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Monday, December 9, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

4t Mtturt
so Tetktns bird
53 SorroWful
cry
M C.llhtw or
lllblrt
!! Wol~

1 Phyalque
4 Wedge

8 Hanofl cry
11 Places

~"'~~
"' K Q ~ 4

13 S1811er
14 Ha~ of

!2'"-II'J

.. ,

Wttl
... I A 2

FAU

• Q'
. 1111763
~ ei 1

•

18 Unexpected
DOWN
20 Socked out
21 MI. 111un1w1 1 Diner thor!
22 Common
ordert
query
2 Wtlklkl
•
24 Do 1
locale

t AJ
8' 3'

doubl•takil

Draier: South

27 Yell
30 Foundation
31 Remtln
unHitlod
32 Cerd game
34 Devotee
35 Connect up
36 BaJa lett
food
37 Aerie
builders
39 Fervor
40 Uee a
calculator
41 Ceeoer'a 21
42 Seductive
woman
45 Discount

Vulnerable: Both
South
~~

2 If
4 o\

w.. l

N•rt h

Pass

2•

r.-s"

l;'n~

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NT

Pna

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PaM

Pn.•

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Opening ~ad : • 2

Here's history
Bv P!trwP ALDER

S'tiOlJt.D .I

G~T

TtitS'~
GOPY It I Gt4T~P,

Oft IS Tt4AT

Gove~ttt&gt;

IY

"TtiOlJ !tfALT

NOT S'TeAt:'1

56 Went away
!7 Observe
!8 Retortt
59 Airport info

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

17 Hwy .

ll)fl2
K 9 S !

.. "Q J
Soul II
A "J II 3
¥ KI 7 4

•

ventilated

"deux,.
1! Quekar
pronoun
18 Dn top of

• ~ J 3
• Q.
• K 10 7 5

t

Winter Sports insert inside today

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOE

3 Recolored
4 Steam

5
6
7

8
9

room
Whh-lt
Woddlns
vow
(2 wda.)
Onclet and
lathono
Check
Wager

1D Hoe

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 81
yeano
24 ·Beaeball

39 Hatchet

25 Roltxlllon
28 Movie
canine
27 Cocp
denfzant
28 Erclem•
lion of yore
29 "Miami
Vice" cop
31 -PI par

42 COtnmutor
vthlciH
43 Tho chhlo

33

(hyph.)

44 -out

(dlllribute)

48 Neutlcal

potltion
47 27th
Prwoldent
48 Thla, to
NeHhar'e
Jott
folio50 Ktnle and
DA'o
Bell
degree
51 Shelp bark
Like aorne· 52 Brody Bill
eldora
oppoaor
Corne
unzipped

Staff report

An interesting new
12 Entice
19 CPR pro
35
book has just been
20 Lellher·
·
published: "The New
working
36
York Times Bridge
tool
22 Beep
38
Book" by Alan and
23
Along
In
Dorothy Truscon (St.
r-tl':'-r--rrMartin's Press, 2002).
· The majority of the
book was written by
Alan, who has been
the bridge columnist
for The New York
Times since 1964.
Dorothy and · Alan
each contributed to an
autobiography of
their bridge careers.
The book is primarily a history of the
game, bul it will be
· controversial because
Alan discusses famous cheating scandals in Europe.
The authors lhink
this deal. features lhe
best defensive play of
all time. Look only al
CELEBRITY CIPH
the North and East
by Luis Campos
· hands. Defending
Cefebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous .
against four SQ!Ides,
people, past and present Each le"er In the cipher stands tor another-.
Todsy's clue: N equals R
your partner (West)
leads the club two:
five, jack, three. How
" J • L
POFJIPY,
PFZIEIJF,
would you continue?
One
no-trump
G A I
ITPMIU-XJDP
WAUZ
promised
13-15
points. North's Stay·
KCEU.
J. I
T E Z M 'I
VAZI
9
man sequence guar·
L p."
- EMWPC
anteed a four-card
IN B U
major. Since North
!
WC E A Z
B M
hadn't raised hearts,
i
he had to have
T B N C Y ZPNJPZ
L D ·K
spades, which ex~r~N~~~;;~~~
~"'
r---.l
plains South's correcPREVIOUS SOLUTION- "We sh~ll fight for the things which
tion 10 that suit game.
we have always carried nearest our hearts- for democracy.~
L---------~ ----~·L---------~~----~
-Woodrow Wilson
There seemed lo be
no hope for lhe . deWORD
fense, but the mercuGAM I
rial Brazilian Gabriel
Chagas saw one 0 Rtorronge letters cf the
chance. At trick two,
four scrambled words ba·
low
to form four simple words.
he cashed the club
ace, trying to look
A 0 RA H
like a man who had 1--,-,..-,--,---;,-..,..,~
1
2.
started with a doubleton. Then he shifted
;;~·:;:;:~·~-~~-.:.-..J
lo the diamond nine.
r
The declarer asM0 V E N
sumed that if the dia~,....,--"T-'1'1.rl
mond finesse lost, . . . . .
·
Wesl would give Easl
My
a club ruff. So, Sourh
EARES
:;: old argument
1 thought had
-~Oil 5AL.E •
won
with
his
diabeen
settled
weeks
before. I've
ALL I ~AVE
JOE 6ARA610LA
mond
ace,
drew
.
.
.
.
..
concluded
that
there's
nothing like
IS A DIME ..
AUT061tAPIIED I!ASEIJALL
trumps ending in
~ a cooling off period to get people
WILL I 6ET
a
K
u
T
y
E
R
all . : ....• up. .
·
hand,
and
played
C~AN6E?
club to dummy's 10. 6
~
Complete
tho
chuckle
quoted
7
V by tilling iii the mining words
Imagine his surprise
I I 1
when Chagas pro,
you davelop from step No. 3 below.
duced the club queen
MAKE ME
and cashed the diaAN OFFER
mond king to defeat
the contract. Brilliant!
The hardback book
is $28.95 postpaid
SCRAM·LETS .ANSWERS
from Baron Barclay
Amidst- Tcita 1- Quirk- Jester- LIKE ME
Bridge Supplies. Call
loKJ9QOY fiLMS MY
Patient to psychiatrist, "I like you better than my last
(800) 274-2221 to or1MT AT E'I'E cEVli"
analyst" Psychiatrist, "That's nice, but why? Am I a betder.
0
ter doctor?" Patient, "Oh no, you act more LIK MEl'
0

"The three-deer

POMEROY Hunters
took 3,0 18 deer in Meigs bag limit in much of
eastern and
County during hunting season with guns, the Ohio
southeastern ·Ohio
Departmenl' of Natural
Resources reported Monday · · provided excellent
in a preliminary count of deer
opportunities for
checked and tagged last Ohio's hunters, and
week.
the elimination
The Iota! for Meigs is up
from 200 l"s count of 2,685
of Sunday hunting
deer.
I
restrictions gave
Gallia County saw 3,217
'
working hunters
deer laken, up from last
year's total of 2, 705. There
an extra day
were 4.697 deer tagged in
in the field."
Athens County (3,667 in
200 I), 3,569 in Jackson
County (2,966). 2,351 in
Lawrence Counly (1,920) ,
•
- Mike Budzlk, ODNR Division
Santa
(Adam
Will)
adds
a
few more decorations made by South.ern Elementary students to the 10-foot Christmas tree
and 2,319 in Vinlon County
of Wildlife
used
in
the
courtroom.
(Charlene
Hoeflich)
(I ,950).
.
Statewide, ODNR said ·
hunters took 133,163 deer
last week, a 34 percent be 575,000, 15 percent high·
increase lhat made the 2002 er than last year.
About 450,000 hunters
season lhe second-highest
• I
ever and a record for the one- were expected to participate
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
birds directed by Sayre and Amy
week season.
in the statewide deer gun
News editor
Smith.
The stare record was set in hunting season.
Activities will take · place from
Athens was fourth in the
noon to 4 p.m. .
1995 when Ohio had a twoCHESTER - Decorations and
Last weekend, Meigs County's
week gun season lhat pro- lop five counties with the
displays with flavors of .an old1 h. h h 1 h dbell h ·
duced 137,811 whitetails. highest number of . deer
fashioned Christmas are featured in on Y tg sc 00 an
·c otr
The first week of the 1995 broughl to check stations.
·
h
5
056
the
restored
.
Chester
performed
under
the
direction
of
1823
season accounted. for 115.063 Tu scarawas Ied w1t
• •
.Chris Kuhn, music teacher at
while Washington, had 4,869;
C,:ourthoose, where an open house Eastern High School. .
of thar total.
·
. "This year's gun season Guernsey,
4,844;
and
was held over the weekend.
· Visitors attending were greeted
began and ended with excel· Coshocton, 4,484.
A second open house will be held with a scene. which seemed right
lent weather," said Mike
ODNR reported that deer
Saturday and .Sunday.
out of a Norman Rockwell paintSaturday's schedule will feature a ing:
Budzik, chief of ODNR 's hunting contributes an esti·
Division of Wildlife. ''The mated $266 million during
2:30 p.m. program of holiday
A 10-foot tree adorned with
three-deer bag limit in much the season to the state's econ·
music by Dorothy Karr on t~e homemade decorations, chains
of eastern and southeastern omy and helps support thou1885 Sh?~ert grand cabt- made of colorful paper rings,
Ohio provided excellent sands of jobs. Deer hunters l;.c,~~J~~~~~ri;blat..w•ll ·befolloo,yed.bY, ,, 1mini&lt;~ture angels, stars and· other
epportunilies for Ohio's also contribute lhou~aiJ-ds, &lt;;&gt;f , .
smg-alon~. .
. . things of Christmas created . from
hunters, anct the elimination pounds of venison to ctntlmu;'
been destgnated as a pape~,qn;&lt;J;ies' ia"d ·31 ·Va.t'fety of
to ·
day There Will be the
' ,.. 1 • ' ,..
•
of Sunday ·hunting restric· nity-based organi-'a1fO'ns
~'
·. · .
. · hand ade ornimienrs made from Mary Powell displays antique music bo:~es
lions gave working hunters help feed Jess fortunate
of the. C~nstmas story by white sclllpture clay, were featured
belonging to Mary Grueser and Maurita
an exira day in lhe field."
Ohtoans through special prosmgmg of carols .led in the courtroom.
and a craft proJect ·
Miller during the Chester Courthouse holi·
At the beginning of deer grams, such as Safari Club
of ' food for
Please see Chester,A:S
day display.
season, the statewide deer lnlernational's Sportsmen
population was estimated to Against Hunger program.

Open hou$e set for Chester Courthouse :

i

..

BIG NATE
YOU

HAVE

A

MATH TEST
TOMOI'-1'-0\.J?

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Ir-.'"'l

1 1 1

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daya till
Chrlatmaa
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----------~~
··-

your own capabilities.

there are ex.cellent chances

you wi II be able to accomplish something rather large
and rewarding. ft can actually

ARIES (March 21·April .19)
.. Don'l ignore any insighls
you think you gel today. Your
perception could prov1de you

change your lifestyle.

with valuable vision that can't

en; to be cooperative and

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

If you are alert and enter·
prising in the year ahead,

WHY,
THANK "'QUI

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 ·
Oec. 21) .. Take advanlage of
loday's conditions being basi -

cally favorable for you. Get

involved in somet hing per -

sonally imporlant and lry 10
finalize any projects you
might have underway.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

19) •· Thi s may be one of

THE GRIZZWELLS
\\AIJ~

'ld..l (;,\\It~ A~IJ I i1"o.JUn,l
(J\\\i51MA'5 11115 YEr..R? ,..;_,.;

'1't:A\\,, 1\\ATS I'J\1A.T
1 \1-\0lJC\\.IT

those rare time s when more is
better. so don't be afraid to
take on several ass ignrnents
simultaneously. You actually

need a variety of activities to

keep you happy.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19 ) .. When il comes 10
money matters , don't leave

any loose threads dangling 10
trip over late r. The poss ibiliti c~ for per.,. onal ~a1n are far

beller today 1hun 1hey will be

tomorrow .

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) .. If yuu are se lf·relianl
· and more dependent upon

yourself than on anybody else
today, .what you hope to ac·
wmplish can be achieved. It's
important to have faith in

be derived through logical
. reasoning. Use both.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Avoid beino inlluenced
by friends or usso'""ciates \Vhen
it comes to making a determination regarding .sd meon e
new who enter s th e scene 10- .

day . Your judgmenl will be
I he bener call .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20}
-- If you rati ona lize up front

that a difficult job is lmpossib1c to accompli sh. yoU won ' t
put forth the necessary effort
required to &lt;H.: hi eve the tusk.

You 'II be defemed before you

even try .

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

-- · Practice what you preach
today. or else others aren' t apt
to be interes ted and wi ll pay
littl e atte ntion to your phi losophies or sugi!CSti ons. ll 's

only the example lha l will
count.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..

1 Sections - 11 Pages

friendly , first show a willing·
ness to be so yourself today.
This is a good way to develop
pleasant associations.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
· In order to gratify Y.our inner
urgings today. you need to be·

I

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
0 2002 Ohio

AS
84-S
B6
AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3
A2
Vall~

BY BRI.IIN

J.

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY - Whether
Meig s County residents
shop locally during the
Christmas season will nol
only affect the pocketbooks
of local merchants, but will
also impact the county's
financial condition in 2003.
Meigs County's incom e
from sa)es tax is down by
nearly $70,000 from last
year.
Heather Haggy of the Department of Job and Family Services sorts gifts to be distributed
through the agency's Angel Tree project. After 10 years , the project continues to grow. . November receipt of tax
collected in September was
(Brian J. Reed)
reponed at $91,285.19, an
increase of $19 ,000 from
September 200 I , but Ihe
increase only steadied a
year-ro-dale
drop
in
BY BRIAN J. REED
nizalions purchase gifts. for a boy or girl. receipls.
That sales tax revenue is a
Staff writer
wrap the gifts and deliver them ro the
DJFS. which then delivers lhe gifts to lhe major source of general fund
needy family . The program continues to revenue , and the deficit in
MIDDLEPORT - Meig s County 's orow.
collections, combined with a
largest program for providing toys and " This year, 13 bicycle s were · included decrease in revenue from
other grfts _tor needy chtldren continues. among the gifts donated.
personal property tax, and
to grow. Th1s year, the Department of Job
"All these bikes .. . il's unbelievable," cuts in interest on counly
and Family Services collected and will said DJFS' s Susie Casto .. "People are so investments. will make the
deliver over 500 gifls through its Angel generous."
·
lask of appropriating funds
Tree proJect.
Each day, through Christmas, a team of inro courthouse budgets
Members of some 40 local churche s.
more challenging for county
clubs. civic organizations and other orgaPlene see Angel. A:S
commissioners.

Angel tr~e project helps needy kids

Index ·

Be money minded or com-

mercially .conscious today,
because you'll have excellent
possibilities to profit from a
source other 1han your usual
channel of income. Keep your
eyes open.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
.. People tend to mirror your
behavior, so if you wish oth·

. Tuesday. Dec. 10, 2002

GARFIELD

....

'

Holiday sales may
help with c,ounty
operations shortfall

1 1 I ·1 1.
==·

1..

www.mydailysentinel.com '

Deer ·season total
in Meigs tops 3,000

41 ER plctUNa

llit ·

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2002

Publishing Co.

March, June, September,
October and Novembe1
receipts were higher than
those of last year, but the
collection of tax receipts if
$6~.0 00. lo date, is le ss rhar
those of a year ago .
Local officials blame thf
closing of Tri-County Fun
in Middleport and Pamide.
for much of the revenue loss~
along with bu sine ss lost tc
Meigs County merchanlf
due ·to the 2000 opening ol
the Wai-Mart Supercenrer in
Mason , W.Va.
County 'Treasurer Howard
Frank esti mates a $200,000
shortfall in general fund revenue for 2003 .. and commis·
sioners plan to meet witb
county officeholders next
week to discuss lhe needs of
their deparlnients in light of
dwindling revenue.
The closing of the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Meigs Mines has . also
impacted the county's financial cond iti on, resulting in a
loss of income fro m P,Crson·
al property taxe s.
·
Last year. lhe county collected $1' 158,000 in sale
tax revenue.

come involved in something
that you deem to be construe-

live and worthwhile. Work
has many rewards.

at the Meigs Senior Center

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Somelhing ,you though\
might cause you complications IOday is not likely to

December 12 - 10:30 AM
Cooking Demonslrations
December 17 - 1 PM
Reading and Understanding Food Labels

manifest itself ilnd. as a resu h,
this should turn out to ·be a
rather pleasant day for you.

Saginarius, ttcat yourself
lo a birthday gift. S.end for
you r Astra-Graph predictions
for the yeur uhead by mai1ing

December 19 -.10:30 AM

Graph. c/o this newspaper.

Holiday Cooking Tips for Diabetics

$2 and an SASE to Astro·

P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092. Be sure 10 stale your

zodiac sign.

·

.

I

·

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Diffe,·ence
www~holzer .org

Sponsored by the Meigs Health Deparhnent and Holzer Medical Center
For more information, call
446·5080

.

.

•

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
.

Wednesday, Dec. 11

•

Youngstown j26'134"

1•
l r.tlnliieili-]23-;iie,
HHH_O__

I

···-·~---•M

•IColumbus 127'136' I

VVIoOV

•••

KY.

0 2002 AccuWeather. Inc.

Q ~--~··Kfl!!·

Sunny

~ · Cloudy

Cto~Ktt

Shawl!fi T-slolll15

Rain

F\11ries

Snow

Ice

Rain likely to stick around
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fair weather· high pressure
remains the dominant weather
feature across the region, but
this will change today as this
system weakens in responce
to developing low pressure
over the southeast states.
This new system will likely
move to the Mid-Atlantic
coast by Wednesday morning.
There will be a chance of rain
or some freezing rain spread·
ing over the area tonight. The
.[ow pressure will pull off to
the east Wednesday night with
most of the wet weather also
moving to the east.
More high pressure will
build . back into the . area
and
Wednesday
night
Thursday with dry conditions
over the state through
Thursday and probably
Friday.
. Weather forecast:
· Tonight. .. Raja... becoming
likely. Eveni. rows in the
lower 30s, temperatures slow·
ly rising into the mid 30s
overnight. Nonheast winds 5
to I 0 mph. Chance of rain 70

percent.
Wednesday ... Occasional
rain, tapering off in-the afternoon. Highs in the upper 30s.
Nonheast winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
· Wednesday night...Cloudy
with patchy drizzle. Lows in
the mid 30s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday .. .Clouds giving
way to some sun late. Highs
in the mid 40s.
Thursday
night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s ..
. Friday... Partly cloudy. A'
slight chance of rain late .
Highs in the upper 40s.
Saturday ...Cioudy with a
chance of rain. Lows in the
mid 30s and highs in the
upper 40s.
Sunday ... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the .mid 30s and
highs in the. mid 40s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 30s and
highs in the upper 40s.

Child support collection
firm sues state of Ohio
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
child support collection
agency has sued the state of
Ohio for terminating · its
contract.
National Child Support
Inc. , based in Blue Ash,
Ohio, sued the state in U.S.
District Court in Cincinnati
Monday, asking for $4 million for the . company and
$21 million for parents who
have been unable to collect
child support.
Several Ohio counties had
hired the company to locate
deadbeat parents and collect past-due child support.
The state terminated the
contract after the Ohio

Deaths

'·

COLUMBUS (AP) - For governor's office - a call here,
almost a year, the state Board of a comment there," hoard memEducation has debated new sci- ber Martha Wise of Avon told
ence standards.
the newspaper. ••Jt's a very
The hoard was to meet heavy-handed way of dealing
Thesday to vote on standards with the situation. This is our
that had been hotly contested, vote. It's not the governor's
with supponers of evolution vote."
and intelligent design clashing
Taft has not taken a pub! ic
over what the proper wording position on the issue.
should be.
· Spokesman ·Joe Andrews
· The 19-member hoard voted acknowledged that board memunanimously in October for bers had been contacted by the
proposed standards that empha- governor's top education advissize evolution and critical er, Elizabeth Ross, but said no
analysis of the theory. Ohio's pressure was applied.
previous standards had avoided
The new standards were
the word "evolution," instead
recommending the teaching of reached only after board mem"change through time" without ber Deborah Owens Fink of
specifying what the phrase Richfield offered compromise
language that says I Oth-graders
meant.
should
be able to "describe how
Although teachers will not be
required to follow the stan- scientists today continue to
dards, students will be tested on investigate and critically anathem in new achievement lyze aspects of evolutionary
theory."
exams.
A majority is required for the
Some · hoard members,
standardS to be approved. The including Marlene Jennings of
Plain Dealer reported last week Kirtland, say they believe that
that at least six of the 19 mem- could open the door for teachbers might vote "no."
ing "intelligent desi~n," the
Some members of the hoard concept that livmg things are
have said they feel pressured by' too complex to have occurred
Gov. Bob Taft's office and his by chance and therefore must
eight appointees on the panel to have been the work of a designvote unanimously for the cur- er.
riculum guidelines.
. '.'I'm a 'no' vote if it doesn't
"'It's all coming through the change," Jennings said.

m42:J

Tuesday, December 1o, 2002

Thesday, December 10,2002

Board to vote on new
science standards

Ohio weather

~-roildo--

PageA2.

Department of Job and
Family Services objected to
the way the company was
·
,
paid.
"What they are proposing, we can't do," said Tom
Hayes, director of the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family Services. "It's illega,l." ,

ADAY ON WALL STREET
Dec.9,2002

Dow
Jones
8,473.41 .
Pet. charf,je

from~

·2.00

'

SEP

OCT

NOV

Law
High
8,643.99 8,473.00

DEC

7,000

~high:

11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000
1,600

Nasdaq
compos1t

1,400

·3.89

High
1,411.40

1,000

Standard
&amp;Poor's

900

lrom previoos

·2.22

POMEROY - Salisbury
Elementary is sponsoring basket games at 6 p.m. Friday at
the Middleport American
Legion. The PTO will have
refreshments and a craft table.

Meeting changed
RUTLAND - A regular
meeting of Rutland' Village
Counci'l scheduled for tonight
(Tuesday) has been changed to
Dec. 17.

BOO

:i-U'
Pct. chariJe

Fundraiser
.planned

1,000
OCT . NOV
DEC
Law
Reconlligh: 5,048.62
1,367.07
March 10, 2000

Oec.9,2002

892.00

Local Briefs

1,200

SEP
lrom prevO.Js•

CHESHIRE
Lloyd
James Sears Sr., 64,
Cheshire, died Monday, Dec.
9, 2002, in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Arrangements will be
announced by Fisher Funeral
Home.

--e.ooo

Dec.9,2002

Pet.charf,je

Lloyd James
Sears Sr.

- - - - - - - - 1 0,000

700

SEP

OCT

High

Law
891.97

912.23

DEC
NOV
Record high: 1,527.46
March 24,2000

..
AP

Local Stocks
Federal Mogul AEP- 26.73
USB -21.01
Arch Coal- 19,99
Akzo -30.32
Gannen- 69.77
AmTech!SBC- 25.69
General Electric Ashland Inc. - 28 .25
GKNLY- 370
AT&amp;T- 27.89
Har1ey Davidson Bank One - 37.60
Kmart - .54
BU - 12.10
Kroger - 15.10
ltd. - 14.71
Bob Evans - 24:25
BorgWarner - 48.42
NSC - 19.68
Champion- 2.53
Oak Hill Financial Charming Shops - 4.35 OVB-20.69
City Holding - 28.91
BBT - 37.30
· Peoples- 25.01
Col - 20.94
DG - 12.75
Pepsico - 43.21
DuPont - 42.52
Premier - 7.43

Rockwell - 20.30
Rocky E;!oots - 5.12
AD Shell- 42.15
25.50 Sears - 25.71
47.72 Wai·Mart - 51.85
Wend}'s - 26.45
Worthington- 17.25
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
20.30 quotes of the previous
day's transactions, pro- .
vided by Sm~h Partners
at Advest Inc. ·Of ·
. Gallipolis.
·

.35 ·

Hand bell choir
to perform
POMEROY Eastern
High School hand bell .choir
will present a concen of
Christmas music at the Mount
Hermon United Brethren in
Christ · Church, 7 p.m.
Wednesday.
Also performing will be the
youth quanet "Sacrifice of
Praise." The church is located
just off · Texas Road on
Wickham Road in the Texas
Commu.nity. The public is
invited to attend . .

Residents still feel big Church members were wary of man now
charged with slaying of parish priest
chill from ice stQrm
FRANKLINTON,
N.C.
(AP) - Nearly a week after a
disastrous ice storm, just two
of the town's five traffic lights
work, more than half of the
I ,800 residents still lack power
and people are getting angry.
Franklin County Manager
Richard Self said 8,000 customers were without electricity in,the counry of2~,000 people, and the largest' concentration was in Ff3flklinton, about
30 miles nonh of Raleigh.
Monon said Carolina Power
&amp; Light got power restored
· Friday to the town hall~ which
doubles as the emergency
operations center, but 70 percent of the town was still in the
dark. he said.
"I haven't seen any other
CP&amp;L activity in town since
then," he said. .
Carolina Power &amp; Light
spokeswoman Julie Hans said
some long lines coming into
the town are down and are taking more time to repair.
She said that in rural areas it
takes the same effon to restore
a few customers as· it dOes to
restore hundreds in a city.
"That's the most efficient
way to restore power, to work
on the lines that are going to
get the most number of customers restored in the quickest
amount of time."

Town administrator Mike
Morton said late Monday that
the utility hadn't told the town
what to expect.
"I wish there was something
we could do," he said. "People
are really starting to get angry
here."

··we've had it bad," said
Devera' Martin, 74, who is
blind. ..Look at all the clothes I
have on . It's everything I
have."

More than 2 million people
in the Carolinas were without
power immediately after last
week's ice storm. By Thesday.
utilities said that number was
down to about 359,000.
Duke Power said it will take
it until midnight Wednesday
before it can restore power to ·
most of its 292,500 Nonh
Carolina customers and
13,710 South Carolina customers still without electricity
on Thesday.
CP&amp;L, which serves most
of the state east of Durham,
still had about 46,000 customers in the dark, but hoped
to connect all but a scattered
number of customers on
Tuesday, spokesman Ganick
Frdllcis said. The state's eleciric cooper11tives reponed
about 7,035 without power
Monday.

..

Memo stirs fear of
reprisals at Los Alamos

LOS ALAMOS, N.M. Audits and Assessments
(AP) - A memo 'from the Office. But critics say the
Los Alamos National order prompts fears of
Laboratory telli'ng employ- · retaliation by lab manageees to give the lab copies ment.
"How duplicitous to say,
of documents they provide
to federal inve stigators 'Feel free to say whatever
compromises the confiden- you want. We just want to
tiality,of employee s, critics know everything you
said.
· said," ' said Danielle Brian,
The message from the executive
director of
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs lab's associate director, Project on Government
Middle School will present a. Richard Marquez, was in a Oversight, a WashingtonThursday
that based watchdog group.
Christmas program at 7 tonight memo
ordered emp.Joyees at the
Lab spokesman Jim
(Tuesday) m the auditorium.
Selections by the 6th *rade nuclear weapons lab to Danneskiold said the audit
will include "Jingle Bells ' and cooperate with investiga- division maintains a list of
tors .
·
·~upon· the House Top" while
The
D.
e
partment
of
materials
provided to the
the 7th and 8th grade group
General
to
will do "Christmas Bits and Energy and the FBI are Inspector
looking
into
allegations
of
.
ensure
the
lab
can
assist
Pieces" and "Repak" from the
theft and fraud at Los investigators.
Nutcracker Suite.
Alamos, includin~ millions
1\vo lab employees who
of dollars in missmg equip- were investigating fraud
ment and abuse of lab cred- char¥es and other problems
·
withm the lab were fired
POMEROY White's it cards.
The
memo
instructed
·
last
month.
.
Sanitation Service pick up of
Lab officials said they
trash scheduled for Christma~ workers to forward any
Day will be done on the after~ documents they provide to had lost confidence in the
investigators to the lab's pair.
noon of Dec. 24.

Musical.to· be
presented

Pickup changed

To·perform
POMEROY - Junior and
Rita White will present a musical program at the Senior
Center 5:30p.m. Thursday.
The pro$rarn, free and open
to ,the pubbc, will feature songs
of yesteryear along with songs
of the season.

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us. .
1

:·on Tuesday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
·
you wish, select one. of the following
· your tribute.

FREE •erses below to

For the Record

1. We hold yOO in our thoughts and memories foreVer.
2. May God cmdle you in His anns. now and fqrever.
3. Forever missed. never forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of
Da.vid C. Andrews
July 10, 19,61-May 6, 1980

May God's angels

POMEROY
Meigs
County Emergen cy Medical
Services uriits an swered the
· following calls on Monday:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:44 a.m .,' Fifth Street,
Racine, JeffThornton, trans-.
ported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
assisted
by
Syracuse EMS;
3:58 p.m., Welchtown Hill,
Pomeroy, 'Justin
Klein,
Holzer Medical Center:
5:30 p.m., Holzer Clinic,
Darlene
Older,
Hol:z;er
Medical Center:
7:58 p.m., Colburn Road,
Marjorie Sfakianos, treated
not transponed.

heavenly glory.

6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fill s us With joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight, you'll forever be in my hean and mind.

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and

family

Emergency calls

His hand.

4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared mgethcr. My prayers
will be with you unlil we meet again.
·
5. The days we shar~d were sweet I long to St:e you again in God's

8.'J'Pe days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughoUI time.
I I. You were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
11 You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from
year to year.

14. We send this message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and warm. loving bean.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PE.R LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED (I per~on per picture j.er ad)
Fill out the form below and drop off to

The Daily Sentinel.

Citation issued

"Fondest Memories"
11 I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, Noon
r----~--------...o:----------------------·-,

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Please publish my tnbute in the special Memory Page on Tuesday. December 24.
1

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Relationship to me
Date of ·birth

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Date of passi n o . - - - - - - ' -

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.

TUPPERS PLAINS Melissa A. Rose, · 20,
Marietta,- was cited for
assured clear di stance by the
Gallia-Meigs. . Po st of the
State Highway Patrol lollowing a two-vehtcle acctdent
Sunday on Ohio Route 7.
Troopers said Rose was
northbound
in
Orange
Township at 6:15p.m. when
she was unable to slow in
ti'me and struck the rear of a
vehicle driven by Ralpl] B.
Wells, 53, 34361 Flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy, that had
slowed in traffic .
Damage to Rose's car was
disabling, and nonfuncttonal
damage was listed to Wells'
vehicle.

-------------------------------------+--- -

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Prisoners may be
moved due to law suits
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP)
- Suburban Haltom City is
studying whether to l send its
prisoners to jails in otner com·
· munities while it battles eight
civil-rights lawsuits alleging
sexual abuse in its own jail.
Police said the study doesn't
mean the department agrees
there was widespread abuse at
the jail. ·
. "I'm still of the opinion that
the allegations stemmed trom
one former jailer," Deputy
Police Chief Cliff Jaynes said ..
Eight women who were
jailed for minor offenses

between June 2000 and March
200 I filed federal lawsuits
alleging they were sexually
abused by male jailers and
other police emplo~ees.

Chester
from Page A1
The decorations were the
creations
of
Southern
Element&lt;Jry· art students.
Also displayed . were
miniature gingerbread hous.es made by fourth graders at

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
man recently ousted from his
training to become a
Franciscan brother pleaded
innocent Tuesday to .charges
that he fatally shot a Roman
Catholic priest and set fire to
his church office.
Daniel
Montgomery,
charged with aggravated murder and aggravated arson in
the slaying of the Rev.
William Gulas, 68 , was
ordered held without hond.
He was due back in court Jan .
14.
Montgomery, 37, was silent
during the five minute hearing in Cleveland Municipal
Court. Defense attorney
Henry Hilow said afterward Daniel Montgomery. 37, center, stands before a judge flanked
t11at he had not yet discussed
the case with his client. by his defense attorney's, Henry Hilow, left, and Kevin
Authorities would not com-· Spellecy, right , before pleading innocent in Cleveland to .
charges that he killed a priest and set fire to his rectory office.
ment on a motive.
Gulas ' body was found Rev. William Gulas, 68, was found dead Saturday in the burnSaturday in the burning recto- ing rectory at St. Stanislaus Church and an autopsy Sunday
ry at St. Stanislaus Churc~ in showed he had been fatally shot, Montgomery was held withthe city's Slavic' . Village out bond . (AP)
neighborhood. The coroner ht'm."
intern ship was finished ,
said he had been shot in the
chest and hit in the head.
Konisiewicz said · Gulas Luczak said.
Gulas
reported
on
It was Montgomery who confided in him at a pany
had consoled parishioners Friday.
telling
him Montgomery' s performance
after Gulas' death and helped Montgomery had disrupted but did not make the decision
di stribute communion at the ··chemistry" in the rectory to oust Montgomery, Luczak
Mass on Sund&lt;!y. He was and was supposed to move said.
Luczak would not speci ry
arreste.d Monday.
out Wednesday.
"The flames were that high, . "Let's face it, some people why Monlgomery was termi- ,
I could not do anything," have it. Father William knew nated. but said it was clear he
Montgomery said after the what it takes ... and it was was unsuited to be a .
fire. ••1 couldn't hear him, he pretty obvious he didn't have Franciscan. As a brother. he
was probably overcome by what it takes," Konisiewicz might have taught or worked ;
in church offices but would ,
.the flames by the time I got said.
there."
Montgomery was in his not celebrated Mass or hear
Some parishioners at the seventh year training to confessions.
About a third of the I ,500
historic Roman Catholic become a Franciscan bro,ther,
church say they were a little according to the Rev. Thomas parishioners at St. Stanislaus
wary of Montgomery. .
Luczak, provincial leader of speak Polish and Mass is .
sometimes celebrated in that
••You'd try to talk to the guy the Franciscan order.
and there just wasn't a Jot of The director of training for language: ·
The church is on the .
attention on his pan," Richard the Fmnciscan order had.travRegi ster of Historic
National
J. Konisiewicz told The Plain elect from Chicago before
Places
and
·was dedicated in
Dealer. People would say, · Thanksgiving to meet with
'Wow, he'.s different.' There Montgomery and informed 1891 , according to the
was just something about him about a week ago that his church's Web site.

Court throws breast implant case
NEW ORLEANS (AP) A state arpeals coun threw
out a jury s finding that Dow
Chemical Co: plotted to hide
dangers about silicone breast
implants.
In a ruling issued late
Friday and made public
Monday, the 4th Circuit Coun
of Ap~eal said the trial judge
erred m the way she divided
the once-class-action suit into
various phases in 1997.
"They said it was an incorrect procedural vehicle to go
through," said attorney
Richard Root of . New
Orleans; who handled the
case on appeal for the plaintiffs. "Ther did not say the
jury's verdtct was wrong."
The case once involved
1,800 women claiming darnage from Dow Corning Corp.,
which manufactured breast
implants. Dow Corning filed
for bankruptcy reorganization
Eastern Elementary.
Satiuday .afternoon, Meigs
County's only high school
handbell choir performed
under the direction of Chris
Kuhn, and visitors were
invited to view special holiday exhibits, including several antique music boxes and
Bobbi Karr's collection of
antique children's chairs.

Angel

The Daily''Sentinel

from PageA1
two DJFS workers will hit
the road to deliver the gifts.
Deliveries began Friday.
The wrapped gifts make
Christmas po ss ible in
hou&gt;-eholds of the unem ployed and underemployed,
and help ensure a Merry
Chri stmas for kids who
might otherwise not receive
Christmas gifts . The program stqrted I 0 years ago.
DJFS staff members distribute the angels, which
bear only the age and gender of the recipient , and
later sort and deliver the
gifts. From Reeds ville to
Rutland , Letart Falls to
Harrison yille, the generosity of local re sic!ents continues to help li'arents concerned about providin~ holiday gtfts for thetr cht!dren ·
.. and the joy of giving to
other s also continues to
ring true for those who participate in the program.

Reader Services

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in 1995. Dow Chemical is fund.
half-owner of Dow Corning.
The Louisiana plaintiffs
"This is a welcome vindica- have -not decided whether to
tion, especially since Dow appeal the 4th Circuit's ruling
Chemical has . always con- to . the Louisiana Supreme
tended it should never have
been involved in breast- Coun, Root said.
Dow Chemical has always
implaill litigation," Dow
Chemical spokesman John said it did not de\!elop, test or
manufacture berate implants.
Musser.
Root said it was unclear The company earlier was dis;
what would hapyen to the missed from about 4,000
Louisiana plainttffs, but suid implant cases .
they likely would have to
either join a Dow Corning
settlement fund or continue
their suits through a litigation ·

carrier serviCe is available.

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Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

· Editor

Leiters to the editor arr u ·elcome~ Ther should be less than
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Co. s

NATIONAL VIEW

Backfire
Social Security Jailed to
beniftt either party in election

Thesday, December 10, 2002

English is everywhere, Community Calendar
broadcast by cable news
County Churches of Christ

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce

Local

The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, December 10,2002

Page AS

"

- - - -- - - - - - - - - , - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - -- · ·

...
.. -

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
"

Election proves Democrats should shift to the .center ,

Bv MoRTON KoNDRACKE
state legislative seats for the first time Arabia and Iran .
.., .
, ,.
The 2002 election results and the like- since 1952.
To some extent, Democrats have.;·
ly politics of 2004 argue that the
In ' the absence of Election Day exit taken such positions- two presidcniia l:! ·
Democratic Party needs to move to the . polls, From and Reed used a pre-elec· candidates, Sens. John Kerry (Mass.).::• .
center.
The question is: Can it?
tion Gallup poll -- which accurately and J.ohn Edwards (N.C.) , have beew• ·
• The Dallas Morning News, 011 Social Securiry:
Pressure
from
Democratic
primary
caught
the overall trend toward the critical of Bush 's Afghan policies, for••
Democrats sel oul lO wield the Social Security issue like a
voters
is
likely
to
push
2004
presiden·
GOP
to determine that Democrats example - but the party still com6 off
club in this year's election, and they succeeded in turning the
tial candidates to the left, where front· lost ground among midele-class voters. as force-averse on the issue of Iraq.
,.
is1ue around in voters· minds.
runner
AI
Gore
is
already
heading.
And
In
1996,
they
note,
President
Bill
Most
House
Democrats
voted
again
st.;
They used deception, telling senior citizen voters that plans
House Democrats not only chose a lib· Clinton carried voters with incomes giving Bush authority to go to war to •.
to "privatize'' Social Security would cut benefits for current
Rep. Nancy Pelosi (Calif.), as their between $50,000 and $75,000 by 2 disarm Saddam Hussein. Kerry is still
eral,
retirees wl1en not a single plan under consideration would do
leader, bul most are ensconced in safe points. In 2002, according to Gallup, ·,saying that the United States needs the:
that . They used hyperbole, accusing those who would provide
seats,
with more need to keep lhe they lost this largest voting bloc by 60 "legitimacy" of the United Natious"
workers with options for investing their money of threatening
Democratic
base h:fppy than to appeal percent to 38 percent.
before doing so.
..
the clllire system when all the While House proposes is letting
to
swing
voters.
Democrats
won
in
the
·Northeast,
Gore
argues
that
the
campaign
against workers invest 2 percem of payroll taxes. ... ,.
The case for centrism was starkly among urban voters, younger voters and Iraq is.detracling from the war on ter(::erlainly. there were olher reasons for lhe sea change on
in a Nov. 26 memo written by the blacks - i.e., their base vote - but rorism- as if a great power can't figl1 t:
stated
Social Security. Who could have predicted that lhe stock martop
·
two
otlicials of the Democratic Republicans won in the South, Midwest lwo dangerous foes at once - and· ..
ket wo uld falter. or thal so many would suffer setbacks to their
Council, who warned lhat, and West, among suburban and rural · Clinton has sounded a similar theme. _ .
Leadership
retirement savings? Both developmellls made Americans
"on its currenl course, the Democratic voiers; they also carried the white vote
Clinton remains a DLC hero for his
leery of investing even a tiny portion of payroll taxes in pri·
Party
will
lose
the
White
House
in
2004
by
20
percent
and
all
age
groups
over
ability
to hold the Democratic base and·'
vale accounts. Democrats pounced on that fear, trying to con·
even
more
decisively
than
it
lost
the
35,
including
seniors.
expand
the party's support amon g:
vinee voters lhatlhey would be worse off individually in a pri· .
Congress
in
2002."
From
and
Reed
concluded
that
swing
voters,
but that may be a case· of '
vale system .....
That view is sharply at odds with the "unless the Democrats take swift, nostalgia. To win future elections, Reed·'
With Democrats focused on the individual, Republicans
analysis
of liberals heading the aggressive steps to recapture the vital and From argue, Democrats need to
could have engaged the country in a discussion about the colCorps, who contend 'that the · center of the political spectrum that we "close the culture gap" by represen ting .;
Democracy
lective. They didn 'L In slead, they allowed themselves to be
GOP
victory
in November was "largely reclaimed during the 1990s, our party middle-class values.
:.
· bullied on the issue. and left the American people ill served in
tactical" and represented "a relatively will return to the political wilderness
However, Clinton is now regarded_
the process. The While House even said il preferred tabling
small
Republican
advantage
in
actual
and
Republican
gains
will
be
far
more
with
disdain among middle-class votersc' ·
lhe issue umil 2005.
·
votes
cast."
lasting
and
consequential
than
the
grim
for
his
ethical lapses -· to the poin1··
With the election now behind us, there's no need to wait
. In its latest review of post-election results in 2002."
where he mainly is invited to campaigrr···
until then . Washington instead needs lo stop playing games
opinion
polls,
the
Democracy
Corps
My
own
guess
is
that
Democrats
can't
for
Democrats among minority voters ...
and start acting like grownups. There are several bipartisan
.
contends
that
the
political
environment
recapture
the
White
House
or
Congress
On
domestic issues, both liberals ancl .
plans alive in Congress, and legislators need lo address them.
is
"unchanged"
and
"should
strengthen
.
in
2004
unless
President
Bush
and
his
centrists
seem set on a course.of fight -:~
The clock is ticking, and, hey, none of us is getting any
Democrats
in
their
resolve
to
fight
Republicans
either
fail
or
overreach.
At
ing
to
delay
or repeal Bush's tax cuts for'
you nger.
President Bush and the Republicans on .the same time, though, Democrats have high-income taxpayers and to fund a
fundamental issues such as tax cuts, to .put themselves in position to win by short-term tax cut for the middle class.'·
Social Security privatization and energy having credible alternative policies both Both groups agree that the absence of a
independence."
on national security and domestic issues coherent economic strategy was one uf ;
The DLC's AI From and Bruce Reed - alternatives that both liberals and the main reasons - along with Bush's
by contrast, that "Democrats centrists agree they lacked this year.
popularity .- that Democrat.s lost this
contend,
8'1 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
.
suffered
a
significant
defeat
on
Nov.
5,"
.
On
national
security,
the
best
sugges·
year.
.
:
:Today is Tuesday, Dec. I0, the 344th day of 2002. There are
the
overall
vote
for
House
candition
I'ye
heard
for
a
Democratic
strateThe
Democrats'
first
task,
though,
with
21 days lefl in the year.
dates shifting away from a 49-49 lie in gy actually comes from a conservative, will be to form a ·Unified front against
Today 's Highlight in History:
2000 to 51.8 percent for the GOP and the Weekly Standard's Bill Krista!, who Bush's proposed /ermanent extension
On Dec. I0, 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt became
said on a recent Fox News Sunday of the tax cuts an an argument to pro-;
45.2
percent for the Democrats.
the first American to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for
This
was
"almost
identical
to
(the
panel lhat Democrats could move to lect themselves against charges thal ;
h~lpin g lo· mediate an end to the Russo-Japanese War.'
GOP's) 52.4 percent to 45 .4 percent Bush's right.
they are the "tax-and-spend party."
On this date:
margin
in
the
1994
Republican
land·
Democrats,
he
said,
could
favor
a
big·
·In 1817, Mississippi was admitted as the 20th state.
slide." Moreover, "Republicans scored ger security force in Afghanistan, more
(Morton Kondracke is executive edi - .:
: In 1869, women were granted the. right to vote in the
a
net
gain
of
more
than
200
state
legexpenditures
for
homeland
security
and
ror
of Roll Call, the newspaper oj:.
Wyoming Territory.
islative contests" and hold a majority of defense and a harder line .on .Saudi Capitol Hill.)
•
In 1898, a treaty was signed in Paris officially ending the
Spanish-American War.
- - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -----_:_- - - .,
In 1931, Jane Addams became a co-recipient of the Nobel
Peace Prize, the first American woman so honored.
·
WASHINGTON TODAY
. -In 1948, the U.N. Ge11eral Assembly adopted its Universal
Declaration on Human Rights ,
In 1950, Ralph J. Bunche was presented the Nobel Peace
Prize, the first black American to receive the award.
In 1962, "Lawrence of Arabia," David Lean's epic film starring Peter O'Toole as British officer T.E. Lawrence, had ils
BY WILL LEsTER
lots, customized to the voters' neighbor· master this or any other tactic for long
royal gala premiere in London.
WASHINGTON ·- Republicans' suc· hoods, and information on the locations of unchallenged:"
In 1964, lhe Rev. Martin .Luther King Jr. received the Nobel
cess
at turning out voters in the 2002 polling places. During the summer and
Donna Brazile, a Democratic specialisl
Peace Prize during ceremonies in Oslo, Norway.
midterm
election
means
the
GOP
will
fall,
they
also
talked
with
people
in
their
at
voter turnout, especially tumoul of'
In 1967. singer Otis R.edding died in lhe crash of his private
make
the
aggressive
voter
tumout
strateneighborhoods.
black voters, said the GOP's effort to beat ·
plane in Wisconsin.
gy
borrowed
from
Democrats
and
orgaJack
Stansbery,
who
directed
.
the
Democrats
at the.ir own game proved sue-·:
In 1987. violinist Jascha Heifetz died in Los Angeles at age
nized
labor
an
essential
part
of
its
camColorado
effort,
said
the
intensive
voter
cessful.
~.
.
.
. paigns.
tumout effort can have an impact up to 4 "Th~y had better targeting, they were ;
Ten years ago: President-elect Clinton announced his first
Republicans get a chance to test these percentage points, crucial in a close race successful at nationalizing the election :
Cabinet selections, including Lloyd Bentsen to be treasury
skills
Saturday in Louisiana's Senate like Colorado's 7th Congressional District ·and better at grabbing the moderate inde-.;
secretary and Leon Panetta to be budget director. Oregon
runoff
between Democratic incumbent election between Republican Bob pendents," said Brazile, chair of;
Senator Bob Packwood apologized for what he called "unwelMary
Landrieu
and Repubiican Suzanne Beauprez and Democrat Mike Feeley.
Democratic National Committee's votin ~
come and offensive" actions toward women, but refused to
Haik
Terrell.
Beauprez
apparently
got
122
more
rights institute. "The Democratic Party .
resign.
.
.
"Quite
probably
it
has
changed
the
way
votes,
but
a
recount
was
wrapping
up.
will have to come up with a new model ini
Five years ago: The Supreme Court narrowed double-jeop·
'
:
Republicans
get
out
their
vote
forever,"
Republican incumbent Sen. Wayne Allard 2004.'~
ard y protecti ons for people who face both civil fines and crim·
Kevin Sheridan, a spokesman for the defeated Democrat Tom Strickland by a Mississippi Gov. Ronnie Musgrove, a~·
inal prosecution fo r the same conduct, ruling thal lhree
Republican
National Committee, said of 51-46 margin.
Democrat, will need lO have that ne1~
Oklahoma men could be prosecuted in a bank failure case
the
success
of
the
GOP's
"72-hour
task
"The
margin
of
victory.in
some
of
these
Democratic strategy in place by 2003,
even though they 'd already paid civ il fines for their actions.
force."
races proved loa lot of our volunteers that When he faces re-election. Democr;ll ic~
One yea r ago: President Bush told reporters a videotape of
Factors this year such as President their help in the get-out-the-vote efforts is candidates for governor had more succesS:
Osama bin Laden in which the ai·Qaida leader talked happily
Bush's
popularity and national security crucial." Stansbery said. "This will make than Democrats generally, he said.
. •
abou t the Sepl. II allacks "just remi nded me of what a mur·
issues were as important as the new grass- it easier to recruit help in the future. "
"People are looking for capable, com· ··
derer he is. " Federal authorities charged Golden Stale
roms approach.
Nowhere was the GOP turnout effort petent leadership thal un.derstands slate:,
Transportation. a Los Angeles-based bus company; wilh ille·
In
the
pasl.
Republicans
relied
more
more
impressive than in .Georgia, where priorities," 1\11 usgrove said.
:· ·
gaily lransponing thousands . of undocumented aliens from
heavily on television advertising and Republican state Chairman Ralph Reed
staging areas near lhe U.S.-Mexico border.
·
r
He said people are much more imcrest.. ;:
direct maJI. tinanced by their big advan· helped organize the · effort to defeat ed in a govemor's plan to help'a slate than:
Today's Birthdays: Aclor H:~rold Gould is 79. Former
tage in campaign money. Democrats, led Democratic Gov. Roy Barnes and Sen. in national political trends.
Agri cu lture Secretary Clayton Yeuuer is 72. Actor Mako is 69.
by the AFL-CIO, had developed a more Max Cleland.
Actor Tommy Kirk is 61 . Actress Fimfnula Flanagan is 61.
In November, Republicans "were ab k ·
aggressive voter turnout effort in the mid·
"Clearly Presidem Bush and the White to tum out their. vote because they d1d ,, ·
Pop singer Chad Stuarl (Chad and Jeremy) is 59. Actress·
to lale- l9_90s. They oflen could cloSe a House pol iticalteam created an overarch· good job of identifying il, and they sci 1J1c: ·
singer Gloria Loring is 56. Pop-funk musician Waller "Clyde''
·
race by several percentage points or over. ing national political environmem that terms of debate for this election," said:
Orange (The Commodores) is 55. Rhythm-and-blues singer
take ReJ'lubl ican candidates who hac! a was extremely helpful to all our candi· Curtis Gans, directbr of the Committe·,)
Ralph Tal' arcs is 54. Rhyt hm-and-blues singer Jessica Cleaves
slight lead jL\Sl before lhe election.
1Friends of Di st ine~ion 1 is 54 . Countr y sin ger Johnny
dales," Reed said. "There was a wind at for the. Study of the American Electoral,:. ::
In
2002,
the
Colorado
Republicans
senl
Rodri guez is 51. Actress Su.san Dey is 50. Jaumu sician Paul .
our backs."
"Who won and losl in the organizin ~ w;1·. :
Hardcastle is .JS . Actor-director Kenneth Branagh is 42 .
l ,300 val unteers into neighborhoods in
But Reed said the GOP's upper hand on a function o.f who set an agenda anS w[l,, ·
Aclrcss Nia Peeples is 4 1. Actor Mi chael Clarke Duncan is 39.
the lhree days before Nov. 5, visiting an voter turnout was unlikely to be perma· did not."
Rock singeHllu si'cian J :\1a.scis is 37. Country singer Kevi n
. estimated 300,000 homes of Republican- nenL
(Will Lester covers politics and pollilf &lt;
::
S[Hirp id2. Ruck musician Scut Alexamk r (Dishwalla) is 31.
leaning Coloradans. They left sample bal"I don't think either party is likely to for The Associared Press.)
_ .
'

DEAR ABBY: You printed
a letter from "Disillusioned
American," who interceded
when he saw a man in his 60s
chastise a youn~ couple for
spea!'ing a foretgn language
outstde a Kmart. You called it
an example of xenophobia.
I do not share either the
opinion of "Disillusioned" or
you regarding people who
refuse to learn Enghsh or at
least speak it in public. There
are two Spanish-language TV
networks in this country. Tell
me another country that
. allows foreign language chan·
nels to operate, contributing
to the fragmentation of that
country.- LAWRENCE IN
AVON PARK, FLA.
DEAR
LAWRENCE:
Cable Network News (CNN)
· is an English· language net·
work that is broadcast in more
than 210 countries and territories in English. (In fact, someone recently told me she had
seen me on "Larry King Live"
while she was in Beijing _
obviously not a nation that
:uses English as its primary
.
.
language.)
. DEAR ABBY: I am proud
. llf bemg not only American,
. but a Chinese American. r was
raised bilingually and bicul·
. -turally. Other than my Asian
features , most people would
be hard-pressed to find any. (hing "on-American" about

"

Dear Abby

Concerts, Shows

remarks are still thrown at me
·for no other reason than my
appearance. Fortunately, that
type of bigotry is fading, but
comments and actions lt'ke
that · inan experienced at
Kmart are common and
should be stopped. White
Americans should be sensitive about any treatment of
nonwhite Americans as different.
For example, I am frequent·
ly asked where I am from.
When I answer "Pittsburgh"
(where I was born and raised),
the response I often get ·is,
"No, where are you REALLY
from?" as if I couldn't be
from America. I know people

Tuesday, Dec. 1o
SYRACUSE - Carleton
School annual Christmas proADVICE
gram, 6:30 p.m. in the school
gymnasium . Students and
not also asked where they are .staff invite the public.
from. In this country, anyone
with an accent is considered
"exotic" -- and as such,
inspires curiosity. When peo·
pie are curious, they ask ques11Jesday,Dec.10
tions . 1 know I'm right,
MIDDLEPORT
because I have been guilty of Middleport Masonic Lodge,
·
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic
n.DEAR ABBY: I came to Temple.
this country 20 years ago and
attended college in the
Thursday, Dec. 12
Midwest. 1 have also been
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
accosied by such "patriots" on
campus, in restaurants, and
wherever 1 happened to be
h ·
avuig a conversation in my
language. My appearance
does not give people any clue
that I am not a "red-blOoded
American." I speak perfect,
unaccented English, in addition to other languages, and I
know there are many people
RACINE - Star Mill Park
like me.
Board will hold its annual
Because I Choose to speak Christmas celebration at the
another language does not American Legion Hall on
mean I don't know English. 1 Thursday, Dec.12.
find it fascinating that
The program will open with
Americans, when in other · a candlelight walk at 6 p.m.
countries, expect people to around the walking track in
accommodate their language the park.
needs, but do not afford the
Southern Elementary first
same courtesy to people who graders will be singing at the
come to this countj;. _.
hall, starting at 6:30 p.m. after
THERESA· ·B·•· Hou· s ON which Santa will arrive and
DEAR
THERESA: present the children with
Interesting point. And it's a treats.
good reason why American
For information, contact
Dale Hart at 949-2656.
d
h
ld
I
stu ems s ou earn at least
one foreign language. Our
world is shrinking, and it
doesn't revolve around us.
. DEAR ABBY: If that gen·
tleman wants to be politically
POMEROY - Breakfast
correct, perhaps he should be
speaking an American Indian
dialect, since the Indians were
here first and the Pilgrim
fathers changed the lanfuaYN

arecuriousaboutmyheritage,
but Caucasians (even ones
with accents) are not treated
thus, so why are those of us
with Asian . features, but
nonaccemed English, treated
this way? - PROUD CHINESE AMERICAN
DEAR PROUD CHI·
NESE AMERICAN: Don't
be so quick to assume that
Caucasians with accents are

(Onlyjoking!)-SAL
WILLOW GROVE, PA.y
DEAR SALLY: Mini-haha!
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

m~owever, oc&lt;;asional racist

TODAY IN HISTORY

Voter turnout strategies leave Republicans encouraged

Tuesday, Dec. 10
. POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m . at
the townhall ,

Clubs and
Organizations

Candlelight ..
walk planned

Breakfast with
Santa

.

Sharlene Carmear, Hallie
and
Heather
Brooks,
Debbie, Tyler, Kathryn and
Allison Barber, Lloyd
Brooks. Tim, · Tiffany, and
Kirt Spencer, 1\ilarilyn
Robinson, Richard Spencer,
Dave and Jane Beattie, Pete
and Osie Follrod, Nellie
Parker, all local, and Lee
Ann Fick and Olivia of
Loveland.

Thanksgiving dinner guests
SYRACUSE
Thanksgiving dinner guests
of Larry
and . Sally
Ebersbach of Syracuse
were Joyce Carson and Ed
Carson of West Columbia,
·W. Va.: George, Bev and
Cody Knapp of Letart, W.
Va.; Leigha, Gregory and

Terry
Fenwick
f
C
' II
W
Vo
ottagevi e,
· . a.;
Mehssa Smnh and Knsun
Cozart of Eleanor, W. Va.;
John Gregory of Dubhn;
Chris and Aimee Ebersbach
of Wickliffe, and David and
Kelly
Ebersbach
of
Madison, Ind.

'

Proud to be a part of your community

Saturday, Dec. 14
POMEROY - Breakfast
with Santa. at the Meigs
County Muse1,1m , 9·11 a.m. 01t
the Meigs County Museum.
Reservations to be in by
Friday, 992·381 0.

Church services
'

Thursday, Dec. 12
POMEROY - Revival at
the Faith Valley Tabernacle
Church, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy, 7. p.m: each evening
through Dec. 15. Pastor
Emmett Rawson, speaker;
sepcial singing and prayer for

. Tueaday, Dec. 10
Meigs
· POMEROY
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic, 9 to 11
a.m and 1 to 3 p.m. at the
office on Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy. Take child's shot
records. Each child must be
accompanied 'by a parent or
legal guardian. Donations
appreciated but notd required.
Flu shots will also be available
at th&lt;~t time. Take Medicare or
Medicaid card. Flue shots
without a card are $15.

•

with Santa will be held from
9-11 a.m. at the Meigs
County Museum Saturday.
It will be an ·all-you-caneat breakfast of pancakes,
sausage, · and scrambled
eggs. Cost if $3 for adults,
and $2 for children 12 and
under. Reservatio-ns are to
be made before Friday at
992-3810.
Those attending will be
invited to view the Teddy
bear exhibit on display for
the holiday season.

POMEROY - Thomas
Minshall celebrated his third
birthday .at his home on Oct.
28.
.
Attending were his moth·
er, Lisa Minshall, his great·
grandmother,
Francis
Jeffers, his great-grandfa.
ther, Jim Bland, Kim Green ,
Ron and ·Stella Icenhower,
Cassie Jeffers, Danielle and
Bradly Heighton, Teresa,
James and . Bridgette Gray,
Amy McGuire, Julie Leach,
Sandra
and . Jonathan
McDaniel.

Carleton School
.Christmas

Raising Community
Awareness About Alzheimer•s

SYRACUSE - The annual
Christmas
program
of
.Carleton School will be held
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
c;:arleton School Gymnasium.

A'.dults are· e
· .ssentl•all·n·
chI•1 dren 's seIf-esteem

Children who have high
self-esteem are more likely
tb be happy, self-confident
and resilient after facing
unsuccessful
efforts.
Parents, child care providers
and other adults are instru·
mental in developing posi·
tive self-images in children.
The most important way
to enhance your children's
self-image is to show you
love them. Demonstrate
your affection for them by
singing, reading and talking
to them. Hold them and let
them know how much you
cheri sh, appreciate and
value them.
Be frequent, but genuine,
in your compliments. Praise
your children for their
efforts, . as well as their
accomplishments. Provide
them with opportunities to
be successful. Have high
expectations of them, but
not so high that they are
. unreasonable and unattainable.
Encourage children to deal
with criticism and frustra·
tions in an acceptable manner. Let them knowthat no
one can be successful all of
the time and that failures do
occur. Tell them you under·
stand their disappointments,
but they will be able to try
again at a later time.
Give children choices.
Let them make some of their
own important decisions,

Other events

'

-----------------------------------------·

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

.

the sick.
Friday, Dec. 13
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Saturday, Dec. 14
Fellowship Christmas dinner,
POMEROY - Annual holi·
noon at the Middleport Church day dinner, 6 p.m. at the
of Christ. Each member is to Laurel Cliff Free Methodist ·
take a finger food and a $1 gift Church. Friends invited .
for an exchange.

Birthday

Holiday events

Christmas dinner held
ALFRED - The Alfred
United Methodist Church
held its annual Christmas
dinner Sunday.
It followed Sunday school
and worship services. Pastor
Jane Beattie asked grace
before the carry-in meal.
Attending were Nina
Robinson, Sarah Caldwell,
The1ma Henderson, Victor
Bahr, Russell Archer, Doris
and Lloyd Dillinger, M;try
Jo Buckley, Janice Weber,.

Women's Fellowship, 7 p.m. at
the Bradford Church. Zion to
have devotions and pr0 gram .
There will be a money tree.
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053, 6:30 p.m. dinner
followed by 7 p.m. meeting at
the hall .
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, Beta Sigma Phi
sorority, . Christmas dinner,
6:00 p.m. at Morgan's Rest.
Donna Byer to have the pro·
gram . Take nems for Serenty
House.
·
RACINE - Star Mill Park
Board's annual ChristmaS eel- ·
ebration to open with a 6 p.m.
candlelight walk around the
walking track in the park.
Southern Elementry first
graders to sing at 6:30 p.m. at
the American Legion hall after
which Santa will arrive and
present the children with
treats.

Becky
Baer
EXTENSION AGENT

with appropriate limitations.
Since children crave atten·
tion and seek it· in many
ways, they may misbehave
in order for you to pay al'tention to · them. Combat this
by concentrating on their
good behavior. Give them
your attention when they are
doing things right. Help
them by setting boundaries
and offering encouragement.
Avoid constant yelling and
belittling which destroys
self-confidence.
Misbehavior will still need
to be addressed, but make
sure you regularly recognize
and acknowledge the children's positive behaviors.
Evaluate your own self·
esteem. Since children pat·
tern behavior after what
they see others do, display a
positive self-image for them
to follow.
(Becky Baer is the Meigs
County extension agenr,
Family and Co/ISume.r
Science siC om mu nit y
Developmelir)

Others
presenting
to
gifts
him · were
Thomas
Minshall
of
Rio
Grande,
James and
Je n n y
Minshall
of Portsmouth, Serena,
Larry. Whitney and Kia Peer
of Columbus, Johnny,
Kristen, Brandon, Justin and
Joshua Sommerville.

. Bv Lou HoRVATH

progress, our seniors' retire·
Social Security manager
ment years have been fuller,
more productive and longer.
It's been said that our Despite this overall improve·
memories are all that we ment in health care,
really own in life. If that's so, . Alzheimer's. disease contin. then Alzheimer's disease has ues to take many of the best
· to rank. as one of the worst and most enjoyable years of
afflictions that can strike life from millions of seniors.
someone.
I think all of us have been
Social Security joins with moved by former President
other national and communi- Ronald Reagan's battle with
ty organizations·in observing Alzheimer's disease, and
National
Alzheimer's many of us have relatives or
Disease Awareness Month. friends
who
have
Alzheimer's is a progressive, Alzheimer's.
degenerative disorder of. the
Slightly more than half of
brain that robs /eople of Alzheimer's disease patients
their memory an much of receive care from their farni·
their mental and physical ly and, friends at home.
functions. Eventually, it can Years of providing for the
lead to death.
emotional, physical and
About
four
million financial . needs of a loved
Americans now suffer from one with this difficult disease
Alzheimer's disease. The can be emotionally painful
chance
of
having and exhausting 'for a caregiv·
Alzheimer's disease rises significantly ~ith age, and as erPresident Bush has call d
older Amencans become a
.
e
larger percentage of our on all Amencan~ to learn
nation's population, t!Je num- .• more abo.ut the d1sease and
ber of people exr\.il&lt;ied to to take t1me to h,onor and
develop Alzheimerr;ill rise support Alzheu~er s d1sease
dramaucally. It has been esti- patients and_the1r fa1111hes .. I
mated that 14 million JOlll m urgmg everyone m
Americans, mostly seniors, our· community to do what
will suffer from Alzheimer's they can to help combat
by the middle of this century. Alzheimer's disease, through
Those of us at Social donations for research, and
·Security work with older by helping families and comAmericans eve'/': day and munity organizations care
know how happily most of for tho)e with the disease.
them look forward to well·
By doing so we can help
·earned retirement years. And those whose future now
over the last few decades, as seems so bleak to at least
medicine makes ever ·more . have hope for tomorrow.

DISH
NElWORK

NGSYOU

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::.::::~-:=.······ -----· --~--

•
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Page A~

Business

The Daily Sentinel

..

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel ·

Scoreboard, Page 83

. Tuesday, December 10, 200i

.•

MedFiight expands
· . INvEsTMENT viEwPoiNT . •
helicopter service Preparation can lead to happy retirement
ATHENS - O'Blene ss
Memorial Hospital patients
who are critically ill or
injured and in need of air
transportation to another
medical facility will benefit
from improveme.nts in the
helicopter capabilities providtd by MedFlight of Ohio.
MedFlight
recently
financed and implemented
the development of a Global
Positioning · System (GPS)
approach at O' Bleness. The
.new GPS approach allows
pilots to land MedFlight's
Columbus-based,
GPS -.
equipped helicopter at
O'Bieness' heliport with the
aid of instruments when visibility is limited by adverse
weather conditions. such as
fog . The Wellston -based
MedFiight helicopter, which
is not GPS-equipped and
cannot travel in adverse
weather conditions, will
continue providing air transportation in good weather.
O'Bieness is one of only six
Ohio hospitals to receive the
new service.
"These .GPS systems are
very simijar to the GPS
approaches used at airports
to increase . reliability and
enhance
safety during
adverse weather conditions
and night flying. " said Mark
Collins, director of air se rvices at MedFlight.
Before the development of
the new GPS approac h,

MedFlight could dispatch _a
mobile
inten sive
care
ground unit. a GPSequipped helicopter. or an
airplane from ·co lumbu s
during adverse weather condition s. However, the airplane and the helicopter had
to land at the Ohio
University Airport near
Albany. With. the new GPS
approach , the GPS equipped
helicopter can land at
O' Bleness ' heliport, elimi·
nating the time it takes to
transport the patient from
O'Bleness to the helicopter
or airplane waiting at the
·
atrport.
The
GPS-equipped
MedFlight helicopter from
Co lumbu s can arnve at
0 ' Bleoless. in 4~ minutes
while the helicopter from
the Wellston base can arrive
in only 13 minutes. Both can
transport a patitnt. to a
Columbus hospital in about
33 minutes. Although the
GPS equipped helicopter
expand s MedFlight's capabilities, the helicopter will
still have limitations in
ex treme weather conditions,
such as ice storms or !hunderstorms . In those situations , airplane and ground
transportation remain as
options.
O' Bleness in stalled a heliport in 1983 - the first in
the area.

Personnel Notes
Enrico-Simon
granted
certification
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-Agnes, A.
EnricoSimon, MD,
DABFP
recently
received
board cert ification in
the specialty of Family
Practice by
Enrico-Simon t
h
e
American
, · Board
of
Family Practice for the years
2002 through 2009.
·
Simon received her medical
degree in 1988 from the
University of Santo Tomas
located · in
Manilla,
Philippines. From 1988 to
1989 she completed her postgraduate internship· at the
SantO Tomas University
Hospital and from 1990 to
1992 she finished her pediatric residency at the Hospital
of the Infant Jesus, also located in Manila, Philipines,
where she was named chief
resident in 1993.
After coming to the United
States in 1996, Simon became
a Research Fellow in the
Division of Human Genetics
and Molecular Biology at
the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia. She completed
her familv medicine re sidency at" West Virginia
University in 2001 at
Harpers ' Ferry. She served
as the chief res ident in the
sa me year.
Prior to comi ng to
Pleasant Valley Hospita l,

Here 's some information
that may interest you: The
happiest retirees .are those
who feel fmanctally prepared for retirement.
This finding, from ~study
by Hams Interactive, a
major polling firm, may not
be shocking . After all, you
would ·probably expect that
retirees who feel financially
prepared would be more
content than those who are
worried abou t outliving
their income.
But you might be surprised by another finding
gleaned from the study:
Retirement happiness is
directly linked to the number of years you' ve been
saving for retirement, rather
than your net worth although the two factors are
certainly related.
Just how long do you need
to save before you can feel
you're financially prepared
for retirement? In reality,
there's probably no one
"right" answer, because
everyone has different goals
for retirement. ·
Nonetheless, the Harris
survey does point to some
interesting numbers :
• 61 rcercent of those who
save d or 25 years or more
said they were extremely
satisfied with retirement.
• 51 percent of those who
saved for 15 to 24 . years

Amy
B
MOWffiall
oore
ADVICE
said they were extremely
satisfied.
• 46 percent of those who
saved less than 15 years
said they were extremely
satisfied .
The lessons seem clear:
Start saving for retirement
as early as you can. By
putting time on your side,
you great!/ increase your
chances o enjoying your
retirement years.
The Harris survey didn't
just ask respondents about
how long they had been
saving
and
investing.
Another question
was
designed to relate retirees'
happiness with the type of
investments they had accumulated.
.•
The finclings? The happic
est retirees' investment
portfolios were weil-diver'
st·f ·ted. Stocks made up o
the bulk of these retirees'
holdings, with smaller allocations in fixed-income
securities and re·al estate.
·r

ODOT employees
help needy families

Simon served us the clinical
director at the Harpers ' Staff report
Ferr~
Family Medicine
Clintc and as an assistant
MARIETIA
Ohio
professor at WVU.
Department of Transportation
(ODOT) employees donated
$480.000 of tl)qir own money
to charity during the state's
Combined
Charitable
Campaign this fall. That's up
$40,000 from last yea:r.
·
OOOT
District
10,
which
POINT . PLEASANT,
Gallia,
W.Va.
Randall F. includes Athens,
Hawkins, Hocking; Meigs, Morgan,
MD , was Monroe, Noble, Vinton and
recently re- Washington counties, raised
certified in $30,074 for this campaign.
The money collected during
the specialthe
fall drive benefits Ohio
ty
of
charities
that service children
lnte ·r nal
Medicine and senior citizens, medical
by
the research projects, literacy and
American neighborhood development
Board of efforts, humanitarian and disasInternal ter relief efforts and environ·
Hawkins
Medicine mental education and conservafpr the years 2002 through tion programs.
Nearly half of all OOOT
20 II.
employees
donated to the charHawkins graduated in
1987 with hi s medical ities, averaging $190 per perdegree
from
Marshall son. OOOT Director Gordon
University and, in 1989, Proctor said he is proud of the
completed his residency in increase because "more money
internal medicine at the will go back to the communities
same in st itute. He also in which we work and live."
"Our impact on the citizens
obtained his Bachelor of
of
Ohio·is unique among all the
Science degree in medical
technology in 1983 from state agencies m that we are the
only agency with employees in
West Virginia University.
every
county in the Buckeye
Hawkins is a member of
the
American Medical State," Proctor said. 'The
Charitable
Association (AMA), Mason Combined
Campaign
offers
us
the oppor·
County Medical Society and
tumty
to
support
our
vanous
the American Coll~ge of
communities through a variety
Physicians.
He and his wife, Jennifer, of programs dealing with
a regi stered nurse, have four health, human, educational, and
children Jonathon,
12, environmental services."
Campaign, ODOT's Central
Christopher, 9, and Trevor
and Tate, 4-year-old twins. Office. located in Columbus,
The family resides in Point collected · food and money for
the Mid-Ohio FoodBank this
Pleasant.
month.

Hawkins
granted
re-certification

In the past, OOOT has collected more than 70 baskets for
the Mid-Ohio FoodBan\{, and
similar results are expected this
year. OOOT has given to the
Mid-Ohio FoodBank during
the holidays and throughout the
year for more than a decade.

Apparently, maintatmng a
diversified array of investments helped contribute to
the respondents' feelings of
being well prepared for
retirement.
The survey's results support many other studies
that, over the years, have
shown the value of diversification . But you can diversify your portfolio in many
ways. To determine which
mix of investments is
appropriate for you, consider the following :
• Your goals -What do
you plan to do during retirement? If you envision traveling around the world and
maintaining a couple of
houses , your investment
income needs will be far
different than those of your
neighbor who plans to stick
close to home and do some
consulting.
• Your risk toleranceIf you're an aggressive
investor, you're willing to
accept a greater degree .of
risk in exchange for potentially . higher returns. If
you're
a conservative
investor,
you're
more
i nclined to protect your
principal a.tall costs, even if
it means sacrificing growth.
And if you're a moderate
investor, you're somewhere
in between.
Your individual asset allo1

Airline stewardesses, required
to be registered nurses, pose in
front of a United Air Lines'
Boeing transport in San
Francisco, Calif, in this May 15 ,
1930.file photo. Standing in
foreground from left are,
Margare~ Arnott, Inez Keller.
Cornelia Peterman. Harriet !den,
Jessie Carter, and Ella
Crawford. Standing in the doorway from left are, Ellen Church
and Alva Johnson. U'nited
Airlines made the largest bankruptcy filing in aviation history,
saying it was the only way to
keep the world's No. 2 airline
flying after two years of heavy
losses , (AP)

,.

Girls·basketball

Pro football

Waterford rolls
over Meigs

proximity to retirement will
also help shape your investment mix. If you're many
years away from retiring,
·
't
you may want 10 mve~
more aggressively, 'beGause
you have time to bounce
back
from
short-term
volatility. But if you're only
a few years away from
retirement, you might wadt
to shift some_ but certairi-

BY JtM SouLSBY
Marauders held their last leact
Sports correspondent
of the game at 7-5 on a
--'---...:..:..::...:....:....:....:..:._ _ Chrissy Miller
basket.
· POMEROY - The Lady Waterford took the lead for
Wildcats of Waterford broke good scoring 5 points in the
open a close game with a 17- last: 08 of the quarter when
3 second period run and went Hayley Drayer hit a thtee and
on to defeat the Meigs Lady Heather Fulmer turned a steal
Marauders 55-36 at Waterford into a lay-up to give the
Wildcats a I0-7 lead after one
Monday night.
quarter.
' The loss is the fourth in as
Pierce ·pulled Meigs to
many
starts
for
the
Marauders. Meigs only man- within I at I0-9 with 6:55 left
aged 12 ftrst half points as the in the half, but the Maraudel'!
hosts raced to a IS-point half- would not score from the fielc1
time advantage at 27-12. The again
until
Shannor
. turnover bug again bit the Soulsbyls jumper made it 2().
Marauders hard as the 12 with 3: 18 left in the half
maroon am) gold committed Waterford ended the ftrst If
12 miscues in the first half minutes with a 7-0 run to push
and 24 for the entire game.
the lead to 15 at intermission.
Waterford got on the board
Meigs pulled to within 10
tirst as Mallory McCutcheon with Pierce, Soulsby and
connected on a three pointer J!!)lqee Davis keeping Meigs
to open the scoring at the 7:20 _in the game early in the secmark of the ftrst quarter.
ond half.. Chrissy Miller
Meigs took a short lived 4- scored late in the period to
3 lead on two straight buckets
Please see Meigs, B:Z
by Samantha Pierce, the

ly not all _. of your investment dollars into more SIC(•
ble, conservative vehicles .: ·
There you have it. To-be
happy during retirement,
you need to invest for many
years beforehand, and you .
need to be properly diversr_·.
fied . Take action soon - · ·
the future will be here
before you know it.
(Amy Bowman -Moore ls
the
_Edward
· Jon&lt;~~
Investments representative
for the Gallipolis area. She.
can be contacted at her
office, 990A Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, at 740-44 f.- .
9441.)

Southern defeats
Miller inTVC
Hocki.ng action

.6

•WIN•

.....

2FREEnCKm
SPRINB VAlLEY
CINEMIJ
FIND YOUR NAPIIE IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN! '--F;;';C~\iai;~ing:~~Ovii:i'"""

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent

~ay

Merry Christmas·
to OOmeone 8pecial with a
&amp;ntinel Holiday Ornament
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Child's Name: _ _ _-,-_

Miami Dolphins wide receiver James McKnight (80) jumps for extra yards as Chicago Bears cornerback R.W. McQuarters makes
the stop in the first quarter of .the Monday game in Miami. (AP) ·
.

Dolphins take down .Bears
MIAMI (AP) - Ricky Williams defensive end Jason Taylor sa id .
untucked his jersey, removed his' "He's a completely different back
cleats, slipped on a baseball cap and than he was in New Orleans. He 's carleft the field smiling as hundreds of rying us. He pounds them and we. sit
fans cheered and chanted his name. · there and watch. It's nice , except
He felt like he was back in college. when he breaks that long one and the
He looked like it, too.
defense has to go back on the field."
Williams topped 200 yards for the
That has happened a lot lately.
Williams had a 63-yard touchdown
second consecutive week, . gaining
216 yard's and scoring twice as the run Monday, breaking his career-long
Miami Dolphins beat the Chicago run of 55 yards set last week. Both
Bears 27-9 Monday night. He became came on the same play - a counter in
just the third running back to reach which he started left then cut back
the 200-yard milestone in consecutive right behind two pulling blockers .
games, and · the first since Earl
Williams asked offensive coordinaCampbell in 1980. He ran for a team- tor Jllorv Turner to run the play earlirecord 228 yards last week against er this season, but. Turner balked and
Buffalo.
waited until last week to unveil it.
"He 's been phenomenal," Dolphins· The counter was Williams' favorite

_;__....__;_~----..,.

From: ___________________________________
YourName:----~--~----------------------

Address: -----,-~-----------­
Phone:~----..,.---'---------.:.._-

play in college at Texas, where he ran
for 2,124 yards as a senior and won
the Heisman Trophy.
"It 's a confidence thing ," . said ·
Williams, who attributes his breakaway speed to losing more than 20
pound s before the season. "In college,
I knew once a game I would have a
long run. Now I'm proactive going
after -the big run."
Williams carried 31 times, gained ·
the most yards eve r aga inst the Bears
and overtook Kan sas City 's Priest
Holmes for the NFL rushing lead with
I ,5 00 yards.
"He's hard to tackle, and he made
Please see Dolphins, 82

RACINE - Placing all 11
. players in the scofing column,
the Southern Lady Tornadoes
defeated the Miller Falcons 67.30 Saturday during Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
action in Southern Is Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium.
Southern (3-0, 2-0 TVC
Hocking) was led by senior
Rachel Chapm'lfl's 17 point'
and seven rebounds, while
junior Katie Sayre notched 12
points, Brigette Barnes added
12 points, sophomore Joanne
Pickens nine, and Amy Lee
and Tara Pickens four each.
Lee had a $real floor game
with som!!. thread:the-needle
p~ses for eight assists. Others
hllung the sconng column
were IJ)eana Pullins, Ashley
Roush, Brooke Kiser, and
Susan Brauer with two each,
and Ashley Dunn one.

Miller's Sam Britton hac.
nine, Mandy Spencer had six
while the nio of Malarie Altiet
Megan Osborne, and AshleJ
Hinkle each added four
Brianne Hinkle .two, anc
c
H
ourtney oops ·one.
Southern jumped out to an 8
0 iun on bucket5 by sisters Tar,
and Joanne Pickens; whii1
Katie Sayre and Chapman boll
drilled baseline jumpers
Brigene Baines made it I().(
before Spencer scored a goa
for the Falcons. Behind fou
Joanne
Pickens
points
Southem raced to a 19-7 firs
period lead.
. Behind 'another strong peri
od, fueled mostly by Chapmar.
and Sayre, Southern whirled w
a 38-15 halftime advantage
. Amy Lee had already begun r
good tloor game with three
assists to her credit, whik
Brigette Barnes hit a couplf
stop-and-pop jumpers. Spence:
Please see Southern, B:Z

Eastern takes down
South Gallia

Boys basketball

BY ScOTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent

Portsmouth tops Eastern at Wellston tourney

TUPPERS PLAINS
Behind a potent 25-point second quarter explosion, the
Eastern Lady Eagles soared to
a 62-28 non-league victory
over the South Gallia Rebels
Monday :night during girls
high school basketball action.
Eastern is now 2-1 overall and
0-I· in the Tri-Valley
Conference, while South
Gallia falls to 0-4.
Eastern was. led in scoring
by sophomore Jennifer
Hayman who poured in 13
points and had eight rebounds,
while sophomore Morgan
Weber added ten points and
seven caroms. Jessie Hupp
added eight, Krista White · Please see Eastern. B:Z

BY ScoTT WOLFE .
Sp9rts correspondent

Ads must be pre-paid
•

Tuesday, December 10, 2002

cation
your mix: of
investments will be
shaped, in part, by yotir
investment personality and
risk tolerance .
• Time horizon _ Your

* 1Child f'er Ad ·

From beginnings to bankruptcy

Page Bl

WELLSTON - Helping
kick-off the opening of the new
Wellston High School gymnasium as pan of the annual
Holiday Hoops Classic, the
Eastern Eagles did most everything they had to - except
bring home the victory:
The Portsmouth Trojans (2-1)
were pinned on the ropes late in
the game, but Eastern let the
win slip away with PHS win-

ning on a last second shot.
Gerald Froe who stole an
inbounds pass with under ten
soconds to play, then hit a short
jumper for . the win led the
Trojans with 26 points, a performance that bordered the edge of
offensive dominance during the
day. No other Trojan hit double
figures, but Ash Green had six
and Aaron Smith five.
Eastern (2- 1), who was with·
out talented freshman guard
Nathan Cozart was led by dual
13-point efforts · from Alex

Simpson and Cody Dill. Cozart
injured his elbow in the River
Valley · game Thesday and is
fighting off an ensuing infection. He may be sidelined yet
another week to ten days. Jason
Kimes added six, Nathan Grubb
five, and Brent Buckley four.
Paraphrasing Coach Howie
Caldwell's words of wisdom
from Saturday's game, the contest itself was a "big one that got
away."
Foul shooting played a big
role in the game. Early Trojan

deficiencies (3- 13) at th~ foul
line may have set up Eastern's
shot at a victory late in the
game. But the free throw virus
crossed enemy lines and hit the
Eagles when they needed points
most, rigbt at the end.
Relatively close throughout
the game, both teams battled
hard until the waning moments
of the third frame and early
fourth quarter minutes when
PHS built a 39-30 advantage.
Simpson and Dill were caught
Please see Toomey, B:Z

eight, Alyssa Holter eight, and
Krystal Baker five.
' South Gallia was led in
scoring by Julia Gwinn with
six: points, and four each from
Joanie
Fellure , Hether
Temple, Jessica Watson, and
Ashley Cremeans.
Eastern
coach
Rick
Edwards said, "Overall we
played a good fundamental
game. We were good in transi1ion tonight and put together
another great team effort."
EaStern took the early lead .
and never looked back.
Behind . buckets from Holter,
Hayman, . Weber
and
Robertson, the young Eagles
blitzed to a IS-6 advantage
after one round. Althmigl

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•

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Dolphins
from Page81
us look bad," Chicago line·
backer Brian Urlacher said.
''He's at full speed when he
gets the balI. He makes two
moves while he's still in
the backfield . He hits the
crease . and he's gone."
With Jay Fiedler throwing a TD pass in his return
from a broken right thumb,
Miami (8-5) tied New
England atop the AFC East
and moved one game ahead
of the New York Jets . The
Dolphins host Oakland (9·
4) in a conference showdown Sunday.
Injury-riddled Chicago
(3-1 0) lost for the I Oth
time in II games since .a 20 start. The Dolphins outgained Chicago 436 yards
to I 95, helping Dave
·wannstedt beat the team
that fired him following the
1998 season for the first
time.
Bears coach Dick Jauron
started sore-armed Jim
Mitrer at quarterback, tried
Henry Burris in spot relief
and turned to Chris
Chandler . in the second
half, but none could get
Chicago into the end zone
until the final minute.
And injuries continued to
mount. Miller departed on
a cart midway through the
third period with a spraineg·
left knee, and guard Chris
Vi llarrial sat out the second
half with back spasms.
"It was a 4ong night,"
Jauron said. "Not a \\?hole
lot good. · The Dolphins
were not playing at the top
of their -game, but they
.were close, and we were
not effective at alL''
The Dolphins overcame
two
early
turnovers
because th~ defense kept
gett1ng the ball back, and
they put together a long
drive in the ·second quarter,
marching 84 yards and
scoring on Williams' ISyard run. ·

Decernber10,2002

Tourney

a

Eastern

Southern

Scoreboard

was tied 8-8, but PHS took a ·
21-19 lead into the locker .
room at the half. After the third ·
canto, Portsmouth led 3431 before Eastern began the
late-game 12-D run. Eastern
inabilities compounded by
timely Trojan luck played a
· role in the outcome.
Eascern hit 18-50 twos, 5-16
threefs, and was 2-7 at the line.
The Eagles had 40 rebounds
(Simpson 9, Dill9); 12 fouls,
· eight assists (Buckley 2); 17
turnovers, nine blocks (Dill 7), ·
and two steals, both by Kimes.
Portsmouth hit 19-60 two!s, 49 threes, and was 3-13 at the
line. Portsmouth had 39
rebounds (Kerns 10); 15 fouls,
eight assists (Green 3); 10
turnovers, two blocks by
Clifford, and three steals.
There was no reserve con. test. Eastern hosts Wat¢ord
Friday.

Pro Football
National Football league
AFC

WaShington at Philadelphia, 1 p_m_
Jadtsonville at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.

Miami... ...........8

5

New En~ancL8

5

N.Y. Jets ......... 7
Bu1talo ...........6

6

0 .615 314 237
o .615 33C 268
0 .538 274 282

7 0 .462 332 365
South
W · L T Pel Pf. ""

Tenoessee ......8
lndianapolis ....8
Jacksonville .... s
HouSion ..........4

Baltimore at Houston . 1 p 'm.
San Diogo at But1alo. 1 p.m.
Carolina at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
Mmnesota at New Orieans, 1 p.m.

bot

W L T Pet PF ""

5
5

B
9

0
o
o
0

.615
.615
.385
.308

302 304
274 233
276 252
181 294

WLTPetPFPA
Pittst&gt;JiQh ....... 7
1
309 293
Clovoland ....... 7 6
.538 283 263
Baltimore ........ &amp; 7 0 .462 249 287
Cincinnati ....... 1 12 o .on 235 387

s

o

.sn

L

4
5

6

T

o

o
o

6 0 .538 419 322
NFC
Eoat
WLTPctPFPA
Phltadetphla.. 10 3 0 .769 347 207
N.Y. G iants ..... 7 6 0 .538 229 238
Dellao ...... ....... 5 a 0 .385 193 245
Washington .... 5 8 0 .385 240 307

South
WLTPetPFPA
TampaBay .•. 10 3 0 .769 301 159
New Orlean&amp; .. 9 4 0 .692 382 328
Atlants •........... 8 4 1 .654 328 245
carolina ....•.... .5
.385 21
252

a o

o

North
WLTPetPFPA
x.(J....., Bay... 10 3 0 .769 351 272
.231 247 327
Chicago ... ....... 3 1
Del roiL .......... 3 10 0 .231 235 354
Minnesota ..... ..3 1o o .23 1 300 358
Weal
L T Pet PF PA
9 4 0 .m:! 316 2ll8
!Wcril ......•........ 5 a 0 .385 213 333
Stl.Ws.....•........ 5 a 0 .385 245 291
-..................4 9 0 alB 264 'JJl
x--cllnched dlvl1lon
Sundey'e Game•
Houston 24, Pittsburgh 6
San Francisco 31, Dallas 27
N.Y. Giants 27, Washington 21
New England 27, Buffalo 17
Kansas City 49, St. Louis 10
Tennessee 27 , Indianapolis 17
Carolina 52, Cincinnati 31
Cleveland 21, Jacksonville 20
Tampa Bay 34, Atlanta 10
Arizona 23, DetrQjt 20, OT
. Philadelphia 27, Seattle 20
New Orleans 37 , BaUimore 25
N.Y. Jets 19, Oen~.~er 13
Oakland 27, San Diego 7
Green Bay 26, Minnesota 22
Monday•• Game
Miami 27, Chicago 9
Sunday, Dec. 15
Seattle at Allanta, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Chicago. 1 p.m
Oakland at Miami, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Detroit, ~ p.m.

MuoleCHyBowl
At -hvUio, Tenn.

w

""""'Fnn::i9oo ...

--

$750,000
M1noesota (7-5) "" Ar1&lt;ansas (9-4), 2
p.m. (ESPN)

S1 miHion
Wake Forest (~) vs. Oregon (7-5). ·5
p.m. (ESPN)

Mo~. Doc. 16

Tuesdey, Doc. 31

New England at Tennessee. 9 p.m.

'Humon1111rton a-t
At BoiM, kSat:to

College Football

$750,000 .
Iowa State (H) vs. Boise State (11·1 ).
Noon (ESPN)

Bowl Schedule
All Tlmeo EST

$750,000
North Texas (7·5l vs. CinciMatl (7~) . 7
p.m . (ESPN2)

At El Puo, Teua
St .35 million
Washington (7·51 vs. purnue (6-6). 2 p.m .
(CBS )

Ubortya-t
At llomplllo, Tonn.

Wednoodoy, Doc. 18

a. Kalloas St............ ...................... 20.13
9. Notre Dame ................................ 20.93

Colorado State (1Q-3)
p.m. (ESPN)

$750,000

llondoy, Doc. 23

vs. TCU (9-2). 3:30

cJoN,

Marshall (10-2) VB . lOuisYIIIB (7-5), 8 p.m.
(ESPN2)
.

Slltc:on vo11oy

$750,000

--

.

Clemson (7-5) 1111. T8lC8s Tech (8·5). 5:30
p.m . (ESPN)
Wednosctey, Doc. 25

LilY-a-t
AtLioVegoo
1100,000
UCLA (7·5) vs. New Mexico (7-6), 4:30
p.m . (ESPN)

At Atlonbl

SUmllllon

Maryland (1Q-3) va ..Tennessee (8-4),
.
7:30 p.m. (ESPN) ·

S.n

$750,0!JO
I
Tulane (7 ·5) VI. Hawaii (1 ().3)•. a p.m .
(ESPN)
Thu"doy, Doc. 21
Motor City Bowt
At Pontloc, lllch.

Francl~ea

8ow1
1100,000
Air Force (6-4) va. VIrginia Tech (9-4),
ttt30 p.m. (ESPN2)

Howoll Bowl
At Honolulu

¥!od000KIIy,Jon. 1
Outbid&lt; Bowl
At Tompo. Flo.

11 . Miclligan ....... .............. ............... 23.91
12;. Penn St. ................................ .-.... 26.97
13. C01ora00 ..........................•......... 33.27
14. Florida St. .... .._. .... ......... .............. 33.95
15. W~t Virginia .............................. 35.97

· Toledo (9-4) vs. Boston College (8-4) , 5
p.m. (ESPN)
.
lnolghl Bowt
At Phoenl•
$750,000
Oregon State (8-4) vs. PiHsburgh (8-4) ,
8 :30p.m . (ESPN)

Dec. 27
HouttonBowt
At HOUlton
' $750,000
Southern Mississippi (7·5) vs. Oklahoma
State (7·5) . 1 p.m. (ESPN)
Independence Bowl
At Shreveport. Ll.
$1.2 m111ion,
.
Nebraska (7-6) vs. Mississippi (6-6), 4:30
p.m. (ESPN)
Holiday Bowl
At San Diego
$2 million
Kansas State ("1Q-2) vs. Arizona State (85), 8 p.m. (ESPN)
F~doy,

Seturday, Doc. 28
Alamo Bowl
At San Antonio
$1.35 million
Colorado (9-4) vs. Wisconsin (7-6), 8 p.m.
(ESPN)

nre

Continental
Bowl"
At Cha~otte, N.C.
$750,000
West Virginia (9·3 ) vs. Virginia (8·5), 11

Michigan (9-3) vs. Florida (8-4). t 1 a .ni.
(ESPN)
. Cotton Bowl
At Delloo
LSU (8-4) vs. Texas (1(}.2), 11 a.m. (FOX)
Gitor Bowl,

At Jacbonvllte, Fla.
$1.8 million

Notre Dame (10·2) vs. North Carofina
State (1(}.3). 12:30 p.m. (NBC)
Copltal Ono Bowl
At O~ando, Fla.
$5.125 million
Ponn State (9·3) vs . Auburn (8-4). 1 p.m.
(ABC)
.
Ron Bowl

At Paudena, Calif.
$11-13 million
Wash ington State {1Q-2) vs . Oklahoma
(11·2). 5 p.m. (ABC)
Sug~~r Bowl
At. New Orte1n1
$11·13 mllllpn
Georgia (12·~) ·vs. Florida State (9-4) ,
8 :30 p.m. (ABC)
Thursday, Jan. 2
Orange Bowl
At Miami
$11-13 million
Southern Californ ia {10-2) vs. Iowa (11·
1), a p.m. (ABC)

•
F~doy,

Jan. 3
Fleeta BoWl
At Tempe, Artz.
$11·13 million
Miarn i (12·0) vs. Ohio State (13·0), a p.m.
(ABC)

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hospitality and service.

golf.
There's likely one within

Chillicothe 63. Cols. Worthington 59
Cols. OeSales 62. Cols. S. Urban 32
Cots. Ohio School for the Deaf 59,·Cols.
Torah Academy 53
Edgerton 67 , Favette Gomam Favette 49
·. Fayetteville Fayetteville -Perry 63, Peebles
55

Portsmouth 45, Ealtem 43

of quality and affordability. ~ .· 0 ~
'-'ht
't
t
f JiUN'I~f '-?{fJipf.,IWol
.
f
.
S1x o our e1g s1 es go
.
prices ... multiple courses ... easy
. The Grand European Spa, an
4-stars from Golf Digest's
to get to .. .famous Southern

champion~hip

Barnesvtlle 57, Cadiz Harrison Cent49
Beaver Eastern 64, Fra nklin Furnace
Green 3a
Bertin Center We stern Reserve 51 . N.

EasIem ......................a 11 11 13 - 43
Mondoy
EAST
" " " - ··'············-8 13 13 11 - 45
EASTERN - Jason Kimes 2 1-4 6 ,
American u . 62. Md.·Easrern Shore 61
Nathan Grubb 3 0..1 5, Alex Simpson 5 0.1
Hannibal River 45, New Malamoras
Columbia 75, Binghamton 65
13. Brent Buckley 2
4. Cody Oill 6 1-1 Frontier 26
Duquesne 63, Toledo 60
1_
3. Rober1 Cn&gt;SS o
o. Totsts 18 2·7 43,
Hubborn 63. Youngs. Liber1y 51
Massachusetts 59, Rhode Island 45
3-Point goals _ 5 (Simpoon 3 , Grubb 1 .
Huber Heights Wayne 59. Cols. S&lt;hool
SO\ml
and Kimes 1).
lor Girls 41
Jacksonville St. 65, Hampton 68
.•
PORTSMOUTH - Taylor Babod&lt; 1
Ironton 69, S. Point 48
louisiana Tech 81 , Louisiana-Lafayette
2, Gerald Froe 10 3---3 26, Aaron Smith 2
Kette ring Alter SO, Kettertng Fairmont 34
50
•
2 5. Taylor Cliflord 1
2, Ash Green 3 (}.
Lebenon 53. w. C8rrolt1on 36
Monmouth, N.J. 65, Norfolk St. 46
6 6, Brice Karns 2 o-2 4. Totals 19 3-13 45.
Lowellville 62, Vienna Mathews 32
Tulane
74. Drake 6~
. ,
3-Point Goals_ 4 (Froe 3, Smith 1 ).
. Magnolia Sandy VaHey 44, MassillOn
UNC-Greensboro 61 , Campbell 57
Tuslaw 36, OT
.
W. Carolina 71, Savannah Sl. 56
·•
Mondly'l Reeuttt
Manstield St. Peter's 74 , Galton N~rthmor
MIDWEST
34
Cols. Torah Academy 88, Cols. Ohio
NebrB"Ska 71. Texas Southern 48
School for the Deaf 43
Martins Ferry 60, Newcomerstown 44
Oklahoma 70, WichH:a St. 64
Defiance Ayersvllle_51 , Paudllng 38
McDermon Scioto N.W. 58, Waverly 47
SOUTHWEST
Mount Vernon Academy· 72, LOndon
McDonald 53, N. Jackson Ja~n-Millon
Ark.arisas 66, Tulsa -49
Madison Plains , 2
43 ·
FAR WEST
Miamisburg 48, Franklin 29
Arizona St. 76, Denver 53
Middletown · Fenwick 51 , Rivers ide
E. Washington 55, Boise St. 42
. ,
Stebbins 34
Idaho 73. San Jose St. 57
Mount Ve rnon Academy 32 , London
Montana 68, San Franc isco 66
Madison Ptains 14
Southam 67, Millar 30
New Knoxville 49 , Houston 43
Miller ..........................7 8 8 7 - 30
New Middletown Spr. 67. Mineral Ridge
Southern .................. 19 19 7 12 -87
51
MILLER - Emily Wlnnef~berg 0 Q-0 O.
'• I
Newark Cath. -43, Baltimore Liberty
Kayta Post 0 Q..O 0 , Sterra Toth 0 o-o 0 , Union -Thurston 32
BASEBALL
Brianne Hinkle 1 Q-0 2 . Mandy Spencer 3
Amertcen League
. ·:
Newton Falls 59, Leavittsburg LaBrae 12
Q-3 6, Malaria Altier 2 Q-0 ... Megan
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Named Orlando ·
Northwood 50. Tot. Libbey 44
Osborne 2 Q-0 4. AohiCI)' Hinkle 2 Q-0 4.
Porry 55. Waynesfield 52, OT
Mercado bullpen coach and Steve Soliz 1
S8m Britton 4 0-1 9 , Courtney Hoops 0 1-2
RiChmond Edison 49. Rayland Buckeye bullpen catcher.
1, Emily Brag 0 Q-0 0, Lora Spencer 0 Q-0 Local37
. DETROIT TIGERS-Sent LHP Jaso·n
0 , JennaMurphy 0 0.0 0, Jenna Bolyarn 0
Sarahsville Shenandoah 54, Beverly Ft. Jimenez outright to Tolec:to of the 1~ .
o-o 0. TOTALS 14 1-6 30. 3-polnt goals - Frye 42
TORONTO BLUE JAY5-Named Tom
1 (Britton).
· Spr. N. 76 . .Spr. N.W. 35
Filer
pitching coach tor Syracuse of the ll •
SOUTHERN - Katie Sayre 6 Q-0 12,
Spr. S. '"36, D_
&amp;y. Christian 33
and Mel"\/ Renenmund minor laague hitting
Rathel Chapman 8 1·1 17, 'Brigette Barnes
Spr. Shawnee 75, LondOn 48
5 2·2 12, Deana Pullins , Q-.0 2, Amy Lae
St Marys Memorial 48. Delphos St . instructor.
1 2·5 4, Ashley Dunn 0 1·2 1, Joanne John's 29
NaUonel League
,
Pickens 4 1-4 9, Tara Pickens 1 o-o 4,
SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Signed AHP
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 58, Wheeling
Ashley Roush 1
2, Brooke Kiser 0 2·2 (W.Va.) Linsly 3a
Carlton Loewer to a minor league contract.
2, Susan Brauer02·2 2. TOTALS 2a n-16
Stryker 53, Hicksville 47
BASKETBALL
67. 3-point goals- none.
Swanton 68. Tol. Waite 31
Natlon11 Bltketblll Ataocletlon
To I. Christian 61 , Pettisville 58
NBA-Suspended Seattle F Aashard
Tol. Woodward 67 , Tel. Maumee Valley 43 Lewis one game, without pay, lor shovi"ng a
•
Watertord 55, Meigs 36 •
Troy 48. Maria Stein Marion Local -46
Meigs ........................ .7 5 13 11 -36
fist in the face of Miami G Travis Best in a ·
Watren Champion 48 , Corlland lakeview
Waterlorn ................. 10 1110 1a - 55
game on Dec . 7. Fined ·utah C Greg
27
MEIGS Maria Drenner 0 0·0 O,
Ostertag $7,500 for failing to leave the
Warren Howland 76, Youngs. Chane~ 32
Samantha Pierce 4 2·5 10, Shannon
Washington Court House Miami Trace 79, court and head to the lOCker room immediSoulsby 3 3-5 9, Jaynee Davis. 1 5·8 7,
ately faflowing his ejection in a game
Chrissy Miller 3 3-4 9, Renee Bailey 0 1·2 Wilmington 39
against the LA lakers on Dec . 8.
Wa~ n esville 60, Clarksville Clinton1. Kayte Davis
Michelle Drenner
Massie 26
.
CLEVELAND CAVALIERs-Activated F .
0·0 0, Justine Dowler 0 o-o o . TOTALS
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 62, Tol . 08.rius Miles from the injured lisl. Placed G
14·23 36.
·
WATERFORD - Heather Fulmer 4 0 8, Rogers 33
Bimbo Coles on the injured list.
Willow WOOO Symmes Valley 41 , Ironton
Alana Miller 3 0 .6, Mallory McCutcheon 5
FOOTBALL
·
, 4 16; Jeconda Smith 50 10, Haley Drayer St. Joseph 22
National Football league
Youngs
.
Mooney
47,
Struthers
36
3 2 9; Alicia Polen 2 0 4; _Bethany.Huck 1 0
GREEN BAY PACKEA$-Cia1med OT
2. TOTALS 23 6 55.
Jerry Wisne off wa ivers from St. louis.
Waived G·T Barrett Brooks.
Eastern 62, South GBIIIa 28
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Ciai med LB
South Gallia .............. 6 9 4 9 - 28
J
.R.
Johnson off wai1.1ers from New ,
Men's
Major
Scores
Eastern ....... ....... ...... 15 25 12 ~0- 62
Orleans. Waived LB Terry Killens.
SOUTH GALUA- Sara Wright 0 2-4 2,
Monday
COLLEGE
Joanie Fellure 1 2·2 4, Tosha Pelfrey 1 1-5
EAST
SOUTHERN
UTAH-Named
Gary
A l~ny.. N.V. 47. -Army 43
3, Halher Temple 1 2·2 4, Julia Gwinn 3 0Andersen football coach .
1 6, Jessica Watson 2 0·1 4, Jessie
American U. 61, Howard 56

your day on the links.

golf... very affordable

New! Improved!
Smaller! More convenient!···

MIDWEST
Indiana 73, Vanderbilt 56
Missouri 88, Wis.-Green Say 67
Xavier 68. Miami (Ohio) 58
SO\miWEST
SW Texas 68, Housion 59
FAR WEST
S. Utah 83. Montana St -Northern 54
Wyoming 74, Boise St. 61

Monday'• Results

at Youtl Do If You Could
Do Anythirig You Want

e've got what you

·A -MUST for your business!

MaJne 82 , Morgan St. 61
The Cftadol 95. Oglethorpe 55

Uma S. Ral)ge-39

Boys Basketball

SO\ml

Alabama A&amp;M 97. Savannah St 78
East Carolina 76, Virginia Tech 60

Transactions

S2 million

S3 million .

$780,000

a

10. Texas ......................................... 21 .08

o-o

At Bon
CoiH.
$7110,000

Fresro State (8·5) vs. Georgia TOC&lt;h (7-5).
3:30 p.m. (ESPN2)

Tong«&lt;noa-t
At Ortondo, Flo.

Bucknell 72, FOU-Avrt!ctnl 45
Lehigh 67. Columbia 51
Rhode Island 67, Brown 48
Saint Joseph's 7f. Delaware 59
Siena 1, St. Peter's 63

Cantrell 0 1-4 1, Ashley Cremeans 1 2-4 4.
TOTALS 9 1(}.23 2a.
EASTERN - Krystat Baker 2 t-2 5.
Atyssa Hotter 4 o-o 8. KriSta White 3 2-2
8 , CaSSie Nutter t 0..0 2, Jenniter Armes 1
Q-0 2, Moryan Weber 5 Q-0 t 0. Katie
Robertson 1 o-o 2, Casey Smith 1 Q..O 2 ,
Jessie Hupp 3 2-4 8, Jessica CMon 1 0.2
2. Jennifer Hayman 6 1·3 13 TOTALS 26
&amp;-13 62

o-o
o-o

SUmlltlon

IIOblta, All .

It's

2. Ohio State .................................... 3.97
3. Geo&lt;gia ......................................... 8.37
4. Southam Cal .............................. 10.51
5. 1owa ............................................ 10.79
6. Washington Sl ........................... 16.14
1. Clklahorna .................................. 16.79

Sun a-t

Tueoday. Doc. 11
New Orteent Bowl

o o

cent from the field with no
~cpoint ~tlempts and a 6-13
mght at the line. Eas!em had 39
. rebounds (Hayman 8, Weber 7,
Robertson 5); 16 steals
(Hayman 4, Robertson 4,
Holler .3); ·four turnovers, and
18 fouls. South Gallia hit 9-33,
0-3 three!s 10-23 free throws
and had 2S rebounds (Wright
6); two steals, 25 turnovers, and
17 fouls.
There was no reserve game. . ·
.Eastern goes O? the road to
Miller Thursday ~ght ar:~d then
prepares. for a btg wee~ next
week With four games m SIX
days with three being back to
back to back.

Uondoy, Doc. 30

GilA&lt;: a-t

Pet. PF . ""
.892 381 265
.815 270 292
.538 308 285

Flnol
1. Miami ............................................2.93

Green Bay at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Arizona at StLouis, 8:30p.m.

Weal .
W
OakloncL ....... 9
San Diego ...... 8
Denvor •.... ....... 7
Kansas Clty .... 7

a.m. (ESPN2)

Indianapolis at Cleveland, 1 p.m .
Kansas City at Denver, 4:05p.m.
Dallas at N.Y. Giants. 4:15p.m .

North

The loss of Robertson did
not slow Eascem Monday, but a
stretch run of four games in the :.
next seven days could be grueling should Robertson be out for
any length of time.
Eastern called off the dogs in
the third frame, yet was still .
allle to outscore South Gallia
12-4, pushing the score to 5219. A 10-9 finale that saw several younger members of the
EHS squad see action finalized the score at 62-28.
. Eastern hit 26-59 for 44 per- .

..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.rnydally~llnel . corn

)

Fiedler went 15-for-29
grabbing offensive rebounds.
Meigs pulled in 32 boards led
for 196 yards in his first
by
Davis with II and Miller
start since being hurt Oct.
with
7. Mei~s went II of 30
from
Page
81
from Page81
13. and Miami improved to
from two-pomt range and 0 of
6-1 with him as the starter.
4 from long r.mge. Waterford
"Certainly a lot of people make the count 32-25, but the put the ball up 56 times for making most of the Eagle frreare keying on Ricky, and Mar.tuders were whistled for
inside the arc connecting on 20. works on the diiy, making a
late foul and the two free The Wildcats were 3 of 9 from great inside-outside combinait's going to allow me to throws by McCutcheon · gave
tion in countering Froe's
have a little more time in the hosts a 12 point margin three-point territory.
' Meigs made 23 trips to the resilient effort for Portsmouth.
the pocket," . Fiedler said. bl:ading to the final stanza.
Easlern then went on a 12-D
foul line cashing in 14 times. ·
"I' II take a 200-yard rushMiller again closed the gap Waterford found their way to run to take a 42-39 lead and
ing game any day. As a to I0 with two free throws, but the line just 9 !irne hitting. 4. added a Kimes free throw later
quarterback, it's a great the Marauders then melted The Marauders committed sev- for a 43-39-advantage. From
under the full coon pressure of eral unforced errors at they that point on Eastern went sour.
thing to work with."
the Wildcats as Waterford went again struggled to find a flow The Eagles, traditionally ~ood
Williams had 119 yards on a decisive 10-2 run that
three throw shoolers, tnlssed
by halftime for his fourth dashed any hopes of a Meigs on the offensive end of the the front end of three bonus
floor. One bright spot for · tries, and a double bonus
I 00-yard game in a row, come back. Meigs would get
Meigs was the return to the
and his eighth this season. no closer than 12 points the rest · hardwood of senior Kayte attempt that could have sealed
·
He scored on a 15-yard run of the way and the Wtldcats Davis. Davis went down with a ihe WID.
Another
turnover
fueled
. · serious knee injury in the first .
in the second quarter, then posted the 55-36 win.
Portsmouth's
victory
run
and
sealed the victory in the · The veleran Wtldcat club was week of December last season the Easlern could not regain the
third · quarter on the lead in scoring by McCutcheon as was seeing her first action in momentum.
with 16 points, Jeconda Smith a game since the injury.
After one round the game
counter.
added - !0 and Drayer 9. The
I
The Wildcats made it a clean
"We don't .get to watch Marauders were led by Pierce sweep winning the N game
him much during the game, with 10, Soulsby and Miller 44-30. Justine Dowler led
but when we watch the added 9 each and Davis had 7. Meigs with 10 points, Felisha
film, he looks like he's run- The Wildcats controlled the Stumbo added 8.
Meigs will host TVC foe
ning three time s faster than boards, especially on the offenfrom Page 81
sive
end
where
they
got
numerAlexander
Thursday night, tip
anyone else on the field ,"
ous second chance points by off for the first game is at 5:55.
tight end Jed Weaver said.
putting up impressive numbers
Notes: The previous
m the first quarter, Eas!em was
highest
rushing
total
calm compared to its second
advantage.
against Chicago was 206
Southern hit 28 of 53 for 52 period fireworks. The Eagles
by Campbell in 1980 ....
percent going 0-9 on three's, and opened up their fuU court game,
Miami receiver James
from Page 81
hitting 11-16 at the line. The and incorporated several fast
ladies grabbed 36 rebounds breaking points into their offen~
McKnight and tackle Mark
Dixon hurt their left ankles. and Altier each had four for (Chapman 7, Dunn 7, T. Pickens stvTh~Rebels showed some
Reserve defensive end Miller at the half, · while 5); II steals (Chapman 3); 17 signs of fatigue in the second
David Bowens hurt his left Owpman had nine and Barnes assists (Lee 8, Pullins 3, Barnes period and Easlem used that to
3); 14 turnovers, and 14 fouls.
.
tts advantage. The Eagles setknee, and reserve defensive eight for Southern. ·
Southern enlptied its bench
Miller (0-3) hit 13 of 35 twos, tied into their transition game
end Jay Williams bruised early, with eight players getting 1-13 three's, and was 1-6 at the and received some good passhis left thigh .... At half- in the scoring column by the line, while grabbing 25 ing from Jessie Hupp and
time the Dol ph ins honored half. Southern · received some rebounds (Hinkle 6). Miller had · Alyssa Holter. The upbeat
Hall of Fame fullback quality time from Brooke Kiser, five steals, . four assists, 29 tempo put 25 points on the
Larry Csonka, who played Deana Pullins, Pickens, Ashley turnovers, and 17 fouls.
board as Eas!em led 40-15 at
Roush,
and
Susan
Brauer,
while
the
half.
for the undefeated 1972
Southern won the reserve
Ashley
Dunn
did
another
good
One
of the main sparkplugs
team, and retired his No. 39 job on the boards. and Tara game 44-38 led by freshman
jersey .... Because WitHams Pickens grabbed spme key Kristina Williams with 17 in f!Je offensive mix was
points, Joanne Pickens 12, Jenrufer Hayman. H~yman
has reached 1,500 yards rebounds.
sc&lt;?fe&lt;~ _ten of her game-high 13
rushing, the Dolphins will
Southern put the game away Ashley Roush 6, and Susan pomts m the second quarter.
During the second quarter,
give their first-round draft in the third round with a 17-8 Brauer 6: Linda Eddy had two
and
Kasie
Sellers
two.
For
pick next year to New offset in scoring, settling back in Miller, Emilie Bray had 15 and Katie Robertson went down
with a lrnee injury. Said coach
Orleans. ... O.J . _Simpson a wne for the remainder of the Jenna Murphy had 14. Edwards, "We hope it is just a
game. Chapman's shooting
rushed for 200 yards in hand never cooled and Joanne Southern's reserves liTe now 2-0. strain and she will be back in a
consecutive games in 1973 Pickens had a strong third quarSouthern hosts Belpre few days. But right now we
and again in 1976.
will have to wait and see."
ter as SHS ended with a 55-23 Monday.

Meigs

Tuesda~

Tuesday, December 10, 2002

www.rnydallysentlnel.corn

world!

sets tell you

easy drive of where you are

The Resort Division

now. You can begin in
Huntsville at the top of the

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you've found

exquisite comfort and

what you've been

state and meander in non-stop

luxury when you finish

missing.

CAPITOL HILL
.,,Hyfllo

Call today and
make your plans
to experience .
Golf's Greatest
Road Trip.

People who've played

.

the Trail call it the •Number

ALABAMA'S

One Value in the world as a
golf destlnll:lop•

.,

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

~·

\

II

i

-Golf Digest consumer survey

and tastefully-

.. :'one of the top 10 trips in

designed guest-

'

rooms designed to wow any the world:'
traveler.
GRAND HOTtL MARRIOTT l'rllnt Clflr I

I

-Frequent Flyer Magazine

1.800.949.4444
www : rtjgolf. com

•
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�... ..

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. . ..

. .., . -

Tuesday, December 10, 2002

r

m:ribune - Sentinel - 3Regi~ter

V.w~ &amp;

4-WDs

1999 F·350 4 wheel dr.

power ........ 8 speed manual XLT· Gooae noel&lt; tlitd1.
Reese hitch tots of extras

CLASSIFIED

BLIC
NOTICES

205-9557.

.,'
..

F41

MolORC\'&lt;llS

PUBLIC NOTICE.
NOTICE OF PUBUC
HEARING ON THE
TAX BUDGET

land lying along lhe 5-7093•
L8lt &amp; Right -'de of
Iron pins (to be HI)
the
centerline of a
In the above descrip2000 Suzuki katana 600
ourwy, made, by !he tion are (314 Inch) by
Blue, 5500 mites. New tires,
Department
of 30 Inches reinforcing
. $3.250. OBO.
Two copies of the taJc
Transportation , and
rod w~h an aluminum
budget
for
the being located within
cap atamped "ODOT
Southern Dlalrlct of
the boundary pointe
District 10".
Racine, In
Melga of Parcel 1-WD ao
The bearings for
You could be
County, Ohio, are on
delineated upon the
this descri ption ara eligible for FREE
Ilia In the onlce of the · Department
of . balled on the aeetllne
help getting
Treasurer, Dennie E. Tra n aportatlon ' a of Csrlatonvllle being
back
to work
BASEMENT
Hill of llld dlatrlct.
Right-of-Way
plan
S 45" 36'07" E and are
For
more
Information,
WATERPROOANQ
They are for public MEG.
124·24.65,
for angle calculation
call Gallla M e i~s
Unconditional Hfetime guar- lnapactlon , a public
Sheet 4 of 4 on plana
only.
Communily Acloon
antee. Local references fur- hearing on this budgflied
at
Ohio
CK the above
A~ency
nished. Established 1975. et will be held at the
Department
of
deacrl- area, 0.105
(740)
992·2222
or
Call 24 Hro. (740) 446· Southern
local T r an a portallon
acres, more or leas, of
(740)
446-1018
0870. Rogers Basement School Dlatrict, Board
Dlotrlct 10 Office
which the preaent
Waterproofing.
of Educ:.oUon oftlce on
Marlena.
road occupies 0.0415
the day ol January 6,
Commencing at an
acres, more or Ina,
J6S flfCTRIC 6
2003, at 7:00 p.m. at Iron Found at tho are to be deleted from
PLUmBinG
c&amp;C
General
Home the
organizational
Northeut comer of
Lot 8 Auditor's Parcel
Maintenance- Painting, ylnyl maetlng . .
Lot No. 13 ol the
No. 18-00362.000; and
siding. carpentry, . doors.
Carlatonvllla
0.084 acres, more or
windows, .baths, mobile Dennie E. Hill
Subdlvlalon, (aee Plat
leas, of which tha
home repair and more. For Treasurer
Recorded In Deed Vol.
present road occua
rree estimate ca ii · C~e t , 740. 14, Pg. 158 I 158;
plea' 0.0415 acres,
992-6323.
(12) 9, 10, 11 , 12, 13, thence s 45" 46'08" E more or leas, are to
16,17,18, 19,20, 2002 along the East line of
be delated from Lot 7
aald subdlvlalon a
Auditor's Parcel No.
distance
of
129.20
18..00350.000
18·
PUBLIC NOTICE
teat to an Iron pin set
00381 .000 and t 8·
73.59 leet right of
00362.000.
New Homes • Vinyl
LEGAL NOTICE FOR
Station· 13011+76.00,
Prior
lnatrument
. PUBUCATION PUS. and being the Trua
Rafarenca: Vol . 93, Siding • New Garages
RUANT To R .C. 163.07
Place ol Beginning;
Page 889 and Vol. 315,
• Replacement
thence N 28" 06' 08" E Page 609, Meigs
Windows
• Roofing
The following par- a distance of 100. 84 County Racorder'a
Ilea, namely : (1) teat to an Iron pin nt;
COMMERCIAL and
Office.
U n k n o w n Commencing at an
OWner, for hlmeell
RESIDENTIAL
Transferees, Aa·algna,
Iron Found at tho ·and his hei rs, axecu·
E x e c u t o r s Northeaat comer of tore, admlnlatratora,
FREE ESTIMATES
Administrators , Lot No. 13 of the
successors
and
740·992-7599
Devisees and Hairs ·o1
Carletonvllle
asalgns, reserves all
Ruth
Ann
Allen, Subdivision, .thence S exlatlng rights of
Deceased, and all per· 30" 11' 25" E along
lngraaa and ogress to
sons claiming by,
random Rna dlatanca and from any residual
through, or under of 328.33 feet to a
area.
them,
Addraaaea
point In the centerline
Pursuant to Civil
Unknown, and (2)
of S.R. 124 at centerRulo 12(A)(1), aald
U n k n o w n line
alation
persona mentioned
Transferees, Aulgna,
1302+64.32 and being
above ahall taka fur·
E x e c u t o r s In the North line of ther notice that they
Administrators ,
Lot
No.
a of have 28 daya after the
Devlseea and Hairs of CarletonVIIIa
and completj on of the
William E. Williams, being !he Tr• Place
Service
by
111, Deceased, and all of hglr\nlng; thence
Publication
within
persona claiming by,
s ago 41 '23" E with the which to answer or
through, or under North line of aald Lot
otherwise
defend
them,
AddresHa No. 8 a dlatance of against .Plaintiff a
Unknown, will take 87.85 feet to an Iron
petition.
notice lhet they have pin thence luvlng the · The original of any
been named 11 dalan· . North line of aald Lot
such anewer or other
dents by Gordon
No.8, S 02" 44148" E 1
pleading delendlng
Proctor, Director Ohio dlatance 01 10.08 feet against Plaintiff a
Department
of to an Iron pin nt In
petition mutt be flied
Transportation, Who the South line of Lot with
Marlene
lnsllluted a caae 02· No. 7 of Carletonvllla;
Harrlion, the Clerk of
CV-119 now pending thence N W 44'48"W the Common Plaaa
In the Common Pleas with the South line of
Court
of
Melga·
Court
of
Meigs · aald Lot No. 7 a dla·
County, Ohio, whoee
office Is located at "
County, Ohio, which lance of 158.115 leal to
l
Ia en acllon to appro- a point In the center·
Meigs
County ~ Ldlk'!llro, '-,'ft~rts .,
pr:late certain pr:opar· line of S.R. 124; Courthouee, 100 East ,r \:1-"/rl' Ntwspopcr.:_~ ""~t
'
,~,\
ty lor highway pur· thence leaving the 2 nd Street, Pomeroy,
poaea, namely the South line of aald Lot Ohio and whoaa mall·
making, construcilng, No.7, with the center·
lng eddrau Ia P.O.
or Improving of State line of $&lt;11. 124, with a
Box 151, Pomeroy,
Route 124, Section curve to the right hav· Ohio 45768·0151 .. A
24.65 and 10 fix the
lng a radius of 375.00 copy of any auch
value of seld proper- feet and a length of anawer
or
other
115.62 leet and a pleading delandlng
ty.
The
property chord
length
of against Plaintiff a
sought to be appro115.16 leet and a petition
must be
priated
Ia
more chord bearing of N eerved upon Pia tift' 1
specifically described
18" 31' 27" W to the
attorney, namely:
True
aalollowa:
Place
ol Shirley E. Chapman,
Beginning. ·
Aaalalant Att orney
PARCEL 1·WD
It Ia understood General, at 140 East
MEG. 124-24.65
that aald Parcel of Town
Street, 121
ALL RIGHT, TITLE land contains 0.189
Floor, Columbus,
AND INTEREST IN acres, more or Ills, of Ohio 43215-6001 .
A failure to answer
FEE SIMPLE
• which the present
IN THE FOLLOWING road which occuplaa · or ·otherwise deland
DESCRIBED PROP· 0.093 acres, more or
within said 28 daya
ERTY
leaa.
will result In Plaintiff,
WITHOUT
LIMITA·
This Parcel wila
purauanno Civil Rule
. TION OF EXISTING . baaed upon a proper·
55; eaklng the court
ACCESS RIGHTS
ty survey of State to grant a judgement
Route 124 for the
by default against any
The Daily
Situated In the Ohio Department of such parson who lalla
In
to answer or other·
Sentinel
Townahlp of SUTION, Transportation
wlae defend.
County of MEIGS, 2002, Thla daacrlptlon
992-2155
prepared by The Ohio Gordon Proctor
State of Ohio, and In
ol
Director
Ohio
100 ACRE LOT 300, Department
Department
of
Town IN, Range 13W, Tranaportatlon under
Transportation
and bounded end the supervision of
Ronald F. Rlaar P. S.,
described as lollowa:
Being a parcel of Reglatered Surveyor

GREENHOUSE
lraJOU SUE's
Quality, Variety, Low Prices

LaldoH;t

C.W. CDW~ty. OH

In One Week With Us
.REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To Place
m:ribune
Sentinel
Regi~ter
Your Adr (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
can Today•••
675-5234

r

PER&lt;;O~i\1.~

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _...
•
Why waif? Sta r! meeting
Ohio singles tonight. call toll
rree 1-800-766-2623 ext
1621 .

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sal(l. Chester Township,
M~g s County. send lene.rs ,
of , mt~rest to : The Dally.
~ntln el. PO Box 729-20,
~e roy, Ohio 45769 .
. PUBLIC NOTICE
Anthony Land Co., Lid. has
made the following changes
10 Buckeye Hills Subdivision
lOcated in Galli a Co.,
Raccoon Twp., due to fence
line: Tract #2· 5.267ac. Tract
# 3· 4.882ac and Tract N4·
5.26 1ac. Anthony Land
Company. Ltd . 531 E
Broadway, Jackson . OH
45640
1-800·2 13-8365
www.alcland.com

ro

HELP W AN'IID

Word Ads

~

Avoid Abbrevl1tJons

~(7-40_1_25_6_·1_6_8_3_ _ _ _ _G_al_lip..,o_tis_._ _ _ _ _ _

we

It

Ho~m;

.11140

.r.
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FOR SALE

Gallipolis Career Coliaga Land home packages. No
(Careers Close To Home} payments while under conCall Today! 740-446-4367. struction.
Little
or no
1-800·214-0452.
down payme nt required.
Reg #90-05·1274B.
(740)446·3218
Maintenance lree 3BR brick
ranch. 1 112 bath, .ceramic,
oak &amp; carpeted flooring, mile
12x7 utility trailer all metal, from town off S:R7, .large
good cond. $450.00 firm, level lot, last house on (lead256·6228 or 25 6·14 17.
end street. 4 car Qarage; with
large storage area, 12x24
7 11. flex s'teel sofa w/ off covered
6x 12
patio,
While velure covei $125 .00 .
storage
area,
9x21
enclosed
octagon coffee table $50.00
porch,
new
furnace
&amp;
wi n·
446 -8821.
dows, centra l air &amp; natura l
Pool table -regulation size, gas heat, remodeled bath
4K8 slate top w Red fe lt. call c&amp;ramic ti le flooring, large
after 4:30$1000. 367·0138. conc rete drl\le. quiet neigh·
borhood.
$139.000.
Pr opane heater 18,000 (740)44 1-1417 after 5pm.
BTU.Frise Bushon puppies - - - - - - - - 44 1·9510
New 2000 sq tt home. 10
W
minutes from Hospital.
Amm
Compl ete above ground
"----TiiioiiDoiioi__,.. pool .with porch, driveway
'
.and ga rage fo undation.
GeorQBS Portable Sawmill,. Pric!'t below . appraisal.
d~ n '.t htaul your 1ogs 1o the (740)446-3384.
11304 675 1957
~

iao

.l

11

Help Wanted caring for the J:i
elderly. Darst Group Home. 230 PROFI'SSIONAL
·
· ·
SER'1~
now pay1ng mm1mum wage, "---iiiii"iiliii'
~iiiiit
= lllit·_.1
new shifts : 7am-3pm, 7am5pm , 3pm· 11pm, 11pm·
TURNED DOWN ON .
7am. i::811 749·992-5023.
SOCIAL SECURITY.fSSI?
No Fee Unless We WinI
HVAC Installer needed:
1·888-582-3345
Cash Reward- Lost, brown Experience preferred, but
I{
I \I I .., I \II
&amp; white hunting dog , English willing tO trai n. Apply at
Comfort
Air.
1160
Jackson
Pointer
(Brutus).
near
HoM~
Tuppers Plains. Nov. 29th. Pike. Gallipoli!&gt;, OH.
fOR Si\I.E
scarlet &amp; gray collar &amp; drag - LOOKING FOR A FUN
gi ng orange nylon ro pe . JOB? THIS IS ITI OFFICE
inj ured right rear leg, uses 3 ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI· $9,000 Foreclosure! 3 bed·
legs to run or walk, call TIONS AVAI LABLE. H88· room home, 1·800-7 193001, e)(t. F14 4
Robert Buck, (740)992-3833 974-JOBS

r

4 yea r old ranch style house
w/4 acres, -cou ntry setting .
3br. 2ba. 2050 sq. ft. + 2 car
atlached gara ge . (30 4)B82·
3820

LoSt &amp; sadly missed,. brown MAINTENANCE· HEAVY
toy. poodle last seen Main EQUIPMENT- Sands · Hill
St.. Ru tland, cel l Laura . Coal Company is seeking
experienced heavy eq uip·
(7~0)742· 1 0 1 7
menl maintenance worker.
Experience
In
diesel
LOST: Golden Retriever 4·5 mechanics, welding, electrl: · Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2
rT'Ii&gt;nths old in the Addison cat troubleshooting and air bath , garage, on river, e;
area (7 40)446·3208 or conditioner service. Make miles south ol Gallipolis.
(7]10)339·3880
appllcallon a1 38701 s .R 1740)441·8817
160. Hamden Ohio. Monday
W ANTEIJ
thru Friday, Bam to 4:30pm:
01 call (740)384·4211 lo
have an applic ation mailed
ASsoluta Top Dollar: U.S. to you. EEOC employer.
SNver.
Gold Coins ,
Pa:.otsets. Diamonds. Gold McClure's Restaurant now Alll'llllltltl ldvenlllnt
U.S. Currency,- hiring all 3 locations, lull or
Ril1gs,
In thll n1wap1per II
M;T.S. Coin Shop, 151 part•tlme. pick up appllca·
IUbJtct IO thl fl&lt;llf'lll
Second Avenue , Gallipolis, tlon at location &amp; bring back
flelr Houalng Ao1 of 1HI
between
1O:OOam
&amp;
740·446·2842.
whiOh mtkll It lllegtl to
10:30am, Monday th ru
acivan111 "any
Saturday.
prefarence, llmltetlon or
I \11'111\\11 ' '
c:Hiorlmlnltlon bliaed on
" ' I~ \ I( I ...,
NURSES (RNo) $47.00 per
r101, color, r.llglon, 111
hour, Col umbus, OH. All
f1m11111atatua or natlon11
Unlls, FULL TIME (800)437·
origin, or any Intention to
0348
make any euch
prel'trtncl, llmltlllon or
Retail Sales Clerk, some
dlacrlmln•tton."
ATTN : Point Pleaaa.nt.
evenings, no Sundays.
Postal pOSitions. Cler~slca r­ 3.2hrs. per weak, $6.50/hour,
Thla newaptper will not
r ~tt rslso rters .
No
e .. p. picKup
at
application
knowingly accept
rtqulred. Benems. For exam, Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy.
advtrtiHmtntl tor rnl
salt'lry, end testing informs· Pomeroy
eatat• wh ich I• In
tio~ cell (630)393-3032 Exl.
vloletlon or the law. Our
Small accountlngttax .prepa·
782. eam-Spm. 7 days.
readers lte htreby
ration llrm seeks bookkeep,
lntormed th•t all
er wit h bas ic Income tax
dwelling•
ldVIr1111d In
A'.lbN! All Areas! To Buy or
on
Knowledge.
thll newsp•per are
Seft. Shirley Spears, 304- prepara!l
FleKible working hours of 14·
I VIillbll on In 1qu11
6.~6· 1429.
opportuntty b1ae1.
35 per week, Knowled·Qa or
'
Peachlree Accou nting and
Head Start Bu s Monitor Excel Spreadsheets a plus.
Foreclosed sw on 2 ·acre
needed tor Gettle County. Please send resume with
fract. $500 down to qualified
Muet have hig h schOol diplo- salary requirements to PO buyers. Call (
740)446 . 3570
ma- or equivelen·l COL pre· Box 141 , Cheshire . Oh lor quick sale.
8
tarred. Previous preschool 45620 .
experience preferred. Ability
House for sale at 2224 MI.
to lift 30 lb. child. Must have Truck D ri ver~ . Immediate
Vernon
Ave
in
Poin t
hire,
class
A
CDL
required,
vlllid Clriver's license and be
Pleasant,
lots
of
e)(lras,
very
~ill i ng to parlic;ifiale in excellent pay, experience
com fortable, low mainte·
required.
Earn
up
to
$1,000
drug/alcohol
test ing.
nance home. 3ba, 3br. pos·
Preference to past/present per week.C!;!II 304 :675·
Sible
4, huge master bed·
Head Sta rt parent/employ· 4005
room, a 16x32 great room.
ee. Send resume to HOV
Waitress. Health Insurance, central haaVair w/2 gas-lire·
Head Start. PO Box 684.
paid vaca tions. flexible places, artie storage wlpull
Oh.
45769.
Pomeroy.
hours. Apply. in person down, 1 car block garage
deadl;ne for apphcaiiOn 4 00 Villaga Pizza Inn · 3004
wfnatura l gas. Vinyl siding &amp;
p.m Dec 13
Jackson Ave. Polnl Pleasant windows. (304)675-6855

Redman, 14x72, 3 bedrOQlTl,
2 bath, garden tub, laundry
room. new blinds, curtains &amp;
wallp6per, dry wall throu ghout, cathedral ceiling, newly
installed ·berber &amp; trackless
premium carpel , May tag
refrigera tor with ice maker,
·factory ·storm s, au utilities
are on, rented lot, $16,900,
(740)992-76a0

r'

BusiNESS

AND 8UUDINGS

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
,2 Bedrooms. 2 Roors, CA. 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted ,
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $375/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Depos it Requ ire d, Days.:
Excellent r:JtN Home, 3BR, 2 740·446·3481; Evenings:
Ba th , 1 acre on 775. 74()-367·0502.
Peaceful
Neighborhood,
outbuildings, 15 minules to
SPACE
I" Gallipolis and f;lio Grande
FUR R ENT
.
. Phone evenings (740)379·

r

r

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17 40~)~44~6~·3_0_9_3~~--, ~

Mo!tLE
K ~':f.~~
...... . ~

I, - HOlSES

12 used homes priced under
$3000 1 will 'help with delivery. Call Nikki 740·385·9948
12x50 mobile hOme, new
kitchen, new beth,. $3500.
(740)44 1·9369
1966, two bedroom mobile
home, new a,fc &amp; w.h.. set up
on lot 7, Riverpark. $3000,
lot rent $120/mo, (614)876·
1661

fORRENf
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Yea rs at 8.5%
APR. For Listings. 80()-3193323 Ext. 1709.
--------2 bedroom. living roo m. den,
dini ng rm., kitchen, 1 bath, 2
porches, 2 story house,
newly decorated. 8th St. , Pt.
Pl. $425./mo. plus utilities.
$250. deposit. (304)675·
2£51 .

LM~~~

°w w"

I

.,.,

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Re bar
FOr
Concrete,
Ang le,
Chan nel , Flat Bar, steel

·1 g;i~~~~ys &amp;~~lkwa.vsD~a~~sl

r·O

I,.
•

A~
l&lt;UR SALE

· :. :
. I

IMPOUNDS!:~

$500 POLICE
Hon das, Chevys, and more,
Cars/ Trucks/ SUVs from
$500. For , listings
Call
1_800•719 _3001 ext 3901
- - - - --

r

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wv.

LIVESrOCK

Scrap Metals Open·Monday,
} railei space tor re nt $125 Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed
per mont h, plu s deposit.
Thursday,
Satu rday
&amp;.
Priest's Trailer Perk. Water
Sunday. (740)446-7300 .
1986 El Camino. P/S, P!B
~
A/C, great condition, runs
Office file cabinet. maple
asking
$4 000
ta ble w/f, chairs. microwave. good,
(740)286-0189 or (740)200
10
H~ ' · tv, dishes. vacu um cleaner 2848
~
"""""
• (304)675-5773
1988 Li ncoln Sig Sf:lries
WATERLESS COOKWARE.
1 coffee table $75.00, 2 Beautifu l, 7-ply sumica l runs, $400 OBO. (740)2 56· ,
matchlnQ end tables $50.00 stainless steel setl 17pcs! 8476
each in good cond . ca ll 446- Lifetime warranty! At dinner
1989 Buick Park AvenUI; ·;
, 1909 after 5 pm.
parties $1750, now $377! High mileage . Car rU11 :1
Fo~ Sale: , Aeco ndltlo n~Hj 1st 10 callers receivi:l a great, good' g&amp;s 1ntloag1· ·,
washers, dryers and refrig· $200. roaster treel 1·800- to6ks great. Asking. $~WU'' ;
434·4628!
Telephone (304)675·3823 .;
erators
· Tho mpsons

$400 monlh. 46 Olive Slreel.
(740)446·3945
~

----:---:-=

1

I

Sc hwa rt z Koff ·X Maine :·
JET
An jou steer. Born/raised 1
AERATION MOTORS
Call Pa tr icio:·~
Repaired, New &amp; Re built In Gellis Co.
Srock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Saunders (740) 645·2253 or&gt;
(740)446-2974
.:
800·537·9528.

1 Bedroom Ap artments
Starti ng. al
$289/mo, Appliance. 3407 Jackson Waterl ine Sp ~i a l : 3/4 200
Washer/ Drye r Hookup, Avenue, {304)675-738 8.
PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1" 200
Stove an d Refrigerator. Good Used Ap Pliances, PSI $35 .00 Pe1 100; All
&lt;740 )441"1519·
Reco nditioned
and Brass Compression Fitti ngs
,
Washers, In Stock.
2 bedroom apartment tor Guaran teed.
Ranges,
and RON EVANS ENTERPRISrent in Syracuse, $200 Dryers,
Refrigerators,
Some
start
at ES Jackson. Ohio, 1-800·
deposi t. $330 month re nt
53J.9528
which includes water, sewer $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine
St.
,'
(740)446-7398
an d toash. (740)378·6111
White a· Fiberglass Topper
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark for a truck, sliding fron t and
2 bedroom apartments
Chapel Aoad, Porter, Ohio. side windows with a rack on
hookUp,
w/washer-dryer
(740)446·7444 1-877-830· top. Excellent Condi tion.
new. references required,
9162. Free Esti mates, Easy $300. (304)675·3248 after 6
and deposit. (740)441 -3702
financing, 90 days same as pm.
2 bedroom , was her-dryer, cash . Visa/ Master Card . - - - - - - - -WHITE "S METAL
$325
plus
utilities. Drive· a- 1111113, save alot.
DETECTORS
(740)286·0189 01 (740)286Oak Fire Wood Cur &amp; Split Ron Allison , 588 Watson
2828
10' off Blacktop can load Road, Bidwell, Ohio 456 14.
4 rooms and bath, steve/ anyti me $30.00 per pick up •(740)446-4336 ·
refrigerator. Util ities paid, load (740)843·5425

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwoo d
- - - - - -- -Drive from $297 to $383 .
1967 t 2x60 mobile home,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
$1500. (740)645-2070 cell
Equal
phone, (740)645·2599 ce ll ·· 2·3 bedroom, large Kitchen/ 740·448·2568.
Housing Opportunity.
·
phone; (740)379·2515
Dining, living rooni, Bath, ell
- - . , . - - - , , . . - - - - - appliances. $475 per month, Beech Street, Middleport , 2
1994 Schul( 16x72 Mobile $400 depoelt. No pe1e, NO bedroom fu rnished apartHome ~rlced to sell Quick Exceptional
St.Rt. 141 . ment, utilities paid, depoelt &amp;
Call (740) 385·2434
(740)448·425&lt;1 or (740)448· references, no pets. 74Q02oe
892·0 185
1898 16x80. Schull mobile
homo
with
a
24x24 3 bedroom, Pomeroy, $375 Deluxe, 1 BR Town Houae ,
detached heated garage on per month plus deposit, near
CIA ,
Holzer,
Economical gas hoa1, WID
1 double lot loca1ed In 1740l 982 •0l 75
Racine. Mobile nome hea a ~
3br-.- H-ou-.-. - 1-oc_a_tl_d_l_n hookup, $359.00 plus u1111flully equipped kllcnen and Mason,
$49~. + U1illl loo. l loo. (740)446·2957
garage hao a large work· No Pate. (304)773-e 881
Furn lahed 3 rooms + bath,
bench. Includes a p ri~JIOY
lenco ond also haa a t mall 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Oliva Sl, upatalre, cl ean, no peta.
Reference
&amp;
deposi t
slorage building In back $325 mo. (740)446·3845
required. (740)448·1519
i ard. Include• lront porc h Small 1br. houoo at 2404
and beck+ porch with eun·
deck . Must 888 to appreci· Mon·roe Ave. lncluda appll· Gtaclous llvt~:~g. 1 and 2 bed·
ate. Immediate poaaesalon. cations. Must have Aef &amp; room apartments at VIllage
Manor
and
Riverside
Call (740) 992. 1987
Deposit. (304)875· 3757
Apartmenta In Middleport.
From $278·$348. Call 74()1999 Clay1on 18x80 3br.
992·5064. Equal Housing
2ba. CIA &amp; heat, vi nyl lldlng
Opportu niti es.
&amp; shingled roo!. Excellent 1997 mobile home for ~:__ _ _ _ _ _ _
Condlllon. (304)773·5238
Modern 1 bedroom apart·
ronVop1lon ·10 buy. 2 bed· men1 (74 0)446·0390 .
room, 2 ba1h, (304)773·
200~ 14x80
Oakwood 9557 or 740 •992 •597 t
3rd.
mobile home 218·(740)J51· . , - - . , . - - - . , . - - - - Norln
Avenue
7086 or 216·257·1485.
2 bedroom !railer, more Info Mlddlepor 1, 2 BED, unl ur·
nlahed Appt. , Deposit &amp;
I740)448·9589
Referance , No Pel s. 992·
28x5El doubl e wide for sale.
2 bed•oom, all electnc, ole. 01 85
3 br. 2 full ba. 258·1883.
wa1er &amp; l•aah Included, rei· ~
N--:T::-ki--A-:----erences &amp; deposit required, .
ng PP 11 cat 1 one"Get Your Money's Worth# at
35
1 2
$300 per month, located just
8fil
Bedroom
.Coles Mobile Homes, St. At.
outside Racine on 338 247· Townhouse
Apart ments,
50
East
ol
Athen a.
Includes Water Se wag e,
0402
Deliveries, set·u ps, eXcavat·
Trash, $350/Mo.• 740·448·
lng, fo undati ons, se wage 2 bedroom, all electric, AC, 0008.
systems, driveways, healing very nice, lr1 Gallipolis. No
·an d cOoling along with part s pets. (740)446·2003 or One bedroo m apartme nt.
920 4th Avenue, utilities
and service. You should (740)446· 1409
Included, $300 single, $350
accept nothing less. Slnc8
1967 we are Cole 's Mob1le 2br. Mobile home $325. mo. couple (740)446·8677 days;
Homes where you W
Get ~ur $300. Dep. (304)882·11 07. (740)256·1972 evenings.
Money's Worth."
Bea~tiful River View Ideal Small furnished apr. All utili·
- - - - - - - - - For 1 Or 2 People . ties paid except Electric. No
New 14x70 3 b r/2 b t~ . Only
References, Deposit. No Pets. Security
Deposit
$999 · down an d only
Pets. Foster Trailer Park . Req uired. S275 . Month.
$197.71 per month . Cell
740·441·0181.
(304)675· 1365
Ka'rena (740)385-7671
Mobile Home 4-rentJsale. Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
Nice lots available for up to near New school in Racin e. ing applications for waiting
16x80 m.obile liomes. $1 15 3br. 2ba , secu rity deposit list lor Hud·subsized, 1. br,
water Included, (740)992· required . No Pets. (304)773· apartment, call 675-6679
2167
6081
EHO

,.

L.------_.1

i

Large Commercial Retail Mobile home fo r rent. no
Office or Building on 1 to 5 pels, (740)992·5858
acres tor safe. rent or lease.
Some owner linancing avail·
APARIMENrs
able. In Rio Grande area.
mKRmr
740 245-5747
· l...ots &amp;
1 and 2 be droom apartments, furnished and unfur"---iiAiiCREAiiiiiiiiGii
E-_.1 nished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740·992·
112 acre lot on Tycoon Lake 2218.
w/12x60Trailer$16,500.00
now $1 3,500.00
1 bedroo m apartment, stove
(740) 247' 1.100
&amp; refrigerator incli,Jded, ~tili·
Patriot area, 20 wood8d lies included. (740)245·5859

w anted! Good credit cus·
tamers to purchase new
home w/land . $0 down to
quali fi ed custom ers. 1•5 Will pay top dollar fo r prime
acre
tr acts
available. land . New hOme builder.

l_

Clean, 2 bedroom mobile
home in Gallipolis area, all
electric. All new carpet
Water and Garbage service
furnished. Washer and Dryer
included. Cal (740)645· 1750
and leave message.

_
94_6_5~------

acre s, county water &amp; alec·
New House lOr sale· Debbie tric,
homesite. Borders
Drive. 3 bedroO ms, 2 baths,
Wayne Nationa l Forrest,
$130. 000. (740)245·9268.
excellent hunti ng, $38,000
Call after 5:30
(740)379-9141

011
~~i~~fi'
il ri~gia~~
l! e-in-ve_•_tig-a-1e_d_lh'le j33)

.
QIVEAWAY: Beagle Dog
Female, Tiger Cal tree to
good home· 992 -0219

.

POUCIES: Ohio V• ll•y Publishing reaervea lhe right lo M it, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Error. must be reported on the first day of
Tribune-SentiMI-R-e later will ,be r..ponslble fOJ no more than the cost ol the 1pace oecupled by the error and only the fl ~t lnaertlon. We ahall
any loss or ea:penu that ruul.. from the publication or orniulon of en advertisement. Correction will·be mede in the_flrat avalleble edition. • Box
.-e alwa,a confldwltl•l. • Current rate card appllel. • All real estate acivertlaemema are subject to the Federal _
Fair Houalng ACI of 1968. • Thla "'""P''.. '
eccepta only help wented ads
EOE atandarda.
will not lenowlngly ecceplany advertising In violation of the law.

• I ndude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Foster Parents.
Local Agency in Ohio seek·
ing qualifi ed couples to
be"come Foster p8rents in
1: LMa~rence. ~aTIIhia. Ja.ckbson ,
G IVEA\V,\Y
e1Qs areas. ere WI11 e 5
to 10 families chosen 10 become pari ot the pilo t proj•
FREE
ect. Qualified applicants may r1o
BUSINESS
3 or 4 cord
receive up to $40.00 per day
OP'PoR'IlJNTJY
Firewood water maple.
reimburse men t. Interested
recently cut down not sea·
parties Call (740)709·9062.
!NOTICE!
soned. First come &amp; first
If you have prev iously
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH·
serve . (304)675-2 112
palled. please call again .
lNG CO recomme nds that
Giveaway
10 pupp1es, Full-time night auditor. you do business with people
·s hepp·ard I Boxer mixed ~xperience require d. Apply you know, and NOT to send
grea1 Christma s present in person at Holiday Inn. money through the mail until

ro Buv

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

Description • lndude A Price

Desk Clerk nee ded, fu ll·
time. Please apply ~at the
Budget Inn, 260 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis. No phone
calls please

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

Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper

• Start You r Ads Wtth A Keyword • lnc:lude Complete

"
-----·
CounselorAn -outpatient
alcohol and other drug
agency is seeking a counselor to provide services in
Jackson , Ohio. Services
include but are not limited to:
assessments.
mdividual
and/or group co unseling.
Caseloa&lt;t will co nsist of
juvenile and adult clie nts.
Bachelor's degree a mUst.
CCDC, LSW and knowledge
in chemical dependency
preferred. send resume by
December 16, 2002 to:
FACTS, 45 Olive Street,
Gallipolis. OH 45631 or FAX
10 (740)446·80 14 EO E.
MIF/H

ss.oo aup

Gooa Selection of Shrubs
Morning Star Road - CR

•

· -QUES

""' II

i
I

Buy ·or se ll. Riverine
Antiques, t 124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526. Ru ss Moore,
~
o wi:nreo:'·:":"..._______,

r

MlscELLANEou
· MER
S

~~~
o&gt;Ur.......,

•

I

OIANDISE
9 loot ··christmas Tree,
bought at Sears· used 1
year. Paid $250· aell tor
$175. (740)256·9181

.,

$ t~ or ·· ~

1994 Geo Metro
(740)4 46·0744

'
''
:

1995 Beretta $2395. 1996
Cavalier $3395, 1995 Grand '
Am GT $3495, 1995 Gran d.;
Am Sport Sedan 4dr $289G , '1
1991 Probe GT $1 295, we:~
take trades. Cook Motol's ·1
(740)446-0 t03 '
.,

.,

1995 Berettta, $2 ,395: 1996 •I
Cavalier, $3,395; 1995:::
Grand Am GT, S3,49S , 1 99~i • .
Grand Am Sport .S eda11. :
40, $2,895 ; 1991 ProiJ e GT. 1
$1,295. We take Trade,s. 1
COOK MOTORS (740)446· '
01 03
:

'

.

·-- - ·

1995 Cadillac Deville .Sedan..
4dr., hunter gree n. Excellent..,
Condition. Phone (304)675-..
2800
~

..,"

'

1996 Ponliac Sunfire GT 2.£"
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
dOOI, $3500 OBO. (740)256-~
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
6169
i
Winters, Rio Grande, OH -- - --·- ·11.
Call 740·245-51 21.
1998 VW Bee tle Bug, blAck,~·
PE:rs
5 sp., air, am/fm cas sette.
Olectrlc locks, 79.000 rnlles,
fOR SALE
nic e clean car. SB,450.
(740)742·3802
.
AKC Golden Retriever pup·
plea, tat shots &amp; wormed, ~ 999 Monte Carlo Z34,1
both parents on premises co upe, bl ack, cu~om ste reo;
$300. will be ready for x-mas system, leath er in t e r ior ,~
will hold w/ dep. 256· 1886. power •u nroof &amp; more':''
eX1ros. (140)379·2721
;
AKC Yorklo pups, will be
ready Jan 20th . Toklng 2000 Pontiac Bonnuvllla
dtpcalta now. · 3 female&amp;, 2 super charged, fully loaded,.
malu
S4eOi maleo, and heado up dlaploy. 10.00&lt;1{
Se00/lamala.(740)245· 1217 mllel exc, cond. ca ll aU en
~
4:00 740 · (740) 441 ·933~
Blue Heeler Puppies 8 wka.
old Call After 5 p.m. 742· 95 Dodge Neon. 4 door, 4lllt
cy linder, 5 speed. ru ns:
1103
good,
$1150
OBO.•
Full blooded Ral Terrier pup- · (740) 441 ·0584
·:
pies, 8 weeks old, lalla
docked and wormed, 1 96 Chevy' L.umlna, PW, AC,'l,
male, ·1· lemale, $50 each. excellent shlipe, $3600. ~ ·
(740)38.7-7488
(740) 441 ·9389
__:

i

Baby ltame, Jg . China
Cabin et, am . colored TV.
(304)676·2801
'--'-------BONUSIUYS
Volume aa te1 get• liberal
dlseounta at Sam
Somervi lle's Store. Original
army camoufl age, field
Jackets, B.D.U., oul1a,
l na~,o~lated Coverllla, Jr.
sizes also. Free two Dish
Satell ites w/baalc lnetalla·
tlon. Company Promotional;
No Credit Carda required .
By Sandyville, WV Pos1
Golden Retriever puppies,
Office. (304)273·5656
will hold lor x·m a1 w/ deposit
$275
.00 1·470·(740) 843·
BURN
Fal.
BLOCK
Cravings, and BOOST 0013
E
Llk
Yo
H
nergy
•
u
ave Norwegt•n Elk HoUnd pupo
Never EMperlenced.
plea, 1ar sh ots, $75 each. 4
WEIQHT· LOSS
mile&amp; South of Ala Grande,
REVOLUTION
New prod1.1ct launch October righ t on Wolf Run Ad, 1at
place on rig ht.
·
23, 2002. Call Tracy al
(740)441 ·1982
Pekingese pups, feady by
'--'------Chrlslmao.
(740)388· 941 1
Firewood lor sale. Spilt and
delivered, $40 a load, $5
I \I n I ..,, 1'1'1 II ..,
extra In West Virginia.
,\ 11'1 -., I (H J,
(740)367·783, ,
ll'lll'""-~~--.....0..
Firewood for sa le. Call
10
FARM
(740)388·8284
'.
r."'~--tiiEQum.!F.Nriiilllliiiiiiioiio.....,J

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

-;&gt;

-

r

~~~.

ij

•
Doc!Qe pickU p.~

1990 lull size
11 3,000 mllea, aulometlc.~
$11 00 OBO. (740)250·1875'
(740)256·1233

!

-:=-~-=--=---··-· •

1994 1/2 Ton Ford Truck. 4-'
speed w/overdrlve. 2 whee~
~
drive no AIC . 14 ,OOU.
(304)875 -1571

Firewood , large pick up. load
Hondo 250 4·wheelor $1000
of mixed hardwoods, S45 or 1rod e fo• ca111e (740)448· 92 Chevy 4&lt;4 pick-up. 3,,~
dell~tt3red . Complln1entary 1052
automatic power cloo1sl wilL·•
kin dling. (740)367·7780

r

~

Ifs$5,r~c28:j

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Repairs: Problems? Need
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.
Athens Livestock sale Sat.
740·446·4525
Dec. 14th 1 pm, special
Hand Crafted, Walnut Gun feeder calf sate, will be senCabinet, double Glass lng 50 Black &amp; Red Angus
Doors,
lock
storage, cattle from 1 farm ell CO l)~
.$300.00. (740)992·7836
slgnments welcOme, hauling
available 5$2·2322 or 698Tappan gas oven/ range ."
35 31 .
$75 OBO (740)446·9555

\

1984 Chevy 4wd true~ :JUI'.i·
matte. (740)446·074o1
1986 Jeep Cherokue 4:-: '1.
re buil t tran smission , tebuill
fro nt end, good body etlli.J
tires. needs enoinn or
rebuilt. $700. (740)44r. ~9~'"
••

•

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171

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

Bring this coupon

(740) 446-1044

Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get5FREE

MDnday-FrldQy 8'5PM • Saturday B-2pm

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

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 6rlndlf1

B. D. CODSTRUCTIOO
992·297

Bucket Truck

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

, 30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

%%%%%%%%XXI~;,P;.R;E;C;IS;IO;,N;D;,E;.E;R~

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

C~~=:~~:;;rt

[10'x10' 610'x20')

Decorating.

(740) 992-3194
992-titi35

Sports

Comics

IBSON
0R4Pn1CS

1-lOUDAY .

Look For
My Lost

Free Estima tes
Insured.
(740)949- 1701

%%%%%%%%%%%

Classifieds

~ w:i l11 ": 1 : r ~i irl• :

lake
740-.949•2734

:L~~'k:··

Mailng Our Sates
Free Supplies, 'Postage!
Slart lmmediale~l
Genuine ()pport,.,ilyl
For Free Information,
Call Toll Free
1-800-357·1170

FREE, Non-profit debt

help. Be treated with
honesty, understanding
&amp; respect. CareOne.

1·800-847-.5869
(toll-free)

Reduce Tolal Monlhly Payments
by 11:1 or More
Elimilale High lnlfltSIIWs &amp; Fees
One S~le Low Monlhly Payment

1-74()-667 -o363
Shop early for the

holidays!
•
New Shipment
Farm Toys &amp;
Construction Toys

IIPOSIIIOO., ol.l)plios provided! Rush
IIAcldrellHd Siamped Emelopel I
4, P.O. Box 1438. A,.locll,
S1art lmmedlalelyl·

E-mili
Flnon&lt;:lllhllpOmoooagoumo.oom

Car!

JllllY

CGISTIICTIII

Le~

me :k 1t fe r youl

..

. Toii·I""1-81H05-3!71

"}:.l}ff,~ If., ,;,ff"'l"

$45.00

EiecuiC. Plumbing

The Daily
Sentinel
992·2155

Best Service at
the Best Price
Skln, Cui, Wrap
&amp; Freeze
All this for only

Footers, Foundation,
Add-Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete,

31645SR325
Lan9SVUie, OH
740-742;..2076

lnsuranu Wort lndudtd

(740) 992-3320
Email : blade aO zapfin~.com

Open

9am - ~p m

ffft in 1\ome p~Ctu~
C.ll ~• for IJI yoorcumpner n«dl

~ «~imaln,

(740) 446-1812
A.JA- IU

tibtJHI ( I IH

s~rviu

Plmu!

· Hill 's Self
Storage

Tlt1ng~
• Tonneue Cover •
Ventvisor • Bug
pn1e1a &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories ·

b i l~ w ~h

$2.500.0010 $150,000.00
Bad credil welcomed
LOANS O.A.C
Free ex~n1utta~on with liVe agent
No a!&gt;Pk&gt;l11on lee

: 843-5264.·

the PAIN
out cf PAINTING'

Building over 30 years

~ JP~:

Fimr Cor:ttln6ntal

ond Financial SerJicM,
' Box 169, Middleport, OH

Ta~ e

Pret Consultation

Conoolida1e you•
Qol H Nowt
Call 24 hr: 1181'30H7t7 •·5

MILLS

Feel Good Ahout Yqur Finances

(¥&lt;Jii.li11IL &amp;KS1

mel

My money is wtlh
Roclty Hupp lnauron~

All Brands

Again

}.110(1,438-9179 ext. 207
llri!!I*Jnwww.hrightoncredlt.
Cletllt ''M ! •Cup.
om

"W.Y"s #I Chevy. Pontiac .. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van De!!ler"

45723

ANew

:L~~k;

1-800-822-0417

1000 S.R. 7 South
. Coolville, OH

Wlte'l'e 'J;
while Becomin g

Ripley, WV :15271

Depoy'sAg Pll1s

Find

Save Tltcusands

Skin, cut, wrap
All boneless cut
740-949-0708
740.949-7600

Dean 1011
New&amp;Used
4 75 South Church St.

( !I I

Whe'l'e

PROCESSING

DEER
PROCESSinG

SUmmer
~P~CIAL
Sausage made
~8Vfl 1()%
maplewood

Puppy!

Debl free
Receive Cash Baok Every 6 Mo&lt;

1SO East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

All pack $5.00

News

SaH' up to ::07' r
Oil 111011 I hh hi II~~

992-5479

(flbQ:zc{eC &amp; Gravely

Every Thur.olay &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thur.olay
of every month

per
month

•

Need a car? New soconcC
chance financi ng available-1'11
now. Requlrea $300 weekly(
income end you · are~
approved . Call th e Loa ~
Doctor at 1·866·4LOAN·Dr"'
or locally (740) 446-4533
:

740-992-5232

$75

·••!

Jeff Warner.lns.

Self-Storage

in this
space
for

Events

Cell"ular

High&amp; Dry

Advertise

Local

.Alllll

?!-· ~~ ·

a

a

30 • Racine, Oh io

1-740.949-2115

BUILDERS IDC.

Dally In_.Column: 1 :00 p.m.

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to ·s:oo p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ••.

Swags

BISSELL

Of/tee llo«P-$'
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

GrtlVe Blllnlcets .SS.lJ0.$25.00
Wreaths SlO [(up
Slllc Poinsettias 9'1t ea

Sell

My

\II' II, I

Tractor

I

II

I

!Ill

I

(74 0) gq2 5822

.

JUST launchedlll
LOSE WEIGHT
NOWI Bums FATI
BLOCKS Cravi ngs I
BOOST Energyl
All Natural/Doctor
Recommended·
Get this AWESOME
produllf TODAY
Call: Jeanie

Wlte1'e f,

®efQ If...

The Dally
Sentinel
992·2155

740-992·7g98

.,

or visit website:
www.htrbahdlet.com

Ball Logging
&amp; Firewood

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

Bob Ball
Dump Truck Deli very

I·740.992-41142
Leave a

LAMM'S

CIIIIITIUCTIIN
Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
. Siding, and
Additions
Owner:
Terry Larilm
(740) 992-0739

Hours
7:00AM - 8:0.0 PM

YOUNG'S
ROBERT CARPENTER
.
BISSELL
SERVICE
• Room AddHionl lo
CONSTRUCTION • Rem-.lng
Newo.,..

•New Homes ·

• 1 1 - 1 lo Plumbing

• Roofl ng lo Gutters·

• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling

• VInyl Biding lo Painting
• Polio and Pofch Decko

Free Estimates

Stop &amp; Compare
7/22/TFN

V.

e.992·
YOUNG Ill
6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

�"

~.

.

.

.

.;

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

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'

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

'

~.

...

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~

. . .. . . .

.. .. . .

. -.

BRIDOII:

...

N•rth

.. H

•
•

t

A to 8 I
.. A 10 1
• Q R4

•K J5 4 3
\0!11~

. ... 1

4 II 82
Sollth
A ,A QJ9R

• Q.
• J 3 1
•
De1l~r:

South

Vutn~rabk : N~ither

Seulh

W~ll

North

l-Ad

I NT

P1U

lA

Pan
Pan.

I NT
I

r.~,

4 NT
1'111

Pan

1'1~•

Ope-ning lead : ?'!

1 Web eddr.

competitor
41 Med.

40 PO

.

Explo~ed

gentl.,.n
24 -length

1
2

27Podrum

Inscription
3 Wolfish
· look
4 Kind of tire

(hyph.)

Crazy game

THE BORN LOSER

39 I.a. - •

f.":!. •.)

KJ 4

P1~t

Old Noras

Middleport e Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol 53. No. 82

unno

36 Dept. stcn
lnwntory

38 Prowled

39Covel

.

41 Plnetrae

w•ltre•• 42 e::..uc:pell
43 Irwin-of

25 Word of
l)onor

26 Moktl
footnate

thePGA

44 Oletary

need
27 Diplomat's
46 Not too
asset
5 Glorify
friendly
28 Emmy
6 Study
47 Spelling
relative
7 PlcturesqiHI
error
29 Witty
8 Accurate
48 Did In the ·
remarks
9 WrHing

30 tougar's
home
31 Hourly pey
32 Aoat along

8y PHIWP AlDER
Mark Twain wrote,
34 Slugger
"Truth is stranger
Meldragon
31 Practice
lluldo
35 Circle perle
than fiction, but it is
51 Plndar tone
sumo
1o Attontlon
36
nny
because Fiction is
33 Wager
getter
parasite
obliged lo stick to
37 Armor pert 13 Pampered 35 Elactrlcsl
"T""""""Ir-"1!"-ml".,
possibilities ; Truth
isn' t."
Bridge can be
strange at times, too.
This weird deal is
Truth, not Fiction, be·
cause it occurred during the final or the
1999
Spingold
Knockout Teams
Championship.
Look only at the
West hand. South
opens one no-trump,
14-16 points. What
would you lead if
North raised straight
to three no-trump?
Once you have de·
cided, now -a second
question: What would
you lead if North arti·
ficially showed a balCELEBRITY CIPHER
. anced slam-try with a
by Luis Campos
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from quotations bY famous
five-card club suit,
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another:
and South jumped to
Today's clue: 8 equals H
sil\ clubs?
IBPFG
IGPFR,
ED EG
" 0
. At the other table,
!P"
""' ' Billy
Eisenberg
I'M LOOOYitl(, TO ~liE C.OffE£
L P P A IGPFR,
El
El
0
(South) and Garey
C.ON~I ~D 1\ ''"'-""",
Hayden. after learnK E U S
0
. W B E -K A ' I
U E G S
FOOO C:&gt;IWUI.' I,
ing that they didn't
have a heart stopper,
ZPXASF,
0
IV 0 K K
0
·.
ended in four spades, _
an unusual 5-2 fit.
VPVSXG ."
JFESD,
JFELBG
West led his singleton
club, so declarer took
IS 0 X
P'DOPKOEX
12 tricks via five
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I'm excited, ecstatic, bullwenly·
spades, two diamonds
five
guys play. It wasn't just me."
.
and five clubs : plus
- Angel Trov Glaus on being named World Series MVP
480.
WORD '
In this auction.
GAM I :·
T~~~:t;~r
~
· North's two-spade re· - - - - - - Iaiita iy 'I.AY R. ,OLLAN~:::;:;;:;;;:;;;;~
sponse ·was a relay;
Rearrange letters 9f the
South's two-no-trump O four
scrambled words .beTEN INCHES OF
rebid indicated a low to form four simple words.
SNOW PL\.1!.
minimum;
and
ONE INCH OF
North's
four
no·
K H I N5 R
FII.EEZ.ING. RAIN
EQUA~$ A
·trump announced a
SNOW 'MY! balanced slam-try
with a club suit.
South liked his hand
NUDEC
enough to jump to six
clubs.
Against three notrump, West would
and I had argued .over
M U Y M T ' . :_"'"': theMysoQ
amount of allowance he was
automatically lead the .
s 16 1
getting . Granny knows a great _
heart four and defeat
.
.
.
way to teach kids the value of a
the contract, the defenders taking the r--~--:::-:-;-::-:-:-c-.., dollar. _She says all you have to
G L T H .E N
do is just give- .. · a ·- • •. ~
first five tricks in
hearts. However,
7 I
I
18 I
Comp lete the chuckle quoted '
_
.
_
.
.
bY filling in the mi.ssing words •
1
I when Bob Hamman .L.--1.._..__,__..__,___,
you develop from ste~ No. 3 below.
,,... ,,,
(North) and Paul So.,
loway reached sil\ If:). PRINT NUMBERED
1
clubs, West was un· ~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
willing to lead away
UNSCRAMBLE_ FORI
from tbat heart hold· @) ANSWER
.
ing. He selected the
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
diamond 10. so Solo·
Hazard- Venom- Erase- Turkey- STEAMED
way · claimed 12
My
husband tried to stir up an old argument that I ,
tricks:
plus
920.
HOW IS·10UR
1 OOf.l'r KNow.
thought
had been settled weeks before . I've concluded
c.HIIJS!M/6
So\1'-HOY/11-'IS
Three . no-trump
' S~I~IT
1EAR I ~EEL A
that·there's
nothing like a cooling off periqd to get people
stood no chance, but
,.
SOfA~?
CEI!TAIN
all
STEAMED
up .
six clubs and six noDETACHMEf./1"
trump were laydown!
flU!\\ IT AlL

I

S© R4U lJ\.- £ t/'Se

BIG NATE

I I I'

PEANUTS
-FOR SALE-

U5ED COMIC. 600KS

I

I~

I

Ie

I II

'

,.
W'Jj lt ll.t'

Qbnr

BY BERNICE BED£ 0sOL

Although yo u usuolly enjoy
a variety of friends. it c·ould
become more important 10
you in the ycm ahead to spend
time with a few close. loyal
ones. Don 't ·trim yo ur soc ial
circle. but do cultivate one or
1\\IO intimate friem.lships .

GARFIELD
COM/N" UP
NEXT :

l "HAII&lt;:Y t.;ARRY, 'THE
!iPIPEI&lt;: WHO 5AVEP
CHRISTMI\5"

f

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-

Dcc. 2 1) --Speak to the entire
clun and make ccrtam yuu
have everyone's approval be ~
fo re makin g. any changes that
would affct:t the entire famil y:
Dissention cou ld create !in · .
gerin'g problems.

1

~~
~-i ~

CAPRICORN (Dcc.·22-Jan.

19) --If you find yo urself in a
position of authority where it
ls ·ur, to yo u w ap prove nnd
imp emenr plans and proce dures. don't pretend tu know
more thun . you do. especially
how to lr~unch them .

THE GRIZZWELLS
WCIR.REt-1 \NOU\..0 '\'0\J
EllER 1~kE ~tN~~~~GE
oF ci..IR ffi\EI'\115\.1\? ?

t-\0, CMON ... Wl-\C.T \.\ll.\1£
~0\.1

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

601 ?
I

19) -- There is nutltinl! wrung
with )'our earning abint ies tvday: the problems begin with.
y nur 1 sp~ nd ing· hahit s. Every th ing yoLi·.g:nin could quickly
di sappctt r af you're cx.tru va~
~umt or w;.tsteful.
.

- ?ISCES (Feb 20-M arch
rr~e tlt

Opl'ratc
as you choose tudo.ty. suc..:ess
i!&lt;i likely. However. if you feel ·
hotmpered. ir could be unolhcr.
20) -- If you ·rc

story . Be wary of aily involvement that would impede
your independence .

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

-· Today you nwy be inclined'
to talk about things as if th ey
arc u ~ait accompli. just becau·se m your m1nd you cun

see them done. If yuu ·mislead

others, you 'll lose their sup·
port .
· TAURUS (April 20-Muy
20) ·· Don 't go starling any

new projects today before You
have successfully finali ze d
the ones you already have in
the mill. If you all()w too
much lo overlap. all could go

down the drain.
GEMINI (May 21-lunc 20)
-- Unless you know how to

hang onto what you ·go after

today . your poss ibilities for
ach ie ving a crit ic al objet.:t ive · ·
wlll be in vain . Have a ga me
pl;.m · ready for maintamin g
contro l.

CANCER (June 21-luly 22)

-- Do everyth i ng at a muLler,

ate , careful pace today and
avoid incl inati ons
inl pul·
sivc aclion. If you're undt sci·
plined . you m iglu repeat a
mi stake you 've been trymg to
avoid .
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) -There is no way a joi nl \11:!11rure t:an work out satisfnc to-

or

rily for you lodoy if you lack

hurmony regarding your mu tual object ives and purposes.
Be sure there is accord before

proceeding.
.
:
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Scpt. 22) ·

-- Don't blow your chance today to estublish ·a relation ship
when the opportunity strikes
with someone who frequently .
opposes you. If you miss thi s ·
chance , there may not be another.

. LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23).

. - Ta.ke extra care to me your
resources. be they people or

POMEROY
Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODOT) employees donated
more than $480,000 of their
own money to charity during the
state's Combined Charitable
Campaign' this fall.
ODOT District . 10 - which
includes
Athens,
Gallia,
Hocking. Meigs, Morgan,
Monroe, Noble, Vinton and
Washington counties - raised
more than $30,000 for the campaign.
·
About 52 percent of Meigs
County ODOT employees contributed to the charitable drive
to beat this year's district goal
of $26,000.
. Chris Davis, Combined
Charities
coordinator
for
District 10, said she was very
pleased with employees' generosity. She expected fewer
donations from last year
because of the events surrounding the terrorist attacks on Sept.
II.
"We honestly thought . there .,
would be less this year," Davis
said. "l don't know if what happened last year made the spirit
grow, but we're very thrilled
with the results."
Nearly half of all ODOT
employees donated to the charities, averaging more than $190
per person.
Pilv.is said people maintained
th~;gen&amp;~s spirit they had
ex~ressed itst year.
• I think everyone got into the
Christmas spirit," she said. "I
just asked them to contribute

.

'

J. M1~ LAYTON
Sentinel correspondent
BY

. RACINE Racine Village
Couqcil unanimou sly approved the
$15,000 purchase of about 2 acres
from the Meigs County District
Public Library Board Monday.
Located on the property of the
Meigs County Library in Racine,
the land will be the future si te of a
waier treatment facility.
· David Spencer, clerk-treasurer,
said that while the village is stili in

the application process for sec uring
grants to provide the $ 1.6 million
in funding . for tlte project, he is
optimistic abou t grants corning
through so that construction can
begin in 2003.
.
.
The village is waiting for decisions on grants including $300,000
from the Appalachi a n Regional
Commission ;
$500.000
in
Community Development Block
Grant funds; $375,000 from Issue
2, and $520 ,720 from th e Ohio
Water Development Association .
Spencer ·said "the- proposed water

t_reatrnent facilit y will provide not
only for the needs of Racine re si·
dents, but for those living between
Portland and Minersville , along
with Letart.
Racine'-s wat er system supplies
water ne cessary to lreat se wage
corning in from those areas. ·
The facility will help the village
in three ways, Spencer said.
First, the water treatment plant
will help the vill age to comply with
EPA standards.
Second, the facility . will supply
sufficient water fo r the village. The

days till
Christmas

lhing~.

very wisely today . If ;

current water treatment facility has
been operational since 1950 w(th.·
·,
·out any upgrade s.
Since then , water usage ~ a~
increased with population g rowi~.
and with the completion of the ne\1·
combined school , which uses abou.
500,000 gallons of water pei
month.
·: ·
Finally, the water treatment faci.f
ity 's increa sed production . wir
allow for commercial expansion ir
the area.

New ARC list could
mean boon or bust
for Meigs County
•

.

BY BRIAN

J.

.

'

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY
The
removal of several nearby
from
the
counties
Appalachian
Regional
Commission's list of economicaliy-dis.tressed
counties
could be a boon to Meigs
County, according to local
officials, or could be a sign of
bad things to come.
ARC
recently
The
announced a "dramatic"
reduction in the number of
di·stressed
economically
counties in the I 3-state
Appalachian region, based on
2000 census data. Meigs
County remains one of those
distressed counties, but others
i~
the area, including
JaCkson, Morgan and Monroe
. · C~tl~ties, have been removed
from the list.
Throughout
the
Appalachian region. 25 percent of the distresssed coun·
ties were removed from the
list, bringing the total from
121 to 91. Since the ARC's
founding in 1965, over I 00
have been
permanently
removed.
Counties considered "dis·
tressed" are given special

Please see ODOT, A3

~414

mv·I~tlv·.. •nr:nPI .11m

'

'

consideration when applying.
for some federal grants, anc
County Commissioner Jef,
Thornton said Tuesday the
removal of Morga n an c
Monroe Counties, in particu.lar, frol1) the di stressed counties li.st could be beneficial to
Meigs. Those counties, alont
with Meigs, are in ihe
Buckeye
Hilis-Hockin~
Valley
Regional
Development District. Of the
counties in that di strict, which
administers a number of fei:leral grant programs, only
Athens and Meigs remain on
the ARC 's distressed counties.
li Sl.
''This should help Meigs
County," Thornton. said. "If
they remove some counties
from the list, one wotild hope
that there wi II be additional
funds available to those dis·
tre ssed
which
. , · cbunties
rem am.
But Commissioner Mid.
Davenport said the removal
of counties like Morgan and
Monroe, which continue to
suffer high unemployment
rates, could be a bad omen for
counties still on the list.
"Eliminating counties from
the li st is a disturbing trend,"

..

. Please see ARC, Al

Conservation included in agriculture tax status
Staff report

eligible for CAUV unless ll1e
property is enrolled in a conser·
vation program.
POMEROY - Resolutions
The federation maintains
involving agi;cultural property. that soil conservation and stewtax and supporting the reclama- aniship of agricultural land is
tion of abandoned mines were an integral part of agriculture,
among the items discussed at ·and that agricultural land
Thesday's monthly meeting of devoted to conservation should
Pt Pleasant -675-4498
. the Meigs Soil and Water continue to be recognized as
Gillllpolls-446- 5411
Conservation Distiict's Board land devoted to agricultural
MeiQS- 992-0060 .
of Supervisors at the SWCD use.
office in Pomeroy.
In addition, the board earlier
The board approved a reso- approved a resolu.tion urgin15
•
'\ 1 '
lution, to be presented at the Congress to contmue provt• •
January 2003 meeting of the sions of the Surface Mining
Ohio Federation of Soil and Control and Reclamation Act
Water Conservation Districts, of 1977, which imposed on
encouraging the Ohio legisla- coal mine operators a fee of 35
ture to include qualitied conser· cents to the ton on surface
vation practices as "land c;levot · mined coal and 15 cents per ton
ed
exclusively to. agricultural on underground mined coal.
1 Sactlons - 11 Paps
use" eligible for the Current
The fees are used for
Agricultural Use Value tax sta- reclaiming abandoned strip
Calendar
AS
tus.
mines, . and for addressing
B4-S
. Classifieds
To
qualify
for
CA
UV,
land
health and safety concerns
Comics
BG
must consist of more than 10 caused by previous mining
Dear Abby
AS
acres and be devoted exclusive· activity.
Editorials
A4
ly to agriculture.
It was noted that abandoned
A3
Movies
The problem, accoroing to strip mines and underground
Obituaries
A3
the resolution, is that county mines continue to impact the
,BI-3 · auditors in some counties have lives of many people in southSports
Weather
A2
taken the position that volun- eastern Ohio.
tary conservation practices on
According to the resolution,
Q 2002 Ohio Valley Publ ishing Cq.
agricultuntl land may not be . Ohio has about 13,600 acres of

T\7\i'~.J\

you don't. all your efforts will . ·
be ineffective '-IIlli wh at you ·
had ;.It your disposa l lost forever .

clogged stream lands and
22,000 acres of scarred landscape, I ,300 miles of streams
affected by acid mine drainage,
and more than 4,000 underground mines, which po:&gt;e a
risk of subsidence and water
contamination.
It will cost about $203 million to clean up . these areas,
most located in southeastern ·
Ohio.
The board presented a
plaque to outgoing Supervisor
Thomas Theiss of Racme, rec·
ognizing Theiss' 24 years of
service to the district.
The board also discussed the
purchase of new tires for the
district's pickup truck, and the
possible installation of four dry
Thomas Theiss of Racine, right, Is recognized Tuesday for 24 ·
tire hydrants in 2003.
Dry fire hydrants are years of service on the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
installed in · ponds near road· District's Board of Supervisors. He is shown here with Board
ways, giving rural frre depart· President Joe Bolin.
ments access to water where
there are no traditional fire · Ohio Department of Natural Vicki" Morrow, Wildlife
Resources' Division of Soil S p e c i a I i s t/ W a t e r s he d
hydrants.
and
Water Conservation , Coordinator Jim Freeman and
Present
were
board
District
Conservationist Mike District Technician Steve
President Joe Bolin, Vice
President Marco Jeffers, Duhl from the Natural Jenkins.
Conservation
The next board meetinf
Secretaryffreasurer Bill Baer Resources
Service,
Meigs
SWCD
will
be held Jan. 9. ll :30 a.m
and board members Chris
Opal
\at
the
Meigs SWCD office ll'
Program
Administrator
Hamrn and Thomas Theiss,
Con stance White from the Dyer, Education Coordinator 3310 I Hiland Road, Pomero} ·

Love Lights al Tree -

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.
Shou ld someone in·

sponsored by the American Cancer Society and Holier Medical Center

22) ..

elude a person who you di s-

li ke in a social acti v ~ty in
which you:re engaged. don't
·do or say anvthing you will
later regret. Se gruc10us and
tolerant
Astro- Graph ~s year-riheitd ..
predi c tion .~ arc available for ·
all signs and mak e excellen t
Xmas stot' king stuffers for the
emire famll.y. Mnil $2 und om

A special holiday event honoring loved ones and helping oid cancer research

Wednesday, December 1 8, 2002
6:00 pm •, Gallipolis City Park

J

SASE' each to

ASiro·Gr&lt;~ph.

c/o rhi s newspape r. P.O. Box

167. Wickli ffe. 01-144092. Be

sure 19 stute yqur desi red zu d i;.~ c si.l!ns.

'
I

BY J. Mt~ LAYTON
Sentinel correspondent

Nww

Water plant going on library land

Index

'BirthdayWednesday. Dec. II. 2002

ODOT
maintains
tradition
of giving

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER l l , 2002

I

I

-·

BETTY

81

Uti....

11 111-61

£a1l

i ~ 1

ACROSS

4 Velendne
color
peroonnel
7 Swab(hyph.) 42 Be poifChed
11
45 Plcko
12 Sk81er'o
49 Lloten
leap
50 FO!felt
14 Footed
52 PDJMY8'1
VIMI
OliveIS Chemical
53 - vera
oufllx
54 Correct a
16 Elc• ol
text
"MacGyver'" 55 Unseal, to a
17 Razor-billed
poet
blrdo
56 Proceed
1B Go oil track 57 USCG
20 Clergy
ofllcer
19 Remote
member
56 Moo
· 21 City on the
22 Blubber or
Tiber
DOWN
suet
24 "Allee"
23 Spanloh

A K 6
.,Q \0~~

Wn&lt;

+

Tomadoes beat

NEA Crossword Puzzle .

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

- .......

Tuesday, December 10, 2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

•

.. .

~

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

~

I

To donate $5 for a personalized Christmas ornament per honoree,

•

call {740) 446"4728, {740) 446·5055 or {740) 446·505.4
before 4_pm on Tuesday, December 17.
..

·'

•••

I

www .holzer.org

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