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                  <text>·--Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

NEA Crouword Puzzle

PHILLIP

-

ACROSS

38 Yeo, to 1

ALDER

1 Accurlle
3t W111t
6 Vlllbly
jogging
"40 Slioon
t 1 Dleaulllng
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FRE5H
VEGGIES
FELLER
CAN
T !!

THE BOR~ LOSER .
"io &amp;. COt-&lt;.\INUE.D" 7

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BIG NATE
SOCCER 15
· OBVIOUSLY
NOT

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AT
LE ...ST
HE'5

ARTUR'So
GAME.

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IT 'S

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LIKE .. .

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AM SORRY, FELLOWS. I
IOUESS r AM A
L ITTLE .. ,/\ LITTLE .. .

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PEANUTS
AS SOON AS l WALK
lt.l TilE DOOR, M&lt; .
MOTJ.IER WILL 5AV,
~ LU!iV~ VOU DONE

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AND END UP
MARR'r'IN6 SOfi\E

NERD!

-

1 To~ lOll - l'M

C!M

Audrey · Gtant became well-known after she wrote the four
beginners' books
published by the
American Contract
Bridge League. Now,
she produces her own
works. The first in
her Improving Your
Judgment series is
" Doubles" (Better
Bridge).
Do not be fooled by
the book's title-- it is
oniS' abo.ut takeout
doubles: there is no
discussion of, for example, negative or re's ponsive doubles.
Along with the basics
explained in lucid
language, there are
many example hands,
numerous quizzes,
and 32 full deals with
complete bidding and
play .. of which this
Js one.
South is in three
diamonds. Is he safe,
or should the defense
prevail?
In the second position North would
have a bare. minimum
takeout double, but in
the balancing scat he
sho uld protect his
partner's values. (If
South has a weak
hand, why haven' 1 the
opponents
bid
higher'!) When East
.rebids two hearts ,
South should settle
for · three diamonds,
not jump to four. Do
not hang partner for a
balancing double; if
he has extras, he
should bid again.
With diamonds 2-2,
you seem to have
only four losers: one
spade, two hearts and
one club. However,
East plays three
rounds of hearts, the
last of which West
ruffs with the diamond jack. You .can
get home by overruffing (you can either eventually endplay East or establish
the spade king), but it
is much safer to discard a club from the
dummy. When you
get back in, draw
trumps and ruff your
club loser in the
dummy.
The book is $I 2.95
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 2742221 to order.

PUTTING Sl"UFf 01/f
ON THe LAWN l!eCAIJSE
I'MGeTTIN(; Ml
CARPOTS CU:ANED

46 Sldn

....,.ts

lrlnll-

49 ltcltobbied-!d
53 Hepburn of
films
54 Annually ·
55 walled In

line

56 V -

DOWN

Lallque
29 OUIIhlne

1 Slick up
2AcbHILuplno

32 Moon

4

non
penguin

34 Skimpy
35 More

luz rata
12 Pock

40 •
chOice
All...,. ·:
43 Curly

18 Leu
cautloul
19 Lerge
. llurd

20 Getman

3 Tonic

bear

9 Undivided
10 Montgomery- of

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energetic -

city

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22 Agree
23

Joke
neighbor

hairdo
~
nanny ~
46 Pump fuel ,:
47 Roed
hUard

•
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Great lear 48 Commotkiri

24 Boot port

50 Farce open

5 Ubyo

25 Beclme

51 Gl'Kelul -•·

38 Oldalloma
town

6 PatrDnllge

28 Weep over

52 Use henn.(;

·closer

30 Okra

7 Delighted
8111uml......,

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·tree

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rnonel~r,-r.""""'lr""Tlli"'&lt;i

World Series now even, 81

-Deaths
J:loyd RidgleY. Myers, 81
Anna LeeL&gt;a1ley, 61
Robert lynn Riffle, 48
o.talls,AJ

by Luis Campos

· ~OCK PUPPET
IMPRE5510N

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'fOUR Lu~c~ 6o){

in the year ahead

bridge location

Today's clue: L equals M
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Z C IV F
MJB

IW

ZFU

MJB

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Weather

LCIHZJRH.

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a·

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Victory often changes her side." "
-Homer
'\
"There are defeats more friumphant than victories."
- Michel de Montaigne
.
'"Q. (i;J '0 _i\
PUZZLII . 0~ l'QU

THAT DAILY

WOlD
GAM I

-,----...:..._.:. ldltod ~,
Rearrange httters of
0 four,
scrambled wc1os

the

below to .form four simple words.

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N ~ ;°:;
.1--.,.~-. . .:._I,_.,_,
01
3

1

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F

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se~:r'it:

the mom, " you have
the whites from the colors.· ",]
'----'--.J..._,_
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know," replied the coed. "I've done
.--~~:-::-:~--.the whites and yellows, but I still
Q A L P E U have to finish the-----!"
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f--r:~s,..c,lr-'1-·-,,-T,--i C)
.

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f9 PR!NT
NUMBERED LETTERS
THESE SQUARES .

by filling in the miuing words "

IN

A

UNSCRAMSLE A601'E LETTERS
~
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS "NSWERS
Wiggle- Arbor- Proof , Choose- HORRIBLE.

.::;, ·
I

My two sons entered a local department store's poster.
contest The eldest son won first prize . The youngest:
boy sighed, "Yea,and I only won HORRIBLE menlion! 'f.;

someo ne with whom you

·· POMEROY - Meigs
Co'Qnty Veterans Service
Commission will meet at
9 a.m. on · Monday at the
I 17 East
office , at
Memorial Drive.

POMEROY - The U.S.
Coast Guard will consider
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation's proposed
location
for
the new
Pomeroy/Mai)On Bndge and
accept comments on the proposal through Nov. ~ 2. .
ODOT's . Stephame Filson
· smd ,Tuesday the Coast
9uard s · revtew P~?c.ess IS
~ust another step , 1n the
highway department s tans
to co~struct the new bn . ge.
While no wetlands and no
historical properties will be
affected by the project, the
Federal
Highway
Administration estimates that
5 477 cubic yards of material
~ill be eKCavated from the
site, and 66,480 cubic yards
of fill placed ·below lhe 100year flood plain during construction of the bridge.

-- You 'II project a warm and · ;·
jovial presence today that oth- .
ers will find quire appealing. ·:
This . will not only smooth '·
your own path out, but it' ll ~·
make life easier for those who ··.'.
walk beside you,
.;
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ,
.• Don't .put any limitations ., ·
on your Imagination today, ,
.becau~e the bigger you think ~
and the bolder you act, the
more you can accomplish . .,;
It'll als9 help to enhance your ;"material securit)_'.

~

sires. In fact, something for

-t.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·· .•
This is nor a time lo give up &lt;
on any of your dreams or de·
which you've been hoping
has better-than-average
chances of becoming a reality
today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-· Because you'll be equally
con~erned · about furthering
the interests of your peers ns

:

.

OHIO

W.VA.

Daily 3: 4-2-5
Dally 4: 1-9-9·8
PowerbaU: 2-14-18-30.31 (36)

·Index·
· 1 Sections - II Paps

Calendar
AS
Classifieds
86-7
ComiCs
· 88
bear Abby
- AS
Editorials
Af,
Movies
A3
Obituaries .
A3
Sports
.,81-S
Weather
A2'
: c 2002 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.'

er from the current bridge.
The $33 million cable-stay
bridge design is considered
"state of the art" by engineers, and is· similar to a
bridge at Proctorville and
another at Steubenville. It
· includes a pedestrian ·walk.way on the upstream side, and
a unique "J-Hook" approach
·design on the Ohio · sipe,
designed to more quickly
accomodate "through" traffic
10 Middleport.
ODOT has completed the
purchase of land near the new
bridge approach , and all
structures, except for the
. Ad 1 h• Dairy Valley build. oP s
. ,
1ng at the fo,QI of the ex1stmg
bndge, , have been demol1shed, ~1ther by ODOT or by
local hre cre~s who burned
the bu1ldmgs m tratmng exercises.
The existing bridge, opened
in 1928, will be demolished
once the new span is completed.

Volunteers ·enliven
.
history for local students

Wakh out: Area car-deer

Bv KRtS DoTSoN ·
Staff writer

BY KEVIN KELLY

crashes on .increase
News editor

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Elementary School . third
graders were treated to some
hands-on Meigs County
History lessons Wednesday
when RSVP (Retired Senior
Volunteer Program) volunteers took·them on a "History
of Meigs County" tour.
RSVP volunteers - have
been in every third grade
classroom in Meigs County
this past, semester teaching
local history. The tour g1ves
the111 a chance to visit or see
the places they have been
. Judge Robert Buck answers questions from Pomer~y
learning about first hand.
"I learned a lot myself Elementary School third graders Wednesday dunng RSVP s
·~ory of Meigs County" tour. Pictured are Buck and stuPle..e IH Tour, AJ • defft's Cheyenne Beaver and Olivia Cleek. (Staff)
. .

POMEROY ·- Fall means
cool nights, foggy morni1_1gs
and roving deer - the kmd
that collide with cars on rural
roads.
Car-deer accidents are a
' fact of life all through the
year, but are especially com-·
mon between · now and
December, said Lt.· Richard
Grau, commander of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway PatroL
,
The patrol is investigating
or taking reports on an average of five to six car-deer colli sions a day as the weather
turns colder and nightfall
coines earlier, Grau said.

Clocks will be . turned back
one hour Saturday ni,ght, sig:
naling the end to dayhght savings time and the beginning
·
of earlier twilight.
"You have to be careful at
all times of the day," Grau
advised. "This is true especially now and drivers should
exercise due caution. The
speed limit is 55 miles ·per
hour, but if the conditions are
not ideal, r;lrivers should be
cautious and slow down."
Those conditions include
fog that lingers into the
predawn hours, creatin~ a ~ri­
ving hazard due to hmned
visibility.
"Sometimes the first time

Plea.se see Deer, AJ

;~

,
}
¥

;;
•
:
'!

you are your own today, you •
will win their respect and approval. There is something ·•
extremely good in this for ~
you.

Bobbie Karr turned her corner of Pomeroy into a workshop Tuesday, cpnstructing a qecora. tlve snowman from scrap lumber. Karrplans to use the snowman rn a Chnstmas seasonal
· ··diSRiay In the window of Hartwell House, or her new shop next door, Klutter, whtch spectal,. lz~~~n antiques. (Brian J. Reed)
'·I~

Pick 3: 6·3-4
Pick4: 2-1-1-8
Superlotto: 5- 16-19-28-4Q-46
Jonus Ball: 44
·
Kicker: 1·3-3·0·2·7
Buckeye 5: 22-23·25-27·29
Pick l night: 5,· 2-8 .
Pick 4 night: 3-2' 2-3

J. REED

Staff writer

Middleport Board of
Public ,Affairs will hold its
·kgijlar meeting at ~ P·l_ll·
·on Tuesday, Oct. 29 m village council chambers.
The board will hold its
November meetings at
5:30p.m. on Nov. 6 and

Complete the chuckle quoted ·,;

L...--L-'-..L.......Jl--'---' ycu develop from step No. 3 b.elow. · :

an agent ac1ing "on behalf of

~ MIDDLEPORT

: Commission ·
meets

By NE0

2

BY BRIAN

~0.

SUTUA ·G

I

ODOT still expects a bid
.Comment
award on the new bridge by
end, with construction
period open toyear's
begin in spring, 2003. It
through Nov..12 will be constructed just upriv-

High: 60s, Low: 50s
petells,Al .

ZFU

KCMH."

work , Make a good deal, because it'll benefit you as well
will be done on a much
in the long run as welL
grander scale than you may . . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb,
have experienced in the past.
19) ·· Because you won't be
This will be true for you so- ,
judging people or events ore·
cially as well as wilh your camaturely today, matters will
,.reer.
.
work out far better for you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov,
than you had expected, Ride
22) .. A collective interest in
the tide that ~rings good
which you are involved has
things,
ossibilities for taking a bi~
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
r.eap forward today, In fact. 1t
20) -- Your financial success
could develop into somethin,g
is clearly on the upswing tofar larger than anybody anticoday,
SO, ~hen eiven a jo~ tO
pated. Know where lo look
do, g1ve 1ryour aiL There s a
for romance and you'll find iL
you could receive
The Astrograph Matchmaker · · chance
greater
remuneration' than
instantly reveals. which signs
usual from a task well done.
are romanliclilly perfect for
ARIES (March 21-April19)
you, Mail $2.75 10 Match·
•· For those of you who are
.maker. c/o this newspaper.
unattached, there's a good
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
chance a new romance could
44092.
be introduced into your life
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23today. For all Rams, your
Dec.21) -- Somethi ng quite
popularity is now ascending
fdvorablc is slirring for you al ·
in exciting ways.
this time. eve n though you
TAURUS {April 20-May
might not be aware of it. It is
20) -- Mnking money could
being engineered by an ally
be your primary goa l today,
who lhinks quite highly of
and, wilh this kind of molivayou and wants to see, you
tion, chances are you' ll do
happy.
.
quile well. It's a good time to
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan.
negotiate a new contract or
19) -- You could find yourself
job.
in the posilion t,oday of being
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
underta~e

Coast Guard
'considering

Celebrity Ciptler cryptograms are created from quotations by·famous ·
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher Stands for &amp;r'IOther.

-,
,,,
•

or

The snowmen are coming

CELEBRITY CIPHER

..' ,

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

POMEROY - In a ceremony prior to Friday night's
kickoff between Belpre and
Meigs at Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy, the section of
Pomeroy Pike in fro~t of
Meigs High School leadmg to
the new middle s.chool under
construction will ·be renamed
"Charles Chancey Drive."
This honor is in recognition
of Chancey's many contributions to Meigs High School
and its students.
Chancey came to Pomeroy
High School in the fall of
I 961 and served as · the
school's head football coach
for four seasons. In his four

,,

~

' Almosl everything you do

years as the Panthers coach, mater, Marshall University,
he compiled a 24-12-2 record, Chancey returned to Meigs
including a 9-1 mark in 1964, County with the newly conand he was named · co-coach solidated Meigs High School
of the year in the SEOAL . in the fall of 1967 .
In the spring of 1962,
With the help of dedicated
Chancey and many other vol- players and assistant coaches,
unteers began the construe- Chancey was able to bnng
tion of the dressing facilities together young athletes from
at Bob Roberts Field. The . three different schools and
locker room project was com- win a league championship iii
pleted and ready for use that . their first season with a 9- I
faiL After the 1963 season, record.
Chancey was responsible for
During the middle 1970s,
· th
fi ld 1 d Chancey spent five years of
bav~
e game
te Chancey
p owe · evenings, weekends and sumThe next
spring,
and others spent many hours mers at Meigs High School,
here raking and seeding the taking on ·the enormous task . Former Meigs High School football coach Charles Chancey will
fite ld · S.mce th at t.tme ' Meigs of
theinto
hJIIa footSide be honored Friday evening prior to the kick-off of the game
beht'reshaping
nd the school
has en,ioyed one of the nicest
'
·
ball field, baseball field, between Belpre and Meigs at Pomeroy. From left are his son
Rick, Chancey and son Mike. Mike i~ currently the head coach ·
playing fields in the state: ,
After two years as an ass1s- &gt;t
for the Marauders, while Rick is an assistant. (Dave Hams)
tant football coach at his alma
Pluse see Ch•ncey, AJ

'

.•...

Thursay, Oct. 24, 2002

Honor going to Chancey at Friday game
BY DAVE HARRIS
Special to the Sentinel

45 Bombay

33 Kind of

37

Whars inside

13 Bam locale 41

28G....
lllllket-

31 Big Qipper

Takeout twin

IF HE GIT5 TO 'EM
'FORE MAW CANS
AN' PICKLES._,___
'EM ALL

16 Centur·

43 Mllltlry
ldclr.
44 Health
club

. 27 TIUIUry
depl.

Opening lead: 9 10

AHH !! HARVEST TIME !!
Al..L TH'

42 tulip color

17 Eliminate
18 Corduroy
ridge
21 Veina of ant
23 Bronze
component
26 Mature

• Q.
•

14

lon'a 14

.. A II I
9 AKJ t I 4

Dealer Ea.!it
Vulnerable: S~ilher

J •

'

Wednesday, October 23, 2002
BRIDGE

9

•

,,

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23) - ::

-Try to get involved in activi- ~
ties today where :You can meet ~ "
and mingle with many new .::
people, fio. valuable. friendship ..

could be eslablished at this .:
time that ·will bring with it ::
·many benefits,
;.

Look for lhe Holzer Medical Cenler Community Heallh and .Well~ess Depar1ment a• ol.~
'

Community lnfonnatlon and .
Wellness Day/Flu Shot Clinic

Friday, October 25
9· 11 AMand 1 ·3PM Mell• Multlpurpoae Senior Center In Pomeroy
Public ·

For m9re information, call
992·2161

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org·

••

•
"

•

1

�•
'

hio

The Daily Sentinel ·

PageAl
1'11ursd.y, October 14, 1 ..1

Forests at peak or near peak color

Ohio weather
Friday, Oct. 25 ·

COLUMbUS (AP) - Fall colors
will be at their peak across northern
Ohio this weekend, with traditional
reds, oranges and golds coming on fast
in the state's central areas, according to
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
"After a delay in the onset of the fall
foliage viewing season, trees across the
northern two-thirds of the state are
rapidly changing color this week," said
Bill Schultz, spokesman for the department's Division of Forestry. "The next
week will likely offer the best fall color
.of the year in most areas."
For those interested, weekly updates
on the best fall color viewing locations
across the state are available by calling
1-800-BUCKEYE. Users can also find
fall color information on the Internet at
www.ohiodnr.com .
Fall color stages:
CENTRAL
· · Alum Creek State Park, Delaware
County, peak; Mount Gilead State Park,
Morrow County, peak; Blaclchand
Gorge State Nature PreseJ;Ve, Licking
County, fair; Deer Cr.eek State Park,
Pickaway County, peak; Madison Lake
State Park, Madison County, peak.

•

~
··:·~
ol Cdun luo ~1"155" I

W.VA.

NORTHEAST
. Punderson Slate Park, Geauga
County, peak; Mohican State Park and
State Forest, Ashland County, peak;
Findley State Park, Lorain County,
peak; Malabar Farm State Park,
Richland County, peak; Hach-Otis State
Nature Preserve, Lake County, near
peak.
EAST .
Guilford
Lake
State
Park,
Columbiana County, near peak; Blue
Rock State Park and Stale Forest,
Muskingum County, near peak;
Fernwood State Forest, Jefferson
County, near peak; Beaver Creek State
Park, . Columbiana · County, peak;
Harrison State Forest, Harrison County,
near peak; Salt Fork State Park,
·Guernsey County, .near peak.
SOUTHEAST
Lake Hope State Park, Vinton.County,
near peak; Hocking Hills Stale Park and
Stale Forest, Hocking County, near
peak; Jackson Lake State Park, Jackson
County, near peak; Burr Oak State Park,
Morgan County, near peak; Tar Hollow
State Forest, Ross County, near peak;
Zaleski State Forest, Vinton County,
near peak; Lake Alma State Park,

Vinton County, near peak.
SOUTHWEST
Shawnee State Park and State Forest,
Scioto County, near peak; Hueston
Woods State Park and State Nature
Preserve, Preble County, near peak;
Paint Creek State Park, Ross County,
near peak; Caesar Creek State Park and
State Nature Preserve, Warren County,
near peak; Little Miami State Park,
Warren County, near peak; Scioto Trail
State Parle and Forest, Ross County, fair.

WEST

.

Kiser Lake State Park, Champaign
County, near peak; J. Bryan State Park
and Clifton Gorge Nature Preserve,
Greene County, peak; Indian Lake State
Park, Logan County, near peak.
NORTHWEST
Van Buren State Park, Hancock
County, near peak; Maumee State Forest,
Fulton County, peak; Harrison Lake State
Park, Fulton County, peak; Mary Jane
Thurston State Parle, Wood County, peak.
Color condition key: Green - still
mostly green; fair - beginning to tum
colors; near peak- mostly colored; peak
-peak colors; fading- mostly colored,
but fading from peak conditions; leaf
drop -few leaves on trees.

Rain likely for region on Friday

Amber Alert helps police track down abducted girl

the mid 40s. East winds 5 to
We'll finish the work week 10 mph. Chance of rain 40
out with cool and rather wet percent.
weather.
Friday... Rain likely. Highs
Cool Canadian air and quite 55 to 60. Southeast ·winds 5 to
a bit of moisture have com- . 10 mph. Chance of rain 70
bined to almost eliminate the percent.
·
normal fair weather effects of
Friday night...Rain likely.
the high pressure in the Great Lows near 50. Chance of raiQ
Lakes. Very weak upper level 70 percent.
,
I
disturbances will move across
Extended forecast:
the area today and tonight.
Saturday.. .l'artly cloudy.
This could trigger some light Highs in the upper 50s.
rain or rain showers, but this
Saturday
night. .. Partly
wet weather is likely to be cloudy. Lows in the lower
. . 40
pretty light.
.
Low pressure which is
s.
expected to develop .to the
Sunday.. :Partly
cloudy.
·
h f h
'II
h
Highs in the lower 60s.
sout o t e area wi pus a
Monday... Mostly cloudy
trough of low pressure into with a chance of rain. Lows in
the area on Friday and Friday
night and this will increase the lower 40s and highs near
the threat for wet weather. 60.
Some heavier rains will also
Tuesday... A chance of rain
be possible.
in the morning, oth~rwise
A little warming will take partly cloudy. Lows m the
place tonight and Friday with . mid 40s and highs in the mid
.
highs on Friday about 5 to 10 50s.
degrees warmer than today.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
Weather forecast:
with a chance of rain. LO'\VS in ·
Tonight. .. Mostly cloudy the upper 30s and highs in the
with a chance of rain. Lows in mid 50s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MAPLE HEIGHTS (AP)
- A man was arrested a few
hours after northeast Ohio's
first Amber Alert, resulting
in the recovery of a 5-yearold girl who had been taken
from her home · in this
Cleveland suburb,
Maple Heights, Cleveland
Heights and Euclid police
coordinated efforts with the
FBI and located the girl,
lmari Brooks, apparently
unharmed at an apartment
building
in
Euclid
Wednesday night.
In the alert, police were
seeking James Bennell, 21,
of Cleveland Heights, who

A roundup of the dally markets
Oct.23,2002

12.000

Dow Jones
lndusb1als

11,000
10,000
8,000

Pct.&lt;:llMgo

+0.52

High
'8,494.76
8,294.38
Record high: 11,722.98
Jon . 14,2000

8,000

OCT

7,000

Oct. 23, 2002

2,000

Nasdaq
composrte

1,!10Q

+21•4:8,

1,600

1,320.23

1,&lt;100

Pel change from "'""'""

. +2.12

High
• '1,320.25
1;279.46
Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

1,200
1,000
JUL

AUG

SEP

·

OCT

Oct. 23, 2002

1,200

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

1,100
1,000

•.£ ~~. 14
Pel"""'"" from~ .

900

High
'896.14
873.82
Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

800

was taken into custody when alerts, Prusha said.
Euclid authorities raided a
Prusha
said
police
bnilding about 10:40 p.m. exhausted all their leads
and found Bennett with the be.fore broadcasting the kidgirl.
napping alert. He said
Maple Heights police threats also had been made
Detective Gerald Prusha . discouragin,ll: the family
credited the alert for helping from contactmg authorities.
authorities fi.nd the girl.
Imari was taken from her
Within an hour after the alert bedroom between 3 a.m. and
'\VaS issued, the Maple 6 a.m. Wednesday and .there
Heights Police Department was no forced entry, police
was inundated with phone said.
A regional Amber plan has
calls, he said.
Through the alert, police been in the works in northused the same method to east Ohio for several
issue a child ·ad!mctlon months. A similar system is
emergency broadcast that is already in plac.e in the
used for severe weather Cincinnati .area, and state

legislators and Gov. Bob
Taft have called for . a
statewide plan by Jan. 1. .
Amber plans are named
after 9-year-old Amber
Hagerman, who was kidnapped and murdered while
riding her bicycle in
Arlington, Tex&lt;js, in 1996.
Nearly 50 Amber plans have
been adopted at local,
regional and statewide levels, according to the
National Center for Missing
.&amp; Exploited Children. The
center says Amber stands for ·
America's
Missing ,
Broadcast
Emergency
Response.

Man found guilty in child's. Debating the issues
de.ath in Ross County
CHITl..ICOTHE (Af) -A
Ross County man was found
~lty Wednesday of murder
m the ap~nt shaking death
of his gulfriend's 2-year-old
daughter.
.
A Common Pleas Court jury
deliberated for about three
hours before reaching the verdict against Tunothy Smith,
31.
Smith, who had been free on
bond, was talcen into custody
immediately after the .verdict
He will be sentenced later. He
faces a possible sentenc.e of 15.
years 10 life in prison.
Smith was arrested on July
20, 2001.
Authorities say he was car. ing for Carisa.Sherrick on July
9 while her mother, Debora

Sherrick, was · working. He
said the girl fell on a bathroom
floor and.struck her head.
Carisa was taken 10 Adena
Re@onal Medical . Center in
Chillicothe and then flown
about 45 miles north to
Children's
Hospital
in
Columbus, where she died six
days later.
Doctors at Children's
Hospital diagnosed shakenbaby syndrome. They told
authoribes they found bleed·
ins and swelling in Carisa's
brain and a 4-inch bruise on
her buttocks.
Debora Sherrick mail\tained
Smith was innocent during an
appearance on a nationally
televised talk show. She died
of natural causes in June.

Ohio · Gov. Bob Taft, right, and Democratic challenger TIITI
Hagan shake hands after their debate · at ·Ohio State
University, Wednesday In Col~mbus . (AP)

•
. ~o~day 6:00 - 8:00 pm
:
: Begmnmg Oct. 28 $2.00 per class •
: Location: Senior Citizen Building . :
• Call 992-2681 Ext. 233 to register •
:
or to get more information.
:
Heart Healthy Awareness Coalition

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

AI'

:Obituaries _

AEP - 21.78
Arch Coal - 17AO
Akzo - 30. f4 · ·
AmTech/SBC - 25.85
· Ashland Inc. - 26.51
AT&amp;T - 13.40
Bank One - 39.65
Bll - 15.82
Bob Evans - 25.35
BorgWarner- 48.85
Champion - 2.48
Charming Shops- 4.99 .
Cl!y Holding- 26.85
Col - 22 .48
DG - 14.50
DuPonl - 40.97

Federal Mogul-· .58
Aocl&lt;well-17.15
USB - 20.90
Rocky Boots- 4.97
Gannett- 78.39
AD Shell - 42.66
General Electric - 26.90 Sears_ 26
GKNLY- 3.85
Harley Davidson- 54.60 Wai·Mart- 57.23
Kmart - .53
· Wendy's - 34.30
Kroger- 15.21
Worthii1gton- 18.94
l1d. - 15.87
Daily stock reports are
NSC ~ 21
the 4 p.m . closing
OakHiiFinardal-21.90 quotes of the previous
OVB- 20.89
. day's 1ransac1ion.s, pro·
BBT- 36.19
Peoples - 29.89
vided by Smith Partners
Papsica- 44.59
at Advest Inc. cit
Premier- &lt;7.10
Gallipolis.

Mary
(William)
of
Argabrige, Maryland; two
brothers, Alvin R. (Josefina)
Junior of Reedsville, and
PORTLAND -Anna Lee Bruce D. (Dorothy) Myers
Dailey, 61, of Portland, of Long Bottom; a caregiv·&lt;passed away at 1():25 p.m. er, Ken Treiber; and many
·· Tuesday, October 22, 2002, nieces and nephews.
· · in the Ohio State University
Calling hours are from 6
· -Medical
. Center
in to 8 p .m. Friday, October
• 'Columbus.
25, 2002, at While Funeral
' Born October 28, 1940, in Home in Coolville. Services
: Long Bottom. she was the . will be held at the funeral.
·: daughter of the late William borne at I p.m. Saturday,
• and Louise Congo Craig.
October 26; 2002.
Burial will take place in
. · · She was a self-employed
upholsterer and 'a homemak- the South Bethel Church
'' er. She was a member of the Cemetery, Reedsville.
·i Hazel Community Church.
Memorials may be made
.' · Surviving are two sons, to the National World War II
Fund,
2300
: Harold Person and his wife, Memorial
Clarendon
Boulevard,
Suite
Debbie, of Middleport, and
Jonathon
Dailey
of 501, Arlington, Virginia
; Portland; a daughter, Kathy 22201.
: .Smith of North Carolina;
- Pa.id notice
- three. grandchildren, Anna
. Reynolds, Amber Person
· and Ryan Beegle; two sis.: ters, Janet Jeffers and ·her
·_ husband, Pete, of Cheshire,
· and Reise Harris and her
• husband, Al.vin, of Point
- , Pleasant, West Virginia; and
one
brother,
Charles
"Chuck" Craig and his wife,
- Debbie, of Letart, Ohio.
Robert
She is also survived by . · POMEROY Lynn
Riffle,
48,
1739
; her sister, Eileen Polk of
Chester
Road,
Pomeroy,
• 'Portland.
• Services will be held at 1 died Wednesday, Oct. 23,
p.m. Friday, October 25, 2002 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
' 2002, in the Cremeens
will
be
Arrangements
· Funeral Home, Racine.
Ewing
Pastor Edsel Hart will offi- announced
by
. ciate. Interment will be in · Funeral Home.
··'the Browning Cemetery,
.. ·Portland. Friends may call
, after 9 a.m. Friday, October

DeathS

Robert Lynn
. Riffle

;

0

•

992·2156

Elissolutions

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Magistrate L. Scott Powell
recently processed fines and
bond forfeitures in Pomeroy
Ma~istrate Court.
Fmed in court were: Sherri
Nelson, Columbus, speed,
$51 and costs; l::inda
Dodgin, Proctorville, speed,
$49 and costs; Alfred
Hudnall, Athens, disorderly
conduct by intoxication,
$100 and costs; Sandra
RaybliOJ, Middleport, speed,$46 and costs ; Steven
Krajnak, Gallipolis, s!leed,
$48 and costs; David Mora,
Pomeroy, assured clear disc
tance ahead, $50 and costs;
Terri Rose, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., speed, $48 and co·sts;
Elizabeth Morgan, Pomeroy,
speed, $52 and costs; Megan
Teachout, Rutland, speed,
$46 arid costs; Edward Zim,
Pomeroy, stop light violation, $63 and costs; Faith
Wells, Reedsville, speed ,

Chancey
from PageA1

· track, and softball fields.
This huge project could
not have happened without
the capable assistance of
Homer Hysell, and the
many others wbo donated
countless hours.
.
Chancey served as the
school's head ' football
coach through the fall of
1986 and then returned for
one year in the fall of 1988.
He served as athletic director at Meigs High School
from 1967 until 1981. He
compiled . a
116-82-4

$54 and costs; Michael Ky., speed, $48; Martin Middleport, illegal left !urn,
Imboden, Racine, open con- Chasteen, Vinton, unlawful $50;
Amanda
Saxo n,
tainer, $63 and costs; Paul entrustment, $150; Elaine Pomeroy, no licen se plate
Schuler, Langsville, speed, Harris, . Middl~port, .speed, _lights, $50; Lance Chapman ,
$46 and costs.
.
$48; D1ana ~nder, S.hade, Pomeroy,
speed,
$44 ;.
Forfeiting bonds we(e: ~peed, $53; Tiffany B1ssell, Michael
Woodfork,
Shirley Diddle, Middleport, 1ll~gal left turn, $50; Columbus, open comainer.
assured clear distance, $50; Eltzabeth
Stewart,
Pt:
Jacinda Yoriker, Mason,
Russell
Thomas,
Pt. Pleasa~lt, W._Ya., spee~. ~8. W.Va., speed, $41 ; Michael
Pleasam, W.Va., speed, $45; Frankhn Odes, Galhpohs, Manley R ·
f 1T a
; acme, as1 1c Amber Bird, Racine, speed, ·speed, . $48; Ton Crouch, .
$45 ;
William
Zuspan, Racine, speed, $4&gt;9; Shaunn t10n, $163 •. d1 sorderly conMiddleport, child under 16 Barron, Shade, seat belt vio- ·duct, $100, Betty H?schar,
in back of pickup truck, $50; Iation $30· Daniel Bable Syracuse, speed , $45 ; Robm
James Hess, Pomeroy, Syrac~se, sj,eed, $45; Tory · Spurloci,, Coolville, speed,
R1ck
McDamel,
speed,
$51; · Dennis Swartz, Middleport, speed, $53;
$44;
Jeremy
Briclcles,
Jackson,
speed,
$49; Carl
McKinney, Rutland, speed,
Salser,
Racine,
speed,
$40.
·
$48 ; Patricia McCullough,
Racine, speed, $41 ; Lyle
Nichols, Racine, sped, $48;
ditional deer runs," Grau
Rl\ndy Smith, Middleport,
said. "As deer season
speed, $44; Eric Foos,
approaches, they run much
Blacklick,
speed, _ $51,
.
harder."
·
from PageA1
expired tags, $63; William
. Bow season is unde~ay
Wooten, Letart, speed, $4 7;
in
Ohio for deer, and the
Timothy Adams, Pomeroy, · you see a deer is when the
one-week gun season
illegal left turn, $50.
li~hts are in its eyes and
Danny Stacy, Alexandria,
with the fog, you don't even begins Dec. I. Grau said he
understood the deer -ki II
get .that," Grau said.
Statistics on car-((eer col- total for Gallia County was
lisions handled so far tliis · down last year, "so the herd
· record,
·winning
the
year by the G-M Post are · hasn't thinned that much."
· SEOAL title in 1967 and
not available·, but they
S0 if a collision with a
the Tri-Valley Conference
accounted for almost a third deer can't be avoided and a
.crown in 1986 with the
of
the accidents the post car must be repaircll, Grau
Marauders.
investigated
in 2001. There advised drivers to call the
During his tenure as head
·
were
412
such
collisions post and set up a time somefootball coach, his teams
out of the I ,372 accidents time within 24 or 48 hours
were always well prepared,
the patrol handled last year. of the crash so a trooper can
and played with great
Injuries to drivers are not take a report the driver can
effort, and represented
unlrnown
in such crashes, submit to their insurance
Meigs High School with a
. and they can tum deadl;Y,
tremendous amount of
..
agent.
Grau said. A deer can f11p
class.
"Check with the insurinto the car and through the
With all of Chancey's
ance
company about filing a
windshield when struck,
contributions to Metgs
and fatalities to drivers have report," he said. "Some may
l:{igh School, clearly his
occurred when they used not need a report, but most
most significant contribuevasive action to avoid col- do. Call the p.o st and set up
tion was how many lives he
a time that's mutually conlision.
...
touched. His players and
'The majority of people venient to file a report,
his coworkers have always
who
live around here have because our troopers may
had the utmost respect for seen or Irnow about the Ira- be out on·other crashes."
him.

Deer

POMEROY - An action
for
dissolution. of marriage
~
has been fjled in Meigs
County Common · Pelas
Court
by
Kathy
L.
Jeffrey Roush had a more
&gt; CHESTER
Lloyd Strickland, Middleport, and
seriou$
question: ''What if
' Ridgley Myers, 81, .of ~48 Jerry
B.
Strickland, ·
somebody
pulls a gun in the
West lith Street, Ene, d1ed
Pomeroy.
courtroom?"
Tuesday, October 22, 2002,
from PageA1
Dissolutions
have
been
"I've worn bulletproof
· at Beverly Health Care, folgranted
to
Harold
H.
when I prepared 10 go into vests before," Buck said.
lowing a brief illness.
Harbour
and
Lori
K.
the
classroom, and I've lived "You have to be willing to
He was born in Long
Harbour,
.
and
to
Kevin
here
my whole life," said take risks in this job but we
Bottom, on October 16,
usually know when there
•Zi921, the son of the late Stanley and Betty Stanley. .
Gladys Cumings, RSVP val- could be a security risk and
A divorce has been grant:;.A lvin R. and Leona Pooler
unteer.
Four RSVP volunteers are prepared."
~Myers.
· ed to Christina Marie Marie
took
36 students, four teachBuck then said that Meigs
·~· He was .a graduate of Mather froni Steven Patrick
County
is a more small town
:tblive Orange. High School, Mather.
ers and two STARS volun- environment, but when he
:•lnd sei\Ved in the United
Dissolutions have been
leers to the Meigs County worked as a judge 'in
~States Navy Air Force dur- · granted in Meigs County
Courthouse, where they saw Cl 1 d
· d
ihe Morgan's Raid marker,
eve an ' Jl! ges · were
· ~ing Wotld War II.
Common Pleas Court to
drove bff the century-old given panie bunons under
:• : He: was a long haul truck
their desks .
:: llriver for many years. He . Jeffrey E. _Haning . and
Sacred eart Church and
He also had a webbed hole
Rebecca
L.
Haning,
Angela
'!!'as a member of the
Su~ar
Run
Feed
Mill
before
·
behind
the bench that would
:- American Legion and the Lynn Fink and John Paul
gomg
to
the
restored
Chester
allow
him
to escape into a
Fink, and Susao Anne
::1TFW. .
.
Courthouse. They also
~
· f hi
r
enjoyed Happy Meals at sa e room 1 t ngs got a It. ;.: : He loved to garden, and Miller and Paul Joseph
·
McDonald's.
tie scary.
· •!enjoyed
fishing and hunt- Miller.
.,
l
At the courthouse, offiThe scary part g~ the
.•mg.
Divorces
have
been
cials took time to explain .youngsters, allention and
.~ • In addition to his parents, granted to Frank E. Bobo
prompted Cheyenne Beaver
. be was pre!=eded in deatb by from Linda Sue Bobo, and .
their jobs, what their depart- 10 ask if little kids can go to
., 11 brother, Richard Myers.
· ments are responsible for, jail.
to Cynthia L. Bowling from
He is survived by a sister, Randy E. Bowling.
and to answer questions
"We can· officially send
from the children.
· Judge Robert Buck iold kids to jail at age 12," Buck ·
answered.
the children different stories
He also added that there ·
and. gave some background are several other juvenile
on his 28 years on the bench. facilities that can be utilized
Whitney Reit.mire asked if depending on the severity of
Reader Services
(USPS 213-960)
·
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co•
the\¥could "play court?" · their crimes.
" ell, not toda~," Buck
Our main c:oncem In all storieo 11 to be Published
every
afternoon, .
Buck described the elecaccurate. H you know ot an error In il Monday through Friday, 111 Court
said. "But if you o '\Yell in tion process and said that it
story, can the newsroom at (7Ail) 992· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Secondschool, when you ~et to the takes four years of college,
2156.
class postage paid at Pomeroy.
eighth
grade you II come three years of law school,
Member: The' .AsSOCiated Press
and
1he
Ohio
Newspaper
back
and
see me. We'll have and six . years of being a
Our main number 11
••
Association.
defense attorneys, witnesses practicing attorney before a
(740) 992-2158.
; Deptll'lmt!lt
Pollmester: Send address correc·
- it's a lot of fun."
extensions are:
I

: Lloyd Ridgley
Myers

·Tour

News

•

Edllar: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Rop-: Brian Reed, Ext. 13
llopartor: Agneo Hapka, Ext. 14
lporto: Derek Taylor. Ext. 14

t

!

MILL

Advertising

Circulation

..

OUTLET·

•

'•

• Large .U1 'xt8;S"xU" Sin
• lntriadtly Htm4~rveJ Duign
• V.ctorilln Oak anti Cedt~r Vauu
• Child Proof Lock For S•f•ty
• Whitt: muh Finilll Abc&gt; A••il··~l( I

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perfect place to store all of
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.Makes an ideal gift for that
very special anniversary,
birthday or wedding.

General Manager

•

Charlene Hoellk:h, Ext. 12

'

person can even run for the said. ·"It teaches the kids
office.
County,
about
Meigs
On the bus to McDonald's, increases their knowledge ·
Danielle Cullums said she about their community, and
was having a good time and hopefully instills a sense of
learning a lot. "My favorite pride in the place where they
part was with Judge Buck," live. "
she added.
Coates said RSVP has
· But Taylor Gilkey said,
received glowing reviews
"After he (Buck) said not to
from the teachers.
get in trouble with your
'The
intergenerational
teacher, I was just shuffling
interaction brings benefits
my feet thinking, 'uh oh."'
our volunteers, the chilfor
Dianna Coates, RSVP
director, said the tour is part dren and the teachers,"
of their Seniors
in School Coates said.
..,
program. .
·
''The first year we · only
worked with th.tee third
grade classes ancf now we
give the tour to every third
grade class at Eastern, Meigs t~~~
and Southern school dis~~~~~~~
tricts," Coates said.
Coates said that volunteers
do more than tour, they go
into the· classroom once a
week for one semester and
teach the children local history. They also give the students a booklet with facts,
stories, puzzles, worksheets,
basically everything you
ever wanted to know about
·
Meigs County.
'The booklet took us two
months to put together but
it's more than doubled in
information content over the
past several ·years," Coates
'

_

tiona to The Dally Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

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By carrlw or motor route
One month ........... _'8.95
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0111y .......... . ...... m

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Senijnel. No subscription by mall
permitted In areas where home
carrier service Is available/
.

FHEE INSPECTION

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1~:90¥JM

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FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, M.iddleport .
ALL AC. ES, ALL TIMES $4.00

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at the funeral

Outolde Soleo: DIMI Harris, Ext 15
t Outoldo SMo: Jessica Evano, Exl1~
( Cl-.ICI10•.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
, CI-JCIIO.: Cynlhla Swtshar, Ext. 11

:. ...

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~~:ne~002,

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••••••••••••••••••••••

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Anna Lee
Dailey
•

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·sPECJAI.S

Local Stocks

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••••••••••••••••••••••
:
YOGA CLASS
:
•

• Thursday, October 24, 2002

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

(Complimerm qf tbe l'ttiiJIInt IIIU., Horfittu Auxiliary)

INGELS CARPET

• FREE REFLECTIVE HALLOWEEN BAGS

175 N. 2ND AVE. • Middleport, OH
.
992-7028

I LIVE REMOTE WITH "BIG COUNTRY
99.5"
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~

...-.,

.,

~~

..

'

' -. .'I ·-

'

..

.'

-

.

'

•. '

..

-·

'

. . ...

.,.

"

~'

I
I

...

,..

,.!\

.....

·'

••

�.

-.

o_an~y_se_ntin_ei_ _---=8=-y the

_Th_e

Witness deplores bigotry
di~sguised as patriotism
DEAR ABBY: I recently
witnessed something outside
the local Kmart that left me
livid. A man was speaking to
a young lady in a foreign language, when all of a sudden,
. another man who appeared to
be in his 60s began to chastise
them for not speaking
English. His exact words
ADVICE
· were: "What the hell is the
matter with you? This is
America. People
speak extended family lives in
English here! " He stormed off Mexico. My parents and
when I stepped in and pointed some aunts, uncles and
out that HIS · ancestors . cousins live near me in East
weren't born here, and they Texas.
probably
didn't
speak· My girlfriend, "Cyndi," and
English, either.
I have been dating for three
When I ride the train to years. She recently decided to
work, I see people with move to San Antonio to be
Middle Eastern backgrounds closer to her parents- and to
get dirty looks from other "find herself."
passengers. Where exactly is
Cyndi has met my parents
this "newfound patriotism" I several times and told me she
keep hearing about? All I see intended. to learn Spanish so
are people using terrorism as she could better communicate
an excuse to act like bigots.
with them. (They speak little
. Patriotism isn't slapping an English.) I was delighted
American flag on your car. because when we visit my
It's remembering the princi- family in Mexico, Cyndi
pies this country was built on. would not feel left out of our
THAT is how you honor the converSations.
people who died protecting
Cyndi and I spoke over the
our freedom, not by infring- weekend. She told me she had
ing on the rights of people sig11ed up for language classwho aren't exactly the same es. When I called her last
as you. - A DISILLU- night, she informed me that
SIONED AMERICAN
she's taking German. Then
DEAR
DISILLU- she gave me a lecture about
SIONED: What happened in how my family' needs to learn
front of Kmart was a textbook English because they live in
example of xenophobia, America. (They try hard.)
which · Webster's defines as Then I asked her how she
"fear and hatred of strangers intends to communicate with
or foreigners or of anything my family in Mexico. She
that is strange or foreign." ignored the question.
Abby, Cyndi and I have
Unless the r,erson who did the
"chastising ' was a part of the split up several times over the
conversation, he was rude, past three years. We always
aggressive, and a mile out of seem to find something to
,
argue about. Now this. What
line..
Wuh the recent war on ter- do you think about this, lind .
rorism and fear of terrorist what should I ·d o? ·IN
EAST
·activity from the Middle East, ERNESTO
there have been incidents of TEXAS
DEAR ERNESTO: Face
· hostility aimed at People from
Middle Eastern backgrounds it. Cyndi has no interest in
and those who resemble communicating with your
them. With that in mind, it's family. She'~ moved on. Tell
important to remember that her adios or auf Wiedersehen
no one can tell by looking - whichever comes first.
Dear Abby is written by
what is going on in other peopie's hearts. It is quite likely Abigail Van Buren, also
they are American-born or known as Jeanne Phillips,
naturalized citizens; and as and was founded by her mothfervently patriotic as those of tr, Pauline Phillips. Write
us who have been .here for Dear
Abby
· at
generations.
www.DearAbby.rom . or P.O.
DEAR ABBY: I am a Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069
.
Hispanic male. Most of my
·

Dear

Abby

Bend

Thurllday, October ~4. 2002

PageA4
Thursday, October 14, :zoo:z

TIME ouT FOR TIPS

Physical stress can ~ause appearance of ganglion cyst

Universal design makes inconveniences less of a problem
Have you ever had trouble getting something through a door? Found it hand to
clean the bathtub?
Realized your·home isn't conducive for
short people? Wanted better lighting in
your home? Couldn't get the door opeq
wtth your hands full?
·
Most of us have experienced these and
other annoying inconveniences and possible hazards in our work places and homes.
ADVICE
Many building contractors, architects and
homeowners are incorporating a concept
known as universal design to help alleviate side refrigerators and upright freezers so
these problems and make areas more user- daily tasks will be easter. Elevate dishfriendly.
·
washers and place microwave ovens on
What is universal design? It is haxing an countertops or at waist level. That way
environment where people of all ages, there wouldn't be heavy lifting, working
sizes and abiliti'es can live and work in a over your head or bending over to use the
functional and beautiful setting. It allows appliances. Install decorative hand rails on
an area to be useable by all kinds of peo- stairs both inside and outside the home and
ple, making it more Comfortable and easi- grab bars in the bathroom to make the
er to live. Universal design helps people home safer, while still offering an attrac"age in place" - being able to stay inde- tive appearance.
pendent in their own homes as they grow
Expand doorways from 32 to 36 inches
older. But it also considers how children in width. 'This will allow room to move
and people with or without disabilities can furniture and accominodate wheelchairs
· use their home or work area more effi- · and crutches. Choose 'touch pads, dimmer
ciently.
and rocker light switches just inside doors
Universal design does not look "institu- to . illuminate a room easily. Have light
tional." It integrates atiractiveness with an switches and electrical outlets 18 to 48
easy-to-use environment. Because a inches off the floor to eliminate bending
~ouse has extra features in its design that and reaching.
·
allows it to be accessible and operative by. Select a one floor home or one with no
everyone, it increases the resale value of steps inside or outside. Use a gradual sidethe home.
•
walk to enter the home. This is more
Homeowners do not need to gut· their attractive than a ramp and easier to use
homes 10 implement uni versa! design. than steps. If a one floor home is not posInstead, as appliances become unservice- sible, locate the kitchen, bath, bedroom
able and rooms need remodeled, universal and laundry room on the first floor.
design can be incorporated into the revi- Residents or guests who have trouble getsions, renovations and modernizations. ting around will be able to perform daily
For instance, replace old equipment with ·activities with little difficulty.
front-load washers and dryers, side-by-

Becky
Baer

Question : I'm a 34-year-old
banquet server who is one of
many at my hotel banquet
department who has developed a
wrist ganglion cyst on the right
liand. I've been in this business
for five years. In this particular
hotel we press . 35 to 45-pound
service trays and walk up to oneeighth of a mile .o ne way. No
other facility any of us has
worked at has such · a requirement. It would seem that someone has conducted a study on
this industry and shown some
s·o rt of correlation to cyst. Have
you heard of anything?
Answer: Ganglion cysts are
the most common growth in the
wrist and hand . .These are commonly found on the top of the
wrist (dorsum), but can also be
f.ound on the palm side of the
nand at the base of a finger or

An iinportant thing to remember is that,
there are no set standards or rules to use.
when applying the principles of universal
design. Make changes in a room or c1Joos1; ·
products that will be beneficial to your situation. There·are many easy and inexpen~ .
sive ways .to make your home more con- ·
venient and safe. Go through your house·
and critically check each r()om. What:
could be done to improve the accessibility, .
decrease effort and adorn your living and
work areas? .One common modificatioq
has been to have low, standard and hig})
countertops in kitchens. The low ones
would permit use from a chair, the high .
ones would allow tall people to work without slumping. Use the same principle in
Closets. Have adjustable storage shelves or
ones of various heights.
·
·
To help prevent potential accidents and
to make it more convenient for people
with limited mobility while attending tO
their personal care, install hand-bel&lt;!
showers, portable tub seats, and walk-in
showers with little or no lip. Eliminate
thresholds and scatter rugs. Use non-slip
and non-glare floor eoverjngs. Attractive
night lights, anti-scald devices and smoke
and carbon monoxide detectors can .also
improvl! the safety of the home.
·
Universal design products can be found
in most home i)nprovement and handware
stores. Some newer items may need to be .
special-ordered, but many are already on
the shelves. Begin to evaluate your own
home to see how you can gradually make
it easier to use - for yourself, your fami~
ly and visitors.
(Becky Baer is Meigs County's
Extension ·agent for consumer cuui familY, .
sciences/community development, Ohio .
State University.)
'

'

.

Friday,

'
I

Dimensions 28.1/2" W x 30"H x 28 1/2" D
Weight .................. .. ...... 3451bs.
Max. Heating •
.
Capacity ........ App . 2,200 sq. ft ..
Hopper Capacity App. 70 Jbs. (wood
pellets)
. Window OpeningS t/2" x ~ 1/2"

Organizations

SPECIFICATIONS
Dimensions 23" W x 28' H x 21" D
Weight... .......................265 Jbs.
Max. Heating Capacity App. 1,500 sq . H.
Hopper Capacity App. 40 Jbs . (wood pellets)
Window Opening 8 1/2" x 8 1/2"
AC·G9 Glass .................... 9"x9"
Flue Size I.D 3" Pellet rear vent
Type of Fuei ......... Wood pellets
Blower Capacity 140 elm Variable speed
·
· SKU N72001

(

4.3 percent, down 0.3 percent; Jackson County, 6.8 .
POMEROY
percent, down 0 .2 percent;
Unemployment in southern and Vinton· County, 9 ·7 perOhio continued a downward cent, down 5 percent.
Lawrence County was the
trend in September, in line exception, posting a O.l perwith a drop on the statewide cent increase to 6.8 percent
level.
in September.
Ohio'~ unemploymenl rate
Data from the Ohio
Department of Jobs and was
5.5
percent
in
Family Services said the September, down from the
decrease in joblessness was revised rate of 5.6 percent in
seen in Gallia, Meigs and August.
most s ounding counties
The national rate was 5.5
percent for September, also
last mon · ·
alii County was at 5:7 . down 0.1 percent from the
percent unemplo~ment tn previous month.
September, a dechne of .03 · "The Ohio labor market
percent from August's 6 per- remained
essentially
unchanged in September,"
cent, !JDJFS reported. .
Metgs County came m at said · ODJFS Director Tom
9.4 percent, down 0.1 per- Hayes. "The total number of
cent from August's 9.5 per- Ohioans employed held
cent.
steady, while the number of
Athens County's rate was . unemployed was down

· AP, Stall report

°·

slightly."
The number of unemployed workers in Ohio fell
to 326,000 in· September
from 327,000 in August.
In
September
200 I,
259,000 workers were unemployed and the unemployment rate was 4.4 percent.
Morgan County had the
state' s highest county unemployment rate at 12.4 percent. The lowest was in
Holmes County, where
unemployment was 3.3 percent. Rates increased in more
than half of Ohio's 88 counties.
Counties that had rates of
at least · 7 percent in
September,
other than
Morgan, Meigs and Vinton,
were Adams, 9.9 percent; :
Crawford, 7.9; Pike, 7.4; ·
Scioto, 7.3; and Ashtabula,
7.1.

BY LISA CRUMP
full retirement benefits. living.
Q. A relative of mine Please clear this up for me.
Q. I disagree with the decirecently died and left me a
A. Because of longer life sian I received ih the mail
sizable inheritance. Will this expectancies,
Congress after my disability hearing.
money affect my Social changed the Social Security What is the next level to
Secunty retirement benefits law to gradually increase the appeal my claim?
in any way?
full retirement age. In 2003,
A. If you disagree with your
A. Income from an inheri- for example, people must be hearing decision, you may ask
tance, pension, IRA or annu- 65 years and 2 months old to for a review by the Social
ity will not affect yoitr Social receive full retirement bene- Security's Appeals Council.
benefits.
Only fits, and the age will Continue The Appeals Council looks at
Security
income you earn from work- rising until it reaches age 67 all requests for review, but it
ing can affect your benefit for people born in 1960 and may deny a request if it
amount. However, if you have later. For more information, beheves the hearing decision
high income, your Social visit . Social Security at was correct. For more inferSecurity benefits might be www.ssa.gov, or call 1-800- mation about this .rrocess,
subject to tl)e federal income 772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325- . contact Social Secunty at 1tax. About 20 percent of ben, 0778) and requestthe booklet, 800-772 1213 (TTY 1-800eficiaries fall into this catego- Retirement.
325-0778), and a representary.
Q. My husband died recent- tive will explain all of your ·
· Q. I received my Social ly. Would you please explain legal rights and help you with r---~ , . · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Security Statement in the · .widow's benefits?
your appeal.
mail, and it showed an estiA. As a widow, you can
Q. Where can I get a list of
mate. of my Social Security receive benefits from Social . disabling impairments for
retirement benefit. Once I Security as early as "age 60 (or Social Security disability?
retire, will my benefit amount at any age if you have a child
A. Disabihty Evaluation
stay the same forever?
who tS under 16 or disabled in Under Social Security, SSA
A. Once you begin receiv- your care.) The amount you Publication No. 64-039, con.ing Social Security, your ben- receive depends on your age; · tains the medical criteria that
efits will increase automati- and the amount of benefits Social Security uses to detercally in January, if the cost- your husband would have mine disability. It is intended
of-hving has increased. Also, been entitled to when he died. primarily for physicians and.
if you work after retirement, For example, if you choose to Other health professionals.
)".our earnings also could receive widow's benefits at This 205-page book can be
tncrease your benefit entitle- age 60, you would get 71-1/2 obtained free of charge by
inent.
·
percent of your deceased hus- visiting our website at
: Q. Why do I keep hearing band's benefit amount. But if www.ssa.gov or faxing a
HURRY. ..
!lifferent ages for Social you wait until age 65 to begin request to our fax number,
Security retirement? I always receiving widow's benefits, (410) 965-0696.
OFFER EI:IDS
thought the retirement age you'll receive 100 percent of
(Lisa Crump is mana_Ber of
OCTOBER 3fST!
was 65, but a friend told me what your husband would the Social Security office in
lie will have to be age 66 for have received if he were still Athens.)
·

0

Emmylou Harris to be inducted into
the Alabama Music Hall of Fame
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) Emmylou Harris is among the
·inductees for the Alabama
Music Hall of Fame's class of
Z003.
.
: The 55-year-old singer will
be inducted at an awards bancjuet and show in Mobile on
JtU!. 25, the Hall of Fame
announced Monday. Other

inducte·e s include soul singers
Clarence Carter and Eddie
Floyd, ·songwriter Mack
Vickery and jazz orchestra
leader James Reese Europe.
Harris, who was born in
Birmingham, has been an
influential force in country,
folk and pop since the early
. 1970s. She's among the artists

on the Grammy-winning "0
Brother, Where Art Thou?"
album ..
"We couldn't be more
excited about the fact ·that
Emmylou will be inducted
and that she'll be performing
at the induction banquet,"
said David Johnson, .the hall
of fame' s executive director.

•

VOTE

. . $1J0191°

..

•
•
•
•

'.
•

FOR

POMEROY- Caring and Sharing
Support Group, I p.m. at the Meigs
Senior Center. Laura Houley of the
Health Department to speak on cardiovascular health and tobacco use . .

Support Groups

1.9

Model 55-SHP10

Thursday, Oct. Z4
POMEROY - Ewings
POMEROY -Annual meeting of
Chpter. SAR. anniversary dinner
6:30 p.m. , meeting, 7:30 p.in. at the Meigs County Council on Aging
the museum Speaker, FBI repre- Board, II a.m. at the Center. Open
sentative .
meeting.

Thursday, Oct. 24 ·

AC·G9 Glass .................... 9"x9"
Flue Size
3" Pellet rear vent
Type of Fuei. ....... .Wood pellets
SH·1 06·P .............. Window trim
Blower.......................... 140 elm
Variable speed

SKU •72 005

Seniors Groups

CARPENTER- Mt. Union
Baptist Church near Carpenter,
revi va l.services, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday through Saturday. Rev.
Mark MorrOw evangelist;
singers. Earthen Vessels,
Thursday ; Rev. and Mrs. Steve
Tbunday, Oct. Z4
/
Little, Friday, and local speATHENS
Survivors
of
Suicide
ci al s, Saturday. The G.abriels
Support Group, 7 p.m. Athens
will be in concert at the church
at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. Rev. David Church of Christ, 785 West Union
. St., Athens. For additional informa·Wi se man invites public.
tion call 593-7414.

Meigs, Gallia jobless·rates decline

FINANCING
·For 60

~5

Mondoy, Oct. Z8
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens, II a.m.
at the firehouse. Potluck dinner,
blood pressures taken, everyone wei·
come.

!s

approved
credit

Clubs and

Wednesday, Oct. Z3
POMEROY -Tom Shelton
in conce rt, 7 p.m. ~ion Church
p f Christ . · t

in doctor lingo - the cyst to advice . If it is a ganglion cyst,
both diagnose and treat it.
rest your wrist or hand as much
However, there is a 50 percent as possible . Avoid activities that
recurrence rate when a cyst is strain the wrist or hand .
aspirated. Surgery is another Promptly report any ch a nge s,
treatment for gangliorr cysts and
such as dramatic increase . in
more r~liable than aspiratiOfl
size, d'evelopment of pain , or
tn preventtng recurrences. While
aspiration can usually be done in de creased function in th e affecta physician ' s office, complete ed area. Don ' t be surprised if
removal is besl performed in an you wake up one day and it is
gone.
outpatient surgical setting .
By far, the most common treatment . is ' observation .. Unless a
(Family Medicine is a weekly
gangfwn cyst ts .causm_g a great - colrtmn . To submit ques tions,
~eal of pam or tmpamng func- write to Martha A . Simpson,
Oh 10
· u ·
liOn, there ts no need to remove D 0
· c0 11
tl. Occasionally, wearing a wrist
· ··
. nrverSlty
ege
brace. can help decrease the size of Osteopatluc Medrc_111e, P. 0.
of a cyst.
·
Box 110, Athens, Ohw 45701.
So here it is in a nutshell: Or, e -mail Dr. Simpson at simpConsult with your physician to sonm@ohio.edu. Pa st columns
confirm the diagnosis of any are
available - online
at
new rump. Follow treatment www.fhradio.org/fm.)

01.
10
.APR
with

SYRACUSE- Harvest
Wednesday, Oct. 23
Gathering at Syracuse . First
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport . Church of God, corner of
Village Council finance meeting, Second and Apple .Streets,
2 p.m. in council chambers. through Oct. 27. Speakers Rev.
·Meeting open to the public.
Robert Rauch and Rev. Steve
,. Roush. Services, Friday and
Saturday, 6:30 p.m. with
Earthen Vessels and Gabriel
Quartet respectively. Sunday
services, 10 a.m. with Pastor
Cavid F. Russell, speaking; I :30
Thursday, Oct. 24
afternoon service with
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW "Released."
9053 7 p.m. at the hall in
Tuppers Plains.
Saturday, Oct. 26
CLIFTON - Clifton
POMEROY :_ Alpha Iota Tabernacle gospel sing, 7 p,m-:'
Masters Chapter of Beta Sigma featuring Delivered.
Phi, 6:30 p.m. at Our House,
Gallipolis, for dinner.
GALLIPOLIS - Gospel sing,
7 p.m. at the Poplar Ridge
'
POMEROY Meigs
County Church of Christ Freewill Baptist Church off
Women's Fellowship, 7 p.m. at State Route SS4.. New Horizons
Zion Church of Christ. Pomeroy and Cross Creek to sing. Jdhn
Church to have devotions; new Elswick, pastor. ·
officers to be elected.
DEXTER - Old De.ter
Church,
old-fas~ioned wiener
REEDSVILLE- Riverview
Garden Club, meet 5:30 p.m. at roast, 6:30p.m. Fellowship and
the home of Maxine Whitehead singing around the fire.
for a trip to .Parkersburg's River
City Rs staurant for dinner.

Church services

will typically decrease in size .
Most often, ganglion cysts are
painless and cause no problems,
but they may be unsightly.
Occasionally, they cause pain
when moving the affected area.
It is not uncommon for them to
disappear on their own, but
some have to be drained or sur'g ically re.moved.
Generally it is easy to diagnosis a ganglion cyst by its classic
location on the dorsum of the
wrist. If the cyst is large, your
physician may shine a light
through it -. a procedure called
transillumination ·to prove
that it is a fluid filled growth.
Sometimes an MRI is done to
differentiate a ganglion cyst
from an arthritic lesion, especially when the lesion appears
on the palm of the hand. Some
physicians will drain. aspirate

Will an inheritance affect
your Social Security?

which benefited $1,600. "We ·
want to .exceed that this year,"
said Crisp.
·
· ·.

Uterarydub

the underside of the wrist , close
to the thumb . They are always
benign.
A ganglion cyst is a fluid filled sac that arises from a nearby joint or tendon sheath . .While
the cause is not really known,
one theory is that damage to a
tendon sheath or joint al·lows
fluid to leak out and form a cyst.
What is known is that they are
more common in women than
men, and are common in gymnasts, who frequently apply
stress to the wrist.
Strenu-ous acttvlly to the
affected joint can cause it to
increase in size . So it does
appear that physical stress ·_ as
you experieQce in your job may sometimes be a causative
factor. Also, it may be of interest
to you to know that when a joint
With a ganglion cyst is rested, H

SOCIAL SECURITY

News and notes
1he Middleport

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

FAMILY MEDICINE

Community Calendar
Publ •IC Mee· t"mgs

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

PRO·B ATE/JUVE"ILE JUDGE
DRUG AND At.COHOL ABUSE
BY JUVENILES
NEEDS TO BE DEALT WITH NOW

i

2003 Relay for
Life rally set
MIDDLEPORT .- Meigs
County's Elvis impersonator,
Dwight Icenhower; will kick
off the 2003 Relay for life at a
benefit concert program, 7 to
9 ~.m. on Nov. 2 in the Meigs
Middle School auditorium.
All of the mQne/will go to

•

II

· r,.

.

CONSEQUENCES
AND
EFFECTIVE TREATMENT
A FULL TIME JUDGE WITH NEW iDEAS AND OLD TIME VALUES
PD. FOR BY THE COMM. TO ELEG LENTES

~------------------------------~~~:

I

I

�•

'

•
•
0 1n1on

·The Daily Sentinel
•

·!

..

•

~age

A&amp;

lhunday. October 14, :zoo:z

WAIT
rORMEJ

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

.,

Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

~W

· ··

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
• • signed and include addres,, wul telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be ill good
tasle, addres:-;ing issues. not personalities.
The upinions expressed in the column below are the con ·
se11sus of the Ohio .Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board,

unless otherwise noted. ·

,.

2'----------~~--~------~--------------

•

NATIONAL VIEW
•

Try aga1n
...' .

.
,·
'

'· .

•

•

Budget rules paved way ·to
1990s prosperit~ surplus

• Star Tribune, Minneapolis, on Congress and the budget'
In 12 troubling months, the federal government's fiscal condi' . tion has undergone the worst one-year reversal on record. A fed., eral surplus that was heading into the trillions of dollars has
~ given way to budget deficits as far as the eye can see.
... President· Bush and the 107th Congress probably couldn't
have prevented this. Much of the blame lies with a stubborn
. recession and new spending on homeland security. But they
., certainly can prevent the crisis from getting worse. A set of bud..' get protocols .that have govern~ taxing and spending since
..1990 - and have proved spectacularly successful- expired
' earlier this month. If Congress goes · home thi s fall without
renewing them, it will be an appalling political failure and a
blow to the nation's prosperity.
It's popular to think that nothing works in Washington, but
, the 1990 budget rules are terrific evidence to the contrary. They
• . capped annual spending levels and required lawmakers to prove
:·how they would pay for any costly new initiatives. Coupled
: with a strong economy, they worked. The federal budget deficit
' started shrinking in 1993 and IUI"'ed into budget surpluses in .
: 1999. That paved the way for falling interest rates in the private
·
: economy and a long, durable economic expansion. .. .
I Ironically, it's not congressional spendthrifts who are fighting
I the rules now. Two Senate Democrats Russell Feingold of
Wisconsin and Kent Conrad of North Dakota - joined
i Republican Pete Domenici of New Mexico in trying to extend
: !hem last summer. They were shot down by the White House,
; . which objected to .Senate spending priorities, and a group of
· · Senate conservatives who want more tax cuts.
.
! Conrad wants to give the idea a second shot this fall arid the
' White House has signaled that it might go along. Lawmakers
. owe this one to themselves, to taxpayers and to the future.

!

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

: :TODAY IN HISTORY
; .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

, , Today is Thursday, Oct. 24, the 297th day of 2002. There
l are 68 days left in the year.
·
: Today's Highlight in History:
. . .
.
.
: Fifty years ago, on Oct. 24, 1952, Republican presidential
• candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower declared, "I shall go to
j Korea," as he promised to end the· conflict. (He made the visit
a month ·later.)
·.
I over
On
this
date:
.
•
·
1
j' lh 1537, Jane Seymour, the third wife of En~land's King
, ; Henry VIII, died 12 days after giving birth to Pnnce Edward,
! later King Edward VI.
• In 1861 , the first transcontinental telegraph message was
: sent as JustiCe Stephen J: Field of California tl'ansmitted a
' telegram to President Lincoln.
In 190 I, Anna Edson Taylor, a 43-year-old widow, became
, !he first person to survive going over Niagara Falls in a barr~!.
I . In 1931, the George Washington Bridge, connecting New
; · York and New Jersey, opened to traffic. .
: In 1939, nylon stockmgs were sold publicly for the first
time, in Wilmington, Del.
· In 1939. Benny Goodman and his orches\fa recorded their
signature theme, "Le)'s Dance," for Columbia Records in
, NewYork.
' In 1940, the 40-hour work week went into effect under the
Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
· In 1945, the United Nations officially came into existence
as 'its charter took effect.
·
'• In 1962, the U.S. blockade of Cuba during the missile crisis
;I officially began under a proclamation signed by President
j Kennedy.
.
.
• In 1987, 30 years after it was expelled, the Teamsters union
: was welcomed back into the AFL-CIO. . •
·
: · Ten years ago: The Toronto Blue Jays became the first non1' U.S. team to win the World Se~ies as th•·Y defeated the Atlanta
! Braves, 4-3, in game six. .
; . · Five years ago: Setting the stage for an upcoming summit,
: President Clinton rejected calls for a confrontational approach
; · to China, arguing that isolating the Chinese would be "paten. : tially datfgerous." In Arlington, Va., former NBC sportscaster
: : Marv Albert was spared a jail sentence after a grudging court- ·
: room apology to the woman he'd bitten during a sexual romp.
l , One year ago: The House passed a ,$ 100 billion economic
! . $1imulus package. Two trucks crashed head-on in a main tunl nel through the Alps, igniting a fire and killing II people. O.J.
: Simpson was acquitted in Miami of grabbing another driver's
: glasses and scratching the man 's face in a road-rage argument
: l]lat the .former football star insisted was started by the other
;&lt;

~

guf~day's Birthdays: Football Hail -of-Farner Y.A·. Tittle is 76.

Rock musician Bill Wyma~ is 66. Actor-producer David
; Nelson is 66. Actor F. Murray Abraham is 63. Actor Kevin
1
Kline is 55. NAACP President Kweisi Mfume is 54. Country
musician Billy Thomas (Terry McBride and the Ride) is 49.
: Actor B.D. Wong is 40 . . Rock musician Ben Gillies
• (Silverchair) is 23. Singer-actress Monica Arnold is 22.
: Rhythm-and-blues singer.Adrienne Bailon (31w) is 19.
' Thought for Today: "History must always be taken with a
: grai n of salt. It is, after all, not a science but an art." -. Phyllis
; (vlcGinley, American
poet and mHhor ( 1905-1978).
.

!

.•

RYAN'S VIEW

In times of stress, we'll always take the World Series .
BY JOAN RYAN

Legendary New York sports columnist Red Smith liked to tell the story of
Laurence Stallings, a novelist and playwright who had been a correspondent in
World War I.
In 1925, Stallings was sent by Hearst
newsp&amp;pers to cover a football game
between Illinois and the University of
Pennsylvania. A fellow named Red
Grange, who would become one of the
greatest halfbacks of all time, ran for
three touchdowns in his first East Coast
appearance. When the game ended and
the sportswriters were pounding the
keys of their typewriters, Stallings
paced the press box and clutched his
hair. "I can't write it!" wailed the man
who had covered a war. "It's too big!"
Smith would share the anecdote when
it wa~ ·suggested that writing about
sports was not a very meaningful use of
his talent. He never put up a particularly vigorous defense of htmself, recognizing that he wasn't shaping national
policy or saving lives. But he would
point out that anything tha:t can move
people as deeply and wildly as sports
seemed worth chronicling.
This is why, to answer the growing
chorus of critics, the San Francisco
Giants are taking up space on the front
page these days alongside news about
war in Iraq and the crashing economy. It

is why, despite more important events is never more important than in times of
unfolding around the world, the Giants , crisis. After Sept. II , football and base- '
and othe' cherished sports teams still ball stadiums became the.only venues inmatter.
which large numbers of people could
Civilization will not be altered gather, feel connected and express their
whether the Giants or Angels win the shared patriotism.
World Series. But in these anxious
This has long been so, The national
times, the games - with th~ir momen- anthem had been played at sporting
!~heroes and heart-poundmg plots-- events since the tum of the century but
sur m ~s an unreasonable euphQna th~t only for special events, such as Opening
I consider a. kmd of g~ace: We don I Day or the World Seri.es: With the outhave to earn It, save for It or deserve 11. break of World War II, the anthem
We JUst.have to care.
.
became a fixture at every game.
A,nd 1f you care, .even a httl~, you
1 am biased, of course, in putting forth
can t ~elp ~ut l?e upl!fted a.t the s~ght of this defense of baseball, having become
men JUmpmg m umson . hke c~tldren, a starry-eyed Giants fan when I stopped
t~err ~s aroun~ eac.h other, m .utter covering them as a journalist and began
disbelief and del~ght m their unlikely watching as a spectator. I rediscovered
. ·
.
.
. "Je
victory. You can t help but take pure
pleasure in reading the next day of what wh~ all. sports fans behe~e m mtrac. s.
the boys did on the field.
. Unhke JUSt about everythmg else m hfe,
. "Baseball is legitimate news right' ~ames offer almost endless opportumnow," says Rob Elias, University of San ties for a better outco~e from prev10us
Francisco professor of politics ·and edi- . attempts, an opportumty to close the
tor_of the antholog)' "Baseball and the door on yesterday and start over.
American Dream" (M.E. Sharpe, 2001). . So give me the ~e~s about the loom"In an increasingly mobile, isolated t~g war and the. dlVt~g Dow. But also
and fragmented society, baseball has the g1ve me the game.s. G•ve '!le some hop~,
capacity to generate a sense of commu- ~o matter..how. mdefenstble, that thts
nity. It offers one of the few real oppor· ume our s1de wtll come through.
!unities for public interaction.... I think , (Joan Ryan1s a colummstfor the San
the Giants should be covered more by Francisco Chronicle. Send co(1lments to
the media, not less."
her in, .care of this newspaper or send
The argument can be made that sports her e-mail at joanryan@sfgate.com.)

..

KONDRACKE'S VIEW .

'

'I

;

Democrats' economic pitch won't win them election
Both polls suggested that by wide mar·
Polls indicate that Democrats have a gins- more than 60 percent to 30 percent
chance to exploit the public's economic -- the public doesn't think Bush is paying
worries in the election campai~n, but enough attention to the economy or doing
there's reason to doubt that they will do so enough to help it.
,
effectively. ·
.
In the CBS poll, only 43 percent of vatSpeeches on the economy by Congress' ers said the economy IS currently "good,"
two top Democrats on Thesday got limited while 56 percent srud itis "bad." On the
publictty and failed to deal with the econ- other hand, only 39 percent said the economy's two most . urgent problems -- a amy is getting worse, while 59 percent
scary stock market and falling capital said it would stay where it is or improve.
investment.
Both · Gephardt and Senate Majority
House Republicans were planning to Leader Thomas Daschle (D-S.D.) went
push through measures to encourage out of their way - as former Vice
mvestrnent, and President Bush will prob- President AI Gore did in a speech earlier
ably use the Senate's failure to pass them this month-· to make the economy out to
as part of · his election-year economic be in dire straits and to blame Bush for it
defense.
almost exclusively.
Bush also may make a speech on the
None of them attributed any ofthecouneconomy next week, but White House try's woes to the breaking of the stock
aides were tight-lipped about what new market bubble of the 1990s or the recesproposals it might contain.
. sion that was starting when Bush beciune
House Minority Leader Richard president in 2001.
Gephardt's · (D-Mo.) stimulus plan
Gephardt said, ''we are in the weakest
involves $200 billion of deficit spending, economic period of economic growth in
including anti-terrorism aid to states and 40 years" and "America faces a clear and
money for school construction.
present danger to the economic life of
Bush will certainly say Senate working families."
·
Democmts are refusing to pass a terrorDaschle said, "We're experiencing the
ism-insurance bill in order to protect their worst market decline since the 1930s,''
trial-lawyer contributors, and m doing so, which is true enough. He added that in
blocking some $15 billion in construction September, "home foreclosure rates
projects.
reached their highest rate in 30 years" and
The good news for Democrats was con- that "since President Bush took office ...
tained in two polls last week - by the more than .2 million people have lost
Pew Research Center and CBS/New York jobs."
Times - showing that voters favor
Gore said, "There is a crisis of confiDemocrats over Republicans to deal with dence in U.S. · eco;,omic leadership
the ~:,~:onomy. The margin was narrow, throughout the world, and this lack of conhowever, 3 points and 4 points, respective- fidence has become in itself an obstacle to
ly. .
global economic recovery."
Bush 's performance on the economy got
He added, "To lead our nation the presia 49 percent positive rating in the Pew dent needs to accept responsibility for the
, poll, compared with 61 percent for his· fact that his own fiscal policies are the
ovemll approval. The positive rating on largest factor responsible for the $5 trillion
the economy was just 41 percent in the evaporation of our budge,t surplus."
CBS/New York Times poll, which gave
The Democrats may be right. There are
him 63 percent overall.
scenarios whereby a continued falling
BY MORTON KONDRACK£

stock market could lead to greatly reduced
consumer spendi!)g and tip the economy
back into recession.
Contrary to Gephardt's assertion of a
40- year low in econ.omic perfonnance,
Bush economic adviser Larry Lindsey
said, "1980 was worse, 1982 was worse
and 1973-75 were worse. In fact, we
expect 3 percent economic growth for this
quarter; It'll be the fourth straight quarter
for growth."
Unemployment, which used to be the
main political measure of economic performance, is at 5.6 percent - it actually
improved 0.1 percent last month ~ compared to I0.1 percent in 1982 and 7.2 percent in 1992.
As the administration further argues,
inflation is low, interest rates are'low, productivity continues to rise, household
income and consumer spending are up
and so are housing starts and home,sales.
It's true that the government's projected
budget surplus has disappeared, and
Bush's $1.6 trillion tax cut is partly
responsible: But neither Daschle nor
Gephardt - nor even Gore - recommended that it be rescinded.
It's understandable -- if disingenuous
- in the case of the two Congressional
leaders. In Gephardt's case, most of the
contested House seats this year are in
rural or ex-urban districts where
Democratic candidates mi~ht be hurt if
Gephardt recommended a ' tax increase." · ·
Gore's ·failure to recommend such·-a
'step is less explainable - particular(y
because otber Democratic presidential
contenders,' Sens. John Edwards (N.C.)
and Joe Liebennan (Conn.), have done
so.
So the nation will ride the Bush economic path until 2004 -- and ·j ttdge
favorably or harshly, in the next pre:!lae:n...,
tial election.
·(Morton Kondrack£ is e:ucutive editor
of Roll Cal~ the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)
.

'

•

111unday. October 24, :ZOOl

groundbreakin~

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

'

PageA7

AOl Time Warner to restate .Aspirin reduces risk of death after bypass surgery
(AP) - A
worldwide who undergo blood and prevents clots. Yet question she would get
revenue, income because
study has disproved doctors coronary bypass surgery each many doctors are rei uctant to aspirin pos'toperatively," said
lon$·held worries that giving year.
give it soon after or shortly the lead researcher, Dr.
of troubled online division asptrin
to heart patients right
Foundation
researchers before bypass, fearing it will Dennis Mangano, founder Qf

The Daily Sentinel

c.

Nation • World

..The Daily Sentinel

'

,,

.......... \. .

--

YORK (AP) - AOL
Tune Warner plans to restate
two years of financial results
because of accounting practices
at its America Online Unit - the
latest .bad news surrounding the
troubled Internet division.
The media giant made the
announcement Wednesday as it
reported third-quarter results,
which showed a small profit
despite weakness in the online
business.
.
AOL Tune Warner said the
restatements for the third quarter
of 2000 through the second
· ·. quarter of 2002 would reduce
·revenues by $I 90 million.
· The revenue adjustments,
much higher than the company
previousfy disclosed, follow an
mtemal co~y review of certain advertismg and commeree
ttansactions at the division.
The America Online division
·has been struggling for months,
bwdened by deelining advertis: ing revenues and a government
investigatiqn into its aecounting
practices. AOL had previously
said it may have inappropriately
accouqted for approximately
$49 million in transactions at the
online Unit .
The changes are expected· to
be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission . by
· year's end.
"Although our internal review
is ongoing, we do not expect this
internal review will result in any
further adjustments," said
· Richard Parsons, AOL Time
· Warner's chief executive.
· . Investors were largely
unshaken by the news, finding

after bypass surgery can trig- estimate giving a 5-cent
ger dtsastrous bleeding, a aspirin within hours of bypass
finding that could save thou- surgery could prevent about
27,000 deaths and 51,000
sands of lives every year.
The study, published in serious complications annualThursday's New England ly worldwide. That would
Journal of Medicine, found also save billions of dollars,
the use of aspirin dramatical- given the lower complic&lt;!tion .
ly lowers the risk of death and rate ahd shorter hospital
complications, and keeping stays.
patients on the blood-thinning
'The results are so strikingpill before the surgery also ly positive and so definitive,"
said Dr. Robert Bonow, presiImproved outcomes.
Researthers at the Ischemia dent .of the American Heart
&amp;
Education Association. "It's studies like
Research
Foundation and other experts this that actually change prac.
said the results- from 5,065 tiee."
patients at 70 medical centers
Aspirin has been a mainm 17 countries - should · stay of treating and preventquickly change how doctors . inj! heart disease for a..generhandle the 1 million patients atton because it thins the

reassurance in the robust performance of other divisions and the
company's statement that it
believes no additional restatements will be required.
AOL Time Warner's busi-.
nesses include the cable network
HBO, the Warner Bros. film and
music companies and Time
Warner Cable.
AOL Tune Warner shares
surged niore than 6 percent in
extended trading after gaining 3
cents to close at $13.53. ·
For the three months ending
Sept 30, the media conglomerate earned $57 million, or I cent
per share, compared with a loss
of $W7 million, or 22 cents per
share, in the same period a year
ago. The results were in line
with analysts' expectations:
Re~enues for the third quarter
totaled $9.98 billion, compared
to $9.07 billion during the cOm·
parable 2001 quarter.
Also Wednesday, AOL Tune
Warner said it plans a Dec. 3
rooeting with analysts. to give
Wall Slreet more details about
America Online's future business plan.
In August, Jon Miller was
named the division's new chief
executive and chairman, but
Wall Slreet has remained skeptical - expressing douprs about
whether America Online has the
momentum and busiriess plan to
continue to grow. Some also
blame America Online's trou·
bles for the steep drop in the
company's stock price, which
has tumbled from a high of
about $55 to as low as $10 since
the merger.

interfere with clotting and
cause life-threatening internal
bleeding. ·
In the study, about 60 percent of the patients received
asP.irin in doses up to 650
mtlligrams. Those getting
aspirin within 48 hours of
bypass surgery were only
one-third as likely to die in
the hospital as the others;
The aspirin group also was
only half as likely to suffer a
heart attack or stroke while
still in the hospital, only onefourth as likely to suffer kidney failure and about onethird as likely to have bowel
damage from blood clots.
"If my mother were ~Qing
into surgery now, thete s no

the ischemia foundation, a
nonprofit research group in
San Francisco.
The study was conducted
from 1996 through 2001.
The heart association and
the American College of
Cardiology in 1999 recommended giving patients 100
mg to 325 mg of aspirin within 24 hours of bypasses using .
grafts from leg veins. The
guidelines do not cover grafts
using chest arteries or both
veins and arteries, but
Mangano said that in the
study, aspirin benefited
patients getting every graft
type.

Students use forensics in program
Capitalizing on ·success of television shows
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y.(AP) -The
muddy area around the crime scene had
· yielded several promising footprints,
and the crime scene investigators had
carefully applied a liquid molding mixture. But when they tried to dig out the
first hardened cast, it broke in half.
"Awwww," said the investigators,
sounding like the teenagers they are.
. The investigators are the first high
school students in the nation to lise a
forensic-science cuniculum offered by
·Court TV and designed to capitalize on
the interest in television shows like
"CSI" and "Forensic Files.'~
Science teachers at high schools in the

New York City suburbs of New
Rochelle, Jericho and Wantagh are
using some or all of the nine lessons in
the curriculum, and their experiences
will be presented this weekend to 150
. other teachers from around· the country
at the Forensic Science Educational
Conference in New York.
Evan Shapiro, a Court TV vice president, sald he hopes the curriculum,
which can be downloaded .for free
beginning Friday, will be in 1,000 classrooms nationwide by May.
"What people like .about these TV
shows is looking over the shoulder of
the investigator," he said. '.'We're hop-

ing to take this interest; and maybe the
interest in real-life crimes like 9-11 or
anthrax. or the Washington sniper, and
turn it into a real interest in biology and
chemistry that shows these kids why
science is important to their life;''
Court TV devised the cuniculum with
guidance from the American Academy ·
of Forensic Science. New Rochelle
teacher Scott Rubins sald it meets all
·educational standards. The nine lessons,
grouped into three mysteries, include
tests for gunshot residue and finge~rint
matching. Together, they might typ•cally fill a few weeks of the school year,
Rubins said.

.

.

ia bans fishing
:. Governor defends pilots who
in
areas
sunounding
·
·bombed Canadians in Afghanistan
Channel Islands
.

. SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP)
... - Gov. George Ryan said he
: stands behind two Illinois
.. pilots
facing . criminal
.charges in a mistaken bomb·
: ing
that killed
four
·Canadians in Afghanistan,
.. saying the men are responsi·
· ble soldiers - "not cow. boys."
. · Ryan,
meeting. with
.. report~rs
ou!side . the
.Executive Manston dunng a
· $!50-a-person fund-raiser for
Majs. Harry Schmidt and
· .William Umbach, said it was
· his duty as Illinois' com.. mander in chief to ..upport
the men.
·
_ "I was · responsible for
sending those people, or
signing off for them to go
when called by the federal
government. If I don't stand
behind them, I don't know
who would," Ryan said.
"And I don't know why I
wouldn't."
Schmidt and Umbach are
· members of the · Illinois Air
National Guard's 183rd
Fighter Wing based in
Springfield.
· Ryan said the April 17th
'" bombing near Kandahar .that
· ·: also
wounded · e1ght
· : Canadians was .an accident
and the pilots are getting a

"raw deal."
"I know these two fellows,
and I know their wives.
They're not people who
coinmit manslaughter. They
didn't do this on purpose.
They're solid, sound citizens," Ryan said. "They're
not cowboys."
The two face charges of
involuntary manslaughter,
aggravated auault and dere·
liction of duty.
Schmidt and Umbach were
flying a routine mission over
southern Afghanistan Vl(hen
Schmidt d~opped a !500pound bomb on a Canadian
Jive,fire exercise. He says he
thought the fire was ~o~tile.
Umbach was the miSSion's

commande~

a criminal military proceeding, Ryan said he was merely helpin$ Schmidt · and
Umbac!J ra1se money so they
can defend themselves.
Umbach's lawyer, David
Beck, said he has never seen
a governor intervene in any
of the · military cases he's
defended, but he found it
appropriate given Ryan's
·position as leader of the
state militia.
·
"He's showing support for
his trOI&gt;p&amp;, as I wish the Air
force would," Beck said.
· Critics have complained
that the government ts making scapegoats of Schmidt
and Umbach · to maintain
friendly
relations with

Schmidt and Umbach must
report to Barkdsale Air
Force Base in Louisiana late
this year or early next for a
military hearing to deter- .
mine if the charges will be
pursued.
.
Their lawyers have asked
for a new investigation, saying the one tlfat faulted the
pilots was biased and was
not conducted according to
Air Force procedure.
Asked whether it was
appropriate for a government official to intervene in ·

•

SANTA
BARBARA,
Calif. (AP) - A state
commtss10n
decided
Wednesday to create one
of the nation's largest
marine reserves by ban·
ning fishing in areas
around · the
Channel
Islands.
The state Fish and Game
Commission voted to ere·
ate what is essentially a
130-square-mile, offshore
wilderness area. ·
"I just believe there ' is
more than enough science
to show that thej!lrannel
.Islands need to be protected," . said _commissioner

'02 Park Avenue
Bob Hattoy.
Speaking to nearly 200 Buicks Best!
angry fishermen in the
audience, he said, "Some
of you will call me wrong
... But I think your grand- ·
children will call me
right"
The measure will pro·
hibil all fishing in specific
sections around the five
islands in the Santa
Barbara
· Channel.
However, there will be
some exceptions when the
ban causes extreme economic hardships for fish·
ermen.

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· New~=~~

· Veterans of Foreign Wars member Dan Earl, left, waits to enter
a fun&lt;Hatser at the Illinois Executive Mansion In Springfield, Ill.
· Gov. George Ryan said Wednesday he stands behind two Illinois
pilots facing criminal charges In a mistaken bombing that killed
·. four Canadians In Afghanistan because · It's his job _. and
. because ..they're not cowboys." Ryan. meeting with reporters
· outside the Executive Mansi.on during the $5()-a.person fund- ·
raiser for Majs. Harry SChmidt and William Umbach, said as
Illinois' commander In chief, he has, to support his militia. (AP)

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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Page

AS • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

Thursday, October 24, 2002

·Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

The Extra Point, Page 82

NASCAR Weekly, Page 83
Meigs JV finishes 20-0, Page 84
.()SU turns to WR for help, Page 85

Page 81
lbursday. October 14. 1001

World Series • Game 4

The OVP

1

&lt;. mneruy/

·5,Mtddleport

Halloween
....

.

..·.

party
• A halloween party
with Phil and the Thrill,
electric blueS and rock,
and a special guest will
be held at 9 p.m. at the
Court Grill Saturday
night. $5 cover. For ·
more information call
992-6524.

Fur Peace
Ranch
• Jorma, Ro,bert Jones
and Ed Gedulid will be
featured in the Concert
Hall at the Fur Peace
Ranch, at 8 p.m.
Saturday. Call 992-7595
for more information.

''. Point
Pleasant
River
Valley Opry
II The River Valley
Opry . will
feature
"Retrograss"
and
"Open Highway" 7
p.m., Saturday, Oct. 26
at the Stat.e Theater.
Retrograss is a local
band
and
Open
Highway will be coming from Columbus,
Ohio to perform bluergrass. Each band will
perform a one-hour
concert with a ·20minute intermission.

Halloween
excitement
II Halloween fun, 7.to
10 p.m., West Virginia
State Farm Museum,
games, best costume
contest, haunted house,
spooky trail rides, trick
or treating for children
12 and under, in front
of the old building. Will
' sell chances on a
Halloween
Basket;
three tickets for $1.
Call 675-5737 for additional information.

·Singer/songwriter ..~o perform in Pomeroy tonight ·

I Atlien.s I
Cajun bltles

'

P

OMEROY- Rick
Redington, a solo
singer/songwriter,
a founding member of The Huge Members,
one half of the acoustic duo
The Heavily Bros, and
more recently a part of a
backup band called The
Luv Machine, will be in
Pomeroy tonight.
He will be performing at

the Court Grill at 9 p.m.
There is a $5_cover charge.
In the past Redington has
opened for many different
national recording artists
such as: Joe Walsh, Blue
Oyster Cult, The New
Riders,
Rick
Danko,
Warren Haynes of Govt
Mule, Cake, April Wine,
and Mike Keneally (form~;r FZ guitarist). ·Most
recently he has opened for

Hot Tuna, The Wailers,
Richie Havens, and The
Samples.
·
The artist has six album
releases to date and is currently working on his seveilth. Four discs with former band Huge Members
as well as .two solo releases. He also• appeared i!l a
movie with Billy Ray
Cyrus called "Radical
·Jack."

Redington's last release
titled "Destiny" included a
track with Rock 'n' Roll
Hall of Farner Jorma "
Kaukonen and his next
release will ,teature · t·wo
more songs recorded with
Jorma as well as one track
with Jack Casady. The new
disc will be called "S'\Veet
Life."
.
For more information call
992-6524.

• Appearing at The
Blue Gator in Athens
tonight (Thursday) will
be Tab Benoit, Telarc
Records' cajun blues
guitar sensation, who
will
perform . his
Swamp Boogie featured on his · new
release, "Wetlands."
Tickets sare $15 in
advance. Call 594-7271
for more informatoin~

GAHS
Choirs
• Gallia Academy
High School Choirs will
perform ther fall concert
at 7 p.m. Monday; Oct.
28 in the GAHS auditorium. Admission is $3
· for adults and children
are admitted free.
Marilynn
Kibble,
beginning her first year
with the GAHS choirs,
will dilect the concert.
The concert will include
music from the junior
high and senior high
choirs.
The GAHS Madrigals
will also perform. The
public is invited to
attend.

I Southside ·I.
Trick-orTreat
II Trick-or-Treat, 5:30
to 7 p.m., party at
Community
Center,
7:30p.m. Prizes, games,
and treats provided.

Letart I

.

Music jam
sessiOn

Gallipolis ·Fe

'Halloween
party
II Halloween Party, 6
to . 8 p.m., Oct. 26,
Community
Center.
Prizes, food, anq games,

Henderson
Trick-orTreat
II Square dance
lessons at Henderson
Community Center from
7 to 7:30 r.m. Friday. A
dance wil be held from
7:30 to 10:30 p.'m. No
alcohol or smoking permitted. Snack bar OJ?Cn.
For more infortnauon,
call446-6188.

30
26 ·
22
17
16

votea:

receiving

Columbus DeSales 13,
Wellston 7, Chesapeake 3,
Ravenswood 3, Belpre 2,
· Logan 1, ParkersbUrg 1, River
Valley 1, Cheshire Naval
Academy 1.
To be eligible !or Tire ovP 10,
a team muat either: a.) be
the

from

Maeon-Gallla·

Melgs-Jackaon area; b.) be a
· local.conterence mamber; or
c.) play at 1eaat one game
against local or conference

teama.

Prep Football
·· TVC
Ohio Division
I111m
M
Wellston .
4-0
Belpre
3-1
Nelsonville·York
2·2
VInton County
2·2
Meigs

1-3

Alexander

()-4

All
7-2

(740) 44"842

~~~~~~~~;

nRE ROTAnON
BALANCING

•

San Francisco's J.T. Snow, left, scores on David Bell's single to centefin the eighth inning
of Game 4 of the World Series Wednesday in San Francisco. At the plate for Anaheim is
. catcher Bengie Gil. The Giants won, 4-3, to even' the Series, 2·2. (AP)

7-2

4-5
2·7
4-5
3-6

Bell's RBI ties
Series for ,Giants.

.Hocking Division

Illlm .
M
All
Waterford
4-0
6-3
Trimble
3-1
6-3
Federal Hocking
3-1
3-6
Eastern
1-3 3-6
Miller
1-3
1-8
Southern
()-4
Q-9
Friday's Games
Belpre at Meigs
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Vinton County at Wellston
Waterford at Fedeml Hocking
Trimble at Miller
Saturday's Game

ave
.Chesapeake
Rock Hill.
RiverValle)i
Fairland
South Point
Coal Grove

~

All

. 4-0

6·3

3·1 . 6-3
2·2
4-5
2-2
3-6
1·3 2-7
()-4
3-6

Friday's Games
Fairland at River Valley
Chesapeake at Rock Hill
South Point at Coal Gr0\/8

-

'

S~OAL

'

SEQ
All
Illlm
8-1
i;larletta
5·1
Gallia Academy
4-1
7·2
6-3
Logan
4·1
Athens ·
3-2
6-3
Point Pleasant
1-4 3-5
1-4 .3-6
Jackson
Q-9
o-5
Warren
Friday's Games
logan at Galia Academy
Athens at Point Pleasant
Warren at Jackson ·
. Marietta at Parkersburg South

Non-league
111m•

All

Wahama

8-0
7-2

Symmes Valley

Ironton
Oak Hill
South Gallia
1-jannan

6-2
3-6

3-6
1-6

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
After
Francisco
Rodriguez breezed through
Barry Bonds and the middle
of the San Francisco lineup,
a buzz swept through Pac
Bell Park. Forget about a
run. Would the Giants ever
get a hit against the Kid? ·
Quickly, it all changedthe rookie's aura of perfection, and the momentum in
this World Series.
David Bell lined a goahead single off Rodriguez
in the eighth inning and the
Giants came back to beat
the Anaheim Angels 4-3
Wednesday night, leaving
the Series tied at two games
each.
,
"I was just trying to get a
pitch I could handle and hit
11 hard," Bell said. "He's
· had a lot of success so far.
He's done a great job for
these guys.
"So to get a win tonight
was big. I think to get a run
off him is important, too." '
Jason Schmidt will start
for the Giants in Game 5.
Thursday night against
1

Southern at Eastern

,,

WEEK

1.

.

.

· Others

Staff writer

31

8. Po.rt~mouth W. 9
9. ParlmDJrg Call. 8
· 10. Athens
9

'·•

1/4 mile norih of
Pomeroy ·Muon Bridge
Meson, Weet VIrginia
. Phone
773·5721
OPEN

Ironton
4
6. Gallia Acadeti1y 3
7. Wahama .
7
5.

. •.

BY DEREK TAYLOR

1' (tie) For1smouth 5 44 (1)
New L~lng1on . 2 44 (4)
3. Parkersburg s. 1 35 (1)
4 . Marietta
6
33

Wahfma at Parkersburg Catholic .

.s179s .

(

· A look at the region's t()J&gt;
football teams, as voted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-place
votes in parentheses)
Team
Prev. Votes

Frlday'a Games
South Gallia at Guyan Valley
Hannan at Bishop Donahue
~ijry, Ky. at Ironton
Clnn. Country Day at Oak Hill
NBW Miami at Symmes VaHey
· : Saturday'• Game ·

Norris Northup Dodge ·

Oil &amp;. Fllll!r • Lube Chassis
Chtd&lt; All Fluids ; Chtd&lt; Chessls

'

• Jam session, 6:30 to
10
p.m., ·
Letart
Community
Center. ·
Country, bluegrass, and
gospel music by local .
groups. ·
Letart
Concessions (hot-dogs,
popcorn, candy, and
drinks) . available by
Pioneers
4-H. ·
Admission is a $1 donation. Call Lois Hoffman
at 304-895-3557, for
additional information.

252 Upper River.Road, GaiiiQolls, Ohio

OIL CHANGE

Meigs missing
Roush for
.season finale

IGallipolis I

BEST DEAL IN TOWN
.

Prep Football

'

Jarrod Washburn. lt '.11 be a
rem;uch of the opener in
which Schmidt ootpitched
the Anaheim ace.
Down 3-0 early and in
danger of being blown out
again, the Giants somehow
slowed down Anaheim 's
persistent hitters.
And then, the game began
to turn on · the littlest of
things - a chopper in front
of the plate and a.bunt that
simply would not roll foul.
Suddenly, it was 3-all and
time for more late-inning
drama.
Cue Rodriguez . At 20,
he'd pitched only 5 2-3
innings and didn't have a
win in his major league
career before October.
Since then, he'd gone a
record-tying 5-0 in the post·
season, getting his latest
win when ·he embarrassed
the Giants with three perfect
innings in Game 2.
Rodriguez began this stint
by setting down Jeff Kent,
Bonps and Benito Santiago
in the seventh without a
problem.

·"You're just trying to get
to a young pitcher, maybe
knock him off his pedestal,"
Keot said. "He's had a clean
playoff slate, and we were
hoping to dirty it a little bit.
Of course, I started off on
the wrong foot by striking
out against him. I' II figure
him out one of these days."
But J.T. Snow broke
though with a leadoff single
in the eighth and -moved up
on Bengie Molina's passed
ball. Snow had to stay put,
.though, when first baseman
Scott Spiezio made a sensational, diving catch on
Reggie Sanders' foul bunt.
That brought up Bell, who
earlier had made an error at
third base and been thrown
out trying to stretch a single.
He fully redeemed himself
by singling sharply past diving
shortstop
David
Eckstein, and Snow scored
ahead · of center fielder
Darin Erstad's throw.
Officially, it was an
unearned run because of the
passed ball . No matter, it
Please see Series. 84

POMEROY- He'd surely
rather not do it, but Meigs
coach Mike Chancey will
have to end the season without the player who has
. accounted for more of the
team:s yards in the past two
seasons than anyone else.
After sustaining an injury .in
a loss at Vinton County last
week, senior tailback Jeremy
Roush will be unavailable for
the final contest of the season,
a Friday tilt in Pomeroy
against Belpre, which kicks
off at 7:30.
Roush injured· his knee
against the Vikings and a
return is .not like! y.
Meigs (4-5) appeared on its
way to a chance at a winning
season last week against the
Vikings, ·but ~ urpri s ingly
ended up on the short end of a
40-0 rout.
Chancey was not available
Wednesday night for comment on the game against
Belpre or Roush' s injury.
While Meigs comes intothe
season's final week with a
limp, the Golden Eagles are
·enjoying their finest sea~on in

·.Belpre
at

l

Meigs .-

.,. 7:30 p.m., FrfdaV,

,

Bob .Roberts field
several years, and are in line
for at least a share of the TriValley Conference Ohio
Division Championship with
a win.
.
Regardless of his team's
sudden handicap, it's not likely Chancey intends to use any
excuse for the Marauders, the
seniors for whom will be
playing their final game in
high school.
..
.
"You only get so many
Fridays a year to play football," Chancey has said. "You
just have to go out and enjoy
it as much as you can and
give it' everything you have."
lt •s doubtful ·there will be
any letup in that philosophy
when Belpre enters town, and
while steady and reluctant to
get too up or too down for any
contest, Chancey . kno.ws he .
has both senior night festivities as well as the opportunity
for a rather substantial upset
in his emotional corner.

EHS, SHS reneW rivalry
BY DEREK TAYLOR

Staff writer

TUPPERS PLAINS · Eastern may be ending the-2002
season a day late and a dollar
short, but there may be more to
smile about for the Eagles thiln
a typical sub-.500 season would way- is a rival Southern
offer most programs.
tornadoes squad still in
After losing five straight in search of its first win of the
a year which began at 2-0, the season under Dave Barr. The
Eagles (3-6) and coach Pat purple and gold, led by Matt
Newland have been given Thomas and freshman A.J.
plenty of signs 2003 will be a Simpson, will have potentialsolid campaign in the past ly another long night ahead of
two weeks. To top it all off, them in the final contest · of
the team will play host to the season.
winless Meigs County rival
Meanwhile, Eastern sophoSouthern (0-9) Saturday in more tailback Bryan Minear
Tuppers Plains.
looks to be back in the lineup
To start things off, Eastern Saturday after sustaining a
has managed 68 points in its mild leg injury in the second
last two games, a 42-0 win quarter of the loss to
over Miller and nail-biting Waterford .
Minear
re34-26 loss at Waterford, who emerged in the second half to
now stands on the precipice finish ·the game· with 192
of winning the Tri-Valley yards on the ground to take
Conference Hocking Division him over the 1,000 yard mark
championship.
on the year.
Sophomore . quarterback .
The Eagles defense has
been steady throughout the· Ken Amsbary has also found
year, and with the coming of his feet in recent weeks and
age of the green and white has solidified his role as fielcl
offense, all things point a general. Freshman fullback
happy~ though bittersweet end · Terry Durst has given the
to the season this weekend.
Eagles a much-needed third
Of course, standing in the option in carrying the ball.

Eastern's success bu-ilt on more than talent
One of the most interesting facets
of this profession is getiing to know
the personalities behind the athletes,
seeing what makes a person into the
player, coach, etc., that they are.
To be honest, it's what keeps sports
writers in the market. Whether sports
fafis want to believe it or not, covering athletics gets to be just as monotonous as any other job.
·
At times the last thing a writer
warits to do is go to a game of any
kind, and on days off O(. iri their free
titne, you can bet those, writers are
doing something which is, most often
not sports related..
'·.
.
Therefore, it's a definite bonus
when a writer is able to. find something to cover that make~ work not
only interesting, but something to
look forward to.
Covering Eastern High School's
volleyball squad is one of those
squads that, as Vve ai)'Vays put it, "I
would pay to go see."•; i'.
It's an interesting story to begin
with . Howie Caldwell is the third
coach to guide the program through a
season in as many years, yet despite
the lack of continuity, there must be

Derek
Taylor
ON SPORTS
something .in the water in Reedsville
and Tuppers Plains, because the
school just keeps winning.
There is an unmistakeable talent
pool for the sport that Meigs County
ts enjoying right now, as witnessed in
the year-to-year s.uccess at Meigs
Hi,gh as well as the solid season
enJoyed by Southern in 2002, and
Eastern, with its sectional title and
district tournament bid, is taking the
banner in representing that countywide talent at the next level.
However, it's not just the athleticism of this team which makes it
interesting: It is very much so it's personality not just on the individual
level, but as a team which is of note .
l

It all starts at the top, where · Fellow senior Krystal Baker, whom
Caldwell is one of the most charisma!- I improperly identified as a departed .
ic coaches of any sport at the high member of the roster last week in
school level I've had the opportunity sectional coverage, seems to take
to work with in recent years. While everything in stride. I apologized to
emphatic and exciteable, Caldwell Baker for the mistake at Eagles' pracseems to be firmly based in reality and tice, and the senior assured me tqere
aware of what limitations the Eagles was no problem or .insult taken.
may have. He expects excellence from
"It's okay, I didn't even read it,"
his players because he knows they are Baker said. "I wouldn't have known
capable of it, but mixes his at times about it if coach didn't tell me."
negative reinforcement which is comI really don't know how to take that
mon to many coaches with a degree of other than to be glad the girl wasn't
levity and support which makes him a offended.
rather rare breed.
Seriously, though, it showed the
As a fan of the_ garile, you want selflessness which is needed and preHowie Caldwell to win just by talk- sent on every championship team -to a
ing to him.
.
certain leveL You can have superstars
That trickles down through the ros- and you can have role players, but
ter, as well.
without a sense of knowing that at an
Caldwell has called senior Tiffeny amateur level you play for the name
Lynn Bissell the team's spokesper- on the front of the jersey rather than on
son, if for no other reason than the the back, you're not going anywhere .
girl is a great talker. Never mind the
Eastern. indeed, appears to be
fact she appears to be a solid motiva- lieaded somewhere, and it's a pleator. Bissell carries a measure of sure to follow them.
(Derek Taylor is a sportswriter for
hyperactive cool (as much of a misnomer as it may seem) and shares her The Daily. Sentinel. Colltact him at
coach's sense of humor. She is the 992-2156. ext. 14, or by email at 1
sparkplug, without question. (
dtayior@mydailyselitinel.com.)
I

�.,
PaQe B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

,

Thursday, October 24, 2002

rT~h~u=rs::-;d=a:!.y~,O:::.c::t:::o:=:be::r...!2::4~,2~00~2======:::;-- - - - -

ladle llllelt

Prep Football

........ ,

Point meets real
deal' in Athens

:~----

6

BY

Gallipolis, OH
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

992-2825
OUR

since. One of the losses in
Spor1s correpondent
that 1990 season came
agai~st the Big Blacks in a
contest.
POINT PLEASANT' W."• a. non-league
The
Build
- "Athens is the real deal."
ogs reIYheavilYon
Those were the words of quarterback/defensive back
Point Pleasant coach Steve Grant Gregory, who has
Safford, about · his team's thrown for almost 1,000 yards
opponent th~ Friday night.
this season, and has contributed
"They are a pretty good greatly to a strong defensive
football team," Safford said. unit It was his defense a week
"They did a number on ago that allowed Athens to
Gallipolis last week. They escape Gallipolis with their 22were very opportunistic, tak- 15 victory. He intercepted a
ing advantage of good field pass deep in Bulldog tenitory
position. And, they played a late in the game to preserve the
solid defensive game against win.
The Big Blacks are 3-5
a good offensive team. We
will have to play well to have overall and 1-4 in league play.
Their starting lineups should
any success against ihem."
The Bulldogs are 6-3 overall not change much, although
and 3-2 in.league play. Their there are a couple of injuries
only losses have come against to report. Lee Re:ypolds and
Portsmouth (22.:0), Logan (6- Ezra Carr are sun nursing
0) and Marietta (35-32). In the ankle injuries and both are
latest ratin)lS released by the listed as doubtful. ·
state of Ohio, the Bulldogs are
Additionally, Nic Dalton
ranked lOth in the Division II, didn't practice on Wednesday
Region 7 standings. The due to an ankle irijury, but _he
Bulldogs are on the bubble for is listed as probable.
•
a playoff spot with the top - "Our goals are to -nm the
eight in each region advance ball, eat up some clock, and
to the playoffs.
minimize our turnovers," said
· Regardless of the outcome Safford. "If we can do those
on Friday, this will be the best things offensively and not
finish for an Athens team give up the big play on
since 1990 when they went7- defense, we will have a
3. They have not come close chance to pull this thing out,"
to a
finish in any year- Safford SaJd.
-

EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN NEXT WEEK'S MATCHUPS

6

Ancnw Carter
Asst. Editor
Record: 62·28
Last week: 7-3

Butch Cooper
Spor1s Staff
Record: 73-17
Last week: 6-4

DanHarmea
Spor1s Stall

Bryan Long
- Copy Editor

iwlnnari In .llll.lliJ

(winners In illlkl)

(winners In .llll.llll

(winners In .llll.llll

Logan at

Logan at
GellleA.-w

Lapnat
Gallia Academv

Logan at
Qllll• Ac';rfrnv

Logan at
Gill!• ~cadtmy

Qtll.. ,&amp;cedrmy

6lbiDa at

Alliloaat

Point Pleaaant

- Point Pleaaam

Wlfwnlat
F'lrkotlburg Cain. (Sat)
Fairland at
RIY"r Y.le.y

Wlthama al

P.M e1

mc;w.. (Sal)

BIIJDat
Meigs

Albina at
Point Pleasant

Alhtnaat
PolmPieaaant

WJhlnw at
ParMrsburg Cath. (Sat)

Wahamaat PwMI I rn Cl!b, (Sit)

RM!r Valle)&gt;

River valley

hiiHII at

hbnat

IIIIIJDal

Belpre at

Meigs

Mila

Meigs

Southern at

SOuthern at
Eeetem (Sat.)

Quvan Valley

SOOth (lailla at
Guwny.n.y

0•'"' at
Cluyan Ville)&gt;

Hannan at

Hannan at

lllbop QpnlbUf

...... QOntblJI

l:llnnln.at

Routh Rll!!e 81 •

PtrkMehum 'Nrth
at Rock Hill

Blahop Donahue

M•"'ltl•t

Marietta ••

C!bteemt

Sqylb

Plrkeflburg SOuth

Cbeet••U

Clwu•ke

·It Rock Hill

al Rock Hill

Nallonal Foolball League

w

Mlami. ......... ... 5

Buffalo .............4

New England .. 3
N.Y. Jets :........ 2

w

AFC
Eut
LTPCIPFPA
2 0 .714 19() 143
3 0 .571 217 214
3 0 .500 152 134
• 0 .333 95 169

SOuth

LTPCIPFPA
2 0 .667 124 118
Jacksonville ....3 3 0 .500 12B . 112
Tennessee ..... .2 4 0 .333 160 173
Houston .... ...... 1 5 0 -.167 83 157
North
w LTPCIPFPA
Baltimore ........ 3 3 0 .500 104 111
Pittsburgh ....... 3 3 0 .500 138 122
Cleveland ....... 3 4 0 .429 161 151
Cincinnati ...... .0 6 0 .000 51 tB1
WOII
WLTPCIPFPA
Indianapolis .... 4

San Diego ..... 6

1

o .857 173 119

Den.er. .. ........ 5
Oakland ........ ...

2
2

o .714 183 154
0 .667 196 14$

Kansas Citv .... 3

4

o .429 239 230

.

.

South Gallla at
Qmn 'IIIIey

South Qallia at

South Q•llll at

Qu"'" yanu

Cluvan Valley

Hannan at

Hannan at
llahgp pgn•h(M

IIIDnanat
Bishop Donahue

ctw. . .p .

Arizona ... ,....... 4

2

0 .667 108

San Fran&lt;&gt;sco4

2

0 .667 142 116

St.Louis ... 11 .... 2

s

-a .286 139 158

Seattle ........... 1 5 0 .167 125 152
Sundlly'a Gllmea
Seattle at Dallas, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
aevetand at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.

Tampa Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.

Atlanta at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Chica~o at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
PittsbUrgh at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Denver at New England,4:15 p.m.
Houston at Jacksonville, 4:15 p.m.

Indianapolis at Washington, 8:30p.m.
Open: Miami, San Diego, .Green Bay, St.
·
Mondlly'o Gome
N.Y. Giants at P'hiladalphla, 9 p.m.

NASCAR
Wln11on Cup Serlee
The 2002 NASCAR Wlnoton Cup ochod- .
ule (winners ln. parenthooeo) and drtvor

point atandlng1:

Feb. 17- Davtona 500, Ca)'lcna Btach,
Fla. (Ward Burton)
·
Fob. 24 - Subway 400, Rockingham,
N.C. (Man Konllth)
March 3 - UAW·CalmlorChryoltr &lt;100,
Lll Vogu (Starling Mlrlln)
Maron 10 - MBNA Am. rica 15001
Hompton, Qa. (lbny SIIWirt)
Morch 17 - Corollna Codilo ONiara
400, Dorllnil1o~C. (Stoning Martini
March 24 City 500, ltlatol, '!linn.
(Kurt BuiOh)
April I - samoung,IAadloShaolc 800,
~ort Worth, Tuio. (Maft Konootll)
April 14 - Vlrglnlo 500, Martlnovllo.
(8olll&gt;y Llbontt)
April 21 - Aaron'o 411, Tllladlga, All.
(Dole Earnhirdl Jr.)
April 28 - NAPA Auto ~1rt1 800,
Fontano , CIIH (Jimmlo Johnoon)
Mov 4 - Pontiac Exoltomtn1 · 400, .
Richmond. (Tony Sttw«rt)
May 26 - Coca-Cola 500, Conoord, N.C.
(Mark Martin) _

Juno 2 - MBNA PlaUnum 400, COYer,
Region 7-1 . Avon Like (8·1) 22.4444. 2.
Qroen '(8-1) 22.1169. 3. Groll!&gt;n Mkllrlaw
Del. (Jimmie JOhnson!
.
June 8 - Plloono &amp;oo, Long Pond, Pl. (8-0) 18.3886. 4. Eaat Liverpool (8·3l .
(Colo Jarrett)
18.2008. G. Marl- (8·1) 16.0901. 8.
Juno ta- Michigan 400. Brooklyn. (Matt _ Macedonia Nordonla (8-1) 1!.90155. 7.
Konoeth)
Mana. Madaon (8-3) 14.8555. 8. Copley (8Juno 23 - Dodge/save Mart 350, 3) 1•.2500. 9. Richfield R...re · (6-4)
sonoma, CoiH. (Ricky Ruddl
14.0611.10. A1hona (e·3l 12.7866.
July I - Plpli 400, Davtona Btoch, Flo.
Realon 5-1 . Klnga Millo Klnga (9.0)
(Micll.oel Waltrip)
211.1i58. 2. Day. Cham-Julienne (9.0)
July 14 -ltojllcano 400, Jollot, ID. (Kovln 25.7422. 3. Vandalia Butltr (8-1) 23.7500.
4. '!i'onton Edgewood (8-1) 20.1866. 5.
Har&gt;k*J
July 21 - Now England 300, Loudon, Loveland (8·1) 19.0243. 6. '!i'otwood·
N.H. (Ward Burton)
Madlaon (7·2) 18.8833. 7. Dar Corroll (7·2)
July 28- PIMoyt&gt;anla 500, Long Pond. 17.8055. 8. Cln. Woodward (8-1) 15.5458.
(Bill Elliott)
9. Ckt Mt. Healthy (7·2) 15.4288. 10. Cln.
Aug. 4- Br1cl&lt;yara 400, lndlanapollo. (Bill Mc:Nicholao (6-3) 14.8333.Elliott)
DIVIStON Ul
Aug. 11 - Slrlus SateDIIt Radio at Tho
Region 9-1 .
Benedictina (8-1 1
Glen, Wattdna Qlen, N.Y. (Tony S-ri)
24.9277. 2. Hunt Yaltey lJnlv. School (7·2)
Aug. 18 - Pepli 400, Brooklyn, Mich. 22.ole80. 3. Uobon
(8·tl 20.6132. 4.
(Dale Jarrett)
·
SteubefMIIe (8-1) 20.32116. S. Richmond
• Aua. 24, - Sharpie 500, Brtatol, Tenn. Edlaon (8-t) 19.5954. 6. H/Jibard lt1!
18.2055. 7. Chollerlond w. Geaugl ·2
(JatfQordon)
Sept. 1 -Southern 500, Dertlngt_
on, S.C. 15.4846. B. Parma -His. Holy Name 8-3
14.5611. 9. Po~nd Seminary (6-3) 14.4688.
(Jelf Gordon)
Sept 7 - Chevy Monte Carlo 400, 10. WIIT&amp;rllllille HIS. (6-3) 13.0753.
Region 1Q-1 . Ook Harbor JB-1) 25.4000.
Richmond, Va. (Matt l&lt;aneeth)
Sept. t 5- New Ha"l'Shhre 300, Loudon. 2. \tlo) Akron Buchtel (9-0), Akron Hoban
(8- ) 23.7555. 4. Willard (9-1) 21.4277. 5.
(R_yan Newman)
Stpt. 22 - MBNA America 400. 00.., Cuva. FallS WalSh Jesuit (6-3) 20.0208. 6.
Conal Fulton N.W. (8-1) 18.5944. 7. Medina
Del. (Jimmie JOhnaon)
Sept. 29 - Protoc:tlon One 400; Kansas Bud&lt;8yo (8-1) 18.0611 . 8. Napoleon (1-1)
17.9333. 9. Wooster Triway (7·2) 14.9944.
City, Kan. (Jeff Clordon) ·
Oct. 6 - EA Spotta 600, Talladega. Ala. 10. Clvde (6-3) t3.Bm.
Reolon 11-t. Newatk Licking Voile)&gt; (9-0)
(Dale Earnt)ardl Jr.)
·
Oct. 13 - UAW·GM Quality 600, 26. ~. 2 Cots. OeSalea (7-2) 23.B:l68. 3.
Conoo&lt;d, N.C. (Jamie McMurray)
Cots. wetterson (6-3~.7000. 4. arc~&lt;wille
is Clalla Acad. (7-2)
Oct. 20 - Martinavllle 500, Mar11paville, (8-1) 19.2666. 5. Ga
17.11e07. 6. Cola.
amlnon Twp. (7·2)
Va. (Kurt Buoch)
' ,
18.5000. 7. Cots. Beechcroft (7·2) 16.2833:
Oct. 27 - NAPA 600, Hampton, Qa.
Nov.3- Pops....t400, -Uii&gt;Tl, N.C. B. SUrbJry Bit Walnut (00) 15.5500. 9.
Nov. 10 - Checker Auto Parts 500K, Thornville Sheridan (7·2) 14.4833. 10.
Whltehal~\llanlng (7-2) 14.1166.
Avondale, Ariz.
.
Region 12-1. Utbana (9-Q) 21 .5055. 2.
Nov. 17-Hon biad400,HOI"''-'""'"'.Fla.
Clermantown Yalley View (9-0)'21.2777. 3.
-D~vwr-ngo
Tlpp City Tl"""""noe (8·1) 18.8000. 4.
1. Tony Stewart . ....... .. .... ........ .... ...4,283
Belbrook (6-3) 14.9555. 5. New Richmond
2. Jinmle JOhnson .... .... ...... .....'.... ..4,181
8·1! 13.5697. 6. Oay. Dunbar (6·3~
3. Mark Martin ........ .. .......... ,.. ......... 4,140
3.5348. 7. St. Paris Graham (7·2
4. Ruoty Wallace ... ......... ........... ...... 4,089
13.2833. e. St Marys Memorial (6-3
5. Ryan Newman ............... ..............4,086
13.0381!. 9. Cln. Wyoming (6-3) 12.~111 .
e. Jeff Gordon ....... .. .. ........... ........... 3.972
10. BeHefontalne (8-3) 12.2333.
7. Kurt Busch ................ ..... ..... f! ..... 3,946
CIVISION IV
B. Matt Kenaeth .............................. 3,929 .
Region 13-1 . Akron Manchester (9-0)
9. R!cky Rudd ....... .. .. .. ... .................3,923
20.1120. 2. Cie&gt;e. VA·St Josepll (7·2)
10. Dale Jarrett ..................... ........... 3,862
18.6388. 3. Girard (8·1)· 1B.0055. 4.
11 . Bill Elliott .......................... ,.........3,624
Sullivan Blaclc River (8·1) 17.2944. 5.
12. Dale Earnhardt Jr...................... 3,784
Chagrin Falls (7·2) 15.0650. 6. East
13. Sterling Martin ....... .................... 3,703
Palestine (8-1) 14.5388. 7. Peny (7·2)
14. Jeff Burton .................................3,690
14.5050. 8. Akron St. Vincent.St.Mary (5-4)
15. Michael wanrlp .. .................. :..... 3,601
13.6555. 9. '!bung. Moonev (5-4) 13.2000.
16. Ricky Craven .. .. ....... .. ....... ....... ..3,498
10. Young. Ursuline (4·5) 11 .4838.
17. Bobby Labonte .. .......... .. ............ 3,413
Region 14-1. Kenton (7·2) 21.7500. 2.
18. Jeff Groen ........ .............. ..... ,...... 3,367
Ollawa·Giandort (B· 1) 1e.3944. 3.
19. Dave Blaney .............................. 3,287
Rosslord (7 -2) 18.0666. 4. Archbold (B-1)
20. Robby Gordon ........... ................ 3,232
17.4944. 5. Upper Sanduskv\7·2) 16.6555.
6. PamborvHie Eastwood (9- ) 14.6722. 7.
Marion River Valley (7 ·2) 14.4833. B. Huron
(6·3) 14.1666. 9. Della (e-1) 13.9388. 10.
Wetlingto~ (6·3) 13.2277.
OHSAA Computer Rating•
Region 15-1 . Portsrr&lt;luth (8-1) 25.0543. 2. New Lexington (9-0) 24.5500. 3.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here are tho sixth Porlsmouth West (9-1) 20.6104. 4.
weekly fllOiball oornputer r~~tings lrom the Coshocton (9-0I;:s2000- s. Len&lt;;. Fairfield
Ohio High School Athletic Association. U~B-1) 19.
. 6. Martins Ferry (9-0)
Ratings are by dilllslon and regioo with 17.
. 7. Wellston (7·2) 16.6944. 8. 1ronton
record and average bl-tevel points per (6·2) 16.4nO. 9. WINMiv (7-2) 16.4000. 10.
gafJ)e (top elaht teams in each region WlliarnsporiW-11 (7·2! 13.6277.
advance 10 reglonal quarterfinals):
Region 16-1 . Arcl'lllshop Alter (8·1)
DIVISION I
, '
24.1602. 2. Reading (9-0) 21 .4611 . 3. •
Region 1-1 . SOlon (9-0) 32.7186. 2. Coldwaler (9-0~ 20.6833. 4. Plain City
Warren Harding (9-0) , 29.4416. 3. Jonathon Alder 8·1) 19.0668. 5. Clarkavllte
Lal&lt;ewood St. Edward (8· t) 22.3333. 4. Cllnton·Maasle 8·1) 15.4084. 6. W. Millon
Memor (8-1) 21 .5833. 5. Lakeside (7·2) Milton-Union ( ·3) 11 .8500. 7.' Dayton
21.3275. 6. StrongsvMio (7·2) 20.1055. 7. Oakwood (7-2)' 11 .7386. 8. Spring
North Olmlled (7-2) 17.9222. B. Cleve. St. Nortl\eestern (6·3) 11 .4111 . 9. Ham. Badin
lgnatlua (8-3) 17.5294. 9. Parma HIS. Valley (3-6) 10.1833. tO. Brooi&lt;YIIIe (5-4)9.5500.
Forge (7·2) 17.1777. 10. Young.
DIYISIONY
Auolintown·Fitch (6·3) 17.1277.
Region 11- 1. Smlllwllle (9-Q) 20.5055.
Region 2-1 . Brunswick (9.()) 24.1833. 2. 2. Middlefield Cardinal (9·0) 16.5666. 3.
Findlay (8-1) 23.4m. 3. Tol. StJOhn~ (6-3) Rocky River Luth. W 18·1) 15.8111 . _4.
17.0244. 4. Hudaon (9-0) 18.8111 . 5. Bedford Chanol (7·2) 15.566S. 5. Calion [8·
(8-3) 16.0666. 8. Spt~South (8- 1) 15.1611. 8. New Mlddlttown.Springtiold ·
3) 15.TOOO. ?. Marion HardWtil (tl 15.0668. 6·3) 12.3811 . 7. Gates Mills Gilmour Acad.
6·3) 11 .9166. 8. Newton Falla (6·3)
8. Aloon Clarfleld ~2) 14.3?22. . (~) 13.6e66. 10.
(~) 13.6333.
1.4833. 9.Warren Kennedy (5-4) 11.3425.
Region 3-1 . ublln Cottman (8·1) 10. Clatea Millo Hawken (7-2) 10.8881 .
26.61 t 1. 2. Dublin Sdoto (9-0) 25.8888. 3. N.
Region 19-1 . Del. Tlnora (8-0) 18.2950.
ConlOn HOOYOr (7·2) 24.4500. 4. 2. Bucyrus Wvrt1ord· (8·1j 18.2555. 3.
Plcl&lt;artna1on (8-t) 23.6.222. 6. Mala. Piny Hamler Pattlck Henry 18· ) 17.711 t . • (8-1) ~-2000- 8. Gahanna Llnooln (7·2) Dalphoo St. John'a (7·2) 16.3970. 5.
11.8000. 7. Mall WalhinQton (7·2) 17.-461 t . Caatalla Morgaretta (7·2) 14.7811 . 8.
8. Uppof Altlngton (6-3) t1.144U. Xonla (8- Columbia Slltlon Columt&gt;a (7·2) 14.2722.
7. Lorain Claarvlew (7·2) 13.2888. 8.
3) t4.sooo. 10.
C11y~-2b1•.TOOO .
Region o&amp;-1 . Cln. Elder 8-1 28.4&amp;ie. 2. Colllna Wltotarn Rtooerve jB·1) 12.4500. 8.
Cln. Andoroon (8·0) 2 .IB 3. 3. Cln. Celphoa Jefloreon (7·2 11 .6055. - 10.
Coltrain (8·11 23.7333. 4. Huber Htl. Bluffton (7-21 11 .0944.
Wlvrtt (7-2) 22.811 t. 5. Cln. St. Xovltr (8Region 19-t . WoOdoflal~ Monroe
3) . 22.0882; e. Cla)'lcn NorthrnOI'I (7·2) Control (9·0) 21 .0400. 2. Amanda·
21.3000. 7. Cln. Princeton (7•2) 20.7etl8. 8. Cltlta"Hk (7·2) 1e.5844. 3. Barntovilli 18·
LtOanon (8·11 20.3888. t. Cln. Moalltr (8· 1~1Uia&amp; . ~. Sarahavillt Shonontloah e.
3) 1U4U. 10. Mlamllbllrg (8·3)17.10a&amp;. 3 13.1 G56. 5. Johnltown-Moni'OIJI·2)
DtVIIIONlt
1 .1188e. e. SltuD. C8th. Ctnt
·2)
Region 5-1. Loulavllll (8.0) 2•.5333. 2. 12.1a&amp;1 . 7: Whllltrtburg (5-4) 11.8
.••
can"old ~;c; 21 .8'1'22. ~- Uniontown Like JohnatoVIn NorthrY.o (1·3) 11 .aeaa. 9.
(1-3) 20.
• • · Madleon (1-1) I 1.2311. 1. Crookovlllo
11 .7188.
10.
Olmo*l ~~~~~ (7·21 n .aeae. e. W.rron CHIIA~IAKI U 11.1111.
HOwtand~l 11.o&amp;l7. 1. 'itlung. Chlnav
Region 20-1 . arion Pltoaantj-o
(1-~1 1
Ohlartn l'elil Klrltlon (80 11.1m. 2. Loto Crook E. Clinton t-O
31 11.0000. ~ Qai!told Mol;nll (7·1) 1Ul33. 3. Mo"al Rldgldllt
·2
13........ 1O. M~la Hilt. (8-3) 13.2277.
1Ul33. • - Cln. Hilla Chrtltlln ACid. -o
Raalon 5-1 . ~. CIIilll (1-1) 24.1717.. 1~.1401. e. Clahlnna ·Cola. ACid. 1·1
2, COlt. llrool&lt;hl11t11 (..1I 2U444. 3: 13.7811 . a. flllnbrldge Paint Vallov 1·1
Mlumoe (1-2) 20.I :133. .f. Tl1fln Colu~an 1U3a&amp;. ?. Colo. Roacly (7-2)12 .92 . e.
1·1) IUIOO. 5. ~- Cont. CothMe-1) llt'flllltl (ii-311U~a. 0. Arcanum (7·2)
1.3777. e. Cola. Will,..- Aldllt - e-1) 10.8318. 10. s Honrv (11-~l U811 .
CIVIIIONVI
11.2571. 7. Colo. MIH!n (8-31
1.
Region 21-1 . Mogacloro (1·1) 18.2000.
Colt. at. Charlo• la-3J 1a.13H. e. eo11.
lndopor1donoa (1-t 14.0187. tO. Oregon 2. Lowollvlllt (D-O) 1! .7388. 3. Eo at can1on
Clay (8·3)1 3.1144.
(7·2) t 1.1000. 4. Wlndhtm (8·1) n .1!087.

a.....

11·3

e.

·I·

1

rr.:

I

\

MartinSville, Va.

T

II Rock Hill

5. Monrt11YIIIe (7·2) 10.7000. 6. Cleve.
Cuya. Hto. (8-3) 1o.-41M6. 1. Lllltonla (8-3!
10.4500. 8. St Mary COntrat Cothollc (5-4
10.1B33. 9. Kirtland (1-4) 8.0403. 10.
Norwalk St. Paul (5-4)8.0111 .
Region 22-1 . Columbua Qrove ·(9-0)
16.9222. 2. Tlflln CoM!rt (1·2) 18.2333. 3.
Edon (9-0) 15.819(). 4. Northwood ~
15.8500. S. Rawaon Cory-Rawaon 8-1
14.0222. 6. S more Mohawk
·2
12.B833. 7. Ail: Seneca Eut 8·3
10. 7818. 8. Hopewell-Loudon
·2
10.4688. 9. McComb (6-3) 9.9388.10.
.
A)'OIOvlllo (6-3)9.5854.
Region 23-'-1 . Stra&amp;burg·Franldln (9-0)
14.7277. 2. Danville (8·1) 12.2723. 3.
Sl\advaldo 17-2) 11 .73flll. 4. Wilow Wood
SVmmes Vale)&gt; (7·2) 10.5603. 5. Millersport
(&amp;-3! 10-0111 . e. Newark Coth. (5-4) 8.8427.
1.
(6-3) 8.1458. 8. BtoHavllle (5-41
7.0555. 9. Glouaterlllmble (8-3) 6.7611. 10.
Belaire St. John (4-5) 6.7131 . .
Realon 24-1 . Marla Stein Marion Local
(8·1) 18.1000. 2. Dota Hardin Northern (9·
0) 16.0055. 3. Mechanicsburg (9·0)
14.7555. 4. Covington (9-0J 14.4833. 5.
Troy Christian (8·1) 12.9092. 6. S.
Charteston SE (7·2) 12.21 t 1. 7. Anna (7-2)
10.4688. 8. Cln. Country Coy (7-2)9.6660.
9. N. Lowllburg Trlad (B·3) 8.4277. 10.
DeGraff RM!r11lde (6·3) 8.0658. _

w-

AIIOCiated Prell State Polls
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a slate panel
Of sports wri1era and broadcasters rates
Ohio high IOI&gt;ool football teams In the sixth
-kiV Associated Press poll of 2002, by
OHSAA divisions, with won-lost roa&gt;rd and
total points (llrst-plaoa votes In parenthe·
sea):
DIVISION I
W-L Pto
1. Warren Harding (30) ............8-0 359
2. Solon (5) ........... ...................8-0 306
3. Cubt!n Scioto (1) .... ... ...........8-0 2e1
4. Cln. Elder (1) ...... ..................7·1 22S
5. Brunswick .. .............. ... :.. .......8-0 170

6. t.!allilion Wlohlngton .......... 7-1
7. Cle. St. lgnauus,................... B-2

148
122
117
97

8. Cln. Anderaon ...................... 8-0
9. Cubtln Coffman ...... .... .......... 7·1
10. Lllcawood St. Edward ......... 7·1
7lf
Ollloro rtcolvtng 12 or moro pointe:
11. Pickerington 28. 12. Flndlav 24 ..13. Cln.
Colerain 21.14. Hudeon 14.
DIVISION II
W-L Pto
1 . ~~('.11) .....8-0
335
2. Loulavtlle (1 1).................. .....8-0 601
3. Tol. cant Clth. (2) .............. .8-0 . 237
4. Kings Milia Klngo (1) .... .. .... ..8-0 231
.6· Canlleld ............ ..... .....~....... .. B-0 218
8. Tot St. Francis (2) ................7-1
164
7. Loveland ..............................9-0 152
B. Cola. Brookliaven ................. 7·1
116
9. Macedonia Nordonla (1) ... .. .9-0 106
10. llolwood-Madlaon ............... 7·t
35
Othon ,_lYing 12 or mora polntl:
t 1. Vandalia Butler 31. 12. Qraflon Midview
21. t 3. Green 20. 14. Madlaon 1B. 15.
Willoughby South 15. 16. Tlflln Columbian
12.
I
DIVISION Ill
W·L
Pto
1. Akr. BUchtel (18) ..................8·0 . 332
2. Newark Licking Valley (5) .....8·0 298
3. Clermantown V8ilol' View (5) ....8·0 270
4. Hubbard ...... ..... ....................8·0 224
5. Oak Harbor (3) .... .................8·0 181
6. Cle. Benedictine (1) .............7·1 - 156
7. Urb.ana .............. .. ......... ....... .8-0 127
8. Akr. Hoban (1) ..................... .7·1 · t21
9. Steubonvll~ (1) ..... .. .............7·1
82
10. Cola. DeSales .....................6-2
49
Othel'li receiving 12 or mo,. polntl:
11 . Llabon Btaver 34. 12. Napoleon 31. 13.
Willard lCI'. 14. Conal FuHon NW 16. 15.
CuvahOIII Falls Walsh Jaau• 15. 18. (TIE)
ClALLIPOLIS QALLIA ACADEMY, Cols.
Watterson 12.
DIVISION IV
W·L -Pto
t. Coldwater (21) .. .. .... ........ .....8·0 345
2. New Lexington (5) ............... .8-0 267
3. Akr. Manchesler (3) ...... .......6-0 264

- 4. Coahocton .......................... .. 8-o 23fl
5. Ottawa-Glandorf (2) .. .... ....... 9-0 185
6. Martins Ferrv (3) ........... ..... .. 9-0 173
7. Porlernouth ........... ....... .. ..... 7-1 . 117
8. Kettorlng Mer (1) .. ...........;... 7·1
t05
9. lronton ... .. ........ ..;... .............. .6·1
69
10. Reading (1) .... ..................... 8-0
51
Othlre rocolvlng 12 or moro potnta:
11 . Kenton 27. 12. Plain City Jonathan
Alder 25. 13. (lie) Archbolcf, Ciarks•llte
Clinton-Mallie 20. 15. East Palestine :16.
16. (tie) Roaalord, Sullivan Black RM!r 15.
18. Girard 14.
DIVISIONY
.
W-L
Pto
1. Marion Pieaaant (26) ...........8-0 337
2 Woodallsld- (5) .......... 8-o 306
3. Sm~lwllle (2) ............... ......... 8-0 292
4. Middlefield C.rdlnal (1) ........ 8-0 :il28
5. Amanda-Ciearcreek (1) ....... 8-1
t7B
e. Cln. Hills ............................... B-0 ~211
7. Delphos St. John'o... ............B-2 124
e. Dalton ............... ......... .......... 7.·1
114

c.

9. Bamesvllle ............ ............... 7·1

7. Dola Hardin Northern .......... 8-0

BODINE

'

I

.

(

I
I
I

Grissom was-signed just for Sunday's race, bUt
with four events left on the season, he may be called
, upon again to drive the No. 44 car of Petty

Enterprises.

Cars aash at pi actice
Jeff Burton and Mike Skinner crashed during

Saturday's practice session, and Burton attributed
the wreck to the ·grinet.in,g of the track, which left
grooves similar to those that are ground ihto a highway just before a repaving job.
Burton said Skinner went into the corner in the
htgh groove and turned to the Lnslde lane as he e~~: ited
the turn, a maneuVer that was rare with the old rae·
ing surface. When Skinner dropped low, Burton was
there.
"It was a case of two people in the
hole,"
Burton said.

•
.'

'

.

'

,.

.·

: €hatg1qgftom3"6.th spot; , ::.'.:':~!':e:'!f:!=.'::~
.No. 91
qattJ.es for win , ~l1$0111JA111lBusoliab:.mpoomlnsotflurn

car

.,·'

the lea&lt;l
.
' ..
"I know how hiUiii'Y he Is. but we were starv·

Busch Series driver Hank Parker Jr. is set to make
his Winston Cup debut in the Pop Secret 400 at
Rockingham in two weeks, driving a third car for Ray
Evernham .

lng,loo. We needed to JIB! thatoec:Ond win."
• Busch sekl the early spin was not a big con·

......

Japrutese driver Hldeo Fukuyama made his second

said.
'
.
Rk:ky Rudd aiBo oVercantJl early problems. He '

Career Winston Cup start Swulay and finished last at
Martinsville, one .of the series' tightest tracks. He
was 39th in his debut Sept. 22 at Dover.

toottwolapseatiylntheraceW!Ihacutttre,

WlNS'roN CUP
STANDINGS
t . Tony Stewart, 4,263 .
2. J immie Johnson, 4,181.
3. Mark Marlin, 4,140.
4. Rusty Wallace, 4,089.
5. Ryan Newman, 4,086.
6. Jeff Gordon, 3,972.
7. Kurt Busch. 3,946.
8. Matt Kense1h, 3,929.
9. Rlckv Rudd, 3,923.
10. Dafe Jarrett, 3,B62.
11 . Bill Elliott, 3,824.
12. Dale Earnherdt Jr., 3,784.

·-•

'.
•
•
,."

~

.~

!1
~~

,I

.,·'••, •

•Burton wasflfth.

AD-of 11\e rears about the newly ground taC·
\ng surfa&lt;:e at Mrutinsvlll~ Speedway turned,
out 10 be unftnrnded. Tire '!'ear WB9 not"'""""
alve, and.lhere Wilre two !]Cing grOove$
~(therace.

DRIVER STANDINGS

•'
••

.••

,.

~

Homest~·Mlami Spoolway

••-,

r:
!_.
..'•'•
.,'•.
:.,
••
,••

,

Dale Earnl&gt;ai'dt Jt tlnl.shed tourlh and WOI'd

Pennzoil
11\oenix international Raceway
Noy. 17 ~ Ford 400,

-.
•

••

rialor til hie No. 23 Ford.

N&lt;iv. 3 ~ Pop Secret 400,
North Carolina Speedway
Nov. 10 - Checker Auto Parts 500 presented by

';~

~

, "

but miide up the deficit fithln the llrst 100 lapo;
he fb\lshtld thll.\! \!e9Pite a mall\mctlonlng-ill~

AlOOK AHEAD

,..,..

.

"I waan't reallY worrled about it because at
MartJn!iVUle, yon can spin around, make a lot of
smo~ - smokescreen everybody - and sts,y on
the lllOI!Isp and onlY IOS&lt;l a few posltlono," he

I act-place finish for IUcuyam;l

••

n

2 with two,laps to gO, but Butlcll recovered and
beat Berisort 10 the check&gt;l'ed Dag by four car- ·~
len(lths.
.
"[tried 10 move him otitof thOwB)Iond that
vras about lt," said Ileruion, Who rarely uses h~
bumper to move ooropellton; "I don'I know If
that IB thdtest way to do it. I raced him hard ~
a Uttle bunlP here and there. I've'seen him do it,
' so you kind of rare the _same waJ&lt;"
•
Benson e¢d he cJQeSil't l'!l8ll't not repayit\8
Butlcll fo,r Bristol by~ him COit)pletely
out of tha \Val(
_
"That wasil.boutall yilu cando wlthoutgt'j• . i ' $
llnjl a $11!' t'e!d utiSot.'' ~ said. . .
.
Buscl:l'"!!db• had no complaints af!otll .
BellS01l'S driving; . , ·
"He raced irte I!J'OIIt, I raced )tJm ~t"
Buseh sal¢ "I bUmped hlrn at BrlsWI to get Into

.Winston Cup debut

••
•
••

'

Dally Sentinel for
details

Dave or
Jessica
992-2155

Mart:in.svllle, Va.

·
29. Ken Schrader, 2,686.
30. ·Johnny Benson, 2.614 .

31 . Bobby Hamilton, 2,515.

32. Ml~e Skinner, 2,505.
33. Casev Alwood, 2.444.

34. Steve Park, 2,273.

35. Jeny Nadeau, 2, 250.
38. Joe Nemechek, 2,184.
37. Bren Bodine, 2, 160.

..

38. Todd Bodine, 1,80B. ·
39. Hut Stricklin, 1,781 .
40. Stacv Compton, 1,527.

TRUCK SERIES STANotNQS
20. Larry Foyt, 2,818.
-------------------------------~---------BUSCH SERIES
1. Mike Bliss, 2,922.
· 21 . Aahlon Lewis, 2,705 .
STANDINGS
2. Rick CraWford, 2,837.
22. Keny Earnhardt, 2,773.
1. Greg Biffle, 4,244.
3. Ted Muagrave, 2,773.
23. Jaff Green, 2,723.
2. Jaaon Keller, 4,139.
4. David Sterr, 2,753.
24. Kevin Grubb, 2,57B.
3. Scott Wimmer, 3,887.5. Jason Leffler, 2,701 .
25. Kevin Lep~ga , 2,551 .
4. Jack Spregue, 3,808.
6. Dennis Setzer, 2,698.
28. Rick'( Hendrick, 2,125.
6. Mike McLaughlin, 3,755.
7. Robert Pressley, 21660.
27. Jlmmv Spancer, 2,113.
6. Kenny Wallace. 3,8e7.
B. Torry Cook,.2,647.
28. Mlcheel WaHrlp, 1,915.
7. Jamie McMurrav. 3,e17.
9. Travis Kvapll, 21691 .
29. Shane Hell, 1,813.
8. Scott Riggs, 3,594.
10. Coy Glbba, 2,563 .
30. Jeff Burton, 1 795.
9. Bob~y H'arnllton Jr., 3,588.
11. Brendan Qaughan, 2,4e9.
31 . Mark Clreen, 1.517.
10. Randy LaJoie, 3,473.
12. Jon Wood, 2,407,
32. Brian VICkere, 1,491.
11. Tonv Raines, 3,470.
13. Lance Norlek, 2,280.
33. Caaoy Kohne, 1,483.
f:i. Stacy Cor!ipton. 3.483.
14. Bobbv Dotter, 2,186.
· 34. Joe Nomechek, 1,453.
13. Tim sauter, 3,287.
15. Matt Crafton, 2.036 .
35. Je.V Sauter, 1,437.
1'4, Honk Perker Jr., 3,119.
t 16. C&amp;rlos Contreraa, 2, 028.
38. Chad Chamn, 1,430.
t5. Johnny Sauler, 3,048 •
1 · 17. Bill Lester, 1,972.
37. Mike Wallace. 1,315.
16. Shane Hmlfll, 3,ote.
I 16. lance Hooper, 1.935.
38. Jeff Purvis, 1,309.
17. Ron Hornaday,- 2,856.
t 19. Steve Ponenga, 1,879.
3g, Mike Harmon, 1,174.
18. Todd Bodine, 2,B37 .
1 20. Brtan Rosa, f ,870.
40. Br11d Teague, 1,032.
' 19. Kany Earnhardt, 2,819.

Main Street,
_Rutland, Ohm

740-742-2289
1-800-837·8217

Ward Bwton, who speaks with a Slow Virginia
di'awl, and his new crew chief Frankie Stoddard, a
fast·talking New Hampshire native, have become
quite the odd couple during their rmt few races
"together.
Communication during ~s seems to be somewhat of a problem.
T\\•ice during the early laps of the Old
11om inion EOO, Burton didn't come into the pits
even though Stoddard and the crew·were expect·
ing him.

"I couldn't understand a thing Frankie was say.
Burton said. ''And I can't understand [car
owner] Bill Davis either."
Burton, who fmished flfth, said the problem
isn't the accents.
"My hearing, from shooting so much as a kid
without ear plugs, is shot," Burton said. "I've got
to get the volume up on my radio."
ing,"

Raa! p!IM!S 'bl' for Earnhardt:
[,ike many of his competitors, Dale Earnhardt
had considerable body damage on his car face - alter the final short·
track race of the season .
"It was a lot or fun,"
Earnhardt said. "You had to
use every corner of the car at
some point 1n time either to be
on the offensive or the defen·
sive."
"You had to really get
aggressive with some guys
EARNHARDT .
a lo_t of guys out there
will take a little more room
than you want to give them, and it's whoever barks
the loudest at that point.''.
Jr.

•

.

.

Rookie leams short-trade lesson
Rookie Ryan Newman drove ·l ike a veteran in·
winning the pole, but by the end of the race he
was back in the learning mode.
•
'If cooked the brakes,'' he said. "I was too aggressive at the start of the race. It's one of those thlngs
at Martinsville, being a rookie I messed up. Being
out front, l should have slowed down a little bit"

Dave _or
Jessica
992-2155

And once he realized he'd burned up his brakes,

there was little he could do, other than ride it Out
to a 15th-place finish .

lmmy ~pe nce r. NASCAR 's

"Mr. Excitement" for many
years, may have mellowed
some, but he still can put some
electricity into routine events
like question-and-answer ses·
sions.
Spencer, who fmished 24th in
Sunday's ·oLd Domir.lion 500 at
Martinsville Speedway,
expounded on a variety of subjects Saturday morning, then
thanked his audience, took a big
chew of Red Man tobacco and

went back w driv ing his No. 41
Dodge;

St&gt;enter said too many drivers

Spencer admires Tony
Stewart, the current points
leader, for speaking his mind.

today won't say what they really

· "Tony will add a lot of spice

think, and that's bad fol- the .
sport.
··we can't have guys with no
emotions getting out of these
cars,'' he said. "BObby Allison,
Da\lid Pearson, Richard Pettythey all had personalities.
"Today, some of the Winston
Cup champions have been pretty
boring in my eyes."

to the series as a champion, if

Wimmer wins Busch race

S

cott Wimmer held off Ron Hornaday on a

restart with seven laps left Swulay and

won the raln-delayed Busch Sam's 1bwn

250 at Memphis MotorspOrts Park ror his sec-

ond victory in four races.

Wimmer led sa of the 250 laps and passed

Hornaday for the final time on lap 218. He a~r
aged 79.387 mph In hls Pontiac on the threequarter-mile oval and had to avoid three cautions In the ftnal ao laps for his second career
victon&lt;
Stacy Compton was second In his Chevrolel ,
followed by Jamie McMurray, who needed a
provisional and started 37th after becoming the
quick~t Wlnston Cup winner in the modern
er a In just his second start Oct 13ln Charlotte.

he does come through,'' Spencer
said.

Spencer also said he'd wei· •
come slower speeds, wh ich he
says are too hlgh and contribute
to injuries, such as the one that
knocked teammate Sterling
Mari.Ln out of the points raoe.
~ RickMin iD

. . . - TRIQ( PROFILE ....

BANKS

ATUNTA MOTOR SPEEIMlY
Track: 1.54-mlle oval; banking ln'tur~s
1·4, 24 degrees: banking in straights, 5
degrees; length of frontstratch, 1,415
feet; length of backslrelch, 1,320 feat.
Where: Hampton, Ga.
0... opened: 1960
Flral Wlnalori Cup race: DIMie 300 •
July 31, 1960.
Grandallnd Meting: 124,000.

CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

On the Web: www.aUantamotor
speedway.com

(740) 992-5009
Larry W. Banks,
Owner/Operator

Dlatrlbuted by Universal Prose Svnalcate for Cox News Service. (BOO) 255-e734. 'For release the week ol October 21, 2002 .

,

Place Your
Business's
Ad here
Call The
Daily
Sentinel for
details

Outspoken Spencer still gives circuit a charge

J

27. Jimmy Spencer, 2,913.
28. John Andretti, 2,851.

13. Starting Martin. 3,703. ·
14. Jeff Burton, 3,680.
15. Michael Wallrlp, 3,601.
16. Rlckv Craven, 3.498.
17. Bobby Labonte, 3,413.
18. Jeff Clreen, 3,367.
19. Dave Blanev. 3.267.
20. RobbV Gordon, 3,232 .
21 . Kv_
ie Petty, 3,165.
22. KeVin Harvlcl&lt;, 3,15e.
23. Terry Labonte, 3,09B.
24. Ward Burton, 2,991 .
25. Jeremv Mayfield. 2,975.
28. Elliott Sadler, 2,922.

Rutland Bottle Gas)

Conmlllic:ation woes

~~~iifl;~:'~IKI Will;

Rookie driver Ryan Newman chalked up his fourth
pole of the season Friday by turning a qualifYing lap
of 92.837 mph.
Winning the pole for the Old Dominion 500 tied
Newman with Bill Elliott and Jimmie Johnson f6r
the most this season. It also was the flfth pole of
Newman's career.

••

here Call The

ill Elliott has never been a dominant drtver
on the half-mile track at Martinsville, but
he hsd a good day golns until he crashed
into the fhmtstretch wall on
lap424.
He had qualified third
and ran in the top 10 for most
of the race.
"What can you say about it?"
he said. "We had a good car all
d~ We were looking at
fmish, but there's nothing you
can do."
Elliott finished 42nd and
EU.Ia!T
dropped out of .the top 10 In Wln5ton Cup points.
He was·eighth entering Martinsville. but he's now
lith, 439 behind leader Tony Siewart.

Dlll/lllll.lila 110. W l'oiJI, Kurt Busclllought oil Jotin,Y Benson in the cl08lng ~
to cltllr\i vk:tPI'Y at Mil.l;llnsvllle.• Buscll is Olie of (our drivers to win m~ than once .
~~_lhf.~ ol,25. Bu~ ~ won the Food City 500 Marcn 24 at BristOl.

Another pole for Newman _

·••
••
•••

. Business's Ad

~:2k 2000-

B

same

166

. OuallfVIng record: Kurt Busch, 177.388 mph,

By RICK MINI'ER
Cox News Service

driving a go-cart:. He sat out Sunday's race at

''

Place Your

..-

drops Elliott from top 10

· Jei.Ty Nadeau's roller-coaster season took another

In the No. 44 Dodge and finished 4001.

28,-2000.

Poor run at Martinsville

downhill turn when he ir\iured his shoulder whlle ·

-&gt;

Defending chemplon:.Ted Musgrave
RIICII rocord: Kurt Busch, 144.260 mph, Oct.

NASCAR NOTES

"The only way to get respect
back is by earning it. and I feel

MartlnsvWe Speedway and is likely to mlBs the rest
of the season.
Veteran driver Steve Grissom took Nadeau's place

992-5432

"'"'Y"""' The
Trud&lt; series.is in the midst of a
1 three-week
break belore resuming NoV. 2 at California Speedway
_
•Three drivers are within
I ·169 points of standings leader Mike Bliss.

Tough luck for Mild n

_,

•

~1J!?Z71J

I

1

Dominion 500 and fmished 30th, one lap down. .

••

C•ll Nowl

I
I
1

RIICII: American Racing Wheels 200
Where: California Speedway, Fonlana, GaiW.
Trac:l&lt; length: 2-mile oval.
When: Nov. 2, 5 p.m. EST.

like I've got to earn i~" he said.
·
Todd Bodine siSyed out of trouble In Stinday's Old

•

Get ·the bucks
you need!

1

I
I

him.

..

•

Fall is the season to be outdoors doing all the great activities
you enjoy. II you're looking lor a loan to
finance your outdoor lifestyle come
to CreditXpress in Pomeroy. We
have special loan programs in
place lor 4-wheelers, RV's, 4 X 4
trucks and much more. Our loans
are processed while you walt, and
our Customer Service Reps. will work
with you to make sure you get the loan
you need, whether It ba auto, real estate or personal.

1

Race: Aaron's 312
Where: Atlanta Motor Speedway,
Hampton, Ga.
Trac:l&lt; lengtlt: 1.54-mile ovaL
When: Saturday, 2 p.m. EDT.
Defending champion: Joe Nemechek
Race record: Mark Martin, 191 .661 mph, MatCh
a. 1997.
Qualifying record: Ryan Newman, 191 .661
ill&gt;h. March 9, 2001 .
Storyline: Wrth four races remaining on the
Busch Series schedule, GIBQ Biffle has a 105·
point lead over Jason Keller in the standings.

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

stoinach to walch It because I feel
that bad about It," Bodine said.
He also said it'll take work to
p~t the lncjdent -and the reputation II has given him ~ behind

e. Covlngton .................. ........... 8-0 112
9. Cory-Rawson (1) .......... ........ B·O
,93
tO. Mechanlcsburg ....................B-0
•81
Othlro receiving 12 or moro polnto~11.
Svcamore Mohawk 16. 12. Northwooc(15.
13. Shad)o'Side 13. 14. s. Charleston SE.12.

......

I
I

I

1hlng dangerous lntentional!J&lt;
"I'Ve only watched the tape
onoo, and it made me !lick to my

,67

to. Celiance nnora ..... :.... ......... 7·0
39
Othare roctlvtng 12 or more polnta:
11. Bainbridge Paint Valley 32. 12. Ljtea
Creek E. Clinton 31 . 13. Hamler Pollick
Henry 25. 14. Castalia Margarel1a 17.·15.
Gahanna Colo. Academy 12.
DIVISION VI
W·L
1?11
t. Marla Sttin Mlr'a!IJx:al (24) ..... ..7·1 329
2. Danville (8) ................. ;......... 8-0 287 .
3. Columbus Grove (2) ............8-0 ~
4. Sltasburg·Frllnklln ................8-0 ..,.
5. Mogadore (1) .......................7·1
187
6. LoweDvllle .............................8-0 187

BUSCH SERIES

Drive-Thru Window

~

odd Bodhle, who was put on probation by
NASCAR alter triggering a llkar crssh Oct. 13
at LOwe's Motor SpeedWBJi admitted last week
he made a mistake wh~ he tried to pass Wanl
Burton, a move that set off the Wl'!Ck. But he said
that's not the same as doing some-

,

~

Louis

'

By Rick Minter
Cox News SerVice

Prep Football

93

Whero: Aflanta Motor Speedway, Hampton, Ga.
When: Sunday, 12:30 p.m. EST.
Race dlltance: 325 laps: 500.5 miles
Trac:l&lt;: 1.54-rnile oval
Defending champkJn: Bobby Labonte
Race record: Dale Earnhardt, 163.633 mph,
Nov. 12, 1995.
Oualllylng record: Geoffrey Bodine. 197.478
mph, Nov. 15, 1997 . .,
Storyline' With tour races remaining in the
2002 Winston Cup season, tour drivers are with·
In 177 points of standings leader Tony Slewart. •

Bodine laments error,
_seeks to earn respect

ChiiiM'h

al Rock Hill

Ric.: NAPA 500 .

American Racing Wheels 200,

Parkersburg South

Parkerlilurg South

Busch: Aaiun's 312, 1 p.m.
EIYI' Saturday on TNT.
Craftsman Truck:
5 p.m EIYI' Nov. 2 on ESPN.

Merlth at

M•rltttl at

·I

WINSTON CUP

pre-nee coverage noon EST
Sunday on NBC.

Southern at

Pomeroy, Ohio

UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS

Winston Cup: NAPA 500,

,_

1

NAtiONAL CONFERENCE
Esll
w LTPCIPFPA
Philadelpllia .... 4 2 0 .667.185 102
N.Y. Giants ..... 3 3 0 .500 86 98 ·
Dallas .............3 4 0 .429 94 129
Washington ....2 4 0 .333 115 157
South
WLTPCIPF PA
New Orleans ..6 1 0 ,857 221 172
· Tampa Bav ..... 5 2 o .714 153 76
Atlanla ....... ... .. 3 3 o 500 130 84
Carolina .......... 3 . 4 0 .429 102 105
North
w LTPCIPFPA
Green Bay ...... 6 1 0 .857 203 154
Chicago .......... 2 ·4 0 .333 132 155
Oetroit.. ..... ...... 2 4 0 .333 132 1B9
Minnesota ....... 1 5 0 .167 137 185
Welt
WLTPCIPFPA

ON THE TUBE

Belpre at
MIJp

Ellllm (Sal.)

at Rock Hill

· Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken
228 Main St.

Fairland at
Blur Valley

Southern at

ctw•wke

Family

The Winston Cup circuit reb.Jrns to·Artanta Motor
Speedway this week. Tony Stewart won the track's
spring IIIC8, the MBNA America 500, on MatCh 10.

W•hlnw at

Eulam (Sat.)

..... h:mlmr!b

·992-6611
Back to Adanta

l'al1&lt;ersburg C&amp;th. (Sat) .

Southern at

Marlena at

Crow's
Restaurant

AlblnJII
Poln1 Pleasant

EyJtm (Sat.)

lllbpp PAMhlll

555 Park St
Middleport

Lapnat
Gallla Academy

Waharna at
Pwlwllug Cl!b, (Sal)

AIY'r Vtltty

Ealflm (Sal)

Ellllm (Sal.)

c-.
a.-

Pro Football

·Valley Lumber

Record: 57-33
Last week: 9·1
(winners in llllkl) _

Pteaaant

F•lrlaod at

fllrtend

"

t--IG-0Ut2

Hoo11er Daddy .
The Masked Picker

· Albina at
Point

at

Meigs

SOuthern at

Lalit week: 8-2

Fairland at
RIY'r Y•llty

Fairland at
...

Record: 58-32

Dank Taylor
- Spor1s Staff
Record: 61-29
Laal week: 7·3

Record: 61-29
Last week: 8-2
(wlnn_
ers In l!s!!ll)

'

San Franclac:o 4, Anaheim 3, H&lt;iot !loci
2-2
ThuNdly, Ocl 24
Anaheim (Waohburn 18-6) at San
Francisco (Schmidt 13-6), 8:22 p.m.
Saturday, Ocl21
Sin Franclac:o at Anaheim, 7:58 p.m.
s ... ~~ay. OcllCI'
San Fr~~nclac:o at Anaheim. 8:02 p.m., H
neceaaary

E

Dave or Jessica
992·2155

Scoreboard

leadS serlea 2-1
wadneaday, OCt 23

'

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call The Daily Sentinel for details

:soo

WORLD SERIES
saturday, Ocl t 1
San Fr~~nclac:o 4, Anaheim 3
Sundq Ocl20
Ahaholm 11, San Franclac:o 10, series
tied 1·1
Tuoldoy, Ocl22
Anaheim 10, San Franclac:o 4, Anaheim

252 Upper
River Rd.'.

RICK SIMPKINS

Baseball

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

,.

.......

7

www.mydallysentinel.com

t~.•. --------------~--------------------------------------~------------------~----------~----------------~--------------~------~==================J
•
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'I

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__

.,!.__

__ __ _ _

�.
Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 24, 2002

Thursday, October 24, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeye Notebook

Meigs volleyball resetves run the table in 2002:
.

JV Marauders
post perfect
20-0 record
BY Scon WOLfE
Sports correspondent

ROCK
SPRINGS
Continuing a tradition that
dates back seven years, the
Meigs junior varsity volleyball team of coach Phil
Harrison ·completed 'a perfect
20-0 season during this 2002
campaign,. Not only was
Meigs' record flawless in that
they won 20 matches, but they
won 40 straight games without a defeat in doing so. No
match went three games.
Dating back to the preseason, Meigs won every preseason game as well and won
their seventh straight .TriValley Conference Ohio
Division championship. As
freshmen last year this particular group posted a 19-1

Not many get that opportunimark.
"It has been my pleasure to ty. I am looking forward to
work with this group of young coaching this group."
ladies," Harrison said. "It was
very satisfying to watch them
grow in experience and start
believing in themselves.
They are not just good athletes; they are quality young
people."
The Meigs junior varsi,
Hitters for this team were
ty volleyball team of
Megan Garnes, Renee Bailey,
coach Phil Harrison
Emily Ashley, Justine Dowler,
completed a perfect
and Brittany Hysell. Setters
20-0 s~ason during
included Samantha Pierce,
this 2002 campaign
Erin Collums, and Joey
and won their seventh
Hanning, while Casey Lee
straight Tri-Valley
and Ashley Baylor were
Conference Ohio .
defensive specialists.
Division champi·
''By going undefeated this
onship. Front row,
group has set a very high stanfrom left, Megan
dard for future clubs to strive
Garnes, Samantha·
for," Harrison said. "I am very
Pierce, Ashley Baylor
proud of what this group has
and Casey Lee. Back
achieved. Every girl did . her
row, from left, Justine
job, and did it very well."
Dowler, Erin Cullums,
· "I'm . Looking forward to
Emily Ashley, Coach
coaching this group in the
Dale Harrison, Renee
future," varsity Coach Rick
B'ailey and Joey
Ash said, ''This group experiHanning. Absent from
enced the thrill of victory, but
picture was Brittany
missed the agony of defeat.
Hysell. (Scott Wolfe)

4 rank'mg, unbea tState•S; •"'
.,o.
eri record and national championship hopes may all rest 00
the slight shoulders of two
freshmen and two sophomores.
: The Bucke es are 8-0 headin into Satu~ 's showdown
~th N 18 n y S
WI
o.
.-eon tate and
for the most part, ·the defens~
has been as unforgiving as a
block of granite. Yet head
c:oach Jim Tressel still holds
his breath on every pass head.
cid in the direction of his
young cornerbacks.
''Eve?' time the ball goes up
i!' the atr and someone.' s running deep, lily 1_1eart is in my
throat because 1!. can go o~e
way_ or th_e other, Tressel satd
~arlier,thls week.
.
: :rhat s _not to say Tressel
thm~s h1s ~omerbacks and
safeuesaren t!3lented.Onthe
c;ontrary, he thinks they are-

a

I

.. .

'•.

Gibson's pinch·hit home run
in the bottom of the ninth
iiiDing to win Game I of the
1988 World Series · (157,716
votes); and Nolan Ryan's seventh career no-hitter in 1991
(146,269 votes).
Major league baseball and
MasterCard, which sponsored
the balloting, announced the
results before 'Game 4 of the
Series
in ·san
World
Francisco. · ·
Not making the top 10 were
two moments dear to Giants
fans: Bobby Thomson's "Shot
Heard 'Round the World" in a
1951 playoff game, to propel
the New York Gtants pasi
Brooklyn into the World
Series, and Willie Mays' overthe-shoulder catch in the 1954
World
Series
against
Cleveland.

Mays was at Pacific · Bell
Park before Game 3 and
recalled his play that robbed
Vic Wertz at the Polo
Grounds. Mays, however,
added that he thought ·he'd
made a few hetter plays in his
career.
Also not making it were
o.t her famous World Series
moments: Don Larsen's ~r­
fect game in 1956 agamst
Brooklyn; Bill Mazeroski's
home run to beat the Yankees
in 1960; and Carlton Fisk's
shot to win Game 6 of the
1975 Series ' against the
Cincinnati Reds. ·
.
Voting took ·place in all 30
major league ballparks, on
major league baseball's Web
site, and from ballots in
selected magazines and at
participating advertisers.

,.a

Cal Rlpken Jr.

Our
Heroes ·

~~Honor

Bv HAL BocK

of fiction, the kind of fairyWertz.
None of those even made tale finish that make the game
the Top 10, which were and its seasons so compelling.
·· h ?
announced.
by
sponsor They called. it "The Shot
They •re kidd'mg, ng
t.
MasterCard and major league Heard 'Round the World ....
. The vote ,pr\)Ciaiming Cal . baseball. Instead of a memo- Nobody in this election must
· the~ ·
h
bee I'
·
Ripken's ironman record as
bl
baseball's most memorable ra e moment,
.ans gave us ave
n 1stemng.
Again, an also-ran.
moment must be some kind of a memorable career at No. I.
Consider this: In 577 World
'Mays' amazing back-totest to see if the rest of us are
Series
g11111es
before hlate catch and throw defined
paying
attention.
"'-"d
·
h
th
Fans examined the rich fab- Y\'t;\llles ay mg t. ere had im as perhaps the most comric of baseball history, everv, been exactly one no-hitter. And plete player of his time, a
.., it happened to he Larsen's per- fearsome slugger who played
thing from Mathewson to fect,..game, 27 batters up, 27 his position flawlessly.
It hardly impressed ~ fans,
Mays, Ruth to Rose, and the batters down, the ultunate
moment that topped them all pitcher's 1\Chievement in the who voted with ballots at ball. was Ripken's 2,131st consec- ultimate baseball showcase.
·parks and online at maJ'or
utive game. It beat out Hank
Aaron breaking Bahe Ruth's
Pretty memorable, huh?
league baseball's Web site. .
career home run record.
Not in this election. It was
Then there was Bill
That must be it. They'reJ·ust nothing more than an also-ran. Mazeroski's winning home run
Thomson's exclamation in the 1960 World Series and
kidding.
'
point home run ended one of Carlton Fisk's Game 6 homer
"I was pleasantly sur- the most remarkable come- in the 1975 World Series.
prised," Rip ken said. "I backs iD' pennant-race history Neither made the Top 10,
thought this was really a cool when the New York Giants
The result of the vote was
concept after the All-Century wiped out a 13 112-game lead . disturbing, but no more so
team created all the interest
· and excitement for baseball." to o,vertake the B_rooklyn than the ballot, which ignored
So what would he voie for? Dodgers.
moments far more memorable
. ''The Aaron moment,'' he . It was high drama, the stuff than some of the candidates;
s:aid. ''That was very memoc
rable. I watched it on televis'ion and I remember getting a
~oosed-up. charged-up feelmg. I w1sh I could tell you
why baseball invokes those
feelings. It puts you in the
moment. I was in that
rnoment. I could · feel it
ipside."
Pictures will run:
· And what about his own
Thursday,
moment?
October 31
: "Mine was a heartfelt
moment for many people,'' he
Deadline for Entry:
said. "I know that because
Thursday,
they've told me. For me, it
October 24
was a magical moment."
: Ripken's accomplishment
i~- laudable, a career achievef!ient built over years of playing day·in, day-out, season·
in, season-out, ignoring
bumps and bruises and celebrated in an emotional highPer Ad
ldlll
five victory lap around
.
I
One
eub~ Per l'UDIP
Camden Yards. · ·
Tessa Paige Will
; It was a nice, heartwarming
Daughter of John
ipterlude. But for it to top the
Will &amp; Cassie Nease
Memorable Moments vote,
well, that's hard to believe.
AIIarh ThiA Coupon To Your Chlld'a P~turc. and
· A moment is just that, a
~------------------------------Mall or Ortng wnti·vour P11ynumt To:
I
s_napshot in time that sets it
I
The Daily Sentinel •lllCourt Street
a,Part. The last out of Don
I
Pomeroy, OH 45769
b8rsen 's World Series perfect
.
I
!fame in 19S6 was a moment
1Cblld'• N a m e ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - 1Parenl'l
Name:: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
~o was Bobby Thomson~s
Adclren:
_
_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
I
}951 pennant-winning home
1
run. The same for Willie
•Phone N u m b e r • - - - - - - - - - - - l'tfays' running out from under
his hat for the 19S4 World
Series catch against Vic

The Southern Junior High Tornadoes finished one of the better seasons In school history recently, finishing the. season at 5-1 overall. The team was coached by head
coach C. T. Chapman, and assistants Terry Patterson, and Kenny Guinther. Front row;
from left, Trenton Roseberry, Wesley Riffle, -casey Hubbard, Jacob Hunter, Brett
Beegle, Jqhn Harton, Josh Smith . Middle-Scott Musser, Grant Phillips, Teddy Brown;
"
.
Ryan Donaldson, Mike Brown, Michael Yost, Josh Lunsford and Ryan Chapman. Back
row, from left, Cody Patterson, Eric Zeiner, Nick Buck, Darrin Teaford, Jesse McKnight, .
Butch Marnhout, Weston Counts and Tyler Harkness. Standing are coaches Terry
Patterson, C. T. Chapman and Kenny Guinther. (Scott Wolfe)
·•

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(

tice. ''They tell me what to do
and I'll just do it."
Gamble said he does not
have his sights set on playing
quarterback, or becomi.ng the
head coach or the Big Ten
commissioner. He's busy

Associated Press

lr

i

Ruth's " all-time home- run
record . in 1974 (275,451
votes); Jackie Robinson
becoming the first black to
play in major league baseball
m 1947 (251,564 votes); the
home run chase by Mark
McGwire and Sammy Sosa to
beat Roger Maris' single-season home run record m 1998
(242,279 votes); Gehrig's
farewell speech in Yankee
Stadium in 1939 (237,131
votes).
The rest of the top 10
moments were Pete Rose
breaking Ty Cobb's all-time
career hits record in 1985
(230,852 votes); Ted Williams
becoming the lastf:Iaver to hit
above .400 in 19 1 (203,982
votes); Joe DiMaggio•s 56game hitting streak in 1941
(176,810
votes);
Kirk

Can we have a recount, please?.

Series

"

1

~~e~aid :lt~:Tue~d=y·sn:~~-

enough with the increased
playing time.
He's made it look 50 simple,
that the other comers have
tried to make him see it's not
alw
.
.. ay~ this ~asy.
He s a h~tle lucky a~ut
gettmg h1s ptcks, I tease h1m
bot th t" F
'd 'h
a uh
,. _ok" s~MI Wit a
1aug . 1 m 11 e, . an, you
come and play hke five snaps
and ,r,ou re leadmg the
team?
.
.
Tressel sa1d there is no
more demanding position on
the field than cornerback, particularly when there's a blitz
c~lled and th~ comer is out by
htmself ba!tlmg a taller, faster
rece1ver wtth no safety rn;t.
"I'm a little like you guys,"
Tressel said to reporters. "I .
look ou.t there and toe ball's in
theairandthere's aguyopen, ·
I'm nervous."

'

ball. Pete Rose drew the stands and sitting with the
big~est ovation and Cal fans."
Rip en, Hank Aaron and
Yet Santia~o got sweet
Mark
McGwire.
also
were
w1th an RBI sinredemption
from Page 81
honored in a pregame trib- f.le that. capped a three-run
ute .to the sport's most mem1fth that made it 3-all. And
arable
moments.
·
counted all the same as
in a tasty twist for a Series
Bell's father, Buddy, and dominated by long balls, the
Giants · posted their first
Series win at horne since grandfather, Gus; both comeback started wit!\ · two
1962, settin£ off fog hom &amp;layed in the ma~ors. of the shortest hits yet.
Pitcher Kirk Rueter led
blasts from e nearby bay.
ud'a, who w~s at Pac ~II.
As the Giants and their and us combmed for moe off with a high chopper that
sellout crowd celebrated, All-Star appearances, yet he beat out for an infield
Rodriguez sat in the dugout made it to only one World single. Kenn6 Lofton fol&lt;and watched after his first Serjes - Gus in 1961 for lowed with a unt that slowCincinnati.
d;mced down the chalk
big lea~ue loss.
"That's
about
the
onlr,
hoe
until third baseman
''You re notJfing to win
every time," R ··guez said. "l thins we don't talk about,· Troy Glaus picked it up for
felt great. I made a couple of Davtd said.
another little single.
Spi~zio and Bonds, of
Rich Aurilia singled home
mistakes. They took advantage.
course, alsq had dads in the · the Giants' first run, Kent
Today, my stuff was good.
"You're going to have big lea~ues. Snow's father hit a sacrifice fly and, after
another intentional walk to
your bad· days, your lucky played m the NFL.
Pitching on his 24th birth· Bonds, Sa'tltiago sinJied up
days. I'll forget it, it's in the
past, come back strong day, Anjlels rookie Joht'l the middle. The MV of the
NL championship series
tomorrow."
Lackey p1cked ul' a nice
sent,
the
souverur
ball
m
clapped his hands and pointAngels
~
Mike
Sciascia knew Ralriguez watld- his ftrst major league hit. ed toward the San Francisco
More
importa~
for dugout after rounding first
n't be Mr. Unhiuable fclever.
trouble . base.
"Yoti might be a little Anaheim, he avoi
"Benito's come throufh
~oiled
by FranCisco," on the mound, thanks mostly
Santiago.
·
.
bij!
time in the second hal •"
to
ioscia said. "He's gotten
virtually everybody out. But · Twice, Lackey intention- 01ants manager Dusty
we know that's not the life ally walked. Bonds to load. Baker said.
Glaus hit a two-run shot;
the bases with one out. Both
of a pitcher. .
tying
Bonds' record of
times,
he
got
Santiago
to
hit'
"I don't think you can
look at what franciSCO did- grounders to Eckstein that seven home runs in a post·
n't do. Those guys are good the shortstop turned into season, to give the Angels a
inntvt-endin$ double plays. 3-0 lead in the third.
hitters."
"
en I h1t into the sec"You can't start thinking,
Tim Worrell got the win
'Here
we go again' because
and Robb Nen closed for a ond double pia~ I didn't
even want to go ck to the it will h~pen agafn," Baker
save.
The tight, tense duel came· dugout," Santiago said. "l said. ·" eab, you're conon a special night for base- felt like jumping into the cemed."

•

one team worse m passing
de.ense
~
· Iowa - the only
IS
other team unbeaten m the
!eague. The Blickeyes are givmg up 263 passing yards a
~arne . FCOJur teams have more
mtercepuons than thetr mne.
. Gamble has some insight
mto the comer position since
. ·
.
hef sees 11 from the othe,r s1~e
o the ball w~en he s on
of~ense. He satd he really
enJoys the chall.enge o~ gomg
~ead-to-head With a w1de-out
10 . man-to-man coverage. He .
dally learns more zone coverag·~i learned l'k f,
1 ~ 0 ~~ cove~~
tod

pass m the fourth quarter Gamble when he s m thereended
Wiscons'n'
.
. I s Ias t scor; every t'lme Peon Sta te •s Za
. ch
mg ~t m the Buckeyes Mills drops back to throw this
19- 14 wm on S~t~y.
weekend.
. The problem IS that Gamble
"I don't think we NEED
ts so val_uable. on offense, him,"
linebacker
Matt
where he IS Ohto State's sec- Wilhelm said of Gamble.
ond-leading receiver with 20 "We've got guys who know
catches for 337 yards that he the system and are j'ust one
.
•
b'
cannot be sh1fted to defense 1g ·play in practice from
full time.
provmg themselves to the
"I don't want our secondary coaches. There's guys· out
coaches to gef'tempted to start there who ~ very good cofcoaching him," Tressel said n~rs .. They JUSt have to play
with a chuckle. ''We just want wtth!" the system and ~0 what
to let him· go out there occa- 'they ~ ~oached to do.
.
sionally and make a play."
~~s. r~ always shp·
Ohio State's safeties lot · of saas~i~nse g~~~d'f a
Donnie N_ickey a_nd two-time because It~ not gve~ g~~
Ali-Amencan ~ke Doss - · opponents are frequently
are better at rus~mg up to stop playing catch up, or.the other
the ru11 or rushmg the passer team cannot run the ball
than ~yare m coverage.
again.st it?
So Jt appe_a~s. more and . Oh1o State ranks next to last
more respons1b1hty falls on mtheBigTeninpassdefense.
the younger comers.- or on It may be revealing that the

Ripken's milestone -voted-most memorable moment

..

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - ·
Cal ~irken Jr. b~ng Lou
Gehrig s consecull ve gatJies
~ijlak was voted baseball's
tpOSt memorable moment in
f110 balloting.
· The milc;stone by the
Baltimore Orioles • shortstop
in 1995 received 282,821
votes, out of more than .. 1.1
million · cast. Many credit
Ripken's feat with bringing
many fans back to baseball
{ollowing the 1994 players'
strike.
. "Mine was
heartfelt
moment for many people,"
Ripken told The Assocl8ted
Press. "I know that because
they've told me. ·For me, it
was a magical10oment."
~ Rounding out the top five
memorable moments was
Hank Aaron breaking Babe

BEREA, Ohio (AP) you're going to talk about
. Andre'
Davis
politely"
intangibles, I would put
excused himself from a
intelligence at the top of the
group of reporters following
list."
Sunday's game so he could
Davis caught the attention
put on a silk tie before heing
of a national TV audience
interviewed.
this summer, returning the
opening kickoff93 yards in a
Davis wanted to look his
Monday night g11111e against
best, but not because the
the . Green Bay Packers on
Cleveland Browns' rookie
wide receiver was trying .to Hokies' 4 x 100 meter relay Aug. 26.
get himself profiled _in next team.
"Andre's the man," White
"He can roll," said Browns saici.1 'You never know what
month's GQ.
. "I didn't want to be there running back Jarnel White.
he's going to do when he
with my shirt off or sitting
It was the Browns' first · gets the ball in his hands."
down," he said Wednesday, kickoff return for a TD sirice
Davis has made three starts
shortly after learning he was Sept. 4, 1994, when Randy this season - each lime the
the AFC's special teams play- Baldwin took one back BroWIIS have opened in a threeer of the week. ''That's just against
the ·Cincinnati receiver set - and has made
part of being a professional." Bengals. Davis also became the most of his opportunities.
He's already acting like a the ftrst Cleveland rookie to
He had his most produce
seasoned pro on the field.
return a kickoff all the way tive game in his first career
Taken by the Browns in since 1967.
start in Week 3 at Tennessee.
He nearly broke two other Davis had five catches for 99
the second round (47th overall) of this year's draft, kicks agamst the Texans, yards and two TDs. All five
Davis, who also ran track at averaging 42 yards on his of his receptions picked up
..,,_ Virginia Tech, has emerged four returns.
·
ftrst downs.
:J. as one of the league's rising
"It was very close on all of
"I realize I'm the third
young stars.
them," Davis said. "I was receiver right now, and I
Davis enters Sunday's just a little bit off on hitting know whenever I get the ball
game against the New York the holes. We were like two I need to try and make a
Jets with five TDs already yards away from taking back play," said Davis, a · former
this season. On Sunday, his at least another one."
soccer star who didn't play
95-yard kickoff return for a
Davis' quick start hasn't foo'tball until his junior year
score came just .seconds after surprised the Browns.
of high school.
the expansion Texans had
The 6-foot-1 Davis has
Davis has made plent)' of
taken a 14-10 lead in the been impressing the Browns big plays already. And. he
third quarter.·
· since the ftrst day he arrived knows his early success will .
After catching the ball .at in camp with his' playing make it tougher for him to
the 5, Davis made a couple ability - and his polish. A make the next one.
quick moves to the left side- three-.time member of the
"The second you return
line, picked up key blocks · Big East's all-academic one for a TD, then teams are
from Barry Stokes and Mark team, Davis had little trouble going to try to find a way to .
Campbell and was ·gone - absorbing the Browns' vast try and stop you," he said. "I
untouched.
playbook.
guess that's the whole point.
Once
Davis
passed
"For a rookie, he's proba- You want teams to say, 'OK.
Houston kicker Kris Brown, bly ahead of the curve," this guy is a very dangerous
there wasn't a player on the Browns coach Butch Davis returner and we're going to
field who could catch the · said. "He's a very smart guy. try and do anything we can
former anchor man for the He learns quickly and if to stop him'."

I?.
ack of depth at the
poSlliODS
T
. f h
U ;e
re.s man . E._J.
In erw~ - 1 ~ staru~g . 10
PR_ace o
IDJUred JUm_or
•chard McNutt _and oppostte
~oph~ore Dusun Fox. who
ISm h1s first season at comerback after ·playing safety a
Y~ ago.
me backups are true freshman Nate Salley and sophomore Harlen Jacobs.
.
To add some depth, Ohio
State wide receiver Chris
Gamble has been seeing time
late in games_as a cover corner on _the opposing team's
top p~ssrng target. So far, ~at
expenment has been a rousmg
success.
.
Gamble has played just five
snaps on defen~e -.and has
t~o garoe-sav~ng. mtercepll_ons. Hts~thlet1cp1ckoffofa
J1m Sorgt-to-Jonathan Orr

~ajor League Baseball

Good season

Davis .already·up to speed

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

~~~~~~~!':.~ms to wideout ~ shore up secondaiY ·

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1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
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1990 Dodge Dakota Rotor,
$20,
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mornings SHERIFF'S SALE OF
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PRQJECT
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Are you interested In a re· Home Health Agency 300
warding and Pciting career Green Slreer, ~O..Box 748,
as • dedk:aled care-giver? Marietta, Dhoo 45750
Scenic Hilla Nursll\n Center Part·t'ome .Teache"s A•'d
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has the job lor~·
•-·· you wanted 1or Ch'ldca
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area a state teldsl~ nurslng ter. Requirements: HS Dl·
aide, and wou •ke to ;om p1o
(GED) nd 1B
~hy wait? Start meeting our team, please call and
ma
~
years
Ohio singles tonight, call toll talk to Dianna thompson or of age. Expenence a plus.
lloe 1·800·788·2823 ext slopbyandapplylnperson MaU ~Letter, Flesume,
1621
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new. Slartlng wage! Our Pt Pleasant WV 25550 or
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numberis. 17401446 "7150 ·
FPto(304.)S75·6575 '
__
•
· ATTN: Point Pleasant.
Route Manager, 60-60 hour,
C·f Beer Carry Out permil ~sial positions. Clerks/car· 5 day work week. Insurance
•. for sale, CheSter Township, ners/sorters. No exp. re- and
retirement
plan.
1 • MeiQs County, send letters quIred · BenefHs: For exam · $35.000 1st year salary.
• ol interest to: The . DRily ~lary,l~(":~e);:~~':r~~- Please leave message.
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·, er cat. 4 black &amp; 2 grey &amp;
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• Elderly couple can no lon·
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· .. otd, spayed lemale cat. All
Lets Talkl
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• , shots up-to·date.
Color
Contact Brian Billings
of the caution light in Tup~ while other than tan &amp; gray
. 1333
pers Plains. Our Treatment
13041675
•
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• 773-5 166
Class II Water Treatment Ll:
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.. Free Klltttns- 2 females, 3
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• males. 8 weeks old . Dependable babysHter to must be filled out (740)985• (740)446·9582
watch 2 little girls 5 days~ 3315
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Domino's Now Hiring all lo- excellent pay. experience
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1-800-214-0452.
R •9o-o 5 1274 9
.. 4367 Stare Route 160. 7 lent benefits. If you .would
eg
· ..
~ · family yard sale. Starting like to join our dedicated
WANTED
: ffriday, ·25th. &amp; Saturday, team of ca regivers , you may
T Do,
.... , 26th· beside Shinn's Tractor apply in person at Scenic •
0
• Sales. Flea market dealers Hills or call Dlane''Thomp- ~ welcome
son tor more information at Childcare avatfable in dOwn•
(7 40)446·7150 .. We are an town Pomeroy. private pay
' · Gara ge Sale including a equal opporlumty employer. only, providing 24 hr. serv·
· ~' ~~~~ sa~~~~~eo~ ~~~nq~fcsk
ice, call (740)992-5827 lor
•
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II'
M
1
c
·
·
.. sale. Get Your Avon now!!
a Ia·
e gs ommumty more information .
·~&lt; 54 White Rd.
Action is seeking a Housing
·• :;.,:..:.:=:..:..:::....____ Assistant, Position will pro· Economy Conatru.~lon
·\ . Moving Sate- Misc . house- vide direct support to .Hous· Alttypes_o~ construction,
;, l'lold goods and furniture, ing Director. Must be a high- rooflng/sldln_g, remod~lng,
.. designer clothes (womens ly mot1va1ed person needing gu~te_r cleamng, plumbtng,
~- sizes 6&amp;8) 16 cubic foot limited supervision. Must palntmg, concrete.
4
... lleezer. books, microwave. have e~~:cellent organization- (30 )674 ·0t 18 or (304 )674 .
~"'~281 Lariat Drive, Friday (II skills, computer skills , 4682
~ :25th, Salurday 26th, 8-3pm. corrw;nunic~ t io~ .~kills, able Georges Portable sawmill,
Yard Sale/ ' Flea Market !od~~k 7''h ldlmltedllncolme ·don't haul your logs to the
· t hursday- Sunday. New &amp; '" 1v1. ua ~an _con rae ors, mill jusl call 304-675·1957.
i used clot hes. toys, dolls, a valid dnvers license, and :-..:....:-...,....-----,- ' angels. tools, lndiacs, ha.... be bondabl_e. Associate de- Housekeeping service "avail·
3 dl
.,
'' gree In b4siness prelerred able. For a tree consultation ·
'
es, trailers, Tren ts Pro- with high sc~ool diploma or please
call
Amber.
j duce. Spring Valley.
GED with two years ollice 1740)245-7801
6
YARD SALEexperience required . Appll .
.
cations wllh resumes will be Mom Will babySit 3·4 year
, ..__oipiol~iio'oioi'LEA.sANriiiiliiiiiiiiiO..,J accepted until 4:00pm on old part-time in my home,
' '
October 25, 2002 al the lot of TLC. (304)675·4027
' Sat. Oct. 26, 9·5. 129 Cheshire office. GMCAA is Wilt pressure wash houses.
, P.leasant St, Point Pleasant. an Equal Opportunity Em· trailers. and decks. Call
•
.
pln.Jer
~'!.~~h~
441-4238 ••k lor Ron or
.I' Lr.J\l¥1/UU\r.,l
Help wanted caring for the leave message.
·
·
e lderly• Dorol Group Home• wm · Set with
elderly any
1
•ow
pa
lng
minim
ge
• AUCTION
"
Y
um wa • shilt. $7.00 hour. Phone
t. Every Friday 06:30 Ang le's new shifts: 7 am- 3pm, 7Brrt· (304)692·3753
,
Cell.
5pm, 3pm·1tpm, 1tpm· (304)593·1196
Flea Market 333 Mechanic 7am, call 740-992-5023.
• Street Pomeroy, Ohio Call
For.lnlor.matlon: 992·9734
Home Heetth Agency ...""
W
lng Full Time AN. Competl· il'l'll\61"""--::B:-l.JSJNESS
........- - . ,

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Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Sliver, Gold Coins, Proal, seta,
Diamonds,
Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,, M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Sec·
:. ~~- Ave nu. e. Gallipolis, 740·
_,...

2 84 2

Good Used Flute. (304)675·
345;:.=9----:--:---:::Wanted to buy- border collie
pup or adult dog. Call
(740)446·9632

~~~:·g~:ah~h ~x~e~~tl~n~~ L.-..iOiiPI'OiitlliR'IlJNioiolliiiii'Yioio....
necessary. Apply at 3064 ~
Slate Route 160, Gallipolis
h
t II I
I t 886
or P one 0 ree 8 •
•
441 1 9
· 3 3.
.
Ma~e 8~etra monev for
Christmas.
Sell
Avon.
(740)446-3368

Includes
. Up To
Over 15
Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Oeys Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display : 1 : 00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundays

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
You do bustness with people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you haiJe inVestigated the
McClure's ~ Ae1taurant now offering.
hiring all 3 locations. lull or 1"'"'-::::--::-:-~~~,
part·tlmo. pick up appllca· 1
·
:NEWSPAPERS
lion at location &amp; bring back
between
. 9:30am
&amp;
Cover AI The
10:00am, Monday thru SatMatorSubjecttl
urday.
'

.

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PubllMing raerves thl right 10 ecHt. refitct. or carat •nv ld at ttny ttmt.. lEnoN mUd be r.portM on the fl,_ ~
Tnbune-SenttneJ.Reglater wtll be I'MPO'Wbll for no more tNn a. 0011 of the ep101 ooauplld tty lhe llfOf' and onty 1M nnt lnMrUon. W.
any lou or.....,... IMt rMUb from 1M publlcMion or omlaalon o1111 HYert~etrntnt. Coli wtkrn wil be INidl in 1M nNtevalllbMI edtaon. •llo•
are • ...,. confldtntlal. •oC~,~~n~~t N111 c.d epplln.. • All rMI ..WIIIIIdvertiMIMnb .,. •ubflct to 1M Feder~~ Fall ftoullnt Act of 1MI. • lbl•
- o n l y h o l p - o d o - E O £ - W.wlll nolou-ingly _
_,_llnglnv-oltholaw.

• POLICIES: OtiJD

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JUDY GRIFFITH
Congratulations! You have
won 2 free movie tiCkets to
lhe Spring Valley 7 In Gal·
llpollo. Call the Reglotor today lor detalls.(304)87o·

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1333

,Spacious
. • remOdeled home,
All rulnletlldvertltlng
In thl• nenpaper Ia
oulljoctiOthoF-..1

D·--

.....,.....,..,
AND BVILDINGS

3 bedroom, 2 baths •mobile
home, excellent condition
on 218. $500 month,
(740)256·1417 (740)256·
6228
1 1/2 ba_ 3$450bed~~~·· d. ., "nd''
"~"" No
eposo pets
a
referencos.
.

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dryer, $95; GE electric
range, $95; Sunray gas
range $95· Wltirlpool Re·
lrigenitor (..;,Ito) $150; May·
tag washer &amp; dryer set,
$300·,
Upright
freezer
(white) . $250·. (740)446·
7398

(740)448~4

Mobile Home lor Rent/Sale.
Fraziers BoHom Rent-to·
OWn, 3
bed/1
bath,
$3 5o.rmonth &amp; $2.000.
down
or
rent
only
$375./month. Close to
Building for sale with Ot Toyota(304)582·5840
without stock at 62 Olive
Street,
Gallipolis.
OH
·
· 45831 . (740)448·31 59 .
APAJrlllftMS

i

n........
FOR """I

(304)875·6991

~1304;:.;.1::6.:;75:.·2:.4:.:7.::3_-"---

83 Park Avenue, loaded,
$3,000; 82 P•rk Avenue,

::.

wate~ine Special: 31~ 200
PSI $21 .00 Per 100; 1 200
PSI $35.00 Par 100;. All
Brass Compression 'Fillings
In Stock.
RON EV"NS ENTERPRI"
"'
"
Used furniture store, 130 ES Ja~son , Ohio, 1-800Bulaville Pike. We sell mal· :::53ij7~·9;;;52;;;;_B~----.,
tresses, bunk beds, dress·
ers, couches, appliances,
BUIWING
much I'Tlor&amp;. Grave monu·
.
Su"PPuE;
menta. (740)446·4782 Gal· lwotio-tiiliiii___,.l
ilpolis, OH.
,
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
A~~
Windowl, lintels, etc. Claude
n.~."'•~
Wlntera, Rio Grande, OH
.CB11740-245-5,121 .'

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84

Corvelta Coupe, white
rad ltether, glass lop.
loaded. CD/ CUHHt radio,
$12,500 OBO, (740)882·
·7512
w~h

Claaalc Car· 1875 Mer·
240DL. excellsnt
, condition,
neVer been
wrocke&lt;l. $4,000 DBO.
(740)441-8289

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Carolina Antique &amp; Craft PwnnyCiark
Mall 3 ~ 2 eth. St. Pt. Pleas· 740-t12-4411
ant, WV. Antique &amp; Craft Congl'lltU ..tlonll ~ have
Vendor&amp; Welcome.
won 2 tree movie ticketl to
.
the Spring Valley 7 GalllpoB
II A' I
A ;· lis. Call the Sentinel tor deuy or sa , overne n I· tails. (740)992·215 5)
1 bedroom apartment in ques. 1124 East Main
Middleport, (740)928-4941 SR t24 E. Pomeroy, 740·
collect arter 7pm.
99.2-2526. Russ ~oore,
~
owner.
~
1 Bedr90m Apartments
, ..__ _itiliiiiiiiiio-P
Starting at $289/mo, Washer/ Dryer HOOkup, Stove
. Mcsctll.A.NDJl5
AKC Registered Black Lab
and Ref~~eratOr. (740)441·
· MERaiANDL5E
pup, ~?.50. C&amp;ll (740)245-1519.
.
'5342
Ba 1
ke &amp;
1
Apartment, CIA, 1 eR, 1
rca ounger roc r re· --,-----~C
.
lla
elinor.,
bah kn h
registered
Yorkte
1 Wing back chair. AK
t '
c en w1app nces, Like n.ew. Appointment.' mates, parents 3 t/2-5 lbs,
located at 133 2nd Avenue, (304)6 2045
shots started, wormed,
water and trash paid, $326.
75$500 each firm ; Se"rlous
(740)446-4859
2 campe·r refrigerators calls only; purebred "Beagle
BEAUTIFUL
APART· $251$35; 2 camper stoves, . pups, S50 each, shots startMENTS AT BUDGET PRI- $30 each. Call (140)258- ed &amp; wormed. {740)985·
CES AT JACKSON ES· 6130
4378
·
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive 4
Beagle puppies, t male, 1
lrom $297 to S383. Walk to -~0 ·D John Deere Rubber female. 12 wks old, fo·rst
shOp &amp; movies. cau 740· tire Backhoe,
$10,000;
446·2568. Equal Housing 9·55· K Caterpillar track s$~o00ts, wrmed( ,)$9860 each or
Opportunity.
loader, $12,000. Both in ·
pa r, 740 6 •3054
="''-:-:-~-:::-:--:-::-,- good condition, 1740)388· Choc. Lab Pup 12 weeks
1
Furnished
In Middle9327
· - - - AKC Reg. $250. (304)675·
port.
PrivateBDdrive.
rater- - - ' '- - - ence/deposlt required No 85 Dodge 4x4 truck, Queen _
438
- ,6_ _-::---c:-"n- (740) 354 4084
.992 size waterbed couch chair ::..
HP/CA· woodburner; new, 971 Flamingo Mobile
nariS
•
or
.
'
Full
stock Boston Terrler
53,14
and loveseat (740)367
dishwasher &amp; electric r~nge,' Home12xGO 2 B~drooms, ;,;::=::;.;:::::==~
·
.
puppies,
lather AKC regis·
7276
2-112 . ca.,r. g~rage wtlh 3 relrigator, stove! underpin- C
Furnished 3 rooms+ bath, ::"-..:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ lered, mother full blooded.
rba
.oornms&amp; upoopst,ao"ns 4w7o5rkaschroeps, nlng, wheelson, ready to
HouSES :
upstairs, clean, no pets. Bbedaby,Jtemsd, ·hutch , ',ulllslze BoShtohtsparents oedn pr&amp;emllsels.l
.
.
·
· move. $2,500.00
RENT
Reference &amp; deposit rV·
, arge resser w m rror
; worm
as
2.2 miles from Rio Grande (740) 843·5 129
FOR
qulred. (740)446 _1519
304-675·2801 .
docked,
$100
each.
at 2212 Cherry Ridge. Call
(740)388·8743
(740)992-3241 $85,000.
1984 RBaitzhcraft 14FX 70 '2 t ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Gracious living. 1 and 2 EJURN Fat, BlOCK Cra11- Hershey Kisses For Sale
8 r., 2. 1 s, new urnace, Homes From $199/Mo., 4% bedroom apartments at Vii· ings, and BOOST Energy AKC Ch
Lab 6 M 1· &amp;
3 Bedroom~. 1 bath; c~r- entry doois &amp; dish wash~r. Down, 30 Years at 8.5% lege Manor and Riverside Like You Have Never EM·
oc.
9 - ae
port, newer root •. storm w1n- appliances included, center
perienced
3-Female Borp
9-9·02
dows, 135 Klneon Dr. ko'tchen. ceterlcal c·'tlngs. APR. For Listings, 800-319- Apartments In Middleport.
WEI.GH•· LOSS
$400.00 Both P§:rents also
~
3323 Ext. 1709.
From $278·$348. Call 740·
,,
F
I I·~·
(740)446·2776
deck &amp; porch, nice hOme, _.:_________ 992·50.64. Eq"u"al Housing
. REVOLUTION
or sa e w .,vulgrees 2 yrs.
3 bedrooms, 1- 1/2 bath, central air $8,500.00 must 2 bedroom home, approltf· Opportunnies.
New product launch Octo- old. (74 0)742-3802
living room, dinette, &amp; kitch· move 985·9831
mately 1 mile from Gallipolis .:.::;::.:;.:=.;;;.:c..._ _ _ _ ber 23, 2002. Call Tracy at Mother· Golden Retriever,
.,_
St 1 Rout 588 $400/ Now Taking Applications- (740)441·1982
F the Ch
t ' Lab 5
d
en. 2 ecks, garage. •unced 1988 mObile home, 14x56, on
ae
e
·
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- .:__.;:__c...:.:_:.____ 8 roco 1a 8
'
In yard. 1116 Sunset Dr. 2 bedroom t bath $3900 month, $3001 deposit, refer· . house Apartments, Includes ·Burner motor with trans- males, very friendly, will
Phone (740)4 46- 77 9 4
(740)992-4172 af1e~6pm. ' :;;s required. (740 )446 · Water ' Sewage, Trash, :~er t~nd ~u;np comp$1~~e ~a~k~ir:tltcs~~~~:·r~~~
3 ye ar oid er ick Ran~h, 1996 Clayton 14xSO 2br. .
$350/Mo., 740-446-0008.
Eolrecter"oc'ngb·aoth'·roourmnaceh,sater:, vet checked. $25 each.
2br. $325. a month. Security
PI
3 000+ sq 1t 2 112 acres 1n
'
· · ·. · ·with glamour bath, all etec·
Small lumlshed apt. A!l utll· $8.00 (740)367-7729
ease ca 1I alter 6:00pm.
grou("ld pool, st~rage build· tric, central
air.
Call Deposit required at 1112 ities paid except Electric. No ::=:'::':-"::'=:"':"-c:=:::....-,- (740)245·0¥7 ·
.
lng, excellent ne1ghborhood, (3041675 .8180
Hogg Street. 304-675-3458 Pets, Security O.eposit Re- COOL DOWN, Central Air.
(740)446·01"49
$
Conditioners and Heat Purebred Norwegian Elk
275 ·
'-"'--'-"--'-----. Hurricane Creek Road, 3 bedroom home, Miners- qulred.
Month .· Pumps. 11 you don't call us Hound puppies, . $?5 each.
6 acres, 2 bedrooms '" Rent· To-Own
gorgeous ville, Ohio, riiJer view, no (304)675-1365
. we both lose. Free esti- Make good lam!IY pets lor
country, S65,000. (740)388· ' 998 Doublewide, 1 owner. pats, references required, .
mates. (740)446-6308 and , children. 4 miles South of
9645
Rio Grande oft 325 on
3 bed/2 bath, great room, $450 month, call ( 740 ) 992 ~ Twin Rivera Tower tor ekt· 1-800-29t-D098.
Big 7 room !arm house, 1 large eat-in-kitchen, laundry 6777 after Spm.
erly/ disabled.
·
Wolle Run Ad. 1st place on
acre, fruit . lrees, barn, room; 2 decks. Beautilu1 ,18 3br. $425. Month. 2609 Lin- Now accepting applications Deer Rifles, 1998 Honda right at AAA Woodcrafts.
(740)379·2697
~Is, Ret. Re- tor 1 br. all utilities paid 300
o a good home, part Walk' - - - ' - - ' - - - - - - - wooded acres. Close to coin A......
.... , No '""""
2040 4-wheeler. (304)675·· """'
II
-=Toyota. $110,000. Qwruu quired, Deposit (304)675· HUO -assisted, carpeted
er. 8 weeks old puppies.
Country Home with 11 - 112 Ejnance
SS,OOO down. 2749
apartment. rent Is 30% ol Firewood. 1'Cul your own. 2Ft4M, wormed and well
acres. 3/4br. 2ba., 2 ~- ::13..:.04_,)..:.56::2:_·5::6:_4..:.0_-,-::--:your adjusted income Call (304)895-3287
cared lor. Call after 8pm,
~=~~~~~~:v~~~~~~~ cabi~ Hurricane Creek Road, 3br. ~$located 1
304-675-8679 between 8(740)446·4706
nets. Off Leon Baden Ad. Aent-To·Own
gorgeous ~~"Pets. (~~;_; ~ ~~ 1 es, 4:30pm weekdays.EHO
For Sale' Quilt Tops.
I \ H\1 ' I 1'1'1 II '
(304)458-1580
1998 doublewide, 1-owner.
Unfurnished apartment, also ;'(30"-'4)':'6_75:..·.:.353::"'-9--::--~"- I 1\ I \ I 01 "
3 bed/2 bath, great room, 5 rooms &amp; bath. 50 Olive St, small trailer close to down- For Sale Space Saver 4·
For Sale By Owner Ranch large eat-in-kitchen, laundry $325 mo. (740)446·3945
town Gallipolis. Reference &amp; w.heel scooter. has Turn cr:-:::l""~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
Style Home 3 BR 1.5 Baths room . 2-decks, new con- Now ieastnn new home.
, deposit. (740)446·1158
S•gnals, Heed L1ghts &amp; New
FARM
3
$E6x9c900elle r1 t·Lo c ation ·. crete driveway. Beautiful 4· bedroom ''"nving · room
S ,
Battenes. $950 (304)675F..Q\liPMENT .
·
.00
1!2 acres. $110,000. Qwnlr
'
'
PAa
··
7791
{740) 446-7825
~
$5,000
down. kitchen, dining room, quail·
RFNr
-''-----·- - - .
(304)562-5840
tied persona onty. (740)«6·
FOR
Grubb's Plano- Tuning. &amp; Case 58(,)C ~ackhoe w!Cab,
Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
2801
Repairs. Problams? Ne'ed 1995 Terrl.m1te T5C Back·
tract, $500 down ·to qualified MUST SELL BY THE END
"Mobil&amp; home lot, takes 12· Tuned? Call The Plano Dr. fhoe. (304)675-3773
buyers. Call (740)446·357q OF OCTOBER I COLE'S One 3 badroom and Dna 2 14·16 wldes. $100 deposll, 740·446·4525
lor a qulck "sale.
MOBILE HOME, Athens, Bedroom hOuse for rent. $125 rJQnth. (740)446·0175 ;..:.::..:.::...:=:....____ Troy built garden tiller, 8
Ohio (740) 592·1972, on oc· Somerville Realty (304)6!5·
f
Hillside Baptist Church, hp., used very lillie, paid
Fraziers Bottom , 5 bed· casion we have a display 3030 or (304)6753431
39724 St. Rt. 143 Pomeroy, $2,000, sell $500, (740)985room, 2-t/2 bath, 2 ldtch- home that doesn't sefl. we
Tabfes. Chairs,· Desks, Par- 4378
4
ens, mid entry on ~ acre, hBve pne such
now. i~I'JII"~M~--~--.,~
"tlrlons. 992-6768
ai~~------,
Owner Etnanoa With 13% New 16 X 80 three bed·
OBD.E ~
iiir!ir;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _...:.....:.....;.:.:.."'=::'---Ln~
down. Close to Toyota, Win- room 2 Bath home at a
.
. FOR Rmr .
HCK.!iEIIOLD
JET
.,........, .. '"""'..
field schools, $150,000. used 'home prk:e come...
'
'
Gooos
AERATION MDTORS
(304)562·5840
Lynn or Ernie today and
Lw-------~ Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
2 bedroom trailer, no pets, ..,
Stock. Call Ron E"ons. 1· 2 Paint Tennessee Warker
Home on 2 112 acres of check out your savings.
t
ld (740)446 9569
•
8
colts, 2 &amp; 3 years old, full
•
•
wa
or
P
7.2
Cubic
foot
ctlest
lreozer.
800·537·.9528.
land, full basement. 3 br.,. Remember, we must sell b)'
brothers
$2,200
both.
675 8861
576
"
dining room, family room the end of October!
2 bedroom, 1. !lath. large
· (30o4)
;....__ _ _ _ _ _ (304)562·5840
Ill ploc
11 1 g room 2
yard no pots rent $275 Good Uaed Appliances, ReMllllo Tibor
w re
.e, v n
'
New 2003 14 wide. Only
'
'
lull baths, utility room, 2 car 5799 down and only month+ utilities, $200 de· conditioned and Quaran· Congra!ulatlonsl You have Black Racking mare. trail
garage, host pump, 20x20 159 .45 . Call Nikki ,740 . ::.po::•::ltO-'
. lc.,740=12::5:.:6c:·B.::20:::2:.'---,- teed. waaherl, Drvere, won 2 frH movie tickets rOde, St500 .. Paint mare,
~~~~~~~~~~~· :~~~~;:. 365-7671.
•
2 bedr9om, all elec.trlc, Ranges, and Rolrlgerotors, lo the Spring Vallay 7 tn shown 4·H. $1200 ., AOHA
Some atart at $95. Skaggs Gallipolis. Csll the Tribune mare, barrel prospect,
trlct, on Flatwoods Ad ., Palestine Rd, 17 miles to• Spring Valley area, bath &amp; Appllancos, 70 VIne St.. lor details. (740)446·2342
$2000.. others available
112
Pomeroy, Oh (740)992· Milton 6 mlleo to Rto 2 &amp; 36,
· 5325 month, depoolt
(740)446·7398
NEW AND US!D IT!!~ ":304:.;..:·8:.;.95:..·3:.:3:.;.19;__ _~
250
740 441 6954
1841
clooe lo Toyota Beautiful '
· 1 1 "
or
14x75 ShlngloNinyl . . 95 (304)875·2900
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Stool Beams, Pipe Rebar Fair calves· A·l alrod, Heal
~and home packages. No modal on totally level lot, 2 bedroo m, located on Chopel Road, Porta&lt;, Ohio. For Concrela, Anglo, Chan· Seeker plus Who Made
paymenta while under con· solid block fOundation, 2 Jacklon Pike, 5250 month, (740)448·7444 1-877·830· not, Flat Bor, Stool Qrallng Who. black &amp; halter broken,
struction.
Little
or no bed/2 balhl with 100 many $250 deposit. ( 740)448 _ 9162. Froo Estimates, Eaey For Draine, Driveways &amp; (740)667-8837
down payment required. features to !lat. $45,000 4051 .
financing. 90 days same aa Watkwaya. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
(740)448·3218
Owner Finance. with 54 ,000 . .:.:.::.;..._ _ _ _ _ __ cash. Visa/ Muter Car~. alt Open Monday TueSday Female Donkey wtth baby,
down. (304)562 _5840
2 bedroom, no pets, $245 Drive- a· little save alot.
Wednesday &amp; Friday, earn: alto one small Jack.
New 2000 8Q ft home, 10
month, Includes water. $100
Oak table with 6 chairs 12 4:30pm. Closed Th~roday, 1740 1446·1158
mlnutos lrom Hospital.
deposit. (740)446 •3617
leavvs) &amp; hutch, !Ike new, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. Gray Quarter horse colt lor
Complete above ground
sale. Clentls &amp; pretty.
2br. Mobile Home in New $650: Few Deport 56 Houo- (740)«8-7300
pool with porch, driveway
Haven. $300. Month + Se- es (Oickera VIllage). make · Seasoned llrewOOd, 530 or ":(7-'4"'01:;;:256:.;:.;·8:..1-'4:::6_ _ __
and garage fo undation. ·
Price
below appraisal.
curity deposit. (304)882· oflor: Call •(740)992·5110 or 2'$25,
(740)992·3276 Horses, paints and bays.
I 107
(7401446·3384.
(740)992·2862 alter _3pm.
weekends.
1740)992-3278 (
•

or,..,

r10

r1--

1 and 2 ~edroom apart·
mefll.s, furnts~ and ~nfur·
nished, secunty deposit re~IraQ, no pets, 140-992·
__,_a_
. -''-- - - - -

on

r

r

I.

198' Chevy c1o pickup.
auto. B cyl. $900. (304)675·
8893

I

35

'

horne

I

10

s

...

" '

•
•

VInyl Sldl"'t &amp; Pointing
Polto and Porch Dockll

Dump

(740) 992-3320

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

I·
1988 J'"" Cherokee 4x4.
rebuilt tranamlnlon, rebuilt
front end, good body and
urea, needs engine or rebuiH. $1200. (740)446·7~28

88 314 ton Chevy 4x4 pick·
up, aluminum wheels, bed
liner. $4,000. (7~0)446·
0744
92 DOdge Conversion Van1
1 owner, tots of new parts
$2,500.304·675·8893
97 Plymouth Grand VCO/ag·
er, V·8, auto. A/C, cruise,
low miles, extra clean,
$8.000 OBO (740)288·
9696 or (740)286-8095

na

I
.

IIELPWANIID

SEMI-DRIVER
NEEDED
Seeking local &amp;
experie.nced Semi·
Tractor Trailer
driver. Excellent
Pay. Experienced
Drivers Only.

&amp;

Leave message

- .Ohio

740-992·6142

Best Service at
the Best Price

Pomeroy Eagles

992-6215

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket TNek

Truck

Deliveoy Call

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Email: bladnOtap!Vlk·.com

Tree Service

BALL
LOGGING&amp;
FIREWOOD

Free Estimates

lluwRJIIft . , , ffKI»ehd

JOlES'

Cu.h Cadet" &amp; Gravely.

BING02171

Every Thursday
&amp;

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

Sunday

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

1st Thursday

(10'X10' 610'11211

Open 9am-Spm

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

fnt ..UrMIII, fl'll II\ bornt JI'Ckl4l
Call \II r.. a11 ro- ~ .--

(740) 446-1812

4359 Sl. Rt. 160 .
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-1044

Bonanza Get
SFREE

Ad 11.J nbow DWr
~n'iU

LOWELL C. SH~N TRACTOR

of

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

PltuU!

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2p111

ROBERT
BISSELL

Longaberger!Druden
Bus Trip
Sal. November 30, 2002

$6S .(J(). Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. 20. 2002

CONSTRUCTION

Everyone recci ves a
basket!!! Call:
Stad• 740-ClClMI\67

. •Nawttona
•GII&amp;gel
•Coti~IJIJ FBIIOII!tlg

Public Notice

e

Stop &amp;Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
741).992·1671
7122/TFN
ol the
IOCiety mull declere
their 1111ndldacy lor the
olllce ol Director of
the Society by filing
with the Secretery,
Debbie Wallon, 4245&amp;
wo o d e
Ro ad ,
Coolville, Ohio 4&amp;723:
1 petition elgnld by 10
or more members ol ,
the society who are
reeldenll ol Meigs
County, ·~Ileal 7 day•
before the ennuel
election ol dlrectot'lll
held. Only regularly
nominated cendldetes
who&lt;liave mat the Ill·
lng requirement• will
111 eligible lor election .
11 director.

"

For all your Holl)e
Improvement needs
"No Job To Small"

Hill 's Self
Storage
GUN SHOOT
OCTOBER 27th
Rutland Gun Club
3 Money Matches
Pattern, Slug
$100.00 on each Match.
All regular matches will
be shot.
Everyone Welcome
ToGo
Travel Agency
will be Closed
Fri. Oct. 25th
BASKET &amp; BEAR BINGO
6pm
American Legion

Hall

29670 Ba6han Raad
Racine, Ohio

45771
74G-94t-2217

(340 773-11412
Cell 304 87

..

Cellular

992-5479
~'R~·

High&amp; Dry

........

Jllllllllfnl
BISSEll .lrl
,
BUILDERS me. Mlllrflllllllll
11ni11Dclll

New Homes • Vinyl

lllll

Siding • New Garages

SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

• Replacement

...........

et••llltllctlu

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-5232

740-992-7599

FIIIMI

IIFIIIIIIII Clll

Windows • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IIIIICI

740-992-2222 or
740-446-1 01 8

Middleport

For more info 992-4055

FREE ESTIMATES

A Bear in eve,.Y 15asket

SMALL OR LARGE o!I)BiSII!M

SINCE 1964

~B,,Ct(HCIE•DO~NG•ENDLO•~DE&lt;RI

TRUCKING • TRENCHING

• Tonneue Cover •
Xentvisor • Bug

Full Line of
Other Accessories

Shield &amp;

•
•
•

I

1

\ J11

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Positions Available
I) Reglstcre!l Nurses

.
.
· •
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Care Agency os . accepung
applications for Registered Nurses on a Per D1em baSIS.
Contact Tia Wooten at
304-675-7400 for more information.
• Aexible scheduling • Mileage reimbursement
• Great work environment

2) Pby&amp;lcallberap!sl· Two positions •

I) Home Health 2) Outpatient Rehab
. • .
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Health and PVH Rehab1htat1on
Center is currently accepting resumes for Physical Therapists.
Full time. Current state PT licensure, graduate of an approved
school of PT or graduate of accredited college or university

a certificate

Malnten•noe .lobe

·Jeff Warner Ins.

or
800-523-0804

with

JlmAuerk

Eleotrlo, Plumbing,
andlmaiiHome

992-297

1-'I0·68Z·ll73

• Competitive pay

J&amp;S flfCTRIC 6
PLUmBinG

B. D. CORSTRUCTIOR

J". .rs-

i

Electric81 &amp; Plumbing
·-~
Aooll"'t • Gut1ilrl

•
•
•
•

"Firewood
for Sale

88 112 ton Chevrolet 4x4,
350 engine, 4·opeed, vary
good condition, 53600:
(740)245·9652 evenings.

I

10

R_,l"'t

(10) 17 24

air condition, CD player.
bldlner, Tonneau cover for
$7,000. (740)258·1709

j

_:_.:. ._______

at,

2000 Chevy S-10, 5-speed,

FOR

r.o

Add..Qns, ~ew Homes,
Pole Barns. Cdncrete,
Eleclric, Plumbing

• Room AddHion• l

r.n

$2.000. (740)448.()744

j*

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

The annual elacllon
ol the Board ol
Olrectora lor the
Melge
County
Agrlcullurel Society
will be· held 11 the
Coon
Hunter~
lulldlng at the fllr•
groundl, on Mondlty,
November 4, 2002. The
poole will be open
!rom 5:00 p.m. to
p.m. on EIIICIIon Dey.
The electiOn lhlll bl
by ballot. Belloll muat
bl merkad with en "X"
oppatlle the n11111e or
11 will not be countacl.
The caallng ol vot•
lor directors by prox·
Flelph E. Trullell,
les 11 not to be
Sherlll ol Melge
permitted.
County
Only Melgl County
holding
. Jeffrey A. Rodgers, realdents
memberehlp tlckete
Attorney lor PlelniiH
lor 11 leaet 15 d1y1
before the dele ol
(10) 24,
(11) 1
election m1y vote.

92 Z·24 Chevy Cavalier,
good condition. 135,000
mleo, (740)311Hl394

Skaggs Appliances Whirl- Sports Cord Collection For

pool washer, $95; Kenmore sate. All sports-Lots of Roo-

nice landscaping .. covered
patio, garage, basement. Box Van lor storage, all aluConvenient. Grape Street. mlnum, 28 n.tong. $400.00
(740)446·3108
.or OBO 740-985-4409

Ftlr ~inCJ Act 01 111611
which m~~kn ltlllegat to
State Route 692 " Pomeroy,
MlvoniH"IIIY
15 miles to Pomeroy, 12
preference, llmltllllon Of
mileS to Athens, 5 acres,
dl.crlmlna~tion biiMd on
pond, . 3 bedroom, 1 112
race, color, religion,... bath; 2 porches, central air,
ramlllat ...tulornotlonat. 2
car garage, 511950000
•
· •
origin, or any Intention to · {740)698--9855
Lors &amp;
mllke•nylucn
ACJt&amp;l\GE
pl'efe,.nce,llmlhiUon 01
Wanted! Good credit cus- .L,_________.
dl.crlmlnetton...
tamers to purchase new
home wAand. $0 down to 112 acre lot on TyCoon Lake
Thle new•paper will not
qualified . customers. 1·5 w/12x60Trailer$16,500.00
knowlngl~ .ecepa
acre
tracts
available. now $13,500.00
(740)446·3093 .
. (740) 247·1'100
1
advertlaemenll
eltltewhlchlaln
New haven 3 large bed· 100 acres more or less,
violation of the l•w. Our
room, 2 1/2 bath, large open county water, Leon area,
Nldlra Ire Mretw
kltchenldlnlng area, over· $125,000. 304·458-1519
Informed that 111
sized 2 car garage, large ·
dwelling• RvertiHd In
rear deck w/ 16x32 in Mason Co. 73 + acres,
thl• new1paper .,.
ground poet, 20x20 building, Pond, city water, electric.
1vaUabl1 on 1n equal
3 years old located on 4 112 Very nice trailer included.
opponUnlly ~Ha.
acres 304·882-2072
Great Hunting. timber. Nice
..__ _~,;;.;;,.-.-._..
dBvelopment lor home site.
$
000 1
"'l!i~~--~---. 150.
. 304)882·3131
M
H
niir,;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
OBR.E OMES
Mason CoUnty Seven 1·
Ho~
SALE
acre lots with easy accest.
FOR SALE
City water, electric &amp; paved
••-i.iiiiiiiiiiii--,.1 12 used homes under road. Close to Toyota. OWit
$14,900,4 bedroom, 4 bath $3,000. Will help with deliv- :a:l(l!304F)jn562anc584e0$18,000
home. won'l last! For list- ery. Call- Harold, 740-385·
•
1Fng call 1-800·719·3001 Ext. 99
_ _411..;._
· ------REALW.ANID&gt;FsrAn:
144
- - - - - - - - - 12x60 3 bedroom w/c/a,
3 Bedroom with garage on washer &amp; dryer, Stove,
approximately 1 acre On $5,495, 740-992·2167
Will pay top dollar tor prime
Route 2. Gallipolis Ferry. 14• 65 Shultz wiDishwasher land. New home builder.
(304)675-5332
(740)446·3093
&amp; front deck. $6,000.
3 bed room, 2 bath home, (304)675-6295

feel to a railroad
oplke aet on the
' alaumed North right
of way
line of
Conaolldaled Rail
Corporation; thence
le.vlng nld cenler·
line and along nld
North rtght of way

'

YOUNG'S

CIISIIICnll
Building uver 30 yrars
Footers, Foundation,

Slid premlsea Is
located 11 38857
IAIIdlng Creek Road.
Said property 11
lppraiSid
II
$311,000.00 and can·
not be eold lor 1"1
then two·thlrda · (213)
of that amount.
TEFIMS OF SALE:
percent ol the
.hlghHI bid, ceah or
certllllll chack, due
on the dey of the
a11e, belence due
upon the confirm•·
lion ollhe ull by the
Melp County Court
of Common Pleae.•
The daed will be
lnulll upon the bal·
. , . . being paid.

• 2001 Dodge Stratus. load·
ld, 17,000 miles, $9500
080. (740)258-6189

.llS
FllllY

degr- 06' 14' West
a distance of 31.57

..-.

,__..iiiiiiiiio~

TURNED DOWN ON ~ PRICE REDUCED. ' 3 bed·
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? room. 2 bath Brick Ranch
No Fee Unless We Winl
on 1.5 llat acres, newer car1·888·5&amp;2·3345
pet, doors an appliances.
full basement (partially lin·
,
..
ished), 2 car garage. Rt 33
above
New
Haven.
(304)882·3897

27

w . .t a dla·
18nce of 123.61 feet
to a 511" Iron pin AI;
thence lnvlng aald
North rlg~t of way
llne ·Norlh 05 ~
02" 4r e ..t pa811ng
lhru a 511" Iron pin
aet at a dlatance of
341.31 feet and going
a total dlltance ol
380.31 feet to a paint
In • the centerline ol
County Road t3;
1. North 83 degreu
14" 22" E..t a dis·
18nce ol 92.51 feet to
a paint;
2. North 71 degreu
61" 41" But 1 diS18nce
ol 81.22 1•1 to lhe
principal
paint ol beginning
containing
1.719

675-52~

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Word Ads

- t o a point;
5.
South

nne South 19 degr-

(740) 446-2342 (740) .992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

3.
South
22
degr- 53" 12' West
a dlatance of 82.61
feet to a point;
4.
South
34
degreH 26' 22'" Wesl
a dlatance of 176.74

38' 43"

l\.egister

Sentinel

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

'•'

· Defendant

--

\

l

I ,I

1,

' " ' II'"

:1o ill

j,

.....

IIPIIC llllll,liiCIIIUI
WITU-u EtiCftleUIII.

I

I ll111'

(740) 992·5822
JUST launched!ll
LOSEWE!GHT
NOW! Burns FAT!

BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energyl
All Naturai/Doct01
Recommended

Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740·992-7988
or visit website:

DeanHW
New &amp; Used
471S South Church St.

Ripley, WV 25271

1·800·822-0417
"W.V's 11.1 Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds

www.harbondlot.com

in PT, Current BCLS (CPR) certification.

Cumnt WV license.
·
·
.
3) Spwh Tbcmp!at· Two positions available
Pleuant Valley Hoepltal Rehab Center Is currently acceptlna

r~aumea

tor Speech Therapiats for Outpatlentllnpatlent.
Muten Dearee from an approved colleae or school of speech ·
lanauaae patholoay from an accredited lnatltutlon. Current

Weat Vlralnla Speech Language Patholoalst lltenae.
Plwant Valley Hotpltal
e/o Human Relourca
Z520 Valley Drive
· Point Pleuant, WV Z55SO
(304) 6'75-4340
AA/EOE
l

Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Pans

All Makes

Dealers

1000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolvlllt, OH 45723

Locai143·S264

Medlc:an Supplement; LlfeiiiiUI'IIIetl
Burial and Final ExJIIII-1
Cancer II Dental,
Retlnment, Plmlon II 401K RoUonn1
Mortpae1 MIJor Medical

• Nunlna Home

.

�Page B 8 • The Dally Sentl~el

Thursday, October 24, 2002

www.mydallynntlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

BIUDOE
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

beveregee

1 Kld'l '
~.

scow

G

-

•• ' l

....

.,

•

K I 4 I

.• J 5 I

•••

.Al014
....th
• QJ 1
9 A Q3
• 10 5 4

.KUJ
Oealer: South
Vu.lntrable: Elst·West
Soulh Wesl · Nafta. East
I.
P111 1"
Pan
I NT

Pan

P111

Pall

. Q-penlnclead: • K

From Japan

'•

BARNEY
PAW WILL NEVER
THINK TO
MERE f'ER
MY EGG
MONE.'&lt; !!

d•
!

'

•

;

I ~

\ •"•
•
•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST,

ToNIGHr&gt;
TOPIC.
&lt;:tiA(ZM$,
OMtN,$

AN.I&gt; TH~
$(/f&gt;,;~-

•..

NATVPAlTHE BORN LOSER

'Tf\CfRE C,;VIKG WIL..BEJ~F~?
Wf&gt;.-Y TOO MUC.f-1 1-\0ME WO~K
,--... FOR SC.HiJOL Tf\ IS YE.t\R I

0

College

45

::::li.
Fllry-tlle

46

quartm
word
50 Open a gill
Mom'a
53 Deep blue
mom
55 T·bones
12 Itemize
56 Flip-chart
13 Chlneee
temple
etands
57 Plantain
14 Lure
lily
15 Arrogant
person
58 Ceremon·
lolllre
18 !lap abbr •
18 Bead• on
DOWN
gr111
19 Dripping
1 Type of
wei
muffin
23 Legal
2 "Othello"
matter
28 Reporter's
heavy
query
3 Door
openers
27 Apprecla·
4 Ceau
live
5 Poetaounds
Jonson
30 Portllenon
goddell
6 LL.D.
holder
32 Trilled with
7 Plunder
34 Early New
Zealander 8 Good·
natured
35 Sm~ll wave
9 Old In the
36 Tum
37 Unlold
dragon
centuries 10 AMA
38 Dwarl
members
11 Honda rival
39 Holiday
'l"""'i-r.:--r.:--

.. Qt?!i
Wnl
• 10 I S 3
\' 10 I 1
t KQJt7

42

10

~·~·.
\' Kll t

&gt;

Giants lead W.lcl 5elles 3 pines to :J, 11

NEA Crouword Puzzle

Melp CountY's Hometown Newspaper '"
diver·
Ricky or
·gences
old TV
17 Boxing win 41 Like bubble
bath
20 Wllh lftle lo
21 Obaervlng 42 Shrub
22 Sticky atuff 43 Wild obout
44 Felli
23 Play
grateful
bumper·
47 Quay
cars
48 Look
• 24 Theta
rudely at
precedero
49 Calculator
25 Boutique
llge.
28 Hoopla
51 Squeal on
29 Market .
52 Wanted·
· 31 Huron.
poater
neighbor
abbr.
33. Phone lrlo
35 New cop 54 Rug texture ·
37 USN rank
40 Wide
12

Bridge -computer
programs are still -·
and will remain, in
my opinion •• a long
way short or chess
programs. (In chess,
i!"""""!r-'-"'!'l'--r.;"""r.,
all the information ·is·
. 'TAIN'T HARDLY
known all the. time,
FAIR,IS IT'?
which makes analyz·
ing a position much
easier.) The latest
bridge program I received is Micro
Bridge I 0 by Tomio
and Yumiko Uchida
from Japan. It is the
b!)sl I have seen. The
machine bids accepta·
bly and plays decently. The user has
lots of control over
SUP~ItS'TITIONS1
the bidding and card- .
play methods to be
employed.
·.
'NOT ll~AL£.Y •••
There is one strange
quirk: A dot appears
JVST llt6VLA/t
above one of your
.STITIONS.
cards when it is your
turn to play. Do not
CELEBRITY CIPHER
be swayed •• it is not
by Luis Campos
a hint.
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.
10·24
Here is a deal that
Today'sclue: V equals Y
the program defended
correctly. How did
"GEJEMV
NUUN
R
KYESUP
EastWest
collect
.
.
seven tricks against
s u ZRIUG'H
HAL U
RGM
I-llS MOTf\E..R. 1\NO t DON'\ ""' one no-trump 7
•
1-\!&gt;..VE Et-.IOU61-\ TIME. TO 00 ITI . South might have
HE
NU U
HRWUN
HAL U,
rebid two hearts, but
YAWU
HE
Z R I.U R
KPAUG. M.
4-3-3-3 hands tend to
be better in no-trump
H R W UN
HAL U."
!
unless partner's hand·
· is unbalanced.
:i
TUEPTAR
E' W U UK K .U
West led the dia·
~ •
~
mond king. First, East
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"Broadway's mountain. Tough sled·
00
~
din.~ .on the way up- a loboggan on lhe way down:
made .the· key play of
0
- vyalter Winchell
•
overtaking with the
ace. One must unWORD
block in these posiGAM I
tions. East returned
I
the. diamond eight,
and West carefully 0 Rearronil• !olton of
four scromblod words b..
· overtook with its low to form four slmplo ·words.
nine. When West
cashed the diamond
HA WT E R
queen, East accu- ·· ~~,.........--...,..-.,.,2,.....,-.,--1
rately discarded an
.
. . .
encouraging spade ~=:;~~~:;:=~__.
six; after the diamond .
T J.\ I N G
deluge, East wanted a 1--n--,--r--n:--i·
spade shift. not a club
1• 1 1
switch (in case South 1..-.J.-...L.--L.- ' - ·--'N
had the club jack). · 1. R U L Y. C ~ ~
Our son
away
The spade king .
... camp. We got a real laugh from
KfND OF Nl
5 1
needed to be estab·
1 1 . 1~ ~ one of his letters. He wrote that
LIVIN6 IN A
lished before the club
. . _ .
~ before he signed up he never
ace was dislodged.
knewthat4:30 came around---·
After taking his dia- ·~l---r-PTU_D..,....L-.-E_Hnr-11· a-· -1
·
mends, West trust- . .
I
B.
Complete Jho chuckle quoled
ingly shifted to a .
. . . .
i&gt;y fiiHng in the missing words
spade, and that gave
you develop from step No. 3 below.
1
the defenders seven
PRINT NUMBERED
3
tricks: one spade, five ·
LETTERS IN SQUARES
diamonds and one , A UNSCiAMBlE FORI ,. I
. club.
, ~ ANSWER
. .
The software is
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
$66.90 postpaid from
August- Ebony· Queen - Plaque -BLUES
Baron Barclay Bridge
"To do the wash properly," says the mom," you have
Suprlies.
Call
(800)
I~
274-2221 to order.
to separate the whites from the colors." "I know," replied
the coed. "I've done the whites and yellows, but. 1 still
have to finish the BLUES!" ·
..
~

'

I

:3

••

BIG NAT.!£
WAS.
SUI THEN
r !&gt;i'OPPEt&gt;
TO BEGoiN
LESSON!&gt; .

'

I

I

PEANUTS
1

MWORRIED ABOUT POOR

MARCIE .. llER PARENTS INSIST
l"fllAT SIIE 6ET 5TRAI61.1T /J:S •.

1

1 1 1

r

I

5
Bv BRIAN J. REED
Slaff writer

Weather
High: 60s, low: 405

Qetalls, Al

Deaths
Robert Lynn Riffle, 48

.

Details, Al

.

Fall ·~~

.back·.. :

GUeSS WHAT ri\Y
FAVORI'ffi MOVI~ OF
· ~002 IG\'

-

-l)'1bur.

'Birtllday

l'riday, 0&lt;:1. 25, 2002
BV BERNICE BIDE 0sOL

A nonvocational interest

could take center stage in
y11ur life in the year ahead. It
will be something you think
of as fun. but it could eventu·
ally evolve into a very sue-

GAIWII£LD

cessful

TI.IE GBIZZ\VELLS
D? 'ro Ml\-\0 1\' I

I'i'll JU5\

1~1\\F.

Ma:J:)To 8EI-IP
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BrniJ YCU~ t.l&gt;.?..
\'OR A FEW
t&lt;\1\'\UTI.S

bu~iness

venture:

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) ·· Even though you might
get involved today in a busi· ·
ness arrangement that won't
be conducled along conven·
tionallines, it will prove to be
· the successful one to follow.
Get a jump on life by under· ·
standing lhe influences lhat
will govern you in 'the. year
ahead. Send for your Astra·
graph predictions by mailing
$2 and an SASE lo Aslro·
graph. c/o this newspaper. ·
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dcc.21) ·· Something mutu·
· ally beneficial can develop today· from a partnership ar·
rangemenl wilh a person
whom you don't normally
deal with. The association is

apt to last only as long as it
takes to complete your busi-

ness.

- -------- -- ..----··
...

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· If ynu have been sty·
mied by delays that are going

..J·
"' '"

-

....... "

.....

.. ..

·

nowhere, discard your normal
tactics today and use your in·
genuity and resourcefulness
to circumvent the roadblock.
You can do it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· A spur·of·the"moment
development could ensue to·
day; and . you'll want to be
able to take advantage of it.
Keep your calendar as ne~i­
blc as possible. because this
happen~ng could be rather exciting.

'

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) •• Through ihe good auspices of a friend. ·an unexpected bonus could be in the
making for you today. You
might get a piece of ihe pie
that's being ·served up in a
new and different way.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
.. .Stick to mental pursuits to·
day if it is at all possible.
You'll be far beuer equipped
lo handle them at thiS ltme
than you'll be able to cope
with physical ones. Deal in
the realm of ideas.

· TAURUS . (April 20-May ·
20) .. An unusual chain of
circumstances that pop out of
nowhere could tum out IO

he

very profitable for you in ihc
long .run. But it's the lype nf
arrangement lhat isn' t ltkely
. 10 be repeated.

. GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. h will be evident to every·
one you encounter today that
you're the one who possesses

the best leadership qualities,
as you demonstrate your abil·
ity to make quick, accurate

assessments.

'

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Your best ideas can be formulated in environments that

are quiet and pose little
chance of being dis(upled. If
you have something to sort"

out mentally today, keep this
in mind.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
There is a possibility lhat you
mig,ht be hearing from a
friend today who has some- .
thing unusual but good going
on. Your pal appreciates your
talents and wants you to get

involved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·· Lady Luck IS hanging out
in your nei~hborhood today.
but she won t stay around too

long. Move swiftly when you
see her. and

mk.~

POMEROY_ "We've had
some setb acks, but we 're not
down, and we're not going to
step down, because we know
the need is really great.''
Tom Dooley, president of
the United Fund for Meigs
County, discussed the effect
of the closing of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines
and other economic down-.
turns on contributions to the
United Fund during the
fund's 2003 campaign kickoff
breakfast Thursday.
According to Dooley, giving to local charities through
UFMC has suffered in the

Officials say rubble to
be gone by year's end

Don't forget:

nmechanges
Sunday·morning
WASHINGTON (AP)With the back.Yard barbecue season wmding to a
close, it's . time to say
jlOOdbye to daylight-savmg lime.
Clocks shift back to
standard time at 2 a.m.
Sunday, local time, giving
an extra hour of sleep to
most people Saturday
nigh!--- · . an extra hour of
work to those who work
the overnight.
And the change means it
will be dark lin hour..t;arlieG , n~xt week , when
Halloween arrives, calling
for .extra caution on the
par.t of drivers and those
watching the children Ol)
their rounds.
·· Most people set their
clocks back before retiring
Saturday evening. Those
who don' t, need to remember to set · them . back
Sunday - or they'll be an
hour out of sync with the
rest of the community. ·
If they still haven't
remembered to do it by ·
Monday morning, they
could be an hour early for
work.

LoHeries
OHIO

Pick 3: 0·4·8
Pick 4: 2-9-6~8
Buckeye 5: 2·3-15·18-19
Pick 3 night: 4·7·1 f•
Pick 4 night: g.(). 1·0
W.VA.
Daily~: 2'4·7

Daily 4: o,G-6-1
Cash 25: 8-1()-12-17·19-23

Index
1 Sections - 111 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A4
86-7
88
A4
A6
A3
A3
81-5
A2

· C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bv BRIAN J. REED

highway department 's heavy
equipment is occupied with
pending road and bridge .proPOMEROY ,.,.:: All that jects, but a trackhoe will be
remains of the Pomeroy made available to help clean up
Masonic Temple is a pile of the Mulberry Avenue site
bricks and lumber. But that pile before year's end.
of rubble has . become a
During the business session,
.headache for Meigs County commissioners .approved trans~
d
fer5 of funds for the county
· ·
CotrumssiOners
an an eyesore auditor, and tabled action on a
for neighbors and passersby.
Commissioner Jim Sheets $17,500 transfer request fium
said Thursday the debris will be the Meigs Board of ~ntal
removed as soon. as the coun- Retanlation and Developmental
ty's highway department can Disabilities fium its Workers'
Compensation line item into its
spare the equipment needed.
The historic temple building contract repair and other
was condemned years ago and expense line 1tems.
.;"'f#t:lonwliishl~ "M"llier-thiso yell{:' 10
Coll1Il)issioners also:
make
a courthouse
• Appro.v ed a resolution
parking
commissioners declaring November National
said,
.
SHo~e CMare .thand 'thHospicffe .
"We' ve had a lot of people erv~ces
on , WI
sta
inquire about the debris, and we members from Holzer Hospice
know it looks bad," Sheets said Meigs County, Holzer .Home
during Thursday 's regular com.· Care and Holzer Extra Care .
mission meeting. "We' re mak· participating·,
·
h 1·t ff"
• Approved payment of bills
~~=~gements to au 1 0 ' in the amount of $282, 153.4 1..
According to Sheets, the
Commissioner
Mick
· Davenport also attended.
Staff writer

Hundreds of potted plants and perennials came into the l)enior Citizens Center on Thursday
for the fall plant exchange, a project o.f the Meigs County Extension Office ·and the Master
Gardeners. Jim Deeter of Bedford Township, · a "regular" at bringing in and taking away
plants at the exchange, selects a spider plant. He is assisted by Colleen McCambrigge
Ridenour, a master gardener. (Charlene Hoeflich)
·

Students .track ·own .P.rogress,
given more·responsibilities
BY KRIS DllTSDN
Staff writer
RUTLAND - · Rutland
Elementary School boasts
I00 percent teacher/classin
room
participation
Baldrige this school year,
and according to Principal
Rusty Bookman, "It's a good
thing."
.
What is Baldrige?
"It's a comprehensive
school reform model ·that
puts an emphasis on student
responsibility with greater
communication between the
schools
and
parents,"
Bookman said.
Students track or chart
their progress in such areas
as dtscipline, turning in
homework and test scores.
That way they can tell if they
are meeting the goals that
they set for themselves, also

a part of
Baldrige.
Grades
are
no
longer surprises at
repon card
time. The
parents and
students
can easily
Bookman
tell
how
..
Ihey ' re
doing and why they deserve
Jhe grades they receive.
Baldrige began as a corpo- ·
rate iniuative to .help busi.nesses improve their bottom
lines by making their
employees more responsible
for their production.
It sbowed them how their
effons directly relate to the
end result. Because it was so
effective, educators adopted
the model for the classroom

Aging Council _hails
past year's efforts ·
committed and caring."
Mick Davenport, the coun·
cil president, recogni zed Gar
Haggy, building mainte·
POMEROY - More. than nance/vehicle
supervisor,
2.000 Meigs County senior who received the program of
citizens - that's nearly one the year award; Mary Hindy
out of every two in the coun- was named the outstanding
ty - received some service in-home . employee of the
through the Meigs County year; and Darla Hawley,
Council on Aging over the execulive assistant/human
past year.
. resource director, was named
Susan Oliver, execu1ive employee of the year.
.
director, gave that report at
It was reported that a speThursday 's annual meeting cial "march for meals"
held at the senior center. In brought in $9,000 for the
discussing the finance s of the home delivered meal pro-·
agency, Oliver described it as gram, and that Diana Coates
.
"tough."
She said cuts in federal and wrote a grain and received
$9,000 from the Corporation
state funding were made last for National and · Volunteer
year, and that additional cuts Service
for
Homeland
of I0 to 15 percent are Security to use with RSVP
expected in 2003 .
volunteers.
She attributed the ability of
Also noted was receipt of
the .center to continue its con- $26,000 through the Sisters of
stant level of services to the St. Joseph :s Foundation, used
dedication of employees.
Lo purchase a walk-in cool"This staff is the best," she er/freezer and do 'renovation
. said . "Every da y, they' re in ihe kitchen.
Oliver reported that the
coming up with innovative
ways to save money and still
provide the services. They are
Please see Aging. Al
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tJews editor

with great success.
"Our entire staff went to a
two-day training seminar
June 2001 ," Bookman said.
"Ohio
Orientation
to
Performance
Excellence
gave the training through the
Region a!/ Profes s ion a I
Development Center. And
the enure thing was volun.tary for my teachers."
Bookman said the school
had follow-up activities prior
to school starting so they
could decide what . quality
tools needed to use that
school year. Four ·o f 13
teqchers practiced Baldrige
during the 2001 -02 school
year.
"As the year progressed,
tj10ugh, we had seven
involved in the process,"
Bookman said.
"They were seeing · Ihe

Please see School, A3

Together we've lost 252 pounds.
.
And we're. still losing.·

advantage of

her help financially or careerwise.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·

• You have your own unique

way of handling delicate de-

velopments , and !Od uy you
will put these talents to work

TOLL FREE (866) 821-4541

In your favor, Other:s can only ·

watc_h and applaud.

•
~

Fund

past year, due in part to giving .
to Sept. II charities and other
organizations, and because of
the general downturn in ~he
economy.
United Fund ·for Meigs
County collects contributions
h
h
ll d d ·
t roug payro
e ucuons
and private and corporate
donattons on behalf of nine
1 1
h · bl
oca
c anta e groups:
Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative
Parish,
Riverbend Arts Council,
Meigs County Historical
.Society
and
Museum,
Serenity House and Meigs
County Men's Homeless
Shelter, .
Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency, Jan Knapp and Rachael Proffitt of Meigs County's Peoples Bank branches present a $750 con.
tribution toward the United Fund for Meigs County's 2003 fund-raising campaign. Campaign
Chairman Sue Maison and UFMC Treasurer Bruce Fisher accept the contribution. (Brian J.
Please see Kick oft, A3 · Reed)

'Spider' man

I I I I e

e

acks don't.deter un·

r

)

WWW.CCWL.INFO

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