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                  <text>Tuesday, December 2, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page to • The Daily Sentinel

•
.'

Prep Scoreboard

Ben gals
Greenan 75 Yellow Sbnngs 68
Hamilton 47 . lancaster 45
Hann1bal A1ver 55 . Bella1re 48
Hunt1ngton Ross 65 . Wh1teoak 48
Ironton 67 . Rock Hill 34
Jackson 60. Wellston 39
Lebanon 55, W. Ca rrollton 41
Leetoma 65. Voungs Woodrow W1l son 19
LoUisv ille St Thomas Aqu inas 54.
Youngs . Card1na l M ooney 34
Lynchburg Clay ,;. 1 Greenfield McClain

Ohio High School Girls B asketball
Mon day's Result s

Girls Basketball
Southern 7t , South Galt Ia 25
South Galt1a
3 10 3 9 - 25
Southern
25 13 16 t7 - 71
Southern {1-0)- Ashley Dunn 3 0-0 6 ,
Jessica Hill2 0 ·2 4 . Deana Pullins 3 1-1
7, Katie Sayre 7 5-8 19, Susan Brauer 1 2·
2 4, Brooke Kiser 3 2-3 B. Joa"ne Pickens
2 3-3 7. Ash ley Roush 1 1-2 1, Kristuna
W•ll•ams 2 0·0 5, Kasie Sellers 1 0·0 3.
Linda Eddy 3 0·0 7. Totals- 27 14-2 1 71
Sooth Gatlia (0- 1) - Knsten Halley 0 00 0. Jessica Cantrell 0 2-5 2. J1ll Swa1n 1
1·2 4, Ashley Clark 2 2-3 7. Elke Schuster
0 0-0 0. Chetsea Canaday 2 3·4 . 7, Lacy
Lane 0 0-2 0, Stacy Fe tlure 0 0·2 0, Julia
Gwinn 0 5-6 5. Totals 5 13-24 25.
3-point goals - South Galt1a 2 (Ciar ~ .
Swain). Soulhern 3 (William s. Se lle rs,
Eddy) .

Kentucky
from Page6
hot could be."
The ove1w helming m:uority
of the crowd of 13.913 wore
blue and wh ite for Kentuc ky\
annual visit to Ci ncinnati. The
Wildcats are 8-1 a!J.Itime ut the
downto wn arena, the on ly loss

to Dayton in 1999.
Jirsa was an assislanl at
Dayton when it pulh;d off the
upset. He also was one of
coach Tubby Smith's assistants
at Tu Isa and Georg1a.
Jirsa tri ed every sun of
defense to slo w Kentucky.
with limited success . The

Atwater Waterloo 62 . Sebrmg McK•nley

24
Barne·sv11le 68. Cad•s Harnson Cent 29
Bella•re St Johns 55, Bridgeport 36
Belmont
Un1on
Local
63
New
Matamoras Frontier 42
Beverly Fort Frye 45, Stewart Federal
Hockng 43
Brookfield 46 , Kmsman Badger 45
C1n Walnut Hills 58. Shaker Ht s 45
Cortland Maplewood 34 , Cortland
Lakev•ew 32
Day. Carroll 54 , ·OJ&lt;Iord Talawanda 43
Day Chaminade-Jut•enne 60. TrO!'fOOd
Madiso n 21
Day_Jetterson Twp 67,'oay. St1vers 44
Day. Northridge 48. Xellla Chr 44
Eastern P1ke 45. Manchester 33
Enon Greenon 75, Yellow Spnngs 68
Fa1rborn 44 Edgewood 16
Girard 51. McDonald 48

Old

Wash•ngton

Buckeye

Trial

from Page 6

43 .

W oods ~ eld Monroe Cent. 42

Rayland Buckeye Local 54, Wintersville

lnd1an Creek 43
ROssford 59, Tal. Maumee Vall. 37

Sarasv1lle Shenandoah 61 , Waterlord 55
Sharon (Pa ) Kennedy Cath 49, Warren
JFK 39

Spnngooro 46. Day. Lemon Monroe 42
Spr1ngboro 46, Lemon-Monroe 42
Steubenville Cath Cent. 60. Toronto 38

26

Struthers 47 , Youngs. Chaney 37

21

Sylvanta Northview 89 . Tol Woodward 3 1
Tal. Bowsher 80 , Sylvan•a Southview 42

Manst1eld Temple Chr. 41 , Evangel Chr
M1am1 Vall 52 , Tn -County N. 29
MiamiSburg 46 Franklin 40
M1ddletown Fenw1ck 58. Day. Stebb1ns 2 1
N. Adam s 59, Hillsboro 44
N Lewi sburg Tr t.~td 56. DeGraff Riverside

41
New M iddle tow n
Palestin e 37

Sprinqlield . 46.

E

Tnad 56, OeGrall Riverside 41
Vincent Warren 57. Belpre 44
Western Brown 68, Goshen 6 1
Wheeling (W.Va .) Linsly 46. Steubenville

37
Youngs . Boardman 75. Hubbard 31
Zanesville 67 . New Concord John Glenn

42

N1les McK1ntey 37 Youngs Liberty 34

Smith said. "We tried a num- out tu guard him earl y...
her of people on Dawn and
Dawn hit two more 3s. and
couldn 't slow him dow n. David Anderson had a pull-up
That'., the biggest disappoint: jumper and a three-point flay
lront 1 me.
that cut it to 64-60 with I :18
Four turnovers set up a 1.1- ment. That was our Ac nilles
heel
ton
ight."
left. makin g the two sections
point run that put Kenttd:y ·
Dawn
hit
three
consecuti
ve
of
Marshall-fans erupt. Smith
;:, head to stay 28-17 1111dway
3s
:1&gt;
Mm·shall
stayed
close
in
huddled
with his coaches durthrough the halt'. The Wildcals
repeatedl y bad playe rs slip free the ope nin ~ minutes. Fitc h ing a timeout. discussing a
inside for easy baskets. making then chasea him around the course of action .
The decision: take it inside.
up for thci r poor outs ide shoot- lloor. limiting him to one more
3-po in te r in the hal f as Azubuike's dunk staned a 13-4
mg.
Fitc h had 12 points in the Kent ucky full ed ahead by as splll1, which he completed by
steal ing Dawn's crosscourt
fi rst hair. when his main job nwny as I. pnmts.
By that point. the Wildcats pass and goi ng in lor another
was to try to shut down Daw n
after an e:u·Jy ilUITYof 3-point- ~cn se d the uame mi ght come dunk.
Dawn made another long 3ers. The JUnior gu:u·d slmuts 42 clown to whether they C&lt;luld
slop
Dawn.
pointer
and Marvin Black
perce nt from behind the arc.
''We
kind
of
underestimated
dunked
off
a rebound. cutting
one of the best marks in
him
.
and
he
burned
us,"
it
to
82-76
with 4:27 to go.
Mm·shall history.
Daniels
said.
··we
knew
he
Fitch's
pull-up
jumper ended
''I'm J isappomted in the way
we defende d the 3-poilll shot.'' could sh&lt;xJl. bu t we didn 't gel • the comeback.
Wildcats took a .n.34 hal ft ime
lead by running last breaks and
t ~tkin\ ,_aJ va n tage l)f Marshall 's

two dau ghte rs. Sh e ha s
pleaded innocent to charges
e n dri vin g and marijuana of fel onious assa ult and
possess ion . He has a pretrial domes tic violence.
from Page 6
Gree n to ld poli ce th e
hearing
schedul ed
fur
injury was a~cide nt a l, that he
to speculate on Gree n's Wednesday.
The Brown s · suspend ed tripped while walking up
future in Cleveland.
him
for th eir Nov. 9 game at stairs.
"Everybody
recognize s
During a search of Green's
that William has some iss ue s Kan sas C ity for "conducl
ri ght no w that he has to det rimenta l to the team ,'' and home on the night nl· the
address and take care of,'' lhe league counted th at gu me al kged stabbin g. police discove red a stainless stee l
Davis said. ·'When th ose as pan of its suspensinn .
On
No
v.
19,
Green
was
kni fe with suspected blood
things are taken care of and
resolved . we' ll decide what allegedly stabbed with a on the blade imbedded in a
knife by Asia Gray. his girl- kitchen cabinet door.
William's future is ."
They also round marijuana
friend
and the mother or his
Green, a first-round dral'l

in four separate locations in
Gree n's re sidence, and confi scated perso nal papers
belong ing to the couple.
After a slow start last season. Green ru.shed for 887
yards - 726 yards in th e
final seven games - and led
the Browns to their fir st
playoff appearance since
1994.
Green has rushed for 559
yards and one touchdown
this seuson.

Canada y had six of her
seven in th e last fram e as
Southern coasted to a 71 -25

South Gallia was 5- 39
ove rall with 2- 10 trey s, and
a 13-24 ni!'hl at the line
while grabb1ng .18 rebounds
(Gwinn 14). South Gallia
had five steals (Gwinn 2) . 38

pick in 200 I. was arrested
Oct. 27 on c har ~es or drun k-

Browns

Southern
from Page 6
the half.
Play got sloppy both ways
in the lhird frame, however.
both clubs hustled well. The
Tornadoes missed numerous
lay-ups on the break to keep
their overall output ·,down.
but continued to hold a comfortable lead . Linda Edd y
came off the bench to spark

a stug nant Suut~ern otle n ~e .
Eddy grabbed two steals. hit
a pair of lay- ups and drilled
a three pointer to ~ ive . SHS a
53 - 16' lead alter three

'W in .

Southern wa s 24-60 from
the two point range, 3- 18 on
Kasic Sellers ami Jess ica treys. 27-7X ov erall . and 14Hill had great effort s in the 2 1 at th e line. Southern was
fourlh quarter. with Sellers outrebound ed 38-34. but
picking up three steal s and was led by Joanne Pickens
drillin g a three poi nter. with nine. Sayre se ven , and
Ashl ey C lark had a good Pullin s si x. Southern had 3R
floor game for the Rebel s. steal s (Pullins 7. Dunn six.
while. Canaday hit a two Roush six) . 14 turnovers,
fi eld ~ o a ls for Coac h four ass ists (Ki ser two ), anJ
Chaney s
youn g
club. 2 1 foul s.
rounds .

turnovers, two assi sts , and

19 'fou Is.
Southern .hosts Eastern on
Th ursda y 111 Tri -Valley
C o nrerence

games, th!'ir bes t stretc h
since their J&lt;JHX Surer Bow l
season.
'The guys who have bee n
aroun d here for a few years
- we haven' t had this
ma ny wins.
linebacke r
Ad ri an Ross said. "It 's great
to be play ing for someth ing."
One qui ck. efficient drive
prov ided more evide nce
th ai the NFL's worst tea m
since 1990 has tu rned its
hac ks on ih hi story.
Durin g thei r 12-yea r ru n
as ' a runn ing JOke. the
Bengals perfe cted tl1e a rt uf
blowing games at th e e nd .
That 's wh y the Heinz Field
crowd fe.lt sec ure when
Hin es Ward 's to uchdo wn
catch putt he Steelers up 2017 with onl y 65 seconds
left.
Playe rs on th e Be nga ls
bench were so fru str atcu
that coach Marv'in Lew is
wa lked ove r and deli ve red a
soothin g mess age .

" After they scored their
last touchdown , the wliole
offense was like. ' Aw .. ." '
Anderson said . "Marv in
imm edia te ly came ove r to
us and said , · He y. don ' t
worry about it .' We were
ju st going craz y. and we
~n ew from th e exc ite ment
in his voi ce and hi s eyes
that we had to do so methin g."

.

.

Brandon Bennett returned
a short kickoff 27 yard s.
Kitna threw an I R-yard pass
tu Peter Warrick, Bennett
ran 16 yards on a surprising
draw play, and Kitna threw
an incompl eti on that left
Cincinnati at the 18-vard
line with 23 seconds Iet't.
Kitna threw to Schobel on
th e next play for a touchdown that co uld ha ve a
long- lastin g impact.
"We're really confident
right now." Ross said . "I
think for the few guys that

might not be believers, it
so lidifies
where
we're
goi ng and wliat our goals
are . It gives everybody
more self-confi de nce."
Instead of bei ng priSone rs
uf recen t his tory. these
Be ngals are turnin g to pages
muc h farth er back.
Si nce 1990, the Be ngali
have n' t bee n to the playoffs
or fin ished with a winning
Un til recentl y,
record.
th ey' d go tten littl e national
atten tio n exce pt for their
los ing and their occasional
nove lt y ga me - the Shula
vs. Shu la matchup in 1994,
for exa mpl e, whe n Bengals
coac h Dave Shul a lost ' to
pa pa
Don's
Miami
Dolphins.
On th e few occ asions
when they've sneaked into
th e
spotli ght .
the y' ve
bombed. They made a rare
Sunday ni ght appearance in
Atl anta last season and got
embarrassed, 30-3.
Lewi s ha s turn ed them
into th e kind of team that
can handle pressure, including the kind that comes on a
last-minute drive .
"We've had a big game
for the last five weeks, and
it will be big for the ne xt
four we have left," Lewis
' aid Monday. " It does n' t
re all y c hange. The same
thin g's on the line, just like
it was last week ."
A victory in Baltimore
would give the Bengal s the
equival ent of a two-gam~;
lead with three to go th eir head-to-head sweep
would make them division
champions if they finish
with the same record.
As much as they try to
kee p on the blinders. the
playe rs can' t help but take a
peak down the road they
have n' t traveled in a long ,
lung lime.
"We're trying to take it
one game at time, but in the
same sense ... if we keep
winnin g . we have the
opportunity to do something
thi s team hasn' t done in
more than I 0 years,"
Bennett said.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

LeBron, Bt

•·
.) 0 ( ., . '

I ~ • \ "I. .)4 . ' " . h-

Middleport prize drawing underway Vaughan to chair

• Blue JacRets 2, Mighty
Ducks 1. See Pilge 81

BY BRtAN J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORT
Christmas shoppers can now
regi ster at Middleport stores
for over $5,000 in big-ticket
prizes, to be given away
Dec. 23 in conjunction with
the Middleport Community
Association 's
Chri stmas
promotion.
The prizes include a 36inch flat- screen televi sion. a
DVD player, Palm Pilot .
Game Boy, portable CD
player, three bi cycles. a
mini -vacation, merchant gift
certificate s
and
a

OBITUARIES

• Family Medicine.
See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3
• NASA braces for
landing on Mars.
See Page A6

WEATHER
30s, low: 20.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-4-6
Pick 4 day: 5-8-7-2
Pick 3 night: 6-5-2
Pick 4 night: 7-1-4-8
Buckeye 5: 18-20-24-28-36

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SJ995 .

Great Selection
of

Beautiful
Pictures!

l!tbe J)ajip 6entinel

Witlro~er 150 p,botograpbs, this 100 page
book contahis \\'est Virgitlla Disasters.
Mountain St!Ue Tragedies that have
. ~hanged our lives.
. '~ SUver 1'ridge Collapse

"Dundee Double"
Double Reclining Sofa
W/Rocker Recliner

• Bluestone Bridge Span.Collapse
• Mine Explosion Rocks Beckley
• Fire Deebnates Business District
.• State FlOOds Leave DeVIIStatlon
1. . 1\ Exploslou at Farmlngton•No.9 Mine
.; l' .'• Polo- IU,ver Brellks!IS"Bankfi
•··
'l • Mon~'lt\rin M~ Disaster
• ·. (&gt; { '
• S~ Tonitldo Crisis
,' '·j, } .·. •Wb!tafllle Bridge &lt;::ollapse
. '' ll '
, , M.n d others!

i

"·:)~~ ·~ ~ __ ~ _.-:·.·- _9/l..D.fl!~ !'9-'!.~~ _lf(_IM_I!-! ____________ .: _
Please enter my order for: A Pictorial History of West Virginia Disasters
u ,•· - - copy(s) STANDARD EDITION

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Calendars
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© 2003 Ohtn Volley Puhtlshtng Co.

Dooley and Susa n Baker
will beg in work ing on the
assoc iation's 2004 membe r·
· campaig n. The associash1p
ti on will offer three Jeve b of
member.s hip nex t yea r,
includi ng an indiv id ual
members hip, a busi ne" .
members hip an d a third.
more ex pensive leve l of
membe r.ship whi ch wi ll
·

Please see Drawing. AS

cold. The teachers then contact the bank wi th names of
the students and the appropriate coat sizes. Edwards
stressed that the bank is still
taking name s up to Dec. 10
for the multitude of coats it
has to offer.
The charitable program did
not evolve overnight. During
Donna Edwards, coordinator for the Coats for Kids program · the year, People's Bank takes
at People's Bank, and People Bank manager Joan Wolfe all sorts of donations to pay
look over a bunch of winter coats that will find new owners for this program. Naturally
in the days ahead. Edwards said the program gives between coats are donated by con60 and a 100 coats to children in Meigs County each year. cerned adults. but the bank
(J. Mi les Layton)
has a lot of bake sales and

ed ·trea, urer

Jill Curry has 'erved as the
a~"uc i at i on\

MIDDLEPORT - Dodger
Vaughan will preside over the
Middleport
Communi!)
A"ociation next year. rep lacing Tom Dooley. \I ho
decli ned re -electiun a' the
assoc iati on·,

pre~ i J e n t .

Members aprrmcd

o,ecretarv this

year.
Doolev 'aid the association 's effort' to attract retail
traffic in the village th rough
'pecial eve nts and promotion s was &gt;uccess ful this
year. and en&lt;:auraged member' Ill work with Vaughan
anu uther me mbers to continue tho'e effort' in the new

the

nom ina tion of Vaughan Ltnd

ot her otlic'er' at Tue,d;,v·,
mon thly a ~ ... ociat ion m~etil1g .
Dooley and An~ie Ed \\ ards
· were 'c lccteJ n )., ice pre"de nt s. and Sue Stone secre-

\Car.

food sa les to. raise money.
Several times duri ng the
past year whil e Sama Claus
has been \1 atch ing to 'ee
who ha:-. h..:~n na ugh ty or
ni ce. bank employees hal'e
bee n at the top of hi ' li st hy
offer in g t a:-;ty mpr..,e ).. , to
tempt hun gry so ul s who
need a small snack whik
cunliu ct ing a ri nan cial tran. . ac ti on. Chili . tacos :md sneral types of desert s have
rai sed money to buy. clean
and rep air wi nter coats.
Donations to th e project are
sti ll bei ng aci.:epted.
Edwa rds sai d the num her
uf chi!J rc.n r~ y ue;,ting coah
has increaseJ each year. Th e
winter gear will he di stnhuted durin!,! the next kw
weeks.
.. Th e n u m ~e r \\ ' ~ !!iH· o ut

varies, bu l il gro\\ " ~o· \·ery
year:· she said.
Wo me n at lhe Me i"'
&lt;'
County Senior Ce nte r ha ve
al so contributed tu the Coat'
for Kid s prot: ram by provid ing to boggans. Di ffere nt col ored toboggans and hats may
be a necessity as the lemperatu re dips and cars ' cream in
pain seekil1 g escape from the
ch ill y wind . The Meigs
Count y Lib ra ry ha s al so
donat ed seve ral pai r.s o r

be held by
God's Net

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
hoethch@ mydailysentinel.com
The
MIDDL EPORT annual "givea wa y" sponsored by God's N.ET. will be
held Friday and Saturda y at
the
old
Middleport
Eleme ntary School on Pearl
Street in Middleport.
Keith Rader. director of the
Meigs Coo perati ve Pari sh.
sa id Tue,day that one semitrai ler load has already
1 arri v~d and that three others
1 art: expe&lt;.:ted 1
11 before Friday.
The trail ers are packed
with furniture and clothing
and miscellaneous item s.
e\'en things like doors and
windo\\·s. said Rader. Food is
not inducted. he noted.
Distributi on will take place
on Fri dav from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. with an ything remaining
to go out on Saturday. All of
the items wlll be moved into
the school for easy selection .
Rader ' aid that assistance
i' needed in unloading the
. trail ers and noted that those
who assist in the unloading
will be given"first chance" at
the hundreds of items to be
·distributed free of' charge.

I

Please see Glve••IIY· A5

gloves.

over I()() tons nf mu stard cas
into the harbor and the "air
over the city pf Bari. and
POMEROY _ Tue sday none of the cre w of the John
marked the 60th anni versary H arve~' li ved to reveal th e
of a World War 11 event many secret. It was n' t until an
describe as "the second Pearl in vestigation much later that
Harbor.'' and Don Mullen of the truth was r evealed.
Pomeroy remembers it well . " A ret1red msurance agent
He was there.
and tormer Me1gs Count y
The Germans' strike on the CommiSSioner and school
Bari board men;,ber. Mullen keep~
English -controlled
Harbor in Italy, on Dec. 2. a copy ol D.1saster at Baf'.1943, is considered the worst an acco unt ot the attac k w;nt·
Allied shipping disaster of ten by Glenn B. lnlleld. as a
the war, other than the attack memento ul h1s ex penences
on Pearl Harbor. Seventet;n whlle servm g 111 . the 15th
ships were destroyed. and Arm y A1r Corps D1v1s1on.
eight others seriously damStat10ned at . the h~adquar.­
aged . A thousand military ters syuadron m Ban. a half perso nnel we re killed in the mtle tram the harbor. Mullen
'·"Don Mullen of Pomeroy, 80, was a first-hand witness to the attack. and even more civil- and h1s fellow a1rmc n could
attack on Bari Harbor in Italy. Tuesday was the 60th anniver· ians Jied.
onl y stand at the wmdow and
sary of the attack many call ' the second Pearl Harbor... A
Most notably as a result of w ~'.t c h the attac k.
. .
copy of a book about the attack is a cherished memento of the attack. one ship rel eased
Our mdar was not Junehis war-time service. (Brian J. Reed)x

ti oning." Mullen said . "At the
time of the attack , it was
under repair. so basically
nobody knew anything about
what was happening until the
bombs bej;an to fall."
The allies could only
res pond with anti -aircraft
wea pons. and four and a half
hours later. the raid was over,
the ships were sunk and thou sands were dead.
Many more would suffer
the effects of the mustard gas.
and Mullen theorize s that the
had publicity of the secret
sl:ISh of mustard gas was the
primary motivation for keeping the attack a secret for so
long.
Now. .as nearly 1.500
World War II veterans die
each day. the full story of the

PIHII see Mullen, A5

sponsored by the American Cancer Society and Holzer Medical Center
A special holiday event honoring loved ones and helping aid cancer research

fURNIS H ING~

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tarv. Di ck Owen wu' re-elect-

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ myda11ysent1nel.com

Love Lights a Tree

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Middleport association

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breed @mydailysentinel 1com

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'99995

Dally 3: 8-3-3
Dally 4: 3·0·7-7
Cash 251-4-6-7-12-13

a SECTIONS -12 PAGES

. • ~Wowell &amp; Wyomlpg Floods

. •&amp;Jiiisevaln Mine Explosion

in

Mullen remembers World War II attack

West Vll'ginia

INDEX

for gift
giving!

• Deva5tii.tlni(Snowstorm Hits Bluefield

1

hel d

POM EROY - The colJ
weather has many child ren
in Meigs County anxiously
awaiting the spring - or a
warm coat from People 's
Bank. The bank has given
out coats to hundreds of chil .f'
dren since 1989.
"We do it to help kee p area
children who can not afford
coats warm." said Donna
Edwards. coordinator for the
Coats for Kids program .
Edward s es timates th at
betwee n 60 to I 00 kids.
sometim es more. are give n
coats each year. Edwards
said teachers from all acros"
Meigs County watch their
students carefully and make

LO'I'l'ERIES

All Leather "Mansfield"
Sofa&amp;. Chair&amp;. 1/2

foint tll~ll$ant 3l\rgi5ter

bi ngo even!
Nove mber.

note s as to who isn ' t w earing
a co&lt;Jt when the weathe r ge ts

orderedt
cfi)allipoU51llailp t!l:ribune

Longaberger hol iday basket.
accordin g to A" nciati on
President Tom Dooley, who
discussed the , giveaway at
Tuesday's month ly assoc iation meeting.
The association wil l draw
winners for the grand prizes
from entries made th roughOut the shcJpping season at
parti ci pating stores. Those
parti cipating me rchants "':ill
also conduct t~e 1r o wn 111hou se drawmp lor s t art;~..
merchand1 se an? gdt cert1f1cates on M~ndays betwee n
now and December.
The assoc1at 1on purchased
the grand prizes wi th the
proceeds from a basket

BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton @mydailysentinel .com

INSIDE

cloudy, Ht:

I ' " '"

Winter weather charity warms more than hearts Giveaway to

Page AS
• Sylvan Cleland
• Shirley Pauley

Partir

' III II II

1

992-2155

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Hocking

Deer kill do\\n on first day
of gun season , Bt

Carmelo sweeps

f,'

-

Frlclay, ·Dece111ber 5, 2003
6a30 . p111 • Gallipolis City Park

•

To ~onote $5 to the American Cancer Society lor a personalized Christmas. ornament pe(
honoree, please call (7401 446·5055 before 4 pm an Thursday, December 4 .

MEOICAL CENTER
Discover· the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

For more information obovt the elient, pleos,e coll(7 401 446·.5679.

.,.,

..

•

,.

�..

O HIO

The Daj ly Sentinel

~"
•••
••

ime condit1ons. lowlh1 h tern

ratu res

MICH

Toledo

•

C?leveland_. 25 &lt; 135 ~

23 136-

-- .. ii

~
• ••

PA.

·- 137
Youn~_st own .~.2~

• •

_,

IND.

-

* ••

•

•

•

(_ Oayi~n -27'" /40 '

Columbus 28°/40

•

~

-~
•

. Cincinnati 33 /41 "

4i'?:•'-L

· ~

KV

CO 2003 Accu Weather. Inc.
.--~-

'

,-.

,'

li[pl 1!-..'!!l!o@J li!l~
Sunny Pt Cloudy

Clouct,'

Showers

..

"'~'~ ~"~ )
~~r ~~
~
~-·.
..,
'
.

.

Flumes

T·storms

Snow

Ice

'

Snow·likely Friday
BY TH E ASSOC IATED PRESS

chance of rain then rain likel y
aft er mid ni ght. Lows around
.14 . Lig ht wi nd s. Chance hf
precipitati on 60 pe rce nt .
Friday .. .Cioudy with rain
and ·snow likel y. Hi ghs
around 38.
Friday ni ght... Cioudy with ·
rain and snow likely. Lows
around 31.
Saturday ... Cloudy with a 60
perce nt chan ce of snow
shower\. Hi ghs around 33 .
Saturday
ni ght ... Mostl y
cloud y with a 30 perce m
c hance of snow showers.
Lows around 23 .

Today.. .Partl y cloudy in the
mornin g th e n "beco mi ng
mostl y cloudy. Highs in the
upper 30s. East wind s around
IOmph.
Toni ght.. .Most.l y cloud y. A
20 perce nt chance of snow
·after midni ght. Lows in the
upper 20s. Li g ht winds.
Thursday ... Mos tl y cloud y
with a 50 percent chance uf
rain . Chance of freezing rain
and snow in th e morn ing.
Hi ghs around 39. Somhcas t
·winds around I0 mph.
Thursday ni g ht...Cioudy. A

Ques ti o n: As the winter th e same surface wi thout
ho lidays approach. the issue washing it first to later cut up
of proper food handli ng vegetab les. you could get
comes to mind as I prepare bac teria from the meat in
for famil y gat herings. Coul d your salad. Not a good idea!
yo u give me some tips so I A better way to prevent such
can pro vide safe ho li dtiy cross contaminatio n is to
foods for my fa mil y and slice raw meat . fi sh and
poultry on a separate cutting
guests'!
Ans wer:
Food
safety board. Fresh prod uce shou ld
begins at the grocery store. have its ow n board . Eve n
Buy fresh produce. check the wi th th is "two- board"
"sell by" dates on prod uc ts. approach. it's sti ll a good
and avo id dented cans or idea to was h your cutting
cans with bulging lids. If you boards in hot, soapy water
are purchasing perishable between foo d items .
Defrostin g should be done
foods, tak e the m straight
by
mi crowave or in the
home and store them properly. Do nut leave peri shable refrige rator, neve r at room
groceries in the car when temperature. Food should be
runn ing other errands. eve n cooked or refri ge rated immein the winter.
di ately
afte r
thaw ing.
Du ring food preparati on, Cooked foods .sho uld be
always work on a clea n sur- cooked to the proper internal
face wi th clea n hands. Was h temperature.
yuur work sllffaces and LrtenUnder-cooked meat, poul si ls fre ~ue ntl y to preven t try, fish and stutf ing can be
c ross co nt amination fro m the ideal place for bacteria to
one ty pe of fo od to another. grow. Bacteria grow best at
For instance. if yo u cut temperatures betwee n 40 and
uncooked meat and then use · 140 degrees F. Your refriger-

I:nl' Jeres

MARIETTA
The · ing on more responsibili ty
McDonougli'
Center
of because of down sizing and
economic
iss ue s.
Leadership and Business at other
Marietta College will be managing stress takes on
offering a one-half day sem- eve n niore urgency than
inar on "Take Control of normal.
This
se minar
Managing
Your
Stress" focu ses on strategies and
Friday. The. seminar will be techniques to take control
held from 8 :30 a.m. to of managing the stress in
12: 30 p.m . on the Marietta your life.
College campus in the
Learn how th e bod y
McDonou gh Center build- reacts to stress, how stress
helps and hinders, what
ing.
you control and what you
~ t ress is an unavoidable
part of our lives. However, do not control , how Lo
in an environment of tak- practice coping strategies.

NEW HAVEN - Allen and
Sherri Warth o.f New Haven,
W. Va. announce the birth of a
daughter, Allison Grayce
Warth, born on Oct. 14 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant. The infant
wei ghes 7 pounds, 9. ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Warth have
another daughter, Kenzie Watth.
Grandparents are Dwight
and Caro lyn Bisse ll of
Reedsvi lle and Brenda Warth
of Hartford, W. Va. Margaret
Bissell of Racine is a great grandmother.

.intarials
- - - ' -- - - - -- - - - 9,000

-45.41

Dec. 2. 2003

Nasdaq

rutp::site
-9.75
1,980.07
Pet. change
from previous:

-.
1

_S
_
E_
P----,
O~
C=
T --NO_
V_ _ _
DE
_C_

High
9 ,900 .45

Low
9.837 .27

8,500

Record high: 11 .722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

~

2. 000
1.800

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

1. 600

--cS
:-::Ec:P----,0:-:Cc:
T-

1,400

-0 .49

Dec. 2, 2003

- N
- 0:-V- --DE
_C_

Htgh

low

Record high : 5,048.62

1.996.08

1.978.23

March 10, 2000

then cooled, food to at least
165 de grees. Always boil
sou ps, sauces and grav ies.
The fi nal adage is: When in
doubt, throw it out. If you
are un sure about how so mething was prepared or stored,
yo u should foll ow this cardinal rule of food safety. As the
old sayi ng goes, it's hetter to
be safe rather than sorry.

Familv Medicine® is a
ll'eeklr .colu11111. To s11bmir
quesrians, wr·ire to Marrha A.
Simpso11. D.0 .. M.B. A., Ohio
Universirr
College
of
0 .11eoparhic Medici11e, P.O.'
Box 11 0. Ath ens. Ohio
4570 1. Medical infim natioll
in rhis column is provided as
em educational service a11ly.
It does not replace the judgment of you r perso11al phvsician. ll'ho should be relied on
to diawwsis and recommend
treatment fo r wry medical
conditiom . Pasr co/um11 s are
amilcdJie
011/ine
at
www.thradio.org/fm .

and a five-s tep model for
managing stress. This seminar is targeted to indi vidual s wh o are loo king to
improve - the quality o f
the ir li ves.

1/re lwl{day seminar f ee
is $69 all&lt;/ includ,,s 111i1ion
ancl

course

maf(_) r ials.

Tn

regis1e1; m /1 rile Ofti.-e of
Bnsin ess Trainin g at The
McDonough Cmter: (740)
376-4624 or e-mail at
Iead@marie/Ia.Nlu.

Student found dead in Kent State.dormitory
KENT, Ohio (AP) - The
hody of a 29-year-o ld student
was found Tuesday eve nin g
in her dormitory room at
Kent State University. ·
The identit y wasn ' I immediately rel eased by campus
authorities.
The cause and time of
death were under inve;;tigation. An autopsy was ordered
for Wednesday.

Scott Rainone, a university
spokesman, said the woman ' s
parents hadn 't heard from her
in a couple weeks, su they
called the Korb Hall residence hall staff Tuesday
evening. Her body was found
in her room.
Korb Hall is a residence
hall for upperclassmen and
graduate students and is limited to single-bed room s.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Public meetings
•

Ath let ic Boosters. 7 p.m ..
high sc hool. Coaches. par-·
ents urged to attend.

Other events

Wednesday, Dec. 3
MID DLEPORT
PAGEV ILLE ··Sc ipio
Middleport
CommunitY
Thesday, Dec. 2
Township Trustees to meet,
Assoc
iation
,
8:30
a.
m:.
POMEROY
- Parent and
6 : ~0 p.m.. Pageville Tow n
Peoples
Bank.
girl
meeti
ng
for all g irl\
Hall.
·
aged fiv e and in kindergarWednesday, Dec. 3
den
interested in being a
POME ROY
Me ig s
M IDDLEPO RT Th e Daisy G irl Scout from 5:40
Coun ty Board of Hea lth Midd lepo rt Litera ry Cl ub
tu 6 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.
meets at 5 p.m.. Dec. 3.
wi l mee t adt 2 p.m at the Registratio n \:O &gt;t is $ 10.
confe re nce roo m uf the
home o f O li ta he ig hton . Financial as, istance ava ilMeigs Coun ty Health Dept. ,
Fran kin
H unn c l
w il able.
Information
from
112 E. Memoria l Dr ,
rev 1ew
"Th e
M as ter Cindy Seymour at 742 -255 8
Pomeroy.
But c hers Si ngi ng Cl ub'" or Jerrena Ebersbach at 992by Lou ise Erd ric h.
7747.
POME ROY Me igs
Loca l Board of Education, 7
Thursday, Dec. 4
p. m. at th e Meigs Hi gh
POMEROY
- Meigs
Wednesday, Dec. 3
School Iibrary.
Co unty Retired Teac hers
MIDD LE PORT
Assoc iati on. noon luncheo n. Rev iva l at Vi ctory Baptist
Thursday, Dec. 4
Trinit y C hurch. Eas tern Church, 525 N. Seco nu
MID DLEPORT ·
Hi gh School Bel l Choir to
Mi dd le port Board o f Publi c prese nt mu sica l progra m. Ave ., with Eva nge list Dr.
Affai rs, 5:30 p.m
Bring childre n's books for Samu el C. G ipp, 7 p. m.
Christmas gi'ft s. Rese rva tions through Wednesday. Spec ial
PO M EROY - Le ad ing for lunch may be made by music. Pastor James Keesee
invites the publi c.
C ree k Waters hed mee tin g. callin g 992-32 14.
6:3 0 p .m . at Meigs So il
Friday, Dec. 5
a nd Wa ter Co nse r va tion
POMEROY
Ho lze r
RUTLA
ND - Community
Di str ic t o ffi ce . wi t h Barb Hospice
'' Dinner
with
Flowe rs
fro m
the Friends," 6 p.m.. C row 's Cand le Iight Serv ice. 7 p.m:.
D iv is io n
uf
Mine ra l Family Restaurant. Ca ll 992- Rutland Churc h of the
Nazarene. Li ve · nati vity by
Reso ur ce s
Ma na ge me nt 7463 for info rmati on.
tee ns direc te d by Ca rl a
a s spe a ke r. LO d isc uss
min e rec lamati o n pro Wyatt. Spec ia l musi c and
TUPP ERS PLAINS
g ram s a nd pa st rec lama - Tuppers
Chri stmas
Plains
VFW congregati o nal
tion proj ec ts in the a rea. Auxiliary, 6:3 0 p.m. at the caro ls,
and
Poin se tti a
Conta c t Cy nthi a Baue rs hall.
Memory Tree lighte d 111
at M e igs SWC D, 992honor of loved ones.
4 282 .
Friday, Dec. 5
Saturday, Dec. 6
POMEROY · - Meigs .
POM EROY Salisbury County PERl Chapter 74
NE W HAV EN New
Township Tru stees, regular m~;et s al th e Meigs County Have n Chri stm as parade. I
mee tin g. 6:30 p.m.. town - Multipurpose Senior Center p.m. foll owed by · visit s with
ship
buildin g
on with lunch at noon and the Santa at the fire station .
Roc ksprings Road.
C hri stm as program with Hal
MIDDL EPORT Open
Knee n at 12:.10 p.m .
RUTL AN D
Me igs
house at the Un iversity of
Count y Republi can party
Rio Grande- Me igs Ce nterSaturday, Dec. 6
potluck dinner al 7:30 p.m.
HARRISONVILL E
Cross ro ads Program . 6 to
at
th e
Rutl and
Fire Harri sonville Lodge 411. 8:30 p.m . Food and treats
Department.
7:30 p.m . at the hall. for the kids. Being held in
Refre shments.
co njunct io n
with
the
Tuesday, Dec. 9
Middleport
Chri slmas
POMEROY
The
parade .
Bedford Township Tru stees
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
Thesday, Dec. 9
town hall.
POMEROY
- Childhood
POM EROY - The Meig s
County Humane Soc iety is Immunization C linic, 9 to
having a s!raw giveaway II a.m., I to 7 p.m .. Meigs
from I0 a.m. to 2 p.m. County Health Dept. Bring
Saturday. Dec. 6 at !he Sav- shot records, medical card.
A-Lot
parking
lot
in Child must be accompanied.
Thesday, Dec. 2
Middleport and at Hill 's by parent/legal guardian.
RACINE
- Southern Citgo in Racine.
Donations appreciated.

Straw giveaway

SEP
High
1.07 1.22

1.066 .62
Chenge

-0 .33

950

OCT
DEC
NOV
Low
Record high: 1,527.46
1, 065.22
March 24, 2000

Local Stocks
Ganrett - '68.93
GeneraJ Eklclric - 29.48
GKNLY - 4.85
Halley Davidson - 46.71

DG- 20.63
FederaJ Mogul- .27

Pl13ffiier ~ 8.05
Rocky Boots- 18.99

Krrart - 32.58
Kroger - 18.27
Lld. - 17.86
NSC-21.62
Oak Hill Frnrm - 31.76
Bank One - 44.20
OVB -27. 26
Peoples - 28.25

RD~I - 45 .95
R~ll - 3394

Sears - 54.94
SBC - 23.18
AT&amp;T - 20.27
USB -27.87
Wendy's - 39.69
Wai-Mart - 53.02
Wor1hington - 14.59
DaDy stod&lt; reports are the 4
p.m. closng quotes of the

previous day's transactK:&gt;ns,
provided by Sm!h Partners

PepsK:o- 48 14

at Adl.esllnc. of Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

45769.
Editor: Charlene Hoefl ich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Exl. 14
Reporter; J Miles Layton, Ext. 13

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Ou1slde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
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.

DEA R ABBY: My "'n.
"Sean." is onl y 13. bUI he
wi ll be attend ing hi' best
fri end \ fun e ral. "Frank ..
died by hi &gt; ow n hand .
Apparentl y he had to ld
man y of hi ' fri end ' that he
was going to kill hirmelf.
but no nne took him 'eri nu sly.
I am wri ting in the hope
that my letter will al ert chi ldren and adults that children
and adolesce nts so metime'
mean it whe n thev threaten
~ui ci de . I pra y parents will
Instruc t their c hildren tn
ALWAYS te ll an adu lt if
one of the ir fri e nds !alb
about 'ui ciue. I have done
that now. but unfortun atcl v
it i' too late to help Frank . ·_
- GRI EF-STRI C KEN IN
MARYL AND
DEAR GR IEF-STRIC KEN : Please ex tend my deepes t sympathy to the parenh
of your son's fr iend . And
thank you for giving me th e
c hance to po int out th at
th reats o f suic ide . and
repeated co mm e nts about
suicide , can be &lt;y mptoms of
serious illness and shoul u be
taken serio usly. Manv
young people are reluc tari't
to "rat" on the ir fri ends. bu t
when it co mes to talk of sui cide. ex pert s say that. keeping a sec ret ca n result in
los ing a friend . Skil led professional help is needed for
intervention.
Profess ional coun selin g
should also be made ava ilable to the survivors nf the
suic ide -- and th at includes

_,......_ __

Dear
Abby

famil y member' and fn end'
-- tu help !hem cope with

the ir own feel ing, nf c uilt
and deprc,siun .
c
DEA R ABB Y Two yea"
ago. I re tired fm m 111 1
teachin g joh ' U I cou ld tra,:e l with tm hu \ banJ. "B ill. "
on h i~ i nte~rn a t ion a l bu..;inl.!\\
tr iP·' · At the li me. Bill

ea rned a ve ry high ' al an .
Since th en. Bill has been
laid uff and ha' taken an
ea rl y ret ireme nt. He nn w
pullers arnund th e i1 o u,e.
paintin g the \ hull er\. working in the yard and thorough ly enjoying himse lf.
Th i, i' not the life I
expected. and I arn becom ing increasingly depre"ed . I
was never mu ch of a hou,cwi fe and wou ldn 't ha1e left
my joh had I known this
would be the outcome . I
ha ve a part -lime job in a
dre" shop . bu t it\ hardl y a
c hallenging career. I want to
trave l. I wa nt to hm·e fun .
We have a net wort h in
excess of SI mi Il ion. hut
Bill has alwavs been co nce rned abo ut • nu r fi nances
an d wan ts to ma na':.!e them

sn that we c·;m set "up cu i-

lege fund" for our gnmJ c hildren . bne a sub\lantial
amou nt to our children . and
budget $7.500 a vear for
'acat ion,, including tnp' to
vi,i t family . Th " doc,n 't
leave much .
If I tell Ill\ hu,hand ho w I
fee l It wdl liun htm terribly.
W ha t ' houl d I do ·• -R E L L C T 'A \ T L Y
RET IRED It" ILLI \O IS
DEA R RETIR ED Be fore
} ou

become

" \ IIH.d ~\. "

Y&lt;~u and Bill al 'o need to
re a.:h a m ee tin ~ of the
mind ~ ah nu t lllm rnone\
should he allocated . II vou
c tn 't rn anJgc to ag ree. then
the two o f vo u ' houl u ,eek
profe"io na·l
courhel ing.
PJca,e. do n't pu t 11 off
Di \agreemenh about money
have destroyed marn age ' .
Dear A!Jh 1· i.1 11 n11en h1·
Ahigail v,,;, ·Bnren . CI IS~!
kno11 ·n &lt;1.1 Jm nne Phillips.
and ••as f ollnded /J1 her
mothn Pwtlirw Plu/lip.1.
Write
Deur Ahh1
w
~n l' a ·. Dea rA!JJ...,r. cmn (;,.PO.
fJ o.r f&gt;\I.J./0, Los An ~ ef,. ,, C4
\IOUM.

Celebl'tlfing special days with you!
Sunday limes-Sentinel

740-992-2155

Organizations

One mon1h . .... . .. . . . .'8.95
One year . .. . . .. .. .. ...' 96.70

Subscribers should remit in
advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscripti on by mail
permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Malt Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .. .. .. . . . .. '30 .15
26 Weeks .
. ... ' 60.00
52 Weeks
. . . . ' 11e.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . ·.
. .. .'50.05
26 Weeks .... .... . ...' 100'. 10
52 Wee ks .
. ' 200.;&gt;0

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Wednesday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but
not forgotten . They will be similar to the sample below:
II you wish, selecl one of the following FREE verses below 10
lacrontpaiO) your 1rlhute.
I. We hold you in our thoughts and memori es forc~·cr.

Town meeting set
to discuss care
ALBANY - A town hall
meeting to di sc uss tssues and
concerns about t.he management of pain· and care of persun s with terminal illnesses
wi ll be held Tuesday. Dec. 9
from II :30 a.m. to I :00 p.m.
and from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at
the Well s Public Library,
5200 Washington Stree t, in
Albany.
Co niment s are sought
from persons dealing with
termin a l illness or severe
chroni c pain as well as th eir .
famil y members and professional healthca re providers.
The Albany meetings are
part of a se ri es of regional
meetings conducted throughout the state by the
Compassionate Care Task
Force appointed by Ohio
Governor Robert Taft. The
Task Force is charged, under
the direc tion of th e Ohio
Department of Healt h, with
studying and making recommendations about the care of
persons with terminal illness
and seve re chronic pain. cancer or non -cancer,

2. May God cradle you in His arms, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, neve r forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we sht!n.:d together. My pra,·crs
will be with you umi l we meet ugain.
·
5. The days we shared were sweel. I long to ~ee you agam in GOO's
heavenl y glory.

David C. Andrews

July 10, t961·May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

. . 995

6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us ~ IL ai1d the memory of vour
smile fills us witk,joy :.md laughter.
·
7. Though out of sight, you' ll forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, buttht: times we shared will al ways remain .
9. Ma y the l ight of peace shine on your fa~·c for ctemity.
10. May God's angels guide you and protcr.: t you throughout ti me.
I I You were a light in our Iif(' thut hums fore ver in our heart!\.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
13. You ·arc in our thoughts and prayers from morni ng to ni ght and from
year to year.
'
14. We 1-icnd this mc~snge with a loving ki ss ror ctcninJ rest and l1appines:-..
15 . May th e Lord hl ess you with His graL'C~ &lt;md warm. loving hcan.

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews a.nd

With over 150 photographs, this 100 page
book contains West Virgh*l Di~asters.
Mountain State Tragedie's that have
cb.!Wged ourJi~e~..

family

.

• SUver Bridge Collapse·
•J\1~well &amp; Wyomlng·Fioods
• Devastating Snowstorm Jilts Bluefield
• Boissevain Mine EXplosion ·
• Bluestone Bridge Span Collapse
. ~ • Mine Explosion Rocks Beckley1'
• Fire Decimates Business District
• State Floods Leave ~astation
• Explosion at Fnrmlng!Qn No.9 Mine
• Potomac ;River Breaks Its Banks '··
• Monongaih Twhi Mln!lll ~i'saster
• S~inilston Tornado C~IS · .
• WhljesYIJie Bridge Colla(lse' , ,,

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your home this holiday ~easoo, AEP reminds you to
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need to trJYel more ~xie n ­
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News

Teens who·threaten suicide
sometimes do more than talk

www.mydailysentinel.com

ATH ENS -The 22nd
annual Railfair model train
show will be held Saturday,
Dec. 13 from 9 a.m. until 9
p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 14
frorri noon until 6 p.m. at the
Univers ity Mall on East State
Street in Atnens. The
Rai [road
Model
and
Historical
Sociely
of
Southeastern Ohio, Inc. sponsors Railfair each year.
Displayed will be model
train layouts running in all
scales . The re will also be
drawings for prizes, including a model train.
For more information, contact
Robert Lewis, 740-594-4026.

AP

.;GI -27.11
AEP- 27.00
Akl.o - 35.20
Ashland Inc.- 40.60
BBT - 39.09
BLI - 13.95
Bob Evans- 31.44
BorgWaroor- 00
Cwt Holdirg - 36.20
Champion -4.42
Charmirg Shops - 6.28
Col -27.21
Duf':lnt - 42.34

Wednesday, December 3 , 2003

Railfair Model Train
Show at University
Mall in Athens

..a·.5o .

,.,,,:'r

PageA3

5:35p.m. Thursday

R:or.s 500

WetJ ;

Community Calendar

- - - - -- - - - -- - - 1,100

stan::lard &amp;

p~vlouo:

atur shoul d be between 32
and 39 deg rees, and your hot
food should be he ld above
140 degrees. Keep your "hot
food " hot and your "cold
food" cold. Following that
simpl e rule can preve nt most
cases of bacteri al food con tamin ati on and illness.
When transport ing food, be
sure to kee p your cold food
at the proper temperat ure by
using an ice chest or cooler.
Li kew ise keep your hot food
sizzli ng in we ll wrapped.
insulated co ntainers.
After your meal, pro mptly
store your left overs in the
refrigerator. Don't ove rload the
refri gerator as the foods may
not cool properl y. Using several small contai ners is preferable to one large container for
storage since this, too, allows
for more rapid cooling. The
two-hour rule says that food
that has been at room temperature for over two hours
should be di scarded.
When it is time to eat
again. reheat your cooked.

Allison Grayce Warth

Dec. 2, 2003

BY THE BEND

Wednesday, Dece mber 3, 2003

Local Folks The McDonough Center offers seminar

:A DAY ON WALL STREET

9 ,853.64
Pet. change
tram pcevtous: -0 .46

•

The Daily Sentinel

Family Medicine
Cardinal rule of food safety - when in doubt, throw it out

Ohio weather
Thursday, Dec. 4
AccuWeather.com forecast for da

PageA2

For more information about
electrical safety, visit sep.com

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

READER'S

VIEW

Death
Sniper miswiderstood
Dear Editor:
I noted in ihe Nov. 25 edition that th e sniper had received
the death se ntence. As might be expected. a fal se picture has
been pa inteu of this 11wn. He is gu ilt y to be sure. anu is.
indeed, part of a •k illing tc~n." hu t not the captain. as prosecut ors have depicted him .
, .Who is the captain ·' And wha t do these sn ipin gs, along wit h
the other key events of the past two years, have to do witl1 th e
Kennedy murder'' In adui tion to the direct effects upon the
public stru cture. immense sym bol ic and ritua list ic impo rtance. The Kennedy killing. like the Sept. I I style plan that he
nixed. is particul arly rich in symbolism and ritual . The sniper
operations- obviously still active- are one particular component of a multi-phase program that Kennedy rejected,
spec ifica ll y that spec ia l forces wo uld target civilian s . to
inflame the public psyche to put it in war fever mode and/or
elirtai l civi l li be rt y. It i.s therefo re no co incide nce that
Muhammed is a tra ined sniper. He expertly placed hi s shots
'
and evaded detection until he completed his parlrcular phase
of the mi ssion. After that. he allowed himself to he seen, and
pulled to a consp icuous spot where he could be 'taken into
custody.·
When the teams make a hit. they frequently leave calling
cards. In Muhammed 's case, he used th e death card . For the
Kennedy hit, the killers placed the ·pri stine bullet' on a
~tretcher . Both th e card and the bullet have sacred sign ificance. They send a message: ' We are in control and we can do
whatever we want -

Lo

PageA4

an yone we want -

anytime we

want. ' Many ot her symbolic elements could 6e ment io ned.
Both Oswald. an unfortunate CIA patsy. and the sniper have
been painted as unstable crackpots. Unless hi s handlers have
:appeals planned for show. the sniper will likely go j ust the
way McVei gh did, quietl y preparing for 'shutdown .'
. . Jeff Field.!
. · Middleport

Wednesday, December 3, 2003

Obituaries

American tourists} Mexican justice
The young couple and their
9-year-old son wer.e detained
by police on the evening of
Oct. 7 after having crossed
the U.S.-Mexico border earlier that day. Two officers
walked the husband and the
son to an ATM machine ,
relieving the husband of the
cash th ey forced him to withdraw.
Meanwhile, two other officers escorted the wife to a
police station . She was
ordered to take off her clothes
- the better to strip-search
her. Then one officer raped
her as the other kept watch.
Had this crime occurred in
San Diego. Calif., had the
young co uple and their son
been Mexican nationals, it
wo ul d have touched off a
firestorm. There would have
been demands for justice by a
right fully angry Mexican
co mmunitv. There would
have been marches and
demonstrations organized by
ac tivist gro ups. There would
have been declarations by
politicians - like Californi a
state Senate Democrat leader
John Burton. who suggested
last week th at. anyone oppos"
in g driver's li censes fur ille-

gal aliens is ·racist' - that
the police are hatefu l toward
brown-skinned people.
But there have been no
demands for justi ce in th is
case. No marches or demonstrati ons in support of the

Joseph
Perkins

victims. No blanket condemnations of the cops by politicians. That's because the
crime took place in Tijuana.
And the vic tims were
Americans. So the husband
and th e wife, a 32-year-old
With an Iowa driver's license,
are left to the tender mercies
of the Mexican judicial syst.em.
After filing a criminal
comp laint with the Baja
Cal ifornia attorney ge neral's
office, four Tijuana municipal police officers were
charged with crimes against
the American touristas. The
most serious charges, including rape. extortion and abuse
of authority, were made
against offi cer Hector M.
Arias Campos. He's a supervisor on the Tijuana police
force working in a unit
assigned to assist tourists.
Talk about the fox guarding the hen house.
Baja California's top state
official
law-enforcement
prom ises to throw the book
at Arias Campos and hi s

three subordinates if they are
found guilty. ' In this case,'
said · Attorney
General
Antonio Martinez Luna, ' the
punishment has to be more
severe. Police officers are the
first ones who should obey
the law. '
·vet Mexican officials have
been anything but seve re
with Tijuana police officers
who prey upon the border
city's 26 million yearly visitors . Earlier this year. in fact . .
the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana
beseeched city officials to
follow up on complain ts
from American tourists who
said they had been shaken
down by the Mexican city's
crooked cops.
Tijuana's interna l affai rs
unit responded by recom mendiflg puni shment for 16
officers involved in eight different incidents. And a sixmember comm iss ion
inc lucl; ,,g two Tijuana city
counc 111embers, two city
government employees and
two private ci ti zen' - acted
upon the recommendati ons,
suspending the 16 officers 30
days wi th out pay. That.
apparently. is the going pun ishment south of the border
fo r shaking down Yankee
tou ri stas.

Indeed. th e leniency witl1
which San Diego's Mexican
neighbor deals with its corrupt cops explai ns why, as a
spokeswoman for Martinez

Sylvan Cleland

Luna's office acknow ledged,
·Police extortion is com mon

WELLSTON Sylvan
Cleland, 96, of Wellston, died
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2003, at the
Holzer Medica l Center.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Birchfie ld
Funeral Home, Rutland.

i:UT10 11 g tourist s.~

Let us consider again if the
situation were reversed: If
Mexican nationals were
shaken down by cops in San
Diego or Nogales, Ariz. or~
Columbus, N.M .. or El Paso.
Texas. you can bet your last
peso those po lice officers
wou ld not get olf with a mere
JO unpaid days away from
the force. Thev'd be fired.
They'd be thrown in jail.
They'd be vi li tied as racist,
xenophobic cops on the
evening news, on the front
page of the morning paper.
Yet there hasn't heen even
Lhc sli ghtest

sugge~ li on

Shirley Pauley
MINERVA -Shirley M.
Pauley, 60, formerly of
Toronto and Middleport, died
Friday, Nov. 21, 2003. at
Aultma n Hospital following
an extended illness.
She was born Jan. 21, 194.3
in Toronto, daughter of the
late Floyd and Vera Morrow
Rudder. She was a housewife
and a notary public. She was
a member of the Minerva
Kipgdom Hall of Jehovah's
Witnesses and formerly the
Middleport Kingdom Hall.
Besides her parents , she
was preceded in death by her
hu sband, James E. Pauley,
who died on July 19, 2003,
and a brother. Floyd Rudder.
Survivi ng are a son. Juanita
Whytsell of Long Bottom; a
son. Nick Barber of Long
Bottom; two sisters, Barbara
Painter of Canton and Mrs.
Rob ert (Vera) Morckel of
Minerva; three brothers: Bill
Rudder of Hammondsvi lle,
Robert Rudder of Massilon,
and Nick Rudder of Arizona;
fou r gra ndchildren and a
great grandchild; and several
nieces and nephews, including her ca regiver, Karen
Grimm of Carrol lton .
A memorial service will be
held at 2 p.m. on Sunday,
Dec. 7. 2003. at the
Middleport Kingdom Hall of
Jehovah ·s Witnesses with
Brother David Green officiating.
There wi II be no visitation.
Arrange ments are under the
direc tion
of GotschallHutch ison Funeral Home in
Minerva.

in

any quarter that the Tijuana
poli'ce officers who raped an
American

worncn .

\Vhn

shook Jown her hu.sband.
were either raL·i:-,1 nr xell\) ..
phobic. That's hecmrsc . under
the libera l orthodoxy. on ly
wh ite folks em he racist.
On ly Ar:uerintn:-. can be
xenophobic. Well 'there's at
leas t one young American

co upl e that know' hct tcr.
They've l..:.a rncd fiN hand .
from the Tijuan" police. just
ho w host ik brown

ru l~ . . l'~lll

non ~ b rnwn .~o,. how
co nlemptuou -. Mexic~tns CLin

be agttinst

be towanJ American .....

(Josclp/i Perkins is a colwnnisl
j{w 1J1e Slu1 Diegf 1 [ l! 1ir JJt-1iihw u;

and wn l&gt;e 11'11&lt; ll1'd !II
Jnseplr.Perkt!Js @U1Jiflll7i-ih.&lt;·'"'')

WHERE
ARE THE

VIDEO
CAMERAS

WHEN I .

NEED
THEM?

Vaughan
from Page A1

-=
nLBE
RI6HT
WITH

l

/}

n

You.

lf at first class you don't succeed •

0TfiH(ER.
© 2003 by NEA, Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to th e editor are welcome. They should
'.be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
•
'.editing
and must be signed and include address
•
~nd telephone number. No unsigned letters will
;be published. Letters should be in good taste,
'rpddressing issues, not personalities.
: The opiniqns expressed in the column below
'
:are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
;co.:~ editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Soon , the holiday travel
season will start. What a
depressing thought.
I remember reading a story
a few years ago about an airline that lost a woman's cat in
tran sit. They looked for that
cat for 12 days before it
finally turned up - alive and
we ll and hungry. The sad
thing was that I knew it was
11 -1/2 days longer than they
would have looked for a
missing passenger.
Sometimes I wonder what
is worse, the airlines or the
passengers? On almost every
flight I've taken in the last
few holidays some couple
will show up at the very last
minute and have to be ushered on board -with special
airline people hustling them
throu gh the door, stowing
· th eir hand luggage for them,
ge tting them settled before
rushing out so the crew could
shut the cabin door. All under
th e hateful glare of all the
other passengers who had the
co urtesy to show up an hour
early.
'
Guess whose luggage will
come off first? The late passengers. So why should they
bother to show up on time
when they get rewarded for
their bad behavior? They
didn't have to wait in any
lines. They didn't have to
hang around the lounge for

spend four or more hours
in side .an airport with
abso lutely nothing to do but
cruise the airport stores.
Where else could you find
a
newsstand
that sells magaJim
. zines like 'Funeral Home
Mullen
Management ;'
'Cubicle
Cloth Designer,' 'Pension
Fund Skimmer,' ' Meter
Reader
Monthly '
and
an hour sitting in chairs that 'Professional
· Llama
specifically Breeder.'
What?
No
have · been
designed to be uncomfort- 'Am3teur Llama Breeder?'
able so that homeless people What. kind of a dump are you
wouldn't live in them. They running 'here?
The
bookstores
are
didn't have to hear ' Would
Mr. and Mrs. Liptfitter pl ease jammed with best-se lling
report to the main ticket se lf-help books like ' How to
counter'?' 4.0 times over a Pick a Self-Help Book,'
nerve-shredding loudspeak- 'How To Get. Out the Most
er. They didn't have to hear it Out of Self-Help Books.·
because, of course, they are ·How to Get 10 the Front of
the Liptfitters.
thi s Store By Yourself.' and
' Honey, this is so nice, it's 'Running a Billion Dollar
nice to be late,' said Mr. , Corporation Made Simple.'
.
You can also pick up a $6
LrptfiUer.
'Late? What do you know container of three individualabout being late?' snapped ly wrapped antacid tablets at
Mrs. Liptfitter. ' If you had any newsstand. Which you'll
li stened to me we would need because the only t.hing
have been tw.o minutes later you .can buy to eat in the
and they would have given entire airport without having
us seats in first class. Don't to stand in an hour-long line
talk to me about being late. I is a frozen yog urt and a bag
know how to be late.'
of cashews.
The shopkeepers in the airYou'll never ge t into any of
port don't mind if y·ou're late. the good restaurants. Even if
They know that on any, trip you do, you won't have time
you take there's a good possi- to eat there. Wait, isn't that
bility that you will have to the Liptfitters? They're sit-

,,

••

ling 111 the window of
L'Exq ui site. th e fanciest
restaura nt in the ent ire airport. The line snakes from
terminal A to termi na l B and
back aga in. How did they gel
rn ? They arc laughi no and
drinkin g wine. She ·is ~ati ng
medallions of beef wit h crabmeat garnis h. He is having
the cog au vin.
I can't worry about it now
have accidental ly dragged
my coat through something
wet on the men's room tlo&lt;ir
while , tryi ng to juggle my
carry-on luggage and use the
sink at the same time. How
can people put up with this
kind of nonsense'' As I leave
the
men's
room, · the
Liptfitters glide past me on
one of those beeping. chauffeur-driven electric carts that
ferry elderl y people arou nd
airports. Me , I rus h back to
my gate on' foot. Ju st in time
to see the Liptfitters disappear down the gangway with
the rest of the first class passengers.
Wow, let's do th is aga in
next year.
(.lim M111/en is the author o.f
:Jt Takes A Village Idiot: A
Memoir of Lif'e After the Citv :
(Simon and Schuster. 200i ).
He also cm1trilmtes regularly
to Entertainment Week! v
where Ire can he reached ·;,;
jim _mul!en @e w. com)

Presiding over hi s final
meeting yesterday, Dooley
encouraged members of the
association to cominue to
support assoc iation acti vities,
including Pops in the Park, a
Father 's Day breakfast intro. duced thi s year,
and
Treasure s in the Village, an
antique and craft sidewalk
sale organized in conjunction
with the September Morgan's
Raid re-enactment, which the
association hopes to continue
next year.
The association also introduced a "Bunny Hop Bake
Sale" in conjunction with tbe
Easter holiday, organized the
community 's July 4. celebration , and expanded its
"Christmas Village" promotions for the Christmas shopping season.

Drawing
from Page A1
,.

I

ensure bu sinesses that the
association will not seek
additional tinancial support
for the year.
Baker said the association
pl ans to judge residential
Christmas displays aga in this
year. Three judges will tour
the village before Christmas,
at ~ n unannounced time and
date, and award merchant gift
certificates to winning residents. The association will
award a $200 certificate to
the first place winner. $1 do to
the second place, and $75 to
the third place.
Registration is not required
to participate in the contest,
Baker said.
Dooley noted that the association worked to check and .
replace bulbs in the village's
downtown Christmas decorations, and has voted to pay
the electricity costs involved
in lighting the snowflake decorations along North Second
Avenue, Mill Street, and
General Hartinger Parkway.
Dooley also said the primitive snowmen purchased last
year will be installed in the
downtown shopping district
prior to the
village's
Christmas
parade
on
Saturday evening.

Routines
Bridge closes
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department
of
Transportation will close the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge from
9 p.m. to 5 a.m. nightly
beginning Dec. 8, to allow
for the completi on of maintenance work. Work will continue nightly through Dec.
12, but will not be in
progress during the weekenJ
of Dec. 13. The work will
resume on Dec. 15, and may
continue on Dec . 16.
Alternative crossings are at
Ravenswood, W.Va. and
Point Pleasant, W. Ya.

Craft·show set
NEW HAYEN - The New
Haven Fire Department
Ladies Auxi liary will have a
Christ mas bazaar from I0
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at the
New Haven fire station . The
annual Christmas parade will
be held at I p.m. followed by
a visit from Santa with treats
for the ch.i ldren at the fire station .
The bazaar will feature
food and baked goods, woodcraft. candles and crafts.
Door prizes will be awarded
during the day. Information is
available by calling Shelby
Duncan, (304) 882-28 14..

Meeting changed
MIDDLEPORT
Middl eport Board of Public
Affairs mee ting has been
resched uled for 5:30 p.m. on
Thursday.

Police News
r

~eig s

Open house
to be held
MIDDLEPORT-An open
house · will be held at the
University of Rio GrandeMeigs
Center-Crossroads
Program, 6 to 8:30 p.m.
Saturday. Food will be served
and treats will be given to the
children. The open house is
being held in conj unction
the
Middleport
with
Christmas parade.

Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS
The
Board of Directors of the
Galli a-Meigs Community
Action Agency will meet at
4:30 p.m. on Dec. I I at the
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis

Syracuse Village
Council to meet
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Cou ncil will meet at
7:30 p.m. on Dec. 4 in the
municipal building.

Meals being offered
HARRISONVILLE - The
Scipio
Townshi p
Fi re
Department at Harrisonville
is offering homemade hot
meals through Saturday.
Breakfast is served 5 to 6:30
a,m. lunch. II to 12:30 p.m .
and dinner, 5 to 7 p.m.
Dinners include homemade
pies and cakes.

73-year-old woman dies
when fire guts home
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
73 -year-old woman died
when fire raced throu gh
her home and firefighters,
delayed by trains at a
crossing, were unable to
reach her.
Alice Runyan was found
dead in a rear bedroom.
The cause of. the fire
wasn't determined, but one
fire ofticial said a cigarette
likely was to blame .
Columbus
firefighters,
along with five engines,
two ladder trucks and a

resc ue truck, found their
path to the house bl ocked
by two trains ·at a crossing.
Madi son Township firefighters, also respondin g to
the alarm, got there first.
The victim's . 19-year-old
granddaughter,
Amanda
Stump, who shared th e
house, was resc ued by her
father, who li ves nearb y
and rea ched the . .scene
before firefighters. He was
treated for smoke inhalation .

State: Seat belt
usage up in Ohio
BY MtLLtSStA RUSSELL

drivers and passengers alike
to buckle up.
So far this year, there have
GALLIPOLIS - Recent
been six fatal crashes in
studies are showing that
Gallia County with six peamore lives are being saved pie killed. Last fall there
by the use of seat belts, and
tliat more Ohioans than ever were eight fatal crashes with
ten people killed.
are buckling"up.
Out of those six deaths,
According to data collected at Miami University in Grau said, only two people
Middletown, 74.4 percent of were wearing their seat belts,
Ohioans are choosing to and those accidents occurred
wear their· seat. belts. This in such a manner that seat
number surpasses the previ- belt usage was not an issue.
ous all-time high of 73. I
But. he added, seat belts
percent.
have played an important
Lt. Richard Grau, of the role in saving many other
Gallia-Meigs Post of the lives this year.
Ohio State Highway Patrol,
Grau said that troopers
said that he has definitely have combined force s with
see n an increase in the num- officers from the West
ber of people wearing their Virginia State Police detachsafety belts in our area.
men I in Pt. Pleasant, W.Ya .
'The voluntary compliance . to enforce satety belt laws
rate increase is certainly " ac~oss state_Imes.
.
That effort has earned
noticeable here " he said.
"That has been 'made possi- over for both of us," he said .
ble through not onl;v through :The Pt. Ple~ sa nt de tachm ~ nt
law enforcement efforts but IS a leader m thetr state tor
seat belt enforcement efforts,
education efforts as weli."
The patrol has . actively and it benefits both agencies
participated in the statewide, to be working together."
"What 's
Holding
You
Back?" education campail)n,
and cites th e effort With
being a constant reminder to
MRUSSELL®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Give~way,
from Page A1

Mullen
from Page A1
Dec. 2, 194.3 attack on Bari
Harbor may never be told at least not by the men who
saw it first-hand as · Mullen
did.
'
"The allies' secrecy still
gripes me," Mullen said.
"The Germans flew over Bari
the next day and surveyed the
damage, so they knew
already the effects of the
attack. There was no need to
keep it a secret."

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, December 3, 2003

He suggested that th ose
coming bring bags and
boxes. No income guidelines
or other criteria are required
to participate in the giveaway, according to the Parish
director.
The items have been collected by the Old Fon United
Methodi st Church east of
Findlay and another group
from Upper Sandusky.
· "This is the fourth year that
our community has. been
remembered with shipments
of good usable items.." said
Rader.

County Sheriff\ also entered and several under ,u.,pension. po&gt;se•sion
Department log
items were reponed mi"ing . of marijuana and posse'&gt;'&gt;ion
POMEROY - The Mei g'
Tam i Brabham reported a of drug paraphernalia.
County Sheriff\ Departmem truck owned by Reds Rolling
Shawn Marcinko reported
reponed a rash of break-in; Garage wa&gt; parked near ·the hi&gt; 19'14. Dodge Truck was
and vandalism around the TNT Pit Stop in Middleport. &gt;tolen from his mothers driBrabham reported straps. veway in Tuppers Plains .
county over the past week .
of chain s and a battery were Within four hours. the truck
Daniel
Newsome
Langsville reported his home stolen from the truck.
wa.1 found wrecked on State
was broken into. Entry was
Regina Erlewine of Strongs Route 248. Benjamin Call of
made through a rear window Run Road reponed her hou&gt;e Pomeroy was cited 10 Meigs
to the home and several items was entered . An inventory of County Court on a charge of
are reported missing.
missing items is being pre- posse,sion of marijuana .
Ru" Well reported that the pared.
Elizabeth
Kauff
of
lkes Club located on Sugar
Sharon Shuler of Pomeroy Middleport reported she was
Run Road had been broken reported that items were nearly run off the road while
into and entered. Several stolen from three cars parked dri1 1ng on Leading Creek
types of ammunition were on her property and that the Road . Keith KinLel of
reported missing.
cars were also vandalized .
Cheshire reported hi' lawn
Lisa Morris of Wellston
Brian
Connol ly
&gt;f mower was 'tolen on Story"s
reported her si Iver 1990 Reedsville reported his Run Road . Larry Lee of
Toyota Carmy was stolen Yarnaha YZ PW 80 motorcy- · Pomeroy was arrested on
while it was parked at a resi- cle was "olen.
charges of dome,tic violence.
Chris Diddle of Racine
Gregory Lee of Middleport
dence on Dexter Road in
Langsville.
reported receiving hara"ing was arre, ted &lt;&gt;n charge' of
Butch Russell of Skinner telephone calls . Rubert second offense driving under
Road Pomeroy reported his Council of Langsvrlle repon- the influence and dri1 ing left
home was broken into. A ed trespassing on his proper- of center.
vehicle ran through a garage ly.
Laura Noel of Albanv was
door and a rear door window
Henry Paul Price wa' arre,ted on charges of dri,ing
was knocked out of the resi- arrested on charges of drr,ing under the influence and not
dence. A camping trailer was under th e influence. driving driving within marked lanes .

For The Record
Civil suits

Divorces

POMEROY - A civ il lawsuit has heen filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc., against Alexander
Buckalew. Portland, doing
bu siness as Alexis· Tay lor
Greenhouses. in the amou nt
of $14,083.54.
A foreclosure action has.
bee n filed ag ain~t Green Tree
Servicing , Tempe. AriL. .
against Rena K. Day. Raci ne.
alleging default in the
amount of $82.78 1.13.
A forec los ure has been
granted to Beneficial Ohio.
Inc., doin g bu si ness as
Benefi cial Mortgage Co ..
Columbus. agai nst Terry N.
Waugh, and others .
A default j ud gme nt has
been rendered to Beneficial
Ohio, Inc .. agai nst James R.
Grueser, Jr. . and others.

POMEROY Divorce
ac ti ons have been fi led in
Meigs Coun ty Common
Pleas Court by John Fie lds.
Bidwell . aga inst Jeanine
Fie lds. Bidwell , and by
Shannon
M.
lhle.
Middleport. agai nst Kevin
M. lhle. Racine .
Divorces have been granted to Meli ssa Dixon from
Ern est Dixon. Sr.. and to
Virginia Haning from V•iarren
M. Haning.

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been i&gt;Sued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Trevor Jon Harrison. 29.
Pomeroy.
and
Frances
Lorrai ne Walker. 23. Shade;
David Allan Heightland. Jr.,
3 1. Shade. and Toni Daun
Marinucci. 25. Shade: and
Da1·id Mi chael Rhodes. 39,
Long Bottom. and Norma Lea
Rhude, . 34. Long Bottom.

Dissolutions

Straw giveaway

Marriage licenses

POMEROY - The Meigs
POMEROY
Dissolutions have been i" ued County Humane Society is
in Meig s County Com mon huvi n,l:!. a st ra w eni\·eaway
Pleas Court to Robert R. from I 0 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Easo n and Krista A. Eason . Saturday. Dec. 6 at the SavLisa J. Rou'h and Gregory A-Lot
parking
lot
rn
Eugene Roush. Sr .. and John Middleport and at Hill" s
M. King and Brenda S. King . Citgn in Racine.

Court News
Cases heard in
Meigs County Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between Oct. 27 and Nov. 16
are as follows:
Ivan K. Swanger. Bell ville ,
properly secured loads, $25
and costs; Jeremy C. Taylor,
Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and
costs; Michael A. Tilli s.
Rutland, DWI!and or drugs
of abu se, $350 and costs,
seatbelt, $30, failure to control , $20; Jeremiah Triplett ,
Racine. improper passing,
$20 and costs; Billy J.
Yancooney. Portland. domestic violence, dismissed. disorderly conduct, $50 and costs.
induci ng panic , di smi ssed.
criminal trespass, $50 and
costs. violating protection
order. di smissed: Nellie A.
Vincent, Fort Pierce . Fla ..
speeding. $30 and costs;
Carrie R. Walker, Middleport,
seatbelt, $30 and cost&gt;: Ricky
W. Weatherly. Narrows. · Ya ..
speeding, $30 and costs. seatbelt. $30 and costs; James D.
White. Pulaski, Ya, speeding.
$42 and costs: Kenneth M.
White, Long Bottom, posessio!Vuse of drug paraphernalia.
dismissed. drug abuse, $50 and
costs. no child restraint, $50 and
costs, use of Lmauthori7.ed plates.
$50 and costs: Kimberly D.
White. Columbus. speeding,
$3() and COStl:
Charles
Whittington .
Pomeroy. DWI and/or drugs
Of abuse. dismissed. display
plates/vafid sticker, dis'

740-753·3400
MOVIES

10

mi ssed:
Timothy
Wickersham. Rac ine. seatbelt -passenger. $20 and
costs; Kasey N. Williams.
Middleport. speeding. $30
and costs; Rick v L. Williams,
Glouster, speeding. $30 and
costs; David L Williamson.
Pomeroy. $20 and costs;
Lora L. Wolfe. Shade, passing
bad checks, $25 and costs;
01arles F Yearick, Weddington,
N.C., speeding, $30 and costs;
Jonathon R Young. New Haven,
W. Ya., use/possession of drug
paraphenalia. $135 and costs.
drug abuse. $30 and cost~: Lisa
D. Young, Guysville, speeding,
$30 and costs; Melissa D. Young,
Middleport. stop sign, dismissed.

Cases heard
in Pomeroy
Mayor's Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Pomeroy
Mayor\ Court of magistrate
Charles Knight in November
are as fo llows:
Fined
Adam Barton, Portland. leash
law $65 and costs. Ronald
Keyes. Pomeroy. disorderly by
intoxication. $75 and costs: Sean
Meadows. no opemtor.; $50 and

cost,. expired tags. $50 and
cost1: Amber Lee. Middleport.
wrongfu l entrustmen~ $150 and
costs. child endangerment $250
and costs, open container in
motor vehicle, $63 and costs.
underage possession of alcohol.
$200 and costs and 30 days jail
-credit for time served. 29 davs
jail suspended. six months piD.
bation of good behavior,
Kendra Swanz, Pomeroy,
fictitious tag. $63 and costs,
expired tags. $63 and costs:
Larry
L
Mitch ,
Jr ..
Middleport , possession of
contro lled substance. $250
and costs: Kimberly Haley.
Pomeroy. no operators. cost
onl y, ACDA $50 and costs:
Clayton Taylor, Middleport,
illegal left turn on Butternut
Ave .. $50 and costs; Shannon
Scholderer. Middleport, open
containe r in motor ve hicle,
$63 and costs. drug paraphernalia. $ 100 and costs:
. Brenda Gray. Portlanq,
tinted windows. costs only:
Lori Thomp son. Pomeroy.
driving under suspension.
$150 and .costs, left of center,
$50 and costs, Kurti s L.
Braley. Pomeroy. driving
under suspension, $150 and
costs: Michael Craig. Raci ne,
driving under sus pension,
$150 and costs.

HEARING

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�ATION

The Daily Sentj.nel

PageA6

···WoRLD

Prep Scoreboard, ~ 82
Bearcata stomp Valpo, Page 83

-Wednesday, December 3, 2003

NASA braces for dangers of landing twin rovers on Mars Experts say bugs on food
are a byproduct of efforts
PASADENA. C;i\if. (API
After seven routine
Mars
to reduce pesticides
months
of
spacellight.
:-IASA is bracing for six
miuut~s of hrgh anxiety in
January. whe n th e tw in
rovers it launched earlier this
year punch through the
Ma 'I ian atnmsp hc re to land
on the Red Planet.
Each nf the unmanned ,
$4( Kl million rovers must he
slowed from )2.000 mph tu a
rnmplete ~top within minute\
after fir~ t plunging into the

planet's tenuou &gt; atmosphere .
··Just ge lling to

Mar~

i~

hard. but l anur n ~ is more
so... Ed Wcikr. NASA's
assoc iate administrator for
space scie nce sai d Tuesday
Juri ng a news

br i~'fin g

from

Washington . D.C .. that was
hroaucast
to
the
Jet
Propulsion Lrborawry.
Landing the rovers sa kly
req ui res tile elaborate ly
choreographed and faq.
paced use of heat· shields.
parachutes. rockets and air
bags. A strong gust of wind.
or a single sharp rock. cou ld
destroy eit her or both rovers.
Two-t hirds of all previous
Martian mi s&gt;ions have fai led.
includin~
the las t !antler
NASA · launched. .I ~09's
Polar Lander. A sewnd mission . the Climate Orbi te r
satellite. als.1 fa iled ih;ll year.
Just ei~ht semmh before
landin g. tbe ro vers wi ll
inflate e normous air

b ag~,

sim ilar lo those successfull y
used by II.J97's Pathfinder
spacecraft and the small
Sojourner rov er it carri ed, to
cushion thei r arrival on th e
planet'.s surface.
"We c~11tld bounce aboui as
hi gh as a fou r-story build ·
ing:· project manager Peter
Theisinucr said.
The l'irst of the ro ve rs.
Spirit. is schcdubl to lantl
Jan. .1 in Gusev Crat er. a
C'onrkct icut-s ited ha.sin that
ma y have held a brimming
lake aft c' r it formed -+ billion
ye ar ~

a!;.!o . .

· Th e 'scc:ond six-\vhe eled
robot. Opportunity. shou ld
land Jan . 24, '"' the far side
of the planet i11 Meridiani
Planum . V..'l1ere min erah1g. ical
evi dence

inLi icates

wa ter

once was pre"enl.

The

C&lt;l!llera -

mcnt - la lie n

and in stru rovers

are

· Mars invasion

used even on organic foods.
Certainly, though, finding
a beetle does not evoke the
same response as the discovery of a poi sonous spid.er.
Howard said the black Widows were a rare find , with
only a handful reported
among 800 million bags of
grape s shipped every year.
Food safety experts say an
occasional beetle or weevil
or spider is a re aso nable
price to pay for safer foods.
"We 're seeing four or five
people coming across spiders in their grapes, but
we ' re seeing a lot less people being exposed to greater
use of pesticides ... and
long-term health hazards."
said Paul Tierney, director of
the state 's Food Protection
Program in the Department
of Public Health. "What is
the greater good here?"
Still , Tierney said the
scary di scoveries serve as a
reminder to consumers to
carefully ·inspect and wash
produce.
"As consumers we have to
learn not to assume that
everythin g is perfect," he
said.
That was a le sson Teri
Muccini and her family
learned the hard way.
Muccini said her husband
found a quarter-sized black
widow on their grapes and immediately killed the
bug. She said she doesn't
know much about pesticides.
but she says something
should be done to ensure the
dangerous spide rs don't
reach consumers.
. "Most people wash their
grapes before they eat them
anyway, so if there's something that would kill them ,
use it," said Muccini , of
Upton. " It was kind of scary
to see a spider that big and
ugly and poisonou s."
Dan Mott, editor of the
Journal of Arachnology and
chairman of the biology and
chemi stry department · at
Texas A&amp;M International
University, said he did not
thin!&lt; ~ hanges in pesticides
woulu have a marked effect ·
on the black widows.
"I'd hate to think we'd
discourage people to keep
th em from using· pesticide,
because that's a good thing,"
he said. "Black widows just
aren't a problem for us, generally."

BOSTON (APl - Sure.
Four new m1&amp;111ons to Mars are
fucpeclltd to }oin NASA's Mars
it's scary to find P?isonous
Gtobal SurveyOf al1d Mars
Odyssey in late December and
black widow sptders on
next yeet.
store-bought grapes. But
No.oml
food safety specialists and
Japan
growers say it's less frightening than the alternative : a
return to harsher pesticides.
At least three people
found black widow spiders
on bunches of red seedless
grapes from California pur·
chased recently at separate
Shaw's supermarkets in suburbs west of Boston . Black
widows are the most danger·
ous type of spider in the
United States, though their
bite s while extremely
painful - are not often fatal
because the venom is delivered in tiny doses.
Grape growers and grocers
say their efforts to use fewer
SOURCES. Space &amp;\ll!fiCI.,..
J\uocleled Prass
or softer chemicals are to
blame for more bugs reachdesigned to analyze Martian
ing
conswners.
rocks and soil for additional
"As
a result of the grow·
l'lucs that co uld re vea l
ers' efforts to reduce the use
whe ther the plane t was ever
of pesticides in the industry,
a wa rm er. 1,.vetter place capathe possibility of finding an
blt• of sustai ninu li fe .
insect or spider exists,"
"The easy p~rrts of these
Shaw's supermarkets said in
mission~ are J)ve r. Now lhe
a statement.
tou gh pa ri co mes. Mars has
Pesticides are used to help
hecn a mos t daunting desticrop
production and yield by
nal ion.
Some. includi ng
preventing fungal invasion,
mysell.. cu ll it ' the &lt;.I eath
insect damage and the
planet."' said Weile r.
growth
of unwanted plants
One~ the n.Jv inu
ro boti c
0
all
of
which can contamfield geologists have landed ,
inate
crops.
However, since
NASA may not hear from
some chemicals have been
th em again for ' ncurly 24
'
l10urs. In the meantime. the Dr. Ed Weiler, NASA associate administrator for space science, shown to contribute to such
rovers shou ld begin sur vey- left , Dr. Charl es Elachi, director, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, health problems as cancer
and birth defects, the use of
ing their surroundings.
' cente r, and Peter Theisinger, Ma rs Exploration Rover project pesticides is heav ily regulatEve n after the first pictures ' manager, nght, brief reporters on Tuesday, 2003 in
and data are receive U on Washington . NASA discussed the preparations being made for ed by the federal governEart h. it wi ll take each rover tt1e January Mars landings by two mob1te robotic geologists. ment.
Jim Howard, a spokesman
at t ca~t nine da v~ to bc~.: um e (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)
for the California Table
read y tu wll ,irf ih lander
Commission , said
Grape
ami be-gin exp loratory work '"" taken pains to publicize it. Becau se they have done
grape
growers
have led the
in earnest, projec t sc ien ti st the ris k inherent in space everything humanly possible
produce
industry
over the
.loy Cri sp said.
exploration since the loss of that we know about to be
Steve Squyres. the mi s- the 1999 Mars mi ssions, as able to minimize the risk and past 20 years in reducing the
sion \ lead st: ie nti st. said any well as of the space shuttle enhance our possibility of use of pesticides.
" With
that
reduction
sci entifi c payoff could be Colum bia and it s crew earli - succeeding ," JPL director
an
in
crease
in all
comes
months away. Each mission er thi s year. It has also Charles Elachi told reporters.
is expected to last 90 days .
The rovers are part of an sorts of in sects that are
bee fed up oversight of how
"Thi s isn ' t a sprint. It's a its spacecraft are designed, international armada, includ- found in the fields," he· said .
The' U.S. Environmental
nwrathon:· Squyres said . built. tested and launched.
ing Japanese and European
Protection
Agency says there
"The best stutl ma y co me in
"Now people ask me . can orbiters and a British lander;
hasn'
t
been
one particular
Fehruarv. March ur April. It we guarantee success') Of all en route to Mars. Two
&lt;nay t;rke a while."
course not. We cannot do , other NASA satellites are law or change in regulation
The National Aeronaut ics thai. But on the other hand. I alreqdy in orbit around the that would make way for
more bugs reaching grocery
and Space Admini st ration wou ld say the team deserves planet.
stores
and
con sumers.
Rather, it is a gradual reduction or changes to individual
chemicals that could be having an effect, said EPA
spokesman David Deegan,
Subscribe today • 992-2155
who noted pe sticides are
earl~

Proud to be apart of your life.

Authorities say 12 shootings along Ohio highway loop are connected
COLUMBUS
(API Knowing someone had fired
a shot into Hami lton Central
Elementary. parents watched
nervou,ly in the school gym
as their kids dribbled basketballs around orange cones.
They said they didn' t want to
dumge their plans despite news
Tuesday that amlwri ties had
linked the school shooting with
II ot hers along a tive- rnile
stretch of interswte, including
one that killed a woman.
Greg Mellon said he hoped
tile recreation league practi ce
wou ld calm the children.
including his 8-year-old son
Corbin, who was so fri ghtened on the way to practi ce
that he cowered under the

dashboard.
"He ducked down in the
car. .. Mellon said. "Of course
he· s worried about it.
Four of the shootings three at vehicles and one at
the 'chool last month - were
from the same gun, Franklin
C&lt;lunty Sheriff's Chief Deputy
Steve Mar1in said Tuesday.
Although ballisti cs tests
could not link the rest of the
shootings along Interstate 270,
investigators "are comfortable"
saying all 12 are connected, he
said. He would not elaborate.
Authoriti es have rece ived
more th an 500 tips. but wou ld
not speculate about who
mi ght be responsihle and
would not release the type of

weapon.
"We think it 's not good for
us to put that information
out," Marlin said. "We don ' t
want people to stop calling
u.s because we put out that
kind of information."
Til e shootings began in
May along Interstate 270, the
free way
that
circles
Columbus. Many were not
reported until after Nov. 25,
Gail
when
62-year-old
Kni sley was killed by a bullet that pierced the side of a
car driven by a friend.
The latest shooting linked
to the spree happened Nov.
II at Hamilton Central
Elementary in Obetz. about
twn miles from the freeway.

The school sits along a rural
road lined with pastures, three
schools, a church and houses
decomted with Christmas ltghts.
Local businesses have· established a $10,000 reward for
infonnation leading to an arrest.
Customers at Hamilton
General Store a half-mile
from the school already had
been sharing alternate driving
routes, and Tuesday's news
increased their fears, owner
Beverly Evans said.
"People are trying to figure
out how to stay off 270, but
now people aren't sure if that
will keep us safe," Evans
said.
Superintendent
Bill
Wittman said he believes the

,.

~~,·.

shooting at the school was
not meant to harm anyone
because
it
happened
overnight, but nervous parents expressed concern.
Tiffany Ellis, 32, said her
son's second-grade classroom
faces the front of the school,
where the bullet struck.
"It makes me angry to be
honest with you, that I have to
drive down the road worrying
about getting shot," Ellis said
Tuesday. ·
She said she plans to call
Wednesday to see what precautions the district is taking, and
may avoid her own living room,
which also faces the two-lane
road.
'That's kind of scary to

';_ .. :&gt;·

. : ' , ' ....

think someone could shoot
through your window like
that," Ellis said.
Jimmy Eggers said he
brought hi s 8-year-old son to
the
basketball · practice
Tuesday night because "it's
hard to stop your daily routine." But he added: "It's definitely scary. You fear for
your kid's life ."
At a gas station along the
interstate about two miles from
the school, emotions ranged
from skittish to calm among
drivers stopping to fill up.
'The odds are you're not
going to get shot," said Tom
Dixon, 56.

.
Wednesday, December 3, 2003

Prep Schedule
Wednesday, December 3

Wreatllng
River Valley at Athens Tri·Match
Thursday, December 4
Girts Baaketball
Warren at Gallia Academy
Jackson at River Valley
South Gallia at Crass lanes Christian
Meigs at Belpre
Eastern at Southern
Friday, December 5
Boys Basketball
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy
R ver Valley at Me1gs
Eastern at South Gallia
OVCS Tournament

Glrto Baokotboll
OVCS Tourna ment

Saturday, Deeember e
Boys Basketball
&lt;lallia Academy at Meigs
Eastern vs. Greenfield McClain (at Zane
Trace Tournament)
OVCS Tournament
Girls Basketball
OVCS Tournament
Wr11t11ng

.

'

'

;,

' ·

"

:·1:

'

~·.·

CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Bengals' surge into first place
in the AFC North has made
them a bigger attraction at the
gate.
The
club
announced
Tuesday that its home game
Dec.
14 against
San
Francisco has sold out. Their
other remaining home game,
Dec. 28 against Cleveland,
already was a sellout.
The Bengals now have sold.
out five of their r;ight home
games, the most in any of
their four seasons at Paul
Brown Stadium.
Cincinnati is 7-5 and tied
with the Ravens for first
place headi ng into their
showdown
Sunday
in
Baltimore.
I

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Columbus Blue Jackets
recalled defensema'n Aaron
Johnson from Syracuse of the
American,Hockey League on
Tuesday.
The move was made to
• support · the Blue Jackets'
depleted blue line. Four
front-line defensemen captain Luke Richards.on
(broken
finger),
Duvie
Westcott (foot), Jaroslav
Spacek (groin) and Rostislav
Klesla (knee) -are sidelined
with injuries.
Johnson, 20, was selected
by Columbus in the third
round of the 200 I draft and is
playing his first season of
professional hockey. In 20
games
with
Syracuse,
Johnson has two goals, six
assists and 25 penalty minutes.

Marshall's
Goddard named
defensive player
of the week
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall defensive
end Jonathan Goddard has
been named the MidAmerican Conference East
Division defensive football
player of the week for his
performance against Ohio.
Goddard; a junior from
Ja&lt;;ksonville, Fla.. returned a
fumble 40 yards for a touch·
down in Marshall's 28-0 victory. He also recorded two
sacks for losses of nine yards
and had seven total tackle~.
Miami of Ohio quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger and
p1acekicker Jared Pl\fseghian
were named the East Division
offensive player of the week
and special teams player of
the week, respectively.
Bowling Green swept the
West
Division
awards.
Quarterback Josh Harris was
named offensive player of the
week, strong safety Kcon
Newson was awarded the
defensive honor and placekicker
Shaun
Sutsham
received the special teams
awards

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fouused:·shockwaves to·'rtag,ment a·st~.n·e.
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PLEASANt VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive • Point hea;~nt, WP' • 304-675-4340
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Please see Green, Bl

Jackets win in
Zherdev's debut
COLU MB US- The mawration of Rick Nash con tinues at
a fri ghtfu lly fast pace.
Th e second-year forward had a goal and an a'&gt;S i&gt;t to lead
the Columbus Blue Jackets pa.st Anaheim 2- 1 Tuesday night.
" It 's a big win. We've been hurting lately with all the
injuries.': Nash said. "It ';, ni ce to see 'ome kid, stepping up.
Those two points are ju't really big right now ...
Among the "kids" the 19-year-old Nash was referrin g to
was another 19-year-old. acclaimed Ru ;,sian forward Niko lai
Zhe(dev. He made his NHL Llebut aft er !lying out of his
homela nd on Sunday and arriving in Co lumbu ;, on Monday
night.
"He cau ght on after a white:· Blue Jackeb coach and general manager Dotrg MacLean said. " He had tremendous
speed at times and mauc some great plays."
David Vyborny also had a goal and an a" ist for the Blue
Jacket s, who had lost two straight.
The Mighty Duck;· 11 -game point streak was snapped. The
last time th ey failed to earn a point wa;, Nov. 2 at Chicago.
"We have to look at our preparation and our urgency.''
coach Mike Babcock sa id . "We didn't skate and didn't manage the puck and didn't come Qut and go after the other team.
"Anytime you take more penaltie;, than the other team even though I reafly thou ght we really go t jobbed on onethat usually mean s the y' re on yo u more than you're on
them ...
Vaclav Prospal scored with 3 1.9 ;,econds left - and goaltender Martin Gerber off for an ex tra skater - for the only

Bengals sell out
last two games

Columbus calls
up defenseman
from Syracuse

"William ha &gt; '&gt;ome per'&gt;Onal
issues ri ght now that he ha '&gt; to
uduress." Ua vis &gt;aid. "He's got to
rake care of these things. When
those thing' are taken care of and
reso lved. v.e'll decide exactly what
William 's future is. but right now
it's all premature ."
Before the 200 I draft. the Browns
were av. are that Green. whose parent'&gt; died of AIDS when he was a
teenager. was twice suspended for

. Bv RusTY MIUER
Associated Press

Meigs at Warren
Nelsonville· York at Southern

Litb.otripsy uses the technique;.of,.
&lt;

Blue ~ackets 2, Mighty Ducks 1

Ohio Valley Christian at Fi:tderal Hockin g

l -~' ':,"

~

Paul Tagliabue will decide when
the 23-ye&lt;Jr-old cu n return afler
cun&gt;ulting With meuica) experts in
the program .
If that doesn ' t happen until after
the sea"m. th&lt;&gt; Brown ' will have
'ome tuugh choices to make on
Green. Do th ey give him a second
chance. bring him to training camp
and ri sk Gree n havi ng a relapse '' Or
do they release him and move on ·'
Browns coac h Butch Da1·is
refu sed to address quesliOn '&gt; about
Green' s fut ure on Mondav.

Glrto Baokotboll

"' .·.
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CLEVELAND - The Cleve land
Browns took a big ri sk two years
ago when they drafted Willi am
Green. Is the troubled running ba'ck
worth another one?
That's the dilemma facing the
c lub after le arnin g Tuesday that
Green's NFL -i mposed suspen sio n
for violating the leagu e's s ubstance-abuse policy' has bee n

extended. .
The league's decision to lengthen
Green's ban indefinitely makes it
unlikely he will play aga in this season.
The second-year back was suspended four games on Nov . 8 for a
.v iolation involving alcohol. He was
alre&lt;tdy en rol led in the seco nd stage
of the leag ue's trea tment rro gram .
Green , who was e li gible to retu rn
to the team on Monda y, will remain
suspended for "treatment purposes." The leag ue sai d commi " ioner

South Gallia at Eastern

option lor _patients·: suffering from kidney"s.tones.
j

Bv ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press

Monday, December B

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Meigs at Meigs Invitational

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Green not allowed back, NFL extends suspension
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River Valley at Union Local lnwitational

Pleasant Vallei,Hospit~t
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The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

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Columbus Blue Jackets' Nikolai Zherclev (13) and Anaheim Mighty Ducks ' N1clas Havelid of
Sweden battle for the puck during the first period in Columbus . Zherdev, the number one pick
for Columbus played his first game for the Blue Jackets Tuesday. (AP)

Please see Jackets, B:S

Carmello sweeps LeBron
BY JOHN MARSHAU

Associated Press
DENVER - LeBron vs .
Carmela the sequel had the
same ending as the original.
Carmela Anthony scored
20 of his 26 points in the
second half Tuesday night ,
leading the Denver Nuggets
to a 115- 103 victory over
LeBron James and the
Cleveland Cavaliers in a
rematch of the NBA's top
two rookies. ··
Anthony was just 1-for-5
in the first half, but was 7of II in the second to help
Denver to its sixth straight
home win. The Nuggets
(11-6) have won eight of I0
overall and are off to their
best start since 1989-90 .
James got off to a quick
start, but struggled late in
Cleveland's seventh straight
loss. The Cavaliers have
lost 32 straight road games
- 0-11 thi s season - tying
for the third-longest streak
in league history.
James finished with 19
points, six rebounds and
five assists, but. forced sev·

115
..

(JtJJ)/1 ltY.:)

103
era! shots late and fini shed
6-for-19.
Denver won the first
meeting 93-89 on Nov. 5,
but the second game didn't
· have the fanfare or the
celebrities of the original.
Still, there was plenty of
excitement.
Scalpers set up .. shop in
the morning and a crowd of
19,6 10 were at the game,
.g iving the Nuggets consec-

utive sellout s for the first
time since March 1996.
About a dozen Denver
Broncos players were in
attendance.
including
Shannon
Sharpe
and
Clinton Portis , who wore
Nuggets' jerseys at center
co urt. Colorado Avalanche
star Peter Forsberg at so was
at the game .
Anthony didn't give them
much to get exci ted about
early, but got it go in g in the
third qu arter.
He hit a 3-poi nter midway
through. followed with a
driving layup and hit five of
six free throws to finish
with 10 points in the quarter.
Anthony kept it going in
the fourth quarter. faking a
pass to set up a lay up during
a I 0-0 run that put the
Nuggets up 92-81 midway
through. He also had a
rebound slam after Jame s
hit a 3-pointer on the other
end, and had a steal and
layup to put the Nuggets up
102-93 with five minutes

Please see Carmello, B:s

Denver Nuggets rookie forward Carmela Anthony, right, works
"the ba ll inside for a shot against Cleveland Cavaliers rookie
guard LeBron James,in the fourth quarter of the Nuggets ' 115·
103 victory in Denver on Tuesday. (AP )

Cavs' Diop might need surgery Deer kill down on first
day of gun season

&lt;...., .
CLEVIlLAND (AP)- Cavaliers center basketball of hi s career,'' Paxson said.
DeSagana Diop, whose improvement has "Moving forward , we : ll work with
been a pleasant surprise thi s season, has DeSagana and our medical staff to detertorn cartilage in his right knee and might mine the best course of repair and act
need surgery.
quickly so we can get him ba.:k in the
Diop sustained the injury in Saturday lineup as soon as possible ."
night's double-overtime loss to Memphis.
After barely playing in his first two seaHe had four points and eight rebounds in . sons as a pro, the 7-foot Diop has emerged
24 minutes before getting hurt.
· as a defensive force for the Cavs. He lost
He did not accompany the club on its more than 40 pounds in the past year and
trip to Denver and Los Angeles, where ,the the cl ub recently picked up their 2004-05
Cavaliers will face the Clippers on contract option on the former fir st-round
Wednesday.
pick .
Last season. the 21-year-old played in
An MRI te st taken Monday revealed tt\e
tear, and Cavs general manager Jim 80 games, averaging 1.5 points. 2.7
Paxson said Dr. Richard Parker confirmed rebpunds and nearl;y one block a ga me. As·
the results.
a rookie, he appeared in just 18 games and
"Obviously, this is a big setback for sat out part of the season with a sprained
DeSagana, who has been playing the best knee .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ- Ohio hunters killed 43.052
deer on the first day of gun season Monday. That figure is
five percent lower than ),ast year's opening-day total of
45.296. the Ohio Divi s io~ of Wildlife reported .Tuesday. ·
"Over recent years, we have seen a change m the pattern
of' deer hunting with an increasing number of deer being
killed during the four-month archery season, as OJ?posed to
the week-long gun season,'' said Steven Gray, ch•ef of the
division. "We are also seeing the distribution of deer taken
SJ?reading beyond southeast Ohio to more of a statewide
ktll."
Last year. 204,65 2 deer were killed during the gun season.
Coshocton County's deer kill of 1,90 I was tops in the state
Monday. The county's opening-day total last year was I ,824.
The Wildlife Divtsion said it received five reports of opening-day accidents, one in Knox County was a fatality that is
under mvestigation.
. The gun season ends Sunday.

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

lPrep Scoreboard
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Girls Basketball
Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Tuesday 's Results

,

• Adena 39, Pa 1nt Vall 36
.. Akron Ellet 44. Umontown Lake 40
: Akron Elms 38, Shaker Hts Andrews 36

. Akron Groon 50 Crestwood 28
Ak.ron St V·St M 62. Rocky

River

Magmt1cat 50
Arl1ngton 31 , Ada 29

Bascom Hopewell·loudon 54, Liberty

Bent, n 36
•

Bat..~v 1a

7 1 Jacobs 30

• Bellevue 46 Kenton 28

: Bexley 71, Col School for G1rls 37
• Bloom-C arroll 41, Ut1ca 35

• BotkinS 53. RUSSia 50
Bryan 52, Napoleon 40
: Caledonia R1ver Vall 50 Bucyrus 33

Canal Fulton Northwest 76. Akron
Coventry 36

· Canal WH'"IChester 73. Col Bnggs 23
: Cedarv ille 49, Ridgeville Chr 39
. Central Cross1ng 6 1 Olentangy Liberty
~2

· Chagrm Falls 57. M1ddlel1eld Cardlnal42
·
.
•
·
·
.
•
·

Green

.

C hardon 39. Wld;hffe 29
Chillicothe 54 , Logan 26
~hllllcothe Huntington 53 , Piketon 35
Ch1lhcothe Unioto 55 Westfall 43
C1n . Deer Park 40 Cln Sl Bemard 30
C1n Madeira 54. C1n Country Day 10
C1n Mar1emont 40. Clermont NE 34
t:1n . Mt Healthy 59. Cln. N. College Hill

"34
• Cin Mt Notre Da me 94 Ham1 lton 39
C1n Princeton 67. Mason 59
· Cin Reading 38, Cin No.wood 21
C1n Roger Bacon 64 Cm Ursu 11nc 39
: Cm . Seven H1lls 51 , Cm lnd1an Hi~ 42
Clj Trailblazers 47 Sprmg Emanuel
Chr 28
· C1n Wmton Woods 64, Cln . Lakota East

:S4

Cin. Wyom1ng 56. Cin. Finneytown 26
• Clark Mo nr essor~ 66. Gin Lockland 22
: Cle Cent Cath 83 Fa1rport 37
· Cle Glenv1lle 47, Bedtord 39
Cle Independence 47. Kirtland 40
Col. Beechcroft72 , Walnut Ridge 40
· Col Mifflin 58 Galloway Westland 55

Colonel C•awlord 51. R1verdale 44
Columbus Grove 60 Spencerville 58
Con!lnental 70. Llncoln'.ilew 20
Gory-Rawson 41 , Van Buren 35
Dalton 65, Malvern 33
Delphos Jefre•son 84. L1ma Temple Chr.
14
· DeSales 47, Teays Vall 36
E Canton 64 , United Local 43
E Kno11 50. Moun! Gilead 32
Eastwood 47, Bowling Green 33
Eltda 63. L1ma Sr. 32
Evergreen 57, Otsego 48
Fayette 60. Liberty Center 50
Fayette'J1IIe 49 Bethel-Tate 46
Fort Loramte 55 , St Hemy 33
Fmnkhn Hts 44. Liberty Chr. 14
Gahann a 62. Col. Independence 53
Ga11on 59. B1g Walnut 53
Grbsonburg 57. Old Fort 33
Glouster Tnmble 82, Nelsonvi lle-York 49
Grand Vall 47. Pymatun1ng Vall 36
Groveport 75, Hamilton Twp. 57
Ham1tton Bad1n 85. Gin Chnstian 15
H1lhard Dav1dson 29, Westerv•lle N. 26
Hopewell Loudon 54. L1berty Benton 36
Jackson Center 54. Fai rlawn 26
Jamestown Greeneview 52, Spring
Northw estern 33
Johnstown 52, Granville 45
Johnstown Northndge 51 . Eaton 47
Jonathan Alder 64. Col. Academy 27
K1ngs Mills 33, Cm. Turptn 28
Lex1ngton 40, Willard 37
L1berty Un1on 47. Amanda-Cieard:reek 37
Lima Shawnee 55 , Delphos St Johns 45
Logan Elm 43, Wash1ngton C.H 32
London 42, C1rclev1lle 35
Loveland 40 Mritord 34
Mancheste r 71 , W Un10 n 22
Marion Cath 29, Upper Scioto Vall. 28
Marion River Vall. 50, BuC)•tus 33
Marysv111e 48. Bellefontaine 43
Ma ssil lon Jackson 65. Cle. Kennedy 59
McComb 40, Lima Perry 38
Mentor l ake Ca th . 44 Cle Hts
Beaumont 42
Millersburg W Holmes 45. Cambndge 39
Montpelier 44, Fa 1rvrew 43
Mount Vernon 48. Upper Arli ngton 35
Mount Vernon Aca d 36. Lrck1ng Coun ty
Chr 34
N , Batrrmore 43 ."Tot Ottawa H1lls 40

New Albany 54 , Worthmgton Krlbourne
35
Newbury 34 . Southrngton 25
Northwood 84, Millbury Lake 77 OT
Norwalk St. Paul 54. Sandusky St. Marys
3i
Oak Haroor 56. Genoa 52
Pa,nes"Jille Har ...ey 43, Ledgemont 41
Parkway 59. Wayne Trace 47
Parma 76. Qe. Lin coln-West 16
Parma Padua 57 Cte. VA-SJ 42
Paulding 56. Antwerp 44
Perry 74 , Edgewood 49
Perrysburg 4 7, Defiance 39
Port Clinton 62 , Norwalk 61, OT
A1dgemont 42. Hardtn Northern 34
Rockford Parkway 59 , Havilan Wayne
Trace 47
Rocky R1ver Luth West 54. Cte. St.
Joseph 43
Seton 61. Gin Sycamore 51
Shaker Ht s Laurel 52 , Lakewood St
Augushne 36
Sparta Highland 60, Fredericktown 48
St
Pans
Graham
55 , Sprrng
Northeastern 49
St Ursula 60, Fremont Ross 39
Strongsvrlle 48. Westlake 39
Sycamore Mohawk 34, Bucyrus Wynford

28
Troy Chr. 36. Arcanum 25
Tu scarawas Vall . 27, Coshocton 25
Twin Vall S. 58, Carli sle 32
Un1oto 55, Westfall 43
Vermilron 47, Milan Edison 42
W. Jefferson 47, Madison Pla1ns 44, PT
Watktns Memorrat 44, Newark 34
Whitehall 50. F1sher Cath. 44
Woodndge 48, Cuyahoga Val l. Chr 46
Zane Trace. 50. Chillicothe Southeastern
39

Boys Basketball
Ohio tligh School Girls Basketball
· Tuesday 's Results
Cte He r~ tag e 59, Grand R1ver 53
Elyria F1rst Bapt . 26, Medina Chr. 25
Vrlla Madonna 84, Cin School tor the
Perlorm1ng Arls 39
Za nesville Chr. 42, Wood
W.Va
38
,

9J'nty.

.College Basketball

Bearcats stomp Valpo
VALPARAISO. Ind . (AP )
- Even· with Robert Whaley
ou t and Tony Bobbitt hobbled. I9th-rank ed Ci ncinnati
had littl e trouble with
Valparai so.
Jason Maxrel l had 20
points on 12-of-20 shooting
from th e free -throw line aml
added II rebounds. seven on
the offensive encl. to help the
Bearcats beat Valparaiso 6g49 on Tuesday night.
The stat that pleased
Maxiell the most was th e
fact ·the Bear t ats, after being
outrebounded by Copp in
Slate 111 their last game. had
a 42-26 rebounuing advanlage.
The Bearcats (4-0) alread v
have to dn some win ~l
sprint s on their da y on
Wednesday because of the
Co pp1n State ga me and didn ·t want to add to it agdinst
Valparai so.
"It moti va tes us a lot
because the conseq uences or
not reboundin g are motivation enough. If we don' t
rebound , there's a lot or run niilg going on:· he said.
Ma xicll had seven offensive rebounds and Kareem
Johnson added 10 rebounds
for the Bearcats.
Valparai so coach Homer
Drew sai d th e Crusaders
were better in the second
half. After Cincinnati had I J
o ffen sive reboun ds in the
first half. it was l1eld to four
in the· secnnd half.
"We competeu. We got
better in the second half.'. he
said. ··1 thnu ~ ht we diU a
much better j&lt; ~b !lf screenin g
out and gettin g to the ball on
the rebounds."
Both t~;1m s played sloppi ly. Cincinnati turned th e ball
over
19 times while
Valparaiso had 20 turn overs.
Cincinnati coach Bob
Huggins sa id he wasn't con·
cerned about the turnovers.
"When the game is hard it
creates more turnovers and
that's just kind of what hap·
pens. We'd kind of liked to
do better. but I think they
(Valparaiso) played well,"
he said.
The .Beurcats also h&lt;td un
advuntagc in free-throw
shooting. going 20-for-31
overall in their lone roud

1

VVednesda~Dec.3, 2003

I was a little bit tired."
have that one and we' ll talk
Zherdev played 13 sh ifts about it tomorrow in practi ce."
and had 10:59 of ice time.
from Page 81
Nas h then score.d 3: 18 into
Anaheim had tied an NHL
record by going to overtime th e th1rd. taking a perfect
pass
fro m
goal aga inst Co lumbus' in its last five road games. cross-crease
Deni
s
and
a
pair
of
to
easi
ly
beat
Vyborny
Marc Denis.
power-play
goa
ls
made
Gerber.
Nash, who had 17 goals as
It was Gerber who had
a rookie last season in 74 sure the Mighty Ducks didn' t
su
rvive
regulation.
the Blue Jackets the
given
ga mes, scored hi s 16th this
man
advantage.
He was
Pulled after giving up four
seaso n in 24 games. The No.
I pick in the 2002 draft ran goals in hi s last stan. Denis give n a minor penalty for
his point streak to six games was not supposed to start stuffing hi s blocker into the
agai nst Anaheim . He got the throat of Co lumbus' Tyler
(6 goa ls. 2 ass ists).
MacLean simply called last-minute call when Fred Wright.
Denis, who had 30 saves.
Brathwaite came down with
Nash "our bi g 1i1a11."
made severa l big stops. None
Zherdev, the fourth overall the tlu .
"It
feels
great
to
bounce
was
better than when he
pick in thi s year 's draft,
joined the team for it s morn- back," Deni s said . "As of dived to hi s ri ght and
ing skate. He was wildly l&lt;)le, to my liking, there's spraw led to block Prospal's
cheered when he came on 40 been too much bouncing- jam shot on a backdoor pass
seconds into the ga me. Hi s back to do. I'd like to be from Petr Sykora at 15:45 of
the second period .
first shot was blocked by a more consistent.
The
Mighty
Ducks
had
··we just .&gt;hut down a pretdefenseman just 59 seconds
numerous scoring chances in ty good offens ive tea m
into hi s NHL career.
the
first two periods, but the there,'' De ni s sa id. shaking
Late in the game. Zhen.lev
was on a two-on-one rush Blue Jackets held a 1-0 lead . hiS head.
Nash slipped a defender
Notes: Anaheim C Sergei
and waited patiently before
and
fed
Derrick
Wal
ser
at
th
e
Fedorov
returns to Detroit to
shooting as he closed in on
point for a one-timer. The play against the Red Wings
Gerber, who made the save.
puck
was defle cted by on Wednesday. Fedorov won
"I had a great chance to
Gerber.
but bounced to three Stanley Cups and an
score a goal but I think I
made the mistak'e myself," Vyborny for an easy putback. MVP award durin g hi s 13
Vyborny 's lOth goal came seasons with the Red Wings.
Zherdev sai d through an
Columbus, RW Trevor
interpreter in the crowded at 6:20 of the second period.
"
He
was
in
my
territory
Letowski
had his point streak
dressing room. "I felt comand
I
to
ld
him
to
stay
out
of
end
at
five
games . ... The
fortable today. In this rink I
thought there would be more there because ·that's where I Mighty Ducks are 0-7' 2-2
problems for me becau se of get my goa ls," Nash said when scoring fewer than two
the small ice. but it was OK. with a laugh . "I' II let him goals.

l!tse Can!
G I IIIJ Collfll)'. OH

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Aol hn s located at the Mason
be licensed both tn Oh10 and
Jar and W1lla's B1ble on Ma1n
16 Day COL Tra ining
Street.
TMC/SwiJt &amp; 30 Major We st V1rgmra We offe r a
Camers Need Entry Level compel1t1ve sa lary, benet11s
Say good bye to h1gh phone
Or1vers Grad 's Rec Top package and 401 K. E O .E.
b1lls 1 New local phone servPay/B'frt s/Job Placement &amp; Please send resume to 430
ICe wrth FRE E unlimited
Be otf wk"ends 1·866-602· Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
nat1on w1de long Drstanoe
OH 45631
Attn
Drana
7035
1-800-635-2908
or
Harle ss. Clinical Manager.
www.Freedom Movie com/rip
A REALISTIC
aysyou Loca l Agents wantOPPORTUNITY
Medi Home Health A9ency,
ed.
Lear n To Earn
Inc. seekrng a PRN full-tme
To the man who was stand S10k -+- per month Not MLM stat! Phys•cat Therap1st lor
ing in front of Alcove Book Tra1ning Provided .
Oh10 and West V1rgrn1a client
Store (Oh 10 Rtver Plaza ) on Call lor Info
base. We otter a competrt•ve
Monday. Dec 1 who saw 1· 800-881 · 1540 Ext. 3258
salary, benefits package and
the lady M my car and got
40iK . E O.E. 55.000 SiGN·
the license plate It for me An El!; cell ent way to earn
ON-BONUS. Please send
contact
me money Lets talk the
Please
resume lo 352 Second
NEW AVON
(304)882·3729
Aver~ ue.
Gallipohs,
OH
Call Marilyn 304 -882 2645
4563 1 Attn . Diana H arless.
Joyce 304·675-6919
A N. Clinical Manager
GtV£..\WAl'
April 304-882-3630

Puppies

lfl&gt;rAND

FouNn

Found· Older male beagle
Near St Rt
141 and
Ne•ghborhood
Ad
Call
(740)446-3217
If
not
claimed by weekend will
take to shelter.
Lost. Black/White male
Walker Coon Hound with tan
ears. Lost on Clay Chapel
Road! Friendly Ridge Area .
(740)256·6233
Lost· Himalayan , light gray
lns1de cat, answe rs to
Charlie. Only has one eye
Vrcrn ity ot JoAn n's Kut 8.
Kurt on Westwood Dr
across from Jackson Estate
Apt 1740)446·9496
REWARD .... Brown , lad1es
purse ,
Chester- Tuppers
Plains area. Friday-Saturday
November 28th-29th
No
quesllons askedl (740}6676500 home. (740)992-5 102
work .

r

r
Mo"Jing sale, Saturday 9-3,
Dec. 6, rain or shine, notebook
computer,
dining
tAbles &amp; chair, beds, reclln~;u, d ~esser, chest of drawers, lots of books, keyboard,
much misc. ·R.Io Grandelocally made Bldg beside
Lear
At. 588

rrs mas .
You can earn up to
$8/hOur by ca ll1ng on
be halt ot maJOr Non-Profit
end Polrtrcal
organizatrons We also
. Otter pard trarning
and holidays. Call today.
1-87]11463-6247 ext. 2454.

Racin e area NO PETS
(740)992· 5858

tll~wvt::~t&gt;

M~

WAAA\ &lt;;for

Mob1le Home for rent. 3b'
w/washer &amp; drye1, stove &amp;
1ef (304)576-999t
N1ce 2 Bedroom Mobile
Home Sandh1ll Ad DepoSit
&amp; Refere nces
1304)675-6 156
Tra11er lor renJ . 1dea1 tor one
or two people No pets reierences. (740)441-0 18 1.

www.comics.com

AJ'AII'IMEN'IS
iO

10

Ho~m;
H)R SALE

BustNEili

0PPOK1l!Nrrv
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI

eo vending machines with
excellent locations
Must Sell!! 800·234-6982.

"'

"'

All real e1tate adverti•mg
In this newapaper is
subject Ia the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which make!ilt illegal to
ad\lertiae " any
preference, limitation or
discrimination bned on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin, or any rnlenfiOn 1o
mak-e any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
This newspaper will not
knowingly acc:ept
advertisements for real
estate which is rn
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basu.

Monu.E Ho.aFS

,
Building &amp; Busmess in
GallipOliS. Oh10, has 4
rentals Can shOw good
profits All at one wow pnce.
owner can help l tnance .
740 367-7886.

Lors&amp;
A CREAGE

~
10

Hou.&gt;;Es
IUR

RtNr

1997 Oakwood 14)(70, pay- 2 BR near Holzer. CIA . ecoelf $17,500 or take over pay - nomical gas heat. all appliments. (740)441-8571 .
ances turmshed , 1ncludmg
WID, no pets. lease and
2000 14)(70 3 bedroom , 2 deposrt reqUired . $485. 740bath, drshwasher, stove, rei . 44 6-2957.
large back deck and front
steps Included $20.000. · 3 bedroom home 1n Chester,
(740)379-2928 .
many improvements. Rent
$395.00 deposi t $395 .00.
(614)501-8339 after 5pm
2003 Oakwoo d 16x80, 3
bedtoom.
2 bath , all the 3 bedroom, 436 Mam St ,
extras, asking $29,000 must Rutland . $350 a month.
deposit ,
HUD
be
moved ,
evenings' $300
approved , (740)593·7 1 13
(740)949·2446

snopl

~
.I

WANIID

ToDo
Pose as a custom&amp;f at local
re tailers as
a, Myttery
Sh oppe r Training Pro11klea , Georges Portable Sawmill,
make your own hours. Mus! don't haul your logs to the
have email . t -888·287-o363.
m11l just call 304·675· 1957.

11

l1

II

Jj

New 14 wide only S799
down and Only St69.76 per
month. ce)l Nikki, (740)385·
767 i
.

·-· · 4 ~------------------------....;.

.

HOI ISI-:Hfll .ll

)...1gh t orne bedroom su1 t
Q_reen s1ze postet oed wrth
pla tlorm drawers. dresser.
m1rror chest n1gh1 stand
and Jewelry armo1re $400
Call (304)675 -6787 alter 6
pm
-M-o-llo_h_a_n_C_a_cp_e_I_2_0_2_C_I_ar-k

3466 or 591-0649

ThOmpso ns App1 1ance &amp;
2 BR-Roomy duplex LA .
Reparr-675-7388 For sale.
kitchen. Lg . bath 1 c ar
re-cond1tioned
automatic
attac hed
garage
Nea r
washers &amp; dryers rej lgeraRodney-$400 per " Mon th.
tors . gas and elec1flc
1eferences -+- depos1t No
ranges an cond1 t1oners. and
pets. (140)446·280 1
wnnger washers Wil l do
reoarrs
Qn ma1or brands 1n
2 Furn1shed small apart·
ments lor rent. L!Vrng room, shop or at your home.
kitchen bedroom , &amp; bath
Useo tur n1t ure store 130
$275 each all ut11 r11es paid
Bulav1lle Prke We sell mate)(cept electrrc (304)675 tresses. dresser couches .
1365 .
0un l\ beds. beoroom SUites.
Grave
monu 3 bedroom apartm ent on 3rd recli ners
(740 )446 -4782 .
St, Racme. rem plus oepos1t ments
Gallipolis Hours 1 ~~- 4pm
Stop Oy '
3 bedroom $450 month
$350 depoSit. f1 rm No pets
1 bedroom upstairs, $300
month $250 depos1t. No
or
sell
Rl'.l&amp;mi e
pe ts
(740 )7 10-1467 o r Buy
Ant1ques. 11 24 East Ma•n
(740) 286·01 69 .
on SA 124 E ~· Pomeroy 740·
4 rooms end a bath All utili- 992·2526
Russ Moore .
Ires paid . $400/month. 46 owner
Olive St (740)446·3945.

&amp; Utlll!leS. (740)247-4292

r

:~~~~I~U~T a~'ri'GR:T
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WesiWood
Drtve from S297 to S383..
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740·446-2568
Equa l
Housing Opportunity.

.. .,

Now Tak1ng Appl iCatiOns- Kenmore
washer dryer
35
West
2
Bedroom S160 e)(erc,se b1 ~e $30
Townhouse
Apartments .. (740)992·5544.
Includes Water
Sewage,
Trash , S3501M o 740-446 - Kiln 30gal f1sn tank. frre
0008.
screen tan lOOyr ola Kraut
cuner (3041773-5952 leave
Tara
Townhouse message
Apallments very Spac1ous. - - - - - - - - 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. t L1ke neN so:1d wood corner
1'2 Bath , Newt ~, Carpeted. hutch 4 o1ece oak desk set
Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool . raesk. . t·~pmg taote 2 drawer
Pat10 Start $385 M o No lrle cab,nen While gas cook
Pets , Lease Plus Secur1 ty stove - ~ o rks great
New
DepOSit Aeq u1red
Days compaz
tJ750
pr1nter
740- 44 6-3481 . Evenmgs ElectriC typew11ter Women s
740-367-0502
and g1rls sk1 su,ts-e• cellent
cond1 t1on
Tw1n R1vers Towe r rs accept·
Lor~gat&gt;erge, Baskets
mg applications for wartrng
Call alter 6 00 pm
!is! lor Hud-suos 1zed t . br.
740-446-4518
apartrrent call 675 6679
EHO
NEW AND USED STEEL
bedroom
Steel Beams P1pe Retlat
Upstairs
one
For
Concrete
Angle
apartment at 65 1 2m:! Ave
Chal'lnel Flat Bar. Steel
Gallipolis Rent $350 per
Gralmg
For
Dra1n~
month &amp; $350 depos1t
Onveways &amp; Walkway&amp; L&amp;L
reqUired 6 mos tease
Scrap M e ta!~ Open Monday.
water/trash
pa1d
Call
Tuesday
Wednesday
&amp;
Debb1e or Judy at (740 )446Fnday Mm-4 30pm Closed
7323 (Lrbrary ).
·
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday /7 40J446 ~ 7300
iO

1br Apar tme nt on V1ana
Street S325 month S100
Secunty depoSit Ava ilable
1st week ol Dec. (304)6753654
- - - - -- - - 2 bed room apartmen t 1n
Middlepor t. $275 a month .
$275 depos11. call (7 40r596·

I

M~"-H .I .A,~
1\'!F.RCHA.'Ill\1:

"""

I"'"'

Ml'lCD.L"-''E!ll.S
MERCIIANDl&lt;;E

Office Furnrture
New syratch &amp; Dent
Save 70°o 1-800·527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bndge Srreel.
Guyandoffe Hunt1ngton M 1F
Trarler dual axle lilt t&gt;eCl
new treated floor 13 000 tos
mal( 5699 17401245· 5648
Tr1-axe Kenwort-. Log Truck
wrth 120 PrentiCE Log
Loaaor ask1ng S t 6 000
03 Cat Dozer 6 ..... a-y blade
515 000
,John Deere 440 0 Skldder
11e ry
good
. con1 1110n
$22 000
2002 John Deere 79Q 4•4
compact tractor . 6 tt l 1n1sh
mower 5 ft t1Uer, new cond1t1on $11 .500
89
GMC Utllll)' truc"
(740 )446-6 783 or (740 \6452480

Ht11Jll"&lt;;

St•I'I,Jt:'
Block. bnck. sewer p1pes
wrndows lintels elc Claude
W1 n te rs . R10 G1ande . OH
Cal! 740-245-5t21

r

l'f~ l" '

mnSAu:

2 AKC beagle pupp 1es. 6
week s old 1no1an H 11ts &amp; Ace
rn me hale bred (74017091se 1
AKC Lab puiJS. 8 weeks old.
shots wormed, dew claws
removed F1etd Champ1on
Olood hne. Black $300. yel ·
low 5350 Call (7 40)44 10130.
AKC Reg rstered Srbenan
Husl(y pups 7wks old 1st
snots &amp; wor med 2 males. 4
lemates Beautrful Olue eyes
Parents on prem1Ses $:250
(304)773·5730

Dalmat1an
puop18S .
mother/father fu ll blooded , 8
46" 8 1g Screen TV. 51000 females , 2 males. S 125 .
30 gel AQuarium With stand. (740)992-9832 ready X-mas
$150
(740 )36 7-0 807 or week .
(740)367 -0812.
Golden Retne11er pupp1es
99 EZ· Go Golf Cart, New Read y Ch r1 stmas ~eek
Batte ry, Factory Charger. Mother and Father on prem·
Canopy,
Great
Shape, ises AKC registered . $125
Si799 . (740)245·5648
each . (740)992·7557

Furnished one bedroom Apt
clean, no pels. Must th! WillIn g 10 give relerences
PhOne (304)67 5- 1386
Cemetery plot and vaun tor
sale. $1 ,200 nag. Ohio
Graciou! l~rng 1 and 2 bed· Valley Memory Gardens.
room apartments at VIllage 614·527·4616 .
Manor
and
Alversrde
Apa rtments In Middleport. Deer Cut $35 .·$40. Will be
From $276·$348. Call NO· open till end of season.
992·5064 Equal HoueinQ Located 1n Gallipolrs Ferry
area. Johnson Lane. Look
OpportunitieS.
for signs.
Modern one bedroom apt
For
Sa le
Celestron
740·4~6·0390 .
Telescope Visual black 1·
New 1 bedrOom apt. F'hone 114" New Condition $400.
(304)675·5098
14x80 Mobile home , 8l(C81· 740--446-3736.
lent conditron. 3 BR 2 lull
JET
baths, all electric. nice yard .
North 3rd Ave Middleport :2
AERATION MOTORS
Porter area . $400 month,
bedroom furnished apt Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
$400 deposit Referenc es
Deposit
&amp;
reference Stock. C811 Ron Evans, 1required. (740)446-4514 or
requ1red. No Pels (740)992· 600-537·9528.
(7 40)44~·3248 after 5 p m .
Oi65

· tURRL·vr

Mobile home. Damaged by
tire . make an offer. Call
(740)696- i 227

AP-\RT\IE:\TS
mR Rt~w

Chapel Road. Porter. Oh10
(740) 446- 7444 1·877·8302 38 Ac , bea utifully wood- 2
bedroom
apt
rn
9 162 Free Est1mates Easy
ed. accessib le driveway Centenary, app11ancos furf1nanc1ng, 90 days same as
Green
Twp .
$49.000 mshed . utlll!le S paid e•cept
cash V 1sa/ Master Card
etewic clean.. $350 month
Or1ve- a- li ttle save alot
Call (740)256-11 35

11..0

2770.

"""

1 an d 2 bedroom apartG&lt;.MHW&lt;
ments, l urnrshed and uniUINew 2003 Doublew1de. 3 SA mshed. secur1ty deposrt
Good Used Appt1ances.
&amp; 2 Bath . Only $ 1695 down required no pets , 740-992· Recond1troned
a1d
and &amp;295/mo. 1-800-691 - 2218.
Guaranteed
Washers
5n7
- - - - - -- - Dryers.
Ranges .
and
t BR downtow n upstairS
Refr1gerators. Some start at
references. deDOSit. no pets
BustNI:-;s
$95 Skaggs App lia nces 76
446-0 139
AND BLILDINGS
V1ne St r740)446·7398

t42 4th, Sm. Furn . 1 8R
W1D, ~C . $2501mo. Depos1t
Mouse tor Sale 8612 State and Refere nces required
Route 7 South . (740)44 1· (740)446·3667
0953
i;i:iF-:~--":':'---, 2 Bedroom log Home in the
~IODILE HOI\~
country. $400/mo. Reference
FOR SALE
and Deposit. No Pets.
.__ _ _ _ _ __ . Lease . (740)446·280i .

176 ........................................

tl JR Rtl\T

FOR SALE

4 bedroom , 2 baths, 2 car
garage, No pets. $650 plus
Cote's Mob1le Homes
US 50 East. Athens. 0 hio. deposit. (740)44i · ii84.
45701, 740·592- 1972
4 br, 1 112 baths. Located on
SA. 141 near Centenary.
FI~JAL CLEARANCE
$700 per month . Deposit &amp;
Just a few 2003 model reference required
Call
homes remain , come early, Wiseman Real E!tAte at
make your p)ck·then·ta lk to 740·446-3644.
Ernie or Lynn. get the best
possible price , yOu 'll be House ,lor rent tn West
pleasantly surprised. faun- Columb ia on At 62 1 mile
www.galtlpottsc.•reeroollege.com acres, land contract av&amp;ll· . "datlona, heat pumpa , central lrom Mason Walm~trt OM/,
able, 11. needed $240,000. · airs anr:t· septic systems our whirl pool tub. 2br. LQ.
A!91t90-05•1274B .
(740)256·9247 or (740)645· specialty, Cole·s Mobil e Kitch / LR / De ck
Sec
~~
087.0.
Homes. 15266 US 50 E, S400.mo i S400.
1 1
1 - - - - - - - - - Athens, Oh1o 45701 . PH : Deposit, Full Basement or.
will
consi der
se lling
Ranch, 3 Bedroonl. 2 Car 740·592· 1972
25 Strloua '-apia Wanted, garage, New Haven. W Va .
(304)773·9167
Who want to LOSE weight
Photos, information online Good used 14x70 2br/2bth:
. MOBD.J': HOM&amp;&lt;;
We Pay You C ash for the Www.orvb.com,
code Will help with delivery. can
pounds you LOSEI
11 1503 or call 304· 882- Harolb 740·385·9948

Patio Sa le Christmas items, lion requires 1 to 3 years
expe r l.nc•• nd C.n l••d to
apprenticeship positions .
Experienced 1nstallars must
have minimum 5 years In
fi re protection. We offer.
excellent pay and benellts.
Please c all Aimee at 1·677287-5862 for more tnforma-·
tion .
Drug
Free
Workplace/EOE.
Safe, Natural, No Drugs.
800·20Hl832
Ab solute Top Dollar: U.S
Mike Money While You
Silver.
Gold
Coins ,

2 Bedroom Mob1le Home.
Located behind Fox s P1zza
on Sa ndhill
Road PI
Pfea san l
S350 rmon lh
(Includes wate r and sewer)
Call (304)675-3423
Clean 3BR Mob1l e Horne 1n
the country. 256· 6574

NORRIS NORTHUP
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
DODGE
lNG CO. recommends tha
Full Time Sales Person
ou do business With Peo
LOCATION : 252 UPPER
le yoU know, and NOT t
RIVE R AD
end money through th
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
mail until you have 1nvestr
AVON' All Areas! To Buy or
ated the offefln
UNLIMITED INCOME
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304POTENTIAL
675-1429.
NO EXPERIENCE
I'ROFF1~10NAL
REQUIRED
Controller
In
based
SEHVK.'ES
Mu st poses good people
GallipoliS Reqwed to tra"Jel
skills , ambitrous attrh.Jde,
to branch locatiOns 1n
TURNED DOWN ON
and the desire to succeed.
Co lumbu s,
C levelan d,
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Toledo,
and
Detro1t
No Fee Unless We W1n1
Mmrmum
requrrements Now Hlnng Dance rs. InqUire
1-888·582-3345
Bachelors
degree
1n at AT 35 Adu lt Video &amp;
IH \I I Sl \II
Day &amp; night
accounting, with 3 years book store .
experrence. Send resume to shirts.(304)937-4900
or
Hom:s
CLA 565. clo Gallipolis Dai ly (304)549-5696. Amate urs
FOR
SALE
Tnbune, P.O . Box 469 Welcome
Gallipolis OH .45631
1600 Sq ft. 3 year old Ranch
Owner-Operators/ Fleet
styl e home. 2 1!2 car
Elderly Middl eport couple
Owners Needed.
garage, 3 bedroom . large
see ks
assi stance
with
•Percentage Pard on the
kitchen. dinnmg room. livrng
household
chores
in
Gross.
room, 2 112 baths, laundry
exchango for rent and utili ty
*No Trarler change/ 75%
room. front porch, all custom
tree residence nex t door
drop and hOoks
oak tri m doors and cabinets .
Prefer matu re mamed cou*Weekly Settlements.
All electric .. Very well layed
ple References and good
'$500 Sign-on Bonus,
out, beautiful in tenor on 1
drrvrng record reqUired
•Home Every Weekend.
1!2 acres ... Won't last long at
(304)675· 1066
'Call 800·652·2362 for
only $115,000 ... Call 740application and information.
446-4514 or 740-446-3248
Expe rience d Crown and
eflet Spm,
Brrdge
techmcran .
Southern Hrgh School 1n
(740 )59.2·41 3.7
days,
Racine, Ohio rs seeking a 1600 Sq. ft . 3 year old Ranch
(740)594 -6725 evenmgs
Varsity Football coach . style ho me. 2 1!2 car
Previous head coaching garage, 3 bedroom, large
Home Work Needed.
For assembly work . Send 1 experience Is preferred. kitchen. dinning room. living
Anyone Interested. please room. :2 1/2 baths, laundry
size #10 self addressed
send resu mes to Ryan room. front porch, all custom
stamped envelop too·
Lemley, Athletic Director. oak trim doors and cabmets.
JC
•
Southern High School, P.O. All electnc. Very Wen leyed
PO Box 87
Box 96 Racine, OhiO 45771 ou t, beautiful lnterror on 1
wau1eon, Oh. 43587
1/2 acres ... Won't test long at
lmmed )ate Opening ! OHice Wanted· Nice, lovlng, experl· only $115,000 . Call 740·
help, Are you hard working. enced cook that works well 446·4514 or 740-446·32 48
love to work with the publ!c? With children 1riqutre with in, ,•«~•:.:.r..:5;:.
pm
c.:..- - - - - ' - - " 1eMper1ence A pus.
1
0 p11ca
French City Child Care · -3 bedroom house, 4 112
F'ositlon In Point Pleasant.
,.,_ ;
300 Thl d A
......,n er,
r
venue. acres. cia . fenced pasture.
Send Resume w/ hand writ· No Phone Galls Please.
ten cover letter 10 PO BoM 95
vinyl Biding, Thermal pane
Hsrrla\lllle WV. 26362
~~
window, (740)985·4288
------..,.--- •
J.I\IW"''Il~
4 bedroom house for sale or
Large mechanical" contractrent on Rt 248 In Chester,
ing co mpany Is seeking Qalllpolll ClrMr CoUegl Oh. please call after Spm
Experienced and .Entry
(Careers Close To Home) (614 )MI·Sl39
Level
Fire
Protection Call Today I 740..446·4~67 ,
Installers. Entry Level posl·
1-800-2 14 _04 52
New Log Home on 1.3

clothing , lurnlture, bed. bath .
tu b, and somet hing foi
everyone! December 4th: 5th ' (Thurs-Frl) 8am- 5pm .
15 Dew St. Middleport (off of

Proolsets, Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency.M.T.S. Com ShOp, 151
S&amp;cond Avenue. Gallipolis,
. 740-446'-2t142

2 Bedroo m mob1le home in

' ()!-\-, ND,
'70.1'\f:D N£

r

Arbors at Gallipoli s IS seekmg a licensed social worker
to join our team We offer
extremely
competitive
wages. 401 K plan , and
excellent health and dental
insurance. EOE . Apply- In
person o r call Stephani e
Cleland NHA at 740-4467 11 2
Arbors at Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Drive
Phone 740·446-71 12
Fa•. 740·446-9088

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added lo your classified ads
{p~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small·
Sl.OO for large

POLICIES: Ohio Valley P ubll ehlng reHrvn the right to ed;t, ,.~, Of cencel eny ed at any time . Errors mull be reported on the llr.t day ol publication lllnd
Trlbune--SentlneHteglster will be reai)Onllbte tor no mOJe than the coli of the 1pace occupied by the error and only the firltiONr11on. We ehall not: be liable

L~--------~ Timberland or standing tim- MANAGING

r

'

w. ·eov....
, r'--7
And Muon
Counti•Uk
NoOne

Free Rotweiler
(740)367 ·0467

left knee 011 Wednesday.
The Bearcats started slow
as the Crusaders jumped to a
qui ck 5-2 lead, making 2-of5 shots. But Field Williams
got Cincinnati going with a
pair of inside bas kets. igniting' a 20-4 run and
Valparai so, which trained
37-24 at halftime, never seriously threatened.
was
Drew
said he
impressed by the Bearcats.
" I think they're going to
be better than 19th in the
nation when they get
Whaley healthy," Homer
suid. "They pass the ball. the
defend. they're deep. I think
they ure going to be a very
good basketball teum us the
season goes on.''

•

•

Meigs, G•llla,

Free 2 one year old cats
F1xed and Oedawed. Indoor
home only. (740)367-o87 1.

game before beg1nning
Confere nce USA play nex t
month . Valparaiso ( 1-3),
which hosted a ranked team
fo r the first time in six years,
was 12-of-18.
·
Bobbitt had 15 points . in
the first half for Cincinnati,
but didn ' t score in the second half as he was slowed by
a cramp in his right calf.
Field Williams had 14 points
for the Bearcats and Nick
Williams had 10. Joaquim
Gomes led Valparaiso with
10 points.
Cincinnati was simply too
big anct too fast for the
Crusaders even without cente r Robert Whulcy,. who is
scheduled to have surgery ro
repuir torn curtilage in his

ster

- Sentinel -

CLASSIFIED

Beauliful female kitten. very
playful and loving. Rescued
from dog. Needs warm
hOme {740)446-3153

Crncin nati fo rward Arme1n Kirk la nd (33 ) dnves the lane
around Valpara1so guard Ali Berdiel (33) during second half
action in the Cincinnati 68·49 victory Tuesday in Valparaiso,
Ind . (AP)
.

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ribune

re ce ntly surrendered hi s
home to Gray. who is living
there with (he co uple's two
young daughters . She is
under court order not to be
within 500 feet of Green .
A phone message seeking
comment on the suspension
wa s left Tuesday with
agent.
Tom
Green's
Condon .
The Brown s have heen
fru strated with their inabili ty to · interact with Green
during
his
sus pension
because of league rules. On
Tue sday. Po li cy said the
club wil l continue to abide
by the league 's gllideline s.
"Our primary goal. as it
has always been, is for
Will iam to take the necessary steps to resolving his
personal matters,'' Policy
said in a statement. "He
cont inu es to have ou r support."

1 puppy-Black Lab Adult
Corky and adul t m1xed
breed ChowtSprtz To good
home only Also 3 k11tens
(740)742·2632.

Carmello

•

Policy has said the Browns
will sup port Green as long
as he continues to show. a
willingness to get better and
from Page 81
make lifestyle changes.
Green was suspended by
marijuana us e at Bmton
the league after being
College.
arrested
in October on
But the dub fe lt it could
of
driving under the
charges
help Green deal with his
problems. and selected him influence and marijuan a
with the 16th overall pick possession . He has a pretn before signing him to a five- al hearin g sch.edu led for
yeur contract worth $ 12 Wednesday.
While serving IllS suspen million if he reached incen'
sion,
Green\ fiancee was
lives .
When Green got off to a accused of stabbi ng him in
rough start as a rookie. the the bac k with a steak knife.
Browns began to wonder if Asia Gray, 22. was charged
they made the ri ght choice. with, fe lonious assault and
But the speedy 6-foot. 2 15- domest ic violence.
Police searched Green\
pounder emerged in the sec·
home
the ni ght of the
ond half of 2002, rushing
all
eged
attack and sa id they
for 726 yards in his final
seven ga mes to help the folmtl marijuana 111 fou r
Browns qua lify for the play- locmions of the residence .
Green's
whereabou ts
oils .
unknown.
He
Browns preside nt Carmen rem~in

)t

Jumes played just five minutes in the
second quurtcr and huu an uirbull on a
puiJup jumper midway through the third
from Page B1
quarter. He opened the fourth by having a
layup swatted away by Chris Andersen,
but followed with a 3-pointer and scored
·left.
James started off well after being booed on a nifty reverse with three minutes left.
Notes: According to the NBA, James and
during introductions, but struggled after
Anthony
have the top two selling jerseys
the first quarter.
,
He opened the game with a three-point online and at its store in New York .... The
play on a break after he was fouled by second quarter was delayed for several
:Anthony. then had an assist on Carlos · second s after a kid latched onto the leg of
·:Boozer 's baseline jumper that helped Cleveland 's Ricky Davi s. The boy had
been dancing with Nuggets mascot Rocky
Cleveland open a 9-0 lead.
between
quarters. ... .Denver's Jon Barry
James followed with a 3·pointer. the n set
·up Ira Newble's layup with a no-look has.hit 17 straight free throw s. He was 3bounce pass. But that was abou t it until the for-3 against the Cavaliers .... Boozer was
back after missing six games with a
fourth quarter.
·
sprained ankle.
·I

Wednesday, December 3, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

M tnlature DachSI'IuM pup·
pres. 1 mate and 1 female .
First shots. (740)379·2389.

r

13 rentals. nice, 3 bedroom
house . 50 acres. 2 mi les
from
Gall1pol i s.
Good

I \l ~\ 1 ' I 1'1'1 H '
,\I I\ 1-. !CH h.

r

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

For Sale Hay about 2000
bales·. $2.00 pe• bale. Phone
(740)446· 7857

_____. ,__________________________

__:_~

�VVednesda~Dec.3,2003

www. myda ilysentinel.com

VVednesda~Dec.3,2003

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

•

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle .

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ACROSS

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Alder

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53
Money owed 54
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55
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10
12

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Early birds slart
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Last Thursday or
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All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

Middlep&lt;&gt;rt, OH
(740) 992-7533

ASSOCIATES NEEDED

kX:tll calhl'lQ to aro~one · Bn)lt(rre

I

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1·800. 561 {)174

PO BrJt 14]6 AntH:&gt;tft.

1 1438 Stan trnmetlrateivt

DtEl PfLLS, PJJrn. Prlls. Vragra Fr~te
ShtpprnQ 1 Hl'l'o Ott On Ralllls
Ptwntcrmine. Drdre, , Adipe~ . Soma.
Amb~n. F 10ri~L Tr~madol &amp; Moref
US OoctOfSJ PMnnr.es

Use lrNesrors IJ()I')eyt
Sp~! Profils'

:;:~:;:::=;,====d I -800-44S.2431 www eme&lt;l:i~O fe~ oom

Sunset Home
Construction

DEER
PROCESSI.IG

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Poll!
Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Skinned, Cut
&amp; Wrapped

Maplewood Lake
Christian
Campground
St. At. 124 between
Racine &amp; Syracuse

Ma J'be you sml a a1rd or called witll a nice word

·

119 W Second St.

w say, Maybt' you scrid a silent pmyafor
·
o11r loss tl1at dar.
: Marbr )'Oil sent a spray r!{J1owtrs bwum• you

Bobbie Jo ·•
Butcher

wu ld11't be ,rerr, Ma)•bt•

krrow

}'Oil

)IIIII ll'err till' one tlwr
hugKed 11s ti;:l1t tcJ let us
cared. For t~ll
kindtu•ss )'Oil lw11e

We little kn.ew
-that monri"g
tlwt God W(U' gfli11g
to call your rzarne
In life we loved

"'f'

siWII'" • I ,l!il'&lt;' )'t.l ll this pril}'t'r at/ )'illlr Oil'"· Dear
lu•aJitrrl••.farl!er JlfN JSl' ~ llill t' ym1r errl'r lrwiu,r,: li~IJI
11pon tl!i·irfac(',AIIdJ!m"t tltt'lll all peace,
H'rt· nit}' &amp; J'''" r /o11iu,~ xmrr. A mt• n

God blrss afT

&lt;~·}'Oil,

you dearly, ;, death we do the same
It bmke our lrearls to loJe ymt
you did11 't go altme
For part of u.'f weflt
with ym4
.April9, 1977 ·Dec. .1, 1998
Randy, Robirr &amp; Family

· Announcements

WALLEYE
FISH FRY
Sunday,
Dec. 7,2003
11:00 am 6:00pm
Rutland
·American Legion
. All you can eat
Fish, Cole Slaw,
Baked Beans
$6.00 (includes
' Drink) Hot Dogs
also availab le
Meals to Go ll

'--~to_..Aiiioiiurosiiiiiiio._.ll
L_
FOR SALE
.

Happy Holidays
from

The Daily Sentinel

IN THE COMMON
Karen
Passage,
PLEAS COURT OF Barbra Jean Hicks,
MEIGS
COUNTY, and Charles Jones,
and any other individ·
QHIO
DONALD C. DAILEY
uals, organizations or
Plaintiff
entities who may be
va
entitled to claim an
L.M . PIERCE AKA
inter~st in the real
LAMONT M.
estate which is the
PIERCE, ET AL
subject
of
the
Defendants
Complaint, WHOSE
Case No: 03 CV 110
NAMES
AND
NOTICE BY PUBLICA·
ADDRESSES
ARE
TION
UNKNOWN .
To: L.M. Pierce aka
You are hereby notiLamont M. Pierce , fied that you have
Uzzle Pierce , Charles
been
named
pierce,
Kenneth
Defendants In the
Pierce, Frank Pierce , action entitled Donald
Allee Pierce ake Allee
C. Dailey, Plaintiff, vs.
Wollman,
Frank
L.M.
Pierce
aka
Wollman ,
Daniel
lamont M. Pierce, et
Wollman ,
Franklin
al., DefendantS. This
Pierce, Alma Pierce action
has
been
aka Alma Curlls , assigned Cas&amp; No.
03·CV·11 0, and Is
Zelda Pierce aka
Zelda Jones, Juanita
pending In the Courl
Birch, Francis Cline, of Common Pleas of
Richard Cline, Wayne
Meigs County, Ohio.
Cline, Randall Cline, The obJecl ol the
Dean Cline, Carol
Complaint demand•
Burlingame, Kennelh
lhat lhe following
Burlingame, Karen
described real ealate
Poasage, Barbre Jean
be quieted In lhe
ttlcks, Charles Jones,
Plalnllll, Donald C.
Jo
Ann
Dailey, Dailey:
Burch ,
$amuel
Sltuale
In
lhe
ADDRESSES Township ol Chesler,
UNKNOWN: Upon the
In the Counly ol
Unknown Heirs, Next Meigs and Slale ol
of Kin, Spouses , Ohio, thai Ia to say
Devloeeo, Legalees , lhe Soulhweal quar·
Adm ·lnlstrators , ler of lhe West hall ol
Executors,
the Fraction rium·
Succeeaora
and
bered one No. 1, In
Aoslgna
ol
L.M.
Section 14 and 15 In
Pierce aka Lamont M. Town No. 3 of Range
pierce, Lizzie Pierce, . No. 12, as surveyed
Charles
Plerr.e,
by E. Hutton, the said
Kenneth Pierce, Frank . parcel
measuring
. Pierce, Allee Pierce
16.50 chains North
aka Allee Wollman,
and 20 a. 12·112
chains East from the
Frank
r!llmen,
Daniel
oilmen, · SOuthwest corner or
Franklin P erce, Alma
said Fraction and
Pierce aka .Alma
33·211 o
containing
Curtis, Zelda Pierce
acres, be the same
aka Z~lda Jones,
more or less.
Juanita Birch, Francia
Reference Deed:
Cline, Richard Cline,
Volume 80, Page 238,
Wayne Cline, Randall
Meigs County Deed
Cline, Dean Cline,
Recorda.
Burlingame,
Carol
Parcel
Auditor's
Kenneth Burlingame,
No.: 03-00974.000

__

e

n

I

KMHVD14N1 XU43790
1
2003 Cannondale
Racing
AVT
5B6BB31352B000934
The Home National
Bank reoerves the
rlghl to reject any and
all bids. For · an
appointment lo see,
Call 949·2210, ask fo•
Sheila.
(12) 3, 4, 5

\

"'

BARNEY
TIME TO SCHEDULE
STUDENT EYE
EXAMS!!

DOC, TODAY I GOT THREE
APPLES, A
TOMATER
AN ' A RED
RUBBER
BALL

THE BORN LOSER
I 11-\1!-IK '&lt;OU SBOU..~

'-=""·"' KNOW ~\00 ~~

1-800-822-0417

001'\( ~'1'\f\11% t:&gt;UT

"W.V's #I Chevy , Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dea ler"

MD f\OW Dll&gt; 'iOtJ
C.OM( eN

Tl-\1~

"""

11'1FO~MI IOI'\ ~

l'IJE &amp;:EI'\ :)1 \liNG "&lt;&lt;
.it::"-...C... f-IERE WI\TC.i'\li'IG f-Ill'\
ThE:. Et-1I II&lt;'£ TI11\E 1

'::&gt;1\ N'-ID :'&gt;TAKE IN\0

"Not me!
· My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial SelVices,
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone 843-5264."

A ~E LF - APPOINTED
PoST. I'l'\ Gi.JESSI NG .

J'.CCORDI'(; TO

AC.&lt;.ORI&gt;I NG

ME ! I 'M
(01'1-

PEANUTS

.:.::.:..::.~:c.:..~:::_~-

Now o~n for

94 Chevy 3/4 ton. 4WD, 350
Auto. 128K, Runs Great,
S4995. (740)245-5648

Ch1i&amp;mai &amp;aron
Poinsettias, Pots and
hanging baskets.

99 Blazer LS. 4 door, 4x4,
loaded, 54,000 miles, excellent condition.
$11,900

Open daily Monday
thru Saturday 10·4
Closed Sundays

(740)446·6251 .

r

40
MOTORCYCUS

\
Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

\

BETIY
AND1llATS
w~ 'lOU WEltE

SEATING UP OUR
P~ILODEN~
~'MEN t C)J('£

740-992~5776

1

I~ liiE. ROOM?

2002 Handa 350 Rancher
four wheeler. $3,200.
John Deere Gator, electric

dump. (740)446-6783
740 645·2480.

NoT JU~T­

'rnATFlAWI'
AIJD I

HAVE
HISTORY! ·

-rr

or

CAMPERS&amp;
MOTOR HoMES
1976 Taurus Camper. Self
coatail1ed 20 ft. new tires, &amp;
brakes, everything works,

GARFIELD

~~~

clean, $1,200. (740)388·
9327.

High&amp; Dry
r~. tO....IMPR-~-~~1 Sell-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Unconditional lifetime guar-

anlee . Local references fur·
nlshed. Eslablished 1975.
Call 24 Hts. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers
Waterproofing.

Base ment

_ _
740 992 5232

~:::;:;;;;.:;;;:;::;;:;:~

r

YOUNG'S

December 1st - 6th
Breakfast · 5 to 6:30
Lunch - 11 to 12:30
Dinner- 5to 7

• Room Addition• 6
Fiemoctellng

• New Garailea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roo11ng &amp; Gutte"rs
•. VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

All meals homemade
including Pies &amp; Cakes

Free Estimates

Shop
Classlfteds!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 ·6215
Pomeroy. Ohio
Ye rs l ocal

North

lo~ ast

Pa.o;s

1•

Pa ss

3 ...
J J\ T

P&lt;tss

3 t
Pa:; s

Pa ss

Pas~

Pa ~s

¥ ~

down
One declarer had an imag tnative idea. At
tnck two, he led a low clubt As South
hoped , East won the lrrck and ret urned
the heart five. his original fourth -htghest.
Alter South covered with the jack. West
won with the ki ng and retUrned his last
heart. Sudden ly South 's hand was back in
the sunshine. He got one spade, two

YOU

'THINK

1'00 MUCHI

G

AstroGraph
-..~,

47FI-

26 Short-term 48 Tompoll8y
footbtlller

worker

27
28
30
32

Vlklna name 49 Those

..-

Pact letters
electad
Convention 51 Smoll
number
Mach 1

36 Lair
39 PantyhoM
shade
40 Late-night
hoot
41 Calc's bear
42 Overoupply
44 Calarwaul
45 French
friends
46 Swell ,
aa a river

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
992-6635
SELF
STORAGE
IN MASON
lOXlO • $35.00
10X20 · $55 .00

740·992·396f

licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·!1!12·0933
Cell 740·5!11-1073

ROBERT
BISSELL

Thursday, Dec . 4, 2003
By Bernice Bede Osol
The year ahead could turn out to be a
unique one that wilt enable you to tap several new sources ol oppmtuntties to further
your in terests. They might be in areas you
never thoug ht to explore previously.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec ..21) - Do not
discount any clever tdeas you get today on
ways to increase your ear nings or add to
your resourc es just because they came to
you ou1 of the blue. You 're tuned mto 1he
money ti ne
CAPR ICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Rather
than stru cture your day too t1ghtly mday.
throw away your schedu le and play thmgs
by ea r. Spontaneous activities are ltkely to
be the ones that turn out to be the most tun
lor you
AQUARIU S (J an
20-Feb
19) Circumstances may unf url in such a man nel today that you'll be able' to conclude a
matter which . up until now. has been
tmpossibte to sett le. Whe n it occurs.
pounce on it.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - ThtS could
be an exciting day lor yo u. You will be able
to see and uncterstand several facets of lite
that were never apparent before and gtve
· you tremendous opportunities lor growth .
ARIES (March 21-Apri ~ 19) - A couple of
once-in -awhile opportun 11ies ot unique
nature s cou ld be in the ottmg tod ay. One of
them might relate to ftnances. but the other
has to do with advancing your. ambitions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although
you may be the last person to realize it.
you'!! have a marvelous ability today tor
Saying all the right thing s that will up!ift
those with whom you share your day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Those who
are tond ot you wtll sense yow needs
today and do nice little things tor you to
make your life easier - without be ing
asked. You may not even know about it
until you feel the effects
CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22) - An answer
to e dilemma tor whic h you've been
searching may fall into' your lap today just
whe n you're. not looking . It could be a
chance remark or something you stumble
upon 1
LEO .{July 23-Aug . 22) -You are bltlted
today with marvelout Jmaglnatlve abllltlet,
and thlt Ia the V'ery th ing that could gl~~e
you an edge o\ler your competl tcra. Let
your mind run unfettered.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Chancel are
tht ldell and attfludtl ot o1htrl could
11111y rub off on you today. to ttay away
fro m tht negative tvPtl and IPtnd your
time only with 111oclat11 who V'ltW 11r.
optlmlttloally.
,

we 1'-\aoe Sfeciel

foR~

• New Homes

Stop &amp; Compore

cryprogutms illll CHtiilteo trO!"I qiJOiailorlS ~ t arrous oeoC!ie PlSl anO preWl!
Each tetter rll tM c.phe• stBM$1or arootheo

Tooay s due A eouals B

" NHXFLM .
BTF• XH
OFXV

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NHXFLM

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UZTL

JTNB

P G F B F P F H Yl
N

TV
F. H

ONWCCZHB

NAZOB

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IZMH . -

ZHAZGLV

PRE VIOUS SOLUTION- "Coocem lor man and hiS lale mus1 always form
tc) 2003 by NEA . Inc

.

TOAl OAIU

'UULU

c. '1'1 \)
.._.

- - - - - - - £dit •J It, CUY ~

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scrcmb leo

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GAM I

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we; j ' ba·

low to !oHn lo ur ~ore~

R U WB

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PEy P

g

'Tcere are lwo iypes of bad
e-rr.~ 10~1 ee ,"

a colleague in-

forcneJ me "The flrsl resen\5

.---R-E_D_G_U-'f - -., ~:~ :: ~·-s.~ ~nd

I I I 1I

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the olh er wi ll

: .:~ mp lera the chuckl e . quoled
b v l,llmg ,n the m oll&gt;nQ v.ord~
'-....1--L-....J._.L_JL_J yov d~"e1op !rom step No. 3 be lo w

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PI11NT

•

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1

NU~lflf ~ED L ETTE~S

tN

THESE SCM ARE '
UN SC ~AMBLE ABOVE
10 GET Af' ISWEII:

LETT ERS

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
Yeasty- Maker -Inlet - Tawdry · ALREADY
"Give othe r pe ople a chance to express the1r opin·
ion," lhe professor lectured "When you ta lk." he.added,
"vou hear only what you ALREADY know·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

j

0

'ttlu mlghl

SI:.MOOL

12·3

~"' \ • •

~ ~'-'-r'tJ ~

SOUPTO NUTZ

COIImUCTION

140-992-1611

· by Luis Campos
Celebflt"l' C1oher

htar about an lnttrettll'lg program .today
that hat po11lbllltl11 of benefiting your
rt mlly. R1111rch It wett and th ink through
now 111 pltctl could lit l,to vour lttmlly'a
t ltua tlon.
SCORP IO (Ool. 2~·Nov. 221 - Choncoo
ere that any lmportint deeltlont you might
ha\lt to make It thlt llmt will turn out quite
advantageoutly, ~u 'rt 1 11!11 thinke r 11
wttl II the I)OIIIIIOr ot 8)1Ct11ent judgment today.

J&amp;L
Eledric

• Garages
•.Complete
Remodeling

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ie •' •!HJ

LISRA (Sopl. 23·0ol. 23) -

(:ARPENTER (1 D'xl 0' 6 1D'x20']
(740) 992-3194
SERVICE

Harrisonville, OH

HAVE t,IOU 1'HC)IJG,H1' A!IOU'T'
WHA'l' YOU WAN1' FOR
CHRI 1'MA&amp;, C"IARFIEI.l7?

IMPORTS
Athens

... 11(\111-..

BASEMENT
WATERPRooFING

Wl' st

4

24 " Miami
Vice" cop

the chtef tnterest o1 all technical endeavors ~ - Alben Etnstem

-2001 Ford Explorer Sport,
4~e4, white-grey trim, leather
int .. fully loade d . 29,000
miles. E~ecellent co nd . 60
mo.-100,000 mile transferable warranty. $16,000.
97 F250, 4114, loaded , sharp.

Syracuse, Ohio

Soo th

hearts. one diam ond and live clubs
Away from th e table. it is easy to say that
the defenders sho uld have played difteren11y. But I th 1nk South deserved success
for his enterprising ef1ort.

~P/&gt;o..CE I;,LL /1\0ii!:r-.llt-.1.&amp; I

::.::.:~..:.:.....:...:..:::.:..:..._ _

4672, (740)441 ·1034

..

breaklastl
You are SoUth. t he declarer in 1hree notrump. West leads th e heart three: lour.
queen, ace. How wou ld you conttnue ?
There are two possible lines of play. One
is clear-cut: Yo u play clubs from the top,
hoping fo r a friendly - but unlikely- 3·3
split. Howeve r. at the table . West won the
fourth club and shifted to the diamond
queen. When he was allowed to win the
trick , West led h1s dtamond seven.
Declare r called tor dummy's ace and
played another diamond. Bul East continued the excellent deff'";e by switch mg to
a spade . Now South had to finish one

excellent co ndition, leather 2000 Fo rd F 550 Diesel . 4
powe r sunroof, runs great, dooi, 4 wheel drive with flat
$2500 must sell, 740-416- bed. (740)446-9317 .

HUBBARDS
GREEnHOUSE

i\ J 10
9 i

Price llclult

5 New
England
cape
6 Ruotad-out
ship
7 Dlva'a
rendHion
8 Book ID
9 Legal ma11er
10 T'al ch 'uan
11 Fiowlf
garlands
12 DC
37 Disney site
landmark
38 Longhorn 17 Map abbr.
40 Haul
19 Fornwloenl
43 Corporate 20 Light
ending
sword
44 Fabric
21 Gl'a
measure
eddre11
48 "Cabaret " 22 AI tlm&lt;o
senlng
-on
50 Dorm sharer 23 Eden man

choose the winning move
_I n lh ts co lumn . Wh ich would you be? Yes .
you may hide your answer behind your

!'\ISSIONE""
Of N IC.KNAME S 1

Van, loa ded, leather seats,
prem ium so und, traction
control. 76,000 miles, asking
$12,900. Phone {740)446·

~ 7

~

are technicians. always tryi ng' to ltnd the
the orelically best .action . Others play much
more by feel , using the tr table presence to

T HE

(740 )446·6783 or (740)645·
2480.
::._::.::.:.__ _ _ _ ___:
2001 Oldsmobi le S ilhoutte

... l 0 R

1 Entrance
2 Columnlot
- Bombeck
3 Flber ..,......

fraud . I alw ays t8lt the Greeks were h1d1ng
beh tnd their columns."
Bndge players have different style.s Some

market!"

''45

K I ll 8

DOWN

Willem Oe Koonmg. a Dutch-born U.S.
artiSt who dted in 1997. said. · style tS a

Hllostmyshirt
in the stock

Wrap a
Freeze
For only

t

J :l

Seeing in your mind
what they will think

IT'S NOT A STAMP~PE··- /"\Of'.rf
IT'.f A fLASt-4 MO,!
I
y-f '

1998 Mazda B2500 extended cab, white , 4/speed. 2
wd ., 59,000 miles, ac, cd,
bed liner. (740)992-9229
alter 6pm 57,500 abo.

Skin, Cut.

Q 9i.12

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$850 .00 080 (740)742·
95 Blue Neon, 5 speed, 4 2877
door, 86,000 miles. $1 ,400 - - - - - - - or best offer. 740-256-ls 52 . 1991 Dodge pickup. 4 W.D.,
S.W.B.; AIC ; 96K miles,
95 Chrysler Newyorker, $3,500. (740)245-5213.

DEER
HUNTERS

·C

1114/ 1 mo . pd

20 01 Chevy S-10, Dark
metalli c green, 4 cyl. , 591 Firebird , V-8 , auto. speed, AJC, CD, cru ise/till ,'
114 ,000
miles.
asking exc. condition. 14,000 miles.
$2,000; 97 Grand Am will sell lor pay oft S10, 100
74,000 miles, 6 ely, auto, (740)446·0864
$2700; 96 Ranger, 4 ely, 5
VANS&amp;
sp. , 106,000 miles, $2,000;
4-WDs
92 Ranger, 4 ely, 5 sp.,
107 ,000
miles,
$1200;
1986 Chevy Blazer, 4X4,
(7 40)742·2357

r

c

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

.

Opening lead ·

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

(740)446· --~~---1992 Chevy 3/4 ton, 5·
speed, w/topper. $3,500.
1995
Cutlass
CIERA Call740-446·8832
$2,495;
1996
Co rsica =~:.:........:...:..::::::_
$2,195; 1993 Cavalter SW 1995 FORD E350 CUBE
$ 1,495; 1993 Geo Tracker BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
$1,1 95 . Others in stock .
(740)446-9416 . M-F 9-5.
Cook Motors
Located
t391
Safford
School, Gallipolis.
(740)4 46 _0103 •

You are required to
answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight $5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS. 1979 Ford F250 Campe r
(28) days after the last Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc! Special with utility bed, 460
publication of this Cars from $500. Fo r listtngs automatic, Good Body, Runs
Good, $JOOO Negotiable
Notice, which will be 1-800-719-300 1 ext 3901
( 0)38 _
published once each
74
8 8121
•
week ' for six (6) suc· 1985 Buick LaSabre 307,
cessive weeks. The VB, 4 Ba rrel , Duels, 1987 Ford F250 Diesel
last publication will Exhaust, Collectors Edition , w/Turbo , · 2" Lift, Aluminum
be made on the 3rd $1000 (740)367 -0807 or Wheels , Goose Neck hitch,
day of December, (740)367~08 1 2
much more. (7 40) 256-1360.
2003, and the twenty·
eight (28) days lor
answer will com·
mence on that date.ln
the case of your fail·
ure to answer or oth·
erwlse respond as
requested by the Ohio
Rules
ol
Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default will be ron·
dered against you
and for the relief
demanded • In the
Complaint.
Dated lhla 13th day
of Oc1., 2003.
Marlene
Harrison,
Clerk of Courts
(10) 29, (11) 5, 12, 19,
will be held at the
28, (12) 3
Enterprise United Melhodist Church
Friday, Dec. 5th
Public Notice
8 am to4
The Home National
Bank will auction the
following vehicles on .,
Saturday, December
8, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.
at Home National
Banks Parking Lot,
Want Great Homemade
Racine, Ohio:
Hot Meals??
1993
' Cadillac
D e v I I I e
Come to Scipio Township
1Q6CD53B2P4234609
Fire Department SR #684
1999
Hyundal

A

'

--

good. $7,900.
4034

0174.
-------Aums
95 Toyota 4-Runner Limited.
FOI&lt;SALE
V6, autom atic, 4x4, PW, PL,
Sunroof, Tilt, Cfuise, AJC.
$500' POLICE IMPOUNDS. $3,500. (740)37 9·2280.
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps. etc!
TRUCKS
Cars from $500. For listings
m~&lt;SAU:
1·800-719·3001 ext 390 t

BLIC
NOTICES

r

K 8 3

l

Hill's Self
Storage

1987 Ford Ranger extend
1987 Buick Grand National. cab, runs good, new ti res,
95,000 miles, looks and runs $t200, (740)992-6897

1999 Volkswagen
New
Beetl e 47 ,176 mileage Red
with tan doth int. auto, air,
cass. alloy wheels. 2.0 lit er
engin e. $9 800. (304)6756889 after 4:00pm .

lin \SI'On I \110'\

I

•

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7401 992·2139

[!}

•

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

~ b11y quilt tops
9 miles from Pt . Pleasant
on Sand Hill Ro.rd.

Pomero)' Auto Parts

•

· ~\KQ i42

i"'achlne Quilting· Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns Available
Connie Curnutt
895-3962 Shop
owner/operator
895-3512 nome

Machine Shop Service

K J 8

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-54.7 9

Let me do it for youl

In Memory

Ul~l

•

•
•
•

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

;rr,,;;.,;245-5021

W~st

~ u th

740·992·7599

949·2734

A6 5J l

• QJ 1
... J 9 :'! 3

Windows • Roofing
COMMERC IAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

8ab8a&lt;lt

Thank You

Cellular

.. • Replm:e rnent

• CanfldenUal

Card of Thanks

t

BUILDERS InC.

Courier/Messenger
• Professional

~ ·card of Thanks
..

.ALltEL

.. .

New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Garages

Made

IHJ1.0J

• ••

BISSEll

Summer Sausage

74G-7 42-341

North
• A" ll ~ :1

Pomeroy Eagles

13 RHpecl
1o1 lmprovl...
(hyph'.)
15 Oiltxpofllf
16 Bratty kid
18 Colo.
neighbor
19 Bustling
about
21 Trophy
25 Island oH
Manhattan
29 Speaklf'l
plaHorm
3 t Worko
by Puccini
33 Diviner
34 Curba
35 Hammed ~
up

Forgotten
Silly
Applll poi1t
"You 're
oornethlng
-1"

'rtJ 6-aD

aLL

~&amp;NUT EltJ=R

CNeR a f'tNe CCNe aNt&gt;
114eN ~L IT tNCI&lt;&gt;...,oo
8 ND HaN&amp; 11' tN &lt;l

•

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Harnson . lrn:t
69
• Tom11nson . S.D 66

Pro Football
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East

W l T Pet PF PA
10 2 0 .833 257 209
8 4 0 667 241 191

New England
M1amr
Buffalo

s

Indianapolis

1 a 417 197 194
5 7 0 .417 234 238
South
WLTPctPFPA
9 3 0 750 343 254

Tennessee

9

N Y Jets

Hou~

•on

J acksonville

3 0 .750 320 232

5

7

0

417 211 29{)

3

9 0

.250 202 264

North
W L T

Baltimore
C1nC1nnat1

7

5 0

7

5 0

Pet

PF PA

583 300 238
583 268 266

B 0 .33;3 192 224
8 0 .333 223 277
West
WLTPctPFPA
Kansas C1ty
11 1 0 .917 361 222
Denver
7 5 0 .583 279 206
Oakland
3 9 0 .250 222 278
San D1ego
2 10 0 .167 233 342
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
4
4

Cleveland
Pittsburgh

East
W L T

PniladeiPhla
Dallas
N Y. Giants
Wash ington

9
8

3 0
4 0

4
4

8 0
8 0
South

Pet

PF PA
.750 245 212
667 226 208

.333 202 266
333 236 280

w· L

T Pet PF PA
4 0 667 234 229
6 0 500 256 278

Carolina
New O rl eans

8
6

Tampa Bay
Atlanta

5

Mmn6sota
Green Bay

7

5 0

Chicago

6
5

6 0
7 0

Detroit

4

7 0
tOO
North

2

W L T

a o

West
W L T

St. Louis

9

3 0

8
San FranCISCO 5
Ar izona
3

4 0
7 0
9 0

Seattle

4 17 230 191
167 221 328

Pet

PF PA
583 310 295
500 298 255
417 219 247

333 202 280

Pe t PF PA
750 347 246
667 323 239
417 248230
250 166 337

Monday 's Game
N.Y. Je1s 24 . Tennessee 17
Sunday, Dec. 7
Sa n D1ego at De t1011. 1 p m
Ch1cago at Green Bay, 1 p m
Oa kl and Ell Pin sbu rgh. 1 p m
Houston al Jackson'JI IIe. 1 p_m
Wash n;gton m N.Y Giants. 1 p m
Indianapolis at Tennessee. 1 p 111
C1ncmnat1 at Batt1more. 1 p m
Dallas at Phllada lphia. 1 p m
Seattle at Mmnesota. 1 p m
Tampa Bay m New Orleans . 1 p.m.
Arizona at San Fr anCisco. 4:05 p.m
N _Y J ets at Bu tfa to . 4 15 p.m .
Miami at New England , 4.15 p.m.
Kansas C1ty at Denver 4:15 pm
Carol1na at All anta , 8:30 p.m
Monday, Dec. 8
St. LOUIS at Cle ...eland, 9 p.m.

AFC Individual Leaders

Wee k 13
Quarterbacks
Att Co rn Yds
326 2 1t 27 12
McN a1r. Te n
Pe nnington, NY 17 2 t1 3 1390
M an~:ng. lncl
441 294 3383
G reen, K. C
386 239 2915
K1tna Cm.
400 24 4 2811
Ru shers
A tt Yds Avg
28 4 1442 5 .1

J Lew1s. Bal
POr11S, Den .
Holmes. I&lt; .C.
Toml1n son. S.D.
F Taylor , Jac.

230 1234 5. 4
252 t1 77 4.7
2 15 11 72 55
249 1037 4.. 2

·

TO lnt
20 Ei
12 6
23 9
19 9
22 9

LG TO
82t 8

651 7
3 1t 17
73t 9

42 4

Receivers
No
78
WfHd, Pit
C Johnson, Ci n. 7t
Maso n , Ten.
70

Yds

Avg LG TO
923 11.8 50 9
1105 15.6 8 21 9
968 13.8 SOt 5

13.2 791 8
6.2 23 0

Washington

1374

Wayne

222
478
145

Wood

NFC Individual Leaders
Quarterbacks
At! Com Yds
Culpepper M.n. 330 212 2526
Hasselbock. Sea 381 234 2883
8 Johnson . TB 437 270 2919
Favre. G.B.
354 229 2358
Brooks. N 0
383 223 2473

TO
17
22
20
22
15

In!
B
9
13
18
8

LG TO
761 8

Green . G B.

262 1383 5.3

651 10

Davrs . 'Car

270 1258 47

40

7

Ale&gt;.ander. Sea 245 1034 42

55

9
-2

Holt. StL
Moss. M1n

229 993
Receivers
No Yds
92 t387
82 1239
7.0 1032

Boldm. Ar1z
McCardell, T.B. 66
65
Coles Was

905
968

43

27

Avg
15.1
15.1
14 7
13.7

LG

TO

48
72

10

11
71t 6
75t 7
14.9 64 4

First-day deer kill totals
COLU MBUS. Oh1o (AP) - County-by·
county totals tor the f1rst day of Ohio deer
gun season
2002
2003
County
489
421
Adams
202
171
Allen
656
Ashla nd
806
856
905
Ashtabula
1422
1208
Athens
Belmont
Brown
Butler
Carroll
Champa1gn
Clark
Clermont
Clinton
Columbiana
Coshoc ton
Crawlord
Cuyahoga
Darke
Det1ance
E11e
Fa1 rl ield
Fayette
Fra nkli n
Fulton
Galli a
Geauga
Greene
Guernsey
Hami lton
Hancock
Hardin
Hamson
Henry
H1ghtand
Hock1ng
Holmes
Huron
Jackso n
Jefferson
Knox
Lake
Lawrence
Lic king
Logan
Lora in
L ucas
Madison
Mahoning
Manon
Medina
M eig s
M erce r
Miami
Monroe

Montg omery
Morgan
Morrow
MuS k1ngum
NoblE!
Ottawa
Pauldin g

118
811
471

62
712
312
150
435
155
698

106
993
520
130
660

309
156
433
139
687

1901

1824

265
8
89
194
333
74
517
84
133
138
944
352
128

197
15
122
199
230
65

636
63

96
12 1
t104

304
130

1536

1833

94

190

111
146
203

1400

1550

93
670
939
1301
451

84
672

11 53
11 21

t 226

984
138

951
105

565

686

t4 2•

1017
t 366

374
1200

1257

1305

327
268
115
98

304
222
93

222

118
169
1039
11 3
47
854
48
972
300

105
206

100
139
1050
14 2
37
1158

32
11 22

t4 36

293
1554

830
35
255

987
50
178

1106

11 89

Pi c~&lt;;; away

360
452
213
91

35 1
483
194
67
154
542

Porta ge
Preble
Putnam
Richla nd
Moss
Sandusky
Scioto
Seneca
Shelby
Stark
S ummit

179
51 1
929
67
397
214

National Basketball
Association

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic; Division
WL
Pc i GB
9
10 .474 _j
Ph1lactelph1a
7
10 .412
1
Boston
New Jersey
New York

7

Wasll1ngton

6
5

7

1

1118

67
503
224
213
332
64
645

10
11

.41 2
.389

~

11

.353

12
16

.294
059

2
3

Central Division
W L
Pet
lnd1ana
Detro1t
New Orleans
Toronto
Milwaukee
Atlanta
Chicago

(31-30).
A-16.525(18 .136). T-2: 15.

1 112

National Hockey League

GB

3
6

.833

.684

2 1J2

12
9

6
8

667
.529

3
5 112

9

9
13

.500
.3 16

9 1/2

12

.294

9 1/2

6
5
4

6

Cleveland
14 .222
11
WESTERN CONFERENCE ,
Midwest Division
W L
Pet
GB
12 6 .667
Dallas
11

Denver
Utah
Hous ton
Minnesota
Sa n Anto nib
Memphis

6

647

1/2

10 6

625

1

9 7
9 8
99

.563

2

529

2 112

88

.5003

EASTERN CONFERENCt
Atlanti c: Division
W L T OLPtsG F
Philadelphia
14 3 5 1 34 7 1
12 5 6 0 30 55
New Jersey
N.Y. Rangers 9 9 5 2 25 68
N.Y. Islanders 9 12 2 0 20 60
Pinsbu rgh
6 12 4 1 17 45

GA
44

39
65
63
79

Northeast Dhli&amp;ion

W
13
11
10

L T OLPts GFGA

6 5
4 4
8 2
11 11 2
1t 11 2

Toronto
Boston
Ottawa
Buffalo
Montreal

2
4
3
,
~

33
30
25
25
25

68 68
63 53
72 55
57 65
55 60

Southeast Division
W L T OL Pts GF GA

5003

Pacific Divi sion
W L
Pet
GB
14 3
824
l A. Lakers
12 4
750. 1 112
Sacram ento
8 6 .57 1 4 t /2
Seattle
8 7 .533 5
Golden Stale
8 7 .533 5
Po rtland
7 9 1.438 6 tf2
Phoenix
5 8
.385 7
LA Clippers

Atlanta
Tampa
Florida

Monday's Games
Memphis 96, Boston 89
Detroit 79. New York 78. OT ·
Chicago 97, Milwaukee 87
Utah 91 . New Jersey 84 ·
lndiaflll 8·9 . Phoenix 82
L.A . Clipp ers 91. San Antonio 83
Tuesday's Games
Toront o 95, Philadelphia 88
New Orle ans 100. Orlando 91
Milwaukee 106, Atlanta 94
Dallas 97. Wash ington 72
Denver 11 5. Cleve land 103
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Toronto, 7 p.m .
Miami at Detro it, 7:30 p.m .
Memph is at N·ew Jersey. 7:30 p.m .
Orlando at New Orl eans, 8 p.m.
Utah at Houston , 8: 30 p. m
, LA Lakers at San Antonio, 8:30 p. m.
Minnesota at Phoenix . 9 p. m.
New York a t Sea ttle. 10 p.m.
Indiana al Portland . 10 p_ m
Denve r at Golden Stat e, 10:30 p.m
Clev eland at LA . Clippers, 10:30 p .m
·
Thu rsday's Games
Chicago at Philadelphia, 7 p.m
L.A . lakers at Dall as. 9·30 p.m.

Bay

12 10 3
11 5 4
9 13 4

1
1
0

car&lt;&gt;ina

7. 10 7

o

21 49 60

Washington

8

1

18 66 75

15 1

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

W. l

T OL Pis GF GA

St. Louis

14 6 1 1

Detroit
Nashville
Columbus
Chicago

14 9

2

0

12 10 1 0
8 12 3 1

30 59 48

3o

8 1 58

25 60 59
20 51 65

6 12 4 3 19 47 71
Nonrtwe11 Divl1lon
W L T OLP1sGFGA

vancou...er
Colorado

14 6 3 2

33 81 58

14 7

3 1 75 59

Calga'Y

10 8 1 3

24 51 55

Edmonto n
Minnesota

10 11 3

23 67 75 '

a·

2

12 4

1
0

o

28 74 73
27 52 38
22 57 70

Vi

Los Angeles
San Jose
Dallas

Boslon at Atlanta , 7:30 p. m
Anaheim at Oeuoit. 7:30 p.m .
Ottawa at Florida, 7:30 p. m.
BuffalO at ChiCago. 8:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Edmonton, 9 p.m.

Thuradl!y's Gamu

Phoenix at Burtalo, 7 p.m.
Toronto at BoslPn, 7 p.m .
Ottawa at Ta~a Bay. 7 p.m .
Nashville at Columbus, 7 p. m .
N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders. 7 p m.
Detroit al St. Louis, 7:30 p.m .
washington at New Jersey, 7·30 p.m .
Calgary at Vancouver. 10 p.m .
Dallas at Los Angeles. 10:30 p. m
Colorado at San Jose, 10:30 p .m .

20 52 57

Pac Hic Division

Referee s- Kerry Fra ser. lan Wal sh .
linesmen-Dan Schac hte, Brad Kovach ik

7

15
13

L T OL Pis GFGA
I 26 60 57
B 7 8 2 26 61 '62

Transactions

12 10 I

11 11 3 0

Anaheim

8

Phoenix

8 9 6 I

8

4

25 58 61

5255464

23 61 74

lwo points lor a win , one po int for a tie
and overtime loss.

American league
CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Acquired INF .
Juan Uribe from the COk&gt;rado Rockies tor
INF Aaron Miles. Named Anen Thomas
di1ector of conc:fltioning.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS- Named Curt
Young pitch ing coach .
National League

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKs-Named Ed

Monday'• Gamel
ottawa 4 , Philadelphia 1
Pinsburgh 4, A11anta 3
Tuesday's Games
Columbus 2, Anahei m 1
Washington 4, N.Y. Islanders 1
Montreal 3, Tampa Bay 2
Toronto 5 , N.Y. Rangers 4
Phoenix 3 , New Jersey 1
St. Louis 4 ,· Los Angeles 1
Calgary 3, San Jose 1

Vosberg pitching coach tor Yakima o f the
Northwest League .
FLORIDA MARUN&amp;-Agrood 10 terms with
38 Mike Lowell on a four-year 00(1tract and
2B Luis Castillo on a three-year contract.
PITISBUAGH
PIRATE S-Agreed
to
terms with RHP Brian Meadows on a
one-yea1 contract.
SAN OtEGO FA.DREs-A!J9W to terms with
LHP Kevin Walker on a one-year oontract

2

OW PTS AVG
t 9 5 37.5 47
15 .0 33.0 4.1

6

Idaho

6

2

Rockford
G reat Lakes
Yak1ma

5

3

17.0 32.0 4.0

5 4
3 6

20 .0 35.0 3.9
19 .0 28.0 3.1

Ga'Y

3

7

t 6.0 25_0 2.5

Siou x Falls

2

6

13 .5 19.5 2.4

Teams rece ive lllree points for a win,
one poi nt lor each quarter won and 1/2
point lor any quarter t1ed . No points
awarded during O'-'srtime .

fer Picture
Prepaid

Rocklor d 108, Gary 100 (5 .5, 1.5)
Siowc Falls 108. Dakota 105 (5, 2)
Yakima 101, ·Grea1Lakes ' 77 (6, 1)
Wednesday's Game
Great lakes at Idaho

Thursday's Game
Da ko ta at Gary

Hockey
2,

Mighty Ducks

0

0

1

0

1

1

1

1
-

2

Trum bull

22 1
376
65
686

Tuscaraw as
Union
Va n Wart
Vinton
Warre n

1590

1787

First
Period- None.
PenaltiesMcDonald , Ana (ob.-hooking) , 3 :42 ;
Lupul, Ana (interference) , 14:25 ; Pr'ospa l,
Ana (roughing) , 20:00 : Nash. Clm (rough·

223
51
748
211

218
30
822
212

Second Period-1, Columbus, Vyborny
10 (Walse r, Nash), 6:20 (pp) . PenaltiesCassels, Clm (hooking), 1:32 ; Burnett,

ing),

• Kitna's breakthrough.
See Page 81

OBITUARIES

WEATIIER
Rain, HI: 401,: Low: 30.
' '

Mail or drop otT at:

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...
Child's

Name:-.,.----~----___;_ _ _ _ __

From: ___. , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - YourName: _________________

•

Dr. Stephen Popper, Director of Occupational Medicine at Holzer Clinic
is now available at our Sycamore location to perform the following:

Dally 3: 9-9-0
Dally 4: 0-0-4-2

Calendars
c;:lassifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Places to Go

,,

Please see Hotel. AS

POMEROY
To
remember lhe elderly and
those confined to nursing
homes is a priorily lhis holiday season at the Senior
Cilizens Center where
paintin g · a nd sewing and
creating prelty lhings is a
daily proJect of RSVP volunteers.
Snowmen have been painted on more lhan 200 small
paper bags to go oul just
before Christmas to seniors
receiving home-delivered
meals. Each bag will ,have a
pair of one-size.Ji ts-all
gloves and a couple pieces· of
fruit. Gloves are still needed
and any color is fine, said
Diana Coates, RSVP director.
·Ditty bags with draw
string tops are al so being
made by two volunteers ,
Doris Carder and Mary
Alice Bias. The lwo have a
goal of 200 10 go to residents at Overbrook Center
and the Rocksprings Rehab
Cenler. Cards, stationary,

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysenti nel.com

POMEROY
- Meigs
Countv stand s to benefil
from portion of $2.9 million awarded to lhe Ohio
Di sasler Relief Fund to
repair damag e cau sed by
June flooding .
Stale
Senator
Jame s
Carne s. R-St. Clairsvi lle, a
member of the Stale
Controlling Board. said
Tue sday Meigs County is
one of 14 Ohio counties
whi ch experienced flooding
durin g the spring and summer monlh s eligible for
funding through the award.
Meig s
Emergency
Agency
Manageme nt
Director Robert Bver said
Thursday he has nol "received
notification of a specific
funding award 10 the county.
and Carnes- spokesman Liz
Everhard said yesterda y's
announcement
represe nls

a

Right: Doris Carder paints a
snowman on a paper bag.
The decorated bags with gift
items inside wi ll be delivered just before Christmas
to the more than 200
seniors who receive homedelivered meals . (Charlene
Hoeflich)

A3
83-4

Bs
A3

A4
As
As
81
A2
A6

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

Please see Fundlnc. A5

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel .com
POMEROY- The Meigs
Local Board of Education
voted at Wednesday nighl's
meeting to place a new fi ve
year lhree-mill levy for permanent improvements on
1he March ballot.
· The resolution to move
forward on the levy passed
by unanimous vote of the
members. According to
Mark Rhonemus, treasurer,
the levy, if passed: will generate
approximately
$353,000 a year.
The main use of the
money will be far keeping
the bus fleet and books current, explained the treasurer.
He said that the goal wi II be
to replace four buses a year
and one set of textbooks, k
lhrough 12, every year or
every other year. It was
poinled out lhat the state is
reducing the amounl of
money it provides toward
bus replacements.
In order to gel on lhe
March ballol, the levy will
have to be certified to the
Meigs County Board of

Eleclion s by Dec. 18. Meigs it would mean just shifling
County Auditor Nancy the burden on lhe first 3.3
Grueser was on hand at last mills of a levy from lhe slale
nighl 's meeting to clarify any to lhe local 1axpayer." said
issues which mighl relate· to Rhonemus. The slate now
picks up the difference to
meeting that deadline.
The district has had a per- bring the di strict.lo the 23.3
manent improvemenls levy mill level.
.in place for the past l 0 years.
It was passed as a live mill
Contacts awarded
levy but the mileage was
reduced after being renewed
Contracts for the asbestos
when the di strict wem lo the removal and demolition of
voters for a bond issue to the old Rutland and Salem
construct new buildings.
Center Elementary Schools
Rhonemus said lhat lhe were awarded' by the Board
district is currently collecl- at lasl night's meeling.
ing .55 of a miU from lhe old
The contracts for bmh
permanent
improvement . schools wenl to Keen and
levy which expires Dec . 31. Cross ,
Inc.
asbesto.s
That levy was rollt;d back by remo val, $ 132,289; and
the administration three Jeffers Coal Trucking and
years ago as an incentive to Excavating.
demol ilio n,
get voters to approve lhe $127,256.
bond issue lo build the new
The Rutland school lot
schools and · renovate Ihe once the' building is down
high school.
will be transferred to the
Rhonemus said thai lhe RUI!and Volunteer Fire
Board opted for a permanent Department. Disposal of the
improvement levy over an Salem Center propert y is •
operating levy because the sti II pending determinalion
district is currently at 1he 20 of ownership. Originally lhe
mill floor.
property if not use9 for a
"If we would do an operating levy since we're at the
Please see Levy. AS
20 mill floor now, basically

John Hood , a 12-year member of the Meigs Local Board of
Education, was honored at his last meeting before leaving
for Fort Dix. N. J. where he will temporarily be stationed
pending overseas assignment. He is a member of 3664th
Maintenance Co., Point Pleasant National Guard . Board
president Scott Walton presented Hood with a gift and a
red, white and blue window flag on behalf of the board .
(Charlene Hoeflich)
·

This FREE support group is sponsored by the Arthri~s Foundation and Holzer Medical Center

.

.Tuesday, December 9, 2003.

5:30 - 8:00 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
I

Funding
approved for
flood damage

Fibro•yalgia Support Group

Call Now!

·4th Avenue &amp; Sycamore Street Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

12 PAGF-S

'© 2003 Ohio Valley Publghing Co.

DOT Physicals, Drug Screens, Employment Physicals
and Workers Compensation.

740.446.5100

Please see Water. AS

Pomeroy Mayor Victor Young Ill discusses with Council the possible
sale of the land where the old Pomeroy Junior High sits -to the
Community Improvement Corporat1on for $75,000. (J. Miles Layton)

Bv

Pick 3 day: 9-4-7
Pick 4 day: 1-6-7-1
Pick 3 night: 8-0-5
Pick 4 night: 6-6-8-5
Buckaye 5: 1-4-11-21-27
Supetl.otto: 8-11-20-29-30-33
Bonus Ball: 26
Kicker: 8-2-4-3-9-6

2 SECTIONS -

Protnoting a healthy workforce
is what we are all ab:o ut.

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council approved ·the
sale of lhe land where the old
Pomeroy Juni or High sils to
the Community lmprovemenl
Corpora lion
(C IC)
for
$75,000.
· Mayor Viuor Young Ill
said there are fulure plans 10
develop the commercially
zoned · property inlo a ni ce
1wo-s1ory hole! once 1he

LJ

jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

Ohio

INDEX

Ads must be pre-paid

BY ). MILES lAYTON

increase , households that
are charged $ 13 for the first
2000 gallons of water could
be charged $16.50 starting
Jan. !Onext year.
Business and industry
could also sec a $3.50
increase i1i 1he base amount
for lhe firs! 2000 gallons.
Rate change increases in 1he
base charge sel for non-residenlial users based on waler
line size service are as follows for the firsl 2,000 gal-

Meigs Local Board of Education voted Wednesday night on a new levy

Phone:~----------------~-------~

Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State

New hotel planned for Pomeroy

Lo'ITERIES

West VIrginia

Address: - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - -

"""'" " 1·"" "'" ' " ' ..1' ' ""

envelopes, s1amps. crossword puzzle books and other
small items not supplied by
the nursing homes are needed to fill the dilly bags to be
delivered on Dec. 19.
A Secrel Sanla project
will provide remembrances
for many seniors who will
be alone on Christmas tune.
At the Cenler Ihere is a tree
with numbered stars and a
li's r of items fo r about 50
seniors who may be alone
for the holidays . In addition
to personal items some
non-peri shable foods like
small canned hams or other
meat and canned vegelables
will be included in each gifl
bag. Seveml stars have not
yet been selecled from the
Secret Santa tree .

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Detalla on Pa&amp;e A2

The Daily Sentinel

IJHI \IIIII( ~ .:.! oo; ;

Remembering senior citizens

Page AS
• Cecil w. Rice
• Leola Keck
• Sylvan J. Cleland
• Susan Gillilan

* Actual Size 1x3
* Runs Wednesday, December 24th
* Deadline for entl)' December 17th at 5:00

2MO

J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
BY

POM EROY - For lhe
third time in 1wo years,
Pomeroy Village Cou ncil
wants to increase water
rales.
Each ordinance requires
that Council approve · the
measure lhree limes before
it is pa ssed into law.
Council . took -the firsl slep
Wednesday toward rai si ng
lhe monthly. base by $3 .50.
If Council passes lhe rate

• Extension Corner.
See Page A2
1 Places to Go.
See Page A6
.I Community Calendar.
See Page A3

Evan Bryce Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

11111{~11\'

Possible water rate increase
begins to boil again in Pomeroy

SPORTS

terms w i1h AHP Dustin Hermanson on a
one-year contract.

0ay Merry Christmas
to 0omeone 0pecial
with .a
&amp;ntinel Christmas An8el

Tuesday's Games

Blue Jackets

.)nll'\1&lt;.;•\~&gt;1 .-.~ '\u . t.S

INSIDE

Dakot a '

Anaheim
Colu mbus

Middleport • Poineroy, Ohio

SAN FRANCISCO GIANT5-Agreed to

Wednesday 's Games
Nashville at CarOlina. 7 p.m .
Pinsburgh at Philadelphia , 7 p .m .

Continental Basketball
Association
W L

Pe rry
Pike

Pro Basketball

M1am1
Orlando

Hunting

Augla1ze

' 43.052

IR~ ~r:fT I ti~ylu~ ·ro
\il~~rlt ®J]l Jll!lli!1~1~::~ 11 (;

Wednesday, December 3, 2003

Ana, tr iple minor (double c ross-checking,
ro ughing}, 5:3 9: McDonnell, Clm (rough·
ing ), 5:39; Ma rch ant, C lm (hooking),
12:30 .
Third Period--2 , Columbus. Nash t6
(Vyborny), 3.18 (pp). 3, Anaheim , Prospa l
s (Havelid. Sykora), 19:28. PenaltiesGerber, Ana, served t:ty Prospal (roughIng), 2:59; L up ul, Ana (tripping), 6:35;
Sydor, Clm (inter1erence), 12:29.
Shots on goal-Anaheim 1(}11-t o-31
Columbus 14--9-9-32.
Power-play Opportuni tie~Ana he im 0 of
3; Columbus 2 of 6.
Goalies-An ah ei m, Ge rb er 4-3·2 (32
shots-30 saves). Col umbus, Denis 7-10·3

1763
151
393
81
228
45,296

268

Wyandot
Totals:

Rushers
All Yds Avg
McAllister, N 0. 272 1393 5 1

Delaware

Thursday 's Games
De troi t 22, Green Bay 14
Miami 40. Dal.l as 2 t
Sunday's Games
Ch1cago 28. Arizona 3
Houston 17. AUanta 13
Bultalo 24 , N Y. G 1an ts 7
St . Louis 48, M1n nesota 17
New England 38 , Indianapolis 34
Cincinnati 24. Pittsburgh 20
Ph iladelph ia 25. Caro l1na 16
Bal ti!Tlore 44 . San Franc1sco 6
New Orleans 24. Wash1ngton 20
Seattle 34. Cleve land 7
Denver 22, Oakland 8
Kansas C1ty 28. San D1ego 24
Jacksonville 17. Tampa Bay'· t 0

912
408

Williams

Barber. NY-G

Page.B6

o

HOLZER
CLINIC

Discover the Holzer Difference

Take a more active role in your healtltl

www.holzer.org

For more

SYCAMORE

MEDICAL CENTER

Topics discussed will include .. _pain control, exercise, relaxation,
fatigue, depression and doctor/patient relationship.
informa~on,

or lo regisler, coli Mi.si Ross at '

(740) 446·5121 or 1·800·116·5131

...

,,

••

,_. '

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