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                  <text>INSIDE

SPORIS

TEMPO

Empire State
Building reopens
for business, A3

Highlights of
Friday's action
begin on 81

Hank Williams
Sr. receives
tribute album, C7

•

tmts
Missing ·
juvenile·
found

Stemwheel Riverfest 2001

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Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-2002
Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

ing that ~girne."
"The United States respects
Bush's condemnation of the
the people of Afghanismn and Taliban followed two weeks of
we are their lafb&gt;eSt provider of
unsuccessful efforts to con- ·
human itarian support," h e
said. "But we condenm the virice the Muslim rulers to
Taliban,and welcome the sup- hand over bin Laden. A Pak--·porr· ofbtl'le'r nations in isolate ~Pie.ii.Tellban, AS
ronst~.

iee

.

Newdistrid
STERNWHEELER TOUR - Students of Gallla-Meigs Headstart had an opportunity to board an
actual sternwheeler on Thursday during the 2001 "Rally by the River' In Pomeroy. Following the
tour, students presented the sternwheeler captains with a thank-you card. (Tony M. leach photos)'

RVHS royalty

GAHS royalty

lines separate
Meigs, Gallia
Board expected
to approve
districts this week
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

Jenny Blake was crowned 2001
River 'vl:llley High School homecomIng queen Friday during ceremonies at halftime of the River Va~
ley-Athens game. The court is pictured on A5. (Bryan Long photo)

Brlanna Johrwon, right, the daughter of Brent and Becky
Johnson, wasl crowned 2001 Gallia Academy homecoming
queen during pre-game ceremonies Friday. The court is pictured on AS. (,Qoug Shipley photo)

POMEROY Meigs
and Galli a co unties will no
longer share a state repnis entative or senator under new
distri ct lines expected to be
approved this week.
· Re-districting
occurs
every 10 years after the
completion of the federal

census.The State Apportionment Board will consider .
the new boundaries submitted by Republican leaders
on Monday. The board is
controll ed 4-1 by Republicans.
Under the GOP's proposal, M eigs County will join
·Athens, Morgan and a par· tion of Washington County
. - Lrttle Hockmg, Beverly
and Belpr~ -. if! a new 92nd
House D1stnct, and Athens, ·
Morgan,Washmgton, Noble,
Monroe, Muskmgum and
Ple.se see District. AS

Pain sufferers find it harder to get OxyContin

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10/7/01.

WASHINGTON (AP) President 13ush condemned
Mghanistan's Tali ban rule~&gt; for
harboring Osama bin Laden
and his followers on Saturday
and the United States pressed
its military and diplomatic
campaign against terror.
Peace groups marched in
the capital, protesting that
innocent lives could be lost in
the coming retaliation against
prime suspect bin Laden,
tn
believed
hiding
Afghanistan.
In his weekly radio address,
Bush said the Taliban, not the
Afghan people, would be held
responsible for harboring ter-

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY
A
Racine juvenile, who has
been missing for more
than three years, has been
located by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department and other law
enforcement agencies.
Sheriff
Ralph E.
Trussell
and
Meigs
Cm1nty
Prosecutor Pat
Story
said
Tru~l
Samantha Jean
Wilcoxen,
who
was
rel?orted missing Jan. 16,
1998, was located and
apprehended by deputies
Thursday following information that Wilcoxen may
have returned to the Meigs
County area from Wilmington, N.C.
Story said thai if it could
be proved Wilcoxen was
assisted by others to
remove her from Meigs
Co\}nty and the custody of
her parents, then·-crlhiinal
charges would be filed
against those responsible .
Trussell said his office ·
and the Bureau of Criminal Investigation had made
several out-of-state . trips
within the past two years
to follow up on leads. in
this case. Wilcoxen's name
was entered into the
National Crime Information Computer and the
National Center of ·Missing and Exploited Children.
"The successful outcome of this case was
made possible through a
joint investigation condu cted by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department, Meigs County Prosecutor's Office, and special
agents of the 0 hio Attorney General's Office and
Bureau of Criminal lnvestigation,"Trussell said.
Wilcoxen is being questione.d by deputies and
BCI agents as to her
whereabouts for the . past
three years.

entin.e

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Classjfjeds
Comics

02-7
insert

Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Cl

COLUMBUS (AP) - Sally Royster
cried when her orthopedic surgeon said he
would no longer prescribe OxyContin for
the chronic back p~in that leaves her
unable to walk. She was told prescriptions
for the drug were under too ·much sc ruti -

M

AS
Bl-6
0 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

they w.:ren 't taking new patients or didn't
take pain patienis.
"If they hear you have been on OxyContin they treat you like an a&lt;ldict," said
Lambert of Jonesville, \1.1.
Across the cbu ntry, chroni c pain sufferers
ny.
like l'toyster, 50, and Lambert, 41, are findSheila Lambert sent the medical history ing it increasingly difficult to obtain the
of her degenerative spinal disease t0 25 . powerful prescription painkiller, dubbed
doctor.; and phoned 100 others but all said "Hillbilly Heroin" 'because of it~ burgeon-

ing abuse as a narcotic in Appalachia.
They say that abuse - and th e response
to it by law makers and law enforcers has made doctors in creasingly ~nwilling to
provide the drug, even to the cancer
patients and chronic pain sufferers who
need it.
Royster searched seven months before
she found a specialist in late September

Pleue see OxyCotln, AS

95323

·~~~9

Holzer Medico! Center ond lhe HMC Community Heollh and Wellness Deportment presents

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Thomas

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Mon.-Fri. 7-5• Saturday 7-3

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. 304-675-5200

11

Minimally Invasive Approaches
to Breast Cancer"
Friday, October 5, 2001 • 9:00am - 1:00pm .

:loI center

· HMC Conference Rooms A·B·C

Speakeraa Allee Grlcoakl, MD
and Michael Covelli, MD

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Dif.ference
www .holzer.org

FREE and open Ia nurses in lhe community. Contact hours available. Lunch provided.
For more informotion or to
call (740) 446-5313.

•
I

•'•

'

�Page A2

Page Al

. Sunday, September JO, :ZOOl

Sunday, Se(tember JO, :Z001

Empire State Building reopens deck to sightseers

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
3-carwreck

Free shots
Thur5day

injures 2
GALLIPOLIS -Two people were transported Friday to
Holzer Medical Center following a wreck on Ohio 7
South near Orchard Hill
Road .
The Gallia-Meig; Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol
reportS Ruth E. Butler of
11005 Ohio 7, Gallipolis, was
cited for f:1ilure to provide
assured cleared distance in a
three-ve hicle accident at
II :55 a.m. Friday.
13utler's 1999 Chrysler and
Stuart ]. Osborne's 1993
Chevrolet were traveling
north o n Ohio 7 when
Osborne slowed for traffic,
the report said. Butler's vehicle f.1 iled to slow and struck
Osborne's ve hicle.
The force of the impact
caused Osborne's vehicle to
cross left of center, striking
Carolyn F. Green's 1991
Dodge.
Green and passenger Lula
G. Shafer were transported by
Gallia County EMS to Holz'er Medica l Center for treatment of injuries, the report
said.
,.
Another passenger, Sarah L.
Kyl e, was uninjured, th e
report said, as were Butler and
Osborne.

Rio Grande Community Holzer Medical Center and
College lloard o[Trmteti for two refusals.
·a term ending Oct. 10, 2005,
• Holzer Senior Care to
replacing Howaro. Smith of HMC.
Oak Hill, who resigned.
• Gallia Street to HMC.
Karr is co-owner ofWesam
• Gallia Metro Estates Construction. He received his refusal.
B.A. frym Ohio University.
• Gallia Street - refusal.
Total runs for the month:
265. Total runs for the year:
2,775.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Health Department will provide free inununizations Thursday at its
offices, 499 Jackson Pike, from
4 to 6 p.m.
Additional services such as
blood pressure checks and
pregnancy tests will be offered
GALLIPOLIS - David P.
during the evening hours at
Hammons,
RN, of the Emerthe health department. C hildren in need of immuniza- gency Department at Holzer
tions must be accompanied by M edical Center, was named ·
David Tener, executive
a parent or legal guardian and September 2001 Employee of director ofWooclland ·Centers
bring a current immunization the Month, said LaMar Wyse, Inc., announ·ces the WCI GalPresident and chief executive lia Clinic now has additional
record with them . .
officer.
staff available to schedule
Hammons is a graduate of evening appointments. .
,....,...,....,---....,., North GalBeginning Monday, clinic
lia
High hours will be expanded to 8
School and a.m. to 9 p.m. on Mondays
GALLIPOLIS Marine
GALLIPOLIS -The Gal attended
and
Thursday.
Tuesday, Corps Pvt. Chad W Frazier
lia County Health DepartCapital
Wednesday and Friday hours recently completed basic
ment will provide . extended
University
remain 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
training at Marine Corps
hours at its 499 Jackson Pike
and
the
To schedule an • appoint- Recruit Depot, Parris Island,
office for those wishing to
University
ment, caU 446-5554.
S.C.
obtain a free · food hancller's
of
Rio
In additi on, WCI Meigs
Frazier successfully comcar for Gallia Co unty's
Grande,
C linic will expand its Tuesday pleted 12 weeks of training
upcoming events.
where he
and Thursday hours to 8 a.m. designed to c hallenge new
TB skin tests will be given received an associate degree
to 7 p.m . Normal Meigs Marine recruits both physiTuesday from 4 to 6 p.m. The in Nursing. Aft'e r graduation ,
·hours are Monday, Wednesday caUy and mentally.
·
health department also will he worked at Oak Hill Comand Friday from 8 a.m . to 5
Frazier is a 2000 graduate of
have extended hours on munity Medical Center as an
p.m.
Gallia
Academy and the son
Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m. tQ Emergency
Department
To schedule an appoint- of Kim K. andDavid J. Frazier
nurse for fo ur years before
read the skin tests.
ment, call 1-800-252-5554.
of GaUipolis.
coming to work at Holzer
Medical Center's Emergency
Department in August 1994.
He obtained his certification
in Emergency Nursing in
Gallipolis Harl ey Owners 1996.
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
LCpl. Nicholas A. Williams
H ammons' wife Wendy Medical Center and the
GA LLIP OLIS
The Group plans a " Day in the
entered the
Gold wing Road Riders Asso- Country" Oct. 13 from noon works in the accounting HMC Community Health
United
ciation Chapter C-2 of Gal- · to 5 p.m. at Aunt Clara's Col- department at Ohio Valley and Wellness Department
States
lipolis is having an auction at lection of Fine Amish Things, Bank, and daught~r Kindra, announce an upcommg symMarine
11 a.m . Oct. 6 at the Kanauga · Ohio 141 four miles west of I 0, attends Washington Ele- posium for nurses in the comCorps
in
Gallipolis.
mt·ntaty.
Amvets Building.
munity.
June
2000
Admission is a non-perishAs Employee of the
Items have been do nated by
· "Minimally
Invasive
after gradu_members and Gallipoli~ mer- able food item or a new, Month, Hammons received a Approaches to Breast Cancer"
aiing from
chants. Money is being used unwrapped toy per person. $100 U.S. Savings Bond, a is scheduled for Friday from 9
Gallia
to buy toys fo r children and Featured attractions include reserved parking placed desig- a.m. until 1 p.m. in .ConferAcademy
clothes for seniors. Food will live bluegrass and gospel nated in his name, a compli- ence Rooms A, B and C of
High
music by Joey Freeman Band, mentary meal in the Hospital the Hosp ital's Education and
be sold.
\
·SchooL
For infohnation, call 367- a costume co ntest for chil- Cafeteria, his · pkture dis- Conference Center.
Since completion of Milidren, face painting, games, played on the Employee of
7 105 .
Featured speakers and dis- tary Occupational School at
motorcycle rides, pictures and the Month wall - near the cussions will include: ; . Alice
Employee Enirance, and his Gricoski, MD, who will dis- Ft. Bliss, Texas, in Low Altia clown.
Refreshments will be avail- name engraved on the 2001 cuss incidence and pathology tude Air Defense, Williams has
Employee of the Month of Ductal Carcinoma In Siru;
able.
For information, contact plaque, also displayed on the prognostic factors of DCIS;
0.0 Mcintyre Park Dis- Linda Skidmore, 379- 2686; Employee .of the Month WalL treatment options; and sterotrict plans a nature program at Tammy Patterso n, 446-87 15;
ThanlcVou
tactic mammotome breast
I p.m. today at Raccoon Julie Webb, 446-6683.
biopsy; and Michael Covelli,
Creek County Park.
MD, who will discuss · lymGALLIPOLIS Gallia phatic mapping and indicaA Raccoon C reek Scav- .
County Emergency Medical tions in melanoma and breast
enger Hunt .,vill be featured.
For Bu11inq 111111
Services responded to the folMeet at th e east playground
cancer; and value and short2001
Ho~;~
near Wild Turkey Shelter. For
COLUMBUS Gover- lowing calls Friday:
comings of pre-operative
at
the
• Motor-ve hicle collision at
in fo rmation , call 446-4612, nor Taft ·announces that
lymphoscintigraphy.
Gallia Count., Jr. Fair
Ohio
7 and Orchard Hill '
ext. 256.
Thomas W Karr of Pomeroy
Planning committee memka.,la Siders
has been appointed to the Road, with two taken to bers of the symposium

Hammons top
employee

New center
hours

Extended
hours set

Chad W. Frazier

·oay in the

Friday
symposium set

Country

Audion readied

LCpl. Nicholas
A. Williams

Nature program
today

Ciallia EMS runs

Sgt. Colin
J. Boyd

lS

Marlett

a

COUSUl

of
Pfc.
Travis M .
R eed, currently stationed at
Camp Lejeune, l\J.C.

PJc. Travis
M. Reed
Pfc. Travis M. Reed, combat
engineer,
2nd Marine
Division
8th FSSG,
currently
sta tioned at
Camp Lejeune, awaiting deployment.

DENVER (AP) - Airline first states to have guardsmen
passengers
encoun tered in ai rports Friday. Senior
National Guard soldiers at Airman Sam Ruiz, one of
airports across the country as two soldiers patrolling the
states followed a presidential Bismarck airpo rt , said the
request to call up troops to reaction was mixed from
fend off potential terrorism passengers.
threats.
"I can sense that people
National Guardsmen pack- feel a little safer," he said.
ing · M - 16s and pistols and "I've heard, 'Better safe than
wearing camouflage fatigues sorry.' I've heard 'What's this
were visible at several air- world coming to? ' Some
forts · Friday. Many states · agree, some don 't."
were in the process of acti ~
President · Bush recomvating soldiers and were mended that states begin
expected to have them in
calling up Guard units until
airports in coming days.
longer- term security meaDenver International Airsures could be put in place.
port
passenger
Tom
In Denver, travelers were
Dabrowsky wasn 't bothered
told to arrive at least four
the presence of soldiers with
hours 'early. Lines at security
guns in terminals. · '
and
flight
"I was born in E;urope, so I checkpoints
have seen what. it is like else- check-ins were long early in
where," said Dabrowsky. "At the day, but shortened conleast there is a visible some- siderably by mid-afternoon.
A guardsman watched over
thing, something is being
a screening entry point as
done."
At the Albuquerque, N. M., private security employees
airport, passenger Diane checked baggage and ran
Jones, who was heading handheld metal detectors
home to Maryland, said the over passengers or patted
·armed patrols would make them down. Outside, guardsSTANDING GUARD - Colorado National Guerd military pollee
. people more nervous about men peered into cars in airofficer Richard Flanagan of Ft. Collins, Colo. , 11nd CSPD officer
port parking lots and passen- Hugh Velasquez patrol the Colorado Springs airport. Members
flying.
"I think it creates an aura ger drop- off points. The of the Colorado National Guard first and second battalllons of
.of heightened fear," she said. guardsmen can also detain the 1Ei9th Field Artillery are charged with security at the airNorth Dakota was among ·passengers If necessary.
port, In the wake of the recent terrorist attacks.(AP)

John
MellenCamp
SEYMOUR, . Ind. (AP) John Mellencamp will celebrate
his 50th birthday on Oct. 7, and
fans plan to mark the occasion at
a three-day tribute in the singer's
southern Indiana homeland.
An outdoor concert at the
Southern Indiana Center for the
Arts in Seymour will be the climax of the celebration beginning Oct. 5 in Bloomington.

Thank You

Walsh Blaatrla
l'ar larlag Mr

IDOl Market Hog
at the Dalila aaaatr
Jr; l'alr
LaayLaadtr

unit donation
BATTLE DAYS
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

BY MARTHA IRVINE
I&gt;J' NATIONAL WRITER

October 5th

A few days atier planes strike
the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, a 3-year-old girl
on long Island begins sleepwalking and muttering.
Her parents listen to her
muddled words: "My don't
like the bad people. My will
hit the bad people with a hammer," she says.
· Anger and arxiety brought
on by the Sept. 11 terror
11ttacks have put revenge on
the minds of many young people, everi those who've been
told litde about the devastation
but still sense something's very
wrong.
For those who know more,
the revenge fantasies can get
quite graphic. N icholas Sands,
a 6-yea~-old from Los Angeles,
is still so angry that he wants to
track down terrorists and "cut
off their arms and leg; so they
die.
"That would be really cool,"
says Nicholas, whose father's
cousin was among those killed
when American Airlines Flight
11 hit the World Trade Center.
A I 0-ye!Jr-old boy from
Swartz Creek, Mich., says he
wants to "shoot Osama bin
Laden in the head with a 20gauge shotgun and then drop
·him from a plane into the
Pacific Ocean so he does a
belly flop."

IO :Oct . \1\rl -4:30 PM Man!!lion llouse Mu ~u m
IO :UU .\M -b:OO PM Cratb•• Mn in Street
Encumpmcnl &amp; Craft Demonstrations, Battle Monum~nt Purk

~

10:00 AM S:OO PM Alph.o -Photo E"hibit, Mason County Library, 6th nml Viand Strct•ls
11:00 PM -~;00 PM Art Show. Fon Rwtdolph Terrace, Mai n Street
7:JO PM l.ant~o:m Tour, Battle Monum~o."nt Park

Saturday, October 6th 4

&amp;unbap -Gtime• &amp;mtinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main cu:1cern !n all stories is to be
accunue. lr you know or an error In a
story, call lhe newsroom at (740) 4462342 or Pomeroy: (740) 9112·2155. We wUI
check your Information and make a
corredion lr warranted,

Nawa Deportment•

Galli poll'

(USPS 2JJ.:U0)
Commuall)' NtlUJUipn Holdl•p, lllf.
Publi shed C\'ery Sund1y, 112.5 Third Ave..
C111lipoli1, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publilhil&amp;
Company. Second clus pottage paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio.

Enlered u Jtcond cla u mai lin&amp; maurr 11
Pomeroy, Ohio Poll olfiCC.
Member: The Auociattd Pn:u, and the Ohio
New1paper A1101.iadoo.
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Ratts Oul!ldt Gallill County
IJ Wech ....................................................$29.2.S
26 Wecks......... ~ ............................................S56.61l
.S2 Weela..................................................... SI09.72
H

•

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

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

(;ALLIPOLIS Buckeye
Rural Electric Co-op , represented by Debra Sword,
director of community/economic development, and
Farmers Bank ·rep Randy
Hays , recently gave Gallla
County Sheriff David L.
Martin a donation for the
addition of a K·9 unit to the
sheriff's office. Other dona·
l ions have been given by
Robert Foster, Jim's Farm
Equipment,
SFS
Truck
Sales, Vanco Floor . Cover·
ing, Haffelt's Mill Outlet,
Ohio Valley Bank and
Evans-Moore
Insurance
Agency. The K,9 unit will
have a dual purpose. It Yfill
be used for drug detection
and tracking. Deputy Aarori
Metzler will be the canine
handler.

•

9:00AM ·Noo~ Chili lind Sol .. Cook-oiT ,
Noon-J•d&amp;!n4i..Cier Barlow .1ooet Brid~e : "
I0:00 A,M _.:30 PM MaOJiOil ~ MUJ&lt;um
I0:00 AM Herit.,. Queen,,GJltiil Port
~· ;1 ·'
.
I0:00AM , .S:OO PM Alpha Photo Exhibit, Mason County Llbmry, lilb and VllUid Sums
IO:OO.i;'Jo PM Art Show, fort IIA!ndolph lenuce, Main Suoet - ..
) · t~. .pment &amp; Craft Demonstrations, Unuic Monument Park ,. - .
··
·· 10:30 ;.J;t'n.e TrOblemokers, Moln Street
·
II :00 AM Ox Roast :!.nd Benn Dinner. Senior Citi?.CO!i Parking L6t
II :00 AM ·4:00 PM Crans and ac!ivitie.'l for .:~11 ngcs. Main Street (Main Street Merthaots)
II :00 AM l'nrmle, bt:gins at 12th' Street
.:;·
·
12:JO PM M~:~~icim1 Philluckeydoo, SeniorCili1.ens l.ot'
·
I:OIJ P\ol KUnn wha Vnllcy Pipes, Battle Monwnenr PMk
I:JO P\1 Mugiciw1 t•hil l.uckcydoo, Battle Monument Park
:!:00 1'\-1 Dukimcr l'laycrs, Uanle Monumem Park
2.:t1U I'M -1:1.10 PM Aulhi.Jr in the Jlark, Allan W. P.clu:n
.l:DU PM Andrew lewis Volunteers, Batt!.: MunutDent Park
b:OO PM • 8!00 PM Colonial Governor's Reccpdoa. Am,~~:;4c~:
lc~ion

·'

H1ll (tickets required)

S:OO PM -II :00 PM Coloniolliall, Amerioan Lesioa Hlll'ilfOiol:li'

Sunday, October 7tb
I0;110 AM Colonial Church Sendee.
Banle Monument Park
I:00 PM -4:00PM An Show,
Tc:rracc, Main Strut

. I

WASHINGTON (AP) The terrorist attacks on
America have transformed
relations with Russia, thrusting rhe Cold War rivals into
into an alliance agai nst terronsm.
The
new
paradigm
became evident on Sept. 11 ,
when
President
Bush
ordered th e U.S. military to
high alert shortly after th e
attacks and Moscow did not
follow suit.
President
Russian
Vladimir Putin telephoned
the White House, as Bush
hastily flew away from Washington aboard Air Force
·one. National Security
Adviser Condoleezza R.ice
took the call in a bunker
beneath the presidenti al
mansion.
" I want you to know that
we are not putting our
. troops on alert," Putin told
her. "Not only are we not
going on alert, we are standing down."
Rice p.med word to llush,
who later rema rked that
Putin must have taken to
heart his oft-repeated statement that the United States
and Ru ssia are no longer
enem1es.
Putin ca lled Bu sh the next
day to express his co ndolences for the thousands of
lives lost. H e also pledged
Russia's help in d efe~ ting
.

13ush linked the rebds to
te rrorists for the first time,
giving tacit approval, perhaps, for Putin to crack
down .
Quite a turnabo.ut for two
men who warily eyed each
other in the early months of
13ush 's term.
"There's a convenient
meeting of interests here,''
said Antony Blinken, for
seven years a senior member
f
President
Clinton's
national security team. He
said Putin may be able to ·
slow, if not stop, Bush's missile defense system.
"This conflict against terrorism has the potential to
forge new alliances of convenience around the globe,"
Blinken ;aid. "Russia may be
th e best example, bur it's ·not
the only one."
Indeed, the terrorist strike
has turned the global community on its ear.

terrorr~m .

Suddenly, nobody is talking about the dispute over
Bush's missil e shi eld dream s.
U.S. forces are preparing to
strike from former Soviet
territory. And a longtime
so urce of tension , the rebel
uprising · in Chechnya, has
become a pivot point in the
·reconfigured U.S. - Russian
partnership.
The United States has
gained unprecedented access
to three key former Soviet
states near Afghanistan , Russia's help to arm resistance to
the terrorist-harboring Taliban regime, and valuable
intelligence
about
the
region . Russia fought an
unsuccessful
war
m
Afghanistan .m the 1980,
when Putin was a Soviet
spymaster.
In return, Putin won an .
unexpected opportunity · to
earn respect in the West and
a freer hand in Chechnya.

Attacks causing children to conjure 'revenge fantasies'

2001 SCHEDULE

Friday,

ing, more than 500 people had
lin~d up by)_D.a.m. Saturday}~ _
enjoy the view. Most appeared
to be tourists, many from tours
that were planned before the
twin towers of the Trade Ceoter cnunbled.
"We were going to go to the
observation deck of the Trade
Ceilter, but now this is the
tallest building in the city," said
Albert
Fabrizio. 35, of
Philadelphia.
On Friday. officials said the
price tag of the attacks on the
trade center will be nearly $40
billion - an early estimate of
what it will cost to remove
debris, pay overtime and .
rebuild subways and skyscrapers.
Cleaning up the estimated
1.2 million tons of rubble will
cost $7 billion alone and take
up to a year, officials said.
. OPEN FOR BUSINESS - The twin towers of the World Trade
"It's probably too early any- · Center burn behind the Empire State Buildling in New York.
way, and no o ne can really say Almost three weeks after the attack on the World Trade· Cen·
what the final costs will come ter, the observation deck of the Empire State Building, the
to," said Kenneth Golding, a city's tallest skyscraper for the first time In 30 years, reopens.
consultant who had come to The 102-story building has the dubious distinction of being the
see the site Friday night. "'Also, only other skyscraper in Manhattan to have been hit by a
it seems demeaning to try and plane. On July 28, 1945, a B-25 bomber flying in fog crashed
put a dollar value on what hap- into the 79th floor, killing 14 people but causing only minor
pened."
damage to the building's structure. (AP)

National Guard soldiers at airports aaoss the nation

PEOPLE

Kenn11 Barcus
Truekinq

Karr appointed

K·9

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Empire,
State • lluilding._
reopened its observation deck
for regular business Saturday,
attracting hundreds of tourists
- some of whom had once
planned ro view the Manhattan skylin~ from the World
Trade Center.
As visitors r~turned to the
86th floor attraction, Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani announced
plans to do the opening monoIogue on the season debut of
"Saturday Night Live."
Giuliani ~ to appear with
Fire Commissioner Thomas
Von Essen, Police CotnrJiissioner llernard Kerik, and a
group of city firefighters, police
officers and Port Authority
police officers.
" It will be reverential," said
Sunny Mindel, a mayoral
spokeswoman.
About 5,960 people are
missing in the rubble of the
trade center, which was
destroyed by terrorist hijackers
Sept. 11. As of Friday, 306 bodies had been recovered. Funerals were held Saturday for at
least 16 victims of the attack.
At the Empire State Build-

included Bonnie McFarland, been stationed at Camp
RN, BSN, Dirwor, HMC PPndletn'l, Calif _
Community H ealth and WellHe is the 10n of Charlie and
ness; Alice Gricoski', MD, Staff Chris (Bahr) Williams and the
Physician, Holzer Clinic and grandson of Aurelia Williams
Holzer Medical Center; Mar- of Cora Community, Galliposha Rodgers, RN, BSN, Edu- lis.
cation Coordinator, Holzer
Medical Center; and Lennie
Davis, RN. MSN, Director,
HMC · Education Department.
Sgt. Colin J, Boyd, Infa ntry,
The se111inar is free and
lunch will be provided.Con- r---;:o..-----, stationed in
Okinawa,
tact hours will be awarded to
and · curthose participants who attend
rently
the entire event.
deployed
For information or to regison the USS
ter, call the Holzer Medical
Kitty
Center Education DepartHawk . H e
ment at 446-5313.
.
.

U.S-Russia forge
new alliance out
of terrorist strikes

•

I .

Hearing such talk can be
disconcerting to parents, and
even to the children themselves. But experts say revenge
fantasies are generally a normal
response.
"Let's face it. H alf of the
adult population is walking ;
around spouting off this kind
of thing in diners and living
rooms across the country;• says
James Feldman, national director of public education for
KidsPeace, a nonprofit organization that deals with children
in emotional crisis.
He and others say young'
people may be even more likely than adults to come up with
revenge fantasies because they
feel particularly powerless, not
to mention scared and insecure. The contents of those
fantaSies tend to come from
the children's surroundings, or
sometimes TV and movies.
Some young people are just
venting. That's what ' 15-year-

· select
Group of ~·
Fall
Fashions

old Wesley Tolson says he was
doing when he sent his mother an e-mail suggesting the
U.S. military "nuke" all Midclle
East countries that don't support the United States and
then seize their oil assets.
"But I was just joking
around," says Tolson, who lives
in Houston.
In reality, he says, any plan
for retaliating "is a tricky situation, and a lot of kids see
that."
Robert Billingham, a professor of human development
and family studies at Indiana
University, says spouting off,
especiaUy for lioys, is a primal
response. He compares it to
the "banging on the chest and
hooting and hollering" that
apes do when they feel threatened.
"The danger is that if you do
it in a peer group, it's kind of
like throwing gasoline on a
fire," Billingham says.

2,5.· OJ

to

Qffl
· ··

•

The Layfayette Mall .•
"'300. Second
'
Ohio

:

He says fear of that "mo.b
mentality" prompted officials
on his Bloomington, Ind.,
campus to take swift action
after hearing that Midclle Eastern students were being verbally harassed atier the attacks.
'We went into our classrooms and just lambasted the
stupidity of this behavior and
said 'You will not do this," '
Billinghaq1 says. " I think the
students were surprised, but it
also seemed to work."
1

Ohio
•

I

Ladies
Diamond
Clusters
UP

TO

1/2
OFF

Embroidery

Ztatitf; ad. 'P~ttu ~- ..

�Page A2

Page Al

. Sunday, September JO, :ZOOl

Sunday, Se(tember JO, :Z001

Empire State Building reopens deck to sightseers

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
3-carwreck

Free shots
Thur5day

injures 2
GALLIPOLIS -Two people were transported Friday to
Holzer Medical Center following a wreck on Ohio 7
South near Orchard Hill
Road .
The Gallia-Meig; Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol
reportS Ruth E. Butler of
11005 Ohio 7, Gallipolis, was
cited for f:1ilure to provide
assured cleared distance in a
three-ve hicle accident at
II :55 a.m. Friday.
13utler's 1999 Chrysler and
Stuart ]. Osborne's 1993
Chevrolet were traveling
north o n Ohio 7 when
Osborne slowed for traffic,
the report said. Butler's vehicle f.1 iled to slow and struck
Osborne's ve hicle.
The force of the impact
caused Osborne's vehicle to
cross left of center, striking
Carolyn F. Green's 1991
Dodge.
Green and passenger Lula
G. Shafer were transported by
Gallia County EMS to Holz'er Medica l Center for treatment of injuries, the report
said.
,.
Another passenger, Sarah L.
Kyl e, was uninjured, th e
report said, as were Butler and
Osborne.

Rio Grande Community Holzer Medical Center and
College lloard o[Trmteti for two refusals.
·a term ending Oct. 10, 2005,
• Holzer Senior Care to
replacing Howaro. Smith of HMC.
Oak Hill, who resigned.
• Gallia Street to HMC.
Karr is co-owner ofWesam
• Gallia Metro Estates Construction. He received his refusal.
B.A. frym Ohio University.
• Gallia Street - refusal.
Total runs for the month:
265. Total runs for the year:
2,775.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Health Department will provide free inununizations Thursday at its
offices, 499 Jackson Pike, from
4 to 6 p.m.
Additional services such as
blood pressure checks and
pregnancy tests will be offered
GALLIPOLIS - David P.
during the evening hours at
Hammons,
RN, of the Emerthe health department. C hildren in need of immuniza- gency Department at Holzer
tions must be accompanied by M edical Center, was named ·
David Tener, executive
a parent or legal guardian and September 2001 Employee of director ofWooclland ·Centers
bring a current immunization the Month, said LaMar Wyse, Inc., announ·ces the WCI GalPresident and chief executive lia Clinic now has additional
record with them . .
officer.
staff available to schedule
Hammons is a graduate of evening appointments. .
,....,...,....,---....,., North GalBeginning Monday, clinic
lia
High hours will be expanded to 8
School and a.m. to 9 p.m. on Mondays
GALLIPOLIS Marine
GALLIPOLIS -The Gal attended
and
Thursday.
Tuesday, Corps Pvt. Chad W Frazier
lia County Health DepartCapital
Wednesday and Friday hours recently completed basic
ment will provide . extended
University
remain 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
training at Marine Corps
hours at its 499 Jackson Pike
and
the
To schedule an • appoint- Recruit Depot, Parris Island,
office for those wishing to
University
ment, caU 446-5554.
S.C.
obtain a free · food hancller's
of
Rio
In additi on, WCI Meigs
Frazier successfully comcar for Gallia Co unty's
Grande,
C linic will expand its Tuesday pleted 12 weeks of training
upcoming events.
where he
and Thursday hours to 8 a.m. designed to c hallenge new
TB skin tests will be given received an associate degree
to 7 p.m . Normal Meigs Marine recruits both physiTuesday from 4 to 6 p.m. The in Nursing. Aft'e r graduation ,
·hours are Monday, Wednesday caUy and mentally.
·
health department also will he worked at Oak Hill Comand Friday from 8 a.m . to 5
Frazier is a 2000 graduate of
have extended hours on munity Medical Center as an
p.m.
Gallia
Academy and the son
Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m. tQ Emergency
Department
To schedule an appoint- of Kim K. andDavid J. Frazier
nurse for fo ur years before
read the skin tests.
ment, call 1-800-252-5554.
of GaUipolis.
coming to work at Holzer
Medical Center's Emergency
Department in August 1994.
He obtained his certification
in Emergency Nursing in
Gallipolis Harl ey Owners 1996.
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
LCpl. Nicholas A. Williams
H ammons' wife Wendy Medical Center and the
GA LLIP OLIS
The Group plans a " Day in the
entered the
Gold wing Road Riders Asso- Country" Oct. 13 from noon works in the accounting HMC Community Health
United
ciation Chapter C-2 of Gal- · to 5 p.m. at Aunt Clara's Col- department at Ohio Valley and Wellness Department
States
lipolis is having an auction at lection of Fine Amish Things, Bank, and daught~r Kindra, announce an upcommg symMarine
11 a.m . Oct. 6 at the Kanauga · Ohio 141 four miles west of I 0, attends Washington Ele- posium for nurses in the comCorps
in
Gallipolis.
mt·ntaty.
Amvets Building.
munity.
June
2000
Admission is a non-perishAs Employee of the
Items have been do nated by
· "Minimally
Invasive
after gradu_members and Gallipoli~ mer- able food item or a new, Month, Hammons received a Approaches to Breast Cancer"
aiing from
chants. Money is being used unwrapped toy per person. $100 U.S. Savings Bond, a is scheduled for Friday from 9
Gallia
to buy toys fo r children and Featured attractions include reserved parking placed desig- a.m. until 1 p.m. in .ConferAcademy
clothes for seniors. Food will live bluegrass and gospel nated in his name, a compli- ence Rooms A, B and C of
High
music by Joey Freeman Band, mentary meal in the Hospital the Hosp ital's Education and
be sold.
\
·SchooL
For infohnation, call 367- a costume co ntest for chil- Cafeteria, his · pkture dis- Conference Center.
Since completion of Milidren, face painting, games, played on the Employee of
7 105 .
Featured speakers and dis- tary Occupational School at
motorcycle rides, pictures and the Month wall - near the cussions will include: ; . Alice
Employee Enirance, and his Gricoski, MD, who will dis- Ft. Bliss, Texas, in Low Altia clown.
Refreshments will be avail- name engraved on the 2001 cuss incidence and pathology tude Air Defense, Williams has
Employee of the Month of Ductal Carcinoma In Siru;
able.
For information, contact plaque, also displayed on the prognostic factors of DCIS;
0.0 Mcintyre Park Dis- Linda Skidmore, 379- 2686; Employee .of the Month WalL treatment options; and sterotrict plans a nature program at Tammy Patterso n, 446-87 15;
ThanlcVou
tactic mammotome breast
I p.m. today at Raccoon Julie Webb, 446-6683.
biopsy; and Michael Covelli,
Creek County Park.
MD, who will discuss · lymGALLIPOLIS Gallia phatic mapping and indicaA Raccoon C reek Scav- .
County Emergency Medical tions in melanoma and breast
enger Hunt .,vill be featured.
For Bu11inq 111111
Services responded to the folMeet at th e east playground
cancer; and value and short2001
Ho~;~
near Wild Turkey Shelter. For
COLUMBUS Gover- lowing calls Friday:
comings of pre-operative
at
the
• Motor-ve hicle collision at
in fo rmation , call 446-4612, nor Taft ·announces that
lymphoscintigraphy.
Gallia Count., Jr. Fair
Ohio
7 and Orchard Hill '
ext. 256.
Thomas W Karr of Pomeroy
Planning committee memka.,la Siders
has been appointed to the Road, with two taken to bers of the symposium

Hammons top
employee

New center
hours

Extended
hours set

Chad W. Frazier

·oay in the

Friday
symposium set

Country

Audion readied

LCpl. Nicholas
A. Williams

Nature program
today

Ciallia EMS runs

Sgt. Colin
J. Boyd

lS

Marlett

a

COUSUl

of
Pfc.
Travis M .
R eed, currently stationed at
Camp Lejeune, l\J.C.

PJc. Travis
M. Reed
Pfc. Travis M. Reed, combat
engineer,
2nd Marine
Division
8th FSSG,
currently
sta tioned at
Camp Lejeune, awaiting deployment.

DENVER (AP) - Airline first states to have guardsmen
passengers
encoun tered in ai rports Friday. Senior
National Guard soldiers at Airman Sam Ruiz, one of
airports across the country as two soldiers patrolling the
states followed a presidential Bismarck airpo rt , said the
request to call up troops to reaction was mixed from
fend off potential terrorism passengers.
threats.
"I can sense that people
National Guardsmen pack- feel a little safer," he said.
ing · M - 16s and pistols and "I've heard, 'Better safe than
wearing camouflage fatigues sorry.' I've heard 'What's this
were visible at several air- world coming to? ' Some
forts · Friday. Many states · agree, some don 't."
were in the process of acti ~
President · Bush recomvating soldiers and were mended that states begin
expected to have them in
calling up Guard units until
airports in coming days.
longer- term security meaDenver International Airsures could be put in place.
port
passenger
Tom
In Denver, travelers were
Dabrowsky wasn 't bothered
told to arrive at least four
the presence of soldiers with
hours 'early. Lines at security
guns in terminals. · '
and
flight
"I was born in E;urope, so I checkpoints
have seen what. it is like else- check-ins were long early in
where," said Dabrowsky. "At the day, but shortened conleast there is a visible some- siderably by mid-afternoon.
A guardsman watched over
thing, something is being
a screening entry point as
done."
At the Albuquerque, N. M., private security employees
airport, passenger Diane checked baggage and ran
Jones, who was heading handheld metal detectors
home to Maryland, said the over passengers or patted
·armed patrols would make them down. Outside, guardsSTANDING GUARD - Colorado National Guerd military pollee
. people more nervous about men peered into cars in airofficer Richard Flanagan of Ft. Collins, Colo. , 11nd CSPD officer
port parking lots and passen- Hugh Velasquez patrol the Colorado Springs airport. Members
flying.
"I think it creates an aura ger drop- off points. The of the Colorado National Guard first and second battalllons of
.of heightened fear," she said. guardsmen can also detain the 1Ei9th Field Artillery are charged with security at the airNorth Dakota was among ·passengers If necessary.
port, In the wake of the recent terrorist attacks.(AP)

John
MellenCamp
SEYMOUR, . Ind. (AP) John Mellencamp will celebrate
his 50th birthday on Oct. 7, and
fans plan to mark the occasion at
a three-day tribute in the singer's
southern Indiana homeland.
An outdoor concert at the
Southern Indiana Center for the
Arts in Seymour will be the climax of the celebration beginning Oct. 5 in Bloomington.

Thank You

Walsh Blaatrla
l'ar larlag Mr

IDOl Market Hog
at the Dalila aaaatr
Jr; l'alr
LaayLaadtr

unit donation
BATTLE DAYS
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

BY MARTHA IRVINE
I&gt;J' NATIONAL WRITER

October 5th

A few days atier planes strike
the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, a 3-year-old girl
on long Island begins sleepwalking and muttering.
Her parents listen to her
muddled words: "My don't
like the bad people. My will
hit the bad people with a hammer," she says.
· Anger and arxiety brought
on by the Sept. 11 terror
11ttacks have put revenge on
the minds of many young people, everi those who've been
told litde about the devastation
but still sense something's very
wrong.
For those who know more,
the revenge fantasies can get
quite graphic. N icholas Sands,
a 6-yea~-old from Los Angeles,
is still so angry that he wants to
track down terrorists and "cut
off their arms and leg; so they
die.
"That would be really cool,"
says Nicholas, whose father's
cousin was among those killed
when American Airlines Flight
11 hit the World Trade Center.
A I 0-ye!Jr-old boy from
Swartz Creek, Mich., says he
wants to "shoot Osama bin
Laden in the head with a 20gauge shotgun and then drop
·him from a plane into the
Pacific Ocean so he does a
belly flop."

IO :Oct . \1\rl -4:30 PM Man!!lion llouse Mu ~u m
IO :UU .\M -b:OO PM Cratb•• Mn in Street
Encumpmcnl &amp; Craft Demonstrations, Battle Monum~nt Purk

~

10:00 AM S:OO PM Alph.o -Photo E"hibit, Mason County Library, 6th nml Viand Strct•ls
11:00 PM -~;00 PM Art Show. Fon Rwtdolph Terrace, Mai n Street
7:JO PM l.ant~o:m Tour, Battle Monum~o."nt Park

Saturday, October 6th 4

&amp;unbap -Gtime• &amp;mtinel
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Correction Polley
Our main cu:1cern !n all stories is to be
accunue. lr you know or an error In a
story, call lhe newsroom at (740) 4462342 or Pomeroy: (740) 9112·2155. We wUI
check your Information and make a
corredion lr warranted,

Nawa Deportment•

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for advance payments mlllk to canim.
Publisher reserves the riJhl lo ldjuM tile! durillj
the •uhscripdon period. S ub5C!iptio~ rille chanau
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Dilly ancl Sunday
MAlt SUBSCRIYfiONS
Jruldt Gallla County ,
I] Wrrb ....................
$17.30
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j2 Wccb ................... ~ .. . ..................... SIO.S.X!
Ratts Oul!ldt Gallill County
IJ Wech ....................................................$29.2.S
26 Wecks......... ~ ............................................S56.61l
.S2 Weela..................................................... SI09.72
H

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(;ALLIPOLIS Buckeye
Rural Electric Co-op , represented by Debra Sword,
director of community/economic development, and
Farmers Bank ·rep Randy
Hays , recently gave Gallla
County Sheriff David L.
Martin a donation for the
addition of a K·9 unit to the
sheriff's office. Other dona·
l ions have been given by
Robert Foster, Jim's Farm
Equipment,
SFS
Truck
Sales, Vanco Floor . Cover·
ing, Haffelt's Mill Outlet,
Ohio Valley Bank and
Evans-Moore
Insurance
Agency. The K,9 unit will
have a dual purpose. It Yfill
be used for drug detection
and tracking. Deputy Aarori
Metzler will be the canine
handler.

•

9:00AM ·Noo~ Chili lind Sol .. Cook-oiT ,
Noon-J•d&amp;!n4i..Cier Barlow .1ooet Brid~e : "
I0:00 A,M _.:30 PM MaOJiOil ~ MUJ&lt;um
I0:00 AM Herit.,. Queen,,GJltiil Port
~· ;1 ·'
.
I0:00AM , .S:OO PM Alpha Photo Exhibit, Mason County Llbmry, lilb and VllUid Sums
IO:OO.i;'Jo PM Art Show, fort IIA!ndolph lenuce, Main Suoet - ..
) · t~. .pment &amp; Craft Demonstrations, Unuic Monument Park ,. - .
··
·· 10:30 ;.J;t'n.e TrOblemokers, Moln Street
·
II :00 AM Ox Roast :!.nd Benn Dinner. Senior Citi?.CO!i Parking L6t
II :00 AM ·4:00 PM Crans and ac!ivitie.'l for .:~11 ngcs. Main Street (Main Street Merthaots)
II :00 AM l'nrmle, bt:gins at 12th' Street
.:;·
·
12:JO PM M~:~~icim1 Philluckeydoo, SeniorCili1.ens l.ot'
·
I:OIJ P\ol KUnn wha Vnllcy Pipes, Battle Monwnenr PMk
I:JO P\1 Mugiciw1 t•hil l.uckcydoo, Battle Monument Park
:!:00 1'\-1 Dukimcr l'laycrs, Uanle Monumem Park
2.:t1U I'M -1:1.10 PM Aulhi.Jr in the Jlark, Allan W. P.clu:n
.l:DU PM Andrew lewis Volunteers, Batt!.: MunutDent Park
b:OO PM • 8!00 PM Colonial Governor's Reccpdoa. Am,~~:;4c~:
lc~ion

·'

H1ll (tickets required)

S:OO PM -II :00 PM Coloniolliall, Amerioan Lesioa Hlll'ilfOiol:li'

Sunday, October 7tb
I0;110 AM Colonial Church Sendee.
Banle Monument Park
I:00 PM -4:00PM An Show,
Tc:rracc, Main Strut

. I

WASHINGTON (AP) The terrorist attacks on
America have transformed
relations with Russia, thrusting rhe Cold War rivals into
into an alliance agai nst terronsm.
The
new
paradigm
became evident on Sept. 11 ,
when
President
Bush
ordered th e U.S. military to
high alert shortly after th e
attacks and Moscow did not
follow suit.
President
Russian
Vladimir Putin telephoned
the White House, as Bush
hastily flew away from Washington aboard Air Force
·one. National Security
Adviser Condoleezza R.ice
took the call in a bunker
beneath the presidenti al
mansion.
" I want you to know that
we are not putting our
. troops on alert," Putin told
her. "Not only are we not
going on alert, we are standing down."
Rice p.med word to llush,
who later rema rked that
Putin must have taken to
heart his oft-repeated statement that the United States
and Ru ssia are no longer
enem1es.
Putin ca lled Bu sh the next
day to express his co ndolences for the thousands of
lives lost. H e also pledged
Russia's help in d efe~ ting
.

13ush linked the rebds to
te rrorists for the first time,
giving tacit approval, perhaps, for Putin to crack
down .
Quite a turnabo.ut for two
men who warily eyed each
other in the early months of
13ush 's term.
"There's a convenient
meeting of interests here,''
said Antony Blinken, for
seven years a senior member
f
President
Clinton's
national security team. He
said Putin may be able to ·
slow, if not stop, Bush's missile defense system.
"This conflict against terrorism has the potential to
forge new alliances of convenience around the globe,"
Blinken ;aid. "Russia may be
th e best example, bur it's ·not
the only one."
Indeed, the terrorist strike
has turned the global community on its ear.

terrorr~m .

Suddenly, nobody is talking about the dispute over
Bush's missil e shi eld dream s.
U.S. forces are preparing to
strike from former Soviet
territory. And a longtime
so urce of tension , the rebel
uprising · in Chechnya, has
become a pivot point in the
·reconfigured U.S. - Russian
partnership.
The United States has
gained unprecedented access
to three key former Soviet
states near Afghanistan , Russia's help to arm resistance to
the terrorist-harboring Taliban regime, and valuable
intelligence
about
the
region . Russia fought an
unsuccessful
war
m
Afghanistan .m the 1980,
when Putin was a Soviet
spymaster.
In return, Putin won an .
unexpected opportunity · to
earn respect in the West and
a freer hand in Chechnya.

Attacks causing children to conjure 'revenge fantasies'

2001 SCHEDULE

Friday,

ing, more than 500 people had
lin~d up by)_D.a.m. Saturday}~ _
enjoy the view. Most appeared
to be tourists, many from tours
that were planned before the
twin towers of the Trade Ceoter cnunbled.
"We were going to go to the
observation deck of the Trade
Ceilter, but now this is the
tallest building in the city," said
Albert
Fabrizio. 35, of
Philadelphia.
On Friday. officials said the
price tag of the attacks on the
trade center will be nearly $40
billion - an early estimate of
what it will cost to remove
debris, pay overtime and .
rebuild subways and skyscrapers.
Cleaning up the estimated
1.2 million tons of rubble will
cost $7 billion alone and take
up to a year, officials said.
. OPEN FOR BUSINESS - The twin towers of the World Trade
"It's probably too early any- · Center burn behind the Empire State Buildling in New York.
way, and no o ne can really say Almost three weeks after the attack on the World Trade· Cen·
what the final costs will come ter, the observation deck of the Empire State Building, the
to," said Kenneth Golding, a city's tallest skyscraper for the first time In 30 years, reopens.
consultant who had come to The 102-story building has the dubious distinction of being the
see the site Friday night. "'Also, only other skyscraper in Manhattan to have been hit by a
it seems demeaning to try and plane. On July 28, 1945, a B-25 bomber flying in fog crashed
put a dollar value on what hap- into the 79th floor, killing 14 people but causing only minor
pened."
damage to the building's structure. (AP)

National Guard soldiers at airports aaoss the nation

PEOPLE

Kenn11 Barcus
Truekinq

Karr appointed

K·9

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Empire,
State • lluilding._
reopened its observation deck
for regular business Saturday,
attracting hundreds of tourists
- some of whom had once
planned ro view the Manhattan skylin~ from the World
Trade Center.
As visitors r~turned to the
86th floor attraction, Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani announced
plans to do the opening monoIogue on the season debut of
"Saturday Night Live."
Giuliani ~ to appear with
Fire Commissioner Thomas
Von Essen, Police CotnrJiissioner llernard Kerik, and a
group of city firefighters, police
officers and Port Authority
police officers.
" It will be reverential," said
Sunny Mindel, a mayoral
spokeswoman.
About 5,960 people are
missing in the rubble of the
trade center, which was
destroyed by terrorist hijackers
Sept. 11. As of Friday, 306 bodies had been recovered. Funerals were held Saturday for at
least 16 victims of the attack.
At the Empire State Build-

included Bonnie McFarland, been stationed at Camp
RN, BSN, Dirwor, HMC PPndletn'l, Calif _
Community H ealth and WellHe is the 10n of Charlie and
ness; Alice Gricoski', MD, Staff Chris (Bahr) Williams and the
Physician, Holzer Clinic and grandson of Aurelia Williams
Holzer Medical Center; Mar- of Cora Community, Galliposha Rodgers, RN, BSN, Edu- lis.
cation Coordinator, Holzer
Medical Center; and Lennie
Davis, RN. MSN, Director,
HMC · Education Department.
Sgt. Colin J, Boyd, Infa ntry,
The se111inar is free and
lunch will be provided.Con- r---;:o..-----, stationed in
Okinawa,
tact hours will be awarded to
and · curthose participants who attend
rently
the entire event.
deployed
For information or to regison the USS
ter, call the Holzer Medical
Kitty
Center Education DepartHawk . H e
ment at 446-5313.
.
.

U.S-Russia forge
new alliance out
of terrorist strikes

•

I .

Hearing such talk can be
disconcerting to parents, and
even to the children themselves. But experts say revenge
fantasies are generally a normal
response.
"Let's face it. H alf of the
adult population is walking ;
around spouting off this kind
of thing in diners and living
rooms across the country;• says
James Feldman, national director of public education for
KidsPeace, a nonprofit organization that deals with children
in emotional crisis.
He and others say young'
people may be even more likely than adults to come up with
revenge fantasies because they
feel particularly powerless, not
to mention scared and insecure. The contents of those
fantaSies tend to come from
the children's surroundings, or
sometimes TV and movies.
Some young people are just
venting. That's what ' 15-year-

· select
Group of ~·
Fall
Fashions

old Wesley Tolson says he was
doing when he sent his mother an e-mail suggesting the
U.S. military "nuke" all Midclle
East countries that don't support the United States and
then seize their oil assets.
"But I was just joking
around," says Tolson, who lives
in Houston.
In reality, he says, any plan
for retaliating "is a tricky situation, and a lot of kids see
that."
Robert Billingham, a professor of human development
and family studies at Indiana
University, says spouting off,
especiaUy for lioys, is a primal
response. He compares it to
the "banging on the chest and
hooting and hollering" that
apes do when they feel threatened.
"The danger is that if you do
it in a peer group, it's kind of
like throwing gasoline on a
fire," Billingham says.

2,5.· OJ

to

Qffl
· ··

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The Layfayette Mall .•
"'300. Second
'
Ohio

:

He says fear of that "mo.b
mentality" prompted officials
on his Bloomington, Ind.,
campus to take swift action
after hearing that Midclle Eastern students were being verbally harassed atier the attacks.
'We went into our classrooms and just lambasted the
stupidity of this behavior and
said 'You will not do this," '
Billinghaq1 says. " I think the
students were surprised, but it
also seemed to work."
1

Ohio
•

I

Ladies
Diamond
Clusters
UP

TO

1/2
OFF

Embroidery

Ztatitf; ad. 'P~ttu ~- ..

�Page A~-.

.Opinion

•

sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

~~

-- --...__

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Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyer

Diane Klly Hill
Controller

Un'n to IJa• fflitor tu' w'lconu.
tVt

R. Shawn Lawla
Managing Editor

Advertlelng Manager

Tit•; rhould H · ~~~ 1114• 300 woniJ. AIJ kliln

!IMb}etl ro tditint Gild"'"'' bt !litn«&lt; aM lntlutlt tJdllnll 1111d tt~plto11' IINwrbu.

No 11nsign~d ktUn will M publilht4. Lttt«l rho111d H ln lood IIUit, IJildrallnt
illu~J, twt ptnOIIOIJrits.
Th~ ophtloiU upnu~4 in lltt col11.mn klo~t~IUI! tlw COIUtiUIB of llrt Olllo V.Uty
PubliJIIi"R Co. 'I ~mtOI'ial board, 11./lhn othtnt~U• 11otftl.

NATIONAL VIEW

Don't do it

,,.,

OUR .READERS' VIEWS
Will boycott
Dear Editor:
To seize and ban smokers rights? People tell us to fight for America an!i our
rights. What right do Meigs countians
have?
Do we need to ask the health department before we go to the bathroom or
what toilet paper we use? Are they going
to ban certain brands of toilet paper?
Are we no longer to kiss our loved
ones for fear of spreading infectious diseases?
I was once proud to be a citizen 6f
Meigs County, but l\OW I am ashamed.
I know ~his letter may not . be pub.-,
lished In ril:ii'.lj;lcal p~per· because by the
time I. get.:it
and submitted to
the desk of the editor, I may have lost my
right to freedom of speech in Meigs
County.
If! am not allowed to smoke in Meigs
County, there should be no ... tobacco
products sold in Meigs County. I myself
will no longer do any business whatsoever in Meigs County, and I 1,1rge other
.citizens in Meigs County to do the
same.
.
.
If we· do not &gt;make stand now, we
will los~ ;ill mu; ti~hts.

written

a

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Sept. 30, the 273rd day of 2001. There are
92 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 30, 1791, Mozart's opera "The Magic Flute" premiered in Vienna, Austria.
On this date:
In 1777, the Congress of the United States- forced to flee
in the face of advancing British forces -moved to York, Pa.
In 1846, dentist William Morton used ether as an anesthetic
for the first time on a patient in his Boston office.
In 1927, Bahe Ruth hit his 60th home~ of the season to.
break his own major-league record.
In 1938, British, French, German and Italian leaders decided
to appease Adolf Hitler by allowing Nazi annexation of
Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
In 1946, an international military tribunal in Nuremberg,
Germany, found 22 top Nazi leaders guilty of war crimes.
In 1949, the Berlin Airlift came to an end.
In 1954, the first atomic-powered vessel, the submarine Nautilus, was com missioned by the Navy.
In 1955, actor James Dean was killed in a two-car collision
near Cholame, Calif.
·
·
In 1962, black student James Meredith succeeded on his
fourth try in registering for classes at the University of Mississtppo.
In 1986, the United States released accused Soviet spy Gennadiy . Zakharov, one day after the Soviets released Nicholas
Daniloff.
·Ten years ago: The military in Hai ti overthrew Jean-Bertrand
Aristidc, the countiy's first freely elected president. (He was
later returned to power.)
Five years ago:Withjust hours to ~pare before the smrt of the
fiscal year, the Senate passed and President Clinton signed a
$389 billion sp ending bill .
One year ago&gt; A Catholic priest crashed his car into a building housing an abortion clinic in Rockford, Ill., and attacked it
with an ax. (The Rev. John Earl later pleaded guilty to damaging property, and was sentenced to 30 months' probation and
two days in county jail.) In Sydney, Australia, Marion Jones
won Olympic gold in the U.S. women's 1,600-meter relay and
bronze with the 400- meter squad - making her the only
woman to win five track medals ~t one Olympics.
Today's Birthdays: Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox is
86. Actress Deborah Kerr is 80. Actress Angie Dickinson is 70.
Singer Cissy H&lt;;JUston is 68. Singer Johnny Mathis is 66. Actor
Len Cariou is 62. Rock singer-musicia n Dewey Martin (Buffalo Springfield) is 59. Singer Marilyn McCoo is 58. Pop singer
Sylvia Peterson (The Chiffons) is 55. Rock musician John
Lombardo (10,000 Maniacs) is 49. Singer Deborah Allen is 48.
Actor Calvin Levels is 4 7.

· Faye Wettfilll

.·'· .: .'' .

ati.d

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Brian ·aK' Annes ·
h~

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PuMtK~I -Urian .. 111&lt;.. · Armes, 37,.Pgmeroy,died at his

""

Th~ 2001 River Valley High School homecoming court.

Homecoming courts
River v.;lley High School and Gallia Academy High School observed homecoming Friday night. River Valley's homecoming court,
above, included Queen Jenny Blake , Amy Hood, Cayla Caldwell, Krista Smith, Megan Harrison, Tessa Baker, Ashley Reese, Bridget Harder, Erin Meige, Cassie Sheets and their escorts. Galli a Academy's court included Jessica Bodimer,.Queen Brianna Johnson, Andrea Woodall, Katie McCalla, Britney Pelletier and their escorts. (Bryan Long and Doug Shipley photos) '

Sharon A. Diehl

Erect monument rather
than rebuild twin towers
As shock and anger come under control, some are asking
whether the twin towers of the World Trade Center should be
rebuilt after the devastating Sept. 11 attacks.
The magnificent towers that defined New York City's skyline
for three decades were reduced to seven stories of rubble.
Although they were designed to withstand the impact of~ 707,
the towers could not survive heat from the burning aviation
fuel , which experts believed reached temperatures greater than
1 ,000 degrees.
.
As for rebuilding them, conflicting impulses wresde. There is
defiance. Show the terrorists that no damage they can do to this
nation is permanent. Rebuild. Make the towers, if anything,
taller.
Then there is prudence. Last week's attack was the se~ond
terrorist attempt to bring down these symbols of American
commerce and success.
. .
.
Rebuild the towers and the irresistible target returns. Who
would have the courage to work there?
·
Terrorists are not the only threat. It could be that 110 stories
is just too tall for a building. Any emergency - fire, earth- ·
quake, explosion - could leave thousands stranded. During
Sept. 11 's disaster, some people walked down 86 flights of stairs.
Fire equipment can't be designed to be effective for such sttuctutes.
Those are all valid arguments, but they feel like rationaliza-tions, justifications to take the coward's way out. Rebuilding
the towers would feel good. It would be a New York, in-yourface response.
But it would be wrong, we think. It would risk having to face
· this nightmare again somewhere down the road. Those who
chose to rebuild might have to face the relatives of the victims
- today's and tomorrow's- and explain how their pride was
worth someone else's blood.
. .·
No, it would be better to clean up the .rubble
cre~te a
monument to the fallen, a memorial by which America could
remember the thousands of innocent victims and the hundreds
of rescuers who lost their lives.- 71oe Ch~rle-ston (W.lil.) Gazette

t!:omrs ·!S&gt;rntonrl • Page AS

Deaths

residence on Thursday, September 27, 2001 .
He was the son of Roy K. Armes Jr. apd Mary Louks Armes
ani! was employed by the Ohio Department ofTransportation
as ·a mechanic at the Meigs County Garage.
He was also a graduate of Southern High School and a
member of Bet hal Worship Center.
·He was preceded in death by his grandfathers, Roy Armes
Sr., and Robert Louks; and a special neph ew, Shawn Marcinko.
Along with his parents, he is survived by his wife, C harlotte
Marcinko Armes of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter, Melissa and Sam
Combs of Racine; a brother, Randy and Edna Armes of
Chester; a grandson, Nicholas Combs of Racine; two sisters-inlaw, Charmaine and Bill Thoma, Charlene,and Louie Frederick, all of Racine; and his grandmothers, Margaret Jane Armes
of MinersviUe, Elma Louks of Syracuse.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Fisher- Acree
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Pastor Rob Barber.
·
Burial will follow in Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.

,.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~unbao•

Sunday. SeptemMr :so. 2001

'·

Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy1 OhioPoint Pleaaant, W.Va.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis. Ohio • Pomt Pleasant, WV ·

LongBottom

. Hop~ a,~ sympathy
.

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the American spirit, which lives on in all -:
of us. They may commit the most terri~
ble of crimes but they -will be hunted
down. There will be no sa fe place for
them anywhere on this earth.
' '
No matter how much time or money ' '
may be needed to capture them, it will
be given and spent, and they will be: •
caught and p\)nished. Those who com-· ~
mitted this crime hate and fear Amnic"· :;
and us, the American people. For all that
we have, which they will never, for all ..
that we are and will be, which they m; ··
not and never shall be.
This, ·the worst attack of terrorism
agaitist us, was well planned, well trained• ;
and pn;pared for and well led and perc
formed with .millions of dollars perhaps
funding it. This we must co nsider an act
of war. Any nation and its leadership that
suppo'rts, helps; funds , e11courages such: ··.
an attack must be considered at war witl'i'
us. We have the legal and moral rightt(&gt;:'i
search out these terrorists, their ttainin.g·:;
areas, meeting groups and grounds sup~
ply dumps and points. Leadership and '.'
their manpower and attack and destroy ' ..
them.
· ·· -··" ·
This was not the first such attack, no'o·
will it be the last. An American flag still - ~
flew in New York in front of what h~d
been the World trade Center, covered ',
with dirt, dust and perhaps the blood ·~f '
untold innocent lives.
·
It says to them we have bled, but we ;.
are not broken. We have lost many but
you will lose all. We wanted· peace; you
Martha V. Parson• gave us war. Now we will repay you a
Racine
thousand-fold. God is on the side of th"
just, the right and 'the sane. God is oil":

call heard from all corners of the earth:
God help us. Why, Lord?
There arose heroes who have their
lives for their fellow man , a coming
together that I pray everyone will
understand , for everyone pulling together can make God's task so mu ch easier.
God, I know, is crying for each one
who lost a loved one and the ones that
remain. He's waiting to hold them in His
arms. The litde ones who were taken
away already know God's tender arms
and His everlasting love.
· In life, ·things happen for a reason . I
think,. was the reason to bring everyone
to their knees? I don't know. This act was
senseless, cruei, personal without con, science or love for his fellow man. They
destroyed lives that were just beginning
and ended in such horror, some knowing their fate and some .knowing nothing at all. There were also some who did
make it. I pray they will take this chance
to give the Lord a place in their heart.
My heart goes out to each and every
faririly .who lost someone. My prayer is
for each of you peace, love, joy and· a
fond remembrance of each of your family..
l also pray God gives your body comfort, your heart a renewal of life, your
eyes something to dry them with,'your
ears· to hear the sounds of music and life,
and your soul to hear the voice of our
Lord Jesus Christ, a comfort to all .
God Bless everyone.

Dear Sditl)r: .;·· . : · , .
'
Sep1. 'Jl, Ari).erieli Was wounded. Our

sister's' anq

brother$ were .e xposed to a ·
different . kind of hate. That hate
destroyed families, dreams, ambitions and
the ability to multiply.
Souls . I hope had a chance to pray.
Shock, terror and sorrow forever in disarray.
Hearts ached, eyes cried, ears hard,
bodies trembled, praying that their
mother, father, brother, sister, aunt, uncle,
cousin, grandmother, grandfather was
.s omehow spared.
There arose out of all of this anguish a

Enemy will suffer
Dear Editor:

I would like tb say this about the terrible and sad events that took place on
the morning of Sept. 11.
They may . kill our peopie, but they
will never kill the American dream and
all those who have it and will see it f\11filled.
They may destroy our ·greatest nation al building,s but they will never destroy

~ ·- t

our side.

Be at peace and always remember that
those who have 's ttuck us shall them~ "
selves be struck down. Pray for mil"'
country, our people and especially thosl' '
who have suffered loss. Give blood if
possible.
'"·
· There is no greater power in the
world, than an angry and aroused' :
democracy.
"
David Edwaroli:-~
·"·
Pomeroy--

..,,' '

WASHINGTON MERRY- GO-ROUND

Will new security czar have real power?!~
WASHINGTON - Many lawmakers
said in the wake of the attacks on New
York and Washington, "We should have

seen it coming."

put anything in writing about what exactly Ridge would ·do. What authority will
he have?Will he have money? Staff? There
are reports that aides arc scouting space for
him in the West Wing, and where he sits;.,
will be a measure of his access and power, ··
.at least initially. Until we know w~,\ ";
Ridge's appointment means bureaucrati~. ,
· cally, it will be hai-d to judge hi~ potentiql ,
effectiveness. "l'Joes he have a blac.k seduo ·
and five people, or does he.nm a Cabinet ..'
COLUMNIST
department?" wonders one friend.
Ridge reportedly is not anxious r&lt;J '"
command
a full-fledged Cabinet departI
his success. Some 40 government agencies
ment,
and
would
prefer
a
sleeker
modCT
''
are involved in counterterrorism, and they
don 't easily shJre information ·or yield that would look more like the domestk:'':·
rurf For Ridge to be effective, all the var- equivalent of the National Security
ious agencies must report all their relevant Council, with a small staff ao)d guarantee&lt;
,.
findings to him. And he tnust have some direct 'access to tlie president. Riclg~'s ,.
··
say over their budgets and how they allo- Power is potentially awesome if he is to ,.
coordinate
such
disparate
agencies
as
th
e
::
cate resources. In the intelligence breakdo'wn that preceded the Sept. 11 hijack" Coast Guai-d, the, , Centers for Disease I•·.
ings, there was n~body at the CIA or FBI Control and the hrtrnigration and Na~u - ~
· who was able to connect the dues that ralization Service. And he may have to ~
came from numerous federal bureaucra- grapple with the possibility of a nationol -::
cies even though there were dozens of identity card, which un!il Sept. 11 was ::
anathema to both conservatives and liher- ::
warnings about a mega-attack.
ak
Putting a reassuring face on the kintl ::
Bu.&lt;h is personally close to Ridge, and
might have picked him for his vice presi- ofinttusive powers Republicans tradition- .::
dent if it weren't for the abortion issue. ally resist is what his job, however.defined . J
~ .
Ridge, who is Catholic, supports abortion is really about.

·Jack

Anderson

In fact, they did see it coming. In March
of this year, a bipartisan commission on
terrorism headed by former Senators
Gary Hart. D-Colo:, and Warren Rudman. R -N.H., reported to Congress on
the magnitude of the threat and urged the
creation of a National Homeland Security Agency.
•
.
Now that everybody's priorities have
changed, the need fur .self-protection is
painfully obvious. Republicans who
might once have decried adding another
layer of bureaucracy to th e government
are lauding President Bush for es4blishing
a new Cabinet-level position with d1e
pug&gt;ose of providing _hon:teland security
Buih's· chotce for the JOb ts the Republican governor of Pennsylvania, Tom Ridge.
He bring; a stellar resume to Washington,
and he'll need it. How he conducts him. self in the coming months could mean the
difference between a one-time publicrelations gimmick and the launching of
the most powerful Cabinet departlnent of
the new century.
As a combat veteran in Vietnam who
was awarded the Bronze Star, Ridge commands respect in the world he's now asked
(J~ck Attdmon mtd Douglas Colon are dis- ·::
rights. But so far, the White House hasn't
to oversee, and that is a crucial 6rst step to
tributed by United Fe~ture Sytodic~te.)
::

&amp;

Douglas
Cohn

,.

COTTAGEVILLE, WVa. Sharon A. Diehl, 26, Cottageville, W.Va., died Thursday, September 27,2001, at Jackson
General Hospital ih Ripley following an automobile accident.
She is the daughter of Richard A. a~,J&lt;:arron Skeens Lambert and was a supervisor of quality contro1 for K.S. ofWestVirgima.
She was also a member of the Flatwoods Freewill Baptist
-thurch in Ravenswood, W.Va.
.
She is preceded in death by her paternal grandparents,
Charles J. and ,Betty Lambert; and her maternal grandfather,
Louis Gene Skeens.
Along with her parents, she is survived by her husband, James
D. Diehl of Cottagevitle; three brothers, Louie R. Lambert of
Mason, Roman E. Ward, Rudy D. Ward, both of New Haven;
her materna1 grandmother, Gladys June Skeens of Letart.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason. Officiating will be Pastor .C hris
Skeens.
·
The 2001 Galli a Academy homecoming court. (Doug Shipley photo)
Burial will follow in Graham Cemetery in New Haven.
Friends visited on Saturday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral
Home.

Julia Belle Konieczny

'

.SWCD annual banquet, election set Oct. 16

DETROIT -Julia Belle Konieczny, 72, died Friday, Sep- .
tember 28, 2001, in Detroit.
·•
She was born Oct. 25; I 928, in Reedsville, Ohio, daughter of
the .(ate Dean Harry and Delphia Chutes Harvey. She was a
homemaker.
She is survived by a sister, Patricia Swierlik ofWashington,
WVa. ; a brother, Jack Eugene Harvey of Atlanta, Mich .; several .nieces, nephews and cousins; and several great-nieces and
great-nephews. .
'·
.
.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister,Virgin:ia Harvey.
·
·
Services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at White Funeral Home,
Coolville, Ohio. Burial will be in Weatherby Cemetery,
Coolville.
Fri~nds may call from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at
the funeral home.

FROM STAFF REPORTS
·s outhern Junior High School.
meetings and other meetings as required;
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil and
His students partiCipated in local envi- they also correspond with state and fed' District will hold its roth0n competitions sponsored by the eral legislators on conservation issues.
Water Conservation
annual meeting and banquet Oct. 16 at soil and water conservation district. He They also assist with the day-to-day
Y:16 p:m. at Meigs High School.
resides on a farm in Sutton Township, work of.the distri ct.
Ron Ramey of Lancaster, a self-pro- and raises alfalfa hay, targeting a specialty
Voters must be at least 18 and reside or
fessed outhouse expert and humorist, crop . market. His hobbies include hunt- own property in M eigs County. Absentee
ballots may be requested in writing from
will discuss \~~- "good old days" of"Out- ing, fishing and horseback ridong.
back America ."
. ·
Sayre is th e agricultural education the district otlice at 33101 Hiland Road,
An agricultural enthusiast, educator, teacher at Southern High School and has Pomeroy, at least five days prior to the
humorist and community leader, Ramey had success in training teams in soil judg- election. Ballots also m ay be cast at the
has won many humorous and serious ing, envirothon, parliamentary proce- di strict office the day of .the election
dure, forestry, agricultural engineering, between 7 a.m ..and 2:30p.m.
speech contests.
Awards will presented to the OutIn addition, attendees will elect a new grain merchandizing, farm blJ,'iiness manstanding . Cooperator, Soil Judging, Big
member to the Meigs SWCD Board of agement and other FFA events .
He resides on a 189-acre farm in Letart Tree Contest and Hay Show winners.
Supervisors to serve a term cmnmencing
Tickets for the chicken and ham dinTownship and is active in vegetable pro t
Jan. I, 2002, through Dec. 31, 2004.
ner
are available for $7 eac h at the district
Candidates include Bill Baer of Racine duction. The remainder of the farm is in
office, from district employees or superhay and timher.
and Aaron Sayre of Letart Falls.
CHESAPEAKE - Dorothy Danford Smith, 84, of ChesaThe winner will replace John Rice of visors Chris Hamon, Marco Jeffers, Joe
Baer is a retired teacher from Southern
peake died Friday, September 28, 2001, at St. Mary's Hospital, Local School District. He taught and was Reedsville, who is not seeking reelection Bolin,John Rice and Tom Theiss.
Huntington, W.Va.
The deadline to purchase tickets is
principal at Syracuse Elementary School ·after serving three terms.
~he was born May 6, 1917, in Lawrence County, daughter of
Supervisors attend regular monthly Thursday.
before becoming a science teacher at
the late Grophia and Lida Hesson. She was a former employee ·
of Guyan Cemetery, retired as purchasil)g director at Marshall
University, and a member of Greasy Ridge Church of Christ.
district ,' meaning both the
interim basis, she said.
She also was preceded in death by her husband, l.S. Smith; a
92nd House District and the
While most strong pain
sister, Hilda Pyles; and a brother, Dr. Edwin Danford.
20th. Senate District will be
medicines
last only about four
Survivors include a son and daughter-in-law, Keith E. and
up for grabs next spring.
from
PageA1
hours, OxyContin gives a
)anie Smith of Gallipolis; two brothers and one sister-in-law,
from Page Al
Meigs officials say the new
steady
•12- hour release and has
Russell and Jo Danford and Collis Danford, aU of Corpus
. .
...
Guernsey counties in the 20th districts could mean a step
Christi, Texas; two sistf'fS, Garnet Nance of Chesapeake and
near
her
Cincinnaticarea
home
fewer
side
ef\ects.
But
to
addicts
Senate District.
backward in economic develBeatrice Dillon of Friendswood, Texas; a grandson; and many
Gallia County will be rep- opment efforts and increased that would prescribe Oxycon- who chew the pill or crush it
nieces and nephews.
.
resented in the 87th House awareness in Columbus of tin. Until then, her primary and snort or inje ct the powder,
· Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Hall Funeral
District, along with Jackson, ISSues affecting distressed care physician agreed to pre- OxyContin produces a quick,
Home, Proctorville.
scribe the drug, but only on an heroin-like high that can kill.
Vinton and a portion of . Appalachian counties.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. -Monday at the funeral
"It's discouraging to see,~~
Lawrence County, and in the
home. Minister Barry Kelley will officiate.
17th Senate District, with County Commissioner Jeff
Burial will be in Rome Cemetery.
Highland, Clinton, Fayette, Thornton said 'last week.

Dorothy Danford Smith

Distrid

OxyContin
.

donned their uniforms after
Friday's callup. The Pentagon
said the Marine Corps would
mobilize 191 reservists and the
PageA1
,. Navy 250 mote to bring those
isttni delegation failed again activated so far to more than
Friday and said the Taliban 16,600.
leader, Mullah Mohammed
At Camp David, Bush conOrhar, refused to discuss the suited CIA director George
Saudi exile. One of the Pak- Tenet, chief . of staff Andrew
' istani participants said, "I don't Card and- national security
think that Mullah Omar is adviser Condoleezza Rice. The
afraid of war."
White House released a photo
The United States moved showing the four around a
· more equipment to the central table, a map of Mghanistan in
Asia region, and more .reservists the middle.

.Ta
.

from

Ross, Pike, Jackson, Vinton
and portions of Pickaway and
Lawrence Counties.
Neither of Meigs County's
state legislators will play a role
in the new arrangem ent. Rep.
John Carey, R -Wellston, will
·end hi s term next year due to
term limits, and Sen. Mike
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
will be located in the new
· 17th District, which includes
Gallia County.
State Sen. Nancy Hollister,
• R CMari etta, o1ow represents
portions of the proposed 20th
Senate District, but Marietta
will not be included in that

The"..Frontiersman"
The Battle Days Festival Committt&gt;e in Point ~laeasa~!· .':"~st Virgin!~ is
pleased to announce the arrival of the "1&gt;-ronuersman .. • h1s authen~Jcally
dressed Scotch-Irish frontiersman Is the second In a scr1cs o~ collectJhlc
hears made by The Ohio River Dear Co. to commemorate Battle Days,
Onl
the first battle of the American Revolution~ ~adc only
of the. finest materials this handmade collectible
Frontiersman is a limited edition.
~,
•

To order call

5

1-800-813-4055

. All

'·
••

BY 9

credit cards accepted

·····"····-

"We've been to Columbus so
many times to get help from
the state level. · and even
though you keep fighting, it
seems like a step back." ·
Besides the redistricting at
the state levels, lines for U.S.
co ngressio nal districts also
will be adjusted before next
year's primary election :
Chad
Tanner,
press
spokesman for U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D - Lucasville, said
Friday the Ohio Legislature is
not expected to consider any
ch anges in those district
boundaries unt il January
2002.

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~

•

•

,'

�Page A~-.

.Opinion

•

sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

~~

-- --...__

..

• -.

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyer

Diane Klly Hill
Controller

Un'n to IJa• fflitor tu' w'lconu.
tVt

R. Shawn Lawla
Managing Editor

Advertlelng Manager

Tit•; rhould H · ~~~ 1114• 300 woniJ. AIJ kliln

!IMb}etl ro tditint Gild"'"'' bt !litn«&lt; aM lntlutlt tJdllnll 1111d tt~plto11' IINwrbu.

No 11nsign~d ktUn will M publilht4. Lttt«l rho111d H ln lood IIUit, IJildrallnt
illu~J, twt ptnOIIOIJrits.
Th~ ophtloiU upnu~4 in lltt col11.mn klo~t~IUI! tlw COIUtiUIB of llrt Olllo V.Uty
PubliJIIi"R Co. 'I ~mtOI'ial board, 11./lhn othtnt~U• 11otftl.

NATIONAL VIEW

Don't do it

,,.,

OUR .READERS' VIEWS
Will boycott
Dear Editor:
To seize and ban smokers rights? People tell us to fight for America an!i our
rights. What right do Meigs countians
have?
Do we need to ask the health department before we go to the bathroom or
what toilet paper we use? Are they going
to ban certain brands of toilet paper?
Are we no longer to kiss our loved
ones for fear of spreading infectious diseases?
I was once proud to be a citizen 6f
Meigs County, but l\OW I am ashamed.
I know ~his letter may not . be pub.-,
lished In ril:ii'.lj;lcal p~per· because by the
time I. get.:it
and submitted to
the desk of the editor, I may have lost my
right to freedom of speech in Meigs
County.
If! am not allowed to smoke in Meigs
County, there should be no ... tobacco
products sold in Meigs County. I myself
will no longer do any business whatsoever in Meigs County, and I 1,1rge other
.citizens in Meigs County to do the
same.
.
.
If we· do not &gt;make stand now, we
will los~ ;ill mu; ti~hts.

written

a

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Sept. 30, the 273rd day of 2001. There are
92 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 30, 1791, Mozart's opera "The Magic Flute" premiered in Vienna, Austria.
On this date:
In 1777, the Congress of the United States- forced to flee
in the face of advancing British forces -moved to York, Pa.
In 1846, dentist William Morton used ether as an anesthetic
for the first time on a patient in his Boston office.
In 1927, Bahe Ruth hit his 60th home~ of the season to.
break his own major-league record.
In 1938, British, French, German and Italian leaders decided
to appease Adolf Hitler by allowing Nazi annexation of
Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
In 1946, an international military tribunal in Nuremberg,
Germany, found 22 top Nazi leaders guilty of war crimes.
In 1949, the Berlin Airlift came to an end.
In 1954, the first atomic-powered vessel, the submarine Nautilus, was com missioned by the Navy.
In 1955, actor James Dean was killed in a two-car collision
near Cholame, Calif.
·
·
In 1962, black student James Meredith succeeded on his
fourth try in registering for classes at the University of Mississtppo.
In 1986, the United States released accused Soviet spy Gennadiy . Zakharov, one day after the Soviets released Nicholas
Daniloff.
·Ten years ago: The military in Hai ti overthrew Jean-Bertrand
Aristidc, the countiy's first freely elected president. (He was
later returned to power.)
Five years ago:Withjust hours to ~pare before the smrt of the
fiscal year, the Senate passed and President Clinton signed a
$389 billion sp ending bill .
One year ago&gt; A Catholic priest crashed his car into a building housing an abortion clinic in Rockford, Ill., and attacked it
with an ax. (The Rev. John Earl later pleaded guilty to damaging property, and was sentenced to 30 months' probation and
two days in county jail.) In Sydney, Australia, Marion Jones
won Olympic gold in the U.S. women's 1,600-meter relay and
bronze with the 400- meter squad - making her the only
woman to win five track medals ~t one Olympics.
Today's Birthdays: Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox is
86. Actress Deborah Kerr is 80. Actress Angie Dickinson is 70.
Singer Cissy H&lt;;JUston is 68. Singer Johnny Mathis is 66. Actor
Len Cariou is 62. Rock singer-musicia n Dewey Martin (Buffalo Springfield) is 59. Singer Marilyn McCoo is 58. Pop singer
Sylvia Peterson (The Chiffons) is 55. Rock musician John
Lombardo (10,000 Maniacs) is 49. Singer Deborah Allen is 48.
Actor Calvin Levels is 4 7.

· Faye Wettfilll

.·'· .: .'' .

ati.d

.'

Brian ·aK' Annes ·
h~

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&gt;.

•

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• -

-.-

-

•

PuMtK~I -Urian .. 111&lt;.. · Armes, 37,.Pgmeroy,died at his

""

Th~ 2001 River Valley High School homecoming court.

Homecoming courts
River v.;lley High School and Gallia Academy High School observed homecoming Friday night. River Valley's homecoming court,
above, included Queen Jenny Blake , Amy Hood, Cayla Caldwell, Krista Smith, Megan Harrison, Tessa Baker, Ashley Reese, Bridget Harder, Erin Meige, Cassie Sheets and their escorts. Galli a Academy's court included Jessica Bodimer,.Queen Brianna Johnson, Andrea Woodall, Katie McCalla, Britney Pelletier and their escorts. (Bryan Long and Doug Shipley photos) '

Sharon A. Diehl

Erect monument rather
than rebuild twin towers
As shock and anger come under control, some are asking
whether the twin towers of the World Trade Center should be
rebuilt after the devastating Sept. 11 attacks.
The magnificent towers that defined New York City's skyline
for three decades were reduced to seven stories of rubble.
Although they were designed to withstand the impact of~ 707,
the towers could not survive heat from the burning aviation
fuel , which experts believed reached temperatures greater than
1 ,000 degrees.
.
As for rebuilding them, conflicting impulses wresde. There is
defiance. Show the terrorists that no damage they can do to this
nation is permanent. Rebuild. Make the towers, if anything,
taller.
Then there is prudence. Last week's attack was the se~ond
terrorist attempt to bring down these symbols of American
commerce and success.
. .
.
Rebuild the towers and the irresistible target returns. Who
would have the courage to work there?
·
Terrorists are not the only threat. It could be that 110 stories
is just too tall for a building. Any emergency - fire, earth- ·
quake, explosion - could leave thousands stranded. During
Sept. 11 's disaster, some people walked down 86 flights of stairs.
Fire equipment can't be designed to be effective for such sttuctutes.
Those are all valid arguments, but they feel like rationaliza-tions, justifications to take the coward's way out. Rebuilding
the towers would feel good. It would be a New York, in-yourface response.
But it would be wrong, we think. It would risk having to face
· this nightmare again somewhere down the road. Those who
chose to rebuild might have to face the relatives of the victims
- today's and tomorrow's- and explain how their pride was
worth someone else's blood.
. .·
No, it would be better to clean up the .rubble
cre~te a
monument to the fallen, a memorial by which America could
remember the thousands of innocent victims and the hundreds
of rescuers who lost their lives.- 71oe Ch~rle-ston (W.lil.) Gazette

t!:omrs ·!S&gt;rntonrl • Page AS

Deaths

residence on Thursday, September 27, 2001 .
He was the son of Roy K. Armes Jr. apd Mary Louks Armes
ani! was employed by the Ohio Department ofTransportation
as ·a mechanic at the Meigs County Garage.
He was also a graduate of Southern High School and a
member of Bet hal Worship Center.
·He was preceded in death by his grandfathers, Roy Armes
Sr., and Robert Louks; and a special neph ew, Shawn Marcinko.
Along with his parents, he is survived by his wife, C harlotte
Marcinko Armes of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter, Melissa and Sam
Combs of Racine; a brother, Randy and Edna Armes of
Chester; a grandson, Nicholas Combs of Racine; two sisters-inlaw, Charmaine and Bill Thoma, Charlene,and Louie Frederick, all of Racine; and his grandmothers, Margaret Jane Armes
of MinersviUe, Elma Louks of Syracuse.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Fisher- Acree
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Pastor Rob Barber.
·
Burial will follow in Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.

,.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~unbao•

Sunday. SeptemMr :so. 2001

'·

Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy1 OhioPoint Pleaaant, W.Va.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis. Ohio • Pomt Pleasant, WV ·

LongBottom

. Hop~ a,~ sympathy
.

.. ,

. . ... ·~

. . ~~.:~:·

'

.

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-:-

..

the American spirit, which lives on in all -:
of us. They may commit the most terri~
ble of crimes but they -will be hunted
down. There will be no sa fe place for
them anywhere on this earth.
' '
No matter how much time or money ' '
may be needed to capture them, it will
be given and spent, and they will be: •
caught and p\)nished. Those who com-· ~
mitted this crime hate and fear Amnic"· :;
and us, the American people. For all that
we have, which they will never, for all ..
that we are and will be, which they m; ··
not and never shall be.
This, ·the worst attack of terrorism
agaitist us, was well planned, well trained• ;
and pn;pared for and well led and perc
formed with .millions of dollars perhaps
funding it. This we must co nsider an act
of war. Any nation and its leadership that
suppo'rts, helps; funds , e11courages such: ··.
an attack must be considered at war witl'i'
us. We have the legal and moral rightt(&gt;:'i
search out these terrorists, their ttainin.g·:;
areas, meeting groups and grounds sup~
ply dumps and points. Leadership and '.'
their manpower and attack and destroy ' ..
them.
· ·· -··" ·
This was not the first such attack, no'o·
will it be the last. An American flag still - ~
flew in New York in front of what h~d
been the World trade Center, covered ',
with dirt, dust and perhaps the blood ·~f '
untold innocent lives.
·
It says to them we have bled, but we ;.
are not broken. We have lost many but
you will lose all. We wanted· peace; you
Martha V. Parson• gave us war. Now we will repay you a
Racine
thousand-fold. God is on the side of th"
just, the right and 'the sane. God is oil":

call heard from all corners of the earth:
God help us. Why, Lord?
There arose heroes who have their
lives for their fellow man , a coming
together that I pray everyone will
understand , for everyone pulling together can make God's task so mu ch easier.
God, I know, is crying for each one
who lost a loved one and the ones that
remain. He's waiting to hold them in His
arms. The litde ones who were taken
away already know God's tender arms
and His everlasting love.
· In life, ·things happen for a reason . I
think,. was the reason to bring everyone
to their knees? I don't know. This act was
senseless, cruei, personal without con, science or love for his fellow man. They
destroyed lives that were just beginning
and ended in such horror, some knowing their fate and some .knowing nothing at all. There were also some who did
make it. I pray they will take this chance
to give the Lord a place in their heart.
My heart goes out to each and every
faririly .who lost someone. My prayer is
for each of you peace, love, joy and· a
fond remembrance of each of your family..
l also pray God gives your body comfort, your heart a renewal of life, your
eyes something to dry them with,'your
ears· to hear the sounds of music and life,
and your soul to hear the voice of our
Lord Jesus Christ, a comfort to all .
God Bless everyone.

Dear Sditl)r: .;·· . : · , .
'
Sep1. 'Jl, Ari).erieli Was wounded. Our

sister's' anq

brother$ were .e xposed to a ·
different . kind of hate. That hate
destroyed families, dreams, ambitions and
the ability to multiply.
Souls . I hope had a chance to pray.
Shock, terror and sorrow forever in disarray.
Hearts ached, eyes cried, ears hard,
bodies trembled, praying that their
mother, father, brother, sister, aunt, uncle,
cousin, grandmother, grandfather was
.s omehow spared.
There arose out of all of this anguish a

Enemy will suffer
Dear Editor:

I would like tb say this about the terrible and sad events that took place on
the morning of Sept. 11.
They may . kill our peopie, but they
will never kill the American dream and
all those who have it and will see it f\11filled.
They may destroy our ·greatest nation al building,s but they will never destroy

~ ·- t

our side.

Be at peace and always remember that
those who have 's ttuck us shall them~ "
selves be struck down. Pray for mil"'
country, our people and especially thosl' '
who have suffered loss. Give blood if
possible.
'"·
· There is no greater power in the
world, than an angry and aroused' :
democracy.
"
David Edwaroli:-~
·"·
Pomeroy--

..,,' '

WASHINGTON MERRY- GO-ROUND

Will new security czar have real power?!~
WASHINGTON - Many lawmakers
said in the wake of the attacks on New
York and Washington, "We should have

seen it coming."

put anything in writing about what exactly Ridge would ·do. What authority will
he have?Will he have money? Staff? There
are reports that aides arc scouting space for
him in the West Wing, and where he sits;.,
will be a measure of his access and power, ··
.at least initially. Until we know w~,\ ";
Ridge's appointment means bureaucrati~. ,
· cally, it will be hai-d to judge hi~ potentiql ,
effectiveness. "l'Joes he have a blac.k seduo ·
and five people, or does he.nm a Cabinet ..'
COLUMNIST
department?" wonders one friend.
Ridge reportedly is not anxious r&lt;J '"
command
a full-fledged Cabinet departI
his success. Some 40 government agencies
ment,
and
would
prefer
a
sleeker
modCT
''
are involved in counterterrorism, and they
don 't easily shJre information ·or yield that would look more like the domestk:'':·
rurf For Ridge to be effective, all the var- equivalent of the National Security
ious agencies must report all their relevant Council, with a small staff ao)d guarantee&lt;
,.
findings to him. And he tnust have some direct 'access to tlie president. Riclg~'s ,.
··
say over their budgets and how they allo- Power is potentially awesome if he is to ,.
coordinate
such
disparate
agencies
as
th
e
::
cate resources. In the intelligence breakdo'wn that preceded the Sept. 11 hijack" Coast Guai-d, the, , Centers for Disease I•·.
ings, there was n~body at the CIA or FBI Control and the hrtrnigration and Na~u - ~
· who was able to connect the dues that ralization Service. And he may have to ~
came from numerous federal bureaucra- grapple with the possibility of a nationol -::
cies even though there were dozens of identity card, which un!il Sept. 11 was ::
anathema to both conservatives and liher- ::
warnings about a mega-attack.
ak
Putting a reassuring face on the kintl ::
Bu.&lt;h is personally close to Ridge, and
might have picked him for his vice presi- ofinttusive powers Republicans tradition- .::
dent if it weren't for the abortion issue. ally resist is what his job, however.defined . J
~ .
Ridge, who is Catholic, supports abortion is really about.

·Jack

Anderson

In fact, they did see it coming. In March
of this year, a bipartisan commission on
terrorism headed by former Senators
Gary Hart. D-Colo:, and Warren Rudman. R -N.H., reported to Congress on
the magnitude of the threat and urged the
creation of a National Homeland Security Agency.
•
.
Now that everybody's priorities have
changed, the need fur .self-protection is
painfully obvious. Republicans who
might once have decried adding another
layer of bureaucracy to th e government
are lauding President Bush for es4blishing
a new Cabinet-level position with d1e
pug&gt;ose of providing _hon:teland security
Buih's· chotce for the JOb ts the Republican governor of Pennsylvania, Tom Ridge.
He bring; a stellar resume to Washington,
and he'll need it. How he conducts him. self in the coming months could mean the
difference between a one-time publicrelations gimmick and the launching of
the most powerful Cabinet departlnent of
the new century.
As a combat veteran in Vietnam who
was awarded the Bronze Star, Ridge commands respect in the world he's now asked
(J~ck Attdmon mtd Douglas Colon are dis- ·::
rights. But so far, the White House hasn't
to oversee, and that is a crucial 6rst step to
tributed by United Fe~ture Sytodic~te.)
::

&amp;

Douglas
Cohn

,.

COTTAGEVILLE, WVa. Sharon A. Diehl, 26, Cottageville, W.Va., died Thursday, September 27,2001, at Jackson
General Hospital ih Ripley following an automobile accident.
She is the daughter of Richard A. a~,J&lt;:arron Skeens Lambert and was a supervisor of quality contro1 for K.S. ofWestVirgima.
She was also a member of the Flatwoods Freewill Baptist
-thurch in Ravenswood, W.Va.
.
She is preceded in death by her paternal grandparents,
Charles J. and ,Betty Lambert; and her maternal grandfather,
Louis Gene Skeens.
Along with her parents, she is survived by her husband, James
D. Diehl of Cottagevitle; three brothers, Louie R. Lambert of
Mason, Roman E. Ward, Rudy D. Ward, both of New Haven;
her materna1 grandmother, Gladys June Skeens of Letart.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason. Officiating will be Pastor .C hris
Skeens.
·
The 2001 Galli a Academy homecoming court. (Doug Shipley photo)
Burial will follow in Graham Cemetery in New Haven.
Friends visited on Saturday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral
Home.

Julia Belle Konieczny

'

.SWCD annual banquet, election set Oct. 16

DETROIT -Julia Belle Konieczny, 72, died Friday, Sep- .
tember 28, 2001, in Detroit.
·•
She was born Oct. 25; I 928, in Reedsville, Ohio, daughter of
the .(ate Dean Harry and Delphia Chutes Harvey. She was a
homemaker.
She is survived by a sister, Patricia Swierlik ofWashington,
WVa. ; a brother, Jack Eugene Harvey of Atlanta, Mich .; several .nieces, nephews and cousins; and several great-nieces and
great-nephews. .
'·
.
.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister,Virgin:ia Harvey.
·
·
Services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at White Funeral Home,
Coolville, Ohio. Burial will be in Weatherby Cemetery,
Coolville.
Fri~nds may call from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at
the funeral home.

FROM STAFF REPORTS
·s outhern Junior High School.
meetings and other meetings as required;
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil and
His students partiCipated in local envi- they also correspond with state and fed' District will hold its roth0n competitions sponsored by the eral legislators on conservation issues.
Water Conservation
annual meeting and banquet Oct. 16 at soil and water conservation district. He They also assist with the day-to-day
Y:16 p:m. at Meigs High School.
resides on a farm in Sutton Township, work of.the distri ct.
Ron Ramey of Lancaster, a self-pro- and raises alfalfa hay, targeting a specialty
Voters must be at least 18 and reside or
fessed outhouse expert and humorist, crop . market. His hobbies include hunt- own property in M eigs County. Absentee
ballots may be requested in writing from
will discuss \~~- "good old days" of"Out- ing, fishing and horseback ridong.
back America ."
. ·
Sayre is th e agricultural education the district otlice at 33101 Hiland Road,
An agricultural enthusiast, educator, teacher at Southern High School and has Pomeroy, at least five days prior to the
humorist and community leader, Ramey had success in training teams in soil judg- election. Ballots also m ay be cast at the
has won many humorous and serious ing, envirothon, parliamentary proce- di strict office the day of .the election
dure, forestry, agricultural engineering, between 7 a.m ..and 2:30p.m.
speech contests.
Awards will presented to the OutIn addition, attendees will elect a new grain merchandizing, farm blJ,'iiness manstanding . Cooperator, Soil Judging, Big
member to the Meigs SWCD Board of agement and other FFA events .
He resides on a 189-acre farm in Letart Tree Contest and Hay Show winners.
Supervisors to serve a term cmnmencing
Tickets for the chicken and ham dinTownship and is active in vegetable pro t
Jan. I, 2002, through Dec. 31, 2004.
ner
are available for $7 eac h at the district
Candidates include Bill Baer of Racine duction. The remainder of the farm is in
office, from district employees or superhay and timher.
and Aaron Sayre of Letart Falls.
CHESAPEAKE - Dorothy Danford Smith, 84, of ChesaThe winner will replace John Rice of visors Chris Hamon, Marco Jeffers, Joe
Baer is a retired teacher from Southern
peake died Friday, September 28, 2001, at St. Mary's Hospital, Local School District. He taught and was Reedsville, who is not seeking reelection Bolin,John Rice and Tom Theiss.
Huntington, W.Va.
The deadline to purchase tickets is
principal at Syracuse Elementary School ·after serving three terms.
~he was born May 6, 1917, in Lawrence County, daughter of
Supervisors attend regular monthly Thursday.
before becoming a science teacher at
the late Grophia and Lida Hesson. She was a former employee ·
of Guyan Cemetery, retired as purchasil)g director at Marshall
University, and a member of Greasy Ridge Church of Christ.
district ,' meaning both the
interim basis, she said.
She also was preceded in death by her husband, l.S. Smith; a
92nd House District and the
While most strong pain
sister, Hilda Pyles; and a brother, Dr. Edwin Danford.
20th. Senate District will be
medicines
last only about four
Survivors include a son and daughter-in-law, Keith E. and
up for grabs next spring.
from
PageA1
hours, OxyContin gives a
)anie Smith of Gallipolis; two brothers and one sister-in-law,
from Page Al
Meigs officials say the new
steady
•12- hour release and has
Russell and Jo Danford and Collis Danford, aU of Corpus
. .
...
Guernsey counties in the 20th districts could mean a step
Christi, Texas; two sistf'fS, Garnet Nance of Chesapeake and
near
her
Cincinnaticarea
home
fewer
side
ef\ects.
But
to
addicts
Senate District.
backward in economic develBeatrice Dillon of Friendswood, Texas; a grandson; and many
Gallia County will be rep- opment efforts and increased that would prescribe Oxycon- who chew the pill or crush it
nieces and nephews.
.
resented in the 87th House awareness in Columbus of tin. Until then, her primary and snort or inje ct the powder,
· Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Hall Funeral
District, along with Jackson, ISSues affecting distressed care physician agreed to pre- OxyContin produces a quick,
Home, Proctorville.
scribe the drug, but only on an heroin-like high that can kill.
Vinton and a portion of . Appalachian counties.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. -Monday at the funeral
"It's discouraging to see,~~
Lawrence County, and in the
home. Minister Barry Kelley will officiate.
17th Senate District, with County Commissioner Jeff
Burial will be in Rome Cemetery.
Highland, Clinton, Fayette, Thornton said 'last week.

Dorothy Danford Smith

Distrid

OxyContin
.

donned their uniforms after
Friday's callup. The Pentagon
said the Marine Corps would
mobilize 191 reservists and the
PageA1
,. Navy 250 mote to bring those
isttni delegation failed again activated so far to more than
Friday and said the Taliban 16,600.
leader, Mullah Mohammed
At Camp David, Bush conOrhar, refused to discuss the suited CIA director George
Saudi exile. One of the Pak- Tenet, chief . of staff Andrew
' istani participants said, "I don't Card and- national security
think that Mullah Omar is adviser Condoleezza Rice. The
afraid of war."
White House released a photo
The United States moved showing the four around a
· more equipment to the central table, a map of Mghanistan in
Asia region, and more .reservists the middle.

.Ta
.

from

Ross, Pike, Jackson, Vinton
and portions of Pickaway and
Lawrence Counties.
Neither of Meigs County's
state legislators will play a role
in the new arrangem ent. Rep.
John Carey, R -Wellston, will
·end hi s term next year due to
term limits, and Sen. Mike
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
will be located in the new
· 17th District, which includes
Gallia County.
State Sen. Nancy Hollister,
• R CMari etta, o1ow represents
portions of the proposed 20th
Senate District, but Marietta
will not be included in that

The"..Frontiersman"
The Battle Days Festival Committt&gt;e in Point ~laeasa~!· .':"~st Virgin!~ is
pleased to announce the arrival of the "1&gt;-ronuersman .. • h1s authen~Jcally
dressed Scotch-Irish frontiersman Is the second In a scr1cs o~ collectJhlc
hears made by The Ohio River Dear Co. to commemorate Battle Days,
Onl
the first battle of the American Revolution~ ~adc only
of the. finest materials this handmade collectible
Frontiersman is a limited edition.
~,
•

To order call

5

1-800-813-4055

. All

'·
••

BY 9

credit cards accepted

·····"····-

"We've been to Columbus so
many times to get help from
the state level. · and even
though you keep fighting, it
seems like a step back." ·
Besides the redistricting at
the state levels, lines for U.S.
co ngressio nal districts also
will be adjusted before next
year's primary election :
Chad
Tanner,
press
spokesman for U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D - Lucasville, said
Friday the Ohio Legislature is
not expected to consider any
ch anges in those district
boundaries unt il January
2002.

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~

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•

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�Page A&amp;
Sunday, September :so. 2001

Warmer for next few days
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

High pressure that has settl~d over Ohi will make :: 0\
littl e warme r &gt;cross the
region, the National We;uher
Service said.
It will be partly cloudy during the d1y with mainly clear
skies at night. Highs ' ':ill be in
the 60s to around 70. Lows
will be in the 40s.
No rain is in the forecast

Cities tightening belts as economy worsens

until Tuesd:.y.
Fore'tast
,._..J
.,.
"' H,·S"
•' --uo,
'-" •
St . ........ , . - Su1 '••!·
low 43.
Monday: I'Jrtly cloudy.
High 73, low 45.
Tuesday : Partly cloudy.
High 72, low 4H. ·
Wedn esday: Partly cloudy.
High 76, low 511.
Thu rsday: Partl y cloudy.
High 74, low -15.

COLI,.JMUUS (A I') -

As the state
~'nno~mq~s J·SF-f l.\ n•i!-!~e! !- bufl~e! shert
f.11l, mor&lt;• tfun half of Ohio cities also
say their revenues ;ore down and budgers
are tighr.
·
" It's just a m;~tt,·r of not panicking and
just hangin g right for th e ride," said
C hristoph er G rimm ," mayor of Tallmadge in su burban Akron where the
city is facing a. $500,000 deficit this year
on its s'Hi mill ion budget because of
falling income tax revenues.
The middl e-class city of 16,000 saw
comfortabl e revenu e increases of-5 to 8
percent in the 1990s, before the economy began to slow. Now, Tallmadge is
cutting back on traming and travel,
eliminating furniture purchases and
sl9wing down work on a planned recre1

Ruling allows greater access
CLEVELAND (AI') - A federal judge in Columbus ruled
that police must prove releasing information ftom otlicers' personnel files poses a threat to the otlicers or their fa milies before
withholding it from the public
Otlicials in Ohio had used a 1998 fe deral appeals court opinion to block the release of a police officer's home address, the
identities of family members and disciplinary files.
Judge George C. Smith ruled Thursday th at the health and
safety of the democracy takes precedent over the health and safe- ·
ty oflaw enforccinent officials and their f.1milies.
"To deny members of the press access to public information ...
· would silence the most important critics of governmental activity," Smith wrote.
·
The case originated with three undercover narcotics otlicers
from Coh•mbus who sought a court order blocking the city
fi-om releasing personal information tium their fil es.
·

ation ce:nter.

During t he 19')0s, more than half of "external pressures" the state faces
Ollie citi•~ n:ycrt &lt;l·gr..,;;.&gt;,rg-rewo.tm; ihd~dt"/\1cdiaid .ljlerrdlng and a coui'fsaid John Mahoney, depu·ty director of ordered school-funding fix that could
the Ohio Municipal League.
hit S1.2 billion annually.
Today, more than half say revenues are
In Warren in eastern Ohio, despite ~
down .
tax increase that took effect in July, the
"Clearly it's not good," Mahoney said. city received $200.000 less in incom~
"Our cities f.1ce the' same sorts of pure tax collections in August than the previ~
budgetary problems that the state's fac- ous year and is looking at another shorting," he said. "Our heavy exper;ditures fall this month.
are in personnel like police and fire, so it
Mayor Hank Angelo blamed layoffs in
has us m a d1fferent way than the state, the steel industry a11d predicted a drop
and we don't have the external pressures . in retail sales as the economic fallout
they do, but still th e pressure's there and from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks con-.
th e reve nue's not good."
tinues.
Ohio, which cut $180 million from its
The city increased taxes to raise an
budget last year, is predicting a $500 additional Sl.S millionJor the remainmillion budget shortfall this year and der of the year to rehire police and fireanother $500 million shortfall next year. fighters laid off because of a previous
In addition to falling revenues, the budget defi ci t.

Sunday. September :so. 2001

SUNDAY'S

Reds
defeat
Expos

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football
rum

SEOAL

~
Logan
3-0
Gallia Academy
3·0
Marietta
2·1
Athens
2·1
Jackson
1-2
Point Pleasant
1-2 .
Warren
0·3
River Valley
0-3
· Today's Games
Logan 59, Pt. Pleasant

rum

AI!
6-0
5·1
5-1

4-2
3-3

2-4
1·5
0-6

Ohio Division

~
Wellston
1·0
Belpre
1-0
Nelsonville-York 1-0
Alexander
0·1
Meigs
. 0·1
Vinton County
1
Hocking Division

AND

Ium

AI!

4-2

3·3
3-3

2-4

o:

1-5
0-6

~-

AI!

Waterford .
1·0
Trimble
1-0
Southern
1·0
Eastern
0·1
Miller
0-1
Federal Hocking 0·1
Today's Games
Trimble 35. Eastem 6

5-1

4·2
3·3
5-1
1-5
0-6
BUCKEYES WIN- Ohio State's running back Jonathan Wells. front. is .h it by indiana's tackle Dominique. Smith during the
first half in Bloomington, Indiana Saturday. (AP)

Soulhem 26. F. Hocking 15
Wellston 64. Meigs 7
Nelsonville-Y 47, Vinton Co. 6

Freshman leads OSU

Waterford 40, Miller 0

Belpre 41, Alexander 7
'

.

Non-league
rum
AU

lhree sentenced in thefts

Ravenswood
Oak Hill
Ripley
Wahama
,
Hann~rr--..- -- " ..
south daliia ,. ,_

LONDON (AP) -Three men accused of being involved in
a $5 million theft ring that operated in Ohio and. Indiana
received prison sentences Friday.
Fifteen Dayton-area residents have been charged with offenses related to the th'eft of motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, pickup
trucks, farm equipment, tools and other iten1s. The items were
taken from homes, farms and businesses in paris of Ohio and
central Indiana.
· Madison County Common Pleas Cou rt Judge Robert
Nichols sentenced Timothy Bell, 28, to nine years in prison after
Bell pleaded guilty to engaging in a pattc:rn of cormpt activity
and receiving stolen property.
Timothy Long, 28, was sentenced to six years in prison after
pleading no contest to engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity
and receiving stolen property.
John Tidwell, 30, was sentenced to two years in prison after
pleading no contest to receiving stolen property and having a
weapon under disability.
A fourth man, Todd Bell. 31, pleaded no contest _to receiving ·
stolen property. He was released on a recognizance bond pending a presenten.ce investigation.

6-0
3-2
.3-3
3-3
&lt;f·5

·· .. - o-5

~

Friday's Results
Wahama 46. Duval 6

Spring Valley 26, Ripley 14
Ravenswood 41, Ritchie 0
Saturday's Results

S. Gallia at Park. Cath, late
Hannan at Burch, late
Oak Hill at Ports. ND. late

Reds' casey out
for season
CINCINNATI (AP) Cincinnati Reds first baseman
Sean Casey tore his right calf
while running out a grounder
Friday night and will miss the
rest of the season. ·
Casey won't need s•Jrgery
to fix the \Orn muscle, the latest major injury to Cincinnati's depleted infield. Shortstop Barry Larkin has missed
most of the season with a
groin injury, and third baseman Aaron "Boone has broken
a hand three times when hit
by pitches.
Boone had surgery on his
left thumb Thursday to have a
pin and a wire inserte·d.
Larkin is recovering from a
hernia operation.
Casey joined them on the
out-of-commission list in the
third inning of a 7-6 loss to
the Montreal Expos.

Fresh Mark recalls hams
CANTON (AP) - Fresh Mark recalled a batch of cooked
hams Friday after determining they did not rpch the temperature to be classified as fully cooked.
Company spokesman Philip Whitfield said there have been no
illnesses related to the recall. The total weight of the recalled
hams was 16,500 pounds.
.
The hams were removed from store shelves in Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, Michigan, Arizona and Louisiana.
The recalled hams were: 10-pound Superior's Pit Ham. Lot
No. 9335, no sell-by date; 5-pound Super Tru Brown Sugar
Ham, Lot No. 9335, sell-by date Dec. 9, 2001; and 5-pound
Superior Brown Sugar Ham, Lot No, 9337, sell-by date Dec. 9,
2001.
.
Customers will receive a refund by returning the hams to the
stores where they were purchased.

.

Officer receives maximum

NFL, car dealen
resume talks

COLUMBUS (AP) - A former police officer received the
maximurn sentence of six months in jail on . Friday for the accidental death of his wife.
Jan Marie Wright, 37, was killed May 16 when a bullet from
Richard Wright's service revolver hit her in the chest outside
their suburban home. Wright told author ities he and his wife
were struggling over the gun when it fired .
Wright pleaded guilty in Franklin County .Common Pleas
Court to negligent homiCide, a misdemeanor charge, and
resigned from the police force in August.
A tearful Wright said in court on Friday that he thinks of his
wife day and night and lrves in anguish because of the shooting.
A sheriff's department investigation showed the shooting was
not intentional.

CONTACT:
Debra Sword
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc.
4848 SR 325 S, P.O. Box 200 Rio Grande, OH 4567 4-0200
740-379-2025 or 800-231-2732 ext. 170

Police .accused of hiding evidence

~ Touchstone Energy"

C INCINNATI (AP) - The children of a slain woman say a
suburban Cincinnati pollee, department conspired for almost two
decades to cover up evidence in their mother's death . .
· The children of Mary Wright Schuholz say in a federal lawsuit
· filed Tuesday that city officials ii1 Sharonville and current and former police officers of that city destroyed evidence. The police
chief and law. director declined comment on Friday.

'

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Page 81

TVC

CLEVELAND (AP) -A former congresswoman, a former
Clinton appointe; and two county commissioners head the field
of I 0 candidates in Tuesday's mayoral primary that has no clear
tiunt-runner. ·
That field will be trimmed to two after a campaign season that
was silenced at its scheduled peak by the terrorism attacks in
New York, Washingmn and Pennsylvania.
All candidates in the nonpartisan primary are Democrats, like
retiring Mayor Michael R. White. No Republican filed for the
race in the city where Republican, U.S. Sen. George Voinovich,
preceded White.
The two top primary finishers will advance to the Nov. 6 election .
~
White set off a political free-for-all in the overwhelmingly
Democratic city when he announced in May that he wouldn't
seek a fourth four-year term.
The city's two members of Congress decided to stay put: Den·-pis Kucinich, who was mayor when .the city went into default in
1978, and Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a popular former judge and
prosecutor.

.l

Blue Devils top Warren, Page B2
Sor~thern slays Lancers, Page 83
NASCARgetting rougher, Page B5
Outdoors: In The Open, Page B6

13
G. Academy 23. Warren 21
Athens 36. River Valley 12
Marietta 34, Jackson 24

NEW. YORK CITY

10 Demoaats seek office

Inside:

.,

·'

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -·
The NFL and the National
Automobile Dealers Association resumed talks to try and
work out a schedule change
that would allow the city to
keep the Super Bowl.
With a week's worth of
games postponed following
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
the NFL hopes to move the
.Super Bowl back one week to .
Feb. 3 - the same weekend
that N ADA .is set to hold a
major convention in the city.
In case no deal can be
. reached with NADA, the
NFL has asked Miami, Tampa
Bay and Los Angeles if they
could host the championship
game.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Lydell Ross ran for 124 yards and
two touchdown s, and Steve Bellisari
was 15-for-21 for lSI yards as Ohio
.· .State beat Indiana 2·7 " 14 Saturday.
Ross, a true freshman who wasn't
listed · on Ohio State's two-deep for a 17-7lead.
depth chart, entered the game with
He had to be helped to the sideline
only six carries for 20 yards in two with 3:03 remaining in the game
games. He had 16 carries for 69 yards after being tackled. He did not
in the first quarter, and carried 25 return.
times overall.
By then, the J:luckeyes had finished
Bellisari opened the second quarter scoring, with th e last touchdown
with consecutive 17 -yard comple - coming on a 7 -yard run by Jonath an
tions to Chris Gamble and Angelo Wells.
Chattams.
Josh Huston, who ki cked a 20-yard
Ross ran the ball five straight tim.es .field go~] in the first quarter, added
and scored on a "5-yard run with another 20-yarder in the third to
12:07 left to put the Buckeyes (2-1, push the lead to 20- 14 .
1-0 Big Ten) ahead 10- 7.
Bellisari , who coinp leteo:l only 5 of
Ross had a !-yard touchdown run . 23 passes _ for 45 yards last week
with 23 seconds left in the first half against UCLA, rebounl:led with an

·Buckeyes difeat
, Indiana, 27-14

11-for- 15. 146-yard effort in the first
quarter. The Buckeyes finished with
391 yards of total offense after only
166 last week.
Indiana's Antwaan Randle El, who
became the first quarterback in Division 1-A history to rush for 3,000 ·
yards and pass for 6,000 yards, threw
a 44-yard touchdown pass to Levron
Williams with 7:03 left in the third to
make it 20-14.
Williams scored the Hoosiers' first
touchdown, on a 1-yard run in the
fir st quarter. Williams ran for 81 y~rds
on 21 carries and caught four passes
for 62 yards.
Ohio State has won eight straight
games against the Hoosiers (0-3, 01). Indian a's attendance was 48, 577
thankS to about 15,000 O hio State
fans.

C IN C INNATI (AP)
R obin je1mings hit a two-run
homer a~1d Ken Griffey Jr. drove
in a pair of runs as the Cincin- ·
nati R eds beat. the Expos 7-4
Saturday, clinching another 90loss season for Montreal.
The Expos have lost 90
games in each of their last four
seasons, the worst such streak in
the franchise 's 33-year history.
In their first 29 years. the Expos
reached the 90-loss mark only
four rimes, never twice in a row.
The Reds · stayed one · lo~'
away from a .{llilestone of their
own. Baseball's first professional
franchise needs one loss in its
last four games at Cinergy Field
to set a club record.
The 1937 Reds lost 51 games
at Crosley Field. These Reds are
26-51 at home.
They've already have lost 90
games for only the 13th time in
their 133-year histoty.At 64-91,
Cincinnati is having its worst
seasoiJ since 1984, when it lost
92.
Elmer Dessens
(1 0-13)
pitched six shutout innings and
became the first R ed' pitcher to
reach the 10-victory mark. The
rigl1t-hander gave up four hits
before leaving for a pinch hitter
with the Reds up 5-0.
Danny Graves, who blew a
three-run lead on Friday night,
relieved with two on and no
outs in the ninth and allowed an
RBI single to Jose Vidro before
getting three outs for his 30th
save in 37 chances.
Masato Yoshii (4-6) struggled
in his second start since replacing Javier Vazquez. out for the ·
season with broken bones
around his right eye.Yoshii gave
up four runs in the first inning,
when he added to his problems
by failing to field his position.
Yoshii walked Todd Walker to
start the inning, then threw
away Wilton Guerrero's perfectly placed bunt, leaving runners
on second and third. Griffey hit
a sacrifice fly, Dmitri Young singled home a run and Jennings
hit his third homer for a 4-0
lead.

Terps

after 23~20 win over WVU
· COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - Bruce
Perry ran for 153 yards and a touchdown Saturday as surprising Maryland stayed unbeaten
with a 32-20 victory over error-prone West
Virginia.
It was the fourth straight 100-yard game for
Perry, who carried 31 times and caught two
passes for 28 }"-lrds. ShJun Hill threw ,for a
touchdown and ran for another as Maryland
improved to 4-0 for only the second time
since 1978.
Ralph Friedgen, hired to turn around a
. team that hasn't been to a bowl game since
1990, joined H.C. Byrd as the only two
coaches to begin their first season at Maryland with four straight wins.
Avon Cobourne ran for 128 yards and
Shawn Terry returned a kickoff 100 yards for

West Virginia (2-2). But Brad Lewis threw
four interceptions and the Mountaineers lost
two fumbl es.
Lewis went 31-for-52 for 279 yards and a
touchdown, but his five turnovers were too
much for the Mountaineers to overcome.
Antonio Brown, who had 10 catches for 108
yards, also lost a fumble.
.
The Mountaineers' fifth turnover enabled
the Terrapins to take a 25-13 lead with 41
seconds left in th e third quarter. After Randall
Jones returned an interception 30 yards to the
West Virginia 22, Guilian Gary caught a pass
from Hill in front of Lance Frazier for a 29yard score.
Terry followed with a fourth career kickoff TRY TO CATCh ME - West Virginia quarterback Brad Lewis
return for a touchdown, cruising down the scrambles away from Maryland linebacker Aaron Thompson
(40) during the second quarter at Byrd Stadium. (AP)
right sideline to make it 25-20.

Many changes for new-look hockey league
NHL
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

The landscape of the NHL
has changed so much in a
year, it might as well be a
brand new league.
Mario Lemieux returns for
. his first f)lll season in five
years. Wayne Gretzky is back,
too, as an executive in
Phoenix. For the first time
since 1979, Ray Bourque isn't
playing - and · isn't chasing
the Stanley Cup. Will any fan
forget the image of Bourque,

a tear running down his
cheek, hoisting the trophy he
pursued for a lifetime?
Eric Lindros is wearing a
new blue shirt, hopeful. his
concussions and months of
acrimonious relations wi th his

with the Rangers.
Jaromir Jagr has changed
colors, too, -leaving Pittsburgh
behind after II years and five
NHL"scoring' titles to try to
put hockey on the front page
in Washington. That could be
difficult: After realizing ~e
couldn't compete in Pittsburgh with Lemieux's popularity, he now must go headto-head at the box office with
a guy named Michael Jordan.
In perhaps the most

former employers, tlie Flyers,
finallv are over now that he's intriguing

''

moves

Detroit's ,ISSe mbly line of high-priced stars who couldaging stars· added more big n't win the big game, are the
names, and they're about as defending champs. They're
big as they get: Dominik nearly all back, too, except for
Hasek and Brett Hull, plus th e now-retired l:lourque and
Luc Robitaille, too. The Red tht&gt; tired-out Peter Forsberg,
Wings have more potential who may sit out the season
Hall of Famers than any team after having his spleen
in sports (and a Hall of Fame removed during the playoffs.
coach in Scotty Bow man) . · · However, the Avalanche still
. The trouble is, most could be have plenty of stars, thanks to
juining the hall relatively soon . th e $.100 million-plus in con- seven are 35 or over.
tracts signed by Joe Sakic,
The Colorado Avalanche.
Please see NHL, B4
of all, once seen :is a collection of
,.

�Page A&amp;
Sunday, September :so. 2001

Warmer for next few days
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

High pressure that has settl~d over Ohi will make :: 0\
littl e warme r &gt;cross the
region, the National We;uher
Service said.
It will be partly cloudy during the d1y with mainly clear
skies at night. Highs ' ':ill be in
the 60s to around 70. Lows
will be in the 40s.
No rain is in the forecast

Cities tightening belts as economy worsens

until Tuesd:.y.
Fore'tast
,._..J
.,.
"' H,·S"
•' --uo,
'-" •
St . ........ , . - Su1 '••!·
low 43.
Monday: I'Jrtly cloudy.
High 73, low 45.
Tuesday : Partly cloudy.
High 72, low 4H. ·
Wedn esday: Partly cloudy.
High 76, low 511.
Thu rsday: Partl y cloudy.
High 74, low -15.

COLI,.JMUUS (A I') -

As the state
~'nno~mq~s J·SF-f l.\ n•i!-!~e! !- bufl~e! shert
f.11l, mor&lt;• tfun half of Ohio cities also
say their revenues ;ore down and budgers
are tighr.
·
" It's just a m;~tt,·r of not panicking and
just hangin g right for th e ride," said
C hristoph er G rimm ," mayor of Tallmadge in su burban Akron where the
city is facing a. $500,000 deficit this year
on its s'Hi mill ion budget because of
falling income tax revenues.
The middl e-class city of 16,000 saw
comfortabl e revenu e increases of-5 to 8
percent in the 1990s, before the economy began to slow. Now, Tallmadge is
cutting back on traming and travel,
eliminating furniture purchases and
sl9wing down work on a planned recre1

Ruling allows greater access
CLEVELAND (AI') - A federal judge in Columbus ruled
that police must prove releasing information ftom otlicers' personnel files poses a threat to the otlicers or their fa milies before
withholding it from the public
Otlicials in Ohio had used a 1998 fe deral appeals court opinion to block the release of a police officer's home address, the
identities of family members and disciplinary files.
Judge George C. Smith ruled Thursday th at the health and
safety of the democracy takes precedent over the health and safe- ·
ty oflaw enforccinent officials and their f.1milies.
"To deny members of the press access to public information ...
· would silence the most important critics of governmental activity," Smith wrote.
·
The case originated with three undercover narcotics otlicers
from Coh•mbus who sought a court order blocking the city
fi-om releasing personal information tium their fil es.
·

ation ce:nter.

During t he 19')0s, more than half of "external pressures" the state faces
Ollie citi•~ n:ycrt &lt;l·gr..,;;.&gt;,rg-rewo.tm; ihd~dt"/\1cdiaid .ljlerrdlng and a coui'fsaid John Mahoney, depu·ty director of ordered school-funding fix that could
the Ohio Municipal League.
hit S1.2 billion annually.
Today, more than half say revenues are
In Warren in eastern Ohio, despite ~
down .
tax increase that took effect in July, the
"Clearly it's not good," Mahoney said. city received $200.000 less in incom~
"Our cities f.1ce the' same sorts of pure tax collections in August than the previ~
budgetary problems that the state's fac- ous year and is looking at another shorting," he said. "Our heavy exper;ditures fall this month.
are in personnel like police and fire, so it
Mayor Hank Angelo blamed layoffs in
has us m a d1fferent way than the state, the steel industry a11d predicted a drop
and we don't have the external pressures . in retail sales as the economic fallout
they do, but still th e pressure's there and from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks con-.
th e reve nue's not good."
tinues.
Ohio, which cut $180 million from its
The city increased taxes to raise an
budget last year, is predicting a $500 additional Sl.S millionJor the remainmillion budget shortfall this year and der of the year to rehire police and fireanother $500 million shortfall next year. fighters laid off because of a previous
In addition to falling revenues, the budget defi ci t.

Sunday. September :so. 2001

SUNDAY'S

Reds
defeat
Expos

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football
rum

SEOAL

~
Logan
3-0
Gallia Academy
3·0
Marietta
2·1
Athens
2·1
Jackson
1-2
Point Pleasant
1-2 .
Warren
0·3
River Valley
0-3
· Today's Games
Logan 59, Pt. Pleasant

rum

AI!
6-0
5·1
5-1

4-2
3-3

2-4
1·5
0-6

Ohio Division

~
Wellston
1·0
Belpre
1-0
Nelsonville-York 1-0
Alexander
0·1
Meigs
. 0·1
Vinton County
1
Hocking Division

AND

Ium

AI!

4-2

3·3
3-3

2-4

o:

1-5
0-6

~-

AI!

Waterford .
1·0
Trimble
1-0
Southern
1·0
Eastern
0·1
Miller
0-1
Federal Hocking 0·1
Today's Games
Trimble 35. Eastem 6

5-1

4·2
3·3
5-1
1-5
0-6
BUCKEYES WIN- Ohio State's running back Jonathan Wells. front. is .h it by indiana's tackle Dominique. Smith during the
first half in Bloomington, Indiana Saturday. (AP)

Soulhem 26. F. Hocking 15
Wellston 64. Meigs 7
Nelsonville-Y 47, Vinton Co. 6

Freshman leads OSU

Waterford 40, Miller 0

Belpre 41, Alexander 7
'

.

Non-league
rum
AU

lhree sentenced in thefts

Ravenswood
Oak Hill
Ripley
Wahama
,
Hann~rr--..- -- " ..
south daliia ,. ,_

LONDON (AP) -Three men accused of being involved in
a $5 million theft ring that operated in Ohio and. Indiana
received prison sentences Friday.
Fifteen Dayton-area residents have been charged with offenses related to the th'eft of motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, pickup
trucks, farm equipment, tools and other iten1s. The items were
taken from homes, farms and businesses in paris of Ohio and
central Indiana.
· Madison County Common Pleas Cou rt Judge Robert
Nichols sentenced Timothy Bell, 28, to nine years in prison after
Bell pleaded guilty to engaging in a pattc:rn of cormpt activity
and receiving stolen property.
Timothy Long, 28, was sentenced to six years in prison after
pleading no contest to engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity
and receiving stolen property.
John Tidwell, 30, was sentenced to two years in prison after
pleading no contest to receiving stolen property and having a
weapon under disability.
A fourth man, Todd Bell. 31, pleaded no contest _to receiving ·
stolen property. He was released on a recognizance bond pending a presenten.ce investigation.

6-0
3-2
.3-3
3-3
&lt;f·5

·· .. - o-5

~

Friday's Results
Wahama 46. Duval 6

Spring Valley 26, Ripley 14
Ravenswood 41, Ritchie 0
Saturday's Results

S. Gallia at Park. Cath, late
Hannan at Burch, late
Oak Hill at Ports. ND. late

Reds' casey out
for season
CINCINNATI (AP) Cincinnati Reds first baseman
Sean Casey tore his right calf
while running out a grounder
Friday night and will miss the
rest of the season. ·
Casey won't need s•Jrgery
to fix the \Orn muscle, the latest major injury to Cincinnati's depleted infield. Shortstop Barry Larkin has missed
most of the season with a
groin injury, and third baseman Aaron "Boone has broken
a hand three times when hit
by pitches.
Boone had surgery on his
left thumb Thursday to have a
pin and a wire inserte·d.
Larkin is recovering from a
hernia operation.
Casey joined them on the
out-of-commission list in the
third inning of a 7-6 loss to
the Montreal Expos.

Fresh Mark recalls hams
CANTON (AP) - Fresh Mark recalled a batch of cooked
hams Friday after determining they did not rpch the temperature to be classified as fully cooked.
Company spokesman Philip Whitfield said there have been no
illnesses related to the recall. The total weight of the recalled
hams was 16,500 pounds.
.
The hams were removed from store shelves in Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, Michigan, Arizona and Louisiana.
The recalled hams were: 10-pound Superior's Pit Ham. Lot
No. 9335, no sell-by date; 5-pound Super Tru Brown Sugar
Ham, Lot No. 9335, sell-by date Dec. 9, 2001; and 5-pound
Superior Brown Sugar Ham, Lot No, 9337, sell-by date Dec. 9,
2001.
.
Customers will receive a refund by returning the hams to the
stores where they were purchased.

.

Officer receives maximum

NFL, car dealen
resume talks

COLUMBUS (AP) - A former police officer received the
maximurn sentence of six months in jail on . Friday for the accidental death of his wife.
Jan Marie Wright, 37, was killed May 16 when a bullet from
Richard Wright's service revolver hit her in the chest outside
their suburban home. Wright told author ities he and his wife
were struggling over the gun when it fired .
Wright pleaded guilty in Franklin County .Common Pleas
Court to negligent homiCide, a misdemeanor charge, and
resigned from the police force in August.
A tearful Wright said in court on Friday that he thinks of his
wife day and night and lrves in anguish because of the shooting.
A sheriff's department investigation showed the shooting was
not intentional.

CONTACT:
Debra Sword
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc.
4848 SR 325 S, P.O. Box 200 Rio Grande, OH 4567 4-0200
740-379-2025 or 800-231-2732 ext. 170

Police .accused of hiding evidence

~ Touchstone Energy"

C INCINNATI (AP) - The children of a slain woman say a
suburban Cincinnati pollee, department conspired for almost two
decades to cover up evidence in their mother's death . .
· The children of Mary Wright Schuholz say in a federal lawsuit
· filed Tuesday that city officials ii1 Sharonville and current and former police officers of that city destroyed evidence. The police
chief and law. director declined comment on Friday.

'

.
•

..
.......
••

- ...'1

•

,.

\

•'

.

Page 81

TVC

CLEVELAND (AP) -A former congresswoman, a former
Clinton appointe; and two county commissioners head the field
of I 0 candidates in Tuesday's mayoral primary that has no clear
tiunt-runner. ·
That field will be trimmed to two after a campaign season that
was silenced at its scheduled peak by the terrorism attacks in
New York, Washingmn and Pennsylvania.
All candidates in the nonpartisan primary are Democrats, like
retiring Mayor Michael R. White. No Republican filed for the
race in the city where Republican, U.S. Sen. George Voinovich,
preceded White.
The two top primary finishers will advance to the Nov. 6 election .
~
White set off a political free-for-all in the overwhelmingly
Democratic city when he announced in May that he wouldn't
seek a fourth four-year term.
The city's two members of Congress decided to stay put: Den·-pis Kucinich, who was mayor when .the city went into default in
1978, and Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a popular former judge and
prosecutor.

.l

Blue Devils top Warren, Page B2
Sor~thern slays Lancers, Page 83
NASCARgetting rougher, Page B5
Outdoors: In The Open, Page B6

13
G. Academy 23. Warren 21
Athens 36. River Valley 12
Marietta 34, Jackson 24

NEW. YORK CITY

10 Demoaats seek office

Inside:

.,

·'

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -·
The NFL and the National
Automobile Dealers Association resumed talks to try and
work out a schedule change
that would allow the city to
keep the Super Bowl.
With a week's worth of
games postponed following
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
the NFL hopes to move the
.Super Bowl back one week to .
Feb. 3 - the same weekend
that N ADA .is set to hold a
major convention in the city.
In case no deal can be
. reached with NADA, the
NFL has asked Miami, Tampa
Bay and Los Angeles if they
could host the championship
game.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Lydell Ross ran for 124 yards and
two touchdown s, and Steve Bellisari
was 15-for-21 for lSI yards as Ohio
.· .State beat Indiana 2·7 " 14 Saturday.
Ross, a true freshman who wasn't
listed · on Ohio State's two-deep for a 17-7lead.
depth chart, entered the game with
He had to be helped to the sideline
only six carries for 20 yards in two with 3:03 remaining in the game
games. He had 16 carries for 69 yards after being tackled. He did not
in the first quarter, and carried 25 return.
times overall.
By then, the J:luckeyes had finished
Bellisari opened the second quarter scoring, with th e last touchdown
with consecutive 17 -yard comple - coming on a 7 -yard run by Jonath an
tions to Chris Gamble and Angelo Wells.
Chattams.
Josh Huston, who ki cked a 20-yard
Ross ran the ball five straight tim.es .field go~] in the first quarter, added
and scored on a "5-yard run with another 20-yarder in the third to
12:07 left to put the Buckeyes (2-1, push the lead to 20- 14 .
1-0 Big Ten) ahead 10- 7.
Bellisari , who coinp leteo:l only 5 of
Ross had a !-yard touchdown run . 23 passes _ for 45 yards last week
with 23 seconds left in the first half against UCLA, rebounl:led with an

·Buckeyes difeat
, Indiana, 27-14

11-for- 15. 146-yard effort in the first
quarter. The Buckeyes finished with
391 yards of total offense after only
166 last week.
Indiana's Antwaan Randle El, who
became the first quarterback in Division 1-A history to rush for 3,000 ·
yards and pass for 6,000 yards, threw
a 44-yard touchdown pass to Levron
Williams with 7:03 left in the third to
make it 20-14.
Williams scored the Hoosiers' first
touchdown, on a 1-yard run in the
fir st quarter. Williams ran for 81 y~rds
on 21 carries and caught four passes
for 62 yards.
Ohio State has won eight straight
games against the Hoosiers (0-3, 01). Indian a's attendance was 48, 577
thankS to about 15,000 O hio State
fans.

C IN C INNATI (AP)
R obin je1mings hit a two-run
homer a~1d Ken Griffey Jr. drove
in a pair of runs as the Cincin- ·
nati R eds beat. the Expos 7-4
Saturday, clinching another 90loss season for Montreal.
The Expos have lost 90
games in each of their last four
seasons, the worst such streak in
the franchise 's 33-year history.
In their first 29 years. the Expos
reached the 90-loss mark only
four rimes, never twice in a row.
The Reds · stayed one · lo~'
away from a .{llilestone of their
own. Baseball's first professional
franchise needs one loss in its
last four games at Cinergy Field
to set a club record.
The 1937 Reds lost 51 games
at Crosley Field. These Reds are
26-51 at home.
They've already have lost 90
games for only the 13th time in
their 133-year histoty.At 64-91,
Cincinnati is having its worst
seasoiJ since 1984, when it lost
92.
Elmer Dessens
(1 0-13)
pitched six shutout innings and
became the first R ed' pitcher to
reach the 10-victory mark. The
rigl1t-hander gave up four hits
before leaving for a pinch hitter
with the Reds up 5-0.
Danny Graves, who blew a
three-run lead on Friday night,
relieved with two on and no
outs in the ninth and allowed an
RBI single to Jose Vidro before
getting three outs for his 30th
save in 37 chances.
Masato Yoshii (4-6) struggled
in his second start since replacing Javier Vazquez. out for the ·
season with broken bones
around his right eye.Yoshii gave
up four runs in the first inning,
when he added to his problems
by failing to field his position.
Yoshii walked Todd Walker to
start the inning, then threw
away Wilton Guerrero's perfectly placed bunt, leaving runners
on second and third. Griffey hit
a sacrifice fly, Dmitri Young singled home a run and Jennings
hit his third homer for a 4-0
lead.

Terps

after 23~20 win over WVU
· COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - Bruce
Perry ran for 153 yards and a touchdown Saturday as surprising Maryland stayed unbeaten
with a 32-20 victory over error-prone West
Virginia.
It was the fourth straight 100-yard game for
Perry, who carried 31 times and caught two
passes for 28 }"-lrds. ShJun Hill threw ,for a
touchdown and ran for another as Maryland
improved to 4-0 for only the second time
since 1978.
Ralph Friedgen, hired to turn around a
. team that hasn't been to a bowl game since
1990, joined H.C. Byrd as the only two
coaches to begin their first season at Maryland with four straight wins.
Avon Cobourne ran for 128 yards and
Shawn Terry returned a kickoff 100 yards for

West Virginia (2-2). But Brad Lewis threw
four interceptions and the Mountaineers lost
two fumbl es.
Lewis went 31-for-52 for 279 yards and a
touchdown, but his five turnovers were too
much for the Mountaineers to overcome.
Antonio Brown, who had 10 catches for 108
yards, also lost a fumble.
.
The Mountaineers' fifth turnover enabled
the Terrapins to take a 25-13 lead with 41
seconds left in th e third quarter. After Randall
Jones returned an interception 30 yards to the
West Virginia 22, Guilian Gary caught a pass
from Hill in front of Lance Frazier for a 29yard score.
Terry followed with a fourth career kickoff TRY TO CATCh ME - West Virginia quarterback Brad Lewis
return for a touchdown, cruising down the scrambles away from Maryland linebacker Aaron Thompson
(40) during the second quarter at Byrd Stadium. (AP)
right sideline to make it 25-20.

Many changes for new-look hockey league
NHL
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

The landscape of the NHL
has changed so much in a
year, it might as well be a
brand new league.
Mario Lemieux returns for
. his first f)lll season in five
years. Wayne Gretzky is back,
too, as an executive in
Phoenix. For the first time
since 1979, Ray Bourque isn't
playing - and · isn't chasing
the Stanley Cup. Will any fan
forget the image of Bourque,

a tear running down his
cheek, hoisting the trophy he
pursued for a lifetime?
Eric Lindros is wearing a
new blue shirt, hopeful. his
concussions and months of
acrimonious relations wi th his

with the Rangers.
Jaromir Jagr has changed
colors, too, -leaving Pittsburgh
behind after II years and five
NHL"scoring' titles to try to
put hockey on the front page
in Washington. That could be
difficult: After realizing ~e
couldn't compete in Pittsburgh with Lemieux's popularity, he now must go headto-head at the box office with
a guy named Michael Jordan.
In perhaps the most

former employers, tlie Flyers,
finallv are over now that he's intriguing

''

moves

Detroit's ,ISSe mbly line of high-priced stars who couldaging stars· added more big n't win the big game, are the
names, and they're about as defending champs. They're
big as they get: Dominik nearly all back, too, except for
Hasek and Brett Hull, plus th e now-retired l:lourque and
Luc Robitaille, too. The Red tht&gt; tired-out Peter Forsberg,
Wings have more potential who may sit out the season
Hall of Famers than any team after having his spleen
in sports (and a Hall of Fame removed during the playoffs.
coach in Scotty Bow man) . · · However, the Avalanche still
. The trouble is, most could be have plenty of stars, thanks to
juining the hall relatively soon . th e $.100 million-plus in con- seven are 35 or over.
tracts signed by Joe Sakic,
The Colorado Avalanche.
Please see NHL, B4
of all, once seen :is a collection of
,.

�Page B2 • ~unb ,w (!;unrs - ~rnl111rl

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

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

Sunda~Sept.30,2001

Week Six

'

High School Football

Blue Devils hold off Warriors EaStern loses
first game to
Tomcats
BY R.

SHAWN LEWIS
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

CA LLII'OLIS. O l110 -

' ' .l'\ ti l l'
\ \ '&lt;l P•t

bc ... t o f t im e~:

It \\'.lS

It

the

of ti i i JL''i .

Such was C allia Academy's
tale Frid.1y as the Ulue Devtls
(5- 1. 3-0. SEOAL) fo ught o ff
W~t rrl'll

Local 2H-1 1 on homecu imn g tl1 bht :1t Memorial
Fil'ltL
As fo r the best. GaUipolis'
hi gh- ort.me o tle mive atta ck
ag.un \truck L•arl y and often ,
tt•ckd bv the long- range combi n.Ition of quarterback David
IJ ro,k m .md W!deout Jmh
i't' ITVTh e dynamic duo hooked
up 0 11 a 73- yard scoring strike
on Ca llipoli&lt;' fi rst play from
s•. : r Illllll Llg:t· .
M,·.mwhile, tailback Bobby
Jones continued his assault on
th e region's defenses, rushing for
125 yards and two touchdowns
(SO, 72) - all on just five carf\ L'S.

Jones also factored in the
worst portion of GaUia Academ y's evening multiple
injuries to key players - when
he was it~ure d on his fifth carry,
limping off the field with a
sprained ankle midway through
th e •econd quarter.
He did not play in the second
half.
" 13obby's OK," Coach Brent
Saund,·rs said after the game.
" He'll be aU right in a few

d1ys."
Co rnerback Justin North and
ddi:mive standout Kyle Forgey
also suffered injuries. North
"had a spasm in his hip muscles"
atier recording a touchdownsaving tackle late in the fourth
quarter. Saunders said.
"Forgey pinched a nerve in
his lower back."
In addition to those three, the
lllu e Devils were without the
services of offensive lineman
Ben Doolittle, who pulled a
hamming Tuesday.
Gallipolis looked poised to
carry a 21-0 lead into half- time,
but Shannon Shipley shanked a
13-yard punt with 28 seconds
left, giving Warren Local the ball
on the Gallipolis 32.
After a delay penalty, quarter. back Travis Ollum Jed the Warriors on a five-play, 37-yard
scoring drive capped by Justin
Gum's ! ~yard dive with one
second
remammg.
Jared
Arnold's extra point made the
half-time score 21-7.
Facing the loss ofJones, Saunders' pre-game wish of having
his Blue Devils mount a sustained drive came true to start
the third half.
Gall ip olis used the one-two
punch of fullback Ty Simmons
and tailback Donnie Johnson to
march 70 yards in 12 plays, consuming 6:41 off the clock.
Simmons carried nine times

for .J9 yards on the drive,
in cl udm~ a 1-yard scoring run .
The fid lback to taled 50 yards on
14 carries for tlw ni!;IJt.
Warren Local didn't go away,
however.
Th e Warriurs turned to split
end Chris Hendricks to get
back in the game, and ·Hendricks responded . On J fourthand-in ches play, Hendricks
scooted around the end and
scampered 55 yards for a touchdown .
Arnold's kick left the score
28-14.
On Gallipolis' ensuing possession, Hendricks intercepted an
errant Travis McKinni.ss toss and
returned it 36 yards to the Gallipolis 33.
But Warren Local . couldn't
capitalize. The Warriors' drive
staUed · when Arnold's 36- yard
field goal attempt sailed wide
left.
Gallipolis got the ball back on
its 20 with 7:33 remaining in
the game and tried to run out
the clock. The Blue Devils did
run 10 plays - at one point
advancing to the Warren 42 -but were forced to punt with
2:52 remaining.
Ollum, a three-year starteJ,
then took to the air.
H e hooked up with Hendricks on a 67 -yard catch-andrun on second down. Only
North's last-gasp salvo along the

near sideline kept Hendri cks
hum scoring .- but not for
long.
Ollum found Hendricks in
the end zone for an 8-yard
touchdown on the next play.
Arnold's point-after was good,
and the score was 28-21 with
2:25 to play.
Warren Local then sat up for
an onsides kick.
Saunders put in his " hands"
team, and the strategy paid off.
llrodeur dove on the baU at the
Warren 49, and the Blue Devils
were able to run out the clock
to record a 28-2 1 win.
"I was really proud of our

execution," Saunders said. "That

was definitely a bright spot
tonight."
The coach also praised his
defense, . which recorded one
sack (Nathan Kiskis) and repeatedly put Ollum on his back.
Saunders praised Warren
Local, saying . the Warriors
"should have been 3-2 coming
in here. Warren has losses to
logan and Parkersburg. They're
going to make it rough on a
couple qf other people in the
league.
"What a
well-balanced
league."
Gallipolis hosts county rival
River.Valley next Friday. The
Raiders (0-6, 0-3 SEOAL) lost
36-12 to Athens Friday in
league play.

Wahama takes sting out of 1ackets
BY GARY CLARK
OVP CO RRESPONDENT

MASON - . Brandon Hankitison and Bradford C lark
enjoyed a coming out party for
the Wahama White Falcons Friday evening as the senior duo
combined to lead the White
Falcons to a convincing 46-6
homecun nng victory over visit-

in g DuvaL
Hankinson ran for a team
high 6,3 yards on the night
while scorins on runs of one,
two and 23 yards in addition to
catching a ~6-yard scoring pass
from Clark. Clark also tossed an
additional pair of touchdown
passes to Adam Rickard covering 25 and six yards while running for 48 yards and ' interceptin g a Yellow Jacket offering.
"I was extremely pleased to
see our offense starting to come

together," Falcon head coach Ed
Crom ley sa id follo\ving th e
hu ge homecomin g victory.
vve
""'

overcame

some

ea rly

turnovers and didn't panic. We
--Stayed focused and received
some strong leadership which
was a big factor tonight."
Wahama committed two
early turnovers before raUying
for 21-second period points and
a 21-0 halftime lead. Hankin-

son's one yard plunge staked the
White Falcons to a 7-0 advantage midway through the sec~
ond stanza before giving way to
Clark who tossed a pair of scoring strikes in the final four minutes of the half. Clark went on
to complete 7-of-1 0 passes on
the day for 115 yards and three
touchdowns.
"Our passing game was the
big difference," said Cromley.
"Bradford is starting to come
around. H e's been back from
his injury for three weeks but in
reality this would esselitiaUy be
his first or second game because
normaUy you would have a
couple of scrimmages prior to
beginning the season and he
missed those. He put the ball
where it needed to be but our
receivers did an outstanding job
also in getting open. Rickard
caught one pass lying on the
ground that was nothing short
of spectacular," added the veteran grid mentor.
Following Hankinson's first
touchdown Wahama came back
with a 25-yard score on ·a pass
from Clark to Rickard. Seconds later the WHS lead balloaned to 21-0 as Clark found a
streaking Hankinson down the
left sideline for a 36-yard TD

strike.· Rickard booted the first
PAT before giving way to
Columbian exchange student
Ivan Cadavid who added the
final two conversion kicks of
the opening half.
Wahama was relel]tless as
third quarter action resumed
following the crowning of
Holly Barnitz as the 2001
White . Falcon homecoming
queen during halftime fes~vi­
ties.Three successive possessions
resulted in a six-yard Clark to
Rickard touchdown followed
by a two-yard burst and a 23yard dash ' into the end zone by
Hankinson to lengthen the
Bend Area edge to 40-0.
Junior Justin Jordan capped
off the nights' scoring for the
Mason County team with a 20yard run during the first minute
of the. final quarter.
Duval scored its lone six
points of the game with 2:38
remaining when quarter~ack
Joe Lacy found Brandon
McClure behind the WHS secondary for a 32-yard touchdown pass.
D efensively WHS shut down
the Yellow Jacket thrust behind
the play of Shilo Staats; Adam
Rickard and Aaron Faulk who
emerged as the defensive stop

leaders. Wahama rolled up 453
yards in tota] offense (338 rushing and 11 5 passing) while
Duval managed 181 yards (67
on the ground and 114 thru the
air).The bulk of the Yellow
Jacket yardage came in the final
period against the Falcon junior
varsity unit.
Hankin so n rushed for 63
yards while Brandon Gagnon
added 59; Ryan Mitchell 54;
Clark 48; Gabe Lambert 4S and
Rickard 33 for WHS. Lacy was
the offensive leader for Duval
after connecting on 11 of 19
passes for 114 yards.
"I have to give our offensive
line credit for another impressive outing," stated Cromley.
"They're beginning to give
Clark the protection he needs
and are doing a good job open'i ng holes for our running backs.
Assistant coaches Joe Johnson
and Tom Cullen deserve credit
for some excellent play calling
while James Toth and Rick
Kearns had our defense ready to
play tonight."
·
Wahama will try and boost its
record over the .500 mark next
week when the White Falcons
entertain visiting Gilmer County in a 7:30pm affair.

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

GLOUSTER, Ohio- Eastern head coach Scott Christman
knew that his undefeated teain was ;:oing to have it; hands full.

Friday.
No one realized, though, how true that statement was going
to be.
Trimble ran for over 300 yards as the Tomcat; rolled over the
Eagles,35-6 in theTVC Ohio Division opener for both schools.
No one also realized how much an ope11ing kickoff would tell
the tale of the game on this night.
As the game began, the ball was kicked to Eastern's Brad Park. er. The senior, though, fumbled the ball, placing the Tomcat;
offense on the Eagles' 37-yard line.Two plays later, Trimble quarterback Bobby Trace connected with Mike Jago for a quick 35yard touchdown.
"When you're playing a good team like Eastern, you need
those plays;' said Trimble head coach Phil Faires. "Last. year, they
went against us (in Trimble's loss to Eastern). Ths year, it started
right off the bat and then we come back with the boot pass.
We've never booted it right, so we decided to try it Mike Jago
got behind their detender and made a good catch.'
"That wasn't the deciding factor of the garrie;' added Christ"We got outplayed and we got outcoached. Thats basicaUy
what happened"
Another key factor against the Eagles wa•Trimble's Jesse Brunton.
Starting tailback Jago was moved to end prior to the game,
allowing BruntOn to have more carried.
The 6-foor-0, 185 poim senior took full advantage of that
with 216 yards rushing on 28 carries and three touchdowns.
Kyle Andrews had 18 carries for 85 yards.
"He's a good rurming back,''said Christman ofBrunton. " He
looks better in person than he does on film, not that we thought
he was horrible or anything. He's quicker than we thought he
was and they got a few good angles on us and kicked us out the
there was holes there. He stepped up in there and ran the ball
ll ..
we.
The Tomcats scored later.in the first quarter on one of Brunton's touchdowns to take a 14-0 lead. ·
"All year, I've been saying we're missing a tailback;' said Faires.
"It's nothing against the kids. They're working hard. We don't
have that outstanding speed. They give, us everything they have.
We just wanted to give one of our guys more carries. I think
we've found our tailback.''
Brunton ran in two more touchdowns in the third quarter to
give the Tomcat; a 28-0 advantage ·going into the fourth.
"If you would've told me we'd beat them that bad, I'd never
believe you," said Faries. "Going in 14-0 at half, I'd never believe
that either. Our defense had b~en good, I wasn't for sure how
good."
The Eagles had their chances to score early.
Eastern, following Trimble's first score, got the ball to the Tomcats' 25-yard line, but failed to convert on fourth down.
"We had some big plays against them, but we couklri 't sustain
a drive;' said Christman. "Four, five or six play drive, then we'd
stall. I don't know if the plays we called weren't the right'plays to
call or if we just got outplayed. (Trimble) wa• a better football
team tonight.
The Eagles, early in the second, got the ball to the Tomcats'2· &gt;,
but Garrett K.arr, on a pass attempt to Ben Holter, was intercepted.
·
~r was 5-for-13 pJSSing for 26 yards and three interceptions,
all m the first half. Karr led the Eagles rushing with 18 carries for
I 07 yards, while RJ. Gibbs had nine carries for 50 yards.
A couple of more opportunities came later, but the Eagles
finally scored with II seconds left in the game when Karr met
up with Jeremy Connolly on a I 0-yard pass play.
The Eagles will try to get back into the win column when
they play host to Federal Hocking.Trin1ble (4-2) will play Waterford (5-1).
.

man.

Point struggles against dominating Chieftains
Bv DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT - Things started
badly for ~he Big Blacks Friday, and then
they got worse.
By the time it was said and done, Logan
had walked away with a 59-13 SEOAL
fo otball win to improve its season record
to 6- 0 and 3-0 in conferen ce play.
On the Big lllacks' first play from
sc rimmage, quarterback Kevin Thompson
ftred a ball into the right fl:i t. The Logan
de fende r almost picked the pass, but
droppL' d it f&lt;1r an incomplcrion as Point
do dged th e bullet for a minute.
Five plays later, however, Thompson was
stripped whi le scrambling to his left, and
Logan 's Matt Mong recovered the ball at
the Point 33.
Two plays later at the 10:16 mark of the
fim 1- !riod, Point was trailing 6-0 after
Logan 's Alex Penrod h it Jeremy Coakley
for a 20-yard catch and run .
Special teams then haunted the Dig
Blacks as they gave up 23 first-quarter
poi nts. After a Chris Ramey deep snap
sai led over the head of punter Bucky
N ibert and through the end zone for a
sa fety, Logan returned the free kick all the
way to the Point 20-yard line.
On the third play of the ensuing Logan
drive, tailback Derek Harden scored from
eight yards out to make it 16-0.
.
Logan picked up another first-quarter

freebie when another high snap sailed off 12-1, losing only to eventual Ohio Divithe hands of back- up punter Ned Park , sian I champion Upper Arlington.
and Logan's Trent Woodgeard recovered
Despite the score, the game was decidthe ball in the end zone for another six ed on opportunities cashed in, as Logan's
which led to a 23- 0 first quarter deficit for total offense was just 277 yards, and Hardthe Big Blacks .
- en, the Chieftains' leading rusher, had just
" I don't know if we have ever had such 59 yards on 19 carries. Point mustered just
a total breakdown in the kicking game," 129 yards of total offense.
said Point coach Steve Safford. " It was all
Point finally dented the scoring column
kicking gam e in the first h alf. We had in the fourth quarter on a 13-yard offpoor coverage on kicks;.we didn't tackle tackle run by senior fullback Andrew
well. We h ad snaps over the kicker's head. Dennis.
On the other hand , we didn't have any
Po int's other tou chdown came on a
returns when they kicked the ball so the seven~yard pass from reserve quarterba ck
whole game we were pinned down in our Kenoy Durst to freshman end Justin
own territory."
Smith, who ended the game with two
After another Harden ' scoring jaunt (a catches for 32 yards.
two-yarder) midway through the second
Freshman Newton Mattox finished as
period, Logan added another score on a Point's leading rusher with 50 yards on
Matt Mong interception. Mong picked of nine carries.
the Thompson pass in the left flat and tan
"I'm still disappointed, however, with
the ball back 19 yards molested for anoth- the way that we played," said Safford,
er Logan score.
refusing to make excuses for his team. ''I
Mong's runb:ick ended the first half know we ar~ a young footbaU team, but
scoring.at 37-0.
we have to be able to step it up a notch
Logan's defense held the Big Blacks to against that caliber offootball team."
10 total yards on 25 plays in the first half.
Mong, Coakley, and Austin Rohr added
Thompson, under constant pressure· from touchdowns for Logan in the second half.
Logan's 5-3 defense, completed just one
Logan's Adam Puhl was 7-for-7 on PAT
pass in 13 attempts and was held to 21 kicks.
yards rushing on 12 carries.
Point falls to 2-4 overall and 1-2 in the
"They're probably as good as they were SEOAL. The Big Blacks will play host to
defensively a year ago," said Safford, refer- Jackson for homecoming next Friday.
ring to the 2000 Logan team which went
Logan will play at Athens Friday.

~uub .w Q:ltnrs -$&gt;rutlnrl•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

2001 4x4 SLE Pkg.

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Page 83

.~

Southern jumps early on league. with
win
over
lancers
._ - __
..
BY ScOTT Willi£

Somhern
linenien · Tun
OVP CORRESPONDENT
CogJr, Chris Coppick, M ,nt
STEWART - Poundmg out Thomas, Rnssell Krider, Tyler
261 yards, the Soll!hern Torna- Little, and Justin Allen along
does whirled to .1 26-15 win with other substitutions helped
over the Fedtor.tl Hocking control the line of snimmage
Lan cers Friday night during and pave the way for the South··
homecoming activities at Feder- ern backs. Both the offensive
al Hocking High SchooL
and defensive down men earned
The Tri-Valley Conference praise from Coach IUchanis.
Hocking Division opener at the
Senior running back llrice
"Fog Bowl " saw Southern Hill rushed tor 62 yards on ten
Coach ltusty lljchards defeat carries and two touchdowns ,
father Dave ll..ichards for the while claiming Southern's only
second time, putting .Southern reception.
Those numbers
on to p of the league rankings earned him the Athens' Autowith a 1-0 tally, 3- 3 overall. Fed- zone "Post-Game Player of the
eral Hocki11g remained winless · Game" honors for offense. Tydis
at 0-6.
Jarvis of Federal Hocking
"The di!Terence in the game earned the Autozone "Posttonight was our ability to con- Game Player of the Game"
trol the line of scrimmage;' said defensive award with eight solo
a smilin g Coach
Rusty tackles, fiv~ assists, and two sacks.
Richards. "We told the line at
As time ticked down to the
the half the game was in their start of the game, a heavy fog
hands and they stepped it up rolled into the deep ' vaUey
another notch. We came out berween the Hocking Hills,
strong to start the half and that making it difficult to see the
made the difference m the action from any distance. As st1g.une.''
tistics show, passing became

'

--------

110!1- existent and the officials
had a difficult time sib~1aling the
olli r ial scorer to start and srop
the clock. The fog became so
he·!\~' that in the second half,
ntti cials moved the yanlmarke"
and chain crews to the home
side of \he fidd to assist the spot-

ters and scorers.
South ern's Hill scored the
game's first touchdown at the
3:06 mark of the first period,
when ~e rambled 11 yards to
paydirt. The PAT kick failed but
SHS led 6-0.
Southern's score came after
Southern dominated both time
of possession and offensive
yardage, racking up five first
downs in its first two drives prior
to the score.
Moments later, Zack Wires
foun4 the same endzone when
he broke a 34-yard gainer for a
score to tie the game at 6-6. The
Sam Auharty kick gave Federal
a 7-6 lead at the 8:41 mark of
the second frame.
Southern fumbles rurned the
ball over on consecutive posses-

-

.

Ma es menacing with five TD's as
We lston blasts past Marauders, 64~7
·BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

WELLSTON - Wellston
scored 21 points in the first
period and added 22 more in
the seco nd and coasted to a
64- 7 win over the Meigs
Maraud er s in the TVC
opener for both teams at
Wellston.
Thomas M ayes led the way
with five tou chdowns , two
on the ground, one through
the air and another on a
punt return, while just missi n g a kickoff return for
another score.
Well ston won the coi n toss
and Mayes took the opening
kickoff 86
yards with
Marauder Tyson Lee catclfing him from behind at the
Marauder four .. Mayes then
took it over on the n ext play,
Phillip Osborne added the
extra points and the Rockets
were on top 7-0 ju st 11 seconds into the contest.
After ·a Marauder punt the
ltockets went 61 yards in
four plays with Evan John son pulling in a 42 yard scoring toss from Dusty Fultz .
Osborne added the kick at
the 9:03 mark .
Jeremy Roush returned
the ensuing kickoff 36 yards
to the Marauder 49 yard
line. On first down Kyle
Hannan hooked up with
freshman Ryan Fraizer for
26 yards to the Ro cket 25.
But the Marauder drive
fizzled
when
Hannan's
fourth -do wn · pass
was
incompl ete. .
.
The Rockets went on a
6 7 -yard drive in· eight plays
for the score, with Fultz hitting Mayes from 31 yards
out. Osborne once again
added the extra points for a
2 1-0 lea d at the 5:05 mark.
Mei gs took the kickoff and
lPUt together an impressive
drive to pull to within 21-7.
Meigs druve 66 yards in 16
plays, Tyson Lee went the
fin al nine yards for the score.
Buzzy Fackler added th e
extra p oi nts at the 11 : 17
mark.
The score was set up on a
fourth-and-1 0 pass comple- .
tion from Hann an to Fackler
for 16 yards, Lee scored on
the next play.
Mays scor~d his third
touchdown of the evening·
from 13 yards out at the 9:10
mark, Osborne added the
extra points capping off a
63-yard, nine-play drive .
M ayes added his fourth
touchdown of th e night two
plays later when he stepped
in front of a Hannan pass to
Fackler and went down the
. sidelines 45 yards for the
score.

,.

•

Brad Young's plunge for
the extra points made it 367 at the 8:16 mark.
Young, the Rockets AllState candidate score d from
a yard out with I: 51 left in.
the h alf, Osborne added the
extra points for a 43-7
Rock et lead at the half.
Young carried eight of the
nine plays in the drive for 79
yards.
Mayes scored his final
touchdow n of the night at
the 10 :40 mark of the third
period on a 74-yard punt

another score in the third on
a 10-yard run by Mike Floyd
and scored in the fourth on a
one-yard run by Noah Waldron. Osborne added the
kkk for the extra points
after both scores.
Young gained 146 yards in
17 ca rries . for the · night,
which gives him 977 for the
season. Mayes was 4"of-5
passing for i 16 yards and
two scores.
Mayes ca ught three p asses
for 7 4 yards.
Tyson Lee led Meigs with
return .
32 yards in 13 ca rries. HanOsborne added the . extra n an was six of 16 in the air
points .
Wellston
added for 78 yards and one inter-

-

...

....,_ .

stons. Josh ll.Jtkcr and Kenton mark of the third quJr tt·r
Butcher of F~dcral secured dte when Joe Cbrnell hammercdtlnnbles .
into the endzone from two
Perhaps the biggest \tand of yards to give Southern a 12- 7
the l§lllll' came when Southern lead after the PAT run Ltiled.
hdd "FedL·ral Hocking on a first
On the ensuing kt ck a
and goal, five plays after Butch- thundering hit of th e Lancer
ds fumble recovery. Wires took return man · jarred th e ball
the ball down to the three- yard loose where Tommy Sheppard
line, but on fourth and three and Matt Thomas recovered
Southern's defense made a stand the fumble to set up anothe r
and did not budge. Again, the · Tornado score. A huge interTornado defensive line dug deep ference penalty put Southern
in the trenches.
in great position . Cornell ran
The Tornadoes took over on the ball to the 17 -yard line,
downs and sustained a drive that then on the next play Hill
fizzled just shy of the 25 yJrd rambled 17 yards for the score .
line, where Federal took over Southern led 18-7 · after the
and ran out the clock.
PAT pass fell incomp,lete at the
That score stood until half- 4:27 mark of the third fm11e.
time, although Southern domiA Tydis Jarvis safety put
noted the half offensively, regis- Federal back on the board
tering six first downs to Federal's with 11 : 19 showing in the
two.
fourth frame, the score now
Southern came out in the 18-9. Aft er the Tornado free
second half and literally , kick , Jeremy Cundi1r jaunted
plowed right through the in from four yards out at the
Lancers with little resistance. 8:59 mark, tightening the
Southern culminated a 61- score at 18-15 after the PAT
yard, ten-play drive at the 6:21 kick failed .

• So uth cr7i ho ped to pl ay
co t\.trol footb.tll, but a!;ain the
lint&gt; b urst o pe n -.unH!

hug~:

hole&lt; and SHS Wt'm nin e plays
l~&gt;r .1 34 yard drive after 13J
M .u 11 ho ut recowrt·J the Fedcr.tl ons ide kick . llwtdon
l'i erce. pun ched in for the
scar&lt;' and Co rnell ran in the
ex tra s fo r a 24- 15 SHS lead.
That mark held umil the end.
Besides Hill's two sc ores
ai1d f&gt;2- yards rushing, Cornell
carri ed IS times for 64 yards.
Amhony Co fli11an ten times
for 43 yards. Marnhout 3-11,
Pierce 9- 49, and Wes Burrows
two for tive yards.
Federal was led by .W ires
with 17 carries for 84 yards,
Cody Ball was 8 for 12, and
Cundiff was 3-9. Southern's
Aaron O hlinger had a fumble
recovery and Phillip Pierce an
interception .
Hill caught the lone Southern pass, while Fe deral's Clint
Sears caught three for 54
yards.outhern goes ro Mill er
Friday.

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ception . Eric Cullums was
one of four for 26 yards.
Freshman
Ryan
Fraizer
caught four passes for 69
yards, Fackler had three
receptions for 29.
"There are four games
left," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said after the game.
." We are going to stay
together, work hard and'
continue to improve."
Meigs drop s to 1-6 overall,
0-1 in . the TVC, they will
travel to Nelsonville- York
next week. Wellston is 5-2
overall and 1-0 in the conference, they will host Belpre
next week.
·

'

--·

...·

CHIVY
"Moot Dlptnd.lblo, l9nge1t· WIUN'"'U.
Lllltlng, TniCkl on the R011d."

~Oldsmobile.
"Start Something."

~

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JOHNSON
Gallipolis' Hometown Daal~r

OHIO I=Di"i
VALLEY 'BANK
liUAL.....

•

,... _ _ _

�Page B2 • ~unb ,w (!;unrs - ~rnl111rl

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

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

Sunda~Sept.30,2001

Week Six

'

High School Football

Blue Devils hold off Warriors EaStern loses
first game to
Tomcats
BY R.

SHAWN LEWIS
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

CA LLII'OLIS. O l110 -

' ' .l'\ ti l l'
\ \ '&lt;l P•t

bc ... t o f t im e~:

It \\'.lS

It

the

of ti i i JL''i .

Such was C allia Academy's
tale Frid.1y as the Ulue Devtls
(5- 1. 3-0. SEOAL) fo ught o ff
W~t rrl'll

Local 2H-1 1 on homecu imn g tl1 bht :1t Memorial
Fil'ltL
As fo r the best. GaUipolis'
hi gh- ort.me o tle mive atta ck
ag.un \truck L•arl y and often ,
tt•ckd bv the long- range combi n.Ition of quarterback David
IJ ro,k m .md W!deout Jmh
i't' ITVTh e dynamic duo hooked
up 0 11 a 73- yard scoring strike
on Ca llipoli&lt;' fi rst play from
s•. : r Illllll Llg:t· .
M,·.mwhile, tailback Bobby
Jones continued his assault on
th e region's defenses, rushing for
125 yards and two touchdowns
(SO, 72) - all on just five carf\ L'S.

Jones also factored in the
worst portion of GaUia Academ y's evening multiple
injuries to key players - when
he was it~ure d on his fifth carry,
limping off the field with a
sprained ankle midway through
th e •econd quarter.
He did not play in the second
half.
" 13obby's OK," Coach Brent
Saund,·rs said after the game.
" He'll be aU right in a few

d1ys."
Co rnerback Justin North and
ddi:mive standout Kyle Forgey
also suffered injuries. North
"had a spasm in his hip muscles"
atier recording a touchdownsaving tackle late in the fourth
quarter. Saunders said.
"Forgey pinched a nerve in
his lower back."
In addition to those three, the
lllu e Devils were without the
services of offensive lineman
Ben Doolittle, who pulled a
hamming Tuesday.
Gallipolis looked poised to
carry a 21-0 lead into half- time,
but Shannon Shipley shanked a
13-yard punt with 28 seconds
left, giving Warren Local the ball
on the Gallipolis 32.
After a delay penalty, quarter. back Travis Ollum Jed the Warriors on a five-play, 37-yard
scoring drive capped by Justin
Gum's ! ~yard dive with one
second
remammg.
Jared
Arnold's extra point made the
half-time score 21-7.
Facing the loss ofJones, Saunders' pre-game wish of having
his Blue Devils mount a sustained drive came true to start
the third half.
Gall ip olis used the one-two
punch of fullback Ty Simmons
and tailback Donnie Johnson to
march 70 yards in 12 plays, consuming 6:41 off the clock.
Simmons carried nine times

for .J9 yards on the drive,
in cl udm~ a 1-yard scoring run .
The fid lback to taled 50 yards on
14 carries for tlw ni!;IJt.
Warren Local didn't go away,
however.
Th e Warriurs turned to split
end Chris Hendricks to get
back in the game, and ·Hendricks responded . On J fourthand-in ches play, Hendricks
scooted around the end and
scampered 55 yards for a touchdown .
Arnold's kick left the score
28-14.
On Gallipolis' ensuing possession, Hendricks intercepted an
errant Travis McKinni.ss toss and
returned it 36 yards to the Gallipolis 33.
But Warren Local . couldn't
capitalize. The Warriors' drive
staUed · when Arnold's 36- yard
field goal attempt sailed wide
left.
Gallipolis got the ball back on
its 20 with 7:33 remaining in
the game and tried to run out
the clock. The Blue Devils did
run 10 plays - at one point
advancing to the Warren 42 -but were forced to punt with
2:52 remaining.
Ollum, a three-year starteJ,
then took to the air.
H e hooked up with Hendricks on a 67 -yard catch-andrun on second down. Only
North's last-gasp salvo along the

near sideline kept Hendri cks
hum scoring .- but not for
long.
Ollum found Hendricks in
the end zone for an 8-yard
touchdown on the next play.
Arnold's point-after was good,
and the score was 28-21 with
2:25 to play.
Warren Local then sat up for
an onsides kick.
Saunders put in his " hands"
team, and the strategy paid off.
llrodeur dove on the baU at the
Warren 49, and the Blue Devils
were able to run out the clock
to record a 28-2 1 win.
"I was really proud of our

execution," Saunders said. "That

was definitely a bright spot
tonight."
The coach also praised his
defense, . which recorded one
sack (Nathan Kiskis) and repeatedly put Ollum on his back.
Saunders praised Warren
Local, saying . the Warriors
"should have been 3-2 coming
in here. Warren has losses to
logan and Parkersburg. They're
going to make it rough on a
couple qf other people in the
league.
"What a
well-balanced
league."
Gallipolis hosts county rival
River.Valley next Friday. The
Raiders (0-6, 0-3 SEOAL) lost
36-12 to Athens Friday in
league play.

Wahama takes sting out of 1ackets
BY GARY CLARK
OVP CO RRESPONDENT

MASON - . Brandon Hankitison and Bradford C lark
enjoyed a coming out party for
the Wahama White Falcons Friday evening as the senior duo
combined to lead the White
Falcons to a convincing 46-6
homecun nng victory over visit-

in g DuvaL
Hankinson ran for a team
high 6,3 yards on the night
while scorins on runs of one,
two and 23 yards in addition to
catching a ~6-yard scoring pass
from Clark. Clark also tossed an
additional pair of touchdown
passes to Adam Rickard covering 25 and six yards while running for 48 yards and ' interceptin g a Yellow Jacket offering.
"I was extremely pleased to
see our offense starting to come

together," Falcon head coach Ed
Crom ley sa id follo\ving th e
hu ge homecomin g victory.
vve
""'

overcame

some

ea rly

turnovers and didn't panic. We
--Stayed focused and received
some strong leadership which
was a big factor tonight."
Wahama committed two
early turnovers before raUying
for 21-second period points and
a 21-0 halftime lead. Hankin-

son's one yard plunge staked the
White Falcons to a 7-0 advantage midway through the sec~
ond stanza before giving way to
Clark who tossed a pair of scoring strikes in the final four minutes of the half. Clark went on
to complete 7-of-1 0 passes on
the day for 115 yards and three
touchdowns.
"Our passing game was the
big difference," said Cromley.
"Bradford is starting to come
around. H e's been back from
his injury for three weeks but in
reality this would esselitiaUy be
his first or second game because
normaUy you would have a
couple of scrimmages prior to
beginning the season and he
missed those. He put the ball
where it needed to be but our
receivers did an outstanding job
also in getting open. Rickard
caught one pass lying on the
ground that was nothing short
of spectacular," added the veteran grid mentor.
Following Hankinson's first
touchdown Wahama came back
with a 25-yard score on ·a pass
from Clark to Rickard. Seconds later the WHS lead balloaned to 21-0 as Clark found a
streaking Hankinson down the
left sideline for a 36-yard TD

strike.· Rickard booted the first
PAT before giving way to
Columbian exchange student
Ivan Cadavid who added the
final two conversion kicks of
the opening half.
Wahama was relel]tless as
third quarter action resumed
following the crowning of
Holly Barnitz as the 2001
White . Falcon homecoming
queen during halftime fes~vi­
ties.Three successive possessions
resulted in a six-yard Clark to
Rickard touchdown followed
by a two-yard burst and a 23yard dash ' into the end zone by
Hankinson to lengthen the
Bend Area edge to 40-0.
Junior Justin Jordan capped
off the nights' scoring for the
Mason County team with a 20yard run during the first minute
of the. final quarter.
Duval scored its lone six
points of the game with 2:38
remaining when quarter~ack
Joe Lacy found Brandon
McClure behind the WHS secondary for a 32-yard touchdown pass.
D efensively WHS shut down
the Yellow Jacket thrust behind
the play of Shilo Staats; Adam
Rickard and Aaron Faulk who
emerged as the defensive stop

leaders. Wahama rolled up 453
yards in tota] offense (338 rushing and 11 5 passing) while
Duval managed 181 yards (67
on the ground and 114 thru the
air).The bulk of the Yellow
Jacket yardage came in the final
period against the Falcon junior
varsity unit.
Hankin so n rushed for 63
yards while Brandon Gagnon
added 59; Ryan Mitchell 54;
Clark 48; Gabe Lambert 4S and
Rickard 33 for WHS. Lacy was
the offensive leader for Duval
after connecting on 11 of 19
passes for 114 yards.
"I have to give our offensive
line credit for another impressive outing," stated Cromley.
"They're beginning to give
Clark the protection he needs
and are doing a good job open'i ng holes for our running backs.
Assistant coaches Joe Johnson
and Tom Cullen deserve credit
for some excellent play calling
while James Toth and Rick
Kearns had our defense ready to
play tonight."
·
Wahama will try and boost its
record over the .500 mark next
week when the White Falcons
entertain visiting Gilmer County in a 7:30pm affair.

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

GLOUSTER, Ohio- Eastern head coach Scott Christman
knew that his undefeated teain was ;:oing to have it; hands full.

Friday.
No one realized, though, how true that statement was going
to be.
Trimble ran for over 300 yards as the Tomcat; rolled over the
Eagles,35-6 in theTVC Ohio Division opener for both schools.
No one also realized how much an ope11ing kickoff would tell
the tale of the game on this night.
As the game began, the ball was kicked to Eastern's Brad Park. er. The senior, though, fumbled the ball, placing the Tomcat;
offense on the Eagles' 37-yard line.Two plays later, Trimble quarterback Bobby Trace connected with Mike Jago for a quick 35yard touchdown.
"When you're playing a good team like Eastern, you need
those plays;' said Trimble head coach Phil Faires. "Last. year, they
went against us (in Trimble's loss to Eastern). Ths year, it started
right off the bat and then we come back with the boot pass.
We've never booted it right, so we decided to try it Mike Jago
got behind their detender and made a good catch.'
"That wasn't the deciding factor of the garrie;' added Christ"We got outplayed and we got outcoached. Thats basicaUy
what happened"
Another key factor against the Eagles wa•Trimble's Jesse Brunton.
Starting tailback Jago was moved to end prior to the game,
allowing BruntOn to have more carried.
The 6-foor-0, 185 poim senior took full advantage of that
with 216 yards rushing on 28 carries and three touchdowns.
Kyle Andrews had 18 carries for 85 yards.
"He's a good rurming back,''said Christman ofBrunton. " He
looks better in person than he does on film, not that we thought
he was horrible or anything. He's quicker than we thought he
was and they got a few good angles on us and kicked us out the
there was holes there. He stepped up in there and ran the ball
ll ..
we.
The Tomcats scored later.in the first quarter on one of Brunton's touchdowns to take a 14-0 lead. ·
"All year, I've been saying we're missing a tailback;' said Faires.
"It's nothing against the kids. They're working hard. We don't
have that outstanding speed. They give, us everything they have.
We just wanted to give one of our guys more carries. I think
we've found our tailback.''
Brunton ran in two more touchdowns in the third quarter to
give the Tomcat; a 28-0 advantage ·going into the fourth.
"If you would've told me we'd beat them that bad, I'd never
believe you," said Faries. "Going in 14-0 at half, I'd never believe
that either. Our defense had b~en good, I wasn't for sure how
good."
The Eagles had their chances to score early.
Eastern, following Trimble's first score, got the ball to the Tomcats' 25-yard line, but failed to convert on fourth down.
"We had some big plays against them, but we couklri 't sustain
a drive;' said Christman. "Four, five or six play drive, then we'd
stall. I don't know if the plays we called weren't the right'plays to
call or if we just got outplayed. (Trimble) wa• a better football
team tonight.
The Eagles, early in the second, got the ball to the Tomcats'2· &gt;,
but Garrett K.arr, on a pass attempt to Ben Holter, was intercepted.
·
~r was 5-for-13 pJSSing for 26 yards and three interceptions,
all m the first half. Karr led the Eagles rushing with 18 carries for
I 07 yards, while RJ. Gibbs had nine carries for 50 yards.
A couple of more opportunities came later, but the Eagles
finally scored with II seconds left in the game when Karr met
up with Jeremy Connolly on a I 0-yard pass play.
The Eagles will try to get back into the win column when
they play host to Federal Hocking.Trin1ble (4-2) will play Waterford (5-1).
.

man.

Point struggles against dominating Chieftains
Bv DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT - Things started
badly for ~he Big Blacks Friday, and then
they got worse.
By the time it was said and done, Logan
had walked away with a 59-13 SEOAL
fo otball win to improve its season record
to 6- 0 and 3-0 in conferen ce play.
On the Big lllacks' first play from
sc rimmage, quarterback Kevin Thompson
ftred a ball into the right fl:i t. The Logan
de fende r almost picked the pass, but
droppL' d it f&lt;1r an incomplcrion as Point
do dged th e bullet for a minute.
Five plays later, however, Thompson was
stripped whi le scrambling to his left, and
Logan 's Matt Mong recovered the ball at
the Point 33.
Two plays later at the 10:16 mark of the
fim 1- !riod, Point was trailing 6-0 after
Logan 's Alex Penrod h it Jeremy Coakley
for a 20-yard catch and run .
Special teams then haunted the Dig
Blacks as they gave up 23 first-quarter
poi nts. After a Chris Ramey deep snap
sai led over the head of punter Bucky
N ibert and through the end zone for a
sa fety, Logan returned the free kick all the
way to the Point 20-yard line.
On the third play of the ensuing Logan
drive, tailback Derek Harden scored from
eight yards out to make it 16-0.
.
Logan picked up another first-quarter

freebie when another high snap sailed off 12-1, losing only to eventual Ohio Divithe hands of back- up punter Ned Park , sian I champion Upper Arlington.
and Logan's Trent Woodgeard recovered
Despite the score, the game was decidthe ball in the end zone for another six ed on opportunities cashed in, as Logan's
which led to a 23- 0 first quarter deficit for total offense was just 277 yards, and Hardthe Big Blacks .
- en, the Chieftains' leading rusher, had just
" I don't know if we have ever had such 59 yards on 19 carries. Point mustered just
a total breakdown in the kicking game," 129 yards of total offense.
said Point coach Steve Safford. " It was all
Point finally dented the scoring column
kicking gam e in the first h alf. We had in the fourth quarter on a 13-yard offpoor coverage on kicks;.we didn't tackle tackle run by senior fullback Andrew
well. We h ad snaps over the kicker's head. Dennis.
On the other hand , we didn't have any
Po int's other tou chdown came on a
returns when they kicked the ball so the seven~yard pass from reserve quarterba ck
whole game we were pinned down in our Kenoy Durst to freshman end Justin
own territory."
Smith, who ended the game with two
After another Harden ' scoring jaunt (a catches for 32 yards.
two-yarder) midway through the second
Freshman Newton Mattox finished as
period, Logan added another score on a Point's leading rusher with 50 yards on
Matt Mong interception. Mong picked of nine carries.
the Thompson pass in the left flat and tan
"I'm still disappointed, however, with
the ball back 19 yards molested for anoth- the way that we played," said Safford,
er Logan score.
refusing to make excuses for his team. ''I
Mong's runb:ick ended the first half know we ar~ a young footbaU team, but
scoring.at 37-0.
we have to be able to step it up a notch
Logan's defense held the Big Blacks to against that caliber offootball team."
10 total yards on 25 plays in the first half.
Mong, Coakley, and Austin Rohr added
Thompson, under constant pressure· from touchdowns for Logan in the second half.
Logan's 5-3 defense, completed just one
Logan's Adam Puhl was 7-for-7 on PAT
pass in 13 attempts and was held to 21 kicks.
yards rushing on 12 carries.
Point falls to 2-4 overall and 1-2 in the
"They're probably as good as they were SEOAL. The Big Blacks will play host to
defensively a year ago," said Safford, refer- Jackson for homecoming next Friday.
ring to the 2000 Logan team which went
Logan will play at Athens Friday.

~uub .w Q:ltnrs -$&gt;rutlnrl•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

2001 4x4 SLE Pkg.

Jimmys - Loaded
STARTING AT $22,500
With 7.4% Financing For 60 Months

4 To Choose From

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ocal Owner, 4x4, Super Nice; Low Miles, Green/Silver

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Page 83

.~

Southern jumps early on league. with
win
over
lancers
._ - __
..
BY ScOTT Willi£

Somhern
linenien · Tun
OVP CORRESPONDENT
CogJr, Chris Coppick, M ,nt
STEWART - Poundmg out Thomas, Rnssell Krider, Tyler
261 yards, the Soll!hern Torna- Little, and Justin Allen along
does whirled to .1 26-15 win with other substitutions helped
over the Fedtor.tl Hocking control the line of snimmage
Lan cers Friday night during and pave the way for the South··
homecoming activities at Feder- ern backs. Both the offensive
al Hocking High SchooL
and defensive down men earned
The Tri-Valley Conference praise from Coach IUchanis.
Hocking Division opener at the
Senior running back llrice
"Fog Bowl " saw Southern Hill rushed tor 62 yards on ten
Coach ltusty lljchards defeat carries and two touchdowns ,
father Dave ll..ichards for the while claiming Southern's only
second time, putting .Southern reception.
Those numbers
on to p of the league rankings earned him the Athens' Autowith a 1-0 tally, 3- 3 overall. Fed- zone "Post-Game Player of the
eral Hocki11g remained winless · Game" honors for offense. Tydis
at 0-6.
Jarvis of Federal Hocking
"The di!Terence in the game earned the Autozone "Posttonight was our ability to con- Game Player of the Game"
trol the line of scrimmage;' said defensive award with eight solo
a smilin g Coach
Rusty tackles, fiv~ assists, and two sacks.
Richards. "We told the line at
As time ticked down to the
the half the game was in their start of the game, a heavy fog
hands and they stepped it up rolled into the deep ' vaUey
another notch. We came out berween the Hocking Hills,
strong to start the half and that making it difficult to see the
made the difference m the action from any distance. As st1g.une.''
tistics show, passing became

'

--------

110!1- existent and the officials
had a difficult time sib~1aling the
olli r ial scorer to start and srop
the clock. The fog became so
he·!\~' that in the second half,
ntti cials moved the yanlmarke"
and chain crews to the home
side of \he fidd to assist the spot-

ters and scorers.
South ern's Hill scored the
game's first touchdown at the
3:06 mark of the first period,
when ~e rambled 11 yards to
paydirt. The PAT kick failed but
SHS led 6-0.
Southern's score came after
Southern dominated both time
of possession and offensive
yardage, racking up five first
downs in its first two drives prior
to the score.
Moments later, Zack Wires
foun4 the same endzone when
he broke a 34-yard gainer for a
score to tie the game at 6-6. The
Sam Auharty kick gave Federal
a 7-6 lead at the 8:41 mark of
the second frame.
Southern fumbles rurned the
ball over on consecutive posses-

-

.

Ma es menacing with five TD's as
We lston blasts past Marauders, 64~7
·BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

WELLSTON - Wellston
scored 21 points in the first
period and added 22 more in
the seco nd and coasted to a
64- 7 win over the Meigs
Maraud er s in the TVC
opener for both teams at
Wellston.
Thomas M ayes led the way
with five tou chdowns , two
on the ground, one through
the air and another on a
punt return, while just missi n g a kickoff return for
another score.
Well ston won the coi n toss
and Mayes took the opening
kickoff 86
yards with
Marauder Tyson Lee catclfing him from behind at the
Marauder four .. Mayes then
took it over on the n ext play,
Phillip Osborne added the
extra points and the Rockets
were on top 7-0 ju st 11 seconds into the contest.
After ·a Marauder punt the
ltockets went 61 yards in
four plays with Evan John son pulling in a 42 yard scoring toss from Dusty Fultz .
Osborne added the kick at
the 9:03 mark .
Jeremy Roush returned
the ensuing kickoff 36 yards
to the Marauder 49 yard
line. On first down Kyle
Hannan hooked up with
freshman Ryan Fraizer for
26 yards to the Ro cket 25.
But the Marauder drive
fizzled
when
Hannan's
fourth -do wn · pass
was
incompl ete. .
.
The Rockets went on a
6 7 -yard drive in· eight plays
for the score, with Fultz hitting Mayes from 31 yards
out. Osborne once again
added the extra points for a
2 1-0 lea d at the 5:05 mark.
Mei gs took the kickoff and
lPUt together an impressive
drive to pull to within 21-7.
Meigs druve 66 yards in 16
plays, Tyson Lee went the
fin al nine yards for the score.
Buzzy Fackler added th e
extra p oi nts at the 11 : 17
mark.
The score was set up on a
fourth-and-1 0 pass comple- .
tion from Hann an to Fackler
for 16 yards, Lee scored on
the next play.
Mays scor~d his third
touchdown of the evening·
from 13 yards out at the 9:10
mark, Osborne added the
extra points capping off a
63-yard, nine-play drive .
M ayes added his fourth
touchdown of th e night two
plays later when he stepped
in front of a Hannan pass to
Fackler and went down the
. sidelines 45 yards for the
score.

,.

•

Brad Young's plunge for
the extra points made it 367 at the 8:16 mark.
Young, the Rockets AllState candidate score d from
a yard out with I: 51 left in.
the h alf, Osborne added the
extra points for a 43-7
Rock et lead at the half.
Young carried eight of the
nine plays in the drive for 79
yards.
Mayes scored his final
touchdow n of the night at
the 10 :40 mark of the third
period on a 74-yard punt

another score in the third on
a 10-yard run by Mike Floyd
and scored in the fourth on a
one-yard run by Noah Waldron. Osborne added the
kkk for the extra points
after both scores.
Young gained 146 yards in
17 ca rries . for the · night,
which gives him 977 for the
season. Mayes was 4"of-5
passing for i 16 yards and
two scores.
Mayes ca ught three p asses
for 7 4 yards.
Tyson Lee led Meigs with
return .
32 yards in 13 ca rries. HanOsborne added the . extra n an was six of 16 in the air
points .
Wellston
added for 78 yards and one inter-

-

...

....,_ .

stons. Josh ll.Jtkcr and Kenton mark of the third quJr tt·r
Butcher of F~dcral secured dte when Joe Cbrnell hammercdtlnnbles .
into the endzone from two
Perhaps the biggest \tand of yards to give Southern a 12- 7
the l§lllll' came when Southern lead after the PAT run Ltiled.
hdd "FedL·ral Hocking on a first
On the ensuing kt ck a
and goal, five plays after Butch- thundering hit of th e Lancer
ds fumble recovery. Wires took return man · jarred th e ball
the ball down to the three- yard loose where Tommy Sheppard
line, but on fourth and three and Matt Thomas recovered
Southern's defense made a stand the fumble to set up anothe r
and did not budge. Again, the · Tornado score. A huge interTornado defensive line dug deep ference penalty put Southern
in the trenches.
in great position . Cornell ran
The Tornadoes took over on the ball to the 17 -yard line,
downs and sustained a drive that then on the next play Hill
fizzled just shy of the 25 yJrd rambled 17 yards for the score .
line, where Federal took over Southern led 18-7 · after the
and ran out the clock.
PAT pass fell incomp,lete at the
That score stood until half- 4:27 mark of the third fm11e.
time, although Southern domiA Tydis Jarvis safety put
noted the half offensively, regis- Federal back on the board
tering six first downs to Federal's with 11 : 19 showing in the
two.
fourth frame, the score now
Southern came out in the 18-9. Aft er the Tornado free
second half and literally , kick , Jeremy Cundi1r jaunted
plowed right through the in from four yards out at the
Lancers with little resistance. 8:59 mark, tightening the
Southern culminated a 61- score at 18-15 after the PAT
yard, ten-play drive at the 6:21 kick failed .

• So uth cr7i ho ped to pl ay
co t\.trol footb.tll, but a!;ain the
lint&gt; b urst o pe n -.unH!

hug~:

hole&lt; and SHS Wt'm nin e plays
l~&gt;r .1 34 yard drive after 13J
M .u 11 ho ut recowrt·J the Fedcr.tl ons ide kick . llwtdon
l'i erce. pun ched in for the
scar&lt;' and Co rnell ran in the
ex tra s fo r a 24- 15 SHS lead.
That mark held umil the end.
Besides Hill's two sc ores
ai1d f&gt;2- yards rushing, Cornell
carri ed IS times for 64 yards.
Amhony Co fli11an ten times
for 43 yards. Marnhout 3-11,
Pierce 9- 49, and Wes Burrows
two for tive yards.
Federal was led by .W ires
with 17 carries for 84 yards,
Cody Ball was 8 for 12, and
Cundiff was 3-9. Southern's
Aaron O hlinger had a fumble
recovery and Phillip Pierce an
interception .
Hill caught the lone Southern pass, while Fe deral's Clint
Sears caught three for 54
yards.outhern goes ro Mill er
Friday.

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ception . Eric Cullums was
one of four for 26 yards.
Freshman
Ryan
Fraizer
caught four passes for 69
yards, Fackler had three
receptions for 29.
"There are four games
left," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said after the game.
." We are going to stay
together, work hard and'
continue to improve."
Meigs drop s to 1-6 overall,
0-1 in . the TVC, they will
travel to Nelsonville- York
next week. Wellston is 5-2
overall and 1-0 in the conference, they will host Belpre
next week.
·

'

--·

...·

CHIVY
"Moot Dlptnd.lblo, l9nge1t· WIUN'"'U.
Lllltlng, TniCkl on the R011d."

~Oldsmobile.
"Start Something."

~

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JOHNSON
Gallipolis' Hometown Daal~r

OHIO I=Di"i
VALLEY 'BANK
liUAL.....

•

,... _ _ _

�..
Page 84 • li&gt;unbap U!:imrl ·li&gt;rutmrl

"

.

.

~

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

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

---=----------~---------------------------~------~~-----~------------------------------------~--------------------------------~~~--------"" ·~

Ohio, W.Va. Prep Footbaii _Scores
llay.IQiuo&lt;!O,Si:ny 14
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or

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~

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--68.

St-6
aw..tt « . Elyria ea... 7

8elt:lro:* 42, Day. Oakwood 0
Spmg. Sha..... 7

Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 52,

Cass»Ml Miami E. 14
.........,46,&amp;cyrus 0
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Hoines 21
~ 41' Al1an\l Ale- 7
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15

CAI:Mel20, ~ 18
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~

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27, Chagri1
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Chilcoile Ht.mrg1on
00ihe Urd:l , 4
cr.iicohe Zane Trace 34, Bairbridge

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

Crt Deer Par1127, Fmeytown 2 1

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.·

TOP 25 COLLEGE FOOT··B. ALL
.

.

.

.

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

history, and rushed for a school
Brandon Hance caught a quarterback-record 191 yards
touchdown pass and threw for as visiting No.4 Nebraska beat
three more, including the go- Missouri 36-3 Saturday.
Dahrann Diedrick scored
ahead score to john Standeford
in overtime, as No. 24 Purdue two touchdowns for Nebraska.
Fading to pass in the
'rallied fro m an 11-point
fourth-quarter deficit and beat Nebraska end zone, Crouch
Minnesota 35-28 on Saturday. was neady tackled for a safety
~ h
H ance, a •res
man, h.1t before tucking the ball away.
r d fi
Sta n demr
rom 19 yards out He deked a pair of defenders
on third-and-4 on the Boiler- around the Nebraska 20, then
·
ma kers ' ~urst OT possessiOn.
easily won a sprint to the end
Minnesota's Travis Cole had zone to put the Cornhuskers
his third-down pass intercept- ahead 22-3 with 2:21 to go in
ed ·in the end zone by Stuart the third quarter.
Schweigert.
The run bettered the record
Hance completed 22 of 36 of94 yards set by Craig Johnpasses for 308 yards and two . son on Oct. 13, 1979, against
interceptions. Travi_s Dorsch Kansas, and matched by Roger
kicked a 48-yard field goal as Craig on Sept. 19, 1981 ,
time expired in regulation.
against Florida State. Crouch,
No.4 Nebraska 36,
who had 17 carries, eclipsed
Missouri 3
the quarterback mark of 174
Eric Crou ch scored on a 95- yards set by Gerry Gdowski
)'ard run, th e longest in school against Iowa State in 1989.

NHL
from Page 81
Rob Olake and Patrick Roy not long after
they raised the C up.
·
The New Jersey Devils, who co uldn 't hold
a 3-2 lead in the finals, are contenders again
rather than champs. They're virtually
unchanged, too, except for losing 43-goal
scorer Alexander Mogilny to Toronto.
Very much changed are the other two New
York metro teams, the Rangers (Lindros) and
Islanders (Alexei Yashin, Michael Peca), who
have new stars and, as always, ·new hope.
So many story lines and., the Olympics, too, ·
which will shut down the league in February
for· only the second time ever. T hen, teammates will become opponents (the Penguins
alone have players · for Canada, the Czech
Republic, Russia, Finland and Sweden) and a
gold medal, not a silver cup, will become the
sought-after prize.

~, ,

Academy.
Ath
. en~ advances to 4- 2 avera_II..; ~~ ·
whtle R1ver Valley fa)ls to 0-6.
, .. •. •
d The Raiders take the short trilf .. ,.: .
. own river to -Memorial Field nel\1,:;
Friday. Kick off with the Blue Devils
is set for 7:30,
Athens returns home to host Logan...;..

..•

· Crouch added a 15-yard
touchdown run with 9:56 to
go for a 29-31ead, and finished
with 311 yards in total offense.
. l-ie was 8-for- 14 for 120 yards
and an interception.
No.8 Virginia Tech 46,
Central Florida 14
Grant Noel was 15-for-25 ·
for 170 yards and No. 8 Virginia Tech. capitalized on five
Central Aorida turnovers to
beat the Golden Knights 4614 on Saturday.
· The Hokies gained 232 '
yards on the ground to help
·Virginia Tech (4-0) beat Central Florida (1-3) .
'
Freshman running back
Kevin Jones had 90 yards, spinning and diving into the end
zone in the second quarter for
his first career touchdown.
Keith Burnell added 82 yards
and two touchdowns.·

Speaking of gold, a lot of players grabbed it,
in an offseason filled with more big-money
signings than ever - Yashin's $90 million and
Sakic's $50 million-plus deals for starters.
(Even Martir. Lapointe, a modest starer, got
$20 million from Boston .)
The,re were so ·nany big contracts, some
w,onder- if the NHL can dare wait until its
labor deal expires in 2004 to establish a salary '
ceiling that owners and players can live with
in a sport that, unlike the NFL, N:UA and
baseball, can't live off its TV dollars.
But even after a seemingly endless flurry of .
star-player movement (Pierre Thrgf'on from
St. Louis ·to Dallas also was-a huge move) , the
most-watched player will be on ~ who stayed
put: Lemieux.
.
His unexpected comeback · in December
was even be~er than he imagined. He easily
led the leagu e in per-game scoring and carried the Penguins to the Easletn Conference
finals, even with mininial contribution during the playoffs from a distracted and soonto-depart Jagr.

'

The 2001 NASCAA Winston Cuo. ·· ·
schedule (w1nners 1n parentheses)
and driver po1nt standu1gs
Feb 18 - Daytona 500, Day·
tona Beach , Fla (Mtchael Wallnp}

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•,•

BY JENNA fRYER

SPORTS WRITER
Upset with some on-track rubbing
and wanting to discuss it with Chad Litde, Kevin Harvick instead got a drink
poured over his head and wound UP. in
a shoving match that landed h1m on the
ground.
·
Thinking he was intentionally taken
out ·of a race, G~eg Biflle ran down•the
crack and threw a punch at Jay Sauter
through his car window.
Rusty WaUace and Ricky Rudd,
involved in some serious bumping and
banging in three straight races, foUowed
their· latest contact last week in Dover,
Del:, with a physical confrontation and
angry name-calling.
As NASCAR hits the homestretch of
a long season, tempers are flaring on -and
off the trade.
The sanctioning body is watching this
latest rash of bad behavior and has been
busy doling out punishment.
"It's typical of this time of year," said
Kevin Triplett, NASCAR's director of
operations. "You have a vety long stretch
of races where guys either aren't doing
as they'd hoped to at this point in the
or guys are doing better and are in
critical points positions.
"It's getting down to the nitty gritty
But,vhen it gets beyond the nitty gritty, that's when we have to react."
A developing problem with rough
driving and hot tempers started last
month at Bristol . Motor Speedway, a
ttack with a histoty of creating feuds.
Kevin Harvick, the rookie in the late
Dale' Earnhardt's ride, started it by
bumping future teammate Jeff Green
out of his way to win the Busch race.
An upset Green pulled alongside at
the finish line to d,iscuss it, but Harvick
had no desire to· listen. His response?
~eginning his celebratocy burnout by
creating puffi of thick, white smoke for
Green to choke on.
In the main event the next night, the
' feud betWeen Wallace and Rudd officially began.
Trying to gain position in ihe final
laps of the Winston Cup race, Rudd
tapped Wallace aside. Wallace got his
revenge on the cool-down lap, ramming
Rud4'from behind.
Both drivers attributed the tap to

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~SAS CITY, Kan. (AP) about getting stuck here:' Earn- Tl1e last time Dale Earnhardt hardt said Thursday. "At the
Jr. left Kansas Speedway, it was time, we still didn't know if we
1
for atl,, 18-hour van ride home had a race that weekend:'
on dhe of America's darkest 'NASCAR postponed the
days. ~·
·
New Hampshire 300, scheduled
He' came back Thunday to for Sept. 16, but resumed _last
pick~ where he left off- try· we~k with Earnhardt's emoti~n­
ing fd. find a way to win Sun- al win in the MNBA Cal Ripday's iiuugural Protection One . ken Jr. 400 in Dover, Del.
400. ~:
A week later, it's still not busi00:. .Sept. 11, Earnhardt was ness as usual - not with a ban
pt;:paiing for hiJ second day of on coolers and large handba~,
testin( at the new track when not with security searching car
four liijacked planes ctliShed into trunks at the gates of the new
the World 'Il:ade Center, the Kansas Speedway, not with
Pema&amp;Pn and a Penruylwnia · sponsors promising .per-lap
field. r.
do~tiom for disaster relief.
·•~- couldn't fly out. of the
But for W~to~ Cup W:ivers,
airport', and we were worried a sense of rouane ts returrung.

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can complain
they want, but
•: AP SPORTS WRITER
there will be no changes.
Dale Jarrett doesn't want to
The complaints come as no
throW: snowballs at NASCAR, surprise to NASCAR vice presbut h~ might get the chance.
ident Jim Hunter.
Th~ 1999 Winston Cup
"If we took a poll of the drichampion would prefer not to vers, I don 't know that any of
race ih very cold weather; and them would want to go to New
. ' does~ think a sport that bills Hampshire:· he said. "We make
, illelf ~ one big family should tough decisions every d;iy and
requife teams to leave on we live with them:'
Thanksgiving for a makeup
So, bundle up and pray for
even~ the itext day in New sunshine. The New Hampshire
HamPshire.
300 could be the coldest race in
"Tllat's not promoting the history. Weather bureau records
famil; image," said Jarrett, an show a high temperature in the
infrecj\.ent critic of the sanction- area last Nov. 23 of about 30
ing bqdy.
degrees.
So ~ASCAR, criticized a year
Of course, it also could· be
ago after two driver deaths at comfortable: the high was 61 in
New : Hampshire International 1998 and 69 a year later.
Spee&lt;!my, is getting ·111ore heat
The colder it gel5, the more
fiom :~hose who don't want to difficult it will be to heat up the
run tljere Nov. 23. But the sane- slick tires. Warm rubber is needtioni'% body is honoring its ed to create decent traction for
contri;Ct with a track deprived of the 3,400-pound cars.
a race.:Jive days after the terrorist
But Terry Labonte, who
attackt
would rather be having a tradiNfli~CAR, which never races tiona! turkey dinner in Texas
on Mother's Day or Easter, with his family and %-year-old
unde~tands driver sentiment, grandmother, says people might
ut ~ no open date the rest of not notice a difference.
the s~~n. Jarrett and the others · "Most of the races up there

,.

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"brake failure" from .Wallace, but now called "The Instigator" as a spinoff
NASCAR called them into the hauler of Earnhardt's nickname "The lntimidafor a lecture.
tor"- a $1 0,000 fine and probation.
Tempers flared again at Darlington
Despite the penalty and an ensuing
Raceway. the.nextweek,when Harvick •.,lecture from NASCAR over his driving
and Little had their fight after 'th e Bu~c h in the Darlington Cup race, Harvick has
race. The confrontation cost Harvick ~ the support of car owner R-ichard Chi!~

y

--

PClfiiTlAC

March 4 UAW- Da 1mler·
Chrysler 400, las Vegas (Jeff
Gordon)
I
March 11 - Cracker Barrel 500,
Hampton. Ga (Kevtn Harvick)

March 1a -

kind of resemble demolition
derbies anyway," sai~ Labonte,
shooting for his 701st career start
Sunday in the inaugural Winston
Cup race at Kansas Speedway.
"With the cold temperarure and
the hard tires, it's going to be a
bigger problem - on resmrts
especially."
Bill Elliott says setups in New
Hampshire always have been
critical, and that a cloud cover even in summer - changes a
car's handling characteristics
more than at most tracks.
Drivers would prefer to quality on a cool track, where for one
lap they can fight a lack of handling for more speed. But The
Magic Mile in Loudon, N.H., is
the exception.
"When you go out to quality,
you pray for the sm1 to be out;'
Elliott said. "That's probably the
only place in the world where
you want that"
A place some would like to
hold the makeup race is Fort
Worth, Texas. Officials of Texas
Motor Speedway haw proposed
smging the race, but New
Hampshire wantl to keep it.
Jarrett proposed running in

Loudon on Wednesday, Oct. 10,
three days after the race in Concord. N.C., and four days before
tl1e next one in Martinsville,Va.
"I know that's three races
within .a week, but that's wlzy we
have great race teams," he said.
"Have you talked to anybody in
favor of being in New Hampshire on Nov. 23?"
Asked if they knew anybody
who did, Labonte and Elliott
looked at each other and
laughed.
Kenny Wallace says people are
making too much of it, particularly in view of the Sept 11 terrorist attacks.
"The bottom line is they've
already announced •we're going
to run there," he said." It's not up
for debate."
Hunter concedes a 36-race
schedule is the price NASCAR
pays for being so successfuL He
says there are six or seven cities
that either \vould like a race or
like to add one.
Still, NASCAR has remained
loyal to its oldest partners, refusing to pull the second race fium
its venues along the eastern
seaboard to make room for

I

"This week seems like each fium .haulers and flashed around
time we go back to the race- the 1 112-mile tri-oval on comtrack it's another step forward, petitors' cars during practice laps
one step to getting back to nor- for Sunday's Protection One
mal;' points leader Jeff Gordon 400, the inaugural Winston Cup
event at the new track.
said.
That wasn't the case at Dover,
though.
"Last week was pretty emoAuto- Owner~ Insurance
tional," Gordon said. "We
Life Home Car Business
weren't sure how the fans wete
going to react, and we weren't
7.V '1f,
?l·r,~fl"
sure how we were going to react
INSURANCE PLUS
as drivers and competitoa out
I
there."
AGENCIES, INC.
One reaction has held eyer - •
114 Court Pomeroy
a display of American !Ia~ and ;
patriotic slogans everywhere.
Old Gloty flew fium the roo&amp; .
9~2.-6677
of recreational vehicl~, hung • L....;.,_________.

Carolina Dodge

Deal ers 400 , Darlington, S C
(Date Jarrell}
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)
Ap ril 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort
Wort h, Texas. (Dale Jarret1)
Apri l 8 - Virginia 500 , Martinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - Talladega 500. Talladega, Ala . (Bobby Hamilton)
April29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500,
Fontana, Calif. (Rusty Wallace)
May 5 - Pont1ac t E~ecite m ent
400, Richmond. Va. (Tony Stewart)
May 27 - Coca·Cola 600, Con·
c ord, N.C. (Jeff Burton)
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400,
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
June 10 - Km art 400. Brooklyn.
Mich. (Jeff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500. Long

Pond, Pa. (Ricky Audd)
June 24 Dodge/Save Marl
350. Sonoma , Calif. (Ton)' Stewart)
July 7 - Pepsi ~00. Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Dale f:ai nhardl Jr )
July IS - Tropicana. 400, Joli et,
Ill . (Kevin Harvick)
Juty 22 - New England 300 ,
Loudon, N.H.· (Dale Jarrett)
J uly 29 Pennsylvania 500,

Lung Pond. (Bobby Labonlo)
Aug . 5 -

Brickyard 400, Indi-

anapolis. (Jeff Gordon)
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at
the Glen , Watkins Glen . N.Y. {JeH
Gordon}
Aug . 19 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn ,
Mich. (Sterling Marlin)
Aug. 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol,
Tenn . (TonY Stewart)
Sept. 2 - Southam 500, Da rlington, S.C. {Ward Burton)
Sept. 8 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo
400, Richmond 1 Va. (Ricky Rudd)
Sept. 23 - MBNA Cal Aipken Jr.
400, Dover, Del. (Dale Earnhardt

Jr.)

Sept. 30 - Protection One 400,
Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 7 - UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 14 - Old Dominion 500,
Martinsville. va.
.
Oct 21 - EA Sports 500 , Talladega, Al a.
Oct. 28 -:- Phoenix 500. Avon~
dale, Ariz.
Nov. 4 ..:_ Pop Secret Microwave
400, Rockingham, N.C.
Nov. 11 - Pennzoil 400, Home·
stead , Fla .
Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton.
Ga.
Nov. 23 - New Hampshire 300,
Loudon.
Driver Standings

I. Jeff Gordon . . .. .. .
2. A~ky Audd ........

3.928.
3,716.

3. Tony Stewart....... 3,516.
4. Dale Jarrett ........ 3,507.
5. Sterling Marlin .. . .. 3,444.

6. Dalo Ea111hard1. Jr. , . 3.429.
7. Kevin Harvick . . . . . . 3,380.
B. Ausly wallace ..... 3,355.
9. Bobby Labonte .. , , , 3,327.
1a. Johnny Benson . ... 3, 168.
11 , Jeff Burton .. , .. .. 3,079.

'

N~CAR returning to regular routine after attacks

I

Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rock·

Childress said. "All of us at llC R work
wry hard to win. There are times, especially after racing on a demanding lrJck
like Darlington, when we can get carried away by our emotions."
Perhaps that's why Harvick was bold
enou gh to tangle with Wallace and
Rudd the next week in Richmond, Va.
With Wallace leading the race and
Rudd and Harvick in pursuit, a tapping
sequence began that knocked Wallace
out of the way.
Then Rudd and Harvick fought it
out, with Harvick bumping Rudd out
of the lead.
"Sometimes you just run into each
other a little bit," Harvick said.
Rudd didn't agree. After the tap, he
radioed his crew that, "That kid is
mine.''
Several laps later, he tapped Harvick
and went on to win the race .
It did little to soothe his anger.
"The only thing I can say is that you
can do that and you race 1;ach other and
you use a little class about it, or you can
kind of be like a bull in a china closet,"
R udd said."He sort of chooses to do the
second."
' Little did Rudd know Harvick would
be the least of his problems.
S_till seething from the Bristol tap,Wallace, nearly a lap down, spun R.udd out
of the lead last Sunday in Dover, DeL
Ri:tdd recovered and finished third.
but later had to be restrained afte r grabbing hold ofWallace.
"I knew he was called 'Rubberhead
Wallace' in the garage area but I never
knew why until now;· Rudd said . "He
took the race away from us."
· Wallace also had some choice words.
"His m emory is pretty short," Wallace
said.
Witl1 just under two months to go in
the season, the bumping and banging
probably will continue Sunday at Kanas
Speedway as drivers battle for position
in th e series standin gs.
Robert Yates, who owns Rudd's car.
expects to see more action between his
driver-and·Wallace before it's all over.
'"it's a good old-fashioned racmg
feud,"Yates said.

r

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BAD BOYS - Kevin Harvick sits on a duffle bag and looks over his shoulder
as rain clouds approach the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach ,
Fla . July 6. (AP file)
·

- .-

.ngham, N C (Sieve Park)

" Emotio ns can run high in racin g,"

..

FULL SERVICE BODY SHOP
Tony Davis • Body Shop Manager

dress.

AP

~y DICK 8RINSTER

•

•

•

12. Mark Mai1in ......
13. Bill Ellion ...... . .
14. Jimmy Spencer . .. ,
15. Matt Kenseth . . . .
16. Steve Park .......

. Qrivers cold to late Ne\1\(.Hampshire·300 date

'

e rallies paSt Goldeh Gophers

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings

BY REIIICCA THUMA$

increase the Athens lead to 16:
R
OVP CO RESPONDENT
Once again the ll..aiders bauJ,·,\
CHESHII'E
- "It's by rar
th~' best
'•;
back. Graham started the R o1dt'r
we've played all year," said River Val- series with a 12-yard run . Both tc.tms
Iey Itead coac h. [.~rry Carter 10
r II
.
owmg
suffered penalties, but the Raider&gt; ,,
Friday night's SEOAL Athens match- stayed tough. The Graham-Marcurn ... ,
up.
h B lid
h duo dominated as a 37-yard pass. play .. ~..However, t e u ogs played t e
unfri endly guest to River Valley's put them into Bulldog territory and "'"·, ;
NUniS.Atr&lt;ge41 , _ _ , o
homecoming festivities as they cap- 27-yard Marcum . run off the pitclt.., ·~
from Grabam put them in scorirtl-\ ~
Sptlng. 0
Wlou!tbi
s.28,Macl!mo..
--.YOtt&lt; 47, McAlltluf v""""
Wiini1g1r&gt;:117.ture d t he · 36- 12 v1' ctory over t h e
eo.nys·
W&gt;dwnol5.f'11111nsu1a~--Oilkj;,&gt;obol2
Raiders.
. position . Five yards later, Marcui11 - ;·
Ceols1o ~1 ' 'T'w Ci1y
- 2 7 , Ca-t GlonOok 13
T"""""""" 16
'M&gt;Ioogt&gt;• Klbcune 24,s.
Sophomore quarterback Joey . Gra- trotted into th e end zone to bring th~ ,. ..
Now C&lt;n1ord JoM Glom 28, Zl1nMvile 22
h 1 d h
h
w......... -21
·
-55.K811eti1gF-IO
ham stepped up is ea ers ip as e Raiders within 10 at the conclusio1.1 ... :.
",
37
22 • Vot.ngs. Jackcompleted I 0 passes for over 11 0 of the first half.
•
13.,;;.,-~ ·
""'19
,
River
Valley
controlled
the
olli.,u!l(,,,,
.,
lilaa•o.. F1Qf'lllor 20,
Vot.ngs.lt&gt;otly 4B. ~ LaBtao
yards and senior Blake Marcum got
15
8
Ft)e
_P1.....,.1ii21.U t"""'*o
- 1 7,LimaSr.14
the job done as weII • rush ing "tOr at the start of qu arter three, but " ''"'
NowRiduood49,-llllo7
-TitocanlwasYaloy33, ~
[
90
d
series of penalties and mistakes put•w
NoMott&lt; 3, _ 27
St -~ 14
a most
yar s.
U:1ci1g ~ ~~ . WIWiogt&gt;•
W.Vil.hlgh-"We were really successful moving control right back in to th e hands .ut.'"' '
''::&lt;··
c=2~~19
-~~~;·:=,ao
the ball, both in the air and on the th e Bulldogs.
,
_
,
_
,
2&lt;1,
Slraottutg-Fmnklil
1111.-y SpMgs 39, l'etersbttt!l12
d
0
ff'
'
Once again· th e Gregory-Hartley'·
Bluefield09,Man 14
groun ,"said Carter. " ur o e ns1ve
1g
-2&lt;1.WoyneMle6
Btt&lt;l!leP&gt;114.Aobort C. ~7
line did a good job protecting Joey." connection took only on e play w · ' ·
6
g:r"'~~ 34,Caclz 14~~~~
But turnovers became the name of perfect as the Bu lldo g1 qui cklf :•,
HatrWICGnl.O
th e game
.
I I''"''d ers gave up th e ' increased their lead to 18,
. ·' !
Olms1odFals12,N.Oimslod 7
llullaloi4,Fayo-l 3 (ol)
as tle
Oto!P151ttil:M,DirWy32
~-.J28, Hunlngtln20
pigskin on some major plays and the
The Raiders continued to drivt' .;~
28·Arinl St-. 7
16·""' eo.ny 14
Otr.llie
Cel1u1
eo.ny
B
lid
d
'II'
I
I
d
dowri
field in what looked to be tht.. " .
OtwoiGnnl~28.Binln~~5.-CilyO
u ogs accepte w1 mgy eac1 an
on......~.
~~- .
oClay• ..,CCu1ly
ai'B,Ohb39,'1biiao
every time.
beginning of a comeback. But les~ " ..
-.....- ~~ ' 2
21, r.- CCu1ly 22
O&gt;&lt;b'd'11111 •dl:ae.~o
EaotHant/6.~W01z81o
The Bulldogs took the first bite of than 15 yards from tou chdown terri L'"'
- 4 9 , 'NUO
G&lt;ogo .,_,.ogbi49, lJl!IM 12
Potma37, MaploH11.11
Gtiit40,CtiopnwMio12'
the contest at the HJ:OO minute mark tbry, River Valley fail ed to convert ad ""
Paui!Jng17,Adl15 44·, _ , _ _ -Cou:oty2l.l\&gt;gotta,Valey12
· t h e fi1rst quarter off" a 35 -yard QB a ,,'ourth and one ,,
-ea.t.ood
Gtallon3S,l.betty-s
m
, ·tuat1'on and W .lth ' 1'
1a12
~l/aliy29, Hmin18
·
keeper by sophomore Grant Gregory. 5:26 left in the third quarter put til{,'' "·
Pony 27,-20, OT
~36, Franl&lt;iort 20
, .,.,
Pet~yRt~utg27, -Sptlng. 7
Ho&lt;tgoo&lt;tiP31, Shioandu,l/a. 23
T hen, 61 yards and 16 plays later, ball back in the hands of the Bulldog!;. .. .
7
pquaa,i!jlllng.
~38.Soul1~
the Raiders answered back. Graham . Thanks to a few key Luke DeGai~,·.'.""
- .. w. S.O
84, Sci*&gt;- - ,.29,&lt;l&lt;»Mii6
·· · ·
NW 14
· lndlpiolilol""ll;l,-12
passed for 22 yards and Mercum car- mo tackles, the Raiders had one man•
s...- 2e,
FOdttaJ · JametMctntltO~f · MidardTill!22
d
... u
Hodii1g15 ·
.. .
JohnMa-33.irdanCntelc,a.io14 rie 21 yards to tie it all up at 6-6 chance to bring themselves back. Bu~.... ·:
2 · ·
RIMmaSE48.-2
0
· I&lt;III'
OB&lt;:M,Beai,Mtil
with 4:10 remaining in the first quar- the fourth quarter did not carry with","'
~
19, .......
Cenlar
-Oiotil.ogtln;
Ohb59,F'&lt;iil1-1~
1l1ngy 11
·
'O'Illoudoun CW&gt;ty, 1/a. 21, Jelletocn ~4 ter.
it much luck as once again penalties' : .
- - I 4 . A A r. NotmY
I
A tens
h
h
RktmondDoloSE26,- 0
ldadomi28,Htmad O
;
wou ld ten
advance 23 andturnoversallowedAthensyeton'( ,""·
-45.~-·•
Mllgda2&lt;1,SlCiamilo,Ohio8
yards bef,ore a Marcum m
· tercep t'wn· more · chance to dance in the enc'!"" ·
s.O..-SE21,Splng.NEO
Motlinobttg42-East19
~13,0iogonCioy3
-.116,Hutloy,Va.B
would put the ball back into Raider zone. With 7:00 left in the ballgam e "· '
~ - . 41 · PonCirionO
,_Bttdiii,2.VaJoy Fa)o\1t 7
·· '
territory.
SwMnN.-..36.Edon13
~42. Sou1h-.12
th e Bulldogs made it 36-12 off au ·
9'ot1clylldo27, - 1 3
.....,.,.._,ee, ~Potlle
'0
d
1
b
'" ' '
Foltvlow 40, Do1lOnco
Mc:ultHupe~, GtiiAoyBrtllgo6
'
ur secon ary P ayed 1000.4 etter eight-yard scamper by Graylon Sum~ ..~w.
~ 3S
Muoulla•4B. FM liil, Mti13
·tonight," stated Carter. "We defend21 ·BtaxmCOIJnlyiZ ed the pass well and made them real- mers.
Som4B. ~-··
-eo.nv
· · "·"'·
Spring. ee... cent 28, Natt1 Mll1on31,Eao1FIIIm01114
The Raiders would see the posses-. ,
Gt•'"'*"4
Dano27.Cia)•P -12
ly scramble"
.
~27,CepllaJO
·
sian arrow in thei( favor two mot~ . ~ !
· Spru.N.21.~7
S]lti'G.
NWI8,
Encwl~
13
~
SOt.dh35, Nlbo27
The,.
R
_
aidders
could
nolt
convhert
and
times, but it was too little to late as th e .- .._. I
St. - l d Rogellllicon 40, -..g CCu1ly 21, SitU uuoll Jaol&lt;11
~~l!e.J.moCini.Cdl.il
=~~.Liluon?
we~e · orce .w punt eary m t e se·c- Bulldogs captured the homecom in11 "",', t
St.PIM-31 , Spllng.' 3e!Hoillllt-7 ' ·
onl quharter. .
.
_.,. I
f h
' victory36-12. ·
1 o t e next
Aitt;IIO
Ro-••.-CCullyO
n t e opemng pay
.... -• -· 1
-35.S.M)(N.V.)St.Jao1P1 Fl!vorlliloBO,SI.AilllwO
·B lid
d ..
G
t d
"Overall, I am completely pleas~d , " ..
0
611111iSpllngSI ,I'bVJtw 2
u og nve, regory connece
'dC
"
hd
d
k -.. .
oonm .,35.-14
ShotlnM 1e,LI&gt;otly_,e
with Brad Hartley for a 37 _yard sa1 _ arter. We a a goo wee ;ot , ; •
7 80 " 111 * 48' -..gHII.~ ~~~ 0
touchdown . A successful two-point p:ac~•ce,~nd we c_ame out tomght an,d .,.; - 1
14
u:lt'::":.~
1 ~ Cllu'i1y • 0 - - conversion gave Athens the 14-6 lead. d•dn t q~lt . . I am really-proud of them .,.,,.
61-. 42, Tuu.......,.4B. ••..,..,a
River Valley came back strongly, Now, •ts,_nme to get up for Gall~':' '

~~J~5~~~~E~E.12

i!&gt;unb,w irunrS ·$&gt;rnuurl • Page 85

_,

'

'

advancing over 35 yards including a
FIIO
.,.., 51 ,1!1QC.....Ie
20-ya~d gain on a Graham-Marcum
~'A'ahiogt&gt;•l 7, Mot ,,, 1 ~ 14
·
~
~J.we
connection.
But turnovers once again
10
~Ill~.':'*"~'::~
'~~~~~~;~~ l!i .. ec..vrid."'"-"".llt}"'',. 11111
.. Oou\IY ,. plagued the Raiders as a fumble put
--lobglil&lt;e.llteldo!llll' ·,.
··. Woiiwlt;Ohbii,Cioi&lt;CIIitnd
the ball back into the hands of the
~ 13. N.- J~Lia.,M. ···
·. : D'll.~~Fotll ~ ... · · .Bulldogs. With 4:44 left in the first
m7 or· ·
· · ·
·
-Wio&lt;in14,Pmoo1Qn0
half, Gregory found teammate Chris
Modna40,N.AoYalon14
· u.-er,Jtdw,~oj(j
WyoningEattl2&lt;1.0okHI20
Hewitt on s 36-yard connection to
..
~-.35, ••-7
;:;:;;;:~
27,"~

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

Raiders look better,
NASCA
b~tf~l! to By!IQogs,~· Trading paint, punches more common

u::.;:.,.

aa... Mils-31 . ~ieljCarHatYoy 14, or
v..w 75, Milon-

erya, 28, Wauseon 18

~~&lt;moo

"'""'*"'
_....!50.-,.,.,

di'la17
Geneva 22.
Gennantown VaJoy
Unioo 12

Br9d&lt;svte 17, N. A0J8vi19 7
!l&lt;uns..o 24, 8e&lt;oa 6

-16,Eidl 14
- L I M Coli. 211

Ub27, --.1Qtw~l10

.,..,llutun 1 3 . - ·
.,.., Wltl27, Llna sr.- 8
W. 1\WI Valey S. l'll, Plltl

...
'lla,Sp•cP&gt;tuO
wa-~W42F-12
~ St. ..k:tw\'1 56, A. RaaMtry 0
Mid......_., 3. CNI 0, ar
W. l..bMy SI11n 14, MlctialllcltuV'7
Dolla·28,
Hotvy 7
_, _ Conlo&lt; F - "3, """" 17, ~ 7
•
o.-33, CaniJtlll013
IW\o27.
. .............. 21 , BOI14
13
0u111n SOO«l ~' , a-. 13
r.ll&gt;uty!Mot41 ,llloot•-~ 14 Htm1g 2l · - F1l::h
e. ae.S1ww «l, lotlli'l-l&lt;iv 28 --•42 !&lt;ulr 0.0.. .... Unioo -&lt;e. -., 14
e. 1.Notpoa «l, """'S- Al)wl30
18
-"K 28.- - 8
E.Palosn61,SobtrvMcl&lt;Hoy8
-flidll0 1 ~-C...- ··-d40..,..,C.H.:!5.a.awMBWO
Ea.,..35, - s n . - r
_...13
-.o
E""""Wouci!luto21,~18
-l'll.- - 7
1111Yott,54,MiDd3
Elyria 13, Lai&lt;S'MlOd 6
.
Mogodc&gt;l 58,
l'1o1cl 14
Woli ogO&gt;' 7, AYOn 3
Fa&lt;potl ....... ~ 26, Mutntl
-54.P&lt;tmotoyMIQI7
~-;~;::;,&amp;~F~ 28, Rocky_,.
(W ..._1J o M - 33, . :.::"'~':=~~~ 3
21
--~••
l\llilohaiA'eeti1g28,Lordun7
F-I 7 , T~ . IIWIImorl6
Mwt&lt;""""'"28,D11i.,.21
Whholtuuse ...,lOOny Wayne 20,
F•--40. ......mEao~Knox17
t.t.Giaad20.~14
Malmlol8
3
Gahama38.1'ickom;llon17
,
N. CM.-28,~,_ 6
-••.IJR&gt;ot8onrusky
Ga1un 63, l'bwal28
N. Cologt HI 55, Cln. His ChtloOian 14
~ 4B. C1etmor&lt; lloOJhoo.-...,42 Cotwoyco

- ......, ..... ~ogt&gt;•o36.-6-

Bu1l9r 35, Troy

o

OolawMo~~7, Mattln~

8

Ala. 14, Akr. l&lt;.emlooo 7
Ala. . _ 16.- 12
Na. Mauct · 55, E. Cal. 0

Arl01glon 27, f'&lt;Wy

-.tkdol&lt;ollO. _ , _ 13

-~llO.Gtw-obutg&lt;lowl

sunda~Sept . 30,2001

17. Ward Burton ..

, , ..

3,015.
2,990.
2.962.
2,905.
2,859.

2,776.

18. Elliott Sadler ..... . 2,755.

19. Bobby Hamil1on .. . 2,742.
20. Jeruy Nadeau .. , . . 2,726.

weather-related postponemenl5.
"In a perfect world, if you
were starting NASCAR today,
vety few tracks would have two
races;· Hunter said. "Scheduling
is the hardest thing on
NASCAR's plate." .
Hunter points out that special
circumstances led to the New
Hampshire postponement, and
with the Winston Cup championship an· the line, the race
should be run. It was scheduled
for a Friday to ensure there
would be as many as three days
to race should the weather rum
bad.
"Yes, it could be cold, but our
fans can adapt," he said. "They've
done it before."
Hunter said even the tire temperatures can be managed somewhat by running longer than
norinal under caution before
waving the green flag.
He can remember a race in
Richmond,Va., when there was a
foot of snow on the ground.
"They plowed the snow and
ran the event:' he said. "I learned ·
in this business never to say
never, but I don't think canceling
an event is in our vocabulary."

21. Ke n Schrader ..... 2,706.

22. Jeuomy Mayliold . , . 2,596.
24. Teruy Labonlo ... , , 2,470.
29. Ricky Craven .. .... 2,500.

25. Dave Blaney ...... 2,450.

26. Kurt Busch . .

. . 2,365.

27. Robert Pressley ... 2.351.
28. Michael Waltrip .... 2,336.
29. John Andreltl ..... 2,320.

30. Casey Alwood .. .. 2,25 1.

Bodine .. .. ..
32. Brott Bod! no ......
3 1. Todd

2,211 .
2,204.
33. Joe Nemechek . .. . 2,085.
34. Mike Skinner. . . .' . . 2,029.

35. Stacy Compton . .. 2.015.
36. Ron Hornaday . . .
37. Jason Leftler ......
38. Mike Wa llace .....
39. Kevin Lepage . . . .
40. Buckshot Jones . . .

1,888.
1,800.
1,750.
1,552.
t ,388.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
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CASHS

'P•"'-

w, 2nd ltrHt

Pomeroy, Ohio

·11112-0461
UoiiM CC700071-oot

Uco- Cl 7100111-oot

218 Upper River Rd.
Oalllpolla, Ohio
,
'I• Mlleeouth of the Sliver arid..
Llcen•• CC7000n.OOO and
Lla••• Cl 710CMI-OOO and

•

'

·'

�..
Page 84 • li&gt;unbap U!:imrl ·li&gt;rutmrl

"

.

.

~

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

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

---=----------~---------------------------~------~~-----~------------------------------------~--------------------------------~~~--------"" ·~

Ohio, W.Va. Prep Footbaii _Scores
llay.IQiuo&lt;!O,Si:ny 14
JJoWcc36.Lmalloi&gt;17
Oefttn)e Traa 27, , _ o

Ollk&gt;High-Fttdoy'o-..s
!W. Co.e'llly 19, Navarre FaittetSs 13,

or

Akr~

Elot:Jl, Ala, ~-0

~

- - 5 0.- 2 4
Atre28,Mioria11
Ar-,:JS.E~12
-39. ~28

~

-~59. Plymouf13

13

Ahn 38, Olo!llw9 River valey 12
AVM lMe :ll, Bay Vllag&amp; Bay 0
Barbemn 20, Ra&gt;J8I"f''a &amp;
8aeotrn llcpc nellou!bl 27, Fosb'ia

--68.

St-6
aw..tt « . Elyria ea... 7

8elt:lro:* 42, Day. Oakwood 0
Spmg. Sha..... 7

Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 52,

Cass»Ml Miami E. 14
.........,46,&amp;cyrus 0
BeiMi1e Oear Fork 26, MillersOO~g West

Hoines 21
~ 41' Al1an\l Ale- 7
- 3 8, Spen:eM1e 14
15

CAI:Mel20, ~ 18
Qw&gt;, ~ 48, Washngb1 (D.C.)

Auooooei!O
QnlJ F\Jion WI &lt;4, CM. S. 27
Cwlleld 34, Nles 6
C;wy 42, Fmmont Sl 7

Palma-

~Galla28, Viloon1Wamin21

p-

GalfiBOj ""' 34,
GalfiBOj His. Tmty

Ca~sle21 , 1!roo1Mle14

GBn:134.Fals
12
Gious18rTri1til35,
-Eastom6

~"""' va1ey :J&gt;, Beinanl.
Unioo
local 1 ~
~Mi&lt;Mew48,
l.ot&amp;t1CieaMow7

~='.18.~~

Fals21, OT

w.

21

Harr01100 34. Mi11otU 10
HarniblAoss2S, Goshen 21

0\ardon 21, Eastlake N. 0
~

22
40, ~- ""'- ee... s

Gta1Yile42,8ailnot9l.bettylkiun21
G - - 38, CinmMassio
28,0T

Carrol1on le, Ala. Spmg. 7
Cl\arrcliOn 24, 8looldield 0

27, Chagri1
Ross 47, 011-

Goacga

-Uni1od17,Leetlnla13

=~~34.Hul;jal822

Chilcoile Ht.mrg1on
00ihe Urd:l , 4
cr.iicohe Zane Trace 34, Bairbridge

.-:xJ, Sulm!Slation'--'IJH1S. 14
Hlian:I- 23 . ~Colliren l 7

"""'VaJioy21

Hllup53.-(M&lt;:h.)O

Cin AnOelson 35, G1on ES18 7
c.,_Coerain 55, s~ 7

~0

1'ttbbatd
21.Wayne35,9oa&gt;io.,..,..7
Cot11and
......... ,.._

Crt Deer Par1127, Fmeytown 2 1

·

Ch El:Je&lt; 39, Ch LaSale 0
Ht.doun21.--e
Ch Hoq1es 20, Ch Men 0
t-Mon 42, Casl8lla MatgBIOI1a 23
Cit 1ncl&lt;r1 Hl29, Cin Malierron113
'""""'s,F'utllwm.&lt;hiS
Je1lotoon 24, t.oa;ard 0
Col. Mt Hoalhy 34' Col. Woodwan:l 20
en. 0a1c His 43, en. Princeton 35
..........,Atoa35,..,._,P)m&gt;llrtig
Ch-.g20, ChMade&lt;a12
· ValleyO
Johnsl&lt;&gt;wn-Monroe 13, SataCil. Aogo&lt; Baoon 40, -21
I Cin. St XIMof 47, Cil. Moe1er 0
~7
Cin. St.rm;t eo.my oay 28, an. eo.nJonalhanAklor23, Sich&gt;y L.olmln 13
"Y Day6
1&lt;sns1on 31, r-~ 7

21

Cil. W"""Woods27,Cin. No&lt;lhwest12
Cil. W.,row 14, Cin. Wah.rt Hilts 0

Kenl:&gt;n22,StMal)'8
~FwrtJom63,Day.-.o

Cit IYjorljng 53, N. Bam Ta~ 2e
C i - 9, Bloom-Can'OI 7
Cle. Beued&lt;h 34, Ala. SVSM 27

lafa)e11e_,E35,liMPany18

Kngs Mils Kngs35, UdeMilrrll4
Lal&lt;ewoodStEa..td42,Si&gt;wwalltl

c~ . E. 28, ae ..JoM Marshal o
Cia. E. Tedl32, Cia. Rhodes 8
Oe: Giw'lvie 55, Cle. ~WeSI 0
Cle. His. 19, Lo&lt;a&lt;lSoultMowiO

Jesu&lt;25
LaraiS10r37. -Nat11127 .
~~ FaJtfield UniOn 35, AtnMda· ·

0
-·~Un:astetAsherCe1h. 26, -AI&gt;any
,_,.,_21,Dey.Cittal 14

Cle. .Jotin Hay 28,Cle. South 8
Cle. ar..tge 7, AuiOill 6 • .
Cle. St li1'8M 48, Fmmont Ross 25
Cljde 29, Oek Ha&lt;bo&lt; 13

14

Collwa1Bfl7,- Parkway 0
Cols. Academy 49, West Je1lotoon 7
Cols. Beechct'ofl 33, Cols. Mariofl.

·

Lal&amp;lglun13,Matl0n~lo

l.bettyCenlar27,- 9
l.bettyTw!J.Lal&lt;o4aEas117.-.
o
,__,_,_20.Woltton(W.VIL)
-0
Cols. .... 44, Cols. w. 15
o
Cols. C&lt;!rTierOa134, COis. E. 14
L.ogan59·Poili-(W.Va.)la
Cols. DoSe"' 35, COis. St Dwl9s 28
l.ogtlnEtn38,C8nal~""' 111 20
Colo. EasOooor 10, Cols. Lilden 0
Lctaln 28, LaGnlr1ge Key&gt;
Cols. F....., His. 38, PalaSkala wa- .....,o
-21
lotlli'ICotl. 57, Tol. ~ '"
Cols. f"!l 25, A&lt;tM1il Teey!l
,
_ 7, Bolo11 W. Btlntll 8
ValeyO
~~28,-ConmtCols. Hw1ley 59, Cols. Word Ha""" 0
COis. lt&lt;lelleUioliOO 15, Co1s. $. 13
Magnolla(W,\a)Z&lt;I,S1.au.A8
Cols. Mtln 55, Cols. Briggs 6
Manafiai1Madaon311,- 0
, Cds. NortWld 41 ' l...olle&amp;ir1d 35 '
Man1ua Ctooloood 42,
.Colo. Wa.nul Ridge 48, Colo. Wholslcno GarllotiY
0
MariaS1oilMalton,_2B,-8
COis. WalltltSot131' ~ 22
Go~o.mM Slam Go~o.mM 47, Bmoldyn
:::::"~:.O.roa .. oo
7
Marion
-~ 18· Sl&amp;la~
7
Col..n-.a 22, u.bon 13
COUiillana Ctss1Yiew 41' -

Ga-

-·

-F&lt;onyti0,--1•

C&lt;mea"l4,~~e

.

Coploy 10, Loci o....n.at 7
Cay-Rawsm
~ 10
~ 41 , lJht'&lt;TooAio C1o)mcrC 21
~54, Unioo C i 1 y -

valey

14,

11

C&lt;.y.mga Fals 21, StJw 0
· C&lt;.y.mga .... 36, AUuo d H1o. 6
Day. Bet1urt 26, ~~13

-

Day. ~37.­

-29
Day. Col. wt&gt;lo22, Day.- 8

-Hill.

Holjo

--25

MOIIII

w. ~

-...,_20

...

=~DtollfB

..

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_..,A.

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'Yr"Oot-M.COcbldgtCuun~··~o

.·

TOP 25 COLLEGE FOOT··B. ALL
.

.

.

.

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

history, and rushed for a school
Brandon Hance caught a quarterback-record 191 yards
touchdown pass and threw for as visiting No.4 Nebraska beat
three more, including the go- Missouri 36-3 Saturday.
Dahrann Diedrick scored
ahead score to john Standeford
in overtime, as No. 24 Purdue two touchdowns for Nebraska.
Fading to pass in the
'rallied fro m an 11-point
fourth-quarter deficit and beat Nebraska end zone, Crouch
Minnesota 35-28 on Saturday. was neady tackled for a safety
~ h
H ance, a •res
man, h.1t before tucking the ball away.
r d fi
Sta n demr
rom 19 yards out He deked a pair of defenders
on third-and-4 on the Boiler- around the Nebraska 20, then
·
ma kers ' ~urst OT possessiOn.
easily won a sprint to the end
Minnesota's Travis Cole had zone to put the Cornhuskers
his third-down pass intercept- ahead 22-3 with 2:21 to go in
ed ·in the end zone by Stuart the third quarter.
Schweigert.
The run bettered the record
Hance completed 22 of 36 of94 yards set by Craig Johnpasses for 308 yards and two . son on Oct. 13, 1979, against
interceptions. Travi_s Dorsch Kansas, and matched by Roger
kicked a 48-yard field goal as Craig on Sept. 19, 1981 ,
time expired in regulation.
against Florida State. Crouch,
No.4 Nebraska 36,
who had 17 carries, eclipsed
Missouri 3
the quarterback mark of 174
Eric Crou ch scored on a 95- yards set by Gerry Gdowski
)'ard run, th e longest in school against Iowa State in 1989.

NHL
from Page 81
Rob Olake and Patrick Roy not long after
they raised the C up.
·
The New Jersey Devils, who co uldn 't hold
a 3-2 lead in the finals, are contenders again
rather than champs. They're virtually
unchanged, too, except for losing 43-goal
scorer Alexander Mogilny to Toronto.
Very much changed are the other two New
York metro teams, the Rangers (Lindros) and
Islanders (Alexei Yashin, Michael Peca), who
have new stars and, as always, ·new hope.
So many story lines and., the Olympics, too, ·
which will shut down the league in February
for· only the second time ever. T hen, teammates will become opponents (the Penguins
alone have players · for Canada, the Czech
Republic, Russia, Finland and Sweden) and a
gold medal, not a silver cup, will become the
sought-after prize.

~, ,

Academy.
Ath
. en~ advances to 4- 2 avera_II..; ~~ ·
whtle R1ver Valley fa)ls to 0-6.
, .. •. •
d The Raiders take the short trilf .. ,.: .
. own river to -Memorial Field nel\1,:;
Friday. Kick off with the Blue Devils
is set for 7:30,
Athens returns home to host Logan...;..

..•

· Crouch added a 15-yard
touchdown run with 9:56 to
go for a 29-31ead, and finished
with 311 yards in total offense.
. l-ie was 8-for- 14 for 120 yards
and an interception.
No.8 Virginia Tech 46,
Central Florida 14
Grant Noel was 15-for-25 ·
for 170 yards and No. 8 Virginia Tech. capitalized on five
Central Aorida turnovers to
beat the Golden Knights 4614 on Saturday.
· The Hokies gained 232 '
yards on the ground to help
·Virginia Tech (4-0) beat Central Florida (1-3) .
'
Freshman running back
Kevin Jones had 90 yards, spinning and diving into the end
zone in the second quarter for
his first career touchdown.
Keith Burnell added 82 yards
and two touchdowns.·

Speaking of gold, a lot of players grabbed it,
in an offseason filled with more big-money
signings than ever - Yashin's $90 million and
Sakic's $50 million-plus deals for starters.
(Even Martir. Lapointe, a modest starer, got
$20 million from Boston .)
The,re were so ·nany big contracts, some
w,onder- if the NHL can dare wait until its
labor deal expires in 2004 to establish a salary '
ceiling that owners and players can live with
in a sport that, unlike the NFL, N:UA and
baseball, can't live off its TV dollars.
But even after a seemingly endless flurry of .
star-player movement (Pierre Thrgf'on from
St. Louis ·to Dallas also was-a huge move) , the
most-watched player will be on ~ who stayed
put: Lemieux.
.
His unexpected comeback · in December
was even be~er than he imagined. He easily
led the leagu e in per-game scoring and carried the Penguins to the Easletn Conference
finals, even with mininial contribution during the playoffs from a distracted and soonto-depart Jagr.

'

The 2001 NASCAA Winston Cuo. ·· ·
schedule (w1nners 1n parentheses)
and driver po1nt standu1gs
Feb 18 - Daytona 500, Day·
tona Beach , Fla (Mtchael Wallnp}

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•,•

BY JENNA fRYER

SPORTS WRITER
Upset with some on-track rubbing
and wanting to discuss it with Chad Litde, Kevin Harvick instead got a drink
poured over his head and wound UP. in
a shoving match that landed h1m on the
ground.
·
Thinking he was intentionally taken
out ·of a race, G~eg Biflle ran down•the
crack and threw a punch at Jay Sauter
through his car window.
Rusty WaUace and Ricky Rudd,
involved in some serious bumping and
banging in three straight races, foUowed
their· latest contact last week in Dover,
Del:, with a physical confrontation and
angry name-calling.
As NASCAR hits the homestretch of
a long season, tempers are flaring on -and
off the trade.
The sanctioning body is watching this
latest rash of bad behavior and has been
busy doling out punishment.
"It's typical of this time of year," said
Kevin Triplett, NASCAR's director of
operations. "You have a vety long stretch
of races where guys either aren't doing
as they'd hoped to at this point in the
or guys are doing better and are in
critical points positions.
"It's getting down to the nitty gritty
But,vhen it gets beyond the nitty gritty, that's when we have to react."
A developing problem with rough
driving and hot tempers started last
month at Bristol . Motor Speedway, a
ttack with a histoty of creating feuds.
Kevin Harvick, the rookie in the late
Dale' Earnhardt's ride, started it by
bumping future teammate Jeff Green
out of his way to win the Busch race.
An upset Green pulled alongside at
the finish line to d,iscuss it, but Harvick
had no desire to· listen. His response?
~eginning his celebratocy burnout by
creating puffi of thick, white smoke for
Green to choke on.
In the main event the next night, the
' feud betWeen Wallace and Rudd officially began.
Trying to gain position in ihe final
laps of the Winston Cup race, Rudd
tapped Wallace aside. Wallace got his
revenge on the cool-down lap, ramming
Rud4'from behind.
Both drivers attributed the tap to

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~SAS CITY, Kan. (AP) about getting stuck here:' Earn- Tl1e last time Dale Earnhardt hardt said Thursday. "At the
Jr. left Kansas Speedway, it was time, we still didn't know if we
1
for atl,, 18-hour van ride home had a race that weekend:'
on dhe of America's darkest 'NASCAR postponed the
days. ~·
·
New Hampshire 300, scheduled
He' came back Thunday to for Sept. 16, but resumed _last
pick~ where he left off- try· we~k with Earnhardt's emoti~n­
ing fd. find a way to win Sun- al win in the MNBA Cal Ripday's iiuugural Protection One . ken Jr. 400 in Dover, Del.
400. ~:
A week later, it's still not busi00:. .Sept. 11, Earnhardt was ness as usual - not with a ban
pt;:paiing for hiJ second day of on coolers and large handba~,
testin( at the new track when not with security searching car
four liijacked planes ctliShed into trunks at the gates of the new
the World 'Il:ade Center, the Kansas Speedway, not with
Pema&amp;Pn and a Penruylwnia · sponsors promising .per-lap
field. r.
do~tiom for disaster relief.
·•~- couldn't fly out. of the
But for W~to~ Cup W:ivers,
airport', and we were worried a sense of rouane ts returrung.

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can complain
they want, but
•: AP SPORTS WRITER
there will be no changes.
Dale Jarrett doesn't want to
The complaints come as no
throW: snowballs at NASCAR, surprise to NASCAR vice presbut h~ might get the chance.
ident Jim Hunter.
Th~ 1999 Winston Cup
"If we took a poll of the drichampion would prefer not to vers, I don 't know that any of
race ih very cold weather; and them would want to go to New
. ' does~ think a sport that bills Hampshire:· he said. "We make
, illelf ~ one big family should tough decisions every d;iy and
requife teams to leave on we live with them:'
Thanksgiving for a makeup
So, bundle up and pray for
even~ the itext day in New sunshine. The New Hampshire
HamPshire.
300 could be the coldest race in
"Tllat's not promoting the history. Weather bureau records
famil; image," said Jarrett, an show a high temperature in the
infrecj\.ent critic of the sanction- area last Nov. 23 of about 30
ing bqdy.
degrees.
So ~ASCAR, criticized a year
Of course, it also could· be
ago after two driver deaths at comfortable: the high was 61 in
New : Hampshire International 1998 and 69 a year later.
Spee&lt;!my, is getting ·111ore heat
The colder it gel5, the more
fiom :~hose who don't want to difficult it will be to heat up the
run tljere Nov. 23. But the sane- slick tires. Warm rubber is needtioni'% body is honoring its ed to create decent traction for
contri;Ct with a track deprived of the 3,400-pound cars.
a race.:Jive days after the terrorist
But Terry Labonte, who
attackt
would rather be having a tradiNfli~CAR, which never races tiona! turkey dinner in Texas
on Mother's Day or Easter, with his family and %-year-old
unde~tands driver sentiment, grandmother, says people might
ut ~ no open date the rest of not notice a difference.
the s~~n. Jarrett and the others · "Most of the races up there

,.

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"brake failure" from .Wallace, but now called "The Instigator" as a spinoff
NASCAR called them into the hauler of Earnhardt's nickname "The lntimidafor a lecture.
tor"- a $1 0,000 fine and probation.
Tempers flared again at Darlington
Despite the penalty and an ensuing
Raceway. the.nextweek,when Harvick •.,lecture from NASCAR over his driving
and Little had their fight after 'th e Bu~c h in the Darlington Cup race, Harvick has
race. The confrontation cost Harvick ~ the support of car owner R-ichard Chi!~

y

--

PClfiiTlAC

March 4 UAW- Da 1mler·
Chrysler 400, las Vegas (Jeff
Gordon)
I
March 11 - Cracker Barrel 500,
Hampton. Ga (Kevtn Harvick)

March 1a -

kind of resemble demolition
derbies anyway," sai~ Labonte,
shooting for his 701st career start
Sunday in the inaugural Winston
Cup race at Kansas Speedway.
"With the cold temperarure and
the hard tires, it's going to be a
bigger problem - on resmrts
especially."
Bill Elliott says setups in New
Hampshire always have been
critical, and that a cloud cover even in summer - changes a
car's handling characteristics
more than at most tracks.
Drivers would prefer to quality on a cool track, where for one
lap they can fight a lack of handling for more speed. But The
Magic Mile in Loudon, N.H., is
the exception.
"When you go out to quality,
you pray for the sm1 to be out;'
Elliott said. "That's probably the
only place in the world where
you want that"
A place some would like to
hold the makeup race is Fort
Worth, Texas. Officials of Texas
Motor Speedway haw proposed
smging the race, but New
Hampshire wantl to keep it.
Jarrett proposed running in

Loudon on Wednesday, Oct. 10,
three days after the race in Concord. N.C., and four days before
tl1e next one in Martinsville,Va.
"I know that's three races
within .a week, but that's wlzy we
have great race teams," he said.
"Have you talked to anybody in
favor of being in New Hampshire on Nov. 23?"
Asked if they knew anybody
who did, Labonte and Elliott
looked at each other and
laughed.
Kenny Wallace says people are
making too much of it, particularly in view of the Sept 11 terrorist attacks.
"The bottom line is they've
already announced •we're going
to run there," he said." It's not up
for debate."
Hunter concedes a 36-race
schedule is the price NASCAR
pays for being so successfuL He
says there are six or seven cities
that either \vould like a race or
like to add one.
Still, NASCAR has remained
loyal to its oldest partners, refusing to pull the second race fium
its venues along the eastern
seaboard to make room for

I

"This week seems like each fium .haulers and flashed around
time we go back to the race- the 1 112-mile tri-oval on comtrack it's another step forward, petitors' cars during practice laps
one step to getting back to nor- for Sunday's Protection One
mal;' points leader Jeff Gordon 400, the inaugural Winston Cup
event at the new track.
said.
That wasn't the case at Dover,
though.
"Last week was pretty emoAuto- Owner~ Insurance
tional," Gordon said. "We
Life Home Car Business
weren't sure how the fans wete
going to react, and we weren't
7.V '1f,
?l·r,~fl"
sure how we were going to react
INSURANCE PLUS
as drivers and competitoa out
I
there."
AGENCIES, INC.
One reaction has held eyer - •
114 Court Pomeroy
a display of American !Ia~ and ;
patriotic slogans everywhere.
Old Gloty flew fium the roo&amp; .
9~2.-6677
of recreational vehicl~, hung • L....;.,_________.

Carolina Dodge

Deal ers 400 , Darlington, S C
(Date Jarrell}
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)
Ap ril 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort
Wort h, Texas. (Dale Jarret1)
Apri l 8 - Virginia 500 , Martinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - Talladega 500. Talladega, Ala . (Bobby Hamilton)
April29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500,
Fontana, Calif. (Rusty Wallace)
May 5 - Pont1ac t E~ecite m ent
400, Richmond. Va. (Tony Stewart)
May 27 - Coca·Cola 600, Con·
c ord, N.C. (Jeff Burton)
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400,
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
June 10 - Km art 400. Brooklyn.
Mich. (Jeff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500. Long

Pond, Pa. (Ricky Audd)
June 24 Dodge/Save Marl
350. Sonoma , Calif. (Ton)' Stewart)
July 7 - Pepsi ~00. Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Dale f:ai nhardl Jr )
July IS - Tropicana. 400, Joli et,
Ill . (Kevin Harvick)
Juty 22 - New England 300 ,
Loudon, N.H.· (Dale Jarrett)
J uly 29 Pennsylvania 500,

Lung Pond. (Bobby Labonlo)
Aug . 5 -

Brickyard 400, Indi-

anapolis. (Jeff Gordon)
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at
the Glen , Watkins Glen . N.Y. {JeH
Gordon}
Aug . 19 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn ,
Mich. (Sterling Marlin)
Aug. 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol,
Tenn . (TonY Stewart)
Sept. 2 - Southam 500, Da rlington, S.C. {Ward Burton)
Sept. 8 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo
400, Richmond 1 Va. (Ricky Rudd)
Sept. 23 - MBNA Cal Aipken Jr.
400, Dover, Del. (Dale Earnhardt

Jr.)

Sept. 30 - Protection One 400,
Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 7 - UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 14 - Old Dominion 500,
Martinsville. va.
.
Oct 21 - EA Sports 500 , Talladega, Al a.
Oct. 28 -:- Phoenix 500. Avon~
dale, Ariz.
Nov. 4 ..:_ Pop Secret Microwave
400, Rockingham, N.C.
Nov. 11 - Pennzoil 400, Home·
stead , Fla .
Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton.
Ga.
Nov. 23 - New Hampshire 300,
Loudon.
Driver Standings

I. Jeff Gordon . . .. .. .
2. A~ky Audd ........

3.928.
3,716.

3. Tony Stewart....... 3,516.
4. Dale Jarrett ........ 3,507.
5. Sterling Marlin .. . .. 3,444.

6. Dalo Ea111hard1. Jr. , . 3.429.
7. Kevin Harvick . . . . . . 3,380.
B. Ausly wallace ..... 3,355.
9. Bobby Labonte .. , , , 3,327.
1a. Johnny Benson . ... 3, 168.
11 , Jeff Burton .. , .. .. 3,079.

'

N~CAR returning to regular routine after attacks

I

Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rock·

Childress said. "All of us at llC R work
wry hard to win. There are times, especially after racing on a demanding lrJck
like Darlington, when we can get carried away by our emotions."
Perhaps that's why Harvick was bold
enou gh to tangle with Wallace and
Rudd the next week in Richmond, Va.
With Wallace leading the race and
Rudd and Harvick in pursuit, a tapping
sequence began that knocked Wallace
out of the way.
Then Rudd and Harvick fought it
out, with Harvick bumping Rudd out
of the lead.
"Sometimes you just run into each
other a little bit," Harvick said.
Rudd didn't agree. After the tap, he
radioed his crew that, "That kid is
mine.''
Several laps later, he tapped Harvick
and went on to win the race .
It did little to soothe his anger.
"The only thing I can say is that you
can do that and you race 1;ach other and
you use a little class about it, or you can
kind of be like a bull in a china closet,"
R udd said."He sort of chooses to do the
second."
' Little did Rudd know Harvick would
be the least of his problems.
S_till seething from the Bristol tap,Wallace, nearly a lap down, spun R.udd out
of the lead last Sunday in Dover, DeL
Ri:tdd recovered and finished third.
but later had to be restrained afte r grabbing hold ofWallace.
"I knew he was called 'Rubberhead
Wallace' in the garage area but I never
knew why until now;· Rudd said . "He
took the race away from us."
· Wallace also had some choice words.
"His m emory is pretty short," Wallace
said.
Witl1 just under two months to go in
the season, the bumping and banging
probably will continue Sunday at Kanas
Speedway as drivers battle for position
in th e series standin gs.
Robert Yates, who owns Rudd's car.
expects to see more action between his
driver-and·Wallace before it's all over.
'"it's a good old-fashioned racmg
feud,"Yates said.

r

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BAD BOYS - Kevin Harvick sits on a duffle bag and looks over his shoulder
as rain clouds approach the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach ,
Fla . July 6. (AP file)
·

- .-

.ngham, N C (Sieve Park)

" Emotio ns can run high in racin g,"

..

FULL SERVICE BODY SHOP
Tony Davis • Body Shop Manager

dress.

AP

~y DICK 8RINSTER

•

•

•

12. Mark Mai1in ......
13. Bill Ellion ...... . .
14. Jimmy Spencer . .. ,
15. Matt Kenseth . . . .
16. Steve Park .......

. Qrivers cold to late Ne\1\(.Hampshire·300 date

'

e rallies paSt Goldeh Gophers

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings

BY REIIICCA THUMA$

increase the Athens lead to 16:
R
OVP CO RESPONDENT
Once again the ll..aiders bauJ,·,\
CHESHII'E
- "It's by rar
th~' best
'•;
back. Graham started the R o1dt'r
we've played all year," said River Val- series with a 12-yard run . Both tc.tms
Iey Itead coac h. [.~rry Carter 10
r II
.
owmg
suffered penalties, but the Raider&gt; ,,
Friday night's SEOAL Athens match- stayed tough. The Graham-Marcurn ... ,
up.
h B lid
h duo dominated as a 37-yard pass. play .. ~..However, t e u ogs played t e
unfri endly guest to River Valley's put them into Bulldog territory and "'"·, ;
NUniS.Atr&lt;ge41 , _ _ , o
homecoming festivities as they cap- 27-yard Marcum . run off the pitclt.., ·~
from Grabam put them in scorirtl-\ ~
Sptlng. 0
Wlou!tbi
s.28,Macl!mo..
--.YOtt&lt; 47, McAlltluf v""""
Wiini1g1r&gt;:117.ture d t he · 36- 12 v1' ctory over t h e
eo.nys·
W&gt;dwnol5.f'11111nsu1a~--Oilkj;,&gt;obol2
Raiders.
. position . Five yards later, Marcui11 - ;·
Ceols1o ~1 ' 'T'w Ci1y
- 2 7 , Ca-t GlonOok 13
T"""""""" 16
'M&gt;Ioogt&gt;• Klbcune 24,s.
Sophomore quarterback Joey . Gra- trotted into th e end zone to bring th~ ,. ..
Now C&lt;n1ord JoM Glom 28, Zl1nMvile 22
h 1 d h
h
w......... -21
·
-55.K811eti1gF-IO
ham stepped up is ea ers ip as e Raiders within 10 at the conclusio1.1 ... :.
",
37
22 • Vot.ngs. Jackcompleted I 0 passes for over 11 0 of the first half.
•
13.,;;.,-~ ·
""'19
,
River
Valley
controlled
the
olli.,u!l(,,,,
.,
lilaa•o.. F1Qf'lllor 20,
Vot.ngs.lt&gt;otly 4B. ~ LaBtao
yards and senior Blake Marcum got
15
8
Ft)e
_P1.....,.1ii21.U t"""'*o
- 1 7,LimaSr.14
the job done as weII • rush ing "tOr at the start of qu arter three, but " ''"'
NowRiduood49,-llllo7
-TitocanlwasYaloy33, ~
[
90
d
series of penalties and mistakes put•w
NoMott&lt; 3, _ 27
St -~ 14
a most
yar s.
U:1ci1g ~ ~~ . WIWiogt&gt;•
W.Vil.hlgh-"We were really successful moving control right back in to th e hands .ut.'"' '
''::&lt;··
c=2~~19
-~~~;·:=,ao
the ball, both in the air and on the th e Bulldogs.
,
_
,
_
,
2&lt;1,
Slraottutg-Fmnklil
1111.-y SpMgs 39, l'etersbttt!l12
d
0
ff'
'
Once again· th e Gregory-Hartley'·
Bluefield09,Man 14
groun ,"said Carter. " ur o e ns1ve
1g
-2&lt;1.WoyneMle6
Btt&lt;l!leP&gt;114.Aobort C. ~7
line did a good job protecting Joey." connection took only on e play w · ' ·
6
g:r"'~~ 34,Caclz 14~~~~
But turnovers became the name of perfect as the Bu lldo g1 qui cklf :•,
HatrWICGnl.O
th e game
.
I I''"''d ers gave up th e ' increased their lead to 18,
. ·' !
Olms1odFals12,N.Oimslod 7
llullaloi4,Fayo-l 3 (ol)
as tle
Oto!P151ttil:M,DirWy32
~-.J28, Hunlngtln20
pigskin on some major plays and the
The Raiders continued to drivt' .;~
28·Arinl St-. 7
16·""' eo.ny 14
Otr.llie
Cel1u1
eo.ny
B
lid
d
'II'
I
I
d
dowri
field in what looked to be tht.. " .
OtwoiGnnl~28.Binln~~5.-CilyO
u ogs accepte w1 mgy eac1 an
on......~.
~~- .
oClay• ..,CCu1ly
ai'B,Ohb39,'1biiao
every time.
beginning of a comeback. But les~ " ..
-.....- ~~ ' 2
21, r.- CCu1ly 22
O&gt;&lt;b'd'11111 •dl:ae.~o
EaotHant/6.~W01z81o
The Bulldogs took the first bite of than 15 yards from tou chdown terri L'"'
- 4 9 , 'NUO
G&lt;ogo .,_,.ogbi49, lJl!IM 12
Potma37, MaploH11.11
Gtiit40,CtiopnwMio12'
the contest at the HJ:OO minute mark tbry, River Valley fail ed to convert ad ""
Paui!Jng17,Adl15 44·, _ , _ _ -Cou:oty2l.l\&gt;gotta,Valey12
· t h e fi1rst quarter off" a 35 -yard QB a ,,'ourth and one ,,
-ea.t.ood
Gtallon3S,l.betty-s
m
, ·tuat1'on and W .lth ' 1'
1a12
~l/aliy29, Hmin18
·
keeper by sophomore Grant Gregory. 5:26 left in the third quarter put til{,'' "·
Pony 27,-20, OT
~36, Franl&lt;iort 20
, .,.,
Pet~yRt~utg27, -Sptlng. 7
Ho&lt;tgoo&lt;tiP31, Shioandu,l/a. 23
T hen, 61 yards and 16 plays later, ball back in the hands of the Bulldog!;. .. .
7
pquaa,i!jlllng.
~38.Soul1~
the Raiders answered back. Graham . Thanks to a few key Luke DeGai~,·.'.""
- .. w. S.O
84, Sci*&gt;- - ,.29,&lt;l&lt;»Mii6
·· · ·
NW 14
· lndlpiolilol""ll;l,-12
passed for 22 yards and Mercum car- mo tackles, the Raiders had one man•
s...- 2e,
FOdttaJ · JametMctntltO~f · MidardTill!22
d
... u
Hodii1g15 ·
.. .
JohnMa-33.irdanCntelc,a.io14 rie 21 yards to tie it all up at 6-6 chance to bring themselves back. Bu~.... ·:
2 · ·
RIMmaSE48.-2
0
· I&lt;III'
OB&lt;:M,Beai,Mtil
with 4:10 remaining in the first quar- the fourth quarter did not carry with","'
~
19, .......
Cenlar
-Oiotil.ogtln;
Ohb59,F'&lt;iil1-1~
1l1ngy 11
·
'O'Illoudoun CW&gt;ty, 1/a. 21, Jelletocn ~4 ter.
it much luck as once again penalties' : .
- - I 4 . A A r. NotmY
I
A tens
h
h
RktmondDoloSE26,- 0
ldadomi28,Htmad O
;
wou ld ten
advance 23 andturnoversallowedAthensyeton'( ,""·
-45.~-·•
Mllgda2&lt;1,SlCiamilo,Ohio8
yards bef,ore a Marcum m
· tercep t'wn· more · chance to dance in the enc'!"" ·
s.O..-SE21,Splng.NEO
Motlinobttg42-East19
~13,0iogonCioy3
-.116,Hutloy,Va.B
would put the ball back into Raider zone. With 7:00 left in the ballgam e "· '
~ - . 41 · PonCirionO
,_Bttdiii,2.VaJoy Fa)o\1t 7
·· '
territory.
SwMnN.-..36.Edon13
~42. Sou1h-.12
th e Bulldogs made it 36-12 off au ·
9'ot1clylldo27, - 1 3
.....,.,.._,ee, ~Potlle
'0
d
1
b
'" ' '
Foltvlow 40, Do1lOnco
Mc:ultHupe~, GtiiAoyBrtllgo6
'
ur secon ary P ayed 1000.4 etter eight-yard scamper by Graylon Sum~ ..~w.
~ 3S
Muoulla•4B. FM liil, Mti13
·tonight," stated Carter. "We defend21 ·BtaxmCOIJnlyiZ ed the pass well and made them real- mers.
Som4B. ~-··
-eo.nv
· · "·"'·
Spring. ee... cent 28, Natt1 Mll1on31,Eao1FIIIm01114
The Raiders would see the posses-. ,
Gt•'"'*"4
Dano27.Cia)•P -12
ly scramble"
.
~27,CepllaJO
·
sian arrow in thei( favor two mot~ . ~ !
· Spru.N.21.~7
S]lti'G.
NWI8,
Encwl~
13
~
SOt.dh35, Nlbo27
The,.
R
_
aidders
could
nolt
convhert
and
times, but it was too little to late as th e .- .._. I
St. - l d Rogellllicon 40, -..g CCu1ly 21, SitU uuoll Jaol&lt;11
~~l!e.J.moCini.Cdl.il
=~~.Liluon?
we~e · orce .w punt eary m t e se·c- Bulldogs captured the homecom in11 "",', t
St.PIM-31 , Spllng.' 3e!Hoillllt-7 ' ·
onl quharter. .
.
_.,. I
f h
' victory36-12. ·
1 o t e next
Aitt;IIO
Ro-••.-CCullyO
n t e opemng pay
.... -• -· 1
-35.S.M)(N.V.)St.Jao1P1 Fl!vorlliloBO,SI.AilllwO
·B lid
d ..
G
t d
"Overall, I am completely pleas~d , " ..
0
611111iSpllngSI ,I'bVJtw 2
u og nve, regory connece
'dC
"
hd
d
k -.. .
oonm .,35.-14
ShotlnM 1e,LI&gt;otly_,e
with Brad Hartley for a 37 _yard sa1 _ arter. We a a goo wee ;ot , ; •
7 80 " 111 * 48' -..gHII.~ ~~~ 0
touchdown . A successful two-point p:ac~•ce,~nd we c_ame out tomght an,d .,.; - 1
14
u:lt'::":.~
1 ~ Cllu'i1y • 0 - - conversion gave Athens the 14-6 lead. d•dn t q~lt . . I am really-proud of them .,.,,.
61-. 42, Tuu.......,.4B. ••..,..,a
River Valley came back strongly, Now, •ts,_nme to get up for Gall~':' '

~~J~5~~~~E~E.12

i!&gt;unb,w irunrS ·$&gt;rnuurl • Page 85

_,

'

'

advancing over 35 yards including a
FIIO
.,.., 51 ,1!1QC.....Ie
20-ya~d gain on a Graham-Marcum
~'A'ahiogt&gt;•l 7, Mot ,,, 1 ~ 14
·
~
~J.we
connection.
But turnovers once again
10
~Ill~.':'*"~'::~
'~~~~~~;~~ l!i .. ec..vrid."'"-"".llt}"'',. 11111
.. Oou\IY ,. plagued the Raiders as a fumble put
--lobglil&lt;e.llteldo!llll' ·,.
··. Woiiwlt;Ohbii,Cioi&lt;CIIitnd
the ball back into the hands of the
~ 13. N.- J~Lia.,M. ···
·. : D'll.~~Fotll ~ ... · · .Bulldogs. With 4:44 left in the first
m7 or· ·
· · ·
·
-Wio&lt;in14,Pmoo1Qn0
half, Gregory found teammate Chris
Modna40,N.AoYalon14
· u.-er,Jtdw,~oj(j
WyoningEattl2&lt;1.0okHI20
Hewitt on s 36-yard connection to
..
~-.35, ••-7
;:;:;;;:~
27,"~

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

Raiders look better,
NASCA
b~tf~l! to By!IQogs,~· Trading paint, punches more common

u::.;:.,.

aa... Mils-31 . ~ieljCarHatYoy 14, or
v..w 75, Milon-

erya, 28, Wauseon 18

~~&lt;moo

"'""'*"'
_....!50.-,.,.,

di'la17
Geneva 22.
Gennantown VaJoy
Unioo 12

Br9d&lt;svte 17, N. A0J8vi19 7
!l&lt;uns..o 24, 8e&lt;oa 6

-16,Eidl 14
- L I M Coli. 211

Ub27, --.1Qtw~l10

.,..,llutun 1 3 . - ·
.,.., Wltl27, Llna sr.- 8
W. 1\WI Valey S. l'll, Plltl

...
'lla,Sp•cP&gt;tuO
wa-~W42F-12
~ St. ..k:tw\'1 56, A. RaaMtry 0
Mid......_., 3. CNI 0, ar
W. l..bMy SI11n 14, MlctialllcltuV'7
Dolla·28,
Hotvy 7
_, _ Conlo&lt; F - "3, """" 17, ~ 7
•
o.-33, CaniJtlll013
IW\o27.
. .............. 21 , BOI14
13
0u111n SOO«l ~' , a-. 13
r.ll&gt;uty!Mot41 ,llloot•-~ 14 Htm1g 2l · - F1l::h
e. ae.S1ww «l, lotlli'l-l&lt;iv 28 --•42 !&lt;ulr 0.0.. .... Unioo -&lt;e. -., 14
e. 1.Notpoa «l, """'S- Al)wl30
18
-"K 28.- - 8
E.Palosn61,SobtrvMcl&lt;Hoy8
-flidll0 1 ~-C...- ··-d40..,..,C.H.:!5.a.awMBWO
Ea.,..35, - s n . - r
_...13
-.o
E""""Wouci!luto21,~18
-l'll.- - 7
1111Yott,54,MiDd3
Elyria 13, Lai&lt;S'MlOd 6
.
Mogodc&gt;l 58,
l'1o1cl 14
Woli ogO&gt;' 7, AYOn 3
Fa&lt;potl ....... ~ 26, Mutntl
-54.P&lt;tmotoyMIQI7
~-;~;::;,&amp;~F~ 28, Rocky_,.
(W ..._1J o M - 33, . :.::"'~':=~~~ 3
21
--~••
l\llilohaiA'eeti1g28,Lordun7
F-I 7 , T~ . IIWIImorl6
Mwt&lt;""""'"28,D11i.,.21
Whholtuuse ...,lOOny Wayne 20,
F•--40. ......mEao~Knox17
t.t.Giaad20.~14
Malmlol8
3
Gahama38.1'ickom;llon17
,
N. CM.-28,~,_ 6
-••.IJR&gt;ot8onrusky
Ga1un 63, l'bwal28
N. Cologt HI 55, Cln. His ChtloOian 14
~ 4B. C1etmor&lt; lloOJhoo.-...,42 Cotwoyco

- ......, ..... ~ogt&gt;•o36.-6-

Bu1l9r 35, Troy

o

OolawMo~~7, Mattln~

8

Ala. 14, Akr. l&lt;.emlooo 7
Ala. . _ 16.- 12
Na. Mauct · 55, E. Cal. 0

Arl01glon 27, f'&lt;Wy

-.tkdol&lt;ollO. _ , _ 13

-~llO.Gtw-obutg&lt;lowl

sunda~Sept . 30,2001

17. Ward Burton ..

, , ..

3,015.
2,990.
2.962.
2,905.
2,859.

2,776.

18. Elliott Sadler ..... . 2,755.

19. Bobby Hamil1on .. . 2,742.
20. Jeruy Nadeau .. , . . 2,726.

weather-related postponemenl5.
"In a perfect world, if you
were starting NASCAR today,
vety few tracks would have two
races;· Hunter said. "Scheduling
is the hardest thing on
NASCAR's plate." .
Hunter points out that special
circumstances led to the New
Hampshire postponement, and
with the Winston Cup championship an· the line, the race
should be run. It was scheduled
for a Friday to ensure there
would be as many as three days
to race should the weather rum
bad.
"Yes, it could be cold, but our
fans can adapt," he said. "They've
done it before."
Hunter said even the tire temperatures can be managed somewhat by running longer than
norinal under caution before
waving the green flag.
He can remember a race in
Richmond,Va., when there was a
foot of snow on the ground.
"They plowed the snow and
ran the event:' he said. "I learned ·
in this business never to say
never, but I don't think canceling
an event is in our vocabulary."

21. Ke n Schrader ..... 2,706.

22. Jeuomy Mayliold . , . 2,596.
24. Teruy Labonlo ... , , 2,470.
29. Ricky Craven .. .... 2,500.

25. Dave Blaney ...... 2,450.

26. Kurt Busch . .

. . 2,365.

27. Robert Pressley ... 2.351.
28. Michael Waltrip .... 2,336.
29. John Andreltl ..... 2,320.

30. Casey Alwood .. .. 2,25 1.

Bodine .. .. ..
32. Brott Bod! no ......
3 1. Todd

2,211 .
2,204.
33. Joe Nemechek . .. . 2,085.
34. Mike Skinner. . . .' . . 2,029.

35. Stacy Compton . .. 2.015.
36. Ron Hornaday . . .
37. Jason Leftler ......
38. Mike Wa llace .....
39. Kevin Lepage . . . .
40. Buckshot Jones . . .

1,888.
1,800.
1,750.
1,552.
t ,388.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
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CASHS

'P•"'-

w, 2nd ltrHt

Pomeroy, Ohio

·11112-0461
UoiiM CC700071-oot

Uco- Cl 7100111-oot

218 Upper River Rd.
Oalllpolla, Ohio
,
'I• Mlleeouth of the Sliver arid..
Llcen•• CC7000n.OOO and
Lla••• Cl 710CMI-OOO and

•

'

·'

�•

Page 86
Sunday. September 30, 1001
•

Inside:

\

Celebrations begin on C2

"'Ohio's bow hunting season underu;ay
Ohio's deer season is underway with
the first day of deer an:hery season, and
as sure as thousands ofbowhunters will
be heading for the woods armed with
their favorite hunting implement, the
old debate over hunting with crossbows will begin anew.
Odds are pretty good I'll be in the
woods that day, too, prouclly totihg my
latest ·crossbow, Horton's Nitro Humer
SL. Tha~s because Ohio is one of the
few states that allows deer hunters to
use crossbows.
In fact, at least two of the bestknown crossbow manufacturers, Horton and Ten Point, are ba~.
The problem IS that many
bowhunters consider using a crossbow
somewhat less than sporting. However,
bear in mind that it was not too many
years ago that using a compound bow
was considered unethical by the
bowhunting purists who prefer using
long bows or recurve bows with
wooden arrows.

Th.1t being said. Itt's !,'0 into J brief
discu~tsion about the pnls and con" of
using a eros bow as compared to a
modern compound bow.
There are a number of myths involving crossbows, many of them pertaining to the accuracy. range and ea.'" of
using a crossbow as compared to a
compound bow:
Some people say that using a crossbow is as easy as shooting a .22 rifle. or
that the crossbow is the choice of
poachers. I can definitely tell you that
shooting a crossbow is nothing like
shootiog a .22 rifle; in fact, most modern compound bows shoot f.1Ster, flatter and ti.mher than the newest crossbows. Compound bows are a heck of a
lot 111011! accurate, too.
As far as being the poacher's weapon
of choice, ariy wildlife officer can tell
you ·that the poacher's f.worite tool is
the .22 caliber centerfire rifle.lt is true
that a cro~'bow can be used almost
"out of the box" with few modifica-

Jim
Freeman
IN THE OPEN
tions, tuning or added-on acces.o;ories.
Some crossbow packages come with
almost everything a hu(Jler need, to
get started.
A crossbow also gives a hunter more
stand location options since the hunter
does not have to diaw and maintain
full draw while awaiting a shot; prpne
ground blinds, shooting fium the seated position, these are aU easily done
with a crossbow.
Many people that could not get out
in the woods otherwise are afforded
the opportunity to hunt with cross-

• bows, and maybe therein lies the
resentment. Perhaps some people just
don't \Val)! to share the woods with
others.
On the downside, as I mentioned
earlier, I am convinced that a crossbow
is not nearly as accurate or fast as a
modern compound bow, especially
when shots exceed 30 yards.
A crossbow is also louder than a
compound bow. With many compound bows, the only sound is the soft
"phwip" of the string and arrow cutting through the air; with a crossbow,
the noise resembles more of a sharp
thud or crack.
Furthermore, a crossbow's shorter
bolts are almost impossible to "tune" to
a certain broadhead - there just aren't
many adjustments a shooter can make
to improve accuracy. About the best
thing a crossbow shooter can use is one
of the newer "mechanical" broadheads
like the Wasp Jackhammer or NAP
Spirfire. These broadheads don't seem

to plane or sail like regular, bladed
head,.
Regarclless of how you feel on this
subject, the important thing is to con- .
tinue the outdoor tradition, to get out
and enjoy the great outdoors. It is this
love of nature that binds aU hunters
together.
Remember also, it is important for
aU hunters to stick together, in other
words, I may not hunt what you hunt
- or how you hunt it - but I'll still
defend your sport fium the antis.
Anti ohunters dou't like ANY hunting, but they sure !ove to turn hunters
against each other to further their own
agendas.
With aU that being said, get out there
and eqjoy. Be safe, and don't forget to
introduce a young;ter to the sport.

Jim Freemm1 is tl1e wildlife specialist for
the Meigs Soil and Water Conserwtion
District.- He can be contacted at (740) 9924282 or at jim:freeman@olwacdnet.org

Mine drainage site ~ay boost West Virginia economy
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP)- Forget . the microchip as a way to
advance the new eco nomy in
north- cen tra l West Virginia. A
group of West Virginia University
re searchers are looking at channel
catfish, instead .
Over the pa st three months ,
researchers in the un ive rsity's aqua~
culture department have been, dili gently charting th e progress of
1,000 channel catfish, large mouth
bass and blue gill that are surviving
and thriving in the most unlikely of
places: a former acid mine drainage
plant !'!ear Fairmont.
The then-small fry (all at no more
th an 3-4 inches and weighing well
under I ounce apiece) were
l:leposited in the 100,000 gallon
cement holding tank s of the former
Tygart River Mine acid mine
.J

drainage plant at the Levels community n~ar Fairmont.
"They were 'aquarium fish,"'
WVU's Dan Miller said, as he stood
over a bucket of wiggling young
catfish that were to be weighed as
part of th e · study. "Look at them
no'w. They're definitely holding
their own ."
MiHer is an agriculture sciences
resea rcher and senio r coordinator
on the· M arion County project to
explore th e viability of aquaculture
- the rai si ng of fi sh for food or
sport - in the Mountain State.
His assessment of the crop is no
fish story: The tank inhabitants
grew to a foot or more long, and
each weighed better than a pound,
which has got Miller hooked . The
project, he says, is a keeper.
Water is fed to a cement tank

from an adjacent pond, one used as
a second level to purity what once
came out of the mine. Miller said
it's a steady, reliable resource that
pumps in around I 00 gallons a
minute.
"This is a resource in the state
that's not being used," Miller ·said.
"There's plenty of water here and at
other old mine sites across the state.
We're just trying to develop an
industry."
That effort was bolstered by a $2
million grant appropriated four
years ago by Sen . Robert Byrd, DW.Va. It's being kept afloat by the
study here, and Miller said he plans
to scout another site in the southern coalfields of M cf:1owell County.
The fish are closely monitored.•A
computer probe in the tank measures the oxygen content and acid

(pH) level in the water. Fish are
given a high-protein feed in an
"on-demand" feeder that releases
the food each time it's "bumped" by
the inhabitants of the tank . Miller
said the tanks are always empty (or
near empty) during the once- aweek excursions to the facility.
The former Tygart River Mine
facility is owned by Eastern Associated Coal Corp., which loaned the
pond, holding. tanks and grnunds to
WVU for the study. Miller said he
appreciated the company's "good
neighbor" policy, especially in light
of the often love-hate relationships
between coal companies and com· munities where facilities are located.
Gary Timms, an Eastern Associated project engine~r, said he was
excited by how the fish have grown

in thre e months, and he likes the
idea of hi s company once again
being part of the state's ·economic
.development. ·
" It 's something positive. we can
do," Timms said. " I like seeing the
facility put to good use. You know,
I'm from here. I was born and raised
in this area. This is something we
can do to make. it better."
Dr. Ken Semmens, a WVU
Extension specialist in aquaculture
who is overseeing the study, said the
goal of starting a new industry in
the state is a dream, but · one that's .
definitely doable.
"Can you imagine a kid fishing
on the bank catching a trophy-size
fish?" he said. "This is a place where
families could go. It's clean and it's ·
·safe .You .could fish from the bank in
a wheelchair."

Page Cl

-

2001 Pontiac Grand Am

2001 Chevy

2001 Buick Century

2001 Oldsmobile

~iJ5o· ~i,io· ~3,75~0. ~taio· ~5:4i· qi;i

• Automatic, Air
Power Seat, Wlndowa &amp;
CD Syetem, Tift &amp; CruiH

· • Automatic, Air CondHionlng
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Locks
.• CD System, Tilt &amp; CruiH

• CD System, Tl~ &amp; Cruise
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seat; Windows &amp;lockl

• Power Sea~ Window~ &amp;
• V-6 Power, Automatic
• CruiH, Tilt, CO Syatem

• Power Se1t. Wlndowt &amp;
• CD Syatem,.Aiumlnum
• CruiH Control, Tift Steering

• Taxos, Tags, Tdle Fees extra. Rebate included in sa~ price ol new vehicle !~led where applicable. "On approved credn. On selecled models. Not responsiqlelortypographlcalerrOIS.
Prices Good September 26th Th~ September 30th.
.
.

....

CHIYIOLIT
WlrUUTHIIC .

'
--PONT1AC

Buick
It's all

@

gooCl

(iZ) Oldsmobile.

•••• ••u•MOG'

• AutOIIIIIIc, Air CondHionlng
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lockl
• TIH ·Stee~ng, CruiH Control

•

•
Dear
Abby
ADVICE

wife·
finds letter
that's too hot
to ·handle

· Farmer~

DEAR ABBY: 1· am in a
predicament! I don't know
what to do:We live on a farm.
Last night after the children
were asleep, I went out to the
barn and found my husband
hurrying to put away a mysterious bag. I asked him what he
was doing. He said, ~'Nothing,
just going through some old
thing;." When we returned to
·the house together, he had
some old photos of his ex-wife
he said he was giving to her
sister. I didn't mind. I felt that
at least he was getting rid of
them.
. This morning, after the kids
went to school, my· curiosity
got the best of me. I opened
the bag and found some old
family photographs and col. lectibles. Underneath, I found
an envelope with his name on
it. I opened it and found a letter written by his ex-wife. It
wasn't an ordinary love letter
-. it was a sexual fantasy.
. The contents of the letter
are disgusting. Now I don't
· know if I should destroy it,
confront _him, '?r l,l!-lt. i; back
at:\P ~ ·to fotget t ever saw 1t.
I'm a&amp;.rid if I mention it he'D
get angry that I snooped .
through his private things. If!
denroy it, he will get really
angry. If! leave it, I'm afraid he
will read it fium time 'to time,
and I'LL be angry all over
~gain. I wish I hadn't found it.
' · Abliy, !love my husband and
have never had any reason not
to trust him, but after finding
that letter, I don't know .what
to do.- THE FARMER'S

SECOND WIFE
. DEAR WIFE: Under no

2001 Oldsmobile

Sunday. September :so. 1001

circumstances should you be
. the one to destroy the letter.
TeU your husband what you
did and offer him an apology
for snooping. Wl\en you tell
him how upsetting the contents of the letter were, he may
volunteer to get rid of it.
However, the decision should
be his. ,And if he wants to keep
it, he won't be the first man (or
woman) to keep a souvenir of
a dead romance.
. DEAR· ABBY: So many
p~ople can't seem to get off
the couch and into an exercise
program. May I offer the following "Exercise Program for
Lazy People"?
• Jumping to conclusions
• Beating around the bush
• Climbing the walls
• Passing the buck
• Dragging my heels
• Pushing my luck
• Making mountains out of
molehiUs
• Hitting the nail on the
head
• Running around in circles
• Climbing the ladder of
success
· • Opening a can of worms
· • Starting the ball rolling
• Jumping on the bandwagon
. • Picking up the pieces
· • Going over the edge

.
ANN E. FINK,
ORANGE CITY, FLA.
DEAR ANN: What I like
best about your "exercises" is
they require no particular talent and no expensive equipment. However, my favorite
wasn't listed: Putting your foot
in your mouth:

Dear Abby is written by
P~uline · Phillips ~nd daughter
Jeanne Phillips. .

Students, UR G Meigs Center faculty
·join community in developing market
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMEs-SENTINEL STAFF

IDDLEPORT
Imagine a
classroom
where
the
teacher is miles
away, but where both students
and teacher can easily communicate.
This new long-distance learning
·environment is only one of the
high-tech tools now available to
students and faculty at the University of Rio Grande's Meig; Center,
Those tools represent a commitment on the part of the university
to make technology and its benefits
available to Meig; County students,
and to extend the value of this technology throughout the community.
The Ohio Board of Regents has
provided a grant to allow the university to implement hig9-tech
equipment and programs, allowing
' Joc~tudepts,l'S we!J ~~d_ents QU
the m;u · campus at Rio Grande, to
benefit from new technology like
the "virtual classroom" and highspeed Internet access (1.54 Mbps) .
In the case oflong-distance learning, a teacher uses a remote control
to maneuver cameras in the distant
classroom, and an imaging device to
share the printed word. Meanwhile,
students in the classroom can see
and hear, and be seen and heard by
the teacher.
Using such technology, students
can now achieve an associate's
degree in information technology
without · ever leaving the Meig;
County center.
.
That's a good thing, according to
County Commissioner Mick Davenport, who along with URG
PIHH IH Vlrlu8L Cl

LAB WORK - Melissa Brown, Tina Mayle, Pearl
Scott and Mary Beals, students at the University of
Rio Grande's Meigs Center, work ln.the center's com-

puter lab, which provides 20 computer stations with
Internet capability and other applications' necessary
to teaching Information technology.

Popular Louisiana DJ lends his voice to Scooby-Doo
PORT ALLEN, La. (AP) "Zoinks! Yeow! Like, let's get out of
here.I"
Imitating such lines from "ScoobyDoo" cartoons used to get Scott Innes
sent to the principal's office.
Now, the Baton Rouge disc jockey
and lifelong cartoon fanatic is living
out his dream, taking over the voices
of Scooby-Doo and the perpetually
frightened Shaggy for nc;w videos and
hundreds of toys licensed each year.
"I'll never get tired of Scooby. I
hope I can do this for the rest of my
life:' says the 35-year-old Innes. "I've
been a part of something that is not
only a childhood dream, but an

American 'ico,n."
The job couldn't be more fitting for
Innes, a Poplar Bluff, Mo., native who
spent countless Satunf.a¥. mornings
watching Scooby-Doo and years collecting thousands of items celebrating
Scooby, Shaggy, Fred, Daphne, Velma
and their well-traveled Mystery
SCOOBY TALK - Scott Innes, the voice of cartoon dog Scoot&gt;y-Doo, poses
Machine.
for a photograph Jn· his home Port Allen, La. Innes, 34, creates the voi·ce of
Warner Bros. claims Innes is the Sccioby-Doo and sidekick Shaggy for Scooby videos and the hundreds of toys
largest collector .of Scooby-Doo that are licensed each year. (AP)
memorabilia in the world, and his
house proclaims his attachment to the him pack some items in boxes because and couch in his llving room, and a
lovable pooch.
it was leaking into every crevice and tiny Mystery Machine tent sits next to
"I live a Scooby-Doo life," he says.
a furry Scooby~Doo chair just the
corner.
Scooby stuff lines the walls and
"I have literally no place to put it right size for his youngest son, Presley,
bookcases, adorns his office and con- all," Innes says, laughing as he points 10 months old.
Innes' wife, Jodie, doesn't complain
sumes his car. Scooby candles sit on to a Scooby-Doo lightswitch plate on
the fireplace mantle. Nearly every the wall next to framed posters of the muc!l about it, though . She knows
how much Scooby means to her husarticle of clothing Innes wears features Scooby movies he's done.
band and the lifestyle the cartoon pup
Scooby
blankets
cover
every
chair
the cartoon canine. Innes' wife made

I·

"

VIRTUAL CLASSROOM - Robert Taggart, computer lab coordinator at the University of Rio
Grande's Meigs Center, and Gina Pines, the center's director, demonstrate the Poly-com teleconferencing system, used for long-distance learning.
County Commissioner Mick Davenport is seen "oncamera." (Brian J. Reed photos)

ll

'

.,

provides her family.
"My wife calls this the house that
Scooby built," Innes says, sitting next
to a Shaggy doll wr•pped around a
table lamp. "Scooby has been very
good to me."
And Scooby is on an upswing in the
cartoon world. The series, which originally debuted . in 1969, is one of the
top shows on the Cartoon Network.
Warn er llros. says Scooby-Doo
video sales increased 46 percent from
1999 to 2000, with Scooby grabbing a
5 percent share of the kids market last
year. The cartoon charac ter reaches
over 7 million kids and 6 million
adults weekly.
The latest video, "Scooby-Doo and
th e Cyber Chase," hits stores Oct. 9.
It's the fourth video for Innes, who
voiced Scooby and Shaggy in that
movi e and the last two: "Scooby-Doo
and the Alien Invaders" and "ScoobyDoo and the Witch's Ghost."
For Inn es' first movie in 1997, he
only did the voice of Scooby. The
video hit close to home, set in
Louisiana and called "Scooby-Doo on
Zombie Island."
Inn es has also Sl!bmitted his voice
for the new live-acti on Scooby-Doo
movie being filmed in Australia and
slated for release this summer. AU the
characters are live actors, except for
the computer-generated Scooby.
Innes hasn't yet heard if he 's got the
part.

�•

Page 86
Sunday. September 30, 1001
•

Inside:

\

Celebrations begin on C2

"'Ohio's bow hunting season underu;ay
Ohio's deer season is underway with
the first day of deer an:hery season, and
as sure as thousands ofbowhunters will
be heading for the woods armed with
their favorite hunting implement, the
old debate over hunting with crossbows will begin anew.
Odds are pretty good I'll be in the
woods that day, too, prouclly totihg my
latest ·crossbow, Horton's Nitro Humer
SL. Tha~s because Ohio is one of the
few states that allows deer hunters to
use crossbows.
In fact, at least two of the bestknown crossbow manufacturers, Horton and Ten Point, are ba~.
The problem IS that many
bowhunters consider using a crossbow
somewhat less than sporting. However,
bear in mind that it was not too many
years ago that using a compound bow
was considered unethical by the
bowhunting purists who prefer using
long bows or recurve bows with
wooden arrows.

Th.1t being said. Itt's !,'0 into J brief
discu~tsion about the pnls and con" of
using a eros bow as compared to a
modern compound bow.
There are a number of myths involving crossbows, many of them pertaining to the accuracy. range and ea.'" of
using a crossbow as compared to a
compound bow:
Some people say that using a crossbow is as easy as shooting a .22 rifle. or
that the crossbow is the choice of
poachers. I can definitely tell you that
shooting a crossbow is nothing like
shootiog a .22 rifle; in fact, most modern compound bows shoot f.1Ster, flatter and ti.mher than the newest crossbows. Compound bows are a heck of a
lot 111011! accurate, too.
As far as being the poacher's weapon
of choice, ariy wildlife officer can tell
you ·that the poacher's f.worite tool is
the .22 caliber centerfire rifle.lt is true
that a cro~'bow can be used almost
"out of the box" with few modifica-

Jim
Freeman
IN THE OPEN
tions, tuning or added-on acces.o;ories.
Some crossbow packages come with
almost everything a hu(Jler need, to
get started.
A crossbow also gives a hunter more
stand location options since the hunter
does not have to diaw and maintain
full draw while awaiting a shot; prpne
ground blinds, shooting fium the seated position, these are aU easily done
with a crossbow.
Many people that could not get out
in the woods otherwise are afforded
the opportunity to hunt with cross-

• bows, and maybe therein lies the
resentment. Perhaps some people just
don't \Val)! to share the woods with
others.
On the downside, as I mentioned
earlier, I am convinced that a crossbow
is not nearly as accurate or fast as a
modern compound bow, especially
when shots exceed 30 yards.
A crossbow is also louder than a
compound bow. With many compound bows, the only sound is the soft
"phwip" of the string and arrow cutting through the air; with a crossbow,
the noise resembles more of a sharp
thud or crack.
Furthermore, a crossbow's shorter
bolts are almost impossible to "tune" to
a certain broadhead - there just aren't
many adjustments a shooter can make
to improve accuracy. About the best
thing a crossbow shooter can use is one
of the newer "mechanical" broadheads
like the Wasp Jackhammer or NAP
Spirfire. These broadheads don't seem

to plane or sail like regular, bladed
head,.
Regarclless of how you feel on this
subject, the important thing is to con- .
tinue the outdoor tradition, to get out
and enjoy the great outdoors. It is this
love of nature that binds aU hunters
together.
Remember also, it is important for
aU hunters to stick together, in other
words, I may not hunt what you hunt
- or how you hunt it - but I'll still
defend your sport fium the antis.
Anti ohunters dou't like ANY hunting, but they sure !ove to turn hunters
against each other to further their own
agendas.
With aU that being said, get out there
and eqjoy. Be safe, and don't forget to
introduce a young;ter to the sport.

Jim Freemm1 is tl1e wildlife specialist for
the Meigs Soil and Water Conserwtion
District.- He can be contacted at (740) 9924282 or at jim:freeman@olwacdnet.org

Mine drainage site ~ay boost West Virginia economy
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP)- Forget . the microchip as a way to
advance the new eco nomy in
north- cen tra l West Virginia. A
group of West Virginia University
re searchers are looking at channel
catfish, instead .
Over the pa st three months ,
researchers in the un ive rsity's aqua~
culture department have been, dili gently charting th e progress of
1,000 channel catfish, large mouth
bass and blue gill that are surviving
and thriving in the most unlikely of
places: a former acid mine drainage
plant !'!ear Fairmont.
The then-small fry (all at no more
th an 3-4 inches and weighing well
under I ounce apiece) were
l:leposited in the 100,000 gallon
cement holding tank s of the former
Tygart River Mine acid mine
.J

drainage plant at the Levels community n~ar Fairmont.
"They were 'aquarium fish,"'
WVU's Dan Miller said, as he stood
over a bucket of wiggling young
catfish that were to be weighed as
part of th e · study. "Look at them
no'w. They're definitely holding
their own ."
MiHer is an agriculture sciences
resea rcher and senio r coordinator
on the· M arion County project to
explore th e viability of aquaculture
- the rai si ng of fi sh for food or
sport - in the Mountain State.
His assessment of the crop is no
fish story: The tank inhabitants
grew to a foot or more long, and
each weighed better than a pound,
which has got Miller hooked . The
project, he says, is a keeper.
Water is fed to a cement tank

from an adjacent pond, one used as
a second level to purity what once
came out of the mine. Miller said
it's a steady, reliable resource that
pumps in around I 00 gallons a
minute.
"This is a resource in the state
that's not being used," Miller ·said.
"There's plenty of water here and at
other old mine sites across the state.
We're just trying to develop an
industry."
That effort was bolstered by a $2
million grant appropriated four
years ago by Sen . Robert Byrd, DW.Va. It's being kept afloat by the
study here, and Miller said he plans
to scout another site in the southern coalfields of M cf:1owell County.
The fish are closely monitored.•A
computer probe in the tank measures the oxygen content and acid

(pH) level in the water. Fish are
given a high-protein feed in an
"on-demand" feeder that releases
the food each time it's "bumped" by
the inhabitants of the tank . Miller
said the tanks are always empty (or
near empty) during the once- aweek excursions to the facility.
The former Tygart River Mine
facility is owned by Eastern Associated Coal Corp., which loaned the
pond, holding. tanks and grnunds to
WVU for the study. Miller said he
appreciated the company's "good
neighbor" policy, especially in light
of the often love-hate relationships
between coal companies and com· munities where facilities are located.
Gary Timms, an Eastern Associated project engine~r, said he was
excited by how the fish have grown

in thre e months, and he likes the
idea of hi s company once again
being part of the state's ·economic
.development. ·
" It 's something positive. we can
do," Timms said. " I like seeing the
facility put to good use. You know,
I'm from here. I was born and raised
in this area. This is something we
can do to make. it better."
Dr. Ken Semmens, a WVU
Extension specialist in aquaculture
who is overseeing the study, said the
goal of starting a new industry in
the state is a dream, but · one that's .
definitely doable.
"Can you imagine a kid fishing
on the bank catching a trophy-size
fish?" he said. "This is a place where
families could go. It's clean and it's ·
·safe .You .could fish from the bank in
a wheelchair."

Page Cl

-

2001 Pontiac Grand Am

2001 Chevy

2001 Buick Century

2001 Oldsmobile

~iJ5o· ~i,io· ~3,75~0. ~taio· ~5:4i· qi;i

• Automatic, Air
Power Seat, Wlndowa &amp;
CD Syetem, Tift &amp; CruiH

· • Automatic, Air CondHionlng
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Locks
.• CD System, Tilt &amp; CruiH

• CD System, Tl~ &amp; Cruise
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seat; Windows &amp;lockl

• Power Sea~ Window~ &amp;
• V-6 Power, Automatic
• CruiH, Tilt, CO Syatem

• Power Se1t. Wlndowt &amp;
• CD Syatem,.Aiumlnum
• CruiH Control, Tift Steering

• Taxos, Tags, Tdle Fees extra. Rebate included in sa~ price ol new vehicle !~led where applicable. "On approved credn. On selecled models. Not responsiqlelortypographlcalerrOIS.
Prices Good September 26th Th~ September 30th.
.
.

....

CHIYIOLIT
WlrUUTHIIC .

'
--PONT1AC

Buick
It's all

@

gooCl

(iZ) Oldsmobile.

•••• ••u•MOG'

• AutOIIIIIIc, Air CondHionlng
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lockl
• TIH ·Stee~ng, CruiH Control

•

•
Dear
Abby
ADVICE

wife·
finds letter
that's too hot
to ·handle

· Farmer~

DEAR ABBY: 1· am in a
predicament! I don't know
what to do:We live on a farm.
Last night after the children
were asleep, I went out to the
barn and found my husband
hurrying to put away a mysterious bag. I asked him what he
was doing. He said, ~'Nothing,
just going through some old
thing;." When we returned to
·the house together, he had
some old photos of his ex-wife
he said he was giving to her
sister. I didn't mind. I felt that
at least he was getting rid of
them.
. This morning, after the kids
went to school, my· curiosity
got the best of me. I opened
the bag and found some old
family photographs and col. lectibles. Underneath, I found
an envelope with his name on
it. I opened it and found a letter written by his ex-wife. It
wasn't an ordinary love letter
-. it was a sexual fantasy.
. The contents of the letter
are disgusting. Now I don't
· know if I should destroy it,
confront _him, '?r l,l!-lt. i; back
at:\P ~ ·to fotget t ever saw 1t.
I'm a&amp;.rid if I mention it he'D
get angry that I snooped .
through his private things. If!
denroy it, he will get really
angry. If! leave it, I'm afraid he
will read it fium time 'to time,
and I'LL be angry all over
~gain. I wish I hadn't found it.
' · Abliy, !love my husband and
have never had any reason not
to trust him, but after finding
that letter, I don't know .what
to do.- THE FARMER'S

SECOND WIFE
. DEAR WIFE: Under no

2001 Oldsmobile

Sunday. September :so. 1001

circumstances should you be
. the one to destroy the letter.
TeU your husband what you
did and offer him an apology
for snooping. Wl\en you tell
him how upsetting the contents of the letter were, he may
volunteer to get rid of it.
However, the decision should
be his. ,And if he wants to keep
it, he won't be the first man (or
woman) to keep a souvenir of
a dead romance.
. DEAR· ABBY: So many
p~ople can't seem to get off
the couch and into an exercise
program. May I offer the following "Exercise Program for
Lazy People"?
• Jumping to conclusions
• Beating around the bush
• Climbing the walls
• Passing the buck
• Dragging my heels
• Pushing my luck
• Making mountains out of
molehiUs
• Hitting the nail on the
head
• Running around in circles
• Climbing the ladder of
success
· • Opening a can of worms
· • Starting the ball rolling
• Jumping on the bandwagon
. • Picking up the pieces
· • Going over the edge

.
ANN E. FINK,
ORANGE CITY, FLA.
DEAR ANN: What I like
best about your "exercises" is
they require no particular talent and no expensive equipment. However, my favorite
wasn't listed: Putting your foot
in your mouth:

Dear Abby is written by
P~uline · Phillips ~nd daughter
Jeanne Phillips. .

Students, UR G Meigs Center faculty
·join community in developing market
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMEs-SENTINEL STAFF

IDDLEPORT
Imagine a
classroom
where
the
teacher is miles
away, but where both students
and teacher can easily communicate.
This new long-distance learning
·environment is only one of the
high-tech tools now available to
students and faculty at the University of Rio Grande's Meig; Center,
Those tools represent a commitment on the part of the university
to make technology and its benefits
available to Meig; County students,
and to extend the value of this technology throughout the community.
The Ohio Board of Regents has
provided a grant to allow the university to implement hig9-tech
equipment and programs, allowing
' Joc~tudepts,l'S we!J ~~d_ents QU
the m;u · campus at Rio Grande, to
benefit from new technology like
the "virtual classroom" and highspeed Internet access (1.54 Mbps) .
In the case oflong-distance learning, a teacher uses a remote control
to maneuver cameras in the distant
classroom, and an imaging device to
share the printed word. Meanwhile,
students in the classroom can see
and hear, and be seen and heard by
the teacher.
Using such technology, students
can now achieve an associate's
degree in information technology
without · ever leaving the Meig;
County center.
.
That's a good thing, according to
County Commissioner Mick Davenport, who along with URG
PIHH IH Vlrlu8L Cl

LAB WORK - Melissa Brown, Tina Mayle, Pearl
Scott and Mary Beals, students at the University of
Rio Grande's Meigs Center, work ln.the center's com-

puter lab, which provides 20 computer stations with
Internet capability and other applications' necessary
to teaching Information technology.

Popular Louisiana DJ lends his voice to Scooby-Doo
PORT ALLEN, La. (AP) "Zoinks! Yeow! Like, let's get out of
here.I"
Imitating such lines from "ScoobyDoo" cartoons used to get Scott Innes
sent to the principal's office.
Now, the Baton Rouge disc jockey
and lifelong cartoon fanatic is living
out his dream, taking over the voices
of Scooby-Doo and the perpetually
frightened Shaggy for nc;w videos and
hundreds of toys licensed each year.
"I'll never get tired of Scooby. I
hope I can do this for the rest of my
life:' says the 35-year-old Innes. "I've
been a part of something that is not
only a childhood dream, but an

American 'ico,n."
The job couldn't be more fitting for
Innes, a Poplar Bluff, Mo., native who
spent countless Satunf.a¥. mornings
watching Scooby-Doo and years collecting thousands of items celebrating
Scooby, Shaggy, Fred, Daphne, Velma
and their well-traveled Mystery
SCOOBY TALK - Scott Innes, the voice of cartoon dog Scoot&gt;y-Doo, poses
Machine.
for a photograph Jn· his home Port Allen, La. Innes, 34, creates the voi·ce of
Warner Bros. claims Innes is the Sccioby-Doo and sidekick Shaggy for Scooby videos and the hundreds of toys
largest collector .of Scooby-Doo that are licensed each year. (AP)
memorabilia in the world, and his
house proclaims his attachment to the him pack some items in boxes because and couch in his llving room, and a
lovable pooch.
it was leaking into every crevice and tiny Mystery Machine tent sits next to
"I live a Scooby-Doo life," he says.
a furry Scooby~Doo chair just the
corner.
Scooby stuff lines the walls and
"I have literally no place to put it right size for his youngest son, Presley,
bookcases, adorns his office and con- all," Innes says, laughing as he points 10 months old.
Innes' wife, Jodie, doesn't complain
sumes his car. Scooby candles sit on to a Scooby-Doo lightswitch plate on
the fireplace mantle. Nearly every the wall next to framed posters of the muc!l about it, though . She knows
how much Scooby means to her husarticle of clothing Innes wears features Scooby movies he's done.
band and the lifestyle the cartoon pup
Scooby
blankets
cover
every
chair
the cartoon canine. Innes' wife made

I·

"

VIRTUAL CLASSROOM - Robert Taggart, computer lab coordinator at the University of Rio
Grande's Meigs Center, and Gina Pines, the center's director, demonstrate the Poly-com teleconferencing system, used for long-distance learning.
County Commissioner Mick Davenport is seen "oncamera." (Brian J. Reed photos)

ll

'

.,

provides her family.
"My wife calls this the house that
Scooby built," Innes says, sitting next
to a Shaggy doll wr•pped around a
table lamp. "Scooby has been very
good to me."
And Scooby is on an upswing in the
cartoon world. The series, which originally debuted . in 1969, is one of the
top shows on the Cartoon Network.
Warn er llros. says Scooby-Doo
video sales increased 46 percent from
1999 to 2000, with Scooby grabbing a
5 percent share of the kids market last
year. The cartoon charac ter reaches
over 7 million kids and 6 million
adults weekly.
The latest video, "Scooby-Doo and
th e Cyber Chase," hits stores Oct. 9.
It's the fourth video for Innes, who
voiced Scooby and Shaggy in that
movi e and the last two: "Scooby-Doo
and the Alien Invaders" and "ScoobyDoo and the Witch's Ghost."
For Inn es' first movie in 1997, he
only did the voice of Scooby. The
video hit close to home, set in
Louisiana and called "Scooby-Doo on
Zombie Island."
Inn es has also Sl!bmitted his voice
for the new live-acti on Scooby-Doo
movie being filmed in Australia and
slated for release this summer. AU the
characters are live actors, except for
the computer-generated Scooby.
Innes hasn't yet heard if he 's got the
part.

�Sundlly, September 30, 2001

PageQ

Gallipolis, Ohio

:so. ]001 :'

FLASHBACK
their American TV debut on
"Shindig!" performing ' I Can't
Explain.•
Oct. 6:
·
In 1~7, """"'!W:-&lt;; a~!::
.. In 1945, 10-year-old Elvis .. with the San Francisco po!ice
Presley made his firSt public rllided' the communal house
appearance in a talent show of the Grateful Dead on Ashat the Mississippi-Alabama bury Slreet. Some of the
Fair and Dairy Show, singing· members were taken lo jail
"Old Shep:" He won second for possession of marijuana
place and $5.
and released on bail after six
In 1950, the gaine show hours.
"You Bet Your Ute• premiered
In 1978, Mick Jagger apolon NBC. Groucho Marx was ogized to the Rev. Jesse
the host.
Jackson for offensive lyrics in
In 1955, James Dean died . the Rolling Stones song
in the collision of his sports "Some Gir1s," but he refused
car with another automobile to change the words.
near Paso Robles, Calif. He
In 1980, singer Carly
was 24.
Simon
collapsed . from
In 1957, 'Leave II To exhaustion on stage in PittsBeaver" made its debut on burgh. She ended up cancelCBS. After a year, the show ing her tour.
In 1990, "Beverly Hills,
switched to.ABC and ran until
1963.
9021 0" premiered on the Fox
In 1959, "The Twilight network.
Zone," created and hosted by
In 1992, singer Sinead
Rod Ser1ing, madE! its debut O'Connor ripped up a picture
Jay McKelvey
on CBS.
of the Pope during an after.
In 1961 , Bob Dylan made midnight appearance on
his concert hall debut in New "Saturday Night Uve.' Nf:lC's
York. Aboul 50 people attend- switchboard in New York was
ed, mostly his friends, and he flooded with calls, ·mast of
earned
$20.
them criticizing O'Connor's
Vocalist and pianist was
In
1965,
The
Who
made
actions.
Kathy Meyer.
Presentation of the gilts was
by Donald and Margie Ferfolia , uncle and aunt of the
bride.
The processi on was led
2
2TwlnSolld
. from the church by a Scottish
Wood
bagpiper.
The dinner-dan ce recepHeadboards
tion was held at Ridgewood
Party Center.
The couple flew to Puerto
R..ico for a seven-day cruise of
the southern Caribbean.
They reside in Indianapolis;
where the new Mrs. McKelvey teaches at Cardinal Ritter High SchooL
Mr. M cKelvey is a systems
analyst for Eli Lilly.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Entertainment highlights
during the week of Sept. 30-

Mr. and Mn1. Shane Edward Swisher
•

Doyle (D.J.) Saunders II and Ucla Leger

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Lee Dale

Saunders wedding

Haffelt 5Oth

Doyle and Sharon Saunders ofBidwell, and Sidney and Margaret Leger of Iowa, La., announce the marriage of their children, Doyle (DJ.) Saunders II and Licia Leger.
The couple were united in marriage Aug. 31 , 2001, in a private ceremony in Columbus_·
DJ is a 1994 graduate of the University of Rio Grande and
is a senior technician with ATS. of Ohio, Columbus.
Licia is a 1995 graduate of O hio State University and is a cost
accountant, also with ATS of Ohio.
The couple reside in Lewis Center, Ohio.

In honor of the 50tli anniversary of Kay and Amyl Haffelt,
their children and grandchildren are holding a reception Oci.
7 from 2-4 p.m. at Grace United Methodist Church, Gallipo-

Dale wedding
SEV IERV ILLE, Tenn. - The Rev. Robert Parsons united
Sarah Jane Caldwell and Timothy Lee Dale in marriage on
Au g. 11 , 2001 , at Smokey Mountai n Wedding Chapel.
The bride is the daughter of David and Treva Caldwell, Gal-lipol is. O l1io. The groom is the son of Dottie Dale, Columbus,
Ohio.
Accompanying the couple at the ceremony were Tina (Russell) Moodispaugh, friend of the bride . who was Matron of
Honor, and her husband, Carl, of Kingsland, Ga. Also attending
were Jeff Platt, friend of the groom who served as best man,
&gt;nd his wife Janelle, of London, Ky.
The bride wore an ivory floor- length gown with princess
style bodice trinuned in pearls. Her hair, styled in an up-do, was
•darned with clusters of fresh baby's breath. She wore a strand
of pearl s that were " borrowed" and pearl earrings that were

Mr. and Mrs. Kay Haflelt

h

.

The Haffelts were married Oct. 7, 1951, in Central
Methodist Church, Mt. Airy, N.C., by the Rev. A. C. Wagoner,
assisted by the Rev. W.W Blanton.
Mrs. Haffelt is the former Katherine Fulcher. The couple
have two children, George (feresa) Haffelt of Fairborn, Ohio,
and Pam Oacky) Seal of Mt. Airy. There are 10 grandchildren. ·

. new."

Her great-grandmother's wedding ring served as her "somethin g old" while sapphire cluster ring given to her hy Carol
Barnette served as her"something blue." She carried a bouquet
of white roses tied together with white ribbons and accented
with black and red rosebuds.
The matron of honor wore a black, floor-length sleeveless
dress accented with a scarf of )Vhite trimmed with black. She
1 carried a smaller version of the brides' bouquet.
The groom wore a traditional Lakota Ribbon shirt with
black pants.
The best man wore burgundy sport shirt with black pants.
The couple honeymoonetl in Gatlinburg. They resid.!' in .
London, Ky.
An open house reception will he held at the home of the
brides' parents on Oct. 20 from 4 to 7 p.m .

Mr. •nd Mn1. Ch8rlel W11t

J#st 55th
Everett and DallY Kemper

Kemper 51st
Everett and Daisy Kemper observed their 51st anniversary on
Sept. 23.
The couple have three children: Linda Burnett ofVinton,
Brenda Oohn) Park of Bidwell and Sam (Carol) Kemper otVinton; eight grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
Everett operates .Gallipolis Flea Market, and Daisy is a dedicated mother, grandmother, and wife.
The couple attends Morgan Center Wesleyan Church..

Houck 30th
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew lee Chapman

Chapman wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Roger F. Houck, Mitchell Road, Gallipolis, celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary on Sept. 11.
They were marri ed at Ft. Hood, Texas, in 1971.
Mrs. Houck is the former Mary Margaret Brick of Lowell,
Mass.The co uple have two children, Roger Franklin Houck II,
who resides with his wife, Lynn, of Mountain Home Air Force
Base, Idaho; and Mary Ktistine, who resides with her paren.ts.

LEESBURG,
Fla.
Charles and Martha West of
Leesburg, Fla. , celebrated
their 55th wedding anniver- .
sary on Sept. 14.
Charles of Columbus,
Ohio, and the former Martha
Marcella Russell of Bradbury,
Ohio, were married Sept. 14,
1946 in Russell, Ky.. They
lived in Columbus until 1988
soothe .
when they moved to Lees- • All size extra long
for added comfort
your body.
burg.
They have a son, Ernest M.
West of Pataskala; a daughter
Darlene S. McElroy of Lancaster; and two grandchildren •.
Joshpa and Jonah West of
Pataskala.
The couple celebrated their
55th anniversary at a local
restaurant and have planned a
trip to Biloxi , Miss., in FURNITURE &amp; DE$1GN
•tfWtg NAME fUfiMITURI!!: OT D"ICOII•oT PI'ICE!i"l
November.
Rt. Z, Gallipolis Ferry, WV 675-1371

:·-\

I REUNIONS I

•

To ensure prompt publication,
the Sunday Tomes-Sentinel
re.quests that articles be neatly
typed and double spaced for
easy editi ng. Reunion items
should not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted wi!hin
30 days of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for
publication is su bject to editing.
Ar!icles will be published as
soon as possible.

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Beds!

Cantrell. RedZone.
5. "U Remind Me,' Usher. Arlsta.

.
FILMS
.~. "Hardball," Paramount.
~ "The Others,' Dimension.
3. "The Glass House,' Sony.
4:. "Rush Hour 2," New Line.
5. "The Musketeer," UniVersal.
(from Exhibitor Relations Co.)

..

(From Billboard magazine)
ALBUMS

1. "The Blueprint." Jay-Z. Roc-A-

Felts.

2. "Silver Side · Up," Nickelback.

Roadrunner.
3. "Songs In AMinor," Alicia Keys. J.
(Platinum - certified sales of 1 mil·
HOTFfVE
lion units)
t. "Fallin',' Alicia Keys. J.
4.
"Ghetto Fabolous," Fabolous.
2. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja .
Dese~ Storm.
"ule). Epic.
.l . 'Where The Party At," Jagged 5. Love And Theh,' Bob Dylan .
Columbia.
~dga With Nelly. So So Oaf.
(From
Billboard magazine)
4. "Hh 'Em Up Style (Oopsl)." Blu

McKelvey wedding
MEDINA
Melissa
Marie Sabol, daughter of
James and JoAnn Sabol of
Medina, and Jay Patrick
McKelvey, son of Marvin ·and
Eleanor McKelvey, Syracuse,
were united in marriage July
14 at Holy Marryrs Catholic
Church in Medina, with the
R.ev. Fr. Bob Pfeiffer officiatmg.
The bride ·was escorted to
the altar by her father. She
wore a full-length formal
satin ·wedding gown accented
with crystals and a cathedrallength train. She carried a
bouquet of hand-tied flowers
in shades of blue. The bride's
mother wore a flo or-length
blue gown with matching
jacket. The groom's mother
wore a two-piece, navy floorlength gown with a beaded
top.
The bride's attendants wore
tWo-piece periwinkle floor
length gowns and carried
hand- tied bouquets of white
nowers. Matrons of honor
were sisters of the bride, Jennifer Cunningham of Alexandria, Va., and Marianne Jones,
ef Arlington, Va. Other atten-.
dants \Vere Rachelle Bogdon,
Cincinnati; Michelle Dean,
Provi dence, R .I.; Mi chelle
Ferfolia, Cleveland ; H eather
Saunders, C incinnati; M eg;~n
Sawyer, Cleveland.
Besr man was brother of the
groom, Michael McKelvey,
Columbus. Other groomsmen were Maso n Fisher,
Columbus; Bryan Lynn, Indianapolis, Ind.; Gareth Quin,
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Dan
Raser, Cincinnati; Robert
Reiber, Racine; and Jim
Sabol, C leveland.
The flower gi rl and ring
bearer were Halley Barnes
and Devon Barnes of Gallipolis .
Readers for the ceremony
were Tom Cunningham,
Alexandria, Va .; Kevin Jones,
Arlington, Va, ; Carol Brubaker, Wadsworth, and W ill iam
McKelvey, Norwell , Maine.

INSIDE SPORTS
Highlights of Friday's
· prep football action

'Allan W. Eckert
Author of:

All material submitted for
publication is subject to editing.

ENGAGEMENT RINGS

•
•

••
••

•.
'From Solitaires to 'Bridal
Sets: 'for tfie largest selection
of today's best styles
!All value priced·
Cfitck us out before you
decide.

'

I

j

Good News Baptist Church

.••

Would like to welcome you to a night of
, great music with nationally known group

THE HOSKINS FAMILY
Place: Good News Baptist Church, 4045 Georges
Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio
Time: 7:00p.m. • Date: Sunday, September 30 •;
For more lnrormatlon, call Denver Hill at (740) 446-6822

•

SYRACUSE - Kimberly Dawn Jenkins and Shane Edward
Swisher were united in marriage on July 14, 2001, at Asbury
United Methodist Church in Syracuse.
The bride is the daughter of Roy Jenkins of Racine and the
late Rose Ann Jenkins. The groom is the son of Carlos and
Patricia Swisher of Gallipolis.
.J The bride's godfather, Wendell Stutter of Parkersburg. W.Va.,
and the Rev. Bob Robinson of Middleport performed the
evening ceremony. Madeline Stutter of Parkersburg, godmother of the bride, recited scripture from the books of Genesis and
I.Corinthians.
Nuptial music was performed by Sharon Hawley of Middleport, Rick Hauber and Brittany Hauber of Long Bottom.
Justin Diddle of Racine sang ''I Cross My Heart" and John
Lisle of Syracuse, uncle of the bride, and the bride's cousin,
Leigh Anne Biers tine of Palmdale, Calif., sang "The Prayer."
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a white fulllength matte satin gown embellished with beads on the bodice
and hem. Her cathedral length veil was accented with dusters
of pearls and rhinestdnes. She carried a bouquet of lavender
roses accented with lily of the valley. The groom wore a black
_ tUXedo featuring tails with a matching boutonniere oflavender
(t&gt;ses and lily of the Valley.
.
• Matron of honor was Rochelle Lamm of Pomeroy, sister of
the bride and maid of honor was Tamara Tucker of Hunting-,.on.W.Va. Bridesmaids were Tracy Thompson of Pykeville, Ky. ,
Toni Bailey of Racine, April Swisher ofThurman, sister-in-law
of the groom, and JoBeth R othgeb of Gallipolis, cousin ofthe
~om.
·
·
'• The flower girls were Brittany Walkowski of Alhambra.
Calif., cousin of the bride, and Olivia Smith of Bidwell. Ring
15eartrs were Dimitrious- Lamm' of-Pomeroy, neph'ew pf the
bride, and Nathan Rothgeb of Langsville, cousin of the groom.
i Best man was Shaun Swislier of Thurman, brother of·the
grooffi.Groomsmen were Joey Edwards of Cheshire,· Nathan
Worthington ofNashport,Wedzel Kingery ofBidwell, uncle of .
rhe groom, and Craig Kingery ofT radenton, Fla ., cousin of the
groom'. Ushers were Terry Lamm of Pomeroy, Brian Drummond, Todd Rothgeb, and Terry Rothgeb, all of Gallipolis.
A dinner and dance reception was held after the ceremony at
Royal Oak Resort. The wedding cake decorated with wedding
colors was made by the groom's mother. Flowers for the reception and the wedding ceremony were designed by the bride's
aimt,Janet Haught.
: The new Mrs. Swisher is the granddaughter of Mary Lisle of
Syracuse and the late bon Lisle, and Garnetta Jenkins of Marietta ancl the late Carl Jenkins.
Swisher is the grandson of Floyd and Ima Kingery ofBidwell
ajld the late Alice and Kenneth Swisher.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I.

Jennifer Nicole Lemaster and Andrew Lee Chapman were
united in marriage Aug. 27,2001.
1
In an effort to provide our
Jennifer is the daughter ofTella Lemaster of Gallipolis and the
readership
with current news,
bte A~nold L&lt;!master. Andrew is the. son of Helen Cox, also of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel will
Gallipolis.
not accept weddings after · 90
Th e wedding was at Fair Haven Methodist Church in days from the date of the event
Kan auga, with the Rev. Mary Cyrus officiating. Charlene
Weddings submitted after the
9D-day deadline will appear durMc Kcn scy provided the mu sic.
T he bride was given in marriage by Tella Lemaster. Joey Ing the week in The Daily Sentinel. Point Plesant Register and
Chapma n, brother of the groom, served as best man, and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
Ama nda H.enee Lemaster, sister of the bride, served as maid of
All . club meetings and other
news
:articles in the society sechonor.
tion
must
be submitted within
ll oth the bride and the groom attended Gallia Academy
60 days of occurrence.
High School. Mr. Chapman is a member of the United States
All birthdays must be submitArmy and the co uple reside in Ft. Campbell , Ky.
ted within 60 days of the occurrence.

Swisher wedding

THE TOP FIVE

FLAIR

Mr.. and Mrs.

'

The Frontiersmen
Meet the author Dr. Allan W.
Eckert during the Battle Days
celebration on Oct. 6th
between 2:00 pm and 4:00 pm
at Battle Monument Park in
Point Pleasant West Yirginia.
He will also be signing ~is
books at this tim~ which can be
purchased Oct. 6th at the Alcov~
Books booth at Battle
Monument Park.
Seven-time Pulitzer Prize nominee, Dr. Allan W. E~kert has auth ored 39 books sl)me of which
include: The Crosbreed, Incident at Hawk's Hill, A Time ofTcrror, Wild SeuS&lt;m, The
l'mntiersmen, The Silent Sky, Wilderness Empire and The Conquerors. Hi~ books have been
translated into 13 different languages and Dr. Eckert was presented The Americanism AwarJ
the Daniel Boone Foundatil&gt;n.
'"

2SetTwin
t:leavy
Foundation
Steel Bed
Mattress .
Frames

AnENTION
KMART SHOPPERS
In llaht of tht lragtd y lhwt o«IJrffll on
Sept. U, 2001, t"·o ~ld ~ g11 n1 H ll.~trd on
p11ge 5 in the•Kn1an Sept. 19, 2001 wetkly
1d ciHu lar, the "Spldtr nntn 1" 1111d
"Syphon Filler 3" for PI.AYSTATION will
n ot be a ull1ble . Due to lht \'lolr nl
depiction nlatrd to thc~c pmdueb, lht
n1anufadun:r lias rte~llld the produt"t.
We rqnel aany lnconnnltntt this may
han .cau·K'd our cui'ltomtl"!l.

Yft the new dawn of

'Fourteen Years

J

happy tears bloss,om as roses in our freGJts,
wfiile appreciating -the love, tfie trust,
tfie support, our family of patients
fias ii1cessantly showered on us.
'We are tfiankful, we are grateful, well,
"J{earts won't lie. "

Jfalesfi 'PateL :MrrJJ 'F:JfC'P
lntemal :Medicinei:Medical Oncology

~

a 'Tribute

a tribute to tfie best of tfie best guardian angels of tfre past :
Jean !Ann) :Xara} :Kimberly~ Laurie) !Annett)
. Jodie} Jodi} !Agnes) !Amy &amp; !1ndrea
wfio tfirougfi tfieir vision, honesty, and liard work
fiave bult a strong backbone to our practice.

!l.

• CVanny Carr Internal :Medicine Clinic
• )'PC :Medical Laboratory
• James :Keslar Cardiopulmonary Center
• gowri Oncology Clinic
·

�Sundlly, September 30, 2001

PageQ

Gallipolis, Ohio

:so. ]001 :'

FLASHBACK
their American TV debut on
"Shindig!" performing ' I Can't
Explain.•
Oct. 6:
·
In 1~7, """"'!W:-&lt;; a~!::
.. In 1945, 10-year-old Elvis .. with the San Francisco po!ice
Presley made his firSt public rllided' the communal house
appearance in a talent show of the Grateful Dead on Ashat the Mississippi-Alabama bury Slreet. Some of the
Fair and Dairy Show, singing· members were taken lo jail
"Old Shep:" He won second for possession of marijuana
place and $5.
and released on bail after six
In 1950, the gaine show hours.
"You Bet Your Ute• premiered
In 1978, Mick Jagger apolon NBC. Groucho Marx was ogized to the Rev. Jesse
the host.
Jackson for offensive lyrics in
In 1955, James Dean died . the Rolling Stones song
in the collision of his sports "Some Gir1s," but he refused
car with another automobile to change the words.
near Paso Robles, Calif. He
In 1980, singer Carly
was 24.
Simon
collapsed . from
In 1957, 'Leave II To exhaustion on stage in PittsBeaver" made its debut on burgh. She ended up cancelCBS. After a year, the show ing her tour.
In 1990, "Beverly Hills,
switched to.ABC and ran until
1963.
9021 0" premiered on the Fox
In 1959, "The Twilight network.
Zone," created and hosted by
In 1992, singer Sinead
Rod Ser1ing, madE! its debut O'Connor ripped up a picture
Jay McKelvey
on CBS.
of the Pope during an after.
In 1961 , Bob Dylan made midnight appearance on
his concert hall debut in New "Saturday Night Uve.' Nf:lC's
York. Aboul 50 people attend- switchboard in New York was
ed, mostly his friends, and he flooded with calls, ·mast of
earned
$20.
them criticizing O'Connor's
Vocalist and pianist was
In
1965,
The
Who
made
actions.
Kathy Meyer.
Presentation of the gilts was
by Donald and Margie Ferfolia , uncle and aunt of the
bride.
The processi on was led
2
2TwlnSolld
. from the church by a Scottish
Wood
bagpiper.
The dinner-dan ce recepHeadboards
tion was held at Ridgewood
Party Center.
The couple flew to Puerto
R..ico for a seven-day cruise of
the southern Caribbean.
They reside in Indianapolis;
where the new Mrs. McKelvey teaches at Cardinal Ritter High SchooL
Mr. M cKelvey is a systems
analyst for Eli Lilly.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Entertainment highlights
during the week of Sept. 30-

Mr. and Mn1. Shane Edward Swisher
•

Doyle (D.J.) Saunders II and Ucla Leger

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Lee Dale

Saunders wedding

Haffelt 5Oth

Doyle and Sharon Saunders ofBidwell, and Sidney and Margaret Leger of Iowa, La., announce the marriage of their children, Doyle (DJ.) Saunders II and Licia Leger.
The couple were united in marriage Aug. 31 , 2001, in a private ceremony in Columbus_·
DJ is a 1994 graduate of the University of Rio Grande and
is a senior technician with ATS. of Ohio, Columbus.
Licia is a 1995 graduate of O hio State University and is a cost
accountant, also with ATS of Ohio.
The couple reside in Lewis Center, Ohio.

In honor of the 50tli anniversary of Kay and Amyl Haffelt,
their children and grandchildren are holding a reception Oci.
7 from 2-4 p.m. at Grace United Methodist Church, Gallipo-

Dale wedding
SEV IERV ILLE, Tenn. - The Rev. Robert Parsons united
Sarah Jane Caldwell and Timothy Lee Dale in marriage on
Au g. 11 , 2001 , at Smokey Mountai n Wedding Chapel.
The bride is the daughter of David and Treva Caldwell, Gal-lipol is. O l1io. The groom is the son of Dottie Dale, Columbus,
Ohio.
Accompanying the couple at the ceremony were Tina (Russell) Moodispaugh, friend of the bride . who was Matron of
Honor, and her husband, Carl, of Kingsland, Ga. Also attending
were Jeff Platt, friend of the groom who served as best man,
&gt;nd his wife Janelle, of London, Ky.
The bride wore an ivory floor- length gown with princess
style bodice trinuned in pearls. Her hair, styled in an up-do, was
•darned with clusters of fresh baby's breath. She wore a strand
of pearl s that were " borrowed" and pearl earrings that were

Mr. and Mrs. Kay Haflelt

h

.

The Haffelts were married Oct. 7, 1951, in Central
Methodist Church, Mt. Airy, N.C., by the Rev. A. C. Wagoner,
assisted by the Rev. W.W Blanton.
Mrs. Haffelt is the former Katherine Fulcher. The couple
have two children, George (feresa) Haffelt of Fairborn, Ohio,
and Pam Oacky) Seal of Mt. Airy. There are 10 grandchildren. ·

. new."

Her great-grandmother's wedding ring served as her "somethin g old" while sapphire cluster ring given to her hy Carol
Barnette served as her"something blue." She carried a bouquet
of white roses tied together with white ribbons and accented
with black and red rosebuds.
The matron of honor wore a black, floor-length sleeveless
dress accented with a scarf of )Vhite trimmed with black. She
1 carried a smaller version of the brides' bouquet.
The groom wore a traditional Lakota Ribbon shirt with
black pants.
The best man wore burgundy sport shirt with black pants.
The couple honeymoonetl in Gatlinburg. They resid.!' in .
London, Ky.
An open house reception will he held at the home of the
brides' parents on Oct. 20 from 4 to 7 p.m .

Mr. •nd Mn1. Ch8rlel W11t

J#st 55th
Everett and DallY Kemper

Kemper 51st
Everett and Daisy Kemper observed their 51st anniversary on
Sept. 23.
The couple have three children: Linda Burnett ofVinton,
Brenda Oohn) Park of Bidwell and Sam (Carol) Kemper otVinton; eight grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
Everett operates .Gallipolis Flea Market, and Daisy is a dedicated mother, grandmother, and wife.
The couple attends Morgan Center Wesleyan Church..

Houck 30th
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew lee Chapman

Chapman wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Roger F. Houck, Mitchell Road, Gallipolis, celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary on Sept. 11.
They were marri ed at Ft. Hood, Texas, in 1971.
Mrs. Houck is the former Mary Margaret Brick of Lowell,
Mass.The co uple have two children, Roger Franklin Houck II,
who resides with his wife, Lynn, of Mountain Home Air Force
Base, Idaho; and Mary Ktistine, who resides with her paren.ts.

LEESBURG,
Fla.
Charles and Martha West of
Leesburg, Fla. , celebrated
their 55th wedding anniver- .
sary on Sept. 14.
Charles of Columbus,
Ohio, and the former Martha
Marcella Russell of Bradbury,
Ohio, were married Sept. 14,
1946 in Russell, Ky.. They
lived in Columbus until 1988
soothe .
when they moved to Lees- • All size extra long
for added comfort
your body.
burg.
They have a son, Ernest M.
West of Pataskala; a daughter
Darlene S. McElroy of Lancaster; and two grandchildren •.
Joshpa and Jonah West of
Pataskala.
The couple celebrated their
55th anniversary at a local
restaurant and have planned a
trip to Biloxi , Miss., in FURNITURE &amp; DE$1GN
•tfWtg NAME fUfiMITURI!!: OT D"ICOII•oT PI'ICE!i"l
November.
Rt. Z, Gallipolis Ferry, WV 675-1371

:·-\

I REUNIONS I

•

To ensure prompt publication,
the Sunday Tomes-Sentinel
re.quests that articles be neatly
typed and double spaced for
easy editi ng. Reunion items
should not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted wi!hin
30 days of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for
publication is su bject to editing.
Ar!icles will be published as
soon as possible.

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Beds!

Cantrell. RedZone.
5. "U Remind Me,' Usher. Arlsta.

.
FILMS
.~. "Hardball," Paramount.
~ "The Others,' Dimension.
3. "The Glass House,' Sony.
4:. "Rush Hour 2," New Line.
5. "The Musketeer," UniVersal.
(from Exhibitor Relations Co.)

..

(From Billboard magazine)
ALBUMS

1. "The Blueprint." Jay-Z. Roc-A-

Felts.

2. "Silver Side · Up," Nickelback.

Roadrunner.
3. "Songs In AMinor," Alicia Keys. J.
(Platinum - certified sales of 1 mil·
HOTFfVE
lion units)
t. "Fallin',' Alicia Keys. J.
4.
"Ghetto Fabolous," Fabolous.
2. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja .
Dese~ Storm.
"ule). Epic.
.l . 'Where The Party At," Jagged 5. Love And Theh,' Bob Dylan .
Columbia.
~dga With Nelly. So So Oaf.
(From
Billboard magazine)
4. "Hh 'Em Up Style (Oopsl)." Blu

McKelvey wedding
MEDINA
Melissa
Marie Sabol, daughter of
James and JoAnn Sabol of
Medina, and Jay Patrick
McKelvey, son of Marvin ·and
Eleanor McKelvey, Syracuse,
were united in marriage July
14 at Holy Marryrs Catholic
Church in Medina, with the
R.ev. Fr. Bob Pfeiffer officiatmg.
The bride ·was escorted to
the altar by her father. She
wore a full-length formal
satin ·wedding gown accented
with crystals and a cathedrallength train. She carried a
bouquet of hand-tied flowers
in shades of blue. The bride's
mother wore a flo or-length
blue gown with matching
jacket. The groom's mother
wore a two-piece, navy floorlength gown with a beaded
top.
The bride's attendants wore
tWo-piece periwinkle floor
length gowns and carried
hand- tied bouquets of white
nowers. Matrons of honor
were sisters of the bride, Jennifer Cunningham of Alexandria, Va., and Marianne Jones,
ef Arlington, Va. Other atten-.
dants \Vere Rachelle Bogdon,
Cincinnati; Michelle Dean,
Provi dence, R .I.; Mi chelle
Ferfolia, Cleveland ; H eather
Saunders, C incinnati; M eg;~n
Sawyer, Cleveland.
Besr man was brother of the
groom, Michael McKelvey,
Columbus. Other groomsmen were Maso n Fisher,
Columbus; Bryan Lynn, Indianapolis, Ind.; Gareth Quin,
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Dan
Raser, Cincinnati; Robert
Reiber, Racine; and Jim
Sabol, C leveland.
The flower gi rl and ring
bearer were Halley Barnes
and Devon Barnes of Gallipolis .
Readers for the ceremony
were Tom Cunningham,
Alexandria, Va .; Kevin Jones,
Arlington, Va, ; Carol Brubaker, Wadsworth, and W ill iam
McKelvey, Norwell , Maine.

INSIDE SPORTS
Highlights of Friday's
· prep football action

'Allan W. Eckert
Author of:

All material submitted for
publication is subject to editing.

ENGAGEMENT RINGS

•
•

••
••

•.
'From Solitaires to 'Bridal
Sets: 'for tfie largest selection
of today's best styles
!All value priced·
Cfitck us out before you
decide.

'

I

j

Good News Baptist Church

.••

Would like to welcome you to a night of
, great music with nationally known group

THE HOSKINS FAMILY
Place: Good News Baptist Church, 4045 Georges
Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio
Time: 7:00p.m. • Date: Sunday, September 30 •;
For more lnrormatlon, call Denver Hill at (740) 446-6822

•

SYRACUSE - Kimberly Dawn Jenkins and Shane Edward
Swisher were united in marriage on July 14, 2001, at Asbury
United Methodist Church in Syracuse.
The bride is the daughter of Roy Jenkins of Racine and the
late Rose Ann Jenkins. The groom is the son of Carlos and
Patricia Swisher of Gallipolis.
.J The bride's godfather, Wendell Stutter of Parkersburg. W.Va.,
and the Rev. Bob Robinson of Middleport performed the
evening ceremony. Madeline Stutter of Parkersburg, godmother of the bride, recited scripture from the books of Genesis and
I.Corinthians.
Nuptial music was performed by Sharon Hawley of Middleport, Rick Hauber and Brittany Hauber of Long Bottom.
Justin Diddle of Racine sang ''I Cross My Heart" and John
Lisle of Syracuse, uncle of the bride, and the bride's cousin,
Leigh Anne Biers tine of Palmdale, Calif., sang "The Prayer."
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a white fulllength matte satin gown embellished with beads on the bodice
and hem. Her cathedral length veil was accented with dusters
of pearls and rhinestdnes. She carried a bouquet of lavender
roses accented with lily of the valley. The groom wore a black
_ tUXedo featuring tails with a matching boutonniere oflavender
(t&gt;ses and lily of the Valley.
.
• Matron of honor was Rochelle Lamm of Pomeroy, sister of
the bride and maid of honor was Tamara Tucker of Hunting-,.on.W.Va. Bridesmaids were Tracy Thompson of Pykeville, Ky. ,
Toni Bailey of Racine, April Swisher ofThurman, sister-in-law
of the groom, and JoBeth R othgeb of Gallipolis, cousin ofthe
~om.
·
·
'• The flower girls were Brittany Walkowski of Alhambra.
Calif., cousin of the bride, and Olivia Smith of Bidwell. Ring
15eartrs were Dimitrious- Lamm' of-Pomeroy, neph'ew pf the
bride, and Nathan Rothgeb of Langsville, cousin of the groom.
i Best man was Shaun Swislier of Thurman, brother of·the
grooffi.Groomsmen were Joey Edwards of Cheshire,· Nathan
Worthington ofNashport,Wedzel Kingery ofBidwell, uncle of .
rhe groom, and Craig Kingery ofT radenton, Fla ., cousin of the
groom'. Ushers were Terry Lamm of Pomeroy, Brian Drummond, Todd Rothgeb, and Terry Rothgeb, all of Gallipolis.
A dinner and dance reception was held after the ceremony at
Royal Oak Resort. The wedding cake decorated with wedding
colors was made by the groom's mother. Flowers for the reception and the wedding ceremony were designed by the bride's
aimt,Janet Haught.
: The new Mrs. Swisher is the granddaughter of Mary Lisle of
Syracuse and the late bon Lisle, and Garnetta Jenkins of Marietta ancl the late Carl Jenkins.
Swisher is the grandson of Floyd and Ima Kingery ofBidwell
ajld the late Alice and Kenneth Swisher.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I.

Jennifer Nicole Lemaster and Andrew Lee Chapman were
united in marriage Aug. 27,2001.
1
In an effort to provide our
Jennifer is the daughter ofTella Lemaster of Gallipolis and the
readership
with current news,
bte A~nold L&lt;!master. Andrew is the. son of Helen Cox, also of
the Sunday Times-Sentinel will
Gallipolis.
not accept weddings after · 90
Th e wedding was at Fair Haven Methodist Church in days from the date of the event
Kan auga, with the Rev. Mary Cyrus officiating. Charlene
Weddings submitted after the
9D-day deadline will appear durMc Kcn scy provided the mu sic.
T he bride was given in marriage by Tella Lemaster. Joey Ing the week in The Daily Sentinel. Point Plesant Register and
Chapma n, brother of the groom, served as best man, and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
Ama nda H.enee Lemaster, sister of the bride, served as maid of
All . club meetings and other
news
:articles in the society sechonor.
tion
must
be submitted within
ll oth the bride and the groom attended Gallia Academy
60 days of occurrence.
High School. Mr. Chapman is a member of the United States
All birthdays must be submitArmy and the co uple reside in Ft. Campbell , Ky.
ted within 60 days of the occurrence.

Swisher wedding

THE TOP FIVE

FLAIR

Mr.. and Mrs.

'

The Frontiersmen
Meet the author Dr. Allan W.
Eckert during the Battle Days
celebration on Oct. 6th
between 2:00 pm and 4:00 pm
at Battle Monument Park in
Point Pleasant West Yirginia.
He will also be signing ~is
books at this tim~ which can be
purchased Oct. 6th at the Alcov~
Books booth at Battle
Monument Park.
Seven-time Pulitzer Prize nominee, Dr. Allan W. E~kert has auth ored 39 books sl)me of which
include: The Crosbreed, Incident at Hawk's Hill, A Time ofTcrror, Wild SeuS&lt;m, The
l'mntiersmen, The Silent Sky, Wilderness Empire and The Conquerors. Hi~ books have been
translated into 13 different languages and Dr. Eckert was presented The Americanism AwarJ
the Daniel Boone Foundatil&gt;n.
'"

2SetTwin
t:leavy
Foundation
Steel Bed
Mattress .
Frames

AnENTION
KMART SHOPPERS
In llaht of tht lragtd y lhwt o«IJrffll on
Sept. U, 2001, t"·o ~ld ~ g11 n1 H ll.~trd on
p11ge 5 in the•Kn1an Sept. 19, 2001 wetkly
1d ciHu lar, the "Spldtr nntn 1" 1111d
"Syphon Filler 3" for PI.AYSTATION will
n ot be a ull1ble . Due to lht \'lolr nl
depiction nlatrd to thc~c pmdueb, lht
n1anufadun:r lias rte~llld the produt"t.
We rqnel aany lnconnnltntt this may
han .cau·K'd our cui'ltomtl"!l.

Yft the new dawn of

'Fourteen Years

J

happy tears bloss,om as roses in our freGJts,
wfiile appreciating -the love, tfie trust,
tfie support, our family of patients
fias ii1cessantly showered on us.
'We are tfiankful, we are grateful, well,
"J{earts won't lie. "

Jfalesfi 'PateL :MrrJJ 'F:JfC'P
lntemal :Medicinei:Medical Oncology

~

a 'Tribute

a tribute to tfie best of tfie best guardian angels of tfre past :
Jean !Ann) :Xara} :Kimberly~ Laurie) !Annett)
. Jodie} Jodi} !Agnes) !Amy &amp; !1ndrea
wfio tfirougfi tfieir vision, honesty, and liard work
fiave bult a strong backbone to our practice.

!l.

• CVanny Carr Internal :Medicine Clinic
• )'PC :Medical Laboratory
• James :Keslar Cardiopulmonary Center
• gowri Oncology Clinic
·

�Page C4 • jJuubq CU....-jJadbcel

Sunday, September 30, 2001

Sunday, September 30, 2001

Gallipolis; Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio

~av 'G!inus-jlmfuu! •

Page cs

'The Phantom' still strikes fear in hearts cifcrimin~ls

.....
.-...
.

he current
comic page
in the G~! - ·
lipolis
Daily Tribune fea-

-.

tures

James
Sands

one

strip that has been in the
Daily Tribune since 1940 HISTORY
"The Phantom."
Next in seniority are
" Peanuts" and "The Born
"Levy"'s Law:·
Loser," both of which first
In 1991 the Tribune added
appeared in the Gallipolis
"'Calvin &amp; Hobbes," "The Far
paper in 1%5. "Garfield" and
Side" and "Cathy."The last strip
"Frank &amp; Ernest" date to 1982.
is still in the paper but the first
In the late 1980s "The
two were a little top "far out"
Grizzwells" and "Arlo &amp; Janis"
for small-town America.
were added. The ·other strips
The Phantom is now in its
date from the 1990s and after.
61 st year in the paper.
"Cathy" has been on the
The first "Phantom" strip in
comic page since 1991.
the Daily Tribune was Nov. 18,
1940. "The Phantom" has carThe first comic strip to .
appear in the Daily Tribune FUNNY PAPERS- "Alley_Oop" and "Dinny" have been absent ried. on a long tradition of
was "Out Our Way:• which from the Dally Tribune"s. comic page since 1981. Comics first crime fighting since the 16th
Angela Lynn Vance and David Michael Holley
showed up in . early 1935. appeared In the local paper In 1935 with "Alley Oop" and "Out our century.
"Alley Oop" was added on · way." "The Phantom" has been In the Dally Tribune for 61 years.
The persona has been passed
June 15, 1935.
on from father to son for more
Both of these strips had long when he was replaced by
None of those lasted very than 20 generations.
The Phantom's symbol is
James and Jacqueline Vance ofVinton announce the engage- rum in the Daily Tribune. They Garfield.
long.
ment and forthcoming marriage of their daughter. Angela Lynn both bowed out the same year,
In the 1950s "Grandma",
1980s
came "the sign of the skulL" Just the
In
the
Vance ofVinton, to David Michael Holley of Gallipolis.
1981. In the 1930s "Alley "Bugs Bunny" and "Vic Flint, "Garfield," which today is in mention of that symbol instills
The prospective groom is the son of David and Arlene Hol- Oop" was stuck in the king- detective" were popular strips. more papers than any strip in fear in the hearts of callous
ley of Gallipolis.
criminals. In many of The
dom of Moo dealing with In the 1960s "Mortie Meeker," American history.
The bride-elect is a 1992 graduate of North Gallia High King Guzzle, Foo~y. and ''Priscilla''s Pop," ''Peanuts,"
Also added in the 1980s was Phantom's episodes he was
_J;c hool , and a 1995 graduate of Somheastern Business College. Queen Umpateedle. In 1939 "The Born Loser," "Short "Frank &amp; Ernest." At different aided by the Bandaf pygmies.
Alley became acquainted with Ribs," "Eek and Meek," times this strip has also been
The \'hantom i~ very popuShe is employed by Medi Home Health.
Professor
Woninug,
the
invenlar
in other countries as well.
uTige[" and ''Ben Casey" were called "Frank &amp; Ernie." Strips
The prospective groom is a 1'991 graduate of Gallia Acade(Jim Sar~ds is a lor~gtime Wlltribmy High School and is employed by Dave Holley Construe- . tor of a time machine, and his added.
tried and failed during that
assistant Oscar Boom.
tion.
In 1969 the Daily Tribune decade included "Snake" and •&lt;tor to tile S1111day Times-Senti•oel.)
The wedding will be Oct. 6, 2001, at World Outreach Min· · In the ensuing years Alley had 17 strips every day - up
is tries, Wellston . · ·
Oop met Cleopatra, fought in from 9 in 1961. Whlle "Ben
COUPON
the Crusades, battled pirates Casey" didn "t operate in the
and rescued American pioneers Tribune very long, two
(''Peanuts,u 11 Born Loser') are
from Indian attacks.
"Out Our Way" featured still around today and "Mortie
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY ~y
such typical small-town char- Meeker," · "Priscilla's Pop,"
acters as Smoky, Spuds, Cot- "Short Ribs" and "Eek and
™
ton, Wes, Chuck, the School Meek"lastea until 1990.
13 2 Eastern Avenue alii oils hlo
Marm, Soda and a horse
"Tiger" left the paper in
TUESDAY, OCT. 2, 2001
named Jiggin" Jack. In 1935 1980. "Eek and Meek" was
· both Alley Oop and Out Our perhaps the most ~r out strip
40) 446-1744 • 9 to 4
Way were one-panel set-ups.
for a Midwestern sinal! town.
Call Toll Free 1-B
34·5265 lor an Immediate appolnlment.
In 1939 "Myra North" Meek was a bland mouse and
Thi tesg will be given by a Llcenaed Hearing Aid Specialist.
became the third strip in the "Eek was !he great cynic who
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
Daily Tribune. Added in 1940 was always · being rebuffed by
converutlon 11 Invited to have afBEE hearing tea• to see II
were "Biondie" (remained iri Monique.
thla problem can be helped I Bring thla coupon with you lor
the Tribune until 1991), "Red
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
Strips tried in the early 1970s
UMWA. UIIW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.
Ryder" (appeared until 1962) included "The Badge Guys,"
WALK·INS WELCOME
..
and "Thimble Theater" star- "Lancelot," '!Ild "Campus Clat- . .
·
Fing Popeye. "Red Ryder" had ter."
such memorable · characters as
Sheniff Newt, Little Beaver,
Ace Hanlon, Banjo Bill and
Donna Ringo.
In the 1940s "Dr. Bobb" was
in the paper as well as "They'll
Do It Every Time."
By 1945 a war strip called
"Hackrnark" was added, along
with "Wash Thbbs," "Freckles"
and "Boots." Freckles stayed on
the Tribune comic page until
about 1mo. Freckles was about
a boy and his buddies who
included Lard Simith, Hilda
Grubble, Pepper, Fuzzy and
Lori Melissa Wohlford and Wesley Ryan Saunders are plan- Kenny.
ning a Dec. 8 wedding at Hillsdale Baptist Church in Advance,
"Wash Thbbs," which had a
N.C.
20-year run in the Daily TriWohlford is the daughter of Richard and Melanie Wohlford bune, was a comedy and
_pf Lewisville, N.C. She graduated from Campbell University adventure strip. One ofits main
and Wake Forest School of Medicine. She is employed by Cen- characters was spun off with
tral Carolina Dermatology Clinic in High Point, N.C., as a his own strip, "Captain Easy"
phystcian assistant.
(1967-81). During times of
Saunders is the son of Kennison and Kay Saunders of Gal- national crisis Captain Easy
lipolis. He graduated from Cincinnati College of Mortuary was an international spy in the
Science· and is employed by Hayworth-Miller Funeral Home Tribune; that is until 1981
in Winston-Salem. N.C.

L-------------------.J

Sharon Barr and Jerry Roush

Angela R. Elkins and Brwndon L Roberta

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wickline

Ba"-Roush engagement

Elkins-Roberts engagement

Wickline wedding

Barbara Elkins of Gallipolis and Paul Elkins of Patriot
RACINE - Carrie Glaze and Scott Wickline were united
announce the engagement and upcoming wedding of their in marriage on July 23 at Racine United Methodist Church
daughter, Angela R. Elkins, to Brandon L. Roberts.
with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating.
Angela is a 1997 graduate of Gallia Academy High School
The bride is the daughter of Jim · and Debbie Glaze of ·
and is employed at Wal-Mart Po trait Studio, Gallipolis.
Pomeroy, and the granddaughter of Peggy Taylor and the late
Brandon is the son of Kim Roberts of Crown City. He is a Paul Taylor, and Donna Glaze and the late Glen Glaze.
1999 graduate of South Galli a High School, and is enrolled in
The groom is the son of Beverlee Wickline of Racine and .
nursing school in Scenic Hills.
the late William Wickline and the grandson of Kathryn Hunt
The open church wedding wiU be held at 4:30 p.m. Oct. 20 and the late James Hunt and Inez Wickline and the late Douat Christ United Methodist Churl:h.
glas Wickline.
A reception will immediately follow the ceremony at the
Given in marriage by her parents, the bride was escorted to
American Legion on Bob McKormick Road, Gallipolis.
the altar by her father.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.
The bride's attendants were Emily Hill, maid of honor, and
Stephanie Stewart, Renee Powell, and Kyla Hudson, bridesmaids. The flower girl was Kelsey Hudson.
Kyle Wickline served as best man, and the groo~men were
Cass Cleland, Todd Powell, and Zach Glaze. The ring bearer :
was Austin King. The ushers were Brice Hill and Trenton CleBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. Actor Jack Wagner is 42. Drum·
land.
Celebrity birthdays for the mer Tommy Lee (Motley Crue) Is
Brandi Meadows and LeAnne Johnson registered the guests.
week of Sept. 30-0ct. 6:
39. Actress Janel Moloney ("The
A reception was held after the ceremony at the Riverside .
. Sept.30: Actress Deborah Kerr West Wing") Is 32. Singer Gwen
Is 80. Actress Angie Dickinson is Stefani of No Doubt Is 32. Singer GolfCourse Club House. The couple honeymooned in Las :
70. Singer Clssy Houston is sa. Kevin Richardson of the Back· Vegas. They reside in Racine.
Singer Johnny Mathis Is 66. Actor street Boys Is 30. Actress Neve
Barry Williams ("The Brady Campbell Is 28. Actor Seann
Bunch") Is 47. Singer Basia is 45. William Scott ("American Pie,"
Actress Fran Drescher is 44. "Dude, Where's My Car?") is 25.
Actress Crystal Bernard ('Wings")
Oct. 4: Actor Charlton Heston Is
is 40. Actor Eric Stoltz is 40. 77. Author Jackie Collins Is 60.
Actress Jenne Elfman ('Dharma Author Anna Rice is 60. Actress
&amp; Greg") is 30. Actor Ashley Susan Sarandon Is 55. Actor
Hamlllon Is 27. Actress Lacey Armand Assante Is 52. Key·
Chabert ("Party of Five") is 19. ' boardlst Chris Lowe of the Pet
Actor Kieran Culkin is 19.
Shop Boys Is 42. Singer Jon
Oct. 1: Actor James WhHrnore Secada is 40. Actor Liev
Is 80. Plani$I .Roger WIHiams Is Schreiber Is 34. Actress Alicia SllGrant Medical Center
77. Actor Torn Bosley Is 74. Actor verstone Is 25. Actress Aachael
• r11·
Richard Harris Is 71. Actreas- . Leigh Cook ("Josie and the
Ohio Health
singer Julie Andrews. Is 66. Pussycats," "She's All That') Is 22.
Actress Stella Stevens is 65. . Oct. 5: Cartoonist Bll Keane
Actor Stephen Collins ('7th Hpav- ("Family Circus"} Is 79. SingerSpecialized Care for Total Knee
en"} Is 54. Actor Randy Qull!d 1s guitarist Steve Miller is. 58; Actor
51. Singer Youasou N'Dour Ia 42. Jeff Conaway ("Taxi ) 1s 51.
and Hip Replacement
Actor Esal Morales (*NYPD Blue"} Actress Karen Allen Is 50. Director
Is 39. Model-actress Cindy Mar· Clive Bal1&lt;er Is 49. Guitarist David
Mr. and Mrw. Stanley Seal
golis 1s 36.
Bryson of Counting Crows Is 47.
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
Oct. 2: Singer-guitarist (eon Singer Bob Geld?f Is 4.7. Actor
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue In the Huntington
Rausch of Bob Wills and the Daniel Baldwin ( Homletde: Lne
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
Texas Playboys Is .74. Critic Rex On The Streets"} Is 41. Actor Guy
Reed 1s 63. Singer Don McLean Is Pearce Is 34. Actress Kate
58. Country singer Chris LeDoux Winslet Is 26.
.
.
. Our next clinic date Is
Joint
STRONGSVILlE Stanley and Jaunita Beal of Is 53. Guitarist Mike Rutherford of
Oct. 6: Actress Britt Ekland 1s
Implant
Friday, October 19, 2001.
Strongsville celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recent- · Genesis Is 51. Singer Sting Is 50. 59. Impressionist Fred Travalena
Surgeons, tnc.
Iy with family and friends at Carrie Cerino's Ristorante in Singer Phil Oakey of the Humen Is 59. Singer-guitarist Thomas
Call (614) 221-6331
League Is 46. Actress-talk show McClary (The .Commodores) Is
North Royalton.
for an appointment.
host Kelly Rlpa ("All My Children," 51. Singer Kevm Cronin of. REO
The celebration was hosted by their daughter, Pat Edmond, "LLve With Regis &amp; Kelly") Is 31. Speedwagon Is 50. Gu1_tanst
and grandsons, Jeremy Edmond and Steven (Nicole) Majs- Singer Tiffany Is 30. Rapper Big David Hidalgo ?f Los Lobos IS 47.
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
-\ororic.
•
Proof of D12 is 24.
· Singer-songwriter Matthew Sweet
Oct. 3: Singer Chubby Checker IS 37.
The Beals were married Aug. 5,1951, at Harrisonville. He is
Is
60. Slnget-guitarist Lindsey
retired from Alcoa Aluminum in Cleveland and Mrs. Beal is
Buckingham
of Fleetwood Mac Is
retired from Ameritech of Cleveland.
52. Blues singer Keb' Mo' is 50.

BIRTHDAYS

The
Joint /mph. VJt Center
~~~~i

Beal50th

Several elements combine
as pleasantly as the ingredients
in this recipe for apple chip
cookies.
It's fall . A baking session in
the kitchen has a cozy sound
to it . Farmers' m~rkets and
stands, or even your own
trees, offer generous supplies
-pf ripening fruit. Brown sugar
and butterscotch have sweet,
golden associations.
.
The following recipe adds
nutmeg, for a hint of spice,
and pecans for crunch.
Apple Chip "Cookies
For the cookies:
), cup butter
. •
1 cup brown sugar
), cup half-and-half
1 egg
.
), teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
:&gt; teaspoon nutmeg
2 cups flour
1 cup Cameo or Rome Beauty
apples, pared and chopped
~cup butterscotch chips
1 cup pecans, chopped
For the glaze:
4 tablespoons butter, melted
1 teaspoon cinnamon
4 or 5 tablespoons half-and-half
2 cups powdered sugar
Preheat oven to 350 F.
Cream butter and sugar.
Beat iR half-and-half, egg,
soda, salt, nutmeg and flour.

To make the glaze: Combine ingredients to desired
consistency, spread · over
cooled cookies.
Makes 3 dozen cookies.
'·

LAUREL CLIFF
FREE METHODIST .CHURCH .
LAUREL CLIFF ROAD, POMEROY, OHIO

SUNDAY SEPT. 30, 2001
THRU
WEDNESDAY OCT. J, 2001
EVANGELIST
REV. JAMES BAKER
FROM HURRlCANE; wv

EVANGELISTIC SINGERS
REV. JOHN &amp; RUTH BRISCOE
FROM CANADIAN, OK
INSPIRING HOLINESS PREACHING
EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY MORNING tO::iO-SUNDAY EVENING 6:00
MON., TUES., AND WED. EVENING 7:00

Wohlford~Saunders

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Get $20·
..

-~···· ·

Top VIdeo Rentals
1. "Blow." New Line Home Video.
I!. "Exit Wounds." Wamer Home

.. ·-·

Mom
needed
more care
than I could give,

engagement

Come into FARMERS BANK today and open up any one of our
great checking accounts and you will be qualified to draw from
the "Barrel 0' Money!"

s."Memento." Columbia TnSIJu Home
Video.
6. "Joe Dirt," Columbia TnStar Home
Video.
7. "The Family Man," Universal Stu·

Ask about our HiFi, Golden Life, SuperNow
or Lifestyle checking accounts andyou'll
be sure to find one that's right for you!

· Top VIdeo ~les
1. 'Willy Wonka &amp; The Chocolale Fac·
lory," Warner Home Video.
2. "Ses Spot Run." Warner F~mily
Entertainment
3. "Pokemon 3 - The Movie." warner
Home VIdeo.
4. "Recess: School's Out," Wall Dis·
r.ey Home Video.
5. "Men Of Honor." FoxVideo.
6. "61." HBO Home Video.
7. ' Soooby Doo: Spookiest Tales."
Turner Home Entertainment
8.."Barney: Lers Go To The Zoo." Barney Home VIdeo.
9. "Space eov.toys." Warner Home

dios Home VIdeo.
8. "The Mexican." DreamWorks Home

v....~ We're Your Bank for Cife~

'

3Jnuites pou to celebrate blttb us our
l25tb anntberlarp

I'd go over after work and on the weekends, but I began to
realize that she needed more than just a little help around the
house. Sometimes she'd forget her medications. Sometimes
she'd stay in herrobe all day if her arthritis flared up and dr.essing was a problem. Her refrigerator always looked pretty bare,
and I didn't know what to do until I discovered the terrific progam
at Wyngate.

on October 7th through October lOth

l!&amp;ctober 7tb
..

9:30 a.m. • Sunday School
10:30 a.m.- Combined Worship Service
Mark Seevers, , Speaker
12:00 p.m. - Carry-In Dinner
1:30 p.m. • Anniversary Service

Both of us were very impressed with the homelike accommodations, professional nursing assistance, activities, and the friendly
residents and staff. Now she can do pretty much what she
· wants to do without living alone, and there's plenty of care when
she needs it. We're both really pleased and relieved ..

Entertainment
9. "15 Minutes." New Line Home

Video.
10. "Chocolat," Miramax .

.,

This offer is good through Oct. 15, 2001 and
will be provided at opening of new checking account.

,(F' B) Farmers Bank

'leburcb .of 'lebrist

·Corner of Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road
· Pomeroy, Ohio

ment

Select an envelope with a dollar amount of
$20.00 and this amount will be deposited
into your new FARMERS BANK Checking
account!

Pomeroy

~rabforb

Video.
3. "The Talor Of Panama, • Columbia
TriSiar Home Video.
4. "tiannibal." MGM Home Entertain-

Gallipolis

(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667-'3161

Video.
10. "Biue·s Clues: Cage Blue," Nick·

elode&lt;in VideO.

•

1
HEARING AID CENTER I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

---------------

Weekly charts for the
nation's most popular videos
as they appear in next week's
issue of Billboard magazine:

00

REVIVAL

1
I &amp;tt4.e
1
I
I
I
I
1
I

ON VIDEO

New FARMERS ·sANK
·Checking Accounts

······-·''' ''",__,,,..,,

•

•

----------EE HEARING TESTS

but I couldn't put her in a nursing home.

Apples, butterscotch combine well in cookies
Add apples, chips and nuts.
Drop by teaspoonfuls onto
greased cookie sheet. Bake for
12 to 15 minutes. Be careful
not to overbake.

•

.vance-Holley engagement

LANGSVILLE - Michelle Barr of Belpre and H. David
Barr of Racine announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their mother, Sharon Barr of Langsville to Jerry
Roush of Pomeroy.
.
She is the daughter of Howard Thoma of Pomeroy and the
late Evelyn Thoma, and he is the son of the late John and Mar_garetta Roush.
The· gracious custom of an open church · wedding will be
Oct. 13 at Rudand Nazarene Church on Main Street in Rut,
land.
The couple will reside on Midkiff Road, Pomeroy.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

'

QE)ctober Stb tbrougb tOtb
7:00p.m.- Evening Service
Monday • Oifforc:l Smith
Tuesday- Dr. George Pickens
Wednesday • Danny Evans
.

,

.

Call us at (740) 441-9633 or mail us this coupon
Please serid me more
Information about your
community

· •·

Come and help us

"Ql:beri~b

tiJe t}aut anb 'look
j'orwarb to tbe future!"

For more Information, call (740) 992-5844

Wj'lyilft

last name

first name

city

street address
state

zip

. OP GALUPOUS

phone number .

MNMC2

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, West Virginia 45631

•
•
•

•
•
•

•

�Page C4 • jJuubq CU....-jJadbcel

Sunday, September 30, 2001

Sunday, September 30, 2001

Gallipolis; Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio

~av 'G!inus-jlmfuu! •

Page cs

'The Phantom' still strikes fear in hearts cifcrimin~ls

.....
.-...
.

he current
comic page
in the G~! - ·
lipolis
Daily Tribune fea-

-.

tures

James
Sands

one

strip that has been in the
Daily Tribune since 1940 HISTORY
"The Phantom."
Next in seniority are
" Peanuts" and "The Born
"Levy"'s Law:·
Loser," both of which first
In 1991 the Tribune added
appeared in the Gallipolis
"'Calvin &amp; Hobbes," "The Far
paper in 1%5. "Garfield" and
Side" and "Cathy."The last strip
"Frank &amp; Ernest" date to 1982.
is still in the paper but the first
In the late 1980s "The
two were a little top "far out"
Grizzwells" and "Arlo &amp; Janis"
for small-town America.
were added. The ·other strips
The Phantom is now in its
date from the 1990s and after.
61 st year in the paper.
"Cathy" has been on the
The first "Phantom" strip in
comic page since 1991.
the Daily Tribune was Nov. 18,
1940. "The Phantom" has carThe first comic strip to .
appear in the Daily Tribune FUNNY PAPERS- "Alley_Oop" and "Dinny" have been absent ried. on a long tradition of
was "Out Our Way:• which from the Dally Tribune"s. comic page since 1981. Comics first crime fighting since the 16th
Angela Lynn Vance and David Michael Holley
showed up in . early 1935. appeared In the local paper In 1935 with "Alley Oop" and "Out our century.
"Alley Oop" was added on · way." "The Phantom" has been In the Dally Tribune for 61 years.
The persona has been passed
June 15, 1935.
on from father to son for more
Both of these strips had long when he was replaced by
None of those lasted very than 20 generations.
The Phantom's symbol is
James and Jacqueline Vance ofVinton announce the engage- rum in the Daily Tribune. They Garfield.
long.
ment and forthcoming marriage of their daughter. Angela Lynn both bowed out the same year,
In the 1950s "Grandma",
1980s
came "the sign of the skulL" Just the
In
the
Vance ofVinton, to David Michael Holley of Gallipolis.
1981. In the 1930s "Alley "Bugs Bunny" and "Vic Flint, "Garfield," which today is in mention of that symbol instills
The prospective groom is the son of David and Arlene Hol- Oop" was stuck in the king- detective" were popular strips. more papers than any strip in fear in the hearts of callous
ley of Gallipolis.
criminals. In many of The
dom of Moo dealing with In the 1960s "Mortie Meeker," American history.
The bride-elect is a 1992 graduate of North Gallia High King Guzzle, Foo~y. and ''Priscilla''s Pop," ''Peanuts,"
Also added in the 1980s was Phantom's episodes he was
_J;c hool , and a 1995 graduate of Somheastern Business College. Queen Umpateedle. In 1939 "The Born Loser," "Short "Frank &amp; Ernest." At different aided by the Bandaf pygmies.
Alley became acquainted with Ribs," "Eek and Meek," times this strip has also been
The \'hantom i~ very popuShe is employed by Medi Home Health.
Professor
Woninug,
the
invenlar
in other countries as well.
uTige[" and ''Ben Casey" were called "Frank &amp; Ernie." Strips
The prospective groom is a 1'991 graduate of Gallia Acade(Jim Sar~ds is a lor~gtime Wlltribmy High School and is employed by Dave Holley Construe- . tor of a time machine, and his added.
tried and failed during that
assistant Oscar Boom.
tion.
In 1969 the Daily Tribune decade included "Snake" and •&lt;tor to tile S1111day Times-Senti•oel.)
The wedding will be Oct. 6, 2001, at World Outreach Min· · In the ensuing years Alley had 17 strips every day - up
is tries, Wellston . · ·
Oop met Cleopatra, fought in from 9 in 1961. Whlle "Ben
COUPON
the Crusades, battled pirates Casey" didn "t operate in the
and rescued American pioneers Tribune very long, two
(''Peanuts,u 11 Born Loser') are
from Indian attacks.
"Out Our Way" featured still around today and "Mortie
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY ~y
such typical small-town char- Meeker," · "Priscilla's Pop,"
acters as Smoky, Spuds, Cot- "Short Ribs" and "Eek and
™
ton, Wes, Chuck, the School Meek"lastea until 1990.
13 2 Eastern Avenue alii oils hlo
Marm, Soda and a horse
"Tiger" left the paper in
TUESDAY, OCT. 2, 2001
named Jiggin" Jack. In 1935 1980. "Eek and Meek" was
· both Alley Oop and Out Our perhaps the most ~r out strip
40) 446-1744 • 9 to 4
Way were one-panel set-ups.
for a Midwestern sinal! town.
Call Toll Free 1-B
34·5265 lor an Immediate appolnlment.
In 1939 "Myra North" Meek was a bland mouse and
Thi tesg will be given by a Llcenaed Hearing Aid Specialist.
became the third strip in the "Eek was !he great cynic who
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
Daily Tribune. Added in 1940 was always · being rebuffed by
converutlon 11 Invited to have afBEE hearing tea• to see II
were "Biondie" (remained iri Monique.
thla problem can be helped I Bring thla coupon with you lor
the Tribune until 1991), "Red
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
Strips tried in the early 1970s
UMWA. UIIW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.
Ryder" (appeared until 1962) included "The Badge Guys,"
WALK·INS WELCOME
..
and "Thimble Theater" star- "Lancelot," '!Ild "Campus Clat- . .
·
Fing Popeye. "Red Ryder" had ter."
such memorable · characters as
Sheniff Newt, Little Beaver,
Ace Hanlon, Banjo Bill and
Donna Ringo.
In the 1940s "Dr. Bobb" was
in the paper as well as "They'll
Do It Every Time."
By 1945 a war strip called
"Hackrnark" was added, along
with "Wash Thbbs," "Freckles"
and "Boots." Freckles stayed on
the Tribune comic page until
about 1mo. Freckles was about
a boy and his buddies who
included Lard Simith, Hilda
Grubble, Pepper, Fuzzy and
Lori Melissa Wohlford and Wesley Ryan Saunders are plan- Kenny.
ning a Dec. 8 wedding at Hillsdale Baptist Church in Advance,
"Wash Thbbs," which had a
N.C.
20-year run in the Daily TriWohlford is the daughter of Richard and Melanie Wohlford bune, was a comedy and
_pf Lewisville, N.C. She graduated from Campbell University adventure strip. One ofits main
and Wake Forest School of Medicine. She is employed by Cen- characters was spun off with
tral Carolina Dermatology Clinic in High Point, N.C., as a his own strip, "Captain Easy"
phystcian assistant.
(1967-81). During times of
Saunders is the son of Kennison and Kay Saunders of Gal- national crisis Captain Easy
lipolis. He graduated from Cincinnati College of Mortuary was an international spy in the
Science· and is employed by Hayworth-Miller Funeral Home Tribune; that is until 1981
in Winston-Salem. N.C.

L-------------------.J

Sharon Barr and Jerry Roush

Angela R. Elkins and Brwndon L Roberta

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wickline

Ba"-Roush engagement

Elkins-Roberts engagement

Wickline wedding

Barbara Elkins of Gallipolis and Paul Elkins of Patriot
RACINE - Carrie Glaze and Scott Wickline were united
announce the engagement and upcoming wedding of their in marriage on July 23 at Racine United Methodist Church
daughter, Angela R. Elkins, to Brandon L. Roberts.
with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating.
Angela is a 1997 graduate of Gallia Academy High School
The bride is the daughter of Jim · and Debbie Glaze of ·
and is employed at Wal-Mart Po trait Studio, Gallipolis.
Pomeroy, and the granddaughter of Peggy Taylor and the late
Brandon is the son of Kim Roberts of Crown City. He is a Paul Taylor, and Donna Glaze and the late Glen Glaze.
1999 graduate of South Galli a High School, and is enrolled in
The groom is the son of Beverlee Wickline of Racine and .
nursing school in Scenic Hills.
the late William Wickline and the grandson of Kathryn Hunt
The open church wedding wiU be held at 4:30 p.m. Oct. 20 and the late James Hunt and Inez Wickline and the late Douat Christ United Methodist Churl:h.
glas Wickline.
A reception will immediately follow the ceremony at the
Given in marriage by her parents, the bride was escorted to
American Legion on Bob McKormick Road, Gallipolis.
the altar by her father.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.
The bride's attendants were Emily Hill, maid of honor, and
Stephanie Stewart, Renee Powell, and Kyla Hudson, bridesmaids. The flower girl was Kelsey Hudson.
Kyle Wickline served as best man, and the groo~men were
Cass Cleland, Todd Powell, and Zach Glaze. The ring bearer :
was Austin King. The ushers were Brice Hill and Trenton CleBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. Actor Jack Wagner is 42. Drum·
land.
Celebrity birthdays for the mer Tommy Lee (Motley Crue) Is
Brandi Meadows and LeAnne Johnson registered the guests.
week of Sept. 30-0ct. 6:
39. Actress Janel Moloney ("The
A reception was held after the ceremony at the Riverside .
. Sept.30: Actress Deborah Kerr West Wing") Is 32. Singer Gwen
Is 80. Actress Angie Dickinson is Stefani of No Doubt Is 32. Singer GolfCourse Club House. The couple honeymooned in Las :
70. Singer Clssy Houston is sa. Kevin Richardson of the Back· Vegas. They reside in Racine.
Singer Johnny Mathis Is 66. Actor street Boys Is 30. Actress Neve
Barry Williams ("The Brady Campbell Is 28. Actor Seann
Bunch") Is 47. Singer Basia is 45. William Scott ("American Pie,"
Actress Fran Drescher is 44. "Dude, Where's My Car?") is 25.
Actress Crystal Bernard ('Wings")
Oct. 4: Actor Charlton Heston Is
is 40. Actor Eric Stoltz is 40. 77. Author Jackie Collins Is 60.
Actress Jenne Elfman ('Dharma Author Anna Rice is 60. Actress
&amp; Greg") is 30. Actor Ashley Susan Sarandon Is 55. Actor
Hamlllon Is 27. Actress Lacey Armand Assante Is 52. Key·
Chabert ("Party of Five") is 19. ' boardlst Chris Lowe of the Pet
Actor Kieran Culkin is 19.
Shop Boys Is 42. Singer Jon
Oct. 1: Actor James WhHrnore Secada is 40. Actor Liev
Is 80. Plani$I .Roger WIHiams Is Schreiber Is 34. Actress Alicia SllGrant Medical Center
77. Actor Torn Bosley Is 74. Actor verstone Is 25. Actress Aachael
• r11·
Richard Harris Is 71. Actreas- . Leigh Cook ("Josie and the
Ohio Health
singer Julie Andrews. Is 66. Pussycats," "She's All That') Is 22.
Actress Stella Stevens is 65. . Oct. 5: Cartoonist Bll Keane
Actor Stephen Collins ('7th Hpav- ("Family Circus"} Is 79. SingerSpecialized Care for Total Knee
en"} Is 54. Actor Randy Qull!d 1s guitarist Steve Miller is. 58; Actor
51. Singer Youasou N'Dour Ia 42. Jeff Conaway ("Taxi ) 1s 51.
and Hip Replacement
Actor Esal Morales (*NYPD Blue"} Actress Karen Allen Is 50. Director
Is 39. Model-actress Cindy Mar· Clive Bal1&lt;er Is 49. Guitarist David
Mr. and Mrw. Stanley Seal
golis 1s 36.
Bryson of Counting Crows Is 47.
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
Oct. 2: Singer-guitarist (eon Singer Bob Geld?f Is 4.7. Actor
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue In the Huntington
Rausch of Bob Wills and the Daniel Baldwin ( Homletde: Lne
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
Texas Playboys Is .74. Critic Rex On The Streets"} Is 41. Actor Guy
Reed 1s 63. Singer Don McLean Is Pearce Is 34. Actress Kate
58. Country singer Chris LeDoux Winslet Is 26.
.
.
. Our next clinic date Is
Joint
STRONGSVILlE Stanley and Jaunita Beal of Is 53. Guitarist Mike Rutherford of
Oct. 6: Actress Britt Ekland 1s
Implant
Friday, October 19, 2001.
Strongsville celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recent- · Genesis Is 51. Singer Sting Is 50. 59. Impressionist Fred Travalena
Surgeons, tnc.
Iy with family and friends at Carrie Cerino's Ristorante in Singer Phil Oakey of the Humen Is 59. Singer-guitarist Thomas
Call (614) 221-6331
League Is 46. Actress-talk show McClary (The .Commodores) Is
North Royalton.
for an appointment.
host Kelly Rlpa ("All My Children," 51. Singer Kevm Cronin of. REO
The celebration was hosted by their daughter, Pat Edmond, "LLve With Regis &amp; Kelly") Is 31. Speedwagon Is 50. Gu1_tanst
and grandsons, Jeremy Edmond and Steven (Nicole) Majs- Singer Tiffany Is 30. Rapper Big David Hidalgo ?f Los Lobos IS 47.
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
-\ororic.
•
Proof of D12 is 24.
· Singer-songwriter Matthew Sweet
Oct. 3: Singer Chubby Checker IS 37.
The Beals were married Aug. 5,1951, at Harrisonville. He is
Is
60. Slnget-guitarist Lindsey
retired from Alcoa Aluminum in Cleveland and Mrs. Beal is
Buckingham
of Fleetwood Mac Is
retired from Ameritech of Cleveland.
52. Blues singer Keb' Mo' is 50.

BIRTHDAYS

The
Joint /mph. VJt Center
~~~~i

Beal50th

Several elements combine
as pleasantly as the ingredients
in this recipe for apple chip
cookies.
It's fall . A baking session in
the kitchen has a cozy sound
to it . Farmers' m~rkets and
stands, or even your own
trees, offer generous supplies
-pf ripening fruit. Brown sugar
and butterscotch have sweet,
golden associations.
.
The following recipe adds
nutmeg, for a hint of spice,
and pecans for crunch.
Apple Chip "Cookies
For the cookies:
), cup butter
. •
1 cup brown sugar
), cup half-and-half
1 egg
.
), teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
:&gt; teaspoon nutmeg
2 cups flour
1 cup Cameo or Rome Beauty
apples, pared and chopped
~cup butterscotch chips
1 cup pecans, chopped
For the glaze:
4 tablespoons butter, melted
1 teaspoon cinnamon
4 or 5 tablespoons half-and-half
2 cups powdered sugar
Preheat oven to 350 F.
Cream butter and sugar.
Beat iR half-and-half, egg,
soda, salt, nutmeg and flour.

To make the glaze: Combine ingredients to desired
consistency, spread · over
cooled cookies.
Makes 3 dozen cookies.
'·

LAUREL CLIFF
FREE METHODIST .CHURCH .
LAUREL CLIFF ROAD, POMEROY, OHIO

SUNDAY SEPT. 30, 2001
THRU
WEDNESDAY OCT. J, 2001
EVANGELIST
REV. JAMES BAKER
FROM HURRlCANE; wv

EVANGELISTIC SINGERS
REV. JOHN &amp; RUTH BRISCOE
FROM CANADIAN, OK
INSPIRING HOLINESS PREACHING
EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY MORNING tO::iO-SUNDAY EVENING 6:00
MON., TUES., AND WED. EVENING 7:00

Wohlford~Saunders

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Get $20·
..

-~···· ·

Top VIdeo Rentals
1. "Blow." New Line Home Video.
I!. "Exit Wounds." Wamer Home

.. ·-·

Mom
needed
more care
than I could give,

engagement

Come into FARMERS BANK today and open up any one of our
great checking accounts and you will be qualified to draw from
the "Barrel 0' Money!"

s."Memento." Columbia TnSIJu Home
Video.
6. "Joe Dirt," Columbia TnStar Home
Video.
7. "The Family Man," Universal Stu·

Ask about our HiFi, Golden Life, SuperNow
or Lifestyle checking accounts andyou'll
be sure to find one that's right for you!

· Top VIdeo ~les
1. 'Willy Wonka &amp; The Chocolale Fac·
lory," Warner Home Video.
2. "Ses Spot Run." Warner F~mily
Entertainment
3. "Pokemon 3 - The Movie." warner
Home VIdeo.
4. "Recess: School's Out," Wall Dis·
r.ey Home Video.
5. "Men Of Honor." FoxVideo.
6. "61." HBO Home Video.
7. ' Soooby Doo: Spookiest Tales."
Turner Home Entertainment
8.."Barney: Lers Go To The Zoo." Barney Home VIdeo.
9. "Space eov.toys." Warner Home

dios Home VIdeo.
8. "The Mexican." DreamWorks Home

v....~ We're Your Bank for Cife~

'

3Jnuites pou to celebrate blttb us our
l25tb anntberlarp

I'd go over after work and on the weekends, but I began to
realize that she needed more than just a little help around the
house. Sometimes she'd forget her medications. Sometimes
she'd stay in herrobe all day if her arthritis flared up and dr.essing was a problem. Her refrigerator always looked pretty bare,
and I didn't know what to do until I discovered the terrific progam
at Wyngate.

on October 7th through October lOth

l!&amp;ctober 7tb
..

9:30 a.m. • Sunday School
10:30 a.m.- Combined Worship Service
Mark Seevers, , Speaker
12:00 p.m. - Carry-In Dinner
1:30 p.m. • Anniversary Service

Both of us were very impressed with the homelike accommodations, professional nursing assistance, activities, and the friendly
residents and staff. Now she can do pretty much what she
· wants to do without living alone, and there's plenty of care when
she needs it. We're both really pleased and relieved ..

Entertainment
9. "15 Minutes." New Line Home

Video.
10. "Chocolat," Miramax .

.,

This offer is good through Oct. 15, 2001 and
will be provided at opening of new checking account.

,(F' B) Farmers Bank

'leburcb .of 'lebrist

·Corner of Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road
· Pomeroy, Ohio

ment

Select an envelope with a dollar amount of
$20.00 and this amount will be deposited
into your new FARMERS BANK Checking
account!

Pomeroy

~rabforb

Video.
3. "The Talor Of Panama, • Columbia
TriSiar Home Video.
4. "tiannibal." MGM Home Entertain-

Gallipolis

(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667-'3161

Video.
10. "Biue·s Clues: Cage Blue," Nick·

elode&lt;in VideO.

•

1
HEARING AID CENTER I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

---------------

Weekly charts for the
nation's most popular videos
as they appear in next week's
issue of Billboard magazine:

00

REVIVAL

1
I &amp;tt4.e
1
I
I
I
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1
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ON VIDEO

New FARMERS ·sANK
·Checking Accounts

······-·''' ''",__,,,..,,

•

•

----------EE HEARING TESTS

but I couldn't put her in a nursing home.

Apples, butterscotch combine well in cookies
Add apples, chips and nuts.
Drop by teaspoonfuls onto
greased cookie sheet. Bake for
12 to 15 minutes. Be careful
not to overbake.

•

.vance-Holley engagement

LANGSVILLE - Michelle Barr of Belpre and H. David
Barr of Racine announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their mother, Sharon Barr of Langsville to Jerry
Roush of Pomeroy.
.
She is the daughter of Howard Thoma of Pomeroy and the
late Evelyn Thoma, and he is the son of the late John and Mar_garetta Roush.
The· gracious custom of an open church · wedding will be
Oct. 13 at Rudand Nazarene Church on Main Street in Rut,
land.
The couple will reside on Midkiff Road, Pomeroy.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

'

QE)ctober Stb tbrougb tOtb
7:00p.m.- Evening Service
Monday • Oifforc:l Smith
Tuesday- Dr. George Pickens
Wednesday • Danny Evans
.

,

.

Call us at (740) 441-9633 or mail us this coupon
Please serid me more
Information about your
community

· •·

Come and help us

"Ql:beri~b

tiJe t}aut anb 'look
j'orwarb to tbe future!"

For more Information, call (740) 992-5844

Wj'lyilft

last name

first name

city

street address
state

zip

. OP GALUPOUS

phone number .

MNMC2

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, West Virginia 45631

•
•
•

•
•
•

•

�unb_av.;__~_imt_•------tl~-·~_ __;,_AI_o~nc tl1e Riv-'r
Youngsters learn valtJable life lessons ftom Sept. ·11 qttacks

__

.

A lesson in giving to thosr less fortunate was carried out at Bradbury
Elementary School following the terrorism attack in New York and Washington D. C.
The 77 students were challenged by
the school staff to give
th eir
lunchtime treat money for twO weeks
to the relief fund of the American
Red Cross.
The money which they usually
spent on pop, chips and candy. was put
into a "disaster jar" and then matched
at the end of the two weeks by the

· ·""'

.

by Yesenia Garcia, who wrote not
about the attack but about how much
she and her family appreciate life here.
The family came here from Mexico
to work in the farm fields.
Yesenia's letter was one of lppreciation. She wrote, "Living in the United States means a lot to me because if
I wasn't here I wouldn't have the education that I have right now or the
freedom that ·I have here.
"I have family in other places that
can't receive the freedom and education that I have became they don't
and can't afford having an education
because they help their parents working to be able to eat and to have
something to wear each day."

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY

Putting it on paper ofien provides
an outlet for frustrations as well as an
exercise in writing.
So last week some of the teachers at
staff.
The students contributed $358. 17, Southern Elementary had their stuthe teaching and other staff members dents write about the attack on
matched it, and a total of$730. 17 was 'America or otherwise express their
sent to Red Cross for assistance to the feelin gs about life in the United
States.
·
victims and their families .
I was impressed with one written

•••

One of four doctors in the Warren
Otologic Group featured in an recent

•••

Becky
Collills
with family and friends while
56 percent called for a less
hectic, more relaxed approach
to life. More than 80 percent
agreed most of .us buy and
consume far more than we
need.
Particular concern was
expressed about today's youth
being overly focused on buying and consumption. When
asked what is causing so many
of our society's troubles, the
respondents basically said our
values are out of whack.
Nearly 30 percent of the
respondents had voluntarily
downshifted to a simpler
lifestyle. The most common
changes were working fewer
hours, opting for a lower paying job, and withdrawing
from the workforce to stay at
home.
The Trends Research Institute of Rhinebeck, New York,
reports simplification is a
leading trend of our times.
The excessive, frenzied quality
of American life has left more .
and more people yearning for
balance and simplicity.
Some wake-up calls are dramatic, like the national
tragedy we've all just suffered.
Others can be of a more.
personal nature like surviving
a car crash with minor
injuries, being revived from
cardiac arrest after a neardeath experience, or the death
of a loved one.
Other wake-up calls are
more subtle, but the result is
always the same: a reminder
that this life of ours is precious, that we no longer have
time for pettiness, that we
have much ·to give, and the

GALLIPOLIS - Songfest at New L~e

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Board
of Health, 9 a.m., Heanh Depanment,
499 Jackson Pike.

-o.urot1 of God, AIIJIOII Road behind
C.UO..St Pal1s Warehouse, 6 p.m.,
with Delivered from ReedsvHie, plus
local church slngeiS. Refreshments
will follow.
GALLIPOLIS- Gory-Sheets-FOWler
reunion will be held at Raccoon
Creek County Polk, Sheller 5, 10
a.m. -dell&lt;.
BIDWELL- Layman Day ael'lice at
Mt. Cannel Bepllst Church, 2:30
p.m.with guest speaker Brother CllnIOn YOkely of Dayton.
GALLIPOLIS - Scavenger hunt
Raccoon Creek Country Pall&lt;, 1p.m.
meet at East playground Wild Tull&lt;ey
shelter. For Information, call Mcintyre
Park District 446&lt;1812 ext 256.
GALLIPOLIS -Andrew PaiiOIUI will
P19ach at White Oak Baplist Church.
ServiCes elan at 6:30 p.m.

Mo11d11y, 0cto11er 1
CHESHIRE- TOPS OH 1383
meets at 10 a.m., Cheshire Unned
Methodist Church. Weigh-In 8:45 •
9:45p.m. lnformalion, call367-o274.
· Weclnnday, Octobtr 3
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
re~rees, 11:30 a.m., Palk and Ride.
Ohio 160, to go to Dr.Willock'a for a

Flevlvalt
Revival at Garden of My Heart Taber·
nacre, Bidwell, Sept. 27-&lt;lct. 6. with
preachers Including Calvin Minnis,
Ray Cook, nm Phipps. and Tony
Hale. Singel8 Include Joyce Banks,
Headed Home and L.T. Preston.
Revival at Silver Memorial Freewill

~

·

"····

.. ,

WILLIAMS SR.

'

implant recipients. Last year it was
attended by 600 people, 3QO of whom
were deaf prior to receiving the
implant.
·

· Dylan, Cash among artists
on tribute album

•••

Holzer Hospice reportS that more
than $2,500 was raised to assist
patients and families receiving Hospice service in .Meigs County at the
recent benefit performance of Elvis
impersonator Dwight Icenhower ar
Meigs High School.
Sponsors were Taz's Marathon,
White's Funeral Home, Reed's'
Country Store, Ritchie's. Auto Sales;
Quality Furniture Plus, Inc., Riebel's
Auto Sales and Clark's Jewelry Store.
Pam Richards and Penny Mid"
dleswart coordinated the event.

Win Again." Beck cleverly
arranges "Your Cheatin'
. NASHVILLE, Tenn. - For Heart"- with its lyrics about
many years, record company · guilt making it hard to sleep
executives embellished hits -as a lullaby. ·
compilations
of
Hank
Williams released some
Williams Sr. with orchestras songs that didn't fit his usual
and choirs of . background honky-tonk music mode
vocalists.
under the name Luke the
It was a misguided effort to Drifter. They were usually
make Williams, who died on moral lessons, many times
jan. 1, 1953, more relevant to spoken rather than sung.
today's audiences.
On "Timeless," Cash recites
They should have realized " I Dreamed About Mama
that songs like "Your Cheatin' Last Night;' a sentimental ode
Heart" and "I'm So Lonec to the trials of motherhood.
some I Could Cry" wiU never
"Hank Williams has been
be outdated, so long as lo~ers ail inspiration for me, as he
betray each other and people has been for m(J&gt;t country
wallow in depression.
singers;' Cash said. "This song
Beck, Bob Dylan, Keb' is one of my favorites."
Mo', Keith Richards and
Lucinda Williams ·no
Johnny Cash understand. In relation to Hank - slows the
some cases, their versions on already mournful "Cold, Cold
the new Williams tribute Heart" to a funeral dirge.
ylbum, "Timeless," are more
''I've been singing 'Cold,
rustic than the originals by Cold · Heart' ever since . I
Williams, which were record- remember, so it was an easy
ed between 1947-1952.
choice for me," she said.
"! could easily have goiten "Hank Williams' music influslick country singers of 2001 enced me profoundly when .I ·
to make slick covers of Hank was very young. This recordWilliams tunes," said Luke ing gave me a chance to conLewis, president of Mercury tribute to his memory in my
Nashville Records. "They own individual way."
would have lined up at the
Hank Williams was born
door to do it. But that wasn't into poverty on Sept. 17,
what we were after."
1923, in Mount Olive, Ala.
Lewis, who made millions His family farmed strawberfor Mercury as a force behind ries, and his father worked as
the career of pop-country a logger before becoming ill.
superstar Shania Twain, started
Williams was born with a
the Lost Highway subsitliary deformed spine, which caused
label named after a him great pain and edged him
Wiliiams'
songto champi- toward alcohol as an escape.
1
on the rootsier side of counHe scored his first hi~.
try. Besid~s the tribute album, "Move It on Over:· in 1947.
t~e label has released music by starting a fiv~-year streak that
t~e
band Whiskeytown, established him as the proto~~inda .. Williams.
Ryan . typical tragic .hero: brilliant, "
,.,:'dams and actor Billy .Bob tortured and dead before 30.
Thornton.
The songs were sturdier
· "Part of the agenda .... is to than the man. Torty Bennett
not make music with radio in recorded "Cold, Cold Heart"
thind," Lewis said. "I discov- while Williams was still alive,
ered Hank Williams from an and Mercury has frequently
obscure record by Leon Rus- released hits collections that
sell, 'Hank Wilson Strikes sold well over the years.
Back: Part of my motivation
"I don't want to say anyis to try to do that again:'
. thing too bad about the peo. In his view, the artists on pie that came before me, but
·'.Timeless" are singers and perhaps that catalog wasn't
s~ngwriters "who have a treated with the respect it
body of work that hopefully deserved," Lewis said.
·be as timeless as Hank's
"We turned a corner with
work."
.
the box set ('The Complete
Also on the album are Hank Williams' in 1998). We
Adams, Sheryl Crow, . Mark · spared no expense, and were
Knopfler, Emmylou Harris, not looking to make money.
Tom Petty and Hank's grand- We were trying to break even
10n Hank Williams Ill. Their at best.
..l:lpproaches differ, except for
"That package is something
an emphasis on the lyrics and. that will be around .a hundred
avoidance of clutter.
years from now. We ve come a
' Richards
uses
New long way from those endless,
Orleans-style horns. to back cheap budget titles and
his anguished vocals on "You repa.ckages."
' .
BY JIM PATTERSON

ASSOCI~TED PRESS WRITER

(CI1arlerze Hoeflich is general managtr
of'TI!e Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy.)
'

MEIGS EVENTS
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Eagle Ridge Commu·
nlty Church, homecoming, Sunday.
Momlng seiVIce, 10 a.m., cany·ln
dinner at 110011, anemoon se!Vice, 1
p.m., with special singing by Calll1el·
Sutton Bluegmss.

a.m. with special speaker.
MONDAY

...

.,

I

I' .

I

ll,lfl

•

.

...

Baptist Church, Sapt. 23-30, 7 p.m.
Monday through Saturday, e p.m. on
Sunday. Evangelista are Donnie
Johnson and Dennis Pa1sona.
Singe,. Include Mitchell Family, Monday; Chnslian Messenge,., Tuesday;
Randy and Lisa SeaMs, Wednesday;
Fortner .Family, Thursday: Mercy, Frl·
day; New Beglnnel8, Seturday; and
Church Slnge&lt;s, Sunday.
Gospel meeting at Pyro Church of
Chrlst, Sept. 28-30, Fridey and Satur·
dey 7:30p.m., Sunday morning 10
a.m., Sunday evening 7 p.m., with
speaker Jack Dasher.

12' ............. .... ... $19.
15' ........ ' .. .... ..... $26.99
18' ..... .. ... .... ...... $32.99
24' ......... ..... ......$52.99

N
A
5

15X30 OVAL.. .... $47.99

IN GRoutiD POOL covas
18XJ6 ...... .. $63.99

20X40 ....... .$74.99

OLIDAY POOI.S, INC.
2973 PIEDMONT RD.
HUNTINGTON, WY

Mon

.~t.•;:; 0 • 5 , 00

Sot., !•30-MO

..

.

We are BioEnergetics for Balancec •..-";a;~ ~_.•
Living are proud to offer all area residents a
superior health program to help you feel (and look)
your very best! A painless, 1 hour BioEnergetics ;
Evaluation, performed by Dr. Nick W. Robinson, call ·
help address a majority of today's health concerns:
* weight management ·
* mental pet:formance
* energy and vitality

•'

Johnny Cash

Up on the roof ~

* natural defense/immune system support
* joint and bone support · * detoxification
*digestive health
*children's needs

Are you paying more than you can
really afford for personal health insurance? Or are you taking the risk of being r,J'.'I.

Self-employed?· Recent graduate? Nawly divorced?

BioEnergetics for Balanced Living is now
conveniently located at 444 Second Avenue! Can ·
today at (740) 446-7460 and Dr. Robinson will ·
personally answer any questions you have about this
revolutionary program! Be one of our first 25 callers
and receive a FREE nutritional analysis!
Now is the time for you to feel better and
regain control or your life! Let us help your
body help itself! Call us now at (740) 4467460 and start your path to a Balanced Body
and Better Health! !!

,

WW.HOLIDAYPOOL.COM~_: ·

Bob Dylan

will

··"""
ARE YOU FEELING
. ..,.,..
" ·"
AND LOOKING .
...
YOUR VERY BEST? ......
..

!O~!_~N~SPAS,

16XJ2 .. ...... $53.99

Sunday. September 30. 10cn

..

FAMILY

potluck cOokout For details, call
Rose Stoney at 446-3256.

sunday. SepteMber 10. 100!

time for doing what is impor- ties.
RUTLAND- Rutland Township
"
TIIJStee,
Monday,
5
p.m.
Rutland
Ara,.
tant is now.
It's a surefire signal that we
Station.
Quick says that after a need to slow down, simplify,
wake-up call, we become less and re-prioritize our lives:
REEDSVILLE- Olive Twp. """'Trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday. town· .
interested in things and more Millions of Americans are POMEROY - Bethel WoiShlp conship building. Call clelk at 378-6149 , ·
tal (fonnerly South Bethel Church)
focused on the treasures of seriously sleep-deprived while family pral~e S81Viee Sunday, at the
to be placed on agenda.
••
relationship, spiritual growth, about half of us just don't get now property on State Route 7. Spe·
CARPENTER - The Columbia
creative expression and ser- enough sleep. Sleepiness and cial p~esentatlons to the Royal
TownShip Trustees, Mondey, 7:30
Range,. and Missionenes will be
vice to others.
the related lack of alertness are made. The CORE drama team will
p.m. -t the fire station.
Isn't it amazing that now, principal or contributing fac- · perlo1m. Service begins at 6 p.m.
. SYRACUSE - Sunon Township
,•
with a wiena1 roast to follow. Public
even as the NASDAQ falls tors in accidents of all kinds.
welcome.
Trustees to meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. "
and we become unsure of our
For example, drivers who
at the Syracuse Village Hall.
·
financial futures, we've given fall asleep behind the wheel MIDDLEPORT- Homecoming,
'•
Chriatlan Fellowship Church,
TUESDAY
~·
over a half of a billion dollars account for nearly 50,000 Hobson
Sunday, 1:30 p.m. The Hoskins Fam- POMEROY- Salisbury Township
to the Red Cross for the dis- collisions and 1,500 deaths ily to sing. PoUUOI&lt; dinner at noon at
Tru-s ~~~gular meeting, 6 p.m.
Tuesday at the townShip building,
the
old
Legion
haD
In
Middleport.
aster victims of the recent annually.
Rockaprlnga Road.
attack?
Aside
from accidental SYRACUSE - Forest Run, MinClearly, wake-up calls injuries, think of how much eiBvllle, and Asbury United Methodlat ALFRED - Orange Township
Truateea, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the .;
remind us not to give undue we miss in daily life because Churoh congregatlona, WOIShlp
home of Clelk Osle Follrod. ·
.
experience at Asbury, Sundey, 11
attention to the material side of flatness and varying degrc:es
of life.
of exhaustion. And how do
How much clutter is there . you think lack of rest affects
in your drawers, closets, attic, relationships,
judgment,
II'RIIIG 'lAIII 'I lllll '.lA
_.,
I
basement ·or garage that is school performance, our
446 ·4524
~ ~ ~· taking up space and is seldom immune systems, our creativiFRI 8128101 • THURS t 014101
or never used? As you think ty?
TUES IS "BAAGAIN NIGHT"
about these and similar storWhen we start to make
•.
53.75 ADMISSION
(CIIITAIN
PUTU
..
II
YAV
II
DCLIJDII»
.
age areas in your .home or positive changes in our lives
workspace or better yet as you;· we ofien run into resistance.
actually look through . them
It can come from fears,
you .may be amazed at the doubts and old habits as weU
amount of stuff you've accu- as from family and friends. Just
mulated.knowing opposition may crop
Other kinds of clutter that up can help you get through
get in the way of a life are the it.
old hurts and resentments
You'll be more prepared to
we've been unable or unwill- face it and respond creatively.
(InformatiMI adapted from
ing to let go. The process of
cleating away these inqer "Simply Beautiful, Choosing an
blockages to the good life is . Uncluttered, Focused, Rich uje,"
similar to housecleaning. a fact sheet by Sam Quick,
Learn from mistakes and let l1uman development and family
them go.
relations specialist, Kentucky
Don't imprison yourself or Cooperati11e Extension Service.
others by an unwillingness to Becky Collins is a Gallia Counforgive. Remember, forgive- . ty Extension agent.)
ness doesn't condone behavior that caused suffering, and
~.. ,~,'
...
it doesn't keep us from speak• " ...,.
of
ing out and taking strong
..,~c.;
action to prevent future hurts
'fl;f
,_.,.
and mistreatment, When it
~..
' ~
.. 0
li ...
comes to getting rid of old
..,,.
~"'
,;t ....
emotional clutter and pre~
... ~
!.' ..
venting new inner clutter, for•
A "•~.
~ giveness is the treatment of
choice. A truly n1iraculous
process, forgiveness heals·,
refreshes, energizes, and opens
up an array of new possibili-

GALLIA HAPPENlNGS
Sunday, September 30
ADDISON - Preaching ael'lice at
Addison FreewHI Baptisl Church, 6
p.m., with Rick Barous.

Page C7

article on hearing in the Tribune
Chronical was Dr. Frmklin Rizer, a
Pomeroy High School graduate and
son of Wanda Rizer who still lives
here.
Rizer heads the cochlear implant
telm for totally or near deaf patients,
the largest of its kind in the Midwest.
He is one of the country's most experienced implant surgeons and has participated in nine FDA trials for
cochlear implants over the past 15
yean.
He performed the first cochlear
implant on a child Dec. 29, \987 at St.
Joseph Riverside !-lospital in Warren
and since then has traveled to several
continents to instruct on the procedure.
Rizer sponsors an annual picnic at
the Cleveland Zoo for cochlear

Simplifying life:·Path to happiness
Once an otf-cours'e test
pilot radioed back to the control tower. He said, ''I'm lost,
but I'm making record time."
_Many of us are like that test
pilot, moving faster, doing
more, not sure where we're
go mg.
With little time for reflection, we squeeze one activity
afier another into our frenzied
lives. But are we really getting
anywhere, or worse yet, will
we end up in the wrong
place?
Sam Quick, an extension
specialist for human development at the University of
Kentucky, suggests taking a
few minutes to write out your
responses to the following
four items:
t .Think about your dreams,
-,values, and 1ife goals. Lisnhe
five most important thmgs
you want to do with your life
from this point on.
2. Next, pretend you 'II die
suddenly in three months. List
the several most important
things you want to do with
your remaining time.
3. Look over your answers
to the first two items. Are
your two lists in harmony
with each other? Of aU the
things you listed, put a star by
the three most important.
4. What new steps toward
your dreams and key goals do
you want to begin taking?
According to national survey results, Americans are
seeking balance. When asked
to describe what would make
their lives more satisfying, the
answers don't focus on more
money or buying more stuff.
Instead of new toys, more
expensive cars and bigger
-homes, most Americans say
they want simpler lifestyles,
some quiet time, ideas more
in line with their core values.
In a 1995 study commissioned by the Merck Family
Fund, 66 percent of
Americans said they would
be much more satisfied if they
were able to spend more time

PageC&amp;

Dr. Nick W. Robinson

..

•· "'"

uninsured be'couse you think you just can't afford it? Call usl SuperMed One'" may be the answ~r.

Ws fast and simple. Call our toll-free number. Take a few minutes to answer same simple
questions. If you qualify, you can be enrolled ond insured within days.
find out how much you can save with SuperMed One~ Because Medico I Mutual is the larges!
and oldest heollhcare insurer in the State of Ohio- with 2.7 million members- we can offer you pnce
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can make it possible for us to save you money without. reduc1ng serv1ce or benefrts.

l&gt;a!;tor carl Ward of White Oak Baptist Church ·preaches from
rooftop to meet a challenge made during Joy FM:s fall
shclre-a-tt1on. Joy FM is a Southern gospel radio stat1on In
Pleasant, W.Va.

We want your photos!
..

Ohio valley Publishing Co. ivercomes )&lt;IUr photographs to accompany
wrlte.ops Here are a lew &amp;uldellnes for submissions:
.
• CorOr photographs ara accepted, proVIded they ~rein focus and have
good contrast. Nega~ves also are accepted; however, please Include a
print along with me nega~ve.
·
• Black-aOOWhlte photographs are accepted, proVIded they are In
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; howeve1,
please Include a print along with the nega\lve.
'
• Standar(j.slze slides are accepted, proVIded they are In locus and
have good contrast.
• Submitted photos shOuld be no smaller than standald wallet size
and no larger than 8 • 10.

' "'
.
Ad ngw to sgQI When a health crisis strikes, it's too late,

Call toll-free 1-soo,722-7331
Or Visit Us Online at ww-N.SuperMedOne.com
, .
&gt;

•

�unb_av.;__~_imt_•------tl~-·~_ __;,_AI_o~nc tl1e Riv-'r
Youngsters learn valtJable life lessons ftom Sept. ·11 qttacks

__

.

A lesson in giving to thosr less fortunate was carried out at Bradbury
Elementary School following the terrorism attack in New York and Washington D. C.
The 77 students were challenged by
the school staff to give
th eir
lunchtime treat money for twO weeks
to the relief fund of the American
Red Cross.
The money which they usually
spent on pop, chips and candy. was put
into a "disaster jar" and then matched
at the end of the two weeks by the

· ·""'

.

by Yesenia Garcia, who wrote not
about the attack but about how much
she and her family appreciate life here.
The family came here from Mexico
to work in the farm fields.
Yesenia's letter was one of lppreciation. She wrote, "Living in the United States means a lot to me because if
I wasn't here I wouldn't have the education that I have right now or the
freedom that ·I have here.
"I have family in other places that
can't receive the freedom and education that I have became they don't
and can't afford having an education
because they help their parents working to be able to eat and to have
something to wear each day."

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY

Putting it on paper ofien provides
an outlet for frustrations as well as an
exercise in writing.
So last week some of the teachers at
staff.
The students contributed $358. 17, Southern Elementary had their stuthe teaching and other staff members dents write about the attack on
matched it, and a total of$730. 17 was 'America or otherwise express their
sent to Red Cross for assistance to the feelin gs about life in the United
States.
·
victims and their families .
I was impressed with one written

•••

One of four doctors in the Warren
Otologic Group featured in an recent

•••

Becky
Collills
with family and friends while
56 percent called for a less
hectic, more relaxed approach
to life. More than 80 percent
agreed most of .us buy and
consume far more than we
need.
Particular concern was
expressed about today's youth
being overly focused on buying and consumption. When
asked what is causing so many
of our society's troubles, the
respondents basically said our
values are out of whack.
Nearly 30 percent of the
respondents had voluntarily
downshifted to a simpler
lifestyle. The most common
changes were working fewer
hours, opting for a lower paying job, and withdrawing
from the workforce to stay at
home.
The Trends Research Institute of Rhinebeck, New York,
reports simplification is a
leading trend of our times.
The excessive, frenzied quality
of American life has left more .
and more people yearning for
balance and simplicity.
Some wake-up calls are dramatic, like the national
tragedy we've all just suffered.
Others can be of a more.
personal nature like surviving
a car crash with minor
injuries, being revived from
cardiac arrest after a neardeath experience, or the death
of a loved one.
Other wake-up calls are
more subtle, but the result is
always the same: a reminder
that this life of ours is precious, that we no longer have
time for pettiness, that we
have much ·to give, and the

GALLIPOLIS - Songfest at New L~e

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County Board
of Health, 9 a.m., Heanh Depanment,
499 Jackson Pike.

-o.urot1 of God, AIIJIOII Road behind
C.UO..St Pal1s Warehouse, 6 p.m.,
with Delivered from ReedsvHie, plus
local church slngeiS. Refreshments
will follow.
GALLIPOLIS- Gory-Sheets-FOWler
reunion will be held at Raccoon
Creek County Polk, Sheller 5, 10
a.m. -dell&lt;.
BIDWELL- Layman Day ael'lice at
Mt. Cannel Bepllst Church, 2:30
p.m.with guest speaker Brother CllnIOn YOkely of Dayton.
GALLIPOLIS - Scavenger hunt
Raccoon Creek Country Pall&lt;, 1p.m.
meet at East playground Wild Tull&lt;ey
shelter. For Information, call Mcintyre
Park District 446&lt;1812 ext 256.
GALLIPOLIS -Andrew PaiiOIUI will
P19ach at White Oak Baplist Church.
ServiCes elan at 6:30 p.m.

Mo11d11y, 0cto11er 1
CHESHIRE- TOPS OH 1383
meets at 10 a.m., Cheshire Unned
Methodist Church. Weigh-In 8:45 •
9:45p.m. lnformalion, call367-o274.
· Weclnnday, Octobtr 3
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
re~rees, 11:30 a.m., Palk and Ride.
Ohio 160, to go to Dr.Willock'a for a

Flevlvalt
Revival at Garden of My Heart Taber·
nacre, Bidwell, Sept. 27-&lt;lct. 6. with
preachers Including Calvin Minnis,
Ray Cook, nm Phipps. and Tony
Hale. Singel8 Include Joyce Banks,
Headed Home and L.T. Preston.
Revival at Silver Memorial Freewill

~

·

"····

.. ,

WILLIAMS SR.

'

implant recipients. Last year it was
attended by 600 people, 3QO of whom
were deaf prior to receiving the
implant.
·

· Dylan, Cash among artists
on tribute album

•••

Holzer Hospice reportS that more
than $2,500 was raised to assist
patients and families receiving Hospice service in .Meigs County at the
recent benefit performance of Elvis
impersonator Dwight Icenhower ar
Meigs High School.
Sponsors were Taz's Marathon,
White's Funeral Home, Reed's'
Country Store, Ritchie's. Auto Sales;
Quality Furniture Plus, Inc., Riebel's
Auto Sales and Clark's Jewelry Store.
Pam Richards and Penny Mid"
dleswart coordinated the event.

Win Again." Beck cleverly
arranges "Your Cheatin'
. NASHVILLE, Tenn. - For Heart"- with its lyrics about
many years, record company · guilt making it hard to sleep
executives embellished hits -as a lullaby. ·
compilations
of
Hank
Williams released some
Williams Sr. with orchestras songs that didn't fit his usual
and choirs of . background honky-tonk music mode
vocalists.
under the name Luke the
It was a misguided effort to Drifter. They were usually
make Williams, who died on moral lessons, many times
jan. 1, 1953, more relevant to spoken rather than sung.
today's audiences.
On "Timeless," Cash recites
They should have realized " I Dreamed About Mama
that songs like "Your Cheatin' Last Night;' a sentimental ode
Heart" and "I'm So Lonec to the trials of motherhood.
some I Could Cry" wiU never
"Hank Williams has been
be outdated, so long as lo~ers ail inspiration for me, as he
betray each other and people has been for m(J&gt;t country
wallow in depression.
singers;' Cash said. "This song
Beck, Bob Dylan, Keb' is one of my favorites."
Mo', Keith Richards and
Lucinda Williams ·no
Johnny Cash understand. In relation to Hank - slows the
some cases, their versions on already mournful "Cold, Cold
the new Williams tribute Heart" to a funeral dirge.
ylbum, "Timeless," are more
''I've been singing 'Cold,
rustic than the originals by Cold · Heart' ever since . I
Williams, which were record- remember, so it was an easy
ed between 1947-1952.
choice for me," she said.
"! could easily have goiten "Hank Williams' music influslick country singers of 2001 enced me profoundly when .I ·
to make slick covers of Hank was very young. This recordWilliams tunes," said Luke ing gave me a chance to conLewis, president of Mercury tribute to his memory in my
Nashville Records. "They own individual way."
would have lined up at the
Hank Williams was born
door to do it. But that wasn't into poverty on Sept. 17,
what we were after."
1923, in Mount Olive, Ala.
Lewis, who made millions His family farmed strawberfor Mercury as a force behind ries, and his father worked as
the career of pop-country a logger before becoming ill.
superstar Shania Twain, started
Williams was born with a
the Lost Highway subsitliary deformed spine, which caused
label named after a him great pain and edged him
Wiliiams'
songto champi- toward alcohol as an escape.
1
on the rootsier side of counHe scored his first hi~.
try. Besid~s the tribute album, "Move It on Over:· in 1947.
t~e label has released music by starting a fiv~-year streak that
t~e
band Whiskeytown, established him as the proto~~inda .. Williams.
Ryan . typical tragic .hero: brilliant, "
,.,:'dams and actor Billy .Bob tortured and dead before 30.
Thornton.
The songs were sturdier
· "Part of the agenda .... is to than the man. Torty Bennett
not make music with radio in recorded "Cold, Cold Heart"
thind," Lewis said. "I discov- while Williams was still alive,
ered Hank Williams from an and Mercury has frequently
obscure record by Leon Rus- released hits collections that
sell, 'Hank Wilson Strikes sold well over the years.
Back: Part of my motivation
"I don't want to say anyis to try to do that again:'
. thing too bad about the peo. In his view, the artists on pie that came before me, but
·'.Timeless" are singers and perhaps that catalog wasn't
s~ngwriters "who have a treated with the respect it
body of work that hopefully deserved," Lewis said.
·be as timeless as Hank's
"We turned a corner with
work."
.
the box set ('The Complete
Also on the album are Hank Williams' in 1998). We
Adams, Sheryl Crow, . Mark · spared no expense, and were
Knopfler, Emmylou Harris, not looking to make money.
Tom Petty and Hank's grand- We were trying to break even
10n Hank Williams Ill. Their at best.
..l:lpproaches differ, except for
"That package is something
an emphasis on the lyrics and. that will be around .a hundred
avoidance of clutter.
years from now. We ve come a
' Richards
uses
New long way from those endless,
Orleans-style horns. to back cheap budget titles and
his anguished vocals on "You repa.ckages."
' .
BY JIM PATTERSON

ASSOCI~TED PRESS WRITER

(CI1arlerze Hoeflich is general managtr
of'TI!e Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy.)
'

MEIGS EVENTS
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Eagle Ridge Commu·
nlty Church, homecoming, Sunday.
Momlng seiVIce, 10 a.m., cany·ln
dinner at 110011, anemoon se!Vice, 1
p.m., with special singing by Calll1el·
Sutton Bluegmss.

a.m. with special speaker.
MONDAY

...

.,

I

I' .

I

ll,lfl

•

.

...

Baptist Church, Sapt. 23-30, 7 p.m.
Monday through Saturday, e p.m. on
Sunday. Evangelista are Donnie
Johnson and Dennis Pa1sona.
Singe,. Include Mitchell Family, Monday; Chnslian Messenge,., Tuesday;
Randy and Lisa SeaMs, Wednesday;
Fortner .Family, Thursday: Mercy, Frl·
day; New Beglnnel8, Seturday; and
Church Slnge&lt;s, Sunday.
Gospel meeting at Pyro Church of
Chrlst, Sept. 28-30, Fridey and Satur·
dey 7:30p.m., Sunday morning 10
a.m., Sunday evening 7 p.m., with
speaker Jack Dasher.

12' ............. .... ... $19.
15' ........ ' .. .... ..... $26.99
18' ..... .. ... .... ...... $32.99
24' ......... ..... ......$52.99

N
A
5

15X30 OVAL.. .... $47.99

IN GRoutiD POOL covas
18XJ6 ...... .. $63.99

20X40 ....... .$74.99

OLIDAY POOI.S, INC.
2973 PIEDMONT RD.
HUNTINGTON, WY

Mon

.~t.•;:; 0 • 5 , 00

Sot., !•30-MO

..

.

We are BioEnergetics for Balancec •..-";a;~ ~_.•
Living are proud to offer all area residents a
superior health program to help you feel (and look)
your very best! A painless, 1 hour BioEnergetics ;
Evaluation, performed by Dr. Nick W. Robinson, call ·
help address a majority of today's health concerns:
* weight management ·
* mental pet:formance
* energy and vitality

•'

Johnny Cash

Up on the roof ~

* natural defense/immune system support
* joint and bone support · * detoxification
*digestive health
*children's needs

Are you paying more than you can
really afford for personal health insurance? Or are you taking the risk of being r,J'.'I.

Self-employed?· Recent graduate? Nawly divorced?

BioEnergetics for Balanced Living is now
conveniently located at 444 Second Avenue! Can ·
today at (740) 446-7460 and Dr. Robinson will ·
personally answer any questions you have about this
revolutionary program! Be one of our first 25 callers
and receive a FREE nutritional analysis!
Now is the time for you to feel better and
regain control or your life! Let us help your
body help itself! Call us now at (740) 4467460 and start your path to a Balanced Body
and Better Health! !!

,

WW.HOLIDAYPOOL.COM~_: ·

Bob Dylan

will

··"""
ARE YOU FEELING
. ..,.,..
" ·"
AND LOOKING .
...
YOUR VERY BEST? ......
..

!O~!_~N~SPAS,

16XJ2 .. ...... $53.99

Sunday. September 30. 10cn

..

FAMILY

potluck cOokout For details, call
Rose Stoney at 446-3256.

sunday. SepteMber 10. 100!

time for doing what is impor- ties.
RUTLAND- Rutland Township
"
TIIJStee,
Monday,
5
p.m.
Rutland
Ara,.
tant is now.
It's a surefire signal that we
Station.
Quick says that after a need to slow down, simplify,
wake-up call, we become less and re-prioritize our lives:
REEDSVILLE- Olive Twp. """'Trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday. town· .
interested in things and more Millions of Americans are POMEROY - Bethel WoiShlp conship building. Call clelk at 378-6149 , ·
tal (fonnerly South Bethel Church)
focused on the treasures of seriously sleep-deprived while family pral~e S81Viee Sunday, at the
to be placed on agenda.
••
relationship, spiritual growth, about half of us just don't get now property on State Route 7. Spe·
CARPENTER - The Columbia
creative expression and ser- enough sleep. Sleepiness and cial p~esentatlons to the Royal
TownShip Trustees, Mondey, 7:30
Range,. and Missionenes will be
vice to others.
the related lack of alertness are made. The CORE drama team will
p.m. -t the fire station.
Isn't it amazing that now, principal or contributing fac- · perlo1m. Service begins at 6 p.m.
. SYRACUSE - Sunon Township
,•
with a wiena1 roast to follow. Public
even as the NASDAQ falls tors in accidents of all kinds.
welcome.
Trustees to meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. "
and we become unsure of our
For example, drivers who
at the Syracuse Village Hall.
·
financial futures, we've given fall asleep behind the wheel MIDDLEPORT- Homecoming,
'•
Chriatlan Fellowship Church,
TUESDAY
~·
over a half of a billion dollars account for nearly 50,000 Hobson
Sunday, 1:30 p.m. The Hoskins Fam- POMEROY- Salisbury Township
to the Red Cross for the dis- collisions and 1,500 deaths ily to sing. PoUUOI&lt; dinner at noon at
Tru-s ~~~gular meeting, 6 p.m.
Tuesday at the townShip building,
the
old
Legion
haD
In
Middleport.
aster victims of the recent annually.
Rockaprlnga Road.
attack?
Aside
from accidental SYRACUSE - Forest Run, MinClearly, wake-up calls injuries, think of how much eiBvllle, and Asbury United Methodlat ALFRED - Orange Township
Truateea, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the .;
remind us not to give undue we miss in daily life because Churoh congregatlona, WOIShlp
home of Clelk Osle Follrod. ·
.
experience at Asbury, Sundey, 11
attention to the material side of flatness and varying degrc:es
of life.
of exhaustion. And how do
How much clutter is there . you think lack of rest affects
in your drawers, closets, attic, relationships,
judgment,
II'RIIIG 'lAIII 'I lllll '.lA
_.,
I
basement ·or garage that is school performance, our
446 ·4524
~ ~ ~· taking up space and is seldom immune systems, our creativiFRI 8128101 • THURS t 014101
or never used? As you think ty?
TUES IS "BAAGAIN NIGHT"
about these and similar storWhen we start to make
•.
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.
age areas in your .home or positive changes in our lives
workspace or better yet as you;· we ofien run into resistance.
actually look through . them
It can come from fears,
you .may be amazed at the doubts and old habits as weU
amount of stuff you've accu- as from family and friends. Just
mulated.knowing opposition may crop
Other kinds of clutter that up can help you get through
get in the way of a life are the it.
old hurts and resentments
You'll be more prepared to
we've been unable or unwill- face it and respond creatively.
(InformatiMI adapted from
ing to let go. The process of
cleating away these inqer "Simply Beautiful, Choosing an
blockages to the good life is . Uncluttered, Focused, Rich uje,"
similar to housecleaning. a fact sheet by Sam Quick,
Learn from mistakes and let l1uman development and family
them go.
relations specialist, Kentucky
Don't imprison yourself or Cooperati11e Extension Service.
others by an unwillingness to Becky Collins is a Gallia Counforgive. Remember, forgive- . ty Extension agent.)
ness doesn't condone behavior that caused suffering, and
~.. ,~,'
...
it doesn't keep us from speak• " ...,.
of
ing out and taking strong
..,~c.;
action to prevent future hurts
'fl;f
,_.,.
and mistreatment, When it
~..
' ~
.. 0
li ...
comes to getting rid of old
..,,.
~"'
,;t ....
emotional clutter and pre~
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!.' ..
venting new inner clutter, for•
A "•~.
~ giveness is the treatment of
choice. A truly n1iraculous
process, forgiveness heals·,
refreshes, energizes, and opens
up an array of new possibili-

GALLIA HAPPENlNGS
Sunday, September 30
ADDISON - Preaching ael'lice at
Addison FreewHI Baptisl Church, 6
p.m., with Rick Barous.

Page C7

article on hearing in the Tribune
Chronical was Dr. Frmklin Rizer, a
Pomeroy High School graduate and
son of Wanda Rizer who still lives
here.
Rizer heads the cochlear implant
telm for totally or near deaf patients,
the largest of its kind in the Midwest.
He is one of the country's most experienced implant surgeons and has participated in nine FDA trials for
cochlear implants over the past 15
yean.
He performed the first cochlear
implant on a child Dec. 29, \987 at St.
Joseph Riverside !-lospital in Warren
and since then has traveled to several
continents to instruct on the procedure.
Rizer sponsors an annual picnic at
the Cleveland Zoo for cochlear

Simplifying life:·Path to happiness
Once an otf-cours'e test
pilot radioed back to the control tower. He said, ''I'm lost,
but I'm making record time."
_Many of us are like that test
pilot, moving faster, doing
more, not sure where we're
go mg.
With little time for reflection, we squeeze one activity
afier another into our frenzied
lives. But are we really getting
anywhere, or worse yet, will
we end up in the wrong
place?
Sam Quick, an extension
specialist for human development at the University of
Kentucky, suggests taking a
few minutes to write out your
responses to the following
four items:
t .Think about your dreams,
-,values, and 1ife goals. Lisnhe
five most important thmgs
you want to do with your life
from this point on.
2. Next, pretend you 'II die
suddenly in three months. List
the several most important
things you want to do with
your remaining time.
3. Look over your answers
to the first two items. Are
your two lists in harmony
with each other? Of aU the
things you listed, put a star by
the three most important.
4. What new steps toward
your dreams and key goals do
you want to begin taking?
According to national survey results, Americans are
seeking balance. When asked
to describe what would make
their lives more satisfying, the
answers don't focus on more
money or buying more stuff.
Instead of new toys, more
expensive cars and bigger
-homes, most Americans say
they want simpler lifestyles,
some quiet time, ideas more
in line with their core values.
In a 1995 study commissioned by the Merck Family
Fund, 66 percent of
Americans said they would
be much more satisfied if they
were able to spend more time

PageC&amp;

Dr. Nick W. Robinson

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l&gt;a!;tor carl Ward of White Oak Baptist Church ·preaches from
rooftop to meet a challenge made during Joy FM:s fall
shclre-a-tt1on. Joy FM is a Southern gospel radio stat1on In
Pleasant, W.Va.

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.NBC puts Emeril on prime-tim~
NEW YORK (AP) Emrril the Underdog.
That's how chef and TV
personality Em'eril Lagasse
sees his role in the drama
known as the fall television
~ason. Believe it or not, the
confident man behind the
..Bam!., says it's . a part he's
used to playing.
Lagasse, already the top
draw on cable's Foo&lt;:l Network with "Emeril Live" and
"Essence ofEmeril," is getting
his own half-hour comedy on
NBC. Plain old ·~Emeril," premiering Sept. 18, is being
written by Linda Bloodworth
and directed by her husband
Harry Thomason, the team
behind "Designing Women"
and "Evening Shade."
The series already is the
victim of some bad buzz. Severa! changes have been made
since the poorly received·
pilot,
including
adding
Robert Urich to the cast as
Lagasse's agent and concentrating on workplace antics
instead of a fictional family.
But Lagasse has faith that
his populist, no-frills style wi!J
attract viewers, if not praise
from critics.
.J "We've already been beaten
up · by the 'Hollywood.
expcm; and that's OK," he
says. "'l'he"foodie community
used to bash me, too."
· That was before he opened
his ·six restaurants - all of
which rank among the 20
most popular in their respec-.
rive cities, ac.cording to Zagat

Bluegrass community
gathers for ~eeklong
celebration rn ·Kentucky

Surv~

dining guides - and
taped more than 1.000 cooking shows . .
Turns out, Lagasse's leap
from reality to sitcom isn't a
big one: On the new show, he
plays a chef with a TV .cooking show who struggles to
balance work and home
(Mary Page Keller plays his
wife).
."It's not a stretch for me to
be Emeril," he says. So far, the
hardest part was k.issing his
on-screen wife when his reallife wife, Alden, was in the
studio. "I guess that was act. "
mg.
To Thomason, the secret
ingredient for the show is the
real Lagasse. He doesn't want
Lagasse "the actor," he wants
Lagasse "the everyman."
"He comes across as a guy
everyone would want to
know. He brings a familiarity
of people you know to TV."
Those qualities are what first
attracted Bloodworth and
Thomason.
"Linda started watching the
Food Nerwork a couple of
nights in a row. One night she
woke me, and she just
thought he's a star," Thomason explains.
All the Hollywood attention is flattering, Lagasse says,
6\ri he'll never give up the
food that first brought him
accolades. In fact, he's mixing
a little bit of his rwo worlds
together, posting recipes on
NBC's Web site.

30,2001

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Imagine being a rock
music fan, arid getting to talk
about the blues with Mick
Jagger, then jam with The
Rolling Stones.
The reality for bluegrass
fans is · pretty dose to that
once a year, during bluegrass
week in Louisville, Ky. Chatting with the biggest stars of
the genre over a meal or
picking a song or two is not
only possible, but likely.
" l·t's a very open atmosphere;' said Dan Hays, president of the International
Bluegrass Music Association.
"You run into great musi-

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-7

Page Dl
Sunday, September :so.• 1001

cians in the hallways, ride
with them in the elevators
and see them at breakfast.
There's very little separation."
The organization holds
bluegrass week in Louisville
every October. This year,
World of Bluegrass 2001
starts Monday and runs
through the weekend; with
the International Bluegrass
Music Awards held Thursday
night at the Kentucky Center
for the Arts.
Worries that the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks wOuld hurt
attendance have proved
unfounded so far, Hayes said. .

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest performed last week.
Each day's closing figures are provitkd by Advest ofGallipolis.

MON.

18'1.

+

AmTechiSBC

+

BankOne

. ftcwn Pap Cl

Meigs Center Director Gina
Pines, recently attended a
technology summit sponsored
by U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucasville.
That conference confirmed
what Davenport, Pines and
others concerned with community development have
· believed for a long time: The
. future is in technology.
Pines said last week the university includes economic
development as a top priority,
'and that communities like
Meigs County are perfect for
the burgeoning e-commerce
business.
Why?
Because· Midwestern communities are' generally demographically stable, and that
means a steady, dependable
workforce.
Davenport said Meigs
County has other advantages
to offer, as well, including
proximity to electricity gener~
arion fa cilities, and fiber-optic
telephone lines whi ch are
essential for the fastest' Internet access.
"We need to get the word
out that we're ready ftir this
type of ind~try." Davenport
said.
"The
Appalachian
Regional Commission and
other agencies involved in
development in communities
like ours are becoming more
involved m promoting ahd

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BWEGRASS - Ronnie McCoury, left, and Del McCoury of
the Del McCoury Band perform In Louisville, Ky. Bluegrass
devotees will gather in Kentucky for the World of Bluegrass
2001 to celebrate a watershed year for the music genre.
(AP)

;nclucles 300 anytime. and·1 noo rngl1t &amp; weekend mmutes per mont11

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The trading floor of the New York StOCk Exchange was a flurry of activity this. Selling swept Wall Street when the stock
market re-opened, sending the Dow Jones Industrials down C!S much as 600 points and below 9,000 for the first time
In 2t years. Now the market seems to making a comeback but some wonder how long it will last. (AP)

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After operating in Parkersburg since
"''ve been doing HVAC for 23
1980, Al)lerican is the biggest Bryant years," said Bobby Wheeler, American
dealership in West Virginia, handling service technician said. "And he's the
large commercial, residential , church- first man I've ever seen in hearing and
es, hospiral, schools and industrial cooling that said, 'I want you to be
heating and cooling needs.
honest with the customers, treat them
"We can work on anything that fair and don't cheat anyone, that's not
goes down that is refrigerated,'' what we're h~re for.' "
Wheeler told of a tim e when he
McWilliams said. "And that's anything
didn't charge a customer after going
- barges, pO\ver plants, anything."
Bonded, licensed and insured, out on a Saturday call to help an older
American prides itself on customer man who just couldn't see well
serv1ce.
Please see Service, Dl

·+\ "J ... •'\ ~ ~ "''·\ .,! .

Kmart

right under his nose.
He knew one other thing:
that the central truths of his
film remain intact.
"What better place for terrorists to strike?" says Burns in
a
shoulda-seen- it- coming
tone. "Growtd zero of a global
commercial culture for 400
years, since the Dutch got here.

t

+

DuPont

19l'.

POINT· PLEASANT, WVa.
"This is something I believe in, quality work at a fair price. beats bad work
at any price," Bert McWilliams, owner
of American · Heating and Cooling

37\

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By Sept. 11, the program was
all done, all 4 1/2 hours ofit. It
would stay that way. But Burns
· knew his film, while the same,
was also different. When the
WorldTradeCenterfellpreyto
terrorists, taking thousands of
victims with it, he knew the

developing technology-b=d
industries.
"The good thing about ecommerce is that you don't
need to be tied down geographically."
.
This 21st-century partnership between the university
and its community will likely
increase in scope, as efforts to
attract e-commerce businesses
and to train a qualified workforce become more concentrated.
Pines envisions a day when
qualified Meigs County residents can work at e-commerce ufarms" right here in
the community - facilities
which house a number of ecommerce companies under
one roof.
"This university has made it
a major mission to .become
involved in the field of technology, and we're committed
to doing all we can to provide
assistance, not only to our studen ts, but to the community
as a whole," Pines said.
"That involves everything
from worldwide teleconferencing, which is now possible
right here at the Meigs Cen- ·
ter, to remaining extremely.
open to ideas about continuing education for the non- traditional student."
Most of the students who
have received their degrees in
I. T. were already employed
wh en they began their course
of study, but many, Pines said,
have experienced promotions,
pay raises and other benefits
because of their new degree.

14'4

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FRI.

15

+

Aahland Inc.

AT&amp;T

THU.

Owner stands behind stores service
TIMES.SENTINEL STAff

47'4

Bob Evans

Loving 'New York'
more than ever, as
-the finale premieres
No
way could Ric Burns have
seen it coming several years
back, when he began "New
York: A Documentary Film."
: No way could he have imagined it in November 1999,
when the first five chapters of
this epic urban portrait reached
the air.
Even a month ago, what
American was braced for the
tragedy?
Not Burns, looking ahead to
this Sunday and Monday (9
p.m. EDT on PBS), when the
final chapters of "New York"
take his viewers on the last leg
of his grand tour: from the
Crash of 1929 to the soaring
promise of the new millenni-

WED.

44'!.

Harley Davldaon

NEW YORK (AP) -

TUE.

+

AEP

BU

GOOD COOKIN' - Chef-TV personality Emert! Lagasse gestures near the 59th Street Bridge in 'New York Lagasse,
already the top draw on cable's Food Network with • Emerll
Live• and "Essence of Emeril, • is getting his own half-hour
comedy on NBC. Plain-old "Emeril," premiering Sept. 18, is
being written by Linda Bloodworth and directed by her husband
Harry Thomason, the team behind "Designing Women• and
"Evening Shade.· (AP)

AMERICAN HEATING AND COOLING

Economy worst
In eight yean

terrorist hijackings, Delta Air
Lines said Wednesday it will
cut its flight schedule and
work force by about 15 per. WASHINGTON (AP) - . cent, eliminating up to 13,000
: The global economy this year jobs.
: will turn in its weakest perforDelta Chairman Leo f.
mance in eight years, the Inter- Mullin said he had no choice
national Monetary Fund said because the slump threatens
Wednesday.
the very survival of the nation's
Against this backdrop, the third-largest airline.
IMF's chief economist, KenDelta was the last of the
neth Rogoff, at first declared a nation's six major airlines to
recession in the United States a announce cuts in the aftermath
"done deal." At the end of his of the Sept. 11 attacks on New
briefing, he sought to soften York and Washington. Dallasthat comment by saying it based Southwest is the only
"remains to be seen" whether major airline that has not
the Sept. 11 attacks would announced job reductions or
throw t~e already ailing U.S. schedule cuts. since the attacks.
. economy into a recession this
Overall, U.S. airlines plan to
year.
shed about 93,000 jobs, with
Even before the strikes, the aircraft maker The Boeing Co.
IMF, a 183-nation lending cutting up to 30,000 more by
agency, reduced its global the end of next year, as fright. growth forecast for this year to ened Americans largely have
just 2.6 percent, a 0.6 percent- abandoned air travel.
age-point reduction from May.
, The new figure would mark
. the. poorest showing since
1993.

Airplane maken ·
cutUng Jobs

TORONTO (AP) - Air
Canada · and Bombardier,
Canada's dominant airline and
airplane !Jl.aker, are ·cutting a
ATLANTA (AP) - With total of 8,800 more jobs folmost of its planes flying tWo- · lowing the Sept. 11 terrorist
thirds empty since the recent attacks in the United States.

.Airlines continue
to cut Jobs

Have a business news item?
Give us • all at (740) 446-1341. ext.n

Completes counes

sales and service staff in Gallipolis, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and surrounding areas.
Drummond brings to the company
MIDDLEPORT - Jennifer Sayre
several
years of insurance experience in
recently completed
cosmetology courses the Gallipolis area, and is well received
at Meigs
High as an insurance professional by his peers
School and is now and colleagues.
He can be reached at 1-800-316state certified.
1248
(office) and 1 ~740-446-2 8 1 1
Sayre will be tak- .
ing on new cus- (home) .
tomers at Kay's
Beauty Salon in
Middleport Starting
Sept. 5.

year term on the board.
Sloan is a partner with the Athens law
finn of Mollica, Gall, Sloan &amp; Sillery
Co., LPA. Sloan, an attorn ey since 1973,
is admitted to practice before all state of
Ohi o and federal court' as well as
before the U.S. Supreme Court.
.
He is a member and former president
of the Athens County Bar Association, a
member of the Ohio State Bar Association, a member and former state president of the Ohio Association of Civil
Trial Attorneys, and a member of the
Defense Research Institute. In 1992, he
was recognized as a Fellow of the Ohio
State Bar Foundation.
ATHENS - Sheltering Arms HosSloan is also heavily involved in campital Foundation Inc.'s annual meeting is munity activities and has assisted with
Sept. 25 at 7 p.m.
O'Bleness' fund-raising campaigns for
Sheltering Arms is many years. He is a member and past
the patent corpora- president of the Athens Noon Rotary
tion for 0 'Bleness Club, a board member and current vice
Memorial Hospital.
chairman of the Athens County H abitat
The meeting, to be for Humanity, a member and past chairheld in the hospital's man of the admipistrative council at the
basement conference First United Methodist Church of
rooms, will include Athens, and past president of the Athens
the election of one Athletic Boosters.
new member to the
He also served on the Athens Counfoundation's board of ty C hildren Services board for 13 years,
trustees. Steven T. Sloan, an Athens resident, has been nominated for a fourPlease see Business, Dl

Foundation
to hold iiieeting

Joins Monumental
staff
GALLIPOLIS -

Monumental Life
Insurance Co., Parkersburg, W.Va., a
leader in life insurance coverage, cancer expense coverage
and various heath
products, including
medical ·
and
Medicare . Supplement
Insurance,
announces that Larry
Drummond is the newest addition to its

Changes in legislation
affict local farmers
Farmers, don't get caught
without proper lighting on
your farm equipment.
On Oct. 1, 2000, Ohio
Substitute House Bill 484
Hal
became effective, requiring
new lighting and marking
Kneen
.of agricultural equipment
and tractors made before
GUEST VIEW
2001 and traveling on public highways.There must be
two amber flashing lighl!l · tors facing to the front' 'of
located on the left and right the multi-wheeled tractors.
of the tractor and within 16 The law also changed the
inches of the lateral extrem- need of lighting and marking to incorporate any time
ities.
between
Hsunset and sunIn .addition, there must be
installation of rwo red rise" and "when natural
reflectors facing the rear and light is not sufficient to rentwo amber or yellow reflecPiuH ... KnHn,DI

·d

McKinney to discuss
tobaao· (buyout' plan
"What about this buyout?"
It is a question asked of
me every day. The short
answer is no one knows for
sure whether or not there
will be a buyou t, because it
is in the hands of our lawmakers.
After 5 years of tobacco .
buyout teasers, we are well ·
accustomed to such speculative answers. However, if you
want to know the details of
the buyout program that has
been proposed to lawmakers, plan to attend the annual Pride-In-Tobacto Association banquet on Oct. 9
beginning at 7 p.m. at the

•

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

Senior R esource Center in
Gallipolis.
Danny McKi nney, CEO
of the Burley Tobacco
Growers Cooperative Association (the pool) will be
here to present the details of

Pluse ... Byrnes, D8

�wv

Ohio • Point

.NBC puts Emeril on prime-tim~
NEW YORK (AP) Emrril the Underdog.
That's how chef and TV
personality Em'eril Lagasse
sees his role in the drama
known as the fall television
~ason. Believe it or not, the
confident man behind the
..Bam!., says it's . a part he's
used to playing.
Lagasse, already the top
draw on cable's Foo&lt;:l Network with "Emeril Live" and
"Essence ofEmeril," is getting
his own half-hour comedy on
NBC. Plain old ·~Emeril," premiering Sept. 18, is being
written by Linda Bloodworth
and directed by her husband
Harry Thomason, the team
behind "Designing Women"
and "Evening Shade."
The series already is the
victim of some bad buzz. Severa! changes have been made
since the poorly received·
pilot,
including
adding
Robert Urich to the cast as
Lagasse's agent and concentrating on workplace antics
instead of a fictional family.
But Lagasse has faith that
his populist, no-frills style wi!J
attract viewers, if not praise
from critics.
.J "We've already been beaten
up · by the 'Hollywood.
expcm; and that's OK," he
says. "'l'he"foodie community
used to bash me, too."
· That was before he opened
his ·six restaurants - all of
which rank among the 20
most popular in their respec-.
rive cities, ac.cording to Zagat

Bluegrass community
gathers for ~eeklong
celebration rn ·Kentucky

Surv~

dining guides - and
taped more than 1.000 cooking shows . .
Turns out, Lagasse's leap
from reality to sitcom isn't a
big one: On the new show, he
plays a chef with a TV .cooking show who struggles to
balance work and home
(Mary Page Keller plays his
wife).
."It's not a stretch for me to
be Emeril," he says. So far, the
hardest part was k.issing his
on-screen wife when his reallife wife, Alden, was in the
studio. "I guess that was act. "
mg.
To Thomason, the secret
ingredient for the show is the
real Lagasse. He doesn't want
Lagasse "the actor," he wants
Lagasse "the everyman."
"He comes across as a guy
everyone would want to
know. He brings a familiarity
of people you know to TV."
Those qualities are what first
attracted Bloodworth and
Thomason.
"Linda started watching the
Food Nerwork a couple of
nights in a row. One night she
woke me, and she just
thought he's a star," Thomason explains.
All the Hollywood attention is flattering, Lagasse says,
6\ri he'll never give up the
food that first brought him
accolades. In fact, he's mixing
a little bit of his rwo worlds
together, posting recipes on
NBC's Web site.

30,2001

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Imagine being a rock
music fan, arid getting to talk
about the blues with Mick
Jagger, then jam with The
Rolling Stones.
The reality for bluegrass
fans is · pretty dose to that
once a year, during bluegrass
week in Louisville, Ky. Chatting with the biggest stars of
the genre over a meal or
picking a song or two is not
only possible, but likely.
" l·t's a very open atmosphere;' said Dan Hays, president of the International
Bluegrass Music Association.
"You run into great musi-

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-7

Page Dl
Sunday, September :so.• 1001

cians in the hallways, ride
with them in the elevators
and see them at breakfast.
There's very little separation."
The organization holds
bluegrass week in Louisville
every October. This year,
World of Bluegrass 2001
starts Monday and runs
through the weekend; with
the International Bluegrass
Music Awards held Thursday
night at the Kentucky Center
for the Arts.
Worries that the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks wOuld hurt
attendance have proved
unfounded so far, Hayes said. .

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest performed last week.
Each day's closing figures are provitkd by Advest ofGallipolis.

MON.

18'1.

+

AmTechiSBC

+

BankOne

. ftcwn Pap Cl

Meigs Center Director Gina
Pines, recently attended a
technology summit sponsored
by U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucasville.
That conference confirmed
what Davenport, Pines and
others concerned with community development have
· believed for a long time: The
. future is in technology.
Pines said last week the university includes economic
development as a top priority,
'and that communities like
Meigs County are perfect for
the burgeoning e-commerce
business.
Why?
Because· Midwestern communities are' generally demographically stable, and that
means a steady, dependable
workforce.
Davenport said Meigs
County has other advantages
to offer, as well, including
proximity to electricity gener~
arion fa cilities, and fiber-optic
telephone lines whi ch are
essential for the fastest' Internet access.
"We need to get the word
out that we're ready ftir this
type of ind~try." Davenport
said.
"The
Appalachian
Regional Commission and
other agencies involved in
development in communities
like ours are becoming more
involved m promoting ahd

15~'

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BWEGRASS - Ronnie McCoury, left, and Del McCoury of
the Del McCoury Band perform In Louisville, Ky. Bluegrass
devotees will gather in Kentucky for the World of Bluegrass
2001 to celebrate a watershed year for the music genre.
(AP)

;nclucles 300 anytime. and·1 noo rngl1t &amp; weekend mmutes per mont11

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HIGHLIGHTS

•

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;Qcal plans &amp;feat~res

•

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toll-free USA feature

home state plans

toll-free USA feature included
· with home state plans

phone directory
stores up to 75
names and
humbers

cal anyy,f1ere 'hithin the cootinental u.s.
toll-free from~ home state plan calling
'o1sit your local u.s. cellular• store for details

otder at homt&gt; HUE deUvory

~u.s. Cellular.
We connect with you7

For adMr IfNI~ whit 1101 ol 01( txdootlvo Nlhodztd tgtlll:

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lOaf 0111 Peak Conrnunict1ioM, 206 Morgaortown St., \304) ·329·3299
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.
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Mto•l I 9 Colluor Assoc~tOI, Maninaburv Mal, 800 Foxcroft Aw., 1304} 263-9085 ·
11i111n M1nford Tele!l/IOne. IOJIJ S.A. 139. 174lll820-2151
.
M.llllld SMmian Becrrooics, 507 N. Main SL, 13041536-1371
. MI. ito,e Tho Collular GRIIJII, Crossroads Mal, (3041255-7137
Wmlfy Pike Cotrtry Pawn. 720 W. Emmitt Ave .. IJ40194J-JIOI
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For bulinel111 with five 011111111 6na please caH 1-877-947·5729.

The trading floor of the New York StOCk Exchange was a flurry of activity this. Selling swept Wall Street when the stock
market re-opened, sending the Dow Jones Industrials down C!S much as 600 points and below 9,000 for the first time
In 2t years. Now the market seems to making a comeback but some wonder how long it will last. (AP)

' ;, 12'1.

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RockMII f

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"And I stand behind that all the
way.
Now, American is expanding to
offer its quality services to Mason
County and the surrounding area.

21Y.

23~.

Pramler

film had changed retroactively,

BIClloy Bac~B\' Crossing Shopping Ctr., 1304)255·3990
B~ East Pointe Shopping Ctr., 154 Emily Dr., (3041622-2331
CillllcOIIIt U.S. Cellular, 750 Westam Aw.. (7401702_.872
Cllllcallo ln-TO&lt;J&lt;h Wireless &amp; More, 34 East Water, 174lll179-6999
Ellol 220 Tl!ird St. 1304)636-9311
·
F-.- 17 Mit«&lt;etown Ad., Route 73, 13041363-7881 ·
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JackHo ClaasM: Plaza, 4ll8 E. Huron, 17401188.0016
Motp- Morgantown Commons, 6518 Mall Aoad. l3041983·1355
....,._. 14 Stilurban Court Plaza, ChHtnut Ridge Ad., 13041598·2450
Now lloslao U.S. CeiWr, New Bo111011 Shipping Canter, 4ll10 Rhodes Avo..
174111456·8722
l'ortlllootll Hilltop Centor, 2736 Sc~to Tllii. IJ401355.(1()58
"*- Pine Plaza, 1233 Stafford Dr.• l3041481·3855
1016 Wal Street, 1304)872-6922
Waverly USCC Wai-Mart Kiosk, 900 Wasl &amp;nm~ Avenue, 1740(947.(1()69

31 },

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Nokia 252C

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for •&gt;$30 per month

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Flratar

1,3oo· minutes

--

30'!.

~~

After operating in Parkersburg since
"''ve been doing HVAC for 23
1980, Al)lerican is the biggest Bryant years," said Bobby Wheeler, American
dealership in West Virginia, handling service technician said. "And he's the
large commercial, residential , church- first man I've ever seen in hearing and
es, hospiral, schools and industrial cooling that said, 'I want you to be
heating and cooling needs.
honest with the customers, treat them
"We can work on anything that fair and don't cheat anyone, that's not
goes down that is refrigerated,'' what we're h~re for.' "
Wheeler told of a tim e when he
McWilliams said. "And that's anything
didn't charge a customer after going
- barges, pO\ver plants, anything."
Bonded, licensed and insured, out on a Saturday call to help an older
American prides itself on customer man who just couldn't see well
serv1ce.
Please see Service, Dl

·+\ "J ... •'\ ~ ~ "''·\ .,! .

Kmart

right under his nose.
He knew one other thing:
that the central truths of his
film remain intact.
"What better place for terrorists to strike?" says Burns in
a
shoulda-seen- it- coming
tone. "Growtd zero of a global
commercial culture for 400
years, since the Dutch got here.

t

+

DuPont

19l'.

POINT· PLEASANT, WVa.
"This is something I believe in, quality work at a fair price. beats bad work
at any price," Bert McWilliams, owner
of American · Heating and Cooling

37\

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+

cny Holding.
·~

18\

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t '

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14\

39'1.

um.
By Sept. 11, the program was
all done, all 4 1/2 hours ofit. It
would stay that way. But Burns
· knew his film, while the same,
was also different. When the
WorldTradeCenterfellpreyto
terrorists, taking thousands of
victims with it, he knew the

developing technology-b=d
industries.
"The good thing about ecommerce is that you don't
need to be tied down geographically."
.
This 21st-century partnership between the university
and its community will likely
increase in scope, as efforts to
attract e-commerce businesses
and to train a qualified workforce become more concentrated.
Pines envisions a day when
qualified Meigs County residents can work at e-commerce ufarms" right here in
the community - facilities
which house a number of ecommerce companies under
one roof.
"This university has made it
a major mission to .become
involved in the field of technology, and we're committed
to doing all we can to provide
assistance, not only to our studen ts, but to the community
as a whole," Pines said.
"That involves everything
from worldwide teleconferencing, which is now possible
right here at the Meigs Cen- ·
ter, to remaining extremely.
open to ideas about continuing education for the non- traditional student."
Most of the students who
have received their degrees in
I. T. were already employed
wh en they began their course
of study, but many, Pines said,
have experienced promotions,
pay raises and other benefits
because of their new degree.

14'4

37'!.

f

Bv PAM Wn.i..rAMSoN

FRI.

15

+

Aahland Inc.

AT&amp;T

THU.

Owner stands behind stores service
TIMES.SENTINEL STAff

47'4

Bob Evans

Loving 'New York'
more than ever, as
-the finale premieres
No
way could Ric Burns have
seen it coming several years
back, when he began "New
York: A Documentary Film."
: No way could he have imagined it in November 1999,
when the first five chapters of
this epic urban portrait reached
the air.
Even a month ago, what
American was braced for the
tragedy?
Not Burns, looking ahead to
this Sunday and Monday (9
p.m. EDT on PBS), when the
final chapters of "New York"
take his viewers on the last leg
of his grand tour: from the
Crash of 1929 to the soaring
promise of the new millenni-

WED.

44'!.

Harley Davldaon

NEW YORK (AP) -

TUE.

+

AEP

BU

GOOD COOKIN' - Chef-TV personality Emert! Lagasse gestures near the 59th Street Bridge in 'New York Lagasse,
already the top draw on cable's Food Network with • Emerll
Live• and "Essence of Emeril, • is getting his own half-hour
comedy on NBC. Plain-old "Emeril," premiering Sept. 18, is
being written by Linda Bloodworth and directed by her husband
Harry Thomason, the team behind "Designing Women• and
"Evening Shade.· (AP)

AMERICAN HEATING AND COOLING

Economy worst
In eight yean

terrorist hijackings, Delta Air
Lines said Wednesday it will
cut its flight schedule and
work force by about 15 per. WASHINGTON (AP) - . cent, eliminating up to 13,000
: The global economy this year jobs.
: will turn in its weakest perforDelta Chairman Leo f.
mance in eight years, the Inter- Mullin said he had no choice
national Monetary Fund said because the slump threatens
Wednesday.
the very survival of the nation's
Against this backdrop, the third-largest airline.
IMF's chief economist, KenDelta was the last of the
neth Rogoff, at first declared a nation's six major airlines to
recession in the United States a announce cuts in the aftermath
"done deal." At the end of his of the Sept. 11 attacks on New
briefing, he sought to soften York and Washington. Dallasthat comment by saying it based Southwest is the only
"remains to be seen" whether major airline that has not
the Sept. 11 attacks would announced job reductions or
throw t~e already ailing U.S. schedule cuts. since the attacks.
. economy into a recession this
Overall, U.S. airlines plan to
year.
shed about 93,000 jobs, with
Even before the strikes, the aircraft maker The Boeing Co.
IMF, a 183-nation lending cutting up to 30,000 more by
agency, reduced its global the end of next year, as fright. growth forecast for this year to ened Americans largely have
just 2.6 percent, a 0.6 percent- abandoned air travel.
age-point reduction from May.
, The new figure would mark
. the. poorest showing since
1993.

Airplane maken ·
cutUng Jobs

TORONTO (AP) - Air
Canada · and Bombardier,
Canada's dominant airline and
airplane !Jl.aker, are ·cutting a
ATLANTA (AP) - With total of 8,800 more jobs folmost of its planes flying tWo- · lowing the Sept. 11 terrorist
thirds empty since the recent attacks in the United States.

.Airlines continue
to cut Jobs

Have a business news item?
Give us • all at (740) 446-1341. ext.n

Completes counes

sales and service staff in Gallipolis, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and surrounding areas.
Drummond brings to the company
MIDDLEPORT - Jennifer Sayre
several
years of insurance experience in
recently completed
cosmetology courses the Gallipolis area, and is well received
at Meigs
High as an insurance professional by his peers
School and is now and colleagues.
He can be reached at 1-800-316state certified.
1248
(office) and 1 ~740-446-2 8 1 1
Sayre will be tak- .
ing on new cus- (home) .
tomers at Kay's
Beauty Salon in
Middleport Starting
Sept. 5.

year term on the board.
Sloan is a partner with the Athens law
finn of Mollica, Gall, Sloan &amp; Sillery
Co., LPA. Sloan, an attorn ey since 1973,
is admitted to practice before all state of
Ohi o and federal court' as well as
before the U.S. Supreme Court.
.
He is a member and former president
of the Athens County Bar Association, a
member of the Ohio State Bar Association, a member and former state president of the Ohio Association of Civil
Trial Attorneys, and a member of the
Defense Research Institute. In 1992, he
was recognized as a Fellow of the Ohio
State Bar Foundation.
ATHENS - Sheltering Arms HosSloan is also heavily involved in campital Foundation Inc.'s annual meeting is munity activities and has assisted with
Sept. 25 at 7 p.m.
O'Bleness' fund-raising campaigns for
Sheltering Arms is many years. He is a member and past
the patent corpora- president of the Athens Noon Rotary
tion for 0 'Bleness Club, a board member and current vice
Memorial Hospital.
chairman of the Athens County H abitat
The meeting, to be for Humanity, a member and past chairheld in the hospital's man of the admipistrative council at the
basement conference First United Methodist Church of
rooms, will include Athens, and past president of the Athens
the election of one Athletic Boosters.
new member to the
He also served on the Athens Counfoundation's board of ty C hildren Services board for 13 years,
trustees. Steven T. Sloan, an Athens resident, has been nominated for a fourPlease see Business, Dl

Foundation
to hold iiieeting

Joins Monumental
staff
GALLIPOLIS -

Monumental Life
Insurance Co., Parkersburg, W.Va., a
leader in life insurance coverage, cancer expense coverage
and various heath
products, including
medical ·
and
Medicare . Supplement
Insurance,
announces that Larry
Drummond is the newest addition to its

Changes in legislation
affict local farmers
Farmers, don't get caught
without proper lighting on
your farm equipment.
On Oct. 1, 2000, Ohio
Substitute House Bill 484
Hal
became effective, requiring
new lighting and marking
Kneen
.of agricultural equipment
and tractors made before
GUEST VIEW
2001 and traveling on public highways.There must be
two amber flashing lighl!l · tors facing to the front' 'of
located on the left and right the multi-wheeled tractors.
of the tractor and within 16 The law also changed the
inches of the lateral extrem- need of lighting and marking to incorporate any time
ities.
between
Hsunset and sunIn .addition, there must be
installation of rwo red rise" and "when natural
reflectors facing the rear and light is not sufficient to rentwo amber or yellow reflecPiuH ... KnHn,DI

·d

McKinney to discuss
tobaao· (buyout' plan
"What about this buyout?"
It is a question asked of
me every day. The short
answer is no one knows for
sure whether or not there
will be a buyou t, because it
is in the hands of our lawmakers.
After 5 years of tobacco .
buyout teasers, we are well ·
accustomed to such speculative answers. However, if you
want to know the details of
the buyout program that has
been proposed to lawmakers, plan to attend the annual Pride-In-Tobacto Association banquet on Oct. 9
beginning at 7 p.m. at the

•

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

Senior R esource Center in
Gallipolis.
Danny McKi nney, CEO
of the Burley Tobacco
Growers Cooperative Association (the pool) will be
here to present the details of

Pluse ... Byrnes, D8

���r ~:=Ita~

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

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

Page 04 • ilunba!' 1:1mtf ·&amp;rnunrl

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.:
·S~u~n~d-ay~,~S~e~p~t.~3~0~
r ~200;::::1~~~=,-;;;=:;:==P=Q:me;;ro:y:•~M~Id~d~le=po~rt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WjV:~~~~J~~i.&gt;~ulnb~,,~ :t!:~u~n~r!i:·!&amp;~rn~ll~nr~I:•:P:a~g~e~D~S

I·r ~~ I·

FARM

ta;;_

=/~:-' $:~~~~~~ rra~ S: (:!~'.;'s~~ ~"t::Pu~!!.E!;

..

160. (740)441-01 17
Ta&lt;a TownhOuse Apart- 3pm. (740)446-4782
ments. Very Spaciou s, 2 Nic:e. ueed turnih!ra/.app!ian•
1 ces. (740)446-1004 or
&amp;.df.:A)."li:i, 2 Ftw.~; CA:
112 Bath, Full)&lt; Carpeted, 1740)446-2680.
Ad un Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Patio,
Start
$365/Mo
Pets. Solid
Trestlehut&lt;:hl
Table buf·
w/6
Leaoe
Plus
SewrityNo
Deposit
chairs.Oak
matching
Aequ,ed . Days: 74().446· let 6 years okl. pertact con3481. Evenings· 740.367·
$1 800 (740)256
0502. 740-446·0101 .
dltion·
'
·
·
::::::..:...:.:..:...:.:=.:..:.:.-- 1275 after 5 :30pm week·
Apartment Available Now day&amp;, anytime Saturday a
Call
Sunday.
Twin River Towers

. (304)675-6679.
for appltealion. HUO subsi·
diZed apt.for elderly and
!tisobled. EHO

ve r; n1ce, . 2·3 bedroom
apartment, •n town, large
kiiCI'I&amp;n, LA, $5001mo. Rei·
erences &amp; depos1t requ•red
(740)446·3644

i

SPACE

FOR RFNr

R

(740)441-0114
1 Problems? Need
epa"·CaN The Plano Do.
1.eoo-l-7e
Tuned?
7.-40-446:::::::::.-'~:::::52:;5:_____
RESIDEtmAL HOME
OWNERS
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4
lor$10. Open Sat. 8-5pm. &amp;
evenlngs. Dewhurst GrHn- ~;u.!!c:~O::VFu~
house Mt Mo. (304)8953740 leave message or ces, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
Whorlpool wooher, wnito, (304)895-3789
Air COnditioning Systems
heavy duty- $95; Whirlpool
Free 8 Year Warranty Ben·
1
d!)'er. almond. heavy duly. Independent Hert&gt;alilo llos- ~·::- ~"a'1 ~ ~~ 1;;'1&amp;
$95; Dryer. heavy duty, tributor, Cal For Product Or
whilo- like new. $150; G.E. Oppol1unlty. (740)«1-1982 www.orvb.com/bennett
elecutc rang~, 3Ci nice,
JET
Singer ZIQ Zag sewing ma$150; G.E. refngerator, frost
AERATION MOTORS
china in cabinet with chair,
free,
$150;
Skaggs Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In gOod
condition,
$70.
APJ&gt;I.Ia"?8s, 76 Vlr\8 Street, Stock. 11 Ro!'l Evans, 1· {740)S49-2SS3
Gaihpoi!O, (740)44e·7398 801). 537.9528_
Hours 1Dam-4pm, MondaySteel 046-Ma.gnum ChainFriday, Saturday by appoint· - - - - - - - - saw. 6 loads of split fire·
mont
Ull Chair, Wheal Chair, wood. 2·3 loads unsplll.

0

-~===--=='--

I

I

Mobile Home lot 101 rent In • • - - - - - - . . . ,
Middleport $t 25 per month
i\NnQlEi
·
~
•

Antlque Show· October 6&amp;7
9am-5pm, Point Pleasant,
10 HOUSEHOl.D
WV, wv Farm MusSum, adr-~
vertislng, bottles, stone·
L•••liU\AJl.Uiiiiliii;.,.,J. ware. lools, local collecll·
bles, glassware, marbles
Appliances: Reconditioned pottery. Dealer apace avallWashers, Drye,., Ranges. able. (740)992·5088
Aelngratorn Up To 90 Days
Guaranteedi We Satl New Buy or sell. Riverine AntiMaytag Appllances, French ques, 1124 East Main on
C•ly Maytag. 740-446-n95. SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74().
992·2526. Russ Moore,
Contemporary Couch $375, owner.
Oak TV entertainment oen·
tar, $275; Magnavox Tuner New Bualness, Opening Oc·
Amp w1th noor speakers, lOber 181. Sue a Selectables
$250. All in good condition, on lhe
In Middleport
Ohio. (740)992.0298
(740)446-6968

walker, bedside
shower
bench, comode,
booster
cushion, other ~ems . 11.000
lor 11. (304)675-3542\Aavo

I

·r

r

rtng. size 8 . 1200. CaR
(740)379-2268

i

New

$150. (304)675-5984

r

•111."'-~---=:---,
F'Rt;TIS &amp;

rt..--·SIJJrft.m;·---.,1.I

Vo;ETABI...fS

~

Richards Brothers Fruit
Farm
APPLES
AND
MUCH MORE . 24 miles
North of GallipoliS oo CounR
•• (740)286 ••••
ly oad ~~-

•--~~----, (7~}696- 1 085.

BunlliNG

...,

!:::;wa~ti.l::':~ c =

---------------Real Estate Genel'lll

L---•""""'liiliiiit;.,--"

OPEN HOUSE

In the

'

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Siraw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Vmume Discount AvailaHeritage
Farm
ble.
(304)675-5n4.

Ii 769

1996 Cavalier, 2 dr., red
new t1res, automahc, air, 4
cyl., 86,000 miles, eMcellent
cond.. $3450
OBO,
(740)742·3802 or (740)7423154

COUNTRY JIVING · doesn't gel any better than this
4 tx."droom, 2 bath on 2.acres with an inground pool and
patio, garage. sheds and pon:hes ... also rec room,
sliding glass doors.
REDUCED TO $83,475.

l 997' Cavalier 49.500 m11es.
35-45 MPG, Cld, air, auto,
new t1res, ~
~ Y off $7.000,
(740)949-222 1.
.
1997 Ford Aspire, auto, air,

116 fa11 \eca'ld \1

~statl'

PcmEIO) Ol11o

992·3325

Directions: 94 Winterplace
Gallipolis, Ohio

WOODED • acreage in Cheshire with frontage on
Poplar Ridge. Peat.:eful Area.
Nearly II acres for $20,000.

State Route 588
approximately 3 miles,
tum left on Winterplace,

Bl/11 P YOUR BUSINESS • in Sulton Twp. along
SR 124 on close to 4 acres, near town and close to
new highway from Ravenswood, WV.
Can Be Yours For Under $43,000.

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths over 3000 square
feet Dl living apace. Formal living room
and dining. LOla ol beautlli.tl woodwork.

lnlerseetlon of

ON I EGRANDE
bedroom, 1.5 bath
modernization.
desirable to you!

BLVD· in Green Township this 4
has been remodeled for the utmost
Many features make it highly
Was $93,000, Currently $87,000.

\IJJIJJ\JJI(I\

us 33, 595

1'\ii''''jill\

\il\\1\111111\11

Just South of
Logan.
lfi•F 8:31).8:00
Sat 9:00-6:00
Closed Sunday

lllll\''

. 740-992-3325
G. Bruce Teaford- Broker
Wendi R. Miller- A ent
Real Estate Generel

Real Estate General

cu~.. qt, ~~JJ,4
r(/m;d
446•6806

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

*

~

Branch Office
23 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio . . .
45631 .

..

BR home In
Maintenance
3 BRs, 1 112 balho, eat-In
kitchen, LA and large FA with
balcony. Very nice woodwork &amp;
doc,.. 2 car garage plus large
outbuilding. 2.4 acres pllle
along lho river. Extra building
lot. Large play area lor klde.
$149,900 1107

3

I

:=~:~

I

ranch
Qller and
full
car
garage
family room. Home sits on 2
In Hannan Trace Schools.
from downtown
home leatures a
landscaped lawn, wood
stove and central air. Located
Rock L~k Ad. on Mabie Dr.
' neighborhood. Have a
~ard1ir and raise some !lowers but
sure 10 look at this. Call
;:~::. :al~ :367·0323 today lor an

I

1 1

CLASSIC
'Updates include new carpet, copper
plumbing &amp; bath, new roof, privacy
fence. Finished 3rd floor, 4 bedrms,
1 112 baths, lull basem't, living rm
wlfireplace, formal dining rm, 3
bedrooms on
2nd floor
1
wlfireplace, garage &amp; landscaped
yard. Calt lor appoint. Vtrginia 446·
6808

13397 IN THE CITY Huge
home wl4 BAs, 2 balhs, kll, LA,
,
partial basement Priced
this outstanding offer!
to welcome you. VLS

HOlliE·
charm
BUILDINGS Old
with modem convenience in lhls 4
BR, 2 story home, · 2 balhs,
(whinpuol tub). Lovely equipped
kit/fam1ly rm combo wJhardwood
floors, cherry cabinets. Enjoy
VIewing the country lrom every
wondow. Formal dining rm &amp; LM
wlbeamed collings. Porch &amp; pallo
72 ACRES of beaulllul roUing land.
Pasture, woods &amp; some limber,
pond &amp; mineral rights. Large barn
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 446·6806 .

I

Look
I
room, large spacious
3
Great family home In o great BAs, dining area, 1wo 2 car
locallon. lmmacula!e &amp; lUSt detached
Selling on
wailing for your family. This brtck two Iota.
to sell al
&amp; vinyl Bi·levol oHers Ll'1 open Ia ~ijti,:.&lt;J&lt;J.
dining room, remodeled K open
to a lg. screened In porch, 4 BRs,
2 112 baths &amp; a lg. vary light and
brighl FR &amp; 2 ear garage. All this
tucked away In a corner of the
neighborhood thai overlooks lhe
countryside. Come view the best
at both worlds Priced al
$126.500.1130
Senlngl Th1s 3 BR
has
a privale 4 acre setting. Very
nice home wllh 2 baths. large
LR, aa1-ln kitchen wllh dining
vaulted ceilings and
has a private
allordably al

loa

I

'

14029 TRULY DEUGHTFUL HOlliE
Pretty as a ptclure. Very well
planned stone and frame ranch
home offO&lt;S 3 bedrooms, walk·ln
cloaal, 2 full balhs, charming living
room w/11replaoe. New oak cabinets
line tl'le kitchen. Range, refrigerator,
dishwasher. and compactor all stay.
Utility room la extra fargo. 2llor deck
In tho rear with 38' lnground pool.
Many fruit trees, fiOWet'S, and
shrubs. Sprinkler syalem In tho rear.
2 car attached garage and a ca~ort.
2 story bam bulldlng. Blacktop and
cement dri'v'ewaya. A heme you'll be
proud Ia own. VL Smith 446-6806

on

a 1 acre lol, 1M, oHetlng you
some privacy, good garden
spot or a great place lor
kids !o play. Homo
very nice kilchon w...ll;h;,.;-,;;·;l
cabinets, lots of "'
space, bar area and pantiy,
all open Ia a dining area/FA
wilh vaulted ceiling. formal
LA, 3 BRs &amp; 2 baths,
carpel throughout Newly
Dozed Pond Area Price
QOS
Reduced Ia

'

13367 Large home in town, new
rool 1999, 4 BA. 2.5 SA, 2 car
garage,
vinyl
siding,
nice
neighborhood. Needs some'TLC but
priced rtghl a! $79,goo

I

BEAUTY· 3
;:~~~W~e~tchEnjoy
the River rrom your 14035
the view from
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Ranch home.
or back deck. this 1+ . Kitchen w/eating area, formal d1nng
a 2 BA 1 bath moblle room, garden tub, Fireplace In LA,
hl,meliva,call&gt;on camper Is juol the Cathedral ceilings, covered deck,
for stress. May be room for a above ground pool, cellar" w/
I OllrdEin. Locale&lt;! at 7183 St R!. 7 building, storage shed, 3 car
garage,
blac~lop
delached
I ~)ulh . Reduced!
driveway,
fenced
lot.
2.2
acres
rrv1.
,.{~·?..':~ FOR SALE ON SR 588- 5

I

'

i4005 A FEW MINUTES OF YOUFI
TIME COULD PAY OFFI VIew this
lovely all brick home w/three
bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining
rm , living rm ., family rm., with
fireplace ., Patio, above ground pool,
2 car attacl'led garage and
basement. VERY LIVABLE HOME
FOR THE MONEY. $125,000.00

Potentlol With

Charm
with
Modern
Conveniences Is found In lhla
2 story home featuring toyer,
LA, DR, eal·in kilchon wllh
mudroom, 3·4 BAa and 2 112
baths. Updated Items Include
baths, wiring, 2 furnaces,
siding, real and more.
•$97,500· Owner anxious lo
selL .make an offer I 112011

C.n You Flully Find A Newer
Home
Prlcod
AI
Only
$85,000??? Yes, you can
when you view this vinyl ranch
located al 34 Graham Slraet.
Offering LR, kitchen open to
dining wllh door leading out 10
wrap around deck, 3 BAs and
bath. Call t~ay. 111128

VIew Is what you ~~ip~iii;lf
when you vlew ·the p
located at 5 &amp;
Street Main home
larg• LR, -DR. 3 BAs
112 baths
efficiency
I
end e bath.
converted
home. 2
garage with
atreal parking .
590,000. 1:124

Commercial Ground lor Slle Located along one of the buslesl highways In Southeastern Ohio. Close Ia McDonald's. SPveral
lracls to consider. Some wllh good road frontage along Eatllm Ava. (SR 7) and some wllh frontage on side streets. Prices and lol
sizes vary, so call lor more Information. 1124

·

Before shopping for your New Add.ress ... stop by ours:

www.wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch, GAl 441·1007 Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce

446.0621

Alta Wiseman

446·2707

446-9555

(740) 446•3644

[H

1:il

ltllll!OR"

~UNITT

4

$1800

"';. A

140016
&amp; INCOME
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulaviile
F'k. 3 bedrm, 3 bath living quarters.
Also 18' • 32' garage plus 30' ' 20
building 1/2 ac. of land. good sales
THE loc. Pnced to sell VLS
PICTURE
OF
GAL~IPOLIS • Ho11oe leatures 3
BA, and i bath ~th custom
cabinets in kitchen, very large lot
thai has potential lor several
options, let us show you this home
wilh great location todayl
14038 COMMERCIAL BUILDINQ
Olivo &amp; 3rd. 2756 sq. It mil. City
water, sewef &amp; gas. All Inventory
available too. Owner wants action!
COMMERCIAL
LOT·
84019
Jackson Pk. Galllpoffs, OH Corner
Jot with great potenUal.

SPACE
COUNTFIY LIVING Newly 10bulll 4
bedroom ,
2
balha
wlhuge
equipped kitchen and Smllh Oak
cabinets., Family rm. laundry rm.,
carport &amp; deck. 15 acres mil
fenced . 2 fishing ponds. This Is a
family location that oHara privacy.
Graen Twp. VLS 44e-8606

DEliGHTFUL HOlliE, Clean comlorlable· PLUS Income Located on SR 180 4 Bedrms, 2 balha, apprax.
of an acre. Live on 1st floor &amp; rent lower level for $400.00 mo. Would make a gOOd Mother-In-Law Suite.
llnoon'" can help you own this gOOd home. Owner moving out or town. Call to Inspect, this will not last. VLS.
r4037 Spacious 4 Bedrm, 2 story home. Overlooks the Ohio River. 3 lull bati'IS, lR, Dining rm, !'luge kit. w/many
oak cabinets. Fam rm, w/flreplace, Great deck lor vlev.Jing the river. City schools, shopping nearby. Hln top retreat
In a gracious sentng, Newly &amp; complelly decorated with luxurious appointments. Quick possession.

1095

Ylllnilh~

by

' 250 A 2000

Polaris

Scrambler

GaO•'""'-

r

r

TR.uocs

C~ECK.

~LT.

.:....cc:..::...::;._ _ _ _ _ 2000
"""'- Dakota Sport all~
1997 bl·-.
Ford '5K.
F-1504x4 , nar..
mot·
Ohio Valley Bank will offer
"'VYVV
•
"" .... , .
lor sale by Public Auction d
27:000( m40iles)2. ox9ce21
52tent con- side. :r lift, 33' tire~, with
A 1994 Plymouth Acclaim
»247966 al 10 00 am, on
10113101 At Ohio Valley
Bapk Annex, 143 3rd A\Je.,
Galipol1s, Ohoo. Sold to tho
highest bidder ·as is· where
is" without expressed or im·
plied warranty &amp; may be
seen by calling the Colleclion
Department
at
(740)4 41- t038. OVB reserves lhe. right 10 accepll
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with·
draw items from sale pnor
to sale Terms o,
a.le:
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK

s

1997 Pontiac Grand Prix
GT. Approx. 67,000 m1tes.
(740)742-4008

1998 Ford Ccmtour LX. 4
cyltnder, 76,000 miles, dark
green, 4 door, NADA
$7,000 asking $5,700. Reducod $5200. (740)4462524.

~

:se:::l:.;l304:.::-8.::::75-:.::88::3:::2_ _ _
Leer ful size truck topper,
l1ts Dodge or Ford '96 clowf1,
$350,(740)992·5532.

:::::::::::..;.::::.:;::.;::::.:;___

Ohio Valley Bank will offer
ror sale by · Public Auction
A 1991
Chevy S-10
N298146 at 10:00 am, on
10113101 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3td Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. SOld to the
highest bidder •as Is· where
ts" without expressed or 1mplied warranty &amp; may be
seen bv calling the CoHection
Department
at
(740)441 ·1038. OVB reserves the right lo accepU
rejecl any &amp; all bids, &amp; wilhdraw items from sale prior
to sale. Terms of Sale:
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

Are you looking for engines
transmlslions? Give me
&amp;call at (740)446-0519

•

•

a

.....
-·---·----·-

-~

~,.... ...

-sunday-Times
Sentinel

_,

(740)446-2342. (740)992-2155

r:~~~~§~]

Residential or commercial
audflet Tr.naml•
alonl All Typos, Aocoss To wiring, new service or reOver 10.000 TtanStnloaions, pairs. Master Ucansed elecTransler Casea, 74Q.245- trician. Rklonour Electrlcial,
WV000308, 304-875-1788.
C.H: 339-3765.

z..•••· wall malnta.-. MW
5" ;'3' · "~~~-~~ean,
,......_.-v
97 Aotro Van. 55,000 mlleo,
air, cruise, tilt. PW. PL,
AMIFM Cassette, dual air
baga, ABS. seats 7, like
, _, (740)3711-2134 leave
mesuge.

'7oo

san.

Re•l Eatata Gene1111

1;;;:::::~----.,

r'IO

~·~~--. _

Jl'JUJUIU,;T\.J.&amp;:J

1

2000 Hortda 250 Rocon
ATV, perfect cond111cn, paid
S3.500. wtn ae11 lor 52,500.
Groat Deal (304)675-7348

Buy; Sell or Tra~
'

j

.In the

\

:

·~

M4 Se.,ond Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0~
740-446-0008 740-441-1lll .
•
evansmoo@zoomnet.net www.evims-moore •.,o:ml

Y!

11016 PRICE REDUCED Low
Molnt..,.nco Homol 3 BR 1 BA
with newer: windows. siding,
lnsulallon, furnace. roof, cenlral
air conditioning 1nd carpet.

Fonn.rly Blaekbuna

$68,1100.

RMt~lly

..S•1'1'i•'6 Soutllem Ohio For Qper A Quarter Cetatury""

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cera Casey•245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
Candace
446-7412

CLASSIFIEDSI

Real Estate General

1
~ ____if
___ d
cIass.
ie
.
I
limitS

I

or

~"on
.:_:'.:._7__:_~45:..·.:.:..::...._,~ Leer topper, vary clean.
63 Dodge Ram 6 cyt ifs ~(7~40~):,:44:;8:.:6::323:::_-_ _ __
auto, very...,....,... cond. must 1998 BlaZer $-10, 4-door,

•

Real Estate General

ehd U4- ~ut At

www .BIG- BEND REALTY .COM
. g'~ g'e,ut ~
, ~lee,
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

lt2085 Went your own little
corner of the world? Retreat to
tl'lls home located only 5 minutes
from Holzer, but tucked away on
pnvate Charolals Lake. Nice 4 BR
3 BA redwood aided homo with 2
car aHached garage and private
deck OYettooklng tho lake. Peddle
around the lake in
own

lit

Russell D . Wood, Broker446·4618
Judy DeWiu ....... .................... 441 -0262
Cheryl Lemley ................................. 742-3171
Tammie D eWitt.. .............. . ..... 245-0022
Dana Alha ......................................... 379-9209
Ruth Barr...... .. .......................... 446-0722 l1m Slone .......................................... 446·9483

WITH LOTS OF STYLE Foyer
open to spacious formal living
room ~nd dining area, step-saving
kitchen, family room with fireplace,
oversized master bedroom w!th
patio area that leads to lnground
pool. master bath. 3 addi tional
bedrooms and bath. Appro)( 2
acres, concrete circular dnve. To
much to mention tn this ad call for
an appointment. #2050

'

''

~r.

sale by
Auctlon 4:c4,
A 1994 Plymouth Acclaim (740)992-2167

by

34
awnings. good condhton .
~O)~~~~. I,UOO ltrm, 1247966 at 10 00 am~ on :....=--- -- - 1011184 al 10:00 am. on 1 143306 at 10:00 am. on 4&lt;6,000 miles $32,000.
-I OII3/0I AI Ohio Valley 1990 Ford Bronco XLT, 4x4, 10/13/01 AI Ohio Valley 10113101 At Ohio VsUoy (740)+48-7602
Ohio Vaii'1Y Bank wiU otter Bank Annex, 143 3rd Awi., NC.
good
con&lt;lilion. Bank Annoo&lt;. 143 3nlAvo., Bank Annex, 143 3oQ Avo..
lor sa)o bX Public Auciinn . Ga."J:r-'2!, OM&lt;:. Sold to 100 $3,000, (1..W~
Ga~-'l&gt;ol!o. Olllo.. Sold to the - G•~ - oo.;e ~"" "'-" .!,~~
A 1992 Chevy Ca'llaller highest bidder "as is- whert
higheSt bidder ·u is· where highest biddef •as is· where ~· •UUl, 2 ~"""'outs, baded.
1263706 at 10:00 am, on is" without expressed or im· 1992 F~ Bronco XLT 4~4 is" without expressed or im- Is" wUhout exp~essod or lm- 8J1Cellent
condition,
10113101 At ·Oh10 Valley plied warran~ &amp; may bo 300 · 6 ~r. SljiMd, ""· plied warranty &amp; may bo phed wananly &amp; may be (740)245-9480
Bank An
143 3 d A
''
lift, cru158 •. w.1, ..., by col1ing 1110 c....,_ ....,., by coli'"" 1110 Coltec·
'-I I&lt;\ I• I "
. . ne:.., .
r ~e . seen by calling the Collec- rlres, atumil)um whMIS, ex· lion
n-.•rtmenl
at ;Oepe
.. 'n"mont
at
Galhpahs, Oh10. Sold to the hon
Oen::o.rtmenl
at ell 1
ndll
••900
.._..
1~·
1
•bk10
~
c
en
co
on.
•
(740)441-1038.
OVB
ro-(740)441
-1038.
OVB
re·
riO
hg.~s•
er ·as is- where (740) 44 1-1038. ova re· (740)992·7584
- t h e right to accop11 sarveo the ....,
_ _,
HOME
ts• without expressed or lm· serves the right to accepV
' 'V''110 ......_...,v
•• ----.... ~r~on:o...-.
pl1ed warran~1 &amp; rna be
·
&amp;
.,._
1994 3141011, txtendad cab, reject any &amp; aM bids. &amp; wi1f1. reject any a all bids, &amp; withJ.MrJCU•~~,
·'
Y
retect any ah .........,, &amp; witl'l- , , SLE, fully loaded• ..-....t l'kaw ltent&amp; trorn sale pnot draw items from sale pnor
'
~een by calling the Collec- draw i1 ems !rom saJe prior 4 4
V"'"""
I S
lton
Department
at to sale . . Terms of Sale: condttion, bucket seats, to sale. Terms o
alv: to sale. Terms ot 5afe : C&amp;C General Home Malnte(740)441-1038. OVB re- CASH OR CERTIFIED 82.000 miles, $12.000. CASH OR CERTIFIED CASH OR CERTIFIED nonce- Painting, vinyl ,;o.
serves the njjtll to accep~ CHECK.
(740)«&amp;1066
CHECK.
CHECK
ing, carpentry, doofs, win·
retect ~ny &amp; all hids, &amp; withF
dows, baths, mobile home
50
985
draw ttems hom sale prior
1995 Ford •1 ...... 1
A~~
repair and mora. FOf free
IO sale. Terms ol Sate·
'~ .- .. ~
Ford F-150 4x4, (740)448"'~
ostimall ciall Chat, 740-992·
CASH OR CERTIFIED ~----·~--""""-iiiiiii.-,J :6.::46:.;4_ _ _ _ _ __

'new

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER .......- ...... 446-88011
GAIL BELVILLE ................................ 44&amp;9209
TRISH SNYDER ................................... 441·9458
JOHNNIE FIUSSELL...........................36Nl323
DAVIb SNYDER .................................. 441·9458
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlsmllhreal&amp;state.com
e-mail . vlsrealestateOzoomnet.net

•

'

r

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

For
Loss
of
en•woni•~"''? High cosls for a
lo! of
Maybe lhose are
some maintenance costs for a
long driveway? Maybe those
are some trade offs you have
to make with some properties,
bul not this rambling ranch.
Locate~ on the edge of town,
thiS hl'ne Is very convenient
for schools and shopping. Wilh
over 3000 sq. fl. of living
space. you'll enjoy the open
floor plan and large windows. 4
BAs. 3 full balhs. LA, DR. den
and large FR, also an enclosed
porch. Newly remodeled
kitchen wi!h a!lracllve oak
cabinets. 3 fireplaces. 2 car
gai1ag&amp;. St54,soo 1218

ITI8roon, 72,000 miles,
$2995. (740)742-3802 or
(740)742·3154
1997 Lumina, $4 . ~ . 1992
Grand Am, $1 ,795.
""" 1990
Gran-Prix, $1,995. 1993
cavalier, $2,195. 1992 Corsica, $2,495. COOK MO~
TORS. (740)446·0103

COTTAGE STYLED ·2 bedroom home in Lincoln
Heights, fenced yard is virtually maintf'nance free.
Home is mostly carpeted and has a heat pump and
ceiling fans. Hurry ... this won ' t be on the market long
al only...
$45,000.

Sunday, September 30, 2001
· From 2:00 - 4:00 o'clock

Real Estate General

just north of
wllh
frontage along bolh sides of
Rl. 7. Buildings Include a 4 BR,
3 bath, 2 atory houso with lots
of windows for a great view.
Nearly 3,000 s&lt;j. ft. In all. Plus
a 40 x 80 six door garage, two
manufactured homes p)us a
greal river view. Acldillonally, 5
campsites wtth water; electric
'~, .....,
., &amp; sewer, 3 dock~ and a large
on the river.
launch

ery op1Km co)d a" a
ev
·
•
steal at $2850. (740)992·
671 9 or 74().992•3490 ·
t993 lincoln Town Car
•
leather, maroon, e.:calient
conditon 114 000 miles
53450 ' (740 ).;.42 .3802 0 ;
(740)742_31 54
~::.:._;:_::.:;:::.___ __
1993 Probe, 5 speed, P.S,
PB. 4. cyl.. air, 11 4,000
miles, $2995. (740)7423802 or (740)742·3154

Buy, Sell or J...__,

CLASSIFIEOSI

.

qutS LS, 4 door, 79,000
mileS. extra good cond~toon.

WE ' VE GOT YOUR BUSINESS LOCATION •
How about a building that has everything you need:
2 offices, 2 restrooms, sho'M'OOm, parking, Ohio River
view, l11111e garage doors. .. Don 'I pass this by!
JUST $100,000.

1st house on right.

740·385.4367

"

1~ Mfti'C.-wy Grano Mar-

81111 D CLOSE TO TH E OHIO RIVER · On two
level lots. Nice area, close to businesses and new
school. You can buy it for only...
$6,500.

Oak Fir......., Split &amp; Oollvored. 8ft. Bod. $70.
(304)576-2013
PHC electric lift chair, taupe
color- like n£rw. $300
,(7:.;40::;):;:4:;48-:;3:.:7,::75:,__ __
Waterline Special: 314 200
PSI $21.95 Per 100; 1' 200
PSI $37.00 Por 100; AH
Brass Compression FIHings
In Stock.
FION EVANS ENTEFIPRIS.
ES JackllDn, Ohio, H!OQ.
537-9528

(740)742~900.

r

IT:L\lforb :l.\L\ll

r;:::::::~::::::::::::::::::;;;:}

H~ge tnvento!)'. Discount
PrK:es. On Vonyl Skirting, ___,__~;.:::;_:;.:.;:;.:~.:......:.....:..._ _ __
Doors, WindOWS, Anchorl,
Water Heaters, Plumbing &amp;
Electrical Pans. Furnaces &amp;
Heal Pumps. Bennot11J Mobile Home Supply, 740-4469416 www.orvb.cornlban:;n°::":__ _ _ _ _ __
NEW AND USED FUR·
NANCES 1'01'1 IAL!l We
Install, Free Esllmales, If
you doilt Call ua, We both
Loosal (740)4&lt;48·830&amp; 18Q0.2&amp;l-oo98
•
'
Nurses unitorma. Size 2x
and 3x. 3 sets paid over
$100.
Sell
for
$40.
(740)982· 7118

Hidden Treasure • 13 Acres in
the C11y11 Allhe end ol Cotton
Lane, you'll ftnd this spacious
tn·level home lhal offers
wondertul pnvacy, while nol
sacrificing convenience. 4·5
BR home wllh 3 baths, LR,
large FA,' medta room and
indoor pool. 13 acres Include
pond and creek frontage.

iOCited.

•es&amp;ore ~~ onginal, 107.000
actual rrules, S6200 080.

picker. rmontholdAngusbuMcaH,

Idea

Real Estate General

Cats &amp; kiftanl available for
~. (740)843-5268.

REAL ESTATE
St.ee 1943

Conveniently
locatton withm
dtstance to downtown.
the street rrom a supermarket,
bank and drugstore. 2 story
with 3 bedroos. 1 bedroom
could be downstairs for those
who don't want e.tatrs . 2
bathrooms . Large eaHn
kitchen, living room, off street
parking. $59,9001812

01

Smolh, (740)992·5956
ro~. - ·
•-•- Deere ··~
~"'
_" Tiitan 11
combine Call (304)675·
4'308
Buck a bale sate. square
bales $1 .00 other hay up to
$2.00. round bales $15.00
each 304-675-4869
laue

lfiOSILE HOlliE OWNERS _ _ _ _ _ __:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Real Estate General

'4•5 BRs AI An Aff1Drd.ibie
Prlcell ThiS roomy bl· levol
has as many as 5 BRe If
needed. Also. has 3 baths.
Over 2000 sq . ft. of living
space Features also Include
large LA, eal·in kitchen wllh
dining area, deck and 2 car
garage. Quality location In
Spring Valley atoa at an
affordable price of $115,000

1

Window Air Conditioner. Adorable full bkx&gt;ded Minla·
Work5 Great SSO OBO. ture Collioo, 5 weo1&lt;o old.
(740)992·7116
$75 , · males a females.
(740)«1-0865
Woodworking Equipment
10" Tabl&lt;l Saw. 12" Planer, AKC Slleltle puppies sa·
16'" Drum Sander, 6" Join.. bles, Tri, bi black, , tNue
tor.
(740)245·9147
or merle; AKC Mlola1uro
(740)245-7311
•~nauze,., saiVpepper,
""''
black/sliver, $300 each
(firm), vet checked &amp; shots,

Kingtonwood
stove. C811740-245-5121
Winters. Rio Grande,
OH
25
wood bumtng
splittet. $1000.
.
tor all (304)576-3636 leave
a rnesaage.

Tables with 2 leaves, 6 Cut your own fire wood, Slorage Vans wtlh roll up
chairs. Good condition, call $15.00 truclcload, all ready doors. 38ft. to 45ft. $1500
•easoned. Call (740)44e· each. N"" (740)446·7600
(740)256·6417
2506.

Unllmllod
Beauttful brick structure buill
around 1904 has wonderful
charm and limilless potential.
FOt'merly used as a restaurant,
ills well suited tor office space,
apartments or a mixture.
Approx. 5600 sq. ft. plus full
basement.
Beautiful
woodwork, high ceilings, great
location. 1111

Shots. Parents 00 premises.

F'llR"lJ.UE
""""'

I

For Sale· Reconditioned
~
washers, dryers and refrig·
MF.aaiANDisE
era Iars Thompsons Appll- ~
ance 3407 Jackson Ave·
.
nue, (304)675-7388.
12&lt;50 Oflk:o Trailer. NeWly
:::::.:.:::.:..:.:::..:..:::.:.::._ _ Remodeled.
$4,000.
Kincaid dining room sel· (c7_40:;)_44_1_·9_38_s_ _ _~
pedestal table with 2 leaves, 6 chairs &amp; hutch. Solid 27 cu. ft. Kenmore Side by
wood. Ask1ng $450. Phone· Side Refrigerator witl'l Ice
(740)446-4064 after 5pm.
MakO&lt;. $100 (740)256·
•
6445
Main Street Fumiture
::..:.;:__ _ _ _ __
(304)675-1422
Antique Qak Cider Pre!S.
515 Main Slreel, POinl
$100. (740)256·6445
Pleasant
Bod wtlh Box Spring and
New &amp; Used Fumiture
Mattress. Chest Drawer~,
New 2 Fllace Llvingroom Chair, Table and Chairs, M1·
Suites. $399. Buy, Sell, crowave, Baby Car Seal,
Trade.
Stroller. (740)44e·9742

row

Call (740)388-8743

:M=e=~~e~----------­

;;;;:::;:::====;;;;;;

r

7

ca,

i

soxloozteno:as u 7.s9ci

(7.t0)69ol-1 681

AlnUS

1956 Chevy Belaire, 4 dJ..

Condi...,.,.. 10 year parts WATER WELLS ORIUEO. now $1 9,990; 60x200x16 Guinne Pig al 185 Norlh S2500. 1 740 ~ 6 ' 1542
AI sired by EXT29ANI413.
Flr,twood for Qle, S150 and labor warranry inctude4. (740,...7311
was $58,160, now $42,990 Pan. Drive (304)675-1 420 7 1a NeW Hohand ~ Case SQuare hay baler,
kMia. (740)«i-f47i
COMFORT AIR HEATING Wedding dress, lize 7/8, 1-800-406·5126.
Male Miniature Dachshund .,.w 1th 2 ~ heads -&amp; graSs (740~79-2798
Grubb's Piano- Tunlng &amp;
AND COOliNG
$150, 112 karol diamond
puppy. red, Vet tacked, first head direct cut. Harold
HAY &amp;

=-=:!::•-=:.::·..!:::..;::::.:..:;::;

l.t_
. ..

IF'o .!~ I riO ~~
t_Wn._
. &amp;___.1 ~~M~UJ~OIIC~t~(U~S~
M&lt;nuo~ IL
&amp;
t..--•·UR-·S·A-LF.- -"· 86 new
Chevrolet Celebrity, lots Ohio valley Bank wiA otter 1985 Chevy S-10 Blaltr, Ol1lo Valloy Bank will otter Ol1lo 'oo'alloy Bonk wtlt ol1or 1995 Winnebago Adventur·
parts
mot
tor
Public
asking
tor aa1e
Pubic Auc:11on tor sale
Public Auction er,
foot, auto levels;
r10

year old AOHA lncentiile
New 2 Bedroom. Heat New and Used Fum•ture Beet lifl Chair $SO: Kitch-·
RESt0£NTtAL AND
Used 2300 Ditch Witch Steef bUikhngs, new must Full-stodt Boston Terrier
EQuiPMJoM
Fund Mare with 120 days
Pump, Wasl"rerJ Orym Hook· store be4ow Hoida~ IM , Ka~ en
and 4 Ct.al~. $50.;
COMMERCIAL
Trenchef and 05 HP Ver· seU 30i .C0.12 was $1 0.200 puppies father AKC moth·
riding. Will make all around
up. 7 miles lrom Hospital on nauga. We seH gravB monu· Dresser. SSO.: Twin bed AMANA · Hi Efticiency 92 + meet suxnp grinder call ~ :0990: JIOA60$~~ ;'g~~ er fuU-~tock. $100 • each 560 FarmaU with mounted 2 prospect. (140~41-1015

3614
Road $86,500 Nice
style
home that has large family room ~
din1ng area that opens to large
rear deck and private back lawn.
Eat·in kitchen 3 bedrooms, large
lam1ly room, garage, concrete
drive and morel

_.,--·r:..··_-.., meaterplece

.~o:r:i'fi:lh~;F.ru~~~

paddle
boat lhe
dock. Relax~

no1r oily.
2 story cape
offers over 3000 sq. ft. o1 living
apace plus full pourod besemenl
just on lholldge of town. With 3·
4 BR and 2 112 BA, lhls
Impressive homa offers a custom
kitchen with breakfast nook, a
largt formal dining room, large
open family room with gas log
fireplace and a maeter suite on
the main level. Unsurpassed
construction elevates this home

12093 Owner wonto on olftrl
Not only dOes this 1.79 AC Green
township property have a cute 2
bedroom and a bath hor'na, but
extra Income· can be generated
from lhe well kept mobile home
with 2 bedroom and a bath. In
addltlon to all this an extra
building lot can be e1ther used_or
sold to help off set the cost of

kt VIIWI
outside and a
classy look
Inside all on 2 acre~ . Located at
100 Lakeview offers four
bedrooms and 2 112 baths, large
formal dinning and hving rooms
along with a cozy family room
featuring a gas log fireplace. With
an Oak crafled kitchen and top
quality kitchen appliances this
country setting Is a must

RANCH
HOME. 1.200 sq.
ft ol livtng space area wtth an
additional 2000 sq, It which is
used presently as carpenters shop
but could be easily converted into
additional livmg area. Melal pole
barn 30 x 60 with 16 x 60 addition
on each side. Parttally wooded.
Fenced pasture. Tillable acreage
$25,000 Off Listing Prlco. Ideally Private setting. Call lor details and
located close to 35 bypass between ap!l(lintmenl today I 12138
Gallipolis and Alo Grande. Over 12
acres Included with this 3 bedrooms
ranch, large living room, eaHn
kitchen, · basement, family room , 2
car attached garage #21 08
$42,500.00 NEW PRICE ON THIS
NEAT
WELL
MAINTAINED
RANCH with 3 bedrooms, l1ving
room, kitchen attached carport and
more situated just on the outskirts of
lowni Quick possession! #2142
338 THIRD AVENUE I $89,500.001
In Town living close to city schools
HUGE
PRICE
REDUCTIDNI and wal~ng dlslance lo shopping
$44,500.00 IS THE NEW ASKING at its bestl Lovely 2 story !'lome
PRICE on this one tloor plan ranch with 4 bedrooms, Ioyer, living
slturated at 21 neil avenue 3 room, kitchen, enclosed porch,
bedrooms, basement, carport, basement carport, morel 11
small easy to ma1ntain lot. M2112
EXTENSI~ELY
REMODELED
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED EXTERIOR &amp; INTERIOR! Root,
RAISED RANCH STYLE HOMEI siding windows wiring and much
Liv1ng room, d1ning room, kltcheo, much' morel H8rdly nothing else
den, family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 lor you 10 do but move In and
batl'ls, built-In 2 car garage plus enJOY all the hard wortl: the owners
large rec. room in basement! put Into this lovely 2 story home.
Central air. 12141
Large sized rooms, .2 baths, 3
EXPAND THE FAMILY HEREI 2 bedrooms, Ioyer. Detached garaga
Homes for $72,500.00 and Owners and plenty morel Call to view this
are wanting sold nowl Your owner one. 12129
may just buy lhese two homes. LOT.. FFIONTAQE ALONG SR
Large sized 2 slory and smaller 3 160 &amp; BULAVILLE PIKE 'handy
bedroom home Country senlngl convenient location Level, public
12033
utilities available. Residential or
PRICE
. DROPPED
TO commorclel. Selling below lhe
134,900.001 1 t12 Story home appraised value. 12146
situated on nice level lot 3 WITHIN MINUTES OF HOLZER
bedrooms, enclosed lronl
~OSPITAL Localed al 6153 SR
I
kitchen &amp; dining
160 you wl!l find tl'lls over 1.7 acre
lot and multiple use dwelling ideal
tor res1denUal or commercial use.
OFFERII2035
Unlimited potential. Must call for
completellstlngl 112143

alory

home that Ia
years young
resting on appro11. 2 acr11. Uvlng
room,
kitchen,
a btdroama,
basement.
Low
exterior
maintenance, de«ached 24 x 30
largo tronl poroh and morel

'

36812 SR 124.. $79,000 3.29
acres comes along with this ranch
home. Uvlng room, dining room,
kitchen 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 2
Car detached garage. Lovely
pond, fruit trees &amp; berries. Lels go
seel12130
CHEAP CHEAPI $21,000.001
lnvestmenVstarter... Ranch
style
home ... sltuated at 738 Main
Streel .. 2 bedrooms, · equipped
. kitchen, living room, bathl M2121

NEW LIST1NO
1t971f1081LE
HOME ON RENTED LOTI
Excellent opportunity lo own your
own home. This 1997 Clayton
home Is In excellent condition. 3
·Bedrooms, 2 baths, nice sized
ki tchen and living room area All
set up on a reasonably priced
rented lot. Call today ! Only
$22,500.00.

.

IChoola, park front, grocery
and much morel This 2 story
home hatlhe mslbillly ol having
,,.,..l\~f}j.W
.'"',
3 rentals with lt. ll\fe In one and
1118 Looking ror 1 low let tl'le rent trom the others pay
malnttftlnce ranch with low your mortgage This Is a deal of a
utility coeta on 1 level lot In a ilfetlme. Don't let this one pass
convenient location? Look no
further, this Ia it. This home has 3
bedrooms. 2 batho, 2 car garage,
newer roof, . newer vinyl aiding,

;;-

FROM $1511,1100
$125,000.001 Does lhlo moan
motlvaUon or wha11 2000 Secllonal
home situated on 13 acre• and has
over 2,00 sq. ft. living space~ 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,' living ·room,
family room, den &amp; dlnlrlQ plus more
situated close to elementary schoOl.
12131
ACFIEAGE LIST1NOI 94 112 acres
m/1 wilh road frontage, homesite,
larm land and kteal hunting land
thai Is adjacent to Wayne National
Forrest. 12140
RIO GRANDE AREAl Roomy
almost new home with approx.
2,560 sq. ft. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, formal dining room, kitchen
and morel Nice sized rooms. Large
Iron! porch bam &amp; shOp and 3.29
acres mil. •2133
COMMERCIAL· Sycemore Street
Location. Largo 2 alory building with
off street parking. Ideal tor floral
shop, etc. Call for mreo del8ill.
12044
t649 SR 218 $85,000.00 1 slory
vinyl olded ranch ltomt. Uvlng
room, dining area, kitchen, family
room and 2 baths. 2 Car allaehed
garage. c;:enlral air. City ochooltl
N2145

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP 13Y FOR A
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY

t11 0 Sot up and roody to go.
This 3 • bedroom and 2 bath
mobile rests on a spacious level
lot convanlonlly located. $47 ,ooo
l
'"

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
MIDDLEPORT. Older homo with
charm and great locallon near
echool, grocery, etc. Lota of room
here tor tl'la tamilr,. Glva Cheryl a
call for more detai s. 12110
368 112 N. 3rd Stroot. One IIDry
raised ranch, 2 bedrooms, living
room, kitchen &amp; t.ath, garage,
basement. Priced rlgl'lt $38,000
112134

[·,

.,

~'

... II!

~

n~ow;~·~~r~dheat

•-ii:,itiiod

·~
on •
qulot countr~ road ldjotnlng
Stoto Owned Foreot This 2 BR
1 BA with a nice family room on
over 4 acres ol wooded land.
Ideal lor lha person looking to got
Trails through lho property
2 natural aprlnga. All thla
In lha 40's.

pump, fenced
and 12 ' 14 storage
Great
tor this

LOCAT I 0 N 'ILllstl~:g~ ;~~~.~~~.

Riverfront Qetlwayl 1.5 acres
m/1 wilh 180 teet of water frontage
located 1 mile from public boat
rf,mp access. AJso included Is an
Immaculate 2 BR mobile home
with oentral heat an!;t air.

LOCATION! You will find lhls 3
BR 1 Balh gam In a quiet
neighborhood close to schools
and
Cell eoon, mey
Totally remodllod, top to
bollom, lntldo and outl
!loaulllulllghl end airy 3 BR 2 BA
hOme on 1/2 aero mil. Oulol
selling and only 10
town. Immediate

cape
3 BR 1 2 BA. All city ulllillos,
schools, living room with
wuod burning fireplace , full
now QUIALITY
baeement, large wood Cleek and
BUILT ham1 on 2 level ICFII
m/11 Very nice 3 BR 2 BA home aff&lt;H.iaobloil I
In beck. Very
' with solid 6 panel doors, lots of
hardwood lloorlng, Smith cuolom
kitchen an·d 2 car garage.
Locallld In Po~or area. $102 ,900.
Call Ieday lhlo ona won'l 1..1

ua T1NQI 2-3 Bldroom longl
On 2 Acreo, 1 ear
pluo 2 ather atorags
lOcated on SR 554.

VIsit us
online at r.
www.EvansMoore.com

1141 FrH natural gel to
our hamel Use the savings
rom your heating bill to he)p
make your mortgage payment! 3
BA
secllona.l, nice
ll
I , newer noor
gas log

1123 BldwsiVPorlor Area. 4 BR
2 BA home wtth country charm on
an acre of land With lot.a or trees.
Newly remodeled sectional with
drywall accented with custom
wood molding, a re!lnlshad oak
lcltchen. ootid 6 panel door,. open
room and 3 car detached

Quiet wooded I
7.8 acres on Smokey
3 bedrooms, 1 "bath,
great room with
spacious garage with
much more.
1

�r ~:=Ita~

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

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

Page 04 • ilunba!' 1:1mtf ·&amp;rnunrl

lr~lr~lt~~lt~~~~~~~
~ It .~

~~~~~~~ ~,_ _ _ _ __..1

.1r·

6

.:
·S~u~n~d-ay~,~S~e~p~t.~3~0~
r ~200;::::1~~~=,-;;;=:;:==P=Q:me;;ro:y:•~M~Id~d~le=po~rt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WjV:~~~~J~~i.&gt;~ulnb~,,~ :t!:~u~n~r!i:·!&amp;~rn~ll~nr~I:•:P:a~g~e~D~S

I·r ~~ I·

FARM

ta;;_

=/~:-' $:~~~~~~ rra~ S: (:!~'.;'s~~ ~"t::Pu~!!.E!;

..

160. (740)441-01 17
Ta&lt;a TownhOuse Apart- 3pm. (740)446-4782
ments. Very Spaciou s, 2 Nic:e. ueed turnih!ra/.app!ian•
1 ces. (740)446-1004 or
&amp;.df.:A)."li:i, 2 Ftw.~; CA:
112 Bath, Full)&lt; Carpeted, 1740)446-2680.
Ad un Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Patio,
Start
$365/Mo
Pets. Solid
Trestlehut&lt;:hl
Table buf·
w/6
Leaoe
Plus
SewrityNo
Deposit
chairs.Oak
matching
Aequ,ed . Days: 74().446· let 6 years okl. pertact con3481. Evenings· 740.367·
$1 800 (740)256
0502. 740-446·0101 .
dltion·
'
·
·
::::::..:...:.:..:...:.:=.:..:.:.-- 1275 after 5 :30pm week·
Apartment Available Now day&amp;, anytime Saturday a
Call
Sunday.
Twin River Towers

. (304)675-6679.
for appltealion. HUO subsi·
diZed apt.for elderly and
!tisobled. EHO

ve r; n1ce, . 2·3 bedroom
apartment, •n town, large
kiiCI'I&amp;n, LA, $5001mo. Rei·
erences &amp; depos1t requ•red
(740)446·3644

i

SPACE

FOR RFNr

R

(740)441-0114
1 Problems? Need
epa"·CaN The Plano Do.
1.eoo-l-7e
Tuned?
7.-40-446:::::::::.-'~:::::52:;5:_____
RESIDEtmAL HOME
OWNERS
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4
lor$10. Open Sat. 8-5pm. &amp;
evenlngs. Dewhurst GrHn- ~;u.!!c:~O::VFu~
house Mt Mo. (304)8953740 leave message or ces, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
Whorlpool wooher, wnito, (304)895-3789
Air COnditioning Systems
heavy duty- $95; Whirlpool
Free 8 Year Warranty Ben·
1
d!)'er. almond. heavy duly. Independent Hert&gt;alilo llos- ~·::- ~"a'1 ~ ~~ 1;;'1&amp;
$95; Dryer. heavy duty, tributor, Cal For Product Or
whilo- like new. $150; G.E. Oppol1unlty. (740)«1-1982 www.orvb.com/bennett
elecutc rang~, 3Ci nice,
JET
Singer ZIQ Zag sewing ma$150; G.E. refngerator, frost
AERATION MOTORS
china in cabinet with chair,
free,
$150;
Skaggs Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In gOod
condition,
$70.
APJ&gt;I.Ia"?8s, 76 Vlr\8 Street, Stock. 11 Ro!'l Evans, 1· {740)S49-2SS3
Gaihpoi!O, (740)44e·7398 801). 537.9528_
Hours 1Dam-4pm, MondaySteel 046-Ma.gnum ChainFriday, Saturday by appoint· - - - - - - - - saw. 6 loads of split fire·
mont
Ull Chair, Wheal Chair, wood. 2·3 loads unsplll.

0

-~===--=='--

I

I

Mobile Home lot 101 rent In • • - - - - - - . . . ,
Middleport $t 25 per month
i\NnQlEi
·
~
•

Antlque Show· October 6&amp;7
9am-5pm, Point Pleasant,
10 HOUSEHOl.D
WV, wv Farm MusSum, adr-~
vertislng, bottles, stone·
L•••liU\AJl.Uiiiiliii;.,.,J. ware. lools, local collecll·
bles, glassware, marbles
Appliances: Reconditioned pottery. Dealer apace avallWashers, Drye,., Ranges. able. (740)992·5088
Aelngratorn Up To 90 Days
Guaranteedi We Satl New Buy or sell. Riverine AntiMaytag Appllances, French ques, 1124 East Main on
C•ly Maytag. 740-446-n95. SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74().
992·2526. Russ Moore,
Contemporary Couch $375, owner.
Oak TV entertainment oen·
tar, $275; Magnavox Tuner New Bualness, Opening Oc·
Amp w1th noor speakers, lOber 181. Sue a Selectables
$250. All in good condition, on lhe
In Middleport
Ohio. (740)992.0298
(740)446-6968

walker, bedside
shower
bench, comode,
booster
cushion, other ~ems . 11.000
lor 11. (304)675-3542\Aavo

I

·r

r

rtng. size 8 . 1200. CaR
(740)379-2268

i

New

$150. (304)675-5984

r

•111."'-~---=:---,
F'Rt;TIS &amp;

rt..--·SIJJrft.m;·---.,1.I

Vo;ETABI...fS

~

Richards Brothers Fruit
Farm
APPLES
AND
MUCH MORE . 24 miles
North of GallipoliS oo CounR
•• (740)286 ••••
ly oad ~~-

•--~~----, (7~}696- 1 085.

BunlliNG

...,

!:::;wa~ti.l::':~ c =

---------------Real Estate Genel'lll

L---•""""'liiliiiit;.,--"

OPEN HOUSE

In the

'

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Siraw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Vmume Discount AvailaHeritage
Farm
ble.
(304)675-5n4.

Ii 769

1996 Cavalier, 2 dr., red
new t1res, automahc, air, 4
cyl., 86,000 miles, eMcellent
cond.. $3450
OBO,
(740)742·3802 or (740)7423154

COUNTRY JIVING · doesn't gel any better than this
4 tx."droom, 2 bath on 2.acres with an inground pool and
patio, garage. sheds and pon:hes ... also rec room,
sliding glass doors.
REDUCED TO $83,475.

l 997' Cavalier 49.500 m11es.
35-45 MPG, Cld, air, auto,
new t1res, ~
~ Y off $7.000,
(740)949-222 1.
.
1997 Ford Aspire, auto, air,

116 fa11 \eca'ld \1

~statl'

PcmEIO) Ol11o

992·3325

Directions: 94 Winterplace
Gallipolis, Ohio

WOODED • acreage in Cheshire with frontage on
Poplar Ridge. Peat.:eful Area.
Nearly II acres for $20,000.

State Route 588
approximately 3 miles,
tum left on Winterplace,

Bl/11 P YOUR BUSINESS • in Sulton Twp. along
SR 124 on close to 4 acres, near town and close to
new highway from Ravenswood, WV.
Can Be Yours For Under $43,000.

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths over 3000 square
feet Dl living apace. Formal living room
and dining. LOla ol beautlli.tl woodwork.

lnlerseetlon of

ON I EGRANDE
bedroom, 1.5 bath
modernization.
desirable to you!

BLVD· in Green Township this 4
has been remodeled for the utmost
Many features make it highly
Was $93,000, Currently $87,000.

\IJJIJJ\JJI(I\

us 33, 595

1'\ii''''jill\

\il\\1\111111\11

Just South of
Logan.
lfi•F 8:31).8:00
Sat 9:00-6:00
Closed Sunday

lllll\''

. 740-992-3325
G. Bruce Teaford- Broker
Wendi R. Miller- A ent
Real Estate Generel

Real Estate General

cu~.. qt, ~~JJ,4
r(/m;d
446•6806

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

*

~

Branch Office
23 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio . . .
45631 .

..

BR home In
Maintenance
3 BRs, 1 112 balho, eat-In
kitchen, LA and large FA with
balcony. Very nice woodwork &amp;
doc,.. 2 car garage plus large
outbuilding. 2.4 acres pllle
along lho river. Extra building
lot. Large play area lor klde.
$149,900 1107

3

I

:=~:~

I

ranch
Qller and
full
car
garage
family room. Home sits on 2
In Hannan Trace Schools.
from downtown
home leatures a
landscaped lawn, wood
stove and central air. Located
Rock L~k Ad. on Mabie Dr.
' neighborhood. Have a
~ard1ir and raise some !lowers but
sure 10 look at this. Call
;:~::. :al~ :367·0323 today lor an

I

1 1

CLASSIC
'Updates include new carpet, copper
plumbing &amp; bath, new roof, privacy
fence. Finished 3rd floor, 4 bedrms,
1 112 baths, lull basem't, living rm
wlfireplace, formal dining rm, 3
bedrooms on
2nd floor
1
wlfireplace, garage &amp; landscaped
yard. Calt lor appoint. Vtrginia 446·
6808

13397 IN THE CITY Huge
home wl4 BAs, 2 balhs, kll, LA,
,
partial basement Priced
this outstanding offer!
to welcome you. VLS

HOlliE·
charm
BUILDINGS Old
with modem convenience in lhls 4
BR, 2 story home, · 2 balhs,
(whinpuol tub). Lovely equipped
kit/fam1ly rm combo wJhardwood
floors, cherry cabinets. Enjoy
VIewing the country lrom every
wondow. Formal dining rm &amp; LM
wlbeamed collings. Porch &amp; pallo
72 ACRES of beaulllul roUing land.
Pasture, woods &amp; some limber,
pond &amp; mineral rights. Large barn
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 446·6806 .

I

Look
I
room, large spacious
3
Great family home In o great BAs, dining area, 1wo 2 car
locallon. lmmacula!e &amp; lUSt detached
Selling on
wailing for your family. This brtck two Iota.
to sell al
&amp; vinyl Bi·levol oHers Ll'1 open Ia ~ijti,:.&lt;J&lt;J.
dining room, remodeled K open
to a lg. screened In porch, 4 BRs,
2 112 baths &amp; a lg. vary light and
brighl FR &amp; 2 ear garage. All this
tucked away In a corner of the
neighborhood thai overlooks lhe
countryside. Come view the best
at both worlds Priced al
$126.500.1130
Senlngl Th1s 3 BR
has
a privale 4 acre setting. Very
nice home wllh 2 baths. large
LR, aa1-ln kitchen wllh dining
vaulted ceilings and
has a private
allordably al

loa

I

'

14029 TRULY DEUGHTFUL HOlliE
Pretty as a ptclure. Very well
planned stone and frame ranch
home offO&lt;S 3 bedrooms, walk·ln
cloaal, 2 full balhs, charming living
room w/11replaoe. New oak cabinets
line tl'le kitchen. Range, refrigerator,
dishwasher. and compactor all stay.
Utility room la extra fargo. 2llor deck
In tho rear with 38' lnground pool.
Many fruit trees, fiOWet'S, and
shrubs. Sprinkler syalem In tho rear.
2 car attached garage and a ca~ort.
2 story bam bulldlng. Blacktop and
cement dri'v'ewaya. A heme you'll be
proud Ia own. VL Smith 446-6806

on

a 1 acre lol, 1M, oHetlng you
some privacy, good garden
spot or a great place lor
kids !o play. Homo
very nice kilchon w...ll;h;,.;-,;;·;l
cabinets, lots of "'
space, bar area and pantiy,
all open Ia a dining area/FA
wilh vaulted ceiling. formal
LA, 3 BRs &amp; 2 baths,
carpel throughout Newly
Dozed Pond Area Price
QOS
Reduced Ia

'

13367 Large home in town, new
rool 1999, 4 BA. 2.5 SA, 2 car
garage,
vinyl
siding,
nice
neighborhood. Needs some'TLC but
priced rtghl a! $79,goo

I

BEAUTY· 3
;:~~~W~e~tchEnjoy
the River rrom your 14035
the view from
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Ranch home.
or back deck. this 1+ . Kitchen w/eating area, formal d1nng
a 2 BA 1 bath moblle room, garden tub, Fireplace In LA,
hl,meliva,call&gt;on camper Is juol the Cathedral ceilings, covered deck,
for stress. May be room for a above ground pool, cellar" w/
I OllrdEin. Locale&lt;! at 7183 St R!. 7 building, storage shed, 3 car
garage,
blac~lop
delached
I ~)ulh . Reduced!
driveway,
fenced
lot.
2.2
acres
rrv1.
,.{~·?..':~ FOR SALE ON SR 588- 5

I

'

i4005 A FEW MINUTES OF YOUFI
TIME COULD PAY OFFI VIew this
lovely all brick home w/three
bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining
rm , living rm ., family rm., with
fireplace ., Patio, above ground pool,
2 car attacl'led garage and
basement. VERY LIVABLE HOME
FOR THE MONEY. $125,000.00

Potentlol With

Charm
with
Modern
Conveniences Is found In lhla
2 story home featuring toyer,
LA, DR, eal·in kilchon wllh
mudroom, 3·4 BAa and 2 112
baths. Updated Items Include
baths, wiring, 2 furnaces,
siding, real and more.
•$97,500· Owner anxious lo
selL .make an offer I 112011

C.n You Flully Find A Newer
Home
Prlcod
AI
Only
$85,000??? Yes, you can
when you view this vinyl ranch
located al 34 Graham Slraet.
Offering LR, kitchen open to
dining wllh door leading out 10
wrap around deck, 3 BAs and
bath. Call t~ay. 111128

VIew Is what you ~~ip~iii;lf
when you vlew ·the p
located at 5 &amp;
Street Main home
larg• LR, -DR. 3 BAs
112 baths
efficiency
I
end e bath.
converted
home. 2
garage with
atreal parking .
590,000. 1:124

Commercial Ground lor Slle Located along one of the buslesl highways In Southeastern Ohio. Close Ia McDonald's. SPveral
lracls to consider. Some wllh good road frontage along Eatllm Ava. (SR 7) and some wllh frontage on side streets. Prices and lol
sizes vary, so call lor more Information. 1124

·

Before shopping for your New Add.ress ... stop by ours:

www.wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch, GAl 441·1007 Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce

446.0621

Alta Wiseman

446·2707

446-9555

(740) 446•3644

[H

1:il

ltllll!OR"

~UNITT

4

$1800

"';. A

140016
&amp; INCOME
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulaviile
F'k. 3 bedrm, 3 bath living quarters.
Also 18' • 32' garage plus 30' ' 20
building 1/2 ac. of land. good sales
THE loc. Pnced to sell VLS
PICTURE
OF
GAL~IPOLIS • Ho11oe leatures 3
BA, and i bath ~th custom
cabinets in kitchen, very large lot
thai has potential lor several
options, let us show you this home
wilh great location todayl
14038 COMMERCIAL BUILDINQ
Olivo &amp; 3rd. 2756 sq. It mil. City
water, sewef &amp; gas. All Inventory
available too. Owner wants action!
COMMERCIAL
LOT·
84019
Jackson Pk. Galllpoffs, OH Corner
Jot with great potenUal.

SPACE
COUNTFIY LIVING Newly 10bulll 4
bedroom ,
2
balha
wlhuge
equipped kitchen and Smllh Oak
cabinets., Family rm. laundry rm.,
carport &amp; deck. 15 acres mil
fenced . 2 fishing ponds. This Is a
family location that oHara privacy.
Graen Twp. VLS 44e-8606

DEliGHTFUL HOlliE, Clean comlorlable· PLUS Income Located on SR 180 4 Bedrms, 2 balha, apprax.
of an acre. Live on 1st floor &amp; rent lower level for $400.00 mo. Would make a gOOd Mother-In-Law Suite.
llnoon'" can help you own this gOOd home. Owner moving out or town. Call to Inspect, this will not last. VLS.
r4037 Spacious 4 Bedrm, 2 story home. Overlooks the Ohio River. 3 lull bati'IS, lR, Dining rm, !'luge kit. w/many
oak cabinets. Fam rm, w/flreplace, Great deck lor vlev.Jing the river. City schools, shopping nearby. Hln top retreat
In a gracious sentng, Newly &amp; complelly decorated with luxurious appointments. Quick possession.

1095

Ylllnilh~

by

' 250 A 2000

Polaris

Scrambler

GaO•'""'-

r

r

TR.uocs

C~ECK.

~LT.

.:....cc:..::...::;._ _ _ _ _ 2000
"""'- Dakota Sport all~
1997 bl·-.
Ford '5K.
F-1504x4 , nar..
mot·
Ohio Valley Bank will offer
"'VYVV
•
"" .... , .
lor sale by Public Auction d
27:000( m40iles)2. ox9ce21
52tent con- side. :r lift, 33' tire~, with
A 1994 Plymouth Acclaim
»247966 al 10 00 am, on
10113101 At Ohio Valley
Bapk Annex, 143 3rd A\Je.,
Galipol1s, Ohoo. Sold to tho
highest bidder ·as is· where
is" without expressed or im·
plied warranty &amp; may be
seen by calling the Colleclion
Department
at
(740)4 41- t038. OVB reserves lhe. right 10 accepll
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with·
draw items from sale pnor
to sale Terms o,
a.le:
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK

s

1997 Pontiac Grand Prix
GT. Approx. 67,000 m1tes.
(740)742-4008

1998 Ford Ccmtour LX. 4
cyltnder, 76,000 miles, dark
green, 4 door, NADA
$7,000 asking $5,700. Reducod $5200. (740)4462524.

~

:se:::l:.;l304:.::-8.::::75-:.::88::3:::2_ _ _
Leer ful size truck topper,
l1ts Dodge or Ford '96 clowf1,
$350,(740)992·5532.

:::::::::::..;.::::.:;::.;::::.:;___

Ohio Valley Bank will offer
ror sale by · Public Auction
A 1991
Chevy S-10
N298146 at 10:00 am, on
10113101 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3td Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. SOld to the
highest bidder •as Is· where
ts" without expressed or 1mplied warranty &amp; may be
seen bv calling the CoHection
Department
at
(740)441 ·1038. OVB reserves the right lo accepU
rejecl any &amp; all bids, &amp; wilhdraw items from sale prior
to sale. Terms of Sale:
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

Are you looking for engines
transmlslions? Give me
&amp;call at (740)446-0519

•

•

a

.....
-·---·----·-

-~

~,.... ...

-sunday-Times
Sentinel

_,

(740)446-2342. (740)992-2155

r:~~~~§~]

Residential or commercial
audflet Tr.naml•
alonl All Typos, Aocoss To wiring, new service or reOver 10.000 TtanStnloaions, pairs. Master Ucansed elecTransler Casea, 74Q.245- trician. Rklonour Electrlcial,
WV000308, 304-875-1788.
C.H: 339-3765.

z..•••· wall malnta.-. MW
5" ;'3' · "~~~-~~ean,
,......_.-v
97 Aotro Van. 55,000 mlleo,
air, cruise, tilt. PW. PL,
AMIFM Cassette, dual air
baga, ABS. seats 7, like
, _, (740)3711-2134 leave
mesuge.

'7oo

san.

Re•l Eatata Gene1111

1;;;:::::~----.,

r'IO

~·~~--. _

Jl'JUJUIU,;T\.J.&amp;:J

1

2000 Hortda 250 Rocon
ATV, perfect cond111cn, paid
S3.500. wtn ae11 lor 52,500.
Groat Deal (304)675-7348

Buy; Sell or Tra~
'

j

.In the

\

:

·~

M4 Se.,ond Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0~
740-446-0008 740-441-1lll .
•
evansmoo@zoomnet.net www.evims-moore •.,o:ml

Y!

11016 PRICE REDUCED Low
Molnt..,.nco Homol 3 BR 1 BA
with newer: windows. siding,
lnsulallon, furnace. roof, cenlral
air conditioning 1nd carpet.

Fonn.rly Blaekbuna

$68,1100.

RMt~lly

..S•1'1'i•'6 Soutllem Ohio For Qper A Quarter Cetatury""

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cera Casey•245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
Candace
446-7412

CLASSIFIEDSI

Real Estate General

1
~ ____if
___ d
cIass.
ie
.
I
limitS

I

or

~"on
.:_:'.:._7__:_~45:..·.:.:..::...._,~ Leer topper, vary clean.
63 Dodge Ram 6 cyt ifs ~(7~40~):,:44:;8:.:6::323:::_-_ _ __
auto, very...,....,... cond. must 1998 BlaZer $-10, 4-door,

•

Real Estate General

ehd U4- ~ut At

www .BIG- BEND REALTY .COM
. g'~ g'e,ut ~
, ~lee,
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

lt2085 Went your own little
corner of the world? Retreat to
tl'lls home located only 5 minutes
from Holzer, but tucked away on
pnvate Charolals Lake. Nice 4 BR
3 BA redwood aided homo with 2
car aHached garage and private
deck OYettooklng tho lake. Peddle
around the lake in
own

lit

Russell D . Wood, Broker446·4618
Judy DeWiu ....... .................... 441 -0262
Cheryl Lemley ................................. 742-3171
Tammie D eWitt.. .............. . ..... 245-0022
Dana Alha ......................................... 379-9209
Ruth Barr...... .. .......................... 446-0722 l1m Slone .......................................... 446·9483

WITH LOTS OF STYLE Foyer
open to spacious formal living
room ~nd dining area, step-saving
kitchen, family room with fireplace,
oversized master bedroom w!th
patio area that leads to lnground
pool. master bath. 3 addi tional
bedrooms and bath. Appro)( 2
acres, concrete circular dnve. To
much to mention tn this ad call for
an appointment. #2050

'

''

~r.

sale by
Auctlon 4:c4,
A 1994 Plymouth Acclaim (740)992-2167

by

34
awnings. good condhton .
~O)~~~~. I,UOO ltrm, 1247966 at 10 00 am~ on :....=--- -- - 1011184 al 10:00 am. on 1 143306 at 10:00 am. on 4&lt;6,000 miles $32,000.
-I OII3/0I AI Ohio Valley 1990 Ford Bronco XLT, 4x4, 10/13/01 AI Ohio Valley 10113101 At Ohio VsUoy (740)+48-7602
Ohio Vaii'1Y Bank wiU otter Bank Annex, 143 3rd Awi., NC.
good
con&lt;lilion. Bank Annoo&lt;. 143 3nlAvo., Bank Annex, 143 3oQ Avo..
lor sa)o bX Public Auciinn . Ga."J:r-'2!, OM&lt;:. Sold to 100 $3,000, (1..W~
Ga~-'l&gt;ol!o. Olllo.. Sold to the - G•~ - oo.;e ~"" "'-" .!,~~
A 1992 Chevy Ca'llaller highest bidder "as is- whert
higheSt bidder ·u is· where highest biddef •as is· where ~· •UUl, 2 ~"""'outs, baded.
1263706 at 10:00 am, on is" without expressed or im· 1992 F~ Bronco XLT 4~4 is" without expressed or im- Is" wUhout exp~essod or lm- 8J1Cellent
condition,
10113101 At ·Oh10 Valley plied warran~ &amp; may bo 300 · 6 ~r. SljiMd, ""· plied warranty &amp; may bo phed wananly &amp; may be (740)245-9480
Bank An
143 3 d A
''
lift, cru158 •. w.1, ..., by col1ing 1110 c....,_ ....,., by coli'"" 1110 Coltec·
'-I I&lt;\ I• I "
. . ne:.., .
r ~e . seen by calling the Collec- rlres, atumil)um whMIS, ex· lion
n-.•rtmenl
at ;Oepe
.. 'n"mont
at
Galhpahs, Oh10. Sold to the hon
Oen::o.rtmenl
at ell 1
ndll
••900
.._..
1~·
1
•bk10
~
c
en
co
on.
•
(740)441-1038.
OVB
ro-(740)441
-1038.
OVB
re·
riO
hg.~s•
er ·as is- where (740) 44 1-1038. ova re· (740)992·7584
- t h e right to accop11 sarveo the ....,
_ _,
HOME
ts• without expressed or lm· serves the right to accepV
' 'V''110 ......_...,v
•• ----.... ~r~on:o...-.
pl1ed warran~1 &amp; rna be
·
&amp;
.,._
1994 3141011, txtendad cab, reject any &amp; aM bids. &amp; wi1f1. reject any a all bids, &amp; withJ.MrJCU•~~,
·'
Y
retect any ah .........,, &amp; witl'l- , , SLE, fully loaded• ..-....t l'kaw ltent&amp; trorn sale pnot draw items from sale pnor
'
~een by calling the Collec- draw i1 ems !rom saJe prior 4 4
V"'"""
I S
lton
Department
at to sale . . Terms of Sale: condttion, bucket seats, to sale. Terms o
alv: to sale. Terms ot 5afe : C&amp;C General Home Malnte(740)441-1038. OVB re- CASH OR CERTIFIED 82.000 miles, $12.000. CASH OR CERTIFIED CASH OR CERTIFIED nonce- Painting, vinyl ,;o.
serves the njjtll to accep~ CHECK.
(740)«&amp;1066
CHECK.
CHECK
ing, carpentry, doofs, win·
retect ~ny &amp; all hids, &amp; withF
dows, baths, mobile home
50
985
draw ttems hom sale prior
1995 Ford •1 ...... 1
A~~
repair and mora. FOf free
IO sale. Terms ol Sate·
'~ .- .. ~
Ford F-150 4x4, (740)448"'~
ostimall ciall Chat, 740-992·
CASH OR CERTIFIED ~----·~--""""-iiiiiii.-,J :6.::46:.;4_ _ _ _ _ __

'new

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER .......- ...... 446-88011
GAIL BELVILLE ................................ 44&amp;9209
TRISH SNYDER ................................... 441·9458
JOHNNIE FIUSSELL...........................36Nl323
DAVIb SNYDER .................................. 441·9458
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlsmllhreal&amp;state.com
e-mail . vlsrealestateOzoomnet.net

•

'

r

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

For
Loss
of
en•woni•~"''? High cosls for a
lo! of
Maybe lhose are
some maintenance costs for a
long driveway? Maybe those
are some trade offs you have
to make with some properties,
bul not this rambling ranch.
Locate~ on the edge of town,
thiS hl'ne Is very convenient
for schools and shopping. Wilh
over 3000 sq. fl. of living
space. you'll enjoy the open
floor plan and large windows. 4
BAs. 3 full balhs. LA, DR. den
and large FR, also an enclosed
porch. Newly remodeled
kitchen wi!h a!lracllve oak
cabinets. 3 fireplaces. 2 car
gai1ag&amp;. St54,soo 1218

ITI8roon, 72,000 miles,
$2995. (740)742-3802 or
(740)742·3154
1997 Lumina, $4 . ~ . 1992
Grand Am, $1 ,795.
""" 1990
Gran-Prix, $1,995. 1993
cavalier, $2,195. 1992 Corsica, $2,495. COOK MO~
TORS. (740)446·0103

COTTAGE STYLED ·2 bedroom home in Lincoln
Heights, fenced yard is virtually maintf'nance free.
Home is mostly carpeted and has a heat pump and
ceiling fans. Hurry ... this won ' t be on the market long
al only...
$45,000.

Sunday, September 30, 2001
· From 2:00 - 4:00 o'clock

Real Estate General

just north of
wllh
frontage along bolh sides of
Rl. 7. Buildings Include a 4 BR,
3 bath, 2 atory houso with lots
of windows for a great view.
Nearly 3,000 s&lt;j. ft. In all. Plus
a 40 x 80 six door garage, two
manufactured homes p)us a
greal river view. Acldillonally, 5
campsites wtth water; electric
'~, .....,
., &amp; sewer, 3 dock~ and a large
on the river.
launch

ery op1Km co)d a" a
ev
·
•
steal at $2850. (740)992·
671 9 or 74().992•3490 ·
t993 lincoln Town Car
•
leather, maroon, e.:calient
conditon 114 000 miles
53450 ' (740 ).;.42 .3802 0 ;
(740)742_31 54
~::.:._;:_::.:;:::.___ __
1993 Probe, 5 speed, P.S,
PB. 4. cyl.. air, 11 4,000
miles, $2995. (740)7423802 or (740)742·3154

Buy, Sell or J...__,

CLASSIFIEOSI

.

qutS LS, 4 door, 79,000
mileS. extra good cond~toon.

WE ' VE GOT YOUR BUSINESS LOCATION •
How about a building that has everything you need:
2 offices, 2 restrooms, sho'M'OOm, parking, Ohio River
view, l11111e garage doors. .. Don 'I pass this by!
JUST $100,000.

1st house on right.

740·385.4367

"

1~ Mfti'C.-wy Grano Mar-

81111 D CLOSE TO TH E OHIO RIVER · On two
level lots. Nice area, close to businesses and new
school. You can buy it for only...
$6,500.

Oak Fir......., Split &amp; Oollvored. 8ft. Bod. $70.
(304)576-2013
PHC electric lift chair, taupe
color- like n£rw. $300
,(7:.;40::;):;:4:;48-:;3:.:7,::75:,__ __
Waterline Special: 314 200
PSI $21.95 Per 100; 1' 200
PSI $37.00 Por 100; AH
Brass Compression FIHings
In Stock.
FION EVANS ENTEFIPRIS.
ES JackllDn, Ohio, H!OQ.
537-9528

(740)742~900.

r

IT:L\lforb :l.\L\ll

r;:::::::~::::::::::::::::::;;;:}

H~ge tnvento!)'. Discount
PrK:es. On Vonyl Skirting, ___,__~;.:::;_:;.:.;:;.:~.:......:.....:..._ _ __
Doors, WindOWS, Anchorl,
Water Heaters, Plumbing &amp;
Electrical Pans. Furnaces &amp;
Heal Pumps. Bennot11J Mobile Home Supply, 740-4469416 www.orvb.cornlban:;n°::":__ _ _ _ _ __
NEW AND USED FUR·
NANCES 1'01'1 IAL!l We
Install, Free Esllmales, If
you doilt Call ua, We both
Loosal (740)4&lt;48·830&amp; 18Q0.2&amp;l-oo98
•
'
Nurses unitorma. Size 2x
and 3x. 3 sets paid over
$100.
Sell
for
$40.
(740)982· 7118

Hidden Treasure • 13 Acres in
the C11y11 Allhe end ol Cotton
Lane, you'll ftnd this spacious
tn·level home lhal offers
wondertul pnvacy, while nol
sacrificing convenience. 4·5
BR home wllh 3 baths, LR,
large FA,' medta room and
indoor pool. 13 acres Include
pond and creek frontage.

iOCited.

•es&amp;ore ~~ onginal, 107.000
actual rrules, S6200 080.

picker. rmontholdAngusbuMcaH,

Idea

Real Estate General

Cats &amp; kiftanl available for
~. (740)843-5268.

REAL ESTATE
St.ee 1943

Conveniently
locatton withm
dtstance to downtown.
the street rrom a supermarket,
bank and drugstore. 2 story
with 3 bedroos. 1 bedroom
could be downstairs for those
who don't want e.tatrs . 2
bathrooms . Large eaHn
kitchen, living room, off street
parking. $59,9001812

01

Smolh, (740)992·5956
ro~. - ·
•-•- Deere ··~
~"'
_" Tiitan 11
combine Call (304)675·
4'308
Buck a bale sate. square
bales $1 .00 other hay up to
$2.00. round bales $15.00
each 304-675-4869
laue

lfiOSILE HOlliE OWNERS _ _ _ _ _ __:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Real Estate General

'4•5 BRs AI An Aff1Drd.ibie
Prlcell ThiS roomy bl· levol
has as many as 5 BRe If
needed. Also. has 3 baths.
Over 2000 sq . ft. of living
space Features also Include
large LA, eal·in kitchen wllh
dining area, deck and 2 car
garage. Quality location In
Spring Valley atoa at an
affordable price of $115,000

1

Window Air Conditioner. Adorable full bkx&gt;ded Minla·
Work5 Great SSO OBO. ture Collioo, 5 weo1&lt;o old.
(740)992·7116
$75 , · males a females.
(740)«1-0865
Woodworking Equipment
10" Tabl&lt;l Saw. 12" Planer, AKC Slleltle puppies sa·
16'" Drum Sander, 6" Join.. bles, Tri, bi black, , tNue
tor.
(740)245·9147
or merle; AKC Mlola1uro
(740)245-7311
•~nauze,., saiVpepper,
""''
black/sliver, $300 each
(firm), vet checked &amp; shots,

Kingtonwood
stove. C811740-245-5121
Winters. Rio Grande,
OH
25
wood bumtng
splittet. $1000.
.
tor all (304)576-3636 leave
a rnesaage.

Tables with 2 leaves, 6 Cut your own fire wood, Slorage Vans wtlh roll up
chairs. Good condition, call $15.00 truclcload, all ready doors. 38ft. to 45ft. $1500
•easoned. Call (740)44e· each. N"" (740)446·7600
(740)256·6417
2506.

Unllmllod
Beauttful brick structure buill
around 1904 has wonderful
charm and limilless potential.
FOt'merly used as a restaurant,
ills well suited tor office space,
apartments or a mixture.
Approx. 5600 sq. ft. plus full
basement.
Beautiful
woodwork, high ceilings, great
location. 1111

Shots. Parents 00 premises.

F'llR"lJ.UE
""""'

I

For Sale· Reconditioned
~
washers, dryers and refrig·
MF.aaiANDisE
era Iars Thompsons Appll- ~
ance 3407 Jackson Ave·
.
nue, (304)675-7388.
12&lt;50 Oflk:o Trailer. NeWly
:::::.:.:::.:..:.:::..:..:::.:.::._ _ Remodeled.
$4,000.
Kincaid dining room sel· (c7_40:;)_44_1_·9_38_s_ _ _~
pedestal table with 2 leaves, 6 chairs &amp; hutch. Solid 27 cu. ft. Kenmore Side by
wood. Ask1ng $450. Phone· Side Refrigerator witl'l Ice
(740)446-4064 after 5pm.
MakO&lt;. $100 (740)256·
•
6445
Main Street Fumiture
::..:.;:__ _ _ _ __
(304)675-1422
Antique Qak Cider Pre!S.
515 Main Slreel, POinl
$100. (740)256·6445
Pleasant
Bod wtlh Box Spring and
New &amp; Used Fumiture
Mattress. Chest Drawer~,
New 2 Fllace Llvingroom Chair, Table and Chairs, M1·
Suites. $399. Buy, Sell, crowave, Baby Car Seal,
Trade.
Stroller. (740)44e·9742

row

Call (740)388-8743

:M=e=~~e~----------­

;;;;:::;:::====;;;;;;

r

7

ca,

i

soxloozteno:as u 7.s9ci

(7.t0)69ol-1 681

AlnUS

1956 Chevy Belaire, 4 dJ..

Condi...,.,.. 10 year parts WATER WELLS ORIUEO. now $1 9,990; 60x200x16 Guinne Pig al 185 Norlh S2500. 1 740 ~ 6 ' 1542
AI sired by EXT29ANI413.
Flr,twood for Qle, S150 and labor warranry inctude4. (740,...7311
was $58,160, now $42,990 Pan. Drive (304)675-1 420 7 1a NeW Hohand ~ Case SQuare hay baler,
kMia. (740)«i-f47i
COMFORT AIR HEATING Wedding dress, lize 7/8, 1-800-406·5126.
Male Miniature Dachshund .,.w 1th 2 ~ heads -&amp; graSs (740~79-2798
Grubb's Piano- Tunlng &amp;
AND COOliNG
$150, 112 karol diamond
puppy. red, Vet tacked, first head direct cut. Harold
HAY &amp;

=-=:!::•-=:.::·..!:::..;::::.:..:;::;

l.t_
. ..

IF'o .!~ I riO ~~
t_Wn._
. &amp;___.1 ~~M~UJ~OIIC~t~(U~S~
M&lt;nuo~ IL
&amp;
t..--•·UR-·S·A-LF.- -"· 86 new
Chevrolet Celebrity, lots Ohio valley Bank wiA otter 1985 Chevy S-10 Blaltr, Ol1lo Valloy Bank will otter Ol1lo 'oo'alloy Bonk wtlt ol1or 1995 Winnebago Adventur·
parts
mot
tor
Public
asking
tor aa1e
Pubic Auc:11on tor sale
Public Auction er,
foot, auto levels;
r10

year old AOHA lncentiile
New 2 Bedroom. Heat New and Used Fum•ture Beet lifl Chair $SO: Kitch-·
RESt0£NTtAL AND
Used 2300 Ditch Witch Steef bUikhngs, new must Full-stodt Boston Terrier
EQuiPMJoM
Fund Mare with 120 days
Pump, Wasl"rerJ Orym Hook· store be4ow Hoida~ IM , Ka~ en
and 4 Ct.al~. $50.;
COMMERCIAL
Trenchef and 05 HP Ver· seU 30i .C0.12 was $1 0.200 puppies father AKC moth·
riding. Will make all around
up. 7 miles lrom Hospital on nauga. We seH gravB monu· Dresser. SSO.: Twin bed AMANA · Hi Efticiency 92 + meet suxnp grinder call ~ :0990: JIOA60$~~ ;'g~~ er fuU-~tock. $100 • each 560 FarmaU with mounted 2 prospect. (140~41-1015

3614
Road $86,500 Nice
style
home that has large family room ~
din1ng area that opens to large
rear deck and private back lawn.
Eat·in kitchen 3 bedrooms, large
lam1ly room, garage, concrete
drive and morel

_.,--·r:..··_-.., meaterplece

.~o:r:i'fi:lh~;F.ru~~~

paddle
boat lhe
dock. Relax~

no1r oily.
2 story cape
offers over 3000 sq. ft. o1 living
apace plus full pourod besemenl
just on lholldge of town. With 3·
4 BR and 2 112 BA, lhls
Impressive homa offers a custom
kitchen with breakfast nook, a
largt formal dining room, large
open family room with gas log
fireplace and a maeter suite on
the main level. Unsurpassed
construction elevates this home

12093 Owner wonto on olftrl
Not only dOes this 1.79 AC Green
township property have a cute 2
bedroom and a bath hor'na, but
extra Income· can be generated
from lhe well kept mobile home
with 2 bedroom and a bath. In
addltlon to all this an extra
building lot can be e1ther used_or
sold to help off set the cost of

kt VIIWI
outside and a
classy look
Inside all on 2 acre~ . Located at
100 Lakeview offers four
bedrooms and 2 112 baths, large
formal dinning and hving rooms
along with a cozy family room
featuring a gas log fireplace. With
an Oak crafled kitchen and top
quality kitchen appliances this
country setting Is a must

RANCH
HOME. 1.200 sq.
ft ol livtng space area wtth an
additional 2000 sq, It which is
used presently as carpenters shop
but could be easily converted into
additional livmg area. Melal pole
barn 30 x 60 with 16 x 60 addition
on each side. Parttally wooded.
Fenced pasture. Tillable acreage
$25,000 Off Listing Prlco. Ideally Private setting. Call lor details and
located close to 35 bypass between ap!l(lintmenl today I 12138
Gallipolis and Alo Grande. Over 12
acres Included with this 3 bedrooms
ranch, large living room, eaHn
kitchen, · basement, family room , 2
car attached garage #21 08
$42,500.00 NEW PRICE ON THIS
NEAT
WELL
MAINTAINED
RANCH with 3 bedrooms, l1ving
room, kitchen attached carport and
more situated just on the outskirts of
lowni Quick possession! #2142
338 THIRD AVENUE I $89,500.001
In Town living close to city schools
HUGE
PRICE
REDUCTIDNI and wal~ng dlslance lo shopping
$44,500.00 IS THE NEW ASKING at its bestl Lovely 2 story !'lome
PRICE on this one tloor plan ranch with 4 bedrooms, Ioyer, living
slturated at 21 neil avenue 3 room, kitchen, enclosed porch,
bedrooms, basement, carport, basement carport, morel 11
small easy to ma1ntain lot. M2112
EXTENSI~ELY
REMODELED
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED EXTERIOR &amp; INTERIOR! Root,
RAISED RANCH STYLE HOMEI siding windows wiring and much
Liv1ng room, d1ning room, kltcheo, much' morel H8rdly nothing else
den, family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 lor you 10 do but move In and
batl'ls, built-In 2 car garage plus enJOY all the hard wortl: the owners
large rec. room in basement! put Into this lovely 2 story home.
Central air. 12141
Large sized rooms, .2 baths, 3
EXPAND THE FAMILY HEREI 2 bedrooms, Ioyer. Detached garaga
Homes for $72,500.00 and Owners and plenty morel Call to view this
are wanting sold nowl Your owner one. 12129
may just buy lhese two homes. LOT.. FFIONTAQE ALONG SR
Large sized 2 slory and smaller 3 160 &amp; BULAVILLE PIKE 'handy
bedroom home Country senlngl convenient location Level, public
12033
utilities available. Residential or
PRICE
. DROPPED
TO commorclel. Selling below lhe
134,900.001 1 t12 Story home appraised value. 12146
situated on nice level lot 3 WITHIN MINUTES OF HOLZER
bedrooms, enclosed lronl
~OSPITAL Localed al 6153 SR
I
kitchen &amp; dining
160 you wl!l find tl'lls over 1.7 acre
lot and multiple use dwelling ideal
tor res1denUal or commercial use.
OFFERII2035
Unlimited potential. Must call for
completellstlngl 112143

alory

home that Ia
years young
resting on appro11. 2 acr11. Uvlng
room,
kitchen,
a btdroama,
basement.
Low
exterior
maintenance, de«ached 24 x 30
largo tronl poroh and morel

'

36812 SR 124.. $79,000 3.29
acres comes along with this ranch
home. Uvlng room, dining room,
kitchen 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 2
Car detached garage. Lovely
pond, fruit trees &amp; berries. Lels go
seel12130
CHEAP CHEAPI $21,000.001
lnvestmenVstarter... Ranch
style
home ... sltuated at 738 Main
Streel .. 2 bedrooms, · equipped
. kitchen, living room, bathl M2121

NEW LIST1NO
1t971f1081LE
HOME ON RENTED LOTI
Excellent opportunity lo own your
own home. This 1997 Clayton
home Is In excellent condition. 3
·Bedrooms, 2 baths, nice sized
ki tchen and living room area All
set up on a reasonably priced
rented lot. Call today ! Only
$22,500.00.

.

IChoola, park front, grocery
and much morel This 2 story
home hatlhe mslbillly ol having
,,.,..l\~f}j.W
.'"',
3 rentals with lt. ll\fe In one and
1118 Looking ror 1 low let tl'le rent trom the others pay
malnttftlnce ranch with low your mortgage This Is a deal of a
utility coeta on 1 level lot In a ilfetlme. Don't let this one pass
convenient location? Look no
further, this Ia it. This home has 3
bedrooms. 2 batho, 2 car garage,
newer roof, . newer vinyl aiding,

;;-

FROM $1511,1100
$125,000.001 Does lhlo moan
motlvaUon or wha11 2000 Secllonal
home situated on 13 acre• and has
over 2,00 sq. ft. living space~ 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,' living ·room,
family room, den &amp; dlnlrlQ plus more
situated close to elementary schoOl.
12131
ACFIEAGE LIST1NOI 94 112 acres
m/1 wilh road frontage, homesite,
larm land and kteal hunting land
thai Is adjacent to Wayne National
Forrest. 12140
RIO GRANDE AREAl Roomy
almost new home with approx.
2,560 sq. ft. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, formal dining room, kitchen
and morel Nice sized rooms. Large
Iron! porch bam &amp; shOp and 3.29
acres mil. •2133
COMMERCIAL· Sycemore Street
Location. Largo 2 alory building with
off street parking. Ideal tor floral
shop, etc. Call for mreo del8ill.
12044
t649 SR 218 $85,000.00 1 slory
vinyl olded ranch ltomt. Uvlng
room, dining area, kitchen, family
room and 2 baths. 2 Car allaehed
garage. c;:enlral air. City ochooltl
N2145

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP 13Y FOR A
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY

t11 0 Sot up and roody to go.
This 3 • bedroom and 2 bath
mobile rests on a spacious level
lot convanlonlly located. $47 ,ooo
l
'"

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
MIDDLEPORT. Older homo with
charm and great locallon near
echool, grocery, etc. Lota of room
here tor tl'la tamilr,. Glva Cheryl a
call for more detai s. 12110
368 112 N. 3rd Stroot. One IIDry
raised ranch, 2 bedrooms, living
room, kitchen &amp; t.ath, garage,
basement. Priced rlgl'lt $38,000
112134

[·,

.,

~'

... II!

~

n~ow;~·~~r~dheat

•-ii:,itiiod

·~
on •
qulot countr~ road ldjotnlng
Stoto Owned Foreot This 2 BR
1 BA with a nice family room on
over 4 acres ol wooded land.
Ideal lor lha person looking to got
Trails through lho property
2 natural aprlnga. All thla
In lha 40's.

pump, fenced
and 12 ' 14 storage
Great
tor this

LOCAT I 0 N 'ILllstl~:g~ ;~~~.~~~.

Riverfront Qetlwayl 1.5 acres
m/1 wilh 180 teet of water frontage
located 1 mile from public boat
rf,mp access. AJso included Is an
Immaculate 2 BR mobile home
with oentral heat an!;t air.

LOCATION! You will find lhls 3
BR 1 Balh gam In a quiet
neighborhood close to schools
and
Cell eoon, mey
Totally remodllod, top to
bollom, lntldo and outl
!loaulllulllghl end airy 3 BR 2 BA
hOme on 1/2 aero mil. Oulol
selling and only 10
town. Immediate

cape
3 BR 1 2 BA. All city ulllillos,
schools, living room with
wuod burning fireplace , full
now QUIALITY
baeement, large wood Cleek and
BUILT ham1 on 2 level ICFII
m/11 Very nice 3 BR 2 BA home aff&lt;H.iaobloil I
In beck. Very
' with solid 6 panel doors, lots of
hardwood lloorlng, Smith cuolom
kitchen an·d 2 car garage.
Locallld In Po~or area. $102 ,900.
Call Ieday lhlo ona won'l 1..1

ua T1NQI 2-3 Bldroom longl
On 2 Acreo, 1 ear
pluo 2 ather atorags
lOcated on SR 554.

VIsit us
online at r.
www.EvansMoore.com

1141 FrH natural gel to
our hamel Use the savings
rom your heating bill to he)p
make your mortgage payment! 3
BA
secllona.l, nice
ll
I , newer noor
gas log

1123 BldwsiVPorlor Area. 4 BR
2 BA home wtth country charm on
an acre of land With lot.a or trees.
Newly remodeled sectional with
drywall accented with custom
wood molding, a re!lnlshad oak
lcltchen. ootid 6 panel door,. open
room and 3 car detached

Quiet wooded I
7.8 acres on Smokey
3 bedrooms, 1 "bath,
great room with
spacious garage with
much more.
1

�Page 06 • ~uullnt•

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

il:mtrs -~rntmrl

-

Federal Reserve joins ::
investigation into
.·..
home .loans in Poconos::.

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The new
judge in the Microsoft antitrust case
ordered both sides to work around the
clock to settle the long dispute, citing
economic fallout from the terror attacks
as one reason for haste.
"There's no reason this case can't be
settled;' U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said Friday. She said she ·
would appoint a mediator in two weeks
if sufficient progress isn't made toward
settlement.
· Kollar-Kotelly said the issues have .
been argued in and out of court for
more than six years, and both the government and the software maker could
spend their money better elsewhere.
" In light of the recent tragic events
affecting our nation, this court regards
the benefit which will be derived from a
quick resolution of these cases as
increasingly significant," the judge wrote
in an order after a morning hearing.
She told both sides to start negotiating
"24 hou rs a day, seven days a week." She
encouraged settlement at every opening
during the hour-long hearing.
Besides the case, Microsoft also is dealing v.jtl). a shaky economy and the coming release of two key products: the
_jWindows XP operating system upgrade
and its first major foray into the video
game business, X-Box. Even though a
quick settlement would end the pro. ceedings, business restrictions sought by

the government would affect the company for years.
"One of the reasons they've been trying to Jelay this is that it's much easier to
just go to court all the time~,'' Giga Information Group analyst Rob Enderle said_
" A conduct remedy would mean a
cross-section of the company would·
have to deal with it daily."
·
Although Microsoft and the Justice
Department said they didn 't need a
mediator to oversee settlemenftalks- a
tactic that already failed once - KollarKotelly said one will be appointed Oct.
12 unless the case is settled by then. She
said she expects regular updates on the
talks' progress_
"We're certainly pleased with the
schedule,... Assistant Attorney General
Charles James said on the courthouse
steps.
Likewise, Microsoft spokesman Vivek
Varma said the company " looks forward
to resolving this case as soon as possible."
The hearing was the first time the new
judge presided over the historic antitrust
case. An appeals court overturned U.S.
District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson's
original verdict to break Microsoft in
tw(/, and Jackson was removed fTom the
case for making pejorative statements
against Microsoft executives.
The federal appeals court, in a unanimous ruling, said Microsoft was guilty of
holding an illegal monopoly and sent

the case back to the district court to
decide a new penalty.
If the case isn't settled by Nov. 2, a
penalty will be devised in court, KollarKotelly said and set a swift schedule for
that phase that sided with prosecutors in
most aspects.
"The government basically got what
they wanted,'' University of Baltimore
law professor Bob Lande said.
Microsoft had argued that the government should specify the scope of the
penalty first. Kollar-Kotelly dismissed
that argument.
" It is premature to now address the
appropriateness of specific provisions
w hen the government · itself has not
specified" the scope of their case, she
said.
The Justice Department has said it is
no longer seeking to break up Microsoft
but .is opting instead for 'restricting the
company's business practices.' Prosecutors have not said what restrictions they
would seek.
The judge set a tentative hearing date
of March 11, 2002. Both sides are sched- .
uled to offer penalty proposals in
December.
Kollar-KoteUy firmly brushed aside
multiple requests fTom Microsoft to get
more time for various aspects of 'the
case, noting that the government and
Microsoft requested seating for 28
lawyers .

STROUDSBURG, Pa.
(AP) - . The Federal
Reserve Bank is investigating whether hundreds of
homeowners were duped
into buying overpriced
homes in the Poconos
Mountains.
The investigation is the
fifth probe into Poconos real
estate launched by a public
agency this year,
The Federal Reserve,
which supervises and regulates banking institutions,
will examine whether banks
and lending institutions that
approved or purc hased
mortgage loans from several
builders and mortgage companies took part in the
alleged fraud.
"We want to know
whether the banks were
innocent pJ.lrchasers or are
part of predatory lending
practices," said Robert
Cook, special counsel for
the Federal Reserve's. Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs.
the
Foreclosures
in
Poconos have skyrocketed,
quadrupling in Monroe
County from 120 in 1990 to

____

"m want to kt~ow

.f'

•

,,:

whether the banks
were innocent
purchastrs or are
part of predatory
let1ding practices. "

...

Robert Cook

'.

•.

'

561 last year.
. '.
The Monroe Gounty dis ~ · ,
trict attorney and state atto~- "
ney general are investigatirlg
sales and financing of homesthrough the apparent use of
inflated appraisals and phantom financing.
1
The Department ofHousf
ing and Urban Develop,
men t is also looking i~
possible civil rights vio"-'
tions, Cook said. So~
builders in the Poconos hav~
used ads targeting minorities
in the New York City are,a.
about an hour's drive east.,,.,.,
Some of the loans suspe10~,
ed of being fraudulent WQre 1
eventually purchased fro~ :
banks by the Federal Ho~.~ :
Mortgage Corp. and tq,~,
Federal . National Mortgase
Association and defaulted. ·' ,

..

..
Rul Estate General____ ..
•.
_..;._....:..._..;.....:..._..;._,;.

'S ATTIC!
Public Notice

i&gt;unba!'- tleime~ i&gt;enttnel
I

Public Notice
time,

Real Estate General

on

Monday,
October-15, 2001, and
publicly opened and
read at that hour end
plan. Bid forme may
be obtained In the
office of the City
Manager, 511 Second
Avenue, Galllpalla,
and OH 45131.

Notice Ia hereby
given that eeeled
bldl will be rectllved
In the office of the
City Manager, 51 I
Second
Avenue,
Galllpalle, Ohio far
the City of Galllpolla
Fire Station Site ' September 23, 30,
Preperatlon.
-200:::..;1_ _ __.___
Bide
will
be Public Notice
rectllved II the lbove
named office until
BIDS FOR BUS
12:00 noon, IOCII
time, on Monday,
Entern
Local
October
2001, and
publicly opened and . SchOOl Olatrlct, 50008
read M that hour and State Route 181,
pl-. Bid lonna may Reedavllle, Ohio
be obtained In the 45772, 11 accepting
for 1
72
office ol the City bide
p81aenger
achool
Manager, 518 Second
Avenue, Galllpolla, bua. Specification•
for bua can be
and OH 45131.
obtained by calling
September 23, 30, the auperlntandant'a
2001 .
· ofllce at (740) 117·
- - - - - - - 1071. Quote• will be
opened
In
the
Public Notice
treuurer'a office at
noon on Monday,
LEGAL NOTICE TO
October 16, 2001 .
BIDDERS
The board reaervea
Notice Ia hereby the right to reject any
given that ... ted or any part of the bid.
bide will be received Bide ahould be
In the office of the labeled "Bid for
City Manager, 518 School Bill" and
Second
Avenue, mailed to:
Eutern
Local
Oalllpolla, Ohio for
the City of Oelllpolla School Dletrct,
Fire Station Building Treaeurer'a Office,
soooe State Route
Conatructlon,
Bide
will
be 881, Rudevllle, Ohio
received 11 the above 45772.
I) 30, 2001
named office until
12:00 noon, local 10) 7, 2001

Rul Eatate General

been
acres with a
. There are 2
garage. Just look at

G)

·-LENDER

OFFICE

'

WHEAT RIDGE. Colo. (AP) its ears, tail and one leg, a
black-and-white cat Jiaim;d Westy ts
swaddled in a baby sleeper on a blanket inside an incubator.
In me four months since two teenagers set the srray afire in a parking lot.
he has undergone three major surgeries for skin gratis and amputations
and faces painful rehabilitation to
regain mobility.
As Westy prepared to move fiom a
veterinary hospital to a new home on
Friday, his well-publicized plight has
prqmpted a lawmaker to seek stiffer
ani)'nal cruelty penalties.
The teen-agers - ages 16 and 17
--''.served two days in jail after turning

N\Fius

a

...

117 TEODORA AVENUE, CITY PROPERTY:
This home has ,great curb side appeal amidst the
treed driveway and l811 timbers in the biCkaround
makes a stately seuina. Thia home is a· couple

blocks from the Holzer Sycamore Branch and The
BaptiSI Church. Brick 2 Slory feonu•• 21xl3 new
LR w/ lots of glass and WBFP this is a beautiful

room. Fonmd entry, 2 BRs on main level. Complete
kitchen, DR and from lherc a larae sull room.
Second Level: 18d7 &amp; 19&gt;14. Full finlahed

basement, Huse FR 2411..28, An exerclae room
13• II . Mostly all hanlwood floon in lhio home.
Breezeway room. w/aame desi1n aa rhe IUD of
Florida room. Garaae, top of the around pool, 2
· storage buildinJR· This home is on 4 lots which
makes lots of pr1vacy and yard. NO. :ZU

· POMEROY • HYSELL RUN ROIID-1
I story ranch style
lncludea living room,
kitchen, dining-·--· .c
.lull bath, A larger
1~n~~;P:ll
patio overlooks a nice Ia
back yard with pond. A
lour·car garage finishes up
package. It all sits on a 1+ acre
ASKING $77,000.

!

2tc

"His appetite was good. he still
grnon •e&lt;L hin=IC vet&lt;&gt;rinari:&gt;!l- Pen Omvald said."''Signs like that shO\ved
us he wanted to hang in there."
As doctors worked to save Westy,
about SbS,OUO in donations poured
into a fund for his treatment. Hospiul
officials plan to me it in ocher animal
cruelty cases.
In sonu' sL1tes, animal cn1elty conviqions have resulted in lengthy
pnson sentences.
Earlier this month. a California man
who slaughtered four puppies in an
agricultural shredder was sentenced to
three years and eight months in state
prison.
In San Jose, Calif, a ·28-year-old

HONOLULU (AP) Fourteen new dengue fever
caS.es have been confirmed by
f~deral health officials in
I'Ja\vaii's first outbreak of the
.lrrt'6squito-borne disease in
tf\ore dian 50 years.
· tast week, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevenlion confirmed that four people had contracted dengue
· fe,l(er, which is rarely fatal. All
f&amp;ur have since recovered.
lthe 18 cases
so far have
.
been confined to the remote
~na and. Nahiku areas of
Efst Maui, said Dr. David
~saki of the state "Departt¥nt of Health.
:More cases are suspected
and awaiting confirmation by
tl{e CDC, he said. ·
·
:Oengue fever causes severe
headaches, fever and rashes.
T~e more serious dengue
h~morrhagic fever has a fatalitt rate of 5 percent, accordittg to the CDC. There is no
vfcdne.9r,specific treatment.
' ,Dengue fever had been

reported
previously
in
Hawaii, but by people who
had contracted the disease
elsewhere. None of the newly
confirmed cases involved
people who had recently traveled away from Maui, Sasaki
said.
Bruce Stoner · of Nahiku,
said he, his wife and two children are among those
believed to have contracted
dengue fever.
"In dengue, you're not
going to die, but you feel like
it wouldn't be so bad," Stoner
told the Maui News. "It's like
a very unpleasant flu, and the
headache Is very •excruciat. "
mg.
State health officials say the
best way to fight the disease is
to eradicate the mosquitoes
.that carry it. They · have
sprayed areas where dengue
fever · has occurred, and
encouraged residents to eliminate standing water, which
acts as a b.reerling ground .for
mosquitoes .
'

Everyone Welcome to hear

BASEMENT SALE
October 1 &amp; 2 ·

Mr. Harley Coon
(Korean Veteran)
speak at the

French Art Colony
530 First Avenue
Sunday, Sept. 30th
at2:00 .m.

Elementary School. .. 2 miles from
and Holzer Hospital. Private &amp; ·

Surrounded by woodland &amp; meadows.
Cape Cod home. QUALITY BUILT HOME.

T S TRANSMI!=iSIONS
Automatic Specialists
20 Years Experience

BEECH STREET· Here's the home lor
a beautifully decorated one story
was re'cently remodeled. Has 3 baclrocoms
central air, and a fenced back
walling tor you.

740-992-4578
OVER THE HILL!
. KEITH OILER
was the BIG 50
on September 28th

POMEROY· A lwo story hOme
apartmenle. One unll has 5 rooms
one unit has 4 rooma and a bath
unlt 'haa 3 rooms and a bath . Live
apartment and rent the other two.

Backyard Sale
2144 Jackson Pike

446-3200 After 5:00pm

Stop at our sale
first... then stop by our
tent. ·

New Business Opening
Oct. 1

SUE'S SELECTABLES

French 500
Flea Market

on the "T' in Middleport, Ohio

&amp;t&amp;to-2342
or 992-2156t'

740-992·0298

••'

LX2 55 Lawn Tractor
•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

•

JS60 Walk-Behind Mower .
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting height's

Tl 05C Line Trlmmer/Brvshcutter
•1.05-hp (19.8 cc) M·Series engine
•15-inch-cutting-swath
• Only 8.5 lbs
• 2-year consumer werr.anty

SST18 Lawn Tractor
•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

deckin&amp; and 2nd levol balcony. Formal entry wl
hardwood floorina all oak trim and solid oak

• HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD • Cloae to town yet private
country. Thla convenient one floor plan ranch hail 4 bedrooma,
bath, newer shingle root, public waler, insulation and a spacial bonua
'lrH
IIIII lila on a 1+ acre lot.
ABKINO

interior doors throughout Larse family room w/
vent li=ss fireplace . A free flowina: floor plan of
1pa&lt;;e &amp; function . Private bedroom suite &amp;. bach.
Several walk-In closet&amp;, large kitchen wilh loti of
oak cabinCts. 3 addilional bedrooma. Basement
and detached 2 car garage. NO. JZO

APPLE QIIOVE· Approximately 29.935 aorea of great hunting
Home aile out of flood plain. S.pllo, electrlo and your own water
a gas well on thla properly. Could hiVI lree gaato your home .
royalties. What a view of the Ohio River. Aak.abcut an J1V~,Ii&amp;ble
fronllot also. kgent Owned.
ASKING
REDUCED • CHESTER TOWNSHIP • Juel mlnulet from tho village of
. right off SR 248. Approximately 10.02e acres. Electric TPC water
Great lor a homesite, you cen see fer mUss. Call today.
_
. REDUCED TO $11,000.

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce.............992-2259
Henry E. Clel.and ........................... 992-2259
Sherrl L. Hart •••••.• ."..........................742-2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·8191

.

(

.

'

For the past 163 years, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, q~ality,and ~o~mi.t~ent
to the cus.tomor. Stop in to your local Johll Deere dealer to see for yourself our t1me tested rehab1hty. .
You'll find that our standards hayen't changed much over the years. Ask about easy financing options
at your participating dealer today.

room,
home has many
paymenl would be Cheaper than rent.
route. Eaay acoeas to everything. .
ABKfNQ

from Oallipolis. Need a new place 10 atan
own busine!JS? Call for more details. ~0.

Watch for Yellow Balloo11s
October 12, 13, 14th

. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
House in Northup.

For .More
Info ...

.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE, 6.91 """''· Only 5

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING:
Cigarette Smoke Contains Carbon Mono~ekie.

BUnERNUT AVENUE • A two story
vinyl aiding. Hal 3 apartmenll with a
Income. There Is a part basement.
apartment has 4 rooms and a bath. on••,.
apartment has 3 rooms and a bath,
other apartment has 3 rooms plus 2 ·enclllc)led~
porches, and a bath.
$38,000.00

amenities to list. NO. 321

ONLY $165,000.

Levi Garren Chew .............. $15.99
I TAillnr''~ Pride Chew ........... $1 4.99
smJtherrn Pride Chew .... $11.99 en
Morgans Chew .. ............ $11.79 en

FOR RENT OR SALE

Happy Birthday
Gloria, Kevin, Lorena

.LTI53 Law• tractor
•13-hp engine
• 38.-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shih-on·the-go transmission

level. 3 more l)edrooms &amp; bath plus a parlor
area. Front porch &amp; 2 car go.rage. Too

.

Levi Garren EXIra Chew .$11 .99 en

LARGE GARAGE SALE
Monday 8:00- 5:00
6 miles below Gallipolis
on St Rt 7S

.,..

and bath w/ whirlpool tub, vanity and
1shower. Open
oak stairca1c leadin1 to second

tall trees wilh natural seclusion. A lovely 2 year
old home on 4 acres more or !ell. Wrap around

Kool ............................... $24.10 en
tl:IUIOier 6o.z can Roll. Tobac . ... $6.29 en
6oz can Roll. Tobac ......... $5.99 en
II,;ClUg;ar Buy 1 gett Free .. ......... $1 .79
5 can/roll. .................$6.99
llimhAru•nll Scanion ...............$6.99

A DEERE FoR ·ALL ·SEASONs

I

~~;~~:~Formal
andw/DRFrench
w/ hardwood
family LR
room
doors. floors.
Main

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled In

III~:~~~~;;:::::::::::
............. $1
$1 5.79
9.71 en
en
..................

Office desks &amp; Chairs, Misc.
Office Equip, Baby Clothes,
Swings, Toys, Men and
Women Clothes, Gas Cook
Stove and Many Misc. Items

NEAR PAGEVILLE • Behind Wells

oak interior paneled doors, o.nd ldts of oak
cabinets in this complete "wife approved"
'1

man received a three-year prison term
he W"~ convicte(l .of throwing a
bichon frise to hi death fo~owing a
fender-bender with rhe dog's owner.
In Torrington. Wyo., a man is serving
eight months in the county jail after
he pleaded guilty to animal cruelty for
abusing and killing his ex-girlfriends
dot;.
" If lawmaker.&gt; tell me 1 can have
additional prison beds li&gt;r those who
are cruel to animals or for those who
sexually assault children, I'm going to
take the latter," said Grant. "Those are
me kinds of tough decisions we are
forced to make and legislators are
fon:ed to make with limited .tax dolIars...

aft~r.

Marlboro ....................... $24.fl0 en
Winslon ......................... $22.22 en
Camel ............................ $24.1 Ocn
Doral ............................. $19.68 en

74 Mill Creek Road

2

PERFECT
H 0 ME
PROFESSIONAL. Green

Page 07

SMOKIN' ROBS
1525 Eastern Avenue

Rain or Shine
9:00a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport • A
brick hame with big stone accents
corner. There are threa bedrooms, dining
kitchen, 1 1/2 baths, family room and a
room. A lull basement, and a large garage
an allached carport. Has ne.w
•• ···~··
rooms.

Rul Eatate General ·

~rnunrl•

LLETIN B

fever conf1rmed on Maui
~y federal ·health officials

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • This 2 story home
6 rooms, 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths

PRICE REDUCED • SR 110
r OALLIA COUNTY·
This one
. atory ranch with 2+ acres Is aa cute
aa oan bil Eaay accesa, prlvMI
aenlng, 3 be&lt;lrooms, harONood
llocrlng, kitchen, dining room, &amp; lvlng
·room. Newer carpeting &amp; wall paper.
AttaChe&lt;! one oar garage.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIDNII
REDUCED TO ~1,800.

themselves in a month after the inci- P"nalty of 11!. months in j.til and a
dent. They were fined $500 and given $5,000 fine .. At least ');] stat~ punish
I tfmonths probation.
·
.
some animal ~ruelty crimes as fdonies,
On May 26. an unidentitied driver
Bob Grant, me Adams County district attorney who prosecuted the saw the two teens set Westy on fire and
teens, said they wanted to know what called police. Animal control officers
would happen if the eat's mil was set took ·the anin~1l to the Wheat Ridge
on fire "like the cartoons:'
Animal Hospital, where the veterinar1
State Rep. Alice Borodkin said ian on duty nicknamed him Westy
authorities need to view animal cruel- after the city ofWestminster where he
ty as a precursor to far worse crimes.
was found_
"These people later go on t(&gt; murTht&gt; cat was critical. with 25 percent
der;' she said_ "These people reaDy of his body covered in third-degree
need to be put away. They need treat- .. burns. An additional 10 pen:ent had
ment.' and they nee&lt;l to be taken off first- and second-degree burns. Vets
me streets:'
said the cat was near death .but they
Colorado law defines animal cruelty \vere inspired to save him because of
as a misdemeanor with a maximum . his will to live.

li4 new c~ses of dengue

a,

basement There Is an
and private drive.

lii&gt;unb.lp i!::tlllti ·

,,

•

992-2259

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

cat draws call for stiffer animal cmelty penalties

.

You may find just what you wut•••

LEGAL NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

•
S)lnday,
Sept. 30, 2001

wiNw JohnDaere com

•
• At the edge oi town 11 thla
bedroom home alttlng
_c:&amp;,;;,Oibeol.•lriutiful family room
cr
back porch and
to play.
• Need a building tor
Here'a a bualneaa building
atorea or use •• one big one. Also has
apartments, being two 4 rooms and bath, and
6 rooms and bath apertmenla. Haa had
of the remodeling
done.

N

0 THING

LIKE

RuNs

A

JOHN DEERE

DEERE ·

CARMICHAEL'$ FARM &amp;LAWN, INC.

EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

· Jackson
Pike • 2 ml West of Holzer Hospital
.•
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740·446·2412

2402 Third Aventie
Huntington, WV 25703
304·529-3309

'

•

�Page 06 • ~uullnt•

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

il:mtrs -~rntmrl

-

Federal Reserve joins ::
investigation into
.·..
home .loans in Poconos::.

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The new
judge in the Microsoft antitrust case
ordered both sides to work around the
clock to settle the long dispute, citing
economic fallout from the terror attacks
as one reason for haste.
"There's no reason this case can't be
settled;' U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said Friday. She said she ·
would appoint a mediator in two weeks
if sufficient progress isn't made toward
settlement.
· Kollar-Kotelly said the issues have .
been argued in and out of court for
more than six years, and both the government and the software maker could
spend their money better elsewhere.
" In light of the recent tragic events
affecting our nation, this court regards
the benefit which will be derived from a
quick resolution of these cases as
increasingly significant," the judge wrote
in an order after a morning hearing.
She told both sides to start negotiating
"24 hou rs a day, seven days a week." She
encouraged settlement at every opening
during the hour-long hearing.
Besides the case, Microsoft also is dealing v.jtl). a shaky economy and the coming release of two key products: the
_jWindows XP operating system upgrade
and its first major foray into the video
game business, X-Box. Even though a
quick settlement would end the pro. ceedings, business restrictions sought by

the government would affect the company for years.
"One of the reasons they've been trying to Jelay this is that it's much easier to
just go to court all the time~,'' Giga Information Group analyst Rob Enderle said_
" A conduct remedy would mean a
cross-section of the company would·
have to deal with it daily."
·
Although Microsoft and the Justice
Department said they didn 't need a
mediator to oversee settlemenftalks- a
tactic that already failed once - KollarKotelly said one will be appointed Oct.
12 unless the case is settled by then. She
said she expects regular updates on the
talks' progress_
"We're certainly pleased with the
schedule,... Assistant Attorney General
Charles James said on the courthouse
steps.
Likewise, Microsoft spokesman Vivek
Varma said the company " looks forward
to resolving this case as soon as possible."
The hearing was the first time the new
judge presided over the historic antitrust
case. An appeals court overturned U.S.
District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson's
original verdict to break Microsoft in
tw(/, and Jackson was removed fTom the
case for making pejorative statements
against Microsoft executives.
The federal appeals court, in a unanimous ruling, said Microsoft was guilty of
holding an illegal monopoly and sent

the case back to the district court to
decide a new penalty.
If the case isn't settled by Nov. 2, a
penalty will be devised in court, KollarKotelly said and set a swift schedule for
that phase that sided with prosecutors in
most aspects.
"The government basically got what
they wanted,'' University of Baltimore
law professor Bob Lande said.
Microsoft had argued that the government should specify the scope of the
penalty first. Kollar-Kotelly dismissed
that argument.
" It is premature to now address the
appropriateness of specific provisions
w hen the government · itself has not
specified" the scope of their case, she
said.
The Justice Department has said it is
no longer seeking to break up Microsoft
but .is opting instead for 'restricting the
company's business practices.' Prosecutors have not said what restrictions they
would seek.
The judge set a tentative hearing date
of March 11, 2002. Both sides are sched- .
uled to offer penalty proposals in
December.
Kollar-KoteUy firmly brushed aside
multiple requests fTom Microsoft to get
more time for various aspects of 'the
case, noting that the government and
Microsoft requested seating for 28
lawyers .

STROUDSBURG, Pa.
(AP) - . The Federal
Reserve Bank is investigating whether hundreds of
homeowners were duped
into buying overpriced
homes in the Poconos
Mountains.
The investigation is the
fifth probe into Poconos real
estate launched by a public
agency this year,
The Federal Reserve,
which supervises and regulates banking institutions,
will examine whether banks
and lending institutions that
approved or purc hased
mortgage loans from several
builders and mortgage companies took part in the
alleged fraud.
"We want to know
whether the banks were
innocent pJ.lrchasers or are
part of predatory lending
practices," said Robert
Cook, special counsel for
the Federal Reserve's. Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs.
the
Foreclosures
in
Poconos have skyrocketed,
quadrupling in Monroe
County from 120 in 1990 to

____

"m want to kt~ow

.f'

•

,,:

whether the banks
were innocent
purchastrs or are
part of predatory
let1ding practices. "

...

Robert Cook

'.

•.

'

561 last year.
. '.
The Monroe Gounty dis ~ · ,
trict attorney and state atto~- "
ney general are investigatirlg
sales and financing of homesthrough the apparent use of
inflated appraisals and phantom financing.
1
The Department ofHousf
ing and Urban Develop,
men t is also looking i~
possible civil rights vio"-'
tions, Cook said. So~
builders in the Poconos hav~
used ads targeting minorities
in the New York City are,a.
about an hour's drive east.,,.,.,
Some of the loans suspe10~,
ed of being fraudulent WQre 1
eventually purchased fro~ :
banks by the Federal Ho~.~ :
Mortgage Corp. and tq,~,
Federal . National Mortgase
Association and defaulted. ·' ,

..

..
Rul Estate General____ ..
•.
_..;._....:..._..;.....:..._..;._,;.

'S ATTIC!
Public Notice

i&gt;unba!'- tleime~ i&gt;enttnel
I

Public Notice
time,

Real Estate General

on

Monday,
October-15, 2001, and
publicly opened and
read at that hour end
plan. Bid forme may
be obtained In the
office of the City
Manager, 511 Second
Avenue, Galllpalla,
and OH 45131.

Notice Ia hereby
given that eeeled
bldl will be rectllved
In the office of the
City Manager, 51 I
Second
Avenue,
Galllpalle, Ohio far
the City of Galllpolla
Fire Station Site ' September 23, 30,
Preperatlon.
-200:::..;1_ _ __.___
Bide
will
be Public Notice
rectllved II the lbove
named office until
BIDS FOR BUS
12:00 noon, IOCII
time, on Monday,
Entern
Local
October
2001, and
publicly opened and . SchOOl Olatrlct, 50008
read M that hour and State Route 181,
pl-. Bid lonna may Reedavllle, Ohio
be obtained In the 45772, 11 accepting
for 1
72
office ol the City bide
p81aenger
achool
Manager, 518 Second
Avenue, Galllpolla, bua. Specification•
for bua can be
and OH 45131.
obtained by calling
September 23, 30, the auperlntandant'a
2001 .
· ofllce at (740) 117·
- - - - - - - 1071. Quote• will be
opened
In
the
Public Notice
treuurer'a office at
noon on Monday,
LEGAL NOTICE TO
October 16, 2001 .
BIDDERS
The board reaervea
Notice Ia hereby the right to reject any
given that ... ted or any part of the bid.
bide will be received Bide ahould be
In the office of the labeled "Bid for
City Manager, 518 School Bill" and
Second
Avenue, mailed to:
Eutern
Local
Oalllpolla, Ohio for
the City of Oelllpolla School Dletrct,
Fire Station Building Treaeurer'a Office,
soooe State Route
Conatructlon,
Bide
will
be 881, Rudevllle, Ohio
received 11 the above 45772.
I) 30, 2001
named office until
12:00 noon, local 10) 7, 2001

Rul Eatate General

been
acres with a
. There are 2
garage. Just look at

G)

·-LENDER

OFFICE

'

WHEAT RIDGE. Colo. (AP) its ears, tail and one leg, a
black-and-white cat Jiaim;d Westy ts
swaddled in a baby sleeper on a blanket inside an incubator.
In me four months since two teenagers set the srray afire in a parking lot.
he has undergone three major surgeries for skin gratis and amputations
and faces painful rehabilitation to
regain mobility.
As Westy prepared to move fiom a
veterinary hospital to a new home on
Friday, his well-publicized plight has
prqmpted a lawmaker to seek stiffer
ani)'nal cruelty penalties.
The teen-agers - ages 16 and 17
--''.served two days in jail after turning

N\Fius

a

...

117 TEODORA AVENUE, CITY PROPERTY:
This home has ,great curb side appeal amidst the
treed driveway and l811 timbers in the biCkaround
makes a stately seuina. Thia home is a· couple

blocks from the Holzer Sycamore Branch and The
BaptiSI Church. Brick 2 Slory feonu•• 21xl3 new
LR w/ lots of glass and WBFP this is a beautiful

room. Fonmd entry, 2 BRs on main level. Complete
kitchen, DR and from lherc a larae sull room.
Second Level: 18d7 &amp; 19&gt;14. Full finlahed

basement, Huse FR 2411..28, An exerclae room
13• II . Mostly all hanlwood floon in lhio home.
Breezeway room. w/aame desi1n aa rhe IUD of
Florida room. Garaae, top of the around pool, 2
· storage buildinJR· This home is on 4 lots which
makes lots of pr1vacy and yard. NO. :ZU

· POMEROY • HYSELL RUN ROIID-1
I story ranch style
lncludea living room,
kitchen, dining-·--· .c
.lull bath, A larger
1~n~~;P:ll
patio overlooks a nice Ia
back yard with pond. A
lour·car garage finishes up
package. It all sits on a 1+ acre
ASKING $77,000.

!

2tc

"His appetite was good. he still
grnon •e&lt;L hin=IC vet&lt;&gt;rinari:&gt;!l- Pen Omvald said."''Signs like that shO\ved
us he wanted to hang in there."
As doctors worked to save Westy,
about SbS,OUO in donations poured
into a fund for his treatment. Hospiul
officials plan to me it in ocher animal
cruelty cases.
In sonu' sL1tes, animal cn1elty conviqions have resulted in lengthy
pnson sentences.
Earlier this month. a California man
who slaughtered four puppies in an
agricultural shredder was sentenced to
three years and eight months in state
prison.
In San Jose, Calif, a ·28-year-old

HONOLULU (AP) Fourteen new dengue fever
caS.es have been confirmed by
f~deral health officials in
I'Ja\vaii's first outbreak of the
.lrrt'6squito-borne disease in
tf\ore dian 50 years.
· tast week, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevenlion confirmed that four people had contracted dengue
· fe,l(er, which is rarely fatal. All
f&amp;ur have since recovered.
lthe 18 cases
so far have
.
been confined to the remote
~na and. Nahiku areas of
Efst Maui, said Dr. David
~saki of the state "Departt¥nt of Health.
:More cases are suspected
and awaiting confirmation by
tl{e CDC, he said. ·
·
:Oengue fever causes severe
headaches, fever and rashes.
T~e more serious dengue
h~morrhagic fever has a fatalitt rate of 5 percent, accordittg to the CDC. There is no
vfcdne.9r,specific treatment.
' ,Dengue fever had been

reported
previously
in
Hawaii, but by people who
had contracted the disease
elsewhere. None of the newly
confirmed cases involved
people who had recently traveled away from Maui, Sasaki
said.
Bruce Stoner · of Nahiku,
said he, his wife and two children are among those
believed to have contracted
dengue fever.
"In dengue, you're not
going to die, but you feel like
it wouldn't be so bad," Stoner
told the Maui News. "It's like
a very unpleasant flu, and the
headache Is very •excruciat. "
mg.
State health officials say the
best way to fight the disease is
to eradicate the mosquitoes
.that carry it. They · have
sprayed areas where dengue
fever · has occurred, and
encouraged residents to eliminate standing water, which
acts as a b.reerling ground .for
mosquitoes .
'

Everyone Welcome to hear

BASEMENT SALE
October 1 &amp; 2 ·

Mr. Harley Coon
(Korean Veteran)
speak at the

French Art Colony
530 First Avenue
Sunday, Sept. 30th
at2:00 .m.

Elementary School. .. 2 miles from
and Holzer Hospital. Private &amp; ·

Surrounded by woodland &amp; meadows.
Cape Cod home. QUALITY BUILT HOME.

T S TRANSMI!=iSIONS
Automatic Specialists
20 Years Experience

BEECH STREET· Here's the home lor
a beautifully decorated one story
was re'cently remodeled. Has 3 baclrocoms
central air, and a fenced back
walling tor you.

740-992-4578
OVER THE HILL!
. KEITH OILER
was the BIG 50
on September 28th

POMEROY· A lwo story hOme
apartmenle. One unll has 5 rooms
one unit has 4 rooma and a bath
unlt 'haa 3 rooms and a bath . Live
apartment and rent the other two.

Backyard Sale
2144 Jackson Pike

446-3200 After 5:00pm

Stop at our sale
first... then stop by our
tent. ·

New Business Opening
Oct. 1

SUE'S SELECTABLES

French 500
Flea Market

on the "T' in Middleport, Ohio

&amp;t&amp;to-2342
or 992-2156t'

740-992·0298

••'

LX2 55 Lawn Tractor
•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

•

JS60 Walk-Behind Mower .
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting height's

Tl 05C Line Trlmmer/Brvshcutter
•1.05-hp (19.8 cc) M·Series engine
•15-inch-cutting-swath
• Only 8.5 lbs
• 2-year consumer werr.anty

SST18 Lawn Tractor
•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 48-inch mower deck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

deckin&amp; and 2nd levol balcony. Formal entry wl
hardwood floorina all oak trim and solid oak

• HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD • Cloae to town yet private
country. Thla convenient one floor plan ranch hail 4 bedrooma,
bath, newer shingle root, public waler, insulation and a spacial bonua
'lrH
IIIII lila on a 1+ acre lot.
ABKINO

interior doors throughout Larse family room w/
vent li=ss fireplace . A free flowina: floor plan of
1pa&lt;;e &amp; function . Private bedroom suite &amp;. bach.
Several walk-In closet&amp;, large kitchen wilh loti of
oak cabinCts. 3 addilional bedrooma. Basement
and detached 2 car garage. NO. JZO

APPLE QIIOVE· Approximately 29.935 aorea of great hunting
Home aile out of flood plain. S.pllo, electrlo and your own water
a gas well on thla properly. Could hiVI lree gaato your home .
royalties. What a view of the Ohio River. Aak.abcut an J1V~,Ii&amp;ble
fronllot also. kgent Owned.
ASKING
REDUCED • CHESTER TOWNSHIP • Juel mlnulet from tho village of
. right off SR 248. Approximately 10.02e acres. Electric TPC water
Great lor a homesite, you cen see fer mUss. Call today.
_
. REDUCED TO $11,000.

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce.............992-2259
Henry E. Clel.and ........................... 992-2259
Sherrl L. Hart •••••.• ."..........................742-2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·8191

.

(

.

'

For the past 163 years, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, q~ality,and ~o~mi.t~ent
to the cus.tomor. Stop in to your local Johll Deere dealer to see for yourself our t1me tested rehab1hty. .
You'll find that our standards hayen't changed much over the years. Ask about easy financing options
at your participating dealer today.

room,
home has many
paymenl would be Cheaper than rent.
route. Eaay acoeas to everything. .
ABKfNQ

from Oallipolis. Need a new place 10 atan
own busine!JS? Call for more details. ~0.

Watch for Yellow Balloo11s
October 12, 13, 14th

. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
House in Northup.

For .More
Info ...

.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE, 6.91 """''· Only 5

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING:
Cigarette Smoke Contains Carbon Mono~ekie.

BUnERNUT AVENUE • A two story
vinyl aiding. Hal 3 apartmenll with a
Income. There Is a part basement.
apartment has 4 rooms and a bath. on••,.
apartment has 3 rooms and a bath,
other apartment has 3 rooms plus 2 ·enclllc)led~
porches, and a bath.
$38,000.00

amenities to list. NO. 321

ONLY $165,000.

Levi Garren Chew .............. $15.99
I TAillnr''~ Pride Chew ........... $1 4.99
smJtherrn Pride Chew .... $11.99 en
Morgans Chew .. ............ $11.79 en

FOR RENT OR SALE

Happy Birthday
Gloria, Kevin, Lorena

.LTI53 Law• tractor
•13-hp engine
• 38.-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shih-on·the-go transmission

level. 3 more l)edrooms &amp; bath plus a parlor
area. Front porch &amp; 2 car go.rage. Too

.

Levi Garren EXIra Chew .$11 .99 en

LARGE GARAGE SALE
Monday 8:00- 5:00
6 miles below Gallipolis
on St Rt 7S

.,..

and bath w/ whirlpool tub, vanity and
1shower. Open
oak stairca1c leadin1 to second

tall trees wilh natural seclusion. A lovely 2 year
old home on 4 acres more or !ell. Wrap around

Kool ............................... $24.10 en
tl:IUIOier 6o.z can Roll. Tobac . ... $6.29 en
6oz can Roll. Tobac ......... $5.99 en
II,;ClUg;ar Buy 1 gett Free .. ......... $1 .79
5 can/roll. .................$6.99
llimhAru•nll Scanion ...............$6.99

A DEERE FoR ·ALL ·SEASONs

I

~~;~~:~Formal
andw/DRFrench
w/ hardwood
family LR
room
doors. floors.
Main

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled In

III~:~~~~;;:::::::::::
............. $1
$1 5.79
9.71 en
en
..................

Office desks &amp; Chairs, Misc.
Office Equip, Baby Clothes,
Swings, Toys, Men and
Women Clothes, Gas Cook
Stove and Many Misc. Items

NEAR PAGEVILLE • Behind Wells

oak interior paneled doors, o.nd ldts of oak
cabinets in this complete "wife approved"
'1

man received a three-year prison term
he W"~ convicte(l .of throwing a
bichon frise to hi death fo~owing a
fender-bender with rhe dog's owner.
In Torrington. Wyo., a man is serving
eight months in the county jail after
he pleaded guilty to animal cruelty for
abusing and killing his ex-girlfriends
dot;.
" If lawmaker.&gt; tell me 1 can have
additional prison beds li&gt;r those who
are cruel to animals or for those who
sexually assault children, I'm going to
take the latter," said Grant. "Those are
me kinds of tough decisions we are
forced to make and legislators are
fon:ed to make with limited .tax dolIars...

aft~r.

Marlboro ....................... $24.fl0 en
Winslon ......................... $22.22 en
Camel ............................ $24.1 Ocn
Doral ............................. $19.68 en

74 Mill Creek Road

2

PERFECT
H 0 ME
PROFESSIONAL. Green

Page 07

SMOKIN' ROBS
1525 Eastern Avenue

Rain or Shine
9:00a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport • A
brick hame with big stone accents
corner. There are threa bedrooms, dining
kitchen, 1 1/2 baths, family room and a
room. A lull basement, and a large garage
an allached carport. Has ne.w
•• ···~··
rooms.

Rul Eatate General ·

~rnunrl•

LLETIN B

fever conf1rmed on Maui
~y federal ·health officials

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • This 2 story home
6 rooms, 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths

PRICE REDUCED • SR 110
r OALLIA COUNTY·
This one
. atory ranch with 2+ acres Is aa cute
aa oan bil Eaay accesa, prlvMI
aenlng, 3 be&lt;lrooms, harONood
llocrlng, kitchen, dining room, &amp; lvlng
·room. Newer carpeting &amp; wall paper.
AttaChe&lt;! one oar garage.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIDNII
REDUCED TO ~1,800.

themselves in a month after the inci- P"nalty of 11!. months in j.til and a
dent. They were fined $500 and given $5,000 fine .. At least ');] stat~ punish
I tfmonths probation.
·
.
some animal ~ruelty crimes as fdonies,
On May 26. an unidentitied driver
Bob Grant, me Adams County district attorney who prosecuted the saw the two teens set Westy on fire and
teens, said they wanted to know what called police. Animal control officers
would happen if the eat's mil was set took ·the anin~1l to the Wheat Ridge
on fire "like the cartoons:'
Animal Hospital, where the veterinar1
State Rep. Alice Borodkin said ian on duty nicknamed him Westy
authorities need to view animal cruel- after the city ofWestminster where he
ty as a precursor to far worse crimes.
was found_
"These people later go on t(&gt; murTht&gt; cat was critical. with 25 percent
der;' she said_ "These people reaDy of his body covered in third-degree
need to be put away. They need treat- .. burns. An additional 10 pen:ent had
ment.' and they nee&lt;l to be taken off first- and second-degree burns. Vets
me streets:'
said the cat was near death .but they
Colorado law defines animal cruelty \vere inspired to save him because of
as a misdemeanor with a maximum . his will to live.

li4 new c~ses of dengue

a,

basement There Is an
and private drive.

lii&gt;unb.lp i!::tlllti ·

,,

•

992-2259

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

cat draws call for stiffer animal cmelty penalties

.

You may find just what you wut•••

LEGAL NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

•
S)lnday,
Sept. 30, 2001

wiNw JohnDaere com

•
• At the edge oi town 11 thla
bedroom home alttlng
_c:&amp;,;;,Oibeol.•lriutiful family room
cr
back porch and
to play.
• Need a building tor
Here'a a bualneaa building
atorea or use •• one big one. Also has
apartments, being two 4 rooms and bath, and
6 rooms and bath apertmenla. Haa had
of the remodeling
done.

N

0 THING

LIKE

RuNs

A

JOHN DEERE

DEERE ·

CARMICHAEL'$ FARM &amp;LAWN, INC.

EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

· Jackson
Pike • 2 ml West of Holzer Hospital
.•
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740·446·2412

2402 Third Aventie
Huntington, WV 25703
304·529-3309

'

•

�Pt~Qe

•ness
Busl

Susan Robinson-Brooks. a
midem of Albany, currently
serves as a radiology aide in
110M Pap D1
O'Uleness' radiology department. She also worked in the
10 of those yean 2s chairman. hospiuls medical/ surgical unit .
Members of the foundation as a _nurse aj~e for nearly four
may retum th~ir trustee dec- years.
tion ballots at the ·annual meet- ' Robinson-Brooks' co-working or in advance to O'Bleness' ers say she show. her conunitadministration office.
ment to quality by performing
The meeting is open to the tasks in a timely, efficient and
public as weD as to members of pleasant manner.
·
the foundation.
As a radiology aide, Robinson-Brooks is responsible for
transporting patients to and
fiom the radiology .departATHENS - A four-year ment. She also assists in the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital radiology department. by
employee who co-workers entering information into the
describe as courteous, caring computer system, retrieving
and committed to quality has patient files, developing X-rays
been selected the hospital's and performing other clerical
employee of the month for tasks.
Robinson-Brooks said she
September 2001.

Top employee

ti&lt;e and nauonal ll'Jder&lt;hip on Memori;~] Hospital, Coppinger 725# St. $78-SlW Hf. l70--S76;
rural issues.
·
joined the Slllif of On CaD 750-850# St. S74-S82 Hf.
The conference theme, Medical A.~'IOCiates, where she S68-S75.
"Rurnl Amenca - Who Is continues to work while servFed Cattle
Going to Lead?" brought in ing as Planned l':lrenthood (Second Wednesday of the
more than 20 presenters fiom medical director.
month)
all facets of economic developCoppinger provides ove&lt;Choief" - Sr-". $1&gt;472;
andjelr.anJ.jusfi. a.w!...i.
,....,. nl€ i, t.
$ight of healfb. services at six Heifers, $66-$67.
Sword is director of commu- clinics throughout Planned
Select - Steers, $62-$65;
nity I economic development Parenthood's eight-county serRetums fiVIU
for BREC and is an active vice area. She succeeds Dr. Heifers, $60-$63.
Holsteins- Steers, $60-$63.
member of NREDA.
· Frnnk W. Myers, who resigned
Cows-Lower
in June.
RIO GRANDE - Debra
WeU Musded!Aeshed $45Sword of Buckeye Rural Elec$50; Medium/ Lean $40-$46;
tric Cooperative Inc. was .
Thin/ Light $30-$38; Bulls
among the delegation of more
GALLIPOLIS - United $54-$61 .
than I 00 members of National
ATHENS - Dr. Imber
Back To The Farm:
Rural Economic Developers . Coppinger has been appointed · Producers Inc. market report
Cow/ Calf Pairs $500-$945;
Association {NREDA) attend- medical director for Planned fiom Gallipolis for sales conBred Cows $475~$650; &amp;by
mg the association's recent Parenthood ofSoutheast Ohio. ducted on Wednesday
Calves $35-$86; Goats $15Feeder Cattle
annu'al
conference
In
After graduating from Ohio
275-415# St.$100-$116 Hf. $110.
Charleston, S.C.
University College of OsteoUpcoming specials:
NREDA i~ a network of pathic Medicine and complet- $90-$98, 425-525# St. $90Special feeder sode Sept 29.
rural economic . development ing her family practice residen- S102 Hf. S85-S94 550--625#
professionals providing exper- cy last year at O 'Bleness St. $85-$91 Hf. $77-$85 650Call the office at 446-9696.
enjoys working as an aid._.
because she b~ts to meet and
spend tune with many different P&lt;'&lt;&gt;plc.
Robinson-Brooks and her
husband, Luke, have four children: Joe and.Andy Robinson

Medkaldil'edor

named

long, and with almost 30 different suppliers, they can normally have any part that
might need to be ordered
within a day.
The only person being
transferred from Parkersburg
wiD be Wheeler, but as the
service requests grow, workers
wiD be hired fiom the local
community.
"We'll begin hiring as
demand needs, and it won't
k I
.. M w·u·
..
~I ed o~g·b· I. c ~ •abm~ said.
on t e Ie~e m rmgmg
other people m. I want the
local peopl~. to support the
local people.
American can be reached at
304-674-0060.

under a permit system. These
permits would not be sold,
leased, or transferred, but they
may be inherited if the heir
fnwn PllpD1
intends tt;J grow tobacco.
the President's Commission
Immediately, one might ask,
Report, which is the docu- are these S4 and S2 per pound
ment that outlines the pro- options based on basic or
posed buyout and subsequent effective quota and of which
changes to the U.S. Tobacco year(s)? The report identifies
Program.
the base years as an average of
McKinney has worked 1997-99.
closely with members of the · Some officials close to the
Commission, thus he may Commission say it was their
provide some insight on intentions to base these paywhether or not it is safe to ments on effective quota,
hope that something resem- while others maintain that the
bling the proposal could intended base is basic quota.
become law.
Even if the answer was spelled
The final report, issued in out clearly, it may be of little
May 2001, proposes all quota consequence at this point in
owners receive $8 per pound time.
for quota that they own. It is
If there is any action taken .
further recommended that on this report by lawmakers,
those who actually grow we will be fortunate if the
tobacco be offered an addi- final · result even vaguely
tiona! S4 per pound if they resembles the original proagree not to produce tobacco posaL
anymore. Four dollars per
To pay for the buyout, the
pound probably sounds like report suggests a I 7·-cent
an acceptable offer for those excise taX on cigarettes.
who are loolcing forward to . The anti-tax mood in
retiring from tobacco produc- Washington is the major hurtion, however there are sever- die, however members of the
_jill ~ucers who would like Commission think that some
· to continue growing tobacco. type of a buyout is very possiFor these folks, the proposal ble. After the I 997 McCain
s11ggests that instead of an Bill failed to produce the
additional $4 per pound, they enticing $8 per pound and
take $2 per pound and con- Ohio's 1999 request for $12
tinue producing the crop per pound fiom the state was

denied, obviously it is difficult
to expect success.
Optimistic or not, the discussion offered by banquet
speaker, Danny McKinney's is
intended to put !JUt expectations and hopes into perspective. All producer; are encouraged to attend and learn more
about thl! possibilities of a
buyout.
Reservations are required
and can be made by calling
740-446-7007 (speak with
Gail or Martha) .The cost is $8
per person, which does
include membership in the
Gallia County Pride-InTobacco Association.

Service

..

Bymes

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
"L Nissan Motor Co. will
move its Maxima production
line from Japan to Tennessee,
part of an expansion that will
create 2,000 new jobs in the
state.
A redesigned model of the
Maxima, Nissan's top-of-the. Jine car, is set to roll off the
assembly line in January
2003,
the
company
announced Thursday.
The move is part of the
company's strategy to produce cars close to the markets
were they are sold, said Emil
Hassan, Nissan's senior vice
president of North American
manufacturing.
Gov. Don Sundquist joined
Hassan in making the
announcement at the Capitol. He commended the
Japanese-owned Nissa!) for its
investment in Tennessee over
the last 20 years, creating
thousands of jobs and hun-

dreds of spin-off businesses,
mostly small parts suppliers.
Last
year,
Nissan
announced a S1 billion
expansion to its parts plant in

Kneen
fntm Pap D1

Uvestock report

the selection, nutrition, health,
economics, marketing and
financial opportunities from a
current producer. This is a free
event, open to ;ill interested goat
producers.
Further details and maps may
be received from the extension
office.

der discernible persons, vehicles,
and subs1:1nrial objects at a dislllnce of 1000 feet ahead:'
The old law that stated a halfhour after sunset until a halfhour before sunrise has been
Homeowners, are you cleannsullified.Remembe:tohave.the ing up your perennial Hower
· low Movtng Vehicle _(SMV)
. emblem Oil aU farm equipment gardens and lancilape?
operated on any highway in . Don't toss those extra perenOhio at aU times, 24 hours a day. nials and seed heads away. Save
Our office has a summaty them for the Fall Meigs County
sheet written by David A Jones, Peremlial and Seed Exchange
Agricultural Agent from Allen
County of the Revised Code
for any farmer wanting more
details.

•••

on Oct. 23 from noon to 1 p.m.
at the Mei~ County Senior
Center, located at Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
Tips on dividing and· winter
care for perennial plants will be
given by Master Gardene~ at 1I
a.m. This event is free and open
to the general public of aU ages.
If you don't have any plants to
spare, don't worry There are
always plenty of o:tra plants and
seeds for the novice gardener.
(Hal K,_. is tire Mtigs Caomty
Q_gritullllrt and Mluml rt.sourtes
'fl""l, Ohio Slate Vnimsity Extm·
sion.)
.

•••

Are you interested in meat
goat production?
The Ohio Meat Coat Association in conjunction with Ohio
State University Extension,
Clinton County is sponsoring a
free seminar on the opportunities of meat goat production on
Oct. 11 at 6:30 p.m. just west of
Wilmington.
Hosts are Mark and Amy
Brooker of 1455 · N. Webb
Road, Wilmington. Learn about

Middleport, Ohio

ALEXANDER mGH SCHOOL

s3:;oo;o.

PAYOUT GUARANTEE!

I Page 6 I

Six Feet
Under Actor
· Played Jesus

Weekly
Puzzler

Lana Turner,
Beyond The
Sweaters And
Scandals

Advice On
Home
Repairs
I Page61

'I Page 4 I

·-

...

Potential desert sites In Arizona were considered and
· then discarded because of their Isolation.
LOS ANGELES - With so many television channels, ·
"When I looked at the technical aspects, .I realized the
there's room enough for fiction, harsh reality and people further from civilization the harder it would . be to get the
hawking jewelry and juice machines.
(images) out," Albritton said. In a small irony, his search
Is there a placa for the American bald eagle?
ended up on his home turf, in nllrthem Wisconsin .
The folks at American Eagle TV believe there should be,
A lake-rich area near Woodruff, Wise., that is favored by
and they've spent several years and a six-figure sum to the fish~eating eagles proved ideal. Lakeside cabins had
give the big bird its national close-up.
.
been in place so long lhat birds had grown accustomed to
Their goal: to present continuous live daytime coverage building their nests near human activity, Albritton said. ·
of an eagle's nest and the family that Inhabits It, tracking
"Birds are nesting right over people's houses. They're not
them from egg-laying to the first flight of hatchlings.
tame, ·but they're used to human Intrusion," he said. A
As naturalist Keith Alb.ritton describes It, this is no homeowner agreed to allow American Eagle TV to place its
.birdbrained ccheme. Albritton and Skip McWilliams, owner cameras in a towering white pine tree holding an eagle's
of a Michigan company that sells educational materials, .nest.
. think Americans would relish the chance to better know
The video images will be transmitted by phone lines and
their national emblem of strength.
satellite to viewers.
·
"Skip envisioned people getting up In the morning,
Eagles' nests themselves are a wonder: Made of sturdy
getting · ready for work, having their coffee and tuning Into branches, they weigh hundreds of pounds (the biggest can
the eagles," said Albritton.
reach 2,000 pounds) and are used for the reproductive life of
There's precedent for such wild fare: In Tumers Falls, the birds, which Albritton said is "upwards of 30 years."
American Eagle TV's two 3-by-4-inch, closed·clrcuit
Mass., a local cable channel has shown nesting bald
eagles for the past five springs. There's also ·a Webcast of cameras, designed for prison surveillance, were placed about
·
5 feet above the nest. The equipment Is sealed to withstand
the pair.
While American Eagle TV Is ry~aking its case with cable winter cold; temperatures can drop to 30 degrees below zero.
and satellite operators to carry the image_s of dally eagle
•Albritton chose a camera system with a fixed lens that
life, the physical logistics have been worked out.
uses only natural light: "I didn't want anything to move, didn't
By LYNN ELBER
AP Televlelon Writer

Plus an Additional
ssoo.oo·Buick owner Loyalty/
· (fiUis Mondll)', Octoller l)

Cullom 7K, Chestnut,

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~

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want any noise. We can't spook the birds."
Permits were obtained from the U.S. Department of
Fish and Wildlife, whose job Is to prevent Interference with
the threatened species. Albritton can't handle the birds or
their approximately 3-inch eggs.
The designated eagle family played a bit of a trick on its
· would,be biographers this year: The birds chose to use a
nearby alternate nest that was cameraless. But Albritton
has seen signs they're returning to their primary home,
including delivery of fresh branches to shore up the nest.
The plan Is to begin TV transmission next year just
before the spring egg-laying, following through to the first
flight of the eaglets in summer. This year, because of a late
cold snap, only one eaglet was successfully hatched by the
adult pair.
Nature's uncertainty Isn't the only obstacle facing
American Eagle TV; intense competition for cable carriage
Is another.
The company is hoping that cable and satellite
operators see the program as a valuable educational
service, one that deserves to be on throughout the day: But
even small chunks of eagle time would be a good start,
said company spokesman Rick Vess.
'We think people will be Interested once they see It,"
Vess said.
·
Adds Albritton: "It can open people's eyes to the natural
world."

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Judge Hatchett seeks solutions, not punishment,- in
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Now starting her second season in syndication (check
local listings), Hatchett has brought to her TV-studio
NEW YORK - One big difference about.·Judge Hatchett" · courtrollm the same direct, solution-seeking style for which
she was renowned In Atlanta as a juvenile t::ourt JUStice.
Isn't obvious to viewers.
But attend a taping. There you find that, unlike other
She had grown up across town · rn a loving household
courtroom shows, which move with a briskness that where her parents assured her anything was possible - but
requires only minimal editing for broadcast, Judge Glenda only with hard work and dedication .
A. Hatchett won't be rushed.
She ,earned her law degree from Emory University, then
. "I have to be sure everybody Is crystal-clear about why went to Delta Airlines, first as a corporate lawyer, then as
we're here today," she tells the disputing parties of a compan)l spokeswoman before becoming a judge of Fulton
negligence case: Should the defendant have to pay for the County (Ga.) Juvenile Court In 1990.
Injury the plaintiffs' dog sustained while In his care?
Asingle mother, Hatchett stepped down as chief presiding
It's a minor case, but she doesn't treat It that way. judge in May 1999 to be at home with her two teen-age boys.
Before she reaches a decision, 40 minutes have passed. 'rhen the offer of a TV show came her way.
Until not long before that, Hatchett knew nothing about
Viewers will see It trimmed to five.
Doesn't this dellberallve pace mean lots of pricey the courtroom genre whose ranks she was being asked to
produdtlon time?
.
·
swell.
' "I don't care," says Hatchett during lu_nch recess In her
"I believe In divine order," says Hatchett, expl11lnlng that
dressing room. "We've. got to do what I would do If It with providential timing she had helped care for her
godmother following surgery. "For about two weeks when she
WEREN'T on TV.
·
"I get into a zone," she continues, after bowing her head was In the hospital, I was Sitting there watching TV with her."
In silent thanks for her meal. "I get oblivious to the ~meras Including the numerous courtroom shows. ·
and to the lights and stuff. I thlnk, 'What do I have to do
During her crash course, Hatchett didn't much like what
right now with these people?"'
she saw. She almost turned the offer down.
.
That would Include the people In the gallery. At one
. "Then I figured I would be upfront with them: 'This is what
point, while tape was rolling, Hatchett. turned from her I'm prepared to do . Otherwise, you guys ought to get
litigants to glare at a spectator afflicted with a stubborn somebody e.lse."' When the new "Judge Hatchett" show was
announced in February 2000, its star promised not to be
COUQh.
I don't want you to feel like you have to leave," Hatchett "another quote-unquote Judge Judy."
assured the woman. "I just want to get you some water." In
The key to "Judge Hatchett" is its "creative sentencing,"
a flash, an assistant did.
·
which takes· the delendant (and the viewer) beyond the
FRAZIER MOORE '
AP Televl1lon Writer

lnltllllllon, your locol chlnnoll, If mlloblt, ond
• America's Top 150 pracromml"ff poclutp with lolls
. ollj!Oitl, """'In ond fomlly chonnola, for only
$&lt;19.99 o montltRIIdy to dump your coblt1

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TV.

TV Pipe Line

::

LADY BEETLES: The
fact sheet and list of recommended chemicals to control
lady beedes can be obtained
by calling the Extension
office.
When you receive or pick
up this information, pleue
note 1hat aU of the -ehemiem
listed are indeed recommended, thus I do not intend to ·
single out one product. As
many homeowners shop for
these chemicals, they wiD discover that availability rather.
than choice will dictate
which product they use, as
-some of these products can be
difficult to find.
aennifor Byrnes is a Gallia
County Extmsion agent.)

Decherd and · its Smyrna
manufacturing plant, the
company's only vehicle
assembly factory in the United States.

Times-Sentinel And The

I Page 3 I ·

•••

You're born.
You wait for them
to fix your cable.
You die.

•• s 7

_I

Confe1ence

American offers a special
discount to seniors past 65.
"If they're over 65, they get
1 percent off the service caD,
fuwnPap:DI
if their 66, it's 2 percent and if
enough to light the pilot on they're over 80 and living
alone the only thing they
his furnace.
"He tried to light it Friday have to pay for is parts,"
and Saturday morning but McWilliams said. "For every
then he finally called us so I year over 65, you get 1 perwent out, lit his pilot and cent discount until you're
_)watched it for a little while to over 80, then the service caD
make sure it was OK,"Wheel- .,. free...
McWilliams · also offers a
er said. "I just didn't think l
S
W
discount on each service
should charge him anything. I
felt, the man was older, and he call if customers · clip any
couldn't help it. When I told American Heating ad or any
him (MeWilliams) what the other HVAC competitor's ad
circumstances were, he shook fiom the newspaper.
The response ·rime is usual- .
my hand and said, 'Good deal.'
ly within 24 hours, if that

Nissan Motor
Co. to move
production
plant to Tenn.

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

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

D8 • iouriba!' l!:imn: -•tnllntl

•

courtroom for real-life lessons.
.
A youngster who likes to set fires visits a yo~Jng burn
patient. Someone nailed for drunken driving is assigned to
witness car-crash victims at a hospital emergency room . ·
Asked why people choose to come before her, Hatchett
says: "They're seeking help. With a lot of the family issues,
people who come here have tried other things and they
haven't worked."
·
·
. After lunch, Hatchett will be hearing from an a_nxlous
mother and her 13-year-old son, who built a bomb. and
blew up a computer at his school.
The boy had appeared In Hatchett's courtroom days
before, whereupon she dispatched him for a cautionary
tour.
Cameras recorded him arriving by stretch limo at the
fancy offices of an apparel business started by two fellows
not much older than he. Then, In fearsome contrast, he was
hauled to jail for a tough talking-to from Inmates who
warned him not to screw up like they did ,
"So what do you want for YOUR life?" the judge
demands. ''Talk to mel"
She metes o.ut his sentence - a ~ruellng regimen of
community service .- then cautions, If I hear that your
mother has been called into school because you're acting
the fool, there's gonna be hell to pay." He flinches.
This was the youngster's big chance - being set on "a
'new hope road," In Hatchett's bracing words. "But it's only
a beginning. I don't expect-us to get this fixed today."
·
She knows that, In her line of work, there Is no quick fix. ·
But she's just as convinced: Take your time, you make·
things better.

....................................a.,. ... ,....._

'''

•\

•

I

.

�Pt~Qe

•ness
Busl

Susan Robinson-Brooks. a
midem of Albany, currently
serves as a radiology aide in
110M Pap D1
O'Uleness' radiology department. She also worked in the
10 of those yean 2s chairman. hospiuls medical/ surgical unit .
Members of the foundation as a _nurse aj~e for nearly four
may retum th~ir trustee dec- years.
tion ballots at the ·annual meet- ' Robinson-Brooks' co-working or in advance to O'Bleness' ers say she show. her conunitadministration office.
ment to quality by performing
The meeting is open to the tasks in a timely, efficient and
public as weD as to members of pleasant manner.
·
the foundation.
As a radiology aide, Robinson-Brooks is responsible for
transporting patients to and
fiom the radiology .departATHENS - A four-year ment. She also assists in the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital radiology department. by
employee who co-workers entering information into the
describe as courteous, caring computer system, retrieving
and committed to quality has patient files, developing X-rays
been selected the hospital's and performing other clerical
employee of the month for tasks.
Robinson-Brooks said she
September 2001.

Top employee

ti&lt;e and nauonal ll'Jder&lt;hip on Memori;~] Hospital, Coppinger 725# St. $78-SlW Hf. l70--S76;
rural issues.
·
joined the Slllif of On CaD 750-850# St. S74-S82 Hf.
The conference theme, Medical A.~'IOCiates, where she S68-S75.
"Rurnl Amenca - Who Is continues to work while servFed Cattle
Going to Lead?" brought in ing as Planned l':lrenthood (Second Wednesday of the
more than 20 presenters fiom medical director.
month)
all facets of economic developCoppinger provides ove&lt;Choief" - Sr-". $1&gt;472;
andjelr.anJ.jusfi. a.w!...i.
,....,. nl€ i, t.
$ight of healfb. services at six Heifers, $66-$67.
Sword is director of commu- clinics throughout Planned
Select - Steers, $62-$65;
nity I economic development Parenthood's eight-county serRetums fiVIU
for BREC and is an active vice area. She succeeds Dr. Heifers, $60-$63.
Holsteins- Steers, $60-$63.
member of NREDA.
· Frnnk W. Myers, who resigned
Cows-Lower
in June.
RIO GRANDE - Debra
WeU Musded!Aeshed $45Sword of Buckeye Rural Elec$50; Medium/ Lean $40-$46;
tric Cooperative Inc. was .
Thin/ Light $30-$38; Bulls
among the delegation of more
GALLIPOLIS - United $54-$61 .
than I 00 members of National
ATHENS - Dr. Imber
Back To The Farm:
Rural Economic Developers . Coppinger has been appointed · Producers Inc. market report
Cow/ Calf Pairs $500-$945;
Association {NREDA) attend- medical director for Planned fiom Gallipolis for sales conBred Cows $475~$650; &amp;by
mg the association's recent Parenthood ofSoutheast Ohio. ducted on Wednesday
Calves $35-$86; Goats $15Feeder Cattle
annu'al
conference
In
After graduating from Ohio
275-415# St.$100-$116 Hf. $110.
Charleston, S.C.
University College of OsteoUpcoming specials:
NREDA i~ a network of pathic Medicine and complet- $90-$98, 425-525# St. $90Special feeder sode Sept 29.
rural economic . development ing her family practice residen- S102 Hf. S85-S94 550--625#
professionals providing exper- cy last year at O 'Bleness St. $85-$91 Hf. $77-$85 650Call the office at 446-9696.
enjoys working as an aid._.
because she b~ts to meet and
spend tune with many different P&lt;'&lt;&gt;plc.
Robinson-Brooks and her
husband, Luke, have four children: Joe and.Andy Robinson

Medkaldil'edor

named

long, and with almost 30 different suppliers, they can normally have any part that
might need to be ordered
within a day.
The only person being
transferred from Parkersburg
wiD be Wheeler, but as the
service requests grow, workers
wiD be hired fiom the local
community.
"We'll begin hiring as
demand needs, and it won't
k I
.. M w·u·
..
~I ed o~g·b· I. c ~ •abm~ said.
on t e Ie~e m rmgmg
other people m. I want the
local peopl~. to support the
local people.
American can be reached at
304-674-0060.

under a permit system. These
permits would not be sold,
leased, or transferred, but they
may be inherited if the heir
fnwn PllpD1
intends tt;J grow tobacco.
the President's Commission
Immediately, one might ask,
Report, which is the docu- are these S4 and S2 per pound
ment that outlines the pro- options based on basic or
posed buyout and subsequent effective quota and of which
changes to the U.S. Tobacco year(s)? The report identifies
Program.
the base years as an average of
McKinney has worked 1997-99.
closely with members of the · Some officials close to the
Commission, thus he may Commission say it was their
provide some insight on intentions to base these paywhether or not it is safe to ments on effective quota,
hope that something resem- while others maintain that the
bling the proposal could intended base is basic quota.
become law.
Even if the answer was spelled
The final report, issued in out clearly, it may be of little
May 2001, proposes all quota consequence at this point in
owners receive $8 per pound time.
for quota that they own. It is
If there is any action taken .
further recommended that on this report by lawmakers,
those who actually grow we will be fortunate if the
tobacco be offered an addi- final · result even vaguely
tiona! S4 per pound if they resembles the original proagree not to produce tobacco posaL
anymore. Four dollars per
To pay for the buyout, the
pound probably sounds like report suggests a I 7·-cent
an acceptable offer for those excise taX on cigarettes.
who are loolcing forward to . The anti-tax mood in
retiring from tobacco produc- Washington is the major hurtion, however there are sever- die, however members of the
_jill ~ucers who would like Commission think that some
· to continue growing tobacco. type of a buyout is very possiFor these folks, the proposal ble. After the I 997 McCain
s11ggests that instead of an Bill failed to produce the
additional $4 per pound, they enticing $8 per pound and
take $2 per pound and con- Ohio's 1999 request for $12
tinue producing the crop per pound fiom the state was

denied, obviously it is difficult
to expect success.
Optimistic or not, the discussion offered by banquet
speaker, Danny McKinney's is
intended to put !JUt expectations and hopes into perspective. All producer; are encouraged to attend and learn more
about thl! possibilities of a
buyout.
Reservations are required
and can be made by calling
740-446-7007 (speak with
Gail or Martha) .The cost is $8
per person, which does
include membership in the
Gallia County Pride-InTobacco Association.

Service

..

Bymes

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
"L Nissan Motor Co. will
move its Maxima production
line from Japan to Tennessee,
part of an expansion that will
create 2,000 new jobs in the
state.
A redesigned model of the
Maxima, Nissan's top-of-the. Jine car, is set to roll off the
assembly line in January
2003,
the
company
announced Thursday.
The move is part of the
company's strategy to produce cars close to the markets
were they are sold, said Emil
Hassan, Nissan's senior vice
president of North American
manufacturing.
Gov. Don Sundquist joined
Hassan in making the
announcement at the Capitol. He commended the
Japanese-owned Nissa!) for its
investment in Tennessee over
the last 20 years, creating
thousands of jobs and hun-

dreds of spin-off businesses,
mostly small parts suppliers.
Last
year,
Nissan
announced a S1 billion
expansion to its parts plant in

Kneen
fntm Pap D1

Uvestock report

the selection, nutrition, health,
economics, marketing and
financial opportunities from a
current producer. This is a free
event, open to ;ill interested goat
producers.
Further details and maps may
be received from the extension
office.

der discernible persons, vehicles,
and subs1:1nrial objects at a dislllnce of 1000 feet ahead:'
The old law that stated a halfhour after sunset until a halfhour before sunrise has been
Homeowners, are you cleannsullified.Remembe:tohave.the ing up your perennial Hower
· low Movtng Vehicle _(SMV)
. emblem Oil aU farm equipment gardens and lancilape?
operated on any highway in . Don't toss those extra perenOhio at aU times, 24 hours a day. nials and seed heads away. Save
Our office has a summaty them for the Fall Meigs County
sheet written by David A Jones, Peremlial and Seed Exchange
Agricultural Agent from Allen
County of the Revised Code
for any farmer wanting more
details.

•••

on Oct. 23 from noon to 1 p.m.
at the Mei~ County Senior
Center, located at Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
Tips on dividing and· winter
care for perennial plants will be
given by Master Gardene~ at 1I
a.m. This event is free and open
to the general public of aU ages.
If you don't have any plants to
spare, don't worry There are
always plenty of o:tra plants and
seeds for the novice gardener.
(Hal K,_. is tire Mtigs Caomty
Q_gritullllrt and Mluml rt.sourtes
'fl""l, Ohio Slate Vnimsity Extm·
sion.)
.

•••

Are you interested in meat
goat production?
The Ohio Meat Coat Association in conjunction with Ohio
State University Extension,
Clinton County is sponsoring a
free seminar on the opportunities of meat goat production on
Oct. 11 at 6:30 p.m. just west of
Wilmington.
Hosts are Mark and Amy
Brooker of 1455 · N. Webb
Road, Wilmington. Learn about

Middleport, Ohio

ALEXANDER mGH SCHOOL

s3:;oo;o.

PAYOUT GUARANTEE!

I Page 6 I

Six Feet
Under Actor
· Played Jesus

Weekly
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Lana Turner,
Beyond The
Sweaters And
Scandals

Advice On
Home
Repairs
I Page61

'I Page 4 I

·-

...

Potential desert sites In Arizona were considered and
· then discarded because of their Isolation.
LOS ANGELES - With so many television channels, ·
"When I looked at the technical aspects, .I realized the
there's room enough for fiction, harsh reality and people further from civilization the harder it would . be to get the
hawking jewelry and juice machines.
(images) out," Albritton said. In a small irony, his search
Is there a placa for the American bald eagle?
ended up on his home turf, in nllrthem Wisconsin .
The folks at American Eagle TV believe there should be,
A lake-rich area near Woodruff, Wise., that is favored by
and they've spent several years and a six-figure sum to the fish~eating eagles proved ideal. Lakeside cabins had
give the big bird its national close-up.
.
been in place so long lhat birds had grown accustomed to
Their goal: to present continuous live daytime coverage building their nests near human activity, Albritton said. ·
of an eagle's nest and the family that Inhabits It, tracking
"Birds are nesting right over people's houses. They're not
them from egg-laying to the first flight of hatchlings.
tame, ·but they're used to human Intrusion," he said. A
As naturalist Keith Alb.ritton describes It, this is no homeowner agreed to allow American Eagle TV to place its
.birdbrained ccheme. Albritton and Skip McWilliams, owner cameras in a towering white pine tree holding an eagle's
of a Michigan company that sells educational materials, .nest.
. think Americans would relish the chance to better know
The video images will be transmitted by phone lines and
their national emblem of strength.
satellite to viewers.
·
"Skip envisioned people getting up In the morning,
Eagles' nests themselves are a wonder: Made of sturdy
getting · ready for work, having their coffee and tuning Into branches, they weigh hundreds of pounds (the biggest can
the eagles," said Albritton.
reach 2,000 pounds) and are used for the reproductive life of
There's precedent for such wild fare: In Tumers Falls, the birds, which Albritton said is "upwards of 30 years."
American Eagle TV's two 3-by-4-inch, closed·clrcuit
Mass., a local cable channel has shown nesting bald
eagles for the past five springs. There's also ·a Webcast of cameras, designed for prison surveillance, were placed about
·
5 feet above the nest. The equipment Is sealed to withstand
the pair.
While American Eagle TV Is ry~aking its case with cable winter cold; temperatures can drop to 30 degrees below zero.
and satellite operators to carry the image_s of dally eagle
•Albritton chose a camera system with a fixed lens that
life, the physical logistics have been worked out.
uses only natural light: "I didn't want anything to move, didn't
By LYNN ELBER
AP Televlelon Writer

Plus an Additional
ssoo.oo·Buick owner Loyalty/
· (fiUis Mondll)', Octoller l)

Cullom 7K, Chestnut,

~

....

~

-· .,......__.,. ....

want any noise. We can't spook the birds."
Permits were obtained from the U.S. Department of
Fish and Wildlife, whose job Is to prevent Interference with
the threatened species. Albritton can't handle the birds or
their approximately 3-inch eggs.
The designated eagle family played a bit of a trick on its
· would,be biographers this year: The birds chose to use a
nearby alternate nest that was cameraless. But Albritton
has seen signs they're returning to their primary home,
including delivery of fresh branches to shore up the nest.
The plan Is to begin TV transmission next year just
before the spring egg-laying, following through to the first
flight of the eaglets in summer. This year, because of a late
cold snap, only one eaglet was successfully hatched by the
adult pair.
Nature's uncertainty Isn't the only obstacle facing
American Eagle TV; intense competition for cable carriage
Is another.
The company is hoping that cable and satellite
operators see the program as a valuable educational
service, one that deserves to be on throughout the day: But
even small chunks of eagle time would be a good start,
said company spokesman Rick Vess.
'We think people will be Interested once they see It,"
Vess said.
·
Adds Albritton: "It can open people's eyes to the natural
world."

T~clolh

28,l40 msrp

1

szlJ900

Judge Hatchett seeks solutions, not punishment,- in
her TV courtroom
.

Leather Interior, 5. 7
V-8, 24K miles,

Towing Package

4 w~etl drive, V6,
Automatic:, l.paded

$12.,900
$15,900 .
.
'•

-1998 Fora
While, Eddie Bauer Pkg.,
Sunroof, Leather,
Mulfl ~Disc Changer

«Locall owner»

1999 Tahoe 4 Dr
4 Wheel Drive, White,
Leather Interior, LOADED!

$24,900

Mgr. Special:

$2 880

«8» ,.,. 1 owner
Cetrturys fr
'

IN STOCK!
Very-Affordable/

(740) 992-2635
-·--··•"ft.':.I'~O::-----

llllll .....

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

~....-.--·---

,.. ..... , . . . . . . . . . . . ."" ............................. l .................. . . . . .

"-'

Today's
Homes

I Page 3 I

American eagles are ready for their TV close-up

Expedition

11 . .

INGELS FURNITURE

~-

Soap Talk

I Page61

1999 Suburban 2001 Grana Am 1999 Chevy 51
Jrd Seat, F&amp;R A/C,
Ext Cab
2 Door or 4 Door

-11m

. ---...............
....... ...
.................
,......._..,---··
.......,..""",.,...

I Page 5 I

Now starting her second season in syndication (check
local listings), Hatchett has brought to her TV-studio
NEW YORK - One big difference about.·Judge Hatchett" · courtrollm the same direct, solution-seeking style for which
she was renowned In Atlanta as a juvenile t::ourt JUStice.
Isn't obvious to viewers.
But attend a taping. There you find that, unlike other
She had grown up across town · rn a loving household
courtroom shows, which move with a briskness that where her parents assured her anything was possible - but
requires only minimal editing for broadcast, Judge Glenda only with hard work and dedication .
A. Hatchett won't be rushed.
She ,earned her law degree from Emory University, then
. "I have to be sure everybody Is crystal-clear about why went to Delta Airlines, first as a corporate lawyer, then as
we're here today," she tells the disputing parties of a compan)l spokeswoman before becoming a judge of Fulton
negligence case: Should the defendant have to pay for the County (Ga.) Juvenile Court In 1990.
Injury the plaintiffs' dog sustained while In his care?
Asingle mother, Hatchett stepped down as chief presiding
It's a minor case, but she doesn't treat It that way. judge in May 1999 to be at home with her two teen-age boys.
Before she reaches a decision, 40 minutes have passed. 'rhen the offer of a TV show came her way.
Until not long before that, Hatchett knew nothing about
Viewers will see It trimmed to five.
Doesn't this dellberallve pace mean lots of pricey the courtroom genre whose ranks she was being asked to
produdtlon time?
.
·
swell.
' "I don't care," says Hatchett during lu_nch recess In her
"I believe In divine order," says Hatchett, expl11lnlng that
dressing room. "We've. got to do what I would do If It with providential timing she had helped care for her
godmother following surgery. "For about two weeks when she
WEREN'T on TV.
·
"I get into a zone," she continues, after bowing her head was In the hospital, I was Sitting there watching TV with her."
In silent thanks for her meal. "I get oblivious to the ~meras Including the numerous courtroom shows. ·
and to the lights and stuff. I thlnk, 'What do I have to do
During her crash course, Hatchett didn't much like what
right now with these people?"'
she saw. She almost turned the offer down.
.
That would Include the people In the gallery. At one
. "Then I figured I would be upfront with them: 'This is what
point, while tape was rolling, Hatchett. turned from her I'm prepared to do . Otherwise, you guys ought to get
litigants to glare at a spectator afflicted with a stubborn somebody e.lse."' When the new "Judge Hatchett" show was
announced in February 2000, its star promised not to be
COUQh.
I don't want you to feel like you have to leave," Hatchett "another quote-unquote Judge Judy."
assured the woman. "I just want to get you some water." In
The key to "Judge Hatchett" is its "creative sentencing,"
a flash, an assistant did.
·
which takes· the delendant (and the viewer) beyond the
FRAZIER MOORE '
AP Televl1lon Writer

lnltllllllon, your locol chlnnoll, If mlloblt, ond
• America's Top 150 pracromml"ff poclutp with lolls
. ollj!Oitl, """'In ond fomlly chonnola, for only
$&lt;19.99 o montltRIIdy to dump your coblt1

.......... _

Crossword

I Page 3 I

.

Willi DISH N - you'll n - hM to dell wltll
tho Clblt IIJY opln. Sian up for tno Dllitll Homo
Pion thlllncl- 1 -l~olV oymrn, !reo

,. ....................................... w.. ........... ., . .. ..

TV.

TV Pipe Line

::

LADY BEETLES: The
fact sheet and list of recommended chemicals to control
lady beedes can be obtained
by calling the Extension
office.
When you receive or pick
up this information, pleue
note 1hat aU of the -ehemiem
listed are indeed recommended, thus I do not intend to ·
single out one product. As
many homeowners shop for
these chemicals, they wiD discover that availability rather.
than choice will dictate
which product they use, as
-some of these products can be
difficult to find.
aennifor Byrnes is a Gallia
County Extmsion agent.)

Decherd and · its Smyrna
manufacturing plant, the
company's only vehicle
assembly factory in the United States.

Times-Sentinel And The

I Page 3 I ·

•••

You're born.
You wait for them
to fix your cable.
You die.

•• s 7

_I

Confe1ence

American offers a special
discount to seniors past 65.
"If they're over 65, they get
1 percent off the service caD,
fuwnPap:DI
if their 66, it's 2 percent and if
enough to light the pilot on they're over 80 and living
alone the only thing they
his furnace.
"He tried to light it Friday have to pay for is parts,"
and Saturday morning but McWilliams said. "For every
then he finally called us so I year over 65, you get 1 perwent out, lit his pilot and cent discount until you're
_)watched it for a little while to over 80, then the service caD
make sure it was OK,"Wheel- .,. free...
McWilliams · also offers a
er said. "I just didn't think l
S
W
discount on each service
should charge him anything. I
felt, the man was older, and he call if customers · clip any
couldn't help it. When I told American Heating ad or any
him (MeWilliams) what the other HVAC competitor's ad
circumstances were, he shook fiom the newspaper.
The response ·rime is usual- .
my hand and said, 'Good deal.'
ly within 24 hours, if that

Nissan Motor
Co. to move
production
plant to Tenn.

Sunday, Sept. 30, 2001

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

D8 • iouriba!' l!:imn: -•tnllntl

•

courtroom for real-life lessons.
.
A youngster who likes to set fires visits a yo~Jng burn
patient. Someone nailed for drunken driving is assigned to
witness car-crash victims at a hospital emergency room . ·
Asked why people choose to come before her, Hatchett
says: "They're seeking help. With a lot of the family issues,
people who come here have tried other things and they
haven't worked."
·
·
. After lunch, Hatchett will be hearing from an a_nxlous
mother and her 13-year-old son, who built a bomb. and
blew up a computer at his school.
The boy had appeared In Hatchett's courtroom days
before, whereupon she dispatched him for a cautionary
tour.
Cameras recorded him arriving by stretch limo at the
fancy offices of an apparel business started by two fellows
not much older than he. Then, In fearsome contrast, he was
hauled to jail for a tough talking-to from Inmates who
warned him not to screw up like they did ,
"So what do you want for YOUR life?" the judge
demands. ''Talk to mel"
She metes o.ut his sentence - a ~ruellng regimen of
community service .- then cautions, If I hear that your
mother has been called into school because you're acting
the fool, there's gonna be hell to pay." He flinches.
This was the youngster's big chance - being set on "a
'new hope road," In Hatchett's bracing words. "But it's only
a beginning. I don't expect-us to get this fixed today."
·
She knows that, In her line of work, there Is no quick fix. ·
But she's just as convinced: Take your time, you make·
things better.

....................................a.,. ... ,....._

'''

•\

•

I

.

�PAGE TWO

IMONDAY

I SUNDAY

OCTOBER 1 I
Six Feet Under actor played Jesus
By Taylor Michaels
CTVOata Features Synd.cate

about the haunting tb~~ song

ror HBO's Sir Feet Urrder? And
didn't the actor who plays Billy

Qr What tan yuu oell one
York iPaf1 7 of 1) ICC)

MoNDAY

Jeremy Sisto ·
on thai show alsO play Jesns ill
a TV movie? -P. Morgan,
Pottsville, I'll.
A: Thomas Newman (American Beauty) composed that
haunting main title theme (which
you can download and play at the
hbo.com Website) especially for
this dazzling series. And yes. Jeremy Sisto. who is featured as
volatile Billy Chenowith on Six
Feet Under. also played the title
role in Jesus on CBS in the spring
of 21XXJ.
Q:. Watdolng syndicated reruns or The Big 1-i~Uey made me
wonder: When did the show
originally air, and whatever
happened lo Richanl Long and
Peter Breck? -Pat Sikes, Winter Haven, Fla.
A: After playing Jarred in The
Big Valley, which ran on ABC
from 1965-69, Long had a modest hit in Nanny and the Professor
(AllC 1970.71 ), but he died in
1974 of a heart ailment, when be
was only 47 years old.
Now 72, Breck - who played
Nick on Valley - most recently
appeared in the 1999 movie Ene·
my Action, which co-staned Randolph Mantooth. of eme'IJ~rrcyl
Recent 1V guest credits include
the syndicated L.A. Heat and the
revival of 77Je Outer limits, as
well as a voice appearance on
the animated .Barmm•: Gothic
Kniglri•· series.
Q: I seem lo remember seeing
John Glenn on either The
$64,000 Question or Name That
Tune. Am I right? --shirley
Long, Erhanl, Minn.
A: Yes. In 1957, after seni"g a·

Quarterback VInny Teataverde leads the New York
Jets as they visit the New York Giants In NFL action
Monday on ABC.

ITUESDAY
By John Crook
TVData F..tu,.s Syndlcata
As high concepts go, this
one was a real dilly: What if
the title character on Felicity
were a secret agent?
That cockamamie notion
lodged firmly in Felicity
creator
J.J .
Abrams'
imagination. The, um,
felicitous result is Alias, a
.colorful, genre-jumping
thriller series premiering
without
commercial
interruption Sunday, Sept.
30, on ABC. (VCR alert! This
premiere episode runs just
over an hour, pushing back
the season premiere of The
Practice by about nine
minutes).
Alias stars dewy Jennifer
Gamer (Time of Your Ute) as
Sydney Bristow, a smart,
resourceful graduate student
who moonlights as a CIA
operative . Recruited in her
freshman year, Sydney has
found fulfillment as a
"spook," but she begins to
question whether she wants

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

covert mode.
, Complications ensue, to
put it mildly, alter boyfriend
Danny (guest star Edward
Allerton, The Mists of Avalon)
proposes to her. While Dixon
(Carl . Lumbly), her CIA
partner, manages a happy
marriage
by keeping his wile
1
: in the dark, Sydney isn't sure
: she wants to shut Danny out
. of any aspect of her life.
After making a tragic
miscalculation, she finds
herself on the run,
questioning the loyalties of

everyone in her life: her aloof
father, Jack (Victor Garber);
her by-the-book boss, Sloane
(Ron Rifkin); perhaps even
her dithery roommate,
Francie (Marrin Dungey).
Assume nothing, Sydney
realizes, and the wise Alias
viewer would do well to take
his cue from her.
'' The premise of the
show is ludicrous," creator
Abrams admits drily, " this
idea of a young woman In
grad school who is a spy.
That's not necessarily the
sort of show that interests me
from the outside. I really
came to It from the inside,
from the idea of ' who is this
woman, and what is her loss,
and
what
are
her
ralationshlps In her Hie?'
"I mean, t~e Idea of this
woman who loses a person
that she loves dearly and ...
has
I his
estranged
relationship with her father
and slowly they are coming
together - that, to me, is a
story tha~ I think would work

OCTOBER 21

"She is a normal woman
going through extraordinary
circumstances, and I just
have to focus on (the' fact
that) this is a chick who is
scared. She's a lot better
trained and laster on her feet
than I am. but she wants to
run (from her situation) as
much as I would, yet she has
to stay and fight fos her life,
to have to think about all
these things going on at
once.
.. As long as it stays
grounded in the fact that she
is just like me (apart from her
situation), I don 't think I'll
have a problem."
Apart, that is, from the
odd aches and pains that go
along with the job, not to
mention the punishing hours
-sometimes 18 a day - that
are a routine part of starring
in an hourlong series .
" It was a shock doing the
first episode after the pilot,
where you had a month to
leam and rehearse the fight,
to suddenly have to learn the

always be feeling the danger says Garner, who began
and the pressure and the studying tae kwan do even
strain of that (spy) part of her before she snared the role .
life on the show."
"My stunt double told me
Garner, who candidly . 'You always are going to
admits
she
lobbied have .lce on something, you
aggressively ror the role, can count on it,' and knowing
says she hasn t really had a that in advance, It's not a big
hard time putting herself In deal. Today my shoulders are
Sydney's fleet running shoes, sore and niy knee Is just
desptte the far-out premise of getting over a little thing. But
the show.
so far, nothing major."
.
"What Is written so well
More complicated is the
about Sydney is that she fact that Garner Is a
comes · from a place of
normalcy," Garner explains. . Continued on Page 3

transcontinental speed record

from California to New York,
then-Maj. John Glenn appeared
on two game shows, I've Got a
Sec"'' and Name 71mr Tu11 e. ·

Q: Did Mr. Lyle from The
Prturuler play the groom ,In, the
movie remake or Father of the
Bride?
- D.
Tanenbaum,

SOAP TALK

ATWT star hosts

St. Jude fund-raiser
me twice."

By Candace Havena
cTVData Features Syndicate

Lana Turner, beyond the sweaters and scandals
By Jacqueline Culler
CTVOata Features Syndicate

Lana Turner's di scovery - she
was enj oy ing icc cre:tm when

W.R.

WilkcJ~on ,

pui&gt;lishcr nf the

young beauty, and asked if she
wanted to be in the movies - became legend. Her response w~1S
that she had to ask her mother.
By 17. 1\uner wus a s t~u ·, and
despite a stormy personal life, she ·
reigned in Hollywood for 20
years.
Cheryl Cmne. Turner's only
child, tells her m01her's story in
Turner Classic Movies lAlla
Turn er: A Dauglrrer:., Memoir
premiering Monday, Oct. I.
Crane shot to notoriety as a teen,
when she fatally stabbed her
mi&gt;ther's ubusive boyfriend Johnny Stompanato.
The documentary. featuring

clips from many Turner films.
also shows her in the most important role of her life: speakin g at
the coroner's inquest regarding
the fatal stabbing. Devoid of her
usual glamour. Turner is shown in
a plain tweed suit, tearfully explaining how Stompan nto bent
her.
That ugly incident made her a
pariah in Hollywood. yet l\1mer
never allowed other people's
opinions to dictate her hold on
stardom. The year before, when
she was supposedly washed-up,
she was nominated for an Oscar
for her role as a single mother in
Pewon Place.
And in 1966, she turned in a
haunting Performance in which
she ages significantly in Madame
X.

1l1ese roles were crucial to her
as an actress, because from her
first bit role in a movie (711ty

Tha tumultoua life and career of MGM's Sweater Girl are
chronicled In Lllml TUrner: A Daughter's Memoir, a new documentary premiering Monday on Turner Clasalc Movies.

I

'

Columbus, Ohio.
A: No, Jamie Denton play~d
Mr. Lyle. That was George Newbern. more recently from the
TNT Wall Street drama a.. u.
playing groom Bryan MacKenzie
in FmiJer oftiJe Bride and its sequel.
CLIP 'N' SAVE: Write to Ute
stars of any current network
prime-time series by sending
your letter c/o (Name of Series),
Viewers Services Department, at
the following addresses:
ABC, 500 s·. Buena Vista St..
Burbank, CA 91 521 ;
CBS, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Los
Angeles, CA 90036;
FOX, P.O. Box 900, Bever!)
Hills, CA 90213:
NBC, 31XXJ W. Alameda Avc
Burbank, CA 91523:
UPN, . 11 800 Wil shire 81 1'
Los Angeles, CA 90025;
WB NETWORK, 4()()(1
ner Blvd .. Burbank, CA 91 :&gt; -

A.J. Langer, Katherine UtNasa and VIcki Lewis (from
left) star as siblings who have remained ctosa over the
years In Three SIIIWB, airing naaadaya on NBC.

Hollywood RcfJOI1el: spotted the

•

TuESDAY

Wont Fo'IJet) Turner was put in a
tight sweater and filmed walking.
She forever became known to
American audiences as MGM 's
Sweater GirL

Alias

Continued from page 2
newlywed , and her husband,
Scott Foley of Felicity, has
his own shooting schedule to
juggle. It helps that both
Garner and Foley knew
they'd .have to make some
major adjustments when she
accepted the role.
.. Even on Time of Your
Life, when I watched
(Jennifer Love Hewitt) wor~
all ti'!Qse hours, I never
envied her position , because
I knew how hard she was
working, and the publicity on
top of It, and Scott and I have
said the samtl thing about
Keri Russell (in Felicity). We
never said, ·Boy, wish we
COIJid trade places wltii her! ' "
Garner says with a laugh.
" In this case, the role
was so good and the project
was so ·amazing that there
was no question of turning It
down , even though I had a
pretty good Idea of what I
was getting Into . As long as
you know you're going to be
running a marathon , you 're
OK . But. yes , It's Eiven more
than
I
could
have
·anticipated ."
Pr~or to Alias , . Garner
adds, It was she who
arranged her life around
Foley's Felicity schedule, so
it's still a little surprising to
find her new husband driving
to be with her during latenight shoots .

Day.&lt; of Our Lives and Soap
City are sponsori ng a contest
that could be a lucky fan or aspiring soap actor's dream co me
true.
Now through Friday, Oct. 12,
viewers ca n enterthe Be a Soap
Star for a Days contest. The
grand prize is a coveted walkon role for the winner - and
their family - to parti cipate in
. the ann ual reading of the
Christmas story episode. More
information is available at

www.Soap City.com and AOL.
As the World Turns star
Martha Byrne i• gearing up to
host the eighth annual St. Jude
Benefit. This year's star-studded event takes place on Friday, Oct. 19. at the New York
Marrion Marquis in Manhanan.
Dear · Candace: I'd like to
know if Andrea Evans and Josh
Ryan Evans (Rebecca and Timmy) on Passimrs are related'!
Also is Liza Huber. who used
to play Gwen. related to Susan
Lucci? - Samantha in Pennsy l&lt;
vania.
Dear Reader: ·Andrea and
Josh Ryan are not related. Hu• ·ber is Lucci's daughter. ·
Dear Candace: Please tell
me why Laurence Lau replaced
Kale ~rowne as Sam Rappaport on One Life 10 Live. I like
Lau much better in the role and
recall when he was Greg Nel·
son on All My Clrildrm. - R.
Lewis, Victoria, Texas.
Dear Reader: It was
Browne's decision to leave. the
role. Lau was an old friend of
OLTL executive producer Gary
Tomlin .
"I had ·read for the role of
Colin, a nd Gory ·saw the old
tape I had done," Lau says.
"'We \\forked together before on
Another World. and I knew how
great he was. He ca lled me one
day and asked if I would be in-.
terested. He didn' t have to ask

Dear Candace: There's an
actres s. Rena Safer, who
played the prosecutor Bonnie
on Ed. I was wondering if she
is th e sal]le one who played
Lois on General Hospital.
- Jim
Harmon,
Harwood
Heights. Ill .
Dear Read~r: Former GH
star Safer played Bonnie on Ed,
and will be back on the first
episode this season.
She can also be seen in the
new Sci-Pi Channel series The
Chro11icle.

Send quesdons or general inte"'st
to TV Pipeline, TVOatu ~·eatu"'s
Syndicate, 333 Glen St., Glens
Falls, NY 12801, or e-mail to
tvplpellne@tvdata.rom. Only
quesdons selected ror this column
will be answered. Pers&lt;~nal replies
cannot be sent.

~ V'11"J~ ·

a

\I

.w.~

Channel Listings ·

Channgl

Service

Chgnne!

2 WSAZ Huntinglon-Charleston (NBC)

J

ovc

4 WGN-Chicago

Family Channel
6 WSYX Columbus (ABC)
7 Prevue
.
8 WCHS Huntington-Charleston (ABC)
9 WPBY Huntington (PBS)
10 WBNS Co lum bus (CBS),
II WVAH Hunting10n (FOX)
12 WOWK Huntinglon- Charleston (CBS)
13 WTAP Parkersburg (NBC)
~ 14 HBO
~

.-

•ts Cinemax
"'17 Showlime

18 Sne•k P1evue
19 Community Bulletin Board
•20 Srarz !
'21 Plex(s)
'22 HB0-2(S)
2J Community Watch 23
•24 HBO Family (s)
25 WOUB (Athens) PBS
26 Trinity Broadcasl Network
• Denotes premium channels

Serv!ca

27 C-Span
28 The Learning Channel
29 E!
JO TNN
Jl TNT
32 . ES PN.
3J Nickelodeon
34 Weather Chan nel
J5 MTV
36 Lifelimc
37 A&amp;E
38 Headline News
39 CNN
40 America's Hc:iJth Nel.
41 WTBS (At lant')
42 C·NBC
43 USA
44 Discovery
45 fox News Ncrwork
46 CMT
47 VH- 1
48 TV Land
49 . Disney
~0
MSNBC
51 FX

·•

�PAGE TWO

IMONDAY

I SUNDAY

OCTOBER 1 I
Six Feet Under actor played Jesus
By Taylor Michaels
CTVOata Features Synd.cate

about the haunting tb~~ song

ror HBO's Sir Feet Urrder? And
didn't the actor who plays Billy

Qr What tan yuu oell one
York iPaf1 7 of 1) ICC)

MoNDAY

Jeremy Sisto ·
on thai show alsO play Jesns ill
a TV movie? -P. Morgan,
Pottsville, I'll.
A: Thomas Newman (American Beauty) composed that
haunting main title theme (which
you can download and play at the
hbo.com Website) especially for
this dazzling series. And yes. Jeremy Sisto. who is featured as
volatile Billy Chenowith on Six
Feet Under. also played the title
role in Jesus on CBS in the spring
of 21XXJ.
Q:. Watdolng syndicated reruns or The Big 1-i~Uey made me
wonder: When did the show
originally air, and whatever
happened lo Richanl Long and
Peter Breck? -Pat Sikes, Winter Haven, Fla.
A: After playing Jarred in The
Big Valley, which ran on ABC
from 1965-69, Long had a modest hit in Nanny and the Professor
(AllC 1970.71 ), but he died in
1974 of a heart ailment, when be
was only 47 years old.
Now 72, Breck - who played
Nick on Valley - most recently
appeared in the 1999 movie Ene·
my Action, which co-staned Randolph Mantooth. of eme'IJ~rrcyl
Recent 1V guest credits include
the syndicated L.A. Heat and the
revival of 77Je Outer limits, as
well as a voice appearance on
the animated .Barmm•: Gothic
Kniglri•· series.
Q: I seem lo remember seeing
John Glenn on either The
$64,000 Question or Name That
Tune. Am I right? --shirley
Long, Erhanl, Minn.
A: Yes. In 1957, after seni"g a·

Quarterback VInny Teataverde leads the New York
Jets as they visit the New York Giants In NFL action
Monday on ABC.

ITUESDAY
By John Crook
TVData F..tu,.s Syndlcata
As high concepts go, this
one was a real dilly: What if
the title character on Felicity
were a secret agent?
That cockamamie notion
lodged firmly in Felicity
creator
J.J .
Abrams'
imagination. The, um,
felicitous result is Alias, a
.colorful, genre-jumping
thriller series premiering
without
commercial
interruption Sunday, Sept.
30, on ABC. (VCR alert! This
premiere episode runs just
over an hour, pushing back
the season premiere of The
Practice by about nine
minutes).
Alias stars dewy Jennifer
Gamer (Time of Your Ute) as
Sydney Bristow, a smart,
resourceful graduate student
who moonlights as a CIA
operative . Recruited in her
freshman year, Sydney has
found fulfillment as a
"spook," but she begins to
question whether she wants

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

covert mode.
, Complications ensue, to
put it mildly, alter boyfriend
Danny (guest star Edward
Allerton, The Mists of Avalon)
proposes to her. While Dixon
(Carl . Lumbly), her CIA
partner, manages a happy
marriage
by keeping his wile
1
: in the dark, Sydney isn't sure
: she wants to shut Danny out
. of any aspect of her life.
After making a tragic
miscalculation, she finds
herself on the run,
questioning the loyalties of

everyone in her life: her aloof
father, Jack (Victor Garber);
her by-the-book boss, Sloane
(Ron Rifkin); perhaps even
her dithery roommate,
Francie (Marrin Dungey).
Assume nothing, Sydney
realizes, and the wise Alias
viewer would do well to take
his cue from her.
'' The premise of the
show is ludicrous," creator
Abrams admits drily, " this
idea of a young woman In
grad school who is a spy.
That's not necessarily the
sort of show that interests me
from the outside. I really
came to It from the inside,
from the idea of ' who is this
woman, and what is her loss,
and
what
are
her
ralationshlps In her Hie?'
"I mean, t~e Idea of this
woman who loses a person
that she loves dearly and ...
has
I his
estranged
relationship with her father
and slowly they are coming
together - that, to me, is a
story tha~ I think would work

OCTOBER 21

"She is a normal woman
going through extraordinary
circumstances, and I just
have to focus on (the' fact
that) this is a chick who is
scared. She's a lot better
trained and laster on her feet
than I am. but she wants to
run (from her situation) as
much as I would, yet she has
to stay and fight fos her life,
to have to think about all
these things going on at
once.
.. As long as it stays
grounded in the fact that she
is just like me (apart from her
situation), I don 't think I'll
have a problem."
Apart, that is, from the
odd aches and pains that go
along with the job, not to
mention the punishing hours
-sometimes 18 a day - that
are a routine part of starring
in an hourlong series .
" It was a shock doing the
first episode after the pilot,
where you had a month to
leam and rehearse the fight,
to suddenly have to learn the

always be feeling the danger says Garner, who began
and the pressure and the studying tae kwan do even
strain of that (spy) part of her before she snared the role .
life on the show."
"My stunt double told me
Garner, who candidly . 'You always are going to
admits
she
lobbied have .lce on something, you
aggressively ror the role, can count on it,' and knowing
says she hasn t really had a that in advance, It's not a big
hard time putting herself In deal. Today my shoulders are
Sydney's fleet running shoes, sore and niy knee Is just
desptte the far-out premise of getting over a little thing. But
the show.
so far, nothing major."
.
"What Is written so well
More complicated is the
about Sydney is that she fact that Garner Is a
comes · from a place of
normalcy," Garner explains. . Continued on Page 3

transcontinental speed record

from California to New York,
then-Maj. John Glenn appeared
on two game shows, I've Got a
Sec"'' and Name 71mr Tu11 e. ·

Q: Did Mr. Lyle from The
Prturuler play the groom ,In, the
movie remake or Father of the
Bride?
- D.
Tanenbaum,

SOAP TALK

ATWT star hosts

St. Jude fund-raiser
me twice."

By Candace Havena
cTVData Features Syndicate

Lana Turner, beyond the sweaters and scandals
By Jacqueline Culler
CTVOata Features Syndicate

Lana Turner's di scovery - she
was enj oy ing icc cre:tm when

W.R.

WilkcJ~on ,

pui&gt;lishcr nf the

young beauty, and asked if she
wanted to be in the movies - became legend. Her response w~1S
that she had to ask her mother.
By 17. 1\uner wus a s t~u ·, and
despite a stormy personal life, she ·
reigned in Hollywood for 20
years.
Cheryl Cmne. Turner's only
child, tells her m01her's story in
Turner Classic Movies lAlla
Turn er: A Dauglrrer:., Memoir
premiering Monday, Oct. I.
Crane shot to notoriety as a teen,
when she fatally stabbed her
mi&gt;ther's ubusive boyfriend Johnny Stompanato.
The documentary. featuring

clips from many Turner films.
also shows her in the most important role of her life: speakin g at
the coroner's inquest regarding
the fatal stabbing. Devoid of her
usual glamour. Turner is shown in
a plain tweed suit, tearfully explaining how Stompan nto bent
her.
That ugly incident made her a
pariah in Hollywood. yet l\1mer
never allowed other people's
opinions to dictate her hold on
stardom. The year before, when
she was supposedly washed-up,
she was nominated for an Oscar
for her role as a single mother in
Pewon Place.
And in 1966, she turned in a
haunting Performance in which
she ages significantly in Madame
X.

1l1ese roles were crucial to her
as an actress, because from her
first bit role in a movie (711ty

Tha tumultoua life and career of MGM's Sweater Girl are
chronicled In Lllml TUrner: A Daughter's Memoir, a new documentary premiering Monday on Turner Clasalc Movies.

I

'

Columbus, Ohio.
A: No, Jamie Denton play~d
Mr. Lyle. That was George Newbern. more recently from the
TNT Wall Street drama a.. u.
playing groom Bryan MacKenzie
in FmiJer oftiJe Bride and its sequel.
CLIP 'N' SAVE: Write to Ute
stars of any current network
prime-time series by sending
your letter c/o (Name of Series),
Viewers Services Department, at
the following addresses:
ABC, 500 s·. Buena Vista St..
Burbank, CA 91 521 ;
CBS, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Los
Angeles, CA 90036;
FOX, P.O. Box 900, Bever!)
Hills, CA 90213:
NBC, 31XXJ W. Alameda Avc
Burbank, CA 91523:
UPN, . 11 800 Wil shire 81 1'
Los Angeles, CA 90025;
WB NETWORK, 4()()(1
ner Blvd .. Burbank, CA 91 :&gt; -

A.J. Langer, Katherine UtNasa and VIcki Lewis (from
left) star as siblings who have remained ctosa over the
years In Three SIIIWB, airing naaadaya on NBC.

Hollywood RcfJOI1el: spotted the

•

TuESDAY

Wont Fo'IJet) Turner was put in a
tight sweater and filmed walking.
She forever became known to
American audiences as MGM 's
Sweater GirL

Alias

Continued from page 2
newlywed , and her husband,
Scott Foley of Felicity, has
his own shooting schedule to
juggle. It helps that both
Garner and Foley knew
they'd .have to make some
major adjustments when she
accepted the role.
.. Even on Time of Your
Life, when I watched
(Jennifer Love Hewitt) wor~
all ti'!Qse hours, I never
envied her position , because
I knew how hard she was
working, and the publicity on
top of It, and Scott and I have
said the samtl thing about
Keri Russell (in Felicity). We
never said, ·Boy, wish we
COIJid trade places wltii her! ' "
Garner says with a laugh.
" In this case, the role
was so good and the project
was so ·amazing that there
was no question of turning It
down , even though I had a
pretty good Idea of what I
was getting Into . As long as
you know you're going to be
running a marathon , you 're
OK . But. yes , It's Eiven more
than
I
could
have
·anticipated ."
Pr~or to Alias , . Garner
adds, It was she who
arranged her life around
Foley's Felicity schedule, so
it's still a little surprising to
find her new husband driving
to be with her during latenight shoots .

Day.&lt; of Our Lives and Soap
City are sponsori ng a contest
that could be a lucky fan or aspiring soap actor's dream co me
true.
Now through Friday, Oct. 12,
viewers ca n enterthe Be a Soap
Star for a Days contest. The
grand prize is a coveted walkon role for the winner - and
their family - to parti cipate in
. the ann ual reading of the
Christmas story episode. More
information is available at

www.Soap City.com and AOL.
As the World Turns star
Martha Byrne i• gearing up to
host the eighth annual St. Jude
Benefit. This year's star-studded event takes place on Friday, Oct. 19. at the New York
Marrion Marquis in Manhanan.
Dear · Candace: I'd like to
know if Andrea Evans and Josh
Ryan Evans (Rebecca and Timmy) on Passimrs are related'!
Also is Liza Huber. who used
to play Gwen. related to Susan
Lucci? - Samantha in Pennsy l&lt;
vania.
Dear Reader: ·Andrea and
Josh Ryan are not related. Hu• ·ber is Lucci's daughter. ·
Dear Candace: Please tell
me why Laurence Lau replaced
Kale ~rowne as Sam Rappaport on One Life 10 Live. I like
Lau much better in the role and
recall when he was Greg Nel·
son on All My Clrildrm. - R.
Lewis, Victoria, Texas.
Dear Reader: It was
Browne's decision to leave. the
role. Lau was an old friend of
OLTL executive producer Gary
Tomlin .
"I had ·read for the role of
Colin, a nd Gory ·saw the old
tape I had done," Lau says.
"'We \\forked together before on
Another World. and I knew how
great he was. He ca lled me one
day and asked if I would be in-.
terested. He didn' t have to ask

Dear Candace: There's an
actres s. Rena Safer, who
played the prosecutor Bonnie
on Ed. I was wondering if she
is th e sal]le one who played
Lois on General Hospital.
- Jim
Harmon,
Harwood
Heights. Ill .
Dear Read~r: Former GH
star Safer played Bonnie on Ed,
and will be back on the first
episode this season.
She can also be seen in the
new Sci-Pi Channel series The
Chro11icle.

Send quesdons or general inte"'st
to TV Pipeline, TVOatu ~·eatu"'s
Syndicate, 333 Glen St., Glens
Falls, NY 12801, or e-mail to
tvplpellne@tvdata.rom. Only
quesdons selected ror this column
will be answered. Pers&lt;~nal replies
cannot be sent.

~ V'11"J~ ·

a

\I

.w.~

Channel Listings ·

Channgl

Service

Chgnne!

2 WSAZ Huntinglon-Charleston (NBC)

J

ovc

4 WGN-Chicago

Family Channel
6 WSYX Columbus (ABC)
7 Prevue
.
8 WCHS Huntington-Charleston (ABC)
9 WPBY Huntington (PBS)
10 WBNS Co lum bus (CBS),
II WVAH Hunting10n (FOX)
12 WOWK Huntinglon- Charleston (CBS)
13 WTAP Parkersburg (NBC)
~ 14 HBO
~

.-

•ts Cinemax
"'17 Showlime

18 Sne•k P1evue
19 Community Bulletin Board
•20 Srarz !
'21 Plex(s)
'22 HB0-2(S)
2J Community Watch 23
•24 HBO Family (s)
25 WOUB (Athens) PBS
26 Trinity Broadcasl Network
• Denotes premium channels

Serv!ca

27 C-Span
28 The Learning Channel
29 E!
JO TNN
Jl TNT
32 . ES PN.
3J Nickelodeon
34 Weather Chan nel
J5 MTV
36 Lifelimc
37 A&amp;E
38 Headline News
39 CNN
40 America's Hc:iJth Nel.
41 WTBS (At lant')
42 C·NBC
43 USA
44 Discovery
45 fox News Ncrwork
46 CMT
47 VH- 1
48 TV Land
49 . Disney
~0
MSNBC
51 FX

·•

�.

!

PAGE FIVE

IWEDNESDAY

OCTOBER31 Hanks directs pivotal episode of Band of Brothers
By Jay Bobbin
QTVData FeaturEJS SyndiCate

If a pan of history interests Tom
Hanks deeply. you can bet one
screen project about it probably
won't be enough for him.
TI.c l,.o-ti .....:'i'\.~rt•} A'o~wtuti·.

·J

"mncr proved that ~y following
h" actmg job Ill Apollo 13 with
his Emmy-honored HBO production From ''" Ean!J to tht Moon.
und he is returning to d1at cable
network by revisi1ing World War
II the'll"S he previously dealt with
in_,.W?Y,ing.. Prii!(Jte-Rvan. ..
-, 1 ...

I SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY
.Tom HankS
Executive-produced by Hanks :
and Rya/1 di=tor Steven Spiel- ·
berg, the Band of Bmthel3 contin- ·
ues its run on HBO with the fifth
episode. ..Crossroads." airing,
Sunday, Sept. 30.
Based on historian Stephen E. .
Ambrose's best seller, the drama :
follows Easy Company. U.S . :
Army paratroopers who jumped .
into France on D'Day and fought :
in the Banle of the Bulge. Familiar faces in the huge cast include
David Schwimmer (Friends),
Donnie Wahlberg, Matthew Setde, Soon Grimes (Party of Five), ·
Kirk Acevedo (0&lt;), Jimmy Fallon :
(Salurrlny Night Live), Ron Liv- :
ingston (The Practice), and .
Hanks' son Colin (Roswell).
"It's a huge undertaking," Hanks says. "Thn ti.mes bigger than a
movie, but crowded into about (only) twice 1he time a feature :
film would lllke. You might think ·
you're done with parts one and :
three, !hen you discover things :
still touc)led upon in patt six or
. part nine. I always start 1hese
things thinking I know 80 percent
of the material, and we 'II find 20 '
percent of these hidden nuggets.•
Well, that proportion is always'
exactly the opposite."
·•
Saving Privale Ryan viewers •
will =ognize the you-are-there~
style of the Btmd of Brotlum bat-'
tie scenes. "Steven (Spielberg);
wrote the book on that with the •
Omaha Beach sequence that
opens Ryan." Hanks reflects. "In
a weird way. it was glamorous, •
but it was also a honifying place ~··
for humanity to spend an hourand-a-half. He captured that in a
way very different from World.
War II movies that have bypassed
that sense of tangible terror. He
gave a number of the Band of.
Brothers directors some suggestions on how to do that, because'

Larry Joe Campbell plays Andy, the brother-In-law
and co-worker of Jim, In According to Jim, airing
Wednesdays on ABC.

ITHURSDAY

OCTOBER41

tol2)

TuuRSDAY

ti
10TV
News

to B&amp; Anroonced
Regk&gt;nal Coverage - Tearns to B&amp; Announced

our desire was much the same; to .

put the audience on missions that
do not come olf looking like fun ."
Having made his directing debut on the movie Tllnt 11Iing You
Do!, Hanks chose to direct the
fifth episode of Bm1d of Brothers.
He calls it "a 'bridge' episode,"
wbich is also literal since it deals
wilh Operation Market-Garden . .
dramatized earlier in the 1977
film A Bridge Tov Far. 'That
parachute drop into Holland we
achieved, I've never seen anything like that, and right in the
middle of that episode is the moment where there's no fun left in
this. Guys aren't putting notches
on their rifle stocks anymore. You
start the hour with them one way,
then end it with them just heading
off into the darkness."
Hanks continues, "I think one of
the reasons (Rym1) did what it did
socially is that we !.re at this (par·
ticular) time in our history. The :
people who lived (the World War
II experience) are reaching the
end of their lives, so it's proper
and unden;tandable that it has
.come back to 1he forefront.
"Before all this living history
leaves us, let's see what there is to
learn ... not about ancient times,
but about human behavior, and
how what they went through is reflected in how we live today. The
wife of an associate.of mine was
born after the war and grew up in
Belgium, and she told me, 'If not
for these American paratroopers
who liberated Belgium, I'd be
speaking Gennan right now.' .
That's extraordinary to hear from .
someone who's the same age I
am."

Laura San Giacomo ·stars as a down-to-41arth journalIst seaklng to bring substance to her father's style
magazine In Just Shoot Me, airing Thursdays on NBC.

_ _...;.· Weekly Puzzler Answer--

'I'

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

I FRIDAY

OCTOBERS I

Bobby (Joseph Lyle Taylor) aurpriHS Cynthie with
some news In tOO c.n~ SlrHt Sunday on A&amp;E Network.

Saturdays on CBS, Craig
T. Nelson atar.s as the
pollee chief of Washington,
D.C., who has hla hands
full with strife In the
department In The District.

-TRIVIA
Shirley Jones won the Miss
Pittsburgh Pageant in 1952,
and was voted fin;t runner-up
in the Miss Pennsyl.vania contest.

The identity of the featured celebrity is found within the
answers In the puzzle. In order to take the TV Challenge,
unscramble th.e letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
7. First name for a
daredevil
1. Days _ _ _
B. Olivier or Gielgud
9. Major-leaguer
10. _ Man ; '84 Emilio
9. Series about a doctor
Estevez movie
12. Actress on The
n . Energy
Jeffersons (2)
13. _._-Cop; '88 Burt
14. Place for 3 nursery
Reynolds lilm
rhyme men
15. Carmen or Olello
16. Thickness
17.Charlie Young's
19. _ _ Three Uves ('53·'
~portrayer on The West
'56)·
Wing (2)
20. Sheridan &amp; Sothem
18. Number of seasons for
22. Sabrina ;_ Beaut of

_ _ weekly Puzzler On Page 6 - -

IN

..---FRIDAY

TV CROSSWORD

Focus

CHiPs

'

Former Miss New Jersey Candy Cooper (Kristin
Bauer) otters her friend Lydia support as aha strive•
tor a better future In That's Life, airing Fridays on CBS.

.

Jon
U.C. Unden:over, debuting Sunday, Sepl. 30, on NBC.
'
The elite Justice Depanme~t
unit, which is the latest high·
tech crime-fighting team, tackles 1he country's worst criminals.
,
Agents Shaw and Alex Cross
(Vera Fanniga, 15 Minutes) report to Donovan (Oded Fehr,
The Mummy) . Psychological
profiler Monica Davis (Bruklin
Harris) and techno-wiz Cody
(Jarrad Paul, Action) round out
the undercover unit.

20. Married... With Children
role
21. _ Do Anything ; '94
Nick Nolte ·movie
23. Criminal trial e\iill.
24. Ruby, for one
-. 25. Emma Samms'
birthplace: abbr.
26. Wilbur Post's pet
29. Acapulco aHitmative
30. Series about a student
34. Eric or Glenn
36. Tom _; '58 Pater
Sellers film
38. Mill Connie BrookS'
· portrayer
39. Like Felix Unger, as
oppoeedto .C&gt;acar
Madison
42. _ Crucu, NM

43. 7'1'111 - .:_

·a day In HIO's hnd 111•rotherl, O.mlan Lawla stars aa Richard Winters, the lleutanant who flnda hlniMII vlctorloua attsr

. t.'!~nng's rlaky miMion. Hla • - • IHds to a promotion, which doean't ill wall wllh him- aapeclally becluM ha'a doing a
lot o1 alttlng ... blhlnd 1 dille.
,
t .

•

\

~ ('09·'71)

DOWN
1. Vein contents
2. _or; having a liking lOr
3. Ru11la't _ Mountalna
4. Prefix for lllllkt or mind
5. 78 or 45, lor ahort '·
e. _ Arabian Nights ; '59
Mr. Magoo movie

The Cosby Show
23. ABC lollowers
27. _ the Mayor ; '86

sitcom
28. Air. nation
30. Hatfields and McCoys

31 . Jay .

;32. Part of the title of Jeny

Mathers' sarles (2)
33. Holiday season
35. Tom Selleck's age
37. Bell and Kettle
40. Marinaro's Initials
41 . Mr. Foyt

•

�.

!

PAGE FIVE

IWEDNESDAY

OCTOBER31 Hanks directs pivotal episode of Band of Brothers
By Jay Bobbin
QTVData FeaturEJS SyndiCate

If a pan of history interests Tom
Hanks deeply. you can bet one
screen project about it probably
won't be enough for him.
TI.c l,.o-ti .....:'i'\.~rt•} A'o~wtuti·.

·J

"mncr proved that ~y following
h" actmg job Ill Apollo 13 with
his Emmy-honored HBO production From ''" Ean!J to tht Moon.
und he is returning to d1at cable
network by revisi1ing World War
II the'll"S he previously dealt with
in_,.W?Y,ing.. Prii!(Jte-Rvan. ..
-, 1 ...

I SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY
.Tom HankS
Executive-produced by Hanks :
and Rya/1 di=tor Steven Spiel- ·
berg, the Band of Bmthel3 contin- ·
ues its run on HBO with the fifth
episode. ..Crossroads." airing,
Sunday, Sept. 30.
Based on historian Stephen E. .
Ambrose's best seller, the drama :
follows Easy Company. U.S . :
Army paratroopers who jumped .
into France on D'Day and fought :
in the Banle of the Bulge. Familiar faces in the huge cast include
David Schwimmer (Friends),
Donnie Wahlberg, Matthew Setde, Soon Grimes (Party of Five), ·
Kirk Acevedo (0&lt;), Jimmy Fallon :
(Salurrlny Night Live), Ron Liv- :
ingston (The Practice), and .
Hanks' son Colin (Roswell).
"It's a huge undertaking," Hanks says. "Thn ti.mes bigger than a
movie, but crowded into about (only) twice 1he time a feature :
film would lllke. You might think ·
you're done with parts one and :
three, !hen you discover things :
still touc)led upon in patt six or
. part nine. I always start 1hese
things thinking I know 80 percent
of the material, and we 'II find 20 '
percent of these hidden nuggets.•
Well, that proportion is always'
exactly the opposite."
·•
Saving Privale Ryan viewers •
will =ognize the you-are-there~
style of the Btmd of Brotlum bat-'
tie scenes. "Steven (Spielberg);
wrote the book on that with the •
Omaha Beach sequence that
opens Ryan." Hanks reflects. "In
a weird way. it was glamorous, •
but it was also a honifying place ~··
for humanity to spend an hourand-a-half. He captured that in a
way very different from World.
War II movies that have bypassed
that sense of tangible terror. He
gave a number of the Band of.
Brothers directors some suggestions on how to do that, because'

Larry Joe Campbell plays Andy, the brother-In-law
and co-worker of Jim, In According to Jim, airing
Wednesdays on ABC.

ITHURSDAY

OCTOBER41

tol2)

TuuRSDAY

ti
10TV
News

to B&amp; Anroonced
Regk&gt;nal Coverage - Tearns to B&amp; Announced

our desire was much the same; to .

put the audience on missions that
do not come olf looking like fun ."
Having made his directing debut on the movie Tllnt 11Iing You
Do!, Hanks chose to direct the
fifth episode of Bm1d of Brothers.
He calls it "a 'bridge' episode,"
wbich is also literal since it deals
wilh Operation Market-Garden . .
dramatized earlier in the 1977
film A Bridge Tov Far. 'That
parachute drop into Holland we
achieved, I've never seen anything like that, and right in the
middle of that episode is the moment where there's no fun left in
this. Guys aren't putting notches
on their rifle stocks anymore. You
start the hour with them one way,
then end it with them just heading
off into the darkness."
Hanks continues, "I think one of
the reasons (Rym1) did what it did
socially is that we !.re at this (par·
ticular) time in our history. The :
people who lived (the World War
II experience) are reaching the
end of their lives, so it's proper
and unden;tandable that it has
.come back to 1he forefront.
"Before all this living history
leaves us, let's see what there is to
learn ... not about ancient times,
but about human behavior, and
how what they went through is reflected in how we live today. The
wife of an associate.of mine was
born after the war and grew up in
Belgium, and she told me, 'If not
for these American paratroopers
who liberated Belgium, I'd be
speaking Gennan right now.' .
That's extraordinary to hear from .
someone who's the same age I
am."

Laura San Giacomo ·stars as a down-to-41arth journalIst seaklng to bring substance to her father's style
magazine In Just Shoot Me, airing Thursdays on NBC.

_ _...;.· Weekly Puzzler Answer--

'I'

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

I FRIDAY

OCTOBERS I

Bobby (Joseph Lyle Taylor) aurpriHS Cynthie with
some news In tOO c.n~ SlrHt Sunday on A&amp;E Network.

Saturdays on CBS, Craig
T. Nelson atar.s as the
pollee chief of Washington,
D.C., who has hla hands
full with strife In the
department In The District.

-TRIVIA
Shirley Jones won the Miss
Pittsburgh Pageant in 1952,
and was voted fin;t runner-up
in the Miss Pennsyl.vania contest.

The identity of the featured celebrity is found within the
answers In the puzzle. In order to take the TV Challenge,
unscramble th.e letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
7. First name for a
daredevil
1. Days _ _ _
B. Olivier or Gielgud
9. Major-leaguer
10. _ Man ; '84 Emilio
9. Series about a doctor
Estevez movie
12. Actress on The
n . Energy
Jeffersons (2)
13. _._-Cop; '88 Burt
14. Place for 3 nursery
Reynolds lilm
rhyme men
15. Carmen or Olello
16. Thickness
17.Charlie Young's
19. _ _ Three Uves ('53·'
~portrayer on The West
'56)·
Wing (2)
20. Sheridan &amp; Sothem
18. Number of seasons for
22. Sabrina ;_ Beaut of

_ _ weekly Puzzler On Page 6 - -

IN

..---FRIDAY

TV CROSSWORD

Focus

CHiPs

'

Former Miss New Jersey Candy Cooper (Kristin
Bauer) otters her friend Lydia support as aha strive•
tor a better future In That's Life, airing Fridays on CBS.

.

Jon
U.C. Unden:over, debuting Sunday, Sepl. 30, on NBC.
'
The elite Justice Depanme~t
unit, which is the latest high·
tech crime-fighting team, tackles 1he country's worst criminals.
,
Agents Shaw and Alex Cross
(Vera Fanniga, 15 Minutes) report to Donovan (Oded Fehr,
The Mummy) . Psychological
profiler Monica Davis (Bruklin
Harris) and techno-wiz Cody
(Jarrad Paul, Action) round out
the undercover unit.

20. Married... With Children
role
21. _ Do Anything ; '94
Nick Nolte ·movie
23. Criminal trial e\iill.
24. Ruby, for one
-. 25. Emma Samms'
birthplace: abbr.
26. Wilbur Post's pet
29. Acapulco aHitmative
30. Series about a student
34. Eric or Glenn
36. Tom _; '58 Pater
Sellers film
38. Mill Connie BrookS'
· portrayer
39. Like Felix Unger, as
oppoeedto .C&gt;acar
Madison
42. _ Crucu, NM

43. 7'1'111 - .:_

·a day In HIO's hnd 111•rotherl, O.mlan Lawla stars aa Richard Winters, the lleutanant who flnda hlniMII vlctorloua attsr

. t.'!~nng's rlaky miMion. Hla • - • IHds to a promotion, which doean't ill wall wllh him- aapeclally becluM ha'a doing a
lot o1 alttlng ... blhlnd 1 dille.
,
t .

•

\

~ ('09·'71)

DOWN
1. Vein contents
2. _or; having a liking lOr
3. Ru11la't _ Mountalna
4. Prefix for lllllkt or mind
5. 78 or 45, lor ahort '·
e. _ Arabian Nights ; '59
Mr. Magoo movie

The Cosby Show
23. ABC lollowers
27. _ the Mayor ; '86

sitcom
28. Air. nation
30. Hatfields and McCoys

31 . Jay .

;32. Part of the title of Jeny

Mathers' sarles (2)
33. Holiday season
35. Tom Selleck's age
37. Bell and Kettle
40. Marinaro's Initials
41 . Mr. Foyt

•

�PAGE SIX

Home decorating: find your style
*
BY CAROL McGAR\IEY

~

Everheart

.

10 -440
first floor 3173 sq.h.
Se&lt;ond Floor 931 sq.h.
PLAN

[-.-·L

Master
Suite

Pallo ·- · 17'6" x24'
9' X 9'

living AreG 41~ sq.ll.
Garage
1455 sq.h.
Goroge Storage 504 sq.h.
Dimensions 132'6" x 88'

3000 SERIES
www.acfihomep&amp;ans.com

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1

Patio

[

16' X 25'

Great Room
27'8" X 23'4"

.

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Garag_e
49' X 27'4"

Open to

Great Room

Below

and furnishings become key
8ffiERHOMES
tools.
AND GARDENS BOOK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATU ES
• COLOR: Color can visuWhat's your decorating
ally
stretch space, ra1se or
style? You say you favor simple but classic furniture _pieces lower ceiling heights, and alter emotional levels. Besides,
but love colorful, graphic it's
the most reasonably priced
poster art? Plus, you always
tool on the market. Dramatic
scour flea marhts for Fiesta color can transform a bland
·ware pitchers?
wall into the focal poii:n of the
Look around at what you
.b 1 use of white ,
live with and what you love. room. L1 era
such as for woodwork and
If those pieces and colors trim, li htens a color-rich
make you happy, that's a start. g
ing spot· for finding your style. room
Never underestimate the
Decorating is all about expressing your personality and stimulating power of red, or
surrounding yourself with fa- the surprising impact of cobalt
blue . Look at natural, lighter
vorite things.
tints of old favorite colors for
Rules of this game don't
afresh look when you paint.
really exist. You can fashion • Call on yellow to infuse some
them to suit your lifestyle.
sunlight into a · room, and
Perhaps you want to display a don't . be shy about using a
growing collec tion or to
rich chocolate brown on walls
showcase some inherited tra- for a rich restful look.
ditional furnishings. Maybe
If you 'like the retro look,
vibrant color is your signature . check out some shades of
look in public spaces, but in
blue, green, and turquoise
private ones, you favor whites used in mid~20th-century inand soft neutrals. That's pertenors. Or, create a dramatic
fectly OK.
What style can feature the look with gold , silver, and
·ewe! tones
look you love : .eountry J • PATTERN : Show your
French, N ew Country Coloperso nality by building a
nial, Southwestern, '50s Funk,
bold contemporary, or rich room sc heme based on · a
traditional? These days, eclec- dominant pattern, such as in
an Oriental rug. Or, showcase
tic is a style all its own.
Tying all the components · a faux-paint finish for a tou ch
together is tricky for some. of drama, or pick a mix of
That's where color, pattern, fabric and wallpaper designs.

How to keep cut flowers fresh
8v LINDA COBB
THE QuEEN OF ClEAN

(R)

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION

cause the flowers to die more
quickly.
Keep the water clean and
clear to extend the life of the
flowers . Add 1 tablespoon of
liquid bleach to 1 quart of water. Pour this water into your
vase. Or add 1 teaspoon of
sugar or two aspirin tablets to
the water. Even a can of reguJar 7 -UP or Sprite mixed with
the water will keep the floral
arrangement fresh . Combine

plug them with cotton. Are
the stems too short for the
vase you want to use? Slip the
stem into a plastic drinking
straw before arranging it. To
help with flower arranging,
stand some hair rollers in the
container, and put the -flowers
in them. The flowers will stay
put.
Wilted flowers? Snip off the
end of eac h stem, and then
stand the flowers in hot water.
114 cup of soft drink with 3/4 Allow the water to come to
f
u h [. room temperature, and then
cup! o ~aterh. se t ese or- arrange the flowers in fresh
mu as 10r omegrown or
·
water.
store-bought fl owers.
Roses are a particular chal- DEAR QUEEN : My cat
was feeling a little jealous .of
lenge. Before you put them in my boyfriend and urinated on
water, remove the thorns with
one of his shoes. What can I
a sharp knife, split the stems, do to remove the stain and
and peel off a little bark.
the smell? _ DEE SMALLFor lilies, cut off flowers' WOOD, Bangor, Maine
anthers - the part that con-. DEAR DEE : Oh, dear.
tams th.e pollen that s~ams you and the cat had better
everythmg. Use care cuttmg 1t h
lk T
fi h
. o f 1t.
. ·
ave a ta . o remove res
o ff an d disposmg

DEAR QUEEN : I love
flowers, and I have a wonderful garden. I often pick flow ers and bring them into the
house to enjoy, but I can't cut
them and keep them alive or
even arrange them. Can you
give me some easy ideas? . PEGGY COOLIDGE, Charlotte N .C.
DEAR PEGGY: I share
your love of flowers, and,
while my garden is not too
impressive, the King, being a
good husband, brings me
flowers frequently . I hate to
see them die quickly, so I
have a few tricks I always use.
First of all, when you cut
flowers, always cut the stem
on an angle. Use a sharp knife
or pruning sheers. Split the
ends of thick stems so that the
water can travel · more easily
up the stern.
For dahlias and other hol- urine stains on leather, dip a
Remove leaves that will sit
low-stemmed
flowers , fill soft, white cloth in warm wabeneath the waterline in your
vase. These leaves will rot and them with water, and then ter and wring out well.

patterns are scaled down.
W lth multiple patterns, a
pnnt fabnc of a sofa slipcover,
for example, can set the scene.
Wallpaper
h
. alm1ght be
. h added to
t e mix~ ong Wit a subtle
pattern 111 drapenes. ~nother
pattern on a s1de chan, along
with others on accent pillows,
~:~e~~-rk together for a total
• FURNISHINGS: Focu~
on one or two furniture
pieces, such as a sofa or a pair
of love seats. The rest of the
furniture plan can be based on
the pattern, color, scale, and
size of the pieces.
.
Furmshmgs compose more
than the furniture_pieces in. a
room. They also mclude artwork, rugs, lamps, mirrors,
book, photographs and mementos that add character.
•••
..
Better Homes and Gardens
Decorating Basics" (Meredith
Books, $19.95 softcover)

WEEKLY PUZZLER

Everheart is luxuriously large
The Everheart is handsome, lies may prefer to use this patio.
luxuriously large and com- space as a family room. It's
Two more complete bedfortably relaxed. And despite open to the kitchen, with a room suites are upstairs, plus a
· boasting 4,100 square feet of raised conversation bar mark- computer loft with a built-in
living space, plus nearly 2,000 ing the boundary. .
desk: Each of the bedrooms
square feet of detached garage,
Working at the L-shaped has a roomy walk-in closet,
the front facade is decidedly' counter, or the cooktop is- plus its own bathroom.
unpretentious.
land, you can easily be a part A breezeway links the house
Eye-catching features in- of goings-on in the larger to a three-car garage, with
elude stone veneer wainscot- space. The nook is handy for plenty of extra storage space
ing, multi planed windows and ·day-to-day meals, while the above it.
a collection of variously sized vaulted dining rooms stands
For a review plan, including
gables.
ready for festive occasions. A scaled floor plans, elevations,
Entering, you step inside a built- n hutch fills most of one section and artist's conception,
wide, lofty foyer, naturally il- wall.
send $25 to Associated Deluminated by windows, sideWhen day is done, the signs, 1100 Jacobs Drive ,
lights and overhe11d dormers. owners can retreat to Ever- Eugene, Ore. 97402. Please
Art showcased on the gallery heart's deluxe master suite, specify the Everheart 10-440
wall separating foyer and great and soak away stress in the and include a return addr~ss
room will need · spotlighting roomy spa tub. During the when ordering. A catalog feaonly at night.
day, soft light washes into the turing more than 350 home
Multiplaned windows fill bay that houses the spa tub, plans is available for $15. For
most of the spacious great plus an oversized shower. more information, call 1-800room's rear wall, and a 14- Other amenities include a den 634-0123.
foot ceiling adds to the feeling (or home office) , two large
of expansiveness. Many fami- walk-in closets and a private

For supporting patterns, repeat at least one of the colors
in the dominant patteru .
Large rooms can accommodate a mix Small room~ can
handle a lively mix, too, if the

ACROSS

1 - Jessica Parker
6 Glut
1D Less
15 Betrayer
18 Nimble
19 Cleans by rubbing
21 Cordial flavoring
22 ·- Like 1t Hot"
23 Light·ray device
24 Horn
25 Spiked
26 Brass·band
instrufl\ent
27 t&gt;enesls name
28 - blanche
29 Express a belief
31 Pictures
33 Repair
35 Length times width .
36 Dou.bly
37 Cabinet lor
bric-a-brac
38 Waned
40 Wooden box
41 Source of ore
42 Wreckage
44 Imperfections
45 Gunner's need
47 Minced oath
51 Dolly the singer
52 -donna
53 Bodies of water
55 Lll~ story, lor short
56 Direction Indicator
57 Baldwin or
Gulnness
58 Racing vessels
60 T·man
62 Play the lead
63 Baked65 Biblical pronoun
66Muck
67 Wallet Item
68 Gist
69 -de loie gras
71 Frequently
73 JFK predecessor
75 Kimono sash
76 Monk
77 Inlet
78 Wall and Fleet:

abbr.
Earn
Campus mil. grp.
Sediment
Blushing
Publication's layout
90 "Once- .. ."
92 Kitchen item
94 Opening
95 Approves
96 . City in.Denmark
98 Wargod
99 Poundstone or
Abdul
100 Shade tree
1D1 Menace
103 Knights' attendants
105 Vacation vehicle
106 Back talk
1D8 Kiln
109 Moisten
11 0 Maker of verse
111 Border on
113 Understandable
· 11.4 Hold i!l balance
115 Hermit
118 Demand
119 Study in haste
120 Inclined way
124 Chafe
• 125 Rotten kids
126 Dull, heavy sound
127 Roadster
. 128 Glum
129 Anklebone
131 Seat lor a king
133 Laconic
135 Rooney or Griffith
136 Woodwinds
137 Drenched
138 Wrongly
139 Hard liquor
140 Insignificant
141 Tinted
142 Painters' subjects
81
83
84
85
87

DOWN

_1 Capital of Oregon ·
2 Century plant
3 Gone up
4 Cakesand5.That girl
6 Made points
7 Blood vessel
8 Melody
9 Poe(s "before"
10 Ill-will
11 Poir1tless ·
12 Agreeable
13 Put to work
14 Rebellion
15 Acosmetic
16 Yellow color
17 Tantalize
19 Frightens
20 Passenger In hiding
22 Put on, as a play
28 Rustic dwelling
30 Fruit stones
32 Person
34 One ir) the red
36 Mine car
37 Bovary and Lazarus
39 Forehead
40 Mouse-button push
42 Flltled
43 Trip of a kind
44 Impudent
45 Pain
46 Shooting stars
48 Under the covers
49 Resound
50 Observe
51 Gone by
52 Truisms
53 Yellow pigment
54 Fire or yard 57 Suspect's salvation
59 Raid
61 Weapons
63 On the left, at sea
64 Protective garments
66 Declare
70 Island
72 Stuffs
74 TV award
76 Weather systenn
79 Group of actors

Replacing double-hung windowsBY

MORRIS
AND JAMES CAREY

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
Q. How po I replace a window? The current window is
double-hung with sas h
weights, and I want to replace
it with a new vinyl window.
A. Replacmg double-hung
wood windows with vinyl
ones is about the simplest and
most cost-effective of all window replacements - as long
as the main frame of the existing window is in good condi-

tion and can be reused. Here's main frame has an offset in it
how it happens.
that goes all the way ar~und.
First, all the trim is removed The inside half of the fra.me is
from the four inside faces of slightly smaller than the outthe main frame. No, you side half of the frame. The re don ' t have to remove the placement wiPdow comes in
ropes and weights. They can its own frame and is set in
. be left in the hollow sides of place from the outside fitting
the window frame . However, mto ~he larger opening and
we do suggest spraying expan- butting up against the face of
sive foam into the balance of the smaller portion of the
the void to improve energy fram e. If the main frame
efficiency.
doesn't have a jog, wood trim
After the trim is removed, it is added to create one.
becomes apparent th at the
\

Puule answer.on Page 4

80
82
84
86
87
88
89
91
93

I

Vendor
Bridge position
Scatter
Costly
Enemies
Neighbor of Tex.
Butts
Organic fuel
-beaver
94 Carpenter's tool
96 Speechify
97 Swordsmen
99 Is profitable
102 Roof
104 Eden resident
105 Orang cousin
107 Yearly earnings
109 Raucous sound
110 Wandered
112 Unopened flower
113 Elegant
114 Trimmed
115 Tracking system.
116 Black wood
117 Unrefined
118 Bottle lor oil
119 Throttle
121 Bitter
122 En - (all together)
123 Urge
125 Stain
126 Salver
130 Actor Vigoda
132 Coal scuttle
133 Beach-vacation
result
134 Flightless bird

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