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                  <text>.- .~ --

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

;.

. Monday, December 8 , 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Browns back in prime time Prep Scoreboard
on Monday Night Football

McComb •7. Blulf!on 48
Cln . N. College Hill 65. Paint Valley 40
Mentor
Cl'lr. 42, MeadVIlle Chr. 29
Circ:levHia 64, Williamsport Wslttall57
Galllo Academy 15 2 13 20 9 - 59
Milan Edison 64, Attica Seneca E. e1
Cle.
Horizon
SCience
58,
University
Hts.
Meigs
19 10 12 9 8 - 58
Milford 47, Cin. Walnut Hills~
GALLUA ACADEMY (1·1) - Jeff Pay1on Fuchs Mizrachl 57
Milford Center Fairbanks 67, Sn&amp;kinah
Cle. Shaw 102, Cleveland JFK 44
1 o-o 3, Eric Taylor 1 o-o 3, Donnie Johnson
Cle. St. Ignatius 80, Cia. Villa Angela-St. Christian 51
5 3·6 14, Jaymes Haggerty 4 2-3 12 .
Mount Gilead 65, East Kno~~: 49
ShBphen Robinson 1 0..0 2, Tom Bose 54- Joseph 52
Moun! Vernon 62, LeKington 54
Cleveland Hts. 48, Lima Sr. 44
5 14, NiCk Craft 4 2-5 10, Zach Shawver 0
N. Ballimore 78. Arcardia 37
Cllnton-Massie 66, UtUe Miami 50
1-2 1 TOTALS - 2 1 12-2 1 59.
Napoleon 59 , Sherwood FaiNiew 43
Coldwater 51 , St. Marys 43
MEIGS (1-1) - Jon Bobb 4 6·10 15,
Collins W.A. 55. Sulllvan Black River 47
New LondOn 66, Well ington 51
Jeremy Blackslon 0 2-2 2. Carl Wolfe 3 o-2
Cots. Eastmoor Academy 51 , Cle.
Newark Cath. 42, Tho rnville Sheridan 41
6, Eric Van Meter 0 0-0 0, Dave Boyd 0 0-2
Newbury 75, Sta. John &amp; Paul 44
O, Corey Woods 3 0-0 6, TY Ault 2 0-0 4, Rhodes45
Cols. Mifflin 76, Cin . Aiken 61
.._,
Norwal!( 51. Paul61 . Sandusky Pen&lt;ins 60
Adam Snowden 1 o-o 2, Dakota Dewitt 55Conneaut 39, Madison 37
8 15, Ryan Hannan 3 2·5 8 . TOTALS- 21
Oak Harbor 62. Millbury Lake 57
Convoy Crestview 53, St. Henry 50
Oberlin 66, Lorain Cath. 61
15·29 58
Cary-Rawson 53, Bascam Hopewell·
3-point goals - GA 5 (Haggerty 2,
Olentangy 69. Delaware Buckeye Valley
1
Johnson , Taylor and Payton), Meigs 1 LoU'don 45
39
Coshocton 63, Zoarville Tuscarawas
(Bobbl
Oregon Clay 59, Whltehouse AnthOny
Valley 55
Wayne
53
Greenfield-Mclain 68, Eaatem 50 Defiance lmora 60. Liberty Center 52
Pandora Gilboa 52, .Allen E. 38
Delaware Chrislian 55 , Granville
At Zane Trace
Pataskala Walkins Memorial 90, Ashville
Christian 26
Eastern
7 9 15 19 -50
Teays
Valley 40
Delaware
Hayes
70,
Zanesville
63,
OT
Greenfield Mclain
16 19 19 14-68
Paulding 52, Delphos 45
Eastern 81own 60, Fayetteville 50
EASTERN (H)- Nathan Grubb 3 5-7
Pori Clin ton n, Genoa 33
Elida 50, lima Bath 29
13. Cross 3 4·4 10, Meyers 2 1·2 7, Carroll
Reynoldsb urg 51 , Hilliard Darby 37
Elyria Open Door 69, Richmond Hts. 47
2 2· 2 7. 1 4·4 6. Di111 2·2 4, Hayman 1
Rossford 60. Pemberville E. 45
Enon Greenon 63, Day. Chnsllan 41
0 2. Dillard 0 1·5 1. Totals: 13 19-26 50
Sandusky 72, Mansfield St. Peter's. 69
Euclid 51. Collinwood 46
GREENFIELD - Jackson 11 7-8 29,
Sandusky St. Ma ry 68, Fostoria St .
Felicity 40. Mariemont 39
Carson 4 2·4 10, Huffer 2 3·6 9, Binegar 3
Findlay
Liberty-Be nton 49, . Tel. Wendelin 57
2·2 S, Ralph 2 1·6 5, Justice 0 2·2 2,
She ffield Brookside 55, N. Ridgeville lake
Charles 1 0·1 2, Smith 1 0·0 2, Stark 0 1-2 Woodmere 44
Franklin 51, Waynesville 39
Ridge 29
1. Totals: 24 19-33 68.
Three Point Field Goals: Eastern 5 (Grubb · Fredericktown 56, Westerville Cent. 22
Shelby 69, Powe.ll Olentangy Liberty 49
Ft. Jennings 71, Ayersville 43
2, Meyers 2. Carroll 1) Greenfie ld 2 (Huffer
Sidney Lehman 42, Botkins 34
Ft. Recovery 48 , Union City Mississinewa
2)
Spa rta Highland 76. Streetsboro 54
Valley 36
Ohio High School Boye Basketball
Sugar Grove Berne Union 85, Uberty
Gahanna 65, Cols. Independence 63
Saturday's Reaults
Christian 44
Gallipolis Ganla Academy 59. Meigs 58,
Ada 73, Arlington 46
Sylvania Southview 59. Tol . Whitmer 51
Akr. St. Vincent-St. Mary 57. Cambridge OT
Thomas Worth ington 53, Col&amp; . Marion
Garfield Hts. 63, NDCL 53
39
Franklin 51
Georgetown 49, Western Brown 37
Amherst 65, Lorain Southview 49
Tipp City Bethel 57, Spring. NW 49
Glouster Trimble 76, Zanesville Maysville
Andover Pymatuning Valley 46, Orwell
Tal. Bowsher 72. Maumee 47
46
Grand Va lley 40
Tot. Ottawa Hiils 50 , Eden 35
Grandview
59,
Utica
55
Antwerp 46, Fayette 32
Tal. St. John 77, Fremont Ross 37
Greenfield McClain 68, Reedsville E. 50
Archbold 84, Continental 66
Tot Waita 70, Grove City 58
Grove City' Cenlral Crossing 65, Cols.
Ash tabula E,dgewood 52, John Marshall
Troy 66, Spring. S. 58
Hamilton Township 48
49
.
Twinsburg 62, Chagrin Falls 52
Groveport Madison 50, Miami Trace 45
Aurora 70, Cardinal 52
Van Buren 64, Bloomdale Elmwood 55
Haviland Wayne Trace 72, Rockford
Avon 64, Vermilion 56
Van Wertlincolnview 69, OHoville 59
,
Parkway 60
Brecksville 45, N. Olmsted 35
Heath 51. North Ridge 50
W. Ala... ander Twin Valley 5. 72, Day.
Cadiz Harrison 4 1, Fairlield 38
Hoban 59, Akron Garfield 47
Northridge 42
Canal Winchester 69, W. Muskingum 55
Holgate 46, Tot. Chris. 29
W. Cl'leste r Lakota East 86, Cin.
Canton McKi nley 76, Newark 40
Huntington Ross. 70, Ridgedale 48
Cardington 71, Marion Catholic 62
Woodward 41
.
Indiana Deal 65, Cols. Ohio Deaf 8
Celina 57, Tol. Wood ward 33
w. Chester Lakota West 67, Mason 62
Johnstown 59, West Jefferson 57
Centerburg 54. Galion Northmor 29
W. Geauga 61, Maytleld 39
Kent Roosevelt 70, Young . Boardman 67
Chicago Hales Franc;iscan 782. Cois.
W. Salem NW 80. Clover1eaf 53
Kings Mills King s 58, Indian Hill 51
Northland 72
Warsaw River View 58. Gnadenhut1en
Lakewood St. Edward 73. Bedlord Chif!el
Chillicothe 59, Vinton Co. 42
Indian Valley 43
Chillicothe Huntington 70, Morral 65
Well ston 56, WeUington 46
Lancasler 48, Cln. Withrow 46
Ridgedale 48
Westerville N. 50, Bellefontaine 37
Lewis
Center
Indian
lake
47.
St.
Paris
Cin. Anderson 68. Clermont NE 46
Wilmi ngton 49 , HillsbOro 48
Graham 33
Cin. Colerain 72, Cin. Northwest 71
Wooster 68, Cle. S. 64
Lima Perry 62, Ridgeway Ridgemonl 48
Cin. Deer Park 64. Middletown Madison
Worthington Kilbourne 47, Cols. Westland
logan
Elm
71
,
Minford
50
46
'
46
london 93. Urbana 60
Cin. Lockland 45, Cin. Seven Hills 42
Yellow Springs 64, Bellbook 61
Marton Elgin 52, Cheshire River Valley 48
Cin. Love land 63, Cin. McNichOlas 51

CLEVELAND- All arl
Lillie needed was a tou e.
blazer and microphone .
... ! his is Howard Co ell,"
the Browns safety said mimi~king the !;Jle-legend, . TV
sponscastef. whose distincti\e vo ice and signature
ope ning line we lwmed the
nation to "Monday Nig ht
Football" telecasts duri ng the
1970s.
In anticip,n ion of their f1rst
regular-season Monday night
appearance since returning to
the leag ue in 1999. many of
C leveland 's players spent the
past week reminiscing about
ni ehts they' ve spe nt staying
up late to watc h classic
games.
On Monday ni ght , th ey
hope to play in one.
The Browns (4-~). trying to
salvage some pride in a se~l ­
son gone wrong. will host the
St. Louis Rams (9-3). It wi ll
he Cleveland 's first "MNF'
appeara nce since Nov. 13.
1995. and its 25th since hosting the inau gural Monday
nig ht game on Sept. 2 1. 1970.
when the Browns beat the
New York Jets 3 1-2 1.
Before losin g fi ve of their
last six games. the Browns
pointed to the· n1atchup with
one of the NFC's elite teams
as an opportu ni ty to show the
rest of the NFL that they are a
team to be taken.seriously.
They still sec it th at way,
des pite not havin g a reali stic
shot at making the playoffs.
"We don ' t get much 11ational exposure. but we've got a
lot of great players on thi s
team." said Little. who leatls
the Browns wi th fou r intercept ions. "This season hasn' t
go ne li ke we ex pected·. But

Ravens
from Page 6
"We can 't turn it over like
we did today and expec t, to
beat anybod y.'' Marvin
·Lewis said. "We have a lot of
football left: we'll prove
what we' re made of the next
th ree weeh ."
Baltimore (8-5) moved a
game ahead of the Bcnga ls
itNhe AFC Nort h. Cinci nnati
beat the Ravens in October.
and would have gained a
tiebreaker w1th a victory. But
the Bengals never led after
Jamal Lewis scored a fi rstquarter touchd ow n following a Cincinnati turnover.
The ga me was the opposit e of the fi rst meeting,
when the Bengals capitalized on· Baltimore mistakes
to win.

" It was a sour taste in our
mouth the last time we
played them:· Ray Lew is
said. "We just knew we didn't play our football game.
Yeah, th ey were riding hi gh,
but they had to come into
Baltimore sooner or later."
The game was played in a
brisk 20 mph wind.
Although Bengal s quarterbac k Jon Kitna blamed the
wind for one of hi s two interceptions. he had no exc use
for his two fumbl es.

sibly to soothe the agitated
Browns fans who flooded
radio call-in shows wondering what the coach could be
thi nking.
"Let me make thi s completely clear," Davis said .
"By no stretch of the im~g i­
nation are we satisfied bemg
4-8. There were a lot of higher expectations of this team
going into training camp . We
don't want the wheels to
we ' II be on the big stage, so come off in the last four
we ' re going to go out and put weeks. We want to fini sh
on a good sliow because we these last four games as posiknow the whole world wilT be tively as possible, and what
better place to do it than on
watching."
Monday Night Footbal l."
At least for a half.
The Rams, meanwhile,
After the way the Browns
would
lock up a playoff berth
folded lust week in a 34-7
wi
th
a
win.
drubbing at Seattle. it would
"We' re fortunate enough to
be hard to imagine them givbe
in a position where we
ing the powerful Rum s much
don
'
t have to worry about
of a tussle. However,
what
other people do," lineCleve land has played we ll
when it\ leas t expected to, man Tyoka Jackson said :
and that could happen again. "Winn ing puts you where
The Browns wi ll have their you want to be.
"Ju st win and everything
hand&gt; fu ll tryi ng to contain
St.
Louis'
hi gh-octane else w1ll take care of itself."
NFL players view games
offense led by quarterback
Marc Bulger. running back on Monday night as sacred.
Marshall Faulk and wide It's a chan ce to show otf to
their peers. who are relaxing
receiver Torry Holt.
and
recoveri ng after playing
Holt leads the league with
92 catches and 1,387 receiv- the previous day.
ing yards. He's on pace to. St. Loui s coach Mike
break Jerry Rice's league Mart z recalled seeing an
mark of 1.84S yards in a sea- assistant coach for another
team urging his players to
son (1995 ).
"I love Monda y ni ght ," pe rform at their best because
Holt said . "It's the greatest it was a Monday night game.
''I'm thinking to myself,
stage. Eve rybody in the coun am I missing something
try is watching:·
Earl ie r las t wee k. coach here," Martz said. "What
Butch Davis raised some eve- we re we doing last week?
brows when the proclainied How about next week? I
the Browns were ahead of d'on ' t get that. I don 't underschedu le "i n some respects'' stand it that, and I hope our
in hi s third season rebuild ing players don't either. That \
wh at's ex pected of them
Cleveland.
Davis clari fied those every time you put the uniremarks a few days later. pos- form on.''

"We jus t had &gt;nme real ly
costl y turnovers m certain
points in the game," he said.
"But we' ll bounce back.
V..'e· ve done it all year.··
Th e
Bengal s
hadn 't
allowed more than four
sacks in any game this season. and Kitn a had 19 TD
passes and four intercept ions
in his previou s nine games.
He fini shed 23-for-3 1 for
2 14 yard s. Eleven of hi s
completions were to Peter
Warrick. who scored a
touchdown bu t also committed a turnover.
Dow n 17- 10 at halftime.
the Bengal s promptl y moved
47 vards before Shavne
Graham kicked a , 38-yard
fi eld goal.
After a Balli more ptmt,
Kitna fumb led upon being
sac ked by rookie Terrell
Suggs. who recovered at the
Cincinnati 17. Jamal Lewi s
then ran for 14 yards before
scoring from lhe 3 .for a 2413 lead.
He clinched the vidory
with II :48 left, scorin g after
Will D.emps returned an
interception 54 yards tD the
Cmcinnati 2 1.
It was the fifth straight
home win for the Raven s,
now poised to win the first
division title in their hi story.
"A ll it does is create the
opportunity to get someth ing
done that we had set our
sights on in training camp."

Rave ns coach Brian Billick
said.
A fumbl e by Jamal Lewis
set up a field goal for a 3-0
Cincinnati lead, but Warrick
fumbl ed a punt to set up the
first of Lewis' three· touchdowns.
Anthony Wright capped a
70-yard drive with an 8-yard
touchdown pass to Marcus
Robinson to make it 14-3,
and after Warrick scored on
a 4-yard throw from Kitna,
Matt Stover gave the Ravens
a seven-point halftime cushion with his 19th straight
field goal with 2:09 left in
the half.
Notes: Baltimore LB
Adalius Thomas sustained a
fracture in the elbow area
and will likely requtre
surgery.... Jamal Lewis now
has 146 career points. most
by a non-kicker in team history. Jerma ine Lewis held
the old mark (132). .. .
Warrick's I I receptions were
a career hi gh. He has 70 for
the year. ·ty ing hi s season
hi gh set in 200 L ... Kitna is
the only NFL quarterback to
take every offensive snap for
hi s .team this season. ...
Cincinnati OT Levi Jones
left the game in the third
quarter with a strained right
knee and did not return. ...
Ra vens
KR
Lamont
Brightful sprained his knee
in the third quarter and did
not return.
·

•

o-

Fiesta
froiTi Page 6
out of th e national rankings ,
but have won seven straight
since then.
Ohio State quarterback
Craig Kren zel said Kan sas
State made a statement with
Saturday' s win .
"I watched Kansas State
beat Oklahoma, and there's
no debate about whether
they ' re a good football
team ," he said.
The Bu ckeyes are returning to the site of one of the
greatest vi ctories in school
history. On Jan. 3, 2003,

Thriller
from Page 6
Wolfe was referring his
team' s free throw woes; his
Marauders mis sed I I free
tosses during the fourth quarter and overtime.
"One time there, we missed
eight out of nine free throws
and only scored one field
goal in that last quarter,"
Wolfe explained. "They were
fouling to get the ball back; it
worked for them and it was a
disaster for us.
"If we make the free
throws, we pull away and
probably still win by that
double figure margin - but
that's why you play four
quarters."
Despite the disappointing
ending, there were many positives for Meigs.
The Marauder defense was

Maurice Clarett scored on a
5-yard run in the second
overtime and the Ohio State
defense held No. I Miami
on downs to preserve a 3124 victory in a classic contest in the desert.
When asked if he thought
the familiar terrain would
benefi t hi s tea m, Tressel
said it could give them a
slight boost.
" I think once you ' re anywhere for a day, you're
familiar. You know how to
get to th e practice field and
that kind of thing. so maybe
we' ll be more efficient the
first day."
have
The
Buckeyes
played in three Fiesta

Bowl s, losing to then-inde·
pendent Penn State 31-19 in
the 1,.980 game pitting legendary coaches Joe Paterno
and Woody Hayes , and
beating Pittsburgh 28-23 in
the 1984 game thanks in
large part to Keith Byars'
99 -yard
fourth-quarter
kickoff return for a touchdown .
The Fiesta Bowl pays out
between $13.6 million and
$16.6 million, which will
be pooled with other Big I 0
teams' bowl earnings and
divided evenly 12 ways
among
the conference
members and the league
office . .

stellar in the first half, particularly in the pivotal second
quarter. Meigs allowed no
field goals and held its opponents to just two free throws
over that eight minute span.
"The defense did as good
a job the first half as you
could pos sibly ask for,"
Wolfe
commented. ~
"I
thought our defense was
superb, our board play was
superb, our shot selection
was great - we did just
about everything right for
three quarters."
Johnson and Tom Bose
paced GAHS with 14 points
each. Johnson recorded
game-highs in assists with six
and steals with seven as well.
Nick Craft also turned in a
solid performance in the
paint for the winners with I 0
points and six rebounds.
Zach Shawver led the team
· with eight boards.
Bobb and Dakota Dewitt

led Meigs and all scorers
with 15 markers each. Bobb
added four assists and four
· steals while' Dewitt collected
a team-best seven rebounds.
Gallia Academy . also won
the junior varsity contest by a
count of 51-39.
Travi s Stout scored I 5
points in the win while teammate Matt Mooney followed
with 12.
Eric Van Meter paced
Meigs with I0 markers with
David Pode and Brandon
Kimes chipping in nine each.
GAHS will tip-off the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League schedule Friday at
Logan. Junior varsity gets
underway with varsity to follow.
·Meigs will remain at home
to host Belpre on Friday in
the Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division opener for
both squads. JV begins at
6:30.

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- Rumors swirl about
possible closure of Kroger
stores in Pomeroy and Gallipolis

SPORTS
• Rams hold off Browns.
~PageB1

BY

..,/:~: ~

,., .

OBITUARIES
Page AS
Wilma B. Williams

~

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~.. ~ ... ,

" ,

.

-~

'X

,

·• ) f¥,
·'•

: • Finding the perfect gift
:See Page AS
•·• Woman reunited with
·daughter.
· See Page A2
'\..,
• • Community Calendar.
See Page A3

'

~

,._ ...

---- ---- -- -

members of United Food
and Commercial Workers
Local 400 went on strike
after rejecting. Kroger's
contract offer.
Arc hie
Fralin ,
spokes man for Kroger said
Monday the company has
no plans to close any
stores incl udi ng Pomeroy
or Gallipolis.
"That rumor ca me from
a Charleston Daily Mail
that qu oted one of our
competitors as saying that
he heard trom ' indu stry
sources' th at seven stores
includin g both Pomeroy
and Gallipoli s wo uld close
permanentl y," said Fralin.
"We have made no
announcements on perma-

Please see Kroger, AS

-

'. f { "'=-·
MASON - A new Bob
.....
.J..
Eva ns Restaurant is under
}
t' •'
• j ~
const ruction in Mason.
Mayor Ray Cundiff said he
is exci ted to see the bui lding
going up .
"We knew that they had
purchased a building perm it,
but to see them actul,llly break
ground is a step forw ard for
Mason,'' Cund iff sa id.
The new restaurant is the
larg er of the two proto-types
of r~ s taura nts that Bob Evans
builds. sa id a company
spokesperson.
Located directly in front of
the Wai-Mart store at the end
of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge Workers broke ground on Nov. 20 and the walls are going up
on W.Va . Route 33, in a high for the new Bob Evans Restau rant in Mason. The restaurant
is scheduled to open in late spring and wi ll employ about 70
Please see Bob Evans, AS workers. (Kand y Boyce)
~

J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@mydailysenli nel.com

;i
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l" i I

Cloudy, HI: 50s, Low: 40o

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Dotallo on Page A2

LO'I"I'ERIFS
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-6-0
Pick 4 day: 4-5-4-9
Pick 3 night: 9-0-7
Pick 4 night: 2-3-1-8
BuckeyeS: 6-25-29-31-32

Deem 's children, Alison , 5, and Trenton, 11, led the
pledge of allegiance as they stood beside their father
Tony, Monday at Me igs Elementary School. Deem's
unit with the West Virginia Army National Guard was
put on alert and then activated a few weeks ago. The
Meigs Local Board of Education presented Deem , the
kindergarten through second grade principal, with a
flag featuring a s ingle star. (Jan Haddox)

It is tradition to give families with
soldiers serving a red, white and
blue flag with a star on it which
symbolizes that a loved one is
serving abroad . The words on the
flag say "We honor those who
serve." (J. Miles Layton)

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysenlinel.com

RUTLAND - Ared. white
GREAT BE"'D - The
and blue fl ag wi th one star is Ohio
Department
of
flying in the wind at Meigs Transportation "il l officially
Elementary sy mboli zin g duty open
the
Ra,en&gt;wood
to country of one man .
Connector on Dec. 23. and
The Meigs Local Board of Go,·. Bob Taft i&gt; expec ted to
Education recognized Tony attend.
Dee m, the kind erga rten
The ceremon v has been set
through second grade prin ci- for 9:JO a.m.. a·t a locati on w
pal. for answering the ca ll to be announced nex t week.
serve overseas by presenting according
to Stephanie
him with a special flag with a Filson. a ., pokesman for the
single star. Deem 's unit with O hio
Department
of
the We st Virginia Army Transportation 's Distnct I 0
National Guard was put on office in Marietta .
alert and then activated a few
Major &lt;:onstruction work
weeks ago. Ru sty Bookman. on the remaining tw o secthird through fifth grade pri n- tions of the 15-mlk hig hway
cipal. said it is trad itional 10 has been completed. and
give a fl ag with a star on it to ODOT Deput y Director
symbolize that a fam ily has a Geo rge Collins said last
member serving overseas ·'month the hi ~ h way could be
during a war.
open to traftic as early a'
"This is just our way of let- . De c. 15
..
ting everyone know that he
ODOT' s contract with
(Deem ) is serving our co un- Koko sing Construction Co.
try." he said. "We are going carries a cas h payment of
to miss him."
S 100.000 on each section of
Deem said has been called unfin ished highway. if the
to serve 18 months. which constructio n is completed by
include s three month s of Dec. 1. While that date has
training on both ends of a 12 come and gone. the firm loses
month tour of duty. He is cur- $500 per dav. per section. for

Please see Deem, AS

Please see Connector, AS

West Vn-ginia
Dally 3: 5-5-5
Dally 4: 7-9-6-7
Cash 25: 2-5-l 0-20-23-24 ~

Vigil for guard members
on for Wednesday night
BY KEVIN KELLY

kkelly@ mydailyregister.com ·

INDEX
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries' ·
Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
As
B1
A2

POINT PLEASANT A vi~il honoring . the
departmg members of
Point Pleasant's 3664th
Maintenance Company of
the West Virginia National
Guard is on for Krodel
Park
at
8:30
p.m.
Weqnesday.
Around 175 members of
the co mpany, called to
active duty in Operation
Iraqi Freedom, leave the
guard armory on W.Va.
Route 62 at 7 a.m .
Thursday for pre-deployment at Fort Dix , N.J .
Citizens from the tri-

Ornaments with artist's rendering ot the new
Pomeroy-Mason B
went on sale this week
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel .com

county area of Mason,
Meigs and Gallia counties
are asked to attend and
show their support for the
company.
Pete Allinder, mini ster of
Sandhill Road Church of
Christ, is contacting local
clergy abOut speaking to
the crowd, whil e Point
Pleasant
Mayor
Jim
Wilson is in contact with
American Legion Post 23
about arranging for a
speaker.
Cler~y interested in participatmg should co ntact
Allinder at 675-35 12.
"It's a way of showing

POMEROY
Gold
metallic tree ornaments featuring an artist's rendering of
the new Pomeroy-Maso n
Bridge as it will look when
competed in 2006 went on
sale this week.
The limited edition ornaments are being sold by the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association with proceeds to
go into bea utification of
downtown Pomeroy.
A picture in black and
white -of the cable-s tyle
bridge across the Ohio Ri ver

Ple1H see Vl.. l, AS

PI-s.. Ornaments, AS

Peggy Barton and John Musser. president of . the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, disp lay the gold metallic tree ornaments depicting the new cable .Pomeroy-Mason bridge under
construction . The bulbs, a limited edition of 300. went on sale
this week. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Dla.etes Support ·Group
The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet

•

-':

Sunday, December_14
2:()0 pm - 4:00 pm

MEDICAL CENTER

HMC French 500 Room

Discover the Holzer Difference

Featured speaker - Billie Toothman of Purdue Pharmaceuticals
Christmas Dinner! Please bring a covered dish fo the meeting.

www.holzer.org

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ODOT sets Dec. 23
connector opening

BY

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WEATHER

304-675-4340

2520 Valley

BY KANDY BoYCE

kboyce@ mydailyregister.com

I I

~~ . ~ o}·jl' ·; :; J. ..;;;(:.'t~.·:r
"-'

Mason gets Bob Evans restaurant

Deem honored with special flag from Meigs Local

INSIDE

'

foco·sed shQ,~~~waves to ft~IIJient

MILES lAYTON

POMEROY - A statement by former Kroger
exec uti ve Don Tate quoted
"industry sources" as saying Kroger plans to not
reopen its stores in
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, and
fi ve ·other store s in West
Virginia. Tate, who now
owns 18 competi ng groce ry stores m We st
Virginia and Virginia.
made the stateme nt last
week in the Charleston
Daily Mail.
.Along wi th 42 other
stores,
the
Kroger
Pomeroy and Gallipolis
stores have been closed
since Oct. 13 when 3,300

@ 2.003 Ohio V•lley Publishiq Co.

~·:

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jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

2 SECriON -

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Gallle Academy 59, Melga 58 OT

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

Eagles fly high
over Rebels, Bt

Southern·
defeats
"

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!he Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Wednesday, Dec. 10
AccuWeather .com forecast tor da

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Ice

V'ia As!i-OCiilted Press

Mostly Cloudy, much warmer
Thursda y ni ght... Mosil y
clear. Lows around 23.
FriJ,,y... Partl y
cloud y.
Highs around 39.
Friday ni gilt...Mostl y clear.
Lows around 22.
Saturd ay ... Mostl y
clear.
Highs around 39.
Saturday night... Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
snow. Lows around 26.
Sunday... Mustly
cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
rain. Highs around 42.
Sunday nigh!... Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of rain
and snow. Lows around 33.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ... Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. A 20
percent chance of showers toward
dawn. Lows in the mid 40s.
; Wednesday ... Ciuudy with a
~0 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Wednesday ni ght.. .Mostl y
cloudy. Rain showers likely
early.. :Then a slight chance of
rain showers after midnight.
Lows around 35. Chance of
~recipitation 60 percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs around 40.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Dec. 8, 2003

Dow
Jones

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9 ,965 .27
Pet. change
from previous: +1 .04

Dec. 8, 2003

Nasdaq
composite

Dec. 8, 2003

High
9,970.16

Low
9, 859.57

Record high: 11 ,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000
-

2,000

/~/"\~
~J&lt;:&lt;,"""·•tl---=---::--·---- 1.800
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1 '400

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Low

1,948 .94

1,926.94

-

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• Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000
- - - ' - - - - 1,100

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
SEP
Pet. chanra;
from prev ou1: +0.73

High
1,069 ..59

950

OCT

NOV
DEC
Record high: 1,527.46
Low
March 24, 2000
1,060.93

AP

tocal Stocks
AEP -28.21

Ganrett - 87 .43
General Elaclric- 29.37

AkZo-35.00

GKNLY - 4 95

Asf1and Inc. - 41.30
BBT - 38.62
BU - 13.44

Harley Davidson - 46 38
Kmart -27 36
K11J98r - 17.89
Lld. - 17.77
NSC-22.65
Oak Hin Finardal - 39.89
Bank One - 44.65
CNB -27
Peoples - 27.82
Pepsico - 46.26
Premier - 8.25
Rocky Boots - 21.90

ACI -26.29

Bob Ev.ms - 30.91
BorgWamer- 80.83
Crty Hol&lt;lng - 36.41
Charr!Jion- 4.37
Chaming Shops- 5.64
Col - 27.39
Dlf'onl- 43.96

DG-t9.83
Fedeml
-266

AD Shell - 46.88
Rod&lt;well - 33.75
Sears- 47.93
SBC -2417
AT&amp;T - 20.00
USB -28.15
Werdy's - 39.89
Wai-Mart - 53.40
Wm1hington - 15.77
Dai~ stock reports arn the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous dafs 11ansacboos,
prcNid&lt;ld by Smilh Par1neiS
at Advast Inc. of GaRipof1s.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate . If you know of an error in a
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2i56.
"

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

(USPs 213-s6o)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"Publ ished
every
afternoon ,
Monday through Friday, 11 1 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodi cal

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The As sociated Pre ss
and
the
Ohio . Newspaper
Association.

Postmaster: Send address correc~,
tions to Til e Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Po meroy. Ohio .
45769 .

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext . 12
Reponer: Brian Reed, E)(1. 14
: Reporter: J. Miles Layton, E)(1. 13

Advertising
· Outalde Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
ClaooJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext I 0

Circulation
; Dlotrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext 17

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

month ............'9.95
One year .. ... .. .. .. .'119.40
Dally ... .. .............so•
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Subscribers should remit , in
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carrier service is available.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County

General Manager
Charlene Hoefl ich , EKI. 12

E-mail :

13 Weeks . ... ........ ' 30.15
26 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . • so.oo
52 Weeks .... ... ..... ' 11 8.80

news@mydaitysentinel .com ·

Web:
www.mydailysentinel .com

PageA2

Rates .Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
. .. '50.05
26 Weeks ............' 100. i 0
52 Weeks ........ . . ..'200.20

.

Woman reunited
with daughter
COLUM BUS (AP)
Nancy Range l spent the last
23 years wo ndering what
happened to her daughter.
She didn 't even kn ow if
the girl she named Ana was
sti ll ali ve. Now her waiting
and wondering are over.
Rangel and her daughter
spoke for the first ti me after
Ana Rangel's name was
entered into a national database of missing children last
week . It matched a woman
who had applied for a Texas
identi fication card in June.
They were reuni re d by
phone Wedn esday.
"I go t to tell her that I
neve r abandoned her and
looked for her 365 days a
year for 23 years:· she said
Monday. "And she got to tell
me that she was loved and
had Ji ved a good life. It's
·ust too bad it wasn't with
J

Ana Range II ,
shown
in
this undated
photo from
the
Ohio
Attorney
General 's
office , was
found afte r
being reported mis sing 23 years ago.
Rangel spoke to her mother
for the first time . after her
name was placed into a
national database of missing
children las t week. Ana disappeared in 1980 when she
was 23 month s old . (AP
Photo/ Ohio Attorney General
via The Columbus Dispatch) ·

Vermilli on reque sted that
Ana' s name be carried on the
national Missing Children
Clearinghouse database even
after she turned 18.
me ."
It was luck. he said, th at a
Ran gel's ordeal began Oct. · new employee was given a
29. 1980. Ana was just a stack of cold cases to run
month awav from her second
birthday. They were living in through the computer for
possible leads.
Kenton in northwest Ohio.
Poli ce will not pursue
Her former hu sband. Pedro criminal charges because of
Ran gel, and another man th e time lapse and Rangel
woke her early on that morn- and Ana's wi sh to move on,
ing and packed her and the Vermillion said .
toddl er in the car.
Rangel screamed "she's
"I kept askin g him where alive" and tears streamed
we were going and he down her face when she
wouldn' t tell me anything," found out that her daughter
said Rangel. who now lives had been located after all
in East Li ve rpool near the these years.
Wes t
Virginia
and
Ohio Attorney General Jim
Penn syl vania state lines.
Petro helped link mother and
They drove for days to daughter by phone thi s week
Texas . Peuro Rangel told her through an interpreter. His
they were going to vi sit hi s office administers the state's
mothe r in Mexico . They Mi ssing
Children
crossed the border the next Clearinghouse .
morning. but drove to the
"Ana was scared and conMonterrey
airport
and fu sed after living all these
dropped Nancy Rangel off, years with a woman she
she said .
believed to be her biological
He told her he would bring mother," said Michelle
their daughter home in two Gatchell, a spokeswoman for
weeks. she said , but they Petro . "And Nancy was ncrnever returned .
vous about talking to a
" I didn't know the Ian- daughter that might believe
guage. I didn ' t know where I she had abandoned her."
was. And I was afraid that if
They talked about their
I threw a fit, he ' d kill me." lives but did not discuss
what happened after. they
she said.
She had no passport and were
separated,
said
little money.
Vermillion, who listened to
" Mexican
authorities the phone call. Rangel didn't
wouldn ' t let me leave want to upset her daughter,
because my visa had mine he said .
and Ana's names on it,"
It's not known who raised
Rangel said. "But I was hys- her or where she grew up.
"We kind of helped break
terical and they finally let
me go."
the ice," he said. "Maybe as
Rangel took a bus home to time goes on, the daughter
Ohio and began searching will talk more. There's . an
for her baby. ~he called awful lot of questions they'd
mrssmg-chtldren s groups, like to ask each other."
police and t~e U.S . conRangel said her daughter
sulate. She htred a pnvate · asked for a month to let the
investigator and drove to information sink in before
Mexico with a Spanish- they talk again. No phone
speaktng fnend to 1mplore number is listed for Ana
police to help. .
.
Rangel in Texas.
Nancy Rangel said she
. Mex1can offtcers ptcked
up her husband and took him hopes to pick up where she
to her hotel. but they let him left off and was tickled to
go.
learn that Ana is six months
She ~tarted drinking , quit pregnant.
"Now that I've found her 1
her job as a nursing assistant
and spent her days rocking don' t ever want to lose her
back and fo~th. wrapped in again," she said tearfully.
her daughter s blanket.
''I'm not only gaining a
Kemon Police Chief John daughter but a grandbaby."

Three dead in fire
on Columbus'
west side
COLUMBUS (AP)
Three people , including
teenage girl and a 2-yearold boy, died in a duplex
fire early Tuesday morning
on the city 's west side,
firefi ghters said.
The victims. which al so
included woman in her
"
40s, probably died of
smoke
inhalation
even
thou gh there were working
smoke detectors in the
home, Chief Dave Whiting
said . Whiting would not
identify th e victims or say
where in the home firefi ghters found their bodies.
The fire started in the
back of the home at 3:15 '
a.m. a.nd it took firefighters
about 30 minutes to get it
under control.
Two firefighters were
transported
to
Doctors
Hospital West wi th minor
injuries, Whiting said. A
hospital.
spokeswoman
would not give their conditions..
In vest igators were tryIng to determine the
cause of the fire which
cau se d
an
estimated
$60.000 in damage s.
. -·-

Clinton Goad , manager of the new Fruth Phar macy in Pomeroy,
cuts the ribbon to officially open th e new store at a ceremony
on Monday morning. Also pictured are , 1-r. Bob Messick, vice
president of operations; Jack Fruth , CEO: Pomeroy Mayor
Victor Young Ill; Connie Cook. John Musse r, Mayor-e lect a nd
President of the Pomeroy Merchants Associatio n; and Don
Pullins, president of Fruth Pharmacy. The s tore opened for
business on West Ma in Street last week. (Bri an J. Reed)

Middleport considers
sewer, water rate hikes
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
may have to increase· water
and/or sewer rates agaih in
order to qualify for grant
funding for the construction
of a new water treatment
plant.
Becky Hays, representing
the village's engineering
firm ,
Floyd
Browne
Associates,
discu ssed
progress un plans for the
new plant, to be locateu on
Page Street on land now
owned by Harold Brown.
According to Hays. a
$500,000 grant application
submitted
through
the
Community Development
Block Grant water and
sewer program is now on
hold, because it requires the
village's combined water
and sewer rates to be 2.5
percent of median hou sehold
income in the village.
The combined minimum
rates are now $21.80, plus a
$5
water improvement
charge, and the CDBG program calculates a required
minimum
of
$46 .95.
However, Hays said, the
rates may not require a $20
increase, because the CDBG
program calculates the minimum rate on a minimum
usage of 4,500 giillons per
month, while the village
bills at a minimum of 2,000
gallons per month.
.
Hays said the CDBG
application also · did not
account for the $5 monthly
water improvement fee
charged vill age residents,
and may not have counted in
recent increases in both
sewer and water rates
approved earlier this year by
council at the request of the
Board of Public Affairs.
Hays said if a rate ·
increase is deemed necessary, council should at least
. consitler rai sing sewer rates
rather than water rates, so

that a cash reserve can he
accumulated
for
future
sewer system improvement s.
The tot al cost of the new
treatmen t plant has been
estimated at $ 1.8 million ,
and Hays has al so submitted
grant application s through
the Appalac hian Regional
Commisston and the Ohi o
Public Work s Commi ss ion.
The BPA has ju st completed development of a new
·well fi eld in th e Hobson
area, to be used once the
new treatmen t plant is completed .
Hays said th e village must
al so address th e separation
of th e village's sanitary
sewer and storm sewer systems. and a reserve created
by a rat e increase, if dee med
necessary for th e CDBG
application. could be used as
a foundation for fundin g that
project .

Other business
Council also approved
appointment of Attorney and .
fotm er Judge Robert E.
Buck as village solicitor, to
replace Linda Warner, who
has resigned. Buck will be
paid $450 per month, and
will work on the basi s of a
one-year contract.
Other action:
• Council approved payment
of bills in the amount of
$13,488.14; the mayor's
report of fees and fines collected in November, in the
amount of $2.739.80; the
income tax revenue report in
the amount of $10,290.24: and
the report of refuse revenue in
the amount of $ 10,382.72.
• Set its next meeting for
7:30 p.m. on Dec. 18.
Members present were
Linda
Haley,
St ephen
Houchins. Robert Manley,
Robert Robinson and Kathy
Scott.
Mayor
Sandy
Iannarelli and Fi scal Otficer
Susie French.

High school reunions
require degree of humor
DEAR ABBY: I saw the
letter you printed from the
79- vear-old woman who
was conce rned about going
to her class reu ni on be~a u se
she had bee n ve ry prom iscuous back in high school and
had bedded abou t a third of
the boys in her class.
When I read the letter to
my husba nd, he looked at me
and sai&lt;l. "Diu you wri te that
letter''"
Shoul d I hit my husband
on the head w1 th my' marble
ro lling pi n or tras h his golf
d ubs - or both '' - HELEN
IN TACO MA
DEAR HELEN: None of
the above. But if it WERE
true. I' d hide th e yearbook.
DEAR ABBY: -Thi s is in
respo nse to "Former Belle of
th e Ball :· th e 7'!-vcar- old
Ially who's reluctant io attend
her 60th hi gh school reunion.
My siblings an&lt;l I were all
born . rea red and educated on
th e West Coast. One of my
ba by sisters was popular in
hi gh school and wouldn't
think of missin l! a reunion .

Sis was. and ,q ifl is, th e girl
with the perfect skin , perfect
body. perfec t career, etc.,
even after tw o husbands and
four child ren .
Sis re lated this story to nie
,a fter altending her 25th hi gh
school re uni on. Wh en she
ma&lt;lc her e ntrance. not only
was there no drum roll or
trumpets 10 announ ce her
arri va l. no one recogni zed

For The Record

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2004 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 30. Fees are Four Dollars
($4.00) for each dog, male or female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
license by mall, complete and return application to: Nancy Parker Grueser, Meigs County
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769. Enclose a sell-addressed, stamped
envelope with a check for the price of the license.

POM EROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
Meigs Co~nt y Commcm Pleas
Court by Mortgage Electronic
Reg istration Systems, San
D1ego. Calif., against William
C. Fink. Middleport , and others. alleging default on a
promissory note with an nustanding balance uf $24,886 .42.
A personal injury lawsuit
has bee n fi leu by Teresa L
Diddle. Rutland, and others,
again st Village of Rutland,
and others. alleging injuries
sustained in a fall on village
propert y on Dec. 4, 2001.

RACINE - Jason ...,......,.,,.,...--._ Moodispaugh, Chris
and Marlene Pierce
and Zachary, Kathi
entertained with a party
and Nickie Ginther,
in celebrati on of the tirst
grandmother Debbie
birthday of their son,
Jones and Charlie,
Justin Stanley Pierce.
great-grandmother,
A Winnie the Pooh
Vivian Jones; greattheme was carried out with
grandfather, Carrol
pizza, cake and ice cre;un
Pierce; Nancy, Rick .
being served. Candy bags
and Jacob Pierce;
were :il so given to the L - - - - . . . J Claira Mae HyseU,
guests.
and
Justin stanley Eugene
Attending were Narsa and
Charissia Adkins,
Pierce
Desi and Claudia.
Sam Terzopplous, Ryan
Terzopplous, Darlene and
Sending gifts were Virginia
Bradley Seller, his great-grand- and Larry Laudennilt, his greatmother Darlene Searlers of grandmother Gloria Hutton,
Columbus, Debbie and Adam and Gladia and Ralph Blosser.

Year Month Male Female

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Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thesday, Dec.9
POMEROY
The
Bedford Township Trustees
will meet at. 7 p.m. at the
town halL
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission to meet
at 9 a.m. at office, Memorial
Dr., Pomeroy.
CHESTER
- Chester
Township Tru stees, regular
monthly meeting, 7 p.m.
Chester Town Hall .

Clubs and
Organizations
1\Jesday, De.:. 9
HARRISONVILLE .
Harrisonville OES will meet
at 7: 30p.m. at the hall. Take
Christmas gifts.

Social Events

Other events

1\Jesday, Dec. 9
Saturday, Dec. 13
POMEROY - Ch!I(Jhood
RACINE - Santa Clau&gt; Immunization Clin1c. '.ltu II
will be coming to the town of a.m.. I to 7 p.m .. Meig'
Raci ne I p.m. at the Racine County Health Dept. Bring
Fire De part men t building . shot record\, mcdkal c·ard .
Parents can have their chil· C~i.l d mu&gt;l be accompanied
dren \ pictures taken wi th by parent/lega l guardian .
· Santa. Eac h child wil l receive Donation' appreciated .
a treat. Cookies. hot chocolate and toffee wi II be served.
The event is sponsored by '
businesses and o rganization&gt;.
For more information contact
Kathryn Hart. 949-2656.

Proud to be apart
·"ofyour life.

EAST MEIGS - A huli day concert will be presented
at 7 p.m. at Eastern High
SchooL There w ill be performances by the concert choir.
the handbell choir. and the
concert band . ·

Subscribe today • 992-2155

STOP FEEDING THE PIG

Thursday, Dec. 11
POMEROY
The
Rodders 2000 Car Club will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at Wendy 's.
Anyone interested in membership is invited to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at the
Tuppers Plains hall at the 7
p.m. A dinner will be served
at6:30 p.m.

Friday, Dec. 12
MIDDLEPORT The
Widows Fellowship will
have a Christmas luncheon at
the Golden Coral at noon.
Members are to take a $1
exchange gift. Let your caller
know if you intend to attend.
Saturday, Dec. 13
MIDDLEPORT -Annual
inspection of Bosworth
Council will be held at the
Middleport Masonic Temple
followin~ a 5 p.m. dinner.
Reservations for the dinner
are to be made with Dan
Arnold, 992-5963 by Dec. 6.

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Tuesday, December 9 , 2003

&amp;ntinel Christmas i\n8el

TOWNSHIP
SEX

her. She later admitted th at
she di dn ' t recog ni ze any of
them, either. name tags and
al l.
·
Then something interestin g
hap pe ned . Peo ple began
approaching Sis's husband ,
say ing. "I re membe r yo u1"
He's usually soc iall y retiring.
but after people persistentl y
ignored his protests, he settled into enjoying bei ng identitied by vari ous people as
everyone fro m the yuarterback of the foo tball team to
th e class president . One
woman eve n pointed to a
picture in the class almanac
and announ ced, "There you
are. I could never forg et
you r •
No ne of those peopl e could
poss ibly have known him
from high school. My brother-in-law was born. rai sed
and educated on th e East
Coast.
_
Frankly, I think that someone showin g up at a 60th
class reunio n would be ti ckJed to see ANYONE from
th e graduatin g class, even if

Civil suits

ovv~e·R·C&gt;j;Cio&lt;i·------------------------------------------------------------------

ADDRESS
TELEPHONE

Dear
Abby

he or she didn ' t recognize the
person. I hope she followed
yo ur advice and went. COLLEEN IN FAIR OAI(.S,
C ALI F
DEA R COLLEEN: So do
I. As your sister's ex perience
demonstrates, the one thing
that a person attend ing any
class reunion should never be
without is a sense of humor.
DEA R ABBY: I hope you
are goi ng to gi ve us the follow- up story of the 79-yearold woman who slept with
two-th ird s of the boys in her
hi gh school class and everyone knew it. Did she go to
the re union '! What happened'! You owe it to your
readers. - RICHARD 1\
WASHINGTON , D.C.
DEAR RICHARD: One of
the frustrating aspects of my
job is not always knowing
how things tum out. If I had
to make a guess, I'd say she
probabl y went and was voted
mo st popular girl at the
reunion.
"Furmer Belle of the Ball"
- if you see thi s ·column .
Please let us know. Your fan
club is waiting .
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips;
and was f ounded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
w•vw.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

Justin Pierce
Observes first birthday

IO,.ICE ,.0 DOG OWNERS

AGE

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 9 , 2003

Cutting the ribbon at the new
Fruth Pharmacy in Pomeroy

PageA3

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

NATIONAL

VIEW

No child
Telegraph ·Herald, Dubuque, Iowa, on tile No Child Left
Behind law:
No Child Left Behind , the education law that triggered th,e
inclusion of some Dubuque schools on the governm e ~t s
··watch list." is legislation gone awry. The list calls attention
to stude nt achievement areas that did not meet improvement
guidelines for one year. ...
.
.
Under No Child Left Behind, all students - mclud1ng those
in special education - are held to the same achievement
ex pectations.
Only 1 percent of those students-. those ·with the -most
se vere disabilities- are exempted from passing grade-leve'l
tests. The idea here is tha.t many special-education students
are wrongly placed. In some cases, that might be true. But 99
pe rce nt ~

Hold ing virtually all special-education students to the same
statldards as general education students does not make sense.
... Ironicall y. this unfunded mandate comes from the same federal government that has underfunded special education f~r
yea rs. So fa r, the Bl!sh admimstrat1on has appropnated $6 btllion less than prom1sed for the legtslatwn ....
. Common sense tell s us this special education dilemma cannot be an intended outcome of No Child Left Behind. The
education department should correct thi s egregious flaw.

NATIONAL

Tuesday, December 9, 2003

Page A4
Tuesday, December 9, 2003

Obituaries

McGovern versus Reagan in 2004
This looks to me like a deja
vu presidential election, wi th
the Democratic candidates
all resembling their party's
past losers and President
Bush setting himsel f up fo r a
1972 or 1984-style landslide.
Leading the Democrats, we
have former Vermont Gov.
Howard Dean, repri sing a
militant anti-war role previously played by Sen. George
McGovern . D-S. D., who carried on ly Massac husetts and
the Di strict of Columbia in
1972 against Preside nt
Richard Nixo n.
Nex t in line is ' Rep .
Ri chard Geph ardt. D-Mo ..
who closely resembles 1984
candidate Walter Mondale.
the tax-raising favor it e of
trade unions a nd ot her
Democratic interest groups.
who carried only Minnesota
and Washington D.C. in his
loss to President Ronald
Reagan.
The parallels don't stop
there. Sen. John F. Kerry, D·
Mass., des perately wants to
be compared to his state's last
war-hero president, John F.
Kennedy.
But it looks as though he's
. going to be even less succeS&gt;ful than "Massachusett s
liberal " Michael Dukaki s,
who at least got nominated in
1988 before lo sing to
President Bush's father in a
near-landslide.
Following on, we have
Sen . John Edwards, D-N.C.,
who's reminiscent of countless other senators who convinced themselves they are
presidential materi al, but
went nowhere.
The long line includes
Harold Hughes, D-lowa, in
1972; Fred Harris, D-Okla .,
Frank Church. D-ldaho, and
Birch Bayh, D-lnd., in 1976;
Alan Cranston, D-Calif., and

who ran &lt;l ll he slo~an
"tmbought and unbossed' in
1972.
The only candidate in this
fie ld whose precursor. I can't
.exactly identify is Rep .
Dennis Ku cinich. D-Ohio.
Morton
One might compare him ideKondracke ologically to the very liberal
1976 candidate, Rep. Mo
Udall , D-Ari z.. but Kucin ich
i1 now here near as funny.
Fritz Hollings, D-S.C., in lovable and accompli shed.
J9X4; Joseph Biden, D-Del. ,
Starting back at the top, I
and Paul Simon, D-111., in adm it there are dtl lerences
1988 ; and Tom Harkin , D- be twee n
Dean
and
Iowa , and Bob Kerrey, D· McGovern. In Dean's favor,
McGovern was a dow n-theNeb., in 1992 .
.
l'b I
d
"C
But wait, we're not done 1me I era an a
ome
with parallels yet. The. Rev. Home, America" isolat ionist.
AI Sharpton. ot course, 1s the
If nominated. Dean cou ld
natu ral heir to the Rev. Jesse shift to the ce mer in the gcnJac kson. who ran in 1984 and era! election, portray his for1988.
eign policy dov isl1ness as
Sharpton obv i ou ~l y aim s to restri&lt;: ted to l ru~ and rem ind
succeed Jackson as the top vo ters th at he s a budge t
poli tical spokesman for black hawk.
On the other hand.
America, and hi s fellow presidential candidates, ever def- McGovern was the straighterenti al. seem to be helping shooter th at Dean onl y
him do so.
claim s to be and a likeable
Then there's Se n. Joe persor• "·' we ll. All Dean's
Lieberman, D-Conn., repris- pos it i &lt;&gt;~l -s wi tc h i n g -- on
ing the unsuccessful Irawk trade. Medicare, defense
candidacy of Sen. Henry M. spending and busi ness reg u" ' h.. ·111 1976 • lat ion · will be
endJac kson. D-"as
B replayed
h
.
and retired Ge n. Wesley lessly by the us campmgn.
Clark , play ing a role origtMoreove r. if Dean tries to
nated by war hero Sen. John say that he's not a
Glenn. D-Ohi o, who went "McGovern" on foreign poli nowhere in 1984.
cy by promi sing to prosecute
Then again , Clark also a vigorotl ' war on terrori sm,
brings bac k memorie s of the Bush political machine
Gen. AI Haig, another form er will counter by saying that
NATO commander who went Iraq and the war on terrori sm
no place as a Republican-can- are one and the same. Right
dictate in · \988.
now, the publi c seems to buy
Finall y, we have former that .
Sen. Carol Moseley Braun ,
Both Dean and Gcphardt
D-111 ., who is not the first want to repeal every cent of
African-American woman to Bush's tax cut s, even th&lt;?se
run for the Democratic nom- for the m•ddle class, wh1ch
ination. Tha t was Rep. " makes them far more vulnerShirley Chi sholm D-N.Y. able to the charge of betng a
'
'
' "tax- raiser " than Walter

Mondale ever was.
By Election Day, Dean
would be made out to be
McGovern and Mondale
rolled into one. Gephardt , if
he win s the nomination,
would be j ust Mondale.
And there's a Dukak is parallel to all the 2004
Democrats, who sound Iike
"proud members of the
ACLU" when they attack
Attorney Gene ral John
Ashcroft.
The only hope Democrats
now appear to have of beating Bush lies in lra9's ~urning
into the "quagnme they
clai m it is.
That wo uld place Bush in
the hi storical position of
Lyndon Johnson in 1968 -thouoh Bush wo n't suffer
John~on 's fate (arid Jimmy
Carter's in !980) of being
challenoed for hi s own
"
pany's nomination.
Democrats had hoped to
see Bush retrace the steps of
hi s fa ther, who won the first
lra4 war but got beat in 1992
amid a weak economy.
Hating Bush, Democrats
also want to make him out to
be another Ri chard Nixon .
From
the
beg innin g,
though, Bush has plotted to
be Ron ald ·Reagan, stimulating the ec onomy with
defense spending and tax
cuts. running up big deficit '\,
and causing the econ omy to
boom . The la test growth
numbers indicate that the
plan is working.
Moreover, people like
Bu sh the way they did
Reagan. History is repeating
itself.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

Wilma B..
Williams
LANCASTER - Wilma
Wil liams,
74,
of
B.
Holl ywood, S.C .. fo rmerly of
LancaSter, died Friday Dec.
5, 2003 in Charl eston S.C.
She was a re ti red art
teacher of 43 years from the
College of Charleston. She
was a graduate o f Ohio
Uni versit y and had a master
in fine arts. She started her
teac hing in Crooksvill e in
1955. She also taught at the
Lancaster High School eight
years in the late 70's after
starting her teaching career in
Lancaster in 1958. Her forte
was woodcarving,, abstract,
and modern an plus photography. She taught students
not subj ects. She raised
Geqnan Shepherd dogs and
had 4 AKC male champions.
She is survived by her husband o f 43 years Dr. William
R.
Bill
William s
of
Holl ywood. S C. and sistersin-law. Lillian Pickens. Ruth
Ann (Lyle) Balderson, both
of Reedsv ille, and Katheryn
Dietz of B e lpr~
Friend s ma y call at the
Frank E. Smith Funeral
Home. Lancaster. Wedne sday
2-4 and 6-8 p.m. with services to be held Thursday II
a. m. at Reedsville Cemetery
with Pastor Eri c Ross officiali ng.
Memorial gifts ma y be
given for Cancer Research to
the Medical Uni versity of
South Carolina. 171 Ashley
Ave. Charleston S.C. 29425 .

Local Briefs
Road to close
ALFRED- The Alfred,
Orange Township, Mudsock
Road (Twp. Rd. 304) is
closed from Guthri e Road
(Twp. Rd. 305) to State
Route 68 1 until further
notice du e to a slip ,
according to an announcement made by the Orange
Township Trustees Monday.

Clinic to be closed
POM EROY
Th e
Meigs County Tuberculosis
Clinic will be closed
Chri stmas Day and Dec.
26. Skin te sts will not be
given either Dec. 23 or 24
due to the office being
closed.

theft of a large air compressor from a storage
location.
• Thomas Allen of Racine
reponed the theft of a 12gauge stolen from a hunting cabin .
• Sheli a
Wes tfall
of
Reedsville reponed th at a
four year-old cow was shot.
• Jana
Brockert
of
Langsvi lle reponed a handica p placard taken fro m her
car.
• Daniel
Althouse
of
Erickson Rd . reponed his
house broken in to through
a front door. A fi rearm .
gold coins and cash were
reported mi ss ing.
• Rema Palumbo, Rutl and,
reported threateni ng phone
·
call s.

Incidents reported Arrests reported
POMEROY
- Meigs
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Sheriff
Ralph
Sheri ff
Ral ph
Trussell reported the fol - Co unt y
ssell
reported
the
folTru
lowing complaints received
lowing arrests:
by his office:
• Dav id Elkins, Pomeroy,
• Robert
Coun cil
of
Langsvill e reported tres- on charges of di sorderl y
passing on hi s property.
conduct by intoxication.
• Davina Lonas of Racine
• Tammy
S.
Moore.
reponed damage to her car Middleport , on charges of a
from a beer bottle thrown second-offense
dri ving
from a passing vehicle.
under the inlluence and not
• Toni a
Jewell
of
within
marked
driving
Pomreoy reponed the theft
of lawn chairs from her lanes.
• David E. Hendricks,
front porch .
Pomeroy,
for having a
Pachinger,
•John
reported_ the weapon under a di sability.
l. ~ n gs ville ,

The Gazette, Colorado Spri11gs, Colo., on the federal energy
bill:
It hardly qualifies as a tragedy that. the U.S. Senate, ~fter
failin g by two votes to overcome a fthbuster on the admlmstration energy bill , decided to give up the effon for the year.
The bill contained almost nothing attractive and a good deal
that was objectionable.
Senate leaders have vowed to try to revive the bill nexl year,
though it wil l be tou gh to get a compromise in an election
year. Instead they should relegate this mess to the scrap heap
of history.
·
. The bill foundered in pan on a proposal to give manufacturers of a fuel additive called MTBE an e~ e mption from cer\ain law suits. which some in Congress are calling a form of
corporate welfare. Bu t it's worth remembering that MTBE
was added to gasoline not at the behest of these manufacturers. but in res ponse to a congressional mandate meant to help
reduce air pollution.
.
The mandate seemed OK with Congress until· it was discovered that MTBE was itself a significant pollutant, forcing
a panicky reverse course. And now farm state lawmakers are
trying to force the use of more ethanol to meet the mandate,
and fill the void left by a phase-out of MTBE - in perhaps an
even more noxious form of corporate welfare.

Subscribe today¥ 740-992-2155
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••

FINDING OUT
WHAT MARS
15 UKE WHEN

•••
•'

KUC\NICH?

Moderately Confused

Sweet land if liberty
BRITNEY

SPEARS

WRITTEN
ANY
CHILDRENS ·

BOOKS? ·

@

2003 by NEA , Inc

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They slwlild be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing and
inust be signed and include a£kiress and teleplwne number. No unsigned letters will be published Letters should
be in good taste, addressing issue~; 1wt personalities.
. The opinions expressed in the column IJ'elow
ure the co.nsensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
~o. ~· editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

rently training in Point
awaiting
Pleasant
and
deployment orders.
"Training is Jon~ , hard
work and 11 is cold, ' Deem
said.
Meigs Elementary School
gave Deem a proper send-off.
Deem's children, Alison, 5,
and Trenton, II , led the
pledge of allegiance before
the entire school broke into
the "Star Spangled Banner."
The third, fourth , and fifth
grades sang "I Love My

candle and shine them during
the ·event ·as a show of support. Those wishing to stay m
their
cars due to the weather
from Page A1
can turn on their headlights.
The sound system for the
the local people who are pan event is being donated by
of this company that we are WBYG-FM
of
P(/int
not forgettin g about you ," Pleasant, Wilson said.
.
Wilson said. "This is someThe company, which mainthing really bi g, I would tains vehtcles and other
think , when you take nearly equipment, was called up to
200 people out of a commu- supplement regular force s in
nity.
mid-November for the first
"We want to show we are time since the Cuban Missile
keeping them in our thoughts Crisis of 1962. Families of
and prayers," he added .
those company members
Those planning to attend leaving Thursday are expectthe vigil are asked to bring a ed to be at the armory
flashlight or light other than a Thursday morning to say

farewell.
The public is asked not to
come . to the armory that
morning, but is encouraged
to line the route the company
will take when leaving. The
company will travel down 62
into Point Pleasant, turn left
onto Third Street, and continue out Route 2/62 to U.S .
Route 33 at Ripley, where it
will connect with 1-77.
"The community is behind
them becau se the National
Guard has done many things
for this community," Wilson
said. "It is a big pan of the
community and I think the
community needs to know
that."

a.

...

HAS

12-stool, 24-hour restaurant
in Gallipoli s. Since then, the
business has steadily grown
to include additional restaufrom Page A1
rants and a full line of Bob
Evans food products availtraffi c area, the restaurant able in more than 15,000 growill seat !55 people and will cery stores across the counaccommodate 88 vehicles in try.
its parking lot. It will bring
Mandy Jordan, public relabout 70 jobs to Mason.
tions
for Bob
Bob Evans Farms Inc. Evans, coordinator
said that it looks as
owns and Ol'frates 539 fufl- though the Mason restaurant
iervice, famtly restaurants in should be open by late spring
22 states , featuring home- and is confident that Mason
style food and friendly ser- will be a good fit for Bob
yice. · · ·
Evans.
The firm is famou s for its
"With what we look for in a
lean, pork sausage and vari- restaurant in terms of looking
ety of breakfast, lunch and at an area that can suppon
dinner meals.
our restaurants, we think that
The tlrst restaurant opened Mason will fit the criteria.
in 1948, where company We are excited about opening
founder, Bob Evans opened a in April," Jordan said.

:Bob Evans

WE COULDJUST
ASK D~NNIS

Civil libertarians have been
praising many American librarIans who are rebelling against
Section 215 of the Pallial Act.
This section enables FBI agents
to come to a public library with
a list of books to be matched
with the names of their borrowers for possible links to terrorist
activity. Librarians know that,
although Attorney General
John Ashcroft says he has not
Implemented that provision, he
can do so in the future.
Accordingly, more and
more librarians are informing
people who come to the
libraries about that law, and
suggest they urge the attorney
general to protect their right
to read without being put into
a government database.
Meanwhile, however, the
American Library Association
(ALA), with its more than
64,000 members, is ignoring a
much more pressing human
rights issue. The organization
. refuses to condemn Fidel
Castro for sending to his gulag,
for prison tenns of up to. 28
years, I0 independent Cuban
librarians -- who were included
among the 75 independent
journali st~. union organizers,
economists, human rights
workers and other dissidents
who were rounded up. The
librarians resist the ct 1ctator's
censorship of ideas. a~ do all
those captured in the raids.
This crackdown on freedomofspeech -- and freedom
to read •• took place last April
at summary trials in remote
locations ·that were closed 10

Nat
'Hentoff ·

foreign journalists. Amnesty
International considers these
75 dissidents, including the
independent librarians, to be
"prisoners of conscience."
Yet, at the ALA's .annual
conference last June in
Toronto, Cuban independent
librarians were refused a
speaking place on the program.
· Only Castro's official librarians
were accorded the freedom to
speak -- for nearly three hours.
And there was no ALA resolution to demand that Cuba's
leader release the independent
librarians. Some of them --like
a number of other prisoners of
conscience in Castro'~ gulag -bad!y need, and ar_e bemg
demed, medtcal attent•on.
· . Declaring "the fundamental
n&amp;hts ot all human ben:tgs to
acce~s. tn\?rmatwn wt~hout
restnct1on, the InternatiOnal
Federat1on
of
L1brary
Assoctat1ons and Institutions
m The Hague, Net~erland s,
has condemned th1s ~rural
suppression of nonvtolent
d1.ssent. And Jo se M1guel
Vtvanco -- execullv_e dtrector
of the An:tencas D1v1ston of
Human Rtghts Watch -- says

"Cuba is floutin g fundamental human ri ghts norms."
Moreover, in a Sept. 18
Washington Post article,
Vaclav Havel, form er president of the Czech Republi c:
Lech Walesa, former president of Poland; and Arpad
Goncz, former president of
Hungary joined to condemn
Castro's draconian imprisonment of Cubans "merel;r for
daring to express an opmion
other than the official one ."
And the July issue of The
Progressive magazine, a long
list of Americans who dissent
from their own government -among them, historian Howard
Zinn: linguist and political theorist Noam Chomsky ; The
Progressive Editor Matthew
Rothschild; and philosopher
Cornel West -- condemn
Castro's arrests and "the shockingly long prison sentences ...
imposed after unfair ttials" of
the Cuban dissidertts, including
the independent librarians.
The signers of that· ad
oppose the American embar~o on Cuba, but emphasize
the imprisonment of people
-for attempting to e~erct s e
their rights of free expression
is outrageous and unacceptable. We call on the Castro
government to release all
political prisoners and let the
Cuban people speak. write
and organi ze freely."
Yet here is the ALA with its
rallying cry, "Free People
Read Freely," abandonmg
these extraordinarily courageous Cuban librarians who,

under a dictatorship. advocate,
to their own great peril, the
same right to read freely that
we Americans enjoy. The
ALA's membership booklet
proclaims "the publ rc's right to
explore in their libraries many
pomts of view on all questions
and issues facin~ them."
In our Amencan libraries,
we can borrow George
Orwell's "1984" and a copy of
the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, but those, and
many other publications, were
only available in Cuba in the
homes of the independent
librarians who dared to offer
them to their fellow citizens.
ALA will have its next
Midwinter Meeting from
Jan . 9 to Jan . 14 in San
Diego. Those in attendance- ALA official s, including
officers of libraries around
the country and rank-andfile members -- will have a
chance to rescind the shameful silence of the ALA.
Ashcroft has put none of
the delegates to San Diego
in prison; and it take s no
courage -- only self-respect. for them to insist on the
freedom of those librarians
in Cuba who max not be
"professional " librarians.
But they certainly are the
very exemplars of the ALA 's
purported dedication to
everyone's freedom to read - and freedom of con science .
The next time you go to a
public Iibrary, ask the librarians if they stand with their
colleagues in Castro's prisons.

Vigil

:ornaments

City National Bank in
Pomeroy, Clark 's Jewelry
Store and K&amp;C Jewelers.
frQm Page A1
Cost of the individually
gift-boxed ornaments is $8.
"These ornaments are not
with both the Pomeroy and only beautiful, . but unique
Mason approaches showing · collectibles," said John
is on one side of the orna- Musser, president of the
ment. On the other side it Pomeroy
Merchants
notes
"Construction Association, adding
that they
Underway
2003would make a perfect
Completion 2006."
gift for family or
' The glass 3 1/4 ornaments Christmas
"As the years go by
are for sale at Hartwell friends.
and
the
is completed,
House, Wea~ing Stitches, they willbridge
become
a cherished
Sentinel , ke!!psake and heirloom,"
The
Daily
he
Anderson's Furniture, Meigs sat d.
County
Chamber
of
Several of the earlier ornaCommerce, Farmers Bank;'
ments
featuring
Mei~s
both Pomeroy and Mason
iocations, Peoples Bank in · County landmarks are sttll
Pomeroy, Ohio Valley Bank available. They include the
Pomeroy-Mason
. at the Save-a-Lot location, current
Bridge built in 1928, the

One of the most burden·
some things about the holi days is linding the perfect
present for those individual&gt;
on your gift list. Keep an ear
and eye open throughout the
year to 'fhat things friend&gt;
and relatives casually men·
tion that they may want or
need. If you sti ll have problems com ing up wi th the
rillht item. here are 'ome
fa1 rl y inexpensive. useful
and though tful holiday gift
ideas for the various people
in your life.
Gi ft s fo r Mom - Cedar
hangers and sweater cubes;
multi-co mpartment cosmetic
bag; gi ft certificate to a day
spa: colorful silk scarf;
mpnogrammed leather ce ll
phone case; scented soap set.
Gifts for Dad - Cap or Tshin with hi s favo rite sports
logo: soothin g shav ing
mousse; gift certificate for a
car was h and wax; engraved
wooden pen or letter opener:
CD of hi s favor ite art is t:
tickets to a ball game or lesson wi th a golf pro.
Gifts fo r Teens - Duflle
bag in school colors; glittery
hair accessori es and makeup;
specialty locks for sports
equipment : pre-paid phone
cards: neon-colored high·
lighters, pens and paper clips
with note cubes: gift cenifi ·
cates for mu sic or game COs.
Gifts fo r Kids - Board
games and natu re books:
Nerf dominoes, ball s and
toys; wri st walkie-talkies;
cartoon
battery-operated
pencil sharpener; animal-

(Left to Right) Carter French,
Joe. Wood , Charles Reitmire.
winner of a Trailblazer from
Pomeroy Auto Parts . Harry
Cunningham , Mike Nease,
Jim Sisson. and Roger Dent
stand left to right in front of
the 2003 Polaris Trai lblazer
won by Reitmire. It is valued
at more than
$4 ,000 .
Reitmire said th rs is the first
time he has ever won, any·
thing and thanked Pomeroy
Auto Parts . (J. Miles Layton)

Sunday Times-Sentinel
WHY SPEND
&amp;IG BUC~S ON

Finding the perfect gift.

Charles Reitmire proud winner of a 2003
Polaris Trailblazer from Pomeroy Auto Parts

VIEW

Federal energy bill

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com ,

Deem
from Page A1

Country." After the second
Lee
grade
girl s sang
Greenwood's "God Bless the
U.S.A.," at least 874 kids, the
faculty and administration
went outside and circled the
flag pole.
Afte l' the American flag
and the new one starred flag
were hoisted into the air,
Deem said, "I'll be thinking
about you. I'll miss each and
everyone one of you."

Pmud to be apart of
your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Connector
from Page A1

each day after that the road
remains unfinished, providing an incentive for the earliest completion possible. ·
Collins said that remaining
work,' including minor construction and clean-up, may
be completed by Kokosing
into the spring of 2004, once
the roadway is open to public.
A ribbon cutting on the first
ponion of the new roadway
was canceled last December
Meigs County Courthouse, because of inclement weatht.he old Remington House . er. but Collins said the Dec.
which became the Meigs Inn 23 ceremony will be held for
in later years and burned
down in 1986, Pomeroy High the finished highway regardSchool, and the grandstand less of weather conditions.
on the Rock Spring s
Fairgrounds. Those bulbs are
for sale at $8 each at Peoples
Bank and Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy.
The project of preserving
different aspects of the Bend
area by picturing landmarks
on tree ornaments was started
many ·years ago as a fund
· raising project by the
employees of Bank One.
From there it evolved into a
fund raiser for the Pomeroy
Merchants Association and
the money was designated (or
beautification of the village.

Becky
Baer

shaped soaps or animal print
tomhbrushe;; Santa 's &lt;:ookie
plate and mi lk mug.
Gift; for Grandparents Family pictures set in pretty
frame&gt;; lighted key ring and
key tracking device; large
outdoor thermometer: "ice ·
walker" cleats: baskets II lied
with cookies or homemade
jellie': IOUs for frcezable
ca"ero les. yard work. or
ru nning errands .
Gi fts for Cook .s and
Gou rm ets - Animal oven
mit ts: ho liday coukre &gt;tamps :
cookbook
from
cook·'
fa1o rite
place;
holiday
kitc hen towel and apron set
exotic llavonngs. ~p i ces or
sauce;: variety of fl avored
coffees or teas; subs&lt;:ri ption
to a food magaz1ne.
Gi ft s for Crafters and
Garde ners - Skeins of varn
with pattern instr uc·tions:
scrapbook ing sup plies: gift
certificate to LTaft or fabriL·
store: pair . of embroi dery
sc issors; clay pol fi lled with
seed pac kets: magaz ine for
spec ial interests.
G ift s for Computer Te&lt;:hies
- Sentiment al mouse pad;
accessories that attac h to the

monitor:
laptop
light ;
ergonomic wri,t pad : inspira·
tiona! wallpaper ; decorative
monitor frame .
Gift, for Health and
Fitne&gt;&gt; Guru &gt; · Sock&gt; with
pockets for key; and wallet ;
water bottle carrier belt set
of
colorful
hand/ankle
weights or sweatbands: hot
or cold muscle and neck
wrap!.; tabletop gri ll for
reduced-fat cooking.
Gilh for Handypersom Toolbox with picture hanger,. wire. different size nail; .
duct tape . etc.; &gt;pray gun for
power wa,hing; fold -up
pruning saw; pocket lantern
or double-headed flashlight
to see down and ahead at the
same time.
G1fb for Co- Worke" ·
Small folding umbrel la: day
plw10cr; microwave popcorn
packets with sea .soning :
membership to a public television 'tation; calendar of
their favorite hubby or pet.
Gifts for· Romanti&lt;:s · Silk
sheets or pajamas: set of
'tented cand les and soaps;
gift certificate for a roma ntic
dinner : picn ic basket filled
with "ine . Frenc~ bread.
goblets. and a book of poetrv; bath caddv w1 th bath salts
,ir o ik CD of · romanti c
mu~ic; crystal bud vase with
a &gt;i n ~le red ro&gt;e.
These are just a few low&lt;:ost idea&gt; that would make
excellent presents fo r those
on yo ur holiday gift li st .
What creative. pe rsonal
item~ can you envi~io n ?

Elvis show to benefit
Meigs class trip
A
POMEROY
Chri stmas dinner and show
featu ri ng the mu sic of Elv is
by impersonator Dwig ht
Icenhower wil l be presented
Saturday night in the Meigs
Hi gh School Gym.
The dinner will be serveu
from 5: 30 to 7 p.m. and the
show will be presented fr om 7
to 9 p.m. Cost for the dinner
and the show is S 12. Pri ce of

the show alone is S7 .
Ticket&gt; are for sale at ·the
Purple tunle 10 Ga!!i pol1 1.
Farmers Bank and Mane Image
in Pomeroy. and Oftlce Service
and Supply in Middleport
Reser\'atiotb for dinner may be
made b' callin£ 7-l0-992-29M.
All proceed~ will go to the
JUnior and senior Spanish
classes to ward the ex pense,
of a cl ass tn p to Mex ico.

Kroger

coordinator of Local
400. said rumors about clos-

from Page A1
nent closures other than to
sa&gt;' that after the strike we
w1ll reopen those store s
which we can economically
justify continuing to operate .
We are keeping our option s
open , but our focu s is to
resolve the di spute so that we
can get back into business. "
Kroger announ ced before
the strike that some of the
affected stores mi ght not
reopen. but compan y offi·
cial s also said that the decision of which stores to permanently cl ose. if any.
wouldn't be made umil the
strike was over. Fraim sai d
today the compan y's pos ition
hasn't changed.
Nelson Graham. regional

ing any store is pure specula·
lion.
"Th ere are j ust rumors
because we (the uni on and
Kroger) are talking again,"
he said . "We haven't been
notified by any member of
management that any store is
closing."
At a federal mediator' s
request, Kroger negotiators
and a uni on representin g
strik ing workers in three
states attempted to resume
negotiations Sunday.
"If the y are not there to talk
about improve me nts
in
hea lth care co,·erage. then
there is not much to talk
abou t." said Graham.
The strike enter&gt; it' seventh week. which is longer
than the month -long strike
the company had nearl y thirty years ago.

We would like to thank all the Eagle
Members and adults who helped by
donating their time and props. '
Thanks also.to the local merchants
who donated materials for building
the Haunted-Manor.
A special thanks to all the kids from
Meigs loc.al Schools who helped In
building and performing in the Haunted
Mansion and also a special thanks to
the general public who came and
supported the kids by going through
th~ Haunted Mansion .

�Page A6 • The J)aily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

•

Thesday, December 9, 2003

INSIDE
Prep Scoreboard, Page 82
Redwomen win In Tennessee, Page 86

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

New FLUIDjoin( has 60% greater effect than Glucosamine for improving overall joint function·
BY L EE STEARNS
UNIV E RSAl M EDIA SYNDICATE•

Pharmacists around the country are bracing for the rush of
reople ex pecting to get one of
the newe st breakthrou ghs in
medica l
sc ience
called
FL UIDjoint.
What calcium is to yo ur bones
FLU!Djoint is to your joints.
It's being compared to "human
joint oil " for adults becau se of
it 's ability to deliver powerful
micronutrients to the human
joints.
Just imagine a formula that
will help your body to reduce
joint di scomfort, stiffne ~s and
improve tlexibility to enhance
daily living activities.
Scientists have identified and
conden sed the micronutrients
that your body can use and put to
work within days.
With the special micronutri ents in FLUIDjoinl the only
"effects" experienced are more
mobility, comfort and improved
joint health.
It's called FLUIDjoint. But the
trade name for it is MicroNutrielll2- lmmuno g lobu/in-lgG Antibodies. This brand-new sup-

plement is a huge breakthrough for
those concerned about joint function, because the clinical results
show that the remarkable. health
benefits are significant.
Not all drugstores have
received
deliverie s
of
fLUIDjoint yet. But for those
who want it first, we are provid ing the phone number and information on who has it so you can
get it right now.
"FLU!Djoint goes directly to
the cartilage and helps joints move
freely, helping to preserve cartilage and improve joint function ,"
explains John L. Zenk, M.D.
"FLUIDjoint combines micronutrients that work with our own
bodies immune systems to slow
the cycle of cartilage destruction,
leading to joint dysfunction."
"The major problem is that our
immune function declines as we
age. FLUIDjoint ,provides the
valuable micronutrient support
needed to help protect our
joints," Dr. Zenk said.
Unlike popular pill remedies
that people take after they have
pain
from
inflammation,
FLU IDjoint helps prevent swelling
in the joints before it starts.
Each chewable dose of
FLUIDjoint is so good it tastes
just like a tablespoon of a vanil-

Ia milkshake. That make s most
people happy because they can
get rid of all those huge supplement pills they choke down
everyday.
"FLUIDjoint's effect was far
superior, than Glucosamine in
every clinically measured joint
parameter. A remarkable 90% of
the people who use FLU/Djoint
can expect to experience an
improvement in joint function .
FLU/Djoint is safe and effective
for continuous, long term use,
according to study results. "
John L. Zenk, MD
Principallnl'estigatur

Certified American Board
of Internal Medicine

For most, FLU!Djoint provides
rapid results. A noticeable improvement in joint performance
can be seen in less than 14 days of
taking the daily dosage. You can
take it anywhere because no refrigeration is needed.
In a normal, healthy joint, the
cartilag e of one bone glides
freely over the cartilage of the
opposite bone aided by lubrication of fluid, which is compared
to the joints "o il."
Each place in your body where
bone meet s bone is a potential
spot for the grinding agony of
joint pain, arthritis, stiff fingers
or sore knees.
OYer time, wear and tear on
the joints causes the cartilage to
break down. So just as you maintain the oil and grease that keeps
your car's parts moving freely,
maintaining lubrication. in the
body 's joints is essential.
Until now, many people have
!locked to remedies that contain
Glucosamine,
Chondroitin.
MSM or Collagen.
Yet, Glucosamine and Chondroitin have a common drawback,
they do not work for everyone.
In contrast, FLU!Djoint is a
new micronutrient supplemeni.
Drugstores will be able to provide FLUIDjoinl without a prescription.
"It's as safe and wholesome as
mother's milk so you can get the
benefits you want without
worry," Dr. Zenk said.
Dr. Lee Randolph Beck, a biologist and former professor at the
University of Alabama Medical
School explains. "FLUIDjoint has
extensive scientific support, and
FLUJDjoint' s micronutrients have
been tested in well-controlled clinical studies."
"The results of one study

.

revealed that FLUIDjoint was significantly effect ive in improving , Do You WoRRY ABOUT THESE 10 JOINT
II' Check ·all that apply:
all measured parameters (joint
0 Neck
0 Wrist
pain , joint stiffness, activities of
0 Shoulder 0 Fingers
daily living and total WOMAC
0 Back
0 Knee
scores which measures overall
0 Elbow :I Ankle
joint function) beginning at the
0 Hip
:I Toes
second week and continuing to
11
you
1'1ave
checked
one or more
the completion of the trial. Gluyou can get FLUIDjoinl now.
cosamine, when compared to
base line, was effective in improving joint stiffness and total scores.
THE CLINICAL RESULTS
No serious adverse reactions were
noted in any of the groups," Dr.
Beck said .
Figure I depicts the etlect
measurements for FLU IDjoint
and glucosamine sulfate in one
..
of the studies. FLUIDjoint beat
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0 8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6
g lu cosamin~ in the head to head
FLUIDjoint Outperforms
study by an impressive 60%.
Glucosamine
in Every Clinically
Although both compounds
Measured Joint Parameter
show the abili ty to produce a
large effect size in every category, FLU!Djoint out-perform s
FLUIDJOINT ORAL DOSAGE
glucosamine in every area meas- , Just 2 Chewables Per Dose
ured.
Taste tests show that the vanilla
Numerous worldwide patents
milkshake taste of FLUIDjoint chewon th e uses of the special
able tablets are well accepted and
easier than swallowing pills. They can
micronutrient technology have
deliver faster and increased absorpbeen is sued. The active ingredition to your joints than pills. The twice
ent in FLU!Djoint was awarded a
daily dosage comes in a cobalt blue
United States Patent 5,650,175,
prescription designed bottle.
for the anti-inflammatory factor
method of isolation and use.
For Complete References see Current Tberapeutj'c Research, Vol. 63 , No.7. July 2002. Dr. Lee
Randolph Beck a biologist and former professor of the University of Alabama Medical School
With many years of science
is currently the Chief Scientific Officer tor the producer of the milk biologics ingredients. John
behind FLUIDjoint, clinical tests
L. Zenk, M.D. the fo rmer Ghief of Medicine at St. Francis Hospital, Minnesota, is currently
retained as the Chief Medical/Scientific 01ficer of the licensee of the milk biologics ingredients;
show that dai Iy consumption of the
amazing key ingredient in
-;n:iEsE STATEMENTSHAVTNOTBEEN Ev.iii.i!Ar eo·av -ifi[- rooDA ND llRilG ADMINISTRATION.
TH IS PRODUCT IS NOT INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE. TREAT. CURE OR PREVENT DISEASE .
FLUIDjoint helps protect against
_Figure ~ S01J1ce : PatentHEALTH, LLC c:ooJ - Enect •• ~a1cu 111 ed u1~ ng Hedges ano CoM~~ _'.~r..,u la __ .. __ - · - structural and functional damage
caused by acute and chronic inflammation.
"This all results in · the most
advanced joint health supplement
on the market today. It lets you
move freely. It works sooner than I. RITE AID and CVS/phannacy stores are offering a special
introduction of FLUIDjoint while supplies last.
imagined. Your joints can bend
2.
Until shipments of FLUIDjoint have reached all U.S. drugstores you
and tlex easier so you can do all
can get FLUIDjoint now directly from the National Processing Center
the things you love to do," Dr.
by following the instructions below. FLUIDjoint carries an unconditional
Beck said.
money back guarantee. Each shipment of FLUIDjoint contains
Beginning today the company
60
chewable tablets.
-· · ''" ·· _.... •
is making FtUIDjoifiT immediA. Since you are ordering FLU!Djoint direct it will be sent with the
ately available to the general
FREE FLU !Djoint Official Results Report upon request. (Your
public .
copy
of'thefirst report is FREE bill if you want a second one you
"Until shipments have reached
need to enclose an additional $5.)
all 30,000 of our drugstores,
B. For fastest sewice to get FLUIDjoint. order by phone. Those with
we've opened a· Notienal Direct
a credit card (Visa, MasterCard, Discover/NOVUS, or American
Order Line 1-800-239-6133 ask
Express/Optima) can call 1·800-239-6133 ask for Dept. FJ22U4
for Dept. FJ2204. So anyone who
to order. You can call 24 hours a day.
doesn't want to wait can call
C.
To
order by mail, enclose $29 plus $5.87 for shipping and handling,
immediately and have FLUIDjoint
in check or money order made payable to FLUIDjoint. Send with this
sent to their home," said John LinFLU!Djoint order form to:
desmith, PatentHEALTH spokesPatentHEALTH, LLC
man.
FLUIDjoint National Processing Center Dept. F J2204
"It has been announced that
Postal Drawer 2950, N. Canton, OH 44720
WTE AID and CVS/phannacy
D. Print your name
stores are the first in the area to
and address here:
receive FLUIDjoint and now have it
available," Lindesmith said. •

.=-=-====-

HOW TO CONTACT FLUIDJOINT'S
NATIONAL DIRECT ORDER LlNE

Little known u.s. Government
benefit is now being taken FREE
Private citizens find legal access to tap into the U.S. Atomic Time~eeper. All it takes is the new s19
U.S. Perfect Time Clock that runs on a signallOO times more accurate than a $20,000.00 ROLEX®
BY LAURA FISHER

UNIVERSAL MEDIA SYNDICATE•

Right now, the U.S. Government is trying to
send you the special Perfect Time signal that
automatically sets your home clock FREE, 24
hours a day, even after a power outage.
But, you can't receive it with a regular
clock. All you need is the $19 Perfect Time
Clock that looks like any clock, only this
one re-sets itself automatically and runs on a
signal 100 times more accurate than a precision $20,000.00 Rolex•.
It's all possible through a little known Universal Officials also announced the
FREE Government Benefit. As U.S. citizens, expected release of the wristwatch with the
we have paid the bill for years to build and same Perfect Time technology that many top
maintain a multi-million dollar U.S. perfect U.S. Government Officials rely on.
time Atomic Clock, located in Colorado.
Amazingly, less than I% of Americans know have to climb a ladder or chair again to set
about this Atomic clock or how to get the their clocks for daylight sav ings.
benefit of FREE Perfect Time.
Universal TechTronics is making a limited
Thomas White, Vice President of public distribution of the new U.S. Perfect Tune
Universal TechTronics confirms, "This is the Clock that goes perfectly with any decor and
perfect time continuous signal the U.S, · works in every time zone to provide a lifetime
Government uses to launch shuttle missions of precision time. ''This clock finds the perfect
and space operations. There are never any fees time signal and then sets itself automatically,
or charges to get it. That's because it's FREE not only in spring and fall for daytight savings,
to all U.S. citizens. With Universal's automat- but even after power outages," White said.
ic U.S. Perfect Time Clock, anyone can get the
Universal:s new clock is only available to
U.S. Perfect Time signal right from their own the genenil pubtic direct frol)l the TechTronics
home thai is continuously broadcast and accu- Processing Center that consumers can call
rate to one billionth of a second."
TOLL FREE (1-800-242-6155) 24 hours a day.
And those who are lucky ~nough to get
The Perfect. Time clocks come with a
one of these amazing new devices will never full five year guarantee and have i)een

This large 12 inch wall
size-. U.S. Perfect Time
Clock (shown smaller
. than actual size)
automatically receives
Perfect Time signal
the Gov't uses to
launch space shuttles
missions into outer
•spo1ce. There are no fees
or charges to get the
signal. That's because
it's FREE to all
U.S. Citizens.

Tuesday, DeCember 9, 2003

Prep Schedule
Today's games
Boys Basketball
Eastern at River Valley
Southern at Nelsonville-York
Federal Hocking at OVC
Girls Basketball
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant
Wahama at Herbert Hoover
Wednesday's games
Wrestling
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Warren Quad
Thursday's ga(Ties
Girls Basketball
JIJ~Isonville - York at Meigs
Waterlord at Eastern
Southern at Miller
Lilgan at Gallia Academy
Symmes Valley at South Gallia
:N~hama at Buffalo

checks payable to Universal.
Send to:
U.S. Perfect Time
Universal Dept K2204
Post Box 2287
N. Canton, OH 44720
Few can afford a Rolex•, But at only ' 19,
anyone can get the U.S. Perfect Time Clock.
So, hurry to be among the·first to get one! •
Univ~rsal

TechTronics is not affiliated with Rut~.
wlrich is the Regisrered Trademark-afRo/ex Watdr USA, Inc.

STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailytribune.com
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern girls varsity
basketball team had little trouble in picking up
their first win of the season.
The Eagles took a 25-5 lead at halftime and
rolled in the second half to defeat South Gallia
Monday. 60-13.
· Eastern held the Rebel s to seve n points in the
·
first three quarters.
Morgan WebeF led Eastern (1 -2) with 14 point s,
eight rebounds and five steals. ·
Meanwhile , Alyssa Holter added II points for
the Eagles.
Katie Robertson, Jenny Armes and Jenna Hupp

each grabbed five boards for
Eastern and Holter, Je"ie Hupp.
Jen Hayman and Erin Weber each
had four.
Eastern outrebounded South
Gallia, 43-11 .
Chelsea Canaday had six
rebounds for the Rebel s (0-3),
while Julia Gwinn scored fi ve
points. Ashley Clark had four
steals for Sou!h Gallia .
M. Weber
South Gallia shot just over 10
precent from the field (4-for-41 ).
There wasn' t a junior varsity game between
Eastern and South Gallia .
Eastern plays host to Waterford Thursday, while
South Gallia entertains Symmes Valley.

Pruett to coach
jt;~ Blue Gray
All-Star Classic
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. Marshall University Head
Footba II Coach Bob Pruett
has accepted
an invitation
to serve as
coach of the
blue team in
thi s year's
Blue Gray
All-Star
Classic on
December
25th.
.
"
l"'m
excitPruett
ed to have
the · opportunity to represent
Marshall and the MidAmerican Conference in the
Blue-Gray game," Pruett said.
"We are going to have a few
of our players in the game and
it is an honor to be a part of

Southern's Joanne Pickens (221 guards
Nelsonville-York 's Sara Higgins (32) as
Tornado teammates Katie Sayre (10) and
Ashley Dunn (20) look on. Southern defeat·
ed the Buckeyes, 83-65 .

Southern
defeats
Buckeyes

it."

Pruett, the winningest active
coach in major college football with an overall record of
88-17(.838), will coach the
offense along with Marshall
quarterbacks coach Larry
Kueck. Northern Illinois head
coach Joe Novak and defensive coordinator Scott Shafer
will handle the Blue defense.
The Gray team will be
o;oached by Baylor's Guy
Morris and Brent Pease, and
North
Carolina's
John
Bunting and Dave Huxtable .
· Marshall 's Darius Watts,
Nate McPeek , and Luke
Salmons are expected to participate in the game.
: The Blue Gray Classic is
the first post-season all-star
game of the year and is making a return following a oneyear hiatus. This year, the 65th
Blue Gray game will be
played on Christmas Day at
Movie Gallery Stadium in
Troy, Ala., and be broadcast
live on ESPN2 at 3 p.m.

Ohio dismisses
assistant coach
Greg Gregory
ATHENS
Ohio
Voiversity Head Football
CoacH Bnan Knorr announced
today that the
Bobcats will
pursue a new
offensive
coordinator
for the 2004
season.
G r e g
Gregory, who
has been in
charge of the
Ohio offense
. : Gregory
for the past
three seasons, has been
relieved of his duties.
: ~ i•J commend Greg for his
~ice to this university and
tlte football program," . Knorr
said. "He is a man of integrity
and he has served the program
well. However, I have decided
make a change. It is my
tielief that our offense needs
different leadership to carry us
into the future.
. "We hope to fill this position
~ickly,"
Knorr
added.
' However, we will conduct a
thorough search to identify the
best person available."
The Bohl;ats finished the
2003 season with a record of 210. Their 1-7 mark in MidAmerican Conference play
tied for sixth place in the
MAC's East Divtsion.
. The University y;ill honor all
tenns of Gregory, s employment contract, which remains
in effect until June 30, 2004.

to

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ery. The advance distribution price of only
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Eagles fly higtl over Rebels

BY ScoTT Wou:E
Sports c~rrespondent

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Quincy Morgan holds on to a second quarter pass as he is flipped by St.
Louis Rams' Travis Fisher Monday in Cleveland. Watching is Rams' Aeneas Williams (35). lAP)

Rams hold off late
Browns' surge, 26-20
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND - The St. Louis
Rams are going back to the NFC
playoffs, and their high-potent
offense didn't have very much to do
with it.
Aeneas Williams had two interceptions - the .first for a 46-yard
touchdown - in the tinal I :04 of
the first half as the Rams clinched a

postseason berth, holding on for a
26-20 win Monday night over the
Cleveland Browns.
Williams· two picks enabled the
Rams (10-3) to score 14 points itl"a
42-second span at the end of the first
half, giving St. Louis a 23-7 lead,
Jeff Wilkins kicked four field
goals- 26, 28, 29 and 37 yards for the Rams, who won their fifth
straight game and advanced to the
playoffs for the fourth time in five

years.
But they had to withstand a
valiant comeback by the Browns (49), who were making their first regular-season appearance on "Monday
Night Football" since 1995.
Quarterback Tim Couch rallied
Cleveland, but was stripped of the
ball by Rams defensive end Brian
Young on fourth down with I:5 1

Pl•s• see Browns. 81

Schmidt predicts Rose
decision later this month
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) - Mike Schmidt ing Pete back won't mess that up a little bit."
thinks Bud Selig has been delaying a ctecision on
Selig repeatedly has said he ts considering the
whether to reinstate Pete Rose, but the Hall of application for reinstatement but won't give a
Farner predicted the baseball commissioner would timetable for his decision.
act by the end ofthe month.
"Th_ere is nothing new on the isslle," Selig
Schmidt has been pushing Selig for more than a spokesman Rich Levin said Monday in New York.
year to reinstate Rose, who agreed in 1989 to a
Schmidt, who will manage Philadelphia's Classlifetime ban from baseball follow in~ an investiga- A team in Clearwater next year, realizes a decision
tion of his gambling, The former Ctncinnati Reds · to reinstate his former teammate would be contraplayer and manager applied for reinstatement in versial.
1997 and met with Sehg late last year.
"There's going to be a few disgruntled people.
"The commissioner's kind of laid off a little bit." whether it 's 50-50 or not from the fan-base standSchmidt said Monday at the Phillies' new spri ng point. I dorl't know," Schmidt said. "But he has
training complex. "He's riding a high right now been a little slow to react to this thing .... I would
with baseball ... based on the postseason. I guess stick my neck out and say before the first of the
he 's just not totally convinced just yet that bring- year that something is going to happen ."

RACINE - Pbcing three girl' in double
tigures. the Southern Lady Tornadoes posted an 85-63 Tri -Valley Conference victory
over the Nelsonville- York Buckeyes (0-3.
0-2) Monday in Southern's Charle' W.
Hayman gymnasium .
Southern senior Deana Pul lins opened up
the second half for the Tornadoes I3-0. 2-0).
who led by just two at the half 33-31 .
Pullins led the Southern offense with 20
points. while hitting I0-1 ~at the line and 510 from the tleld to go along with a great
floor game. Pullins at 5-~ was the smallest
person on the tloor. but wa' second in
rebounds with seve n. Pullins was on the
scoring end of several Katie Sayre passes
the length of the floor.
Sayre had 15 points. to match an outstanding effon from junior guarJ Ashley
Roush. who with 15 po1nts. paced Southern
throughout the first half Roush led the
team with eig ht rebounds.
All t\ine Southern players in the game
scored as Southern got great bench effons
from its supporting cast. Kri stiina Williams
added nine points. Ashley Dunn seven
points. Su san Brauer six . Brooke Kiser six.

Pleue see Southem, 81

Meigs falls
at Warren
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribu ne.com
VINCENT - Warren jumped on top of
Meigs 34-12 at halftime and added 23 more
points in the third in the Warriors ' 69-33
victory over the Marauders Monday.
Warren (3-0) scored 17 in each of its first
two quarters of play, taking.a 17-4 lead over
Meigs at the end of the opening period .'
Stacie Shrider led the Warriors with 18
points, while Lyndsey Lemon added 10.
The Marauders ( 1-1) had 14 points from
Jaynee Davis and nine (rom Angel Harter.
David also grabbed 13 rebounds along with
three' steals.
Meigs was 12-for-39 shooting, while the
W¥fiors hit over half of their shots, going
29-for-44.
The Marauders,had 25 turnovers to warren's eight.
Meigs plays a make-up game at Belpre
Wedne sday before returning home
Thursday against Nelsonville-York.
Warren also won the junior varsity game.
.45-11.
'
.•
Kristin Cozzens had 16 points for the
Warriors, While Amy Rittenhouse added 10.

�..

www.my~ilysentinel.com

Pag_e B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 9.

2003

Tuesday, Dec, 9,2003

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

~rtbune-

Warren 68, Molga 33
8 12 9 - 3.1
17 17 23 12 -69

Meigs

4

Warren
MEIGS (1·1) -

J~ynee

Davis 5 4-13 14,

Sam Pierce 2 2-2 6. Justine Dowler 0 2-4
2, Angel Harter 4 0.0 9, Joey Haning 1 o-o
2. TOTALS- 12 8·19 33.
WARREN (3.0)- Ali Postlewaite 1 D-0 3,
Kaylt'e Swaney 2 1-2 5, Lacey Holbel1 3 o0 7, Lyndsey Lemon 4 2·2 10, erin Dutton
2 0-Q 5, Madison Connery 3 1·1 7, Stacie

o-o

Shrider 7 o-o 18, Jenna Wittekind 3
6,
Miranda Tompkins 2 0-0 4, Summer
Baumgard 1 0-0 2, Melissa Rauch 1 0-0 2.
TOTALS- 29 4-5 69.
3-polnt goals - Meigs 1 (Harter), Warren
7 (Sh rider 4, Dutton, Postlawaite, Holbert).

Southern 85, Nelaonvllle--Vork &amp;3
Nelsonville-York
13 18 14 18 -63
Southern
18 15 20 32 - 85
NELSONVILLE-YORK - Ali S1andall 0 5·
10 5, Kayleigh Bunti ng 2 1-2 6, Jennifer
Andrews 0-Q-0 , Sara Higgins 4 0-0 8,
Megan Edwards 4 2-3 10. Elizabeth
Runyon 2 1-2 5, Jordan Bateman 3 5·9 12,
Jenniter Bishop 2 0·3 4, Whitney Malden 3
3·4 9, Megan Sears 2 0·3 4. Totals - 22
17·36 63.
SOUTHERN - Ashley Dunn 3 1·1 7,
Jessica Hill 0 1~2 1 , Deana Pullins 5 10-14
20, Kalie Sayre 2 11 -13 15 , Susan Brauer '
1 4-4 6, Brooke Kiser 1 4-8 6, Joanne
PiCkens 1 0·0 6, Ashley Rousl'l 5 4-8 15,
Krlstilna Williams 4 1-1 9. Totals - 23 3551 85.
3-point goals - N-Y 2 (Bunting, Bateman),
Southern 1 (Roush).

Eastern 60, South Gallla 13

The Chester Reds minor league boys completed an undefeated season, with a record
of 19-0. The team is made up, 1-r, of Nicholas Burke, Ethan Nottingham, Randy Armes,
Marshall Aanstead, Max Carnahan, Bradley Goeglein , Kirk Pul lins, Kyle Young and
Davtd Warner. Coaches were Randy Armes and Randy Young, and JeffNottingham, who
is not pictured.

South Gallia
3 2 2 6, - 13
Eastern
16 9 13 22 -60
SOUTH GALLIA (0-3) - Kristen Halley 1·
0·0 2, Ashley Cremeans 0 0·0 0, Jessica
Cantrell 0 2·3 2. Ashley Clark 0 0-0
Chelsea Canaday 1 0-0 2, Lacy Lane 0 o0 0, Stacie Failure .0 0·0 0, Julia Gwinn 1 34 5, Jill Swain 1 D-0 2. TOTALS- 4 5·10
13.
EASTERN (1·2)- Alyssa Holter 5 Q-0 11 ,
Morgan Weber 7 0·0 14 , Katie Robertson 2
0-0 5, Jessie Hupp 1 3-4 s, Jen Hayman 1

o.

1·2 3, Jenny Armes 3 o-0 6, Erin Weber 2
2·2 6, Jenna Hupp 3 0-0 8. Amber
Willbarger
Georgie Ko~entz 1
2. TOTALS- 25 6·8 00 .
3·point goals- SG 0 , Eas te rn 4 (Hupp 2.
Hotter, Robertson).

o o-o o.

Ohio High School Glr1s B11ketblll
Monday's Reaults
Akron Buchtel 52. Akron Garfield 51
Akron Central-Hewer 69, Akron E. 34
Akron Ellet 75. Akron N. 42
Akron Kenmore 52, Akron Firestone 41
Athens 37. logan 33
Beallsville 51, Sarahsville Shenandoah
Beverly Fort Frye 50, Caldwell49
Ca nal Fulton NW 69, Canton S_47
Cin. Glen Este 55, Loveland 45
Cin. Hughes 90, Cin. Jacobs 20
Cin. Indian Hill 78, Newport (Ky.) 73
Cot. Harvest Prep. 45 , CoL Alricentric 4 1
Cortland lakeview 43, Niles 37
Cortland Maple wood 60. Ashtabu la
Edgewood 50. OT
Day. CarroH 51, Monroe 31
Day. Christian 48 , Spring. Soutll 38
E. Brown 66, Ripley 31
Evorgreen 56, Bettesville 35 .
Fairfield Chr. 46. Muskingum Chr. 10
Fayetteville 50, Leesburg,Fairfi eld 45
Franklin . 60, Day. StebbiR s 35
Gahanna Evangel Chr. 38. Co l. Liberty
Cllr.28
Girard 52 , Austintown-Fitch 26
Hamilton Badin S2, Cin. St. Ursul&lt;i'36
Hamler Patrick Henry 72, Tol. Emmanual
Bapt. 18
Holy Cross 63, N. College Hill 44
Ironton 68, S. Point 45
Latham Western 61, Portsmouth Notre
Dame 39
Liberty 53, Kinsman Badger 37
Lordstown 37, N. Jackson Jackson-Milton
34
Louisville
Aquinas
71,
Massillon
Washington 62
Lynchburg Clay 53, Whiteoak 29
Marlena 55, Jackson 42
Martins Ferry 57, Newcomerstown 36
McDonald 56, Southington Chalker 31
M~i na Highland 65, Young . Chaney 28
Middletown Fenwick 53, Fairborn 33

so

Southern
from Page 81

The Rutland Reds Little League baseball team , coached by Chris Hutton an'd Bilr Jones finished their 2003 season with a 34-3 record and took first place in the Syracuse Hubbard
and Kyger Creek Little League tournaments. Pictured, front 1-r, are Tanner Hysell, Jacob
Swtdell, bat boy, Cameron Bolin, Justin Little, Matthew Wright, Austin Sayre, and Colton
Stewart. Back, 1-r, are Coach Hutton, Michael Wright, Mason Matz, Eugene Patterson,
Camtlle Boltn, Clay Boltn, Corey Hutton, and Coach Bil l Jones.

Joanne Pickens six, and Jessica Hill one.
Nelsonville-York was led by Jordan
Bateman with 12 points and eight rebounds,
while Megan Edwards had 10, and Whitney
Maiden nine. Maiden led the Lady Bucks
"':ith nine rebounds. Sara Higgins added
e1ght, Kayleigh Bunting six, Elizabeth
Runyon five, Ali Standall five, and four each
from Jennifer Bishop, and Megan Sears. ·
. Southern played fairly well the first quaner
In postmg an 18-13 advantage. Nelsonville
outscored Southern 18-15 in the second round
to cut he score to 33-31 at intermission.
The game already drew heavy attention to
the foul line, where Southern missed only
four times the first half, however, the Lady
Bu_cks _were sporadic at best from the charity
stnpe m a 9-17 stmt. Overall, 87 fouls shots
were attempted in the brutally physical game.
Southern came out refreshed in the second
half and attacked the paint. Southern hit several key buckets and completed the old fashioned three-point play at the line, hitting 8-10

Browns
from Page 81

Kirk Pullins, 8, son of Tom
and Stacie Pull ins of Long
Bottom, bagged his first
· deer on Nov. 22 in the first
youth deer hunt. The deer
bagged was a 10-point
buck weighing 150
pounds . He was assisted
on the hunt with his uncle,
Davie Hall.

lefl, and St. Louis ran out the
clock.
Marshall · Faulk rushed for
more than I00 yards for the
founh straight game, ricking
up 102 yards on 24 cames.
Couch went 6-for-9 for 98
yards and threw a 28-yard TO
pass to Quincy Morgan after
replacing Kelly Holcomb.
Holcomb, who threw a 2yard TO pass in the f1rst quarter, was benched with 17 seconds left in the first half after
throwing the two interceptions
to Williams.
The Browns, who have been
ravaged by injuries all season,
also lost defensive end
Counney Brown (ann), nmnmg back James Jackson
(knee) and guard Chad Beasley
(ankle) to injuries.
But Cleveland didn 'l quit,
and twice had the ball down
26-20 in the final mihutes.
Couch, though, couldn't bring
the Browns all the way back
and they dropped their founh

o-o

Mount Orab W. Brown 55, Amet1a 38
N. Lima S. Range 53, leetonia 38
New Miam1 34 , Xenia Nazarene 32
Newbury 59, Painesville Harvey 43
Qak Hill 87, Lucasville Vall. 32
Clregon Card1nat Stritch 52. Elm01e
Wooclmore 3B
O:dotd TalawahCia 56, Lebanon 42
Poland 53, Hubbard 45
Pot1smouth 49, Chesapeake 48, 20T
Por1smouth Clay 72, Franklin Furnace
Green 58
Portsmouth E. 65, Beaver Eastern 42
Powell Village Acad . 43. Madison Chr. 33
Racine Southern 85, N elsonville-York 63
Reedsville Eastern 60, Crown City S.
Gallia i3
Richmond Edison 64 . Rayland Buckeye
Local 54
S. Webster 39, Waverly 35
Salem 62 . Lisbon Beaver 31
Salin.eviUe Southern 62, Young . Chr. 52
Shadyside 95, Toronto 44
Springboro 50, Trenton Edgewood 19
St. Clairsville 68. Cadiz Harriso n Cent. 34
Steubenville Ca1h. Cent. 51, L1nsly (W.Va )
32
Stewart Federal Hocking 56 , Gallipolis
Ohio VaiL Chr. 38
Swanton 67. Tal. OMawa Hills £2
Tol. Notre Dame 47, Wauseon 41
Tontogany Otsego 46, Delta 20
Vincent Warren 69, Pomeroy Me1gs 33
Water1ord 52 , Wellston 40
Wheelersburg 46, Minford 37
Willow Wood Symmes Valley BO. New
Boston 5 1
Wintersville Indian Creek 64. E. Liverpool

straight.
Young's strip sealed it for St.
Louis'
underappreciated
defense, which recorded five
sacks and forced four
turnovers.
The Rams' offense failed to
get into the end zone in the first
half, relying on three field
goals by Wilkins to take a 9-7
lead before Williams bailed St.
Louis out.
The 35-year-old cornerback
stepped in from of a Holcomb
pass intended for Quincy
Morgan and took it back for his
ninth career interception retwn
for a TO and his 12th return for
a score- one shy of the career
record for defensive TDs held
by Oakland's Rod Woodson.
l'wo plays later, Williams
again picked off Holcomb,
bringing it back to the Browns'.
20.
Marc Bulger then hit Isaac
Bruce with a 16-yard scoring
pass as the Rams scored 14
points in a span of 42 seconds
to blow it open, forcing Browns
coach Butch Davis to replace
Holcomb with Couch for the
final 17 seoonds of the half.
Bulger finished 22-of-36 for
223 yards.

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wut not
knowingly 111:eept
advertiMmentlfor rM1
nttte whloh Ia In
vlolltlon ot ,.,_ 11w. Our
r..S.re are h«eby
Informed that Ill
dwefllngaldvertiMCIIn
thla newapjlpef' ,,.
IIVIIIIble&gt; 00 In equel
opportunity baNI.

Ranch, 3 Bedroom, 2 Car

e

N

wv

H

111503 or call 304-8822770.

rlo

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~
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un·u111 ul'lu 1

M~FOIIn
~.:~::~
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60 vending machlnet wtth 1997 OakwOod 14x70, pay.
excaiJanllocatlons
off $17,500 or take over payMuot Sellllfl00.234-ll982.

menls. (740)«1-8571 .

2000 14x70 3 bedroom, 2
bath, dishw81fler, stove, ref.
large t.ack deck and lroot
steps Included. $20,000.
(740)379·2928.
2003 Oakwood 16x80, 3
bedroom, 2 bllth, all the
extras, aaklng $29 ,000 must'
be
moved,
evenings
(740)949·2«8
.~
•
u~ 1.x70 2bf,.~.. .
Will help ~ delivery. Calf
Harold 740-386-9148

Good --•

Moblli'-

llli1

t I' ~ -

ott.{ ·Call

~--.

,..

CLASSIFIEDS
--

-~-

1 or 2 small bedroom trailer
$250 . a month , $200.
Deposit. No pets, LP gas
heat. (304 )895·3815
--'-'-----2 Bedroom Mobile Home in
Water,
Trash .
porter.
Sewage paid. $400 ren t,
$400 deposit. (740)3889325

~==~===~

Modern one bedroom apt
740-446-D390

~
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·I

wv

or two people. No pets, ref142 4th, Sm. Fum., 1 BR. ervnces. (740)« .1..0181 .
WID. AC, $2SO/mo. Deposl 1
APAR1MtNJs
and Referencet required .
(740)4411-3687
FOR RJ;Nr

~

r

- - - - - - - - - ~ow:ne::'~
· ~~~---.,
North 3rd Ave . Middleport . 2 (i
bedroo m turn 1shed apt.
~-J.Al''EOtS

&amp;
relerence
·rn~~:;;:-ID~S::;;:~·E;;.Oepos1t
required. No Pets (740)992·
0165
Cherry Janssen
Pmno,
e)(cellent cond1t1on . St .(X)Q,
Sm. 1 or apt. Mt. vernon 1995 Grey Bu1ck Lasabre
Pl .Pleasant 304- 77 3· Own owner. excellent con(jl-

L--MERiiiill
.

.,J

·tion . $3.000. (304lfi75 -5688
Dee r Cut $35 -$40 will be
open till end. ol season
Located 1n Gallipohs Ferry
area. Johnson Lane Look

for signs
'oe tl computer with Cannon
cop!er/printer/scanner lfa)( m
ope. wlde s ~ . Like new. used
only a little. (740)992-0274
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa 1red , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Can Ron Evans. 1·
800·537 ·9528

NEW AND USED STEEL
Stove i Relr i ge r ator . Slee t Beams. P1pe Rebar
WaterfTrash included. S285
Concrete.
Angle .
plus deposit . Call after For
7:00pm. (740)4-46-7620 or Channel, Flat Ba r. Steel
Gratin g
For
Drains.
Daytime (740)441-{)583.
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
~0:
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
FOR Jb],-r
Friday. 8am -4:30prn. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
FOR LEASE
New Office space tor lease Sunday. (740)446-7300

2 Bedroom hoult, full base· 1 and 2 bedroom api.rt- in Point Pleasant. Located in
ment, stove and retrlgerator.
fumllhtd In Town. $400. per
month,
plus
deposit .
Atllrtncea
Required .
(304)6 76-8902

menta. furnished and untur- high traffic area, very visible
nished, security deposit wl1h easy a~X&amp;ss and abun required, no pets, 740-992- dant parking. InteriOr will be
2218.
finlihed to suit tenant.
"PP'"""Ima1e11y 1.150
. ft
10
bedroom 5275
apartment
2 BA and 38R , both 2
Middleport.
a monthIn. In
to r
wa1orArath paid, no poll, $275 doposl1, call (740)596·
need ret.nlnoee , near porter 3488 or 591~9 .
3118·1100.
2 Furnished sma ll apartments fer rent. Living room ,
2 BR. neaf Holzer, CJA., 11C0- ..,..,.,
~..:...........
.. n, bedroom . &amp; bl•
111 ,
oomlctl gao hell oil IPIJII· $275. eacn all u1111t1ea paid
Yirgtnla House QlninO Tabfe
ancea furnl•hed,' Including except electric. · (304)675with 8 chairs oak wood.
WID. no poll. leiH Ond 1385
$250. Cllll . (304)675·1383
dopool1-118d. $415. 7404i9s7.
258 S1a1o Sl. , 1 BR. lum . Uko Now.
.;.:::..:::::..,.------ $350 mo., utilities paid ,
GOOd Uaed "ppllances.
2 TIIIIH l"'m Pomoroy, 2 Clepool1/ra1l10nco reqollld
ReConditioned
and
bedJOOm. ki1chon lurnlohed • . No poll. (740)«6-3667.
Guaranteed .
Washers:
S3ro+ u1111110o. S3tiO ClepooM,
,3 bedroom apartment on 3rd Dryers,
Aange s,
and
no polo, (740)882+121
St, RaOlnfl, $400 per month Refrlgeratorw, Some start It
2b1. AofoTenCtl &amp; dopo&amp;M. plut depo$11 &amp; u111111to, HUO S95. SIJaggo Appliances, 76
appJ'O\'OCl, (740)247·4292
No Ptlo. (3GI)e76-51112
Vlna Sl. , (740)446·7398 ,

::;~:~~~;~·~~!~~

==------

---- ------·--1----------------.....--------

~om
..:...,.--,----,­

r
I

1railtu for rent. ideal lor one

r

Light pine bedroom SUit'
Queen Size poster bed w!Jh
platfurm drawers. &lt;;H esser
mirror. chest. nl!;lhl stand
and Jewelry armoire $400
Call (304)675-6787 after 6

Bu y
or
sell
R1venn~
New 1 bedroom apt . Phone Ant 1ques. 1124 East Ma1n
on SR 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
740·446-3736
992 -2 526 . R uss Moore.

:1

Hendarson,
. $300 . per
th
'II
1
man
'
WI
accept
ass S·
t
f'h (304)675-3626
:nee.
·

$175: Kenmore Dryer. $tS.O:
Kenmore Retr1gerator, $ t 50,
Chest of Drawers with m1rr0f
and dresser. S140: Couc~
and Cha1r. S150: 4 v~ry mce
01n1ng cha1rs . $40 eacn . Full
S1ze beO wrt h box sonngs
and manress , $t 4S. Queen
s1ze bo)( spr1ngs and mat·
tress . $150 . 10°1o off Sale
thru December.. S~aggs"
App11ance 76 V1ne Street;
(740)446 -7398

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clarh
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohto;
!740)446-7444 1-877-8309162. Free, Est1mates. Eas-,t
f1 n&amp;nc1ng. 90 days same as
For Lease: 2 floor. spacious. casn V1sa1 Master Card
totally remodeled, 2 bed- Dr1ve· a· liMie sa11e alot
rooms . 1 1/2 baths . un!ur·
n1shed apt. New HVAC and Thompsons Applian ce &amp;
appliances.
$600/mont h Repalr-675· 73B8 For sale .
automatiC
plus ut11it re.s Downtown re-cond1honed
Gallipolis. Secur1ty and Key washers &amp; dryers retngera ••
deposit requ1red No pets tors . gas ana elec tnc
References
required . ranges . air conditioners. and
(7 40)446-6882, 8:00 to 5 :00. wringer washers Wrl l do
repa1rs on ma10r brands rn
Furnished one bedroom Apt. Shop ?' at your home
clean. no pets. Must be w1ll1ng to g1ve references. Used turniture Store. t30
Bulaville P1ke Man rasses:
Phone. (304)67 5-1386
dres.!:i'ers. couches . ou nk
Gracious living t and 2 bed· beds. good refngerator, gas
room apartme nts at Village range . ractmars . what-nots·
Manor
and
Riverside Grave
Monuments.
Apa rtments 1n Middleport. (740)446-4782 Gal lipOliS.
From $278-$348 . Call 740- Ohio. Hrs. 10-4pm.
992· 5064 . EQual Hou sing
Opportunities

s

FOR
L.---:.:""":::.:.'-.J.

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI

llre, make an
(740)ellll-1227.

-

APART· ElectriC Ra nge, $100; GE
WasherN1ce
St OO .
Kenmors Washer- Like New,

2 Bedroom mobile home in
Racine area. NO PETS.
(740)992·5858 '
:--------Townhouse
2 B&amp;droom Mobile Home. Tara
Located behind Fox's Piua Apart ments. Very Spacious.
on Sandhill
Road Pt. 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
$350 ./month 112 Bath. Newly Carpeted.
28 acres mil on Scenic Pleasan t.
Drive, 15 min. from town. (includes water and sewer) Aault Pool &amp; Babv Pool.
Patio. Start $385/Mo. No
$35 ,000. Call (740)388· Cell (304)675·3423
Pets. Lease Plus Security
8142.
2 ~room, electric mobile
- - - - - - - - - hOme In country, no pets, Deposit Required .., Days :
House and 1/2 acre of land
740-446-3481 : Evenings·
in Flatrock. West Vlrgina. (740)742·2014
740-367.0502.
$10,000. Call after Sp.m . 2 bedroom . WW carpet.
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
(740)992·6769.
wood deck, ve ry, very nice
lng applications for wa iting
In
GalliPQIIS . · Phone
Lots 19 &amp; 10 Heatley
list fo r Hud-subsized : 1- br.
Addltion In Bidwell . Two (740)«6·2003 0' (740)446· apartment , call 675-6679
1409.
.
· large level lots. Price to sale
EHO
now. Phone 74 0-446-9539. 3 Bedroom mobile home
located on Forrest St Upstairs ,
2BR.

IriO~

-11!11'~,..-...,,..--.
F!

•
1

r: M~=GS I

r

Georges Portable Sawmill, g
rag ' lntormatlori
ew aven, online
· 8•
Photos,
code
don't haul your logs to the www .orvb.com,

r

. AWESOME CAREER
$ 14.80-$36 .00+/HR .
Postal 2003104
Full Benefits. No e)(p. req .,
Call Now
1·8Q0.875·9070 Ext 2072

Save- $9160- Save this
Week's Feature Home, New
2003, 4 bedroom, 3 bath,
over $9,000 in Factory
Options at Dealer Cost,
2280 sq. ft ., Huge Family
room . Purchase This Home
Friday 12112 or Saturday
12113 and receive a lree Hot
Point Washer and Dryer.
Cole's
Mobile
Home&amp;,
15266 US 50 E, A.thens,
Ohio 45701 "Where You Get
Your Money's Worth~

dlecrlmlnetlon INIMCI on
race, color, religion, " "
famlllel lltatue or l'liltfonal
origin, or- ..YIntention to
mtktany auch
prllflfftlce, ·umttttlon or
dltcrlmlrmlon."

a

(740)709·1166 01 (740)261!·
1805.

and &amp;295/mo. 1·800·6916777

1 110

-

G&lt;xni

BEAUTIFUL

Need to 11!1-Good cletn House for rent in West
Ropoo. Only 2 loft.
Columbia on At 62 1 mile
97 Redman 16x72 $10,999;
from Masoo WalmB.rt D/W,
90 Fleetwood 141C70 $7,999 whirl pool tub , 2br. Lg
Kitch / LA / Deck .
$400 .mo/$400:
Sec.
Deposit.
Full
Basement
or
New 14 wide only $799
consider
selling.
down and only $169.76 per wi ll
month. call Nikki, (740)385- (304)n3·9167
7671
Partly furn . 3 br. house ou~
New 2003 Ooublewide. 3 BR back of Letart. used sofa &amp;
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down chair like new 304-882·3970

For Sale Big Screen TV floor
model, 36 inch screen Gets New Log Home on 1.3
good picture. Call (740)992· acrea, land contract available, If needed $240,000.
7091
(740)256·9247
OJ (740)605·
r,IF,:::;.-'":'!~----,
0870.
WANTFD

..,
01
PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
170 Plnecreit Drive
lNG CO. recommends tha
Phont1: (740)446-7112
Y?u do busi ness with_~
Fax: t740)4411-901111
le you know, and NOT 1
end money through the
mall until you ha~te invest!
Seeking
Phytlcal
aled 1ne ol1eTino.
Therapia\
•nd
Occypatlonal Thtrtpiat
competitive sa lary; flexible
work hours. and generous
benefit package.
,
Send resume to :
TURNED DOWN ON
Tri-State Physical Therapy
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Inc.
No Fee Unlesa We Winl
PO Box 375
1-861!·582--5
Barboursville WV 25504
I
~ I \ I I '- I \ I I
For Job Inquires call 304733-9870

I'

Completely refinished home.
Great location. in GaiUpoiia
Ohio, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, priced to sale now.
Phone (740)446·9539

which makH It IUegal to
advert!• "any
.
preference, limitation or

BUSINtNl

I17U

1-kM.NliOIJl

FOR lbNr

MENTS
PRICES

bedroom, 1 bath hous
ocated in Aodnev Vi!tag
1, -family room, liv '1 rco m
ew heat pumplfurnance
500 / m on t h +depos i t .
740 446-3128
.

~.,r.,o_HELP--w·AMm--.JI r,o

wv 25550

AP,.RTh1FJ'&lt;I"S

AT
BUDGET
AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $29 7 to $383.
3
Bedroo m
Brick. Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Mercerville Road~, Close to 740-446·2568.
Equa l
schools, S5001mo. Ca ll Housing Opportumty.
(740)2511-1417 OJ (740)256·
6228 .
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
3 bedroom nome in Chester,
apartments .
Townhouse
many improvements . Rent
houses &amp; mobile homes
$395.00 deposit $395 .00 .
FOR RENT. Call (740)441(614)501·83.19 afte1 5pm
111 t for appliCation &amp; 1nior·
3 bedroom house 1n mat1on.
Minersville . $400 per month,
$250
deposit.
HUD For Lease. 1600 sq Feet
beautifully restored 2M
approved . (740)949· 2025
Hoar. 2 bedroom apt 1 1/2
3 Bedroo m nouse
1n baths , hvmg ano dining
Pomeroy. $325 .00 -$400.00 r~. rear deck . Lots ol star.._deposit (740)992-0175
age
HVAC
DowntQwn
Gallipolis.
All
modern
amen1·
Brick in Gallipolis. 3 bedties $600/monlh Security
rooms , 1.5 baths, basement , and key depos1ts . No pets
carport. $650, relerences .
References
required
cSepos it, no pets. 740-446· (740}446· 4425 or (74014469209.
3936

You can earn up to
$8/hour by calling on
beha H of major Non-Profit
and Political
organizatio ns. We also
Offer pa1d training
and holidays. Call today.
1-Sn-463·6247 ext. 2454.

MANAGING
STYLIS T
NEEOED lor busy salon.
SASSY
SCISSORS
Timberland or stand1ng tim - (740)441·1880 or (740)256·
ber and oil &amp; gas production 6336
or mineral r1ghts. 740-2 36Medi Home Health Agency,
0035.
Inc. seekin g a lull·time AN
l\ll'lll\\11\1
Case Manager for the
''In H I..,
Gallipolis Ohio lo ca tion.
,.,,;;...;;;..;;;..;;;..;;;,;;;..;;;;;;; Must be licensed both in
10
11
HJ.l~P WANThl&gt; _ OM~i~ and West Virginia. RN'e
1
1n1mum two years supervi- Due to an upgrade in this
sion, management and facilities level of acute servAddressers wanted immedi- home health experience. We ices, We have an opportunity
ately1 No experience neces- offer a c.?mpetitive salary, to offer employment to AN's
sary. Work at home . Ca ll benefits package. 401K, and part time/ fu ll time. We offer
flex time_ E-O.E. Please
(405)447·6397
12·hour sh ifts , elltremely
- - - - - - - - - send resume to 352 Second competitive wages, 401K
Avenue , Gallipolis,
OH
An E)(cetlent way to earn
plan and 611cellent health
·
45631
.
Attn
:
Diana
Harless.
money. Lets talk the
and dental insurance . Apply
AN . Clinical Manager.
NEW AVON.
in perso n or call Judy
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
Barcus.
AN/DON
at
Joyce 304-6 75·6919
(740)446·71 12.
April 304-88 2-3630
Arbora at Gallipolis

AiABAMA•s

{p;.

How you con hove borders and graphics
~
oddedtoyourclosslfledods
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

• Sblrt 'W'our Adt_With A Keyword • Include Complete
Detcrlptton • Indude A. Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number Arnl Addrca• When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 1 Daye

HELP WANTFJJ

•

luxury offered in the new 20,000 aquare foot
epa at MARRI01'1''s GRAND HOTEL GOLF
R ESORT AND SPA, part of the Reoort Diviaion
of the ROijERT TRBNT JONES GOLF' TRAIL.
Enjoy golf at the reeort Lakewood Couroes or at
nearby championohip Magnolia Grove courses.
For Spa reoervationa call 251.990.6385. For
golf and hotel packages at The Grand or anywhere on the Trail, call800.257.3465.
,

Oe-aclifir'e.fo ·

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

Ohio High School Boys BaeketbaU
Monday's Resutts
Ashland 56 , Hilliard Davidwn 50
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 68, Bridgeport 48
Cols. DeSales 72. Cols. Eastmoor 51
Madison Cllr. 46. Powell Vill age Academy
25
Poland 74. Unioo (Pa .) 49
Stryker 61 . Edgerton 36

Lw-------.,1.

European Spa. Experience the lateot in epa
therapies and treatments. Allow trained hande
to massage away the rcmna•n ts of a hard day -o f
golf or just the cares of the world, as you relax
in luxury. Experience the popular H ot Rocks .
treatment, Vichy shower, anti-aging facials or.
give yourself a work-out in the cardiovascular
wo rkout room. Give yourself over to all the

(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304} 675-1333

Offtee-llowe-~

o

lmm~roe yourself in .all the pleasures of a

Regt£)ter

Sentinel

Call Today•••
.,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:O::.r..:,.F;;;ax;.;;To (740) 446-3•o.,os.....__ _ _o:.:r....:F..:a:::.x...:.l:..o.!.:17....:4.:.;0lc.::99=2-..:2.:.;15::..;
·7-•

Young_Cardi nal Mooney 45, Struthers 38
Young. Wilson 49, Campbell 44
Zanesville 56. Byesv ille Mea dowbrook 50

Wilkins' kicks of 28, 26 and
29 yards came after the Rams '
offense failed to get into the
end zone despite running II
plays inside Cleveland's 20yru·d line .
Wilkins' third tleld goal gave
the Rams a 9-7 lead with I:52 .
left in the half.
Holcomb, who went I0-of17 for 80 yards tx;fore being
benched for the second straight
week, threw a 2-yard TO pass
to tight end Keith Heinrich to
give the Browns a 7-3 lead
after the tirst quaner.
Trailing 3-0, lhe Browns
drove 72 yards .in seven plays
w1th Holcomb hilling a wide
open Heinrich in the back of the
end zone wilh 4:13 remaining.
Heinrich's catch was set up
by running back Jamel White's
22-yard run on 3rd-and-2 to the
Rams' 2.
St. Louis rookie linebacker
Pisa Tinoisamoa aided the
Browns by getting a 15-yard
penalty for roughing Holcomb
on the fu·st play of lhe drive.
The Rams took a 3-0 lead on
Wilkins' 28-yard kick, which
came three plays after he ran
for a first down on a fake field
goal.

m:rtbune

To Place

54

overall in the frame. Katie Sayre picked up
her game with eighl third"period points, while
Roush neued five and Pullins 10.
Southern also made good use of its bench
with Williams, Ki ser, Brauer, Hill , and
Pickens getting the job done. Roush had a
great reboundin~ effort as well.
Ashley Dunn 1gnited the, final round for the
TornadO!!S who put 32 founh quarter points
on the board in pulling away from a 53-45
third period lead. Pullins helped open up the
game with two break -away lay -ups, while
Williams and Kiser added steals and lay- ins
that helped break the game open.
•
Southern hit 23-65 overall twois, while hitting 2-12 threefs . (24-77 tot al) and 35-51 at
the line. The Lady Tornadoes grabbed 30
rebounds (Roush 8, Pullins 7), 19 steal s
(Sayre 5, Pullins 5 ), 7 assi~s (Sayre 4 ). 16
turnovers, and 24 foul s.
Nelsonville hit 20-54 on two ·s, 2-7 threeis ,
(22-61 overall) and 17-36 at the line . N-Y had
34 rebounds (Maiden 9, Bateman 8), I0 steals
(Bateman 3, Sears 3 ), 22 turnovers. and 33
fou ls.
Nelsonville won the reserve game 27-23 led
by Megan Edwards with I0. Southern was led
by Mallory Hill with eight.
Southern goes to Miller Thursday.

- - ~e

Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

Prep Scoreboard

Youth Gallery

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydally~entlnel.com

-----~---

otHe.

Fumhure
New. scratch &amp; De nt.
Save 70%. 1-8()().527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Str8e t.
GuyaMonetHuntington . M/ F
RCA Cotor console T.V..
Formal B!kM'ht. evening
gown sz. 22 , electric hospital
bed, hoyt hydraulic Uft, oversize portable co mmode.
folding walker, tonet seat
handles. (304)875·1349
Seasoned oak lirewood tor
sale. Split' and delivered
tocolly. S50. al'uci&lt; load. Call
(304)675-3508

j

Bulu&gt;tNG
SuPftJEs
Lo.----~fiiio-.,J
Block, briCk,. sewer pipes~
windows. untels. etc. Ctaude
Wln1ero, R io ·a,ando. OH
Coli 740-245·5121 .

•

�•

Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2003

, Tues.,.y, Dec. 9, 2003
OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.l]'lydallysentlnel.com

In M emory
1-red t'ck male 5 years old, AQuarium's 2-4 gal. , 1-30
1-blue tick lemale 2 years gal. 3-10g , also filters, and
old. $200 Each (304)675- haaters , phone 446 -0039
2428

In loving memory
of our wonderful
mother and

jD.,.n E. ~I 1981
Vwltt E. Smith 19BS
U... M. Hrnslty 1986
Miclwlllmilk BWtll
1990
&amp;nndh E. BWtll
1991
Ma E. Blutlt 1m

Ada Swan Bissell,

on

Phillip
Alder

· Mm""J' •/
J98J

)D.,.nll. ~l

grandmother,

pupp1es,
len1ale Snow Dalmalian
Monkey-ta me. mothe&lt;/father full ~looded , 8
females, 2 males , $1~5 .
$1,500. Call (740)388-6 142.
(740)992·98'l.2 ready x-mas
T
A-KC-L-ab_p_u_p-pi-es-.-,-w-ks-on week.

her birthday,

December 9, and

Oec.

23rd. Christmas Eve
WOnderful
.
Golden Retriever puppies. Mae Swan •-~t::PeekJ
pick-ups. Available, yellow, Ready Christmas week.
n
$300. (740}985-332 8.
Mother and Father on pram on her birthday,
- - -- - - - - ises. AKC registered. $1 25
November 24.
AKC Reg istered Siberian each. (740)992-7557
Happy Birthday ,
Husky pups. 7wks old. 1st
shots &amp; wormed. 2 males. 4 Mate Pomertan-dog-very
Mom and
lemales. Beaulilul blue eyes gentle. Andy J. H. Yoder.
Aunt fv\ae.
Parents on prem1ses . $250 .. 1032 1 St. At. 141 , Gallipolis tM"'- INP m iSS yOU
(304)773-5730
OH 45631 .
and love you
alWays.

Tom, (anet &amp;. Tom

~orth

In pursuance to an
order of sale directed

to me in the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at public

auction , at the front

door of the courthouse in Pomeroy,
Ohio, In the 'above

named county, on
January 16, 2004 at
10:00 A.M., the follow·

lng

described

real

estate and mobile
home, to -wit:

mobile

home,

accepted,

shall

be

Public Notice ·

ol Slate Route #681
South 76' 43' 38"West
a distance of 464.60
feet to a p .k . nail set In
the center of a bridge

The State ol Ohio,
Meigs County
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,

crossing

Inc. as Nominee for

branch of the Shade
River;

Household
Corporation

Thence
leaving
said center line and

Household Finance
Corporation

along the center line

Plaintiff

of said East branch of

vs.

the shade River the

Realty
aka

1. North 01 ' 38' 58 "

Gall McAbee lka Gall
Zirkle, etal.
Defendants

East a dislance of
149.88 teet to a point ;

Case No. 02 CV 102
In pursuance of an

following six courses;

M iddlepurt, OH

6:30

(740) 992-7533

Las t T hursday of
every m o n th
A ll pack $5.00
B r ing this coupun
B uy $5.00
B ona nza Get
5 F R EE

i

GaM bot ""' f.wgo ttttr ~
~ Orw: ftau Marilyn, ~
Mikt rJttJ
fomilin

Ovtr 50 Mounls
on Display

Sunset Home
Construction

rlO

FARM

EQuiPMENT

98 Pontiac Bonneville SE,
Nice, S5295; 98 Olds 88 LS
61 ,ooo miles, Nice, S6BOO;
01 Nissan Frontier, E~o:t. Cab
Picku p, 2 WD, Auto, 4 cyl.,
$8500;
90
Cadillac
Eldorado,
97,698
miles,$4000 (740)446·8554

Ir

r.l!""-'"':':----,

Thence
leaving
said Section line and
along the center line

East

5th Avenue

52 Ford Tractor BN with
Blade. Finish Mower, $2800.
Heavy Duty M.F. Frontend
Load. hydrol Fork and
Bucket, $1000. (740)44 6-

FOR SALE

1979 Ford F250 Camper
Special with ulility bed. 460
automatic, Good Body, Runs
Go"od, $1000 Negotiabl e.
(740)388-812i

1989 Chevy 3500 Dually,
Ext. Cab, 2WO, Auto 454.
90,000 miles. Extra Nice,
Attention Ring Buyers. I am $8000. (740)446-855 4
looking for a ring bought in 1995 FOAD E350 CUBE
front of The Art Schoo l, BOX
TRUCK.
CALL
Gallipolis around October (740)44 6-94t 6. M-F 9-5.
200 1 (740)775- 1075
Located
1391 Sa fford

WAI\'I'ID

roBuv

Wanted to buy gaesa or

Summer Sausage

New Homes • Vi nyl
Siding • New Garages

Mad e

• Rep li.lcemenl

Maplewood Lake

Window:-. • Roof"i ng

Christian

COMME RC IAL and

Campground
St. Rt. 124 between

R ESIDENTIA L

FREE

Ra cine &amp; Syracuse

~:;:o~:::p~=kola

949-2734

Come To Us For
All Your Needs
119 W Second St.

.·
1.J

~ ···. Hartwell House . ..,.
UPS Shipping Services

ll·. .

Holiday Hrs. : Mon 10-8 pm : T-Th 10-6 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10-5 pm; Sun. Noon - 4pm

·. Located ill Historic Do wntOWII Pomeroy
100 E. Main

9

·

4-Wlls

II{\ '"'l'l IR I\ llC 1\
=~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, UJ96
Jeep
Ch erokee
lO
AUTOS
: 1100.000 mnes, 4x4 , tilt, CD

J
.

·Slzea h i o•;
to1o'~oi

'· ·

~~~:~;;;:;~~
r:to

1975 Taurus Camper. Self L.~-oiiMI'Riiii.iiiiO,;,VEMiiiiiiiiENTSiioili.-1
coa1ailled 20 fl. new tires, &amp; •
BASEMENT
brakes. everything wo rk s,
WATERPROOFtNG
clean, $1,200. (740)388U_nconditiona l lifetime guar·
9327.
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basemen t
Waterproofing.

.) "'•
, 1.-J (('P I~(:}
b

HU6BHRDS
GREEnHOUSE
Syrac use, Ohio

thru Sa turda y 10-4

Poinsett ias, Pols aml
hangi ng baskcls.

158.46 feet to a point;
5. North 16' 33' 02"
West a distance of

Ohio

Cl o sed S unda ys

MYSELF

THE BORN LOSER

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

,..1-\ELLO, 1'\'K).\f-\OIZN,.;.I&gt;f&gt;L( 7 ~
R!&gt;J-.1&lt;.10 1-1. VE:.EBLti'E:.STER.
-..........._---;:;.::;?;;~ 1-\E:.RL .

1-800-822-0417

~

~

~

f-IE 01/E~t.Pi 1\TTI-\E OFFICE 1.

l.'M. &lt;.1\LLI NG TO N.EIZT YOU

Ti-\JI..\ YOUR i-\U:'l5JI..I'&lt;\) WILL &amp;

GEHI!&gt;lG 1-\0 t-\E. 1\ 51\ L-"TE:
\ODI'\'1' ...

~

I

t

North

4•

Obi.
Pass

5 •

Pasll

Pass

I

KNow

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

READIN6 IS LIKE A
JOURNE'( TO A NEW PLACE ..

BETTY
l OON'T KNON... iHATs
ALOT OF mss ANti
PP.~SSURE ...

i

I

M&amp;;roo! 'THAT'S
00UGIIT llliS
SOOS·BUSI'ING CD•i!ElAXING
llAINSTOAA\S II
WilY 1

Lt111AC!I!na.c;om
Free ShiQpingt
No prior prescription required
Get Ambien, Phenlermine,
Soma, Xanax 11t"ld more.
SectJre online sav1!1QS &amp;corverllertee.
CaR 866-563-3932 Of VISit

~"'~
High&amp; Dry

Seff.Storage

Wf. NOW RETURN TO

9~ Columbus Rd.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

740·992-5232

97 Beech st.

YOUNG'S

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decka
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
22 Years

1

IMPORTS
A then•

J&amp;L
Eledric

•

Ph 740-tn-on:s

C•ll740·591·107:1

middleport, OH
992-6635

• New Garagae
•
•
•
•

'MURRAY NEEI/l..EMAN .. ."

. Licensed &amp; Bonded

CARPENTER (10'110'610'11201
[740) 992-3194
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

&lt;.
East

Pass

Pas!!i

"" 6

SEASONED
FIREWOOD
• • &amp; I.ICIIII

$40.08 IIIIM'IIll
IIHSIICIJ

992-2269:

answers are given overleaf Both sets of
puzzles cover w1de gamuts.
In Ieday's bndge diagram. !low should
South play at five spades after West
leads the club six? (The reade r can see
all 52 ca rds, bu1 Girisll Moorthy, from
Philadelphi a. fout"\d the ri ght line at the
table.) This is the logic question: The
22nd and 24th presidents ol the United
States had the same parents but were .
not brothers .+low could. this be?
The authors give no bidding. In my auction, North is right to douhle, not to overcall two diamonds ; his hand is playable in
three suits. West sacrifices 1n live hearts
because he inters spade sh ortage opposite.
If declarer immediately plays a trump.
West will win , put his partner on lead with
the heart ace, and receive a club ruff to
.defeat the contract. Visualizing the posi1ion, 1he declarer won the first trick in the
dummy, cashed the diamond ace. discarding one heart, and cont inued wr1h the
diamond queen, throwing his other heart
This Scissors Coup kept East off the
lead. so South lost only one spade and
one diamond.
The 22nd and 24th presidents were the
same man: Grover Cleveland.
Each book is available from C&amp;T 8ridge
Suppl ies. Cal! (800} 525-4718 to order.

G

BIG NATE

Commiuion Potential, Par1 TIIT1&amp;
Trainil'_l9 PrOVIded

PfT Income to .S tsoo Frr
Unlimitedllnveslment
required. Fil1 ancing allatlal:lte
T~ l ·irao 1·ffi·!.16-3496
(Hil-249-59421

11

~..;::::::::=u ~ IE:::i~::i....;

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used

740-992-5776

992·6215
Pomerov, Olllo

,.

!
II
r..

READIN6 IS ACTUALLY
AN ADVENTURE ..

on the 30th day of

Columbus,

:E' VE DONE SOME TIME AT
TH' OL' "CRIMINAL JUSTICE
' r-.......,.--- - - ACADEMY''

PEANUTS

East a distance of

43206
(614) 221-1662
(11)25, (12)2, 9,16, 23

T
WORRY, PIKE,
l WON'T HOLD
THAT AG'INST
YA !!

I

1985 Buick La Sabre 307,
MaroRCYO.ES
V8 . 4 Barrel, Duels,
Exhaust, Collectors Edition,
$1000. (740)367-0807 or 2003 Suzuki RM 125: rode
'i740)367-08t2.
very little, like new. Cost
$4,850. Sell $3,800 or trade
1995
Cutlass
CIEAA for car. 740 367-0632.
$2,495;
1996
Corsica
CAMPERS&amp;
$2 ,195; 1993 Cavalier SW
MmoR HOMI'll
$1 ,495; 1993 Gao Tracker
$1,195. Others in stock.
1988 GMC Camper for sale.
Cook Motors
(740) 44 6- 4325
(740)446.0103.

Open dai ly M o nday

P ro f e s s Io n a I

JUSTICE ACADEMY !!

I

Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
2000 Ford F 550 Diesel, 4
Cars from $500. For listings
door, 4 wheel drive with flat
1-800-719-3001 exl 390 1
bed. (740)446-931 7

public auction, at the
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy, Ohio. In the
above namod County,

Su.rvayor 116844.
Excepting and reserv·
lng to Luther E.
Boo1ha the g~s . &amp; oil
on 1ha foregoing real

SMIF , MEET DEPUTY PIKE !! HE SPENT
TWO YEARS IN TH' CRIMINAL . -- --"-......

Box 189, M iddleport. OH
Phone : 843 -5264 ."

45

'.5

3 . North 31' 22' 11 "
East a distance of
160.28 feet to a-point ;
4. North 05' 46' 3(1 "

&amp;Wooldridge

BARNEY

and FJnancial Services,

Now open for
Chrislmss 6earon.

Frank

18 Patterns .tvallable
tco1nnle Curnutt
895-3982 !ihop
895-3512 nome

"Not mel
M y mo ney is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance

above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at

Co., L.P.A.
·
Anornoyslor Plaintiff
800 South Pearl Street

i'lachlne Quilting ·Regulated Stitch

740-742-2076

Order ol Sale in the

on the 16th day of
June, 1987, by C.
Thomas Smllh, Oh io

Phon e (74() )5'~3-•66 ;rt
A t hens, O hio

750 Enst Stn te Street

L*ngsvllle, OH

r

START DATING ,
TONIGHT!
1-800-ROMANCE
ext 1847

Wt:st

I.
5•

wE INnF-flrJPT JACK-ANl&gt;·Ttlf·
,fAN5TALK'S fAflM ~~ bridge and brains
F.tPO/lT fOF. TttiS ! ~~ Authors struggle for ne~ slants in bn~
books , but one person who has had no
BlltAICING NtwS ~U trouble is Erwin Brecher. Two years ago.
ON Tttt
~~~ he put out "Hocus-Pocus," and lllis year.
co-authored witll Julian Pot1age. came
tifOflGif·PO/fGIE
~~~ "More
Hocus-Pocus" (Panacea Press)
SCANDAL ... • ~H On each of 96 right-hand pages, you get
Y-'"11
&lt; a brid,ge problem and a brarnteaser. The

L ---FO·R-SALEiiii-_.1- player, runs good. $2,500
0 80. (740)256- f 2J3 or
$5001 POLtCE tMPOUNOS. (740)256·9031

r

South

ORIZZWELLS

AstroGraph
'lbur&lt;fll~ :

Wedne sday, Dee . 10, 2003
By Bernice Bede Osot
An enterprise into which you enter in the
ye ar ahead may start out as a tnckle. but
could gradually increase 1nto a gusher it
you 've got the heart to see it through.
Some lessons may have to be 1earnee1 to

1 Cleans

SAG ITTARIUS" (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Someone who is indebted to you (and who
you never thought you would hear from
aga1n 1 may be forced into repay1ng you
today in order to get something else she or
he wants. Time takes care ol things.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Although you may have a tendency to wa nt
to go it alone tOday, and not fee l like being
part of a group. circumstances may pusr1
you into being a joiner. II'll prove to be lo
your benelit
AOUARJUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Thai
tough job you didn 't want to do today, bu t
went ahead arid did your best on anyway.
may end up winning you tt1e respec t of
your peers and enhance your reputation 1n
the process.
PISCES {Feb. 20-Mar-ch 20) - Although
you may be in a sociable mood today.
chances are you're no! apl to feel at ease
be tng pa rt of a large group, so avoid them
if possible and seek quality companionship, not quantity.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Do not be
resistant to tt1ose in high places today. nor
to their ideas. Once you get in to their way
ol doing things, conditions may prove to be
to you r banef1t in tt1e long run
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although 11
migt11 nbt be easy and may take a bit of
guts, be firm today and insist that the person with whom you have an arrangement
honors the terms that were ori ginal ly
agreed upon
GEMINI {May 21-June 20) - If you are a
poor eott octor today rega rding something
!hat Is borrowed or owed to yo u. con~ider­
able time could elapse before you'll be
able to gather what is yours and the debt
1s finally sallied.
·
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - Situations
rhat ha11e proven to be too difficul t for others to manage could be dumped in your
lap today Fortunalety, the iobs won 't be
tough tor you and your reputati on will soar.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) - EV@n i1 11 costs
you a degr" of inconven.&amp;nce that doesn'l Ill in with Ieday's plti"h s, it is best tllat
you do not leave any important maner
dangling. 11"11 pay to see lhinga through to
the en d
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Don't ,make
the mla1ake of lumping all people or al!uatlona Into one outcome loday. II wil l cause
confusion that you'll have a lle.rd lime sorting out. Face hard lacts so you know
where you stand.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c1. 23) - Oepend upon
the past lor leaiona learned. but don't live
tnera. Once you retrllt'Je wl'1a1 you want
from your memorlet. apply It to tooay·a sit·
uatlon and matce It count for the good .
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Juet
becautl there are problem• around you
dol ln't mean they can't be tolved. Your
gr11t11t a&amp;Ht today Ia yo~,~r mental lacul~ ... ao uH them to ngurt out ways to ctr-

a fish
2 Wrher
- Nln
3 Light brown

19 Formal olllm 4 "1984"
21 CioN on
22 Type un~

28 ·'There
oughla be

author
5 Sat down

- -!..

36
37

38
39

40
42

44
47
49
51
54

(Lat.)

49 Cull
50 Designer

or Joey
St. Laurent
31 Cookie51 Snow boot
selling org . 52 House
32 VIolin port
odd~lons
33 Envelope
53 Munch
abbr.
55 COok' s
35 Synthetic
vessel
fabric
3(1 Klkl

- - 6 _,.,...,
Cobl1ol clspt. 7 Inch
Tiny Hv
muhlples
" Bien''
8 Evergreen
oppoelto
9 "- we ,
llionlopocllut
thore yet? "
Congoeto
10 Joke whh
Epoch
13 Curbside
B rlglno 's
shout
l riend
18 Stops
Per!orm
20 Etevotor
Ne\:•'llclns
buttons
Do socks 23 Good frien d
Husks
24 Volkswagen
Adult meale
kin
Reason
26 Grace endor
Tweet
27 Queen
Fuel cartel
ol Scol o

25
29
31
34

40 - olandstill

41 Geronimo's
tribe
43 Brats
45 Restaurant
patron

46 Feed
the fire

48 - bene

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by
Celeb&lt;~

Crpho&amp;• cryptogram,

Luis Campos

111'8 ~rUtted

!&gt;orr. r;;uotat~ oy 1an;JUS peoo!e
n t~ CltlhO• stands l{ll ano!rlll'

E~~ ~

Tooa~· s clue

" X

C TH ' V

VKLF

O XIL

J ZNN

K L HP F
" X

ZE

oaS~ 1nd p&lt;He&lt;'ll

M tlQtJats W

VT
JF

P ~ W C

D TTI N :

JX H C . "

S T PC

RWHHT Y

0 T TIN ."

OX A L

MXV KT Z V

VKT J W N

UL S SL PN T H

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - · He truly was great and a gen1us. a man Of
enormous 1nteg nty and dass · - Tra1ner John Gosden on W• lhe ShoemaKe!
(CJ 2003 by NEA Inc t 2-9

S©RJ.l}'\ -Ll £ ~ '=' 3

THAI DltiT
'UULII
- - - - - ' - - - ' - fd if• d i ~ CLAY I '0 ~l AN

0 lour
lile:monge letlerl o'
K romb ltd words
lew

I

IO

won
UMI

t"he
be·

form fo ur word'

PERTUE

' I I ·I' I I

get it going

cumWint

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIIIcnDII

DOWN

whelmed
17 Exhaled
loudly

as

Vulnerable: Doth

1\ ~

Wrap I
fi'Hze
For only

l0 7

-

Dealer: West

TFN

31645 SR J25

Skin, Cut,

KQIO!IIi l

. Q J 0 87 5

&amp; Custom Van Deale r"

2. North 39' 14' 03"

from'" actual survey

."

"W .Y's # I C hevy, Pon tiac. "B uic k. Old s

·

3

Problems- from

Racine. Ohio
4577 i
740-949-2217

t I U ll 4
... J 9&lt;

.
.

Hill's Self
Storage

East a distance of
. 125.80 feet to a point ;

January,
2004, at
10:00 o 'clock a.m ., the
following described
165.41 feet to a point; · real estate, to wit:
Situated in the State
6. North 40' 36' 36"
·East a distance of
of Ohio, County of
112.63 feet to a po'int;
Meigs and Township
said point being the
ol
Salisbury
and
intersection of the
being
further
center line of said
described as follows:
East East branch of
Being all of Lot f440
Shade River and the
and 15 leal adjoining
center line of a ditch;
part of Lot #441 and,
Thence
leaving
being a part of tho
said center line of the
same real estate conEaol branch of Shade
veyed by James R.
River and along the
Eads to James !I Allen
center line of said
by deed recorded In
ditch North 69' 49'
Deed Book 197, Page
41 '" Eaolpassingthru
65, Deed Recorda of
a railroad spike set tat ' Meigs County, Ohio.
a distance of 255.40
Parcel Nos. 15-01407·
feel and going a Iota!
000 &amp; 15-01408.000
distance of . 259.02
Said
Premises
feet lo the principal
Located at 760 Laurel
point ol beginning
Street,
Middleport,
containing
5.8004
Ohio 45760
acre tract more or
Said
Premises
less subject to all · Appraised
at
leg'l easements and $11,000.00 and cen rlght-of-wayo.
not be aotd lor leas
Bearings
were
than twq-lhlrda ol that
111umed and are tor
amount.
the determination of
Terms
of
Sale:
ongtos only.
$5,000.00
down,
The above descrlpremainder" upon ten·
lion was prepared
der·ol deed.

... 6

Hatcher

15 Over-

t:ail
... 1
. AQ932

Opening lea8

29670 Bashan Road

. ··.···.
..

.

K .f 'R 6 5
K J 6 2

t

orr Sa"d Hill Road.

h'~~~~~~~

Ho~

r

992-5479

9 miles from Pt. Pl,asant

f
. i

A 5 -4

•

Jeff Warner Ins.

r# buy q11ilt tops

Gifts &amp; Gift Baskets or aU of
your ltoliday ueeds

•

60 Austin h,..
In Porio
61 Poker oto.._
12 Uncommon 62 Thing ,
13 Garr or
In htw
14 Mol 15 Married
woman

Soulh

Pomeroy Auto Part.'i

I.

MONTY

Cellular

Mac hine Shop Se r vice

•
·

Wf! ~ l

let me do it for y o ul

liNDA'S PAINTING

:2 09113

J 8 3

t i\Q 97 5
,. I\K J 2

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

(740) 245-5021

~-------,.J

For Sale: Hay about 2000 2001 Chevy S- 10, Dark
bales. $2.00 per bale. PhOne metallic green, 4 cyl., 5(740)446-7857.
speed, AJC, CO, cru ise/till,
axe. condition. 14.000 miles,
Round Bale hay. first and will sell for pay off. $10, 100.
second cutting. Orchard (740)446-0864.
grass and cleve r. Call
VANS&amp;
(740)446-7787

ESTIMATES

7 40·992-7599

Sporl,
i:!
'u:::Ork:"
ey;.;s.;3;;.04":·;:.
67.;5.;·5~3.;.
54--, 48K m11es, bedliner, coiOb
HAY &amp;
matching runn. bds, w s r~1111"-~C~AMJ-'ERS.. &amp;~....,I
"il 1{\ II I .._
· GRAIN
visor/lights,
$10,000,
.
~~-""!":~....- - ,
{7401992-6276 after 5pm.
..... MOTOR
HOME

r

57 Moumful cry

1 Chlner

4 Vlt&lt;Jng tWM 58 Auto goUjlt
8 Tlbe1 beoot 59 - ot.C o Mig

• &lt;

BUILDERS InC.

Skinnt'd, C ut
&amp; Wrapped

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992·21 39

TRUCKS

·

•

BISSELL

DEER
PROCESSING

j

required lo deposit on
the day ol the sale, In
cash or by certllled
S1tua1e
In
the
Township of Orange, check payable lo the
County of Meigs and
Sheriff, 10% of the
Slate of Ohio;
amount
of
such
Baing a part of a
accepted bid but In no
tract of land last event
less
than
transferred to Luther $1,000.00. The bel·
E. Boothe as recorded ance of the purchase
in deed Book 259 at
price shall be due and
Page
251 ,
Meigs
payable to the Sheriff
County
Recorder's within thirty (30) deys
Office, Meigs County,
from the date of the
Ohio, also being a confirmation sale. Tho
part of the Northeast
purchaser shall ba
Quarter of Section 23 , required Ia ay lnlerest
Township 4· North,
on said unpaid bal·
Range
· 12-Wesl,
ance at 10% per
Orange
Township ,
annum from the ·date
Meigs County, Slate
of confirmation of the
of Ohio. and. more sale to the date of
particularly described
payment of lhe bel·
as follows :
ance unless the bal·
Being at a point on anco shall be made
the East Section line within eight (8) days
of Section 23 which
from the date of sale .
bears South 00' 01 '
All Sheriff's sales
49" West a distance of
operate under the
1093.65 feet from the
doctrine of Caveat
northeast corner of Emptor. Prospective
said
Section
23 , purchasers are urged
Township
4-North ,
to check for liens. The
Range 12-West;
Sheriff makes no
Thence along said ·. guarantee as to status
East Section
line
ol Title Prior to sale.
South 00' 01 ' 49" West
Ralph Trussell
a distance of 768.49
Meigs County Shariff
feet to a railroad spike
Donald A . Cox
set in lhe center line Anorney lor Plaintiff
of Sta te Route #681 ;
(11) 25, (12) 2_, 9 , 16,23

the

137

1996 Dodge Neon, 5 speed.
Bryan Reeves
74,000 miles, Runs Good.
Border Collie pups, Classic $1400 080. (740)256-1233,
New Homes,
marki ngs, working·, imported or (740)256-9031.
Room Additions,
blood line, great Christmas
1996 Saturn Sl ,4 dr, 5
Garages, Pole
gift (740)379-911 0.
sp., manual ABS, 1 owner
Buildings, Roofs,
$4299. 304 -675-6199 or
Siding, Decks,
Registered
Christmas 722·3862.
Bassett Hound. 7 weeks,
Kitchens, Drywall
had 1st shots and wormed. 1999 Volkswagen New
&amp; More
Beetle 47,176 mileage. Red
$250 Call (740)388-932 7
' ESTIMATES!
FREE
with tan cloth int. auto, air,
p70
MUSICAL
cass. alloy wheels. 2.0 liter
740-742-341
!Nj;IliUMENI'S
engine. $9800. (304}6756889 alter 4:00 p'm.
Courier/Messenger
used Trumpet $300. Call
95 Chrysler Newyorker,
(304)675-4729
between
• Professional
9)(Cellent condition, leather
7:30 and 4:00
power sunroof, runs great,
• Confidential
$2500 must sell, 740-416FoR SALE
Bob Back
0174
ORTiwlE

Identification Number
NZOH.C NCX770142FK
017092 and being reg·
istration no. 10-00088.
Said real estate and
mobile home
are
appraised
at
$ 22,000 .00 and can· 13 rentals. nice, 3 bedroom
not be sold for less house. 50 acres. 2 miles
than two-thirds of the from
Gallipolis. Good
appraised value.
TERMSOFSALE : The
s uccessful pUrchaser,
as soon · as his bid Ia

Pom eroy Eagl es
BINGO 2171
Every Thu rsday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Earl y b i rds start

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
S.

~·-~

Registered

estate.
Address: 47155 Booth
Road , Co olville, Ohio
Parcel
No.
10·
00061 .001
Said real estate will
be s old together with
tho
1987
Nashua

Cotondar-

obllt.

11 One,

AIITOS
FOR SALE

Sheriff's Sale of Real
Estate
The State ot O h i o ,
Meigs County
AMERICAN GENER·
AL FINANCIAL SER·
VICES, INC., Pleintiff
vs
JOSEPH W. PULLINS,
el al ., Defendants
case No. 03-CV -065

se

ACROSS

ltt l.4ving

6 yr. old
Macaque

_.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

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neig hbo rs k td th at a lie
. - w ou ld spread qu o:k ly, but the
tr u lh would alwa y s • • - - - .

VA T END

l

UNSCIAMBif ABOJE UTtERS
10 Gfl ANSWE R

12 - ' - o 1
Laxtty · Prowl- Knock· Fathom - INTO /Ire POOL
SC~M -LETS ANSWERS

" T here's w ater in the carb ure to r: the wife la id her
h usband. " Yo u do n't eve n kn owwha l a carburet or is " the
husban d si g hed. "We ll," sh e a n swered. "I know 1 drove
the c ar IN TO the POOL. ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

HOW D I D

YOOK&gt;.XJW!

~d tlt~o~ atlon a.

SOUP.TO NUTZ
etooJ......_, .... ~ . .. -....__

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remode ling

140-992-1m
Stop &amp;Compare

·.

,

�. . .. .
"'

.,

Tuesday, December 9, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.co~

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Redwomen score a pair of
wins at Tennessee tourney
STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailytribune.com
McKENZIE,
Tenn .
The
I,Jniversily of Rio Grande women 's
basketball squad continu ed with il s
impressive early season run with a pair
of victories at the Bethel (Tenn .)
College Rotary Classic.
The Redwomen defeated the host
school Bethel on Friday evening, 63 54 and followed that up wilh a 74-55
triumph over NAIA Division I
Williams Baptlsl (Ark.) on Saturday
afternoon.
Rio Grande (8-2) was led by junior
wing player Tiffany Johnson in the
Friday lilt against Bethel. John son
tos s~d in 13 points an d pulled down
eight rebounds.
Senior forward Annie Tucker added
12 points off the bench on 6-of-9
shooti ng from the field.
Sophomore forward Tiffanie Hager
topped the rebounding €hart with 12
while junior post-mate Alkia Fountain
also collected double digit rebounds.
corralling It .
Megan Reynolds led Bethel (6-5) in
scor ing with . 13 points .
Kayla
McSweeney added II points and
Stacey Huff chipped in I0 with, a

-i .
game-hi gh, 13 rebound s.
Rio Grande won the rebounding bal ·
tie , 46-43 and turnover margin (22-24}
The Red women shol 41 percent (26of-63) from the fie ld , wit hout the benefit of making a lhree-point attempt
(0-for-7), and 58 percent (II -of-19)
from the free throw line.
The Lady Wildcats shot only 33 percent (22-of-66) from the noor, 29 percent (7-of-24) from three-point land
and 30 percent (3-of- 10) from the fou l
line .
Rio Grande led 29-25 at halft ime.
On Saturday, the Redwomen pulled
away in the second half to get the 19poinl margin of victory. Sophomore
guard Tana Richey scored 15 points 10
pace the Rio Grande attack. Ri~hcy
connected on 4-of-6 three-point shots.
She also pulled down five rebounds
and dished out fo ur assists and swiped
four steals.
Hager ad ded 13 points and six caroms while Fountain co ll ected u dou-

ble-double with 10 points and 12
rebou nd s. John son garnered s1x
rebou nds to put her two away from
500 for her ca reer. Freshman guard
Carlesha Chambers handed out , a
game-high, seven ass ists.
Williams Bapti st (5-4) was led by
Sarah Elizabeth Hei sserer, who
scored, a game-high, 18 poin ts. She
also pu ll ed down seven rebounds.
Kayla Barr also reac hed double fi gures with II points.
Rio shot 48 percent (30-of-62) from
the field. 50 percent (6-of- 12) from
long range and 57 percent (8-of- 14)
from the charity stripe.
.
William s Baptist co untered with 32
percent (20-of-63) from the floor. 31
percent (5-of-16) from beyond lhe arc
and 83 percent ( 10-of-12) from the
free throw line.
·Rio out-rebounded the Lady Eagles,
43-35 and won the turnover bailie (2224).
Rio Grande !railed 28-26 at halftime.
Rio will ope n the American Mideast
Conference South Division portion of
the sched ule on Saturd ay when they
host Mount Vernon Nazarene at the
Ncwl Oliver Arena. Tip-off is set for 6
p.m.

,

No. 2·1 Redmen fall at Point Park
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
WEST MIFFLIN , Pa. - NAIA
Division II No. 2 1 Rio Grande lost to
a quality Point Park team, 67-53 , on
Saturday nigh! in American Mideast
Confe rence men's basketball action at
the CCAC South Campus gymnasium.
Junior center Sean Plummer was the
leading scorer for Rio Grande (6-3),
scoring 18 ' points. Plummer was the
only Rio player to score in double figures. He shot 6-of-8 from the field ·and
6-of-7 from the free throw line . Senior
forward• Seth Deerfield was on the

ve rge of double figures in points, tossing in nine.
Tex Williams Jed Point Park (9-3)
with a 21-point, nine steal. effort. The
Pioneers raced out to an early cushion
and never looked back. Marek
Kosovic added 12 points and five
rebounds while Reggie Gaddi s tossed
in I0 points off the bench. Shaun
Peters handed out. a game-high, seven
assists and pull ed down seven
rebounds for Point Park .
Point Park led 38-22 at halftime.
Rio shot poorl y from the field , hitting only 37 percent (17-of-46) from
the field, 25 percent (4-of- 16) from
three-po int land and 68 percent ( 15-

of-22) from the free throw line .
Point Park shot 46 percent (26-of56) from the field , 32 percent (6-of19) from beyo nd the three-point arc
and 69 percent (9-of- 13) from the foul
line.
Point Park won the rebounding bat·
tie , 33-31 and the Redmen were crippled by 20 turnovers, compared 10 a
respectable 13 for Point Park.
Rio Grande will open up AMC
South Division play on Saturday at the
Newl Oliver Arena when the Redmen
host Mount Vernon Nazarene.
·
Tip-off will be at 8 p.m. and the
game is spon sored by Norris Northup
Dodge.

Colon close to deal with Angels,
Matsui arrives in New York
BY RoNALD BLUM

Associated Press

deal with Anaheim. said two
baseball officials who were
familiar with details of Colon's
negotiations with the two
teams. The pair spoke on lhe
condition of anonymity.
Anaheim offered a '$48 mil·
lion, four-year contract; one of
the officials said. Once a preliminary agreement is reached,
the right-hander still must pass
a physicaL
Colon was only 15-13 with a
3.87 ERA this year, but he's
coveted for his dumbility and
consistency.
His agent, Mitch Frankel, did
not retum several telephone
calls from The Associated
Press. Angels general manager
Bill Stoneman refused to conftnn or deny talks.
"We've been more active this
offseason than last." Stoneman
said: "We' re still trying to get
some other things done. In
terms of what they are, we're
only going to comment on that

NEW YORK
The
Anaheim Angels closed in on
Bartolo
Colon,
Nomar
Garciaparra expressed dismay
at Boston's talks to acquire Alex
Rodriguez, and Kazuo Matsui
arrived in New York on
Monday to complete his deal
with the Mets.
The day after baseball's ftrst
big offseason deadline passed,
teams plotted their moves in
advance of the winter meetings,
which start Friday in New
Orleans.
There were on! y two freeagent signin~s, with right-hander Kerry L1gtenberg agreeing
to a $4.5 million, two-year contract with Toronto and outfielder Eduardo Perez settling on a
$1.7 million, two-year deal with
Tampa Bay. But other deals
were percolating.
1\venty-flve free agents were
offered salary arbitration before
Sunday's midnight deadline.
They have until Dec. 19 to
accept and can re-sign with
their former teams through Jan.
8. The 139 free agents not
offered arbitration can't re-sign
until May 1.
Among those cut off by the
deadline were Greg Maddox
and Atlanta, Ivan Rodriguez
and Florida, and Vladimir
Guerrero and Montreal.
"There was absolutely no ·
possibility this was going to ftt
mto our operating scheme this
year," Bmves general manager
John Schuerholz said of
Maddux. "I would have loved
to have seen him say, 'I want to
stay with the Braves no matter
what. I want to achieve these
goals wearing a Bmves uniform. I want to stay.' We all
would have loved that. But our
economics and his economics ,
weren't anywhere near each
other." ·
Colon was close to a big
money-deal Monday.
While neither Colon nor the
Angels discussed the talk, both
Anaheim and the Chicago
White Sox believed the righthander was on the verge of a

COLUMBUS (AP) Hunters killed 116,004 deer
in the weeklong gun season
that ended Sunday, state
officials
said
wildlife
Monday.
The preliminary total was
down about 12 percent from
last year's tot.al of 133.163
- the stale record for a oneweek deer-gun season.
County
Tuscarawas
reported the highest number
of deer brought to check stalions (4.193), followed by
Guernsey
(3 ,835 ),
.(3,8 11 ),
Coshocton
Muskingum (3.726) and
Washington (3,7 15) counties.
Wildlife officials said as
many as 450,000 hunters
participated in the gun season . One hunter was killed
and 10 were injured.

Guernsey

Hamilton
Hancock
Hardin
Harrison

Henry
Highland
Hocking
Holmes
Huron

Jackson
Jefferson
Knox .
Lake
Lawrence

Licking
Logan
Lorain
Lucas

Madison
Mahoning
Marion

Medina
Meigs
Mercer
Miami
Monroe

2003 deer kill totals
Montgomery
COLUMBUS (AP) - County-by· Mo rgan ,
county totals.for last week's Ohio Morrow
deer gun season:

County
Adams
Allen
Ashland
Ashtabula
Athens
Auglaize
Belmont

2003
1,428
459
2,077
2,382
3,513
364
2,451
Brown
1,290
Butler
' 320
1,766
Carroll
Champaign 873
Clark
502
Clermont
1,288
Clinton
462
Columbiana 1,853
Coshocton 3,811
Crawford
894
Cuyahoga 57
Darke
306
Defiance
456
Delaware
1,028
Erie
270
1,704
Fairfield
Fayetle
325
Franklin
515
Fulton
321
Gallia
2,402
Geauga
949
Greene
418

2002
1,566
594
1,852
1,948 )
4,697
252
3,056
1,543
533
1,857
920
580
1,560
472
1,820
4,484 ,
661
81
283
487
1,057
248
2,073
275 ,
416
308
3,217
993
472

Muskingum

Noble
Ottawa

Paulding
Perry .
Pickaway
Pike
Portage
Preble
Putnam
Richland
Ross

Sandusky
Scioto
Seneca
Shelby
Stark
Summit

Trumbull
Tuscarawas

Union
Van Wert
Vinton
Warren

Washington
Wayne
Williams
Wood
Wyandot
Totals:

3,835
381
400
599
3,637
206
1,760
2,634
2,745
1,353
2,905
2,809
2,239
459
1,641
3,414
883
933
373
189
767
324
575
2,789
369
134
2,471
154
2,250
861
3,726
2,435
149
553
2,645
1,035
1,331
694
304
415
1,453
2,712
267
1,350
685
534
1,265
368
1,676
4,193
694
123
1,818
722
3,715
660
917
285
716
116,004

4,844
419
422
566
4,049
197
1,968
2,930
3,226
1,095
3,569
3,728
2,605
514
2,351
4,095
872
842
382
343
787
379
593
3,018
274
135
3,613
219
2,967
873
4,366
2,891
t27
460
3,401
1,069
1,517
723
323
378
1,440
3,352
272
1,924
735
488
1,261
356
1,640
5,056
757
95
2,319
828
4,869
580
851
228
677
133,163

E-mail us your local sports news:

Baseball Roundup

stuff once we do have something that we announce publicly."
The Angels could be dealing
again if the Alex Rodriguez·
Manny Ramirez trade .. goes
through. Garciaparra would be
out of a job, and it's believed the
Red Sox could trade him to the
Angels for a pit~her, possibly
Jarrod Washburn, or second
baseman Adam Kennedy.
"!' d definitely be hurt,"
Garciaparra said Monday in an
interview with Boston's WEE!
radio. " I'm in a place that I've
given so much of my lite and so
much of my effort."
In New York, the Mets weiC&lt;;Jmed Matsui after the shortstop accepted their $20.1 million, three-year offer and traveled from Japan.
He was welcomed at John F
Kennedy International Airport
by Mets chief operating officer
Jeff Wilpon and New York gen·
era! manager Jim Duquette.

sports@mydailytribune.com
0ay Merry Christmas
to 8omeone 8pecial
with a

&amp;ntinel .Christmas Angel

"'ONLY"'
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fer Picture
Prepaid
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v

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:-·

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner
rJizz.!i&amp;
for two at
..
r fi'At"

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

1.) Send us your ruu11e, addressBnd phone number.
2.) Include your mrrler's name, your route number

Mall your entries to: " Paul Batker
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
. 825 Third Avenue
$lalllpolts, OH 456.} I

,,

'\ 1 1

.'

'

\\tlf\l"'ll\'

t•lll\1n!J{ Jp

.' tiO ,;

HHI\IIIIol11h

Kroger strike may soon end

SPORTS
• Harris scores 23, but
Bobcats lose to DePaul.
See Page B1

Company brings
offer to the table
for union approval
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

OBITUARIES
Page AS

• Barbara Reeves

INSIDE.
• Verizon expands local
calling area. See Page A3
• Meigs County Girl
Scout diary. See Page A6
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3

POMEROY
The
Kroger · s tri k~ may be days
from ending becau se there
is a possible setllemenl
offer on the tab le. Federal
mediators were brought in
last weekend to ·get both the
Uni ted
Food
and
Commercial Workers Local
400 and management back
to the bargaining , table.
More than 3,300 wo{kers
in three states witli the
Kroger Company wen l on
strike Oct 13 because their
union and the com pany
were un able to agree on
who pays for increased
health insurance costs.
"Through the office of the
federal mediator. the parties

WEATHER
Rain, HI: 50s, Low; 30&amp;

Details on Page A2

LorrERIES
Ohio

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydaitysentinel.com

MIDDLEPORT - A commiltee has been funned to
work with ;111 Ind iana de,cl oper in hope s that 1hc
IY1 idd leport Hi gh School
building can be turned imo an
upscale apartment burlding.
Meeting with Joe Woltla of
lndiamrpoli s
Monda y
even ing. a group of ~.. :it lt.t'll"''
including
me mher'
nf
Middleport Village Council
and the Middleport Planning
Commi s., ion formed a , ixmembcr committee. made up
A shelter built by striking Kroger workers that is ltned with of Mayor Sandy lannarelli .
strike notices is shown outside a Kroger store in Charleston, Meigs County Commissioner
W.Va .. Tuesday. It could take up to 10 days to reopen Kroge r Mick Davenport. Counl'il
Co. stores in three states if union members ratify a new con- members Stephen Hou chin&lt;.
tract this week, .a company spokesman said Tuesday. (AP Kath y Scott and Robert
Robin ,on. and Plannin u
Photo/The Daily Mail, Craig Cunningham )
Commi ssion
President
have reached an understand- tor of Local 400. "The com- Myron Duffield .
Thai committee. acwnling
it:tg in regard to the work pany has changed offers."
to
Developer Joe Woltla. wil l
stopp age." said Nelso n
"narrow down" use' for the
Graham. regional cocirdinaPlease see Kroger, AS

Old Fashion Chester Courthouse Christmas
•

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

~ocker, pull ~0 );~• a w~eel~~~ow,d ~I a )I f~rn~ge
~~ntsa 0 ' kmust~a .1115 rud
' a broc mhgt . orbse, an
more r ide · roug
.
h·m y harea.
es nts so I at ot ers
mtCa
ghbl.enJtoyh. ld d'
f
me s e
1sp1ays o
dolls and cradl es of th lat
e e

•

Cash 25: 8-12· 14-23-24-25
.,

1800s and early 1900s iday mu sic and talented
many from the vast collec- Alison Rose sang both lration of Shirley Huston of · ditional and contemporary
Syracuse, along with more music of the season.
Th e event a1so I'eaturec1
an 1·tque toys.
On Saturday the Eastern a special lime for the chil High School handbell choi r dren . Youngsters ~at he red
d · t d b Ch · K h
· h d
d -·
lrec e
y
ns
u n m t e . ecorale . courtroom
presented a prograf!l of hoi- tor a lime of smgmg. art-

olllll'·''"'' '

.Committee formed for
school apartment development

CHESTER - The flavor
of an old fa shioned
Christmas was carried out
in programming . decorations and displays at the
1823 restored Chester
Courthouse for its weekend holiday open house.
A scene of yesteryear
greeted visitors as they
entered the courtroom of
the restored building . The
focal point was a 10-foot
tree decorated with strings
of popcorn , chains created
from colorful paper rings,
and a variety of handmade
ornaments made by local
elementary school children.
· Beneath the tree was a
di splay of antique children 's toys _ a pioneer Little Jeffey Dolan takes a ride on a rocking horse , a part of an antique toy collection beneath
costa wagon, a honey bear the Chester Courthouse Christmas tree . (Charlene Hoeflich)

Daily 3: 3-9·7 .
Daily 4: 3-0-3-0

work anti listeninc tu ~ t u~
ri es from vol untee-rs of the
Chester-Shade Assoc iat ioA.
On b01h days cooki es and
punch were served hy
members of the CheslerShade Hi storical Soc:ietv
and Santa was there to ,·islt
wi th the children.

huilding and negotiate tenm
of either a direct ;ale or other
land use agreement to allow
Wol!la \ lirm. The Legend;
Rea lty Co .. to pnx:eed w1th
de,elopment plarh
Wolflu 'iiid an engineering
firm working on

hi~

firm\

behalf ha' eva luated the
building and has determined
that J5 apartment unih &lt;;an
he built .
Wolfla 'atd he and h;; com·
pany arc still committed to
rrnceding with .the de velopment plan s.
While the con,truction
would be 'upported wi th
fu nd'
from 1he
U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urban Development . the
apartment complex would
not b.e re,tricted ttr those
4ualifying for Section 8
re ntal a"istance . Wolfla's
firm would control occupanc~ and operate the com-

Please see Committee. AS

Chamber announces
crash course series
J. MILES lAYTON
;layton @mydailysentinel .com
BY

MIDDL EPO RI The
Meigs Count\' Chamber of
Commerce and lhe Wild
Horse Cafe are teaming up to
sharpen hus incss ski ll&gt; for
arl"a bu,..ine..,..., l e ader~ .
The Chamher will be~tn a

minded"' ~ra~h
sc rie\ of workshop-"'
beginning in January. Thts
wi ll be a wurkrng ltmcheon
featurin g a ditlerent keynote
speitker each month. The topics rnav include small bu sint:s-, or· tax ~.·hanger.; and laws.
marketin.g ba:-.i c~. retiremen t
''bus in e:.. :-.

COll r'iC

pla nnin g. worker\ compen-

.sation i&lt;,sues. and finding
~rant \\&lt;Titer-. .

- 'These courses will help
sharpen people's busines s
ski ll&gt; and he lp keep them
~.·ompe tili ve in an alwav . .
dwn gi ng husiness envin1nmcnt : · said Jenny Smith.
director of the chamber of
~.· ommt.:rn: .

~

l11c-.e rour~e~ are just a 'mall
'ampling of the topics the
Chamber plans Ill. otTer in the

Please see Ch•mber, AS

Three bloodmobile visits scheduled for Meigs
Meigs 2003 deer
"And whut beller gift to
visits here in December.
the bloodmobile give this time uf year than
harvest down slightly hoeflich@mydailysentinel .com wiMonday
ll be at Meigs High School the ·gift of life' to help someBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

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

.. Runs Wednesday, December 24th
* Deadline for errt;ry December 17th ai 5:00
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Pick 4 day: 9-3-7-2
Pick 3 night: 0·3-7
Pick 4 night: 6-0-1-8
Buckeye 5: 3·22·23·28·33

" Actual Size 1x3
riominate them for

Tornadoe.
s grab
.
WID over
NelsonviDe·-York,~ Bt

Ohio hunters took
116,004 deer in week
long gun season

must be pre-paid

_IND.E X
2 SECI'lONS -

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BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@mydailysenlinel .com
12 PAGFS

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2003 Ohio Valley PublishJng Co.

POMEROY - . Hunters
harvested 2, 789 deer m
Meigs County last week,
down slightly · from last
year,
but
the
Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources said last week's
dee r gun season was the
third most successful season
on record across the state.
Ohio
hunte rs
took
116,004 deer during the
· state's popular week-long
deer gun season, accordin g
to ODNR . The preliminary

total of deer killed during
POMEROY - For the
this year's season is about American Red Cros.s, the
12 percent less th an the pre- weeks after Thanksgiving are
vious year's preliminary a time when blood donations
total of 133,163, the state usually drop while the need
record for a one week deer- mcreases.
gun season.
People are so busy with holi . According to ODNR, 28 day activilies that sometimes it
counties had an increase in seems it's just not conve nient
the number of deer taken to take the time to give blood.
over 2002's numbers, while In the meantime. however.
60 had a decrease in .. kill . surgeries, accidenls, and oth~r
Meigs County's harvest was medical treatments that require
3,018 in 2002, according to blood transfusions continue.
Meigs County Wildlife
To make it a lillie easier for
Officer Keith Wood.
Meigs Cou ntians to get to the
Cou!lties reporling the bloodmobile and to encourage residents 10 give. the Red
Ple•se see Deer. AS
Cross has scheduled three

from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m . On
Wednesday. Dec. 17. it will be
at the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, and on Dec·. 31 it wi ll
be at the Middleport Church of
Christ from 10 a.m. 10 2 p 111 .
As pointed out by Cheryl
Gergely. spokesperson l\1r the
American Red Cross. the weeks
between Thanksgiving and midJanuary are a time when blood
donations U&gt;ually drop below
tl1e amount lhat is needed to
adeq uately till hospital orders.
That 's why th e Red Cross
tries 10 sc hedule communi ty blood dri ves so they are
more convenient fo r 'most
people's sched ule s.

one in need," said Gergely.
She noted that the staff works
to ensure donors get in and out
as quickly as possible -. ··usu·
ally little more than an hour. "
While types 0 and B negatiw are espe.-iall y heeded. all ·
blood types are in demand by
local hospi1als. Th~ onl y
rcquiremem' to be a donor are
to ·be at least 17 years old.
weight at least I05 P,und,, be
in good general health and not
have donated blood within the
past 56 days. Donors can give
biO&lt;xl when tak ing most medications. includmg insulin and
high bi&lt;Xxl pre" urc mcdil.'ines
if their condi tion is stable.

Are you caring for
your aging· parents?
Call. Holzer Extra Care to receive a FREE copy
of our brochure, ~'Caring for Aging Parents".
Discover the Holzer Difference

-EXTR
446-9560 •. 1-800-920-8860
II.

'

Www .holzer.org
.

,

I

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