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Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Thursday, December 5, 2002

MarshalL Toledo 11aeet for MAC title, 81

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

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'BARNEY
C'MON IN,
PARSON- -

NO THANKEE, SNUFFY,

I'D BE&amp;T BE GO\N' !!

STAY FER
SUPPER!!
MAW'S
MAKIN'
SOUP!!

THE BORN LOSER
COMPO\E.~&lt;:~ fl.AVt. 1~rove:.o

t-ND H\t: I'IOSI II'IPOR\~1 1-JI\

OUR LIV~ IN C.OUN\Lt::~~~

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:'&gt;Pat. CKE:.GK. !
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BIG NATE
HI THERE, MEGK"'N'.
HOW'S IT GOiNG~

LET ME

MEGH,._N:
. EVER THI
TWO OF

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•
~~~~~~!~~~~~
W~AT

A GREAT IDEA!

TJ.lAT'S TilE FIRST TIME

I'VE EVER SEEN 141M .
SPILL 1-115 WATER DIS!-1 ..

WTitor

,_,23 Heap
dull
28' Leelof
gnN

30 Food
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

llllende

SO CENTS • Vol. 53 No . 79

58 c.rtoonlll

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Bulhmlll«

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DOWN
1 Implore
2 Ulllner'a
need

3 "Giveh
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4 Hlddln
5 Rope ftber
6 NIIUral

14 Boutique

19 SnOW- 45

20Rent
22
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48 -Fr. title

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47 Roolde
compatolon
aoclllltee
25 Tenttoria 49 Alahll
24

26 Willie

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27 Pert ole

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51 CouniTy

I I I ·I I I I I I

.:BETTY

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''MOMEN1t&gt; lr\0!!1:'
-,.,e ~EMI~OER 01'

.. 4

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ovER sew 1

..

BY BRIAN

J.

0,_,..,. ... ,."\

I had read where a politician was retiring . My coworker says he was retiring because of ill health. The
voters finally got SICK of HIM.

\

REAcLY HAVE

REED

POMEROY - Meigs County
: commissioners plan to meet
.with county officeholders next
~eek to determine their finan~ial needs in light of a projected
shortfall in revenue.
During the board's regular
Thursday,
: meeting
Commissioner Mick Davenport
said a meeting will be set to outline the county's projected
financial condition, ·and to
determine how the needs of
county government can be met.
. Davenport .said that state
mandates, or expenses required
by the state but paid with local
runds, must be determined
before tl)e process of apptopriating funds into county departments can begin.
A county share of public
assistance funding is one such
mandate .
"We' re going to look at those
mandates, and any increases in
them, and then look at our revenue, and determine what will
be left once those mandates are
paid," Davenport said.
County Treasurer Howard
Frank estimates a $200,000
shortfall in general fund revenue for 2003, due to the Joss of
personal property tax revenue
from the Southern Ohio Coal
Co., a decline in sales tax
income, and a loss in. interest
· paid on the investmenl of inac. :
tive public fun~s.
This year, 'commtssmners
appropriated $3:53 million into
county .deparlmental budgets,
.

Pomeroy firemen and emergency squad member work to remove Reagan Shuler, 16, from
underneath a pickup truck. She was struck by the truck when she JUmped from 1t as 1t sltd 1n
the. snow. It rolled over her once and landed on its wheels, pinning her underneath. (Charlene
Hoeflich )

Racine man arrested
Staff report

set fire to his mother's
Chevrolet Blazer and resistSYRACUSE - A Racine ed arrest.
man · was arrested ·• late
He is charged with two
Thursday for domestic vio- · counts of domestic violence,
lence, arson, resisting arrest both first-degree misde,. and other .~harges:_ followm,g "'!liJ:liUOrs; arson, a fourth-an alt~;iltitin at hts mother s degree felony J assault .on a
Syracus home.
peace officer! a fourth. J.R. lackwell, 23, was degree felony ; intimidation
jatled by Syracuse Pohce
f'
h' d
Chief Brian Pearce , after he of peace of tc~ r, a ~ tr allegedly struck both his degree felony, reststmg
ttl6ther and live-in girlfriend,
Please see Radne, A:S

Please see Buclcet. A:S

.

.

.

Ray Fowler, conductor of the Ohio Valley Symphony, leads the orchestra through a practice session
in this file photo. The OVS, along with four vocal soloists and the Larry Parsons Chorale, w1U present Handel's "Messiah (Part!)" at 8 p.m. Saturday at the.Ariel Theatre 1n downtown GallipOliS.
Tickets for the performance are $22 each for adults , $20 for senior citizens and students.

Mt/19

Ohio Valley Symphony brings
'Messiah' to the Ariel Theatre

_days till _
Chrletm11
Sponsored by

'liiii'Niilicl

Annual Christmas
performance set

446-9800

'

News edilor

friday. Dec. 6, 2002
BY BERNICE BEI!E OsoL .

GARFIELD
; 11''5 NO'T' "''Ht:: 51Z.E OF
· A. P~IS!IISNT 1'HA1' COUN1'5,
'

&amp;ARI'IE:Lf;&gt;. ..

~.,...._

"''HINI&lt;
HUGE

_,

THE CRIZZWELLS
'-NI-l~~ ~t.
')bUSo

SIIIU6
~?

0\-1.

MANNI'-t ...

1 FoU\J.D OUT Wl-IA'I' I'M
GETTI~G -~ C."i?\5TMAu!

The mantle of leadershtp
·may be thrust ·on your shoulders in the year ahead. both in
~ .odal or business involve-

ments. In either case, you' ll
handle things well ond will
feel at ease laking on the role.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) -- It's important at
this time that yo u be extra
pruden! and practi cal in ail .
your financial dealings. Good
managemenl and control will
holp slretch your dollars down
the line.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -· Whether today will be a
productive or unpro(!uctive
one res ts solely in your own
hands. The quality .of your efforts will determine the size
of vour rewards.
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- You'll functi on best today when left to your own devices. If there is a co-mplication you need to work out, go
off by yourself where you can
be alone to think Lhings o.ut
thorouohly.
PIS~ES (Feb. 20- March
20) -- Loyal friends will stand
by your side today because
you· ve shown them you{ sup-

I

....

~

..........

- "' -~ ·---·-·"·····~·

..

port when it was needea .
Don't hesitate ta request their
backup when necessary.
ARIES (March 2l·Aprill9)
-· In order to achieve your ca·
reer objectives today, you're
going to have to get down to
business and give it extra im:
petus as needed. Don't let
down if the going gets a bit
rough.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ·-This is an excellent day
to stl down and make plans
for the future. Anything salid
or of substance can be accomplished by orga ni zi ng yaur
actions ahead of time.
GEM IN I (May 21-June 20)
-- If tough business procedures are called for today in
order to work out a commercial transaction, wear that hat.
Don't let others push you into
a compromise that benefits
only them.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- The attent ion and spotlight
might be on your mate or
partner today. However. yo u
won't mind a bit , because

yo u'll still be an essential part
of the team and you know 11.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) -- A
proper altitude on how you
approach yo ur work today

·····-··"'"'""'

.

bered.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- You'll enjoy entertaining at
your place today where· you
can be in charge of events and
able to select with whom
you'll spend your time. Everyone will have a good time
with you calling Lhe shots. .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- No v.
22) -- Involvements that require the full foc us of your
mental anributes will be the
ones you'll be the most qualified to do today. Using your
-smans spells success.
taglineGet a jump on life
by understanding 1he intluences that'll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your Astra-G raph predi cLion.&gt; by
mailing $2 and an SASE to
Astro-Grapti, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe,
OH 44092. Be sure to state
your zodiac si~ n./tagii ne

Index

GALLIPOLIS - It has been said that
there's a first time for everything.
Well, cousider Saturday a day of firsts for
the Ohio Valley Symphony.
The orchestra. now in its 13th year of operation, will present its an nual Christmas performance at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Anel
Theatre in downtown Gallipolis, and, for the
tirst time, the OVS will present Handel's
"Messiah (Part 1).''
.
·
The symphony also will , for the first time in
its history, perform with a choral group - the
Larry Parsons .Chorale - and four guest
vocal soloists - Blythe Walker, Dap"tne

2 Sections "' 12 Peces

. Calendar
Classifieds ·
Comics

AS .

84-S
B~

· Dear Abby

AS

Editorials
Movies
·Sports
Weather

A4
A3
Bl-3

A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.y

••

.We want your snowmen

I WATCH?

will work wonders. If you
think something is hard, it
will be; but if you think you'll
have no trouble handling it,
then 1his win be true also.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You'll be very effective in
your dealings with youngsters
today . When . you malce a
point with them, the lesson
they learn will be a quality
one that will be long remem-

This snowman was ponstructed Thursday by 3-year-old
Trenton la'ckett, middle, 12-year-old Andrea Mendieta,
right, and helper Lee Osborne, far l~ft. The snowman Is
· located ·at Tackett:s home on · Brentwood Drive in
· .G'allipoUs and was bulit ·. during the snow day
Th\i'rsday.His face is constructed of vegetables. lnclud·
. lng potato ears, a gree~ pepper nose and oranges for
· eyes..jMllllssla Russell) .
·

BY ANDREW CARTER

'(01.1
~ PROGIW'fo~

...,...

HOEFLICH

News editor

Staff writer
•

mydaolysentinei .com

firefighters using specialized equipmem to lift the
t:ruck and the emergency
squadmen for saving the
POMEROY
A girl's life.
Pomeroy teenager is report"They were on the scene
ed in · fair condition at almosl immedialely and
C abe II - H u n I i n g I o n .. knew exactly how to mise
Hospital in Huntington, that truck and get that girl
W.Va., where was tmns; out from . underneath the
ported by Me~Fhght front of the truck," said
Thursday afternoon follow- Proffitt
·
ing a weather-related acciThe driver, according to
dent.
..
· Proffitt. was attempting to
Pomeroy Police reported tum around in a small offthat Reagan Shuler, 16, street space on State Street
State Street, Pomeroy, when he lost control and
jumped from a 1985 Ford the truck slipped over the
pickup truck driven by embankment. He was
Troy A. Shuler, 20, West charged with failure to conMain Street, when the truck trol.
beg;m to slide in the snow
On the scene til assist at
from State Street toward an the 3:30 p.m. accident in
embankment.
addition to lhe Pomeroy
As she jumped, Shuler Fire Department volunteers
was struck by the truck. It were three emergency vehi·
rolled over her once and cles and personnel, two
then landed on its wheels from Central Dispatch and
with · the teenager trapped the third from Pomeroy,
beneath the front of the several officers from the
vehicle.
Pomeroy
Police ·
Pomeroy Police Chief Department, and a deputy
Mark Proffitt credited the fro m the Meigs County ·
quick work of Pomeroy Sheriffs Office.
BY CHARLENE

Picker; Whisk- Crush - Climax.- SICK of HIM

1 Wit# Ncwspapet'; ·.

I

ON&lt;:S MMAIITY

www

Pomeroy teen in
fair condition
following accident

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

=~.ii

FRIDAY. DECEMBER 6. 2002

Officials
plan
budget
meeting

43 Author-

15 Goddl-'
G._y
·
- laic 44 hlghny
Cllo'l
17 AI...,...

lddr. ·
AIJJER
llln
52 Devoond
31 Reuben
oleve.
Arthur M ullarq, a
29 'rVH'
53 T lnld
. 7 Numll&lt;ull
¥11C811on
allirmlllve
32 Dllwn dolly 8 Shaman' a
British comic actor
dme
and boxer, said,
33 IIOd· for
9 quell
Dried-up
3411-feel
"Boxing got me
35 Met .
10 Latin I
36 l.hchlevoua
production
vetll
39 Perklelltrll ___ - - - - ·
started on philosophy .
You bash them, they
bash you , and you
think, what's it all
for?''
In bridge, j¥e try to
bash them, they try to
bash us, and we know
what it's all for: to
make or break a contract. But we do have
one technique in
common with boxing:
the uppercut.
In pugilism, an uppercut occurs when a
boxer brings his fist
.vertically up .to his
opponent's exposed
jaw. In bridge, it happens as in this deal -how?
·
North had an unappealing rebid overthree spades. Since he
CELEBRITY CIPHER
didn't have a dia'
by Luis C.mpot
mood stopper, he
Celebrity Cipher cl)'lllograma .,. Ciliated llllfTl quotations by famous
people, past and PI8Sent. Each Iotter In ltle cipher stands lor another.
couldn' t bid three noTodsy's clUB: T equals A
trump. Without six
clubs . (or a very
strong five), he didn't
"EWHYS
CFBPCHHCH
MKTM
want to rebid his suit.
UKYSK
STIIRM
DC
HTYJ
South couldn't have
four hearts, because
TIJ
Rl
UKYSK
YM
YH
· he hadn' t rebid three
hearts; so four hearts
YEBRHHYDGC
MR
DC
was out. By a process
of elimination, that
HYGCIM."
NYSMRP
KWXR
left four spades.
West led the dia. PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The !hom from the bush one has
planted, nourished and pruned, pricks more deeply and draws
mond ace: six, eight,
mora
blood."- Maya Angelou
jack. He continued
with the diamond
king: seven, four,
WOlD
queen. What should
GAMI '
West do now?
First, West checked
the. points. This assessment strongly
suggested that South
held the. heart ace.
· And if so, the defenders had taken all possible side-suit tricks .
West therefore continued with a low diamond, and when East
ruffed with the spade
nine, it effected an
uppercut. South had
to overruff, but now
West's trump holding
was worth two tricks,
not the one it had
· been at the beginning
of the deal.
One last note: If
you have two trumps
@ PRINT NUMBERED 11
Lf!Tf,RS
and believe partner is
trying for an upper... UNSCRAMBLE FORI
cut, ruff high.
'l:o' ANSWER
•

· BY

CEO

wife
22 Film acrlpl

25 VOicenlc

Blow to jaw

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

18 Orcherd

50 Help pey
54 Stelr poet
55FI.t.qoped
hl1

18 Socllll

•6 KQJ1076
"'J,
J

f.::'

:
tum
41 Corel

pe-.

I t
6 Jtll

40 Elltal
41 · - Te
Ching"
42 VIper

12 :::.~.
13 T-Ille

hone .
15 DedotcH

, ,

t

37 FOIWI

Walker

Lightfoot

;;"lderson

lkach

Do you have a spectacular, creative, cute snowman in yopr yard? If so,
send us a photo!
There are. just too
many terrific snowmen
in the' area for Tribune
staffers to get around to
see, However, readers
are welcome to submit
photos of their snowmen.
Photos submitted by
Tuesday, Dec. 10, will

·appear in the Thursday,
Dec. 12, edition of the
Tribune.
Be sure to include the
snowman's address and
names of the humans, if
any, with ol; Frosty on
the back of the photo.
Photos can be dropped
off or mailed to: The
Daily
Sentinel,
Snowman Photo, Ill
Court St .. Pomeroy, OH
45769.

Please see Messiah, A3

Love Lights· a Tree
sponsored by the American Cancer Society and Holzer Medical Cenfer
A special holiday event hon~ring loved ones and helping aid cancer research

Wednesday, December 18, 2002
6:00 pni -. Gallipolis City Park
To donate $5 for a personalized Christmas ornament per honoree,
coli (740) 446~4728, (740) 446-5055 or {740) 446-5054
before 4 pm on Tuesday, December 17.

.

I

,.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discove1· the Holzer J)ifference
I

www .holzer.org ,

.,

•

�,.

It

I

'

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
. Ohio we~ther

I Toledo

119'137'

I

Friday, December &amp;, 2002

I Monslleld 117'/42' I o

ol Columbuo.l17'/41' I

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Dec. 5,2002

Dow

Jones
---a.ooo
COLUMBUS (AP) - A pain-and-suffering awards
House-Senate
committee for patients injured by med·Mtr
NOV
DEC 1JXXJ
compromised their versions ical malpractice. The Ohio
OCT
8.623.28
SEP
of a bill designed to hold Supreme Court declared a
Loll
higll: 11,722.98
Ndwlgo
..... 1(,2000
8,769.05 8,608.75
down the cost of medical similar attempt to cap awards
tom lllll'itU: - U1
malpractice insurance by unconstitutional in 1999.
1,600
Oec. 5,2002
capping the amo(\nt of money
Under the bill, no limits
inJured patients could receive wou.ld be placed on economNasdaq
for their pain and suffering.
ic or punitive damages,
comeosit
Under
the
measure which insurers say are easier
approved on a 4-2 vote along to project. The legislation
party lines Thursday, patients also does not affect jury
--=----==-~=---;;;;;;NOV
DEC 1,000
SEP
OCT
1,410.75
mjured by medical malprac- awards for medical e11penses ·
Roconl high : 5,().18.62
Low
1'11"- -1.37 1,445.95 1,410.58
tice would have damage and economic losses, such as
Marc!110, 2000
-~:
awards capped at $350,000 future earnings.
1.000
for most claims and $500,000
The House's version, sponDec. 5,2002
for injuries causing perma- sored by Republican Rep.
Standard
900
nent disability or damage.
Tim Grendell of Chesterland,
&amp; Poor's
If there are · multiple had called for damages to be
800
patients involved in a claim, capped at $500,000 for most
700
such as .a mother and her claims and $1 million for perDEC
NOV
OCT
906.55
SEP
baby durmg a btrth, damages manent injuries. The Senate's
_
_high: 1,527.46
Loll
Ndwlgo
would be capped at $5()(_!,000 measure, sponsored by
March 24. 2000
fmm pnwilul -1.20
921 .49 ·905.90
m most c;ases and $1 mtllton Republican Sen. David
for those considered cata- Goodman of Bexley would
· have put . the c~ps at
strophic. .
Tim Mag_lione, a lobbyist $750,000.
for th~ Ohto State Medtcal
Grendell said he proposed
Assoctatton, satd the group changes to his bill "in the
would be hesitant to agree spirit of compromise" while AEP- 27.19
Federal Mogul- .35
Rockwell - 20.17
Arch
Coal-19.86
USB21.16
Rocky Boots- 5.25
w1t~ the proposal and would fighting to keep in certain
Akzo29.86
Gannett70.96
AD Shell- 42.69
dec1~e Fnday whether to sup- provisions he felt would
AmTechiSBC- 26.25 Gonen~l Electric-25.80 Sears- 26.97
port tl. .
. ·
. ensure the measure was con- Ashland Inc.- 29.05
GKNLY- 3.75
Wai-Mart- 53.02
."We thmk th~ c~p ts too stitutional.
AT&amp;T- 27.95
HarleyDavllson-47.26
Kmart- .57
Wendy's - 'Zl.45
~l&amp;h to_ be effect~v~, he s~!d.
Goodman said the compro- Bank One- 37.30
BU -12.20
Kroger- 15.29
Worthington -17.48
. Its sttll a $1 mtlhon cap.
mise bill achieved his goals.
Bob Evans - 24.54
Ltd.
15.06
·Daily
stock reports are
Both the full House and
"I think we have reason- BorgWarner- 49.56 · NSC - 19.68
the 4 p.m. closing
full Senate must app~ove the able caps that provide for . Champlon-.2.58
oitkHitFnancial-20.18 quotes of the previous
compromtse btll, whtch then predictability," he sajd.
Chanmlng Shops- 4.28 OVB- 20.50
day's transactions, prO"
BBT- 37.15
vided by Smith Partners
The Senate on Wednesday City Holding- 29.99
would go to Gov. Bob Taft
for hts stgnature. A Taft
.
.
Cot- 20.68
·
Peopl~- 24·75
at
Advest Inc. of
Popsico- 43.23
spokesman said the governor ~orced the IS~ue to .go to a 00 - 12.90
Premier- 7
Gallipolis. .
would have to review the JOtnt COm':lJll!ee m part DuPont- 43.11
h nges before · deciding beca~se tt dtdn t agree ~tth a
~~ether to support it.
plan m the House verston to
Medical malpractice legis- create a pool of money !hat
lation has moved through would . pay p~rt of the J~ry
COLUMBUS (AP)
18 months in prison and a
both chambers quickly over award m medtcal malpractice Authorities in 34 counties $5,000 fine.
the past few weeks as ·law- cases.
arrested at Ieasi 106 accused ·" so far, 18 counties have
makers worked to get priority
As a result, the comprodeadbeat
parents in Ohio's reported their results to us,"
bills passed before adjourn' mise bill wpuld require the
ing for the year.
Ohio
Department
of sixth coordinated enforce- · said Jon Allen, a spokesman
Supporters, including doc.- Insurance to study whether ment of child support for the Ohio Department of
tors who say soaring mal- the state should create such ·a orders, the state said Job and Family Services.
f
practice insurance costs may patient compensation fund, Thursday.
The
number
of
persons
"We
have
yet
to
hear
rom
force them to retire or leave but ther~ would be no
arrested
still
is
being
tallied.
Cuyahoga and Lucas counthe state, say caps are needed requirement
for , the
The
maximum
sentence
in
a
ties, so I would expect the
to end huge verdicts that are Legislature to act on any recdrivin~ up rates. Opponents, ommendations included in criminal non-support case is count to climb further."
includmg lawyers who repre- t:hh~e·~s~tu~d~y~._ _ _ _ _ __.:._ _ _
sent malpracttce victims, say r
the legislation does not hold
insurance companies responsible"for the rate increases.
Current law doesn't limit

W. VA
I&lt;Y.

Workshop
postponed

.....

C 2002 AocuWealher, Inc.

Local Stocks

Sunshine set through Saturday
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
upper 20s. Chance of snow
High pressure will bring 30 percent.
E11tended forecast:
mostly sunny skies today.
along with cool tempera" Sunday ... Mostly cloudy
lures once again. Highs will with a chance of rain or
be near 30. Skies will be
party
I c Iou dy t·n th·e north snow showers. Highs in the
overnight with lows near 20. upper 30s. Chance of preIn the south, sk.ies will be cipitation 30 percent.
mostly clear with lows in
Sunday night. .. A · slight
the mid teens.
chance of snow and rain
On Saturday, skies will be showers in the evening, othcloudy as a cold front erwise partly cloudy. Lows
· ·
approaches from the north
f
west. Highs will be near 40 near 20. Chance o prectptin the south. There is a tation 20 percent.
chance of snow showers in
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
the north Saturday night as Highs in the upper 30s.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
· the front edges toward the
reg ion. The front wtll move with a chance of light snow
south &lt;1nd extend the chance or rain . Lows in the mid 20s
of snow to the south pn
Sunday.
.
· and highs in the mid 40s . .
Weather forecast:
Wednesday ... A ·
slight
Tonight. .. Ciear. Lows in chance of light snow or rain
the mid teens. Calm winds. during the day, otherwise
Saturday ... Mostly sunny. partly cloudy. Lows in the
Highs in the lower 40s. upper 20s and highs in the
Southwest winds 10 to 15 lower 40s.
.
BY

m~~iurday

night ... Partly
Thursday ... Mostly clear.
cloudy with a chance of Lows in the lower 30s and
snow showers. Lows in the highs in the lower 40s.

I

Child support roundup

For the Record

Emergency
calls

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accompany your tribute. •
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His hand.

4. Thank you

for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were sweet. I long to see you again in God's
heavenlyglory.
·
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·
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smile fills us with joy and laughter.
.
7. Though out of sight, you'll forever \le in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the light Of pea&lt;e shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God'sangels guide you and protect you throughout time.

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time. ·
Always in our hearts,
John and Mono. Andrews o.nd
family

eraft

Rocksprings
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II City
1

year's terrorist attacks.
For the past year, the
Laredo mayor has waged ·a
campaign against bui Iding
the final truck-inspection
station alongside the city 's
main international bridge s
leading to downtown , preferring a more remote location .
"Now we have temporary
in spection stations at both
bridges and we've already
seen huge delays. It 's -been
murder." Flores said.

Budget

~

II. You were a light in our life that bums fore ver in our heans.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
.
13. Yo!.~ are in our thoughts and prayers from-morning to night and from

I Pnnt your name here
I
1 Address

economic· success to the
NAFrA, which has allowed
U.S. industry to set up factories employing Mexican
workers directly across the
border. Auto parts are an
especially big business made in Mexico and shipped
to plants in the Midwest for
final assembly.
But traffic is already a
problem, and city officials
fear slowdowns on top of
delays caused by tougher
security measures since last

December 16th, ll-.6 •.: :_.

2. Mny God cradle you in His arms, now and foreYer. . ·
l Forever missed, never rorgotten. May God hold you m the palm of

Do.vid C. Andrews
tO, t96t·M&amp;y 5, t980

Laredo's World Trade
Bridge is a wide arc of newly
laid road opening into miles
of warehouses, truck washes,
and wei~h stations.
The cl[y's Old West downtown, With parks and discount
wholesalers along the Rio
Grande, is now surrounded
by ever-reaching rings of bigbox retailers, chain restaurants, new school buildings
and skyrocketing property
values.
The city owes much of its

Messiah -

.Auto stolen

Uyou wish, select one of the following FREE verses below .to

-

An inspector with the U.S. Department -of Transportation checks for safety violations under a
cargo trailer at the World Trade Bridge in Laredo," Texas, Rigs must pass through inspection
before they are allowed on U.S. highways. (AP)

Racine

On TueSday, December 24, we will publish a spec1111 page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
'.
·

...

burning rigs.
They also worry that impatient truckers could look for
new crossings, bypassing
Laredo.
And they fear that letting
Mexican trucks into Jhe U.S.
interior- instead of limiting
them to commercial zones
hugging the border - will
hurt the local trucking industry, which has sprung up
around the need for driver&gt; to
ferry short-haul transfer loads
across the border.
About 2,500 drayage trucks
make 9,000 .trips across the
border each day, transferring
cargo between long-haul
trucks in Texas and Mexico.
Laredo Mayor Betty Flores
said that transportation officials in the two countries
don't consider the econorrlic
impact in her city when making policy.
"They're not · worrying
about peor,Ie's jobs as they
should be,' Flores said. ~·we
in Laredo respond to the policy decisions, good or bad, of
twQ very powerful countries."
U.S. officials said President
Bush's decision to let
Mexican trucks into the U.S.
interior made good on a commitment to improve international trucking and bus service.
"This will help increase
trade between our countries,"
Transportation
Secretary
Norman Mineta said in a
statement.
Eighty percent of U.S.Mexico traffic c;omes through
Te11as and about one-third
comes through Laredo on its
way along Interstate 35
toward San Antonio and
beyond.

'
at West Virginia Wesleyan opera companies.
·
tion adjustments for the
College since 1968. From
Alderson 's warm contralcounty engineer, juvenile
1985 to 1993, he served as to voice lias moved and
court and health insurance
founding · chorus master of delighted audiences of all
, POMEROY
from PageA1
from
Page
A1
" •
fund;
West
Virginia ages. A frequent oratorio .
the
Emergency Services . units
• ·Appointed Sherry
Chorus.
and concert artist in this
·responded Thursday as fol- Alderson, Peter L'tg h.tf oot Symphony
"The Larry Parsons country, she also performs
but anttctpate only $3.26 Wright, victims' ad vocate ,
lows:
Mark
Proffitt,
million for 2003 appropri- and
and Yugo Ikach.
·
Chorale is one of the finest cabaret music.
'.
CENTRAL .
police
chief,
to
Pomeroy
Maestro Ray Fowler said choruses in the Ohio
ations.
Ikach
is
a
frequent
Community
3:30 p.m., State St., Thursday that he'sjust a lit~ Valley," Fowler said. "The ·
County offices were the
Corrections
Local
motor vehicle · accident, tie e)lcited about Saturday's level (of talent) is very recitalist as well as a stage
subject to a five-percent
in
both
opera
performer
Planning
Boa~d.
"Regan Shuler transported, "first" performance.
high with this particular and music theatre . He has · ·cut in operating funds last
Also
pres ent
were
"So many orchestras in group."
Troy Shuler, refused treatyear.
in
a
number
of
orasoloed
Commissioners
Jeff
. ment;
.
Commissioners also:
the world have been around
The chorale's members · torios as well as starred in
Sheets,
Thornton
and
Jim
• Approved appropria. 4:47 p.m., South Second .· for such 1\ long time," he are selected from around "DaUghfer
of
the
and Clerk Gloria Kloes. ·
said.
"Because
(thb
OVS)
·
the
state
of
West
Virginia.
Ave., Middleport, Greg
Regiment,"
"Candide,"
is still a new orchestra,
Fowler said this is his
Hayes, treated;
.
Bernstein's
.having
just
been·
birthed
in
first
time working with the "Tartuffe,"
6:58 p.m., Holzer Meigs
"Mass"
and
"Merry
·Clinic, Linda Cunningham, 1989, every · time we do Larry Parsons Chorale. He Widow".
degree misdemeanor.
::
something, it's the first met with the group in
'Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
Blackwell
also
allegedly
Lightfoot,
known
for
his
time.
N
b ·
·
REEDSVILLE
"And, y·ou know, it's not
ovem er m ~reparation vocal brilliance and beautibroke a window at the home
Saturday s . perfor- fully placed and clearly
5:44 p.m., Ohio 124, a big deal for most arches- for
with
a rake, and stole ·a
from
PageA1
mance.
·
$3.29
gasket sealer. during
focused
voice,
has
·
sung
Fannie Bigley, Camden- tras to have a chorus Soprano Blythe Walker,
Clark Memorial HospitaL
arrest, a second-degree mis-. the incident, according ,l o
they have them at least contralto Daphne Alderson, numerous roles in this
country
and
abroad
,
SYRACUSE
demeanor; criminal damag- charges filed in Meigs
once a year. Well, here we tenor Yuj!O lkach and bass
Butterfly,"
"II
"Madama
· 10:04 p.m., College Rd. ; are, our first .time." ·
ing, a second-degree misde- County Court early today.
Peter Lightfoot join the
The · Larry
auto fire, Pickens resiParsons
h
d h 1 ~ · Tabarro," "Cosi fan tutte,"
meanor; and theft, a first- He was scheduled to appear
in court this mof)ling ,
··
"Samson
et
Dalila"
and
Chorale, based at the West ~fi:P ~~~0 ~~ c h~f e ~f
:dence.
"Porgy
and
Bess"
are
just
a
Virginia Center for the Saturday's performance.
TUPPERS PLAINS
"These four soloists are. few ef the works he has
5:47
p.m.,
Arbaugh Choral Arts in Clarksburg,
Addition, Wanda Spragu~. W.Va., has been described nationally, and some inter- sung to great acclaim.
:············~:
Fowler said the public is
as "a gifted ensemble of nationally, "recognized,"
Holzer Medical Center.
0
vocalists that draws its Fowler,said.
\
to
:
"Many of them have done
members from · marty loca·
£.
· ·
tions in West Virginia to this work ("Messiah") so on Saturday.
Tickets are $22 for
tOr
.
:·
offer professional choral many times. They're all
POMEROY - Charges music performances."
P. •
very unique. They all bring . adults. $20 for seniors and
·of grand theft auto will be
·D~'t
,.1'
-~:
Larry R. Parsons, the so many different aspects students and are available '.: ~
filed today in Meigs County chorale's founder, has been of music to this particular at Tawney Jewelers, The ~
-.¥
'
'court against Robert E. a driving force behind performance."
Purple Turtle , oak Hill ,_." ;_
Light, Jr. of Third St., "building, expanding and
Walker
has
been Banks or at the door.
Middleport, according to elevating the quality of acclaimed internationally
For information, call the • .
'· ··
.Pomeroy Chief of Police choral music in · West for her performances in Ariel Theatre at 740-446- . .
2787
·Mark Proffitt.
Virginia."
opera, concert and music
ARTS
(
).
.:
REHABILITATION
Parsons has served as theater performing with the
· Light allegedly stole a
.·1996 Buick from 205 professor of voice_ .a.nd Metropolitan. Opera, New
:·Butternut Ave. owned by director of choral actlVtlles York City Opera, on and
off Broadway and with
·' Kendall Lemley.
.....:---...----_.;.---,
.many
domestic and foreign
·. Lemley told police t~at he
had started his car early
· Thursday morning, we~t
OHIO
: back into the house whtle dt
Pick 3: 2·5-3
~ warmed up, and when he
Pick 4: 5-8-3-2
· came back out it was gone.
·Reader SeiVices
(UsPs 213·960)
. ; The car was recovered a · Buckeye 5: 3-4-8-23·26
Pick
3
ni,ht:
3-5-1
correction
Polley
Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co.
· .few hours later at the
Our main concern in all stories is to be Publlshec;t
ever~
afternoon,
Pick
4
nisht:
5-9-6-4
:·-Pomeroy Cliff Apartments
accurate. If you know of an error in a Monday through Fnd~y, 111 Court
; on Union Avenue. Light
story, call·the newsroom at (740) 992· Street, Pomeroy.. Oh1o. Second:
W.VA.
2156.
class postage pa1d al Pomeroy.
: was
apprehended
on
Dally 3: 6-3-9
Mt!mber: The Associated Press
: Osborne Street soon after.
Daily 4: 1·5·0-7
Ohlo
Newspaper
and
the
Our main number Is
·{]rand auto theft is a felony
cash 25: 1-14-18-20-23-24
Association .
. (740) 992·2156.
Postmaster: Send address correc*
'of the fourth degree. ·
Department extensions are:
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
News
45769.
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, EKt. 14
Subscription Rates

___,--------------=====:

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

LAREDO, Texas (AP) Clay-colored boots were all
that was visible of Mexican
trucker Augustin Robles
Pachuca as he lay beneath his
REEDSVILLE
A 18-wheeler, worlcing on the
Christmas gift give-away rig's brakes.
sponsored by the Heart and
"They said they needed a
Hands Clothing Pantry and little adjusting," Pachuca
the Fellowship Church of the said, emerging with a swipe
Nazarene at Reedsville will of his brow.
be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The 42-,ear-old driver sat
Saturday at the church.
in a line o other trucks at "el
Everyone is welcome, import lot," the latest product
according to Jill Holter, one of the North American Free
Agreement
and
ofthe workers on the project. Trade
President
Bush's
decision
last
She said that there are thousands of gifts to be distrib- · week to ·let Mexican .trucks
travel into the U.S. interior.
uted.
Pachuca was sweating to
bring his truck's brakes in
compliance with U.S. safety
standards. The truck must
pass a 22-point inspection POMEROY
The Washington's assurance that
Christmas workshop · sched- Mexican trucks will not pose
uled for Thursday night was ·safety risks or excessiv~ wear
postponed until Dec. 12 due to U.S. highways.
to the snowy road conditions. . Pachuca satd he didn't
mind, because the in.spectors
"A Homemade Holiday Magical Ideas Made Easj" tell him what needs fixing on
will be presented by the his truck.
But others are not happy
Meigs County Extension
about
plans for new inspecService office at 7 p.m. tion stations,
• including eight
Thursday at the Meigs in Texas, where federal work-.
County annex.
ers will open hoods, honk
Tips will be. given on how horns and turn back trucks
to handle the holidays, sam- with rusted wheel bearings.
ples of holiday foods will be
Victor Hugo De Leon, a 21. available and a craft to make year-old Mexican driver, said
, and take home will be fea- he wol'ried about being late to
, tured.
pick up the load of Canadian·
There is .a $5 registration · beef in Laredo that he would
· fee to be taken at the door. To return to Mexico. He was
pre-register . just call 992- expected at 9 a.m., and it was
6696.
already 11 a.m.
Officials in Laredo fear that
the new trucking regulations
will increase pollution · from
long lines of idled, diesel-

Gift give-away
planned

10,000

.....

0

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Local Briefs Southern border's busiest inland port fears truck inspections

.....

0

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, December 6, 2002

House-Senate committee
compromise on biU

:: Saturday, Dec." 7

....

PageA2

Web:
www.mydallysentinel .com

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�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

&lt;

'/OU'VE

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

JAil!

Den Dickerson

Publisher

Dear
Abby

..,. -···- -

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor ·

'

L&lt;•tten tu the editor are welcome. They shm&lt;ld he less than
JOO words. All letters are .wbjen io ' editing .and must be
signed and include address an4 telephone number. No
unsigned le11ers ..-ill be published. utters should be in good
taste. addn:.'ising issues. not personalities.
Th e ophrioru exprened in the t·nlwnn below are the consennu of" tli&lt;· Ohio Valley l'ublishing Co. s editorial board,
wries.-. 01benviJe noted.

Clubs and
Organizations

NATIONAL VIEW

•

Dod·now
Boston swinning convention
honor should stimulate business

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Nike lawsuit raises questions about u:hat is free speech

• The Boston Globe, on hosting the 2004 /)emocratic
National Con vention: Boston's success in landing the
2004 Democratic National Convention brought cheers

•

from political and business leaders at City Hall, and
rightly so.
Mayor Menino's perseverance was the key ingredient;
his attempt to bring a national convention here was
called a fool's errand when he began it five years ago ....
But he ralliecl a degree of community support rarely seen
in Boston. ...
·
. But the cheers must tum to serious work if goston and
Massachu.setts are to capitalize fully on an unprecedented opportunity.
A few days of nice pictures on national TV ... would
not justify the investment. The nation already knows that
Boston has lobsters, the Red Sox, and old brick buildings. Other cities have successfully used major events to
· siimulate equally memorable improvements ....
:The private sector should be expected to use this event
as a target date to begin construction on major developIlient projects such as the Fan Pier. Leaders from medicine, technology, higher education, and financial services will want to show why Boston is a capital of these
endeavors and to do so in a way that stimulates long,term improvements. :..
.
There are no guarantees. Many people talked of using
;the turn of the millennium as a prod for major civic projects, but little happened. Now, with' five years having
:gone into the pursuit of the Democratic Convention and
,only 20 months left until it starts, there is no time to
waste.

·TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS .

Today is Friday, Dec. 6, the'340th day of 2002. There are 25
·days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On Dec. 6, 1889, Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the Confederate States of America, died in New
Orleans.
On this dat~:
: ln 1790, Congress moved from New York to Philadelphia. .
· In 1884, Army engineers completed constructi.on of the
:Washington Monument.
In 1921, British and Irish representatives signed a treaty in
London providing for creation of an .Irish Free State.
In 1923, a presidential address was broadcast on radio for
:the first time as President Coolidge spoke to a joint session of
:Congress.
· In 1947, Everglades National Park in Florida was· dedicated
by President·Truman .
In 1957, America's first attempt at putting a satellite into
orbit blew up on the launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Fla. ·
· In 1957, AFL-CIO members voted to expel the International
:Brotherhood of Teamsters. (The Teamsters were readmitted in
:1987.)
: ·In 1973, House minority leader Gerald R. Ford was sworn
jn as vice president, succeeding Spiro T. Agnew.
: In 1982, II soldiers and six civilians were killed when an ·
!Iri sh National Liberation Army bomb ·exploded in a pub in
:Ballyke)ly. Northern Ireland .
•
: In 1989. 14 women were shot to death at the University of
;Montreal 's sc hool of engineering by a man who then took his
own life.
Ten years ago: Bowing to anti-foreigner sentiment,
German y's main political parties agreed to tighten postwar ·
:asy lum laws. Iii India, thousands of · Hindu extremists
:ctestroyecl a mosque, setting off two months' of Hindu-Muslim
r ioting that claimed at least 2,000 li ves.
Five yea rs ago: At least 69 people were killed when a ,
Ru"ian military cargo plane crashed in the Siberian city of
'Irkutsk seconds after takeoff.
One year ago: The House of Representatives, by a one-vote
;margin. gave Pres idem.Bu"sh more power to negotiate global
··trade deab . Yasser Amiat 's inlensified crackdown on Islamic
rnilitams nm angry" resistance as I,500 Hamas supporters· bat:tled Palesiinian riO! police outside the home of the group's
leader. .President . George W. Bush dedicated the national
Chri stmas tree to !hose who died on Sept. II and to Gls who
died in the line of duly.
.
Today"s 13irthdays: Jazz musician Dave Brubeck is 82.
Country singer Hele n Cornelius is 61 . Actor James Naughton
is . 57. Sen . Don Nick les. R-Okla., is 54. Actress JoBeth
Williams is :\4. Actor Tom Hulce is 49. Actor Kin, Shriner is
49. Talk show hosi Wil Shriner is 49. Actor Miles' Chapin is
48. Rock musician Rick 13uckler (The Jam) is 47. Comedian
Steven Wright is 47 . Cou ntry singer Bill Lloyd is 47. Singer
Tish HinoJDSa is 47. Rock musician Peter Buck (R.E.M.) is
46. Actre ss Janine Turner i' 40 .
•

high school. All parents and
DEAR ABBY: I" am a 13interested parties of band
year-old girl in the eighth
members are invited to attend
Monday, Dec_ 9
grade. My problem is a girl in
this
meeting . Plans for the
RACINE- Racine village
my class. "Angie" thinks she's
upcoming
basketball concesCouncil, special session,
my best friend. We met in
sion will be discussed.
7:30 p.m. at the municipal
fourth grade, and I felt sorry for
building. Business will include
her because she didn't have any
Friday, Dec- 6
final reading on water treat·
friends, so I let her hang out
POMEROY
Meigs
ment plant property pur- .
with me.
County PERl #74, noon,
chase, two property owner
It didn't take long to learn
Meigs County Senior Center.
.
trash
litter
violators,
personADVICE
why no one liked her. Angie is
Lunch to be followed by pronel matters, fire engine bid
,insulting, rude, lies, and can't
gram with Becky Baer, Meigs
award. ·
have a conversation without requirements. I don't date
County Extension Agent,
TUPPERS PLAINS saying something negative much because every girl I think Tuppers Plains Reginal
group singing, anniversary
about someone else. Avoiding about going out with, I come to .sewer District Board, 7 p.m. cake .
her isn't an option. We live fmd out has slept with a bunch Monday.
POMEROY.
Annual
within walking distance of of guys.
Christmas
dinner
of
the
Meigs
POMEROY- Veterans
each other, ride the same bus
It upsets me that in today's Service Commision, 9 a.m .
County Pioneer and Historical
and are i.nvolved in many of the world, sex is no longer viewed Monday at the office, 117
Society, 6:30 p.m. Friday at
same after-school activities.
as something to be shared Memorial Drive. ·
the Museum. Bear exhibit to
I have come right out and between two people in love,
be featured for the holidays.
told Angie to leave me alone, but as something that just goes
but she thought I was kidding, along with casual relationships.
Saturday, Dec_ 7
and I couldn't convince her 1 When I look at the relationMIDDLEPORT- Members
was serious. She knows other ships of my friends, I fmd they
of Burlingham Camp, Modern
Saturday, Dec- 7
kids, so I don't see why she are not happy. Most of them
SALEM CENTER - Star Woodmen, will eat at Millie's
can't leave me alone. My don't trust their partners -and
Restaurant from 2:30 to 5
friends think it would be a good for good reason. After the first Grange 778 and Star Junior p.m. Saturday. The camp will
idea to get her to stop following few dates, if I make no moves Grange 878, regular session, pay $3.50 toward each memme around, but no one knows beyond some heavy kissing, 6:30 potluck supper followed ber's order. Bring canned food
how to tell her to buzZ off with- the relationship seems to grow by meeting at 7:30 p.m. for food bank. Information is
.out being mean.
distant. I am now 23 and wor- Members to take food bank available by calling 992-7770.
Please help me, Abby. I want ried I won '.t ever fmd the right items. Subordinate, youth and
CHESTER - Annual holiyoung adult baking contests· day
open house at Chester
to make the rest of my school ·girl for me.
will
be
held
.
year a good one. - SUPERAre my expectations too
Courthouse, noon to 4 p.m.
ANNOYED
EIGHTH high?- LOSING HOPE IN .
both Saturday and Sunday.
Sunday, Dec_ 8
GRADER
SARDIS, OIDO
Eastern High School bell
MIDDLEPORT - Annual choir
DEAR
SUPERDEAR LOSING HOPE:
to present Christmas
family
Christmas
party
of
the
ANNOYED: Talk to Angie Certainly not. It appears you're
concert at 1 p.m.
privately. She lacks good judg- looking for love in all the Middleport Fire Department,
HARRISONVILLE
ment. You will be doing her a wrong places. You won't catch 1 p.m. at the firehouse. Take a Harrisonville . Lodge 411,
covered dish and dessert.. F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m_ at the temfavor to tell her exactly what a trout if you're fishing in a Santa will be there.
ple. Refreshments. ·
you-have written me. First list herring barrel.
the characteristics you LIKE
To fmd a girl whose values
Monday, Dec. 9
Sunday, Dec- 8
about her, then list the ones that mirror your own, an excellent
POMEROY - Meigs High
TUPPERS
PLAINS -VFW
have made you · withdraw. place to look wol.lld be a faith- School Band Boosters, 6:30
Angie needs to understand so based singles group. Your spiT- p.m. in the band room at the Post 9053 and Auxiliary,
annual Christmas dinner, 6
she can modify her behavior. itual adviser can tell you how
You seem to be a nice young to find one. I'm sure many
lady. Remember that we all young . women will appreciate · HJt:u:ui:xu:[Xlti::::::::I"f:.¥_;~~~¥~~~~~¥;tl
have our faults, and give her you for who ·you are once you
N
room .-· and time- to mature. fmd them.
•
DEAR ABBY: A long time
CONFIDENTIAL TO MY
2 FRH TICKETS
ago I promised myself I would MUSLIM .
READERS:'.
111111
·
"II r d th · h1 · 1 Happy Id ai-Fitr.
SPRING
VALLEY
watt unu .oun e ng grr
Dear Abby is written by
before having sex. The "right
CINEMA 1
girl" for me is one who will Abigail Van Buren, also known
FIND YQUR NAME IN
love me as much as !love her, as Jeanne Phillips, and was
TODAY'!I"CLASSIFIED
.
t talk t0 • shares similar
her mother,
Pauline
SECTION AND WIN I '-"FW.~iP,iO!~~
IS easy o
· founded
Phillips. by
Write
Dear Abby
at
interests and has respect for www_DearAbby.com or P.O.
~IUIIIJWEIIA2SJ~~I.'?_
herself.
1 C
As I get older, I'm finding Box 69440, Los Ange es, 1\
out that not many girls fill those 90069.

Public Meetings

GOT

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

•

Friday, December 6, 2002

Teen tries to distance herself Community Calendar
from friend she can't avoid
------------------~--

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce
Miinaging Editor

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 6, 2002

Page AS

.

•'

'···

BY JAMES

J.

KILPATRICK

Let us suppose, just to be su~posing,
that the makers of Nike tenms shoes
erect a billboard that proclaims, ''You'll
run faster in our great tennis shoes."
Let us further suppose that in
response to stinging social criticism,
Nike runs a full-page newspaper ad:
"Our investments around the world are
helping to build economies, provide
skills, and create a brighter future for
millions of workers."
. The sole purpose of the first ad is to
sell tennis shoes. It is clearly "commercial speech." As such, the puffery is
entitled only to limited protection
under the First Amendment.
Is the second ad also commercial
speech? In a case now pending in the
Supreme Court, Nike says it is not. The
second ad says nothing about tennis
sho.es. It does not promote a commercial transaction. The message is a statement of opinion, backed up by the facts
as Nike sees them, e.g., that Nike's
Vietnamese contractors do not exploit
little girls. Is this false or. misleading
advertising? No, it is free speech. As
such, Nike insists; it is entitled to full
protection.
Califo_rnia has a peculiar law on f~se
advertismg. The law (I) makes 1t a
criminal misdemeanor to disseminate
any statement "which is untrue or misleadi~g'' and (2) permits any citizen to
sue tor enforcement. In the case at
hand, a San Francisco social activist
named Marc Kasky sued Nike in a state
court, charging that the company had
engaged in false representations. In the
California Court of Appeal, Nike successfully defended its responsive campaign as free speech, but California's

Supreme Court reversed.
law.
The California court did not hold thai
"Handicapping one side in this
Nike had violated the state law. It held, important worldwide debate is both ill
4-3, only that the company had considered and unconstitutional. Full
engaged m commercial speech. Judge free speech protection for one side and
Joyce L. Kennard, speaking for the strict liability for the other will hardly
majority, emphasized that her opinion promote vigorous and meaningful
"in no way prohibits any business debate."
enterprise from speaking out on issues
Nike' s petition for review heads
of public importance or from vigorous- toward the U.S. Supreme Court on big
ly defending its own labor practices." ~eet. The company's appellate team
She continued: "It means only that mcludes Harvard professor Lawrence
when a business enterprise, to promote H. Tribe and former solicitor. general
and defend its sales and profits, makes Walter Dellinger. Their brief argues
factual representations about its own persuasively that the Nike case is ripe
products or its own operations, it must for the high court's consideration, e:ven
speak truthfully.... We do not consider though the California courts have not
this a remarkable or intolerable burden . found the company guilty of any false
to impose on the business community." representations.
Three members of the California
Particularly
troublesome
is
court vigorously dissented. Judge Ming California's unique authorization proChin noted that Nike's accusers have vision. Kasky is permitted to sue withcharged the company with "despicable out regard to any injury he may personpractices," involving "slavery" and ally have suffered. He is his. own attor"sweatshops." Activists have taken full ney general. Unless the high court acts,
advantage of their right to uninhibited defendant companies are .saddled with ·
and robust debate. Their accusations the Herculean task of proving a nega-:
receive full First Amendment protec- tive proposition - that its foreign·
tion.
operations are not"unconscionable ..Jt&gt;. · :
"The same cannot be silid of Nike.
I hope the court agrees to hear Nike'~
When · Nike tries to defend itself from appeal. There is no point in waiting·
these attacks, the majority denies it the upon a final judgment in the lower
same First Amendment protection courts. The constitutional issue is .
Nike's critics enjoy. Why is this, squarely presented. Justices Antonin
according to the majority? Because Scalia and Clarence Thomas have:
Nike competes not on)y in the market- expressed their discomfort with what is·
place .of ideas, but also in the market- known as the Central Hudson test for:
place of manufactured goods. And commercial speech. Maybe the test
because Nike sells shoes -- and its should be reconsidered and clarified.
defense against critics may help sell Something surely is wrong with a pubthose shoes - the majority asserts that lie debate in which one side gets a
Nike may not freely engage in the microphone and the other gets a gag. :
debate, but must run the risk of lawsuit&gt;
(James J. Kilpatrick is a columnist
under California's unfair competition for Universal Press Syndicate.)

p.m. at the hall. Spouses and
friends
invited .

Other events

Saturday, Dec_ 7
POMEROY
Me igs
MIDDLEPORT
County Humane Society
Middleport Masonic Lodge, sponsors a free straw give7:30 p.m. at the Masonic away for animal bedding, 10
Temple.
a.m. to 2 p.m. at Kroger parking lot.
Tuesday, Dec. 10

Church services

.

Saturday, Dec. 7

HARTFORD, W.Va.
Gospel sing, 7 p.m., Father's
House Church, with Builders
Quartet , Cross Creek and
Teresa Preston. Love offering
for Bend Area Gospel Jubilee
2003.
.
..
NEW HAVEN, W.Va . . Christmas Bazaar, hosted by
New Haven Ladies Auxiliary,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., fire house.
Christmas Parade at 1 p.m.,
with Santa Claus at fire station after the parade. Food
and baked goods, crafts, etc.
.

Christmas
Auction
. Friday,

Dec.6,2002
at

Syracuse Fire Dept.

Sunday, Dec- 8

Starts at 7 pm
All new merchandise
Refreshments available

POMEROY
Annual
Christmas concert of Trinity
church, 2 p.m. at the church .

992-7181

7421DW

The Three Diamond
Ptndant or Earrings

ll4CARAT
of diamonds

$199

WI •

FFflf' Otr .lllut,

(l}ur fl'l.eunt
m1d grot' ('J,U' ~1/.uJ&lt;e.

Ingels
106 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport, OH
(740) 992-2635 .

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'Doorbell .ministry' may.annoy some, but is dfective
BY GEORGE R. PLAGENZ
I am ielling you this story now
This is a story of. how I. became a because Gene passed away recently and
Jehovah's Witness for a day.
I have been thinking of that afternoon
Like everybody else, I had been when we went door-to-door together.
called on numerous times over the
Our problem that day was not thatl
years by these door-to-door "telemar- people slammed any doors in our faces.
keters," who use the doorbell instead of It was that we got no answer at most
the telephone to get your attention - doors we knocked on. Yet through the
and often your goat!
screen doors, we could hear a television
The Witnesses' foot-in-the-door tac- playing or people talking.
"They know we are Jehovah's
tics antagonized many. Consequently, it
was not unusual for them to get a door Witnesses," Gene said. "That's why
slammed in their faces .
they won 't answer."
· Little by little, however, this began to
That was one part of it. Another was
chan~e. Aware of the bad will they were the neighborhood we were Cat)vassing.
creatmg, the sect's leaders did a remod- Gene pointed out it was solidly middleeling job on the Witnesses' image. The class. "People are happy here and conpersistence remained (it is still true that, tent," he sa1d. "It is those who are troulf you turn them away, they will be back bled and lonely who are most interested
in another few months) , but the old in our ministry."
antagonistic attitude was replaced with
The church's biggest growth is in the
a pleasant demeanor.
. poverty-stricken Third World. (The
I was not alone in noticing the Jehovah 's Witnesses' m'bst recently
change. Irish author, Alan Bestic, wrote published statistics, as of August 200 I,
that, 'The rank-and-file of this much- cite a practicing membership of more
abused movement are gregarious, than 6 million -- up 1.7 percent from the
cheerful and happy people. At their year 2000.) ·
.
international assembly in London, I
Ironically, while the doorbell min;
was ireated with the utmost kindness, istry irritates so many, it is responsible
gentle courtesy and genuine friendli- for the Witnesses' great growth .
·
'ness by every Witness·! tnet." .
· "Most who are Witi.esses today once
But the Witnesses' · ''doorbell min- slammed the door in the face of a
istry" · continues to annoy some. Witness caller," Gene said. "But situaWitnesses still receive an inhospitable tions change in •people's lives. The next
reception.at many doors. Having never time we come, they may show an interhad a door slammed in my face, I decid- est. Almost every Jehovah's Witness
ed to see what it was like. I asked Gene today joined as a result of the door-toTenke, a Witness friend and neighbor, if door ministry."
I could accompany him on his rounds
As Jeho vah's Witnesses firmly
one day. Gene was a .successful cook- believe th at they mu st "beat their
ware salesman and lifelong Witness.
swords into plowshares" and not "learn

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war anymore" (Isaiah 2:4), they do not
participate in war or serve in the Armed
Forces. Thousands have gone to jail as
conscientious objectors. (Gene himself
served in prison for 30 months during
World War II.)
.
Gene recalled that once he rang the
doorbell of a woman who had lost a son
in World War II. She became angry :
with him over the Witnesses' refusal to
take part in the war that cost her boy's
life.
"I can understand how you feel ," he .
told her.. Then he added, "If it .is any
·consolation, you can bf! sure it was not
a Jehovah's Witness who killed your :
son."
"'
·
Witnesses believe we are living in the
Last Days. They look forward to the
"new heaven and riew earth," spoken of
in the book of Revelation, that will
replace the present order after the battle
of Armageddon.
This new world will be one beautiful
park, alive with colorful varieties of
animals and birds. Instead of 11rowing
old, cilizens of the new earth w11l grow
progressively younger. We will all be as
we were at age 33.
·
After a foot-wearying day · in which
we met more indifference than enthusi~
asm from the people we called on, I
asked Gene if he sometimes didn't get .
di scouraged.
"When we get depressed," he said,
"we remember that the Creator is
watching and · that we are pleasi'ng
. ."
h 1m.
(George R. Plagen z is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Association./

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�Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Cluucls ol J..., CbrlsiApoolOik
VanZandt and Ward Rd.

Pastor: Jllftles Miller
Sunday School - I 0:30a.m.
bening - I :JO p.m.

RJ"er Valle)·
Worship Cemer

AJXI~otolic

873 S . Jrd Ave .. Middleport
Ke vin Konkle, P&amp;'itur
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 :00p .m.

161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992·SK93
Pastor: Re\', Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5: I 5p.m ; Ma_iiis- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m..
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8:30a.m.

PJstor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

( 'hurdl ol' ( 'hrisl

Trioity Cbu~b
Second &amp; Lyn_n, Pomeroy

Hemlot:k Grove Christian Church
"-1 inister: Larry Brow n
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday S{:huol - 10:30 11.m.
Bihle Stud)'- 7 p.m.

Tabtrntclt JM.
Loop Rd .off New Lima Rd. Rutl~nd
Servicrs. Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:lll p.m.
Thurs. 7:00p.m.
Pastor Many R. Hunon

Lllwrty Asstmbly or God
P.O. Bo.'t 467, Dudding Lane
Mawr~. W.Va .
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sund:ly Services- JO:OO a.m. and 7 p.m.

B;lplisl
Hope Bapti.~t Churt:h (Southern)

570 Gram St. Middlepon
Pasti&gt;r: Rev. l&gt;o1vid Bryan
Sunday !K:hooi - 9:)0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m. 'and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
KuUand First Baptist Churtb

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4 5 a.m.

Pomeroy First Bapdsl

''

Pa stor Jun Brock.ert
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a. m.
Won.hip - 10:30 a.m.

First Southern Bapdst
41872 Pomeroy Pik~
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sun&lt;fuy $(:hool - 9:30a. m.
Worship - 8:15 a.m ., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7: 00p.m.

·First Baptist C hurch·
Pastor: Murk Morrow
61h and Palmer St., Middlepon
Sunday School - 9:1 5a.m.
Worship - 10:1!! a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvice-.7:00 p.m.

Racine Finl BaPtist
Pru.1or: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W~:t.lnesday Services -7:00p.m.
Slh·er Run Bap_d st
,Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School - I Oa.m.
w Orship . !!a.m .• 1:oo p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m
ML Union Baptist

· Pastor : David Wi ~man
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptbt Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.
Okl Bdhel Frt-t Will 8aptl11t Churt'h
28601 'St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunda;r School - I0 a.m.
Evening · 7:00 j,.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10
Worship . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

a:m.

Forest Run ·a8ptis't · ·:
Paslor : Arius Hurt
Sunday $(:hool - I0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St.. Middleport
Pastor: Re v. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist ·
SundaySchool-_9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland Frtt Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul TaylOr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m,
WcdOcsday Services - 7 p.m.

SKond Baptist Churt'h

u
Ravenswood, WV
· Paslor: [Javid W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMorning worship II am Evening- 7 pm
Wed nesday 7 p.m. .

( 'alholir
Sacred He1rt Cachollc: Church

Da'•IIIS··Oulck,el A•~en1:v Inc ..
Full i of
INSURANCE
Insurance
Products+
Financial

~ENCIES
Bill Quickel

Inc.

Services

992-ssn

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

l'url Cbopd
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 ·a.m.
Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth FellOwship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

773-5017

Rev. Mark Michael

Sunday School- 10 a.m
Worship - 9 a.m .

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 1 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

l.aller - Da~

923 S. Third S1., Middlepon
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wedn'esday seryice, 7 p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
, Wednesday -7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m ..

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Laurel Olf!' Fl'ft Melhodb:l Church
Re\'. U::s Strand! and Myra L . Strand!
Sunda y School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

'

The BeUeven' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime.Rd .. Rutlimd
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinsoo
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
_Sunday. 2:30p.m..

CarmeJ-Sullon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohto
Pastor: Dewayne Studer
Sunday School - 9:'30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Sainls

The Chu~h of Jesus
Christ or Latter-Day Salntt
St. RL 160,446-62_47J)r446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05- 12:00
noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meetiO:g, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

•

Harrisonville Community Churcb
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m . and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl·St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Momln1Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Faitlt Valley Tabernacle Cburcb
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
_Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

EutLotart
Pastor: Brian Ha.rkne!s
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedneitday - 7 p.m.

l .utheran
St. J~hn LUtheiiut Church
Pine Grove

Our Sariour Lutheran Chu~h
WaJnut and H~nry Sts., Ravenswood,

·w.va.

SL Paul Lutheran Chun::h

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

l nill·d \ll'lhodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9::\0 a.m. (1 st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.·m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p._m.

M1. Olive United Mtthodls1
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pa.';tor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
. Thursday s·ervice$ - 7 p.m.

\

•

Meigs Coopentive Parish

Mt. Moriah Church or God ·

No nh ~ast

Mile Hill Rd. , Racinf
Paslor: James Sanerfield
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Alfred

Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday School - 9::\0 a. m.
Worship - 11 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Janf Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Rulhmd Church-of God
Pastor: Run H'eoth
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdne ~a y Services · 1 p.m.

Syracuse First Church or God.

Joppa
Pastor: Boh RandQlph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 li.Jll.

Apple and Second Sts.
!'astor: H.cv. IJavid Ru sse ll
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening S~:rviL-es- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Long Bouom .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Church of God of Propha:y
O.J . White Rd. off St. Rt.J60

Reedsville

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Tere!LII. Waldcck Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~dnesday Service5- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Chu~h ol the' Nazarene
Pastor Mlke Adkins
Sunday SchoOl - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Sooth Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship Service 10 a.m.
Carleton lnterdenominMtlonal Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship S~ rvice 10:30 a.m.
Evening Service 6 p.m.

';t~fl,e~ta-t ~D-we-e
174 Layne Street
. New Haven, WV 25265
~
17........, .
Matthew.5: 16 lJa111es H. Anderson 304·882·1!2001
Director Fax:

'

Adnndst

3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursda~ -'7:30p.m.

Freedom G011pel Mlaion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford

•

&amp;noul!tr'l
;ffrt &amp; &amp;aletp
·TOu..nu

I-800·UHIIJ

,9Y,
........

c.&gt;

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82
4
Bearcats can still clinch title, Page 83

Page Bl
Friday, December 6, 2002

Leftwich, Babin
players of year

College Football

Major League Baseball

Nevin vetoes swap
for Griffey Jr.

CLEVELAND (AP) Marshall Univmity quanerback
Byron Leftwich and Western
Michigan defensive lineman
Jason Babin have been selected
aS the Mid-American Conference
offensive and defensive players
of the year.
Leftwich won the award last
year and is the first player in I0
years ID repeat as the MAC's top
offensive player, the conference
said Thursday.
Leftwich, a 6-foot-6, 250pound senior, has completed 277
or 405 pass attempts for 3,615
yards and 22 touclxlowns in leading the Thundering Herd to a 9-2
record He is 49 yards shy of the
conference's all-time passing
~ of II ,299 set by Western
· ~ichigan ' s Tun Lester from
1996-1991
· He has a 157.3 passer mt:ing,
third highest in the nation, and is
.517 yards shy of the conference
. single season passing record of
· 4',132 yards, whicb he set last
year.
: Last week he . became the
league's career leader in total
. offense with 11,408 yards.
· Marshall wiU face .Toledo on
· Saturday in the sixth MAC
championship game. Marshall
has played in all six games.
· Babin, a junior from Paw Paw,
Mich., led the league with 16
slicks and 29 tackles. He averaged 7.8 tackles per game with 66
5olo and 28 assists in 12 contests.
:Three times this season Babin
!'Jad three sacks in a single game.
. .. Western Michigan led the
MAC in IDtal defense tluuugh the
2002 regular · season, allowing
330.7 yards ~r game. '
The league's coach of the year
Will be announced Friday.

SAN DIEGO (AP) Padres
The Cincinnati Reds and
would even
San Diego Padres agreed to
discuss a
Nevin trade
trade Ken Griffey Jr. for
· Phil Nevin last we.ekend
in the first
place.
but the deal died when
"There
Nevin wouldn't waive hi s
never
could
no-trade clause.
have been a
Nevin said Thursday 1hat
deal.
at
he told Padres general manleast from
ager Kevin Towers that he
Griffey
our point of
wants to stay in San Diego,
view,"
where he resurrected hi s
career in 1999 after arriv- Axelrod said.
ing as a backup catcher in a
The Padres included a
spring training trade with no-trade clause in the $34.5
million, four-year contract
Anaheim.
"I let them know that's extension Nevin signed in
where 1 want to be," Nevin November 200 I. That
said by cell phone from Las extension kicks in with the
Vegas, where he was golf- 2003 season.
But with Nevin again
ing with Padres manager
Bruce Bochy. " I just don •1 . vacating third base in favor
really·want to tark about it, of Sean Burroughs, he's
honestly. r m staying in San apparently become the tar'II ·
k · get of trade talks. Nevin is ·
.
d
Diego an we. JUSt ta e 'rt expected to play right field.
from there. Those are
Last spring, Nevin moved
things that are. supposed to from ·third to first , and first
be left between the learns.:·
Towers said he had no baseman Ryan Klesko
comment.
moved to right field so the
A baseball source famil· rookie Burroughs could
play third.
Thai experiment failed,
iar with the proposed deal ,
who spoke on condition of though. Burroughs strug:anonymity, contirmed that gled because of a shoulder
the teams agreed to the injury. was benched, went
the on the disabled list in late
swap
over
May and then spent 1 112
Thanksgiving weekend.
Griffey has been both· months
at
Triple-A
ered by injuries the past Portland.
·
two seasons after orchesNevin moved back to
·!rating a trade to Cincinnati third base after Burroughs
in 2000.
was benched, but broke his
He tore a tendon in his left arm divirig for a ball
knee during the first week, two days later. He had a
setting up another,_season frustrating season, cappe~
limited by leg injuries. He when he made an ol:)scene
also pulled a hamstring and gesture to a heckling fan
strained hip muscles, limit- late in late September,
ing him to 70 games, a .264 angering Towers
and
average, eight homers and · Bochy.
23 .RB!s.
Nevin's agent, Barry
Please see Trade, Bl
Axelroq, wondered why the

Redwomen edge .
Houghton in OT
HOUGHTON, N.Y - The
University of Rio Grande
women's basketball team woo a
tight affair over Houghton
College on Thursday, 82-79 in
overtime.
Rio Grande held a 72-70 edge
in the final seconds when
Highlander foiWard Amanda
Sweeney hit a lay-up at the
buzzer ID send the ganre iniD
overtime.
Rio out~ HoughiDn I(}.7
in the extra period to earn its fifth
consecutive win.
Rio Grande (6-2) had five
player.; in double figures and two
Redwomen posted double-doubles. Sophomore Alkia Fountain
led the way for Rio with 19 points
and 12 rebounds. s~ was 11-of14 from the free till vw line and
also blocked two sl)ots.
Angel Allen had 17 points and
lO rebounds. Tana Richey scored
:14 point~. nailing four 3-pointers,
while Tiffany Johnson and Annie
Thcker tossed in 12 points each.
J{lhnson had five steals and
Thcker had five rebounds.
Hould!IDn (1-2) was Jed by
Alicia Mucher with a game-high
23 points. Sweeney added 15
points and a game-high 14
OOards. Angela Layne had II
(:!lints, eight rebounds, four
assists and two blocked shots.
The Redwomen won the game
d:spite an off-shooting night
from the floor, connecting on just
: 28-of-78 shots from the field.
HoughiDn shot 45.5 ~~nt (25of-55) fium the field
: Thrnovers were the difference
in tHe game. HoughiDn commit: ted 30 turnovers while the
: Redwomen had only 15.
. The two schools will hook up
again at 7 p.m. next Thursday
mght at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Next up for the Redwomen
. will be Carlow College at 6 p.m.
tin Satun:lay night at the Newt
Oliver Arena Rio won the only
meeting between the two teams
last year.

•

Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich leads the Thundering Herd into Saturday's MidAmerican Conference championl)hip game against Toledo at Marshall Stadium. (Bryan Long)

Sports broadcasting·

Marshall, Toledo meet
again for MAC title
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. teams are already committed you," Marshall coach Bob
(AP) - Marshall has won to bowls, so the game will be Pruett said. "It 's certainly
four of the last five Mid- mainly for bragging rights.
disappointing to not win the
American Conference cham·· Toledo has beaten the championship because that's
pionships. The one . that got Thundering
Herd
two a team goal. But is that going
away last year at Toledo has straight times, winning 42-0 to carry over to this year? I
the Thundering Herd hoping in the 2000 regular season doubt it.
to avoid another embarrass- and 41 -36 in last year's tille
"What's going to carry
ment.
· game in which Marshall led over to this year is we're
Marshall (9-2) and Toledo · 23-0.
going to be playing for a
(9·3) meet on Saturday for
"Your wins last a week. All championship against a good
the fourth time since the your losses las1 for a life· football team." ·
championship game was ·time. That's just the way
Please see MAC. Bl
held starting in 1997. Both football is. It sticks with ·

OSU keeping eye on games
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio
State Buckeyes know they're going to the
Fiesta Bowl. Now they're wondering who
else is.
· "We're just kind of in the La-Z-Boy chair
right now," quarterback Craig Krenzel said.
Starting on Saturday afternoon, the
B.uckeyes will he clicking remotes all over
. the city to see who wins the other spot in the
national championship game on Jan. 3 in
Tempe, Ariz.
The day 's television menu starts with

FLOWER SHOPI Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
POMffiROY,OH 992-6454
shall see God.
"Flowers for all occasions'
Matthew5:8

"Let your light so shine before
men, that ih~y may see your
good works and glorify your
Father m Heaven. "

740·992·2644

Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - 9 a.m.

Eden United Brethftn In ChrUt
State Route 124. Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duly
Sunday School- II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servk"es- 7:00 ·p:m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:00p.m.

Full Gospel Llghthouso

Middleport Church of the Nu.rene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sund.ty School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m, 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Harri!IOnvlUe Presbyterian Church

In Chrlst Church

Pastor: Lawren{:e Bush
Sunday School - 9:30·a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 1 p.m.

'\;l!al'l' lll'

Cluster

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - II a.m.

Texas Community 36411 Wickham Rd
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:3_0 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

. Mt. OUve Community Church

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

l'n·sll\ ltrian

MI. Hermon United Brtthrtn

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne sday 7:30p.m.

Sunday Scllool · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednnday Services - 8 p.m.

Ptmtecoslal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine ·
Pastor: William Hoback ·
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday·Services- 7 p.m.

I niled Brethren

Morse Ch1pel Church
Sunday school - I0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Grarxl Street

l'e nltl'o~ I a I

St~en1h-Day

Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m

Hocklnaport &lt;llureh

Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens
Pastor: Lonnie CQats
Sunday Worship 10:30 om
Wd sda 1 •

'Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pa...tor: Roy Lawinsky
· Saturday Services:
Sabbath School- 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Faith.Gospel Chur&lt;h
\

Ps10r: Herschel White
Sunday School- 10 am
Sunday Church service - 6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor: liober Crow.
Worship- to a.m.

Uye:sviUe Community Church

Bethel Church
Township Rd. , 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Hobson Christiaft Fellowship Churtb

Midd&amp;eporJ.Presby1elian

Haul Community Churt:h
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

CoolviUe Unit«~ Methodist Pl.riah
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St. ,
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship - 9 a.m.
· Thesda;r Services . 7 p.m.

Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - ll a.m.

Hartford Chun:h of Christ in
Christhln Union
Hartford, W.Va .
Paslor:Da\'id Greer
Sunday s~· h ool - 9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Scr..-iccs- 7:00p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman SL, Syracuu: 1
Rev. Mike Thompson.Paston
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

, Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Worship-9:00a.m .
Sunday School- JO:OO a.m.

Salem Communit)' Church
l:ieving Road. West Columbia. W.Va.
Pas1or: Clyde Fenell
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

Abundant Gnc:e R.F. I.

Salem Center ·

s.. .mu.

CaJvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m::7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Church of the Um.g Savior
Rt.J38, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesdiy 1 pm

Pastor: Willim K. Marshall
Sunday School- 1.0:15 a.m.
Worship ~ 9:15a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

Hysell Run Holinm; Church

Fellowship Cn&amp;sad&lt;lor Cbris1

Rejoicing Lift Churt'h
500 N. 2nd Ave .• Middleport
Pastoc': Mike FQreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- I 0:00am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

"Fliii-Gospel Chun:h"
PastOI'!!. John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Rudlllld
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor.Jtip · 10:]0 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

WnleyMn Bible Holiness Church
7$ Pearl St .. Middleport.
· ' Pastor: Re\', Doug Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:j) p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Christian l'nion

Acts 24:16

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Re v. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sr.::rvice- 7:30 p.m

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

Btthtl Worship Center
Chester School
. Pastor: Rob Barber
As.sistant Pastor: Karen Davis
Sunday Worship: 10 am
CliftQn Tabernatk Church
Evening Worship: 6 pm
Clifton. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Su
nday
SdlOOI- 10 a.m.
Wednesday: Power in Prayer
W()T'l\hip - 7 p.m.
and Bible Study - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - ? p.m.
Ash Slreet Church
Ash St., Middlepon- Pastor: Glenn Rowe
New Life Vidory Center
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
3773
George
s Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
Sunday Service · 7:00p.m.
P&gt;~s tor. Bill Staten
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday _-,., p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Appe Life Center

Pa ~tor :

Laapvllle Christian Church
Pastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wol'llhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Servi c~ 7::\0 p.m.

W

Rob Brower

Miner.,-Uie
Pastor: Bob Robinson

PlOt Gr,~ve Bible HoiiHSS Church
112 mile off Rt. 325

Bn.dford CbuKh or Christ
Comer of St. H.t. 124 &amp; B-:ndbury Rd .
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday SchQ;Q.I - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m..
. W~dn esday S~rvices - 7:00p.m.
'
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Evangeli st Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Jill.

Pa.~tor:

Sunday School - 9:30 uri.
Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

ROK of Sh•ron HoUneu t;:hurch
U::ading Creek Rd.. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Rutland Church of Chrisl
. Sunday School - 9: 30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.lfl.

Easl Main
Pomeroy, Oh

Hooth (Middhport)

Inside:

Faln'irlt' Bible Church
Letan, W.Va. Rt. I

Stivenvillt Community Churtb
Pas1or: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Sc:rvk""es- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday-7:00p.m,

Communi I' ol Cbrist
Portland-Racine Rd.
P!Slor: Michael Duhl
Sunday ScOOol - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - W:JO a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

While's Chapel Waleyu
Coolvilk Road
Pas1or: Rev. Phillip RideOOW'
Slmdly School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service: - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Qic k ~ ns
Scrv1ce: Frida)'. 7 p.m.

( &gt;thtr ( ' hurdw~

FomtRun
Pastor. Bob Robinson

Cah•ary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzi~
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00 p.m

Bradbury Churrh of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon
39558 Bradbury Road , Middle(Xln
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Meigs County's Oldest FloriS!

~·-

Worship- 7 p.m.

t"olth

Portl..d FIT"!!II Claurch of the NIU.Irent
Pastor: Wdlilm Justis
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship ~ 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30p.m. ·

Pas~or:"b;m Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
·worship- II a.m.

Danville Holine.v~ Church
31057 State. Route 32.5. Langsv lle
Pastor: Gary Jack.son
Sunday school.- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
Instrume ntal
Worship Service - 9 a.p1.
Communion - 10 a. m.
Sm1dny Sc hool - \0;15 a.l}l.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
· Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

!,francis Florist

Sunday School - 9;:W a.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m,, 6:30 p.m.
Wcdncsda.y Services - 7 p.m.

Enl&lt;rprbt
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Worlhip - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Ste,·e Tomek
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service- 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Cbrisl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunda y School -9:30a.m.
Worship , 10:~0 a.m., 1:0(fp.m.
Wcdncsd!!y Services- 7 p .m.

Office Service &amp; Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

Rutland Cburdt ol dM Nuam~t:
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. B~ye

Sundaly School - 9:4:5 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.
Wedntsday ~rvice s. 7:30p.m.

Community Churrh

Jkarwallow Ridgt Chu.r th nf Chrbl
a
Pastor:Bruce Tell)'
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor3hip - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30 p.m.

Chuoch of Chrisl
lnlcrscclion 7 and 124 W
E\•angelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
· Wednesility Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Bob Robinson

llolim·~-.

ChurTh of (]uisl
Worship -9:30 a.m.
Sunday School. 10:30 a.m.
Pa~ tnr-Jeff~y Wallace
Ist and 3rd Sunday

Faith Baptist Church

~yServi~s-7p m

""""Y (S Y'"""")

Sunday School and
Holy ELKharist 11 :00 a.m.

K~no

Dexter Church of Christ
Pastor: Hil l E.&lt;ihilman
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Nonnan Will. wperintendent
Sunday wo~hip - 10:30 a.m .

Chater Churtb otdle NuareiM'
Pastor: Re v. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Cc:atral Chum

326 E. Main Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster

Middleport C hurch' ~ Christ
5th and Main
Pastor: A! Hanson
Youth Mmtstcr: Hill Frazter
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a. m.• 7 p.m.
· Wedncsdoy Services- 7 p.m.

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2rxi St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - 10a.m.,.7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor:

Gnct EpiKopal Church

Pomeroy Weslside Church of Christ
33226 Children 's Home Rd.
Sunday School · Jl a.m.
Worship - 1Oa.m.. 6 p.m.
~~dnesday Services -·7 p.m.

Reed.n llle ChuKh of Chrl!it
J•astor: 1--'hilip Sturffi
. Sund:~y School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m
Bible Study. Wcdnc!«tay. 6:]0 p.m. ·

Pomtrov Cburdl ollbe NUirtDe
Jan Lavender
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
'WOBhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

1\lppen ...... Sl. Paul
Pastor. Jane Beattie
Sundl:y School - 9 a.m. ·
Worship · I0 a.m.
Tuesday Services . 7:30 p.m.

I· pis(·opal

Pomeroy Church or Chiisl
212 W. Main St .
Mini ster: Anlhony M oni~
Sunday Schnol - Y:JU n.m
Worship- IU:JOa.m.. b p.m.
Wednesday Scr\'kes - 7 p.m.

Hillside B1ptist Church
St. Rt. 143justoffRt . 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr
SumWy Unified Sen-· ice
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
F~nt: Sundly of Mandl - 7:00p.m. 5m'ice

Pastor: Rev. Jack Noble
W06hip 10:25 a.m.
SW'Jday School 9: 15 a.m.

"!ednesday, 7:}() p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.
Emmanu~l Apo~~toUc

Friday, December 6, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Miami - which is No. I in the BCS standings- playing Virginia Tech at I p.m. If the
Hurricanes win, they will defend their title
agains,t the Buckeyes at Sun Devil Stadium.
Miami is a three-touchdown favorite but
has had moments where it has looked less
than invincible.
"They've got great team speed, got an
excellent quarterback, excellent wide
receivers. h's hard to find a weakness in that

Please see Buckeyes, 83

Roone Arledge is shown in this June 1977 photo in New
York. Arledge, a pioneering television executive at ABC New~
and Sports responsible for creating shows from -·Monday
Night Football' : to " Nightllne," died Thursday, Dec. 5, 2002
at Memorial Sloan-Kettering C(lncer Center in New York. He
was 71. (AP)

Pioneering TV executive
Roone Arledge dies
NEW YORK (AP) Roone Arledge, a pioneering tel~vision executive al
ABC News and Sports
respoA sible for creating
shows from "Monday Night
Football" to "Ni ghtlin e,"
died Thursday. He was 71.
Arledge died at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering
Cancer
Center, spokesman Jeffrey

Schneider said. The cause
of death was complications
from cancer, ABC News
reported.
"Roone changed lhe face.
of televi sion sports coverage with ' Wide World of
Sports' in the el)rly 1960s
and the production of the
Please see Arledge, B3

EXPERIENCING PAIN FRO KIDNEY STONES~
I

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL otfers a lithotripsy option for patients
suffering from kidney stones. Lithotripsy uses the technique offocu_~ed shock
waves to fra&amp;ment a stone in the kidney or ureter. The patient is placed in contact
wi~ a Water-fille9 cushion and a shock wave is created which is tocused on the
stone. The wave shatters and fragments d1e stone.
·

My grace Is sufficient for
thee; for my strength Is
made perfeCt in
1
weakness
11 Cor. 12:9

For More Information: 13041 675~4340, Ext. 1311.
..,

I

l

.

'

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•

�Friday, December 6, ~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

. Friday, December 6, 2002

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Paqe B 3

0

Scoreboard
Jamestown

Prep Basketball

Mecllanicstlu'IJ so

Greerle'liew

Fa1tfleld 83, 1ona 78, OT
67. South Caoolina 59
M.1ris1 72. A - 70. OT
N~agara 60. Looyrota. Mel 53
Salflt Joseptt's 71 . Boston U . 49
UMBC 68. Moonf Sl Mary's, Mel. 53
Yale 88. Sacred Holan 69

51 ,

~

JalomesJile Hii!DIIe 55. w Salem Nll-42

Kahda 65, An1Mtp 25
Kings MoUs 52. On. Noowood 20

Bovs

Syn 01- Val. 83, Ohio Val. Chr. 57
Oh10 Valley Ctv....... .15 19 11 12 - 57
Symmes Valle)' ....... .21 24 24 t 4 - 83
aves (0·2) - Moctoae&lt; cns~e 1 IHl 3.
Solomon Peoples 3 3-4 10, Brody
B&amp;ankenship 0 2:2 2. Andrew Hok:omb 1
1 2. Conrad Butt.ngton 2 6-7 10. Scolt
Frans 4 2-2 10, Nate Bowman 3 3-4 9,
..IOtln Hussell 0 0-0 0. J .P Lindeman 5 1-4
11 TOTALS 19 17-24 57. 3-powtt: goats 2 (Co'oste, P9cp1es) . .
SVMMES VALLEY (0-2) - Ctvis Elswici&lt;
3 5·5 11 , Kyfe G~mo&lt;e 1 1-2 3. TOf'Y
Elswod&lt; 11 3-6 26. Cory Buodlum 0 2·2 2.
Boandon Laton 0 0-0 0 , Se1h ~ 1
G-1 2. T.J. Grubbs 2 0.0 4, Kevin Miller 7
0 14, Justm Holland 0 1-2 1. Jarred Shaffer
2 0.(] 4, Chad Higgins 3 ().(] 6. J.D. Mille&lt; 5
IHl 10. Chad Anrip 0 ().(] 0. TOTALS 35 12·
18 83_3-poinl goals- 1 (T. Etswic*). ·

leeiOI'IIa 5 t , Berhn Center W. Reserve 45

leopsic SO. Oo1a HaoQin N. 40
Ltma Bath 65. Kenron 33
Uina Cent Calh. 51, Miller Co1y &lt;8, OT

o-

o-

Thurodoy'sCie. Horizon Science 57, UrWersity Hts.
Fuchs Mizrachi 52 , OT
Cots. St Charles 79, E. .ngel Clio'. 52
Mt Vernon Acad. 90, Torah ACad . 22
Wellington 75, De&amp;aware Ctv. 43

Girls
Thursday's Results

Akr. Centrai-Hower 39. Akr. Kervnore 37
Alu. Firestone 59, Akr. Ellet 42
Akr Garfield 76, Akr. E. 29
Akr. Manchester 45, Navarre Fairless 43
Apple Greek W;oynedaiO 44, Norwayne•18
Archbold 72, Liberty Center 40

As1iand Coestview SS. -london 54, OT
Ashlabu!a Edgewood 42. Cortland
Maplewood 27 ·
·
Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 50. Cle. Cent.
Cath . 39

Barbenon 81, Rawnna 36
. Baseom Hopewell-loudon 69. TiNin
Calven 66
Berlin HitaAd 101. Bowerston Conotton
Valley 42
. ..
Bloomdale Elmwood 69, Millbury Lake 25
Bluffton 49, Seneca Allen E. 45
Bryan 68, Edgerton 37
Cardington 46. Galion Northmor 37
Carey 17, Bettsville 22
Gin. Mt. Healthy 51, Cin. W. Hills 29
Cin. NW 56. Gin. Anoerson 51
Gin. f'u11)011 Marion 58. On. Roger Bacon41
Cin. Reading 47, N . Bend Taylor 43
Cin. WalnUt Hills 53, Cin. Taft 37
Cin.· Wyoming 50, Cin. Deer Park 10
Coldwater 57, Versailles 51
Cols. School for Girls 45, Wellington 33
Continental 56, Defiance Tinora 32
Cornerstone 36, Greater Cle. Chr. 25
CuyaMga Valley Chr, Acad . 52,
Massillon Tuslaw 32
Danville 30, Utica 25
Delaware 54, Pataskala Wat kins
Memorial38
Delaware Buckeye Valley 56, Marion
River Valley 55
Delphos . Jefferson 46, Van Wert
linclonview 24
Delp11os Sl. Jolin's 52, Marion local37
Doylestown Chippewa B1, Rittman 45
E. can.67. Zoarville Tuscaf11WBS VBIIey 58
E. Knox 46, Johnstown Nortnridge 39
E. Palestine ~8. N. Li maS. Range 34
Edon 71, Fayene 65, OT
Elmore W\)Odmore 47, Gibsonburg 44
Fairfield 49, 'Gin. Colerain 31
Findlay Liberty-Benton 70, Arlington 29
Fredericktown 48, Centert&gt;urg 38
Girard 67, Cortland Lakeview 28
Hamillon Aoss 50, Wilmington 47
Hamler Patrick Henry 86, Delta 25
Hubbard 56. Newlon Falls 48
Hudson 56, Kent Roosevelt 46
Jackson 48, Perry 42

L.ad:JlMnD'I Ptans:JJ,•\tsi•IIP•CH.31

SOUTH
Alabama St 82, Geo&lt;goa St. n , OT
lJpS&lt;:On'b 97. Tennessee St. 8S

lo&lt;ain 4dmiraJ 1CJng 62. Obeo1in 24

Mercer 80. Georgia Southern 72

lorain Southview 48. Maumee 46

New Df1eans 80, Tulane 67

Louisville 57, Columbiana 4 t
LouiS'Iille Aquinas 82. Kldron C. Chr. 45
Magnolia Sandy Valley U, 33
Mansf'oe1d sa. Marion Haod'ong 39
Mason 60, Batavia Amelia 22
!AcComb 52, Cory Rawson 25
McOonala 54. Lorostown 30
Medina Ctw. 67, Oraoge Ctw. 32
MillooO Cter Failbanl&lt;s 54. Cots. Acad . 33
Millersburg W. Holmes 56·, L(M..I():)rMtle 39

South Flonda 65 , Nebrasta 60

-

Rio:t,je 44,-

FAR WEST

Air Force 65, Texas-Pan American«
Gonzaga 75, Montana 67

79, Wyoming 70

Women's Major Scores
Thunday
EAST

L
5
8

Pet
.762

GB

.529

5

9

.526
.4;!8

5

9
12
12
13

.368
.368
.350

6.5
8
8

8.5

New York at WashingtOn. 7 p.m.
Or1ando al New Jeo1ey, 7:30 p.m.
CI&lt;M!Iand at Chicago. 8:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Hooston, 8:30 p.m.
New Or1eans ·at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Indiana at Denver, 9 p.m,
Miami at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Goeden State, 10:30 p.m.

Clemson 90. Winthrop 52
ETSU 85, Tusculum 59

Georgta Tech 96, Mercer 50
North Carolina 80, Appalachian St 44
Radford at W. Carolina. ppd.
Tulane 70. Alabama Sl. 57

Pro Football

MIDWEST
BaU St. 82, Wisconsin 81
,Drake 63. Neboasl&lt;a 55
Ill. -Chicago 72, Illinois St. 55
Mtchigan St. 88, Oakland, Mich.
Missouri -St. Louis 83, Saint Joseph's 59
SE Missouri 71 , Lipscomb 50
SOIITHWEST
Baylor 104, Ark .·Pine Bluff 3B
Oklahoma 77, Stephen F.Austin 55
TCU 77. SMU 57

AFC

5
5
6
6

Gonzaga 71, Texas-Pan American 55
New MeiCk:o St. 76, Wich~a St. 60
Oregon 85, Pl)rttand 63
S. "Utah 66, Western St., Colo. 53
UC Santa Barbara 76, Loyola-Marym6unt
63

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Pel
.944

GB

228
251
338
269

Indianapolis .... 8

4

5 0 .583 275 287

0 .667 257 206

Jaci&lt;sonville .... 5 1 o .417 256 231
Houslon .......... 3 ·9 0 .250 157 288
North

WLTPCIPFPA
Pittsburgh ....... 7 4 1 .625 303 269

Pro Basketball
' Atlantic Division
W
L
Pet.
GB
Ph iladelpllia ....... 15
4 .789
Boston ............... 12
6 .667
2.5
New Jersey ........ 12
7 .632
3
Orlando ............. 11.
8 .579
4
Was111nglon ......... 8
10 .444
6.5
11
.313
8.5
New Yo&lt;k ............. 5
Miami... ................ 5
t 3 .278
9.5
Central Division
WLPctGB
lndlana ............... 15
3 .833
NeW Orleans ..... 13
6
.684
2.5
Del roiL. .... .... ..... 12
6 .667
3
Allanla ...... ....... ... .9
10 .474
· 6.5
Milwaukee ...........a
10 .444
7
Toronto .... ........ ....6
12 .333
~
Chicago ............... 4
14 .222
11
Cleveland .... ........ 3
17 .150
13

287
300
315
255

Tennessee ...... 7

Baltimore ........ 6 . 6
Cleveland ....... 6 6
Cincinnati ....... 1 11

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.583
.583
.500
.500

Sou1h
WLTPCIPFM

FAR WEST
BYU 68, san Francisco 65 ·

National Basketball Association

0
0
0
0

-

-

- -·

•

T Pot PF PI\
0 JJrl 2lfi 2511
0 .417 Zl5 l!C!

8

0

8 0

1--c:lilllChed dtvislon

.:m
.:m

100 313

.:!41 all

SundoY•-

Hcuslon a1 ~. 1 p.m.
San Fnoncisco ., Dallas. 1 p.m.
N.Y. Gia,... at 'NasNngton. 1 p.m.
EnglaM, 1 p.m.
Bultolo ol St. Louis at Kansas Cily. 1 p.m.
tndianapois at T•• see, 1 p.m.
Cincimati at Corolina. 1 p.m.
~ne101.-o-. 1 p.m.
AllarU aiT-IIoy, 1 p.m.
Detroil: at Arizona, •:OS p.m.
Pllllodolploio at Seattlo, 4:05 p.m.

Carobna a1

o .500 262 243

7 p.m.

New Je(sey at Toronto, 7 p.m.

Transactions

Qa1danO al San Diogo, 4:15p.m.
MOo- at G.- Bay. 8:30 p.m.

BASEBAU
Amorlcoln J.Mguo
BOSTON REO SOX-signed RHP W.Hie
Ban1&lt;s and RHP Ryan Rupe.
NEW'IORK YANKEE5-Ai1oed to lerms
witt'! 38 Robin ventura on·a one-year con-

lloiod&amp;; .. o.m.
CNcago at Miami, 9 p.m.

Hockey ·

tract

Natlo11111 Hockey' l.Mgue
EA8TEIIN CONFEIIENCE

A-DI-

WLTOLIII.GFGA
-Je&lt;My .... 14 6 1 2 31 so so

Phi1adelphia .... 12 6 6

1 31
N.Y. Ranger&gt; .. 1212 4 1 29
PittoiJurgh ....... 11 7 3 3 28
N.Y. Ialanders ... 913 3 0 21
Noo U..at Otvl&amp;ion

61
78
76
64

56
92
68
82

W L T OLP!s GFGA
3

MonlseaL ....... tO 10 4
BuHato .............. 5 14 4

1
0
0
1
1

38
30
26
25
t5

88 56
69 65
76 67
8S 80
52 67

W L TOLPtsGFGA
8
a
8
13

3
4
6
2

2
3
•
0

31
31
26
24

83
68
67
67

72
66
81
. 76

Natlona1LN!IUO
ATLANTA BRAVE$-Agreed to terms
with RHP Chris Fussell, LHP Derrick
Lewis, LHP Sam McConnell, LHP Denny
McDaniel. C Lee Evans. C Mil&lt;a Hubbard
and OF Oonzetl McOonaJd on minor IBBgue
conlradS.
COLORADO ROCKIES- Announced
the resignation ol Josh Byrnes, ~Stant
general manager. 10 take a similar position
with Boston.
MONTREAL EXPOS--Agreed lo lllfri1S
with INF Jamey ~"~I on a one-year con·

rract.
NEW YORK MET5-Agreed to 'arms

with LHP Tom Glavine on a three-year-contract
.
PITTSBURGH PIRATE$-Agreed to
terms with INF Joe Caruso. RHP Bias
Cedeno, INF David Dosier, RHP Steve
Frtcto, INF Aaron Holben, C Brad King,
AHP Todd Ozais and INF·OF Brett·
Aoneberg on minor league cOntracts.

BASKETIIALL

AllanJ8 .............. 7 14 1 . 2 17 68 92
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cenlrol Dlvflllcln
W L T OLP!s GFGA

N.uono1 Baoketba11 As110011111on
GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5-Waiveil
G Dean Oliver.

Detrolt... .......... 15 7 3 1 34
St. Louis .. :...... 14 7 3 1 32
Chlcago .......... 11 11 3 0 25
Columbus .........9 12 2 2 22
Naslwille ........... 5 12 4 4 18
Norlh-t Dlvfolon

N.uona1 Foolboll League
NFL-Fined Denver G Steve Herndon
one game's pay for clipping San Diego DT
Jamal Williams, ending Williams' season, in ,

0 .500 224 250

0 .083 204 335
Well
W L T . PC1 PF PI\

~.

Edmonlon at Florida. 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. t....-s at Pittsllutgl, 7:30 p.m.
Montr8al al Phoenbc. 10 p.m.
Minnesota at Val"tCCO..Vee', 10 p.m.
Nashville at San Jose. 10:30 p.m.
Columbus al Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.

- Or1oans a t -· 4:05p.m.
""'-at N.Y. Joll, 4:15p.m.

T....,. Bay:.... 13
carouna .......... 12
Florida .............. 8
Washinglon .... 11

"""""'"'al ~- 8·30 p m.
Oe4roit al Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Montrell at COkwaclo. 9 p m_
Columbus at San Jose, t0.30 p.m.
SP!unloy'sGomos
T....,. Bay at Boston, 1 p.m.
51. Louis at~. 1 p m.
WastWnglon at Buftalo, 7 p.m.

-Divfolon

Eaol
WLTPCIPFM
Miami .............. 7
N- England .. 7
BuHalo ............ 6
N.Y. Jels ..... .... 6

St LcUs--..5

L
4
7

0Hawa ............ 13 7 4
Toronto ........... 1211 2

Natlo1111l Football League

n

W
Slf1 filrcim _ B

Boston ........... 17 •

,

Wake Forest 73, lnd.-Pur.-lndpls. 60

L
1

.278
.105

Minnesota at LA. Clippers. 3:30 p.m:

Cincinnat/91, E. Kentucky 78

W
UaUas ............... :17

Thursday
EAST

13
17

6.5
1
12
155

Satunlay'o-

SOtm!

Men's Major Scores

.550

Detroit at Attanta. 2 p.m.

Connoclicul68, Holy Cross 46
· Siena 76, Fairfield 53
Syracuse 58, Sl Bonaveoture 48

College Basketball

.579

Artama 98, Mitwaukee 80
M innesota 114, Goldeo S1a1e 98
Frldly'aWashlngton at Qfiando, 7 p.m.
New VoR at Boston, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Toronto, 8 p.m.
Houston at New 0o1eans. 8:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Memp11is at Ulah, 9 p.m.
Indiana at Phoantx. 9 p.m.
~at Sacrameolo, 10 p.m.
Miami at Po&lt;tland. 10 p.m.
Dallas at LA. lakers, 10:30 p.m.

111DWEST.

w.

8

9

Thunday'• -

Butter 65, Indiana St. 45
SOUTliWEST
Di&lt;lahoma St65. Hartfor1152

Spring. Shawnee 72, New Carlisle
Tecumseh 44
SpringbOro 57, Oxford Talawanda 42.
St. Marys 67, Wapakoneta 53
Stow 51, Cuyahoga Falls 43
Stryker 75, Pettisville 27
Sugarcreek
Garaway
64,
Newcomerstown 39
Swanton -51 . Montpelier 36
Sycamore MOhawk 69, Seneca E. 49 ·
Tot Whitmer 62, Napoleon 48
Torah Acad . 39, Mt. vernon Acad. 36
Tsunamis 31 , Cols. Tree of Life 22
Uniontown lake 46, Alliance 37
lJpoef Aolnglon 46, Thomas Woo1tinglon 36
Urbana 64, Lewistown Indian Lake 51
Van Buren 78, Vanlue 45
Van Wen 50, Defiance 29
W. Chester Lakota W. 52, Cin. Milflod 26
Liberty-Salem 62, Cedarville 45
W. Unity Hilhop 78, Pioneer N. Ge:nt 15
Wauseon 73 , Metamora: Evergreen 60
Woosler Trtway 71, Sullivan Black River 59
Wonhington Chr. 77, Johnslown 50
\llungs. Boardman 84, \llungs Mooney 38 .
Youngs. Chaney 50, Campbell 49
Youngs .. liberly 55, Kinsm.f!!n Badger 22
Youngs. Ursuline 76, Auslintown-Fitch 26
Za nesville Maysville 57, Lancaster
Fairfield Union 50

Ulah ..... ...... ....... 11
Minnes0ta .......... 1t
Denve&lt;.. ............... 5

L A. lakers .......... 7

. Virgin&amp;a Teen 71 , VMI 66

Graham 43

6.5

Sacramento ... .... 16
Pnoentx ........ .. ... ..9
Seallle ............ .10
Po&lt;tland .............. 7
Gokien State .. ..... 7
LACiippef1; .. .... .. 7

72

f"em¥:ull57, .............. ktm(WefM 47
Plain City Jonathan Alder 48 , Cofs.
GraOOview 1B
Plymouth 67, Monroeville 27
Ailgeoey Ri:VJo o I 47. Lina Tllirl*&gt; Ctr. 44
Riverside Stebbins 48. W. carrollton 45
S. Ch3tleston SE 59, N. leMsbuog Tolad 18
Salineville s _50, Youngs. Chr. 44
Smithville 70. Dahon 44
Spana H;gtano sa, Marion Elgn 48
Spring. Calh . Cent 61, Spring. NE 42
Spring. Greenan 50. Spring. NW 38
Spring. Kenton Ridge 100, St. Paris

6.5

.579

w

Va Commonwealth 90, Florida Atlantic

Wasllinglon

.588

-01-

Tenn.-Marbn 72. Union, Tenn. 60

f'yonalari'{jVaol. 40

7

8

""""PM ... .....2

me Cila&lt;lel 82. Higl1 Poim 67

Minster 62. Ft. Reotwery 43
Monal R'odgeclale 51 , Mt. Gilead 26
New KOOJOViNe 61 . Roc::kfo&lt;a Pai11way 37
New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Cent.
Calh. SO. W. Lafayette Ridgewood &lt;13
New Riege161 , Fremont St. Joseph 4 t
Niles McKney 63, leiM1!sllu'!l U8oae 22
Norton 48, Medina Buckeye 46
Norwalk St Pa1i 72. Collins W. Reseow 38
Oak Hart&gt;or sa. SandUSioy st. Mary 33
Old Fort 39, Fostoria St. Wendelin 33
Oregon Clay 69. Findlay 46
Oregon Stritch 64, N. Baltimore 54
Ollawa-Giandorf 61 . Elida 40
Pandora Gilboa 47, Arcadia 44
Pemberville·Eastwood 63, Genoa 50

Houston ............. IO

San Anlooio .. .....1t

81
·86
56
73
53

63
64
57
78
71

W L T OL Pis GF ·GA
VancOuver-...... 16 6 4

0

36 60 · 62

Minnesota ....... 13
EdmoniOIL ....12
Colorado ...........8
C81gasy ............ .7

1
1
3
3

33
29
27
21

7
9
7
13

6
4
8
4

89
67
88
ss

FOOTBALL

a game on Dec. 1.
WASHINGTON REDSKIN$-Released .
. K Brett eon..-y from injured reserve.

HOCKEY
N~lonal Hocl&lt;ey J.Mgue

sa
65
64
80

NHL-8usp&amp;nded Columbus F Jody
Shelley one game, without pay, for an altercanon Involving New Vorl!; Rangers LW
Oakland .......... &amp; 4 0 .667 354 2sa
. Ronald Pelrovicky in a game on Dec. 3.
San Otego ...... 8 4 0 .667 263 265
Poc1flc Dlvfolon •
Announced Chicago F Thea Fleury has
Denver ............ 7 5 0 .583 295 266
WLTOLPisGFGA
been cleared to play.
Kansas Cily .... 6 6 0 .500 370 312
Dallas ............. 16 6 5 1 38 91 57
CALGARY
FLAMEs-Assigned
G
NFC
· LoaMgeles ... 10 8 4 3 27 68 67
Levente Szuper to Saint John of tt'le AHL.
Eaat
Anahe'om ........... 9 9 6 3 27 62 71
W L T Pel PF PI\ ·
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKs-Recalled D
SanJose ..........912 2 2 22 70 79
Steve McCarthy lrom Nootolk ollhe AHL
Philadelpllia .... 9 3 o .750 320 187
Phoeni'-.. ......... 8 13 4 2 22 65 86
EDMONTON
OILER5-Placed
F
N.Y. Glan1s ..... 6 6 0 .500 202 217
Two polnta"" I wln1one point"" I lie
. ond_.me-.
Georges Laraque on injured reserve .
Dallas ............. 5 · 7 0 .417 166 214
Washington .... 5 7 0 .417 219 280
Activated F Jlrl Ooplta.
Thurodry'l O.meo
. LOS ANGELES KING5-Aciiwted C
Soulh
Boston 4, Atlanta 3, OT
W ' L T Pel PF PI\
Tampa Bay 3, Edmonlon 2
Jason Allison from Injured reserve.
NASHVILLE PREDATOR$-Recalled G
Tampa Bay .....9 3 0 .750 267 149
OttaWa·2, St. Louis 2, tie
Allan1a ............ 8 3 1 .706 316 211
Jan Lasek from Milwaukee of ,the AHL.
Detroit 5, Phoenix 3
New Oneans .. 8 4 o .667 345 301
Announced F Wyan Smith has cleared
Philadelphia 3, N.Y. Rangers 2, OT
. Carolina ........ .. 4 8 0 .333 158 221
walverJ and was assigned 1o Milwaukee.
Minnesota 1, C.lgary 1, lfe
No~h
NaahvHie 3, Lao Angelaa 2
SAN JOSE SHARKS- Named Rob
WLTPCIPFPA
F~doy'o O.meo
Zettler assistant coacti .
•·Green Bay ... 9 3 0 .750 325 250
Florida al Carolina, 7 p.m.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Recalled C
Chicago ........ .. 3 9 o .250 238 300
Atlanta at Washington, 7 p.m.
Alexander Svltov from Springfield of the
Delroi1...... ,...... 3 9 0 .250 215 331
Bu"alo at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
AHL. Reassigned 0 Darren Rumble to
Toronto at N.Y. lalandara, 7 p.m.
Minnesota ....... 3 9 0 .250 278 332
Spnngfleld. Placed LW Dall&lt;t An&lt;lreychuk
W..1
Pfttlbul\lh at Now JOfHY, 7:30 p.m.
on injured reserve.

MAC
from PageB1
In 200 I, the teams combined for 1,004 total yards.
Marshall built a big lead
behind Byron Leftwich, but
Toledo's Chester Taylor ran
for 188 yards and two touchdowns and the Rockets
scored a touchdown on a fake
field goal to pull out the win.
''They have what we
want," Marshall defensive
back Chris Crocker said.
"When they took it from us
last year, we had a 23-0 lead.
We dido 't play well enough
to maintain it."
Taylor is gone, and so is
:Toledo quarterback Tavares
Bolden . But the Rockets,
predicted to fmish second in
_the West Division this sea•son, won their last four
'games to ovenake Bowling
Green and Nonhero Illinois.
Toledo's ·Brian Jones has
-completed a national-best 71

•

percent of his passes. He has tained on Nov. 2.
Despite being unable to
2,894 yards passing, 21
touchdown and JUSt six inter- move around the pocket last
ceptions.
week, he threw for 40 I yards
Taylor has been replaced and two TDs in a snowstonn
by a trio of running backs. in a 38-14 win over Ball
William Bratton and fresh- State.
men Trinity Dawson and
Leftwich, who still has
Astin Martin have combined hopes of winning the
for 1,914 yards rushing, Heisman Trophy, has four
while Jones has fared well 400-yard passing games this
with 382 . yards on the season.
ground.
''The thing that I think that
"It was supposed to be a sets him apart right now, in
rebuilding year," Jones said. the last four weeks, he's
"Just to have an opponunity practiced three times," Pruett •
to be part of this, it's been said. ''He practiced 1 1/2 half
practices last week, and he
more than I could ask.for."
Marshall won its sixth came out 35-of-42 for 401
straight East Division title yards.; His mobility was
since rejoining the league in extremely restricted.
"He's so adept at the line of
1997.
Carrying the team again scrimmage that if you blitz
has been Leftwich, honored him, somebody's band's
this week as the league's going to play. It's usually
offensive player of the year ours."
for the second straight time. · Marshall will play again in
Leftwich has thrown for the GMAC Bowl on Dec. 18
3,615 yards, 22 TDs and in Mobile, Ala., while Toledo
eight interceptions in just 10 · will make a return trip to the
games and hasn't fully recov- Motor City Bowl on Dec. 26
ered from a leg injury sus- in Detroit.

a

·euckeyes

Ohio State punter Andy
Groom said.
Should Georgia also be
upset,
then all bets are off.
from PageB1
No. 4 USC and No. 5 Iowa
team." Ohio State tight end · have already completed their
Ben Hartsock said. "But you regular seasons. No. 6
watch week to week and you Washington State plays at
·see different teams giving UCLA at 4:30 p.m. Saturday
'them problems. You see and No. 7 Oklahoma meets
Pittsburgh running the ball Colorado in the . Big 12 title
on them and you think, 'Hey, game at 8 p.m.
if Pittsburgh can run the ball
Ohio State strong safety
on them then we ought to be Mike Doss said he was hop.able to run the bail on them ing Miaini wins on Saturday
:here and there.' I have no so the nation' s only two
doubts about our defense remaining Division I-A
-being able to stop whomever unbeatens can decide things
they put on the field.
on the field.
"You've got to respect your
'They're No. 1 in the BCS
opponent, but at the same right now. They're the hottest
·time we have no fear of team in college football,"
'them, I guess."
Doss said. "Who would want
If the Hurricanes lose, the anything less? If they make it
Buckeyes ' next opponent out there, I think it would be
would be BCS.No. 3 Georgia a fun game."
.if the Bulldogs win their 6
Still, most of the Buckeyes
p.m. game against Arkansas don't care who they end up
m the SEC championship playing - even a Miami
game in Atlanta.
team that has won 34 in a
Maybe.
row.
"I was just watching ESPN
"You've got to beat the
:last night and. they said if champs to be the champs,"
:they (the Hurricanes) lose, . Groom said .. "If we take ~n
:don' t be surprised if they're .. !'&lt;liatpi,)f we}~e OJI . Qe~rgt'!_
'Still not in the Fiesta Bowf," ·.e..rwh6ever 1t"iS' -· we'lmo'w
•

' Trade

Nevin and his wife have a
new home in the San Diego
area and he has a a daughter
from a prior relationship
from Page B1
who lives in the area,
Axelrod said Towers Axelrod said. The only ·w ay
he would consider agreeing
~sked him before· the re~ent to a trade is if it were to a
.general managers . meetmgs West Coast team that has
;,..,hether Nevin, an Ali-Star · spring training in Arizona
~n . 2001, would ever waive and that he'd play third
the no-trade clause.
base.

we're going to have our
hands full ."
Krenzel said he would try
to watch several games at the
same time, if need be.
"I might try to split the
screen on the TV and get.as ·
many games as I can," he
said. "I'm sure I'm going to .
see a majority of the Miami ·
gaine and watch any other
games that might be of interest to us."
1\vo teams from the same
conference have never met in
the BCS title game. Should
Virginia Tech beat Miami
and
Georgia
lose
to
Arkansas, the national championship game could also be
the Big Ten championship
game.
Iowa and Ohio State shared
the conference title with .8-0
records. They did not meet
because of the Big Ten's
rotating schedule .
"Miami could lose to
Virginia Tech. Something
could happen in the SEC
championship game. Then
maybe Iowa would be in
there,"
wide . receiver
Michael Jenkins said with a
devilish
" grin.
.... ., ''That would be
crazy.

Bearcats can clinch sl1 ;~~e
of title with win vs. ECU
GREENVIU..E, N.C. (AP) on the bowl selection process South Florida - Cincinnati has faced plenty
of ups and downs this season,
but .the Bearcats still have the
chance to win a share of their
league title for the first time in
nearly four decade&lt;.
The Bearcats can clinch a
share of the Conference USA
championship and become
bowl eligible with a win Friday
against East Carol ina. The
Bearcats (6-6, 5-2) haven't won
a conference title since winning
the Missouri Valley Conference
in 1964.
"We feel fonunate to be in
the pos1t1on we're in,"
Cincinnati coach Rick Minter
said. "It's been a frusbating
year, but our primary goals are
still intact."
Cincinnati has perfonned
well against a rugged non-conference schedule, losing games
to Ohio State and West Vrrginia
by. a combined seven ·points
early in the season. The
Bearcats also lost by one at
Hawaii two weeks ago, a game
that was marred by an enfield
brawl after the game.
That fight, as it turns out.
could have a significant impact

which will
involving Conference USA join the league next year teams. Three bowls with league would go to Hawaii. Teter said.
tie-ins have already selected
Though theirthree-year bowl
their representatives, leaving streak will end this year, the
only the ConAgra Hawaii and Pirates can still clinch a share
New Orleans bowl games.
of second place in the leag ue.
The Hawaii Bowl typically. They have won four strJight
gets the fourth pick. which and 12 of the .last 14 in the
would have likely been the
Bearcats if they beat the Pimtes series. incl.uding last year's 28,
(4-7, 4-4). But it would have 26 win.
The question mark . for the
also paired the Bearcats and
Pirates
regards the health of
Warriors barely a month ~fter
Art Brown, who
leading
rusher
their brawl.
·
'That wasn't a healthy situa- missed last week's 24-7 loss at
tion for either team for that Southern Mississippi with a
game to be rematched." said groifl injury. Brown has rushed
Brian Teter, assistant commis, for I ,029 yards and 14 touch-.
sioner for Conference USA.
downs, and has three receiving
Teter said officials from touchdowns.
Conference USA, the Western
Without Brown out last
Athletic Conference and the week, the Pirates had to play
bowl committee met and decid- outside linebacker Christshawn
ed that Tulane wou ld earn the Gilliam at tailback. Gilliam
Hawaii Bowl invitation if
Cincinnati wins. That would rushed 15 timesfor 59 yards.
"We are going to have to see
send the Bearcats to the New
Art is this wee!,," Pirates
where
Orleans Bowl.
Steve
Logan said. " If Art
coach
If Cincinnati loses. that
would leave Conference USA looks like he wi ll be able to
with only four bowl-.e ligible give us something then
teams. Tulane would stay home Christshawn will go and play a
for the New Orleans Bowl, and little more on defense."

Cincinnati dominates E. Kentucky
RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) Valerie King tied Cincinnati's
single-game record with six
3-J,JOinters, and scored 30
pomts to lead the 25th-ranked
Bearcats to a 91-78 victory
over
Eastern
Thursday
Kentucky.
King wound up 11 -for-22
overall for Cincinnati (3- 1).
Pam Garrett led Eas tern
Kentucky t4-3) with 19
points.
Debbie Merrill added 16
points for Cincinnati, while
K.B. Sharp had 12 points and

12 assists, maki'ng her the
school's career leader with
469.
King scored 23 points and
got five of the Bearcats' seven
3.-poimers in the first half
She had seven points during a
13-0 run from a 12- 10 lead .
Katie Kelly an d Teresa
McNair added 14 points
apiece for Eastern Kentucky.
Eastern pulled to 32-25 but
could get no closer as
Cincinnati pushed the lead
back 47-31 at the half.
The Bearcats stretched the

lead .to as many as 26 points
in the second half.
Cincinn ati was 35-of-67
(52.2 percent) from the field
to Eastern's 32-of-60 (53.3
percent) and outrebo unded
the .Lady Colonels 39-27.

JCPenney

Catalog

MERCHANT STOllE 1659-S
338 2n d Avenue
Cllllipolis. OH 45631

(740) 446-3525
Moll~w ICI-6 .

·~

"Clearly,
Cincinnati
would not be one .of those,"
Axelrod said.
Nevin was the t\lp pick
overall in the June 1992
draft, by Houston, but
developed a reputation as a
hothead
and
bounced
around the majors uri til set- .
tling in with the Padres. He
became their starting third
baseman in August 1999.

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r e ge

•

• CD Sys1em

from Page B1

·Olympic games," said long•

. W/6 Spea_koiS

Brand New 2003 Pontiac Grand Am
SE Sedan
• Automatic
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Alum. Wheela • Power Loc~a
1400 V-6 Power • Power Mirrors
Power Wlndowa • CruiH Con1rol

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Brand New 2003 Chevy
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$

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• Smooth Ride SuajMintlon

• Taxes, Tags, 11lle Fees exira. Rebate included In sale price ol new vehicle lis1ed where appli cable. " On approved .credit. On selec1ed models. No! responsible lor typograph ical errors.
Prices Good Decembet 4th Tlvough December B1h.
..
"
I
·
.
.

...

CHIVROLIT

wru·alntiU "

'
Buick
it's all gooO

ez&gt; Oldsmobile.

-~Take

•

Ripley FAIRPLAIN Interchange
(exit 132) Turn North on At. 21 ,
Dealership Is 3 miles on left

l-71. to

-time
broadcaster
Jim
:McKay.
: Although he retired . in
· 1998, Arledge's far-reachmg
:influence can stili be seen. on
;TV: ":hen a slow-mot~on
;replay 1s shown at a spo~mg
:event, when Peter Jenmngs •
:reads the ne~s. ?r when a
.sportscaster cntlctzes a play. er.
.
: Arl_edge_ was ~mgle:h~d.edly cred1ted wtt!t bnngmg
:modem production tech11iques to sports coverage,
. then building ABC News
:into a power during the
;1980s. For a decade, he was
:President of the sports and
oflews divisions atAB&lt;:;. .
.: He changed the v1ewmg
.habits of American sports
.fans by bringing "Monday
~ight Football" to the air in
:I 970. it is stili a staple of
:ABC's prime-time schedule.
. "Few - if any- individ· ·
:Uais outside the NFL family
:had as large an impact on the
:popularity and public accep-tance of pro football then
:Roone Arledge," NFL com:missioner Paul Tagliabue
.said. .
· The36-time Emmy winner
:was cited as one of the 100
:most important Americans of
:the 20th century by Life
·magazine in 1990.
: "Roone Arledge revolulionized television ;md with
it the way people see and
understand the world," ABC
·. News President David
Westin said in a statement.
"He was our leader and our
friend, and we will miss his

,,
/

us ail better than we were." ers- a phi osophy that led
Roone Pinckney Arledge to his hiring of Howard
was born July 8, 1931, and Coseli, the abrasive New
reared on Long Island. The Yorker who was probably
Columbia University gradu- the most famous sportseastate joined ABC Spotts as a er ever.
producer in 1960 a:fter a five"His intuitive genius, that
year stint at NBC.
sixth sense that told him
Appealing to his bosses to what would or wouldn' t play
bring showbiz to sports, the on television, was never
29-year-old was g1ven con- more apparent than when we
trol of ABC's NCAA football first worked together in the
broadcasts. Through the . 1960s," Cosell wrote in his
1960s, he introduced innova- autobiography "I Never
tions taken for granted Played the Game."
today : slow-motion and .. "Monday Night Football"
freeze- frame views, instant became a cultural event after
replays, hand-held cameras he brought Cosell into the
and the placement of micro· booth with Frank Gifford
phones to bring the sound of and Don Meredith. •
tlie game into living rooms.
Arledge's broadcast contri- ·
In addition to ali the tech- butions to the NFL were recnicai innovations, McKay ogniied by the Pro Football
said Arledge would also be Hall of Fame in 2001' when
remembered for "putting the he was given the Pete .
focus on the human being · Rozelle
Radio
and
involved in sports.''
Television Award, named for
In 1961, Arledge created the former commissioner. He
"ABC's Wide World of also received the· Medal of
Spons," one of the most pop- the Olympic Order from the
uiar sports series ever, and International
Olympic
coined its tag line - "the Committee, and was inductthrill of victory and the ed in the Olympic Hall of
agony of defeat."
Fame in 1989.
Arledge, who became
When Spons Illustrated in
president of ABC Sports in 1994 selected 40 individuals
1968, supervised coverage of with the greatest impact on
10 Olympics from 1964 to sports over the prevtous 40
1988, including the . memo- years, Arledge was third
rable 1972 games in Munich behind Muhammad Ali and
disrupted by a terrorist attack Michael Jordan.
in which a somber McKay
The reaction was harsh.
delivered the news of the though, when Arledge was
deaths of the Israeli athlet~s . selected in 1977 to resusciArledge expanded OlympiCS tate ABC's strugglin~ news
broadcasts beyond the com- division - while sllll run petition by including person- ning sports.
"People in news were outal profiles of athletes, .a style
echoed today since hts pro- . raged that I hadn't been a·
tege, Dick Ebersol, runs reporter or worked my way
NBC Sports.
up. The newsr.aper articles
He was the first to demand were brutal , ' he later
that networks , not sports recalled.

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�Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

•

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, December 6, 2002

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!I:ribune - Sentinel - 1\e

CLASSIFIED

Public Notices in N': r,.·spiiiH!Irs.l

\'our Ri1ht lo Know. ~linrtd RiChllo \'our Door.

lriJHllllllftil

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,

The Unknown Helr1,
:Oevlsees, Legatees,
•Admlnl1trators,
:;Exec u I o rs
and
-Assigns ol HERBERT
J... MILLER, Deceased,
·The Unknown Heirs,
Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators,
Executors
and
·Asolgns ol FRANCES
:M. MILLER, Deceased
"Whose laat place ol
:residence and whose
-present place ol resl;dence Is unknown will
take notice that on
February 21, 2002 at
.2:DS p.m., MORTGAGE
·ELECTRONIC

And Mason

Counties Like
No One
Else Can!
CallY County, OH

In One week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~ribune

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Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Word Ad.s
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In Next Day's Paper
Sunday ln-Cplumn : 1 : 00 p . m .
Fo.r:- Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
Succes s ful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Ge t Response .. .

Display Ads
All Display : 12 Noon 2
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Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for S und;•vs

~ A , . ... ~
·

1\'NOUi"'LEJ\IEVI'S

C· 1 Beer Carry Out permit

lor, sale, Ch~s!er Township,
Meigs County. send letters
of . mterest to The Da1ly
Sentmel , PO Box 729·20,
Pornerov. Ohio 45769.
Edwin Clark e wJII not be
'bl 1 ·
d bt
respons l e or any e s
other than my own as ol
12·03·02
PUBLIC NOTICE
An thoriy Land Co.. Ltd. has
made the following changes
to BucKeye Hills Subdnl'is1on
loca ted iri GaUia Co., Rae·
coqn Twp., due to fence
line: Tra ct tt 2- 5.267ac,
Tra ct I# 3· 4 882ac and
Tract # 4- 5.261ac. Anthony
Land Company, Ltd. 53 1 E.
Broadway. Jackson. OH
456 40
1·800·213·8365
www alcland com
1

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.

GIVEAWAY

Dnver. Alw ays a step
ahead!
Up to 38 rt CTM No !arced

~~R~r 2~a~=~~~ ~~~: b~a~

0

~.~-Rmr-·rJS-•1 t'

Owner operators welcome,
PTL8QO·B48·0405.

1180

JNOTtCEt
Easy Work! b cellent Payl OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Assemble products at home lNG CO. recommends that
Call Toll Free
1·800-467·5566 Ext. 12170 you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
Foster Parents.
money through the mail until
Local Agency in Ohio seek· y'ou have Investigated the
ing qualified couples 10 be· _o:;ffe!;'ri-ng::.:--............-...,
come Foster parents in
PROF'ESiiONAL
Lawre nce. Gallia. Jac~son .
~~RVIC"'
Meig~ areas. There will be ·--tti""'iiiiiiitiiii
'~iittt-r
5 to to families chosen to
become part of the p11o1
TURNED DOWN ON .
Protect. Oualtlled applicants SOCIA'· SECURITY ISS!?
may receive up to $40.00
N F• U I
W W I
o ee ness e 1n
per day reimbursement. In·
I ·BB8·5B2·3345
tere sted
parties
Call
(740)709·9062 If you have
preVIOUSly called , please
call aga1n.

Fir

Cash Reward· Lost. brown
&amp; white hunting dog, Eng·
hsh Pointer !Brutus) , near
Tuppers Plains. Nov. 29th.
scarlet &amp; gray collar &amp; drag·
g1ng orange nylon rope, in·
JUHid right rear leg, u s ~ 3
legs to run or wall&lt;. call
Raben Buck, (.740)99 2·
3833

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
FOUND- Young , med1um Sell. Shirley Spears. 304·
675·1429
SIZB , lnendly. well-behaved
blac k female dog. Well·
groomed Appears to be a Full-11me n1ght aud1tor Ex·
hOuse pet. v1C1n1ty ot Route pene nce requ1red Apply in
7 and Orchard Hdl Ad Call per'son at Holiday Inn, Gal·
(740)446·B400
lipolis
Found
HVAC Install er needed. Ex·
Unusual bro wn &amp; white dog. perience preferred, but w1ll·
Sandt)1ll
area .
Call ing to tra i_n. Apply at Gam·
(304)675· 1242 or (304)675· fort A1r. 1160 Jackson Pike.
1BI9
.
Gallipoli s. OH

r

LOOKING FOR A FUN
JOB? THIS IS ITI OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT 50 POSI·
TIONS AVAILABLE . t ·B88·
974-JOBS

YARD S,\J.E

y~ Hll S,\LEGALUI'{JUS

Fall Baroams. No early
birds, 9· 11 Saturday only,
84 Krisli Dnve, Bidwell.
·Garage sate- Winter coats
and clothes
Christmas
cratts and decorations, 221
Debb1e Drive. Saturday,
Dec 7 9·5
A UCI10NAND

FLEA MARIG:T

·~

All real estate aclvenlalng
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act or 1968
which make~ It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status ·or national
origin, or any lntenllon to
rTl&amp;ke any auch
preference, llmltallon or
. discrimination."

riO

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1'1':11'""--::-----.,

·-------,.J

Help wanted canng lor the
elderly. Darst Group Home . Gallipolis Career College
now paymg m1n1mum wage , (Careers Close To Home)
new Shift s 7am·3pm, 7am· Call Todayt 740·446-4367,
Spr'tl 3pm· 11 pm . 11pm·
1·800·21 4·0452.
7am. call 740·992·5023"
Reg •90·0S· 1274B

Wan)ed! GoOd credit cus·
tamers to purchase new
home w/la nd. $0 down to
qualified customers. 1·5
1
acre
tra ct s
avai lable.
(740)446·3093

Used furniture store, 130
WHITE'S METAL
1989 Buick Park· Avenue.
Bulaville P1ke. We sell mal·
~ETECTORS
High mileage. car 1 _runs
tresses, bunk beds, dress- A on Alhson, 586 Watson great, good gas mileage,
ers, couches, appliances. Aoad, Bidwell, Ohio 46~14. looks great Asking. $2,000.
much more. Grave manu· (740}446·4336
,.Telephone (304)675·3823
ments (740)446-4782 Gal·
Gracious living 1 and 2 lipolis, OH.
BUILDING
1992 Chevrolet
Lumina
bedroom apartments at Vii·
-Euro. 4 door sedan, $1 ,500.
HOf.JSES
tage Manor and R1vers1de Refrigerator, $95; Electric
Phone (740)446-3479 aher
......
FOR Rmr
. Apartments 10 Middleport range, $95 , Washer, $95; Block brick sewe 'pes :5;:;pm~.~----:-:-:::-::From $278·$348 Call 740· ~~':{· ~~; ~~~ig~!:gr:ez,:: ~incbws, li~t~ls, etc~ J~ud~ 1994 Gao Metro $1200.
: Caloric · gas W1nters, R1o Grande, OH ( )446.0744
1 . 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed 992·506~ .. Equal Housing mond $
740
150
Homes From 1991Mo, 4% Oppor1unit1es.
·
range, white,
like new, Call740·245·512 1.
Down 30 Years at 8 5%
.
1995 Berema, $2,395 ; 1996
APR
L' I'
800 319 Honeysuckle HillS Apart· $195; Frost Free relngera·
Cavalier, $3,395; 1995
·
· ~ents located behind Colo· lor, $165; Kenmore washer/
cea.,
Grand Am GT, 53 ,495 ;
332 E~r ~~~gs,
t.
·
n1al onve behind H1ghw~y dryer set, $250. Skaggs
FOR SALE
Am
Sport
1995 Grand
.
,
$
Paft'ol Post. 1· BR now avail· Appliances, 76 Vine Street,
Sedan,
D, $ ,
;
2 bedroom hou::~e, 425 a able. Rent starts $245/ (740)446·7398
4
2 895 1991
monthplusdeposll,nopets · th L &amp; od 1 · •
AKC Labrador puppies, ProbeGT, $1.295 Welaka
(740)441-1519
man . ow m ~rae In
Chocolate and Yellow, POP Trades COOK MOTORS
come .. Equal Housmg Op· '
~hampion bloodline. BntiSh .(740)446·0103
2·3 bedroom, large Kitchen/ por1u01ty. (740)446·3844 or
AN11QUF.S
blocky heads written health
Dining, living room, Bath, all TOO 1·800·?50·0750.
___
• gar Born 11128/02 Price, Need a car? New second
appliances.
$475 . . per North 3rd. Avenue Middle. .
. $400. (304)372·4642
chance financing available
month, $400 depos1t : No port , 2 BED, unfurnished Buy or sell. RJVenn.e _Anll·
now. Requires S300 weekly
pets,
NO
Excep11ons! Appt., Deposit &amp; Reference, ques. 1124 East Ma.1n on AKC Yorlcle pups, will be 1ncome and you are ap·
St At.141 . (740}446·4254 or No Pets. 992 •0165
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· ready Jan 20th. Taking de· proved. Call the Loan Doc·
{740)446..0205
992·2526 Russ Moore, R!JSits now. 3 females. 2 tor at 1·866·4LOAN·Dr or
br
House
located
in
Ma·
Now
Taking
Applicationsowner
mares. $450/males, and locally (740)446·4533 .
3
son, wv. $495. + Utilities . 35 West 2 Bedrpbm Town·
Mlscru..ANEOUS
$500/lemale.(740)245·1217 n!!::'--~---...,
N p 1 (3041773 5881
house Apartments, Includes
ME
·
TRUCKS
o ~ s.
.
.
Water
Sewage, Trash,
RCHANDISE
Blue Heeler Puppies 8 wks.
5 rooms &amp; bath, so Olive St, $350/Mo., 740·446·0008.
--. ~~~ Call After 5 p.m. 7A2FOR SALE
$325 mo. (740)446-3945
One bedroom apartment, 2 Lazy .Boy Rocker/ Aech~·
· , ,
1 e DbdQe pickup,
MOBILE Hor..~
M
H
1920 4\h Avenue, ulthlieS in· er chaJrs: Excellent condl·~ Border Collie, 3 months old, ,,990 full st_
Lw--iiFOiiiiRttiSIIALEiliil,__.l
OIIILE QME&lt;;
eluded. $300 ~ngle. $350 lion, $75 each. (740)446· Jemale, $100. Had tirS1 113,000 miles, automatic,
~
FOR RENT
couple 1740)446·B677 days; 4053
shols, (740)245·0316
$1100 OBO. 17401256·!8 75
(740)256·1972 evenings.
(740)256~ 1233
12 used homes priced un·
9 foot Christmas Tree, Female Black/White/Collie, - - - - - - - - i l der $3000, will help with de- 12xao, 1br. Trailer for rent ' Remodeled one bedroom bought at Sears- used 1 Giveilo/Good Home 32523 1994 112 Ton Ford Truck. 4·
livery. Call Nikki 740·385- for older couple. W/Laundry apt. adults only. No Pels. year. Paid $250· sell tor Dark Hollo:-"~ Rd., olf SA 7 speed w/overdrive, 2 wheel
9948
Room/br. Large fenced Call alter 5pm. (304)675· $175. (740)256·9181
first home on left
dr1ve no AJC
$4,000.
- - - - - - - - - yard $3~0. WIO Camp Con· 3788
(J04) 675 . 1571
12..:50 mobile home, new ley area. (740)682·0292
- - - - - - - - - Army Issue Camou flage - - - - - - - - - ~--'----~-kitchen, new bath, $3500 : 2 bedroom trailer, more info Small furnished apt. All util· clothing. Free Dish Satellite Full blooded Rat Terrier 1994 Ford F·150 XL. auto,
(740)441·9389
(
_
ities paid except Electric. No w/baslc installation, compa· puppies, 8 weeks old, tails cruise, air, _6cyl.. 77 ,000 ac7401446 9569
Pets, Security Deposit Re· ny promotional Sam Somer· ·docked and wormed, 1 tual
m1les . $6.000 .
1966, two bedroom mobile 2 bedroom, all electnc, elc, qulred.
$275.
Month. ville's (since 1964.) By San- male, 1 female, S50 each. (304)675·7397 or (304)675home, new ale &amp; .w.h., set water &amp; trash included, ref· 0(304_):...6-,75::-·-138-:-5---:--:- dyvllle, WV P.O. (304)273· (740)367·7468
5880
·
up on lot 7, Rlverpark, eren
&amp;d
'I
. ed
5655
d ~~'!1301"""-":v,:":ANS--&amp;~--,
$3000 , 1ot ren t $1201mo. $300cas
eposth requlr
Norwegian Elk Houn
I
ed• Tara Townhouse Apart·
(614)in6-166l
per mont · ocat
ments, Very Spacious, 2 BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav· puppies, 1st shots, $75
4-WDs
J·ust outside Rac1
·ne on 338 B
F
c
h 4 'I S lh t R
1
edrooms,
2
loors,
A,
1
ngs,
and
BOOST
Energy
eac
.
m1
es
ou
o
to
~------...
967 12 60
b'
247 0402
R
1
x
mo 1le home,
·
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Like You Have Never Ex- Grande, right on Wolf un
..;·
$1500 (740)645·2070 cell 2b
· $2
De
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· penenced.
Ad, 1st place on right.
1964 Chevy 4wd truck auto·
phone. (740)645·2599 cell M;s~~-~~e~br. ~~u;e :;,i~ tic, Stan $375/Mo. No Pets.
WEIGHT- LOSS
Pekingese pups, ready by matic. (740)446·0744
phone, (740)379·2515
Deposit . Point Pleasant Lease Plus Security Deposit
REVOLUTION
Christmas. (740)38S-Q 4 11
· 1985 S·10 Blazer 4x4, No
1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile 03503587(304)675· 1911
Required, ~ays· 740· 446· New prOduct .launch Octo·
I \ I! \I st 1' 1'1 II S
Rust. Low miles. $2500.
Home Pnced to sell Quick
3481 ' Even.ngs; 740·367· ber 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
(304)8B2·2221
.
,\ I 1\ I ' lOt K
cau (740) 3B5·2434 .
-B-ea- U1-il_u_l-R-iv_e_r~V-ie-w-Id-e-al 0502.
, (740)44 H 962
Bedroom Apartments Dog House fiberglass.
1986 Jeep Cherokee 4x4,
1998 16xBO Schult mobile For 1 o r 2 People, Referen·
LIVFSI'OCK
rebuilt transmission, rebutll
home with a 24x24 detach· ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Start1ng at $289/mo, Wash· Med.·$40. Large·$60. p..ir
1• front end, good body and
ed heated garage on a dou· ter Trailer Park 740-441· er/ Dryer Hookup, Stove Hoc~ey·table, Tourn . size.
'
and Refrigerator. (740)44t- New·$200. Hewlett Packer - tif'es, needs engine or reble lot located In Racine 0181 .
1519.
Printer Deskjet·540. New· Registered Angus Bull $800 built. $700. (740)446-7928
Mobile home has a flully
$75
(304)675· 1644 (
•
equipped kitchen and ga- Clean 1 2 bedroom mobile
7401446 7410
home in ·Gallipolis area, all 1 and 2 bedroom apart· (304)675·6963
rage has a large work· electric.
All new carpet. Wa· rnents, furnished and unfur·
bench Includes a privacy
tar and Garbage service fur· nished, security depos11 re·
renee and also !las a small
nished. Washer and Dryer quired, no pets, 740·992·
storage building in back
Included. Cal (740)645· 22 1B.
yard Includes front porch
1750 and leave message . - - - - - - - - and bac~+ porch with sun·
'-, llt\lt l"
deck. Must see to appreci· Excellent OW Home, 3BR, 2 Twin Rivera Tower tor eld·
ate. Immediate possess1on. Bath, 1 acre on 775. Peace· erlyf disabled.
Caii(740)992·19B7
lui Neighborhood, outb'ulld· Now accepting applications
lngs, 15 minutes to Gal11po- for 1 br, all utilities paid
"Get Your Money's Worth• lis and Rio Grande . Phone HUD ·assisted, carpeted
at Coles MObile Homes, St. evenings (740)379·9465
apartment. rem Is 30% of
At 50 East of Athens. Deliv·
your adjusted Income call
.
,
.
BASEMENT
enes, set·ups, excavating, Mobile home for rent, no 304·675·6679 between 8· Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need 1988 Lincoln S1g, senes,
WATERPROOFING
foundations, sewage sys· pets, (740)992·5858
4:30 pm weekdays.EHO
Tuned? cau The Piano Or. runs, $400 080. (740)256· Unconditional liletime guar·
tems, driveways, healing
~· -·~
6476
antee. Local references tur·
740.446 .4525
and cooling along with parts
tU"I'U'.•l~u:.l,..,
::::.~------- nishet:l. Established 1975.
and service. You should ac·
FOR RENT
Hand Crafted, Cherry Gun 1995 Cactntac Deville Sedan Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
cept noth1ng lesa . . Since
Cabinet Glass Doors and 4dr., hunter green. E~~:cellent 0870, Rogers Basement
1967 we are Cole's Mobile
lock &amp; key.S300.00
Condition. Phone (304)675· Waterproofing,
Homes where you "Get 1 bedroom apartment, stove Jim Connolly
2800
Your Money's Worth."
&amp; refrigerator Included, ullllt· 74()..992·7838
Jacqueline's "Livln' Doll1" ==---~--- =::-:- --:---,-lea Included. (740)245·5859 Conur•tulltlonll You have Presenting Apple Valley 1996 Ford~ Contour V6 . C&amp;C General Home Mainte·
New 14x70 3 brl2blh . Only
won 2 free movie tickets to Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made Loaded. 62,500 Miles, nence- Painting, vinyl sld·
$999 down and only 1br. Furnished Apartment . the Spring Valley 7 Galllpo· babies &amp; tOddlers tor lhat Looks, Runs Great.Pam· lng, carpentry, doors, win·
$197,71 per month . Call $325. Mo. Includes water, lis. Cell the Sentinel for de· special someone, or make pared. One Owner. $4,300 dows, baths, mobile home
Karena (740)385·7671
.sewer. trash. $300 Security lalla. (740)992·2155)
your own, your way! Many 740·992·7888
repair and more. For tree
Deposit. Rei. Required . - - - - - - - - Nice Iota available tor up 1o (304)875·3042
Trallsr space lor rent $125 laces, eye colora, hair color 1996 Pontiac Sunlire QT 2. esUmate call Chel, 740·992·
$3500
OBO 6323.
16xBO mobile homea, $115 :.:..:.::.:.:..:.:.:.~---- per month, plus deposit. &amp; slyles, skin tones, and door
·
water Included, (740)992· 2 bedroom apartment · tor Prleat's ·Trailer Park. Water body styles to choose from. (740;256 .81 B9
Cloth1ng also available. ':'='==..
. =::...____
2167
rent In Syracuse, $200 de· Paid. Call (740)448·3844
Compare to Middleton and 1999 Monte Carlo Z34 ,
posit, $330 month rent
My .Twinn Cuddly Bablea coupe, black, cUstom steruo
BUSINFSS
which Includes Water. sewer
Call lor more Information. sys tem, leather intenor,
~ AND BUILDINGS • and 1rash, (740)378·6111
(740)448a8S40
power sunroof &amp; more OK ·.
tras. (740)379·2721
4 rooms '-nd bath, stove/ re· ::.;n~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
JET
For Leaaa· 2640 sq.lt.
frlgerator.
Utilities
paid,
HOtJSEHOW
building, nice pal't(lng lot, $400 monlh. 46 Olive
AERATION MOTORS
2002 Hyunctai12,500 miles,
Repaired, New &amp; Aebuill In 4·door, sUck shift. 1Oyr.
Corner ol 3rd &amp; Vme Street Street. (740)44B·3945
Gooos
In Gallipolis (740)448·8030
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 100,000 mile guarantee.
Applications being taken for
.
B00·537·9528.
(304)675·2315
JJu Brown
very nice 2 bedroom In Co:uch &amp; . Chair• Country
'
t
ttl
1
t Blue and Oak Trim. - - -- - - - - - 76 Dodge Aspen , runs
Congratulations! You have coun ry se ng yet c ose o (740)446·0946
NEW AND USED SfEEL good, 72k miles, Asking
won 2 free movie tickets town. Washer, Dryer, Stove, - - - - - - - - Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar $1300. Call (740)3BB·9914
to the Spring Valley 7 In Frig, Dishwasher provided.
,
:,:·:__ _ _ __
Galtlpolla. Call the Tribune Large Kitchen. Lots of cloa· For Sale : Recond•t lon~d For Concrete, Angle, Chan· ::af:::1e::.r.::4;:;Pm
.
lor details. (740)448·2342
at space. Total eleclrlc with washers, dryers and refnQ· nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
Central AIC. Garbage pick· erators. Thompsons Appll· For Drains Driveways &amp; 90 Chevy Lumma, 4 cyl,
Large Commercial Retail up and water provided. Ten- ance. 3407 Jackson Ave· Walkways. i.&amp;L Scrap Met· auto, $600; 95 Ford .Probe,
als Open Monday, Tuesday, been wrecked· f11cable ,
Office or Building on 1 to 5 ant pays electnc No pets. nue, (304)675·7388.
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam· $300. (740)38B·8029
acres lor sate, rent or lease. Non smokers only. $400 de·
Good Used Appliances, Re·
Some owner financing avail· posit,
$450
month, conditioned and Guaran· 4:30pm. Closed Thursday, 92 Olds Bravada, 4.3 Tech
able. In Rio Grande Brea. (740)446·9585 or (740)446·
&amp;
Sunday. Motor leather interior load·
teed · Washers, Dryers, Saturday
(740)245·5747
ed , riew tires, all 'wheel
2205. 1743
Centenary Rang~ts , and Refrigerators, ~44~7300 ·
Road, Gallipolis. Asl&lt; for Vir· Some star1 at $95. Skaggs Rainbow Sweeper like new drive,
$3200·
OBO .
ginla.,
Appliances, 76 VIne St., w/all
attachments. (740 )441 ·9317
BEAUTIFUL
APART- (740)448·739B
(304)675·1725
94 Corvette Coupe, white
Ml;l!TS
AT
BUDGET
PRIMollohan
Carpet,
202
Clark
Snowblower,
fits
Ranch
with red leather, LT1 ·motor,
1/2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake
stage
auto, loaded, CO/ AM/FM
CE'§ AT JACKSON ES· Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio. King.
2
45 .. · cassette,
w/12x60Traller$16,500.00
glass
top ,
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive {740)446·7444 1·87.7·830·
now $13,500.00
(740) 446·1759
S11 ,500, (740)6B2·7512
trom
$297.
to
.$383.
Walk
to
9162.
Free
Estimates,
Easy
1740 1247·1100
shop &amp; mov1es. Gall 740· fi nancing, 90 days same as Waterline Special: 3/~ 200 95 Dodge Neon, 4 door, 4
446·2568. Equal Housing cash. IJisaJ Master Card. PSI $21 00 Per 100, 1 200 cyli nder, 5 speed, runs
Patriot area , 20 wooded Opportunity.
Onve· a· litt le. save alot. .
PSI . $35.00 Per 100: All good
$1150
OBO.
acres, county water &amp; elec·
Brass Compression Fittings (740)441 ·0584
trlc, homesite. Borders Furnished 3 rooms + bath, Oak F~re Wood Cut &amp; Split In
Stock
Wayne National Forrest , ex· upstairs, clean , no . pets. 10' off Blacktop can load RON EVANS ENTERPRIS· 96 Chevy Lumina , PN, AC.
cellent hun ting , $38.000 Reference &amp; deposll re· anytime $30.00 per p1c1&lt; up ES Jackson. Ohio, 1·800· excellent shape, $3600
quired. (740)446· 1519
load (740)B4J.5426
,1740)379·9141
537.9528
I
1740)441 ·9389

I

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s

3

F

I

1

r

r

.

I

I

I

3

r

i

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=

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r.

It

.;:~

I ·

$14,900 Foreclosure! 4.BR .
4 bath home, won't 1asll
For listing call 1·800·719·
3001 Ext. Ft44
:-:--::--:-:----3br 2ba, kitchen, living
room w/11replace, 0.53
acres. Call (304)B7H089
call alter 5 or Leave mes·
sage .
asking $75,000.
OBO.

I

l.,t_MiscEL ANrousi i~i i i ·-ISE-plll.,r.IO-tttifliii!iiturosiiiSALiitE-r
Ri iOIANDi i

i

~;~:id'~:~~~~:~~~: :::.:nw~~~dtt:1!'~; :~~~~~~~~WJ

...
....

Mlllrlllllllll

Quality, Variety, Low Prices

--~Clll
llfll...n.

Grave Btanlcets S5.DO-Sl5.00
Wreaths SlO Er up
Silk Poinsettias 94¢ ea
Swags $5.00 Er up

liiiiiiiiiClll

111111111111
ee-.11111
Acllll
740.992·2222 or
740.446-1 018

Morning Star Road • CR

r

I

r'o

TH~~~ A

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TFN

~~~

Jim Ruark

Electric, Plumbing.

HighBl Dry

and Small Home
Malntenanc. JQba

' SeU·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

740-992-5232
Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171

LARRY SCHEY

750 East State Street Pho~e (740)593-667t
Athens, Ohio

Cuh C'ad«C &amp; Gravely

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds·start
6:30

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

1st Thursday of

every month

4359 Sl. Rl. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

Buy $5.00

(740) 446·1044

Bonanza Get

Monday-Friday 8-5PM • Saturday 8-2piTt

S FREE

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trill!
• Stump Grinding.
• Bucket T!'UCk

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

30 Yrs. Exp.

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jqnes

:z::n::n:u:::z:::::::x:
Light ~
4

Christmas

H

Installation,
M
Decorating.
~
Free Estimates ••

LangabergeriDresden

Bus Trip

Sat, November 30. 2002

S65.IJO. Space Limited
Deadline: Oct 20, 2002
Insured. . ~
Everyone receives a,
(740) 949-1701 ~
baske1!! ! CalC .·:Z::C:II:Z::Z:D:Il:.&amp;• Loa
Stac"'i
'e'oW;
7401..~oo&gt;•011110

. ,••7-t

Deed

Depoy'sAg Parts

"llo&amp;tmyshirt
in the stock
market!"

1000 S.R. 7 South
Coolville, OH

45723
1-740.667-0363

1 1

Shop early for the
holidays'
New Shipment
Farm Toys

&amp;

Construction Toys
All Brands

Best Service aJ
the Best Price

MILLS
FAMilY

·y.. "''r·~ I? •• ,Jilr.~r

CONSTRUCTION

Skin, Cui, Wrap
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

Budding over .10 yf!ars

CH
Dec .

7,

Footers. Foundation,
Add·Ons, New Homes,
Pole: Barns, Concrete:
_ t,loctri£,1'lo1t1bing

2002 9am-2pm

Racine United Methodist Church
Craft

&amp; Bake Sale

Lunch Avai lable

Saturday,
December 7
6:30
All packs $5.00 ea.
Starburst $1300
Middleport American Legion

OPEN HOUSE

SWttT
~u~s

Home Tour/Refreshments

LlASSifit~

Cellular

i

Weber's Christmas Trees

IN THe

30 • Racine, Ohio

1-740-949-2115

PLUmBIIIG

med
(340 773-5412
"lis Complaint and on marshaling of any &amp;13S. 26deg.09'W. REQUIRED
TO
Cell (304)·674-30B2
' saptember 18,. 2002 at liens, and the sale of 263.56 lee! the point ·ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 24th
!8 :30 a .m . filed lis said ·real estate, and ol beginning.
·Supplemental Comp. the proceeds of said
DAY OF JANUARY,
PRECISION DEER
:1n Case No. 02 CV 020 sale applied to the Reserving, however, 2003.
PROCESSING
•In llle Court or pay men I
or the coal and all min·
Skin, cut, wrap
' Common Pleas Meigs Pelllloner's Claim In erals underlying said BY: REIMER
&amp;
County, Ohio alleging the proper order ol 111 the above described LORBER CO., L.P.A.
All boneless cut
·that the new party priority, and lor such property together CONSECO FINANCE
740-949-0706
;Delendant(s), The other and further relief with the right to mine · SERVICING CORP.
740-949-7600
-Unknown
Heirs, as
Is
just . and the same without DEAN W. KANELLIS,
'Devisees, Legatees, equitable.
encumbrance 1o the Attorney at Law
:Administrators,
The
Defendant(s) surface and subJect Attorney lor Plalnllff· Executors
and named . above are to an eaaement lor a Petitioner
· Assigns ol HERBERT required to answer on sewage filter ditch ·P.O. Box 968
• L. MILLER, Deceaaed, or before the 24th day and leaching ditches Twinsburg, OH 44087
set ·
forth
and (330) 425-4201
· The Unknown Heirs, of January, 2003.
;Devlaees, Legatees, By: Reimer &amp; Lorber described In the
New Homes • Vinyl
•Administrators,
Co., LP.A.
Instrument bearing (11) 22, 29, (12) 8, 13,
:Exe.cutors
and peon W. Kanellll, dateofNov.26,1943, 20,27
Siding • New Garages
· Assigns ol FRANCES Attorney at Law
In Deed Book 151, - - - - - - - • Replacement
M. MILLER, Deceased Attorney lor Plaintiff· Page 178, and as
Public Notice
Windows • Rooting
. ' have or claim to have .Petitioner
shown on the· map · - - - - - - - an Interest In the real P.O. Box 968
attached to Vol. 'l 69,
COMMERCIAL and
estate
described Twinsburg, OH 44087 Page 3 83, Meigs.
RESIDENTIAL .
below:
(330) 425-4201
Dead
0 u n 1y
FREE ESTIMATES
Situated In Letart Aurora Loan Services · Recorda
townsh lp,
Meigs (11) 22, 29, (12) 6, 13,
•
740-992-7599
County, Ohio, com- 20, 27
Reference Deed:
menclng at a stake at
Volume 78, page 535,
the southwest corner
Public Notice
Meigs County Official
of Ed Sargent's land,
R!ICords.
lying East or the public road running from
J0 HN
D 0 E,
Auditor's Percel No.
Letart
Falla
to Unknown Spouae, II
18-00008.000
Pomeroy, Ohio; thenc'! any, ol FAYE AIDER
The Petitioner fur·
East with the south aka
FAYE ROSE tiler ellegee that by
line or Ed Sargent's AIKER wlloae lut reason ol default ol
land ·120 reel to a place of residence Ia the Delendant(s) the
stake; thence South known
11 1889 payment ora promls50 !eel to a stake; Lincoln Hill Road, oary nate, according
thence Weal 120 feet Pomeroy, OH 45789, to Its tenor, the conto the middle ol the but who · preaent ditions of concurrent
road; thence North place of residence Ia mortgege deed given
With the public road 50 unknown will take to eecure the payleal ' to the place ol nollce that on PJ!ay 8, ment olsald note and
beginning, containing 2002,
CONSECO conveying tho prem8,000 square feet, FINANCE SERVICING Ia. . described, have
being a part ol the CORP. lka GREEN been broken, and the
one-half ol the 100 TREE FINANCIAL same hal become
acre lot deeded by SERVICING
absolute.
Florence Miller and CORPORATION flied
The
Petitioner
othen to Edgar M . Its Complaint In Cese prays
thai
the
Chapman, a1 recorded J'lo. 02-CV.Q51 In the
December 15, 1896, Court ol Common
Vol "259·260, and Pleas Meigs County,
In Memory
being the r 61, Page Oh alleging, that the
same property can- Dofendant(s), JOHN
veyed by John Quillin DOE,
Unknown
and Florence Quillin, Spouse, If any, of
hll wile, to Harold FAYE AIDER a FAYE
Quillin and Ruloell ROSE. AIKER have or
Qulilln by deed dated claim to . have an
May
4 , 1936 , and Interest In the real
recorded In Book 142 eslate
described
Page
67
Melg~ below:
County
Records,
Situate In
the
and the Interest of VIllage of Pomeroy,
Russell Quillin therein County of Meigs and
having been conveyed State ol Ohio and
Ia Harold Quillin by baing known and
In Loving Memory
deed dated June 13, designated an a map
1936 and recorded In of Lincoln Heights
of Charles Bissell
Book 142, Page 90 , made by Breece and
on his birthday
Meigs County Deed Caiper, Registered
Recorda. SubJect to all Civil
Engineers,
Dec. 6.
legal
highways. Huntington, W. Va.
We
send
all our !,ave
Reference· Volume dated Oct. 17 • 1942•
·
and recorded In Plat
Daddy.
281, Page 413, Meigs Book3 Pages43and
County Deed Records.
•
l2
Your wife Margaret,
The Petitioner fur- 44 • as Lot No.
•
being more partlcuchildren and families
ther alleges that by 1 1 described as
reason or default of ~[ tws:

c

Gooa Selection Of Shrubs

J6S ElECTRIC li

BUILDERS InC.

1

Will pay .top dollar for prime Deluxe, 1 BR Town House,
land. New home builder. near Holzer, CIA, Economi·
(740)446·3093
cal gas heat, WID hookup,
$359.00
plus
utilities.
(740)446-2957

Defendant(I) n1med
above be required to
answer and sel up
their Interest In 11ld
real eotate or be lorever b1rred !rom
111ertlng the same,
lor loreclosuJe .ol
said mortgage, the
marshalling or . any
liens, and the sale ol
11ld real estate, and
the proceeds ol said
oale applied to the
payment Petitioner'•
Claim In the proper
order ol Ita priority,
end lor auch other
further relief aa Ia
Just and equitable.

S E's GREE H USE

-=-=-------

McClure's Restaurant now
hinng all 3 locations, lull or
part·tlme, pick up appllca·
tlon 81 locallon &amp; bring back
10:00am
between
&amp;
10:3oam, Monday thru Sa.!·
urclay.
·
NURSES
(ANI) $47.00
·.ro_,B;oto;~--,.1 per hOur, Columbus, OH.
1
All Unlls, FULL TIME
Absol ute Top Dollar: U.S. (B00)437·0348
4 year old ranch style hoUse
Sl]'ll!r. Gold Coins. Proof·
OWNER OPERATORS
w/4 acres. country setting.
set, , Diamonds, Gold
WANTED
3br. 2ba. 2050 sq. ft. + 2 car
A(n,gs.
U.S Currency, ·
auached garage. (304)B62·
fl,l S. Cain Shop, 151 Sec·
TRUCK DRIVERS
or:Jd Avenue, Gallipolis, 740· Longhaul Teams Welcome. 3820
Call (304 )675 "4005
Brick Ranch House on AT 2
Po,lnl Service XPress
N. 3br. 2ba . 1 car Anached
I \11'1 fl\\11 'lol
Truck Drlvert , Immediate garage. 16x32 lnground
' ' Ill IC I s
hire , claSs A COL required, pool. On 0.46 acres .
excellent pay, experience (304)675·8051
110
required . Earn up to c-c-c------ W
H
-•E•:IiiiJ'-•A•N'•IID-ttirl S1,000. per week.Call 304. Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2
· 675·4005
bath, garage, on river, 5
m•les south ol Gallipolis .
ATTN Po1nl Pleasant.
Waitress, Health Insurance, (740)441·6817
Postal pos1tions Clerks/car· paid vacation s, llexible ' - - ' - - - - -- - ri ers/sorters. No exp. re · hours. Apply in person Vii·
quired . Benefits. For exam, lage P1zza Inn 3004 Jack· New 2000 sq fl home, 10
min utes from
Hospital.
salary. and tes11ng tnlorma· son Ave. Point Pleasant
Complete above ground
11on oall (630)393·3032 EKt.
poor w1th porch, driveway
782 8am·8pm 7 days
and garage fou ndation.
- - - - - - - - 11.qo
BUSINESS
Pric e below appraisal.
TRAINING
(740)446·3584 .

.

6

Beginning at a
point In the north line
ol Lincoln Hill Road
atthe corner betwMn
Lola 12 &amp; 13, as
shown on oald map;
thence with the line
ol Lincoln Road,
north &amp;3 deg. 51
'west SO feet; thence
with the line.,._,
Iota 11 end 12, N. 26
deg. 09, E. 261.n lee!
to a point In .the S.
line ol North ·Street
South 40 deg. 10' E.
4.781881; thence con·
tlnulng with uld
otreet line S. 68 deg.
33' E. 45.8 feet;

BISSEll

i:ir;,:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,._,

Thta newapaper wilt not
knowingly accept
advartl..menta for real
MAINTENANCE· HEAVY
lltatt Which II In
EQU IPMENT· Sands H1ll " violation ar the law. Our
Coal Company is seeking
readera are hereby
experienced heavy equip·
Informed that all
ment maintenance worker.
dwalllnga advertllldln
E~eperienc~;t 10 diesel methll newapaper are
.chan1cs. weldmg. electrical
avaUabt. on an equal
troubleshootmg and air conopportunity btl. . .
ditioner service. Make appll~
cat1on at 38701 S.R. 160,
HI \I I ..., I \II
Hamden OhiO, Monday thru
Friday. Bam to 4:30pm; or ~:1:1!'"'-~~---.,
call (740)3B4·4211 1o hava
HQMD
an application mailed 10
FUR SALE
you. EEOC employer.

AU CTION ,
CAI STMAS
DEC 6TH &amp; 20TH. TOOLS,
NEW THI NGS , COMM .
BUILD ING, HARTFORD.
WI/A, HAROLD CLARK ,
SMOKING OUTSIDE
Tl--lANK YOU
·
:
WANTED

.
REAL
.w•ANIID•Esl:-A•TE_,...I..,r_...

Sleeper Sofa. Tweed Mult1 Maintenance free 3BA brick
Color 949·2661 Calls after ranch, 1 1/2 bath, ceramic,
4:00p .m.
oak &amp; carpeted flooring ,
mile from town off SA7,
WANJ'ED
large level lot, last house on
To Do
dead·end street, 4 car garage wllh large storage
area. 12x24 covered patio,
Diesel Engine Repair, Serv· 6~~:12 enclosed storage
icing and Overhaul. Cell I# area, 9K21 porch, new fur(740)645-2305; Home I# nace &amp; windows, cenlral air
(740)446· 1542 Ask lor Brian &amp; natural gas heat .. remod·
~led bath ceramic 111e fi?Or·
Georges Ponable Sawmill, 1ng, large concrete dnve,
dOn't haul your logs Ia the quiet
neighborhood.
mill just call304·675·1957. $139,000. (740)441·1417
alter 5pm.
HOUSEKEEPING Serv1ce
Available. For a tree consul· New House for sale· Debbie
.
IIA b
1
tahOn, pease
ca m er a1 Drive, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
(740)245·7801
S130,000. (740)245-9268 .
Mother at 2 will babysit in Call alter 5:30
niy home. Private pay or Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
link. (304)895·3277
tract, $500 down to qualllied
C 11 ( 7401446 , 570
Will lake care of the elderly buyers. a
·,J
in their home. Home nursing lor a quick sale.
home experience. (304)675· Land home packages. No
3264
'
payments while ·under con·
struction. Lillie or no
down payment required .
(740}446-3218
j10
B~
0PPOR1UNITY

l'!'lll"""--::-----.,1
~~te~w~~m~o~~~~iio~~?~

with Hazmat required. No

loading or unloading . Guar·

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

• Include Ph one Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run ' Days

~,r.~o-".a.·.··.w·A·N"-''ED-•1 1' ~ I L,r.·o--~•R•~•A•LE._.I L,t__
Why waiP Start meetmg
Oh1o s1ngles ton1ght. call toll
lree 1·800· 766·2623 ed
1621 .

Includes
Up To
.Over 15
Ads

• St,rt You r Ads With A Kevwo rd • 'Includ e Complet e
Descr ip t ion • I nch/de A Pri ce • Avoi d AbbrevJ~t l ons

70

Counselor· Ar outpatient al·
coho! ad other drug agency
is seeking a counsel~r 10
pr_ovide serv1ces 1n Jackson,
Ohio. Services include but
are lim1ted to: assessments,
individual and/or group
counseling. Caseload ·wifl
consist of juvenile and adult
clients. Bachelor's degree a
mus1. CCOC , LSW and
knowledge irr chemical de·
pendency prelerred Send
resume by December 16,
2002 to: FACTS 45 Olive
Street. Gallipolis, 'oH 45631
or FAX to (740)446·8014
EOE M/F/H
·
--------Desk Clerk needed. fulllime. Please apply at the
Budget ln_n, 260 Jacl&lt;son
P1ke. GallipOliS. No phone
calls please.

3aegister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Offtee !low&lt;-&amp;"
, HOW TO WRITE AN AD

Sentinel

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

the Delendanl(a) In the
p1yment ol 1 prom Issory note, according
to Its tenor, the condllions ol a concurrent
mortgage deed given
to secure the payment
ol said note and con·
veylng the premises
described, h1ve been
broken and the same
has become ebsolute.
The Petitioner prays
thai Ill~ Delendant(a)
named above be
required to anower
and set up their Inter•
estln said Jell estete
or be forever barred
from asserting the

Yll CIIMIII . . .

Rutland, OH

Dec. 15th

4-8 pm

Mason VFW
Good Time . Karaoke
Saturday Night
9-1

$45.00

In Loving Memory
Donnie Freeman
Feb. 25, I 970 Dec . 6, 200I
We 1emember your
smile, your laugh,
and the way you
brigh1en 1he
You were a husband,
daddy,
brother, son, grandson, nephew, and
friend . But now
are an angel woltoh··l
ing .over us and
paring a place for
when we all called
to come and join
you This year has
flown by but also
seems to have been
a lifetime. We love
and miss ·you,
know we will be
together again.
Tara, Michael,
Ashley. Jessica,
I
Mom, Dad, Nutty,
Rick, Judy, Ronnie,
Shari, Roy. Doug,
Joe, Shirley,
Tom,
.
I
Todd &amp; Brandon.

(7 40) 992·3320
Email: blldleOzaptlnk.eom

• Tonneue Cover •

Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories
I

'

I

\ll, 1t!L

I

'

IIIII(

'"II' I

I

I', I

H11~ 1

( 740 ) 992 -58 22

JUST launchedlll
. LOSE WEIGHT
NOWI Burns .FATI
BLOCKS Cravlngsl
BOOST Energyl
All Natural/Doctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie

740·992·7996
or visit websile:
www.horbondlot.com

Open 9am·!ipm ,

3164SSR325
Lanvsvllle, OH

hUilNtltl't Mbr.t lflf'ludtd

Ftilc $I IJITIIIJa, r -

Dump

Mmt pickup

(740) 446-1812

740-742-2076

Firewood
for Sale
BALL
LOGGING &amp;
FIREWOOD

~~

ra 111~ OOif1WS _..

Call Ill

As.t us abour our
St n •irt Plnns!

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Read
Racine, Ohio
45771
740.848-2217

Truck

Delivery Call

&amp;

Leave message

740-992-6142

LAMM'S

CONSTRUCTION

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00

PM

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decke, •NawHomel
•Clrngll ,.
Remodeling,
1•Cuu;lt 11 Remodal11g
Siding, and
' Stop &amp; Compare
Addition•
Owner:
FREE ESTIMATES
Terly Lamm
(7 40) 992-0739

7411-992-1671

7122/TFN

YOUNG'S

j

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Room Addftlone •
· Atmodt11ng
• • NIW Qarape
· • Electrlc11 I Plumbing
· ; Roofing l Gutterw
• VInyl Siding Ia P1lnttng
• Patio 1nd Porch Decka
Free Estimates
1 •

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
.

Pomtr'OY1Ohio

"
I

�Page ~ 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysenUnel.com

Friday, December 6, 2002

ALLEYOOP

•IIIDOIE
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

41 Bulrulh or
CllltiU

42 o.tla or Poe

1 Eloc. unit
4 C...bupr'o

.....
...

Woo

44 Allo

Domelllc

46 Chill

onlmol
lngndlent
10 Ttndlr pod 47 Llcenll
11 11111/cooe
51 Neutnt
dolly
color

YAKI 75
• Q 11 1.

Wnt
A U tl
Y4 J

F...nt
A JJ
YQ J U

• lt.kJJ
.. "151

•
•

...

coo"*"

7

.,

.....

13

eomn-

Mlbr.
15 AddhiOIIIII
16 MP'o pnty
17 Whit
Mlcbtlh did
1' A"""""",

A AKQ111

• J n

'

oo .money

Dealer: South

\'ulnffable!: East-West
S.utll

WHI

NertJII

Dtl

l o\
2•

Pau
Pass

!NT
Pus

Pus

~

Upecole
aport

14

14
11:10176

Y 10 I

21 ExomDinner
:zs Vote in ·

l"'.u

23

--.

2S Bullfight

yell

.

29 2001 In

George Foreman
said, "Sure the fight
was fi~ted. I fixed it
BARNEY
with a right hand."
Both sides are tryI'M BACK, AUNT
ing to fix a bridge
LOWEEZY. ME AN't-1-,-.,..
deal. Sometimes it is
llH"li"V FOUND A
a foregone concluNEW SJ.IORTCUT
sion: a heavyweight
against a bantam·
weight. But sometimes the outcome is
uncertain. Here,
Sourh is in two
spades. Who should
finish with a knockout?
North-South did
very well to stop so
low. Most pairs
would get higher, per. TOI&gt;AY IS TMe FI~ST DAY OF TM~
haps wnh North's re.bidding two no-trump
~~ST OF YOUf LifE, BUT SO viAS
over two spades.
East-West can take
YE. ST~~PAY, ANI&gt; t.OOIC ~Ovl YOU
the first seven tricks
MES.f~l&gt; TMAT lJP.
· against that contract.
West cashed his
two top diamonds,
East playing high-low
to .show a doobleton.
West
continued with
:THE BORN LOSER
· the diamond two,
r"'I
tl'"
,.
""" East ru.ffing with the
. [ S"-W Tfl.£. Cl.f.&amp;IC VO:.SIOO Of
~CffTI\(
NO,N0 1\fiE a'IE.WI\1-\r-\\Z.W&amp;OO! spade three. What
.,._ ffii:.ISTM/&gt;0 oroL"
Nf.WtR.I':tMN:.ES
next?
·
ON Tl/ Ll\:&gt;1 NIGI-\T ...
~ 1-\0L\) I\.
Reading West's
0
.CMIOLE
diamond two as a
0
suit-preference .signal
0
TO IT 1
for clubs, East led the
0
club seven. West won
with the ace and re0
turned his last dia0
mond. East ruffed
0
with the spade jack,
but South refused to
BIG NATE
be uppercut ·- he disr-~~-----...., carded his second
club. Declarer won
JlJ5T LET ME
HWE BOTH
the next trick, drew
HANDLE' THIS .
· HAVE BOYtrumps, and claimed. ·
FI'.IENDS.
It is often critical to
cash all side-suit winners before trying for
an uppercut. East
must cash the club
king before leading a
second club to West's
ace. Then, when East
ruffs the fourth dia·
PEANUTS
mond with the spade
jack, it effects a
'(00 DON'T ~1\VE TO liJORR'I'.
trump promotion to
defeat the contract
SNOOPV.. I'D NEVER SELL YOII ..
'I'OIJ. ANC1 I AREFRIENDS ...
Finally, notice that
if East buys the con,\
WE'Re SUDDIES .. IN FACT.
tract tn three clubs,
'(OU'RE TJ.IE BEST Tt.UN6
~AT'S EVER ~APPENED .
the defenders, to giv,
declarer aguess, must
TO ME...
,A&lt;~~~:2';
take their four majorsuit tricks, then lead
either a spade, which
- s ........ .
North ruffs with the
club jack, or a heart,
which South trumps
wirh the club queen.
But East shoulCI still '
makc the contract, finessing the other op- ·
ponent for the miss-

53 Mdoo.blors
55 RecHig

neighbor

field
59.Exec

2 Sheot..m
3 Trolly

Deadly

lnlkl
5 Snag

6 "Runaway
Bride"

CCHtar
7 Bullied
B Without

making a couple of ilf!ponant

YOUGWW

BRI(M1' ENO~.

YOU GET TO
GUII'!o THE

5\..f.IG-H

changes in the year ahead.
Each will have splendid pos·
sibilit'ics of unfolding · sutis-

. faclorily if you give them
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dee. 21) .. People in general

by Luis Campos
Today's clue: Y equals 0

HWYHVW

TWDHOKJSVW
VYJZCD\IRW,
0 D,

'0

'\'HE l\\1\\'\(j

nr-~

ROOf;\

BE~oR~

'(oll

, (:iJ lt\51DE

7

I

lew tc form four simple words.

1

LAYE L V

I I ·I

1·

12 1

IhJr;lro4-rl-.,..,..-lI
.

.

.

.

~~~;:;:~~~

I
I

HAL T E

I

.

I
I I I I e

II\

I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I.

-..:.::::!....:::.:::~.::.....-.....J_.l-...J........J-.l-...J...-L.-..1......J

SC::RAM·LETS ANSWERS
8eheai:J- Swift-

Folio- Domino· AMBITIONS

The new employee made small errors in his endeavors to prove he could do the job. The boss told him that,
"Most people would succeed in small things if they were
not troubled with great AMBITIONS."

ynu ca n't live ll(' 10 w hat is
expected or thmking that
you' re bette r· than the other
guy will ;tffcct yo ur hc havi1or.

PISCES (Feo. 20-March
20) .. Should you hnve lo dea l

with an annoying individual
today. don't hring up nny pre-

ways lhat will fulfill your

.

Strive to be a

pos!l ave thanker throughout ·
the entire day.

CA NCER (June 21-July 22)

-- A gossipy friend might at-

tempt to probe mto yo ~r business .todi.ly just to have so mcthi ng with which to make

ltuuble. S/he is a sk illful in·

vcstiguror, so don ' t ge t ca ught

off guard.
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) .. It
may not be uny one maj or issue thut gets you and your
mute 1;0ing at cuc:h other to-

.

Index
day , but rather small, trivial
ones that catch you off guard.
Keep your coola.'nd stay culm.

VIRGO (Aug: 23-Sept. 22)

-- You ure usually n cautious,
. detailed person, but t~ay you

could be both impnuent and
careless. Such behavi or does
not mix wel'l with jobs that
call for focus and concentration .

LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 23).

• Strong desires for some

form of personal. financial
g·ain~ could cause you to gam-

ble and lake chances on
things you normally wouldn't.
Don 't bet your bundle on any
long shots .
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Nobody can be all
things lo all people, so don't

cxh~tust
yourself trying .
Cham:es are tho.sc you try to
please the rri ost may npprcciate it the leas t because they
simply .don ' t \~unt to be

pleased.

taglineA stro-Graph's yearahead predic tio ns are avail ab le for all signs and make
cxcc llcm X!nas stock ing stuffers for the em ire family . MJ il

$2 and an SASE to Aslro·

Graph, c/o lhi s news paper,

P.O. llo~ 1·67. Wickliffe . .OH

44092 . Ue sure lo ~ wte your
desired zodiac ~.; i g n )&lt;.tug linc

·---·-- - ··t,-

-

a similar tree at'llnother hospital and decided to bring the
Staff. wliter
idea home to allow people to
·
· honor their loved ones.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
''These carl be dedicated not
- A wonderful wav to honor
someone is by dedicating a only the loved ones who are
Christmas tree ornament with dece·ased, but to honor those
who are still living. My grand·
his or her name attached to it children dedicated a bulb to
·at the Pleasant Valley Charles and I that means a lot
Hospital's "memory tree."
to us," said Fulks.
This is the first year thai the . The cost for dedicating the
Pleasartl Valley Hospital
Auxiliary has sponsored the ornament is only a dollar and
the money is used by the hos:
special memory tree.
Carolyn Fulks, a member of pital auxiliary. ·
·
rhe auxiliary, said that she and
The auxiliary utilizes the
her husband, Charles Fulks, money they earn from various
president of the mrxiliary, saw
Please see lribute, A3
BY iCAlDY BOYCE

'

BY KEVIN KELI.Y

_:'t:::P~L~E~TT~E~RS~IN;;;SQ=;UA~R~E~S;::~=~::;~;:::~::::;=~::;
~ UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
ANSWER

Memory tree a tribute
to living and dead ·

· News editor

PRINT NUMBERED

'1:1 FOR

'I

Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary is sponsoring a "memory
tree" at Pleasant Valley Hospital this year for people to
remember loved ones. Carolyn Fulks dedicated a Christmas
bulb jn memory of her parents , Hilda and Orville "Buck"
Sturgeon. (Kandy Boyce)

Local business
joins in Toys for
Tots campaig·n

"It's not easy to find just the
right glasses," the eye doctor told
5
1 16
I 'i the elderly man. "That's for sure,"
·
::::· agreed the old man," especially if
E 8 E L F E
~~~u're buying them for a-.----·
17
e
.Complete tho thutklo .quoted
_
_
.
.
.
by filling in the mining words
you develop from step No. 3 below.
1:::,

prop~csics ..

20-Fcb.
19) -- Proper self-esteem is
important today in dealing

: . GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
''I'm delighted to see Pomeroy in
Motorists in southern Ohio start·
second place. We've made a real
ed the holiday season with an
move up," said.John Musser, festival
:early gift - a 5-cent drop in the
chairman.
average price of unleaded, selfThis is th~ first year Pomeroy has
serve gasoline.
·
made the captains' list.
The current average_price for .
· the region, AAA's Weekly Fuel
Gauge reported, is $1.30, 19
cents more than a year ago.
In south~rn Ohio, . average
prices by community hovered
around that figure, Fuel Gauge's.
survey found.
The lowest average price was
in Logan and Washington Court
House at $1:21, followed by
Waverly at $1.26, Hillsboro,
Portsmouth and Chillicothe at
$1.28, Marietta at $1.29. Athens
and Gallipolis ar $1.35, Jackson
at $1.38, and Steubenville at
$1.39.
Fuel Gauge said thai Iraq's
compliance with United Nationsrequired weapons inspections
helped push the nationwide aver. age gas price down to $1.38. The
future outlook for prices is uncer·
tain, Fuel Gauge said, as crude
oil prices continued to fluctuate .
AAA cited concern over military action against Iraq and .
renewed labor unrest in
Venezuela's energy industry as
·reasons for the price instability.
These influences were credited · Delaney Clickenger, 3-month-old d(IUghter of Tim and Angela Clickenger of Gallipolis, gets her
with pushing the price of cru~e first visit with Santa Claus, a.k.a. Mike Stanley of Southside, W.Va., while First American Cash
oil to past $27 yer barrel this Advance Gallipolis branch manager Pam Earley helps out during the Toys for Tots drive the
week, ,. for th~,..,nrst time in a business held Flida~tb. the assi7~~n~~!~ihe. Marine Corps League. (Kevin Ke~, ~~~tos) , ·
month.
.
Industry analysts will be
watching Dec. 12 when OPEC
meets in Vienna to discuss production levels that have exceeded
agreed targets.
.
.
.

":~·;:~·::;:·;:·::~·'-­
r
AVI R L

if that 's what you intend. If
.

Pomeroy In
second place.
We've made a
real move up:'

POMEROY, Ohio - When the
American Sternwheel Association 's
newsletter came out this month,
Pomeroy'~ Stemwheel Ri verfest was
ranked No. 2 in Ohio and West
Virginia.
Judging was done bY stemwheel
captains who actually attended the
festivals and was based on festival
port ameniries and hospitaliry.
The captains ranked the Wheeling
Festival first ; Pomeroy, second;
Marietta, third ; and Charleston,
fourth, according to the newsletter,
edited by R.C. Heckert.

He noted that this year there were to accumulate a lot of money ; just
make enough to pay the expenses and
with more than 60 pleasure boars lin- have a lillie over to slart. lhe next
ing the more than 300 feet of new year."
docking along the parking lol wall.
"What we want to do is bring peoPlans are underway for !he 2003 ple in and make them happy," he said.
festival which again will be held on
As in the past three years. gifts of
the last weekend- in September.
money have been made to orgamzaMusser said the additional docking tions who contributed to the success
should be even more of an attraction of the festival and to other worthy
to boaters
with pleasure crafl projects.
because it now has utilities and light- . This year the Stern wheel commiting in place. It was opened before tee gave $1,000 to the Pomeroy Blues
beiQg completed for this year's fesri- and Jazz .Society, $500 to the "Brandi
val.
Thomas Scholarship Fund. and $250
The 2002 fesli val grossed more each . to the Pomeroy Fire
than $27 ,000, about $3,000 over Department , lhe Middleport Train
expenses, Musser reported.
Station restoration project, and to the
He emphasized that the goal is "not Meigs Marauder Band.
·
14 stemwheelers in for the festival

Veterans ·do their
part to help out

O four
~eorrange letters gf . ·the
.S&lt;rambled words bo·

bad.
GEMINI (May 21-Juoc 20)

understand s in advance thur you're going Dutch

"I'm delighted

News editor

'

pcrs~m

with associates. Thinking that

----·--·- -

WOlD
GAM I

-- If you Stilrt out ilnticipating
negative results in your operation today. you will act in

up the tab.
AQUARIUS (Jan.

LVJZZWPB."'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Musi.c expresses lhat which cannot
be said and on which It is impossible to be silent."
- VIctor Hugo

make everyone present feel

join you in some social activity today. make certain thi s

nor . you may be expei.:ted to

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uneasy and make you look

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
I&lt;i) .. If you call a fnend to

pick

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BY CHARISE HOEFLICH

· Staff report

Cetebrtty Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by tamous
people, past and present Each tener In the cipher stands for another.

If 1t is aired in public, it could

own ~pccdomcter and the
other on motnrists who are
sharing the roads with you .

t----.·

weapon

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"MCWF

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 16

Average.
~Sternwheel fest ranks second in newsletter
•
.
price
gas
to see
drops by
:: 5 cents

54 Scoundrel

lawn
35 Street

aoecrot

what s/he is up to. Help if
asked, but go no further.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ·· Should you have a dis·
agreement with anybody 10·
day. try to resolve it privately.

adequate time to work .

tend to be a bit careless today.

IS Tfl\51\lE '5AME FLORA W\.lo 6ET5
\lYSltRICAL 'M\£1'-l YdJ ~DR6ET l'o
. W\I&gt;E 'IOU!l. m i

33 Instant

9 Didn't keep

doesn't wunt anyone to know

When running around on errands. keep one eye on your

THE GRIZZWELLS
FLoRP, WP.,\oi!S t&gt;\'t. To ·-r-r\)R~G 11.\\'i&gt; Thu: .11'\To

Ingredient

hllp

son's part and embarrass
him/her in public. It won't be
wonh it.
· ARIES (March 21·April19)
., lt's best not to get into another friend's business Ieday.
because chances are your pal

In order to advance your
personal interests you may be

"1'1-ff (&gt;IANT RAPIOAC1'1Vf
MU'I'AN'I' RfPfl\..10 WHO
6AVfP CHRI6TMA6"

oummory

43 In good
23 Stir·fry pon
limo
24 - . Dome 45 Nllhvllle
light
gridder
25 Omahl'lll46 Mrs.
27 Piece
Trumon
29 Buolneoo 48 S-rd
dogs.
49 Brolllllng
31 Wonder
spell .
32 Sclp
50 "En garde"

1 Primote

vio~si.ll behavior on this per·

BY BERNICE BEOE 0sOL

NOW, &amp;AC.K 1'0
"ZORG.O... "

numblor

22 Con. low
enlorc.ro

•-

37 Hordenlng
40 Mlg,.,ory
llacko
41 Deely ·
42 Quick

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ho~

Saturday, Dec. 7, 2002

GARFIELD

mouth
18 Blrthdly

DOWN

0

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12 Popyruo
pion!
13 Roof ol1110

58 Melo Hori

39 Fuzzy

-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • Dec:ember 7, 1002

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

event

56 !)ceon Iller
57 Grsuy

4

&lt;&gt;kl

.Rome
.
· 30 Rtllluront
olflringa
34 Shlth36 C11frvoyonce
36 Mont.

. Bv PHIWP ALDER

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties

Potting
need

· 60 Wentflrot

20 honey

Fight fix.

mg,Job

OVCS holiday tourney action, B1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

2 Sections - 12 Paces

Calendars.
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B4"S
66
AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Making Christmas brighter
for area children is the goal
of numerous businesses and
orllanizations that launch toy
dnves every holiday season.
The same objective· is
sought this year by one local
business rhar hosred a
Christmas party Friday, with
the help of volunteers from
the Marine Corps League.
First American Cash
Advance, 19 Ohio River
Plaza, has joined. with the
company's nearly 300 ·other
stores across the nation as a
corporate sponsor of the U.S.
Marines Toys for · Tots
Foundation.
First American's local
office launched the toy and
fund drive for the needy Nov.
9, with a toy drop in place
~nd c~sh donations deposited
mto Its account at Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. Those
funds are transferred to First
American for distribution
just prior to Christmas.
The company. based in

·Truck overheats

D.J. Turley, standing, a member of Detachment 340 of the
Marine Corps League in Huntington , W.Va ., displays a present
to Santa Claus, at First American Cash Advance's Christmas
party Friday to help collect toys for needy children this
Christmas.
Cleveland, Tenn., has set a
collection goal of $25,000
nationally, and local First
American branch manager
Pam Earley said the firm is
only thousands of dollars
away from meeting that total.
"It's our first year with
Toys for Tots," Earley said,
adding that First American
has been involved with different community drives
over the years. "We've been
· doing pretly well with it. "

Firs! American opened its
local office in April 1999.
Due to its connection wit)l
the Marines, this Toys for
Tots campaign drew the
assistance · .of four members
of the Marine Corps
League's Detachment 340
from Huntington, W.Va.,
including member Bill
Hamilton of Bidwell.
Hamilton was joined at the

Gallipolis volunteer firefighters were called to Eastern
Avenue near the entrance to Wai·Mart at 2:10 p.m. Friday
on a report of a truck fire, but instead found one of the
department's former vehicles had overheated. The truck,
a :).970 International, was retired from the Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Department's fleet last summer and was
' purchased by Gallipolis City Commission President Gary
Fenderbosch. Fenderbosch had driven tne truck in a
Christmas parade Friday on the Gallipolis Developmental
Center grounds and was returning it to where he has It
parked when the engine overheated. (Kevin Kelly)

Please see Veterans, A3

Care Center
'We Tailor Our Services to Your Individual Needs"
Skilled Nursing Services • Short·Term Rehab Services
Solarium and Courtyard Areas
Physical, Occupational and Speech Therapy
Therapeutic Activities and Community Outings • Hospice Services
#-

Certified by Medicare/Medicaid • Private Pay Insurances
Long· Term and Short· Term Care Facility

(740) 446-5001
Located ·

west of. Holzer Medical Center on Jackson Pike

SENIOR CARE
/

Discover the Holzer D~tference

www.holzer.org

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