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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Yanks

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Clt-Jneris wJ-. m control.
When Cr.ug CounseU reached
on an error to starl the game,

fllMBPap86

•
••

Clemens picked hun off.
Once he got rol)ing, it w.s
knew those plans were clear the five-time Cy Young
scrapped when · ·e began Award winner wos charged
wanning up in t' Anzona up. Desp11e an injured right
bullpen in lhe """'""' mning. hamstring, Clemens unp-owd
"He said all :Uong he's pre- to 3-0 lifetime rn the World
pared to pitch," Brenly said, Series. He evened lus oftenreferring to Schilling. "He checkered postseason record
didn't do cartwheels or any- at 6-6 for 20 starts.
thing like that and he didn't
Rivera , the most dominant
look at me like I was crazy."
reliever in Series history.
Asked about his history of struck out four.
pitching on ihree days' rest,
Brian Anderson pitched
Schilling said, "D.;&gt;n 't have weU enough for Arizona, but
one. Never done it before in
lhe big leagues."
Before Game 3, Brerlly
admitted it would be risky to
bring back Schilling so early.
"That's the great gamble,"
he said. "The numbers will
show over the past two or
three years that it is not a good
gamble, and some very good
pitchers, some aces of staffs,
have failed coming back on

too the loss.
Tted at 1. the Yankees
scored in the srxch. Bernie
Williams opened wtth a leadoff smgle, Posada drew a oneout walk, and Mrke Morgan
reheved. With two outs, Brosius hit a soft 'ingle to left field
for the go-a. ·.1d run .
Posada l~u &gt;tf rhe second
inning wnh J. home run. He
ended the Yankees' scoreless
streak at 18 innings. their
longest drought in Series history.

Arizona tied it in the fourth
on Matt Williams' sacrifke fly.

Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2001

•
passes into fidd goals:
As bad as his ce~
looked for three quarters,~
managed to open the fou~
quarter with an 8-0 run "!~
take a 71-69 lead before J
dan checked in with 8:57 I~
Jordan htt his next shot ~
got an assist on his next p~
helping the Wizards nuintaDl
a slim lead.
;:
The game stayed close l1w
r"'t of the way, setting up
ending that could have be;,
dramatic if Jordan hao bee~
little more accurate. f&lt;t
showed no emotion when ~
game ended.
::,.

Jordan

found Jordan open at the 3point line. His shot -like so
many of his jumpers - didn't
Pap II .·
h•ve enough on it. .
"I had a good look and it
next shot, also a jumper, and came up short. My shot was
then failed to ouuump Kurt pretty short and pretty flat,"
Thomas, :Ulowrng him to grab Jordan said. "It could have
• n offenSive rebound. That led been a great situation, but it's
to a pair of foul shots by the beginning of a long seaOthella Harrington with 34 son- that's the way I look ac
seconds left for a three-point it."
lead.
Chris Whitney scored 18
Jordan threw an ill-advised points to lead the rest of the
pass chat was stolen on Wash- Wizards, who would have
ington's next pos.coession, but made Jorda~'s return a much
Christian Laettner immedi- bigger success if they had
ately stole the baU back and converted a few of his precise

fl'om

Melp County's

H0111etown News,.per

.,-•

Free TB

MEIGS LOCAL

~esting

Levy

to fund
sports

BY BRIAN J. Ruo
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Kroger Flavor

cround

series.

·Hudson
tre11m Plour

Bee#

Thanks to Clemens' win and
Rivera's save, the defending
three-time champions won't
have to try to do it, either.
The Yankees have a history
of coming back from 2-0
margins. They did it in 1996
against Atlanta.
· The win came before Bush
and a quieter-than-usual
crowd of 55,820 bundled up
against the cold and wind at
Yankee Stadium.
From the very start,

-·--

F&amp;..OLIIt

Fields
from Papa&amp;

or

Heiners

Oh,well.

Red Delicious .
Apples

Bread

· - PLAYOFF BOUND:
Good luck to Gallia Academy
and Eastern this weekend in
their respective playoff games.
The home team, or higher
seeded team, had a .704 winning percentage last year.
This bodes well for the
Blue Devils, who play hose to
Alliance Marlington on Friday.
•
The Devils and Eagles did
lose home playoff games last
year, though ....
On Sunday, we'll find out
where Wahama (7-3) will be
playing in the first round of
the West Virginia Class A
tournament.
The White Falcons are No.
13 in the latest WVSSAC
computer ratings and assured
a playoff spot. Likely road foes
are Williamson, Van, Fayetteville or Matewan.
• TOUGH LUCK: No
matter what Newcomerstown did this season, they
were not going to the playoffs.
They finished I 0-0 and
didn't receive enough computer points to make the playoffs because of a weak schedule.
Pity, pity.
• ON THE OTHER
HAND: Cuyahoga Falls
W:Ush Jesuit played a very
tough schedule and got
in .... with just three wim.
While a lot of 5-5 teams are
in this year's Ohio playoffs,
W:Ush Jesuit finished 3c6 and
travels co 9-1 Youngstown
Chaney.
Last year, no team with a
losing record made it to the
' playoffs .
• FINALLY: Meanwhile,
SEOAL champs Logan (I 0-0)
play host to Dublin Coffman
(6-3), the first home playoff
game for the Chieftains.
Another 2001 Gallia Academy opponent, Ironton (100)" plays host to Portsmouth
West (10-0) ..

a1

in hands
of voters

In fact, it's usually been a
downright disaster.
Since 1999, pitchers working "on lhree days' rest in the
postseason are 1-9 with a 9.73
ERA in 15 starts.
Orlando Hernandez is set to
start for New York on H:Uloween night.
An early home run by Jorge
Posada and a tiebreaking single by Scott Brosius in the
sixth were enough to win for
the Yankees. Especially when
Arizona managed t)iree hits,
the same toto! Schilling and
Johnson served up.
No baseball team has ever
rallied from a 3-0 deficit to

a postseason

•

u

short rest in the postseason."

win

EASTERN'S OFFE SIVE LINE OPENS BIG HOLES, 81

POMEROY The
continuation of free tuberculosis servic"' will depend
on the Nov. 6 approv:U of a
replacement levy for the
program.
Voters will decide the fate
of that h:Uf-mill, five-year
replacement levy for the
Meigs County Tuberculosis
Office as one of two countywide levies on the ballot.
The five-year levy would
generate $118,958 per year,
said Nancy Campbell,
Meigs County auditor. She
:Uso said $7,835 comes in
from the state for operation
of that office from a fund
which de:Us with electric'
aitd gas deregulation.
:Program director Connie
&lt;:;otterill said the office now
tteats one patient with
active TB, and nine others
;;ho are on preventive treatment for the bacteria.
:"Those patients have
been exposed to the bacteria but do not have the
attive disease;· Cotterill said.
:: "We don't operate on
""ry much, and every cent
t~at comes into the program
comes from the levy. We
d~n 't receive any state or
federal revenue for our services.
"For property with a valuation of $60,000, the
increase in cax from the
replacement of chis levy will
be only about $3.25."
All services offered
t~ugh the TB office are

PluM ... TII.AS

complex
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POSSIBLE ANNEXAnON - Rutland's corporation sign could be moving pending the acceptance of a proposed ·
annexation plan by village officials. Mayor Richard Fetty said the plan could replenish depleting revenue sources,
which was lost ln ·FEMA's 1998 flood hazard mitigation program; and play a key factor in the community's development (Tony M. leach photo)

AMA

OF SURVIVAL

Rutland looking at annexation as possible solution
BY TONY M.

WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

UTLAND
Annexation is the key
to the villagt' 's survivo!, Rutland Mayor
Richard Fetty said,
dismissing rumors chat an income tax
and higher sewage rates play any pare
in the propos:U.
Rutland officials hope the possible
annexation of areas surrounding the
village, including the site of the
Meig; Loco! School District's new
elementary building, will generate
enough money to replace lost profits.
The decline in funding comes in

the wake of
1998's Federal Emergency Management
Agency's
flood hazard
mitigation
program,
which
resulted m
the loss of

"Before FEMA's decision to turn
over the flood-prone properties co
the village, we received around
$6,000 in taxes. Now, chat number
has decreased to $3,800," Fetty said.
"The property is basically useless
because it can't be used co generate
any revenue. It will probably have to
be developed into a park or something similar in nature.
"We just want the viUage to survive. We lost a lot of revenue and this
more
than annexation plan could definitely help
30 residential us regain some of that money"
dwellings and revenue from those
The proposed annexation would
homes served by the village's sewage
system.
PlUM see Rutt.nd, AS

POMEROY - "The finishing touch,
the icing on the cake," was how Meig;
Local Superintendent William Buckley
d"'cribed the proposed sports complex, the
funding for which to be decided in Tuesday's general election.
When voters in the Meig; loc:U School
District go to the polls next week they will
vote on a 20-year, 2.67-mill bond issue.
If approved, the S4.2 million it generates
will provide funding for construction of an
all-sports facility at Meigs High School. It
will also provide about $250,000 for construction of a new bus garage behind the
new elementary school.
"That means we would have brand new
buildings and the rest of the facilities co go
with them," said Buckley.
"A facility like chis would be outstanding,
something we could be very proud of, it
would be absolutely great to move into
everything new at the same time," he con-

tinued.
Buckley said that if the bond issue is
approved construction could get under way
early next year and be finished in 2003,
about the same time that the new elementary and middle schools are ready to move
into. The high school renovation will be
completed before chen.
Currently, the district has ,a $33 million
dollar building project underway. It is fund- .
ed with a local 4.95-mill bond issue and
S27 million from the Ohio School Facillti"'
Commission. That bond issue replaced a 5PIHM

Ohio House approves plan
to patch budget deficit ·
Fresh thicken
&amp;eg ouarters

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
, House easily passed a plan
:Wednesday co patch a $1.5 billion state budget deficit by
tapping Ohio:s rainy day fund
and borrowing from the state's
multibillion-dollar tobacco
settlement.
GOP-controlled
: The
House passed the plan 53-46,
with no Democratic votes. Six
Republicans :Uso voted against
it, concerned about targeted

Kroger
Raisins

ToM(s

FMII
Meat Weiners
110L

Sentinel

theerlos
tereal

l Sedlan1- II Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
carnics

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

tax i~creases on businesses.

Democrats were prepared to
debate the bill and offer
changes but did not stand up
in time after House Speaker
Larry Bouseholder called for a
vote.

Democrats oppose the speed
with which . the bill moved
through the House. They
wanted more hearings and
public testimony.
The plan, which also

Hllh:70s
Low: 50s
Details, A2

AS

OHIO
B4-6 Pick 3: 3-7-9; Pick 4: 7-5-2-1

87

Super Lallo: 3-23-32-3&amp;3942
A4 Klclor. 0.2 8 9 9 8

A3 W.VA.
Bl-2. 5, 8 Fuwerbllll: 2-16-18-35-40 (41)
A2

Ghouls just
wanna
have fun

includes a proposed soles tax
holiday in late January, goes
now to the Senate where President Richard Finan, a
Cincinnati Republican, has
expressed concerns over the
tax increases and the use of
rainy day money.
The budget plan raises about
$344 million over two years in
targeted tax increases on busi-

For 364 days of tlie year, the
staff at the Pomeroy law flrm
of Little, Sheets &amp; Warner conform to a more sedate
wardrObe, but each year on
Halloween, they break out the
good stuff. Dressed as w~ches
and goblins, pumpkins and
even a wluptuous French
maid, Attorney Jennifer Sheets,
seen here In a pumpkin costume, and members of her
staff turned heads In Pomeroy.

Piule see Budpt. AS

Amid anthrax and terrorism scares, Halloween goes ·on
•

BY

Lotteries

Cl 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

iee Levy, AS

SHEILA HOTCHKIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP,
NJ. -The booiy was carefully spread out on Robin !upport's dinner table, ready for
inspection.

This year, Rapport was extra
vigilant about looking through
the candy haul her two little
pirates had dragged home
Wedn.,.day night after a more

subdued year of trick-or-treatmg.
"There's a lot of mixed feelings this Halloween," she said,
adding a thought that would
rnake her children turn as white
as ghosts: ''I'm really tempted to
throw it all out."
Halloween 200 I wa&lt; a night
of frayed perves and lingering

cricks and parents clutched their
little goblins somewhat tighter.
The Rapports ~ere "'pecially on edge. The Sept. 11 attacks
toppled the World Trade Center
tower where Robin and her
husband, Greg, were married
and anthrax shut down pose
offices near their centml New
Jersey home.
sadness across the nation, where
But Greg Rapport was deterthe treats had to be com bed for mined not co lee terrorism

threaten his kids -or ste:U part
. of their childhood. For days, he
looked for a way co give them a
normal, happy-go-lucky Halloween, and keep them safe.
·"You make it go on for the
kids," he said. "But at the adult
level, I think we all feel pretty
vulnerable because we have an
enemy that we can't see who
seems to have a remarkable
capacity to gee co us."

•

November Is NatfOIIal Ho.lce Month
In observance of this sp~ial month, Holzer Hospice will
provide FREE blood pressure, cholesterol and
glucose•screenings at

Foocllancl • Jackson Pike
Frlclay, Nove111ber ' 2
10 AM· 12 Noon

--------------~--------------~.'

I

•

I

I

MEDICAL CENTER
·,

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

For more information 'call 446-5074
•

-·

•

'

�..

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

FrJcgy, Nov. 2

....

1-

•
I.

lM"IU"

,
•l Colu,..... [Willi" I

•

~

..

-W.VA.

ICY.

02001

PageA2

• •

1hunday, Nove••er 1, :ZOO I

••
•••

C:OLUMBUS (AP) - Gayl• S.roka
would welcome a break from paying
sales tax on purchases, whether the
chance came pre-Christmas or post- holidays.
A proposed two,.day sales tax holiday
in mid-December would determine
wh•n she did her Christmas shopping
for her three children .
And if held at the end of January, "I
would buy that big-ticket item I don't
have to buy right away:• said Seroka, 52,
a coun reporter in the market for a new
washer. "It would just be--'.n added
incentive to get it in january."
House Republicans have proposed a
\wo-day holiday from stat• and local
sales taxts on Jan. 26 and Jan. 27. Savings
for consumers would depend on where
they live: Stark County has the lowest

combintd rate, 5.25 percent, while
Cuyahoga County has the highest With
7 percent.
Most counties' combined sales taxes
range between 6 and 6.5 percent.
The proposal was included in a plan to
deal with . a St.S billion state budget
deficit. Although the two-day holiday
would cost Ohio $27 million, the hope
is it would encourage Ohioans to boost
consumer spending, which in turn
would spur the economy and increase
state revenue.
The GOP-controDed House wanted
the holiday in mid-December, but
moved it to late January at the request of
the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants,
which supports the plan. The council
pushed for January, arguing shoppers
would already be in stores in December.

__

About 70 postal employees at Cleveland's Main Post Office
refused to enter the building Monday night after a mail handler
discovered a powdery substance in a letter jammed in a
Slmy PlCIDI.otj Clol.otj
T·,._
·..
mail sorting machine.
·
A ha:imat team field test identifi·ed the substance as baki'ng
powder, not anthrax as feared, post office officials said.
Timothy Miller, criminal division chief in the county prosthe lower 70s. Southwest wind ecutor's office, said the boy, from Cleveland Heights, was
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
More seasonal temperatures 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain angry With the ex-girlfriend, a 15-year-old Cleveland resident.
·
will return to the region later 30 percent.
Friday as a cold front sweeps
Friday
night.. .Mostly
across the area. Showers also cloudy. A chance of showers
· are in the forecast, ending Fri- until around midnight. Lows
CLEVELAND (AP) - Four teens were shot, one fatally,
near 50. Wind becoming west
day night.
while
sitting on benches at an apartment complex playHighs on Friday will be in 5 to 10 mph.
ground Wednesday night.
the 70s.
Extended forecast:
Relatives said the dead man was 18. The three other vicCool fall weather is expectSaturday... Pardy
cloudy.
tims, two 17 -year-olds and a 15-year-old, were taken to
ed through the weekend Highs 60 to 66.
MetroHealth
Medical Center for treatment.
Saturday
under partly cloudy skies, the
night ... Mostly
No
names
were
available immediately.
·
National Weather Service said. clear. Lows near 40.
A nursing supervisor at Metro Health who declined to give
Sunset tonight will be at
Sunday... Partly . cloudy.
her name said one of the 17-year-olds was treated and
5:29, and sunrise on Friday is Highs in the upper 50s.
released,
but the other remained in serious condition early
at 7:01 a.m .
Monday. .. Partly
cloudy.
Thursday
morning. She said the 15- year-old was in satisfacLows in the lower 30s and
Weather forecast:
tory condition with a gunshot wound to the right shoulder.
Tonight ...Partly cloudy with highs 51 to 56.
areas of smoke. Lows in the
Tuesday... Mostly clear. Lows
lower 50s. South wind 5 to 10 in the upper 30s and highs 57
to 62.
mph.
DAYTON (AP) - 1\vo passenger concourses at Dayton
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Friday.. .Becoming mostly
International
Airport were ' closed for nearly two hours
cloudy With a chance of show- Lows in the lower 40s and
Wednesday when airport security equipment falsely indicate,rs in the afternoon. Highs in highs 58 to 63.
ed that a piece of luggage contained an unknown hazardous
substance, an airport official said.
The concourses, which closed at 6:30 p.m., were reopened
at about 8:30 p.m., airport spokeswoman Sharon Sears •aid.
1\vo flights that were preparing to taxi for takeoff were
CLEVELAND (AP) - A boy who allegedly sent baking
brought back to the terminal and three other flights were
powder to an ex-girlfriend has . been charged in juvenile
delayed in taking off, Sears said. Flight.s con\,in,u~il to land
court with inducing panic and attempted aggravated menacduring the concourse closure, but' passengers did not use the
ing.
affected concourses.

...0 ~--~-·-·

More seasonal temps coming

Shooting kills 1, wounds 3

False alarm spurs closure

Boy acc,.·sed of hoax

Til~ piece ofluggage in question was singled out at a s~~!l­

rity checkpoint, Sears said. Upon further investigatibn,
"nothing was found, everything was fine," she said,

Database aims at convlctl.-ns .,,
COLUMBUS (AP) -The state would collect blood sa!pples from inmates convicted of six additional types of cri6\es
under legislation introduced Wednesday to expand the st~~e's
DNA database.
"The more DNA we put in, the more likely we'ij be 1~Ie
to solve both old and new cases," said Attorney General B~~
Montgomery, whose office draited the legislation. .
The genetic codes of aU adult and juvenile offenders copvicted of 14 other violent crimes, including murder, rape apd
kidnapping, have been collected since the database was creat•:
ed in 1995.
The bill, &gt;ponsored by R .ep. Ann Womer Benjamin; a
Republican froin Aurora, would ~:equire that DNA alsO' be
collected from people convicted of aggravated robb!:!Y•
attempted aggravated murder, attempted murder, burglary,
felonious assault and robbery.

Hazel R. Nottingham
VINTON - Hazel R. Nottingham, 68, Vinton, died
· Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2001, in Cabell Huntington Hospital,
. : Huntington, W.Va.
Born Jan. 12, 1933, in Nicholas County, W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late James and Mae Carpenter Holcomb.
Surviving are a son, Tommy Nottingham ofYinton; a daughter, Freda (Arnet) Nottingham ofVinton; three stepsons and
. three stepdaughters, Roy (Geraldin•) Nottingham of Clay,
. _W.Va., Billy (Donna) Nottingham of Medina, Ohio, Kenneth
· ~Arbutis) Nottingham of Statesville, N .C., and Nancy (Romnlie) Duncan of CarroDton, Texas; eight grandchildren, a great. grandchild, and several stepgrandchildren and step-great. "gl:andchildren; and two brothers, Holbert (Marianne) Hoi. comb of Medina, N .Y., and !-larry Holcomb of Indore, W.Va.
Sh~ was also preceded in death by her husband, William Not·•tingham, in 1998; and by two sons, a daughter, two brothers
. ' · and three ~ister~.
.
.
•r -S.rvlce~ will be 11 a.m. Friday in McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, With the Rev. Gary Jackson officiating. Burial
, will be in Brush Cemetery, near Vinton. Friends may call at the
·.'' f,metal home from 7-9 tonight.

I

. ''

'

.,

.

convicted of both charges in
the asphyxiation ·death of
Owensby, 29,last November.
Prosecutor Michael Allen
said Wednesday tha~ he had not
decided whether to rerry Jorg.
Common Pleas Judge Thomas
Nurre said jurors were leaning
10-2 toward acquittal before
concluding they could not
reach a unanimous verdict.
Jorg's attorney, R. Scott
Croswell, said he would await
the prosecutor's decision
before asking Nurre to dismiss
the felony charge. Both sides
are to appear Nov. 8 before
Nurre, who can dismiss the
charge on his own.
' Jorg was the first city police
officer ch;lrged with a felony
in an on- duty death. He
remains suspended v.lithout
pay, Police ChiefThomas Streicher Jr. said Wednesday.
The Rev. Damon Lynch III,
a black clergyman who . has
accused city police of excessive

Rutland
flam Pip AI

"

COLUMBUS (AP) -A woman was sentenced to life in
prison for dousing a mother of six with 'gasoline an,d s~t{Wg
her on fire during an argument.
,
Lana Williams, 30, will not be eligible for parole,Judge Jplm
Bessey of Franklin County Common Pleas Co'!rt rt!).~d
Wednesday.
:, !
The sentence follows the recommendation of th!' same jl\[Y
that convicted Williams on Oct. 22 of charges of aggravaqed
murder, aggravated arson and attempted aggravated mui'Cier
for the death ofTrishella McDaniel, 32.
: "'
·The jury ·returned this week for the sentencing· phase,
deliberating for several hours on Tuesday .and Wedne!itay
morning before recommending the sentence. ·
"

~·

.'

.,i~clude , areas

on Ohio 124 to

. Miles Cemetery, areas along
~eech

Grove Road, an area
' 3long Leading Creek at
!o NicholS Road, the ·areas of
New Lima Road and Ptterson
• HoDow; Happy Hollow, and
! •·t•l!4 to Hilltop Grocery, as well
ds the new elementary school
site.
. " . . Fetty•'dismissed rumors of
·n.!he implementation of a new
income taX and increased
sewer rates if the annexation is
~tGcces'sful and said, in fact,
;!~ne,xatibn could actually pre•'!tnt th~ issues from becom~;og retW•
;·..;':Are .;residents are being
~ ; ed
hearsay and persis: • nt 11WIOrs of a new income
· ~ ,, an~}ncreasing sewer rates,''
satd.
·
"Wej have no intention of
r~ treating a new income tax or
~ raising the sewer prices. It
~ would be extremely foollsh
;} for council·to do such a thing. ·
~.'" "In reality, those being
!! annexed would be able to par-

..,

,., J;;tty
ti.;:

didn't disclose until this year,
and again in an affidavit in
January.
Merz said Byrd, Brewrr and
several other inmates were
called to provide a 'factual
account for court rtcords of
the night Tewksbury was
murdered.
Attorney General Betty
Montgomery wants the hearintf delayed to give the U.S.
Supreme Court time to consider a request the state filed
on Wednesday. The state
wants the co~rt to review the
order that Byrd's innocence
claim be examined by a magistrate. The state believes the
hearing should not be held.

force, thinks Jorg should be
retried. .
The ·county coroner ruled
Owensby's death a homicide,
saying it could have been
caused by a choke hold or by
the weight of officers falling
on Owensby and smothering

e

Woman gets life sentenc9t

llctpate in local government,
which is an importanl factor
in this issue.
"Their participation in village government, eithrr by
voting or actuaUy being elected to council, could prevent
new taxes or rate increases
from ever happening."
Before the properties could
become the jurisdiction of the
village, public notices and
hearings would have to be
held, a decision by the Meigs
County commissioners to
allow a vote woul~ be needed,
and a vote by those living outside of the village and. who
would be included in the proposed annexed areas would be
required, he, said.
."No one is going to be surprised by annexation. It's a
long process and once residents know the facts, I'm sure
they'D see the benefits.
nonce again, annexation
isn't a bad thing. The village ·
needs to grow and this plan
will present numerous advantages, namely an increase in
property values, more police
protection, and better streetlights. Rudand's development
depends upon it."

[%_________________________________________

••
••

:l

LOCAL STOCKS

~

::AEP-4J.80
1\ An:h Cool- Z!.ll6

Fedanll MlgU- .56

.

.

'

- -.;:; :;-- - - 11r
-

•

-- ,....

IPI
(

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; ~

1.

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,.'

·''

Gamelt-83.20

~ AinTach'SBC- 311.11

·~~ -::::,_

f'nln'ier- 8.59
FlcJckoMII- 13.711 .
Accky Boola- 5.70
RDShof-5051

USS-17.711

•• Alao-41.()7

Prosecutors deciding whether·to retry officer
CINCINNATI (AP) Prosecutors on Wednesday
began discussing whether to
retry a police officer on a
felony charge in the death of a
black man, while a second officer testified in his own trial in
connection With the death.
Jurors deliberated for two
days before deciding Tuesday
to acquit officer Roben jorg
of a misdemeanor assault
charge, but they deadlocked on
an involuntary manslaughter
charge. A mistrial was declared
on that count in Hamilton
Common
Pleas
C ounty
C ourt.
In another COl!rt, officer
Patrick Caton testified that he
helped Jorg subdue R.oger
Owensby Jr. If co nvicted of
misdemeanor assault. C aton
could be sentenced to six
months in jail.
Jorg, 30, could have been
sentenced to as much as five
years in prison if he had been

.

• ' J ..

;

delay the h•aring before
Magistrate Michael Merz.
Both sides say there are not
cltar requirrments for what
the magistrate is allowed to
do.
The appeals court ordered
the hearing to examine Byrd's
claims of innocence.
Byrd, 37, has acknowledged
that he helped rob the store
where Monte Tewksbury, a
40-year-old Procter &amp; Gamble Co. employee, was moonlighting to pay for his daughter's education.
But Byrd says he didn't stab
Tewksbury. Brewer confessed
to the slaying in a 1989 affidavit, which Byrd's attorneys

Samuel Richard 1Mc:k' Larch

•'• ORANGE, Texas ·- · Samutl Richard "Dick" Larch, 55,
'0tangr, Texas, died Octobrr 24, 2001, in Beaumont, Ttxas.
' ,• H• was employed by AEP's Phillip Sporn Power Plant in
'N!!w Haven, W.Va., from 1970-1981, and wa1 currently
employed m Beaumont, Texas, by Triangle Engintering.
He was preceded in death by his father, S..muel B. Larch of
•.Elkview, W.Va.
.
• :-He is survived by his wife, jeanine Millrr Larch of Orange,
•T~xas; two sons, Sam and John Larch of Houston, Texas; moth. ·t!f., Neva Johnson Larch of Elkview, W.Va.; three brothers,
•Charles Larch of Elkview, W.Va., Kenneth and James Larch of
· Richardson, Texas; three sisters, Barbra Spradling of Clendenin,
' W:Va., Helen Stricklin and Betty Tignor, both of Elkview,
W.Va.; one grandson; and several nieces and nephews.
t • ·Memorial contributions can be made to the St. Paul UMC
· •Building Fund, 120 Bland St., Bridge City, Texas 77611; or to
· •_the Golden Triangle Emmaus Community, P.O. Box 388 I,
"Beaumont, Texas 77701.
, ·

Condemned inmate scheduled to
appear in federal court Monday
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
condemned inmate who
,Iaims innocence is scheduled
to testify Monday in federal
court in Dayton, along with
th• accomplice who claims
responsibility for the crime
· that led to his death sentence.
John W. Byrd Jr., whose
execution was· delay•d in
September, and John Brewer
are to describe what happened when a convenience
store clerk was killed during a
robbery near Cincinnati in
1983.
However, both Byrd's attorneys and the state have asked
the 6th U .S. Circuit Court .o f
Appeals in Cincinnati to

Obituaries

•

"We really W2nt to see Ohioans go
back to the ffi&lt;l)ls, go back on Main
Street, stan to walk around and shop and
feel confident in the state of Ohio," said
House Speaker Larry Householder.. a
Gltnford Rtpublican.
Several states, including Connrcticgt,
Florida and Texas, hold similar holidays,
usually before school begins. ..
;•
Most cap tax- free spending at S100
and limit it to clothing or school sppplies. Ohio's proposal has no · cap il!d
exempts only motor vehicles, boats ud
restaurant meals.
•
State lawmakers see the tax holidays as
a way to alleviate the tall burden , i)h
working families as well as a way&lt;.to
jump start local retail businesses, accouling to a report by the Federation ofTax
Administrators.

,Inc.

Pomeroy, ~lddleporl, Ohio

...•

Sales tax holid~ys popular, critics.question impact

Ohio weather

IND.

Tllilrldlly, Nov. 1, 2001

•

Clenenll Eieclrlc- 311A1

GKNI.Y-3.70
.
HeJtay DlrMocn -45.26
Knwt-8.13
Kroger- 24.46
l.anda End- 32.04

"' Alhllrtd Ire. - 40.2!1

·1t AT&amp;T -15.25

Soera.-:3&amp;n
Shcnr;'a- .26

,.

him.
A prisoner caDed as a
defense witness in Caton's trial
in Municipal Court testified
Wednesday that he saw officers
beat Owensby, but did not
know whether Caton was one
of the ones' who hit the victim.
"When he was handcuffed is
when the real beating started.
They just kept beating him
and b~ating him:· said the prisoner, George Weaver.
. Under cross-examination,
Weaver acknowledged that he
gave different versions to
police and in court of what he
saw when officers stopped
Owensby for . questioning
about drug trafficking.

.~' ~=:~:-UO

W8f.Mort- 51 AO

111-

..

~ ·Reader ServiU1

~

n
••

~

••

~:.

a.n.tal ""'hager

Ext. t 2

Newa

Ext.

~

t3

~ Ext. 14

or

Other aervlcu

,~

AdYerllalng

Ext. 3

•: ~ • Clrcul•llon
•

Ext 4
Ext. 5

: Claallllacl Ada

•

., :

:••t ••

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·t:
........
•

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•

TO lind

e-mail

newaOmydaH~~~&amp;nllnel . com

On the Web
www.mydallylenllnel.com

-=

51.. """-· Ohio 45769.

Newa Department&amp;

The main number l8 992-2158.
•• • Otpertmtnt extentlona era:

,.

LOCAL BRIEFS
CloSed aossing
~

Subacrlptlon rate1

ly oontorar mo10r rou10
Ono$2
Ono mon111
$8.70
Ono1104
Dally
.
50 cenls
Sut&gt;ocnbera noldellrlng to pay ltoa

carrier ma~ remit In advance direct to
The Dill~ Stnllnol. Crtdil Will be giV111
ca!rlor M&lt;lh - · No oubecrlpllon by
mall pe&lt;mmod In • - whtlnl home

carrier HMce Ia available.

'Mall subsalptJon
lnolde Molgo CoUnty

13Weelol
26 Weeki
52 WHkl
-

13WHkl
28Weelol
52Weelol

$27.30

$53.82
$105.56
- l l o l g o COunty

$211.25

156.68
$109.12

lowed by a potluck dinner. No
afternoon service.

RUTLAND .Monday
and Tuesday, Norfolk and
Southern Railroad will be
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
doing crossing work in the
bazaar will be held at St. Paul
Rutland area.
On Monday, a crossing on United Methodist Church,
Leading Creek Road, about a Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
mile from ftudand, will be
closed at 9 a.m. or after the
bures passes, and will open
POMEROY
Meigs
early afternoon.
County
Health
Department
On Tuesday. the crossings on
County Road 10 between offices will be dosed Tuesday,
Langsville and Dexter will Election Day, from noon to 4
clO!e, one at a time, beginning ,p.m ..and will reopen at 8 a.m.
at 9 a.m. and they too WiD be on Wednesday.
open in the afternoon by the
time school is out.

Bazaar planned

Office to dose

EMS runs

Craft show set

POMEROY- Units of the
Meigs Emergency Sert&gt;ice
.
answered
nine caDs Wednesday:
POMEROY -The annual
CENTRAL DISPATCH
craft show of the Senior Citi2:36 a.m .,. Burlingham
. Z!'m Center will be held Friday
Road,
Sue Geog, O'Bieness
and Saturday at the Center.
Memorial Hospital;
12:42 p.m., Family DoUar,
Tracy Chapman, PleasantVaUey ·
POMEROY - On Friday, Hospital;
8:07 p.m., Village Manor,
County Road 18, known as
Shirley
Frazier, Holzer Medical
K.ingbury; and Horner Hill
intersection will be dosed for Center.
POMEROY
one day to replace a culvert
2:18p.m., Kingsbury Road,
pipe, according to a spokesman.
from the Meigs County High- White Oak, brush fire, Tim
ErWin Sr., proptny, no injuries;
way Department.
8:36 p.m., Lincoln Street,
The suggested detour is
Wesley
Patterson, HMC.
County Road 14 to Wolf Pen
RUTLAND
and Ohio 143.
5:09 a.m., Ohio 124/Lasner'
Road, Robert Saltsman, PYH;
9:50.a.m.,Titus R.oad, motor
vehicle
accident, Chad Wise,
POMEROY
The
.Uplifters will p.erform at the 9 treated;
10:26 a.m., Ohio 143, Casa.m. service at Enterprise
United Methodist Chutch on sandra Toiley, OBMH;
5:21 p.m., U.S. 33, brush fire.
Sunday. The service will be fol-

. aose road

Coaaec6on

TB
facwn PapAl

free, including skin-testing
clinics, chest X-rays for those
Wanct,'a- 26.30
with positive skin tests, med:: Bob Ewf)l.,- 18.81
~~ ........
13
ications and other treatments.
Lli - 11.15
NSC-18.'15
E~=--~72
In addition to offering skin
Daly- tapCI1a 818 . .
Ooi&lt;HIFI•dlll
15.&amp;6
4
p.m.
c1o11ng
quo1ae
or
lii~Shopo-4.77
teSts at the TB office, the staff
OVB-21.50
lha pn!l/klJo day'a conducts
about 50 evening TB
IIBT-32.10
ldcre. po.idld by smtl
Plcpoe -17.86
f'llrhn
1nc. or . clinics throughout the county
Plpoico- &lt;18.71
Galplll
• for the convenience of the
' Dll'a1t- 311.98
~
working public, and visiis busi~~-----------------------------, nesses who provide food service for on-~itt testing.
Students in kindergarten,
and grades four, eight and 12,
,(UIPI21wt0)
,
Ohio Volley Publllhlng Co.
receive testing at their schools,
Publl- ovaty afternoon, Monday
as do faculty and school· suplllrough Friday, 111 Co"rt St. ,
:•
,Correction Polley
Pom~troy,
Ohkl.
Second·class
pon staff.
· ;:
Our n\aln conoem In allllorioels ~ pald'al Pomeroy.
"That's a lot of people," Cot~
to bl accurate. If Yo:u know of an
The-lad p - and
lha
Ohio
Ne.._
Aaooclallon.
terill
said, "and we do our best·
: t~ error in a !llory, call the newsroom Poetmaat.r: Send addreu DOr11l(&gt;
•
•• at (7-io) m-2158.
Ilona Ia Tho Dally Sontinol, 111 Court.

:.Sri
One- 33.18
•• eu.:...7.30

~ The Daily Sentinel

,.

SYRACUSE - Betty Tyree, 70, of Snowball HiD, Syracuse,
died on Tuesday, October 30, 200 1, at The Ohio State Un iversity Hospital in Columbus.
She was born on November 7, 1930, in Meigs C ounty,
daughter of the late Taylor and Lula Bing Bass.
She was a homemaker and attended th e Syracusr Church of
the Nazarene.
She married james H .'fYree in August 1949, and he preceded her in death on March 3, I 9'18. She was also preceded in
death by a sister, Bernice Levacy, •nd two brothers, Leonard and
Ralph Bass.
'
Surviving art two daughters and sons- in-law, Kay and Mike
Ryan of Syracuse, and Mae and Gerry Hupp of Racine; four
grandch~
' dre Scott Grueser, Kevin Grueser, Kim Wolfe and
Tim R an· tght grea~grandchildren, Tad Tyler, Elizabeth and
Emma
e, Alexandria, Cera and jonna Gru eser and justin
Erb; and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held on Friday, November 2, 2001,
at 11 a.m. at the Gilmore Cemetery, with the R.ev. Mike Adkins
officiating.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.
on Thursday, November 1, 2001, from 6- 8 p.m. and 011 Friday,
November 2, 2001, foro 9- l0:30 a.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to th ~ Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene, State R.oute 124, Syracuse, Ohio
45779.

to provide the&gt; services in as
convenient a manner as possible, all at no out-of-pocket
cost.
"It is important that voters ·
understand that the TB program in Meigs County is not
affiliated with the health
department.
"We are governed by a separate advisory board, and that
board had nothing whatsoever
to do With the board of health
or , its countywide smoking
ban.
· "Counties whose TB programs are affiliated with a

The O.lly Sentinel• Pllge A 3

Levy
fnMI

to prepare tht plam and P"'sented an architectural modd
to the board.
The plans, Bucki..Y said, call
Pllp A1
for redoing the football fid d
mill permanent improvement and relocating the softball field,
levy which had been in effect . expanding th~ track to eight
lanes, putting in bleachers to
for nin• years.
Buckley said the permanent reat 4,000 people using both
in1provement levy went off the sides, erecting a two-story
tax duplicate at tht time the building to house coaching
bond issue went on, resulting officers, rest room facilities,
stands,
ticket
in only minimal changes in concession
taxes paid by propeny owners. booths, storage . rooms, weight
However, if the 2.67-mill rooms, locker rooms for both
bond issue is passed Thesday, home and visiting teams, boys
propeny owners· will see an and girls, a new press box,
increase in taxes. That will be installing new lighting, and
necessary to pay the interest anything else needed fo r outand retire the bonds which are door spons.
Buckley said that by having
levied as a direct tax on aU taxsuch facilities, th• district could
able propeny in the district.
Meig5 C ounty Auditor look forward to hosting
Nancy Campbell said a bond regional track meetings, playoff
issue is different from levies in games and other competitions.
that on a bond issue, enough The football fields at both
money has to be collected to Pomeroy and Middleport
would be abandoned and all
retire the debt each year.
"If you have the loss of a games, ·both middle and high
large taxpayer, (such as South- school, would be played at the
ern Ohio Coal Co.), it would new facility.
When asked about how
reduce the value and you
would have to collect more responsible it was to put the
(from others taxpayers) to bond issue on the ballot in
compensate for that loss," said view of the projtcted deficit in
CampbeD.
operating funds of $3 million
"You have a set amount of in 2006, and the possible need
money you have to correct so if for an operating levy down the
the value is reduced, the only road, the superintendent said
way you can collect that set thpt "it cari be assumed that
amount of money is to increase there will be more money
tax rates."
coming in from the state."
He also explained that while.
"On the other, hand; if the
.value increases the rate could th• board knoW. what it will
go down;• she said.
receive in state funding this
The idea to seek funding for year· and next, it can't predict
the spons complex came up what WiD come in 2003 when
earlier this year, said Buckley. the district projects a deficit
He said coaches, athletic boost- year. .
ers, band personnel and boost- . He acknowltdgtd that the
ers got together with the dis- closing of the coal mines will
trict's administrative personnel have a real impact on tax dolabout
and decided to move forward. lars to schools On recommendation of the $500,000 a year.
"'1-iowever, concluded Bucksuperintendent, the Board of
Education voted to put the ley, "it's my position and the
board's position that we've got
bond issue on the ballot.
The archittct on the current to do what we think is tight
building project was retained for the kids:'

Budget
ftumPapA1
nesses, compared With $465
million in Gov. Bob Taft's budget proposal .. It also borrows
about $240 million from
Ohio's share of the national
tobacco settlement, compared
With $100 million in Taft's bill.
However, Taft generally supports the House plan. Taft
spokeswoman Mary Anne
Sharkey on Wednesday called it
a "respomible, balanced package."
The plan leaves intact Taft's
proposed $600 million in state
bt,~dget cuts, which will likely
force the dosing of at least one
prison and one mental health
hospital.
Taft first proposed the plan

health department are not able
to devote the time to services
that we are able to provide
because of our independence.
The incidence of TB here is
very low, and Meigs- County is
con!idered a low- risk area
because of the wide-ranging
services that we offer, and the
time that we can spend with

our patients."
Holzer Meigs Clinic provides chest X-rays through an
arrangement With the TB program.
·:we appreciate the past suppon of voters and we feel that

two weeks ago to address a
budge~

deficit created by the
sloWing economy and the
-financial impact of the Sept. l 1
terrorist attacks.
Lawn1;1kers have said they
are raising money from businesses by closing "tax loopholes:' But Rep. Michael Gilb,
a Findlay Republican, said he
considered the proposals tax
increases, which he adamandy
opposes.
"Using more rainy day
funds, getting into more tobacco settlement money and finding ways to cut state government more was the right
· approach to solving the exist..
ing budget hole," he said.
Ohio received $10.1 billion
from tobacco companies after
the companies in 1998 settled
a lawsuit With ·more than 40
states.

progran\

the
is vety wbnh- "
while," Cotterill said.

�PapA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Thunay, Nova. . IF I. 2001

• •

DEAR ABBY: The letter from
."A Teen Needing to Talk in Ohio,"
asking parents to listen to their children, motivates me to share my

111 COurt lt., ~Ohio
740 112-2111• Pu:
21111

Ohio Valley ·Publlahlng Co.
Publllher

C'*IIM Hoeflich
Gentrll Mlrwger

Page AS
Thunday, November 1, 2001

Parents finally pay.attention after teenS·suidde attempt

The Daily Sebtinel

ct..-w.Oovey

By the Bend

:..The Daily Sentinel

exp~rience.

"· lhawn Llwll
Mlflltlt1g
Editor

•

~

When I was in high school, I suffered severe depression and insomnia. I knew I needed help, so every
oncdn a while I'd ask my parents if
I could get counseling. When I
would tell them how suicidal I was
·feeling, they'd say, "Oh, it's just a
·' teen-age problem." Or, "Give it
some time.Y01.i'll get over it:' Those
were the only responses I got.
The strange behavior that resulted from my depression finally made
my parents suspect that I was using
druS'. They searched my room and
read my diaries, which only furthered my Nranoia and depression,
because I was clean. In my warped
state of mind, I was convinced that

·

DIMe Kay Hill
Controfler

NATIONAL

Plea
help

,

,.

and Were in denial from the beginning about my problems.
I hope parents who see themselves·in this letter
be motivated to help their children. And for
kids fn my situation: If your parents
won't listen, talk to your teachers,
your.l4mily doctor, or the parents of
one ~f your friends. Just make sure
ADVICE
you get help. You are worth it. BETTER, NOT BJ:l'TER
suicide was che only way out. I am
DEAR BETTER: If there is
sad to admit it, but that's what final- one complaint that tops the list of
ly caught my parents' attention .
those I receive from teen-agers, it's
We could have saved thousands of that their parents don't take the
dollars in hospital bills, unl!elievable time to listen, or take their probamounts of pain and years off my lems seriously.
recovery if they had only listened to
Your letter curies an important
me in the first place!
m~sage. We are living in particularMy parents are not horrible peo- ly ~tressful times, and parerits should
ple. They love me dearly. They be · especially concerned about the
explain now that they didn't know effect that recent events. are having
what to do with a depressed child on· their children. Read oni

Abigail
Van

will

Buren

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Calendar is published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to
· · announce meetings and special
events. The calender Is not
designed ·to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space parmlts
• and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of
days.

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

• Austin (Texu) Ame~lcan-StatasiiWl, on tht plight of
r loaJ/ charitim In tJ:!e days followittg the Sept: 11 attacks on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon, Americans have donated
like never before. They've reached deep into their . pockets,
sending a half-billion dollan to relief efforts in New York and
in Washington, D.C. The money still is pouring in. Their generosity is especially heartening considering economic conditions. But those tragic events and economic trends are having
a starkly different effect on local charities.
·
... Local charities already were feeling the pinch of a sluggish
economy that has further deteriorated in the aftermath of the
Sept. II attacks. They are scaUng ba~k services at a time when
more people need help. ...
"What happened in New York an'd Washington can definitely catch people's eyes and make them give money," said Claudia McWhorter, a spokeswoman for the American Red Crms
of Central Texas .... "Local charities are responding to disasters
·everyday. (Last week) we had two farnllles come in andsay,'My
house burned down, can you. help me?' " ·
· Many seniors, children and famiUes won't get help this year
if donations don't improve. We wo11't ~ee their photographs on
television or in the newspaper. Their stories will largely go
untold. They may be strangers, but~they are part of our communities, memben of our extended families .... '
The bottom line is that local charities are dependent on public support and donations for their survival. Let's not forget
their need.
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCI"TED PRESS

Today is Thur~day, Nov. 1, the 305th day of 2001 . There are
60 days leftin the year. This is All Sllino:Day.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. I, 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau made its first
meteorological observations.
On ·this date:
In 1604, William Shakespeare's tragedy ."Othello" was first
presented at Whitehall Palace in London.
In 1611, Shakespeare's romantic com~dy "The Tempest" was
first presented at Whitehall.
·
·
·
In 1765, the Stamp Act went into effect, prompting stiff r;esistance from American colonists.
In 1861, General George B. McClellan was made Generalin-Chief of the Union armies.
· In 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists tried to force their
way into Blair House irl Washington to as!iassitlllte President
rruman. The attempt failed, and one of the pair was killed.
In 1952, the United States exploded the lint hydrogen bomb
, .. ·,
at Eniwetok in the ManhalllslandJ.
In 1954, the north African nation ofAlgeria began its rebel- ·
lion against French rule.
In 1973, following the "Saturday Night Massacre," Acting
Attorney General Robert H. Bork appointed Leon Jaworski to
be the riew Watergate special prosecutor, succeeding Archibald
Cox.
.
In 1979, former lint lady Mamie Eisenhower died in Washington, D.C., at age 82.
In t 989, East Germany reopened its border with Czechoslovakia, prompting tens of thousands of rl!fuge~s to flee to the
West.
.
Ten years ago: Clarence Thomas took his place .115 the neWest
justice on the Supreme Court. The opening seuion of the Middle East peace conference recessed in Madrid, Spain.
Five years ago: Accused ofpeddling access to the Oval Office,
President Clinton demanded an end to what he called the
"escalating arms race'l for political money. Bob Dole countered
with his own solutions to what he called "a growing scandal"
of Democratic financial sins.
·
One year ago: Yugoslavia's new democratic government
joined the United Nations after .eight yel\1'! of U.N. ostracism
under former strongman Slobodart Mllosevk ·
Today's Birthdays: Newspaper colurnnistJamesJ. Kilpatrick is
81. Golfer Gary Player is 66. Coun~ singer Bill Anderson is
64.Actress Barbara Bosson is 62,Actor Robert Foxworth istiO.
Actres• Marcia Wallace is 59·. M:agazine publisher Larry Flynt is
59. Actress Je-•nnie Berlin is 52. Pop. singer•musldan Dan Peek
is 51 . Rhythm-and-blues musician Ronald Bell (Kool and the
Gang) is 50. Country singe~Josongwriter~ptoducet Keith Stegall
· is 47. Couniy singer Lyle Lovett is 44. Actress Rachel Ticotin
is 43. Rock musician Eddie MacDonald (The Alarm) is 42.
Rock singer Anthony Kiedis (Red Hot 'Chili Peppers) is 39.
Pop singer-musician MaS' Furuholmel) (a-ha) is 39. Rock
musician Rick Allen (Def Leppard) ·is 38.

a

transporting sawed-off shotgun from
Oklahoma into Arkansas. They pleaded.a
constitutional right to own and carty the
weapon. The high court held that because
sawed-off shotguns are not customarily
used by the militia, the defendants had no
right to carry one. By inference, the court
seemed to be saying in its M,iller opinion
that it is 0 K for a civilian to own the kind
of firearms that are used by soldiers, but
not the kind offireartns used by sanS'iers.
COLUMNIST
This was a puzzlement.
In the pending Emenon case, Circuit
right to keep~ firearm, in· his view, is an Judge William L. Garwood reviewed arguindividual right. Last week a panel of the ments for both the collective view and the
5th Circuit voted 2-1 to affirm that con- individual view, and carne down solidly
elusion, but ordered the case sent back for for individual rights: "We do not believe
further ,proceedinS'.
.
Miller supports the sophisticated collecThe case is bound to fascinate profes- tive rights mode!:' The "rights of the peosional scltolan and curbstone constini- pie" phrase must be given consistent
tiona! ~rs. If it were not for the float- m.eaning. If the people have an individual
ing .clause, the amendment would be a Fourth Amendment right to be secure iii
model of clarity. Strip away the introduc- their homes, then surely the identicallantory b!lggllge about a well-regulated mili- guage secures an individual Second
arid we are told, simply and direcdy, Amendment right to keep and in some
"The right of the people to keep and bear fashion to bear arms.
arms .shall not be infringed."
That makes sense to me. No constituFor good or ill, the reference to a well- tiona! right is an absolute right. Congress
n:gulated militia cannot be discarded out and the states have unquestioned power to
of hand. The language must mean some- enact laws protecting the public safety thing. One school of thought holck that including the safety of an adulterous wife
the language secures only a collective or and her lover. All the same, in the Emergm:emmental right to ·arm a civilian mili- son case there .was only the most flimsy
tia. An opposing school contends that the evidence that the doctor was a serious
right to keep arms is rooted in Colonial danger to anyone. In the absence of solid
history, · when all able-bodied men e_vldence to the contrary, his age-old right
between the ages of 16 and 40 were , stmplyto possess a handgtm ought not to
expected to provide their own weapons if be mfimged.
.
.
they were called into military service.
. (Letters to Mr. Kilpatnck should be sent
In its only direct opinion on the Second ·~ can: of this newspaper, or by e-mail to
Amendment (U.S. v. Miller, 1939), the kilpaiJJ{at)aol.com.)
Supreme Court iuled with unanimous James). Kilpatrick is a rolumr~ist for Univer·
ambiguity.1\vo men had been indicted for sal Press Syndicate.

James
Kilpatrick

aa

'

Here's one way 'to fight terrorism: go get aflu shot

Morton

Kondracke
COLUMNIST

something Thompson should consider
doing, and memben of Congress, too.
One knowledgeable HHS official,
explaining that drug companies don't
have an adequate amount of flu vaccine
on hand, said HHS could push for mon:
b
d d
to e pro uce , much as it is doing with
the ·antibiotic Cipro and vaccines for
anthrax and smallpox.
The federal Centen for Disease Control
d
··
an Prevention's national immunization
program estimates that, without a push,
79.6 million d01es of flu vaccine will be
available this year, up from 70 million
doses last year.
delivered his message by rolling up his
"Right now we recommend that peasleeve and getting his flu shot in public. It's ·

111 Court Sl., Pomorov, Ohio '
7~·21&amp;8

.I

','

200 Moln SL, PGlnt Ploaont, W.Vr..
3(M.I711o1SM

~

...

'

pie with health risks get flu shots, and we
encourage othen to do so;· one HHS
official said, "but we ought to recommend
it fur .everyone to avoid confusion with .
anthrax."
HHS officials said that not enough vaccine exists at the lone company producing
it, the. Bioport Corp. in Lansing, Mich.,
and that Bioport's supply has not been
cleared by the Food and Drug Administration.
·
But Bailey, who overs~w military
anthrax vab:inations during the Clinton
administration, said she is confident that
Bioport's vaccine is safe and effective, and
called for its use with informed consent
from patients.
Homeland security . and bioterrorism
obviously are new challenges for the gov- ·
errunent and the citizenry - ones that ·
the Bush administration shouldn't be
faulted for not having mastered in a few
weeks.
.
But the administration sho.uld take suggestions fiom the outside, especially from
Rudy Giuliani. in fact, when the mayor :
leaves office, President Bush should offer ·
him a big job.
(Morton Kotrdracke is executi"" editor ~
Roll Call, tlrt ttewspaper of Capitol Hill.) · ·

..

'' ..

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Mayor Rudolph Giuliani of New York
City has advised New Yorkers to do what
.high-level Bush administtation officials
should tell all Americans to do: get your
flu shot. It is vital that as many people as
possible get one, because when flu !eason
hits, Americans could start clogging hospital emergency rooms, fearing that they
are suffering from anthrax. Hospitals
would have a terrible time handling the
flu crush and could miss people with
anthrax, who'd die if not treated. Getting
a flu shot is one simple way ordinary
Americans can fight terrorism.
.
One problem is that then:'s not enough
vaccine to go around, but Sen. Bill Prist,
R-Tenn., told me he's considering adding
money to his bioterrorism bill to make
sure 200 million doset are available.
Surgeon General David Satcher last
week urged citizens to .,.1 flu sho&amp;, but
.,the message needs to he delivered at a
higher level, by Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson,
Homeland Security chiefThm Ridge or
officials at the White House. And themessage musr.be repeated.
'·
Giuliani, with typical showmanship,

MIDDLEPORT- Gospel sing,
Saturday, 7 p.m. Hobson Christian Fellowship Church. Featuring
The King Famil)' of Lancaster;
Christian Echoes. Love oftering
to benefit Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee.
·

Sunday, 7 p.m. at Second BapUat
Church In Ravenswood. Refresh·
ments following performance.
church located on comer of ~nn
and Elwood atrHII.

..

" 'Tomorrow's looking bright"
"Take a momen.t to listen today
"To what your children are trying
to say.
"Listen today, whatever you do,
"And they will come back to listen to you."
Thanks, Abby. I read your column
every day. - A.J. IN CALIFORNIA

DE~ A.J.:

Thank YOU.

Dear Abby i5 written by Pauline
Phillips and daughttr Jwme Phillips.

t

Question:
·A
lawyer
fiiend of mine mentioned
recently that he had a case ·
involving a medical condition
know as "Munchausen Syn·
drome by Proxy." Can you
explain to me what this is?
Answer: Munchausen Syndrome is named alter Baron
·Karl Friedrich Hieronymus von
Munchausen (1720-1797). He
was a German traveler and soldier and the reputed source of
' · ' numerous·adventure stories that
· - were wildly exaggerated and
', ' preposterous.This penchant for
'"'exaggeration and fabrication
characterizes those who have
· · Munchausen Syndrome. .
' ' People who suffer from this
· condition have an emotional
: need to seek medical care.They
· ·· '!;ravel from doctor to doctor
and c:Ven from town to town
·· seeking care for the everc
." .. changing list of amazing and
· . imagined·medical problems.
• . The typical !Ufferer has
repeated
hospitalizations
. ,because· of his or her imagined
. .. need to obtain medical care. It
: ' is not unusual for these people
' · to prick a finger to drop blood
·. ··into a urine sample to imitate
' "kidney disease, or to inject saliVa under the skin to mimic an
, · infection. As a result of these
antics, patients often undergo
• ·, numerous and complex med- ical tests. They also often com. , plain of severe pain. Surgeries,
particularly abdominal surgeries, have sometimes been per- formed in an attempt to find
the illusive cause of the report•· ed pain.
Sufferers of Munchausen

&lt;

Gospel musk

concert planned
by Fist Baptist

POMEROY
Fim
Southern Production•, a part
O"f the First Souther.n Baptist
Church's ministry, will be
presenting "A Meigs. County
l'fomecoming" Saturday at
Meig! High School.
According
to
Marty
O'Bryant, music director, the
event will be a Gaither-style
homecoming featuring some
of the best i,n gospel music.
Scheduled to appear are
·Mark Lanier, former baritone
for Perfect Heart, along with
Garry Sheppard, tenor with
The Kingsmen and Perfect
Heart, Buddy Lilies, longtime
bass for The Florida Boys, and
the group Willif\g ijeart from
Lexington, Ky.

Each act will perform separately and then all will come
together and sing. The joy
FM Trio will also perform.
Doo!"S. will, open at 6 p.m.
and the concert starts at 1
p.m. There is a suggested
donation at the door of $3
per person and a free-will
offering will be taken.
Concessions will be avail.able from the MeiS' Athle.tic
Boosters. For additional
information, residents may
call 740-992-6779.

A day away
REEDSVILLE - Members of the Riverview Garden Club enjoyed a dinner
meeting at the · River City
Restaurant in Parkersburg.
W.Va., recendy.
On the outing were Betty
Boggs, Nancy Wachter! Max-

ine Whitehead, Grace Weber,
Marilyn Hannum, Margaret
Grossnickle, Frances Reed,
Delores Frank, Margaret
Cauthorn, Mary Alice Bise
and Ruth Anne Balderson.
Cards were signed for
members that were sick or
unable to · attend. Program
books decorated in a patriotic theme and red, white and
blue pins were distributed to
each of the members. The
books and pins were made-by
Hannum, vice president.
The Nov, IS meeting will
be held at the Reedsville
Church of Christ social
room. A· guest will direct the
members in ~ecorating tote
bags. Memben are to take
finger foods and gifts for the
nursing home. Club dues will
also be payable at that meetmg.

.PEOPLE
"I still live with my folks,
who make me mow the grass
and take the garbage out;' he
tells People magazine. in its
Nov. 5 issue.
"Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones" is due
out next year.
Christensen says every

nuance on the set was surreal.
"The outfit and the cloak?
Mind-boggling.
Meeting
R2-D2? An out-of-body
experience.The light saber? A
thrill;' he said.
Christensen also plays
Kevin Kline's son in the new
film "Life as a House.''

Munchausen by Proxy: child has
symptom~ but parent is ill
_:hmilp

~dicinc

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Aasociate Profes10r
of Family Medicine
Syndrome are not malingerers.
A.&gt; malingerer receives some
benefit from their imaginacy
medical condition, such as back
pain producing a disability
claim or illness producing a few
extra· days off war~. For the
Munchausen patient, medical
care is the underlying reason for
his or her behavior. This is a
very serious condition which is
disruptive to the life ofboth the
patient and his or her family.
The sufferer's health is additionally threatened by the
numerous unnecessary medications, surgeries and diagnostic
procedures.
Now for the "proJfY" part of
your question. When a child is
brought repeatedly to the hospital by a parent reporting
problems which are not apparent after careful evaluation, it's
possible the child has Munchausen syndrome by proxy: A
few examples may be helpful.
Often, the accompanying
parent - usually the mother
- tells the doctor a story
involVing problems with
seizures or similar neurological
abnormalities that only the parent observed.

In other cases, the parent will
actually give the child a substance like syrup of ipecac to
make him or her vomit.
It's important to stress that it
is the parent who is ill, even
though the child has the symptoms or n:ported symptoms.
The parent is acting out his or
her emotional need for medical
attention through the child.
That is, the parent ls using the·
child as a .. proxy" or ..stand in"
for him or herself. Tha~s why
it's called "Munchausen . by

Diabetes nealth ralr
Open 1b The Public
Thesday, November 6, 2001
PVH.Wellness Center
10. a.m. to 2 p.m.

e [RI:I: Blood Gl~ Screenings
e [RI:I: Blood .Pressure Screenings

e [RI:I: Diabetic Foot Screenings

proxy."
While the treatment fur this
t Inforrnition On Advance Directives,
condition is best· given by· a
mental health care professional,
Dietary Habib &amp;: Diabetic Medications
these patiel)ts often n:fuse to see
a psychiatrist or psychologist
I Numcrow Vendors &amp;: Giveaway Items
when nne iS recommended.
Much coordinated effort from
I Light Rd'rcshmcnlli
the patient, his or her family
and the medical community is
necessaty to keep the Munchausen sufferer in the necessary psychiatric therapy.
Family Medicine is a wttk/y rol·
umn. To submir questions. write Ul
John C. Wolf, D 0 ., at RO. Box
110, Athens, Ohio 45701. Post
columns
art alldilable onli"t · at
www..fhradio.crgijin.
L-._;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __J

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
(304) 675-4340

(
.

~

' SOCIETY NEWS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Volleyball banquet at Eastern High
POMEROY - Sacred Heart School, grades 7·12, 2 p.m. SunChurch, 9:30 a.m. Man and day at high IChool. Bring vag·
Dominican AssOciates meeting. etable and desnrt. Meat, drinks,
table nrvice prolllded by athlatlc
POMEROY- A Meigs County boosters.
·
THURSDAY
. , TUPPERS PLAINS - Com· Homecoming by First Southam
, munlty pep rally, Eastern High Productions at Meigs High
ENTERPRISE - Heritage
SchOol, 6 p.m. Thursday, high School. Galther-style event with Day cellblallon Enterprin Un~·
·· · school football field. T-ehlrts and best In goepel music. Doors open ed Methodist Church'a 127th
. · · game tickets will be available.
at 6 p.ni., concert starts at 7 p.m. annlveraary. Services ltart a 9
a.m. Potluck dinner, special ·
RACINE Family night muslo at afternoon program by
• . RACINE - Racine American
• · ..Legion Auxiliary Unit 602 to meet potluck at Carmel United The Upltfters.
· at hall Thursday, 7 p.m. Members Methodist Church, 6 p.m., 7:30
' · should note time change. Ofll· p.m. youth night worship service.
RACINE - Wol'lhlp Hrvice at
• . cera will be Installed and a
carmel
Methodist Church
,., .. · ..memorial service held for mem·
TUPPERS PLAINS- Tailgate featuringUnited
Clark Family Singers,
bers who have died this year.
party at Eastem High School, 4 10:45 a.m. Sunday, 7:30 p.m..
p.m. Public lnvHed to participate
• '· POMEROY - Sacred Heart In party and C!lravan to Glouster worship nrvlca with Putor wan·
' -Church Feast of All Saints Ser· · for quarter-final game against dell Stutler.
, vice, 8:45 a.m. confession fol· Trimble.
MONDAY
:. lowed by 9:30 a.m. Mass.
R
M
Cou
SYRACUSE - Sutton . Town·
- ·. POME OY elgs
nty ship Trustees. -ular rneetiCft,
FRIDAY
Humane Society to give away
•..,
· ,- RACINE - Revival services straw for pet bedding at Kroger, Monday, 7:30 p.m., SyracuH 1- '··begin at carmai·Sutton United noon to 3 p.m. Cold weather tips laga Hall.
'
·
LETART _ La.t.lrt To.wnahp
,,- -Methodist Church, Cannel Build· for peta to be distributed. Dona·
: .. ,lng. 7:30 p.m. Friday. Pastor Bill lions accepted.
Trustees:' Monday, e:oan 11·111· at
H ba k
., 0 c '
"''
HARRISONVILLE - ' Har· oft!ca bUlldlng.
· POMEROY - All Soule Day rtsonvllle Lodge 412, F&amp;AM, - TUESDAY
• ··service, 9 a.m., Mass 9:30a.m., meets Saturday at 7:30 p.m. for
·, ··1 p.m., Sacred Heart Church. election of , officers. Refresh·
POMEROY - Eagtaa AulciiMass followed by prayer 1119mor- menta.
·
lary, 7:30 Tuellday at lht hall.
.lal for all names on the altar, fol·
· lowed by Euchar1stlc Benedlc·
SUNDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
· · ' tlon.
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - The Trustees, regular meeting, TUII·
Sumplln Valley Trio, featured on day, 7 p.m. at the home of clark
Gospel
Music Television, to sing, Osle Fotlrod.
SATURDAY

Court ·may difine Second Amendment in 21st century
More than 60 yean have passed since
the Supreme Court last considered the
constitutional right to keep and bear
arms. Now a gun case from Texas is on the
ladder to Olympus. Eventually the high
court may tell us what the Second
Amendment means in the 21st century.
This will take some considerable pondering. The 18th-century amendment
reads as if it were written by a committee,
which indeed it was, and no one can say
with certainty what it meant then or what
it means today. The amendment begins
with a dangling clause and stumbles over
two commas on its way to confiuion. It
·says:
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary tO' .the security of a free State, the
right of the people lO keep and bear
Arms, shall not be infringed."
The pending case involves Dr. Timothy
Joe Emenon ofSanAngelo,'Il:xal.ln 1998
he and his wife, Sacha, had a falling-out.
She sued for divorce in the district court
of Tom Green County and asked for a
restraining order. At a hearing on her
motion, she was asked if Emerson had
threatened her. She replied, "He hasn't
threatened to kill me. He's threatened to
kill a friend of mine:'
Without .further ado, the· trial court
granted her motion. Subsequenriy it rran~
spired that Emerson owned a Beretta pistol. Federal prosecutors indicted him fur
violation of the federal firearms act. An
obscure section of the act makes it unlawful for any, person who is subject to such
a restraining order to possess a firearm.
Before .the indictment could go to trial,
U.S. District judge Sam R. Cumming!
granted a defense motion to dismiss. He
concluded that the challenged provision
violates the Second Amen4ment. The

their laughter,
" Find out what's the matter, find
out what they're after "But tell them that you love
them, every single night,
"And though you scold them, be
sure you hold them tight;
"Tell ,them, 'Everything's all right

'

'

Local charities still need our
help in these d!lficult times

DEAR ABBY: A teen-ager
wrote to plead with parents to listen
to their children.
1\vo or three years ago, there was
a sermon at my church on the subjeer ofpan:nts listening. During this
s~rmon, our priest read a poem that
touched me. After the service I
asked if I. could get a copy. I'm
pleased to share it with you and
your readers. The author is
unknown:
i'
"Take a moment to listen t~ay
"To what your children are trying
to say.
~
"Linen today, whatever you~do, ·
"Or they won't be there to,listen
to you.
"Listen to their problems, 1listen
to their needs;
A
"Praise their smallest tri'll'phs,
praise their smallest deeds. ;~
"Tolerate their chatter, amplify

.

•

�Pllge A I• The o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlepon, Ohio

Thu...ctay, Nov. 1, 2001

Meigs County news of record

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

11nancllly, Novenaber I, 1001

'

nhr L. Myeta, Gllipolll, $30 and costa, - ; Rithlld E. Clmp, McAnhur. $20 and valid operatprs liceme,'no operators deed,v,·•,ge ofPomeroy.
speed; Mal1ln l.tcAnguo, P......uy, $50 and coala, llctitiaut rwg!Aatlon; A - K. Cln1&gt;- license, $63 and costs, expired tags;
Fredd1e
Simmons, Pallline M.
POMEROY -A number of cues coata, one ya1r proballon, daye jail_. bell, ...... p1&lt;1, $25 and coati, _ , belt:
were recendy processed by Meigs pauded 'upon a valid - · no drivers Oollglu 8. Eblin. Jr., Pomeroy, $&lt;180 and Robert Johnson, Pomeroy, S!50 and Snowden, · to Robert D. Holliday,
County Court Judge Steven L. Story. liclnle; Eldlr Gatvu, lmmakaiM, Fla., S30 c:o.aa, overlold; DavkS W. Oubbl, Wllclt·llll, costs, vehicle forfeited to the Vilalge Maxine H. Holliday, corrective deed,
and-· ...t belt, $20 and COII8,11cp lign; 1125 and coati, lllure to control: Dele J. Her- of Pomeroy, 90 days to produce valid Sutton.
Those fined were:
Mindy A. PatllriOn, Pora.nd, 1150 and COlts, man, Pon.roy, S50 and coeta, poet ltt'M;
~ L Gangwer, ~.1860and llix rnontho jal-oded 1o Audra Harmon Leighton to
days, one larael L Phlllpo, Rulllllld, $50 and coati, opeiaton license, driving under sus..... -days joll,
I*. . . jliland
IUijWodad upon com- year licenaa - - · · one ya1r probation, -days jall._,oded, proballan until 21 pension, $200 and costs, 40-honrs Shirley M. Wilson, Arnold E. Wilson,
and omar.ge conaumpllon.
community "'rvice, underage con- deed, Village of Syracuse.
~ t:l RTP Sdlool 10 clays, drMng driving under the lnluence. ana· years ol • •
Poontloy M8yor'a Cour1
under 1M lnft.,.,...; Juon 8. Wola, concurrant, one
sumption;
Bonnie Payne, Albany,
Gregory Lloyd Wiseman to Grego)*r proballon, driving undor the influanoe
POMEROY -A num~r of peoAeedlllillo, $30 and - . """"· $30 and (ucond count); Micl-' Plotner, Albany, $30
and
costs,
disorderly
after
warnry
Lloyd Wiseman, deed, Salisbury.
$100
coots, saat bell; Roy J. Schwlnllllrg, and co.ts, - t. belt; JUIIIn L. Mltldlaswart, pie were recently fined by Magistrate
Ravet-. W.Va.. $20 and 00111, llop
ing; Brenda Woods, Pomeroy; StOO
Rebecca Jane Anderson, James R.
Portland, $25 and - · OICideu operation, L. Scott Powell during Pomeroy
oq,, $30 and cooto, ..., boll; Richard R. $25
and coalS, 11ct1tou1 taga; Patricl&lt; Mulbam,
and costs, reckless operation, $100 Anderson to Rebecca Anderson,
Young. Mlddloport, $100 and 00111. AICidHa ~. costa only, oix months jail suo- Mayor's Court.
and costs, failure to control; James James R. Anderson, deed, Village of
operation; Burna, Middlopo!t, $30 P8ncled to one day aarved. 11&lt;0 ysars ~Those fined were Louis Young,
and cooto. epeed; DaMy J . Wile. Rutland.
restraining order, domestic violence, Pomeroy, $52 and costs, speed; David Pringle, Cincinnati, $45 and costs, Pomeroy.
$50 and cooto, 30 days jail . . . _ - to one lion,
100
Charles E. Trader, deceased, to
S and 00111 • dlaordarty conducl; Floyd J. E. Durbin, Coolville, $63 and costs, speed; Frank R. Nelson, $700 and
day - · one year ~lion. '"lrlining Boring, Albany, $850 and coata, 10 daye jail
costs, $300 suspended if DIP School Doris Fox, affidavit, Scipio.
· disoldad)' conduct; Sherry A. Wile,
Rutland. $50 and COliS, 30 days )Iii auopot'ldo suapendad to th-. six month license sus- fictitious tags; Debra Arnott, Racine, is completed within 90 days, 180 day
Edna K. Rus"'ll, deceased, to Marc
petOiiou, two yean~ probation, three daye jail $63 and costs, e&gt;mired tags; Misty D.
ad to one day - · one year probation,. and $500 suspandacl upon completion ol RTP
"r
I'IIStralnlng ordar, disOidelty conduct; Juan Sdlool, driving under the lnnuanca, $100 and Bissell, Pomeroy, SSD-and costs, speed; license suspension, driving under the E. French, certificate, Village of Middleport. ·
influence, $43 ·and costs, speed.
E. Counts, Syracuse, $25 and cools, restllutlon, .,,... days )Iii~. one oyer pro- costa, 10 days jail suspended to three con- Jeni L. Stewart, Pomeroy, $46 and
Land transfers
Clifford L.Adams,Judith D. Adams,
curran~ two yean~ probation, driving under ·
""--·
bation, passing bad c:llecks: Keith w. Deal, suspension,
$25 •nd costa, ~ssion.
costs, spee· d; T:ammy L. Dye, r.uuPOMEROY
Meigs
County
to
Sonya L. Ray, deed, Olive.
l.anculaf, $850 and coots, days jail, six
Barry Chapman, Pomeroy, $100 and costa, beth, W.Va., S63 a.nd costs, expired
Recorder Judith L. King reported the
Mary Rumfield, deceased; Mary
• month 11cenaa SUiplllllon, jill and $500 susI'IICkleas operation, $100 and costa, lhl'lll tags; Joseph L. Reeves, Athens, $63
: peudad upon complotion or RTP Sdlool, one days
jaM su~. one eyar probation, no
·
•
•
following
transfers
of
real
estate:
Louise
Rumfield, deceased, to Arthur
probation. driving under 1M lnftuence, operalol'llllcenas; Jualln M. Ssymour, M - anu1 costs, open coutamer m motor
Lamar Lyons, Shirley Lyons, Lind- Rumfield, affidavit, Salisbury.
and cooto,opaed; Sean GrueMr, Racine, port, $500 and coats, 10 days jailauapanded vthicle; James D. Paso!, Shade, $63
sey
: $350 and COlla, over1oad; Jo An~ Evans, to three, six month llcenH suspension, one
Lyons Ill, Carol Lyons, Lawrence
Arthur Rumfield to Mason Cound
·
·
·
• PC1111and, $25 and coel8, stop llgn. .
ysar probation drtvtng under the lnftuance· an costs, open contamer m motor Hasbargen, Lyndall Hasbatgen, Lind- ty E Corporation, deed, Salisbury,
Thomu A. Myeta, L.angsllillo, $350 and Kevin Roush, Racine, $100 and coalS, ~ vehcle; William A. blackwood. RutJimmie G. King, deceased, to Mary
• coalS, over1oad; James Scoll. Pomeroy, coats dayejaiiiiUipellded, one year probaticf1; Cray land, SSt and costs, speed; Koriel sey L. Lyons, to Lamar Lyons, Shirjty
• only, tallul'll to dim lights; Sharon K. Uludet- Howard, flullancl, $25 and coalS on each
Lyons, deed, Orange.
R. King, affidavit, Lebanon.
. dl
: mitt. Vinlon, $850 and cosl8. lhiM daye jail, count 1o daye jail suspended, .one year pro- Carter, M1d eport, ACDA, $50 and
Lori Pierce to Robert L.. Mash,
Lloyd Douglas Grimm, Jr., Fern J.
• six monlh licen8e suspension, jail and SSOO billion, l'llslitutlon, two counal8 passl~ bad costs; H.Jason Writesel, Pomeroy, $57
: suapended upon completlou ol RTP School, checlla; Wlllarn Morgan, Shade, $100 and and costs speed· Almeda Marshall Tamara Mash, Village of Middleport. Grimm, to Jeffrey David Howell,
• one ayar probation, driving under 1M lnllu- coalS, ftva daye jail suapendod, one year pro.
'
'
' · Hazel A. VanCooney, deceased, to deed, Village of Middleport.
: ance, $30 and costa, aaat batt; Martha billion, dtMng under suapsna1on, $25 and Middleport, S44 and costs, speed; · Clyde A. VanCooney, certificate of
Gary P. Norris, Donna M. Norris,
- lltyant. Galllpob, $30 and OQII8,opaed; Don- costa, ftva ·daye jail suapendod, one year pro- John Smithsop, Mason, W.Va., SSO
transfer,
Village
of
Middleport.
to
Howard Ervin, Jr., Sally L. Ervin,
ald L Cn!meana, ~. $30 and ·ooal8,
batlon, fllllllcation, coati only, PmIll ion; and costs ACDA · Kell1'e Tho~··
Darlene
Grueser,
Darlene · deed, Sutton.
.
•
•
.. _,
""'' belt Elena Goumezoo,
Spring, Bryan C. Gheen, Pomeroy, $25 and-.
Md., $30 and COlla, apeed; Patrtclc L Aiket', tort.itul'll, ~sa opel'lltion, $25 and coalS, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., $63 and costs, . Oliphant, Waym~n Oliphant, to
LaSalle· National Bank to Clarence
long Bottom. $30 and - · -1 belt: Ryan Impeding trafllc; Terry G. Conga, I.Cng bel- traffic control device; Roy Pierce, Mark A. Grueser, Mark A. Grueser Gordon Proffitt, deed, Lebanon.
B. WliMama, Syracuse, $30 and 00118, - t tom, $850 and costa, lllx rnonlh license sua- Ra ·
$100 an d costs, disorder1y by
- belt; L. Merdlant Sullivan, Athena, $30 and pension, 1o daye jail IUBplndod 1o th,.., two . cu.'e, .
Trust Agreement; deed, Bedford.
Janice Steele, James Steele, to Brad
costa. apead; Anthony A. Clrpenlor, Rutland, · ~*"' probation, jail and $500 suapandad mtoX!catton, StOO and costs, drug
Roy Brunty, deceased, to Linda James Steele, deed, Scipio.
$30 and 00118, Mat belt; LUCio Diu, FlOral upon comple«on o1 ATP School, driving paraphernalia· Nancy Y. Laudermilt
Brunty,
deceased, affidavit, Chester. .
Homer Mills, Jr. to Jerry L. HayCity, Fla., $20 and 00118, aeat batt; Lulllllaz, undar the lnftuence; Brian K. Harrla,
'
·
'
lnvameoa, Fla., $30 and cooto, bolt; Raadavllle, $30 and - · Hat ball; Jennifer Pomeroy, $50 and ~osts, leas law;
Robert L. Kautz, Sr. to L. Rose man, Angela D. Hayman, deed, SutJuan A. Martinez, McAllen, Texas, $30 and ~rrnan, Racine, $20 and coats, lallul'll to Joshua Youngblood, Middleport, $50 Kautz, Robert L. Kautz, Jr., William ton.
costa, apead; James w. Kntyar, Memphis,
Jaiad w. Smith, Racine, $2S and· costa, a_n d costs, ,ACDA, $63 and costs, fictt- F. Kautz, Deborah R. Speck, certifiVernon E. Harrison, Avis F. HarriTenn., $30 and costa, apesd; David J.
McCunn, McAI!hur, $30 and coats, - t belt; recklaaa opei'IIUon, $25 and costa, ~· ttous tags; Dwayne Qualls, Pomeroy, cate of transfer, Chester.
son, to Marvin F. Krider, Clara D.
Thomas L. Stewart, New Marattfleld, $50 and sian, ~ and costa, raalftutlon, criminal dam- S100 and costs, disorderly by intoxiKelly · Dawn Rizer, Larry R. Krider, deed, Sutton.
.
. costa, apead; Larry G. Val88, Uttfe Hocking, aglng, Ga,..ld L Mool'll, Long Bonom, $100 cation
Herges, to Aaron M. Drummer, Erica
Melissa M. Thrasher to Eric L.
· $20 and coata, atop sign; Konnath A. George, and cosl8, oackleso operaticf1; Daniel J. Raid,
·
Part&lt;llllburg, W.Va., $30 anad coel8, apead; Rio Granda, $100 and coats, one year llcansa
Erika Vanmeter, Hartford, W.Va., D. Drummer, deed, Sutton.
Nieka~p, Dale S. Niekamp, Cyril F.
Randy J. Stunn, Wllllamatown, W.Va., $30 ~sian, 10 daya jail, one year probation, $33 and costs expired tags· Bryan
Mary Camille Rudolph to David Niekamp, deed, Chester.
' .
'
and cools, bttt; Jared R. Malwle. The driving under tha lnftuanca, $100 and coalS,
Plains, $30 and coata, speed; Amber R. Grtl- live daye jail concurrent, one year piOOation, Holley, Reedmlle, $63 and costs, Allan Rudolph, deed, Lebanon.
Kelly Denise Phelps, Kelly Deni"'
. fith, Zannfiald, $30 and coats, apaad; Shirley driving under suspension, $25 and coalS, expired tags; Cynthia L. Faulk, MidHiram T. Fisher, deceasetl, to Mark Green, Phillip Clarence Green, to
, M. Tabler, Athans, $30 and coats, - t bttt.
open container, $100 and colla, five dayajall dleport S700 and costs 90 days to C. Fisher, affidavit, Sutton.
Wiley Lennie Phelps, Debra Kay
. David M. Allan, Allleon Park, Pa., $30 and ooncurranl, one year probttlon, fleeing, $25
'
'.
· costs, apead; Michael 0. Sheline, Jacklon, and cools, spesd; Michael A. Cain, Racine, complete DIP School, ltcense susMark C. Fisher, Kelly Fisher, to Phelps, deed, Village of Pomeroy.
$31 0 and 001ta, ovsr1oad; Theodore F. Gas- $100 and cosl8, 10 days jail auapanded to pended for 180 days, driving undet Danny Brown, Cordelia Brown, . Calvin E. Hawk, Jean L. Hawk,
ton, Belpl'll, $30 and COII\I. apesd; Kenneth thrae, one year probation, jail suapendad h 'nf)
J ffi
p
William B. Deem, Susan K. Deem,
.S. McQueary, Nicholaavtlle, Ky., $50 and upon proof ora vaiHd license, $25 and costa, t e 1 uence ames e ers, omeroy, deed, Sutton.
costs, apead, $30 and coalS, Hal belt; Jon- lett of canter, $100 and costa, leaving the $150 and costs, 90 days to produce
James A. Miller to State of Ohio, deed; Orange.

Collllty Court

ssoo

obt--..

year-.....,..,..,,

.year

• see

suv.r

iJ

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Drake of Racine has ~en
awarded the annual scholarship. She is a senior enrolled at
the University of Rio Grande,
majoring in early childhood
education.
·POMEROY -Alpha OmiIn additiqn to her scholastic
cron Chapter, Delta Kappa
•. she has particiachievements
_Gamma, met recendy at the
pated in various 4-H activi_Lewis Family Restaurant in
ties, done volunteer work, and
. Jackson, with "'vera! members
works
part-time. Lo help with
coming in Halloween cosher college expenses.
tumes.
Next meeting will be Dec. I
The program included a
Halloween poem, "The Velvet
POMEROY
Carol at Trinity Church.
Collar," read by Paula Whitt, Adanu, co-chairman of the
· and a cosmetic demonstration Appalachia Cancer Network
:presented by the personal (ACN) sponsored by the
. growth committee, Gay Per- National Cancer Institute, was
. rin, Rosalie Story and Becky speaker at a recent meeting of
CHESTER Chester
Zurcher. Demonstrators were the Meigs County retired
323,
Daughters
of
Council
Teachers.
Lena and J\)yssa Longstreth.
Prayer was given before the
Adams said that the Ohio America, met recently a the
· dinner served at tables deco- ACN focuses on increasing hall.
Gary Holter presided at the
· rated. with flowers ·from the awareness, providing educa. 50th wedding anniversary of tion, and promoting early meeting which opened with
- Ida Mae Crabtree. Candies detection and prevention of pledges to the American and
were given as favors.
cancer in Appalachia Ohio. Christian flags, scripture &amp;om
Pam Toon conducted the She said this community- Psalms, the Lord's prayer iri
. . meeting with Nellie Parker based group of volunteers is unison, and singing of the
- giving the secretary's report. dedicated to reducing cancer National anthem.
Officers' reports were given.
Carol Eberts thanked the soci- incidence and mortality in
• ety for cards and prayers dur- Meigs County. She distributed Reported ill were Doris
· ing her recent illness.
pamphlets encouraging early Grueser and Laura Nice. Mary
Those having birthdays in detection and healthi~r life Jo Barringer read "When I'm
an Old Lacy." The ways and
October were · recognized. styles.
Congratulations were extendThe meeting was held at means committee held a silent
· ed to Suzy Hysell-Parker on Trinity Church with Ida Diehl auction. Members were urged
her position on Gov. Taft's giving devotions. Get-well to ·fly · the American flag. A
Teacher Advisory Board cards were signed for Helen report on the district meeting
which was created to give Taft Williams, Dorothy Woodard was given by Erma Cleland.
a ~tter connection with the and Daisy Blakeslee. Gay Per- Refreshments were served.
Attending . besides those.
. Legislature, the Depa~lment of . rin conducted the meeting
- Education, and educators. She with
officers
presenting named were Deloris Wolfe,
Helen Wolfe, Jean Welsh, Opal
: explained that diagnostic tests reports.
:will be used in schools.
A .new mentoring program Eichinger, Shirley Beegle,
: Next meeting will be held at the Middle School was dis- Sandy White, Julie Curtis,
an Nov. 10 at Lake Hope cussed, and a meeting in Thelma White, Charlotte VanLodge, Zaleski and will · Athens to preview a new Meter, Anna Roberts, Everett
: include a silent auction.
pharmacy program to be Grant, Ruth Smith, Charlotte
; Attending from Meigs effective in
2002
was Grant, Betty Young, Opal Hollon, Esther Smith and Mary
: County were Marjorie Fetty,, announced.
: Martha Greenaway, Wendy
It was noted ~hat Christy Holter.

Teachers'

SOrority meet
atJaclson

CELEBRITY
BIRIHDAYS

Halar, Suzy Hyseli-Parker,
Nellie Parker, Gay · Perrin,
Rosalie · Story, San~ Tillis,
Paula Whitt, Sandra ·Walker,
and Rebecca Zurcher.

Retired teachers

hear about

Appalachia
Cancer Network

Chester Coundl
meets

·.

1nwar

,

J.

c.

•

J.

HOMOREO - Clara Burris, left, was presented a plaque In
recognition of her 35 years of service to the VMH Auxiliary by
Rhonda Dailey, administrator.

VMH Auxiliary
member

Roush, Sarah Neigler, Wanda
Wolf, Mildred Fry, Grace
Warner, Marabel Frecker and

Nov. 4: Former 'CBS
news anchorman Walter
Cronkite is 85. Actor Art
Carney is 83. Actress Doris
Roberts
("Everybody
Loves Raymond") is 71.
Actress
Loretta
Swit
("MASH") is 64. Actress
Markie Post is 51. Singerguitarist Chris Difford of
Squeeze ls 47. Pianist Yanni
is 47. Actor Ralph Macchio is 40. Actor Matthew
McConaughey is 32. Rapper-producer Sean "P.
Diddy" Combs is 32.
Nov. 5: Singer-songwriter Ike Turner is 70.
Actress Elke Sommer is 61.
Singer Art Garfunkel is 60.
Actor-playwright
Sam
Shepard is 58. Singer Peter
Noone of Herman's Hermits is 54. Singer Bryan
Adams is 42. Actress. Tilda
Swinton ("The Deep
End:') is 41.

honored

Rutland VIllage
·POMEROY - Clara Burris of New Haven, W.Va., was
honored recendy for 35 years
service to the Womens Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
on
Hospital.
She was presented plaque
by Rhonda Dailey, hospital
administrator, at a dinner party
held at the Outback Restaurant in Vienna, W.Va. She is the ~~~~·P"!d"!'1o•rb,.;,y Rutland Village, PO Box 420, Rutland, OH
oldeit active member of the
Auxiliary.
Otpers attending were
Betty Sayre, Vinas Lee, Libby
Fisher, Rose Deem, ·Juanita

VOTE YES

a

2 Mill Levy Renewal
for current expenses

(

WASHINGTON (AP) As American warplanes carpetbombed Talib~n forces in
AfghanHbn, Pentagon officials
concerned about potential terror threats at home moved
• toward calling up more
reservists than they had
planned.
The Pentagon notified the
White House that it wants to
mobilize more than the 50,000
first thought necessary for the
U.S. W:lr against terrorism. It
did not offer a new projected
total.
''We're not benchmarking
it," Pentagon spokeswoman
Victoria Clarke said Wednesday.
Clarke also announced that
Defense Sec~tary Donald H.
Rumsfeld will leave Friday for
Russia and nations near
Afghanistan to bolster support
for the U.S. bombing campaign.
She would not identifY what
other cities Rumsfeld will visit
except for Moscow, where the
secretary plans to talk arms

control and anti-terrorism with military capability;' he said.
his counterpart. Defense MinStuf!lebeem said the current
ister Sergei Ivanov
focus of U.S. bombing includes
In W~esday's attacks on bUnken and eaves thought to
Afghanistan, its most intense be used by the Taliban and
attacks yet, the United States fighters of the al-Qaida terror
•
used B-52 bombers and other network, as well as Taliban
w:n-planes "all aver the country; troops aligned against opposiincluding (against) Taliban tion forces near the northern
forceS in the north;' said Rear · crossroads city of Mazar-eAdm.John Stuf!lebeem, deputy Sharif and just north of Kabul,
director of operations for the the Afghan capital.
Joint ChiefS of Staff.
In explaining why more U.S.
The stepped-up attacks on reservists are expected to be
front line positions came a day called to active duty, Pentagon
after Rumsfeld acknowledged officials said they continue to
U.S. troops were on the ground receive new requests for securiin Afghanistan directing bombs ty forces at federal installations.
to their targets.
Gen. William Kernan, head
During a Pentagon news of the U.S. Joint Forces Comconference, Stuf!lebeem said mand, told reporters he has
that more than three consecu- considered "the fuU array of air
rive weeks of airstrikes have defense systems" to protect
severely damaged the Taliban's. some sites.
communications system to the
"Most recently some of the
point that field .conunanders things we looked at are some of
are having trouble summoning the nuclear power plants, some
new supplies and troop rein- of the other critical infrastrucforcements.
ture that supports the ·national TAKE OFF- An F/A 18 Hornet launches off a catapult on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS
"We believe that puts a ter- and state governments;' he said Carl VInson. The Vinson is one of the many ships involved In the U.S.-Ied campaign In
· rific amount 9f stress on their without elaborating.
Afghanlstan.(AP Photo/U.S. Navy, Martin S. Fuentes)

--

.....

Saudi government issues Govemment enforces a new·border policy
·order to freeze assets of
those linked to terrorism
WASHINGTON (AP) The Saudi government has
issued an ordet to freeze
· asse~ of people and groups
' suspected of links to terrorism, cooperating with the
U.S. campaign to disrupt terrorist financing, Bush administration . officials
said
Wednesday.
• President Bush has ordered
the freezing of U.S. assetS of
66 individuals and organizac
_; tions suspected of conducting or fmancing terror.
, The U.S. government is in
. a delicate situation in its rela·. tionship with Saudi Arabia.
The longstanding ally some) times seems reluctant to be a
. full partner in the U.S.-organized anti-.terror coalition.
&gt;.
Saudi .Arabia is believed to
, be the home of at least half of
·_ th~ suicide hijackers and
other suspects in the attacks
on the World Trade Center
towers and the Pentagon.
Secretary of State Colin
Powell said he was pleased
with the Saudi order. "Everything we have asked them to
do they have done," he said at
the State D epartment.
If the United States needs
more from the Saudis it will
, ask, Powell said.
. The information about
. Saudi Arabia came as a 29nation task force, which had
met in a two-day emergency
session
in Washington,
announced it had adopted
measures to disrupt terrorists'
, financing.
.
The measures include
.imposing anti-money-laundering requirements on nonbank financial systems, such
as the informal "hawala" network of money brokers
believed to be used by the a!Qaida network of Islarnic
militant Osama bin Laden,

the prime suspect in the
Sept. 11 attacks.
· The actions by the task
'force "could potentially save
thousands of lives," said
Jimmy Gurule, the Treasury
undersecretary for enforcement. He said they show "the
kind of cooperation and
international teamwork neeessary to shut down those
who perpetrate acts of terro;·
against us and other lawabiding nations."
The group does not plan to
discuss until June, however,
possible penalties against
countries that fail to cooper- ·
ate in the effort against terrorist financing.
Saudi Arabia "has cooperated" with the U.S. financial
action against terrorism and
has issued ari order to block
the assets, Gurule said.
Asked whether the Saudi
government had actually
blocked . assets,
Gurule
replied, "I think what's most
important is cooperation.'' In
some cases, it may be more
desirable to keep bank
accounts open and monitor
them as part of an investigation, he said.
Treasury officials say 152 .
countries have
pledged
cooperation with the U.S. .
effort. Of those, 81 have
· issued asset blocking orders,
including Saudi Arabia. The
orders freeze the assets and
prohibit citizens of those
countries from doing business with the named individuals and organizations.
An official said Wednesday
that the Gulf Cooperation
Council, of which Saudi Arabia is a member, had said in
mid-October that its member nations were issuing
blocking orders.

helped ~ff the stage.
.In 1975, the Sex Pistols
played their first concert, at a
London art school dance. Ten
minutes into it, the school social
programmer unplugged .their
amps.
In 1978, the band Boston
played the city ofBoston for the
lint time, in a sold-out show.

Also in 1978, Greg Reeves, a
former bassist for Crosby, Stills,
Nash and Young, sued his former bandmates for $1 million in
unpaid royalties.
In 1990, the 200th episode of
NBC's "Cheers" aired in a onehour special. Original cast
member Shelley Long made a ,
special appearance.
'

suppo~ters.

The changes announced
Wednesday by Attorney Gen•
era! John Ashcroft came as
officials acknowledged weaknesses in a visa system that
cleared the Sept. 11 hijackers
into the country. At least four
overstayed their permits.
"The ·best way of protect. ing the United States is to
keep these people out," said
Mary Ryan, assistant secretary of state for consular
affairs.
Promising that the government won't allow visitors "to
use our hospitality as a
weapon;' Ashcroft asked the
State Department to designate 46 previously identified
terrorist organizations whose
members or supporters will
not be permitted to enter the
United States.
The Justice Department
says 1,087 people have been
arrested or detained in the NO UNK?- FBI Director Robert Mueller addresses the U.S;
investigations Of the Sept. 11 Ct;mference of Mayors In Washington. Mueller said there Is no
attacks,
intludittg
182 link between the Sept. 11 hl)acklngs and anthrax attacks that
charged with immigration were meant to terrorize the nation. (AP)
violations.
Ashcroft said among those even if some U.S. agencies July. Neil Gallagher, head of
the FBI's counterintelligence
arrested this month were would want them barred.
three Arab men "suspected of Ashcroft said he was creat- and national security prohaving knowledge" Of the ing a task force co foster bet- grams, also plans to retire at
Sept. 11 attacks.
ter coordination omong gov- the end of next month.
At a news conference,
A day planner containing ernment agencies.
Ashcroft
said the government
notations in Arabic and what
Shoring up the nation's
appeared to be a diagram of border defenses came on a will delve more deeply into
an airport flight line were day the FBI announced that the backgrounds of people
found in the apartment of the its second in command, seeking visitor visas and will
men, Ashcroft said, along Thomas Pickard, overseer of turn the information over to
with false immigration forms, the investigations into the the CIA and FBI for further
a fraudulent U.S. visa and a Sept. 1 1 attacks and introduc- investigation before issuing
false alien identification card. tion of anthrax into the mail permission to enter.
"This is clear authority that
Ryan said U.S. intelligence · system, will retire at the end
agencies don't share their ter- of November. Pickard's
rorist and criminal watch lists retirement is the second
with the State Department, major departure since FBI
which made it possible for Director Robert Mueller
foreigners to get legal visas took charge of the bureau in

MEIGS

•••••••••
is acci:pting patients at his
following offices:
(l#itmtlilys, 17111rsililys &amp; Fridllys)

2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

106 N. 2n~ Ave.

11

rea1-time access to informa-

tion" that will enable them to
keep out suspected terrorists.
· Federal officials acknowledged a lax system for tracking people once they pass
through border check points.
State Department and
immigration officials told
Congress they don't know
how many foreigners are in
the United States illegally
with expired student visas or
student visas never used for
schools where the holders
were to have studied.
Hani Hanjour, suspected
pilot of American Flight 77,
which hit the Pentagon,
entered the United States on
a student visa after promising
to enroll at Holy Name College in Oakland, Calif. He
failed to appear there.
The State Department said
15 of the 19 hijackers in the
Sept. 11 attacks applied for
and were . granted visas in
Saudi Arabia. Before getting
the travel papers, their names
were checked against lists of
suspected terrorists, and six
were interviewed.

31/2" Doubles

•

Offers

In Memory of "P.appy" B.K.
Armes GreatlY missed but
nevef forgotten
Your "Boomer

strengthens our ability to say
to terrorists, 'You're not welcome in the United States,"'
Ashcroft said.
Under new rules, immigration authorities can bar
members of political or social .
groups that endorse terrorist
activities. People who use
their prominence to endorse
terrorism can also be barred,
and anyone certified by the
attorney general as a threat to
national security can be
denied entry.
Immigration Commissioner James Zigl~r said the task
force, headed by FBI official
Steven McCraw, will provide
immigration officials with

HOLZER CLINIC

LOOKING BACK IN TIME .

, In 1961, Brian Epstein 6rst
· saw the Beades perform at the
Cavern Club in Liverpool. He
soon became the band's manag. er.
In 1970, Brian Wilson made a
: rare appearance with the Beach
· Boys at the Whisky-A- Go-Go
in Los Angeles. He lost his balance several times and had to be

WASHINGTON (AP)
The government is increasing
vigilance at the nation's borders with better background
checks and coordinated
enforcement designed to .bar
suspected terrorists and their

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sentinel

NBA Roundup, Page 85
Football news, Page 88
•

Page 81
1hursd8J, November 1.1001

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LINCOLN
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE '
•

BEREA, Ohio (AP) Those plain orange helmets
will be back on national TV
this weekend, and this time
the Cleveland Browns don't
plan to embarrass themselves.
Their last prime-time
appearance on the tube was a
disaster.

One of the NFL's early-season surprises, Cleveland (4-2)
will get a chance to show the
nation if they should be taken·
seriously on Sunday when
they visit the streaking Chicago Bears (5-1) at Soldier
Field.
"The whole world will get

receiving votes:
Wellston 7.

Others

To be eligible far The OVP
10, a team muat either: a.) be
the Maeon.Qallla·
Mlllgi-Jac'*n aiu; b.) be a

from

loclil c:orftnonce member; or
at leeat 0118 gilme

c.) play

agalnat local . . . .

to see us," said cornerback

'THuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
. SCOREBOARD
.
NBA
· · Wednesday's Gamea
New Jersey 95, Boston 92
Charlotte 100, Cleveland 94
Miami 97, Toronto 92
lridiana 98, Chicago 73
P!)rtland 92, Golden State 87
NHL
. Wednesday's Games
Florida 3, N.Y. Rangers 1
Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 0
St. Louis 1, Colorado 0
Nashville 6, Minnesota 4
Detroit 4, Dallas 3, OT
San Jose 4, Anaheim 2

•••••

Skier
· Cavagnoud dies
· after aash

LINCOLN

in the
spotlight

A final look at the region's
.top lootball teams, as
voted by Ohio Valley Publishing Co. sports staffers.
(First-place votes in parentheses)

VIENNA, Austria (AP) Regine Cav.Jgf!oud, a champi. on skier who feared motorcycle
cruhes more than spills on the
slopes, died, two days after slamming into a German coach
while training on a glacier.
With her f.unily gathered at
her bed&lt;ide, Cawgnoud's re.pirator was disconnected after
tests showed her brain had
~e~ed to function, said Dr.
Wolfgang Koller, head of the
trauma intensive care unit at the
!l)tlsbruck University Clinic.
;The 31-year-old speed skier
was hurtling down Pitztal glacier at about 40 mph when
Markus Anwander, a coach
from the German team, crossed
irito her path. wimesses told
authorities. Anw.mder, who also
suffered head injuries, underwent spinal surgery and was in
serious condition.
The fatality was the first
involving a World Cup skier
since Austria's Ulrike Maier
died in 1994 after crashing into
a post during a downhill race in
Garmisch-Partenkin:hen, Germany.
Cavagnoud won last season's
super-G World Cup and was
third overall in the World Cup
standings. She also won the
super-G tide at the World
Championships last February in
Sc.Anton,Austria.

PGAmonies

to shrink
. HOUSTON (AP) - The
growth rate of PGA Tour prize
money likely will slow during
the next four-year television
contract because of the recession, although commissioner
'f.irri Pinchem said he still
~i&lt;pects an increase of at least
$100 million.'
·,"We don't see significant
ifllpacts;' Finchem said during
his annual State of the tour news
cQnference.

E.P.A. (EAGLES' PROTECnON AGENCY)- The Eastern offensive line has been key to this year's success. Pictured, from
left, are, front: Eric Batey, Cody Dill, Travis Batey, Travis Willford, Mike Taylor. Back: Josh Clegg, Ross Holter, Jon Will , Tyler
Faulk, Ben Holter, Cody Faulk, Cacy Faulk. (Butch Cooper)

Won in the trenches
Eastern linemen set pace for
playqffi, big rnshing numbers
BY

BuTcH CooPER

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS
It's become common to
expect Garrett Karr to break
right on the option and take
the ball 50-plus yards, or R.J.
Gibbs to carry the ball to the
left for 50-plus yards.
The
most prominent
aspect of Eastern's ground
game this year, and yes, the
running game has been outstanding in it's own right, but
the most prominent has been
the dominance of the linemen.
The Eagles (9-1) have
helped produce some big
offensive numbers since their
34-6 loss earlier at Trimble
(9-1), who Eastern plays in
the regional quarterfinals
Saturday at Glouster Memo-

. rial Stadium.
Over .~00 yards rushing at
Miller.
·
Over 400 yards rushing
against Southern and Federal
Hocking.
The Eagles big men have
truly been remarkable.
~· As offensive linemen, we
know if we do our job, then .
everyone else we block for
gets their scats in the paper,"
said second year offensive
line coach J.E. Kirkpatrick.
"That gives us personal satisfaction."
One of the keys to this is
the depth of the line.
While sen\or center Jon
Will and ju!lior right tackle
Travis Batey have started all
season, guards Ross Holter,

Pleese see Line. B:a

The Eastern backfield, shown warmiing up in the 'I' fon11at:lon.
has benefitted from the line's hard work. (Butch Cooper)

Corey Fuller. "We can get a
lot of respect that night."
Roughly 75 percent of
CBS' viewers will see the
Browns-Bears
matchup,
which the network has
moved - from a 1 p.m. kickoff to 4:15p.m.- so it could
be aired to a majority of the
cou ntry.
It will be th e Browns' first
national exposure since 1999,
an opening-week Sunday
night game that Cleveland
fans are just now starting to
forget.
On Sept. 12 that season, the
Browns maqe their return to
the league following a threeyear absence and were shut
out 43-0 at hom~ by the
Pittsburgh Steelers, who ·
trashed the welcome back
party in C leveland's new stadium.
The Browns don't want to
see a rerun.
"A lot of people will be
tuned in," said rookie running
back James Jackson. " A lot' of
them are wondering, 'Why is
Clevelan&lt;;l 4-2?' We've got to
go out there and show them
why. A lot of teams will be
watching, too, and' we don't
want to go out and make
fools of ourselves."
There's no reason to think
the Browns wilL
In its first year under coach
·Butch Davis, Cleveland has
already surpassed its win total

Please see Browns, B:Z

Schilling efforts wasted by 4-3 Buckeyes
blown save in the ninth . now have ·backs
to the wall

NEW YORK (AP) - Derek Jeter already
saved the New York Yankees' season in Octo- .
ber. He might have saved the World Series for
them in November.
Jeter homered _with two outs in the bottom
of 1Oth inning, celebrating with a two-footed .
jump onto the plate and giving New York a
· thrilling 4-3 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
The first game-ending home run of Jeter's
career tied the Series at 2c2.
. A game that belonged to Curt Schilling
most of Wednesday night slipped away when
Tino Martinez hit a two-run homer to tie it
with two outs in the ninth.
Sh.;rtly after the Yankee Stadium scoreboard
flashed, "Welcome to November Baseball;'
Jete( connected at 12:04 a.m.
"We always feel as though we have a chance
to win a game," Jeter said. "When you get to
the postseason, you ·can throw everything out
.
that you've done in th e regular season."
BADGE OF SHAME - Anzona pitcher ByungMartinez and Jeter both homered off Hyun Kim reacts after giving up a game-tymg
Byung-Hyun Kim. The Diamondbacks' closer two-run hom~ run to Yankee Tino Martinez in
came on in the eighth to relieve Schilling, the ninth lnnmg Wednesday. (AP)
pitching on only three days' rest.
Jeter usually shines in October, and it was his
Sitting in tlu: dugout, Schilling watched it all
incredible, backhanded !lip that helped the
unravel with a look of utter disbelief· as the
Yankees avoid elimination by Oakland in the
Yankees won their record ninth straight home
first round.
game in the Series.
Facing the homer-prone Kim, Jeter sent an
The defending three-time champions will
opposite-field drive into the seats in right. The
send Mike Mussina against Miguel Batista in
Yankees spilled ·out of the dugout to greet him
Game 5 Thursday night. No matter who wins,
the Series will go back to Bank One Ballpark.
Please IH YenkHI, B:Z

COLUMBUS (Af') - Jim Tressel recognizes that he is
no longer leading a charmed life as Ohio State's football
coach. He had been taking hits even before the Buckeyes
blew 17- and IS-point leads in their two
most recent ]asses.
11
The honeymoon ended when we
were 1-1 ," he said earlier this week.
It duesn 't appear that Tressel and Ohio
State's fans are he,rling for a trial separation, but that c nd I change if the !luckeye s' s ea ~ on ClHltinlle!l to spiral o ut of
controL
When . presea&gt; &lt;&gt;n practice began in
:Tressel
August, there WJs bold talk about a
national championship, a Bowl Champi. onship Series berth and a Big Ten tide.
" It seems highly unlikely that we're going to deserve to
be national champions- unless that formula is a lot different than 1 thought," Tressel said this week, tongue
placed firmly in check. "Obviously our chances of being
Big Ten champions are less."
Now the Buckeyes (4-3, 2-2) arc hoping'just for a winning record and maybe - maybe - an invitation to a
bowl game. And not the ones played in Pontiac or Memphis.
·
To do that, they must finish with a winning record. To
do that , they must win two of their final four games.
After Saturday's game at Minnesota, Ohio State hosts
Purdue and Illinois and then travels to Michigan to close
out the regular season.

Please see Buckeyes, B:a

�, · 'r

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursdllv. Nov.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1l 2001~

·•'
...

Greg Gumbel and Phil Simms
behind the microphones i&lt; just
another step.
"And eventually we'll be on
Monday Night Football," said
offensive guard Ross Verba.
The Browns are getting an
added boost on defense with
second-ye3r end Courtney
Brown expected to play for the
first time this season against the
Bean.
Brown, the top o&gt;&lt;rall draft
pick in 2000 who had a solid
rookie season with Cleveland,
has been sideli ned since August
with a partial ligament tear in
his right knee.
Brown worked out with the
r
first-team defense dunng practice on Wednesday, and Davis
said he'll play on Sunday and
may even start at right end.
' "We're giving him a litcle
more to handle every single
day," Daw said, "and he's handled everything preay gi&gt;od.
But we're going to be smart
since it's hi&lt; first game of the

Browns
flam Page 11
of last season, and one more
win .and the Drowns will have
matched their victory total
OVer the past two seasons.
Fuller said Davis is the
biggest reason for the turnaround.
"He's brought the love back
into this locker room;' Fuller
said: "From Day One, he's told
guys, 'If you believe you can
do it, you can do it.' We won
five games in two years. There
were times I wanted to go
home and not play football
agam."
Like · the Dears, who have
won five straight and are off to
their best start since 1990, the
Browns are gaining believers
around the league with every
victory.
And now they can add a few
million more on TV against
the Bears.
"I think it's great," said quarterbackTim Couch. "I think it
shows a lot of respect for us
and for the Bears. People want
to see ifboth teams are for real
and if we've come that far in
such a short period oftime."
The Browns think they've
made huge strides and feel
being a feature game with
CBS' top announcing team of

year."
Daw said the national expo-

sure was "a nice compliment"
to the Browns, who were
lucky to even get their highlight! replayed while losing 27
games the past two years.
"That's one of the things our
players wanted to do;' Davi&lt;
said "To play in significant
games and earn some respect."

Yankees

out. Unfortunately, it didn't."
Mariano Rivera broke three
bats in a perfect I Oth inning
for the win.
from Pip II
A sellout crowd of 55,863
at the plate, and Jeter that included Mr: October hopped home as baseball's Reggie Jackson turned
first Mr. November.
quiet in the ninth inning with
"Yeah, I think I broke my the Yankees in trouble.
Kim, who struck out the
foot," he said.
The crowd, already crazed side in the eighth, gave up a
on Halloween night, went one-out single to Paul
wild while Jeter's parents were O'Neill in the ninth before
hugged by everybody sitting striking out Bernie Williams.
Martinez, hitless · in nine
;near them in the stands.
Series
at-bats, launched a
"Surprising things happen,"
Yankees manager Joe Torre drive over the center-field
said. "Yet, when you think fence to tie it. The fans roared,
about it, it doesn't surprise and several Yankees jumped
you, because this ballclub over the railing in front of the
dugout to celebrate.
never quits."'
"We knew we had our
It was the first time in
World Series history that a work cut out for us,n Marteam tied a game with a tinez said.
Kim set down the first two
ninth-inning homer and won
with a homer in extra batters in the 1Oth. But Jeter,
innings, according to the Elias only 1-for-15 in the Series,
rose to the occasion.
Sports Bureau.
Jeter fouled three twoSchilling, moved up by
rookie manager Bob Brenly, strike pitches and then homedid everything Arizona could red.
have asked. But :when Kim
Making Brenly look like a
relieved, the game turned genius, Schilling showed no ill
effects in giving up three hits
spooky for his team.
"We had a lead, we had six for seven innings.
"I felt good. I told him
outs left to go in the ballgame," Brenly said. "That's the there was no reason take me
way we hoped it would work out right there," Schilling
said.

from Pagell
Travis Wilford, Cody Faulk
and Casy Faulk, tackles Eric
Batey and Tyler Faulk, and
guard/taclde Josh Clegg have
given the Eagles plenty of
options to play with.
Ben Holter and backup
Cody Dill have been key
players at tight end.
"We've got some depth
there this season," said Eastern head coach Scott Christman. "Our depth's probably
better now, at this point in
the season than it was last
year, whereas we started out
the season without as much
experienced. It's a nice luxury to· have."
On the defensive side of
the ball, the Eagles have also
been successful in the trench.
"We're pretty pleased with
the way most of our line has
been playing," nid third year
defensive line coach David
Hawthorne. "R.J. Gibba
· especially and Caay Faulk,
Travh Batey arid Jon Will
. hPve all been doing ~ally
well, j(uh Clegg comea in to
a~m

faomPageB1
The Buckeyes are tied for
fourth in the Dig Ten. The
three teams ahead of them?
Purdue, Illinois and Michigan.
The most immediate concern is Minnesota. Tressel got
the Ohio State job when athletic director Andy Geiger
tapped him and not Golden
Gop hen coach Glen Mason, a
former Ohio State player,
alum and assistant coach.
Mason has made it clear
over the years that playin[: his
alma mater is a red-letter day.
It was thought that he had
virtually locked up the Ohio
State job a year ago - if it
subsequently became vacant
- . when he coached Minnesota to a stunning 29-17
up•et of the then unbeaten
and No. 5-ranked Buckeyes.
How big of an upset was it?
Minnesota was unranked, 4-2
on the year and had already
lost to Ohio University.
When John Cooper . was
.fired in January after an 8-4
season, Mason was in hot pur·suit of the job.
If it was a red-letter day
before, then Mason must have
run o'ut of felt-tip markers
circling Nov. 3, 2001, on his
Schilling's bid for a record
fifth win in a postseason,
however, ended when the
Yankees rallied.
"Schilling might pitch
tomorrow night, too," Jeter
said. "He did his job.''
Since 1999, starters working on three days' rest had
been just 1- 9 with a 9.73
ERA in postseason play.
·
Every!Jne at Yankee Stadium
was energized, a sharp contrast
to the subdued crowd on
hand for President Bush's visit
for Game 3.And while Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani hollered
from the front row, Yankees
starter Orlando Hernandez
;was the most excitable of all.
El Duque shouted at plate
umpire Ed Rapuano, firmly
shook off catcher Jorge Posada
and accidentally smacked into
Arizona's Tony Womack. ·.
Hernandez made up with
Rapuano when he was pulled
in the seventh. He made a
beeline to meet the umpire
along the first-base line and
patted him on the chest, and
both men smiled.
With Hernandez gone, the
Diamondbacks scored twice
in the eighth for a 3-1 lead.
Reliever Mike Stanton
retired 22 straight batters in
Series play before Luis Gonzalez singled to start the inning,

"I was really pleased at the have played a huge role in
Waterford game when we those guys, more mentally
helped hold down Dan Doe- than physically," said Christbereiner, probably the best man. "The · players do the
tailback in the league," said work in the offseason to get
bigger, stronger and faster. In
Hawthorne.
An improved offseason the season, those coaches get
conditioning program that them focused and get them
has ·improved the team's n1otivated."
strength, among other things,
·And now, Eastern returns
has played a pivotal role and to Trimble; the scene of their
improving the performance only loss of the season .
of the linemen.
"They feel they didn't play
The weight room has to their potential when they
become like a second home. played Trimble the last time,"
"That's their hobby now," said Christman . "It's a huge
said Kirkpatrick.
challenge for them. Their
"They love it," Hawthorne t\toughts this week is that
added. 'Jon Will, he looks they want to play to their
like a Greek god. His legs are . potential.. open up some
huge."
holes for us and dominate
Kirkpatrick
and the game like we have everyHawthorne have also played one else on our schedule so
the role of motivators.
far thb year."
"Both of those coaches

Line ·

Cllntr!bute and

Buckeyes

no his record 324th majorcalendor.
"I don't think it's a big college coaching win, Tressel's
thing for their players, but it's shoulders were slumped, his
always big for coach Mason," eyes were glassy and he
Ohio State linebacker Matt seemed to . have dif!iculry
Wilhelm said of the rivalry. focusing on questions and
"Being a finalist for this job, answen. Maybe that'! because
he might have the feeling that there are a lot more of the
former than there are of the
he wasn't good enough.''
Mason says he still has fond latter.
One more loss on Saturday
memories of his days at Ohio
State but doesn't look at the and the Buckeyes will have to
game differently than any beat two arguably better
teams in their final three
other on his team's schedule.
"I wanted to beat them real games.
For a team that still considbad last year and I want to
beat them real bad 'thi, year. ers itself better than almost all
Just like I wanted to beat of its opponents week in and
them real bad the year before week out, there is no more
and just like I wanted to beat wiggle room.
"This game is everything,"
Murray State real bad. That is
what my job comes down to," one of the head coache! said.
Mason said. "I hate to lose, I
And it wasn't Mason.
The most immediate condon't care who I'm playing.
To say I want to beat one cern is Minnesota. Tressel got
· opponent more than another, the Ohio State job when aththat's not true. Losing is los- letic director Andy Geiger
. "
tapped him and not Golden
mg.
Tressel isn't used to losing Gophen coach Glen Mason, a
and doesn't like it any more .former Ohio State player,
than Mason does. Clearly he alum and assistant coach.
Mason has made it clear
is being beaten down by the
way things have gone for him o~r ihe years that playing his
and his team so far this season. illna.mater is a red.letter day.
The most obvious sign of It was thought that he had
virtually locked up the Ohio
that came last week.
He stepped onto the field at State job a year ago - if it
Penn State looking excited subsequently became vacant
and ready to go. During his ·- when he coached Minpostgame interviews after the ne!ota to a stunning 29- 17
29-27 loss that gave Joe Pater- upset of the then unbeaten
and Erubiel Durazo followed
with a go-ahead double.
Pinch-runner Midre Cummings later beat Jeter's throw
home on Matt Williams'
grounder for another run.
Before then, the only runs
came on homers. Shane
Spencer connected for · the
Yankees in the third and Mark
Grace tied it in the fourth.
Spencer also· :contributed
another big defensive play. A
day after making a sliding
catch, he threw out Womack
at the plate on a sj'Jort fly to
left in the fifth.

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
-support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

i'

and No. 5-ranked B~; ;
How big of an upset was
Minnesota was unranQd, 4 . :
on the year and had ~a :
Jose to Ohio Universi~ 1 :
When John Coop
w:S:
fired in January after
a~·
.
II
•
season, Mason was m ot pUt-!
1
suit of the job.
'\
;:
· If it was a red-leqer ~
before, then Mason mOst ha.,_
run out of felt-tip \ markeh
circling Nov. 3, 2001\ on ~;
calendar.
: '
1
"I don't think it's a bt,g:
thing for their players, but it'~
always big for coach Mason,'~
Ohio State linebacker Matt
Wilhelm said of the rivalry.'
"Being a finalist for this job,
he might have the feeling that
he wasn't good enough."
·
Mason says he still has fond
memories of his days, at OhiO:
State but doesn't look at the
game differently than any
other on his team's schedule. :
"I wanted to beat them real
bad last year and I want tC\
beat them real bad this year;
Just like I wanted to bea1
them real bad the year before
and just like I wa~ted to beai
Murray State real ~a.d. That i1
what my job comes down to;:
Mason said. "I hate' to Jose, I
don't care who I'm playing;
To say I want to beat one
opponent more than anotherj
that's not true. Losing is los•
"
1ng.
·

.

'

.",..... ,..

9ntanla, N.C. 1e01t

Crow's
.Family
Restaurant

·
ANTI-• auteh lerln, lall'l'l Club zoo
1:30 p.m. • Saturday • TNT
• Cr.tt. . . . Truak, Auto Club 200

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Fried Chicken
228 Mllln St.
PDIMI'Oy, Ohto

4:30p.m. • Saturday • ESPN
• Wlntton Cut. PoiiS.Cret 400
12:30

992-5432

-- - 2001 POIN T\ \TANDING\

I. IHclt Audd, 4,282
I. 1ony Stft8f't. 4.HI8
4. Dele Jwrett, 4,1lfl
•· Sttrllrc Merlin. uot
.. Rutty w.tlece, 4,027
7, o. E•mhafdl Jr., :Ut17
.. llobtf Llboote, 3,He
1. ~n Htrvlck. 3.918
:10. Jeff Burton, 3,174

I

•

,·.•'''

\

.

•
I,

.

'j

Child Llttll! , 3.852

Rlclr, C1awfold, 3.140

"""""'Wallacl, 3,!131

Ccr:t Gollm. 2,754

- PitOFitf--··

Bobby Labonte

HN

Winston Cup Sarin

•II:•••·······
Yow1\lm
Llllnls r- a...,
DearNASCAR Thi~ Week .
I w~nled au uk it~~ tw bcea
l dare ~~ • -• f)( )'tt For the
NASCA H. awa rd~~ to be tck!vi!IC'J th i~ yc~r.

Till' rfril•f'r "·1m Jlar lr /lit rurt

AVONDALE, Ariz. - Gre&amp;

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
AVON~LE.

Ariz. -Biffle,

the 2000 champion,

returned tor • rare
appeat'ance and outdueled
Jack Spraaue , who all but
Wt'apped up the serlea
chamJllonshlp.
Spraaue finished second
in the Silverado 150,
foliowEid by Ford driVEir Rick
Crewtord end Stacy
Compton In a Dodte.

unepectacular. He remains
10ti11n the Winston Cup
points standtnas - after ,
finlshln&amp; third In 2000and other than his two
victories, has onlr five mOt'e

FEUD OF THE WEEK

Tony Stllwlrt vs. NASCAR
Stewart spoke out at a -Saturday momtna press
confetence on a wide ranae of topics end reiterated his
differences with tne wey NASCAR mlneges the sport.
He accused NASCAR officials of stcrlficina the quel/ty
of competition by cetertn&amp; to the needs of television. He
elsa SQOke specifically about the dlfflcultles he has
wearing the head-and-neck restraints mandated by

NASCAR.

NAICAR Tllil-k'o Monto
~stewart

-on

II&gt;• hlo

spoke quieti)' In a room unusually
crowded with NAS~AR otflclala, looked ttlem atral&amp;ht In
tha eye and said he dlaaa;reed wltn what they were
doing to the sport. Al;ree wlth him or not, ne wa1n't
b!owlna; smoke."

1
'
,.

•'
~

• fROM THE ARCHIVES

..\

I . . . MIIooklnchl•""'

'

~

:•
'1

..',

(Shown actual size)
Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

IIIIIIIIIDWn•NorW
lpnJ

I

4--tt.

lilo .... -

'

~~

"''""'·

_,..,nder

r:~·

IIIIMtortr1HOtill'

r •.

AD DEADLINE TUES., NOV. 6, 2~~
Trlbules must be pr'.lpald.
~•.
Photos may be picked up alter Nov. 1111\!

..._H.I. Ftanot,

wonttteJ.HI

__

Rookin._. opener In

:::'
Willi No.
,.. .t'""..!,...,..
.

t-.j"

,'(i.

..._fft•Pennaylv.,...

Your Name:

...... CI,.sh.

.

"
,,"

,,

"

(740) 992·2158
'

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2

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......,.

$

1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....

r .....,.u.oee.a-•Tr'n' •

a,...._ htton

WM!'a more,

111

Prl11 , owned~ Joe Glbbt ·
C1rMr ttetlttlct: 290
start, , 17 wlna, 82 top.flve
finishes, 138 top-10
rtnlshu. 21 poles, nearly
$25 mtiUon In esr.nl ngs

.. sd 4

a«ldeflt. 1am just lucky no
one elM ntt me:
MoW r. dO JOU think you
In t1te (llllllntl
ttlntlsiCS? "I am confklent
we can finish In ttle top fl.ve
Flratt: Start (June 2.
In the final point atandlnta.
1991, at Dqver, Del .), pole I feel really &amp;ood about the
(Sept. 9. 1993, at
tracks we are &amp;oln&amp; to.
Richmond, Va.), win (May
'We teated (recently) In
28, 1995; at Concord,
Homeatead and I think
N.C.)
that can help ua at all the
'You eae~PM -~ In a ftet tracks we are 801"1
TIIIMqll. to , and I love Rockln&amp;Mm
"I have said h Defore and
and Atlanta, so 1feel
wlllaay It aaa ln, tl\at It 's
really IOOd ebout our
not really reeln&amp; at ·
chances:

o•" mow."'

......... ,,..lit

BOb~

became the onl~ driver to
follow ul) a Buscn Grand
National tltie (19911 witf'l a Talladeaa.
Winston Cup title .
·Even If I flld won the
He lost tl'lt 1993 rec:e for event, I wouk1 ttlll sey the
Wlr'ltton Cup rookie of the
same thing. To me raclnt Ia
year to another bright
when a driver and team are
youn• dltver. His name was able to outwit and outsmart
Jeff qordon.
their competition both on
Ap:31
and
the racetrack. I
Wife: D.onna
know What the fans SIIW
Ch....n: Robert fyt•r
lut week was probably
excltlng, but to me, It was
(7), Madison Elizabeth (3)
HoMetown: Corpus
terrible.
Chr1stl, Texas
"And that does not count
~w cltlef: Jimmy Makar me sliding on mr roof
,
c.r: No. 18 Interstate
3/lOths of a mue doWn the
backstretch after our
Bl!ltteries Pontiac Grand

o«

HoWH.-ratethe
ltiHn'W MOINI ....,.,
"Thouah we are not happy
With our 2001 aeaeon by
any means, I think when aU
the points are added up,
had

you a1ked ar'l)'one at

the mid-point of tt1e senon
WhO was 80ifl£ tO finish in .,
the top.flve , we would not ·
be

mentioned .

*So, to come back from
10 far down Ism positive
we can take Into the
offseason and use as a
motivation for 2002."

••••••••••••
Who'IHot-

Jcrr.

With ntll)' U lapt to JO In the
race. IMtcad Of showlna who'• taklnJ tht le ~ d . you're 1how ina Jrrr
fi ahtina for ~vmt h orc-i&amp;hth pl...c.
Ktep lhe U 1'11en no tht front and
nu&amp; MJ mud1 ootht pulnt~ lc&amp;Jcr.
1\"s U CIIinJ to Wll\t'h •II lht
bumplnaln tht lutlaps M ~t whn
tllo.""C'~ lo II. nniBh liM .
l .lnda a.ltu

Marlon,Otrto"
Thtu lhcilli&lt;HU fiN' m.lllt br 1/tt
fJtOplt fn dltltRI' II/ 1/H ltlufutl .
tltl'y ""Ill rrmi rltl• lrll"

p,.,,,,,

kfif' .~"ffll f ITfmlfb /11/(1 ("UIIJfd·
trclliurt .
find

X
Ow NASCAR Thi• Wwk.
I wu vt!ry disappoint~ in the
fan1 at the Dowr I'1ICe durina driver
lntmduc:tlon~ . The "'*"hy of driv·
t111 WCK "'booed" with the- ~'-~P·
lion of a few.
I know everyone hu hi1 or htr
favorite(~,. includ)nJ n1y ~ IL E~~~;h
drl~tr ri l k~ hh life eve!')' wttkend
to entcr1ain us, I know rhe dri~cr~
&amp; uppo~dl)"· tune theNc negiltlrr
K~&amp;~:tloo t nut. but I ~till think tht~
all de~erve Kchetr wben they 11rc
introdurtd.

Sanh Smith
Rildloro, N.C.
"~' ''Rrt~ " itll ) rn~ . b111 !Itt' fi m 1
hm'i' llrt rlttlil lll t.tfl"'n thtrfl~IL1'1
1111 lhty Ut f/t. fl 1&lt;"/JI//d /It: lli('t f/
IItty dtmr '" br pmill•·r , hnr botJ:t
{lff'IJ {Jflrlll} uf/ sprNIInRfl'i'/HJ.

Who'aNot

1. Who was the first driver tu win in four
different makes of cars al North Carolina
Speedway?
2. The 1973 Carolina 500 h8d the fewest lead chan&amp;es
in Rockingham his.tor y. How many were there?
.
3. What distance must a track ll8 to be considered a

• HOT: Jeff Burton now
has a second w!n to ao
with top.lO finlahesln 1111
of his lest elif1t races.
• NOTr Todd Bodine has
failed to flnlah 11 races ,
more than artY other

superspeectway?

X
lmr NASCAI'fllh Wtek,
I am h~tpp)' to !!et NASCAR
fl11ally 111r1 ~ hnwing M,moe 51!Me
IMd pllllifl(l a 510p 10 thil bumpinJ
~~&lt;~~neunc out to get ahead ln:fmiAJ
lu Kevin Haf\'ick).
They let thlilt ~rk Eurnh1rd1 ~~
•w•y with !hat for IQI.J iooJ.

drlver.

I.Nkdy
Monlpdkor,Ohlu

••••••••••

Johnny Benson says the HANS device carne In handy

ly Morita Dutt.n
NASCAR This Week

ju~1

··Atlif!lll criticized i!vcrybod~ !IllyIna: whl:n they'd j!Ct in a wlt..'dl. 'Oh
man. thal lhin11 ~ved m)' life: but I'll
Johnny lkn!IOII now fetl8 that tcH you what. I'm Sflii!J to so rishi
NASCAR mandated llnd·and· l*k bmind lhml oow wnd SIIY ltuc it w*' 11
l"e!llfalnt~ a1: the ri,tlttime.
damn good lhln!j: I had thut thinJ on
In IM tat.:lr.wir lti·lup accident heci!LY I hill~ Wli.ll Hwful huttl:·
Ckt. 21 a! Talladc~11 fAiu .l SuperX
~pe.!dway. lknson Wll.'i weatinJ il
HANS device for the liNttlqte . Hi~
ON•: SUGG.:STJON: Dale Jar·
PontiiiC Wtlll hcild-{ln iiiiO"I he b!ICk- rettlhln~~ t~ an~wt!J to NASCAR"s
~lltt~·h wulllllo.'ioile lo 200 mph.
contllWcrsy o~cr rt~triclur· pkuc rac;t'~
"II Wlls pn:ny big ha:au:c m)' neck mi1h1 bt 5!rw llercn~t~ine~.
t.lne~n·t hun at ull .'" Ben!IOI\ Sl\~ uflcr
"I d1\fl.t huve !he tolnlcln,wc-rll~ to
wulkiu~ !11" 11)". ··My l."iltlll hurt~~ lillie \\-hut wnulll be heuer."' Jnrrett ~aid.
hit from the HANSdevltthrc!lli'Oe it"s '" NI\SCA R is mukin11t he en·on l1l
goin~ M work in that urt~. but l"d c h" n~l' till: rulo . I ' till 1110111d hkt' tu
flllher hv vc "!Y dlest hun thun m)" S&lt;.."l! u~ try a snVJIIercublc·inch engine
ned; hun . M )' ned; i~&lt; in pi:riC...11y und !'I.'C ihl-e c11n'r doMlllll."'hi ng there .
Tiley cnuld m:1lc it Wi ~mall m• they
~ood .Wrv-

want tt1 kMII the speed~ dov.-n 111ld
then tna)·be M~ric!ot plulc wu.1kl
no1 br ~"~C"CeJ.wy."

X

·

IT -KEEPS "IM OCCUPU:D:
Phomix hck.l foo r fliCt'l&lt; m"fr tiJC W«io;·
end - Fea~htrlite Southwe'lt on Tuur

Thvn.day, Cnlft!lffiall Troch ron Frid~y .
&amp;!~~.:h Unuld Nriiii"II\UI o-.1 Suturd.lv an..l
Winston Cup on Snntluy - ar11i Ken
&amp;.ilrudcr~·c~nlpct~'tl in all of1t.: m.

"'Phoeni•

i~ olway~

a favorite for

beings blw:k .I lol or
merrooriell. In ahoor 197'il, tht flr!it bis
ro~~:in~ trip I took ww; to Pbomi1. '1M:
loadt:d up nod droVe: down from St.
Loui~ . and I rnnrmber thlnkin&amp; tiw "
wt.n a big deal il ww.; to run hm ."
Wh.ot else i~ there for u n.."l!r ll)o,b?
"S..onJC pet&gt;plc th inl. it"s .:nu~ that
rm runnin! all Four of the rae~."
Sdmllkr :;.uicl. "hut all that time ~l lhc
!niCk. I coukl either he in 11 r&lt;~~.'e car nr
lilt hccu u~.it

sittllll! lltlhe rooturi11111~ . l ·d ruther br
my hohhy." Schrudcr smd. "When the rud np:. Mii t "'~~ 11 no·bruioll:r fur me:·
oppnnunity was ~1oC!Ited ln me to
.run "li the ta:e• ill Ph&lt;~ni~ - r o;ouldn"t
I'IRST TIME HERt;: Bohby
SIL)' no. At fir:-t I wa,n 'tttoin!! tu run
the Busch na. bu11hen 11!01 u ~IOfl­ Hnmilton\ fiNl Win-.tton Cup ~A-Ill!)'
~ for tile ~·u r 1o1 • I dt:t:itk-d tn run th!tl ,-.:.·url\'d 'at Pho.:rll~ lntcrrmtlnlllil
nnc, too.
ltut·cwuy.on 0..1. 27. 1996.
" RIII."i 1J8

i~n·l

jU,IIII) job: it"• 111"'1

·x

·-WII-ilk-·

•

992-2155

MIIHI:
1' -

.•

See us lor Your Slihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

otr a '"ond piiCt ftnlah,

..,..1,

tho botl ol
due to 1 declalon
bJ CNW otllef hter

.._.. _lwo

tlrniMtiMI Df fwr,
Jeff Burian w.. able
to &amp;•t by W.llace, but no

St. Rt. 248

Chester

985·3308

one .... wu.Atln
Mweral rHM earlier In
tl\e year, tl\e tall-Off In
the perfonunce o1

......,.'l

Well•t•s fOI'd Wll

mlatmal.

11rona: runt .. net Jolnlnl
tM No. 2.2 tum are
htiPifll him MOUre 8
ride

tor next ,,.,,

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

""

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45888

afliiiP

•••

Dur NASCAR Thl~ Wed!.
We rcallu Jeff Oonlon ia the
point• ltlldtr. but we would lite to
watdl the front olthe raee . and not

...

Sl

Place Your Business's Ad here.

~-------------------~ :
~be llailp 6enttnel

Jollll~ftlll.,..
7

AROUND THE GARAGE

e-loot---"'
,.,..,.........
....,....._
.._..

' .n. ....... _

'I

X

Biffle won for the fifth time
NASCA.R This, week
this seaaon, halpln• owner
Jack Roush pull off a three·
Bol:lb)' Labonte realized a
race Ford swWp &amp;\ PhOIInlx I! llfelon&amp; dream and rnac:le
International Raceway.
hit mark on NASCAR
Jeff Green finished
hlttory with his 2000
second, and Kevin Harvlck,
championship .
who leads the points
Bo.bby and older brother
stendln&amp;t by 198, waa ttllrd .
Terry, who won Winston
HII'ViOk nHdl Only tO flnllh
Oup titles In 1984 and
25th or better In tn.
i896, are the only
season's flnel two event• to
brothers ever to both win
win the championship,
championships.

Lowe's Motor SpeerJway In
Me)'- hi a eeuon has been

,

lfrlr rrwlll j11r 1/tt ptlilfl.l .

IUICH QIIAND NATIONAL

go and

Dplnlon:

Conflict!War

Dnr NASCAR. Thi~ Week ,
When 1 driver I~ ~ubstituted for
durlnJ &amp; gee, Who SCII lhr poinl.~"!

... .

coaatlna to about a 40.Car·
lenllth vlctorr at Phoenix
International Raceway,
tucked In the ahadow of the
Estrella Mountains.
Burton defended his
viewy here a year a&amp;o and
won for the second time this
season . Ottler than his
.vlctorlet - here and at

I
I
I

I

X

flnllhes In the tOp five In 32
races.
Ricky Audd finished third ,
followed by Matt Kenseth
and Tony Stewart.

with 32 laps to

...

Branch ol Service

Tllr lu.mqiH'I IJ .u·/i,.,fwlrJ fnr
rrid11_
,. lfiflhr, Ntll'. JO. /1 "'ill 1w lrlrPI..-d m1 TNT fru"' 9 p..lfl. ''' U
fl .111 . Etullrtt IIIIW .

_roolly_tho_

ease, passln&amp;
upset-mlndad
Mike Wallace

-

l.ew.ult,N.C.

- - · . . . ...

But Burton went to the
Arizona desert
and won the
Che~~er 1500k
with relative

~~"~

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Dates of Active Duty

Track .-ltfrtnc r.aant:
Busch , Ford . 177.388 mph,
Od't. 27 , 2000
tt... raard: Busch, Ford,
144.260 mph, Oct . 28,
2000

.......

~ln
... No.4
_.....,.._

and sport thirt than cOWbOY

II

In Honor of (name and rank)

What: Auto Club 200
When: 4:30 p.m.. Seturdlly 1
Whtfll: CaUfomla
·
Speedway, Fontaue (2 miles),
100 laps/200 miles
Dele...... ah...pkln: Kurt
BuJCh

r.t~.3,412

Jlmrnll .Johnton, 3. ~ 0.0011 s.tar, 3,146

AVONDALE, Ariz . - Jeff
Burton Is a native of
southern Vif1inie. He It·
more comfortable In kl'lakll

''"'..

Phone:

ley doe1 ."
Mil&lt;e Maddry alill help1
coach the linemen.
Probably
their
finest
~chievement was holding
down explooive Waterford
tailback Dan Doebereioer to
under 100 yards. The junior. DoLINI -Pictured ere from lett. front: Josh Cleg, Jon Will,
had over 1,200 going into R.J. Gibbs. Beck: Chez Ven Sickle, Tyler Faulk, Brent Buckley,
Travis Batey, Caoy Faulk.
the game.

Club 200

8.
(7) - ~--·..-.
9. (:10)
lluoty· E l f I bs•&amp;
:10, (I) llolibr .......

Add reM:

Buck-

Noteblt: Mart in, the
winnln&amp;elt driver on this
~rock qui~- =
Wilen: 1:30 p.m., Saturtlay circuit. no lonaer runs In the
Rusey Wallace, FOf"d, 158.035
Busch Series .... In 1987,
W...: Norttl Carolina
mph , teo. 25, 2000
Speedway, Rockin&amp;ham
the sl)l'i111l race was
R--.NOOrd: Jeff Burton .
(1.017 miles ) , 196
cance lled due to snow.

w...t: Sam's

~ RU., 3,767
Atcllrl'lerdicK. 3.2'18
Melaufllln, 3,670Terry Cook. 3.177

bOOta and hit.

Your choice Of 1\vo Styles... r--------~----------~
Please Fill Out And Retum Wdh I
Ad Only $7.00
Your Payment to: ·
I
(shown actual size)
VETERAN SALUTE

Corporal Bob
Johnson
1991·1992
Marines
Desert Storm

124.397 mph , Oct. 19,

FROM LAI TWEEK

t/aorua,;a

In Honor Of

Dofoo&lt;lln&amp; ...,.,..., Oele
Jauett

Martin
Tteok .....,.. . NOOI'd:
Martin, ForCI , 154.583 mph,
feb . 25, 2000
Reot record: Martin. Ford ,"
1996

IUICH GRAND NATIONAL

Mile

7. (I) .loll liNton

On Not~t~mber 11, our nation ..,Ul paUIIe to pay tribute to else
men and ..,omen. ..,ho have proudly •e,ed their country during tfliaea
crile• and peace.
'J
Tim Yeteran ~ Day,.the
Daily Sentinel
"'iU pubU.h a Nry •JH!clal
tribute honoring area oo(eraJU. You can join In our 1alu1e by lndudiM the
Hleran in your life, li11l"'f Of' decea1ed, "'ho ha11e le,ed or iJ crurendy
ISI'IIing In any branch of the U.S. Armed Fore••·

Love, Your FamUy

NOtaiM: The races at
Rock ingham chanieg from
500 to 400 miles in 1995.
... Turns three and four have
three more degrees of
banklna; than Ont!! and two.

•• (I) - - - _ , _ _ tile_

...~.

Heroes

VietNam

Joe Ruttman. .J,.t50

WUt: Pllp Secret 400
WitH: Green flag drops at
1 p.m •• Sunday
lfn..t.: North Carolina
Speedway. Rockingham
(1.017 miles), 393
laps/399.6 miles

CfiiAmMAN TAUCK

-.a1nc .........: M•rk --===:::::..:..:::::::__

1999

3. (4) __, Rudd
Cue ?' lllledplac•-.h
4. (3) D.lanj-Jr, - - 8. (8) - Moo 1 ltulplnlolop:IO

~

.:~:

Your Veteran

Tl'allll Kwt'll, 3,401

I. (:I)
2.
(2J ,~~~~..,._

.

Kenny Wlggln~ieri&lt;'

....

Photo of

fll:on ~. 3,791

~

FOJd , 131.103 mph, Oct 24, lapi/ 199.3 mllee

WINSTON CUP

..,_,theses.

HonorUti'f!

Ad With Photo- $14.00

Jeelt

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

· .NASCAA Th~ 111!ek writer Monte DJtton - • 1!\etop 1 0 - .
heaOila Into this 'MietterJj's race. !Jist week-s mnttlf'l9 amlrt

Paid for by Sutton rowrlotvp riU8-.s

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army

~. 3. ~
Rltll. 3,4~

1\avin HM'olk:lt, 4,596
.Nft Grew~, 4,3H
MIWln Keller, 4,311!
Gr.. tllfflll.4,211

TO~

Thanks for your support-

In Honor Of

p.m. · Sunday • TNT

:1.. ,., Gordon, -4,862

Drive-Thru Window

On Nov. 6th

We would appreciate your support In
votlno for the 0.4 mill replacement levy
for the ouroose of malntalnlna
.and operatlna cemeteries.
• This Is to repla~e the current 0.4 mill
Cemetery levy which
expires Dec. 31 this year.
• FOr Five (5) years
...

, wrtt.:

NAICAII-cr{a
21001.-·-

.

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

__

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9:
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�P8ge B 4 • The Dally

Senllnei~...------.;..-----~P=OI:m:•::o~y,~lll:d:d'=:p:ort,~Oh:lo:.-----------~~

TbursdQ. Nov. 1, 2001

Nov.1, 2001

. ._[_~.::_;a_m_,H'

tErihune - Sentinel We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

_.

!!"-·-

:: f&lt;ll

alb-

Mg'

.......

both tar - - - - - - - FGr (2) 111114 Cooto SS. (l)bjMo- (1)

~
- · 74CI-742·7243.
-742-41327.

Soc-

7

•

. . , _ ,

- .To- .

.

•.•ssr.-

(304) 675-1333

-oo.--.S3500.
j

I

::j

Prtvltl Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 oavs • each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads

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Avenue, Galll~olls, OH 456ll

• tnclud• Phone Numta.r And Aeldnss Whltn Heeded

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ltwul4

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~

~

•n.

P.'IO

•

• 1 yr. aid fciK TOI'riot,
2old pupo,
: ' (740)811 ,..,

1001~

6S04 Lllvl M

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I 1-FoniF·150,300,8dV.
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I d'llol ol oquol value. or 1I * F·250 4x4 Red
lor S3000. Cell 123,000 mtioo. Ctoo.omO
Nool 1304)1175-854C)
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(700)-.a 1101!11

CoiNo
""""'"· 111112 Fool - . E-.
· lllo whltot 1orrt RunninG Condition. 11115 Cl1oYy Ext Cob. 4x4,
eoo/DtdiiiNI.
1101m11 - · Conlltlon,
Body IIOd 1 - 1n Fair 5.7- · Eo~oHo,.. ConcJ.
a 1400.,P.
(740)815n101!5.
1750. (100)256- lion, $12.200 OBO. L11v1
,
.
1428
M1 oge, Wil R-.. Col.
• AKC Gotden Rebt1wr
(7~1448 48al

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7

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:•(740)2455358
~ ':;.,~~

5:30pm Bolh ""'· (304)882-2212
or,...... mo ego.
2000 Jeop Wrlngler Sport.
1988
Plymouth Rltlanl 4 ~• 51p, AJC, Cnill, 231&lt;
. _ Slilphonl pupo, cy1
uto
• mllu. 18 000 (304)875--

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·•

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.
F·1 50 4x4, llr, am11rn
10,000; B8 CIO
- · 1·e-,$1u11
. . - noor,
(740)1182-7!67.
115

r•

MoiOIICVfl!IS
Ha~ey

11183

~LHT,

!

DIMdoon

Etotra-gtlde, """·
blue, 42,000 ori1oa, toJrpadc,

~~ ":11

'"'!:;

8pm.

111118

300EX. $3,200 010.

Good couditlooo wfthlew IX·

uu. (700J379-1258
For

shot just 15-for-31 at the foul
line. Paul Pierce led the Celtics with 36
points. Kidd werit 8•for~8 from the
I"me, h"tttmg ux consecutive .C.a
uce throws
in the fourth quarter to protect the
lead when Boston closed within one.
"Jason 1s. a ·'81'~, that knows how and
when to score, Nets coach Byron
Scott said. "He knows what has to be
d
dh d
. "
• one, an.
e oes lt.
•
Trail Blazers 92, Warrao~a 87
B
. 'Y' II
. d h" . . .
OnZI ..,e S conttn~~:e IS lmp~"!IIVe
comeback from a senous knee InJUry,
scoring a career· high 33 points for host
Portland
• • .
.
•
Scottie P1ppen, held tp two pomts on
1-of-5 shooting in '1\tesday night's sea·
son-opening loss .to the Lakers, made ·
d
.
10 of 14 shots and score 26 pomts.
Damon Stoudamire added 12 assists.
Antawn Jamison scored 23 for the
0

1988 Goidwlna
......r.
..., tires and bltleoy.
17500· (700J448-7B77 Sale-

GL1500- .-.~~y

0

0

..._
up mo1 box

(i~rt~~;.;;;~

or ,...... , _ "

..- -G.-Aid,_.
=-:!::..·- - - - Phone (3Q.I)815'1!745 "llor 1983 DOdgl Dvnat'Y. .........

a

$1700. New Tirtl, Good
: ' Richards BOOIMni Fruit Woo1o Cor. (740)25&amp;-8002 Are vou looking for anginll
Finli APPLia AND
or toanoonlallona? Glvoo mo
11ucH IIORI. 24 mllu 111115 Bulcl&lt; St&lt;ytarlc, Vory 1 colt at (740,_19
NOOh ol Glillpollll on CCoun- Good Condition. Sharp, ::--..:...-'-c--=-"--:121100· (740)245-90e0 . luclgll 7. lyly ~-~;48~-~(7;40)~2~86~·580~.
lnnoml•
:-::
111118 Mutma IIUio, M T-. ,._To
Vlrgll"l Beny Pllcli, Elllol 011r ,_, ooo1 38 000 OYer 10,000 Tronoonilllonl.
8ynoculo on Aou1a 12• lila •
'
Trons1er CUM, 740-245., i.3pm.
7

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5:,..,:-=;;~=~ ~19J~. ~~~ m~~~~~n
=: (700l"B-311!:-

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=~~~~1 :111 (740)742-:11152
11187 Fool Yin, IUIDCoekor 5pon1o1 Pupplol1 chair 1m., 11187 c~wyo~«
. FUI ,Bioodod Pll'8ill on Yof118r, Look&amp; ond
. Pnm. I . $150. (740)o148- """"good. (304)875-3734
. . 21188
1158 • door Chovv Clv•
·· Rot •••r Puppy, mate, 11 tier. $800. Cal (304)882·
old, dog bo11, c1111r. 3003-epm.
. ' colo&lt; 1ood Hili II VIOCini, · _ _. $150 010. No Po- 11188 Bulcl&lt; - · 3.8,
..., - . (740}'41-&lt;»50 (DIVIJ. pw. pt, po, lir. am'lm cu(740!441-9658 ce-tnaol ~· (7~~ 1':\" S2300
• a UKC
Rat Toortor pupti.
.. $150. Cah Firm. tolls 1988 Honda- LX· Ill,, doclood &amp; 1•- on IOmltic, ouno good, 1oo1oo
.. po•• I n . (304)703-3308 - ' SZOOO. 300-4175-21187
· :·
1992 Goand Polo&lt;, se. v-e,
La1i Pupp1eoo KC NC. Powor
: · Aagiltertd szoo. Each. Tlreo. $3,000. (300)875Alldv to Gol (304)875- 787V
_4488
111112 Plymouth ~Flumi
4
~-·
Door.
'
Vi
rce.ooo2mlleL
GoodAppfox.
Condl..
~ lion. 11400. (700)448-387'

The Raptors are off to an 0. 2 start
for the second year in a row.
Pacers 9&amp;, Bulls 73
Jermaine O'Neal scored 20 of his 25
points in the second half as Indiana
ruined Chicago's season opener.
O'Neal scored 12 points to spark a
17-2 run, twice starting threeapoint
plays with dunks as the visiting Pacers
went ahead 82-66 with just over six
minu1es left.
·
O'Neal shot 9-of-15 - 8-of-1 0 in
the second half - and also had I 0
rebounds . Jamaal Tinsley added 12
points and J 3 assists for the Pacers .
Brad Miller scored .24 for the BuUs,
who manag~d just 29 second-half
points and nine in the final quarter.
Ron Mercer added 22.

While the Nets are the only 2-0
t cam, the aval"1ers and"z
""'Pt o n are the
only teams widt 0-2 records.
Boston had a chance to take the lead
with Kenny Andenon at the line for
two. free throws with 15.2 seconds left
d h N'
1 di 93 92, b h
an t e eu ea ng
ut e
missed both.
"Confidence can sometimes be your
worst enemy," Andenoll said. "I went
.
h"Ink"mg I W"as
. gomg
· to
up to t he 1met
put . it in overtime, at least. But I

II"·

1m~CJ5wlndolor (740J247·2981 ·

Warrion, who gave Pordand a to11gh
*chaUeng~. but lo&gt;t to the Blazers for
the ninth •traight time.
WeUs tore a ligament in his lett knee
April 6 and wasn't exp~ct~d to return
this JOOn.
· Heat 97, Raptort 92
At Miami, Alonzo Mourning scored
25 poin" in 33 minutes and had help
from five newcomers as the Heat won
their season opener.
The Raptors cut an eight-point
deficit to one in the final three minutes
before Eddie Jones sank a 3-pointer
witlt 23 seconds left to make it 94-90.
Mourning had 10 rebounds, blocked
four shots and ~xhibited more stamina
than he showed after returning late last
season from a kidney ailment.

• .

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010

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• ltlrt Your Ads Wltft A KerWord • lncludl Complete
OIICttj)tlbn • Jntludl A ,tltt • AvOid MbtavlltiOI\1

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WRITE A.li ~
Succeuful Ads
Should Include Thtse ltema
To Melp Get Retponse ...

,

Congratulations are in order for the
New Jeney Nets. Right now, they are
B
th~ only N A team with a 2-0 reco~.
Jason Kidd had 21 pointJ, I 0 assists
and eight rebounds Wednesday night :u
the Nets, who led by :u many as 25,
held off the Boston Celtics 95-92.
Todd MacCuUoch had 12 points and
12 rebounds for New Jeney, which
beat Boston for the first timt! in five
tr1"es.
•
"It's the way we want to star:t ' the
year," forward Keiih Van Horn said of
the Nets, who were two ...
.,... mes above
500
o
e
I
t year before they lost
·
nc as
f&lt;ll mort iolom-• e11; , _ wl rodoo 5011 nine consecutive games to fall to 6-13.
45
:.
:
RoV ~~oyoo (3111)1175-2421
- . " ""'
.- .w-~DIIInicold-or_,_
we Icarned a Iot fro m I:utyear."
1818111 . - . .000 ·'•tip Tnodc T-. szoo 43115
(740,_7877
In .other NBA games, Portland beat
10
-:· Flml Col (740l2- · Hay 1
no
Golden State 92-87, Charlotte defeated
• -·..... bi!ING ~~
:1!...,.-....
0=
+Willi
Cleveland 100-94, Miami edged
:SIHus
lite.
Hlrillgl
Foom.
. Toronto 97- 92 and Indiana beat
·•
(304)1175-5724.
11186 $-10-. 4WD, AT, Chicago 98-73

In One Weak With Us
RIACH OVIR 185,000 PROSPECTS _
YOUR AD
ONLINE

lll

Kidd Nets Wl·n agaan
•

Led by

part...

'•
:• - . T"'*''l 1 T-- -. """"' ond :............ Po I' I ..r 111 Lozy·fU ,.._ea.,. _, 511500 · (74D1'41-7877
•• T - COl! The Dr. ,___ Goad Coo 1 I
18115 ~
:: 140 •• 181
s1100. (301)175-8o14Cl • . PS. PB, PW, &gt;/1,
.• Iiii.., 1 dol ow IIIII¥,...
lir1lnd ooo11m1 1 o,.,.
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dlr - • 10 "Y· -.g
100
· (740)448o
=~
•• - . , -CooiPftlll!2:00, (7.oo)&gt;l' 1100
:{, lor oma11 ooa1 mint.
1'lucKs
.. .- or1ump~.,O.:.
10018.\u
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100
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Spdll:: 3U 200
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2404
llaat15 "" 100: 1• 200 SZ.to. - - S15.oo ·
•• Pl1 137.00 P• 1110: All ~
Fat 1• Fool F150.
.~-in
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I
I Ringo F
Co 300 • cyl .• - · 511150·
(740)448o7877
• •liON DAHl~ II now ••= lwiQ tobtfiooo.
·,• a - . 01m. 1._. fltlt 11111 we ba - - 14. Rlr_1_,T_1.,.

1

HOW

NAT I 0 N A L BASKETBALL ASS 0 CIA T I 0 N

12

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lmd,- loll.. .COl!-,..ald.11
j GT.
oooa-•
_ - -12:l.l (1~n I Dillow (74111251- - a l i i gating. F11on1J, ..,_. p ,; 1*11.
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"'

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

'

7

GUNNER - New Jersey's jason Kldd (5)
shoOts a three ·pointer over the arms of
'Boston's Kenny Anderson, rf&amp;lrt, In the
fourth quarter of the Nets 95-92 Victory
over the Celtlcs In Boston, Wednesday.
(AP)

,

.

.

:; ~(7~==-~v~~;~$$:= .Hornets·sting Cavaliers_, 100~94
I \I '\ I 'I 1'1' 1 II '
,\ I I\ I • II H h

--~----.

111.800. (304)87H440
85 ElCimlnO SS, Int. ·&amp;"ext.
In good coudllion, dotvet,
runt, but netdl worto,
$2500: 93 Cavalier, auto,
looloo good, run1 good,
11800, (700)1192-6566·
85 Ponlloc Bo Ilia
30000 ac1ua1 ....;n~
•
v.~.-.a..
. '·
-oooidltlon.
1417
~ or (700)256-

; .$1.:.00;.;._ _ _ _ __
Two P235 15 Inch II"""
$30. Two P205 14 .Inch
u.... $20. (140)387·7729

CHARLOTTE• N •C• (AP) to be able to get the guys
-Trailing Cleveland by dou· going and you have to find
CWmls &amp;
ble digits and stru.....ring to .....,. to do it;' Davis said.
MoroRHOMI!S 1
...,
spark the offense, Baron Davis "Some nights it's not going to
1979 11oga Motor homo 20' caught the attention of his happen, but when everyone is
380 v·8· o~
I • Iacka'z
.. al , 1ts
. ' up. to
-•• c·'"'j
· •teammates coming out of a paymg
UitiSIC
10
. ~~4wclwhh 1Qodor~
Too
new porto
':; timeout and mouthed "My the point guard to try and
· ~5.I500. Niw Hotllncl881~
fault."
that's what I was doing."
From that point on Davis
If the rest of the Hornets
; · 4wd. tractor 80hp. rentll
UOilt 487 houre. 1utt waoranty. '92 Otdl AQhievol, 2 door,
.
,
•
$23,500., New Hot'-"" PS. PB, PL. auto. air,
HoME
took 1t upon himself to get turned up the energy, it was
·.· tronemllllon
3010 4wcl. tractor1 42111
8&gt;&lt;2 amllml-•, .11400 ·
IMrlro\IEMI!NIS
Charlotte back in the. e·
.,.me.
only to. feed Davis
the. baU.
doUble (700)591-7075
.
.", "vo1voo, S18,1500.. Ulld New 95 Clievv eorvotto. white
IAtEIIENT
He scar~ 21 .of his career-, Dav11, ":'ho IS on the verge
- ~~= whh Old ln-. GIUI 1'001,
WATERPIIOOF1NCI
high 33 pomts m the fo11rth of beconung one of the pre185 houro sv,500., UHCI dull climlta controlttko' ~w' Uncondltlonlllffellme guar· quarter, lifting the Hornets to mier players in the NBA, used
New Holland 4830 2wd toac- powar oea1I,
·~
antee. Loc:al reforencel fur·
.
.
•
f
1
_~ tor !!lhp whh 7310 lolcler za,ooo miles. S18.995. nlohed. Established 11175. a 100-94 season·opemng VIC- a nux o reverse ayups, stron.g
.. 9117 hours 1 (700)448·898 1
Celt 24 Hre. (700)
tory over the Cavaliers on drives to the basket and a pau
870 · 1"800"287"0578· '"ednesday night.
• :S1',900.,
UHCI
Ford
3010
95
Muatang
Purple.
47,000
of3·pointers
to raUy
the Hor118C10r 2wd 42111 1 """" mllao
good oorodRton. Aogora Wateoproollng.
w•
.
.
d
· 18,900., Uoed Pord 4810 $&amp;4(lC)., 3 1111 o1 uHCI tlroa
"As a point guard, you have nets fiom • -15·pomt secon troctor 52hp 2wol ROPS dlfforent prlclo. (304)875-- C&amp;C Genoral Home Malnte· ·
·
Ia~ pu~9,900.. UHCI :."::54:,______ .....,.. Painting. vinyl aid· ;.~ Lb!:.t &amp;
~
1ng, caopontry, doorl, win·
•$8,900., Ulld o.utz 00011 91 Clirytlll' t.eeamn Con- dowl, ba11io, mobile home
~':"'':":'-:-'":'::':'"'~"':"
4011p RoPI and vtt1iblt, sz,ooo. (74())307· -lr IIOd more. For 1'"
110 H I W.I'!Wd
110 Help Wanted
· 4wd • ·conopy 12oo houre 0880 (740)387-7272.
Htlmele
c:a1t Chat, 7o40-1192· ~;.;;;;;
·
;;;e;.p:;~;;;
·
~=;;j
632 3
·· S7
800B.ctmoe
Ulld John
00118
::•;;.·-=~---:-., GIHII Melge Colllmunlly Aollon ~
3tOA
&amp; Loador 91 Oynuty,greotcondllion,
to 800 John Deere Gator ot1 chango&lt;l ragularty. Good
.,..,..,.....,...,
Ia _IICoeptlng appiiOIIIoM for IIIII full
. ~..2 uNci83••.;,Dhn
=~·~~:~~
lbniGiliiATION
tline poeltlon, whloh wll M liMed It
actooy
ump ate.
(700)379-9081
our Galllr:l• 1-n:
.., . bod,
moro oldouura$5,000.,
=~=:,:.:.:.c.-~:- Residential or cornmerclat
~1'"
" New Holland 1488 11' Hay· 9.1 unootn Towncar and ita wlnng,
or reEducaJSpepi.,IIJ Will provide and/or
',blne $10,500 .. New Holland a beeutyl "''oklo, auto Hghl palre. Muter Uconold alae· arrange for asaeaement, educational, and
266 Rlice sa,ooo., New Hot· dlmmor. \700)048·11823 or blclan. Ridenour Electrical, remediation services to youth and idult
•
: "S5.200.,Naw
In 130 140 Holland
au Spreador
1700)'-48443
WV000308.
3CM-CI75-17 BBcustomer&amp;.
PosHion
wlllaleo
aeeltt
other
Per
Hour
185 ·-::,.;...-:-:----;-----7-:----,
· "287 au Sponder Hvd tndg- ,..Shop at homt '
staff In providing a full range of
ate tandom uto 19,500 .. ·
...
.
, ,.
employment and ·training ~ervlcea .
FulUPart
=-=·~~~. 31~...::
Emphasis will ~on ltrvlng youth age14OFFICE
, "'" suoo., Alf'Naw Hoi· i.;;d~::,·~-~=:=~:=:;=:===::!. 21. Position wlllr~qult:a regular relmbumd ENVIRONMENT
_tand new tractoro and
travel In Gallla County and occaaiOnal
.
110 Help Wanted
.., oqulpmont
- nnanclng
VALUE
relmbur&amp;ed
!ravel
1 888 974-JOBS
BONANZA 0%
ror
p _,.1
1 outaldl
fo Gallla County.
.._
1
38 montho or cuh . - . ..
Don on requ rea 1. ur·year w...,ree n
PART•TIME COLLECTOR
~~:~~.:::~ teaching canHicate and •
, VANMAR YM 11500 Toactor.
. dfaul, 3 point hftch. sz.150.
Formers Bonk &amp; Savings co., Pomeroy.
To apply aubmll the following: reeuma,
. :· Aalo, n.w 4' flnllh mower.
compleled GMCAA apPlication form, copy
IIIII In erato, $850. Shipping Ohio Is seeking a part-time collector (o
available. Located lull out· maximum of 35 hours per week) for Its of teaching canlflcate, and copy o1 driver's
. · oldf ol Huntsvtle, ~ ~58) Pomeroy office. We are looking for license before 4 PM, Wednesday,
• 778-0435 www.maynerde· someone with collections experle.nce.
November 14, 2001.
· :.qulprnent.oom
good communication &amp; computer skills. Applications may. be· obtained and
Responsibilities/duties Include but not submitted at the following locatlona:
limited to making dolly phone calls.
Ohio DepL or Job I&lt; Family s.ntcea
preporotlontmalllng
of
form
collection
443 Buckeye Hilla Raid, Rio 'Orondo
..
GMCAA Mlln Off1a
· , Tal&gt;e Sew. Cell (304)675- letters. preparation of repons. . utlllzoflon
1888 Love Message,
of computer to facilitate dolly
8010 Nortll Slate Route 7, Cheshire
responsibilities. personal conta~t with
GMCAA Ga!Ua One Slop
customers, filing small claims., osslsftng full
420 Silver Brtdae P,laza, Oalllpolis
ftme collector.
GMCAA Melp Oftlce
' •:!Vf. old Mule - rocle, .....
Send cover letter and detailed resume
186 Mulbeny Avenue, Pomeroy
o1 gated Jock. $1500. to Formers Bonk. Attn: Human Resources
Appllcatlone may be requeatld by phone
. .. (300)576-3259
Director. P.O. Box 626. Pomeroy, Ohio by calling 740.367·7342 ext. 27 or 740.
457/f."/. Farmers Bank Is on Equal Housing 992 6829 ext. 27 before No\lember 8.
'"
Angua Steer, t 112 yea11 Lender, Member FDIC, and Equal Gallla·Melgs Community Action Agency
·.old. Grain Fed. Apprqx. Opportunity Employer.
Equal Opportunity Employer
•,800- 900 lba. Beat Ofleo. L - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . 1 .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. .___ __
(700)441-1182
•

.
OCT.&amp; NOV. FARM
EQUIPMENT SPECIALS
• ' KEEFM'B BEIMCI C!N• TI!R ST. RT. 87 POINT
. PLEASANT/RIPLEY RD.
--··PHONE
(300)895·387'
, ·Holllnd 7810 II8CIOr
,•

780

r

7

777

•••

°

•

"*

::U

gee•• :!.

:

r- .,_____,,
now-

I

NOW
HIRING
$6 ·$8

n""'

Buy from the Classlfledsl

;============:,

::F

half de"cit.
,_.
"Baron can do whatever he
wants to whenever .he peneul
trates like he did," coach Pa
Silas said. "He's got to keep the
mindset that he can ta ke anyone off the dribble and do just
about whatever he wants to
out there."
He proved it by opening the
fourth quarter with a reverse
layup that drew a foul. The
ensuing free throw cut Cleveland's lead to 75-73.
The 22-year-old point
guard then scored on the next
three possessions, hitting on a
three straight drives to the bas·
,

ket to tie the game at 79.
David Wesley gave the Horts th . fi t I d 0 f th h If
ne
etr rs · ea
e a
on a 3·pointer feql to him by
Davis, and Davis sqored CharIottes next nine points for a
91-85lead with 3~6 to play.
D aVIS,
· W hose 21 rrourt h•
arter points tied a franch 1'se
qu
,
record, also had nine assists
and no turnoven. He shot 11for-20 from thcilloor, S· for-12

fropo:t~~s~ line anAd•.hit three 3-'
·
Cleveland
' •rd Andre
Miller, who has played a,.inst
o·
Davis for years and was teammates with him this summer
in the Goodwill Gamel, said
the Cavs' strategy on Davis

backfired.
"Our goal was to ha'
Baron shoot from the outsid,
which we accomplished, b•
unfortunately he was feelin g
from out 'there;• ·Miller ''
"He was able to get to th r 1."
ket and really create &gt;pace.
This was one of his better
games.''
Jamal Mashburn added 22
for the Hornets and Wesley
had 18. Elden Campbell finished with 10 points and 12
rebounds .
Miller, who averaged 18
points in four games against
the Hornet5 last season, scored
22 for the Cavaliers.
Cleveland, which dropped
to 0-2 under first-year coach
John Lucas, had aU five starters
in double figures. Chris Mihm
scored 13, Michael Doleac had
12, Lamond Murray ,II and
Wesley Person 10. Reserve
Ricky Davis had 14.
Lucas, who was disgusted by
Cleveland's I 08-89 loss to
Boston on opening night, said
he felt better about the Cavs
after this game.
"I was ecstatic about our
effort and our execution," he

said. "I loved our competitiveness ·and I saw a lot of growth
out there."

%~

Daily
Sentinel

7

••

,.

992·2155

,.
'•

�· ,~n.~....~..;;rt~y~,~No~~~1~,!200~1~----------------------------~P~o~m~~~6y~,!M~~~~~~~O~h~.~~~~~~~~==~======~T~he~D~a~ily~Se~n;~~ine~I•~P~a~ge~B~7~
aawo•

rALLIY OOP

Nll:A Crossword Puzzle

I'HILIJP
ALDER

ACROSS

·-y_...., Dllflht

I

4 Queny

•

I

...... ...

.

.

P/8

COISIIICIIOI

COII1UC1'0IS, lit

• New ltolnet
•Ganlgll
•Compllll

740-985-3948

Ohlo41f71

'

• Q ••

NOW OPEN
.M."

n~"3l;

r1()( hv H fiupp l\1wnt

Tonia
r
llcao-MIIIaQe

rlidCJIPporl Oh,o l")/(!(1

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Ht'J. 1 Wt

740-992-1705
213 N. 2nd Aw,
Micldlepo&lt;l. OH 45780
ComelnMCIUII
llbout ep1 lela

om c.ronc.~ee

•IIIDtriMIAPI.......

·-ond-. -,..a-.

• Vlnyt-.. 6 - ·

Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
• Nursing Home

...
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)"

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Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

DMrso,e.tll

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Service

111111 ••

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740-992-7599

""""""'""

The Daily Sentinel
(740)892-2155 '

1\CTORY DIRECT
PRICING

-fLIEPIUEMIITWIIIOWI
-Miri/IE...,. . .-

• FREE INSTALLATION .
• FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
• 50 YEAR WARRANTY

........

AH M.WS 'I'nllolor '"I
Equipment Parll

QUALITY WINDOW

-992-4119 1-800-291-5600

Filctory Aulborlsed

c.H·IHParll

VIlli Our Showroom Oa State Routt JJ

Dealen

6 Mila North Of Pomeroy, Ohio, AI C..nty Rood II

'1000 St. Rl. 7llollffl

• No Dulen or Coatncton l'leuo

(10) 21, 2001
(11) 1, 8,11, 2001

Club Dance
Friday 2nd
Saturday 3rd
Lone Wolf Band

ACCOII/tlTS

THE BORN WSER
,.1--JE NE.VER 00 N-~Yml NGo "'' ,..QI(AY, Wf\Y
TOC.C.ll-\e.K AAYMO'ZE.! Wfo\Y
DOO'T HE
1;)00\W€: ~ f&gt;.N.I\C.TIVITY
TO 00 'i'OG&gt;eTI-\&amp; Mlc.t\T?

·'

Shad~"I.UveiAG Servi~~ :
' ·

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • P~~~~teroy, Ob 457211
I.

Whole Corn ....... :.......................... S5.2SI100
Crackld Corn ...............................11.2111 00 ·

II~

......

I

WNCH .....

I ·

I

Pl~Y
CA~PS'?

Mtnngo,

I

your when
last East
trump.
,,.n u Then,
wins
with the diamond
ace, the defenders wiU

Advertise
in
•
·sq- this space for
DINNIR .....
$100
per
5:00
7:30
month

REAU'r'?Wi.JATKlND OF

A MONKE't' DO 'r'OU J.IAVE.?

I

IUFFn 10 GO (LUnch .. Ut)
IUFFn 10 GO (Dinnef •• 'l.tt)

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves

HowardL.
Wrlteset
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FrH Estlmlt"

949·1405
591·5011

VI

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Bull~lnga, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
a More

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-'3411

frid.1y, Nov. 2, 2001

CON
N
PROJECT?

a good ch:mcc

on an endeavor in

th\· yc01r ahead that

yo~1

were

hold enough to i\Ctcrnpt ·
. prcviomly. The way' ~nd
mC"am will be there for you to
nC'VN

&lt;ll'hicvc your ~oal.

SCORI'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ~~ Dy rnakinH it your top

Er~

In Gallipolis

dummy with a trump
and immediately play
a diamond. Let's assume you misguess,
.
your jac k Iosmg
to
West's queen. You
ruff the next spade,
play a trump to
dummy, and coll for
another diamond. If
East wins with the ace
and leads a fourth
spade, you ruff in the
dummy, return to
hand with a club,
draw the last trump,
and claim.

There·~
yo\1'J1 t:-~kt:

WE CAN HELP

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

prioriry, matters that have
been loR dnn~lln1 can realizo a
IUCL'cuful concfuaic,&gt;n tPdJy,

' Yuu 'lllmpp1ly •pply th&lt; OMtrl
vflhn c~llud fo~ to mak~ this
happen . A•trn ..praph YI:IU•
•h••d Jlfodlnlnnl moko 1101t
f.hrl!tlllA! llnokin~ atull'on
oil •l~n• ur tho Zudloo. Mall
~~ lhr ~och to "'''"· Oroph,
clo thl•n•w•popor, 1',0. llhx

Going out

r.,

FOR

lro7, Wlvklltfo, Oli 4409Z.
1111•7, llo """ lu •t•t• tho Z•·
&lt;liac liBil! YPU llo•lrv,

S!IG I Tl'fii~IUS (Nuv. 23·

Business Sale
Continues ...

Due. ZI) •• It will bo 11p to
ynu tu inltiRtc contac_t with
~n1noonc yuu'vo rcromly llllrlt
who y~)u\llikP hl knuw lwt.
tor.

nQ IU todny, thir. J'l;lfiQI1 I•

&lt;illlllly intorcatod in you nnd
will be rc•pnmivo.
CIII'I~ICORN (i')e&lt;, 2l·

1!J) .... r!xtra dividcmt. for
a job well done rodny is puni-

J(\11,

.

'

1440
11 Wind dlr.

11 Horwoy'o 31 Jellyllone
potron ..lht
21 Y!llllln veto 3t llanly
23 Indy 500
41 ltltlan

loundlld In

22 Ctimlldlln
eoot.llo

DOWN

11Mp
24U25 Klller- 2 "Hot bid"'

fM

gdo.

,._AI
25 ......

11oon mo.

3c:-

.._.
42 Bocl-, Fl
44 FNC!-'11' .

=-··

t:r......

\

I1-..,1 -11rTI2rrl""'lrl
~=·;:~·:;:~·~-=~---l
I IP 1·· I RI I
r

E P A

l

:::;:·

cash two spade tricks.
~=·~~-:;~· ~Better is to cross t o -

II :30am- 2:00 pro :
pro pm
:4 yrs &amp; under FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE
1
5-8 yrs - 12.99 . :· 5·8 yrs- 13.99
I
1 9·12yrs-13.99
I
9-12yrs-14.99

--------------------1

11 Conlumor 37 Llndlord'a

•

1

1

I

20 Chicken

£111
,._.
Pau

10 Schoal

Lotter
45 - ·
21 lo
.
44Rultor'o
wisdont consists in
4 Typo ollllt 21 ligml
oflorlng
31 Rlllau1'111t l . .
being wise in time."
37 Declnl
44 Hlrd to find
~~··
ar.41 Tlkllt I
It is important to be
mom
32 lllnl-pily
chllr
33 Pontiy 11om 71vyi.AigUI 21 IJu
wise in tinte in this
30 ExtnoctM 50 On:lwd
31 -tho II..
deal. You arc in four
ore
unit
33 C8mp- 53 W111tler'1
word
hearts. The defense
37=part
31 Dtoyool- • oak
begins with two
llht pool)
:14 "Cialllcll" 14 lui
31
10='
rounds of spades.
31 NemO'a
11111'1
wordl
I cab
cl'lllor
What would be your
plan?
North's two-notrump
response
showed a balanced
13-15 points with no
five-card suit an·d ·
fewer than four cards
in either major .
When you are in a
trump contract, it is
usually best to check
losers. You look at
your 13 cards and
'APPAitfNTI.Y,· YOVIC 8ANIC
take dummy·~ honors
into account. Here,
IALANG~
you have one spade,
INN~It fAit
n9 _hearts, one, two or
three diamonds, and
PIC08LfM5.
no clubs. So, you can
afford two diamond
CELEBRITY CIPHER
losers, but not three.
by LUll Campoe
Altcrn•tively, count
Colol~ty Clphororyplogllmon- hom
by 1antou1
poctpll, put ond ~- Eoch Iotter In tho ~r atandl for onothlt.
winners. (lde•lly, do
Todly'o clue: P equa. K
both -- if it doesn't
take you a week!)
"LYH 'OH"V I
YCMH
WT
You have nine: five
L y.
NCKO YHIOL
0 H D I K Y ·H
Flt-IE 1WAAT"''
hearts and four clubs.
So, you need one dia~&amp;Nie.
H 0 H 'V
YCMH WT
LYH
mond trick to get
DOYOO~?
home.
{ICGZHO
THI
DWLN.'
This is apparently
NCOP
DWLN
ZINCG) H J IS.
no problem if East has
at least one high dia0~
w. PCDY
mond honor, but if
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You alwayolooklld to lhltwo towera
you draw · all-· the
to find out where you're going, and now they're gone.•- (Now
trumps ending in the
Yorker) Tony Nuzzo
dummy, then lead a
low diamond toward
WDID
lAM I
~Riii;;PS)iiiJ-Cwrl hand, you must put
up the king to sucWHY Plt&gt;N'T AN'I~E
WANT 11'( tiOIIEI'IA'i)E
ceed. If you finesse 0 Reorranoe ltnen of the
CANt&gt;'( COR.N? ''
ICfamblod ward1 bethe jack, West will low four
to form four slmp.l•. words.
win with the queen
and play another
G I DN I 0
spade to force out

Hours: Suo • Thur.llam • 10 pm
Frl &amp; Sat 11 am • llpm

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

17 lrldiCIIII

51 CNIIId
58 lllplbbr.

!.: " '

Tel: (304) 773-5800

ri.t~-

r ... 1¥

II Mol
hoiIlL.-

-lono

FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOIIT

(1000 n from the bridge)

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Nflrtll
lifT

11 Not -....-

12 f.rolellll

tM5

FIRSTCIME.

"Ahead In Service" '

1066. 2nd Street • Mason,

_.

&lt;IIIC/ciNG

PlAine

740-985-3831

(740) 992-3194
•992-6635

Ea~Jies

· ~AN~

'
12% EGOIKifiiY Stoclc Ftod .......... $1.scii'IOO
12% Equlne12
(Fonnerly W1111m Prldl) ..........$1.00110
21% Hunlel'll Pride Dog Food ......$1.75110
Swell Lick Deer Blockl ...................... li.75

(10'1110' 610'11201

Eagles Aeries lt21
Regular meeting Nov. 5
Voting on By·law Changes
concerning employee wAges
&amp; vo11ng of memberahlp
to take place.

24'12r

$321.00
PER JOINT
'

.

omploymon1,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IEGUliRLY

992-5479

l'ul~k Notk•s in Nr•o·sp•l'""'·l
\'our Hight to Know, lldh·rrtd Hight to \'our

achollrthlpelloon...,.
I
WIIVera.
lldueltlon•l

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month

1·12 DOIBlE Will

Jeff 1
Warner Ins.

"Grace Aclldlmy
IChOOI, located 11
1331 Stall S11MI In
Albany, Oh lo hae
roqueo1ad.
1
nonpubllc echool
chlnor from till Ohio
Dop.,tmenl
of
Educa11on.
Any
pereona
hiving knowlodgl of
r10111 cllocrlmlna1ory
pr~c11c11 In 1he
rocrultmen1
of
ltudlnla, lldmlulona

·.... '

'229.00*

(NO SUNDAY CAllS)

Cellular

If ICIIvlllee ehould
conteo1 1ho Ohio
Dopor1mont
ol
Educ1tlon, Office ol
Student onct F1mlly
Progr1m1, Equity
A11uranc•
1nd
Compllonce lllctlon,
II Sou1h Front
Street, Room 111,
Columbue, Ohio
43211·4113, (114)
411 40&amp;4.
. All complolnto
mode
will
be
lnvelllgotlld prior to
tho IIIUinCI of I
ch1ner to the 11ld
achOOI."

·

Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

RNH!IIIble R.tu
All Occltlonl

.ALLIR

NOTICE

U.·

1-877-466-1234
(740) 517-6827

Vlla/Mutercard
WVHll471

'

U

Roofing • Gutters • Siding

IINYI

ts

·..._· _

Deck* • COncrete • Electrical.

Nrwii-.•VIaJI

992-6215 •

T-

Teddy Roosevelt
said, "'Nine-tenths of

r.octtMUIIc

.U.LDIRIIINC.
• R r'nn•tat
WIMowl• ......
Alcldldols • Rooll..
tlJIIIIli(JAL . . If!IDIIIIUI.

~~r
S DWIW'

Opeslin1KM: • Q

740-742·7709

BISSELL

. FREE ESTIMATES

-.Ohio

,.,

,

SldiJoJ • Now c.,...

t A II IS

.. •• fl

I(

w"'
PAN

4547 lnillll

51·..,.
o.v.·- a- ·-

II·-·

t. ,. . . . . . .

'"''
1¥

Kandl

t3t

Free Elllmatas

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Mortgage; Mlljor Medical

A'41111bll

---_

.... ,,,

Local843-5284

Tllarapiot

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

YOUNG'S

MONUMENTAL UF£ INSURANa CO.

14£~

J

J J
.. K Q J 7
•

1 tJl3,,
s ...

l'nlrt* Cll!rall
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,

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M1Ta ...

rr.,,...,

FREE ESTIIATES
740-1112-1m

......

A •

Dtaler:Soulh
Vubterabflo: Neitht:r

Udtiiii*Dt

Rlmocleling
Slap. CompiN

•

••

•

flllesiiii&amp;G 2111
6

....

. ( j J itl4

(740) 992-347

IOIIITIISELl

13 IIIUDurt

• ' 4 J
.. AIIU

•

43 . . . . for

12 llanjo

KI J

• "Q'

w...

40 Dhclor
Paemingw
41-

,,

I

0 F 0 I L

14

I I I

1::',

Granny says thai what you
L.~~~:;~;::;:;
· :::...., don't know can't hurt you. That
r
would explain why so many kids
T I p
A M ., today are immune - • - - - -.
Complolo _tho thutkl_o quoted
by Mhng •n the m•u•no word•
L...I......I-.1-..L....J--- you dov.lop from llop No, 3 bolow.

I

c

I I I' I 16

O

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Trophy· Guide· Mouse · Wholly· HISTORY
One old genl to another: "To give you an idea of how ·
old that guy is, when he went to school they didn 't have
HISTORY."

Kl it bel1oovc5 you to ap~
ply your very b.:st scrvke to

hie,

coc.iay thmc with whom you'll

anythin~ )'Ou've bce1'1 con ~

he involved will behave just
the o pposite. They w1ll can:

tractcd to do.

AQU/11\.IUS

O•n. 20-Fob.

19) -- The moment you'r~

exposed to a challenging development, your nanlra( lcadcnhip qunlitics will C'(llll~ to

the fure and brin~t rht projc't
down tcf~ire.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch %0)
•• You co11ld bo moro oll'oc-

th·o rodny whoro yom cnrcor
Ia con&lt;Ornod by bolna tho
puwor bohlnd !ho lhrgno In·
llood of toklnM tho !polllaht
rulo. lt'a wh01 yon do ~o11.
1\1\IES (Mnr~h 2l· flpri119)

•• Wll!t a ~;tf.,onoo R d~y
·mikfJ, Yo"'ll Mil lfuon ,\uw•&gt;•
trodden yo11orday to on, uf
hupo ~1111 oKpo&lt;lation. Sonw.
thin~ OM~irin• could happon
fur ynu t••l•y.
T!IUI\US (t.prll 20·May
~ll) •• Whon yuu ••• 011 op·
porru111ty for por~onol ~ail&gt;
yo\1'11 I\IOYt oll'ectlvcly and
!Winly today, Ymor 'KH'OI'ivc
resporne i• wh•t wv~• yo~l tho
you'll •chit.lVQ,
GEMINI (May 21-Jnnc 21l)
·- Wht:rC!U ycarcrday rcnplc
were pobed to oppose you.

SUCI:I:II

about your interests ;md coop~rnte with your pl:ms.

CANCER

0un~ 2 1-j uly

' 22) -- In the proc.:css of stmnlbring developments for othm
tnc.lay. you'll find :t niche fo r
yuunt'lf. Othcn w11l dmovt'r
th~y have a n•al need fo r you r
prc~c:nce .

LEO 0uly 2J-IIuK. 22) .. I&lt;

will Pchocwc you to

auocialc

with anrve friend• wday
ri\fher rhan thmc who r~·rl nn
Q)(nti.II Jll'f \1

111 l11l·. You will
tP rt1 1rro r and ~o
thlllic )'rm'rL' ~vuh .

PI-' ludinNl

alurnt w11h
VlllliO .(I\u)l.

2.l·S~·pt

12)

~- ~VCII

drfnc1d1 U51M:I liiJ I.' IJi i
r:\n bp •1r hicvc d wd~y with
thu prnpcr II HHIVi\t l o ll . If I he
row11nh

.He

Wtlrt hwhd c,

ym1 'II MIV"
the ondL•avur yvu r lllilKimum
rffort.
1hcrc'1 nn

l]\Witron

L IIIJ~ft. (S~JH . 23 ~ 0n.

•

jlcr h~JU

yu ur

~ r calei l

:!3) auct

tod .1y 11 h~ vm g the 11lnhly tu
. rcnrg&lt;IIIIU' ~rtl1 a tJulli tlut ;\fC!
bL•):innm~ tu fray at the edij:~~
anclmfme them wtth new va-

tJI!ty.

,.

�PageBI

The Daily Sentinel

n

Not qu~ · the new Steel Cu
PITTSBURGH \P) - Don't stan referring to this Pittsburgh Steelers defense as the '76en just yet.
The Steelers' defense has allowed the fewest points and the
fewe.t yards in the NFL, setting a difficult-to-mainrain pace
that would rank with some of the best in league history if it
lasted aU season.
If they keep this up, the Steelen would allow 163cpoints, two
fewer than the Baltimore Ravens did a year ago in &gt;etting an
NFL record for a 16-game season. The two defenses will be
matched Sunday when the Steelen (5-1) try to stay atop the
AFC Central by taking on the Ravens (4-3) in Heinz Field.
Just don't suggest to Pittsburgh fans- at least any above the
age of 40 - that this defense, as good as it has been, is among
the best in franchise history. In Pittsburgh, all discussions about
defense start and stop with the Steel Curtain, a defense so overpowering that eight of the 11 starter,; made the Pro Bowl in
both 1976 and 1977 and four are in the Pro Football Hall of
Fame.
Despite leading the Steelers to four Super Bowl championships in six seasons from 1974-79, the Steel Curtain's pealt
came a quarter-century ago in 1976 during one of the most
extended single-season stretches of domination by a defense in
NFL history.
With Terry Bradshaw injured and rookie quarterback Mike
Kruczek, a below-aver.~ge passer, forced to start most of the season, the Steelen seemed to have litde chance of getting back to
the playoffi after an injury-filled 1-4 srart.
But, beginning in mid-October, the Steelen' defense - cognizant the offense would be short-handed the rest of the season
- began pl.tying as if yielding a single field goal might end its
pl.tyotf ambitions.
During a season-ending nine-game winning streak; the Steel
Curtain ofjack Ham,Jack Lambert, Mel Blount and Mean joe
Greene shut out five teams - three in a row - and gave up
only 28 points, an average of a field goal a week.
Only the Houston Oile!"' scored in double digits - 16, in a

32-16 loss - and three other teanu that scored combined for
12 points. Tw; '• the Steelm allowed only a field goal, in a 7-3
win at Cincin.1. ti and a 14-3 victory over Miami.
Steelers president Dan Rooney and his father, the late Art
Rooney, agreed that '76 team was the best in franchise history,
even if a 10-game winning streak that included a 40-14 pl.tyotf
victory in Baltimore ended with a 24-7 AFC championship
.
game loss to Oakland.
To this day, the '76 Steelen insist they would have won a fifth
Super Bowl in six yem if 1,000-yard running backs Franco
Harris and Rocky Bleier hadn't gotten hurt for the AFC tide
game. That forced them to go with a one-back offense featuring journeyman runner Reggie Harrison, with predictable;,
results against a Raiders team eager to avenge AFC title game
losses to Pittsburgh the previous two seasons.
"That 1976 team might have been the best Steeleo:s team
ever. I know Mr. (Art) Rooney feels that way.... We just shut
people down, reaDy dominated them;• Lambert said. "Teams
would just give up running the baU against us."
Twenty-five yean later, this Steelen defense must play at its
current level for the 10 games it has left to prove it is worthy o(
being mentioned with such a defense.
"You can feel the aura of confidence building, but we're not
even halfway through the season;• cornerback Dewayne Washington said. "There is still so much fo.otbaU left to be played."
Strong safety Lee Flowers said this defense began .coming
together as the Steelen won four of their _final five games last
season. Not surprisingly, he expects a low-scoring game Sunday.
"It could be a 9-6 game, a 6-3 game," he said.
Sounds like the '76 Steelers. ·
"It's a very focused team, a hungry team;' said coach Bill
Cowher, who believes these Steelers are driven by missing the
playoffi the last three seasons. "When you \lon't .experience
something for a couple of yean when you're used to being
there, it tends to put things in perspective:'

DOMINATION -Pittsburgh Stealers linebacker Jason Gildon (92) Is tackled by Tennessee Titans quar~erback Steve McNair (9)
after he recovered a fumble Monday. Some are comparing this year's defense to the 1976 Steel Curtain defense. (AP)

WEST VIRGINIA CONFERENCE

Fairmont.in must win to meet up
with.preseason title expectations
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - There's stiU time for
more heroics from Fairmont
State's Bryan Harman.
F2irmQOt State was picked in
the preseason to win the. West
Virginia Conference championship, but the Falcons (4-3, 32 WVIAC) must win both
their remaining games to earn
at least a share of the tide.
If H.arman is involved, anything is possible.
He's led Fairmont State to
three straight victories after
starting the season 1-3. Last
"'eek, Harman threw for five
touchdowns and ran for three
more in a 70-20 victory over
Concord.
, "I just want to make sure we
finish on a good note," he said.
"! always finish strong."
Coach Doug Sams told Harman after Fairmont's poor start
that he needed to stop trying
to be a perfectionist and stop
pressuring himself to perform

son when he tried to force
throws to his receivers. Now,
he's making smarter decisions
by either throwing the baU
away or running with it.
"He takes a lot of responsibility·and takes the game very
seriously;• Sams said. "He forgot sometimes there were 10
other guys out there.
"FinaDy, we've gotten him to
play relaxed. He realizes it's
important to have fun and
that's what he's been doing."
Harman has rebounded
enough personally to become
locked in a battle for fint-teatit
all-conference honors with
West Liberty's Tim Hicks and
Shepherd's Joel Gordon.
Harman has the best completion percentage (59.2).
Hicks has the most yards
(2,190) and touchdowns (21).
Gordon has the f&lt;West inlerceptions (5).
Harman also ranks seventh
in the conference with 3!i 1
rushing yards. When he goes
wen.
Most of Harman's 11 inter- back to pass, defenses tend to
ceptions came early in the sea- focus on receivers Todd Ander-

son, Devin Nickerson and
Germaine Johnson and forget
about Harman's ability to run.
- "To be successful against us,
you have to account for
Bryan," Sams said. "Otherwise,
he'D take off."
Fairmont State plays at West
Virginia State (4-4, 2-3) on
Saturday. Shepherd (7-1,4-1j is
at West Virginia Wesleyan (2-5,
2-3);West Liberty (4-4: 2-3) is
at Glenville (4-3, 4-1), and
WVU Tech (4-4, 3-2) is at
Concord (1-7, 0-5) .
Shepherd or Glenville can
clinch a share of the league
title Saturday if one wins and
the other loses. Shepherd and
Glenville shared the crown in
1997.
"It's still a race," Sams Said.
'We don't control our own
destiny. We have to hope for
some help. The conference has
been so unpredidable that
with two weeks to go, anything can happen."
Shepherd is the only conference team still in contention
for a playoff berth. The Rams
1

NFL STANDINGS
NAnONALCoNFERENOE
Eut

AMEIICAN CONFERENCE

Miami
N.Y. Jots
Indianapolis
New England

4
4
3
3
1

BuWalo

2 0
3 0
3 0
4 I)
5 0
Ctnfrll

W l "T
5

Plttlburgh
a.veland
Ba~lmolv

Cincinnati
.-.onvlle

r.._.

·'

4
4
4
2
2

1
2
3
3

0
0
0
0

fg

W L T
Ookland
Sin Diego

Denver
Slottle
KaniUCity ·

"

5 1 0
5 2 0
4 3 0
3 3 0
1 8 0

Pet
.667
.571
.500
.429
.187

PF
t:lO
141
170
161
108

PA
131
166
183
1!50
165

Pet
.833
.667
.571
.571
.333
.333

PF
110
111
128
120
90
101

PA
65
91
119
136
87
156

Pel PF

.833
.714
.571
.500
.143

151
186
164
104
139

PA
105
121
144
131

152

Phlladelpt&gt;la

W L T
3 3 0

N.Y. Giants
Arizona
Dallas
WashlflO!on

3
2
2
2

4 0
0
4 0
5 0

•

Pet
.500
.429
.333
.333
.266

PF PA
124
121
92
92
84

91
116
145
120
179

cen1ra1

W L T
Chicago

a.... aav

Tampa Bay
Mlnneeola
Oatrull

St. Louls

New Orleans
san Francisco
Atlanta
Carolina

5 1 0
4 2 0
3 3 0
3 4 0
0 6 0

Wnt
W L T
1 0
2 0
2 0
3 3 0
1 8 0
6
4
4

improved one spot to fifth this
week in the Division II football committee's Northeast
rankings. Four teams from
each of four regions are selected for the playoffi.

NFL owners promise
a secure Super Bowl,
agree on labor deal
PITTSBURGH (AP) Super Bowl in Tampa played
The NFL is planning on during the 1991 GulfWar.
Super Bowl-like security at
Since the terrorist attacks,
the Superdome in New security has been much
Orleans more , than two more visible at NFL games.
months
Fans cannot bring containbefore the en or packages into stadiFeb. 3 kick- urns, and teams are urging
off:
spectator&gt; to show up earlier
"This will than usual to avoid getting
be· the most stuck in long lines just
secure game before kickoff:
ever played
Tagliabue has not estimatin the histo- ed how much the additional
ry of the security is costing each team
Tatllabue
!~ague,"
or the league, but suggested
commiSit is substantial.
sioner Paul Tagliabue said
The labor deal, worked
out by the NFL ManageWednesday.
The increased cost of ment Council and the NFL
securing NFL stadiums and Players Association in June,
assuring a safe Super Bowl, still must be approved by the
topics that in past years
nl
players union. Among the
might have required 0 y a unresolved issues before the
few minutes of discussion,
d
d lks Wed sda players can r.~tify it are how
ominate ta
ne y financial losses .would be
at the NFL owner,; meet.
divided if games are cait-·
h
mgs.
The increased emphasis celed, and how t e 2006
on security means the salary cap would be adjusted
Superdome will be secured if the economy is in a down-.
"weeks, if not months'.' in turn and TV revenues have
advance of the Super Bowl decreased.
Among other iss~es the
on Feb.3.
The discussion came as owners took up:
owners wrapped up their . -They approved the !attalks by ratifying a three- est deal to keep the Saints in
year extension of their labor New Orleans for the next
agreement. The collective I 0 yean. The next hurdle
bargaining
agreement will be the approval of
extension would push the financing plans by state leg•
salary cap through 2006 and islators, a topic likely to
would carry beyond the come up during Tagliabue's
NFL's S17.6 billion televi- weekend visit.
sion contract, which has four
The roster-stockin~
more years after this season. plan for the expansion
The security discussion Houston Texans as they
developed from the terrorist enter the league next season:
attacks of Sept. 11. The NFL The pl.tn wiU resemble that
rescheduled the second of the Cleveland BrownS'
week's games to the end of . when the team re-entered
the season, butTagliabue said the league, though safe~
an agreement is needed on guards wiD be in place sO:
how the costs would be split teams can't use the expan..:
between the owners and siorl dr.~fl as a salary cap
players if any future games dumping ground.
,
can't be played.
- The league is urging
The increased emphasis teams to consider the altere&lt;t
on security means the
state of the economy in set-;
Superdome in New Orleans ting ticket prices for th~
will be more secure than any
previous game, including the postseason and the 2002
regular season.
,.

Bobby W. Vance
Sclplo Townahlp

TRUSTEE
Your ~ time truatee
Your vote wtll be llbatlr appreciated

PF PA "

Pet
.833
.667
.500
.429
.000

135
147
119
136
97

74
65
98
165
176

Pet
.657
.667
.667
.500
.143

PF
207
139
153
125
112

PA
115
118
142
127
148

Mt'p Cou11l(s

Swisher
••
pra1ses

In value,

~

Unlike the stock market, a Farmers Bank Rate Changer CD Is a safe and sure
way to invest for the future. You can' call in, once for a 3 year CD and twice tor
a 5 year CD and we'll bump you up lo the higher percentage rate being paid.
Simply put, you'll make more money!
With a Rate Changer CD there's anly one way for your Investment to go
and thlt'a up, so call Farmers Bank now and watch your investmeni grow.

Call Now. This Is a limited time offer.
• Pomeroy 992-2136 • Gallipolis 446-2265 • Tupper$ Plains 667-3161

BY BRIAN J. REED·
SENTINEL .NEWS STAFF

POMEROY _..A community plan and the work
of the COI11plittee who
wrote it has resulted in
some benefits for Meigs
County in terms of economic development, and
has helped make the transi.tion from welfare to work
easier for local residents.
· Michael Swisher, direc:tor of the Meigs County
Department of job and
Family Services, presented
·a status report on the
Meigs County Communi:ty Plan to Meigs County
.commissioners
during
"their regular meeting
Thursday.
.
A group of educators,
service providers, DJFS
employees and health professionals, working under
the direction of the commissioners and the DJFS.
was organized as part of
1998 welfare reform legislation passed by the Ohio
Legislature.
·The group has studied
the issues of education,
economic and workforce
development, child care,
child support and Medicaid, and health ser\rices, and
how those areas can be
improved locally to benefit
the local job market, and
enable those on cash welfare :wistance to transition
into the workforce.
"We realized from the
beginning that if we were
going to be successful in
helping OIJr clients transition from welfare to work,
we were going to have to
grow the job market in
Meigs County," Swisher
said. "That's why the c&lt;&gt;unty commissioners · have
become
so
actively
involved in .economic
development work."
The commissioners have
allocated hundreds · of
thousands of dollars into
local economic development efforts since 1998,
and hundreds of thousands
more
in
Prevention,
Retention and Conting~ncy
Development
Reserve funds into other
programs, including health,
education, and youth pro-

Win a $1,000 CD
Farmers Bank
live on the
radio on
Dec.• ~4!
Enter to win at any Farmers
Bank Lacjltlon.

Health board autonomy
on tobaao bans at issue
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

COLUMBUS~ By a vote of to 66-33, the
Ohio House of Representatives oit Wednesday passed legislation which may rescind
Meigs Courty's public smoking ban, and limit
the powers of local boards of health in enacting similar measures in the future .
Senate Bill 128 requires any regulations
relating to the sale or use of tobacco and
tobacco products to be approv~ by elected
officials in their respective health districts
before they _can be enacted.
Because Meigs County's is a county-wide
health district, any smoking regulations enacted here would be subject to approval by the
township trustees in aU of the county's 13
townships and village councils in aU five villages.
.
State Rep. John Carey,R-Wellston, voted in
favor of the measure.
Ahhough the measure easily passed in both
House and Senate, Gov. Bob Taft has said he
will veto the bill, because he feels that local
boards of heatth are most qualified to decide
issues relating to public heal!h.

Eaistem Ei!PI~1• ®Q1'football seasor) that's

·Second local craft sampler
planned by county commission
BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -A new ver- ·
sion of a local crafts sampler
wiD be printed to highlight
local crafter,; not included in
the sampler's first edition, and
Meigs County Commissioner
] efT Thorn ton urged local
crafiers to par~cipate,
'
Thornton d1scussed the new
publication during Thur,;day's
regular commissioner&lt;' meetmg.
Thornton said 1,000 copies
of the
Meigs
County
Appalachian Artisans Sampkr
will be printed to highlight
additional cr.~flers not mentioned in a 2000 publication
dis~ibuted to tourist sites
across Ohio and neighboring

Hlp: eo,
Low: Us

Sentinel
2 SKIIonl- 11 ......

Calendar
Comics
Editorials
- Obituaries
Sports

st)tes.
The first
publication
was
developed using
funds from an
Appalachian
Regional
Commission
Entrepreune. Thornton
rial Initiative
grant, which
were also used to form an artisans' association in the county
to promote local craft products
as a·draw for tourists.
~rtisans who want. to be featured in the- sampler must submit their information to Meigs
County Tourism Director
Betsy Nicodemus at 9925005-,or Justin Diddle at 992-

2895, within the next two
weeks.
Thornton also said the new
Artisans Shop on West Main
Street is doing very weU and
that any cr.~fter who wants seU
products inside the establishment may do so by purchasing
a $25 membership in the artisans association.
To help ·fund the store's
operation costs, Thornton said
l 0 percent of each item sold
will go toward the payment of
·utilities, advertisement and
other expenses.
The commissioners also:
• Approved transfers of funds
for the sheriff's office, county
engineer and county auditor;
• Approved paymem of bills
in the amount of$230,451.99.

Wolly bear folklore
Some say that you can predict the
severity of a winter to come by the
width of the rust:eolored band on
the woolly bear caterpillar. The
endearing little creatures are more
easily seen in autumn when trees
and shrubs they feed on loose their
leaves.

The woolly bear is
the Immature form
for the Isabella tiger
moth.
DIM'ing the oold weather, the
caterpillar will hide under the
bali! of atree or under rocks.
In spring h spins a cocoon,
IMIIllually becoming a moth.
SOURCES: The Old Farmor.s Almanac: USGS

Carleton School looks for levy passage·

Qetails, A2

Lotteries

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

A5 oHIO .

84-6 Pldl :S: ().7-3; Pldl4: ().2-11-2

87 111m 1,. s: 1&amp;1&amp;-21-24-35
M W.VA.
A3 Dlllly 3s &amp;o-5 Dally 4: 9- t·1-5

BJ-3. 5 (ash :ZS: 9-10.15-17·23-25

A2

PI- 1M S... 121, AS

.'

Tod.y's

- Weather
Member FDIC

5.8. 121
passes
House.

plan for
county

A Rate Changer CD from Farmers Bank

will only go up
can't go down and that's guaranteed and lnaured by the FDIC.

SMOKING BAN

INSIDE TODAY

•

pt,. . . . . ,..n.AS

Rate Chan!l"rs CO's are In 3 and 5 year terms. Penalty lor ea~y withdrawal.
Farmers Bank directors, officers, employees and their families are not eligible.

..,

,f

Ellll
wl T

GO EAGLES! BEAT TRIMBLE!

lhundllf, Ncwe111ber 1, HOf

C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing CO.

SYRACU~E - · Meigs County voters
will · once again decide the fate of a 1.6
mill continuing levy this Thesday th'at
would help pay for service expansion and
facility upgrades at Carleton School and
Meigs ~dustries.
·
The ~posed levy, if passed, would
authorize the 'Meigs Board of Mental

Retardation and Developmental Disabilities (MR/DD) to continue with services
that have already been established and
implemented at the school, increase the
level of new services, allow for the
replacement of two buses and two vans
during the next five year,;, and help fund
a capital construction project that,
according to school officials, is needed to
serve the increased enrollment in school

age and adult programs.
The program currently serves more
than 150 children and adults with devel. opmental disabilities and their families
throughout Meigs County.
This is the seventh time that the
MR/DD's request for additional funding
has gone to voters. The issue was last
defeated in the 2000 general election.

Please -

Levy, AS

5th Annual Lewis A. Schmlclt, MD
· Mea11orlal Cancer ·symposium
Saturday, November 3, 2001
8:00 am - 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 7:30 am)

Discover tlie Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conf~rence Center ·
For more information, call (740) 446-5057.

www .holzer.org

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