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'

Monday, Nov. 17, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

ALLEY OOP
OOP

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

11-17-03

.. 5 4

• • 2
•AK 9874
"'A J 7

West

~ast

•

8 7

9

1(18763

• J 10 9 3
• Q J
• Q 10 6 5

• 3 2
• Q 9 84

... 10 5 2

Soulh
o11AK Q6 2
9 A K 9 5
• •J

_.. K 6 J

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: Both
8oulh
1 tft

2•
3 tft
64

Wesl

:"&lt;&lt;orth

t:ast

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
3 "'

Pass
Pa!:iS
Pa!:iS
Pass

&lt;l •

Pass

Opening lead: • 8

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Online sites provide
interesting material

~UCLE'A~
pow~

GOOD
FER YOU,
MISTOFER

'NORJ&lt;.

AN' FER

bearer

relative
39 Grass skirt
go-with
41 Extinct bird!
42 ldltarod
terminus
43 Tennyson
heroine
44 Specs
preceder
46 Boxing

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
11Jf! ' , J 'l • \ td

,~

'\ o

victory

29 Canned fish
31 OV"ercome
33 Hair·styllng
goo
35 Gp - diet
36 Sharperedged
38 PBS

47 Rebekah 's
son
48 Fender flaw
50 Rest
51 Sturdy tree
52 Epoch

,.......,.,....,........,,....-

ME!!

\~ ~E:.I\LLY D\&lt;.1\GGIW:o

Wf\Y, 5Y Tf\1:'&gt; \ltl\t:.lM'i
IT W1\", t-IE.XT tl\01--\11-\ 1\LF£/\tJi

I

trump?
Gravis only discusses South's rebiddi!lg
three- not two- hearts , the jump promising maximum count. But that badly
burns up bidding space. After a two-overone response, opener's new-suit rebid is
forcing for one round. Then, North rebids
three clubs, fourth-su it game-forcing, asking for more inform ation. South bids
spades a second ti me because that suit
looks like a six-carder. Finally, after North
raises. South jumps to slam.
The simple line is to win the spade lead ,
cash the top hearts , and ruH a heart in lhe
dummy. East overruffs, but at the cost of
his natural trump trick. Back comes, say, a
spade. Declarer draws trumps, plays oil
dummy's top diamonds (discarding his
la st heart), and ruHs a diamond. When
they break badly, South falls back on the
club fi nesse to make his slam.
Go to www.bridgeru n.co m; for more
details.

G

BIG NATE
Oi&lt;.?

.JIJST PO YoUR t&gt;EST,
OK, BOY ? THE.RE 'S
NO PRESSURE ! ALL YOU
H AVE TO DO I S ... 15 .

you HEAP?
-JUST

~eAT

TtiE

CAT!
j
~------------~· ~~----~~~

PEANUTS

··auorl-l
THE RAVEN.
'NO PR06LEM"'

BETTY

...

GARFIELD
OR 50
t'VE: H!:ARP

SCRATCH .
SCRATCH
SCRATCH

AstroGraph
&lt;Your 'lllrih&lt;IIQ':

Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2003
By Bernic:e Bede Osol
You'll have plenty go1ng lor you in the year
ahead and life could prove to be quite
lucky tor you at times in ways that will
make you stand out. Friends and associates will wan t to come along lor the ride .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Cancel the
shopping spree you had planned lor today
if you don't have a hold on your spending
habits. Te mpting items will be all around
you and you could end up bUsted and
broke.
5AGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your
need for anen tion today could cause you
to step out of character and use tactics
that draw notice to yourselt th at would tarnish your image. Being gracious wi ll get
you what you want.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - No
matter how good the e)(cuse, obligations
and responsibilities should not be neglect·
ed today or else you might have to pay the
piper tor your s1ns of omi ssion.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Be particularly careful to whom you go lor as~J s ·
ta nce today should you be in need of a
favor. Th e wrong choice could tie conditions to his or her help and put you in an
awkward position
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- This could
be one of those days when (without real- .
izi ng It) you might rub the wrong people
the wrong way. Watch that you don't accidentally step on anybody's toes.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - If you don't
have a handle on yourself today you could
get cocky about things going well and
become a bit bossy with co-workers.
Instead. try to make them feel like part of
a team .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - AlthOugh
your better judgment Is flashi ng warning
signals today. your love aHair with beautiful things could cause you to spend foolishly and end up costing you more money
than you should spend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Even if you
feel someone in your family doesn't
deserve it. try to be as tolerant and considerate with this person as you are with
your friends. It'll pay ott in the long run.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) ._ The problems you encounter at work today are likely to be of your own doing. yet you might
try to kid yourself into believing the fault
lies with others and cast blame bn innocent associates.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You are goinQ: to
have to be e)l(!ra prudent in the manage·
ment of your funds today or etse you coutel
easilY squander .a bunch of dollars you
really don't have to waste .
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Should
someone do sOmething today that really
disturbs you, be careful not to vent your
fru straiions and anger on innoce n!
bystanders. Direc t your ire at the real cui ·
prit.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Before you
cross swords with the boss today ove r
something about which you're not too
pleaseel or receptlve. remember who
signs your paycheck. Hold your tongue
and hold onto your job .

.

SOUP TO NUTZ

ltJ ~, JJ\\

•

1

'\ t) \ J\II~II&lt;I H

.·oo 1,

\\ 1\ \ \ lllul . d ,

military trained him to be a
vehicle mechanic, Deem didn't think he would be called
into active service. Deem ·said
POMEROY - Uncle Sam he was sulllrised when he
needs a few good men to received the phone call late
serve in these troubling times one evening last week about
and one of those soldiers is when he needed to report and
Tony Deem, a principal at where he needed to be.
Meigs Elementary SchooL
"I worry about myself, but '
More than a week ago, I have a lot of younger guys
Deem's unit with the West under me with babies who
Virginia Army National have been called up," he said.
Guard was put on alert and
Deem said has been called
then activated within hours. to serve 18 months, which
" I never thought I was includes three months of
going to be called up," said training on both ends of a 12
Deem who is a staff month tour of duty. He was
sergeant. "We were put on among many men in the
alert in 1992, but nothing area, including Meigs Local
happened. !thought it would School Board member John
be the same this time."
Hood, who have been "acti- Tony Deem, the kindergarten through second grade princiThe father of three has vated" or called into service.
pal at Meigs Elementary. fin ishes up his last day before
served nearly 20 years with
reporting for duty. (J. Miles Layton )
Please see Deem, AS
the National Guard. Since the

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

• Owens shines in
primetime as 49ers beat
Pittsburgh. See Page B1

BY

CELEBRITY CIPHER

morntng
pursuit
successful
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

hoeflich@ mydailysent1net.com
POMEROY - Following
an early Tue sday morning
pursu it on country roads.
crashing of hi s 1ruck. and a
foot chase. David M. Person s
was taken into custody by the
Meigs County Sheri ff' &gt;
Department.
Meigs Count y Sheriff
Ralph E. Tru&gt;'ell reported
that just after midnight the
she ri ff's office '&gt;'as notified
by off-dut y Racine marshal
Curti s Jone\ that a black Ford
truck had rammed into a
!995 Oldsmobi le parked at
the rear uf a residence located
at ~ 17 Vine St. in Ra&lt;:ine .
When the truL·k left the
scene Jones followed in hiS
personal car. The truck proceeded north on Ba shan Road
and wen t into a field on
Pleasant'; Road and turned
off the lights .
Enroute to the location,
Sheriff Trussell &gt;potted the
truck which th~n sped away.
After a 23-minute pursuit
in volving sheriff's deputies
assisted by a Rutland pol ice
offi&lt;:er. contact with the truck
was lost. However within
minutes. deputies found the
truck crashed on Bigle y
Ridge Road . Persons was
taken into custody following
a short foot chase into the
woods.
He was airli fted to Cabe ii Hunti ngton Hospital for .
treat ment uf minor injuries.
and then tran sferred to the
Huntingto n jail where he
remain s pending a hearing.
reported ShenffTrusselL

My Good Sam wins top award at banquet

by Luis Campos
Ce!ebnl)' Cipher r::ryptogr001s are createc tromQUOtatiOns by famous recple. pasl and p1asent
Each lener In ltle Cipher stand s for anotll!ll

Today 's clue. Vequals W

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

"WP
ON

VBHZ
B'LZ

TBGGTZ

MOGZD

GN

DGOYGZA
WNYZ.

B' W

KNNI ,

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

KNNIBXC
0

0

CYZOG

WBKYNVOLZY ."
RYN

CNTHZY

IZX

POMEROY Brooks
Sayre's three year old colt
pacer named "My Good Sam"
. took a top award at the recent
banquet of the Southern Ohio
Valley Colt Circuit.
Owners and drivers of
champion harness horses
who raced during the summer
months at II Southeast Ohio
county fairs were honored at
the event held in Zanesville
"My Good Sam," ownl!d
by the late Wilma Styer of
Waterford and her brother
(Brooks Sayre,) is stabled
and trained on the tra~k at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Thi s year the colt pacer won
four of the II races in the circuit securin~ the trophy for
the best in hts category.
"Sam" was tr.rined by 81·year-old Sayre and his assis. tant Steve Swatzel of
Pomeroy. This is the second
year "My Good Sam" has
captured the top award. Sayre
smd he kept the plaque last
year, but gave it tci his driver,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Harley Haning

CYZZX

PREV IOUS SOLUTION -" I was neve r a fan of any actor ou ts1de of James
Cagney .. . I always liked Cagney·s style and energy.w- Clim Eastwood
(c) 2003 by NEA. Inc t 1·15

T:~~:t~~, scctR~lA-~t-~s·
0 Rscrrongt
le!lerJ of tha
fovr scrambled words be-

WOlD
GAM I

fdit•d by Cl..A.Y R. POllAN - - - - - -

low

I

WEATHER
Showers, HI: 70., Low: SOa

10 form follr slmolt wora~ .

LAPLA .P

I' I I I I'

I FIT, .l
Ll

~

The
a seminar on
.• .
_. - ch ild rearing had no children,
. __.NI._I_,_D_..w...,.y-'---'1:-'-; which proves tha t the person with
no children is the one who thinks
'r--::-:------, they know how to bring them . -

Detail• on Page A2

o

I III
rl- ,I,. . ~. .,YI. . .;L:.,.I.:;.,B-rul.-.:o,_s l--1~ -0

q~o"d

-complete ·the chuckl•
_;.L-...J.L-...L.-.L.
-!..
.
....J.
by IHi inliJ in the miuing words
L.
yo:J develop from step No . 3 below.
~ PRINT NUMBERED LEiTERS IN

THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I ., - t • -

oi

.l,ttll•l · ···•·

Princ.ipal Deem called to active duty ·Deputies'
early

SPORTS

On this deal. how would you (Soulh) lry to

I

PANG!:ROUS!

19 Lauper's
"- Bop"
20 Umbrage
22 Chief exec
23 Naval ott.
24 Tiny legume
25 lnvlte·lnits.
26 Palm read·
er's phrase
27 Gazed at
28 Anller

make six spades after West leads a

Tf\ IS f/\Ot-1Il-L

CAl~ ARe

~Sivlduat.

49
50 Loundry
amount
53 Alleviate
54 Cosmonaut
apace lab
w~h
55 "Othello"
14 Pay dirt
plotter
15 Not written 56 Actress
t6 Coup d'Meg 17 Fled
57 Tokyo,
18 Most foxy
once
20 Small bit
58 Barely
21 " SO! "
scrapes by
22 Pan of mph 59 Away
24 Value
DOWN
27 Tubb
of country
1 Courts
music
30 Latin I verb 2 Nobleman
3 Mule's
31 Skippers •
sound
OKs
4 Ms. Garbo
32 Jerk
5 Struck
34 Wide st.
a match
35 Uses a
charge card 6 All- sudden
36 Welles'
"Cillzen -· 7 Poker stake
37 Composed B Bull,
In Barcelona
39 on the
9 Smelt - up-and·up
40 Walk softly 10 Lucy
Lawless
41 Billy role
Williams
12 Dirty
42 At close
politics
quarterg

the more individual- or unique - is run
in New Zealand by Vii Gravis. He puts out
an e-zine (that word must exist by nowl)
several times a month that covers all
ranges of Player from the near beginner to
mcpert. (The different levels· are kept separate.) The main drawback from our poi nt
ol view is that lhe bidd1ng is Acol-based,
with four-card majors and weak (12- 14)
no-tru mps. But the card-play isn't affected. and Gravis offers some uselul
insights. His writing style is definitely individual - or unique.

BARNEY
MAN

1 Fly
4 Dollop
8 ToriH
11 Rowboat's
need
13 Teeming

Kids in Ohio, Michigan
dream of playing in
'Tite Game', Bt

All's well with
Browns after blowout
of Cardinals, Bt

Answer to Prevloul Puule

Miele like •

More and more Web sites are providing a
variety of bridge entertainment. One of

Pl-ANt

I'M STRICTLY A
CATC..
RELEASE

c1tch~r

45

LorrERIES

"My Good Sam" owned and trained by Brooks Sayre of Minersville, took the award fo r outstanding thre.e year old colt pacer in the Southern Valley Colt Circuit. Here "Sam:· driven by
AI Jones , makes a run for the finish at the 2003 Me igs County Fair.
AI Jones, this year. Jones also a day, seven days a week !here ers, dri vers, tminers and fair
won a top driver's award.
from his home in Minersville representati ves attended the
banquet where awards were
"I began training horses to feed and care for them.
when I retired at age 62 from
As for the times when he's given to the owners of the best
the U. S. Corps of on the road traveling to fairs. horses and to the top drivers.
Engineers," said Sayre he says his wife, June. is right
Taking home the lop troadding "I have no plans for to there beside him. ·In addition phy for hi s two year old filly
retire from training horses."
to the fairs, Sayre says he pacer with hi s horse.
Easter"
was
Currently he has three hors- sometimes races at Scioto ;, Perfect
es in training at the fair· Downs and at Lebonan.
grounds. He makes three trips
Approximately I00 ownPlease see S1m, AS

Ohio
Pick 3 day: S- 1-9
Plck4day: 3-0-7-3
Plctl3 night: 4-7-9
Pick 4 night: 8-9-6-4
BuckeyeS: 4-16-21-23-35

Southern replaces pop machine with milk Two injured in accident
Bv J. MtLES LAYTON .
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

·-

Eschew- Knife- Valid- W/1eeze - VICES

The mom was going to punish her son for hiding cookies in his bj!d His grandpa laughed and told the mom ,
"Mas I people would rather be saved from their conse~que nces tha n their VICES ."

West Virginia
Dally 3: 5-5·5
Dally 4: 0-3-9-5
Cash 25: 1-4-11-13-15-19

ARLO &amp; JANIS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGE,S

YOU ~E.E, 't1HA1'5 HAPP~~IUC.
Ho~~,

oou·r You~

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

·. Editorials

A4

Movies
Obituaries

As
As·

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Pubtishln&amp; Co.

RACINE -In the area with a reputation for
dairy fanns, th.e American Dairy Council
awarded a $1.•000 milk vending machine grant
to Southern Elementary SchooL
By adding a milk vending machine, valued at more than $3,000, students have a
healthy beverage choice that Mickey
Kucsma, principal, said is better than carbonated drinks. The school sells more than
300 bottles a week.
Kucsma said the milk machine is only a
small part of a ·coordinated school health
program that emphasizes fitness and .
health. She said students are rewarded for
exercising and this translates into academic progress. Kucsma said the Southern
Local School District is the only district in
· the county with such a program that integrates health with academics.
The program. which started this fall, is in
part based off the results from a California
study which discovered that healthy active
students equals improved attendance rates,
less discipline referrals, and an overall
improvement in proficiency tests.
'.'Good nutritinn aids academic progress,"
Kucsma said.
The milk vending machine grant pro-

Southern Elementary health and physical
education teacher Scott Wickline accepts a
$1000 check toward the purchase of a new
milk machine from Stacey Stradley of the
American Dairy Association . Wickline said
the new machine sells more than 300 bottles of milk per week. (J. Miles Layton)
gram is part of the dairy promotion checkoff program and must have been purchased
by the school from one of five distributors .
Schools serving grades six through 12 are
eligible to apply for the $1,000 grant, and
sdiool distrtcts may receive up to two
grants per district.
·

Troopers from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol are currently investigatmg this two-ve hicle
crash that occurred just after 1 p.m. Monday on Oh io 7 near
Middleport. The drivers of both vehicles were flown by medical helicopter to Cabeii-Huntington Hospital in Huntington ,
W.Va .. for medical attention . Further information was not
available at press time .

lhe Great American·

...

Nove•ller20

.
HMC's Tobacco Prevention Center
encourages you to be smoke-free on "Thursday!

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Differe'nce

For more information on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-5940•.
••

I

~-

- - -- - -- --

�. Page.A2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 18 , 2003

Time Out forTips

DAR hears about
paper dolls

. Are you going to be preparmg Thanksgiving dinner this
year? You may feel that it is
an overw helming task . How
do you know wh ich turkey to
buy ? How do yo u know how
muc h to buy ? How do you
know how to prepare it ?
Read on for some guidance.
First. you wi II need to plan
ahead for the big day. If you
have room in the freezer. you
can purchase the turkey several months in advance .
Frozen turkeys are great buys.
Watch newspaper ads for the
best pri ce. If you prefer a
fresh turkey, buy it just a day
or two before the meal. DO
NOT buy a prestuffed fresh
tu rkey because bacteria can
multiply rapidl y in it. potentiall y causing food poisoning.
AI ways be sure the turkey is
wrapped tightly in a clean package without holes or tears. Pick
up the rurkey just before checking
out of the grocery store. Frozen
turkeys should be rock solid;
fresh Turkeys should be kept in a
very cold refrigerator case.
To determine how much
turkey you need, one pound per
perwn is sufficient when buying
a whole turkey. If you are
preparing a boneless brea~t of
turkey. one-half pound is
enough. Three-fourths pound
per person will be needed for a
turkey breast. Allow I 1/4
pounds per person for prestuffed
frozen turkeys. These MUST be
kept frozen until ready to cook.
When ready to thaw, place the
frozen . turkey in its original
wrappe r in the refrigerator.
Twenty-four hours of tl1awing in
the refrigerator will be needed
tor each live pounds of turkey.
An 8- 12 pound turkey will thaw
in 1-2 days; 12- 16 pounds in 2-3
days; 16-20 pounds in 3-4 days;
and 20-24 pounds in 4-5 days.

POMEROY - A progmm on
[ Mansllotd lso'/53' ! •
paper doll cutout books was
given by Catherine Colbum, past
DAR Historian Geneml and Ohio
State DAR· Regent, at a recent
meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
·-··-·- ;;;.:. ·Jo;; , ...... '
• 1.£~~~.~~~0/~50 !
American Revolution.
The guest · speaker displayed
hundreds of paper doll cutout
books and spoke about their relation to history, the pleasure provided to children an11 yo ung
girls, and their use in advertising.
"No one knows for sure how
paper doll s were originated,"
said Colburn noting that one
popular belief is that they began
as pantins dolls made of
cardboard with arms and legs
that moved when a string
() :''&gt;,r:A. ~
•
,.
~ fi'..:il_
-, . . . • * *
,.
. ",. ---~
..
attached to the parts was pulled.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloud~
Showers T-storms Rail
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Paper dolls during the 19th
Paper doll collector Catherine Co lburn displ ays a portion of the
century were of famou s dancers
hundreds dolls she has in her collection during her talk on
and of the opera star, Jenny
their histor y at a meeting of Return 'Jonathan Me igs Chapter,
Lind, plus others which are now
Daughters of the American Re volution.
very rare and hard to find.
Colburn noted that during
not the campus organizer who ha1 American Revolution. Two new
BYTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lows around 37. Chance of World War II, paper doll books
given us the freedom to demon- prospective members were acceptwere made of service women in
Today... A chance of show- rain 30 percent.
it is the soldier, who salutes ed and welcomed to the Retum
strate;
ers early. Rain developing by
Thursday ... Partly cloudy their uniforms, and later of
the
!lag,
who serves beneath the Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Parnala
afternoon ... With a chance of with a 20 percent chance of United States Presidents' wives.
llag,
and
whose
coffin is draped by Schultz and Jennilee Mohler.
Adverti sing paper doll s
thunderstorms. Highs around showers. Highs around 54.
the flag, who allows the protester Moore recognized guests, Dale
70. Chance of rain 90 percent.
Thursday
night. .. Partly were used by many compato
bum the flag," and cal Jed for the and Anna Colbum, Unda Bohner,
Tunight...Showers and a cloudy with a 20 percent chance nies in the 1800's, Colburn
member
to "hold our vetemns and Opal Grueser, Jennie Mohler,
continued, to further the sales
chance of thunderstorms. of showers. Lows· around 37.
their
families
in our hearts."
Dawn Ruhnen, and Edith Si~&lt;;011,
of their products. The ONT
Lows in the mid 50s. Chance
Friday...Partly cloudy with Thread Company, Lion
!fdve Colburn, a gue&gt;~ gave
The next meeting of the Chapter
of rain 100 percent.
a 20 percent chance of show- Coffee, McLoughlins Coffee,
greetings fium the Sons of the will be held ori December 13.
Wednesday... Cioudy with a ers. Highs around 57.
50 percent chance of showers.
Friday night... Partly cloudy.
Highs around 55 .
Lows around 41 .
Lindsay and Alex Stewart,
Fourth St.. The Plains, 45780.
· Wednesday ni ght. ..Partly
clear.
Saturday ...Mostly
·
Andy,
J.
D.
and
Lance,
Rolie
The district friendship meeting
cloudy. Cooler. A chance of Highs around 60.
Stewart.
Ashley
Meeks;
Kenny
was
held 011 Nov. 15. E.5ther Smith
showers then a slight chance
Saturday
night. ..Partly
and Debbie Stewart and Katie.
was recognized for having received
of showers after midnight . cloudy. Lows around 42 .
MIDDLEPORT - Brooks- Anston and Loraine Newsome
a
commission in the order. Doris
CHESTER - Several memGrant Camp Sons of Union Charlie Slone, Ronnie and bers were reported ill at a recent Grueser presided at the meeting
Veterans of the Civil War and the Louise Dalton, Mollie Dalton, meeting of Chester Council 323, which opened in titualistic tonn.
Maj. Daniel McCook Circle Drema and Ray Bias and Sara, Daughters of America.
Others uttending were Julie
A DAY ON WALL STREET
Ladies of the Grand Army of the Brenda and Kristin. Audrey and
They included Margaret Cut1i s, Nathan Biggs. Mary
Republic
will
have
their
annual
Lesley,
Terry,
Tammy,
Drew
Amberger,
Opal Hollon, and Holder, lnzy Newell, Jean Welsh,
10,000
Nov. 17, 2003
celebration
of
President and Cole Newsome, Rod and Erma Cleland. it was noted that JoAnn Ritchie, Laura Mae Nice,
J:ONJmes
Abraham Lincoln's first national Barbie Newsome, and the hosts. cards can be sent to Beulah Charlotte G11mt, Thelma White,
9,500
.ll:rhstrial s
declaration of Thanksgiving
Dinner was enjoyed by the Maxey at 6736 Fourth Ave., St . Betty Biggs, Janice Zwilling.
9,000
wtth
a
dmner
at
6:30
p.m.
,
guests.
After the gifts were Petersburg, Fla., 33710, and to Goldie Frederick. Opal Eichinger.
·' OS7,Q
Tuesday
at
_
the
Riverbend
Arts
opened,
a
late supper was served Esther Wright at the Hickory S;mdy White, Mary Jo Barringer.
8.500
9,7 10.83
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
Council Bmldmg 111 Mtddleport. with cake and punch
Creek Nursing Center, 51 E. ;md Everett Gnmt.
High
Low
Pet. change
Rooord high: 11 ,722.98
· The two groups will furnish
9,765 .64 9,629.87
from prevlot•" -0.59
Jan. 14, 2000
the meat and beverages. All
attending are to bring a covered
Nov. 17, 2003
2.000
dish. Anyone interested in the
Nasdaq
Civil
War is invited to attend.
, ,800
At the meetings to follow,
both groups will be having
1,800
their annual election of offi1,400
cers.
Brooks-Grant Camp will
AUG
MEDICAL
SEP
OCT
NOV
1 ,909.6!
be
considering
a by-law
High
Low
AUTOMOTIVE
Aocord high: 5.048,82
Pet. chan~
change.
A
report
of
from preY OUI! -1.07
t ,919.23 1,890.72
March 10, 2000
Remembrance Day held on the
Holzer Medical Center
Norris Northup Dodge
Nov. 17, 2003
third Saturday of November at
1.1tJO
www.holzer.org
Gettysburg, Pa., will be given
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
St:.an::l:u:d &amp;
1,050
by those who attended .

M

j

RJft.
-

.,

~

~

~

Chance of showers

Civil War groups
to meet

D of A members
reported ill

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

R:XJr.s 500

1,000

SEP

AUG
High
1,050.35

1,043.63
Pet. change
rrom previous: ·0.64

OCT

Low
1,035.28

950 i

NOV

Local Stocks
ACI -25.70
AEP - 27
Akzo - 33.14
Ashland Inc.- 38.71
BBT - 39.07
BLI - 13.73
Bob Evans - 30.05
BorgWamer - 79.23
Cily Holding -

33.40

Char!l&gt;on - 4.50
Charming Shops- 6.19
Col-26.39
DuPon1 - 39.73
00 - 21.19
Fedetal Mogul- .30

Layette shower
honors Newsomes

Gannett - 84.52
Genetal Electric- 27.81
GKNLY-5
Harley Davidsoo - 45.70
Krnart - 29.40
Kroger - 17.82
Ltd.- 17.45
NSC - 20.87
Oak HiM FiMncial- 30.04
Bank One - 42.91
OVB - 26.34
Peoples - 27.65
Pepsico- 47.67
Premier- 8.17
Rocky Boots -17.40

RD Shell - 44.56
Rod&lt;well - 30.85
SealS - 54.05
SBC - 23.39
AT&amp;T - 19.17
USB- 27.39
Wendy's- 37.95
Wai-Mart - 55
Worthington - 13.65
Daily stock reports are the ,
4 p.m. closing quotes of
lf1e previoos day's transactions, provided by Sm!h
PartneiS at A&lt;Mist Inc. of
GalliJolis.

POMEROY - A layette
shower was held recently at
the home of Frank and ,
JoAnne Newsome of Five
Points for their son and daughter-in-law, Tammy and Terry
Newsome of Wilmington.
Games were played and
prizes awarded to Lindsay
Stewart, Angie Flint, Mary
Perry, Alex Stewart, Fernande
Stewart, Katie Stewart, Shannon
Newsome and Sandy Roberts.
Attending or sending gifts
were Shannon Newsome,
Sierra and Phenix, Mary Perry,
Angie Flint, Brian, Fernande,

Correction Polley
.Qur main concern in all stories is to be
·accurate. If you know of an error in a
:s1ory, call the newsroom at (740) 992·2t56.
Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News

.

Advertising

·Outllde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15

:ctaasJClrc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation

-

-- --·-

www.mydailyregister.com

'"
. L.;
-..,._r., ;·"--l";-;
. WI

~

.

ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

CHESTER - The Rodders
2000 Car Club will meet at .
6:30 p.m. at the MJ &amp;
Family Restrurant in Chester.
Members encouraged to
attend .
.•

REEDSVILLE Riverview Garden Club, 7:30

Birthdays

.

Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
1he
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
·
Postmaster: Send address corrections 1o The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Kt!eping ·,
·Meigs .
informed

..

"

'

·..•

j .,.. .

.

.c '

.• '".J

need to block phone call s, tr• •.
if telemarketers are a problem
at her house.
.
If she has to take away
hi s co ntrol of th e fami ly
fi nances. she should try to
do it in a way that allows
him to put the bl ame on
someone eb e. not her.
My father neve r did wi n
the shiny ne w car or the mil lion doll ars he was prom ised.
even thou gh the .sweepstakes
companies called to get directions to his home and had him
till out offi cial forms requNing color and style of the
automobi le. He is now in the
dementia ward of an assistedli ving facility, and my mother
wishes she had those thousands of dollars he spent on
sweepstakes entries and charities to help pay for hi s care.HOPE THI S HELPS.
COLUMBI A, S.C.
DEAR HOPE: You and your
family have my sympathy for the
way your fathefs condition wa'
exploited, and I hope "Going
Broke" will heed your suggestions. She should ab o write to
each charity that is '-l.lliciting her
husband and req uest to be
removed from the mailing list.
Readers, you can write to
,Mail Preference 'Se rvice.
Direct
,Marke ting
Association Inc .. P.O. Box
643. Carmel. N.Y. 10512 .
The Web address
is
wwwDMAconsumers.org. If
you 're drowning in j unk
mail, contacting it can cut
down on the volu me.

Lap blanket
project

associate matron. and the other
at Lancaster attended by
Darlene Casto. a1sociate conductress, ClarJ Hysell trea~ urer.
Betty Bishop, EJecta. Avanell
George associate matron and
Betty Lowery. marshal.
Thinking of yo u cards
were sent to members who
are ill. Betty Bi shop and
Alegera Will. and t o Jane
Wise who is caring for her ill
parents. The meeting opened
in ritualistic form which
included the presentation of
the American fl ag and
.reports from the officers.

HARRISONVILLE
Members of Harrisonville chapter 255, Order of Eastern Star.
will partiCipate in the District 25
project of making lap blanket for
residents of the Masonic home
and the Eastern Star Horne.
It was noted that 400 36x36
inch lap blankets are needed.
At 9;30 a.m. on Dec. 2 at the
Albany Chapter room members will meet to cut and sew.
Reports were given on two
schools of learning held recently. one at Cambridge attended
by Pauline Atkins, worthy
matron and Avanell George,

Dear
Abby

DEAR ABBY: M1 hu sband. ""George."" i' 6 ·feet. 3
inche&gt;. He needed a ncv. car.
so my parems '\urpri,cd "
h;m with one of theirs II ts
le\S 1han· a yea r old and tn
excellent conditi on .
George and I apprec iate
my parent, . ge nern, it;. hut
the car is ve rv 'mall and
ex tremely uncoinfortahk for
George . What ' houl d we do ''
THANKS BUT NO
THANKS IN THE EAST
DEAR THAt\KS : Thank
vour parents t(&gt;r their ~err­
erosi ty. and explain the prot}.
lem . Offer to return the Glr if
they wi sh. If thev refuse. sel l
Jl.

"

down payment on a· larger
model. !The al tc rnati 1c is to
c.xchange George for a ,mail er model -- bu t that v.o uld he
even more expensil'e . 1
Deur Ahh r is \\T i/1&lt;'11 In
A!Jiguil Vwt H llrt' ll . a/.111
kno&gt;m as l t' WIIIt' Ph ill tf"·
and H:.C/ .1 fo wtded br her
m O/ h e ~ Piitdin e Phi l/if'' ·
Wri 1e
Dt•ar
A h h 1 e1 1
WH'\'f.D eorA hh \'.nnn or P. O .
B ox 6'N.JU. Lri1 /111 ~eln . C'A

90069.

It was decided thai for the
~cem he r

--"

_Keeping'.
·Meigs ·
informed
Sunday
Ttmes-Sentine/. .

id Oak Curios
Sr.rting at

5

Meigs • 992~2155

199

~F~'1 ~,

Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

\

One in

for only a $1 a day.

Talk with your doctor about heart disease.
·learn more about heart health under
O'Bleness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

AO'BLENESS

·Sheila DicKens was the winner of a 25-pound turkey given
·away r:m Customer Appreciation Day at Peoples Bank in
:Middleport. Here employee Carla King presents the turkey to
:the winner.
.. ~•• .. w••••'"''"''"'--·-··--·· - •••- •-" - •'•

··~

•• •

~

two wom · ~will

die of heart disease or
stroke.

.· Meigs ~ 992~11S5 '

-

i&lt;

~­

'' '

---- -- - - -- - -- --"-.

meet ing ever~ one

Will bring a fun gift rather than
one for exchangi ng. A letter
from the past worthy grand
patron Larry Groves and his ,
wife thanki ng the order for the
complimentary membership
and a dinner was read.
Harold Ri ce gave prayer
before refreshments we re
served. Hostesses were Atkins
and Sharon Jewell . Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Bishop and Mr. and
~- Glenn Kennedv will provide refreshments for the Dec.
9 meeting.

'

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

Rates Ouht~ Meigs County
13 Weeks ..... ....... .'50.05
26 Weeks . . ....... .. .'100.10
, 52 Weeks . . . .. . • . . . . ." .'200.20

and u..,e the ·monev a' ·a

~{

: Supday ..
.:Ttmes;.Sentinel

I j!''

DEAR ABBY: "Go10 g
Broke
10
Maryland"
described her 85 -year-old
husband as a cash cow for
charitie;. She said they live
on a fi xed income, and he
kee ps insisti ng they "don't
reall y need the money."
lh my father's. case. what
she described was the firs t
sign of Alzheimer's disease . It
started several years before
the usual signs such as confusion or gett ing lost occurred.
He. too. spent a fo rtune try ing
to "wi n" a million dollars
fro m sweepstakes companies.
Since "Going Broke's" hus. band has clearly lost his good
judgment. it's unlikely that
legal counsel will bring it back
to him. (My dad seemed to
understand our ad vice, but
continued sending money to
sweepstakes. humane societies. etc,). What "Going
Broke" needs is an anomey to
protect herself and her husband
financially. She should also try
to get a medical exam fur. him.
If they have children, they need
to help her with this NOW.
"Going Broke's" loca l
Al zheimer's Association can
offer ass istance and advice.
The Maryland attorney general's office will have a consumer protection or omsbudman's office that may be able
to advi se her. There is probably a Council on Aging in her
county. Al so, please make
sure she has the address of the
Direct Marketing Association
to stop the junk mail. She may

Wins Turkey
'

afternoon,

Man out to win sweepstakes
had lost his good judgment

Other events

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks . . ... . . .. ... .'30.15
26 Weeks . ..... ... ... .'60.00
52 Weeks .. . .. .' ... .. .'118.80

Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Point Pleasant Register

~~~

Clubs and
Organizations
Thursday, Nov, 20

www.mydailysentinel.com

·. oo &lt;
S::,

19

p.m. at the Reedsville United
Methodi st Church. Christmas
workshop will be held.
Members to take gifts for the
VVednesday, Nov. 19
nursing home and finger
POMEROY
Victor
foods for refre shments. Dues
at the
Hannahs
who
resides
are payable at the meeting.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
will observe his 83rd
Center
Thesday, Nov. 25
birthday
on Nov. 19. Cards
ATHENS - The Southern
may
be
Consortium for Children will Room 114.sent to him there,
meet at 10- a. m. at the office,
507 Richland Avenue, Suite
Saturday, Nov. 22
I07 , Athens.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Fredrick Goebel of Tuppers
Pl ain s will celebrate his 99th
birthday on Nov. 22. Cards
may be sent to him at P. 0 .
Box 256, Tuppers Plain s
Thursday, Nov 20
45753.
POMEROY - Caring and
sharin suppport group will
Thursday, Nov. 25
meet at I p.m. at the Meigs
COLUMBUS - John
Semor Center. Topic will be Crooks, native of Syracuse and
update on Alz.heimers disease. a 1942 graduate of Pomeroy
High School wil observe his
Thesday, Nov. 18
80th birthday on Nov. 25. He
POMEROY - The Meigs had a hip replacement in March
County Health Department and a second surgery on the
wtll have a childhood immu- same hip in August. He is curni zation clinic, 9 to II a.m. and rently doing well and residing
I to 3 p.m . at the office on in Mayfair Village Retirement
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Center. Room 215.3011
Take child 's shot records. Each Hayden Rd., Columbus,
child must be accompanied by 43235. He,would enjoy getting
parent or legal guardian. Take cards from old acquaintances.
medical cards if applicable .

Tuesday, November 18, 2003

You may be able to
.reduce your risk.

Mall Subscription

General Manager

.Web:

every

permiHed in areas where home
carrier service is available.

:otatrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext 17

E-mail:
news@ myda llysentinel.com

Published

www.mydailytribune.com

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

.

VVednesday,No~

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in regular se.ssoin"add! 7:30 p.m. in
the· elementary conferen ce
room.
POMEROY - Sali sbury
Trustees, 6:30 p.m.
nship building on
Road.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

'

· Thesday, Nov. 18
RACINE - Racine Water
Board will meet for a regular
meeting at f 0 a.m. in the
Council chambers in the
municipal building.

www.pvcilley.org

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

Public meetings

Thursday, Nov. 20

NEWSPAPERS

~ ~ )_ ·

(UsPs 213-9&amp;0!
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Subscription Ratas
By carrier or motor route
One month ........ . . .•'9.95 .
One year . .... ... . ...'119.40
Dally .. . . . .. . ..........511'
Senior Cltt ..n rates
Ono month . , . , ; •••••• .'8.95
Ono year , ........... .'96.70
Subscribers should remit In
advance direct to The Daily
SentineL No subscription by mail

:Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
·Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
·Reporter: J. Miles Layton , Ext. 13

www.turnpikeflm.com

?

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Servi ces

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

take about 2 3/4 - 3 hours to cook;
12-J41XlUIXh need 3 ·3 3/4 hours;
14- lll j:x.JUndd 3/4 - 4 1/4 hours;
IR-20 pound, 4 1/4 - 4 _ hours;
and 20-24 poundl 4 -- 5 hours.
With stuffed turkeys. the time will
Becky
be a little longer - 8- 12 pound;,
Baer
requires 3 - 3 _ hours; 12-14
pounds 3 - - 4 hours; 14- 18
pounds 4 - 4 114 hours; 18-20
pound1 4 114 - 4 3/4 hours; and
20-24 J:&gt;.lUOOS 4 3/4 -5 114 hours.
When completely thawed. do Do not roast a turkey lower th;m
not leave in the refrigemtor more 325 degrees or ovemight _the risk
than a day or two before malting. Be sure to remove the pla1- tar food poi&gt;Oning is too great!
A meat thermometer in the
tic bag of g iblet~ located in the fleshy part of the thigh should
brea&gt;t cavity before roasting.
· be used to make sure the bird
Tu rkeys can be thawed in
cold water, IF the water is is completely cooked. The
changed every 30 minutes and temperatu re must reach 180
remains cold. An 8-12 pound degrees Fahrenheit. Chec k
turkey will thaw in 4-6 hours; other areas of the turkey. No
12- 16 pounds in 6-8 hours; 16- area should be below 160
20 pounds in 8- 10 hours; and degrees Fahrenheit. Whether
20-24 pounds in 10-1 2 hours.
the stuffing is baked inside or
Thawing can also be done in outside of the turkey, it should
the microwave oven if the turkey reach 165 degrees Fahrenhei}.
is small to medium in size. When the turkey is taken
Check the microwave oven's from the ove n, let it stand 20
manutac'IUrer's directions to see minutes before removing the
what size of turkey can be · stufting and carving.
thawed, how long it should take
Take the rurkey off the bones
to thaw it, and the power level to and refrigerate it and the stuffing
use. Turkeys thawed in the in shallow containers within two
microwave MUST be roasted hours ofmoking. Leftoverturkey
immediately after thawing.
&lt;md stuffing e&lt;m be used within 3The stuffing can be partiall y 4 days. Gmvy only keeps 1-2
prepared the .day before the days. If it is going to be longer
dir,ner. The moi st stuffing than that before they are eaten,
ingredients and the dry stuffing freeze them. A tempen.:ure of
ingredients can Jxl assembled, 165 degrees should be reached
but they must be refri ge rated when reheating these food~.
separately. Don' t co mbine
For more information about
them until just before putting food safety, call the U.S.
the stuffing in the casserole Department of Agriculture
dish or the turkey. If it is going Meat and Poultry Hotline at
in the turkey. stuff it loosely - 1-800-535-4555. Their webno more than 3/4 cup of stuff- site can be accessed at
ing per pound of turkey.
http ://www.fsis.usda.gov.
Turkeys should be roasted in a
Butt erb all al so ha s a
325 degree Fahrenheit oven. An Turkey Talk -Line at 1-800unstuffed 8-12 pound turkey will 323-4848. It s website ts
www.butterball .com .

Community Calendar

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Record high: 1,527.46

March 24, 2000

B Y THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Local Folks
Ceresota, Fiour and Pill sbury
Flour are a few example s.
This type of advertising continued through the 1900's and
even today has not completely disappeared, said Colb urn.
Around the turn of the century. popular women's magazi nes started to incl ude a page
of paper doll s - Ladies Home
Journal. Good Housekeeping
included. Colburn said . in the
1930 's and 1940's, paper
doll s began to appear in the
comic section of local newspapers. and in the Sears catalog . Paper dolls were still produced in good quantities in
the 1950's: however, with the
ad ve nt of television , children
were not quite as interested in
sitting dow n to read a book or
cut out paper doll s. she added.
Colburn concluded with the
ad'.&lt;ice that for those who want to
paper doll collectors start by buying paper doll books in local stores
lxx;ause someday these, too, will
be sought after. She also suggested that the dolls not be cut out but
left in their original condition. She
said it has taken her many years to
complete the large collection she
has and she still buys paper dolls
during her travels.
Peggy Moore, Regent conducted the business meeting. National
defense chairman Rae Moore.
gave a National Defense report
honoring vetenms of all wars. She
said it is the "soldier, not the
reporter, who ha~ given us freedom of the press: It is tl1e soldier,

PageA3

-... ··----- ··-~---· -- ·---···- ..· -~- ------·--·-:..•.__ __U .-... •
'•".

~

¢

.

'W Memoria.ll:lospital

.:!!~IL

~~L~
1 r11

•

~

Oh1oHealth
·

This women 's heart health initiative is providtd by O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in collaboration with OhioHealth.

___ J!' ....

�..
•

PageA4

OPINION

·The Daily Sentine~

Tuesday, November 18,
'

Tuesday, November 18, 2003

Tl~e

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Daily Sentinel • Page As

Gavin plant receives internationat
habitat conservation award

Obituaries

1

Th~

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
.,

STATE

VIEW

OhioReads
Is it worth the investment?
• · · The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, 011 OhiuReads gra11/s:
' .It's time Gov. Bob Taft admitted wl1at is tncreasmgly plam
:to the rest ot the state · Appealing though its premise may be,
. Ohio Reads is not worth taxpayers' stgntftcant in vestment.
This truth has been evident f01 years to anyone wt_ll tng to
examine how OhioReads spends its money. Now. an Indi ana
Untversity research team has added the considerable weight
!Jf earlier data-based concltt&lt;tuns To sum up the eva luators'
report: OhioReads grants do n~ll yteld higher test scores.
. : The governor's vanity program does bring volunteers into
~chool butldings. It provtdes money for school s to buy more
books and other readtng me~tenals . And it helps pay for programs to help p&lt;~rents and teachers work mot e effect tvely wtth
children
·The question tsn't whether OhioReads does anythmg good.
It does. The question ts whether 'the money spent on the program- $138 million so far - would be more wtsely spent
on other programs.
.. The answer to that question is yes.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Tuesday, Nov. 18, the 322nd day of 2003. There are
43 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight m History : On Nov. 18, 1928, 75 years ago,
the first successful sound-synchromzed animated cartoon. Walt
. .Oisney's 'Steamboat Wtllie,' starring Mickey Mouse, premiered
in New York.
On this date: In 1820, U.S. Navy Capt. Nathaniel B. Palmer
dtscovered the frozen continent of Antarctica.
· . In 1883, the United States and Canada adopted a system ot
.Standard Time zones.
. In 1886, the 21st president of the Untted States, Chester A.
,Arthur. died in New York at age 56.
In 1903, the United States and Panama stgned a treaty granti·
·, ng the United States rights to build the Panama CanaL
· In 1936, Germany and Italy recognized the Spanish government of Franctsco Franco.
· · In 1966, U.S. Roman Catholic bishops did away with the rule
against eating meat on Fndays.
· · In 1969, financier-dtplomat Joseph P. Kennedy died in Hyanms
· Port, Mass., at age 81.
:· · In 1978, California Congressman Leo J. Ryan and four other
· people were killed in Jonestown, Guyana, by memhers of the
Peoples Temple: the killings were followed by a night of mass
murder and suicide by 912 cult members
' In 1987, the congressional Iran-Contra committees issued their
final report, saying President Reagan bore 'ultimate responsibili·_. ty ' for wrongdoing by his aides.
In 1999, 12 people were killed when a bonftre under construction at Texas A&amp;M Umversity collapsed
Ten years ago: The U.S. House of Representatives joined the
·.Senate in approvmg legislation aimed at protecting abortton
. factlil!es, staft and patients. American Atrlines flight attendants
,went on strike; they ended their job actton four days later.
. Representatives of 21 South African polittcal parties approved a
new constitutton.
: ·. Five years ago: House Republtcdns endorsed U.S.
· Representative Bob Livingston of Louisiana to be their next
·speaker, succeeding Newt Gingnch. (Livingston later resigned
.from the House before he could take over the speakership atier
· ~'admitting to marital mfideltttes.)
: ·. One year ago: U.N. arms inspectors retumed to Iraq atier a
- four-year hiatus, calling on Saddam Hussein's government to
· cooperate with their search for weapons of mass destruction.
Actor James Coburn dted in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 74.
Today's Birthdays: Senate Appropriations Committee
Chairman Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, is 80. Actor Brad Sulli van is
72. Actress Brenda Vaccaro is 64. Actress Linda Evans is 61.
Actress Susan Sullivan is 59. Country singer Jacky Ward is 57.
Actor Jameson Parker is 56. Actress-smger Andrea Marcovicci is
55. Rock musician Hennan Rarehell is 54 Singer Graham Parker
is 53. Comedian Kevin Nealon is 50 Actress Elizaheth Perkins
is 43. Singer Kim . Wilde ts 43. Rock musician Ktrk Hammett
(Metallica) is 4 1. Rock singer Tim DeLaughter is 38. Actor
Owen Wilson ts 35. Singer Duncan Sheik is 34. Actress Peta
Wilson is 33 Actress Chloe Sevigny is 29. Rapper Fabulous is
24.
Thought lor Today: " It can't happen here' ts No. I on the list
of famous last words.· - David Crosby, rock singer-musician.

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
_editing and must be signed and include address
:and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
' be published. Leiters should be In good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensl{s of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. editorial board, unless otheiWise noted.

s

Iraqis have cause to doubt US. promise
If you were an Iraqi facing a
decision whether to risk your
life and your family's by stding
with the United States, would
yuu''
If you constder recent U.S.
history, you would not. If you
Iisten to President Bush, you
might. However, if you li sten
to other voices coming out of
the administnllion and consider
the security situation outside
your door, nu one could blame
you for hesitatmg.
On the crucial question of
whether the United States will
'stay the course' until Iraqi
freedom is secure, the president sounds eloquent, idealistic
and determined.
As he said at the Heritage
Foundalion on Veterans Day,
'Two years into the war on terror, the will and resolve of
America are heing tested, in
Afghanistan and Iraq.'
He referred to cases in which
America had successfully
stayed the course - the 194 ~
Berlin airlift, Ronald Reagan's
determination to win the Cold
War - and said, 'Again, the
world is watching. Again we
wtll he steadfast. We will finish
the mission we have hegun.
Period.'
Bush demonstmted th at he
understands
the
stakes
involved. 'The failure of
democracy in Afghanistan and
Iraq will condemn every advocate of freedom in those two
countnes to prison and death,
and would extinguish the
democratic hopes of millions
in the Middle East .
'The failure of democracy in
those two countries would provide new basis for the terrorist
network and embolden terrorists and their allies around the
world.'
And, said Bush, failure
'would convince terron sts

mind - and in much of the
govemment, too, civilian and
military - all ambiguous and
difficult military conflicts are
' Vietnam ' and 'quagmires.'
In one of the other mo~t dtsgmceful episodes in U.S. history, President Bush's father in
1991 encouraged Iraqis to rise
up against Saddam Hussein in
the atiennath of the Persian
Gulf War. And then he allowed
them to he butchered and tortured by the thousands - all to
avoid the 'quagmtre' involved
m going to their aid.
In between Vietnam and
Iraq, the United States wasterror-bomhed out of Lebanon in
1983. Afterward, in 1993.
Somali thugs forced a U.S .
withdrawal by downing a
Blackhawk helicopter and
killing most of tls crew.
Even now, in Afghanistan,
it's not clear that the United
States is devoting the military
and financial resources to
secur11'., freedom outside
Kabul ~·cnain l y, Bush has not
delive ted on a promised
Plan'
for
'Mars hall

Morton
Kondracke

that America backs down
under attac k and more
attack s on America would
surely follow. '
On the other hand, since
Vietnam, America has a record
of not stay ing the course, of
abandoning Its allies and
encouraging its enemies.
Moreover, some Americans
- notably, Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz. - are' worried that
they hear noises emanating
from the Bush admim strattOn
that the president's firm expressions of resolve are not the last
word on policy.
In Vietnam, to be sure, the
Umted States stuck with the
l&lt;t~k to the tune of 55,000 lost
lives, but the country lost its
will to fight after a well-timed
election-year enemy oft'enstve
m 1968- Tet - and elected a
president, Richard Ntxon, who
effected a· U.S withdrawal
the
rubri c
of
under
•Yietnamization.'
Nixon's secretary of state,
Henry Kissinger, negotiated a 'peace treaty ' tha t
allowed North Vietnamese
forces to stay in South
Vietnam . Then, . in one of
the
most
disgracefu·l
acttons 111 U.S. history,
Congress voted in 1975 to
deny financial support as
South Vietnam was facmg
its final battle of life and
death. It died.
In the · popular American

Afghan~&lt;tan .

Iraq, as McCam satd in a
speech last week, is not
Vietnam - because the enemy
is a hated oppressor, not a liberator - and must not become
another Vietnam because
Amenca loses its will.
But atdes say that McCain
hears worrisome echoes of
Ntxon-style 'Vtelnamization'
in administration talk of swift
' lraqiization ' of the contlict especially in an election year.
' When our secretary of
defense says that it is up to the
Iraqi people to defeat the
Baathists and terrorists.'
McCain said at the Council on
Foreign Relations, ·we send a
message that America's exit is
ultimately more nnportant than

Harley Haning
POMEROY - Harley L. Haning of 35975 Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, died Nov. 17 , 2003 .
Services will be held at II a. m. Thursday, Nov. 20, at Ewing Funeral Home . Calling hour!itwtll
be 5 to 8 p.m. Wednesday and I0 to II a.m. Thursday before the time of servtce.

the achievement of American
goals.
'We send a signal to every
Iraqi ally, neutral and adversary that the United States is
more interested in leaving than
we are m wmnmg.
Specifically, he said, 'when
the United States announces a
schedule for training and
deploying Iraqi security forces,
then announces an acceleration
of that schedule, then accelerates it again, it sends a signal of
despemtion, not certnude. '
And, he said, when the
United States increases 'by
thousands our estimates of the
numbers of Iraqis tramed, it
sounds like somebody is cooking the books.'
Indeed, on Veterans Day,
Bush announced that 118,000
Iraqis were doing security duty.
1\vo weeks ago, the Pentagon
was touting 90,000. And two
weeks before that, 70,000.
Persistent news reports suggest
that the Iraqis are ill-trained
and not adequately vetted for
past Saddarrust ties.
Moreover, the Pentagon has
announced that U.S. forces will
he lowered from 130.000 to
I05,000, and then he! ow
100,000 sometime next year.
That sounds suspiciously like
an election-year deployment
schedule, not a winmng one.
As McCam satd, the number
of American lighting troops on
patrol m any one time in all of
-Iraq is only 30,000. Military
expert Edward Luttwak points
out that New York City has
38,000 police officers. Clearly,
for a while anyway, we need
more troops, not less.
(Mnrtrm Kondracke IS executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper qfCapitol Hill.)
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Local Briefs

I

Escapee being
sought by
sheriff
POMEROY
Daniel
Craycraft of Cheshire is
being sought by authorities
on escape charges after he
allegedly fled on foot from
the
Meig s
County
Courthouse last week.
According to Monday 's
report from the Meig s
Co~nty 's sheriff's department, Cravcraft " fled after
being told that the adu lt
parole authority was going to
hold him in jail on a parole
violation.
Arrest s reported by the
department mcluded Todd
Cooper uf New York, ctted
on charges of possession of
marijuana and speeding :
Elmer Stone of Bellfountaine
on a bench warrant for
domestic violence: Todd
Goode ot Racine and Frank
Ateker of Pumeroy on
charges of domesttc vtolence ,
Billy J. Vancooney of

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used racial epithets 'from using
any derogatory racial or ethnic
eptthets directed at, or descriptive
of,
Hispanic!Latino
employees of Avis. This included, as Justice Mosk underlined,
'any future use of a list of offensive words (to be compiled by
the trial judge) even out5ide the
presence of the Latino employees, and even if welcomed or
overtly permitted.'
Justice Mosk emphasized
that 'punishment for - and
suppression of - speech are
two
different
things.'
Moreover, the trial judge was
indeed ordered by the majority
to put together a list of words
that would be forever forbidden
in that workplace. I emphasize
this because it turns the Ftrst
Amendment upside down.
Declarin~ all of this flatly
unconstituuonal, Justice Mosk
made the elementary point that
even if someone has previously
discriminated against employees through slurs and epithets,
setting up a list of preJudicial
words that can never be used
thoroughly undercuts the First
Amendment.
This, he wrote, is 'because
the offensive content and effect
of using any one, or more, of a
list of verboten words cannot
be detennmed in advance.' A
list alone provides no context
for the words in the future, or
when the forbidden words
might or might not actually be
offensive.
In her dissent, Justice
Brown wrote that she 'can
think of no circumstance in
which this court has brushed
astde such an important constitutional protection as the
right to free speech on the
basis of so little analysis or
authority ... Moreover, here
we are not dealing merely
with a regulation of speech,
we are dealing with an
absolute prohibition - a
prior
restraint.
Prior
'

• • ' • ••

·~

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. . .. -

restraints of speech are particularly inimical because
they do not merely place a
burden OJ) the speaker's ability to communicate a message; rather they erase that
me ssage before tts effects
can he assessed.'
Also, in her dissent, Justice
Brown said of the list of condemned words that 'if applied
generally, the plurality's rule
would create the exception that
swallowed
the
First
Amendment.'
During her hearing before
Senate
Judiciary
the
Committee, Justice Brown
was criticized for her dissent
in that case, but I het that
none of the Democratic senators - even their bombastic
leader in approving judicial
selection, Charles Schumer
of New York- had any real
knowledge as to what the
Aguilar case was about. I do
ajlree with them about critictzing her support of the
Lochner Sup'reme Court
decision ( 1905) that placed
property rights over human
rights. During the 'Lochner'
era (from the early 1900s
through the 1930s) the
Supreme Coun struck down
worker safe~~ .laws, stating
that they mtnnged on businesses' rights.
As for Justi~ Brown being
out of the mamstream, in the
electton to confirm her appointment to the Supreme Court of
California, she won 76 percent
of the vote. And California is
hardly a right-wing state. When
will the entire Senate realize the
embarrassment it has become
by demanding that certain
norrunees confonn to certain
ideologies of the Democrats on
the
Senate
Judtciary
Committee?
INat Hento.ff ~ a nationally
renow11ed authonty on the First
Amendment and the Bill of
Right.,.)

•

home was broken into and
severa l items were stolen:
Re gina Hill reported the
Darwin General Store had
been broken into, and
William Fife reported the
Silver Run Bapti st Church
had a money jar stolen.
Other incidents reported to
the department were from
Teresa Barber of Portland
who said she was assaulted in
her front yard: Suzanne
Cammarata of Portland who
said she is receiving harassing telephone calls: Honest
Ellis of Ingli s. Fla., that his
Chevy Silverado Truck was
vandalized: Jock Rose of
Racine reported his Sx8 utility trailer wa s stolen: and
Angela Lee of Albany reported her vehicle had been vandalized.
Courtney
Hunnell
of
Syracuse was arrested on
charges of domestic violence
after assa ulting her boyfriend
and 1s incarcerated in the
Franklin County Jail. the
closest facility with a room to
house a fema le prisoner.

State auditor wants New Rome dissolved
NEW ROME (AP)- Ohio
Auditor Betty Montgomery
said Monday that the village
of New Rome. known for
decades as a speed trap,
should be dissolved.
A new state law allows the
state to request dissolution if
a village of fewer than 150
people meets two of six cri te ria of wrongdoing . New
Rom e would he the first vil lage to close under the law.
New Rome , whtch has 60
residents, has violated state
election law 23 times since
1988, mostly in the replacement of council members,
Montgomery said. The village met one of the law's criteria by failing to follow election law for at least two consecutive election cycles.
The village, which abuts
Columbus' west side, also did
not adopt a budget based on
the amount it collects in taxes
in any year since 1993 another benchmark for dissolution under the law,
Montgomery said. About 90
percent of the village's
$400,000 annual budget
came from traftic fine s.
A village also could be dissolved if it does not provide
at least two services typically
provided by municipalities,
such as fire and police protection, garbage collection
and water or sewer service.
The auditor's office did not
pursue allegations that New
Rome did not provide those
services. Its pol ice depart·
ment has been inactive si nce
June, when Police Chief
Larry Cunningham and Lt.
Roge~ Kerr resigned. There is
no fire department.
"It is clearly in the best
interests of New Rome' s citizens that the village shou ld

Janice R. Brown: Too independent for Democrats
Janice Rogers Brown, the
black daughter of Southern
sharecroppers who hecame a
California Supreme Court justice, has been nominated by the
president to an influenttal
Nat
District of Columbia Court of
Appeals seat. Because she is so
Hentoff
persistently independent, 14
well-known law professors Democratic, Republican and
Independent - have written
the
Senate
Judiciary
In a future column, I'll disCommittee supponing her. But cuss Brown's opinions, which
committee Democrats find her illuminate her independence,
'out of the mainstream,' and and, as the law professors have
unacceptably conservative. The said, her ' thorou~h appraisal of
Judiciary Committee has con- legal argumentation.' But l will
tinned Brown by a party-line tirst show the mindless partivote. On the floor, she faces a sanship that so blinded
Democratic filibuster.
Democrats on the Senate
Years ago, the singularly Judiciary Committee and therr
inventive Miles Davis, helli- allies (including editorial writcosely reactive to any hint of ers on The New York Times)
Jim Crow, was criticized by on part of Justice Brown's actuother black j372 musicians for a! judicial record.
hiring a white pianist, Bill
In a lead Oct. 25 editorial,
Evans. 'I don't care if he's pur- 'Out of the Mainstream Again,'
pie with green dots so long as The New York Times cited as
he can play,' Davis told me. So. one of her 'extreme positions'
too, Justice Brown's race is not Justice Brown's dissent in a
relevant to her nomination.
case where 'her court ordered a
I have read many of Justice rental car company to stop its
Brown's opinions, and I judge supervisor
from
calling
her solely as a JUdge. I have Hispanic employees by racial
strongly disagreed with some epithets.' Also attacking Brown
of her opinions, strongly agreed for her dissent in that case,
wtth others. But in supporting Aguilar v. Avis Rent A Car
her nomination, the 141aw pro- Systems, was Sen. Ted
fessors, who represent the polit- Kennedy
and
the
ical spectrum, wrote w the Congressional Black Caucus
Senate Judtctary Comm1ttee: . Lawyers Committee for Civil
'Justice Brown's clarity of rights. Have they read the full
thought has often captured the record of the case?
!na.instream of California's
The California Sul?reme
JUrisprudence Perhaps · noth- Court's majority opimon m that
mg ts more revealmg ot her case was one of the most
mamstream views than the destructive to the core of the
fact that in 2002, Justice First Amendment in American
Brown was relied upon by her judicial history. Among the
collea~;u~s to wnte the m3Jor- other justices joining Justice
tty opmton more often than Brown in that dissent 'was the
any other member of the legendary civil libertarian, the
Court.' (Many conservatives conscience of the 9th Circuit
:egard the 9th Circuit, which for many years, Stanley Mosk.
mcludes Brown's court, as far
What the majority did was to
too liberal.)
enjoin the Avis supervisor who

Portland on charges of
domestic vtolence and dt sorderly by intoxtcation, also
charge s of violating a temporary protection order, two
more co unts of domestic violence, one count of trespassing and one count of menacing threats. He was incarcerated in the Middleport Police
Department Jail.
Thefts teported came into
the department from Rick
Hauber of Long Bottom who
said someone entered hi s
home and took some firearm s
along with several other
item s: Fred McCormick of
Syracuse reported the theft of
baseball cards: Richard
Minnish of Kettering report·
ed his cell phone was stolen
from his vehicle while he was
eating at a local restaurant:
Jonathan Green of Pomeroy
reported a theft of his tools:
Jonathan Green of Pomeroy
reported a theft of his tools :
Tracy Buckalew of Portland
reported the theft of 2,600
lottery tickets: Sally Dailey
of Portland reported · her

I

Deem
from Page A1
"I don't have a clue as to
what I will be doing," he said.
"I don't even know where I
will he stationed yet."
Deem thought a lot about the
conflict overseas and why the
country is in a war on foreign
soil. He said he supports the
, president and that 11 ts hts duty
to serve when called upon by
the nation . Deem said he was
very aware of the importance
of the mission of providing
freedom for the citi1..ens of Iraq
from a brutal dictator.
"I support the president,"
he said. "When you take that
oath, you know what is
expected of you.''
·
Deem's wife, Wendy, works
at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis.

.

be dissolved,'' Montgomery tion-related matters mentioned tn Montgomery's
sat d.
It will be up to a judge to report.
She said the state wanted to
decide if the village should
get rid of the village any way
be dissolved.
Attorney General Jim Petro tt could. In February, resinow has 20 days to file a law- dents voted 21- 11 to keep the
suit in Franklin County village intact.
" If the people are happy,
Common
Pleas
Court.
Spokeswoman Kim -Norris what is their problem?""
sa id Petro would move Chapman said as she watched
qutckly. The court then must her husband working in their
hold a hearing wtthin 90 garage. Charles Chapman is a
former mayor of the village.
days
Across the street, Mike
Residents of the village had
mtxed feelings about the McMillin, 55, played poker
effort. Ed Anthony, a village with friends during a lull in
council member who favors business at his bait shop.
the shutdown, said its dissoHe recalled how a supplier
lution would mean more got a ticket once for parking
busi ness for his barber shop.
too far from a curb when he
"People of Ohio can take a stopped for a delivery.
nice long breath because
"Do you see a curb the~e ?"
every time they went through he said as he pointed to the
the village, there was a good street, which is flat right up to
chance they were going to be his door.
McMillin wants the village
stopped and ticketed for very
minor infractions," Anthony dissolved and be absorbed by
said as he clipped hair in the Prairie Township rather than
shop he has operated for six Columbus to keep its smallyears. "It might bring some town feel.
businesses out further west.
"I'd like to see it stay the
Employees working for a same name. It's not the name,
company won't have to it 's the people who are run worry about the village of ning II," McMillin said.
In
July,
the
Ohio
New Rome intimidatin~
them."
Department of Transportation
For
customer
John removed the town's only trafCawacki. 46, of nearby fic light along its I ,000-foot
Galloway, having no local stretch of U.S. 40. The
police means he can dnve department plans to replace
nght down Broad Street 35 mph signs along the htghinstead of navtgating back way in New Rome with 45
mph signs to match the speed
roads.
"I bypassed the barber limit on either side of the vilshop. I couldn't come over lage.
here. If I did I'd sneak in the
Money scandals have taint·
ed New Rome four times in
back way,'' Cawacki said.
However, council member the last I 0 years. Last year, a
Nancy Chapman said she'd former Mayor's Court clerk
fight the dissolution. Her was sentenced to two years in
appointment as a council prison for stealing $5,600 Ill
member was one of the elec- court funds.
This the first time she has been
separated from her husband.
She will be responsible for
raising Taylor, II years old,
Trenton, seven years old, and
Alison who is five years old.
"I am worried," she said. "It
will be the first time in my life
that I have been a single parent
and I am not looking forward
to it, but people do it everyday
and I think I can do it."
Scheduling IS just one
small adjustment Wendy wtll
have to adjust to. Since her
husband has been the kindergarten through second grade
principal at the elementary
school where the couple's
two younger children go to
school, he has always been
responsible for taking them
home in· the evenings.
"We have gotten a lot of
support from the staff, family
and friends with everything
including rides," she said.

Their children .. are still
adjusting to the uncertamty
of one less place setting at the
dinner table. Wendy said her
oldest son, Taylor, knows
what is going on and has
accepted it. but her two
youngest children don't
know what to expect and are
apprehensive about their
father being away.
Financial worries have been
made a little easier, Wendy
said, because the Meigs Local
School District is going to supplement the difference between
her husband's salary as a staff
sergeant and what he makes at
his job as principal. She said
this is one burden she is glad
she will not have to deal with
while her husband is away.
"Meigs Local has been very
supponive of me and my family," said Tony a few short hours
before reporting for duty.

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t:t{

BALTIMORE, MD. Employees at American
Electnc Power Company·,
!AEP) Gavin Plant received
international
recognition
today for their contributions
to wtldlil'e habttat conservation at the Wildlife Habitat
Council's
(WHC)
15th
Anmversary
Symposium,
Collaborations
for
Conservations Maximizing
Landscape Potential.
Ar. t ~ rican Electric Power
demonstrates tts commitment
to environmental stewardshtp
and increasing nati ve biodt ·
versity by achieving Habitat
recertification at the Gavin
Plant.
"When WHC was form ed
111 1988, the founders conceived a new and innovative
concept of bnnging together
conservation and business.
WFIC assists corpomte
landowners in providing
valuable wildlife hab!lat on
their properties Pioneering
approaches to habitat management provide our memhers with the knowl edge and
tools to enhance and restore
land, water and living
resources Congratulations
to AEP for thetr commendable efforts towards the
restoration and enhancement
of wildlife habitat. Through
knowledge and passion. we
can promote a greater understanding of the natural
world," said Btll Howard,

In 1999, Am~rican
WHC President.
To uemonstrate corporate Electnc Company provided
and site commitment to the matenal; and a locatton for
environment . the Gavm an o;preyne; ting platfonn,
Plant Wildlife Team current - which was built and erected ·
ly manages 3.000 of its a' part of an Eagle Scout
4,500 acre' as a wildlife project. Several plant per·
habitat The team has un'der- sonnet and Boy Scout Troop
taken m~ny successtu l pro- members assisted with the
grams to increase the avail- project. The platform was
ability of suitable habitat for placed adjace nt to the Ohio
wildlife. said Howard .
In 1994, the team began a R1 ver, at a location JUSt
bluebird nest box proJect , south of the Gavm Plant .
Gavin employee s also crewith assistance f~om the Boy
ated
a half-mile nature trail ,
Scouts of America, Cub
Scout s. Ohio Divi sion of which include; educational
Wildlife and JVAAC. a local signage and an improved
organi zation dedicated to the parkmg lot to ensure safe
education of mentally chal- access to the trai L
The Gavm. Plant was one
lenged
mdi vtduals.
Approxunately 60 boxe' of 130 ;~ t es recogntzed at
were placed on the propeny the 2003 SympoSium for
over man y years. These creatin g a habttat program
boxes provi de habitat for Smce
bluebirds. tree swallows,
19'10. WHC has certified
other native btrds and the 33.:1 programs worldwide .
occasional
whtte-toote,d The certificatio n program
mouse.
recogntzes
outstanding
Wood duck boxes were wildlife habitat management
first installed at the Gavin and env tronmental educaMitigative Wetland in 1994.
lton e lforts at corporate
in an effort to provide addt ·
tiona! habitat components &gt;t tes. and offef' thtrd-party
that went beyo nd mimmum validation of the henefits of
re4utremenh such prog rams.
mitt gat ion
The Wildlife Habitat
Smce then. additional boxes
Council
is a nonprofit. nonwere placed in other locations around the plant prop· lobbying organization dedt ·
erty. with the current total cated to increasing the qualbeing 22 boxes. Also m tty and amount of wildlife
1994. the wildlite team habttat on corporate. private
and publtc lands.
mstalled four bat houses

New program advocates keeping
health records in your fridge
CLEVELAND (AP) Storing
your
medical
record s- hetween your milk
and your mustard may save
your life. organizers of a
new program say.
A group called Caring
Communities is encouraging
people to keep medical history form s m a plast tc bag
mside the refngerator, where
the information is easy to find
for emergency personnel.
If the program is successful, organizers hope to go
national, joining one other
high-proftle group with a
similar effort.
EMS officials chose the
refrigerator as the best place
for the bags, which have stickers on them to indicate they
contain medical information,
said Kristine Mariotti, marketing director at Canton
Regency
Retirement
Community. The retirement
home donated the decals.
"We figure everyone has a

refrigerator." she said. "It's a con- and health and community
sistent place that EMS would be organizations. such as the
able to grab right a'Nay:·
Alzheimer\ Association and ··
Margaret Marchand, 83. Meals on Wheels. The fonns
who lives alone in North are being passed out in Stark
Canton. put the form s in her County south of Cleveland,
refrigerator last week.
and the group hopes to find a
Marchand . a borderlme nmi onal sponsor for the prodiabetic, sa id keeping the gram if the six-month ptlot
records in her refri~rerator project is successful.
gtves her a sense of secunty
The mformation wtll help
"I thmk it 's a good tdea, when semors cannot rememreally, because a lot of older ber what medtcatton they
alone." take or dates of hospitalizapeople
live
Marchand said.
tions,
Kilpatrick
said.
Kathryn Kilpatrick. who Sometimes emergency workruns Caring Communities, ers cannot get such infonnacollaborated with emer- tion from people who are
gency medical service work· hun or unconscious, she said.
ers in Stark County south of
"Everybody needs to have
Cleveland to get the pro- it," Kilpatrick said. "You could
gram started last week.
be a sitter for the first ttrne with
'The only way you can do it a child who has an unusual
is to work with EMS. If they reaction to something."
don't know to go and look for
The forms also provide space
it (the record), then that's a to infonn emergency workers
problem," Kilpatrick said.
about pets or family members
The group gave 5,000 that should not be left alone if
forms to emergency officials someone is hospitalized

honors for their two year old Award (most points for fincolt pacer "Annie's Trick" tshin g 1-2-3 ); and two
who won eight races in ht s awards for the most tnps to
II race category. Lloyd the winner's circle drivmg. 3
from Page A1
Hawk
of Newark tramed the year old colt trotters and 3
"'\
Washington County horse- hest three year old colt trot- yea.r old filly pacers.
Athens 's own, Charlie
men Greg Fi sher of Vmcent. ter, "Joby's Shamrock Kid "
Schoonover.
also received
for
owner
Joe
Lannmg
of
Fisher 1s horse won nine of
of
the
top driver's
two
her eleven races in the cir- Zanesville. ''Potions and awards by reaching the fincuit. Andy Malone of Spells" captured the two
Waterford added another year old filly trotter honor ish line first more than any
other dn vcr in the two year
trophy to his mantel with his for her owner and trainer old filly pace and two year
of
Dufford
consistent three old filly Sharlene
old filly trot classes. Other
Washmgton,
Pa.
"\.
pacer, "Fashion Forever".
Dave Hawk of Orient, who top driver awards went to AI
Guy Malone of Waterford,
Jones of Sc10to County (3
lrained "Perfect Easter" and is one of the leading dnvers
year old colt pace) Ty
"Fashion Forever" on hts in U.S., collected four of the
Van
Rhoden of Mt. Vernon (2
Washington County farm top dnver awards by winyear
old colt trot) Btll Long,
trdck. As a result of his success ning the Fred McVicker
Jr. (3 year old tilly trot and
with these horses and others. Driver Award (most wins):
the 2 year old colt pace)
he recetved the best trainer the Sid Spencer Driver
award (The Terry VanRhoden
Tramer Award) by startmg
horses 44 limes in the circuit
with 18 wins and I I second
place finishes . His UTRS was
an outstanding .60 I.
'Tii£ ·Riwr6end Comnwnity 'Jii,·atre ·Present.&lt;:
The top three year old filly
'Mt"relirh WilSo" 's
trotter award went to "Sweet
Fate" owned by Leni Sheeks
of Amesville and trained by
Charlie Schoonover of
Athens. "My lnqutrer"
Friday, November 21st · 7:00 PM
earned the top two year old
Saturday, November 22nd · 7:00 PM
trotter trophy for hts owner
Sunday, November 23rd · 3:00 PM
Thomas Stubbs of Alledonia.
Duane and Carol Sue
Old Meigs County Middle School , M1ddlepo_!1
Lowe of Malta received top
Available at:
• Middleport Department
Store
• Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
• Bob's Greenhouse
• Farmers Bank
• People's Bank

Sam

New Dates!'
~fie Music Man

Tickets

$6.0Q
Call

992-3040

&gt;.
I

...................--------------------------------"------------&lt;---· -

~·-··.,.,::_~.-~~-----------------..

�•

The Daily Sentinel

i

NATION

• WORLD

PageA6
Tuesday, November 18, 2003

In tough times, some farmers Schwarzenegger sworn in,
are flooding their fields for fowl convenes Legislature as first
step toward fixing economy
ENGLAN D. Ark. (AP)Farmer Dow Brantley's
muddy
fields
in
the
Arkansas Delta are absorbing mill ions of ga ll ons of
wate r thi s week, transforming rice and soybean plots
into a hunting gro und.
The state 's duck season
opens this weekend and far mers across the Delta are fl ooding thei r fields with the hope
of attracting ducks. Hunters
rent access to the fields generating new income fo r
the area's farmers.
"It's helped sustain some
farms in these bad economic
times,''
Brantley
said.
"Anybody around here who
thinks they can duck hunt on
their field, they'll tlood it."
Brantley 's family
has
farmed here since 1946, but
only started flooding to attrac t
duck hunters three years ago.
The Brantley farm is just 18
miles from Stuttgart, the selfproclaimed "Rice and Duck
Capital of the World" where
the industry brings in a million dollars a day during huntmg season.
"This week a lot of folk s
will be setting up and finalizing their duck blinds, making
sure they have their decoys,"
Brantley said.
Of their 6,000-acre stead,
the Brantleys flood about 500
acres and charge between $25
and $50 an acre for the season. They also take day
hunters, charging $50 or $75
per gun.
Farmers start the floods
about a week before opening
day. Diesel engines drive
pumps that haul water out of
bayous. over levees and into
ihe fields. The engines run 24
hours a day, pumping water at a
rate of 700 gallons per minute.
Here it takes about three days
to flood the fields anywhere
from 6-18 inches deep.
At Brantley's farm, a single
white pipe spills water over
wooden boards arid into hi s
soybean field . The farmers
wait until the last moments to
let the autumn rains saturate
the fields.
"It costs money for us to
pump. When it rains it's free,"
Brantley said.
Scott Stoll, one of nine Little
Rock firefighters who rent~d
the field for the season, was at
the site Monday preparing it
for the weekend's hunt.
"We ' re brushing up the
blinds, seeing what needs to
be done," Stoll said. wearing
muddy boots as he walked
toward his pickup truck
parked at the side· of the
land. "I'd like to see some
water on the other side, but
it's looking good."
· In addition to the firefighters, Brantley has leased land to
a group from Nashville, Tenn.
He said there is enough business for his family even though
the area is dotted with hundreds of duck huming clubs.
"This side of duck hunting
has grown," Brantley said.
"We've seen a reason to get

Water from a nearby bayou is pumped in to one of Dow
Brantley's fie lds near England, Ark. Brantley's family has been
at their farm since 1946, but only started flood ing to attract
duck hunters three years ago. (AP Photo/ Danny Johnston)
EIGHTY FOUR, Pa. (AP) State environmental officials
have ordered a mining company
to
pay a southwestern
Pennsylvania floral shop nearly
$1 .2 million for damages to
greenhouses tmd other structures
caused by mine subsidence.
The damages ordered
Monday by
the
state
Department of Environmental
Protection against the EightyFour Mining Co. stem from
land damage and drainage
problem s throughout the 25acre farm run by the
Hothouse Floral Co.
The state agency found that
the damage in 1997 and 1998
was caused by a longwall mine
beneath the floml shop, about

20 miles southwest of
Pittsburgh.
Cheryl Hudock, who owns
Hothou se with her husband,
Eugene, said she had not been
informed of the decision and
would not comment until she
had spoken with her attorney.
The Hudocks had been
seeking $2 million.
Cohsol Energy Inc ., which
own s Eighty-Four Mining
Co., would not comment.
"We have recei ved the notice
from the DEP and we are
reviewing it," said Consul
spokesman Joe Cerenzia.
Eighty-For Mining has 60
day s to comply with the
state order.

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - Calling himsel f "an
ide alist without illu sions,"
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
took charge of California
immediately after he was
sworn in, repealing an unpopular car tax hike and calling
the Legislature into a special
session to deal with the state 's
budget mess.
But political observers
agree: keeping hi s pledge to
fix the state's beleaguered
economy will be a formidable
task for the political newcomer, who faces a budget deficit
he believes is already more
than $24 billion and a business climate he has cast as the
nation's worst.
De spite his overwhelming
win in the Oct. 7 recall election, Schw arzenegger also
faces a Democrat-dominated
Legislature that may not grant
hi s wishes.
" He's got a tough challenge
on hi s hands," said former
Republican · governor George
Deukmejian, who attended
Schwarzenegger's swearingin ceremony Monday. "I don't
envy him."
With his wife, Maria Shriver,
holding
a
Bible,
Schwarzenegger took the oath
of office from California's chief
justic~ in a short ceremony on
the steps of the state Capitol.
An immigrant from Austria
who arrived in . the United
States 35 years ago as a body
builder dreamin g of fame and
fortune , the 56-year-old
Republican invoked former
Presidents John F. Kennedy
and Ronald Reagan and
called him self "an ideali st
without illusions."
"Perhaps some think this is fanciful or poetic, but to an immigmnt like me, who, as a boy, saw
Soviet tanks rolling through the
streets of Austria, to someone like
me who came here with absolutely nothing and gained absolutely
everything, it is not fanciful to see
this state a1 a golden dream,"
Schwaranegger said as he offi,cially took the helm of the nation's
most populous state and the

world's sixth-largest economy.
In a speech, Schwau..enegger
As he was sworn in, promised to spend the next three
Schwarzenegger was accom- years rebuilding the stllte's econpanied by fo ur of the tl ve li v- omy, protecting the needs of chili ng form er governors of dren and the elderly and breaking
California, including Gray the hold of special intere st~.
Dav is, who he replaced. Only
"I enter this office beholden
Reagan. who is suffering to no one except you. my fel t'rom Al zheimer 's disease. low citizens. I pledge my govwas not pre sent.
ernorship to your interests,
The ceremony was devoid not to special intere sts,''
of much of the usual inaugur- Schwarzenegger said .
al pagealltry. Bitterness over
Although_he had never held
the recall vote and the state 's · elected offlee, voters picked
financial troubles prompted Schwarzcnegger to replace
Schwarzenegger to pu sh for a Dav1s last month . Po"t1omng
more lo w-key ceremony.
hm1se ll as
a
reformer,
Nevertheless. the inauguration Schwara negge r won w1th 48
had 7,500 invited guest~. in addi- percent of the vote over a list of
tion to several thousand people 134 other candidates vymg to
watching from the street, and replace Dav1s, ":ho was bounced
drew such celebrities as Dennis by 55 percent ot the voters.
Miller, Jamie Lee Curtis, Danny
At a lunch th at followed the
DeVito, Rob Lowe tmd Vanessa ceremony, Schwarzenegger
Williams, who sang the national urged l eg i s l~tor~ to heed the
anthem. Hundreds of journalists call of Cahtorma voters and
from around the globe covered put as1de part! san politi CS to
the event. some from Japan, solve the state s problems.
France and Schwarzenegger's
Front and center will be the
nativeAustria.
state economy wh1ch, wh1 le
The recall movement was showin g some signs of recovlaunched in February by ery. _is troubled. California's
activists angered over the cred it ratmg 1s the lowest
state's budget woes and the a_mong all
s t~te s and state
fmances are 111 disarray. _
prospect of higher taxes.
After repealing the tripling
Schwarze~egger promised to
of the car tax shortly after the put the stat&lt;;, s finances m order,
ceremony, Schwarzenegger and added I w11l not rest until
signed proclamations calling Cahforma 1s a cu~pet lti ve,
the Legi slature back into spe- JOb-creatmg machme . ,
cia! session Tuesday.
. Democrdl,, sllll the state sdomSchwarzenegger wants law- mantparty. have SUid that they will
makers to reform workers ' be wdhng to g1ve the new govercompensation law, deal with nor a chance -.. but most
the budget deficit and repeal a observers
pohucal _good Will
bill granting driver 's licenses IS nota la'ung commodity.
to undocumented immigrants.
He also said he wants the
Legislature to put a massive
bond proposal before voters on
the March 2 ballot, and set a
state spending cap to prevent
the creation of such a huge
t!nancial hole in the future '
both items that lawmakers will
need to act on before Dec. 5.
Also Monday, Schwan.enegger
Sunday Times-Sentinel
suspended implementation of
740-992-21 55
new swte regulations ·and called
for a review of all regulations
adopted, mnended or repealed
during Davis' administration.

5q

awee

Celebrutl'ilg

spedt1l dtlVs
with you}

some more money."

INSIDE
Scoreboard, Page 82
Navarre's legacy hinges on OSU, Page 86
N8A approves realignment, Page 86

Tuesday, November 18, 2003
v

Geiger: No
charges to be
filed following
incident
COLUMBUS (AP) - No
Ohio State football players
wi ll be charged after an incident that occurred early
Sunday morning near Ohio
Stadium. Buckeyes athletic
director Andy Geiger said
Monday night.
"The investigation is over,"
Geiger sa id. "Players will not
be charged."
Geiger would not release
detail s or names of the play ers.
WJW-TV •n Cleve land
reported as many four players were involved in · an
assault and property damage
case about 4 a. m. on Sunday
near the stadium and that
four women filed a police
report.
The Buckeyes beat Purdue
16- 13 in overtime Saturday
at the stadium.
Geiger said the case was
investigated by campus
police . . A dispatcher at the
police department said he
could not release any information.

Indians outright
Baez to Triple-A
Buffalo
CLEVELAND (AP) Indian s
The Cleveland
dropped pitcher Danys Baez
from their 40-man roster
Monday, outrighting him to
· Triple-A Buffalo in a move
that could increase their
chances of signing him to a
new contract .
The right-hander can not
refu se
the
a ss ignment
because he has fewer then
three years of major league
service time and less than ·six
years of pro experience .
Last week , the Indians
declined their $5 million
option for 2004 on Baez, who
went 2-9 with a 3.8.1 ERA
last season and blew 10 save
opportu nities.
The Indians could have resigned Baez, but under baseball's coll ective b.argaining
agreement . they couldn' t cut
his salary by more than 20
percent - or to $4. 1 million.
But because he's ilot currently on the 40-man roster,
Baez isn't protected by the
union's deal and the cashstrapped Indians may be trying to sign him to a cheaper
contract.
General manager Mark
Shapiro was not immediately
available for comment.
The Indians have tried
Baez as a starter, setup man
and closer since sig ning the
26-year-old in 1999.

Eastern High
school season
passes available

Standing on the side of his
flooded field, ankle-deep in
mud, he said the flooding and
pucks don't affect his crops
and that he will drain the
fields in February to prepare
them for plantin ~ in late
March or early Apnl.
"It being so close to opening weekend," he said. "If we
stay here long enough you
ought to be able to stand here
the rest of the winter and constantly see ducks."
Some ducks were already
arriving Monday.

EAST
MEIGS
Beginning Monday from
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m ., basketball passes will be available
for putchase in the main
office of Ea stern High
SchooL
Senior citizen passes may
be purchased for the 20032004 basketball . season for
$10. Seniors must have a
Golden Buckeye card and
.be a resident in the Eastern
Local School District to
qualify for the reduced
price pass which is good for
both junior and high school
basketball.
·
The girls basketball passes for adults for the season
are $30 and is good for all
~iris basketball games, both
JUnior and senior high
school.
The boys basketball passes are $25 for the season
lmd are good for · all boys
basketball games, bot~
·unior and high school
eve I.
Athletic events for the
school year are $4 for adults
at both high school and.
junior high events, and $2
for students for high school
events and $ 1 for students
for junior high events. ·

l

.I

,

•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Owens shines in primetime as 49ers beat Steelers
mates mobbed him in the
end zone, Owens strutted
- - - - - - - - - - back to the sideline w·ith
hi s swagger that 's growing
SAN FRANCISCO
as quickly as the 49ers '
Terrell Owens had been pl ayoff hopes.
ordinary so far thi s season,
"T.O ., he played really,
with drops , di stractions and really well," 49ers coac h
doul)le coverages all con- Denni s Erickson said. "The
spirin g against one of foot- block he made on Kevan
ball's most exciting play- Barlow's run might be the
ers.
most impressive thing I've
Under the prime-time ever seen do, and he' s
spotlight , Owens finally _ made some pla~s."
broke free with one spec- · In the teams first meettacular play after another ing since a rain-soaked
- perhaps because the San !lame at Candlestick Park
Francisco 49ers' All -Pro tn 1999, San Francisco (5 receiver knew all eyes were 5) dominated the matchup
on him .
of defending
divi sion
Owens had a 61 -yard champions who have stnlgtouchdown catch among gled this season.
his eight receptions for I 55
Fully aware of the
yards, and Tim Rattay went national audience for his
2 1-of-27 for 254 yards in talents, the would-be actor
the 49ers' 30- 14 victory and basketball star got San
over the Pittsburgh Steelers Francisco started with one
on Monday night.
of the big plays he has pro"They're giving me the vided only sparingly thi s
opportunity to make some fall.
plays," Owens said. "The
On the third play of the
first half of the season, I N iners' second drive,
was really putting pressure Rattay lofted a perfect pass
on myself. I dropped some down the left sideline. ·
passes and I wasn t playing Owens accelerated away
T.O.-like . That was when from cornerback Chad
we went OQ a los ing skid, Scott, stopped at the goal
and I was just trying to do line and did a slow piroutoo much."
ette into the end zone
Helped by two superb before breaking into a
blocks
by
downfield
.
Owens, Kevan Barlow dance
"He 's 'so big and strong
rushed for a 78-yard score that when they have to sinin the third quarter to break gle him, it' s a mismatch,"
open San Francisco's
Pittsburgh Steelers runningback Amos Zereoue tries to break away from San Franc1sco 49ers
fourth straight home victoPlease
see
Steelers.
B&amp;
ry. While Barlow 's teamdefensive end Sean Moran in the first quarter, Monday, m San Franc isco. (AP )
BY GREG BEACHAM

Associ ated Press

All's well with Browns after blowout of Cardinals
BY TciM WITHERS

Associated Press

BEREA - The guy who
soaped "Butch Must Go" on
the back windows of his
orange customized Brown s'
van was probably at the car
wash on Monday.
And the computer hits at
the newly created www.firebutchdavi s. com weren't nearly as fast and furious as they
were last week.
All is we.ll with the Browns
- for the moment.
Cleveland coach Butch
Davis isn't going anywhere,
and following a 44-6 rout of
the Arizona Cardinals on
Sunday, the Browns (4-6)
have never felt better about a
season that seemed doomed
just a few days ago.
"We're back in it," safety
Earl Little said. "I've said all
along that a 7-9 record might
be good enough to make the
playoffs, and so far I'm

right."
By ending a three-game
losing streak with their most
lopsided win since 1989, the
Browns moved back into
contention in the wide-open
and weak AFC North.
With six games left,
Cleveland is one game
behind division co-leaders
Baltimore and Cincinnati,
which upset previously
unbeaten Kansas City on
Sunday.
The Browns' dominating
win - they had season high
in points, yards and first
downs - capped a dizzying
week of events, which
included the release of populac. wide receiver Kevin
Johnson and the NFL's fourgame sus(!Cnsion of running
back Wilham Green for violating the league's substance
abuse program.
From the outside, it
appeared the locker room
was divided, Davis was out
of control and with one more

loss. the season would plunge
into a deep hole .
However, the adversity did
just the opposite:
"[ think it's a little bit like
all the water in the ocean
won't sink the ship if you
don' t let it in," Davis sa id. "I
think it certainly galvanized
the team from the standpoint
that everybody pulled together and 1 think they put the
team first.
" It was more about the
team. It was more about the
Cleveland Browns than anything. It wasn' t about egos. It
wasn' t about anybody doing

anything other than what was
it going to take to get the
Browns to win a football
game ."
A lo &gt;~ to the Cardinals
would have heen devastating.
and Little said some of
Cleveland 's . players were
even considering the consequences of one before kickoff.
"I was like, ' Hey. let 's nut
even talk like that. · There
wasn't a lot of people. hut I
heard it. It would ha ve been
terrible." Little said. "If we
had lost that game, you guys
would have been ridin g us
about the K.J . situat ion , the
fans would have been on us.
It was a game we really needed.:'
Perhaps it isn ' t a coi ncidence that Johnson's departure wa s immediately fol lowed by the most complete
this season by
game
Cleveland's offense.
.
Wideouts Quincy Morgan
and Andre ' Davis went over

I00 vards 111 re(eJvlllg .
Quarterback Kell y Holcomb
passed for 392 yard&gt; and
three touchdowns. And slot
rece iver Denni s Northcutt .
whn wasn't getting as much
playing time with Johnson
around. had six catches and
was used as a decoy for much
of the game.
Morgan. who has been far
more alTe"ible and talkative
since John son's departure.
has been say ing for the past
week that the Browns wouldn't mi ss him as muc h as
many thought.
"It was one guy... Morgan
sa id . " It wasn' t Michael
Jordan ."
Morgan said last week's
headline-making events may
have been just wh at the
Brown s needed to make a
playoff piiSh .
''I'd be lying if I didn ' t say
they didn't. .. he said ... All the
outside talk. it really got this

Please see Browns, B6

Kids in Ohio, Michigan dream of playing in 'The Game'
BY RUSTY MtUER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS When
Rob Sinh was growing up in
Macedonia - not the cradle
of chcilization but a small
town in northeastern Ohio he used to cry when his
beloved Ohio State Buckeye s
would lose to rival Michigan
in football.
Now Sims is 6-foot-4 and
305 pounds and is an offensive tackle for No. 4 Ohio
State.
Just like when he was
small , he doesn ' t want to
shed any tears after the
Buckeyes play at No. 5
MichigJin on Saturday.
"The Michigan-Ohio State
game is like a ... holiday,"
Sims said Monday, carefuHy
searching for just the right
word to expre$s his feelings .
"And for me to be a part of
this holiday now makes me
feel good, knowing that all of
those people back home will
be watchmg me doing my
thing,"
•
From the major cities of
Detroit and Cleveland, from
Ohio State split end Michael Jenkins talks with members of small towns, dairy farms and
the media during player Interviews Monday, in Columbus, from inner-city row houses,
Ohio. (AP)
hundreds of kids dream of

•·

. one day playing in the con- tel ev ision.
undoubtedl y
test referred to in the neigh- bringing man y familie s
boring states as "The Game... together and causing fri ction
The rivalry grabs the allen - in a few others .
"This is everything. " Ohio
tion of more than just sports
fans each November.
State offensive Iineman Mike
Ohio State linebacker A.J . Kudl a said . "G rowing up as a
Hawk remembers hi s whole little kid you watch these
sc hool in suburban Dayton games on TV. I can rememchoosing sides.
ber my dad and my uncles all
" We 'd have a 'Beat comin.~ over to watch the big
Michigan' Week at school game.
and everybody would wear
Kudla fin ally got a chance
their Ohio State stuff for the to play in his firSt Ohio Statewhole week. Even the teach- Michigan game last year and
ers would g'et excited," Hawk sreaks as if it were a relisaid. "Everyone in Ohio is an g10us expenence .
Ohio State fan."
" You neve r really, truly
Maybe not everybody.
understand t·he feeling of
After all, the Wolverines how big thi s game is until
have 13 native Ohioans on you play in it. Last year was
their roster. Some of JUSt unbelievable," he said. "I
Michigan's most storied couldn't even describe it."
players
including
Craig Krenzel is Ohio
He1sman . Trophy winners State 's startinjl quarterback
and and is 2-0 agamst Michigan. •
Charles · Woodson
Desmond Howard - grew That is particularly galling to
up in Ohio.
. Wolvennes fans since he
Michigan has returned the grew up in Sterling Heights,
favor. It was Michigan 's Mich.
"Some of my friends from
band that introduced Ohio
Stale to "Script Ohio," the high school have somewhat
blend of calligraphy and converted to Ohio State fans
music now a staple of the while I'm here," Krenzel said
Buckeyes' marchin~ band . . with a wide grin. "Some of
Most households m the two
states will watch the game oil
,..... -osu,H

'

'

�....

..

SCOREBOARD

:The Daily Sentinel
Pro Football
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East

WLT

Pet

PF PA

New England

8 2 0

800

M1 Bm1

6 4 0

600

Butfalo

4 6 0
3 7 0

400

196 155
177 147
159 170

300

197 211

N Y Jets

South
W L T Pet

lod•anapohs
Tennessee
· Hous!on

8 2 0
8 2 0

: JaCkS00\111 19

2 8 0
North

PF PA
800 292 202
800 265 177
400 174 254
200 175 241

4 6 0

W L T

5 50
5 50
4 6 0

Baltimore
C tncmnatl

Cleveland
Ptnsburgh

3 7 0

Pel
500
500
400
300

West
WlT Pet
9 ~ 0
900
6 4 0
600
3 7 0
300
2 8 0
200

,
,Kansas C1ty
~ Denver
Oakland
San D1ego

PF PA
212 191

210 21 9
179 177
190 247
PF
306
247
190
182

PA
174
179
229
280

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East

W
7
7
4
4

Dallas
: Ph•ladelphta

· NY Glanls
: ~ashtnglon

Pet
700
700
400
400

PF PA

L T Pel
2 o 600
50 500
6 0 400
80 200

PF PA

l
3
3
6
6

T
0
0
0
0

181 148

187 176
182 223
193 232

South

W
8
5
4
2

Carolina

New Orleans
Tampa Bay
Atlanta

198 180

212 225
20 1 161
177 273

North
W L T Pet

640
5 50
370
370

~ Minn6sota

; Green Bay
. Ch1cago
• Detro•!

PF PA
600 269 233
500 264 223
300 172 234
300 166 242

West

WLT Pet
Seattle
7 3 0
700
St Louis
7 3 0
700
San Francisco 5 50 500
Anzona
3 7 0
300

PF
248
269
232

PA
188
202
166

, 36 279

Sunday's Games
St Louis 23, Chicago 2 1

Houston 12, Butlalo 10
M1Bm1 9 Baltimore 6 OT

Caroltna 20, Washington 17
Tennessee 10 Jacksonville 3

New Orleans 23, Atlanta 20 OT
Cleveland 44, Anzona 6
C1ncmnat1 :24 Kansas C1ty 19
Ph1ladalph1a 28, NY G1ants 10
Indianapolis 38, N Y Jets 3 1
Denver 37, San Diego B
Seattle 35, Detro1t 14
Oakland :28 M1nnesota 1B
Green Bay 20 Tampa Bay 13
New England 12, Dallas 0
Monday's Game
San Franc1sco 30, PittSburgh 14
Sunday, Nov. 23
Carolina at Dal las 1 p m
Seattle at Ba lt1more 1 p m
New England at Houston I p m
Jacksonville at N Y Jets 1 p m
lnd1anapolls at BuHalo t p m
San Franc1sco at Green Bay, 1 p m
DetrOit at Minnesota, 1 p m
P1ttsburgh at Cleveland , 1 p m
New Orleans at Philadelphia, 1 p m
St LOUIS at Anzona . 4 05 p m
Ch1cago at Denver 4 05 p m
Ten nessee at Atlanta 4 15 p m
Oakland at Kansas C1ty, 4 15 p m
C1ncmna11 at San D1ego 4 15 p m
Washmgton at M1amt 8 30 p m
Monday, Nov 24
N Y Gmnts at Tampa Bay 9 p m

College Football
The APTop 25
The Top 25 teams m The Associated Press

PageB2

collegelootball pol~ w1th f1rst·place votes rn
parentheses records through NQ\1 15 total
po1nts based on 25 pomts for a f1 rst·place
vote th roug h one pOint for a 25th place
110te and pr8\lrous ran k1ng
Pvs
Record Pts
1 OklahOma (65) 11·0
1.625 1
1,559 2
91
2 Southern Cal
1 474 3
9·1
3 LSU
101
1 431 4
4 Ohro St
1,356 5
5 MIChigan
9·2
8·2
1 205 7
6 Georg1a
1 192 6
7 Texas
9·2
8 Washmgton St 9·2
1,140 8
9 Tennessee
82
1.092 9
10·0
989 10
10 TCU
9 18
13
11 Flor1da St
9·2
8·2
12 V~rg mr a Teen
845 12
842 15
13 Flonda
8·3
842
14
8·2
13 M1am1
805 17
15 MISSISSIPPI
82
683 11
8·3
16 Purdue
572 20
17 Iowa
8·3
18 M1am1 (OhiO)
9 1
530 23
9-3
484
19 Kan s~s St
24
20 Batse St
9 1
330
239 16
2 1 Pmsbu rgh
73
212 25
22 Bowll ng Green 8·2
124 18
23 Nebraska
B3
118
24 Oklahoma St
8·3
109
25 West VIrginia 6·4

N Carolina A&amp; T 38, Hampto n 28
S Carolina St 27 Florida A&amp;M 15
SE LOUISiana 64 Pra me V19w 10
SE M1sso un 24 Tennessee Tech 20
Southern M1ss 28 Tulane 14
Tennessee 59 MISSISSIPPI St 2t
The Citadel 27 VMI 23
Va nderbilt 28 Kentucky 17
W11t1 am &amp; Mary 38, New Hampsh1 re 28
Wofford 7 Furman 6

Mmnesota

5 5
500
2
Pacific Division
WLPctGB
L A Lakers
8
2
BOO
Seattle
6 2
750
1
L A Clippers
4 2
667
2
6 4
600 2
Sacramento
Portland
5 5
500 3
Golden State
4 5
444
3 112
Phoemx
3 6
333
4 1/2

MIDWEST
Sundays Games
Toronto 101 Houston 97 20T
Sacramento , 06 Golden State 104
L A Lakers 99 M 1am1
Monday's Games
Hou ston 74, Ph1ladatph1a 66
Washmgton 106 Atlanta 97
New York 89 Boston 86
Dallas 105 Portl and 98
Uta h 90 Orlando 88
Tueeday's Gam&amp;s
L A Clippers at Cleve land 7 p m
L A Lakers at Oet ro1l 7 30 p m
New Orlea ns at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Atlanta at Milwaukee 8 p m
Denver at M1nnesota. 8 p m
Gold en State at San AntoniO B 30 p m
Chicago at Phoemx 9 p m
M1am1 at Seattle, 10 p m
Wednesday a Games
New Orleans at Bost on 7 p m
Cleveland at Wash 1ngton 7 p m
Philadelphia at Toronto 7 p m
L A Clippers atl ndt ana 7 p m
L A Lakers at New York 7 30 p m
Golden State at Houston 8 30 p m
Sacramento at Utah , 9 p m
Milwaukee at Denver 9 p m
Detro1t at Memphi s, 9 p m
M1am1at Portland 10 p m

Akror935, OhiO 28
Bowling Green 42, Ken t St 33
Butler 17 St Joseph's, lnd 13
Colorado 44 , Iowa St 10
Drake 42, Waldor1 17
E MIChigan 38, Ball St 14
IllinOis St 38 lnd1ana St 3
Iowa 40. Minnesota 22
Kansas St 38, Nebraska 9
MIChigan 4 1, Northwestern 10
MISSOUri 45, Texas A&amp;M 22
N Iowa 43 S IllinOIS 40
Notre Dame 33 BYU 14
Oh1o St 16, Purdue 13, OT
ToledO 49 N IllinOIS 30
ValparaiSO 44 , Aurora 26
W Illinois 63, SW MISSOUri St 42
W Kentucky 37 Youngt own St 13
W M1ch1gan 44, Cent Mtch1gan 21
W1sconsm 56, M1chtgan St 21

n

SOUTHWEST
Others receiving vol11 : Mmnesota 105,
ArkanSJS 48, New MexiCo St 20
Mtssoun 79, Arkansas 58 Utah 49
N Anzona 34 Sam Houston St 18
Maryland 37, N llhno•s 24, M1ch1gan St 19 ~ orth Texas 58, Arkansas St 14
Wlsconsm 18 Oregon St 11 , Connecticut/
Oklahoma 41 Baylor 3
10, Southern Miss 6, N C State 5, Texu
Oklahoma St 44 Kansas 21
Tech 5 Clemson 3
A1ce 41, SMU 20
Sou thern U 24, Texas Southern 17
Major College Football Scores
Stephen FAustm 28, Nrchplls St 16
EAST
TCU 43, Cmcinnat1 10
Boston College 35, Rutgers 25
Texas 43, TeKas Tech 40
Brown 26, Dartmouth 21
Tulsa 48. Lou1s1ana Tech 18
Co lga1e 14 Fordham 3
FAR WEST
Co lumb1a 34, Cornell 21
Bo1SB St 51 , UTEP 21
De laware 51 Massachusetts 45 20T
California 54 , Washtngton 7
Du9uesne 33 Robert Morns 28
Colo rado St 21, San D1ego St 6
Georgetown DC 30 Oavtdson 10
Fresno St 41 San Jose St 7
Houston 34. Army 14
Idaho Sl 38 , Cal Poly·SLO 31
Lafayette 41 Holy Cross 13
Monta ne 41 E Washington 10
Lehigh 45 BucKnell 9
Montana St 25 Portland St 14
Ma1ne 14 Villanova 10
Nevada 24 Hawau 14
Mansi 33 Cent Connecticut St 29
New Mexrco 24 Air Force 12
Monmouth N J 28 St Franc1s, Pa 2 1
Oregon 3 1, UCLA 13
Northeastern 45 Rtehmond 0
Oregon St 43 Stanford 3
Penn 32, Harvard 24
S Utah 40, 51 Marys Cal 7
Penn St 52, lndrana 7
Southern Cal 45, Artzona 0
Rhode Island 24, Holstra 0
Troy St 23 Utah St 14
St Pete r'§ 38, La Salle 20
Utah 47 Wyommg 17
Stony Brook 31 lana 20
Washmgto n St 34, Arizona St 19
Towso n 35, Albany N Y 16
Weber St 26, Sacramento St 14
V1 rg1ma Tech 24, Temple 23, OT
Wagner 24 Sacred Heart 16
WQst V1rQ1ma 52 Pittsburgh 31
Yale 27 Pr~nceton 24, 20T

Pro Basketball

SOUTH
Alabama St 55, MVSU 31
Alcorn Sl 20, Alabama A&amp;M 15
Appalachian St 26, W Carolina 18
Bethune·Cookman 21, Howard 7
Clemson 40 Duke 7
Connect1cut 51, Wake Forest 17
Delaware St 36, Norfolk St 25
E Kentucky 43, Tennessee St 31
ETSU 68 Chaltanooga 7
-J
Ffonda 24, South Caro lina 22
Ftonda Atlanttc 51 S1ena 3
Flor1da St 50 N C State 44 20T
Gardner-Webb 22, Fla International 19,

or

Oeorg1a 26, Auburn 7
Georg1a Southern 37 Elan 13
Georg1a Tech 41 North Carol1na 4:4
Orambl1ng St 33, Savannah St 17
Idaho 58 LOUISiana-Monroe 20
Jacksonville 34 Webber lnte rnat1ona1 14
Jacksonvtlle St 36 E IllinoiS 24
James Mad1so n 45 Charleston Southern

National Basketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

WLPetGB
Boston
New Jersey
Philadelphia
Washington
New York
M1am1
Orlando

5

5

500

5

5

500

5

6

455

4
3
2
1

6
7
8
10

400
300
200
091

112
1
2
3
4 112

Central Division

WL

Pet

Toronto

8
7
6
5
5

2
3
4
4
5

800
700
600
556
500

3

Chicago

4

7

Cleveland
Atlanta

3
3

7
B

364
300

4 112
'1

273

tJ 1/2

lnd1ana
New Orleans
DetrOit
M1 l wau ~ee

GB
1
2

2 112

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweet Division

7
LSU 27 Alabama 3
Liberty 38 Coastal Carolina 21
Lo w s1ana·Lafayette
57,
Middl e
Tennessee 51, OT
McNeese St 13, Northwestern St 9
Memphi S 37 loUISVIl le 7
M1am1 17 Syracuse 10

Houston
Dallas
Denver
Memph1s
San Antonio
Utah

WL
7 3
7 4
5 4
5 4

Pet
700
636
556
556

GB

2Dukel1)

0·0

16772

3 M1ch1gan St ( 1)
r1 Anzona
5 M1ssoun
6 Kansas (1 )
7 Syracuse
8 Flonda
9 North Carolina
10 Kentuc~y
11 Texas
12 IllinoiS
13 Satnt Joseph s
14 Oklahoma
15 Wrsconsm
16 Gonzaga
17 LOUISVIlle
18 Cincinnati
19 Wake Forest
20 Stanford
21 Notre Dame
22 PittSb urgh
23 Marquette
24 N C State
25 Oklahoma St

0 -0
0-0
0·0
0-0
0-0

1 623
1 494
1 438
1 414
1,334
1 21 7
1, 172
1,115
1 100
946
865
862
719
714
615
538
528
52 1
427
348
226
118
102

o-o

0 0
0-0
0-0
0-0
t-0
0-0
0-0
0· 1
Q-0

o-o

1-0
0-0
0-0
10
1-0
0-0
0 0

3
4
5
6
7

a

!;l

11
12
13
17
14
15
10
16
18
20
19
21
22
23
24
25

Others receiving votes· Mary land 64
Xav1e r 63 Califo rnia 6 1, Oregon 57 Ohio
St 39, Utah 30, BYU 23 Anzona St 15
Auburn 15, LSU 14, Providence 13 UCLA
13 , Colorado 12, MtSSISS1pp1 St B
Southe rn Cal 8 Alabama 7, Purdue 7
M1ch1gan 6 Butl er 5 Manhattan 5, Temple
5 Georg1a 3 N llhno1s 3, Nevada 3
W1chlta St 3 Arkansas 2. Ill Ch1cago 2
Verm ont 2 Dayton 1 lnd1ana 1 Seton Hall

1

112
1 112

6

5

545

1 112
1 1/2

6

5

545

1 112

Women's AP Top 25
The top 25 teams 1n The Assoc1ated Press
women s college basketball poll w1th firstplace votes In pare nthese s reco rd s
through Nov 16 total pomts based on 25
points for El first-place vote through one

potnt tor a 25th place vote and prev1ous
rank1ng
1 Conne&lt;:t1cut (46)
2 Texas
3 Tennessee
4 D uke
5 Purdue
6 Stanford
7 Texas Tech
8 Kansas St
9 Penn St
10 Georg1a
11 LOUISIMB Tech
13
14
15
16
16
18
19
20
21
22

Re'cord Pta
0-0
1 150
1·0
1 096
0 0
1 009

Pv
1

0·0

997
936
860
827
826
808
666
649

3
4
2
7
6
10
5
8
11
12

1·1

639

9

Mmnesota
0-0
North Carolina
00
Rutgers
2·0
Colorado
2·0
Ohio St.
0 0
UC Santa Barbara 1·0
Utah
1·0
Notre Da me
11
O klahom a
0-0
Anzona
0·0

606
559
454
376
376
37 4
341
33 1
234
170

13
14
16
20

12 LSU

0·1
1-0
0 0

2-o
0·0

o-o

o-o

23 TCU

0·0

123

17
18
19
15
21
23
24

24 O regon
25 Au bu rn

2·0
1-1

113
93

22

Others receiving votes V1 rgt ma 90
George washmgton 57 Vanderbilt 42
DePaul 23, Bosto n College 22 M1ch1gan
St 17, Baylo r 14 V1rgm1 a Tech 12
VIllanova 10 Cincinnati 9, Washington 7
SW MISSOUri St 5 LOUI SVIlle 4 Temple 4
BYU 3 Harvard 3 Artzona St 2 Arkansas
2 Cretghton 2 N C -W1Immgton 2, New
Mex1co 2 Satnt Josephs 2 Montana 1
Pittsbu rg h 1 W M1ch1gan 1

Ho~key
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE •
Atlantic Division

Anaheim 4 St LOUI S 3
Monday·• Games
Buffalo 2 Ottawa 1
Tuetday 'a Games
Ph1ladelph1a at Carolina 7 p m
Anahe1m at Colorado, 8 p m
Ch+eago at Edmonton, 9 p m
Toronto at Calgary, 9 p m
Montreal at Vancouver 10 p m
N Y Rangers at San Jose 10 30 p m
Wednesday's Gamet
Bos ton at Atlanta 7 30 p m
M1nnesota at P1 nsburgn 7 30 p m
Columbus at DetrOit 7 30 p m
Buffalo at New Jersey 7 30 p m
N Y Islanders at Ftor1 da 7 30 p m
Anaheim at Dal las, 8 30 p m
St Low s at Phoenrx 9 p m
Nashville at Los Angeles , 10 30 p m

lates the size of lots
containing
mobile
homes; age of mobile
homes brought Into
the Village, underpinning requtrements ;

minimum stze porch;
prohibition of mobile
home parks; and

right of Council to
refuse permission to
anyone to park a
mobile home in the
Village II Council
deems the mobile
home to be unlit or
unsuitable

for human

habitation.
This ordinance will
become
affective
November t3, 2003.
A complete copy of
the ordinance can be
seen at Village Hall
during regular business hours.

Carolyn French
Clerkfl'reaaurer
Village of Middleport
(1t)4, 1t, t83TC

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S
SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
02-CV-133
GMACMORTGAGE
CORPORATION
Plolnllff

VI
NATHAN M. HANSEN,
1111
Delendonto
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
In purauance of an
Ordor of Sale to me
directed from uld
Court In the obovo
entitled octlon, I will
eXpoll to Hil II publiC auction on the
front atope of tho
Molgo County Courl
HOUII on Friday,
December t9, 2003 11
t 0:30 a.m., of aald
day, the following
deocrlbed reel eatate:
Parcel t: Situated In

thermore It Ia understood and agreed that
tho Granteea, their
heirs and asalgna, are
to maintain tho aald
oewer at Ita preaent
location at their own
••penae.
Parcel 2: Situated In
the County of Molgo,
In the State of Ohio
end In thl Vi111g1 of
Pomeroy.
All of Subdlvlolon
No.2 of Lot No. 188 In
Burnop'o Addition to
oald
Villege
of
Pomeroy, 1xtendlng
from High SlrHI on
Lincoln Hill to tho
~utland Road now
known 11 (ole) the
Lincoln Hill Road,
••cept 23 fHI off of
the well end or aide
oold by E.F. Felger to
H1rry Felger,, Vol. 78,
Page
342,
Melgo
County
Dlld
Recorda.
Aloo the following
rul eotate In oald
County or Mtlgo end
Stato of Ohio, Village
of
Pomeroy,
and
deecrlbed ao followe:
. Subdlvlalon
No.
Thr•• (3) of Lot No.

•l

I

t89
In
Burnap's
Addition
to said
Village of Pomeroy
extending from high
Street on Lincoln Hill
to the Rutland Road
now known as the
Lincoln Hill Road.
Except the coal
underlying the above
described property
with the right to mine
the same which has
been reserved by previous owners.
Reference
Dead:
Volume 133, Page 6t,
Meigs County Official

Records.
Auditor's Parcel Nos.
16-00960.000,
160096t.OOO,
1800055.000
&amp; 1600054.000
Subject to all leases,
easementa and rightof-way of record.

Current

Pursuant to the com-

by reserved to John

mand of and Order of
Sale Issued from the
court of Common
Pleas or said county,
and to me directed, In
the action of The
Provident Bank vs.
Fred E. Ray, et al.
I, Ralph Trussell,
Meigs County Sheriff,
shall offer lor sale al
public auction, to be
held at the Meigs
county Courthouse ,
on January 9th, 2004
att0:30 o'clock am.,
the
following
described lands and
tenements to wit:
Parcel No. 1:
Situated In the Village
of Pomeroy, County
of Meigs and Stata of
Ohio;
Beginning at the

0. Roedel and Martha

feet;

2) Thence along
osld driveway 1oulh
78 dog. 30 min w11t a
dlotance or 50 1111,
3) Thence norlh 3
deg. 40 min. welt 30
fill,
4) Thonco norlh 84
dtg, 30 min. w111 58
fHito tho face of tho
Cliff,
5) Thence northerly
olong tho race of tho
cliff 1 dlotonco of
obout 28 loot to tho
north llno of lot No.
286;
8j Thone• oalllerly
olong the norlh line
of uld lot No. 296 to
the place of beginning, 1 dletance of
about 8t loot.
1
S1vlng and e•ceptlng the Firat Ward
Houee lot altuated In
tho norlhuat corner
of 11ld Lot No. 298
and being 18 1111 lacIng on Nyo StrHtand
extending back at
that width a dlatence
of 28 fHt. Tho right
and privilege Ia here-

2) Thence North
eighteen (18) fnt;
3) Thence Eeot
twanty-olx (28) feet to
the place of beginning. Saving and
uceptlng all coal and
othor mlnarala undorlylng tho praml111
hereby
gr1ntor,
togalhar with lho
right to mine the
aamo without ony
unnocaeury damage
IO thl IUrfiCI Of

and also the north-

LP.A.
By: Donnlo Reimer
(Rag. il00311 08)
Wrontmore
J1m11
(Reg.II0048n8)
Ahornoyo for Pl1lntlfl
2450 Edloon Blvd.
P.O. Box 988
Twlntburg,
Ohio
44087
(330) 42!1-4201
(11) 18, 2~. (12) 2

c.

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
CASE NO. 03 CV 012
The State of Ohio,
County of Molga,

may

way,

tha Firat Ward House

Volume

occasion

east corner of Lot No.
296,
t) Thence ooutherly along the weal aide
of Nye Street a dlotance of 95 feet to the
norlh aide of a drive-

northeast corner of

Owner:

133, Page 61
Appraised
at:
$30,000.00
Tormo
of
Sale:
Cannot be oold lor
1111 than 213rdo of
tho appral11d value.
10% down on day of
tole, Cllth or oortllled
chock, balance on
conftrmatlon of Hit.
Ralph E. Trutllll,
Sheriff,
Molgl
County, Ohio
Rolmer &amp; Lorber Co.,

as

require.
Parcel No.2 :
Situate In the village
of Pomeroy, In the
county or Meigs, and
State of Ohio, to -wit;
Beginning on Nye
Street
at
the
Norlheaat corner of a
lot heretofore deeded
by Curlls D. Reed and
Laura Alberla Reed to
John M. Roedel by
deed dated April 24,
t899, recorded In
Volume 84, Pages 84,
Page
388-387,
Records of Deeda of
Melga County, Ohio,
1) Thence South
parallel with Nye
Street eighteen (18)

Nathan M. Hansen
Property at: 101 High
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
PPI
16-00055.000,
and t6-00960.000
Prior
Deed

Reference:

Roedel, their heirs
and assigns to use a
sewer that Is con~
structed across said
above described lot
from the coal bank,
with the right and
privilege of entering
said premises for the
purpose of making
repairs lo said sewer

Ph1iadelphra 10 2 3 1 24
New Jersey
9 3 4 0 22
NY Islanders 8 6 2 0 18
NY Rangers 6 6 3 2 17
Pitt sburgh
4 9 3 0 11
Northeast Divis ion

52 3 1
40 28
51 40
42 44
3 1 58

W L T OLPtsGFGA
10 2 3 2

Boston
Toronto
Buffalo
Ottawa
Montrea l

25 47 34

755 1 204350
8 7 2 1 19 39 46
7

6 2 1

17 50 37

8 9 1 0

17 35 39

Southeast Division
W l T OLPta
Tampa Bay
9 2 2 1 21
Atlanta
8 7 3 1 20
FlOrida
7 102 0 16
Ca rolina
5 7 5 0 15
Washrngton
5 12 1 0 11

•
GFGA
42 26
53 52
41 49
38 40
44 54

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlvlalon
W l T OL Pts
St LOUIS
11 4 0 1 23
Detrort
9 7 2 0 20
Ch1cago
6 7 4 2 18
Nashville
7 8 1
15
Columbus
5 9 2 1 13
Northweel Division

o

Vancouver
Co lorado
Edmon ton
Mrnnesota
Ca lgary

GF
42
55
36
42
35

GA
34
46
51
44
46

W L T OL Pta GF GA
10 4 2 2 24 57 37
10 5 1 1

22 56 43

8 7 2 0 18 50 51
7 8 3 0 17 40 41
6 8 0 2 14 32 40
Pacific Olvlslan

W L T OL Pis GF GA
Los Angeles
Anaheim
Phoen1x
Dallas
San Jose

8

6 1 1

18 44 38

7 7 1 3 18 38 46
5 6 5 1 16 42 51
7

9 2 0

16 40 50

3 6 7 2 15 43 52

l'wo po1nts fo r a wrn one po1nt for a 11e
and overt1me loss
Sunday's Games
Phoemx 2, Columbus 2 t1e
Atlanta 5 Flonda 2
N Y Rangers 2, C h1cago 2, tre

Call TOday...

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
SABRES - Activated
LW
BUFFALO
Jochen Hecht fr om InJured reserve Wa1ved
LW Jason Bottenll
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Annou nced
the ret1rement of LW Jeff Danrets

CH ICAGO BLACKHAWKS-AsSigned AW
Pavel Vorob1ev to Norlolk of the AHL

COLORADO AVALANCHE-Recalled C
Steve Moore from Hershey of the AHL
DALLAS STARS- Ac qwed D Jon Klemm
and a 2004 fourth round draft p1ck from
C hrcago for 0 Stephana Rob1das and a
2004 second round draft prck Sent C Anttt
M1ett1nen to Utah of the AHL Recalled F
Steve Ga 1ney and F Rob VahceviC lrom
Utah
EDMONTON O ILEAS - S1gned C Adam
Oates to a one -year contract
FLOR IDA PANTHEAS-LReass1gned AW
JuraJ Kofn1k to San Anton1o of the AHL
LO S ANGELE S KINGS- Recalled C
Michael Cammatlen from Manchester of
the AHL
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS- Recalled AW
Aadovan Som1k and J im Vandermeer tram
Philadelphia of the AHL
PHOENIX COYOTES - Recall ed C Jeff
Taffe from Spnngheld of the AHL Placed C
Jan Hrdma on InJured reserve

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING- AsSigned D
Darren Rumble to Hershey of the AHL

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~~~~====~~~~::~~~~~~==::~~~:::::·:·:·:·:·:h:o:u:ld~R:u;n~7~D:o~y~o~~~~~--~~::~:t~o~o~nl~y:--:·:;WM::t~~~::::::EOE~o:~:NM=:r~d:•.Wo~w;:ltl~~~k;n:o•:~::~~~~~~~-n~y:~::·on~l~n;g;ln:•:~~~~~~~~~~M~OM~::ii;;~~~;;;;~~~

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1110

ANNolJNO::MENTS

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.

HELPWAI'l!HJ

ro.

~REALISTIC
OPPORTUNITY

C-1 Beer Carry Ou t perm11 Learn To Earn
for sate Chester Townsh1p $10k +per month Not MLM
Me1gs County send leners Tramrng Provided
of rn te rest to The Dally Call lor Info
Sentinel PO BoK 729 20, 1-800 881 1540 EKI 3258
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
AVONt All Areasl To Buy or
Sh1rley Spears 304
Chase Merchan t Sen11ces Sell
acce pt all maJor credit ca rds 675-1 429
now also debit telecheck ebt
AWESOME CAREER
g1tt card Ill analyze your
$14 80·$36 00./HA
current processmg statePostal 2003104
ment reduce your cost and
Full Benefns No exp req
1mprove cash flow ma~e
Call
Now
appOintment 304-755 0462
1·6()().875-9078 Ext. 2072
or 800·767 -2484 e:d 9960

SENIOR PORTRAITS!
Get You best deal at
Main Street Photography
51 1 Mam Sheet
Potnt Pleasan t
C att tor Appomtment

(304)675 7279

r

potenhal
ava1lable
ext 1975

Local pOSition s
1-800 -2 93·39 85

Mlntmum of 1 year e11per1
ence Med1cal Insura nce
401K Ho me Weeke nds
Dom1c1le 1n Jacks on OH
Female Ret Tamer puppy to S1gn on Bonus, 34C pe r
g1ve away Good w1th k1ds mile 95"/o No touch NO
(740)388 9932 , anyt1me or NYC freight.
leave message
Call1·800-652·238
= 2_ _

GJVF.AW&lt;\Y

Free puppres 1/2 Austrclhan
Sheppa rd
1/2 German
S heppard Call (740)367
7947

UlSl ANI&gt;
FOUNJ&gt;

Lookin g for Rock Gu1tanst
and srnger to JOtn band Must
Found· 2 young Blue Tick be ser1ous to play a lot Call
coon hounds Goose Creek Robboe (740)742·3200

Ad area (740)698·7101

MANAGING

STYLI ST

Found· male red P1t Bull NEEDED for busy salon
SCISSORS
near Broad Run, WV 304- SASSY

(740)441 1880 01 (740)256·
6336

882·2469
Found
Male
tncolo red
Beagle w1th tra1nmg collar

Call (740)446·9303
Lost Forked Run area
While
English-Setter
female Brown nng around
left eye REWARD Call col-

lect 7401367·7069
Lost Beagle lost m Northup
area
Whllelbrown/black
orange tra1n1ng collar Call

(740)256·6317
2835

00

(740)446

Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc seekmg a full·t1me LPN
to perform chart aud1ts and
therapy coordination for the
GallipoliS, Oh1o area Must
be 11censed both In Oh1 o and
West V1rgmra We olfer a
compettflve salary, benefits
package and 401 K E 0 E
Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue GalliPOliS
OH 45631
Attn Diana
Harless, Clinical Manager

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WANilll

roBuv

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver
Gold
Coins
Proofsets Diamonds Gold
U S Currency ·
Rings,

MTS

Coin

Shop, 151

Second Avenue. Gallipolis.

3 BR 2 bath acre lot on cor
ner Conventently lOCated 1n
town Exce llent cond lt!On
Deposit
refe renc es
$ 7 00/month
Ph on e

BEAUTIFUL
APART ·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We stwood
Dnve from $297 to $383

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tr40}446 . 799 5

Wa lk to shOp &amp; mov1es Ca ll ranges a11 cond1t1oners and
Equal wrrnger was hers Wrtl do
74 44 6-2568
Housmg Opportunity
rapa1rs on maJOr brands rn
shop or at your nome
Fu rn 1shed apt All utrl11tes
pa 1d up st a1rs no pets 2nd
Used lurnrture s10re 130
Ave
G att 1pohs
OhiO
Bulavrlle Prke We sell Mat
(7 40 )446· 9523
tresses dresser couc he s
bunk beds beclroom surle c;
Graetous 11v1ng 1 and 2 beo
recliners
Gr ave
monu
room apartm ents at Vi llage
{740\446 4 782
ments
Mano r
and
R1Vers1de
Galltpolls Hour s 10 4pM
Apartmen ts m Mrddleport
Stop by 1
From 5278 $348 Call 740·
992 5064 Equal Hous tng
Opportu nt118S

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P"'-'
&amp;.Jf;t-M~ ~ f Y 7 ~

4 br 1 1/2 baths Locat ed on
SA 141 near Centenary
$700 per month Deposit &amp;
reference req u~red
Call
W1se man Real Estate at
740·446-3644
75 Locust 3 bedroom $550
per mo dep ostt &amp; refer
enc es reqUired (740)446
3667

Th e
Athen s- Meigs
Educat ronal Sef'\llce Center
15 seek1 ng a person to work
wtth presc hool tam1hes rn
Ath ens Co unty 1n the area ol
sacral work and fam1ly cen·
tered act1Vllles plannrng The
posr ho n reqwres tle~e1ble
hours w1 th some evenrrg
and occasronal Saturdays
Work load Will be an average
of sn&lt;teen hou rs per week
Persons w1th social serv1ce
edu ca!IOn and backg round
are encouraged to apply
Applicants must be w1 llmg to
have B c r~mmal record
check Plea se send letter of
mterest and three refer·
ences to Sa lly H ockmg
Ath e ns-Me1gs EducatiOnal
507
Cente r
Serv 1ce
Richland Avenue. SUite 108
45701
Athe ns
Ohi O
Deadline November 28 .

QI'I'Oim.JNIIY

I

Lo cal vending route 60
machmes locatrons mctuded
all fo r $ 10 99 5 80D-509·

7909
IV . NU_II'-~ ~

OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bu s1ness w1th pea
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
~all un ttl you have 1rwesu
ated the offerin a .

Bll'itNOO
TR~INING

E

MoNEY

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IU loAN
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Mortgages, Mortgages!!!
Call Today' 740-446 4367
We offer competitive mterest
1·800- 214-0452
www gatltpollscareerco llege co m rates on mortgages and
debt consolidations and
Reg #90-05 12746
spec1alize rn good and bad
1170 M&amp;:ElLANEOUS
cred1t Call toll free to fi nd
out about our low mtere st
rate s and rece tve expert
20 ft tandem axle pe ndel adVICe
tra1te r
lowboy
hitch
1-888-739-8719

I

(740)256·6574
Need extra cash? We are

25 Serloua People Wanted th e loan specrallst we don I
Who want to LOSE we1ght
We Pay You Cash for 1he
pounds you LOSEI
Safe Natural No Drugs
800-201 0832
- - -- -- - -99 EZ·Go Gall Cart, New
Batte ry, Factory Cha rger
Canopy
Great
Shape
51799 (740 )245-5648

specu late good or bad cred
it eKcepted There are no
tees last approva l and low
mt erest rates For more 1nfo
call toll tree 1· 866-882 ·
6875

~~;..=------.,

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PRot•l~IONAL
Sli:KVJt:n

ltD

Ho~w

mRSAI£

G:t

a

All rsal ••t•t• advertl1lng
In thl• naw.paper 11
IUbiKI to the Federa l
Fair Housing Act of 1968
wl'tich m1ke1 It Illegal to
advertln "any
preference, llmltatton or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial •tatua or Nrtlonat
origin or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmitltlon Of
dlacrlmlnatlon "

rM~~E~

Thia newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertt ..menta fOf real
8118te which II In
vlol•tlon of the law Our
readers are h•reby
informed that all
dwelling• ed'ltlrtieed in
thl• newlpaJMr ar1
available on an equal
opportunity baHt.

4 BA 2 bath , attache
arage storage bwldmg ,
112 acre lot 3 m1les fro
own on 141 Protess1onall
andscaped , CI A smok
ree
home
Askm
69500 Call (740)44 1

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Do

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888-582·3345

r10

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Honda 250, mull run and be
etreel wo1lhy 740·245-5027

..., , H \ II I ...,

SALARY

poulble mailing our sates
brochures from home No
experience
necessary
FT/PT Genuine Opportunrty
Supplies provided, Including
customer malting labels Call

1·708·688-1700 (24 hou1s)

A + Certified Technician
fund raising
needed for Full·11me Of Part·
Send resumes to Mindy
time drop off resume at 303
Smith , State Orr&amp;c1or WV
Main Street. pt F»leaunt or
Chapter March ol Dimes
,.. (304)675-5283
3508 Staunton Ave Second
Charleston, WV
live !n for elder1y lady Teays Floor,

Valley area (304)882·3322

25304,

rio o!:rr

(304)875-1352

I

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61

House under constructionranch style 1680 sq It w1t h
full basement &amp; attached
maJ&lt; $6999 (740)245·5648
garage Gallrpolts Cityschoo l
HI \ I I ..., I \II
dlstnct. Green anendance O ne half acre tot on
WANIDJ
Poll teal
Raccoon Creek completely
area 1740)446·7633
organrzallons Mal\&amp; up
furn ished 14JC65 mob1 le
•
To
HQMEl;
to $8/hour plus benellts.
home 2 bedrooml, 2 b8th
In Syracuse. 3 bedroom, 2
Full or pa rt time
Cleani ng
lady
Hone st,
40ft of new boat docks
depe ndable,
reasonable
bath new windows pat1o on
shifts available
deck1ng &amp; boardwalk, 18x20
rates Call 740·258·8128 3 bedroom home, 15 m1n front. beautiful 0011ered deck
Call today
carport easy access to OH
from town Gas heal, newly m back, 740-667·0674 or
1'677·463-8247 eld 24e4 ask tor Tammy
rive• $36 000 Ph 1740)367·
remodeled Phone (740)379- ~7;4D-;;:::59
:,1~-B:2:;9:;:8;_~_;...., 7025 or 1740)845-0508
Now Hiring Dancers, d ay Need a Babys itter? Please
sh!ft or evenings (30-4-)549- calll740)446·1858
H I ' I \1...,
9887
5696 Local
Will babysit In my hOme 3 bedroom houaa, 4 112 - Part-T1me
Community Any ohlflll Call (740)448· acres, cia, fenced pasture 10 used homes under
D1rector Organized well· 2839
v1 nyl siding, Thermalpane $2 000 oo Call Nikki Call
motivated and outgoing perwindow (740)985·4288
(740) 385·9948
son needed to manage and Will Bit with elderly No lifting
2 bedroom B idwell 01'1
Implement the March of Call and leave message at 3 BA, 1 bath. 2-atory w1th
basement and 1 112 car 1983 Liberty mobile home $300 + deposol (740)367·
Dimes West VIrg inia State (740)245·0191
garage Located at 162 4th 14M60 2 bedroom under- 7015 oo (740)367-7746
Chapler'a
Walk·Amerlca
$29900 614·891 · pinning, 8M16 porch must belo rt apm
events In Pt Pleasant Job Would you ll~e your hOusa Ave
be moved 54,500 740·387·
8763
begins on January 7 and cleaned for the hOlidays?
2 Bedroom , 1 bath house
702151740·645.05011
ends May 31, approx num - 1 can do Ill Call Pat at
3br 2 full bath&amp; , deck .
No
Pets
Dapo11t
&amp;
(304)675-8886
ber ot hours will be 20 pe r
wh irlpool tub Located near
References required $350
week Job can be worked
1985
mobile
home,
no
(ELDERLY CARE)
school In Game Owner
Month Phone (304)675·
out of your home, computer
hnancing
Is
available smoke , no pets, appliances 5578
Care for your loved one
necessary
Included, niCe porch, $8500
Light cleaning hot meals
(304)675-1352
Primary skills necessary
OBO, (740)949-2486
2 bedroo m, Front St
shopping, etc CMA with
mdude ability to organize
Beautiful
Dream Home
Mason. $350 month $300
E)Ccellent References
and prlorltrze outgoing per32001Q h with wrap around 2 mobHe homes 2 112 acres deposit, references no pets
1304)882·2766 .
sonal!ty experience In workdeck, upstairs balcony 4·112 8 miles West of Jado:son OH 1304)773-5604 afte r 7pm
ing w1th vo lun teers. self·
acres, 4br, 2ba , large living on
Rt
35
$70 000
ll "\\"\ 1 1\ 1
3 bedroom trat ler House
starter whO Is proactive Job
room wlflfeptace
dining (740)288-11267
newly
remOdeled 3 bed·
history of Sales spac1al
room 2 cer garage OWner
room PatriOt area No petl.
event management andior
financing
11
avai lable
Trailer dual ax le. tilt bed.
new treated floor. 13.000 lbs

Thompsons App liance &amp;
Repar•·675 7388 For sate
ra condiiiOned automatic
washers &amp; dryers refr1ger a
tors
gas and elec1r 1C

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102003 by NEA, Inc
8U.1NI~

Ir·o ..,~~JJ

Modern 1 BA apt No pets
Ava.1table soo n N1ce 3 BR $250 WICiudes water $100
all appliances
$450 + deposrt C all (740 )446·3617
de posit
&amp;
relerences
Mod ern one bedroom apt
(740)446 1079
740-446·0390
For Lease Pnvate 4br 1-1!2
bath 1n H1sto r1c Pt P I North 3rd Ave M1ddleport 2
01strr ct Fully restored all bed roo m tur ntsh ed apt
www.comlcs com
appliances
$650 /mo Depos1t
&amp;
refere nce
Secunty and reference s reqw red No Pem (740)992·
reqwred For apph cauon 0165
MoBILE HOI\mi
727 593 1454
FOR SALE
Pleasant Valley Apartment
For sale or re nl 4 bedroom
Are now takin g Applications
house 1n Pomeroy $450 a
for 2BA 3BR &amp; 4BA
Cole's Mob1 te Homes
month rent $400 secunty
Appl 1cat1on s
are
taken
US 50 East Athens Oh io depoSit no pets stove. !rig
Monday thru Fnday from
4570 1 740-592 1972
Be dishwasher (740)949·
9 00 AM -4 P M OffiCe IS
7004
Located at 1151 Evergreen
FINAL CLEARANCE
Jus t a lew 2003 model House tor ren1 2 BR CI A. Dnve Po 1nt Pleasant WV
Pho ne No IS !304)675 5806
homes remam co me eady no pets $450 plus depoSit
make you r piCk-then-talk to uhlitles Call (740)44 6 431 3 EHO
Ernte or Lynn get lh e best
Trustwor thy fam1iy tookmg Roo ms for ren t Back of
poss1ble puce yo u II be
lor a home on land cont racl Addrson ctose to Gavm and
pleasantly surpnsed founor to rent then buy Kyger C reek pla nts Call
datiOns hea t pumps central
References available 740· 367·0 102
a1rs and septiC systems our
446·3750 day or 740· 388·
specialty
Coles Mob1 le
0498 evenrnt;~s
Roomy 2 BA
1 bath
Homes, 15266 US 50 E
anached garage $400 per
Athe ns Ohio 45701 PH
month depos11 &amp; t yr lease
740·592· 1972
relerence {7401 245·5 114
Need t6 sell -Good clea n
Townhouse
2 bd wlw carpet. a1r porch Tara
Aepos
98 Schult 16x80 $14 999 97 Very n1ce no pets In Apartments Very Spacrous
Champton 16x80 $11 999 Gall1poi1S 740-446·2003 or 2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA 1
1!2 Bath Newty Carpeted
97 Clay1on 16K80 S11 999 740· 446 1409
Act utt Pool &amp; Baoy Pool
97 Redman 16x72 $tO 999
90 Fleetwood 14x70 $7 999 2 bedroom 14k70 near Clay PatiO Start $J85!Mo No
AI
7
South Pets Lease Plus S&amp;eunty
(740)709·1 t66 oc (740)288· SChOOl
(740)256 1684
Dep OSit Requ 1red Days
1605
Evenmgs
2 bedroom turn1shed m 740-446-3481
New 14 w1de only $799 00
740-367-0502
Mason neKI: to Wai-Mart c/a
down and only $169 76 per
carport storage bu1ldrn g
Call
Karena
month
Tw1n R1vers Tower •s accept·
references requtred, depos1t
(7401385·767 1
1ng applrcattons lor w8111 ng
$450 month, 17401992-3961
lrst lor H ud subs tzed 1 br
New 2003 Doublewlde 3 BA
2 Bedroom Mobile Home apart ment call 675-66 79
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
Located behi nd FoK'S P1zza EHO
arid &amp;295t mo 1 800 691·
on Sandhill
Road Pt
6777
Pleasant
$350 tmont t1 Wanled Someone to share
(1nctudes water and sewer) my large home With Located
sourh 32 5 near Ato Grande
Cell (304)675 3423
$3 00 and $ 150 depo srt
3 bedroom 1n country, $300 (740)245-9844
LOIS IJ9 Be 10 Heatley S deposit &amp; $300 a month ,
Add1tron 1n Bidwell Two (740)992-11313
SPACE
large le~~el lots PriCe to sa le
APARTMFNTS
.'OR RENT
now Phone 74D-446-9539

ttiMriO

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3 br ranch hOuse for rem
$375 00 a man In New
Haven no pets 120 Howaro
St 304-675-3458

I

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740-448·2842

$550 WEEKLY

r

lwr1ght®lc.net ,

PO Box 87
Wauseon, Oh. 43567

L-,0--~ilii~iiRI::_;.._ _.I

&amp;CARLYLEr

Styli st neede d lull and part
t1me Be your own boss
Renl or work on commts·
s1on chos e your own sched
ule
Call 740·446·4247
Personal Touch

Deltveryi\'Varehouse person
needeQ lurmture store lull
t1me. tmmedlately openi ng
apply at Life Style Furniture
856 3rd Ave, Ga1l1pohs no
Gray lemale kttten Very
phone calls
fnendly Call (740)446 8192
Earn money for Chnstmas
!ns1de home only Brown by selh ng Avon call Joyce
strtpped male k:1tten , IIIIer 304·675·6919
tra1ned
all shots
Call
Home Work Needed.
1740)446-0961 or (740)441
For
assembly worl\ Send 1
172 1
stze lt 10 self addressed
j11D
Male German Shepherd stamped envelop too
Black Lab and 3 cats JC

r

KIT

Southern H1gh Sc hool In
Aacme. Oh to IS seekmg a
Vars ity Football
coach
Prev1 ous M ad coachmg
ex pe rien ce IS preferre d
Anyone mtarested pl ease
send resumes to Rya n
Leml ey Athletic D1r ector
Southern H1gh Sch ool PO
Box 98 Rac1ne Oh 1o 45771

Class A COL Drivers
Wanted

(304)675·6680

H ELPWANTID

Plumber 5 yrs exp required
Appty at Cat ers Plumbi ng
98 Pme Stree t Gallipolis,
OH (740)446-3888

BARTENDER TRAINEES
NEEDED! S250 a day

I \ 11 '1 ! 1\ ' 11 ' I

'Onco jOU 11M tlpil up 1011111 iet'jor Dlleount, jOUr-~ no11ct wlllllftlcl ""'' diiCOIInl.

word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Need 7 IBd1es to sell · Avon
Reward lost female German Call 740-446-3358
c.oa!M:oo
on:r-,
Sheppard Last seen rn West ;=;;.r.:N•ee.,.,oa,.;.
0 rM
10,;,;,;
Cotumb1a (304)773- 5174
behalf ol Non profit or

TERMS OF SALE:
Ten (t Oo/o)percont of
the hlghell bid, coah
or certified check,
duo an the day of

eala,

or Fax To 1740&gt;446-3008

Offtee 11o~~

FOOTBALL

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) .675-1333

Your Ad,

BASKETBALL

National Football League
ATLANTA
FALCONS- Wa 1ved
WR
Quentin McCord
DETROIT LIONS- Placed WA Scotty
Anderson on 1n1ured reserve S1gned WA
David K1rcus from the pract1ce squad
HOUSTON TEXANS- S1gned QB M1ke
Oumn to the practrce squad S1gned LB
Shantee Orr from the practtce squad
NEW YORK JE TS-Placed S Jon McGraw
on 1n1 ured reserve AQded DT Josh Evans
to the act1ve roster

t!r.:ribune

To Place

National B11ketball ASsociation
NBA- Reduced Hous ton F Maunce
Taylors suspens1on from 10 to SIX games
fo r VIOiat1on ol the leag ues substance
abuse policy
SAN ANTONIO SPUR s-S1gned F Sean
Marks Wa1ved G Sha ne Heal

If so, you qualify for a

You'll

(

BASEBALL
American league
CLE VELAND INDIANS-Sent AHP Oanys
Baez outr1ght to Buffalo of the IL
TE XAS RANGERS-S1gned IN F Andy Fox
to a m1nor league contract
National league
HOUSTON A STAOS-Agreed to terms
wtlh INF Jose V1zca1 nO on a one-year contract

Are you 65 or older1

Appraised
at
$30,000.00
Kim M. Hammond
(0062572)
Leonard A. Cullll
(0067712)
Attorneys for PielniiH
Keith D. Weiner &amp;
Associated Co., LPA
75 Public Square ,
Fourth Floor
Cleveland,
OhiO
44tt3
Tel. (2t6) 77t-6500
Fax: (2t6) 771-6540
(11) t8, 25, (12)2

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

ume.
Proporty
Addreoa:
Btrolll,
1508
Nyo
Pomeroy, Ohio 45758
Parcel No: 18-0078Q-

'

c.m. c..., oH

Transactions

W L T OLPis GFGA

1-.ul:»ll c N o- t.l c.._,.., In N c_.,..J:»UJ:Joer.,..
Y••••r Hla.tht. l.ou Knu""'• l&gt;cllv c r c d Rl~o~.ht. t •U Vc•u•· l&gt;ot.u.Jor.

the
Village
of
Pomeroy, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio : Being Lot No. 1
and 23 feet off the
westerly side of Lot
No. 2 adjoining said
Lot No. 1 In Burnap's
Addition to the town
of Pomeroy. Said Lot
No. 1 and part of Lot
No. 2 and being In
subdivision of Lot
No. t89 In said town
of
Pomeroy
as
recorded In Volume
23t, Page 893 of the
County
Meigs
Records.
Furthermore, the
right and privilege to
maintain and use tha
existing underground
sewer through Lots 2,
199
and
t7
In
Burnap·~ Addition to
the town of Pomeroy,
but Is It (ale) understood and agr11d that
the rights granted by
this ,deed to use said
sewer are not to be
exclusive, and fur·

'·

,.(

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

ORDINANCE #03-03
Middleport Village
Council has adopted
regulations
lor
mobile homes In the
Vlllege of Middleport.
This ordinance regu-

rtbune - Sentinel - ~egister
CLASSIFIED

Tuesday, November 18, 2003

College Basketball
Men 's AP Top 25
The top 25 teams m The Associated Press
men's colleg&amp; b as ~elb a ll poll , wtth l1rst·
place votes m parenthese s records
th rough Nov 16, total pom ts based on 25
points lor a f1r st place vote through one
po1nt fo r a 25 th·place vote and prev1ous
rank1ng
Record Pta
Pvs
1 Connecticut {69) 0 0
1 796 I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesda~No~18,2003

99 14K70 3 BR, 2 be&lt;h vinyl (740)379-2540

s1di04J, shingled root v1nyl
COmpletely refinished home windows. 6' walla Iota ol 3br house In Henderson
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEJ Great locatkln In Gallipolis upgrades on private lot m Laundry room lenced yard.
eo vending macntnel Wjth Ohio, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull Green Twp., 3 miles form out bu1ld1ng Deposit &amp;
axcellenl locations
requ ired
batht, priced to sale now OollipoHo (740)446·8935 References
Mull Solll1 11110-23WH2. Phone (740)446-95~
(304)675-4082
after 6pm

I
,

_____ _

r

i

•UR Rmr

I~

Buy
or
sell
Rtve r1ne
AntiQues t 124 Ea st Mam
on SA 1 2~ E Pomeroy 740
992 -2526
Ru ss Moore
owner

S«l M ,N XLI .......UII.IS
Ml-lllllANill~f.
3 Pl aque
Gas
Heijter
$1 4395 10x10JC6 Ke nnel

$189 95
Paint Plus Hardwar•

(304)675-4084
ngan er ee

011e wr
useo
onlhs Ove r S1 700 value
or
St 000
(7 40 )37 9
93 0151285 10 1512851

!t au achments

For sale· pool table
s1z e
state top

ofltcta

5300

(740)992 ·9052
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; Reburlt In
Stock Can Ron Evans 1
800 537-9528

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Be ams P1pe Rehar
For
Concre te
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grat ing
For
Dra 1ns
DrtYEtWays &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Sc rap Meta ls Open Monaay
Tue sday
Wednesday &amp;
Fnday Bam-4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740 )446--7300
Oa~ t;~un cab1net wrlll draw
er S50 bought at Emptre
Furnrture lrke new Call
(740}446·2668

Office Furnrture
New scratch &amp; Den1
Save 7lr' o 1 800 527 ·4662
Argonaut 5 19 Br1dge Street
Guyandotte/Hunt1ngton M/F

Sawm1ll 52" blade 15
C arrrag e good R A T•e
machme D1esel EngrnEo
for good
condtt10n
Pho ne

Commerc1al property
rent- a stor e front m (740)286· 1309
1 and 2 bedroom apart · H1stoncal
downtow n
ments, furnrshtd and untur· Pomeroy Oh lacmg nver
WHITE'S METAL
n lshed , sec unty depo91t (7401589·7122
DETECTORS
required , no pets, 740-992 Ron Allison
22 18
NIOa new mobile hOme lot
588 watson road
Bidwell Oh iO
2 bedroom apartment 8'18!1· for rent $1 25 a month
able In Syracuse, $200 (740)446-0175 00 1740)675·
deposit, $315 per month 5~5
\I I IH II \ ' 111 ..,1
rent rant Includes- water
88Wflt, traatl , no pets rental
application references and
suffiCient, Income to qualify,

(740)446-4336

.w-~;;~~~

;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;; i~...._,.s~
----_.,

e~

(740)378-11 111

Blin..ooiG

~

BlOCk briCk sewer PIP9S
w1n&lt;Jow&amp; lintels etc Claude
W1nter1 R1o Grande OH

Good Used Appliances
Call 740-245-5121
r:.econdltloned
and
Guar•nteed
Wuhers
Dryers,
Ranges
end
Refrigerators, Some start at
(7401446·4467 uk "" Lloa $95 Skaggt Appllllnces, 76 AKC Lab pupa. 6 weeks old
VIne St (740 )446 ·73~
shots wormed dew claws
or Faye
removed Field Cha ml)f on
2 Furnished small apart- Uke New wheel chclr $150 , blood line Bla&lt;:l&lt; $300 , yel·
ments tor rent Llvmg room, Dinette Set $100, Consokl low $350 Coli (740)441 ·
kitchen bedroom &amp; bath TV 550 , Sofa bed &amp; cl'latr 0130
$275 each all utltltres paid $50 • 3 bar stools $30 .
eMcept electric (304)675 - Microwave $20 , 25ft Cheat
1385
freezer sso . Call (30&lt;1)675· Border Collte pups. ClusiC
markings, work1ng lmpaned
3 BA Ranch-LR. K DR. 2933 after 6 30 or klave
blood line great Chnsrmas
bath, 1 car gerage 1
message All 1n Good condt- glfl (740)379·9110
teaae dap ref $500 per tlon

2 Bedroom bottom floor
apartment with amall poroh
and yard Gaa and water
jneluded $435/mo no pets
For more Information call

I·

vr

month (740)245·5114
Now Tak!nQ App llcaUona-

35

Wesl

2

Bedroom

Townhouse
"partments,
Includes Water Sewage
Traeh, $3501Mo . 74()-446-

0006

_Mol_lol1a_n_C_a_rpe_t.-202-Ct-ari&lt; Norwelgn
Elkhound
Chapet Road, Porter, Ohio Pupp~et 6 _,.. old S75
17401••8-744• 1·877·830- each • mltel south ot Alo
9162 Free Eltimatfl, Eaay Grande, ott 325 R~ on
financing , 90 days aame a1 WOIIII Run RoMt lot place
cash VIBaJ Master Card bn the rlghl al A&amp;A
Woodcrafts
0..11/e- • · 111111 01110 elot

•

�:Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~No~ 18,2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, No~18, 2003

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP
Help Wanted

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

Help Wanted

BRIDGE

LAB TECHNICIAN

blrd

Ma~o n County. WV

L()(:a l

Area

~~.·L'k ing

lndus tr)

Ov~.-rtim e

115"

m;:n:

be r~qui rcd. M u~t hOJve a minimum nf a '"'~l
in dl l' llli ~ t ry , p hy~ i1,:!'&gt; .

BuLLETIN BOARD CEADLI NE
2 :lOPM DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION'

~ea r as~ o~,.· la t ~:~ dc g rc ~.·

biology. or the equi vakn t.

Mu:-1 haw

Phillip
Alder

'8"'column lncll week~ys
column Inch SAl. or Sunday
. CAI,..L OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

temporary

pcr ~o nnd .

;a.o Hr. workweek!-. antit"! pated.

a

., pl(xleratt: kn owl eUg~ anll ~k ill ncr~s~~try w
perform work \~· it h :-;andard lahorutDry and
chemical analyzing equipment.
. Entry le vel wage rate (g) appmx unatd y $ 15.50
• per hour with moderatl' hcnefit pad :.~g c hcing

°

Human Resources Dt'pt.

882·3598

r

Fauns &amp;

; haul away. (740)992·0413 or
740 992· 1071 .

LlvF..&gt;TOCK

• .__ _ _ __..~

Larry 0 .
Sellers, Sr.,

C incinnati. those who sent cards to him at

Middleporl, OH

home. !lowers, money, food , prayers and

(740) 992-7533

our loss.

··~--~:ilaby
pigs
tor
sa le,
:·(740)949·2908

Thanks again,
Agnes Sellers

l ~t:.....~-~-&amp;~~~====~~~
10

· New Farme rs Tobacco Co. is
: -now receiving tobacco. First
· jale is Nov. 18. Call New
Farmers
1·888·844·4365

Auros

foUR SALE
1993 Eagle Vision . Power
everythi ng, CD, $1,500 or
bes t offer. Call (74 0)256·
1652.

1995 Grandam 99K $2,495 .'
1994 Century 96K $2.495.
1991 Cavaller 95K$1 ,495,
$!i00! POLICE IMPOUNDS. 1995 GMC $3,995. We take
Hondas, Chevys. Jeeps, etc!
trades
Cars trom $500. For listings
COOK MOTORS
1·800·719·3001 erl390 1
(740)446·0103
$500! POLICE IMPOUND S
Honc:ta s, Chevys, Jeeps, e1c1
Ca rs from $500. For list ings
1-800·719·3001 ext3901

thoughts. Thank:-; to the nurses at:

1997 Sa tu rn. 4dr, 5 speed.
9)(Cellent cond ition. Great
safety features. (30 4)675·

Sunset Home ·
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs ,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More

2001 Su nlire, 30,000 miles. 199 1 Dodge Ram 250. 4x4
auto. AIC , CO player, $5.200 Cumm.ins Turbo Diesel, new
080. (740)256 -16 18 or tires, new pam t, $6, 500
(740)256'6200.
080 (740)256-1589.
1992 Chevy 3/4 ton , 5speed. wltopper. $3 ,500.
Call 740-446 -8832.
-------1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK .
CA LL
{740)446-9 41 6 _ M·F 9-5 .

Window &lt; • Roofi ng
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

on Display

7 40·992· 7599

DEER
PROCESSING

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Skinned, Cut
&amp; Wrapped

Let me cJo it for youl

LINDA'S PAINTINI

Summer Sausage

Mnde
Maplewood Lake
Christian
Campground

Sl. Rl. 124 between ·
Racine &amp; Syracuse

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742·341

VANS &amp;

·--•4-iiliWDsoi.iiiii,0..-,.1

FOR SAJ.E

--

1996 Toyota Tercel . auto , 9'1 .Dodge Carava n LE,
Located
139t
Safford AJC $ 9
QBO
, 1, 00
· (740)256· loac:tec:t, one ow ner, 86K,
School. Gallipolis .
1'618
(740)256 6200
- ------or
·
$1500, 740·949·2481 or
1996 Foret E.xp lore r Eddie
740·992· 6 145 leave mas·
--'------~--- Bauer. Mu st sell. Loaded . 730
VANS &amp;
sag•
95 Chrysler New yo rker. $760 0. abo. Ca !l 674-0089
4-\VDs
. ~~------40
ex cel lent co ndnion. runs after 5 pm.
great. 525 00 mu st se ll. 740Chevrolet Suburban,
MO"n1kCVCLKfil
41 6-017 4.
r---,::-:--:-::c::--- 1980
~
4x4 350. $1000. (740)256· .
TkUCK.•;;
6574
2001 CR 80 dirt bi ke, asking
tUR SALE
•$,;:t
0~;:4:46~·.:,19::,:7;_;3
1989
Plymouth
Grand Fl 'ir400~C;::a:::ll.l.7~4~

I

SHOP

1988 Chevy S-10 long bed.
1985 CheVy Caprice Classic 97 Ford Escort, 5 sp.. nice
needs
transmission,
2dr., V·B. 305. good condi- clean car. runs great, $1200
(7401949-2908
tion. $2500. (304 )882-2936 must sell , 740·4 16·0174

CLASSIFIEDS

.I

P~~g;~- ~on~r ~~:~ o~~~
(7401388-8475

AIJIU PARTS &amp;
'--iiAiita:F..W"liiiiiiiii'iiiRiiitFS-.,.1

1999 Suburban 1500. 4x4.

Tool box across b8d lor S·1 0
or small truck _ Diamond
plate, alum inum , locks .
excellent conditi on. $110 .
(740)367-75 12 .

loaded, immacula te!
kept. nonsmoker,
mi les New tires ,
$15,500_ $1 5 ,000
(740)44 1·9593
IOpm

Garage
64,000

NAOA
OBO
before

2000 Fo ret F 550 Diese l, 4
door, 4 wheel drive with flal
bed (740)446-9317 .

2001 Oldsmobile Silhoutte

~

"'It\ I( I .._

rm

HoME

L.,...,;IMPiiiiitiiRIIOttiVEiilill\IEiiiNTS-_.,1

BASEMENT
Van . loaded, leather se ats.
WATERPROOFING
premium sound, tracti on
control. 76,000 miles, asking Unconditional lilelime guar·
$12,900. Phone (740)446- an tee. Local references fur·
n1shed . Established 1975.
4672, (7401441 · 1034 .
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
94 Chevy 3/4 to n. 4WD. 350 08 70, Rogers Basement
Aut o, 128K , Runs Great, Waterproofing .
$4995.(740)245-5648

We Found o u r new
f".amily t h r o u g h the
cl.assifieds!

C,AN'T

i'lachlne Quilting · Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns Available
Connie CUrnutt
895-3962 Shop
ownerI operator
895-3512 nome
I# buy quilt tops

29670 Bashan Road

New&amp; Used·

45771
740·949·2217

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00 PM

Van

-Not mel

every month

My money is with

All pack $5.00

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Selvlces,
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone: 843-5264."

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

Dealer"

1&gt;0

c,r

vr·~11 N 'hW

qwt;• , (orr

:tSCO\IER THE LATEST. HOTTEST. MOST
f"f:!OFITABL E HOME BUS INESS
l r~ro5iirof.ii:iiiiioi.i.--~l
Ma•llng Our Sales Brnr:lu.•
1

r ~;- s•

OP=&gt;OATUNITY' IN AMERICA

FREE 24 PAVE RE PORT
WRIT F.. l .A.KF.N. DE PT 12701&lt; E11 .
.

UP

lOca l callonq to an~nn&amp;·anytime

Gu""""""'ll

""'"'"''I

and. PUI!rto Rico

~~--~St11pp•ngl 10'\ Off On Aefins

Fr~t ll ln tor matton •

Pllf!n tf! l lf\lfllt , Oldut~~: , Adipe.1t, Soma.

I()()..U1·45S6 • t513

Ambtt!ll FIOI'ioet, Tramadoi A MDfW!
US Ooctor" 'Pt1armactes.
l.oftf.().4A9-24:31 ~o~o~WW. eme&lt;JS Jt pren 00111

LEAiiN TO EARN
Silt-figures a

~ear'

From anywhere no &amp;e#lf&gt;g
Not mlm, I ·IJ00.549-8013

MI SSEl&gt;

HERE~

PEANUTS
YES. MAAM .. M'{ FRIEND, Wl-lO
SITS IN FRONT OF ME.
NEEDS YOUR f.lEL.P...

Home Sites Pprrd.\· DriJ'eways

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

NO, 51-lE'S NOT El'-PERIENCIN6
ACADEMIC DIFFICULTIES
OR HAVING TIWL16L.E
RELATING TO f.lER PEERS ...

1-lER ~AIR IS CAU6~T IN
~ER BINDER A6AIN ~

BETTY

'

. . . ... .. ,_...

_ -: .

GARFIELD

~"'~

High&amp; Dry
SeH·Storage
33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

74_
0-992-5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

YOU'RE A BAC'INFL.UI!NCE
01111'1-iE VERMIN

IMPORTS

Athens

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beedl st:
middleport, OH
(10'1110' 610'x2D'J

(748) 992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
992-6635

Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilitie

740·992·7953
1113

•

HE

THE DOOR .

F' rt't' Shipping!

50
l ·EIOO·Sti
1·0114

18 AIIICH'ano 56 Mix 11 Oiled
20 GooN
57 JAMA
downKema
l2 "Mono U.." 56 Group

aJ

•

K

9
t

J 81) 4 :S 2
A K Q

singer
23 WOO&lt;IIIh
product
24 Wire nell•
27 Hardly ever
30 Yours and

South

West

North
Pas5

F.ast
l •

2 \f

Db!

4•

Pass

Pan

''"

mine

Sledding
spot

2Buttor
aubi1Huto
3 Souvenir

-

Ron Klinger, from Austral ia , puts out 58\1·
oral books a year. SorTie are reprints w1th
updates: othe rs are new offerings. O ne tn
the laner category IS "The Power of
S ha pe~ (Cassell. 2002) _Klinger e•pl a1ns
how to e•pand hand eva luation beyond
point -count. He covers the bases. then
1ncludes some more high-powered mate·
r1al. like an alternative method ol open·
er's rebidding when responder has used
the Jacoby Forcing Major-Swt Raise.
II you concentrate on the appropnale
parts. your b1dding wi ll improve.
Look at the West hand 1n the diagram
Alter a pass on your left. your partner
opens one spade and the next player
overcalls two hearts.' What would you dp?
Whatever you chOose . your left-hand
opponent jumps to lour hearts, whtch is
passed back to you . What now?
Initially. three c lubs is temp ting. but it IS
an overbid. Bener. If you have thts arrow
1n your quive r, is a negative double. wh1Ch
promises length in both minors.
Most Wests at the tggg world champ1·
onships hoped for a minor-suit fit and bid
tour no-trump over four hearts . a version
of tne Unusual No·Trump . Howeyer.
South had an easy double of l ive aia ·
mends, and the con tract went two or
three down.
One player. many·time world-champion
Eric Rodwell, doubled lour hearts! He lol·
lowed the guideline ot berng cautious
when short 1n partner's suit Th e defend·
ers took the spade ace. a spade ruH wrth
the heart ace. anc:t East's two top trumps
fo r one down.
The book is $18.95 postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274222 1 to order

Astro-

Graph

"bur 'lllrlh&lt;IIIY :
19. 2003

By Bernice Bede O•ol
More movement and activity than usual
could take place 1n your hfe m the year
ahead . Much witt have to do with you r
srx:ial life. but more 1mportanlly it can
mean advancement 1n you r work or
career
SCORPIO (0c1. 24·Nov. 22l -YOur lead·
ership qual1t1es wt!! be much in ev1dence
today to anybody with whom you' ll be
1nvolved. Don 't be surprised if they sta rt
looking to you fo r giv1ng them the1r cues .
SAG ITTAR IUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) Alt hough the odds tend to favor yo u a bil
today when involvoel in competiti ve situa tions. it'll serve you better to keep a low
pro!it e and not to play your trump cards
until you're ready.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - An
opportunity may arise today to use to your
adva ntage some inform ation or knowledge
you've recently acquired . Don 't feel guilty
about having an edge and let 11 gather
moss.
AQUARIU S (Jan
20- Fe b. 19)
Something you may have been una~e to
do successlu!ly i n the past can be
achieved today it you'll only give rt a sec·
ond chance. This is not the t1me to hesitate
and baCk off.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)· - A situahon
that you haven 't been able to get a handle
on lately can be brought ba ck into focus
today. Once the way is clear, take a!!
approp r1ate measure s to get going on 11.
ARI ES (March 21-April 19) - By today
you should nave a ooner handle on the
week and where it is going, especially In
linan cia! areas . Keep your eyes peeled lor
profita ble possib ilities you can be part ot
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Put your
pride aside today and lind yourself a com·
petent partne r to 81d you with accompliSh·
ing something you can't do alone . You
don't always have to do things al l on your

~AN

26 Solo

31 - pertlcte
shirts
32 Bond rellng
34 JecquH' pol 4 Hooded
anakes
35 Not diluted
5 Captain '•
36 In vogue
37 Fairy IItie
shout
6 Pro vote
39 Waterfall or 7 -up
rapids
(got ready I

Distribution may
overpower points

VVedneada~No~

DOWN

8 Prowl
Simon
9 1anw11ete 36 c - n d
movie
·NBA.tn
tO Troe growth 38 Pub brwws
13 Full
39 V o t 19 Stopa
41 Out In front
21 Jean Auol 42 Trot o•
heroine
gallop
24 Anoconda 43 Till
25 Type
44 Country
o1 roeat
ecktra.

employets

tor c.ruao

27 Dried-&lt;lp
47 o...rheng
28 Diamond
48 Hightail K
Head loc.lte 51 Freddy
29 Post
Ktwger'a
31 Water
dreet
e.rlera
33 Play • role
35 Newman Of'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
Cele!:rrtt C!Vef crti)!Ograms an! createcl lrom ~ r:Jy tatro.Js te001e
E.:n letter mft,e ~ SlaMS fer ~

OliSI nl ~

Today'scitPJ GeouaoL

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FRP

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ZFU

UPPJBP

IIRHKCM

WDCPU."

VDUM

OCYUP

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ZFIDOUD ,

MCGSU

ZFCLJP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "My wile hates to cook. so I've S1arted cook111g a
linle more. lmagreat microwaver · - Pro gollet Ken Green
jcl 2003 by NEA. Inc. I 1-18

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- - - - - - lo:too b, CUY R. •ottAN _::__ _ _..;._
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h ar.· c r.,. le:·er3 of ~ ~~
fov~ ~cornbi~ C: wor.::t beTO form loiJr J ·!To ~ it wcrd~

. I' I I I I
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Aller the fir st cf the year I allry to die: and exerc&gt;se mer e
but ne ver see n to do eit her
So,-,eone tole me the promises
most !ikely Ia be b~oken are lhe
1-.....:U
;.. .:;.S. . ::..E,..:l,_;;ij~G,..._; cnes we make to .... . ... .

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Complete fhe r:hur:k ie Ci.!Ofed
by iilllno;; in fhe m,SJin; woros

vo1.1 develog from srec No. 3 be!OI'\' .

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3

SCUM.LETS ANSWII'RS I l - : 7- o l
A;;pa/1 - Fe!JI - Wmdy- Oumbh1- UP WE'LL
The &gt;ecaker ;:;t a s err:na r 01 ch ,ld re arrng had no
c:·ii:Jrec , wr,icc. pr oves thai r•.e pe rson wi1h no ch&lt;ldren
IS ! ~ .e one who ll11 nks they know how to bring lhem UP

WELL

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YOCI'VE.
BWJ KliJD
CfOOE-f
ALL
~VWU&amp;

GEMINI (May 21 -Juna 20) - Because of
the creativity you'!! display today in tne
cosmelic sense with most anything you

N&lt;.o p&lt;JOr pr~ticnption requlrl!d.
Go:&gt;t Amt~ .e n . Phentenn ir~a .
Soma , Xana.o: and n-.out
So•; wJ online !lOvings &amp; COfl\lertie n~
Cali 866-51:13-3932 or Vlsil
• -.rx·••lutprtKrtbt.com
Promo code: TACN

·~=::::;;:;;:;;~~~:~==il~~~s~~~~~~~~-~ .1 1 stilt~&amp;, Cant~ da.
~
Ttl lnlf19!

IT

t·8n 72D-4281

22055 SHERMAN WAY

Cel l! Toll Fre-e
1·800·357 -11 70

104

road

54 lnauK
17 Etectrlcol
55 8iotoglll'a
dlactulrgea
egos
~

own.

FOf F u~e lntof matv.J &lt;'l

Urte lnvnton~ Maot!y

FIND

lllnteretted In Buving or'Semng

1·800-999-SALE

Start 1m~dia1P.Iy'
Lrvllt()pe(ators 24: !

1~

AS FAST A S '(OL)
· CAN! 0~&gt; I 'LL
I'-- -, rtON !TOR YOU I'.
I'ROGI(ES&gt; FROM

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.
740·992·7953

A Business Call

4

G

Pomen1y, Ohio

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrele Work
Roofing •All types

Fr ett Supp1re'\_P ostan ~"'

I '--~---~-~-(_fl\__..1

ALL YOU HAVE To

Ltmd Clearing

Pomeroy, Ohio

'•

1-\101-\E\Z Tf\P-N
1\ (Ort\1'"-CT 7

BIG NATE

Commercial Reside11tial
Bulldm:.er &amp; Backhoe Trucking Service$
Septic System lm·tallation

22 Years LOCII

Pr'iGVii«Cf'ee

~'1

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992·6215

R£i',LL'( '? OU\&lt;:. PI\'(·
MEt-ITS W~'T OC

r-NO! WE'LL JUST
1-\1\\lf. TO rt\1'.\ZF;. 1\
~ !)ut·KI-\ f'/'C:I?..E Of

"I lost my shirt
in the stock
market!"

YOUNG'S

V. C. YOUNG Ill

p-

"W.V's #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday ·
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of

Free Estimates

Of Busineues For Sale
By Owners Nationwide.

HE LOVES RABBIT,
'POSSUM,
VENISON ...

THE BORN LOSER

1-800-822·0417

1114/1 mo . pd

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1-800-ROMANCE
ext1847

PAW'S A NATURE LOVER
FROM WAY BACK, ELVINEY !!

Dean Hill

Racine , O hio

Remodeling

5501).5 100.000 instant1yl
1OO'Ib opprolial

BARNEY

Hill's Self
Storage

• New Garages
• Elec1rlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Flooring &amp; Gutters

Ne&amp;O lr, ~ b!iSh credit tor youf businen?

J~

(,tiOOS~/lS:

• Room Additions &amp;

THOUSANDS

YOU TO

TA~~ PAP~~
0~ PLASTIC.···
IAtiG~IlS

750 East State

0

v

42 14

r

~Lt.

9 '"""from Pr. Pleasant
on Sand Hill Road.

....--------.

TR_U_C_KS
___.~I rlO

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

lcHiVRO,~Tj

949·2734

r___
j

LARRY SCHEY

• Replaceme nt

Over 50 Mounts

. ,L.'o_...~.R~~~-~-·_,.~l~.,t__.~J:.R.'~.:A'.s: .,E•·_..~

r:

6 KQR 752

K Q

Opening lead: .to J

New Home&lt; • Vinyl
Sidi ng • New Garages

1/ Experience

Tire Famity of Larry 0. Sellers

2003 Ford Taurus-SE . V6,
auto transmission, 14 ,000
mites, loaded, good condition $9.500 _ (740)44 1-0157
or(740)441-0337
_:___~_:___~_:__:_--~
94 Cutlass Supreme. red ,
3 .4, moto•. leathe•. loaded ,
moon roof, dependable,
$2.200.
(740)388-99 1 ! .
leave message.

~ H 7 :J

Dealer: North
Vulnerabl e Neither

BUILDERS InC.

£ ·Over 15 ttars

Jackson General Hospital ER, Chillicothe VA
Hospital , and Cin cinnati VA Hospi tal.
Thanks to the Doctors at :
Jackson General Hospital ER. Chil licothe VA
Hospital, and Cinci nnati VA HospitaL
Also thanks to everyone for helping out every
they did . We will a l w ay~ re m ~;: mbc r yuur
kindness. May GOD BLESS each and
every one nf you .

thoughts for
our family in
the time of

; Syr thocoughb•ed/Oua•te•
: horse $600. Sockie Horse
; 8yrs $400. or trade tor a
.. -geOd childrens horse
: (304 )895-3943

t

: II64 J2

... 3

BISSELL

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 S. 5th Avenue

William Justis. Cremeens Funeral Home
Raci ne, Pomeroy EMS. The Fi~he r House in

would like to
thank the
Pomeroy Police
Department
and the
Racine Police
Department for
their escort
and their

: Will pay $20.00 each for junk
: _o~ unwanted automobiles to

Card of Thanks

would like to Thank everyone for
thoughts during our time of los~ .
We would like to thank :

The family of

" A

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

The Family of Larry 0. Sellers

Card of Thanks

VF..GITAHLES

Potatoes tor sate 50M: $1 O,
Mon·Sat. ,
65002
State
Fiouto 124, Reedsville, Oh ,

:~

Card of Thanks

· A ~ I 0 7 G

"

Soulh

By November 2 t. 2UOJ
· All Equal OppnMU I\II Y l:rur l. •! i'l ·

• J
t

' P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25265-1051
0

16 Headqulrt·

Ea,.l

Wewt

MONTY

$35.00 $45.00
Hartford, WV

41 Dune
bu9gy kin
42 Brook
oound
(Hlu)
45 Corned
11 Notre Dome
beef dillies
sight
4i Before,
12 Done whh
In combos
14 Fntne'l
SO Crawl with

....,_,.,!52 Fleetwood
t5 Mcjon"'
Remick
53 Old Roman

1/2 mile oul Hanging Rock Rd.

Interested Candidates arc to suhmi t rcsum~.· s to:

1 Troplcel
4 Oflallo&lt;e
tmnd
7 - onto

I I 11.00

Hanging Rock Deer Processing
Skin. Cui , Wrap

offered.

'

ACROSSt'" 40 Bering s..

1 mo

'ELF

STORAGE
IN MASON

lOX lQ • S35.00
I OX20 · S55.00

740·992·396f

J&amp;L
Electric
·Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph 74CJ.H2·0953

~· 740-581,107l

ROBERT
BISSEll

co•m•cn••
• New Homes
• Ga•ages
• Complete
Remodeling

741-112·1811
Stop &amp; Compare

take on. little taSkS that usually are a bore
lor vou 10 do could tum out to be delightful
diversions.
CANCER (June 21-Juiv 22)- Even 1f anything testy shOuld arise that needs tending
now, your wonderful mood won 't allow you
to take the situation or yourself too Hrl·
ou sty. This verv fact makes you verY eftec·
tl\le today.

cEO (July 23-Aug. 221- Something good
it pretently atlrrtng that could contrlbuta to
stcurity tor you and your loved onea. tt will
be of a m1terial n1tu rt and you may learn
ot lt today.
VIRGO (Aug , 23-Sopt 22) - Thlo II on
excellent dly to Q4!t Involved In actlvlfllt
that could help broaden your mente! r.on.
zont_Thtrt could ne ootn power and prof·
It in what you diVIIQP or lea rn 11 thlt time.
l iBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct . 23) - Thlo could bo
a r1thtr lUCky City lor you where your
financial lnte rtttt are c:o~rned . Two
oppo rtunltln are developing ~hl nO the
totn•• that "':'II help you tmrnenHty.

SOUP TO NUTZ
4oiJ was 'tbuR. DaY
aT SCHOOL , An&lt;J~w

?

The WHCIJ' FIR&amp;"

C&gt;4 ~'ii! D aND
CLal'!'eo .Ju.IT fuR

Gr&gt;ae&gt;e

L&lt;!'t te o ld Me ~

I d~"''I'&lt;P MY wnc:H
11-~Y ,,. ""' caiOT..n.s

v

�Tuesday, November

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

18, 2003

Navarre's legacy at Michigan hinges·on Ohio State game
BY LARRY LAGE

Associated Press
. ANN ARBOR. Mich . John Navarre's name is
secure in Michigan's record
book .
His legacy in Wolverines
lore is not.
f\:avarre is atop a slew of
Michigan career and season
passing records, but those
accompli shments are marred
by an 0-2 record against
Ohio State.
Some believe the se nior
has to lead the fifth-ranked
Wolverines to a win against
the No. 4 Buckeyes to be
remembered as one of the
best quarterbacks to wear a
winged helmet.
"You have to block that
out because that's just part
of the hype ," Navarre said
Monday. "You can't focus
on that when you're preparing for this gamt.
"But obviously, how you
do against Ohio State is a

big part of any career here ."
Navarre has one last
chance to improve hi s mark
in the rivalry when the
Wolverine s (9-2. 6-1 Big
Ten) play Ohio State ( I0-1,
6-1) at home Saturday. The
outright Big Ten title and an ·
automatic
Bowl
Championship Seri es bid
are at stake.
Michigan coach Lloyd
Carr sa id it is not right that
one game cou ld define the
career of any player.
"What defines you is yo ur
character," Carr said.
However, teammate Grant
Bowman, who grew up in
Columbus. Ohio. understands why Navarre's legacy
hinges on the outcome of
the Ohio State game .
"It's probably unfair, but
there's a lot of things in life
that are unfair." Bowman
sa id. "In big games Iike this,
the opportunities are bigger
and the chance for loss bigger. That's whai you've got

to lo ve about it as a competitor. If you don't love
that. you probably shouldn't
be in the game."
Navarre, a candidate for
two national quarterback
awards, is finishing hi s
much-maligned
career
strong.
The native of Cudahy.
Wis., has thrown a Big Tenbe st 2 1 touchdowns , with
just eight interceptions.
Navarre is 218 yards from
being the first Michigan
quarterback to throw for
3,000 yards in a season and
is two TDs short of Elvis
Grbac's career mark of 71.

He has co mpleted 67.9 perce nt of his fourth-quarter
passes for eight TDs and
only one interception .
But those numbers will
pale next to Navarre's 0-3
record against Ohio State if
the Wolverines don 't win
Saturday, especially becau se
of his previous two performances in the series.
Last season in a 14-9 setback, he was 23-of-46 for
247 yards when he fumbled
with 2:02 left and then
threw a game-ending interception short of the end
zone.
"You want to focus on

those plays, and not repeat
them," he said.
Navarre threw for 206
yards with two touchdowns,
four interceptions and a
fumble in a 26-20 loss two
years ago.
He said it's difficult to
create positive plays while
doing everything possible to
avoid mi stake s.
"The fine line is so fine
th at it will be the difference
between a Bi g Ten championship and the Rose Bowl."
he sa id . ·'In this type of
game. mistake s will cost
you a ring and a BCS bid."
Carr said Navarre has had
an outstancing season and
career, but because he started so young at Michigan ,
he 's had ups and downs.
As a redshirt freshman in
200 I, Navarre started the
first four games for an
injured Drew Hen son. He
started strong against weak
opponents . then struggled in
a lo ss at UCLA and for a

half. at Jllinoi s before being
replaced by Henson .
When Henson decided to •
skip hi s senior season to
play - baseball,
Na va rre
threw more TDs ( 19) than
interceptions ( 13). But he
didn't play well in losses
Washing ton .
agai nst
Michigan State , Ohio State
and Tennessee.
After hi s job was in jeopardy the next spring. he
respond e~ Nava rre threw
21 TDs and just seven inter· ce ptions in a 10-win season.
Agai n, nay sayers pointed to
hi s one TD and two interceptions in Michi ga n\ three
losses.
Carr recently said Navarre
will make more money than
most of his critics next year
when he 's playing in th e
NFL.
"As an individual , he's
special," Carr said Monday.
"There's no tougher man
anywhere
than
John
Navarre."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

,l l t'''""''ol ,, , ... ~
SPORTS
• Buckeyes see through
coach's cool exterior, See
Page 81

New Orleans Hornets were Washington. The Central
moved to the Western Division will have Chicago,
Conference. The Hornets pre- Cleveland, Detroit, Indiana
viously played in Charlotte · and Milwaukee. Atlantic
before moving to New · Division teams will be
Orleans two seasons ago.
Boston, New Jersey. New
Joining the new Charlotte York. . Philadelphia
and
franchise in the Southeast Toronto.
New Orleans will play in
Division of the Eastern
Conference will be Atlanta, the Southwest Division of the
Miami ,
Orlando
and Western Conference with

Dallas, Houston. Memphis
and San Antonio. The
Northwest Division will have
Denver, Minnesota, Portland,
Seattle and Utah. The Pacific
Division teams are Golden
State. the Los Angeles
Lakers,
Los
Angeles
and
Clippers, . Phoenix
Sacramento.
Teams will play divisional

opponents twice at home and
twice on the road. They will
play conference opponents
outside their division three or
four times, and teams from
the other conference twice at home and away.
Divisional winners each
earn a playoff berth. The
remaining five playoff berths
for each conference will be

'

jjtayton@ mydaitysentinat .com
RACINE - Without a
I 00 percent guarantee
securing payment for a specia l grant, the Southern
Local School District has
no new e~ercise equipment
to stay healthy with.
Southern
Local
Superintendent
Bob
Grueser pleaded with the
Financial Planning and
Supervision Commission
overseeing the district's
tinancial recovery to allow
the district to borrow the
money needed to secure a

based on regular-season
records with no regard to
divisional ali gnment.
Home-court
advan ta ~e
throughout the playoffs w1ll
be based so lely on regularseason records. That means a
divisional winner will not
necessaril y have home court
advantage in the playoff
senes.

\\l l l \ t ' ' ' ' '

\tl\1\ l ( :l l ~lll

$270,000 LIFf gra nt that
would provide exercise
equipment to the di strict.
· The Learning and Fitness
Training (LIFf) program
seeks to create healthier
students and to make physical exercise a bigger part
of the educational experience. In order to qualify for
the LIFf grant. the school
di strict would have to provide a suitab le exercise
space. lloor mat s and take
out a loan for the exercise
equipment estimated to cost
approximately $270,000.
The LIFf foundation
reimburses the district only

Please see Southern, AS
I

Flowers depict upcoming holiday season
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@mydaitysent inel.com

osu

from Page 81
them remain Michigan fans
and would like to see me do
well - as long as we don't
be·at Michigan."
.
This is the tOOth meeting
between the two schools.
Michigan holds a 56-37 -6
lead in the series, voted the
greatest rivalry of the 20th
century in a fan poll conducted by ESPN.com.
"It's a great h&lt;,nor to pl ay

Steelers
from Page 81

championsh ip .
Even if th e stakes weren't
so high. however, The
Game remains a red-letter
day in the two states.
"Man. I just can't believe
it ," said Sims, who will
play in his first Ohio StateMichigan
game
on
Saturday. 'Tve been thinking about the Michigan
game, dreaming about it if I
ever got a chance to play in
it. I can't believe how long
I' ve bee n thinkin g about
this game. And now thi s is
my chance."

our mistakes, and we also
gave up too man y bi g
plays," Randle El said.
"That is tough to overcome.
This is a big lo ss, but we'll
bounce back ."
Nin ers
safety
Tony
Parrish intercepted a tipped
pass early in tlie second
quarter and returned it 48
yards, setting up a 32-yard
field goal.
After gaining just 125
yards in the first half.
Pittsburgh made a 79-yard
drive to open the third quarter. Jerome Betti s scored on
a 1-yard plunge to pull the
Steelers within 10-7.
But after Owens paved
Barlow's way to the end
zone, Randle El fumbled the
ensuing kickoff - and on
the next play, Rattay made
another perfect throw down
the sideline to Beasley. The
fullback made a tou gh catch
and dove across the goal
line to give San Francisco a

24-7 lead.
Former Steelers kicker
Todd Peterson also made
three field goals for the
Niners.
Notes: Barlow was held
out of the fourth quarter
with a concuss ion , though
he remained on the 49ers'
sideline. ... Chicago Cubs
Dusty
Baker
manage r
attended with 4-year-old
former batboy son Darren,
who watched his first live
foot ball ga me . "I like when
the y make the touchdown,"
the boy said .... "A lias"
actress Jennifer Garner
came by to meet the Baker
fam ily, hollering, "Are xou
readv for some football? ' as
she 'met little Darren . ...
Pittsburgh WR Hines Ward
left in the third quarter after
hitting hi s head on the turf
while dropping a pass, but
he eventually returned. He
had fo ur catches for 44
yards.

Rattay said. "We did a good ·
job calling plays for him ."
Fullback Fred Beasley
al~o caught a 28-yard touchdown pass from Rattay, who
added more spice to the
49ers' quarterback controversy with a second straight
near-flawless performance
in place of injured Pro Bowl
player Jeff Garcia.
"It ultimately come s
down to Jeff's health ,"
Rattay said. "lfhe's healthy,
he 'II go. I love to play, I
love to be out there. but
right now, my role is the
backup."
' Tommy Maddox was 25of-44 for 327 yards for
Pittsburgh (3-7), which lost
its sixth in seven games
thanks to key defensive
errors and Antwaan Randle
El's fumble on a kickoff
return, which allowed San
Francisco to score two
with
·
touchdowns in 14 seconds.
FIBERGLASS INSULATION
"All night, .we were an
inch away here and an ·inch
80% of
away there from convertin~
heatless
some real big plays, '
occurs
Maddox said. "It's frustrating to know that we were
through
moving the ball , then we
your attic.
start to hurt ourselves. We
just aren't making the .
plays."
The Steelers periodically
moved the ball well with
inventive play-calling but at other times , their exe~ution was equally inventive. Pittsburgh made too
many
small
mistakes,
including a 7-yard loss on a
pass by Randle El and a I 0. yard setback on a double
feverse.
Randle El had a 32-yard
TD catch in the fourth .
Though Pittsburgh is in one
of the most di smal stretches
of coach Bill Cowher's 12
[ - - Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio
seasons. the Steelers still
are just two games out of
first place in the AFC North .
GUARDIAN Mon .-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday 11 -5
"We hurt ourselves with

we 're one game out," wide
receiver Andre King said.
"We still got a shot. and that's
our goal. We' re not trying to
from Page 81
win 19 straight. We're just
trying to win our division and
team fired up and we're get
in the playoffs."
going to try and keep this tire
Notes:
CB
Daylon
lit for six more weeks."
McCutcheon, the only draft
The Browns just want to
from 1999 still startgel hot enough to make a run choice
ing, said he 's not sure if he's
like they did last season. in · the Browns' plans after
Cleveland went 5-2 down the this season. "Maybe my
stretch and qualified as a future around here isn't that
wild-card team.
much longer. I don't know,"
"Look at our division,

Browns

he said. McCutcheon is under
contract for ne xt season, but
is du e a $1J million roster
bonu s in March . If . the
Browns elect not to pay it, he
would become an unrestricted free agent. Cleveland can
also renegotiate a new deal
for him .... Davis said he
expects injured DE Kenard
Lang (back) and ~B Ben
Taylor (back) to be re ady for
S~nday's
game against
Pittsburgh.

KICK OFF

Attic Insulation

omas

- ~

no it center.

740-446-2002

Page AS
• Daisy V. Provance
• Harley L. Haning
• Opal Mae Cummings
f I

I

WEATHER

(

Rain, HI: GOo, Low: 30o

'1
' '

Detail• on Page A2

SEASO"!

LoriERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-6;8
Pick 4 day: 5-5-5-5
Pick 3 night: 4-0-9
Pick 4 night: 4-7-1-6
Buckeye 5: 9-13-20-26-37

West Vll'ginia

With your business
advertised in the lffiT~~~;.

Dail Sentinel

Dally 3: 6-0c8
Dally 4:7 -2-6-3
Cash 25: 9-15-19-20-24-25

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Reach Over

Editorials

6.000

Obituaries
Sports

A4
As
As
B1

Weather

A2

ttouseholds
In Meigs
County!
Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 24th
'
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155
'

"S~tocking

Stuffers." a
miniature arrangement not
over tive inches:
"Decorate the Tree." creative mass;
"Nativity ar the Church."
using the Holy family;
"Christmas
Carolers."
synergistic;
"Christmas Bells." your
interpretation ;
"Pictu re on a Christmas
Card ... a st ill life .
There is a spc;cial class for
table ex hibition pictures and
another for men and boys
on ly called "S now in the
Woods" to include treasured
wood .
Junior classes (up to IK
years) are
"Christmas
Shopping." an interpretive
de sign; ''Sle igh Riding:·
show ing
motion,
and
"Christm as Critters... an
ornament created from natural material s.
There . is a dass for bnth
indoor and m1tdoor wreato!ll;
and wall hangings and \me
for gift wrappings featuring
natural materials for adult

Movies

more than $1 ,000.
Heinz is the presidentelect of the local ciLJb
POMEROY _ The which is a part of the
Paul Harris Award, given organization of business
in recognition of u:ecial and professional leaders
service to the
otary united to provide humanClub, was e.;esented to itarian service, encourage
the Rev. Fr. alter Heinz hifh ethical standards 111
at Mondah ni~t'ls meet- al vocations, and help
iddlegort- build goodwill and peace
ing of t e
Pomeroy Rotary Clu . . in the world.
The Rotary Foundation
Robert McGaufh~, district governor o
otary is
how
individual
International, presented Rotarians can "make a
the Paul Harris pin to the difference" in the world,
~astor of Sacred Heart said Don Vaughan, presi_hurch in ap~re~iation of dent. ~J It boasts one of the
to
hts contrt utwns
PltBII see Heinz. A5
Rotary Foundation of
hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Comics

.

de s 1~n ;

BY CH~RLENE HoEFLICH

2 Sf.CfiONS- 12 PAG!lS

Wednesday, November 26th

Table exhibition pictures will be featured this weekend at
the annual Christmas flower show of the Meigs County
Association of Garden Clubs.

POMEROY - The sights
and sounds of the holidays
will be depicted in floral
arrangement s. wa ll hang ings. wreaths and package
wrappings to be on display
this weekend at the Senior
Citizens Center.
The annual Christmas
!lower show of the Meigs
County Garden Club s
Association to carry nut that
theme will be open for public viewing from I to 5 p.m.
on Saturday and fro111 noon
to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
. Anyone living in \he Bend
area can ex hibit their creations in the show which not
only has classes for adults
but junior exhibitors.
Entries must be in place
by noon on Saturday in
preparation for judg ing by
an accredited judge of the
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs at I p.m. Each
exhibitor can only place one
entry in each of the arti stic
arrangement classes, but can
exhibit . up, to fou r specimens. each of a ditferent
variety in the horticulture
classes. While no artificial
plant materials are allowed
in any of the classes. babbles and contributed from
natural material fl owers wi II
be acceptable. Bases and
accessories are allowed in
all artistic classes .
In the artistic classes ribbons will be awarded in sev-

eral places in each class and
there will be special awards
-best of show. reserve best
of show. and creati vity will
be awarded. Exhibits are to
remain in place until the
show closes.
The artistic arran ge ment
classes are as follows :
"The Christmas Li ghts in
Town t·· a creative illumnary

nition
INDEX

Keep WARM this winter!

Upgrade Your

0BrftJARIES

THE

HOLIDAY

between the emp loyee unions
and the Southern Local
Jjtayton @mydailysentinal.com
School Board, Pam Carter.
RACINE - The Southern treasurer. said the di strict
Local School District is slow - would save more than
ly crawling its way out of a $22.400 this year and at least
debt of more than $648.000. $36.000 ne ~ 1 year. Both conThe Financial Planning and tracb call for the employees
Supervision
Commissio n to pay more of their health
overseeing the district 's insurance premiums and prefinancial recove ry approved sc ription medication. The
of a plan tn save the district trade-off for the unions is a
thousands of dollars.
sa lary increase that more than
"Progress is slow but sure offset&lt; the increase in health
like a turtle running a race," insu rance premiums and will
said Nancy Burbacher. who cost the di strict nothing .
monitors
the
district's
"Both groups sacrificed
finan ces for the Commission .
By adopting new contracts
Please see Debt. A5
BY J.MILES LAYTON

if the district sends in the
results month after month
~or the e~c rci se regimen.
Modest health goals must
be met. Grueser said more
than I00 schools in Ohio
are enrolled in thi s program.
"This will be good for the
district. good for the community and good for the
county," said Grueser. " If
you look around. really
there is nothing like this for
the general citizenry.''
The Commission was
concerned about what

Bv

in any Ohio State-Michigan
game," Krenzel said. 'To
be considered good enough
on your team to be able to
participate in this game is a
tremendous honor as well.
Someday. to be able to sit
back and talk to your kids
and grandkids about playing in the IOOth ga me, I' m
sure it ' ll be a great thing.''
For now, the teams have a
lot more to play for than
memories. The winner
takes the Big Ten title and
keeps alive a clear shot at
playing for the .national

~

'thll

Thumbs down to exercise
Southern Local
equipment at Southern Local crawls out of debt
BY J.MILES lAYTON

NBA approves three division realignment plan
NEW YORK (AP) - The
NBA's board of governors
approved a realignment plan
Monday that creates three
divisions of five teams each
in the Eastern and Western
conferences.
The expansion Charlotte
Bobcats, the NBA's 30th
ieam. were placed in the
Eastern Conference and the

Reds announce
four manager
candidates, Bt

OSU: Players were
trying to break up .
fight at dortu, Bt

© aoo3 Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

'

...

,

..

•

Robert McGaughy, district governor of Rotary International,
presents a Paul Harris pin to the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.

Demolition,
abatement bids
taken again
BY CHARLENE HOEfliCH

hoeflich@ mydailysenti nel.com
POMEROY - Bids on the
asbestos abatement and
demolit.ion of the Salem
Center and Rutland elementary schools. vacated earlie.r
by the Meigs Local School
District.
were
openea
Monday afternoon .
:
It was the second round of
bidding on the project after
the f1rst bids were rejected
bec:1use of incomplete inform~tion and documentation.
On the asbestos abatement
Keen and Cross, Inc . of
Cincinnati with a bid of
$132.389 was the apparent
low b1dder. Four bids were
suhmined. Estimate for
asbestos
removal
was
$ 1~8.900.
The apparent low bidder on
the demolition was Jeffers
Trucking Co. of Pomeroy,
$ 127.256. A total of six companies bid on that phase of
the project which had been
estimated to cost $174.000.
Four companies bid on the
combination of the two phases. asbestos abatement and
demolition. with the low bid
coming from Keen and Cross
at $276.389. That bid. however. totaled more than the
separate bids.
The bids will now be
reviewed by Quandel , the
construction managers for the
overall project . They will
then make a recommendation
to the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
Once the two-story Rutland
'chool is down. the basement
filled in and the debris hauled
away. the lots Ifill be trans"
ferred to the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department
for construction of a new lire
station.
As yet a decision has not
been reached on the disposition of the four acres on
which the Salem Center
school is located . When the
land was originally transferred to Salem Township
and later to the Meigs Local
School District at the time
consolidation occurred, the
deed carried a provision that
the land would revert back to

PIH!se see Bids, A5

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