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Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

TUesda~October29,2002

www.mydailyaentlnel.com

PHILLIP

ACROSS 49 Kin ol
oltn
1 Sld/1 length 51 Muolcol
S Big burger
boot
8 Topple over 53 Pullet
11 Dlpp'-&lt;1
54 Deborah 12 Crlmoon·
of old ftlmo
Tide 11.
55 "Thll-13 Tumplke
otlckupl"
15 Hole up
57 Felines
16 Tonic
61 Plum
pol1ner
variety .
17 S.ge'o
82 Medllltlon
pooch
practice
18 Hindu Mr. 83 Aporlrnlflt
20 lllmlzo
84 Go by plone
22 Glide
85 Cartoon
25 Dlvloutl
ohrlek
26 Sun, In
88 Mild
Mullion
27 Support
DOWN
28 Thin layer
31 Scheme
1 Ooohbooril
33 Mil. r1nk
Info .
34 p.,try
2 VI halved
illml
3 Blllty of
' Himdom
38 Any
39 YH,ID
4 l.o. wordo
5 Wlumen
Ynllo
40 Freud'o
8 "/llllddin"
prlnco
conceme
7 Softly
41 Deolre
(2 wdo.)
lllumlriod
44 CPR pro
8 Pony's galt
45 Adherent
9 Wee bill
10 Courtyard
ouftlx
14 Ken or Gl
48 Coal!
Guard ele/1
Joe

ALDER

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Opening lead: t J

From Israel

... (1

Give h the
Opry"
901
45 Vexeo
21 ogle
48 Place for
22 E•hauoto
booko
23 Wtlghtln
47 Alpl~e
Canada
r1glon
24 Bode or Ant 50 Rough, oo o .
25 Plgo' noo111 dlomond .
2t Bt frugal
52 Deuce
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30 Addreoo
ouc-oor ·
lbbr.
53 Yom
32 NOI pre·
muoure

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owned

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BUT TI-IERE'S MORE TO
LIFE TI-l AN 6EIN6 CliTE ..

I

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able declarer, he will _ . M E T P Y ~~-.,r,.
have the given suit. .
...
One fellow to his buddy al ball :
So, you should make 1 ., ~ 1 1
~arne, "No wonder our language . . .
. is so hard.to understand . We call
the unnatural-looking
shift to the ace a lid
amfreree_a_ge_ n_ t,a... n athlete who wants
E L FNE I
. 0
another spade. Then,
when West wins with . f--T"~-T"~-,..~--~,..--,~,.srl 0 Complete the chuckle quoled
his heart ace, he Can . . . . . .
by, fillinq In the missing words
give you a spade ruff ":;~~~~~:;~;;~y~ou~d·~·~·l~op¢,fro~m~st~ep~N~o~-~3~b~e~lo~w:,
:
4
to defeat the contract. i:\ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
3
s
For full . de.tails ~{;;!' THESE SQUARES
about the magazine, ' A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
Jog
onto WWW .bridge- ~ ...:;._~..:;.;..:...:::.;.;:.:,:.:;,::
V
TO GET ANSWER_ _ _ _-'-~-.1-_._....,.__.
today.com.
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Verify· Wedge- Taupe- J\Aining- INVENTED
NEWSPAPERS .
f( group of people were standing in the doarway _af 11
Cover ~Nille
.
department
stare waiting.for a storm to pass. One dummy
Malar Subjectll
asked the other, "How did they measure ~ail before the .
· golf ball was INVENTED?"
·

I

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T\IERE

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'll:ll!l'OJTS
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-----~=~-----Wednesday. Oct. 30, 2002
BY BERNICE BEDE OsOL

· 'In situations where you
were once content to be a fol·
lower, you may now find
I WA5 MUCI-l

MO~E

I W""~p HAVE Bt:EN
AC'r1ve. roo ...

ACTIVE:

fHAN YOU TOV'AY

yourself strivi ng to be a

leader. Under your experi·
enced hands, and armed with
fresh ideas, . everyone in·
valved will benefit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Through sound thinking. you can' breathe new life
intd an enterprise that looked
like a lost cause . You believed in it, and now you may
realize the success you had al·
ways hoped it would become.

Scorpio, treat yourself to a

. TilE (;I:JZZWELLS
~ON ARE
YOU 1:0\NG

To'VAY'

YoU CAN'T WICK' J.lA~I-li\!

I Cl!.\-\'1 KICK

1\.\t&gt;.i'l'&gt; A?R£m' fJTUPID

!

i
I

\HING 10 nAY .. WI\~ I'Jc(J\D
'fdJ WANT To KICK f:I:&gt;ME · _

TH\~6.;.

\-lA! ~A! WA!

• CAI-I'T \&lt;.10\"'

\mJ LAME

CAN

birthday gift. Send for your
Astrograph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing $2 and
an SASE to Astrograph, c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 167,
Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be sure
to state your zod iac sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)-- There's a strong
possibility that you may get
in volved in a new crowd to·

day thai wi II prove to be a
very happy occurr~nce. These.
people are doers rather than

dullards.
CAPRI&lt;;:ORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •• Startmg today. you wtll
be able fO advance your status

in life if you apply yourself
toward those ends. Set realistic goals and .obj' ectives and
begm immediate y to pursue
- them.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- An experience you .
have today may immensely
help broaden your outlook
and perspective on life. A
happter and wiser you could
emerge from this new slant on
life that you discover.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) •. ·You may be invited to
join in today on a joint en·
deavor that is presently under·
way . The foundation has ~I·
ready been laid. but you II
still be able to make a major
contribution.

ARIES (March 21-April19)
.• There is strength in· numbers, as today may prove. A
partnership mlo which you
enter at this time could turn

out to be far more beneficial ·
than anything you would un·
dertake on your own.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) •• Even though you may
be given a larger rapge of re·
sponsibilities today thim
usual, you'll perform well and
will receive rewards! in ~To­

portion to your accomplish·
ments.

Odob£'t \(\ 1001. Vol ~J Nn 1)4

~..... &lt;\ mtddil\~e-ntln(:l rr.. m

Middl e p or t . Pomeroy. Ohi o

Whafs inside

Bridge.design includes decorative wall
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

sa 0o1 111e

1

1--.,ntr--llr-'l-.

nt&lt;.. \.h•rlflt'H1.n

35 "-Around" 58
38 Alukon
59
· port
37 JFK orrivolo eo
42 Bonfire

All.TUII.. .

' I I

(I

19

·

i

..........1

Mei1s County's Hometown Newspaper

picture
Ml-llony
BY PHIWP ALDER
Scrooge · '
The second i_nde·
ond Tiny pendently published
Souh :
Marie, .Mich.
Am~:rican magazine
remain•
is Bridge 'Today. It
43
"GrandLUCKILY TH' PARSON'S
started in Jamaica,
r_ro,.,.. NO SUCH IIGE
QUeens, but moved to
LIMITS!!
Israel when the edi·
tors, Pamela and Matthew Granovetter,
emigrated. It has a
varied content, but
aims squarely at the
• tournament player.
This deal from Peter Kichline contains
a good lesson. Look
at only the North and
East hands . Against
four hearts, your partTtt~ APA~TMrNT$ A~l:
ner· (West) leads the
diamond
jack. South
fMAt,L ANI&gt; Tttt:
wins with. his ace and
p/,l)M,ING 15 SAl&gt;···
runs the heart jack to
your queen. What
vii: C.At,L IT "Tttt:
would you do now?
Pl:~tStC.UT ION
After North's one'OMPLfY.':
no-trump
rebid,
South's two-spade re·
CEkEBRITY CIPHER
verse announces four
by Luis Campos
spades, five hearts
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher starids for another.
and game- forcing valToday~ clue; J equals K
ues
.
(True,
he
might
THE BORN LOSER
,..
17'" .
"'q
17'
~ ·be 4-6 or 5-6 in the
\f\E.fi~S\Tf\lt-IG [ u::~f.IE.I) .
W~ TO N.OT :'&gt;WEI'-T Tf\E.
Tf\( SE.C.OI\ID Tr\11'-!G l ~EO majors, but the hearts
"0 p w
X W I 0 · H B 0 V S· I
-M V
1--lf\E.I\I t WWT TO WOIZK fO~
U TTL( Tr\1 1'-\GS ...
IN"-':&gt;, W\Ti-1. VE£5L.C.rDTE.I&lt;.,
must be longer than
.v v0
AWO
0 p w . LPWWAI
VEE6lEFE~TE.IZ ...
! Tr\Ei&lt;:e.':'&gt; ~0 ~01. Tr\1\-IG A::&gt; the spades. With 5·5,
South would have re1\ U\TL( Tf\ING
I P Vl . "
PWVSE
DVYMH
sponded one spade,
.
not one heart.)
I
"TO · IRSW
XW H 0 I
LVSJTVFI"
A natural reaction
for you is either toresvxwso ZTOBPRZ
turn a diamond (lead
back J?3rlner's suit) or
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Being a woman hasn"t helped me. I
know It's an all-boys club. But I'm not going away."
to swttch to the club
- Boxing promoter Diane-Fischer ·
jack· (hoping for ·ferRIC. NATF:
tile soil there). HowWI)RD
ever,
first stop :and
I..ET'S GO. FRAMC\$!
COME ON,
GAMJ .
ask yourself about deLETS Go. TEl)t&gt;'f!
clarer's· trump holdL.ET's. GO. MATT!
ing. Could he have O Reerrcnge latrers of the
four scramb'led words be·
LET~ - Go. KEVIN!
ace-jack· JO,fifth?
IQw to form fovr simple wor~s.
It is highly unlikely, because the ..1· T N K Y T 0
normal play with that
-r-=-,.,~
~J]fl;B~J combination
is low to
. . . . .12
dummy's king, fol· L-....1---I.-L,---'---L.--l
lowed by a ·secondl 0 wR D
Ea~~-d finesse through
13
PEANUTS
_.,
If SOuth is a reli- ~-:::::·:;:~·::;:·;:~·~"'

I

'ntbe hires

NEA Crossword Puzzle

IRIDOII:

•

'

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
•• Happy oc~urrcnces could
be in the offing for you today
pertaining to your social life
and popularity. A couple of
present relationships may also
become more meaningful at
this time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
•• Today could mark the end ·
of any discord· you may have ··
had in the household of late. ·
Influences that have been ·af·
fecting the unhappy situation
will undergo solid constructive change.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 72) ·Several tdeas or proposals set
forth by others today may
provide you with some con-

OSU gears for Gophers, Bl

Weather
High: 40s, Low: 30s

Details, A2

POMEROY Design
plans for the' new Pomeroy·
Mason bridge include a
retaining wall depicting
Meigs County landmarks and
history.
. .
George Collins of Tuppers
Phiins, deputy · director for
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation District I 0,
met with a committee of locai
business owners and officials
Tuesday morning to unveil a
preliminary sketch of the
wail, which will be constructed near the present bridge
approach.
·
The 204-foot-long wall will
lle part of a "J-Hook" intersection on the Pomeroy side
of the bridge, and will be
erected on 30-foot pylons.
The decorative elements of
the wall will be etched into
the concrete and shaded,

Collins said, creating a threedimensional effect. ODOT's
preliminary sketch of the wall
show a rendering of the
Meigs County Courthouse,
children playing, and a map
of Ohio showing the county 's
location.
· Committee members sug,
gested that the portion of the
wall showing children at play
be changed to include a Civil
War soldier on horseback,
representing those who
fought at the Bailie · of
Buffington Island.
ODOT plans to award a bid
for the new cable-stay bridge
in December, and construction is expected to begin in
March, according to ODOT's
Stephanie Filson, who also
attended Tuesday's meeting.
It will be built just down
river from the existing bridge,
which will- be demolished
once the new bridge is open
to traffic.

.
·

•
ODOT Deputy Director George Collins (standing) and members of a local design review com·
mittee review plans for a decorative retaining wall to be included in the design of the approach
to the new Pomeroy/ Mason bridge. (Brian J. Reed) ·

Advisory lifted
MIDDLEPORT - The
water boil advisory issued
for the North Second
Avenue in Middleport has
been Iifted.

School bus safety

Pancake's jail
record •becomes
•

·Trick or treat ·

campa1gn 1ssue

· POMEROY - Trick or
Treat in Syracuse will be
observed from 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday. The fire siren
will sound to begin and·
end the hour.
: The Letart Falls commu·
l)ity will have trick or treat
from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday.
, 'J;.be 1'uppers Plains commun~ty will observe trick
or treat night from 6 to 7
p.m Wednesday. The siren
will sound to start and end
the observance.
Portland will have trick
or treat from 6 to 8 p.m.
Thursday.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

'

Plan giveaway
· POMEROY Meigs
County Humane Society
will have a straw giveaway
for dog houses from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday
at Kroger.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 0·9·8
Pick 4: 3·3·8·2
Mep Millions: 9·1().14·41·49
Me11 IIIII: 35
Buckeye 5: 3·6·23-32·34
Pick 3 night: Hl·9
Pick 4 night: 3·1·5·6

Ciovemor ·debates education tax for extra school_funding

W.VA.

Daily 3: 0·6·8
Daily 4: 2·9·5· 7

'

Clsh·zs: 1·3·6·8·10·13

·Index ·
1 Sections - 16 P111es

Calendar
tlassifieds
Comics ·
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

SAFETY CHECK - Ra~_dy Boston, a mechanic with the Eastern Local School District. gives
a school bus engine a tune-up. Buses are serviced every 3,000 miles as part of the School
system's safety policies. In observance of School Bus Safety Week, school officials are urging motorists to be extra cautious and to heed buses' stop signs and flashing lights. Archie
Rose, transportation director, says drivers who don't stop for school buses can be fmed and
have .their license suspended. (Krls Dotson)

port, but said his arrearage
was largely due to his losing
hi s job with AEP.
" It was a rough time in my
POMEROY - Democrat life," Pancake said. "I lost
Jim Pancake 's jail record my job, and fell behind in
has become an issue in his my child support · and I'm
race
with
Republican sorry about it"
Jimmy Stewart, and features
Pancake denied abusing
prominently in a campaign · his . former wife, Billie,
mailing financed by ihe although s~e filed affidavits
Ohio Republican Party.
f
·
Stewart. who will face off accusing him o domestic
with Pancake next week in a violence and Nel sonville
race for the new 92nd police logs indicate comHouse District seat, said plaints about domestic disTuesday he was not respon· putes at the Pancake home. ·
sible for the content of the
Pancake also was briefly
mailing, which addresses jailed in 1980, charged with
Pancake 's conviction, in the burglary at hi s estranged
early J 980s, of contempt of wife's home.
court and burglary. and his
Stewart declined to ·comeventual sentence to jail ment OFt Pancake's arrest
time.
record and failure to pay
Pancake, of Nelsonville, child support, but said he
served 13 days .in the was not aware. of the GOP
Athen s County Jail in 1982. _ mat ling unttl II arnved tn
He said Monday the sen- mmlboxes. .
.
tence was related to a
"The Oh10 Republtcan
dome st ic violence case, Party makes independent
stemming from a dispute expenditures, and I have no
between himself and his control over what they do or
·former wife' s boyfriend.
don't do," Stewart said .
He also said that he was
" I wasn't even aware of
found in contempt of court the piece, and my campaign
for not paying his child sup- did not pay for it."

A4
86-7
8.8
A4
A6
A3
A3
81-5
A2

- Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

::--, it.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov.
Bob Taft might consider a new tax
But the court
agreed to reconsid·
to provide extra money for sc hool s,
depending on the outcome of a state
er that deci sion
after estimates of
Supreme Court ruling.
the spending hit
Taft's budget director Tom
$1.2 billion annu·
Johnson said Tuesday the tax is one
ally. Taft said he
option under consideration.
believed the court
Johnson said he told .the governor
used
inaccurate
it would be difficult .to comply with
information
in
the Ohio Supreme Court 's most
Taft
reaching it s deci·
recent school-funding decision
ston .
based on the current budget.
John
son
said
any
decision to proAfter twice ruling the school
funding sys tem unconstitutional, ceed with an ~ucation tax depends
the court in September 2001 said on the couri' s next decisior. in the
school funding would be constitu· 11-year-old lawsuit.
"We hope the Supreme Court
tiona! if more money was spent on

rules th.at· we' ve done enough," he
said. He cited increases in bas ic aid
to schools, the state 's $2 million -a·
day school construction program
and new standards for student learning.
"Our pos1tton is we'v.e done a
great deal for education," John son
sa id. "We hope the court recognizes
that."
·
L~ s t month, Taft said he would
consider additional tax increase s
next year if the state needs to raise
more money after schools; higher
education and economic development initiatives are funded .
Taft , a Republican , is running for
re-election Nov. 5 aga inst DC1t10crat

Tim Hagan.
. Throughout the campaign, Taf1
has consistently refused to give
details on any proposed tax increases . Neither he nor Johnson will say
what kind of deficit the state might
face for the two-year budget begin·
ning July I.
If more taxes were needed, Taft ·
has said he would look at the kind
of business taxes enacted earlier ·
this year to balance the budget.
Tho se included an increase in the
state's cigarette tax and a tax on
trusts held by Ohio banks .

to

structive elements that you

wi II be able to incorporate .

into . your own immediate .•

2002 SIO.AI foofiJUII Co-Champions
A Community Pep Rally will be held .

plans.
.. ·
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) .
.: A marked improvemell\ in
your financial trends could
begin starting today. Much of
it will be due to the healthy
way' you aP.proach yOur funds
and obhgattons.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Plan your tomorrows wilh
great care today, because ven-

Thursday,October

31 • 7:30pm • City Park

Division Ill Region 11 State Playoff Game

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

_ vs. the Circleville Tigers

tures or endeavors you now

undertake could have promis·
jng, long-term effects. What
you envision will materialize.

Saturday, November 2 • 7:00pm • Memorial Field

Good Luck Blue!!

I
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www.holzer.org

,

.,
•

�•

•

••

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Oct. 31

ol Columbuol33'/4e'

COLUMBUS (AP) Surgeon
Daniel McLaughlin planned to attend
a Statehouse rally .Wednesday to support capping medical malpractice verdicts . Dave Coover, who got a malpractice settlement for his daughter's
brain damage, said he would be at an
event next to the doctors' rally to
protest such caps. .
Doctors crushed by rising malpractice insurance premiums and victims
of medical malpractice have argued
their cases before Ia wmakers for
months. They planned side-by-side
events Wednesday at the Statehouse
expected to attract hundreds.
McLaughlin, 44, of Cleveland said

I

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o • ••, ~••~*
Shooe ~

T~IOiml

Flurrioo

Rain

SI&gt;M

k:e

Clouds, rain, cold to continue
cloudy. A slight chance of rain
An area of low pressure was or snow showers after midover the Central Appalachians .night. Lows in the mid 30s.
and extended back into the Chance of precipitation 20
upper Ohio Valley. This sys- percent.
.
tem kept skies cloudy over the
Extended .forecast:
area last night. It also caused · Friday.. .Mostly cloudy with
some light rain light rain or
drizzle.
. a chance of showers. Highs in
The loiv pressure will move the mid 40s. Chance of rain
30 percent.
off slowly to the east today.
night ... Mostly
Skies will be mostly Cloudy. t Friday
Lows will be in the upper 20s cloudy with a chance of snow
to the mid 30s.
or rain showers in the
High pressure will extend evening, then a slight chance
·into the mid Ohio Valley on of snow showers late. Lows in
Thursday. Weather should be the upper 20s. Chance of predry, but ThursdiJ.y's skies will cipitation 30 percent.
remain 1'nostly cloudy. Highs
. ·Saturday... Partly cloudy
will be in the 40s.
with
a chance of snow showA c'old front will across the
area Friday. It will cause snow ers. Continued cold. Highs in
..
showers across much of the the upper 30s.
Sunday... A slight chance of
~;egi·an ·Saturday. Highs temperatures Friday will be in the · showers in the morning, othlower 40s and not e11:pected to erwise partly cloudy. Lows in
climb out of the 30s statewide the upper 20s and highs in the
on Saturday.
upper 40s:
Weather forecast:
Monday ...Partly
cloudy.
Tonight...Partly
cloudy. Lows near 30 and highs in the
Lows in the upper 30s.
Northwest winds 5 to I 0 mph. lower 50s.
Election
Day... Partly
· Thursday... Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 40s. cloudy. A chance of showers.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph. Lows in the lower 30s and
Thursday night. .. Mostly highs in the upper 40s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aroundup of the dally markets
Oct 29, 2002

12,000

Dow Jones
. Industrials
''""~':

8,368.94
Pet c:haroe 1r001 previous

-0.01

High
Low
8,399.74
8,198.04 .
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000 ,
2,000

Oct 29, 2002

Nasdaq
composite
r ·1

""'"'•:;~ :

1,300.54
Pet c:harQe from IJI!VIOUS

-1.16 .

High
Low
1,318.93
1,279.19
Record high: 5,048.62
March 10. 2000

-----------1,000
AUG
SEP
OCT
JUL

1,200

800
700

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

BEAVER (AP)- Pa~ents scuffled
with security ·guards Tuesday night
after members of the Eastern Local
School Board left a packed meeting
without h!'!arinll from striking teachers or commumty members.
Teachers have been on strike for
more than a month and negotiations
· 1
are deadloc"ked.
The school board announced before
the meeting Tuesday that there would
not be time set aside for public corrtmel)t from hundreds of parents, staff
members and students in the audience. It was the board's first meeting
since the strike began Sept. 26.
Board members left after a twohour private ~xecutive session, and

,'li-·
'f

..

ROCkwell- 16.55
ROCky Bools - 4.75
Gannett- 77.3/J
RD SheU- 40.11
General Electric - 25.85 Sears - 27.23
GKNLY-3.75
Harley Davidson- 52.76 Wai-Marl- 56.47
Wendy's - 32.20
Kmarl- .69
Wortllinglon-'- 18.75
Kroger - 15.49
Dally stocl&lt; reports are
L1d. - 15.50
NSC - 20.65
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak Hil Fnancial- 21 .
quotes of lhe previous
OVB - 20 .69
day's transactions, proBBT - 36.35
vided
by Smilh Partners
Peoples - 26.43
al Advesl Inc. of
Pepsico - 43.66
Premier - 7.10
Gallipolis ..

USB - .20.88

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NEWS, .
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Federal Mogul - .53

n

he's attending the rally because he is damage when she was born in
concerned about the future of Nov~mber 1998 and requires constant
patients' access to quality health care. medical care.
Medical malpractice insurance that. Coover, 41, settled with a Union
he and his partner buy rose from County doctor and anesthesiologist
$25,000 in 2001 to $125,000 thiJi but lost a lawsuit against the hospital.
year, McLaughlin said.
The settlement amount was sealed.
. "We had to take out a loan so we
"From the . standpoint of the
could go to work this year;" he said. Legislature, there ' g. a huge lobby for
The Ohio State Medical Association -the doctors but the lobby for the vicexpected more than 2,000 doctors tims, for the people who've under~ .
from around the state to attend .·
gone malpractice problems, people
Coover of Columbus was to. be one are not seeing that," said Coover, a
of a group of between 50 and 100 vic- regional sales manager · for a
tims of medical malpractice and their Columbus manufacturing co~pany.
families also at the event. His daugh- "I think they need to see that stde of
ter Lexi, 3, suffered .severe brain it."

the altercation occurred when some · hasn't changed its position on any
parents followed board members as bargaining issue since the strike
they left the building.
began.
.
.
The district hired the security
Classes are continuing with substi guards for the strike. Most of the dis- tute teachers in the 900-student district's 61 teachers and some staff trict.
members have joined the walkout and
Teachers . union spokeswoman
have been picketing school entrances. Cheryl Sel.b ee said the ·strike has
· People attending the meeting con- divided the · community. "I feel t~at
ducted an impromptu public forum
while the board was in executive ses- the majority of the people that are
sian.
here (at the meeting) are behind the
· School officials have said striking' teachers and the support staff 100
workers are demanding that the dis- percent," she said.
Margaret Rigsby described the .
trict cover 100 percent of their health
insurance costs. They also want back strike as "stupid" and said she has
pay for days missed during the strike. sent her child to school every day
The union said the school board since the walkout began.

'

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Subscribe totjay.
992-2156

- - -- -- - -

,. Shots available
. . POMEROY -- Meigs
. County Health Department
_has received additional
la.te
' influenza
vaccine
· · Tuesday. The vaccine is designated for Meigs County
· 'residents 65 and older,
• · accordin~
to
Health
·CommissiOner Norma Torres.
· · "I offer our sincere apolo. 'gies to those inconvenienced
1 when the vaccine reserved
' for senior citizens was
·ex_P:ended Monday," Torres
c • swd. "Seniors were provided
the first opportunity to
receive vaccine Friday, and
. approximately 600 received
· shots."
·
The department will conduct flu shot clinics for ei'sidents six months and older
· ·from 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3
· ·p.m. on Wednesday and
Friday, at a cost f $15 per
· . shot, for those without health
- insurance. The shots will be
administered on a f1rst come,
. . first-served basis, and no
.. shots will be reserved, Torres
. said.

bership drive.

Grange meets
HEMLOCK GROVE Meigs County Pomona
Grange #46 will hold their
annual officers' conference
and yearly planning meeting
at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the
Hemlock Grange Hall, followed by the regular meeting
at 7:30 p.m. All members are
asked to attend.

TrUstees to
meet
RUTLAND -- Rutland
Township Trustees will hold
their November meeting at 5
p.m. on .Nov: 6 at the Rutland
fire station.
.

Lodge meets
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Loqge 411,
F&amp;AM, will hold a stated
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Masonic Hall.

Planning party

:.: Report a~ent

MIDDLEPORT -- Hope
MIDDLEPORT- Baptist Church, 570 Grant
. Middleport
. Police St., Middleport, will host a
. Department reported that .block pany from 6 to 8 p.m.
· James W. Easton of Thursday during Trick or
Middleport was backing out Treat. Free hot dogs, popcorn
· of a parking space on Pearl and soft drinks will be
.. Street, Tuesday when he served, and the public is
struck Kenneth P. Leedy's car invited.
on the passenger's side.
Leedy is from Athens. There
were no injuries and no citations were given. Minor damPORTLAND - Lebanon
age was reported. .
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. Saturday at the ·
township building.

Trustees meet

after trickor-treaters'
attacker

Local Stocks
AEI&lt;l - 25.16
Arch Coal - 17.6.5
Akzo - 29.20
AmTechiSBC -'- 25.25
Ashland Inc. - 25 .64
AT&amp;T - 12.97
Bank One - 39.21
BLI - 16.59
Bob Evans - 25.31
BorgWar.ner - 44.35
Champion - 2.45
. Charming Srops - 4.49
City Holding - 27.57
Col - 21.92
DG - 14.76
DuPont - 41.20

•

Mom goes

. q

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Scientists test common medicines and
mental exercise as preventives for Alzheimer's

Local Briefs

I

CANTON (AP)
Young trick -or-treaters
were out going door-todoor when someone in a
hockey mask jumped out
of a car, tackled a boy in
the group and took his
candy.
Two teenagers now face
felony charges after an
angry mother went on
patrol and found the
alleged culprits.
"It was a really traumatic
night,"
said
Melinda Balbo-Shiven,
whose daughter was in
the group Sunday during
the official Halloween
trick-or-treating in Plain
Township .
Her 12-year-old daughter, Lauren, and 11-yearold
friend,
Danny
Schnabel, were tearful as
they told her about what
happened.
Balho-Shivers and her
nephew, each driving / a
car, found a 13-year-old
boy and 17 -year-old girl
in a car the girl was driving in a nearby cul-desac.
. "I think they were looking for other kids to do
this to," she said, noting
that the girl kept telling ·
. the boy: t'o get out and
apologize.
·
The boy did, and
Ietumed the candy.
.
' Balbo-Shivers returned
home and called deputies.
She had taken down the
license plate number to
the car. which belongs to
the . girl's father, a
deputies' report said.
Rick DeHeer, court
administrator for Stark
County Family Court,
said both teens were
booked into the MultiCounty
Juvenile
Attention Center on ·
Sunday.
They
were
released to their parents'
·custody and were scheduled to appear for a hearing Nov. 14.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

WMinesclay. October :so. 1001

Meeting in~ district with striking teachers ends with altercation

~~~w. v~

C1oudy

: Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Doctors, patients, rally on opposite sides of malpractice bill

Ohio weather

SuMy Pt. Cloudy

PageAl

Coalition meets

POMEROY
Meigs
County Health Department's
Cardiovascular Coalition's
·November meeting will be
held at 1 p.m. on Nov. 2 at the
Meigs
County
Health
Departm~nt Board Room.
The t9p1cs will be "Cold
Hands/Warm Hearts," incentives for 2003, and the lllt!m-

.. .. =="'Honor Our
Heroes

,

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·Major
Earl Jones

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

1969~1971

Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $14.00

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·_

Citations
issued

On Nol'ember 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who hal'e proudly ser~~ed their country during times of
crises and peace.
.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Stmtinel will publish a l'ery special tribute ·
honoring area l'eterans. Yori can join in our salute by including the
l'lfleran in your life, lil'ing or deceased, who have ser~~ed or is currently
ser~~ing in any bran~h of the U.S. Armed Forces.
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Driver cited

PORTLAND - Tara L.
: Knighting,
22,
: Ravenswood, W.Va., was
! cited for assured clear dis; tance by ihe Gallia"Meigs
i Post of the State Highway
: Patrol following a two-vehi; cl.e accident Tuesday on
' Ohio Route 124.
: Troopers said Knighting
was eastbound in Lebanon
Township at 9:50p.m. when
she was unable to stop in
time and struck the rear of a
pickup truck driven by Troy
D. Barton, 38, Ravenswood.
Barton hab hit his brakes
to avoid collision with a
deer when the accident
occurred, the report said.
Barton's pickup had dis·
abling damage, and functional damage was reported
to Knighting's car, troopers
' said.

In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates of Active Duty
Branch of Service
Conflict/War

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Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
.

Your Name:

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www.mydlltyHnllnel.com

Controversial combination of Spanish
and English making its way into mainstream
'

•
Spanglish

In the wacky cartoon world
SJ?eakers, wh9
of the "Mucha Lucha" often. move mmbly between
wrestling school, Buena Girl the two lan~uages and cuiis trying to help her friend tures, say it IS an e11:pression
. gain weight in preparation of ethnic pride.
for his match with three big · "Spanglish is proof that
"brutos."
Latinos have a culture that is
"And now for the ultimate made up of two pans. It's not
. in buena eats! El Masked that you are Latino or
Montana's mega torta!'' she American,"
said
Ilan
says, stuffing an enormous Stavans, the professor of
Latin American and Latino
sandwich into his mouth.
The WB network's new culture who translated
show is peppered with a Miguel de Cervantes' masblend ofSpanish and English terpiece. "You live on the
·called hyphen, in between. That's
dialogue
often
· Spanglish. And TV isn't the what Spanglish is all about, a
· only-place you'll find lt.
. middle ground."
·
. An Amherst College proSpan~;lish speakers span
fes&amp;or recently completed a generations, . classes and
Spanglish translation of the nationalities. Immigrants still
first chapter of "Don learning English may tum to
Quixote," and Hallmark is SJ?.anglish out. of necessity.
expanding its line of cards Bdingual speakers may d1p
that mjx America's most into one language, then
commonly spoken tan- weave in another because it's
more convenient.
guages.
Not eve~one is happy to
''There are certain words or
see Spangbsh creep into the sayings that are just better in
mainstream. Critics see it as Spanish," said Danny Lopez,
a danger to Hispanic culture 28, who speaks Spanglish
and advancement. But with friends and family,
'

though seldom at work.
"When I talk to my dad,
I'll say, 'Hey Dad, I remember sitting in abuelita's coci na when we were little, and
we were drinking a taza of
, cafe,"' said Lopez, describ,
ing memories of his grandmother's kitchen. His family
has Jived in the United States
for four generations.
Stavans traces Spanglish's
origins hack to 1848, when
the treaty that ended the
U.S.-Mexican War signed
over much of the Southwest
to the United States, abruptly
transforming Spanish-speaking
Mexicans
into
Americans.
But the modem phenomenon has plenty of pop culture
examples, · from Ricky
Martin scoring a big hit with
"Livin' La Vida Loca" to topselling Mexican singer
Paulina Rubio doing all of
her songs in S,Panglish as she
opens for Ennque Iglesias.
At mun2, a cable network
that ' shows music videos,
comedies, game shows,

.

.

extreme sports and other progtamming targeted at 14- to
34-year-old Hispanics, language has evolved in the last.
year. When it launched, most
of the programs . were in
Spanish. But the network, a
d1vision of NBC-owned
Telemundo, will soon be
mostly
English
and .
Spanglish, in response to
v1ewer preferences, said
spokeswoman Claudia Santa
Cruz.
.
Stavans
translated
Cervantes into Spanglish this
summer in response to a
Spanish-language purist who
asserted the linguistic mix
would never be taken seriouslY. until it produced a classic hke "Don Quixote."
"In un placete de La
Mancha of which nolilbre no
quiero remembrearme, vi via,
not so long ago, uno de esos
gentlemen who always
tienen una Ianza in the rack.
una buckler antigmi, a skinny
caballo y un grayhound para
el chase," his translation
begins.

.

GAO: 'Insufficient' data to grade Edison,
other private for-profit edljcation companies
r

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Congressional investigators say
research into private edtication
companies is "insufficient" to
.determine whether the companies are effective - a blow to .
critics of for-profit education
who had hoped for a more
definitive statement
The General Accounting
Office cited a Jack of "rigorous
research" on Edison Schools
and two other for-profit educa•
·
Ch
11
uon co~parues,
ance or.
Beacon Academies
and
Mosaica Education.
"As a result, we cannot draw
. conclusions about the effect that
·
these companies' progrruns
·have on student achievement,

parental ·satisfaction, parental low-performing schools in
mvolvelilent, or school elimate," the report said.
Join us for thr
Rep. Chaka Fattah, the
Philadelphia Democrat who
ordered the GAO review, called
the ·results disappointing and
said he will ask the agency to
conduct its own scientific
stUdy.
Edison - the nation's largest
·featuring
private o~rator of public
schools, With !50 arcund the
country - . has a $60 million
contract to run 20 Philadelphia
schools. Chancellor Beacon,
which runs 81 schools nationwide, and Mosaica Education,
which has about two dozen,
were also hired this year to run

Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
. Annual Recognition Dinner
Basketball Hall of Famer

Oscar Robertson

Published
avery
afternoon,
Monday lhrough Friday, 11 1 Court
Strlie1, fomeroy, Ohio. Secondcla88 pOstaga pold at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoclaled Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspoper

Asoot: 1lon.
Poatm.11ter: Send address corrections to The Dally Sentinel, 111

Street,

Pomeroy,

Ohio

Subacrlptlon Rat~

Outoklo 8ateo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outotde . - : JaNIC:a Evans. Ext. 18
CI-.!Cioc.: Judy Clartc, Ext. 10
Ct-.!Cioc.: Cyn1hle ~- Ext. 11

·Circulation

Dr. Samuel Gandy Ill. right, director of the Farber Institute fo r
Neurosciences at Thomas Jefferson University, poses for a
photograph .in the University's Alzheimer research laboratory in
Philadelphia. Gandy, who studies estrogen 's role in
Alzheimer's, is among a group of scientists who have been
testing common medicines and mental exercise as preventives for the disease . In the background, Troy Carter, a post:
doctoral fellow, examines an x-ray image. (AP)

45769.

E - : Cha~onelloeftlcll, Exl. 12
lllportM:, Brion Reed, Ext 14
Ropomr: Kr1a Doeton, Ext. 13 ·
Sport.: Derek Taylor, Ext. 14

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Court

News

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 457.69
(740) 992-2155 .

LETART FALLS - A
Racine man was injured in a
one-vehicle
accident
Monday on Ohio Route 338,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State · Highway
Patrol
·
reported.
Michael L. Grant, 33,
4 7606 Bookman Road, was
Holzer
transported
to
Medical Center by private
vehicle following the 2:50
p.m. accident, the patrol
said.
•
Troopers said Grant was
westbound
jn
Letart
Township when he lost control of the truck he drove
and went off the right side
of the road. As Grant
attempted to correct and
come back on the road, the
load in the truck shifted.
The truck reentered the
road, overturned dnto its
right side, skidded across
the road and went off the
left side, the report said.
The truck had severe damage, and Grant was cited for
failure to control.

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

Address: - - - ' - - - - - - - - 1
I
Phone:- - - - - - - - - ' - - - 1

In Honor Of

ROCKSPRINGS
Rocksprings Church will
have an Election Day dinrier
beginning at 11 a.m. There
will be soups, sandwiches,
pies, cakes and drinks.

·: Patrol notes

,

In Honor Of

1t

!

Election Day
Dinner

Maybe it would be going being investigated by brain
a bit far to suggest that researchers seeking ways
reading this news article to delay or perhaps even
will keep you from getting prevent the onset of ·
Alzheimer's disease.
Alzheimer' s disease. They
But why take a chance? suspect that the way peaKeep going , and you will pie Jive, the pills they take,
encounter the latest ideas even the way they think
about Alzheimer's preven- may influence their risk of
tion. You will absorb a few the disease.
unfamiliar words. You will
Much of the work
follow the back-and-forth involves the hunt for
about what experts know · mind-protecting . inediand wish they knew. In cines, but new ones are
short, you will probably years away from routine
Jearn somethinf..
use. In the meantime, sciIn theory, earning is
good for the brain, espe- entists hope to prove good
cially old brains, although solutions are already in the
of course it is no guaran - medicine cabinet. The postee, since plenty of news- sibilities include . such
paper
readers
get familiar items as vitamin
Alzheimer's. But staying E, cholesterol pills, antimentally active, whether inflammatory painkillers,
working a crossword puz- estrogen, folate an,d ginkzle or composing a sym- go biloba.
That's a big · change.
phony, might help forestall
the worst by building up a Until recently, the suggesreserve of mental circuits tion that garden-variety
that keep thoughts flowing elderly dementia might
smoothly even when this actually · be preventable
awful disease takes root.
seemed silly, since it was .
, The use-it-or-lose-it the- assumed
to
be
an
ory- and it's only that, a inevitable consequence of
theory - is one of many aging .

By C!lrrl• or motor route
One month . .... .......'9.115
1111.40
One
Dilly . •
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0

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Subscribers should remh In
advance direct to The Dally
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pormltted In areas where home
carrier service 18 avallatie.

Deadline for tickets
November l st.
This event will sell out!

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13 Weeks ...... . .. . ...'50.05
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Cor.porate:
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Horace &amp; Dorothy Karr Racine Home National Bank
• Farmers Bank
P/qtimun;
Peoples Bcmk
Holzer Medical Center

�Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Music videos leave this
woman singing the. blues
DEA R ABBY: I am an .
African-American reader, and
as a young black woman I am ·
fed up with the images of
you ng wo.men in our music
. videos of to.day. We are displayed as sex objects, and
those images are imprinted
into the minds of our young
children. Boys think that girls
ADVICE
· are supposed to be treated the
way rappers and singers treat
wome n in the videos, and doesn't understand why we
young girls th ink the only would invite them on our
wav to secure male attention honeymoon in the first place!
is by being half-naked.
· I am very angry and upset that
We, as women, are losing they would consider changing
our sense of self-respect. We their plans in order to make
should take pride in our my sister happy. .Should I
minds. not just our bo.dies.
confront her about her jeaiShould we blame ourselves ousy? Why would she delibfo r partici pat ing in .s uch erately sabotage our relationvideos , for allowing our ship . with the folks when
young boys and girls to watch things between us are so
th is on TV, or for not protest- great? - BRIDE-TO-BE IN
ing?
RALEIGH, N.C.
I feel so overwhelmed.
DEAR · BRIDE-TO-BE:
. Who do we blame? Where Because your sister is insedoes it end? How do we stop· ·cure . .She views you and your
thi s? NOT JUST fiance's relationshi~ as threatBREASTS AND THIGHS ening to her position in the
family structure. Confronting
IN BALTIMORE
DEAR NJ.B. &amp; T: Don't her about her jealousy and
get caught up in the blame insecurity will only fan the
game. I agree that people - flames. It is your parents who
not just women - should must stand their ground and
take pride in their minds and refuse to be manipulated out
not just thei r bodies . One of the trip of a lifetime. Your
important way to accomplish sister is out of line, and your
this is to stress to children that parents must be strong
what is o.n television is, for enough to lovingly, but finnthe most part, meant to. be ly, put her in her ~::e.
entertai nme nt - not an accuDEAR ABBY: · t night, a
ra te reflectio n of life. really cute gQY kissed me. He
Chi ldren need to underitand says he wants nothing further
th at as glamorous ·as life to do with me unless I will
seems to be in the music have sexual relations with
vi deos, the REAL road to sue- him - then he will date me. I
cess lies in getting a good like hill) a lot and really want
edu catio n and learning to this to work out. What should
respect themselves and oth- I do? - GOING ON 16 IN
ers.
. OHIO
DEAR ABBY: I'm about to
DEAR GOING ON 16: He
be married for the second may be cute, but you have
time. My parents love my described a user and a loser. A.
fia nce, " Greg," unlike my reader once sent me the folfi rst husband whom they lowing -- and it applies to
despised. We spend a lot of you:
.
·
time with my parents. Greg
"When I saw him, I liked
and my father get along him.
extremely well. The wedding
"When I li~ him, I loved
is this month. We have him.
planned a cruise for our bon"When I loved him, I let
eymoorl.
him.
"When I let him, I lost
We have invited my parents
to join us on the critise him."
because their anniversary is
Dear Abby is written by
this month, and they have Abigail Van Burtn, also
neve r been on a cruise. My · known as Jeanne Phillips,
parents thought it was a won- and was founded by her mothderful idea.
er, Pauline Phillips. Write
Now, however, they are Dear
Abby
at
waveri ng about whether to go www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
because my younger sister Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
has told Mother she doesn' t 90069.
'
wan t them to go, and she
.'

Dear

Abby

•

Community Calen~r
Clubs and
Organization~
Thursday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Wildwood Garden
Club, 6:30 p.m., home of Tunie
Redovian, Plalwoods Road .
Saturday, Nov. 2
RACINE
Racine , Area
Community Organization's fall food
drive for Meigs Coooperative Parish,

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville
Lodge 4 I I, F&amp;AM, stated meeUng,
7:30p.m., lodge hall.
CHESTER - Friendship meeting
of District 13, Oaughtent of America,
at Chester lodge haM. Potluck at
noon, mooting follows. Officers urged
to attend.

Church services

.
Wednlldily, Oct. 30
MIDDLEPORT Middleport
Church of the Nazarene revival,
perishable food items, paper prod- through Nov. 3. Services 7 p.m. weekt.Jcts, soap products, toiletries. days; 10 a.m: and 6:30p.m. Sunday.
Donati ons may be made and picked The Rev. Sherman Cundiff, .evange·up by calling Ann Zirkle, 949·2031 , or list with tho Rev. Jan Lavender,
Ka thryn Hart, 949-2656.
singer. Pastor the Rev. Allen Midcap
invites public.

· at corner of Third and Pearl streets.
Accepting monetary donations, non~

Procedures available _
to treat RP
Question: Recently I've
Currently sev~ral retinal
seen some articl~s about a implant research projecis
retinal computer chip that are going on worldwide.
supposedly allows ·previ- The
retinal
im plant
ously bli nd indi viduals research involves the
of
a
with retinitis pigmentosa to development
regain some sight. Since I lrlicrochip that could be
have a relative with RP, implanted in the retinal
I' m very interested in find- region that would react to
ing out how promising this light in a fashion similar to
and other research might re tinal tiss ue. This first
on RP be.
·
chip sends an electronic
Answer: In order to signal to second chip that
· answer your question. con- ·relays the message to the
ceming retinal implants for brain, causing sight. .There
the treatment of retinitis are also .laser and battery
pigmentosa (RP), I first components to this device.
need · to give you some
This research is very :
background on this disor- promising, and some limitder. RP is just one of a ed human trials are in
number of diseases that can process. Howe ver, it will
cause blindness. It runs in probably be over five years
families and is believed to before a working retinal
result from defects in one implant is fully cJeveloped.
of several genes. In RP the
Retinal cell transplantaretina - a layer of "pho- tion is anbther RP treattoreceptor' ' nerve endings ment that is currently being
researched. It involves
in the "back" of the eye degenerl!tes.
transplanting healthy retiThese
photoreceptor nal cells into the diseased
cells are called "ro.ds" and retina. Testing in humans
"cones." The -rods · are has begun, and the early
respo.nsible for "black and results are enco uraging.
white" night vision and the
Since the mutant genes
ability to see out of "the in this genetic disorder
corner of your eye."
be ·d ·fi d
Doctors call this "peripher-. have en t enu te • gene
al vision.,
therapy also appears very
Rods
are . located promising. The ·problem is
throughout most of the figuring out howthto del~ver
retinal surface but more the new genes to· e retma.
Vitamin A has been used
thickiy on the edges, o.r to slow the progression of
periphery. The cones concentrated in a central RP. but it can be toxic if
porti6n of the retina called taken fn hi gh dosages. .
the fov ea _ work best in Always check with ·your
the light and allow you to · docto.r before beginning
·see in color.
high dose vitamin A !heraThe ro.ds and cones con- PY· .
vert the light entering the
So here it is in a nutshell:
eye to electrical signals RP is inherited, so know
that send the visual mes- your family medical histosage to the brain via the ry. If you have a positive
optic nerve. Usually, the family history, get regular
first indication of the dis- eye exams, and report any
ease is the deterioration visual losses promptly.
and eventual loss of low- Discuss taking vitamin A
light vision. Next, the dis- with your doctor. Follow
ease typically results in the research, but be wary
gradual loss of peripheral of "quick cures" or pie-in·
eresight causing "tunnel the-sky promises about RP
vtsion." Later in the . dis- treatments. Learn every·
ease, color vision is lost thing you can about RP.
and finally, central vision . "Family Medicine" is a
·can be lost.
weekly column. To submit
While symptoms of RP questions, write to Martha
may first api· ar in child- A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A. ,
hood, visua impairment Ohio University College of
does not usually occur Osteopathic
Medicine,
until . early adulthood. P.O. Box 110, Athens, Ohio
There are many other types 45701. Or, e-mail Dr.
of visual loss and blind- Simpson
at
ness, such as cataracts , . simpsonm@ohio.edu. Past
glaucoma, and blindness columns are available
from diabetes or damage to online
at
the optic nerve.
www.fhradio.org/fm. ·

a

.

I

Announce
•
w1nners
·RACINE - Winners of a
recent giveaway; sponsored
by the Enduring Freedom
Support Group, were,
Mickey . Kuscl))a; Racine,
painted 'window; Mick
Davenport,,
Pomeroy,
snowman slate; John
Thomas, Syracuse, patriotic slate; Sandra Laudermilt,
Pomeroy, savings bond.

RE-ELECT

Radford
promoted
POMEROY
Army
National Guard Col. William
R. Ra&lt;)ford has graduated from
the U.S. Army War College
Distance Education Class at
Carlisle Barracks, Carlisle, Pa.
The two-year Distance
Education Class program is
equivalent to the college's oneyr resident program that prepares officers of all the military
services, as well as civilian
officials of the federal governme nt, to. serve in top-level '
command and staff positions
with the U.S. armed forces
througho.ut the world.
Radford is a facilities director assigned to the State Area
.Command, Adjutant General 's
Department, Columbus.
He is the son of William W.
and Louise Radford of
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, a
1967 graduate of Pomeroy
High School, and a graduate of
the State University of New
York. Albany.

Births

MICK

DAVENPORT
• Full Time
Commissioner
• Committed to
Health Care,
Senior Citizens,
and Job Growth
'

Paid for by candidate

,.

Powell birth
SYRACUSE - To.dd and
Renee Powell of Syracuse
r--=-=~--, a n nou nce
the birth of
a daughter,
E m m a
Nicole, on
Sept. 12 at
the Holzer
M edica l
Center.
T h e·
in fan t
Powell
weighed six
po.unds, 12
ounces. Maternal grandp'lf·
ents are Ted .and Mars ha
Russell
of Minersville.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Herb and Mary Pugh and
Bill and Mary Russell.
Paternal grandparents are
Larry an&lt;;! Jean . Powell of
Pomeroy, and paternal greatgrandparents are the late
Omar and Mabel Powell and
the late Jacob and Alice
Schwingel.

Russell birth

News
and notes
TOPS meetS ·.·. ·
COOLVILL E
Coolville TOPS chapter
welco med fo ur new
members · dur ing their
rece nt meeting. The:
Weekly Best Loser award
was presented tO" Mikki
Putman. T he program
was "Back to the Basics."

Kings
reunited
HARTFORD, W.Va. The fi rst reunion of the
descendants o f Quine}'
Lee Canady King and
Estella Mae Grimm J(ing
was he ld recently at the.
Hartford
C ommunity.
Center.
.;
A potluck dinner was
served. A special gift was
presented to . Lucille
Kin g , wife of the late:
Edwin King, as the special gue st of the day:
Robert Clarke was pre•
sented with a gift as the
oldest cousin, Ellen
Forbes won the door
prize and Bernice Dudley
rece ived the present for
having the most family·
present.
The group will meet .
Oct. 25 , 2003, at the
Hartford
.Community
·Center from noon until 4
p.m.

LONG
BOTTOM ·
Michael and Julie Russell of
L o n. g
Bottom
announ c e
.i
the birth of
•.
.
a daughter,
.;,"
Alexa Ann,
born Sept. 6
at Holzer
Medical
Center.
~-i&amp; S . h e
Russell
w e i g .h e d ~~=.::liii:::::;jjjjjj;;::::::.
f i v e li
pounds, 15 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are ·
Tommy and Salty Hill of
Racine. . Maternal greatgrandparents are Eileen
·Roush and the late Herschel
Roush and the late Julian and
Inez Hill.
Paternal grandparents are
Ted and Marsha . Russell of
Minersville. Paternal greatgrandparents are Herb and
Mary Pugh and Bill and Mary
Russell.
"

.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 5

Huge first amendment plaque to dominate new building
WASHINGTON (AP)-A tions~ which look as if they
stone plaque 65 feet high were photographs of an
recordmg
the
First actual structure, much work
Amendment to the U.S. remains to be done before
Constitution will dominate the .design is final. Plans are
the front of the new home of
the Newseum between the · still to be approved by the
Capitol and the White Commission of Fine Arts
House.
and the National Capital
Commission , ·
The museum of news is to Planning
open in 2006 at a presti- which often call ror imporgtous
address
along tant changes in new strucPennsylvania Avenue.
tures.
The First Amendment
Ralph
Appelbaum.
reads: "Congress shall make responsible for the interior
no law respectin$ the estabh · d h h
lishment of religton, or pro- design, emp astze t at e
hibiting the free exercise had not planned just an
thereof; or abridging the exhibit for tourists, but an
freedom of speech, or of the educational experience that
press; or the right of the visitors could take back
people peaceably to assem- with them to their home
ble. and to petition the gov- communities.
emment for a redress of
Windows on the ground
grievances."
·
fl
'II d' 1 d 'I d"
· Plans for the $400 million oor wt
tsp ay at y e !structure were presented at tions of newspapers from all
a news . conference . on 50 states.
Tuesday by Mayor Anthony
Behind the glass of .the
A, Williams and former new building will be an atriSen.
Daniel
Patrick urn rising past six levels of
Moynihan,
· D-NY. galleries. On the far side of
Moynihan played a leading the atrium one or more huge
role in the redevelopment of screens will carry news
be
Pennsylvania
Avenue, footage
that . can
inspired 40 years ago by
President John F. Kennedy. glimpsed through the great A computer-generated image compiled by Ralph Applebaum Associates. shows the interior design of the Newseum that was
, Then, Moynihan recalled, window by passers-by on announced during a WashingtOn news conference. When the Newseum reopens in 2006, it will have at least 140-thousand
only one light could be seen the avenue, including the square feet of exhibit space. (AP)
'
at night along the avenue's presidential
inaugural
main stretch: a liquor store. parades which traditionally
The store was in the build- take that route.
he
said,
where
Tbe Newseum will tfoitse
ing,
President Lincoln went to the offices of the Freedom
pose for his last portrait in Forum, which sponsored it
the studio of photographer
Mathew Brady.
and its preceding home in
The plaque will cover suburban Arlington, Va.
about a third of the facade. That closed in March. ·The
Most of the rest will be in new· building will have
glass - including a 4,500 thre.e times the exhibition
square foot "window," con- space of the old one, as well
trasting with the stone as other offices and shops to
structures of the Canadian be rented out, a conference
Embassy next door and the center and terraces with
two buildings of the
National Gallery of Art on spectacular views of the
the other side ofthe Avenue. Capitol and the National
Speakers emphasized the Mall.
extensive use of glass as a
''There will be a two-story
. symbol of the world seen memorial to the 1.000
through news reports.
newspeople who have lost
: : "Transparency . equals · their lives, showing that
democracy,". satd James newsgathering can be a danStewart Polshek, head of the
architectural aroup that gerous job," . said Peter S.
designed the butlding.
Prichard," president of ·
: He ·said that des_Pite the Freedom Forum and the
vividness of the vtsualiza- Newseum.

~heney will

not attend
Wellstone memorial,
White House says
: WASHINGTON (AP). Tuesday for legislation
The family of Sen. Paul overhauling the election
asked · Vice system, Bush paid tribute to
Well stone
President Dick Cheney to Wellstone and led his audi- ·
stay away, so Health and ence in observing a moment
Human Services Secretary of silence.
Tommy Thompson and the . "I would like to pause and ·
White House's chief con- remember a devoted public
· gressional liaison were servant who was taken from
leading · an administration us last Friday, along with
'f
d h' d
h
delegation to Tuesday h'
niWt's memorial service.
ts wt e an
ts aug ter
and
several
other
hite House press secre- Americans," Bush said.
"Paul Wellstone was a
tary Ari Fleischer .said
Cheney offered to attend the
service for Wellstone, his deeply principled and good·
wife; his daughter . and · t~ree hearted man," he said.
camp,aign aides - all ktlled "He '11 be missed by all who
in
plane crash Friday.. knew him and all who had
·:'The family was apprecia- the privilege of serving with
tive of the offer by the vice him."
president to attend." But he
Bush, who campaigned in
added that it would be inap- Minnesota for Wellstone' s
propriate to characterize the Republican opponent, Norm
private conversations th~t Coleman , just o.ne week
ultimately led to the dect- before the plane crash, will
sion that Cheney would not go ahead with plans to
go.
appear in Minnesota once
: The ~ilot and copjlot al~o more for Coleman ' on
died m the crash m Sunday.
The White House, not
Minnesota.
Another White House
official said privately that wanting to appear insensiwith the memorial service tive, has not formally
expected to draw thousands, announced the trip. ''There
the Wellstone family told will be a time for politics,
the White House they did and there will be a time
llOt want mourners subject- again as the people of
ed to the kind of security Minnesota focus on the fact
screenings that Cheney's that there is still an Election
attendance would have Day scheduled," Fleischer
required. This official also said. "Today is not the day.
~aid White House advisers Today is a day to remember
worried that the memorial Senator Wellstone."
service, with unions bringFormer Vice President
ing supporters by the bus- Walter . Mondale,
.a
load, would double 1 as a Democrat,. is expected · to
Democrat get-out-the-vote take Wellstone's place on
rally and be awkward for the ballot in this final week
Cheney.
before Election Day. With
· There was never any control of the Senate hingf·
ihought of President Bush
attending
Well.s tone's ing on the swing 0 JUSt one
memorial, said the official, seat, senior Republicans
who discussed the matter said an early internal poll
only .on grounds
of showed
,a "*Colemanimonymity.
Mondale race would be very
: But at • signing ceremony tight.
,

a\

ENTER TO WIN DINNER AT
RUSTY'S SHOPII

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•

~. !Items 1 Prices 00011 Through November 2. 2002 In Gallipolis and Pomerov.
Copyright 2002 Kroger Mid-Atlantic. we rtse,rve the right to limit
2 quantities. None sold to dealers.

�..

Page A&amp; ·

Opinion

·The Daily Sentinel

w.clnesay, Oct. H, 2002

.

The D8.ily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

• f

~

.

:~ NEW YORK (AP) ~An
::auorney acknowledged at
: the start of a trial Tuesday
: that his client was guilty of
·murder in the killings of five·
:Workers inside a fast food
.)'estaurant, but he argued that
:lbe man doesn' t deserve the
.
: :death penalty.
; · John Taylor, a former
:•employee at the Wendy's
i:restaurant, is charged with
. first -degree murder in the
::five shooting deaths on May
·:Z4, 2000.
· A · prosecutor painted
Taylor as the mastermind
· behind the robbery and slay•·'ings.
••
. : "John Taylor personally
·;killed two people he knew,"
:Assistant District Attorney
j)aniel Saunders told jurorS.
i ~Taylor then banded the gun
'Jo a mentally retarded
~.;accomplice. instructing the
! man to "fin ish them,"
~ Saundern said.
,. Defense att?rney John

'&lt;

www.mydallysentlnel.coRP

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich .

Editor

Managing Editor

.

'

Wednesday, October, 2002

.

'

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157 '

Bette Pearce

Nation • World

-Defense acknowledges guilt as NYC murder trial begiris

\

:t

-~ TheDaily. sentinei

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PageA7

Leuers to the ediror are welcome. Thev should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to ~diting and must be
signed and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned lerrers will be published Letter&lt; should be in good
tas1e, addressing issues, n01 personalities.

The opi,ions expressed in the column below are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s editorial board,
unless otherwise.noted.

•

NATIONAL VIEW

Prudent

Youngblood countered that life terms. But that option is
Taylor,
while
bearing not available for Taylor,
responsibility for the crimes, because of ·a Court of
had personally killed just Appeals decision this sum ~
one of the victims, not two. mer tbat said · offering a
He said that as such bis defendant the option of
actions were insufficient for pleading guilty to a void .fac the death penalty.
ing death was coercive and a
"He is responsible for violation of his constitutionthose murders, but not mur- al righl$.
der in the · first degree,"
Relatives : of the five vicYoungblood said.
tims have called strongly for
Taylor, 38, and Craig a dellth penalty conviction.
Godineaux ate at tbe
"If any one of the jurors .
Wendy's while planning the votes to save his life, they
robbery just before closing will have it hanging over
time, prosecutors said. They their heads," said Joan
then allegedly herded seven Truman-Smith,
whose
employees into .a walk-in daughter was killed in the
freezer, bound and gagged massacre.
There are five people on
them and shot all seven in
the head. Two survived.
death row in New York state,
They allegedly made off but no one has been executed
with about $2,400.
in the state since 1963.
Godineaux admitted shoot~ . The five workers who died
ing five of the employees but were Ramon Nazario, 44; Joan Truman-Smith, right, mother of Anita Smith, 23, killed in the shooting of five Wendy's
was found to be mentally · Anita C. Smith, 23; Jeremy employees, holds a photo of her daughter and her fiance Sheldon Ferguson, Tuesday at state
retarded. He was allowed to Ryan Mele, 18; Ali Ibadat, Supreme Court In the Queens borough of New York. The trial of John Taylor, one of two men
accused iri the May 24 slayings, begins Tuesday. (AP)
plead guilty in return. for six 40; and Jean Auguste, 27.

•

Advance preparation for
smallpox inoculation
wise ·action
.
.
. • The Times Herald-Record, Middletown, N.Y., on small. pox vaccination: The United States has more than enough
smallpox vaccine to protect every man, woman and child in
· the count ry in the event of a terrorist attack.
That's because of 86 million doses, which had been stored
(and almost forgotte n) in a walk-in freezer in a Pennsylvania
mountai nside since the 1970s. The government says tests have
. shown these doses can l?e diluted in a 5-to-1 ratio and still be
: effecti ve. That would provide more than 400 million doses to
· go with 75 million already on hand- a healthy supply....
The questions ab()ut whether anyone would actually use
smallpox as a weapon and how efficiently vaccines could be
provided to the general population in the event of an attack are
Important because the smallpox vaccine is not a benign agent.

.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Supports levy

.

.

• · Advance preparation and the development of millions more
smallpox doses for immediate use are prudent and laudable.
· Smaii(JOX is one of history's most horrible diseases. Offering
· a vacc me to health-care and emergency workers who want it
· makes sense. But if the government wants to offer it to all 280
.. million Americans before any attack, it needs to make sure
,; everyone understands the risks entailed in receiving the vaceine as compared to the risk of actually being attacked, That
will allow people to make informed decisions in consultation
. .,vith doctors.
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dear Editor:
I feel! need to take time to write once
again in support of the Meigs County
Health Department. From time to time,
there have been news items in The
Daily Sentinel regarding the many services that are offered to. the public.
There have been cuts in the services at
the Health Department since th!! defeat
of the May levy that were once free or
charged a moderate fee.
Recently, in a group discussion, a person said they did not have any dust con•
trol on their road this year. This is not
something the Meigs County Health
Department has ever done. I understand
this to be a service of the township
trustees and they had to cut their budget
to meet their obligation to the health
department by Ohio Revised Code law.
The Meigs County Health Department
is there to · serve all. They do not pick
and choose whom they will serve; they
serve with die;nity and compassion.
1 am sure 1t was a great concern to
many about the Wes( Nile Virus. It is
human nature when we have a health
need we want an answer or solution and
we want the health department to be
two steps ahead of us . with a reliable
answer. To help with the localll)osquito
problem, the health department funded
a tire disposal program which aided in
removing mosquito-breeding environments. These are funds that the health
department does not have and will not
have in the future if they levy fails in
November. ·
·
There are many sc:rvices in place at
the health department for the babies and
children of Meigs County. It is a shame
they can't vote because they will be the

· Today is WednesdaY.. Oct. 30, the 303rd day of 2002. There
. are 62 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
· On Oct. 30, 1938, the radio play "The War of the Worlds,;,
starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS ..(The live drama, which
·employed fake news reports, panicked some listeners who
thought its portrayal of a Martian invasion was true.)
On this dale:
In 1735, the second president of the United States, John
Adams, was born in Braintree, Mass.
In 1885, poet Ezra Pound was born in Hailey, Idaho.
: ~n 1.944, the Martha Graham ballet "Appalachian Spring,"
wnh music by Aaron Copland, premiered at the Library of
Congress in Washington D.C., with Graham in a leading role.
. In 1945, the U.S. government announced the end of shoe
.rationing.
.
.
.. In 196l , the Soviet Union tested a hydrogen bomb with a
(orce eshmated at 58 megatons.
•
In 1961 , the Soviet Party Congress .unanimously approved
. a resolution ordering the removal of Josef Stalin's j:&gt;Ody from
Lenin's tomb.
·
. In 1972, 45 people were killed when an lllinois Central
Gulf commuter train collided with another train in Chicago's
South Side.
In 1979, President Carter announced his choice of federal
appeals judge Shirley Hufstedler to head the newly · created
· Department of Education.
· ·
In 1995, by a vote of 50.6 percent to 49.4 percent,
Federalists prevailed over separatists in Quebec in a secession referendum.
•
In 2000, comedian, television host, author and composer
i Steve Al.len died in Encino, Calif., at age 78.
~ · Ten years ago: Iran-Contra special prosecutor Lawrence E.
Z' Walsh released an excerpt of notes taken by former Defense
!.Secretary Caspar Weinberger in January 1986 which suggestBY JIM MULLEN
! .ed that then"Vice President Bush was fully aware of the
Our neighbor A'lRy has lived on her
¢ "Reagan administration's arms-for-hostages deal with Iran .
· husband 's farm for 30 years. She lived
~ .. (Bush said despite the notes, he was not aware that the
on her father's farm for 22 years before
•• arr;mgement was an actual arms-for-hostages swap until
that She can drive, but she doesn't like
Decembe r 1986.)
.
. to drive on the freeway, so she came
; . Five years ago: A jury in Cambridge, Mass .. convicted
with us when we went into the city to
;; : ~riti sh a u pair Louise Woodward of second-degree murder in
shop for some furniture at the
~ ;Jhe death of 8-month-old Matthew Eappen. (The judge, Hiller
Humongous Colossal Furniture Barn.
Z7_!3. Zobel, later reduced the verdict to manslaughter and set
She likes us well enough, but she's real&lt;:·Woodward free .) Confronting some of his harshest critics,
ly coming because there:s a -seafood
;: : ~hinese President Jiang Zemin defended hi s country's human
restaurant she likes that we'll stop at
"':'fights record before members of Congress. Movie director
after shopping.
f.Sa muel Fu ller died in Hollywood at age 86:
Half of the Humon gous Colossal
.&gt; : One year ago: Ford Motor Co. chairman William Clay Ford
Furniture Barn featured their Country
! :Jr. took .over as chief exec utive after the ouster of Jacques
Furniture collection : Hordes of tables
::.Nasser. NASA's 2001 Mars Odyssey snapped its first picture
made of weathered pine covered with
:: Of Mars, o ne week after the spacecraft safely arrived in orbit
peeling and cracking white paint, chairs
; :q.round the Red Pl anet. Ukraine destroyed its last nuclear
that had faded; butt-worn stencils on
~ .{nissile s ilo, ful fi lling a pledge to give up the vast nuclear
them, pre-sun-faded carpets with brand;) ;~rsenal it had inherited after the breakup of the former Soviet
new bare patches, old-timey pedestal
~~Union. The New York Yankees won game three of the World
sinks and claw-foot tubs, tin roofs and
::~~erie s, 2- 1. cuttin g the Arizona Diamondbacks' games lead to
pie safes specially made to double as
'-::f- 1.
.
.
television cupboards.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Hamiiton Camp is 68. Actor Dick
Abby ' was not happy.... What do they
: -Gautier is 65. Movie di rector Claude Lelouch i~ 65. Rock
think'! Country· people can't afford
! ' singer G race Sl ick is 63.Rock singer-mu s it'ian Gavin
paint? That we don't like whirlpool
J: Ro ssdale. (Bush) is 35. Actress Nia Long is 32. Country
tubs? That we still wait for six-monthsinger Kassiay Osborn (SHeDAISY) is 26..
·
old magazi nes on the noon stage? Why
: T ho ug ht for. Today: "Cuando amor no es loc ura, no es
don ' t they just call it the Hillbilly
• amor." (When love is not madness, it is not lo ve.) - Pedro
.Collection? That's what they mean. My
Calderon de Ia Barca, Spanish d~amatist ( 1600- 1681 ).
house is so clean a fly could slip and

ones who suffer if they levy fails .• in · ence should not be penalized for seekc
November.
ing re-election ." Mr. Buck was not
The Breast and Cervical Cancer required to retire in order to run for reProgram pnder the direction of election. He chose to do so. Of course,
Courtney ·Sim was such a meaningful then he would have to forego the big
service to many. All of these services retirement check:
are un~er the direction of the education .I would prefer to interpret the purpose
and qualifications of Norma Torres, of Amended HB 84 as to help meet the
health commissioner.
I would like to believe that there are needs of filling positions when there is
enough citizens who have been touched ~ shortage of 9ualifi~d candidates. That .
by a·sei'Viee ofthe Meigs County Health IS not the case m Me1gs County, as thete
Department to vote yes for the levy.
· are t~o other ve!Y qual~fied candidates
·· Gladys Cumings runmng for this JUdgeship.
Pomeroy
Shannon Slavin
Syracuse

Different
interpretation

Sell, sell, sell

Dear Editor:
Th'
IS letter is in response to the article
· Th e D ai·1Y Sen
· ·u·ne1• oct · 19 , tha t d'IS10
cussed Amended House Bl.ll 84 and
Robert Buck. I will not dispute the fact
that HB 84 makes "double dipping"
legal; however, J will question ..the pro"
· priety of such an action.
The citizens of Meigs County need to
be aware of the fact that Judge Buck, if
re-elected, will draw not only a salary
of $103,000, but also a retirement of
approximately $70,000. His total compensation per year would be· in excess
of $170,000. That is at least $40,000
more than the governor 's salary.
Judge Buck claims in the article that
he would save the taxpayers of Meigs
County $707 per month in insurance. At
the same time, he would receive over
$14,000 a month 'in compensation,
which is ultimately paid by the taxpayers.
Mr. Buck states, "People with experi-

Dear Editor:
.
Janet Howard was a commissioner for
eight years at a cost of $260,000 to the .
taxpayers. I am sure . she misses the
money.
What did the taxpayer get for the
$260,000? Number one, she leased our
hospital to Holzer for 99 years for $1.
Our hospital, Veterans Memorial, was
valued at over a million dollars. Not a
. bad deal for Holzer.
. Number two, she sold prime property
to Holzer for $150,000 and used the
money for salaries .
: Number three, she cut services to
some.ofourpeople. Youcan' tputadollar value on this .
In her 2000 political ad, she claimed
she was Committed to maintaining a
balanced budget. We can't afford her
brand of government, sell, sell, sell.
·
Jean Grueser
Racine

THE VILLAGE IDIOT

Country-style furniture has

t

:&gt;
z

.

~eel' appeal for

CHATAIGNIER, La. (AP)
- A tornado hurled a mobile
'home several hundred yards
·onto a road early Tuesday,
killing two people and seri,ously injuring five others,
.authorities said.
·· The tornado was spawned
by a violent weather front ihat
: produced heavy rain and high
, wind from southeastern Texas
across 'Louisiana into southem Mississippi.
Flooding killed one person
and forced dozens from their

homes in the Houston -area.
High wind also caused scattered damage ·in southern
Mississippi and tornadoes
were reponed in the area.
Firefighters found the
mobile home in a pile of rubble near Chataignier, about 30
miles northwest of Lafayette,
around 4 a.m., said Fire Chief
Ronnie Smith.
"It had been picked up out
of a field and traveled 300 or
400 yards and slammed on
the pavement," Smith said.

"We found the father first in
the
w~eckage
and he
informed us there were a total
of seven people in the mobile
home."
Two women, ages 33 and
18, were dead at the scene.
All five survivors were taken
to hospitals with severe
injuries, Smith said.
Several other houses were
demolished . but no other
injuries were reponed, Smith
said.
·
A tornado also was blamed

for serious damage at
Northwest High School near
Ghataignier. Several walls
were knocked down and
classes were canceled for the
rest of the week.
As much as 7 to 9 inches of
rain fell during the night in
the Houston area, causing
flooding .that forc.e d more
than 120 people to flee their
homes, said Jim White, emergelicy management coordinator for Harris County.
"They' ve had rain the last

week more or less, so it didn't
A woman's body was found · \
take much to get flooding," in a car submerged in a floodBrian Kyle of the National ed underpass near downtown
Weather Service in Houston Beaumont, said police dissaid Tuesday morning.
patcher Polly Manzer.
Homes and streets were
Strong wind ripped through
early
flooded in the Beaumont, Picayune, · Miss.,
Texas, area after about 8 Tuesday, damaging homes, .
inches of rain fell in four · knocking out power and tophours, saiq Jim Sweeney of piing trees. Tbere were no
the weather service in Lake immediate reports of injuries.
"We have a real mess down
Charles, La.
"We've had about a week' s here," said Freda Rocker,
worth of rain leading up to spokeswoman for Pearl River
this," Sweeney said.
County Civil Defense.

city

break it's back and they make it look
like country people live like the
Clampetts. l got news for these people, I
~~?t~;~e interior design tips from the

am a fjll111er," she said, ''But I'm not
Amish. I've got an electric range. I've
got a real refrigerator. I' ve got a
Cuisinart. I've got a cell phone. You can

She is right. If it weren't for city peopie, the Country Furniture collection
would pretty much sit right where it is.
There's no pent up demand for it in the
country. We got plenty of it already. Just
not in our houses. My hayloft is full of
out-of-date, unfashionable furniture we
no longer use. Full of stuff I bought at
flea markets and garage sales and then
suffered, as they say at the auction houses, buyer's reg~et.
.
' : ·
There's a guy in our town who makes
a very good living buying tables and
cupboards for $5 and $ 10 at country
auctions. He paints them glossy white
and sells them to weekenders from the
city' for hundreds of dollars. They put
them in their "country" bathrooms in
their suburban McMansions. It must be
hard trying to make an 800-square-foot
ba\llfoom look like an outhouse, but
they' re ·sure trying. At this rate, we all
wonder how long it will be before the
cities have more country furniture in
them than the country. ·
Abby was in a better mood after a corn
chowder and a plat;~r of fried clams.

see your face in my dining-room table,
and ·if the President and the First Lady
ever come to dinner, I might finally get
a chance to use the Spode china I got as
a wedding present.
"What I don 't UJiderstaild is why rich
people think it's so much fun to be poor?
. Like I can vegetables because it's just so
h d
f
I.:'k
muc
am un. ' I e r make quilts ·
because I've seen all the latest movies
and have nothing better to do. I supp'ose
if I took in laundry, they' d start doing
that on the .HGTV channel, too. Then,
maybe not. I've been driving a 10-yearold car for 10 years and that. hasn't
caught on yet. Just the furniture . I' ll tell
you one thing, if I had money 1 wouldn' t
be_ buyin_g junk furniture with peeling
I
ff
pamt on It. want stu that shines."
Jim Mullen is the author of "It Takes
A Village Idiot: A M~moir of Life After
the City" (Simon · and Schuster,· 2001).
He · also contributes regularly to
Entertainment Weekly, where he can be
f'l!ached at jim@mullenew.co'?!

"1

:Tornado in Louisiana kills two and injures five after hurling a·mobile home

Vote JOHN LENTES

a Judge:
Who Will Work Full Time
Who Will Be Innovative
Who Will Be Effective
I

•

A Full Time Judge with New Ideas and Old .Tiine Values.

"

~
0 _:__--------~~---.--..__f..-~-_:__------------

,,

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�•

Page A8 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Inside:

The Daily Se~tinel

NBA notes, Page 93
Scoreboard, Page BS

Page 81
~ednesda~OctoberlO,lOOl

Wednesday
night bowling
. MASON, W.Va.- Results
from the Wednesday Nij!ht
League at Mason Bowhng
Lanes:
·
· Team standings: The King
Pins 52-20, Pine Hills Golf
Course 4)-30, Sammy's
Construction 40-32, ·Powell's
Super Value 40~32, Wally's
Warriors 28-44, Meigs
Industries 14-58.
• ·
· High te11m game and series ·
Sammy's Construction ..
701/2003
: Men's high game.
Sam Smith 204, Russ
Carson 180, Clyde Sayre 175
Men's higll series
Sam Smith 569, Russ
Carson 4~ I, Wally Smith 461
Women's high game
Pat Carson 2II, Dottie Will
204, Margaret Eynon 203
. Women's high seri(:s
Dottie Will 523, Margaret
Eynon 477, Pat Carson 470.

I•

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follow these simple tips
and you'll be sure to
enjoy a spooky and safe·
night of trick or treating! ·

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The Daily
Sentinel

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street

Pomeroy 992-2155

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2955

.

RACINE

I

949-2210

.

•

pushing for indoor practice facility

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - .Marshall University
officials are. stepping • up
efforts to get a new indoor
workout facility.
The buHding would be next
to Marshall Stadium at the
current grass practice field
· site. It would consist primarily of a football field measuring 110 to 120 yards long, an
approximate 12,000 squarefoot weight room and an
approximate
5,000-foot
square footba!J athletic ttaining area. '
''This is at the very, very,
very preliminary stage,"
interim Athletic Director Bob
Marcum said Tuesday during
a Huntington Quarterback

Club mee(ing. "We don 't
have any drawing. We don't
have anything. It's one of
those things we're exploring
and how it would affect the

program.
"We ~ave no project."
Marcum said Stafford and
Associates, already hired by
Marshall for refurbishing
projects at the current football facilities building, will
develop a drawing of the proposed indoor facility within
the next couple of weeks.
Head football coach Bob
Pruett said Marshall will ask
the Legislature for about $4
million. The rest of an
approximate $10 million to
$'1 1 million cost could come
from private funding or seat
taxes.
Marcum said Ohio State,
West Virginia, Pittsburgh and
Virginia Tech each have such

Ohio State Football

.,,

.

SYRACUSE

992-6533

COLUMBUS (AP)
Freshman running back
Maurice Clarett was listed as
probable for No. 6 Ohio·
game
Saturday
State's
against No. 23 Minnesota.
· Coach Jim Tressel said on
Tuesday that Clarett needs
time to recover from nerve
damage to his left shoulder.
Claret! was first hurt two
weeks ago in the Buckeyes'
19-14. win ·over Wisconsin.
He reinjured the shoulder on
his fourth carry in Saturday's
13.-7 win over Penn State.
"Nerves do not heal quick.Iy," Tressel said. "He might
!me lip Saturday and play 55
plays or 1!f might line up. and
· P'-Y ~l~s&gt; Rest-ts •tlte
only thing that eventually
solves nerve problems. We
don't have a whole bunch of
time for test."
· .
Claret! rushe!i for 39 yards
on four carries, giving him
I ,019 yards for the season.
He became only the second
Ohio State freshman to pass
I ,000 yards in rushing and
needs 108 yards to break
Robert Smith's school record
of 1,126 yards for freshmen.
Tressel said that linebacker
· Cie Granl should be able to
play against Minnesota after
missing the Penn State game
with an ankle sprain.
Offensive tackle Shane
Olivea . remains. s~delined·
after having an appendecto!JIY last week, but should
begin
practicing
on
Wednesday.
. Tressel also said that wide
receiver Chris Gamble would
likely see significant playing
time at cornerback. Gamble
Became the first two-way
. ~tarter for Ohio State in 39
:rears when he started at cornerback and receiver against
Penn State, getting on the
field for 9:S plays.
·

:Marietta coach
to retire
: MARIETIA (AP) - Gene
Epley, coach at Marietta for
the "past 12 years, said on
Monday that he will retire at
the end of this season.
Epley, 59, has a 43-71-2
record wilh the Pioneers,
including a 2-5 record this
year with three games tQ go.
He was selected as the
Ohio Conference coach of
the year in 1995 after leading
Marietta to a record of 8-1-1
fuur seasons after his team
went 0-10. He folio we~ that
with a.7-3 mark lhat gave the
Pioneers two consecutive
winning seasons for the first ·
time since 1973-74. .
Epley took his first head
co~chin~ j~b at Shippensburg
Umversny m Pennsylvama m
1972, leading the Raiders to a .
18-22-1 record in four seasons.
•
He also has been an assistant at Utah, Virginia, Army
and William and Mary.
Marietta said it will begin a
. search for a new coach at the
end of the season. ·

,

'

faci liti.es.
Akron, Marshall's Mid·
American Conference opponent this week, currently is
constructing an indoor facility. MAC members Central
Michigan. a 23-18 home
loser to Marshall last week,
Kent State and Western
Michigan have indoor facilities.
Marcum said expansive
indoor facilities more and
more are becoming important
tools in recruiting, particularly when it comes to weight
training.
"They've made a lot of difference in college sports,"
Marcum said. "We have to
keep .up. It's the same way

with sports medicine. It's a
difference maker in regards
to your sports programs."
A new indoor facility at
Marshall would not be con·
nected with the proposed stu·
dein recreation facility.
The football program could
use the facility during weath·
er hot weather or cold downpours.
· "It's just like today, as hard
as it's raining," Marcum said.
"What .are you going to
accomplish" Probably not ·
anything.
''It can help all programs,
baseball , softball, take a corner of it for golf. It gives you
a lot of options ·for practice
conditions."

Indians Notebook
'•

:Confident
Wedge takes
overTribe ·

Clarett probable .
for Jame with
Minnesota ·

Fisher
..

MU

CLEVELAND (AP) Eric Wedge's first decision as
manager of the Cleveland
Indians was to add Joel
Skinner, the man he beat out
for the job, to his coaching
staff.
Billed as tough, aggressive
and confident, it didn't take•
long for the 34-year-old
. Wedge to show just how bold
he can be .
"He's a difference maker,"
Indians general manager
· · - Mark Shapiro said. "Eric
. Wedge is a leader."
Wedge was officially intro·
.duced as Cleveland 's managWedge
er qn Tuesday, making the
former minor league manager
'
'i-ii
""
.- '
the youngest in the majors.
.
THe
Wedge
File
Also Tuesday; the Oakland
. '.. '
i
Athletics promoted bench
.
.•
At
age
34,
Eric
W~ge
coach Ken Macha as their
next manager and the Is the youngest manager,
·
Milwaukee Brewers hired · in the majors. ,.'
.
Ned Yost, a bit player in the
• w"dge Is the secOfldo.
Milwaukee Brewers' glory
youngest
manager In _
days two decades ago.
Cleveland
history. l.,oii
Wedge, a former big league
catcher with a no·nonsense ;Boudreau wa1124 \VI)en hii.•;
Fed. .,,.
.·' "
· style of mariagiilg, was .was hi~···,:r
,,;,"~'·
•:
.
picked by Shapiro over
.
,,
•
'
Wedge
coach•d
1
Skinner. who served as
Ohio State's Chris Gamble (7) runs to the endzone past cheerin·g teammates for a touch·
·
Cleveland'STriple-A
club
ill
,
Cleveland's interim manager
down after intercepting a Penn State pass In the third quarter of the Buckeyes 13-7 vic·
last season after . Charlie . IMfalo frotn 2001·02,
tory Saturday In Columbus. (AP)
po~ting a 178·108 record: ·,
Manuel was fired July II .
"'
, ·v
Skinner, though. is coming
• Named top minor:
back despite finishing as a league
manager, by TM
close runner-up. At Wedge's
Sporting
News In 2002.
request; Skinner will resume
his duties as third·base coach
·-, his position before replac· ence maker, and there aren't
. mg Manuel.
many managers like that."
It would seem to be an awkThe Indians sigped Wedge
ward pairing except that to a two-year contract, with
Wedge and Skinner are the club holding options for
friends.
2005 and 2006.
· "Joel Skinner is a great per· · Wedge
managed
son, and he's a great baseball Cleveland's .Triple-A team in
guy," Wedge said. "He was Buffalo the past two seasons.
the first one to call and con- He led the Bisons to a 178·
COLUMBUS (AP) - there is no need 1
9 belabor obvious that there were
me. He's a class acl 108 record and was selecte(l
gratulate
Ohio State has been here the point.
·
deep-rooted problems on
all
the
way.
r didn't have to minor league manaj!er of th~
before: unbeaten, nationally
"You bring it up once for the team. One starter was ·
urge
him
to
stay. I don't year· by The Sportmg News
ranked and on a roll coming the folks that weren't here. I ·kept off the bowl roster with
worry about Joel. He' s a after this season.
off a win over a Top 25 think history is important, a 0.00 grilde-point average
secure person. I'm a secure
Upstate New York was the
opponent.
especially if you weren 't and· several players were in
"
final stop on an odyssey·
person. . ·
h
h h I d'
f
Then
along
comes part of that history," he said. trouble with the law.
Skinner led the Indians to a t roug t e n 1ans arm sys·
Minnesota.
"Then you leave it go."
Ohio State's 24·7 loss to
35-41 mark during a turbulent tern that began in 1998 when,
Two years ago the
It doesn·' t sound as if the . underdog South Carolina in
second ·half thi s season. He Shapiro made Wedge a man;
Buckeyes were 5-0 and No. Buckeyes needed even that the Outback Bowl was· the .
was disappointed arnot get· ager of the team's Class A
5 when they returned home ·one reminder.
last straw. Cooper was fired
ting the job. but wanted to Columbus (Ga.) affiliate.
from a big win against
"I think everyone's pretty the next day and within
stay with the same organiza·
Along the way, Wedge
Wisconsin - and promptly much heard that through the three weeks, Tressel , the
tion he has played, coached developed into an aggressive;
lost 29-17. Many later locker room and the meet· coach at Youngstown State
take charge manager who
and managed for.
pointed to that game as one ing rooms," said cornerback the past 15 years, was
'Tm glad 1 got the opportu- isn't afraid to get into the face
of the turning points that led Derek Fox , a high school brought in to restore order.
nity. 1 think I filled a gigantic of one of his players or go
to the firing ·of coach John senior when the Gophers
"I'm a fifth-year senior
hole, and 1 feel proud about nose-to-nose with an umpire .
Cooper ·at the end of what stunned the Buckeyes. " It now and we' ve beeh
it," Skinner said. "The one
"There's been a lot made of
would become an 8-4 sea· was a big loss for us back in throu~h the good times, the
thing I'm 1101 going 10 have is · my intensity and aggressive
2000. We were the fourth- bad limes and the terrible
nature," he said. "I'm an
80
a pity party."
,
~ow the No. 6 Buckeyes or fifth-ranked team in the times," defensive tackle
Shapiro refused to say what intense person. If I say some{9-0, 4-0 Big Ten) meet ·country. We cton't want that Kenny Peterson . said.
1 sepamted the two candidates, thing, I mean it. It's not about
Without saying it, it was
23rd-ranked Minnesota (7- to happen again,"
but cited Wedge's communi-· being a tough guy. It's just
·
d
'I
The
Buckeyes
beat
clear•he·
considered
the
loss
I)
I , 3• agam, un er een y
cation skills and dynamic per- following Up on what you
say."
similar circumstances. Ohio Fresno State, Arizona, 10 Minnesota one of those
sonality
as
two
of
his
new
A young Lou Piniella?
State held off No. 18 Penn Miami (Ohio), Penn State terrible times.
manager's greatest attributes.
"I'm flattered with that
"!
can't
really
say
,what
. eek wht'le and No·. 22 Wt'sconst'n that
State 13 7 last W
"He has an the qualities compari son," Wedge said.
happened · two years ago,"
the Gophers haven't played season. '
he said. "We can 't live in
necessary today to be a sueWedge is the majors'
since . beating . Michigan · The loss sent the .team the past. You' ve got 10 live
cessful major league manag- youngest manager ._ by far.
State 28-7 two weeks ago.
spira.ling out of control. in the present and work. for
er," Shapiro said. ;'Players Pittsburgh's
Lloyd
Ohio State coach Jim There were numerous prob- the future." .
gravitate to him . He pays M C
h · 43 · h
attention to detai,l. He 's a
c lendon, w o IS ' IS I e
Tressel said Tuesday that he lems on the field and off the
Peterson sai d the 2000
great
communicator,
he
is
drisecond·
youngest. He'll also
will mention what happened rest of the season.
'
team m.ight have lost focus
the last time that Minnesota
By t.he time the Buckeyes
ven to succeed, and has a ti're·
.
I
came to Ohio Stadium, but got. to December, it was
Please see OSU, Bl
less work ethic. He's a differ·
Please see Tribe, Bl
'

;

'

OSU tries to avoid
a repeat of 2000
Buckeyes meet Gophers Saturday

~

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�www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

On the Fringe
the top 30 players on the money Ii~t.
"Getting into the top 30 used to be . kind of thing - different faces.
Missing are 14 players who were 10 no big deal for a 'top player.' Now, I
''I' don 't know what that says.
the field last year.
think it's going to get harder and · There's a lot of good players."
That's what the PGA Tour has
"You can count about eight guys harder," said Davis Love lli, who
who you know are going to be here. secured .. his spot in the Tour been saying all along. These guys
every year," Jeff Sluman said as he Championship only two weeks ago. are good.
And there's a lot of them.
.
stood on the soggy practice range at He is 24th on the money list, his
East Lake. "Five years ago, it was lowest spot in nine· years.
With two tournaments left, there
closer to 15 guys."
As for the Ryder Cup?
have already been 37 winners this
David Duval, who faced off"You're going to see a . bunch of year, up five from this time a year
ago.
course issues throughout the year, new faces," Love said
did not qualify for the flriit time · The current Ryder Cup standings
"No one really pays attention to
since his rookie season in 1995. He . for the 2004 matches mdilde the the fact that there's 130 players in
.is 78th on the money Jist, one spot usual suspects - Woods, Toms, Phil. the field this week, and it very well
behind Mike · Weir, the defend10g Mickelson. Jim Furyk.
. could be that there's 100 people who.
champion
of
the
Tour
It also has Rich Beem, Chris Riley have the ability to win it,' Duval
Championship.
and Jeny Kelly.
·
said halfway through the Buick
Tom Lehman is not playing for the
The list will change over the next Challenge.
.
first time since 1993. At No. 51 in two years, but don't be surprised if
"You're having guys who are realthe world; he'll have to play well players like Riley,. Bynl, Charles ly clicking on various weeks.
early next year to avoid missing the Howell III or Pat Perez are at They' re not making any mistakes.
Masters.
Oakland Hills - or if Sutton has to And what that means is you can't,
Hal Sutton won in 1998, the firSt select from among Love, Duval and either. You've got to make everytime the Tour Championship was Lehman for his two captain's picks. thing. Because if you don't, you' re
held at East Lake. He's not here, · "J noticed that change a little bit in trouble."
either. Sutton is .one of seven on the last Presidents Cup team,"
If they don 't, they might find
Americans who made the Ryder Cup Duval said. 'The first three teams I themselves at home during the Tour
team a year ago, but wasn't good was on, it was mostly the same peo- Championship,
Or watching the Ryder Cup on
enough to finish in ihe top 30 on the pie. All of a sudden, it was different.
money list this year.
•
· And with this Ryder. Cup, the same television.

Somebody has to program the computers
BY )1M LITKE

Associated Press
That sure didn't take long.
The BCS trotted out just its second
poll of the season earlier this week,
but the man-vs.-machine debate is
already at a full-throated roar.
Most people wait until the end of
the season to crank up the volume
because by then, the number of
teams getting hosed · has been
trimmed to a manageable few.
What's given the debate more
immedi~cy is that more big-time
programs are unbeaten some two
months into the season- the largest
,number in 21 years - . and as many
as five legitimate title contenders
could hit the · tape with perfect
records.
What's made it impossible to
ignore is .that Notre Dame, college
football's lightning rod, has landed
squarely in the middle of that pack.
This past Saturday, the Fighting

Irish ventured into Doak Campbell onship came to be called a "mythiStadium, a very hostile env1ron- cal" utle in the first place.
ment, and punished what was supBut most of the guesswork was
posed to be a good Florida State supposed to be taken out of the
team.
process five seasons ago, with the
How good does that make Notre· advent of the BCS, or Bowl
Dame?
Championship Series.
Everybody has an opinion. This
There isn't room here to go into the
was FSU coach Bobby Bowden's: intricacies of the latest BCS formula,
..They kept us bumfuzzled all day." but the simplified version is this:
Tilms out the Seminoles weren't
Each team's total in the rankings is
the only ones left burnfuzzled.
determined bv four components For some reason, the coaches who the average of the two polls; the avervote in the USA Today-ESPN poll age of seven computers (wo/St score
looked at ND 34 FSU 24 and decid- thrown out); number of losses; and
ed to leave the Fighting Irish exactly strength of schedule. Bonus points are
where they were Saturday morning, subttacted for "quality w10s" over
at No. 6. The writers and broadcast• schools ranked in the BCS Top 10, but
ers who vote in The Associated it doesn't apply in all cases.
Press poll were impressed enough to
Finally, the teams with the two
reshuffle the deck, moving them up lowest scores at the end of the seatwo places to No. 4.
son a~ m~tched in ~e. national
Disagreements !Jetween . the c~amp10nsh1p game, th1s lime at the
humans who vote in the AP and F1esta Bowl on Jan. 3. .
After being put through the BCS
coaches polls are nothing liew.
Ther' ve been going on for dei:ades; · ringer, the Fighting Irish came.out of
that s why the national champi- the weekend in exactly the same

place they began it, ranked No. 3.
seascn, fran margin ofVictay to the timThe strong move in the media poll ing of a loss to tre way a team loch headtriJmled a full point from Notre I&gt;arre's · ing into tre f0Ut1h quam of a 100gb game
BCS poll a~ but the computers put oo tre road, are qJen to irieJpretalic11. ·
S!&gt;meofitbackoo.Aweekafterranking
The suits in charge of the )3CS
first in fopr of tre seven BCS computer would have you believe otherwise: ·
One of the computer operatorssystems, tre Fighting Irish ~ed to
snag only two- the Colley Matrix and for-hii-e last year boasted, "I don~t
the New York TI!IleS.
have to watch a minute of footbaiJ.
"People see Notre Dame rising in That's the whole point of having an
the polls at the same time they're objective system. I could . be deail
slipping in the computers ~d you and gone. and it w~:JUI~n't _matter." ·
can almost hear them th10kmg,
That ktnd of th10kmg IS why th!!
'Stupid humans,"' Andrew Bagnato BCS rankings have produced the
of the Chicago Tribu11e said. .
. wrong
championship
game
"On top of that, half the fans think match up the past two seasons. Th:e
we're rabid, ~ro-Notre Dame and number of unbeatens means th,e
half think we re hopelessly biased odds on a making it three in a row
against. the school. The truth,'' he · grow more daunting with. each
said, ''is if you're doing the job right, passing week.
it takes too much effort to be biased."
That kind of suspepse is exa~tly
The simple fact is that you only learn what makes the BCS the smashmg
so much about a team without watch- success it's become. Fans of every
ing theffi play. No team is the same in team love complaining about inju~­
November as it was in September. tices, and never more than when a
lrijuries crop up and roles change. ·. .solution exists .- a playoff ,system
An tre .a!Yr facias in a loog college -:- and yet remains out of reach. ·

..
ond"youngest
manager Double-A Trenton, and led
behind HaU of Fainer Lou · Triple-A Pawtucket to two
Soudreau, who was 24 when winning seasons.
he ·became the club's playerMacha, who agreed to a
from PageB1
· .
three-year deal, spent parts of
manager in 1942.
· "I've been more comfort- six· seasons playing in , the
be younger than two Gf· his able, the hi~her I go in base- majors, batting .258 with 98
top players: Ellis Burks (38) ball,'' he sa1d. "I feel particu- hits, one home run and 35
larly comfonable and at ease RBis.
and Omar Vizquel (35).
"You're talking about a $UY
Shapiro, 36, said Wedge's at the big-league level. I
think
I
have
the
personality
to
with
a civil engineenng
age was not a factor in his
be
a
leader.
I've
always
been
degree,"
.A: s general manager
h1ring. He wasn't chosen ·
because the Indians have a comfortable in a leadership Billy Beane said. "He's very
ofjl:anized, very structured. I ·
young team. He was selected role."
·
ATHLETICS
thmk Kenny's one of those
solely on his qualifications.
four
years
as
a
guys
who' s matter-of-fact
Macha
spent
"I knew that Eric was ' the
right guy," Shapiro said. "I manager in the Boston orga- and easy . to com~unicate
felt so strongly about it that I nization before joining the with."
BREWERS
didn't really care (how old he A's as a bench ·coach before
the
1999
season.
He
was
the
Yost
spent
the last II seais). His maturity transcends
Eastern Lea~ue manager of sons on Bobby Cox's
his chronological age."
Wedge is the club's sec- the year m 1996 with coaching staff in Atlanta.

Tribe·

.osu
from Page B1
or might have had two many
egos and too little unity.
·
"It's not something we' re
going to harp about but we as
"a team recognize what happened and we're keeping it m
the back of our minds," he
said. ''You learn lessons as
you get older. We know how
that felt. We have to go out
on Saturday and do what we
can do to stop it."
Andy Groom, now the
punter, was the holder for
placements on that team two
years a~o. He's almost certain Oh10 State - caught up
in.ran kings, unbeaten records
and personal accomplishments - wasn't concentrating on the Gophers:

"It wasn't even close, was
it?" he said. "It had to be a
lack of focus because I don't
think that ·team was ·that
much .better than Ohio State
-. if they were better."
Tressel swears he doesn't
follow - the BCS rankings ·
(where Ohio State is No. 5).
He said he didn' t know the
Buckeyes had dropped from
No. 4 to No. 6 in the AP poll
until it was pointed out to
him on Tuesday.
His sights are set on
Minnesota
and
only
Minnesota, he said. And he
hopes his players follow his
. · ..
lead.
"I was more curious ·to
watch Minnesota on film
than to see where we are in
the BCS," he said. "If we
don't take care of this week
the BCS is irrelevant. That
has to be what our thoughts
are on."

.He played in 219 gam'es for
Milwaukee, Texas and
Montreal, the majority for
the Brewers in 1980-83:
Yost agreed to a two-year
contract that includes a
club option for -2005.
Although OM Doug
Melvin's first choice for
the job was Macha, Yost's
solid
first
impression
moved him ahead of the
other candidates: Brewers
bench coach Cecil Cooper,
Arizona bench coach Bob ·
Melvin and Yankees thirdbase ·
coach
Willie
Randolph.
"He came in here and
basically won the job with
his enthusiasm," Melvin
said .

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•

••

LOS ANGELES (AP) went 32-of-46 to the Lakers'
While the San Antonio Spurs 24-of-30.
• .
-.were naturally pleased about
lri · other season,.openers
_winning their sixth straight Tuesday
night,
the
season-opener, they weren't Sacramento Kings routed the
in a celebratory mood Cleveland Cavaliers 94-67
because of how it came and the Orlando Magic
about.
topped the Philadelphia 76ers
Reserve Malik Rose had 16 95-88.
Founeen games are schedpoints and 11 rebounds to
.lead a balanced attack uled for Wednesday night.
.Tuesday night as the Spurs
O'Neal, MVP of the last
· beat the short-handed Los three NBA Finals, is recover~Angeles Lakers 87-82.
· ing from surgery on his
"We played terrible, it was _arthritic right big toe. He's
_a terrible game," Sp~ coach expected to be sidelined
Gregg Popovich said. "I'm another two weeks.
Fox was suspended for the
thrilled that it'll count as a
.victory as the season goes on, season's first six games for
and disappointed in our play." his part in a fight witil
The three-time defending Sacramento's Doug Christie
NBA champion Lakers, who in an exhibition game Friday Los Angeles Lakers Kobe Bryant, right, slips around the
played Without Shaquille night.
defense of San Antonio Spurs Bruce Bowen during the first
O'Neal and Rick Fox, shot a
The Lakers were presented quarter of the season·opener Tuesday at Staples Center in Los
miserable 31.8 percent (27- their championship rings in a Angeles. (AP)
of-85) while losing their first pregame ceremony. Fox was .
allowed to take part before
' season-opener in 11 years. ·
Rose made a basket and
The Spurs weren't much having to leave the arena- Lakers coach Phil Jackson
"As
bad
as
said
sarcastically.
free
'throw to give the Spurs a
·better, shooting 36.6 percent the rule for players under susto
it
is,
it's
probably
better
77-70
lead with 5:54 remainpension.
·
(26-of-71). •
win
ugly
than
it
is
to
lose
ing, and Tim Duncan made
"I hope that was as enjoy- But it was good enough.
ugly.
which
was
the
case
free throws with 3:38 left
two
The difference was at the able to watch as it was for me
tomght."
an
82 ~72 lead - largest of
for
foul line, where the Spurs to coach, that's all I can say,''

the game.
The Lakers didn 't pose a
serious threat after that.
"We might have set basketbali back 10 years,'' Rose said
with a smile. ·.·It was just nice
to get the win. It would have
been bad if we didn 't since
they were without Shaq and
Fox."
Duncan had 14 points and
10 rebounds, but shot only 3of-14.
And San Antonio point
guard Tony Parker missed all
10 of his shots.
. "It was ugly, but we won
the !!arne,'' Duncan said.
'Thai's all that matters. We
had a tough shooting night,
that's how it goes sometimes." .
David Robinson, playing
his final season, had 13 points
and 10 rebounds for 'the
Spurs. 'but didn' t play after
ptcking up his fourth foul
with 8:02 left in the third
quarter.
Speedy Claxton also had 13
points, and Steve Smith
added 12 for San Antonio.
Popovich said Rose played

a solid game and also complimented the effon of newcomers Claxton and Emanuel
Ginobili, who had seven
points, two rebounds, three
assists, four steals and one
block in 20 minutes.
· Popovich said his decision
to bench Robinson for the ·
final 18 minutes had nothing
to do with the veteran's
health.
Smith injured his groiq
early in the fourth quarter and
was in pain afterward. He
·d he w ld be
· 'd
sal
ou
examme
Wednesday.
. ·
Kobe BryaJit had 27 pomts
.and 10 rebounds for the
Lakers, but shot o nl y 9-of-29
at leas.t m part due to the
defens1ve effo rt of Bruce
B?,we~.
,
He s a great player,
Bowen said. ''That's enough
to get you mot1 vated to play.
You get to show what you can
do against a player like that.
"I'm just trying to get some
acknowledgment for first
team AII-D this year, that's
my goal."

_
:Kings triumph over Cavaliers, hope to have ·repeat of last spring
But thanks to Oeveland's 24 their top rookie and their coach
turnovers and 32 percent - took their first )oss in
shooting, Sacramento held the what's certain to be a long seaCavs to the lowest score by an son for a team that )IliOn 29
opponent since the Kin~s g~s last season and then
moved to Northern Califorrua traded its top three scorers,
in 1985. Ricky Davis scored ini:luding NBA assists leader
17 points for Cleveland.
Andre Miller.
.
The raucous pregame cere- • Former Oeveland forward
rnony demonstril.ted that Arco Lamond Murray believes the
Arena hasn't lost a decibel of Cavs are tanking the season to
noise since last June, when the improve their chances of draftKings lost Game 7 of the ing Ohio high school phenom
Western Conference finals in LeBron James next fall. Coach
overtime to the Los Angeles John Lucas missed the game
because of a two-game susLakers.
· "(The banner) up there is pension for holding offseason
great, but it's not what we workouts with James.
want," Kings owner Joe
'They came out in the third
Maloof \Old the crowd before quarter and started going up
the game. "You know what we and down really well,'' _Cavs
want."
assistant coach Jeny Eaves
NBA-best61~21Iast 5easim. ,.
the KingS played without said. "We couldn't hang with
. "I! was an excitin~ night, but theil: s!3rling backcourt. Doug them._ It ~as good for I!S to
1t's JUSt a start,'' swd Webber, Christie began . a two-game play 10 this type of envuon- ·
who scored just nine points on suspension for his preseason ment, though. It's the. loudest
4-of-13 shooting. "We would- fight with Rick Fox of the gym in the league, and I'm
n't be ieady f(lf the playoffs if -Lakers; Mike Bibby will be glad we had the opr,ortunity to
they started today. We need the out for about a month while his come in here early. '
whole 82-game season to find broken foot heals.
Rookie Dajuan Wagner's
put where we are."
Jones, a well-traveled veter- NBA debut must wait until he
• While steadily pulling away an signed last week to back up recovers from a bladder infecin the second half, the Kings Bobby Jackson while Bibby 1s tion, while center Zydrunas
Healt with all the usual open- out, hit three 3-pointers in the llgauskas was suspended
)ng-liight problems in execu- first' half and immediately fit because of his no-contest plea
tion - and a few unusual into the Kings' free-flowing to drunken-driving char~es.
ilnes, thanks to passing mis- offense as they pulled away in Backup center-&lt;ehris M 1hm
Jakes that Vlade Diyac said the second half.
.
als&lt;! didn't dt;ess due t.o a
were caused by the new purple
"lri the preseason, I had a lot strained hamstnng.
road uniforins they wore.
of open shots that J didn't
"A big factor was not having
. : 'The jersey~ were confusing make/' Jones said. "'I've ~n our big m~n in,then:. but w~'ll
us," Divac swd. "We usually working on my shot extra m be all nght, s31d Danus
· wear white jerseys at horne. practice. Ithought it paid off." Miles, who had 13 points on 6- Sacramento Kings forward Chris Webber, center, goes to the basket between Cleveland
'We were passing to white jer- · The Cavaliers - glaying of-22 shooting and 10 Cavaliers Darius Miles, left, and Michael Stewart during the third quarter at Arco Are na in
Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday. The Kings beat the Cavaliers on opening night, 94-6 7. (AP)
);eys."
· without their top two l:enters, rebounds."
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
(AP) - If the Sacramento
Kings hope to put any more
banners next to the one they
!tung on opening night, they'll
have to play more like the
.ieam that won the Pacific
Division last spring.
Peja Stojakovic scored 17
points and Chris Webber had
. 14 rebounds as the !Qngs over·came 20 turnovers and opened
a season of great expectations
'with a 94-67 victory over the
:Cleveland
Cavafiers
on
Tuesday night.
. Gerald Wallace scored 15
Points and Damon Jones had
·18 in his.debut for the Kings,
who unveiled the first division
.iitle banner ever hung at Arco
· Arena. Sacramento was an

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=IlNE/I

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

National Basketball Association

New faces on tour mean no more guarantees
ATLANTA (AP)- David Toms'
Especially now.
premonition was correct, and it
Byrd was the 17th player to win
eventually cost him.
for the first time on the PGA Tour
Coming off a year in which he this year, shattering the record of 14
won his first major championship frrst-time winners m 1991.
and qualified for his first Ryder Cup
And don ' t get the idea these guys
· team, Toms was playing in !he Sony are winning tournaments with weak
Open whel) he had to wall as the fields that are held the same week as
or
World ·
Golf
group in front of him teed off on the majors
18th hole at Waialae Country Club. Championships.
"See this kid?" Toms sa1d, nodCra1g Perks won Th\l Players
ding toward a baby -~aced r~kie tak- Championship against the strongest
ing a powerful practice sw10g on the field in golf.
tee. "Watch him this year. He' s
Matt Gogel won at Pebble Beach.
· going to be good."
Kevin Sutherland and Craig Parry
· That player was Jonathan Byrd.
won World Golf Championships.
The hunch Toms had in January Bob Bums won at Disney World
proved correct last week in the with none other than Tiger Woods
Buick Challenge when Byrd closed close behind.
.
with a 63 for hts first PGA Tour vicByrd won against a field that had
tory - by one stroke over To9JS.
19 of the top 30 players on the
. At least Toms saw it coming.
money list
·
It should be a 'Jesson for other · ''There is nothing surprising about
.perennial stars on the PGA Tour. any of them," said Chris DiMarco,
They can no longer assume they will one of those first-time winners two
qualify for the Ryder Cup or years ago. ''To you ~uys , they are
Presidents Cup, play in the Tour not household names. '
Championship, or be able to book
Some of the household names
reservations at Kapalua for winners- . might soon be forgotten.
only Mercedes Championships.
' The Tour Championship starts
There are no guarantees in golf.
Thutsday.at East Lake Golf Club for

www.mydailysentinel.com

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�Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Page 8 4 • The Daily Sentinel

NHL Roundup

Prep Football

Minnesota off .to wild start; Hurricanes down Devils again
Jose 2; Chicago 3, Columbus
2; and Buffalo ! ;Vancouver I.
Carolina managed only 11
shots against goaltender
Martin Brodeur- none in the
third period.
Jaroslav Svoboda also
scored for the l;lurricanes,
who beat New Jersey for the
second time this season. They
eliminated the Devils 4-2 in
the first round of the playoffs
last season en route to the
Stanley Cup finals.
New Jersey (6-2-0) had its
three-game winning streak
snapped.
·
"We had our chances to win
the game, so yeah, right now
they can say they've got our
number," Devils center Scott
Gomez said.
Skating in front of the net,
Sekeras took a backhand pass
from Sergei Zholtok and
wristed the puck past David
Aebischer
to
send
Minnesota's sellout crowd
into a frenzy.
Sekeras hadn't scored in 44
ga111es. Manny Fernandez
made 21 saves for the Wild.
Joe Sakic scored both of
Colorado's goals, and Peter
Forsberg had two assists.
"They're playing better
than everyone . expected,"
·
Forsberg said.
Kings 4, Thrashers 0
Lubomir Visnovsky and
Mikko Eloranta scored two
goals apiece as Los Angeles
kept Atlanta winless.
Felix Potvin was hardly

tested in his frrst shutout this
season and the 26th of his
career. The host Thrashers
lost their ninth straight to
begin the season.
The Kings won despite losing .leading. scorer Jason
Allison early m the game. He
was helped from the ice with
a sprained right knee and was
to have an MRI on
Wednesday.

scored

Czerkawski
Montreal.

for

unteaano18d

Rtd Wi!f! 3, Sharks 2 ·
Sergei F
ov scored two
JX?Wer-p.lay goals •. includ!ng the
wmner m the third penod, as
Detroit beat visiting San Jose.
Fedorov has eight goals thi~
season, and five in his last
tliree games. Jason Williams
also scored and Luc Robitaille
added two assists for the
defeQding Stanley Cup cham.
pions, who improved to 6-31-0.
Owen Nolan scored both
goals for San Jose, which
dropped to a disappointing 36-0-0.

lloglon I
· (8) Strongsville (7·3) at (1) Solon (10-0)
(5) Ashtabula lakeside (8·2) al (4)
Montor (9-1)
(7) Cle. St. Ignatius (7 -~) at (2) Warren
Hatdlng (1D-0)

(6) Parma fits. Valley Forg&lt;~ (8·2) at (3)
Lakewood St' Edward (9-1)
lloglon 2
(8) Marion Harding {7-3) at (1) BrunSWICk
(10.0)
(5) Spring . . South (7-3) at (4) Tot St.
John'o Jeaull (7-3) at Tel. Rogers
Maneflold Senior (7-3) at (2) Findley
(9-1), 7:30 Friday
• (6) W . - (H) al (3) HUdi!Qn (1D-0)
lloglon 3
(B) Musil ion Washington (11-2) at (1) N.
canton Hoover {8·2)
(5) Maaallion Parry (9-1) at (4) Dublin
Scioto 19-1)
(7) Upper Arlington (7-3) at (21
Pk:kenngton (!1-1)
(8) Gahanna lincoln (8·2) at (3) Dublin
Coffman (11-2)
lloglon 4
(8) Cln. St. lCavter (7-3) at (1) Cln . Elder
(9·1)
(5) Huber fits. Wayne {8-2) at (4) Cln . .
Moeller (7·3) at Lockland
(7) Lebanon (9·11 at (2) Cln. Ander8011
(10.0)
(6) Clayton Nortf1mont (8-2) at {3) Gin.
Colerain (9-1)

&lt;n

DIVISION II
All gomu ot 7:30p.m. Fl'ldoy
·
Region 5
(8) Youngs. Chaney (7·3) at (1) Louisville
(ID-0)
(5) Olmsted Falls (8·2) at {4) Uniontown
Lake (7·3)
(7) Maple Heights (7·3) at 121 Canlleld
(ID-0)
(61 Warren Howland (7-3) at (3) Madison
{9·1)
,
Region 8
(81 Cols. St. Charles (6-4) al (I) Tol. St.
Francis (9' 1) at Oregon Clay
(51 Tiffin Columbian' (9-1 ) at {4) Tot Cent.

Steelers hope ne~ grass at Heinz Field will be sturdier, better
PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers are
getting a new home field.
They hope they're not giving
up their home-field advantage.
The much-maligned · gmss
field at Heinz Field was
ripped up and replaced this
week by New Jersey-grown
bluegrass that the Steelers
hope will be more durable and
longer-lasting than the previous turf.
That field never seemed to
take root during a hot and
unusually dry summer arid
often came up in clumps during games. NFL and college
kickers complained that the
turf was so rough, they could

never count on proper footing
for their kicks.
"We're comfortable we're
doing everything we can do to
make it good,': Steelers coach
Bill Cowher said Tuesday.
"But when you're playing on
a grass field in the north, the
weather is going to, be a factor."

So far, players have complained more about the turf
than the weather.
Cleveland Browns kicker
Phil Dawson called the field
the worst ilt..the NFL. Boston
College coach Tom O'Brien
compared it to a parking lot
where his team occasionally
practices.
O'Brien was upset after his

last year, and pro!f~ptly signed
With the expans1on Houston
Texans. Brown said the sandy
base beneath the grass created
a slippery surface for kickers.
The sand is designed to
allow water to quickly drain
off the surface, but it often
made its way to the ·surface,
especially at midfield. To
address that problem, the new
sod has a I 112-inch soil base,
compared to a quarter-inch
· base for the old turf.
The
resodding
comes ·
before two November weekends in which the field will be
heavily used. The Pittsburgh
City League high school
champ~onship game is Nov. 7,
followed by Temple-Pitt on

Nov. 9 and Falcons-Steelers
on Nov. 10.
Two .weekends later, four
western Pennsylvania high
school championship games
will be played on Friday, Nov.
22, the same weekend the
Steelers host the Bengals. ·
With five Steelers and two
Pitt home games remaining,
plus the high school games, at
least 12 more games are left at
Heinz, not counting any possible Steelers home playoff
games . . _
The wear and tear at Heinz
is likely to continue ·in future
years . Because public tax
money was partly used to pay
for the $282 million stadium,
the Steelers are under political

PITTSBURGH (AP) the area, Trapp· jumped on Cowher clarified his remarks to rhake sure you don't do
Pi ttsburgh Steelers coach Bill Bum;ss and pulled off the by saying he didn't mean ,to anything in the heat of the
Cow her says it 's perfectly teceiver's helmet.
imply he agreed with what moment emotionally, that's
Burress then got up and Burress did.
understandable for a player to
spontaneous. If the official
protect an undefended team- charged toward the middle of
"I'm not condoning it," he doesn ' t see what happened
mate during a fight. What he the field, causing the officials said. "But it's over with, we' ll first ... you get reprimanded
won't exc use is that player · to eject him for being out of .learn from it and we'll move and you get thrown out of
getting tossed
for doing control. Trapp also was on."
game . Those are the things
· so.
thrown out, a penalty that carThe way he is playing now, you have to avoid."
Cowher won't further repri- ries an automatic fine to be the Steelers want to keep
Meanwhile, Cowher also
mand wide receiver Plaxico determined by the NFL.
Burress on the field whenever asked · the league why the
Burress for being ejected
Afterward, Burress apolo- possible. After making only
from Sunday's 31-18 victory gized to his teammates. two catches in two games Ravens didn 't list quarterback
in Baltimore after Burress Defensive back Lee Flowers before Tommy Maddox Chris Redman on their injury
caught two touchdown pass- said the apology wasn't nec- replaced Kardell Stewart at report, only to sit him down
es. But he said there's a lesson essary; saying, '.'He (Trapp) quarterback, Burress has 30 with a back injury and unexto be learned by Burress in jumped on him with two feet. · catches for 426 yards and four pectedly start Jeff Blake:
Still , despite his rivalry
how far he can go in standing There's no place in the league touchdowns in five games.
with
Baltimore coach Brian
up for himself or a teammate. fot that."
Cowher reminded his playCowher said the Steelers ers that those who react to an Billick, Cowher doesn't think
"He 's goi ng to be fined by
the leag ue, as he should be," sent tape of the incident to the incident often get a stiffer the Ravens covered up the
Co wher said Tu.esday. "Do I NFL.
·
penalty than those who pro· injury so they could surprise
understand what took place?
"We've addressed it as a voke it.
the Steelers with Blake.
Yes. But I'm not condoning team, and we'll addreu it
"It's just something to
"You certainly don't want
it."
tomorrow (Wednesday) when to leave a guy out there when inquire about because it's the
With the Steelers leading the players come back,"
situation takes place," Ravens," Cowher said, smil28-3 late in the second quar- Cowher said. "I thought what Cowher said. "But you liave ing.
ter, Ravens cornerback James Plax did wu appropriate, but
Trapp intercepted a Tommy there is a le11on to be learned. ·
Maddox pass and returned it As a coach, you like for your
II yard s before being shoved players to defend one another
out of bounds by receiver and I woilidn't expect it to be
Antwaan· Randle El. · ·
any .differeD\. At the same
As the play ended, Burress time, you've got. to use good
saw fellow receiver Hines judgment and be stilart about
Stop in our Racine Office and ask
Ward exchanging words with your actions, because there
one of our friendly loan officers
Ravens cornerback Chris can be an effect that' can bin-.
McAllister and began to move der !he team."
about our New Home Loan Special!
in. But as players swarmed to
Several minutes
later,

pressur~t

to allow the high
school games to remain at
Heinz Field.
Despite the problems,
Cowher doe·sn 't want the
Steelers to install a relatively
new brand of artificial turf
that is softer and more
grasslike than previous ver.sions. The Steelers already .
use the turf at their indoor·
practice complex.
.
"The mud, the grass, that'!
the way the game should be
played," he said. "It should be
a natural game played in the
elements - and on the elements. Let's do everything we
can to make it as good as possible, then deal with it." · •

1)
(5)

Grafton

Mldvlew

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)Grant Hill had 18 points,
seven assists and six
rebounds in his first action
since last December as the
Orlando Magic beat the
Philadelphia 76ers 95-88 in
the first game of the NBA
season Tuesday night.
Tracy McGrady added 31
points and five assists f9r
the Magic, who shook offa
poor first quarter.
Keith Van Horn had 19
points and I 0 rebounds to
lead Philadelphia, while
Aaron McKie also had 19.
Allen Iverson shot 7-of-25,

out

Region I

HOME NATIONAL BANK

'MORE LOCAL
• Subscribe tockly.
. 992-2156 .

(4)

(8) Newton Falls (7·3) at (1) Smithville
(10.0)
(5) Bedtord Chanei (8·2) at (4) Rocky
River Lutheran W. (9- 1)

"(7) Gates Mills Gilmour (6·4) at (2)
Midd~r"ld Catdinal (1D-O)
(6) New Middletown Springfield (6·4 ) at
(3) Dalton (9·1)
Raglan 18
(8) Delphos Jefferson (8·2) at (1)
Bucyrus Wynlord (9-1)
(5) Colu""'a Station Columbia (8·2) at
(4) Castalia Margaretta (8-2)
(7) Lorain Claarview (11-2) at (2) Dotiance
Tinora (9.01
(6) Oelphos St. John's (7·3) at {3) Hamler
Patrick Henry (9· t)
·
llogion 18
{8) Johnotown·Monroe · (7-3) at (1)
Woodsr101d Monroe Cent . (10-0)
(5) Chesapeake (7-3) at (4) Steubenville
Cath. Cent. (8·2)

Charleston SOutheastern (8·2)

Semlflnala otart Wedneaday at 6:30'
p.m.
Flnala Saturday at 2 p.m. except
Wilmington ol4 p.m.
· At Wilmington High School
St. Bernard Roger Bacon (24-2) vs.
Dayton Chamlnade-Julienne (22·31: The
Plains Athens (21·3) vs. Ketterlng Alter
(21 -3)
At Findlay Llberty·Bonton High Sohool
Pambervllle Eastwood (19·6) .vo Canal
Winchester (2&amp;-0); Norwalk (t9;8! vs .
Celina (21-3)
At Stow·Munrot Falla High Bohool
Rocky Al111r (21-&amp;) vo. Chagrin Folio·
Ktnolon (2t •4); Mentor Lako (24- t) vo.
Hubbard 128-0)
At Wooeter High Bohool
Tallmadge (23-2) vo . Mllloroburg W.
Holmto (28.0); Conal Fulton Northwoot
(NIA) 1/1. SunbUry Big Walnut (19·8)
11111
tournament
polrlneo:
Wilmington ve. Llblrty·lenlon; WOOellr

FIND VDUR NAME IN
TODAV'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN I

••· lt-Muntlll ~1111

DtYIIION Ill

I

lemlllnola otarl Thurodoy aii:IO p,m.

••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
:

The Meigs County Health Department's

:

:

Heart Healthy Awareness Group

• ,

:
•

Would like to
Congratulate

:
:

THE MEIGS
BAND BOOSTERS

.

·

•
•

For serving healthy food during the
2002·2003 Football Season!

•

Heart Healthy Awareness q,alition

•

•

•

:
:

:
•

'

Girard (23-3)

Stllte tourn1m1nt pelrlng1: O~rlo VI.
Maadclwbrook;
Barbtrlon

•
•
•

•

"nola lllul'lloy II 2 p.m •.
At OntlriO High lohool
Genoa Area (22·3) vo. Huron (23·2);
Arohbold (21·1) 111. Frtderloklown (20o3)
Atllytovlllt MHtlowbiook High lohool
Wllllamoport Weotllll (NIA) vo•. ZOINIIIo
1\looorowao VaiL (24· t): Fronklort Adena
(24·1) vo. Coohocton 117-6)·
At Wilmington Hlgtt 8ohool
Ploln City Jonalhan Alder (24·0) vo. Cln.
N. Coliogo Hill (23-0)
AI Blrtltrton High 8ohool
Smithville 123·2) vo. Rocky River
Lutheran (23-t); Streelaboro (16·10) va.

:
•

Wilmington

DIVISION IV

vo .
·
/

S.m~lnolo otort Wodnoodoy ot &amp;:30

p.m.
Finale 8aturdly ot 2 p.m. Lonctottr ond
Elida; 4 p.m. Butler ond ttudoon

-

···~·················, ,

Football Lllllgue
AFC

Eoot
WLTPetPFPA
Mlami. ............. 5 2
.714 190 143
Buttalo .. .......... 5 3
.625 241 231
Now England .. 3 4 o .429 168 158
N .Y. Jets ......... 2 s o .286 t 16 t93

o
o

o

Norwalk, Hudaon v.. Vandalia
DIVISION II

.....

N~tlonal

o

At Hudoon High Sohool
Youngs . Austintown Fitch (20·4) vs .
Mentor (19-7); Wooster (16: 10) vs. SolOn
(19-6)
At Vandalia Butler H~h School
Cln. Mother ol Meroy (17-8) vs. Cin.
Ursuline (22·3); Cin. Notre Dame (14-t 1)
vs. Cin. Salon (18-7)
At Hllllatd Davldaon High Sohool
Cols. Watterson (22·3) vs. Dublin
GoHman (22·4); Cin. St. Ursula (24· 1) vs .
Lancasler (24-2)
AI Norwalk Hlglt School
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne (23·2) vs .
Rocky River Magnificat {19-6); Tol. St.
Ursula (23-2) vs. Elyria (22-3)
State tournament palrlnge: Hilliard va.

2 FREEflCIOS
SPRINI VAllEY
CINEMA7

Pro Football

Colo. Acad . {9' 1)
.
• Pittsburgh ....... 4 3 0 .571 169 140
(6) Cln. Hilla Christian Acad . (10-0) at (3) CIOIIeland ..... ..4 4 0 .500 185 172
Balnbrldgs Paint Valley (9·1 )
Baltimore ........ 3 4 0 .429 t22 142
DIVISION VI
Cincinnati ....... 0 7 0 .000 75 211
All gomull 7:30 p.m. Frtdoy
Region 21
• WLTPetPFPA .
(8) Sandusky St. Mary's (5-5) at (1 )
San Diego ......6 1 a .857 173 119
Mogadore (9-i)
Denver. ......... ..6 2 0 .750 207 170
(5) E. can . (HI at (41 Monroeville (8·21
Oakland ........ ..4 3 0 .571 206 185
(7) Laetonia(7-3) at (2) Lowelhlllle (1D-O)
Kansas CIIV ....4 4
.500 259 240
(6) Cle. Cuyahoga His. ( 7-3) at (3 )
NFC
Windham (9-t)
Eaot
Region 22
WLTPetPFPA
(8) Bascom Hopeweii·Loudon (8·2) at (1 1
Phlladelphia .... 5 2 0 .714 202 105
Cpiumbua Grove (10.0)
N.Y. Giants ..... 3 4 , 0 .429 89 115
(5) Sycamore Mohawk (8·2) at (4)
Washington ... 3' , 4 0 .429 141 188
Northwood (ID-0)
Dallas ..........-':'.3 5 0 .375 108 146
(7) McComb.(7 -3) at (2) Tiffin Calvert (8·
South
2)
WLTPetPFPA
{6) Rawson Cory·Rawson (8·2) at (3)
New Orleans ..6 2 0 .750 256 209
Edon (9-01
TamPa Bay ..... 6 2 0 .750 .165 85
Region 23
Atlanta .... .. ...... 4 3 0 .571 167 119
(8) New Matamoras Frontier (5·5) at (1)
qarolina ..·........ 3 5 0 .375 111 117
Strasburg·Franklin (1 0-0)
North
(5) Willow Wood Symmes Valley (8-2) at
W
L T Pet PF PA
(4) Newark Cath. (6-1)
Green Bay .. ... 6 ·1 0 .857 203 154
· (7) waterford (7·3) at (2) Danville (9·1)
(6) Millersport (6-1) at (31 Shadyside {8· Ch icago ......•. .2 5 0 .286 139 180
DetroiL .......... 2 5 0 .286 149 213
~
Mlnnesota ....... 2 5
.286 162 192
Region 24

Flnele Saturday at 2 p.m.

•WIN•

Norwalk St. Paul (25-0) vs. Ashtabula
Sts : John &amp; Paul (22· 1); Wiridham (NIA) vs.
Kidron Cent. Cath. (23-2)
Stollt tournament palrtngo: ~
vo. Bufler' Elkll va. Hudaon

w

Prep Volleyball

missing his final · eight
attempts, for 18 points.
Hill showed no effects
from the three ankle surg·
eries. Hill shot 5-of-1 0
from the field and 8-of-9
from the line. Occasionally
playing point forward, he
turned the ball over three
times.
Orlando center Pat Burke
led the team' s final charge:·
The 28-year-old scored six,
of his 12 points in the final
five minutes as the Magic
took an 93-82 lead with
two· minutes remaining.

At Lancalder High School
REEDSVILLE EASTERN (19-3) VS.
.WELLSVILLE (24-2); S. WebsiOf (HH)
vs. Centerburg (25- 1)
At Butler High School
Marfa Stein Marion Local {22-2) va.
Botkins (10- 14-2); Jackson Center {22-3)
vs.. Ft . laramie (21·5)
At Elida High Schwl
Pettisville (23·21 vs. Mt. Blanchard
Ril/efdalo (18-7); Kalida {21-31 \IS . Old Fort
(22·3)
At Hudoon·Higll Sohool

171 Johnstown Northridge (7·3) at (2)
Amanda-Ciearcreek .(8·2J
(6) Sarahsville Shenandoah (7·3) at (3) .
South
Barnesville (8·2)
WLTPciPFPA
lloglon 20
lndlanapolls ....4 3 0 .571 145 144 ·
(8) Arcanum (8-2) at (1) Marion Pleasant Jacksonvllle .... 3 4 0 .429 147 .133
(1Q.O)
Tennessee ...... 3 4 0 .429 160 197
{5) LHe Creek .E. Clinton (9-1) at (4 ) Houslon ...... .... 2 5 0 .286 104 178
Morral Ridgedale (8-2)
North
(7) Colo. Roady (7-3) al (2) Gahanna
L T Pel pf PA

- (8) Cin . Mt. Heanhy {8·2) at (1 ) Kings
{7) Anna 17-3) at (2) Dola Hardin
Mills Kings (1D-O)
Nortf1em (10-0)
(6) Trotwood-Madison (8-2) at (4) Trenton · (6) Troy Christian (9-1) at (3) Covington
Edgewood (9·1)
(1 O·O)
(7) Loveland (8·2) vs. (2) Day.
Chaminade-Julienne (9-1) at West
Carrollton jr. High Sohool
,r
· (6) ·Day. Carroll (8·2) at (3) vandalia OHSAA Regional Tournaments
Butler (9·1 )
DIVISION Ill
COLUMBUS (AP) -: Regional pairings
,for the girls state high school volleyball
tournament:
DIVISION I
semltlnela start Thuraday at 6:30p.m.

a.

.

(9·1) at

llMSIONV
All gomHII 7 p.m. Soturd41y
Region 17
·I

Macedonoa Nordonia(9-1)
(8) Cin. Country Oay (7-3) at (1) Maria
(7) Copley(7·3) at {2) Avon lake (9-1) . Stein Marion Local {9· 1) ·
{61 Marletla (8·2) al{3) E. Uverpool (7·3)
(5) Mechanicsburg (9·1) at (4) S.

Magic defeats.76ers, 95~aa:

Steelers don't want to take the fight out of
Burress - just ~eep him in the game
·
'

Celh. (9-1)
(7) Cols. Mifflin (7 -3) at (2) Cols.
Brookhaven (9- I)
(61 Maumee (8·2) at (3) Cols. Walnut
Ridgo(9·1)
Region 7
· (8) R~hfield Revere (5-5) at (1) Clreen (9-

.

kicker, Sandra Sciortino,
missed two key field goals one that would have tied the
game in overtime - in a 1916 loss to Pitt on Saturday.
Boston College wasn't even
out of town before work
crews began digging up the
old turf late that afternoon.
After it removed, the workers
began rolling out the new turf,
which was delivered on tractor-trailers ftom a sod farm.
The Steelers said the resodding was planned in advance
and didn't result from the criticism, which hasn't been limited to visiting teams. .
Kris Brown missed 10 field
goal attempts during the
Steelers' first seas9n at Heinz

(6) Spring. Northeastern (7·~' al (3)
Coldwater (10.0)

Ohio Hlglt Schwl A - AIOoclotion
Stole Footboll Polrtngo
Reglonol Qu""*"nolo
DIVISION I
All gomn at 7 p.m. Sotuntoy

Coyotes 3, Islanders 2
. · Landon Wilson batted in a
rebound with 3:~lleftto give
Phoenix a comeback victC!ry
at New York.
The Coyotes won the only
regular-season
meeting
between the teams. and
. haven't lost to the Islanders Blackhawks 3, Blue Jackets 2
Tyler Amason deflected jn
since Dec. 6, 1997.
Alexander Karpovtsev's shot
with 6.2 seconds left to win it
Flyers 2, Senators 1
Keith Primeau scored twice for Chicago.
Steve Sullivan also scored
and Roman Cechmanek
stopped · 29
shots
as for the Blackhawks and ass,istPhiladelphia
remained ed on Lyle OdelEin'scia!.
Jocelyn Thibault sto
20
unbeaten at home (3-0-l).
win. ·
Jason Spezza, the second shots for his 200!h
Jaroslav Spacek and Esp_en
ovemll pick in the 200 l draft,
scored
for
scored his first NHL goal for Knutsen
Columbus, winless on the
the Senators.
road this season (0-3).
Canadiens 2, Mighty Ducks 2
Sabres 1, Canucks 1
Anaheim defenseman Keith
Carney scored his first goal of
Buffalo rookie Ales Kotalik
the season with 4:52 remain- scored with 2:39 left in the
ing in the third period to lift third period to give the Sabres
the Mighty Ducks to a tie at a tie at Vancouver.
·· Montreal.
Ed Jovanovski scored his
Carney also assisted on . frrst goal of the season and
Matt Cullen's 'goal in the first. Dan Cloutier made 30 saves.
Oleg Petrov and Mariusz for the Canucks (1-3.-4).

.

•

Scoreboard

•
•

EAST
RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) - The Carolina
ijurricanes know how to beat
the New Jersey Devils. The
Minnesota Wild are beating
everybody.
Lubomir Sekeras scored
3:43 into overtime Tuesday
nighi to give Minnesota a 3-2
victory over the Colorado
Avalanche and a league-leading 16 points.
The Wild, in just their third
Nm.. season, are 7-1-2-0 and
already five points ahead of
Colol'l!do in the Northwest
Division.
"No one thought we would
be where we are," coach
Jacques Lemaire said. "We
are on a roll now. It would be
nice to keep it going."
Jeff O'Neill had a goal and
an assist as Carolina agai~t got
~e best of the Devils with a
2-1 win at New Jersey.
Kevin Weekes made 34
saves for the Hurricanes, who
have handed the Devils their
last six losses - including
last season's playoffs.
"We're more familiar .with
them than other teams based
on the · fact we have played
them as often as we have,"
Weekes said. "The rivalry was
born in the playoffs. It started
two years ago, and in last
year's playoffs it intensified."
In other Nm.. games, it was
Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 0;
New Jerse¥ Devils' Scott Gomez controls t!Je puck as Carolina · Phoenix 3, the Nt:w York
Hurricanes' Kevyn Adams, rear, yells during the third period Islanders 2; Philadelphia 2,
Tuesday night in East Rutherford, N.J. The Hurricanes beat the Ottawa I; Anahe1m 2,
Montreal 2; Detroit 3, San
DevilS, 2-1. (AP)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydallysentinel.com

west

W . LTPctPFPA
SanFranciscoS 2 0 .714180 144
Arizona .... ....... 4 3 0 .571 136 131
Seatlle ............ 2 5 0 .286 142 156
St. Louis ......... 2 5 0 .286 139 158
Sunday, Nov. 3
Dallas at Detroit, 1 p m.
Baltimore at Atlanta, 1 p.m .
Tennessee at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Cincrnnati at Houston, 1 p.m.
. Philadelphia at Chrcago, 1 p.m. ·
New England al Buffalo .. 1 p.m.
Minnesota at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Pit1sbu rgh at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at San Diei.Jo, '4:05p.m.
St. Louis at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
Washington al Seattle, 4:15p.m.·
~ ~ San Fr~nclsco at Oakland, 4:15p.m. '
Jacksonville at N.Y. Giants. 8:30p.m.
Open: Denver, Kansas City, Carolina,
New Orleans
Monday, Nov. 4
Miami at Green Bay, 9 p.m.

7. Texas .................

10. Iowa ...........................................22 .89
11. Southern Cal ............................. 23.04
•
12. Colorado ...................................29.51
13 Michigan ..............
... 31 .22
14. ~su ........................................... 36.78
15. Kansas St. .......................... ....... 37.11

~5

Aaaoclated Press Top

The Top Twenty Five teams in The

Mid-States Football Association
Mldeaot

W L Pet.

1. Miami (59) ..............7 .0
2. OklahOma (14) ....... 7-o
3. Virginia Tech ........ ..8-0

t ,S32
1,788
I .611

3

4. Notre Oame (1) ... ...8.0

1,597

8

5. Georgia ..... ............. 8.0
6. Ohio SL .... .... ........ B-0

1 .582
1 ,575
1.35t
I .271
1,269
I ,232
1.100

5
4

7. T..as ..... ................. 7·1
8. Washington St ........7·1
9.1owa .......................8-1
10. N.C. Stal0.. ............ 9-0
1 t . Southern Cel... ..... .6-2
12.Aiabama .... .... ...... .6-2 ·
13. Colorado ............... 8-2 .
14. Kansae St. ............ 8-2
15. Mlcl11gan ................ 8-2
16. Arlzon• St. ...... .. .... 7·2
17. LSU ... ..... ............... 6·2

2

1

894

9
13
12
t5.
19
21

ns

20

702
625

8
23
··ro

955

J04

551
11
18. Florida St. ............. 5·3
536
14
19. Orogon .................. 6·2
368
18
20. Pann St. ................ 5·3
361
.24
21 . Bowling Clrean ...... 7.o
335
17
22 Iowa SL ............... 6·3
327
25
23. Minnesota ... :.... ..... 7-1
24. Colorado SL .. ...... H
144
25. Tennessee ............ 4-3
119
16
Otherw rwctlvlng volta: Marshall 104 ,
Aorida 103, Maryland 84 , Pittsburgh 58,
Auburn 54, Boise St. 43, TCU 23,
Nebraska 18, Air Force 12, Virg inia 7,
Oregon St. 6, Wisconsin 5, TeMas A&amp;M 3,
UCLA 3.

Mid-American Conference
Eoll
Con1• .

W L Pel
Marshall ....... 4 0 1.00
Miovri .(Ohio)...4
Ohio .•...........3

.800
.750

Overall

6

L Pet.
1 .857
3 .667

3

5 .375

W
6

UCF ............ ..2 2 .500
Kent Sl ........ I 4 .200

3 4 .429
3 . 5 ,375

Akron .... ........o 4 .000
Buffalo ..........
5 .000
Wast

1

7 .125
8 t 11

N. lllinois .......s o 1.00

6

3 .567

o

lbll'g~ ' · .4
Toledo ......... .. 3
t
Ball
C Michigan . .1
E. Michigan ...1

7
0 1.00
5
.750
3.
3 .25a
3
3 .25a
3
3 .250
3
W. Michigan ... I 3 .250
. Thla Week's Oamea
Marshall .at Akron
C. Florida at Syracuse
Miami at Ohio

st:..........

W. ~i ch i gan at Ball State ·

0 1,00
3 .625
5 .375
5 .375

5 .375
5 .375

L Pet. ·
0 1.00
2 .667

W
7

9.Rlrdi; il:L3 0 1.00
Tri·State ........3 0 1.00
Walsh ·-······ ··3
Malone ........ 1
Geneva ......... 1
Urbana ......... t

4

1 .750

7

2 .333

4

2 .333
2 .333
Quincy. 111 ...... 0 0 .000
Taylor ........... 0 4 .000
Midwest

2
2

1 .875
3 .571
5 .375
7 .125
.6 .250
6 .250

7
6
6
4
2
4

0
1
2
4
5
4

3

t

Trin. lnter...... 1 3 .250
1
Iowa Wes ......
4 .000
1
9.A!rdi;I. ....Q· 4 .000
Tbla
k'e Gam11

o

1.00
857
.75[)
.500
.286
.500

6 .143
6 .143

w..

Wals h at Gannon
Malone at Saint Francis. Ind.
Saint X&amp;vier at St. Ambrose
Iowa Wesleyan at Tr inity International
Tri-State at Urbana
Taylor at Geneva
Quincy at Kentucky Wesleyan
William Penn at 0 . Nazarene
McKendree at St. Francis. 1!1.

Plonaer Football Laagua
North
W L Pet.
o 1 .oo
0 1.00
2 .333
4 .200 ·
5 .000
South
~9. .. 5 0 1.00
Davidson .. ...2 1 .667
Austin Peay ..2 2 .500

Dayton .......... 4
San Diego .... 3
Drake .. .......... 1
Buller .. ........ 1
Valparaiso ...0

JackSOnville ...0 4 .000

W
7
4

L Pet.
I .875
3 .571

5
3

4 .556
5 .375

0

8 .000

8
5
5
2

I
3
4
5

.889
.625 .
.556
.286

Heartland Conference
W L

Hanover. ..... ..4

Pet.

0 1.00

Mt.St.Joe .. ..4 o 1.00
'Anderson ...... 2
Franklin ...... . 2
BluHton ....... .. 0
Manchester .. o
Defiance ....... 0

1
t
3
3
4

.667
.667
.000
.000

.000

W
7
5
4

L
0
2
3

2

5

2
1
2

5
6

6

Pet.
1.00
.714
571
.286
.286
.143
.250

Great Lakes Intercollegiate
W L Pet. ·

W

L Pet.

Grand Vall .... 6 0 1.00
Findlay ... ...... .6 1 .857

7 ·o 1.00
7 1 875

N. Mich .. ...... .6
5q'ew\laL.5
Norlhwood ... .4
Ferris St. ..... .3
Hillsdale ..... ~

1 .857 '
2 ·. 714
3 .571
3 .500
4 ·· .429

6
6
4
4
3

2
2
4
3
5

lnd1anapolis .. .2
Wayne St.. .. .2
Mich. Tech .... 2
Ashland ........ 2
Marcyhurst ... 1

5 .286

3
2

5 .375
6 .250

2
.2

6 .250
7 .222

2

6 .250

5
6
6
6

.286

.250
.250
.143

.750
.750

.500
.571
.375

Pro Basketball .
National Basketbali Association

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
C. Michigan at E. MIChigan
W
L Pet.
GB
Orlando .... .. ........ t
0 t .000
Big Ten
Boston ....... ........ ..0
0 .000
.5
W L Pet.
W L Pet.
M1ami. . ........... .0
0 .000
.5
8 1 .687
Iowa.....
.... 5 0 1.00
New Jersey ...... 0
0 .000
.5
9 0 t.aoo
Ohio St. ...... .4 0 t .00
New York ....... ...... 0
0 .000
.5
7 I .875
Minnesota ....
.750
Washington .. ..... ..0
.5
6 2 .750
Michigan ...... 3 1 .750
Philadelph la .........
1
3 5 .375
Illinois .... ....... 2 2 .500
Central Division
5 3 .625
Pann 51. .......2 3 .400
WLPctGB
4 5 .444
Purdue ....... 2 3 .400
Atlanta .......... ..... ..0
0 .000
6 3 .667 • Chicago ......... .... ..0
'w isconsin .... 1 3 .250
0 .000
Indiana ... ...... 1 3 .250
3 5 .375 . DetroiL ...... .-... .... ..0
o .ooo
AFC Individual Leaders
. 3 5 .375
Michigan St. .1 3 .250
Indiana ....... ......... 0
0 .ooo
Week8
2 7 • .222
... 0 5 .000
Milwaukee ........ ..0
0 .000
Quarterbacks
Thla Week's Games
·New Orlearls ..... . 0
0 .000
Att Com Ydo TO In!
Wisconsin at !OWB
Toronto .......... ..... .0
0 •
Bledsoe, But.. ..... 31B 203 2500 16 5
Indiana al Northwestern
Cleveland ............ .o
1 .000
.5
Gann on, Oak .. ..... 314 214 2382 15 7
Michigan State at Michigan
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Pennington, NYJ.: ..131
91 1096 5 4
IllinOis at Penn State
Midwest Division ·
Maddox, Plt.. ...... 123 82 966 9 6
Minnesota at Ohio State
W
L
Pet
GB
Green. K.C. ........ 244 154 1864 16 10
San Antonio .. .... ... 1·
0 1.000
Conference-USA
.5
Dallas ...... .......... ..0
.000
Rushers
W l Pet.
W L Pet.
.5
......
........
..
0
0
.000
Denver
Att Ydo Avg LGTO
0 .. 000
So. Miss ...... . 3 o 1 .00
5 2 .71 4
.5
Houston
.
............
0
Holmes, K.C ... ..... 190 857 4.5 27 13
.5
TCU
.......
.......
3
1
.750
6
I
.857
Memph
is
............
0
Toml inson, S.D.. .".174 785 4.5 581 7
0
.000
.5
Minnesota ......... ... O
Louisville :..... 3 1 .750
5 3 .625
4.4 531 6
A. Williams, Mia .... 163 711
.5
0
.000
Utah......... . ....
UAB ...... ...... 3 1 .75a
. 4 4 .500
Henry, Bul. ...... ....151 695 4 .6 34 9
Pacific Division
'
e
.
Carolina
...
2
1
667
2
5
.286
4.4
631
4
Taylor, Jac...... ..... t 55 681
GB
W
L Pet
Tulane .... :..... 3 2 .600
6 3 .667
Sacramento
...
i
0
1
.doo
Cincinnati ..... 2 2 .500
3 5 .375
Receivers
.5
Golden State ......0
0 .000
3 4 .429
Houston ...... .. 1 3 .250
No Ydo Avg LG TO
.5 ~
L.A.
Clippers
...
0
0
.000
Memphis ...... I 4 .200
2 6 .250
Harrison , Ind ........ .58 736 12.7 69 3
.5
Phoenix
....
...........
0
0
.000
Army ...... ...... . 6 .000
8 .000
Moulds, But. ... .......57 785 13.8 701 5
.5
0 .000
Portland .... ..... ......o
Thll W..k'a Gamea
P. Price. BuL ........ 51 740 14.5 591 8
Seattle ...... ....... , .. o
.5
0 .000
Houston at Memphis
Holmes. K.C.......... 51 440 8.6 49 2 .·
.000
LA Lakers .........0
Smith, Den . ........... 49 541 11.0 34 2
Tutadey'a Gam••
Ohio Athletic Conferance
Orlando
95,
Philadelphia 88
NFC Individual Ltadtra
W L Pet.
W L. Pet.
Sac
ran;~ento
94. Cleveland 67
QUirllti&gt;IOkl
Mt. Union ..... .8 0 1.00
7 0 1 00
San
Anto
nio
87, L.A . Lakars 82
An Com Ydl TD lnl
John Canoll ... 5
.833
8 1 .857
Wednlldly
'l Qame'
Favre, 13.8....... ....233 153 1706 ' 14 3
Capital.. ........ &amp; 1 .833
&amp; 2 .714
.Chicago
at
Booton,
7
p.m.
Vlck, All. , ......... .... t3&amp; 84 Q&amp;9 4 0
4 2 .857
2 .1 1•
Houaton
at
Indiana,
1
p.m.
Garcia, S.F.........,203 128 1388 to 4
Muaklngum ... 3 3 .&amp;00
3 4 .429
Waoh
lngton
at
Toronto,
7 p.m.
Brooko, N.0 ..........288 153 183&amp; II 9
Ohio No ........ 3 3 .&amp;oo
3 4 .42e
Mliwaukto
11
Philadelphia.
7 p.m.
MatthiWI, Woo .... 125 . 72 718 8 2
Marleltl ... ..... t &amp; .187
2 5 .285
Orlando at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Otterbein .. .... 1 &amp; .187
2 5 .288
~tlanta at Now Jtrtoy, 7:30p.m.
Auohlrt
Wilmington ... t I .187
2 &amp; .288
Oellao at Momphlo, 8 p.m.
All Yda Avg LGTD
1 8 .143
Heldelberg .... 1 &amp; .187
Otnvtr
at Mlnn11ota , 8 p.m.
4,8
e2
7
MoAIIIotor, N.O. ... 17t 838
Tltto W..k'o Qomtt
Now
York
at Deiroll. 8 p.m,
4.1
43
4
Grttn, Cl.B. ......... 143 840
Onarbaln at Haldal~erg
·
.
Ullh
at
Naw
Orllono. 8:30p.m.
4.8
44
7
Foulk, SI.L .. .... ..... 124 . 802
Ohio Northern at Wllm lnglon
L.~.
Loktrl
al
Portland , 30 p.m .
3.&amp;
21
8
L. Smith , Car....... 1&amp;8 58&amp;
John Carroll at Muoklngum
Phoonl•
at
Soartle
, 10 p.m.
4.2
301
2
Smith . Cal. .......... 131 588
Marlena at Mount Union
CltiVoland otl.A. Cllpporo, t 0:30p.m.
Capilli II Baldwln·Wallace
San Anton io at Cloldon Slato. 10:30 p.m.
FIICII\111'11
Thul'ldly 'e Qamaa
No Yde Avg LQ TO
North Coaat Athletic Cont,
Ulah ot Atlanta , 7:30 p.m.
Horn , N.0 ..............49 870 13.7 41 &amp;
W L Pot.
W L Pol.
Beeton at Wathlngton, 7:30 p.m .
Moll, Mln ...... ...... ..49 523 10.7 48 3
7 0 1.00
Wabash ...... .. 5 0 1.00
Portland
al Sacramtnlo, 10 p.m.
Faulk, St.L ........... .:4e 332 8.8 23 2
7 0 t.oO
Woootor ........4
1.00
Booker, Ch i. ......... .42 680 1&amp;.7 &amp;4 &amp;
6
.857
Wittenberg ....3 1 .7&amp;0
Holt, St. L ...............42 613 14.8 52
3 4 .429
Alleghany ... .. 2 2 .500
2 5 288
Oberlin ......... 2 2 .500
National Hockey League
2 6 .286
Eorlham ........ 2 2 .500
3 4 .429
Ohio Wea ... ..1 3 .250
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Bowl Champlonthlp Serlta
1 6 .143
· Denison ........ t 3 250
Atlantlo Dlvl•lon
1 7 . 125
Ken110n ....... ..1 4 .200
W L T O~Pto GFGA
Through gamto of Ocl. 21
0
7
.000
.....
......
.
o
4
.000
Hlram
Philadelphia
.....
6 1 2 0 14 J.4 19
1 . Oklahoma ................................... 3.33
Thla W..k't Oamee
New Jersey .... 6 2 0 0 12· 19 13
2 . Miami. .......................................... 8.89
Pltlsburgh ......... 5 2 2 0 12 31 29
3. Notre Dame ....... ..........................6.99 . Al legheny at Witte nberg
N.Y. Ra ngers .. ..4 5 2 a tO 28 38
Oenlaon a.t Hiram
4 . Georgla ...... ,... ... ....... .... ...... .......... .8.24
N.Y. lsiB.nders ... 3 5 1 0 7 24 33
Ober!ln at Earlham
5. Ohio State .............. ..................... 9.49
Northeaet Dlvlalon
Ke nyon at Ohio Wesleyan
6. Vlrglnle Tech ......... ................... :10:88
Bowling .Green at kent ·State

a

o

o .ooo·
.ooo

.oOo

I

o

a .ooo

o

o

o

e.w ...............

a

e

o

Hockey

College Football

T OLPts GFGA
1 2 o 12 26 21
3 3 0 9 24 31
4 2 o 8 23 21
3 1 0 7 15 14

W L

Wooster at WabaSh

Assotletod Press college fooi!Jall P&lt;&gt;l. with
first-place votes in parentheses. records
.
McKendree ... 4 0 1.00
through Oct. 26, total paints based on 25
St. Ani:&gt;rose ... 4 0 1.00
points fm a first place vote through one
point lor a 25th place wote and previOUs Saint Xavier...3 1 .750
ranking:
· Wm. Penn ..... 2 2 .500
Wol. Polnto ..,.
Olivet Naz .... 2 2 .500

"
'

. ........... 15 64

8. Wash1ngton St ........................ 19.71
9. N.C. State ..................................20.73

Boston ......... ~5
Montreal. .......... 3
eunalo ............ 3
Ottawa .............. 3

Toro~:llo ··-·· -'····· 3 6 1 0 7
Southe81t Olvlalon

32 31

w· L T OL Pta GF GA
Tampa Bay ....... 6 I 2 0 14 36 24
Carolina ....... ."... 4 4
t 10 22 26
Washington ...... 4 4
0 9 19 22
Fionda .............. 3 5 1 1 8 23 35
Atlanta . .....
.a 8 o 1 t 24 39
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T OLPts GFGA .
0 13 37 25
Detroit :.......·...... 6 3
0112515
St . l ou is
..... 5 t
Ch1cago ........... 4 3
0 9 21 18
Columbus ......... 3 5 1 0 7 24 27
Na.shville ... -·· .,. 1 4 1 2. 5 18 22
Northw81t Division
W l T OLPto GFGA
Minnesota ........ 7 1 2 0 16 36 21
Colorado .... ._ ..... 3 1 3 2 11 22 '9
Vancouve r ........ 3 3 4 0 10 26 25
Calgary .......... ...2 3 2 2 8 24 30
Edmonton ......... 2 4 2 1 7 22 27
. Peclflc Olvlak)n
W L T OL Pto OF GA
Dallas ..... .........6 2 2 0 14 33 22

o

Los Ange les ... .. 5 2 2
t 2 28
Phoenrx .... .... .. 4 6 0
I 9 24
Anaheim .... .. ... .. 2 5 3 0 7 24
San Jos"e .. ...... ..3 6 0 0 6 24
1WQ pointe far a win , one point for
end overtime loaa.
Mondey'l Gamta
N.Y. Range_rs 3, Phoenix 2, OT
To ronto,5, Anaheim 2
Pittsburgh 3, Washington 2
Tampa Bay 6, Fl orida 1
Dallas 4, Edmonton 3. OT

21
35
32
33
a tie

TUeeday'a Gemea
Phoani)( 3, N.Y. Islanders 2
·Philadelphia 2. Ottawa 1
Anaheim 2 , Montreal 2. tie
Los Angeles 4, At lanta 0
Carolina 2,"New Jersey 1
Detroit 3, San Jose 2
Minnesota 3, Colorado 2. OT
ChiCago 3, Columbus 2
Buffalo 1, Vancouver 1, tie

Wednesday's Games
Boston at Washington, 7 p.m.
Pittsbu rgh at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
N.Y. lsla"ndefs at Carolina, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Range rs a!Tampa Bay. 7_ p.m.
Nashville at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Florida at ~al ias, 8:30 p.m.

- Thursday 's Games
Anah eim at Boston , 7 p.m.
Atlanta at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
PhoeniJC at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at Minnesota, B p.m.
Los Angeles at Chicago, 9:30p.m.
Buflalo at Calgary. 9 p.m.
Colorado at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Na med Eric
WedgJe manager and signed him to a twoyear contract.
OAKLAND
ATHLETICS-Promoted
bench coach Ke n Macha lo man ager.
Declined 2003 option on C Greg Myers.
SE ATTL E M&gt;"!RINERS-Declined 2003
option on RHP James Baldw1n.
TA'1fA BAY DEVI L RAYS - Announced
Jackie Brown , pitching coach. and Milt
May, hitting coach . will not return ne)(t sea·
son, and Glenn Ezell, bullpen coach , and
Lee May, first base coach , will not be
offeree 2003 contracts.
TORONTO B ~ UE JAY S-Agreed to
te rms with LHP Doug Creek on a one-year
contract.
National League
COLORADO ROCKIES-E)(ercised the
2003 club option on AHP Todd Jones.
Declined \the option on RHP Sean LbWEJ:
but relained arbitration r1ghts to h1m .
MILWAUKEE BREWERs-Named Ned
Yost manager and agreed to terms on a
twd-year contract .
MONTR EAL EXPOS-E)(ercised 2003
option on AHP Bartolo Colon. Activated
INF Jose Macias from lhe 60-day disabled
list.
PHILAD ELP HIA Ptf1 LLI ES- Declm8d
2003 option of RHP Ter ~ y Adams.
BASKETBALL
National Baske1ball Association
GOLDEN
STAT E
WARRIORSAnnounced the club has been award ed G
Oscar Torres on a waive r claim .",
INDIANA PACERS-5igned ~ Jeft Foster
to a contra ct elCtension.
· NEW YORK KNI CKS-Signed Don
Chaney, coach, . to a contract elCtens"ion .
Wslved G Toby Bailey.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CAROLINA PANTHERS ~Wolved OB

•

Tim H111elbeck.
,
DENVER BAONC08-Releaoed P Tom
Rouen and .WA Kevi n Kasper. Signed P·K
Micah Knorr.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-~Ia oed DT
,TIIanoe Sawyer on lnjure d,reaerve. Slgnld
DT C•drlc Kllllngo. Slgnod' CB Shod Crloa
to the practice ·l quad.
NEW OR LEANS
SA INTS-Signod ,
Mickey Loomis, genera manag_
e r. to a con·
tract exten11on t~rough 2008.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signod OB Jon
George.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER3-Signad TE
C111y Crawford. Placed LB Ryan Nece on
lnlurtd flltrvt. Signed C Jaaon Scukanec
to the practice squad.
HOCKEY
fjallonol Hockey Loaguo
FLORIDA PANTH ERS-Rocalied RW .
Pierre OaQenela and 0 Igor Ulanov !rom
Si n Anton io of the ·AH L. Ae.asslgned LW ·
Erie Beaudoin to San Anto ni~ .
NASHVI LLE PREDATORS-Ass igned ~
Mark Eaton to Milwaukee ol the AHL.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS- Recalled G
Sebastien Charpentier from Porllend of the
AHL . Placed G Olle Kolzlg on InjUred
reserve. Reassigned AW Mike Farrell to
Portland .
COLLEGE
STATEN ISLAND-Named Stella Porto
women's softball coach.

.,

�,,

-·
Page ·a 6 • The ' Dally Sentinel

.

www.mydallysentinel.com

~
: Wednesday, October 30, .2002

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

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d. pi
·' who stole my camoflog lad· 782. 8am-8pm, 7 davs.
IS ay sheIIJ Ing. ..
NIUSI have
'
ba stc key board10 9 an d
• dar tree stand, on creek be·
hind Eden U.B. Church or - - - ' - - - - ' - - -- - searchtng skills to 'use autono questions asked 1t re· Auto ·body man- experl· mated catalog to tdentify
• turned to Donny Barker anced tn metal labncatlng, materials. Must be abfe to
• . (740) 378·6365
bodywork, welding &amp; paint- reach, stoop, and bend to
•
lng, call Htll's Classic Gars put materials away n
70
' ·.1 '
YARD SALE
Restorations, 7am·1 Opm, Shelves whiCh are on the

r

!

r

I

{740)949 -2217

; ~ pn

YARD SALE-

•,

GALLIPOLIS

• ' l

! , 514 Buckndge Ad .. just off

f

,I SA 160. 9:00am, Thursday,

friday &amp; Saturday. House. hold, gas grill, Revere
·~ Ware , some turn1ture, color
TV's 10 S b1'kes m 1 1
· Std.9 Y'
· 101 h~a
• women s c
-cr • u
lng
. . ~all (740)446·2196
J
.- . 3 family ..31
yard sale 8·5pm,
2
• October
' No\lember ~ · ·
.. 1626 Wildwood OriiJe, near
~ : Eno, Route 554.
It ' Clark Chapel Church, Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, OH.
, Yard Sale 9-4pm, Novem;... bar 2~·
,
'

1

t

r

4

YARD SALE-

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304•
675· 142 9.
BURGER KING
Management Opportuntltes.
we see~~: career oriented Indivlduals who will Slrt\le to
achieve the "Best~ In Customer SaJislac1ion and
Teamwork 11 you have a
d
estre _to succeed with a
goal dnven, team oriented,
growtng company we offer
health, dental &amp; _life insurance, prescrtptton card,
4 1
0 K, bonus program, patd
~acatlons, Management Apparel, advancement from
·" person at
withl n. APP IY 1
the Burger King Restau~ant
located at .Upper,.. Atver
Road or mal! resume to:
Burger Kmg, 65 Upper River
Road, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

I

Domino's Now Hlnng all Ia·

ground or as high as six
teet. Must be aware ot numericaf and alphabetical til·
ing systems and be able to
ftle matenals w1th cOmplete
accuracy, Mimmum wage.
EOE Boss:ard l~brary, ap·
ply at the Ctrculat1on Desk.
PRODUCTION
DEPAATMENI
We have Parf.ttme open·
.n our producll'on, pack·
ings 1
aglng&amp;distributionarea.
·Must be dependable
·At least 18 years of age
•Clean driving record
·Mechanical aptitude helpful
·Must be flexible wtlh regard
to work hours
·Must be able to lift 50 lbs
Apply between 7.00·9;00am
Monday- Friday 10 Don
Coleman at The Gallipolis
Dally TribunB or send your
resume to h1s attention C/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
Po . Box 46.9 , GaIllpolls,'

PoMEROYIMmoLE c"allons Pt. Pleasant, Galllp· OH 45631 ,

L.~;;:;;o=:;~~=~;J

Display Ads
All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundays

ay In- C olumn: 1 :0b p . m .

Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
Silver, Gold Co•ns, Proofo·
d
G0ld
58 1
s,
Iamon
s.
R•ngs
u S Currency
M.T.s' Coin
151 seCand All8nue Gallipohs .740•
446-2842 '
'

i

Word Ads
Dally In-Column : 1 : 00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In NeKt Day's Paper

oils, Eleanor. Safe drivers,
must be 18. Apply In person
at locations.
Driver needed banatus.
COL claoa
required .
(740)245·6514

lbuWANIID

s

In'cludes
Up To
. Over 15
Ads

I~. r__
ao w_T~-Do--1 to

l.r_A.,~--~E......,I r

HolllliS
FOR SALE

·
k
OCIB1
erv1ce War ers
needed lor Mason Co.
Headstart
Program.
.
. OuBI1f1~liOns indude H•gh School
~1piSocoma . Some B)Cperlence
'"
a1 5 er~ 1ce age~ts
prel8f'!'8d. A valid W, ~riV·
ers L1eense. COL w1th1n 6
months of employment.
Se~ Resu~e. cover letter •
position desired &amp; referen·
ces too: SCAC Director of
Human Resources 540 5th
Ave.
Huntington, . w,v
25701. Posttlon open till ftl·
led. EOE
---------

1

Would like a job setting with
an elderly person in the Gal·
lipolis area or babys•tting
during the day If Interested
catt (740)446·7151

111r10

Bt.SNN

Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
tract, $500 down 10 qualified
buuers.
Call (7'0)"
,
.,. ..-..;J0 -3570
lor 8 quick sale.
'.:__;_______
Brick Rai'lch, 2 bedroom, 2
bath, garage, on riwr, 5
m11es south of Gallipolis .
{740)441·8817

i

1

•

p,., '

I \ ll\1 "il 1'1'1 ll ;.,
,\11\I .... IIUI,

o-

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I

I

4 Holstein Springer heifers,
, , weighing approx 1.000 lbs.
· Calf
hood
vaccinated,
, $1,000 each. (740)4464053
.; Black Racking mare, trail
rode, $1500 .. Paint mare,
shown 4-H, $1200 .. AOHA
, mare, barrel · prospect,
~ $2000., others available
.- 304-895~331 Q

•

•

..... Fair calves· steers &amp; hel·
, fers, 2nd &amp; 3rd generation
• A.l. calves. (740)448-6588
~ (740)339-2822
.. Female Donkey wllh baby,
also one small Jack.
· ; (740)446·1158
' Miniature Horse, 2 saddles,
buggy, buggy harness &amp; 2
bridles. Phone . (304)675·
.32:::84::_~-----"•· Polled Hereford Bulls 16
months, 12 months. Call at,- lor 5:00 (304)882·2426

Ears of Corn for Sale.
(304)675-1506

-

2000 Daman Camplite, 14',
sleeps 8, 3 queen, 1 twin,
gas stove, 2 way furnace, 3
way refrigerator, 2 dinlng
areas, large storage, awn·
lng, electric brakes, tnverter,
easy to pull, great condition,·
$8,300, (74.0)992-7779

Mellau Bluell
740'892·7599
Congrotulallonal You have
won 2 free movie tickets lo
the Spring Valley 7 Gallpolis. Call !lie Sentinel for details. (740)992-2155)
..., , I\' I( I ...,

;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

rio

We qffer a $500 sign on
~onus, up to $7/tiour, paid
vacations and training.

I

~~~!~~ llr~~~~~re:t~~h~e

111 be

All

home that doesn't selL We house In Mason Contrac$14,900,4 bedroom, 4 bath have one such home now tors welcome. (304)773·
home. WOn't last! For list· New 16 X ao three bed· 5784
lng oell1·800·719·3001 EJCt. room 2 Bath home at a Largo, two story, three bed·
F144
d'h
1c
use _ ome pr e coma see room house at 853 Second
1400 Sq Ft MOdular Home Lynn or Ernie today and Avenue, Oalilpollo (near ll3 BiD Full S.lh Garllen check out your savings. brary) $800 per month wllh
Tub 0·ack wiAboV~ ground RomamNr, we muot ooll by $800 d-oll roqulrtd. No
pots. water fnoludoc{ In ron/
25 , 28 2 car garage 1 tho ond of October!
overhead ltorage Racln~ Must salll Owner moved (no other u1111tlll). Six
OH. (740)949·13S3
, ' 2001 OakwoOd 14•70, 3BR: montha ltaoo roqulrtd.
.
2 bath all appllancoo (740)448-7323 (Library) lor
3 bedroom House, 1 bath, wuhor '&amp; dryor Included: mort Information.
lull olzo baoomant w/thow· central llr with dock, Moko
ar. 2 car garage. 121122 • down pa{rnent &amp; take o~~er
glaaa patio room, heat $370 month mortaga PlY·
pump w/ac, 2 112 (31x31) ..m;:o:;:nt::•·..!(2:,:1::8l!::.3:.51:.:.·7:.:08::6:__
cor garage, now dooro &amp; _
wlndowo, vent tree fireplace New 2003 14 wlda. Only 14x70 2 bedroom, nice,
In LIR, vent tree heater In $799 down and only elton, noar Clay School. No
glaaa room &amp; baaamont, $159.45. Call Nikki, 740· polo, 1350 month+ dopoolt.
corner lot 100•100, walking 385-7671.
. (740)258-1664
distance to school, post of.
floe, community center. Ask· Nice 14x65 1972 Schull.z 2 bedroom, 1 bath, large
lng 58,000 lhown by appt. mobile hpme. 2br. 1·balh, yard, no polo, rent $215
only. No answer leave met· nice alze kltche~1vlngroom. month+ utilities, $200 dt·
sage. (304)882·2817
AC/1 olectrlc, heat wflh gao. poofl. 1740)25H202
antral air, ha1 esroot unw•
3 Bedroom newly ramod· lng.. VInyl underpinning 2 bedroom, located on
eled, In Middleport, call Tom Steps,
railing.
Asking Jackaon Pika, $250 month,
Andoroon altor s p.m.
$5,500. 080. Call anytime $250 depooll. (740)448·
992-3348
(304)874·0122 or (304)895· 4051
3078
2 btdroom, private lot, n'"'
3 Bedroom with garage on
""
apprOJCimately 1 acre On
FARMS
pete, $200 month plus utlllt·
Route 2, Gallipolis Farry.
los. Available November
(304)875-5332
FOR SALE
1&amp;1.(740)448·7754

2

I'

Do

r

erly/ disabled.
Now accepling applications
tor 1 br, all utilities paid
HUD •&amp;&amp;slated. carpeted
apa~menl rent Ia 30"" ol
·
?
your adjuotoll Income call
~04·675·6679 between 84:30pm woekdaya.EHO
Unfurnlahtd apartment,
1110
aman trall•r cro11 to down·
town (lalllpolla. Raferenct &amp;
dapoait. (740)448·1158

r•o

11101 1

11

I

~~!:::::.::~----

·l!aa;

.:1' ·

1993 Toyota Passo, silver,
5-speed, CD player, eun·
roof, reduced to $3,350.
" Call anytime. (740)441 ·

I

j

2 bedroom, Spring valley ~,:'8~~~~:\) u&amp;td, $350.
araa, $325 month, $250 de- ::..;~..::.:..:.:::...._ _ _..,
posit, no pets, (304)675· Oownslzlngl Selling furnl~
2900 or (740)441-6954
lure &amp; other IIams. Reaocn·
ably priced, good condition,
3 b&amp;'iroom, 2 full bath, with
e&gt;&lt;pando for rent In Vinton. call (740)245-9448
Avalleble November 2nd. Good Used Appliances, Re·
BUSINESS
(740)388-9192
conditioned and Guaran·
AND BUIWINGS
Beauttlul River View Ideal teed. washers, Dryers,
p
F
R
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
1 e1eren- Some start at sgs Ska
or 1 0 r 2 eope,
Building for sale with or ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos- Appliances 76 Vine ~~ 8
withoUt stock at 62 Olive ter Trailer Park, 740·441- (740)446-7398
.,
Street,
Gallipolis,
OH :0.:;18:.:1.:..- - - -- ...,..Bedroom Mobile Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
45631. (740)446-3169
Clean
. Home 3In ihe Country Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
1 1 NEWS"•PERS
(740)446 7444 1 877 830
(740)256·6574
. ; 182 . F~ Elllm~tea,
Cover AN The
· Gtor~t Aoad, near Eno, off ftnanclng, 90 days same 88
Major SubJecbl · 554. $275 per month, $200 c_ash. Visa/ Maaler Card
deposit (740)388·9326
Drive· a· little save alai.

r--"'

1992 Pontiac Grand Am, 2
door, rebuiH engine, new
~ !Ires, $1900. (740)245-9307

1
Burner motor with trans·
Iormor and pump complile
lor haatlng oil furnace, $75:
Electric bathroom haator,
SPACE
18.00 (740)367-7729
FOR·RENT
, Qrubb'l Plano· Tuning &amp;
--.
, Rtpalrl. Problema? Nttd
,Mobllo homo lot, ta•- 12• Tunod? Caa The Plano Dr
14·16 wldto. $100 dopollt, &gt; 740·446·4526
1125 month. (740)448.0175 Heavy Equlpmant Trallar·
2 x random dual axlo,
7
dovo8 tall wlrompo olocttlc
brakel w d Ill
20T
HOVSEHOIJ&gt;
Penial 'hlto~~
~ :~~ can:
GooDs
dil
SHOO
rll
• ; 1978 Fo
..,
ton,
00
, .S:i·k~B~
2 Almond froot·freo refrlgtr· : ~~:
""' to
ators, $75 each, Kenmore at· fo,,.., r end loadltf', 811·
waah,r &amp; dryer, $150; Late · cellant rtendltlon· $8500 . ...
model Whirlpool waohor, Call (740)446·4514 8·5pm
$100; Kenmora dryer, $75. or (740)445·3245 aftor6pm.
Call alter B:OOpm. (740)446- Hillside Baptist Church,«
9066
------~--- 39724 St. Rt. 143 Pomeroy,
3 seat Llzy Boy couch, Tables, Chairs, Oea«a. Parw/dual recliner, $276: White lltlons. 992-8768

DIANE SAUNDERS
Congralulallonsl You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the Spring Valley 7 In Clalllpolls c 11 th A 1 1 1
8
8 eg s er o·
day for dotalls.(304)6751333

r

1989 Corvette, red, 6-speed
transmission, 17~ wheels,
new 1ires, all original. EJCcel·
lent condlllon. (304)675·
3354

" 0021

. 1996 Ford Contour, $4,500.
(740)388-8847
1997 Pontlao Flret&gt;lrll Excel·
lan/Condlllon power brakes,
locke,wJndowa,oct.$7200.00
Sharp 992•2384

=:::::..:..:;:...;:;;.:.;:_ _.,...._

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Siock. Cali Ron Event, 1·
800·537-9528.

•• 1997 Rod Plymouth Breaze,
. 92,000
mlloa,
14,500
(740)448·4830

Mltsublshl 4 w1 Drive, 5 fl.
Finishing Mower and Snow
Blade (740) 742·3706

1996 Pontlao Sunflre, '"cal·
lent condition, auto, CD
player, aunroof, ntw brak11
and liroa. $8,000, oa/1
(740)992-4044 aftor 8pm.

Mortar Mixer, Troweling me·
chme,
Masonary Saw,
Wa!kar Compactor, Pipe La·
ser,

- 1989 .Monti Carlo %34,
: caupl, blaCk, oua1om 111reo
ayatam, lNlhlr Inferior,
powar · aunrool &amp; mort ox·
troa. (740)37t-2721

(7~)446·3563

:::c.::.=.:.:.:~.::;:.-1-'--

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
Steel buildings, buy direct &amp;
88118 big, 20x24, $2400;
25x24.
$2950; 30M30,
$3950 , 40x49, $5975; Call
1·800-334-8411 .

t

r "'· --·-..

• 1980·80'1 Carol Truoka
, from $500. Pollee Impound•
•• lor aalo. For ilotlng 1·80o719·3001 ..,. 3901

.

,

,,

•NI!wHomes

Stop &amp;Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74o-992·1671

ito

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
REGISTERED
NURSES
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital Home Care
Agency is accepting
for
applications

reimbursement
•Great work
environment
AA/EOE

Gallipolis, 01:1
.. Money amount indicated above Is retlectlva of 40
hrs/week full work ba!ore la•es.

The
Daily

JUST launched!!!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Burns FATI
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All NaturaVDoctor
Recommended

Sat , November 30, 2002
$65 IJO. Space Limited
Deadline: Ocl 20, 2002
Everyone receives a

Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740-992·7996
or viSit website:
www.herbsndlet.com

basket!!! can:

BISSEll

BASKET &amp; BEAR BINGO
6pm

BUILDERS IDC.

American Legion Hall Middleport

New Homes • Vinyl

For more info 992-4055

Siding • New Garages

Racine American
Legion .602 will, be
having a
Ham. and Turkey
Dinner
Nov. 3 at 11 pm.
Cost $6.00.
The public is welcome.

Nov. 2 at 6:30
All pkgs. $5.00 each
Star Burst 11 00

WAYNE'S PLACE.
Party
Costume Prizes
No Cover Charge
Drink Specials

Oct. 31 , 2002

and Small Home
Malntenanc. Joblt

(340 773-M12
304 &amp;74-3082

cen

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

BINGO

Jim Ruark

Electric, Plumbing,

(10'x10' &amp;lO'xlO'J

Bus Tnp

American Legion
Post 128
Middleport ,

J6S ElfCTIUC 6
PLUmBtOG ·

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Longaberger/Dresden

Deals in the

Classlfledsl

Self-Storage

in the [7401 992-3194
-=992=-66;:::35:::::
Cl QSSI'f'ledSI• '.._

Halloween

The Daily
Sentinel

~~~
High&amp; Dry

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH. 740-992-5232

242 3rd Avenue

You'll Find

"Boo-tifu("

7122!TFN

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

I
LU.\.liUUlU

1995 Eagle Talon, Auto, Air,
Power Windows, Mirror,
Sun Root, AMIFM CessaHo,-·
RegjsJercd Nurse§ on
CD Player, Cruise Control
: 992-0805
a Per Diem basis.
Corttact T1a Wooten
1995 Grand Am GT, 20,
at 304-675-7400 for
· $3696; 1996 Grand Am, 40,
·• $2995: 1998 Contour, 4· more information.
· door, $2495: 1998 Cavalier,
• Flexible scheduling
$3895. 1991 Probe, 20,
' ,$1295: COOK MOTORS, • Competitive pay
• (740)448-0103
• Mileage

=:

CONSTRUCTION

•Cai;ll RalkJdl!lllg

Or stop by:

BASEMEHT
WATERPIIOOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur·
nishod. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
OB7p, Rogers Bqement
Waterproofing.

··r•o :R~ 1.l

9327'
,
.
Afford•blt. Canvenfent
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Low Monthly lrwestmanta
Home Delivery
FREE Color Catalog
Call Today 1·800·711 •0158
__www::;:,;.:;·:.JilP~·e:::l::•ll:::n:::.com=:.!...._

B. D. COIISTRUCTIOR

•Gaages

992-6215

1-8n·463-6247 ext. 2456

L-aiiMPRoiiiiilliVEMFNI'Siiiiiiiiiiliiior'

RE:FiuGfJIATION

I I{ \ '"" l't II( I \110 \

ROBERT
BISSELL

992·29

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call today:

HOME

" For Sale: Round Bales ol L.-~liiiiiiiiliililiiiiiiio,J
Hay, Stored Inside. 1·740·
Residential or commercial
898·8211
wiring, new service or reHay for sale. Square bales pairs. Master Licensed elec·
Alfalfa &amp; clover.. 75¢ ba 1e trlclan Ridenour Electrical,
" tJ94)675·1314
WV000308, 304·675·1788.

'

For all your Home
Improvement needs
"No Job To Small'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Start working at lnfoCision today
and you will be on your way to
earning cash for Christmas!

Antique Holbert M-cable
· Rollar plano. (740)448·0325
·· attar 4:30pn;~ ...

L~------"'!1'-"·

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pl1)

YOUNG'S

How does $1886.00 sound?

MUSICAL

Ll:vF.Srotx

(740) 446-1044

740.992-6142

·Need Money for Christmas?

INsrRIJMENI"S

I

I

s2so. 1304)675·

iiiiji;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Call &amp;

HEi.P

_, Rottwellers, 8Jweeks, 2
malta, $150. a place 2 fe·
males $200. a piece dew
clawos and taUs docked
good tempered. large breed
773-5873

:r

Delivery

co•mucno1

- Choc. Lab Pup 12 wsaks

I

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, .OH 45631

Leave message

FAMilY

•
pups. c..ocolale,
10128.
Parent~
on
1-~·ready
.. premises,
Daddy
is proven
• · hunter. Wormed, first shots.
• Indoor homes only. Males
• $250.
Females $275.,
•. (304)695·3903 or (304)674·
'
5 ~&amp;

~: Rag.

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Dump Truck

MillS

~

·r

rr

j . .FOR"l'W.1l

,t AKc Lab

HOIJSEifOIJl
GooDs

Massey Ferguson•
Parts &amp; S8rvlce

r

~op:!:!:po::rl::u::n•~lle=•::·---~

!

r'---.

APARThtFNrs
FOR RENT

5pm.

I

I

w.·. .

r·D

i

Oc1Sh311~t

MARKE'f

_

112

pool'

·i

~~-·

lot
""'
Lake
1 bedroom unfurnished Oak table with 6 chairs (2
acre
on .,coon
apanment. Probable client
wl12x60Traiklr$16,500.00
leaves) &amp; hutch, like new,
MO'IJ $13,500
00
(304)675·1550
(740)
247 1100
$650: Few Depart. 56 Hous·
--..,-· -.,---es (Dickens Village), make
1 and 2 bedroom apart· offer: Call (740)992-5110 or
Mason Co. 73 + acres, ments, tumished and unfur- (740)992·2662 after 3pm,
Pond, ~lty water, electric. nished, security deposit re·
'ir;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Very mce trailer Included. qulred, no pets, 740•99'2. Skaggs Appliances Whirt-.
Great Hunting, timber. Nice 22 18.
pool washer, $95; Kenmore
development lor home site. - - - - - - - - - dryer, S95; GE electric
L,_..;Otro~;;;;:;RruNITY~~~.,J New 2000 sq " home, 10 $150,000. (304)882·3131
1 Bedroom Apartments range, $95; . SUnray gas
minute~ from Hospital.
~
Starting at $289/mo Wash· range, $95; Whirlpool Re·
!NOTICE!
Complete above ground
~Est
er/ Dryer Hookup,' Stove fligeraror (~ite) $150: May·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· pool with porch, drlwway
~~
and Refrigerator. (740)441· · tag washer &amp; dryer set,
lNG CO. recommends that and garage . foundation
n..tu&amp;:.U
• 1519.
$300;
Upright
freezer
Price below appraisal.
(while) $250: (740)446·
you do business with people (740)446--3384
2 b8 d
you know, and NOT •o send
·
Wanred to Buy: Small lot In
room apar1ment, 7398
Taking Applications for Cer· monev through the mail until Country Home With 11·1 12 Galli a County with mpbtle stove, re!rlgerator, water, :.::::::__ _ _ _ __
1
titled W.lder. Must have
b
ba
C
home set-up. 17401 • 46. trash furntshed. , rent $275, Used furniture &amp; antiques.
rill ble E
1
M
you have lnwstigated the acres. 314 r. 2 ·• 2 ar..
deposit required. (740)441- . Crocks, dishes and glass·
ve a
xper ence. ust offering
Garage, above ground pool, 9209
Have Certtficate (304)675· _ _.:_______
·
Handera fed
0583(740)446·7620after7.
ware
for, delal~.
t
kitchen cabi( ) Call
.
4005
740 286 6522
Small .concession trailer nets. Off Leon Baden Ad Will pay lop dollar lor prime 3 bedroom apartment, upland. New
home builder. stairs. LA, DR, kitchen, Used furn1'ture store, 130
The Mason County Com- equ 1pment WI lh coHon can· (304)458·1580
1
3093
bath, washer &amp; dryer room, 1 Bulavllle Pike. We sell mal·
mission Is now accepting dY mac h'ina a_nd 1unne1 Wanted! GOOd crecllt cus- 74 0) 44 6·
applications for the position cake, fryer &amp; lru::lge. Com· tamers to purch"ase new
$400. {740)367·7015. No tresses, bunk beds, dress·
ol a part·tlme 8mployee for plate water system $3500. horhe wlland. $0 down lo
pets.
ers, couches, appliances,
the Mason County Animal or trade lor small car. qualified customers. 1·5
~partment, CIA, 1 BA, 1 much more. Grave monuShelter. Applicants must be (304)675·3830 or (304)593· acre
tracts
available.
HoUSES
bath, kitchen w/appliances. ments. (740)446·4782 Galable to work weekends and 2244 ,
(740)446·3093
FUR RENT
located at 133 2nd Avenue, _11_po_11_8·_0_H_ _ _~-some holidays. This will be
n..~~·oNAL l l nd h
water and trash paid, $325. Moving: Mavtag washer,
a m1n1mum wage position
CKUI'~
a
ome packages. No
(740) 446 • 859
'
A 11 11
f
b
SERVII"'':'C'
payments whtla under con"'"'
dryer, like new, $500 ~r: 2
PP ca on onna can e - ..........,
• structlon. Little
or no 1 -3 Bedrooms Forectoaed BEAUTIFUL
APAR.... barstools, 2 end tables;
obtained in the Mason
down payment required . Homes From $1991Mo., 4% MENTS AT BUDGET PAl~ (740)446·9209 after 4pm.
County Commlsston olfice
TURNED DOWN ON
,Down, 30 Y~ars at 8.5% CES AT JACKSON ES c~..;...;...;..;;..;..,;..._,
74O)446 3218
0
on the ground floor or lhe SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? 1
.
APR For llsllngs, 800·319·
courthouse between the
No Fee Unless We Win I Spaqious, remodeled home, 3323 Exf. 1709.
TATES, 52 Westwood OriiJe
ANnQUI!S
hours of 8:30 and 4:30 Mon·
nice landscaping, C?IJered : - -- - : - - - - - - - from $297 to $383 Walk to L~--------"
1_888 .582 _3345
day through Friday . The
pallo, garage, basement 2
bedroom
house shop &amp; movies. Call 740· Mason County COmmission
'
A
Convenient. Grape Street (740)388-8547
• 446·2568. Equal Hous&gt;ng Buy or sell. Riverine AntiIs an equal opportunity em(740)446·31 08
Opportunity.
ques, 1124 East Main on
player and does not discrim2br. $325. a month, Security
SA
4 ..- Po
12 c.
74
M OFOIIILERs"ALEOME&lt;i
Daposl't required at 1112 Furnished 3 rooms + bath, 992 2526
lnate due to race, sex,
---""------~
R mercy,
ss Moo
Hogg Street. 304·675-3458 upstairs, clean, no pets.
·
·
u
re,
creed, religion, or national ·
origin John D. Gerlach Ad·
Reference &amp; deposit re· _cm_na_r-----'-- ministrator, Mason County All re1 1eetate advertlalng
3 bedroom home, Miners· quired. (740)446·1519
Carolina Antique &amp;~ft
CommiSSIOn
lnthlantw. .peril
12 used homes under "'pie/lies, Pre~le~enrlcveesr vreqiewu,lredno Gracious living 1 and 2 Mall 312 6th. St. Pt . ~saub)ec:tto the Federal
$3,000. Will h~lp with deltv·
•
• bed
rt
t t v·l ant wv. AntiQue &amp; Craft
The Town of Mason Pollee
ery. Call Harold, 740·385· $460 month Call (740)992·
room apa men 8 a I·
'
·
.
1168
Department will be acceptFllr Houalna Act Df
9948.
6il7 after
!age Manor ,and _Riverside I vendors Welcome.
whichldvll'dH
makMit"lny
llleglllo
Apartments
In Middleport.
u
•• _ . ··--·lng applicattons lor the posi·
baths irt From
$278·$348.
Call 740·
J·~~
bedroom, 1•
112
lion or Pollee Officer. Appli·
nraferenc:e, llmttlltlon or
12x60 3 bedroom w/c/a, 3
Pol
$
E
H
u . -... -ISE
cations may be picked up at
.....
washer &amp; dryer, stove,
nt Pleasant, WV. 600 992 •5064 · qua1 ous 1ng
J'IU.ft\..nArm
lhe Mason Town Hall 1t8
dl.crlmlnltlon bliNd 0 '1.
$5,495, 740·992-2167
month + deposit. Garbage &amp;
South Second Street, Ma·
r•~e.color,rellglon.Mx
water paid, no pets. Jut A
d led~ b
1997 Chevy Extended Cab,
WV d ·
t•mMIIIIIItuaorn~~tlont~l 14x65 Shuhz w!Dishwasher ·(740)446·0924
.., ..~. emamooenlh
r.·"P1• 4K4,52,000miles·Giadlator
son,
h unnCog' regl u1ar origin, or 1ny Intention to &amp; fr011t deck. $6,000.
.-.vv
1
~
5200 00 c
business ours.
mp Bled
m•k• •ny lu~;h
3br. House &amp; 3br. Apart· posit. Utlllties included. No onvers on '
pa""age,
675
304
6295
applications· must be repref.,.ncel llmllltion or
&lt; ) ·
menl for rent. $300. per Pets. (304)675·8B72
$16,000 080, 1986 Ch_avv
Calved before close of bust·
1984 Ritz craft 14 X 70 2 month each. Deposit &amp; Ref.
. Pick-up, goOd condiiiQn,
ness NoV. 29, 2002. Appli·
dl•crlmlnltlon,"
Bt., 2 Baths, new Furnace, Required.
8:30·5pm. ~~~ T~k~g~pllca~ons- ~25000; 1999${oreman 450
cants must be of goad char·
entry doors &amp; dish washer, (304)675·8806
es
room own- . .• red,
,500; 14x70
acter and state certlficatton
Thle newapaper witt n01
appliances Included, center ' - - ' - - - - - - - - - house Apartments, Includes trailer wilh 2 car garage on
is preferred
knowingly 1ccep1
k'l h
House located in Ma· Water
Sewage, Trash, 314 acre . Black topped
1 · 1 cei.11 ngs, 3br.
::.::.:.:::::.:::::__ _ _ _ _
ldvtrtlaemenllforreal
tc en, caeriCa
son, WV. $495. +Utilities. $350/Mo.,740·446-0008.
road, 8 mtJes from town,
The Tuppers Plains-Chester
-~which 11 In
deck &amp; porch, nice hOme, No Pets. (304)n3-5881
$32,000; Three horses.
Water District is accepting
violation of lht ltw. Our
central air $8,500 00 must
One bedroom, upstairs (740)367-7087~.
applications lor a Chief Opl'lldlra.,. hereby
move 985·9831
5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St, apartment (partially furnish· - - - - - - - - era tor's Posil!on. Requirelnform.d lhltlll
19~5 Clayton 14x60 hOuse $325 mo. (740)446·3945 ad) at 651 Second Avenue, 3 entrance doors, 32~; 3
ments and Job Descnption
dwelllr'lgt 1dvertiMd In
tratler on rented lot for
Gallipolis. $350 per month storm doors. 32"; 2 closet
for the position can be obthla newtpapar Ire
$12,000. (304)675·2457
Country LIIJing- minutes plus $350 deposit. Water &amp; doors; 5 intertor doors, 32"1
l&amp;lned allhe Water Dlstnct's
.
from Galltpolis, recently re· trash included (no other util·
•v•ll•ble
an •n
eqUII
main office located at 39561
opportunity
bel...
2br. 2 full bath, fireplace modeled house. Kitchen, itl es 1":C 1uded 1n rent l . No (fireplace
)
_door and screen:
740 245 5695
Bar 30 Road, AeedsiJille,
{304)773·5713
LA, DR, 2 bedroom, bath, pets. St)( month lease re· !.:.:::::!!::::::.:::;::::...._:._...,._
Ohio, 45772. Our main offront porch, no pets, $485 qulred. Call (740)446·7323 4·10 ·D John Deere Rubber
flee Is located Just off Route
~~S6cSTEOL~·EBRYI T~EOLE~,OS l~~~,)~46·:~: evede~~g's''·.· (Ubrary) for more intorma- lire Backhoe, $10,000; '
110::_n::_·- - - - - - - 9·55· K Caterpillar track
7 which Is three miles south
:;:
of lhe caution light In Tup- r•o
HOME'i
MOBILE HOME, Athens, ,7.~4,:;0l:,:44:;6:.·;:;020:::5~d::•!:YS.::___
loader, $12,000. Both In
PII
0
li
S
Ohlo(740)59&lt;·1972,onoc·dll
·
pal'8 a ns. - ur rea1men1
FOR ALE
caslon we h8ve a display For Aent 6 room furnished Twin Rivers Tower for aid· gOod con ton. (740)388·
s

a

2

J

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

,.MI'Vfl

,
,
cense.
resumes w
Garage sale, October 31·
A10
R~:
LP,Ns 1 h 1 accepted, but an application
Nov. 2. Bradbury Church
you
ng or c a- mull be filled out ! 740)985parsonage
beside
lange? Would you like the 3315
·
WYVKJWMPO 39558 Brad·
chaliongo 10 uoo your nura·
bury Road ' Middleport
lng skills to "make a differ- URGENTLY
. NEEDED·
'
·
enca?" If oo, consider what plaoma donora, earn $50 to
9.00-4·0o
·
·
EASY WORK/
ilha new foadarahlp at Rock- $80 per week tor 2 or 3
Garage sale· No\/. 1. 9-3.
E:X:CELLENT PA.YI
spNngs Rehabilitation Ctn· hour• wesekly. Call Blo Lite
P";•m• arvlce, 740·592·
Nov. 2. 9·12, camper, exer- Aasambla prOduct• at home tor haolo offer:
68 1
clot bike, new Christmas
Call Toil Free
Compet~lve Salary
o ·
ltomo, nice clothing, 32581 1-SOQ-467-5568 Ext 12170 Fl01&lt;lb/t Schtduling
Wanted Immediately: Roof·
Hysell Run .
Help wantod caring lor the Educallonalaaolotance
011 and Carpentora Labor·
elde"y, Caret Group Home, Job •atlalactlon
Laader. Pay basad on expeInside Huge MoiJing Sale· now paying minimum wage, For • limited time only, rltnct. Loll or trledom,
• Nove 2nd . Rain now lh/111 7am·3pm, 7am· Rockopr(ngo Rohabllltallon (740)446-3541 (740)339·
• or
ne 1124 ollaga Rd. Spm. 3pm· 11 pm, 11 pm· Center It offering a $2000 3818
Syracuse, 1or loll after 7am ca 11740•992 •5023
olgn·on bonuo for LPN'o
park, moving everything
•
·
and RN'o
WORK FROM HOME
mu01
go.
$5.00
lor
a
large
IMMEDIATE
NEED
:
u
·For
more
Information,
Poltnlial
$1500/mo/pt
I
trash bag lull. You fill your Ctnaod Praclical Nuroao pleaoe contact: Dobbie
$5000/molft, Froolnlo.
I own bag more merchandise (LPN) lor full·tlme and part· Stewart, Alllstant Director
1-800·921·44~ 2
and dally. Joys, clothe• for time work In 114 Bed Long ( of Nuralng, {740)892-8606
www.acuqulr~freedom.com
the whole lamlly, doll a, Term Care Stata Facility. Equal Opportunity Employer
housewares, books, and Full·tlma employment offers Encouraging Workplace Di· wanted Experienced:
much misc . Halloween doc· and oxtanolve benefit pock· veraity. MIF ON
Carpenter 1-740·378·6349
orations anc:t party supplies, age, Including Stat&amp; civil
• plates pencils ate tor H ie aervlee retirement earn up Aocksprl!'lga Rehabilitation 1141
BUSINESS
~ at reduced prices also 4 to 15 days vac8tlon 18 Center Is seeking appllcsnts
TRAINING
plecee Iron tractor weights._ days lick leave, and 13' plua lor on experienced Roctp·
paid holidays, heaitMife In· 1/onlst,
Payroll/Accounts Qotllpollo Careor Collage
• Large Garage Sale: One surance Is aiJallable Salary Payable Clerk. Position 18 (Carael'8 Close To Home)
• day only Nov. 2nd. Sat Rain
·
lull time wlth excellent bene· Call Todayl 740 •446•4367 ,
I or ,Shlne 7:00 a.m.-:?..,!USI ·Otf Is commensurate with $1p&amp;• fits pack
(401K) E
I
•
rlence Contact Kim Billups,
age
· JCper ·
1-800·214·0452,
• Ohio State RT 7 &amp; 5 miles DON at Lakin Hospital, La· encad applicants should 'III~R.;;ag;:.;•~90~·F0;;5·.;1;;27;,;4;B;.
. -,
, North of Pomeroy turn on kin, WV at {304)S75-0860 , send resumes or apply In r:
· Eagle Ridge Rd. 2nd. 0, 1 126, Monday l~ru Frl· person to PeHI Wallck 1180,
WANIID
3 bedroom, Garlleld Avo• • House oo left al 1st Inter- day from 8.00am-4 :00pm . Lance, Rocksprings Reha·
'To
nue. Ownsr financing,
; t'uecll tioofn old~onldtrquselu'ff,G araogeld Lakin Hospital is and billtatlon Canter · 38759
$49,000. $4,000 down,
EEOIAA Employer.
Rocksprings Rd., Pomeroy, Chlldcaro available in down· $385 month. (304)986·0864
Ohio 45769.
town Pomeroy, private pay
••. trunks, old quilts, old glass·
~ ware, old toys, old turnllure, LOOKING FOR A FUN Equal Opportuntty employer only, providing 24 hr. setv· 3 year old Brick Ranch,
· · stone jars &amp; jugs, ml lamps JOB? THIS IS IT! OFFICE that encourage&amp; workplace leo, call (740)992·5827 lor 3.000+ sq.ft . 2-1 12 acres, 1n~' 1-740·992-7599
ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI· diversity. MIF ON
· morolnlormatlon.
ground pool, storage build·
•
TIONS AVAILABLE . 1-688·
lng, 8l&lt;CO!Ienl neighborhood,
• Outback yard sale, fill·a· 974.JOBS
Rout&amp; Manager. 60·60 hour, Georges Portable Sawmill, (740)446·0149
• bag· $2, Nov. 1·2, 9·3 At
5 day work week. Insurance don't haul your logs lo the
.... 33. Peach For". watch tor Make extra money tor and
retirement
plan. mill JUSt call 304·675·1957. 6 acres, 2 bedrooms In
: signs.
Christmas . Sell
Avon. $35 ,000 1st yea~ salary
.
. count!)', $65,000. (740)388·
.....
(740)446·3359
Please leave message. Housekeepmg servtce av~tl· 9645
AUCilON AATI
(740)286·7366.
able. For a free consultation bedroom, 2 bath, overstz8d
•: ·
F'LF..4.
McClure's Rei laurant now
please
call
Amber
~
hiring all 3 locations. rull or Truck Orlver1, Immediate {740)245·7801
kitchen, CIA, covered front
:,
pa,t-t&gt;me, p&gt;d&lt; up apphca· h&gt;re, class A CDL required,
.
porch, outside building, ap.~ ~gie's Flea Market 9·5 has lton at locatton &amp; bring back eJCcellent pay, experience Will pressure wash hOuses, prox 5 acres In country set'
g 30am
&amp; required
Earn up to lfailers. and decks Call tlng, but just ~inutes from
• • closed items at 25 each between
~ · Pomeroy, Ohio Call For In· 10 ooam, Monday thru Sat· $1,000 per week.Call 304· 441 ·4239 ask lor Ron or town and hospttal $110,000
fmmarton 992· 9734
675--4005
leave message
,· (740)446·3275
'

I

Block, brick, • • r pipes,
• windows. Unlels, etc. Claude
• · Wlnlers, Rio Grande, OH
ca/17411'245·5121 .

POUCIES1 Ohio Valle., PubUshlng
the right to edit, ,..jloct, or cancel any Mt at lillY' tiiiMI. Errors must be Nporttd on the ftrat Clly ot
THbu......s.ntfneJ.Reglster will btl ..~nslble for no mot11lhan U.. cwt of the epaoe occupied by the error lnd onty the nratln...UOn. We shall not
any lou or 1xpen.. that rHUI1a trom thl publloiUon or omlulon ot 1n IMWertlsemenl CorNcUon wll be meet. In the flrll avallab.. ldiUon. • Box ::::;.;;;p.;~~
are afwaYt oonftdential. •Cu,..,t rail card appfln. • All 1'11111 11tale Mlvwtl.....,... . .
~ h r:.ct.nll F81r Houalng Act ot 1811. • Thle , ..
accepta only Mlp Wllnc.d ltd• mt~~~lng EOE lt.ndalrds. W• will not knowlngty 8001pllny
In violation allhe 11w.

St~r t

Ir·o

""l'l'l.ml

j

Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone NUQ;~ber And Address When Needed
• Ads Should ~un 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response . ..

!.~

•

Monday thru Friday
to 5:00 p.m.
HOW

r

Cuh CmkC &amp; Gravely

19 9 9

s:~ ~'":vANS

!·~:,

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

Best Service
the Best Price

j

~ • PSI$21 .00Per100, 1"200

675-52~

NOTICE: fa hareby womonty given.
by the Board of
at
given
that
on
For further lnlormaRevlalon In the man·
Saturday, Nov1111ber 2, Uon. or lor an appoint- ner provided
by
2002, at 10:00 a.m., a ment to Inspect collet· Section 5715.19 of the
publiC Hie will be held eral, prior to sale date Ohio Revloed Code.
at 211 Weal Second contact
Cyndle Nancy
Parker
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio Rodriguez at 992·2136. campbell
In lh.e parklnn lot of (10) 30, 31, (11) 1
Melgo County Auditor
•
The Farmer• Bank
and - - - - - - - - - (10) 30, 31, (11) 1, 4, 5,.
6, 7, 8, 11, 12
Savlnga Com_pany.
Public Notice
The Farmera Bank and _ __:_;;,:_,;,;,::..:..;.;__ -------~
OJE:n 9•m· 5pm
98 0/dsmot,;la Delta 68, 1c111 Savings company Ia
The Melga County
f'rar a umola. rr. m t.or. p~lwp
Public
Notice
o1 new parts, 4 door. low oelllng for caah In
Cloll 111 I~ .&amp;II )'OUr~_.,
mileage, numNr 1 shape. hand or certified Board o 1 Revision haa
(740) 446-1812
(740)448-4385
compleJIKI Its work of
GRANT
Ask Jt.J tJbvUl Ollf
check the following equalization. The tax
· Stnoirv l'ltUtJ!
APPLICATION
ClasSic Car- 1975 Mer- collat. .l:
1
1
cedes 2400l . excellent 1999 Honda XRIO re urna or tax year
AVAILABLE FOR
condition,
never been JH2HE0107XK•nu78 2002
have
been
REVIEW
.....,
revised and the valua·
wrecked. $4,000 OBO 2000 Honda XOR
(740)441-6299
JH 2 DE0208YK307228 Ilona completed
and
CHESHIRE • The
1
bll
'J'Jtua(s
12000 Honda . TRX are open or pu c Community Servlcea
"··lnapectlon In the Block Grant appllca·
47._n•••y·•0003&amp;a
FOR""""
D • ~K"awaaakl office of the Melga lion for 2003, pre·
KVF400
,
County
Auditor, pared by the Gallla·
1997 Ford f-150 EXIonded
Second
Floor,
cab, 4•4, 128,000 miles, JKAVFKC11)(B502951 Courthouse, Second Melga Comfnun fly
Action Agency, will
bright red, looks and runs 1 989 Ford F25 1 Street. Pomeroy, OH.
be available lor
greau Call (740)441 ·0496 FTHF28G5KNA91168
Complaint• against
revl.e w
between
evenings and weekends
The F1 rme 1 B
k
and (740)44S·7460 M-F.
r
an the valuation•, aa Monday, October 28,
and
S • vI n D • establlahed lor tax 2002 through Friday,
"81 " H D. FXS lowrldor ' Company, Pomeroy, year 2002 must be November 1,.2002.
New
motor.
$9,000. Ohio, reserves the made In accordance
A copy of the appll·
(304)882-2516
right to bid at lhla with Secllon 5715.19
cation
can • be
V.
tale, and to withdraw of the Ohio Revlatd reviewed at · the
AN'i &amp;
the above collateral Code. These com·
C .A.A.
olllce In
4-WDs
prfor to aale. Further, plalntl mull be !lied
Cheshire. The C.A.A.
The Farmera Bank and on forma which will be
ohould receive com·
1996 Ford Windslar van, Savings Company furnished by the m.,ts on the appllca·
auto, air, rear air, bucksl reeervea the right 10 county Auditor and
seats, excellent condition, reject •. ny or all bids must be flied In the lion no later than
beautiful van, one owner,
bmlttld
November 8, 2002.
$7,000, (740)742·2897
au
•
County
Auditor's The comments will
The
abo v e Dflll:a on or before the
be forwarded 1o the
92 DOdge ~---1
VUI •v~~;~~;,Ofl v an, described collateral 3111 day oi · March Ohio Department of
1 owner, loll o1 new parts will be l~ld "aa Is· 2003. All complaints
Building over 30 years
Development's Office
S2•500-304-B7S-6693
where Ia • with no flied with the County
Footers, Foundation.'
of
Community
95 DOdge Caravan, slight expreoaad or Implied Auditor will be heard $ervlces.
Add-Ons, New Homes,
damage lo the lronl finder,
Pole Barns, Concrete;The Gaflla·Melga
runs ·good, 11&gt;11 looka 'good.
C.A.A. admlnlataro
Eiectric, Plumbing
(740)245-5589
WANTm
jl,;;~;;;.;;;;;;___.,
lllllfmllrt ~r.t lnduJtd
the block grant lor
•
Gallla
and
Melgo
(740)
992-3320
['"' Moroacvan&gt; . -~
Counties. The grant
Email. blldHOupilnk.com
provides funding for
numerous aervlceato
86 Yamaha 350 4·whealer,
low
Income
runs &amp; looks good, garage
realdents.
kept, high/ low &amp; reverao,
$1200. (740)446-7185
(10) 28, 30,2002
95 Yamaha 350 Big Bear
4x4 4·wheeler, very good
shape, $2500 (740)448· • Room Addl11ono &amp;
8588 (740)339-2822
Ramodallng ·
• New O.ragee
• ElectriCIII &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutt••
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
2 campers 73·30ft $2,500.
• Pttlo tnd Porch Deck1
And 79·20H. $2,200. Both
Free Estimates
Remodeled. (304)992-2808

• Ton neue Cover •
Vent visor • Bug

RESIDENTIAL

Shield &amp; Full Line

Other Accessories

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7599

'I ' ' ' \ ·1· 1

' ' II I I I ll'

\l~cldk]'&lt;rl(

1n pu laid om

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; . Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

6:30
1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coup_on
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

Aaancv

On his 90th
Birthday

10130112-01/20/67

Sad and sudden
was the call of one
so dearly loved by
all, A bitter grief,
a shock severe, it
was to part with
one so dear. We
often sit 'and think
of you, and speak
of how you died,
To think you could
JIOI8ay good-bye,
before you closed
your eyes. For all
of us you did your
best, and God
grant you eternal
rest.
Very much

missed

and loved by wife,
Myrtle, children

and grandchildren

740-992-2222 or
740-446-1018

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final ~xpenses; ,
•
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

i1J

...,_

DEPOYSAa·
PARtS

Card of Thanks

The family of
Ann Dailey would
like to thank
every011e for their
prayers &amp; support
during the sickness
and death of our
mother, grand·
m~ther, sister &amp;
niece. A special
thanks to Pastor
Edsel Hart &amp;
Bernice, the
Stiversville Church,
Jay Cremeans &amp;
the neighbors on
Grave Hill

( l ilitl

(740) 992-5 822

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Dalton A.
Grover

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All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case· IH Parts
Dealers
I000 St. Rt. 7South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363
Hill' s Self
Storage

Dean HiD
New&amp;: Uaed
4 75 Sou~b Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # 1

&amp;

Chevy,

Pontiac, Buick.

Olds

�'
~

Wedneaday, October 30, 2002

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

PHILLIP
ALDER

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title
41 Ever'a
22 Sag•
partner
23 BIUfilretn 42 Dog In Oz
color
44 Oaala
24 Humorlll!oature
21

Bombtck

member
9 Born aa
10 Walk aoltly
11 Diamond
Hoed locale
12 Stripad '
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17 Wood-

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partlcln
27 Picnic
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45 Debtore'
notn
46 Uncouth
47 Bndlle Day

reck·
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pal
Bv PHIWP ALDER
working . 35 Juice holder 51 Jaane
43 Fun
Bridge Magazine
36 Blue
go-with
44 Melli
tool
39 Frog's
19 10,
fllamem
started in England i.n
Informally
COUBin
48 Estaems .
May 1926. Its first
20 Whlrlpoole 40 Catcher's
50 Old not
editor died one month
before World War II
starte!l, so the publication had a hiatus
lasting until .the appearance of the January 1949 issue. But it
has been arriving
monthly in mailboxes
ever since. ·Now it is
in a large-page format
with a content aimed
primarily at the serious tournament competitor, for whom it
makes an excellent
read.
Here is a tester
from Patrick Jourdain's Problem Corner. Looking only at
the North-South
hands, how would
CELEBRITY CIPHER
you try to make three
by Luis Campos
no-trump? West leads
Celebrity Cipher.cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
a low spade to your
people, past and present. Each letter 1n the ctpher stands for another.
Today's clue: U equals C
king. It 1s easy•if the
spades break 4-4, but
wh.at if they are 5"3,
"JEPRPMY
. PW
H
OVA.
K .V
as West's overcall
suggests?
P R
J Z X X,
P R 'W · H
Y E Z H Fl
Obviously, · South
might have gone to
XPCZ .
GZWW
P FIW ·
HEVOMK,
five diamonds, but
KPWHLLVPMFIGZMRW
JPXX
that would have been
no challenge.
TPXX
FVO."
If you play on dia' .
moods, West will .esDHGZW
H.
GPUBZMZE
tablish his spades
first, and you will
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The besl actors do notlelthe
lose three spades and
wheels show."- Hen~ Fonda .
"It sure beats working! - Robert Mitchum
two diamonds. You
could take the heart ·
finesse, which is all.
T~~~:ti;y S©~ll1A-~"Btr~® WOAD
GAM I
right if it wins, but ---'--·~...:; Edfttd by CLAY R. POLLAN
here it loses, and East
R:ecrronga letters of ·the
will return a spade to .0 four scrombled wordJ bedefeat you.
low to form four slrnple words.
The right line isn't
VA S H E L
easy to spot. You
should iJiay a heart to
dummy's ace, then
lead the heart queen
and discard the spade
ace!
If the defenders establish West's spades,
Because a
r of
they must let you into
G
E
N
A
B
speeding
tickets
she
received,
my
the dummy, and you
~
neighbor had to attend .driving
win two spades, four
hearts and ·three L.
::-~ school.
"What I really need,' she
explained, "is a set of brakes that
clubs. However, · if .they shift to a club,
_LB_JL_;_IJ.. R. . . l.E-M...L.....JI will stop the car-----· - -!'
7
18
Q Cc.
mploto tho chuckle quo"d
you have time to
_
.
.
.
•
by filling In the mining words ,
1
force a dummy entry
yo~ develo~ from step No. 3 below.
,
in diamonds and will
1
lose at most one . ~ PRINT NUMBERED
·
'r.:l
LETTERS
IN
SQUARES
spade, one heart and
two diamonds.
Full details are
available
at
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
www .bridgemagaKnotty- World- Empty- Feiine- MONEY . .
zine.co.uk.
One fellow to his buddy at ball game, "No wonder our .
language is so hard to understand. We call a free agent
an athlete who wants more MONEY."

WENT WITH

TRlC.K. 0((:. \REM ! ·

vahlclea
3 Bowling
alloy
4 Inc. cousin·
5 Above, In

Contributor
Martina'

34 Jangln .

Until today

.,..THE BORN LOSER

2 Allopurpou

Move
ollghlly
Prevent
Sky chart

37 Pleca of

,
'

(hyph.)

Tokyo,

remarka

Openinslead: • 5

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper

tubta

dynuty

33 Opening

'

1 Down the

29 Horaa-

Vulnerable: Both

••
3•
3 NT

DOWN

formerly

• J765l~
... A K Q Z

t-~e, !'U.M 1""'"' "''·· · j

could I
do?"

14 Not pltln

Soutll
• AK

~:~~ '10\l'tk !;.)(C\)Ge_

OSU's aarett receiving hate mail, B1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I RIDGE

I

BY BERNICE BEDE OsOL

No1hing will come easily
for you in the year ahead. but
if you're willing to work to·
ward your aims and goals, a

GARFIELD
t SPENT THE PAY
l.ISTENINGr TO WHAT
YOU PI D TOPI'Y

... ANP THAT'5 WHAT
t PIP TODAY!

· number of channels fbr sue.

cess will open up. Life works
when you work. . .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. You can't lei your
guard down for one minute
today in ~ situation lhat requires extreme courtes)b and
taCt Monitor your words and

behavior carefully so you
don'l do anylhing disrespectful. Know where to look for
romance and you'll lind il.
.The Astrograph Matchmaker

.

instantly reveals which 'slgns .
are rom antically perfec t for

:THE GRIZZWELLS
PI~RI'Ol\-\T ,

YoU CD Rt:Ai,..lZ't YctlR

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

...-~

... !lUI . \\'1'&gt; Trlt ~lY

t:'i-t.'iW\3';. 1 6';.1

CR\.1'31\ o\-\ ;JACO!V\\t\t: IB A\1 'tX'tRG\'1&gt;\:
II'\ 11\TI UTY

you. Mail $2.75 to Match-

maker, c/o this newspaper,

P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
44092.
SAGITTARi tJS (Nov. 23Dec. 2 1) •• Whal you are the
most an xious to hide is usu-

ally whal gelS exposed, creal·
ing undesi rable repercussions..

Don'l get yourself involved in

anyrhing conspi ra10ria l or

clandcsli ne today in the first
place. '
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· Frivolous aclivities will

I

..

,.

needs and desires .

PISCES (Feb. ·20-March
· 20) -· Although ~ou may be
quite compelent m handling
personal and practical silua·
lions, you may be all thumbs
lodav in social mailers due 10
unwarranted suspicions of
olhcrs. Be more tnlsling.
··
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
~-

In an .involvement with

• 'friends loday where expenses
are joimly shared, make sure
everyone understands what to

. expect for !heir money. Oih·
erwise. so meone could feel

chealed.
TAURUS (April 20·May
20) ·- Any alliance you enler
inlo loday 1hat is predicaled

on a flimsy premise will not

possess tme harmony of pur-

pose and will thus be destined
for failure. Sel solid objectives.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
.. Spending all your energy

---- - - - -··'

--·--,..-- . . _ _ . . _
I

cut down your momentum for

J.-

·-

focusing on excuses

instead_

of lhe tasks at hand will be a·
monumenlal waste of time.
Nolhing will be accomplished
and . you'll have doul)lc the
work lo do tomorrow.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
-- Chances are, lrying to bring
up business where others are
together to relax won't go
· over very well loday . If you
auend a social jlalhering,
leave your promouons at the
office.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·Be certain anything you purchase loday can be relumed
should you later be dissalis·
fied. What appears attiaclive
in a slore settmg may not look
so good at home.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sepl. 22)
· -· It 'is· always besl not 10
ma·ke assumptions about
lhi ngs th.at are not lo~ically
though! oul ·- as today s 1um
of events will prove, when .
plans about which you were
complacenl start drifting off
course.

Eagles fall to Wellsville, BI

Deaths
Charle.s Nelson, 66

Details, .U

NELSONVILLE
Democrat Jim Pancake said
Wednesday he will file a.
complaint
with
Ohio
Elections
Commission
against Republican Jimmy ·about' me in mailings," said·
Slewart for allegedly making Pancake, a York Township
false claims in campaign trustee.
mailings.
"When I' m going door-toPancake and Stewart, both door, people don 't want to
of Athens County, are vying know
about
persona,!
for the new 92nd House attacks. They want to know
District seat in the Ohio whether I can bring goodHouse of Representatives, paying jobs here ."
which includes Athens, • A recent mailing on
Meigs and Morgan countieS, Stewart's behalf, paid for
and a portion of Washington ,by the Ohio Republican
County.
Party, addresses Pancake's
"Jimmy Stewart is lying . 1982 arrest for contempt 'of

· GHOULS~ GOBLINS

court and failure to pay
child support, for which he
served a 13-day jail sen. ·]
tence.
Stewart said earlier this
week he neither knew about
nor financed the. mailing,
which hit Meig~ Counly
mailboxes last weekend.
He said his policy, from
the beginning of the House
race, has been to avoid comment on Pancake's· past
criminal record. ·

AND .bHOSTl~S

Weather
High: 40s, Low: 30s
Details. Al

Trustees meet
POMEROY
- ·
Township
Salisbury
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 6 at
the township garage on
Rocksprings Road 1n
Pomeroy.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·2·8
· Pitk 4: 0-4-3-5
Superlotto: 5·22-27·29·38·48
Bonus Ball: 28
Kicker: 2·0·1·0-5·8
Buckeye 5: 4·9·18·27,29
Pick 3 night: 5-5-2
Pick 4 night: 5~ 1-6-5

Index
2 Sections - 1t1 Pllges

Calendar
Classifieds
.Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

"

f

Dayanalr'~;~

-

' '

and ~ndrainada Arnott, 7 and 5, of Middleport, get ready for Trick or Treat
tonight plpklng out a .,costume at Fruth Pl'larmacy. (Brian J. Reed)
\ '4. ');'

"·_~\.'f;.

,;··

j'

;;' ·,

·.~,~~~-·:

A4
B6-7
BS
A4
A6
A4
A3
Bl-5
A2

.

.

.

·'

.

.Keep~~~ Trick or Treat safe·
•

81Y ~IAN'~. REED
Staff writer

Lotteries

Racine . after officers found
materials commonly used in
the manufacture of metham·
POMEROY - The 4ih phetamine.
At the time of trial, Crow
Distri ct Court of Appeals
has remanded a dru g case dismi ssed one of two counts
back to the Meigs County in the case due to an error in
Common Pleas Court fol-' th&lt;; designation of the
lowing its di smi ssal, based statute · used to charge
on
an
appeal
from Schoolcraft, which the ·
Prosecutor Pat Story.
Court of ·Appeals deemed
Appeals Judge Ro ger improper
under
Ohio
Klein issued a deci sion in Criminal Rule 7(B).
· !he case of Robert T.
"The record fails to reveal
Schoolcrafl of Washington any prejudice lhe defendant
Co.unty, overturning Judge suffered because · of the
Fred W. · Crow Ill 's dis - incorrect numerical desigmissal of the case based on nation in County One of the
clerical errors iD the orig i- · indictment," Kline wrote in
nal indictment.
his decision. "Accordingly,
Schoolcraft's case will
now proceed in Crow's the trial court should not
courl , and is set for a pre- have dismissed the indict- .
ment."
lfial hearing in December.
Schoolcraft is now in jail
Schoolcraft was indicted
·in
Washington County. and
by the Mei·g s County grand
jury on charges of posses- .will go trial in Athens
sion of methamphetamine County on similar charges
and illegal assembly or pos- in December, according to
session of chemicals for Paul Gerard of the Meigs
manufac ture of metham- County prosecutor's office.
phetamine, both . third- . Schoolcraft is represented
degree felonies.
by
Pomeroy
attorney
He was arrested during a Charles Knight on the
routine · traffic stop near Meigs County charges.

MlDDtEPORT
. Trick or . treaters will be
scurrying. from ·house to
house in communities
across Neig~ . County
~O$t nei~htonight,
borhoods observe Tnck
or· Treat, and the combination . of excited chi!dren. and drivers with
limited vision can create
safety concerns.
·
The Ohio Division of
Medl'cal Serv1·ces and
EMS for Children .has
issued safety tips for
trick or treaters ·and their
parents to help avoid
mjury tonight.
Motorists are reminded to watch for childr~n
darting from between
parked cars, and walking
on roadways and curbs,
and to slow down in res·
idential neighborhoods.
Drivers should also
take care to slow down

,as.

in 'residential neighborThe state EMS offered
hoods.
these other tips to help
Parents are advised to ensure .a safe Trick or
see that children under Treat night:
12 are supervised by an · • Children
allowed
adult.
after
dark
should
p
h ld 1
·
·wear
" arents s. ou
a so light-coloreq fabrics and
plan a";d . d1scuss the , strips of retro-reflective
route . tnck or treaters tape to improve visibilipl~n to follow, instruct ty.
/
.
chtl~ren to travel only m
• Facial makeup can be
f~mlhar areas, ~nd .~sta~- safer than masks, which
hsh a return llme satd sometimes
obstruct
EMS Director Laura vision .
. Tiberi.
• Children should not
"Children should also be allowed to·carry sharp
be reminded 'to never ob'jects. Km.ves, sword s ·
enter a strange home, and other accessories
and to never eat treats should be made from
until the~ return home." cardboard or flexible
. When 11 comes to that materials.
scarr or cute cos~ume,
, Parents
should
outftts made of fhmsy,
b.aggy or billowing mate- inspect all treats to
nal that may come mto ensure that they are well
c~ntact with a Jack sealed.
0 Lantern .candle or , "When in doubt, throw
other open flame should it out," Tiberi said about
be avoided, as should treats of unknown orig jn
those which could cause or which appear to be
a child to trip.
insecurely wrapped.

10 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RUTLAND
The
Baldrige model for educational reform not only helps
teachers and students track
and graph their progress but
gives administrators data to
better plan for the future . .
Rutland Elementary School
has full participation in . the
Baldri ge program - where
students daily chart lheir
grades, homework, behavior,
etc.
But as Principal Ru sty
Bookman said, "We all find
the Baldrige model beneficial."

"Just like the kids 1 chart
lheir progress, l chan the
classes ', teachers ', and students' progress," he added.
Bookman said he has to be
cautious not to j ump to conclusions when looking at the
data collected, but just having
the numbers to look al is a
great assistance.
" It give s us a reference
point 10. determine whether
the Baldrige model is helping
us reach our ultimale goal
which is to increase student
achievement," he said.
"There are many baby steps
we need 10 taj(e along the way
and one of those is attendance, of both the teachers
and students ."
Bookman said current
research from the Ohio
Department of Developnienl
and the Ohio Association of
Elementary
School
Admini strators shows that
increased staff attendance
increases student attendance .
"And when student attendance is up , you increase stll·
elent time on task which in
turn
increases
s1udent.

2002 SIOJU. Foolkll Co•CIIamploiiS
A Community lJep R~lly will be held
Thursday, October 31 • 7:30 pm • City Park

LIBRA (Sept 23·0cL 23) . If you handle your matenal
affairs irresponsibly loday, it
could lurn ou1 lo be a rather
expensive day for you. Make
ceria in you get dollar value I
for every buck you plunk
down .

,.

REED

Bv KRIS DOTSON
Staff writer

Plan dinner
SALEM CENTER Salem Center Firebelles
will serve the annual
Election Day dinner from
11 a.m. until . 6 cp.m.
Tuesday at the Salem
CenteL firehouse. Soup ,
sandwiches and pies will
be sold .

BRIAN J.
Slaff writer
BY

Pro ram alloWs
for uture ~planning_

SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees will
hold lheir regular meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Monday, ·
N9v. 4, at the Syracuse
Village Hall.

·

- _ ,_.._. - ---·- ···-- -

myd.niV"'""""' " ""

candidate says he11 file
Cou_rt of Appeals ·
complaint against opponent overturns d1smissed
Meigs drug case
Jimmy Stewart says he's
·unaware of mailing concerning
Jim Pancake .. .

Daily 3: 5· 7-4
Daily 4: 8·5·7-6

doing something more important today. Know your priori·
ties and keep lhem in oriler. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Unless you fully under·
stand what is of real value 10
you today, the objeclives
. you're striving for will turn
out to be emp1y promises.
Take lime· to evaluale your

www

Slaff report

W.VA.

Thursday, Oct. 31, 2002

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·Vol B . No 55

achievement ," Bookman said.
Every Monday, staff members are given repons that
show classroom enrollment,
number of students wilh per·
feet allendance, the percent- ·
age of attendance, percentage
of students on the 'honor roll,
Accelerated Reading Points
(given from test taki ng), number of di scipline referrals, and
number of box tops each class
has collected ..
"Nikki Lambert had perfect
attendance last nine weeks, a
98 percent perfect attendan&lt;;e
in her class, over half of her
students on the honor roll and
no di scipline referrals,"
Bookman said .
"Carolyn Snowden is
another one whose achievemerits for the last nine weeks
are amazing."
Bookman gives a special
lt;lter of recognilion to his
staff members who have perfect attendance ·for a nineweek periOd. .
.
·
"Thai shows them that I do
notice their dedication and I
want to be sure ·and let them
know it's importanl to the
overall success of their class,"
Bookman said .
The student attendance rate
for the 200 1-02 school year
for Rolland was 94.3 percent.
So far this year, it 's up to 95.3
percent. The teachers had a
94.1 percent rate last year,
and thi s year it's · already
jumped 10 96.4 percent. ·
"Baldrige brings a height·
ened awareness for students,
parenls, staff and the community about what is happening
in this sc hool~" Bookman
said. "It lets us track and see
both the positive and negative
data.
"But it's what we do with

. Please see School, A3

MEDICAL CENTER

Division Ill Region 11 State Playoff Game

Discover the Holzer Difference

vs. the Circleville Tigers
Saturday, November 2 • 7:00 pm • Memorial Field

www .holzer.org

Good luck Blue!!
t

I

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