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                  <text>•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

',

Big East hopes
to remain in BCS
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Big East filled its football void,
The question remains whether
it wi ll be enough to keep the
conference in the Bowl
Championship Series.
The Big East fonnally invited Cincinnati, Louisville and
South Aorida to join the conte rence in football on Tuesday
to respond to the defections of
football powerhouses Miami
and Virginia Tech, as well as
Boston College, to the ACC.
"We will be one of the six
best football-playing conferences in the country," commissioner Mike Tranghese said.
'T m confident that we will be
sitting at the table with the five
other conferences."
Major college football is split
in two groups - schools that
are part of the BCS and schools
on the ,outside hoping to get in.
The ACC raided the Big East
earlier this year to solidify its
place in the group of the
biggest conferenc.~;s . The Big
East hopes its response will be
enough.
The Big East is locked into
the BCS through the 2005 season, but negotiations for a new
deal will begin early next year
and it was imperative that the
conference pick its teams so it
could make lts case to its partners.
"There's a lot of tradition in
this league," Tranghese said.
"We have schools who have
won national championships,

schools whose players have
won the Heis'man 'Trophy. We
come ti:om one of the most
important sectors in this country.... I'm very confident we' ll
be there in the next go-around."
The BCS was started fi ve
years ago by the six big~e st
conferences to create a nauonal title game without a playoff.
Champions of the conferences
- the ACC, Big East, Big Ten,
Big 12, Pac- 10 and SEC qualify for a BCS game, and
two at-large teams are selected
to till out the field in the Sugar,
Orange, Rose and Fiesta
bowls.
Negotiations for the new
BCS deal have been complicated t.uJ a push from schools in
the five smaller conferences to
improve access to the most
lucrative games. Schools from
the six big conferences will
take in about $113 million of
the $118 million from the
bowls this season unless TCU
qualifies for one of those
games.
Since the BCS began in
1998, Syracuse is the only
school in the new Big East to
linish in the top 15 of The
Associa\ed poll, prompting
other leagues to argue that they
are just as worthy of an auto,
matic invite.
"Yes, we think we can make
a strong case," Mountain West
commissioner
Craig
Thompson said. "Sometimes,
parity hurts too much, but in

osu

from Page B1
concussion" when he was hit by Penn · State
linebacker Deryck Toles just before halftime
of Saturday's 21-20 victory over the Nittany
Lions.
McMullen, a fifth-year senior, started two
games earlier this year when Krenzel was out
with a hyperextended right (throwing) elbow.
In those games, he completed 26 of 41 passes
for 284 yards and two touchdowns with two
interceptions.
After
Krenzel
returned,
however,
McMullen returned to his .accustomed spot
st:mding on the sideline within earshot of
Tressel. He didn 't play against Wisconsin or
Iowa. but shook off the rust to complete all
five of his passes in a rout of Indiana.
McMullen led the Buckeyes 10 a touchdown on their first possession of the third
quarter against Penn State, then fired a pass
that Michael Jenkins pulled al\'ay from cornerback Alan Zemaitis with I :35 left for a 5yard touchdown that tied the game. Mike
Nugent added the extra-point that kept alive
the hopes of a repeat Big Ten title for the
Buckeyes (8- 1, 4-1 ).
McMullen said the decision doesn't change
~hings.

"Craig's the starter. Unless something
changes I don't really view it as a quarterback
controversy..And I don't think he does either,"
he said. "We really can't worry about that
stuff. I've just got to be ready."
Krenzel- along with the entire Ohio State
offense - has struggled most of the season.
Almost all of Krenzel's numbers are down
compared with last year's national championship run.
Krenzel is completing 56 percent of his
passes to McMullen's 67 percent. Krenzel has

light of not having one or two
bell cows, we have eight even!y balanced progmms."
A decision about whether the
Mountain West will expand
should be made by the end of
the month and Thompson
advocates adding one or two
teams. TCU is top possibility,
which would be a btg boost in
football.
The determination about
who will be in and who will be
out of the BCS will be made by
a variety of factors, including
quality of teams, tele vision
market size and how many
fans will travel to bowl games.
When Mimni and Virginia
Tech were in the conference
there · was no doubt the Big
East belonged in that group.
Those two schools have played
for the national title three of the
past four years.
"There's no doubt we lost a
lot ·in Miami, but we feel like
we' re bringing i'n schools that
will make us a very strong conference," Pitt athletic director
Jeff Long said. "We' re very
confident that we have one of
the six conferences that will be
part of the BCS."
Much of the success of the
Big East's football future rests
in three school s with little tradition. Tranghese said he anticipates Rutgers and Connecticut
becoming "players" in college
football, giving the conference
more access into the lucrative
New York market.

more interceptions than touchGlown passes (76), while McMullen has been picked off twice
·
and has five touchdown passes.
"Scott McMullen, when he's had opportunities in particular this year, has made the
most of them," Tressel said.
Tressel denied that the platoon was put into
effect because of something Krenzel wasn ' t
doing, so much as the good things that
·
McMullen was doing.
"Plain ·and simple, Scott has earned this
opportunity to play some," Tressel said . "I
wou ld hope that's the way Craig wou ld look
at it is we' ve got one more good guy that's
going to help us win."
Krenzel is self-effacing, studious and serious. McMullen is more gregarious, quick to
smi le and crack a joke at a teammate's
expense.
Offensive tackle Shane Olivea said there is
also a contrast in the huddle.
"There's a little bit of difference, because
Craig has maybe a little more game exper'ience in crucial situations," Olivea said. "This
past week was Scott' s first opportunity in a
tig ht game. When we needed to make a play,
he made a play. This was the first time that
S.cott was actually put in a situation where the
game was on the line. On that final drive, we
needed him to sort of grow up really quick."
Tressel acknowledged that by having the
two share playing time he ran the risk of hurting both quarterbacks' confiqence.
"It's about the same danger you have with
every decision you make," he said.
Tressel said he wasn't worried about how
Krenzel would handle the decision. He said
Krenzel took an active role when McMullen
was playing Saturday- calling the pass play
that won the game.
"All he wants to do is win," Tressel said.
"He'll do the best he can possibly do.· And
when Scott's in the ballgame, he' ll be signaling the plays and talking to (the coaches) on
the sideline just like at the end of the game."

•

Cooper
from Page 81
scheme of th ings, the Big East is the big loser.
With the Big East as it is now, they are a
viable BCS leag ue; but next year and beyond
is a different story.
And Cincinnati , Loui sville and South
Florida doesn' t really help matters any.
After all, your sharing major medi a markets
like Boston and Miami for Tampa and
Ci ncinnati.
Unless there's a mirac le and Penn State
jumps the Big Ten to join the Big East and
Notre Dame 's football team also out of the
kindness of its heart joins, which is on this
side of fat chance, then the Big East has

Marshall
from Page B1
dent Steve Phipps wondered,
"Why not Marshall ?"
"We 're beinp snubbed by
the Big East,' Phipps said.
"Cincinnati is going to the
Big East. Louisville is going
to the Big East. And
(Marshall)
kicked their
(backsides) in bowl games.
We ' re ri g ~t in the Big East's
backyard.'
Marshall's board of governors authorized President
Dan Angel last month to pursue C-USA membership, and
school officials believe an
invitation is imminent.
Some Marshall fans welcomed a perceived improvement in competition.
Two
Mid-American

dropped to the level of a mid-major football
conference.
·
And the mid - m ajor~. li ke the , MidAmerican Confe rence and C-USA, don I play
in the BCS games.
·
The Big East needs to be concerned.
Very concerned.
Meanwhile, leagues like C-USA and the
MAC don' t win or Jose in this situation.
While C-USA's basketball standing has
dropped considerably, the football side of the
.
league will remain as stron~ .
Meanwhile, the MAC is stmpl y revenmg to
its pre-Marshall days.
.
Besides, there are more problems m the
MAC than just losin~ Mars hall and UCF. If
the NCAA proceeds tn making attendance a
factor in bemg a Division I-A program, then
m,any MAC schools could be dropping to 1AA m the next few years.

Conference members are MAC team he most loves to
ranked in The Associated hate.
"It 's going to be weird , new
Press Top 25, yet it historical!y has been viewed as a less- team s and a new atmos. phere," Johnson said.
er league.
back
Tank
Running
"I'm tired of people saying
Tunstalle
will
be
a
junior
in
a high school team could beat
2005,
when
the
Herd
is
the teams in the MAC," said
Tiffany Fraley. a 2000 expected to begin play . in
Marshall graduate from Conference USA. He said his
teammates are looking forBarboursville.
Russell Carter, a running ward to the conference
back at Louisiana State from switch, and he's looking for1989-90, .said the MAC's ward to playing in larger
improved image makes cities and warmer climates.
Huntington , the southernswitching conferences sensemost city in the MAC, will be
less.
"Someone pretty much the reconfigured C-USA's
grabbed a crystal ball and northernmost outpost.
"We've proven that we can
said the MAC has been
lucky," Carter said. "I don' t play with some of the big ·
think it's a tluke. The MAC is boy s, " Tunstalle said. " It
gives you a bigger range of
a good conference ."
Scott Johnson, an exercise teams to play, and you get
physiology senior from St. more publicity maybe than
Albans, said . he wi ll miss with some of the MAC
games against Toledo, the teams."

"

Reds adjust some ticket
prices for '04, Bt

C-USAmovewill
boost revenue, Bt
TM

'

Former
county
employee
indicted

Investigators believe Southern fire was deliberately set

SPORTS
• LeBron's hc:.g~e debut not
so warm as Cavs fall to
Nuggets. See Page 81

either the ice machine·or the
soda mac hine caused the lire
at 4 a.m. Sunday. Jul y 27.
but this was ruled this out.
RACIN E - An investi"All acc idental causes
gali on into the fire that investigated were ruled out,"
caused $202.000 .in damage said Gerald E. Schmidt.
to Southern High School in Indiana Insurance, in a letter
Jul y revealed that the fire to
Southern
Local
was not an acc ident.
Superintendent Bob Grueser
Indiana
In suran ce dated Oct. 28. 'The investigaCompany, which insures the tors cou ld not . however, rule
school buildings, conducted out a human act. The invtlSti·
a thorough inves t!gatio~ into gator cited in his report 'the
the cause of the ltre. Pnor to cause ol th e fire was narthe investi gation, it was · rowed down to a human act. "'
believed that a short from
While the fire was conBY

J. MILES LAYTON

jlayton@rTJydailysentinel.com

tained to the closet, there
was a lot of smoke damage .
Water damage was mainl y
confined to the main ha llway
leadi ng into the hi gh school.
Grueser notilicd the Meigs
County Sheritl's Department
who refenred him to the state
lire marshal's oflice.
"We w ill pursu.~ I e~;al
recourse tmmedtately. he ·satd.
Doors. windows. li ~ h ts
and a myriad of other thmgs
we re damaged or destroyed .
Items that were damaged in
the fire incl ude one ice
mach ine, one drink machi ne

which di ' p~n ,e d Pepsi
produch . two pnpL·mn
mac hines. two wooden cabinets. several t ascs of car ·
bonated dri nh and two .
video camcra.s value J at
more "t han $2000 each .
Nearby light fixtu re' and
cei lin g tile&gt; were also
replaced jmt before school
started in Augu' t.
Grueser said the insurance
company paid out more than
$2ci2' 000 tn wve r the da m-.
age caused by the lire.

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - A former
'hcrifl"s ofti ce emRloyee ha'
been indicted on \ _ count s nf
th eft in office . .
In a 'ec ret lndtctmenl fil ed
Oct. J 1: Lisa Roush. 4 3. of
Pomero v. wa' charged with
fou rt h -tfe~ree felonies. " \leg. .
in g tha t ' ne used her l&gt;(ls iti on
us secretary to former Sheriff
James M. Sou lsby to comm1t
th eft offenses between Jan. I.
1998 and Dec . 31. 2000. The
in dictment also specilies that
the
alleged
incident s
in1·oived property v alu ed
be twee n $500 and $5.000.
alt hough the spec ific nature
ol the charges ts no t outli ned
in the ind ictmen t as ti led.
The tndi ctment "us fi led bv
Greene Coumv Pro,ecuti ng
Attornev William Sc henck,
who is ~c lin g as spec ial prosecutor in the case .
Roush is sL·hed ul ed to
appear in Commo n Pleas
Court on Nov. 1.1.
AJ , o 1ndicted were:
• Stanlev R. Fairrow. 30.
Chillicotli. on a ch:ll'!C of IX"-·
session ol cocaine. witli a s)XX:itication that the ;unount wa.s more
th:m li1 e !!nUll\ but le&gt;~ than ~'i
gr.JJns. a loorth..J.:g.rec !don).
• Wal lace Randall Chafin.
4 7. no address prm ided. on u
charge of fai lure as a sex

THE ELVIS EXPERIENCE
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich @mydailysentinel.com

Cincinnati
from Page B1
move up to the Big East for the 2005-06 season, along with Marquette, Louisville, DePaul
and South Florida.
The Bearcats are eager to see how they fare
in a much tougher basketball conference.
"It's the best l:)asketball league in the country, if you look," Hu~gins said. "I think the
numbers bear that out. '
The university readily accepted the invitation Tuesday, celebrating at a news conference
that featured the Bearcat mascot and pep band.
President Nancy Zimpher jubilantly broke the
news to an audience that included former
.
school presidents.
"The truth is, it has a tremendous domino
effect," athletics director Bob Goin said. "It
places our university in some outstanding markets. It widens our recruiting base."

The main beneficiary could be the football
program, which has gone to bowl games in
four of the last six *'sons but has !itiled to
draw much of a local fo llowing.
At a news conference in New York, Big East
officials mentioned the following that
Louisville and South Florida have developed
in football. Coach Rick Minter noticed that
Cincinnati was overlooked.
"We seem to be the least-mentioned of all
the schools in football," Minter said. "They
talked about South Florida and they talked
about the excellence of Louisville. We have a
tremendous opportunit~ here."
The Big East lost Mtami, Virginia Tech and
Boston College to the ACC earlier this year
and needed to add three football programs to
maintain ·its Division I status.
The conference found Cincinnati 's basketball program most attractive while assessing
.
possible additions.
"You can't deny the rich traditiop of
, Cincinnati basketball, and you play your tl'llmp
card," Goin said. 'That's the one we had."

POMEROY - If you' ve always wanted to get
up close and personal with the Elvis entenaintnent business. you' ll want tu attend 'T he Elvis
Experience" to be hosted hy Meigs County's
popular impersonator Dwight Icenhower.
Special guests .at the tribute will in clude F. J.
Fontana, Elvi s' drummer from the 1950's. and
Cynthia Pepper. Elvis ' co-star in the mov ie.
"Ki ss in ' Cousin, ." Fontana was El vis' drum mer for 14 years and played on over 4o0 RCA
cuts with Elvi s.
The benetit event for the American C mcer
Socictv will be held at th e Lafavcttc Hotel in
·
Marieita . Nov. 2 1 and 22.
Icenhower described th e two-day pmgram
as a time "when fan s cut loose at .a so·, suck
hop. judge an impersonator contest. and ja rn
with tr ibute arti sts Juring a li,·e ' 6X
Comeback Session· ...
Other events at the "Experience" will be an

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Paul Theis, 87
• Larry Sellers , 59

WEATHER
Showen~ ,

Elvis Lrivia game show, a mu sic "huwcase a nd

a segment featurin g Elvi s· gospel fa vorites.
Doors open on Friday. Nov. 21 at 6 p.m.
After a welcome Fontana and Pepper will
an swer questions about their experiences and
work with Elvi s. At 7 p.m. the mu sic will get
underway with various Elvis impersonators
competing as they.portray Elvis tn the 50 's or
in his movie years. The audience will choose
the winners based on vocals. moves. overal l
look and showman ship with cash prizes going
to the wmners.
That will be followed with questions from
the audience, what it 's like to take on th e persona of someone else. how the y do it and the
experiences they 've had.
At 9: 15p.m. the .audience will be invited to
dance the night away as the impersonators
sing their .favorite oldies, and then wind down
with tunes from '68 Comeback Special.
Saturday's events get underway at nnon
with Pepper sharing her memories about Elvis

HI: SO., low: 30.

KICK OFF
.THE

HOLIDAY

Details on Page A2

SEASOH·!

LO'I'I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 3-0-0
Pick 4 day: 5-9-6-3
Pick 3 night: 6-8· 7
Pick 4 night: 2-8-4·6
Buckeye 5: 4-7 -15·32·37
Superlotto: 5·1 0-14-37-41-45
Kicker: 0·3·0·1·7-0

Clarett

Everything

,

MU officials ho~

Bonus Ball: 7
Department lawsuit against
"We ex peeled the agency
severa l Ohio universities to have ac ted by now,"
and to find Ohio State in Squire said.
contempt
of a 2000 court
from Page B1
The department last week
order in the case banning sent~ letter to Squire saying
the focus of this matter to release of protected educa- his Oct. 16 complaint to the
another forum."
tiona! records. The com- agency did not provide
Ohio State coach Jim plaint asked the court to fine enough information to show
Tressel said he did not know the university at least $2.5 Clarett 's privacY. was violated.
the complaint was dropped. million, payable to Clarett.
"You do not specify what
He and a university spokes- , Ohio State had argued that
education
record was diswoman declined to com- previous court rulings premen!.
vent individuals from suing closed ... how. it was disSquire filed motions in sc hools under the privacy closed, who disclos.ed it, to
municipal and federal court law. Squire said he wanted whom it was disclosed , and
wrote
LeRoy
seeking to prevent a tape- to avoid that academic ques- when,"
famRooker,
director
of
the
recorded interview from an tion by having the Education
policy
compliance
NCAA investigation from Department join him in ily
being used by city prosecu- seeking the contempt ruling. office.
tors. Clarett is charged with
filing a false police report
ON YOUR S1DE
G)
with campus police in April
after a dealership's car he
·was borrowing was broken
We Cover the Front Door, Back Door
into.
Smith said that if he had
in Between.
.and
allowed the case to go forward, he would not have
ordered a state court to ban
To lind out more about our homeowners insuevidence in a criminal trial.
rance · Call me ... Sto~ by... · jl's your choice!
Clarett, 20, has pleaded
Pomeroy
innocent to one count offalJEFF WARNER
Hollonwld.,e
sification, a misdemeanor
Insurance &amp;
113 w. 2nd Street
Financial Sefvtees
with a penalty ranging from
992-5479
probation to six months in
NationwidO is On Your Sidet!JJ
. Jail and a maximum $1 ,000
fine .
The federa l complaint
sought to add Clarett as a
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and AHilialed Companie.s, Home Office:
Columbus. OH 43215·2220 H02 11100
party to a closed Education

•

..

, Wednesday, November 5, 2003

Dwight Icenhower Elvis tribute artist

Pomeroy Village
Council awards
water treatment
plant bid

2 SECilONS -

Wednesday, November
26th.
.
~teach

Over

6.000
Households·
In Meigs
County!.

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

A2

Obituaries

As

Sports .
Weather

B1-2, 6

© 2003 Ohio VaUey l'uhllshlng Co.

PIHse ne Bid, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@mydaJiysentinel.com

Don Dudding, left, receives the 2003
Outstanding Teacher award from the OACHE .
to be, and "he deserves this award for his
commitment to and love of students who far
too often fall between the cracks, in school
and often later in life," Waitt concluded.
Other Appalachian Ohio educators recognized during the banquet included

POMEROY
Those
wanting to see th e twinkling
lights and holida y sights of
hi"or ic Pnmerov bu si ness
buildin gs will enjoy the h oliday tour planned fo r Sunday.
Dec. 7 bv lhe Po merov
Merchants Assoc iation.
·
Ho&gt;ted by the Po meroy
Merchants A&gt;Soc iation. the
to ur~ guided by residents in
period costuming will leave
Trinit y Church between 5 and
7 p.m. Those on the tours will
return there for refreshments
and a short program of holi Jay music directed by June
VanVranken and comments
from the Rev. Jonathan
Noble .
In addit io n to downtown
bu sinesses. two churche s.
Trini tv and the United
Methodist. and the Meigs
Countv Courthouse are
included on places to be visit·
ed. John Clonch will al so be
providing .rides in his horsedrawn carriage around town
that evening .
Luminaries with votive
candles will be · prepared by
Bobbie Karr and hun g on
lamp posts on Lynn and
Court Streets. and in the trees

PIHse 1H Duddlnc, AS

Ple•se ·see Tour, AS

Ple•se see Elvis, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

PO~EROY - Pomeroy
Village Council awarded
Ameritcon, Inc. a $1.7
million
contract
Wednesday to build a
• water treatment plant.
Preliminary work on the
plant will begin in the next ··
few weeks and construction should be completed
by late summer 2004.
There were six; bids submitted
for council's
approval. The lowest bid
was from Ameritcon and
the highest was from
Piping
Specialty
Corporation which due to

A2

Pomeroy
Merchants
plan
holiday tour

Dudding recognized by OACHE

BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

JNDEX

Please see lndlc:ted, AS

· RACINE -· Don Dudding, a teacher at
Soiuthern Local High School, received the
award for Outstanding Teacher of 2003
from the Ohio Appalachian Center for
Higher Education (OACHE) at a recent
banquet held at Lewisburg, W. Va.
A Southern faculty member for nearly 25
years, Dudding teaches fre shman and
sophomore English as well as drama, jour·
nalism and media to juniors and seniors. In
addition to his.classroom duties he directs
the school play, coordinates publication of
the school newspaper, advises students and
meets with l?arents, all while work.ing on a
Ph.D. at Ohto Universitr.
.
"[Dudding] is a ~ t fted, -resourceful
teacher who is commttted to his students
and southeastern Ohio," noted Alden Waitt,
Educational Advisor at Ohio University in
a letter of nomination. "He is much loved
by his students who know that he cares
deeply about their academic progress, their
inner li v.es, and their futures.
"Don Dudding is the teacher I would like

.

.

C

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 24th
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, NcMm. 9 from 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm at the HMC French 500 Room . .
Feolured speaker • Nancy Stevens, RN, CDE who will discuss Blood Glucose Moniloring .
In Meigs County: . Thursday, Novem~ 20 at 10:30 am · Meigs Senior Center
.

..
November 10, II and 12lrom.5:00 pm- 8:00pm in the Hospital's French 500 Room
·
Please bring a list of home medications to class.
.
Pleale have prescription from your physician to attend. •

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover· the Holz~
. l' Difference
,

www.holzer.org

for more inlormarion on these FREE programs, or to regisler, cal\1740) 446·.5080

,.

'

.... ..

~

.. . ... .

.,.

..

, _

. . '" ' .. .

.,...

'r

"

'

�I

•

'

PageA2

OHIO

· The Daily Sentinel
'

Thursday, November 6,

2003

I

Law You Can Use: Consumer Information Column

Ohio weather
Friday, Nov. 7
--

.. ;;::-_").._

At the crossroads of grandparent visitation

MICH.

~ ,­

Toledo

30 t46'

1.40

KV

......,, ..~.•.·.~ . ,
- - .. ~

Sunny Pt. C!cuay

CIOLJCIY

·37"/56"

'

0 2003 AccuWealher. Inc.

'"!!'!'&lt;.~/

W. VA .

.. -!.~L ...
~rtsmouth

~ '1;i~ ~~
~ • ~

Showers

'

T-s1orms

•

Rain

~

-

~

-

~

Flu rries

)~
. ..
'.'.

Snow

Ice

VIII As:KN;r/1/61:1 PlftsS

:Showers likely today
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday
night. .. Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Low
arou nd 37.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
wit h a 40 percent chance of
showers. High aro und 52.
Monday
night...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent chance
of showers. Low around 42.
Veterans
day ... Partly
cloudy. High around 59.
Tuesday
ni ght...Pa rtl y
cloudy. Low aro t~nd 44.
Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs around 60.

Today... Showers likely then a
· · chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 50s.
: · .Chance of showers 70 percent.
: · · Tonight...Mostly clolldy.
::: Lows in the mid 30s.
: : : Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
·: Highs around 50.
·. · Friday night...Mostly clear.
· Low around 26.
:. Saturday ... Mostly
clear.
High around 43 . Light winds.
Saturday
nig ht. .. Mostly
clear. Low aro und 27.
Sunday ... Partly
c l ot~ d y.
Highs around 51.

.A DAY ON WALL STREET
Nov. 5, 2003

D::wJmes

:ird Ftria1s

~0.

A

10.000

/'if

q

,,

':; ,,

I&gt;

9,500

&gt;

'·· ,:,.:., 1

9.000

·1Q.OO

9,820.83
Pet. change

AUG
High

-0. 18

from previous:

SEP

9 ,859

34

OCT

Low
9,778.31

14, 2000

2.000

Nasdaq

1,800

a:up::site

1,600

+i:l1G5

ex·~=

Pet. chan~

AUG

High
1',966.15

+0.07

from prev ua:

SEP

OCT

Low

1,400

NOV

Reco1d high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

I ,938.22

Nov. 5, 2003

1,100

St.an::lml &amp;

1.050

500

B:x::&gt;r's

1,000

\t!:i'fi! J

··-.m· .,, .~. ' ./'·.'""'

1,051 .81
Pet. change

trom previous:

AUG

SEP

OCT

High
Low
1,054.54 1.044.88

-0.14

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

Local Stocks
Gannett - 84.71

· AD Shell - 44.31
Rockwell - 31.65
GKNLY- 4.80
SealS- 52.49
Harley Davidson- 46.26 SBC-23.60
Kmart- 27.54
AT&amp;T- 18.68
Kroger - 17.57
USB-26.93
Lid. -17.52
WeOO;'s - 36.88
NSC-20.60
Wat-Mart- 57.92
Oak Hill Financial-30.60 Worthington-- 13.94
BankOne - 42.86
Daily steel&lt; reports are 111e
OVB-24.75
4 p.m. cklsi/"9 quotes of
Peoples - 28.50
the previous day's transacPepsico - 47.36
tions, pn:&gt;Vided by Smllh
Premier ~ 8.85
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Rocky Boors -18.46
Gallipoli s.
Gene~al

28.43

Electric -

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext.

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laH:Be/OI"&lt;'appf.~·'!'g t/11.1' /l~or­

":aum: to ~':'P&lt;'~!f'c ~~gaiJ".r:b~
'""·. """' 1.1 Ill&lt; '"~"' ~11 .11ek
adt •icc.fmm i/11 atwme\.

Jim 's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northu p Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com
CHURCHES
Lighthouse As~embly of God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

ATHENS - O'Bieness free and requ ires no regisMemorial Hospital in tration. For more informaAthens will offer a class tion or for a schedule of
des igned especially for classes, contact Michele
working mothers who Platt at (740) 592-9364.
breastfeed their babies on
We dn esda~
at
the
O'Bieness basement conference Room B-7. ·
~;;;;~~~-li4ri
The class, which is
!llillll l
offered in addition · to the
hospital's regular breastfeeding course, covers a
wide variety of topi cs
unique to working mothers
who breastfeed rncluding:
preparing to go back to
work, returning to work,
pumping and storin g breast
milk , choosing a breast
pump, and other iss ues
such as mai ntenance of
milk supply, and resources
and products that are especially helpful to nursrn g
mothers wllo work. Those
who attend the class will
also have the opportunity to
see a demonstration of the
various breast pumps now
available on the market.
Michele Platt, O'Bleness' 1-:::li;i~~~~i;i:;"~~
international board certi- I_
fied lactation consultant,
will lead the class which is

ENTERTAINMENT
Charte r Communications

www.charter.com
MEDICAL
Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

r

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribun e

www.mydailytribune.com
The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
Point Pleasant Register

Thursday, Nov. 6
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6 p.m. at
the township building on
Rocksprings Road .
Thursday, Nov. 13
POMEROY - The Meigs
Local Board of Education will
meet at 7 p.m. at Meigs High
School.

Clubs and
Organizations
Thursday, Nov. 6

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Auxiliary Post 9053 will
hold its regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains location .
POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice "dinner with fri ends"
at 6 p.m. Thursday at Grow's
Restaurant.
Friday, Nov. 7
SALEM CENTER- Meigs
County Pomona Grange wil
meet at 6:30 p.m. for officers
conference and 7:30 p.rii . for
a meeting at the S)ar Grange.

Refreshments will be served .
Saturday, Nov. 8
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, 5:30 p.m.
potlu~ meal with Thanksgiving
theme. Potluck dinner with
turkey and ham, beverages
and table service provided.
CHESTER
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American
Revolution , will meet at noon
at the Chester Courthouse
for a Thanksgiving luncheon .
Guest speaker · will be
Katherine Colburn. past vice
president and historian of the
National Society on paper
dolls . Members are invited to
take their dolls. Hostesses
are Peggy Moore , Mary
Powell, Mary Rose , Pat
Holter. Cleo Smith, and Betty
Milhoan.
Tuyday, Nov. 11
POMEROY - Retirement
planning seminar for teachers 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Meigs
School
cafeteria.
High
Speakers from STRS and
ORTA. Call Athens-Meigs
ESC office to register, 9923993.

Homecomings
Sunday, Nov. 9
POMEROY . -Heritage
Day/home.coming will be held
at
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church with worship service to be held at
9:30 a.m. followed by special
program including songs by
Amy Perrin. Carry-in dinner
at 11 :30. The public is invited.
Arland King is the pastor.

Birthdays
Wednesday, Nov. 19
POMEROY
Victor
Hannahs who ~asides at the
Rocksprings Rehilbilitation
Center will observe his 83rd
birthday on Nov. 19. Cards
may be sent ·to him there.
Room t 14.
Saturday, Nov. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
Fredrick Goebel of Tuppers
Plains will celebrate his 99th
birthday on Nov. 22. Cards
may be sent to him at P. 0.
Box 256. Tuppers Plains
45753.

Extension Corner

Have your home and farm
buildings been winterized?
Have your home and farm
Ohio from 5-9 p.m. The Ohio
buildings been wi nterized?
State University annual event
Missing shingles, dogged gutbrings together experts in agriters or dr.tinpipes and poorly
culture to help you in forecastcaulked windows and doors
ing input costs and selling
head the list in causi ng damage
advantages for the 2004 tiscal
to buildings. Climb on the roof
Hal
~ear. Topics this year include
and check to see if any missing
'Farm Policy: Price, Income
Kneen
shingles or roofing materials
and Market Risk" , "legal
need to be replaced. Weakened
Liability Trends for Agriculturdi
roof structures are more prone
Operators", "Grai ns Crop
to further damage and possible
Outlook " and "Livestock
collapse under heavy snow problem. Remember that an icy Outlook". Pre-registration is
acc umulations. Take a good limb' that was five or ten feet needed by Nov. 13. Cost is
look at where the joints meet, away from the electric line can $8.00 per person. A dinner will
are nails popping out? Clogged sag onto the line under several be provided compliments of
gutters allow roof water to back pounds of ice and snow and The Huntington National Bank
up under the roof shingles and cause a power shortage. Remove ·
fascia boands. This water freezes the limbs, keepi ng in mind that it and ADMlCountrymark. To
and not only pushes the boands is highly hazaroous to trim limbs register, please call to 992-6696.
Gardeners, check your supaway from the adjoining boards near electric lines. If in doubt,
ply
of potting soil, pots and
but when the next thaw arrives call the electric company or a
houseplant
fertilizer before
the melted water runs into your professional tree nimmer.
winter
arrives.
Many stores
home ruining your ceiling or
Are you interested in the outbe
reducing
their
inventowill
wall. Check the caulkin!l around look of agriculture in 2004?
ries
so
a
bargain
may
be
found.
the doors and wmdows. Plan · on attending the .
Hal Kneen is the Meigs
Caulking material should be Agricultural Outlook Meeting
continuous and fle xible around on Nov. 20 at the Ross County Cortnry Agriculture &amp; Natural
the OJJ!!nings. Loose, cracked Service Center, Chillicothe, Resources Agent, Ohio State
University Extension.
and mlssing-caulk should be
replaced with new caulk.
Check out~ide for exposed
water spigots and pipes. Make
sure pipes are drained, properly
insulated, taped with heat tape or
for
install new frost-free hydrarits. It
is a pain to have to carry water
Your Continued
from the house to the animals
Support!
wheh bam water lines are frozen.
Check for tree branches hanging near electric and tele(lhooe
Salisbury Town ship Clerk
lines. Memories of last wmter's
ice storm reminds us that it is
much easier to remove possible
Paid tor by tl'le candidate.
hazards before they become a

Published

Monday

every

thro ug~

afternoo n,

Friday, 111 Court

Mom takes~ action.to increase·
bullied son's self-confidence
DEAR ABBY: Please let
your readers know that there
rs a solution to bull ying . If
parents would encoura ge
their children's natural abil ities and-.he!p them to enhance
their physical assets. mstcad
of hoping the problem goes
away, much could be done to
help these innocent victims .
My son, 'Tim," developed
a stammer in second grade.
The teasing he received from
classmates caused him to
stop talking in class or even
to playmates. In fifth grade.1
he developed gynecomastra.
an overgrowth of breast tis$Ue in males. The taunts
increased and included asking him hi s bra size.
I could have told my so11 to
ignore the teasing and concentrate on his "inner beauty. "
etc . But children have to compete in a world that puts great
emphasis· on physical beauty.
Lofty platitudes. whi le they
may or may not be true. do
nothing for a sutlering SO)JI.
I realil~ the impoltall&lt;.'C of
correcting what can be corrected
and out~marting the rest. During
the summer. I took Tim to a pla'tic surgeon who corrected the
gynecoma,tia. Then. although
his pediatrician said he would
eventually outgrow his stammer
(and he did). r tried to help him
. regain the respect of his peers.
Tim was a budding musician. so I arranged for him to
perform a classroom concert.
He played the guitar and sang
songs by John Denver and
Jim Croce . Then he performed one of his own compositions. Students from other
classrooms, as we ll as the
principal, joined the audience.
Tim received a standing ova- ·
tion, and mercifully. he was
never teased again. - CONCERNED MOM IN TEXAS
DEAR MOM : I congratulate you for being proactive
in helping your son. There is
a lot parents can do to prevent bullying. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: r;Jearly
160,000 students stay home
from school every day

Dear
Abby

and

the

Ohio

Newspaper

Associalion .

Postmaster: Send address correc·

lions to The Daily Senllnet, 111
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BUICK@)
The Spirit of Americun Style

BUICK
PONTIAC

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1900 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS
Toll '....•~n

Anderson's

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Super Capacity Dryer
* 7 Cycles
* 4 Temperatures
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Reg. $389 Sale 1359

Bonnie G. Scott

•

WEB SITE
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~C.I-Duffle Bags
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Cq1nb;1t Boots
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Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks .... ..... .. . ..'30.15
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52 Weeks . . .......'11880

can uo,e poo.itive dl&lt;;(:ipline techniyues. &gt;pend yualrty unie wrth a
chrld. and ena llll age oonlidence
and oonviolerK.-e at home and at
school. It\ also imponant to
teaeh t:hi ldren that they don't
have to feel powerle" in the face
of bullying. F.llC&lt;.&gt;Ur..L!!e them "'~
to bc bvstlll&lt;.lt:r; by telling the
bully to- ''or&gt; or by getting help
from an adult. - SID JOHNSON. PRES IDENT AND CEO.
PREVENT CHILD ABLSE IN
AMERICA
DEAR SID : Your lerrer "
both timely and helpful. When
children are the vrt:tirm of hu llyi ng. the parents often don 't
know how to reac·t. In &gt;orne
&lt;.:a&gt;es. the parent&gt; were ,·ic tim&gt; of bullying them-.ehes .
Dear Ahhr i.\ u Titft'll I}\
Ahi~llil Vt.ui Buren. a/.1o
knmm &lt;1.1 Jeanne Phill1p1. and
" ·a.\ jo11nded h1· liN motile~
Paulin&lt;' Phillips. Wrilf IJem

because they are afraid of
bcing bullied.
Bullyi ng i,, n't just a pur1 of
!lrowing up. It t:an have a la, trng eflect on tl1e vtctim. the
bully. the school and the community. Victim' often &gt;ufl'er
from depression. low 'e lfesteem . anxiet y. academic
problems and subqance ahuse .
Research also shows a direct
link het weeh chroni o.: bullying
and fu t ur~ criminal activity and
abusive behavior in adult tile.
' There are many way' to pre, Ahhr a1 H'\H\:Dn 1rAhhr com
vent bullying. Adult' and parent' or ·P 0 . Bo.t 694411. Ln.\
A11ge les. CA 'JU069.

Thank You

Take your business into
the homes of over 40,000
consumers in .Gallia,
Mason, Meigs Counties
EVERYDAY with a listing
of your web address iq our

~~''"1!'·-'1~~'"'''""'"'"""'';''~'"~"" • Camouflage Netting
• Cl Trench Coats

postage paid at Pomeroy.

2003

www.mydailyregister.com ·

" .. 1

General Manager

·1 1

to f'II~I'IC &lt;' 1/Va •
g&lt;~neralu!formatwn about the

Member: The Associated Press

Our main number is
c (740) 992-21 56.
Department extensions are:

O~tslde

.

111 telll 1&lt;'&lt;.1

Community calendar

Thursday, November 6,

(USPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing C!).

accurate. If you know ol an error in a Streel, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
lory, ca ll the newsroom at (740) 992-

and Christi11e Bul/jugel;allm·,.
1wrs wllh the Luna lm v finn of
Hil(lt &amp; ·Juhuson Articles
"i'f'&lt;'Urillg ill tins colum 11 art'

AGRICULTURE

ll

950

NOV

AP

AC\-24.92
AEP -27.88
Akzo-31.46
Ashland Inc. - 36.95
BBT - 39.06
BL\ - 14.60
Bob Evans- 30.39
BorgWarner - 79.74
Cily Holdi/"9- 34.96
.·· Champion - 4.50
·~ Charml/"9 Shops- 6.47
-· "Col-2700
DuPon1- 39.65
DG-2263
Fede~al Mogul - .30

cnts' ri ghts to visitation in ste~
parent ~duptrons. _The legrslat~r~s ol at least 2'. states ha~~
cre&lt;~ted l,rw.s to &lt;tllow post.
adoption. Vt&gt;ttaUon to wntrnue.
hut courts cannot Ioree le~rsl&lt;~·
tures w act. You can wr.rte to
your legrslator askrng th at the
Jcg rslitture enact a statute ".mrlar Ill that of surroundrng st,!t.es
(rndudmg llhnors. Kentucky.
Indiana a11d Pennsylvama) that
preseryes exrs ung vrsrtatron
nghts 111 step-parent adoptrons.
Low YcJ/1 Cim Use'-'"" ll'eeklr cmlswller legal 111/o~mllt1m1
colunm 1,mmled to tins ue\i·s!"'!"'~"~'"'" u pub/,,. sel1'/ce &lt;
!(!lw
Ohio State Bar A,,·sucwllml
"!'d the_ Of!w State Bar
fmmdatwn !Ius omcit' ll 'as
l"''f'ill "&lt;'l i br Jen :r M. John1·o11

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

O'Bieness offers
breastfeeding class for
working mothers

Record high: 11 ,722.98

Nov. 5, 2003

1,959.37

adoption.
Q.: How long docs a stepparent adoption tukc?
A.: A parent and stepparent
nlUSl first file a petit ion lm
adoption. The court ge ne~a lly will not issue an adoptron
decree until 30 days alter the
adoption is finali1.ed. assuming the ·chrld has Jrved rn the
home for at least six mtlllths.
Al so, the adoption becomes
fin~lized, in many Ohio
courts, only after the pare·nl
and stepparent have been
married for at least one year.
Q. My attorney says there
is nothin g 1 can do to protect
my grandparent visitation
rights from a po"ihk stepparent adoption . Alter 11
took so long (t1Jd was so (Iifficu lt 10 •et my visitation
establisheS by the drvorce
court, how can those rights
be taken away from me ;i nd
. .
•
my grandc hrld 1
A. Currently 111 Ohro. what
your attorney S&lt;tys rs conect.
Cour1s h~ve contu~ued t~ &lt;L'k
the legrslature to address the
rssue ol preservrng granclpm·-

8.500

NOV

Jan.

Q. My son has two children ex-wife has custod~ of yJur
with his soon-to-be ex-wife. gmnddaughter), if your grJJldA friend said 1 rrught be a)Jle daughter's' mother reman:Jcs,
to get court ordered visitatron her oew husb&lt;md may WJsh to
with my Brandchildren, but legally adopt you r granddau~h- .
another fnend said that the . ter. If this step-parent adOJ?UOn
U.S . Supreme Court has is granted. ~our nght to vrsnarecently ruled against grand- tion is tennrnated ;md the chrld
parent visitation. c .an .I still becomes a "legal stranger" to
ask the court for vrsnauon?
you because under current law..
A. Yes. While the U.S. there rs no Jrfference between
Supreme Court did find that a stranger adoptions and stepparWashington state statu~e was ent adoptrons when It comes to
unconstitutional, thrs hndmg the nghtsot .relatives to mamwas based upon Washrngton's tarn fam rhal Ires.
,
specrfic laws. In that case, the
. Q. My daughters two
Washrngton statute that. was mrnorchtldren were adopted
dec lared
unconstrtutronal by_therr step-mother bec,wse
allowed any?~e. at. any tune: my daughter had not :up_to seek vr_snauon, ~nd courts poned them lor n;ore than a
co~ld lo_rce grandparent vrsr- year. I h.ad vrs rt,ttron wrth
tatron 1~rth~ut .lrstenrng to the ~hem before . the adop tr~n,
parents Objecuons. .. . .
and my ex-son-m, law lldd
In Ohr o, the law says that promrsed nothrn g ,wou ld
~ randparents can. o~l~ seek chang~ , but I hav ~n t s~en
chourt-ohrd ed~ed vrsll&lt;ttron rf 1them srndce. Is thf_ere an ythrng
t e c r1 s parent s are
can o to orma 1lv reunmarried or rf the child's establish m • visitation- wi th
arents have filed for m · randc hlldren·l
~ivorce or di sso lution or ~~Not at this time. Some
legal separation, or if one of· grandparents have tried torethe ch ild's parents has dred. estabhsh vrsrtatron after adopAlso Ohio courts mu st lion by arguing that Ohio Jaw
respect a parent's dec ision allows for post-adoption visiwhen decid ing whether to tation based upon legal !anaward visitation. The co urt guage th at says a non-relatrve
also must consider whether with an interest in the chi ld
grandparent vis itation would may seek visitation. Divorce
be in the child's best interest. courts have tmmd that they do
Consequently, the U.S. riot have the authority to grant
Supre me Court's decision this visiuuion, since the adopdoes not affect Ohro grand- tion ~ction takes the matter
parents' rig ht to vrsrtauon.
out of drvorce court and rnto
Q. I · have court-ordered probate co.urt (where adopvisitation with my tive-- year- · tions are usually handled).
ok' granddau ghter. Can th is
Further, since the adopvisitation be taken from me? lion legall y cuts off grandA. Under certain circum- parent bonds, courts have
st;mces, yes. Visitation rights found that the grandparent
can always be modified or ter- cannot demonstrate enough
minated by the court. You may "non-grandpare nt" in terest
lose court-ordered visitation tf in the min or chi ld. after
one of the parents establishes adopti on, to warrant visitathat there, has been a change in ti on. There is. however, legcircumstances and that the best islation
pend in g
111
interests of the child make it Colum bus to allow grandnecessary to tenninate those parents and other ref at ives
previously granted visitation to seek court-ordered vis itaon)ers. Or(assuming your son's tion after a step-parent

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetings

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BY THE BEND

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Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

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:The Daily Sentinel

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Thursday, No~mber 6,

Thursday, November 6, 2 0°3

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

GUEST

VIEW

Speed
Keep tnu:ks at 55 mph
. Since the Ohoo St.ote Hoghway Patrol's mcepllon , htghway
safety and the safety ol motonsts have been our number one
. cbncern . Current b1lls, such as House BJ!I 186. m the Ohoo
·• Legislature could place our ho ghway safet y at ri sk ThJS pro. posed bill wou ld raose the onterstate speed lomll tor trucks to
65 miles per hour and wou ld raose to uck speed hmots m Ohoo
to a historic hogh
.
.
The Patrol opposes thJS legJSI.tt ion based on the nse on tatal. JlJ · n-~tn ·s with hogher truck speed l111111s, an mcrease. m
tralti c on Oho1\ roddways. and the mherent sa lety nsh t.:c·
ing OhiO's mo rists
.
Curre ntl y. th' m.:xomum speed !unit is 65-mph lor passe nget vehocles ,11 d 55- mph for commercJUI trucks on Ohm's
rGadways Th · ~ os no statostical ev idence that the cmrent
speed limot lor ucks on Ohoo os unsafe. The speed IJmll 111
Ohio has neve: been set at 65-mph tor trucks. even 30 years
ago when truck vo lumes were .1 f1 actiun of what they are
today.
Last year m Ohoo. 74 percent ot cotatoons Jssued by . the
P.1tool on rural interstmes to to uck d11vers we re tor vJolatJons
of 66-mph and above, whlle 2.500 vool,otoons we re for 75-mph
or more.
Nat oon,;lly. the percentage of trucks onvol ved 111 fatal crashes increased from 7.9 percent to 8 S perce nt ove othe forst five
year' after the ndlional max1mum speed lomol was lofted on
1996 Thioty-three st.otes that have raised truck speed lomols
expe11enced an Increase in lata! crashes Jnvolvmg large
trucks
Ohoo, Mochoga n and Oregon , th ree states that have main tained the 55-mph speed limit for trucks, have documented
decreases m tatal truck crashes dunng that same tome penod
In Ohio, the numbeo of l.orge Ioucks onvolved in fatal crashes
fell 20 percent from 201 on 1995 to 161 111 200 1
.
. . The safet v JSs uc ot truck speed IS somply a matter ot
_phys1cs Lo.wcr speed !:mots tor trucks are necessary to make
the stoppi ng distance of heavy veh ocles closer to that olloghter
ve ho cles. Because large truck&lt; req u11 e Ionge: stoppong di stances than c.:rs. there is no dosputing the laws ol physocs that
eq udte faster speeds With greater damage
· . , Woth Ohio's curre nt 55-mph truck speed lomll , the stoppong
chst.once lor a truck JS alreddy greater th.on a football foeld . II
· the truck speed !Jm ot w,:s ra:sed to 65-mph , the stoppmg ellsta nce tuo " \ruck wo uld be 420 feet. 99 l'eet further than at 55, mph
.
A ve hocle's stoppo ng dost.1nce also h.:s a crucoal eftcc! 111 car
- etdshes A lon ~eo stoppong dJst.lnce reduces the drovers abtlity to dvood ,; c~.os h and oncrei:ses the impact mtens ity, resulting on more seroous lllJLII oes and fat.ololJes.
Touck speed concerns everyo ne on Ohoo's highways. There
are m.on y advantages to Ohoo 's current speed limit. Lower
.. truck speeds allow au tomobole dro vers to pass trucks w1th
. rnore ease. Many trucks woll contonue to ope: ate at 55-mph
even of speed limits were JllCJe.osed becau se ot better fuel effiCiency, lower operallng costs, company pohcy, Ohoo terraon ,
'and Ohoo's congested roads
· The Patro l continually strives to reduce the number of
·c1ashes on Oh1o h1 ghways. Please JOIIl us by supportmg the
current speed limits to kee p Ohio roadways a safe place to
. toave! for all motonsls.
It 's abou t safely
- · (LI D1ck Grell/ " commw1de 1 of the Ohw State H1 ghwa\'
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·. Patrol Callw-Me1g\ P0\1.)

TODAY IN HISTORY
·· · Today is Thursday, Nov. 6, the 3 1Oth day of 2003 . There are
'55 days left in the year
,
·' Today's Highlight m Hostory On Nov 6, 188R, BenJamm
.' Harri son won the presodenual electoon, defeatmg incumbent
Grove r Cleveland with enough electoral votes, even though
Cleve land led in the popular vote
On thi s date: In 1860, former lllmoJS congressman Abo aham
; Lincoln. defe ated three other candidates tor the pres odency.
; In 1861. Jefferson Davi s was e lected to a six-year term as
· president of the Confederacy.
· · In 1893. composer Peter llyich Tchaikovsky d1ed m St.
Petersburg. Russia, at age 53.
' In 1900, President McKinley .was re-e lected, beating
· Democrat Wolham Jenmngs Bryan.
~ : In 1906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
: governor of New York , defeating newspape r publisher
· Wolham Randolph Hearst.
In 1928. on a first, the results of Herbert Hoover's election
· voc tory over Alfred E Smoth we1e flashed onto an electric
sogn oulsode the New York Times buoldong
ln 1956, Presodent EJSenhower wo n re-electJon. defeating
: Democrat Ad laoE Stevenson
In 1962. Democrat Edward M Kennedy was elected senator from Massachusetts.
In 1976, Benjamin L Hooks was chosen to be the new
' executive director of the National Assoc o.o loon tor the
. Adv&lt;tncemenl of Colored People. succeedmg Roy Wol kms
: In 1977, 39 people were killed when an earthen dam burst,
~~i1din g a wall of water through Toccoa Fall s B1ble College m
i Oeorgia.
~~~ Yen years ~go. Heavyweight boxer Evander Holyfield
~eated Roddock Bowe in a I 2-round fight in Las Vegas; the
:match was tnte rrupted in the seventh round when an intruder,
:1tJ;ing a parag hder, tried to fly mto the ring.
~~~ thought fo r Today· 'Proust has pmnted out that the predis4f!i';:t oon to love creates Jts own obJects: Is Lh1 s not true of
:i:hr?'
- Elizabeth Bowen, Engl osh writer ( Iggg. f973 )
,

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Obituaries

Clark missing chance to shine with Iraq plan
Ev:dentl stung by charges
· d
.Y •
•o f 111 dec:s:veness. re 11re
Gen Wesley Clark is launchin ·hlm;derbuss attacks on
g
B h
· 1 d'
PreSident us - :nc u :ng
that the
resident bears
res ons:b 1 for the terrorist
. p k · t sy 11 ?001 1
''11''c s o ept. . - · · · n
the process. Clark JS m1ss:ng
the ch·once to ca italize on
'
h as pa m1 )'nary
hos strengt
.1 , 1
str,o egos
D
.
The onstant
emocrau c
frontrun ner
when
he
d 1
··d t'· 1
an ndoudnce m presko en Ja
c,on 1 acy sox wee s ago.
Cl· k has !a ltered am id welldo~~mented charoes that he
raosed
mon;y
for
Repub!Jcans, pra 1sed Bush.
tho 1 ht abo ut becomma a
R 'gb l
d
ppo~ted
ephu'
:ca
n
an
l
su
Bus s war 111 raq before
· t 'tJ
turno ng decosove Iy aga1ns
The latest CNN/USA
Tod oy/G ·lllup poll shows that
Cld;k ha~ silpped back into a
toe woth forme: Vermont Gov.
Howard Dean fm the lead
among Democrats nationally.
at 15 pe rcent eac h More
1111 ortantl y. he os 111 fourth
pltfce w1th JUSt 8 percent of
the vote 111 New Hampshire.
· to a Boston Gl obe
accordmg
11
poL;nelv, Clark h.os been so
critk.: l· of e; erythong connectcd wnh Bush th&lt;~l one
centnst Democrat smd ' he
sounds like Howard Dean 111
'f'
·
.: um orm
Actuall y. Clark " takmg
moderate posillons on econom1c policy and health care.
But he dod come out agaonsl
Bush's $87 boll ion request to
suppon U.S. troops in Iraq and
has accused the administmt wn
of 'depnving Amencans ot
their covol hbenies' and of
accusong cntics of being 'disloyal and unpatriotic .'
On Tuesdav. he broke new
goound by· chargin g that
'theoe 1s no wav thi s admini strallon can walk away from
ols responsibolities for' the
at t.ocks of Sept II , 200 1.
·Th os was n't something
that could be blamed on
lower leve l ontelloge nce offi cers.' he saod m a speec h to a
tm eogn poht;y co nterence on

!Ji

Paul Theis

3600 Virginia Beach Blvd.,
Virginia Beach. Va.
Memorial contributions
VIRG INIA BEACH . Va. may
be made to the
- Paul Edward The: s, 87, of
Alzheimer'
s Association,
Virgonia Beach, Va .. passed
Roads
Chapter #20
Hampton
aw&lt;~y Nov. I. 2003 on a hospi ·
Kroger Center, Sutle 233 ,
tal there.
Va 23502 .
Norfolk,
A natJ ve of Weston, W.Va.,
Mr Theis was a retJrcd senior
staff
accountant
wit h
Amencan Electnc Power Co.
PORTLAND
Larry 0 .
He had tieen a member ot the
&lt;!land,
Chnst Lutheran Church m Se llers, 59, of
Ro.onoke, Va for many years, passed away on Mond ay,
and was a veteran of the U.S Nov. 3, 2003 at Jackson
Army dunng World War II. General Hospital in R1pley.
He was an avJd square dancer W.Va.
Born Aug. 8, 1944 1n
and enjoyed campmg.
He was predeceased by his Lebanon Townsh1 p. he was
wife, Therma Karr The:s and th' son of Ruth Ann Karr
is survi~ed by two daughters. Sellers of Middleport and the
Paul a Jean Theos of Virgima late Howard Sellers. He was
Beach and Ellen Jane Theis a selt'·employed timer cutter
ol Charleston, W.va : a step· and a veteran ot the U.S.
daught er, Carolyn Milhoan Army
Surv ovmg JS h1 s w1fe,
Bradford of Pomeroy; lour
grand choldren, sox great Agnes White Sellers; tv.o
grandcholdren, three sisters daughters ; Cheryl Se llers
(Jerry Smith) of Portland and
and a brat her
A memonal serv oce wolh Ann Se llers (Fred) Engle,
U S Army honors will be Portl and , a so n, Larry
Sellers,
Jr., '
co nducted at 4 p.m . on (Darlene)
Saturday. Nov. 29. 2003 at Pomeroy: eight grandchil Holl oman- Brown Funeral dren Stacy Black. Brittany
Home Lynnhaven Chapel. Bl ack,
Jacob
Se llers,

Clark :s schedu led to deliver (~ATO' s )
unprecedented
·1:naJ·or foreign pohcy dddress otter ol help . One Pentagon
.
'
t'l' 1 ld e 'We read
on Nov 6 111 South Caro 1rna o 1c1a 10 111 •
W,
It's h1s opponunity to lay out a your book on Kosovo. ere
full Clark phn for Iraq and. not go1ng to let anyone tell us
'
Cl k h
bomb "
M
possibly, a broader . ar w ere to
orton
Doctrine for loreogn pohcy
Los.temng to the speech,
Kondracke As Clark said :n ho s speech one former Chnton admm:s· o t'f-JCI.O
· 1 charactenzed
to the Wash:ngton lme ·ogn tratoon
d Cl k' t
policy as
policy conference. the Unote
ar s oreogn
States· needs 'a stntegy
to till 'learn toh work
'
· and play well
W ·h·n ton
the vt'id that emerged at the wo lh ot ers
as ' g .
e:Jd t'F the Cold W·lr' compaThe speech was dom:natReferrin g to the famous
'
'
b
.. t
s1gn on President Hurry S. r.1ble to ' th e Truman ed. however, Y VlWpel ~Jv~
Truman's desk - 'The buck Doctrine deterrence cont.un- attacks agamst
res: en
ment and the Marshall Plan. Bush . .:ll eging that Bush has
stops here' - Ciark smd that,
,
d ,
ll ·
plll dn
for the Sept. I I attacks, 'the Going forward . we II nee
,111 e1ec to o n~ nven , ' ·. ·
buck rests with the comman- new labels and new Jde.o&gt; '
ve n. Jdeolog!cally dnven lorder in chi ef. George W
Maybe it's too much to eogn po!Jcy that habs pkro·
Bush,'
expect. but Clark . conceov- duced an 1!~10st ~on ro en
Clark came forward woth ably could trans torm the st11ng ot .. m ures . ,
no evidence that Bu sh presodential r.1ce of he we re to
In conlr.ost to Bush s ciaom
come
forward
wo
th
a
clear
the
same day. th.n. he would
ignored specific warnongs of
.
.
1OJ Jc-e 1ec 1:on
the terrorist attacks, but on a doctrine to compete wJth the c.om pat!!ll
" h . h . , 11 IS
stateme nt he demanded that Bush Doctrine of pre-emp- ,uguong 1 ,ol t c "' 01 '
Bu sh hand over records ot t1 ve war ag.1111 st tell'o nsm
more pe,lcelul .md m~re tree
August 200 1 briefi ngs from
Suggestions on Clark's undeo my le•.ldeJShlp; ~la~k
the CIA so far denied to the speech•' s .md hos new book: charged that today v.e are " 1
invesllgating commission 'W111 11 111g Modern Wars nsk - peoh.1ps every bn as
headed by form er New ( Pub!JcAff~i rs. 2003) are that gre~t "' the,"sk .we laced the
Jersey Gov. Tom Kean, a hos maon 1dea os to act on day belote .m I.
.
Republican.
every problem ol U.S. torHe saod ouo armed fo rces
Clark's most often-repeat- eogn pol ocy only m concert arc· full y commotted as an
ed charge agamst Bush, how- with some mtern.:llonal orga- array of new threats are
cmeroong
ev,er. os lh.11 11e has 'no c1ear no z.o1:on
e
• v.o
. th no reserves,
defonotoon of success' in Iraq.
Thos would certaonly eother physoc,tl 01 onte llectu'no u1ternational mandate, no reverse Bush's 'u nolatera l· .11' .md ·wnh thiS admonostra;.
ontegoated poilllcal-mi litary ism' and mog ht make the toon. there JS no prospect o
strategy to v. Jn the peace and Un ited States lletter !:ked help I rom a world that
no exo l strategy.'
around the wm ld, ll ut ot m creas o~1 g l y re ;e ls Ill ouo
Thos os where Clark is wou ld also subJeCt US 1,11iuo es ,
..
moss111 g a golden oppoo1uni- action to a veto by countnes
He sa:d We have lost lanh
h
·d
w h 1 t
ty Goven hos vast Jmillary that don't always s are on ou r p: esJ ent. e ave os
expenence, parto cularly as America's interests. such as fa oth 111 hos ledder~hlp . And
the NATO supreme allied France, Russia and Chma
the woold h.:s lost f.:oth on o~r
commander who won the
At Tuesday's conterence , aut~onty .. Th1 ~ admmJStraKosovo war on 1999. ot ough t the la unchmg event tor a uon s reckless · actJons ha~e
to be urge nt bus: ness for new hberal thmk ta nk , the depleted us of the nallonal
Clark to brong torth a com- Center
tor
American secuooty asset we now need
prchenSJve plan of hos own Progress. Clark suggested most. the moral au thonty we
for Iraq.
that, after the Sept. I I terror- ha&gt;e enJoyed for most of our
It would do stingu1 sh hom 1st atlacks. JllSlead of gomg hi story.'
from hos Democratic nvals. to war unolaterally in
Clark promL:es that, when
maximize h1 s comparative Afghanistan . the United he os elected. Amenca woll
advantage as an ex pert m States 'should have unmedi- once agam be a r~hableonter­
military strategy- and give ate ly gone to the Um ted nallonal partner. It WJII be
hi s campaign a major boost Natoons, developed a legal good lO be loved agmn , but
If it we re coherent and deton :toon ot terroJJ sm - Clark
has to assure
compelling enough. it might and ondo cted Osa ma bin Amencans ,t ha t US lore1gn
affect public atl itudes on Laden.'
pohcy won l be dJctated by
Bush's policy and establish
· Acuon at the U N could Pans or Moscow
Clark as the Democrat most have bee n enforced by
(Morton Kmulracke 11 e.1ec ·
abl e to battle Bu sh on the NATO ,·
Clark
added 1111re dum of Roll Call. the
Iraq ISsue
In stead. ' the U S. ognooed " " "''!"''"'' of Capito( Hill.)

Larry

t

Dennis's named 2004
Ohio State Grange
youth couple
POMEROY - Brent and Rachel Denno ~ of
Columbus, MJ:l-m-law and daughter of Ke:th and
E.'Tlma Ashley of Pomeroy. have been named the
2004 Ohio State Grange youth couple .
The couple wa.'&gt; selected on the ba"' of a
written test of knowl ed¥e of Grange hi story
and programs , along woth mtervJews where
theor abohly to meet the pubhc wa; evatualed
Up unto! recenlly the couple belonged to
Racine Gran~e 2606. They are now members of the H1llard Grange. but remam members of the Meigs County Pomona Grange.
Brent. son of Ke:th and Jane Denn1' of
Rushville. I S a past state pnnce of the Oh10
State Grange Hos parent&gt; were pa&gt;t Oh10
State Grange young couple. Brent " a gradate of A.T.L in agriculture at Wooster and "
a · m coordmator for the State of Oh10 at
the m 's correctional institution at London
Rac hel ali , a past Ohoo State Gran ge
pnncess and past member of the Ohio State
Grange youth team She JS a reg1stered nurse
working at the Ohoo School ot the De at
because of her experoence on deaf educat oon
through the Grange Her parents were a past
West' Vorgima State Grange youth couple
Rachel began her Grange expenence at
age 5 with membership on Star Junior
Grange at Salem Center. She was also chosen as the Oh10 State Grange G R 0 W dub
presode nt Thos orgamzauon Js tor· past wonne" of the Oh10 State Grange young couple.
pnnce and pnncess, and state youth comm ottee. This club works to provide program' to

Office to close

Pomeroy PO
needs contact
information

Plan interruption

POMEROY - The oftlce
of the Me1gs County Health
Department will be closed on
Tuesday for the observance
of Veterans Day.

RACINE
Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Distri ct
has scheduled an interruption
The
POMEROY
of wa ter service from 9 a m
Pomeroy Police Dep.:rtment
needs the bu so ncss name.
to 3 p m on Thursd~y for
.odd ress , buso ness phone
c u sto m~rs on County Road
number and emergency con28 !rom the ontersectJon of
tact numbers (after hours) for
ALFRED
Tuppers
e.och bu"ness 111 Pomeroy Plams-Chester Water D1stnct Ohoo 124 to Rowe Road.
Customers woll be under a
Pomeroy Poloce Chief Mark has lifted .: boil adv1sory
Proltitt said a lot of the con- ossued tor residents on Ohoo bml adv1sory alter servJce is
tac t n.omes and numbers are 681 111 Orange Townshop restored
Customers are
out of da te and the police from Woods Road to the asked to boll all water used
department needs thJS intor· ontersection of Henderson
for dnnkmg and cookmg tor
ma toon upda ted 111 the event Road, Carr Road and
three m1nutes until furth er
of emcrgerKy
Keebaugh-Follrod Road.
notice

Advisory lifted

Bid
a math error was $3 I ,266 molhon.
M.E Companoes dod the design and engineering work on the project and will be the
constru cuon manager for the project.
Mitchell Altier, the project manager with
M E. Companies, sa:d Amentcon os a iarge
company woth substantJ al expenence with
water and wastewater treatment plant constructoon in southeast Ohio.
Depending on the weather, Altier said constructJon w11l take mne months and should be
fono shed by August 2004 The water treatment

plant can be upgraded if necessary and will
prov1de better water quality by eliminating
manganese m the water and sofleni ng the
water.
Previously, three bids for an upgrade of the
Pomeroy water treatment plant were reJected
in September because they were too high.
John Anderson, Pomeroy village administrator, sa1d the bids were outside the 10 percent
margin of the estimated $1 7 mlilion cost for
des1gn and constructJon of the proJect.
Funding for the proJect came from a combination of state and federal grants and a
$I 98,000 loan from the Ohio Water
Development Authority. The planning
process for applying for grants and designing
the upgrade began four years ago .

Cas~s

heard in
Meigs County
Court

•

youth and young adult' on the Grange
Both Brent and Rachel are member' ol the
Degree of Demeter. the h1ghest level of
Grange membership
Emliy A'hley. daughter. 'of Kellh and
Emma Ash ley, at tended the Ohoo State
Grange con;entoon on Columbu' on her
capacny ot one ol four members of the Oh10
State Grange youth team Her team plans the
a~ ti v Jties through the year for convention
and camps for all youth on the Grange. She ''
a JUilJor at Meigs Local Hogh School.

J•~taJKC S:!O ,mJ - ~~ ~~ " le n ) I B:ul c\ F a~ t

Lt\ Crpnul

,Jnd

POMEROY -

C a ::.c~ n!~ll vc d m the \1ctg:.

(nunt ~

Cnun ol Jutlgc Slc\l St.,ry httl4n·n
O..:t II and Ckt 1fl a rc ~ ~ fo ll11v. '
Jawb W Landr:;. Lun g I:IOihom lal ..tiiL.tltmt
uf t dcniEfl ~al loll U1~1111 ~ M:U l ll \ 1 ~ u nl ~
S h,rwn E Gohlc Yrnlon rcd lcs.. u pcrat1un

o,;2 &lt;ill tnd
Gallq)(o) r,

II&lt;~ opcr1tnr'

M,•rlin D Gnllrn
hn·m1c $50 ~mll

l ll~ t ~ Sulolt

t\ H .1 Y~ ~ S)r•l&lt;ll'l D\\1 ~llh

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to )

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( harb B Wt llr ,utNm lturtanJ rCL kle ~~
opcrttmn 'ii l ~O ,tnd '-" ' I' Andr,\ Brogg '
(J ,rll rpu l l ~ larlurc 111 umtrtll $21.K I am] , ~~ ~ ~~
S l~&lt;t w n 1: G11hlc Vrntnn •pt:cdrn!\ ~2 1 anJ
L{l \h tmtcd gh.t" $:?: " md '-'"'' ·
M1~ hucl S Kr,mucr 'J'IIllhl!hlrng $ 10 &lt;Jnll
( fl\1,

M 1thc111

W

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S.H&lt;.~L tl 'l'

~~~urt=d d ear liN.ml c u N ' on! ) dirmb I
Rr•hmnnd Rurl :md. \ Il l and w • t:; Todtl V

V"u11g P&lt;.~J u, .oh Kv ' J&gt;l:nlmg. $1" :mJ
Ltlsts. Tc rr~ W Allman GliKhtcr a ~s ure d
.. kar J r ~ ta l ll C ~ l'i .mol lll'l' J llhn M
Amn' R.1u nc ~~ a t hl.'lt - pa ~"C fl }!~r . $10 and
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a" un;J .. kar

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&lt;Jar) G
md Lml •
S:mJra D Hca udMmp Kt H'f\ · ~· v. H a
..C&lt;~ th--·11 S:\o anti l " ~" runoth) .,... lk nt1
New V1c m•a · rc ~ dn• ~ ~1 1 1 mJ ~ ,. ,., \ 1l~
1&lt;. Hl.td; hu m l.(lng A oll~&gt;m ,Jll!cdmt: ~ lP
Ha~ham

( uul vll lc "''uhdt

Elvis

from Page A1

from PageA1

oftendeo lo poovode notice of
oesodence address change, a
fofth -deg:ee felony.
•limothy R. Pastel, age and
address unrepo1ted, on two
count~ of burglary. a felony of the
second degree, a count of vandalism. a felony of the fifth degree,
and a count of receivmg stolen
propeny, a telony of the fifth
degree, With a spec1ficauon that
the propeny mvolved was more
thtm$500 and less than $5,00)

in everyday life when the
cameras weren't rolling .
There will be another ElvJS
tri vm game show. and then
Fontana will have a drummmg session.
Icenhower' s tribllte to
ElviS will take place at 2:45
p.m. and at 3: 15 p.m. there
woll a competitiOn as perform ers portray Elv1s in
eJtl;er the '68 Comeback
Special or the Las Vegas

Years. Agam the aud1ence
w1ll judge the conte st and
pnzes w1ll be awarded
Highhghtm g Saturday
mght's events will be "Elvis
Through the Years" where
Icenhower wtll be jomed by
other anists in a musi cal
showcase of songs from
1954 through 1977.
A gospel jam to close out
the "Experience'' will begin
at9.15pm.
Tickets are $ 1S for Friday
mght an $25 for Saturday.
Ad va nce t1 ckets can be
reserved by callmg 7408678-2665

LO ' ( '

Pliu n' ' 1)1;.-..:dm}! S:\!l and

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Tour

Dudding
Outstanding Admini strator Thomas Ben of
Symmes Valley Local School D1stnct on
Lawrence County, Outstanding Counselor
·Janette Calendone of Morgan Htgh School on
McConnel sville, and runner- up for
Outstandong Counselor Jenmter Buchanan.
also of Morgan H1gh School
"The OACHE's annual conference is a
tome tq celebrate Wllh and oeward the hundreds of dedicated K- I 2 educators who
seo ve schools in our regoon under often challengms circumstances." sa1d OACHE
Execull ve Director Wayne F Whue "Our
Outstandmg Educator awards are an opportunity to showcase some of the stellar contnbutJons of these indJVJdual s who have
gone the extra mile to help kids reali ze that
college is an option for them,

Handmade
Holiday Treasures

FIBERGLASS INSULATION

L'"''

Bw.:hanun Rl"t~ ld k -.cuth:IJ ~\ft Jrll.l "'"'' '

home tour held tor se,eral years by the
Assocoatoon To ckets are avaol able for a
donatoon of $5 with the money to go mto
from Page A1
town beauutlcauon They can be purchased
at most Pomeroy busonesses, wcludong
along Main Street.
Clark's Jewelry Store. Chapman Shoe s.
Many of the business owners will be
attired in period or old-fash10ned costume s Peoples Bank and Farmers Bank.
"A R1vertown Hol:day" IS the theme of
and g1ve brief commentar1es on the hi stories
of the buildings they occupy and the buso- both the Christmas parade and open house
nesses they operate.
to be held on Sunday. Nov. 30 and the Dec.
The downtown Pomeroy tour replaces the 7 tour

Keep WARM this winter!
with

~~f l

.),ml'er R li~ ~' · Sh:Jdy, •dc.· l.ulurL llll llrJin •l
S20 afkl l f"-l~ Dnnnn H Ji,,ugh.amt r n k

from Page A1

Indicted

Brent and Rachel Dennis, third couple from
left. were crowned Oh iO State Grange youth
couple at the recent Ohoo State Grange conventoon held on Columbus . They are pictured
woth from the left. front , Ada Cummons, OhJo
State Grange youth co-&lt;Jorector, Kayla Rohr.
2004 Ohoo State Grange pnncess; and
Debboe Russell , Ohoo State Grange assistant
youth co-&lt;Jorector; and Rochard Cummons ,
Oh1o State Grange youth , co-&lt;Jorector, Bnan
Hunkms . 2004 Ohoo State Grange pnnce ,
Mochael Russett . Ohoo State Grange assostant
youth co-&lt;Jorector.

Court .news

from Page A1

about SO tunes the Iirst week refused to send hom unul she
Everywhere
Debra
of school. It happened .: II day h.od ,;ssuo ,mces that he would
Ch,osnuft goes these clays,
be safe
in every class, relentlessly
people tell her long- bm1ed
In stead of uwesugaun g
'All
th1
s
stuff
is
go
mg
on.
sec rets fro m middle school
why
the sc hool did httle to
and l can't pay atten tion (i n
Chasnoff always li stens. She
class),' he s.1ys. ' I write 'l protect the boy. prosecutors
is a hstener by nature But
Joan
hate the person' over and put the mother on trial.
she also knows there is no
Ryan
over. l just want to dotch Earloer th JS month , a jury
use onterrupllng Once the
school or kill mysell . any- convicted her of contnbuting
telhng begins, time and disto her son's death by keeping
thing to gel out of 11.'
tance dissolve, and she can
Chasnoft's camerd captures an unsafe and unhealthy
almost smell the crushed
name
of
the
kid
who
did
it,'
the
gaw ky on securit y that home. Nevertheless, the
Fntos and musty gy m shlfls
and strawberry lip gloss of Chasnoff saod. ' It's amazmg defmes early adolescence In boy's suJcode prompted
the omp.oct ot has It stays w1th the hall ways. gu·ls hu g the11 Connecticut to pass a law
the jumor high hallway.
notebooks to the11 chests and 1equumg school staff to
·one woma n told me the you your whole hfe.'
Aulhontoes 111 Colorado boys amble 111 such a stoff, oeport cases of bullyong
girl who bullied her sllll
'There's so much pressure
shows up as a character in th1s week released footage self-conscoous way you thonk
from
a
home
vodeo
that
on
te.1chers around testing
someone w:th a Joys tock os
her dreams,' Chasnoff said
over salad at a San Francisco shows the two Columbme operallng theor lunbs from a and academ1cs that they don't
restaurant. a few blocks from H1gh School kollers takmg remote locatoon They want ha ve enough tome to pay
target practo ce m the woods nothin g more th an to get at tention to what's happening
her stud10.
The two teenagers are through the day wllhout 111 hall s and playgrounds,'
'When yo u think back to
chJIImgly
g1ddy about the embarrassment, an often elu- Henry Der, former deputy
junior high, you don't think
supenntendent ·of public
abo ut your social studies prospect of flfin g bullets Jnto sive goal
' If someone says some- mstruction for the Califorma
class. You think about who people's brains instead of the
pushed you against the lock- bowling pin s they used as thing wrong in class, we, Department of Education,
like, totally humiliate them,' told the audience at the 111m's
ers, or what someone smd to targets.
It makes you hope that m one boy admits, smiling. 'We prem1ere Tuesday.
you on the bus.'
Chasnoff. w,ho has two
Chasnoff JS an Academy the nearly fi ve years since the put the spothght on them .'
Any difference whatsoever school-age sons, says she
Award-wi nning flimmaker Columbine killings, adults
whose stature allows her to have become more attuned to is se1zed upon. It can be eth- wasn't surpri sed by the stomake documentaries about the rage that buolds inside nicJty, sk1n shade (too black, nes she heard from k1d s
anythmg she chooses. For the kids who are relentlessly bul- not black enough) , shoes, while makmg the film , only
pas't decade, she has chosen lied and humiliated at school. religion, weight, learning by the numbe r of the m.
But , Chasnoff says, too style, speech pattern - any- Students were lined up at
to make films about and for
kids, add ressi ng head-on many parents and educators thing. Kids in m1ddle school, every school wantmg to tell
co ntroversial topics such as still shrug off bullying as an like many adults, fear differ- their stoJ ies Some ol those
gay and lesbian stereotypes. inevitable part of adoles- ence. Perhaps it is born of v.ho appear in the documenHer latest film takes v1ewers cence, even a rite of passage. their own fear of being ostra- tary saw 1t for the forst time at
into real middle school s to Maybe they don't know that cized and condemned by the Jts premiere thos week. One
hear k1ds talk about the 160,000 kids stay home from group . By ostracJling and particularly tormented boy,
name-ca llmg and bullying school every day because condemnmg others, one's who was actually pushed off
they fear bei ng bullied, own place feels more secure. h1s b1ke whole the crew was
that goes on ev~ day. •
The documentary, 'Let's according to the National
' You can't stand up for oth- filmmg h11n , was beammg
Gel Real ,' premier!!d recently Education Association. Or ers.' one student says, when the loghts on the theater
in San FranciSco to a packed that bullying has been linked 'because then they'll p1ck on came up.
San
Francisco, to 75 percent of school shoot- you.'
house.
'I'm so glad you did this,'
If we need any more evi- he told Chasnoff ' I hope you
Oakland and Berkeley school ing inc1dents, a U.S. Secret
distncts have comm1tted to Service report says.
dence that bullying has trag1c get thos onto every school m
That's why Chasnoff chose consequences, we got it from America '
showmg the f1lm at the1r
school s, and a slew of groups bullying fo r her new film. a story out of Co nnecticut
He seemed to tbmk that if
like the Natiqnal Middl e though she knows much has lest January. A 12-year-old k1ds and teachers trul y underSchool Assocoaloon and the been written and produced on boy hanged himself with a tie stood the deep and lasting
topic
since
the in h1 s closet. He was an pain that bullyong caused,
Natoonal AssocJatJon of the
Scnool Psychologists nave Columbine shootings. What eccentric seventh-goader who maybe most of it would stop.
onvoted Chasnoff to screen sets Chasnoffs film apan Js was tormented by classmates l want to beheve he s ri ght.
the f1lm at theor upcommg the students' voices. She lets, who pushed hun off the
(Joan Rym i' a columntsl
them tell the1r stories stra1ght bleachers, shoved hom down for the San F;an cisco
conve ntoons
'Everybody who watched to the came ra. They are a ~ta orwe ll and spit on him. C/mmicle. Send commems rd
the film seemed to remember impossible to ignore.
The boy stopped goong to her 111 care of thi' newspaper
A boy named Brian says in school, and hos mother, who or \ end her e-mwl at joannot on ly what happened to
them , in jumor high, but the the flim he was called a 'fag' worked 60 hours a week, ryan@&gt;{chronic/e.com.)

McKenzie Seller,, Kayle
Anna Brooke Werry. Larry
"Bradley" Sellers, Michael
Engle , and Ju ston Engle . Al so
surv1ving IS a "specoal granddaughter," Nicole Jones.
Two brothers survive ,
James (Ru.tl Ann) Sellers of
Portland and David !Roberta)
S~llers ot Magnetic Springs;
two s:sters, Judy Sellers and
Jenn y Williams, both of
Columbu s; specwl famo ly
, Vmce and Brenda
G
of Ponland; brothersIll Ia ~d sisters-in- law.
Margaret (mri's' ustoce of
Phoemx . Anz ., Walt
Jean)
Wh1te of Rodney, and
Kenneth (Marlene) Wh1te of
Ponland .
Services will be held at I
p.m on Thursday. Nov. 5,
2003 at Cremeens Funeral
Home 111 Racine wnh Rev
B1ll
Ju sti s
officw t111g
Interment will tallow at
Middleswart Cemetery in
Ponland. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9
p m. on Wednesday
Military gravesode servoces
w11l be conducted by the
Racine Post of the Amencan
Legion and the Tuppers
Pl ams Post VFW.

Local Briefs

Kids fear the taunts &lt;if bullies

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Fall Craft Show

"We are very proud of Mr Dudding and
our other wmners. and Southern Local High
School has ~ very reason to be proud as
well. " White added
Th1s is not the first time a Southern Local
educator has been honored by the OACHE
In 1997 Sh1rley Sayre was named
Outstandong Coun selor. and in 2002 Tom
Weaver receo l'ed the Outstanding Teacher
award
The Ohoo A.ppalachoan Center for Htgher
Educato on JS a consortium of ten public colleges and unoversllles on the 29-county
reg10n of Appalachian Oh1o. established hy
the Ohio General Assembly in 1993 with the
mossoon of oncreaso ng the educatoonal attamment of the region 's ciuzens
In May 2003 the OACHE won the prestigious Innovations 111 Ary~erican Government
award from the Ash In stitute for Democratic
Governance and InnovatiO n at Harvard
Universny. For more mforrnalion about the
OACHE. contact Wa yne F Whne, executive
dJrector. at 1-866-GO-OACHE or visJt
www.oac he.org.

NOTICE
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy is authorized
to accept utility payments for:
'

American Electric Power - 74' fee
Verizon - 74' fee
Columbia Gas - 65' fee
Payments by check must be

made out to that utility.

Upgrade Your

UTILITY PAYMENT HOURS:
Monday - Friday SAM- 6PM
Saturday 8AM- 3PM

Attic l"sulation
nouember g, 2002
Saturday 10 a.m. - 5p.m.
Jet . Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipoli~ ,

vmu 1

740-446-2002

Datlenal&amp;uard Hnnlll'!l
RDute 62 north
Point Pleasant, wu
Sponsored by:
Mason County Community Educallonal Outreach Service

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sund~;~y ll-5

,,

-· - --·- -·~--;-----.,..--------.,-----------_:._-------

�Page A6 • The

Daily Sf&gt;ntinel

Thursday, November 6, 2003

-www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
AII..Ohlo volleyball teams, Psge B2
Bengals can't find running game, Page B6

Thursday, November 6, 2003

Wooster men,
OWUwomen
picked OAC
TWINSBURG (A P) John Carroll 's men and
Wilminglon 's women were
selected as lhe teoms to beat
in preseason voting in the
Ohio
Confere.nce
on
Wednesday.
The resulls of the voting
by the OAC coaches was
announced during a confer·
ence calL
·John Carroll received six
of the I 0 first-place votes
~nd totaled 76 points. edging
Capital by three points. The
Blue Streaks and Crusaders
tied for the regular-season
title a year ago. John Carroll
we·nt 22· 7 and adva nced to
the NCAA Division Ill tournament for lhe first time in
four years.
Wilmington also received
six of a possible I 0 first place votes and totaled 78
points, six more than
Otterbein , which had three
fi rst-place votes.
The Quakers were 26-3
overall al}d 17- 1 in the OAC
a year' ago and made their
second consecuti ve appearance in the Division Ill
round of 16.

College Soccer

Redmen to open AMC tourney against Geneva
post-season '" the
South
Division
cha m,pion .
The
Redmen are Jed by
freshman forward
Ben Hunter 119
goals, 4 a"ists) and
JUnior striker Simon
Carey ( 16 goals, 6
assi sts). Hunter and
Carey are the top two
Morrissey
scorers in the AMC.
•
Carev mi ssed the
final three regular season games with
ankle difficulties. Hi s status for

BY M-'RK WIW-'MS

Special to the Tribune
RIO GRANDE - The University
of Rio Grande Red men, ranked No. I
in the NAIA Soccer Poll. begin the
road to Olathe. Kansas and the NAIA
National Tournament, with a first
Mideas t
round
American
Conference/NA IA
Region
IX
Tournament match-up with the No. 4
seed out of the North Division,
Geneva College.
Rio Grande ( 17-0-1) enters the

Saturday i' unknown at pre~nl.
The Red men get additional 'upporl
from senior mid-fielder ih Hodc
IH goals. 4 a"i'ts). ,ophornorc mitlfielder John Carroll I I goal. 12
as&gt;istsl and a quartet of frc,hmcn.
Bcnn Hughes 14 goal,. 4 a"i'l.'l.
Conar Dawson (3 goal,, 4 ""i&gt;hl.
Sean Wiseman (4 goa b. 2 ""isis I and
Tony Griffiths (4 goal&gt;. I a.,sistl.
'Senior goalkeeper Oliver Sandef'
(0.24 GAA) i&gt; having a great sea.sun.
having only llllowed four goals all
&gt;cason whi Jc posting I 0 'hutouts.
Sunders is the top net minder in the

,' '·

'

,•·
'

'

'

. ,.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- The widow of NFL running back Fred Lane was
sentenced to nearly eight
years in prison Wednesday
for shooting her husband to
death three years ago as he
walked in the front door.
Deidra Lane who pleaded
guilty in August to voluntary
manslaughter, broke down in
tears as the judge read the
sentence.
She said her husband had
abused her physically and
emotionally. "I loved Fred
.dearly ... but at times he
scared me and I didn't know
him then," she said.
Judge Timothy Patti gave .
her the maximum sentence
of ·seven years and II
months. He ruled the slaying
was premeditated and delib·
erate, that Lane acted with
malice, and that she shot her
husband a second time after
the first shot rendered him
·helpless. Those factors outwet~hed the alleged abuse,
the JUdge said.

.

Come on over to llob ts

·Wanted: Your
varsity winter
sports schedules
All varsity winter sports
coaches and adminstrators
are urged to send us your
schedules for the upcoming
season as soon as possible.
You p1ay e-mailed them to
sports@mydailytribune.com,
or fax them to 446-3008. You
may also drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Ave.

Crow's Family Resta"'rQnt
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
Z28 Main St.

1&gt;..

Pomeroy, Ohio

WiRE D W ORLD COMPANY ••

1/4 mliJ north af

·Pomeroy ·Me110n Brldgl ·
· Maioon, W~•t VIrginia
Phone (304) nu121
OPEH 7 DAYS A WEEK

Denver Nuggets' Carmela Anthony (15) drives past Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) during the second
quarter Wednesday in Cleveland . (AP)

· LeBron's ~home

debut not so
warm as Cavs fall to Nugglets
BY ToM WITHERS

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - The kid from
the local high school stole the show
- and all LeBron James could do
was watch.
Tiny Earl Boykins, who grew up
in Cleveland, scored all 18 of his
points in the second half as the
Denver Nuggets ruined James'

hyped home dl!but . Wednesday
night, 93 -89 over the winless
Cavaliers.
Oh. and the James vs. Carme la
Anthony rivalry? Let's just say it
needs some work. Maybe it's a good
thing they' ll play just once more
this season.
'Tm glad it's over. I don't got to
hear about the matchup with me and
I:eBron until next month," said

1-800-971-5757

..

Anthony, who will next meet James
on Dec. 3 in Denver.
Anthony outscored James 14-7 in
the eagerl y awaited mutchup
· between the NBA's two star rookies.
But neither wa~ able to get into the
flow and disappointed a sellout
crowd of 20,562, which kept waiting for one of them to take over.

Please see Cavs. Bl

MU officials hope C-USA move will boost revenue
'

Associated Flress
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Its nationalteleyision
package is more lucrative. Its bpwl games are
more profitable, 'and there are more of them.
Alumni ·in the South have more opportunities to
attend games.
Marsllall 's decision to join Conference USA and
leave the Mid-American Conference was rooted in
athletics, academics and economics, school officials said Wednesday.
,
"We've done a good job of making sure we didn't embarrass the MAC at any level," Marshall
athletic director Bob Marcum said. "But if this TV
contract is better than that one, so be it. We made
the comparisons. When you look at .the reasons of

,
.

•

'

CEDARVILLE - Both Unive"ity
of Rio Grande men 's anti women\
basketball teams lww been piL·ketl to
finish ., ixth in the
respecti\C American
Mitlea't Conference
Pre -Season Coache' ·
Polk
The
Redmen
received 5-l points
along with T1ffin and
are picked to finish
sixth in the South
Division . Ri o. having
Simpson
lost Je rrv Barlow.
Chris Bai"Jenger and
RunJar Luts. will have
big shoes to fi.ll . Rio
Grande wa' 22-1 -l
overall i&lt;l't season and
went IJ-7 and tied for
~e1.:ond a vear ago in
the divisio'n.
Seth
Senior
Deerfield.
juniors
Sean
Plummer.
Hager
Dawaync Mcintosh.
Matt Simpson. Cam
Vandall and sophomore Cedric
Hornbuckle are the key returnees. Add
transfer Kris Wil"1n and the Redmcn
could surpnse . Rio i., the defending
AMC Tournament champion.
NAJA Pre-season No.~ Cedarville is
the team to heat in the South Division
aL·cordi ng to the W&lt;ll' he' . NA.l A Preseason No. 21 Saint Vincent is the top
pi ck in the North .
The Retlwomen were also tabbed to
finish sixth in the South Division ,
gathering 42 points. Rio Grande lost
one player from last year's squad.
point guard Emily Cooper.
Senior Annie Tucker. juniors Alkia
Fountain. Tiffanv Johnson and Anuel
Allen give the· Redv. omen a solid
returning group and toss in Kent StJte
transfer Tiffanie Hager and the
prospects f\1f improYement jump
great ly for the Redwome n.
Rio Grande finished a disappointing
JJ- 18 last season and only J- 15 in
league play. which re"1ltetl 111 a 9th
place fini ,h .
NAJA Pre-seas011 No. 5 Cedarville is
the choice 10 win the South Divi.sion
anti Saint·Vincent is the team to beat in
the· North .

&gt;

BY JoEDY McCREARY

For All Your Fall Pltm~ ·
And Decorating Needs! · .

Please see Redmen, Bl

sports@ mydailytribune.com

Widow of NFL
running back
sentenced
'

The Golden Tornadoc' get support
from 'ophuniure forward Scolt
Holden (7 goa ls. 13 a"l'h I and
Kevin Roma,co 17 "''istsl. Senior
goalkeeper Chris Robert' ha; registered two shutouts with a 1.08 goal.'

STAFF REPORT

CINCINNATI
The
Reds adjusted some ticket
prices for their second season at Great American Ball
Park but kept must of them
the same Wednesday in an
effort to win back fan s.
The ballclub had a disastrous inaugural season at the
new ballpark, . losing 93
games for only the 12th time
tn franchi se hi story. Fans
were enraged when the Reds
traded away stars at midseason to slash payrolL
The club had hoped to
challenge the franchise
attendance record of 2.6 million
but
finished
at
2,355,259.
Prices for 87 percent of the
season
will
remain
unchanged next year, the
club said .. The price of out-'
field bleacher seats will go
down by $2, and the price of
other seats will be ratsed $2.

,'

"'IX a \~ i ~t~.

Rio men,
women
No.6 in
AMC

Reds adjust
some ticket
·prices for '04

~.

AMC heading into the Jl(l&gt;t-seaMlll .
The Red1den lead the conference
with fiH goal' scored thi ' , ea,on.
Gene va I II -3-3) i&gt; Jed by junior
forward Neil Rabi . He has &gt;&lt;:ored 13
goals thi' season and also contributed

.

,.

I

'.

'

I

joining Conference USA, it
is far greater. We are a great
addition to Conference USA
in the sport of football."
Marshall · and Central
Florida arc leaving the MAC
for Conference USA, which
also added Rice, Southern
Methodist and Tulsa from the
Western Athletic Conference.
The new members will begin
play in the 2005-2006 a~ademic yeai.
.
Marshall President Dan Angel saip he hopes
increased television exposure in larger, desirable
markets in the South yields increased enrollment ,
The 'MAC was largely centered in smaller cities in
Ohio and Michigan. while Conference USA's

lnajor mar~et s include Dallas, Houston , Memphis
and New Orleans.
"Students aren't going to go to a school they
haven't heard of," Angel S&lt;jid. "Marshall has gotten good national visibility from footbalL
Wherever you go now. you see people wearing
(Marshall) shirts.
·
"This evolves to the' next stage. and this is the
next logical step for Marshall University."'he said.
Conference USA could split into two divisions
for football and stage a championship game. commissioner Britton Banowsky said Wednesday.
" It's no secret that the col)fercnce in the past has
wanted to drive m-embersllip
12." Banowsky
said. "Jt .appears as if we have a group of universi· ·
ties excited about being a pan of something great.
Clearly, we want to be a league with its members
committed to competing at the highest level."

to

,

�,' . Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 6,

www .mydailysentinel.com

mrthune - Sentinel - l\e

2003 .

'·. .

r-------------------------------------~------~

All-Ohio High School Volleyball Teams

COLUMBUS (AP ) - Here are th e
2003 AU-Ohio HiQ h School Girl s
Vo lleyball Teams as voted by the Ohio

Volleyball Coaches' Assoc1at10n:
DIVISION II
First Team
Carrie DeMange, Ket1enng Alter, sr.:
Al1sha Dials, Canal Win.chester. sr.;
Tristan Dye. W8st Holmes , sr.. Nicole

Fawcett.

'

'•.

·.

Benjamin Logan . jr.; Ali

Hausteld , Ketter ing Alter, sr., Va1va
laniauskas, Mentor Lake Cathohc. sr :
Megan Tayl or. Lakev1ew. sr : Anme
ZPkeiJ, Nt Dame-Cathedral Latin, sr.
SeCond Team
Jessica Fraley, LaGrange Keystone.
sr.: Sarah Fries , Wi llard , sr., Julie
Gull~k Maysvi lle,- sr.: Rachelle Hagerty,
Defiance, so.; Jessica Hoeh, Cin. Roger
Ba con ,
Jr.:
AlliSon
Klusmann ,
Tallmadge .
sr.;
Tracy
Reschke ,
Mogadore Field, sr. , lauren Teal.
Salem. sr.
Third Team
Traci Hassell, Hubbard, 5r. , Mandy
Humphrey. West Holmes . jr.; Jan
Kehres. Alliance. sr.; Stephanie Lund.
Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin , sr. ; Kim
Novak, Sunbury Big Walnul. sr.: Ashley
Phillips, Granville , sr . Tavia Romano,
Carrollton, sr. , Dennale Speakman,
Unioto. jr
Honorable Mention
Ca111m
August us,
Springfield
Shawnee. sr.; Brittany Langel. Fairview.
jr.; Karly loomis. Eastwood, sr.,
Meg,han Mohr, Elida·. jr. : Jessica Moo re,
Akron St. Vincent-St . M ary, sr .. Laurie
Patrick, Bellevue, sr ; Ally Perko, Notre
Dame -Ca th edral
Latin . Jr.; Sam
Rodabaugh , Indian Lake , sr. ; Alex
Shinhearl , Mento r Lake Catholic. sr.;
Stacie Shrider. Warren. sr.
Coac h of the Veer: Tina Jasinowski,
Kettering Alter.
Coac hes Achlevem~nt Award : Sco tt
Taylor, Cort land Lakev iew; Col leen
Ross. Canal Winchester : Bob Fawcett ,
Benjamin Logan; Ji m Park , West

Holmes: Rich Severino, Mentor Lake
Catholic.
DIVISION Ill
First Team
Megan Borgelt, Huron, sr : Ka tie
Cane!. Old Washington Buckeye Trail.
sr. , Jessica Moses, Luthera n West, jr. ;
Kendra Orwig , Margaretta , sr.; Kelsey
Sewards , Williamsport Westfall , sr .;
Erica Short , Orrville, Jr.: Ta Neisha
Wmters. Orrville, sr.; Jaclynn Yocum.
Plain City Jonathan Alder, sr.
Seeol)d Team
Alicia Hoff. Smithville. sr.; Micki Kuns.
Margaretta, so.; Shannon Kay Leasu re,
Shenandoah, sr. : Sarah Matesich ,
Newark Catholic, sr. ; Aud re McCarey,
Tuscarawas Va lley, Jr.; Courtney Nissen,
Genoa Area . sr. ; Ada ir Pigue! ,
Whee lersburg, sr.; l es lie Stong,
Metamora Evergre en, sr
Third Team
Korie Andrews . Eastern Brown, sr. ;
Rachel Bennett, Marion Pleasant, jr.:
ChelsBa Field. Marion Pleasant. sr.;
Lindsey Grubb, Huntington , sr.; Kara
Hemmelg arn . Versailles, .sr .; Abbey
McCoy. Huron. sr.; Megan O'Donnell.
Villa Angela-St. Joseph , sr.; Ka ri Ann
Young. Monroe Central. sr.
Honorable Mention
Brittni Borre ro , Old Wa shington
Buckeye Tra il, jr.; Sara Collins, James
A. Garfield , sr.; Karla Everh art ,
Lu theran West, jr.; Amanda Fox , Huron,
jr. ; Jess ica Helm , Ontario, sr.: Brooke
Hinkl e, Wellington, jr. . M acke nzie
Layman. West Lafayette Ridgewood, jr.;
Whi tney Maiden, Nelsonville·York, jr.:
Gortn ey Palm, Smithville. sr.: Daniells
Rychener. Arc hbold , sr.: Ashley
Schultz , Marion Elgin , jr.; Nikki Ward,
Williamsport Westfall, sr.
Coach of the Year: Diane Shanklin .
. Orrville.
Coaches Achievement Award : Don
Wood. Huron: Jen Lauber, Tu scarawas
Valley ; Bill Orwig , Margarella ; Brian
Yale,
Genoa
Area :
Lori
Merriman , Williamsp or t Westfall ; Jeri

win of the season.
James and the Cavaliers are
still looking for win No. I,
and the top overall drati pick
from Page 81
is now 0-3 in hi s career .
against
his close frie nd
lnste·acl, it was the 5-foot -5
Anthony.
Boykins· who made all the big
James had the better stat
shots and plays.
The former Cavs guard, sheet: II rebounds and seven
who signed a $ 13.7 million, assists to Anthony's six and
fi ve-year deal with Denver as two.
But James couldn' t get his
a free agent duri ng the offseagame
going and went scoreson. scored I0 poi nts in the
in
the second half, and
less
third qu arter to help the
ti
nished
just 3-for-1 1 from the
Nuggets take control.
Afler the score was tied at field. Antho ny, coming off a
55-all, Denver got a pair of 3· 1-for-13 night in a loss at
pointers trom Jon Barry and Indiana, was 6-for-17.
More than 300 credentials
two from Boykin s while
outscoring Cleveland 22-9 to were issued to see the first pro
matchup between James and
·close the period .
Anthony,
the two most publiBoykins added eight more
-points in the fourth as the cized rookies to enter the
Nuggets, who tied Cleveland league at the same time since
for the NBA worst record ( 17- Larry Bird and Magic
65) a year ago, held o1f a late Johnson in 1979.
"Thi s is overwhelming ,"
Cavaliers' comeback.
said
Cavalie rs coach Paul
Another forme r Cleveland
Silas.
who feel s the early
guard, Andre Miller. made
compari
sons of a James vs.
two free throws in the final 23
seconds to seal Denver 's third Anthony rivalry to Magic vs.
Bird are premature. "But

Cavs

Heller, Newark Catholic
DIVISION IV
First Team
. Lindsay Hess , St. Henry, sr., Robyn
Hoy1ng , Minster, sr., Ashley Newcome r,
Sidney Lehman Catholic, sr.; Ali Roach,
Windham , jr.; Ashley Sowers. Frankfort
Adena . sr.: Moll y Spencer. Spring field
Catholic Central , Sf. ; Ami Stevens,
Centerbu rg, sr.: Sa rah Zellman, Kidron
Central Christian. sr.
Second Team
Janna Barhorst. Maria Stein Marion
Local. so.: Rebecca Day, Beaver
Ea stern , jr.; Joscelyn Kaup , Ft.
Recovery. sr., Kelsey MacDonald ,
Ayersville, sr.; Whi t n~y Mage rs, Old
Fori, sr.; Lindsay Puthoff , St. Henry, Jr.;
Leah Schaffer. Norwalk St. Paul. jr.:
Erica Zwmeh ly, Fran ~lort Aden a, sr.
Third Team
Jess ic a Butt , Sidney
Lehman
Catho lic,
so .;
Carolyn
Ciriegio,
Covington, sr.: Jackie Helm, Fisher
Catholic, sr.. Cera M etz. Jackso n
Center, jr. ; Ashley Pierson, Wellsville.
sr .. Kelsey Schaefe r. Marion Local. Jr. :
Kim Schnipke, Mi ller City, sr.; Rachel
T hom pson, Kidron Centra l Chri stian, sr.
Honorable Mention
Valerie B ornh~&gt;rst. Minster . sr.: Amy
Carnahan, Ayersv itle, sr. ; Me gan
Centers , Norwalk Sl. Pa ul, jr.: Nicole
El~ i ng , St. Henry, st.; Leah Hochs tetler,
Hiland , jr.: Leslie Hoelsc her, Ft ,
Loramie. so., Katie Hupp, South
Cha rles ton Southeastern, sr.; Carrie
J entsch, Gin. Summit Country Cay, jr.:
Brittany Klima, Otlovi lle, sr.; Melissa
Knestaut, Tuscarawas Central Catholic,
sr., Lindsay Lehigh, Tuscarawas Central
Catholic, sr. ; Kat ie Pl ayko, Norwalk St.
Paul, jr.; All ison Siefker. Kalida , Jr.
Coach
of
t he
'fear:
Lori
Schwiete rman, St. Henry.
Coaches Achievement Award :
Laura Smi th , Frankfor t Ad ena: Usa
Boron, Centerburg; Fred Miller, Kidron
Ce ntral Ch ristian; Michael Chaffee,
Windham.

that's the way it is."
Before the game, the
Goodyear blimp from
James' hometown of Akron
~ hovered overhead as the
normally quiet streets outside
Gund Arena buzzed with traf·
fie, fans and scalpers seeking
$300 fo r a lower level seat to
James' home opener.
Nike CEO Phil Knight,
Reds outfielder Ken Griffey
Jr., rapper Jay-Z and suspended Ohio State running back
Maurice Clarett were among
the celebrities on hand.
James. who used to attend
Cavs' games while he was in
high school, was asked if he
ever imagined the Gund
being on center stage .
"No," he said. "But I knew
after I got drafted that it was
time to pany."
But for much of the first
half the only celebrating
Cleveland fans did came during a splashy pregame cere·
many as the Nuggets opened
an 11 -point lead before the
Cavs trimmed it to 46-44 at
halftime.

Red men
from Page 81
against average.
Game time is set for I p.m Saturday.
Rio Grande Head Coac h Scott Morrissey
. has a great deal of respect for the opposition
that will be coming to Rio Grande on
Saturday.
"'They are very well coached, very we ll
organi zed" Morrissey said. "David Murray
has been at Geneva for many, many years,
they've won .a Christian College Natio nal
Champion ship, he's a very successful coach."
Geneva pulled the upset of Rio Grande in
the 1998 tourn ament. "I just have a fee ling
that thi s wi ll be a very good ga me," he ,tdded.
The speculation is that Geneva will pack in
defensively to keep the game close .
" Pe-rhaps, maybe hi s approach Ill Saturday's
game is to sit and defend a littl e bit ,"
Morrissey said . "Maybe not pl ay us stra ig ht
up, head-to-head. if that 's the case then it
should make fo r a reall y, really good game.''
Rio comes into-.the to urn ament off a 1- 1 tie
to Tiftin that cost them a perrect season.
Morri ssey is conrident that there were some
lessons learned.
" Looking back on the Tiffin game, the
personnel that we put out there I fe lt played
ve ry we ll ," Mo rri ssey said. "The one thin g
that I've learned and I think we"ve learned
as a team , is yo u' ve got to take (advantage
of) your chance s; we had a lot of great
chances to wi n that game , we had a lot of
chances to blow that game wide open and "

CLASSIFIED

we didn't take our chances."
"I think one of thing s that we have to do a
better job of is, we need to get a team down
and put them away and we need to ha.vc that
killer instinct to bury a team and I don ..t thmk
we' ve re ally done that much th1 s year.
The other tirst round match-up&gt; are t Nouth
No. I) Houghton ( 14-3-1) vs. (South No. 4)
Ohio Dominican ( I(). 7-2) . (Sou th No. 2)
Tiffin ( 14-3-2) vs. (Nort h No. 3) Robe 11s
Wesleyan (9-7-2), (North No.2) No~re Da!nc
College (7-9·3) vs. (South No . 3) Cedarvil le
( 12-5·2).
Morris;ey offered up a forecast of the ~ ther
match-ups. "The big match-up 111 the held,
well. all of them are big match-ups. but TtUm
will host Roberts Wesrevan. In th e regular
season, Tiftln beat Roberis Wesleyan . 4-0 up
at Roberts ," he said. 'This is u statement
game. I thi nk. for Roberts Wes leyan to .kind
·
of right. the wrong of the regu lar seaso n.
" I think Ti ffin is goi ng to have the 1r hands
full.'.
"Houghton, they host Ohio Domin.ca n, I
think that potentially could be a pretty close
oame and then the one that is a toss- up to me
f, Notre .Dam e/Ce.darvi ll e." he added. " I
th ink. based on the result s I wou ld give the
edge. maybe to Cedarville. but Cedarville has
to travel.'"
" Notre Dam e is a we ll -coached team.
they ' ll be ve ry we ll organ ized. I don ' t think
there are any gimme games in th e first

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round."

Morri "ey could be correct in his asse ssment as there are three Region IX teams that
appear in the final NA IA Top 25 rating. Rio
is ranked No. I. Tiffin is 14th and Hough ton
is 24th .

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'"Tfl.l5 No/11 $£,41~,
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fo~ BDTH
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© 2003 by NEA, Inc.

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1993 Clayton mobile home.
14x60. 2 bedroom. 1 bath.
wldeck &amp; outbu ilding. $9.500
080. 740-441· 9334 .
piCKY PAINTERS
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Roofs, barn s, pressure·
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available
304-895-3074
Free estimate s call M-S
8a m-7pm.
--------Will C lean House , cook,
take ' Care of di sabled or elderly. Call (304 )675·4108

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2 BA. near Holzer. CIA. eco·
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deposit required $485 740·
44 6-2957

Now Tak1ng Ap phcallons35 West
2 Bed mom
Townhouse
Apartments .
Includes Wa ter
Sewage .
Trash , $350/Mo . 740-446·

3 Br. house lor rent Located
on Sanders Dnve $550 per
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ences
requ 1red .
Ca ll
W1seman Real Estate 740·
446·3644

One bed room, lull balh .
k1tchen W-' Siove In town
wfpm ate parkmg Cab le
electr iC . gas wate r. &amp;
garbage 1nc luded
$400
month 740-446 ·2414

0008.

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implem ent the Marcil of
Dim es Il-lest Virginia State
C hapter"s
Walk -America
events in Pt. Pleas ant Job
begins on January 7 .and
ends May 3 t ~ approx. number of hou rs will be 20 per
week . Job can be workect
out ot your home: computer
necessary.
Primary Skill S necessar y
include ability to organize
and prioritize : outgoing personality; experience in working with voluntee rs: se lfslarter who is proactive. Job
history of sales . special
event managemen t and/or
tun draising
Send resumes to Mindy
Smith, State Director. WV
Chapter March ot Dimes ,
3508 Sta unton Ave.. Secane!
Floor. Charleston.
WV
25304 ..

Wanted: front desk cler k, full....&amp;ecialize in C00d and ~ad
time, apply In person .
cred1t. Ca ll tal1 lree _to f1nd
Holida Inn of Gallipolis
out about our low 1nterest
Y
rates and receive elCpert
140
BUSINESS
advice.
TlwNING
1-888-7311-871 i
1

The
Community Cheat
Buyer'• Guide Ia now
accepting appllcatlont for
outtldt eaiet · repreuntaUvtt . Aequlrea eMcelltnt
customer rel ation tk"nla, non·
esty ~ &amp; dependablllt~ . To
apply: bring In or mail your
resume to: The Community
Chest Bu yer's Guide .28
Locuot Street , Galllpollo OH
45631 .

Publication

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p . m .
Thur•d•y for Sundays

lwr1ghl@llc.net

Grace Methodist Rumm age
Sale : Fnday, Nov. 7, 2003, Need 7 ladles to se ll Avon,
8am-2 :30p_m. Cedar St. Call 740.446·3358
en tranc e.
Now taking applicationsYa rd Sale: Thursday, Friday Driver w/CDL'S: preferably
and Salurday. 1116-11/8, w/dozer &amp; backhOe m:peri8am·4pm. 106 Amby Ln., 8 ence , laborer preferab ly
miles from Holzer on 160. w/ aome siding, roofi ng,
Close to Cl tgo Station. Misc. pl umbing &amp; electrical e)(perl·
and email.
ence . Apply Cole '&amp; Mobile
Homeo, 15266
50 Eaot,
Alhono, Oh 45701 . No
phone cans pleaae

3 Fomll_y Ya rd Solo Nov. 1 &amp;
8, eam· 3pm . GIIIIWire,
toolt,
mite,
nouathold
Items. Maton Co. Fair
Groundl.

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

JhlJ' W-wrtll

r

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'.

classified@ mydailyregister.com

CARLY~E

PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
Looking for Rock Guitari st
Send resume to:
!You do bu sin ess with peo
Tom Deen
and singer to JOin band. Mu st
be serious to play a lot. Call
le you know. and NOT t
Recruiting Manager
~end money thr ough th
Robbie (740)742·3200
McKesson Automated
flail until you have investi
Healthcare
Medi Home Health Agency,
500 Cranberry Woods Drive ~aled lhe olleoing.
Inc seeking a Sp eech
Cranberry Twp, PA 16066
Therapist tor the Gallipolis,
Fax: 724·74 1-8026
MONEY
Ohio area. We offer a com·
tom .deen@mckesson.com
TO
loAN
petiti ve salary, ben eflls
packa ge, and 401K. E.O.E.
High School · diploma req'd Mortgagea, Mortgages! !!
Please send resume to 430
pharmacy or medical exp. We offer competitive interest
Second A~·anu e, Gallipolis,
preferred. but not re q·ct . rates on mortgages and
OH 4563 1. Attn: Diana
EOE.
debt consolid ations and
Harless, Clinical Mana ger.

u.s.

The ·Daily Sentinel
i&gt;unbap limt' -j,entintl

In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
Sundays Paper

I·

~::~::;:::~·

Display Ads
All Dl•play: l:Z Noon 2
Bu•lne•• D•y• Prior To

5undlav

r

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with .a
copy ef your photo -ID.

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

Monday .. frlday for lnaertlon
In Next Day•• Paper

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
stripped . litter trai ned, 8 Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
Are you looking for the right
weeks old . 740·256·9125.
675·1 429.
part-time . position wit h iJ
Very friendly Calico kitte n. Earn money for Christmas good work schedule an d
Ce ll 740·256· 101 2 leave a by selling Avon call Joyce competitive pay? If so,
McKe11o n
Automated
message .
304-675·6919
Heallhcare seeks a mot1La.&lt; AND
Full time maintenance posi· vated individual to manage
FOUNI&gt;
t1on. Apply in person at the and maintain all on -site
Holiday Inn. No phone ca lfs. mediCation packaging utiliz·
ing bar-code tech n o l o~
Found Money
in' West
Virginia. Call {740) 992·5594 Head caShie r/clerk needed related to our automatect
lor local conveni ence store. robotic drug d1spensing sysFound:
2002
Gallia Responsibilities include bul tam installed with in the
Academy class ring on a not limited to ordering prod· Holzer Modlcal Center's
chain . Found at Wai-Mart. uct, schedu ling &amp; general Inpatient Pharmacy.
sto re maintenance. 30·40
Cal l 740·44 1· 11 55 .
hours per week, experience The successful canc:lidate
FOUND : Mate Grey cat. is a plus but not nece ssary. mu st be goal oriented, reli·
green eyes, white co llar. Send resume to· TNT Pit able and abl e to work well
(304)773-9143
Stop,
P.O.
Bo~~:
220, independently.
Other
Syracuse, Oh 45779 or pick requirement's include good
Founct: Set of Keys fo und at up appliCati on at Gulf
organiza tional skills. a high
Rio. Gran de Etem . Call 740· Convenience Stati on in
degree of eff iciency and a
245·5333.
Syracuse.
computer apt1tude.

Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!

).

t

Honda 250, must run and be
street worthy. 740·245·5027
SENIOR PORTRAITS !
Ge t You best deal at .
I \IPI II\ \II ' I
Main Street Photography.
"I In I( I ...,
5 11 Main Street.
Point Pleasant.
Call tor Appointment
HEU' WANllll
1.
t304)675·7279

If so, you qualify for a

\

YARD SAt.F.·
Pr. PLEASANT

Mum Family Yard Sale .
Satu rday. 7315 Fi11e Mil e
C· t Beer Carry Out permit Road. Infant items. furnitu re.
tor sale , C hest~r Township, lots of stuff.
Meigs County, send letters
of intere st to : The Daily
WANTI:Il
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
TO BUY
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Ai'e you 65 or older?

~alltpoh• Jl~il!'

r
I
ii

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

. classlfled@mydallysentlnel.com

classified@ mydaliytribune.com

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

i\.egister

-Sentinel

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:

Offiee lfo~.f'

3 Kitten s tree . Gray &amp;

,.

m:rtbune

Goons.
Was ner $95 dr yer S9 5
electnc range $95. r e lnd~e r­
ator while (like n~;tw ) $195 .
Fndg1d1are relr1 gerator St50
wa sher &amp; dryer sets $300
each . gas ra nge $95·. couch
Ivery n1c e tan &amp; browr,l
$125, COUCr"i $ 50 . 2 lull SIZe
bed s ..vlbox spr1ng s and
mattresses S200 p• ctures
$1 2 each lamps $10 each
nfC e f1replace 1nsen $150 2
love seat s $95 ea ch 4
ct1a1 rs S20 each

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now tak mg Appilca110ns
Skaggs Appliances
tor 2BA. 3BR &amp; 4BR.
740-446-7398
Apphcat1 on s
are
take n
76 Vine Street
Monday th ru Frrctay. from
9:00 A M.-4 PM Office IS
SPOR'lt'IG
Located at 11 51 Evergreen
Bnck 1n Gall1polls. 3 bedDnve Po1 nt Pleasant . WV
rooms , 1.5 baths. baseme nt.
PhOne NO IS (304)67 5·5806
carport , $650, refe rences.
EHO
Malhews Bow w11t" accesdeposit, no pets. 740-446·
sones $350 Call atte1 6pm
9209
Tara
Townhouse 740·388-0162
Apartments . Very SpaciOus.
For sale or rent· 4 bedroom
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA. 1
house in Pomeroy. S450 a
112 Bath , Newl)f Carpeted,
month rent . $400 security
Adult Poo l &amp; Baby Pool.
depos1t, no pElts, stove. tr ig.
Pat10. Start $38 5/Mo No Buy
or sell
A 1venne
&amp; dishwasher, (740)949·
Pets. Lease Plu s SeclJnty Ant1ques .~ 1t 24 East Ma1n
7004
Depo s1t Req uired . Days on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
E11en10gs 992· 2526
R1.1 sS Moo re
New 3 or. Ranch Style 740-446· 3481
740-36
7
·0502
owner
home . 1 baih. garage. 1 yr.
lease-no pets. Reference &amp;
Tw1n R1vers Tower IS accept · ~ l\1l&lt;;(HJA'IB M. iS
deposit $500 per month
1ng appl iCati OnS for wa 1t1ng
M EI&lt;Ul -\ NIIi'E
740-446-2801.
Irs! to r Hud -subs1zed. I · br.
Very nice 3 bedroom. no apartment . call 675-6679 3 pc sec!IOnal w'hlde·a·bed
pets , re ferenced requirect _E:l:
HI':'
O- - - : : - - - - , · &amp; recl1ner $200 740· 98 5·
4150 or 740-66 7-3107
sec ~rity
deposit
$725
Sr•n:
monthly. 740-446-.?423 after
Hlll R~JioT
8:00pm.
5 oerson Hot Tub New

r

G&lt;xx:os

r

pump. cover. and d1g11a1con ·
Commerc 1a l property for trois. 51 _200 740.339..()2 13
rent· a store front m
mRRENT
leavt! a message
Histor1ca t
ctow ntown
2 bel. wlw ca rpet, air. porch. Pomeroy, Oh fac mg r1ve r.
740 589- 7122
H. Duly 1,4" BD dt1ll
Very nice. no pets !n
Milwaukee sawz al l ano
Gallipolis. 74{)-446·2003 or
blade Rockwell screwdriver
740 -446· 1409.
10
HD HD ster1 1ng sande r
H~!~ '
McCulloch cha m saw ano
2 br. t4x70 cle an. $375
'-.J'.JULI"l
blade LP gas hOse and reg·
month. $375 deposit 740· ......
ulator Martm 35.000 STV
44 6-4060 or 740·44 1-1283
Complete K1tche n 15 bwch gas heater and p1pe 1 Futon
cab1nets. Built in gas stove. couch hke new
APARThltNt'S
oven formica coun ter tops .
mRRENT
stainless steel smk, taucets, Hosp1tal bed Brand new
breakfast
bar (304~675· never been used' Electnc
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ltlt. ask1ng $400 740·44 1·
ments. fu rnished and unfur· 3275 be st offer

MOBILE H OMES

i

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7390.
nished. secunty deposit
Good Used Appliances .
reqUired, no pets, 740-992·
Reconclllloned
and
2218
Guaranteed
Washe rs.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Dryers.
Ranges .
and
1 BR with stove and refnger·
Refrigerators , Some start at Aepa11ed. New &amp; Rebuilt In
ato r, Startin g at $290/mo. ...
$95 . Skaggs Appliances, 76 Stock Call Ron Evans. 1·
deposi t 740-441 -1 322
1/ine St.. (740)446-7398
, 800-537·9528 .
1 SR . nea r Holzer. W fD
hookup, CIA. no pets. $359 Hot pomt washer $75.
Whirlpool
washer
$75; NEW AND USED STEE~
pl us utilities. 740·446·2957
Whirlpoo l and GE dryer $60 Steel Beams. Pipe Reber
BEAUTIFUL
APART· each: All are while Ca11 after For
Concrete .
Angle
MENTS
AT
BUDGET 6:00pm 740-446·9066
Channel , Flat Bsr, Stee l
PRICES AT JACKSON
Grahng
For
O ra~ns .
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Drive from S297 to $383. Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio. Scrap Metals Open Monday
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es . Call (740)446-7444 t -877-830· Tuesd ay. Wed nesday &amp;
740-446-.2568
Equal 916.2. Free Estlmallil&amp;. Easy Fnday, Sam-4:30pm Closed
linanc1ng. 90 days same as
Housing Opportunity.
Thursctay.
Satdfday
&amp;
cash. V1s a/ Meste r Card. Suncay. (740)446-7300
For rent one and two room Drive· a· linte save aiOt.
apt wit h sl"'ar&amp;d bath utltlties
Office Furniture
included. $200. single. $250. New love seat $1 00. clresser
New,
sc:rat c:h &amp; Dent
$20.
and
table
with
3
chairs
couple. 607 Second 446·
Seve 70%. 1 ·800·5.27·4662
88 77
dayo.
25a· 1912 $25 Call 740-446·«79.
Argonaut5 19 BriOge Street.
evenings
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp; GuyandottetHuntlngton . M/F
For rent one bedroom apart· Repa lr-875· 7388. For aa1e.
me nt 920 Fourth. Utlll tlet re-conditioned automat ic F-'antograms
model
XL
Included . $400. 446·6677 washers &amp; dryers. retrlgera· Jacket Master embroidery
tora. Qat anti electnc
doya 256·1 ;12 evenlngo
machine. Ex cellent condi·
rangea , air cond!tlonert, and
tlon . templatu and new
For rant one room effiCiency wringer wllht.( l. Will do
spoota ot thread Included
apartment. Utllillll lncluctld repairs on major bfandt In
$750. Gall740-441 -02-43
$300 single S350. couple. ahop or at your home .
e20 4th Avo. 448-8871 dayo.
Uted fu rniture ttore . 130 Rough cut lumbtr. Varlou1
Gracloua living . 1 and 2 bid· Bulavllle Pike. Manrenes. sizes and le"n!llh. Muat 1111
room apartments 11 VIllage dr111era .
COUChel. to price C..II7&lt;N4t·73Bo.
Manor
an d
A lvera lde bunJ(btdl. bedroom suhes.
Apanme ntt in Mlddltporl. recf lnera. Grave monu· Wasner, Kenmore large
From $278-$348. Coli 740- menta.
740·446--4782 . capacity, alm~tt new. $350:
992 · ~084. Equal Houa lng Gallipolis OH . Hou ra 10· Gibson electric ra nge. huge:
Opportunities.
4pm . Stop by
$350. Kanmo~a portaD11
dishwasher. almost new.
Modern one bedroom apt.
$150:
RCA 27'1nch TV $100;
740·«6.0390.
·
all lteml $900. Estate sale.
Near Aodney·large 2 br. 1
96 597
bath. attached garage. $400
5-5
or
per month. ref. and depoeit.
No pets. 740-446·2801

North 3rd Ave. Middlepon. 2
2 be"droom on Taxes Rd in bedroo m furn ished apt.
&amp;
reference
GallipOlis.
$280/mo nth. De posit
$200/deposll. Calf aher 5pm required. No Pels 1740)992·
Ot65
740·olo4 8·7309.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

~~:~~

l ,~

~

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Wihters. Alo Grand&amp;. OH
Call740-245-5121 .

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�Thursday, Nov. 6, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Dail y Sltlltinel

Thursday, Nov. 6, 2003

www.mydallys~ntlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel I• Page 85

ALLEY OOP

With A Daily

BULLETIN BOARD

DALE

weekdays
Sunday
55

BARR
CJfappy75th

Phillip
Alder

~j I

;

i

Pauline, Brenda,
&amp; l{on, Gal"), .

North

Ready for Power Outages?

Lori, Sara h, T.J.
and A.J .

Vanguards Ventless Heaters
&amp; Gas Lqgs

COOLING
PETS

Announcements

FORS.) LE

....................................
...............................
.~

~

'$100, 740-367-7468.

AKC Chocolate Labs. vet
,l'IE!cked. 1st shots &amp;
wormect .. reacty 11!7/03.
740-441 ·0931.
'-AKC
Engl iSh
Bullclog.
·female, 12 weeks old. color·
Brindle/white
Adorable
andlo11ing. Shots &amp; wormed .
740·446 -2895.
AKC reg . male and female

Forked

~

GUN

••

::
••

:: SHOOT ::
••
••
••
u
••
J}: rm N11m1

~:

12 RijJlt&gt; Remjire
Stuula_\', 1\ 'm•. 9, lOOJ

••

~~
••

COOLING
446-94 16

••

~·

12:1HJ 1/lllltl

••

Sfuu
,. MmciJ

~·

Fri. - Sat. - Sun.
Nov. 7, 8, 9

: Lnaso Apso·s ssoo ror pa1r. ~r~--~,~
. , .~&amp;~-.,
: Phone 740 -388·8441 or
-LA

1

' 740-388-8856

·_ 1570

MUSIC&lt;IL
IN;,TRLIM~XI'S

~-~·.1"""·----,.1

GR.\JN
Round bale hay. first &amp; last
culling . Orchard grass &amp; .
clover. Call 740-446-7787.

Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome

"f:'h f

sale Guitar Gibson,
100 years anni11er· Sq uare bails of hay for sale.
;- sary
Ed. $2500. Ca ll $2·.$3 per bail. 740-245·
9044
• 304 593·3988

: obvE

FRum&amp;
VEGE:IABLK~
~.f\l taloes

II~

10

FOE2171

Alnus .
nm SALE

FoR SAl.~:
OR TAAnr

1-600-7 19-3001 ex! 390 1

Ij

Fo r Sale. Large 4-Wheel
Scooter. treated lumber.
~ E't.lgllsh saddle/ bridle, bath
sink and cab in et. 304·7735207.

I \R\1 Sl PPI II S
~o\11\ISIII(h.

°

1

FARM .
EQUIPMENT

r

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Aunlli

1993 Chrysler Concorde.
Lively 's Auto Sales
runs eKcellen t. S2.000 OBO
740·388-9303
Pho ne: 740-446-7025 or
740-446-0905
1987 FordE 150 Van $650:
-:-:-::--:::-----:-----:--:,995 Ch rysler Newyorker. 1988 Ford Thunderbird
1992
Che11y
loaded.
mint condition . $1.000:
$4500 OBO, (740)992-5737 Cavalier. 5 spd .. $800: 1994
Plymouth Voyager. $ 1.800;
1997 Ford Escort. clean car. 1967 Mercury Marqui s,
runs great 51995. (740)992· $500: 1989 Dod ge Dynasty,
5737
S800: 1992 Ford Tempo,

"' ~asse y Fergu son 50 live 1997 Toyota 4 runn er.
Power. good co ndition. King loaded , mint condition . call
kGiter brush hog included tor details. (740)992·5737
•"$3, 800. 304 675·8052
2000 Buick Regal LS. 41 ~
miles, exce ll en t condition.
$ 10.250
Esta te
Sale
(304)675·2208. 965·5597 or
Ce l_550·7153
3 ·Fair Steers. $600 each. 1
ex tremely tam e. e)(cellen t for 2000 Lincoln Co ntinental
young . 4-H member 740- Like new cond ition, low
245-93 15.
mileage. Pho ne 740-446·
1079
4 .Holstein Heifers. 4501bs,
2001 Kia Spectra, 33. 100
5700 each. 740·682-65 19.
miles. 4 cylinder . automatic.
4-door,
clean. Take over pay·
AIIIQ us Bulls. Hailers plus
M'b.ine-Angus Steers and ments. 740-388-8788.

.

•TRucKs

~'ll:"--":""----, t;;r-"":':~~~--,

$5001 POLICE IMPOU NDS.
IDK SALE
"'FOr Sale-S acres of real Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps. etcl
• estate Situ ated on Paulins Cars from $500. For listings 94 Corvette Coupe. White.
:·~ad in Cheshire Township, 1·800-719·3001 ext 390 1
red leather. glass top.
•: ejHia
Cou nty,
Ohio 1987
Cadillac
Co upe loaded $10,000. 740·682(Auditor's Parcel #003·002- Oev1lle. Ru ns eKcelle nt. 7512
·"1 71 -00) Sa le price $6, 000. power everything . $1,000 - - - - - - - The real estate is umm- 080, Call 304-675·5612.
Burg undy 93 Eagle Vision .
prolied woodland . Interested
loaded. V6, CD player,
Chevy
Camara. Power e11erything. $2,000.or
pcirties may call 304·273· 1993
Burgundy. au tom'atlc. fu lly best offer 090. 740·25641 70 or 740·992·7 101 .
1652 .
loaded. 740-379-23 89

• R epl ace m ent

FOR SALE

fl'lachlne Quilting- Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns ,b ailable
Connie Curnutt
895·:1962 Shop
owner1operator
895-:1512 Home

Ui

bll)' q11ift IOJ'S
9 miles fro m Pt. Pleasant
on Sand Hill Road,

•

IT'S
Ttillll&gt;Sl&gt;AY.

-

1999 F250, 4WO, cru ise.
AJC , AM/FM cassene, bed
11ner. topper also included
Fibe r glass Tonneau cover
e)(tra whee ls &amp;
ti res.
$17.700 . 740·446·7554 .

45 77 1

New&amp; Used

,,: .. to 1Q'x30'·
Hours

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
1!14/t mo. pd

1999, S-10, 4cyl. 5 sp., PS,
PB. AIC, LS series, exce llent
condi tion. 40K. 740-256-

.'·

.. •

I MEAN ?

Dean Hill

Slze$•s'X1o'

• •

BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slart
6:30
Last ThursdaJ' ol

~~2:~~;,.4lr~~~~~:.~~~~~:~

I[40

L.------_.J
.~~

$1 ,000.

cruise. tilt, power locks and
Hour s: 9·5 Monday -Friday, windows, aluminum whee ls
9·3
Saturday,
Closed with AT duelers . chrome
Sunday.
bumpers and grill, bed finer
ancl cove r. Garaged. non
smoker Perfect! 37, 000
TRUCKS
miles. $10.500. 00 (740)592FOR SALE
2761

MUIURCYCLES

every month

I

All pack $5.00

Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

1987 Jimmy 4 whee l dr.. 2003 Honda XR100 . and a
automatic. 350 engi ne. Go-Cart. (O utgrown') Call
65K .. fat tires 304·675·5516. 740·446-3486 afte r 5pm.
alter 2pm. ·

fiO

AIJIU PARTS &amp;
Acc~RJES

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

THE BORN LOSER

1-800-822-0417
"W.Y's # I Chevy. Ponti ac, B ui ck . Ol ds

&amp; Custom Van Dea ler"'

I

740-446-7215 or 740·446 7669.
1996 Chevy Blazer LT, 4x4,
loaded. leather. $5,500 ot&gt;Q

(304)675-8931

dOME

H
OME

.__iiiiMPiiiiliRiiOii\i'EMEiii
·iii.iiN",;,rs..,..
'

MuroRCYCUS

Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references lurnished. Esta blished 197. 5.

I

1

I

GOnER
•free EsUmateu

949-1405
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing· All types

2000 Kawasa~i Bayou 300.
4x4, like new. less than 50
hours _$4,000 firm. 740·256·
6239.

~n this page fot~s

~ *::r:::NCE

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

24 Hrs. (7401 4461998 Pontiac TransjXlrt, V6. Call
white, loaded, new tires , 0870, Rogers Basement
runs end loo ks great. $7 000 Waterproofing.
OBO 740-441 ·0365

r

WRITESEL
dDDFING

'

740·992·7953

' $25.00

"I lost my shirt
· inthestock
market!"

'"Not me!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp lnsuran&lt;&amp;
and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone : 843·5264."

MAN

1

TH I S

SC IE NCE U P WIT H t1Y
REPOI'.T HYPOTHESIS
IS
YET ~
~E

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

TOUCOH!

I

ANO
WHAT
IS

IT :'·

-'llirthdllf:

INTENO

T O PROVE ,
ONCE AND FOR
ALL . SCIEN-

TIFIC:II.LLY. THAT
t&gt;O&lt;OS AI':E

St1ARTER T HAN

C. lilTS.!

Commercial Residential
Bulldozer &amp; ltacklwe Trucking Servic es
Septic System /m;tallation

!.and C/eari11g
Hom e Sire.'i Porrd.'i Driveways
740-992-3470
Toll Free 1·866-267-0072

PEANUTS
OI&lt;A'&lt; MARCIE .. I'LL
KICK Tf&lt;E BALL, AND
'IOU CATCH IT~

Pomeroy, Ohi11

l.lii-IAT IF IT HITS ME
IN THE STOMACf.l'?

IT WON'T l-IlT 'IOU
IN THE STOMACH IF

'l'O~'RE CAREFUL --·

YOUNG'S

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Parch Decks

BETTY

•

Fre e E sti mates '

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, 011io
22 Yoar
al

NOTICE FOR BIDS
The Southern Local
Schaol District will

receive sealed bids
lor:
1985 International
School Bus, 71 pas:

sanger, V8 Olesal, 5
speed manual, 222655
miles, Serial # I HVLPHYL8FHA55776
Ford Van 350E
1982 Horton Squad,
460-Va·
Automatic
Transmission, 1154t3
miles,
Serial
#
1FTHS36L6CHA9!;461
Bid
opening
November 19, 2003,
12:00 noon .
Right to refuse any
end all bids.
(11) 4, 5, 6

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, November
8, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public sola will be
held at 211 Weal

Second

Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
parking lot of The
Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company.
The Farmers Bank

and
Savings
Company Is selling
lor cosh In hand or
certified chock thelol·
lowing collateral:
1992 Olda Achleva · r----~--,
1G3NL5434NM432816
2003 Nlssan Santra
3N1ABS1D33L719850
1993
Nlsean
Pathfinder
JN8HD17V9PW11790

~~~
High 8l Dry

5
The Farmers Bank
and Savings company, Pomeroy, Ohio,
reserves the right to
bid at thla sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to

sate .

Further,

The

Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
submitted.
The
above
described collateral
wltl be sold "As- Is-

where Is", with no
••pressed or Implied
.warranty given.
For lurther Inform a·
lion, or lor an appoint·
mont to Inspect collateral, prior to sale date
contact Diane Rector
at 992·21 36. XT 122
(11. 5, 6, 7

Self-Storage
,,
33795 Hiland .Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

GARFIELD

IMPORTS

740·992·7953

J&amp;L

Eledric

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Ph 74Q-!i92·013l
Ctll740-591·1013

llO'xlO' 6 10'M20')

ROBERT
BISSELL

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

CIIISTRUCDOII
• New Homes
• Garages

' ,.•

'{oU l&lt;ilP\IJ ~OW ii-\IS Y~A~
MOST\.Y ALL I''l~

IS ME::- _ _,

; Complete
Remodeling

740-992·16'11
Stop &amp; Compare

5HAPPUP, THERE
1,100 STUPII7
MUTT!

Frid•y, Nov. 7, .2003
By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead . you could be graced
with a number ol windfalls that you don't
expect. which wilt affec t seve ra l areas.
These happenings coul d be based on
lucky fin ancial break s that help in many
areas your life
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Follow
your impulses today to do something spe·
cia l for someone you love. Your deed will
be appreciated mare th an you antic ipate
and wilt bring you fe el ings of self-gratification.
SAGIITAAIU$ (N ov. 23- Dec. 21)- Don 't
di scount anyone's il;!eas today : in tact.
encourage others to speak out . Valuable
information could be learned from a least·
e~epected source. which could greatly ben·
el it you .
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Scan
your sources today far ways to generate
greater income. There·s a chance that you
coul d stumble across a means that you
had never considered before and that will
be quite profitabl e.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Someone
whose help is essential to lurther your
present goal (but whi ch you nl'lver expected to receive) wilt be surpris1ngly quite
supportive today. Don't hmll conlacting
Important sources.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Don 't be
shy about what you know needs to be
don e - initiate positive action to get
things off the ground. A financial matter
can be worked out quite favorably for you
today.
ARI ES (March 21-April 19) - The one
thing that would tu m things around the
qu ickest lor you today is to wa nt for others
th at which you want for yourselt. lt's amazing how fast everybody w1ll fall1n line.
TAURU S (Apnl 20-May 20) -Completely
open your mind today and rejec t an li mitati ons on your thi nking . This will allow you
to utilize avenues you rarely or never use,
whi ch could lead to large achieve ment s
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - II you let
peopl e with whom you're involved today
~now you have faith in them and their
ideas. it'll further stimUlate lh81r ingenuity
1n ways th at'll yii!ld grilater benefits for you
as well as them.
CAN CER (June 2 1-July 22) - Be pre·
pared to move swiftly today if opport unity
knocks. especially where your wo rk or
caree r is concerned . Something unusual
and positive may develop that you'll want
to be part of.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- Your jud gment is
particularly goad today, espec ially In situa·
lions where you may have to make snap
decisions. Bein g challenged awakens your
invent ory of successful past e)(pe riences.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Somethi ng
on wh ich you 've be'ln working could prove
to be more successful today than you'd
thougtit feasible. What happens at lhls
time will open your eyes to new posstbitllies.
LIBRA. (S ept. 23 -0ct. 23) - Encourag. a
friend of youra: who has been a bit quiet
ebout something to e,.;pre11 hlm1elt or
herself today. It might eurp ri11 you to lind
out that you !'lev. the answers to wnat'e
bot1'1ertng your pat.

11.1-1-®A~

.'

·I

NOBQPC.&gt; APPRECIATf5 Mf

Licensed &amp; Bonded

(140]992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
992-6635

Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

AW, WHAT'S 'fHE USE?

Athena

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

II-"

'Trttlvr:,-

AstroGraph

r HAVEN 'T
EVEN Co t1E

insec11
42 Conceal
44 Alba and

46 Wlnemaker'a

54 Scl-11 writer
-C. Cl&lt;lrl&lt;e
55 Tasty egg

dish
56 Formal
prayer
57 Put up
58 Injury
reouh1

DOWN
1 Pier
2 Till

3

....,

Corr~t

47 - Kotl
of ""
comlc1

Inventor

22

4 Blunder

5 Kill·

wearer'• no

6 Lemony

flavor

7 Tlcko ofl
8 BoiM'o at
9 Decimal

base

tO Wind up
11 Oluppr""lng cluck
12 Marllna ·
city
16 Standard
18 Dlmlnlah •
20 Stay
21 Oynomhe

Snow•'-

ohernotl..
23Rebull
24 Fl11h
25 Tic-toe- 27 Damage
29 GrHniahblue
30 High pt
32 Haul
34 Architect

48~

Dick I toe
49 Getl a tan
SO H1va
1 go II
51 Take
untmuly
52 Outbeck
bird
53 Gruo-sklrt

1.11.-

occeuooy

37 Captoln'l

lhout

54 Poclno end

Un-

38 Old eoldler
41 Petty
43 Type
alpoem
45 Stared II

Frank Stewart writes a syndicated news·
paper column . rn 11, he regularly features
fictional characters supp&lt;Jsedly playing in
his local club. Now he has put120 of them
into a book . "Frank Stewart's Bridge Club"
(Master Point Press. 2003). There is one
advantage over the newspaper format:
You are fi rst set card-pta~ and defen se
problems. so thai ~ou may CIV!Sider them
uninfluen ced by the full deal. something
your morning paper can 't do. Then you
can read the appropriate columns .
In this deal from I he book. l oo~ only at the

BIG NATE

GONNI&gt;.

IHOWARDL.

All pa ss

As you will see. Stewart still uses a 16-18
no-trump, not the modern 15·17.
Against a no-lrump contract, rt is common
to lead lourlh-highest from one 's longest
and stronge st Assuming West has done
that. East should use the RUle of Ete11en.
Subtractin g se\len !rom 11 tells East that
he, the dummy and the declarer combined have fou r spades higher than the
seven . And he can see all lour: dummy's
king and his own A- 10-9. So, South cannot beat the spade seven - he must have
the doubleton six-four. Ea st should underpl ay with his spad e three.
When partner tak.es the trick.. he will continue w1th the spade queen. and the
defense will raKe, in five tricks: tour spades
and pne cluO _If East wins trick one. South
mu st make the contract.
The book is $20.95 postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridg e Supp lies. Call (800) 274·
2221 to order.

l

Pomeroy Eagles

c6_36-:8:. :-::------:----:----:~
94, S- 10 ext. cab. 4x4, good
shape. high m11es. 5 speed .
$3,850 firm. Call 740-388·
0011.

East

:! NT

51 O.llvero,o
--

North and East hands. Yo u are defend tng
again st th ree no -trump . Your partner
{West) leads the spade seven. After tha.
dummy contri butes · the two. how would
you plan the defense?

SHORE AM GLAD I AIN'T GOT 'LECTRICITY, i
'CUZ IF I I.OST IT I'D MISS IT, BUT IF I
I
AIN'T GoT IT I CAN'T
I
LOSE IT !! KNOW WHAT
~

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
740-949-2217

-"orlh

Pass

From newspapers
to book paper

N~ITtiE#l.

BARNEY

Hill's Self
Storage

1989
Pl ymouth
Grand
Voyager. · runs good. new
GMC Pickup. Sierra Grande pa rt s. $1,000 or make otter.
1992 Chevy 314 ton, 5Hei1 ers. Top blood lin es. '9 1 Accla1m . new tires Need
LS with camper shell. One
speed . wllopper. $4,800
Slat e run farm . Jackson . repair $400.00 080
owner,
41 ,000
miles, 1992 Dodge Caravan , 4
Call 740·446·8832.
740-286-5395.
(740)992-6778
52,500, 740·245· 9619.
cylinder. automatic, 161 ,000
miles, very good condition.
second owner, $1,200. Call

\•

A Berrer

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK .
CALL
(740)446 -9416. M-F 9-5 .
Located
1391
Safford
School. Gallipo lis .

We st

I ~T

1 Cheoo piece
6 Corny
11 Atct1c: f"aln
12 Knight,
loltlady
13 Lampoon
14 Away from
the co.1t
15 TIIJJiple city
of J.,.n
16 U.obeoplr
17 500 llheeto
19 Without
23 Pvt. 'a boll
26 Hat tt~ture
28 -choy
29 POiu
31 Del1111oe
ploy
33 Hu1hed
34 Goody·
goodies
35 Sublett
lorKem
36 Bnlllca
area
39 Salon
aupply
40 Diligent

IUCh

15 TOl&gt;AY
ONfl&gt;AY OllTvl05l&gt;AY?

750 East Stale Strec l Phone (740)593-6671
Alhens, Ohio

Ta~e

2394.

South

Opening lead: 4 7

RESIDENTIA L

$900; 1990 Old s C1era.
$ 1.200;
1985
Pontiac
Sunbird . $600: 1992 Olds
Ciera. $1,200; 1994 Chevy
Cavalier, $ 1,600; 1993 Olds -:-----:----c----:::-:-Ciera. $950; 1993 Plymouth 98 Super Cab, White
Sundance. $800;
1994 Ranger : 4-wheel drive, 4.0L f!'ll!""-"':":~~---,

~;;t~he~~r;l_~~. "!~:,~~.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable Both

COMMERCI AL and

1

1994 S- 10 Blazer. 4.3
Vortec . 64,000 miles. $2,000
excelle nt shape. 740-446-

6 4
A K .) J

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Windows • Roofin g

1n
lllllfS PAINTING
1140) 985-4180
Today's
Cias · ieds! ,

8-12:00

for sale 50# $10,
:: lao~ ·Sat. ,
65002 Sta te
~ APttte 124, Reedsville. Oh. $500' POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. etc!
~ "' 378·6291
Cars from $500. For listings

Siding • New Garages

740-992-7599 .

4 K 5
•
•

Let me do it for youl

Band for Nov. 7th &amp; 8th
"Fast Eddie"

\\Sf'( m I \ 110'\

Nt!w Homes • \- inyl

FREE ESTIMATES

• 7' 3

South

I

BUILDERS InC.

the
;savings

French 500
Flea Market

• 9 6 5 2
• 643

• AKJ
• Q J 10 u

BISSEll

·~

arves-L ~

1-800-872-5967

~:

......................................
..
..........................................
••

·- ----

O.:i

t:alil
• A 10 9 3
• J 10 9 7

• 64

TFN

800-446·0842

BENNETI'S HEATING &amp;

•• ,\ uturda_l', Nm•. S. lfJIIJ ••

••

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949·1155 Evenings

Tappan &amp; lntertherm
Residential &amp; Manufactured
Housing Replacement Furnaces
&amp; Heating System s

MONTY

Wrst
.. Q J 8 7

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

NORTHUP DODGE

Are you Cold?

~.

3 male lull blooded Rat
Run
::
;re,!ier Pups. Born 9/11/03.
::
Sportsman
Club::
w~Hmed and tails doCked

::

1-800-872-5967

I J 06

• K S2
• Q8 2
+ Q I0 8
4 A 8 1 2

Cellular

BENNETI'S HEATING &amp;
446-9416

-

ACROSS

CJJir_tfufay '
LovrYoo

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty t.:10her CI)'PtOoJams a~e creatf!!llrom ctJetat«15 0y larnrus
Each Iefier ll"l lhe opner s~ lor ~
Tooa ys c!Ufl L eqi.Jll/5 K

" FX ' N

TVYFRA .

IN _"

VZ X

XMP

peope

XUW

B V Z T 1"0 L P R ,

" WRE

TZFPOEN "

UFXM

HVIR

.-o pmen~

pas~

WT
W0

ZPIOFWO

II

r

N

XWIZ

NFYWO

PREVIOUS SOLU TION - 'Speech is 1he shadow ol act1011." - Oemocritus
"Well done is better than well said _" - Benjamin Franklrn
(c l2003byNEA Inc 11-6

THAT DilL!

rumu

S©RJl~A-~t~S·

WOlD

u••

- - - - - - lllt•4 ~y C~Y I . ~QUAN - - - - - - -

0 four
Re crron~e lettars
Krambltd wards
of

low

10

btform four simple wcrds.

NUHr
0

;

tM t

K

1r I

r-":""":""-:------, ~
L 0·SE T
Two kids disputed wh1ch one
r-r-r.~---,r-1 .. had broken my window. To e~d
~ the dispute I told them, 'When yau
0

._....__,__,___....._. ~ point a fin ger at someone else ·
B u R G y B llhree fingers point -- •• at-- -.:

1--~r;I-TI-r:l~~~-::7~
_

.

•

.

.

0

Complete rfte cltuck le ouottd·
by filling In the

miSSing

words.

.._....._._....._-'-..L....J you dovolop from steo No. 3 below•

@ riiN T NlJM8EifD

lETTEil

ltl THEH IQUAIES

. lETTEiS
€) r.l )~NICiAMBlc
P.NSWFR:
1

I'

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I I I I Iat I

I•

17

'

•

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS l I - s- o3
Upheld- Anvil- Drunk- Bypath. THINK
:
I keep two lis:s The firs: c ne has all the things every.:
body lh1nks and doesn·t say and ·the second one has·
wha: everybody says and doesnt THINK

ARLO &amp; JANIS

tit. .• ,..,

,/tl~

�Ohio netters beat Herd

National-Football
League
.

Bengals can't find running game
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

"We have to get our coaching staff confidence to keep calling runni ng plays,"
Anderson said. "If we don't give them the
1
CINCINNATI _
confidence, we're not going to run it
dozen years, the Ci nnati Bengals uld enough and we' re going to have what we
be rounted on to two things: run the all had Sunday."
and lose the g
They may have to attempt the tumThey're no anger a sure bet to lo . 'around without a healthy Dillon, who
They' re no nger a sure bet to run, e ith_ .~._.s_trained his groij).wtril84!]3king a cut du r. One of e NFL's most dependable run- · g-tOOJI)lr~eofthe season d hasn' t
ning g es has gone belly-up just as the full y recovered.
Beng s (3-5) start to move away from
Dillon missed one game because o he
their sad-sack ways. With Corey Dillon injury and another because he w s
slowed by a pulled groin, Cincinnati has involved in an auto accident on his way t
turned into a one-dimensional team.
a gan1e. He also had to come out of severThe offen sive line is determined to al others because he was so limi ted.
change it this week.
He carried only seven times for fi ve
During a meeting of the offense yards at Arizona, and didn' t play in the secWednesday, right tackle Willie Anderson and half because the groin ti ghtened.
urged his teammates to get back to doing Dil)on, one of only four NFL runners to top
the Iitt le things right so the running game I ,000 yaids in each of his first six seasons.
gets moving again.
has 208 yards at the halfway point.
Heading into their game Sunday against
"We had the running game going last
Houston (3-5), the Bengals are rushing for year," tight end Matt Schobel said. ''We've
an average of only 85.5 yards per game, had the passing game going in situations,
second-worst in the league. During a 17-14 and we' ve had flashes this year where we
loss in Arizona last Sunday, they ran the had the running game going. Once we
ball only I 9 times and threw it 38 times.
have that balance, it's going to be tougher

to stop us."
Coa9h Marvin Lewis wants the offensive line..and tight ends to do a better job
creati ng space for Dillon, who has n' t been
able to cut as effectively.
" I think Corey teels as good as he has in
a few weeks," Lewis said. "I would n't say
he's 100 percent. We have to do a better
job of providing Corey some area to run in.
Also, you know that people get jacked up
to play Corey. W.e have to li nd a way to get
some space for Corey to get staned in ."
Dillon surpri sed his teammates by insisting two weeks ago that he feels unappreciated in Cincinnati and wants out. Thev
don 't seem to be holdi ng it aga inst him. "We know th is guy comes to work and
on Sunday he runs hard, and in the past that
has ignited us,'' Anderson said. "When all
we·could do was run in parts of 1999-2000.
the guy still put up I ,300 ywds. and we
couldn' t even throw for 100 yards a game.
"That's what carries us. As soon as he's
ready to go, whether he's 85 pe rcelll or I 00
percent, we need him in there. We need
him to be one of the leaders of this offense.
If he's injured, we have to block that much
better."

Johnson's benching shakes up Browns
BY JoE MIUCIA
(lssodated·Press

• BEREA - It took just four
seconds for Cleveland Browns
eoach Butch Davis to bench the
ieam 's leading receiver.
· Kevin Johnson said that was
the length of the conversation
Monday when Davis told him
backup Andre' Davis would be
~tarting in his place Sunday at
Kansas City.
Johnson said he didn't bother
(o a~k why.
· "He's the coach, I'm the player and I respect his decis10n,"
Johnson said.
.
But that doesn't mean he
agrees with the coach's call.
· "I know I'm a starter in this
league, whether it's here or
somewhere else," Johnson said
Wednesday. "! know I can start
in this league. I think my num\Jers speak for themselves."
Johnson said he was hurt by
the demotion, which has shaken
up a Browns receiving corps
that ha~ just six touchdowns and
has failed to perform up to
exr,:ctations.
'It surprised me a lot," wide
receiver Quincy Morgan said.
"K.J.'s a very good player. You
can't help but be surprised."
Johnson ·has led the Browns
in receptions in each of his four
seasons and leads them again

Thursday, November 6 , 2003

www .mydailyse~tinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

this year in catches (40) and
yards (378).
"I have one drop on the season," he said.
But it was a crucial drop on
fourth down in the final drive of
a loss to San Diego two games
ago. Johnson also cut short a
route that led to an interception
and underthrew a pass that
should have been a touchdown.
"Everybody has a couple bad
plays here and there,'' quarterback Tim Couch said. "K.J .'s
been our most consistent guy
over the last five years."
Johnson has been Couch 's
favorite receiver since the two
entered the league in 1999 as
the first two draft picks of the
expansion Browns.
Couch, who was benched in
favor of Kelly Holcomb to start
the season and will again back
him up on Sunday, laughed
when asked if he felt a kinship
with Johnson in · getting
benched.
"We're just connecting in a
different way now," Couch said
smiling. "We used to be on the
same page on the field, now
we're on the same page sitting
on the bench."
But Couch, who has handled
his benching with humility, said
. he was a little shocked by
Johnson's
demotion
and
defended his teammate.

"Obviously he's upset, but he
has a right to be," Couch said.
"Kevin has been the leading
receiver on this team· going on
five years now. He's made play
after play."
Johnson said he doesn't want
his situation to become a di strdction to the team and has
offered to help Andre' Davis
prepare for his first start.
Davis, who was not available
for comment Wednesday, is
fourth on the Browns in receptions (18) and yards ( I%) but
leads the team with three touchdowns.
"I'm here to support him,"
Johnson said. "I have his back."
Davis had two touchdowns
against the 49ers on Sept. 21 ,
including one with 29 seconds
left that gave the Browns their
lirst victory of the season.
But other than that game winner. the Browns' receivers- all
second round draft picks have failed to make big plays
for the 3-5 team.
Johnson is on pace to match
his numbers fi:om a season ago.
But Morgan, the Browns' other
starter, has just 19 catches for
237 yards with one touchdown
through eight games.
· Morgan wouldn't discuss
why his numbers are down
from last season (56 receptions,
964 yards, seven TDs).

"People wonder wh y K:J. got
benched and not me," said
Morgan, who h1rs ruticles fmm
local newspapers critical of him
han ging in his locker. "Just
because I don 't have as many
catches doesn't mea n I'm playing bad."
Morgan, who has dropped
three balls this season, bristled
at the idea that there have been
too many drops among the
receivers.
"Everybody drops balls.
Some of the greatest receivers
in the game drop way more
balls then we do .. .' Randy
Moss, Torry Holt, you ' ll see
them drop two or three a game.
You haven't seen guys drop two
or three ball s here in a game
since I've been here."
Butch Davis said Wednesday
that Johnson could see playing
time Sunday in multiple receiver packages. He has not given
specific reasons for sitting
Johnson.
And Johnson has left it at that.
"He 's made a deci sion,"
Johnson said. "''m not going be
upset about it."

ATHENS The MidAmerican Conterence-lem.ling
Ohio Bobcats won their 20th
straight match to remain undefeated in league volleyball play
by th umping Marshall in three
games on Wednesday at the
Convocation Center by scores
of 30-20, 30-18, 30- 16
Ohio (22-3. 12-0 MAC) is
now only one win or one Akron
loss away from claimi ng its lirst
MAC regular season crown.
Marshall fa lls to 6-6 in the
MAC and 16-1J overall .
Marshall senior Tracey King

BN.rl\V1lS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

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hoefli ch@mydailysentinel.com
POM EROY
Information on the lifestyle
of Nati ve Americans depicted through artwork and narrati ve di spl ays by Meigs
Middle School students was
s hared
with
vi sitors
Thursday night.
It was called a Native
American
Culture
Celebrati on. Over the past
nine weeks more than 170
eighth graders have studied
the iss ues and propaganda
of Native Americans alon g
with their implications for
the future.
Their creation s to tell the
story of the various tribes
including numerous posters
and pictures, more than a
dozen large totem poles,
numerou s small er ones and
masks galore decorated the
auditorium.

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BUI C K '
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Displaying masks they made are from the left, Dustin Lyons
and Travis Eblin. Vodo. a war mask; Brenden Blac k, the wind
God; and Morgan· Powell , a Tiki god. (Charlene Hoeflich )
Last night' s celebration
culminated the study project
which dealt with religion,
ceremon y, food, shelter,
clothing, and relationships.
Native American Indian

• Ronald Edward Davis, 77
• John Thomas Smith , 75

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel .com

WEATHER
Mostly clear. HI ; 50s, Low: 201

Details on Page A2

W'ITERIES
Ohio

Vaughan Bassett

Pick 3 day: 1-9-3
Pick 4 day: 0-3-5-3
Pick 3 night: 6-7-5
Pick 4 night: 6·9·3-6
Buckeye 5: 4-6-7-14-31

West Virginia
Dally 3: 6-2-6
Dally 4: 2-0-5-8
Cash 25: 1-8-9·11-1 5-16

NICHOLAS V. LANDRY, D.O.

~KKI~Ire,rt,
"!believe that my most important focus in patient care is my commitment to
build a relationship with a patient based on irust, confidence 4nd t~e practice of
evidence-based medicine. I respect my patients and their views and appreciate
1Vhen they become more interested in managing their own health."

Lane "Dundee" double ~eclinlng sofa
with matching rocller/rec/lner.

Lone UDundee" Sectional

11 MONtHS

SAM£ AS
C.ASti*!U

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t Osteopathic Manipulation Medicine (Employment, Sports &amp; Other lnjtwy Rehabilitation)'

I · Weight Control &amp; Sinus Allergy Management
1 Pre-employn;~.ent, D.O.T., Sports/School &amp; General Physical Exa~s
e Minor Surgeries, Skin Tumors, Mole Suturing &amp; Laceration Care
e Cholesterol &amp; Diabetes Management

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

e Pediatrics &amp; Adolescent Medicine
e Gyn~ology!Pap Smears, Birth Control &amp; Teenage Management
1 Preventative, Adult &amp; Geriatric Medicine

music was played, and tlintknapper Jim Hammock of
Mason County known as
"Cedar Bear'' was on hand
to display and demonstrate
hi s craft.

BIERCE MARKER UNVEILING

too orulur7

.._.., "'j~ut!en Panel Bedroom Suite

.''

•see Store for details.

''

As
B4-6

Comi~

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials
Faitb•Values
Movies

A.3
A4

NASCAR

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A6

As
88
As
B1-4
A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Josh Clegg, Chelsea Young, Alyssa Holter and Tia Pratt, officers of the Eastern High School Student Council, ]bin the
Ohio Bicentennial Commission's Phil Ross in unveiling an
Ohio Historical Society marker celebrating Meigs County as
the birthplace of Ambrose Bierce. (Brian J. Reed)

TUPPERS PLAINS Student Council leaders at
Eastern High School
unveiled
an
Ohio
Hi storical Society marker
honoring
19th-century
Journalist Ambrose Bierce
Thursday aliernoon.
. The marker; posted just
outs1de
the
school's
entrance. commemorates
Bierce·, binh in nearby
Chester. It is one of a series
of markers commemorating
Literary Ohio as pan of
Ohio 's Bicentennial celebration. The school was chosen
because of the literary
nature of Bierce's accomplishments and because the
school is the closest to
Bierce's chLidhood home,
according
to · Eastern
Superintendent Deryl Well.
The
Bicentennial
Commission had considered placing the marker at
the Chester Courthou se.
which is even closer to the
Bierce home site, but a
similar
marker
was
already dedicated there,
commemorating
the
Morgan's Raid route.
Bierce was born at Horse
Cave Creek near Bashan in
1842, but after serving the
Union in the Civil War,
spent much of his adult life
in California, where he
wrote his satirical column,
"The Devil's Dictionary."
Bierce Wi!Ji also a world
traveler, and is believed to
have died. in his 70's,
while fighting with the
Mexican
revolutionary
forces led by Pancho Villa.
Meigs County
has
claimed Bierce for years,
relying,
the
Ohio
Btcentennial
Commission 's Phil Ross
said Thursday, on early
20th century accounts of
his life. It wasn't until

Please see Bierce, AS

f086Jackson Pike - Suite .206.·
GaJiipolis, ilhio 456,3,!
'

•

'

A collaborative effort wilh PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

I

,-•

....,

Post plans
Veterans
service

,.,.

POMEROY - Dean Scholl.
Pa,t Department Commander
of Ohio American Legion will
be .the 'peaker at a Veterans
Day service at the Meigs
Courthouse
on
Count y
Tuesday. to al"' include the
unve il ing of a memorial
plaque honon ng Ohio's Medal
of Honor recipients.
TI1e service will bcj,~ n at I0:55
a.m.. and the publ ic is invited.
Those
soldie rs
who
rece ived the Medal of Honor
an d who are to be honored
wit h the new plaque are
Jimmy Goe the! Stewart. who ·
'erved in the Vietnam
Con lli ct. Edward Andrew
Ben nett from World War II.
and Willi am H. Barringe r
Samuel 0. McE lhi nny. Pl att
Pearsa ll . Charles Sc horn,
Joseph Van Matre and Ne lso n

Please see Vets, AS

Insurance pays
$160,000 to Pomeroy .
to pay for fire damag~
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Jlayton @mydallysentinel.com
POMEROY - Pomerov
Village Counci l ·approved :1
$ 160.000 settleme nt offer
with the insurance company
Wednesday 10 pay for the
re loca ti on of th e vill age
garage after the li re in Jun e.
Originally. Mayor Victor
Young Ill said the village had
anti cipated a $200,000 settlement with Midwest Cl aims
Inc .. but the company questioned the extent of the insuran ~e
policy's cove rage .
Young said there was concern
over whether the garage was
insured by itse lf or whether it
would be included al ong with
the other village buildings as
part of blanke t cove rage poli -

cy. If the garage was cove red
sep arately. an) sett lement
package wou ld not have adequately covered the (.'OS t of
replacing ur re pairing it. bu t
th e garage was considered
under the blank et policy and
thJS meant that the co verage
amount could be higher.
Young negoti ated with
Mid wes t Claim s for weeks
try ing to sec ure a fai r settlement. He 'aid the company
otfe red $140.boo to cover the
costs of relocation. but he
refu sed. The cost of relocati on will include the purchase
of the land. valued at
$78.000.
repa irs
and
upgrades made to the structure whe re th e garage will be
located. and the demolition of

Please see Damage, AS

Home Care and Hospice Month

The Meigs County Commissioners approved a proclamation
that made November as National Home Care and Hospice
Month. (Front) Kim Mitche ll , Hospice . Kelli Templeton,
Hospice , Sandra Peyton. Holzer Home Care . Sarah Negler.
Holzer Extra Care. Paula Eich inger. Manager of Holzer Home ·
Care; (back) Meigs County Comm issioners Mick Davenpo rt
and Jim Sheets. (J. Miles Cayton )

NING

1

740·441-9800
"'

Here David Casci sets a ·
totem pole 1n preparatio n for
Thursday night's
native
Ame rican Culture Ce lebration.
(Charlene Hoefii ch}

:J6"x60" Ook Fonn Tobie.with
storage dmwei'S onil
farmhouse side rholrs.

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS:

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East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH

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• Smith is no glamorous
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Native American Culture Celebration held at MMS

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will have to wait until the weekend to notch kill No. I,000, as
she en tered Wednesday's contest with 992 career kills but
came away with only three ki lls
versus Ohio. Sophomore Katie
Stein assisted on 18 Herd poi nts
.while freshman Jen Harper led
the Thuudering Herd in kills
with six. Senior Ashley Bamard
tallied eight digs to give her 977
for her career.

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