded the and was fouled for a three- . keep finding ways to pull 10 assists for Philadelphia.
Bucks 54-41, 16-.6 on the point play tl)at put Phoenix games out," coach Frank The 76ers last won eight
offensive boards.
up 73-64 with 5:38 left. He Johnson said. "It's gpver straight at home in 2000.
"We came out with ener- also had a spectacular block going to be easy for us."
Jamal Mashburn, who had
gy," Marion said.
,
of Marcus Haislip's dunk
The Suns outscored the
·
In the only other NBA .attempt in the final minute.
Bucks 14-10 in a cold'shoot- · a season-high 37 points &gt;in
·game, Philadelphia beat New ' "I guess that's what I bring ing third quarter to lead .6 1- the last game against ~~e
Orleans 108-87.
.
to the team - energy and 57 going into the fourth. 76ers, scored 18 but only two
Allen was placed on the physical play," Stoudemire Phoenix was 7-for-22 and in the second half.

76ers 108
Hornets 87

C9llege basketball

;

Duquesne slips.by WestVirg,ini~
PITTSBURGH (AP) - A Duquesne. He dunked off a
pattern is developing only Brad Midgley feed to make it
two games into Duquesne's 71-63, then converted a
season: The opposing coach three-point play with 3:58
keeps talking about how remaining to jump the
Dukes~ lead back to . 10
improved the Dukes are.
· Duquesne c,oach Danny points.
Nee sees that improvement,
"The guys tried to get me
too, but, he said, :·we ' re still the ball and I tried to finish,"
a work in progress."
Dokes said.
·
There
was
progress
Dokes is a one-time Ball
Monday night - and a-little State recruit who averaged
bit of a scare too - as the 12 points' last season at
Dukes relied on Ron Dokes' Lincoln Trail College in
inside scoring and physical . Illinois.
presence to hold off stubborn
"It was a monster night for
West Virginia 86-82.
· . him," Nee
said.
"He
. West Virginia coach John rebounded. He made free
Beilein had never heard of .throws. He was a dominating
Dokes, a junior college trans- player."
fer,
before
scouting
So was West Virginia's
Duquesne but said, "He can Drew Schifino, but in a difplay with anybody in . the ferent way, scoring 25 of his
. Atlantic 10 or the Big East." 33 points in the second half
Down the stretch, the as the Mountaineers cut what
Dukes (1-1) kept getting the was a 17-point Duquesne
ball inside to Dpkes, playing lead to two points in the closonly his second game for ing seconds. Most of the for-

mer Pittsburgh-area high Beilein said of the Duk-es.
school star's scoring came on who won only nine games
drives to the basket or pull- last season. "Danny has done
up jumpers.
·
a great job recruiting. They
"We staned playing a lot share the ball well, and they
better defense in the second were much too physical fur
half," Schifino said of West us. But we hung in there and
Virginia's rally.
· almost pulled one off." .
Elijah Palmer secured the · Jimmy Tric.co, a Gonzaga
Dukes' first victory by mak- transfer, added 14 points and
ing two foul shots with a sec- Palmer scored 13 points and
ond left after West Virginia had . eight rebounds for
scored five quick points on a Duquesne, which shot 53.8
Nick Patella layup and a long percent. Dokes made 8 of 11
3-pointer by freshman Kevin shots and was 13 of 18 from
Pittsnogle. Pittsnogle fin- the foul line, or one more fiee
ished with 19 points. .
throw than West Virgiilia
Before that, West Virginia attempted. ·
:
(1•1)- dressing only eight
Dokes was held to 8 poipts
scholarship
players
in in Duquesne's opener, an 82Beilein's first season - . 67loss to No.5 Pitt.
couldn't get any closer than
Duquesne, beating West
· five points despite Schifino's Virginia for the fourth time in
big half. Sch1fi'no is West their last five meetings, led
Virginia's only experienced 80-73 with 38 seconds left&lt;&gt;n
guard.
· two Midgley free throws
" You
can
see
how before the late Mountaineers
improved Duquesne is," flurry.

The Daily Sentinel o Page A 7.

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Jhree
ranked
teams
advance
in
Maui
Invitational
.::
...

~ LAHAINA,

Hawaii (AP) 37-20 halftime lead.
Indiana and Gonzaga almost met
Utah, which went 1-for-11 from
. last year in a championship game the free-throw line in the first half.
"In Alaska. They'll meet in a semifi- got to 44-33 on a basket by Richard
nal in Hawaii this year.
Chaney with 13:47 to play, but
',. No.
19
Indiana
beat Turiaf had seven free throws in a 9· ~~assachusetts 84-71 on Monday in 2 run that had the Bulldogs back in
·.' the opening round of the Maui control at 53-35 with 9:52 left.
~:-lnvitati0!1al, while the 20th-ranked
Turiaf, who had 23 poiots against
.Jlulldogs beat Utah 71-52 to set up Eastern Oregon last season, made
the g;ame that didn't happen last 15 free throws, one off the school
year m the Great Alaska Shootout. record which Frank Burgess did
"I guess Mike and I are following four times between 1959 and 1961 .
each other around in some nice .Turiaf finished 15-for-16 from the
places ," Gonzaga coach Mark Few line.
said, referring -to Hoosiers .coach
Bankhead had 10 points for
Mike· Davis. "We came close to Gonzaga, 33-for-43 from the free~ · ·playing last year, now I don't know throw line .
·
·
.if we should be happy we got it."
"As a team, we work very hard
,.. Marquette beat Indiana 50-49 in on our free throws every practice,"
)he semifinals in Anchorage last Turiaf said. "I wasn't looking to
: year and the Golden Eagles went score, I just wanted to play hard
·• on to beat Gonzaga for the title.
and with energy. I don't know how
. ''That :Indiana team I saw last I scored 24 points, it just hap,
•year got a lot better as the season pened."
Britton Johnsen led Utah, 5-for·, went on," Few said, referring to the
·r Hoosiers' march to the national 1.8 from the line, with 15 points.
· ~i'hampionship game where they The Utes had 21 turnovers.
"I don ' t know if the free throws
lost to Maryland. "This Indiana
.·~earn is clearly in March form."
were as bad for us as they way we
,:
The
other
Maui
Invitational
were
manhandled in the post and
1
.,.semifinal on Tuesday will have No. threw the ball away," Utah coach
;·ts Kentucky, an 82-65 winner over Rick Majerus said. "We have so
•1'!\.rizona State, against Virginia , many holes in the dike right now
·'·which beat host Chaminade 86, 72. and post awareness and taking care
;&lt;; In other games involving ranked of the ball have to be the most
teams Monday, it was: No . . 4 important."
;,,Alabama 80, Middle Tennessee
Majerus was impressed with
•1;State 65; No. 6 Duke 95, Davidson everyth ing about Gonzaga.
. , , ~0; No .. 10 Oregon 86, Cal State
"I know a Top Ten team when I
,. Northridge 77; No. 12 Connecticut see one," he said. "They are physi' 1i7, George Washington 55; and cal and deep ."
No. 23 Mississippi State 81, ·
_ McNeese State 65.
Ronny Turiaf scored a careerhigh 24 points in as many minutes
and Gonzaga (2-0) u·sed a 19-0 run ·
in the first .half to take control
Tom Coverdale scored 20 points
against the Utes (1-1).
and George Leach added career
· "i Utah led 8-4 when Gonzaga went highs of 19 points and 16 rebounds
gn the game-breaking run that· to lead the Hoosiers (1-0), who
~arted with a jumper by Scott were playing for the first time since .
Bankhead with 13:56 left in the that loss to Maryland in Atlanta.
Leach, a 6-foot-11 senior, was
first half and ended on a tip-in by
~ Zach Gourde that made it 23-8 with .dominant inside for Indiana as he
missed doubling his previous
' "1:05 left.
:·• ' Tim Drisdom hit a jumper with career high by just one point. His
\ '6:4 7 left in the half that ended second career double-double easily
., ·tJtah's scoreless drought that lasted outdid his first, when he had 10
·-8:47. The 6-foot-10 Turiaf then points and 10 rebounds last season
: ''s;:;ored Gonzaga's next seven against Miami.
"If he plays like that all year
points as the Bulldogs went on to a

Indiana 84
Massachusetts 71

f

.

~ ..

•,

.

we' II be a really good team."
Coverdale said of Leach, who averaged 2.8 points and 2.5 rebounds
last season. "If we get half the production from him we did today
we'll be really good."
"I saw that potential in George
when he got here. He has to stay
with
Raheim Lamb had 17 points and
12 rebounds . for Massachusetts (01).

Kentucky 82
Arizona St. 65 ··
Keith Bogans sccired 20 poi~ts
on 7-for-10 shooting from the field,
including 3-for-4 from 3-point
range, and had a team-leading
seven rebounds and four assists for
the · Wildcats (1-0), who opened a
20-point lead in the first half .
"1 wasn't putting everyt hing on
getting off tp a good start but I
came out and played a good game
like I want to every game," said
Bogans, whose scoring av.erage
dropped from 17.0 as a sophomore
to 11.6 last season.
Kentucky coach Tubby Smith
was expecting this kind of effort
.
from Bogi\!)S.
"We &lt;Were able to set the tempo
with Keith scoring in the first
half," he said. "It was one of
Keith's better all-around games.
He's an All-American. and we
expect him to do that every night."
Jamal Hill had 16 points, all but
four in the first half to lead Arizona
State (1-1), playing without lead ing returning scorer Curtis Millage
who is sitting out over academic
eligibility questions.

Alabama 80
Middle Tenn. St. 65
At Tuscaloosa. Ala., Erwin
Dudley had f7 points, 10 rebounds
and three blocked shots for the
Crimson Tide (3-0), who led by 22
points with 4:20 left before emptying the ·bench.
·
Mo Williams had 14 points and
five assists, while Kenny Walker
also scored 14 points. Emmett
Thomas sho.t 4-of-6 on 3-pointers

Coaches Aaron Griess, right, of Chaminade, M1ke Davis, right center. of
Indiana, Tubby Smith, left center, q,f Kentucky and Mike Few of Ganzaga
pose with custom surf boards followong a press conference "on Kaanapali
beach for the Maui Invitational Sunday in Lahaini , Hawaii. The tournament
began Monday with Chamiane playing Virginia , Arizona State facing
'Kentucky Massachusetts playing Indiana and Utah facing Gonzaga . (AP)
for 12 points off the bench as
Crimson Tide reserves accounted
for 27 point s. ·
The Crimson Tide were outrebounded 42-34 by the Blue Raiders
. (0-2).

NO • 6 Duke 95

Davidson 80

At Durham, N.C., Chris Duhon
matched his career high with 20
point~ and added I 0 assists as
Duke needed a strong finish to beat
Davidson for the 16th straight
time.
Duke (2-0) defeated Army by 48
points to » -art the season Saturday,
but struggled to put away the
defending Southern . Conference
champions in this one, turning the
ball over 21 times and shooting 40
percent in the second half.
Wayne Bernard had 21 of hi s
career-high 28 points in the opening half.
No. 10 Oregon 86, Cal State
Northridge 77
At Eugene, Ore., Luke Jackson

scored 23 points and Luke Ridnour
added 19 as Oregon won the John
Thompson Foundation Challenge .
Chris Davis' layup with 3:17 left
tied it at 73 for the Matadors (1 -2).
But the defending Pacific- 10
champion Ducks (2-0) answered
with a 5-0 run to go up 78-73,
capped by Ridnour's driving layup
and foul shot.

Connecticut 67
Geo. Washington 55
At Hartford , Conn. , Tony
Robertson scored 21 points and
center Emeka Okafor had 12
rebounds and eight blocks as
Connectic ut he ld off George
Washington.
The game pitted Jim · Calhoun,
UConn's w4nningest coach, against
his former assistant, Karl Hobbs,
now in his second year at George
Washington.
UConn (2-0) never trailed but
needed Robenson 's four 3-pointers
in the first half to stay ahead of the
hard-charging Colonials ( 1-0).

'
'

:.

0

-

'

'

Two OSU players out of action
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State starting point
Brandon
Fussguard
Cheatham
underwent
arthroscopic
surgery
Monday to repair a torn Jigament in his left knee and
will be out three to five
weeks.
Fuss-Cheatham, a sophomore · from Beaver Falls,
· Pa., hyperex tended the knee
in the first half of an ex hibi-

tion game Friday against
the Harlem Globetrotters.
After tests on Sunday indicated a partially tom meniscus, the smgery was perfo~med early Monday at
The Ohio State Medical
Center.
Coach Jim 0' Brien also
announced that junior for ward Shun Jenkin-s will
miss three to five weeks
after breaking his left little

finger in the 106-82 victory
over the Globetrotters. A
splint was placed on his finger. The injury will be evaluated Tuesdljy to determine
if surgery is needed.

Uneup .1:00 at Football field.

Parade kicks off at 2:00pm.
To register call Tony Dingess,
Parade Chairman at 992-7141.
After Thanksgiving at 992-2054

\--.....,.,,.......,

ANDTHESU

New! Improved!
Smaller! More convenient!

WILLIAMS
·'INSURANCE .
122 E. Main Street·
Pomeroy, OH 992-3985
or
I 005 E.. State St., Suite G .
Athens, OH 594·0660 :

jPomerov Merchants Christmas Parade

Sunday, December 1st

A MUST for your business!

0.

Judy Wllllomo
Owner

Jane Ann Wllllamo
Manager
Athens Office

Are your Investments seeing
RED? How does no risk on
' your principle and a
gusran!ef!d minimum interest
rate sound? Call or stop by.
We'll help with your
"Safe money" needs.

AUTO- HOJE • .
BUSINESS - Li~E •
IRA'S • HEALTH
An Independent
Agency representing
ERIE Insurance
Group.

ERIE•

SAYS...

I
!
I

'. "
.'

I

••

Pleasant Valley Hospital is planning for the future and needs your assistance!
Please complete a community survey by sharing your opinions, ideas, questions
and/or concerns regarding health care and our facility. Surveys can be picked-up in me
following locations : Main Lobby, Emergency Care Center, Wellness Center, Medical
Office Building or visit us at http://survcy.ccsd.b.edufpvh.
All of the surveys should be returned on or before Monday, December 2, 2002 .
Your involvement is truly appreciated and will assist us in better serving you- our patients.

PLEASANT

VALLEY
•
HOSPITAL

..•

Contact your advertising representative for more information!
(304) 675-1333- or (740) ·446-2342 or (740) 992-2155

'I
I

�. . ..,
Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

f

Tuesday, November 26, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!I:ribune- Sentinel C L A 5 5 I F I E. D

www.mydallysentlnel .com

ster

Help Wanted

0

Nursing and ·Rehabilitation Center
Registered Dietitian
Comparable salary

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

\!I:ribune ·

.To Place

Your Ad,

Sentinel

l\egister

AA/EOE

Monday thru Friday

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p. m
H O W IQ WRITE AN AD
Successfu I Ads
Should !ndude Th ese Items
To He.lp Get Response .. .

r"--------,J
I'ERIONAI.S

1110

I

Hu.PWAN'tHl

Display Ads

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monda y - Friday for In ser tion
I n Next; Day'S P ciper
Sunday In-Column : 1;00 p.m.
For S undays Pa p e r

All Display: 12 N oo n 2
Busine:ss D ays Pr-i or To
Publication
·
Su nday Display : 1 : 00 p.m.
Thursday f or S unday s

Pre-Christmas Sale
at

':}:~&gt;

r

~.13.10_
. ._. ..HJ.HRiiio~-cs-_.1 ~.r.10_
. ...:.::~~--_.J' ~..t,__,u_FO_:Ym.nNTS_RiiRENTrii i-·1

rI

Am1~ It:r
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141

;:;;;:======:::;

L--Oili.irliiilri-iriO'-,.J

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Ho•fES

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~---FiiOIIUNIIIiiill--,.J ~:~kson,
1

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1

I

we

r--·..;...·..,...·--.....

and Meigs coun-

Ant,

with. add-on and 3/4 acre lot
in Vinton. (740)388 -8804
·SELL BY THE END
Mus'r'
OF OCTOBER! COLE'S
MOBILE HOME, Athens ,
'Ohio {740) 592- 1972, on occasion we have a display
hO'me that doesn't sen. We
have ~n6e Xsu8cn hhome now.
New 1
0 I ree bedroom, 2 Bath .home at a
used· home pro'ce co me see·

-=~:-u-n"l·n':-g-:&amp; ~~f~r. w~l~ p~!~r, i~r~l~~:

1

2 bedroom mobile home in $350/Mo., 740·446-Q008:
M'd
$
1
dleport, 275 per month Ta ra . Townhouse Apartplus deposit, (740)992·3194 ments, Very SPacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
2 bedroo.'!l Mobil_e Home 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
near Holzer Hosp1tal $~0 Adul t Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pa~~~~~t~ _ ~~~0or ~g;~~ tio, Start $375/M~. No Pet~,
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit
2900
::::::::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ Required, Days: 740·446·
2 bedroqm tral'ler. Patriot 348t ·, Eveni'ngs·. 740-367)
·
0502 · - - - - - - area. (740 379-2540
:::;:::.:_
2 bedroom, all electric, AC,
very nice, In Gallipolis. Twin Rivers Tower for eld(740)446·2003 ·or (740) 446- erlyl disabled.
1409
Now accepting applications
.
.
.
for 1 br. all utilities pald
Beautiful Rtver Vtew Ideal HUD -assisted, carpeted
For 1 Or 2 .People, Referen- apartment. rent Is 30% of
oD
ces, ~pos1t, No rots, Fos- your adjusted income call
te r Trailer Park, 740-441 - 304 _675 _6679 between 8 _
0181.
4:30 pm weekdays.EHO

I

16

WE DELIVER!

19b86 ltJteerapns9h,
.sesroonkeere4bXu4.,1t•'
1 •
re Ul
'"
d
lront end, good body an ·
tire
. s, needs engine or re -

SM'ETlilfE AND ·

built. $800. {740)445•7928 .

1987 Chev-y Van, mechanich
owned Lu)Cury Van (wit
work) or work van, St20P
firm . Kelty 17401446.9961 :

[150 BoATS &amp; M&lt;JfORS
FOR SAIJ:

1.

SHOP TilE

CUSSIFIEDS!

I

Office of
Commlnloners ol
Jurors, Meigs
Counly, Ohio
November 191h, 2002
To

All Whom

I! May

Concern:
On Wednesday, the
4th day ol December,
· 2002, al 8:30 o'clock,
a.m., al the office of
the CommlSIIoners
of Jurors of Meigs
Counly, Ohio, Jurors
will be publicly dr&amp;l'fn
.lor the January, 2003,
Term of lhe Common
Plea• Court of said
Counly.
,. · .
This
drawing
lor the January, 2003,
lerm will be held at
the Meigs County
Board of Electlons
localed al 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

I"Y

Janice Young,
Chrlstoper T. Wolle,
Commissioners of
Jurors

Nurse Aides,
Personal Care Aides
and State Tesled
Nurse Aids
Pleasani
Valley
Home Heallh is
accepting

applica-

tions for home care
cases to· provide care
to clients who reside
in

Mason,

Gallia

Meigs

Counti es and

Jackson County, WV.

• Competitive rate
• Flexible scheduling

• Mileage
reimbursement
• Health insurance
• Iricentive plan
Please call

Tia Wooten for more
information or to
interview at
304·675·7400 or
1-SIJO. 746-0076.

(11) 26,2002

Morning Slar Road - CR

30 • Racine,

Ohio

1-740.949-2115

61B50N

«iR4PniC5
J-IOUDAY

Dean Hill

New&amp;: Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Bu ~ irw ~~ C ~ td~

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #I

Ask uJ nbout our
Stn'iC't Pfaru.'

1n1 JIU laid orr.a
IIIIIIr flEE IIIII
1111111Jacktl

werk

fGIIIIl

Self-Storage.

11111111111 Clll

IIIIHIIIIIS
CIIIIIIIAIIJ AcDin

Firewood
for Sale

NOW! Burns FAT!
BLOCKS Cravings!
' BOOST Energy!

740-992-5232

•

Racine. Ohio 45111

(1 O'x10' 61O'x20')

Sto~s • Fl.ll Work

Li gh t 11

Installation.

~

O.e coraung.
Free Es Umates
II
I
••
nsured .
~~ (740) 949- 1701
~~

~

tl
~

H

~~
••

...................................~-II

i...i..&amp;.&amp;.&amp;.&amp;..&amp;..&amp;.&amp; ......&amp;.&amp;.&amp;.&amp;4

LongabcrgerlDresdcrl
Bus Trip

Sat. November 30, 2002
$65 .00- Space Limit ed
Deadline : Oct ..20, 2002
Everyone receives a
b~ke t !!! Call:
Stai7-

• Footers. W;-1lls.

Replnccrncnt s.
• W&lt;1lks and Dmros •
Slcnc1l Crclo

Fn}o Estl!lli.lt•• s TFN

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

MillS
FAMILY

B.D.COOS{RUtTIOO

CONSTRUCTION
Foo ters, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete,
. ElcctAc,PiuRtbing

992-297

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TFN

hiJWNIIIrt Wort fncluJtd

740.a92·7998

'::G-ru-:b"'b-:-.,-:P::-I.a_n_o_
·

CONTRACTORS, INC. ~

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Recommended

'tonday-Frlday 8·5PM •.Saturday 8-2pm
~~ Chrtstmas

740-985·3948
CONCRETE
BLOCK /BRICK

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

(740) 446·1044
;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;•

P/B

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Building over 30 years

producl TODAY
Call : Jeanie

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Pomeroy, Ohio

All NaturaVDoctor
Get this AWESOME

lOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

33795 Hiland Rd.

AIIIIICI
.
740.992-2222 or
7 41&gt;-446-1018

LOSE WEIGHT

-

Dealer"

&amp; Gravely
~~~ uh CadeC
Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service
High&amp; Dry

Yll c•lll 111111111-

JUST launched!!!

L,-riiMPRiiiliiiiOriVEMENTSIOi::;-~

Pontiac, Buick. Olds

C h evy,

&amp;

740.992-6142
1

I

iliJ ··

(740) 446-1812

Dump Truck
Delivery Call &amp;
Leave message

HOME

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Gooa Selection of Shrubs

· Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 40IK Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
..,_

011

~n9am- 5pm

free ctltm.ota, lrcc ·~hom: l"'kup
Clll l 111 r~ kll )'0'.11" Wfr1lltla n~

FIREWOOD

L _ _;,;A~C~CESSOIUE!i=;:;;;:;;;o,..,l
...,
)
1986/0ldsmobile/C utlasd
Supreme lor parts. 2/door4
Good tl' res $tOO.·OO
Pinnacle 1/2 HPC Recov•
ery/Unitita!'lk. Used 1 time:
Paid$2300.will take $500.00
742·3045
·•
-..,J It\ U I ...,

iiii:;:;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Grave Blankets $5.00~$25.00
Wreaths $10 Er ""
Silk Poinsettias 94¢ ea
Swags $5.00 Er up

~P~CIAL
~ave 10%

BALL
LOGGING &amp;

'
•
1994 Javelin 379T bass
bo
·h
~
at wtt
150 Johnso
Depth Finder. Many extra
$9000. /740\441 -0381
,
60 Auro PAinS &amp;

10 ·

Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Slillng, and
Additions
Owner:
Terry Lamm
(740) 992-0739

Quality, Variety, Low Prices

arrange a personal

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

Unconditional lifetime guar•
1•
antee. Local references furl
Repairs. Problems? Need AM/FM / Cassette-. 4 new nished. Established 1975:
FOUND
Woodland Centers. Inc., is a
subject to the Federal
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr. tires, 42,500 miles with ex· CaW 24 Hrs. (7401 446 ,
White Dog Terrier type.
1
not-fo r-porlit private Com- FalrHou•lngAt:tof 968
740-446-4525
tended warranty to 100,0()0
0 A
Ordnance School area
munity mental health center whlchmaknltlltegalto
:-'--"-=::=..-::---- mites. E)(Cellent condition, w;e~pro:rrn~.s Basement
1304)675·5929
serving Gallia, Jackson, and
ad11ertlse "any
Heirloo m Baby Breelan doll going to college, mUst settl
Meigs Coun ties in Ohio. preferenee, llmltatlonor
blond hair and original $10,000. (740)441-9865 af.: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Competi tive salaries and discrimination based on
clothes on. $50. (304)895· ter 5pm.
C&amp;C General Home Mainte;
benefits package including
race, ~:olor, religion, sex
3577 (304)675-~968
2000 PontiacGrand AM/ GT nence- .Painting, vinyl aid•
·ong · earpentry doors w1'n'
Paid vacat1on and sick time·, lamlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
Jacqueline's .. llvln' Colla" Automatic V-6, 4 door Hunt•
'
'
•
13 paid holidays. retirement
Presenting Apple Valley
IG
L d d G00d dows, baths, mobile homB
Absolute Top Dollar· u S plan, health, life and disabilmake any such
·
Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made er reen
oa e '
repair and more. For lree
Silver, Gold Coins, Proal- ity insurance offered. Pcisipreference, llmlllllon or
Lynn or Ern ie to day and
babies &amp; toddlers for that Co~~itioil, on e owner. 992- estimate call Chet, 740 _9921
sets.
Diamonds,
Gold tion must maintao·n val 'od
dlacrlmlnallon."
check out your savings .
. .:.~-"-------- 6323
•
·
•
specia l someone, or make - P . G nd A
Rings,
U.S. Currency, - driver's license as defined
Remembe r, we must sell by
.d
9
1
4
·
Thl
·
the
en
d
of
October!
you.r
own,
your
wayl
Many'
onllac
ra
m,
c,.l840
u
.....
~
•••
1
M.T.S Com Shop, 151 SecA
1
:nn:;;~:~::~:~~t"ot
laces, eye colors, hair color 5 sp, aJc, new tires, high
~'E....n&lt;;·:n/UJON.
ond Avenue, Gallipolis. 740- ~~rri~;n~ '!a !~et~~~~ra~~~
Must Sell Immediately! 3
&amp; styles, skin tones, and ~m:;;il::e::s·..:l7:_4::0"')7:_4::2:.:·2::5::58:___ ,
au..rN'lJ Alt.
•
446-2842.
sumes to Sherry Gordon,
adllertlsemetits farrell
yea r old 1999 Oakwood
body styles to choo se from.
Manager
ol
Human
Re
sour·
esta
te
which
lsln
Cl
th.
1
·1
b
92
Olds
Bravada,
4.34
Tech
l. \ 11'1.0\ \II'."
ces, Woodland Centers,
16x80 , 3 bedrooms, 2
a mg a so ava1 a le. Motor, leather in terior, roa·d. · R~~i dential or commercia)
SI· R\ I&lt; 'I•S
Inc., 3086 State Route 160 , vtorl=~~e~:.:~:eh~,:b~ur
bath s, LA. Kitchen (applianCompare to Middleto.n and ed new tires all wheel wtnng, .new service or re:
ces Incl uded), laundry room.
My Twinn Cuddly Babies
Ga lll·polis. Ohio 45631..
1n1ormed that 111
$3200
080. pairs. Master· licensed elec·
·
Se rious lnqu_
ires only! !! Call
Call for r:nore information. driVe,
(740)441-9317
trlclan. Ridenour Electrical;
EOEIAA
Employer:
dwellings
advertised
In
afte
r
p,
(
.
or
Mobile
Home
Broad
Run
unfurn
ished
apartment,
also
(740}446-8640
7347
7
3041675
IIEU'WAN'rm
WV000306, 304·675-1786. ,
McClure 's Restauran t now
thla newspaper are
!304)675 -6908
Rd. 3-bedroom, newly re- small trailer close to 9rocery
JET
94 Corvette Coupe, white
avall1ble on an equal
modeled. $400. Deposit, &amp; downtown Gallipolis. Reth. . 811 3 1 t.
1 11
with red leather, LT1 -motor, . . - - - - - - - - - .
Iring
oca Ions , u or
opportunity bases.
Must selll Owner moved, $300. Month. No Pets, No
AERATION MOTORS
APpl ications w111 be taken part-time, pick up applica- L...;:::;:;:.::::;::l:..::;::::;;,;_.J 2001 Oakwood 14x70, 3BR , small children. Reference ~;~~ce &amp; Deposit. ( 740 ) 446 ~ Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In auto, loaded, CD/ AWFM
for part- time clerk, part-ti me
. glass
top,
lion at location &amp; bring back
2 bath, all · appliances, Required. (304)882-2774
- ' - - - - - - - - - - Stock . .Call Ron Evans, !- cassette,
n!lgistered nurse, and full- bet ween
9.30am
&amp;
$11,500,
(740)682-7512
washer &amp; dryer included,
Delu)(e, 1 BR Town House, 800 -537·9528.
t[me registered nurse at the 1D:OOam, Monday thru Satcentra l air with deck, Make Mobile home lor rent, no near HoiZI!tr, CIA, Eeonoml97 Avenger ES, $3495: 96
· Ma son County Health Deurday.
HOMES
down payment &amp; take over pets, (7 40)992·5858
cal gas heat, WID hookup,
partment Please send reLi ke new chair, $ 300 _00 Stratus, $2 695; 95 Grand
FOR SALE
. $370 month mortage pay- Near Clay School, nice, $359.00
plus
utilities
Prix, $2695; 92 Grand Am,
sume to 216 5th S.treet. Needed- a personal care
(740)367·0660
$1895; 92 Firebird $2495;.
ments. (216 )351-7086
clean 2 bedroom, $350 a (740)446 -2957
assistant fo r elderly woman
Attn: Diana Riddle ·
in my home. references re- 59,000 Foreclosure! 3 BA New 14x70 3 brl2bth. Only' month plus d8po~it, water Furnished 3 rooms + bath, NEW AND USED STEEL 91 Camrl, $2695; 91 Escort,
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or q'uired, (740 )985· 4281
home, won't last! For listing $999 down an\~ only . and
tra sh
mcluded . upstairs, c!ean, no pets. Steel Beam~. Pipe Rebar $1450 ; 90 Escort, $995; 88
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- ·Nursmg Assi slant Classes, cal! 1-800-719-3001 Ext. $197.71 per mon1h . Call (740)256· 1664
Reference &amp; deposit re- For Concrete, Angle, Chan- Cavalier Z·24, $1695; 87
net, Flat Bar, Steel Grating Cellca GT, $1895. Rome
~75-1429 .
evening hours. beginning F144
Karena (740)385-7671
Trailer for rent, 2 bedroom, quired . (740)446-1 519
For Drains, Driveways &amp; Auto Sales, Proctorville,
2
2002
COL Drivers wanted- O.T.R. December ·
1'1 you 1.5 acres with hou se &amp; Nice lots available tor up to 24 X32
garage,
$27 5,
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met· OH. Over 35 cars &amp; trucks
flatbeds- 90% lumber/ some enJOY elderly people and barn . 3br. 2ba, 2 car garage 16)(80 mobile homes, S11 5 (740)992-0638 evenings.
,
SPACE
als Open Monday, Tuesday, to choose from. (740)886tarping. East Coast (no New want to become a member
1 · I d d (740)992
n~Wednesday &amp; Friday, earn- ~1::34::3:__ _ _~--Yor k) Must have good of our health care team. can f3~)g~~:3~3~:,895-3909 or ;,a6;r InC u e '
AFOPAR~
FORJ.U..l'll
4:30pm. Closed Thursday, MUST SELLI
MVA. HOME WEEKENOSI! Judy Hart, Instructor at
IU.l'j 1
•
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. 1987 Plymouth Relia nt
4
42
Call (888)398-5220 Jack- (7 0J 7 -2370 or stop by 1400 square ft. home, 3 1340
B USINESS
Trailer space for rent. $125
(740)446-7300
$50000 cas h has 134,000
and
bedroom
apart
Rocksprings Rehabilitation bedroom. 2 lull bath, 2 ca r
r\ND BunnlNGS
pe.r
~onth
:
plus
depo
sit.
son, OH
1
2
Center and till out an appli- garage, 1 acre lot in coun- •
. ments. furnished and unfur· Pne st s Trailer Park. Water New Woodmaster 18~ pia· actual miles lor more info.
Drumrner wanted for coun cation tor the classes. Ex- 1 A ·
· $
·
1
ner molder, 4 year warranty call 992-2230 or 992·1 195
try and rOCk banO. Playin~ te ndicare Health Services, ry, acme, asking BO,OOO Large Commercial Retail ni~hed. security deposit re left, dust collector $2700. Leave Name &amp; Number will ·
.muslc
. I rom Clint
. B l ac~ to Inc. IS
. an equal opportunity OBO, (740)949-1353
Offl'ce or Bul'ldo·ng on •, to 5 qul red , no pets, 740·992080 can be seen at Pt. ,c;;;a;;,ll.:;ba.:;Ck:;;;.
. _______,
2216
Creed, Po1son. etc. Call employer that encourages 2 Bedroom, 1 112 Bath , 'acres for sale, rent or lease.
r,::;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pleasant Hardware for more
·
(740)379-9290 or (740)379- workpla ce ctiversit~. M/F Clean, Racine 949-2517
Some own~ r linancing avai l- 1 bedroom apartment, stove
HOUSEHOU&gt;
infO call 304-675-8958
TRUCKS
2356
ON
able. In R1o Grande . area. &amp; refrigerator included utili!3 Bedroom newly remod· 740)245·5747
ies included. (7ol0)245:5859
Waterline Special: 314
Financial Freedom. InterOWNER OPERATORS
eled, in Middleport, ca ll Tom
350
Beds.
couch,
coffee
end
IaPS!
$21 ·00 Per 100 ; ,. 200
nationaL .Company growing ·
WANTED·
· Anderson after 5 p.m
Lors&amp;
1 Bedroo m . Apartments
.
PSI $35.00 Per 100: All 1980 F-150 Halffron truck,
rapidly. Internet work from
TRUCK DRIVERS
992:3348
Starting at $289/mo, Wash - bles, dresser, hid abed, ml- Brass, Compression Fittings V-8 302 engine, automatic,
ACREA~E
runs good • some rus t
nome. PTIFT positions. Full Longhaut Teams Welcome.
erf · Dryer Hookup, Stove crowave.· recliner.· drop leaf In s lock.
training . 1-888,202·632 1
Call (304)675-4005
3 bedroom, Garfield Ave·
.
table. (740)446-9742
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- $995.00 (740) 992-0916
d
R
I
1
17401441
e rtgera or.
Point Service XPress
nue, Gallipolis, OH. Owner 112 acre lot on Tycoo n Lake an
19:.:·- - - - - - - For Sale: Reconditioned ES Jackson, Ohio, 1"800 · 1983 DOdge 4x4, $1200 neFoster Parents
financing, $49,000 $4,000 w/12x60Trailer$ 16,500.00
c1.::5.:.
7 9::52::8 ' - - -- - - ,gotiable, (740)388-9117
Local Agency in Ohio seek- Seeking energetic candi- down,
$365
month now .$13,500.00
2 bedroom apartment in washers, dryers and refrig- o5::3':·::
ing qualitied couples to be· dates to train as dental as· (304)988-0664
(740) 247-1100
Gallipolis. Air washer, &amp; dry- erators. Thompsons Appli- Wheel Chair with Wheele
come Foster parents in slstan ts, computer experl- ,;:::.:.c:::::.:::::;:::_~--­
.
er hook-up, no pets, water ance. 3407 Jackso n Ave· B8rs asking $80. Beside the 1983 Freight Unef c3b over
Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson, ence preferred. Interested Brick Ranch House on RT 2 Pa tnot area , 20 wooded pai d, 5350,tmo. plus deposit. nue, (304) 675-738~.
bed chair asking 3o. Both 350 Cummings , 13spd in
Meigs areas. There will be persons send resume 10 PO N. 3br 2ba. 1 car Attached a~res, coun ty water &amp; elec- Call after 6pm, (7401446 _
in E)(cellent Condition. grea t shape, too many new
5 to 10 tamihes chosen to Bo)( 704 , Pomeroy, Ofi garage, 16x32 lnground tnc,
hom.esite. Borders 4043 (7401339_3063
Good Us~ppliances, Re - ( 304 ) 895 _ 3 ~ 77 ( 304 )675 _ parts \o mention. Must sell
beco me part ot the pitot 45769
pool. On 0 46 acres. Wayne Nattonal Forrest. ex- -'--'-'-=:.:.:.:.c:..__ co nditio ned anct Guaran- 6968
due to health Spent over
protect. Qualified applicants - - - - - - - - - (304)675-8051
cel lent hunting, $38,000 4 rooms and bath, stoveJ re - teed. Washe rs, Dryer s,
$1 3,000. ask ing $5800
ma~ rece1ve ·up !O $40.00 Truck Drivers. Immediate
(7401379·9141
trigerator. Utilities paid, Ranges, and Refrigerators,
BUilDING
(740)388-9325
.
class
A
COL
req
·
ed
Bric.k
Ranch,
2
be
drOom
.
2
per day reimDursen'lent. In- hIre,
u1r ,
.
$400 month. 46 Olive Some start at $95. Skaggs
S
teresred
parties
Call . excellent pay, experience bath , garage, on river. 5
REAWI:~-~~TE
Street (7. 40)446.·3945
Appliances, 76 Vine St., ~---UPPL-IiiiiESiiii-_.1 1988 Ford F-150 p·up, good
~ H I!.JJ'
(740)446-7398
shape, VB, runs good, call
(740,709-9062 11 you haVe required. Earn up to miles south of Gallipolis.
(740)441-8817
t...---iiiiiriiiiiio-.,.1 Applications be1ng taken for "--'"-'-"-;_;:;:.:__ _ _ _ Block, brick, sewer pipes, (740)985·3372 evenings.
prev1ously called. please $ •'• 000 per wee k .c a11304 - :_.:_:___.:_=c..---Cl
very nice 2 bedroom in Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark . d
.
.
1. t 1
caII aga 1n
~67:.:5::·_400=5'-----Wt ll pay top dollar for prtme cou ntry setting yet close to Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio. ~t ,ows, ~ e ~ etcd a~e 1996 GMC Extended Cab
1
ers, 10 ran e, H V-8. au tomatic, air, lilt,
NEEDED - Foreclosed SW on 2 acre land . New home· builder. town. washer, Dryer, Stove, (740) 446-7444 1-877·830- C ~1740
Help wanted ca ring lor the URGENTLY
Frig, Dishwasher provided. 9162. Free Estimates, Easy a
"245 "5121 ·
cruise, remote control start
elderly, Darst Group Home, plasma donors, earn $50 to tract, $500 down to qualified (740)446-3093
financing.
90
days
same
as
,,:a:n........
Excellent Condltl'on. $9.250.
now paying m1nimum wage, 560 per week for 2 or 3 buyers. Call (740)446-3570
Large
Kitchen
.
Lots
ol
clos·
.
·
cl!.l~
.
IU ~ l\l S
new sh 11ts. 7am-3pm, 7am- hours weekly. Call Bio Life for a quick sale.
~==~====~ et space. Total ·electric with cash. Visa/ Master Card.
FOR SALE
(304)675·7946
Central AJC. Garbage pick- Drive- a-little save alot.
~3o
VANS &amp;
5pm. 3pm-11pm 11pm - Pla sma Service, 740-592- Land llom~ packages No
up and wa ter provided Ten- RCA 27in Console TV with
7am . ca ll 740·992-5023
·;;,
66;,;5;.;'- - - - - - - . , payments while under con- ~10
J·Ious•·•
4-WDs
· No pe ts remote : Dark Maple desk. 4 AKC Registe,ed Beagle
IA:J
an t pays e1~c 1nc.
8\ ISINE.S,,
struction · Little
or no ' · •
.
pups. 1Owks old. Mother
Jo1n th e team ot quality care 140
Non smokers only $400 de· drawers. and chair: BurganFOR RENT
d 1 th
pay
ment
·.
,
J~quired
.
down
p10 fess1ona1s at Overbook
L.,---oiiiiiriiiiiir;.,-..1 pos1·t ,
5450
a er ..,on
property.
man th . dy rocker! recliner.·All in e)(- an
(740)446 -3218
TRAINING
1993 Ford Aerosta r Van .
(740)3 88 -87.::1
Cen ter We are taking ap 1740)446
9585
1740
44
6
1
-3 Bedrooms Fo,eclosed
or
• cellent condi tion . (740)388pltcahons for a lull t1me
2205. 1743
Centenary 8997
.
Air, cruise. tilt, new lire, V6,
New 2000 sq II home, 10 1
Gallipolis
Career
College
Homes From Sl 99!Mo · 4% Road, Gallipolis. Ask lor Vir- ~=--~~----., Lab puppies , yellow or automatic. $2500. Doors to
LPN , shllt 7 am 10 7 pm
(Careers ClOse To Home) m1nu tes from Hospital Down , 30 Year s at 8 5% ginia.
•
SPORTING
black. $75 . (740 ]256•6733
fit 95 Cama ra &amp; Back
Bene f1ts package ava1labJe
Complete
above
ground
1
GooilS
ROTTWEILER 14 wks ol d .Hatch . (304)675-7022 .
Please come 1n and com - Call Toda y 740- 446-4367, pool w1th porch,. driveway APR For Listings, 800-31 9·
1-800-214·0452,
BEAUfiFUL
APART- L,-oii_______... Female $200 .00 773 -5873 '
p!ele your ap ~,lica ti on today
and garage Inundation. 3323 Ext. 1709
Reg
#90·05- 12749
84 E 350 1411 Van, new
at 333 P&lt;)ge Street. M1ddle'·
Pn ce below appraisal. - - - - - - - - - MENTS AT BUDGET PRI- ...,
2 bedroom house in Water - CES AT JACKSON ESBrian Keaton
tires, dependable, $2800
por t. OH ·
(740)446-3384
loo, $320 monlh, wa·ter &amp; TATES, 52 Westwood Drive Congra tulations! You have
(740)446-0205 (740)4464254 Evening.
Out Sandhill Ad. New win- garbage included Reler- from $297 to $383 Walk to won 2 free movie tickets
dows, plumbing, elebncal, ence and deposit No pets. shop &amp; movies. Call 740- to lhe Spring Valle~ 7 in
Ma ke e.-Ira money 'tor
93 Chevy Lumina van, runs
roo f. Ret. and stove (740)643 -2916 (740)643 -. 446-i568 Equal Housing 3allipolis. Call "the Tribune
Chris tmas · Sell
Avon
well, will need tran$mission
$49,900 (304)675-5636
[74r;44 6-3358
2644
"t·Opportunfty.
tor details (740)446 -2342
work, $800, (740)992-4028

t

All rell ettlte advertising
In lhls newspaper Is

Candles
Bath &amp; Body
Gift Certificates &amp; Baskets
Mise, Craft Supplies
Refreshments
Free Samples Door Prizes

not be
ar1y ms or expenM that mulls trom the publication Of om inion of an advertisement. Correction ·wnt be made In tht flrst •vallabla edition. • Box •::=:~
are always conllde"'-lal. • Current rate c.rd applies. • AU real ealllte advertisements .,. a~bject to the fed&amp;(al F•lr Housing Act of 1188. ~ Thla 1
~only
ada
I EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any adveftl•lng In violation of the law.

LOOKING FOR A FUt+ ' (jeorges Portable Sawmill. Wanted! Good credit CUS· 3br. full size basement &amp; Furnished Efficiencies. all Bu Y or sell. Riverine AntiLIVESTOCK
JOB? THIS IS IT! OFFICE don't haul your logs to the tame rs to purchase new garage. Large yard. $450 .. utilities paid, share bath, ques, 1124 East Main on
. I ca II 304 •675 · 1957 - horne W11an
" d. $0 down 1o mo.
Why wait? Start meeting . ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI - m1'II JUS
$250 .
deposit. $135 month, 919 2nd Ave - SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
· singles !On1ghl,
'
•
992·2526. Russ Moore..
0 h10
calI tol I TIONS AVAILABLE ' 1-888 qua1I·1·1e d cus1om ers. •'- 5 (304)675. -4469
nue, (7ol0)446-3945
· cts
tree 1-800-766-2623 ext 974 -JOBS
ac re
tra
available. '- - - - - ' - - ' - - -- - owner.
2~ n;~~~~!;,,
1621
- - - - - - - - - ' , ,_ _ _ _ _...;...;.;;;; · {740)446-3093
3br. House located in Ma- .Gracious livi ng .. 1 and 2 ~:::'"~~----....., ,.
Wl'Vl
Looking for LPN . M9nday- fLIO
son, WV. $495. + Utilities bedroom apartments at Viir - •NN'OtiN~·•tf'. '"rs Friday, no weekends or Hoin.~~SI(INEt':SSINfiY
Cottage . st~le home, 2 bed- No Pets. (304}773-5881
lage Manor and Riverside
,MiscEuANEous
r~o
1...o:.o1l"
~""
·d
A 1 ·
936
vrrv c
A t
t · M'ddle
~RCHAND
.
ISE
1 ays. pp y m person,
room, fu ll basement, 2 car
be droom, , 2 bath home, par menS· m 1 port. ......_
• -=
State Route 160, (740)446garage, road trontage, 10 4
From $278-$348. Call 7409620
INOTICEI
acres
well
ma'nta·
d
II
many
extras,
no
pets,
992-5064.
Equal
Houso'ng
5
·
h
C· t Beer Carry Out permit :::::::__ _ _ _ _ _c._
•
I 1ne . ca $
1 mc · omputer monitor,
tor sale , Chesler Township, Looking for part-time to lull- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- Danny Brown tor appoint- S~;i~;onthV~~~: dep~r~~ Opportunities
$50 .; Se of 9 computer
Meigs County, send letters 11me HVAC Installers and INGdCOb. r~com~nhds tha t ment, (740)949 -8900
(740) 446-6194
Honeys uckle Hills Apart- games,
$30.
Phone 2002 Toyota Camry, 27,000
1
ot interest to: The Daily Tech. Experience is a must. you 0 uslness Wll peop e r=::-~--~---,
ments loca ted behind Colo- (74 0)446·23 16
..m:;;il::es::·,:l;.:74;:0:;;l36:;:,:7,:
-5:;0:,:5:,5_ _
SenlinEil, PO Box 729-20, We have good pay lor good you know, and NOT to send
MOBILE
Five rooms and bath near . I 0 .
b .
.
money through the
. m.ail until
,.
Holzer
Hospital,
$300 ma
nve eh tnd ·Highway 25~ Zenith Cabinet, floor 1980-90's Cars/ Tru cks
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
work done If interested call you have investigated the
FOR SAlE
. month + utilities + deposit. Patrol Post. 1 BR now avail- . model color TV, $40.00 from $500. Police Impounds
~ICE
(740)441-1236. No answer ff .
able. Rent sta rts $245/ Phone (740)446-2316
PUBLIC N ut
leave a message
o enng
(740) 446-9355 (leave mes- month. Low &amp; moderate in;
for sale. For listi ng 1-800Ant hony Land .Co., Ltd. has :::::::.:::::.:::::.:::~=---- 230 PR
.12 used homes priced un- -sage)
come. Equal Housing Op- 3 Wheel Disabled Scooter. 719-3001 ext. 3901
made the following changes LPT. LPTA for home health ·
OJ."ESSIONAL
der $3000, will help wilh dev
..
to Buckeye Hills Subdivision svcs Choices available for
SERVIL'ES '
livery. Call Nikki 740·385- 3 bedroom house, $450 portunity. (740 144 6-3344 .or · ery goOd condition, new 1985 Dodge Lanser, runs
500
1
7
month plu s deposit. No TDD -800- 50-0750
batteries. S
· (?40)388- good,
s~ 75
Phone
located m Gallla Co . Rae- th e counties or areas
9948
75 6 1
coon Twp., due to fe nce served. Currently provide
.pe:::'::'·'"l::74::0:~:l4::4~6-4::3~t::3___ New Haven, 1 Bedroom, · ~.:.:.._·--,----,------- ,(7._::4::0~.:)44:::!:6-=.23::1:_:6:.._____
line: Tract · #2- 5.267ac, services in Jackson, Meigs, . R€volutionary. heall~ ca re 12M60. 2 bedroom · mobile
bedroom, reference re-Furnished Apt, Deposit &amp; Army Issue Camouflage5
Tract # 3- ' 4.882ac and Athens. Gallia, Vinton. and ~r!~ ~ow ava~~a~'~ngln yo~~ home ori rented lot in Mid- quired,
$450
month, Relerences, No Pets 992· clothing, ·Free Dish Satellite ~~~ ~~;~ E ~.~~ ~i~:
Tract #4- 5 261ac. Anthony southern Washington coun- 19
. dleport with view ol river, (740) 446_2158
0165
·
wlbasic installation, campa- S
Land Company, Ltd. 53 1 E ties. Call (740) 286-6631
·95/monthly _lor entire $4500 (740)992·3194
&gt;.:.:.:.;:"".:::::::_____
ny comerc ial Sam Somer- 11 0 060 · · (740 }38893 25
Call Ktmberly at
'
·
5
&amp; b th 50 01· St
B roadway, Jackson. 0 H Maintenance Worker- High fam11y
(740)379-2634
12)(60, 3 bedroom, good
rooms
a ,.
lve . Beech Street, Middleport, 2 ville's (since 1964.,) By San45640
1-800 -2 13-8365 School Diploma/ GEO reshape . must sell! $1.,000. $_
325 mo.- (740)4:46-3945
Bedroom F~rni shed Apt ., ~yvllle, WV P.O. (304)273- 1992 Mits ubishi Precis, 2
ww.:;;,w;.;•;;1c;;1•;;n;;;d;.;co
;;;;;,
m;__ _., quired . Position · performs
TURNED DOWN ON "
Call 6pm, (7 40)256·6574
MOBILE HoMES Utilities Pd., Deposit, Refer- ::56::-5::5c --::--,.,-,:-::---- door, 4 c~ linder, runs great!
o
1
SOCIAIISECURITY fSSI?
n..,.....,
E!nces, No j=)ets 992-01 65
Good work vehicle. $1 200.
genera carpentry, electrical,
14&gt;65.Shultz w/D'oshwasher
FOR .IUJ'II
•
BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav· (740)367.0119
GIVEAWA\'
plumbing, painting and yard
No Fee Unless
Win!
ings and BOOST Energy '_;::::.:::.:_.::_:_:_:__ __ _
1 888 582 3345
&amp; front deck. $6,500.
Middleport. 1Bedroom
. . Fur•
work . EJCperience in the
nlshed
Deposit &amp; Ref- Like You Have Never Ex- 1993 Buick Park Avenue, v13041675 .6295
areas ot carpentry, electrica l
1996. 14x60 Trailer 2 bed- erence, No Pets
,
. perienced .
6, power everything, Ieath992 0165
FREE puppies 112 Golden and p lumbing preferred.
WEIGHT- LOSS
er,
car looks new.
1994 Schull 16 )( 72 Mobile rooms on a rente d lot. AskRet;,',iie!ve~r~.~~~3~0-4)~8:82~-~8:2~t0~. Must bave or willing to ob.
Home Priced to sell Quick · lng $375. a month. Depos.i t Now Taking Applica tionsREVOLUTION
98,QQQK. $3100 (740) 379~
lain COL license witn pasCall (74·0) .385 _2434
required. Prefer older co u- 35 West 2 Bedroom Town- New product launch Octo- 274ir,
I
senger endorsement. Posipie. No pets. Call (304)675- house Apartments, Incl udes ber 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
..o.\TANil
tion req uires travel in Gallia ,
2 bedroom mobile home 2457 References req uired. Water
Sewage, Trash, ( 740 )441 •1982
2000 Oldsmobile Alero.

l,.-------,..1

311 Fifth Street
New Haven, WV 25265
15% Discount on Gift
Baskets
Bring this ad for
10% Discount on
·Christmas. Crocks

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

Specializing In:

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS

GRAND

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pu!ltlshlng reaerves the rlghllo edit, reJeCt, or cancel any ad 11 any time. Errors muat be reported on the fll'$1 dlty of
Trlbune-Senthiei-Reglster will be reaponslble fOr no more than the coat of the space occupied by the etror and only tht first Insertion. We

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • InclUde A Price • Avoid Abbr eviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

11'110

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

COISTIUCTIOII

Best Service at
the Best Price

Public tfotlce

Creations by JaDa
W o rd . Ad s

family

SUE's GREE HOUSE

www.pval ley.org

.,,

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

&amp; benefits. Join our

of professi onals to be the resource for community heallh service needs.
Registered dietitian with the Commission on
Dietetic Registration. Licensed dietitian with
West Virginia Board of Licensed Dietitians.
Please submit resume to :
Pleasanl Valley Hospllal
c/o Human Resou~~
2520 Valley Drive PI Pleasanl, WV 25550
or FAX to (304) 675-6975

· Home Decorating
OPEN HOUSE
Sat. Nov. 30
8 am - 5 pm
Gloria Oiler
31645 St. Rt. 325
Langsville, Ohio
740-742-2076

CaUll Cov.nty, OH

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 9

.or v isit websile:
wwvi.herblndill.~om

(740) 992-3320
Emili: blldiiOzapllnk.cOm

13 1

08

0

I

JliS ELECTRIC li
PLUm BIRO
Jim Fh11rk
l!leotrlo, Plumbing,
•nd 8m•ll Home
M•lnt•n•noe Jobe

(340 773-5412
Colit3o4i 874-3082

;;:;;;;==::====::;
rlO
I

rI

i
I

I

There
Are ·

•r

·---Gooosiiiiriiiiiiiiio--"

FOR SALE
200 L--------,.J

BUYS
In the

s

i

i

:

'

I

I

,

'r

.,

Classifieds!

I

i

Some
SWEET

Bedliners • Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug

Sa H' 11 p tu 57 r;;,

Shield &amp; Full Line of

on monthly hills!

Other Accessories
II 1 h \o•hl, ""11wtul Rd

WEEKLY SALARY mailing
brochu res from home . FT!PT.
Opportunity. FREE Supplies. Call
. Or, Rush S.A.S.E :
Inc. 3013 S. Wolf Ad#200,
IL 60t54
Brochures!
Mailing Our
Free Supplies, Postage!
Start Immediately!
Genuine Opportunity!
For Free Information,
Call TOll Free·
1-B00-357- m~o---JI

\ 11ddk pn 11. ( l1 11t1

(740) 992-5822

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
. Early birds slart
6:30
lsi Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

YOUNG'S

Hours

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

•Colrfllete Remodeling

Stop &amp;Compare

Free E stimates

FREE ESTIMATES
. 740.992-1671

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 15
Pome1oy, Onlo

1-BOCl-303-1170

74D-949-2217

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gr.lges

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GuHers
• VInyl Siding·Be Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

·Divorce S150
Adoption $225
INCORPORAf.ION $125
Not do.it yourself Kit!
CALL
www.ntlcd.com

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577!

ROBERT
BISSELL

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Consolidate your bills with
First Continental
$2,500 oo to $150,000.00
Bad credit welcomed
LOAN S OAC
Free consultation with live agent
No application fee
Toll-free 1-888-605-337~

Hill's Self
Storage

712211'FN

22 Yea1s local

Dail')',
.Sentinel,

,' , 'i

~

I''

'

,. '

'

.

992-2155
------ -------------''-----------~-·-.---- -- ·- ·

-· - ·

DEPOYSAG
PUTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
JOOOSI. Rr. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363

BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.

New H omes • Vinyl
Sidin g • N ew Garages

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

- -- - · -- -

");. (:II'"' &amp; •• ~i~11·.,r
Skin, Cut, Wrap
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

$45.00
·"~1645

SR.325

f angsvllle, OH

740- 742-2076

�NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

ACROSS 45 Pool otlck
&lt;18 Gy~man
1 Tontoclea 49 VIper
5 Container 51 Roclllnguler
a Cow'•
53 Strong
mouthful
11 Beery
or 54 -Fellhety
Weblter
wraps
12 Fruh cooter 55 Menu
13 s.,...t.
[,...
akater2 wda.)
Heiden
57 ecorda
15 Time and- 61 Tub rituol
16 Fiord terr. 62 All dada
17 Mantra
63 Feast wtth
chanter
pol
1a Rumor,
64 Londoner's
perhapa
drink
20 Flour
65 Souffle In·
grinder
gradient
22 Lagoon
66 Focdon
enclosure
DOWN
25 Twitch
26 Faet jet
27 Lick
1 Crumb-toter
28 Leveled
2 "VIve lo ~!''
31 Viking nome 3 'Riled up
33 Mont.
4 Pie crust
neighbor
5 Welles'
34 Bear con·
Citizen atallation · 6 Tokyo,
38 Pac-10 tam
formerly
39 Morse code 7 Sprout
algnal
a Small room
40 Red meat
9 Euraolan
41 Unld up
range
44 Paleozoic, 10 Small coins
e.g.
14 GoH or

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Useful points ·

SILAS, ANYONE·
'M IN DEBT TO
IS INVITE.DTO
DINNER!!

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

-

1&lt;1/r MUST

r~ · Tt'l~
TA~G~T AUI&gt;I~N(.f

FOil Tt'IIS

St'IOvJ.

TilE BORN LOSER
~

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F11:0M 1\f.llf.IV~T~T rott-~T Or
Vlt:W, \'LL &amp;. G.LI\0 \oJf\t:~ Tf\1::.

· ~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol . 53, No. 73

deuert19 - do
Frence
21 Slippery
surface
22 Felipe or
Molooo
23 Powder

brewer
43 Sunrii8IO
auneet
45 "The
Georgia
. Pooch"
· 46 WWIIoub
(hyph.)
bait
47 Make glad
24 Fiery gem 50 Valoo
25 Monotony 52 DepL of
29 Arcade
Labor dlv.
amu~tment 53 Sp. or Ger.
(2 wds.)
58 Drumotlck
30 Bungler
58 YH, In
32 Online Info
Monttaal
35 Mareh
59 Fill about ·
greao
80 Lltlgotl ·
36 Dritcloup
37 Remote
42 Coflee

BY PHIWP AlDER
Marty Bergen has
published "Marty Sez
2" (Bergen Books.
2002). Lil)e the original "Marty Sez," it
contains useful snip11!'--r.!""""''!. pets to improve one's ·
game. This book has
12 chapters, 10 on
bidding, one on de- .
darer-play and one
on defense . It ends
with the 79 tips listed
and a glossary.
You cannot go far
wrong applying the
advice -- if you aP.ply
it correctly! I hiCed
this recommendation ..
Look only at the
South hand. Your
partner opens one
diamond. You res'pond one heart, bidding four-card suits
up the line. Partner
rebids two diamonds.
What would you do
CELEBRITY CIPHER
·
now?
by Luis Campos
With only 10 highCelebrity Cipher cryptograms.are created from quotations by famous
card points, one's im,
people, past and present. Each lener In the cipher stands for another.
mediate reaction is to
Today's clue: E oqua/s C
make a game-tty, ei"RW()
P 0 B
WBROP
B
ther two no-trump or
three
diamonds.
ETYBIX."
Hqwever, partner
must have at least six
osMo· zo
T'ZOHCC
diam~mds, and your
king is magic. Also,
"JIBHPO
RWO
POB, ' LSA
you have an ace ·and
king ·- quick tricks ••
FOOJ
T Z
AWO
C· B Z X • "
•
on the side. You
MOTIMO
should immediately
WOILOIA
leap to three noPREVIOUS SOLUTION -"Dreams do come true If you·keep _
trump.
believing In yourself. Any1hlng can happen."
Note that partner
-Jennifer Caprla11 .
.
;
has only II high-card .
points; he isn't acWOlD
GAM I
cepting any game- ·
tries. But you have
nine quick tricks (as- 0 .llecmange leHers Qf
scrambled words
suming East doesn't lew four
to form · foUr Jlmple worda.
have all four dia- ·
mpnds and the oppo5 L U0 0 N
don't take the ~....~- .:;:....::.,...;:....:~:.,--l
1
first five heart tricks).
Even if you change ~::=====~...J
~ North's club ace intol.the heart ace, you still 1---..:,;R:....;:.E_V:.,.:.A:.....;.T-1
2
have a play for three

UAUNEY

~

f\,1\::, '(OU~ PORTfOLIO T~ 1\ f\1\,
C.I-\ Ie:.f !

'{£.!\'?,. l ~ OVU.. I

BIG NATE

I

I

I I 1I I
I

1I I I

PEANUTS

II=
A REAL
SANTA CLAUS, WJ.IERE ARE
'{OUR REINDEER?

l KNOW WHAT I 51-lOULD
I-lAVE SAID ... I SflOULD !-lAVE
SAID, • I 60T 1-!UN6RV LAST
WINTER SO I ATE TflEM! ''

BETTY
S~m, wHAT ~R&lt; VO\J

r-:::===::::::--1 ~

tt-Y

t)OIN&amp; IN 1\liS·
SHOI' STOll&lt; IINY~AY?

7

...·....:.

['..

in our government," one fellow
1_a 1. .j" 1_ 1. said
. " There's plenty of good
- men ," his buddy sighed, " I ju&amp;t
I I'E D16 I.IC TI E·I Iwish
they had louder--- . -.I":
0 Complete the chuckle quoted ;
_

0sot.

~

tion and ruin your chances for

gain!

~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan.
19) -- If your advice is not solicited today, do not offer ony
suggestions or ide:1s to ·associ-

?=ooo 51'\:lll'i::D 11.

ates. Althoug'h you may mean
well. they C()uld see. it ns in-

terference.

AQUARIUS (Jun . 20-Feb.
19) -- In order to prevent being bored 10 tears today, be

El&gt;.i 8\Cb"
l'oR PR\l't:S

smart and avoid the company
of anyone who always does

all l~e talking but seldom has
anything to say. You may not
have the tolerance fur il at this
time.

PISCES {Feb. 20-Murch

20) -· It' s imcrcstine . but peo-

ple in general may be forgiving of nny !:1rge fau x pas to'

I

TO

Plan to aid Raccoon restoration efforts
BY KEviN KELLY
News editor

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

an open meeting Tuesday to accept
comments and answer questions .
abou11he plan's draft.
"If they don't, we will make modifications based on their needs." she
added .
Hoy is with the In stitute for Local
Government . Admini stration and
Rural Development at Ohio
University, the lead agency in the
plan 's development.
The plan is the result of two
years' work, gleaned from public
comments drawn from hearings
held in all of the counties · where
Raccoon flows.
"Any future EPA fundin g that
will be applied for must have an
approved management plan ," Hoy

with whom you're con\lersing
~hould know about them in

BY BRIAN J. REED
Stan writer

the first place. Be careful.
, TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. It' s not like you to simply talk about makin g
changes to something that has
given everybody fils and then
do nothing about 11. Back up
your words with acti on today.

GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
~~

.To avoid disappointment

know have the potential of

issues:

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) • Your splendid imagination

see. is available and able to

if you are dealing or handling
funds 'that belong to someone .

rnee1 with ·you . Even .if you

made

pl a n~

with

him/her, confirm the appoint'
mcnt.

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

-- Unle.(\s you organize and
plan your time today. you
may merely run around in cir- ·

cle•. You will kick up plenty

of dwa . but to no avai I of ac-

complishing any\hing.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Today . you may m"takenly
convince ynurself that the

Calendar
A4
Classifieds
89-10
Comics
811
Dear Abby
A 11
Editorials
A6
Movies
A3
Obituaries "'-.__
A3
Sports
~81·8
. Weather
A2
e 2002 o·hio Valley Publishing Co.

to focus on negati ve visions
instead of j&gt;Ositive ones. .

SCORP 0 (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ,. Watch your step today

have

z Sections - l4 Pllle'--

will be in full gear today .
There is jusl one problem:
You may have the tendency

today. double-check to make

cenain the person you need to

.Index

only activities worth doing ·

gening everybody in the famtly uptight. For peace in the
household, avoid all volatile

.•

·•

'
)

Hensley ·

Koblentz

Th,anksgiving meal!' costs decrease this

A classmate was bragging that everyone: was jeal~
ous of him. I was taught that it is more important to know
how others value us than to think how valuable WE ARE.:

to a companion today. stop

'

Local students learn of
Pilgrim, Indian friendship

SC:RAM-LETS ANSWERS

down pretty hard on you .

•

-·

~-'

.

are those that will cost big
bucks. Interestingly, they may ·
turn out to be the least enjoy· :
able to you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You·re asking for il if you
bring up topics today that you

such
as
Soil · · and
Water
Conservation .di si:ricis, and .ciiize n
groups such as the Raccoon Creek
Improvement Comm ittee.
· The general consensus is to find
ways of re storing Raccoon to its
former self as a rural stream nunur·
ing the nearby en vironment.
"Our hope is, some day it will
be," said Hoy.
Hoy said she envisions the pl an as
a beginnin g for variou s groups
looking to see Raccoon restored for
wijdlife and use by humans again. _
' I think we ' ve done a good job of
getting the process started ," she
said .
:
"I hope it will stay a living docu:
ment and people will build on it." :

Eastern Local
students count ~
their ·blessings

Wiring - Nomad ' Harsh - Jester- WE ARE

fractions . They could come

said .
" If, for example. there is an effort
to address acid mine drai nage, the
plan can •be used for whate ver
application comes up . We have all
this information at hand ...
The 200-plu s page docu ment
identi fied maj or problems with
Raccoon, long a victim of pollution
and often to bl ame for inland fl ooding in the six affected counti es . ·
Drawn -from the hearin gs were
common concerns, with acid mine
drainage leading the list in addition
to worries about flooding . erosion,
litter and lo ss of historical
resources .
The plan was initiated by a partnership of government age ncies

WILKESVILLE - A watershed
management plan for Raccoon
Creek will go to the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
BY DAN HERMES
for approval on Dec. 31.
Stan wr~er
EPA's approval will smooth the
path for funding if further restoraPOMEROY - No one ever tion efforts arise for the 112-mile
plans for a tragedy to happen,
especially over the holidays. stream that flows through Hocking,
Sadly, ma]ly will die on the Athens, Vinton, Jackson, Meigs and
nation's roadways nonetheless Gallia counties.
"EPA will give the plan final
over the next several weeks.
Mother
Against
Drunk approval, if they agree with everyDriving (MADD), in conjunc- thing," said Rachael Hoy, the manplan' s project manager at
tion with Ohio law enforcement. agement
~
agencies, will be conducting its
16th annual "Tie One On For
Safety" ribbon campaign.
The number of drunk driving
'
fatalities over the holidays are
stunning.
During the Thanksgiving holiday period in 2000, 503 people
died in traffic fatalities, with
257 being alcohol-related.
according to MADD.
. Of the 439 fatalities over the
Christmas weekend in the same
year, 221 involved alcohol.
BY KRIS SCOUTEN
New Year's Eve of 2001 , 75 of
Staff
writer
the 149 fatalities were alcoholrelated.
"Give your keys to a family
TUPPERS PLAINS
member or a designated driver,"
When asked what they are
said Mark Proffitt, Pomeroy
thankful for thi s year,
police chief. "Have a family •
Eastern · High School and
member drop you off ;md pick
· Eastern Elementary stuyou up if you are planning on
dents had this to say:
drinking. Think hard before you
Brittany Davis, senior,
drink and drive."
said, "I'm thankful for my
Complacency about drunk
friends and family for helpdriving has dire consequences
ing me with some major difnationwide . In the 1980s and
ficulties in my life. Making
'90s, significant success was
Maggie Biggs, a teaching aide at Mid-Valtey Christian School, helps Tanner Riffle with
Homecoming queen meant
achieved as alcohol-related
so much to me and without
his American Indian vest, made of a paper grocery bag. The vests were made by stu·
deaths - 60 percent of all crash
the support of my friend1i
dents at the school Tuesday as part of a learning unit about the Mayflower, the
fatalities in 1982 - dropped to a
this · dream would never
Pilgrims, an~ .their friendship
. with .the native Americal)s.
-. (Brian. J. ~eed)
.
... _.,,
low of 40 percent in 1997 .. In
·· have· become a reality."
2000 and 200 I, 1hat percentage
Brittni Hensley, freshman,
I
rose to 41 percent.
.
said , "My parents have done
"All of us working to~ether to
so much for me this year.
spread the word wtll help
They've supported everyreduce injuries and fatalities
thing that I ve done, even
my decision to quit volleyPle11e see MADD, A3
ball to join the cheerleading
· squad ."
Baylee Collins , third
BY BRIAN J. REED
dents were reminded of the many hardships the Pilgrims ,
grader, said, HJ want to say
Stan writer
'
·important
contribution endured," teacher Patty
thank you to the doctors and
::.:.:.:::...::~.:________ Squanto, the.£nglish-educat- Asbeck said. "Over half of
atl of the people that helped
t!d Indian, ailit other natives the Pilgrims died during
save my mommy 's ltfe.
•
MIDDLEPORT
made to the survival of the those first few months."
Even though she can 't move
Children at Mid-Valley English separatists during
"Only s&amp;en of the 17 husaround like she used to we
. Christian School are study- · their first harsh winter in bands on board the
still play games and go
ing the friendship ~tween 1620.
Mayflower and only three of · places. I" m also thankful for
American Indians and the · Squimto, sold into slavery the wives were alive after
my brother because he
Pilgrims, and of the ·hard- but · later freed by an three months in the
taught me how to work the
ships the early American set- Englishman, taught the Plymouth Colony."
computer. "
tiers endured prior to their Pilgrims to plant com, which
· Jordan Koblent;!, firs.t
The Pilgrims and their
grader, said , "I'm thankful
first Thanksgiving celebra- likely saved their lives.
native American friends celfor my family, especially
lion.
"We've talked about how ebrated
the
first
my si ster. She taught me
Using paper giucery bags three kernels of com repre- Thanksgiving feast three
how
to fish and helped me
to craft "Indian-style" vests sented the Pilgrims' daily years after · the Pilgrims '
ride my bike without trainThesday, the elementary ~tu- food ration, and about the arrival in Plymouth, Mass.
ing•wheels."

GET ANSWER

day, but they aren't likely to
put up with small. petty in·

-w.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2002

&amp;I. UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
'1;,1

and think whether the person

mou1h. What you say could
be fed buck lo your competi-

PEOPLE AR£

.

THESE SQUARES

everyone involved.

and take note of who is within
earshot when you open your

IT 5 1\\I&gt;.T 51-i0'/4 '+IUERE l"r\t:Y
1''-~,,._---, MI.K'e. ?EOPLE

by filling In the missing words ,
you develop from step No.3 below. :
LETTERS IN

ARIES (March 21 -Apri\ 19)
.. Before· you open your
mouth and reveal your plans

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- ·
Dec. 21) -- Be very careful
what you say and to whom,

· THE GRIZZWELLS ·

.

are the closest to you . Fortu-

nately, \he moves you make
will prove to be beneficial for

WHERE WE

.

-----fi~-----+-1
Bv BERNICE BEDE

COME FROM . ..

_

MADD
urges tying
one on
for safety

--~ · ·

Important changes that you
make "in xour. life in the year
ahead will affect those who

GAUFIELD

.

&amp;I. PRINT NUMBERED

I·

Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2002

EVER W0Nt7Eil .ABOUT
' L.IFE,&amp;ARFIEL.D?

...
·

!HAASE

"HOITY-TOITY"(

~

·~·

INN&lt;~ MOM

us.s 1\le

=·==-==·~l:o"' : . "We need more.,good men to
F ·I S WT . speak out about what's going on

~=·

no-trump. On a good
day, you would receive a club lead
around to your king.
This bid comes
with no guarantees,
but it is the percentage action.
Also, Ber~en · has
put his
' Points
Schmolnts" book
onto an interactive
CD-ROM.
The book is $16.00
and the CD-ROM
$25.00 postpaid from
Bergen. Call (800)
386~7432 to order.

''

Prep basketball: Southern, Eastern, Meigs win, B1

1Uesda~November26,2002

wvlw.mydallysentlnel.com

Page A 10 • The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Families trying to make
ends meet have something more to be thankful about Thursday: The cost of the traditional Thanksgiving meal is less than last year's.
The Ohio Farm Bureau reports the average
cost of this year's feast for 10 is $34.56 - a
48-cent drop from last year's survey average
of $35 .04, only the second drop in the price
since 1991.
The American Farm Bureau Federation
conducts an annual survey of meal costs. The
shopping list for the survey includes a turkey,
stuffing, sweet · potatoes, rolls and butter,
peas, cranberries, a relish tray of carrots and
celery, pumpkin pie with whipped cream,
coffee and milk, all in quantities to serve a
party of 10.

yea~

''
The cost of a 16-pound
turkey, at 93 cents
a pound, reflects a decrease of 2 cents per
pound, or a 32-cent drop in the total average,
and is the largest contributing factor in the
drop in cost of the dinner. ·
.
"The drop in the price of turkey is probably
due to the grocery stores stocking up early on
a plentiful supply of frozen turkeys," said
Farm Bureau ·economist Mark Jenner.
"Our volunteer shoppers are asked not to
.use prices that require promotional coupons
or purchase deals, such as spend $50 and get
a free turkey."
"The fact that our val unteers still found the
average . price of turkey below a dollar a
pound is an amazing value by any standard."
Other items on the' shopping li st al so
dropped in price, including sweet polat.Jes, a
16-ounce package of frozen green peas, a Joe Holman stocks the turkeys in the meat department 2il
Vaughan 's Supermarket in Middleport in preparation fo'r a rus~
of last-minute holiday shoppers. (Brian J. Reed)
•
Please see Turkey. AJ

Together we can change your body.
And your life.

other than yourself. Not that •
you'd do anything deliberate,
but you could get careless
with small finnnci"al transac-

.
-

,.
&gt;

tions .

taglineTrying 10 patch up a

broken romance? The

A~Hro­

Grilph Matchmaker can help

r you understand what to do to

make the relatiqnship work ,

ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541

Mail $2.75 to Matchmilkcr,

c/o this ncwsp•1per. P.O. Box

www.ccWL.lNFO

167, Wickliffe, OH 44092./ta·
gline

'

l

/

'

/

•

'

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