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                  <text>Raiders .to have home field advantage, 81

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 93

County to
.ask EPA
for f urth er
.ll
Ian dfI
testS
Seeking source
of leachate
contamination
BY BRIAN

J.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 2002

www.mydaily•entinel.com

Com·missioners levy 15°/o budget cuts
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

~overnments

.

Staff writer
POMEROY
Meigs
County · officeholders . will
face budget cuts of l5 percent when they receive their
2003 .
appropriations,
according
to
Cou nty
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport.
"Our revenue will be
down next year, and the cost
of funding mandates set
forth by the state and Feder·

al
gives us no
choice buJ to cut where we
can,"
Davenport
said
Thursday.
Commissioners expect a
$200,000 increase in th e
cost of mandates and other
fixed costs, and a $200,000
decrease in revenue to county general fund coffers, due
to the Joss of income from
Southern Ohio Coal Co., a
decline in sales tax revenue,
al)d falling interest on the
investment of inactive county funds.

c~mmissioners

Last year,
appropriated $3.66 million
into county department s for
operations, but expect to
appropriate only $3.46 mil·
lion in 2003.
Meanwhile, commission·
ers and budget commission
anticipate increases in the
cost of the annual state audit
of county finances. a cut in
the reimbursement rate for
public 'defender service s,
increases in the cos ts of
Workers Compensation and
liability insurance, and an

increase in the local share of
public assistance '
co·unty offi.cials also
expect a 30 percent increase
in employees· insurance
costs and an increase in
Public
Employees
Retir~ment System premiurns.
. Commissioners said every
officeholder should expect
the 15 percent cut in their
appropriations, including
Sheriff Ralph Tr~ssel l .
alt hough appropriations for
housing, . medical expenses

and food for prisoners will
not be affected . •
"The state m.andate s that
the commissioners assume .
r~spon sibi l jty for. the cost of
housing and otherwise car·
ing for prisoners in our custody," Davenport said. "The
appropriation ·for those
expenses wi ll not be subject
to a cut , although the funds
will be appropriated into
Tru ssell 's budget."
Davenport said the appropriations process should be
completed by Monday.

REED

Staff writer

00 OVER INVO
TIL DEC 31ST

· PT£RUISER

'03
PONTIAC VI BE GT
180 hp, 6 Speed Manual Transmission,

Touing Edidon • Loaded!

CD, Spoiler, PW, PL, Loaded!

SJJ,485

161nch aluminum wheels,
Sharp &amp; Sporty!

SJ6,947
·,

.-

)

WAS S/9,900

r.' ~ ·"'

'II·

Intrepid SE t't Seethe all new,

Invoice $18,756
~Ius$!

· 'DODGE RAM TRUCK

All Power Equipment

, ·~ . with the All N(w

~ 1 7, 968 . .

18,767
Less $2000 . REBATE
$1 000 Holiday Cash
CLOSEOUT

.

HEM! ENGINE

VENTURE VAN ·

$2 1 900
¥on Ne t Co st

f:.XItmlrd Modrl. P. floor.
Passt'!Jlf' Sldt

SILVERADO,."
f 'ull Size l'iclcup,

I

$16,499

00

$) 5

7 57

2002
GRANDAM

New Jeep Liberty's.
Wranglers
6 ·Grand Cherokees

was Sll.IIMI

READY FOR IMMEDIATE Vfl/VERY!!
New Dodge 6 Chrysler Mini Cans with

'UNHEARD OF REBATES§ DISCOUNTS!
WORRIED ABOUT CREDIT?
DON'T WORRY, BUY HAPPY!
.

•

I

t I

I •

I

' .

t

•

'

•

•

' • •

•

2001 PONTIAC
t

Every credit application will be accepted.
No Money down programs available.
.
Even if you've been turned down HERE before, the CREDIT DOCTOR
has a whole new list oliO new lenders with millions of dollars
on hand lor this big event! Never done before in this area!
We ·specialize in bankruptcy, Repo's, Divorce, and No Credit customers.

Don't let this opportunity pass you by! Rebuild your credit today.
Our loan process is hassle free with no embarrassing moments for you!
(J.866-4lOAN Dr)

All

1997DODGE

Wh~'t.dodl
was $17.100

nowS

STRATUS
Locally Owned
was: $5995

1011 ·

JIMMY SLE
miles

BRING

• Paycheck stubs or Proof of Income.

Local I Owner: 34K

• Home Phone Bill (Doe~ not have to be in your nl!me)
• Driver's license

SJ J ,840

2001 Volkswagen Beetle #6696A ..............................$16,900
1999 Ford Taurus 116783 ............................................ $5,500
1999 Dodge Neon #6738A ................................... .........$4,900

199!1 Mercury Mystique #62l2D ...................... ; ........ $4,500
1997 Pontiac Trans Am #~74tA ............... :................. $9,900
1994 Cadillac Sedan Deville #6664A ......................... $7,500. '
1987 Toyota SW 4X4 #640JA ..................................... $2,900
PRE - OWN~D TRUCKS ll&lt;SUV'S

2001 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT #6.llSA ........................ $13,500
2001 Dodge Ram 1500.12,000 miles #6554A ...........$11,500
2000 Jeep Wrangler 4X4 6 Cyl, Air #65378 ........... $12,500
1998 Dodge Durango 4X4 SLT #6J9Mo .................. $10,000
1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee #6656A ........................ :.$8,500
1993 Ford F·l50 ~66270 ........ .................................... $4,900
1994~ Ford Ranger #6748A ......................................... $2,800

,l

I'

Owner: Mike Northup .Genarat Manager: Pete Somerville
·
Finance: Alan Dural

.,_,...,.,.

s.tN THm: Neil hfflro Jtmlt Adlmeon; L.arey Pitrct,
.to. Tllll•, John .,_...,.,., John hnnttt, Rob Bright

252 Upper River Rood
1r.llllle SOUth of 1M lllv., lrlcttf, Qaflpollt, ONo

Sonoma Pickup - 27,000 Miles .................. ,....... $7,500
Sonoma Ext· V6, Auto, 23k mi., Showroom clean
was Sll,900 ........ NOW $9,980
'99 Suburban • 4X4, Rear A/C, 43K mi .............................
was Sll.900 ....... NOW 519,880
'98 Grand Am GT 4 Door - We "sold new''........... $4,880
'97 Buick Century- Local 1 owner........................... $5,480
'97 Slitum Station Wagon.................................... $4,3::10
'96 Olds Delta 88 · local seniors trade ................... $3,550
'94 Ford Taurus - Solid Transportation.................... Sl.880
'94. Dodge Shadow- Sporty!. .......... :.......................... $1,980
'93 Cadillac DeVIlle · Only 68k miles, Quality Condition
............................................................................................... $5,950
'S'l Ford F150 Pickup- 300 V6 Engine, Stand. Trans... S ::1,580
'93 LiiJcoln ToWII Car· Local 1 owner, nice! ......... $4,400
'91 Grand Prix 4 Dr. - Budget SpeciaL ................ ~.... S 890
'9::1 Ford Conversion Van · Super Clean - Expect the Best

.
SMITH BUICK PONTIAC
;aa··F;;d·r~~-~~··:·5;;;~-~d·g:;i. ~ri~&lt;fi~;~::::::::::::::::::. ':~~:

POMEROY- Meigs County
commissioners will ask . the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency to investigate the source
of ground water contamination
near the county 's abandoned
landfill. and will ask the EPA for
funds to address the problem.
The commissioners have met
periodically with EPA represen· ·
tatives since 1998, after the
agency first notified the county
of contaminated groundwater at
the site,. located just outside of
Pomeroy
in
Salisbury
· Township . . ·
The county also paid the engi·
neering finn of Burgess &amp; Niple
to conduct a feasibility study to
detennine how to address the
contamination problem. The
study was ordered after the EPA
issued a notice of violation to
the county and ordered the commissioners to address the issue
of contamination.
According to the EPA , infil·
tration of rain water and migration of ground water is producing a contaminated leachate
from the landfill, which in tum
is contaminating groundwater
neil~ th.e site - a co~Jtrrion pro b.
lem for abandoned \a,tJdfills.
When it was closed, the landfill was "capped," and planted
with trees, and while commissioners admit that steps must be
taken to repair the "cap" on the
abandoned landfill, they said
Thursday they suspect the cent·
.amination may not be coming
from the landfill itself, but from
Thomas Fork creek, whicH runs
through the landfill property.
The creek, said Commissioner
Jim Sheets, likely carries water
from abandoned coal mines, and
could be the source of.the coni·
amiriation detected by EPA
inspectors.
"The creek runs through the
property, and we've asked the
EPA :to test water from it on
either end of the landfill property," Sheets said.
·
"We' ve also asked that the
EPA detennine, once and fot all,
that the contamination is com·
ing from the landfill itself," he .
added. "We're not convinced
that the landfill is the only
source of contamination, an~e
want the agency to determine,.
· Please .see Landfill. Al

Index
1 Sections - !l P1ges

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A2
84-5
86

A2
A4
A3
A3

81-3
A2

•

Unable to buy a Powerball ticket in Ohio, Becky Cundiff is pur·
chasing one from Little Jotfn' s .Convenience store ,in Mason ,
W.Va., ·which did a brisk business selling tickets before the
final drawing Christmas Eve. Store clerk Emily Henry, above,
said people came. down from Columbus and from as far away
as New Hampshire to purchase tickets for the $315 million
jackpot. ·our line last week was wrapped around the store."
(J. Miles layton)
.&gt;

••

. Lo~allotte-=~~

dreamers think
charitably
BY J. MtlES lAYTON
Sentinel correspondent

Talking Books Coordinator Whitney Haptonstall demonstrates what a Talking Book
machine is. More than 60,900 titles are available for those patrons who like to hear
"The Sound of Music." (J . Miles Layton)

Talking books can't keep quiet
'

J. MILES LAYTON
Sentinel correspondent
BY

POMEROY
The
Talking Books program has
a lot of listeners in Meigs
County.
The Library of Congress,
· in cooperation with state
and local a.\\encies, is providing talkmg books for
people who are visually or
physically handicapped.
Whitney
Haptonstall,
Talking Book coordinator
for the Meigs County
Library, said it is easy for
someone to get one of the
talking book machines. ,
She said all someone who
is visually or physically
handicapped needs to do is
to apply at a library.
A request is then made to
the proper state agencies
and a machine is provided
' within a few short weeks.
The machine is a special·
ized but easy-to-use type of

tape recorder.
gram is able to provide a
Patrons will . get a cata- range of books similar to
Iogue of titles tWice a month that in any public library
as well.
collection. Books like ·
"It is definitely a good Colleen McCullough's ere·
thing because it enables our alive nonfiction account or
patrons who are visually the rise and fall of the
impaired to still enjoy read- Roman Republic are very
ing," Haptonstall said. ''The popular.
machine is very easy to
''The books this program
use."
offers are very nice and
According to the Library entertaining,"
said
of Congress, more than Haptonstall.
74,838 people are eligible ., The program also offers
for the free reading pro- recordings of 46 national
gram. Ohio is one of four magazines, such · as Good
states where· this campaign Housekeeping, National
is being .conducted..
Geographic,
People
The National Librdl)' ser, Weekly, Sports Illustrated
vice estimates that 349,000 and U.S. News and World
seniors are being served by Report.
the program. Haptonstall
Haptonsllill volunteered
said at least 28. people in for the program because the
Meigs County are taking program helps others. ·
advantage of the relatively
"Knowing that it helps,
new program.
and that it makes a differWith more than 60,000 ence is what made me
book tiiles available in decide to volunteer," she
recorded fonnats, the pro- said.

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Is Giving up Smoking
Your Nev1 Year's Resolution?
The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition is
here to help you accomplish your goal.

/

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer D~fference

..

www .holzer.org.

'86 Buick
. LeSabre .........................· .................................. S 888
..
1900 EASTER N AV E. GALliPOLIS •14G-2?B?

POMEROY - The third
largest lottery jackpot winner
in U.S . history is going to
start the new year off right.
The winning Powerball
ticket in the Christmas night
drawing is worth $3 14.9 million. The Powerball prize is
the largest ever won. with a
single ticket and the multistate lottery 's largest prize
ever.
While . the winning lottery
ticket has been claimed, that
didn 't stop a lot of people in
Meigs County from thinking
about how they would have
spent the winnings.
Meig s County Sheriff
Ralph Trussell said he would·
n't let the money go to his
head if he had won .
" I would put it in the bank."
he said. "I wouldn 't spend
anything · the first day. L
believe I would have sat back
and thought about what I
would do with it before I did
anything."
Trussell said he would be
generous with the winnings.
"I would see what good I
could do with the money," he
said. "You could help a whole
lot of people with that kind of
money."
Powerball must withhold
federal and state taxes from
each prize over $5,000. It
withholds 27 percent for fed-

era! 'taxes in addition to state
taxes . The winner has the
option taking a cash payout of
$170 million before taxes, or
collecting the entire jackpot
in 30 payments of nearly $11
million each over 29 years.
Jackpot winner and West
Virginia resident Andrew
Jackso n Whittaker Jr., opted
to take the lump sum of more
than $ Ill million after taxes.
Carolyn Kesterson, a loan
assistant at Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., said the momentary shock of winning would
keep her plans open.
: " I have no idea what I
would do," said the Pomeroy
resident. "I would probably
give a lot to charity, maybe
invest some in stocks. That's
a lot of money."
Prior to the many la~t
minute
purchases · of
Powerball tickets, the odds
for winning were 1. in
120,526,770.
Candy Burkhamer of
Middleport works at Swisher
and Lohse Pharmacy. After
paying off all her bills, she
would think of others.
" I would pay off all my
bills," Burkhamer said. "My
house pay ments would be
gone, but I wouldn't move. I
would al so give some to charity and tb my family."
Patty White of Pomeroy
thinks God deserves a share
Please see Lottery, A3

(740) 446·5940
.
.t

"I

I.

�PageA2

Ohio • Local

The Daily Sentinel

Man doesn't want to be
known as the 'fat trooper'

Pass the.peas to
the right if you're
eating family- style

Oh lo weather
Saturday, Dec. 28

DEAR ABBY: I was
always
taught that when a
•• • • •
meal is served "family style,"
the food is passed to the right.
However,
I have been unable
. 1eo~..-. 124''""" I
to find that statement in print.
Since I don't have Internet
access, what books on table
manners should I check? I've
examined several at the
ADVICE
library, but have been unable
· to find an answer.
Thanks. Abby. My family you w.ould be seeing a sex
and I enjoy your column. therap1st as an individual
ROSY JOHNSON, BRE- because this is a COUPLE's
MERTON, WASH.
·
problem, and the most comDEAR ROSY: I had to h1on form of treatment for it
check a number of etiquette is to help the husband and
Sum! Pl Cloudy Cloudy ,.._, T.....,.
....
""""' . Snow
"'
books to find your answer wife together.
and to my surprise, the subDEAR ABBY: My 8-yearject of eating "family style" old nephew, "Ralphie," gets
was included in onlY. one of up at 6:00 every morning. I
them: "The New Enuly Post's -. have two children, a 4-year·
BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS . slight chance of flurries after Etiquette."
old girl and a 15-month·old
She writes : "Often 'family boy. We are not early risers.
High pressure covering aU of midnight. Lows in the mid 20s.
When Ralphie sleeps over:
style' means the host or fiostthe region will have little Calm winds.
ess
serves
the
meat,
and
the
.
it's
usually because his parimpact in clearing the blanket
Saturday...Partly
cloudy.
of clouds due to the passage of Highs in the mid 40s. o.ther dishes are passed ents are working and there's
a weak trough aloft. The cloud s th
· d 5 15 h around.with each diner help- no school the next day, and
cover and snow cover will hold ou west wm s to mp · ing himself. These dishes are they need someone to watch
down daytime temperatures in
Saturday
night.. Partly passed
_counterclockwise. him. When he gets up, he \JSU·
the lower and mid 30s.
cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
Men do not offer the dish to ally wakes up my d.aughter,
the women on their right first, and they play loudly in her
Another weak disturbance
' Extended foi'OOISt:
will swing through the area
Sunday... Mostly
sunny. but help themselves when the room.
dish reaches them. They may
How should I handle this? I
Saturday afternoon and night. Highs in the lower 50s. · ·
That system will exit quickly
Sunday night.:Mostly clear. then, if they wish, hold the don't want to be a mean aunt,
dish while the woman next to and I don't want to refuse my
Sunday morning and allow for Lows in the upper 30s.
sister and brother-in- law
a building ridge of high pres·
Monday... Increasing cloudi- them serves herself."
I
hope
this
is
helpfuL
when they need a favor. sure into the Ohio Valley ness with a chance llf min from
DEAR ABBY: For 3 1/2 SLEEPLESS • IN NEW
Sunday and Monday.
·
late afternoon on. Highs in the
months,
I have been going JERSEY
Temperatures Sunday are mid 50s.
once
a
week
to a sex therapist
DEAR SLEEPLESS: At 8
expected to reach into the 40s
Tuesday...C:loudy with a
·who
has
been
trying
to
help
years
old, your nephew is old
via a mild southerly flow. The _chance of showers. Lows in the
me work out my physical and enough to understand that
approach · of a cold front .upper 30s and highs in the emotional sex problems.
you need quiet in your house
Monday will increase the flow upper 40s.
Lately,
my
husband,
until a certain hour. Explain
even more and push temperaN "1
"Danny,"
has
grown
suspithat
your family is on a dJffertures into the mid 40s to lower
ew ear's Day... A chance
50s. But then rain will initially of rain in the morning, other- cious about my whe.reabouts. ent schedule. Put out cereal
accompany the front.
wise partly cloudy. Lows in the Danny believes I am romanti· for him to eat if he is hungry
As temperatures fall Monday lower 30s and. highs in the mid cally mvol~ed with an intern I when he awakens in the
have been training at the morning, and be sure he
night and Tuesday, any precipi· 40s.
tation will change over to snow
Thursday...Cioudy. A chance office. I do not wish to reveal. . brings a book or a game he
through Tuesday.
of showers during the night. to him my true whereabouts can amuse himself with until
because I am afraid it may the day starts with your fami·
Weather forecast: ·
Lows in the upper 20s and affect his self-esteem and, in ly. Make it clear that you do
Tonight..Mostly cloudy. A highs in the mid 40s.
not want your daughter dis·
tum, our sex life. ·
Should I tell my husband turbed, nor do you want to be
the truth and risk him feeling awakened before a designated
inadequate,
or not tell him hour •· unless there is an
A DAY ON WALL STREET
and ~eopardize our relation- emergency. As long as he is
ship. . SEXLESS · IN not hungry or bored, I'm sure
Dec. 26, 2002
10,000
SEATTLE
your nephew will cooperate.
Dow
DEAR SEATTLE: You
jones
Dear" Abby is written by
should absolutely tell your
husband the truth about Abigail Van Buren, also
where you · have been going, known as Jeanne Phillips,
8,432.61
and why. He needs to know and was founded by her moth·
· the truth, because he needs to er, Pauline Phillips. Write
AocOfd high: 1t ,722.98
Pet. chi~
1Iom pmlaul: • 0.2
Jan. 14, 2000
Abby
at
be part of the solution to the Dear
problem. (Explain to him that www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
1,800 .
Dec. 26, 2002
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
this isn't his 'fault.")
Frankly, I am surprised that 90069.
1,400

Dear

Abby

0 ---~-·~·

Gradual wannu·p set for area

1,lOO
1,367.89
Pet c:t1ange

1Iom pnNiaus: • 0.3

SEP

OCT

Low
1,392.58 1,363.61
High

NOV

DEC

1,000

Record high: 5,048.82
Marc~

.

ment, he also would lose a
quarter of his pension, he said.
Hedrick said hes "appreciative for everybody's suppon
as weU as embarrassed this is
in the public limelight
·
"I've always been kind of
private. Certainly not how 1
want to be remembered as far
as my career goes. I. don't
want to be remembered as
fat troopc:r."
Hedrick, who been with the
patrol since 1977, is assigned
to the Massillon post inspecting commercial trucks to
make sure they follow safety
regulations.
He has tried unsuccessfully
for years to purge the pounds,
he said.
· Patrol spokesman Lt. Gary
Lewis said the weight standard was .needed to help
troopers perform their duties
and-live longer.

CANTON (AP) - A state
trooper facing suspension
without pay for being over·
weight says he's received a lot
of support since his case
became public.
Neil Hedrick, 45, said on
Thursday that co-workers and
friends have called expressing
support and health clubs have
offered to help. A man who
said he-is a Tae Bo instructor
offered free workout lessons.
Hedrick said none of the
reaction has been critical.
The State Highway Patrol
said that next week it will sus·
pend Hedrick for up to a year
because he weighs about 68
pounds more than the maxi·
mumlimit of 212 pounds for
someone his height and age.
He will have a year to shed the
pounds or be ftred.
·
Because he is about 15
months short of full retire·

-

I ....- l2t'l34' 1 •

me

Community Calendar
Saturday, Dec. 28
SYRACUSE - Daisy Girl
SCout Tea for Two, sponsored by
the Cadette Troop 1208, 2:30 to
4:30 p.m., for five year-old girls
and male guests. Games, crafts,
activities. $2.50 for registered
scouts, $9.50 kir noil-registered
girls. Information from Jerrena
Ebersbach at 992-7747 or
Shirley Cogar at 992·2668.

Public Meetings
Friday, Dec. 27.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, end of 'i"!ar mejlti"!);
7:30 p.m., home ·of clerk, Os1e
Follrod.
·
Saturday,Dec.28

PORTLAND - Year end
meeting of the Lebanon
Township Trustees, 2 p.m. a1 the
township building.

Monday, Dec. 30
MIDDLEPORT - OH·KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m., at Trolley
Monday, Dec. 30
Meeting, auction,
SYRACUSE
Sulton Station.
refreshments
follow.
Township Trustees year-end
meeting, 7:30 p.m., Syracuse ·
Village Hall. Organizational
meeting follows.
· Sunday, Dec.- 29
RUTLAND - Dixie Melody
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Trustees organization· Boys at Rutland Freewill Bapllsl
al meeting, 6:30 p.m., Pageville Church, 7 p.m. Pastor Paul Taylor
invHes the public.
Town Hall.

Church services ·. ·

Tuesday, Dec, 31
LONG BOTIOM- New
Yea(s Eve service, !:l to 12 p.m.
at the FaRh Full Gospel Church.

Concerts,
Shows
Friday, Dec. 27
MIDDLEPORT- Becoming a
Teen badge workshop, spon·
sored by Big Bend Girl Scout
Service Unit, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.,
Middleport Church of Chrlsl's
Family Life Center. $5 for regis·
tared girl soouta and $12 for non
.registered scouts. Information
from Jemma Ebersbach after 4
p.m., 992·7747.

RUTLAND - Watch night
service, Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. to midnight, wHh
. Norman raylor and Joe 'Gwinn
as speakers, music by !he choir,
Ramsburg Family and AHa and
Junior White.
Thuradly, Jan. 2
SHADE - Kevin Spencer and
Friend&amp; In goaj:Jsl concert, Shade
Un~ed Methodist Chu~~:h, 7 p.m.

Contrary to whit you may hava bean told, now Ia

ments &amp; Suppllas • but It lithe Hme to slop In
and compare our selection and price. Why pay
your daposll now when you can walt 1111 February
or Ma(ch to order? Plus, :(OU can cu.tom taylor
your order to suit your stylelns1eed of aiiUing for
what everyone has. Stop In today and sae.

Supporters of bridge seek
federal funds for overhaul

CINCINNATI (AP) - ject.
Business and political leaders · "There is no question that
in Kentucky and Ohio are there is a great need, and the
900 :
planning a push to secure situation is critical," said
federal funds they say are U.S. Rep. Ken Lucas, D·
aoo
needed to overhaul or to Kentucky, whose distri&lt;;.t
replace a double-decker include s the bridge. "It is a
SEP
889.66
ocr NOV DEC 700
bridge that is a major link in major chokepoint and a safe· .
RecOfd high: 1,527.46
High
LoW
Pet c:t1ange
the nation's interstate system. ty hazard as well."
-pnMaus • 0.3
March 24, 2000
903.89 887.-lll
The 39-year-old Brent
The
bridge,
which
Spence Bridge between the Kentucky owns and mainAP
states over the Ohio River · tains, is a major commercial
has 15 years of life left if route, handling as many as
nothing is done, according to 150,000 vehicles a day.
tran sportation
. studies.
The ·
Kentucky
Replacing the bridge for Transportation Cabinet plans
Rockwell - 20.60
Federal Mogul - .22
Interstates 71 and 75 could to start a 30-month study on
AEP- 27.96
USB -21.54
Rocky Boots - 5.20
Arch Coal- 21.70
cost more than a half-billion the bridge's f\lture next
Gannett - 72.07
Akzo - 31.32 ·
RD Shell - 44.12
dollars
and take 12 years or month. The federally-funded
AmTech/SBC - 28.05 General Bectrlc- 25.30 Sears - 23.1 0
more
to
complete.
study will consider options
GKNLV-3.55
Ashland Inc.- 28.19
Wai·Mart- 49.76
Ha~ey Davidson - 46.20
;AT&amp;T - 26.81
Kentucky and Ohio are fac- that include reinforcing the .
Wendy's - 27.73
Kmart- .27
·Bank One - 36.69
ing
tight budgets and do not bridge, banning heavy trucks
Worthington - 15.33
Kroger;_ 15:45
· BLI - 13.20
have
state funds for the pro- or replacing the bridge.
Ltd.- 13.81
: Bob Evans- 23.63
Daily stock reports are
. BorgWarner - 50.35
NSC- 19.78
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak HI F'nancial - 20.94 quotes o1 the previous
Champion - 2.75
Charmng Shops - 4.70 OVB - 20.66
day's transactions, pro·
City Holding- 28.88
BBT -37.42
vided by Smith Partners
Col-22.92
Peoplea- 24.15
at Advest Inc. of
DG -11.92
Pepsico- 42.41
Gallipolis.
DuPont- 42.60
Premier- 7.51
Open 9am-5pm
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255 Mill Street
Middleport, OH 45760
(740) 992-3345
Fax: (740) 992-3394

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Quality hand cut
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and our homemade
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Vaughans the right
choice for all your
grocery and
catering needs.

Best Service at
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~002 .

A loving mother and fri end.
she will be missed deeply by
all who knew her as she
touched the li ves of many.
She was born November
25 . 1925, •n Lewi ston.
Maine.
. She married Donald Brown
in Seplember 1944 , and
together . 1hey r~tire d to
Florida in 1984 until hi s
death in April 1986.
She later married Reidar
Lund and had several happy
years until his death in
November 2000. She loved
every1hing about Florida.
including her dog, Bambi.
She is survived by sisters
Mary Rose Holcomb and
Rita Goulet; son, Donald
Brown Jr. , an4 wife, Karen,
of Columbu s, Ohio: daugh·
ters, Brenda Clatworthy of
· Raleigh, North Carolina. and
Libby Dudding and her hus·
band, Dennis: of Athens,
Ohio: grandchildren. Chris
Brown and wife Cassie,
Stacey Smith and husband
Ric. Theresa Brown. Michele ·
· Austin and husband Stuart.
Michael
and
Matthew
Clatworthy, Jennifer .Dodson
and husband Jason, and
David and' Teresa Dudding;
and
great-grandchildren,
Dylan Smith, Cody Brown,
Caylin Cole, Brittany Austin,
Meagan Clatworthy, and
Aaron and Garren Dodson all will cherish her memory
forever. .
A memorial service took
place at St. Theresa' s
Catholic
Church
in
Belleville.
Family visitation will take
· place from 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, December 28,
2002, at the Fogleson~­
Tucker Funeral Home m
Mason , West Virginia, fol·
lowed by a funeral Mass at 7
p.m. at Sacred Heart _Catholic
Church in Pomeroy, Ohio.
In li eu of flowers, contribut_i\)nS in Rolande's name may
be made to St. Jude Hospital
or the charity of one's choice.
Cards may be sent to Brenda
Clatworthy, 3 100 Felbri gg
Drive,
Raleigh,
North
Carolina 27615 .

- Paid notice

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·'
(740) 992·3471

HAVE YOiJ PlACIDA ClASSifiED IAIIIYI

grandchildren. Tim and Terry
Mullins of D~xt e r. Gary Lee
Jr. and Theresa Queen. Scoll
and Danyana Queen. and Jeff
and Tammee Queen. all of
Cooh·ille. Tammy Quee n of
Pomeroy, and Mike and Tri sh
Quee n of Liltle Hoc ki ng; and
I0 great·grandchildren.
She is also survived by a
ste p-g randdaught er. Rose
Dunlap of Lora in: and other
lov ing family.
. In addition to her parent s.
she was preceded in death by
her husband, Harley L
Drummond Sr.; a grandson.
Mauhew: two bre thers.
Thomas and James DeWeese:
two sisters. Audrey McQuaid
and Ruby DeWeese: and a
dau ghter-in-law,
Fl ora
Drummond.
Services will be 1:30 p.m.
Sunday. December 29, 2002.
in the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland. with Larry
Drummond
officiating ..
Burial wi II be in Standish
Cemetery at Dexter. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Sat urday, December 28,
2002.
Grandsons will be pall bear·
ers.

- · Paid notice

Alberta L. .
Wagn~r

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No acreage limit
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Refinancing for exis~nglot loans
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Gateway Internet computers w/ monitor
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· Assortment of Inkjet and Laser printers
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Many home and car electronics on sale!
Excel/cut \'elel'tiou.fiJr last minute
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Man arrested
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mother and
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Deaths

Alfred ·
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740-259·5515
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Financial Services Officer

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I

I

•

Lottery

charitable wilh the winnings.
"1 am 50 years old. It is too
late in life 10 go out and spendfrom Page A1
ing money like lhat." he said.
"I would probably help out my
of the winnings.
kids and family members and
"I wm1ld give most of it to with the resl, I would try to
the church," she said as she help out as many people as
was making change for a Dr. possible. I would help out anyP~pper at Swisher and Lohse .
one less fortunate than I am."
Pomeroy Village .Council
More than 20 states partici·
member Victor Young III sup· pate in Powerball , including
ports a large family. If he .had West Virginia, Kentucky and
won. college tuition would Pennsylvania.
never be a problem.
Oh' d
··
.
1
. "First off. I got eight kids," p
~ ~shnot ~art~lpate m
he said. "I would use the ower ~ 1 • t oug .'t. oes parmoney to pay for their col· 11Clpate m MegaMdhons. The
lege."
next MegaMdhon drav-.:mg for
Like many people in Meigs the current esttrmt~d p~kpot
County; Young would be very of$ 10 m1lhon Willis tomght.
leachate containment.
"We complied with their
guidelines;· Sheets said ,
"and they're the ones who are
from Page A1
now complaining. We'll have
once a ~d for all, where the to end up dealing with the
contamination is coming problem, but it seems they
. should at least help us pay for
from. "
"We also plan to a&gt;k the the repairs, si nce they
EPA for fundin g to ad dress changed the regulations after
the work was compleled ' '
the problem ...
The 1998 Burges s &amp; Niple
According to Sheets, the
study
recommended the con·
agency oversaw the closing
struction
of a wetland
of the landfill in 1987, ahd
the county, at the time . com· leachate treatment system. at
plied with the agency's a cost of $100.000, but the
county has yet to take steps to
guidelines.
Since then, Sheets said, · construct the wetland or oth·
more stringe nt reg ulations erwi se address the contami·
'
ha ve been issued with res pect · nation .
A 1999 application for
to capping landfi lis. Jnd the
county is now req uired 10 gram funds for the system
comply with the more strin · was rejected, according to
ge nt re~ulations relating to Commi ssioner Jeff Thornton.

Landfill

HOLLYWOOD. Fla. (APJ
- A chemist connected 10 a
group that beli eves life on
E.n1h was crealed by extrater·
restrials claimed Friday to have
produced the world 's first
human clone. a baby gi rl
named Eve.
The 7-pound baby was born
Thursday.
said
Brigitte
Boi ssclier. head ofClonaid.the
company thai claimed success
in the project. She wouldn 't say
where the baby was born.
Even before the arlnouncem&lt;::n1 , other scienti sts expressed
doubt that her group cou ld
clone a human .
Boi sse lier. who spoke at a
· news conference. said the baby
is a clone of the 31-year..Qld
American ~~(Oman whQ donated
the DNA for the cloning ·
process, had the resulting
embryo implanted and then
. gestated the baby. If confimled.
thai would make the child an
exact genetic duplicate of her
mother. .
"It is very impcirtanl 10
. remember that we are tnlking
about a baby." she said. "'The
baby is very healthy. She is
fine. she doing fine. The parents are happy. I hope that you
remember them when you talk
about this baby, not like a mon·
ster. like some results of some·
thing 1hat is disgusting."
· . She sa id the mother also was
doing fine and had resorted to
cloning because her mate was
infertile.
Boisselier did not immcdi ~
ately present DNA evidence.
showing a ge netic match
betwe&lt;'n mother and daughter.
however. That .omission leaves
her claim scientifically unsupported.
· The group expects four more
).&gt;abies to be born in _the next
few weeks, another from North
America·, .one from Europe and
two from A&amp;ia. The European
. couple I S .lesb~an. -s he sa•~·
She sa1d the baby Will go
home Ill lhree days, and an
mdependem expert w1ll take
DNA samples from the baby to
prove she had been cloned .
Those test results are expected
within a week after the testing.
"You can still go back to
your office and treat me as a
fraud, " she said. "¥-ou havelone
week to do that."
Most scienti sts, already skeptical of Boisellier's ability 10
produce a human clone. will
probabl y demand to know
exactly how the DNA tesling
was done before they believe
the announcement.
Clonaid was founded in the ·
Bahamas in 1997 by Claude
Vorilhon, a former french journalist and leader of a group
called the Raelians. Vorilhon
and his followers claim alien s
vi siting hint in the 1970s
revealed they had created all
life on Earth through genelic
engi neering.

The P,aily Sentinel

WEEK!II

DAILY MATINEES BEGINNING

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Reade ~~o Services
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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ac·cur!lte. II you know of an error in a
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Street, Pomeroy, . Ohio. Second-

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News
Edi1or: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
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Is Coming
Sunday, January 5th

Scientist
group
claims to
have cloned•
a human

An F/ A-18 Hornet takes off on board the aircraft carrier
USS Constellation in the Gulf region Thursday ·Dec. 26.
( A~
.

PlAYING
THIS

Your Chance to WIN

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Hornet takes flight

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. ( AP) ·
- A Missouri. judge revoked
probation for a Southwest
Baptist Uni versity s1uden1 convicted of drunken dri ving in a
wreck that killed three students.
ordering him to serve six
months in jaiL
.
Tyler Wasmer was re-sentenced after Court Alternative
Sentencing Progmm official s
found community service as
outlined by Judge Henry
Westbrooke "is not viable."
Wasmer, 22, was originally
~ntenced Dec. 11 to 15 days in
Ja•l. supervised probation and
250 hours of community ser.
v1ce. Westbrooke suspended the
six monlhs maximum punishment for misdemeanor driving
while intoxical:d in the
Dec6111ber 2000 crash.
..
The judge had also wanted
Wasmer to act as a spokesman
for the dangers of dmn.ken driving and undemge drinking.
"He did not do anything to be
revoked," Wasmer's attorney
Dee· Wampler said Thursday. ·
'The judge was having trouble
getting the communit y service
worked out in the way that he
wanted."
Wampler, who was vacationing in Florida, said he would
seek a hearing with Westbrooke
after the first of the year.

LORD OF THE RINGS : THE
T,WO TOWERS (PG13)

181 State Rt. 728
Lucasville, Ohio 45648

1

Missouri
judge
revokes
student's
probation

LOGAN - Alberta l:.
Wagner, 75 , of Logan, passed '
away Tuesday, December 24,
2002, at her residence.
She was born June 30,
1927 in : Hartford, West ·
Virginia. She was the daugh·
ter of the late Albert and Lena
Theiss Chapman.
She is survived by her hus··
band, William Wagner; one
daughter, Brenda (Roger)
Arn1s of Logan ; . two great · ··
gra ndchildren; four brothers
and four sist ers: and several
ni ece s and nephews.
Serv ices were he ld at · 11
a.m. today, Frid ay, December
27, 2002, at Cardaras Funeral
Home in Loga n, with the
Rev. Karl Hartmann official·
in g. Interment will be at
Letart Falls Ce metery. in . TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - The
Meigs County. friends may ex-boyfriend of a 19-year-old
call one hour prior ·to the ser· woman was :J n·ested and
vice at the fun eral home.
charged with killing the young
Contributions may be made woman and her 2-month-old
to Hospice ' of Fairfield son, police said Friday.
County, 1111 East Main
James Coleman , 24, was
Lancaster, Ohio arrested
Street,
Thursday
and
43130.
,;charged with the murders of
- Paid notice Jessica Hine and her son,
· Devonte Desean Co leman ,
police said.
Hine 's body was found in
the woods near Ormond
Beach on Monday. Police
believe James Coleman stmn-.
gleil her Dec. 8, kept her body
in his apartment for five days,
then ki lled -her son.
The boy's body was found
MASON, W.Va. - Alfred Thursday in Coleman's apart·
M. Conard, 63, Mason , died ment, police said.
Wed nesday, Dec. 25, 2002,
Hine's mother, Shirley
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mason. 39, said . James
He was born July 3, ·1939 Co leman became angry in
in Glenwood, W.Va., son of October after a DNA test
the late Manley and de1ennin ed he was not
Margaret Exer Conard.
Devonte ·s father.
He is survived by hi s wife,
The mother and baby were
·sally Conard of Mebaine, N last seen al a homeless shelter
in Jacksonvi lle on Dec. 4, said
c.
Capt.
Dave Hud son of the
Private burial was conducted Thu rsday, Dec; 27, Volusia Comt(y Sher iff's
2002. at Kirkland Memorial Offic~ . Hin e had said she
Gardens in Point Pleasant. pl«nned 10 stay wilh ·frie nds in
Arrangement s we re by Daytona Beach, he said.
Mason said she had hot seen
Fogle song· Tucker Funeral
or
spoken wi th her daughter
Home, Ma son.
since mid-November.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA 7

446-7850

\

BELLEVIEW. Fla.
Rolande Brown . formall y of
Ne\1 Haven, West Virginia.
lost her bailie with lung -di sease on Fnday. December ~0 .

•WIN•

:; ··-·---

..

Rolande Brown

POMEROY - Josephine
Patricia (Jean) DeWeese
Drummond, 75, of East Main
Street, Pomeroy, formerly of
Dexter, · died Thursday.
· December 26, 2002, at her
re sidence .
She was born October 6,
1927, in Mason County, West
Virginia, daughter of the late
James Stanley and Fannie
Jane Runion DeWeese.
She was a homemaker and
a mother.
She is ~u rvi ved by fo ur
children. Wanda Mullins of
Dexter, Debbie (Jim) Queen
of Pomeroy, Harley L
· (B uster) Drummond of
Dex ter, and Ruth (Lee)
Queen of Coolville: two sis·
ters, Mickey Sc hoonover of
Wilkesville, and Geraldine
(Gene) McQuaid of Lorain;

t«1.! the time to order your GraduaHon An noun~

1,000

Organizational Meeting for
2003 to follow.

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Obituaries

Josephine
Drummond

10, 2000

Columbia Township Board of
Trustees will hold it's regular
Year End Meeting on
Monday, December
30th. at
.
the Columbia Fire Station.

Friday, December 27,2002

Friday, December 27,2002

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Friday, December 27,2002

AL60RE ... RE.\NVENTED

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
•

www.mydallysenllnel.com

Frtdlly, December 27, 2002

""""'*

Clr- a t - Qrtot
VonZondt ond Wan! Rd.

Puulr: l~~~a Miller
SU!ldoy Sdloqi- 10:30 Lm.

Den Dickerson

RJvti'V. .y

Hlalock Groft Chrisdu Clu•rch
Minitttt l..an'y Brown
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
SWldly School • I0:30 Lm.
Bible Study • 7 p.m.

Publisher
Bette Pearce

Charlene Hqeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

Ubr:r:ty Asotmbl7 at God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va .
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

L.•nen to the editor are 1\'e/come. Tlrev should be less than.
300 li'Oi"ds. All /euer.s are subject 10 editing and must be
sig ned tmd include address and telephone number. No
umigned lerrers ll'lll be published. Leiters should be itt good
taste. addressing issues, not personalities.
Tht• opinions e.rpressell in the column belm~· are the con·" '" sus of rlre Ohio Valin Publishing Co. editorial board,

0

unli•.u othi:-nrise nmed.

r---.....

•

Commitment to publicizing
DUI dangers warranted·

SAINTS . AND SINNERS

Shedding new l~ht on .an old Biblical mystery

• Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune, on Mothers
Against DrunkDrivers: Drunken drivers are far less
of a menace than they were a couple of decades ago,
but they're still responsible for an average of 300plus traffic deaths every week. That number, sadly,
is creeping upward.
Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, an advocacy
group that helped draw the nation's attention to the
problem 20 years ago, recently announced plans to
revive its public-awareness campaign of the 1980s
and push for new measures aimed at reducing drinking and driving.
.
.
The renewed attention is warranted. The number
of alcohol-related deaths on U.S. roads rose last year
to 17.448, up almost 900 from the previous year. It
was the second increase in a row, ending a steady
decline in drunken-driving . deaths that began in
1986.
.
MADD officials fear that many Americans have
g·rown complacent and shrug off the risks of drinking and driving. "A lot of l?eople think the problem
is so lved," says MADD president Wendy Hamilton.
Besides a new . adv\'!rtising campaign, the group
plans to lobby for an increase in the federal gas tax,
to help pay for safety programs, and an increase in
the federal excise tax on beer. Both measures are
worthy of study.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 &amp;.IIL, 7 p.m.

Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worship - lla.m .• 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
ML Ulllon Baptist
P!Utor : David Wiseman
Sundliy School-9:45a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Churth
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.

·

Keno Church of Cbrht

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pflsror-Jeffrty Wallact
Ist alld 3rd Sunday

Bearwallow Rld&amp;e Chun:b or Chri!lt
Pasror:Bruce Terry
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 P -~­
Wedtlesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Zion Church ol Cluist
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - \0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services - 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Church ol Christ

Instrumental
Worship Set:Vice -.9 a.m.
Commuflion • 10 a.m.
S unda~ School - 10:15 a.m.
· Youth- S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Stud~ Wednesday 7 pm
'Bradbury Church ot Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon
39S58 Bradbury Road, Middlepon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Charth of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bncllont Cburdr ol Christ
Gomer or St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisler: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunda~ School-9:30a.m . .
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesda~ Services -7:00p.m.

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt 1
Pastor: Rev. Jame• R. Ac~e. Sr.
sUnday Unified Service
WoAblp • I0:30a.m.. 6 p.m.
WcdneJday Servicea·· 1 p.m.

Vl&lt;1011' Bapllot lndopendent
525 N. 2nd Sl, Middleport
Putor: James E. Keesee
. Worthip • IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Faith Bapt11t Churt:b
Railroad St .. Mason
Sunday School~ IO·a.m:
Worship· II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

-BY THE .ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is FridaYc~ec 27, the 361 st day of 2002. There are
four days left in the year.
·
·
Today \ Highlight in History:
On Dec. 27, 1927, the musical play "Show Boat," with
music by Jerome Kern and libretto by Oscar Hammerstein II ,
opened at the Ziegfeld Theater in New York.
On this date :
In 1822. scientist Louis Pasteur was born in Dole, France.
In 1831, n·aturalist Charles Darwin set out on a voyage to
·pERK I N
VIEW .
the Pacific aboard the HMs· Beagle. (Darwin's discoveries
during the trip helped to form the basis of his theori.es on evolution.)
In 1900, militant prohibitionist Carry A. Nation carried out
her fit·st. publi c smashing of a bar, at the Carey Hotel in
Wichita, Kan.
BY JOSEPH PERKINS
Science, revealed for the first time that . ders, according to the study, which
In 1932, Radio City Music Hall opened in New York.
John Gearhart finally spoke the truth embryonic stem ce,lls are unstable; that appeared in the journal Nature.
In 1945, 28 nations signed an agreement creating the World
last month. Four years after he was first · they are unsuitable for developing treat- . The University of Minnesota
Bank.
celebrated in the medical science com- ments for Parkins_on's and various other announced this week th.at Athersys Inc ..
In 1947. the children's television program "Howdy Doody"
munity for his pioneering work in human degenerative maladtes.
.
a Cleveland biotechnology firm , has
made its debut on NBC.
extracting
stem
cells
from
aborted
Yet,
~uch
of
_the
medtcal
sctence
been granted the rights to commercialIn 1968, Apollo 8 and its three astronauts made a safe,
fetuses,
the
Johns
Hopkins
University
commumty
continues
to.
move
full
ize the adult stem cell research by
nighttime splashdown in the Pacific.
researcher conceded, "I am not sure speed ahea~ with .embry?mc stem cell Verfaillie's team. Athersys has raised
In 1970, "1-!ello, Dolly I" closed on Broadway after a run of
these
cells are going to be used in ther· research. Ltke Irvmg We1ss~a~, dtrec- $85 million in investment capital - an
2,844 performances.
apies."
tor . of Stanford Umverstty s. new unheard of sum these days for biotech
In 1979. Soviet forces seized control of Afghanistan.
Dr. Gearhan's startling, and grossly Institute ~or Cancer/Stem Cell Bwlogy companies - to develop therapies
President 1-!afizullah Amin, who was overthrown and executunderreported, admission came during a &lt;Jnd Me~1cme. ~e recently annou~ced based on that breakthrough in medical
ed. was replaced by Babrak Karma!.
conference
hosted by the National· that the mstltutemtends to clone vtable science.
In 1985. Palestinian guerrillas opened fire inside the Rome
Human Genome Research Institute. He human embryos to create a suppl&gt;: of
Meanwhile, investors that have bet
and Vienna airports; a total of 20 people were killed, includ·exposed
the
fiction
.quite
unintenstem
~ells
on
whtch
to
conduct
me~hcal
small
fortunes on the supposed promise
:ing five of the· anackers, who were slain by police and securi·
tionally,
of
course
that
embryonic
expenments.
He
made_
tt
sound
as
tf.
he
of
embryonic
stetn cell research are
: ty personnel.
stem cells eventually will be used to and ~IS team of sctentists w1ll be domg now wondering whether the •ve been
. Ten years ago: The United States shot down an Iraqi fighter
cure
such diseases as cancer, diabetes, nothmg any more offenstve than, say, du ed b the m d' 1 · y
:jet during what the Pentagon described as a confrontation
Y
e tea SCience comm~Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Indeed, breeding roe in a fish tank and harvest- . P
' between a pai r of Iraqi warplanes and U.S. F-16 jets in U.N.1111 ~· For researchers hke Stanfo~d ~
the quietly kept secret in the medical ing their eggs for caviar.
: restricted ai rspace over southern Iraq.
science community is that embryonic
What makes embryonic stem cell Wetssman and, until recently, Hopkms
Five years ago: Billy Wright, Northern Ireland's tnost noto·
stem cells are not nearly as promising as research all the more · unconscionable, G~arhart, have mst.sted, as an article of
:ri ous Protestant militant, was shot to deatti by three members
previously advertised by Gearhart and beyond the morally and ethically repug- fatth , that embryomc ste!"l cells ~old the
·of the Iri sh National Liberation Army at the Maze Prison outother researchers.
nant means by which stem cells are ke~ to effecttve::!Y treating mtlho_ns of
:side Belfast.
Just last month, in fact , a large s_cien-· extracted or'created is that there is a far patients and savmg thousands of hves.
: One year ago: U.S. officials announced that Taliban and aitific study of transplanted fetal cells, more promising alternative - adult
A number of studies c~sts doubt upon
'Qaida pri soners would be held at the U.S. naval base at
gleaned from aborted fetuses, found no stem cell research.
the e::fftca~y of embryomc stem cells in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. President Bush extended permanent
benefit for patients suffering from
Dr. Catherine Verfaillie and a team of treat_mg d1sease and many of those same
.rionnal trade status -to China. India and Pakistan engaged in
Parkinson's disease. The study also researchers . at the University of studtes con.firrn_ed the dangerous ~ide
diplomatic tit-for-tat, ordering half of each other's embassy
revealed that the treatments caused Minnesota's Stem Cell Institute .pub- effects of treatmg patients wtth fetal
·staffs sent home and banning overflights by each other's · · harmful side effects, according to C. lished a study back in July showing that stem cells. The outspoken proponents
; nat-iona l airlines.
Warren Olanow, a neuroscientist at adult stem cells can be transformed into of embryontc stem cell research have
Today's Birthdays: Former U.S. Senator James A. McClure,
Mount Sinai School of Medicine in virtually any kind of cell. Including the been guilty _of hype, if not hoax. They
R-ldaho, is 78. Rockabill y musician Scotty Moore is 71. Actor
New York, who led the research. .
specialized cells found in the brain, reti- bear culpab1hty for one of medical sci·John Amos is 61. ABC News correspondent Cok ie Roberts is
Meanwhile a study last year by the na, lung, heart, muscle, liver, intestine, ence's greatest atrocities: the needless
·59. Singer Tracy Nelson is 58. Actor Gerard Depardieu is 54.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology kidney, spleen, marrow and skin . Those desecration of aborted fetuses, the need:
. Si nger-songwriter Karla Bon off i&gt; 50. Rock musician David
and the Whitehead Institute for adult cells, which can be obtained from less destruction of embryos.
: Knoptler IDire Straits) is 50. Broadcast journalist Arthur Kent
(Joseph P erkins is a columnist for
Biomedical Research found that embry- a patient's own bone marrow, actually
· i ~ 49. Actress Mary am D' Abo is 42. Country musician Jeff
onic stem cells used in cloning mice may be used, at some point, to effec- The San .Diego Unioi/-Tribtme and can
Bt')ant is .m Mu sician ·Man Slocum (Six Pence None The
often result in severe abnormalities. The tively treat diabetes, muscular dystro- be ·
reached
at
Richct • is 30. Actor Wihon Cruz is 29. SingerOiu is 29.
. re search, published in the journal phy, Parkinson's and inherited disor- Joseph. Perkins @ Union Trib .cvtn)

S'

Here~

the bad science behind stem·cell research

Foml Run Bapdst
Pastor : Arius Hurt
,Sunday School - 10 a.m,
Worship - II a.m.
ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: ReV. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:45 a.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:45 ll.riJ.
Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Puslor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Cburth
R11vcnswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchooliO amMorning worship II am Evening · 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Community C'uftb
Pasmr. Stew Tomek.
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday ~rvi~7 p.m.

Pastor: Guy Jackson
Sunday _school - 9:30a.m
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
WedllCSday p111yer service- 1 p.m.

Harri50nville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship· II' a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Evangelist Mike Moore
Suftday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • to a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

•·

Sunda~

Laum CIUf Fl'ft Methodist Chun:h
Rev. Les Stnmdt and Myra L. Strandt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.ni.
Wedne*y Service - 7:00p.m.

I . attl'r - Da~ Saints
The Cburth or Jesus
Chri1t or Llltter-Day.Salnts

Chun;h ul Chrtot
Intersection 7 and ll-4 W
Evangelist Dennis Sarsenl
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30 a.m.
Worship: I0:30 a.m, and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

( ·hrislian l uion
Hartford Church or Chrl!it in
Chrl5tlan Union
Hartron.l, W.Va.
Pastor:IJavid Greer
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a:m.,-7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - ?:00 p.m.

Sunday·School\0:20-11 a.m.
Reller Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00

noon
Sacmment Service 9-l 0: IS a.m . .
Homemaking mo::ting, lsi Thurs. ·1 p.m.

St. John Luthenm «:;burch
Pine Gf'O\·e
Won~hip ·9:00-a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

Our SnJour Lutheran Chureh
Walnut and Henry St1., Ravenswood;
W.Va.
Pa11or: David Ruuell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

SL Paul Lulbenn Chur&lt;h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Sunday School- 9:4.5 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

l'nill'd

.Worship ·. 9:30a.m. (1st·&amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive UnJted Methodist
OfT 124 hehind Wilkesville
Pas1or: ReV. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Th ursday Services - 7 p.m.

Melg5 Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pasmr: Jane Beanie
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m .. 6:~0 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd., Rocine
Paslor: James Sanerfield
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Chester
Pa5tor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - lO o.m.
Thursday Service~- 7 p.m.

Rutland Churth ol God
Pw;tor: RomHeath
Sunday Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Syr~cuse

First Churth of God
Apple and Second Set.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- I0 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

AGENCIES Inc.

Insurance
Products+
Financial
Services

Bill

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992·3785

QI:eaforb
l\eal
'!estate
•

216 E. Secon~ Pomeroy
740-992-3325
Marketing Property
Since 1971

?"'*e"'al '::lltJ-Me
174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
H. Anderson
0/rrHJtor

Fax:

~ll'llwdisl

GrabiQJI United Methodist

or (;od

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

Wednesday Sen.•ices - 10 a.m.

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bash an· Rds .
Racine, Ohiq
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m:

Joppa
Pas10 r: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Lone Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
ReedsviUe

..
.......

.fiiii,Jer ,11Wral.ome

---··

t•

··--··
•••••m....
. . . l . . .. . .

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy
"Let vour lighr so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in Heaven."

Matthew 5:16

Salem Community Chun:h
Lieving Road . West Columbia. W. \In
Pasto r: Clyde Ferre ll
Sunday Schnol -9 :30 a m

Sunda)fevening service 6 pm
Wei.lnesdf!Y service 7 pm
Hobson Christian Fellowship Ch un:b
Pstor: f.lcr~c h e l White
Sunday School- 10 am
Sunday Chmch scrvict' • 6J(J pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restora tinn C~ri stian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens
Paswr: lonnie Coots
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
Wednesday : 7 pm

The B.rlleven' Fellowship Minlstr)'
New Lime Rd.; Ruthmd
Pastor: Re v. Mllfgaret J. Rob i n ~ n
Services: Wednesday. 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Worship - 9 a..m.

'-: ·

Rt.3 38. AntiqUit y
- Pastor: Jesse Morris
Servit:es: S&lt;Jturda y 2:00p.m._

Faith Full Gospel Churdt
long Bnnom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday· fellowship serv ice 7 p.m.

Bt-thany
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School - I 0 a. m.

St.Rt.l60, 446-6247or446-74H6

l .ulhl'ran

D,.ler Cbur&lt;h or Chrbl
P11tor: BUI Eshelman
Sunday schoo\9:30' a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

( 'hurl'h

School-9:30a.m.

Worship- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday B·ible Study and Youth- 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Chun:h or lhe Living Savior

Abundant Grace R.F.I.
923 S. Third .St.. Middlepon
• Pustor Teresa Davi .~
Sunday service. 10 a.m.
Wedne sday sei-vkc, 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School - 10:15a.m. ·
Worship - 9:15 _a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowvilk
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Michael

Rl!'joicing Lir~ Churc:h
500 N. 2nd Me., Middlepon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship-- 10:00 am
Wedne&lt;oday Services- 7 p.m.

"Full-Gospel Church"
PasLOJS John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-S017
S.:rvicc time: Sunda)' 10: ~0 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Rutland
Surlday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - l0:30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 1 p.m.

,Wesleyln Blblt HoliDHS Chun:h
1S Pearl St .. Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Co:t
Sunday Wo~hip - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

•
lleedlvllle Cburclr or Chrbl
Pa8tor: PnlliP. ,Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. '
Wonhlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednerday, 6:30p.m.

Rock Springs
P-.tstor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile off Rt . 325
Pastor. Rev. O' Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m.
WedQCsday ~rvice- 7:30p.m.

Slivtrsville Community Chun:h
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Service~- IQ:OO a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday - 7:00 p.m.

B.rthel ~orshlp Centrr
Chester School
Pa~tor: Roh Barber
As$iStant Pas1or: Karen Da\· i~
Sunday Worship: 10 am
Clinun l 'ubernacle Church
Eve ning Worship: 6 pm
Chrwn. W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunda~
Sd1nol - 10 ~ . m .
Wedne sday: Pow~:r in Prayer
· Worship · 7 p.m.
and Bibl e Study - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Ash SlrHt Church
Ash St., Middlepon - Pastor: Glenn Rowe
New Lire Vktor,· Cen1tr
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m
3773
Georges
Cn:ek. Road. Gallipolis. OH
Suntlay Service · 7:00p.m.
r-u ~ tor: Hill Staten
Wednesday SCI'YlCC- 7:00p.m.
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Agape Lirt CtP:nltr

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
-Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m .

Leading Crttk Rd .• RuLland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

CaiTary Bible: Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship !0:30a.m., 7:30.p.m.
Wedne~y sc:r--ice - 7:30p.m.

Community or Christ
PonJand-Raci ne Rd .
Past-or: Michael Duhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedne:oday Services · 7:00p.m

Pearl Chapel
Sunday &amp;:hoOI - 9 a. m.
Worship - I 0 a.m.

RO!Jt or Sharon Holiness Church

Fallh Fellowship CJ"\\Qde (or Christ
Pastor: Re,·. Frank l~n Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Ollll' r (' h u rrlu:s

1\1inenvllle
Pastor: Bob Rob inson
Sunday School- 9 a.m .
Worship - 10 a.m.

Colvory Pilgrim Chapel

Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study-7 :00p.m.

Portland First Chun:h or tht Nazarene
Pastor: Willi11m Justis
Sunday Schooi -\O:OO.a.m.
Morning Worship · 10:45 a.m
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Heath ( Middleport~
Pastor..Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- II :00 a.m:

Danville Hollnas Chun:b .
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.

Sunda ~ School - 9·l0 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6·30 p.m.
Wedneltda)' Servic~s · 7 p.m.

Foruc Run ·
Pas1or: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 'a.m.

Main Strttt, Rulland

Fairview 81~ Church
Letart. W.Va. Rt. I

Rutlaad Church ot the Nar.a~M
Pastor: Re v. Samuel W Bas ye

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

llolim•o,o,

While 's Cbopel w...., ..
Cooh·iUc: Road
Pistor: Re v. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30'a.m.
Wedneiday Sef'\•ice - 1 p.m,

ol tht NIZiftrw
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servkes • 7 p.m.

Eoterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday. School - 10 a.m.
worswp . 9 a.m .

Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Worship- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churt"b ol tht Nazarene
Pastor: Jan Lave:ndtr
SuDday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.
Chet~r Cbun::h

Cmtnl Cluster
Asbury (Syracust)
Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:4S Lm.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servitts - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School and

Sacred He•rt Catholic Church

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
Full line of

Clumh

Groct Epis&lt;opal Cbur&lt;h
326 E Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki. Rev. Kalharin Foster

( 'alholir

MillWork
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

l'upptn PlaiAa SL hul
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m
T~sday Services- 7:30p.m.

Wonhip10:25 a.m.
Sunday Sthool9: 15 a.m.

Hickory Hills Cbuttb or Christ

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening-7 :00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Old Bethol Fm WIU Boptlsl Cbun:h

HUlllde Bopdrl Chun;b

7 p.m.

Second&amp;: l ynn, Po~roy
Paswr: Rev. Jack Noblt-

Sunday School - 11.·a.m .
Worship - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senrices -7 p.m.

570 Grant St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. David Bryan
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Worship· I ) a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Rudand -Finl Baptist CbuKb
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4:5 a.m.

Rac:ine First Baptlst
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a .m .• 7:00p.m
Wednesday Services - 7:00 P:m.

Triaily

Pomeroy Wc:stside Churcll or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Pastor: AI Hanson

First Baptist Churth
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9: 15 a.m
Worship - 10:1.5 1:1 .m., 7:00p.m:
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

W~lday Service~.

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Fir.lt Sunday of Month · 7:00p.m. Krvicc

Worship.. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

Youth MiTfister: Bill Frarier

Flnt Seuthem ·Bapdst
4\872 Pomeroy Pikt
Pastor. E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship-8 :15a.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Pasloc PJ. Cbapmu
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - It a.m.

· Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hope Bopdst C'urdl (Soulbr:nl

Pomeroy _First Baptist ·
Pastor Jon Brocken
East Main St_
~unday SchoOl - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m

NATIONAL VIEW

Pomtroy Cbuftb at Clulot
212 W. Main St.
Minister. Antbooy Morris
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Mlddt.pon Cbun;b ul Christ
Sth and Main

Bapl io,t

s

Swt. CoR. -8:.f5-9: 15 a.m..
Sun. Mau • 9:30 a..m.
Dliley 1.\W • 8:30 Lm.

( h lll'l'h ul ( II ri-.1

EnuwiDtl Apo~tollc Tat.rucle Inc.
J....oop Rd off New Uma Rd. Rutland
Services: Soo 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:30p.m.
Thurs. 7:00p.m.
Pastor Many R. Hutton

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

lftl Mulbttry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Putor. Rev. Walla' E. Htinz
Sat. Con. 4 :45~5: 15p.m.; Man· !1::30 p.m..

Evcnina · 7:30p.m.
Aposrolic Worship Center
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middlepon
Kevin Konkle. Putor
Sunday, 10 Lm. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednelday. 7:30p.m.; Youth Fri . 7:30p.m.

The Dally Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydallysenth'lel.com

Langsville Christian Ch urch
J:ull Guspc l
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday St:hoo19:30 am.
Worship 10:30 am -7:00pm
Wedn'esday Sel'\'ice 7:00pm

Harrisonville Community Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday- 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

·,.

Morning Star
• Pastor: Dew~:~yne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.

Worship - 10 a.m.

Middleport Com munity Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderoon •
Sunday School 10 a.m .
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

l'l' nlerost a I
Ptntealstal Assembly
St. Rt. 124 , Racine

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evenina: 7 p.m.
Thursda~ Setvicc - · 7 p.m.

EMI Letart
Pastor: Brian Harlmess1
Sunday·School -· 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m ..
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

l'rl'sh\ h"ria n
Unlt«&lt; P~abyt~rlan
Pastor: Robert Crow
Wouhlp • 11 a.m.

Syracu~e

Mlalon
1411 Bridpman 5!., Syracuse
Re~. Mike Thomp10'n,Putor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenlna. 6 p·.m.
Wedne1day Service • 7 p.m.

Racine
Pa ~ tor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 1U a.m.
· Wonh!p - I I a.m.
Wednelday 1 p.m.

Coolville ~nited Mothodlot Partoh
Paator: Helen Kline·
Coolville Church
Main&amp;. Pifth St. .
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
TUesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd,, 468C
.Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.
Hockl111port Churth
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

SyratUit: Flnt

Harrleonvllle Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worahlp- 9 e.m.

H1ul Community Church

OIIRt. 124
Pastor: EdMel Hart ,
Sum!iy School-9 :30a.m.
Worship- !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Mlddlepon PresbYterian
Pastor: Rober Crow.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10;30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - I 0 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
·Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pom eroy
Pastor: Roy uiwinsky

S11turduy Sen.· ices:
Sabbath School- 2 p.ffi.
w h' 3 '

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
Worship - UN5 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wedne sdny 7:30 p.m.
;

.

l nitl'd Brl'fhn·n
1

Mt. Hermon United Brtthrtn
In Christ Chun::h
Tuas Community ]6411 Wick.ham Hd
Paslor:'Roben Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Olive Community Churth

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Tnn::h Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worshi p- 10:30 a.m.

Sunda~

School - 9 :30a.m.

E\'ening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 ·p.m

"' a za n·m·
MiddlepOrt Church or the Nuaren~
Pastor. Alien Midcap ·
·
Sunday School ~ 9:]0 a.m.
Worship - IOi30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednc~da)' Sen.·ices - 1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen ~idcap
Rerdn·ille Fellowship

Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Wa ldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship - \0:45a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedncsda)' Ser\'iccs - 7 p.m.
Syracust Chun::h or the Nazaftne
Pastor Mike Adkin s
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.
We&lt;lnesday Services - 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunda)' School - I0 1:1.01Even irlg 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thurs~ ay - 7:30p.m.
South Bethel Commu nity Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Dame'wood
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship Service 10 a.m.
Carleton Inlerdenomlnatlonal Ch.irth
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Robert Vance ·
Su nday School - 9:30 u.m.
Worship Servke 10:30 a.m.
Evening Sci-vice 6 p.m.
Frtedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd . 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Eden United Brethren In Christ
State .Route 124, Reedsville
P!islor: Rc\'. Bill Duty
Sundlly-'School - 11 u.m.
Sunday Wo r~hi p - Hl:OII·a.m. &amp; 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:(}0 p.m.

Blessed are the pure Crow's Family Restaurant !Fnmcis Florist
Meigs County's Oldest Florist
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
in heart; for they
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shall see God.
W. Main St., Pomeroy
•ut cend your thollghlt with
Matthew J.u .•
992-5432
740.992·2644 740.992·6298
ll~

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POMJEROY FLOWER SHOP
PHARMACY
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY, OH 992-6454
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"Flowers for all occasions"
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"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
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•

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

NBA roundup, Page 83

Page Bl
Friday, December 21, 2002

c. .. I,...

Armstrong male
athlete of year :
. ............
.............

~"·~

L I

, .....,

EXCJTEMENT.PASSil ON Tndlo .........

·o2 Alero

.

4x4 Ext
5

cab, Blu•

4 Door, Gold

13,900

6

$10,900

99 Corvette

was $32,900
now 5

29,900

·ol Chevy

·o1 510 Blazer

Suburban LS

4x4, 4 Door, Pewter

Loaded, 4X4, 3/4 ton, Red

S]5,900

5

18,900

.•

•

·o2 Cavalier

·o1 LeSabre

4 door, White

Silver

$7,990

$14,900

·oo Silverado

.

Ext. Cab, 4X4, Black

$19 900

USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
1997 Cadillac Deville · maroon ......................... $9,900
1998 Cadillac seville STS · black.....................$19,900
1000 Cavalier
. 124 - reci .••••..••••.....•••••_••...•..•.•••••.•• S9,900
.

.

1998 Delta 88 Blue ·····~~·······················•!~••·"·-···· $6,900 .
2000.C:hevy Lumina • White ................_•..•.• ~.•.... $9,900 .
1119 Taurus 51 •.lllaroon ....•.••.•....•.•..•.....•.••.•.... $9,900
1119 Chevy Monte Carlo - white.~-·····-········-··$9,900
Ill!

2001 Grand Am • 2 door, gold ......................... $11,900
2002 Grand Am GT· VG, sunroof, 4 door, white ...$15,900
2001 Camero cOnvertible· red ....................... $14,900
2002 Buick Century • sliver.............................. $ 12,900
2002 Bonneville - sliver.................................... $ 16,900
2001 Cadillac STS • sllver..................................SU,900
1991 s,tum ~ maroon ..........................·-············ S6,900
1119 cavalier ,24. recl~···············-·····~······-·······s•,goo ·

'I

,,

·'

2000.Chevy 'lk'acker.· ·blue ................~····~·······...·· $7,900
1999 Dodge Ram 4X4 • sliver .............~........•... S13,900
2001 Dodge Ram reg cab· recl ........................$14,900
2001 ·Dod1e Ext Cab Sport· ~lte .................. $11,900
2001 CiMC Sonoma SLS · Whlte..........~..........~..SIAOo
1._6 GMC Sonoina res cab ..,lrlteii ....~.......;.~ .... $4,900'.'
1HI Explorer 414 -: whlte.....~~...........................se. tai
2001 GMC Jimmy· maroon ............................. $11,900
2001 Chevy SWB re1. cab· black .•~.~............... $1,10o
1111C~e¥y 5.,10 Blutr LT • ~r.r..~........... SJ2,100 ..
1998 Expedition Eddie Biluer Pkc. · whlte ...~$12,900
1997 Expedition XLT • 1reeri ............................ S11 ,900
2000 Cadillac Escalade· whlte ....................... $29,900
2000 GMC Denali • sliver~................;...•.........•. $25,100
2002 chevy 112 to"·4X4 en cab ..
.
. .
· maroon; 9,000 miles;•••••••• ~~......................$23~995 ·

Williams female
athlete of year
Serena Williams won three
of of the four Grand Slam
titles in 2002 and an astonishing 56 of 61 matches overall
(a .918 winning percentage),
she claimed a WTA Tourleading eight titles (out of
only 13 tournaments played),
and took hon\e a record $3.6
million. She was a runner-up
twice and nevJ!I" fared · worse
than the quarterfinals.
On Friday, Williams was
honored as The Associated
Press Female Athlete of the
, 'Year in a vote that was about
as close as many of her
matches.
She received 53 first-place
votes and 35 1 points from
writers and broadcasters
across the country. Golfer
Annika Sorenstam was next,
.with 27 tirst-piace votes and
193 points, followed by
Olympic champion figure
skater Sarah Hughes (12
first-place votes, !58 points).

Lon Kruger ·
fired by Hawks
ATLANTA (AP) - Coach
Lon Kruger was fired by the
slumping Hawks, the second
Atlanta coach to be fired.
Kruger said he knew he
might be fired because of the
Hawks 11 -16 record so ffl!'
this season.
·•
The news came hours after
the Thrashers, a team ·also
· owned by AOL Time-Warner,
fired coach Curt Fraser.
Hawks assistant coach
Terry Stotts was to be named
interim coach. Assistant Gar
Heard was also fired.

Jackson out
for six weeks
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - Sacramento Kings
guard Bobby Jackson will be
sidelined for about six weeks
with a broken left hand.
Jackson injured himself
Wednesday against the Los
Angeles
Lakers
when
Shaquille O'Neal knocked
the ball out of his hands
while he was driving to the
basket. Jackson, who wore a.
splint after the game, scored
II points in the team's win
over the Lakers.

Cadillac as ·
was $39.415
now S]6 ,

850 aft••

rebate

Richt renews
Georgia contract
Chevy 510

GMC Envoy

was $16,149

was $33,790

now .

sll 979
1

after

rebl!te

now
.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Moving quickly to reward its
championship
coach,
Georgia gave Mark Riehl a
new $1.5 million-a-year contract that will keep him with
the Bulldogs through at least
2010.
The eight-year deal was
announced before the thirdranked Bulldogs arrived in
New Orleans for their .dan. I
Sugar Bowl game agai nst
Florida State.

S]Q1 83S•fter
rebate

,

Eagles know they
won't be facing
the same Giants

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Lance Armstrong was named
The Associated Press Male
Athlete of the Year after winning his founh straight Tour
de France.
Armstrong was diagnosed
in 1996 with advanced testicular cancer that had spread to
his lungs and brain, and
required chemotherapy and
brain surgery. Doctors gave
him a 50-50 chance of survival. By beating the disease,
Armstrong
gained
the
courage and will to conquer
the Tour de France, considered one of the most grueling
events in all sports.
Armstrong and Barry .
Bonds were the top ~wo vote- ·
getters for a second straight
year, only this time the San
Francisco Giants' star finished second. Armstrong
received 45 first -place votes
and 292 points from sports
writers and broadcasters.
Bonds had 31 first-place
votes and 233 points. Tiger
Woods, who won the award
1999 and 2000, finished third
for the second year in a row.

' --

•

Pro football

-

Oakland Raiders quarterback Rich Gannon (12) is hit by Kansas City Chiefs' Greg Wesley
(25) as he releases the ball in the second half Oct. in Kansas City, Mo. The Chiefs won 20.
10. The Oaklano Raiders would just as soon forget their flop at Arrowhead Stadium back In
October. It was loss No. 3 during their frustrating four-game ·slide - a 20.10 defeat to
Kansas City that coach Bill Callahan considers the Raiders· worst offensive performance of
the season.(AP)

Raiders will have
home-field ~dvantage
OAKLAND, Calif: (AP)
- Of all the losses in the
Oakland Raiders' four-game
slide, the one at Arrowhead
Stadium was perhaps the
most frustrating.
That 20-lp defeat to
Kansas City in October was
the team's worst offensive
showing of the season. On
·saturday, the Raiders can
avenge the defeat in the comfort of home.
The Raiders (I 0-5) iire
eager to finish the regular
season with a victory, and the
game is just as important for
Kansas City, which .is still
fighting to secure a playoff
spot. If the Chiefs. lose, they
will miss the playoffs for the Kansas City Chiefs' Ray Crockett (39) knocks away a pass
fifth straight year.
intended for. Oakland Raiders ' Tim Brown (81) in the first half
While Oakland has locked Oct. 27 in Kansas City, Mo. (AP)
up its third straight AFC
West title, not one player on Woodson said. "You don't go defensive role despite a
the roster is the least bit sat- . into a season as a football crack in the fibula bone of
isfied.
team not wanting to win it his right leg, then had
If th~y beat Kansas City; all. We have an opportunity surgery this week. He could
maybe the Raiders will final- in sports that is very rare. We miss two more weeks.
ly allow 'themselves to cele- have an opportunity, and we
The. Chiefs' star, running
brate - if just a bit.
want to take advantage of it." back Priest Holmes, also will
A victory would give them
Beating the Chiefs (8-7) be out Saturday with a hip
home-field ·
advantage. won't be easy. They made a injury. He gained 184 yards
throughout the pl ayoffs; number of spectacular plays against Oakland in Kansas
guaranteeing they won't pinned against their goal line City's win in October, the
have to make another m ·a 24-22 win over San Ch1efs' first victory in six
January journey to the frigid Diego last weekend, includ- meetings.
Northeast, where they were ing an NFL record-tying 99Callahan knows the Chiefs
eliminated last season in a yard touchdown pass from will be ready, despite not
snowy, controversial playoff Trent Green to Marc having Holmes. They 're a
loss to Nev.: England.
Boerigter.
team that adapts well no mat"Everything we .do matters
The Raiders' secondary ter who's suiting up, he said.
now," right tackle Lincoln still is vulnerable. Deion
"They' re depleted in some
Kennedy said: "I've never Sanders was prevented from sense in their personnel, but
been a part of when the AFC joining when the Chargers, they're very resourceful,"
was so close, and to be hon- one of five AFC teams to put Cal lahan said. "You have a
est, I'm kind of tired of it." in claims, were awarded the lot of key guys making
Many consider this the. former Ali:Pro cornerback plays. They've got such batRaiders' last shot at the big Tuesday. He can't play for mice in their attack . They can
prize before this unique ros- San Diego because he will be run it, they can thro w it , they
ter ,of old guys gets broken on the team's resetve-retired1 can play action, they can
up because of salary-cap list, the same list he was on ·drop back, and they .have the
restrictions.
with Washington. which offe(lsive line that's capable
Coach Bill Callahan calls released him Monday.
of doing those types of
them his "FatherTime".· pJayCharles Woodson will things . They' re a problem."
ers.
watch from · the sideline
The Chiefs haven't swept
"You want to win it all," Saturday. He opted to play
Please see Raiders, 81
37-year-old safety Rod last Sunday in a limited

·---- ..... - ---- -- - ---- ·-- -- --------------·- -·.r

'I

(-.

'

I ..

PHILADELPHIA (APJ
Toomer had a career-best 204
. The Philadelphia Eagles don't yards receiving and three touchexpect to hold the New York downs, and Barber ran for two
Giants to just three points this scores.
time.
"He's in a rhythm, be's hitting
The Eagles dominated the his receivers, and he has time to
Giants in a 17-3 victory at sit back there and throw the
Veterans Stadium on Oct. 28. ball," Eagles linebacker Ike
Butthisisn'tthesameNewYork Reese said of Collins. "We've ·
offense the Eagles will face seen flashes of it throughout his
Saturday in the regular-season career, but it's when deferu&gt;es
finale.
can get io him, disrupt him, put a
The Giants have averaged 36 little pressure ·on him, that kind
points in the last three games. of rattles him a little bit.
and have scored 221 points (27.6
"The past few weeks, be's
per game} in the eight games been able to sit back there and
since they lost · to the Eagles. hit his guys. Amani Toomer is
They had just86 points ( 14.3 per doing a great job getting open.
game} in their first six games. They're mixing it up real well
before playing Philadelphia
with Tiki back. there. They're
Quarterback Kerry Collins. putting points on the board.
running back Tike 6arber, They're moving the ball. real
receiver Amani Toomer and · well. It's going to be a test for
rookie tight end Jeremy us."
·
Shockey are playing at a higher
New York's resurgence on
level, helping the Giants over- offense began when Giants ·
come the inexperience of their coach Jim Fassel took over the young offensive line.
play calling from coordinator
"All of a sudden, they' re on a Sean Payton after the loss to the
little bit of a roll," Eagles defen- Eagles. Passel took out most of
sive. coordinator Jim Johnson the pre-snap motion before plays
said. ''They· are playing with and started repeating plays, even
confidence. Collins has been ones that didn't work. He also
oreal hot. He's been throwing the made more of a commitment to
ball extremely well. Between the running game.
Shockey arid Tiki Barber and
"Now they're just lining up
Toomer, they are making a lot of and playing," . Eagles safety
plays. That's part of it. I think the Brian Dawkins said. ''They've
biggest difference in this football always taken a lot of shots
team is the way Shockey's play- downfield. They've continued
ing."
the same thing. The thing you
·Shockey, going to the Pro saw in the Indianapolis game,
Bowl, leads all NR.. tight ends they got the ground game going
with 64 receptions and 796 a little. That's the Giants that we
yards receiving. He. caught know. They get up on you, and
seven passes for II 6 yards in then they start pounding the ball
New York's 44-27 win at at you. That's what we expect"
Indianapolis last week.
The GianL~ (9-6) need to win
Collins, who has passed for Saturday to clinch a playoff S(l?t,
3,817 yards this season, was 23. and would get in with a loss if
of-29 for 366 yards, four touch- New Orleans i&amp;beaten Sunday
downs and no interceptions by Carolina. The two-time NFC
against the Colts. His )58.3 East champion Eagles (12-3}
quarterf)a~k rating for the ,game would secUre home-field advanwas the highest under the sys- tage throughout the NFC playtern.
.olfs with a viciory.

College football .

St. Pierre leads.Boston
College to third bowl
win in as many years
· DETROIT (AP) - Brian speaks for it se lf," he said. "I
St. Pierre will go down as don 't know what Toledo
one of the best quarterbacks thinks , but I don't think
in Boston College hi story.
they ' ve played any team as
On Thursday night, he good as us all year."
proved why.
Boston College (9-4)
The sen ior, who ranks appeared in a bowl game for
third on the sc hool' s career a fourth consecutive season,
passing yarqs list behind winning the past three. The
Doug Flutie and Glenn Eagles , who are 32-17 over
Foley, threw for a .career- that span, fini shed the sea- ·
best 342 yards and three so n with four straight wins.
touchdowns in the Eagles'
Toledo (9-5) wasn't able
51-25 win over Toledo in to take advantage of a parti'the Motor City Bowl.
san crowd at Detroit's new
"When the rest of the Ford Field, which is located
team is playing as well as about an hour north of the
our guys did today, playing Rockets ' campus. The
quarterback is easy," said · bowl's previou s five games
St. Pierre, who completed were
played
at
the
25 of 35 passes and was Silverdome in suburban
named the game's most Pontiac.
·
valu able player.
·
Boston College faced the
"People forget that we challenge of the Rockets'
were second in the Big East unpredictable
spread
in pass in g, and that was
Please see Bowl. B:Z
behind
Mi ami,
which

Boston College wide receiver Grant Adams (5) slips away from
Toledo 's Patrick Body (11) for a 40-yanl touchdown In the second quarte r of the Motor City Bowl Thursday in Detroit. (AP)

----- --- ·

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-·--··. ---- -·-·---~·

•

�.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Paqe B 2 • The Daily ·Sentinel

Friday, December 27, 2002
Friday, December 27, 2002

·Th~y just OUt-CXCCllt~d
us . The quartahack was
rea ll y . sharp. a nd their
from Page 81
receivers did a nice job of
gett ing open and ca tching
offense . but it was the the ball." Am stut z said.
Eag les who do minated with "We didn ' t make a big play
a
more
traditi ona l to stop one of the ir dr ives ."
Brian Jones. who se t se\ approach.
Boston Co llege score d era! single-season Toledo
10uchdowns on it s first six passi ng records thi s yea r.
possess tons.
compl eted 27 of 41 passes
.• ."Our numbe r one objec- for 33 1 ya rds. two touchtive was to stop the run. but dow ns and two intercepthey we re able . to hit us tions.
with some big pass in g
Carl Ford caught 10 passplays;" Toledo cornerback es for 11 2 yards. inc luding
. Brandon He fflin said . " I a 9-yard touc hdown pass
don' t .think we played poor- with 24 seconds to go in the
ly. They just made plays."
second quarter.
One of the biggest was St.
".1 don ' t fee l like they
Pi erre's 40-yard touchdown dominated us. but they got
pass to Grant Adams with a quick lead and took us out
5:2 1 remaining in the first .of our game plan."' Jones
ha lf to make it 35-10.
said . "It 's hard to win a
The score, in which game when you can ·t play
Adams caught St. Pierre 's
pass across the middle , the type of offe nse you
· eluded a defender,and raced want.H
Boston College set a
into the end zone, came one
play after Boston College school bowl record for
stopped Toledo on a fourth - points in a half. surpass ing
the 31 points the Eagl es
and- I. ·
·"We· ve been doing that scored in the first half of
all year. and we've made it the 1985 Cotton Bowl. a
a lot more than we have 45-28 win over Hou ston .
mi ssed," Toledo coach Tom They al so set a Motor City
Bowl record for points in a
Amstutz said .
The Eagles ' senior class half.
tied the 1981-84 group for
"GeneraH y. with the time
the most wins in a four-y ear off, we wouldn ' t have
· span in the past 60 years.
expected to be as precise as
Boston College became we were today," ·Boston
. the ninth team in school College coach Tom O'Brien
hi story to win at least nine said . ''That ·was our best
games and the first since . offensive performance of
. 1.993.
.
the season ~ so maybe the
"After everything that's secret is not practicing."
happened in the past four
Toledo, coming off a 49years. thi s is a storybook 45 loss to Marshall in the
ending." St. Pierre said. MAC championship game.
"When I first got here, I
would have never believed failed to defend its Motor
that we could go to four City Bowl title from a seastraight bowls and win the son ago. MAC teams had
won the previous four
last three. "
The Eagles· set a· Motor Motor City Bowl games .
"I was probably a little
City Bowl record for most
surprised
at how easy it
points. The previous record
was set in Marshall's 48-29 was," Boston College cenwin over ·Louisv.ille . in ter Dan Koppen said .
1998. It was the most points ·"Brian's first half was his
the Eagles scored since a, best of the year. He wanted
55-3 win over Connecticut this game, and he went out
·
and got it."
on Oct. 7, 2000.

Pro football

Bowl

a

Raiders

·Indianapolis and wins by the
Jets and Cle veland . .
That's a lot of ifs and ors.
from Page 81
"We can only do what we
can do. We beat Oakland the
the season series since 1998. last time, so we feel confiKansas City can clinch a dent about our chances,"
playoffberth with a win and Chiefs defensive end Eric
losses · by Denver and New Hicks said. "But the Black
England; or a win and losses Hole is a tough place to play,
by Denver, the New York Jets and those fans will be rowdy.
and an Indianapolis win; or a I'm sure Rich (Gannon) will
win, losses hy Denver and have the boys fired up."

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

NBA

Zastudil: Fourth- Ward, Porter share
round pick shines Steelers MVP award
on 4th down
OWINGS MILLS. Md. (AP) by the Cincinnati Bengals three
- Rookie punter Dave Zastudil . picks earlier at 109th overJII,
has j ustified his stature as a· has been inacti.ve much of the
fourth-round dmft pick and season.
given the Baltimore Ravens one
For Zastudil and Dorsch. the
less position to worry about this way the season has played out is
off-season.
a microcosm of their team's forZastud il has dropped 30ofhi s tunes:
79 punts inside the opponents·
TI1e Bengals are 2- 13, and the
20-yard line- tied for the NA... Ravens (7-8) are still mathematlead wi th Carolina's Todd ically alive for the postSeason
Sauerbrun. Although the entering Sunday's finale against
Ravens have allowed an AFC- Pittsburgh.
high 471 yards on punt returns,
'Travis is a very good friend
Zastudil's 41.8-yard gross aver- of mine." Zastudil said. "We
age. ranks him seventh in the talk J.ust about every week. He
conference.
..1 want to go back and read was put in ·a situation where
all those articles that said he they already had good kickers.
couldn 't punt." Ravens coach With me, I was told it was my
Brian Billick said. 'That's what j&amp;b to lose coming iit, so all I
we dr'Jfted him to do, and he had to do mentally was just ~tick
obviously has the leg to do it." with what I've always done."
In the midst of a sweeping
In addition to perfo(Tlling as
salary-cap driven purge, the effecti vely as he did at Ohio
Ravens raised a few eyebrows University, Zastudil has justified
by spending a fourth-round pick the Ravens' fourth-round vento take a punter. But Zastudil ture.
has proven to be an eHicient and
"Most people would not think
economical replacement for to draft that way. but to have that
Kyle RichardsOn.
position nailed down for quite
He's also outdone another some time is quite a 'Comfort,"
fourth-round pick, Pur~ue Billick said.
standout Travis Dorsch. a firstThe lefHooted Zastudil .uses ·
team All-America and the Ray
timesaving, two-step delivery ·
Guy Award winner as the coun- that impressed scouts during his
try's best punter. Dorsch, taken workouts before the draft.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pistons scrape by Wizards, 87-82 Underachieving

~i:'~~~~Nfel~~!~ ~:- ~~~ :rm~c~:'c~~!

PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Steelcrs have often
looked like two different teams
- so. appropriately enough.
they have two most valuable
players.
Wide receiver Hines Ward
and linebacker Joey Porter
were chosen in a season that
saw the offense and defense
alternate between being outstanding and ordinary. dominating one week and dreadful
the next.
"When they said there were

down field .
Porter has nine sacks. the
most by any AFC linebacker,
and is tied for the ieam lead
with four interceptions. He also
leads the team with 87 tackles.
Porter · just wi shes the
defense had played more con- ·
sistently. as it did during a 13-3
Steelers season a year·ago. This
season, the Tommy Maddoxled offense rallied the Steelers ·
(9-5-1) from a 1-3 start, with
the defense picking up its play
only recently.
co-MVPs, I was thinking two
"It used to be a standard
offensive guys: Hines and
Tommy (Maddox)," Porter said around here; we would tell the
Thursday. "The success I've offense to give us 17 points and
been having this year has snuck the game was over," Porter
up on me. This is unexpected." said. "We weren't holding up
Porter also learned a valuable our end of the bargain. The
political lesson: every · vote offense was putting up points.
counts. Players were asked to but the defense? We couldn't
vote last week, with two games get it done.
still remaining, and he forgot to
"Lately, we have been
hand in his ballot. ·.
putting everything together and
"You're not supposed to vote playing some good defense.
for yourself anyway," line- \\'lth the late success we have
backer -Jason Gildon Said.
had on defense, I could see
De!&gt;pite the Steeler:s' incon- how we had two co-MVPs."
sistency, illustrated by a loss to
Steelers players vote on the
first-year Houston and a win award, first presented in 1969.
over Tampa Bay in a span of The only other tie was in 1988',
three weeks, Ward and Porter when linebacker David Little
have enjoyed strong se01sons and cornerback Rod Woodson
from start to finish.
were chosen.
With Sunday's game against
Even though coach Bill .
Bah.imore remaining, Ward Cowher said Ward imd Porter
already owns the team single95
f h
season record with I 07 catches, got
percent 0 t e votes
between them, Maddox sug13 more tha n hemaeayear
d
f 1
ago. He also has 1,283 yards g~sted a number o payers
· .
d .h
d were deserving.
recetvmg an ' Wtt 116 yar s
"You could throw a dart · in
or more Sunday, would break
Yancey /Thigpen's 1997 team here and hit a locker and that
record of 1,398 yards.
guy's had a big pan to do with
. Several teammates have this season," Maddox said. "I
described Ward as a skill-posi- think the (whole) team is the
tion player with a linebacker's MVP. Everybody stayed
mentality. He.is often called the · together through all the ups and
best blocker among NFL downs. and the team has never
receivers and, two weeks ago, wavered. There's something to
refused to come off the field be said for that in this day and
despite a hamstring injury that age. with all the bad things in
limited his ability to get open sports."

durtng hts return to Washington . until he got on the court.
• Hamilton scored 22 points,
and the Detroit Pistons limited
the Wizards to just 33 secondhalf points in an 87-82 victory
Thw-sday night.
Hamilton
starred
in
Washmgton for two years
before being sent to Detroit in
the trade that brought Jerry
Stackhouse to the Wizards. In
his fm;i game back, Hamilton
scored 20 pomts in the ftrst
three quarters, then made two
free throws with 2: 10 left to cap
a 12-2 spurt that put the Pistons
up 81-7J. ·
Playing the game was the easiest part of his return.
· "When I came in, it was deftnitely strange because I actually
went into the visitor's garage.
I'm so used to l\oing to the other
garage," Harntlton said. 'This
feels crazy being in this locker
room. I've never even been in
here before."
He found a comfort zone on
the cowt, though, scoring 10
points in the third quarter to get
the Pistons back in the game.
Detroit trailed 49-41 at halftime
but closed to 63-61 after three
quarters, then capped the come· back with a tight defensive
effort.
Elsewhere in the J.IIBA,
Dallas beat New Orleans 83-81,
and Seattle defeated Toronto
97-88.
· "I thought our defense was
solid the whole second half,"
Detroit coacb Rick Carlisle
said.
·
But Washington coach Doug
Collins had his own take on the
game. .
"We got stagnant When we
don't move the ball, we stand,"
he said. "When we do that, we
can't win. I must have said it 30
: times in the second half: Please
move the ball!"
The WIZards ftnisbed with as
many assists as turnovers: 12.
"We went dead in tbe water,

;: .

.

.

said.
Washington closed to 84-82
on two free throws by Michael
. Jordan with 25.3 seconds left,
but Chauncey Billups made a
foul s'hot for the Pistons. and
Jordan turned over the _ball ·on
the Wizards' next possession .
Joo Barry then made two free
"throws to seal the victory.
Stackhouse led the WIZards
with 24 points. Jordan added
17, but he missed 10 of 17 shots
and had four turnovers - three
in the fourth quarter.
"When you look at the stats
and look at how the game was
played, we outplayed them in
every area bur turnovers, and
I'm the biggest culprit," Jordan
said. "I had four turnovers;
which is totally uncharacteristic
of me. It's one of those games
where you just want to hide
your head under a pillow."
Detroit trailed 67-64 with
9:II remaining before Corliss
Williamson scored on a follow
and Chucky Atkins hit a 3~
pointer. That gave the Pistons
their first lead since early in the
second quarter. ·
A baseline jumper by Jordan
put Washington back in front,
but Clifford Robinson started
the pivotal 12-2 run with a ISfooter, and Ben Wallace foilowed with two foul shots to
give Detroit the lead for good. Washington Wizards : Michael Jordan, right, tries to drive past
Hamilton went 10-for-13 at Detroit Pistons' Michael Curry (12) during the first quarter,
the line and had · seven Thursday in Washington.(AP)
rebounds.
"I thought he played really - Nowitzki scored 23, points, and
well," Carlisle said. "His dispo- the Dallas defense'' was again
sition was great throughout the good enough to overcome one
whole game. I thought he of the Mavericks' lowest-scarplayed a very mature game ing games of the season.
tonight."
The Mavericks. who came
At Seattle, Gary Payton
Said Hamilton: "I can't really into the game scoring a league- scored 35 points - including
call it revenge. Let's say we~ re high average of 103.5 roints. 10 in row to help .Seattle take a
!-up on them."
· shot 37.8 percent and fatled to comfortable lead - and the
surpass 92 points for the fourth SuperSonics snapped !I ·fourstmight game. Dallas has lost game losing streak.
only one game during that
Voshon Lenard had 27 points
for
Toronto, still playing withstretch.
David Wesley had 24 points out injured Vince Carter and
Antomo Davis.
At New Orleans, Dirk for New Orleans.

SuperSonics 97
Raptors88

Mavericks 83
Hornets 81

4

Hawks fire Kruger
ATLANTA
(AP)
The Associated Press.
Walking into practice afte r a
The news came hours
brief
holida y,
Atl anta after the NHL's Atlanta
H a w~ s guard Jason Te rry Thras hers, also owned by
· wa sn t prepared for th e AOL Time Warner Inc.,
news: coach Lon Krug er . fired coach Curt Fraser.
·
had been ftred .
Kruge r was let go by the · The Hawks. guaranteed a
slumptng Hawk s, three day s playoff spot to thetr seasonafter the team lost by 15 ll c k~tholders thts season. a
points at Indiana . That wa s move llllltated _by Kruger.
part of six losses in seven The team promtsed a $125
games , with all six by at refund , to alf season-ticket .
least I 0 point s.
holders if the team dido ' t
"I just thought he was jok- make the postseason.
ing," Terry said of hearing
With offseason acquisi the news from Kruger. "B1H tion Glenn Robinson joining
then I could tell he was sen- Shareef Abdur-Rahim and a
ous. I just ~;ave him a hug healthy Theo Ratliff on the .
and told htm I ,hope he front .line it appeared to be
makes II back. He s a good
'
.
coach . He deserves a spot in a safe bet;
.
But dunng the recent sktd,
this league."
General manager . Pete the effort has been lacklusBabcock had thought about ter, and Atlanta has lost
making the move for a cou- ground in the chase for a .
pie of weeks, but tried to playoff spot.
It falls to Stotts .to get the
talk himself out of it'. The
loss in Indiana · convinced players motivated . .
"You have to motivate the
him the time was right.
"We just fell back into a . players a lot_ of different
r.oor effort," Babcock said. ways," sums said . "You
'I didn't want to make a have to do it however you
change on Christmas Eve or can.
Christmas Day, · and I tried
'That is the mandate from
to convince myself it ~till
Pete,
to play hard and gixe
could work.
"But we're not 'maximiz- defensive effort. "
The playoff guarantee
ing our potential, and we
may have backfired a bit,
needed to do this."
Assistant Terry Stotts will but Kruger denied it put
take Kruger's spot, and extra pressure on him or the
Alex E~;~glish was moved team.
from director of player
"It was something that I
development to assistant thought we needed to create
coach.
a little enthusiasm . It helps
Gar Heard, who joined the call a little attention to the
Hawks as an assistant short- team," he said.
ly after Kruger was hired in
In a little more than two
2000, also was dismissed.
seasons,
Kruger was 69-122
Atlanta is 11-16 this season.
"I guess when you talk with the Hawks.
"The only thing I regret is .
about wins and losses, we
haven ' t g-otten the job done, that I didn't heip these guys
and so it didn't really come turn the corner," Kruger
as a ·surprise," Krug·e r told said.

~

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�Friday, December 27, 2002

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, December 27, 2002

Make the Sentinel Classlflecls your_-

mrtbune - Sentinel . . l\e
CLASSIFIED

. The following personal property tax legal should have been published on Decq,lllber 26 but, due to a clerical error, was omitted:
DEUNQUENT
PERSONAL
PROPERTY TAX LIST

'

In compliance with
Section 5719.04 of
the Ohio General
Code, the lollo;wlng
nat on peraiiNII propertlea
hea
been
returned . by
the
Treaaurer for the
October 2002 ...ttt ..
.
ment.

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· PERsoNALS

1.

.

Searching for any item sold
at Auction House •n Vinton ,
OH in 1986 that belonged to
Dolph and Floda Swick. Any
information as to the where
about of these ·items please
contact thei r granddaughter
@ (937)698-4177 Call col·
teet.

Sundap Paper

Ieo

elderly: Darst Group Home.
now paying minimum wage,
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amAbsolute Top Dollar: U.S. Spm, 3pm- 11 pm, 11pm·
Silver. Gold Coins, Proof· 7am, call 740·992 -5023.
sets,
Diamonds ,
Gold
Rings.
U.S. Curre ncy,· LOOKING FOR A FUN
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- JOB' THIS IS IT! OFFICE
ond Avenue , Gallipolis, 740· ENVIRONMENT 50 PO SI·
446:2842.
TIONS AVAILABLE. "868,
974-J08S
I \ll'lfl\,11 \I
TO B U\'

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring all 3 locations, full or
part -tii'ne, pick up applica. lion at location &amp; bring back
. between
1O:OOam
&amp;
10:30am, Monday thru Sat. urd ay.

Why wait? Start meeling
Ohio singles tonight, call toll 110
HElP WANfED
free 1-800-766 ~ 2623 e~e t 1
162 1 '
ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
ANNOUNCE\1ENfS 1
j s now accepting AN s appli·
calions. Available positiOns
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit are Part-.n me 3·11 shift We
for sale, Chester Township, have new starting wages for
Meigs County, send letters our ANs. We offer exCellent
of interest to : The Dally benefits !hal include Health
Sentinel, PO Bo)( 729·20, Insurance, 40 1K, Life InsurPomeroy, Qhio 45769.
ance, competi tive wages

I

r

and opportunities for advancement. U you ere' a
team player who enjoys

IT'S
NOT
TOO
LATE!
THERE'S
STILL
TIME TO
ENROLL
FOR
WINTER

CALL
TODAY%!
1- 800-214-0452

OR

446-4367

CAREER
COLLEGE
Careers (lose
1r1 Home,

wo rki ng with the · elderly,

-

fir .........

Ctllltlillrld

Reg #12748
1 would like to thank everyone tor taking the time to
wish me Happy Birtllday 1
apprecjate every card and
phone call .
·
W.F Th~mas and

t

Office Persof')nel needed,
Advanced computer · knowledge is a must. Basic accounting skill s needed.
Monday- Friday 9-Spm, no
benefits. No phone calls.
Send resu mes to 1362 1·
State Route 554, Bidwell,
OH 45614.

tO

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I

"Get Your Money's Worth"
at Cotes Mobile Homes , St.
Rt. 50 East Qf Athens. Deliveries, set-ups, excavating,
foundations
. , sewage_.... systems , dnvaways, heating
and cooling along with pans
and service. You should accept nothing less. Since
1967 we are Cole's Mobile
Homes · where you ~Get
Your Money's Wonh .~.

shi ft . Please ca ll Dianna ·OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Thom pson at (740)446 7150 or stop by and fill out JNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
an application today. We you know, arid NOT to send
are an equal opportunity
·
money through the mail until
employer.
you ',have Investigated the
offering.
ATTENTION: LPN'S
Arcadia Nursing Center
Full-ti me position are availa·
ble on 11-7 shifts. We offer
excellent benefits that lnTURNED DOWN ON
cludf:t Health Insurance, SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
_401K, Ute Insurance, com·
No Fee Unless We Winl
petitive wages plus shift dif·
1·888-582·3345 -.
ferential and opportunities
HI \I I .., I \II
tor advancement. It you
would like to join our team, R'll~..;;;;~~;;;;...;;;;;..;;;;;;;
apply in persOn between
iO
Ho~
FOR SALE
9:00-4:00 or call Susan

r~~~

r

~ow--iiiiiliiiiior-,.1

3 bedroom brick ranch with
l ull fin ished basement, 2 ga·
rages. and concrete drive·
way, on 2 lots, on county
blacktop road In Ewlngton.
(7 40)386·8212

Foater Care glvara Needed, Become a therapeutic
foster ca re giver. You will be
Reimburse $30-$45 a day
for the care of child in your
home. Training will begin
January For more information call Oasis Therapeutic
Care grvers NetWork. Albany,
1556Oh , toll free 1-877-325-

Beautiful River VIew Ideal Trailer Space tor rent. $125
For 1 Or 2 People, Referen- per month, plus deposit.
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos- Priest's Trailer Pat1&lt;. Water
ter Trailer Park, 740·44·1- Paid. Call (740)448·3644
0181 .
\ Ill ~! II \\llhl

r

(:;,740~)99;;;;.,2·;;;56;;;58;...._.,

C~~

I

l.ms&amp;

Starting at $289/mo , Wash·

ACREAGE

erl Dryer Hookup, Stove

and Refrigerator. (740)4411/2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake 1519.
wt121160Traller$1 6,500.00
I BR garage, Appt.Middlenow $13,500.00
port $400.00 992-3823
(740) 247·1100
br. Apa rt ment in Point
1
Pleasant. Furnished, clean
30 acres off State Route
775. Some ·timber· Hunting &amp; nice. No Pets. (304)675~
32lC40 block garage. Rural 1386
water- electric, private ,
2 bedroom ~partment in Rio
$80,000. (740)379·9257
$300/deposit,
Grande,
$325/month (740)245·9060

Thl:::;~::::::~,not
advertlaernenta for real
e1 t 111te which Ia In
violation of the lew. Our
read~r~are hereby
Informed thatall
dwelling• advertiaed In

Two SIOI)', 3 bedroom,- 1-1/2 lion.
.
bath house with now 30)(30 1·8D0-340·8614
2 story unfinished room .
Overlooking most scenic
view .in cou ntrY. AlSo 12
acres with ~ out buildings,
cou nty
water,
stocked
ponds, City schools, 6 mileS
from town. (740)446-8901
Wantedl Good credit cus·
tamers to purchase new
home w/land. $0 down to
qualified customers. 1·5
acre ' tracts
available.
(7 40)446·3093

3 bedroom house, Rio
Grande
area, $SOO plus
deposit, no pets. (740)441 1519 .

=;.:;.:_ _ __ _ __

3br. House located in Meson, WV. $495. + Utilities.
No Pets. (304)773-568 1

=;;;,________
:4 rooms and bath, stove/ re-

x

BriCk Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2
bath . garage. on river, 5 98 28)(56, 3 bedroom, 2 full
miles south of Gallipolis. baths. Must be moved . Ask·
ing $25,000, (740)256·1683
(740)441-6817
Good used 14M56.1 Only
$5995· will help with delivery. Call Nikki , 740-385·
9948 . .

1
For Sale: Reconditioned .
was hers, dry~rs and refrlg- ___
~
erators. Thompsons Appll·
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- ·Block, . brick ,' sewer pipes,
nue, (304)675·7388.
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call740·245·5121 .
Good Used. Appliances, Re- iii-;..;;;,;;;~:.;;,;.;.._"""'
conditioned and GuaranPETs
teed. Washers, Dryers,
FOR SALE
Ranges. and Aefr;lgeratora,
Somo start at $95. Skaggs
Appliances, 76 VIne St., Airadale puppies, AKC reg·
lstered. Loyal family pets,
(740)446·7398
great hunters. AEiady for
Christmas. Choice $200,
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark (740)992·7886
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(740)446·7444 1-677-830· Blood hound puppies, $350
9162. Free· Estimates, Easy each, taking deposits , Will
financing. 90 days same as be ready January · 6, 2003
cash . Visa/ Master Card. (740)245 -0304
Drive- a- little save alot.
Border Collie/ Blue Heater
- - - - - - - - - mix pups, 525 each.
Refrigerator frost-tree, al- (
)
_
740 256 6767
mond $160.
Refrigerator,
small, white $125. Freezer, A~glstered Wa lker Coon
upright $150. Electric range Hound pup, $225. (740)669·
20~. harvest gold $95. Elec· 9905

jlllli"-""""!B'"IJDJJING-----.

i

r

Can Sword
Congratulations! You have
won 2 free movie tickets
to the Spring Valley 7 in
Gallipolis. Call the Tribune
lor details . (740)446,2342
I \H \ 1 " 1 1'1'1 II ..,

APARTMENTS AT BUDGET Pill·
CES AT JACKSON ES·
TATES, 52 WeGtwood Drive
!rom $297 to $383. Walk, to

11{\'\"1'111(1\ IICI \

Buy or sell . Rjyerlne Anti·
quos, 1124 East ·Main on
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992-2526. Russ Moore ,

r

KE Kawasaki 100. 125
miles, dirt&amp; street legal, like
new $1000. 304·773·6000

r
_

AA~:
'-'~l\ll:oJI

Auros

·roRSALE

'iii~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

mjlB

H

IMPHo~MmJs

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guat·
antee. Local references fur- ·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs · (740) 44&amp;
· ·
.
0870. Rog ers Basement
.Waterproof.i ng.

TO

740-

35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
house Apanmenta, Inc ludes
Water
Sewage, Trash ,
$350/Mo. , 74~·0008 .

Racine, Nice 2SD Appt
5325 ·00 Month , Deposit &amp;
Reference, No Pets
992 •7599
::''-'-'~-----­
Ta ra· 1 Town house Apart·
ments, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
very . nice , in Galllpo1ls.
No Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
.
pets. 1740 )446 ' 2003 or lio, Start $375/Mo. No Pels,
(740)446·1409
Lease PI us Security Deposit
:._=-=...:..:..:.::._____
3 BA Trailer for Rent Required, Days : 740-446$325.00 'Y1onthly $250 De- 3481 ; Evenings : . 740-367posit Located in Letart, wvo-·5:;0=2_;__ _ _ _ __
1-304-695-3865
Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
Partially furnished, two ' bed· cepting applicatiOns for
room, $275 a month, $200 wailing ' list for Hud·sub·
deposit, plus utilities. NO sized, 1· br, apartment. call.
PETS . (740)256·6202
675·6679 EHO

Jacqueline's " Livln' Dolla"

6r~1&amp;e~tl~~ ~p~e

Valldey
0 s
'" a. us om ma e
babies &amp; toddlers lor thai
special someone, or make
your own, your way! Many
·faces, eye colors, hair color
&amp; styles, akin tones, and
body styles to choose from.
Clothing also available.
Compare to Middleton and
My Twinn Cuddly Babies
Call for more Information.
(740)44Wf40

1996 Chevy Lumina, 4 'dr.
,93,000 miles 304-675-4014

1997 Dodge Neon, 73,000,
air, tilt, cruise, CD player,
$2850 OBO. (740)256·1675
or (740)256·1233 .
93 Bretta
3 .1 paid

ve

'$148,000.00 new, Excellent
Condition, tires like new
$1 750 _00 742 _2525
:...:,•
..;::.=:::__ _
For sale. or trade 1980 Olds
Cutlass ,350 engine, body &amp;
Interior good cond .. $1000.
080 or will trade for small
car automatic only call 304_67_5_·7_1"'6"
9 _ _ _ _ __

==-'-·

Need a car? New second
ch~n ce financing available
no.w. Requires $300 weekly
l n~ome and you are apJET
proved . Call the Loan DocAERATION MOTORS
tor at 1-866-4LOAN-Dr or
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
locally (740)446-4533
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
800·537 ·9528.
TRUCKS

i

FOR SALE

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps~ t 988 GMC Jimmy, $3800:
Gas Furna ces. Free Esti- 1 burner gas heater, $100.
mate•. (740)446·8308
(740)245,5440
NEW AN~ USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, Angle, Channel , Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For ~rains, Driveways &amp;
WalkWays. L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open Monday, Tuesday.
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam4:30pm. Clo~ed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300

r
__;,

VA!15&amp;

4-WDs

1991 Bronco, 69,000 miles, ·

AJC, auto, nice condition,
$3.800. (740)245·5747
1996 Ford EMplorer Eddie
Bauer White &amp; Gold ,leather
seats, V-8. all oplions 304·
773-6091
(

There
IS a
better
way ...
Call
The
Gallipolis
DailY''
Tribune
446-2342
The Daily
Sentinel
992-2155
The Point
Pleasant
Register
675-1333

Tax II 000857
Level Propane Gaaea
Inc....................$14.62
Lebanon
TwP.
Southern LSD
Tax II 000857
Laval Propane Gaaea
Inc.................. $114.29
Letart Twp-Southem
LSD
Tax II 000857
Level Propane Gases
Inc, ............:.... $552.34
Olive Twp·Eaatem
LSD
Tax II 002189
EDGReaourcaa Inc.
.....:............... $1,854.49
Tu II 000857
Level Propane Gaaea
Inc................... $40.24

GREENHOUSE
Are VOl SUE's
Quality,.Variety, Low Prices
Laid on;a
You could be
eligible for FREE
help geHing
back to wor'k
For more inform81ion,
call Gallia Mei~s
Community Ac11on

HELP WANTED

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-1018

992-5479

~~~
High&amp; Dry

(340 773-5412
Call 304 674-308

SeH·Storage

PRECISION DEER
PROCESSING
Skin, cut, wrap ·
All bonei$SB cut

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

7 4()..949-0706
7 4()..949-7600

Eagles

Pomeroy

M'S

BING02171

in this
space

$75
per
month

Every Thu.-.day &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 lsi Thu.-.day
of every month
All pack $5.00
B!ing this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get5FREE

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions
Owner:
· Terry Lamm
(740) 992-G739

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

Tree Service

B. D. COIISTRUCTIOO

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

1-5 .

8·7
8·3

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

·hursdays 8-5

8-7

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

6-5

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
IB50N
61MPHIC5

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right· to Your Door.

REQUIRED
TO
ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 24th
DAY OF JANUARY,
2003.

Situated In Letart
township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, com·
JOHN
DOE.
menclng al a ataka at
Unknown Spouse, II
any, of FAYE AIDER Reserving, however,
the aouthwast corner
of Ed Sargent's land,
aka
FAYE ROSE the coal and all min·
REIMER &amp; lying Eaal of the pubAIKER whoee last erala ,underlying Hid BY:
place ·of realdance Is the above da11Crlbed LORBER CO., LP.A.
lic road running from
Falla
to
known
as
1669 properly
together ' CONSECO FINANCE Letart
Pomeroy,
Ohio;
Lincoln Hill Road, with the rlghtlo mlna SERVICING CORP.
Pomeroy, OH 45769, the same without DEAN W. KANELLIS, thence East wllh the
south line of Ed
but who · present · encumbrance to lhe AHorney at Lew
1
place of residence Ia surface anlf aub)act AHorney lor PlalntHf- Sargent's land 120
feet to a atake; thence
unknown will taka to an easamlint lor a Patltloner
South 50 feet to a
notice that on May 8, sewage IIIIer ditch P.O. Box 968
atake; lhence Wast
2002,
CONSECO • and leaching dltchaa Twinsburg, OH 44087
120 feet to the ·middle
FINANCE SERVICING sat
forth .
and (330) 425-4201
of lhe road; thence
CORP. lka GREEN described In the
TREE
FINANCIAL lnatrumenl bearing . (11) 22, 29, (12) 6, 13, North with the public
road 50 feet to the
SERVICING CORPO· data of Nov. 26, 1943, 20. 27
.
place of beginning,
RATION
flied
Ita In Dead Book 151,
containing
6,000
Complaint In Case Page 178, end as
aquare feet; being a
No. 02.CV-o61 In the shown on lha map
PUBLIC NOTICE
pert of the on..haH of
Court of Common anachad to Vol. 2 69,
·the 100 acre lot deedPleas Melp Counly, Page 3 63, Meigs
ad by Florence Miller
LEGAL NOTICE
Oh alleging that ,the County
Dead
The
Unknown and others to Edgar
Defandant(a), JOHN R~corda.
Heirs,
Devisees, M. Chapman, aa
DOE,
Unknown
,,.
L
e
g
a
t
e e s , . recorded December
Spouaa, If any, of Reference
Dead: ·
15. 1896, Vol "259FAYE AIDER a FAYE Volume 76, page 535, Administrators,
and 260. and being the r•
ROSE AIKER have or Meigs Counly Official Executors
Assigns of HERBERT 8t, Page aame propclaim ·Ia have an Recprds.
L. MILLER, Deceased, arty conveyed by
Interest In the real
estate
described Auditor's Parcel No. The Unknown Hairs, John Quillin and
Devlaaaa, Legatees, Florence Quillin, hla
U;-{10006.000
below:
The Petitioner fur· Administrator&amp;, wife, to Harold Quillin
Situate
In
the
and · and Ruaaall Quillin,
VIllage of Pomeroy, ther alleges that by Executors
County of Melga and reason of default of Asalgns 'of FRANCES by dead dated May
State of Ohio and lhe Delendanl(a) the M. MILLER, Deceased 14, 1936, and record·
being . known and payment of a promis- whose last ·place of ed In Book 142, Page
dealgnlllad an a mep sory note, according residence and whose 67. Melga County
of Lincoln Hilghts to Ita tenor, the condl· prea,nt place of resi- Dead Recorda, and
made by Breece and .Ilona of concu;rent dence Ia unknown the Interest of Rusaell
Cerpar, Reglatarad mortgage deed given will taka notice that Quillin therein having
Civil
Engineers, to secure the pey· on February 21, 2002 bean conveyed to
Huntington, W. Va. mant of said ncite and at 2:05 p.m., MORT· Harold Quillin by
dated Ocl. 17, 1942, conveying the pram· QAQE ELECTRONIC deed dated June 13,
and recorded In Plat · 1 - described, .have REGISTRATION SYS- 1936, lrnd recorded In
Book 3. Page• 43 and been broken, and the TEMS. INC. ,flied Ita Book 142, Page 90,
44, aa Lot No. 12, same . has become Complaint and on Melga COUI'Iy Dead
September 1B, 2002 Recorda. Subject to
being 'more particu- absolute.
The
Petitioner at 8:30 a.m. flied Ita all legal highways.
larly described as fol·
Reference: Volume
praya
thai
lhe Supplemental Comp.
Iowa:
281,
Page 413, Meigs
In
CaM
No.
02
CV
020
Defandant(s)
named
Beginning at a
· Dead
polntln the north Una abovor be required lo In the Court of County
Recorda.
·
Common
Pleaa
Meigs
answer
and
set
up
of Lincoln Hill Road
The Petitioner fur·
at the comer between their lnlareat In aald County, Ohio alleging
Lola 12
13, aa real eatate or be tor- that the new party ther alleges that by
Defendant(a),
The reason of default of
ahown oil uld map; ever barred from
Unknown
Heirs, the Defandanl(a) In
thence with the line of asserting the same,
Devlaael, Legataaa, the payment of a
Lincoln Road, north lor. foreclpaure of
promissory
note,
Admlnlatratora,
aald
mortgage,
the
63 deg. 51 •weet so
Executors
and according to Ita tenor,
teet; thence with the marshalling of any
line -aen Iota 11 Ilene;· and the Hie of A8algna of HERBERT the conditions of a
L: MILLER, Decauad, concurrent mortgage
and 12, N. 28 deg. 09, aald real estate, and
E. 261.72 teet to a the proceeds of aald The Unknown Helra, deed given to secure
point In the S. line of aale applied to the Davlaees, Legatees, the payment of aald
Admlnlalrators, nota and conveying
North Street South 40 payment PeUtloner'a
pramlsea
Executors
and the
Claim
In
the
proper
deg. 10' E. .4.76 feet;
described,
have
been
Aaalgna
of
FRANCES
order
of
Its
prlorlly,
thence
continuing
wHh uld atraatllna S. and lor auch other M. MILLER, Deceaaad broken and the sirme
become
88 dag. 33' E. 45.8 further rallet aa Is just have or claim to have has
an lntereat In the real absolute.
f881; thence with the and equllable.
Petitioner
The
described
Una between .. ld THE DEFENDANT(S) estate
prays
below:
that
th"'
NAMED
ABOVE
ARE
Lola 12 a. 13 s. 26

a

/

I-IOU DAY
S:P~CIAL
~~V(J 10%

PC DOCTOR

k

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282
www.wvpcdr.com
oc1or0wv dr.com

BISSEll

BUILDERS InC.

MillS

FAMILY

CDNSTRUCTION

Coolville,

(12) 27, 2002

&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

"I lost my shirt
~ar ,rnthestock

OH

market!"

45723

1-740·667-0363

Shop early for the
holidays!
New Shipment
FannToys &amp;
. Construction Toys
All Brands

'"Not mel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp .lnsuf'llnce
and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport. OH
Phone: 843-5264."

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Best Service at
the Best Price

Let me do 1: for youl

·}:. ~ II'., &amp;&gt; •• ,Aifr., r·

liNDA'S PllmiG

Skin, Cut, Wrap ·
&amp;Freeze
All this for only

$45.00
31645 SR 325·
Langsville, OH

740-742-2076

Open 9!1J11·5pm
fn:c c•1inlilln. f= in ht11""

pkk~fl

Call ~• for 111 )'""'! C&lt;llllfiiJler !l&lt;.'Ci.ls

(740) 446-1812
A.\k 1.1.1 1J JU/fl uu r
Xn·if( 1'/ml:r.'

Hill's Self
Storage

NOTICE

Eastern Local School
District
50008 SR 681
Reedsville,
Ohio
45772
(740) 667-3319

·w.v·s #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds

1000 S.R. 7 Soulh

PUBLIC NOTICE

Treasurer

l-800-822-0417

Depoy's Ag PMs

Email: bladesOzaplink .com

Ritchie,

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

740-992·1717

(740) 992-3320

M.

A-JMN-sraw!
992-m
992-2272

HARTWELL
STORACiE

. Sl Rt. 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

Estimates

Now Renting

10x20

01 1

Lisa

Free

lOxlO

Dalandant(s) named
'above be required to 8w: ii!P ~~ 0 Hrd~
answer and sat up
their Interest In said
real estate or be forever barred from
asaartlng the same,
lor foreclosure of
aald mortgage, the .
marshaling of any
IIana, and the sale of
said real estate, and
New Homes • Vinyl
the proceeds of said
Siding
• New Garages
sale applied to the
payment
of
• Replacemeht
Petitioner's Claim In
Windows
• Roofing
the proper order of its
COMMERCIAL
and
prlorlly, and for such
other and further
RESIDENTIAL
relief as Is Just and
FREE ESTIMATES
equHable.
The
Dalendant(a)
740-992-7599
named above are
required to answer on
or before lhe 24th day
of January. 2003.
By: Raimer &amp; Lorber
Co., L.P.A.
Dean . W. Kanallls,
Anornay at Lew
AHorney lor PlaintiffBuildirtg over 30 .\'ear.'i
Petitioner
P.O. Box 968
Footers, Foun(ialion.
Twinsburg, OH44087
Add-Ons, New Homes,
(330) 425-4201
Pol e .Barns, Concrete,
Aurora Loan S.rvlcaa
Eleclric, P~umbing
(11) 22. 29, (12) 6, 13,
l11.1urt.ma W&lt;Wk /rwluJrd
20,27

A public hearing
will be held January
14, 2003, at approxlmlllely 6:30 p.m. In
the cOnference room
located with
the
library at Eastern
Elementary. The purpo• of the hearing Ia
to review the 2003·
2004 tax budget for
the
dlatrlct.
The
budget 11 available
lor Inspection during
regular
business
hours al lhe admlnla·
tratlva · offices of
Eastern· Local School
District

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calla

(10'x10' 610'x20')

JUST launched!!!
LOSE WEIGHT
NOW! Bums FATI
BLOCKS Cravings!
BOOST Energy!
All NaturaVOoctor
Recommended
Get this AWESOME
product TODAY
Call: Jeanie
740-992·7996
or visit website:
www.herbondlet.com

JONES'

992·297

·An Equal lJilportunity Employtr-

deg. 09' w. 263.56 feet
lhe point of beginning.

Jeff Warner Ins.

1-74Q-94g·2115

•nd Sm•ll Horne
Malntenanc. Joba

HELP WANTED

Local Area Industry seeking
temporary personnel. 40 Hr.
workweeks anticipated, rotating
shift work required. Technical
and/or maintenance experience
preferred. Entry level wage rate @
approx. $10.00 per hr with '
moderate Benefit package being
offered. Interested candidates
are to submit resumes to:
P.O. Box 1051
•
New Haven, WV 25265-1051
By January 3, 2003 . ,

Cellular

Morning Star Road • CR 30 • Racine, Ohio

Jim Ruark
Elec:trlc, Plumbing,

Advertise

Mason County, WV

Good Selection o(Shrubs

J6S flECTRIC 6
PLUIRBIH&amp;

(12) 27, 2002

-Industrial Workers-

Grave BlanketS S5.00·S25.00
Wreaths SlO Er up
51/lc Poinsettias 94t ea
Swags $5.00 Er up

Agency

for

LEGAL NOTICE

TRYING

LeveiPropene Gaaea
Inc.................... $31.26
Toll 002202
SBATowara
Inc.
.....................$1.157.86
Lebanon Twp-Eaatem
LSD
Tu II 1100475
Barbara
Green
Painting .........$474.30

Inc.............$32,979.93
To 1002057
Specanetlnc ...$25.11
Tax 1000572
Verlzon Credit Inc.
.......................... $34.94
Pomeroy
VlllagaMelgaLSD
Tol000857
Levorl Propane Gaus
Inc ....................$44.24
Tax 100342
Rickman,
Patricia
...............:........ $255.30
Tax 1000950
S..rla, Keith .$213.78
tax I 001189
Zuapan.
William
....................:... $463.08
Scipio
Twp-Melga
LSD
Tax 1001232
Frontlarvlalon
Operating Partners
.....................$2,274.83
Slillon Twp-Southam
LSD
Tax 1000857
Level Propene Gases
Inc . ...................$86.25
Racine
illllagaSouthern LSD
Tax 1000475
Gheen,
Barbara
.....................$2,705.05

992-215

C&amp;C General Home Maintene~re· ~Sinling, vinyl sidIng . carpentry, doors, wtndows , baths, mobile. home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chat, 740-9926323.

I

1996 S-10 Extended Cab,
$4295; 1997 Saturn , 20.
$2795; 1996 _Ford Contour,
$2495. I 8 others In stodo.
COOK MOTORS
(740)446.()103

•

"' I I{ \ I C I "

shop &amp; movies. Call 740. lawn;:•~··~---~--., $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS!
446,2566. Equal Housing
MlscEu.ANEOUS
Hondas .. Chevys, and morel
Cars/ Trucks/ SUVs fro m
.::
O!:!
pp::o.::rtu::n::c
ity!:..- - - - MERCHANDiSE ·
$500. For listings
Call
Furnished 3 rooms + bath,
upstairs, clean, no pets. Baby high chair, like new 1-600-719·3001 ext. 3901
Reference &amp; deposit re - 304,fi7H633
1994 Buick leSabre, good
quired . (740)446· 1519.
condition, runs great, looks
Gracious living. 1 and 2 BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav· fine , comfortable, asking
bedroom apartments at Vii- lngs, arid BOOST Energy $4900. (304)675-7627
lege Manor and Riverside Like You Have Never Ex·
1995 Old Cutlass Supreme
APartments In Middleport. perienced.
SL, 4dr, very good condi·
WEIGHT· LOSS
From $278-$348. Call 740·
tlon, $3500 . . (740)245·9652
REVOLUTION
992-5064. Equal Housing .
Opportunities. .
New product launch Octo· even,lngs.
bar 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
Honeysuckle Hills Apart· (740)441-1982
mente located behind Colonial Drive behind Highway
Grubb's Planr;&gt;· Tuning &amp;
Patrol Post. 1· BR now avail·
Repairs. Problems? Need
able. Rent starts $245/
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.
month. Low &amp; moderate In·
74().446·4525
come. Equal Housing Opportunity. (740)446,33&lt;14 or
Hobar1 meat saw. $600;
TOO 1·800· 750-0750.
1981 lnte rnatlonEJI School
Modern 1 bedroom apart- b u_s, full size, $1200.
ment (740)446-0390
(740)379·9267

I

Rear glass lor 1991 Chevy
S-1 0 p~k- up, $75. 00 992·
2845

,\ I 1\ I " ICl( 1,

B~AUTIFUL

I

ble lot located In Racine. 14 70 trailer 2 80 total
Mobile home has a tlully electric $300.00 8 month
equipped kitchen and ga- and .150 .00 deposit , no
5
rage has a large work·
bench. Includes· a privacy pets.
fence and also has 8 small "7.4"'2,_,2:;7c.:l..:4______
storage l:lulldlng in back 2 bedroom Mobile Home
yard , InCludes front porch · Spring Valley area , $300
and back+ porch with sun - month,
$250
deposit.
decK. Must see to appreci· (304)675·2900 or (740)441ate . Immediate possession . . 6954
Call (740)992·1987
2 bedroom, all alectrlc, AC ,

I

r1;;r:...-----...,

4
room
1
bedrQom
$350/month plus util ities.
$350/deposit. 125 3rd Ave ,
Gallipolis, OH, must 1'!41(e Modern 1 br Apt.
references. (703)451 ·2591 (740)446·0390

Ii

HOt.miOUl
Goons

frlgerato r. Utilities paid, tric range 30~. white $95.
$400 month. 4 6 Olive GE washer/dryer set $190.
Also have furniture, tamps ,
Street. (740) 446 _3945
tables. night stands, dressApartment Available Now. ers, chest of drawers, bookRiverBend Place , New Ha- shelve~. beds, dining chairs,
van , WV now accepting ap- and a hospital bed. Skaggs
plicatlons lor HUD-subsi- Appliance 76 Vine Street,
dized, I bedroom apart· Gallipolis. OH (740)446·
ment. Utili ti&amp;s included Call 7398
(304)882-3 121 Apartment
available for qualifl8d senlor/dlsabled person. EHO
~

5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St, New 2 bedroom wtwasher,
·
MORU..E HOMriS $325 mo. (740)446-3945
and dryer hookup. Referen·
~
FOR SALE
,
M
HOMriS ces required, 7 minutes
·
OBILE
1rom hospital
(740)441·
1994 Schult 16x72 Mobile
FoR RENr ·
0117
·
Home Priced to sell Quick
Call (740) 385·2 434
12x60, tbr. Trailer lor rent North 3rtl. Middleport, two
for older co uple. W/Laundry BD furnished- appt. Deposit
1998 16lC80 Schult mobile Aooml br. Large fenced &amp; References, No Pats 992·
home with a 24x24 detach· yard . $350. Mo. Camp Con· :0.:;16::5:.__ _ _ _ __
ed heated garage on a dou· lay area. (740)682-0292
Now Taki ng Appl lcatlo ns-

i

r.•o

Mobile home for rent, no
Cipeit•:;.·
,

Watertlne Spacial: :i!4 200 1998 Jeep Wra ngl~r SoftPSI $21.00 Per 100; I" 200 top , 4WD, 5 disC CO changPSI $35.00 Per 100; All er, new carpet, new fires ,
Brass Compression Fittings white . Asking less than
In Stock.
payoff (740)388-1572
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·8DO-r
ll4o':l~------.,
537·9528
M&lt;m&gt;RCY&lt;I.E't

Tax II 000857

Orange Twp-Eaatern
LSD
Tax I 001870
Bibbee
Insurance
Compeny ........ $89.62
Tax I 001232
Frontlervlslon
Operating Pertnara
........................ $726.53
Tax 1000857
Level Propene Galnc.................... $35;18
Tax I 001488
Bibbee
Motor
Company
Inc.
. ..................... $2,437.28
Rutland Twp-Melga
LSD
Tax 1001232
Fronllervlalon
Operetlng Partners
........................$383.87
Tax 100857
Laval Propene Ga88a
Inc....................$76.34
Salisbury Twp-Melga
LSD
Tax I 001232
Fronllarvlalon
Operating Partners
........................$743.88
Tax 1000857
Levorl Propene Ga•a
lric..................$102.54
Middleport VIllage·
Meigs LSD
·Tax IHI01635
Jerry Bibbee Ford

The
V )Daily Sentinel

M~~~ IrL,'-..:FO~s;,RPA!:l&amp;z~~,.JI r ~ I ~.,r__.r.Wos.,.&amp;~_.l

Nice lois available tor up to 1 bedroom ·apartment, stove
16x80 mobile homeS, $115 &amp; refrigerator included, utilll·
water included, (740)992- les included. (740)245·5859
2167
.
1 Bedroom Apartments

2001 14x80 Oakwood mo·
bile home (216)351-7086 or
(216)257, 1485.

Foreclosed SW on 2 acre
tract, $500 down to qualilied
buyers. Call (740)446,3570
for a quick safe.

r

1 and 2 bedroom apartNew 2003 14 wide . Only ments, furnished and unfur$799· down and ohly nished, security deposit re$t59.43 per mont~ . Call quired, no pets, 740·9922218.
Harold, 740·385·7671 .

Bl.lSINFS'i

2 lost dogs, Ewington area,
t fema le golden retriever, 1
female brindle bO)(er. lost

'-"QU
I
.

All real estate edvertltlng
In this nawap~per le
aubJ.ct to the Federal
Fair Houtlng Aci of 1868
Which make• It llltgal to
advertiH "any
preference, limltlitlon or
dlacrlmlna'tlon baled on
race, color, religion, n11
familial ttetua o~atlonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, llm11ell0n or
dlacrlmlnatlon,"

M~s~lfS

11M

r

)

Estates 3 bed·
room house CIA and heat,
fenced yard. Reduced to
92,000
negoli~ble.
(740)446-8508

r

HOllSEl

Winland , AN Director of
Nursing, at (740-667·3156)
Arcadia ·Nursing Center
East Main Street
3 pups Aottweiler/Great
Coolville, Oh 45723
Dane m1x 2 months old,
(740) 667·3156
l)'ormed (740)256 ·1651
EOE·MIFIHIDV.
Free puppies 112 beagle, 6
rhiles , 1 female. [740}446- AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears', 304·
4355
675-1429.

RJGHT

I

r·aw~T£

GIVEAWAY

.))elivered.

HoME&lt;!
SALE

FOR

please apply in pers on be·
tween 9-4 or call, Susan
lhla newepaper are
Winland, AN , Dire ctor of Truck .Dr1v8ra , lmfnediate
available on an equal
hire
,
class
A
COL
required,
opportunity biiS.a.
Nursing.
Arcadia Nursing Center
excellent pay, experience ~::::~==:::::~~~
required. Earn up to
East Main Street
51 , 000 . per week.Call 304 _ . For Sale or Rent- 2 houSes,
·coolville, Ohio
s _
8·1/f aces, appraised at
75 4005
(740)667·3 156)
$78,000. Will take $69,995. Will pay top dollar for prime
EOE·MIF/HI_DV
Rent tor $350/mo. 1601 land. New home builder.
1140
Ad . (740)446-3093
Graham
School
Are you interested in an eJ~:·
(740)446.()()50.
I{ I \ I \I ""
citinQ career in nursing? We
Offer an excellent opportuni- Gallipolis Career College House for sale at 2224 Mt.
ty with great benefits, expe(Careers Close To Home)
Vernon Ave in Point Pleasrience pay, and a friendly Call Today! 740-446-4367, ant, lots of extras,. very comwork envi ronment. Scenic
t-800·214-0452,
forta ble, low maintenance
FORRENf
Hills Nursing Center is now
Reg #90·05·1274B.
home. 3ba, 3br. possible 4,
accepti ng applications lor a
WANTED
huge master bedroom, a 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
· full time LPN on our mid·
16x32 great room ,' central Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
night shift. "Please ca ll Dla- ' - - - - •
' .OTiioiriDoiiiii--,.1 heBtlalr w/2 gas fireplaces, Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
nna Th ompson at (740)446-' ·
attic storage wlpull down, 1 APR . For Listings, 8D0-319·
7150. or, stop by and fill out Georges Portable Sawmill , car block garage w/natural 3323 Ext. 1709.
an application today. We don't haul your logs to the gas. Vinyl siding &amp; windows .
ar,e an equal opportunity mill just call304-675-1957. (304)675-6855
2 bedroom house, 29 Evans
employer.
Will babysit In my home, Land home p ackages . ·No Heights, $425 month plus
deposit. No pets, (740)441 At ~ocal Convient store. lor Link provider, call anytime payments while under coninformation call 992~3332 or 30H75,8685
struction.
Linle
or no ::'15'-'1"-9--~-..,-,-992·0228 Leave Message
Will repair automobiles, all down payment required . 2 br. 2 story house. $3'0 0.00
a month rent +$300 .00
(7 40)446,32 18
Attention dedicated care- types of repairs . 15 years
down damage dep .. utilities
givers! We can otter you a experience, ASE cermied. New 2000 sq tt home, 10 is renters responsibility 304Call
(740)44
H
199
flexible schedule with great
minutes from
Hospital. 576-2247
11\\ \( I \1
opportunity. Scenic HillS
Complete above ground
pool with
r h d.
2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unites
Nursing Center is now acpo c ' nv~ay . available. Pomeroy/Middlecepting applications for a
and garage foundation .
.
.
.
·ce bel
.
port/Rac1ne area, 1mmed1ate
fill-in State Tested Nurses
01'1'0RT!!NITY
ow
appra1sa 1.
·
·
Pr'
• occupancy. Hud approved,
(740) 446 .aaa4
a1de far our 2pm to 1Opm
_ __;__ _ _
. - - - - pets allowed, no deposit opshift and our 1Oam to 6pm
!NOTICE!

kciiiHIHIIIIMr·
lctretllllri-H

~mily.

NURSES
(RNa) $47.00
per hour, Columbus, OH
All Units , FULL TIME
(800)437.()346 .

;;.;p.-;;;;1

are alway• conflcMntlal. • Current rate eft applte.. ··All real Htate adveniHmanta .,. aubjtct to .the Federal Falf Hawing Act at 1168. • Thla ;;;
,
lccephl only help wanted Ht
EOE etandarda. Wt will n~ knowlngty ICCtpt any .n.tlaing in vlo&amp;Mion oflhe taw.

'
---· '
Help Wanted caring for the Clearview

\VANTFD

I ~

••I*'M

• Ads Should Run· 7 Da.,.

HElPWANT£D

Tax II 000857
LavaiPropena Gaua
Inc.................... $30.16
Tax I 0022022
.SBAfowara
Inc.
........................$828.88

POUCIES: Ohio V.hy Publ'*hl,nt ~the right to edit. ,.ject, or c~ any 8d at any time. Errort muat be reponed on tflt flrat Qy
Trilu,.S.ntJnei-Aatlat.r will ~ rHpOnalble for no mare than the coat of tha ~ occupied by the lfTOI' and only tM flret lnMrtlon. Wt
not
any lou or
that rMutta from the pubiiCitlon or omlulon of an aclvettl..,ent. C~on will be made In the flrat avallaba. edition. • Box

• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed

YARDSALE

..., , H\ II

·'

In Next Day•• Paper
~~'!'~11''-IInn-Column: 1:00 p.m .

Description • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbrevl•tlona

r•::::;;:::~ riO

.·r

Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get

.....................$3,889.25

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 ·Days
o ..,..,r 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

Dally In-Column: 1.:00 p.m.

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

Twp-Melga

LSD

Columbia
TwpAittunder LSD
To II 001232
F r ontlervlalon
Operating Partnera
.......................... $76.84 .

Bashan Road
. Racine, Ohio
45771
740,949·2217

29670
• Ton neue Cover •

Vemvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Oth er A ccessories
\

I I

'

"

I

I

1'\ II ( )Ill •'
(740 ) 992-5822
\ 11·1·11

'

Ball Logging
&amp;Firewood
BebBaiJ
Dump Truck Delivery

•·740.992-6142
Leave aMessage

Wolfe Heating &amp; Cooling
~
•10 yr parts &amp; labor
~
• Service on all brands
• Residential &amp; light commercial
• www.americanstandardair.com
GAS, FUEL OIL &amp; .HEAT PUMPS
"SALES &amp; SERVICE"
CUSTOMER CARE DEALER

Toll Free: 1-877-466-1234
WV 034816 . (740) 992-1385

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

YOUNG'S
ROBERT CARPENTER
BISSELL
SERVICE
&amp;
CONSTRUCTION

• ~oom Additions
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Eltt'ctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Pooling &amp; Gutters
• Vln~l Siding a Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Free Eslimales

Stop &amp; Compare
7/22ffFN

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·62 15
Pomercy, Ohio
y

lUI

I

•

�Page 8 6 • The Daily Sentinel

I Friday,

www.mydallysen"linel.com

ALLEYOOP

IIIUDOE

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59 Wepltl ·
11 Dllmpen • 60 AatrGnomer
bird
38 MyttHieo
atamp ·
Co~ 9 Obllgttlon 44 Stopwatch
20 Pollergelot 81 Windy City
10 Blow 1 ham
button
22 Herolam
tl'lina
1~ Bright
46 Wladom
M - Peulo
62 Gall peg
oongblrd
tooth
25 l,llunchlng 83 Chimed·
19 Campaign 47 Flory alack
· plotfann
21 BNp
48 Authentic
DOWN
28 Opulent
22 st..m
41 Doctrinal
28 Nothing, to
23 Hondy
50 Put In tho
1 Itlntf81Y
Juon
24 Sleep
microwave
word
32 Cockney'•
53 Flamenco
optlmlom1 2 Claullied 25 K~chen
utenalll
dancer'a
taction
33 Jecob'a
27 ·Grecolul
ohout
3 Make lace
twin
wrap
55 Ottoman
M Rope tangle 4 Prepare
29 CHUr'l
alllclal
ahrimp
35Exyear
56 Knowa
5 Oppoaltlon
37 Muelctnd
haw
aculpture 6 Drink like 30 Brido'a
portion
57 High school
Rover
39 RCMP
31 Envelope
eubt. .
patrol zone 7 Alpha
abbr.
40 Young lady

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•
MERCY, ELVINEY ,-Ii ' S MIG~T't
TO HAVE
YOU EACh&lt;

!-lOME

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THE BOR,N LOSER .

BIG NATE
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•

BY PHtUIP ALDER
Francoise Sagan, a
French nov elist· and
playwright, sa id, "H
see ms to me that
there are two kinds or
AW, SUGAR BUN, I
trickery : the ' fronts'
DID MISS
people assume before
WIF
one another 's ·eyes,
and the ·from' a
YOU
writer puts on the
·face of reality ."
In today 's deal, one
defender find s a
tricky play before the
declarer' s eyes . But
thi s writer is not puttin~ a front on reality
_; Ithappened dunng
the Cap Gemini invitational pair event,
held last January in
the Netherlands.
First, thou gh, if
South, how would
you play the diamond
suit for four tricks?
Most Souths were
in four spades. However, two East-West
pairs went on to five
hearts. One was doubled and one down.
At the other table ,
.., South bid on to five
....
BUT f-\t. ::,"-'&lt;S
r\t: r\1'0 NOif\lt-IG
spade s, also one
IT 1'-N'&lt;WI\'{!
TO SJ&gt;...'&lt; •.•
down . ..
The- best diamond
play is unclear. You
could cash the diamond ace, then lead
low toward dummy .
But if you think East
•
is longer than West,
~
you
should lead low
1----,--c • f-- -1
toward .the dummy
and, assuming Wesl
plays low, put in the
nine.
lf it loses io the
'C'OIJ'vE BEEN
0
•
jack,
·finesse
through
8'1
IIEITAAVEil
d
•
'C'OUii:
SloiOWBALL.:S
.
East
for
the
king
on
'
•
L-INGERING
SCENT
round
two.
Here,
that
I
0
OF • I'\ ILl&lt;. !!ONES: would have worked .
•
0
•
•
.But Eng.tishman
'
Andy Robson found a
•
' SNIFF!.
way to deflect de•
darer.
'
.
0
• i
•
Zia Mahmood led
'
• • i
'
an
ima&amp;inative heart
•
_,
king, thmking that if
~
he he.ld the Irick. he
mighi be able to m.ake
Ihe telling shift at
-Irick two. However,
ALREAD'r'?
Robson overtook'with
THANK '(OV ..
his ace a11d switched
· to the diamond two.
Understandably,
South thought that
thi s was a s1pgleton.
So, he went up with
the ace and down in
his contract , losing
one heart, two diamonds and one club.
· 1V2.710Z
If you think declarer is going to succeed, try to mislead
PREPA~E ~OVRS f.~f.
him.

5I

36 Utterod

ofSp.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis. Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pa&amp;t and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: F equals G

" IWPABM

RHBWZIDOCMH

AN

XCDO

ITTAYHO
MPABH

ADTL

P Z H

I B H

P Z H

T HI J H

p A

DCFZP."

IP

FIBODHB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·"If you want to pleas~ only the cotics don't play too loud, too soft, too last, too slow."
-MuroToscaninl
I J I

· -TH-AT_D,;.At;;.;LY:;.~C.~fi'iJ~-Q-::--;~a~'-~
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PUZZLIR

------

O Rearrange

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GAMI

ldltod by CLAY a. P O L L A N - - - - - -

leHers

of

th•

fo.:ir scrambled wordJ be·

low to for"' four :simpla words.

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ERVE E R
t--,j-::
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r

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T U QA 0 I
;-'rl""'l-i
. 1
. 1
. . . .
~=;:::~~~~ "
corre
nt is
I NF UT
someone who fiies .around from
.
to country and thinks that
I· I· Is 1_ ·". .country
the most interesting story is the
fact that he has arrived to - -- - 3

A

rl

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Il--r'--rliGT7I-t\
J I T CE N
j'

16 17

I

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·

·. ·

n Complete the chuckle quoted

1IWl' by filli ng in the missing words
L....l.-.l...-l--'---1.--'- you develop frpm s1ep No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBL E LETT ER S

FOR ANS WER

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Deftly- Joint -Imply- Kennel -.:-'ONEY

One not so smart fellow to another: I w1sh I had the
money to buy an elephant." Second fellow : " What would
you do with an elephan_:?" First fellow: "Nothing. I Just
wish I had the MONEY .

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

I'll\ IN

HERE.

ALEX!

·~

SuturLiuy, Dec. 28. 2002
Bv

.'

BERNICE BEDE OsoL

C i 1·cu mstan ces not o f your
mak i n~ may work to your tldvanta gc in the yei.lr uhcad

whe re vour financial affairs

ill'e concerned. You'll be able

to use what happen s to guide
thin~ s to he ne fi t you .

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) ·-- You won't mind at all
if frie nds lean on you a bit

more lhan usu al today.. In

fa c t. c han ces ar c ym i" ll be
· ho no red th:l1 th ey trus t you to
ham.llc what thcv can 't.

AQ UA RI US '(Jan . 20-Feb .
19) •. Finding yourself caugh1

.,?oM VAV~ ~ 1%·11

up in a l:pmp ctitivc invo lvemen t today s ho uld turn 0ut to
be ruth er fu n and satis fying.
You r track time is apt to b~
fur swi ft er tha n your oppo- ··
nent 's.

THE GRIZZWELLS
~'21, 6lJ\-\l'H~'

\NI\ffi SOM(

PI SC ES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- 13y bcneflli ng from

L£Ho\Jt~

IU'K\\EY

vou r pas t experiences. you

'01\.\~f\1-\G?

Sho u ld bl' ah lt: to turn thi s day
in to u pro fi1 ~1 h l e o ne . Y ou' re

nol apl' to fa ll back un fault y
habits th at have previous ly inhibit ed yo u !'rom ma kin g
ga ins .

ARI ES (March 21· t\ pril l9)

-- It can be a b ig ;u.lvant ag.c
·for you toda y 10 hl! cx. trcmcly
-

--

----~--

,. ' .

proficient in your commercial
affairs. Larger profil s than ·

qu ire total atLentiun will be

usual Can be atta ined at this

Your powers of concentration

time if you utilize your insights wisely.
.• .
TAURUS (Apnl 20-Ma y
20) -- There' s talk going on
abotit you today. and it is all
good. A dependable and
force ful friend will be saying
nice tilings on your beilalf
that cou ld have quite an Impact o n his or her li steners.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Roll up your sleeves and
gef· ~ oing early loday. because
you II be murc tlmt a match
for the tasks from whi ch you
cus10maril y back away. The
pride vnu take in your job will

make l hin gs easier.

CANCER (J une 21-Jul y 22)

~- One of vo ur better assets
today is yo.u r abil ity to reor-

gani ze what others have
goofed up. What lm\ks like a
tan g led mess to the m is as

easy as rcadinc a book to yo u.

LEO (Ju ly '23-Au g. 22)

~­

So mc time.s it i ~ eas ie r to h~m ­
dle things for ot he rs than to

sort out our own &lt;lffairs. This
may be .tru e o f you todqy, so
operate where you knoW you '
can do the most good .

VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept . 22)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Heating aid
program
braces
for winter
Bv KrnN KEuY

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • December 28, 2002

SO CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 18

New club to provide . Pomeroy to .
'high energy' for teens collect some

eXtra·revenue

BY lAWRENCE J. SMITH
Staff writer

News editor
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Main Street Point
Pleasant will have a new
business and area teens will
have a "dynamic place to
mingle" thanks to two
enterprising teen-at-heart
women.
Tired of hearing their
teenagers complain about
nothing to do on the weekends, Shelli Barnette, of
Point Pleasant and Kim
Duncan, of Gallipolis Ferry
are opening 21 Under, a
"high-energy dance venue,"
at the former Heilig-Meyers
Furnit~re store Jan. 3.
Barnette and Duncan said
they wanted to provide area
youth an opportunity to partake in a social activity
locally rather than have to
travel elsewhere. ·
"My son has been driving
Route 7 to Barboursville to
go dancing on a Saturday
night," Duncan said.
Likewise,. Barnette, who
regularly works l 00 hours a
week as a registered nurse,
said the club is a way to
escape the daily grind of a
job and begin a family business.
"Basically, we have kids
of our own," Barnette said.
"This. is opponunity to be

the budget predictions.
But officials expect beyond
CHES HIRE, Ohio - The
In years past, Ihe village has
Home Energy Assistance
hard times soon
collected more.
Program, commonl y known as
Hysell, who has been clerkHEAP, has been keeping lowBY J. MILES lAYTON
treasurer for 10 years, said the
income res idents of Gallia and
Times-Sentinel correspondent
vi llage collecied more Ihan
Meigs counties connected t o
$100,000 during the 1995-96
their utilities or heating sources
tjscal years. Any overage
POM EROY, . Ohio
each winter for a number of
amount
is added to the general
Pomeroy will collecl $13,000 fund. Any
years.
extra money is also
more from incoming revenue used to fill in any shortfalls the
This heating season, the
sources Ihan was otherwise pre- vi llage may experience.
demand remains high and offidicted.
·
cials
at
Gallia-Meigs
This past year.
Each year, Ihe
Community Actio.n Agency,
was one besei with
village makes an
where HEAP ass istance is availearly financial dif"We ended
educaied
guess as
able, believe the need will
ficulties. The vilto · how much
up in better
increase in the coming months.
lage has to operale
money it will col"h 's been pretty steady," said
shape that · fo r nearly four
lect in taxes and
Sandra Edwards, emergency
months . without
we were .
fees. The · exaci
services director for the agency,
any
revenue
in
at
the
amount
can
not
be
which assists the area's needy
because none has
predicted · with
beginning
through various programs fund been collected or
complete ~e rtainty
of the year."
ed by state and federal dollars.
processed due lo
because of unforethe
accounting
" I also expect it to increase,
seen
changes
in
tax
-Kathy Hysell, cycle. The vi llage
given the mine closi ngs, layoffs
revenue or the 'ecoClerk-Treasurer faced expenses
at GKN. Sinter Metals and
nom ic climate.
involving $30.000
unemployment benefits running
For instance, th is
for demolition . of
out, the trickle-down effect will
past year several bu sinesses abandoned buildings and a
probably hit us in 'February,"
closed,
depriving the village of major liability insurance paysaid Edwards.
tax revenue.- When the new ment of $25.000.
"We 'll be able to handle it,
school is completed, Meigs
"We ended up in better shape
but it will be pretty bu sy," she
Local
sc
hool
administration
that
we were in at the beginning
added.
will be moving and laking of the year," Hysell said. "I was
· The agency receives its
Shelii · Barnette points to the area .of· the forme r Heiligalong
with it tax revenue and afraid we were noi going to be
HEAP "dollars from the U.S.
Meyers Furniture store that will contain the concession
mi
scellaneous
fees the village able to make it because of the
Department of · Energy, which
stand for the new 21 Under dance club . Barnette along
major expenses we incurred."
collects.
are distribuied by the Ohio
with
Kim
Duncan
decided
to
start
the
club
after
hearihg
The village relies on the. genClerk-Treasurer
Kathy
Departmeut of Development.
their teenagers complain about nothing to do.on the weekeral
fund to gei'it through the
Hysell
said
the
$13,000
is
an
HEAP, often a target for elim'
.
e
nds.
(Lawrence
J.
Smith)
Please
see
Club.
A3
average
overage
amount
the
inatior!'Trom the federal budget,
village will lake ·in each year
was approved for thi s year and
Please see Revenue, A3
funding has increased slightly,
she added.
· ~It increased a, little, not
enough to make a difference,
but the money is available ,"
Edwards said.
Those needing assistance·
always very knowledgeable."
sergeant when he succeeded Chester
"I think the
begin the application period
Taylor, born in Perry County, moved Leeper as chief in 1966.
word that
Nov. I. Applications are acceptto the Gallipolis area at an early age.
"Police work has changed ," Taylor
to mind
comes
ed until March 31.
He had become a probationary city reflected years later. '.' You could have
when I think
Edwards said Emergency Bv KEVIN KELLY
patrolman before his induction into · no training. they gave you a badge and
about
HEAP provides assistance to News editor
World War II service in Dece mber put you to work. You worked a 48John is
households that have had utili1942. He found hi s interest in police hour week , if you were lucky. If ·:i£1U
respect:•
tie s disconnected, face the
work led to interesting duty overseas. weren't, there was no telling how 15fag
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - ·John Tay!or
threat ·of disconnection or have
.
·
"After three years as an MP, I had a you worked."
- Roger
10 days or less supply of bulk was remembered as firm, fair and suppretty good idea of whal police work
Following retirement, Taylor was a
Brandeberry, lorfuel.
ponive by those who worked with him
was like," Taylor said in an interview Republican candidate for Gallia
mar police chief
The program allows a one- and for him in the nearly three decades
John Talyor
prior to his ret irement . "I spent a lot of Coumy sheriff in 1984.
•
time payment of up to $ t 75 per he was associated with the Gallipolis
time in the Naples, Ual y, area working
"He' d been around forever, coming
heating season to restore or Police Department.
in
an
11-man
special
unit,
irrtiestigatup
though the ranks and did an excelpolice chief. What he said was gospel
retain home heating services.
Taylor, who served 16 years as the - he was always firm, but fa i.r," ing the black market, AWOL deserters lent job," said Gallia ·County 911
For propane and fuel oil department's chief before retiring in Brandeberry added.
and a lot more.
Director Steve Wil son, whom Taylor'
clients, the payment was recent- · 1982, died Friday in . Cabell
"It was an interesting job," he added. employed as a dispatcher in October
Joe Owen , who ·worked under
ly increased Io $250 becau se of Huntington Hospi(al, Huntington, Ta~lor during the entire time he was
Returning to Gallipolis in late 1945, 1978. "John was very profess ional, a
the increase in fuel prices.
W.Va. He was 79.
·
ch1ef, agreed with Brandeberry 's tie helped operate the 205 Cab Co. for stickler for helping the public and
Homeowners or renters may
"I think the word that comes to mind assessment.
three years, then worked several jobs . doing Ihe job right."
·
qualify if their total household when I think about John is respect,"
"That was .. I 00 percent true," said and found steady work as a driver for Taylor staned the department's cadet
income is at or below 150 per- said Roger Brandeberry, Gallipolis' Owen, a 28-year veieran of the depan- local furniture wholesaler Raymond program in the Gallipolis City Schools
cent of federal poverty gutde- current police chief, who was hired by ment who preceded Brandeberry as Hoy and Co. In 1953, he passed a Ci vil in the 1970s, whi~h Wilson joined durlines.
Taylor as an officer in 1979.
. chief. "He was a g90d person to work service test and returned to police ing his GAHS days.
·Emergency HEAP income eli"I worked for him for nearly three for. He looked oti1 for you. He was work to stay.
gibility can be for the past three years and I'll tell you, he was the
He rose through the ranks and was a
Please see Taylor, Al
or 12 months . Those not qualifying on three months' income
are asked to·present their full 12

Officers, co-wo.rkers hono·r ·Jo·hn·Taylor

Retired Gallipolis
police chief dies at 79

0

0

(;!leHileeA~ ~y

GARFIELD

Purplloh

flotiMr
18 P 17 Two.ome

• Atol'~

'

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties

51 " OK!"
52 Old Frencll
coin
54 LOCIIIIon

Bend

.. J 1
• AQ! ifi
t K J J
.,._ A K l

,llnulh
A

~5T..ty

_.,.
14 Plnlic -

(,f ~ 1 3

w....

¥aN

43 Vedllon

I Tlny opecll 47 Fllnlly of
11 U.S. bo«1tr
Ilona
-·
SO "NIIUIIIus"
13 Hnty
ok'-r

A K II) 2
It 10 ;

Showdown in CharloHe, B1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

December 27, 2002

nght up you r alley today.

could be rather formidable .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2,3 ) There mi ght be a couple
more presents coming your
way today . Adding a few
more goodies to your array of
coll ectibles looks extremely
good.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No v.
22) -- It's one of those days
where you' re apl lo be no·
ti ced wherever you go. so it

behooves you today to be ex-

.tra consc ious of your personal

Please see HEAP, Al

Index
1 Sections - 11 P•ps

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
MoviE:s
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

A6
84-5
B7

A6
A4

A3
A3
Bl-3
A2

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publ ishing Co.

Carnes assumes Meigs Senate post Mason County schools
BY BRIAN J.
pired term · and Holmes counties will be
meet federal standards
Staff writer
of Bob Ney, dropped from the 20th disREED

POMEROY, Ohio
Republican James E. Carnes,
who will become Meigs
County 's new state senator in
January, was a 30-year coal
mine employee and has been
active in promoting rural
economic development.
Carnes' district will include
Meigs County
as of
Wednesday, due to redistricting of Ohio's senate districts.
Carnes, of St. Clairsville,
took his Ohio Senate seat in
1995, completing the unex-

who
was
elected to
Congress.
Ca r nes
was elected
to hi s first
full tenh a
year later.
His
di strict
James Camas includes
the
eastern por'
tion of Athens County and all
of Bel mont, Coshocton,
Holmes, Morgan, Monroe,
Muskingum, Noble and
Washington counties .
As of Wednesday, Bel mont

tri ct and Meigs, Guernsey
and the remainder of Athens
County will be added.
Carnes worked for th e
Cravat Coal Co. for more
than 30 years and has served
on the company's board of
directors since 1992.
He serves as chairman of
the powerful Senate Finance
and . Financial ln siituti ons
Committee , and is a .member
of Ihe Highways and
Transportali on
and
Agriculture Committees. He
also se rves on the State
Controlling Board.

BY DAN PoLCYN
News editor

elementaries - were placed
on .watch due to low
Stanford Achievement Test9 scores, but all three
schools improved enough tO
meet federal assessment
standards.
Factors in the NCLB evaluation include scores on the
SAT-9, attendance rate,
graduation ra te, and the
dropout rate.
The three schools were
placed on probation afler
more than 15 perce nt of

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va . - After having three
sc hools fa ll short of West
Virgi ni a acc reditation siandards last year, Mason
County school s have rectified the si tuation well
enough to make the grade on
the first federall y-mandaied
" No Child Lefi Behind"
re port card issued rece ntly.
The. three sc hools Leon. Ordnance, and Maso n Please see Standards, Al

appearance. You' ll want 10
make a good impression .

Together··we can.change your body.
And your life.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- It will be-clever of
you to let olhers think that
what you hope to ucco mpli sh

toda y is reall y thei r idea. By
· doin g

MJ.

yuu' gain

th ~ ir

full

support and more ensily get
wllat you wunt.

Try ing to patch up a bro-

ke n rom a nce ? Th e As tro·

Gmph Malch maker con help
you undersla nd 1 what. lo do lo
make the rclalionsh1p work.
Mail $2 .75 w Matchmak'er.
c/o lhis new,paper. P.O. Box
1(&gt;7. Wickliffe. OH 44092.

j

ToLL

FREE

(866) 821-4541 www.ccwL.INFo

-- M en tal uss i ~.wn~c nrs thm rc-

- -- - - J·

,,

'

.

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