<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6905" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/6905?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T22:57:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17307">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8af55deb8e17a37b94ca893cd0d39a1a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>af640f81e1d8d2eed9d423732db2ebc5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22651">
                  <text>'

•

\

•
0

'

A look at 1he Year In cartoons~ A4
0

Melp County's

•

Hometown Newspaper

'

~

What's inside

MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON ACING

. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - A gift ·of $26,000
from the. Catholic Sisters of St. Joseph'
in Parkersburg, W.Va., has been made
to the Meigs County Council on
Aging toward the purchase of a walkin refrigerator/freezer for the Seriior
Citizens Center.
Susan Oliver, executive director,
announced at last week's meeting of
the Board of Trustees that the new
. equipment will be purchased this

Ohio State loses
bowl game, BI

Deaths
.Donald Leach, 65
Everett Hutton, 72
Details, A3

0

month and put into use in the agency's
nutrition 'program.
In addition to .noon meals, Tuesday
and Thursday ev,ening dinners, and
fund-raising dinners served at the center, the agency sends out between 200
and 220 meals every day to homeb oun d persons on t h e agency U s hot
shot trucks. Oliver reported that currently the trucks are on the roads
about six hours each weekday.
The new walk-in refrigerator/ freezer will be both a convenience and also

allow for sav:ngs m food costs, said
Oliver.
. " It will alleviate horrible storage
problems that we have now because
we are constantly trying to find room
to put food," the director said. "Being
able to buy more food at one time .
means we can save money, and thatUs
really important now that funds are
being t ut."
Oliver reported that an application is
being made for a gral}t from Verizon
. which would provide dollars . for the

0

center's technology learning center.
The grant, she said, requires matching
local funds of about$ 10,000.
Cuts in state Title Ill allocations,·
which include monies for transporta.:
tion and meals, were noted by the
· d'
Th
.
d
·
executive !rector. e proJecte 1oss IS
between S20,000 and $25,000 sh~
reported. Because of those cuts, the
Board ofTrustees vpted to increase the.;
suggested donation for meals from;
Please see Donation, A2

Teens charged

in break-ins
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

of 'furniture m the house
was overturned , drawers
POMEROY Three had been pulled out and
Pomeroy juveniles have emptied and gl~ss was brabeen charged with the · ken every\vhere."
three-time vandalism and
Patrolman Ronnie Spaun
theft hit of a Lasley Street was checking the residence
residence.
on Sunday eve ning when
Pomeroy Police 'Chief he observed two mal e juveMark Proffitt said Monday niles at the residence, Profthe juvenile·s were captured fitt said. Three were later
and charged late Sunday apprehended on Mulberry
. after a third attempt at Avenue, Lincoln Heights
entering the home. Proffitt and Union Avenue, and
said ~he homeowner has charged with burglary, van.asked to remain anony- dalism and felony theft.
Proffitt said additional
mous.
The first incident at th e charges might follow.
home was investigated on
Stolen items were later
Dec. 21, Proffitt said, when recovered at a Pomeroy
officers found the home Cliffs apartment unit on
had been ransacked and Union Avenue, Proffitt said.
"There was no damage
items had been stolen.
A second hit was dis'cov- Sunday night," Proffitt said.
ered on Dec. 27.
"We caught them before
"The difference the sec- anything else ,could be
ond time," Proffitt said, · done." ·
"was that everything was
The juveniles have told
destroyed. The home had officials that they do not
been ransacked, and there know the home's owner.
was not a bare spot on the . " I will say again that inclfloor. Ketchup and bleach den.ts like these will not be
were spilled on the floor, tolerated," Proffitt said. "1
eggs had been broken and warn again that those who
food was smeared all over prey on their neighbors
the walls.
will be rooted out and
"In addition, every piece charged ."

Hlp: JOS, Low: 101

Details, A3

•

.Officer resigns
MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy Police Officer Joe
Kirby, Sr. has resigned after
being cited last week on traffic
charges.
Pomeroy Mayor John Blaeftnar confirmed Kirby's resignation on Monday.
.
. "I think (Kirby) found himself in a position where it was
probably best for everyone concerned tl,at he teoder his resignation;' Blaettnar said.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol confirmed Thesday that
Kirby was cited, but did not
indicate what charges were filed
against him.
"The case is the subject of a
pending:and ongoing investigation, and we are not at liberty to
discuss the details of the incident until the investigation has
been closed," said a spokesman
for the Ohio State Highway
Patrol.
A spokesman for Meigs
County Court said Monday no
charges have been filed to date
against Kirby.
Blaettnar said' Kirby's resignation '!Yill be addressed at
Pomeroy Village Council's regular meeting next week.

OHIO
.
Pick 3 (day): 2·6·1
P.ick 4 (day): 6+8-6
Buckeye 5: 1-11·26-30·31
Pick 3 (nlpt): 6-9-8
Pick 4 (night): 7-1-6-4
W.VA.

DEPARTMENT LANDMARK
he original bell of the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department,
which hung in · a belfry
above Middleport Village
Hall - the old firehouse
.- now has a prominent place in fiont
of the department's home on Race
Street. For several years after its removal
fiom the old firehouse, the bell, dating
back · to the mid-19th century, sat
unused. But now, it and the years of
dedicated service it represents for firefighters past and present, are memori. alized in a new brick edifice. Members
of the department worked tirelessly to
prepare the bell's new "home:· which
-now proudly marks the home .of Middleport's firefighting volunteers and their dedication to conununity. (Brian J. Reed)

Aceepts ·donation

0

Daily 3: 9-8-4
Daily 4: 5- 1-4·5
Caslt 25: 3-6-9-17-19-22

Index
•

(Editor's note: This is the second
section of a three-part series look- '
ing back at the · local news of ,
2001.)

BY ToNY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

1 Section -10 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weathl'!r

Storms, fires dominated focal news "

A2
A6·8
A9
A2
A4

A3
A3
A5,7-8, 10

A3

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

the year
in review

POMEROY As . the
nation turned its attention
. toward the execution of terrorist Timothy McVeigh,
Meigs countians were distracted by massive storms, destructive fires and the closing of the
county's largest employer.

inches closer to completion as
conqections are put in place
and water taps installed.
May 2 ~ Am~rican Electric
Power (AEP) plans to sell
May
. three coal mining operatiOJ1S,
May 1 - Construction on including the Southern Ohio
Pomeroy's new water line Coal Co.'s Meigs Division ,

•

•

0

Layoff no~ices are given to 680
employees.
May 3 -· Officials with the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) say new
boat ramp project in Racine is
"to~ prior·ity" ' with
the
department.
May 4 - Pomeroy receives
a $21.,431 NatureWorks grant
for new playground equipment at Sugar Run Park.
May 6 - Pittsburgh based ·
CONSOL Energy Inc. purchases Southern OHio .·coal
Please see 2001, A2

Wishing

you~

• Dwight Icenhower, right, Meigs
s celebrity Elvis Presley impersonator, received• a $300 ?J:&gt;ntribution from .the
-Meigs Gounty Agriculture Society and the Town and Country
Expo toward his travel expenses. Icenhower will travel to
Las Vegas, Nev., this weekend to partcipate in a nationwide
competition. Fair Board President Ed Holter, left, and Expo •
·president Dallas Weber made the donation. (Brian J. Reed)

·- ·

a .happy
healthy 20021

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the lfolzer Difference
'

0

wwW ·llolz~r .org

•

�•

•

_The_D_aily_Sen_nn_·
_
e_I_ _ _

a
· = : .'

f101a p11p AI
S1.50 to S2 beginning in
January.
It was reported that the
S1,600 raised in a walk and
rock-a-than held at the center·
for victims of the Sept. 11
attack on America has been

sent to a senior center located
just a block fiom ground zero.
The center se~ a senior
population composed of 20
percent Chinese and tak~ care
of numerous hamel~ people.
Oliver told of her talk with
the center director there, of
their surprise-at receiving and
appreciation for the gift, and
of possi~le future contacts .in
the way of setting up penpal
relationships among the Meigs
County and New York City

the Bend
.

sen'ors.
The recent retirement of
Alice Wamsley as nutrition
director was announced . .A
reception for her will be held
on Jan . 27. Wamsley has been
with the senior' citizens program in Meigs County since
its inception in the early
1970s.
The bo.ard appointed Belinda Wellington, assistant nutrition director, to the position
for three months, and voted to

eliminate the position of the
assistant
director.
Also
approved was a request tiom
Wamsley to continue for 2002
as a volunteer director of rrips
for seniors.
Because of the · cost of gas
and ·other car eicpens~. the
board voted to increase
mileage rat~ tiom 25 to 30
cents a mile.
The executive director
explained a new program
called "Kinship" to be started

Wednlldfv, Jan. 2. 2002

.'

..
Aging and the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Servic~. Emph'aSis of the pro' gram, not yet started locally,
will be on helping caregivers
who are raising children.
A report on a proposed new
program, p~ned giving, to go
into effect this year was given
by boa'rd member Gina Pln~In other busin~s . the board
of trustees hired Jim Mourning as auditor for 2001 at a

•

from pageA1

.

,_· LOCAL
HAPPENINGS

.,

I~ • • trw 111&gt;1cl10 IIOI)o

prOfit groupe wflhlng to

III1I10UI1C8 ltMIIttgl .nd epee Ill

810enta. The cllendlr t. not

dulg:ted to (lflllll(6 lilies«

fui)Ckallllll of anflype.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Salisbury Township Trustees, Wednesday, 6 p.m.
Organizational meetlll(j followed
by regular meeting.

ALFRED - 01a11g11 Township
Trustees, Wadi 18Sday, 7:30p.m., ·
home of Osle Folrod. Organiza- ·
lional meeting.

.

~.·

Holzer t:;linic offm
the area's only open
MRI along.with
our closed MRI,
expanding our
abilities to make
palients more
comfortable.

We'll have you
feeJjng .
about
your health.
EXpect the latest technology, with a human touch.

RACINE _; Southern Local Board
of Education organizational board

. meeting. Wednesday, 7 p.m., ~
school cafeteria. To )le folic iiled
by special meeting.
RACINE- Sooltlah Rite, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Racine Masonic

'.
'
'
''

••

I

•

POMEROY - Units of
CHESHIRE - Donald W. Leach, 65, Cheshire, died on MonALBANY- Everett L. Hutton, 72, ofOgdin Rd:,Albany, Meigs Emergency Services
day, Dec. 3t, 2001 at CabeD-Huntington Hospital in Huntington.
died on Monday, Jan. 1, 2002 at his residence.
answered eight calls for assisW.Va.
·
..
He was born in Rutland on Dec. 15, 1929, son of the late tance on Monday 'and TuesHe was born on Oct 15,1936, in Wellston, son of the late Joseph
.
'
William Auttie and Cora Gilmore Hutton. He was retired day:
and Margaret Smith Leach. He was Ia 1954 graduate of CheShire
CENTRAL DISPATCH
from the Meigs County Highway Department .a nd was a
High SchooL He was employed at Ohio River Coller's for a num10:31 a.m. Monday, Powell
ber of yean and then went to work for OVEC, where he retired 'self-employed farmer. ·
He is survived by his wife, Gloria McCaskey Hutton; two St., Middleport, Luella Drig·after 31 years of employment. He attended the Silver Memorial
gS, Holzer Medical Center;
Freewill Baptist Church in Gallipolis and a~ended the Middleport sons and daughters-in-law, Gary and Elizabeth Hutton of
1:32 p.m., assisted by Tup· Wilkesville and David and Stacie Hutton of London; a
Bible Study.
'
pers Plains, Kaylor Rd.,
He is survived by his wife of 46 years. Dorothy A. Veitlj Leach, granddaughter, Vera (Richard) Barnes of Stark, F4.; a great Harold Nutter, O'Bleness
Cheshire; a dauglner, Marcia Browning. Cheshire; and two sons and grandson, Hunter Barnes; a step grandson, Jason (Marlene) Memorial Hospital;
daughters-in-bY.\ John and Jackie Leach, Cheshire and Roger and Pierce of Syracuse; a · brother-in- law, Charles Barrett, Sr.,
11 :57 'P.m., Crew Rd., MilRutland;
a
sister-in-law,
Betty
Oliver
of
Rutland;
and
sever~
Mary Leach of Chester; six grandchildren; four brothers: Arthur
dred Lambert, Holzer.
Leach of Columbus, Chuck Leach of Addison, Joe Leach of Gal- al nieces and nephews.
3:01 a.m., Rocksprings
Besides his parents; he was preceded in death by his son, Rehabilitation Center, Jam~
lipolis and Roruiie Leach of North Carolina; and a sister, Gladys
. Stanley Hutton; brothers: Henry, Wilbur, Virgil, Clarence, McDonald,
Leach of North Carolina.
0 ':Bleness
SYRACUSE Syracuse
: Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Jan. 4, 2002 at the Silver Hurley; Harley, Don, Frank, Elmer, and Leroy; sisters: Thelma Memorial Hospital;
Village · Council will meet
• 10:24 a.m., Pomeroy Pike Thursday at 7 p.m. New
Memorial Freewill Baptist Church in Gallipolis, with Rev. Andrew and Bernice Hutton and Florence Barrett.
Services
will
be
held
on
Friday,
Jan
.
4,
2001
at
2
p.m.
at
the
Rd., Myrtle Hanning, Holzer. members will be sworn in at
Parsons, Rev. Dennis ParsonS and Rev.Jack Parsons officiating.
RACINE
.
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home' in Albany, with Pa.,tor John
Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
6:30 p.m . at the mayor's·
7:12 a.m. Tuesday, auto fire, office.
Friends may call on Thursday born 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. at the · · Elswick officiating. Burial will follow at Standish Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from ·2 Terry Clark owner, no
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
Injuries.
to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
Friends may also call an hour prior to setvice.
RUTLAND
1:57 p.m., Ogdih Rd.,
TUPPERS PLAINS Everett Hutton, dead on
'f'heTuppers Plains VFW and ·
arrival.
Auxiliary, Post 9053 will m~t
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thursday at 7 p.m.
12:01 a.m. Tuesday, Elk
Run Rd., Clarice Huffinan,
Marietta Memorial Hospital.
'1!
POMEROY - A number . on each count. one year proba- B. Darst, Albany, .$30 and costs, jan suspended, one year probaof cases were
recently lion, th_ree counts passing bad seat belt; Brad A. Lechler, lion, restitution, passing bad
ro ess d b M ·
c ty checks, Roger C. Smith, Pomeroy, $20 and costs, stop checks. ·
P c e
Y
e•gs · oun
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, 10 sign; David w. Robertson,
Danny J. Merinar, Racine, $50
Court Judge Steven L. Story. days jail suspended to three, one Guysville, $30 and costs, speed; and costs, 10 days jail suspended
POMEROY -A Pomeroy
year probation, restraining order, Dale E. Stewart, Pomeroy, $300 to one served, one year probation, juvenile was' arrested on two
Those , fined~re:
POMEROY -The orga- ,
Roy L Tayk\~~iddleport, $30 domesllc violence.
and costs, 30 days jail suspended vandalism, $50 and costs, pos- counts of criminal trespassing nizational meeting of Bedford •
and costs, spe&amp;d; Waher Haggy,
Wendy L Smith, Some!'58t, $30 to three, two years probation, session, $25 and costs, disorderly
Rutland, $1 oo and costs on each and costs, speed; ·Ed SmHh, Long restraining order, domestic vio- conduct; Edith A. Taylor, Racine, and theft for stealing gas and Township Trustees will be
count, six months jail suspended Bottom, $30 and costs, speed; lance, $200 and cosls; 30 days jail $200 and costs, three days jail attempting to break into an held Saturday ,at 9 a.m. at
Lincoln town halL
to five consecutive two years pro- Elizabeth A. Baranyal,' Pomeroy, suspended to thr~ concurrent, : suspended, one year probation, outbuilding on
batlon, restraining 'omer, violating $100 and costs, 90 days .jail sus- two years ptobat1on, ~eslstmg no financial responsibility; Chrlsto- Heights.
a protection order, Merle Bullock, pended to .one day served, one arrest, $100 and costs, d1sorderty pher J. Cranfield, Ripley, W.Va.,
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Jr. New Straitsville $30 and year probation, restitution. vandal- condu~.
$200 and costs, three days jail
co;ns, speed; Timothy's. .Chesser, ism, $,100 and costs, 90 days jail
Cra1g How~rd, Pomer~y: $500 suspended upon prOof of a vaUd . Proffitt said the department
Middleport, $100 and costs, 1o · suspended ~o one con&lt;Mrent, ·?':19 and costs, s1x. months Jail sus- · license within 90 days, one year received a caU from residents
days jail suspended upon proof of eyar probatiOn, obstructing offlC1al pend_ed, two years probatiOn, 30 probation, driving under suspen- on Lincoln Heigpts, Jl'porting
a valid license within 90 days, bus1n~ss, $100 and costs, 90 d~y In-house. treatment, posses- sion, 28 and costs, speed; Mary that a subject was stealing gas
RACINE
Racine •
no,operators license; Vincent days Jail suspended . to one con- s1on; Harry W1lllams, Belpre, costs L. Kames, Middleport, costs only, tiom a ,riding lawn mower Grlmge will meet Thursday at
Stone, Middleport, $850 and curre~t, _one eyar probation, only, d1sorderty conduct, Timothy three days jail suspended 10 one,
costs, 1o days jail suspended to reSisting arrest, $50 and ·00sts, H. Poston, Albany, $25 and costs, one- year probation, disorderly and had attempted entry in a 7 p.m. at _the halL
,(
three, six month license suspen- disorderly conduct; 01ane Milliron, three days Jail _suspended, . six conduct; David M. Lambert,
sion, two Y&amp;ars probation, jail and Pomeroy, $30 an~ costs, seat months probal!on, r_estltut1on, CooMIIe, $30 and costs, seat be~;
$500 suspended upon completion belt; Timothy L. Kmg, Hartford, passing bad checks; Kimberly D. R' ky C J G II' r $25 nd
of RTP School, driving ·under the W.Va., _$1,000 and costs, · SIX Turner, Coolville, $30 and costs,
IC
· . oy, a ipo IS,
a
inffuence, $850 and costs, $500 ,months )811 suspended to 10 days ·speed; Majed A. Mallki, Marietta, costs, failure to control; Erick
suspended, 1o days' jail suspend- plus 60 days house a~t. t~ree $250 and costs, three days jail Payne, Albml~, $1 00 an!;! costs,
ed to three, two years probation, year license . ·~uspens1on,_ two suspended upon proof of a valid three days 1a!l suspended _upon
driving under suspension; Karen years probatiOn: . forfeiture of license within 60 dars. one year ·proof of a valid l1cense ~nh1n 90
s. Clarll Langsville $25 and motor vehicle, dnv1ng under the probation, no operators license, days, oh~ year probation, no
costs, faliure to yteld' for a stop influence, $100 and costs; six $ll0 and costs, speed; Chns s. o~rators license, $25 and costs:
DAYTON (AP) A ings, but he said Ferguson was
sign; Dennis Auh, Lake View, $25 months jal! suspended to 10 days ·Juder Vinton, s75 and costs, win- failure to display valid plates, m\)nicipaljudge has set bond at an acquaintance of the Fugates.
and costs on elich count, three plu~ 60 days house arrest OOtleur·:. dow tint· Reblicca D, ·cozai1 Emanuel Lopi!Z, • Portland, $100
days jail suspended on each, one l'$nl, two years probation, ffl!&amp;lng, Coolville.' $100 and costs. selli,g and costs, 90 days j~ll suspend- S1.1 million for a man who King's relatives s:aid King was
year probation, 11 counts passing $25 and costs, open ~1ner. cigarettes to a minor; Robert c . ad, two years probation, fafslfica· police say is suspected in the acquainted with Ferguson
ba,d checks; Beverly Adkins, Rut- $50 and costs, possession, ,$25 Saltsman Vinton $25 and costs tlon; Alfredo Lopez, Portland, de~ths of three Dayton ~i- through !]is . brother, Robert _
land, $25 and costs qn each and costs, dru~ paraphemall8, unsafe ,vehll:le $25 and costs' $100 and costs, 90 days jail sus- dents.
King, who was married for .
count, three days jail suspended $25 and COSIS,diSOrderty conduct; . three da~s jail ~uspended, 90 day . pended, two years probation, fal·
The bond was set Monday several years to Ferguson's
Anthony N. Sizemore, Po""'roy,, 'license suspension; Brandon R. slflcatlon, $100 and costs, 10
for Darrell Ferguson, 23, of mother.
- - -------+-------..---.-;._,.,.,- Bopb, Racine, $30 and costs, seat days jail suspeqded, 1\0 operators Dayton.
Ferguson is charged
Ferguson · is also ·. charged
,
beh; Wendell N. Clarl&lt;, Pomeroy, license. $50 and costs, · leaving
•
$20 and costs, assured clear dis- \he sceoe; Marl&lt; A. r,.11chael, Mid· with aggravated m\lrder in the with the Dec. 23 robbery of
lance; Tiva N. Mills, Adamsville, dleport,' $30 and costs, speed.
death Wednesday of Thomas James R. Nicholson ofDayton. ,
$30 and costs, seat. belt; Andrew
Charles T. Ferguson II, Balli·
~
'·'
·
The robbery,
three days .
,
S. Michael, FlaMoods, Ky.. $30 more, $30 andocosts, speed; Jan- King Sr., 61 .
Federal Mogul- .79
Peoples -18.35 '!'
AEP-43.53
Police said Ferguson is also a before Kings body was found, ,
and costs, speed; Ryan K Blair, nWer R. Yeauge~ Middlport, $30
USB- 20.93
Pepsico-- 48.69 !.:
Arch Coal- 22.70
Gannett- 67.23
Premier- 8.30
,
Sycamore, $30 and costs, seat and costs, seat belt; Jennifer A. suspect in the deaths of Arlie occurred at the home of FerAkzo-44.85
Rockwell- 17.86 · ·'
AmTech/SBC- 39.17 General Electric
beh; Thomas E. Kaforey, Picker- Finnicum, Mason, W.Va., $30 and Fugate, 68, and his wife, Mae, guson:&lt; uncle, William T. ~r40.08 .
Rocky Boots- 5.n •
AshlanO Inc.- 46.08
lngton, $30 and costs, speed.
costs, speed; William N. Boring, 69 who were found stabbed to . rell, . accordmg to a pohce
GKNLY-3.65
RDShell~49 . 02 ,,,
AT&amp;T -18.14
Stephanie
L.
Brown,
Athens,
Pomoery, $30 and costs, seat
' .
· h , report. The apartments house ~
Harley Dayldson
Sears~ 47.64
Bank One - 39.05
death Thursday m t e1r home.
ld
d di bl d
'd
·
$30
and
costs,
seat
12&amp;1t;
Travis
J.
belt;
Math
hew
P.
Martin,
54.31
·
Shoney's.27
Bll-10.40
p li S G
Wh '
.d e er1y an
sa e res1 ents.
Abbott,
Pomeroy,
$31)
and
costs,
Reedsville,
$30
and
costs,
speed;
Kmart- 5.46,._
Wai-Mart- 57.55 ' " ·
Bob Evans- 24.57
~ ce _llgt.
bite' sa•
Nicholson, 56, told police he .
speed; . Joseph, E. Donchatz, Darrell Haney, Bidwell, $30 and po ICe WI con,er Wit prose- • was at the apartment when .
Kroger - 20.~7
Wen,dy's - 29.17
BorgWamer- 52.25
lanOs End- 50.16
Worthington -14.20
Prichard, W.Va., $30 and costs, costs, speed; Gale A. King,
Champiqn-2.90 ,
Daily stock reports ate speed; Regina R. Kimes, Middle- PennsbOro, W.Va., $30 and costs, cutors this week ~bout addi- 'Ferguson . began violently .
Chorming Shops - Ltd. -14.72
NSC -18.33
the 4 p.m . closing port, $30 and costs, speed; Nancy speed; Bruce T. Shef,erd, Scot- tlo~al charges agamst Fergu- banging on the fiont door, the :
5.3t
Oak Hill Financial - quotes of the previous L Hubbard, Racine, $30 and town, $30 and costs, speed; Kelly
City Holding -12.04
son·
report said.
15.76
day's transactions, proCoi - 19.50
costs,
seat
belt;
Darren
S.
Taylor,
P.
Cummings,
Huntington,
W.Va.,
W:hite
would
not
discuss
Ferrell opened the door after
ova- 24.20
vided by Smith Partners
DG -14.90
Columbus,
$30
and
costs,
speed;
$30
and
costs,
speed;
DebOrah
J.
BBT
36.11
at
Advest
Inc.
DuPont - 42.51
possible motives for th~ slay- Ferguson threatened to kick it .
$30 and costs, speed; Maryrose Betty L. O'l(ens, Gallipolis, $30 Adkins, Prichard, W.Va., $30 and
down, and Ferguson then
and costs, speed; Richard J. Gill· costs; speed; Robert L Johnson,
punched Nicholson several ,
bride, Jr., Syracuse, $30 and Jr., Clarkston, Miss., $30 and
costs. speed; Michael G. Leadbet- costs, · speed; Bill M. Ball,
times before taking his wallet,
1 , • ter, Cincinnati; $30 and costs, McConnelsville, $30 and costs,
which held about S175, the
speed; James S. Rohrer, Oak seat· be It ; Anna H. Busse, St. .
report said.
Hartlor, $30 and costs, speed; Alba ns, w"
, .a., $30 and costs,
S
. e
•
·
!USPS 213-Jo)
fVICIS
OhiO Volley Publlohlng Co.
Susan T. Fellner, Sa rasota, Fla.. speed; Linda Sakoc, Hudson, $30
Publilhed every aftemoon, Monday
$30 and costs, speed; Linda L. and costs, speed; Conkalene M.
through Friday, · 111 Court St.
Long Bottom, $30 and c;osts. G
H 11 gt wv, $30 d
Correction Polley · Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class . Well,
speed;
Emily
B.
Juday,
K1rtland;
ray,
un n on, · a.,
an
•
Our main concern in all atones Is postage paklat Pomeroy.
$
and
costs,
speed;
James
J.
costs,
speed;
John
W.
Moore,
'
Member: The Associated Press and
30
to be accurate. If you know of an
Amesville, $30 and costs, speed;
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
error In a story, call the newsroi&gt;m
Rezabek, Kent, $30 and costs, John P. WilSon, Zanesville, $30
Poatmaallr: 5end address correcat (740) 992-2156.
tions 10 The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court . :''seat belt; David B. Hoffman, Glen· and costs, speed; Nancy J. FortSt, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
wood, W.Va., $30 and costs. ney, Brandonton, Fla., $30 and
News Departments
speed;
John 1:. Perris, Luray, Va., ""SIS, speed; Steve W. Roberts,
Subscription rates
The main number is 992·2156 .
$30
and
costs, seal belt; Teresa ""
Br C8rrier or motor rout.
Deportment e_xtentions are:
D.
Bush,
Racine, $20 and costs, Patriot, $30 and costs, speed;
lliMI-k
$2 .
disobey
traffic sign; Lisa M. Sara B. Cagle,.Cha~eston, W.Va.,
$8.70
Gene,.l maneger
Ext. 12 One month
Costello, Hilliard, $30 and costs, $30 anp costs, speed; Katherine
Onoyeor
$t04
J . Musser, Rutland, $30 and
EX!. 13 Dolly
50 cents
spead ; Dana D. Ga rbe r, VI nton, .
ad M .
G Sh 11
Subscribers not desiring to pay the
$20 and costs, permit violation; costs, spe ; e 11ssa u.
carrier may remit In advance direct to
Ext: 14 1"'- DaNy Sentinel. Credit will be given
or
Jack A. Connell, Athens: $30 and Glenwood, W.Va.; $30 aned
carrier each weelc:. No subscrip1ion by
costs, speed; Herbert A. Boiling, costs, speed; Dpahne P. Dairy,
Other services
mail permlned In areas where home
elaod, Tenn., $30.and costs, Washington, D.C., $30 and costs,
carrier service Ia available.
··,
Ext. 3
s
; Joseph s . Jordan, Albany, speed;'Timothy R. Powell, Athens,
Advertt~ng
$. 00 and costs, three d!!ys jail $30 and costs, seat belt; John T.
Mllll subsalption
'Ext. 4
Clrcu..~on
suspended, no operators license; Williams, Syracuse, $30 and
I lno!M Mtlgo CoUnty _
''
13Woeks
' 127.30
'
T
eresa
S.
Bell,
Dexter,
$25
and
costs,
speed;
Le£1,
A.
Reynolds,
Ext.
5
Ctaulfled Ada
25Woeks
$53.82
costs, three days jail suspended, Syracuse, $30 and' cotts, speed;
52 Waeks
$105.56
. one eyar probation, restitution, Catherine Hart, Pomeroy, $30 and
Toaende-mall
Ratea oulalmt llelp County
passing ljad checks; Patricia L. costs; speed; Derald B. Sowards,
newsOmydallysentlnei.Com
t 3 Weeki
S29.25
Williams, Belpre, $25 and costs, Gallipolis, $30 and costs, seat
· On the Web
28 Weeks
$56.88
9:45
window tint; Shawn Lambert, Mid· belt, $20 and costs, stop sign, $20
. 52 Woelcs
$ to9.n ·
www.mydaitysentlnel:com
A LL AG E S . All TIM ES $ 4 00
dleport, $25 and costs, three days and costs, failure to display.

session

VFWtom•

County Court Cases procesSed
&gt;

Arrests made

Grange sets
meeting

s

Judge sets $1.1 million bond _
for man suspected in deaths .

LOCAL ·sTOCKS

;ry .

I

· The Dapy Sentinel
Rea. der

=

• I

,.
'.

•

•

Gallipolis
Jackson
Pomeroy

·.
..

Call us ., stop in. We'll enae to
,our honle ad meuurt for •
free nt oW.,_tfon 41'0"' · 1

t

'.

,.
''

..

Here's the deal. .. Buy your
and we'll
the
I.

Temple.

'\

'lftlstees
·meeting
announced

..

:

. HOLZER
CLINIC

••

Council sets.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

REEDSVIllE - Olive Township ·
Trustees. Wednesday, 5 p.m.,
township garage on Joppa Road..·

building. .
Prollih . • i\e lnd Capt.
Jam~ Webster, upon arriving
at the scene, found tracks in
the snow and other evidence
at two nearby hom~. which
they used to trace the juvenile
·to a nearby residence.
Adam Link, 26, High
Street, Pomeroy, was arr~ted •.
on felony domestic viplence ,
charges; following an alterca- ,
tion with his wife. He was
p~ced in the Gallia County
Jail pending a Monday court
appearance. .

Everett Hutton

..

Convnunlty Clf 1ndl!r t. pub- .

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

pens:ate Joyce Bunch, financial
director, and Wamsley, retired,
for vacation time not taken,
and heard a report on the
annual staff Christmas party.
Gifts were presented to
Catherine Shenefield, retiring
president, arid Joan Corder,
who is leaving _the board after
several terms. Mick Davenport .
is new president of the Bo.ard
ofTrustees.

Aug. 15 - · Pomeroy Vol - :
nels and Internet capabili- Co. miners .
the Meigs County Sheriff's
ties.
·
·
July 6 - - Feds deny Holz- Department are shot at dur- unteer Fire ' Department·
June 15 - The. demolition er Medical Center the ing an unsuccessful kidnap- receives $31,500 as part of,
of several burnt and derelict · opportunity to operate .the ping/robbery attempt near the $100 million in federal'
structures
·throughout Behavioral Health Unit at the Gallia County line.
funds · designated by the
Pomeroy is put on· hold Veterans Memotial Hospital.
August
Firefighter Investment .and
because of inclement weathJuly 9 - Major renovaAug. I - Bridge supports
E'nhan cement·
Co.'s Meigs Division from
er.
tions at Meigs High School and exit ramps begin to take Response
June 17 - Ohio Depart- get underway. ·
shape as work on the sec- (FIRE) Act. for assistance to
AEP. Plans for the division
'ment of · Transportation
July &lt;J -A ribbon cutting ond
phase
of
the local fire departments&lt;
are not released.
May 7 - Eastern Local
(ODOT) decla~es "uncondi- ceremony
is
held
to Ravensw~od
Connector
Aug. 19 - "Pickin' Up
School District's compretiona! victory" in a federal announce the grand opening · continues on schedule.
The Pieces," an event geare&lt;:j
lawsuit filed by environmen- of the Southern Local , Aug. 2 - Meigs County toward helpi!'g those affecthensive technology program
. earns a place in "Family PC"
tal opponents regarding School District's new ele- . commissioners app'rove a
ed by the Au g. 5 fire in Galplans for a new section of mentary school in Racine.
MR/DD 1.6-mill continumagazine's "Top 100 Wired
Schools" lis!.
U.S. 33 from Darwin to
July I 0 Construction ing levy for Novem~erUs lipolis, n ets $22,638 m ,
;
May: 9 Meigs Local
Athens.
begins on a $1.75 million general election ballot. The donations for victims.
Aug. 21
• Pomeroy
Board of Education enters
June 19
Pomeroy slip repair along Ohio 338 levy, if passed, would go
into a contract with George
Council passes the first of near Antiquity.
toward extra services and Council approves flood vari J. lngel &amp; Co. for preparathree readings related to a
July II -WECAN Fabri- capital improvement pro- ance for the construction of
tion·of the site near Rutland
new village-wide noise cation to be first industry to jeers at Carleton School and
a new addition to the Me igs ·
·where the new- elementary
June
ordinance .
. locate in Meigs &lt;j:ounty's Meigs lndusiries in SyraCounty Distr ict
Public.'
school will be built.
· · June 1 - · Officials estiJune 25 Underage industrial park in Tuppers cuse . .
May 10 Candidates mate that Meigs County smoking raid throughout Plains.
Aug 5.- A fire hi the his- Library.
Aug. 22 Meigs LQcal
begin filing for village incurs $350,000 in damages Meigs County nets numerJuly 12 .- Seven Meigs toric section l'f downtown
offices.
following a rrumive storm ous businesses who sold cig- County fire departments Gallipolis destroys several Board of Ed11cation approves ..
May 11 - Meigs County on May 21. ,
arettes to minors.
receive $44,773 in grants for buildings that house both a 2.67-mill bond issue for '
commissioners receive a
June 1 - Midwest Steel, a
June 26 Middleport the purchase of new equip- businesses and apartments. _ November's general election ·
S10,000 grant from the division of L.B. Foster Co., police officers increase pres- ment and !raining aids.
Aug. 6 Open class
ballot. The levy, if- passed,.
Governor's
Office
of closes its Pomeroy operation ence in General Hartinger
July 13- CONSOL offi- entries for the 138th Meigs
Appalachia to begin con- after 40 years in business. Park to thwart actions of cials expect mines to close County Fair comes close to would pay for the construe- .
tion of
struction' on a new heliport Cites financial issues ·as rea- reported troublemakers.
by the end of 2001, howev- hitting record number.
. a new athletic facili-"..
in Scipio Township.
son for closing.
June 27 -A public meet- er, they say decision isnUt
Aug. 7 - A visitprs ceo- ty and bus garage at the new · ,
May 14 - Jeffrey Adam
June 5 Estimates of ing is held to discuss the final. ·
ter, located on the bottom elementary school site near·•
Shank. and Christopher A. damage resulting from t future of Middleport's eleJuly 13 --:- More than floor of the Meigs County Rutland . .
Dodson are named valedic- massive storm on May 21 mentary schools once the 1,100 marijuana plants are Courthouse, officially opens .
Aug. 22 -Jeremy Hill of·
torian and salutatorian of increases from $350,000 to Meigs Local School Dis- destroyed followil)g a two- Brochures, visitors guides
Racine is selected as a
Meigs High School.
$500,000. ·
trict's
new
eiementary day eradication effort in and a rest area is available for
national finalist for th.e ·
May 15 -Josh Kehl and
June 5 - Plans are final- school is opened.
Meigs County.
.
tourists to enjoy.
July 15 - ODOT signs
Aug. 8 - Financial trou- National FFA Proficiency ·
Juli Bailey are namod vale- ized for a new strip mall . June 28 - Pomeroy and
dictorlan and salutatorian of beside ~al-Mart in Mason, Middleport receive $16,000 contract on U.S. 33 Athens ble~ force the Meigs Emer- Award in Diversified HortiEastern High School.
W.Va.
·
in grant money for the 'plan- to Darwin proje!=t· Con- gency Service to begin culture--Entrepreneurship.
May 16 -Jonathan Evans . June 7 - Bids for the first ning and developme,ll.t of struction on the first of two charging patients for emer. d Ch d H bb d
h
f
Aug. 23 - Ohio Departan
a · u ar· are p ase o the U.S. 33 Athens facilities
geared tc?ward phases scheduled to begin.
gency squad runs. Patients ·
named valedictorian and to Darwi_n project · are increasing the county's ecoJuly 17
Pomeroy will , be charged $350 per ment
of Transportation
salutatorian of Southern opened.
nomic development. ,
Council approves village- run if advanced equipment- releases drawings of the new ·
June 7 Construction
July
wide noise ordinance.
-namely heart or stroke cable stay bridge . th~t will ;
Hig'h School.
May 16 -A leaking rail-. begins on Middleport's milJuly 2 - The Pomeroy
July 22- Civil War reen- monitors-- or medicines is replace
the
old '
road tanker forces emer- lion-dollar sewer improve- Blues and Jazz Society's free actors flock to Portland to required, and patients with · Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
gency personnel to evacuate ment pro;ect.
summer
concert
series participate in the annual minor inJ'uries, colds or fluA ug. 24 - Rut1an d offiJ
Jun,e 9 Gallia-Meigs "Rhythm on the River" recreation of the Battle of like symptoms will be billed cials consider annexing cera section o f 0 h io 7. The
1ea k was ana Iyze d and d e ter- C ommunity Action Agency opens with a performance Buffington Island. The battle $250 per run . ·
mined to be water ·
· M e1gs
·
by guitarist an d fio lk singer
·
unvet'Is t h e filiSt o f SIX
is considered the only sigAug. 8 - An additional tain areas that surround the
May 18- Both local and County homes to be sold for Peter Keane.
nificant Civil War engage- $448,400 ·is approved by the village so as to help replace
state officials break ground qualifying families .
. July 3 - CONSOL and ment on OhioUs soil.
state for plans for the new residents and sewer system
for the first phase of the
June 10- Meigs County AEP finalize sale of SouthJuly 23- Results from a · Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
customers lost in 1998's
Ravenswood
Connector- E mergency
M anagement ern
· Oh'10 C oa1 C o.•s M e1gs
·
ran d om te1ep h one survey,
Aug. 9 - In preparation flood hazard mitigation pro- ,
project, which will connect Agency unveils new Joint Division
mines. Several conducted by the Meigs \ for the Meigs County Fair, gram.
'
the William . S. Ritchie Jr., Mobile Command Post; a employees remain' as mines County Community Health torkers with the Meigs
converted sc h oo lb us, com- contmue
·
C are p 1anmng
·
..,_ ·
' h way D. epartAug . 29
Petitions ·
Brl. dge w1'th US
· · ·33 ·
to operate.
commtttee,
ounty H tg
May 21 Pvt. William plete with advanced comJuly 3 - Waid Cross' Sons indicates residents desire a ment construct a new metal opposing a proposed ban on .
Barringer, who served in .the munications equipment, that Grocery in Racine, Meigs local emergency room.
fence along the cliff path s~ smoking ,in public places '
Union army during the will assist officials in emer- County's oldest business,
July 24 - A grand open- pedestrians traveling back yields numerous signatures :
Civil War, is honored with a gency Situations.
·
·
· d oors .afiter Wi 11 iam ing ceremony is held to and forth from the grand- as the Meigs County Board ·
c1oses ItS
new commemorative ConJ une 11 T'•mot h y C ross, owner, retires.
·
commemorate Ohio's oldest stand and midway areas are of Health moves forward
gressional Medal of Honor McVeigh is executed for his
July 4 An additional standing courthouse
in safe.
·h h'
·
Wit
t
e
issue.
g rave marker·
mvo1vement in the Okla- 180 workers at Southern Chester, which has underAug. I 0 - Meigs County
May 22 ·- Meigs County homa City federal building Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Divi- gone a six-year, $180,000 commissioners award bid for
Aug. 29 - New Southern
is under a co'u nty-declared b om b'mg.
· 11Y opens
sian are 1ai d o·ff during the renovation.
construction
of Scipio Eleme n t ary 0 fii!Cia
state of emetgency after
J une 14 - M e1gs
· c oun- o fli1c1a
· 1 tranSition
··
'
o f ownerJu1y .26 2001 Meigs Township's
new
3,600 as stu d ents return ,or
t he
-receiving nearly two inches tY•s R ura 1 H eat
1 h Cl m1c
' · sh'tp 110m
r
AEP to CON- County· Fair royalty candi- square-foot heliport.
2001-02 school year.
of rain within a 24 hour c1oses because o f c h anges in SOL.
'
dates are released.
. Aug. 1_2 - A parade_, offi-,
Au_g. 31 - Meigs County
'
time span. Road closings, re1m
· b ursement, h'1gh et cost
J u1y ' 4 N ational Red'
"
July 29 - romeroy Blues c1ally kicks off _th.e Meigs , co1_11missioners unveil plans
power outages •nd other per providing services and bone Days are held at the and Jazz Society holds the County Fan. ReSidents from for a
, t
M.
1
damages make it hard for market conditions.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
county's first ever blues f~s- .all over th~ county . nartici~
new s ~re a ong
am
residents in several commu- ·J une 15 - C h arter Com1
"' ihal\ Street r h at wtII aIIow mem July 6 MQre than $5 tival. Thousands of people pate in .the annual
event
nities . Several tornadoes of mumcat10ns
· ·
and Meigs million in federal funding is travel to Pomeroy to watch highlights agricult\lre ' and "-uers 0 f t h e Meigs County
varying strength also touch c ounty '
commiSSIOners grante d fior ·retraining and nationally renown blues business, while provid.ing. · Art1_·sans Asso ciation to sell
down _within the COJ.tnty.
·
· es, income assispnce ~-or dis- musicians perform on stage. games and rides via the mid- their wares in one conve- ,
rev1_ew _new ·ca ble ,'· s~rv•c.
1
M ay 22 - G roun db rea k w liIth me 1u d es more· c h an- :, p1aced Southern Ohio Coal
July 30 - Deputies with way.
nlent location .

1001··

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

,·Obituaries

by the Ohio Department of cost of S8,500, voted to com-

·.
ing ceremonies are held for
the construction of the
Meigs Local School Distrier's
new . elementary
school near Rutland.
May 23 - Lt. Gov. Mau 7
reen O'Connor visits stormravaged areas of Meigs
Counry so as to assess dama:ge and meet with victims.
May 25 - Students and
faculty at Letart Falls, Syracuse and Portland Elementary schools, as well as
Southern Junior High in
Racine, hold final . end-ofyear assemblies as the
schools prepare to close
down indefinitely for the
opening of the new Southern Elementary school.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

''

lo

'

•

'

'v

�'

.

•
n1on

The Daily Sentinel

I

''

Page~·
2.2.1
.

The Daily Sentinel

'

New ~~lr~ bowl roundup, Page 7
Willing~am ~onfident for Irish, Page 8

' ·'

Pages~
•

Wedliesd.y, ,.nury 2, 2002

WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

McLaughlin ·

~eigs'

8Y PAUL U POLCYN ·
OVP CORRESPONDENT

NCAA Footbll!l

n-dlly'e O.mn
Outbeck Bowl
At Tam111, !ilL
South-Carolina 31, Ohio State

?, ·

28

.

'

Cotton Bowl
At Dllllaa
Oklahoma 10, Arkansas 3
Gldor Bowl
At Jackaonvllle, Fla.
Florida State 30, Virginia Tech
17 ·
Cllrue Bowl
AI Orlando, Fla.
Tennessee 45, Mlohlgan 17
Fllam Bowl
At Tempe, Ariz.
' Oregon 38. Colorado 16
Sugar Bowl
AI New OrtNnl
LSU 47, Illinois 34

•

GALLIPOLIS- With eight wrestlen fin ishing in the top four of their weight classes,
the Gallia Academy Blue Devils wrestle_rs
placed fourth, Wahama - who p1aced five m
the top of their weight classes- finished fifth,
and R1ver Valley - plac1~g SIX - fimshed Sl~th
a_t the 21st Annual Gall1pohs Rotary lnv1tatlonal Wresrl.mgTournament Satl!rday.
Belpre fimshed fint m the team standings
follo~ed by Jackso? an~ Logan.
. . '
Meigs, only havmg .siX wresters compete,
finished. eighth . .Winning fint-place medals
for the Marauden were Nick McGlaughlin at
160, who went S-0. for the tournameAt and
improved his record to 15-2 for' the year, and

.·160 at Rota_,.

Zack Davis at 189, who went 3~0 for the Clay
.and improved his unblemished record to 180.
. Receiving first-place individual medals and
going undefeated for the tournament for the
Blue Devils were Nick Merola in the 171· pound weight class and improV:,d his record
on the year to 11-1, and Ben Doolittle at
heavyweight who pinned Jackson nemesis
Eric McGhee during the third period of the
finals.
Receiving second-place medals and posting 4- 1 records were Josh Parsons at 119 and
Mike Davis at 145.
Placing third was Tommy Saunders at ! 40,

PIMH- Rotary, I

So. Carolina wins on last:second FG
Bellisari, brings OSU back .from
28-0 df{fidt,Jalls short

NCAA Men'a baaketblll
Tuelllay'a Game•
Te~aa

Tech•90, Wyoming 84
NBA
Tunday'a Game

L.A. Clippers 112, Portland 97

Cll-.ers po.-nd
Trail Blazers
LOS ANGELES (AP) Jeff Mcinnis scored 23 poinrs
·and the Los Angeles Clippers
defeated the Portland Trail
Blazers 112-97 Tuesday night
in a matchup of struggling
~earns.

Mcinnis, who .had nine
assists, led seven . players in .
double figures. Quentin
Riciardson added 19 poinrs, ·
Danus Miles had 17 and
Eltol) Brand 16 for the Clip,
"
pers.
1,
The return of Scottie Pippen after !hissing 10 games
with an injured right knee
didn't boost the Blazers. He
had nine points :ind nine
assists in 30 minutes. ·
Damon Stoudamire led the
Blazers with 25 points.
Down 72-54, the Blazers
sparked a 9-0 run in which
StoudapJ.ire hit a 3-pointer off
a steal by Ruben Patterson. ·
· Stoudamire scored eight of
Portland's 10 poinrs late in the
quarter to get to 81-75, but
they would get no closer the
rest of the game.
.
Miles scored seven of the
Clippen: first eight points to
start the fourth quarter and
give them a 96-81 lead.
Even consecutive 3-pointers by Pippen, Stoudamire
and Rasheed Wallace couldn't
g~t Pordanil closer than 9890 with 6:37 remaining.
Mcinnis· had eight of Los
Angeles' final 14 points.
. .

'- : C~rlers fire
Mike Riley

•

I

'

-Mflt
...... "

SAN DIEGO (AP)
Mike Riley was fired as coach
of the San Diego Chargers
after ending the season with a
nine-game. losing streak that
left him 14-3'4 in. three sea- .
sons. •.
Riley, who never held an
NFL job before being hired
by then-general manager
Bobby Beathard in January
1999, was fired by G M John
Buder hours after the· Chargers lost 25-22 to Seattle, fin"
lshing the collapse th;J.t · left
them with a 5-11 record.
The Chargers will b_e
searching for their fou~th
head coach since the popular
and successful Bobby Ross
was forced out following the
1996 season in a power struggle with Beathard.

•••••
'

I

Not seeing your team's
results in . the Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to send
game info by fax to· 9922157. We want your results!

..I

•

INTO KNOTS - Meigs 160-pounder Nick McLaughlin (top)
bends River Valley's Justin Johnson at Saturday's Rotary Tour.
nament. McLaughlin won the match. (Dan Polcyp)

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - With threw for 227 yards and two
the score tied and no time left, touchdowns, and Andrew PinSouth Carolina kicker Daniel nock scored twice for South
Wea""r knew his 42-yard field Carolina.
goal attempl wasn't his best
But none of that mattered
effort. So he put his faith in when Bellisari finally got the
the wind.
Buckeyes (7 -5) going.
The kick barely cleared the
He ran for a 2-yard score to
crossbar, allowing No.
close the third quarter,
14 South Carolina
then · hit Darrell
to avoid a big
Sanders with ·a
embarriss16~y~rd TD
"ment With a
pass
With
10:18 to go
31-28 victory
over .No. 22
that cut the
Ohio State in ·
lead in half.
"We were ~
the Outback
Bowl
on
at the lowest
Tuesday.
we've been all
"I don't . know
year when we were
what would've happened
down 28-0," Bellisari said.
if that sucker didn't go "The team really pulled
through," South -Carolina together and we showed some
coach Lou Holtz said.
real heart and grit right there."
But the kick did, and the
Bellisari, who was 21-of-35
Gamecocks (9-3) had their · for 320 yards, then drove Ohio
second straight Outback win State ro the South Carolina 18
over Ohio State.
but lost the snap. South Car"I knew it wasn 't my great- olina linebacker Jermiah Garest kick ever, but I was hoping rison recovered.
the wind might take it,"
On the next play, Derek
Weaver said. "I was lucky _ Watson fumbled right· back to
enough to make it."
Ohio State's Mike Doss. Three'
. Steve Bellisari, playing for plays later, Jonathan Wells' !the . first time since his yard run made it 28-21 with
November arrest apd ,suspen- 5:02 to go.
sion on drunken driving
Ohio State got the ball back
charges, led Ohio State from a on its 11 with 3:56 to play and
28-0 deficit to tie 'the score. Bellisari was magmficent. He
But he was intercepted by went 6-of-6 for 86 yards, tying
Sheldon Brown, whose return the game on Sanders' 9-yard
t6 Ohio State's 29 with 23 catch.
Cie Grant gave the Buck-,
seconds left set up Weaver's
first game-winning kick .
eyes a . chance for victory . at
Four plays and" two Ohio the end, intercepting Petty
State timeouts after the - inter~ with 1:12 left. A celebration
ception, Weaver delivered.
penalty backed · them up to
"I just give Ohio State a lot their 18, but no one at Rayof
credit to be down by 28 mond James Stadium was
CLUTCH KICK- South Carolina .kicker Daniel Weaver (-97) kicks the game-winning field goal
during the final seconds against Ohio State in the Outback Bowl Tuesday. Weaver· ~ 42-yard ·and never give up," Holtz said.
Please ltie Buckeyes. 7
Phil Petty, the game's MVI~
field goal with no time left barely cleared the crossbar for a 31·28 victory. (AP)

oregon makes itS . .

case for N~. 2 rank1ng

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -The dazzling Ducks
of Oregon made their case for a share of the
national champiomhip - and then some.
Now a.&lt; far as they're concerned, it's "Go
Nebraska!"
In an impressive end to his college
career,Joey Harrington threw fur 350
yards and four touchdowns as
No. 2 .Oregon routed No. 3
Colorado 38- f6 on Tuesday in
the Fiesta Bowl.
Samie Parker caught nine
· passes for 162 yards, including a perfect 79-yarder for touchdown that
put Oregqn .ahead for good in the second quarter, when the Ducks outgained
the Buffaloes 198 yards to 53 ..
Oregon's Steve Smith. set a Fiesta Bowl
record with three inuirceptions, and the
Ducks' defense .:.__ ranked 81st in NCAA
Division .I - s~ut down Colorado's running
g:tme and forced th.e Bu~ to throw.
Maurice Morris ran 49 yards fot another
Oregon score, landing on top of a Colorado
defender at the Buffaloes 21. He got back
on his' feet ah"
ran into the end zone to
.....
make ·it 28-7 early in the third quarter.
The .Pac-1 0 chan1pions had a 500-328

a

advantage in total yards, 150- 49 on the
ground.
.
The Ducks now will root for the Cornhuskers in the Rose ·Bowl on Thursday,
hoping they upset top-ranked Miami in
the Bowl Championship Series tide
•
'I
game.
If Nebraska wins, Otegon
could be voted the national
champion in The Associated
Press media poD . The coaches'
poll automatically crowns the
winner of the BCS game.
· It was the worst bowl loss ever for
.the Buffaloes, who rolled into Tempe as
perhaps the hottest team in college foot- ·
ball after a 62-36 rout of Nebraska and a 3937 victory over Texas in. ihe Big 12 tide game.
The quickTstriking Ducks .(11-1) neyer
had a touchdown· drive longer than 2 min~
utes, 38 secondi, and they achieved the first
11-win season in sc bool history. ·
' The Buffaloes (10-3) took an early 7.- 0
lead, th en. watched . the Ducks · score 38
unanswered poinrs.
I
'

. PUT THEM AWAY EARLY- Oregon quarterback Joey Harring-

'

For a Bowl roundup,
piHH see Pap 7

•

I

ton celebrates his first-quarter touchdown pass to wide receiver Keenan Howry against Colorado Tuesday. (AP)

�'

•

.

•

Wedn11dl~~ ~. · ~~~--------~--~------~----~~~P~~~m~~~~ro~y~,~M~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~~~------------------------~T~h~e~D=a~ll~y~Se~m~l~n~e~I·:P:a~ge~=A~7~~

m:rtbune - Sentinel -

Oklahoma, FSU, lSU, Tennessee post New Year'S winsij

C L A 5 5 1-F I · E D

We Cove
"'elgs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

m

DALLAS (AP) -Although they weren't playing the ,Ro5e pass that ]avon Walker turned into a 77 -yard touchdown to give
Bowl ~ the Oklahoma Sooners sure showed a national chalnpi- the Seminoles the lead for good.
onship-caliber delimse.
•
The pass, which came as Rix wu being leveled by a Hl&gt;kies
Roy Williams had two of'No. 10 Oklahoma's school record- blitz, sparked a 17-point fourth quarter that allowed the Semitying nine sacks and Rocky Calmus noles (8-4) to put the Hokies (8-4) away, much as they d!d in
made II tackles and recovered a late the 1999 Sugar Bowl.
,
.
That game was for the national championship and, while this
fumble, keeping Arkansas from getting
anything going on otf~nse in a I 0..3 ,vic- one had no such stakes, the Seminoles saw it as the start of their
tory in '
' '"n Bowl on Tuesday.
new beginning.
The S·
(1 1-2), who might have been able to ,ld'cnd
-Thanks to Rix, the future lpoks brighter, and Bowden will
their• n~tion:.l championship wid{ a better offense, didn 't get ·begin next season with 323 can:er victories, tied with Bryant
much this time, either-only a 1-yard touchdown run by Nate and four behind Penn State's Joe Paterno in Division.l-A hisHybl in the first quarter and a 32-yard field goal by Tim Dun- tory. Paterno 'atso leads l}owden in bowl victories, 20,-18. ·
can to open the second half.
··
The Seminoles trailed 17-13 entering the final quarter, but
· But. the OU defe1,1se made that lead seem insurmountable. took the lead back on the first play.
·
·
The Razorbacks {7-5) gained only 50 yards on 55 plays and
facing a third- and-5 from his own 23, Rix dropped back as
made just six first downs, two by pe112lties.
the Hokies blitzed, saw Walker break behind corner Ronyell
~ew O~ahoma offensive cllordinator Chuck Long stuck to Whitaker on toe right sideline and threw as lte w as slammed
bas1cs m hJS first game callmg plays, ~nabling Hybl to set a Cot- hard by linebacker Kevi!l McCadam.
ton Bl&gt;wl record wtth . 24 complenons. Most came on short . , Walker caught the pass and outran Whitaket to ~e eud zone.
passes, though, as he firushed 24-of- 32 for 17S yards.
That "made it 20-17 and when the Florida State defense
. Ark.ans25' bid for comeback started ':"hen its best.drive ended stuffed Kevin Jones on~ fou~th~and-1 run from the Seminoles'
tn a 32-yard field goal by Brennan 0 Dono~oe With 9:~~ left 32, Rix went right back to Walker, again behind Whitaker, for
The· Razorbacks had the ball three more .t1mes, yet W11l1ams. SOyards 10 the Hokies' 18 yard~line. · · •
.
Cal":'us and Co. kept them. from even crossmg m1dfield. .
' lljavier Beitia, who already had field goals of 50 and 47 yards,
Williams threw Gerald Howard for a 9-yard loss on a p11ch added a 35-yarder that banked through off the left upright to
during Arkansas' next drive, then Calmus ended the following , make it 23-17.
.
.

NCAA

CallY c-u.ty. OH •

In oiie week With us

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
l\e·gt~ter
(304) 675-1333 .

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

Items

iiJii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1"6Hw&gt;W~
\ \ \ til \1 I \I I \ I "

br....

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I • .
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 2'0¢ Per Word '
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday -Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sundlil.V In -Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

:~

IrMo:::~ Ir M~~~ Ir

I'F.RsoNAu;
_ _ _ _ _,.,l Home Healfh Agency seek· Look No Further We provide 1st 'Time Home Buyers/ 2 Dr. Mobile Homo across Tara

-

ing

Full

Time

~eries

by rec9vering a ~mble by quarterback Matt Jones.
Rix also hit Walker with a 23-yard scoring p2Ss with 2: l4left,
Oklahoma s sacks, wh1ch cost Arkansas 55 yards, were Its most giving the · wideout four catches for a school bowl-record 195
in a bowl and matched the most in any S'!Jlle.
yards .

Tennessee 45, Michigin 17

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
OI!!Scrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address· When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

It

•

~ rr
Townhouse Apart·

CNA. top OuaN!y Financing Assls- FHA/ Government Loans/ from New Haven Grade menta, Very Spacious, 2

==
~ET

..~_M_IS_CAL I~.,r__

r ~.,r_

AERATION MOTORS

70

_ _...

FOR_TRucKs_SALE
_ _•

Spinet plano end bench. 1998 F250 Ext cab, ·longFrultwood finish

$600 . bed, 2WO, diesel, .S·speecl .

It? St 8rt
r (740)441 1393
tance and Help. Start a New Single Parent Program ochoot, neecl 3 ref. $200.00 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 Repaired, Now &amp; Rebuilt In 740-742·2731
$3,500.00 neg; 1979 Chevy
Why
wa
mea lng
•
c-t
for New Year. 1-a66- Loans
Available. Call dep. $300.00 a moo. 304· ~12 Bath. Full~ Carpeted, Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1longbed, 4X4 , 350 auto.
Qhlo singles
lonlghl, call ext
loll
'.. It Pool &amp; """"
S2 ,000.00 · neg. 740 ·985•
free
1·600·768·2623
UFE YOU DESERVE!
322·3694
(740)446·3093 '
·882·1107
~u
_, Pool• Pa• 800·537· 9528·
1621 .
Be YOUR OWN BOSSI
I
.Uo, Start $365/Mo. No Pels,
.
v34•1r:3-~~~::---,
Income potentiall1l
PR~
2 bedroom, stove &amp; refriger- 3 br. mobile home ds on Laaae Plus Security Deposit - - - - - - - - - , &amp;
FREE into. Full T~aining.
§ERVJOO
• ator, new windows &amp; carpet, approx. 3 acret, eKe. cond. Required, Days: 740-448- Mattress &amp; Box Spftngs,
l..MsrocK
VANS
~!'ft..,~ I;:, www,JandpEntemnsescom -$4,995, 740-992·2167
c/a, elec. heit ref. requiNd ·3481 ; Evenings.: 740-387· $95. CB Antenna (Solar ~-------,.J.1 ~---4-iioiWDsiiiiioo-·
888.684 .4325
con), $35. Truck Topper,
-;
.
TVRNEO DOWN ON
Divorce Forces Salol 3 Bed· :304:.:. ·8::.:9:.:5.. :·3400:.:.:.:;.·_ _ _ _ 0502, 74().448.(]101 .
,, $51
91 ' Long x 80' wide, 50 · 3 112 year old Blaclt Angus 1996 Grand Cherokee Lim·
SOCIAL SECUR ITY ISS!? oom1 2 Bath
·
t
lol
Beautiful
Rt·~r
VIew
l"'al
8
Goln Confidence In An
LPN
r
on pnva
· F 1 O 2 P:;.,.,e Ref:::..._ BEAUTIFUL
APART· ~740)258·1529
Bull $650 (74 0)367 ~.,
Uneerteln World. Leam af- Scenic Hills Ia nDw accept- No Fee Unless We Win! cal~ (740)446·3570.
or r ......... , ........ ,- MENTS AT IUDGET PAl·
,
.
-vu.x.
ited. Sunroof, Heated seats.
tective salt defense moves ing llpplicallons lor a fUll
1·888-582·3345
cas, DepoSit, No Pets, Fos· CES . AT JACKSON !.8- MOilLE ! HOME OWNERS
IJAY &amp;
Reasonably .
priced.
today at.Jey Clarle's Kenpo lime 3 lo 11 LPN for fill ln.
ler Trailer Parle, 740·441· TATES 52 Wealwood Drive lnlenherm &amp; Coleman gas,
GRAIN
(304)675·1679
Karate SchOOf. 740·74~· And a full I~ I 1o 7 fill In
0181 . ,
~om ·5297 to $363: Wak 1o oH &amp; eleclrlc fumacu In·
2548
,
LPN. We pay $11 .00 an
, House Trailer for Rent on ahop &amp; movies. Call 740- clu&lt;llng hi effiCiency heat .
, 1996 Jeep Wrangler, White
hour stanlng pay, wtth expeGeorge Road Near Eno. 2 446·2568. Equal Housing pump systems. We carry a. Quality hay for sale, $1.50 Soft· lop, 47,000 miles. 5
Losr AND
nonce pay and shiH differ·
Bed oom $ZOO da~slf Dpi)OI'Iunlty.
. complete line of Mobile bale; flea mixed dog 10 speed, 4x4, 5 disc CD
FOUND
. entia!. Please call us at
r
·
..,..... '
home parts &amp; a0C8&amp;80rles ............t h
( 40)985-3810 Changer.
740-709-8444
~-------..... 1740)446·7150 and ask lor
$275 month .. Total Electric. CMsly's Family Living, BENNETT'S' HEATING i. """" orne 7
(cell) or (740)367·0323.
Stephanie, or stop by and
No Pets, &lt;740)388·9328
33140 New Lime Rd., Rul· COOLING (7401"1·11411 Qualify hey for sale, $1.50
Lost: Male Black Cocker liU out an application.
1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed land, Ohio, 740-742~7~3, or 1..aQ0.872.5H7
bale; lree mixed dog to 97 Astra Van, 561000 mi~s,
Spaniel In The VIcinity or
Homeo From 51 99/Mo 4% Apanment, home and tra11er www.orvb.com/benMtt
good home (740)985-3810 air, cruise, tiH, PW, L,
Left. Fork ·Road or Watson McClure's Restaurant now
·•
rentals. Comtnerclal siDre- •
AMIFM Cassene, dual air
Ad. Has Been Missing Ap- hiring all 3 locations, full or
Down, 30 Years at B.S% fronts available for lease. NEW AND USED STEEL Hay &amp; Bright' Wire \ Tie bags, ABS. seats 7, like
proKimately Two Weeks. part·time, pick up appllca·
APR. For listings, 800-319 - vacanctes now.
SIMI Be.ams, Pipe Rebar Straw, Year 'Round Delivery new, Must seMI (740)379·
Childs Pet. Reward. C~tl lion allocation &amp; bring back
3323rExt. 1709.
·
FOI' Concrete. Angle, Chan· &amp; Volume OiscoUnl Availa- 2134 ktave message.
(740)441-o814
_between
9:30am
&amp;
~
furnished
Apt. 3 Rooms, 1 nel, Flat Bar. Steel Gl'ltlng ble.
Herilage
Farm.
&amp; I
Monday lllru Sat·
~!"t.."'r house 1
Bath. All Ulllltleo Raid. For oralno, Dnvoways &amp; (304)675·5724.
AA~~~
j"'];;";;;;~:;;;;~l ·,o,ooam,
urday.
p:;.r~ 111 peril moio bus no Downstairs, 919 2nd Ave., Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Mal·
~
~ ,
$2851 month (740)446· als Open Monday, Tuesday,
pets ( 740 ~244 uy,
Mothers Or.aml
f
39-45
Wednesday &amp; Frfdlly, Bam·
Stay Home
2 ""· 42 112 Lincoln Ave4:30pm. Clooed ThUtllday, FlO
Auros
IBu&lt;lfiOI Priced TronomloYour OWn Bossi
nue-~•· .. "'-nfh ptuo de· Furnlolted EHicloncy, All Salurday &amp; Su••~.
FOR ., r
olono All Types, Access To
• R~k p......, Auc:Uon Com· Be
1
5
Eam up tO ·
~"""'
Utllltill Paid' Shared Bath
,......; '· - L--..:i~-~--.,a
Over
10,000
pany,
full
time
auctioneer,
pool
.
Off
'ttreet
Parlelng,
A
'
(740......-rJOO
Rebuild
Kits, Transmissions,
740·245-5677,
complete auction service. $500·$8000/Mo
Fenced In ·"t'ard. (740)533- $1251 month. 919 2nd ve.,
L~enseo •66.0hiQ &amp; West PT/FT
(740)446·3945
Old ol&lt;l pair of roller skates, 1968 Dodge Charger, 316 Cell: 339·3765.
2580
d 2 $20; new inlay llnoteum, Automatic, Lots ot New
Virginia, 304-773-5785 Or -1-800·610.0705
··
. . 11{\l(l\
1
304·773·5447.
www.CashNowAndForever.
3 Bedroom House on 160 Gracious living.
an
6'x20', Rockwell electric Parts, Call for More lnfor- fl'llt"""-..1.!~----,
com .
Near Nonh Gallia H.S., :::.ro::..:~a:,en::v:~~~ hedge cutter, $10; bever· matlon. ~740)245-5067
lMPRoHOMEVEMENI'S I'
w.~·~
.. ~
· STAL JO S 110 S18 45
S400' monlh. $400 depoalf. Apartments In Ml&lt;ldtepofl age cOOler, $5; (7401992•
PO
B
·
NoPets. (740)448-8495
FromS278·""'". ·Call740: 2529
1990BuickCenlury4door,
mBUV
·
/Hr..80WILDLIFE
JOBS
To
good
condRion,.
~ - - - - - - - · $21
/Hr. Benefits,
Appll·
4 bedroom hOUII In Racine 992 · 5084. -E
qual HousIng. RllldanUII Homo Ownon 6L cyhnder,
Call (304)
11
Absolute Top Pollar: U.S. cation &amp; E11am Info., 7
acrou front park, nice Opportunities.
Tappan HI efficiency 90 ptus 'f:5smftea~. $2000 675
BASEMENT
Silver, · Gold Coins, Proof· Days, 9 A.M. ·9 P.M. CALL
nelghborllood, heal p~mp Modem I Bedroom Apart· gas fumaceo Including ol 7 8 er .
· .
u~::~::::.~uar·
seta, Diamonds; Gold 1·800 968 0147 X0345
heat &amp; c.mratalr, S500 per
(740)44S-()390
and electric Q8l fuma- 1992 Pontiac High mUeaga antee. Local references furRings,
U.S. Currency,· RN Ca M
(FT)
month, .$500 depaslf In· men·1
cas. HI Efticii(ICV Heat Excellent · condition:
b
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
. se anager
'co1998 Redman, 14x70 MQ. eludes water, eawer, trash, Now Taking Appllcallons- Pumps, featuring Tappano (304)67._2563 aHe 4pm
nfshed. Esta lished 1975..
oncl Avenue. Gallipolis, 740- ordtnatlon-aupervlslon of
bile Home. 2 Bedrooms, ·2 (740)949·2217 call tam- 35 West 2 Baclroom TOwn- Free Incredible warranty
.,.
r
· Can 24 Hrs. (740) 446 •
1"800"287"0576·
446·2842
patient care. Licensed In
· 112 baths. Cathedral Tex· 10pm.
house Apanments, Includes package.
·1997 Burgundy and Gold 0870 •
.
OH and wv. Must be famlfl·
HOMES
I lured Callings throughout 4 R
&amp; B th $300/ Water
Sewage, Trash, BENNETT'S HEATING .. Monte Carto LS, Sunroof, Rogers Waterproofing.
Looking for a reclever for ar wilh Med~re anO JCA·
FOR SALE
entire trailer. AC Included,
ooms
a •
$350/Mo 740·446-00011
COOLING (7401"1-11411 CD Player, All Powei;' ------.....,,-'Direct TV system 304-675· HO guidelines for home
• Gaa Heal. Bart&gt;er Carpel, monlh. 52 Olive Street.
.,
.
ar I-8Q0.872-tte7.
S5500 Arm. (740)446-4768 C&amp;C General Homo M&amp;inte88.59
heanh. Management experl·
Fully Trimmed. Payoff
_ , (740)446·31145
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom www.arvb.comi1Ninnlll
enca of clinical st11.rr a must. 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
apanment In town large
nence- Painting; vinyl ~d · Melge County Historical Full banoflt packa~ lncltJd. (304)67•-53•2
(740)367-7875
Eloganl 2 or 3 bedroom kitchen LA, $500/mo' Ref Star Waro Collection. In·
TRUCKS
lng, carpentry, doors, win·
Book Volume One 740·378· lng health lnsur:n-ce and
· "" "'
1990 Fleetwood 2 bedroom house, 299 Mulberry, Pom· erencei &amp; de,x.tt reQuired: eludes 47 ,:1gures, 2 cases,
FOR SA.I.E
1 dows, baths, mobile home
6270.
·401k included. Contact Pete · 3-4 bedroom, 2 batha,lr, dr, home•can Cheryl 0 740- eroy, no peta, (740)992- (740)448-3644 ~
t talking, 1 laking bank, -repair and more. For free
Son .mer, Medl Home , kitchen,centralhaat&amp;aJc, 385-9621. 2002Sunpointe 5858.
etc., All for $90. Call 1984 Chevy Truck. 4K4. :~~BtecaUC~992·
I \ ll'ltl\ \ 11 \. I
Heallh, 430 2nd. Ave., P.O. basement &amp; anached ga· 3 bedroom'2balh 14 X 70- Mobile HDml for ·Aen1.
Sw.CE
(740)+t1-Q615 anytime.
Runs GOOd. New nres and ~=--·~---~-,
' ' H\ II I '
Bo&gt; 987, Gallipolis, OH rage wilh 2 br, 1 bath, apt., ~.u ~ sell-ca
. II Mike 0 740- (740)448-1279
FOR lbNr
. Vtnlod Gal Hea,ter. Uaed 1 Alma.. Asking $3500. Call
Eu:.cnucuJ
45631 . 800·41!1-6334
bam, 19 acres fenced , 1 112 ~
(740)388·8047
,
n-"GEII!illON
11806
I Sales Person. Must have 2 miles N. on old 33 from 1991 M lo 14 70 3 Trailer for Rent or Sale. Nice Iota, quiet country HI· yNr. (740)446.IUI'KI
u-W.·~
Meigs
High
School,
by
apans
n
x
•
14x80,
2
Bedroom,
I
112
ling,
will
accommodate
Walttllno
"-faf:
314
200
uu.r n.~ua:.u
years eKperlence In sales of 1
( )
bedroom excellent condi· Befh G Heal (740'-aA7
~
2001 Chevy Z--71 elrtended R
· - - - - - - - " ' · lumber &amp; hardware. send po ntment Only, 740 593- t'on call Kavena (740)385• as
·
,_ · 16x80, $100 per month, call PSI $21.95 Per 100; 1• 200 cab, leather, CD/Cassene. esidentlal or commercial
· Are you Serious About roaume or pick up an appll· 6937 ·
~6
•
7187, r140)388.()173,
Ed al Counky Homas, 740- PSI $37.00 Per 100; All ~dad, many extras,
winng, now service or ·re·
ca
_ _ _ _ __;:._ Trailer In Racine, 2 ~. 992·2187.
Brsu·Compreoalon Fltlfngo 11 526 600 (30 )8000 pairs Master L~enaed eloc·
Working From Home? Call tion at Thomas Oo-11 Con· 816 Main Slroef, Pt. Pl. :.:.::::._
In Sfook
m os
4 875·
·
1995 18x80, excellent con·
RON EVANI !NT!RPRII- 4363 ,
'
~:O:J:."!J:~6~~~·
Now FDr Free lnfonnation. for, 176 McCormick Road, Completely Refurbtshed. 2 dillon, will help wbh delivery, room. cal)lOrt,. nice neigh·
Gallipolis, OH 45631
story, 2 Full Balll. 3 Bed· can Nikki 740···5·9948.
borhoocl, $375 per month,
ES
Ohl I ·~
f.688-801-4356
'
$375 deposit Includes wa·
lloosEHow
537 ~kson8'
'U\N"
VNNtJ,sUccess4u4me.com Salas Pasllion. Immediate rooms. Large Kitchen, .
oewor,
garbage, .
,
.._
~~
1 ., Aoom, LRI OR/ 1995 Clayton 14x70 2 bed· tar, '
Opening. Apply In Person: Le rge Uf.ll••
"""""
Anentioril
Bring Resume. Acquisitions Family Rm. New Carpet rooms 2 lull baths dining (740)949-2211 call 7amAmazing
. M•tlbollam
Eam 2nd. Income without Jewelry, 151 2nd Ave., Gal· throughout. f/A &amp; AIC, area, laundl)' room.' central 10pm. .
Appliances: Reconditioned Bl"llklhrouthtl
740 446 9565 or air, underpl""'ng. 8X'l6 COV• Pilot Program Renters Wash~ .Dryers, Ranges, Lose 10 pounds- 200
2nd job up IO
llpolls.
'
$J9,900.
740)446·2(205&gt;or 1'74°1 448·
$25.·$75./hr. PI-Fl. •
1
ered porch. 8x10 building. · Needed, 304-73B·7295.
Rofngrators, Up To 90 Days poun~s easy, quick, Faot
1·80().218·7543
URGENTLY
NEEDED· 2683.
(304)675·7118 or (304)675.
Guaranleedl We Sail New, Oramaflc Resulls. 100%
www.Monay-Dreams.com plasma donors, eam $50 to Brick Conage. 2 BR. possl· 50J8
Maytag Appliances, Fre~h Natural, Dr. Recommended.
$60 per week for 2 or 3 bly 3. Basement. Greal Lo'-·--~-·
City Maytag, 740-446-7795. "Ask aboul FREE Sample'
-----.,.,-,- - hours weekly. Call, Sera- cation .. 1 block from City Nice 281160 Double Wlde
nrt\1\lMU'";:,
(740)441 ~ 1982
R:.r~ci'~P":;'S
Tee, 740. 592-865 1.
Parle.
(740)441-0364. setting on rented lot In
FOR Rmr
For Sale: Rocondlliqned !:_=.:.:..:="::...--::---:$47 500
Pomt Pleasant area. 2K6
washers, drye,. and refng- Eleqtrlc box Lawn Genie,
Arcadia Nursing Center .,,..,.._ _ _ _ _....,
• ·
walls, thermal pane win· 1 and 2 bedroom apart· erators. Thompsons Appli· $10; 8' banquet table, S25i
A Fun Time and Part-time 114)
B~
I For Sale By Owner- Custom dows, priced to sale. can menll furnished and unfur· ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- PrastO 12 qt. pi'alll.lra cook·
aflernoon shiH Is available . .
'I'IwNING. . Built Cape Cod Home. Only (304)675·3689 (606)474· nlshed, seourll)' def)OBI re· nue, (304)675-7388.
ar, $25; Meson jars 5 for $1;
2 miles from Gallipolis. 4391 ask lor A~ry.
quired . .no pets, 740·992· Mollohe ea- ~z Clark (7-40)992·2529.
IWhaet o,.HncelrudaexcefHiee~h~~efisu"~
Through.
All Oak
22!8 ·
. Chapel nRoad,·~··
•v
anc:e, 401 K, Ufe lnsurar&lt;:e, GoltfpoUo Coroor Callogo Quality
Tnm Hardwood
and Berl&gt;er Wln111'·Sprlng Sole
Porlor,
011fo. Firewood for sole. (740)388COR1J81Itlva wages and op- (Careers Close To Horne} ca,Pet Formal Dining Taking orders now fOf deHv- 1 Bedroom Apartmenla, (740}446-74« 1·877-830· 8264, (740)388-0178.
portunitlea ·for advance· Cell Today! 740-446·4387, Room, ' Livtng Room, Large ery In February, March &amp; 5289 month. Deposit &amp; Rtf· 9162. Free Estimates, Easy Firewood, _ $t50 Dump
1"800-214 -o452·
ment. If you would like to
Spacious Kitchen, LDts of April. .
.
erence. HUD Approved. financing, 90 days &amp;arne as Trvck Load. (740}3~9·2758
join our team, apply In per·
Reg 19()05·12748.
Qak Cabinets, Large Family Fln1l Clllren~e
(740)441 _1519
cash. Visa/ .Maatar Carel.
ltolllpoliu lDailp ~ribune
&amp;Off between 9:0()..4:00 or
Room, BedrOOI'Jl SUite and On 4-2001 aectlonal ~as
Olive- a· IIIUe save alot.
Free Gas Fuma01111 and Air
call Kalhr;n Somerville,
ToANrnllDo
Balh wllh whinpool Tub· &amp;3·2002 models on dtsplay 1 Bedroom Apt Gallipolis.
Cond!tloner Eatlmates 1 Call
446-2342 .
O.O.N.
.
Main Level.. 3 Bedrooms, plus Bsingle16 wide homes Water Paid. . $275 month Washer, $95 .. Dryer, $95. (740)448·6308 or f.BQO.
Arcadia Nursing Center
Selling Room and Bath· at huge savings.
plus deposit.. No Pets, Electric Range, $95. Frost- 291·0098. If ~oil don't call
tloint tlleaaant ~t!liuter
East Maln Street
All ol your home repairs; ad· 2nd Level. Green Elements· Special ardllf
(740)446-4043 after 6:00pm Free Refrigerator, $150. us W8 both tole!
675-1333
CoolviHe, Oh
dltlons &amp; remodetlng. 24 hr
Shown By Appointment your new home at reduced
Whirlpool Stack Washer
(740-667 31 58)
prices
1 tlillroom, $300/ mo. plus and Dryer, $350. Refngera. Grubb's Plano- Tunl~g &amp;
Dally
Sentinel ·
emergency
service, 22yra.
aanlor (740)446-2885.
all (740)446-3764 or Cole••· Mobile Homea · ·deposit. References re· tor, Like New, $300. Skaggs Repairs. Problems? Need
E0 E·
citizens discount.
exp (304) 576.2065 ·
15266 US 50 East ·
quired. Slove &amp; Refngera· Appliances, 76 VIne Street. Tuned? Call Tho Plano Dr.
•
992·2155
AV0 Nl AU Areas I ,o 8"for
·
For ssle by owner: Nice bl· Alhens Oh 45701
. lor.
AIC,
Gallipolis. (740)446-7398'
740·446-4525
~~~4~~·rtev Spears, 304· Gao~· Porlable Sawmill, level I\Ome on 1 acre neor 740-592·1972
(740)446·3667
~Ha.;;rtly:..;_c:.M..:u:;ms;:.":$3::-::.oo=..-c""h-4
'
don't haul your logs to the Chester. ~hree bedroom.
115 Court Street. "2 Bed~
for $10. OP.!" Sat. 8·5pm. &amp;
Do you want to eam more mill just catl304-675-1957. two baths, one-car garage,
~
rooms, 1 112 baths, Kitchen
evei'II'IQS. DeWhurst Green&lt;'
lhan minimum wage? Make
·
family room with fireplace,
AND BUII.JliNGS • with stove and refrigerator.·
l
houae Mt. Allo, . (304)895lha change .lodayl lnfoCl· Top to Bottom Cleaning sun room. New centra! heatOff Street Par1dng, Close to Buy or sell. Riverine Anti- 3740 leave mesaage. or
slon Ia looking for communi- ~rvice. PrOfessional clean- lng &amp; ale system. One ml- 6000 Sq. root commerical Schools and Downtown quea, 1124 Ea81 Main on {304)895--3789
·
cators to make calla on be." •ng at affordable prices. nute eft Route 7, but still prl- ~torage with 14,000 sq. fool Area. $5951 month plus de· SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740half
organiza·
Residential,
office, remodefvate. (740)985-3981
nnsit and Reference. No 992-2526. Ruu .Moore, Independent Hert&gt;ellle Olo·
kN\ ofH nonprofithard
~
ing
and construction
clean ____
:..;_.:.;;.:______ of outside area. Call ERA •·
tnbutor, Call· For Producf Or
t s. you are
• wo • up. Confidential. 992~2979 FS: Brand New Home 1600 To.wn &amp; Country Real Es· ·Pets. (740}446·4926
owner.
.
Opportunity. (740)441-1982
lng and career· oriented call or 992-1391 .
sq fl., 1 1/2 acre lot, tate 304·675·5548
..
1·888·237·5342 ext. 2201 ,
- 3 Rooms and Bath, Newly Sue's Salactabtes on lhe 'T"
$115,000. · Call for into. For Sale Drlve-thru Conven· Remodeled. Downstairs. in Middleport. Dolls glass- Metal Desk, 4 Dra,wers •on·
Drivers wanted, no COL. 23
!k:446·45 ~ 41 .(740) 44 6- 'ienl store with block SIOrage Stov~ and ~elrtgerator, All ware, Aladdin mant~la, and one side, Very nioa, 30x20.
Perfect for Childs homa·
yra. old or Older, good drlv·
building. 14x70 · mobile uU11t1es Pa1cl. 46 Olive more. (740)992.()298
worle. $20. (740)985-4409
lng record, benefits, drug
Remodeled 3 bedroom, in . 'heme. 15 plus Acres. l,.ocat- Street. $475. (740)446-3945,
eoreen,
B~
I ' Mt&lt;:ldleport, call Tom Ander- ed on At. 33 outside or New .
~ Bl!""~~---....,
800
31aeniora welcome. 1w
·5 -65&amp;3.
·
0PPo1mJNrrv
son .after 5pm, (740)992- Haven. 112 mile form Moun· Renters Wanted: Pilol ProM£ReHANoisE
BUilDING
Help wanted caring tor the
· 3348.
talneer SP~.rn and Alloys. gram. Own your own home.·
SvPf'l.ns
lklerty, Dertl GTDUp Home,
c;Jraa.t Location. Owners Re- LiHle or no credit OK!· Call 14 amp. portable pizza
,_paying minimum.wage,
INOTICEI
MOBILE HOMES
locahng. Call (304)882·2659 (740)446·3384.
• . oven 535. Ironing• boa d
- shills: 7orn-3pm, ?am- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
FOR SALE
or (304)675·0180
· ,
Ss· ,ia•x30~ work table r • BlOck; brick, sower pipes,
5
3 -11
11 . lNG CO. recommends thai
R1ver Bend Place .now ac- '
• out windows, llntela, etc. Claude
7:;·.cal~40-~i5o23 pm you do business with people ·
ceptlng applications for 1 br. 01 fanner Red Anchor store, Winters, Rio Grande, OH
·
·
vou know, and NOT 1o send New/ Used Homes· lmmodi·
Hud Subsidize Apl. for the $35, good shape, (740)992· Call740-~45·5121 .
Hotzer Senior care Center- money through the mail until ate Ftossesion, No payelderly &amp; disabled. EOH. 2529
·
.
· iiiK-.;.;.;.-.-,..-___,~ ,
Nursing Aaslltant Classes you have investigated lhe ments until Feb. 2002. Pre" HOliSES
I (304)882-3121
Afford•bli•Convenlenl p!D
~
are being offered starting on oHerlng..
qualify by pf1ona. (740)448. FOR lbNr
T AI •
WO'FF ••NNING BEOS j :
Ji'OiniA'LE
January 28, 2002. Appllca3218.
win ver •Ower~· now at·
u
'"
__
tiona need to be fJUed out at Stan Your Bustnne rJ.
ceptlng appllcati~ for
low Monthly Investments.
Registered Pomeranian&amp;, 8
HSCCbyJanuary 10,2002 day... PfimeShoppingCen· Don't Own ·Land? We Dol Nice '4 bedroom country 1BA. HUOsubsldizedapt.
Home Delivery
weeks old, S250 each. 1
.. ror those who are interested ter Space Available At Ar- Landi Home packages home, 25 mtnUtel to Ath· · tor elderly and dlsabfed.
.FREE Color Catalog
white, 2 Sable. (740)386~nur':;:~s:,:.tate lelted ~z~~~~~~j~0~~ 1~a1u.ey ~~=~~ble. Call (740)446· ~;:o)a~'~- 7~:slde1 semng,
( 3041~~~6679.
can!!~~P~~~~158 8414 ..Leave Message.

i

r •·----·--1

lw------_..1
r

j

•r

r

I

c ·

';,f'"":::

r

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - , Casey Clausen got Tennessee
rolling and Michigan couldn't do anything to stop him.
Clausen threw three touchdown passes,and ran for two more
Tuesday in No. 11· Tennessee's 45-17 win over the No. · 17
Wolverines in the Citrus Bowl.
The Volunteers (11-2), who missed a chance to play in the
Rose Bowl when they lost to LSU for the Southeastern Conference championship on Dec. 8, had not won a bowl since
beating Florida State for the 1998 nati.o nal tide.
Clausen completed 26 of 3$ passes for a career-high 393
yardS and threw two touchdown passes to Kelley Washington.
He ilio connected on a 64-yarder with Jason Witten. During
one stret~h in the second half, Clausen completed 10 straight
passes. . ·
.
·
TraVis Stephens scored on a 3-yard run and Alex Walls h.a d a
32-ya'rd field goal to_complete Michigan's worst bowl loss since
Washington's 34-14 victory in the 1992 Rose BowL
The Wolverines (8-4), playing Tennessee for the first time, had
trouble from the start and couldn't stop Clausen's arm or his
receivers.
Tennessee rolled up 483 yards; the most Michigan all&lt;&gt;wed all
•eason. The Wolverines had also not given up more t):lan 26
points this year and saw their four-game winning streak in
bowls end.

I

5 2434

riD

.;10

what

•

h~d be~n a year for learning.

.
Rix, a redshirt freshman almost benched by Bowden durmg
•the season, made the play of the day when he ,wrist-flicked a .

r

1110

W

c

I

L.------_..1

rtO

,

Bucl\eyes
from Pages

••

•

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delinred Right to Your Door.
Ollitl

Crooko Ftrll Addlllon PPN: 2~8.000
dopooll by caah, .
to the town of 2352
41h
Stree1
certified
chock or bank
Syrecuoe. E•cepllng
SyrecuH,
0~
45779
check
poyoble
lo tho
the coet end olhlr
Prior lnllrumenl Shorlfl of Melge
~~:.':t·.~ fall,:.~,d :~~·=~~~~=~:~.~: Rele,.nce Volume 43, county lo 1&gt;1 lenclered
Being Town Lot No.ea rtght to mine end Pege I 01 of Malga ot oole at the lime of
County Record•
acceplance of bid .
Twtnty lWo (22) In IM ......avelhe ume.
Current Owners Name Balance due upon
Robert L. -Boling end Conltrriiallon of Sole
Help wanted
Wilma J. Boling
from Melge Counly
Property Add,.as 2352 Court of Common
4th Str81t, Syracuae,- Pleeo, dood will be
CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
OH 45779
luued upon bola nee
al l&gt;llng paid In lull.
The. Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company A pp reload
ShariH ·
of Pomeroy, Ohio is seeking an $18,500.00
Tenne of Sale· I 0~
Melge County, Ohio ·
experienced Cons.u mer Loan Officer for its
· . Sarah D. Pollyo~a
Gallipolis, Ohio Branch location. Qualified
AUorney lor Plaintiff
Addreu 323 w. :
candidates will have 1·3 years direct
Lakulda, 2nd Floor •
lending experience In personal and real
Clevelaod, Oh 44113 ,
estate (1-4 family) financing transactions ,
(218) 885-1170 .
be computer literate and possess good
F8l (218) 383-4034 :
(12, 5, 12, 19, 28,(1) 2
customer relations skills. Thl! Farmers
Bank · offers a competitive salary,
oommensuratB with experience, and fringe
benefits packagB. Send cover letter and
detailed rBsume to:
Farmers B1nk &amp; Savings' Company
FuiVPart Time
ATTN: Hum1n Reaourcea Director
OFFICE
PO Box 828 Pomaroy, Ohio 45789
ENVIRONMENT
Farmers Bank Ia an Equal Housing Lender
Member FDIC and an Equal Opportunlly
1-888-974-JOBS

800-563•2778

·C!RST
==-.;::: . ......,,

(

.. ..

WWw,j..IWIIII. IOfft

.,.,r• clieeu ...

''!

.• ';~I'' r .1

11'1 {'

J!l

c.-.""

--·

1Ma.41N'41.

~

-,-·

I'll

\'.'Pfll /1

1177-27$-3274, llriZII. IN

.........

.. Wt '-*'t; l'lld llt.llllllip~

v..u.: •• .. ~lit..

·:·w.ra-.

a...,.o--·.........
""A PAaTNIIa YOU I:Airl
COliNI' 0111"

....... 'lt

:

--

M haur IMimlt ICC. .

to Undftlf i\1'1111111

nr-. .

1 y-

•:w.. .

II

.

Uperfcoolal

r..t 23 )'Mil "' ,.,;.1

good diving-

Qul.lltr H'mac Tlttw

' 800-435-4010

wJHxc:eiJul 8tn.triu

O.orH:I Pay

.... a,.,.
~ow..r
...,.
a ape.•

Must

I••••

HIY~ A Clu:.. A
C~l: w/Hunud .l
I )'~ . OTR lisp.

This Directory .is a
produr:l of LiNrty
Group Pubi/Jhing. to
adveniSt. in this
din&lt;.'tnry please call

.-.r;;.;;;n...,_

NAVAJO

EXPRESS
800-800~ 1440 .

1·~90tl-JJ64

Mario Money.. .

• Uono Mfes.. .
More Fun!!!

fiWNU ·~

W.wllotthoMifeof

~IWII6NaS

...,... rfiOII w

..., HaJIMI

d.

.

SlllMM/IITlAMS '

'

..... atlmllalolded ' .mpty
~10~

Cll JMtn .d Me

1188-428-5759
... ,...,;t..'Q

.. . v ......:..;

(,

'

'

'

I

Melling Our Sales Brochures!
Free Supplies, Postage!
Start lmrnediatafvl
Genuine Dpponvnlfyt
For Free lnfonnltion,
CaiToiiFrao:

.,•

Jar yet effi cient se nior who :
has started the past three :·
years.
Petty h ad throws of 9
yards to Watson and 13 to ;
mopd James Stadium was Brian Scott that set u~ ,
doubting Bellisari.
South Carolina's firs t score, a '
However, the long pass 1-yarder by the beefY, 250. :
was picked off by Brown, · ound Pinnock.
i
P
I '
whose twisting,. cutback 37On the Gamecocks ' next '
yard return gave the Game- drive, Petty passed to Scod: ,
cocks hope.
·-•
for 30 yards and Pinnock for :
The pass "was my call,"
9, ending things wlth Scott's :
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
7 -yard grab over freshman ,
said: "And it was the wrong
safety Dustin Fox to lead •
call, I guess."
. 14-0 at the half.
Weaver waited out the
Petty started . ~he third ,
timeouts, reared back and
quarter with a 50-yard TD ;
kicked the dying ball
throw to Andrea Gause. Pin~ ·
through.
· nock's IO~yard run made iC:
Only two years ago, South
Carolina was 0-11 in Holtz's 28~0 before the fun began . ,
Ohio State started strong- ·
first season. Since then, the
Gamecocks · are 17- 7 and ly, forcing three first-quarter ·
won · consecutive
bowl punts, including .a bowj
games for the first time in record 70-yarder by Tye let
De~ n that beat _Syracuse's
I 08 seasons.
·
·
Ohio State, otT its first win Cooper G ardiner's 63-yard
at Michigan in 14 years and kic k in 1989 .
But after Bellisari . hit
talking of revenge against
the Gamecocks, dro~ped to Sanders on a 17-yard pass
0-4 at the Outback. South that was Ohio State's longest
Carolina beat the Buckeyes play at the tim e, defensive
24-7 a year ago.
·
end George Gause stripped
Much of the credit for the ball to start the GameS9Uth Carolina's turnaround cock." first touchdown
goes to Petty. an unspectacu- drive .

NOW
HIRING

Alii abcKII ou1 E down
IIMII'IIurttl... protrtm
CIH \II 1 d.,. a ....

I

Ir

..,...

Per Hour

L,-------.,1

r

FlO

...;..

$.6 . $8

t;

B

puCIIc euctlon et the
Court Houae on
ROBERT L. BOLING, Jenuery 24, 2002 II
ET AL
10:00 e.m. of nil dey,
(DEFENDANT)
lhl
following

vs

0,

I

r

(PLAINTIFF)

Dire~tory

I

r· .

NATIONA~~ITY BANK =~tit~:: 11~10=it~ w!l:

·Driver
Recruitment

•r

I

________ __ ___________

Bowl.
,
.
.
,
The victory extended to 16 Bowden's unbeaten streak in
IN THE COURT OF
In pureuencl Of en deecrl- Nlll eatata:
•
h'
d
COMMON PLEAS Order ol Sele to me Sltulled In tM Slata
a) L"
bowl games that d.on't decide I h e nation Cuamplons ip, an MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO dtrecled from 11td of Ohio, County of
· gave quarterback Chris Rix and the Seminoles a solid finish on CASE NUMBER Ot.CV· Court In the ebove Melge, end Vlllego ol

j

"luo'llr'-------,

PUBLIC
NOTICES

t7 vic'tory against No. 15Virginia Tech on Tuesday in the Gator

r,o

I

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Domanick Davis, Josh Reed and ·
Rohan Davey stirred up LSU fans so much, only ..a rare plea
from coacH Nick Saban settled them down.
A familiar sight: _Rohan_ Davey celebratillJ! another touchdown.ln the highest-sconng Sugar Bowl ever, DaviS ran for
four touchdowns, Reed caught two scoring passes from Davey
and No. 12 LSU beat No. 7 Illinois 47-34 Tuesday night.
Playing ih a game more about poll position than national
championship plans, the Tigers (i0-3) won their school-record
fifth straight bowL Ahead 27-0 in the second quarter, they held
0 n despite fotir TD passes by Kurt Kitmer.
Davis starred while starting in place of injured star LaBrandon Toefield, gaining 122 yards on 28 carries and set a Sugar
Bowl mark with four scores. He nearly had· a fi(th TD, but his
catch. in th e end zone was called back because of a penalty.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - :.robby Bowden matched
Bear Bryant's victory tQ.~, le~.ding "!o. 21. ~lorida State. ~ \1, 30~

riO

r

LSU 47, Illinois 34

Florida State 30, Vimnia Tech 17

•

Reed, an All-American, was open all night and· set Sug;tr:
records by catching 14 p2Sses for 239 yards. A junior, the Bilet- :
nikotfAward winner as the nation's top rec10iver &lt;cored on grabs :
of 32 and 5 yards in what could have been hi• final college ,
ga~
•
•
Davey closed out his career by going 3 1-for-53 ' for a Sugar- ;
record 444 yards and three TDs, guiding an offense that racked :
up 595 yards .

�..

81nUnel

·.

'

'

·~
VV6dnelda~Jan.2,2002

(

•

I

•'

f

Pomeroy,

Willingham CQnfident he can return
Notre Dame to footbaiJ glory

Mldd~rt;

Ohio

· The Dally Sentinel • Page A 9

..

•

NEA CroasWIIIrd
. - Puzzle
.

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - When might have about the
he learned three \Weks ago that Notre fact he wasn't Notre
Dame had hired Dame's first choice.
George O'Leary as
"The way 1 will
·
its football coach, address it is to win," he
Tyrone Willingham said.
told Irish athletic director Kevin White
White said he talked
he had made a mistake.
with · many · coaches ·
" Kevin; you 're hiring the wrong guy;• who .worked with Will. White recalled Willingham had told ingham, including forhim. "You need to hire me. You know mer 49ers coach · Bill
you have to hire me."
-. '
. Walsh, · before offering
White finally took the Stanford Willingham the Notre Dame job.
coach's advice and signed him to a six" Every one of them regards him as
year deal Monday night.
one of the top coaches in college or proWhite recounted the conversation fessional football," White said.
Mikes Trador
Tuesday as he introduced Willingham,
White said after· Davie was fired , he
• Equlpmetlt Parts
the first black head coach in any sparr at had six possible replacements, including
Factory Aulborbed
Notre Dame, and just one of four black Willingham and 'O'Leary. He didn't say
. coaches at Divi.s ion 1- A.
who the others were. After O'Leary
C..·IHParta
•
WiUingh•m's hiring ends an embar- resigned, White interviewed one addiDealers
rassing chapter for one of •the nation 's tional person.
11100 Sl. Rt. 7 South
mo~t prestigiou. football program s.
.O'Leary and Willingham were the · Coo/vii,., OH ·f87Z3
O'Leary resigned five days after being only people offered the job, White said.
748117-8311
White said the reason he initially
hired because oflies on his resume about
his academic and athletic background.
selected O'Leary is because he believed
Asked if Notre · Dame had don.e any- he better met the criteria of being a
thing different to investigate Willing- head coach with a proven record and a
ham's backg1:9und, White said he had great "institutional fit."
not. White said the school used an exec"We just really felt that GS"DtKe kind
utive search company for both men and of brought us something out of central
university personnel spent · exi,ensive casting.
Second-generation
Irish
mltkleport~
ti~e conducting database searches.
Catholic, a great passion to be at Notre
"This is a slippery·slope between con- Dime. He espoused it, he gushed at us
610'x2D1
fidentiality and aue diligence when and we loved him. We tho1.1ght he was a
you're involved with a high- profile per- very good football coach," White said.
son," he said.
' After meeting again with Willingham,
Willingham was the first coach White White was convinced he is "as passionhad contacted after Bob Davie was fired ate or more passionate."
Dec. 2. He didn't contact him during the
O'Leary, who had a 52- 33, in seven
1. \\1\I'S
second search until Sunday, 17 days after seasons at Georgia Tech, is brash. WillI I I \ ' lin I I II I\
O'Leary resigned.
ingham, who had a 44-36-1 record in
.
The uniyersiry declined to disclose seven seasons at Stanford, is more quietRoofing, Det!ks
•financial terms. \Yillingham's agent, Ray ly confident. _
. Remodeling,
Willingham said he thinks a being a
Drywall, and
Anderson, also would not reveal finan, Additions
cial terms, but said a $1.5 million a year black coach at the most prest!,gious
salary cited by the South Bend Tribune football school in the coumr)' is Slgnifiwas much more credible than an earlier cant.
report of $2 'million to $3 million.
"Because part of my philosophy is that
White said he was impressed by Will- there's a gr~ater good, that we're out
Ownor: Terry Lamm
ingham 's response when he told him the there to benefit not just yo'!rself, that's (740) 992-0739
. first time he hadn't been hired and again important, but to benefit others," he
when he contacted him a second time. said. "So is this significant?Yes, I say it is
''He's ·a strong and determined guy, a significant."
very capable guy, a very skilled guy," he
The Rev. Edward Malloy, the universaid. ·
siry presid~nt, said St. Thom:j! Aquinas
Willingham displayed the san;te confi- described things as being essential or
dence at Tuesday's news conference, say- being an accident.
"The essentials for Tyrone are outing he has no doubt he can help lead
-Notre Dame back to being a dominant standing coach, excellent reputation,
team .
greal record, great institutional fit. Acci"That's why I'm here. To reach that dents are - that he is a high-profile
level of excellence that this university African-Ameri,can coach, in a lligh prohas always had. I believe it can be file position," Malloy said. "He is an
excellent example of what is possible if
accomplished," he said. ·
Willingham said he has a simple plan you work hard and have high ideals for
to answer questions boosters and recruits yourself"

1Tumpllra

• c-ntllc

1'
:
.
14

•NCAA

97BeedtSt

OH

0fx10'

12

CrMpy

·-~

----

*\·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

44087 Wlpple Roed

•

4 .I .

HOURS:

• Fd

Pofi*OY

A 1\ ,/ H J
• A t
• II ,; ~
~-tH r.:i

Sot ..1

1\CTORY DIRECT
·PRICING ·

_.,.,.....,,.,_

•

FlUNK
&amp; EARNEST
'
. .

• •.REE INSTALLATION
FI(EE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
50 YEAR WARRANTY

FIRST COIL
FIIIT IERVED
$200.00 PEl JIIIIT
REGULARLY
$321.08 PER JIIIIT

,.-.-.J •

•
QUALITY WINDOW SY~iTEMSJ

992-4119 1-800-291-5600
VIlli Our Showroom On St.lle Route 33

.

,•

..

••

/

..

TtiAT'$ riL~Y-··
· MY TillE$
llOTAn ALl,

rtte

TIME.

6 Mil,. Nonh Of Pomeroy, Ohio, At County Rood II
• NO Dealen or CnnlractDn Please
Vtso I Mul.,..rd
WV/f0l3477

'

WIIWJ\IMS
l@G~Ml

10118'

tree Service

RIIWIOD
FllllllE

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

........

ROIEIT IISSEU
COISIRUCIIOI

I

• NewHomet
• GII'IQII

I

•Complete

Remodeling
Stop a Compare

• Jncii lllll
...... l'llca

.
.....
0481882-3048

FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1871
1/IWH

:,ToW IT I '1'00'~ T~ MIIU€:~
LATE'
fKK.

. (7:.'0) 949-1521
Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash"Avallable
Licensed, Insured • Frt!e Estimates

Sunset Home·
Construction
Bryan Reeves , . New Homes, Room Additions,
~arages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE·ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

BUILDERS INC,
Ne,.. Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garageo
_• Replaoement
Windows • Room
'•
Addition• • Roonna
COMMIICIAL and IESIDENIIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

Racine, Ohio 45771

740·985-3948
CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

~-

WELL, Wll'l' DON'T

·.

'IOU 60 SOMEPLACE

Phone (740)S93-667l

•

Crete f'ree

10AM-4PM Mon.Sat

iIWEDNESDAY

1 f.IATE

the spade
&lt;[uccn, six.
'' second
Declilrcr
won with
llll'l'll 'anJ
&lt;

.... ,-r ..... FOR TilE

:::&gt;I.H•UUL

BU5!

BANKRJ1PrCY
can relieve a debtor of lin111oial ob1iaationa and
lrTIIIJe a fair dl1tribtulon of ...... amilng
creditors. A peraon aolns throuah bankruptcy
may retain cettaln ~y, known as "exempt" propeny, for his or her personal use.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
household Joods. You •hould direct111y
question• TeJII'dlna binlaupccy to en 'attorney

Advertise

Advertise

In this space
for
'2~ per month

before plllCCedlna. Por lnfonnlllon reaaldiRJ

Self-Storage

In this apace
fO!'
'25 per month

'i

· B111kntpu:y contact:
WWlul
Altonlty

·

m•l•
42 Unoccupied

11111tor

1 Soldier In
groy

43 Gray molllt

'13 Knockect

45 Clol'll on

19 Ricochet
20 Pound

47

lilt

property

Mlochtel·

· 32 Boxing

2 Singer

33 ·Cuzco

3 E.T.'o

1&gt;ulkltra
35 Dwarf
word

tronoport
4 R.,_,_
. bo.,._
5 Wrltor
Wlaoel

oppoolte

rolled
52 Orlll tgl.
aggrenlve 26 Toll flower 53 Gorman
7 Awore
·27. Foundation
article
I Sole
. 28 Ride the
54 Fruit
aub[oct
raplda
cooler

tocole

Yoko

37 Pretend

38 Pt.yblll
39 Super·
model
Carol
40 Haw

6 Overly

porto -

22 Win over
24 Gloclal
. rlod
25

_

i

wdo.l'

ockod and

mokero
48 Spreod·
ohtet pro
49 - by myaelf .
50 Wafter'o
chock

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram• are created from quotatlcne by ramoua
l)l()pll, put end prtHnt. Each letter In the cipher 1t1nd1 tor 1noth1r.

Today's clue: Z equals R

'E W

~

V ,M

NZE

AEYZREFHHLCK

BNCCVE

AIBBFAAMIHHR
ICHFAA ·

y M

LE

P V C F

WNA

FHFXFCEA

BVCBFNHXFCE.'

AHFIEW'A

NCEWYCR

~WNMMFZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm nol a real flashy guy. I'm juslldrid
of a regular Joe, tho guy neld door.' .,... (Diamondback) Luis

Gonzalez

.

,,
WOlD
GAM I

Q

Rearrange letters al the
four scrambled words. belo-..;: to form four sirnplt wcrds.

. ~,r-rH-,Or-D'T'"C""TI_R-r.--1

f

AT

1. ·

Y E MA B

E Y

s

.. ,

~-T,,..J-rJ-..--r-1
1
L-'-1...-1...-.1..~--1

I 0 : jack,
Lauria led
diamond.
Rodwell
dummy ' s
f1hyed a
'

0 F

I I I I . I.-

i' have 3 small children and I
often find myself th inking !hat
!here is no child so lovely thai a
mother wasn 't glad lo get them- -

IN;:
:

1---.--,-..,.,~4:--rl-i
.

.

_

r~....:-C-.U_T,:;.A~Cl-S-r-11 .. -"

•

I I I5 I I , 0

V

. ·

.

you

. C~mplete the chuckle quotel
by f1lling in tht missin g words
develop f.rom step No . 3 below.

•

SCRAM-I,ETS ANSWERS
Origin - Assay· Flirf • Bobcat· TO R OASf
Mf molher-in-law'-s favorite slip of the t~ ngue , "The
chickens have all come home 'TO ROAST.

.

f.t n.. t 2Do2
h WJ !I t:1·h ; ; i~k ~j,u k tilll t' t~1
qututr ,• t':u·h CJPI' Ur wn it y you
wi~ h h , (k vdo p in th l' yt•:tr
.l h l'.llL B l' prt'p. ln• tl w gi n ·
c.H: h Ol ll' th t• IH:n·~,~,. ,. att~· u ­
lio n it ll t' l· d ~ i1'1 Ol'l kr 1n n·.lli/l' fu ll 'llt'tt·~~

Cellular

&lt;'~ 1'1 \ICO R N

If

J. ln . !IJ) -• 1111

Jeff Warner Ins.

utlll' n

,,.d ,t r.

t\ 1

L'\'l' ll

(Ike·.

. l.u: k

~1-

d n th ing, ti u· you

hm·n .

pn ltlli~t·d.

nf

l' \ ' l'r)"t h i n g

~ ' t l\H, l'lf.

I{ nnw wlh'l't' 1\J Jon!.. ,Ji.1r ro lt l:llll' l' .1 ml vo u' ll tl nd il. "li n·
A~ tro-(; r,q 'h M .11, ln 11 :1kt· r i11 M
~t.l ntl ~· lt'\'l',ll~ w h 1t·h ~~.~~~~ .lrt•
rolll.llll ir.d ly pt•r ti.•t t li1r yo u.
M .1 d S2 .7.; t,, M .lld 1 1 11.1k ~·r.
l ' / 0 thi' 1\t'\l' ~J ' lj ' l' l. I' .U . IJ LJX
17:1X. t\•1uiJ .1Y llil l ~t. • t i t)l\,
· Nt·w Yttrk. NY I ' l l ;.,~,
A&lt; )UA iliUS 0-"'· !11- l'd• . .
I'}) - - l11 arr.m~t'lll t ' l ll\ whnl'
y,;u lp11d lt· tht• fund~ t tl d .,~·.

11112/t mo.

Rome lmpronments
Sid loa• Remodeling
Porches • Det:ks

t hiHg~ ·Il L' l1 k d y \ 1• ~n •• ~you

Add ·~'s .. Kooftng

J' l.lllllt'd. I( Y''ll k t ,1 1\tll lt t· r
ll l .tll. Jl!t' 1],,.1r,.,, , tlln·~. it l'ot lld

Quality Work

h~.· .11\~lt h l'l' '" •I'\' .

FREE EsTIMATES
Bill Doe ifer

PI ~( ·F.S (hi;. ]11- M.u·d, .:!n)

-- T1·y

,,

~ ~~·.n· • • l d .111y . t. ~~.tl'i·

~i11 1 1~ tll\ ,\ tl•ph' \\lt h ytm r
l\l .l ll' tt lt !.l \' ' Wh t' l t' h i,ltl l~ ' 1! . 1 ~

li

I

1

n m \'lit lr linOi tH't.tl .lll:un
h.l ~t· d 11 pt ~,11 \\ h.H }'O il .
Jl ll tu p .lf v to t'OIII L' 11 1. it lll: ty
"hl' :t tn;Jjm l ll t~t.tk&lt;.' . '1he ,m] y
-,·,t~ h ym1 ,·,m l•.mk tJ II 1s that
. wh1( h \'otl h.t''"' 1.11 Y~'\ IT ll.uul.
.V IR CO (Au~. :!J-S1·p t :!::!)
Vt• ll

!ntl.i y

-- h '~

n·~j' L'l' l ftH rl tt• ~t ,llrt.:t' .

it' th,·y

ht· di,,tpp ~J\1 \t u l. Yul; c,\11 ~'. l ~ily t.1h• 'l'. \ 11'

'

T hio; fl .ltw d ju d t.:ll ll' JJ t na.Jd
n ·~ t yo u v.tl u:.ibi/ rilllt&gt; ; ;11 k .1"1

)'tHI're ·co u11till g

,· J.. m rr~ .Jr t• \ 'otl ' ll

· 9~2-5479

..

toltl you a tjll.lm: l i~ li~ dr to .
P' 'P up. N o tllin~ b .1~ d 1 a 11~~· tt.
so why ,rl'ha ~ h the un rt•,ol\'·•blt'?
·~
A lUES (~lar d o 2 1· AI'nl I'J)
-- It 's j l l\1 pl.1i 11 li.H1 Ii ~l l tu dt·J• riVl' ytll ll'\ l'i ( nf 11\t'li.•l inl(lrlll,ltio n to d.1y Jll'l Jw, ·a u ~l' ~· m 1

Th u r~d .1\'.

33795 Hiland Rd,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Advertise in
Satruek,
740-992~5232
(740) 592-$025
·
Atllenr
this ~pace for
your business on this page for
s1oo.per . A~vertise
on• month· for as low as $25
month
'Phone 992·2155

power

11' Legorl

'

Estl'males

"'"'~~
High &amp; Dry

29 Llverpaote
34 Feeler
38 Pock an~ .

· 10 Poychlc

DOWN

tracka

in g West woulJ have
to win rhe trick.
However, East prodHccd the jack. and
kd his second spade.
west took two more
spade tricks to dcli:at
the contract aud give
Italy 12 international
m;ttc h points .

JANU~RY 21

S•rvlng Ohto and W.V.
1031

:Z It
l':i!IJI

third . diamond, hop-

and.Dri"e' • Stencil

12% a-t HGrltlwed ................ S5.00/50
Stuff
12% s-t Hoiw !wed,............... $4.40150
Hunlln Pride 21% dog food .........s&amp;.86/50
~==~8=1el 12% IIOCk !wed ..... $6.75150

1...
30 Mlllce

t:asl
1'111'.'4
l'n.u

mond and four dubs)
plus c:.oo.
La uri" chose the
diamond SIX. (Any
non-spade
lead
works .) Versace took
du nHHY's king ,with
l11s are and returned

PEANUTS

740-992-7599

Footers, Walls, Sleps
Flat Work,
KeptaCement.t. • Walks
Atncns, Ohio

:1 ~ T

S 11t lll
ll'lol.
l'aR•

''-'r

(7 ...()) 992-5908
CONTRACTORS, INC.

Wf'Jol

I

BISSELL

Guitars • Some Furniture • .Crafts
Now Available ·Tiger Sharp Knives

P/B

No uth •

58 Hot- wlnlt.

57 Naw York
_c.pllll
se Stlv loge

-

ELSE AN" COMPLAIN?

'

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equlne12
._..

itqUII

2811epalro

Soloway selected a
t(nrrtlr - lrighest spade
sc.·vt•rJ'.
However,
Uo&lt;:dii won with his
rl::-7:7.:-:-::-~==~.,..., r:::~~r-:::-:-~=,.--,
r;;;;-;u;---;;T,;,:-::::::==::::-1
r=c::-:-:--:-:-::T""----,
jack,
pIa ycd a club to
THIS
Ot1, llON'T
"I'EMI! ANt:&gt;
I HEC.J&lt;,. WE
G.AME
IT'S NCT'
WORRV! :n·s
li.IGHT' !
I&gt;ON ' T
dummy 's an•, finessed
I HAVE
EA-!.'1' TO
ALt.. IM•
.. IT'S
~
EVEN
MU5'T:..
NOT
LeARN!
EM$1,
JUST
CARE
DESTRoY .. dubs twin· through
PLAYED
Fait.
LIKE
ARTUR .
WHO
East. """ took nine
WE 'LL
&amp;EFORE
C.Hess!
PUM!
WINS_!
tricks (one spade,
TEAC.H
YET .
VOU!
~
three hearts, une dia0

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio

oq

27 "WIIIeid"

Lasr yi•ar, the world
champiomhips were
sdll' dul~J ·to be held
iu llal i, lndoucsia .
Um t&lt;&gt;llo\ying the atl:l&lt;: ks of Sq&gt;r. 11, they
were tnovcd to Paris.
(Uali has been olfer~d ·
the 2003 • tourna- 111ent.) There we re
sc·vcr'd
dramatic
matches in Paris. First,
in the 35th llermuda
Bowl , lire f:tvorites
met .iu the l]uartcrli-·
nals . !tal)•, Ginrgio
I )uboin- Nmbcrtu
Bocchi, Lorl·nzo l.lUria - Alfredo Versace
and Dauo Jc Falco,(;uido ferraro, f:tc&lt;•d
'the U.S . .&lt;quad of Uob
1-lanunan- Paul Soloway, Jet!" Mc~kstroth­
Eric ll..odwell and
Di&lt;·k Freeman-Nick
Nickdl, who have
been the most successftti team owr the
last decade. With 32
deals to go, Italy kd .
by one point. llut Italy won th&lt;• next I (•board scgm~nt by 570 and the tinui session
by _h7-'J to score an
emphatic victory.
Sitting West, what
would you have led . .
against three notrump?

'•

\\1C~'I.

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service~

23 Cor.c111td

To Paris

·'229.00*

ROtary .

nail'a t.b
48 Hlrtl for
kltly
51 Mr.

31 Sum up

IINYliEPU.CUIEIT WINMWI

ny Barton at 140 and Scottie-Johnson at
Bnx 1 B9
,
·
Middleport Ohr o 4S760
heavyweight.
'Local 843-5264
Winning the 1 12-pound..weight class
fromPIIp5
M¢icare
Supp1ement;
·Life Insurance;
and posting a 5-0 record for River Val- ·
Buria.l and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Placing third was Tommy Saunders at ley was Zack Davis, who improved his
Dental, Retirement,
140, g&lt;;&gt;ing 2-2 on the day. And finishing overall record .to 14-2.
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
fourth were lYier Merola at 112, Nick
Placing second was John Manley at
Mortgage; Major Medical
Craft at 152, and Justin Sands at 215.
215. Finishing third was Riley Rice at • Nursing Hom~
Wahama finished fifth and placed five 135. Finishing fourth were Jessie Levawrestlers in the top fout. Receiving sec- cy at 103, Derrick Smith at 145, and
ond place individual medals for the
Joey Graham at 189.
White Falcons were Bradford Clark at
Gallia Academy will
restle at the - BAULIHGaad
152 and Adam Rickard at 171 , both of
Marietta Invitational and River Valley EXCAVATIMG
whom lost matches in the fina~s.
Placing third was Perry Ellis at I 03, will wrestle at the 'Pillsbury Invitational
ofillullng 'Limetlant
.'
oGriVII• Sand •Topeoll
and finishing in fourth place were John- at Jackson this Saturday.
..
·
of'III.Dirt ol.tulch .

NOT QUITE THERE - Bradford Clark, a 160-poundl!'r from Wahama (top),
to
pin Waterford's Aarpn Schott at Saturday's Rotary Tournament. Clark won by pin.
•
(Dan Polcyn)

-

:ze Chft

\' ul nl•r:tblc: IIQth

Rocky fl llupp llrJr·rrl

Stale

... tj . ; i

llcu l••r. \\'t·~ l

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

?50 East

Hll
9 75 2
A .I 1n

!oillll lh

740-992·5344

.

Advertise in
this space ·f or
s100 peJ
mohth

•

L&amp;L Tire Barn

•
•
•

l:'roo.fllm

· 17 Common .
• lnlt..
Spock'l
11 Swtfter'•JO ·
molhtr
11 - vivant
55 Neptune ot
- 21 Enter dabr
VMIUI

t-:a~l

. A \ 1..1 'I ;' 1 I
.'fl .I 111 ~
• 1 It :.!

'

Free Estimates

(740) 992-3194
992-6.635
.

\\'I'~ I

bot·

.41 Coemo-

15 lltltoMr
11 Valid • 1

07

42
43

44

......

llwll_..,.
• fh aftni a OUtllrl
VInyl_,., l'olniingf

e

ACROSS . 41 Gutta

PHILLIP
ALDER

.t

\'t'0' l'o~itiw tluu~

.t(J

!-(00!.~ llj 1 1111U I\ uf y'o ut bul II \\'&lt;llJ]d bl' \\'\Sl' to

j, ,l \'t' ,1

\ d f,

IN ·'11Y ovnt i•r.l i ~l' for your

a l 11li l lt' ~ tod.1y t'tltiw. lrmu the .

TA U R U S · (Ap nl ~II ,M :• y
20) -- You'd hl• wi~L' to d.1y It)
t:1k ~· w id I .1 ~ r.1 111 of ~a h ·.ll tV
flfHJ'Il'al~ prt'~l'l ttcti to you to~

of ~ltl wr~.
•
· LIBR A ,S,Tt. 23-0t't. 2.3) - If yo11 lw pe ttl [l' .I IIJ .1nyr bi1 1 ~ in ~.· nn v n~.ltlo l l\ w ith

to
·f.Ll' t \O illl' th l n ~ lOr nt~ thin g .
.So l! ll'bm ly m )l, hur it t~n't .1 p t
(0 bt• \ '0 11. .
&lt;;EMl ;'\1 1 (M.ty :!1-:J unt· .zit)
-- Ad dl.ll l!; frt·, h r'IIL' I tn ,JIJ al-

\·our ft i~mh t•n l.\\', ,·pu nt't' tl
;o bi.: m nr e u(;&amp; l i ~t\' l·l~·r th,lll .1
t.ilhr. The ~crn'l \ llt.1t .m: .1pt

· . d.t r ,,,: hnc

l' L' ,Jd y

l ip~

yn u · rl' .. u ppo~c

•

nmtl' uu l t·u uld b~ yo m~.
n o t tlwir~.
. SCO I ~I' I O (Od . 2.!-N\1\ ,

w

.,, ; 11Jhll' l i11~ , llllllt'~tir

22) -- T lwrt·\ pkmy

tp rub k•m rod.t \ ' n ndd r:HI~t· 11
,,, t urn tn to .t ro.n i JJ (.! tin• . Let
~lnpi ng ti n~.., hL1•• 111d tl(11 1.t .d~
lnw .q 1 yt111~' d w w \\'.t kc up
tlt.ll IJOUI HI.

fnl'

yn u

ut do tPd.•y to ~~o;t' J ' your (H\ II
:~ tr1ir~ 111 ordn Ho~ thnt \1 hu n Hi t.: mto dvv~o:lltplllt'llt ~ of (lth. t'r~ w hcrt' \ 'llll .I ll' tltJ I il l\' lll'd .
l&gt;o u 't .1 ~k j;1r colllj'h'· · ••iun~
SAC ;( T I AIUUS ( N1tv . :!J .
I ke . ::!1)- H' \·n 11 m · w hc .dl
thi!H,~~ [() .1 11 l'l'l'~1 k, It 1 ~ .. I (li l lie vt• flltrt . ,md t ud ,LI' 11 dl b\·

C AN( : ll' (hn w ~ 1 -J u l y
22) -- v~• rtf\' ,dJ d l\t l ll\ llr l'~ in
~' ll l 11' t' Oi l l! ti ~'J't' i.l l dLt, llJI I(.!' [0 d .t\' ht• f" n ' \ ' tttt \•t· IH'H' .I ll \ '
o;-,d~· ~ pitc h. T k· 111\!.' thm)-: yu{ t
f. tu 't .11l iml ltt 'ht• t~ ...:u lhh k .
LU , (llilr 2J ·.t\\ IJ..': . .! ~~ I(

'n o !.' .\n'l'tl'lll ,

II'' IIlli

1". 1\ H Ill

,;,J\.t' .1 J.!.ll t 1t l d .i\' , !I I thliiL' tl\\ I I

~t·lfh,· iru~·

I

·

•

�....
P-.ge A 10 •

•

..

Th8 Dally Sentinel

·,

·•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VVednesda~Jan.2,2002

•

~ .

..

Read •Dear Abby' on A2

Knight's boys on a roll
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) --After building a big lead in the first half. Texas Tech
. seemed to play tl.·· ;econd half of its
game against Wyom; : as if to avoid losmg.
But Tech (11-1)
fended off a come•
back and · notched its
eighth straight win,
defeating ihe Cowboys 90-84 on T\lesd1y.
.
, .
"I thought two really good teams
played today," fled Raider coach Bob
Knight said. "Us in the first half, and
Wyoming· in the second half We have a
problem with leads. We're not toughminded enough at this point."
Tech managed ro hang on after nearly
squandering an IS-point halftime lead.
Wyoming's defense toughened and the
fled Raiders' shooting turned cold dur. ing a·t7-4 Cowboys run early in the second h~lf Wyoming (9-4) pulled within
· four inside the final minute.
Tech, however,- made 6- of-8 free
throws in the final 30 seconds to hold off
the Cowboys.
"We thought we had it," said, Donta
llichardsqn, who, scored 20 points to lead
the Cowboys. "We came back from 17,
18 clown in the second half on the road
against a team that was playing tough. We
really thought we had it."

NCAA

•

'

••
•

Andre Emmett scored 27 points and
Kosib Powell added 17 and 'even assists
for Tech. Emmett, though, got no kudos
for his play from Knight.
"I can take y&lt; u through the ftlm :. . 1
show you how he gave up 27 points ""
defense, and we ·can't have that," Knight
said.
Knight was so upset at his team's second ·half thot he did not send any players
to postgame interviews, instead having
them 'watch film in the locker room.
"We didn't get a lot · done that was
good," Knight said. "We had gtiys standing around in the second half Wini1ing it
giving up 50 points in the half is not
good. 11
Wyoming's run-'!nd-gun offense heated up early in the second half, narrowing
the gap .to 13 at 62-49 after just '(&gt; min-

Mdp county's

Whars Inside.

CON SOL
8Y IIRwl J. RIID
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SALEM' CENTER - "Coal · production at the Meigs Mines will cease
in late February."
, i'
A spokesman for CONSOL ·.energy,
Inc., the mining operation's owner,
clarified the time schedule for flosing
the mines on Monday.
"It takes a few weeks to shut down
the operation and. finish the cJamation wo.rk, bur mining will cease next

utes.

"We played v.ery aggressively," .Cowboys coach Steve McCI11in said. "We just·
need to find a way to do that for 40 minutes to win in an environment like chis. "
Will Chavis scored 16 points and Andy
Ellis added 10 for Texas Tech. Marcus
Bailey added 17 and had 11 rebounds for
the Cowboys.
Tech's biggest lead, 21, came in the first
half. The fled Raiders led 52-34 at half- OUnA MY WAY- Wyoming's Joe Ries, left, guards Texas Tech's Kasib Powell during second half Tuesday
in Lubbock, Texas. Texas Tech won 90-84. (AP)
·
time.

Orange Bowt, B1

month," said Sandy Hamm of CONSOL's main office in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Las.t w«.k, the Meigs County Com-·
missioners received a certified lette ~
wliich served · as official notification
that the Meigs No. 2 mine will d?'e
and ·tayoffi will begin during the ~oweek period beginning Feb. 28. \
Mining at Mine No. 31 has already
stopped, and the surface operation,
including the coal processing facility
which served . both mines, will also

cease at rhat time.
CONSOL purchased the Southern
Ohio Coal Company &amp;om American
Electric Power in July, and announced
plans to proceed with AEP's plans to
close the mines by the end of 2001.
· The first layoff of coal miners 1mmediately followed the sale, and miners
received layoff notices throughout the
remainder of 2001 :
The mines now employ approximat ely 500 workers, according to

CONSOL's most recent figures.
. The last men on the job will work to
remove mini.ng equipment ·and perform tasks associated· with "closing up
shop," Hamm sai~.
Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency ' and Tri-County CAA offer
funds through the federal government
for retraining of displaced miners and
their spouses, · through tuition reimbursements and the payment of n.eedsrelated expenses.

0

Nettie F. Carter, 90
James Beier, 52
Flora M. Dixon, 87

A final look

Details,~

back·at news

from 2001
(Editor&lt; note: TI1is is the final D. C. and the loss of thousands
section of a three·part series looking of lives lost filled the pages of
back at the loa!/ news of 2001.) The Daily Sentinel.
BY ClwuNE H&lt;iEFucH
Sept. 13- Resid~nts gath-

Hlp: .... .Low: 101

Details, A2

..

- Noseprint

cards required

...

· Pleasant Valley Hospital would like to welcome new AETNA participants. Members of the PVH medical staff are now
accepting NEW patients. As a NON-PROFIT facility, our mission is to be your healthcare provider of choice for services,
wellness and education..CompassioQate and sensitive to our patients, we are completely committed to serving YOU.
• llneral suraerv

• Ulalles/Otalarvnlllon
lEar, ••• &amp; TllroaU
-John A. Wade, Jr., MD

- Young I. Choi, MD
675-1244

• Cll......
- Ismael 0. Jamora, MD

- James Toothman, DO

• Internal Medicine
- Edward Ayers, MD

675-6015

- Randall Hawkins, MD

675-7700

675-4340
675-4340
Jamor~,

MD ·

. - Dan Trent, DO

992-6696.

- M.C. Shah, MD

•

675-4340

- 'Ijaz Ahmad, MD .
675-7100
882-3134

- Robert HoUey, MD

•

675-7100
882-3134
675-1675

- Nicholas Landry, DO

740-441-0757

- Breton L. Morgan, MD

675-6492

- James Wagner, MD
- Danny Westmordand, DO

OHJO
Pick 3 (dey): G-6-5
Pick 4 (day): 6-4-7-4
&amp;upeJLotto: 8-1 D-16-2D-21-23

675-2551

' llonus Bill: 2

J[lcker: 2-9-2·2·0-~
fllcfl3 (nlpt): 2-9-1
fitck 4 (nipt): 3"6-9-2
l.v.VA.
J)ally 3: 3-8-2
Oally 4: 6-B-o-4
·~ .. e.W: 2J.3&amp;42-44-46 (33}

e Obsla1rlcs,&amp;bniCIIDIJ
675-2229·

·-Mark W. Nolan, Mf?

675-3405

··-~-- Edward Sheridan, ...,_D

675-2350

• Pldllb'lcl

•
• Onhallldlcs
- Kenneth Hannington, MD

- Curtis Pack, DO

773-5195

e IIUI'IIIIJ .

- Michael W. Corbin, MD
. - Francis Fugaro, MD

675~1637

675-4340

• FamiiJ lldlelne·
- G.B. Corn, MD

740-992-4226

675-4340

. -Robert Tayengco, MD

- P. Gareth Veres, DO

675-5188

-675-4340

- Mukesh Kumar, MD
- Ali Salim, MD

675-1759

675-5188

- Ismacl 0
- Clyde Rorrer, DO

675-1666

·e H111at1110 &amp; OnctiDIJ
- Vinay Vermani, MD

e ElllriiiCVIIIIICIDI
- Craig Ausmus, MD

POMEROY .- Ohio Sette
fair Li-tock Office has
;mnounced that any 4-H or
FFA member planning to
exhibit a marl&lt;et steer or market heifer at the 2002 Ohio
Siate Fair submit a legible
nosep,rint card to Virgil Strickler of~
· ....,:;a~..
Qhm~~&gt;o;.,
r. &lt;n-.
- ~\~. .~1---;j
stock
?1
th A..,.,
Colwnbus, Ohio 43211, postrnatked no later than jan. 15.
Youth participaiu:s must be
enroDed in a 4-H or FFA market heifer project through their
county or school, and must
also submit an entry to The
Ohio State fair prior to June
20.
Questions regarding eligibility req'*"lnents should be
directed to Strickler at 614644-4047. InfOrmation is available . fi:o~ Chip Haggerty,
County Extension Agent for
4H Youth Development at

- Edward Ayers, MD

tndex

675-6015

1 Section - Ill l'llpl

- John Wiltz, MD

675-4107

675-5971

·• Padlan·
675-3610
773-5333

- Robert McCleary, Jr., J:?O

675-5275

- Arnold Penix, MD

.. '

675-5971

- Gerald Shute, MD

675-5971

't

- Earl Gault, MD

675-1440

• Uralao .

.

- Mel Simon, MD
- Shrikant Vaidya, MD

740-446-0021
675-6060 ·

(

Calendar
Classifieds ·
'comics ·
pearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A2
· A6-8
A9

A2

A4
A3
A3
AS,7,8,10
• A3

C :1001 Ol&gt;lo valley Publilhlna Co.

GOOD RESOWTION - 5avln&amp; more toward "fiscal fitness· Is a good New Year's resolution,
according to the Phio Depart~nt of Commerce. Socking a little elttra money a~ay each week
,_I$,() .&amp;OQQ ltN'~ ,~:.JAdd SO)Itli of Pom!roy, right, anc.J Peopl~sJ~enk ~l!er-,Edie. Harman. (Ch*l-

1
.

Hoeftk:llt· . .

•

-.H

l

·

,

•
investment decisions
has
become a higher priority for
1
many in light of the wavering
economy, and the new year. is
the. perfect time to resolve to
become more fiscally sound,
according to . the Ohio
·
Department of Commerce's
Bv BRIAN J. REID l
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Division of Securities.
POMEROY ·
While
'just as .many of us resolve
physical fitness objectives to exercise more and eat less,
headline the New Year's reso- this is a good time to develop
lutions of many, others make-..a a plan to save' and invest wisesilent resolution to become ly in thl new year," said Deb1 bie DyeJoyce of the Division
"fiscally fit."
Making sound savings an.;! of Securities. "Like . regular

Investment
decisions are,
high priority

physical exereise, regular savings and investing is a h~bit
that can be developed through
commitment and discipline."
Dye Joyce . ·recommends
beginning a "fiscal fitness"
program by developing a
financial plan.
"Research shows that .people who set savings goals, .on
average!, save twice as much
money as those without a
plan," Dye Jpyce said. .
She recommended the following guidelines for doing
· • ,........ FIICIIL Al

Bush.expected.to sign education bill
.

COLUMBUS (AP)
President Bush is expected
travel to southwest Ohio next
· week to sign the $26.5 billion
education bill that mandates
reading . and math tests for
grade-schoolers begi.n ning in
three years, The · Associated
Press has learned.
.
An Ohio source familiar
with the trip said th~ signing
was expected to take place
Tuesday in U.S. Rep. John
Boehner's southwest Ohio
district, which stretches from
Mercer County to Cincinnati's northwest suburbs. .
The source spoke on condi- .
tion of a~onymity and

Boehner's
office did
not return a
call seeking·
comment.
Bush also is
expe&lt;;ted · to
visit Massachusetts and
New
Hampshire
the
same
d:iy, the source said. .
Meanwhile, in a conflicting
report, a Republica~ lawmaker m New Hampsh~re has told
a newspaper the pr~s1dent will
sign _the education bill there.
State Rep. Norman MaJOr

told The Union Leader of
Manchester that Busli will
sign the bill Tuesday during a
visit .co the University of New
Hampshire.
Bush has visited Ohio twice
sin'e becoming president.
. ln February, he· promoted
his education programs · in
Columbus. On Sept. 5, Bush
and Mexican President Vincente Fox visited Toledo to
discuss trade and amnesty for
illegal immigrants.
Ohio was crucial to Bush's
election. The state's 21 electoral votes gave Bush hfs
third-highest total, behind
Texas and Florida.

I

the year
m revrew

Is GIVIng up Smoklilg
Your.New Yea~• Resolution?

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
I

'

FiStal ;'fitness' is the key

..

•

·•

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
'ered in (ium of the Meigs
POMEROY Meigs County Courthouse for a
Countians joined the country prayer service for those who
in grief over the attack on suffered as a result of the Sept
Ainerica. ground was broken 11 terrorist attacks on New
fur a new section of US. ·33 york City:
.from Darwin to Athens, the ' Southern Ohio Coal Co.
economy took a hit when 255 gave layoff notices to 255
employees . at
· employees of its
Southern Ohio
Meigs ~o. 31
Coal Co. got
Mine, and the
layoff notices,
Meigs County
and
indoor
Health Pepansmoking was
.. ;, '
tr~ent enacted a
banned i" all
· smoking ban tO
public places in
•
•
take effect in
the last . four
November.
months of2001.
Sept. 14 SEPTEMBER
Collections of funds and relief
Sept. 2 - After months of items to be sent to the victims
sporatic construction and of·the terrorist attacks in Nev.:
questions concerning its York got underway in Meigs
progress, Pomeroy's new water County.
~e project was finally comSept 17 - · Alan Wallace, a
pleted. ·
survivor· of the attack on the
Sept 4 - Kenny Wiggins Pentagon where he was workretired as director of the Meigs iilg on special assignment, was
County .Recycling and Litter honored at the Marauder-Red
Control program after 14 Devils (l3nle at Bob Roberts
years.
Field. ·
Thousands attended the
Sept. 5 - The Health
Department reported that. a Town and Country EXPO
survey taken at the M~•gs . held at the flock Springs Fair, County Fair showed that 81 grounds to see the work of area
percent of Metgs Counnans crafiers and artisans, and enjoy
suppon the clean mdoor atr. the displays, demonstrations, ·
regulanon which would ban games and entertainment.
Sept 19 Ground was
smoking m aU public places. .
Sept. 7 - About 200 people broken for a new section of
gathered for a public hearing at U.S. 33 from Darwin to
Me_i~ l:li~ School to pres~qt Athens. Gov. Bob Taft joined
their poSIOons on the Meigs other officials for the ceremoCounty ·Health_ Department's ny which marked a watershed
proposed smoking ban m aU moment in the history ·of a
.
, project involved in 40 years_of
public places.
Sept. 7 - Kokosmg Con- urg;ng and prodding.
structlon Co. of Columbus
Sept. 25- Markers recalling
with-a bid ofS13.9 million was Morgan's raiders' trek throUgh
the low btdder on the thml -Meigs County were dedicated.
and final stage of . the " Sept 26 - Meig; County's
Ravenswood Conne~tor htgh- , Dwight Icenhower took first
way proJect. .
place .at the "Search for Elvis"
· Sept. 10 - About 225 fin:- contest~ld at the Sternwheel
fighters. fi:om a SIX county area Regatta in Charleston, W Va.,
were . m Pomeroy . for the qualifying him for the next
Hocking Valley llegtonal Frre level of competition to be held
School and Lesley Srrutl:t was in Marysville,Tenn.
crowned 2001 Racme Fall
Sept. 28 - · .Treasurer
Festival queen in ceremonies Howard Frank met with the
·
Meigs County Commissioners
held at Star Mill Park.
Sept. 12 - D~tails of the to ·lay out a bleak picture of the
attaCk on the Twin Towers in county's financial ·condition.
New York City and the PentePIHII 1ft R•vl-. AJ
gon Building in Washington,

The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition is
·here to help you accomplish you~ goal~
..

.

(740") 446·5940 '
~-

'

··. Discoueli toe·H-Q/eer Difference

www.holzer.org .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="461">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9906">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22653">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22652">
              <text>January 2, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="419">
      <name>hutton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="307">
      <name>leach</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
