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                  <text>7
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AL.L. TOG.E:.THER NOW.. .'
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.Survey:
:Expand
center's
:Programs
Bv

BRIAN

J. REED

Staff writer
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio recent public survey indicates
: interest in additional degree
: grams, including po:st:~:rac:hiattel
education
studies,
University of Rio G~~~~~~~
Grande Community
Meigs Center in Middleport.
. As
discussion
coJllinue.~
between county economic l.le11el~
opmerit officials, M~~~~~~~~~~
Village officials and
leaders about a possible ex1Jan:sion
of the center's faci
Middleport, Ohio Unive1·sit1r's

Ohio deer season begins Monday
Bv

JtM fREEMAN

Correspondent
COLUMBUS, Ohio -· Nearly half
a million hunters will head into the
Ohio woods and fields Monday
morning in pursuit of white-tailed ,
deer.
The Oh1·0 Departme n1 o f Naura
1 1
Resources, Division of Wildlife estimates
approximately 450 ,000
hunters will partici.pate in the annual
statewide deer gun season, which
officially gets underway at 7:02 a.m.
Monday.
"With favorable hunting condi,
tions an&lt;! a deer population higher
than last year, 1 expect we will see ·
105,000 to 110,000 deer taken during the gun season," said Mike
Reynolds, deer management project
leader for the Division of Wildlife,

Last year, gun hunters tagged
100,425 deer. · Ohio 's white-tailed
deer · population is estimated at
575,000, up 15 percent . from last
year, according to the Division of
Wildlife.
Last year, hunters harvested
99,599 deer during the deer gun season, with hunters in Meigs and
G 11 .
·
a Ia counties tagging 2,685 and
2,705 deer, respectively. The· deer
gun season will be open seven days
and close at sunset on Dec. 8.
Ohio is divided into [our deer management zones, an!j hunters in Zone
C, which includes Gallia and Meigs
counties, are allowed to take up to
three deer. Deer hunters must have
the · proper permits and are only
allowed .to take one antlered deer.
Legal hunting hours are one half
hour before sunrise to sunset.
Hunters may use a I 0, 12, 16, 20, 28

A R M E C '";,'

"I Know what democracy 1s,"
answered the smiling third grader.
"My daddy says it's a system that
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P ~ IN T NUMBE RED LETTER &gt; 1

IN THES E SQUARES

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or .4 10 gauge shotgun using rifled that are either solid hunter orange or
slugs, a handgun with a barrel at camouflage hunter orange. A hunter
least five inches long using straig h~· orange hat or cap alone no lonller
walled cartridges
.357 caliber or satisfi es legal requirements dunng
larger, a muzzle-loading rifle of at the deer gun season.
least .38 caliber or larger, a longbqw
In southeastern Oh io, the fi rst day
or a crossbow. Rifled shotgun barrels of deer gun season takes o n a holiare allowed when using shotgun slug day-like atmosphere. Schoo ls are
ammunition.
closed, employees take vacation (or
It is illegal to hunt deer with a call in sick), and relatives and friends
shotgun capable of holding more join in fun and fellow ship.
than three rifled slugs unless it is
But it 's not all fun and games. In
plugged with a one-piece filler that Ohio, and across most of the nation
can only be removed by disassem- as well , deer hunting is a big busibling the gun. Since the three-shot ness, supporting thousands of jobs.
limit was enacted, deer gun season Locally, restaurants and service stahunting accidents have declined 38 lions often boast special early mompercent in the last three years, com- ing hours to attract deer hunters,
pared to the three years prior to the ll,llsiness.
rule change, according to the . The Division of Wildlife estimates
Division of Wildlife.
,
that deer hunters spend over $226
In addition, hunters must visibly million, or $783 ap1ece on average,
Please see Deer, AS
wear a vest, coat, jacket or coveralls

of

Local ~~:~~~~l~

1

InstituteRegional
for
and
(ILGARD) has issued the
of. a survey of 3,500 local
dents about their
needs.
·
Results. of that survey,
by 423 respondents, indicate
strong interest in both asscxi.ate'~
degree and master's degree
grams at the URG Meigs Certter.
"It seems at the outset a
unusual that more would c~~
an advanced degree over a b
lor 's degree," the report "'""''~
"However, a high number
proportion of respondents
current teachers may have
, . ~J)~~.figli1'C.. Teachers a1.reaciJi
· 'hllve a bachelor's d~lfll\e
in ·need of graduate~~
and graduate degrees to mcl~::~
their license under a recent
in educational legislation.

. Plusa see URG, AS

days till

Christmas

I Spcln801'ed by •

I.Li)Holzer
W{!/Clinic
PI Pleasanl - 675- 4498
•j

•

•

Golllpolls- 446- 5411
Meigs- 992-0060

Index
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

to the fact
·hasn't

A3

04-6

insert
C6
A4

C4

AS
81·6
A2

0 2002 .Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
·

ANSWERS

Fondly· Dwel/ · Vault· Yonder - FALL DOWN

;-·-··

CHRISTMAS IS
COMINGr !lOON

, ,..
.

s1.25 • Vol. J7, No. 42

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • December 1. 2002

4 Sections - 14 I'I11JII

r:I'::J

'""~

1'ALK

r I I' I

--.

·'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Notre Dome

The International
56 Vax
38 nlnenultl
57 Rower
{abbr.}
Bridge Press AssocialliJtlOO . .
...
gllland
40
ABC
rl'llll
tion gives ,annual .
41 Red Sea
awards, but because
the cutoff date is of~r.-"l'!"""'!lMONTY
ten well before the
end of the year, deals
bid, played, or defended brilliantly
later in .the year are
considered for the
following year's accolades . This deal
was played during the
match between Ireland and Portugal at
the European Championships in Salso- ·
maggiore, Italy, last
June. It was reported
by Maureen Hiron, an
Englishwoman who
&lt;PEANUTS
has lived in Spain for
I WANTED TO BW .
SO LONG, many years.
West leads a club
'~"~JEAN SOME 6LO'JE5
PE66V
against four spades.
CIIRIST~ BUT ~E'r'
JEAN!
Will South succeed or
TWai'IV-FM
CELEBRITY CIPHER
fail?
.
by Luis Campos
Since tlley were usCelebrity Cipher cryptograms are created troril quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands tor another.
ing a weak no-trump,
Today's clue: L equals G
North had to · open
one diamond. After.
East overcalled two
"FZO
MVBPO
IW
V
GYJ •..
clubs, most experts ·
R Z I P B N
V 0
R 0 0 J•
T J
A Z V F
sitting South would
make a negative douZO
LTMOR
VJN
JIF
TJ
ble because the hand
THE BORN LOSER
is too weak for two
AZVF
ZO
TR
VYBO
Fl
.
~
spades.
'
Tflfr..l 1&gt;-T WOT
II~ 00111005 WE~~
Declarer cannot
HODOTMO . "
f&gt;l,f!.Ef. \0 D\~~ I
GOIN&amp; TO ~0"1
handle four spades in
the West h&lt;md, so he
~..-.... 1!\\~ ...
VBVOHF
OTJRFOTJ
will be "forced" to
guess the trumps.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Every1hlng you hear about
Hollywood Is true - including the lies." - Orson Welles
Wiih . a trump loser
and one loser in each
red suit, it looks as
though the contract
will make. However, .
Nick FitzGibbon
(East) and Adam
Mesbur produced a
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
scintillating defense .
.--------....;_....,....;..;"::~:...
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , After the Portu, '.
guese declarer won
' .
Tt41S WOIJLl&gt; rt A
the first trick with
LOT MOflf
dummy ' s club king,
he played a spade to
IMPflfS'SIVf
the king and ace. If
If 1'4~ l&gt;II&gt;N'T
South
had continued
t4AVt TO
by ducking a trump,
SGfliJFf ttiS
he would have got
HE.'S REACTING
FttT ON Tt4f
home, but he underTO YOU!&lt;.
standably led a heart
TOFU STUFFING .
'AttPfT
to dummy's 10 ••
flttST.
FitzGibbon ducked
smoothly.
i
Now
declarer
&lt;
~
SOUPTONUTZ
played a diamond to
•
h.i s queen •· Mesbur
~
"}o
~·
•
ducked smoothly.
Suitably hoodTHAT DAILY
WOlD 4
winked, South led a
PUZZLER
UMI
heart io dummy's
queen, but East proRearrange letters of .·the
duced the king, put O four
scrambled words ··be·
his partner ori lead low to form four simple words.
with a diamond, and
received a heart ruff..
S L EE PT
A moment later, West
collected a trump
trick to defeat the
contract.
L U R AT
I"' ·~

:

Disney cruise ship being
disinfected, A2

hoi ton~ ,

16 Short·tenn

-·
. ..

... 1 . .

Cunninghams qo
it right, Dl

13 CFL'o-~
det·
14 Forum hello 55 Com15 Loyer
58 Dttlh

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Inside

mule
12 Ughl bulb, 54 Anomey'o

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Happy hunting in
Gallia County, CI

42 Ex44 ZUlu's

ACROSS

ALDER

Tempo

Home and
Garden

z.:.:3 ...

I

On the day of her first parachute .jump, granny panicked and decided not to jump. She radioed herinstruc· :
tor," Help! I've gotten
up and
.
. can't FALL D.OWN I"
U:J !.1 fi-IU2fY DA.'(/3 HATH

5tl'f£M&amp;R, API11 ~, UH...

OCfD\lER .. &gt;JD, ~1 1.'

W'lfOCAR€5.' l JU~T
, 001&lt; AT Mv IIIATCH.'

\~)
&lt;".2 '

at the Meigs Senior Center
December 5 and 12 • 10:30 AM
Cooking Demonstrations

MEDICAL CENTER

December 17 - 1 PM

Reading ancl Unclerstancling Food Labels

Discover the Holzer Difference

December 19 • 10:30 AM

Holiclay Cooking Tips for Diabetics

www.holzer.org
"

Sponsored by the Meias Health Deparhnent and Holzer Medical Center
For more
' call
446·5080
·~~- ----·--- -~- -~ ~

••

~M

•
. . . . . . - - . . . . . . .. . .. - . . . . .. . . .

~- - -···-

-

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•

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__________·--~-~-g-eA-2
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&amp;unbap lim -&amp;mtintl

sunday, December 1, 2002

Ohio prepares to open second veterans home

:Ohio weather
Sunday, Dec. 1

GEORGETOWN. Ohio (AP) -A veterans· home being built in the hills of
southwest Ohio will house 168 people
once it opens next summer and already
has a waiting list of I 00.
The Southern Ohio Veterans Home is
only the second such home in more than a
century to be built in the state to accommodate a veterans population of 1.2 mil·
lion and growing.
States nationwide have found themselves planning homes to serve aging veterans of World War II, the Korean War and
Vietnam, said Frank Salvas, chief &lt;If the
state home construction grant program for
the Veterans Administration.
The United States has 26.5 million veterans, I0 million of which are age 65 and
older. Sal vas said the number of veterans

•
••
•
*•'*•..

•••
••

0

•••••

Man plays matchmaker, helps inmates find dates

KY.

02002

ow.

Sumy. Pt. CIWdy

Inc.

a•~••~•
•" . * •
SllOwers

ClOudy

T~stoiTII6

Rain

Rurrletl

""' """~~"

Snow

~ ~ ~

lee

West Virginia weather
Sunday, Dec. 1

OHIO

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) much as $10,000 a year from
. - A single man who admits running these and other Web
he has trouble getting a date sites that he uses to supplement his income as an insurhas become a matchmaker for inmates.
ance claims adjuster. But he
"!was always very thin and said it isn't the extra money
very shy. I know what it feels that motivates him.
"I hope that each one falls
like to not fit in, to struggle
and be depressed/' said in love and lives happily and
Robert Reese, who runs sepa- finds stability in their lives,"
rate Web sites for female and said Reese, who has never
male inmates across the married and lives alone with
nation from the living room two cats.
of his Columbus home.
Reese scans photographs
Reese, 56, got the idea and edits biographies that
from a pen-pal relationship will help endear the inmates
he had with an inmate in a to outsiders,
Kentucky prison.
Some of the pictures and
Reese said he makes as text are raunchy. Inmates can
'

•

•

•••
••

•••••

•

•

City police issue
citations

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Cited by Gallipolis City Police
on Friday were WtJ!iam M. '·
Mc~rayer, 20, 602 ~lfSt Ave.,
Gallipo~s. for dri~mg under
~uspens!On, possesston of marIJUana and J?O~sesswn of drug
KY.
paraphernalia, Est~er D.
Johnson, 2?, 2~39 Ohio Route
588, Gallipolis, lo~d mus~c
from a motor vehicle; Lois
Inc.
Ros~. 37, 650 Fourth Av~..
'!alhtJC;lhs, no operator s
license, DarreU M. Fellw;e. ~·
Sunrty Pt Clol.&lt;ly Clol.&lt;ly
- . , TotiOfl!il
R11n
Aurrlto
Snow
leo
20 II ~hes!J~ut St. • Gallipolis:
•domesbc violence and assault,
and Rene A. Gonzalez, 34,
1312 Ohio St., Point Pleasant,
w:Va., allowing an unlicensed
driver 10 operate a motor vehicle and contributing to the
unruliness of a minor.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
percent.
On Thursday officers cited
· The region will be mostly
Extended forecast:
Adrian A. Biz~ll. 28, Dayton,
cloudy Sunday. Highs will be
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy for driving under suspension, a .
in the mid 20s to near .30 . with a 30 · percent chance of license plate light violation,
Lows will be in the teens or snow or rain showers. Highs possession of marijuana and
20s.
near 40.
possession of drug paraphernaCold air will stick around for
Tuesday
night ... Mostly lia; and Valerie D. Huffman,
the beginning of the work cloudy with a chance of snow 19, 3218 Little Bullskin Road,
week. Highs will be·· near 30.
or rain in the evening, then a Patriot, for unsafe vehicle and
Weather forecast:
chance of light snow · late. disorderly after warning.
Sunday...Mostly cloudy with Lows in the lower 30s. Chance
Cited by police Tuesday
a slight chance of snow show- of precipitation 40 percent.
were Robert L. Stewart, 40,
ers, tapering to flurries in the
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy. Henderson, W.Va., possession
afternoon. Colder with highs in A chance of showers during the of drug paraphernalia and posthe lower 30s. West winds 10 day, then a chance of light session of marijuana;-David M.
to 15 mph. Chance of snow 20 snow during the night. Highs in Aannery, 36, Olive Hill, Ky.,
percent.
the upper 30s.
domestic violence; · Charles
Sunday night...Partly cloudy.
Thursday...Partly cloudy and Hatfield, 25, 482 Bulaville
Lows in the mid 20s. West continued cold. Lows in the Pike, Gallipolis, theft; and
winds around 10 mph.
lower 20s and highs in the niid Danny C. Morrow, 53, 3207
Monday...Partly
sunny. 30s.
Ohio Route 218, Gallipolis, hitHighs in the upper 30s: West
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows skip, disorderly by intoxicawinds 5 to 10 mph.
in the lower 20s and highs in tion, resisting arrest and posMonday
night ...Mostly the lower 40s.
session of marijuana.
.
cloudy. Scattered snow showSaturday ... Mostly cloudy.
.I
ers after midnight. Lows in the Lows in the upper 20s and
upper 20s. Chance of snow 30 highs in the lower 40s.

Q

{) --·~····

Clouds, cold to remain

Citations issued
by patrol

sunbap m:tmes -senttnel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Our main concern in all slories is to be Second-class postage paid at
accurate. If you know of an error In a Gallipolis.
story, pleasa call one of our newsroomS.
Member: The Associated Press, 1he
West Virginia Press Association, and ·
Our malo numbers ore;
.the Ohio l)lewspaper Association.
Poatmaator: Send address correc·
mribunr • Gallipolis, OH
tions
to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
(740) 446-2342
825
Th&gt;rd
Avenue,. Gallipolis, OH
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every Sunday, 825 Third

r

Mall Subacrlptlon
lnaldo County
13 Weeks................ '29.85
28 Weeks.... . ........... '59.70
52 WHI&lt;s .... . .......... '1 t9.40
Our.ldo County
13 Weeks. . .
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26 Weeks. .
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52 Weeks .. . ........ . ... '200.20

'

decide what to display, $3 per address. Those writing
·
though Reese said he tones .it to men aren't charged.
His female clients range
down if itis too lewd.
Inmates' families send him from the hold and brash to
the ·information. The photos the.remorseful and reformed.
A 48-year-old divorcedwere taken before they were
Texan
named
Brenda
imprisoned.
Reese acknowledges that describes herself as an "exhe can't prove the pictures designer-clad dame of many
are of the inmates. In fact, be appetites" who is "confident : ·
does not verify information that the mistakes that put me :
about inmates or their crimes here are behind me."
Veronica, a 37-year-old'
and sentences.
Reese doesn' t charge locked up in the Ohio
female prisoners to be on his Reformatory for Women near
site. He charges males $20 · Marysville, is a single mother
of three who calls herself an
annually to be listed.
Those wishing to write to "honest loving woman lookfemale inmates are charged ing for a loving person;"

For the Record

•••••

\

"The fact that they're building veterans
age 65 and older is expected to quadruple
homes
shows that the need is' growing,"
by 2010.
"Our World War II veterans are aging said Bruce Parry, secretary of Veterans for
and falli ng ill at an alarming rate. The Unification, a Chicago-based advocacy
demand for long-term care is soaring," group that works to improve health-care
said Ken Fulmer, president of the benefits for veterans. "A lot of people are
Washington D.C.-based Armed Forces ending up on the street."
For Ralph Fox, a 63-year-old Vietnam
Veterans Homes Foundation.
The frut veterans homes were built fol- veteran. the new $16 million home in
lowing the Civil War. There are now 116 Ohio represents a haven for aging veterans
state veterans homes recognized by the who consider the 114-year-old Ohio
Veterans' Home in Sandusky; along Lake
VA, up frOm 33 in 1991.
Erie,
too far frOm family.
Construction also is under way on I 0
'This is where we're going when the
new homes or additions in Colorado,
Florida, Louisiana, Maine, Missouri, time comes," Fox said, looking at the twoNorth Carolina,
Oklahoma and story, 99,000-square-foot brick building
Pennsy Ivania, Sal vas said, adding there that will have a dining and activities room,
are plans for 18 ·more homes and addi- . physical therapy ·room, chapel, courtyard
and picnic area.
tions.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Jason L. Walter, 20, 2404
Neighborhood
Road,
Gallipolis, was cited on five
charges by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State · Highway
Patrol following a traffic stop
early Saturday on Ohio Route 7
near Cheshire.
Walter was ticketed at I :24
a.m. for possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of illegal
drugs, driving under the influence and failure to drive within
marked lanes.
He was taken io the Gallia
County jail and was later
released on bond.

Angela Kay Higginbotham
of Gallipolis to L.all)' Lee Long
II of Gallipolis.
Lisa Annette . VanSickle of
Gallipolis t&lt;YChristopher David
Berkley of Gallipolis.
Tanya R. Johnson of
Gallipolis to Jason A. Sanders
of Gallipolis.
Melanie Lynn Truance of
Gallipolis to Richard Steven
Vanco n of Gallipolis. ·
Amber Raye Jayjohn of
Patriot to Kenneth Mark.
Wheeler of Patriot.
Amanda Lynn Siders . of
Gallipolis to Brett Allan Taylor
of Gallipolis.
Amanda Jane Thompson of
Cheshire to Brian Douglas
s·unms of GallipoI'IS.·
..
Cass~dra E: Barry of P~ot
toM~~ T. Miller II of'Pabiot.
Pa~ci~ Mary Zalewski .of
Gall~pohs to. M~tthew Scott
Hams of Gallipolis.
.
Nell!e M. Gray. of Gallipolis
to .Richard Hmchman of
Gallipolis.
. .
Crystal R. Sayre of Gallipolis
to .Ru sseII W. Van\!e of
Gallipolis.

Crash injures 2
passengers

Public Meetings
Monday, Dec. 2
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m., at the home
' of the clerk, Osie Follrod.
SYRACUSE - Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m., water
office.

BIDWELL, Ohio - 1\vo
people were injured in a one- · GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
car accident Thesday, Nov. 26 Richard Hansen, 53, · 81
on
County
Road
61
(Homewood Drive), the Gallia- Westwood Drive, Gallipolis,
• Meigs Post of the State was cited for assured clear distince by Gallipolis City Police
Highway Patrol. reported.
Transported to · Holzer following a two-vehicle acciMedical Center by the Gallia dent Thesday, Nov. 26 on Ohio
County EMS frOm the scene of Route 160 at Fitch Roitd.
the 5:52 p.m. accident were
Officers said Hansen was·
Peggy S. . Dillon, 15, and southbound at 12:34 p.m. wben
Natasha N. Dillon, 16, both of he was unable to slow in time'
509 Frederick Road, BidweU, and struck the rear of a car dri~
according to the patrol. .
Troopers said they were pas- ven by Rebecca Florence, 24,
13386 Hannan Trace Road,
·
dri
b
sengers m a car
ven y Crown City, who had made a
Marley . N. Bu.sh, 17, 534
Sh~s~ng
Ridge Road, sudde!l right tum.
Both vehicles had nonfuncGalli~lis, that was ~tbound,
tional
damage, the report said. ·
.03 miles ":'est of Ohio R?ute
160, when It went off the nght
si&lt;!e of the road and sbUc~ a
telephone box. The car conbn·
Holzer Medical Center
ued on ~d struck a tree, the
DDcbarges
Nov. 27- Mrs.
report said.
The car was severely dam- Mark Kimble and daughter.
(Published with permis~ed, and Bush was Cited for
sion)
failure to, control.

HMCnotes

Education, special meeting, 7
p.m.. administrative office, to
discuss personnel.
Tuesday, Dec. 3
ROCKSPRINGS _Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m .,
township
building
on
Rocksprings Rd.

Wednesday, Dec. 4
MIDDLEPORT - Board of
SYRACUSE
Sutton Public Affairs to. meat at 5:30
Township Trustees, regular . p.m. in council chambers.
monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall.
Thu,.day, Dec. 5 ·
SYRACUSE - · Regular
TUPPERS
PLAINS
meeting of Syracuse Village
Eastern Local Board of Council, 7 p.m., mayor's office.

Mason Calendar
Public Meetings

tor bingo, and. a five-dollar gift tor
gift exchange.

Monday, Dec. 2
HENDERSON - Town of
Henderson Council meeting, 7:30
p.m., Henderson Town Hall.
MASON - Mason Town
Council meeting, 7 p.m., city building.
'

Tuesday, Dec. 3
POINT PLEASANT - Quills 'N'
Things, 8:30 a.m., VISitor's Center,
(next to OVB). Gift exchange of
sewing notion not to exceoct $5.
POINT PLEASANT - American
Legion Auxiliary Post 23, 7:30p.m.,

.

American legion.

Tuesday, Dec. 3

POINT PLEASANT ;_ Point
Pleasant Historic Landmark
Commission, 7:30 p.m., council
chambers, Point Pleasant City
Hall.
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Sc~ool Board, 6;30 p.m.,
Board of Education office.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY - Akzo ·
Nobel Community Advisory Panel,
7 p.m., planrs main aud~oiium.
Public invitei:t. ·
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Tourism Committee, 8
a. m., MOVC.

Citation issued
after accident

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point PleasanT

Meigs Calendar

Wednesday, Dec. 4

Clubs and ·
Organizations
Monday, Dec. 2
POINT PLEASANT - Mary
Kay cosmetics meeting, 6. p.m.,
. every Monday, Point Pleasant
Woman's Club.
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Fair Annual Christmas
Dinner, 6:30 p.m., American
legion Post 23. All _buyers and fair
workers are inv~ed to attend. All
me/)'lbers, please bri~g a covered
dish.
,
.
NEW HAVEN - NeW Haven
American Legion Auxiliary . Unit
140, · December meeting and
Holiday dinner, 6 p.m., post home.
Auxiliary will furnish pizza.
Members are asked to bring a
dessert or salad, a one-dollar gift

POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleasant Kiwanis Club meeting,
6;t5 p.m., Meinda's Restaurant. For
intoonation call (304) 675-7314.
POINT PLEASANT - Quills 'N'
Things Too, 5;30 p.m., Courthouse
Annex. .
Wednesday, Dec. 4
POINT PLEASANT - Christmas
Workshop and lurdl, 11 :30 a.m.,
oourtnouse annex. sponsored by
the Mason County CEOS Council.
Members are to bring dishes ol fes·
live foods to create a smorgasbord
lunch. Members will teach ,and
demonstrate the making of
Christmas Crafts and bows. the
public is invited to attend. Please
bring ribbon ~ interested in learning
haN to make bows. Reservations ·
are required and may be made by
caling 1he West Virginia Extension ·
S9rvice office at (304) 576-2933. A
tee of $3 is payable the day of the
.wonishop.
·POINT PLEASANT - Rotary
Club, noon, Moose lodge.
Thuraday, Dec. 5
NEW HAVEN- JOUAM 175
ineeting, 7 p.m.,lo&lt;;fge Hall.
POINT PLEASANT . - Uons
Club, 6 p.m., Pleasant Valley

Hosp!tal meeting room.

POINT PLEASANT -

Point

Pleasant Chapter of the Sons of the
American ReiiOiutlon, 7 p.m., Fort
Randolph Terrace.

Saturdliy, Dec. 7
NEW HAVE~ - Woodmen of

Clubs and
Organizations

Social Events and
Benefits

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GALLIPOLIS · - Galllpollls
Tusaday, Dec. 3
Saturday, Dec. 14
Rotary Club m~ets at 7 a.m. each
PATRIOT - Open installaBIDWELL - Clothes and Tuesday at Holzer Clinic doction of officers, 7:30 p.m. :
Patriot Masonic lodge F&amp;AM . . toy giveaway at Living Water tor's dining room.
GALLIPOLIS ~ . Gallia
Refreshments
afterwards. Church, 839 Kerr Road, noon
to
3
p.m
.
Bring
something
to
County Chamber of Commerce
Members are asked to bring
coitea and discussion group
pies and cakes of their place items Into.
meets at 8 a.m. each Friday at
choice.
Holzer Medical Center.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.
- Akzo Nobel Chemicals
Saturday, Dec. 7
community advisory panel will
GALLIPOLIS - Christmas
meet at 7 p.m . in the plant's
Doris Copley will celebrate
main auditorium, located oft Cr!!tl Show for Guiding Hand
School
from
9.a.m
.5
p.m
.
at
her 65th birthday on Dec. 5.
West Virgin ia Route 2 in
Gall.ipolis Ferry. The public is St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Cards may be sent to her at 727
2nd Ave.·
Fourth Ave., Apartment 113,
invited to attend .
·
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
GALLI POLIS
Holzer
Retirees, noon , Holiday Inn .
· Elva and Helen Wood
Wednesday, Dec. 4
Sunday,
Dec.
1
Lowder
will celebrate their 60th
: GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
RIO
GRANDE
The
wedding
anniversary on Dec. 8.
County Board of Health, 9
University
ot
Rio
Grande
Cards may be sent to them at
a.m., health department in the
Gallia County Service Center, Masterworks Chorale wil l be
performing its first perfor499 Jackson Pike .
mance under the direction of ·
Sunday, Dec. 8
Dr.
David Lawrence at 3 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetes
· Support Group, 2 p.m ., Holzer Admission is free.

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The Tribune welcomes items
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from non-profit organizations.
Items must be submitted in writ·
ing and can be mailed to the
Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, OH, 45631 ; faxed to
740-446·3008; or a-mailed to
news@ mydailytribune .com .
·Because of the large volume of
community news and to ensure
accuracy, items can not be
taken over the telephone.
Community calendar is published as ·a tree service to nonprofit groups wishing to
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Southern Ohio tobacco
farmers turn to new ideas

(AP) - Roger Rhonemus much tobacco the farmer
• 1,100 farmers received
grew 14 acres of tobacco on grows and how much money about $2.5 million to impruve
Sunday, Dec. 1
his southern Ohio farm only a is being sought.
their livestock operation&gt; by
RACINE - Racine Order of few years ago. Today, he
"A lot of people are siarting building addiiional fenc ing
grows half as much.
to take advantage of that." and corrals.
Eastern Star, practice, 2 p.m.
Falling demand for tobacco Rhonemus said. " It's been a
• $1.5 million went 10 875
has put the pinch on help to our family.''
farmers to help (hem improve
Monday, Dec. 2
Rhonemus
and
Ohio's
4,000'
Rhonemus
also
grows
com
the·
genetic quality of !heir
ROCKSPRINGS - Big Bend
livestock
herds.
other
tobacco
growers
in
the
and
soybeans
on
hi
s
farm.
The
Farm Antiques Club, 7:30 p.m.,
•
$1.5
million was paid 10
Secretary's office, Rocksprings 22 southern Ohio counties foundation will reimburse
where it is farmed.
. Rhonemus $2,500 for a $4,000 tobacco farmers in exchange
Fairgrounds.
"It's a way oflife. It's part of set of scales that he bought to fo r them agreeing to maintain
RACINE - Raci ne Order of our culture. Without tobacco, I save time and money in their property as farm land and
· not allowing it to be commerEastern Star, 7:30 p.m., lodge never would have been sue- · weighing his grain.
· cessful in farming in Adams
Rhonemu s' wife and son cially developed.
hall .
• Up to 500 people received
County," Rhonemus said. 'T m have both received financial
a positive person, but it's kind a~sistance from the program to · a total of $1 million in educational assistance to pursoe
of dim."
attend college.
An effort to help farmers
His wife, in her second year careers thai enable them to be
sun-ive has been under way at Southern State Community not as dependent upon tobacco
1he World Christmas dinner, 6 p.m.. for about 18 months. Ohio is College, is studying to become farming.
• 1.400 farmers have been
American Legion. Membem and using its share ofthe national a medical assistant. His son is
approved
to receive $1.5 milguests are asked to bring two aN· settlement with tobacco com- attending Ohio State, where he
to improve soil fertility.
ered dishes and gift for Wh~e panies to help tobacco growers wi ll graduate in , agricultural lion
•
$2
.5 million is .on its way
Elephant sale. RSVP by calling find new ways to make a liv- education.
to
1.500
farmers to improve
ing.
"It 's going to be a big help in
(304)675-7618 before Dec. 6.
their
grain
operations by build·
State officials consider the not having to pay as much in
ing
bins
or
buying new equipprograms a success based on student loans," Rhonemus
ment; money also includes a
the number of applications for said.
second
wave of funding to
financial assistance received.
He said he may apply for
buy
new fencing for live;help
- about 6,500. Some farmers money to buy a portable
stock.
.
;·
have applied for more than one sawmill , which will enable
Monday, Dec. 2 • .
• Also, more than 200 fanyt
him to make money cutting ers have applied for $2 milliep
RACINE, Ohio - \'lfeslem style program.
Many of the programs are lumber.
square dance class and worl&lt;shop,
from the diversification priJ.
Many tobacco growers also gram
7 to 8:30 p.m., EliiE!ry Mooday at 1he administered by the Southern
to do such things as builil
Agricultural
and raise cattle because tobacco is greenhouses
RC&gt;fBI Oak Resort. Call (304) 615- Ohio
or raise worms.' :
Community
Development often ·grown on the hill y, less
3275 tor more intonnation.
Sen.
Doug White, RState
fertile farm s of southern Ohio Manchester, said
Foundation in Hillsboro.
the programs
Executive Director Don more suitable fo r grazing than are working as well as can be
Tueaday,ClDec.
Branson said tobacco farmers growmg
· com or soybeans.
ATROCK
h' 3 1
. .
F,'-"''
ot 1ng coseth typically operate smaller farms
"Th.IS ts
· he1ping right a very expected.
9 ·
"
It
's
never
enough.''
said
g1ve-away, a.m. to 1 ·p.m., eac
and are heavi'ly dependent on· .d'ff'
1 SitUatiOn,
· · " Said
·
I ICU t
a
member
of
the
Senate
White,
Tuesday, Good Shepherd Un~ed the crop •or
I·ncome. Many El.Iza bet h Harsh, executtve
·
1'
Agriculture Committee and
Methodist Church.
.
have used profits to make pay- secretary of the Ohio also
a tobacco grower. "It's
HENDERSON - l1ne dance , ments on the farm or send their Cattlemen's
Association . doing all that it can do."
classes every Tuesday, 6 .p.m., children to college.
"There's a long ways to go in
White s-aid the growe rs will
Henderson Community Bu1ld1ng.
"Tobacco is a crop that has terms of the devastation . But make the most of the money.
been a cultural mainstay for these programs are a very big
"Our tobacco farmers will
Wednesday, Dec. 4 .
many, many years. A lot of step in the right direction."
take a dollar and make $10 out
POINT PLEASANT - Sign up these people almost overnight
So far, the fund has awarded of it," White said. 'Tobacco is
for the annual Christmas Food found themselves in a situation $6.5 million to tobacco grow- such an extremely sensitive
Baskets give-away, noon to 4 p.m.,' where 60 percent of their · ers. Another $6 million will crop and takes a lot of manat the tire department. Applicants income just left. They 're strug- soon be on the way.
agement s~i ll s. We wi ll get
must bring a current pay stub, gling," Branson said. "The
Under the program;
by."
mortgage or rent payments, and a ories who have seen the handwriting m1 the wall say,
copy of utility bills.
'.We've got to find another
way to bring some income on
Thuraday, Dec. 5
the farm."'
POINT
PLEASANT
Tobacco growers who want
Christmas quift show, 10 a.m. to 8
I I
•
; I
: l n&lt;&lt;ess
p.m., Mason County library.
to become more reliant on
POINT PLEASANT- Last day raising cattle, growing com
to . sign up tor the annual and soybeans, or even to move
Christmas Food Baskets give- to a non-farming career are
OfftrE~6s12/ ll/02
away, noon to 4 p.m., at the fire lining up for the money;
Ak TOTAL INTERNET sohwore CD
department. Applicants !)lUst bring proposing everything from
~ makes connecting lost &amp; eosy
a current pay stub, mortgage or building greenhouses to growat
!
FIVE email boxes, Webmoil,
rent payments; and a copy of utili· ing worms. ·
Syracuse Fire Dept.
.The money . is awarded
· lnslont Messaging and mare!
ty bills. ·
All materials
based on the proposal's possi- Immediate Aaess ·Sign Up Online
POINT
PLEASANT
bility
of
success,
whether
it
New Christmas Hours ,__
American Red Cross blood drive,
www.localnat.com
noon to 6 p.m., Pleasant Valley will create new jobs, how
Refreshments Start 7 pm ;,
Wellness Center.

Craft Shows

Marriage ·
licenses filed
GALLIPOUS, Ohio - The
following individuals recently
filed for marriage licenses in
Gallia County Probate Coun:
Elizabeth A. Lane of
Gallipolis, to Anthony M.
Hughes of Gallipolis.
Kattie Mari¢ Gibbs of
Gallipolis, to Jason Charles
Northup of Gallipolis.

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(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) '146-3008
www.mydellytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing

DO!

Co~

BUSH

FEEL THE
CAMPAIGN

Publisher
Andrew Carter

Asst. Managing Editor

AT WAR

HAS
ALREADY

Letters co the edirur are welcome. They should be less than
300 wo rds. All /errers are subjecz 10 ediling and must be
signed and inrlude address and ze/ephone number. No
unsigned /errers will be published. Lerrers should be in good

rt:zste, addressinR issues, ,rot personalities.

BY BOB
WOODWARD

BEGUN?

The opinions expressed in the column below are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. editqrial board,
wlless orhendse nOted.

s

JOINEDATTHE~

NATIONAL VIEW

'

.

.
Hop1ng
'

--- ·
'

'

New-York can keep planning.
to host 20 12~ Olympics
• The Poughkeepsie (N.Y.) Journal, on planning for an
Olympics held in New York: New Yorkers had good reason

"

to rejoice -the quest to bring the 2012 Summer Garnes
to the Empire State won the domestic portion of the international bidding competition.
The United States Olympic Committee selected New
York City over San Francisco. What follows, however, is
an excruciatingly long· wait: The International Olympic
Committee won't make a final decision until 2005.
· .and hop. In the meantime, the city can keep planningmg ....
But the plan also hinges on construction of an 86,000seat Olympic S~adium on the _West Si~e of Manhattan, as
well as usmg htgh-speed femes runrung north-south liOd
commuter rail lines running east-west to get the athletes
and spectators to and from events.
·
... Still, critics question whether Manhattan is the best
place for a new stadium when other options, such as renovating Shea Stadium in Flushing, have not been fully
explored.
.
·
.
Most importantly, New York City Mayor Michael
Bloomberg vows the Olymeic bid will not overshadow the
city's commitment torebmlding the World Trade Center
site. 'He must make good on that pledge.
·
.
The mayor believes all .the Olympic construction......_ and .
the requisite project deadlines - would be a catalyst to
the city's renewal. He may be right. It's certainly an ambitious undertaking. Critics envision a transportation nightmare . They raise safety concerns in light of the terrorist
attacks, and wonder if the city can get the needed facilities
·
built in time.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

O-UR READERS' VIEWS
.

.

lions are not to close the Gavin Plant,
solve
but for AEP to be responsible neighbors
in
taking care of our air. soil and water,
this together
Today's technology should be able to
Dear Editor:
modernize a plant well enough to bring
I'm sitting here by my Coleman its pollution standards down. It bothers
lantern (name brands are important) me to know that the stacks were shortreading how my concerns about AEP ened to keep pollution from reaching
are petty gripes.
the Northeast.
I know that we need electricity to live
Now the answer is for it to stay here,
in a modem world. Before the buyout, in the Ohio Valley. If it was bad for New
my thoughts were very similar to Mr. England (after the pollution has had
McFann's letter a couple of weeks ago. time to break up), what is like now conI didn't attend meetings or became part centrated in a local area? I know that
of any town campaigning. I could see workers are looking ·out,for their famithe point of an older generation who lies. That's why they go to work every
owned land in the area before Gavin, day of the week. But most also live outbut the generation after Gavin were well side Cheshire Township. Trust me. I see
aware of a power plant in their backyard the traffic going both ways to and from
when they decided to settle in Cheshire. work,
leaving
the
township.
It seems that my actions and Mr. Unfortunately, the . problem reaches
McFann's letter are about a year too late over the· valley. It doesn't stop at Jhe
(though I don't see what good it would borders.
I've also. s.tated that we didn't start
have done for us outside the village to
have participated). Maybe their con- 'this. We have to see it through to precerns were valid, but I don't believe that serve our way of life. If anyone thinks
a buyout was the answer. In the true . that is petty, read on.
story "Erin Brockovich," my favorite
A local couple had their home
part in the movie was when the PG&amp;E appraised a few years back to apply for
lawyers offered to buy the town of a home improvement loan. After the
Hi~ley, Ca~if., for $20 million to avoid buyout, th;y had the home reappra!sed .
gomg to tnal. It makes you wonder Wtthm months, they have· lost qutte a
bit of equity in their home. The appraiswhat $20 million would have bou~ht.
As I said in my first letter, our mten- er expressed that it will only get worse

Lets

.

once the town is gone. To some with
great-paying jobs, this might seem.
petty. To me and others, it's not petty. :
I live about one mile north of
Cheshire on Route 7. We have the threat
of having a plant that will make latex-'
lined charcoal briquettes in my back- ·
yard, This has nothing (I repeat, noth- ·
in~) to do with electricity. Has anyone ·
dnven on Route .7 between Belpre and ·
Marietta? How about Route 52 near
New Boston? What about Nitro, W.Va.,
or have you driven right by the paper
mill in Chillicothe (not Route 35, but·
business loop 23)? You don't see new ,
homes being .built near those sites.:
Why? Because nobody · Wants to Jive :.
next to it. I don't see this as a petty
grire.
I ve lived here all of my life and I am concerned about the impact this will '
have on our township. Everything that ·
we know about Cheshire Township is ·
threatened and we all need to be
involved. I hofe that the others left .
behind will tel their elected officials :
that there are still plenty of voters in ·
Cheshire Towru;hip, in Gallia County, in
the Gallia County School District, and.
in the state of Ohio. We need to solve:
this together, ·or we' II need to find
someone who will.
Mark A. Coleman ·
North of Cheshire, Ohio

Today is Sunday, Dec. l, the 335th day of 2002. There are
30 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. I, 1955, Rosa Parks, a black seamstress, refused to
give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Ala., city
bus. Mr~. Parks wa ~ arrested, sparking a yearlong boycott of
the buses by black riders.
On this date:
GUEST VIEW
In 1824, the presidential election was turned over to the .
House of "Representatives whim a deadlock developed
between John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, William H. ·
•
Crawford and Henry Clay. (Adams ended up the winner.)
· In 1934, Sergei M. Kirov, a collaborator of Soviet leader
Josef Stalin, was assassinated in Leningrad, resulting in. a
BY LT. RICHARD E. 0RAU
stop when a l;'assing vehicle struck both motorists cannot change lanes safely, or·
massive purge.
Ohio State Highway Patrol Sgt. Trooper Davts' patrol car and the car he are on a two-lane highway. they must
In 1942, nationwide gasoline rationing went into effect in
Christopher Wood and Trooper William had pulled over. Trooper Davis saw the slow down and proceed with caution.:
the United States.
A. Davts are reminding Ohto motorists car approaching and ran to safety. He Motorists who do not comply with this .
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime
' to move over or slow down or move was struck by flying debris, but escaped law can be issued a citation. I
,
Minister Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin concluded their
over or slow down. when approaching serious injury.
The Move Over or Slow Down Jaw.
Tehran conference.
The patrol car video from both of the was enacted after Centerville Police
·an emergency vehicle.
.
In '1956, the Leonard Bernstein musical "Candide," based
Sgt. Wood and Troop~r Davis know· crashes dramatically depicts why DepartmeJ1t Officer John Kalaman and .
on the work by Voltaire, opened on Broadway.
first hand the danger motorists impose motorists need to move over or slow Washington Township Fire Department·
In 1958, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Flower
when they do not use caution near down when approaching an emergency Firefighter Robert J. O'Toole were
Dium Song" opened on Broadway.
emergency vehicles and personnel vehicle. The video footage from both of struck and killed by a ·motorist on
Jn 1965, an airlift of refugees from Cuba to the United
along the highway. State law requires these crashes is being used in the · Interstate 675, on Jan. 12, 1998, while
States began, allowing ·thousands of Cubans to leave their
motorists to move over or slow down patrol's new public service announce- performing emergency assistance.
homeland.
when approaching emergency vehicles ment, which was recently distributed to More recently, Trooper Robert Perez, of
In 1969, the U.S. government held its first draft lottery since
Ohio media outlets, and is also avail- the Milan Patrol Post, was struck and
with their lights activated.
Sgt. Christopher Wood's patrol car able on the patrol's web site at killed in May 2000, while performing
World War II .
In 1973, David Ben-Gurion, Israel's tirst prime minister,
video, which can be viewed on the www.state.oh.us/ohiostatepatrol. The duties during a traffic stop. Just last
patrol's web site, captures the impact of new PSA aims to increase public year, Trooper Frank Vasquez of the
died in Tel Aviv at age 87.
In 2000, Vicente Fox was sworn in as president of Mexico,
·a March 29 crash on Interstate 71 in awareness of the Move Over or Slow West Jefferson Post was killed when he
Richland County, which involved Sgt. Down law, which went into effect in was hit by a car while on foot in the
endi ng 71 years of ruling-party domination.
Ten years ago: Preside.nt Boris Yeltsin survived an impeachWoo.d and Trooper Charles Farley. Sgt. September I999.
.
median on Interstate 270 in Franklin
ment attempt by hard-liners at the opening of the Russian
Wood was on foot approaching Trooper
Ohio Revised Code section 4511.213 County.
Farley's cruiser when a vehicle struck is designed to protect public safety perCongress . In MineQia, N.Y., Amy Fisher was sentenced to ftve
Knowledge and compliance of this
both cruisers. Both officers were trans- sonnel while they are performing job law is key in protecting the lives of
to 15 years in prison for shooting and seriously wounding
ported to Mansfield General Hospital duties on Ohio's roadways. Signs are public safety workers in Ohio road-.
Mary Jo Buttafuoco.
.
with non-life-threatening injuries.
Five years ago: A 14-year-old boy opened fire on a prayer
posted statewide on all the major high- ways. I am asking Ohio motorists to
Chardon ·Patrol Post Trooper William ways. The signs de scribe the state law help ensure the safety of Ohio's law:
ci rcle at Heath High School in West Paducah, Ky., killing
A. Davis narrowly escaped serious that requires motorists to move over or enforcement officers and emergency:
three fe llow students and wounding five; the shooter, Michael
injury when his patrol car and a car that slow dowil for stopped Jaw enforce- personnel by slowing down, moving
Carneal, is serv ing a life sentence. An international confer- .
he had pulled over in a June l2 crash on ment and public safety vehicles.
ence on reducing greenhouse gases opened in Kyoto, Japan.
over, and proceeding with caution when
westbou.nd Ohio Route 2 in Lake
State law requires motorists who are emergency vehicle lights are activated.
One year ago: Two suicide bombers blew themselves up in
County. The crash resulted in the injury approaching stopped public safety vehiback-10-back explosions at a downtown Jerusalem pedestrian
Move·over or slow down - it' s about
olthree
individuals,
including
16-year
cles
with
lights
activated,
to
move
over,
safety.
mall, killing 1'1 bystanders. A baby girl was born to Japan's
Patrol veteran Trooper Davis.
slow down, and proceed with caution.
Crown Princess Masako and Crown Pnnce Naruhtto, the royal
According to a crash report by the
Motori sts must safely change · Janes
coupl e's first child in eight years of marriage; she was later
(Lt. Richard E. Grau is commar~der of'
Mentor
Police
Department,
Trooper
away
from
the.
public
safety
vehicle
if
the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State'
named Aiko.
Davis
was
on
foot
conducting
a
traffic
traveling
on
a
multi-lane
highway.
If
Highway Patrol.)
Today's Birtlidays: Actor Paul Picerni is 80. Former CIA
director Stansfield Turner IS 79. Actor Robert Symonds IS 76.
Si nger Billy Paul i~ 68. Actor-director W~ody_ Allen i~ 67.
Singer Lou Rawls 1s 67. Golfer Lee Trevmo ts 63. Smger
825 Third Avo., Clolllpollo, Ohio
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
200 Matn St., Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Dianne Lennon (The Lennon Sisters) is 63. Comedian-actor
&lt;l'4o-445-2342
740.992·2156
304-875-1333
Richard Pryor is 62.

·Movi~g over and slowing down boosts highway sqfoty

DROP US ALINE.

- ~· ··-· - · -

/

,$uuitag ~u--.-mtbul • Page AS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

....

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. ...

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'

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Petition for a change

Deer

Denver Calvin
Lively Sr.

WHY

Den Dickerson

.

Obituaries

u

6unbap uttm~ -iJtnttnel

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Sunday, December 1, 2002

.

CROWN CITY, Ohio Denver Calvin Lively Sr.,
66, of Crown City, passed
away Friday, November 29,
2002, at his residence.
He was born May 16.
1936, son of Louella
Duncan of Hurricane, West
Virginia, who survives.
He is survived by three
daughters, Donna (Sonny)
Adkins of Vinton, Darlena
Russell of Vinton, and Dena
Kingsley of Gallipolis; a
son, Denver C. "De nny"
Lively Jr. of Gallipolis;
four grandsons, Shannon
(Rosie) Adkins of Vinton.
Raymond Adkins of Vinton,
Jeremiah Voreh of Vinton,
and Jacob Lively of
Gallipolis; four granddaughters, Angel Kingsley
of Gallipolis, Brandice
Kingsley of Gallipolis,
Kiley
Kingsley . of
Gallipolis, and Keshia
Stanley of Hurricane; and a
g teat-grand daughter,
Rayanna Adkins.
He is also survived by
. two brothers, Larry Lively
·of Vinton, and Marvin
·Lively of Hurricane; and
two sisters, Shirlee Lively
of Hurricane, and Marcella ·
(Delmar)
. Lively
of
Hurricane.
Services will be I p.m.
Tuesday, December 3,
2002, in McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton,
with Pastor Elmer Geiser
officiating. Burial will fol. low at Morgan Center
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the fune(al home from 6
to
9
p.m.
Monday,
December 2, 2002.

- Paid notice

Helen L. Riffle
HARTFORD, W.Va. Helen L. Riffle, 91, of
Hartford, died Wednesday,
November 27, 2002, in the .
Pleasant Valley Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center
in Point Pleasant. West
Virginia.
.
.
She was born February
26, 1911, in Hartford,
daughter of the late David
H. Riffle and Blanche
Rebecca Schools Riffle . .
She was a 1928 graduate
of Wahama High School,
· and a member of Fairview
Bible Church. She was ~
employed by New Haven
Pottery.
.
She was preceded in
death by.her parents; a twin
brother, Robert Riffle; three
brothers, Bryon "Barney"
Riffle, Wyatt H. Riffle and
Ray H. Riffle; and a sister.
Martha M. Howard.
She is survived by a
nephew and his wife,
Donald and Vera Howard of
Machesney Park, Illinois;
and a niece and her husband, Janet .and Howard
Selby of Point Pleasant.
Services will be 1I a .m.
Monday, . December 2,
2002.• ill Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home in· Mason
West
Virginia.
with
Brothers in Christ Earl
Dean Knight and Rex
,Howard, and Pastor Rankin
"Roach officiating. Burial
will
be in
Suncrest
Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9
p.m . Sunday, December I,
· 2002.

from PageA1
on food, transportation, gear,
lodging. processing, taxidermy, leasing fees and
other expenses evety year.
That figure does not include
money spent on hunting
licenses or deer permits, or
money that landowner
hunters spend on deer hunt- .
ing. With new shotguns a,nd
bows costing several hundred dollars, and the average
all-terrain vehicle costing
around $5,000, not to mention clothing, tree stands and
other hunting accessories, it
is easy to see tHe impact that
450,000 hunters can have on
a state's economy.
This deer gun season the
Division of Wildlife and
Ohio
Department
of
Agriculture will test random
The Rev. Rob Schenck, right, from the National Clergy Council, shows Rev. Ken Johnson
from the Seaman, Ohio, United Methodist Cl')urch the some 100,000 signatures on a petition supporting the display of the Ten Commandments on p_ublic buildings. The petition
and plaque are to be presented to Ohio Congressman Rob Portman. (AP)

Supreme Court ·says menorah can
be displayed in Cincinnati plaza
•

says that only the city can nance. ·violates the ' First
WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court upheld a use Fountain Square during Amendment guarantee of
federal judge's ruling that the the last two weeks of freedom of speech.
City lawyers argued that
city of Cincinnati cannot bar November through the first
a Jewish organization from week . of January. The ordi- allowing private organizadisplaying a menorah on a nance grew oui of the city's tions to erect unattended disdowntown plaza during the efforts to prevent the Ku plays would overcrowd the
holidays.
·
Klux Klan from erecting a square and make it difficult
In its ruling Friday, the cross during the Christmas for the city to keep order.
After Dlott ruled, the city
high court lifted a stay by the season.
U.S.
District
Judge
Susan
.
immediately
asked the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, noting the square's Dlott ruled Wednesday that appeals court for an emerhistoric chanicter as a public the . ordinance attempts to gency stay, which came a
transform the square into a few hours later.
forum.
In addition to requesting
"It's been a roller coaster zone where only the city's
of emotions as . this was message is welcome, and the e·mergency stay of Dlott's
played out in three courts ordered the city to provide ruling, the city also filed a
this week," Marc Mezibov, . permits allowing Chabad t.o · notice of appeal Wednesday
an attorney for the group, erect a menomh during the - with the 6th U.S. Circuit
holidays.
.
Court of Appeals.
said Friday.
orga"The Supreme Court did
The
nonprofit
Jewish
Chabad of Southern Ohio
probably would not be able nization, which has for years not address the merits of the
to start erecting the menorah · erected a large menorah on judge's ruling, so I expect the
before Monday, Mezibov the square during the eight- city will continue its appeal
said. Hanukkah started at day Hanukkah celebration, of that ruling through the
challenged the ordinance. regular channels," Mezibov
sundown Friday.
A municipal ordinance Chabad argued that the ordi- said.
..

Medical

mar~juana

WASHINGTOI;I, (AP) -.
The typtcal medtcmal manjuana user is likely to resentble someone from the Baby
Boom generation - or ol~er
-rather ~an a 20-s?mething
poster c~ild, apcordmg to a
congressiOnal study.
..
Data collected tn Hawau
and Oregon - .two of.. the
etght states allowmg manJuana use for medtcal treatment
- · show the maJOnty of users
are males, 40 years old or
older. who take th_e drug for
severe pam or_pers1stent muscle spasms, saJd the report.
. The study by !he General
Accountmg Offtce, .whtch
covered Alaska and Cahfomta
as well, al~o saJd the relaxed
drug laws m. ~ose ~our states
have had mmtmal tmpact on
cri~efighting, ~though they
at llmes comphcate prosecution of drug cases.
The GAO found that a to'!Jl
of about 2.45~ people m
Oregon, .HawaJt and Al~ka
6\le manJuana for. medtcal
purposes- accountmg for no
more than .05 percent of the
population in any of the states.
More than 70 _percent of
- Paid notice regtstered users m each of

URG
from PageA1
"Regardless of reason, this
stfltistic indicates a spectfic
need in the commuruty for services that Rio Grande can
offer."
Meigs Center Director qina
Pines said current teacher rudes
are also seeking .ejll'IY ~hild­
hood and educatton trammg,
because state law will. soon
require an associate's degree
for those positions. .
Education, early childhood,
nursing and medicallaboratoty
technology are the programs
most frequently chosen by
·those who responded to the
survey. Business and office
technology were also mentioned by a number of respondents.
The URG Meigs Center has
offered an associate's degree in
infonnation technology since it

still debated

those three states were age 40
or older. In Hawaii and
Oregon, about 70 percent of
the users were men, and most
were taking marijuana to treat
severe pain and persistent
muscle spasms. Such information was not available for
Alaska or California.
Alaska had the only registered user under 18 years old,
and Oregon had 145 users
between the ages of 19 and
29.
The report provided no
statewide data for California.
That state's Jaw does not
require medicinal marijuana
users to register, although
about 4,500 people have done
so voluntarily in four of the
state's 58 counties, the study
said.
, Some law enforcement officials said that while crimefighting was not harmed. the

Jaws allowing doctors to recommend that a patient be eligible to use marijuana has, at
times, complicated efforts to
seize illegal marijuana or to
prosecute some cases, according to the GAO report.
In .some cases, Jaw enforcement officials said the marijuana Jaws resulted in "a general softening" in attit11des
among ¢e public toward marijuana, the report said, ancl
some officials were concerned
about conflicts that arise with
federal law enforcement.
for example, according to
the report, an Oregon police
official cited a series of cases
in which suspects were arrested for distributing marijuana
for profit. but were able to
obtain medical marijuana registry cards after their arrests,
stymieing prosecutorn.

Evans

in the Senate-passed farm bill
vanished after weeks ·of negotiations with the House, angering
family farm advocates and
environmental groups."
Specifically the group noted
the following areas as problems: A Joss of "meaningful"
lirillts on payments to giant
commodity operators; a
tripling of payments to factory
f!lfllls: and a loss of about $3
billion to programs to protect
streams and wildlife, and curb
sprawl.
·
· "It's all about politics,"
Evans said.

from Page A1

fanners to get started. Senate
efforts to limit payments to no
more than $275,000 per farm
were effectively defeated."
"We haven't seen this many
opened in 1999, and began
offering a business manage- caves since they canceled the
Aintstones," said Ken Cook,
ment degree this fall.
URG President Dr. Barry president of the Environmental
Dorsey and other university Working Group (EWG).
"VIrtually all of the imporofficials have met with local
leaders since September about tant
provisions
. refonn-minded
.
the possibility of the ·center
expanding its facilities and
course offerings in the Meigs
Middle School building on
South Third Avenue. While the
college's bUstees have not said
whether such an expansion is
likely, the univernity has asked
for a feasibility study to determine renovation costs and possible facility uses. if such a
move were to be made.
The building will be vacated
. this winter ·when the new
Meigs Middle School is ready
Prom all your friends at Honce NatioiUJl Bank
for occupancy. The . Meigs
Local Board of Education has
Racine, Ohio • (740) 949·2210
agreed to tum the building over
Sy~acuse, Ohio • (740) .992-6333
to the village once it is vacated, ·
Member FDIC
and the village hopes it can be
used for educational and community purposes.

**

~tfh~~

samples of deer from deer
check stations to monitor the
health of the state 's deer
herd. Targeted monitoring of
the herd si nce June hu'
found no signs of Chronic
Wasting Disease.
However, portions of
Meigs, Gall ia and Vinton
counties were affected in
September
and
early
October
by
Epizootic
Hemorrhagic Disease, which
killed hundreds of deer in ·
the affected areas. EHD.
which .is transmitted by biting gnats, is usually fatal · to
deer, but does not affect
humans or .livestock.
The outbreak typically
ends shortly after the onset
of cold weather kills the biting gnats which carry the
disease. EHD outbreaks also
occurred thi s year in
Pennsylvania, West Virginia.
Maryland and Virginia.

change a realistic one:
"It's a relatively new concept in the last I 0 to I 2
years," Cottrill said. "Some
from PageA1
guys are sold on it because
of the money they can save
West has the figures to prove when it comes to feeding
it.
animals. We do it the conHis total winter feeding ventional way."
costs for 1999-2000 was
One of the problems asso$4,61 0 using conventional cia ted with grazing is getmethods, at an average cost ting water 10 the animals .
"Some animals need sevof $2.05' per day, per cow
1 II
d " K
over I 50 days.
In 2000-2001, using year- era ga ons a ay,
neen
said.
ro.und grazing methods,
"D 1 ·
1
West said that his winter
eve optng
natura
springs and such, or other
feeding costs dropped to water sources, is needed to .
$1,108, with the daily cost keep the animal from hav- ,
per cow coming in at .49 ing to travel long di stances.
cents per day over 150 days : to water."
Weather conditions als'o ·
Pretty impressive savings,
to say the least.
can play a big part. Drought
"There is still a good bit in West Virgmia the last
of skepticism," West said. year prevented' West from
"There are a lot of things practicing year-round graz- ·
you have to consider and do mg, so feeding hay is· still a
things differently. I' II tell · necessity at times.
.
my students that you don't . "Each cow need s 3.2
have to have a barn, and · acres to do this ," West said . .
they' ll say, 'You've got to "There is a lot of thinking .
involved."
,
have a barn.'
.
One other problem is peo-·
"I tell them, 'No, you
don't.' It's just the way it pie's perception offarm anihas been done forever. mals and barns.
Times change. There is a
"Some people say it 's
considerable amount of cruel to hl!ve animals outside," Kneen said.
money to make out there."
Evaris said that turnips,
"Basically, all the big
which provide 23 percent barns you see have beenprotein, can be used as feed built in the last 100 years. 1
up to the first of the year, Now, we don't have the natthen the cattle can be put on ural predators we .. used to
grass for the remainder of and cattle aren't foolish ,
the winter season.
They know how to get olit '
Hal' Kneen, the agricul- of extreme weather, with ·
ture and natural resources the hilly · terrain we have ·
extension agent.for the ()hio they'll get out of the wind.'' .·
State University extension
Kneen also said. that ani- ·
office in Mei~s County, said mafs housed in barns . can··
that many dtfferent animal create health problems.
"It's like having a bunch
operations can use yearround grazing. ·.
of people in the same
"We've got a dairy opera- room," Kneen said. "One
tion coming in that will use has a cold and the rest will
grazing," Kneen said.
soon get it. It's the same for
"Getting the full potential cattle."
out of the field is key. We
Kneen said his office conhave fescue grass here that · ducts several grazing semiimproves after a frost. It has oars in the spnng. For more
an excellent protein factor information, he can be
once frost hits it. We do reached at 740-992-8555 .
In Mason County, ex ten -.
have one Meigs County
operation grazing chick- sion
agent
Rodney·
ens."
·
Walbrown can be reached at
Year-round grazing isn't 304-675-0888. In Gallia
feasible for every operation. County, call extension agent
Mason County dairy · Fred Deel at 740-446-7007 . ·
farmer Tim Cottrill said that
he isn't considering changing methods.
·
Cottrill's farm is situated
along the Ohio River, and
wet conditions during the
spring don't make the

Grazing

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Nation • World

6unba!' limt1·6tntintl

Monday, December 1, 2002

Weapons inspectors renew search

Kyle Erickson of Orem, Utah, looks for his car after leaving the
Disney Magic cruise ship with his family at Port Canaveral,
Aa., Saturday morning. The cruise li ner, carrying 2 .400 guests
and about 1,000 crewmembers. returned to port S11turday car·
rying more than 180 people who had contracted a flu·like virus
during its seven&lt;lay Caribbean voyage, officials said. Erickson
said he became ill Friday night with the fiU·Iike virus. (AP)

BALAD, Iraq (AP) - International
weapons hunters crossed a threshold
Saturday, . paying their first visit under
the new inspection program to a military post once declared "sensitive" and
restricted by the Iraqi government.
On the third day of the renewed
in spectiOIJS, U.N. monitors arrived
unannounced but received unrestricted
access to the Chemical Corps base, as
mandated by the U.N. Security Council
when it sent them back to Iraq with
greater powers to inspect anyplace,
anytime.
Another team, meanwhile, inspected
a complex that once was the heart of
Iraq 's aborted effort to build nuclear
bombs.
In both cases, as expected, the U.N.
teams did not disclose their findings,
holding them for later reports. But their
spokesman indicated afterward they
were satisfied with Iraqi cooperation.
''They were able to conduct inspections
. as they planned," Hiro Ueki said.
"They found nothing," said the commander of the Balad military post' north
of Baghdad .
The inspections resumed Wednesday
under a new Security Council resolution giving Iraq a "final opportunity" to

shut down any chemical, biological or
nuclear weapons programs, or face
"serious consequences."
Inspections ·in the 1990s, after the
Gulf War, led to destruction of many
tons of Iraqi chemical and biological
weapons, and equipment to produce
them. U.N. teams also dismantled
Iraq's nuclear weapons program before
it could produce a bomb. But that
inspection regime collapsed in I 998
amid disputes over access to sites and
infiltration of the U.N. operation by
U.S. spies.
Those inspectors believed they never
found all the Iraqi weapons of mass
destruction, particularly chemical
arms. The United States n·ow threatens
war to disarm the Baghdad government
if the new inspections do not.
In their first field missions. the U.N.
teams mostly revisited sites with wellknown involvement in Iraq 's past
weapons programs - places where
equipment had been disabled or chemical or biological weapons material
destroyed after U.N. inspections in the
I 990s.
,
The fact that these installations
would receive unannounced visits was
no surprise to ,their managers, but the

timing was believed to be. In the case
of the Balad military installation, however, the inspection appeared to be
largely unexpected.
The convoy of four U.N. vehicles,
trailed by pursuing journalists' cars and
a cloud of dust, rolled up a country
road to the back gate, sending soldiers
scrambling. Iraqi officers. who accom"
pany the U.N. missions to their undisclosed destinations, shouted orders for
the area to be "frozen"- under U.N.
procedures for sealing off inspection
sites.
The I 0 or so inspectors then spent
almost five hours crisscrossing the
small installation. paying close attention to what appeared to be crates of
ordnance in open sheds, possibly large
artillery shells, bombs or rockets. From
beyond the b!lrbed-wired fence, waiting reporters could hear the sound of a
hammer and chisel prying open crates.
At times , inspectors wielded handheld detectors of some kind. They also
repeatedly consulted clipboards, appar:
ently for checklists of the known contents of the base, home to an Iraqi battalion specializing in preparing the military to defend against chemical, bio·
logical or nuclear attack.

Disney cruise ship
being disinfected.after Federal workers to get smaller pay raise .
passengers get SICk .

WASHINGTON (AP) ,
Federal workers will get a
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- A with the virus. said Centers for smaller pay raise next month
Control
and because President Bush is
Dfsriey cruise liner marred by a Disease
second outbreak of a flu-like Prevention spokesman · Owen freezing part of the increase,
virus returned to pon Saturday. Grant. Disney Cruise Line citing a national emergency
and workers once again began spokeswoman Marilyn Waters because of the fight against
disinfecting the ship after 218 . said the company would offer terrorism.
people became ill during its a free cruise 10 the passengers
Bush's decision , is yet
latest voyage.
who became sick and 10 travel- another blow to the civilian
federal work force , which
In the past few months,
who
stayed
in
the
same
has been the target of sweepers
about 1,000 passengers and room as sick people.
ing changes in the . governcrew on two voyages of the
One ofthose who became ill, ment bureaucracy.
Magic and four voyages of
"The same week the presiHolland America's Amsterdam John Ohlmann, said he was
pleased
with
the
crew's
effons
·
dent
claimed victory on the
have contracted a Norwalkto
help
the
sick
passengers.
creation
of the Homeland
like virus, one of a number of
"This did not deter me at all" Security Department, he is
common .illnesses that can
from
taking another cruise, sending the wrong message
cal)se diarrhea, stomach pain
of. to the employees who will
said
Ohlmann,
68,
and vomiting.
work there," Rep. Steny
Wanda Russ, 60, of Melbourne.
The
cleaning
of
the
ship's
Hoyer,
D-Md., said Saturday.
Tuskase~ee, N.C., became so
Hoyer,
the
ranking
sick dunng the Magic's latest high-traffic areas will last a
cruise she had to be taken to week. The Magic also was dis- Democrat . on . House
infected Nov.
the ship's infirmary.
after about A~ptopnauons subcommu"It hit me really quick," she 275 people developed the ill- tee on the Treasury, postal
- ~er.vtce and general govern. ,,
said after walking off the
ness
on
the
lmer
s
last
sevenmen!, said he plans to fight in
Magic early Saturday. "I have
alk .
ed Congress next year for a bighad the stomach· flu, (but) this dat'-:pN
·Vtrus,
nam.
ger pay false:··
.
e
orw
is the worst stomach flu I've
an
outbreak
30
years
ago
m
tor
ever had."
The Magic, carrying 3,400 Norwalk, Ohio, and a group of
guests and crew members, Norwalk-like viruses are
returned just after su nrise to its among many common microhome of Port Canaveral, about organisms that can cause
50 miles east of Orlando, fol- intestinal diseases, according
lowing a seven-day Caribbean to the, CDC.
cruise.
The viruses are spread
After the passe ngers disem- through food and water or conbarked, about I ,000 workers tact with infected people,
began cleaning and disinfect- Cruise ships, where hundreds
ing .the Magic for the second of passengers and crew mingle
time in less thlm a month.
in close quarters. · can provide
. The ship's next voyage,
whtch had been scheduled to ideal conditions for a virus to
begin Saturday, was canceled. spread, health officials say.
Outbreaks also occur overIt was the third time this year
that a U.S.-based cruise ship seas. In May, Norwalk-like
viruses infected more than I00
had been pulled from service.
A total of I 95 Magic passen- people at a London hospital
gers and 23 crew members and sickened 38 British
reponed symptoms consistent marines in Afghanistan.

:p

Flight attendants .
ratify cost-cutting deal
CHICAGO (AP)- United obtain $2 billion in private
Airlines' flight attendants loans.
. ratified a cost-cutting deal
Without the loan guaran·
with the nation's No. 2 carri- tee, United has said it would
er Saturday, one day after the have no choice but to file for
company's stock tanked as bankruptcy. .
analysts called bankruptcy
In a message to employees
nearly inevitable.
recorded after the mechan· Association of Flight ics' vote and before the attenAttendants spokeswoman dants' approval, United chief
Dawn Deeks ~aid 87 percent executive Glenn Tilton
of the flight attendants who warned that a bankruptcy fil·
voted signed off oli. the deal. ing could dramatically alter
United's 24,000 flight atten- the what he called a "cooperdants had been . widely ative" negotiation process.
expected to approve the $412
"We all must then follow a
million in wage concessions. prescribed course that is
However, their OK means both unpredictable and
· little as long as the airline' s potentially
adversarial,"
mechanics continue to resist
Tilton said.
proposed reductions of $600
A bankrupJcy is likely to
million in their wages and
have no immediate effect on
benefits.
Wage-cutting agreements passengers. United has said
. accepted by United's pilots it will continue flyin g its
and other employee groups normal schedule, as US
expire Dec. 31 unle ss Airways has been doing
mechanics sign on. United is since its Chapter II filing in
asking for a total of $5.2 bil- August.
United .. and
the
lion in companywide labor
International Association of
cuts over 5 1/2 years .
Machinists
. and Aerospace
The airline says its application for a $1.8 billion federal Workers· were scheduled to
loan guarantee is imperiled if meet Sunday to discuss the
a·ll unions cannot agree on mechanics' rejection. Union
wage concessions. A ruling is spokesman Frank Tiberi sa id
expected any day on the the flight attendants ' . vote
guarantee, which cash·poor would have no effect on
United says it must have to those negotiations.

"Federal . employees from existed since Sept. I I, 2001-... can't even keep the best and
the CIA to the CDC to the · Bush wrote. "Such cost the brightest in those jobs
Defense Department are on increases would threaten our now."
the froni lines of efforts to. efforts. against terrorism or
EarlieP this month, the
protect our communities force deep cuts in discre- administration announced it
from terrorists. Anything less tionary spending or federal wants to Jet private compathan the 4. I -percent pay employment to stay within nies compete for up to half of
adj ustment sends the regret- budget. Neither outcome is the 1.8 million federal jobs.
table message that the ser· acceptable."
Also, Bush sought and won
vices they provide to
The White House quietly broad powers to hire, fire and
· .
America every day are not divulged the cut in an e-mail
valued," the congressman t0
rt
I I F 'd
h
move c~vt 1 service-protected
sai·d.
· repo ers a e n ay, t e workers in 22 agencies being
middle of a long holiday
In a letter sent Friday to weekend in which . govern- merged into the new
congressional leaders, Bush ment and politics weren't Homeland
Security
announced · he was using his likely to be on most Department.
authority to change workers' Americans' minds.
'
·"It's been a tough year for
pay structure in times of
Military personnel still will federal employees," said
"national emergency or seri- receive a 4.1 percent increase Paul Light, senior fellow at
ous economic conditions" to and aren't affected.
·
the Brookings Institution and
limit raises to 3. 1·percent.
"This is just another slap at an expert on the federal work
Most federal employees federal employees," said force. "I don't think any one
also were to receive a second Bobby L. Harnage Sr., presi- of them will be surprised. It's
pay hike based on private- dent of the American one of several lumps of coal
sector wages earped in met- Federation of Government in the stocking thi s year."
ropolitan areas. But Bush Employees, which represents · The White House couldn't
said that increase woulth be . 600,000 federal workers. The say exactly how many federtoo expensive and "inappro- Bush administration says al employees would receive
priate" at this time .
"they want to recruit the best the reduced pay raise, but
"A national emergencyii·ll's · and the brightest, but ihey said it would be almost all.

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PageBl
Sunday,Decemberl,2002

·Mount Union
whips Wheaton
ALLIANCE, Ohio (AP)Dan Pugh rushed for three
touchdowns and scored a
fourth on. a kickoff return to
lead Mount Union to a 42-21
win over Wheaton on
Saturday in a Division III
second round playoff.
Pugh's second rushing
touchdown put the Purple
Raiders up 28-0 with 12:36
left in the third quarter.
Wheaton responded with a
7-yard touchdown pass from ·
Chad Bradley to Jonathan
Wills. The Thunder scored
again on Dan Price's 18-yard
run to pull within 28- I 5 with
2:22 to go in the third quarter.
, Pugh returned the ensuing
kickoff 9 I yards for !I 34- I 5
: ~ead to keep Wheaton out of

Eagles cruise past South Gallia
Eastern young guns
pull away late for win
BY BUTCH COoPER

StaH writer
MERCERVILLE, Ohio - It seems
the more players Eastern loses to
graduation, the more they have waiting in the wings to help the Eagles
simply reload.
· With the effons of a young squad,
and poor South Gallia shooting, the
Eagles defeated the Rebels, 68-38, in
the season opener for both teams.
Sophomore C¢y Dill, the Eagles'
big post player, led all scorers with I6
points, 10 of which came in the third

quarter.
had I 0.
It was freshman Nathan Cozart
The Rebels, who put up some
who helped the Eagles pull away for strong defense early, struggllid all
good with three fourth-quarter 3- night shooting the ball as they were
pointers as Eastern scored 19 points 15-for-58 (25.9 percent) from the
in the first four minutes of the fourth . floor and 6-for-17 (35.3 percent)
"We pride ourselves an awful lot on from the free throw line.
·
conditioning and I think it paid off in
"We're' not going to beat anybody
the fourth quarter, because I think shooting like that from the free throw
South Gallia got a little bit tired and I line or from the field," said South
think maybe ·we were a little bit Galli a head coach Mitch Meadows.
fresher than they were," said Eastern "We played, at times, really well on
head coach Howie Caldwell.
defense tonight -really, really well.
Cozart fimshed wtth 13 points for There's times where we'd play good
the Eagles (1-0), while Alex Simpson defense and they'd not make the
added II poims, N~than. Grubb· 10 · shots. There's times we got open
and Brent Buckley wtth mne.
shots and didn't make them." ·
Jason Merrick led the Rebels (0-1)
The Eagles, on the other hand, were
with 14 points, while Josh Waugh 18-for-23 · (78.3 percent) shooting

11.

Mount Union also scored
on special teams in the first
quarter when Chris Kern fell
on a blocked punt. in the end
· zone for a 14-0 lead.
Pugh rushed for I6 I yards
and had 275 all-purpose
yards.
Rob Adamson was 15-of28 for 265 yards and a touch. down throw to Randell
· Knapp, who finished with
· I33 receiving yards.
Price ran for 78 yards and
two touchdowns for the
Thunder.
Mount Union is chasing its
third straight national championship and its seventh in 10
years. It has won 39 ·straight
games, best in the NCAA.

WVU edges
James Madison
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) Drew Schifino
scored 18 points and freshman Kevin Pittsnogle added
I7 as West Virginia (2' I) beat
James
Madison
70-67
Saturday.
James Madison had a
chance to force overtime
when Pittsnogle missed a free
throw with I 3.3 seconds
. remaining.
The Dukes got the rebound
and set up their final shot, but
David Fanning's desperation·
3-pointer bounced off the rim
as time expired.
Fanning, who scored 29
points in the Dukes' 9 I -7 5
win last year, scored 13 of his
I 5 points in the first half
because the Mountaineers'
defense focused on him in the
second half.
The Dukes (1-1 ), who
made 7-of-12 attempts from
3-point range in tlie first half,
made just 2-of-8 in the second half.
Fanning and Ian Catskill
led the Dukes with 15 points
apiece. Kenny Whitehead
scored 14 and Dwayne
Broyles added 12 for James
Madison.

Providence
fries Ohio

TO

iunba~ limti ·itntilld

Scoreboard, Page 82
Miami, OSU on coiHslon courae, Page 83
Lights out for Wellston, Page 83
Prep football playoffs, Page 84
Outdoors, Page 86

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)
- Maris Laksa scored a
career-high 26 points on 10for- 13 shooting and Ryan
Gomes added 18 points as
Providence defeated Ohio
91-68 on Saturday night.
Sheiku Kabba added 16
points and Tuukka Kotti had
13 points as Providence (2- I)
shot 57 percent.
Brandon Hunter had game
· highs of 28 points and I I
rebounds in the season opener for Ohio (0-1 ), Sunny
Johnson, with I 0 points, was
the only other Bobcat in double figures.
• Laksa scored 22 points in the
· first half, making 8·of-l 0 field
go3Js and connecting on 4-of-5
3-pointers. He scored 14 in the
last 7:57 of the first half in a 3012 run that carried the Friars to
a 5 I -35 lead at halftime.
There were three ties and
three lead changes before
Providence's defensive pressure turned the game around,
forcing
13
first-half
turnovers. Donnie McGrath
had nine of his game-high 13
assists in the first half.
. Hunter continued to carry
the scoring load for the
Bobcats in the second half,
scorhtg I 4 more points, but
the Friars continued•their hot
shootin g and pulled ahead by
1
as many as 29.
.

'
as a

from the charity stripe.
· "We don't spend a great deal of
time in practice on the · shooting free
throws, but when we do, we expect
them to be able to mllke them," said
Caldwell. "Basically, these kids are
not bad shooters."
··,
· The Rebels had made it a eight-·
point game with 2:08 left in the thiiid
quarter following a Waugh basket,
but Dill scored six straight points to
help the Eagles lead 44-32 going into
the fourth.
Eastern went on a I 9-4 ruri to open
the fourth, ending any hopes of a
South Gallia comeback.
"We're a young club," said

Pluse see hal••· B:l

Central.
f.lorid&amp;!
flies bY\
Ohio ~~

'

'

••

Marshall .bowls
over Ball State
BY .JOHN RABY

Associated Press
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- Byron Leftwich fought
through a sore leg and
frigid weather to make
sure Marshall stayed
focused heading into the
Mid-American
Conference championship
game.
Leftwich put himself
back into consideration for
the Heisman Trophy by
throwing for 40 I yards as
Marshall cruised to a 3814 victory over Ball State
on Saturday.
"If Byron Leftwich is
not the best quarterback in
this country, Moby Dick is
still a minnow," said
Marshall
coach ·Bob
Pruett. "For a guy playing
on one-and-a-half legs,
he's something."
· Marshall
(9-2,
7-1
MAC) heads into the
league
championship
game at home next
..Saturday against Toledo.
· The Rockets easily defeated Bowling Green 42-24
· on Saturday night to cap-.
ture the West Division
title. Toledo won the MAC
title in 2001, beating
Marshall, 4 I -36.
Marshall already has
accepted an invitation to the
Dec. 18 GMAC Bowl in
Mobile, Ala., against a team ·
from Conference USA.
After Marshall wrapped
up the East Division title
last week, Pruett's goal
against Ball State (6-6, 44) was to get Leftwich
some Heisman attention.
Leftwich was 35-of-42
and had his fourth 400yard game this season
despite limping on a sore
left shin injured on Nov. 2.
He set a conference
record with II ,408 career
yards in total offense, surpassing the Il,08! set by

Please see Herd, 13

BY MIKE 8RANOM

• ••

Associated Press

• ••

Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich, center, throws through the Ball State' defense dur·
lng the first half Saturday at Marshall Stadium in Huntington, W.Va. (AP)

Backyard
Brawl
'

ORLANDO, Fla. - Rya~
. Schneider threw four touch:
down passes to Doug Gabriel
and ran for another score as
Central Florida beat Ohio 42-~2
Saturday fur a fourth straight
victory.
UCF (7-5) went 6-2 in its fu:si
year in the Mid-American
Conference
and finished
second in
East
the
Division.
Schneider
was 17-of28 for 325 yards if! his seventh
300-yard game of the year. He
also set the school's single-season records with 31 TO passes
and 3,770 yards passing. Daunte
Culpepper threw for 28 touchdowns and 3,690 yards in I 998.
Gabriel had seven catches for
I 79 yards, including scoring
plays covering 24, 35, 34 and 50
yards. It was the first time in
nine years a UCF player caught
four TD passes in a game.
Alex Haynes rushed for 151
yards on a season-high 27 car- ,
ries, including · a nine-yard
touchdown run.
Ohio (4-8, 4-4) was led by .·
quarterback Fred Ray, who completed 13 of 18 passes for a season-best 210 yards and a score.
Ray also ran for 43 yards,
including a !-yard TD sneak
late in the third quarter that
brought the Bobcats within 28•
26. The 13-play, 81-yard scor:
ing drive was kept alive when a
pass interference. penalty negated an interception. Ohio's 2· •
point con version run feU short
after the score.
UCF then gained some
breathing
room
with
Schneider's !-yard dive for · a
35-26 lead with I :04 remaining
•
in the third quarter.

.

Turnovers costly for Pitt
as WVU wins the Brawl
. . Bv

ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press
PITTSBURGH - · West Virginia turned
two Rod Rutherford turnovers into touchdowns and the No. 24 Mountaineers, possibly headed to the Gator Bowl , held off No.
17 Pittsburgh 24-17 Saturday.
Led by Rasheed Marshall 's playmaking
and Avon Cobourne's running, · the
Mountaineers (9-3 , 6- I in Big East) completed a remarkable turnaround from a 3-8
season, secured at least second place in the
Big East and beat their Backyard Brawl
rival for the first time in three years.
.Marshall, a former Pittsburgh high school
·star, ran for a touchdown, threw for another and set up a score with a 25-yard reception as West Virginia beat Pitt for the eighth
time in II years.
The Mountaineers likely will play North

_ ___ .._.. '•
,.

~

.

Carolina State in the Gator Bowl on Jan. I, ·
with Pitt now ticketed for the Continental
Tire Bowl in Charlotte.
And the Panthers (8-4, 5-2), denied their
first nine-win season in 20 years, can blame
only themselves for losing before the
biggest crowd to see a Pitt home gaine in 64
years.
·
.
With the score tied at I0, Pitt turned the
ball over on three consecutive possessions
late in the second quarter arid early in the
third, and West Virginia capitalized on the
mistakes to surge to a 24-10 lead . . ·
Even then, Pittsburgh had a chance to
send the game into overtime, driving from
its own 7 to the West Virginia 14 as time
wound down. But Rutherford was sacked
on first down, then threw three consecutive
incompletions into the end zone. He had
Larry Fitzgerald open on third down, but West Virginia quarterback Rasheed Marshall , left, runs away
from Pittsburgh defensive lineman Claude Harriott in the fourth
Please see Brawl, B:l
quarter as West Virginia beat Pittsbu rgh. (AP)
··-

··-,,- - - - --

·-·-'-

~

.

.

�Page 82 • &amp;unlliJp QI:imn ·itmtind

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

OHSAA State CMmplonshlps
DMSIONI
AI-

-..eoneon

Cin. Elder 21 , Wamln H.OOO 19, C...
Elder wins Slale cllam!&gt;O&gt;nship

DMSIONI

,.._, 8 , _ Tiger Stodlum,
liMon
no

Day. ChamiMde-Julienne 41 vs.
Macedonia Nordonia 26, Chaminade·

Julienne wins Division 11 ~
ll!VISIOI!I •
At Poul T1gor Stodlum, ·
Moulllon

Cots. Watterson 28. Cle. Benedictine 7.,
Cols. Watterson wins Division m state
championship
.
DIVISION IV
At Pllul Brown Tiger stadium,
Moulllon
l&lt;entoo 45 , Portsmouth Wesl 13, 1&lt;entoo
wins Division IV championship
DIVISIONV
A t - S - m. Canbl
Marton Pleasant 33, Smithville 18,
M"arion Pleasant wins Dfviston V state
~ip
.
DIVISION VI
A I - Stodium, Canbl
~adore 27, ~ _ Hardin Northern 7,
~dore wins Division VI championship

WVSSAC State Playoffs
CION AM
First round
George Washington 63, Hurricane 19
Martinsburg 48, Spring Vdey 13
Morgantown 52, 'Woodrow Wilson 0

Par1&lt;ersburg So. 32, Wheeling Par1&lt; 6
Princeton-14, North Marion 7

Ripley 26. Buckhannon-UpShur 14
Riverside 41 , Raben C. Byrd 15
Universily 2C, CebeU Midland 14, OT
s-.diVUnd
Martinsburg 36, Geolge Wasllinglon 14
Morgantown 12, UnM!rsity 7
Parkersburg SOulh 9, PrinceiOn 8
Riverside 47, Ripley 14

SemHinolo

s.tum.,•o Gomeo

.

Moqjantown 19, Riverside 14
. Partcersburg South 24, MartinsbJrg 221
ChM&gt;plonohlp

Solum_,. Doc. 7

No. 1 Morgantown { 13·0) v. No. 6
Par1&lt;ersburg Soulh (12·1 ). noon

c ..uAA

First round

Blueflefd 63. Webst8r County 6
Franldort 48, Berkeley Springs 0
Herbert Hoover 13, Bridgeport 6
James Monroe 18, Braxton County 0
Keyser 42, Iaeger 6
Poca 24 . Oak Iiiii Ia
Ravenawood 20, Uberty Raleigh 0
Wayne 20, Mounl VIew 12
s-.dRound
Bluefield 3, James Monroe 0
Keysor 34, Aave'nawood 28
Poca t 5, Herbert Hoover 12
Wayne 22, Frankfort 6
Semlllnlllo

195, sr.; Stuart Beisner, Ansonia . ~ . 170,
ar.: Tommy Lee, Mogadore. 6-2, 230. sr.:
OWl Ooebereiu~w. Watertor:d, 5-10, 178, sr.;
Ty Parko, · Soli, 160, soph., Rafael
Monnquaz, Defiance Ayersville, 5-3. 160,
sr.; ArOy Peterton. Loui'Jille, 6-2, 200,
or.: - ~ Cuyahoga His.. «Kl.
178, sr. Klc:ilet's-Geor Biddle, Colh .. 6-3, 180, or.: Chris While, Notwal&lt;
St Prwi, «Kl, 175, sr.
DEFENSE:
Unerner&gt;-Ously
Hess,
COYingiln, 6-4, 200. or.: Joseph
WIIOW Wood Symmes Yallay, 6-1 , 195, sr.;

-.on.

Josh Pony, Mooooe.W,

~.

254, jr.; Cory

Maag, Colurrbus GrtMI, 5-10, 210. or.: Wliktf!K, Doll HarOO Northe.n, 6-3, 225, jr.
Linebackers-Travis Dreher, St~sburvFranldin, &amp;-1 , 190, y.; ~ KJdc:, DarMie, 59. 140, sr.; Chad Sowers, Sycamore..
Mot'lfitl;, 6-1 , 218, st.; Kyte Fie!:*. Maria
Stein Marion Local, «Kl, 220, sr.: Russel
HefUr/, Wnhlm . 5-11 , 218, sr.; Jason
Schreiber, Cuyanoga His. , 6-2, 205, or.
B~ Toal, Tr&lt;~~~ Christian, 6-1, 185,
sr:: Robert PDcaring, Mogadola. 5-9, 132,
sr.; Stew Patte, Columbus GFOYe, 6-1 , 170,
sr.; Derek Wise. Tfffin caiYen, 5-10, 160, sr.
Punter~vte Aric:k, E. canton, 6-4 , 175, Sf.

Otf80siw
Mogadore.

~of the~

T()ITirTI'f Lee.

OelensiYe ptayeJS of the year: Chad
Sowers, Sycamore ~ Kyle F1ec1&lt;,
Maria St&amp;in Marion Local.
Coaches of the year:·Skip Davis, Marion
Caftt.: lim Hale, Gory-Rawson.
. · s-.d TMnt
OFFENSE:
Ends-Nick
On~tey,
Shadyside, . 5-11 , 170, jr.; Darryl Bird,
Dayton Jefferson, 6-1, 190, sr.; Freddie
Gray, Leetonia, 6-3, 195, sr. Unernen-Steve Lantzer, Strasburg-Franklin, 5-10,
225, sr.: Justin Terry, Millersport, 6-1, 220,
sr.; Kenny Breck~r. Danville, 5-9, 160, sr,;
Mike Young, Columbus Grove, 5-11 , 260.
jr.: Jon sampson, Covington, 5-Z, lBO . sr.:
Andrew Mamula, LoweUville, 6-2, 272, sr.;
C.J. Simpson. Windham, 6-1 , 230, sr.
Quarterbacks-Chad Otte, Maria Stein
MarionLocaJ.~. 175 , sr.; CharleyMotnar,
Mogadore, 6·3. 207, sr. Backs-Stevie
Kernik. Sha~side. 5-10, 192, jr.; Tyler
Brown, Beaitsvil~. 5-8, 150, sr.: Marcus
Wilson, Canal Winchester Harvest Prep, S.
1, 235. sr.: Adam Watton. ~s. Crusaders,
5-7, 110. sr.: Matt Mar11hall, Cin. Country
Cay, 5-11, 205, or.; Jay Reed, Windham, 62, 205, sr.: Jake JacobSen, E. canton, 6-0,
180, sr. Kicker-Mike Baumgarner,
Mechanicsburg, 6-t.ln. sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen-St.,. Payne,
Danville, 8-0, 170, sopll.; Bart Borer, Tiffin
CaM&gt;ri. 6-0, 290, Jr.: Jairod Tirrmons, S.
Cherteslon SE, 6-3, 232, or.: JOiro ChriStian,
Cadarvilk&gt;, ~. 250, sr. ~
Gretchen, Bellaire StJohn, 6-2, 210, or.;
Aie&gt;&lt; Nash, Zanooville Rooocnins, 5-8, 180,
or.; Travis
CorNof ~. 5-11 ,
165, jr.;
Wotefloro, 5-9, 190, sr.
Back&amp;-Aon WOIIaee. llarMIIo, 5-7, 180, jr.:
Jim~Hoboon. -Celh., 5-11,1BO,sr. :
ronger, Marla S1oln Mar'on L.ooal. 510. 165, or.:
Orwick, E. Conlon, 6{),
148. sr.
Cln. Courrtry
Day, 5-11 , 185, or.

e-ns.
Alex.-.

s-

Punier-- -

·

. _ . , Mlolllon

Shayne Rose, Wellsville: Mllrs Solliey.
F~day'aO...,..
Malvern: Brldy
Sharrer, Zlneovlllo
Bluefietd 10. Wayne
. Rosocrana: Joey Crum, Beal~lo: Chad
Poca 21, Keyser 13
Taylor, Bellaire St. John; Craig Wamer,
Clllmplanohlp
Slrasbu~klln; Craig La~ Malvern;
F~.Doc.e
Brandon Adama, Wellsville: M ke Frollnl,
No. 6 Poca (1 ll-3) vs. No. 9 Bluefield (9- Shadyoldo; Jeremy Wollo. New Ma1amoru
4), 7:30p.m.
Frontier: . Greg Dalby, Beallsville: Eric
ClooaA
ZWolln&amp;kl,
Shadyolda:
MaH Joseph,
Fl,.t round
Zanesvlle FIDMKnnl; Danny Reed, New
Greenbrier West 32, Valley Wetzel 6
Mataroorai
Frontier:
Kody Thomu,
Meadow Bridge 28, Wllliamaon 22
Strariburg-Frinldin: Joooe Irwin, Shady&amp;lde;
Moorelleld 47, Midland Trall16
Bobby S.maa, Slladyllde: Zlk Lyon,
Parkersburg Cotholk: 33, Malewan 8
zanesville Roaecrans; Brien Grimm,
South Harrison 12, Wahama 7
Straaburg-Ranldln;
Malvern:
TolsiB 41, OuvBI8
Jer8rr'! Miler, New Malamonll Frontier; Josh
Wheeling Central 51 , Sherman 0
'ltarrtor, •,•,-: Mark l.&amp;Soola, Wallavllle:
Williamstown 46, Valley Fayette 12
Dustin-· MaNom: B e n -·
Socond raund
Brldgepor1: Riehle Ha1haway, Ballalre Sf
Moore(leld 21, Tolsla 6
John: Brandon Holmeo, Shady&amp;lde:
Parkersburg Catholic 20, Greenbrier
Bo Clum, Lancaster Fisher Cath.; Owen
, West14
·
Taylor, Marlon Gath.: Je888 Combs, Milford
Wheeling .Central 29, So~h Harrison 0
Ctr. Falrbanka; Lemar Workman, ·Marlon
Wi lliamstown 19, Meadow Bridge 14
Cath.: Cody Heimerl, Millersport Josh
· s.mnlnolo
Whetstone, Millersport; Ben Barlow, Cols.
SIIUrday'o Gam••
Crusaders; Chris Stoney, Gallon Northmor;
Moorefield 41, Williamstown 7
Nate Slought, MIUersport; Kyle Doup,
Wheeling Central 34, Parkersburg Oanvllle: Brad Mayas, Gallon Nonhmor:
CathOlic 14
Doug Stevena, Newark Cath.;
Chomplonohlp
Brady Rack, Covington; Kurt Esser,
Salur&lt;lay, Doc. 7
Anna ; Jordan" Shafer, Covington: Rob
No. 6 Wheeling Central (11·2) v. No. 4 Castle, Ansonia; len Mclean, Cin. Country
Moorefield (12-1), 7 p.m. ·
Day; Chris Johnson, Dayton Jefferson;
Jimmy Kellar, Troy Christian; SChuyler
Associated Press AII·Ohlo
Lewis, Mechanicsburg; An~ Massie. S.
Charleston SE; Frank Kohstall, Cedarville;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The 2002 Phillip Waller, Cln. Country Day; Josh
Associated Press Division VI AII.Qhlo high Jones, Troy Christian; Aaron Wynn,
school football team, based on the recom- Mechanicsbur~ ; Josh Caner, Anna;
Drew Lohman, Hamiel Patrick Henry:
mendations of a state media pan81:
Joe W8ber, Hamler Patrick Henry; Charlie
DIVISION VI
Kelly, Holgate; Bran Wilhelm, Fremont St.
AratTaam
OFFENSE: Ends-Justin Davis, Milford Joseph; T.J. Brooks, Arlington; Nathan
Center Fairbanks, 6-foot-5, 195 pounds, Stein, Sandusky St. Mary's; Andrew
Calvert;
James
Tiffin
sr.; Craig Wolters, Maria Stein Marlon Reinhart,
l ocal, 6-1, 170, sr.; Mike Aoth, Mogadore, Blankenship, Tol. Northwood; Kenton
6· 2, 183, sr. Linemen-Jon Tobin , Reichley, Cory· Rawson; Dan Otte, Maria
Lancaster Fisher Cath., 6·3, 290, sr.; Kory Stein Marion Local; Dustin MoiT, Edon;
· .Lichten stelger, Convoy Crestview, 6·4, Blaine Maag , Columbus Grove; Scott
265, sr.; Eric Barbour, Newark Cath., 6·2, Garman, Maria Stetn Marion Local; Kane
230, sr.; Bran Thames, Dola Hardin Faber, Sycamore Mohawk; Aick Crispen,
Northam , 6-3, 235, sr.; Jason SchUlte, Tol. Northwood; Luke Niese, Cary-Rawson ;
Maria Stein Marion Local, 6·4, 240, sr.; corey Guttenberg, New. Wash. Buckeye
Biyan Krabach, S. Charleston SE, 6-1. Cent. ; Eric Ames, Monroeville; . Man
232, sr. Qaarterbacks-Marc Baugher, Stookey, Sandusky St. Mary's; Jack
Ttffin Calve rt 5·7, 160, sr.; Lance Zink, Fensler, Ada: Jason Bormuth, CoryCuyahoga His., 6-4, 180, sr. Backs-Tyler Rawson; Brett Diehl, Hicksville; Levi
Dreher, Strasburg-Franklin, 5·11 , 185, sr.; Orsbon, Convoy Crestview; Kyle Roush ,
Drew Snow, Oola Hardin Nonhern , 5-11 , Sycamore Mohawk; Matt Price, Oola

o

Scott-·

Brawl

Virs inia's spread offense and
behmd the Pitt secondary to
catch backup quanerback
Danny Embick's throw to the
from Page 81
5.
Coboume, who gained 104
the receiver slipped just as yards in his third I 00-yard
the ball arrived and it glanced game in four years against
off his hands.
Pitt, scored two plays later.
Marshall , doing what he
Rutherford was intercepted
couldn "t do in three high again, by Brian King, just
school tries by beating a before halftime. But his
Rutherford-led team, didn't biggest mistake was an errant
throw often but was effective pitch early in the third quarter
when he did. He was 5-of-9 that struck fullback Lousaka
for 123 yards, hitting Phil Polite in the helmet. with Ben
Braxton for 29 yards to set up Collins recovering.
Cobourne's 2cyard scoring
Pitt had driven from its 34
run and Braxton again for 79 to the West Virginia' IS, all on
yards for the score that made running . plays,
befo~e
It 24-JO.
Rutherford's 20th and poss1Rutherford's first mistake, bly costliest turnover of the
an interception he threw season.
directly into Angel Estrada's
Pitt, which took No. I
hands, gave West Virginia the Miami to the final play
ball at 1ts own 36. Two plays before losing 28-21 in its prelater, Marshall hit Braxton vious game, needed just six
for a first down at the Pitt 30, plays to open a 7-0 lead on
then slipped out of West

Eagles
from Page 81
Caldwell. "So, what we've
got to do is we've got to
maintain a cenain level for
32 minutes. As soon as we
maintain that, we'll be a pret·
ty good club." .
Eastern had opened · the
game taking a I 0-0 lead and

:i;lunbap '0::1mes -Htinrl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

College Football

Scoreboard
Prep Football

.

Sunday,
December 1 2002
,

Hardin Northern; Drew Walter, carey:

Cirldnnati al Carolina. 1

Mike Wagner,
MoQadora: Steve
Sylvester, Soulhlnglon Chatkar: Justin

Allanla at Tampa Bay,

Juoo Weihraucl1. Oola Har&lt;lin Northern:
~

McOonlld: Ben-LD •IMIIB:
Tony Marstiler, Winclwn; Greg t..awr.tt,
~e: Joe · E. Ca1ton: Slew
Carthedi, Lowellville: Niclc _ , . . . ,
~ : Marl&lt;
McOonlld; K'lle

er-.

~ ~ Qan Jotln,
E. Cal'*ln: , _ , Sm.mochor, Mogodoio:
Adam Hughes, Voonna Mall-.; StOYO
Orwi:X, E. CankJn; Lae Ked(, ..JIOsoi t tillar.;

-

.b!!f Jenkins.

~:

p.m.

~81-.l p. m.

I p.m.
Arizona, 4:05p.m.
f'llilodelpl1ia al Seattle, 4:05 p.m.
New Ofleans at Baltimon!l, 4:05 p.m.
~at

Denver al N.Y. Jets,.4:15 p.m.
Oaldand ar San Diego, 4:15p.m. .
Minnesota at Green 88';. 8:30 p.m.
Mondoy, Dec. •
Chicago at Miami. 9 p.m.

Pro Football

o

Prep Basketball

Rutherford's 32-yard scoring
pass to Fitzgerald, who made
.11 catches for 159 yards and
two touchdowns.
West Virginia answered
with Marshall's 19-yard
touchdown run and Todd
James' 42-yard field goal
before David Abdul kicked a
33-yarder for Pitt.
·
The much-maligned Heinz
Field turf, resodded for the
third time this year eadier in
the week, held up well and
didn't seem to be a factor.
The announced crowd of
66,731 was the second. largest in Pitt history, topped
only by the 68,918 for
Fordham at Pitt Stadium i,n
1938. It' also was the largest
in Heinz Field ~s two-year his·
tory, although there were
many more em'pty seats than
for the Patriots·Steelers AFC
championship
game
in
January, when 64,704 attend·
ed.

turned it into a 16-2 advanSouth Gallia plays host to
tage with the assistance of Piketon Thesday, while Eastern
entertains River Valley.
South Gallia turnovers.
The Rebels would fight
It will be the season opener
back to make it an 18-12 for the Raiders.
game early in the second
n In the junior varsity
game, Raben Cross scored
quarter.
"I was pleased with our effon 10 points, while Derek Baum
after the first three minutes of and Josh Hayman each added
the game," said Meadows. 'We nine as Eastern won 40-33 .
didn 't panic. We dug a big hole
Andrew Chapman and
for ourselves and got back iniO David Bayless each had II
it."
points for .the Rebels.

4-5 10. Cilopnwll I}{) 2, ~
L - 1 ll-2 2, Josh Moniclc 6 1).2 14. Teddy
For1nef 0 1·2 1, ll&lt;andon eo- 31).{) 6 ,
Zoph Clary 1 Hi3. 101'ALS-158-1731.

J.polnt -

-

-

4 (Cozort 3.

College Basketball

College Football

cn;o!i ·

sount GAU.JA c••) - Jooh wa.q,3

Grullb 1), SG 2(Merrlcl&lt;2).

Mike Krimmel , Cuyahoga His .; Brian
Pille, Lorain Cath.; Jason Trivisonno,
Top 25 Schedule
Kirtland; Tim Kiedrowski, L~in Cath.;
Frtct.y'a Glime.
Anthony Miller. lorain Cath.: Man
No. to Texas
Texas A&amp;M 20
Kretc:Mcs, Lorain Cath.; E~ Johnson,
No. 13 Cotorado 28, Nebraska 13
Kirtland;
Aob
Minello,
Thompson
Arkansas 21. No. 18 LSU 20
Lodgemonl: Frank Bo&lt;~r. Fairport Ha-=
Todoy'o Gomee
Sam Hess. Fairport Harbor'; Ryan Jlpvis,
No. t Miami 49. Syracuse 1'
Lorain Calh.: Adam Sod&lt;el, Lorain Calh.;
Oklahoma State 38, No. 3 Oklahoma 28
Mike Rizer, Thompson Ledgemont;
No. 5Georgia51 , GeorgiaTech7
Dominick McCreary, 'Newbury; Brendan
No. 6 Southern California vs. No. 7 Notre
McNicholas, Kirtland: Matt SokSat, Dame, &amp;ate
C1,1yahoga Hts.; Ron Hibbard, Fairport
No. 14 .'Jabama at Hawaii, late
Harbor; Pete Dunphy, Lorain Csth.; J.J.
No. 15 FlOrida a' No. 23 Florida State,
Socausky, Cuyahoga
Hts.;
Kevin late
~. Fairporl Harbor: Chase Szenle,
IJNLV 36, No. 16 Colorado Slate 33
Lorain Cath.; Derek Schultz, Thompson
No. 2" West Virg inia 24, No. 17
Ledgemonl; Josh Notte, Ashtabula Sts. Pillsburgh 17
John &amp; Paul; Chris Day, Newbury; Cody
No. 22 Vi rginia Tech 21 . Virginia 9
Kapostasy,
Fairport
Harbor;
Matt
No. 25 Maryland 32, Wake Forest 14
Oobfzeniecki. KirUand; Cofy Cline, LOf8in
Colh.: Ben SUszynski, FairpOn H . -;
Anoclated Prell Top 25
Travis Barth, Waterlord; R.J. Andrews,
-They FoNd
Glouster Trimble: JASON MERRICK.
How the top 25.teams in The Associated
CROWN CITY S. GALI.IA: A.J. Jenkins. Pross' college loolball poll farad Friday:
Glouster TrYnble; Jinmy Moore, Franklin . No. t Miami (11-(J) def. Syracuse, 49--7.
Furnace Green·: Michael Roth. ~l,low Ne.wt: vs. No. 22 VWglnia Tech, ')ec. 7.
Wood Symmes Valley : Wayne m ith ,
No. 2 Ohio State (13-0) did ClOt play. Next:
Warertord:
Joe
Stout. Waterford; Jan. 3, 2003, Fiesta BoWl, Tempe, Ar)z.
ANTHONY LANE, CROWN CITY 5.
No. 3 Okiahoma (10.2) lost to Oklahoma
GALUA; ZACK LEE, CROWN
Slale, 38-28. Next v. No. 13 Colorado, Big
GAWA; Nathan Pinkenon. WilkrN
12 championship, Dec. 7.
Symmes Valley : Sean Wainwright,
No. 4 Iowa {11 · 1) did not play. Next: TBA.
Watertord: Alan Lanning, Glouster Trimble;
No. 5 Georgia (11· 1) clef. Georgia Tech,
Joe Makten, Ports~outh East; Bruce s 1-7. Next: v. Artc.ansas, SEC champiFouts, Glouster Tnmble; Brett Enz, onship, Dec. 7.
. PQnsmoulh East: Drew Hunt, ~ltow Wood
No. 6 Soulhern Colifomia (9·2) vs. No. 7
Symmes Valley; amy lee, Waterford; Jaccb Notre eame, late.
Bowman. Portsmouth Notre Dame.
No. 1 Notre Dame ~ 1().. 1) at No. 6
Southam California, late.
No. 8 Kansas State (lll-2) did nol play.
NeKI: TBA.
No. 9 .Washington State (9-2) at UCLA,
National Football Laague
Saturday. Dec. 7.
AFC
No. 10Texas (10--2) beat Texas A&amp;M 501;111
2() . Next vs. TBA.
W L T Pet PF PI\
No. 11 Pan.n Stale (9-3) did riot play.
Mlaml. ....... .......7 4 o .638 266 190
Next TBA.
·
New En~land .. 7 5• 0 .583 303 251
No. 12 Michigan (9·3) did not play. No&gt;ci:
N.V. Jets .........6 5 0 .545 235 243
TBA.
Buffalo ............ 5 8 0 .455 277 317
No. 13Colorado (9-3) del. Nebraoke. 28Soutll
13. Next va. No. 3 Oklahoma, Big 12 cham·
W L T Pet PF PI\
plooship, Dec. 7.
lndlanapoiiB .... 7 4 o .638 238 203
No. 14 Alabama (9-3) al Hawaii, .late.
Tennessee ...... e 5 o .545· 243 258
NoKI: TBA
Jackaonvllte .... 5 8 0 .455 233 208
No. 15 Florida (8-3) at l'!o· 23 Florida
Hou810n .......... 3 8 o .273 154 269
State, tale. Noxi: TBA.
North
No. 16 Colorado Slate (IQ-3) los1 1o
W · L T Pet PF PI\
UNLV, 36·33.- Naxt. TBA.
Pltlsburgh ....... 6 4 1 .591 278 248
No. 17 Pittsburgh (~) 1os11o No. 24
Cleveland .......6 5 0 .545 256 230
Wesl Virgini a, 24-17. Next: TBA.
Baltlmore ........ 5 8
.455 197 227
No. 18 LSU (6-4) lostlo Ar1&lt;ansas 21·2C.
Clnclnnatl ....... l 10 0 .091 181 308
NeKI: TBA.
WM1
No. 19 Boise State (11-1) did n01 play.
W L T Pet PF M
Next vs. TBA, Humanitarian Bowt, Dec. 31 .
Oenver ............ 7 4 o .636 288 238
No. 20 Auburn (8·4) did not play, Next:
Oaklond .......... 7 4 0 .838 328 236
TBA.
S.n Otego ...... 7 4 0 .838 233 236
No. 21 North Carolina State (IQ-3) did
Kanou Clly .... S 8 0 .455 321 312
not play. Next vs . TBA, Gator Bol\1, Jan. 1.
NFC
No. 22 VIrginia Tech (9·3) del. VIrginia,
Eut
21·9. NeJCt at No. 1 Miami.
W L T Pet 'PF PA
No. 23 Florida Stale (8-4) vs. No. 15
Plll..delphlo.... 8 3 0 .727 310 184
Florida, late. Noxi:TBA.
N.Y. Giants ..... 8 5 0 .545 173 185
.No. 24 West VIrginia (9-3) del. No. 17
Oallu ............. S 7 0 .417 166 214
P!tlaburgh, 24-17. Next: TBA.
Waslllngton .... 5 7 o .417 219 280
No. 25Maryland(11l-3)dei. WakeForesl,
South
32·14. Next: TBA .
· W L T Pel PF PA
TampaBay ..... 9 2 0 .816 247 126
lllturday'oGomoo
Atlanta ............ 7 3 1 .682 266 187
EAST
Now Orleana •. 7 4 0 .636 322 281
Boston College 44, Rutgers 14
Caronn·a.......... 3 8 0 .273 145 215
Fordham 29, Northeastern 24
North
Miami 49, Syracuse 7
W L T Pet PF PA
Villanova 45, Furman 38
Green Bay ...... 8 3 0 .727 295 230
West Virginia 24, Pittsburgh 17
Chicago ... ....... 3 8 0 .273 218 270
MIDWEST
Minnesota ...... .3 8 0 .273 254 302
CincinnaU 31, UAB 23 .
Detrolt., ...........3 9 o .250 215 331
W. Illinois 48. E. Illinois 9
Wool
•
SOUTH
W a,. T Pet PF PA.
Georgia 51 , G~orgia Tech 7
S!r1 Fnn::isco .....7 4 0 .636 254 235
Georgia
Southern
34, BethuneStllxia .......... ~ ... 5 6 o .455 232 Z32
Cookman 0
Ariztn:t ...-...... ~ ... .4 .7 o .364 190 264
Maine 14, Appalachian St. 13
&amp;dle....._..........:.4 7 o .364 220 249
Marshall 38, Ball St. 14
Thurt&lt;twt'• 01mu
Maryland 32, Wake Forest 14
New En~land 20. Detrolt12 ·
Middle Tennessee 45, Utah St. 28
Dallas 27, Washington 20
Southern Miss . 24, East carolina 7
Tod1y'1 G•m•
Southern U. 48, Grambling St. 24
Miami at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Tennessee 24, Kentucky 0
Chicago al Green Bay, 1 p.m.
UCF 42, Ohio 32
Tennessee at N. v. Giants, 1 p.m .
Virginia Tech 21 , VIrginia 9
Arizona al Kansas City, 1 p.m.
W. Kentucky 59, Murray $t. 20
Balllmore al Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
SOUTHWEST
Carolina al Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Houston 27, Louisville 10
Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
Oklahoma St. 38, Oklahoma 28
Atlanta at Minnesota, 1 p,m.
TCU 27, Memphis 20
Houston al"lndlanapotis, 4:Q5 p.m.
FAR WEST
Denver at San Diego, 4:05p.m.
Montana 45, Northwestern St. 14
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 4:15p.m.
New MeJCico 49, Wyoming 20
Seanle at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
· UNLV 36, Colorado St. 33
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m:
Monday'• Game
N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 9 p.m.
Sundl)', Dec. 8
Eastern 68, South Gallla 38
Houston at PiHsburgh, 1 p.m.
Eestern ........... 16 14 14 24 66
San Francisco at Dallas. 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Washington, 1 p.m.
Soulh Gallla...... 7
9 16 . 6 38
EASTERN (HI) -Jason Kimes 1 4·4 8,
Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m.
Nathan Cozarl 5 D-O 13, Nathan Grubb 4
St. Louis at Kansas City, 1. p. ~ .
.... 1-2 10, Alex _Simpson 2 7-8 11 , Adam
lndiana!X)II&amp; at Tennessee, 1 p.m.

so.

Oilt,p:l 0 1·2 1, lltent But:ldey 3 3-4 9,
llrohOon Worry II}{) 2 , Cody Oil7 2-3 15.
'I01'ALII - 23 18-23 ...

Men
SelUrdey"o EAST

Boston u. 65. Oartmoulh 53
. Brown 97, Navy 92, OT
Canitlius 89, Niagara 69
Colgate 92. Hol&gt;art 56
~ 73, Monrnoutll , N.J. 56
Fairleigh Dlckinlon 91, Mor!lan St 75
Fla. lnlemalional 68, Prince1on 65. OT
Geo&lt;gotown 81 , Towson 52
Harlfold 70, Oolawaro St 57

56, Stony Brook 45
Uberty 60, New Hampshire 70
Marist 97, La Sella BO

Harvanl

Nortt'leastern 99 , Fordham 75
Pillsburgh 89. Ari&lt;·Pine Blutl4!1
Providence 92, Ohio 68
Saint Louis 56, Sl. Bonaventure 54
Siena 69, N. Iowa 58
St. John's 81 , Fairfield 68
West VIrginia 70, James Madison 67

sount

Campbell 65, Co8stal carolina 49.
Charleslorr Southern 68, SteiSOn 62
Davidson 105, Washington &amp; Lea 48
East Carol ..a 66, WUIIam &amp; Mary 51
Eton 68, Md.·Eastem Shore 64
Florida A&amp;M 68, Alabama Sl. 67
Georgia Soulhern 112. North Georgia 65
Georgia Sl. 95, St. Andmw's BO
Maryland 89, Ouquesoe 39
·
Miami 91 . Savannah Sl 57
Mississippi 56, George Mason 49
Miosinippl Sl. 100. Jad&lt;lonville 65
Monlhoad St 100, Asiuy 54
N.C. State 58, Coppin Sl37
N.C.·~Im i nglon 78. ETSU 57
Radlord 67, N. Corolina A&amp;T 58, OT
Richmond 64, Charlolle 60, OT
South Carolina 71 , Appalachian St. 56.
Tr&lt;~~~ St. 95, Upscomb
UNC-Greonsboro 70, Middle Tenn. 58
W. Carolina 94, Southeastern, Aa . 55
Wagner 80. VB. Commonwealth 72

n

MIDWEST
Akroo 88, Oakland, Mlcll. 84
Bowling Green 91, Tiffin 57
.
Buder 71, Ball St·. 45
Calllornla 73, Cleveland Sl. 84, OT
DePaul 92, COni. Michigan 56
Duke 84, UCLA 73
lnd.·Pur.·FI. Wayne 76, E. Kanlucky 69
Iowa 84, Tennessee St. 51
Kent Sl. 88. SW Missouri Sl. 84, OT
Minnesota 72, Georgia 69
Missouri 81 , Austin Paay 48
Northwestern 59, Kansas St. 55
NOire Dame 90, Albany, N.Y. 55
Puroue 66. Louis-'ll• 64
Valparaiso 78, N. llllnois &amp;7
W. Mk:hl~an 56, Michlgen 52
Wisconsin 69, ~s. -Groen Bay 52
Wright Sl. 51, Miami (Ohio) 48·
Youngstown St. 69, Toledo 61

,

SOUTHWEST
Ark.•Uttle Rock 84, Colorado Sl. 75
Baylor 62, Houston 60
Lamar 94. Te&gt;caa A&amp;M·Corpus Chrlsll 76

Oklsllome 75, Prairie VIew 83
Texas 78, Seton Halt 61
Texas A&amp;M 79, LSU
Texas-ArUnglon 81, Texas Wesleyan 65
Tulsa 6 t, Arkansas 60

n

FAR WEST

Arizona st. 85, Lafayette 82
Denver 69, E. washington 48
Southern Cal 93, Monis Brown 54 .

TOURNAMENT
Co!TIISofeway Grill Alooluo Shootout
Filth Ploce
Wyqmlng 72,.Loyola Marymounl65
SevenlhPioce
Alaska-Anchorage 69, Montana 52
Holllro/Wingollllnn Holiday
TOUI'RI,nMI
First Round
Holstra 63, Lehigh 50
Quinnlpiac 72, Texas-Pan American 62
Rod Auerblch Colonlol Clonic
ThlrdPioce
Mount St. Mary's, Mel. 57, Columbl4 48
Unlvenlty Hoope C....lc
. Third Round
UCF 72, Moine 55
.
Wis.-Milwaukee 71 , Indiana· St. 59

Women
Salurday'l Gomeo
EAST
Anierican U. 68, lana 64
Canlsius 65, UMBC 53
Cent. Connecticut St. 62, Lamar 32
Duquesne 75, Robert Morris 58
Manhattan 58, De~ware 43
New Hampshire 76, Dartmouth 68
Saint Joseph's 58. Boslon U. 45
South Carolina 54, Boston College 51
Tennessee 96, Army 44
Yale 74. Lafayene 49
SOUTH
Centenary 76, McNeese St. 69 ·
Chattanooga 73, Alabama St. 55
High Poin159, Campbell 58
Jacksonville St. 85, Alabama A&amp;M 79
MVSU 78, Tuskegee 68
Mississippi 91 , Morgan Sl. 47
N.C. Charlotte 78, S. Carolina St. 55
N.C.-AshevHie 81 , N. Carolina A&amp;T 62
Old Domlnldl'l 90: Hampton 54.

St t.ouil90. Puerto~ 32
Samfold 70, Morris Brown 50
UCF 76, Nicltolls SL 55
Vorginia 57. Long totand U. 46

~
Bradley 83, Loyola ol ~ 59
Cincinnati 79, Midcle Tartllassee 59

c-

N. Illinois 78. San Jooe Sl. 72
Niagara 73,
St 71
North T81&lt;11S 66. ~c •1
S. IllinOis 70, T......... Tech 68

Francis. Pa. 64, ~ 62

Sr.

valparaiSO 91. Concordia. w... 48

SOIIIMWEST

.

Alal&gt;ama 69, Stephen F.Austin 56
Duke 74, ArkanSaS 72, OT
Oral Roberts 110, Upocoml&gt; 62
sw Texas 62, Aloom St 51
Tulsa 70, Toxas·Pan American 35
WiChita Sl. 63. T,....San Anlonlo 54

FAll WEST
Arizona 70, Georgia 49
BYU 51, Weber St.•l

TOURNAMENT

ASU Holiday Cllulc

1111nl-

OklahOma SL 68, Portland Sl 51

-~~~~--.. c-

s-.ciRound
~So. Hawaii 53
DePaul 92, Fordl\am 73
A.ttant. lhrrlotl Hoi thweet CIUalc ·
ThlniArkansas S.l. 63, ETSU 48

ChlmploMhip
Georgia Tech 78, Miami (Onlo) 62
Auburn Thonltoglvlng CIUalc
ThlrdP._
Jacl&lt;son St. 76. Florida A&amp;M 63

CltamploMhip
Auburn 77, Betmont 59
Chrtllmlo City Clanlc
First Round
Belt St. 98. TerW!. ·Martin 61
Lehigh 79, COrnell 57
Coca&lt;olo Chlrlty Clalllc
Flnt Round
Georgetown 79, Norlheastorn 66
Holstia 89, Fairfield 70
Cooro Rod&lt;y llounllln lnvi11flonol
Third. Davidson 71, Louisiana-Monroe 59

Dead ~~- Co. Cllulc
Third-

Drake 75, Brown 67
Clllmplonohlp
Montana 66, Maine 56
Flnt Ten.,..... Toum1ment
FlmRound
Harvaro 69, Coni. Michigan 58
Vonderbi~ 91 , Youngstown St. BO

Fre1no St CIUIIC
Third Pl...
Murray St. 73, But1er 59
Clllmplonohlp
Fresno St. 59, &amp;an Otago St 49
Golden PlnlherT111nltogl¥1n~
Tourney
ThlrdPioce
VIrginia Tech 72, Washington St. 50
Cllomplonohlp
LSU 68. Fla. International 54
Holiday Inn Mountllln Yllw lnv.
ThlniPI ...
Cha~eaton Soulhern 59, Jackaonvllle 54

Conoolotlon Brocltll
UC Irvine 70, William &amp; Ma!)' 67
Champlonohlp
N.C.·WIImington 74. Fur"'''n 58
lllondei'CII. .IC
Third Pl ...
Loutalana·Lafayane 67, MiBIOurl59
John AICUitii'O Nuggot Cl-lc
Flm flound
Oaylon 73, E. M~higan 88
E. Waahlng1on 54, Nevada 51
LMU Thonltaglvlng CIIUIC
Third flound
Iowa 83, South Alabama 62
Lady Tiger Cl-lc
tlltrd Pt ...
Tennessee St. 79, Mercer 65
Clllmplonohlp
Mompllla 59, Mlchl~an St. 58
Onoldl Culno Holiday Touma1111nt
Third Pl...
SE Mloaourl93. Qulnnlplac 87, 20T
Pepponllno Holiday
o.o lc
Third PISt. John's 75, Texas-Arllngron 71 , OT
RazeWV.com Hoopa B11h
Third PlaCI
Troy St. 53, Akron 51
Clllmplonohlp
Weal VIrginia 82, C~ St. 53
Flutgero Cac
1 Clo•lc
Ftrot Round
Northwestern 68, Richmond 65
Rutgers 70, Wagner 41
S.lltle Tlmoo Cloulc
ThlrdPioce
Pacific 61, St. Bonaventure 42
Stonlanllnvllll1tonol
.
Third PIICI
Temple 70, Princeton 40
TeiTapln CIIIIIC
Third Place
Md.-Eastern Shore 79, F,llder 75
·
Chomplonohlp
Rhode Island 70, Maryland 64
U.S. Air Force Academy Tournament
Third Place
Winthrop 71, New Orleans 64
Chomplonohlp
Minnesota 88, Air Force 75
UNCG Merriott Cle ..lc
Third Place
Loyola, Md. 73, Howard 70
\
Champtonahlp
UNC-Greensboro 85, East Carolina 62
· UNLV Tournament
First Round
U.CLA 62 , Norlhweslern St. 74
UNLV 74, UTEP 61

c..

GET APPROVED!

Miami, Ohio State showdown still on track
'Canes win 33rd
straight game,
one away from
Fiesta Bowl

Tech in Miami next week, the second half, hitting Andre
·'Canes ( 11 -0, 6-0 Big East) Johnson for 68 yards to the
will finish No. I in the Bowl Syracuse 2 to set up
Championship Series stand· Quadtrine Hill 's 2-yarrl TD
ings, setting up a showdown run. That gave Miami a 28· 7
against No. 2 Ohio State (13- lead.
0) for the national title in
"They didn't overlook us,"
Tempe, Ariz., on Jan. 3.
Syracuse tight end . Joe
SYRAC USE. N.Y. (AP) M1ami's
quick-strike · Donnelly said.
The Miami Hurricanes nee·d· o"ense
gave the Hum·canes a
The ' Canes even scored on
"'
ed a victory to move a step 21-0 lead early in the second a fake punt late in the founh,
closer to defending their quarter, and the ' Canes which elicited boos from the
· a! tit
· 1e. And they need· cruised from there. McGahee remaining fans in the Carrier
natton
ed a big margin to answer gave them the lead on the sec- Dome. But the Orangemen
their many doubters.
ond play from scrimmage, had no gripe.
"It's something they probaMiami RB Willis McGahee running 61 yards down the
had 139 yards and 2 TDs right s•de for the touchdown. bly felt they had to get on film
today.
That gave him 20 rushing for other teams. to see,''
Paul
The top-ranked ' Canes touchdowns, 1,737 all-pur- Syracuse · coach
e mphatically accomplished pose yards and 120 points this Pasqualoni said. " I don't
both
objectives
against season, all school records.
blame them for that at all."
"We wanted to dominate in
It was a record-setting day
Syracuse on Saturday.
Ken Dorsey 'threw for two all phases," Miami defensive for McGahee. His 5-yard run
touchdowns and
Willis end Jerome McDougle said. late in. the first quarter also
. McGahee scored on runs of "When we had them down, gave him a team-record I,419
61 and 51 yards as the we just wanted to keep them yards rushing, eclipsing the
Hurricanes won 49· 7 for their down. We just wanted to keep season mark of 1,416 set by
33rd straight win, the longest playing at a Miami pace. We Edgerrin James in !998.
current streak in Division I-A. didn 't want to pull out just . McGahee, who d1d not. play
This didn't look like the · because we were ahead by 2i m the fourth quarter, fimshed
team that beat Florida State points."
·
with 134 y~s on 14 carries
by a point, Struj;gled early
The Orangemen (4-8, 2·5), to move his season .tota! to
against West Vuginia and who fini shed with their first 1,481. It also was his mnth
Rutgers and hung on to beat. losing season since 1986, 100-yard game of the season,
Pittsburgh 28-21 last week- came in as 20-point under· w~1ch broke the sc~ool reco~d
end.
dogs, and they were no match he d shared _w• th O~tts
"It was a great team perfor· for Miami, which ha&lt;l won the Anderson and Chnton Pon1s.
mance," said Dorsey, who previous two meetings by a · The Orangemen entered the
completed his first 10 passes. combined score of 85-0. . game allowing 296 · yards
"Our offense was chcking,
Still, despite the imposing passing ·a game. ranking them
and that's what we have to do deficit,
the
Orangemen !15th out of 117 I·A teams.
down the stretch. We want to breathed new life into their They proved an easy mark for
build some momentum, upset hopes when Walter Dorsey, who was 12-for-15
because we know we have an Reyes scored on a !-yard run for 229yards in the first half
even more difficult game next 39 seconds before halftime.
alone. He finished 16-of-25
week."
,
Dorsey ended the pipe for 345 yards.
Barring an upset by Vuginia dream on the sixth play of the
The Hurricanes finished

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with 565 yards, averaging 9.3
per play against a defense that
had allowed an average of
551 yards in its previous three
games.
''It was an outstanding perfonnance today," said Miami
coach Lany Coker. who is 230 in two seasons. "We came
up with some huge plays. We
ld • be · be
··
cou n t 10 a tter position
than we ·are now. We control
our own destiny."
Only six Division I-A teams
have had winning streaks
longer than Miami's, but the
streak is the longest since
Toledo's . 35-game run that
ended in 1971. Oklahoma
(1953-57) holds the .Division
I-A record with 47 straight
victories. Miami would need
to remain unbeaten this sea· son and go undefeated next
year to break the mark.
Rarely pressured except for
two sacks, Dorsey calmly
picked apart the . hapless
Orangemen. He hit Ethenic
Sands for a 23-yard TD pass
with 1:OJ left in the; first quarter, then hooked up with
Johnson on a 4-yard scoring
pass with 10:15left in the first
half
.
·
.
Bot.h sconng plays came on
cr?ssmg patterns over the
mtddle . The se.c ond gave
Dorsey and Johnson 18 touch·
down passes together, one shy
of the Miami mark held by
Ymny
Testaverde
and
Mtchael Irvm. Johnson fin·
ished with six catches for 181
yards.

Syracuse tailback Walter Reyes (39) runs into Miami defenders Sean Taylor (26), Alfonso Marshall (25). and D. J. Williams
during the first quarter Saturday in Syracuse. N.Y. (AP)

Prep Basketball

Bearcats keep.bowl hopes
Power outage 'suspends'top alive with win over UAB
high·school player's opener

The schools must decide off an alley-cop pass from the
whether to pick up the game · Co~ch 's son, Dru Joyce Ill.
or leave it unplayed, he said.
- Grabbed a rebound,
Players from both teams turned and led a fastbreak and
were unavailable for com· was fouled, making one of
ment as authorities tried to two free throws.
- Calmly jogged downclear the standing-room-only
. crowd from the 1,700-seat court after . a Wellston
gym.
turnover and swished a threeAKRON , Ohio (AP) LeBron James can shoot the · FirstEnergy Corp., the util· pointer for an 18-2 Ieadwith
lights out - but not· with the ity serving nonheast Ohio. 1:21 left in the quarter.
lights out.
said about 500 customers
The show continued early
James, widely acknowl· were without power, but the in the second quarter, when
edged as the best high school cause was not yet known:
he swished another three to
.basketball player in the counThe game was one of only make it 31· 7. Just 55 seconds
try, and hi s Akron. St. two the nationally ranked St. · later, a rim-rattling right·
Vincent-St. Mary teammates Vincent-St. Mary was to play handed slam made it 39. 7.
had their season opener cut in· its o~n gym this season.
Senior Romeo Travis, a 6·
short by a · power outage Usually, the Irish play home foot-6 center already commitSaturday night.
. games
at the . nearby ted to play for Akron, was the
The Division II Fighting University of Akron. They game's leading scorer at the
Irish were up 45-10 over also are playing a coast-to·
.1
Wellston, a · Division Ill coast schedule against \he time of the blackout, wht e
sc hool from southern Ohio, best prep schools in the James had II points. Travis ·
with 47 seconds left in the nation .
was at the foul line, shooting
first half when the lights went
The reason for the packed for his 16th point, when the
out at the Akron gym.
schedule is James, a 6-foot-8 lights flickered as he released
"It's very disappoiniing." senior who already has two the ball.
coach Dru Joyce said when state titles, two Ohio Mr.
" No, it wasn't good," .
the game was suspended after Basketball awards and a Blankenship said. "We know
a 45-minute wait.
Sports Illustrated cover.
that much . After that, we
"I honestly want to finish,"
Before the blackout, which were all pretty much guessing
Joyce said. "I'm willing to sit also affected a pay-per-view as to what to do."
here two or three hours to do cable audience in 14 Ohio
Wellston requested the
so, but. the power company counties, James stood as a matchup, requiring a 3.5 hour
said' something .about a five· man above boys without drive to Akron, just to play a
breaking a sweat.
top-notch opponent.
hour wait."
In about an 80-second
In September. St. Vicent-St.
Referee Steve Blankenship
said the decisio11 to suspend stretch in the first quarter, Mary's football home opener
the game was an agreement James:
this season also was stopped
between athletic directors and
- Brought the crowd to its at halftime by lightning. The
coaches from both schools. feet with a thunderous dunk game resumed the next day.

James, Akron
SV·SM leading·
Wellston 45-10
wh~n Ught$ Jail

from Page 81

JUST CALL 1 .

-.

.

Herd

Our loan pri:)caiw4i
moments for
road, In the cllif VII

-·

Western Michigan's Tim
•
Lesterfroin 1996-99.
Leftwich, who is considered one of the top available
picks in next April's NFL
draft, has thrown for 3,615
yards and 22 TDs this season.
As for the Heisman, "if he
doesn ' t get it, I' II tell you
what, in April , he'll have
more money than that other
guy," Pruett said .
B~l State coach Bill Lynch
recalled telling someone on
the sidelines that playing
against Leftwich was "like a
dad playing with kids in the
neighborhood.
"He. is as good as they
come," Lynch said. "When
you play a great player like
that, a special player, maybe
the best player m the country,
when you see him in · person
or play aga!nst him, ~here !s
just someth•ng about u. He s

-

in control of the whole situation."
Leftwich threw for 319
yards to nine different
receivers in the first half, tak·
ing · snaps from the shotgun
formation and using mostly ·
screen passes.
·
He completed 13 straight
passes in snow and gusty
winds, throwing TDs of 4
yards to Jason Rader and 16
yards to Darius . Watts as
Marshall jumped to a 24· 7
halftime lead.
"We knew Leftwich was
good going in, but we didn't
have any idea he was that
good," said Ball State comer·
back Steve Monson.
Leftwich led Marshall
down the field on its firs t two
drives of the second hal (
before being relieved by the
more mobile Stan Hill each ·
time inside the Ball State 10.
Hill scored on a 7-yard run
and threw a 3-yard TO pass
to Watts midway through the
third quaner for a 38·7 lead.
Leftwich sat out the rest of
the game.
.I

"This was the coldest my
hands have ever been in my
life," he said.
As for his leg, "it's getting
better, but it's still far from
I00 percent," he safd. "My
leg isn't allowin§ me to get
under center yet.
·
Marshall's Denero Marriott
caught 10 passes for 129
yards and Josh Davis had
eight for 128.
Ball
State's
Marcus
Merriweather was held to 87
yards rushing, his second
lowest total of the season. He
finished as Ball State's career
rushing leader with 4,002
yards.
.
It was Marshall's first
home game since Nov. 12,
when Miami of Ohio defensive coordinator JonWauford
was charged with battery
after allegedly striking a
Herd fan after Marshall's ·
last-second win.
With Saturday's easy win,
the "'eather and a crowd of
just 23,824, few fans were on
the field after the game.

CINCINNATI (AP)
· DeMarco
McCleskey caught two touchdown passes
and ran for another as Cincinnati kept its
bowl hopes lj)ive with a 31-23 victory over
Alabama-Birmingham on Saturday.
Gino Guidugli completed 14 of 22 passes for 243 yards and two touchdowns with
no interceptions for the Bearcats (6·6, 5-2
· Conference USA).
Cincinnati can become bowl-eligible for
the third straight year with a victory at East
Carolina on Friday. ·
·
Cincinnati tied it at ·17 on Jonathan
Ruffin's field goal with 3:18 left in the.
third quarter, but Nick Hayes kicked two
fourth-quarter field goals to put UAB up
23-17 with II :21 left. Less than three min·
utes later, McCleskey caught a screen pass
from Guidugli and ran 15 yards for a
score, then ran 14 yards for another touch·
down with 3:30 to go.
The Blazers (5·7, 4-4) opened the ·scoring on an 8-yard run from Thomas Cox,
but Cincinnati tied it on Guidugli 's first
. scoring pass to McCleskey. .
Hayes kicked a 44,yard field goal in the .
second quarter, the first of his three .
UAB outrushed the Bearcats 141 •37 in

Alabama-Birmingham ' s Thomas Cox . foreground, is tackled by Cinc innati 's Franklin
Callicott Saturday in Cincinnati. (AP)

the first half &lt;md S"c ored 13 points in the
first 16 minutes of the second half. Kendal
Gibson, with 79 yards on 13 carries, and
Thomas Cox, with 61 yards on 19 carries .
each had ru shing touchdowns.

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Page 84 • &amp;Ullbap ~mt!i -iJtntind

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleaunt

Prep Football Playoffs _

gizing .
"(We're) going to give the
ball to our best player as
much as possible," Bortnick
said.
Watterson · knew what was
coming. After all, Williams
had rushed for 3, 149 yards
and 39 touchdowns coming
in.
"We know he's their horse
and they're going to go to him
every time," said Shaun
Swearingen, who caught a
touchdown p,ass and scored
on a 42-yard interception
return in the fourth quarter.
The weather had little effect
on Watterson quarterback
Danny DeLucia, who threw
for I 05 yards and two touchdowns, including a backbreaking 40-yard scoring pass
to Andrew Murray in the.third
quarter.
On third down from the
Benedictine 40, DeLucia
avoided a heavy pass rush and
threw over the middle to
Andrew Murray, who broke
one tackle and cruised into the
end zone to make it 21-7.
The Bengals then moved
dpwn the field methodically
with their running game, but
Jo.nathan McCurdy intercepted
Benedictine's first pass of the
drive inside the 10-yard line.
The Eagles struck on the
first drive of the game, with
DeLucia's 20-yard pass to
Swearingen down the sideline
moving his team into Bengals
territory. DeLucia ended the
drive with a 7-yard scoring
pass to Swearingen.
The Bengals fired right
back. On third-and-15 from
his own 40, Joe Laffey threw

W~Va.

AAA, A
title games set
Associated

room, but it was the exact
same coverage when he got
beat."
Edler returned the interception 42 yards to the Smithville
13, where Darren Farmer
·
scored one play later to give
the Spartans (15-0) a 19-18
lead with 7:53 remaining.
Matt Brown then returned
an interception 41 yards for a
touchdown with 7:00 to play,
and Jake Bennett scored on a
20-yard return with 6:41 left
after Smithville's Kris Kendle
fumbled.
The Smithies committed all
five of their turnovers- four
interceptions, one fumble over the game's final 7:58,
minutes from their first state
title.
Andy Foster completed 9of-22 passes for 202 yards
and two touchdowns, but also
threw three interceptions for
Smithville.
"We self-destructed," said
Smithville coach
Keith
Schrock. "It's just disappointing that we gave up two
touchdowns with our offense.
The defense, I thought, gave
us a chance to win .... ·
Pleasant coach Chris Kubbs
was pleased with the way his
team . capitalized · off the

~ress

Class AAA

Columbus Wattersorfs Andrew Murray (21).breaks a tackle py
Cleveland Benedictine's Rashad King (45) for a touchdown
during the third quarter Saturday in the Ohio Division Ill state
championship game at Paul Brown Stadium in Massillon, Ohio.
Watterson won 28-7. (AP)
a perfect pass over the middle, hitting Maurice White in
stride. White outran a defender to tie it at 7.
After recovering a fumble,
the Eagles drove back down
the field, and Wes Gilliland
scored from two yards out to
make it 14-7.
·

,,

Golden,. who announced
earlier he was retiring at the ·
end · of this season, seemed
stunned at winning his first
state title.
"I don't think you can do
any better than thts," he said.
"It's very humbling. It's a
great gift."

Marion Pleasant explodes in fourth
quarter, takes Division·V title
CANTON, Ohio (AP) Beaten . for the go-ahead
touchdown in the fourth quarter, Marion Pleasant .c.omerback Ja~on Edler knew more
passes would be coming his
way.
· One did. And he was ready
for it.
Edler's interception started
a fourth -quarter flurry in
which the Spartans scored
three touchdowns - two on
defense - in a 1:12 span and
won the Division V state title
Saturday,
33-18
over
Smithville.
·"I knew they were going to
come back at me on the next
possession," Edler said. "I
· just made a play."
Edler got the pick while
covering Drew Beichler. who
two minutes earlier had beaten the defensive back for a
56-yard TD catch that gave
the Smithies (14-1) an 18-13
lead with 9:56 remaining.
"He's just put in a tough
spot out, there," Pleasant
defensive coordinator Mike
Carroll said of Edler. "We tell
him 'He's yours, have a nice
day, we're going to stop the
run.'
"I told him to back off a bit
to glve him just a little more

Smithville miscues, using
them as the spring board to
clinch an. undefeated season
and the school's first state title
since 1996.
"We've been involved in a
lot of games when the
momentum changes ~uick,"
he said. 'The key is 10 get a
hold of the momentum."
Farmer ran for 48 yards and
scored touchdowns on two of
his four carries for Pleasant.
Besides the go-ahead score in
the fourth quarter, Farmer had
a 3T-yard TDHru~ in the third.d
revor arns comp 1ete
14-of-25 passes for 161 yards
and one touchdown for
Pleasant, which had averaged
only nine pass attempts in its
.
previous 14 games.
Bennett, a two-way ·player
who had rushed for 1,741
yards this season, was held to
71 on 16 carries against
Smithville. Preston Fi~ld,
who had 1,439 yards rush~ng,
got 26 .on. II, attempts aga1~st
t~e Smllhtes strong defens1ve
hne.
· "We knew we were going to
have a tough time running the
ball," Kubbs said. "We knew
we were going to have to
open it up tO go away from
their strength."

Beichler, who had 153
yards receiving on four receptions, caught two touchdown
passes and set up Smithville's
r
·h 1 ·
trst score wtt a eapmg
catch over a defender.
Beichler pulled down the
pass over Nick DeSantis
against the sideline, then fum,
bled the ball at the Pleasant 20
while stumbling toward the
end .zone. Kendle scooped up
the loose ball ai the 5-yard
line and scored a touchdown
to pull the Smithies within 76.
Beichler's first TD catch a
.
'
15-yarder that followed a
Caleb Mtddl~to.n mterceptton,
gave the Smllhtes a 12-7 lead
at the half.
The Spartans came close to
taking the lead at halftime.
They moved from their 28·yard line to the Smithies' 11
in the closing moments of the
first half, but the drive ended
at the 2 when Eric Vangeloff
ked ·
h
f
was mar
JUSt s ort o a
fust .down on a foorth down
pass.
"I liked our chances at the
end of the first half," Schrock
said.

Morgantown . earned
another berth in the Class
.AAA championship game
Saturday,
while
Parkersburg South spoiled
Martinsburg's hopes for a
return trip.
Seth Fogarty caught two
touchdown passes from
Chris Drenning as lopranked Morgantown beat
No. 4 Riverside 19-14 to
advance to· the state championship game for the third
time in five years.
No. 6 Parkersburg South
upset No. 2 Martinsburg
24-21 in the other semifinal.
Martinsburg lost 28-17 to
Parkersburg in last year's
championship game.
Morgantown (13-0) will
play Parkersburg South
( 12-1) at noon next
Saturday for the state title.
Drenning set season
. highs in completions (II)
and attempts (19) as he
passed for 118 yards.
"Chris has thrown the
. ball tremendously all year,"
Morgantown coach Glen
. McNew said. "We needed
him to throw the ball more
than usual. We didn't have
to throw it that mu"Ch earlier in the season. Chris did
an outstanding job."
Geremy Rodamer had a
25-yard touchdown run, his
45th of the season. He
rushed a season-high 32
times for !54 yards and has
I ,990 rushing yards this
season.
Mor~antown
held
Riverstde (11-2) to 125
total yards and 28 yards
passing.
· Rusty Taylor had a 19yard TD run and Dustin
Redman caught a 4-yard
scoring pass from · Kashif
Ealey for Riverside . .
The Mohigans won the
2000 Class AAA cha!flpionship
38-13 against
Parkersbur~ and lost to J.R.
House's Nttro team 69-52
in the 1998 title game.
"I would be surprised if
Morgantown doesn't win it
all," Riverside coach Dick
Whitman said.

Class A
Once again. Wheeling
Central and Moorefield
will meet with the Class A
championship on the line.
No. 4 Moorefield · and
sixth-seeded
Wheeling
Central which have
combined to win the last ·
six Class A titles - earned
berths in next Saturday's 7
p.m. championship game
with
semifinal
wins
Saturday.
Marshall 0 ' Brien rushed
for !55 yards arid two
touchdowns and Mike
DeSantis added 113 yards
rushing as Central (11-2)
beat No . 7 Parkersburg
Catholic 34-14.
Moorefield upset No. 1
Williamstown 41-7 in the
other semifinal.
Moorefield .
and
Wheeling Central will meet
in the championship game
at Wheeling Island Stadium
for the third straight year.
"I think this is what the
people want to see,"
Wheeling Central coach Jim
Thomas said. ''That's how it
is supposed to be, I guess."
Moorefield (12' 1) - which
beat the Maroon Knights 13-D
in last year's championship
game - won the Class A title
frOm 1996-99. Wheeling
Central won the 2&lt;XXJ title by
beating Moorefield 34-6.
Wheeling Central won
the teams' regular-season
matchup,
beating
Moorefield 35-34 on Sept.
6 in Moorefield.
O'Brien scored ori runs
of 66 and 39 yards, while
DeSantis and Jeremy
Coyne added short touchdown runs for Central.
Defensive lineman Bruce
Fowler returned an inten;eption 28 yards for another score
for the Maroon Knights.
Wheeling Central rushed
for 377 yards.
Nate Black led Parkersburg
Catholic (11-2) with 131 yards
rushing. He had a 14-yan:l TD
run in .the fourth quarter.
Vince Black's 2;yard
touchdown run in the second quarter pulled the
Crusaders to within 12-7.
But Central pulled away,
scoring 21 straight points to
·seal its third straight berth
in the championship game.

A story of
unique hunters
in Gallia County
See today's Tempo section ... C1

Elder wins Division I state crown
21-19 . The Raiders .(14-1)
went for two, but Kokal
was hit as he .tried to throw,
and the pass fell incom. plete. The onside kick went
out of bounds and Elder ran
out the clock.
Florian set up and scored
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - the game-winning touchRob Florian ran for two down. Elder took over on
touchdowns and threw for its own 20 with nine minanother as Cincinnati Elder utes left and chewed up
beat Warren -Harding 21-19 almost four minutes while
Saturday night to win the moving to the Harding 42.
Division I state champi- On the next play, Florian
onship.
broke loose on a quarterBut it was a defensive back draw and reached the
stand that won it for the · one before being tackled.
Panthers· (14-1), Harding He scored on the next play
took over on Elder's 48 to make it 21-7. · ·
with 2:20 to play and
The Raiders cut it to 21,
moved to the 2-yard line on 13 · on a· long pass from
a 40-yard pass from Mike Kokal to Manningham with
Kokal
to · Mario less than four minutes to
Manningham ·with 56 sec- play.
Kokal
found
Manningham, who was
onds to play.
After Kokal spiked it on wide open, near the sideline
first down to stop the clock, and Manningham outran
'"Rkhard Davis scored on a defenders for a 73-yard
dive 'to the left to cut it to touchdown.
Elder locked down Davis

Panthers hold
off late rally by
undefeated
Warren .Harding

....

.

-·-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

National Football League

Watterson grabs
Division Ill crown
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP)
- The first time Cleveland
Benedictine and Columbus
Watterson faced off this year,
Benedictine's
Raymond
Williams rushed for 262 yards
and two touchdowns.
•
This time, Watterson was
ready.
The Eagles (11-4) loaded up
to stop Williams, daring the
Bengals (12-3) to beat them
with the pass. Benedictine
couldn't do it and Watterson
won the Division III title with
a 28-7 victory Saturday.
"We took a chance with
them hurting us with the passin~ game," Watterson coach
Mtke Golden said. "We know
what they want to do to win."
Playing on a snow,covered
field, Williams - . Division Ill
offensive player of the year and
runner-up to Benny Malik as
Mr. Football - couldn't use
his speed to getoutside and get
behind defenders. He rushed
for 108 yards, but every time
he had a chance to break free, a
Watterson defender was there
to stop him.
"On the whole, their linebacker corps kept Raymond
in check ," Benedictine coach
Art Bortnick said. "He had a
difficult time in planting,
especially on outside plays."
. On perhaps the ' game's
biggest play as Benedictine
trailed 21 -7, the Bengals tried
an outside sweep to Williams
on fourth-and-2 from the
Watterson 4-yard line. The
Eagles strung out Williams
and stopped him cold as he
couldn't cut upfield.
Even though the play didn't
work, Bortnick wasn 't apolo-

Sunda~Decernber1,2002

-

and the Harding offense in
the first half. Davis, who
came in averaging more
than 100 yards a game, was
held to minus-2 yards rushing in the first half, and
Harding had just 46 yards
of offense.
Davis finally cut loose on
the first play of the fourth
quarter. Starting from the
Elder 34, Mike Kokal
tossed a short pass to
Davis, who turned upfield,
cut left and cruised into the
end zone untouched .
The Panthers chewed up
8:19 on an 19-play, 83-yard
drive to open the scoring.
Florian gave the Raiders
fits during the drive,
repeatedly eluding Harding
defenders on quarterback
sweeps and draws.
A pass interference penalty gave the Panthers a firstand-goal on ,the six yard
line, but a false start pushed
them back to the II. After
an incomplete pass , Florian
lined up in the shotgun,

..

took the snap, sprinted up
the middle, dodged a
defender at the line of
scrimmage and scored.
Elder took just three
plays . to score on its next
poss.ession · when Florian
hooked up with a wideopen Ian Steidel for a. 51yard touchdown pass, mak-

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Surprising Ravens trying to stay
in contention against Bengals
on us," linebacker Peter Boulware said. games. The last time the Bengals had such
"It's de(rnitely doable."
a streak was 1988, when they went to their
Only if the Ravens 1\et yet another victo- first Super Bowl.
·
CINCINNATI _ The playoffs ended ry Sunday over the Cmcinnati Bengals ( 1The difference is the '88team turned. the
and the pain began.
..
10), who claimed the sad-sa;;k role that had yan:ls and points into wins. This team can't
Soon after the Baltimore Ravens lost to been reserved for them.
·
seem to win for anything. A loss Sunday
Pittsb h 10
· th 1 ff 1 J
th
The NFL's worst team has yet to beat an would drop the Berigals to I-ll for the
urg
e P ayo s ast anuary, e established frdllchise this season - its only fourth time in franchise history.
payroll-letting began. One star after anoth·
· H
Th
No Cincinnati team has ever won fewer
er from the 2000 Super Bowl team was jet- wm came over expanston ouston.
e
tisoned to .fix Baltimore's salary-cap pro'- Ravens aren't a likely candidate to lose, than three games, so this one has to win at
..,. ha · be
th B a1s 'ght 0 fth · 1 t leasttwoofitslastfivetoavoidthedistinclems.
.•
. vmg aten e eng e•
err as .lion as worst Bengals team ever. It's motilt was disillusioning and discoumging.
rune games.
"From that day forward, every day was
But this is the time of year when the vation.
"Your won-loss record does matter,"
some type of hit to this team," coach Brian Beng al s stan pulling off upsets an d knock·
·
the
f
1
ff
·
linebacker
Brian Simmons said.
Billick said. "Some veteran was cut, some mg o r teams out o p ayo contention.
veteran signed someplace else. It was loss The Ravens fit the description.
. During their 12-year run as the league's
after loss after loss."
. ''They defmitely have a chance to make worst team, the Bengals have been semiMost fans ex~ted loss after loss after it," Bengals quanemack Jon Kitna said. respectable in December and January,
'ts going21-25.Thegloomlightensastheend
loss when the avens opened the season "B'nan Bill"1ck'IS one ofthe bet
s strategts
the season approaches, and it shows on
d He hasagroup of
with an unprecedented 19rookiesandfrrst- and.garnemanagersaroun.
the field,
·
around him that knows what it takes."
Year Players On the roster.
"I'm starting to get my second wind,"
Look at them now.
daWhat it takes to beat ~eB~ngals ;J~ese rookietightendMattSchobel saiil. "AcouA.s they prepare for their frrst game of. ys IS a runrun¥ game, an
llmore s got pie of weeks ago, it was like, •Oh, man, is
December, the Ravens (5-6) are right one.JamaiLewtshasrunformorethan 100
.
behind the pacesetters in the AFC North. yards in each of his three career games this thinjl ever going to end?' Now you can
· start seemg the end of it."
.
They trail Pittsburgh by a game and a half against the Bengals, including a 38-27 wm
If the Ben~als win on Sunday, the Ravens
. and Cleveland by one game.
on Nov. 10·
•
will .be facmg the end of their playoff
. Baltimore has a game left against each of "If I have a good game running the foot- chances. ·
·
the teams it trails, providin~ a glimmer of ball, I think we'll come out with a win,"
"Tilis is a huge game," tight end Todd
hope. On the downside, linebacker Ray Lewis said.'This team, you can run the ball Heap said. "If we can get back to .500, 1
Lewis is out for the season and the already- on them. We know if we can move the ball, think we:ll be back in the mce."
inexJ?Crienced lineup has been depleted by keep the ball in our hands and keep our
injlll'les.
defense off the field, we'll be all right."
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback John
s~. it's remarkable that the playoffs are
It may not be so simple. The _Bengals are
Kitna (3) tosses his helmet at the end
posstble. .
·
on a reswgence- well, by therr standards,
of a, 29-21, loss to the Pittsburgh
"Oh, we can make i~ but it's going to · ariyway. Behind Kitna. they have topped
Steelers last Sunday.. (AP)
· take a lot of focus, and the Lord has to smile . 350 yards on offense for five consecutive
, BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

Browns not
peeking past
Panthers
.

Cleveland was an identical
Associated Press
6-5 last season, but then went
1-4. Couch said these Browns
understand what's at stake.
CLEVELAND - , The . ':This team is more focused,
~leveland Browns !lfe" t tak- more confident," Couch said.
mg _!IllY chances this Sun~y. · "We see the light at the end of ·
They know t~e C!ffolma the tunnel. There's a lot riding
Panthers, strugghng w1th off- on each and every game and
field problems, can cause them we realize the impact."
problems on the field.
.
Meanwhile, the Panthers '
. For perhaps the first tl~e season of disarray has gotten ·
smce .retummg as an expansion more disorderly.
team m 1999, the Browns (6-5)
On Thursday, running back
have .a game plan for Sun~ay Lamar Smith was charged with
th~t mclu~es more than JUst drunken driving, the latest
X s an~ 0 s. .
.
legal tangle for a team freeThey re womed about bemg falling since a surprising 3-0
overconfident and looking past start. Smith, Carolina's leading
the P3!1~ers:
, rusher and scorer this season,
But •! sa Sign of the Browns was charged with driving
steady Improvement and matu- while impaired, speeding and
nty under ~econd-year, coach reckless driving outside
B~tc~ Dav1s that they re not Charlotte, and the team put
thinkin~ about al!Y other team him on a paid leave for the rest
b~~ ree!mg Caroh~a (3-8).
of the season.
We. re n~.t gomg to ~e · Smith's arrest came just as
them lightly, Browns runmng the club was recovering from
back Jamel Whtte smd of the an ugly incident where wide
troubl~d Panthers, wh?. h~ve receiver-kick returner Steve
los.t eight m a row.. We re Smith was suspended one
gomg to treat them like .they game for beating up teammate
are tl_le Super Bowl champ1ons. Anthony Bright during a film
We JUSt need to g~ out there session. Smith, was reinstated
and play our game.
. . · this week after apologizing to ·
~fter regroupmg dunng his teammates.
·
!herr bye week, the. Browns
In addition, the Panthers
· have, m~ved back mto the released starting right tackle
. AFC .s ~1de-open playoff race Chris Terry last week followby wmnm.g the.last two weeks ing a series of incidents stemat Cmcmnatt and New ming from a domestic violence
Orlean~.
. .
charge this summer. They're
They ve done tl w1th a newly also without defensive tackle
discovered running game that Brenston Buckner, currently
produced 1qo-yard-plus efforts serving a four-game suspenm consecutive weeks for the sion for using a banned dietary
frrst tim.e sin.c~ 1995.
supplement.
Rookie Wtlham Green broke
There's more. Rookie defenout for a season-high ll4 yards sive end Julius Peppers, who
last week agamst the S3U!ts, has 11 sacks, will appeal a pos. who may ~ave Jx;e~ peeking sible four-game suspension ·
ahead to this week s unportant next Thesday for testing posiNFC South matchup wuh tive for a banned substance.
Atlanta.
Sunday's game in Cleveland
The Browns d~n't want to could be Pepper's last this seamake the same lllistake.
·
son.
"Sometimes teams get
"Perfect timing, right?"
. caught overlooking (other Couch said, rolling his eyes at .
teams)," Cleveland quarter- the thought of being chased by
back Tim Couch said. "Look at Peppers. "He's a guy we have
last week, I think the New to account for."
York Giants might have looked
Despite the seemingly end. _past, the (Houston~ Texans. We less adversity, Carolina safety
· don ! w!lllt to fall mt~ that '!'ap Mike Minter said the season
?f thmking thts team 1s commg ·can be salvaged with a strong
m here on a losmg streak. We finish.
.
have a lot of respect for the~.
"We have five games left and
"They're capable of commg regardless of what has hapin here and beating us, so V:,e pened, we can do something
have to be on our .best game.
about these next five games,
Carolina is as close to a sure and we can go into the offseawin as the Browns have left on son not thinking; 'Man we lost
their . schedule. Followmg the 13 straight,"' (\1inter said.
Panthers..
they'll
play
"We have to think, 'Let's go
Jacksonville
~5-6), in and win these five football ·
Indianapolis (7-4), Baltunore games.' There are five
(5-6) and Atlanta {7 -3-1 l - all winnable ~ames left so let's go
teams in the playoff picture. · get them.'
'
BY ToM WITHERS

Coughlin plays cat and mouse
with Cowher, Stewart and .Maddox
BY EDDIE PELLS

Associated PresS'
JACKSONVILLE, Aa. Ever since the Jacksonville
Jaguars came into the NFL,
Tom Coughlin wanted them to
be like the Pittsburgh Steelers.
This week, Coughlin took it
a step further, actually trying to
make coaching decisions for
the Steelers, too.
At
midweek,
-the
Jacksonville coach took the
strange and unprecedented
move of announcing · that
Tommy Maddox would stait at
quanemack for the Steelers (64-1) when they play.. at
Jacksonville (5-6) on Sunday.
Never mind that Maddox is
two weeks removed fium a
scary hit that briefly paralyzed
him, or that Kordell Stewart
took most of the snaps in practice this · week, or that the
Steelers' real coach, Bill
Cowher, made no official quarterback decision.
This was Coughlin's way of
trying to get ahead in the mind
games traditionally played by
these two former AFC Central
rivals.
"He dido 't say anything,"

Coughlin said. "I'm just look- sions. Maddox has been be .successful in this league,"
ing at that he~s not .on the injury cleared by doctors to play and be said. .
report, .and he said he's ready to has no lingering problems fium
The Steelers h~ve changed· ~
play."
the injury, but neuroswgeon bit this year, though, and
Funny thing is, more than Joseflh Maroon said he would Maddox has been a big reason
one player on the Jacksonville prefer Maddox stay out anoth- for it. With him in the starting_
lineup, the Steelers have
defense says the coaches have er week~
been preparing more for
"I feel good," Maddox said. thrown 54 percent of the time.
Stewart than Maddox.
"I'm ready to get back out They have averaged 2~ . 8
"I'd be pretty surprised to see there, but that time will come. I points and 409 yards, and set a
Maddox r,Iay so soon after a hit don't know when it will be, but record by scoring 28 points or
like tha~ ' Ja~ars comemack that time will come. I'll prepare more in four straight games.
Iff Hines Ward, the Steelers
Jason Craft saJd. "But you have every day and see what haphave the · second-leading
to be ready for anything." · pens."
·
Each Steelers quarterback
Stewart has not played well receiver in the AFC. Bu.t comsays that yes, he would like to against Jacksonville. He has bining the yardage of Jerome
play, and yes, he would natu- thrown for. seven touchdowns Bettis (411) a"" · Amos.
rally be disappointed if he.did- and I 0 interceptions and has ·a Zereoue (512) on the ground
n't getthe call Sunday.
68.8 passer rating. In many of would only net the seventhAlthough it seems irnproba- his worst games against leading rusher in the confer-.
.
ble, Stewart Claimed he. reallY. Jacksonville, the Jaguars have ence.
Coughlin,
of
course,
doesn't
wouldn't know for sure until been successful. in stopping
Sunday.
Pittsburgh's run and forcing buy the notion the Steeler.S.
have changed.
"He'll let you know when Stewart to throw.
"! think really, deep dowl),:
he's ready to let you know,"
Coughlin is 8-6 lifetime
Stewart said.
·
t# against Cowhef and the the core is they want to run the
If Maddox does play, it Steelers, . mcludmg 6-1 m football ; which is what they do,
would be one of the most stun- Jacksonville. When the teams very, very well," he said. "The
ning medical turnarounds in were in the same division, he rest of it is a product of being·
recent memory. After an awk- placed Pittsburgh on the high- able to do that."
Coughlin has been right .
ward hit fium Keith Bulluck, . est pedestal, not only because II
more
than he's been wrong in. ·
he was motionless on the field was the team to beat. but
two weeks ago at Tennessee. because the Steelers played the . his seven-year history of play.Maddox briefly was paralyzed; gnndtnjl. . phystcal
style ing the Steelers. On Sunday,
he'll find out again if the.
doctors said be suffered cere- Coughlm liked.
guessing
game worked.
bra! and spinal cord concus~
''That's a pretty good way to

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�PageB6

oon

0
W.Va. Fishing
Report
CHARLESTON. W.lla(AP)- The -Vn;tio
1ismg ,_, Tlusdir; 111 tho CMoion

olls

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ard

-

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W*te ""' --.g ., '"'"' .,

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bails WC1I&lt;i"' "'-Thepi
fi&amp;tl til lhe rroYe ani kugenuJJ1 bass rtlfll3ilfl

""""*"'

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lirQ small jgo ard """"" Cnip;ie llsiW1g has
Boo FUl boo! iaLn:h ..-.d 1ho
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recreation - · Lake ard ""' dear.
1\rlti&lt;lr&gt;
!if'otjj ..., tho slard'&gt;;j ard 1111'1
~ - - 15loel o l - "' llg boss.

After Tlumksgiving Sale

N

N

SILl OP. 11111111

Roy Vass walks inside the flight pen for pheasants at his farm .
. near Beckley, W.Va:, Nov. 14. Vass retired several years· ago
·from a profitable vending and amusement business so he
could spend more time doing what he loves to do most - tending to thousands upon thousands of game birds and exotic
ornamental fowl. He is the owner and proprietor of the Vass
Branch ,Bird Farm. (AP)

II

VI TH

Bird Man Retiree
now tends to
thousands of
feathered friends

.

&lt;XNfl(.

1oedcl.rilg t-elalil hw" ar.tttC- The" pro&lt;Ui'lg some - lroU l:lr lle fli'fiJ« -.g
t&gt; - • 1:1. WlW . . looi&lt;i111:lr al:llldr:ariOy
""*''I .......... r;.. !tis sedion "
riwf a ty.
SUTTON - lJIIe is 23 1ae1 bliow surmer
·~ ealioi t 9IBl l.Bke and tat.wter are ctc:u:tt
l'loimg has _ , fair,,., llbo jgo in! spmor-

BLUESTONE - Lake 5 at 5IITYTlef
""-'l. Lake ard ........ .,. dear.
BURNSVIUE - Lake 6 9loel bobw wrmer

BECKLEY, W.Va. - It's a
cliche, but it fits: As far as Roy
Vass is concerned, retirement is
for the birds.
Vass, 67, retired several years
ago from a profitable vending
and mnusement business so he
could ·spend more time doing
what he loves to do most tending to . thousands upon
thousands of gmne birds and
exotic ommnental fow I.
"I've always liked birds,"
says Vass, owner and proprietor of the Yass Branch Bird
Fann .near Beckley. "When I
was a kid. I had bantam chickens. Now I've got some really
interesting birds."
Roy Vass
"Interesting" would be an
understatement. It takes Vass
"Up to 60 percent uf my
several minutes to recite his game birds go to trainers," he
inventory, which includes 14 says. "I have a list of at least ·
varieties of pheasant, seven 100 clients who come in and
· varieties of quail, four varieties buy five to 10 birds at a time."
of partridge, and 15 varieties of
Though gmne species constipeafowl.
lute more than three-quarters of
As Yass wanders between the birds Vass raises each year,
-the dozens of pens scattered they're not the stars· of his
about the hillside behind his show. Ornamental pheasants
home, he pauses to reflect on and peafowl are.
the growth of his avian avocaThe more rare the variety and
tion.
the more gaudy its plumage,
"It's hard to believe that this the better Yass enjoys obtaining
nas ~rown from . just three and breeding it. .
birds,' he saxs. Fifteen years
"I try to raise 20 to 25of each
ago, Vass' wtfe, Kay, went to variety of exotic bird, mostly
F1orida on vacation. When she for collectors and other deal. stayed longer than ·she had ers," he says.
originally
intended, . she
Those fancy fowl cmhmand
brought home a peace offering some fancy prices. The going
for Roy: a pair of Royal Palm price for a breeding pair of redturkeys and a red-variety gold- variety golden pheasants is
en pheasant.
$60. A pair of peacock pheas"That did it," he says. "I was ants goes for $200, and a pair
tiOoked. Within four years, 1 of mre Temminick's Tragopan
was up to 1,000 qirds. Now J pheasants can cost $300 or
raise about 4,000 a year."
more.
What started out as a back"And I really enjoy breeding
yard hobby now occupies peafowl, too," Yass says.
·seven acres of rural Raleigh "There are only two peafowl
County real estaie. A sophisti- species, but there are lots of difcated egg incubation system ferent color variations. I have
occupies a cornerofVass' base- 15 colors, and I ship them all
ment. A rearing tower for around the country."
'
hatchlings rises in his back
Yass also has begun playing
around with exotic waterfowL
yard .
Holding pens and flight pens His ever-growing aviary now
dominate the surrounding land- includes wood ducks, mandarin
scape.
ducks, mute swans, black.
"During the breeding season, swans and cinnmnon teal. As
I work 10 to 12 hours a day at usual , the rare and exotic get
this," he says. "I work harder top billing.
·now than I did before I retired."
"[ have a pair of white maoThe costs of maintaining so darins," he says excitedly.
many birds can be staggeril)g. "They're my ~ride and joy in
Each month during the peak of the duck pond. '
his bird-rearing season, Yass
To keep abreast of the latest
distributes a ton and a half of and greatest in the bird-breedfeed to his feathered charges. ing business, Yass and his wife
Then- there are carpentry sup- travel to at least 15 exotic bird
plies to build and maintain the shows a year.
many sheds and coops, as well
"We learn a lot, and we get to
as fencing and netting for the know other breeders," Yass
pens. As if that weren't enough, says. "Plus, we're members in
mcubators and pumps consume six or seven bird-breeding and
untold kilowatts of power.
bird-fancying Of!ianizations.''
To defray some of his costs,
Active as he ts in those cirYass sells gmne birds such as clcs, Yass reserves his greatest
bobwhite quail, ring- necked . passion for two conservationpheasants and chukar par- based organizations, the Ruffed
tridges to local hunting pre- Grouse Society and Quail
serves and bird-dog trainers.
Unlimited. Both .groups are
Clients
include
the dedicated to boosting populaGreenbrier reson and the tions of game bird species that .
nationally renowned Stoney are gradually disappearing from
Brook Plantation, but most of '1114!st Virginia's landscape.
Vass' birds go to hunters with
"Both of those organizations
young, inexperienced bird have chapters in the state, and
dogs. The ·hunters release the I'd like to see a lot more West
birds and the dogs learn to find, Virginians get involved . m
point and flu sh them .
them," Yass says.

Sunday, December I, 2002

r. tho 1a1oo. BUogl ..-.d ~ .,. beirg
CSUi111111Wld tho li!h ..-.d en; chlr

-sprnors ·....
Sh&gt;ei1o
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kugenuJJlardbass.
noar """" will wl be
IP"f "'~- -ci*N!n t.oaris boi1g . -

Bv JoHN McCov
Associated Press

Page Cl

tubailsl:lr-~IIIWidciq&gt;­

"
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., .... catfish.

'Dear Abby', Page C6

boi&gt;;t picjo!d 14&gt; 111 '"*U-Cnip;ie l6tOlg " fair.
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feel bebw IIUlYTW3I' IQ)aalio I IEM!JI.l.afe wd 181.... _ ._~..-.d llbo jgo ......

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Inside:

Sunday, December 1, 2002

-~

CHIVY

Quality NE\V \ 'ehiclcs

Wl'\l-11-

Chevy Tlvck • Moef'

D p nd•bte Longest·
luting,. TrucU On The
Rood

with ecotech engine, olrcol1dlt:lon11ng
and more- MSRP $1 "":1!1:1

SILVERADO 4X4 EXT. CAB
VB, aula, cruise, tilt wheel
Sale
price
includes

rebates

$22 995
J

Plus tax

Charlie Pope, a.quadriplegic, prepares to begin hunting during last year's

&amp; IItle .

hun~

at the .home of Jay and Donna Crlsenbery.

•

CHEVYTRACKER4X4
Convertible, MSRP $17,415 .

3rd row seotlng, 4x4, looded, LT pockoge, 171n. olum wheels MSRP $33,940

MSRP $14,830
Saleprice
incl udes rebates
and college

Sjj
.

discoun1

·

.

J

999
.

• •••

TRAIL BLAZER EXT.

CHEVYS-10

,

·-~
~~

.... ' ~.

·~.

-~-

1n

'.,,,..., ~

'

PI

us
&amp; title

Sale price

Quality Pre-()wned Vehicles

4 Dr, Silver, Locally owned
NADAAve Retail $10,375 ·
Sale Price$

9,28

Dale Cornetti of Boyers, Pit, takes his first ride on a four-wheeler during last year's
hunt at the home of Jay and Donnna Crisenbery of Clipper Mill.

.
.

OLDSMOBILE ALERO
4 cyl, auto trans
tNM.ui\Ave Retail $9725
SelePrlce

2000
DODGE STRATUS
4

Dr. Sedan, Burgundy ·
NADA Ave Retail $9,095

------ Loaded
NADA Ave Retail

$

Our Sale Price

$

New car trade, new prem.
tires, extra clean
NADA Ave Retail $11 ,250

. $

CHEVROLET

7 40-446-3672

''Q' I had the resources, I'd have more. Our
dream is to someday open a handicapped-accessible
hunting lodge so they could stay as long
. as they want and hunt whatever is in season. "

C

!Loaded. Sunroof, leather,
wheel, One local owner
tNP•UAAve Retail $16,550
Sale Price

1616 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis
CHIVY
(740) 446-3672.;;.
Call Toll Free ~~~:~~:t~~.:~'1-800-521-0084

...

...tlng, Trucks On The
Rood

I

I
~

r

..

·•

-·~·

·- " 1 - -

···---

-

'.

LIPPER MILL, Ohio - As the
frrst day of deer-hunting season
arrives, so do the hordes of
hunters into our area. · ·
. This season, eight unique hunters will be
l!'acking deer on thj! fann of Jay and Donna ·
Crisenbery, located at Butler's Hereford
'
Fann in Clipper Mill about 10 miles south
Donna
Crlsenberry,
c~owner
of Gallipolis on Ohio Route 7.
Butler's Hereford Farm
Eight men from around the United States
arrived at the Crisenbery farm today, each
with a physical disability that could limit
Donna said IJ1llllY of the hunters are dis- port the men from one location to another.
them from hunting anywhere else.
abled
veterans who live on limited · "If I had the resources, I'd have more,"
For the second year, \he Crisenberys
1
• ..
chose hunters from a list provided for them incqmes..
1 Donna . said. "Our dremn is to ' someday
"Some of them actuqily thought about ~ opt;n a handicapped-accessible hunting
by Buckmasters, a hunting organization
that sponsors the disabled hunters program. not coming because they' didn't think they lodge so they could stay as long as they
."Last year we took fouF, and we just had could afford ·it, but I told them not to worry want and hunt. whatever is in season.''
Some of the hunters participating in ihis
the best time," Donna sai(j. ''This year we about it, it would be taken care of;" Donna
said.
.
.
•·
year's
program are Charlie Pope, Fred
wanted more."
She and Jay then enlisted ti)e help of the . Rausch, Michael Beck, Jim Burke, Brion
So, four more hunters from the long and
growing list were signed up · by the Gallia County Conservation Club, which Woodward, .David Jacobson and Ernie
Crisenberys, and a family friend, Greg donated enough money _to help the men off- · Stacey, who has been confined to a wheelset the costs for hurtling licenses, h?teJ. chair since an accident left him paralyzed·
Spear of Patriot, took another.
18 years ago.
"There are just so many people that have rooms and food.
Many local businesses also .donated 1. Stacey participated in the hunt last year
waited for so long for a progrmn like this,"
Donna said. "We hated to turn anyone goods to the hunt, including several four- and he and his family have become quite
wheelers and all-terrain vehicles to trans-. , close to Jay and Donna.
away, but we only have so much room.''
,
.
I

Price

1,950 ==:.:..:.::=--.::....:.L.:...::..=.J
S14

OBNSO

l

- Jay Crlsenbery

'
.

~

Bv l't'tiWSSIA RussELL
Staff writer

Gallipolis Hometown Dealer

ENE ~

''

t '~

G8llia fanliiY p·rovides Unique hunting opportunity

'

1995 CADILLAC
STS

Our Sele Price

$7 990

'

'

."It's really
made me
stop and
think about
what-you
have and
what you
take for
granted.
It makes
you stop
complaining
about the
nit picky
things.

--------------------·~
. ------~----~----~------------ ~ )•

I

"I'm really looking forward to it," Stacey
said. "The Crisenberys are outstanding
people, they've become really good
friends."
The couple has made a few minor
changes from last year, adding new hunting
blinds and reinforcing old ones to give the
men a wann place to hunt from .
"These guys are pumped and so are we,"
Jay said. "We're lookin,g forward fo milk·
ing some new friends.
"! hope that more people get involved in
this program, it's so worthwhile," Donna
said. "We've learned so much from ihem."
"Definitely," Jay said. "They've taught
me to relax, if they want my help, they'll
ask. I was really nervous at first about what
I· could do for them, but they're not help- '
less. They've learned to adapt, and so have
1."
"They're mnazing people," Donna said .
"It's really made me stop and think about
what you have and what you take for granted," Jay said. "It inakes you stop complaining about the nit picky things.
.• "Ernie's favorite saying is 'Life is
Good,"' he added. "Here's this guy, a paraplegic, saying 'Life is Good,' and I'm complaining about how sore m) back is."
To help with the program or to donate,
contact the Crisenberys at 740-256-1633 .

�Page C2

iunbap li~ -itatinel

· Sunday, December 1, 2002

House Christmas tree and
served by major corporations
that pay up to $1,000 for cus·
tom designs.
After 22 years of crafting
cookie cutters, Bill has fig. ured out their appeaL
"Women are drawn to a
kitchen tool," he said. "It's
like, build a better mousetrilp
and they 'II come to your
door."
The tool analogy comes
easily to a guy who spent his
early working years in factories, met41l shops and l!arages.
The brothers, 51, built dragsters from their teen years in
Bellwood, . IlL, to their mid
20s, when Bill wrecked one
of their cars at a racetrack
and broke his neck. The shell
. of the car, a stars-and-stripes
1976 Chevrolet Vega, hangs
from the ceiling of a shed out
back.
They gave up racing after
that, moved east with their
first wives, both of whom
were Mary landers, bought
houses, got divorced and
worked a variety of jobs until
Bob, on a visit to Colonial
Williamsburg, Va., saw a use
for their talents. Gift shops
there were selling what he
considered poor reproductions of anuque tin housewares.
"I said, 'I can do this. I can
do it cheaper, better and
quicker than what you get
now,"' he said.
He did.
"And if you can do this
kind of stuff, word gets out,"
Bill said.
It did, especially after the
brothers and Julie - Betsy
and Bill hadn't met yet started doing craft shows in
1980. Their wares included
cookie cutters, among them a
cartoonish moose Bob had
made to persuade Julie to
bake him some sugar cookies.
·
·
· But it was Julie's oak-leaf
design in 1987 that put the
cutter business in high gear.
"We started doing the leaves,
and then the next year, everyone else was coni.mg out with
leaves," she said.
·
The competition has driven
Hammer Song to design

Bob Cukl-a is shown making a Hammer Song tin cookie cutter
Nov. 4 in Boonsboro, Md. He, his twin brother Bill and their
wive's have been producing their elaborate, handmade
Hammer Song tinware for some 22 years. (AP)
increasingly intricate cptters sell that hundred," Bill said.
for an expanded range of sea"We still loved the design,"
sons. There is a New Year 's Betsy added, "but it taught us
moose in a champagne glass to appeal ·to a wider audi:
next to a bottle of bubbly; a ence·."
. curly-haired muscleman in
Bob recalled the inspiration
swimming briefs flexing his
for
the cutter busines-s, a
biceps; a leaping rabbit perbooth at a craft fair he attendfect for Easter baking.
ed
in 1978.
"We're trying to move
cookie-eating into other holi- ' "This old Dutchman and
his wife had these primitive
days;" Betsy said.
Some designs are flops. cookie cutters. They were
Bill recalled one of a head- nowhere near the best thing
scratching monkey holding a at the fair, but he had a crowd
banana in its other hand, sim- · at his booth. I thought, 'You
ilar in humorous spirit to can · be an artist or you can
some of their best"selling pat- make money at this thing. Or
tern~. "We thought we know
maybe you can do both."'
enough about the public that
we knew what would sell,"
(The Hammer So~g catalog
he said.
is
available for $3 from
They made 100 copies,
Hammer Song, 221 S.
their standard minimum and near)y got stuck with Potomac St., Boonsboro, MD
.
them. "It took us six years to 21713)

Plan your baking ahead, by the book
NEW YORK (AP) He's re-created, updated and · lection of 175 recipes. from a
There's no shortage of books adapted recipes where neces- baking Web site, by the site's
to guide bakers eager to light s~ for what adds up to a founder and its webmaster.
up the oven and fill the deliciously detailed survey of There's a friendly, helpful
kitchen with the $OOd aromas America's history as reflect· , tone to the texts, ·and the
of seasonal cookmg.
ed by its kitchens.
recipes are accompanied with
· There 'are platters and
plenty of advice, general
cookie jars to fill, and even
•"The Good Cookie" hints and tips.
•
gift boxes to pack with con- (Wiley, $34.95), written . by
fections for the holidays - a Tish Boyle, focuses on this
"The Baker's Manual, Fifth
little time spent browsing favorite confection that can Edition" and "Unde~tanding
will generate J?lenty of ideas. take uncountable, delectable Baking, Third Editt
are
,. Some recent utles to keep in forms. Boyle, food editor and two classics by
oseph
mind:
test-kitchen director of Amendola and Ntco1e . Rees
•"A Sweet Quartet: Sugar, Chocolatier, and Pastry Art &amp; (Wiley, $29.95 each, paperAlmonds, Eggs, and Butter" Design
magazines, has back). They offer "150 masis :the evocative title of Fran assembled a collection of ter formulas for baking," and
Gage's new cookbook (North recipes for about 250 of ihe "the art and science of bak·
Point Press, $27.50). This is a best.
ing," respectively, continuing
colorful scene setter, with
the originals' mission of
pages o~ good reading and
Whimsical demystifying such technical
•The
mformattOn. Gage is a food Bakehouse" (Potter) is a call areas as the physics of heat or
writer who lives in San to have fun with color and natural chemistry between
Francisco, and is a member design when you're decorat- yeast and flour. Recipes are
of the renowned Baker's ing your cakes, made loud included along with line
Dozen group. She delves into and clear by mother and drawings, charts and tables.
culinary history, tells stories daughter
writers
Kaye
of. her travel adventures and Hansen and Liv Hansen. The
"Mom's Best De.sserts"
offers other · wonderfully pages sing with illustrations (Storey Books. $10.95 paperinteres ting background on . showing how buttercream back) by Andrea Chesman
each of her four subject head- and icing can magically turn and Fran Raboff is a homey
ings, along with rectpes using into bright butterflies and selection by . two reliable
them.
snowmen, skyscrapers or cookbook authors of I 00 trateacups, whatever your cake ditional family favorites. The
~"Baking in ·. America" needs. The instruction details recipes are clearly presented
(Houghton Mifflin, $35) is by make it all sound as easy and and interspersed with historiGreg Patent, a food magazine playful as the visible results.
cal detai Is .
and cookbook writer who
lives in Missoula, Mont. His
The
Best
of
" 125 Best Cheesecake
book, subtitled ' 'Traditional Betterbaking.com"
(Ten Recipes" (Robert Rose,
and Contemporary Favorites Speed Press, $24.95 paper- $I 8.95 paperback) is a
from the Past 200 Years," back) by Marcy Goldman roundup by food writer-cookfeatures some 250 recipes. and Yvan Huneault is a col- ing teacher George Geary of

practically every kind of
cheesecake you may have
imagined and then some.
Savory versions are included,
and recipes for sauces to
serve with your cheesecake.
Finally, two sturdy standbys.
8"Betty Crocker's Cooky
Book" (Wiley, $24.95) is a
real period piece, a facsimile
of the 1961 edition, repro·
duced with all its color, about
450 recipes, photos and
drawings.
•"Betty Crocker's Ultimate
Cake Mix Book" (Wiley,
$24.95) is a completely upto-date manual for those who
admit they do grab a box and
go the convenience food way
- but still want to try add a
twist here and there.
Both are handily designed
books, with concealed wue
ring binding .

r'

How to handle postThanksgiving turkey
After
the
big
Thanksgiving dinner, I
always wonder what to do
with the additional I 0
pounds of leftover turkey.
Of course, I always make
many turkey sandwiches,
turkey soup and the convenient turkey casserole. But
sometimes
I'm
.too
"turkeyed-out" and don ' t
even want to hear the word
"tu~key." That's when I
salute Dr. John Gorrie for
inventing the freezer.
By storing leftovers in
the freezer, I can try something a little different when
''turkey-time" resurfaces a
couple of months later. The
National
' Turkey
Foundation has many
appealing recipes. I' ve not
tried them all, but the
Home-style Turkey Pot Pie
and Turkey Tetrazzini have
been taste tested by mY .
family and both dishes
received "thumbs-up."
For your information,
cooked turkey will keep
well in the freezer up to 4
months when wrapped . in
heavy foil or placed in
freezer bags. Thaw any leftover turkey in the refrigerator. or· microwave. Do not
defrost at room temperature.
With turkey in the freezer, you can enjoy these
delectable dishes long after
the Thanksgiving meal is
just a tasty memory.

Sandi

Sammon
FOOD COLUMNIST

flour into remaining stock;
stir into hot vegetable mixture.
Bring to a boil and simmer 8-l 0 minutes, stirring
.until thickened. Remove ·
bay leaf. Stir in peas and
turkey.
Spoon into 9-inch pie ·
crust. Fit second pie crust ·
over the top and seal edges.
Cut vents in center for
steam to escape. Brush top
pastry with milk.
Bake in a preheated 400
degree F oven for 10 minutes . Immediately reduce
oven temperature to 350
degrees F and bake for 2025 minutes or until the pas_try is golden brown and filling .is bubbly.

Home-Style
Turkey' Pot Pie

Turkey Tetrazzini
Servings: 4
2 Tablespoons cornstarch
!- ~. Cups

skim milk ·

'!, Cups TURKEY
BROTH or reduced-sodium
chicken bouillon
~' Teaspoon salt
~. Teaspoon garlic powder ·
~. Teaspoon pepper
~. Cup grated Parmesan

Servings: 6
I Tablespoon butter
I Small sweet onion
chopped
.
~. Cup carrots peeled and
chopped
~. Cup potatoes peeled
and chopped
~. Cup celery chopped
~.Teaspoon salt
~'Teaspoon dried thyme
~~ Teaspoon dried rose·
mary crushed
Pinch black pepper
1 bay leaf
2
Cups
TURKEY
BROTH
~~ Cup flour
I Cup frozen peas
2 · Cups
COOKED
TURKEY chopped
2 9-inch pie crusts
2 Tablespoons milk
In a saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add
onion, carrots. potatoes and
celery. Cook until softened,
about 5-7 minutes.
Add seasonings, herbs
and 1- ~. cups stock. Blend

cheese
2 Tablespoons white wine
I Can (4 ounces)
mushrooms
drained
I Jar (2 ounces) chopped
pimiento drained
4
Ounces
spaghetti
cooked according to pack.
age directions and drained.
2
Cups
COOKED
TURKEY cut into~... inch
cubes
2 TaQlespoons sliced ·
almonds
In 3-quart saucepan over
medium heat, combine
cornstarch, milk, · broth, :
salt, garlic powder and pep- · ·
per. Bring mixture to boil,
stirring constantly. Remove
, from heat and stir in cheese,
wine, mushrooms, pimien·
to, spaghetti and turkey.
Pour turkey mixture into
lightly · greased 9-inch
square casserole dish. Top
with almonds. Bake at 375 degrees F. 25 minutes or ·
. until mixture bubbles and ·.
top is browned.

'
i'

•

'•
;

'it&gt;

,,
,u:·
J~-

.,

Calling a·ll cooks!
seaeon

The-hOliday
is here~_ and our thoughtS ate turnlhg toward food.
Some of lhe belt cook$. to be lWnd ~re are right here in the trl-county.
And we went to hear fi'om them.
,
If you, or somsone you know, enjoys cooking - and is a good cook, of course
;
- call ~porter Millissla Russell.
The only requirements are that you be a good cook, willing to be featured on
our food page and to share five or six of your favorite recipes. . .

•

Health

6unbap lim~ ·itntin,l

Page C3
Sunday, Pecember 1, 2007

~

Cookie cutter artists keep
their nonconformist edge
BOONSBORO, Md. (AP)
- The cookie has crumbled
nicely for identical twins Bill
and Bob · Cukla, who started
out as drag-racing gearheads
and ~nded up as kitchen-gadget kings.
'
Cookie cutters. that is.
Elaborate, handmade tinware
is priced from $6 to $35
apiece in their Hammer Song
catalog, and even higher in
gourmet boutiques.
The witty, finely detailed
designs. which include a
robed and bearded wise man
bearing a covered dish, make
it clear the brothers and their
wives·are artists.
Just don 't call them that.
"A lot of these other craftspeople, they take themselves
real seriously as 'artistes,"'
Bill says in his blue-collar
Chicago dialect. "We're not."
He drives the point home
as he demonstrates his craft,
deftly bending an inch-wide
band of tin around nails J?CO'truding from a plank: "Tius is
mind-numbing," · he complains.
.
It sells, though, and that's
what keeps Bill and his wife,
Betsy Ayella Cukla, a formally trained artist, out in the
garage behind their rural
western Maryland home,
twisting and soldering as
many as 13,000 cutters a year
for sale in stores, by mail and
at craft shows.
Brother Bob and his wife,
Julie Flaherty, also trained
artists, collaborate on the
designs and make oth~r tinware pieces, from painstaking. antiqu.e reproductions to
colorful Jewelry, that the four
partners sell.
Cookie cutters are Hammer
Song's bread and butter,
prized by deep-pocketed collectors ·who seek them out at
shops including La Cuisine in
Alexandria, Va.
"The designs are so unique
and the details are so intricate. ·You just don't find that
kind of detail in many other
cutters," Stephanie Gorenflo,
the store's merchandise manager said.
Cookies
made
from
Hammer Song cutters have
been hung on the White

-

OHIO VALLEY BANK
'

,'

Reading labels can.:
make a difference· •

Set reasonable goals
for exercise programs
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va . Many people
have the best intentions
when they begin an exerCISe program.
Unfortunately, the truth
. of the matter is that over
65% of all individuals who
begin an exercise program
drop-out within 5-6 weeks .
This is usually due to unre. alistic expectations and
lack of preparation.
For example , someone
may want to lose 30
pounds. Instead of setting
a goal to lose 30 pounds ,
they should set a goal to
lose 5 pounds. This is a
more obtainable goal and
once it has been achieved
then they can set a ·new
goal to lose · another 5
pounds. This way the indi-

vidual feels like they have
accomplished something
by losing the 5 pounds. If
iheir goal was to lose 30
pounds they may be.c ome
fru stra ted because they
have 25 more pounds to
lose .
When setting the se goals
individuals must remember
no matter how much it
seems like it, they did not
gain the weight overnight.
In turn it will not come off
overnight.
If they can
"hang in there" through the
first six weeks they will
start to see the results they
want.
Once a realistic goal has
been set the individual
needs to plan their exercise
program.
Many people
begin exercise programs

not knowing what they
have to do to obtain their
goals.
Thi s lack of preparation
can lead to frustration
which in turn leads to the
large drop-out rate.
When planning for their
exercise program they need
to plan what type of exercise they will do, when,
where, how long, how
often and how intense.
Like any team, it doesn't
matter how many great athletes there are, without a
game plan they will lose.
There are a variety of
sources to assist with
developing an exercise
program ;
books/magazines, videos , the Internet,
and
so-called
fitness
experts .

•

Whether you ' ve been between diet and cancer•: ·
diagnosed with Type II dia- were much more likely to ·:
betes or are just watching read Nutrition Facts labels ·
your weight , you have than those who didn't hold
probably found that there is those beliefs. Also. those
all sorts of information on who were in the mainteNutrition Facts labels on nance stage of adopting a
food products.
low-fat diet also tended to
If you' re concerned about use the labels more.
being healthy, you may
The best news is this:
come to the sudden realiza- According to the st udy,
tion of how diet can have a using the Nutrition Facts
strong effect on health. labels was , in fact, associatType II diabetics are proba- _ed with consuming less fat.
bly counting carbs to help The study's authors recom, '·
control blood glucose lev- mended that dietitians can
els, using the Nutrition use the results to emphasize
Facts label as a guideline. to their clients the impor: ·':
It 's also common to count tance of reading nutritio~
fat grams and calories to 'labels.
· '
keep your diet in balance
Reading the label s isn '( ·..
and help Jose weight hard . One of . the most ·
weight is often a factor
important features is serv - ..
.associated with Type II dia- ing size and the number ol· ·
betes .
And, if you're a woman. servings - to determine
you may have been aware how many servings the .
.of the information availabl{ package actually contains, :,·
on tile Nutrition Facts label s and to make sure you're ::
for quite some time. In a consuming the amount -of
study published in 1999 in food that all of the informathe -Journal of the American tion on the label is based
Dietetic
Association. upon. For other tips on
researchers found that using the Nutrition Facts
women used the labels labels, see the Food and
much more often than men . Drug Administration's Web
·
at ..
Consumers younger than 35 site
llv.m
.c
fs
an.
fda.
go
v
1-d
http:
and those with at least a
high school 'education also m s I f o o d I a b :'
were more likely to use the &lt;http://vm.cfsan. fda.gov 1..:.
dm s/foodlab.html&gt; html
labels.
That study also deter- &lt;http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/mined
tllat individual dms/foodlab.html&gt; .
beliefs play a factor in who . (Becky Collins is Gallia
reads labels and who does- County's extension age11t
n' t. . People who believed for family and consumer
that it was important to eat a sciences/comnumity develOhio
State
low-fat diet and those who opment,
believed in an association University.)

The best bet is to meet
with a certified personal
trainer.
A certified personal
trainer is trained to assist
in goal setting and developing an individual exercise program to obtain
tho se goals.
The trainers at Pleasant
Valley Ho spital' s Wellness
Center are certified by the
Aerobics
and
Fitness
Association of America ,
(AFAA) and the American
College of Sports Medicine
(ACSM). Stop by or call to
see how our trainers can
assist you. 304-675-7222.
Eric T. Marlin, M.S., is
the director of health and
wei/ness for the Point
Pleasant Vallev Fitness
Center
·

..

Ohio State to study effects
of exercise on heart failure
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio State make patients feel better, as
University Medical Center well."
cardiologtsts are part of a
The study's leaders seek to
national can improve the determine the long-term safequality and length of life for ty efficacy of exercise trainpatients with congestive heart ing combined with standard
failure.
care for patients with congesThe National Institutes of tive heart failure, compared
· Health is funding the $20 with a strategy of standard
million trial, and the OSU care alone. Typical treatment
Heart Center is one of I0 lead includes a number of medicasites for the project.
tions that work together to
"Heart failure has a . improve symptoms and slow
tremendous impact on a disease progression. Patients
patient's quality of life. Its also routinely are advised to
symptoms can be very maintain a heart-healthy died
uncomfortable and frighten- and to exercise regularly.
ing," said Dr. William T.
The study also is designed
Abraham, chief of cardiology to asses whether the exercise
and principal investigator of causes complications for
Ohio State's participation in patients.
the study.. "Great strides have
"Understanding exercisebeen rimde in improving out- related complications will
comes for heart failure help physicians weigh the
patients; but we believe mod- risks and benefits of adding
erate exercise carries benefits an - exercise component to
that will not only improve stand.ard heart failure care,"
chances of survival and Abraham said.
Congestive heart failure
reduce the need for hospitalizations, but will simply affects an estimated 4. 7 mil-

lion Americans. Of those, up
to I million are classified as
moderate to severe cases,
experiencing shortness of
breath, fatigue and palpitations that either limit or prevent patients from participating in physical activity. Heart
failure typically develops following injury to the heart
caused by a heart attack,
long-term high blood pressure or an abnormality in a
heart valve. It is characterized by a reduced ejection
fraction - a measurement of
how well the heart is pumping - and sometimes leakage
of fluid into the lungs, feet,
legs or abdominal cavity.
In the trial, participants will
be randomly placed in one of
two groups. Those in the nonexercise-training arm of the
study will receive recommendatiorts on how to safely
begin their own exercise
training program, while those
in the exercise-training arm
will undergo supervised

trammg initially and then
keep. an exercise diary once
training moves to their home
setting. Th\! . training will
involve either walking on a
treadmill or riding a stationary bicycle.
A total of' 3,000 patients
will be recruited for the
study, led by Duke University
and spanning 31 regional
centers and satellite sites.
Ohio ·State will recruit
approximately I 00 patients .
In Ohio, the University of
Cincinnati and Case Western
Reserve University also are
participating.

~ast

ON-· NUTRITION

B vitamins too much of a good thing?
DEAR DR. BLONZ: I read sorbed, or leaves via the urine.
many articles that recommend
Many of the cells in the
vitamins B-6 and B-12 supple- body are replaced on a regular
ments for a variety of reasons, basis, and vitamin B-12 plays
but they don't say how much a key role in the system that
one should take. I purchased makes new cells. If there is ·a
bottles of these, but noticed deficiency of vitamin B-12,
that the tablets of B-6 provide this process does not operate
5,000 percent of the Daily effictently. One of the cells in
Value, and those of B-12 pro- the body with the shortest life
vide 4,167 percent of the Daily spans is the red blood cell.
Value. Tell me about these vit- This helps explain why one of
amins. Is there ever a reason the fust symptoms of B-12
why one would need so much deficiency is a type of anemia
more than the Daily Value? Is called megaloblastic anemia,
there a danger of taking "too Other symptoms include menmuch"? - H.S., Encinitas, ll\1 confusion, weakness, tingling, numbness, irritability,
Calif.
DEAR H.S.: Let's consider loss of taste and smell, and a
each of these vitamins sepa- sore tongue.
Seniors are at a high risk for
rately.
.
Vitamin B- 12: The Daily vitamin B- 12 . deficiency; an
Value for B-12 is 6 micro- estimated 10 percent of all
grams per day (1,000 micro- elderly people have inadegrams to equal I milligram). quate . blood levels or this
Vitamin B-12 is found only m nutrient. Such a deficiency,
bacteria and animal foods. surprisingly, can even develop
Vegetarians can use specially when there's an adequate
fermented soy products, such. dietary intake. The problem is .
as tempeh or miso, as a dietary related to the fact that seniors
source. The alternative is to often have an insufficient prorely on foods fortified with vit- duction of digestive acid in the
amin B-12 or a food supple- stomach . This is especially
ment. To be absorbed into the possible when certain medicabody, vitamin B- 12 needs to tions; such as antacids, are
link with a protein called an routinely used. The lack of
"intrinsic factor," which is digestive acid means that the
body will not be as efficient in.
released in the. stomach.
Your product contains 250 digesting foods and releasing
micrograms, which is 41.67 . the vitamin B-12 they contain.
times the Daily Value. Unless In such cases, taking vitamin
there is a specific medical B-12 as a supplement (or as an
problem, it IS unclear why . injection) can be "more eftianyone would need this much. cient" than having it in foods ,
Vitamin B-6: The Daily
As for · it being "too much,"
there is not much evidence of Value for vitamin B-6, also
danger from taking excessive. known as pyridoxine, is 2 milamounts of B-12. This doesn't ligrams per day. Your product
mean that you can take as contains I 00 milhgrams,
much as you want; it just which is 50 times the Daily
means that we don't really Value.
There are concerns with eleknow how much is too much.
The body doesn't store B-12, vated intakes of vitamin B-6.
so the unneeded vitamin either Unless there is a specific medpasses through the body unab- _ical reason, it is unclear why

you would be taking it at this
level. This is especially true if
you are on any other mellications, orifyouhaveotherpreexisting health conditions.

'

Day
:T oday!

Open
' 12:00-4:00

While it is true that B..(i is a
vitamin, when you take it at
this level it is acting as a drug
and not a supplement.
Although adverse effects fiom
vitamin B-6 are not generally
found below dosages of 500
milligrams per day, they have
occasionally been reported at
lower levels. The most common side effect is sensory neuropathy, which is a condition
that involves changes in sensation in the hands and feet The
side effects subside once the
B-6 is.discontinued.lf you are
taking high levels of vitamin
B-6, be alert and report to your
doctor if you start to ex perience any unusual sensations in
. your extremities.
Vitamin B-6 plays a key role .
in protein metabolism, but it is
also needed for fat and carbohydrate· metabolism, and in
nerve transmission as welL
Deficiency symptoms include
a type of . anemia called
hypochromi_c anemia, as well
as skin problems and neurological problems (confusion,
depression,
convulsions,
·
D·
peripheral neuritis). 1etary
sources include meats, poultry,
fish, blackstrap molasses, soybeans, wheat germ, brewer's
yeast, whole grains, bananas,
avocados, green vegetables
and leafy vegetables.
· (Ed Blonz. Ph.D., is a nutri·
tion sciemisr and rhe !Jfjlhor of
"Power Nutrition" and the
"Your Personal Nwritioirist "
book series.)

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�Page C4

Entertainment
Travel books
can take
.
you to fascinating places
The books reviewed in this
column will include both current publications and old
favorites. There are so many
truly enjoyable books that it
is difficult 10 choose.
Today, I will. mclude a
great new novel and two nonfi,tion titles.
There arc some places you
COLUMNIST
will never vi sit and many
experiences you will never
have. Good travel books can pesky young woman who
take you to distant and fasci- kept giving unwanted advice.
miting places without ever The trai l has had nine murle;,tving your chair. almost as ders. incl uding two women
who were killed ·during the
good as the r.:al thing 1
1
time
of Bryson's hike.
'A Walk in he Woods" by
They left the trail at Front
Bill Bryson ts one of the best.
Bryson returned from living Royal. Va. Bryson hiked
iii England lor 20 years and alone through Pennsylvania,
moved to a small town in and Katz joined him again in
New England. They didn't
New Ham'pshire.
Pne day he happened on a htke the entire trail. This realpath that vams hed into the ly increased my admiration
1voods at 1he edge of town , . for our own "Grandma"
the Appalacllian Trail. He Gatewood, who hiked the
decided to walk it. thinking it trail three times, the last time
would get him in shape . be when she was 72! There is a
tnteresti ng and provtdc wonderful scrapbook at
Bossard Library with clipopportumty for reflection.
He selll out in vitations to pings {)f her journeys .
"Martha,
Inc."
by
JOin htm on the htke in hi s
Christmas cards. He had only Chmtopher Byron is one
one "taker," hi s out -of-shape, man's trashing of Martha
s hort -of-b~eath ,
former Stewart, written BEFORE
fne ncl,
'whom
Bry son her problems with insider
de sen bes as "Orson Welles trading. He maligns her from
after a very bad nigt." Katz her falsified childhood to her
arrived wtth a 75-pound duf- sham marriage to her neglect
of her only child, Alexis.
llc bag fuII of Snickers bars.
He has little good to say
The Appalachian Trail runs
more than 2, I00 miles from about Martha, dwelling
Georgia to Maine and wan- · instead on her "controlders across 14 states. Each freak" obsession with nerfecyear about 2,000 people tion. Perhaps one of the most
· begtn the JOUrney. Only about unkind things she has done is
I 0 percent actually walk the tell a reporter her former husenttre trail. One in fi ve drops band was impotent - this
while his new . .wife was
out the first wee~ .
expecting
twins!
~ryson and Katz began in
Georgia on March 9 and were
Born Polish in Nutley, N.J.,
gree ted by a freak snow- 1941 to a door-mat mother
storm. Katz threw away half and a controlling father,
the supplies the first day, Martha was chosen one of
including the coffee filters, so Glamour Magazine's "Best
they had to use toilet paper to Dressed College Girls" (with
filter the coffee .
bOrrowed or hand-made
Some parts of the trail are clothes). How is that for ingeonly 18 inches wide and far nuity? She became a model, a
from human habitation. stockbroker, a caterer (her
Some of the shelters are open first partner says she stole the
on one side to the weather. bu si ness), an author, TV perSometimes they must travel sonality and a billionnaire'
.several days before a grocery
Determined, motivated,
store ts available.
succeed- ~t -all-costs, Martha
Bryson's account of the is quite a person. It is a bit
hike is absolutely hilarious at sad how gleeful we are when
times, quite serious at others. the mighty have fallen.
He is concerned about the
We are all curious about
~ effects of pollution .. He met a unsolved murders. What realwide variety of hikers, from ly happened to Jon Benet
the Ralph Lauren crowd to a Ramsey? Or Chandra Levy?

Beverly
Gettles

Will we ever know?
One of my favorite new
novels is "The Little .Friend"
by Donna Tartt. When
Harriet Cleve Dufresnes was
a year old, her brother was
murdered in the backyard of
their home while she and her
sister played nearby. His
killer was never identified.
In the years that follow, her
mother becomes nearly catatonic from grief and her
father absents himself from
the house and is always away
"on business." Her sister is
also scarred by the murder.
Harriet grows up largely
unsupervised, except for a
kindly maid, Ida, who
replaces her inept mother.
She also has an attentive
grandmother, Edie, and three
doting great-aunts who share
.the same small Mississippi
town.
When she is 12, Harriet
decide s she will find her
brqther's killer. She is a
loner. Her only close friend is
Hely , who admires her for
her daring and smarts and has
a bit of a crush on her.
The . Ratliff brothers, who
run a meth lab in a shed at the
back of their grandmother's
· property, become the prime
suspects. They are alternately
scary and comic and really,
really sleazy. Faris is paranoid; Danny is speed-crazed;
Eugene is a prison-converted
preacher; and poor Curtis is
n;.tarded.
This is a mystery, an
unhappy family story, and a
coming-of-age story. Tartt
does not spare us a look at a
drab, ugly, and sometimes
evil world, seen by a child
who herself is ·no paragon of
virtue. Harriet can be pouty,
vindictive, sullen, and mean.
She is also determined and
brave and loyal. She seems as
believable as any child in
recent fiction.
Loved this book, especially
for the fine writing! Must
caution that some of the language is a bit raw, so I will
give it an "R" rating, just like
the movies. Don't forget to
send me your Christmas
favorites
at
jamescget@eurekanet. com.
(Beverly Genies is a retired
librarian and lives m
Gallipolis).

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Sunday, December 1, zoor·

.
•
.~

Curtis thriving
Layers of age removed from
Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home on the road in

~

Hail Caesar! Friars Club roasts
Sid Caesar on his 80th birthday :
Bv SUE

. Funnyman Drew Caiey
Special to the Times-Sentinel
brought his niece Allison
who recently moved fro~
Cleveland
(his home.)
Thi~ was an e·vening for ·
''!'
m
a
novice
compared to
Amencan royalty, and it
this
guy,"
Cary
modestly
all happened at The Friars
Club, a building nestled satd. In the meantime
between the decadent Cary currently brings i~
Peninsula Hotel and a nail bucks for not one, but two
salon catering to the rich shows, "The Drew Cary
and famous: those with the Show"and"Whose Line Is
bucks to live in an area It Anyway?" Not exactly
called Beverly Hill s adja- chopped liver.
"I was too young to see
cent.
·
Known for smoky cigars the originals," said Cary.
and off-beat humor, The "But I watched reruns.
Friars Club gives roasts He's the best."
TV star Dennis Farina
and toasts and mosts .
Tonight , it brought togeth- attended solo. A huge
er old and new Hollywood Caesar fan, Farina enjoys
and for a few hours was a watching "Curb Your
and
tad on-color. This autumn Enthusiasm"
·
"Everybody
Loves
night was the faux birthday; Caesar celebrated pri- Raymond." Apparently the
camera does not flatter this
vately on September 8th.
America 's sweetheart middle-aged man . He was
Sid Caesar and family (hi~ the mo st charismatic male
MD son is 6'7") and in the room, other than the
entourage of famous ador- honoree .
Farina caught up with
ing fans filled the club
Red
Buttons, who brought
with many warm memohve-tn
galpal VIctoria
ries.
Jolson
(of
the famous
"When I became familiar
with Sid's body of work, it Jolson family). Buttons
was l~ke becoming famil - performed his "Never Had
Iar wnh the Holy Grail," a Dinner" Routine, which
satd ER's resident hunk, i~ legendary in Hollywood
Noah Wyle. "It has been cucles and always will
one of television great bnng grown men to their
crimes that Your Show of knees.
Perennial
bachelor
Shows or Caesar Hour has
never been syndicated for Richard Lewis, brought
future ~enerations to ~row music publisher Joyce
up wah and enJoy." Lapinski, his girlfriend of
(Speaking of future gener- ftve years . Lapinski has
ations. Wyle became a good hair or at least was
first time Dad shortly after having a good hair day.
P~yllis Diller, an octogethis interview).
How's this for a scoop? nanan who recently retired
Wyle told us that he would from show biz (don't
portray the living legend in believe it) chatted with
a film about his life. "We Nanette Fabray. Both
met here a few years ·ago " looked stunning. Fabray
said the ER star. "After 'a brought businessman,Tony
few lunches, Sid gave me Melia, a five-year friend.
his stamp of approval to !hat could mean anything
relive his life on screen." m Hollywood. You go girl!
Fabray
~raciously
Wyle's pro~uction 'comparecalled
worktng
with
ny ts shoppmg the project
Caesar. "I was terrified to
around town.
Because Wyle's wife was meet this great star. He
mega pregnant during this was Mr. Television. I said I
evening, a familiar face don ' t 'know if I &lt;C an·
provided the actor as an remember my lines or do
escort. ER 's Paul McCrane this. He reached across his
- the hostile TV doc- filled desk, took my hand and
in. This man is nothing but said, don't worry, we will
hostile off the set. Ju'st take care of you. I did the
show and felt like we had
shows he can act.
"As luck would have it, known each other all our
I am a huge Caesar fan.
This is quite a thrill for r-.~;u;;;;;::;;;:;;:::----,
me tonight," said Crane.
Not everyone could get
·
a date.
FACTER

SPRINGFIELP.
Ohio
(AP) The hammer's
steady bam, bam, bamescapes from deep within the
center of the Westcott House
and echoes through each
sick! y room, like a heartbeat
sparked back to life after
nearly a century.
Scaff~lding tightly hugs
the outstde of the home making the surgery difficult' to see
from the corner of High
Street
and
Greenmont
Avenue. But the changes are
there.
And they're dramatic.
Those changes, or rather
restorations, include a halffinished historically correct
roof. the opening of formerly
closed porches and structural
reinforcement.
·
"All the additions have
been removed, and the full
cantilever of the porches is
visible," said Courtney
Vandtford, restoration project
coordinator with the Westcott
House Foundation, a group
working to bring tlje house
Frank Lloyd Wright designed
m the early 1900s back to its
original splendor.
~nsid~, layers of age are
bemg npped away. Wright's
original vision has begun to
peek t~rough large holes in
faux-ft~tsh wall coverings
and bnghtly colored paint
that was slathered on in the
five decades the house served
as an apartment complex.
"One of the difficulties in
restoring a house is, after
about 50 years, everything
becomes historic," Vandiford
said. "At what point do you

lives. "
My Big Fat Greek ·
Wedding star, Lainie'
Kazan, mingled with" ·
Buddy Hackett, Tony•
Martin, Elaine Booster and ..
Carl Reiner, who's wifeEstelle (a singer) stayed:.
home with back problems. ·Kazan said Wedding costars hang at each other's ·'
homes and continuie the ··
feasts at var iou s local·
eateries .. She pals with;
John
Corbett,
Nia.'
Vardarlos and Andrea'
· Martin .
Sid Caesar, the man of
the hour, a bit slender, sat' '
quietly and greeted guests
in a fragile manner. He ··
spoke softly and .slowly:
But, and this is a gigantic'
but, the minute he hit the
stage to do his "global'' '
comedy routine (with :
accents in chicken French, .
Italian
and
-German,
Japane se) whatever the :
exorbitant price of the din- ·
ner was , was well worth it.'·
I would have done dishes· ·
to hear this man humor the ,
room. Many were pounding on the table from· .
laughter. His ac t ·brought"
screams.
,,
Florence, Caesar's wife. :
of 59 years, that 's 59 years .
folks, brought their three.'
children, Michelle, Karen-'
and Richard. It was family"·
night in Hollywood, and
by the way, with no cigars ..' '
Each guest received a· :
w~ite chocolate lollipop"·
wtth Caesar 's face.
··
(Sue Facter is an L.A.
based freelance writer, ana-:.
a regular contributor tal'
USA Today and People
Magazine. This article was
compliments of The Story
Dispatch, to which she '
The·'
also contributes.
Story
Dispatch ,
an
News'
. Entertainment
Service, will be opening :
soon on the world wide"
web. The Tribune, through·.~
an arrangemellf with · the
site, will pro~ide originh(
conte~:~t each week from its ·
writers.
· ·· ·
To contact Sue Facter: •·
Sue@ storydispatch. com)

very disturbed young man
(Jon Abrahams).
' Btlly'.s freaked out, ranting
about "They," how they are
out to ~et him, how they
mess wtth electricity, how
they will go after anyone
who had "night terrors" as a
child, Julia included . Then he
kills himself in the middle of
a diner - a decision that in
retrospect, given what's in
store for Julia and two of
Billy's otl')er friends, seems
WISe. '
But what are "They" exactly - other than murkv,
cl~eap-looking
special
ettects? What \ their motivation ? How do they choose
thetr vtctims'? If Hood and
Harmon know, they 've
dectded not to share it with
the audience.
About as. specific as the
movie gets comes in a con·versati on between Julia and
Sarah , a~ adorable young
pallent ot the child psychiatn st. J~ l ta has begun seeing
agatn tn an attempt to calm
her fears.
"They come for me," Sarah
explains.
"Who comes?"
"They."
''Why do they come for
you?"

. NEW YORK (AP) · -.
Celebrity birthdays for the
week of Dec. 1-7:
Dec. I: Actor-director
Woody Allen is 67. Singer
Lou Rawls is 67. Comedianactor Richard Pryor is tj2.
Drummer John Densmore 'of
The Doors is 58. Actresssinger Bette Midler is 57.
Singer Gilbert O'Sullivan is
56. Actor Treat Williams is
51. Actress Charlene Tilton is
44. Model-actress Carol Alt
is 42. Actor Jeremy Northam
is 41. Guitarist Brad Delson
of Linkin Park is 25.
.
Dec. 2: Actress Julie Harris
is 77,. Actress Cathy Lee
Crosby is 58. News anchor
Stone. Phillips is 4a. Actor
Denms
Christopher
("Breaking Away," "Chaiiots
of Fire") Is 47. Actress Lucy
Liu is 34. Actress Rena Sofer
(''Just Shoot Me") is 34.
Ral'per -&lt;~'reach of Naughty
By Nature is 32. Singer Nelly
Furtado is 24. Singer Britney

'·

Contractors work to restore the roof of the Westcott House Nov. 21, 2002, in Springfield, Ohio,
whtch was destgned by the world famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright in the early 1900s. (AP)
restore the house to?"
The foundation resolved
that 'Common debate by taking the home back to the
beginning in I 908, after construction was finished for
Orpha and Burton Westcott,
whose company manufactured luxury touring cars.
Contractors are nearly finished with the first phase of
the three-phase project set to"
be completed in the·spring of
2004. The first phase
includes roof and structure
work, so the house will be
'

protected during the winter.
through the construction
Next, workers will start phases. But the group also
restoring plaster, flooring, needs to collect money to
hardware and other details move forward with programinside. Landscaping and ming after the house is comother outside work will be plete, she said.
done in the final phase.
"We hope to gain more
Once that first phase is community support and more
done, the foundation will regional, national and even
offer hard-hat tours to the international funding," she
public to raise money. The · said.
group needs $4.55 million to
Once finished, the house
restore the house.
will become a house museum
Vandiford said the founda- that fou'ndation members
tion has some of that money hope would attract tourists to
- enough to keep working the area.

Spears is 21.

The Goo Goo Dolls is 37.
J?~c. 3:. Singer Andy Comedian Margaret Cho is
Williams 1s 75. Director 34. Actor Nick Stahl ("In the
Jean-Luc Godard is 72. Bedroom") is 23. Actor
Frankie Muniz ("Malcolm in
S~nger Jaye P. Morgan is 71.
Smger Ozzy Osbourne is 54. the Middle") is 17.
Actress Daryl Hannah is 42.
Dec. 6: Jazz pianist Dave
Actress Julianne Moore is 42. Brubeck is 82. Actress
Actor Brendan Fraser is 34 - JoBeth Williams is 54. Actor
Singer Montell Jordan is ~4: Tom Hulce is 49. Actor Kin
Actress Holly Marie Combs Shriner is 49. Talk show host
("Charmed") is 29. Actress Wil Shriner is 49. Comedian
Anna Chlumsky is 22. Actor Steven Wright is 47. Guitarist
Brian Bonsall ("Family Peter Buck of R.E.M. is 46.
Ties") is 21.
Actress
Janine
Turner
Medicine,"
Dec. 4: Game show host ("Strong
Wink Martindale is 68. Actor "Northern Exposure") is 40.
Jeff Bridges is 53. Jazz singer Keyboardist Ulf "Buddha"
Cassandra Wilson is 47. Ekberg of Ace of Base is 32.
Actress Marisa Tomei is 38.
Dec. 7: Actor Eli Wallach is
Rapper Jay·Z ·is 33. Model 87. Actress Ellen Burstyn is.
Tyra Banks is 29. Country 70. TV journalist Carole
singer Lila McCann is 2I.
Simpson is f:. Country
Dec. 5: Singer Little singer Gary Morris is 54.
Richard is 70. Opera singer Singer Tom Waits is 53.
Jose Carreras is 56. Singer Announcer Edd Hall ("The
Jim Messina (Loggins and Toni~ht Show With Jay
Messina, Poco) is 55. Singer- Leno ') is 44. Actor C.
guitarist Johnny Rzeznik of Thomas Howell is 36.

Top five list for weekend of Nov. 28-Dec. 1
By The Anocllted Preu

Television
1. "Friends," NBC.
· 2. "ER," NBC.
3. "The Bachelor," ABC.
. 4. "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation," CBS.
,5. "Will &amp; Grace," NBC.
.(From Nielsen Media
Research)

7:00 &amp; 9:15 ENDS TUES
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:15

L.aura Regan in RoiJert Harmons "Wes Craven Presents· They "
(AP).
.
.
that besets them, they unlock
the secret to defeating it.
The victims in "They"
have done nothing wrong:
they're chosen arbitrarily
and have no recou·rse. The
least likable character, the
boyfriend, is spared.
That's · the way terror
works in real life, not in the

Films

lllOVIeS.
"Wes Craven Presents:
They," a Dimension Films
release, is rated PG-13 for
terror/violence, sexual content and violence . .Running
ttme: 89 mmutes. One and a
half stars out of four.

1. "Die Another Day,"
MGM.
2. "Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets," Warner
Bros.

By The Auoclated PrHI

DON'T WAIT

Entertainment highlights
during the week of Dec. I-7:
In 1958, RCA Records
signed singer Neil Sedaka.
In I969, four people died at
a Rolling Stones concert at
the Altamont Speedway in
Livermore, Calif. One of the
victims was stabbed by ri
Hell's Angel.
In 1970, on the anniversary
of the Altamont Speedway
concert, the documentary
"Gimme Shelter" premiered
lin New York. It was about the
Rolling Stones' 1969 tour.
In 1973, The Who spent the
night in jail in Montreal after
causing $6,000 worth of
damage to a hotel room.
In 1980, · the surviving

I,

VACCINATE!

I

'·
A Sun il! l o45, 4 ' 15,7 ' 1D,!ll50

!'t~·. ~; j' ss··~:i·s, 7 30. 10 . 10

SANDLER'S .......... .

Sat A Sun. at 2 .05, 4 :l 5, 7 40, 9 ·55

POTTER ......

n~e Chirl ..too Ballet
Kim P•utey Artistic Orrecror

r &amp; Sun at 2 4S, l '15, 6l0, 6 :4 5, 945

ER DAV .....
&amp;

&lt;;:all Your Health Care
Provider Or The Gallla
County Health Dept. At
(740) 441·2950

For More Information

Sun, 111 2 .30, 5.4 5. 9 SO
Su n ati :J0, 4 10,7 00,1 0 0 0

CLAUSE 2 ...
ShOWing Sa1

&amp;

Sun at 1''10, "' .:w , 7 20, 9 4 5

Hot five
I.
"Lose
Yourself,"
Eminem. Shady.
2. "Work It," Missy
"Misdemeanor" Elliott. The
Gold Mind.
3. "Underneath It All," No
Doubt (feat. Lady Saw).
lnterscope.
4. "Luv U Better," LL Cool
J. Def Jam.

5. "The Game Of Love,"
Santana (feat. Michelle
Branch). Arista.
' (From Billboard magazine)

Albums
I. "The Blueprint 2: The
Gift And The Curse," Jay-Z.
Roc-A-Fella.
2. Soundtrack: "8 Mile."
Shady.
3. "Under Construction,"
Missy
"Misdemeanor"
Elliott. The Gold Mind.
4. "Justified," Justin
Timberlake. Jive/Zomba.
5. "Riot Act," Pearl Jam.
Epic.
(From Billboard magazine)

That Was the Week That Was: Nov. 28-Dec.1
.

Sat.

3. "Friday After Next,"
New Line.
·
4. "The Santa Clause 2,"
Disney.
5. "8 Mile," Universal.
(From Exhibitor Relations
Co.)

Rapper .Kon Artis of D12 is
26. Actress Shiri Appleby
("Roswell") is 24. Singer
Aaron Carter is 15.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- He enters center-stage
near the end of the first act
dapper in a yachting jacket:
srrulin~ widely, eyes glittermg. st1ll handsome after all
these years. And the matinee
audience at the Golden Gate
theater goes wild.
Matinees have always
attr!lcted a preponderance of
whne and blue hair, and
Tony Curtis had been the
screen idO'l of the cheering
women when they were
teenagers. And here he was
at 77, singing, dancing and
cutting .~P in a musical verSion of Some Like It Hot."
Curtis is not playing the
role he created in Billy
Wilder's 1959 comedy classic, in which he and Jack
Lemmon dressed as female
musicians to hide from mobsters w~o had caught them
wttnessmg a gangland massacre. In the musical ·he's
Osgood Fielding III, the
ditsy millionaire portrayed
by Joe E. Brown in the
movie - which tops the
American Film Institute's
list of all-time funniest films.
"Some Like It Hot" has
been touring the United
States since June. After the
San Francisco run, the eompany. was bound for 20 other
cities, ending in Las Vegas in
June 2003.
·
Unlike other movie stars
who chafe at playing the
same role night after night,
Curtis is thriving.
"I'm having a really good
time - the audiences have
been
so affectionate " he
.
says. "I do 18 or 20 minutes
onstage, I'm making a lot of
dough, people love me doing

.

it."

· After the final curtain,
backstage at the Golden
Gate is bustling with activity. Stagehands shove the

scenery aside. The actors,
most of them in their 20s or
early 30s, take off for dinner
dates before the evening perfqrrnance. Curtis is greeting
visitors, including a woman
who had played a chorus girl
in the movie "Some Like It
Hot." She had come to see
the show with a busload of
seniors, and Tony insists on
visiting the bus to thank
them for coming.
He returns to his dressing
room, compact quarters decorated with snapshots of
friends and family and two
of his Matisse-like paintings.
By the actor's side is his stat- ·
uesque wife of five years,
32-year-old
Jill
Ann
VanderBerg, whom he then
urges to return to the hotel
and nurse a developing cold.
His bushy hair now silver;
Curtis exudes the same boyish fervor that he showed as
a young man at Universal
Studio. His exuberance is
remarkable, considering that
his saga includes five marriages and four divorces, a
drop from top stardom to
roles in B movies, one-time
estrangement from daughier
Jamie Lee Curtis, plus addiction to narcotics and alcohol.
Bernie Schwartz, his name
before the studios changed
it, learned survival at an
early age. A younger brother
was killed by a truck when
Bernie was 12. His mother
was "very difficult," his
father was a Hungarian tailor
"who hardly learned any
English." So Bernie took to
the Bronx streets.
"I was always on the outside," he recalls. "I was
always in a foreign neighborhood. Being a Hungarian
Jew made it tough for me as
a kid. I had to accommodate
thqse stresses."

Gricoski • Dachowski Wedding
~ ~;~~::.:;;~!;.'~-Dr. Alice Ann Gricoski. and Dr. Edward A. Dachowski Jr.
Ju~e 22, 2002.durmg.an ~ftem~n doubl~ ring nupttal Mas.s at
Ca.th?hc C:h~rch m Galhpolts, Oh1o. Monsignor William Myers
the offic1atmg mmaster.
Mel~in Biars a!ld th~ ~taff of Floral Fashions of Gallipolis di:corated
church m a Colorual Williamsburg
A floral arch of magnolias and
entrance and
·
were placed on
magnolias, and
from brass
palms,
with
white BtiUlazcr lilies

Mr.

The bride wore a reaaJ-otytod weddlna dre11 deolaned by Olea Cmlnl. It
a futt white or11anu batl 11own aklr1 with a cathedral Jen11th train, and
decorated with Schlml lace rooeo, 10qutna, and pearls. The Jona sleev"
of Schlffll lace came to a delicate point over the top of the bride's
Tho beaded ndn top had a pearlod.l!od V-neokllne, and wao 11athered
at a Buque wai1tlinc. The bride wore a t'hree·laycred veil with a blu1her.
The crown headpiece wao atudded,'Whh pearlo, oequlno, satin roseo, and
~wavor~ki crystal•. A strand of pearll and a set of pearl and diamond ear-

nnll•· 111fts from the 11room, comptomented her attire. Sho cWTied a cascading bouquet of fresh white and r,ink roaes, white ataraazer lilies, and rose

calla lilies accented by ma11nolla caves and Ivy.
The bride's three »istcrs aervc.d as her attendants. Dr. Mary Kes;~)er of Bethesda, Maryland was the Matron of Honor,
and Mrs. Susan Worasz of Myll~IC Island, New Jersey and Mrs. Janet Tum of Tampa, Florida were the bridesmaids. The
dusty
organza skuts and short sleeved sold and rose lace tops and carried bouquets of pink and white rose!
wore
The ~teces of the bnde and grooJ!I serveCI a~ junio~ b~desmaids and flower g'irls . The junior bridesmaids, Misses Christin~
and achel Th~ of :rampa, Flonda and Mas~ Chnstma Dachowslti of Warrington, Pennsylvania, wore long linen arden·
style dre.sses w_lth ptnk roses buds, and camed .bouquets of pink and whice roses in ceramic tussy-muss
The
flower g1rls, M1ls Taylor Dac.howskl of Sellersville, Pennsylvania, and Miss Maura Gricoski ofWaningto~ Pennsyl. ·
w~re long organza d~s~es w1th dus~y rose skins an~ pale pink rops, and scattered pink and white rose peiats from v;~j;~
wacker baskets. The JI}OIOr bndesmatds and flower g1rls wore floral wreath headpieces made by the bride and her mother.

~ong

ros~

holder~

Thekmother of the bn~e wore a light teal colored, layered organza tea length dress . On her wrist she wore a fresh corsage
o f pm roses and carnations.
'
The groom wore a lradtlional formal cutaway tu~edo with striped trouscn;, gray vest, winged collared wh ite shirt, and
platmum a.;cot He wore gold m?nogrammed cufflm~s and a gold engraved pocket watch, wedding gifts from the brtde
The gnx~m s brothers served as _h1s attendants. Dr. M1Ch&lt;Jel Dachowski of Warrington, Pennsylvania served as Best Man:
Dr Damtan Dachowskt of Huntingdon Valle\}'. Pennsylvania and Mr. Christopher Dachowski of Sellcrsvtlle Penns lvania
~ere the groomsmen. Master Christopher Dachowslti lr. of Sellersville, Pennsyl vania ably assisted in the PrOt.:eed~ngs as
nngbearer. All groomsm~n wore ~nsembles similar to the grOom. The groom wore a white rose boutonniere while ht~
groomsmen wore boutonmeres of.pmk roses.
'
·
The bnde was given in ma.mage .by he.r parents, ~r. and Mrs. Leonard E Gricoski of Dunedin, Florida. The bride 's 00 ~
mother and aunt, Mrs. ~orame Gncosk1 of.Frackvtlle. Pennsylvania . and the groom's godfather and uncle Mr ch:rlcs
McNally of Burchrunvalle, Pennsylvania, lit the family candles Mr Leonard Oricoski of Warrington
1 ••
brother of the bride: and .Ms . fi orm
· da
· cousin
·
· the groom. read verses from sc ripture
· ennsy
. Re1'd o f ster tmg. y·ug1ma,
of
durinvama,
the
Mass. Mr. John Gncoskt of North Wa1 es, ~ennsylvama, brother of the bride, read the Pettt1ons of the Faithful. Mr. Steg hen
Dachowsk1. of Harleysvall~. P~nnsylvama: brother of the groom, Mr. and Mrs. John Dachowski of Warrmpton
Pennsylvama, brother and SISier· m-law of the groom, and Master Matthew Worosz of Mystic Island New Jer
gh '
of th.e .brtde,
gifts during the Offe rtory Procession. Mr. Peter Keszler of Bethesda,
Messrs. Theodore and Chnstopher Worosz, both of Mysttc Islan", New Jersey, all nephews of the bride were altar servers
Durmg th~ ceremony. the coup le exchanged gold wedding bands hand crafted by the. groom's fa! her Dr Edward A·
Dachuwsk.i, Sr. of Ambler, Pennsyl\'anta.
'
·

P ·

prcs~nted sy~bolic

M:;Jia~~~ a~~

h.MusJc ~as (;onducted ~nd arranged by Mr. J9hn Edelmann of Springboro, Ohio. He composed three origmal pieces for
Mus1cians included violmist Dr. EOward Sheridan' of Point
Pleasant, West Vargtnta, orga~t st Mrs. Barbara White of Evansville, Indiana, and the Brass Ensemble of Dayton, Ohio.
~~s ..Kare~ Moo re of Gulltpolts. OhiO a~,d Mr. Enc .T um of ~ampa, Flonda. brother-in-law of the bride, were the mcaltslli
o os prov ad~ by Mrs. M?ore mduded The Weddmg Song and "Ave Maria" Mr. Turn sel'\oed as cantor and san " Wh _
rever You Go The vocalists sang the duet, 'The Prayer'' during the ltghting of the Unity Candle by the bnde and iroom e
t ts occaston, "~an~n m B ~~ lat" , "Peace," and ''Hope."

"To eaL me."

Julia would do well to heed
that warning, but it wouldn't
matter. because the movie
gt ves her and the other victims no · means of fighting
. back . Craven - or Jamie
Kennedy in the guise of the
movie geek in Craven's
"Scream" - could have told
screenwriter Hood that those
who are terrorized in horror
movies are usually culpable
10 some way. When they
rea lt le that their own wrongdomg has spaw ned the evil

'Some Like It Hot'

Celebrity birthdays for the week of Dec. 1·7

Wes Craven's.'They' is all concept and nothing else
NEW YORK (AP) Some movies are high-concept. most are low-c"oncept.
"Wes Craven Prese nt s:
They" is all concept - and
no execut ion. It's as if the
script development was halted at the pitch stage and the
Tl)ovte went into production
anyway.
.: There's plenty of expositt.on but no development of
cnaracter or theme, no turning point, no climax and no
denouement. It's all first act
-. and it ends just as 1t seems
another, more interestin g
movte ts about to begin.
The premise has promi se:
"The y" supposes that the
beasties who terrorize children in their bedrooms are
not ~ n vente d by tired, ltghtdepmed eyes out of toys,
clothmg and furniture , but
are in fact real and quite
nasty. And th ey pick out certain children to terronze into
adulthood.
It mu st be noted that Wes
Craven did not write, produce, direct or have anything
else to do with the production of thi s mn vte. While
usi ng childhood nightmares
to haunt adults is an idea the
elder states ma n of horror
wo uld certai nly approve of,
nne would hope he'd develop
it further than wri ter Brendan
William Hood and director
Robert Harmon do.
The filmmakers begin with
a 5-year-old boy being terrorized, then !lash ahead 19
years to Julia (Laura Regan) ,
who 's puttin g the final
touche s nn her master\
dcg r~ e in psychology. She's
about to get intimate wi th her
haughty doofus boyfriend
(Marc Bluca s) when she 's
called away by that same
boy, Billy, now grown into a

••••• Cia~ -6e11tintl • Page cs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Polni Pleasant

I

FRIDAY AFTER NEXT .......

ruy;
"' .
w

Showifllf Sal. &amp; Sun 1'1 1 1 00, '1 :25 7 lO, 10'05

HALF PAST DEAD.. ...... ... ....
Showrng Sat &amp; Sun a t 10;()0

All AGES All TIMES S4 .00

=

... . ....
...

West Virgiria lymphooy Orchestta
Grant Cooper ArliJiicOir«fot ond Cood)J(tar

________.,__

I' ..
'

1

I '

..' "" ...

..

' ........ ,

.....

.,. a. to. .~ - -

- - -•• ..J , '

,.

"'

..._....

. _,.

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.....:.....

-

members of Led Zeppelin
announced they would not reform after the death of drummer John Bonham.
In 1982, Michael Jackson's
"Thriller" was released. It
went on to become the
biggest-selling LP of all time.
In 1989. actress Jane Fonda
and Tom Hayden filed separate petitions for divorce in
Santa Monica, Calif. Both
said the split was amicable.
In
1990,
Madonna
ABC's
appeared
on
"Nightline" to defend her
"Justify My Love" video,
which MTV had banned. She
denied the video's explicit
content was meant to stir
controversy and get publicity.
In 1992, Stevie Wonder

received
the
Lifetime
Achievement Award from the
National
Academy
of
Songwriters.
In 1996, actor Burt
Reynolds filed for bankruptcy. .
.
In 1998, rapper Coolio was
found guilty of stealing
clothes from a boutique . in
Stuttgart, Germany, and
punching the boutique owner.
He was fined $30,000 and
sentenced to probation.
In
2000,
Smashing
Pumpkins played their last
concert at a club in Chicago
- the place where they'd
played their fi~st show 13
years earlier.
•

L .. -

b Folio~ in~ Mass. the wcdd~~g..party was driven I~ the reception ~t the University of Rio Grande tn Vintage cars prov1ded
Y the Galha County Model A Club. The reception had a gala nverboat theme, in whach guesls were invited lo embark
"
on an excursion aboard ''The Weddmg Belle" to fete the happy couple. Each guest was provided with a "boardin
whtch they used t_o board the boal, a.s well as souve1~ir' handbills featuring 1he evening's itmerary and wedding g:n~~e;
menu. A spec~al n verscape ':l ura!. patntc~ by local a.:1st Mr. Brad Painter and his assistants, greeted guestct as the enlered
th_e hall. Durang . the cock tatl hour, mustc was provided by "The Backyard Dixie Jazz Stompers" of Huntingt" w, ·t
Vt.rgtma Fo~lowmg a ~ecetv.m g ltne ,in the ''pilpthousc", guests enter~d the fonnal dining room decorated with ~~~ies
wnh cen_terp!eces of magnohas and IVY arranged around crystal hurncane lamps. Monsignor Myers offered the Grace
bet~r~ dmner . ThG Be~ t Ma.n and Matron of Honor gave loving, heartwarming toasts The bride's parents also offered a
~radu~onal Pohsh greettng with bread, sail, and sweet \\oine, symbols of good luck to !he newlyweds Dulcimer m ·· · d •
mg dmner was provtded by "Bank s of the Ohio," dtrected by Dr. Linda Sigismundi The weddi~g cake made u~~' Mur
Sally Spears of J~ck.son, Ohio, ~as a multi~ti.ered creation featuring wh ite and chocolate cake and butter cre~m icing. Sla~
~ecorated w~th f~gur~s of the bndal party bndged the three separate cake sections. The main cake was tOpped with hnde
and groo.m ftgunn~es an a gazebo made of ~ake and had a nowing Water fo untain within a floral ring . The bride and g10om
cut the fust p~ece of cake Wtlh th e groom. s Navy saber. The groom's cake was a confectionery Castle cake. The bride 's
morher made an assortment of fa~cy cooktes and breads for the occasiO n. FolloWing dinner, guests danced the nighl away
wtth the happy coup le to the mus1c of "Santa Cruz" of Charleston, West Virginia.
•
•
Foll?wtog th~ ceremony. the newlyweds departed for a magtcal t,oncymoon at the Fainnonl Banff Spnngs R e ~"rt 10 th
Canadian Rock1es.
-""'
c

:!t

'.,

Dr. Alice. Dac~ow ski is a General Surgeon at the Holzer Clinil.:, Gallipolis, Oh10. Dr. Edward Dachowski is com letin , a
fellowsh tp m Ch1l.d and Adolesc.ent .Psychtatry al the Wesl~m P.sychiatnc lnslilute and Clmtc al the Universtly of P~tJtbu~ h
and plans 10 pracuce tn the Galhpohs area. The couple resades m Gallipolis, Oh10.
g

The above was a paid ad ro the Sunday Times-Semi 11 e/

�.

Inside:

Sunday, December 1, 2002:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Irked sorority sisters Response to travel volume encourages author:
are stuck with
weekend housemom
DEAR ABBY: I am a 21year-old college st udent.
This year I'm living with
three sorori.ty sisters in a
house off campu s. We get
along fine except for one
thing.
The mother of one of our
·roommates comes to stay
with her daughter and the
rest · of us every single
weekend - from Friday
night to Sunday night. She
is alway s underfoot. She is
always in the bathrooh1
_when we need to use it . .
She uses the last of the toilet paper and never
replace s it. In fact , she uses
all the household supplies
we buy as a group. We are
struggling st udents and
cannot afford to pay for a
fifth roommate .
To add insult to injury,
last weekend not only did
this woman come to stay,
but Grandma came with
her! Never once has our
roommate asked if these
visits were convenient for
the rest of us , nor have
Mom's sleepovers been
brought to our attention
·
beforehand.
Wheri
we
finally
addressed the problem with
our
roommate,
she
promised her mother would
·start getting hotel rooms
when she came to town .
Unfortunately, that hasn't
happened yet. We don't
expect her to always stay
in a hotel because of the
expense, but none of us
signed up to live with a
housemother. Please help
us!- IRKED COEDS IN
WACO, TEXAS
. DEAR IRKED COEDS:
I feel sorry for your roommate. Either the mother is
unable to let her daughter
grow up and separate from
her, or she may be seeking
to escape an abusive environment. However, the current arrangement is unfair
to you and your other
roommates. So . st ick to.
your guns and insist that
the- mother keep · her
promise to make arrangements for other. accommodations.
DEAR ABBY: My son is
going through separation
and divorce. It is not a
friendly one.
He is now serving in the
military overseas. His wife

Page Dl
Sunday, December 1, 2002

Max
Tawney

Dear

Abby

•

me

Years after his death, the
'King of Champagne Music'
lives on in fans hearts

Aguilera sheds teen
pop image - and
clothes -for new disc·

Kim Canaday
and the
family dog,
Mandy, relax
·In their family
·room; which
Is decorated ·
In a country/ .
traditional
theme.

A country, Americana,
traditional Christmas
BY MIWSSIA

Relations Co. Inc. and
Nielsen ED! Inc. are:
I. "Die Another Day," .
MGM, $47.1 million, 3,314
locations, $14,204 average,
$47 .I million, one week.
2. "Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets," Warner
Bros., $42.2 million, 3,682
loqtioils, $11,469 average,
$148.4 million, two weeks.
3. "Friday After Next,"
New Line, $13 million, 1,6 16
locations, $8,051 . avenige,
$13 million, one week.
4. "The Santa Clause 2,"
Disney, $10.2 million, 3,251
·locations, $3,141 average,
$94.9 million, four weeks.
· 5. "8 Mile," Universal,
$8.6 million, 2,585 locations,
$3,335 average, $97.6 million, three weeks.
6.
"The
Ring,"
DreamWorks , $7.6 million,
2,628 locations, $2,877 average, $110.8 million, · six

•

weeks.
locations, $6,259 average,
7. "The Emperor's Club," · $3.2 rilillion, three weeks.
Universal , $3.8 million, 809
12. "Jackass: The Movie,"
locations, $4,755 average, ParamouiH, $1.61 million,
$3.8 million, one week.
1,522 locations, $1,059 aver8. "My Big Fat Greek 'age, $62.1 million, five
Wedding," IFC Films, $3.7 · weeks.
million, I ,585 locations ,
13. "I Spy," Sony,- $1.043
$2,307 average, $204.5 mil- million, I ,535 locations,
$680 average, $32.6 million,
lion, 32 weeks.
9. "Half Past Dead," Sony four weeks.
Screen Gems, $3.1 million,
14.
"Sweet
Home
2,113 locations, $1,479 aver- Alabama,"· Disney, $1.041
age, $12.5 million, two million, 952 locations,
weeks.
$1,094 average, $123.4 mil10. "Frida," Miramax, $2.4 lion, nine weeks.
million, 794 locations,
15.
"Bowling
for
$2,984 average, $12.1 mil- Columbine,"
MGM-UA,
$983,467 , 244 locations,
lion, five w.eeks.
II. "Far From Heaven, " $4,031 average, $10.3 milFocus, $1.62 million , 259 · lion, seven weeks.
1

A Registered Investment Advisor

530 Second Avenue
GallipoHs, Ohio .

Our next clinic date is Friday, Dec. 29.

Specializing in total joint replacement

.

\

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BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUCATION PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING

Call (614) 461·8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

.,

Susan Eastman,
left, and her
daughter Peyton
decorate the
Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club
'Americana
Tree," which is
on display at the
/
French Art
Colony in
Gallipolis. The
Junior Women's
Cl~b Is sponsoring its third
annual tree and
wreath silent
auctio n in conjunction with the
French Art
Colony's Holiday
Tour of Homes
this week. Home
tours are scheduled from 6 to
10 p.m. on
Friday and 1 to 4
p.m. Saturday in
Gallipolis.
(Andrew Carter)

·--'

Bv M1wss1A RussELL
Home and Garden writer
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - When
John and Terry Cunningham
chose to restore the home that
had been in their.family for four
generations, they wanted it done
right
"We wanted it done the way
we wanted it, and we were willing to wait for it," Terry said.
"And there are a lot of things
still being worked on."
Wait they did.
After a decade, the three-story
brick home is still being
restored, but being a stop on this
year's French Art Colony
Holiday Tour of Homes has certainly prompted the rapid completion of several projects.
"We've lived with a lot of con- ·
struction and remodeling," Terry
said, laughing.
The . home, located at 1226
Second Ave., was built in 1884
and is one of the last remaining
examples of French archi lecture
in the area.
Originally constructed for the
Wade family, the home was used
as a boarding house for indi viduals visiting patients at the for- ·
mer Ohio Home for Epileptics,

The Cunninghams have remodeled the kitchen of their 1880s home
to make it more famiJy.friendly.
·
now
.· the
Gallipolis make it functional."
Developmental Center.
Determined not the destroy the
Henry and Rosa Cunningham home's rich history, the
purchased the home in 1929 Cunninghams kept the original
when John's father was 4-yearS' layout of the home while updatold.
·ing the essentials, such as mod"It 's a new-old house," Terry
said. "We didn't want to just ern appliances and features in
restore it, we wanted to keep the the kitchen.
character of the house, but also
Please see Tour, Dl

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio In conjunction with the
French
Art
Colony's
Holiday Tour of Homes, the
Gallipolis Junior Women's
Club is sponsoring its third
annual tree and wreath
silent auction .
According tO' Susan
Eastman, co-chair of the
event , area residents are
invited to bid on the trees
and wreaths currently on
display at the French Art
Colony, 530 First ;A.venue in
Gallipolis . Eastman sa id
bidding will · be conducted
during the .tour of homes
from 6 to I0 p.m. on Friday
and from I to 4 p.m. on
Saturday. ·
She said the htnior
Women 's Club is ratTling
off its own "Americana
Tree" at 4 p.m. Saturday.
Eastman said funds from
the raffle are used to benefit
various charitable organizations throughout Gallia

Jamea E. Morrlaon Ia 1 Registered Repreaentlitlve of and offers ucuritlea through Walnut
Street S.Curltlea, Inc ., Member NASD &amp; SIPC. J .E. Morrison &amp; Associate• Is not afftllat.ct
wltiJ WSS. (S.Curlll•• activities aupervlaed from • WSS offke locatMt at 3240 W.
Handaraon Rd., Columbu1, OH 614-442·3355) 1

•

Cunninghams do it right

Staff report

1

Jim Morrison, Certified Financial Planner

740.446.1986

For Christmas, Kim has
planned a warm, homey holiday
feel for her decorations, which
.will include II or 12 Christmas
trees.
"At Christmas we try to keep
the focus with several nativity
scenes and themed trees in most
rooms," Kim said.
The first floor features a tree
with nothing but snowmen and a
patriotic tree in the living room.
A teddy Bear tree . has been· ..
placed in the upstairs' master
bedroom and two of the boys
have put together a Star Warsthemed tree.
· ... We're still not quite finished,"' Kim said. "But the tour
will real!y be a great kickoff to
the holiday season."
.
This and all of the other
homes listed on the French Art
Colony's self-guided Holiday
Tour of Homes can be seen
between 6 and 10 p.m. · Friday,
Dec. 6 and I o 4 p.m. Saturday,
Dec. 7,
.
Also on the tour is the Gallia
County
Convention
and
Visitor's Bureau, .61 Court
Stteel. Ou{ H'ouse Museum, 4~2 ·
First Ave:; and Tope Furniture
Company, Second Avenue and
Grape Street.
Tickets can be purchased at
the French Art Colony for $10 in
advance or $12 at the door.
The tour is co-sponsored by
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.

Terry Cunningham places an ornament on her kitchen-themed Christmas tree. The tree features 'cookie
cutter ornaments and gingerbread men. (Millissia ·Russell photos)

Tree and wreath auction for a good cause

J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement, we offer office hours at:
3554 U.S: Route 60 East,
Barboursville, WV.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - With
three young boys and a houseful
of antiques, one would think that
the home of Mike and Kim
Canaday would be full of "look,
but don't touch" signs, but it's
just the opposite in their busy .
home.
·
·
"lt's very livable," Kim said.
· ··:we want everyon~ · to feel comfortable and at home when they
come here."
Kim has .decorated her home,
located at I 03 Crestview Drive
in the Meadows, in what she
calls a "country. Americana, traditional-style.'
"Our home was built to
accommodate many of the
antiques from our family that
origmated
in
the
Greenfield/Washin~ton Court
House area of Ohio, ' Kim said.
The· home was built in 1995
from a Design Traditions plan
by Stephen Fuller called
"Southwmd." .
.Situated' on five acres; the ,
white frame home has a distinct
southern flavor.
The home has five bedrooms
with formal living ~d · dining
areas, as well as a less-formal
family room, but Kim said that
the family's favorite room .is the
covered front porch with a view
·of the countryside.
(

'

The
Joint Implant Center

RUSSELL

Home and Ga~n writer

r

...

•

ome

Many places I go, I am always asked,
My traveling days are over. Anyone is
"When are you goin~ to write another
invited to the jewelry store at 422
article in the paper? ' I do not know
Second Ave. and I will show you some
myself. But I will be 89 years old the
of my travel photoo, and I might have a
27th of January. My good friend Jack
little gift for you. I found about 100
Hanna is coming down from Columbus
postcards from foreign countries I purand he will put on a show thllt you will
chased when I traveled. Anyone who
never forget.
bought my book, stop in and I will give
I wish my birthday was in June and he
you one.
would be able to P,Ut an animal show in
Everyone has been good to me and I
GUEST COLUMNIST
the park. But it wtll be at the Methodist
appreciate it ·very much. I appreciate
Church on Jan. 27-, 2003, inside. Jack is
when people I don't know speak to me.
like a brother to me and I have been to
I
always acknowledge them. I will never
many foreign countries with Jack.
to Mandalay." But she never made it
be a high-up or think I am better than
· It sure made me happy selling my ·there, she waited too long.
everyone
else. I came up the hard way
travel books. I sold many more than 1
But I walked a mile on it. That is the
on
a
farm
and when my dad told me to
ADVICE
thought I would and have had many one thing.I did. I started traveling when
·
people waiting for the next printing of I was young and now I am too old, and I . do something, I did it.
I
was
not
a
perfect
kid,
I
got
several
sure am glad I hit the road young, startand two children are here books, which will be around 60 days.
Who
would
ever
have
thought
an
old
ing when I was 20, and stopped when I whippings and my dad always told
in the United States and
he did it for my own good. He sure was
live close to my husbanp country boy like me would make was 75.
What happy days I have had seeing right and he sure made something out of
and me. She allows us to enough money to travel in 72 "foreign
see our grandkids whenev- countries all over the world, but not the world and talking to the people and me. I loved my dad. I am just an old man
er we want. However, since bragging. I worked 12 to 14 hours a day seeing how they live. I traveled at the now and I hope I don't have a wreck. If
the divorce, she's fallen on and slept in the studio. I really enjoyed . right time because there is a lot of trou- I do, you won't see Maxie driving anyhard time.s - economica lly the work and I made money. I really ble going on in several countries which more. But I hope I can drive two orthree
.
and emotionally - and it enjoyed geograp.hy and history in are at war now. Who would ever have more years.
(Longtime
Gallipolis
businessman
school,
and
I
made
good
grades.
thought
a
farm
boy
was
taught
how
to
kills ~s to know she is sufI had a lady teacher that was always take photos and sell jewelry, etc. I start- Max Tawney occasionally submits artifering the conseq uences of
saying,
"On the road to Mandalay." I ed in business in 1933. Now I am turn- cles to the Sunday Times-Sentinel about
her decision to break . up
never
forgot
what she said: "Some day, I ing the business over to my son, David. his world travels, and memories of
the marriage.
·
Gallipolis and Gallia County.)
The issue, Abby, is loyal- am going where this road is on the road I wish good luck to my son, David.
ty to our. son. He is very
upset by what she did,
bringing the ch ildren back
to the state s· and destroying
his military career. He is
bitter and adamant that our
relationship with hi s exwife come to a halt : He
says when lie returns home,
The homestead, which
she is not welcome in our
STRASBURG, N.D. (AP)
house. The children won't -It has been decades since includes a summer kitchen,
NEW YORK (AP)
has been at or near No. I on
be an issue, as they have anyone has lived on the small granary, buggy house, blackChristina Aguilera consid- MTV 's "Total Request
joint custody.
farmstead that made this smith shop, outhouse and
ers
her
new
disc, Live," the song peaked at
1 love both my son and small North Dakota farming barn, was ·restored and
"Stripped," a chance for No. 48 on the Billboard sinopened for tours in 1991. The
daughter-in-law. 1 feel ter- community famous.
people to finally get to gles chart. "Saturday Night
Welks
never
had
running
rible that our relationship
But listen carefully. As visknow who she really is - to Live" skewered the video's
with her must end. What itors drive up from the gravel water, Schwab said.
"see the bare me."
raunch. And Aguilera's
Wedding pictures dot the
would you do in our shoes? road, they can hear the
Fans are getting an eyeful. scanty outfits have drawn
HURTING
IN "champagne music" flowing home, though it's missing
The album's first single, barbs in the press (including
HUNTSVILLE, TEXAS
freely from the barn where one - the music . maestro's
"Dirrty," shocked the usual- the barely-there halter top
DEAR HURTING: I'd Lawrence Welk used to play wedding in Sioux City; Iowa.
. ly unshockable audience for she wore to the MTV Video
"They didn't have a phoremind my son that hi s his accordion.
·
. music vi&lt;leps by featuring Music Awards in August). :
almost ex- wife is still the
"His sisters would get so tographer," Schwab said.
the former Mousketeer, · Aguilera acknowledgeS:
A German bible and prayer
mother of your grandchil- sick Of him playing tha:t thing
dressed in a tiny bikini, that "obviously, jaws are
dren, and that · whom you that they would send him out book lie on an end table. in the
grinding against other dropping."
·
living
-room.
The
organ
is
a
invite into ·your home is to the barn," saip Welk's
dancers. The cover of her
"People like to see
close match to the one the
your decision, not his. This niece, Edna Schwab.
new disc shows her topless, (singers) play it safe and it
covered only by her long scares people if we go
is not his choice to make.
Ten years after Welk 's Welks owned.
3,000
people
this
About
For the sake of the chi!- death at age 89, people still
locks. And she's completely beyond the boundarie&amp;
dren, do not burn any visit his family farm in year visited the site, tucked
naked on the new cover of sometimes," she explains. :
bridges.
Strasburg, tune into reruns of away about 100 miles south
Rollin~ Stone - save for a
A graduate of the ne~
CHUCKLE FOR THE "" i'f'he Lawrence Welk Show" of Bismarck and 2 miles off
·strategtcally placed guitar.
Mickey
Mouse Club along
DAY: The apes in the zoo on public television, and join the "Lawrence Welk" high"I don't see anything
have a dilemma: They fan clubs celebrating the way.
wrong with being comfort- with Britney Spears and
Welk left his family farm
can' t figure out if they are "wunnerful,
wunnerful"
able with my own skin," the members of 'N Sync,
on hi s 21st birthday after
their brother's keeper- or orchestra leader.
21-year-old says in a phone Aguilera shot to fame three . . I .
theil\'keeper's .brother!
Schwab is one of several playing at community wed'
interview . with
The years ago as part of a teen.
Dear i\bby is written by local people who gives tours dings and bam dances. He
Associated Press ahead of pop cmze. With a powerful
voice comparable to Mariah:
Abigail Van Buren, also of the Welk farmstead 2 miles didn't hit the big time until
the CO's release Tuesday.
known as Jeanne Phillips, outside of Strasburg, a town more than 20 years later, with
Not everyone is as com- Carey or Whitney Houston,
and was founded by her . of about 550 people. A life- a 1951 television appearance
fortable with her skin as she she scored instant success
mother, . Pauline Phillips. size cutout of the King of in Los Angeles. ABC picked
is. Reaction to the teen-pop with songs such as "Genie
Write
Dear Abby at Champagne music greets vis- up his show in 1955.
idol's transformation into a in a Bottle" and "Come oil
www.DearAbby.com
or itors as they walk into the sod
It ran for 16 years, and was
sexl!.ally charged diva has Over Baby."
P 0. Box 69440, Los house in which he, his par- syndicated until 1982. Welk
btlen decidedly mixed.
Angeles, CA 90069.
ents and seven siblings lived. died on May 17, 1992.
While the "Dirrty" video

Audiences spy on Qond as 'Die Another Day' opens at top
LOS ANGELES (AP) In the box office battle of
. British movie heroes, a
super-spy has displaced a boy
wizard.
"Die Another Day," starring Pierce Brosnan in the
20th James Bond adventure,
debuted as the weekend's top
film with $47.1 million, the
best opening ever for the
espionage franchise.
The ,Bond film bumped the
previous weekend's No. I
movie, "Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets," which
· came in second with $42..2
million.
The top 15 movies at Nonh
American theaters Friday
through Sunday, followed by
distribution · studio, gross,
number of theater locations,
average receipts perlocation,
total gross ·and number of
weeks in release, as compiled
by
Exhibitor
Monday

iunba!' lime• -6enttnel

Classified ads, Pages 04-6

··-

___....... ..... .____

County.
"You can purchase tickets
for the raffle at the French
Art Colony or from Junior
Women's Club members,"
Eastman said. "The tickets
are $1 apiece or six for $5.
(The proceeds) get put back
into Gallia County to fund
various needs in t he community.
. "(The women's cl ub supports) Serenity House, the
children 's home; and we do
diffe{ent things for the
county and city schools if
they have a need. During
the holidays, we sponsor
several different families
and provide meals and
.Christmas presents. We find
out who 'the needy are and
do that." ·
· Eastman said area businesses, groups and individuals have donated 20 trees
and 25 wreaths for the auction. Each tree is handcrafted. Potential bidders
can see the trees on display
at the French Art Colony

--~ r- ------ - ...:.·--- --- - - -

.. - ·.

···~

during regular business
hours from I 0 a.m. to 3
p.m. Tuesday through
Friday.
The following b\lsinesses,
groups .and individuals
. donated trees for this year's
auction:
French
City
Childcare, Country Store
Antiques, Ohio Valley
Bank, Bob's Market and
Greenhouses, Steven B.
Chapman , Holzer Senior
Care Center, Arbors at
Gallipolis,
Foodland,
Peoples Bank, Advest,
Grungy
Hands
and
Primitive Friends , Cou ntry ·
Cupboard, CVS Pharmacy,
Wyngate, The Empty Nest,
Robbie's BP, O' Dell True
Value Lumber, Dr. and Mrs.
Michael Canady, Dr. Arnie
and Bonnie Penix, Vinton
Elementary School kindergarten. Edward Jones
Inve stments, Dawn Tatum,
Ch ildren's Center of Ohio ,
\\4illij Tire , Wee Care Day
Care, Deal Funeral Home,

Please

s~

Auction, Dl

... ,)- --------··-.----

.. . '

�Page 02 • 6aa-ap

flt•tt ·6tatf•tl

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

:

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Spaciousness key to Sea Foam

For someone who has everything: What about a submarine?
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Can't think .
nf the perfect stocking stuffer for those
well-heeled friends on your Christmas
list this year?
What about a customized jet for $70
million? Or a Fonnula One supercar? Or
a $80 million submarine?
Those are some of the suggestions
from the Robb Report and the duPont
Registry, two publications who cater to
fo lks not too concerned about economic
downturns.
"I think a lot of our readers haven't
really been impacted by the economy
slowdown. They are recession resistant.'' said Brett Anderson, senior vice
president and editorial director for the
Robb Report.
'
The submarine is one suggestion from ·
the Robb Report, which -comes up each
Christmastime with a list of 21 perfect
gifts for its money-is-no-object readers.
The duPont Registry's holiday gift
catalogue also features highbrow stocking stuffers: A $450,000 Bentley Estate
Station Wagon is described .as "the ultimate family vehicle for the truly refined
. lifestyle." A pair of McLaren Fonnula
One supercars go for about $1.5 million
apiece.
There's also a 1968 Mercedes-Benz

600 Presidential Landaulet, originally
built for Romanian dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu, for $295,000. And its only
got 30,000 miles on the odometer.
The well-to-do also are hanging out at
home a lot more.
"There's a lot of spending on home entertainment theaters, wine cellars,
commercial-grade kitchens," Anderson
said. "They are creating their own theater and restaurant in the home. It's
cocooning."
Tom duPont, chairman of St.
Fla.-based
duPont
Petersburg,
Publishing, said the .,duPont Registry
items are designed to impress. But they
also reflect America's trend with staying
home.
"Along with the nesting there Is nesting going on in the garage," duPont said
Wednesday. "People with resources are
buying classic and luxury cars - the
everyday car, the weekend car and the
commuter car."
The duPont Registry and Robb Report,
publications definitely aren' t for the
Chia Pet crowd. The average annual
income of a Robb Report reader is
$800,000, with an average net worth of
$4.9 million.
Robb Report offers a 144-carat dia-

Businesses hunt bucks
.as deer season opens
. CLEAR SPRING, Md.
(AP) - This deer season,
Lana Welch is hunting
bucks - the green, folding
kind.
Her Country Deli diner,
at the foot of Fairview
Mountain along U.S. 40,
opens at 4 a.m. Saturday to
serve breakfast to openingday hunters. Two cooks and
two waitresses will take the
extra-early shift through at
least the first week of the
two-week firearm season,
Welch said.
"They're not happy about
getting up that early, but
it's .all part of the job," she
. said.
of
The
Department
Natural Resources says
deer hunting produces $40
million a year for the
state ' s economy, and much

of it is spent in rural communities.
Restaurants,
sporting goods stores,
butcher shops, gas stations
and .taverns all benefit as
more than 70,000 hunters
head for the hinterlands.
"This morning's been
pretty brisk," Rodney
Rector, owner of R&amp;M's
Wine and Beer in downtown Clear Spring, said
Friday. "We probably had
15 or 20 guys in here that
were hunters, stocking up
for camp."
"Welcome hunters," read
a bright orange banner outside his store. The same
sign appeared on some of
the taverns scattered along
the 15 miles of state highway between ·Hagerstown
and the Indian Springs
Wildlife Management Area,

a public hunting ground.
Dave Mills and Wayne
Mitchell waited in a long
line of Black Friday shoppers to buy a 40-pound bag
of shelled corn - deer bait
at Dick's Sporting
Goods in Hagerstown.
"When hunting season
comes, I'm all hunting,
every day," Mitchell said.
Mills said the sport's
appeal was simple: "It ' s
just a chance to get out
there in the woods and
relax , be with Mother
Nature - and freeze to
death ."
Indeed, the opening-day
weather forecast was chilly,
with temperatures expected
to peak in the mid-40s
before dropping during the
afternoon as rain and snow
develop.

Life after the governors office: TV
shows, lobbying, RVs- and politics
(AP)- What comes next
after you've turned words
into law with your signature,
overseen budgets of hundreds of mi !lions of dollars a
year, and fought with lawmakers, editorial writers and
interest groups?
For a record 24 governors
leaving office, the choices
are many. One is already running for president. A few are
becoming lobbyists, wielding their clout for cash. Lesstraveled paths beckon, toohosting a TV show, climbing
Mount Everest, tooling
around the. country in an RV.
And don 't sell retirement
·
short.
"I' ll tell you one thing. I'm
not going to ever run for .
office again," said term-lim·
ited Tennessee Gov. Don
Sundquist, a Republican who
after eight years aims to
retire to his mountain home.
"It' s going to be Martha-

Tour
from Page D1
" I love to cook and I spend

a lot of time in the kitchen,"
Terry said. "It's a nice way to
bring the family together."
Terry said that she and her
family love to entertain and
frequently have large meals,
especially at Christmas.
"We' re used to having a lot
of people in the house, but
Christmas is really a big deal
for us," she said.
Terry said she plans to have
at least seven Christmas trees
in the home this holiday season, including a kitchen tree,
which she has decorated with
cookie cutters and gingerbread men.
The dining room features ' a
tree covered in sparkling,
jewel-toned faux . fruits, and
the third-floor apartment area
has been decorated in an
Americana theme, with Sarita
Claus and snowmen orna·
ments in red, white and blue.

time. ·That's my wife.''
Most ofthe soon-to-be-former governors - 14 - were
barred by law from seeking
another term. Six chose not
to run. And voters decided to
oust four.
In South Dakota, four-term
Gov. Bill Janklow is headed
to Congress. New Hampshire
Gov. Jeanne Shaheen's run
for the Senate failed, so her
immediate plan is to be with
her daughter when her third
grandchild is born next
month.
After reaching the pinnacle
of Vermont politics, Gov.
Howard Dean is aiming
higher - to the presidency.
The Democrat has already
made dozens of visits to
early presidential primary
as
New
states
such
Hampshire, Iowa and South
Carolina. His II years running Vermont is a big selling
point for his presidential

campaign.
"You can really make an
important difference in people's lives," said Dean, who
also is a physician. "I don't
get all the credit - there's
the legislature, · the policy
people - but I'm the one
that makes it happen." '
After years of wielding
power, at least two governors
are taking lucrative .jobs as
lobbyists to try and influence
the powerful.
Oklahoma Gov. Frank
Keating,
who
earned
$101 ,000 this past year, will
become CEO and president
of the American CounCil of
. Life Insurers, a Washingtonbased lobbying organization.
. Nilither the council nor
Keating's office would say
how much he'll earn, but the
council's former president·and former South Carolina
Gov. Carroll Campbell
had a $1 million salary.

A small Victorian-style tree of her friends ."
with tulle, lace and pearls
Terry explained that severwill be placed in the sitting al fainily members will be on
room, which will accentuate . hand as tour guides, includthe Victorian-style decora- ing her aunt and her mothertions in the front hall way.
in-law, who lived in the home
In the master bedroom for over 40 years.
there will be a small tree with
"They' II have a lot of
hand-blown German glass memories to share with tourornaments that Terry has col- goers," Terry said.
lected over the years.
This and all of the other
The family room will fea- homes listed on the French
ture the largest tree, a cut Fir Art Colony's self-guided
, which will be decorated in a Holiday Tour of Homes can
traditional style with orna- be seen between 6 and I 0
ments that the Cunningham's p.m. Friday, Dec. 6, and I o 4
children had either made or p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7.
collected.
Also on the tour is the
"It's not a theme, but a col-"
lection of memories," Terry Gallia County Convention
and Vi sitors' Bureau, 61
said.
The children are also get- Court Street, Our House
ting the opportunity to deco- Museum, 432 First Ave., and
rate their own trees, located Tope Furniture Company,
Second Avenue and Grape
in their bedrooms.
Cunninghams' · Street.
The
Tickets can be p\lrchased at
youngest daughter, Hannah,
the
French Art Colony for
10, has a tree decorated with
Beanie Babies, and their old· $10 in advance or $12 at the
est daughter, Sarah, 18, has a door.
The tour is co-sponsored
Blue Angel tree decorated
with blue and white . lights by Farmers Bank and
and black and white photos Savings Co.

'

Tom duPont,
chairman of the
St. Pete r&lt;;hurg,
Aa.-based
duPont
Publishing,
poses with two
of his personal
cars, a Ferrari
.Testarossa, foreground, and a
1959 pink
Cadillac in St.
Petersburg. The ·
duPont
Registry's hollc;lay gift catalogue features
highbrow stock- ··
ing stutters: A
$450,000.
Bentley Estate
Station Wagon
and a pair of
McLaren
Formula 1
supercars at
about $1.5 million apiece. (AP)

mond necklace at $10 million, a customized private jet for $70 million, the
new
$350,000
Daimler-Chrysler
Maybach 62 sedan, a $1.6 million
Formula One Ferrari race car, a residence in London's fabled Regent's Park
for $29.9 million and a $1.25 million
24-day America's Cup vacation.
Too expensive? How about an original
copy of Ian Fleming's "You Only Live
Twice," signed by the author, for
$75,000?
Anderson said there's been a subtle
attitude in the buying habits of the rich
because of the dot-com bust and stock
market slide. Conspicuous consumption
is seen as tasteless by some.
"People are more interested in discreet
luxury," Anderson said. "Back in the
heyday of the dot-com boom executives
were buying $200,000 and $300,000
Ferraris and there was a lot of show
there.
"What has changed is Robb readers
are going back to basics - spending on
the home, classic cars and historic artifacts and antiques. They want things that
have cultural resonance, things that
aren' t purchased necessarily an outward
symbol of success.

Authorities
resume
river search
for student

SEA
F.O=A:.:M:::
-40·24-

Tbday's Homes

LIVING
3&lt;10 SOFT

,.....

-!...---.

Grissom's family, NASA
in dispute over spacesuit

. HUNTINGTON (AP)
State and federal
authorities
resumed
searching the Guyandotte
River Friday for evidence in the disappearance of 19-year-old
Samantha Burns of West
Hamlin .
Burns, a student at
Marshall University, has
been missing since Nov.
II.
Speaking at a press
conference, FBI senior
agent Joe Cicarelli said
he expects to have no
resul(s in the case until
next week at the earliest.
"We had some investigative
leads
that
what
we'd
weren ' t
hoped," Cicarelli s·aid,
giving no further details.
West Virginia State
Police have said they
believe two fugitives
from a Kentucky jail suspected in a multistate
crime spree were in the
Huntington area around
the time Burns disap. peared. '
West Virginia native
Chadrick Fulk s, 25, and
Branden Basham, 21,
have been charged in the
abduction
of . Alice
Donovan
of
South
Carolina.

.Auction
from Page D1
The Wiseman Agency,
Village
Florist,
Fruth
Pharmacy, That Special
Touch,
Loan
Central,
Fashion Bug, Kathy Mullen
and Gayla Hill, Tom's. Auto
Clinic, Inspirations of
Faith, Dr. Kelly Roush

retrieve the suit last month,
NASA officials stepped in :
and said it was government :
•
property.
Brian Dunbar, spokesman ·
for
the
National
Aeronautics and Space ·
Administration, said there :
is no way of knowing how :
much the historic suit could :
be worth because the ·
agency has never let a :
spacesuit out of its hands. •
Lawyers are negotiating • ·
over the suit's ownership. : .
Scott Grissom, a 49-yearold Federal Express pilot,
said the family wa'!ts tQ
. continue di~playing the . . .
spacesuit, but in. Indiana, · •·
his father's home state .
Possibilities include The
Children's Museum of .
Indianapolis
and
Gus ,
Grissom's alma mater .
Purdue UniversiW
D.C.,
Evans-Moore ·
Insurance arid Real Estate, :
Gallipolis
Chiropractic ·
Center, Headquarters by .
Juanita, Gene Johnson
Chevrolet, University of
Rio Grande admissions
office, Dr. Barry Dorsey, .
University of Rio Grande
baseball team, University .
·of Rio Grande soccer team, .
University of Rio Grande ·
basketball team, Ed and
Sue Vollborn.

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·pcrforn11ng: ~~
.:olorful se111n g and it is full y
visible from yo ur windows
ovcrlooki ng the magni ficcnt
view. The Sea Foam (409-24)
has windows on all s ides. especiall y the left rear for enjoyong the v1ews of the ocean.
the mountains or the valleys.
The unique wing shape of this
beautiful home has excellent
appeal both outside and inside.
up· onto a covered porch.
the entry into the Sea Foam
brings the full openness of the
main great room into view.
The rooms have been vaulted
to provide an even more spacious appearance. The li vrng
room is on the ri~ht and has a
fireplace located m the center
of the room.
The master suite is housed
in the right wing of the home .
Planning has been put into the
design of the master suite. Entering into a hall area, there
are two closets with she Ives
between for "hi s" closets . A
private master bath with many
amenities such as a large corner shower. dual sinks; a huge
corner linen closet. and a tub
The sunse t

v~uu ro

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The family of astronaut
Gus Grissom is battling
NASA over ownership of
the spacesuit he wore when
he became the second
American in space.
NASA .officials
say
Grissom never brought
back the 1961 Mercury suit
he borrowed for a showand-tell session at a school.
But Scott Grissom claims
his father, who .died in a
1967 Apollo I training
exercise fire, took the suit
from a NASA storage facility because he feared the
agency would discard it.
Scott Grissom said .the
family loaned the suit in
1989' to the U.S. Astronaut
Hall of Fame Museum in
Titusville, Fla. , where it
remains on display. When
he and his 75-year-old
mother, Betty, tried to

§!ounbap ll:tmrs - §!orm inrl• Page 03

i .~

BY MORRIS
AND .lAMES CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

;

·:&gt; ('A

~ ~&gt;1- _}...,. _ .
~..
/

.,

/;. ;-.7

GARAGE

/'

'- 25'6 x13~ . _
, / ·'

1

/

•

BASEMENT
2091 saFT
UNRr.iiSHED

:::-::-..: ~:...__

'-':::·,
.

'~ .

SEA FOAM 1409-24)
",,
OVERALL DlMENSIONS: 88'·7" X 73'-S"' ' ·,
LIVING: 2823 square feet
-.
UNFIN BASEMENT 2091 sq uare feet
-&lt;GARAGE: 667 square fe et
'C.

Drilling holes (every little bit helps)
Bv JAMES
AND MORRIS CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Th.ough twi st bits arc the
result in a sprained or broken
wrist.
most' recognizable style, flat
Not all bits are alike. The wood bits (or spade hits) are a
. Jobs around the house that most common style is the close 'second . Although the
require a drill bit: Installing a twist bit. Although it is de- spade bit can be u ~ed with a
loc kset. r unning sheathed signed primarily for use with variety of materials. it is used
electrical wire in wall fram- metal. it has been adopted as primarily with wood where
ing. bolting a gate latch, in- a multipurpose bit l;ly must large holes are needed. How. stalling an expansion anchor do-it-yourselfers. This likely ever, the spade bit does more
in concrete. mortising a cabi- is responsible for the wide scraping than cutting . A good
net duor hinge, hanging a range of sizes available spade bit will have a sharp
plant from the ceiling, install- from 1/64 to 3/4 inches. The point and relieved edges that
tng a towel bar in a tile twisrbit or twist drill has two create a cleaner, cooler cut.
shower. running computer ca- helical flutes that run about As with most drill bits, spade
. bles through a countertop. two-thirds along the length of bits are available in various
And these are but a few.
the shaft. These flute s act tu lengths - up to 16 inches for
There are almost as many clear the waste material from added reach.
drill bits from which to the hole as the drill rotates
For dnlling a big hole with
choose as there are different and is moved in and out of the a flat bottom (such as that
11ses. Some drill bits are t1at, hole. The outside edges of the needed for many sty les of
others short and squally; still spira ls or "margins" form the Europea11 cabinet hinges).- a
others are long and narrow. true diameter of the bit. The Forstner bit works well. It has
Which bit is the right choice? balance of the bit structure is a central brad point for alignIt depends on t·he job.
slightly recessetl to prevent ment and larger peripheral
Quality
drag and resulting friction.
cutting teeth and is available
A drill bit is a tool. Any job
Btls designed for use with in a wide range of sizes.
wurth duing is worth dotng metal are made of hi gh-speed
If you are adding on or rewell. Doing it well means steel (HSS) because HSS can modeling and will be running
having the right tool for the withstand high temperatures. · electrical wire through the
job. Tools are an investment In contrast, bits made from studs, have a wood auger and
that, with proper care and carbon steel will work well a half-inch drill motor handy.
maintenance, outlas t the user. for wood. but ·s hould not be The wood auger isn't de- ·
Many touls in our family have used for drillin g metal since signed for pretty work - its
been passed down through they tend to be more brittle purpose is to gel the job done.
g~eration s. We suggest you and less fl exible.
And it does. It has a lead
spend a little extra up front
Other features that 1nllu - screw tip that pti'lls !he bit
for nmne-brand, better-quality ence the quality of a diill bit through the wood for quick.
tools. You ' II 11el better results are the tip and finish . A bit large diameter holes through
and the toul wtlllast longer.
with a multiface carbide tip which most residential pipe
Maintenance
will act like a hot knife and wire can fit. So powerful
A drill bit essentially is a through butt~r and re~.ist is this bit that six swndard
cutting tool and, thus, must be wear. Some twost btts are tm- two-by-fours s:mdwiched tokept sharp. A sharp drill bit ished with Titanium nitride gether don'tphase it.
will require less physical ef- . (TiN) or Cubic Boron Nitri\le
If you're tired of computer
fort, cause less stress on a (CBN) . whi ch act as both a cables all over your ,desk, a
drill motor, produce better re- lubricant and bit hardener. hole saw is in order. It consults and be safer. Besides Their gold cast di stinguishes sists of a steel cup with a sawkeeping bits clean, store them them.
tooth rim . It is available in
Althouj!h some of the mod- units of fixed diameter and
in a container ur tlrill index
that will prevent them from ern multtpurpose bits are the can be purchased individually
rolling around (as in a tool super heroes of drill bits and, or as a set with an interbox) and becoming nicked as the name implies. can per- chan gea ble mandrel that
and damaged. Drill bits peri - . form well with many materi- houses a replaceable pilot bit.
odically should be sharpened als , drilling in to concrete, Hole 'saws are particularly
to keep theni in peak working · brick, block or stone can take useful for cutting large diameconditton. Most twist bits can the average twist bit to task . . ter holes up to I 172 inches
bt,: sharpened using· an electric So, when drilling into one of thick. Boring from alternating
drill-bit sharpener. It's a nice these tough substances, kick it sides usi ng the same pilot
gift for the do-it-yourselfer up a notch and opt for more hole can get you through
who has everything. Other bit drilling horsepower by using thicker material. Since the
styles should be taken to a a masunry bit . The cutting .tip metal for hole saws usually is
company that specializes in is made from tungsten carbtde tempered, tt can be used on
.
sharpening blades, bits. bonded to a sp1raled stee l met.al as well ns wood.
Ttp : always hold the drtll
chains and other cutting tools. shaft. Use a masonry bit when
installing an ex pans ion an- squar~ to the work and apl?lY
Safet;v
·
chor
into co ncrete.
only hght pressure when drtiiBoring and drilling will proA
masunry
bitcan
be
used
.
·
duce splinters and metal shav- to drill tile pmvided it is used ing.
For more home -tmproyeings that can result in serious
at
slow
speed
and
without
the
ment
and tnfor!natton
injury . Therefore, always hammer action that often is vtstl ' ttps
our
Web slle at
wear safety glasses and con·
used
with
concrete
or
stone.
www.onthehouse.com.
sider wearing a pair of snug"'
fillin g work gloves. Since Better ye t. consider using a .
tile
bit
that
has
a
ground-tungReaders
can
mai l questions
most boring and drilling is
sten
carbide
tip.
Best
used
to:
On
the
House,
APNews·
done with a power-dnver
with
a
variable-speed
drill
at
Features,
50
Rockefeller
drill , use extreme caution slow speed. a tile bit should Plaza. New York, NY 10020,
when operating the device. A
drill bit can "walk" along the always be used with a lubri- or e- mail Careybro(at)onthe·
·
surface of the material being cant such as turpentine to house.com .
keep
the
tip
cool.
Use
a
til
e
drilled - forever damaging
it. Also. bits qn bind in the bit when in stalling hath accesmaterial being drilled and, un- sories. such as a towe l bar.
der extreme cbnditions. can into tile.

Q . Maurice and Geneva
ask: We love our family rooln
corner fireplace with rock but
hate the color of the grout.
The grout is dark to medium
gray and we prefer light gray
which we think would look
better as our decor is mauve.
cream . and light gray. Can the
fireplace grout be rc-grouted
over the existing orout? We
also have a lot of black metal
expo~cd around the brasstrimmed glass doors. between
the fireplace opening and
where the ruck starts. Can a
coordinating marble or tile be
adhered ur affixed to this
metal frunt?
A. The term gruut is mure
commonly used with ceramic
tile installations. What you
have surrounJ.Ii'ng the stone at
. your fireplace ts most certainly mortar. Whereas grout
is used 10 rill joints between
tile, mortar is used tu join
stone together.
Besides providing a solid
bond between the stone, it
also can add to the desil!n and
intere'l of stone or brick. In
any case, yuu can change the

r
closets .
The huge unfinished ba sement on . the Sea Foam "
2.09 1 square feet. It lw &lt; a
central room that contain s the
water heater and the forced
air unit. Surrountling the stair·
well is extra storage areas and
a door leading to the two-car '
garage. This area would pro- '
vide excellent space for an
entertainmen t room. a pool f
room, a playroo m fur the
kid s .
or
a
h u ge
also another ea tin~ bJr facin g recreation/famil y room fo r the
the vaulted dining room . An whole fam il y.
enormous pantry. 1deal for
swring ap pli ances as well as
For a st udy plan . includ1ng
food, is in the center hub. as scaled flo or plan( s). ele va- ·
well as the washer and dryer.
t ion s~ section(s) and an arti st ·
rendering. send $24.95 to .
The dinin g room is lined Landm ark De sig ns. 33 127
with windows that overlook Saginaw Road E .. Cottage .
the view to the rea r. With Grove, Ore. 97 424. Please .
openness of the entire area. speci fy pl an name (Sea Foam) .
entertaining and ha v in ~ fam - ·and the number (409-24). A
ily gatherings would oe fun catalog featuring hundreds o'f
and interacti ve. The left wi ng, home plans is available for .
off the dining area. contains a $12.95, or save by ordering ·,
vaulted den behind pocket both for $29.95. Fo r faster .,
doors and full bath with pro cessi n~ . ca ll 1- 800-56 2:
shower. Through the den are 1151 ur vi sit · our web si te al ·
the two bedruoms, each with IV ww .Iand ma rkdesi g ns.com. ·.
numerou s window s and wall

Bv

MORRIS

Q. Carol asks: Often when I
turn off my kitchen faucet
there is a sudden fierce banging. This also occurs after my
washing machine has com- .
pletely filled and the water
shuts off. It' s very annoyipg.
What is it. and is there something that I can do about it?
A. It sounds as if the condi tion you are describing is an
example of what is called
"water hammer." This noise
generally occurs when you
turn off the water at a faucet
or an appliance quickly . The
water in the pipes slams to an
abrupt stop, causing the hammering noise.
In some cases this could be
caused by pipes that are loose

·-:J

color of the mortar a couple quarter-i nch layer from the:i
of ways. If the mortar is just a surface of the existing m ortat-.~ .
tow;h too dark and yo u wunt using •a hammer anu chi se l.
Ill lighten it up a wee bit. start and ap ply ing a new layer ofwith a ·10 percent solution of mortar in it s pl ace. Powdere1J.;
muriatiC acid . Apply th e solu- pigment can be mi xed in with..:
tion to the mortar joints onl y. the new mortar to create a .
using a small bristle brush or color to suit yuur decor~ting
similar device. A little of th os needs. You should first make
mild acid on· the stone nr a few lest samples uf the mor-'
brick will usually not hurt as tar on a board to make sure
long as you don't allow it to that you ha ve the des ired ·
remain for very lon g.
color. Be sure to allow the :
Allow the acid to"remain on mortar sample to dry comthe mortar joints for at least 5 pletely since mortar typicall y .:
.' r
minutes or until it has slopped will lighten as it dries.
fizzing. Rin se the area comThe black me.tal that you
pletely and allow it to dry. are referring to is th e fron't
You mi ght'need to wait a few face of th e prefabricated ;
days until the mmtar has metal fireplace that was in- ~
dned completely to determine 'stalled bel ore the stone. We
if the process worked. If the . understand your unhappiness '
mortar has lightened but the with the appearance of this
desired res ult has not been metal trim. but re commend '
achieved. give the mortar an- that you do no(hing to. alter it.
other acid treatment and allow This trim frequently contains
it to dry.
intake vems or air exchange ·.
Remember: safety first. vents that might be ne gatively
Wear rubber gloves .and 'eye affected if surround ed by . .
protection and make sure that stone ur tile . We believe th at
there is plenty of ventilation a safer way to deal with thi s
in the area when working problem would be by paintin g
with acid . Another way to the trim wi th a heaHcsista ni
change the color of the mortar spray paint' that is close in
1s by removing abo ut a l- color to either your "one or
the new mort ar color.

.Anchor pipes to avoid hammering
AND JAMES CAREY
-FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

.i

can also be accessible for usc
by guests. The main suite has
"her" rluscts with ' hel ves between and a dour that upcns
into a back yard.
The rear portion is dedi cated to the kitchen and open
to rest of the home. A long
cabinet/counter runs across
the back wall with a large
window ove-r the si nk. The island in the center has a range
ant! an oven with an eating
bar un the backside. There is

Saving mortar around fireplace

"""'

'.

or not properly anchored. The
remedy for this is simple: Ju st
add some pipe straps or cushion the pipes at existing straps
with rubber blankets, or both .
Remember. never usc galvanized straps on copper pipe
-electrolysis will occur and
break down the metal.
Tile most common cause of
water hamtiler is faulty or
nonexistent air chambers.
These air chambers are constructed of small length s of
pipe installed in the wall bchitid fixtures and appliances.
Air chambers are desi gned to
hold a1r that cushions the
shock when flowin g water is
shut off. Huwever, they can
get filled with water and lose
their effectiveness. They can
be restored by turning off the
water supply at the main

... '•.

valve and draining the system, o
at tls lowest po1nt (lhts tS gene '
erally the hose bi b located at
'the 'point where the water enters the home). There are ret- .
rofit air chambers th at can be ·
installed after the fact "that
don 't requi re tearing into the
wall. See your local plumbing .parts supplier for these handy '
'
devices.
Another cau se of water
hammer is wat er pressu re
that 's more than 80 pound s
per square inch. Most moderh
plumb1ng sys tems hav e a
pressure-regulating device at .
the main-water inlet valve. if
your horne doesn ,., have one .·
and the pressure in you r sys-·
tem is h1~1t. tl would probab ly
be a gooo 1dea to ha ve one in:,
stalled.

Over-the counter Rx for kitchen
FROM LOWE'S HOME
IMPROVEMENT WAREHOUSE .
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

· There· s a new player in the
upscale kitchen-counter market once dominated by granite.
Engineered stone. If you haven' t heard about it , you will.
Although this heat-bonded
hybrid mixture of natural
quartz . color pigments and
binding agents ha s been
around since the early '80s
·and has been all the rave in
Europe, engineered stone is
just now making a big sce ne
in American kitchens.
.
"The first time I saw it, l
knew it was going to be a big
hit with consumers," says
Patti Price , vice president of
countertop merchantlising fo r
Lowe' s Home Improvement
Warehouse. " It 's really the
right combinatiun of pluses
that make it a good option to
granite. It looks like stone, is
heavy like stone, and acts like
stone."

Price says homeowners are
moving rapidly away from
laminates as the sole countertop of choice. It is due in part
to the increasin g social importance of kitchens as joint ente rtainment center-gath ering
spot fur guests . " People know
there' s a huge payback from a
remodeled kitchen when the

time comes to se ll th e ir
home," says Price. "They're
voting with their pocketb ooks
when it comes to e'ngi .neered
stone.''
Cosmetically, granite and
engineered stone are strik·
in gly sim ila r. Engine ered
stone · is manufactured with
high concentrati ons of real
quartz. Yet it 's in performance where the new · kid-onthe-counter gets good reviews.
Whereas granite stains and
needs sealing every six
months. engineered stone called by its brand names
Avania and Caesar Stone is not porous and won · t need
sealing. Price says engineered
stone (a European import) has
more color options and is far
more consi stent in looks than
is granite, which can show
imperfections. The new stone
is warranted for l 0 years.
Granite has no warranty , and
is not available in all U.S.
markets.
At $50 or mure per square
foo t in stalled , engi neered
stone is in line with granite .
This compares to roughly $20
per square foot for' laminate
counters . But this ne w wundcrrock is no do-it- yourself
projec t. In fact. Price says
Lowe ' s incl udes prufes.sional

installation in the· price of en : ·'
gineered stone . Even counter' ·
top measurements are the job
of pros prior tu order and in-·
stallation. No speci al supports
are nece ssary to accommodat e the added weight of the
faux -stone which is glu ed to
the subs.truct ure.
•••

Lowe's is a nati onal chain
of nearl y 750 home-improvement. appli ance and gardening stores.
·

.

,

PROUD TO BE .
APART OF ~ :
YOUR LIFE. ·
Subscribe today by calling. '
Gallipolis - 446-2342
Point Pleasant - 675-1333
Pom~roy- 992 -2156
'.

�..... .. _

•

wv

OH • Pt.

Sunday, December 1, 2002

Wrlbune - Sentinel - l\egtster

I"

IJDIWAHIID

CLASSIFIED

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Phytlls

Mason
SPHR
of
Human
Reeourcel Untvef'lity of Rio
Grl ndeRGdoo
10
ran
H
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4587.,
ema11
pmasonOrio edu fax 740245-4909

Director

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for sale Chester Township Garage Sale/ Flea Market
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to setmteNiew at 888 901
made the folloWing changes
to Buckeye H lis Subd v s1on Absolute Top Dollar u S 9472 or fax resu me to 304
located 10 Galha Co S1lver
Gold
Cotns 255-4072 e-ma1l resume to
Raccoon Twp due to fence Proofsets 0 amends Go d ugaa•s@stargate net
hne Tract H2 5 267ac Tract Rmgs
US Currency
~ 3 4 882ac and Tract #4
M T S Com Shop ~5 1
5 26tac
Anthony Land Second Avenue Gallipolis COL Drivers wanted 0 TR
Company Lt d 531 ' E 740 446 2842
Hatbeds 90% lumber/ some
Broadway Jackson OH
tarpmg East Coast (no New
I \II'! In \II' I
45640
t BOO 213 8365
York) Mus t have good
www aiel and com
MVR HOME WEEKENDSH
"I IH H I...,
Call
(888)398 5220
ItO
Jackson OH
lli:u• WANTED
HELP WANTED

CASE MANAGER GoUla
Jackson Me1gs Treatment
Alternatives 1o Street Cnme
Program (TASCJ One (1)
full t•me
posll•on
Competitive salary and
county employee beneflls
Masters degree 1n soCial
work counseling education
or related field re qUired
Independent
Lice nsure
reqUIIad (LPCC LISW a1c )
Vahd
dnver s license
RESPONSIBILITIES
Prov1de supeiVISIOn for
Case Managers conduct
assessments develop treat
men! plans along w1th
screening refe rral case
management
momtonng
and random unnalysts for
court refe rred substance
abusmg
adults
Send
resumes to G J M TASC
P 0 Box 88 Gall potts OH
45631 or FAX to (740)446
7894 by December 6 2002
EOEIAA Employer

AVON• All Areas • To Buy or Galha Me gs Commumty
•s
seekmg
a
Sell
Sh1r ey Spears 304 Action
Recept1on1st Must have
675 ~429
excellent
comm un1cat10n
sk lis abthty to handle a
multi 1ne te ephone system
greet and work with 1ndtv1du
oats of vanous soc•oeconom
tc levels expenence Wllh
M1crosolt OH1ce have a
vat d dnver s 1cense and be
bondable Htgh school d1plo
rna or GED w1th two years
ofhce expenence requ1red
Apphcat•ons w th resumes
wll
be accepted until
sign-on bormsl 4 OOpm on December 6
2002 at the Cheshtre off•c e
ends o n Decembet
GMCAA s an
Equal
31 2002
Opportumty Employer

--------wanted Licensed Pracucal
Nurse for a commun1ty
hOme tor people with mental
retardatton
1n
B•dwell
Curreri LPN LICense OOP
NES or NAPNES vahd drl
ver s license and three
years good driVIng e~epen
ence requ red Hours 12
Bpm MN/ 9am 5pm TU/TH
7am 3pm
FAI
Salary
$1000/hr E1&gt;cellent benefit
package Send resume to
Cecilia Baker
Buckeye
Community SeiVCes PO
Box 604 Jackso n OH
45640 Deadline lor apph
cants
12/3/02
Equal
Opportun ty Emp oyer

r

r

~pn::::;Y:A:KD::;SAL=E=·~

i

~~---------"

Nurse A1des,
Personal Care A1des
and State Tested

Nurse A1ds
Pleasant

Valley

Home Health 1s
act:c pt 1ng
npphca
hum lor hume care
tdSC); to prov tde (;are

10 dt c nt );

~rV ho

\!1 tso n

ttl

res1de
Mc1gs

Gdl ltn C oun t •es

.md

It is Going,
Going ...
It is almost
Gone!

• •

Dnver Always a step ahead•
Up to 38e CTM No 1orced
NE or Canada One year
OTR 23 years old COL wtth
Hazmal requ red No load
mg
or
untoad1ng
Guaranteed home po Icy
2000 or newer convent1on
als Owner operators wei
come PTL800 848-()405

Onvers
THERE'S NO PLACE
LIKE HOME FOR THE
HOLIDAYS!
Every professiOnal dnver
dreams of a sat•sfylng
career on lhe road
but
hassle free t1me off IS also a
top pnonty!

..,1'.10-HELP-·W·ANrn&gt;--... ..,l·.·o_IIF.i.P
__w_ANJED
___.I
Help wanted canng lor the
elderly Darst Group Home
now paymg m.n•mum wage
new shtfts 7am 3pm 7am
5pm 3pm 11Pm 11pm
7am call 74Q-992 5023

EOE
Subject to drug
screen S1x months exp

INSURANCE
Agone¥ Monoger
Large Growing Insurance
10
agency Sp&amp;CialtzlnQ
employee benefits has
career opportumty for an
e~epenenced professiOnal to
oversee offtce operatiOns
and superv1se serv•ce/ sup
port stalf Key respons1b1l1
t1es wtll mc!ude ensuring
outstandtng chen! serv1ce
plann1ng budget•ng staff
h1nng and tra1n1ng schedul
ing and coordmat•ng work
flows managing camer rela
t1onshtps and oversee•ng
commlsston system The
successful candtdate wtll
have substantial e~epenence
In
the above
areas
Expenence 1n an agency
wnh a servtce staff of 10 or
more (or closely related
msurance Industry e~epen
ence) and a
busmess
degree are strongly pre
ferred Excellent compen
sat•on and benet1ts nclud
•ng health msurance and
401 (k) Send resume and
salary requ•rements to Oak
H1ll Fmanc1al Inc
Attn
Agency Manager Search
PO Box 688 Jackson OH
45640 EOE M!F/DN

reqUired
·----'---Foster Parents
\
Local Agency m Ohto seek
tng qual hed couples to
become Fosler parents m
Lawrence Ga111a Jackson
Me1gs areas There w111 be 5
to 1 famtlles chosen to
become part of the pilot proJ
ect Oual1lled applicants
may recewe up to $40 00
per day re mbursement

Public Health Infrastructure
Coordmator needed to
deve op
response
plans/ actiVIties to prepare
for and/or manage pubhc
health
emergenctes
Bachelors degree preferred
Equivalent emergency man
agemenVcommumc:atlorv'me
d•cal expenence cons1d
ered Send resume to 112 E
Memonal Dnve Pomeroy

Hunt
That s why J 8
Transport offers tw1ce as
much t•me off as most earn
ers two days off for seven
on the road m many htnng
areas And regard less of
your location you can get
home as often as 14 days
Say good bye to those
annoymg calls for dtspatch
as soon as you begm your
time ott

We also offer a fleet of new
wei mamtamed Century
Class Fre1ghthner conven
Mnal tractors and many
drivers take advantage of
our permanent truck ass1gn
men! optiOn
To apply see our h1nng rep
resentat1ve at a truck stop
near you or call us 7 days
a week to speed the hmng
process I
1 BOO 2JB HUNT

o

in teraslad

partras

Call Oh 45769 by or belore 12

(740)709 9062
you hove
02I_S_e_cr_e-la-r y--S-e-cre_l_a_ry
prev10usty
called IIplease
call 06
-L-e-go_
aga n

needed
Wllh
bankmg/
Bankruptcy
experience
Temp to h re Gontac1 Kelly
Serv1ces 1 BOO 295 9470

Jac kson Count y WV
• Co mpetltiVI:: rat e

If you 11 0u ld hke to

• Flcxrhh.:: 'ichcduhn g
• Mile 1ge

earn a $500 Sign on

rCinlh lll scm~..: nt
1

H ealth m sur-ance

•

ln~.:c nu vc

pl.m

tn for m at 1on 01 to
arra nge 1 pe1 son a!
l!l i Cr VIC\\ at

1-877-463-6247
ext. 2454
ur &gt;l op

our

Gallipolis

800-746-01176

HELP WANTED

by

ollice

242 3rd A'e nue

304-675-7400 or

I

t o day'

OH

HELP WANTED

e

11:

'Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Regtstered Dietitian

Comparab le sal ary &amp; benefit s Jam our tam tl y
ot pr.o fc ss tonal s to be the res6urce for co mmunny health serv tce needs
Rcg tMercd dtetltt.m w nh the Commtss ton on
D tett:-tt~.: RegtstJat ton L1ccnsed diCtJtt m w nh
We st V trg1 ma Bu.ud of L1~ ensed DLet111 .m s

Pl-ca'ie submtl rc"um~: to
Pleasant Valley Husp1tal

,..... cio Human Resources

2520 Valley
or

Dr1ve Pt Pleasant, WV 25550

FAX 10 1304) 675 6975
www j)\alley org

AAIEOE

AUCTION

AUCTION

bonus and up 10

$7 /hour C&lt;~ ll

Ph.:asc c til
Tr.t Wooten tor more

AUCTION

Saturday, Dec. 7th 10:00 am
We have been commisSIOned lo sell the h ou~eho ld uf
the laic: D'1'.1gh1 Hysell ilnd Mildred Hy~ e ll Due 10
weath er Y.e have moved the whole household to the Old
Glorv Autt on House m M1ddleporl O h10 740 992

9l53
Ttke St Rt 7 S from Belpre Ohio to Second
Middleport Exit From Gall!poll5 OH take St Rt 7 N
to first Middleport Exll Stgns will be posted
HOUSEHOLD Crosley roun d top fndge 2 pc ll vmg
room smte Flatwa ll cab net Fng1da1r elec nnge
(older) Amana Rildar Range Maytag Elec Dryer G E
Portable T\ Luy Bo) reclmcr whec::lchaJr elc::ctn c
heater propane heater coffee &amp; end ta bl e~ stereo
Home l ntenor 3 sewmg machme Hammery corner
stand, mce mat tresl!ie~ &amp; bo1&gt;spnngs Chesser bedroom
su tt fu ll SIZe bed 4 dmwer chest wardrobe recl mer
mcc: old mmors sweepers wood cha1rs knchen table &amp;
4 cham• wood table &amp; 2 cha 1rs wood uonmg board
lamps ut1l1ty cabmets book shelves baskets d1shes
pnns smal l appham.:es quns beddmg !men s 10\'oc:ls
clocks cast Jron sk1llets
COLLECTABLES 3 gallon crock small crock s adv
tms ad' wood cr ates coke crate 7 up s1gn {rn c:tal)
grnnll ...,are tent on hall gunpowder ca n &amp; loaders
(mce ) war ratiOn ~ta mp s Late 1800 s btrd cage depres
s1on w&lt;n c buller mold l:Offee m1ll copper boiler kraut
cutter lanterns carpenters tray old p1ckle Jars pnmtll\le
bench qUil ti ng frame s h.wco w1ndow frtdge (rough)
(;li n e~ H1 Hu (ap gun ~tl:.mters
M•ke Voshel Aucboneer
J1m Taylor Apprentice Auctioneer
l1censed and Bonded m favor or the Sta te of
Ohm&amp; WV
Cash or &lt;'heck w/posltin lD
Announcement~ day uf the sale take pre~;edcm:e over all
pr.n1ed matenal
(
Come out und enJOY th ts one We have good home
cooked food and homemade p1e s

AUCTION

AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sat. Dec. 7, 2002
Bel:innine at 8;00 a.m.
Located at 14336 State Route 93 at the South
edgt&gt; of Jackson, Oh1o Lucille Copenhaver wdl

otTer the followmg for sale·

Anttque Oak Curved Glass Chma Mahogany
Bookcase Secretary 0\al Ornate Parl or Stand,
Ant1que Dresser and Mmor 5 Legged Table w/ 2
Leaves ~pmet Wntmg Desk,.~,. Camel Back Trunk
PamteU F\atwall Cupboa.rd uak Hall Tree Parlor
Stand 2 01l Lamps 4 Stone Pnchers 2 Bem Wood
Cha1rs Fern Stand 6 Stone Jan Blue Crock,
McCoy Vases P1tcher &amp; Bowl 2 Cedar Chests
Gramte Top Table Cast I ron Kettle Mtlk Cans,
Matchmg Breakfront Chma Table w/ 6 Chrurs
Dmelte w/ 4 Cha&amp;rs 3 Leather top Occasional
Table.c; 4 Brass Lamps Small Desk: Floor Lamp
Ntce P1ctures Matchmg Dresser w/ M1rror and
Bed Beddmg Matchmg Dresser Chest &amp; End
Table Matchtng Coffee Tnble w/ 2 End Tables
Waltham Pocket Watch Pocket Kn1ves Carnl\ al
Glass Pressed Glass Iron Sk tliets 3 P1cmc
Baskets Set of Engltsh Garden Chma Knchen
Items lncludmg Cookware Pms Pan s &amp; Dt she s
Costume Jewelry H1de a bed Zenith Color TV 2
Rechners Amana Refrigerator 2 Uprt ght freezers,
Ele(; tnc Range Ma_ytag Washer 8i. Dryer 2
Vacuums Dehum1d1fier 2 L1ke ~ew Kerose ne
Heaters Cub Cadet 1320 Hydro Luwn Tra~;tur 6
Y1ce Bench Gnndcr 22 Alu m Ext Ladder
Cuculat Sa\\ Dnils Roto tiller 2 Pu sh Mo .... ers
Stnng Tnmmer Garden Tools Hand Too ls
Mechamc Tools Coal Stove Fue l 01l Furn ace 2
Large Work Benches Red Wagon Wheel Barrel
Much Much More
Teruu c;uh or Clwck v./ Vutnable lD
Food Avallllblt
No(e A JO' ~ ~ 8ulldln11l• avalt1ble lo cw

of bllld v.utber

Auct1011ter Terry L lloyd 10701 Limerrck Rd
Chtlttcothe, Oh1o 45601
(740) 884·4905
1--lcemed and B ondtd Jn the Stale of OhJO

I

INTERNSHIP
lnfoCielon - Management
Corp uSseaklng •nd•viduals
for an entry level manage
ment
1nternshlp at the
Galltpolts
locatton
Object•ves of the 1nternshtp
Will Include 1n depth tra1mng
of marketing analysis repor1
wnt•ng and team superv1
ston Intern Wtll also excel In
developing the r analytical
11stenmg teaching and com
munlcatlon skits
The qualified cand tdate
must be a Sen1or busmess
maJOr wdh a GPA of 3 0 or
higher The Internship ts a
mlnlltlum or 20 hour:s a
week and pays StO/hr
you would l1ke to con
tnbute to our success at
lnfoC1510n m Gal11pohs send
your resume to

If

lnloCis1on Managamelitt Corp

Attn Sam Gasket
325 Spnngs1de Dr
Akron OH 44333
or ema1l to
hrd rector@lnloC son com
VIsit our website at
lnfoCis•on com
LOOKING FOR A FUN
JOB? T HIS IS Il l OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI
l iONS AVAILABLE t 888
974 JOBS

r

to

HELP WM'MJ

LPT LPTA for home health
svcs Cho•ces avatlable tor
the count1es or areas
served Currently pr0111de
servtces n Jackson Me1gs
Athens Galha V1nton and
southern Washmgton coun
toes Call (740) 288·6631
--------Maintenance Worker Hlgh
School
Dlplomal
GE D
reqUired Posi tiOn performs
general Carpenlry elect Cal
plumbing painting and yard
work Expenence m the

"

_._...

Jk1li1Nmol
AND 8viwJNGs

or For
Loaoa- 2HO " sq h Ooluxa 1 BR Town House,
building nece partdng tot near
Holzer
CIA

2 '-*ootm ••1 ale
"""'
w
water &amp; trash tncluded, ref
8i"ence&amp; &amp; deposit reqwred
$300 per month, located just
outside Aac•ne on "'"'ft
3 •·•
..- With
uvuroom Brick Ra,....,,
full basement, 2 garages
county blacktop road
(740)388-8212
3 Bedroom newly remod
eled in Mlddu.r....... call Tom
... -....__ ........,..
~~~• alter 5 p m
992-3.Wl
Brick Roncll House on RT 2

_

~,l·.·o_IIEt.P_W_M'MJ
_ _..~r

"

~~

OWNER OPERATORS
WANTED
TRUCK DRIVERS
Longhaul Teams Welcome
Call (304)675-4005
Pomt Serv1ce )(Press
--------Truck Drivers lmmedtate
h1re class A COL requ1red
excellent pay e~epenence.
required
Earn up to
$1 000 per week Call 304
675 4005

Folr - n g Act ot 1111

.............

pe'"l'"'

wlllch- H lltegollo

Qualifications Registered
Nuroe licensed lo praclica In
the Sl818 ol Ohio with at
least lwo years ...,.rllnca
One yoat oupervloor expenenca preferred
Public
opoaklng ablllly required
Muel have abllty to oornmunlcate effective Travel
reQuired with relmburae~
menl

.,.,.,..nee, llmtt.tlon or

District 7 Inc
F32 URG P0 Box 500
Rio Gronde Ohio 45674
email jshong 0 aao7 org
Equal Opponunlly Employer

.Uecrlmln.tlon baled on
,_. color, r.llglon Hill:
-1111..-o or
ortgln or .ny Intention to
m.Q 11ny auch
prefeNnce, HrnttiUon or
diKrtm!Mtlon "

notl-

Moro percels available CaJI

now for mapa and other llat·
lngsl Owner financing wllh
slight propeny markup We
buy land &lt;0 acres and upl

--torvt--horwby

Thlo -perwtl not
lolololngty IICIIOpl

Patriot area 20 wooded
acres county water &amp; electrtc , homesite
Borders
Wayne Nallonal Forreal

MtMewhlohlaln

of lho low Our

1-thltlll
-llngoadvertlood In
lht. ntWI)If I . .
netlablt on 1n eqUIII

a•callenl hunllng $38 000
(7&lt;0)379-9141

Antique Auction
Saturday, Dec. 7, 2002 10:00 a.m
MoodiSpaugh's Auction House
Torch, Ohio

Oalllpollt Caneer Collogo
(Careers Close To Homa)
Call Todoyl 740-446 4387
1-80().214-0452
Reg t90-05 12748

Engine
Repair
Diesel
Servicing and OVerhaul Cell
• (74())M5·2305, Home I
(7.0)446-1542 Ask lor Bnan
Georges Ponable Sawmill
don't haul your logs to the
mllljuat call 304·675 1957
HOUSEKEEPING Service
Available For a tree consul·
tatlon, please call Amber at
(7&lt;40)2•5-7601

• Subfloor system
6' Q.l"'l prt&lt;ut ano

numberod Oj ..,jl1y1~m
Graclod borale prou•ro
ooatod ll ytar wa ..nty

O.ality wndOWI and coon
• ~&gt;&lt;Ill up01od boom 011 wih
2x6 IOf'I!IUI and grOO¥t dtcki~~g

INDnCEI
0!'10 VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG
recommends that
y~u do buslneu wHh people
~ou know and NOT to send
money through lhe mall until
you have Investigated the

lx roftor wi\,~,"11 and fell
Porchsystem

co

lntonar ..,jl iram~ng
Gable wall iram1ng
• Oanntr 1)1tlm
10 S~nclord Madto
l,.m P60 1D 2280"' h

800· 280-2574
RIPUY liN

H~ ~

l
I

,, .

Re'v'otutlonary health cart
plan naw available In your
ar•a
Starting
at
t 9 95/monthly tor enllrt
family
Call Kimberly at
(7.0)3711 2634
TURN!D DOWN ON
SOCIAL S!CURITY /881?
No Fat Unlou Wo Wlnl
1·886-582-3346

~ ~-6enttnd

12 used homes priced under
$3000 will help wllh dehv·
ery Call Nlkkl740 385-9948

1994 Schull 16x72 Mobile
Home Pnced to sell OUick
Call (7&lt;0) 385 2434
1998 t6x80 SOhul1 mobile
home
with
a
24x24
detached heated garage on
a double lot located In
Racine Mobile home has a
llully equipped kilehan and
garage has a large wofi(
bench Includes a pr1vecy
fence and also has a small
storage building In back
yard Includes front porch
and back+ porch with sun·
deck Must see to opprecl
ate Immediate possession
Call (740 )992 •1987
.:.::.:.:...::::.:.::::..:......:.___
2 bedroom mobile home

ANnQuEs

•••itiiiliiOiiil•rl
1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo 4%
Down 30 Years at 8 5%
APR For UoUngs 800-3193323 Ext I 709

M!!'!(f!~

Apartmanll 1n Middleport Sold 1o the hl!lhest bidder
From $278-$348 Call 740- •as ts where ts• without
992 6064 Equal Housing expressed or 1mplied war

t

FOR~

I

I ~.,.r

(7&lt;0)388.()320

1996 Ford Contou r 4D
109K $2495 1996 s tO
AKC Registered Beagle Extended Cab 88K $429S
pups tllwt&lt;s old Mother 16 others In s1ock from
and l&amp;lher on
property $ t 295 to $5695 COOK
(7'")388 "721
~ ~
MOTORS (7.0)446-{)103
Lab pupptes yeltow or - - - - - - - - bl ck 575 (7'")1KJ:! .1!!
1999 Monte Carkl Z34
a
~ ·~733 coupe black, custom stereo
One registered 9 week old system leather 1ntenor
male Cocker Spaniel puppy power sunroof &amp; more
buff tail docked dew claws erlras {740)379-2721
removed $225 2 yr old
mate Beagle runs well 2000 Otdsmob•le Alero
$120 (740)742 2525
White w•th gray lntenor
Spoiler All power cruise
AMIFM.f Cassene 4 new
tires 42 500 miles with
""1!111""_ _ _ _ _ __,
dad
a
exten
warranty
to
t 00 000 m11es Excellent
• _,.......,..
...,.,.rl)l\.ll..l\
condition going to college
must
sell!
SIO 000
(740}141 -9865 alter 5pm
Registered Angus Bull $900

r·-------,J

°

"C

iiiiiiiiiil

Good Used Appliances
Aecondittoned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Dryers
Ranges
and
Aefr1gerators Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliances 78
V1na 51 (7&lt;0)«6 7398

Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grettng
For
Drains
Dnveways &amp; Walkw,ys L&amp;L
Scrap Malols Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Friday 8am-4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740)446-7300

f

~~=;~=~~{~~p ;~~~:~

pncf (304)882 3507

:::.:::.:::..:.==-='---

r

Wotan1no Spaoral 314 200 - - - - - - - PSI S2t oo Per 100. 1· 200
SERVICES

PSI $35
00 Par tOO
All
Brass
Compression
Fittings
In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
ES Jackson Oh1o 1·80()..
537 9526
WHITE S METAL
DETECTORS
Ron Allison 588 Watson
Rood Bldwall Ohro 45614
(7&lt;0)446-4336

r

Block bnck sewer pipes
windows Untets etc Claude
Winters Rio Grande OH
Coll740·245·5121

r

Ohio Valley Bonk will oiler
for sale by public auction a
1994 Chevy PU •115795 at
the Oh1o Valley Bank Annex
143 3rd Ava Gsll!&gt;&lt;&gt;lls OH
on 12107102 Sold to lha
highest bidder •as ls·where
is" wtthout expressed or
Implied warranty &amp; may be
seen
by
caltln~
the
Collection
Dept
at
(740)441·1036
OVB
reserves the r ght to
acceptlr8(ect any &amp; all bids
&amp; withdraw 1tema from sale
pr1or to sate Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK
Ohio
Volley
B1111k auction
will oilera
for sale
by public

with add on and 314 aero lol
ln VInton (740)388·6804
•Get Your Money a Worth~ at
Coles Mobllo Homeo S1 Rt
50
East
of
Athens
Deliveries set ups, e~ec avat·

:58=5:::9:..:.._ _..:.
· --1 eedroom Apartments
Starting
at
$289/mo
Washer/ Dryer Hookup
Stove and Refrigerator
,(_74_0.:.)«_•_·1_5_1_9_ _ __

lng foundations sewage
systems driveways heating
and cooling along w!h pans
and aorvlco You should
accept nolhlng less Slnca
te67 we ara Colt 1 Mobile
Homes where you MQet Your
Money a Worth "

4 roomo and belh stove/
refrigerator Utilities paid
$400 montM 48 Oliva Stroal
)
1740 446 3945

Appllcallono baing taken lor
very nice 2 bedroom In
country nttlng yet close to
town Waaher Dryer Stove
Mull Sell lmmodlatolyl 3 Frlg, Dlahwather provided
year old 1999 Oakwood Large Klleheh Loll of clotot
t 6x80 3 badrocms 2 balho
LR Kitchen (appllanc" opaco Total oloctrlc wllh
lncludad) laundry room Central A/C Garbage pick·
Sarioua Inquire~ onlylll Call up and water provided
Tenant poyo electric No
ofter 7p (304)875 7347 or pots Non smokers only
(304)875-61108
$400 depoott $460 month
New t4x70 3 brl2b1h Only (740)446·9585 or (740)446·
$999 ddwn and only 2205 t 743
Contenary
$197 71 per monlh Call Road Galllpolla Ask lor
VIrginia
r
Korona (7&lt;0)385 7871

I

84 E 350 14h Van new tires
dependable
$2600
1994 Javelin 379T bass
(7.0)446 0205 (7&lt;0)446· boat with 150 Johnson
4254 Evening
Depth Ftnder Many extras
$9000 (7&lt;0)4&lt;11-{)381
99 Honda Foreman 450 S,
895 miles good cond1hon
' I I ~\ It t "
$3,800 98 Chevy S t 0
55 000
miles
(7&lt;40)«6-8306

$5 500

r'o

u--

•

""""'"

C&amp;C
General
Home
Malntanence- PaJntlng vlnyt
siding carpentry doors ~
wlndows
baths
mobile
home repa1r and more For
free estimate call Chat 74(}..
992-8323

1984

Chevrolet

Ohio Volley Bonk will offer
lor sale by public auction a
1997 Vamllha YFM350 ATV
It 93622 allhe Ohlc VaJley
Bank Anne• 143 3rcl Ave
GalllpoUo OH on 12/07102
SOld 10 lho hlgheSI bidder
M
as Is where 11• Mthout
ox!AIUd or Implied war·
ranly &amp; may be uen by call
lng lhe Ccllecllon Dopl al
(7.0)441 1038
OVB
reeerves the right to
accepVrejecl any &amp; all bldo
&amp; withdraw Items from sale
prior to sale Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK

Residential or commercial
wiring
new service or
repalra Master Licensed
electrtctan
Ridenour
Electrical WV000308 304675· 1788
,

I dlt( U/l()lr,' ,fdJI•;

\!V Ih Neu- f'1pf r, - 1
'
' -·
'
-\

~==A~U~C~T~IO~N~;::;;,;:::A:UC~:T:IO~N~;:;
fS~Jt

K10

13608«6 ot lho Ohio VaJiey
Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave

AUCl:llJN

Gallipolis OH on 12/07102
Sold lo the hlghesJ bidder
~as ls·where Is" without
expreaeed or Implied war·
ranly &amp; may be aeen by call
lng !he Collecllon Dept at
(740)441 1038
OVB
reserves the r1ght to
occeptlrejecl any &amp; all blda
&amp; withdraw Items from sale
prior to sale Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK
Ohto Valley Bank wil l offer
for sale by public auction a
1999 Ford Ranger M35421
at the Ohio Valley Bank
Anne)(
143 3rd Ave
Gallipolis OH on 12107102
Sold 1o lhe hlghesl bidder
"as Is where IBN without
expressed or Implied war·
ranty &amp; may be seen by call~
lng tho Collection Dept al
OVB
(740)441 -1038
reserves the rlght to
accepVreject any &amp; oil bids
&amp; Withdraw 1tems from sale
pnor to sale Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK
1980 F 150 Half/Ton truck

V 8 302 engme automatic
some rust
runs good
$995 00 (740) 992 0916

1994 Ford F 150 XL auto
a1r 6cyl 77 ooo
actual
m1les
$6 000
(304)675 7397 or (»1)675
5880

V~ &amp;
~L..;•••4-ioiWDsliiiilo•-"

f13D

-93 Chevy Lumina van runs
we ll w•ll need transmission
worl&lt; $800 (740)992 4028

GLASSWARE
Crystal stemware, Goblets, 8 pc
Hav1land Chma, Fenton, F 1gu "'t'"· l
Beautiful Lamps, 011 Lamps , &amp; More
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.
Seth Thomas we1ght clock,
Clock, Brass candelabras, J1m
bot11es • Coal Mmer· John l-lann•.
Amencan Revo l ution
1776 Co•llectc,rl
plates Pictures, Flowers, Bunn Coffee
Quality cookware, Tupperware, Filatw&lt;lre. l
Chnstmas decorat1ons, Pro·lm
machme A1coh FT2050 Copter,
Cannon camera, Sony CD Player
clubs Ltnlms, Blankets &amp; more

SERVICES

-~~~~~~~~::i~~~~~~~Do You HIVI A BUIIIIIN,
Service, Or Product You Would
l.lke to Advert/11/n

4.5 MIU/on Houllhold• With
Only One Phon. Cl/11

The American Community
Classified AdYertlslnQ Network

1-800-821-8139

nlshad security doposrl ;=;A:U:C::T:IO=N==;.:=:A:U:C:T::IO:N::::;
required no pets 740 992
2216
1

IIUC 1AUCnDNIDUSE
,

I

work) or work van $1200 ~-~--...":":":'---,
firm Kally(740)446-996t
rBoA~s~OIORS

94 Corvette Coupe whlte
with red leather LT1 motor
&amp;uiO loaded CDI AMIFM
cassalto glass lop S11 500
(740)682 7512

1994 Ford Taurus SHO 4dr cruise

Need a car? New second
chance financing available
now Requires $300 weekly
King
&amp; super s•ngle
Income and you are
waterbeds
both head· Two 8 x20 culverts In good approved Call the Loan
boards
mauresses
&amp; shape Will sell separately or Doctor at 1 866 4LOAN or
logalher (740)388-8212
locally (740)4&lt;18 4533
healers call 304 675·5630

Molloh8.fl Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Rood Porter Ohio
(740)446·7444 I ·977-830
9162 Free Estimates Easy
financing 90 days same as
cash V•sal Master Card
Beauttful R1ver V1ew Ideal Orl'v'e a little save alot
For 1 Or 2 People
References Deposit No Nice Used Almond color
Pets Foster Tra1ler Park Kenmore Electric Stove
$75 (740)446-2815
740-441-1)181
Refrigerator $95 Electnc
Mason trailer suitable for 1
range $95 Washer $95
or 2 Hud accepted dep
Dryer $95 Upnght Freezer
required 304-675 7783
$150
GE gas range
Mobile home for rent, no Almond $150 Calonc gas
range white l1ke new $t95
pats (7.0)992 5858
Frost Free refrigerator
$165, Kenmore washer/
dryer sa1 $250 Skaggs
Appliances 76 Vme Street
1 and 2 bedroom aport· (740)446·7398
menta furnished end unfur :.;....;.:....:...:.:.;._ _ __

~~

tires needs engine or $3800 (7&lt;40)«6-4210
rebult1 $900 (7&lt;0)«6-7928 - - - - - - - New Honda Rancher ES
1987 Chevy van mechaniC •h4 300 miles $4900 firm
owned L.uxury Van (w1th (740)446-3951

.,I""____..;;..;...,

I

1 baijroom apartment stove
&amp; ralrlgerator ln&lt;:luded ullll·
ties Included (740)245·

43

L•••tl

rsnly &amp; may be seen by cal~
• ....,
tu ing the Colktctlon Dept at Ear of com Small amounts
LArge 2br .....-ances r (740)441 - 1038
OVB
mshed Deposit required reserves the nght to
HUD
accepted
$285 aoceptlretect any &amp; all bids
"(3114:::::)6~7:.5-.:.7783:;:::_ _ _ _ &amp; withdraw ~ems from sale
New Haven 1 Bedroom pnor to sale Terms of Sale
A~
Furnished Apl Deposit &amp; CASH OR CERTIFIED
roR SAlE
No p018 992 CHECK
Reterancas
"
Oh10 Valley Ba:nk will offer
165
---- Army
lsj\ue
camouflage
for sale by public auction a
Baec/1 Slreel Mldd1epan 2 clolhlng Free Dish Satelltte t997 Pontiac Grand PriiC
Bedroom Furnished Apl • wlbaslc lnstallat1on compa •2211&gt;« alllle Ohio Volley
comeretal
Sam Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave
Pd
Depoall ny
Utilities
Reterancas No PelS 992 Somerv1lla s (since 1964 l Gallipolis OH on 12107102
By S8nd~111e WV P 0 Sold to lha highest bidder
0165
(»1)273-5655
·as 1s where is• w1thout
expressed or Implied war
18edroom
Middleport
Black stainless steel oven
Fumlohad Apt DeposH &amp; ronga $99 Kllchan labia ranty &amp; may be seen by call
Reference, No Pe1s 992 light fixture $15 eacll Call 1ng the Collection Dept at
(740)441 1038
OVB
0165
R11S (7&lt;0)446 9555
rese rve s the
right to
North
3rd
Avenue
BURN
Fat
BLOCK accept/reJect any &amp; all bids
Micldlepon 2 BED unlur·
Cravings
and BOOST &amp; withdraw Items from sale
nlshed Appt
Deposit &amp;
You Have prior to sale Terms of Ssle
Energy Like
Reference No Poll 992
CASH OR CERTIFIED
Never Experienced
.:.0:.:165:.:.__ _ _ _ __
CHECK
WEIGHT· LOSS
REYOLunON
Now Taking Applicatlon.,_
Ohio Valley Bank will oiler
35 West 2 Bedroom New product l&amp;u(lCh Oclober for sate by public auct1on a
Townhouse
Apartments 23 2002 Coil Tracy a1 1999
Hyundal
Accen1
Includes Water Sewage (7&lt;0)441·1962
~4&lt;16138 at lhe Ohio Volley
Truh, $350/Mo 740-446
Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave
CHAIITI.tAS SPECIAL
:0008=::.......,..----- FrM VKittlon Get+aWJy Gallipolis OH on 12/07102
SOld to the highest bidder
Tara
Townhouse
While supplies laat
Kas is where ts• without
w/purchuo of Wolff
Apertmenll Vary Spacious
expressed or Implied war
2 Bedrooms 2 Aoors, CA 1
Tanning Bed P'ayments
ronly &amp; may be seen by coli
112 Bath Newly Carpeted
loom $2!!/monlh
rng tho Ccllecllon Dapl at
Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool
FREE Color Calalog
(740)441 1038
OVB
Patio Slart $375/Mo No
I 800-781 5173
reserves the nght to
P'ets Lease Plus Secur1ty
www np etstan com
Deposit Roqulred Days ---..:..---~- occepVrolecl any &amp; all bids
740.446.3481
Evenings Grubbs Plana Tuning &amp; &amp; withdraw Items rrom sale
740-367.()5()2
Repairs Problems? Need prior to sale Terms of Sale
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr CASH OR CERTIFIED
740-446-4525
CHECK
'IWin Rtvort To...,r lor olderly/ disabled
Heirloom Baby Breelan doll Ohio Valley Bank will offer
Now accepting applications blond hair and original for sale by public auction a
lor 1 br all utilities paid HUD clothee on $50 (304)895· 1999 Chevrolet Cavalier
M808335 at the Ohio Valley
_ __
ooslsted carpelad apart _as_77....:.(304_:..lB_75_-B_988
Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave
ment rent Is 30% of your
Jocquohnes "Livln' Dollo" Gallipolis OH on 12107102
adjusted Income call 304
675 8679 between 8 4 30 Presenting Apple Valley SOld to lhe hlghesJ blddor
Dolls &amp; Kits Custom made ~as IS·where 1s• without
P0mllll'wee...;.;;.,kd..a~yo~E
..H.o;..._ _, babies &amp; todd lers for that &amp;)(pressed or Implied war·
SPACE
special someone or make ranty &amp; may be seen by call
roR Rmr
your own, your wayl Many lng the Collection Dept at
faces eye colors halr color (740)441 1038
OVB
nght to
Trailer space for rent $125 &amp; styles skin tones and reserves the
per month plus deposit body styles to choose from accept/reject any &amp; all bids
Priests Trailer Park Water Clothing also available &amp; withdrew Items from sale
Compare to Middleton and prior to sale Terms of Sale
My Twlnn Cuddly Babies CASH OR CERTIFIED
Call for more information CHECK
(740)148 8810
1980 90s Cars/ Trucks from
JET
$500 Pollee Impounds lor
AERATION MOTORS
sole For hsllng 1-800·719·
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 3001 ext 3901
Beds couch coffee end Stock Call Ron Evans 1· .:.:.:._:...c_;:_:._____
tables dresser hid abed SOD-537 9526
1992 Chevrolel
Lumina
m1crowave reclmer drop
Euro 4 door sedan $1 500
leal1abla (740)446 9742
Phone (740)446 3479 after
Like new wheel chwr $300 Spm
For Sale Reconditioned
660
~19:..9_2_Mc-lls_u_b_is-hi-::P-rec_i_s_2
washers dryers and refr1g (740)36Hl
erators
Thompsons NEW AND USED STEEL door 4 cyllndor runs greo11
Appliance 3407 Jackson Steel Beams Pipe Rebar Good work vehicle S1200
Avenue (304)675-7388
For
Concrete
Angle (740)367 0119

Opportunities

__r.\lti_WDs:;;,&amp;_.!l r

.!~

ro

• Page 05

2 1erna1e Ral Tomer pup- 1998 Cavalier, 2D 7tK 1988 Jeep Cherokee 4x4, 2000 Yamaha Kodlac 400
pies- tails docked $100 a $3895 199&lt;4 Oldsmobile rebultt lran81'1'11.sslon rebuitt automatiC. push bunon 4x4
piece
Call after 5 00 Achleva 4D 87K $2695 kon1 end good body and Hi and Low range like new

--=--..:....:::.._____

~

FOR RJiNr

i

;====~===~=======::;

CAU NOW 10~ INfOIIMAnON

r•o

I

-n.

~~~H~~·
"""

Will pay top dollar lor pnme
land New home builder

Land home packages No
paymenls while under con·
structlon
Little
or no
down paymenl raqulred
(7.0)448-3218

i

r

(7&lt;0~782

i

2 Bedroom house $350
New 2000 sq h ll&lt;lme I 0 month plus doposll no
SalOl
minutes from Hospl1&amp;1 pets (7&lt;0)448-92•9
1M LUMBER COMPANY
Complete above ground
Monoger Tl'aiiiHO
pool with porch driveway 2 Bedroom 1 112 Bath
84 lumber Company Is and garage foundation Clean Racine 949-2517
!Jearchtng for career- mind Pr1ce below appraisal 3 bedroom house $450
ad Individuals for our
(740)446-3384
monlh plus depoolt No pe1s
Manager Trainee Program
Pnco
r&amp;ducad
must
sell
3
~(7:..4..:0:..)44:..6:..-4:..3:..1..:3
_ _ __
We want lndlvtduala who are
looking for a career that bedroom ranch new roof 3
bedroom
reference
Includes customer ser~~ce Bidwell area shown by raqulrad
$450
month
hands on work growing oppolnlmanl only (740)742· (7&lt;0)446·2156
sales and management 2062
3br House located 1n
Manager Trainee earn $26k
Wanted! Good credit cus Meson
WV $495 +
$30k per year wllh lhe postamers to purchase new UIIIIUos No Pets (304)773
slbllily of earning $50k·
home wfland $0 down to 5881
$1 OOk within 2 5 years•
qualltled customers 1·5
College preferred but not
acre
tracts
avatlable 5 rooms &amp; bath 50 Olive St
required No construction
$325 mo (740)446-3945
(740)4&lt;16 3093
knowledge
necessary
Through our patd tralntng
MOB!LEFORs"ALEOME'i
FIVe rooms and bath near
Holzer Hospital $300 rnslnth
you will become an •ndustry
+ utilities
+ depos•t
professlonell We offer an
excellent benefits package Oh•o Valley Bank will offer (740)446·9355 (leave mes
along with a great work1ng
for sate by public auctton a ise:iige~)~~-1""!::""-....,
environment Apply today!
1995 Lrborty Wexlord MH
Please forward resume to
IL31905 at lha Ohio Volley
·~ """" 1
1M LUMBER COMPANY
Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave
AHn. Bill Dovel
Galhpolls OH on ,2107102
2 bedroom in country no
Julton Sizemore
SOld 10 lha h1ghesl bidder
pals $275 month $200
lullclng M
~as •s·where •s" w•thout
1018 Route 511
depos•t plus uttllttes Call
e~epressed or 1mplted war
Etghty Four, PA 11330-2813
(740)256-8202
ranty &amp; may be seen by call·
Fe 724-22&amp;-2181
En\1111 CWMneMtumber com 1ng the Collect•on Dept at 2 bedroom mobtle home In
YloH our
at
(740)44 t 1038
OVB New Haven $335 00 a
wwwMiumbercom
reserves the nght to month+ dep 304·882·1107
Equal Opponuntty Employer
acceptfreJect any &amp; all bidS
WFIDN
&amp; withdraw 1tems from sale 2 bedroom ell electric AC
Drug Ffee Environmenl
prior to sale Terms of Sale very n•ce in Gallipolis
CASH OR CERTIFIED (7&lt;0)446-2003 or (740)446·
1409
CHECK

AUCTION

Location From Pomeroy, follow Rt 7 North
lhrough Coolville Ohro to Co Ad 63 turn nghl
go lo t1rs1 road lo le~ Tum le~ go approx 1
mtie to T turn nght go approx 1/4 mtle auctton
house IS on nght Please follow s1gns
FURNITURE Chrna cab1ne1s oak &amp; walnut
dressers w/mtrrors oak wa shs tand oak h1gh
oy sellers cabtnet, oak dtnmg table w/4 chatrs
lg mah drop leal table w/cha1rs bedroom surle
wa lnut c hilds bed 1ron bed cedar chest
Vrclonan chairs &amp; rockers other chairs &amp; rock·
ers organ slool blankel (or Tod) box (early)
sewing machines (4) Ice cream parlor chairs
drying rack pnmltlve broom Jyrng machrne oak
oHice desk m1sc sm 1ables (lamp fern cenler
&amp; etc ) and lois more furniture sllll arnv1ng
GLASSWARE &amp; POTTERY lots of Fenlon
Imperial Blanke Weslmoreland Deprassron ,
Viking cryslal &amp; more Roseville Hull M cCoy
Am 81sque cookie Iars chalkware banks and
lots more
STONEWARE. AP D o naghho 1ars lo ts of
unmarked jars &amp; JUQS, 5 gal stone churn batter
bowls water coolers and tots more
MISC M anlel &amp; kitchen clocks Aladdin lamps
ott lamps tronware ftshmg lures R A
Memorabilia old tools, adv memorabtha estate
rewelry o ld lays black memorabilia gran
lleware, glass churn, brass hangrng hghls piclures &amp; frames musical lnstrumenls o ld bollles
(milk &amp; etc ) blue Iars, and lo1s more slrll
arriving
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE Thrs 1s JUSt a partral
listing of a very lg
auction Due to our adver·
llslng deadlines come early and browse
MOODISPAUGH AUCTIONEERING SERVICES
Auctioneer Bill Moodlapaugh
Ohio Lie 117693 W Ya *1388
App Auctioneer- Todd Moodlspaugh
Ohio Lie SOopo61
Licensed and bonded tn favor of the states of Ohto
&amp; W Va Terms &amp; Cash or good check w(proper
10 Not respons ble for acc1cfen ts or loss of prop·
erty Announcements day of sale ta ke precedence
of pnnted matenal· Refreshments Provided
For lnlorma11on (740) 989 2823 or (740) 667 0644
Web s1te www mood1spau h com

lntha.,... p rerla

oubloct tolho , _

monu!T1801$

Galrpolll OH

~

Gallta Co Vinton nice level
lots Dodrill Rd 5 acres
$14 000 or 11
acres
$21 000 co waterl Rio
Granda scenic 9 acres
$23 000 Huntaral Kyger, 32
acres, $32 000, 28 acres
$28 000 or 18 acres
$18 OOOil.ocl&lt;o &amp; dam aree
33 wooded acrto, $33 0001

All--~

Used turnil\lra s1ore 130
Bullville Pike Waoel mal
lr....s,
bunk
beds
dlttl8ra couches appU
anoes much more Grave

hOokup $359 00 plus utilt- Buy or sell
Riverine
Commerc~al Retatl _tieo_.:.(7_&lt;0..:.;.)«6-_;.c295:.:.:._7___ ""sRtiques 1124 East Matn on
124 E Pomeroy 7 40Office or Building on 1 to 5 Furnished 3 rooms + bath
.._..., lor --~ rent or ~---992 2526 Russ Moore
Some- -fi
--~~~~
1
owner nanc ng ava~l- Reference
&amp;
depostt
abla • ln RIO Grande area reqt~red (740 &gt;"6- 1519
24
(J40) 5- 5747
Fum~&amp;hed Efftelenc•es all
1...ors &amp;
ubhl1es paid share bath
OhiO Valley Bank Will oHer
AOlFAGE
$135 month
919 2nd
.....
.iiiiiiiiiiiii•_.l Avenue, (740}44&amp;-~
for sale by publiC auctiOn a
2001 Murray Garden TraC1or
1128Crlllol on Tycoon Lake Graclo!Js living t and2 bed' 1131118 at the OhiO Valley
wlt21160Traiter$16 500 00
room -rtmenta a1 V1llage Bank Annex 143 3rd Ave,
now $13 500 00
Manor
and
Riverside GaJIIpolls OH on 12/07102
"
Large

$21 5001 Allred SR881, 6
acres Sl5 500 or 22 acres
wllh a 8lrlp ol Shade Rhler
$22 000 or on Carr Rd , 7
acres $14 0001 Danville 5 or
7acrea $99001

opportUnity - ·
Salary $29,000 plus excel·
lsnl benaltt package lnclud- Conaga slyla horne 2 bed·
•no Heallh, Dental VIsion room lull basement 2 car
plena, &lt;Ill k. vacation and garage rood lroirtage t 0
acres well matntalnad call
sltlc leave
Dartny Brown tor appoint
SUbm~ resume and Proof of rntnl (740)949-8900
RN Llcanea no later lh&amp;n _....:.:......:..._ _ __
~Foreclosed sw on 2 acre
13 1ract
4 30pm on ...,..amber
$500 down 1o quaiWiad
20021o
Human Rssourcas Area
buyers Call (7&lt;0)4&lt;16·3570
Agency on Aging
lor • quick sale

NURSES (RNa) $47 00 per
hour Col umbu s OH All ,
Units FULL TIME (800)437 ....
0348

(740}I4Hl817

I

Comor ol 3rd &amp; VUIO Straal Economical ~s heat, WID
1 GaJiipol (74QIA.It:LICW\'VI

'--'--------

NO On-Call· NO W-nds
NO Holidays· Days Only

areas ol carpentry electncal
and plumbmg preferred .:c.:...c.:.:.:...c______
Must have or Willing to
SECRETARY
obtam COL license with pas
HEALTH SERVICES
sen,ger
endorsement
PoSitton reqUires travel m The Unwers1ty of R1o
Gallla Jackson and Me1gs Grande mv tes appltcattons...
counties
for the pos111on of secretary ~
tor the Health Serv ces r
Woodland Centers Inc 1s a Department
'
not for porf1t pnvate commu
mty menta health center Responstbtl tles 1nclude but t
ser.tmg Galha Jackson and are not hmlted to prov1dmg 1
Me1gs Counti eS 10 Ohto general secretaMl ctencal
Compet1t1ve salanes and and technical assistance for •
benef1ts package •ncludlng the D~rec tor of Health
pad vacation and stck t1me Serv1ces as welt as ma1n
13 pa1d holidays retirement tammg and updat1ng med
plan health l1fe and d1sabtl 1cal ftle tor students faculty
•ty
msurance
oflered and staff Must work with ...
Pos1t1on must ma1ntam valid students on student •nsur·
drl'v'er's license as defined ance 1ssues and schedule
by Agency s fleet nsurance phys•e~ans appomtments aS""
earner
Please
send necessary
Resumes to Sherry Gordon
of
Human Must have h1gh s,chool d1plo
Manager
Resources
Woodland ma or eqUivalent Assoc1ate '
Centers Inc 3086 State degree referred Must have
Route 160 GallipoliS OhiO knowledge of computers
45631 EOE/AA Employer
Prev•ous of11ce expenence

I

3br 2ba 2 car~~ &amp; car· ~

port
(304)895-3909
(304)882--3486

This position oftets a
Monday Friday worl&lt; sched
ule

Look•ng for part t1me to full
t me HVAC Installers and
Tech Experience Is a must
We have good pay for good
work done If Interested call
(740)441 1236 No answer - - - - - - - - leave a message
McClure s \Restaurant now
hmng all 3 locattons full or
URGENTLY NEEDED plas part t1 me piCk up apphca
rna donors earn $50 to $60 tton at locat1on &amp; bnng back
9 30am
&amp;
per week lor 2 or 3 hours between
Monday
weekly Call Blo life Plasma 10 ooam
Saturday
Se1V1ce 7 40 592 6651
AUCTION

r

house &amp; bam

_..._..., rv u~a

[)utloe Include OOvetoplng
cumculum and providing Inhome training lor family
earagfvera to reduce caregiver stress, Injuries, and
ulCrease caregiver knowl·
edge 10 as lo Improve lila
quality of care to home
boUnd disabled and elderly

POLICIES Ohio Yalley Publlohlng '"""'"the right lo edll. rejecl. or cancel any oclelany me error. ..,,. be raponed on lhe nrol day o1 publl&lt;lllon and
Trlbuno-Sonllnoi-Roglllef will bo mponolblo lor no morolhln lhe cool ollhe spoce occupied by lhe"""' and only lhe lirlllnHrllon We shill no1 bo liable
any 1011 or ellj)lnoo thel muftllrom lhe publication or ornlulon olsn edverilumenl Comc11on will be mode In lhe nrtt available edmon • Box nun•bor· odt1l
are always confldendll • Currenrrate card 1pplle1 • All rullltlle advertisement&amp; are tub)ect to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 • Thla ,.;,,epaperl: ,
ICCt!* only lltlp wanted ldl meellng EOE lllndardl Wa will nol knowingly ICceplany edVIIIIalng In Ylollllon of the llw

• Stlrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

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

t0

and lnllnlng

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
$.~1ndlay In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

acres-

~ I rio ~

BEAU11FUL
APAIIT·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 1o S383
Walk to llhop &amp; movies cat!
740.«6 2588
Equal
Housing Opportunity

~-ov on a -·~ · pro- Brick Roncll 2 bedroom 2 llelgo Co. SR248 at
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home caregiver education miles south 01 Galllpolls $26 900 or 12 acres

Oearl~it~
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

r ~~ I r

N 3br 2ba 1 car A·-~~ _(,7&lt;0_)2
_4_7_·1-100____
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right
to become an garage
•
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Integral team member at our pool
On 0 46 acres
7otl-44t·14112
caregiver Support Program (3114 )675-BOSt

• nc

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or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

OIAA. e.......w...;..

REGISTERED NURSE

~

Call TOday...

I

FOR&amp;u:

must IIUbrnit t 5

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a leller of tnterea1 and
reoumo including 1118 names
and addresses of three ref·
erenceo on or before
OaceonbfM 6 2002 to Ms

EE

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Nice Iota available tor 01&gt; lo
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skills ~~ I-8Q0. 7 III-300t Ext

communication
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t

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

lll'llrldr-~lloMEs;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

u • mediCal - . . y pre!erred -be-lowork

,

TOOLS
Craftsman dnll, Craftsman scroll
125·250 amp battery charger,
Commercial gnnder, Lmcoln 250
Welder, Belt sander DeWalt power s
saw, Lg Air compressor, Nut &amp;
cabmet loaded, OJ&lt;Y·acet tank &amp; gauQes
cart, Lg yard tools Shp ttler,
mower, Lawn roller Ladders,
Jtnn•• Sander, Rectp ltatlng saw, FUJ·nih.rAI

1~::~:~: ,

1,

furnace st11l m box,
1 a1rNewumtgas
&amp; more

GUNS
Hawkms cap &amp; ball p1stol rephca, 22
676 H&amp;R Inc 357 Magnum Sm1th
Wesson, 385 Special Sm1th &amp; WEISSIOn,l
Mod 37-12 Gauge, Mod 77 Wm 22 au11o.t ,·
Muzzle loader-T1ger maple stock,
Lawman 357 revolver Mark 111 CG
LAWN TRACTOR
Gravely Model 12 Professional
Tractor

VINTON, OHIO

Sat. Dec. 7th 7 pm 2002

Antique &amp; eolleetible Auetion
Partial List: Drop leaf table w/3 sp1n·
die back cha1rs, twin tubs, oak hall
tree, arm chairs, 2-lce cream chairs,
oak dresser, show case, stools, metal
tra1n, old doll stroller, 1915 wooden
shoes, Daisy BB gun, ball cards,
cream cans, graniteware, waah
boards, meat grinders, Iron cookers,
sklllats, old metal tags counter scales,
faed scales, \ Fenton, Depression,
stona crocks, coal bucket, old tools,
stone bowls, Hull F1rB King,
Cambridge glass, Royal Homestead,
Avon Items, cookie Jar, old bottles,
cross cut saw, bottle cap opener,
brass Items, old Chrlstmaa 1tems., Old
coins
Cash or approved check
Auctioneer Flnla "Ike" laaac
388·8741 • 388-8880

ThundiV, DIC81DIIer 5
Dlll'l811111114:10
This will be our last
Thursday night sale
So thtre will be some reol
deals from Neal
41/2 &amp; 8 It windmills, dolls, furmture,
loys, rugs, Christmas glflltems, light·
housa, birdhouse, dish sat and canis·
tar set, tools Tha building will be full.

AUCTIONEERS NOTE: A very large all
day auction, dress lor the weatherll

Auction Conducted

b~:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
1U·Sl85 OF. H3·5447
EXECUTOR: KENNETH E. WILLIAMS
Terms Cub or Check wllh 10.

�Page D6 • 6udlp cttllUS -6mtfnd

Sunday, December 1, 2002:

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaUipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Ravens defeat Cincinnati, B1

BULLETIN BOARD
Ariel
Cultural and Performing
Arts Centre

• Required an outgoing and profes-

f

• Wilt work wnh Board on lund raising
and gmt writing
'
• Responsible for dalty operations,
such as marketing , voiunteer coordination, concert production/preparation
Bachelor's degree preferred and/or 35 years experience with non-profit
organization. Preferably in the arts.
Send resume and salary requirements
to P.O.Box 424 Gallipolis. OH 45631

Dec . 7th

9 am-2:30pm
Lunch Served
11 am - 1 :30 pm
Bingo Oecember 2nd
American Legion Post 467
Rutland, Ohio
4 Packet for $20.00
Star Burst $1 ,800
Doors Open 4:30 pm
Game Starts 6:30 pm

12-4

GARAGE SALE
Flea Market
Inside Sat 11-30.02
Sun 12-1-02 Only 9 am-5pm
4253 ST RT7N
at Old Big Boys Water Toys
$1 ,000 REWARD
upon arrest &amp; conviction of
individual(s) involved in the
breaking &amp; entering of the
Richard Fehrmann residence on
White Oak Road
Call the Sheriff's Office at 446-4612
HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER

•

Grace United
Methodist Church
!-December 6, 2002

Lots of Christmas Items,
Toys, Videos, Furniture,
Knick-knacks, Antiques,
Tools, Housewares,
Candles &amp; NASCAR

Personal Touch

MOLLOHAN
CARPET
Quality at a low price
Berber $5.95/yd.
Vinyl $4.95/yd.
' For free estimates
446-7444

HOLIDAY
BAZAAR

14728 St Rt 554 Bidwell
Nov 29&amp;30 Dec 2&amp;3 9-5

Let Beauti Control
help you bring out your natural
beauty. Help you with
Christmas Gilts.
Sheri Myers will be at

sional indlvjdual with excellent oral
and written communications skills and;
good computer skills.

Sibling Classes
Sunday, December 8 .
1 :30 - 2:30 pm
Education &amp; Conference
Center
lnfanVChild CPR Class
Sunday, December 8
3:30 - 5:30 pm
Education &amp; Conference
Center
For more information or to
register, please call 446-5030

446-2342 OR 992-2155 • 675-1333

Heated Inside Sale

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577

Ariel Theatre is currently seeking ...
• Executive Director
• Full time, 4-Q.hour per week

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

.

Large Assortment of
Christmas Gift Books
Are you looking for an instruction
. book on how to live your life?
Only at
Good News Bible
Bookstore
441-9603
Buy 1 book at regular price, Get
a 2nd book of equal or less value
1/2 off (in-stock items only)
Welcome Friends
Come and join
Brenda &amp; her staff at
Brenda's Kut &amp; Kurl
'
lor a vintage White Christmas
Monday, Dec. 2,2002
4-7pm
Bobby Hood Executive
Director Beauty Control
15 yrs. experience
Make-up- New Purses- Give,A
Way -Prizes- New Jewelry
Sets- Free Food -New
Cologne for Men &amp; Women
Register for 26 in . Unisex Bike
Given away Dec. 21st

FERRELLS ,
DEER PROCESSING
1 Day Processing Available
33 Henkle Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio
740.446-7936

Fall Apples for Sale
Rorne, Red Delicious,
Stamin
$10.00- $12.00
a bushel

304-895-3742 or
304-593-2127
cell phone
ATTN: HUNTERS
Open lor Breakfast 5:30 am
Mon. Dec. 2nd - Sat. Dec. 7th
PARKFRONT DINER
· &amp;BAKERY
314 2nd Ave. Gallipolis
446-1251
CHRISTMAS
BAZAAR
Silver Memorial (FWB)
Kanauga, Ohio
Dec. 6th and 7th •
10am-6pm
Hot Dogs and Baked Goods

NEW HOLIDAY HOURS
Monday 10:00a.m. ~6: 00p .m.
Tuesday 10:00a.m. - 6:00p.m.
Wednes. 10:00a.m. - 6:00p.m.
Thursday 10:00a.m.- 6:00p.m.
Friday 1O:OOa.m. - 8:00p.m.
Saturday 10:00a.m. - 4:00p.m.
at
Headquarters by Juanita
313 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
74Q-446-2673
Featuring
Merle Norman Cosmetics
Scentsations Candles
Goldwell Hair Products

got what you
want in a golf

golf bliss until you reach the
Gulf. Or pick two or three of

vacation .. top qual- your favorite courses and

your day on the links.

50 CENTS • Vol . 53, No. 75

For More Info...

446-2342 • 992-2156
'. 675-1333

MARRIOTT's GRAND Hom at Point

CoNFERENCE CENTER AT

Clear, Alabama, ovei"looking

NATIONAL allows

GRANO

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Places to Play. If you're per-

On Alabama's
ROBERT TRENT
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play the Trail.

TRAIL you ·
can play all
or some of
our 378 holes of
championship golf..
There's likely one within.
easy drive of where you are
now. You can begin in

Cooler

the Trail rank it
Number One in
Value over all
HAMPTON ·COVE
Huntsvllhl ·

Huntsville at the top of the
state and meandl!r in non-stop

I

the money than any other
course in Ainerica."
~Golf Magazine

CROW'S FAMILY ·
RESTAURANT

Our new weekday three-day,

hs Wt·st :-.lain Strt't't • Pomeroy

Fall start at

Index

tions in the

. stately pines, as
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Call today and

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what you've been

exquisite comfort and
luxury when you finish

- .
m1ssmg.

make your plans
to experience
CAPUOL HILL
,.attvl/1~

Golf's Greatest
Road Trip.

People who've played

Artist leaves no skin untouched
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer
REEDSVILLE _ John
Holsinger collects a lot ·of
things - · comic book action
figures, stringed musical
instruments and, tm9.st
noticeably, tattoos.
1
A walking canvas for tattoos, primarily of his own
design, Holsinr,er, 28, said

~~di~il~~~s~ yartC:~:~n~~

wrist on each ann. Tattoos a number of imaginative
also adorn his chest, back piercings, apprenticed under
and legs.
Sam Sowards of .Bqdy
"The only sacred place on Fantasies in Middleport, and
my body is from my neck .now designs and applies tatup," Holsinger said.
·toos part-time, primarily for
And what does his family friends.
think? "They do~!
Hols·I·ng''er also ope.'~
· ,a
.... tlikeit.~'
HolSinger~ Jat mother, in custom design T-shirt usiparticular, was tlemused by ness, tends bar, creates his
·his gtowing collection .of own comic books and works
pennanent skin art.
·
'd
d t.
th
As his enthusiasm for tat- In VI eo pro uc 100' e
toos grew, so did his efforts field he studied at Hocking
t.o h1'de the buxom comi·c · College.
H.15 1
·
·
book figures, skulls and
atest proJect IS an
other designs frem her.
independent film he calls
"My mom had uncondi- "Crutch," the premise of
tionallove for me, so I oid- which typifies Holsinger's
n't hide my tattoos from her off-beat, ironic sense of the
out of fear; I hid them from world around him.
her out of respect."
·
"It's .about a guy who
Holsingef and his twin doesn't make it," Holsinger
brother, Jay, endured open said, with an ornery gleam
heart surgery as infants, and in his eye.
one of his tattoo designs is a
"I want to make a movie
stitched-up human heart where you really root for a
bearing . . the
slogan guy- really get to like him,
"Overl)auled."
and in the end? Well, in the
Holsinger, who also sports end he bites it. Horribly."

. on.a Harley

'

documents it is willing to
release about its increased
surveillance activities.
Especially notable among
the new enthusiasts ·are con~
servatives who once thought
the ACLU represented everything that was wr&lt;&gt;ng with
the left.
"They are very useful and
productive force in jurisprudence," said . Rep . Henry
Hyde, R-Ill.
Conservatives such as ·
Hyde are m
_ indful olh he history of an organization that
was lonely in its defense of
positions now accepted as
universal : Blacks who suffered spurious prosecutions
in the 1930s , Japanese
interned ih the 1940s, books
banned as obscene now
regarded as part of the literary canon.
Yet the group continues to
e)(asperate · some with its
uncompromising positions
against
a
Ten
Commandments monument
in a Frederick, Md., par-k,
against the government's
attempt to get libraries to use
computer filters to block sez;ually explicit material from
children , against
drug
sweeps that it claims are
racially motivated.

t

.

Santa
Claus ' "
arrives on
a Harley : ,. ·
· Davidson : _
during the , -',

'•

'

'

~ ... ~

Pomeroy &lt;.·
Christmas··. ·
paracte .: Sunday on ·· ·
Main
' Street. ~ ·

Pllps

AS
B4-S
B6
AS
A4
A2
A3 .
Bl-3
A2

.......
Wh1te of the Meig!l County
plays the
trombone Sunday during t~e Christmas parade down Main Street in .
Pomeroy. (Dan Hermes photos)

Thursday, Decemll~r 5 • 1 0 AM • 2 PM
Unlvertlty of Rio Grande Student Center Annex:

.. :'one of the top 10 bips in
rooms designed to wow any the YtOrtd."
designed guest-

1.800.949.4444
www . rtjgo If. co m

------~------~------~--------------------------~------------------------ ,

'

-'

.

. ..'

,. .

The University of Rio Grande RN!BSN Program will be sponsoring a
"Healthy Holidays" Community Health Fair on

-Golf Digest consumer survey

-Frequent Flyer Magazine

A .'body' of work

WASHINGTON (AP) Whether protecting the disenfranchised or standing up
for the right to offend, the
American Civil Liberties
Union has sided with those
claiming they were wronged,
even if it meant a disiinctly.
minority stand.
· But smce Sept. 11 and the
government's
expansive
campaign of monitoring and
detention, people are turning
to the 82-year-old org~niza­
t}6n to he!tl&gt;fafeguard their
liberties. Anlong them are
conservatives· who made the
phrase "card-carrying member of the ACLU" a political
insult, but who now are signing up.
"Larger
numbers
of
American people have realized that the ACLU is fundamentally a patriotic organization." executive director
Anthony Romero said. There
are now 330,000 dues-paying members, 50,000 of
whom joined after the
;macks.
.
..
The group has been in the
thick of legal challenges to
the government's broadening
anti-terror powers.
Last week, in response to
an ACLU lawsuit, the government agreed to tell the
group by mid-January which

Community Health Fair

One Value in the world as.a
golf destination"

traveler.

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abl:ly
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

1:1

C 2002 Ohio Valley. Publ ishing Co. ·

the Trail call it the "Hunter

and tastefully-

John Holsinger, left, is a fixture at Body Fantasies in Middleport, where Chris Neal of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., right, applies Holsinger's 31st tattoo -to his elbow. (Briim J;
Reed)
·
·
·

ACLU sees membership
surge sin~ ~pt. 11 ·

annual

whisper through

world!
'
The Re5ort Division
of the Trail offers y.ou

a

2-night hotel.and
golf packages for

Autumn breezes

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - meaning ·the military can
Detainees in the war on ter- hold them indefinitely wilh'rorism are fighting for out filing charges.
access to American courts,
The prisoners are not in
contending they should not the United States and thus .
be held at the U.S. Naval do not fall under the juris;
Base in Guantanamo Bay, diction of federal courts, the
Cuba, without seeing a judge said.
lawyer and without being
Guantanamo has nearly
charged with a crime.
600 detainees.
The Bu sh administration
The Just'Ice · Depart me 01·
was arguing in a 'federal and Kollar-Kotelly are relyappeals court here Monday ing on a 1950 Supreme
that 12 Kuwaiti s, two
Au stralians and two British Court ruling involving
Mu slims
captured
in German nationals in World
Afgh;mistan and Paki stan in War II convicted befote
the months following the military commission and
Sept. II attacks are "unlaw- held in.a prison in Germany.
ful co mbatant s."
Like the Germans , the
Siding
with
Justice , Guantanamo detainees "are
- pepartment lawyers, U.S. 'actual enemies, active in
District Judge Colleen the hostile service of an
Kollar-Kotelly ruled four enemy power"' and they:
months ago that th e lack standing in U.S. courts,
Guantanamo detainee s have the Justice Department said
no right to court bearing s, in recent court papers.

Capitol Hill offers more golf for

other golf destina'

...

at 21, and found the process
intoxicating.
.
"The frrst tattoo was a
winged vampire girl, and as
soon as I got it, I was
hooked," Holsinger said.
"I hated tattoos when I
was younger, but now I
know that's because I had
never seen a good one."
Now, 31 tattoos later, the
wiry Holsinger is well on his
way to being "sleeved," that
is, covered from shoulder to

p&amp;mlic golf on 'earttl."

www.mydaily•enlinel.&lt;on•

Detainees want
access to courts

. bod..Y unu'I· he IS
· covered
hIS
in ink. He got his frrst tattoo

· -The New York

style.
Fall is art
ideal time to

GOLF

eye-popping $6 million pool

'

..:· some of the best

ity, world-class
indulge yourself with a taste
Mobile Bay, offers guests to over- Art~1l~£R5~.~:R limes.
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of quality and affordability. "'%;
T) 1 \ \ ~rrloH look the award,~~ r.., .. .~ ~-....... ,
"The Judge is
· ... mu 1t1p
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Bethpage Black, the Judge at
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4-stars from Golf Digest's
The Grand European Spa, an
comfort and
hospitality and service.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Last
week's terror attacks in Kenya
have made the public aware of
another ·threat - surface-to-air
missiles fired at commercial air-· ·
planes - and leaders of the
Senate lntelli~ence Committee
say they anticipate more terrorist action ahead.
''Let's be honest about it:
There are thousands of these
surface-to-air missiles around
the world,"' said the committee's
vice chairman. Sen. Richard
Shelby, R-Ala. "You can buy
them, and you can transport.
them. A lot of them are · not as
accurate as others. But eventually, that's going to be one of the
methods for the terrorists to
hit."
Committee chairman Bob
Graham, D-Fla., said the Bush
administration must work swiftly to protect American air travelers.
"I think that should be something initiated immediately by
the · newly
established
Security
Transportation
(Admmistration) ... to respond
to this or any other. form of .
attack against commercial aviation· in the United States," said
Graham, appearing with Shelby
on "Fox News Sunday."
In Thursday's attacks in
Mombasa, Kenya, attackers
launched two shoulder-fired
missiles at an Israeli Boeing 757
taking off for Israel with 261
passengers and 10 crew mem. bei:S.•Both missed, narr.owly.
··· •Shortly before, am explosivesladen, four-wheel-drive vehicle
exploded outside an Israeliowned hotel in Mombasa,
killin~ 10 Kenyans and three
Israelis as well as the bombers.

Longaberger Bingo
Sponsored by .
GC Starz Cheerleading
Dec. 5th 6:00
Mason Co. Community Action Group
Senior Citizens Center, Pt Pleasant
$20 for 20 games
Tickets sold at door
Not $ponsored by Longaberger

This fall, THE LODGE AND

MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2002

Officials:
Missiles
post big
threat '

Junior Women's Club
Tree and Wreath Silent Auction
French Art Colony
1st Ave. Gallipolis
Fri., Dec. 6th 6 pm- 10 pm
Sat, Dec. 7th 1 pm - 4 pm
Bid on handcrahed and designed
. Trees and Wreaths donated by
area businesses and persons.
Proceeds to go towards the needs
of various organizations and
functions of Gallia County.

at Youtl Do If You Could

It's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Screenings will be offeree/ including cholesterol, glucose,
bloocl pressure, and much more.

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Department!
For more information about the Health Fair, call {740) 2.45-7302

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org
'

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