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Wednesday, October 29, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page .8 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Throat slash draws
coach's :wrath, Bt

•

•-TVC Hocking
·Division Champions
• Sectional Champions
• District Champions

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,II(

I

, ,~.\~.1

,,

'\ 41

Restaurant
Deily Speciels. Home Cooked Meals.
Piu:as,
Drive lbru, Dine ln. Cell-Ins Welcome

740-985-3902

36361 SR 7

Chester, OH

Ridenour

Brown's Taxidermy

• James dazzles, but
Kings prevail. See Page 81

44 781 Pomeroy Pike
Racine, OH

985-3364

Chester

985-3307

BlUM

MBER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Pomeroy • 992-3785

Wesam

Mark's Plumbing
&amp;.. Heating

State Route 7 • Pomeroy

Chester

992-6466

499 Richland Ave.
Athens, OH

740-594-6333

CROW'S
· FAMlLY
RESTAURANT
Pomeroy 992-5432

TNT PIT
STOP

MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
Pomeroy

Construction
Reedsville • 378-6293

WAY TO GO!

WV 031925 OH34636

St. Rt. 248

Valley

&amp; Supply

Co.

Best
Middleport

992-6611

Attorneys at Law
110W. Second Street
Pomeroy 992-6059

NELSONVILLE - While
there ha' been delay after delay
on selecting the route for the
proposed Nelsonville bypass.
Ohto
Department
of
Transportation District IU
Deputy
Director George
Collins says he "hopes to be in
a position to announce a preferred alternative route early in
2004."
ODOT has completed and
delivered a series of preluninary environmental documents for review by key state
and federal agencies in order
to prepare the recommendation for the preferred altern a-.
tive route for the proposed
Nelsonville Bypass.
The documents. which
include the Preliminary Draft
Environmental
Impact
Statement (PDEIS). the draft
Biological Assessment (BA).
the draft .Biological Evaluation
(BE) and the Ecological Survey

Report rES RJ. were distributed

for review to state and federal
agencies. such a' the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency and Wayne National
Forest. morder to foster collaiJ..
oration and resolve issues while
the project is still in the planning process. Agencies' comments are. to be received by the
OOOT District I0 office in
November.
Di scuss ions regarding the
potential impacts that this
project would have to threatened and endangered species
have further delayed the proje&lt;.:t's advancement of a preferred alternative.
"It was our hope t!tat we
could announce the preferred
alternative to the public earlier this year. but it is important that we address any
issues that arise with public
Pleese see Bypess, AS

WEATHER
Warmer, HI: 701, Low: I50t

...,

Students at Me igs Middle School work feverishly to save a tiny
village in a simulated catastrophe. Throughout the mission,
Challenger Mission Control at Wheeling Jesuit University is live
and in constant contact visually via chat window over the
Internet. (J. Miles Layton)

O.U.IIoonPaceA2

Students save .villagers
from catastrophe

Pick 3 day: 4-8-1
Pick 4 day: 2·7-7-2
'Pick 3 night: 9-4-5
Pick 4 night: 0-1-4-9
Buckeye 5: 5-9-15-30-35
Superlotto: 2-4-10-40-43-48
Bonus Ball: 41
Kicker: 2-6-3-0-3-4

A drive out Mulberry
Avenue In Pomeroy Is
proof enough that some of
the folks with the most
when it comes to
Halloween di!~oratlons

West Vll'ginia

. While
arem"a;•nv

BY J. MIL£5 lAYTON
jlay1on @mydailysentinel.com

'

ROCKSPRING S - A vi llage in the Caribbean sea was
in trouble. A volcano was
about to erupt and a hurricane
was close at hand.
The clock was ticking and
the seventh graders at Meigs
Middle School had to act fast
to save more than 13,000 villagers in a mock simulation
coordinated by Challenger
Mission Control at Wheeling
Jesuit University Wednesday.
The Challenger Learning
Center at WJU in Wheeling.
W.Va. is part of a growing
oetwork of centers nation wide established by the
Challenger Center for Space
Science Edu~ation in memory of the ill-fated Challenger
Shuttle. 'f,,he center is a
unique hands-on learning
experience designed to foster
interest in math. science and
technology education.
·
The students served as
ex.pens or specialist~ to solve
real-life problems associated
with emergency events.
Mission day began with a
space shuttle launching. Within

the~~;~~~~;~;
I

Opt
happy
', stuff like smiling scare-:
·crows. carved'.pumpklns .
!lnd colorful mums. .,
· The .extensive &lt;II splay prepared by C.arql McCullough
~lth an ' e.mpl\asls on fun
ovar fear fills the front
yard and decorates the ·
. porch.
Spotlights and strings of ·
orange, lights enhance th!l
. . · decorations ani! toqlg!l~~· ·
' :, wtn lliflt th.~ ~ay to~, t11tf ,
, . · . hQrdes of trick ahd
treaters 'sure to visit their
home. (Charlene Hoeflich)
.' '
.(I "
MU1l.UII'OU1!11~

Kennein McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'\burBank (in~...
(FsJ . ~~-~k a·

Cutting -Cellar
80 Race Street • Mlddlepo
t

41503 Sumner Rd
Chester OH 985-3813

.

Jesse Thomas, 22
William Ault, 77
Dwight Haley, 85
Jack Lusk, 90

2 SECTIONS-

t6 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Congratulations
Eastern ·Eagles!

'

HA.LLOWEEN
DECORATIONS

Dally 3: 0-8-1
Dally 4: 7-0-8-2

•

0

•

,

Pomeroy
Gallipolis
992-2136
446-226S
Tuppers Plains 985-3161
Mason (304)773-6400

I

Crow&amp;.. Crow

STAFF REPORT

Ohio

992-6682

G&amp;W Plastics

'

Nelsonville bypass environmental
documents up for review

LotTERIES

Insurance

992-4247

• \''

Page A5

Chester

Brogan-~arner

AB

'(II•:

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

OBITUARIES

985-3857 .

Mark E. Smith

Pomeroy

til

Summerfields
Restaurant

66260 St Rt 124 •Reedsville, OH

740-378-6571
orl-800-767-4223

I~

CO#eq/l4l~~·~ E~!

992-3381

CONVENIENCE STORES

CHEVRON
ST RT 7 e CHESTER
985-3350

DVWeber

We are proud of you, Girls!
Good Luck at Regionals!
GO EAGLES!
Eastern Athletic Boosters

Good Luck Eagles! DOWNING CHILDS

Karr Audiology

~ 12 East Main

Mounted with Pride

~ Ga~ ~ Construction
serv1ce

0
.
~~et.relers

·Congratulations Eastern
on a Job Well Done!

tH I4HU

SYRACUSE
Carleton
school
has
opened a third special
education class for pre ~ .
sc hool students aged three
to five, using 'funds provided by the Eastern,
Meigs arid Southern Local
School Districts.
Because of budget problems, the Meigs Board of
Mental Retardation and
Developmental
Disabilities had considered
. discontinuing the class,
which provides interven: Sarah HofffT\an, teacher in the third pre-school classroom
tion work for students at Carleton School, which opened earlier this month, works
experiencing developmen- with two of her students. The class is designed to prepare
tal delays. · The class is students with developmental delays for kindergarten . The
designed to prepare those class is funded by the Eastern, Meigs and Southern Local
students who may not be School Districts . (Brian J. Reed.)
prepared for work in a reg- garten . Activities include ly-a ppropriate
learni ng
ular classroom setting
Pleese see MR/DD, AS
prior to entering kinder- hands-on, developmental-

Eastern 20-3 vs. Adena 25-0
Thursday, October 30, 6:30p.m.
Lancaster High School
Regional Finals
Saturday Nov. 1st, 2:00p.m.

Great Job Eagles!

1111 ''-" 1)\'\

BY BRIAN

GOOD LUCK IN
REGIONALS!

In front is Brenna Holter. In first row, from left to right are
Brandy Bissell, Jenny Armes and Cassie Nutter. In second
row are Jamie Reel, Tia Pratt, Becky Taylor, Stacy Smith
and Rachel Elliot. In back are Alyssa Holter, Jennifer
Hayman, Morgan Weber, Katherine Robertson, Kass
Lodwick and Casey Smith (Brad Sherman)

11

Districts fund MRIDD preschool program

SPORTS

Won20Lost3

MJ~FamiiV

· Winner 'gets the ax'
when Wolverines and
Spartans meet, B2

The Daily
Sentinel
992-2155

Dear Abby
Down on the Farm
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

As
B4-6
B7

A3
A6

A4
As
· As
B1-4
A2

I

.-,
•,

© &amp;003 Ohio VoUey Publishing Co.

moments. a crisis began to happen on the tiny island where the
village is (or was) located.
Students received real-time
data about an area where an
emergency might happen. In a
90-120 mmute lime frame, students analyzed data and determined the risks. Throughout
the mission. Challenger
Mission Control was live and
in constant contact visually via
chot window over the Internet.
Students used all the
knowledge the y have learned
in the past month to save the
village. Seventh grade science teacher Carmen Manuel
said the students used math,
science, graphs and loads of
data to come up with a workable soluti on before the day
of truth arrives.
"It is really a great leamin~
experience for the students,'
she said. "In this simulation,
you have the lives of 13,000
people in your hands. This is
really hands-on learning and
you are in charge."
Were the residents evacuated?
Did the hurricane hit land?
Pl•se ... Students. AS

7th Annual Lewis A. Schn~lclt, MD
MeiiiOIIal cane. SymposiUM
Soturdt~y, November 1, 2003

·9:00am- 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 8:30am}

Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
• Continuing Medical Education wiH be given.
For more information, call (740) 446-5057.
,'1

www .holzer.org

�•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, Oct. 31
AccuWeather.com forecast tor da

ime conditions low/hi h tam eratures
•
-··~1
'
• MICH.
_{
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,·
.
....
·"'
~
.
. •
"·;---- _;~
Cleveland i&amp;ecnoc
'!!WI!!'
. .;:::-;:;r··- · ---- 1. Toledo i 54cnoo 1 \f.:!-::-:.''_~.

·--....::

,...-- --.

'-·

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PA.

. -.!~-~-~-~ -!~-~!-~---1~~~/!.1 °

1"10 .

rci-~ci~~atr'·ss·,;n2~··1
......... , ..... .._,,_, ., ........... .

.

,

..

,

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_

-- ~

,

1__-

W. I/A.

;

KY.

Q 2003 AccuWeather. Inc.

VIa As!lOCia!tid Pr11ss

Indian summer returns
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 70s. South winds
10 to 15 mph.
Tonight...Mostly
clear.
Lows in the lower 50s. South
winds around 5'mph.
Halloween ... Mostly clear.
Southwest winds 5 to I0 mph.
High around 77.
Tomorrow ni gh t ... Mostly
clear. South winds 5 to I0
mph. Low around 53.
·
Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
High around 78.
Saturday
night...Most ly
clear. Low around 54.

Sunday .. .Mostly clear. High
around 74.
Sunday
nighi ... Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs around 71.
Monday
night..Partly
cloudy. Low around 52.
Election day ... Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. High around 68.
Tuesday night... Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Lows around .51.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. High around 68.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Oct. 29, 2003

10,000

D:X.;Joo:s

9,500

irrl Ftrial s
.~y -iDt'

9.000

9,774.53

JUL

AUG

High
Low
9,787.27 9,724.68

Pel change
from previous: +0.27

SEP

8 ,500

OCT

Record high: 11 ,722.98

Jan. 14,2000

Oct. 29, 2003

2,000

Na.sdaq
Wtp::site

1,800
1,600

1,936.56
Pet: Chin~

JUL

AUCJ

High
Low
1,937.37 1,923.56

+0.22

from pray OUI:

SEP

OCT

1,400

Record high: 5,048,62
March 1o, 2000

Oct. 29, 2003

1,100

Stan::3aid &amp;,
RxmeSOO

1,050'

950

1,048.11
High
Low
1,049.83 1,043.35

Prom prev out: +0.13

RICDrd high: 1,527 .46

March 24, ·2000

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-24.25
AEP-28.74
Akzo -30.63
Ashland Inc. :SBT - 3624

Bob Evans - 28.87
.florgWamer- 79.96
City Hokling - 34.39
Champion- 4.06
Charming ShoJlS - 6.73
Col - 27.34 .
·OuPon1 - 39.85

Gannett- 83.20
General Electric - 28.83
GKNLY-4.85
Harley Davdson - 48.19
Kmart- 27.79
Kroger- 17.36
Ltd. - 17.39
NSC - 19.37
OakHillfinaooal - 29.90
Bank One - 42.25
OVB-24.50
Peoples - 28.34
PepsiCO - 48.13 .

DG -22.23

Premier -

36.66

-~LI-14.72

·Fedeml Mogul - .33

8.89

Rodly Boo1s- 16.04

1

RD Shell- 44.36
Rockwell -30
Sears- 52.56
SBC-23.69
AT&amp;T -19.07
USB-27.53
Wendy's - 36.85
Wai-Mar1,- 58.85
Worthington- 14.25
Dai~ S1odl reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the prevk&gt;us day's tmnsactions. provided by Smith
Partners at Advesl Inc. of
Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(USPs 213·960J
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

afternoon,

.Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. H you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
·story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
'Editor: Charlene Hoefl ich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Bricm Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter : J_Miles layton , Ext. 13

Advertising .
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15

ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, E~. 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ex1. 12
E-mail:
news@ mydaltysentl'nel .com

Web:

j

,.

I

www.myd,ailysentinel.com

- --

on ethanol from the general fund to the
highway trust fund, which is used to
maintain the nation's roads and bridges.
States get a percentage of the money ·
they collect for the highway fund, so
states such as Ohio that have a large
percentage of ethanol users end up losing millions of dollars.
Senate Republicans have urged the
White House to' put more pressure on
House Republicans to resolve the
ethanol debate, but the White House
couldn' t say whether the president would
comment ON the topic during his visit.
Also on his trip to Ohio, Bush will
attend a $2,000-a-person fund -raiser
lunch hosted by Gov. Bob Taft at a
downtown Columbus hotel.
Bush's visit also gave him a chance to
court the critical battleground state of
Ohio. Thursday's visit is Bush's 13th to
Ohio as president
Bush is also trying to refocus public
attention on his domestic agenda at a
time when rising violence in Iraq is
consuming much of voters' attention .
The president gave a similar call-toaction Wednesday morning before leaving Washington, urging lawmakers to
send him a Medicare bill.

WACO, Texas (AP) - President Bush with a public policy theme, the re-elecis trying to cajole lawmakers into passing tion campaign was able to bill taxpayers
his energy plan as he and his wife pad the - for part of Bush's political travels. ·
Bush-Cheney re-election bank account
The aluminum company, which
already worth more than $84 million.
makes metal shapes, foundries · and aluBush on Thursday was resuming ~n minum products, runs its operations
aggressive hunt for campaign cash he using natural gas, which has increased
·put on hold for a trip to Asia and in price recently.
Australia earlier this month .
"It provides a forum for the president
The trip was carrying him [J-om his to talk about why it 's important for the
ranch in central Texas to Columbus, country to have a steady supply of enerOhio. and back to Texas for a second gy and natural gas," White House
fund-raiser in San Antonio.
spokesman Jim Morrell said Tuesday.
Bush dispatched Laura Bush to Tyler,
Senate Republicans said this week that
Texas, tor another campaign fund-raiser; an impasse over ethanol taxes could scutVii:e President Dick Cheney headlined a tie the massive energy bill that Congress
fund-raiser in Washington on Wednesday has struggled to complete for more than
night. These money events opened a new three years. The bill passed the House
phase of heavy fund raising for Bush's re- and Senate earlier this year and was being
election. Bush was starring at still another reconciled by a joint committee .
fund-raiser in Birmingham, Ala., on Monday.
The issues threatening to derail the
TheWhiteHousewedgedapolicyeventin bill include proposals to Inventory oil
between Bush's two fund -raisers Thursday. and gas resources in off-limits coastal
Bush plans to give the stalled energy waters, open an ·Alaska wildlife refuge
bill a push by visiting an Ohio alu- to oil drilling and change the way
minum company that has been finan- ethanol taxes are spent.
cially hurt by high energy prices.
The Ohio congressional delegation
The visit to Columbus-based Central lobbied hard for the ethanol provision,
Aluminum Co. was not originally which would . increase highway spendscheduled but by adding an appearance ing for states by shifting tax collected

Schriber says focus on stranded cost misguided
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state officials respons ible for
monitoring progress in
Ohio's two-year-old plan to
restructure the electric industry say they ' re concerned
about customers more than
what the utility companies
are getting out of i.t.
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio Chairman Alan
Schriber and Consumers'
Counsel Robe11 Tongren
briefed the Senate Public
Utilities
Committee
on
Wednesday on the status of the
plan designed to bring full competition to the electric power
industry by the end of 2005.
Tongren also was questioned by Democrats on the
committee over the shredding of a preliminary report
that claimed FirstEnergy
Corp. customers were paying
too much for the utilities'
past investments.
Schriber said customers in
Ohio have not been hit by
price increases such as those
that hit Californians when
the power industry in that
state was restructured.
'T m not here to say it's a
rousing success," Schriber said.
"But no on~ has gotten hurt."
Tongren said he is hopeful
that competition will bring
lower prices when the transition-to-competition period ends.
"The important point is what
Chairman Schriber said today.

People aren't pay ing more
The office destroyed what Dayton R'epublican, said the
than they paid. As I said, they it called a preliminary report UtCapra document was a
m·e paying less. My concern is from Boston-based consu l- work in progress and thus
what in the world is going to tant LaCapra last summer, exempt from public records
happen in two years'''' about 18 months after the law. He said the report was
Tongren said after the hearing. second of two media requests intended for Tongren and his
When the PUCO was to see the report.
clients - about 1.8 million
implementing legislation that
"Do you feel any obligation FirstEnergy residential cusauthorized competition in the· not to destroy that document, tomers- and not the publfc.
"''m not sure why the
$ 11 billion electric power ... based on public records
industry, there were too many requests'!" said Sen. Theresa release of this report ever
estimates on utilities' recov- Fedor, a Toledo Democrat.
would have been in the pubcry of investments to come to
Tongren said he believed lie interest," Jacobson smd.
a consensus, Schriber said.
· the document was no lo~ger
Some
employees
in
In stead. the commiss ion important because it had Tongren's office had recomapproved a settlement that been more than a year since mended against shredding
allowed the utilities to col- his office had been involved the report. but Tongren
played down it"s importance.
lect. through customer bills , in the FirstEnergy case. ·
parts of those costs, such as
''We did not have a pending
"From a practical standthe construction of nuclear public records request. We had point, the LaCapra work was
power plants, Schriber said . not had one si nce January a snapshot in time. It was one
Those
numbers
have 2001," he said. "We concluded consultant 's opinion as
ranged from about $4 billion it was no longer of any value." opposed to a number of opinto $8.7 billion.
Sen. Jeff Jacobso n, a ions,"'
ren said.
''I don ' t thi ilk anyone could
;:;;r'~:-'Ex""'b...,.,.,~'"'\"i::T"'"--.,
come to agreement on any mnilber," Schriber told the committee. ''I don't think there's an ability to calculate that now, ... $8.7 ' .,
billion is a totally illusory number as far as we're concerned.
It's not relevant."
Tongren, who was questioned closely Tuesday by
the Consumers' Counsel
governing board, faced-more
questions Wednesday over
his otTice's destruction of a
report
that
estimated
FirstEnergy's stranded costs
at billions of dollars under
what the company claimed.

Bill to fund
new VA clinic

1,000

Pet chen~

Thursday, October 30, 2003

and the Ohio Newspaper
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passes
House
WASHJNGTON (AP) Ohio lawmakers got approval
from the U.S. House on
Wednesday to spend $90 million on a new veterans medical center for Columbus.
Legislation approved
417-0 would alfow the
Veterans
Affairs
Department to design,
build and stock a 260.000square-foot facility. The
broad bill for veterans projects . still must be
approved by the Senate.
The current Chalmers P.
Wyli e Outpatient Clinic
was built in 1995 to handle
135.000 visits a year. Last
year, the Columbus clinic
had more than 192,000 visits. It expects to have more
than 200,000 visits this
year, clinic ofticials said.
· Many y eterans from central Ohio are being sent to
medical centers in Dayton,
Cincinnati, Cleveland or
elsewhere· because the
118,000·square-foot
Columbus clinic can't
meet their needs.
"A bigger and better facility is needed.'' said Rep.
Bob Ney, a Republican
from St. Clairsville.
The new center would be'
built on federal land at the
· sprawli.ng Defense Supply
Center m eastern Columbus.
l.t would cost $65 million to
build the center and $25
million forequipment.
The bill doesn 't guarantee funds for the clinic, but
Hobson and Sen. Mike
De Wine serve on committees in charge of approving funds for all veterans
projects. . Both
have
pledged their support.
DeWine
and
Sen .
George Voinovich, hoth
R-Ohto, have sponsored
the measure in the Senate.

NICHOLAS V. LANDRY, D.O.

6;/1(/1(/t~tre,rt;·

-·

'

.

What you should know 'about home schooling
intendent has limited authority to deny your request.
Within 14 days of receiving
your request, the superintendent must notify you, in writing, that your child is excused
from attendance for the
remainder of the current
school year. If the superintendent determines that the ·minimal educational requirements
for home schooling will not
likely be met, the S\Jperintendent must tell you . in writing,
why he or she intends to deny
the excuse, and inform you of
your right to a "due process"
hearing to discuss the matter.
Based on the evidence presented at the hearing, the
superintendent may then
grant or deny the excuse. If
the excuse is denied, you
have the right to appeal thedecision to a juvenile judge.
' Q. May my child attend
school on a part-time basis?
A. It depends. If you ask,
your school district may
decide to allow your homeschooled child to be enrolled
part time. However, many
school district policies allow
only full time students to be
enrolled . Also, since the State
Board of Education rules do
not specifythat any part-time
"in-school" instruction counts
towards the 900 minimum
hours required for the home
schooling curriculum, you
sti ll must ensure that that yo ur
"dual enrolled" student completes all of the necessary
home schooling requirements.
Q. Must my homeschooled child take the Ohio
proficiency test?
A. No. Depending on the
school district's policy, you
and the superintendent may
decide to have your child participate in the Ohio's proficiency testing, but it is not
required. .
Q. Can . my home-schooled
child participate in our school
district's
extracurricular
activities?

A. Many districts allow
only full-time enrolled stu-

dents to participate, but it is
up to the local school boards
to decide .
Q. What if a student who
has been home schooled
wishes to enrolj,-or re-enroll
in school ?
A. A superintendent of
schools must allow a child
who has been home schooled
to enroll or re-enroll without
discrimination. However, the
superintendent may determine the appropriate placement for the child. In determining. placement, the superintendent must consider the
child's most recent academic
assessment report and other
evaluation
information
including interviews with the
child and/or parent(s). The
superintendent also must
consider administering any or
all · of the standardized
achievement tests that are
regularly scheduled for students of a similar age.
Q. Can a c. hild receive
credit for home schooling
during an ·expulsion?
A. Under most circumstances, home schooling cannot be used to avoid the consequences of public school expulsion. Schools need not accept
unauthorized home schooling
credits during the expulsion
period. particularly where the
board's policy defines "expulsion" a&gt; total removal from the
educational program.
' (Law You Can Use is a

;omwner legal inforweekly &lt;
marioll column provided to
this newspaper as a public
service of' the Ohio State Bar
As.snciation and the Ohio
Stale Bar Foundation. This
article was prepared by John
E. Britton, an attorney with
the C/evela11dfirm of Briuon,
Smith, Peters &amp; Kalail Co. ,
LPA. Articles appearing in
this column are intended to
provide broad, general information about the law. Before
applying this information to a
specific legal problem, read·
ers are urged to seek .advice
from an attorney.)

Washington State plf)ns trip to Germany
MARIETTA - Washington
State Community College faculty member Carl-Michal
Krawczvk, and his wife. Ruth,
will ho'st the college's I i th
field study trip in March. This
time, the group travels to
:Germany for ten days.
The tour departs from
Pittsburgh on March 18 and
returns on March 27. An
. information session to di s. cuss the tour is set for
:Monday, Nov. 3, at 5 p.m. in
A&amp;SI07,
: The tour begins with an
:overnight flight to · Berlin ,
: where the group will see the
:changes in this once-divided
. city after the reunification in
: 1990. After two days in
: Berlin, including a visit to the
·Checkpoint Charlie Museum ,
:the tour moves on to
:Dresden. From there, the
' group travels to Munich, with
: ~ brief visit in Weimar, the
•mtellectual hub of early 20'h
:century Germany. The two: day visit in Munich includes
; an optional excursion to
· Oberammergau , known for
its passion play, and to

!

"! believe that my ril()f( impprtq~t}P~IIS ,In p.qtM!lt~p~e is my commitment to .

,

Law You Can Use
. In Ohio, parents must either
send children of "compulsory
school age" (children between
six and 18) to school or ensure
that they are being instructed
according to the law. A parent
who wishes his or her child to
be "home schooled" must provide the school district of the
child's residence with infommtion certifying that certain minimal educational requirements
will be met each year that
home schooling takes place.
Q. What is home schooling?
A. Home schooling is an
exception to the compulsory
attendance laws that allows
parents or other qualified persons to provide schoot-aged
children with educational programming in the hqme setting.
Q. What should I do if I want
to home school my chi ld?
A. In addi ti on to providing
personal information about
yourself and your ch ild
(and/or about any other qualIfied individual who will be
teaching the child), you must:
• give the superintendent of
the school district where your
child lives a signed statement
certifying that your child will he
taught certain subjects as the law
requires and m1y other subjecL&gt;
the superintendent may require;
• provide a brief out line of
the curriculum and a list of
textbooks and other teaching
materials that you intend to
use during the school year;
• assure the school di-strict
that vour child will receive at
least 900 hours of home
instruction during the school
year; and
• demonstrate that the home
instructor (you or someone
else) meets certain educational requirements or is being
supervi sed by a person with a
baccalaureate degree. .
If your child was home
schooled last year, you must
also provide an academic
assessment of your child.
Q. Can a superintendent
deny my request to home
school my child?
.
A Yes; your school super-

Page A3

-BY THE BEND ·

The Daily Sentinel

Bush to push for stalled energy bill during Ohio visit

Ohio weather

----------

PageA2

Neuschwanstein,. the fairytale castle of "Mad" King
Ludwig.
The trip then departs for
somber Dachau and medieval
Rothenburg before continuing to Heidelberg where the
group will experience the
heart of romantic Germany
with a Rhineland cruise.
Finally, the tour heads for
Cologne before departing for
home.
State
Washington
Community College students
may earn-one hour of college
credit in history by participating in the trip. It is open to
members of the community
as well .
For more i_nformation on
the field study trip, call Carl-

Michal or Ruth Krawczyk at
(6 14) 374-8716. Additional
l.nformation is also available
online at www.eftours.co
enter Tour #174679.

Thursday, October 30, 2oo3

Online predator lures child
into obsessive relationship
DEAR ABBY: I had to
And las t. plea-e. plea'e
write after reading the letter
move the computer In a cen from "Brokenhearted Mom
tral locatio n where a parent
in Virginia." My 14-year-old
can supervi-e exact ly what
daughter developed an
his or her child i' doing at all
Internet relationship with a
times. Internet acce" ' hould
Dear
now 21 -year-old man when
not be all owed -.. hen a parshe was I 0. By the time she
Abby
ent cann ot be around . I
was 12, he was drawing her
- - - - · learned thi ' le'""l the haru
into a deeply dysfunctional
way. Access to the telephone
relationship. Unbeknownst to
mav al so have to ~ lim ited
her, he was a mental patient
for" a time . C"al le r ID "
who was obsessed with sui- should also obtain copies of extremel y helpful. becau&gt;e
all correspondence between you can block the stalker \
cide and self-mutilation.
Without going into a lot the man and her daughter. number. - WI SER NOW
of detail, it took more than a There is software that can ON THE EAST COAST
year to permanently end this capture their conversations
DEAR WISER NOW:
relationship an~ purge this to a file .
Thank you for ' haring yo ur
When it comes to obtain- experience with more read person from our hves. When
our daughter tried on her ing a restraining order, ers - and parent' - th an
own to extricate herself, he "BroKenhearted Mom" will you can imagine. I hope they
threatened to commit suicide need evidence of the rela- will take your experience to
and take her with him, as tionship because it is likely heart and under&gt; tand that
well as kill her family. We her daughter will refuse to their children are as vulnerawere finally able to get him cooperate. Once the. police ble wandering in cyber&gt;pace
locked up in a mental facili- become involved, they will as they would be wanderin g
ty. We were also able to probably contact the perpe- the streets of a stran!,c c it~ .
obtain a restraining order to trator and warn him. If that Predators capitalize on the
doesn' t work. a restraining lack of experience and gull ikeep him away.
Abby, please impress order is next, and if he vio- bility of young peo ple upon "Brokenhearted Mom" lates that, he will be arrested. some or whom are lonely,
It's important to bear in emotionall y i'o lat ed and
that her daughter is a child
and does not see the situation mind that the daughter will needv. Their acce" can be
in the same light as she does. need professional help in curta.iled only if parent' take
Her friends ·may· be encour- re_covering from a relation· the time. and make it their
aging and enabling the rela- ship with a pedophile . She's business. to do it.
tionship. The daughter will going to be very, very angry
Dear Ahh1· i.1· wrillen Ill
most likely see it as an ""us at her mother. A therapist' Abir;ail Vmi Buren. a/s(,
can help her deal with this·. kn mrn as Jeallllf' Phillips. and
against them" situation.
"Mom" must assert con- In fact, a therapist should be was founded In Iter mother
trol and pay a visit to her contacted for help BEFORE Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
local police station. She any action is taken to end the Abbr at u·u·u:Dt'arAhh,·. mm
should speak to an officer relationship . It will be a very or ·Po. Box 69440.- Los
about her options, and make difficult behavioral period .
Angeles. CA 9rXi69 .
sure to document the relationship as best she can. She

Firebelles
plan
fund-raiser
SALEM CENTER The Salem Township
Firebelles recently met to
discuss purchasing traffi c
vests and pagers for the
Salem Township Volunteer
Firemen.
Also discussed was the
Ltpcoming Election Day
luncheon and dinner where
a variety of soup and sandwiches along with pie will
be served from II a.m. to 6
p.m .

Pay Your

Bills
On-line!
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Automatic payments help avoid late fees!
Eliminate postage and envelopes!
No walling In bank Jines!
Monthly statements show paymenls wel"l' made!
Information Is encrypted for security!
Save time and money!

JOHN W. J&amp;J.Lu~•

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

'READER'S

VIEW

Levy
Support needed
Dear Editor:
The fourth of November will soon be here and the outcome
of the voting will have far-reacing '1.ffec t on the whole of
Meigs County.
There are a number of issues on the ballot, but none more
important as the vote for Carleton School~
I know there is a high percentage in Meigs County that does
not fully understand what Carleton School stands for, and
what it does for the community.
Only the people who have an immediate need for this facility truly understand what is done for the students, and how
important Carleton School is. As for the people who are fortunate enough not to need the services Carleton offers, be
thankful. If you don't know and would like to know what
Carleton is, all you have to do is visit the sc hool or call for
more information. You will be provided with information or a
tour of the faci lities.
If you visited the school, you would see a staff of highlytrained professionals taki ng care of students that none of the
other schools are capable of doing. They have neither the
trained personnel, equipment or facilities for this type of trainmg.
What if two, three. four or f1ve years from now, your child
or grandchild who is totally healthy and well at the present
time would suddenly have a need for the program that
Carleton provides" Sorry, Carleton closed two years ago.
What would you do? Where would you go for help?
_ If the levy failed and the ones who voted no later visited the
school and could see what goes on each and every day, I
would venture to say, if they could, they would change their
vote. But it's too late, isn' t it?

Vote yes now. Don't wish later that you had.
Marvin Cooper
Shade
. Dear Editor:

•••••••

We, the Southern Local Division of the Ohio Education
Association would like to show our support for the Carleton
School Levy. It is the responsibility of all of us to vote to continue to provide an appropriate education to the students at
Carleton School. Our local school district does not have adequate resources to handle the crisis that would ensue were this
levy to fail. The students at Carleton School deserve the best
education'

Please vote Yes on the Care/ton School Levy.
April L. Ki11g, Secretary
Racine

•••••••

Dear Editor:

When you look back on your high school memories, what
do you remember?' If you are like most adults, they
consist mainly of extra-curricular activities that you participated in. H9w would you feel if these reminiscences were
erased, or if someone made a decision that prevented them
from occuring at all?
~ Our district is trying to renew our levy in order to maintain
inany of our classes , ex(ra programs and faculty members. We
~ill also lose a great deal of our much-needed fundtng for the
:jdvancement of technology in our schools. Technology plays
!! major role, not only in the classroom, but also for our future
as members of society. Not having the opportunity to further
technological skills could deter Southern students from highpaying jobs and lessen the possibility for socioeconomic
mobility.
: Because we are seniors, we will not suffer the outcome of
tjtis levy, nor will we reap the benefits. But, as members of
this community, we realize the importance of this levy to
future students of Southern.
~ As new Voters, we feel it is important to know the facts
~bout upcoming issues. We want to stress. the fact that residental and agricultural taxes wi II not increase or; decrease as a
result of the election. However, commercial and business
taxes will remain the same if passed.
~ We. as proud Southern students, would like to personally
~ncourage each Southern district voter to show his or her
pride in this outstanding school. Vote "yes" to the Southern
District Renewal Levy. Not only for present students, but
rnost of all, for the future Southern Tornadoes.
~xactly

:
:
:
;

Codi Davis
Syracuse ,
Bethany Amberber
Racine
.

.

LETTERS TO THE
.EDITOR
. Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
~e less than 300 words. All/etters are. subject to .
~diting and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
~e published. Letters shoulf.t_be in good tastf, ·
·ljddressing issues, not per.wJnalities.
..
~ The opinions expressed in the column below
~re the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

.

s

·-

·-- - - -

PageA4
Thursday, October 30,

Wi!l aDem propose entitlement riform?
Democrats blast President
Bush for ballooning federal
deficits. but their no-cuts, noreform stance on Social
Medi care
Security and
threatens the nation 's economic future at least as much
as his tax cuts.
Former Verm ont Gov.
Howard Dean had been nn
exception to that rule, advocating reining in the growth
of entitlement . programs.
Now, under pressure from his
presidential rivals, he's ruling
out any reforms.
Des Moines Register political columnist David Yepsen
told me that Rep. Richard
Gephardt's, D-Mo., attacks
on Dean' s past advocacy of
entitlement restraint are "definitely a factor" in Dean 's
apparent "plateauing" in
low~. where 74 percent of
the st&lt;lte's c.aucu s participants
will be more than 50 years of
age.
Gephardt , touting the fact
that he has opposed all
efforts to "cut" entitlements.
even those proposed by former President Bill Clinton,
has moved into a slight lead
over Dean in Iowa polls.
In 1993 . Dean declared
· that Medicare is "one of the
worst things that ever happened, a bureaucratic di saster," appare ntly reflect·
ing a frustration that many
doctors
express
over
delayed and inadequate
reimbursements.
In 1995. Dean supported a
GOP plan to reduce the
growth of Medicare by $270
billion over seven years -- a
move that other Democrats
denounced as a "cut."
He al so supported more
managed care for Medicare
and requiring some Medicare
recipients to pay a greater
share of the cost of their
medical services.
And, he said, "the way to
balance the budget is for
Congress to cut Soc1al
Security, move the retirement
age to 70, cut defense ,

But. when it wmes to
addres;,ing the nation's longte rm fiscal crisis, he's now
just one of the Democrats.
None of the candidates wants
to control Medicare's growth
Morton
or reform Sol'ial Security.
K01Kiracke Gephardt is e;,pecially
pmud of the fact that he's
. resisted all entit lement
spending controls. inc luding
Clinton's
1997 budget agreeMedicare ami veterans pensions... . It would be tough, ment .
Moreov er. all of the
but we could do it."
Democratic
candidates advoConfronted with hi s statements, Dean at first tried to ca te nu t just crea tin g an
deny he'd made them. Then . expe nsive · new Meuicare
he tried to explain them. In prescnption urug benefit -September. he defended him- Bush is for it . too -- but also
self by saying. "I did support a hig h-priced guarantee of
slowing the growth of insurdncc coverage for the
Medicare . And I think that unin sured.
These new init iati ves cerwas a good thing."
He al so aligned him se lf t&lt;li nl y arc meritorious. but if
with Clinton. who he said the nation is to avord a fi scal
had signed a balanced budget abyss as the baby boom ge nagreement in 1997 th at erat ion retires. entitlement
redu ced Medicare growth by reform al so is necessary.
People over age 65 now
$250 billion over five years
(though at tile time it was make up 2 1 percent of the
That
will
estimated at just $ 125 bil- popul at ion.
increase to 35 percent by
lion) .
But that's all changed now. 2030 and 42 perce nt by
Even though the federal 2075. The number of workdef1cit is olficiall y e.stimated ers pay mg payroll ta xes for
to be $1.4 tri llion over the each retu ee is nnw 3.7. In
next I0 years -- but w1ll be 2030. 11 wi ll be 2.4 and in
more like $5 tnllion, accord- 2075 , only 2 0. Without
ing to the Concord Coalition reforms , the burdens will b e
-- Dean has reversed himsel r intolerabl e.
The mantra of Democrats on the need for entitlement
now incfuding Dean -- is
reform and cos1 controls.
Jay Carson , a Dean that the Medi care and Social
spokesman, told me that "the Security trust lund s will be
gove rnor has been very clear, "solve nt " until ~ 0 26 and
despite all the distortions of 2042, respectively.
his position . that cuts for
In fac t. the funds begin to
Medicare are off the table . pay out more th un they take
They are not an opt ion." And. in much sooner .. around
"there will be no Social 20 16. The later da tes are
Security cuts and no increase when the funds go totally
in the retirement age. "
broke.
Dean can be legitimately
Instead or contributing surcriticized for fibbing about plu ses to the federal budget,
hi s pa st state ments, for Medicare and Social Security
accusin g those who men - taxes wil l have to be suppletion them of "going nega· mented with ever-increasing
tive" when he 's done the -- and ultimately immense -same to them and , ultimate- contnbution s from income
ly, of totdll y changing hi s tax reve nues.
In chilling testimony
tune .

Kids fear the
Everywhere
Debra
Chasnoff goes these days,
people tell her long-buried
secrets from middle school.
Chasnoff always listens .
She is a listener by nature.
But she also knows there is
no use interrupting. Once
the telling begins. time and
distance dissolve, and she
can almost smell the
crushed Fritos and musty
gym shirts and strawberry
lip gloss of the junior high
hallway.
"One woman told me the
girl who bullied her still
shows up as a character in
her dreams," Chasnoff said
over salad at a San Francisco
restaurant, a few 'blocks from
her studio.
"When you think back to
junior high, you don't think
about your soc ial studies
class. You think about who
pushed you against the lockers, or what someone said to
you on the bus ."
Chasnoff is an Academy
Award-winning filmmaker
.whose stature allows her to
make documentarie s about
anything she chooses. For
the past decade, she has
chosen to make films about
and for kids, addressing
head-on controversial topics such as gay and lesbian
stereotype s. Her latest film
takes viewers into real
middle schools to hear kids
talk about the name-c alling
and bullying that goes on
every day.
The documentary. "Let's
Get Real ," premiered re cently in San Francisco to a
packed
hou se.
San
Francisco, Oakland and
Berkeley school districts
have committed to showing
the film at their school s, and
a slew of groups like the
National Middle School
Association
and
the
National Association of
School Ps.logists ha"e
invited Chasttoff to screen
the film at their upcoming
conventions.
"Everybody who watched
the film seemed to remember not only what happened

2003

,

Jesse Thomas

before the Senate Aging
Committee in Jul y, Social
Security trustee Thomas
Savi ng &gt;aid that to maintain
current benefi ts , by 2025
Social
Security
and
Medicare wr ll use up 28 percent of all federal income tax
reve nue and 47 percent by
2040.
"C learly, elderly entitlement programs are out of
cont ro l. " he said. "If nothing
is done. by 2060. the combination of Social Security and
Med1care wi ll account for
more tha n 71 percent of the
fede ral bud get." double
today\ leve l. ..
Bush and all Democratic
candidates say that spurring
economic growth is the way
out of the nation's fiscal
woes. Bush\ fortmlia is tax
cut s. The Democrats' answer
is t&lt;x increases.
Hi story suggests that
Bush's solution . even if hi s
cuts arc excessive and
skewed toward the rich, is
the more likely to work -especially
since
the
Democrats want to spend
every cent they collect.
The Concord Coalition
estimates that Bush's tax cuts
wi 11 be responsible for 36
percent of an estimated $9
trillton deterioration in the
nation's 10-year budget outlook since 200 I. But unreformed Med1care and Social
Securit y w11l put a $24 tri Ilion burden on future generations in the nex t 75 years -not counting the cost of a
Medicare prescription drug
benefit.
Bush wants to partially
"privatize " Socia l Security
and Medicare. Democrats
adamantly oppose that. They
al so oppose mean s- testing
benefits and rai sing the
retirement age. The question
is: Aside from raising taxes,
what are they for?
(Morton Kondracke is
executin' editor of Roll Call,
1/re newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

taunts~ of bullies

A boy named Brian says in school, and his mother, who
the film he was called a "fag" worked 60 hours a week,
about 50 time s the first week refused to send him until she
of school. It happened all day had assurances that he
in every class, relentlessly.
wou ld be safe.
"All thi s stuff is going on.
Instead of investigating why
Joan
and I can't pay attention (in the school did little to protect
Ryan
class )," he says. "I write 'I the boy, prosecutors put the
hate the person' over and mother on trial. Earlier this
over. I just want to ditch month. a jury convicted her of
school or kill myself. any- contributing to her son's death
to them in junior high, but thing to get out of it."
by keeping an unsafe and
the name of the kid who did
Chasnoffs camera captures unhealthy home. Nevertheless,
it," Cha·s1nlf said . "lt' s the gawky insecunty that the boy's suicide prompted
amazin g the imp ct it has. It de!}ue!&gt;- rl • adolesc~~~Connecticut to pass a law
stays with you
ur whole l1e hallways. ' ri,;--I1(;fth~i-;. requ iring school staff to report
life."
notebooks to the1r chests and cases of bullying.
"There's so much pressure
Authoriti es in Colorado boys amble in such a s'ti ff.
this week released footage self-conscious way you thtnk on teachers around testing
from a home video that someone with a joyst i&lt;:k 1s and acade mics that they don't
shows the two Columbine . operating their limbs from a ha ve enough time to pay
High School killers taking remote location . They want attention to what's happening
target JJractice in the woods· nothing more than to get in halls and playgrounds,"
Tile two teenagers are through the day without Henry Der, former deputy
chillingly giddy about the embarrassment, an often elu- superintendent of public
prospect of firing bullets into sive goal
instruction for the California
people's brains instead of the
"If someone .says some- Department of Ed ucaqon,
bowling pins they used as thing wrong in ch1ss, we. told the audience at the film 's
targets.
·like, totally tiumiltate them," premiere Tuesday.
It makes you hope that in one boy admits, smiling. "We
Chas noff, who has two
the nearly five years since put the spotlight on them."
school -age sons, say s she
the Columbine ..killings,
Any difference whatsoev- wasn 't surprised by the stoadults have become more er is seized upon . It can be ries she heard from kids
attuned to the rage that builds ethnicity, skin shade (too while makin g the tilm, only
inside kids who are relent- black, not black enough ), by the number of them.
lessly bullied and humiliated shoes, religion, weight, Students were lined up at
at school.
learning style, speech pat - every school wanting to tell
But, Chasnoff say .i. too tern -- anythin g. Kids· in their stories. Some of those
many parents and educators middle school, like many who appear in the docum~n­
still shrug off bullying as an ad ult s, fear difference . tary saw it for the first time at
inevitable part of ado les- Perhaps it is bmn of their its premiere this week. One
cence;· even a rite of pas- own fear of being ostracized particularly tormented boy,
sage. Maybe they don't and condemned by the who was actually pushed off
know that 160,000 kids stay group. By ostraciZing and his bike while the crew was
home from sc hool e~ery day condem ning others, one 's filming him, was beaming
because they fear bemg bul- own place !eels more sec ure. when the lights in the theater
lied , accord1ng to the · "Yoll can't stand up for oth- came up.
"''m so glad you did this,"
National
Education ers ," one student says,
A&gt;soc1allon . Or that bully- "hecmiSe then they'll pick on he told Chasnoff. "I h,ope you
1ng has been hnked to 75 you ."
get this il)to every school in '
percent of school shoot1ng
If we need any more evi- America."
incident s, a U.S. Secret dence that bullying has tragHe seemed to think that if
Servic~ report says. .
ic. consequ ences. we got it kids and teachers truly
Thais wl1y Chasnotf chose Irom a story out of understood the deep and
bullymg for her new .ftlm , Connecticut last January. A la.sting pain that bullying
though she knows much has 12 -year-old. boy hanged caused, may be most of it
been written and produced himself with a tie in his clos- would stop. I want to believe
on the topic si nce the et. He was· an eccentric sev- he's right.
Columbine shootings. What enth-grader who wa s tor(Joan Ryan is a columnist
sets Chasnoffs film apart is mented by classmates who for th e Scm Francisco
the students' voices. She lets pushed him off the bleach- Chronicle. Send comments ro
them tell their stories strai'ght ers, sho ved him down a her in care of this newspaper
~a the. came.ra. They are stairwell imd sp1t on hrm. or .&gt;end her e-mail ar joanImpossible to 1gnore.
The boy stopped going to rvan @sjclrronicle.com.)

•

MIDDLEPORT - Jesse J.
Thomas , 22, of Middleport
died Sunday, Oct. 26, 2003, as
a result of injuries sustained in
a motorcycle accident in St.
Clairsville.
Born on May II , 1981 in
Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va., he was
the son of John S. Thomas of
Thomas
Middleport and Cheryl J.
Thomas of Athens. He was a
2000 graduate of M e i~s High School. He was
a coal mm er with Century Energy
Corporation in St. Clairsville and was a me mber of the Heath United Methodist Chu rch in
Middleport.
He is survived by his father and stepmother, John S. and Jenny Thomas of Middl eport:
hi s mother, Cheryl J. Thomas of Athens, a sister, Amy Radekin-Daugherty of Pomeroy, a
step-sister Eddena Russell of Racine ; grandmothers, Evelyn Thomas of Middleport and
JoAnna Fer~uson of Middleport.
Also surv1ving are ).lncles, Paul (France s)
Thomas of Middleport, Lloyd Stanley of
Texas, Russell Stanl ey of Athen s; Larry
Stanley of Oregon ; aunts, Dorothy (Jessie)
Morris of Pomeroy, Jane (Jack) Griffin of
Hill sboro, Eva (Homer) Griffith of
Springfield. Pearl Glaze of Middleport: Lisa
(Randy) Mitchell of Middleport, Laura (Joe)
Davis of Middleport, Darsene Mansfield of
Athens: Barbara Matthewson of Athens, Ellie
Snow of Albany; Merrilyn Travis of
Alexandria, and Jo .Cinda Fergu son of
Middleport; nephew s. Brandon Daugherty
and Garis Ferguson: and nieces, Whitney
Daugherty, Jenna Marshall and Katelyn
Ferguson . .
He was pteceded in death by his paternal
grandfather, Paul F. Thomas; his maternal
grandparents, George Eugene and Della
Stanley; and uncles, Wheeler Thomas, Lowell
Stanley, Kenneth Stanley, Lindir Stanley ; and
an aunt, Thelma Hoch.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday,
Oct. 31, 2003, at Fi sher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Officiatin~ will he Rev. Vernagaye
Sullivan and bunal will be in Joppa
Cemetery. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m.
on Thursday, Oct. 30, at the funeral home.
Friends may register online at www.fi sherfuneralhome s.com

William Ault
MIDDLEPORT - William Louis Ault, 77 ,
Middleport, passed away on Monday, Oct. 27.
2003, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born on Sept. 9, 1926, in Greenup ,
Ky., son of the late Fredrick Merle and Gold1e
May Thompson Ault. Since 1946, he worked
on the river and started in business with his
father in the Greenup Transpon and Ferry
Business. He was also employed by the Ohio
River Company and retired as a mater pilot.
He assisted management in training new personnel as deck hands, and trained new pilots.
He was formerly employed by the Sohio
Petroleum Co. as a tankerman. He was also
employed by the United Steel Workers and
served as secretary/treasurer and the United
Mine Workers and served as secretary/treasurer. He was a member of the Middlepon
Masonic Lodge #363, and was a member of
the Heath United Methodist Church of
Middleport.
·
Surviving are his children, Gerald L. and
Cheryl , Ault of Springfield, Dennis J. and
Charlotte Ault of Lakeview, William "Perk"
and Vicki Ault of Syracuse, Celesta Bush
Coates of Middleport, Patricia Kay and Ron
Logan of Middleport and Merri C. and James
' Amsbary of Pomeroy; grandchildren : Todd
Ault, Toby Ault, Ty Ault, Wes Ault, Greg
Bush, Nick Bush, Jason Bush, Darin Logan,
Kevin Logan, Ken Amsbary and Chnstian

Amsbary anu Victoria Gaebel ; step grandchildren , Troy Speakman, Shannon Korn and
Brooke Ely; great grandchi ldren: Heather,
Lauren, Ashley and Alyissa Ault, Andrew and
Timothy Bu sh and Bradley and Connor
Logan : five step gfeat grandchildren; a brother, George Milton Ault of Springfield: a sister-in-law and brother-in- law. Agnes and
Gene Dodson of Middleport; and a brotherin-law, Charles Sindle of Glendale, Ariz .
In add ition to hi s parent s, he was preceded
in death by hi s wife, Lorena Lawhorn Ault, in
1989, his grandson, Matthew Ault, a sister,
Loretta Lawhorn. and his son-i n-law, Dor
Coates .
Servrces will be held at II a.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003 at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport with Rev. Rod Brower
officiating . Burial wi ll follow at Mei gs
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6
to 9 p.m. on Wednesday. Masonic services
will be conducted at 8:30 p.m.
Friends may se nd condolences and register
online at www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.
Memortal contribution s may be made to
Heath United Methodist Church, 339 South
Third Ave .. Middleport, Ohio 45760 .

•

Dwight Haley
MIDDLEPORT
Dwight "Kelly"
Sherman Haley, 85, Middleport, passed away
at hi s residence on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2003.
He was born on Feb. 9, 1918 in Rutland,
son of the late George and Julia Romine
Haley. He was a veteran, of the U.S. Army
during World War II and was a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion
of Middleport. He was formerly employed as
a boilermaker with Charleston Local 667. He
was a member of the Middleport Community
Church. and was a Sunday school teacher for
50 years.
Survivmg are his wife of 56 years, Eulonda
Little Haley of Mi'ddleport ; a daughter,
Elizabet h Moodispaugh of Middleport; three
sons and daughters-in-law: Harold and Judy
Haley of Toledo, Dwight. Jr. and Kathy Haley
of Middleport, and Mark and Teresa Haley of
Middleport; a son-in-law, Gary Drenner of
Pomeroy: 14 grandchildren and several great ·
grandchildren ; a step sister, Flossie Hysell of
Harri sonville; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in
death by hi s 'daughter, Rebecca Drenner; a
grandson, Christopher Haley; a great grandson , Dallas Shane Moodispaugh: a son-inlaw, Darrell Moodispaugh; and three brothers : Worley, Leland and Floyd Haley.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday,
Oct. 31 , 2003 at Middleport Community
Church with Sam Anderson officiating.
Burial will follow at Miles Cemetery.
Military services will bl! conducted graveside.
Grandsons will serve as pallbearers .
Friends may call from 6. to 9 p.m. on
Thursday at the Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport, and at the church an hour prior to
the service.
Friends may send condolences and register
online at www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Jack Lusk
POMEROY - Jack Lusk, 90 of Pomeroy
died Tuesday, Oct. 28 , 2003 at the
Rocksprings Rehabiiitation Center, Pomeroy.
Among his survivors are a daughter and sonin-law, Joyce and Lamar O' Bryant, Pomeroy.
Services will be handled by Carmichael
Funeral Home, 2950 King Street, Smyrna,
Ga. Local arrangements were handled by
Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

Reminder issued
POMEROY
Sheriff
Ralph Trussell reminds drivers to obey 20 mile-per. hour speed limits in school
zone s.
"My staff and I are concerned about children in the
community, and it 's important that the limit be

observed ," Trussell said .
" We will be enforcing the
speed limit. When the sign
is flashing, that means the
speed limit in those zones is
20 mile s per hour. "
"Those who fail to
observe the limit will be
cited."

Bypass

laborati ve effort," added
Collins.
· The next major steps of the
project after that announcement include the circulation
and review of the DEIS, followed by a public hearing
and final environmen tal
approval by the Federal
Highway
Admini stration
(FHWA) in late 2004.
According to current project
· schedules,
the
Nelsonville bypass contract
could be prepared to sell for
construction in late 2006.

from Page A1
agencies before choosing Our
preferred route," said ODOT
Di strict I 0 Deputy Director
George M. Collins. "We will
continue to move forward
with the preliminary engineering and development of
this project during this
review period."
Upon the review deadline,
ODOT will respond to any·
concerns or issues rai sed
through this process and prepare a Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (DEIS),
which will document the pro'ject findings. The public will
be asked to review this document and' share concerns with
ODOT officials as plans for
the preferred altemati ve
progress.
"The announcement of the
preferrecl alternative will
come on the heels of this col-

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Community calendar

Obituaries

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .niydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 30; 2003

Public m¥tlngs
Saturday, Nov. 1
PORTLAND
The
Lebcnan Township Trustees
will meet at 9 a.m. at the
. township building .
M6nday, Nov. 3
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees meet at 5
p.m. at office building.
TUPPERS PLA INS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, monthly
board meeting, 7 p.m., drs·
trict office.
RACINE
Village
Council will hold a regular
session meeting at 7 p.m. at
the municipal 9uilding.
Wednesday, Nov. 5
PAGEVILLE -The Sc1pio.
Townshrp Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m at the Pageville
town hall .

Clubs and
Organizations

shown . Former Girl Scouts
will share.,~their memories
and experiences. Older girls
will learn about Wider· Ops
and talk to a Wide r Op recipient. Cost is $2 for register11d
-Girl Scouts, which includes
an event patch .
Saturday, Nov. 1
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonv ille Lodge 411 ,
stated meeting, 7:30 p.m ..
with election of officers .
Dues
payable.
Refreshments.

Social Events
Friday, Oct. 31
MIDDLEPORT - t'tarvest
Celebration at Rfiioicing Life
Church , 6:30 to !! p.m. Free
event open to all tamilres in
the community. Games and
refreshments . Those attending are asked not to wear
costumes.
Saturday, Nov. 1
RUTLAND
- Mergs
Elementary school fall festival , 6 to 9 p.m. Public rnvited .

Thursday, Oct. 30
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
'Garden Club will meet 1.:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community
Center.
Members are asked to take
pressed flowers for the craft
Sunday, Nov. 2
session.
POMEROY- The Hunnel
Friday, Oct. 31
reunion will be held from
POMEROY Juliette 12:30 to 4:30 p.ni . at the
Low/Founders Day celebra- Pomeroy Senior Citizens
tion for Girl Scouts, 6 to 6:30 .C enter. A buffet will be
p.m.. Meigs Middle School ·served and all relatives and
cafeteria. Activities will friends are invited.
include learnrng about Girl
Scouts from the past, songs,
911mes and will include a
service projei::t. The video
Saturday, Nov. 1
"Tha Golden Eaglet" which ,
RACINE - Ractne Area
is made with original footage
taken dunng the early years Community Organization fall
of Girl Scouting, will be toad drive, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m..

Homecomings/
Reunions

Other events.

at corner of Third . and Pearl
Streets. All · donations tor
Me igs Cooperative Parish
food bank. To don'ate items,
call An n Zirkle at 949·2031
or Kath ryn Hart at 949-2656.
Sundey, Nov. 2
MIDDLEPORT -Greg
Sears to speak at Ash Street
Church, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
services. Public rnvited .
SYRACUSE - Revival
serv1ces
at
Syracuse
Mission Church. Bridgeman
St., 6 p.m. on Sunday, 7
p.m., Monday
through
· Wednesday.
Evangelist
Major Will ie Cundiff of
Atlanta , Ga. from Salvation
Army. Specral mus ic by
Higher Calling on Monday,
E~rthen Vesseln on Tuesday.
and Rev. Don and Sherrr
Swick on Wednesday.

Birthdays

.

Monday, Nov. 3
LONG BOTTOM - Chloe
Weber will celebrate her
73rd brrthday on Nov. 3.
Cards may be sent to Ohio
246 , Long Bottom , Ohio
45743.
•
Tuesday, Nov. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Dorothy
Davis of Midd_Jepor1 will cele·
brate her birthday on Nov. 4.
She was a long-time volun'
teer at the Meigs County
Humane Society's Thntt
Shop. Cards may be sent to
her at 560 Sycamore St. ,
Mrddlepqr1 . Ohio 45760 .
Saturday, Nov. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Fredrrck Goebel of Tuppers
Plains will celebrate h1s 99th
birthday on Nov. 22 . Cards
may be sent to him at P. 0 .
Box 256, Tl,!ppers Plains
45753 .

Local briefs
Applications
available

County Health Department.

Meeting
planned

POMEROY
Meigs
~ounty Bikers Association
RACINE
Village
will take applications for
toys from their annual toy Council will hold a regular
run Nov. 5 to 19 at the Meigs session meeting at 7 p.m.

Students
from Page A1
lava began to devastate the
countryside, these young scientists worried about the hurricane making waves nearby.
"We didn't have anybody
die, ani~ nine people got
burned;
said
Trevor
Nichols, a seventh grader.
"We learned to work under
pressure and in groups. I am
proud
of what
we did."
Morgan
Lentes,
a seventh
grader, learned a lot from
the simulation . Like many
of her classmates. she was
very concerned about the
fate of the island .

to eight students with
developmental delays or
disability and two age. appropnate peer students.
from Page A1
It now emolls three children, and others are awaitactivities.
Meigs Local has agreed ing the c'ompletlOn of testio provide $5,400 toward ing through their respecthe classroom's operation, ' tive school districts before
and Eastern and Southern they can be accepted .
The MR/DD Board is
Local $1 ,800 each.
seeki
ng approval of a
Two other pre-school classrooms serve students at five-year, two-mill operCarleton School , while ating levy on next week's
another operates at the general election ballot .
Bradbury Learning Center and has vowed to close
under the direction of the !he school-age Carleton
Athens-Meigs Educ,ational School program and preService Center. A traveling school programs if the
teacher employed through levy is not approved . by
the ESC also serves pre- voters .
schoolers with delays lmd
740-753 -3400
",,~ .
disabilities in the students' MOVIES
UJ~THIW\
homes and in ki nderganen
clamooms in all three Meigs
County school districts.
The new Carleton class,
taught by Sarah Hoffman
of Tuppers Plains, a firstyear teacher, will serve up

MRIDD

"Yeah, we were worried
and we didn't think we were
going to save anybody,"
Lentes said. "This is a lot of
work because at any 1mnute
we thought something could
happen to the island and it
seemed ftmpossible for us to
save everybody, but we did ."
This simulation is an interactive metHod for teachers to
effectively utilize technology
in the classroom. The program
meets state and national education standards in the areas of

Monday at the municipal
building .

Proud to be apan of :
· your life. ·
Subicribe today • 99:Z..21~~
mathematics and science for
sixth through 12th grade.
"I learned to use time wisely and to make spot dec, ·
sions," said Lemes. "I think I
am more of a· leader now
because of thi s experience ." ·
A grant from A men can
Electric Power allows seventh graders in Meigs. Gallia
and Vinton counties to experience learning beyond textbooks and lectures.

r---'!'1"---------------.
Please help
my son.
,,

10

Give my child a chance.

YES

Vote
for the ·Carleton School
MeigS Industries 5-y~ar Levy.
If you' ve ever wanted to make a difference m some-

. For

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

one's life, now is your chance. The children and adults
in our community with developmental disabilities are
asking you tO· vote yes ~n the upcoming levy for one
simple reason: they want to live their hves to the fullest
- just like you and I do. When you vote Yes for the levy
you're giving them the chance we all want.

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DOWN/ ON THE. FARM
Extension Corner
Researcher~ hoping to*' · .
Mowing grass in the fall i~ expand markets for soybeans

The Daily Sentin~l

I

'
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursday, October 30, 2003
•

average yields are higher
than in 2002. Many of you
Special to the Sentinel
have probably exceeded our
state average yields, howevIt's only been a little over
er, some fields may not have
30 days since fall officially
reached your desired goals.
arrived, however many
Now is the time to review
homeowners feel that the
your management and cultural
lawn mower may be put into
practices. How was your
storage for the winter. That's
weed control? Due to wet
simply the wrong t hi ng to do.
weather, have you fields
Cooler but sunny weather
become compacted and need
is ideal for grass to conti nue
to be ripped? Does a pasto grow. Mowing the grass in
ture/hay .field need to be
the mid to late fall time perireplanted next spring? Now is
od helps remove fallei1 tree
the time to prepare your plan
leaves that hinder grass photo accomplish your goals.
tosynthesis capabilities and
During the· winter months,
encourages further developseveral opportunities will be
ment of grass shoots for next
available for you to attend
year's growth. Grass plant
that may assist yo u in the
survivability over the winter
decision making process to
requires that it has food
improve your average yields.
reserves stored in the root
If you are interested in a par- ·
system and plant crown. The
ticular subject give me a call .
food reserves are built up
so I can try to arrange a class
during this time of year.
to meet your needs.
Cut yo ur grass close to
'l**
three inches tall. Don 't scalp
Gardening Tip: Cut off just
yom yard as !his will allow
the dead tlowers from the
***
the winter annual weeds like
Farmers, how are your chrysanthemum (mum) plant
chickweed, henbit; wild mus- yield s measur,i ng up thi s leavi ng the steins and leaves
tard to grow along with year? The Ohio Farm Report to ,continue to proc.ess sun- ·
perennial weeds like creeping publi shed by the Ohio light into carbohydrates via
Charlie, dandelion and plan- Agricu It ural
Statistics photosynthesis. The mum
tain . Taller grass shades out Service ·released Ohio's esti- will conti nue to root into the
weed seeds thus preventing mated yie lds for the 2003 soil and produce new shoots
their emergence. If you apply year. Corn yield is estimated for new spring's . growth if
lawn fertilizer, this is the time at 154 bushels per ac re. suffi cient carbohydrates are
to apply it as most 'of the Soybean yield is estimated at available to it. Cut off dead
nutrients will be utilized by 4 1 bu sh~ l s per acre. Alfalfa stems and leaves in early
the grass and not the annual yields are expected to aver- March.
weeds that invade our lawns. age 3.70 tons per acre. Other
(Hal Knee~~ is the Meigs
Apply a lawn fertilizer hay yields are expected to be County Agriculture
&amp;
(like a 23-3- 10) thai is espe- 2.5 tons ~er acre. The tobac- Natt&lt;ral Resources Agent,
cially prepared for the fall co yield ts estimated at 1800 Ohio
State
University
season application . It should pounds per acre. In all crops, , Exrensioi1. )

CHARLOTTE. N.C. ,(AP) tobacco litigation and allows
- R.J . Reynolds Tobacco Co. the company to shift its share
and
rival
Brown
&amp; of pay ments due under a
Williamson Tobacco Corp. nati onal settlement with states
are uniting their U.S. opera- onto th ~ new entity.
lions as a way lo weather an
"Thi s agreemenl marks a
onslaught of di scounted milestone for lioth compabrands and lawsuits.
n1 es," said Andrew J.
The
deal
announced Schindler. RJR's chairman
Monday vastly expands the and chief executi ve.
reach of two tobacco compaBritish American Tobacco
nies that together produce chairman Martin Broughton
about one of every three ciga- said the mer~':" "will i_tnpro ~e
rettes smoked in the Uni ted our competltt ve posltton tn
States. The merged operation the most important cigarette
will be called Rey nolds market in the world."
American Inc ., with about
The merger is expected to
$10 billion in annual sales. It result in more than $500 mil• will still trail industry giant lion in annual savings.
Philip Morris US A. whose
The mer~er follows a tumulbrands command about half tuous penod for RJR. In
the U.S. cigarette r:narket.
September, the tobacco com~any
R.J.
Rey nolds makes . said it was eliminating 2,600 JObs,
Camel, Winston, Salem and dr 40 percent of its work force. as
Dora!, while Brown &amp; pan of a massive restructuring
Williamson's top brands. designed to retreat from still' disinclude Kool, Lucky Strike. count-brand competition.
GPC and Capri.
RJR also said it will focus
Brown &amp; Williamson is the fu ture spending on premium
U.S . subsidiary of British brands Camel and Salem and
American Tobacco PLC.
win scale back investment in
R.J. Reynolds will pay $2.6 the cheaper Winston and Doral
billion in cash and stock for a brands to try to optimize profits.
58 percent controlling stake in
RJR also has slashed profit
the new company, RJR forecasts and surrendered its
spokesman Tommy Payne said. title sponsorship of the Winston
British American Tobacco will Cup stock car racing circuit as
own 42 percent of' the new the company tried to trim costs.
company through its Brown &amp;
On Tuesday, RJR reported a
Wilhamson subsidiary.
hefty loss for the third quarter,
''
The tax-free deal also frees dragged down by restructurBritish American frorri future ·ing costs and dwindling sales:

The company lost $3.45 billion, or $4 1. 31 per share,
co·mpared with a profit of
$ 139 million, or $1.56 per
share. for the third quarter a
year earlier. Sales fell 13 percent to $1.38 billion from
$1.59 billion a year earlier.
Bolh,companies have a rich history that date~ to tl Je late 1800s.
R.J . Reynolds was founded in
1875. when 25-year-old Richard
Joshua Reynolds started a chewing-tobacco
manufacturing
operation in the town of
Winston, N.C. The town would
later merge with the nearby village of Salem, creating the city
known todax as Winston-Salem.
Brown 8i. Williamson was
formed in 189 3 hy George
Brown
and
Robert
Williamson - brothers-.in Jaw. who · both grew up in
tobacco families.
.
The new company plans to
consolidate headquarters and
operations in Winston-Salem,
RJR's current home.
The merger wi II end Brown
&amp; Williamson's presence in
Louisville, Ky., where it has
been based since the late 1920s.
B&amp; W's 460 employees in
Louisville will either lose their
jobs or be offered transfers to
North Carolina, spokesman
Mark SITlith said. Many workers refused to comment as they
left the company's headquar:
ters Monday, after being
informed of the merger.

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Nickle Creek brings 'newgrass' to Columbus
The "newgrass" band ,
Nickle Creek will be in concert at the CAPA Southern
Theatre, 55 East State St..
Columbus. ,The concert begins
ai 8 p.m.
Drawing on influences a'
diverse as Bach, Radiohead.
and Ella Fitzgerald, Nickel
Creek has stretched the boundaries of traclitional bluegrass
with a pair of Alison Kraussproduced COs - their selftitled debut album and the
2002 fo ll ow-up. This Side,
which took home the Gram my
for Best Contemporary Folk
Albu m.
For more information, go to
·the CAPA Web site at
www.capa.com.

Memorial Hospital

Point Pleasant
Trick or · ·

-Treat

NOS

•
Point Pleasant':
5:30-6:30
p.m. ·
Thur.day. Oct. 30.
:.
Hende"on : ·5:30-6:30 '
p.m. Thursday. Oct. 30 . . ·
Hartford: 6-7 p.rri . :
Thursday, Oct. 30. fol -.
lowed by a Halloween ..
party at the Community
.
Center
Leon: 6-7:30 p.m.,·
Friday. Oct. 31
.
Southside: 5:30-7 p.m.·
Friday. Oct. 31. with a .·
Halloween party and
haunted hou~e at the
South,id_e Community ·.
Center
·
Mason: 6-7 p.m ...
Thursday. Oct. 30.
•'
New Haven: 6-7 p.m.: :
Thursday. Oct. 30. with· :
a party at the Fire. ·
Department at 7:30p.m. ·:

~D

UMN SK1

,.

When autumn nights grow colder and the golden harvest moon
hangs low in the sky, we are surrounded by the mysteries of
the night. Do people really get "moonstruck"? Why does the
autumn moon look so large as it rises? The changing seasons
also herald changes in the sky: a lunar eclipse, longer nights ,
and a sky full of autumn stars and planets. Will Princess
Andromeda escape from the terrible sea monster threatening
to devour her? Will brave hero Perseus destroy the snake-head·
ed Medusa, or will she turh him to stone with a glance? For the
answers to these and other looney questions, come to our
autumn show.
This 3(}-minute live show is appropriate for 4th Grade to Adult.
Monday - Friday 11:30am, 2:30pm; Saturday 11:30am.
2:30pm, 3:30pm ; Sunday 1 pm, 2:30pm, 5 pm
For more information on this or other programs at COSJ, calli·
888·819-COSJ or visit COSJ on the Internet at www.cosi.org.

COLUMBUS (AP) - As
They emerged as win ged on ash trees that line streets
(', lobal trade and travel dmmat- ad ul ts in Detroi't. where they and dot fores ts in more than
ICally increase, so has the danger of biological invaders multiplied qui ckly. feeding hal· of the United S tates.
that cause bi!flons of dollars
in damage to ecosystems
throughout the world; The
Columbus Dispatch reported
on Sunday.
And goverrunent5 that are
able to react quickly to health
crises are often ill-equipped lo
deal with the pests and the
threat they po:&gt;e to (itizens,
food supplies and economies,
the newspaper reported in the
first of a four-day series based
on a six-month investigation.
Fighting the 7,000 destructive foreign plants, mammals,
birds, amphibians, reptiles,
fish, arthropods and mollusks
documented in the United
States cost taxpayers $138 billion annually, according to a
1999 · Cornell University
study. The economic damage
they cause each year is twice
as much as hurricanes, floods,
tornadoes and other natural
$
disasters, the newspapersaid.
The
thumbnail-sized
emerald ash borer beetle, for
. example, has killed more
than 6 million trees in southeastern Michigan. The beetle
has spread to four counties in
Ohio and one in Maryland.
Experts belteve the tiny
green beetles stowed away
on a ship from the Chinese
port of Tianjin . Larvae
mfested either the wood
pallets on ·whi ch cargo was
stacked, or the wood chips
that cushioned the boxes.

Cold Pop
20 oz. bottle

·eo-.ntry IIIIJ!rsqr coming to Big Sanely

74¢

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HiVal

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6oz. only 67¢

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Halloween
.p arty

..
•••
•

•
The
Annual
Halloween Block Part y
wi II take place from 6 to
8 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 30 :
a l the Riverfront Park. ...
There
will
be'.
Karaoke, Jupiter Jump. ··
Bunji Run. basketball. :
ring toss. bean bag toss, ·
pumpkin pond, lollipop .
tree. Wheel of Fonune. ,
tricycle races. stick pony ,
races. hayride throug!l; .
Krodel Park. free hotdogs, popcorn, cotton''
candy, drinks, candy. •
and costume contests.
Lots of prizes wi II be ·
awarded.
··

.

'

H U N ) l N G T 0 N ; ' topped.the cpuntry music &gt; 'Ticket~ are set&gt;to go on
W.Va. "'"'·Country music ·charts for several weeks 'sale at 10 a.m. Nov, '1, ai
superstar Toby Keiih ·has as did his single offering the Arena Box Office and
a busy · sche'dule ill his perspective on the online at www.ticketni.asNovember ·· with the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
· upcorn)ng release of his "Courtesy of the Red, ter.com. Phone orders
latest album, Shock'N White, and Blue."
will be accepted by call- ·
Y' Ali, an appearance on II) anticipation of llis· ing (304) 523-5757 or
the Nov. 5 telecast of the upcoming album, the (304) 342-5757,. Due to
· CMA Awards, where ~e· cable network,, Great Kroger labor situation,
has received seven nomi- American Country, has no Ticketmaster outlets
nations, and a tour stop at selected
him
as
Huntington's Big Sandy November 's Artist of the are currently open in the
Huntington
area,
Superstore Arena.
Month.
,&gt;·Tbe Shock' N y' All
Canadian born Terri although, Kroger's in
· Tour hits the Tri-Statlat Clark has.· an opportunity Waverly and Portsmouth,
7:30p.m. Nov: 29. Ke.ith to take 'home a CMA Ohio , are Ticketmaster
,will be joined b;y special Award as wen:after being outlets as is Kauffman's
guest;and fellow CMA no!llinated for Female
Award nominee, . Terri Vocalist of the Year. Her at the Charleston Town
Clark.
album, Pain to Kill, Center. Starting Monday,
.Keith
takes
fans . debuted' ·at number five Nov. 3, the Arena Box
through his career that on the • country all&gt;um Office will offer new
includes six gold, or plat- . c.har!s. . 'J:'he recently extended hours from I 0
inurn albums an~')6,:t~p- ·rt;lea8ed s~n~le, : I ·~anna ' am • 6 pm: ·For more
ten smgles. H1s.. CMA Do1It All, IS rnoyang up .
.
..
Award nominated duet ' th¢;chartS·and is cuniht- mfonnauon, vtstt . the .
with Willie Nelson, ly number 21 according · arena-'s Web stte at
"Beer for My Horses," to Radio and Records. . www.bigsandyarena.com

Greeting Cards

The deadliest disease
for women is also the
most preventable.

Au+umV1 Ski~s· at COST Co1umbus

Haunted
house

.•'

• "N ightmare • orr.
Main St." offns at
p.m. Oct. 2!k I.
.
It is sponsored by the ·
Mason County DARE
Program.
,
' . 'IS $'. .
Ad. llliSStOn

7:

With roots in the Los Angeles country and fo lk·rock scenes,
Linda Ronstadt became one of the most popular interpretive
singers or' the '70s, earning a string of platinum-selling alb ums
and Top 40 singles. Throughout the '70s, her laid back pop
never lost sight of her folky roots, yet as she moved into the
'80s , she began to change her sound with the times. adding
new wave inftuences and settling into a pattern of adu lt contemporary pop. The program , to be announced at a later date,
will be perform'ed on lfle Frank and Margaret Adkins Concert
Stage. Sponsored by AEP and Kentucky Arts on· Tourc Media ·
Partners: WBVB, WKEE, and WTCR.
'
Show times are Sunday 9 Nov. 2003 at 7 p.m Tickets are $50.
$48, $45, $10

Come on over to Bob's

fur all Occasions

For All Your Fall Planting
And Decorating Needs!

Reg.99¢ only ·5 '0¢

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Invasive specie$ threatening ecosystems

More women die ·
heart disease th~ of
any other cause.

Talk with your doctor about heart
disease. Learn more about heart health
\ UnderO'Bieness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

.

' CQmpared to
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ·.
state's' top cash crop. con- as 200 degrees,
Amy Sigg Davis knows tribute a portion of their 350 degfbes .for petrol.eumshe will always be able to sales at grain elevators tQ the based coatings.
sell many of the soybeans council. In 2001 , soybean
Clay Williams, director of
she raises on her I,600-acre sales generated $8(\4 million bio-based products for Omni
farm near Lebanon to feed for Ohio farmers . Corn was Tech International. a consl:lllivestock. That's the single second' at $824 million.
tant to the national United
biggest use for soybeans.
Soybean farmer Cecil: Boes, Soybean Board and other
But Davis, 55, said the of Arcadia in northwest Ohio, industries.
called
the
future of soybeans lies in non- said finding new uses for soy- research "exploratory."
food uses. And she believes beans is "vital" 10 farmers in
Vijayendran said it could
that future is "sparkling."
case crop prices plummet.
take up to 30 months before
"I know beans will still be
Turner said Battelle was all variables are tested and
continued to be led to cows and se lected for the research the powder could be markethogs, but I look at new u;;es as parily because of its contacts ed commercially. The soydemand-increase opportunities," with commercial partners . . bean powder , might have
she said. "It's going to be huge." Battelle, the world's largest some competition, too.
Ohio soybean farmers have independent ,
nonprofit
Jeff Palmer. spokesman for
hired researchers to try to research institute. helped the Powder Coating Institute,
expand typical kitchen u,:;es of create such common inven- said other powde'rs have been
their crops as oil, soy sauce, tofu tions as the compact disc and developed that can be cured
and soy milk to other parts of the nar codes on products.
at lower temperatures . He
house and into the workplace. \5-The cdunci l hopes the soy- said he has not heard of the
The
Ohio
Soybean
.
Cou nc'i l is spending $ l.l bea n research wip lead to soybean research and couldmillion · for
Batlelle pilot projects, then market- · n't offer an opinion on
Memori al
Institute ing contracts.
·
whether it holds promise.
researchers in Columbus to
The most recent effort at
Vijayendran said that if the
help develop soy bean-based Battelle involves using a·soy- soybean powder proves sue- .
furniture coating, printer ink based powder as a coati ng cessful and can capture 30 per.that is easier to remove from for plastic and wood furni- . cent of the U.S. market. it could
paper and pliable plastic for ture. The powder is applied enable fam1ers nationwide to
tubing, blood bags and toys.. to the surface and heated so sell an additional I0 milliQn
"What we've tried to do the parlicle~ mel! into a bushels of soybeans a year.
with soybean new- use shiny, protective coating.
He saicl Battelle also is
research is to identify enviBhima Vij'ayend ran, .direc- testin g a soy-based addition
ronmentally frie ndl y, less tor of commercial develop- that would make plastics
petroleum-based products," · ment at Battelle.' said most rnore 11exihle: and a soysaid Susie Turner, the coun- cqatings are petro leum- · based t on~r for copiers and
cil's· executi ve director. "If ba se\~. Those coati ngs work printers. Paper wo uld be easwe create more demand, that well on metal but have draw- ier to recycle if !he ink could
will increase prices for soy- backs for wood or plastic be remo,;ed easier. he said.
because they require high
Professur Bemie Tao. assobean producers."
Nationwide efforts to 'find -temperatures to cure, he said. ciate professor of biochemistry
soybean uses beyond food · Researchers are irying to ·and food- proc~ssing engifor cattle and people have determine whet her the soy- neering at Purtlue University.
led to crops being used in bean-based coati ng wi ll cure said soy-based products will
adhes ives, paints , lubricants and set at lower tempera- succeed only if they are less
and biodiesel fuel.
tures. he said. Preliminary expensive and perform at least
The state's 30,000 farmers tests show the soy coating as we ll as existing petroleumwho . grow soybeans. the reacts at temperatures as low based products.

have the majority of its nitrogen source (the first of the
three listed, numbers) in slow
release form. Slow release
nitrogen is chemically prepared to release nitrogen a little at a time based on available water a)ld temperature.
If it is too cold the fertilizer
remains tied up and , thu s
unavailable to the plant.
When warmer temperatures
occur the nitrogen is released.
'This available nitrogen is
than taken up into the grass
plant by its roots and used to
create
addi tional
food
reserves for the grass plant. '
Slow release nitrogen costs
more but does not dissolve in
water/snow when it is cold
outside, thus reducing nitrogen pollution of many soluble fertilizers in our streams.
So continue to keep your
lawn cut on a regular basis,
fe rtilize it with a slow release
nitrogen
fertilizer
and
remove any fa llen tree leaves.'

Tobacco giants R.J. Reynolds and
Brown &amp; Williamson to merge

•

BY

. crucial for next year's lawn

W

.

Thursday, October 30, 2003

'

BY HAL KNEEN

.

Page A7 • The Daily ,S ertinel

:(!ageA6

•

f" .

~~
OhioHealth
·l~u-

. This-women's heart health initiative is provided by 0'8/eness Memo(ial Hospital
·
in collaboration with OhloHealth.
·
•

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Page AS

NATION

The Daily Sentinel
.

Prep football plcka, Page 83
Scoret and standings, Page B4
NBA I NHL round-ups, Page B8
91g Ten Notebook, Page 82

Thursday, October 30, 2003
•

.California wildfires threaten mountain towns as weather changes
RIMFOREST. Calif. (AP)
-· The hot Santa Anna winds
that roused California's most
destructive wildfires in history were giving way to cooler,
more humid · conditions
Wednesday, but that did little
to tame the blazing tide :
Instead, forecasts called for
Pacitic air to push tires in
new. dangerous directions.
Southern
California' s
mountains still glowed red as
out-of-control fires devoured
dying fore sts, chasing the
region's newest refugees into
smoky traffic jams as they
.tled their alpine communities
by the tens of thousands.
The towe1ing peak~ of the San
Bemardino mnge east of Los
Angeles and the mountains of
eastern San Diego County
became major fronts Tuesday in
the long arc of wildfires that have
roared over more than 567,000
acres - ahout 890 square miles,
nearly the area of Rhode Island.
At least 16 people have died since
Oct. 21. and more than 1,600
homes have been destroyed.
In the San . Bernardino
Mountains, firefighters set
backfires along a narrow highway, hoping to bum out ·fuel
needed by the wildftre moving
up from below. But.the ftre still
jumped the road in some areas.
"We just pick a line in the
sand and try · to stop it.
· Sometimes we have success,
sometimes we don' t. We just
keep tryi ng," said William
Bagnell, fire chief in
Crestline, a small community
high in the San Bernardino
Mountains.
Fire burning up the south face
of the r.mge threatened resort
communities
from
Lake
Arrowhead cast to Big Bear
Lake. Some 80,000 full-time residents had evacuated since the
weekend, including thousands
who jammed the highway out of
Big Bear with bumper-tobumper traffic Tuesday.
The arrival of fire was

·
·
Adeer runs past flames from the Old Fire near the 15 Freeway
in Devore, Calif., Tuesday. · Authorities announced two more
deaths in San Bern 0dino County on Tuesday, t&gt;ringing the
death toll to 17 in California's deadliest wildfires in more than
a decade. (The San Bernardino Sun, LaFonzo Rachal Carter)
feared in the San Bernardi no
National Forest, which has
been blanched as millions of
trees have succumbed to
drought and a devastating
infestation of bark beetles.
Flames
al so
chewed
through brush-covered hill s
above homes in Ste ve nson
Ranch, 35 miles northwest of
Los Angeles, where some sec-

AGRICl:JLTURE

fires east instead of south and
west, said Brandt Maxwell, a
meteorologist
with
the
National Weather Service in
Sari Diego. It, will take until
Thursday or even Friday,
Max well. said, before the
moist wind·s raise humidity in
. the bone-dry mountain areas
where the fires were fiercest.
In San Diego County, the
state's biggest frre was on the
outskirts of Julian, a Cuyamaca
Mountains town of 3,500
famous for its apple crop. The
210,000-acre Cedar Fire had a
45-rnile front and was just miles
from merging with ' a 37,000acre fire near Escondido.
"There's really no way to
stop this fire from getting up
to Julian ," said Rich Hawkins,
a U.S. Forest Service fire
chief. Reinforcements were
sent out, but Hawkins said he
needed twice as .many.
"They, ' re so fatigued that
despite the fact the fire
peri meter might become
much larger, we' re not willing
to let the firefighters continue
any further," he said.
Ten miles south of Julian,
about 90 percent of homes
were destroyed in Cuyamaca,
a lakeside town of about 160
residents, said Chief Bill
Clayton of the ·california
Department of Forestry.
More than 11 ,11'0 ftrefighters
were on the lines of what Gov.
Gray Davis said may be the
worst and costliest disaster
California has ever faced. He
estimated the cost at $2 biUion.
At least I 0 fires have burned
in a span from northwest of

tions of the community were
under a voluntary evacuation.
Changing weather offered
both problems and promise.
Cool; moist air off the ocean
was expected to replace the
vanished hot and dry Santa Ana
winds that whipped blazes into
firestonms over the weekend.
But forecasts called fo r initial winds that could pu sh

Flames raged along a vast front in devastated San Diego County
on Tuesday. Atleast15 deaths were blamed on the fires in Southern
California. More than 521 ,000 acres of brush , forest and private
land have burned in the state. AI least 1,500 homes have been
destroyed in California.
· I
ACREAGE
CONSUMED

HOMES
DESTROYED

0
0

206,664
26 ,000
37,000
57,232
45 ,291
92,000

881
520
57
77
1
16

15

521,929

1,572

ARE

DEATHS

1. Cedar
2. Old
3. Paradise
4. Grand Prix
5. Otay (Dulzura)
6. Simi Valley
Total

11
2
2

0

•

~

A final look at the region's
top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. sports staffers. (Firstplace votes in parentheses)
Team
Prev. Vote•
1. Ironton
2 45(2)
2. Gallia Academy I 42( I)
3. Westerville So. 3 34(2)
4. Jackson
5
32
5. Wahama
6
23
6. Cols. DeSales nr
22
7. Parkersburg So. 3
18
8. Chesapeake 7
15
9. Symmes Valley 8
10
10. Minford
nr
7

'

' 5C)&lt;ml

t!011m

'

California Department ol Forestry and Fire Protection

.

er, said ne expects the death
toll to rise as crews inspect
hundreds of charred homes.
"This fire was so fast," he said.
"I'm sure we're going to find
folks who simply never had a
chance to get outof their houses."
The number of injured was
put at 42, not including firefighters. They included two
burn victims in critical condition in San Diego.

.,

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\;

''.

·-, .

""'
,

'· '··-r

\c .,. ' q';;

Sl,ll;&gt;scribe.~ay ¥992-2155
.

ji
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MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Holzer Medical Center

.www.holzer.org

AUTOMOTIVE
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorth!Jpdodge.com
Se,ing the Mason,
Meigs and Gallill
County areas since

NEWSPAPERS

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis '

www.turnpikeflm.com
Gallipolis Daily lribune

1950!

www.mydailytribune.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailysentinel.com

%
List
Price

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

Selected furniture items throughout the store!
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

' • 2 &amp; 3 Piece Living Room Suites
, • Bedroom Suites
• 5 &amp; 7 Piece Dinettes
• Curios
• Entertainment Centers

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
Engla~

from

the

Mason-Gaflf•

Melge-Jacbon &amp;1'1111; b.) be a
local confel ence member; or
c.) play at least one game
agalnat to&lt;:al or conference

taama.

louis Irizarry is
suspended·by
Tressel
· COLUMBUS (AP) - .
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
suspended tight end Louis
Irizarry on Wednesday, two
days after the freshman was
arrested on assault charges in
a dorm room altercation.
"Louis will not be allowed
to travel or compete· in any
games until this matter has
gone . _through the legal
proe&amp;fliiU1 been resolved at
the university level," Tressel
said in a statement.
An Ohio State campus
police report said Irizarry
was charged with three
counts of first-degree misdemeanor assault. Three people
sustained minor injut ies
about midnight Monday in
~e Park Hall dorm .room.
Ohio State athletic director
Andy Geiger said Irizarry
:Will be required to undergo
i;oun~~ling
before being
)lllowed to play.
Irizarry, a 6-foot-5, 235pounder from Youngstown's
Ursuline High School, has
seen little action this season
for the No. 8 Buckeyes, who
play Saturday at Penn State.
He is scheduled to be
arraigned next Thursday in
Franklin County Municipal
Court.

Gaither resigns
as Bluefield ·
boys basketball
coach

Attention prep
football coaches

BIG

.Console TV's

uYour'Complete Home Furnishing Store"

·MASON
FURNITURE
CO.
Znd Street • (304) 773-5592 • Mason, WV
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a team must either: a.) be ·

.•

LA-HOY.

Maytag·• Frlgidaire

To be eligible lorlhe CNP 10,

BLUEFIELD, W.Va. (AP)
-. llluefield boys basketball
coach Danny Gaither is stepping down after II seasons.
: Gaither guided the Beavers
to seven state tournament
!fips in the past nine years,
including championship runs
tn 1994 and 1995. Bluefield
ilvas the state runner-up in
1997 and 1999.
: Gaither will remain at the
!\tercer County school as a
drivers education teacher.

Take your business into the homes of over ·
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, ~eigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web atldress in our
for only a $1 a day.

Others receiving votes:
Rock Hill 5, Athens 5,
Wheelersburg 5, Logan 4',
Parkersburg Catholic 2,
Patrick Henry 2, Fairland 2,
Nelsonville-York 1, Trimble 1.

AP

SOURCES: Asaoclaled Press; USDA Forest Ser\'ice ;

·:

NBA

James dazzles, but Kings prevail

~- '"!'

· !#~Pa.ily··.:~tpntinel
,,

The OVP

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

0

' , ,)

Thursday,Ck1ober30,2003

Associated Press

..0

Los Angeles south to the
Mexican border. Some . were
believed set by arsonists; the
Cedar Fire was ignited by a
lost hunter's signal fire.
Officials have struggled to
accurately tally · the damage.
Authorities in San Diego
revised that county 's death
total Tuesday froin 13 to 12.
But Glenn Wagner, San Diego
County chief medical examin-

'

I

Largest actively burning fires on Oct. 28

. ....

•

..

California wildfrres kill and·destroy

Bl ,

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

••
!

: Area high school football
coaches are reminded to
send in their DOJ!linees for
the all-district football
~ams by 5 p.Jll., Nov. 5.
. Nominees, along with
their 2003 stats, can be einailed to sports@mydai1ytribune.com, or faxed to
446-3008. You may also
call them in after 6 p.m. to
446-2342, ext. 33, or drop
them off at our Gallipolis
office on Third Ave.

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
- LeBrilliant - except for
the result.
LeBron James more than
lived up to his hype in the
first regular-season game of
his NBAcareer, playing like
no other 18-year-old ever
had in his professional
debut as the Cleveland
Cavaliers lost 106-92
Wednesday night to the
Sacramento Kings .
James had 25 points. nine
assists, six rebounds and
fo ur steals, mesmerizing
one of the league 's loudest
crowds with . skills no
teenager had ever displayed
at this level.
James' point total was by
far the most by any prep-to·
pro rookie since Kobe
Bryant made the jump in
1996, eclipsing the 10
points scored by both
Jonathan Bender of Indiana in his 1999 tlebut and Amare
Stoudemire of Phoenix last year.
·
In fact, James' 25 eclir,sed the combined totals of Bryant
(no points), Jermaine 0 Neal (two), Kwame Brown (two),
Eddy Curry (two), Tyson Chandler (one), Kevin Garnett
(eight) and Tracy McGrady (none) in their professional
debuts.
James led the Cavaliers back from an early 19-point deficit,
giving Cleveland its first lead by feeding J.R. Bremer for a 3pointer that made it 85-83 with 10:05 left in the fourth.
Sacramento regained conirol with a 6-0 run , and the
Cavaliers never made a $arne of it down the stretch. James
capped his night by shootmg an airball from 3-point range just
before the final buzzer. drawing taunts from the fans .
Those taunts, however, were only half- hearted. James entertained the fans too much to be treated too shabbily.
Though the Cavaliers often were uncreative running their
halfcourt offense, James made thin$s happen whenever he
was moving with the ball - using h1s tirst step to get around
defenders and initiate action.
He momentarily lost control of his dribble in the third quarter, causing Doug Christie to lunge at him in an attempt for a
steal. James de~ly recovered and moved quickly into the l1111e,
finding-Darius Miles along the baseline for an alley-oi\p dunk.
James' best stretch of the third quarter included a high-arcing bank over Vlade Divac on a 1-on-3 break, followed by a

1 Q6

92

Please see James, BJ

Cleveland Cavaliers rookie guard LeBron James, right, has his shot t&gt;locked t&gt;y Sacamento
Kings' Doug Christie, t&gt;ackground during the first quarter in Sacramento Wednesday. (AP)
'

Browns' Green facing DUI, marijuana charges
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
WESTLAKE - Browns
running back William Green
faces legal penalties and pas. sible disciplinary action from
the NFL after being arrested
on charges of drivmg under
the influence of alcohol and
marijuana possession.
According . to a police
report, Green was arrested at
6:12 p.m. Monday after he
failed a breath test. He had a
blood alcohol level of .165 more than twice Ohio's legal
limit of .08.
An officer found a bag of

marijuana weighing 3.2
grams in Green's sport utility
vehicle.
On Wednesday, Green
pleaded innocent to the
charges.
If convicted of DUI, he
could be put on probation or
face up to a $I ,000 fine and
six months in jail. The marijuana charge is a misdemeanor and carries a $I 00
fine .
Green was arrested after
police received a cell phone
call from a motorist reporting
a eossible drunken driver.
'He must be horribly intoxicated," the female caller told

police as she described Green
driving on and off the road.
"He's going to kill somebody."
An officer pull ed Green
over after observing his car
weaving and being driven on
a tlat front tire.
.
Green and hi s attorney,
Brian Downey, did not comment after the player's
arraignment in Rocky River
Mumcipal Court.
After stopping Green ,
Patrolman Casey Carty gave
field sobriety tests to the 23year-old. Green didn't follow
mstructions for the tests .and
was given a breath test.

Green was relea sed on
bond Monday night.
The Brown s released a
statement Wednesday saying
they were aware of Green 's
arrest.
Cleve land has a bye this
Sunday. Following practice
on Wednesday, the Browns
players were given the next
four days off and do not have
to report back until Monday.
The Browns next play on
Nov. 9 at Kansas City, and it
was unclear if Green will be
available .
In 200 I, Browns coach
Butch Davis suspended
defensive tackle Gerard

Warren . fullback Mike
Sellers and cornerback
Lamar Chapman for one
game without pay following
their arrests in separate incidents on the same day.
NFL spokesman Greg
Aiello would not comment
specifically on Green's
arrest.
Under the league's substance abuse policy. any player who breaks the Jaw for
alco hol or drug-related
offen ses is subject to fines
and suspensions, Aiello said.
Green. who was suspended

PleeseseeG......,IJ

Throat slash draws
coach's wrath
BY TOM W11MERS

Associated Press
CINCINNATI
Chad
Johnson has been warned to
watch the choreography.
The trash-talking receiver
who loves entertain the crowd
after a touchdown put the
Cincinnati Bengals' biggest
comeback of the season at risk
with his latest move.
Coach Marvin Lewis castigated him on the si deline
Sunday after his throat-slash
gesture after a touchdown drew
a 15-yard penalty. The Bengals
.
overcame tt, holding on for a 27-24 victory over Seattle.
Johnso~ said Wednesday that he hadn't been fined by the
NFL, an mdt~atJon that the league accepted his explanation
that tt was an mnocent m1stake.
·
· 1'They would have done it already," said Johnson. who has a
lot of firsthand knowledge of the league's methods for ftnes·.
"I'm sure they .understand what I meant."
His head coach is less understanding.
Lewis jogged over to Johnson as he returned from the end
zorie after Sunday's display, and berated him at length on the
sideline. The first-year head coach made it sink in that every
·
Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin Lewis, left, .yells at tight end Chad Johnson In the fourth action - even one done in fun - has consequences.
''That
's
the
significance
of
what
you
do,"
Lewis
said.
"We
quarter against the Seattle Seahawks in Cincinnati Sunday lifter Johnson was penalized tor
.
.
unsportsmanlike conduct after scoring a 53-yard touchdown. Lewis wants his demonstrative
,. ....... s...... .,
players to know the limits of good behavior. (AP)

-·

..

..

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 30 ,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Thursday, October 30)

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

2003

Area High School ·Football

Big Ten Notebook

Winner 'gets the ax' when Wolverines and Spartans meet
fr~s hman running bac k Pierre Thomas had

The stakes are exceedingly high w~en No.
II Michigan travels 50 miles northwest to No.
9 Michigan State for S aturd ay ' ~ intrastate
showdown.
On the line will be first pl ace in the Big Ten,
the inside track to the Rose Bowl, contention
fo r the national title, bragging rights to the
entire state· and, of course. a carving of a
bearded mountain man astride an ax .
The Paul Bunyan Trophy is a 4-foot hi gh
wooden statlj,e - so heavy it has to be broken
down in pans and reassembled- which portrays the woodsman with feet planted on a
map of the state of Michigan . A giant ax lies
between his feet.
"It's the biggest trophy known to mankind,"
Michigan sports information director Bruce
Madej said. "You'll never see anybody lift it
over their head." The trophy originated back in 1953.
Michigan Governor G. Mennen Williams affectionately known as "Soapy" because his
family produced a line of personal hy giene
products including Mennen aftershave introduced the sculpture to honor Michigan
State's acceptance into the Big Ten . He
declared he would donate it to the winner of
the state' s biggest game.
The people at the University of Michigan
were less than enthralled . They said before the
game that they would refuse it if they won . It
wasn 't a problem , however, since Michigan
State won the first Bunyan game, 14-6.
Since then, however, the Wolverines have
gladly accepted it 29 times, with the Spartans
taking it 19 times and the game ending in two
ties.
Of course, the Bunyan Trophy contest is just
one of many. many red-letter days on the Big
Ten calendar. Ohio State and Illinois play for
the lllibuck- a wooden turtle with scores of

CONFERENCE
the games painted on it s shell. Indiana takes
on Michigan State for the Old Brass Spittoon ,
Michi gan and Minnesota meet for the Little
Brown Jug and the Purdue- Indiana winner
takes home the Old Oaken Bucket.
The Boilermakers play the lllini for the
Purdue Cannon , Northwestern takes on
Illinois for the Sweet Sioux Tomahawk and
Penn State battles Minnesota and Michigan
State for the. Victory Bell and the Land Grant
Trophy, respectively.
Back in 1935 , the governors of Minnesota,
Floyd Ol son, and Iowa, Clyde Herrin g,
wagered on the Gophers-Hawkeyes game.
Sculptor Charles Brioschi was commissioned
to create a statue 21 inches long and .15 inches high th at is the envy of both states.
Mark your calendars. On Nov. 15, for the
69th time, the school s vie for Floyd of
Rosedale.
·
Floyd is a bronze pi g.

surgery to re lie ve swe lling on his bru ised left
leg and will miss the rest of the year.
Thomas had been filling in for runnin g back
E.B. Halsey, who was hun against Michigan
two weeks ago.
Thomas is the fifth lllini player to mi ss all or
most of the season with an inj ury. The others
are defensive end Mike O'Brien (knee), offen sive guard Bryan Koch (neck), quarterback
Jon Beutj er (back) and wide receiver Lonni e
Hurst (brok en leg).

UNITED WE STAND 7-J: During a disastrous 4-8 season a year ago, Michigan State 's
attitude was poi soned by selfi shness and a
lack of teamwork .
That's not the case for the Spartans now.
In hi s fo unh re storation project as a coach,
first-year coach John L Smith said he knew
he would be met b~ three groups: those who
would do whatever th ey were told, those who
had to be convinced and those who would
never accept the new staff. By getting rid of
the latter group and gradually converting
those in-between, Ne has turned the Spartans
into a picture of one-for-all and all -for-one.
"That's probably because th ey were hungry," first -year cmich John L Smith said .
"When you 're hungry and you' re looking for
RUNNING LOW: Iowa and Illinoi s have something, a lot of thin gs might taste good ."
enough players to take the field against each
other on Saturday .- for now.
Defensive tackle Jare&lt;.l Clauss injure&lt;.! an
ankle early in Iowa's 26-14 win over Penn
State and is questionable. Clauss hasn ' t
mi ssed a game in four seasons. He has played
45 in a row, the last 21 as a starter.
Linebacker Grant Steen al so twisted an
ankle and he, too, is questionable.
"It comes in run s sometimes and that seems
to be the case right now," coach Kirk Ferentz
499 RldtiAnd Ave., Athens, Ohio Wl 0
said.

'

career - both in terms of victories and personal statistics .
When the losses pile up as they may do in Cleveland
during James' rookie season,
Miles will be the main man trying to help James persevere
through it.
·
"They're close enough in

age where they relate to each
other, and they're good
friends, " assistant coach
Stephen Silas said. "Op the
court Darius can really, really
help because he's been through
a bunch of different situations,
whether good ~r bad, in a shon
peno&lt;.l ol tune.

QUICK-HITTERS: Th e last time
Michigan State (No. 9) was ranked hi gher
than Michigan (No . II) when "they met was
1968 ... . Ohio State had (jp3 total yards in a
35-6 beating of Indiana and only 456 the previous two week s combined again st Wiscon sin
and Iowa. ... Penn State (2-6), which has lost
four in a row heading into Saturday's home
game against No. 8 Ohio State, has had a fivegame losing streak in Joe Paterno's 38 years as
head coach . .. . Purdue (6-2 ) does not play
Michigan State (7-1) or Minnesota (7-2) in the
Big Ten 's rotating schedule.

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Record: 77-23
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Butch Cooper
Sports Staff
Record: 82-18
Last week: 9-1
(picks in bQk!)

Paul u. Polcyn
Copy Editor
Record : 74-26
Last week: 9-1
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Record : 80-20
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Gallia Acadeow

Gallia Academy
at Banvtr Local

Gallla Academy

at Beaver Local

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at Btaytr Loeal

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at Beaver l ocal

Gallla Academy
at Beaver Local

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Point Pleasant
at Roane Coynty

Point Plea sant
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l'olnt Plea11nt
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Point Pl1111nt
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Wohama
at Wirt County

Wah em•
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Wth•m•
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Wthama

at W1rt County

at Wirt County

W1ham1
at Wirt County

Hannan
at Gay ley Brtcl;e

Hannan
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Hannan
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Hannan
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Hannan
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ROck Hill
a!lrllniQQ (Sal)

Roc~ Hill
at Ir.o.nt2D t Sat)

Rock Hill
altmnlml(Sat )

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Rock Hill
altmnllHI (Sal.)

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Cin . Mount Healthy
at Jgck•on

Cin _Moun! Healthy
at Jqckaon

Cin. Mount Healthy
at Jackaon

Cin. Moun! Healthy
at Jgckaon

Fairland
at MartJna Ftury (Sal.)

Fairland
at Mjutlna forey (Sat.)

Fairland
at Martina forry (Sat.)

Fairl and
at Martin• Ferrv (Sat. )

Nel sonvi lle-Yo rk
a! Monroq Central

Nelsonville- York
at Monroe Central

Nelsonville-York
at Monroe Central

Nelsonvill e· York
at Monroe Central

Nelsonville· York
at Monroe Centre!

Nelsonville· YO rk
at Monroe Central

Wbular•byrg
at Chesapeake

Wheelersbu rg
at Chesaoeake

Whaa!traburg
at Chesapea~e

WhttJtrtbyrg
at Chesapeake

Wheelers burg
at ChauP.akl

Symme s Valley
a! Ceqterburq (Sat.)

Symmes Valley
at Cantarbyrq (Sat.)

Svmm11 Valley
at Centerburg (Sat. )

Symmu Yallty
at Cenlerburg (Sat.)

Symmes Valley
at Centtrbuf9 (Sat.)

Wtltaml

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at ChesaDBikt
Symmes Valley
at Centarby'ra (Sat.)

Ha nnan

. Cin. Mount Heallhy
at Jackaon
Fai rl and
at Martina Farry

mr

James finished the first quarter with a lookaway pass on the
fast break for a dunk by Carlos
Boozer, along with a dunk of
hi s own following a steal.
James had a chance moments
later for another breakaway
dunk, but he unselfishly underhanded the ball to Davis and
let someone else throw down
something for the highlight
reel.
James ended the quaner 6tor-1 0 from the field with three
assists and two rebounds. He
was 12-for-20 from the field
for the game.
Though James did not
attempt a shot in the second
quaner, there was a buzz in
Arco Arena at halftime - and
it hai:l almost nothing to do
with the Kings' exceptional
play.
"That was Mike-like," one
fan said of James' third jumper.
"That steal and dunk, I can't

believe I had
head down
and missed it,' one Kings
employee bemoaned.
There would be more. in
store for them and tor everyone else who watched the second half, and there's no doubt
that James will be doing this
again in the future. He was
worthy of the hype. no question, and the hype won't stop if
James plays this way every
night.
Notes: Peja Stojakovic led
Sacramc;nto with 22 points,
Mike Bibby had 19, Divac 18
and Miller and Bobby Jackson
each added 16 .... Bremer
came off the bench to add 20
for Cleveland. ... The Kings
went 15-0 last season at home
against Eastern Conference
opponents . ... Divac showed he
ha5 not lost his penchant for
whining, frequently complaining and gesturin~ when several
calls didn't go hts way.

ing the program.
In the imtial stage, players
.are evaluated and subject to
frequent random testing.
They also receive counseling.
In their statement, the
Browns said they would handle the arrest and incident
within the team "on an individual basis ."
Green missed Cleveland's
game last Sunday in New
England with a separated
rigfit shoulder.

The 6-foot-1, 215-pound
Green was selected m the
first round (No. 16 overall) in
the 2002 draft.
Following a slow stan as a
rookie, Green rushed for 887
yards - 726 in his final
seven games as the
Browns won seven of their
final I0 games to earn a playoff spot.
Green leads Cleveland this
season with 559 rushing
yards on 142 carries.

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Unclaimed Vehicles To Be
Set Free in Gallipolis ·
Unclaimed Auction, repossessions, lease returns and other used vehicles to be let go
at rock bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
By Todd

Michaels

Automotive Correspondent

15 Cu. Ft.

GALLIPOLIS, OH - A
unique opportunity takes
ylace this week for consumers in the market for
cream of the crop used vehicles.
·This Wednesday, October 27th through Sunday,
November 2nd, Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeep - in cooperation with
Fleet Liquidators of
America- is hosting what
may be the 'greatest J iveday sale in the history of
Ohio . Over 145 unclaimed
and other used vehicles are
being offered direct to the .
pul)lic at rock-bottom
prices'. .
Mike Northup of Norris
Northup Chrysler Dodge
Jeepstated, "For those in
the market for a great used
car, this will cer1ainly be
tbe best time to buy. For a ·
$59 down payment• plus
tax , title &amp; fees, then start
making payments, custom-

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ers can get into the quality shield . Just pic,k your veunclaimed or other used ve- hicle and pick your payhicle. of their choice at ab- ment. You won ' t find a
solute rock bottom prices. faster, easier way to purThis is a once-in-a-lifetime chase a great pre-owned
event, so adjust your
car, " stated Mr. Northup.
schedules and make room ·
Extra sales and finance
for this five-day event."
staff will be on hand to asWhile unclaimed and re- sure custome.rs prompt,
possessed vehicles are some quality service and the best
of the mos1 sought afier ve- finance tenns possible .. Mr.
hicles in the used-car mar- Northup said, "We'll have
ket today, they are also the . over $3 million in financing .
most difficult vehicles for available for this event, so
the public to come by. But, chances are we can arrange
as Mr. Northup sajd, "This financing for just about anymay be the only time these one who is employed."
Trade-ins . will be ac vehicles will be offered to the.
public. We have obtained cepted, and customers
these vehicles with the intent .should bring their title or
of passing the great savings payment book to expedite
on 10 the customer."
delivery.
Almost every type of ve"The Ohio bargain-hunthicle and price range will be ers dream· come true hapavailable, from luxury 4x4s pens this Wednesday
through Sunday at Norris
to basic transportation.
Many are ,even still under Northup Chrysler Dodge
warranty.
Jeep . Every unclaimed ,
"We've made it easy for fleet and other used vehicle
you. We'll mark the pay- is just $59 then start makment s right on the wind- ing payments .• ·Customers

(~at.)

.

Cin. Mount Healthy
at Jackson
Fair land
at Mgrtlna ferry (Sat.)

Slash
from Page 81
are beginning to learn that
this is a team game. It's not
the Chad Johnson show, it's a
team game. He understands
and is remorseful."
Remorseful, perhaps, but
not ready to become a wallflower.
Johnson is enjoying his
emergence as one of the
league's top young receivers.
His 53-yard touchdown catch
Sunday left him with 643
yards and an 18.4-yard average per catch in seven games.
He .staned getting attention
with hi s catches and his win
guarantees last season, when
the Bengals fini shed 2-14.
Most of his trash talking is
playful rather than malicious
- he even makes fun of himself.
Last week, Johnson suggested there's no pressure on
him now that he' s become the
leader of the Bengals' receiving corps.
"That's just me," he said. "I
worked my way from the bottom up. Every week, it's only
going to get better. There are
three things in life that are
certain: death, taxes and not
being able to cover me."
He's been fined $20,000
this season for violating the

t

' I

•

Alexander
• Wins TVC Ohio title

LOCATION:
Norris Northup .
Chrysler Dodge Jeep 252
Upper River Rd.
Lancaster • 1-800·529-6262

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wednesday, October a ·
9am-8pm
Thursday, October 30
9am-8pm
Friday, October 31
9am-Bpm
Saturday, November 1
9am-7pm
Sunday, November 2.
Noon-&amp;pm .
Flrsto(X)11'18, firsl served. No dealers or wholesalers allowed.

may never see savings like
this again ," said Mr.
Northup.
After the $59 Down Unclaimed Vehicle SuperSale ends
at 6 : 0~p . m . on Sunday, November 2nd, many of these vehicles will be sent to auction.
Any questions can be directed
to (740) 446-0842. See the
box above for more information.

6-4

7-3
2-8
2,8

Hocking Division

M

1Hm
· Trimble
Miller
Watertord
Eastern
Federal Hocking

All
9-t
8-2

6-0

5-1
4-2

6-4

2-4
1-5

4-5
3-7
0-6 Q-10

Frkllly's Games

Gallia Academy at Bea'ler Local
Cin. Mt Healttry at Jad&lt;son
Point Pleasant at RoaM County

TVC
Ohio Division

M

AU

5-Q

7-3

All

5-0 9-1
3·2 3-7
3-2 6-4
2-3 4-6
2-3 4-6
D-5 Q-1 0

' Wins TVC Hocking t1~e
Friday's Games
Nelsonville- Vorl&lt; at Monroe Cent .
Saturday's Games
Tnmble at Fisher Catholic

3-3 7-3

Athens
Point Pleasant
Manetta
Warren
'Wins SEOAL title

6-4

TVC

Southern

SE.O

Illllm
• Nelsonville- Vorl&lt;

Meigs

6-4
1-9

SEOAL
Logan

3-2
4-1
3-2 '
1-4
D-5

4-6

Rock Hill at Ironton
Fairiand at Martins Ferry

• Galtia Academy
Jackson

Vinton County
Wellston
Belpre

Others
All
IHm
9-0
Wahama
Ironton .
9-1
9-1
Symmes Valley
5-5
South Galtia
Oak Hilt
4-6
0-8
Hannan
Friday's Games
Wahama at Wirt County
Hannan at Gauley Bridi1G
Saturday's Games
Symmes Valley at Centerburg
Rock Hilt at Ironton

league's uniform regulations said. "Everybody has their
- shirt not tucked in and so own little thing they do.
fonh . He got another $5,000
"Last vear. I was a Iittle .
fine for pretending to take a more humble with &gt;Con n £ ~
photograph in the end zone just go to the ' ideline. 'i'hi&gt;
with Peter Wanick to cele- year. what \ the point or
brate a touchdown in working hard and gettin g in to
Cleveland.
the end zo ne and not havin£ a
On Sunday at Paul Brown celebration?"
•
Hi s teammates are with hi m
Stadium, he scored the goahead touchdown in the on that point. Rookie receiver
. fourth quaner, . then headed Kelley Was hington did a
for the stands. He staned to squirmy move - he call s it
rip off his helmet - another "The Squirrel" - after hi'
no-no - to throw it into the first NFL tou chdown catch
stands , then decided against Sunday. Eve n qu arterback
it.
Jon Kitna joined in .
"Growing up and goi ng to
So he did the throat slash to
tell fans he was keeping his the games, playe rs alway'
helmet on, then jumped into . look for what players arc
the stands. An angry Lewis going.to do not necessarily on
was waiting to meet him.
the play. but after the pl ay."
Asked what he would do if Was hin gton said . "Wh at
he were in Johnson's place, Deion Sanders did an d what
Lewis said, "Act like you 've Michael Irvin did - tho,e
been there before. I don't ~uys put a lot of excite ment
know, I never scored a touch- mto the game ."
Lewis isn't going to out Ia\\
down. In high school, you
give the ball to the referee. I dancing. but he wa nh h"
don't know what 1 would do." players to watch their ' teps.
''I want them w be happ0
Johnson knows what he's
going to do - keep celebrat- and excited and cek brate. but
we don 't need to do -ome of
ing.
"You work hard all week the·things we ' ve been doing."
and get in that end zone, and Lewis said. "We have to get
that's what it's all about,'' he rid of that.··

$59 DOWN*
UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE RELEASE
INFORMATION :

'All offers with approved credit. $59.plus tax, title &amp; fees . Addltlonal down payment may be required for credit approval. "Example: 1997
Pontiac Grand Am, Sate Price $3174. $79/mo for 48 mos. @ 10.0% APR. $59 down paymeot, for a total of $59 down plus tax, title and
tees. Total amount financed $3115 plus tax. Subject to crec3lt approval &amp; tenders final approval. @2003 G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. Unclaimed
vehicles refer to used vehicles currently without a binding offet.
·

tlllllll:

Fairland
RCJ!]&lt; Hilt

Sai\Jrday's Games

twice at Boston College for
marijuana use, may enter the
first phase of the league's
substance-abuse program.
Per the policy, behavior th~t
includes arrest on a substance-abuse related charge
could indicate a problem· and ·
could lead to a player enter-

IGTS18EBMWH

8-2
7-3
7-3

Wheelersburg at Chesapeake

from Page 81

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left handed finger-roll from 5
feet away in the Jane .
As impressive as that stretch
was, it was equaled by what
James did right from the getgo.
Just 88 seconds into the
game, James earned his tirst
professional assist on an alleyoop pass to Ricky Davis for a
dunk. His first shot was a 12footer' from the right corner
that swished and was followed
by an identical shot from the
.opposite comer.
Next came the jumper of the
night, James twisting and
releasing a shot simultaneously from a tough angle in the
right comer over the outslretched arm of 7-footer Brad
Miller. Swish again.

Comprehensive Hearing Evaluation

~

River Valley

. from Page 81

Audiological Diagnosdc F.v~•ln11

Illm

South Point

James

Keep WARM. this winter!
heatloss
occurs
through
your attic.

0

Latest, StatAe-of·l

James looks to Miles for guidance
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
(AP) - LeBron James has
become fast friends and best
buddies with teammate Darius
Miles, and the warm relationship between them has extended to their mothers.
Ethel Miles, 47, has been
tutoring Gloria James, 35, over
the past few weeks as their
sons, Darius and LeBron, have
bonded on and off the coun.
"Any advice his mom needs
or he needs, it's just like having
a second mom, basically.
That's what my mom's trying
to be ... just try to show her the
ropes, tell her about the snakes
we have to go through in the
garden, just try to tell everybody how the world works 111
this game." said Miles, whose
mother has remained a constant presence in his life since
he was chosen No. 3 overall in
the 2000 draft by the Los
Angeles Clippers.
Miles' mother now lives
about I0 houses away from her
son, continuing to cook tor and
oversee the personal development of her only son. She now
has three years of experience
as an NBA mom, and her
insight is helpin~ James and
his mother adJust to the
lifestyle shock that comes with
being a multimillionaire professional athlete.
James and Miles have
become inseparable, the 22.. year-old veteran trying to
.school the 18-year-old rookie
- both of them from single:parent households - who is
:taking the same path to the
NBA as Miles took. His advice
to James includes drinking
enough water, eating the right
food and making the right
:moves on the videogames that
:help them pass the endless
.hours spent tn hotels on road
trips
James was to make hi s regu-lar-season debut Wednesday
·night· fQr the Cavaliers in a
·nationally televised game
·against the Sacramento Kings.
"I made a promise to myself
·Oiat I was gomg to get to know
~ him as a person because he
:was in the same position as I
was coming straight out of
high school, and it's helped me
a rot," James said.
That hasn't stopped Miles
from ta'king part m the tradi·tional pranks pulled on rookies.
: His personal favorite happened twice during the exhillition season: Wi til all of the
Cavaliers pretending to be
· :ready to.run onto the court for
warmups, someone shouted
"Let's go." Out ran the rookies,
'James and Jason Kapono, as
·the veterans stayed tlehind in
the entranceway and laughed.
· . Miles has been throu,l!li some
·turbulence during hts three
·years in the league, starting
with his rookie season on a
.Clippers team loaded with
youth and talent that failed to
mesh as a unit. He was 1raded
:ro Cleveland for Andre Miller
prior to last season and
endured the worst season of his.

HARD HEADED: It took one gigantic co llision and fi ve sti tches to make Minnesota
coach Glen Maso n realize he had something
special in runnin g back Laurence Maroney.
During a preseason scrimm age, the fre shman banged into stanin g free safety Eli Ward .
"Maroney JUSt jumped up and ran right back
to the huddle," Mason said. "And Ward had to
go to the hospital for stitches on his nose. That
was probabl y th e harde st Maroney has ever
been hit on a football field . but he didn't even
seem fazed by it."
Maroney hasn' t been fazed by much since,
either. He's rushed for 622 yards and eight
tou chdowns and had a career game last week
with 22 carries for · 179 yards and a pair of
touchdowns against Illinois.
'

ovc

•--~n

The so ng is the sa me at Illinois, where

BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

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ScoREBOARD
10
Orrville 15-15, Cle. VA SJ 6·6
Versailles 1·15· 15, Middletown Fenwick
15·8·13
Williamsport WestlaU 13-15-15, Albany
A leJC.ander 15·6·2
Zoarville Tusca rawas Vallery 15--15,
Newark Calh . 10·12

.•

Prep Volleyball
'
COLUMBU S, Oh iO (AP) - Region al
l'airings lor the girls state high school vol·

"'yballtournamenl :
REGIONAL FINALS
DIVISION I
At Hudson High School,
Saturday, • p .m.
. Youngs. Aust intown -Fitch (22- 4)
Mentor (24~3)
At Norwalk High School ,

"

Pro Basketball

vs.

National Basketball
Association

Saturdey, 2 p.m.

• Rocky Ri ver Magnificat (20·5) \IS.
Amherst Steele (24-1): Tol. St. Ursula (241) vs. Perrysburg ( 17-8).
At Hilliard Davidson High School,
Saturday, 2 p.m .
Dublin Cottman (23-4) vs . Cin . Ursuline
(23·31
At Vandalia Butler High School,

•

EASTERN C ONFER EN~E
Atlantic Division

W L Pet
1 0 1.000
1 0 1.000
1 0 1.000
, 0 1.000
0
.000
0
.000
0 2 .000
Division
W L Pet
Indiana
1 0 1.000
New Orleans
1 0 1.000
Toro nto
1 0 1.000
Atlanta
0
.000
Ch icago
0
.000
Cleveland
0
.000
Detrotl
0
.000
Mil waukee
0 1 .000
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwaal Dlvltlon
W L Pet
Denver
1 0 LOOO
MinneSota
1 0 t .OOO
1 0 1.000
Utah ·
1 1 .500
Dallas
1 1 .500
San Anlonio
0 0 .000
Houston
Memphis
0 0 .000
Pacific Division
W L Pet
1 d 1.000
L.A. Lakers
1 0 1.000
Sacramento
L.A. Clippers
0 0 .000
0 0 .000
Sea Hie
Golden State
0 1 .000
0 1 .000
PhoeniM
Pori land
0 1 .000

Boston
Orlando
Philadelphia
Wash ington
New Jersey
New York
Miami
Central

Saturday, 4 p.m.

: Cin. St. Ursula (B7·0) vs. Gin . Mt. Notre

!la me (17·8) .
DIVISION II
Semifinals sta rt Th ursday at 6 :30p.m.
· At Stow-Munroe Fall• High School
~ Chagrin Falls Kenston (23-3) \IS. Salem
(22·4) ; Mentor lake Ce lh . (22-3) vs .
~ Qcky River (14·1 2).
: .
At Wooster High SchoOl
.: Mog adore Field (24-2) vs. Carrollton
(2,2 -3); Canal Fullon N W (17- 8) vs .
"~ lersburg W. Holmes (22·3) .
·
At Ontarto High Schbol
~ Canal Winchester (24-1) vs . Bell e'fue
(23-3) ; Sunbury Big Walnut (20·5) vs.
M$umee (20-6) .
:
At Wilmington High School
• Chillicothe Unioto {19·6) vs . Kette ring
Aller (23-2 ): Cin_ Roger Bacon vs. Cin .
itcN icholas ( 14-7).
&lt;
DIVISION Ill
At Barberton High School,
Sat urday, 2 p.m .
· Co lumbiana (19·8) vs. Orrville (22 -4)
At Findlay Uberty-Benton High
School, Saturday, 2 p.m.
· Castalia Marga retta (21 ·5) vs. Genoa
(23-3).
At Logan Middle School,
· Saturday, 2 p .m .
~ loarville Tuscarawas Valley (26-1) vs .
Williamspo rt Westfall (22·3) .
~
At Wilmington High School,
Saturday, 2 p.m.
1
· Versailles
(20-3 ) vs . Johns town
Northridge (20·3)
DIVISION IV
Semifinals start Thu rsday at 6:30p.m.
·
At Hudaon High School
Windham (24· 1) vs. Norrvalk St. Paul
(20-5) ; Kidron Cent. Christian· (24-1) vs .
Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul (20-3)
At Elida High School
Defiance Ayersville (24·1 ) vs . Leipsic
(15·8); Fl. Jennings (16·9) vs . Northwood
(18-7):
At Lancaster High School
Wellsville (25·1) vs . Centerburg (25- 1);
Frankfo rt ALiena (25 ·0) vs . Reodtvllle
~astern (20- 3).
AI Vandalia Butler High School
Jac kson Cen1er (18- 8) vs. Sic:lney
Lehman Cath . (20-6); Sl. Henry (24·1) vs.
Russia (20·3).
WEDNESDAY' S RESULTS
DIVISION I
Cin. MI. Notre Dame 15·15, Gin. Seton
5·5
Cin . Ursula 15- 15, Day. Chaminade·
Julienne 3·2
Cin. Ursuline 15-1 5, Cols. Watterson 1-

'
J

2

GB

1 ';,

GB

GB

',
''

.,
~

GB

'

'

\,
1
1

Tueaday'a Games
Philadelphia 89, Miami 74
San Antonio 83 , Ph oenix 82
LA . lake rs 109, Da11as 93
Wednasd.y'e Gamea
Boston 98, Miami 75
Toronto 90. New Jersey 87
Indiana 89, Detroit 87
Ortando 85 , New York 83, OT
New Orleans 88, AUanta 83, OT
Minnesota 95, Milwaukee 89
Wa&amp;hlngton 99, Chicago 74
Utah 99, Portland 92
Denver 80, San Antonio 72
Sacram en to 106, Cleve land 92
Dall as 95, Golden State 87
Thursday's Gemea
LA. Clippe rs vs . Seattle at Saltama.
Japan, 5:30a.m.
New Orleans al Orlando, 7 p.m.
Denver at Hou slon , B p.m.
Cleveland at Phoen ix, 10 :30 p.m .
Friday 's Games
Washington at Toro nto, 7 p.m
Detro it at Miami. 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Indiana, 7:30 p.m .
Boston at Memph is, 8 p m .
Mi nnesota at New Jersey, 8 p.m .
Atlanta at Chicago, 8 :30p.m.
Seattle vs . L.A. Clippers at Saitam a,
Japan. 10 p.m.
. Philadel phia at Sacramen to, 10:30
p.m.

.

Dublin Coffman 15· 16 , Westerville N. 714
Mentor 15·15 , Massillon Perry 7-5
- Rocky River Magni licat 11- 15- 15 ,
Amherst 15-10-4
Tal. St. Ursula 15- 15, Perrysburg 9· 0
You ngs. Auslhi town·F itch 17-15 , Solon
15-7
DIVISION Ill
Castalia Margaretta 15-15, Rockford
Parkway 10·9
Columbiana 15-13- 16 , Girard 11·15- 14
' Genoa 4-15· 15, Welling ton 15·4·9
' .Joh nstown North ridge 15-15, Anna 10-

Hockey
N•llonal Hookey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Wl T Ol Pts GF
Ph iladtllphia
4 I 3 1 12 27
N.Y. Islanders 4 3 2 0 10 27
New Jersey
3 3 2 0 8 18

GA
20
24
17

12 17
N.Y. Rangers 2 3 2 0 6
Pittsburgh
1 4 3 0 5
16 27
Nortl'\eaat Dlvlaion
WLTOLP1s GF GA
6 2 2 0 14 26 20
Boston
5 1 0 1 11 28 13
Ottawa
4221
11 21 22
Toronto
5 5 0 0 10 22 28
Buffalo
5 5 0 0 10 22 22
Montreal
Southeast Oivl1lon
W l T Ol Pts GF GA
Atlanta
5 1 2 1--. 13 26 18
Tampa Bay
6 0 0 0
12 20 a
Carolina
2 2 4 0 8
16 14
Flo rida
3 5 2 0 8
18 23
Washington
1 7 1 0 3
19 33
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Olvlalon
WlTOlPts GF GA
St . Louis
6 2 0 1 13 25 21
De1roit
5 4 0 0 10 27 22
18 27
Chicago
3 4 3 0 9
17 20
Nashville
3 5 0 0 6
Columbus
3 6 0 0 6
19 22
Northwest Dlvltlon
W l T Ol Pts GF GA
5 2 2 0
12 31 18
Vancouver
5 4 0 0
10 31 23
Colorado
4 4 0 1 9
18 22
Calgary
3 6107
2327
Minnesota
3 500 6
2226
Edmonton
PacHic Dlvlalon
W L T OL Pis GF GA
12 25 23
6 4 0 0
Dallas
4 5 1 1 10 21 28
Anaheim
3 3 3 0 9 24 26
Phoenlk
23 20
4 4 0 0 8
Los Angeles
5 3 0 5
15 26
San Jose
Two poi nts lor a win, one point lor a tie
3nd overtime loss
Tuesday 's Games
Mmnesota 3, Buffalo 1
Boston 2, Montreal 0
Ca rolina 3, San Jose 0
New Jersey 4, N.Y. Islanders 0
An ahei m 3, N .Y. Rangers 1
St.. Louis 1, Nashville 0
Ch icago 2, Phoenix 2, tie
Colorado 4, Calgary 2
Vanco uver 6, Col umbus 3
Wednesday's Games
Anahe im 4, Washington 2
Phil adelphia 5, Florida ~
St. l ou is 6, DetrOit 5
N.Y. Islanders 4, Pittsbu rgh 4, tie
Dallas 4, i;;algary 3, OT
Thursday'• Games
Montrea l at Bostqn, 7 p.!J1.
Toronlo at Buffalo, 7 p.m .
San Jose at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Caroli na at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
Florida at Ottawa, 7:30p.m.
Allanta at Minnesota, B p.m .
Delroft at Nashvi lle. 8 p.m.
Philade lphia at New Jersey, 8 p.m.
Pittsbu rgh at Chicago, 8:30 p. m
Columbus at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Friday 's Games
Allanta al Washington. 7 p.m .
Vancouve r at Phoenix , 9 p.m.
East Coast Hockey League
r~orthern Division
W L T Pi s GF GA
Atlantic City
6 0 0 12 25 11
John slown
410 8229
Re ad ing
3 0 1 7 17 8
Toledo
3 1 1 7 15 14
3 1 0 6 13 13
Whee ling
3 3 0 6 18 19
Cincinnati
2 2 1 5 16. 14
Peori a
Trenton
1 3 0 2 8 17
Oaylon
0 3 0 0 5 15
Southam Division
WL TPisGFGA
Florida
4 1 0 8 23 15
Colu mbia
3 1. 1 7 18 16
Greensboro
3 1 0 6 17 t 2
South Carolina
3 1 0 6 12 8
Charloll e
2 2 0 4 14 13
Florence
1 3 1 3 11 20
Roano ke
1 4 0 2 14 20
Greenville
0 3 0 0 6 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W LTPtsGFGA

' Gwmnen

1 1 7 19 14
t 0 6 17 12
Pensacola
33062022
Columbus
2- 2 2 6 18 17
MISSISSippi
2 2 0 4 8 11
Louisiana
2 3 0 4 15 18
Augusla
1 5 1 3 17 32
Texas
Pacific Division
W L T Pis GF GA
4 1 1 9 20 16
Las Vegas
4 3 0 8 20 21
IdahO
2 4 1 7 12 17
Bakerstield ·
3 1 0 6 14 10
Alaska
2 2 0 4 10 10
Fresno
1 3 1 3 11 17
Long Beach
3 4 5
San Diego
3

3

NOTE : Two points are awarded lor a
win. Overtime and shootout losses earn
one point and are referred to as ties.
Wednesd.ay 's Games
Atlanl1c Cily 3, Charlotte 2
Gwinnen 5 . Mississippi 2
Bakersfield 4, Idaho 2
Alaska 4, Peoria 3
Thursday '• Games
Mississippi at Columbia
Trenton at Greensboro
C~ um bus at Pensacola
Friday 's Gamet
Peona at Alaska
Trenton at Charlotte
Augusta al Florence
Gwinnett at Flonda
A11antlc C1ty at Greensboro
Roanoke al Greenville
Dayton at Johnslown
Idaho at Las Vegas
Wheel1ng at Reading
Cotumb1a at S. Carolina
CIAci na ni arToledo

Soccer
Major League Soccer Playoffs
Semifinals
(Two-leg Aggregate Score Series)
Eastern Conference
D.C. United vs . Chicago
Saturday, Nov. 1
Chicago at D.C. United. 7 :30p .m.
Sunday, Nov. 9
D.C. United at Chicago, 1 p.m
MetroStars va. New England
Satu rday, Nov. 1
New Engl and at MatroStars. 5 p.m.
Sund ay, Nov. 9
MetroStars at New England. 4 p.m
We stern Conference
Los Angeles vs. San Jose
S_a turday, Nov. 1
San Jose at Los Angeles. 10 p.m .
Sunday, Nov. 9
Los Angeles at San Jose, 9 p.m .
Colorado vs . Kansas City
Tuesday, No\i. 4
Kansas Ci ty at Colorado. 9:30p.m
Saturday, Nov. 8
Colorado at Kan sas C1ty, 8 p.m

W l T Pet PF PA
Kansas City 8 0 0 1.000246 130
Denve1
5 3 0 625 184 141
Oakland
2 5 0 286 125 161
San Diego
I 6 0 143 125 195
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pet PF PA
5 2 0 714 150 116
Dallas
Philadelphia 4 3 0 .571 119 136
3 4 0 .429 134 140
N.Y. G1ants
3 4 0 429 135 171
Washington
South
W L T Pet PF PA
Carolina
6 1 0 .857 141 125
4 3 0 .57 1 150 97
Tampa Bay
New Orleans 3 5 0 .375 172 191
1 6 0 .143 114 220
Allan Ia
North
W l T Pet PF PA
6 1 0 857 196 133
Mm nesota
3 4 0 .429 200 166
Green Bay
250 .286 ~21 192
Chicago
1 6 0 143 117 t 84
Delr o1t
West
WlTPctPFPA
Seattle
5 2 o .714 170 131
St.louis
52 0 .714 203129
San Francisco 3 5 0 .375 172 t 42
Anzona
2 5 0 .286 98 193

Sunday's Games
Ch1cago 24 Detron 16
Baltimore 26 Denver 6
St. LOUIS 33. Pi ttsburgh 21
Cincinnati 27 , Seattle 24
Tam pa Bay t 6 . Dallas 0
Ten nessee 30, JacKsonville l7
New England 9. Cleveland 3
Carolina 23, New Olleans 20, OT
N Y. Giants 29, M1 nnesota 17
Arizona 16. San Franc1sco 13. OT
Indianapolis 30 Hou ston 21
Philadelphia 24, N.Y. Jets 17
Kansas City 38 . Bullal o 5
Open .Oakland. Washington . G reen
Bay, Atlanta
Mo nday 's Game
Miami 26. San Diego 10
Sunday, Nov. 2
bak land at Oelroit, 1 p.m
San D1ego al Chicago. 1 p.m
N.Y. Giants al N.Y Jets. ~ p. m
Carolina at Houston. 1 p.m
Indi anapolis at Miami. 1 p.m
Jacksonville at Ballimore . 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Tampa Bay. 1 p m
Pi tlsburgh at Seattle. 4:05p.m.
Cincinnati at Arizona , 4:05p.m .
Washmgton at Dalla's, 4: 15p.m.
Phi la delphia at Atlanta, 4 :1 5p .m.
Sl. Louis at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Green Bay at M1nnesota. 8 :30 p.m.
Open : Buffalo. Kansas City, Tennessee,
Cleveland
Monday,, Nov. 3
New England at Denve r, 9 p.m

Auto Racing

Pro Football
Natiort.ll Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pel PF
New England 6 2 0
750 154
Miami
5 2 0
714 144
Buffalo
4 4 0
500 143
N.Y. Jets
2 5 0 286 111
South
W l T Pel PF
Indianapo lis 6 t 0
857 208
Tennessee
6 2 0 750 224
Hous ton
2 5 D 286 121
Jacksonville
1 6 0 .143 127
North
W L T Pel PF
Baltimore
4 3 0
57 1 160
Cincinnati
3 4 0
429 136
Cleveland
3 5 0 375 115
Pittsburgh
2 5 0 .286 132
West

Thursday, October 30,

PA
129 '
87
148
~ 18
PA
126
167
200
184

PA
132
156
130
179

2003 CART Champ Car World Series
schedule, standi ng s
The 2003 CART series schedu le and
standings. with w inners in pare nlhes9s :
Feb 23- Grand Pri)( of St Petersburg.
Sl. Petersburg. Fla . {Paul Tracy) .
, ..
Marc h 23 - Tecate Tehnex Grand Pnx.
Monterrey, Mex1co (Paul Tracy) .
April 13 - Toyota Grand Pri11 , long
Beach . Calif. (Pau l Tracy )
•
May 5 - London Champ Car Troph y,
Brands H atc h, Ke nt England (Sebastien
Bourdais)
May 11 German 500, Lausitz.
(Sebast1en Bourda1s)
May 31 - MilwauKee Mil e 250. West
Allis . Wis. (M ichel Jourdam Jr.)
June 15 - Grand PnM of Monterey.
Mont erey. Calif. (P&lt;llr lck Car pen t1er)
Ju ne 22 - G.l. Joe's 200 , PorHand,
Ore_ {Aclnan Fernandez )
Jul y 5 Cleveland Gran d Prix
(Sebaslien Bourdais)
July 13 .- Molson Indy Toronto. (Paul
Tracy)
July 27 Molson Indy, Vanco uver,
British Columb1a (Paul Tracy)

'
www.mydallysentlnel.cqrn

Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003

-·Sentinel - 1\.e
CLASSIFIED '·
~ribune

2003

Aug. 3'- Marlo Andretti Grand Pri x at
Roa d Americ a. Elkhart lake, Wis . (Bruno
Junqueira)
Mid -Ohio Grand Pr iJP:
Aug . 10 LeKmgtori. (Pa ul Tracy)
Aug . 24 - Molson Indy, Mont real
(Michel Jourdain Jr.)
Aug. 31 - Grand Pr1x of Denver. (Bruno
Junq ueira)
Sept . 28 Grand Pri M Americas .
Miami. (Mario Dom inguez}
Ocl. 12- Telmex G 1gante Gran Premia
MeMico, Mex1co City (Pa ul Tracy)
Oct. 26 - Lexmark Indy 300, Surfers
Parad1se . Australia . (Ryan Hunter-Reay)
Nov. 2 - Champ Car 500, Fontan a.
C~llf. , pp'd , wildfires
Driver Standings
I . Paul Tracy, 226
2. Bruno Junqueira , 199.
3. Michel Jourdain, 195 .
4. Sebast1en Bourda.is , 159
5. Patrick Carpenlier. 146.
6. Mario Dominguez, ~ 18·.
7. Onol Servia. 108
B. Adrian Fernandez. 105.
9. Darren Manning,- 103.
10. AleJC. Tagliani . 97 .
11 Jimmy Vasser, 72 .
12 . Ma r10 Hab erfeld, 7~
13 . Roberto Moreno, 71 .
14 . Ryan Hunter·A eay. 67.
15 . Tiago Mon teiro, 29.
t6 . M1ka Salo.-26 .
17 . Ma11 Papis. 25.
18 . Rodolfo Lavin , 17 .
19 . Gualter Salles , 11
20 Patrick lemarie . B.

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Final schedu le, standings
2003 Indy Racing League
The 2003 Indy Rac ing l eague schedu'fe and standi ngs. with winners in parentheses
March 2
Toyo ta Indy 300.
Homestead. Fla . (Scott Dixon}
March 23 - Coppe r World Indy 200,
Avo ndal e. Ariz. (Tony Kailaa n)
April 13 - Indy Japan 300 , Suzuka.
(Scott Sharp)
May 25 - India napo lis 500. (Gil de
Ferran)
June 7 - Longhorn SOOK, Fort Worth,
Texas (AI Unser Jr.)
June 15 - Honda lrld y 225. Fountain.
Colo . ~Scott Dixon)
June 28 - SunTrus t Indy Challenge.
Richmonc:l . Va. (Scott Dixon)
July 6 - Indy 300 , Kansas City, Kan .
(Bryan Herta)
July 19 Firestone Indy 200,
Gladevill e. Tenn. (Gil de Ferran)
July 27- Michigan lncly 400, BrooK lYn
(AieJC. Barron)
Aug. 10 - Emerson Indy 250 , St.
Louis. (He lio Caslroneves)
Aug 17 - B elterra Casino Indy 300,
Sparta. Ky. (Sam H arnish Jr.)
Aug . 24 Fires lone Indy 225.
Nazare th . Pa _(Hetio Castroneves)
Sept. 7 - De lphi Indy 300 , Jol iet. Ill.
(Sam Harnis h Jr.)
Sept. 21 - Toyota Indy 400 . Fontana ,
Claif. (Sam Harnish Jr.)
Oct 12 - Chevy 500, Fort Wo rth .
Texas . (G il de Ferran )

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Offtee 11o~~
Monday thrll Friday
8:00 a.m .. to 5:00 p.m.
. HOW IQ WRITE AN A12
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

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\\\Ill\( I \ I I ' " '

YARD SALE·

1 Big

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale. Chester Township ,
Meigs County. send letters
of 1n1erest to : Th e Daily
Se ntinel, PO Box 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Say good bye to high phone
bills! New local phone service with FREE unlimite d
nation w1de tong Distance
1·800-635·2908
or
WW!N .FreedomMovie.co m/itp
aysyou. Local Agents want·
ed.

garage sale· rain or
shine , Saturday Nov. 1st.
Bam-? corner of Eag le
Ridge &amp; Pi ne Grove Road s
just off St. At 7 at Meigs
Mem ory ;·Gardens. lots ol
old. old stuff· 10 old 011
lanterns (some with red
globe s). 10 old electri c
lamps. 2 old wood clocks, 2
old butter chums , 100's ol
pieces of ol d glassware
(p ink, red. ye llow, blue ,
glass , greene, olcl corn
she ller, crocks &amp; stone jarsDona ugho, old ' ro cki ng
horse, old 1ools. much, much
more. (740)992·75 99

If so, you qualify for a

lor
Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!

r

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

r6
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~

H ll.t&gt; WAN'Il:ll

c!JallipoU• JBatlp Gtribunt
Joint Jltalant l.tgilttr
The Daily Sentinel
6unbap limtl -6tnantl.
.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

: Subscriber's Name · ·
.
'
:Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I

:City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 '
• 1 Phone
•·
I
I
·I

Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
:
Ohio ValleY, Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.................._._______

--~
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lwrlght@lic.net

www.comics.com

PLr.ASANT

%~

"'ltnh 1 "

Sat. Nov. 1, 9·? At. 7 SOuth,
3 , mile~ from Gallipolis.
Addressers wanted Immedi Clothing 8nd lots of mlec.
ate ly! No eKperlen ce necesThree family yard sale, Frl &amp; sa ry. Work at home . Can
Sat., on St. At. 218. "TWo (.005 )447·6397
mllae aouth ol MercervUie.
An awesome )obi $6.·$9 pa r
Yard Sale 1 12 Grsen hou r aller tralnlngl No &amp;MPI·
Terrance Ct. Mond ay Nov. rlence n11dedl FuiVpa rt
3rd and TutldiY· Nov. 4th. time , Flexib le achaduling,

_,.II

OaUipolls Career College
(Caree rs Ctose To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446-4367,
1·800-214·0452

_,:;R::ea~~..:;-9::l0.:·0::;5:;,·1:,::2;,;;74;::B:.·...,

176 ..........._.. .... ..,.......~

JT~UAJ'-"

I

25 Strlouo Poot&gt;to Wonted
Wh o wanl lo LOSE welghl
We Pay You Caa h for the
poundo you LOSEI
9ai.im~·4;;:P;;m~·~....'::"~:-'-l Convenient ~o maroy loca·
lion,
20+ pos ition s avall - Sale, Natural , No Drug1 .
ablo, Cal l 9-9, M·F, 1·888· 800·201-(1832
974·JOBS

i

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26-canta anv Item . Friday AVONI All Araat l To ~uy or
31st tnd Saturday 11t ·at Sell. Shirley Speari, 304·
Angle't Fletmarktt. For 615· 1429.
mora lnlormatlon (140)~92·
Community Action Is aeek·
11734
lng an EPPIHWAP SPE ·
-4 Family Yard Sale lnalda the CIALIS~ for lhe Emergency
Fl utland Fire Departme nt, Services Programs. EPP,
BuU dlng
Saturday, · November . 1st SMOC · ERS,
Inspection , Train ing and
trorn 8:00AM • 3:00PM
Weatherization 8)(parlenca
Frj. 31at. Sat tat, nice prelerrad. Good read ing,
clothea, tw in bed &amp; bedding , writing ,
compreh-ens ion,
· Chrlatmea
decorations , "training, orga nl;z:at!onal and
Home Interior, bugahellde, computer' akllla a MUST.
clarin et, mise , raaao nable Send or deliver resume and
'p rices , throug h Rutland; references to GMCAA,
t.,angavltle , turn left off 124 anentlon Sandra Edwards,
on to 325 4 1/2 mllea. Watch 8010 N. Sjate ~auta 7 ,
tor signs.
Cheshire, Ohio, 45620 by
11 ·03·03. GMCAA Is and
Garage Sale : October 3~
EOE.
November 1. Christmas
Items, toolt, 36• storm dOOr, Earn money tor Christmas
ttuck tool bOx, drlll-preas. by selling Avon ca ll Joyce
~75-6919
7987 Slale Route 654.

,,

Affordable Service. Hauling,
pa inting, power waehlng,
drl\lewav repair, tea l coatIng,
gutter&amp;,
chimney,
pluMbing. Jack ot all tradal.
30yra. eKJ). Senior Discount
Fret Estimates. (304)882·
2196, (304)377-8288

PICKJ PA!NJEBS
Interior. &amp; Exterior
Senior Citizens Discount
Aealdentlal, Commercia l &amp;
mobil• homes.
Roofs , barns, pressure- .
washing.
ExperienCe &amp;References
available
304-895-3074
Free esti mates call M·S
8am-7pm.

sn with Elde rly,

light chores
or odd jobs. (304)675·74BO

L,e.o_oiFORiiiHiiious
oiREN"rli
,;L&lt;;
iiirio-roJI
4 br, 1 112 DalhS. Localed on
SR. 141 nea r Ce nlenary.
$700 per month . Deposit &amp;
reference req uired. Call
Wiseman Real Estate at
740-446·3644

I 1-IJCE:

IT. MA~S
"'Q ll l.«JI'.

(HI N,VC::IIt
0
D

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Ho~m;

FORS&gt;\LE

BUSINESS

I

OProRilJNnY

~

bt-J IO..,VA ~~T~~~U':LISH
lNG CO. recomm ends tha
ou do business with pea
le you know, and NOT tc
end money through the
mail until you have investi
aled the offerina.

r.

It

Tw1n R1vers Tower IS acceptIng applicat1ons for wa1t1ng
liSt lor Hud -subs1zed , 1• br.
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

t

SP-\CE

AU real eltale tdvertltlng
In thla MWIIPflper Ia
tub)ect lo the Federal
Fair Hout~ing Act of 1968
which makes It IIIIQillto
adv•rtl•• "any
prefe rence, limitation or
dlacrlmlnlltion b"ed on
race, color, religion, 1ex
famlllalltatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
mah any such
preference, limitation or

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FOR RENT

rlO

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-=--·-

1

·····-·- -

A restaurant cou nter p1e
cupboard has slide dOOr! :
an o a~ drop ·leal table. near
Me1gs·Galha l1ne. (740!992·
7012
Buy or
sell
R1venne
AntiQues . 1124 East Ma10
on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740.
992-2526
Russ Moore .
owner

F"''

ML•iCELI..A~DUS
"'b]I(_R-\NUISE

4 pc bedroom su1te Blond
w/gold tnm. Good cond 1t1orr.
C1rca
1940's
$300
1740)446-2776

For Sale: Broyhill sofa. swiv·
el rocker &amp; cof1ee table $200 BooJ.;case . chest drawers.
dresser enterlamment can·
OBO 74().446·1369.
ter. h1deabed. relngerator,
stove. and microwave stand.
Good Used Appliances.
74D-446-9742
Recondit ioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers ,
Diamond Engagement ring
Dryers,
Ra nges .
and
With appra1sa1 740·256·
Refrige rators, Some stan at
$95, Sk.aggs Applia nces, 76 1610
Vine St. , (740)446-7398
Hospital bed Brand new,
never been used! Electrlt
Heat·N-Gio Propane Insert.
lift. asK1ng $400. 740-441Maximum outp ut. 24 .000
7390
BTU _ Excellent ConditiOn .
$1.000 OBO (304)895·
JET
3769
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebu il t In
IT PROV. Dining Room by
Stock. Call Ron Evans, t-Dre,.;el. Oval table wi1h 3
800-537-9528 .
leaves. 6 chairs. plus hutch.
$500. (304)675·2090 Leave
Message.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar
Late
model
almond
For
Concrete.
Angle.
whirlpool washe r, $85: Hot
Channel . Ftat Bar. Steel
Point washer, Wh1 rlpool &amp;
Grating
Fo r
Dra,na,
GE dryers, all white , $65
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
each . Call after Spm. 740·
&amp;:rap Metals Open Monday.
446-9066.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Lik e new recliner $140:
Thursday.
Satu rday
l
Qu een slze-sofa ·bed $125;
Sunday. {740)446-7300
Brass-frame lull- size -bed
$65: Broyhill end table $70
Oftlca Fumhurfl
740·388·0460
New. scratch &amp; Dent.
Save 70%. 1 -800- 527·4662
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street ,
Chapel Road . Porter, Oh io.
Guyandotte/Huntinglon .
(740)446·7444 1·87(·830·
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
Weights &amp; bench set. $1C)().
financing , 90 days same as
Two ~0 speed bikes, $30.
cas h. Visa/ Ma ster Card.
larson slorm doot. $50.
Dr1ve - a- little save alot
. 740·445·2350.
_T_
hO_m
-ps_o_n_s_A
_p_p-ll_a_n_
ce- &amp;
BunniNG

For sale: House trailer and 1
Mo~"EY
acre. in Me rcervi ll e. Call I &amp; 2 BR, $295 lo $359 per
roLoAN
740·256·6663.
month , plus utilities. N~ar
Holzer, no pets . 740·446·
New 2003 Ooublewide. 3 BR
Mortgagas, Mortgagasll!
2957
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
We offer competitive interest
and - &amp;29 5/ mo. ~-800 ·691 ra les on mortgages and
1 and 2 bedroom apa rt·
6777
debt cons olidations and
dltcrlmlnatlon .~
ments, furnished and unfurspecial ize in good and bad
No Problem Sale· want a nishec:l, security depos1t
credit. Call lol l free to fi nd
Thlt newapaper will not
new sectional home? No required . no pe ts, 740·992·
knowingly accapl
out aboul our low interest
Problem. Need foundation 22 ~8 .
advertiMmtnll ror real
rales and receive e)(per1
and septi c? No Problem.
est1t1 which Is In
advice.
Need ut11 itles run or drive- 2 bedroom homes In family
violation
of
the
law,
Our
1·888-739-8719
way? No Prob lem. Wanl big oriented parK. ~a t er furret~dere ara hereby
nished. No pets. Call 740savings on a 2003 model.
lnfarrn.d thai all
Need extra cash? We are
441-4 540 leave a clear mesdwelling•
actvlrtlseclln
No
Prob
lem.
Cole '~ Mobile
lhe loan specialist, we don 't
sage
thl1 new1paper tre
Home s. U.S. 50 East,
speculat e. good or bad cred·
IVIIIIble on In equal
Altlens, Ohio. 740-592-~972
it excepted . There are no
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
opportunity bales.
Since ~967, Where You Get
fees, fast app roval. and low
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
Your·Money's Wor th
lnteresl rates. For mol-e info
PRICES AT JACKSON
call to ll free 1·866-882ESTATES, 52 Westwood
lo'ts&amp;
MUST SELL
6875.
Dri ve from $297 IQ $383
ACRFAGE
bedroom . 2 bath. in Ne
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
aven. Owner moving ou
I'RO~ONAL
Racine , 740-446-2568.
Equal
f state .
Pri ced be lo
Repair-675·7388 . Fo&lt; sale .
SER\'I(E;
Housing Opportunity.
ppralsal value. For mor
- - - - - - - - - - re-cond itioned
automat ic
washers &amp; dryers, retrigera·
nformatlon
,
and
pictures
g
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
TURNED DOWN ON
tors , gas and electric
oryb cpm(cod
o
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
room apartments 1111 Village
ranges, air conditioners. and
102703)
.
Or
call
even
ing
Manor
and
Rivers ide
No Fee Unless We W in!
wri nger washers . W ill dO
304 882·3973
Apartments
in
Middleport.
1·886·582·3345
H~
repairs on maJor bra nds in
From $278·$348. Call 740U I \I I '-.I \I I
· Houae for sale by owner, 4
shop or at your home.
992·5064 . EQual Houtlng
lli;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bed room, 2 balh. lor addl·
Opportunlll81.
FORHn~....
tl onal information or to view 1·3 BED FORECLOSED
Used furniture storl, 130
.:KLII.
on line www.orvb.com- HOMES. Buy trom $199/mo.
Modern one bedroom apt. Bula'JIIIt Pika. Mattreues,
codelt0903
or
ca ll 4% down, 30 years 0 8.5%
dressart,
ooucr1e1,
740-4&lt;e-Q390.
3 br., 2 ba1h , app II ance1, (740)992·2828 01 740·992· apr. For LlltlngsJiri'formatiOn
bunkbtels, bedroom suites,
coli t-800·7 19·3001 Ex1 Near Flodney-l.argt 2 br. 1 rtcllnars . Greve monu ~
niCe condition . Central-heat, 3884
1709
aprox. 1,900 SQ . ft . Alklng
bolh. ortoched garoge. S400 mtnts.
710-446-4782 . ·
NICI "" ~·Bidroom home In
$69,000 . 740·379·96e7.
2 bedroom home in Rutlend , per month, ref. tnd deposit. Gallipolll OH. Hours 10·
Country -alttlng . Qrut for a
No po10 . 74~6·2801.
4pm. Slop by
3br. 2 lull baths, decK, 1tart1r or retirement. afford· OU1 ol high Willi, $325 piUO - -- - - - - &amp; depoait , Now Taking Apptlcatlont- Ultd kitchen cabl n11s fOr
whirlpool tu b. Located netr ablo . (304)576·2201 aH11 rtftranCII
schoo l In Oallla . Owntr 8pm
(740)992-o309·
35
Wilt
2 Bodroom 111e. 74D-«6·2e37 or 740·
financ ing
11
available. ~-------Townhouse
Aptrtmentl, 245-(1557.
(304)675· 1352
Ranch
Style
. Ho mo, 2001 Doublewldt, 2 Car lncludu Water Sewage,
Galllpolll Ferry arta beside Garag'e, 3 Btdroomt, 2 Traah, $350/Mo, 740·448· Wat h•r $95; dryer $95:
4 Bedroom 2 Bolh Pomeroy 84 luml1or. 3B~ . "~' Eal In Stthl, All Appllancll. B 0008.
.
electrtc range $95: refrldgerOhio .
View kitchen , 1·112 bath, large monlh loaoo, $BOO dopoolt,
ato r Wl')l1a (like new) $195:
mo.
Loc11od
by
$500/
Photo/lnlormatlon · o ntln t 20x20 FA, Attached lingle
Pl. .unt Valley Apartment Frldgldlare refrigerator $1 50:
wWw.ORV9.com
co·de car garage, CIA, Gae He at, VInton. Available Oecamber Are now taking AppllefiUons
wohar &amp; dtyef Htt $300
60603, Call (740)992·361Kl olrtlng on .9 ol acre mil. 1ot. Coli lrom October 30th lor 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR. ,
until
Novlmber
2rid . A pplication• art taken each; gas range $9&amp;: oouch
4 BEDROOM, 4 BATH Shown
by
eppt
Ca ll (740)388-(1118.
(vary. nice. tan &amp; brown).
Monday thru Friday, fron-1
95 34 1 7
16,;.
HOUSEl Forocloouro only 1304
-.;;
,;.",;.;.,;._ _ __, ---:----~-$125: couch $50: 2 run olro
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Ottlco II bedl wlbox tprlngs and
$9,900. For llatlngo Cell 1·
MOIIILEFOR.,I_f:~
2br. Houoa. Ro1ollncO
Located at 1151 Evtlllretn mattr11us $200; pictures
800-719·3001 Ext F144
"""""
required . $350. 111011th 11n1,
• $350. o.poolt No P1110. Drive Point Pleannt. WV $12 each; lampa $10 each;
Phone No io (3041675·5806 . nice fireplace lnMrt $ 150; 2
Beau tiful Dream Home
(304)875-~78
E.H .O
3200eq. ft. With wrap around 10 Used homts under
love etata $95 each ; -4
do&lt;k, upo1alro balcony, 4·112 $2,000.00. Cell Nlldd . Call 3 Br. houotlor rent Locolld : : - - - - - - : - - - chairs S20 each.
•acres, 4br., 2ba, large living ('T~~· ·
on Sanders Drive. S55Q·ptr Tara
Townhoull
room wllirep lace, dlntng
1
,~. .'tftOnth. Oeposlt and refe r· Apartments. Vary Spacloul,
room . 2 car garage. Owner 2 bednXIII,.~ on Nnted 101, ettces
required .
Call 2 Bedrooma, 2 Floora, CA. ~
f inancing
Is
available. doel not heWIIo be moved . Wiseman Real Elllata 740- 112 Bath , Newly Carpeted,
(304)675·1352
$5,900. Col1 740-448-3617. 4&lt;e·36+4.
Adul1 Pool &amp; Boby Pool ,
Patio: Start $385/Mo. No
New Starter Log Homes, w/ New 14 wide on ly $799.00 3 br. nouse In lhl country, Pe·ts, Laue Plus Securfly
1 acre. Ready 10 go down ond only $169.76 pe r water furnithad. No pttl. Deposll Requlract, Oaya:
$27,000. 740-256·9247 or month ..
C.ll
Karena Nlc. yard , $400/deposit, 7 40-446-3-tS, ; Evenlngt: Deer Riffles
asle.
740-645-&lt;J870
(740)385·7671 .
$400/morrth 740·245·5084. 740-367-(15()2.
(3041675-6720

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5 person Hot Tuo New
pump. cover, and d1g1tat cOn·
trots . $1 ,200. 740-339-0213
leave a message.

Nice new home, 3 br, 1 bath,
garage. No pets. Deposit &amp;
reference required. 740·
245-5114.

2 bel. w/w carpel , ai r, porch
Very n1ce, . no pels. In
Gal lipolis. 740--446-2003 or
200 1
Fleetwood 74Q-446· 1409.
Doublewide. 3 br, '2 bath. all
applian ces. $35,000
or 2 Bedroom Mob1le Home .
assu me note. Move or lot Located behind Fox's Pizza
Road PI
renl option. Located by on Sandhill
Pleasant .
$350./rr\onth
Vinton. 740-983· 1900.
(inc ludes water and sewer)
97 Redman 16x72, $13,995; Call (3041675·3423
96 Liberly 14x70 $7,995;
2 br. 14x70 clea n. $375
Call740·709·11 65.
'
month , $375 deposit. 740·
Cole's Mobile Homes ·
446-4060 or 740-441 -1283
US so East, Athen s. Ohio.
45701, 740-592 -1972

&lt;Cl 2003 by NEA, Inc.

L'o

Ai'ARThlll&gt;'TS
FORRI-:NT

446-4254 or 740-446.0205 .

&lt;tfl
II\\\( 1\1

r

New 3 br. R anch Style
FORREN'r
home. 1 bath. garage. 1 yr.
lease-no pets. Refe rence ' &amp;
Commercial property lor
deposit $500 per month
rent- a store fron t 1n
740-4 46-2801
H1stoncal
downtown
Pomeroy, Oh faw~g nver.
Newly remOdeled on 51. AI.
(740)589·7122
141. Fully equipped kitchen .
2. bedrooms.. large bath ,
large family room/di nmg Mobile home lot, will take 14
room . No pets $450 month, Of 16 wides . $125 month .
$400 deposit. Phone 740- 740·446·0175.

www

www. gllllpoll~e~trHrcoll~e .com

1

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

POUCIES: Ohk) Vllltly Publlahlng rtHIVal 1M right to edit, re}eet, or ctnctl any ac:llf tny tlml. Errort must be reported on the firat dly of pubtic8tton and
Trlbun•!kntinei·Afillter will tM rnponelble for no more than lhe cott of lhe IIIMC• occupied by the error tnd oNv the first in...-tkm. We lha/1 not bllli.tM
any lo.. or expen.. that r..ulta lrom the publication or omlaaion or an advtftiMment. Cooectlon will be made in the tirat available tditlon. • Box numbef
.,, tlways confidential. • Current rate ctrd appli ... • All rNI estate ltdvertlaementa are eubject to the F~el Fair Housing Act ot 1968. • Thie
1ceep11 only hlltp wanted ada lftH! Ing EOE atandlrde. We will not knowingly accept any advertising in wiolllion of the '-w.

Fullli~ne help needed. Appl y
betwee n 10· 11 am , M.on.,
Thurs.,
Sat.
McC iures
RestaUra nts. All locations .
Jackson Pike . Gallipoli s
740-446-3837: Mi ddleport
740·992·5248;
Pom eroy
740 -992-6292.

L,r46
__

Rt.
7.
Girls/womens
coats/jackets , Quills, bedding, lots or Items, lays.

··Once you have algned up lor the Senior Dlacount, your renewal ·notlce will ~ellect your discount.

Sunday Dlaplay : 1 : 00 p.m .
Thuraday for Sundaya

Visit us at: 200 Mam Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at:(304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

KIT&amp; CARLYLE

FOUND

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Publication

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Are you 65 on older?

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Display Ads
All Dlaplay: 12 Noon ::Z
Bualneaa Deya Prior

Sunday• Paper

Medi Home Health Agency.
Inc. seek ing lu!Hme stall
Physical Therapist for Ohio
and West Virgi nia cli ent
base. We offer a competilive
sa lary, bene tits pacKage .
and 401K E.O .E. $5.000
S IGN -ON-BONU S. Please
send resume to 352 Second
SENIOR PORTRAITS!
Avenu e,
Gallipolis,
OH
Gel Yo u best deal at :
. Friday &amp; Saturday 31st &amp; 4563 1. Attn . Diana Harless ,
Ma in Street Photography.
1st. Pome roy, l aurel Cl1ll R.N. Cl inical Manager
51 1 Main Slreet ,
Ad, Paul Marr residence
Point Pleasant
Call lor Appointment
Inside Sa le Fr iday and Med i Home Health Agency,
13041575· 7279
Saturday. Four th
Place Inc. seeK ing a Speech
Beechgrove ·Ru tland. Xmas Therap1st for the Gallipolis.
gilts and more. (740)742· Oh io area. We offer a com3082
petitive sa l ary, benefits
GIVEAWAY
package, and 40 1K . E.O.E .
Racine Route 124 across Please sencl resume to 430'
sc hool.
high
Abandoned kitten s, to give- from
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
away. Call 740- 367-0359 or Collectibles, antiques. fish - OH 45631. Attn: Diana
ing, household . Come see! H arless. Clinical Manage r.
740-446·2805
October 31 -November 1
Free Puppies : Mixed breed .
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon .
2 males and 2 females. Saturday-November 1, BAM· Call 740·446·3358
5PM _3rd·house on left. top
Please call (740)992-0640
ot Chester Hill (St- Rl-248) Now Hi ring· AN , LPN &amp;
Friendly female cat spayed Clothing:
Gir lS
(2T/5) , Home Health Aides for local
&amp; declewed . 740-446· 1944 Boys(4T/ 14H)
and homehealt h agency, app ly at
leave a message.
Women's( 14/26),
coats , ~3 1 05 Hiland Ad., Pome roy,
'shoes, toys whole set of (740 )992·0990 M· F,
8·
Ki ttens looki ng for loving Rescue Hero's , Dolls. Little 4:30pm
home. Aprox 8 weekS old. p
At. 141 In Centena ry. 740 _ eople , etc. Christm as Tree.
R esidential
Treatment
446·475 3,
YARD SALE·
Facility, now hi ring Direct
Ca re wo rkers &amp; one cook
L.a.• AND
Pr.
position needed tor boys
4 Family Yard Sale at Krodel progra m. Pay based on
Clubhouse . Salurday, Nov experience. Call 740;37 9·
Lost- female Bosto n Terrier 1. 8:00-?
9083 ask lor" Lisa.
(no tall ). Kingsbury area Children's clothes, boy and
Salurday, (7401992·3 185
girls from sizes 3T·16. Home Stytisl needed lull and partdecor, women's
clothing, llmq. Be you r own boss.
Lost· Reward when black
crafts, bedding, 2-sea\e r- Re nt or wo rk on commis·
biHio ld rel'-lrned with pict ures
battery powered jeep, paint· sion . chose your own sched&amp; important papers to
ule. Call 740-446-4247 .
ball equip., cd's ball cards.
C.C.Frye, PO Box 135, New
Personal Touch
Haven, WV 25265, 304-593·
Yard Sal e 1917 N, Main
0685
Co mmu nily
Chest
Street. 8-4pm . Misc. &amp; turni· The
Buye r's Guide IS now
YARD SALE
lure Sal. Nov. , ,,
accepting applications lor
outside sa les represents ·
lives. Req uires excellent
customer relation skill s, honYARD SAIL·
Absolute Top Dollar : U.S. esty &amp; dependability. To
~
GAlLIPOUS
. Sil ver,
Gold
Coins, apply: bri ng in or mail you r
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold resum e to: The Community
Friday, Nov. 31 , from 9-?,
Chest Buyer' s Guide 28
Rings ,
U.S. Currency,32 1 Upper"R iver Ad . lots of
locust Streel , Gallipolis OH
M .T. S . Coin Shop, 151
45631 .
misc. Cash &amp; carry.
seco nd Avenue, Gallipolis,
740·446·2842.
Oct 31 &amp; Nov. 1-2, 1rom 9I \ll'lll\\11\1
1'1wNt,;.Biii
usiiiOONiliNG-·
Spm. 5 mile s S. on 218 tram

Final Driver Standings
1 Scott Dixon . 507.
2. Gil de Ferran. 489
3. Helio Castroneves. 484.
4 Tony Kanaan . 4 76.
5. Sam Harnish Jr , 461
6. AI Un ser Jr. . 374
7. Tomas Scheckter, 356.
8 Scott Sharp. 351
9. Kenny Brack. 342.
10. Tara Takagi, 317.
11 Dan Wheldor\, 312.
12. Roger Yasukawa. 30 1.
13. Bryan Herta. 277.
14 Rob bie Buhl , 261.
15. Greg Ray, 253.
16. Buddy Rice . 229.
17 Alex Barron , 216
18. Sarah Fisher. 2 11 .
19. Buddy Lazier, 201.
20. Felipe Gi aflone , ·199.

Word Ads
.D ally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day' s Paper

In-Column: 1:00 p.m .

110
1.

3L\egi5ter

Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
.
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

• Start Your· Ads With A keyword •lnclude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include: Phone Number And Address When Needed
• • Ads Should Run 1 Days

PoMtliOV/MUJIJLE

ANNOUNCE)\1EI'o'TS

ter

,

Mlf

J

j

..__ _
----

iSium.,u,sioiiiiii.; ...il.
..-

'
pipel.

BlocK, briel(, sewer
windows. lintels, etc. Cla_uqe
Winters. Rio Granda. OH
Call740·245·5121 .

t

FOR~- :1

::::'
AKC reg. mtle tnd !em••
Lhaao AgiO 's $500 ror p•"·
Phone 1•0·388·84.( ~ 4'r

740.388-8858.
--,------~

e

AKC Tricolor Beagles, wk .
old, $100, (740)992-4169
Full breed miniature COllie
pupplts. Parenti on preml(·
•• · Call 740·645·4155 or
740·441-(1855.
One 9 week old Ja'*Rusaa ll
Terrier
pupp~.
female $125. Ctll 740--258--

r

1862.

iNii;;..-~-----.

MlSOO. ·:1
•-•116111iiiiilJMENI"Siiiiiiliio-"'·
-

~ 2 String Jumbo Alvtrllll:
Gu l1ar
Mother-Ot-Ptail
Inlays mint condition . $400.
Drumoel 4 ploco lnclud•
Throno/Ha1s/Craah . S25q.
(304)6715-7004 or i304)87f-

Polatotto lor oela 501 $1t,

Mon-Sat ,

116002

91111

Route 12•, R~st:ta.,_, Oh,
(740)378-62111

.

�Pag~

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

'8" coklmn Inch weekdays
'15"' coklinn Inch Sat. or Sl,lnday
CAU. OUR OFFICE AT 1192·2155

WALLEYE
FISH FRY
All YOU CAN EAT
FOR $6.00

Nonh
4 Q !r6 'l
¥ K' '

EBff
Rutland American Legion

••

November 2,'2003

v

11 :00 am until 6:00 pm
Come o11e come all
Everyo11e Welcome

•

Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department
Monthly Auction At Fire Station

•

Cellular

Saturday, November 1st 6PM
Electric scooters, New electronics,
All kinds ol Christmas Stuff, OVC
Items, Bath accessories

....

•

r

740-992-2738
will be holding Dible Study
n ·ery Sunday from

concept comirrx to Silver Bridge Plaza.

Notv hiring complete staff-Managtr,
As!iJtant Marwgers,full 'and part time
sales aJsociates. "Shoe Sensation '~ will feature ovtr 10,000 pairs of shoes for tire
family. PLUS "Undergound Attitude" will
Jeaturt famous label junior apparel at
'!.••lerJrror.rrrdprices.]OB FAIR-Saturday,
Nor• 1-Fronr toAM to SPM at Silver
Bridge Plaza in Gallipolis. • ~
To schedule arr interview plta~tcaiiJ,
~
Heather Hayden toll-free
~
\:;877-230-7473 or email your resume to\-;;

119 W. Second St. ·• Po m eroy. OH
740-992-2139

Welcomes Back Roger Pullins
A 20 Year Vetnun ofAutomvbile Machi11t: Wf;rk
,We do automobile mac:hine work. including
complete head work. block &amp; pi ston work,
~:res urfaci ng nywheels, repair of alternators &amp;

&gt;

~ ; starters and make hydraulic hoses. Come in
·

and get quality work at affordable pri ces

NOVEMBER SPEC/.4L

at 201 East Main Street in
Pomeroy starting Nov. 2nd
[\'CI'}'OOe Wekome!

r

iO

--

a~

1

1983 Ford Country Squire

Ste. Wag Fta Car, 92K, 302
OD Transmission. New tires,
new brakes, rebuilt transmissian, new batte ry, new
e~~:haust, no rust. $600 or
trade for dirt bike or 4-wheel-·
er. 740-446-7527.

the

;savingsi
'

OR TRADE

~.

•

1n

Today's
1Cias · ·eds!

r

I \R\1 '-II 1'1'1 II..,
,\ 11\I..,I(Uh.
LtVI'STOCK

wheel drive S-10 or Ranger

wlauto; 97 Chevy Cavalier
engine. 350, (740)992·5532

FREE ESTIMATES

Burgundy 93 Eagle Vision,

Auros

s

I

FOR ALE

.I

0436.

i

080. 740-256-1652.

TRuCKS

$5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
FOR SALE
Hondas. Ghevys, Jeep s, etc!
Cars from $500. For listing s 02 Chevy Silverado 4WD.
,·800-719·300 1 ext3901
Auto, loaded. eMtended cab.
excellent
condition .
1980 Chevy Corvette. L48
Charcoal, 16 ,000 miles
engine, automatic , runs
$23,000. 740·388·8869.
good; new tires. Asking
S5,700. Call 740 -367-0244.
1991 Ford F- 150 Lariat .
1983 Ford 302, automatic t;xcellent condition w/toplor sale . $200. (304 }675 - per. 132,000 original miles
_41_4_;_3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ S3,500 firm. 740-446-1168

Ac~Jill:s

,

96 Chevy' P.U. 1/2 ton , A.T.,
P.S., P.B .. 4 .3 V6 engine.
83,000 miles. Excellent
Condition. (304)675-7595

j

Star Craft Camper 17ft .
popouls, air, bath , hot water,
stove. $6,500. (304)458-

C&amp;C
General
Home
Malnlenence- Painting, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
windows, baths , mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 74().

992·6323.

on
SAVINGS

VANS &amp;

·---ioioilil-_.1
__

1998

Lincoln Navigator.
Red, 4~~:4 , loaded, . 145K
miles.
1997 Jeep Wrangler. Black,·
4-cyl., std., '72K miles.

74tl-245-5970

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

_.:_

r-tachlne Quilting · Regulated Stitch
18 Pattern§ Available
Connie Curnutt
885-3962 Shop
owner1operator
895·3512 Nome

BARNEY
I'LL FLIP YA FER IT -'IX&gt;UBLE OR
NOTHIN'

I

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

JUG~AID

SMIF !! JEST PUT

IN TH' BASKET..--.-'T"'

~

I

¥

I
J

1
~

~ '--.;::o,_--lo.,..L.L;,o

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St.

THE BORN LOSER

I"'Tf\r·.J'~ IF' JLN f... Ll~-

'{Q, ~UTU~ 1 LIKE f"/\'1

J.l.r.LLOW££.1-1 C.O~TU ~E 7

1-800·822-0417

Hours

"W.Y's #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buic k. Olds
&amp; Cu s tom Van

De&lt;:~ l er"

p-GRE£1\l

'&lt;:1

COLOI&lt;.E.D C!J'ITIT W11l\ Tf.\C6E
TWO LHTE.R~ Or-\ IT'? WKI\1
~ ~~E. '{Ol) ~UPI'05ED TO BE. ? '

Wi\1-Hl·V,OF COL&gt;r:~U

1

I
I

~

~

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

6:30

~

"I lost my shirt
in the stock

~

WRITESfl
*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
[dUMLESS

__.:._

Lawn ·mower, washer
&amp; dryer, golf clubs,
box spring &amp; mattress, love seat, weed
eater, stereo, VCR,
tape deck, kitchen ·
table, speakers, · com~
puter station, misc.
tools, chairs, chest of
drawers,
roll-away
bed, heater, couch &amp;
love seat, gas can,
misc.
microwave,
clothes.
(10) 23, 30 2T.C

Public Notice

949-1405

market!"

BIG NATE
"Not mel

My money is with

HE'S

AT . MV HOU SE

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services.
Box 189, Middleport, OH

TO M ORROW~

MY

,---.,/

DAD

HAS STRUC K

Phone, 843·5264."

~EMi::I'\BER

THAT
YEAR. HE
HAN DED OUT

RKE CAKES'

[)O I

7

MY MO M

USES
MINE AS

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

A. ~OA!oTER I

Commercial Residential
Bulldozer~ Backhoe Trucking .'\en·ices
Septic System lnsllillaliou
Lm1d Clearing
Home Site.o; Po11d.'\ /)riveways

PEANUTS
WE 06E'1'ED THE

BIBLICAL

INJUNCTION TO 60 OUT

TWO 6¥ TWO ...

740-992-3470
Toll Free 1-866-267-0072

WE TRIED TO TELL
EVERI'ONE ABOUT T~E ''GREAT
PUMPKIN," BUT NO ONE

-..J-~~~L~IS~TE~N_.. _

Pomeroy, Ollio

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

I CAN'T
I CAN .. WE
DIDN 'T 6ET
IMAGINE
ANVT~ I NG MORE ANI' COOKIES,
[)EPII.ESSIIjG ..
EITHER!

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garages

BETTY

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter•
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Peintlng
• Patio and Porch Decks

WAYNE
GllfrtKY?

V. C. YOUNG Ill

WftlWAS

992·6215

~e?\'OUR

OI.D
COACH?

1

~GARFIELD

~~~

740-992-5232

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

AH

pa. ~; s

GARFIEJ..P. OUR TOA5TER
t5 P055El5SED 8&amp;,1 AN
EVIL- 5PIR IT

IMPORTS

e

Alhena

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

J&amp;L
, Eledric

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

Ph 740-HZ·DISl
Ceii740-SIIl·I073

llD'xlO' 610'1120')

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISlllmU

0

~liT 't\1\S F'Ek501-\~I,.;E~~i!E

LI\&lt;.E ~

~!

'.•

• Garages

Advertise
in lhis
space for $25
per month .

QAIZZWELLS
; 11~!1\A! ~!..11\E 4U't THAT

• New Homes
·Complete
Remodeling

&amp;JT I AM

::z

0

•'

· &amp;EFORIS,
NOW

Licensed &amp; Bonded

(740) 992-3194
992-6635 .

! WASN'f
5U.RE OF IT

ANI7 WHI,I,

PRA&amp;,I 1'EJ..L.,
15 THI&gt;.f'P

' IT SPIT
POPP&lt;,I 5EEI75

AL-L- OVER ME

YOU L.OOK
J..IKE A ~IAN'!'
PUMMY ROLL-

18 Pirate's
quaH
19 Wonlforth
23 Actor
- Vlgoda
26 Aunt,

amende
21 Realm
22 "Thst Cell "
sec:urers
23 cor,p and
in Mexico
Jo oon
4 Plumbing
24 Canoe or
27 Lady 's
Joint
honorific
5 Slnbed's
yacht
30 Cosmetic
bird
25 To be,
to Balzac
buy
6 Many )lmes
32 More nimble 7 On the
Z8 Verdi opera
34 South Seas
horizon
29 Glbaon ond
wear
8 Call hlnlo&lt;a
Tormo
31 Modicum
35 Start a tire
9 Appear
36 Head,
10 Get·up-and· 3Z Zipping
in Montreal
over the Ice
37 Paddle
11 ~~eerful
33 Standing,
slangily
cousin
12 Pop singer
38 Serpent
- Tennille 37 unaeal,
39 Made tit
17 Ga. neighbor
to Blake
42 Machine
20 Made
40 Away rrom
1 Faucet
hookup
2 Wild about
3 Debl

By Bernice Bede Osol
More harmonious condi tions 111 gen eral
wtll be 1n the oiling lor ·you rn the year
ahead. You Will be tak1ng the bu ll by rhe
hOrns to st rike up the rrght bal anc e
between your worldly interests and your
social tile.
SCORPIO (OC!. 24 -Nov. 221 - It wilt turn
out to be an e~~:e rc ise 1n tulil 1ty today tl you
attempt to promo te someth mg 1n whi Ch
you truly don't believe. First and toremost.
be honest with you rself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) - II you
tail to open up about a matter that 1s both ering you today. associa tes wi ll lose
patience with you . They won't be good at
playing gueSsing game s.
CAPRIC ORN (Dec . 22·Jan . t9) Fr1volous involvements today w111 tak e you
away from someth1ng on wh1ch you shou ld
bE! spending your lime that wou ld mak.e
you money instead of depleting your col·
lers.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Should
sornethrng testy develop today tand you
allow yoursell to get dragged 1nto tl) , don 't
let 11 cau se you to lo58 your cool. You r
1mage and reputatron wrll suffer 1f you han·
die it poorly
PISC ES (Feb 20·March 20) - If you farl
to plan your agenda today, you could f111d
yoorsell 1n the pos1t1on of be1ng 1mposed
upon by others dorng thrng s 111at you'd
rather not. They won't wart for you to say
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19) - Follow your
tnner voice today 11 it warns you to avo1d
cer tain group assoc,a11 0n s. Getting
Involved with the wrong people could
prove to be more costly than you ant iCrpate .
TAU RUS (April 20-M ay 20 ) Don't
expec t to advance your se ll-m terests
today if you are stubborn or un coo perative
w1th others . A failure to work harmonrously wll h cohorts will greatly lessen you r
\Chances for succ ess
GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20) - By attempt·
rng to do roo much . you'll spread yourself
too th 1n wt'1ere you r work . +!! concerned
tOday, and all you w tll get tor 1! JS a tot ot
aggravai10n and prec1ous tittle productivity.
CA NCER (June 21 -July 22 ) - Assets
entrusted to your care must not oe treated
too casually today. II ~ou manage matters
poorly or are careless about them, you'll
be held accountable for any !osees.
L.EO (July 23-Aug. 22)- II you l lnd thal li
family member it a bit more sens itive
today, try not to do anything abratlve that
could hurt thrl pertoA'I leellngt . The
brul1e1 could end uP tar mort aevere tha n
.vou'd want.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Any work
entrutttd lo you today 11'111 demanctl the
uti'!'\Oit coneentratlon mull bt treated wtt"
the l etiOuar.ete It dettr"Wet or a ma1or
go of coula ensue. Be on your to.e at 111
umet.
LI8F4A (Sept 23·0et. 23) - Ba careful not
1o give In 100 11111y today to tnou In your
·chtrge. If you allow a chancy activity to
prevail and thlngt don't go ae expect~ .
you'll hl\"110 hOld vourStil to blame.

SOUP TO Nl,ITZ

the wind · ,
41 Proteet : •
eong
'
com paM!
42 Valvollfllrt
43 Llk&lt;i tome
both ruga

44 Tro" cam.&lt;
47 RetUMito
48 Romon
hletorlan
49 Cla»Hied
HCtlon
51 "Norma-·
52 Mil. rank
54 El Dorado'
loot

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

by Luis Campos
Celebi11Y~pller cry!logr a rr~ are aeated frcrn quotato()'lS ~· 'a mo-~ DeOPie past i.lr(] Pfi!'SeOI
Eacn letter fl the ~ pter otaoo~ !oo aruthl!f
Today~ Ci'ue TeoualsJ

" LG

AC

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MLG

MHIG

SGCM

OGJRC
EHAC

T N' R RZ

JOGHAKJR
NV

SG

MN

VLJM

LGHN

.

AM

UOJR . "

EHACMNYVGHCNR .

N. R

KJ C l

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·wnen someone " ''" 'zes me. 1 can defend myseif.
~

but aga 1nst pra1se . l am defenseless." - Stgmund Freud

icl 2003 bv NEA. Inc

10·30

S@~4t!~-~t~~·

;MaT DAU.Y
'PUULit

- - - - - - ,..,.. lr cu.r a. Jt:uAN _.;...._ _ _~

0 leur
tt•orrarr ;t.t
!:C't'O'rrtOieo

lofl•t'l

Friday. Oct. 31 . 2003

no.

Free Estimates

22 Year

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

4•

East

3 olo

&lt;lbur'lli~ :

OUT OV
NUTS FOR HALLOWEEN'
IT SOU NDS LIKE A
&amp;At&gt; JOKE. EXCE?T
GUESS WHAT ' N0801&gt;'t'S
LAOG.H I N6 !
HANDI~G

YOUNG'S

High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage

Pass

~ort b

AstroGraph

Pomeroy. Ohio

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
In Rli': Change of
Name of Caleb Elijah
Stanley-Robinson
to
Caleb
EliJah
Stanley
Caaa No. N31200,
Docket 0, Page 200
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE
OF
NAME
Applicant
hereby
gives notice to all
lntereated persona
and to Paul Henry
Roblnaon that the
applicant has llled an
Application
for
Change of Name In
the Probete Court of
Meigs County, Ohio,
requeatlng
tho
change ol nome of
Caleb EliJah Stanley·
Robinson to Caleb
EliJah Stanley. The
IHNirlng on the appll·
cation will be held on
the
1st day of
December, 2003 at
1:30 o'clock p.m. In
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, located
at I 00 Eaal Sacon.d
Street, Courthouse,
2nd Floor, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Brandy Stanley
144 Hill St. P.O. Box 92
Rutland, OH 4sns
(10) 30

'. '.
West

Mos t bndge magazmes a1m al serr ous
tournamen t players. Bndge Plus bucks
that trend , mclud1ng matenal for all levels
of abil ity e ~~: ce pl beg1nner. You get 72
Sr}'lall·format pages f!o/ery month w1th bidding and play qu1zzes. · and a var1ety ot
artiCles. But be wa rned t.h at the b1dd1 i1g ·
usually follows Acol pn nc1ples. w1th w ea ~
(12- 14} no·lrumps and lou r-card maJO rS
Thi S de al was reporled by Kitty Teltscher.
It was used in the 2001 mov ie "Gosfo rd
Park ." The scnptwnte r. Julian Fellowes
(who won an Oscar for hi s work l. pro·
duced the auction. the n Ned Paul. a
bndge laacher, came up w1th the layout
What do you th1nk of the b1dd1ng? C an
Easi-Wesl deleal to ur spades or lour
hearts?
The bidding 1s certa 1n1y reasonable
Soulh. who was played by Magg1e Sm1th.
m1ght have rebid lour hearts, but a slam
was feasi ble. And 11 South were 4·5 111 the
majors , the 4-4 Itt would often play better
tha n the 5-3 bec ause you gel two d1s·
cards on the uneven side swt.
Laurence Fox (West ) led the d1amo nd
ace. Cam1lla Ruther1ord (East) dropping
the three . West cashed the heart ace and
gave his partner a heart rutt. bullhat was
the end of th e defens1ve party. Declarer
could w1n any return , draw trumps and
claim .
II West had led the ace and another heart.
the contract could have bee n defe ated
West can get back. on lead w1th a diamond and give h1 s partner a seco nd heart
rufl.
Here. four hearts IS unbeata ble. but 11
spades were 3-1 and hearts 2-2 . four
spades would be better.
Full details are available at www .br ldgeplus.co.uk.

•

.

*Free Estlmltah

_____ _ _____ __

750 East State Street l'hone (740)593-667,t
Athens, Ohio

Ripley, WV 25271

\ HOWARDl.

fuv

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large content

#cHivRo!~T/

9 miles from Pt. PJeasarrt
o11 Sa11d Hill Road.

, GUmR

-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

STILL

NOTICE
SALE
Tho
following
described
stored
property Will be sold
at Hartwell Storage
Facility, 34055 Laurel
CIIH Rd ., Pomeroy,
Ohio on November 6,
2003 @ 1:00 P.M. Thia
property Ia being sold
to satlafy tho lien of
Hartwell Storage.
Unh76
Occupanl:
Stephanie Roush, 218
Rock St, Pomeroy,
Ohio
Contents:
Two chest of drawers,
telephone stand, sofa
and love ·Hat, coHtl8
table,
microwave
stand,
Christmas
decor~atlons, trumpet,
lamps, Chrlatmaatree
stand, wall shelf unit,
chlld'a games, sewing
box, photo albums,
electric , fan, Ohio
Stata J~cket, Meigs
High School yearbooks, CD's, video
tapes, misc. houait~
hold llama.
Unlt40
Occupant:
Nick Haning, 34043
Willow Creek Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Contento:
Two TVa, wing back
chair, box aprlnga and
mattress, oven range
(electric), suitcase,
night stand, · bed,
amall waaher &amp; dryer,
framed mirror, lamp.
Unlt95
Occupant:
Shaya Bare, 30875
Bowles Rd., Dexter,
Ohio 45741
Contento:
Sofa, (2) Living rOom
chalra, waaher and
dryer, (2) aluminum
whettla.
Unlt106
Occupant:
Jerry Grady, Spring
Ave., Apt. 8, VIncent,
Ohlo45748

Q .J IO.l J l

Opening lead:? ?

I* buy quilt tops

Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

4-'\VDs

L,~-------,..1

·- ·--------

34

Hill's Self
Storage

Bull calf. Excellent bull or 2000 Monte Carlo LS. Fully
club can prospect. 740-367- loaded, 72K miles. Call 740· 59 Jeep &amp; 61 Jeep. Bot h
run , both have hardtops.
7554 or 740-339-011 2.
675•3127 .
Also Tow Dolly $2 ,100 740&amp;
90 Grand Prix,
good 379·2706.
GRAIN
body/trans.
Needs
3. 1
motor. $250. 93 Mazda 323:
Round bales ol mixed hay, 100,000K, $850. 740-2561487
(740)696·8211

r

liNDA'S PAINTING .

·

2589

1998 Chevy 5·10 Supercab.
air. till, cruise. $6,995. 1996
Ford ranger supercab, V-6,
740·286-5395
auto. air $5,995. 1996 Jeep
Cherokee 4dr, auto. ai r, till,
IAHA Reg. 1994 Ch'eslnut
Cruise, 4wd. $6,995. 1997
Mare, asKing 2K. Call 740· Chevy Cavalier 2dr. Aotley
441-0'184.
sport. auto. air. $3,995. 1993
Buick Lasabre, all power.
Moritz 3 horse slant lo ad $ 1,995. Riverview Motors.
combo Stock Trailer. $3,500 (740)992·3490
call 740-245-5978 leave a
1999
Chevy
Cavalier,
message.
66.000 miles. $3,950 or best
Registered Polled Hereford offer. Call740 -256-6169.

••

Let me do it for youI

I

old, Registered 1984 Chevy Caprice 79 ,000 or 740·446·0137.
miles. V·B auto, ale, all
Jersey Bull. 740-992-7603
power, new tires, good work. 1992 Chevy 3/4 ton, 5- am!""'-~~--...,
iO
HOME
A must see! Two Tenn essee car. $800. (304)882-3652
spMd , w/toppe r $4,800 .
IMPROVEMENTS
Walking horses. Broke, gen- 1992 Cadi llac Seville Sedan. CaU 740-8832 .
White, wine leather interior.
107K miles, 2 owners 1995 FORD E350 CUBE
$2,995. 740·44 6-0853.
BOX
TRUCK
CALL
(740)446-94 16 . M·F 9·5.
1997 Mits. Sp)lder co nv. Located
1391
Safford
61,000 miles, auto. $10,000 School. Gallipolis .
080. 740-446·8832.

South

DOWN

in Aberdeen

·' .1
7
l 0 6 :1
KQ !l :i4:lt

Deale" South

TFN

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

I'm!""'~-~-~_,
Auro PARTS &amp;

rliO
1 ~

•
•
•
4o

Brown~

sugar
c andy
13 Respect
14 Gasoline
rating
15 Unskilled
laborer

• II
ofo A

Ta~e

7199.

r

1

740-992-7599

loaded. V6 , CD player, 2002 Yamaha PW 50, $500
Power everything. $ 12·000 or best offer. Call 740-446-

3 Year

lie, &amp; extra smooth . 4 yr. old
Gray; 3 yr. old True Blue
Roam. Quarter Horse, bay
breed , very genlle. 740-3677010 after 8:00pm.
-------Angus Bulls, Heifers plus
Maine-Angus Steers and
Heifers, Top blood tines.
Slate run farm, Jackson.

Windows • Roo fi ng
COMMERCIAL and

Auros

40

.

LARRY SCHEY

• R eplac ement

FOR SALE

r

f)

S Wander•

10 Kids' rides

Anawtf to Previoua PUD:Ie

16 John.

South
1\ A Kt OBi

New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Garages

RESIDENTIAL

$1 ,695; 91 Cavalier $1.495 ;
MmUKCYCLES
91 Geo Storm $795; 95
Firebird $3,995. 23 vellicles
1998 Ya maha 100cc 4·
In stock up to $4 ,395.
wheeler. excellent condition,
COOK MOTORS
new eng ine, new tires .
74tl-446-01 03
$1,000 080. Call 740-388-

FoR SALE

i,_______,. 1 r·o

4x4. real nice, just painted.

96 Corsica $2,1 95: 96 Neon

... J

BISSELL
BUILDERS me.

$3,500 080 or trade for 4

t..-..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l

All fl ywheel Grinding Only $25.00
-.~

I

truck, 122K,
runs we ll,
everything but electric win ·
dows &amp; seats , $8,000: 90
Ford Ranger, 4 cyl 5 sp. ,
$1,100
080;
Jeep
CherOkee Pioneer. 4 dr.,

IO:OOam to II :OOam

t

ii ~
A 8 fi
A K 97 4 2

j

a;

1o
Eit!!t

Vulnerable: East-West

Common Ground Mis!ion.s L,
Q8· F-ord·F-1-50-. 31
· 4- to-n.-n'""
ice

Exciting new 6,500 square foot mail

Pomeroy Auto Parts

r~

¥

992-5479

252 Upper River Road • Gallipf?lis
74G-4411-0842 • 949·1155 Even1ngs
800-446-0842
Announcements

•

Jeff Warner Ins.

NORTHUP DODGE

Sunday, November 2, 2003
Crafts and Indoor Flea Market
Tables $10.00
Doors open 8:00 am lor set-up
·•
For Information contact
Charlie Picaronl

\Ye!;l

MONTY

·' 8

w 'IOo:l

tooth
45 Flower
adornment
46 Social org.
50 Reluc:llnt
53 Kind of
mutual1und
(hyph.)
55 Cope
56 Fund• tor
research
57 Driving
hazard
58 Aware of

1 Knne
handle

12

~I

Drinks are

NEA Cronword Puzzle ·

BRIDGE

BOARD

•).'

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8'1

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Announcements

Announcements

...

Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003
ALLEYOOP

Thursday, Oct. 30, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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dad asked the teen. "ll's greatt'"
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be::er of! than 1f yo~ 'lad oo ~~ nothmg and SL'C-

CEEOED'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

!

•
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------------~~1••
••

740-882-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

•

,.

�.,

Page BS .• The !)illy Sentirlel

Thursday, October 30, 2003

· ww\v .mydililysentinel.com

Smith speech boosts
Jirsa's first

'

NHL Round-up

coaching·clinic, B1

.Blue Jackets' road woes continue, fall to Canucks
VANCOUVER,
British
Columbia (AP) - Vancouver
coach Marc Crawford hopes
Artem Chubarov learned his
lesson.
Chubarov, a healthy scratch
in the last game. tied it with 0.6
seconds left in the second period, then scored the winner 6: 18
into the third as the Canucks
beat Columbus 6-3 on Tuesday
ni~ht.

'Hopefully we don't have to
sit him out to get this kind of
offense again," Cmwford said.
Markus Naslund scored two
goals and added two assists, and
Magnu s Arvedson and Man
Cooke each had a goal &lt;md
assist as Vancouver improved to
5-0-1 at home.
Naslund set up Chubarov's
ftrst goal with a backhand pass
through the crease: "lt's great to
see timely goals from Chubarov
and guys like that," Naslund
said.
·
·
Despite being singled out
between games for a lack of
offense, Chubarov, a defensiveminded Russian who usually
cel)ters the fourth line, said he
didn' t try to do anything differ-

ently.
·
" It's the same game as
always," said Chubarov, who
has heard the call for more goals
before.
'They always tell me that and
I always try. just sometimes it's
not happening. I always play a
defen&gt;tve game, and it goes
slow for me to generate more
offense. It's not that I just sit
back and do nothing. l have
good days. I have bad days."
David Vvbomy, Darryl Sydor
and Rick Nash scored for the
Blue Jackets, who lost their tifth
straight. Columbus has lost all
four of its road games.
Columbus coach Doug
MacLean was particularly upset
with Chubarov 's goals, chastising hi s team for giving up a·
score so late in the period, and
singling out goalie Fred
Brathwaite on the second.
"They were untimely goals
and bad goals when you're
playing yo ur hearts out,"
MacLean said. "It was a joke.
To give up a play like that with
0.6 seconds leti, tt's devastating.
The fourth ~oal was terrible:
short side wnst shot"

Johan Hedberg, making just
his third start of the seasdlt,
stopped 16 shots in a matchuP.
of backup goalies who hadn t
played in I0 days. Brathwaite
made 22 saves ·in his second
game.
Penguins 4, Islanders 4
PITTSBURGH (AP) Mario Lemieux became the
sixth player in NHL history
with I ,700 points with an assist
that started a four-goal run by
Pittsburgh, but the New York
Islanders scored twice in the
third period for a 4-4 tie
Wednesday night.
·
W,ith the Islanders up 2-0 late
in the first, Lemieux took
Konstantin Koltsov's pass
along the right wing boards,
slipped the puck between the
legs of defenseman Janne
Nnnimaa, then made a backhanded pass to the slot to Dick
Tarnstrom for his second goal
of the season.
Lemieux
joins Wayne
Gretzky (2.857), Gordie Howe
(1 ,850), Mark Messier (I ,847),
Marcel Dionne (1,771) and
Carolina Hurricanes captain
Ron Francis (I ,760s) on the

1,700-point list. Only Gretzky
reached the mark faster than
Lemieux.
Trailing 4-2 in the third, the
Islanders scored twice in a span
of 2:48 to tie it as Jason Blake
got his third of the season and
Mariusz Czerkawski evened it
with his eighth at II :13 of the
period.
Blues 6, Red Wutg'i 5
DETROIT (AP) - Doug
Weight had the secohd threegoal game of his eareer and
Dallas Drake collected five
assists as St. Louis · ended
Detroit's club record 15-game
home winning streak
Red Wings goalie Dominik
Hasek allowed four goals on St.
Louis' first 13 shots and was
pulled early ·in the second periOd.
Peter Sejna added two powerplay goals for St. Louis, Keith
Tkacfiuk had a power-play goal
and Mike Danton had two
assists.
For the Red Wings, Brett Hull
scored the 718th goaT of his
career - breaking a tie. with
Phil E.sposito for fourth place
on the NHL's all-time scoring

list.
Hasek was replaced b~
Martny Legace 'after Sejna s
first power-~ goal 4:46 into
the second riod. That goal
made it 4-2.
Flyers 5, Panthers l
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Michal Handzus and Joni
Pitkimen each had a goal and
assist and Robert Esche stopped
21 shots for Philadelphia.
Justin Williams, Jeremy
Roenick and John LeClair also
had goals for Phil~lphia, off
to a 4-1-3 start. Mark Recchi,
Tony A111onte an~ Si!llon
Gagne added two asststs ap1ece.
Vlktor Kozlov scored for the
Panthers, who have lost two of
three.

Roenick and Handzus scored
59 seconds apart in the second
period to break open a one-goal
game.
Ducks 4, Capitals 2
WASHINGTON (AP) Sergei Fedorov scored two
goals and Martin Gerber made
23 saves for Anaheim.
The Capitals lost their sixth
straight and are winless in ei~; ht
game since an opening-day vtc-

tory. The losing streak is their
longest since they dropped the
final six games of the· f998-99
season.
Gerber has allowed four goals
in three games in place of JeartSebastien Giguere, who struggled in Anaheim 's early losses.
Jason Krog and Steve Rucchin
also scored for the Ducks.
Stars 4', Flames-3, OT ·
DALLAS (AP) - Jason
Amon scored 17 seconds into
overtime and Bill Guerin had
three goals as Dallas rallied
from a two-goal, third-period
deficit.
Calgary led 3-1 when Guerin
notched his second of the ni~t
on apower-play rebound With
10:32 left in regulation.
Guerin tied it with 8:35
remaining in regulation. It was
hi s sixth goal of the season and
completed his first hat trick for
the Stars and the fourth of his
career.
.
Jarome lginla scored in ~
ftrst penod, and Oleg Saprykin
and Chuck Kobasew scored for
.. in a span of 4:44 in the second
for the Flames.

·•" 1 I '\1..,•\ol. ) I .·,., ,

SPORTS .

Odom sprained his right ankle
in the season opener on
Tuesday, which Miami also
lost
Raptors 90, Nels 87
TORONTO (AP) - Vince
Carter scored 25 of his 39 points
in the second half as Toronto
r.Uiied past New Jersey in the
season opener for both teams.
Carter, who played only 43
games last season because of
mjuries, almost single-handedly
gave new Raptors coach Ke vin
O'Neill his ftrst win.
Carter shot 15-for-30 from
the field and 9-toi-'l 0 from the
foul line for the Raptors.
Kenyon Martin had 26 points
and II rebounds for the Eastern
Conference champion Nets.
Jason Kidd went 4-for-18 for II
points and missed a 3-pointer
that could have tied it at the
buzzer.
Alonzo Mourning, who
mi ssed all of la~t season with a
kidney ailment, hacj six points
and three rebounds in 17 minutes off the bench for New
Jersey.
Pacers 89, Pistons 87
' AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - Jermaine O' Neal had
22 points and 15 rebounds as
lndJana held on for a victory
over Detroit, helping coach
Rick Carlisle beat the team that
fired him.
In the sea~on opener for both
clubs, Detroit erased a 10-point
deficit midway through the
foutth wtth a 13-2 run and led
.87-86 with two minutes left.
0' Neal scored a go-ahead ba~-

ket with I~ 41 to go and Jell
Foster made a free throw with
14.8 seconds remaining.
Detroit's Chauncey Billups
and Mehmet Okur missed shots
in the final seconds.
Ron Artest scored 21 points,
and Reggie Miller 14 for the
Pacers.
Ben Wallace led the Pistons
with 16 points, 17 rebounds,
live steals and six blocks.
Richard
Hamilton and
Chauncey Billups, Detroit's top
two scorers last season, combinedforjust 19points on6-for31 shooting.
Hall of Fame coach Larry
Brown, who spent the past six
seasons in
Philadelphia,
replaced Carli sle. He succeeded
fired coach lsiah Thoma~ in
July.
Magic 85, Knicks 83, OT
NEW YORK (AP) - Tracy
McGrady scored half of his 26
points in the fourth quarter and
overtime. to mlly Orlando to a
season-opening victory over
New York.
Orlando forced overtime with
a I0-0 run over the tinal 3:55 of
regulation. The Magic made it a
IS-point spurt by scoring the
ftrSt five points of the extm sessian punctuated by
McGrady's 3-pointer with 3:42
left
But the Knicks came back
with six straight points, taking a
79-78 lead on Kurt Thomas'
turnaround jumper.
Tyronn Lue responded with a
. 3-pointer that made it 81-79,
and McGmdy then made a huge

defensive stop - blocking
Allan. Houston's 'jumper. That .
sent Gordan Giricek to a fastbreak basket and three-point
play that made it 84-79 with
I :46 remaining.
The Knicks had one last
chance, but Howard Eisley and
Thomas missed shots on the
final possession.
Hornels 88, Hawks 83, OT
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - .
Darrell Armstrong scored 18
points and made an assortment
of crucial plays in his New
Orleans debut, lifting new
coach Tim Floyd and the
Hornets over Atlanta.
· David Wesley added 16
points, including a 3-pointer in
overtime to spark a 7-0 run as
the Hornets overcame a late 8177 deficit. George Lynch, starting for injured All-Star Jamal
Mashburn, added 14 points and
12 rebounds in the opener for
both teams.
The game marked the f!rst
regular-sea~on game for Floyd
since December 2001, when he
resigned as Chicago Bulls
coach after a 49-190 stint in a
little more than three seasons.
Stephen Jackson led Atlanta
with 21 points, including two
fourth-quarter 3-pointers. and a
prur of free throws that ·ued the
game at 75 heading into overt1me.
. Wizards 99, Bulls 74
CHICAGO (AP) - Gilbert
Arenas was a winner in his
Washington debut, scoring 18
points and adding six assists in
the Wizards' victory over

Chicago. .
Larry Hughes added 20
points to lead six Washington
players in double figures, and
Etan Thomas had 13 points and
13 rebounds
The loss spoiled the homecoming of Scottie Pip~n. who
is back in a Bulls umform for
the first time since winning the
1998 NBA title.
Jalen Rose had 15 points to
lead the Bulls, who shot less
than 32 percent and tied the
fran chise record for worst
defeat in a season opener.
Pippen had seven points, seven
rebounds and two assists.
Jazz 99, Trail Blazers 92
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Carlos Arroyo had 18 .points
and 13 assists in his second
career start, and Sasha Pavlovic
scored 14 points in his NBA
debut as Utah began rebuilding
by raUying past Portland.
The Jazz, playing a season
opener without John Stockton
nor Karl Malone in the starting
lineup for the first time since
1.986. trailed by 13 in the third
quarter before overcoming a
noticeable size· advantage with
some torrid shooting.
Utah was 13-for-16 in the
fourth quarter, which Andrei
Ktnlenko capped wtth a onehartded dunk to set off a Jazz
celebration.
Kirilenko fmished with 16
points and seven rebounds, and
Raja Bell also had 16 points.
Zach Randolph led Portland
with 22 points, and Rasheed
Wallace scored 21 for the Trail

Blazers.
Nuggels 80, Spurs 72
. DENVER (AP) - ·Carmela
Anthony had 12 points and
seven rebounds in his NBA
debut, leading Denver to a win
over San Antonio.
Andre Miller added 16
points, Earl Boykins 13 and
Nene 12 for the Nuggets, who
overcame poor shooting to
knock off the defending NBA
champions.
.
Denver shot 29 percent from
the field, compared with 27 percent for the Spurs.
Tim Duncan had 17 points on
7-ot~ 22 shooting and 21
rebounds for San Antonio,
which opened its season
TUesday night with an 83-82
win over Phoenix .
Mavericks 95, Warriors 87
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Dirk Nowitzki had 29 points
and 15 rebounds and Dallas
spoiled Golden State's season
opener by beat;ing the Warriors
for the 18th straigbt time:
Nowitzki scored five straight
points as the Mavericks took
control in the fourth quarter anq
Antoine Walker added 20 point1
and 14 rebounds for Dallas,
which hasn't lost to the Warriors
since 1999 and regrouped after
losing its season opener to the
Los Angeles Lakers a night earlier.
Cliff Robinson scored 18
points and Erick Dampier,
Calbert Cheaney and Mike
Dunleavy had 14 each for the
Warriors, who played without
three starters.

• Eastern falls in regional
semifinals. See Page B1

-...

tSAP 549.991

C&gt;tldtoheet&lt;-

...,...

We thank all who
participated in 2002 that
enabled the Tri·Count., to
send 2,427 boxesl

*
*
*

*~
~

-

DROP-OFFLOCATIONS: @ .
WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
'I
in Point Pleasant, WV ~
WVYK/WMPO on
Bradbury Road in
@
Middleport, Ohio.
.'I
· aob'sMarketin · ·
.~
Mason, WV or Gallipolis. it

·
.
m comm""one" ye,ter av
Meigs Coun ty Clerk of . Co uri~
Marlene Harri son . paid $ 5.000 i nt~
the co unt y ge nera l . fund recentl y
through the Cert tft cale of tit le
Admini strati on Fund,' and th ose
tunds were subseq uen tl y appropriated tnto Recorder Judy Kin g \
emP.Ioyee salaries fund yes terday.
The money is co llec ted on each auto
title processed through Harri son 's
title otfice.
According to Harri1on. lhe ex pe nses _of starting and operating the tit le
oll tce have been met ·md the S~ 000
represented a s urpl~ ~ in re·;.~ ;J u e
That surplus has traditi onall y heen
pledged to the count v Qe neral fund 10
meet other expe n se s~ '
'
·

d

Other business

Commissioners also:
• Approved transfers

WEATHER
Warm, HI: 70s, Low: 50s

t

I

Details ·on Page A2

Dressing up in a scary or funny costume is not just for children, as staff and members of
the Metgs County Multipurpose Senior Center demonstrated Thursday. These scary, ugly
and funny costumed adults were pnze w1nners. No name does justice to Pam Davis 's costume, far left, but she was a mystery to those who saw her yesterday. Frances Reed and
. Ma~y Altce Btse, R~edsvtlle netghbors, rocked the house as Priscilla and Elvis Pres ley, and
Belmda Wellmgton s Cat tn the Hat was a big hit, too. The seniors also performed a
Halloween sk1t yesterday at the center. (Brian J. Reed )

LOtTERIES

hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com

SEc.- noNs- 20 PAGES
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Faith• Values
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© 2003 Ohio Valley l'ubU.hlna Co.

POMEROY - A · large
black granite marker in tribute to students and staff who
·, left Meigs Local schools not
by graduation or retirement,
but untimely .death , has been
erected in front of the new
Meigs Memorial Field House
on the high school campus.
A colorful school scene from
earlier times is,etched into one
of the dual stones of the monument The other stone contains the names of 48 students,
teachers and other personnel
who .died while attending or
working at a school in Meigs
LoCal sjnce the district's organization in 1966.
The names have been
placed in random order on
the large monument which
has adequate space for addi-

the need occurs.
Most of the marker's cost
wa s paid with donations
from families and friends in
memory of the deceased.
Plans are being made for a
dedication of the stone and
the Field House sometime
next month. The families of
those whose names appear
on the marker will be invited
to be a part of the ceremony.
Included in that list are Rita
Hamm, John Mora, Preston·
Gibbs, Bonnie Fisher, Vernon
Weber, Ben Rife, Barbara
Archer, Barbara Logan, Todd
Johnson, Don Yost, Eric Hart,
Teresa Newfeld, Jack Slavin,
Don Stivers, Helen Milhoan.
Julia McComas, Robert
Morris, William Smith.
Man Ault, Brandi Thomas,
Brad Runyon, Lfudsay Bolin,
Ryan Lemley, Willam Barley,

Bryan Marshall. Benny
Goodman , Duane Howe ll
Matthew Snyder, Dall a~
Castle, Barbara Mowery.
Terry Lee Rathburn, Joseph
Dean Lotiis, Cher~Pence,
Tikiela Burton, Btr( Steven
Kauff, Rusty Nitz, Randy Lee
Haning, Ricky Rowe, Linda
Se'!fls, Sarah Green, Florence
Singer, Matthew Vance,
Jennifer Friend, Gwe ndolyn
Savage, Jerry Napper, and
Penny Hensley.
In a letter to the editor Kari
Runyon expressed her feelings
when tirst seeing the marker.
"As I walked up to the
monument, my heart skipped
a beat,:• she wrote.
"There, listed on this beautiful memorial monument, was
our son 's name, Brad Runyon,
along with so many others.
There are no words to describe

- ·---.-· --·-- - --- ·-

-·---"···· "''-

KANAUGA
Unit ed
Way ofGall ia County is off to
a good start toward the ooal
of raising $150.000 durin ~ it.s
2003-04 campaign.
'
Local pace setter' - individual s and bu sinesses that
made earlv contributions to
the effort -· have accounted
for $27,800 so far.
Thi s year's li st of paceset ters includes Peoples Bank.
Hilda Stotts, LaMar Wyse,
, DCF Graphics. Rockwell.
Ohio
Vall ey
Elec tric
Company. Roberta Holzer.
Lillian Thomas.
Kathy
Cameron. Garry Stover. Dr.
Rick St. Onge. Hol zer Clinic.
Wiseman Agencv. the Re v.
John Jackson. Jean Houck.
Holzer Medical Center, Joan
Schmidt and
Am erican
Electric Power-Ga vin Plant.
A breakfast held Thursday
at the Holiday Inn in Kai1au ga
marked the openin ~ of tiie
campaign for the public .
LaMar Wyse. pres ident and
CEO of Hol zer Medi cal

Center." this year's honorary
chairman. He spoke to the
group of United Way supporte" at Thur;dav· s kick-off
breakfasL
"Karen (Wy,e\ wi fe) and I
have reall y come to love
Gallia County in our four
years here. and thi ~ communi·
ty has enriched our lives in
m ~ ny . man y ways. and this is
a nt ~e opportunity to give
back. Wyse told the group.
Wyse said he was encouraged by the number of
younger people he saw at the
breakfast and hopes that's a
" gn that new leadership is
steppin g fo rward in Gallia
Counlv.
"Thitt \ great. It doesn't just
have to be us ·old guys" who
do this type of thing." he said.
"M y thanks to all of yo u who
are taking any leadership ro le
and helping us meet the
goal .··

Please see Boost, A5

A oedication ceremony for the Meigs Memoria l Field House
an.d a tribute to the deceased students and staff for whom it
was named will be held in mid-November.
the feeling in my heart.
who have lost loved ones, in
. "Thank you _to whomever continui ng to keep their ·
ts responstble for helping us. memories ali ve .
along with the other families
"Thank you for remembering.''

For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
·
log onto our web~ite :

••

.

Wyse said the 2003-04
campai gn is the · 13th for
Gallia County overall and the
fourth for UWGC as an independent agency, which means

Information at your fingertips ...

www~holzer.org
"

for

surer and c u lt . .
. f d
.
.
o .t y tnsu rance un ' ·
and an appropnatton mto the Ju ven ile
Care and Cu,lo&lt;l) Grant fund .
• Ap proved appropn att on of
· S::!07 .n .J in grant funds fo r the
Rutla nd &gt;ewer li ne expansion projecL
,A
d,
· ·
ppro\e .uppropna tton of funds
for the Comm unn y Housmg
Improvement Program.
• Approved payment of bill s in the
amou nt of 180.JOJ,ti7.
• Approved closlne the M. eigs
c t c h ~
""'
nun. Y . ourt ousc at noo n on
EleLt ton Day. Ill &lt;ICL'Ufdance wnh the
Ohto Ren &gt;ed Code .
• Approved a S-10.000 one-year
loan for Meigs Emergen cy Sen ices
thro ugh Peoples Bank. 1\A . for the
purc hase of an ambulance .
Commi s&gt;ioner Mick Davenport
the and Clerk Gloria Kl oes abo attende&lt;l.

~~~~=~~ho~~~~:"1~!:."~7J,~~. "~~~~Lstudents, staff, faculty

INDEX
wl1h 1 $50 mait.ln -

111 \ ff.llh ... - · niiiW I I IIIII

~~~~tt froer of the year receivedd a Common Plea' Court . cnu nty trea-

BY ANDREW CARTER

Cash 25: 1-5-6-14·19-22

Big Country 99,
WBGS the Ministry Station,
K- 92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88. 1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.
-Invite you to participate in
ali opportunity to make a
.·difference in the lives of
young boys and girls throughout
the world in war, torn countries. -

Thursday ' · t
f
· 11
·
. that county sd/pau~fe~ r .1 ~ 1 pa~~s ~~~
. '
anot her two-week pay period . Each
payroll costs the county $1 1.000, and
a transfer app~oved, _e~ rlie r th!s
month ensured at. least a month s
war~ fo r the deputt es.
$N~S'd1ngh to Sheets, at least
. . tn ou smg costs rematn
unpatd to date, bu~ that bilL for
Southeastern
Oh10
RegiOnal
Correcttona l lnstltutton. dates to
2002, and may not be patd usmg the
2003 appropnattoJ;J .
$ C~~mt.ss toners al so appr~ved a
2 . transfer from Tru ssell s con tract repairs line into hi s gas and oil
fund, and a $1. 195 transfer from his
food ltne tnto ht s employee health
tnsurance lund.

acarter@mydai lytribune.com

Dally 3: 7-8-8
Dally 4: 5-2-8-5

Anyomo-1

\\\\\\

Pacesetters give
United Way big boost

West Vll'ginia
(OOO-a20011ddMIDnBI

Bv BRIAN J. REED
. breed@mydailysentinel.com

Recorder's budget

Pick 3 day: 9·3-2
Pick 4 day: 0-8·7-2
Pick 3 night: 9·2-6
Pick 4 night: 6·0-6·4
Buckeye 5: 3-4-5·9-29

1!100 Mwllll,. MlmdM

I Hill\\ Cl( 1111:1 II .· t 1"···•oo .(
·

POMEROY - . Meigs County
Commissioners have approved
another $15,000 tran sfer of funds to
cover sheriff's depuiies' salarie s.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell had requested the transfer of an additional
$30,000 from funds 'set aside for the
hou sing of prisoners into his employees salaries line . item. The line item
contai ns nearly' $78,000, but
Commi ss ioner Jim Sheets said
Thursday, at the commissioners:.regular weekly meeting, that the commissioners want to ensure enough funds
m the account to pay for an anticipated increase in housing costs, now that
deputies have returned to work.
Commissioners, by Ohio law, are
responsible for the costs of housing,
food and medical expenses for prisA second office experiencing diffi oners in cou nty custody.
culties in making payroll for the

Ohio

AT&amp;T Wireless mUle Local Plan

J:,

Board approves second transfer for deputy salaries

Garnett, Wolves hang on to defeat ·Bucks in season opener
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Kevin Garnett had 25 points, 21
rebounds and six assists as
Minnesota hung on to beat
Milwaukee in the season opener for both teams.
Newcomers Sam Cassell (18
points), Latrell Sprewell ( 15
· points)
and.
Michael
Olowokandi (II points, nine
rebounds) helped out Garnett,
as did holdover reserve Gary
Trent ( 14 points).
Michael Redd and Desmond
Mason each had 16 points for
Milwaukee, playing its first
game under rookte coach Terry
Porter.
After Joe Smith's tip-in
pulled the Bucks within 87-85,
Gamet!, the NBA's highest. paid player this season at $28
·million, hit a turnaround shot
tram 15 feet with 50.3 seconds
left to make it 89-85. Celtics
98,Heat 75
BOSTON (AP) - Paul
Pierce scored 23 points and
Boston made up for the absence
of Antoine Walker by placing
six scorers in double figures a~
the Celtics beat Miami.
Playing without their longtime co-captain, who was tmded nine days before the season
began, the Celtics got 15 points
ap!ece from Yin Baker and Eric
Wtlhams, 12 each from Mtke
James and Raef LaFrentz and
I0 from Tony Battie.
Eddie Jones had 22 points
and eight rebounds for Miami,
which was missing Lamar
Odom. The ce nterpiec~ of the
Heat's offseason overhaul ,

!fameS' s~ores 21
asCavslose
to Suns, Bt

·,

..\.

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
.

&gt;

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