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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,

~

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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

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Tod.y's

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Member FDIC

5.8. 121
passes
House.

plan for
county

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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 -

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8:00 am - 12 Noon

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�Frtct.y, Nov. 2, 2001

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Page

Ohio ready for terrorism, even if report isn't

Ohio weather
~.Ncw.3

-

....

(

DAYTON (AP) - Ohio hal been
working more than a year on a report
on how the state would respond to an
act of terrorism and plans to have it
completed by December.
&amp;hley EUis, spokeswoman for Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor,-said the project has.
been time consuming because it
involves coordinating police departmenu, fire departments, emergency
management · agencies and hospitals
statewide
"To get everyone on the same page
and make the assessment as thorough as
possible, it takes some time;' Ellis said.
"We were ahead of the curve. If we bad
started this on September It, it would
be a different story."
The state began working on a

I ..,_ l•t·JM· I •

0

W.VA.•
IIV.

responsoe plan in June 2000 following
the Ohio Terrnrism Conference in
Columbus attended by bw enfurcement
and S3kty officials liom around the state.

TMit Force hal since received

masts 6om all of rhe counties ;md
going through the infurmation to &lt;le11c:rrnine where the greatest threats
"They decided coDectnely as a group needs are.
"The task force is working some
to start wod..ing on this so all agencies
long
hours," she said. "They're still
would have a ~oonlinate&lt;f plan," Ellis
tuning."
said.
Ellis said the asse&gt;sments are
When the Sept. 11 terro.rist attacks
detailed,
down to how many rub•ber
occurred, 84 of Ohio's 88 counties had
submitted to the state a detailed assess- gloves a· county will need for an act
ment of the risk they considered they biological or chemical terrorism.
Dick Kimmins, spokesman for the
faced fiom terrorism and bow they
Ohio Emergency Management Agency,
would respond.
said
a draft of the plan outlines agencies'
After the artacks, the Justice Department ~ked for a report on Ohio's plan responsibilities and mirrors the federal
and gave the state until Dec. 15 to sub- plan in that a terrorist act is to be considered a crime scene and evidence most
mit it.
ElliS said the State of Ohio Security lie preserved.

02001110c:U-.Ino.

o . . ... . . . . . ..

&amp;mr l'l~ ~

.... _ _

-

T-

AIOI

• -

-

101

Showers will end by tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The showers should end and
winds die down tonight as a
fiontal system moves out of
the region, ushering in a
return to normal fall weather.
As cooler air moves in
tonight, temperatures will
drop into the 40s, some 20
degrees cooler than they were
24 hours earlier.
Skies will be sunny on Saturday with highs in the 60s
and lows ~n the 40s.
Much of the same is forecast
into the middle of next week.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:28, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 7:03 a.m.
. Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Showers likely,
ending late this evening. Partia1 clearing frqm late evening
on. Lov:s 45 to 50. West wind

10 to IS mph. Chance of.rain
70 percent.
Saturday... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s. Northwest wind around 10 mph.
Sarurday night...Ciear. Lows
34 to 38.
Extended fomait:
Sunday... Mostly · sunny.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Tuesday... Mostly dear. Lows
in the lower 30s and highs
near 60.
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the mid 60s.
·
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s and highs
in the mid 60s.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The stepfather of a convicte4 killer
who committed $uicidc in prison died nearly one month a(kr his
own attempt to kill himself in jail, where he was hddon charges
ofk:illing his wife.
William Stewart, 51, of suburban Parma, died Wednesday at
MetroHealth Medical Center, the hospital and Cuyahoga County sheriff's deputies said Thunday.
Robert Challener, a deputy county coronet, said Steivm
apparendy died fiom lack of oxygen resulting fiom his ~pt­
ed )wtging. He said tests on Stewart's brain will take a few '!j'Uks
to complete.
.
·
Stewart was charged Oct. 5 in the death of his wife, J~ce
Stewart, 40, whose dismembered body was fuund in Stewart~ car
when he was pulled over by a sheriff's deputy for driving emtically in Medina County.
·
.
•'
1

NASA Glenn plans COIIWIIi•

Court upholds ruling to
let banks sell ins anee.
CINCINNATI (AP) -A
federal appeals court on
Thursday upheld a judge's
ruling that allows federally
cbaqered b,anks to sell insur~
ance in communities with
populations ofS,OOO or less.
Three judges of the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals unanimously upheld
the June I 999 ruling by U.S.
District judge james Graham
of Columbus.
Huntington
National
Bank, along with state and
national banking trade associations, filed the lawsuit in
November 1998 against the
Ohio Department of Insurance. The bankers challenged Ohio ~egulations
which they said would conflier with federal rides and
would. prevent the banks
6om being able to sell insurance in Ohio's smaller com-

munities.
.
Graham ruled · favor of
the banks and forbade the
Ohio Department of Insurance from preventing the
banks from selling insurance
in ihe smaU markets.

-.,....-'---.:.'·:....,

VOTE YES FOR

OSU sets sweatshop cade.

REPLACEMENT.

assra-

OF THE

Man accused of held shapln1

MEIGS COUNTY

Aintrip near plant dosed

Admin-

TUBERCULOSIS
LEVY

Urgent Care.l !
CINCINNATI (AP) While prosecutors consider a
retrial in the case of one
police officer in the death of
a man in custody, the trial of
a second officer is winding
down.
Closing argumenis were
scheduled for Friday in the
trial of Officer Patrick
Caton, who is charged with
misdemeanor assault. He
could get six months in jail if

convicted.
Testimony
concluded
Thursday
in
Hamilton
County Municipal Court as
a rebuttal witness, Officer
Darren Sellers, testified that
he saw Caton pu"ch Roger
Owensby Jr. after Owensby
was handcuffed last November.
On Wednesday, Caton testified that he used accepted
police techniques to subdue

and handcuff Owensby when
police, who wanted .toquestion Owensby about drug
trafficking, tackled him as he
tried to flee.
Owensby's parents said
Thursday that they were not
1atisfied with the effort that
Hamilton County Prosecutor Michael Allen's office
made in prosecuting Officer
Robert Jorg in a separate .
trial.

Two more interested in buying piano. maker
MASON (AP) - Two investme!lt grou~ have submitted cash
offers tO bUy Baldwin Piano &amp;
Organ Co. the company's president said.
.
Both of the offers have been
submitted to General Electric
Capiral Corp., which is Baldwin's
largest creditor. GE Capital won
the right, at an Oct. 15 auction in
u.s. Bankruptcy Court, to buy
Baldwin by Nov. 15.
GE Capital is aware of the two

outside bids, spokesman Jobn ship by the end of the year.
Oliver said T!J.ursday from the , Jones also dec::lined to identifY
company's headquaners in Starn- the investment groups that subfonl, Conn. He said GE Capital is mitted the outside bids. He said
noi identifYing the companies or one is ba$ed in California and the
giving details of their offers while other in Arizona.
the negotiations continue.
Baldwin owes GE Capital
Roben Jones, who took over about $26 million. That is about
in May as Baldwin$ president $3 million less than the total debt
and chief executive officer, said when the piano maker filed for
the new offers increase the likeli- Chapter 11. reorganil'.1tion on
hood that the 139-year-old com- : May 31 in federal bankruptcy
pany will be under new owner- court in Cincinnati.

•

-

No Appointment
7 Days A Week • 9:00am - 9:00pm.

Network .Providers For ·
• Medicare
• Aetna
•Anthem
• OU E~ployees
• Central Jlenefits
• Ohio Htalth
• Medical Mutual
Eric Haseineier, 0:0.
'·
At

LOCAL . BRIEFS
welcomes the public.

To naeet

RACINE Daniel J.
Slowick,
47,
Lima,
was cited
BY TOllY M. LEAcll
\Vas Councilman George
ROCKSPRINGS - SalisPOMEROY - Nina F. Cumings, 75, Rocksprintp Road,
for failure to control by the
SENllNEL NEWS STAFF
Wright.
Pomeroy, died Monday, Oct. 29, 2001, at her residence.
bury
Township Trustees wiU
POMEROY -The fate of a
In other matters, council Gallia-Meitp Post of the Statt'
" ' She was born on Aug. 20, 1926, in Walton, W.Va., daughter of mobile food trailer's placement approved the fint ~ng of an Highw:oy Patrol following a meet on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at
the late Everrett •nd Gertrude Hunt Taylor. She was a Rtired on the Pomeroy parking lot onlinance that would provide one-cu accident early today the township building on
employee of the Meitp County Treasurer's Office, and attend- was decided during Village additional compensation for on Ohio 124 near Racine.
Rocksprings Road.
ed Rocksprings United Methodist Church.
Troopers said Slowick w:os
village emplcyees in 2001.
Council's regular meeting.
. Surviving are her husband, DurwOod V. Cumingr, and two
westbound
at 1:33 a.m. when
Council once again met
The onlinance stipulates the
Dildine DillS
suters-m-law, Peggy R. Taylor and Gladys L. Cumingr, all of with Angela Hall to discuss the village shall pay each full-time the car he drove went off the
Pomeroy.
POMEROY- Saturday is
po&lt;Sibility of situating a mobile empl~ and salaried employ- right side of the road and
the final day for the mailing of
· · She was also preceded in death by her brother, Paul E. Tay- food booth/trailer on the ee in active employment, as of struck a utility pole.
lor.
The car was ·modertately absentee ballots from the
Pomeroy parking lot to sell Oct. t, 2001, the sum of$100,
Meigs County Board of Elec· A private graveside service was held on Thursday, Oct. 31, both American and Chinese and each employee in active damaged, trOOpers said.
2001 at Meigs Memory Gardens, with the Rev. Keith R2der food to lunchtime crowds.
tions.
part-time employment, $50.
.
officiating.
The office will also be open
Hall, who discussed the rssue
If passed, the ordinance
on Saturday from 9 a.m. until
during council's last meeting, would take effect on D.,.,. 4.
POMEROY - Units of noon for voting at the office.
said the 20-foot trailer she plans
Council also:
to use has met all laws required
• approved a request made- the Meigs Emergency Service Monday is the final day to
RUTLAND- Helen Long, 85, Rutland, died Monday, Oct. for operation and that she has by Pofice Chief Mark Proffitt answered five calls for assis- vote by absentee baUot at the
29, 2001, at St. Francis Nursing Home in Memphis, 'ICnn.
also complied with all health to commission the depart- tance on Thursday. Units board office, located at 117 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. ·
She.was born .Dec. 17, 1915, in Whitman, W.Va., daughter of department regulations.
ment's new 1997 Crown Victo- responded as follows:
.the late George and Mary Laura Zarencz. She was a home-.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Mayor John
Blaettnar ria police cruiser. An older
maker.
·
1:22 a.m., Sheets Road,
reminded Hall that past police cruiser will simultaneSurviving are two daughters and 10ns-in-law, Cheryl and. endeavon such as this have ously be decommissioned;
Dwight Spragle, O'Bleness
MIDDLEPORT- United
Michael Loftin of Colliersville, Tenn., and Helen Virginia ;md proven to \le unsuccessful,
• approved the purchase of Memorial Hospital;
· B.obert Denison of Dayton; three som, Larry D. Long of Okla-. however, these failures have I 5 protective uniforms for both
-7:28
p.m.,
Mullbery Fund for Meigs County wiU
homa City, Okla., Douglas R. Long ofThmersville, NJ., and "absolutely no bearing on the the fire and police departments Avenue, Kendra Garnes, host a "Business After Hours"
reception on Tuesday from 5
Gene I. Long of Delta, Pa.; and eight grandchildren and five future of her proposed ven- in case of exposure to contam- Pleasant Valley Hospital;
ture."
i!l"at-grandchildren.
9:15 p.m., Coal •treet, Pre- to 7 p.m. at the Riverberid ·
inated blood, anthrax or other
.
'
Prtvate graveside services will be held at the convenience of
Investment issues and com- hazardous materials;
·
cious Moore, Holzer Medical Arts Council in Middleport,
as a kick-off of the 2002 camthe family at Bald Knob Cemetery.
petition with other downtown
• expressed its appreciation Center;
There will be no calling hours.
10:47 p.m., Horner Hill paign for the fund. The group
eateries was also tabled by with Sabra Ash fur decorating
has set a goal of$35,000.
Arrangements are by Cremeens Funernl Home, Racine.
council in an effort to evaluate empty store-fionts along Main Road, Judy Parsons, treated.
the proposal.
Street;
SYRACUSE
1:30
p.m.,
Ohio 124, assist·Met meeting in eXI!cutive
• agreed to free the village's .
. .
session, council agreed to a 90- parking meten from Nov. 23, ed by Basban · and Racine,
POMEROY Meigs
brush fire, Jane Barnett propLEON, W.Va. - Larry William Plants Sr., 56, Leon, died day trial period, beginning 2001, through Jan. 2, 2002;
County
Grange
will
meet
• expressed its appreciation erty, no injuries.
• Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2001, at Charleston Area Medical Center. April 2002, in which Hall will
tonight at 7:30 at the Star
He was a laborer for C&amp;O Railroad, a U.S. Army veteran · be allowed to place her food with The Daily Sentinel for its
Grange hall. The annual offiserving in the Vietnam Conflict, a member of the Army trailer on the parking lot and coverage of the Waterworks
cers' meeting will be held at
Park grand opening ceremony;
National Guard, Company B. First Battalion, !50th Army ·in sell provisiom to customers.
6:30p.m
.. before the 7:30p.m.
. Dunbar, and attended Eddy Chapel Church.
Once the trial period has
, agreed to "unanimously
MIDDLEPORT - Mid. · Born May 4, 1945, in Leon, he was a son of the late Jam.S passed; council will then meet support" the 1-miU Beech dleport Church of the regular meeting.
· '\\'esley and Clara LueUa (Smith) Plants.
with Hall to evaluate the situa- Grove Cemetery levy on Tues- Nazarene will hold revival
: : He was also preceded in death by his brother, james W. Plants tion at greater length.
. day's general ballot, which, services Nov. 7-11 with services at 7 p.m. Wednesday .
: Ji'~
Voting against the decision would fund year-round care.
POMEROY - All Souls
through Saturday, and 10:30
· :surviving are a son, Larry William Plants Jr. of Connellsville,
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Day will be ob~erved today
Pa.; daughter, Laura Plants of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and four sisters,
increase; a $60,000 appraisal The Rev. Pat McGue ofHur- · with a 7 p.m. Mass at Sacred
Mary Margaret Step\tens and janetta Durst, both 9f Point
: Pleasant, W.Va., Sally Vera HiU of Dunbar, W.Va., and Clara
would garner a SJ-3.60 tax ricane, W.Va., will be the Heart Catholic Church, folincrease; and an . $80,000 ' evangelist, and the Rev. and lowed by prayer in memorial
: Frances Rollins of Pomeroy.
: , Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Crow-Hussell Funeral
appraisal would result in · a Mrs. Jerry Boggs of South of the names on the altar folPoint will be the song evan- lowed by the Eucharistic
: Horne, Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Herman Jordan and the
$44.80 tax increase.
Rev. Larry Gray officiating. Burial will be 'in Eddy Chapel
The MR/DD currently gelists. Pastor Allen Midcap benediction .
Steve Beha, executive direcCemetery. Friends may call at the funetal home fiom 7-9 p.m. tor of Carleton School and receives about $742,000 a year
Meitp IndUstries, said Thurs- fiom county tax revenues and
:Saturday.
results in the past few years, ·
day the school's ability to suc- the passage of the levy would
and the work of this commitcessfully provide the neces- bring that amount to around
tee has helped in those
. sary services to its clients is $1,122,000 in local tax tnoney,
efforts."
,(
•
&gt;
directly related to the voters of she said.
Pip
Swisher said that Meigs
Be~ elaborated on the proMeigs County and it is this
-Mog&amp;A-57
fJEP-&lt;12.48
County's
cash welfare rolls
continued support that enabl~ posed dapital constrUction pro- grams through county school
Rv:l: lllil-13.91
Ardl Coal- 21.51
USB-18
have been cut fiom 840 to
Roct&lt;y- ~ 5.70
Glm8lt -8328
the facility to make a difference ject, which, he said, would' systems and other agencies.
Alao-41.01
FlO Sllllil- 51 .88
GenniEIIcltc- 37.91
AmTBCI&gt;'!B::-311.14
Those PRC-DR programs 246 cases since 1998, but
in the lives of individuals with include two ph:ues.
Seonl-40.25
Aahllnllrl:.- 41.(8
GI&lt;N.Y-3.70
"Th~ first phase would add have since been discontinued noted that many clients con.
. developmental disabilities.
Hll1oy DIMdlan- &lt;f1~ Sl1olwl1- zr
AT&amp;T- 15.()4
tinue to rely on food stamps,
-~52.24
Knat-8.10
Bin&lt; One- 34.05
"Unfortunately, there is no. 4,200 square feet to the Adult because of funding cuts.
Kroger- 24.00
BU-7.80
Werd/1- 26.92
The location of Millenni- Medicaid and cl)ild care ser,cure for mental retardation, Service Program for habilitav.b, • .,, 13.11
I.Md8 End- 32.85
Bob Evlnl- 19.05
however, the progr:uns and ser- tion activities and for school um Teleservices, development vices while they make the
W.-11.24
BogWs•• 41211)
. NSC-17.18
Oaii!*&gt;i-2.50
of the county's industrial sites transition from welfare rolls to
lloly . . . """"'" ...... vices we provide for our clients age transition classes," said
OakHIR&amp;dill 15.116 • p.m. ~
Cliam*ig Shcpo -4.99
d does allow them. to become Beha.
and progress on local road payroll.
. . l)l8ltlul doy'a ......
OVB-21.50
City lilltk'Q- 9.70
"It is obvious that our folks
"It
would
also
aUow
for
projects are, in part, Swisher
contributing,
productive
and
IIIT-32.75
Col-13.85
........ pr!Mctld 1¥ Smili
f'ln*lal
Mif#.
Inc.
d
are
not going to enter the job
00-14.tlli
responsible members of the some renovation of existing said, a result of the commis17.116
Oll'ool- .1 .35
Peplixl- 48.48
space for better utilization of sioners' financial commitment market in a S10-an-hour job,
conununity," said Beha.
"We've been in this situation the production area of the pro- to economic development and they're going to depend
through Temporary Assistance on those services while they
seven times before and are still gram,"he sm'd .
companies, smo)cers' rights confident this levy will pass on
make the transition."
Beha added the second to Needy f'amilies.
groups and the restaurant Tuesday," added Beha. "In past phase would be completed
Every county, Swisher said,
Meigs Counry was the first
industry advocated it.
was
required to prepare a
2004-05
and
would
between
county in the state to earmark
elections, the number of votes
between success and failure has add 4,200 square feet to the TANF funds for economic community plan, but Meigs
The bill's sponsor in the been minimal. If we can just school program with the addi- development, but other coun- made a conscious effort to
monitor the plan 's effectivcA coalition of anti-smoking Senate, Lynn Watchmann, R- get fiVer that small hump, all of tion of two classroom learning ties have since followed.
groups, including Tobacco- Napoleon, meanwhile, said he our efforts will have paid off."
centers, a facility cafeteria,
"I'm pleased with the mod- tless, and to evaluate the need
Free Ohio, American Cancer introduced the bill not as a
Nancy Par~er Campbell, which would permit the full est success that we've made;• for modifications.
"The successes we have
Society, American Heart pro-smoking measure, but ·as a Meig.&lt;~ County auditor, said if program use of the gymnasi- Swisher said. "There are those
·Association and American measure limiting the authori- the 1.6 mill levy passes on um, and kitchen renovations .
who have said there has been seen so far are the direct result
Lung Association, opposed. ty of a non-elected body in Thesday, it will generate an
"Total project costs, include no progress, but we have seen of this strategy," Swisher said.
the measure, while tobacco enacting legislation.
additional $380,665 a year in site development, are projected
local tax doUars for MR/DD's to be around $1.2 million over
the four-year period," said
programs .
aged readers to send him writCampbell explained the Beha.
"$300,000 of the cost will be
ing samples. No cash prizes financial impact of the 1.6 mill
were
offered,
but
on
Thursday
provided
by a capital construclevy upon property owners, if
: . NEW YORK (AP) - Five
: storyteUers are the winners of the winners got their names passed, would require them to tion grant through the Ohio
pay additional taXes each year. Department of Mental Retar:.the Stephen King "On Writ- posted on King's Web site.
King included a statement
Those who have property dation and Developmental
: jng" contest.
which
was
saying
he
had
received
more
apprailed at $20,000 would Disabilities,
· "On Writing," a memoir by
receive a tax incre.Se of$ 11.20 obtained by State Rep. John
. ·King released last fall, encour- than 1,000 entries.
per year; a $40,000 appraisal Carey in a previous state capiwould , garner a $22.40 tax tal budget;' added Beha.

EMS ftlns

Helen Lonl

Lany William Plants Sr.

Grange to meet

Services tonight

'

5~4-7.9!9

.·Levy
.
· ftomPapAI

Plan

LOCAL STOCKS
~

flUID

I

--8.50

AI

""*'"

,.....,.

"""'*"' -

S.B. 111
fnn Pace AI

.

: Stephen King

·SPORTS

Follow Eastern's
playoff run in
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Athens, Ohio

Associates (740)

Nina CUinlnp

•

~,; ;.,; ,; ;l. ; . 1 510 W. Union Str~et. ,

Medical

PomeroY. Council gives
foo~ trader 90-day try

The Dally Sentll'lll• P~~ge A 3

Plan revival

CLEVELAND (AP) -Surprise advances in technology are
sometimes gained when researchers in fields usually separate
compare notes, a planner of NASA Glenn Research Center's
newly announced con10rtium said Thursday.
·
. The NASA plan would establish a Consortiwn for Bioscience
and Engineering involving a partnership with Case Weslern
R~ University, University Hospitals of Cleveland, the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and the National Center for Microgravity R~arch.
Jensen AnderSOI).
Microgravity is weightlessness astronauts experience in orbit.
son of
.
!lesearch in microgravity has potential applications for developBrian ·&amp; Brandy
•ng drug treatments.
,
"It's amazing . the discoveries that can be made when
.__ _A_n_d.::..:.e_rs:..o:..n~_ _ j
researchen of different areas combine their knowledge;' said
Larry Viterna, chief of the commercial technology office at , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . : .
' ,
·
.' ' ,
COLUMBUS (AP) - Thoe defense a~ed that. po DNA was NASA Glenn.
found at the rape scene, but prosecutors said police foun~ plenty
of DNA- the rapist~ entilc body.
He was naked, snoring on the basement 'floor in the home
COLUMBUS (AP)' - Ohio State is joining a nationwide
where .he had dragged a woman .out of bed and raped bet.
On Thunday, a Franklin County Common Pleas Court jury movement of universities and colleges aeeking to improve the
working conditiom of thole who make school-logo merchandise
convicted Casaviero Senu-oke, 24, of Grove City, of rape,
by
uking companies to comply with a new code of conduct.
vated burglary, kidnapping and feloniow ~~~~ault. Senu-oke could
"We are trying to change the l}'ltem by workin11 within the
get up to life in prison when ~entenced on Dec. 13.
l}'ltem:'
Rick Van Brimmer, director of trademark and licemi'n11
The victim testified at the trial that me wu asleep with her
·
huaband one night wt March when she awoke to find a naked services at Ohio State, said Thursday. .
Implementation
of
the
code
wmes
a
yeat
after
Ohio
State
and
man standing next to her bed. She said he pulled her out of bed,
four other univenities - Harvard, Notre Dame, University of
took her to the basement and raped bet sevmJ times.
Michigan and UniVersity of California - issued a study fincliilg
worker abuses at plants where merchandise is made.
'·
The study of plants in South America, Asia and the United
. CLEVELAND (AP) ·- A man accused of trying to shape· his States in the $2.5 billion industry found workers expostd to danrnfant son's head to look more like his own has been charged gerous chemicals, forced.to work more than 60 hours a week ·a nd
women required, to take pregnancy tests.
with felonious assault.
Joshua Brissett, 19, of Cleveland has pleaded innocent. Brissett
is accused of using his hands to try to shape 5-month-old Roosevelt Worsham's head.
Roosevelt's mother, Shiara Worsham, has been charged with
PERR.Y (AP) - Small airstrips near one of Ohio's .two
child endangering, said Kim Kowalski, spokeswoman for the ~uclear plants have been closed after the Fedem! Aviation
Cuyahoga County prosecutor's office.
·
, !Stratton temporarily batmed private planes fiom flying near the
Kowalski said Worsham was charged because she saw Brissett plants nationwide..
•
attempting to shape _the infant's head and waited three days to
~e FAA ·o~ ":~esday imposed th~ restr!ctions "for _reasons of
take him to the hospttal after he began vomiting and refusing to . natrona! secunty. The ban on flymg wrthm 11 miles of 86
Paid for . , ....,. Cowaty Tullen:ulooll te..,. Committee '
eat.
nuclear plants and other nuclear sites will not affect conuilercial .
RJ'WD, Treu-r. P.O. Bo• 447, Pomeroy. Oblo 45789
.......
airplanes.
·
.
'·

Alleged rapist found asleep

POIMi O!f, lllcldl1p art, Ohio

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Eltl. 3

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Publ- evaoy altemoon, MOnday
ihrough Friday, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-clall
paotago paid at Pomeroy.
llembet: The Ak:cloled ancl
the Ohio
Alloc\atton.
POilln ut 1:
addrea COil'tCtlonl to The Daly SonUnel, Ill COurt.
St., Pomeroy, Ohk&gt; 45768.

NOV1=

Subecrlptlon ratee

a , - or motor route

OnoOno.-1111

'Ono,..,

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Mal
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$53.82'
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13Weokt
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26W52-

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Rutland Village

VOTE YES
'

.

on

2 Mill Levy Renewa~
for current expenses
Pd for by Rutland Village, PO Box 420, Rutland, OH 4Sns

RE-ELECT

Kenneth R. Guinther
Sutton Township Trustee
Vote Experience
Paid by IC.

Gulnth~r,

46902 St llt 124, RaC/111!, Ohio

FROMHEU(R)
7:11&amp;8:..
IIA'TIN!U IIAJ IIUN 1llll 1:41

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

___________

PageA4

__ _

Ftfigy• ...., ..... 2. 2001

__._

'

:._Th_eo_an_ySe_n_tin_ei_ _ _

DEAR ABBY: I am 87 years old
• and live in a retirement apartm~nt.
: Sixteen years ago, 'you printed a
funny letter in your column about a
mother's wild goose tale.
Over the years I have entertained
a lot of people with that story. Please
consider printing it again. Our
country could use a good laugh. . HELEN RODGER, KOKOMO,

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
74CHI2-21M • Fo: 882·2117

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publisher

R. Shewn Lewis
MaMglng Editor
Dllne IC8y HHI

Charlene Hoelllch
General Menloger
Ullin lOW-.. - ·

Contr.oller

No IUUipH latns d

DEAR HELEN: You're right. It
- IS a funny story and worth repeating. Read on: ·
DEAR ABBY: Whenever you
mention the poem, "I Had a Mother Who Read to Me," I have to
laugh becau"" my mother NEVER
read to me. Instead, she'd ·tell me
, bedtime stories that were more or
, le~ true.

no.,.-hw-Jff-*-NIF;Jr••_.....

h J ''b'.. lMIIn .-.;, h Itt ,.al illll. ..., .,.

. . ,m...Jitln.

.,.,..,...... ._..,u. ... ..._ ..........

h/HislliNJ Co. 't

... (»»_,

-~

ftiJuJrW...,.... .,.,_ flllwnftH ..-1.

NATIONAL .Y lEW

Overlooked

TODAY IN HISTORY
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Nov. 2, the 306th day of 2001. There are 59
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Twenty-five years ago, on Nov. 2, 1976, former Georgia Gov.
Jimmy Carter became the first candidate from the Deep South
since the Civil War to be elected president as he defeated
incumbent Gerald R. Ford.
On this date:
,
In 1783, Gen. George Washington i!sued his "Farewell
Address to the Army" near Princeton, N.J.
.
In 1795, the eleventh president of the United States, James
Knox Polk, was born in Mecklenburg County, N.C.
In 1865, the 29th president of the United States, Warren
Gamaliel Harding, was born near Corsica, Ohio.
li:J 1889, North Dakota and -South Dakota became the 39th
and 40th states.
In 1920, radio station KDKA in Pittsburgh broadcast returns
from the Harding-Cox presidential election.
In 1930, Haile Selassie was crowned emperor of Ethiopia.
In 1948, President Truman surprised the experts by being reelected in a narrow upset over Republican challenger Thomas
E.Dewey.
·
'
In 1959, game show contestant Charles Van Doren admitted
•
• to a House subcommittee that he'd been given questions and
answers in advance when he appeared on the NBC TV program '~Twenty-One."

In 1963, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dihn Diem was
ass~ssinated in a military coup.
In 1986, kidnappers in Lebanon released American hospital ·
administrator David Jacobsen after holding him for 17 months.
Ten years ago: Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had run for the presidency in 1984 and 1988, announced he wou)d not be a candidate in 1992.
Five years ago: A tentati11e )abor contract was reached
between General Motors and the Uriiied Auto Workers, averting a national strike.
One year ago: An American astronaut and ·two Russian cosmonauts became the first residents of the international space
stati~n, christening it "Alpha" at the start ~their four-month
nusston.
Today's Birthdays: Country singer Charlie Walker is 75.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Earl "Speedo" Carroll (The Cadillacs; The Coasters) is 64. Commentator and political figure
Patrick). Buchanan is 63. Actress Stefanie Powers is 59. Author
Shere Hite is 59. Rock musician Keith Emerson (Emerson,
Lake and Palmer) is 57. Singer-songwriter k.d.lang is 40. Rock
musi cian Bobby Dall (Poison) is 38. Actor David Schwimmer
is 35. Rhythm-and-blu·e, singer Alvin Chea (Take 6) is 3,i.
Rock singer-musician John Hampson (Nine Days) is 30. Rapper Prodigy (Mobb Deep) is 27. Actor Danny Cooksey is 26.
Thought for Today: "If I have d9ne any deed worthy of
remembrance, that deed will be my monument. If not, no
monument can preserve my memory." -'- Agesilaus II, King of
Sparta (circa 444-360 B.c.)

ADVICE
The one I liked best was the one
about how she and her cousin Alice
tried to make whiskey.
They filled a large crock with
water, wheat, oats, grain, raisiru, raw
potato peelings, and any other
garbage they could find.
a
couple of weeks, the mixture in the
crock smelled so bad my grandmother i?sisted they get rid of it.

After

Mom and Alice carried the crock
down by the river and dumped it on
the bank. Naturally, Grandma's
geese followed them and gobbled it
all up.
A while later, Grandma looked
out the 'window and saw her geese
lying about in the yard. She thought
they were dea&lt;\, so she instructed
the girls to pluck all the down from
the geese and told them as· soon as
their gran.dfather got home from
the lumber mill, he'd have to bury
those dead geese. (The geese were
not dead; they were druqk!)
The next morning, the geese were
running around the yard stark
naked; so Grahdma crocheted little
jackets for them to wear. Th;at was
the last time my mother and her
cousin Alice cried to T!1ake whiskey.

,•
l

JOE EASTMAN, COL- neighbors with susp&gt;c&gt;on, because
they looked, dreS&lt;ed and believed
ORADO SPRINGS
DEAR. ABBY: Yesterday. I was differently than I do. Today, 1 see the
afraid of needles, and I was terribly same grief in their eyes that I see in
busy, so I didn't donate blood. Today my own when I look in the mirror.
my country has been attacked by The United States is their home,
terrorists, . and my neighbors have too. Today, I put aside my distrust
been ·murdered and wounded, so I and extended my hand in friendship
stood in line for three hours, rolled and solidarity - because I'm an
American, and that's what we do.
up my sleeve and donated We'll pick ourselves up out of the
because I'm an American, and that's
what we do.
wreckage, and we will rellllild. Yesterday, I had too many finan" · because we're Americans, and that's
cial problems of my own to think what we do. - HOPEFUL AND
about giving money to charity. COMMITTED IN CHAR.:
Today, my country has been LO'ITE, N .C.
DEAR . HOPEFUL
AND
attacked by terrorists. My neighbors
are in need, so I opened my wallet COMMITTED: You said it, my
and gave - because I'm an Ameri- friend. Bless you.
can, and that's what we do.
Dear Abby is writren by Pduli11e
Yesterday, I viewed my immigrant Phillips and ddughrer ]ednlle Phillips.

..

Superior ratings

LOCAL EVENTS

Sept. 11 proved cryng need for
agencies to share itiformation
• San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News, on the failure qf
security agencies to predict Sept. 11 attacks: Congress is
dithering over whether and how to investigate the failure of U.S. intelligence to predict and prevent the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks.
How to conduct an inquiry is worthy of debate. But
whether to do it - why is this even a question?
There were hints of what was coming before Sept. 11.
We know, for example, that one of those teach-me-to·
steer-but-not-to-land aviators was behind bars on immigration charges last summer. How different things would
be today if spmebody had picked up on his bizarre story
and c'h ecked flight schools for others like him.
What else was overlooked, and by whom?
Congress has passed new laws giving the government
far more investigative power and reducing individual!'
civil liberties. What assurance do we have that government agencies given these new powers will use them
appropriately? Before Sept. 11, neither the FBI nor. the
CIA was considered an exemplary agency. They were
known not to share information sufficiendy. The FBI
was particularly discredited, fresh from the Wen Ho Lee
debacle and the failure to detect master spy Robert
Hanssen in its midst ....
Sept. 11 changed so much - but it did not magically
empower ·dysfunctional _organizations to suddenly
become brilliant. Americans need to understand what
failed before they can be confident that new tactics will
work.

Abigail
Van
Buren

. IND.

.ntU}mto~.-1..., .. ......,_.,_,. ..... _,,

Jn~~n.

Friday. November :z. :1001

Grandma's goose tale is strictly for the bird~

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey

-=By the Bend

Page AS

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Praying for a happy conclusioin to our existence
Until we approach our biblically allotted threescore years and 10, most of us
don't think much about our rhortality.
Terrorism has changed all that.
Nowadays the Baby Boomers, who are
usually so sure of themselves, wake up in
the middle of the night when they hear
the sound of a low-flying plane.
. Teen-agers and younger children want
to keep the hall light on when they go
to bed. Small children ask if they can
crawl in with mommy and daddy;
Many people, however, don't have any
worries about dying, no- matter how
scary the headlineJ. They don't flinch
every time the words "Late Breaking
News" flash on the television screen.
These are people who believe that
God has ordained the time of their
death, and that there is nothing anybody
can do to alter th~. They believe that
when your numbeJ.is up, you go -- that
the time of our death is already written
in indelible ink in the big Book of Life.
Some soldiers in battle take this fatalistic view. If the enemy's bullet has your
name on it, you'll be killed. If it doesn't,
you won't. So why worry?
Some of the ancient Greek philosophers believed in fate, that the gods predetermined all events.
Fatalism - the name given to this
philosophy - can be scary or comfort. ing. To know that you have no control
over your destiny, that whether or not
you take care of your health or look

George .
Plagenz
COLUMNIST

something we enjoy. (Bing died on a golf
course.)
It is the gradual failure of ooe's powers
of mind and body, the prospect of a vista
of medicine bottles next to the sick bed
that terrifies us, not death itself
It would be nice to know whether we
could avoid the agony of death even if
we cannot avoid death itself. Can we do
that? Do we have anything to say about
the manner of our own death?
Most of us would be inclined to say
no. But the late Bible translator Monsignor Ronald Knox of England tells of
a friend ofhis,ArchbishopGoodier, who
satd that people ought to pray for the
· kind of death that appeals to them. It was
surpmmg, the archbtshop told Knox,
how often people found that p;u-ttcular
pray~r ~ranted. .
.
, . . ,
Dtd &gt;t work '".ArchbiShop Goodter s
case? Apparently &gt;t dtd, 1f the arc_hb!Shop
prayed for a sudden death. A pnest, says
Knox, went to call on Goodier one
afternoon. The archbtshop, m fine fettle,
saw htm fO the door when the vmt was
over. A few minutes later, he was found
dead in his quarters.
Goodier would have said his life (and
death) was in God's hands, but that we
can appeal to God to grant us a happy
end to our earthly existence.
. If that is true, it could eliminate much
of the terror of dymg.

hoth ways before you cross the street, life
can end for you tomorrow simply
because that is what the gods have
ordained. It is a frightening notion.
On the other hand, knowing that you
don't have to worry about what is going
to happen to you because it is already
determined can get you to adopt a certain carefree attitude about living, which
in turn brings a welcome freedom from
anxiety. .
,
Most religidus people probably are not
·fatalist in the absolute sense. We believe
that our lives are in God's hands, but we
also believe that we have some say in the
matter. We try, for example, to put off
death as long as we can, no matter what
our theological beliefS.
Most of us, I imagine, would say that
we would like to go the way Bing Crosby went: in our 70s (thai'S long enough
(George R. Plage11z is d columnist for
to live, most would say); quickly and
without suffering; and while doing Newspaper Enterprise Associdtion.)

WEST'S VIEW

Here's a school where the patriotic spirit is discouraged
We hear much about "the enemy
wit\:&gt; in"- namely, the suspected cells of
Islamist terrorists and terrorist sympathizers still believed to exist within .our
natioh's borders. But there is another
enemy within so entrenched it defies
conventional police · detection. That
enemy is political correctness. This is not
exactly the same political correctness
that "cleanses" Shakespeare from reading
lists, distorts history to redress grievances, or even contests the unpleasant
wisdom of racial profiling. It is a subtler
brand of thought-control, emanating
from within a person or institution
rather than having to be imposed from
without. Instead of manifesting itself in
political or academic tertns, this kind of
correctness is a behavioral or expressive
phenomenon . In fact, you might call it
uexpressive correctness.''

Expressive correctness seems to
explain why pro-America students at
Amherst College standing fur a recorded
rendition of"God Bless America" could
barely muster a response to a party of
anti-War activists who crashed their rally
to burn flags. About the worst thing
these same pta-America students could
say about the outrage was to deem it
.. inappropriate." Expressive correctness

may explain ·why, on hearing a stream of
anti-American rhetoric at a. University
of Hawaii anti-war rally, a lone dissenting
professor could only call the poisonous
diatribes "troubling for me." The fear of
giving offense - PC's primary precept
- finally seems to have overridden the
natural instincts of self-preservation,,producing a new mode of self-censored
restraint even in the face of extremism.

But not so in the case of Zewdalem
Kebede, a senior at San Diego State University. Mr. Kebede, a naturalized American born in Ethiapia, was studying in a
library on· Sept ..22 when a nearby conversation caught his attention. Four
Saudi Arabian students were speaking
Arabic, which Mr. Kebede speaks fluently, and discussing their pleasure over the
massacre of Sept. 11 . "They were very
pleased," Mr. Kebede later told the campus newspaper. "They were happy. And
they were regretting (thai the terrorists
missed) the 'Big House."'
·when Mr. Kedebe could stand it no
longer, he approached them."Guys, what
you are talking is unfair," he later .recalled
saying in Arabic. "How do you feel when
those 5,000 to 6,000 people are buried
in two or three buildings? They are the
rubble or they bec~me ash. And you are
talking about the action of bin Laden
and his group. You are proud of them.
You should have to feel shame."
A heated exchange followed, after
which Mr. Kebede finally return ed to his
table. End of story? Hardly.Th e Sept. 11celebrating Saudis, exchange. stu11ents
whose regrets over the historic massacre
came from the continued existence of
the "Big House" (the White House? the
Capitol?) had the gall to report Mr.
Kebede to the campus police. (They also
denied making the anti-American statements.) Did the cops scowl and tell the
exchange students they were. lucky to be
able to take advantage of our freedom of
speech to eJ&lt;press such heinous
thoughts? Hardly. The police filed a
report. And the wheels of correctness
began to turn.

· It wasn't long before Mr. Kebede had
to go before the university's Orwellian
Center for Student Rights for having
~llegedly been "verbally abusive to other
students." Later, Mr. Kebede had to meet
with what's known as a "University Judicial Officer." He eventually got off with
a written warning that threatened
"severe disciplinary sanctions" should he
ever again confront "members of th e

campus community in a manner ... .

found to be aggressive or abusive." That
means next time Mr. Kebede overhears
the hate-talk of carnage-crowing, terrorist-symps, the young man should keep
hiS moral revulsion and patriotism to
himself.
The warning letter 'chen went on 'to
say, "You are admonished to conduct
yourself as a responsible member of the
campus community in the future."
There's mu.ch to say about this final outrage - as if the heartfelt urge to rebut
such poisonous invective is anything but
"responsible"- although it may be Mr.
Kebede who puts it best. ''I'm a n~tural­
ized American," he told the campus
newspaper. "I have taken an oath to protect this country, so that is my part to do
- for that I am happy. I am an honest
citjzen for this country. I showed those
guys there are people who love America,
wh&lt;:&gt; defend America. Is that a crime?"
Mr. Kebede deserves our thanks, not
his university's correction. And, frankly,
those Saudi students deserve plane tickets home. Maybe they can take the Center for Student Rights witli the&gt;n. ·

(Dia11a ·West is d co/"muist dl!d editorial
u.-iter for Tire Washi11gton Times. She cau be
cotJtacted via dwestwds/rillgromimes.com.)

• Community Calendar is pu~
· : lished as a free service to non·
· •· profit groups wishing to
· • announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed lo be
printed a specific number of
days.

School. Gaither·style event with table service provided by athletic
best in gospel music. Doors open booslers,
et6 p.m.. concert starts at 7 p.m.
ENTERPRISE - Heritage
RACINE Family night Day celebration EnterpriSe UnHpotluck at Carmel • United ed MethOdist Church'e 127th
Methodist Church, 6 p.m., 7:30 anniversary. Services start a 9
p.m. youth night worship service. a.m. Potluck dinner, special ·
music at afternoon program by
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tailgate !he Uplifters.
party al Eastern High School, 4
p.m. Public invHed to participate
RACINE- Worship service at
in party and caravan to Glouster
Carmel
UnHecj Methodist Church
FRIDAY
' for quarter-final game against
featuring
Clark Family Singers,
RACINE - Revival S81Vices Trimble.
10:45
a.m.
Sunday, 7:30 p.m.,
begin at Carmel-Sutton United
worship
service
with Pastor Wen·
POMEROY - Meigs County
Methodist Church. Carmel Builddell
Stutler.
. lng. 7:30 p.m. Friday, Pa~tor Bill Humane Society to give away
Thomas C. Minshall II
, Hoback.
stmw for pet bedding at Kroger,
MONDAY
noon to 3 p.m. Cold weather tips
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
POMEROY - All Sculs Day lor pets to be distributed. Dona·
ship Trustees, regular meeting, .The Meigs Marauder Band received superior ratings and qual·
service, 9 a.m., Mass 9:30 a.m., lions accepted.
Mon., 7:30 p.m., Syracute VII- · lfled for competition In the state finals as a result of scores at
7 p.m., Sacred Heart Church.
a recent competition held at Fort Frye High School.
HARRISONVILLE Har- lage l;lail.
Mass followed by prayer memorrisonville
Lodge
412,
F&amp;AM,
Ial lor ail names on the altar, foi·
POMEROY · - Thomas
lowed by Eucharistic Benedic- meets Saturday at 7:30 p.m. lor
lETART - Letart Townehp
election
of
officers.
Relresh·.
C.
Minshall II, son of Lisa
tion.
Trustees, Monday, 8:30 p.m. at
Kennedy, and attends Ohio
ments.
office building.
·Minshall of Pomeroy and
Uqiversity, where she is a ·
SATURDAY
Thomas Minshall of Mason,
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Gospal sing,
junior.
TUESDAY
W.Va., celebrated his second
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- The
Saturday, 7 p.m. Hobson ChristR~dick · said that FreemaPOMEROY - Eagles Auxll·
birthday at McDonald's
Ian Fellowship Church. Featuring Sumplln Valley Trio, featured on iary, 7:30 Tuesday at !he hall.
sonry
has
historically
been
·
The King Family of Lancaster. Gospel Music Television, to sing,
Oct. 28.
dedicated to the importance
CMstian Echoes. Love offering Sunday, 7 p.m. at Second Baptist
Theme of the party was
ALFRED - Orange Township
of education in . o~r sotiety, uBlue's Clues."
to benefit Bend Area Gospel Church in Ravenswood. Refresh- Trustees, regular meeting, Tuea·
menta following performance.
Jubilee.
and that it is .always· a pleasure
Attending the party were
church located on comer of Ann dey, 7 p.m. altha home of clerk
to be able to contribute to the his mother, his great-grandOsla Follrod.
POMEROY - Sacred Heart and Elwood Streets.
educational opportunities of father, James Bland, his
Church, 9:30 a.m. Mass and
WEDNESDAY
young people like Kristina.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VolleyDominican Assoclatas meeting.
grandmother, Susie Bryant,
PAGEVILLE - ScipiO Townbail banquet al Eastern High
Abbott. Scholarships are and Ron and Stella IcenPOMEROY- A Meigs Counly School, gradee 7·12, 2 p.m. Sun· ship Trusteaa meeUng, Wldnea·
given to the children of Scot- hower, Teresa, James, and
Homecoming by First Southam day at high school. Bring veg- day, 6:30 p.m, at the Pagevtlli
ti!h Rite Masonic families or Bridgett
Productions at Meigs High etable and dessert. Meat, diinks, Townhall.
Gray,
Cissie,
to young people who have Bradley, Danielle Heighten,
been active in Masonic-relat- April and Shaylla Mayes,
KrlltiM Kennedy
ed organi~ations such as Leigha Bryant, Bobby and
DeMolay, Rainbow and Job's Angie
Minshall, Jason
Daughters.
Miller, Rant and Becky
The grants are made Minshall, Kristen, Brandon,
throughout the 15 state and Justin Sommerville,
northern Masonic JurisdicPOMEROY Kristina tion. Total scholar;ships in the J. W Julie and Nikki
Kennedy of Pomeroy has Northern Scottish Rite Juris- McGuire, Carrie Myers,
There are many ways you
ing. Buy milk by the gallon, been awarded an Abbott diction will be $400,000 for Andy Legg, Mary Haggy,
can save money on your food
instead of quarts and half-gal• Scholarship by the 32nd the 2001-02 academic period. Jonathan Reitrnire, and
Degree Masons headquar- A year ago, 398 college level Linda Michael.
budget. The following are
Ions, if it will be used.
Sending gifts were James
• Purchase while chickens, tered in Columbus.
some examples.
students across the jurisdic- Minshall, Thomas Minshall.
In making the announce- tion were helped by Abbott
Plan menus in advance so
then cut them into parts. Buy
and Adam Hicks.
ment,
·Glenn B. Redick,
you wiD know what is needless tender cuts of meat, such
grants.
ed. Compare store ads while
as round steaks, thar require scholarship chairman said that
Scottish · Rite
making out the shopping list.
moist heat and longer cook- "Abbott
Shop at discount stores
ADVICE
ing times. Consider the Masonic scholarships are
where prices are cheaper.
amount of servipgs obtained awarded to qualified students
Only shop once a week
from a pound of meat, versus in recognition of scholastic
when you have time to look
Purchase day-old bread and fat and bone that will be dis- and all-around achievements.
for bargains. Stick to the baked goods. Select regular
"Our goal is to help young
.
carded.
shopping list to avoi d grains an d cere al , sueh as nee
people fulfill their career goals
impulse buying. Compare the and oatmeal, instead of conEat dried beans and peas by assisting them financially as
unit prices that are noted on venience foods that area fla- for protein in place of more they further their education
·
expensive meat, fish and beyond high ~chool."
store shelves. Stock up · on vored or instant.
Read labels to see what poultry. Prepare your own
non-perishable items that are
Kri!tina is the daughter of
low in price.
you are buying. While grain entrees and casseroles from Mr. and Mrs . Glen L.
Avoid going to the store . breads and brown rice will scratch, because convenience
when hungry - it may be supply more nutrients than foods can be very costly.
hard to resist temptation . those that area white.
(Becky Baer is Meigs
Don't take chil4ren shopping
Nonfat dry milk is inex- County's Extension agent for
with you - likewise, it may pensive and has a long shelf family and consumer sci- ·
he hard to say "no" to them. life. make it, then chill for ences/community developPurchase generic and house several .hour&gt; before drink~ ment, Ohio State University.)
brands. Patronize stores that ...-------------~--------.
double and triple coupons.
Buy fresh fruits when they
llln .....~e who can Clltty the moat ~um~klna 20 fll~tl
are in season . Choose large
(Bring aomeone to load them In your lltmc)
bags of frozen vegetables.
• Z.00 to enter
·
. Cook just the amount you
. need, then keep the rest
lgrga dytflld gnlmgl touch ell!¥£ wlnn~rl
Offers
frozen for later use. Make
• 8 &amp; Undat • 8-12 • 12 &amp; UP
your own salads. Prepackaged
Noon ......J:ot klda o11ly 8 1111d undat- !:ee who c11n
ones and salad bars are more
~ut the mOJ:t goutd£ In II bll£kat In gQ RACOildR.
costly, unless the larger indi50¢ to enter
vidual foods would go to
Stufflld Boyd B~l!t to the wlllMrl
waste before they are eaten.
1~.rn Gogt Glvegway- throw the moat ~~~m~klna
Prepare wholesome snacks of
Into the ~um~kln eatl11g mouth •
fresh fruits and vegetables,
instead of buying high
Pum~klna • 25¢ each
priced, high fat chips.
~0 AG!; LIMIT

Birthday
celebrated

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Ways to save money on your food budget

Awarded
scholarship

B k
ec y
Baer

HOLZER CLINIC .
MEIGS

FREE

......

1 ~.rn....:J:rled ~~~~leJ: ovet a11 Oi'Sil flte In 11n Iron
HI!; T~T£ I~ U~BW!;VABL!;l

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The Daily Sentinel

Fttay. Nonmhr 2. 2101

states of

FBiwams
LOS ANGELES (AP) Terrorists may be planning
attacks on nujor West Coast
bridges sometime in the next
few da)", the FBI has warned
officials in eight western states.
The Justice Department
confirmed the warning Thursday after California Gov. Gray
Davis said law enforcement
officials had "credible evidence" that four California
bridges, including San Francis. co's Golden Gate Bridge,
· might be targets.
The alert was sent to law
enforcement agencies in California, Washington, Oregon,
·Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Montana and Idaho on Wednesday.
Davis' decision to reveal the
potential threats had the support of federal officials,
although they didn't make the
infornution public until mer
he spoke out.
"I respect the decision Governor Davis made; he exercised his judgment," said
Homeland Security Director
Tom Ridge. "Had he chosen
not to reveal, I would have
respected that as well."
Davis told The Associated
Press he felt he had an obligation to make the announcement.
· "This threat came from
three separate federal sources.
It was specific, it was time-sensitive, and I feel an obligation

PapA&amp;

Amencaat
•

B-S2s pound Taliban
headquarters in Kabul
JABAL

·

POSSIBLE AnACKS -Westbound traffic approaches San Francisco on the Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge seen from Treasure Island In san Francisco Bey. California Gov. Gray Davis
warned Thursday that terrorists may be targeting four California bridges for a commute-hour
· attack over tha next seven days. (AP)

to share that information with
Californians:• Davis said. "If I
failed to share that information and, God forbid, something went wrong, I'd be kicking myself." .
The FBI message said:
"Reportedly,
unspecified
groups are targeting suspension bridges on the West

Coast."
lim holy month of Ramadan.
Six
"incidents"
were
Although hundreds of
believed to be planned during • threats have been called in to
rush hour berween Friday and authorities around California
Wednesday, the FBI alert said. since the Sept. 11 terrorist
Davis said reports from other attacks on the World Trade
fe4eral agencies suggested the Center and the Pentagon, this
attacks were planned some- is only the second judged
time between Friday and Nov. credible enough to issue an
17, the beginning of the Mus~ alert, Davis said.

Rumsfeld: More U.S. forces ready ·to go
called off after the helicopterWASHINGTON (AP) ,
borne · troops encountered
Hundreds more U.S. special
ground
fire, presumably from
forcqs ,troops are ready to
the Taliban militia that coninfiltrate Mghanistan and put
trols most o.f Mghanistan.
more pressure on the Taliban
Responding to reporters'
militia that shelters Osama bin
questions about a U.S. attack
Laden, Defense Secretary
Oc.t.
22 of an Mghan village
Donald H. Rumsfeld said.
called Chukar, about 25 miles
Problems including bad
north of Kandahar, Pentagon
weather and heavy fire at a
spokesman Bryan Whitnun
landing area have prevented
said the village was a Taliban
some of the U.S. teams from
·encampment populated by alentering Afghanistan recently,
Qaida "collaborators" and
Rumsfeld said Thursday.
therefore deemed a legitimate
"We have a number of
military target. It was attacked
teams cocked and ready to
at
night by an Air Force ACgo," he told a Pentagon news
conference on the 26th day of paign by pinpomtmg targets 130 gunship.
Rumsfeld plans to leave FriU.S. bombing. "It's just a mat- and coordinating with forces
day for Russia and several
ter of having the-right kind of opposing the Taliban.
equipment to get them there · He said the plan includes countries near Afghanistan.
. in the landing zones ... where placing U.S. troops with a He is scheduled. to meet with
· it's possible to get in and get wider ring of rebel forces, in his Russian counterpart,
out, and we expect that to both northern and southern Sergei Ivanov, in Moscow on
happen."
Afghanistan. The United Saturday.
Rumsfeld declined to idenThe defense secretary men- States also is supplying rebels
tify
the other countries he
'tioned no specific number of with ammunition and arms
troops, but said he hoped to "as fast as we can" once liaison would visit. Before the · U.S.
triple or quadruple the cur- forces make sure the supplies bombing campaign began
· rent number of special forces will be used and not sold, he Oct. 7, he visited Uzbekistan,
Egypt, Oman, Turkey and
· in Mghanistan, which totals said.
between 100 and 200. RumsRumsfeld revealed that one Saudi Arabia.
Rumsfeld on Tuesday had
'feld said the extra troops will recent attempt to land U.S.
help the United States special operations troops wa~ confirmed for the first time
that a small number of US.
improve its bombing cam-

special operations forces were
inside Afghanistan to help
designate targets for U.S. warplanes and to act as liaison
with the northern alliance of
opposition forces who seek to
oust the Taliban.
"I'd like to see as soon as
hununly possible the number
of teams go up by three or
four times:' Rumsfeld said.
He said the present number
was unowhere r\ear as many as
we need."

SARAJ,
Afghanistan (AP) - B-52
bombers pounded the front
line north of Kabul on Friday
in one of the strongest attacks
yet, blasting a Taliban field
headquarters in wave after
wave of strikes. Opposition
forces said the bombing
appeared directed by Ameri- WATCHING - An Afghan
can forces on the ground.
watches smoke rising from
Elated opposition fighters hills In northern Afghanistan
and .awed villagers on the close to the border with
opposition-held side of the Tajikistan (AP)
··
front estinuted as many as 60
bombs fell, but lost track as of Kandahar and at front lines
huge explosions· sent plumes surrounding their northern
of smoke surging up from stronghold . of Mazar-e.Taliban positions.
Sharif.
In
Washington;
u:s.
"There are too many to
count!" 20-year-old opposi- Defense Secretary Donald H.
tion fighter Sham Sher Khan Rumsfeld confirmed TlmJ&gt;5aid. Taliban artillery gunners day that a small number of
fired in vain at warplanes fly- u.s. special foroes were on
ing miles above. They also the ground helping identify
trained some of their guns on targets for U.S. warplanes and
opposition forces across the coordinating with the oppofront line, drawing return fire. sition. U.S. officials indicated
The
bombardment the u.s: ground deployment
· appeared to be part of was between 100 and 200
increased U.S. cooperation men.
with the opposition northern . "I'd like to see as soon as
alliance, which seeks to push humanly possible the number
through Taliban defenses of teams go up by three or
before the rapidly approach- four times:· Rumsfeld said,
ing winter makes ground saying the present size was
offensives more difficult. "nowhere near·as nuny as we
Daylight Friday showed fresh need:'
snow on the peaks surroundAt the fiont Friday, Afghan
ing the front at the Shomali opposition official Saeed
Plain.
Hussain Anwari said AmeriAcross Taliban territory, cans were on the ground in
other . U.S. strikes were opposition tecritory, and
reported overnight at the Tal- appeared to be directing the
'iban 's southern headquarters strikes on Taliban positions.

frld'Y, Nov. 2. 2001

-.,..........,.II•E..-.-7
...
Wt 1y7p..a.

Ooriolv..a-""'-

a..do " Rd.
Puur. Jamet Millet
Sunday School· IO:JO LDI.
EveninJ- 7:30 p..m.

m-vilo,

ApoooOOc w-;p c-,.
873 S. 3rd A\e.• MiddSepon:
Kevin ~Conkle, Putl:r
s.ndty, IOa.m. tnd 6:00p.m.
Wed.oelday, 7:30p.m.: Ya.tt Fti 1:30 p.m..

I.lbeo1r.

.., !I Goo!

P.O. Do• 467.1&gt;uddinJ !.an&lt;

.Open To The Public
Thesday, November 6, 2001
. PVH Wellness Center
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

• rRrr Blood Glucmc Screenings
•

Uttk C.... Bapdot Clooftlo
Price Hollow R4."Rullarll
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Momini Service 11 :00 Ull,
Evenin&amp; Service -6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:10p.m.

•
•

Graat Sl, Middleport
Sunday ~e;hool· 9'.30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m. aod 6 p.m:
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Worabip • 10:4S a.m.

.......,. Flm .......
Easl Main St
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m.

nne Souther~~ Baplist
41812 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOilihip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Sunday ~hool- 9:15a.m.
Woo;hip-IO:I.Sa.m., 7:~p.m.
Wednesday Service.- 7:00p.m.

Bdil181tm Bapdlt Churtb
Grtat Bend, Route 124, Racine. OH
,
Pastor : Daniel M~
~ (
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
•·
SWllilay Wonhip ·10:30 a.m.

•

•

I Numerom Vendors &amp; Givesway Items

We&lt;lnead4y Bible; Study. ~:00 p.m.

· Old llelhol FNI W(U Boptllt Cluordo
284501 St.l\1. 7, Middleport

County ~ercftants

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
•

(304) 875·4340

W~y~-7p~

c
':Owdl
Pooor. b.. ......, TdHo
...... Stout.RudiOd
SYOdly WorWp-10:00 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;moo-7 p.m.

Thunda)' Strvleoa • 7:00

"-~ IICklrl

Wwtbip·!'-30 .....
Swdly Sdlool- l&amp;.lO a.m.

"-·.left''!Y W.U..C.

---Cionloola.tor
Swodoy- -9,JC~a.m.
WOI'Ihif- 10=:30 a.m., 6:JO p.m.
Wedoelday Scrvica- 6:30p.m.

Worship · 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Services· 7 p.m.

"""""Y· .....__Rd. (IIJ."l)

..._.._w.._

Sundly School - 9::30 a.m.
W«&lt;bip-10:30a.m.,7:00p.m.
Wedoetda:r.Smvices -7 p.m.

"'Cbrtlt

Wonbip ServQ - 9 a.m.
Communion - I0 a.m.
Suoday Sdlool- I(); l j a.m.
Voulb- ~:JO pm SWiday
Bible Study Wc:dtadly 7 pm

.rarw

39558Bnodbwy Rood,~
Sunday School - 9: lO a.m.
Radaad O.rdlfll Qrllt

Suodly School. 9:30 UL
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Brodl'ood Cluordo IICiuloc
Comer·o f St. Rl. 124 A Bradbury Rd.
Mlni!ller: Doug Shamblin
Youlh Minister: Bill Amber&amp;er ·
Sunday Scbool- 9:l0 a.m.
Won.hip • 8:00a.m.. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.iJ,
Wednesday Serlicet - 7:00p.m.

Fol'dl Run 8apdlt
'Putor : Ariua Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

(Estimated Value Over $1 ,000)

Drawing to take place Monday, December 17, 2001.

*

*
*

To be ellolble you must make a purchase of $20 or more at
14 partlclpatlnQ stores.

'

I

2
3
4

5
6

8
9
I0
II
12
13
14
15

lllht · l . Ill

. Sao•••

923 S. ThUd St., MNitllepoo1

d rtGnnJU'.J.

A,h

- ur.
""""'
c...t

Vlcto&lt;y c.a....
Rood. Gallipolb. OH
Pastor: Bill Statm
Sunday ServiCes- 10 a.m. A 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p m. &amp;. Youth 1 p.m.i

3773

Wednesday 7 pm

••

PuforTmaDivil

Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Full Gelptl. Cllurdll ohhe Uwl111 ' •

Sund.y lti'Vke, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

.......,

s.-

RL338, Antiquity

Pastor: Jesse Morris

Folllo hJJ Geopol Cb....
L.onJ Bouom
Pllcor: Sieve Reed
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 Lftl.
Wonbip ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wo:Jneacb.y - 7 p.m.
Fric&amp;l.y • feUowlbip ICIVk:e 7 p.m.

Past«: Deway• Stutler
Samday School- 10 1.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 UD.:

c.r..t.sCormel.t u..... -

nee·

Paator: Dewayae Stutler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 un.

•as'

Services: Satunt.y 2:00p.m.

·'

God '1 Ttmp&amp;t ot PnlJt
31665 MoQuU. Rd. Pumeroy, Ohio Putor. Wayne Bak:ol.m
Servku: Thun. Nite1 7:00pm
New church No Sunday lef\'ict
established.
~

f....,........,.

-UmcRd..RudiOd
.... t.forpuJ. Savices: Wcdoelday, 7:30p.m.
. • Suadoy, 2:30p.m.

Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

--.-

•

Puwr. ~wa)'DO Stutler
Sunday School - 11 un.
Wonhlp. 10 a.m.

,..,..... . c

~

d

s.&amp;em Communltr Qurdl
Litvin&amp; Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30am
Sunday evtnillJ !IC:tvice 6 pm
Wedneiday acrv~ 7 pm

...., a..rtb

Palor.l'ltelao Dudum
~ Sunday-9:30a.m. mel 7 p.m.
...........,..7p.m.

r · st c-amtr Clllud
575 Pold Ill., Mlddloport
PuiOr.S...Mdonott

-BrionllorWa
Sundoylkl&gt;ooJ.IOo.m.
WOntdp.' a.m.
Woduooloy . 7 p.m.

luodly-9:10L..

OV ..,.._ Ludtlf• a.rct.
Walmoo IOd HIIU)I su., 111\'0ftlwoocl.

wm,...,..._

Puur. O.vld a.....u
Sun&lt;loy Scbool· 10:00 Lm.
Wonltlp ·II Lm,

Cburd ul 0rto1

ln-7 and 134 W

Evanpllat: Denntt Supnt
S-y Bible Sludy • "30 o.m.
Wonhlp: 10'30 o.m. and 6:30p.m.
W-Jday Bible Study. 7 p.m.

B....... ·7:30p.m.

JollloVollqTo-Chuldl
8alllyRunRoed

Staldly llchaal· l0Lm.
WoniiJp.JILm.
- y 7 p.m.

CooMIIt~-­
l'ulor: Halon Kllno

SL Plul La...... ChUfth
Comer Syeamon~&amp;. Seoond Sl.. PQrneroy
S11nday Sehool - 9:4.5 a.m.
Wonblp II a.m.

CooJyiJle Chwdl
Main .t Fifth 81.
SundlyScbool· IOo.m.
Wonltip • 9 a.m.
Tuelday Serviect. 7 p.m.

Pumr: ln. 8aunla la¥1'1011
Sundoy E....n11 p.m.
n..-y S...loo· 1 p.m.
ly-Miooloo
1411 B....,...., St .. Syroouao
lbw. MU.. ThomJ""',Puoor

I 11ii&lt;'d \ltllwdi ' i

Cb..... ulDriollo
CbrllduU....
.IW1ion1. w.~
PulorJlm Hugbct
Sundly School - II a.m.
Wonh.lp - 9:10a.m., 7:30p.m.

I,.." - 1
Wonhip·-9:30 a.m. (lit&amp;. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (lnl .t 41h Sun)
WedneJday Service- 7:30p.m.

MLOII.. UolledMetJoocllll
Off 124 behind WilkclvUie
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spift!l
Synday Sthool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30a.m., 1 p.m.
1bunday Scrvicee - 7 p.m.

Wednetdly Servkes • 7:30p.m.

II " ' ( ,od

MtiJI CoopenUn PalUh
Nonheas1 CluRer

Sunday Schobl -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Pa.rnor: Ron Hearh
Sunde.y Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Cbakr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Su.nday School • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Sy,..._ Flnt Clo- II God
Apple and Second Sts.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship: 10 a.m.
Evenina: Services- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -6:30 p.m.

J-

Putor: Bob Randolph
Worahip ·9:30a.m.
SlUiday School · 10:30 11.m.

,., h, 1&lt;'1 i.ttl

Putor: Rev. Kri~~tna Rotlln110n
Sunday ~hool 7 10 a.m.
Worship . ll a.m.

f.
Wonthip -9a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

BcdloiCburdo
Thwnlhlp Rd. , .t68C
Sunday khool- 9 a.m.

Swaday Sdlool -9:30a.m.
Wonhlp 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Middleport Pn!sbyterlan
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Wonhip- 10 a.m.

J)ya.tJie C
oiiJ Cbu..Jo
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

--·Hart
7

W«1ncsdaY Sc~ica- 10 a.m.
Jledlt11P"'1 Qurdl

Sunday S..hoot- IOa.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services- g p.m.
Thr&lt;h Cburdo
Co. Rd. 63
Sundly School.· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:-.10 a.m.

Follh GGopd Cburtb
Loai Bottom
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
V(onhip • 10:4$ a.m.. 7130 p.m.
Wednesday7:30 p.m.

l

)

Mulberry HIS. Rd., J&gt;&lt;Jmeroy
Pastor. Roy l..lwinsk)'
Saturday Services:
Snbbalh School • 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

7

~C'' pwtCb•rtbottMN~

P"""" Aile• Ml&lt;kop

I uill'd llrl'lhn·u
Me. Htnnoa Unlltd Brethren
ln Christ Church
Tuu Communily offCR 82
hstur. Robc:rt Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.. 7.30 p.m.
W~y Sel'\'ices · 7:30p.m.

ML Olh'e Community Chun:b
Pulor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service 1 p.m.
7

Stmday School - 9:30 1.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodnetday Servicea - 7 p.m.
-

•'

St~-0., Adveatla

Mont Cbaptl Cbun:b
Sunday ICbooJ. 10 a.m.
Wonbip • ll a.m.
WeG!esday Service • 7 p.m.

OnndSoreet

f

Harrlsonwllle Pmbyttrltn Church

IWol CoonoouuiiJ Cluortb
Of! RL 124

\:11 : 11 '1' 111 '

All....
PaMor. Jane Beattie

l'1

s,,..._nmUuJIId......,_

SundlySchooi·IOa.m.
Even.lna • 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Setvice- 7 p.m.

7

-

•·m.

Sunday School· I0
fivtnlna - 7 p.m.
WodfM'Ida) Servk:t• .. 7 p.m.

·-yhrtloo · MOp.m.

"-Biilo""'-

w.~

Swodoywonblp·IO:IOLm.

Ptntr c wtaL "-mbl)'
SL Rt. ll4.1tJclno
Pulor. WUllom Hobol;k

lundoy SchooliO o.m.

.....

lluodly kbool• IO:OOLm.

UolfedFollhCburtb
kt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pau
Pallor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
• Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Allc• Mllbp

-Fello-p
ChUidl of the Nwrene

Putor: TereSI Waldeck
Sundly School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4!5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m.

FuU"-lup33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hupter

..
)
'

I

Edtn Unilfd Brethren In Chrbit
2 in miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Re11. Rohert Markley
Sunday Schoo l · II a.m.
Sunday WCH'!Ihip - 10·00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7:JO'p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

Syi'KUit Cbun:b ol &amp;be Naureae

Purch~ses must be made between November 2, 2001
and December 15,2001 •

warttclpatbift ~ercftants.
I

Second Baptlsl Churth
Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain

Service time: Sunday 10:10 a.m.

- . . . 9:01lLm.

"

.RuU.nd Cburtb ol Ged ·

CIH'Ioo liberude Churdl
Oif101l, w.Va.
SWJday Schooi · IOa.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wcdnetday Stn&lt;ice, 7. p.IL

SoloooC...
Pastor: Ron Ance
Sunday School- 9: IS a.m.
WOCibip -IQ: IS a.m.

lllol'-1

_ofo.tol
_
-,_N
Cllonlt

Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services- 7 p.m.

After you have made your 14 purchases -fill out the back·
of card and return to any listed merchant.
(Card will be Issued after 1st purchase)

Samdly School- 9:30 un.
Worship. IO:JO a.m.
Tbundlly Senica- 7 p.m.

....... Life Cnttr
"Fuii.(Mpel Chwd!"
PallOrl John ,t Patt) Wade
60) Scooad Ave. MIQ'l

W~IO:OOam

Wednnday Servioea - 1 p.m.

Middl

Cburdo ulCiuloc
-PJdllpSIImD
Sundoylahooi:9:30Lm.
- P - : l0:30o.m.
111111 Sllldjo, Wodnooda7. 6:10p.m.

Antiquity Baptltt
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won.hip. 10:45 a.m.

Salem St.
Pa~lor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday 5(;hool - 10 a.m.

47439 Roibel Rd., a-or
Passon: Rev. Mary and Harok1 Cook
Sunday Scrvk:n: 10 a.m.&amp;: 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
PaPoc Mike foreman
PiAor. Emcriw. Llwmx:e Foreman

173-~17

· Homem*lna meecu.a. Itt Thwt.- 1 p.m. \

-

( lilll'l

........_ur,CII,...

Suadly School - 9: IS a.m.
Wanbip-IOa.m.
Youtb Fetlowabip. Suodar - 6 p.m.

..,_

""""

Wonhlp- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday ~tee 7:30p.m.

N......

----MI-

-s,rtop

..,,1inh

Sr.cramcnt Service 9-10:15 a.m.

Thunday ·7;00 p.m.

W~y~ - 7:00p~

....... K.ilb-

The Cb•rdl Gf JCIIII
ChrktoiLatter-Day Sainll
Sl. Rl.l60, 446-6247 or-446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-t I a.m.
Relief Society/Priellbood ll:OS.l2 :00

t

--a-do

~

RlcinC, Ohio

.....,_ Clorlolloa CJuordo I .t'

-c-..-..Cinordo

Sunday Scbuul- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-6:00p.m.

#

Suuday Scbool- 10:35 a.m.

IIJckarJ IIIUo Cbordo "'Cluloc

ML Moriah Cbordo II God
Milo Hm Rd .. Rao:lno
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday Sc-hool ~9:45a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wcdocsday :kcviccs - 7 p.m.

Rulland Fm Will Baptist

Puf£r. Rod Brot.'t:r
Wonbip - 9:30 a.m.

. PaslDr. Donald Balis
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
WedneAday Service-7:00p.m.

EvanaeHst Mike Moore
Sunday Sdaool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Woduasday Services • 7 p.m.

l'ooneroyPib,Co. Rd.
Paslor:: Re\1. Blackwood
Su(lday School · 9:30 ....
Wonhip JO:JO a.m.. 7:30p.m.
~Y S«vH:e - 7:30 p.m.

Pastor. Wayoc: R. Jewdl
""'SL. MKldlepon- l'aMoc G1cM Row&lt; Sunday Senicel- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.IL,

-...

Free,.._.,. Clnudo

l .a(ln · I&gt;:J\

C*U)' •lhlf: Clunrl1

--Rd.
lotld!aol Dlohl
Su.Dday Sdlool - 9:30 a...
Wonbip- 10;30 .....
Wcdneiday Servica- 7:00p.m.

-Ooopel

Hr.U a... Hall- Oauda
Rev. Mad Mic4ae-1
Sl1l'Kbly School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4.S un., 1 p.m.
'Illut~Cay Bible Study aod Youlb -7 p.m.

Wonbip, 10:30 Lm.

F-F-C.-rorCJorW
Pastor: Rev. Fnntlin Oickau
Senice: Friday, 7. p.m.

...., "'Ooriol

c

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WOflbjp- 10 a.m.

Waleyan Blhll! HoUa.r:. Cb•rdt
75 p..,J St., Middkpoot.
Putor. Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:JO p.m.

Bndbory CIMudo
Putor: Jim Eawl

7

...

w..,..

...ya.m.
Sunday
Sdlool
- 9;)()
Wonltip - 1:00 p.m.
Weme.dly Bibk Study-7:00p.m.

-Rldtoni-

Pasuv: Bob RttiftJon
Suodly Sdtool - 9 un.
WOI'Ibip - 10 a.m.

,._GrvYCBitlr:U...Chrda
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Paslor. Rev, O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

FoldiBapllot thurtb
Railroad St., Muon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.: 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts- 1 p.m.

Ml

--VIna:

Ooonto

1...mrt. W.Va. RL I

Sundaly Scbooi JO:JO ....
Worship - 9:~ a.m.
Bible Study- 7 p.m.
c.m.....mty ofChria

a)

0

·--Gordo

()till I ( illll l i H'
H ' rt C...., a.n.et. a....a

Puler. Rob BI'OIIIo'U
Sundly School - 9:JO a.at.
Worship- 11':00 a.m.

ladmJ c...t Rd., RuiiMd
Putor: Rev. Dewey KiD&amp;
Sundly school:- 9:30a.m.
S...S.y wonhip ·1 p.m.
Wedueeday prayer mcc:dag- 7 p.m.

:a.. Cloordo ., Clollot

Worol!lp . JO:lO o.m.. 6 p.m.
Wtdnalday S.rvlc:e• -1 p.m.
Vktoey laplkt lltd I pI I ~tat
~lj N. 2nd St. Mlddlepon
Pulor: lame• E. KMICO

lt.o.(¥'7" I

c.lvary Pllploo Ooopel
Hmiloo.uJe Rood
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Worship- II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednctdly Service-7:00p.m.
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SuadoySemoe·6:lOp..aL

Worship- 9 a.m.

Sc:rviOe 7 p.a.

Coolvilk Jlold
Puur. Rft. fltillip Ridl!alur
s..oo., School - 9:)0 a.m.
Wonbip ~ IO::JO a.m.
Wt'dnesdly Sttvtee. 1 p.m .

Worthip- 11 a.a.

Pastor: Bob Rotlialoo
SWidly Sl;bool- JOa.m.

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Suodoy Sdoool 9:30 Loa.
......... • IO:lOLDL, 6;30 p.a
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Swdly Sdlool- I 0 a.m.

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l'lloHr. lbw. JIDF W'dlfanl
SLMidly $dlool- 9'.J0 LIIL

Pallor: W"'aUJ-.JaaQ

310S7 Stale R.ou&amp;e 32S,I...Inpv1Jc
Puoor.GotyJ,aSuodly ldJOOI • 9:30 a.m.
Sundly wonhip- 10;:30 a.a &amp; 1 p.m.
Wedoelday prayer tet"Vice - 7 p.m.-

W~y~ 7 7p~

PaJtCH': Rev. lamol R., ActN, Sr.
Sunday Unilled SarYioa

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Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

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33216 Oaildrea's Home Rd.
Slllldly Sc:boo1 - II ..._

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Pastor: Rick Rul~
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wor5hip · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
hstor : 1~ N, Sayre
Sunday SChooi·9:4S a.m.
Evc:nin1 - 6:30 p,m.
Wednesday Services -'6:30p.m. ·

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Wcclacldly Smiocl - 7 p.111.

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Pastur. Mart Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl, Mkldkport

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fRff Diabetic Foot Scrccnings

I Information On Advance Dirtcrives,
Dietary Habits &amp; Diabetic Medications

S.Miu-9:JOa.a.

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Fourth &amp;·Main St., Middlepon
Paltur: Rev, Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday Schoo\-9:30 a.m.
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Sunday, IOa.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wednetday, 7:30p.m.

RON LOGAN
Meigs Local School Board
. t-1'ote (4. ·~ft~ .

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Sllwr Run Baptillt
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School • lOa.m.
Worship- ll&amp;.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Candidate For·

-Miro-

Smdly School 10 ...

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•

�•

America at War

The Daily Sentinel

frld.,.

Page AI
Noll I m•• 2. 2801

The Daily Sentinel
Football news, Page 83
NBA roundup, Page 85

Page Bl
fltUy, NoveMber 2. 2001

Justices return to
Supreme Court
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. anthrax that killed a New York
: woman is virtually identical to bacteria found elsewhere in the bioterrorism scare, said investigators who
remain at a loss to explain how she
-was infected. Cleanup was under
way on Capitol Hill, and justices
: were returning to a decontaminated
Supreme Court.
Almost a month into the anthrax],y-mail mystery, authorities reported
.no ·progt'e5$ in the investigation.
Health officials said each patient
gives them insights, even as they
remain puzzled over the New Yorlc
death. "We're learning more each
day," said Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson.
Anthrax spores continued turning
up in government mail rooms and
post offices. In Pakistan, the nation's
largest newspaper said it evacuated
some of its offices Friday after a letter received bst week tested positive
for anthrax.
But in Washington, where anthrax
has killed two people, city health
authorities suggested the worst was

over.
In New Yorlc, dozens of disease
detectives searched for clues to
explain how a 61-year-old hospital
worker, Kathy T. Nguyen, was
exposed to anthrax.lt'sa challenging
inwstigation, they said: Nguyen was
!00 sick to talk before she died, and
she lived alone with no close family
to help retrace her steps.
So fa:r there's no evidence she was
exposed through the mail, as other
victims were, said Dr. julie Gerberding of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"We are on a steep learning
curve;' she said. "We have learned an
awful lot in an awfully short period
of time, ~nd I suspect we will have
more to learn."
·
Investigators know that the bacteria that killed Nguyen were "indistinguishable fiom all the others,"
including the strain in a letter to
Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle, said Dr. Steven Ostroff of
the CDC, who is leading the New
Yorlc probe.
That could mean anthrax aimed at
someone else mixed with other letters in the mail and wound up
infecting her, said one expert, Dr.
Eric Rackow, chief medical officer at
New York University Medical Cen-

ter. "This may still be related to the
original batch of letters," Rackow
said.
Officials also remained puzzled by
the less serious but still unexplained
skin infection in a 51-year-old New
Jersey accountant. The ~iate's governor asked for help testing every post
offi&lt;:e in the state for anthrax. "It
·appears that New Jersey ... is the
fiont line of the anthrax attack;'
wrote Acting Gov. Donald T.
DiFrancesco.
On Friday. Pakistan's largest newspaper, the Daily Jang, evacuated
some of its editorial offices after an
envelope containing a white powder
tested positive for anthrax, the news-paper and doctors said. The reporter
who opened the letter on Oct, 23
and dozens of other stiff member$
were put on antibiotics as a precaution, said Dr. Syed Mohammed
Shahid, a medical adviser to the
newspaper.
The threat appeared to be r'eceding in the nation's capiial, as city
officials said many postal workers did
not need to take preventive antibiotics. He:alth officials noted it has
been almost a week since a new
infection turqed up. "We are in a different day," said Dr. Ivan Walks, the
city's health director.

FRID\v's

HIGHLIGHTS
SCOREBOARD
NBA
Thur8day'e GemM
Dalas 99, Philadelphia 92
Oetrott 90, Memphis 80

Washington 98, Atlanta 88
Houston 98, L.A. Clippers 92,
OT

L.A. l.al&lt;ers 105, Utah 101
Milwaukee 102, Denver 101
Seattle 114, San Antonio 108
Phoenix 107, Golden State 101
College FOOibllll
Thlnday'• GemM

Georgia Tech 28, North Carolina

21

ANTHRAX SCARE - A postal worl&lt;er walks by the apartment buildi.ng of
anthrax victim Kathy Nguyen In the Bronx borough of New Yorl&lt;. The anthrax
that killed Nguyen, a worller ~a Manhattan hospital, Is virtually identical to
the bacterie found in contaminated letters sent to .the Senate majority
leader and media outlets in New Yorl&lt;. a federal medic&lt;!l official said Thurs;.
day.(AP)

tant now to put some proposals on the table."
Rice said the administration
developed the proposals during the summer, after lengthy
discussions with allies about
the effectiveness of inspection

Georte w. 1Mb
plants that corlld house germ
weapons. The White House
has said there was no way to
verify the inspections, and
countries easily could cheat.
"We just thought that the
particular protocol that was
being discussed was not
addressing the problems that
biological weapons pose:• said
Condoleezza Rice, the president's national security adviser. "We thought it was impor-

cation and shipment of patho.
.
gemc orgarusms.
"I have directed my administration to consult with our
friends and allies, as well as
with Congress, industry. and
nongovernmental experts, on
re~mes.
these proposals," Bush said. ·
"There has been a positive "We look forward. to hearing
reception to a lot of these the new ideas on how best to
ideas," Rice said.
achieve our common aim of
Bush urged all treaty-signeliminating
biological
ing nations to:
weapons."
• Enact strict national criminal legislation against biological weapons activities with
strong extradition requirem~nrs.

-Vote For-

Cathy Morris
FOR

meigs Local Bd. of Education

.

• Establish a U.N. procedure
for investigating suspicious
outbreaks or allegations of
biological weapons use. ·
• Commit to improving
international disease control
and to enhance mechanisms
for sending expert response
teams to cope with outbreaks.
• Devise. a code o' ethical
conduct for scientists.
• Promose responsible c.o nduct in the study. use, modifi-

"May the sacred heart of Jesus be adored,
glorified, loved and preserved throughout
the world now ·and forever. Sacred Heart
of Jesus, Pray for Us, St. Jude worker of
miracles, Pray for Us.';
Say this prayer nine times a day for nine
consecutive days and your wish will be
granted. It has never been known to fail.
Upon receiving your wish, this prayer
must be published in an active newspaper
'
within one month.
•

same old Golden Flashes.
Beating Marshall (6-1, 5-0 MidAmerican Conference) at home Saturday would give Kent State (4-4, 32) its fir5t five,victory season since
1988 and its first four-game winning
streak since 1976.
The Golden Flashes haven't had
more than three wins in the MAC
since going 5-3 in '87.
"R.ight now I feel like I'm coaching
a team, not coaxing a teafl:'l," said Pees,
who has one more win this season
than in his first three seasons combined. "That's what I was always doing
before."

Pees said winning has affected his
coaching style.
In last week's 24-14 victory over
Ohio, he decided to settle for a field
goal that pulled the Golden Flashes
within 14-10 late in the third quarter.
Figuring he'd get another chance to
pull out the victory, Pees deCided
[!ave Pavich's ·23-yard kick was better
than not converting on fourth down
and coming away without any points.
"Maybe in year's past I might have.
gone for it," Pees said. "Now . you're
making decisions in a game when you
have a chance. It's a· lot more fun

Pla-S..MAC.B2

Calgary 2, Columbus 1
Vancouver 4, Montreal 0
Chicago 3, Los Angeles 2

San Jose 5, Atlanta 2

Public safety .
. workers offered
:free admission

BY lurcH COOPER
0\IP SPORTS STAFF

COLUMBUS - To salute
the heroic efforts of the police
officers, firefighters and emer.gency medical technicians
(EMTs) at the horrific tragedies
ip New York City and Washi!'gton, D.C., on Sept. 11, and
to recognize the daily effurts of
those people in our cities and
communities throughout the
country. the Ohio High School
Athletic Association will admit
all police officer5, firefighters
:~nd EMTs for free at the finals
of the four upcoming fall spom
sW..-mur•m•tents and all fj..,
rounds of the regional and state
football tournaments.

HOUSTON (AP) - . The
Astros hired Jimy Will.iams as
their manager, hoping he can
break the clubs playoffjinx.
Will.iams, fired by the Boston
Red Sox in August, was among
six candidates . ip.terviewed by
Houston over the 13$t two
weeks.
Larry Dierker resigned as the
Astros' manager two weeks ago,
after leading them to four division tides in five years but losing in the first round of the
playoffi each time .
Williams went 414-352 in
four-plus seasons as Boston's
manager, leading the team to
the playof!S in 1998 and 1999.

er, he noted that the Senate
Finance Committee intends
Tuesday to begin considering a
$70 billion plan by the' chairman, Sen. Max Baucus of
Montana. The plan is divided
evenly between tax cuts for
individuals and business and
assistance for the jobless.

: Rangers hire · ~
John Hart as GM

Its time To Gear up For. ..

Operation Christmas (Jtifd
@e Sftoe&amp;ox S\(inistry)
, BIQ Country 99 and WBGS the
~lnlstry Station, K-92 The FroQ,
and ESPN 1390 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, lne.
.. Invite you to participate In
an opportunity to make a
difference In the lives ofyounQ
boys and Qlrls throuQhout the
world In war torn countries.

We wish to thank all
who participated in
2000 that enabled the
Tri-Count., Area to
send 1r453 boxes!
'

Eastern earns
second chance in
Trimble rematch

NHL
Thurwday'e a Pittsburgh 3, Toronto 1
New Jersey 5, Phoenix 2
St. Louis 4, Carolina 3

JlmyWiHiatils

:Congress can meet Bush's.deadline
$100 billion stimulus plan
comprised mainly of tax cuts,
said Daschle was to blame if
businesses and workers continued to suffer in the moribund
post-Sept. 11 economy.
"Every day that .someone is
in pain is laid at the foot of
Tom Daschle;' said Thomas, RCalif., chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee.
"He wanted the job. He has
the job. And now his job is to
produce a product."
On the Senate floor, Sen.
Charles Grassley said Daschle
had unfairly "harshly attacked"
a stimulus measure he drafted
that closely tracks Bush's proposals. "Democrats have turned
up the partisan heat and are
trying to torch any real plan
that will help our economy
and our country." said Grassley•.
R-lowa.
Daschle did not immediately
respond to the criticism. Earli-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Others didn't see it
Asked what it's like to coach a g~
that way. •
football team, Kent State's Dean Pees
"I felt all . along
answered inunediately.
Dean is a good
"It feels great."
coach," said NorthNot surprising. Pees doesn't get
ern Illinois coach Joe
asked that q11estion very often.
Novak, whose team
The Golden Flashes haven't finished
lost to Kent State 44with a winning record since going 734 on Oct. 13. "He's
4 in 1987 and have had three winless
gone in there and
years in the las~ 13 seasons.
~
been patien~ and he
One of those years included an Owas able to get those
tt mark in 1998, Pees' first se.Son. skill position players in there. They're
After getting two victories in 1999 going to be something to be reckoned
and one last year, there didn't seem to W1' th"
.
be much for the coach to look forIn other words, these aren't the
ward to.

Asbvs hire

,

WASHINGTON (AP) . Congre.s should meet Presi. dent Bush's demand for an
·economic stimulus package by
. : Nov. 30, Senate Majority
. : Leader Tom Daschle says. It
remains unclear how Democrats and Republicans will
resolve their differences.
Daschle, D-S.D., said Thursliay the final plan must include
greater aid to the unemployed,
including health insurance, and
about $20 billion in spending
for homeland security, rather
than the emphasis by Bush and
the Republicans on tax cuts.
"We're going to move as
expeditiously as we possibly
can, but I think we've .got to do
the right thing;'Daschle said.
Republicans raised their level
of rhetoric after Bush's demand
for action by the enp of the
month.
Rep. Bill Thomas, chief
architect of a House-passed

C's big surprise

E. Illinois 56, Tenn.·Martin 16
BYU 56, Colorado St 34

Bush urges nations to stop building biological weapons SUPPOR11NC AMERICA'S TROOPS!
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush urged nations
Thursday to prohibit the purchase or production ofbiological weapons for terrorist
attackS, billing his efforts as an
improvement to a 1972 germ
warfare treaty that · pits the
United States against its allies.
The proposals, oudined in a
two-page White House statement, came as the Bush
administration grapples with a
wave of anthrax cases in the
aftermath 'o f the Sept. 11
attacks.
"We know that the scourge
of biological weapqns has noi
been eradicated. Instead, the
threat is growing." the president said. • All civilized nations
reject as intolerable the use ~f
disease and biological weapons
as instruments of war and terror:'
To the dismay of allies, the
administration already abandoned the push for a new
international
organization
under the Biological Weapons
Convention for inspections of

Kent State:

FLY UKE AN EAGLI - Eastern quarterback Garrett Kacr breaks loose against Waterford.
The Eagles' success will qepend heavily upon Karr and the running game. (Bryan Long)

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern vs. Trimble 2.
It will be a chance for
redemption when the Eagles
make a return trip to Glouster
Memorial Stadium against the
Thrhcats.
"It's going to be a Hocking
Division victory for someone,
and we hope it's us," said Eastern head coach Scott Christman. "If we play to our potential, it will be us."
The Eagles were 5-0 going
into the Trimble game on
Sept. 28, but the 4-1 Tomcats
were prepared as Jesse Brunton rushed for 216 ·yards ' on
28 carries and three touchdowns in "Trimble's 35c6 win.
Ball control was a problem
as the Tomcats played their
usual game, which entails eating up the clock, while Eastern is a quick-scoring team
that explodes in big plays.
"We obviously want to keep
the ball in our own hands,"
said Christman. "We just have
to slow down their running
8jlme.and try to force them to
pass a litde bit, and they can
pass well if they warit to. But,
I think their strength is running, so we're going to try to
force them to put it up and
not run so much dock."
Eastern was even considered
a favorite by some going into
that meeting. Now, Trimble

talking the smack, ·

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Minnesota coach Glen
· ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)
Mason, who was very interested in the Ohio Sta~e job
-. John Hart, the executive
that Jim Tressel now has, is PoWnplaying the significance
Y~ho turned the Cleveland
of Saturday's game between his Golc'len Gophers and the
Indians fiom one of baseball's
Buckeyes, his alma mater.
'
'o/(lrst teams .into a perennial
So is Tressel.
contender, was hired as genernl
Their players sure _aren't.
manager of the struggling Texas
Minnesota wide feceiver Antoine Burns fired the first
Rangers.
shot, guaranteeing a Gophers victory. His statement c~n
'
also. be found. pfuned 'lo the pulletin board in the Buck. eyes' locker room. .
!&lt;?'&lt;!"!'
. Allow Ohio State center co).LBGB
LeCharles Bentley . to na,;.lo l"ttl I&amp;..•
respond.
IW'U
""
~
''When guys do that, it's
..
a lack of self-confidence
UNDATED -The next
and a lack of team confiNBA version ofTeam USA has
dence," Bentley said. "I
its first seven members, with
think the great teams don't
Jason Kidd at point guard, Reghave to say anything. They
, gie Miller and Ray Allen at
just go .out and play."
shooting guard and a pair of
And what does Ben dey think of the young Minnesota
players with Indianapolis condefense that squelched th·e fifth-ranked Buckeyes' offense
nections - Jermaine O'Neal . .
last year in a 29-17 upset in Columbus but then pro,and Antonio Davis -at center.
ceeded to give up 133 points over its next three gaines?
Small forward Shawn MariThe Gophers, with three freshmen a~d only three
.on of Phoenix and swingrnan
seniors starting, have slowly improved this "year but still
· Michael Finley of Dallas also
rank ninth in the Big Ten in. total defense.
were selected.
"T ~ey're decent," Bentley ~aid. "Nothing spectacular.
' George Karl will coach the
Nothing we can't handle."
US. team.
Ohio State's offense, though, hasn't been much better.
The Buckeyes (4-3, 2-2,BigTen), coming off a 29-27loss
to Penn Stat'e in which they blew a,n 18·point lead, are
Send your winter sports
s.chedules to the Sentinel by
Please see Smack. BZ
fax at 99-992-2157 .

HAPPY TIMES
IN THE BIG·
TOWN-New
York Yankees
Chuck
Knoblauch (11)
and Derek Je1er
acelebrate with
teammates after
Knoblauch
scored the win·
nlng run In the
12th inning to
defeat the Arl·
zona Diamondbacks 3-2 In
World Series
Game 5, Thursday. (AP)

Team USA

DROP-OFF DEADLINE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15th, 2001

'
·•'

•••••

......... hltern.82

Buckeyes, Gophers

·· Players adclecl
to next

DROP OFF LOCATIONS:
WQYG/WBGS In Point Pleosant, WV
WYYK/WMPO on Bradbury Road
in Middleport, OH
Bob's Market·ln Mason, WV
or Gallipolis, O,H

has to be considered · the
hands:-on favorite.
That's the way the Eagles
like it.
"We play better as underdogs," said Christman. "That's
an advantage for us."
Eastern senior quarterback
Garrett Karr, who rushed for
107 yards 18 carties, had the
Eagles lone touchdown, a 10yard pass to Jeremy Connolly
late in the fourth quarter.
But, turnovers were costly as
Karr threw three interceptions, his first of the year, and
the Eagles fumbled the ball
away twice. .
·~we've got t.o be more
aware of things tha~ are going ,
on and things that they're
doing in the game," said
Christman. "The main thing is
we have to protect the football, which we didn't do the
first time."
The Eagles are 9-1 and
making a playoff appearance
for the second straight year.
Last year, Eastern fell at
home to Newark Catholic
34-12 in the regional quarterfinals, becoming the first
Meigs County team to make
the playoffs. ·
·
Now, the Eagles know more
of what to expect.
''Last year, everyone was
nervous going in .... kind of a
hectic week," said Christman.

.

.,

Yankees rally to win, again
NEW YORK {AP) Another jolt of midnight
magic, another stunning World
Series win for the New York
Yankees.
Scott Brosius saved the Yankees with a two-out, two-run
homer in the ninth inning,
then Alfo11so Soriano singled
home the winning run in the
17th early Friday to give New
York a 3-2 victory over the
Arizona Diamondbacks and a
three games-to-two edge.

For the second straight
night, the Yankees were one
out away from defeat when
they victimized closer ByungHyun Kim .
"I can't be surprised. It just
happened the day before,"
Yankees manager Joe Torre
said.
Once Brosius tied it with his
homer, there seemed to be little doubt about the eventual
outcome.
"It seemed like the whole

situation was set again, and it
happened again," Brosius said.
Chuck Knoblauch opened
the 12th with his first hit of
the series and moved up on
Brosius' sacrifice. Soriano fol lowed with' a single off losing
pitc)'er Albie Lopez, and
Knoblauch scored ahead of
right fielder Reggie Sanders'
throw.
.
Sanders had a shot at

Please ... Yanks, 12

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

LOCAL
BOWUNG
POMEROY - In tho EM1y clay Mixed Bowling l.8agve Utuo
John's or Pou....,., doimocf h loom
.., CNe&lt; Pine Hils 0&lt;&gt;11 C&lt;I&lt;Mw. 541184812~ . Powers Super Yllu ltird
(&lt;4&amp;26), ~ by Syracuse Cour*Y
Marl&lt;e1(26146),
TIIZ'o
Maralhon
(26146). and Moigs , _ (1~) .

SloYe Bunon had tho indvldull
mon1s high game w1111 a 1n Cllucl&lt; Burien and Ruoa Carlon 176 and 175
Tho ......
high series was ·
by s- Bur·
1on wi1h a 481 ewer Cllucl&lt; Bur10n wllh

':=ti·

474 and Jack Folrod wi1h 453.
Maryarel Eynon daimed tho woman's
high game with a 211 ""'" SNrtey Simmons with a 1n and Betty.MoKinlay
wi1h a 167. The women's high series
was claimed by Eynon wi1h 498 CNe&lt;
Simmons Wilh a 460 and Mcl&lt;lnley
with a 454.
Team higt&gt;game honols -.110 Ulle
Jol1n's or P"""""Y will1 a 644 and tho
Lil1le John's learn won tho learn high
series with a 17n.

..

Eastem
flumPapB1

"This year, we're just treating
it like another game, because
we have been there before and
we have that experience and
our kids know it's jwt another
part of our schedule." .

State won't penalize
Vikings in Sbinger death
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)- No starr labor cit1tions will
be issuod against the Minnesota Vikings in the heatstroke death
of offensive tackle Korey Stringer, who died Aug. 1, one day :Uler
he was stricken during the Vikings' training camp in Mankato.
The Minnesota Department of ubor and Industry said the
temperal\U'e md humidity in Mankato al)d player activities on
July 31 did not exceed published occupational health guidelines.
The heat index W'5 99 on July 31 at the time Stringer sought
a trainer's help.
Investigaton found that the Vikings had provided trammg
about heat-stress hazards as required by starr law to players,
coaches and trainen. They also found the Vikings had various
· methods available to guard against the heat, including water,
sports drinks and a first-aid trailer kept at 62 degrees.
State officials discussed the findings with the Vikings at the
team's headquarters Thursday.
This year, the game holds
even a greater · emphasis with
the Eagles loss earlier this season. ·
One thing for certain, the
emotion around the game hasn't changed ·
"I think we're excited as we
were the first time," said Christman. "I think we're more mentally prepared this time. We're

-

Friday, Nov. '2, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhiO

going to have to be. It's a big
challenge for us. We're definitely going to be rhe underdogs
this time. We were trying to
take that role last time, but I
don't think our players felt that
way, but now we do." .
·
"'It's going to be a ·war,"
added offensive line coach J.E.
Kirkpatrick.

NcAA reworks hoops eligibility rule~
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The NCAA
Board of Directors approvod a series of college baskl!tball eligibility, recruiting and
scholanhip changes~hursday.
The board reduced the punishment for
players who played professionally on oveneas
teams and reinstated the summer recruiting
period tlut was to end after last July.
The panel also announced a moratorium
on tht so-called "5/8 rule" and allowed
schools to add a ninth scholanhip this year.
Beginning m:xt year, a school could qualify
· for one additional scholarship if it meets
NCAA criteria. ·
The most immediate e'ffect could come
from the professional policy, which required
playen to sit out one college game for each
professional game played. Und~r the policy
approved Thursday, the. maximum penalty
will be eight college games, or 20 percent of
the professional games the student-athlete
played -whichever is less.
The change primarily affects foreign play-

Yanks
f•amPilpB1

•

ers. Athletes already onrolled who must sit out
college games as a· result of past professio~
play can file app~als to have the new.punish"
ment provisions apply to the remamder of
games they had been ordered to sit out. ..
NCAA pr&lt;"&lt;ident Cedric Dempsey S'\1~
about 22 basketball players have been penalized since 1997 because of their association l~
foreign professional teams.
The board also approved a measure t~ t
would split the 20-day summer r~"ruiti11g
period into two I 0-day periods separated by.
a four-day break.
·
The "5/8 rule" limited schools to awardiJJg
no more than five scholarships in any one
year ·and no more than eight over a two-yea~
period in men's basketball. The rule to&lt;;&gt;k
effect Aug. I.
,
The changes made Thursday will n?_w.
allow schools to grant nine scholarships ov,e~
the two-year period that ends this scho~l
year.

yanked Miguel Batista with a
2-0 lead in ~e eighth after
the Yankees put two on with
two outs. The strategy
worked when Greg Swindell
got Tino Martinez on a
harmless fly ball.
But the sellout crowd of
56,018 ~d u the Yankees
came to bat in the ninth, and
the noise level got even louder when the fms realized
. Kim '1'/35 coming in to pitch.
Jorge Posada gave a $ign of
things to . come, leading off
with a double. Kim retired
Shane Spencer on a grounder
and struck out Knoblauch,
bringing up Brosius.
At that point, Barajas
walked toward the young
closer and h~ld up a finger,
seeming to indicate: one
more out.

But Brosius, the 199!'
World Series MVP launched
a long drive to left field aod
immediately raised his arm jn
the air. Kim couldn:t believe
it, and crouched , on the
mound for a fuU 30 secon&lt;isas the ballpark erupted.
Brenly did not move. FrortJ.
the dugout, he stared glassyeyea at the wild sce1;1e
unfolding in front of.him.. ·
Then, as Barajas rushed ,to
the mound, Brenly slow)y
walked out and signaled for
reliever Mike Morgan.
Before this week, only
three times had there been ~
two-out homer in the b&lt;&gt;t~
tom of the ninth that tied &lt;lr
won a Series game. Now, ad(!
two more to the record bo"k
·- and add to the Yahkees',
mystique. ·

Knoblauch, but his onehop throw could not be handled cleanly by catcher Rod
Banjas.
two seasons.
,
A night ear~er, Kim served
. "The scary part i! is, this is the best Kent .
up a tying, two-run homer in
team we've played," Pruett said."This is a team · the ninth to Tino Martinez.
f•omPqeB1
that's on a roll."
r
In the 1Oth, Jeter homered
Pees
wants
freshmm
quarterback
Joshua
off
Kim to win it.
In last week's 24-14 victory over Ohio.' he
Cribbs
to
watch
how
Herd
QB
Byron
Leftwich
Soriano made a key d~fen­
decided ro settle .for a field goal that pulled the
always
seems
to
.
be
able
to
find
open
receivers.
sive
play in the 11th ~ the
Golden Aashes within 14-10 late in the third
He wants his defense to see how Manhall runs
Yankees won their Seriesquarter..
, ·
·
ull
down ballcarrien al)d hits hard.
record I Oth straight home
Figurmg he d get :mother chanc7 t~· P out
Most teams that beat Marshall have to score a
game. Sterling Hitchcoc(&gt; got
the VIctory, Pees dec1ded Dave PaVIch s 23-yard ·
·
the victory.
kick was better than not converting on fourth lot. of ~oinhts. Kefn; Stat~ has P.utthisup at leas~jS
Now, the three-time
· away WJ'thout any pot'nts ·
· pomts m· t ree o rour
down an d conung
tha VICtones
24 · · season auer
1
defending
champions will try
, And a lot scarier for the opposition.
not scormg more .n
pomts m a game ast
to wrap up another crown in
Marshall coach Bob Pruett said don't bet on season.
·
Game
6 Saturday night at
the ·heavily favored Thundering Herd coming
Other MAC action on Saturday finds Central
Bank One Ballpark.
away with an easy victory Saturday.
Michigan at Ball State, Ohio at Buffalo, Eastern
Randy Johnson, who
Pees, a former defensive coordinator at Michi- Michigan at Northern Illinois and Miami
pitched a three-hit shutout
gan State, "has always done a great job of schem- (Ohio) at Bowling Green. Akron travels to CenGame 2 for Arizona, once
in
ing us," said Pruett, whose team beat the Gold- tral Aorida, which starts play in the MAC East
again will start against Andy
en Flashes by scores of28-16 and 34-12 the last next season.
Pettine.
Brenly, second-guessed for
In the Division 6 Playoffs.
can be duplicated.
So let's let the coaches restore
pulling Curt Schilling and
"We're all going to get our some order.
Play Good Have Fun
bringing in Kim with a late
little shots at him;' Grant said.
Mason, who made a lot of
lead a day earlier, was not
Love Mom, D.ad
fnnnPageB1
"We're going to have to play people unhappy at Minnesota
afraid to make a similar
disciplined. He~ a physical guy. when he flirted with the Ohio
Morgan
'
move.
also ninth in the conference I'm a physical guy, too. I'm State job last year, insists the
' '
The rookie
in total offense.
looking forward to this .week:' · game against his qld school is
Steve Bellisari, in his third
Said Johnson: "All around not a big deal.
season as a starter, still hasn't they're a pretty good team. We
"I wanted to beat 'em real
shown the consistency Tressel just have to find the' holes:'
bad last year, and I want to beat
would like and ranks near the .
All right, these guys have 'em real bad this year;' Mason
bottom of the Big Ten among exhawted their time on the said. "That's what my job comes
starting quarterback statistics.
soapbox. Maybe the players down to. I think to say I y.oant to
"He has not demonstrated should stop talking and start win more against one opponent
that he has done all the things warrying about qualifYing for a than another is not true. ·I want
·,
we 'need to do to be as good of bowl game.
to win all the time:•'
tram as we want to be, but he
has demonstrated that he is our
best quarterback;'Tressel said.
But back to the trash-talking.
The Gophers' gripe with the
Buckeyes seem goes back to the
1999 game in Minneapolis.
Ohio State won that game 2017 but then declined to shake
hands. The Buckeyes, who deny
they refused to shake hands,
seem more concerned with
getting Minnesota back for
~g its homecoming last
year.
"I think they're searching for
something," said Buckeyes lin¢backer MattWilhelm."A win in
the Horseshoe would be
enough for me. We took some
things for granted. A school like
Minnesota had nothing to lose
and played its heart out for a
guy who was a coach here and
an alurnnw here. We feel they
stole one from w. We were
maybe basking in the glory of
guing along undefeated."
The Gopher.; (3-4, 1-3), in
turn, are concerned that the
Buckeyes feel last year was a
fluke.
"It has a lot to do with us
going out there and playing for
some respect," said Minnesota
defensive end Greg White.
"That's all it is. If we get that
from them, we'll be happy."
On the other side of the ball,
the Buckey:s don't so':'"d over~
ly impressed by Minnesota s
offense. While the Gophers'
ranking was helped by a 66-10
last week against Division 1-AA
Murray State, they lead the
conference in total offense.
Running backs Tellis Redmon
and Marion Barber both rank
in the top nine in rushing.
"They don't really have great
•P•u•• Live TV
players, but they execute;' said
•Rtwlnd
Ohio State defensive end Tim
•lnlllllt Repl1y
We Are Located On State Route 7
Cheatwood.
• Slow Mollon
At Chester, Ohio • (740} 985~3902
Buckeyes cornerback Cie
• DlgltlliJ Rtcord
Next To Our Complata Faad a Farm Supply Sto,..
Grant doesn't think Minnesota
up to 35 Ht1.
wide receiver Ron Johnson's
TiVo,TVyour
163-yard performance last year

MAC

of

Good luck
Brando.n Werry

Smack

Page Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Novnhr 1.1001

.

Bama, Ohio State, USC
are still looking for wins-

1

Brown$' defense eaming respect
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -They al~ady
lead the NFL in interceptions this season, and now the Cleveland Browns'
defense are swiping someone's old
nickname, too.
"It's already taken," said linebacker
Jamir Miller. "But we'll call ourselves
·
the 'No-Name Defense' ."
The Miami Dolphins of the early
'70s own that moniker, but it may not
be long before someone attaches a
catchy phrase to a swarming Cleveland defense that is quickly making a
name for itself.
Shortly after he was hired as coach,
Butch Davis promised Cleveland fans
he would give them a defeme that
"punched people in the mouth" and
so far the Browns have landed a couple shois.
Cleveland's defense is currently
ranked II th in the league - it was
26th a year ago -and will enter Sunda~,'s, game against Chicago lied with
the Bears by allowing a league-low SIX
.defensiv~ touchdowns.
Miller, enjoying the ability to roam
free and blitz more in Davis' new
defensive system, is having a Pro
Bowl-caliber season and has already
matched his career-high with six sacks
this season. .
.
The Browns intercepted seven passes by TY Detmer in one game; held
four straight opponents to under 275
offensive yards; and developed a bit of
a reputation with some bone-jarring
hlts Gust ask Jacksonville QB Mark
Brunell) and a new swagger.
' And hardly anybody's noticing.
"Hey, nobody is going come up and
hand you any respect in this league,"
said safety Earl Little. "You've got earn

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Once again, there's no tide blk at Alabama, Ohio Starr or USC
this season - not evm conference title tallc.
In fact, the Crimson Tide, Buckeyes and Trojans may all eJ1d up
with losing records and without a spot in any ofthe 25 bowl games.
Times have changed for.three of college football's glamour programs, which have combined for 12 national championships- six
for Alabama and three each for Ohio State and USC. 'Barna won a
title most recendy, iri 1992.
New coaches were hired, enthwiasm restored, and winning was
supposed to be at hand. About the winning part ,..
Alabama is 3-4 under coach Dennis franchioite entering Saturday~ homecoming game against LSU (4-3); Ohio State is 4-3 under
JimTressc;l ~ it travels to Minnesota (3-4); and USC under Pete Carroll is 3-5 with a home game against Oregon Stare (3-4).
In contrast, a trio of new coaches are faring quite weD. L2rry
Cpker at No. I Miami is (&gt;.{), Gary Crowton at No. 13 BYU was
8-0 entering Thursday's game against Utah, and Ralph Friedgen at
Maryland is 7-1.
Alabama, which blew fourth-quarter leads in three ofits last four
games, needs to win three of its final four to have a postseason
chance. 'Barna is tied with LSU for fourth place in the SEC West.
''I'm just going to try to win a game;' says Franchione, who left
TCU and replaced Mike DuBose. "Any of that other talk is very
premature, I think. I always say ~u have to play yourself into the
position to blk about th~ things:•
· The Buckeyes have blown leads of 18 and 17 points in their last
J:Wo losses. When 1res.ei !eli Youngstown State to rep~e John
Cooper, there was a feeling Ohio State was good enough to win the
Big Ten Conference and compere for a national tide.
"The honeymoon ended when we were 1-1 ;• says Tressel. Ohio
State lost to UCLA in its second game, and is currently tied for
fourth in the Big Ten with a 2-2 mark.
'And then there's USC. Like 'Barna. md Ohio Stare, th~ Trojans
ha've faded in the fourth quarter, losing four in a row by a total of
14 points. They need to beat Oregon State on Satun:lay, then California and UCLA to qualify for a bowl.
.
"The guys talk about it some;' says Carroll. "I am dwelling more
on 'what's going around w right now and what is in front of w. We
want to·put together some back-to-hack games where we get the ,
wins imd start to get that feeling that we are accomplishing some-

thin

It

24-14.
Afterward, Shannon Sharpe and
some of his Ravens teammates were
impressed.
.
"Nobody gives us any respect until
they play us and after the game they'll
understand," said Miller.
·The Bears are next, and Chicago
rookie wideout David Terrell has
already provided more proof that the
Browns ar~ still being overlooked.
Terrell said Wednesday he "guaranteed" that Browns tight end Aaron
Shea, his former Michigan teammate,
would rather bi playing for the Bears
(5-1), who have won five straight.
"Who wants to be 4-2. coming to
Chicago against Brian Urlacher, Mike
Brown and those guys and leaving 43&gt;," Terrell said in a teleconference.
"Who would want to do that?"
The Browns' defense has been
revamped by Davis and coordinator
Foge Fazio, who is allowing the
Browns to take more chances. Unlike
the past two seasons when Cleveland'
used more of a read-and-react system,
the Browns are forcing the action and
making big plays.
"That's the difference," said Little, a

former backup now starting for Davis,
his college 'coach at Miami . "We're
letting guys go out there and play ball.
I knew all along we had athletic guys
who can make plays and that's what
we're doing. We're trying to become a
great defense."
·
Guys like Miller and linebacker
Dwayne Rudd are making sacks; or
tackles behind the line of scrimmage.
Guys like rookie tackle Gerard Warren
and Orpheus Roye are disrupting the
line of scrimmage. Cornerbacks DayJon McCutcheon, Corey Fuller and
Anthony Henry are coming up with
interceptions.
And the Browns are talking a good
game, too.
.
As San Diego warmed up before 1_ts
visit to Cleveland, Chargers rook1e
running back LaDainian Tomlinson
challenged Little to try to tackle h1m .
"He told me I was too small to
bring him down," said Little, who
later flattened Tomlinson with a shot.
"And then when I put him on his
bark, I said·, 'Welcome to the NFL' .
That's how you get respect."
·
And may,be a nickname someday.

.it."

IngSaturdays games involving Top 25 teams, it's Temple at No. 1
· In the week leading up to their
Miami, No. 2 Nebraska at Kansas, Tulsa at No. 3 Oklahoma, Vmmatchup against Baltimore, most of
derbilt at No. 4 Aorida, No. 5 Texas at Baylor, No. b Michigan at
the pregame focus was on Ray Lewis
Michigan State, No. 7 Tennessee at Notre Dame, Arizona State at
and the Ravens' defense. But on game
NO.8 Oregon, No.9 UCLA at No. 16 Washington State, md No.
',day, the Browns' .defense shut down
10 Stanford at No. 11 Washington.
.
" Elvis Grbac and was the best umt on
:Also, it's No. 12 Virginia Tech at Pittsburgh, No. 14 Aorida State
the field as Cleveland upset Baltimore
at r;Jemson,noy State at No. 15 Maryland,Wolford at No. 17 South
qrolina, No. 21 lliinois at No. 20 Purdue, No. 24 Texas A&amp;M at
Texas Tech and Missouri at No. 25 Colorado.
.
:Also Th~rsday, NO: 22 North Carolina played No. 23 Georgia
Thch.
A few conference races heat up Saturday, especially the Pac- I 0,
BINGO - Browns ·defensive back
where five teams have one league loss.
Anthotly
Henry Intercepts a pass against
::At Husky Stadium, Washington (6-1, 4-1) takes on Stanrord (5-1,
c,.the
.Ravims.
The Cleveland defense,
4-,1), which is cqmlng off~~ \IP,!I~ of~ .~. Y9A·•
without
any
superstars,
has vaulted the
· The Huskies have five fourt\Hiuarter comebackS this year.
team Into contention. (AP file)
- "The formula is getting the win. Whatever it takes;' says n?'e
tackle 1.2rry 1\ipplett "I know its a big story with w always wml'ling in the fourth quarter. The reality is, it doesri't matter ifwe win
by 50 points or by one point."
. . .
.
""~-"·
. ~"t
· Stanford hasn't won in Seattle since 1975, losmg rune str.ught
Phila~phla at Arizona, 4:05p.m.
games.
CIIW!Oind ot Ch._, 4,15 p.m.
At Pulhnan, Washington State (7-1, 4-1) aiui UCLA (6-1, 3-1)
Carolina 11 Ulaml, 1 p.m.
SNitlo ot WallhlngJOn, 4:15p.m.
both lost for the first time this season last week.
·
New Engllnd alA.-_ 1 p.m.
Klnoal Cl1y B1 san DltQo. 4:15p.m.
"We've got two wounded animals - a Bruin and a wounded
..111........ p._..., 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jet1 at New Orleans, 8:30p.m.
Cougar;' UCLA coach Bob Toledo says.
,. .
-ran.., Bay II Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Openl Clnclnn111, Mlnneeota, 8t.
DeShaun Foster, held to yards in last weeks loss to Stanford,
Jaak8onvtlle al
1 p.m.
Loull
goes against a Cougan' defense that allowed Oregon's Onterrio
lndlonlpolla at Bullalo, 1 p.m.
MondiY'I Game
Slnith to run for 285 yards a week ago.
DelfGII ot San Francllc:o, 4:05p.m.
The Ducks (7-I, 4-1) are home to Arizona State.
O.nver at Oakland, 9 p.m.
~-,

n

r,n-.

RE-ELECT
Sutton Township Trustee

.Roy F. VanMeter
Experienced, Willing &amp; Able To Continue
·
Serving As A Full·Time Trustee

Your Support Wouk,l Be Appreciated

2001 EASTERN EAGLES FOOTBALL
C..-lln: Se.tt CA,._,_,.. 8rla1t Drm4 Brill11 Brnn11, hi N•wliuwl,.
O.N H.WIItlmw, ).E. ~t. Mik• MMIIry, •lfll /tuott *".r.
No.

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Vinson Mmi11
ll AndyMon
l8 Rou Holter
Cody F'awlt
Andy Francis
63 Tr~vh WlllrOid
JoshOcu
Cl'lrl1 Connolly
70 Brie BttefJ
7l Zach Pau k
71 MlkeTrlylor
78 l')'lcr PIUik
79 fuvd Batey

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OIA&gt;E
OULB
OIJDL
OULB
OUL8
OIJDL
OUL8
OIJDL
OULB
OIJDL
OIA&gt;L

80 Brandnn Werry

WR/08

Junior

81 Nick Week~
83 De~k Baum
9() l')'ler Winetnnner

WRJD8
WRJDB

Soph.
Fre5h ,
Fre$h

GILITtC Km
7 Will Woodl

'

&amp;rene Buckley
10 KcnAmsblry
12 Jeremy Connolly
ll Btn Holler
16 ChrislyoM
22 RoJer Chadwell
Chrl1 Myer&amp;
ll Chu V.11Sk:ldr
Dll!ftn Scwtlrouah
3&lt;J Kevin Matcink:o
Jimmie Putman.
33 Bl'ld Parker
l6 Brie Needs
Cacy fallk

,,
,.
"
"
"""'
.,""
..,

..

RJ. Oibbl

&lt;l BryanMirlur
&lt;8 Cody Dill
Brent Hensley
Jon Will

..

WRIDE

Senior
Soph.
1

1UIIiot

fresh.
Senior
Senim
Senior.
Junior
Fresh.

(
\
I

Senior
Prelh.

I

Soph.
Senior

Senior
Senior
Junior
Senior

......

F~~.

F~ib.

"'"""
Soph.
Junior
Freib.

Junior
Frt;lh .
Junior
Soph.
Fre1h.
Soph.

fresh .
Senior
Junior
Junior

Congratulations on your
''BACK TO. BACK''
State Playoff Appearanees!
Good Lueli &amp; Best ~ishes

•

'

Gat TIVo Today!

from the
·
•
Eastern Athletic Boosters

way:

~I

' I

'

l

�B4•The DAlly SentiMI~-----------•P•ome-ro•y~,•M•Idd•Jeport,..i.-0•h•lo----------~
t!tribune- Sentinel- - ~e
CLASSIFIED

Pllge

Friday, Nov. 2, 2001

·~ ~Fi~i~~~~~~·~~·~~iiiiiliiii;r=~~~=;------~~~~~m~MW~oy~,:M;~~~;~~~~~~Oh~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~;Da~l~ly~Se~nt;lne~I•~P~~~~B~S
2

:

iiiiii.lm;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::::::::::;r'

:

FAIIM

gao,

:.:..,

•

OCT.&amp;

In one week With us
REACH OVER 185,000 PROSPECTS
AD ·NOW ONLINE

~

.

COOUNCI (T40)44H411

www.orvb: ,.....,., .. tl

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

·
:

IID0-!37oll528.

-;;;;;;;;t;p;-;;;;;;;:-;o;
-·type OOoitt. tO'
long, 3 .yro. old,

=-

.orv good

2700
Molal llholvae 110. WOrl&lt;

NEEDED· 00 you need a morigage or

IIC'fl to 11 llllllt. GrNIIIInolllo, ee81 .
clofllel, nulling unllonna, Elc1*11tiOI Pay. lnd..,.
_ , tton.. '"'- oporll than CGmt*lt~ wageol WANTED: Experienced
Clfdl, ltol of dlfltftnt ltlt'M. Cll 8olnkl HUla It ~ &amp; ca~ter Fore(140)048-7150 or tlllp by man a, \/Olld drivar sllcenaa,
Why wall? Stan maatlng T,.....andTruh~ andlllouland~lceiiOn hand tools, rallabkl trans·
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Sela. Ill f Olllo Awrwe.
· pootatlon and references relrM 1·800-768·2823 ext Saturday On~. 1:ooam- H e l p - canng fO&lt; lfMI q!Orod. LDcal wort&lt;, exoal·
11121.
3:00pm. Wo ~ lfMI ~. Derot Clnql Homo, lonl pay lor right panoon,
l.alt Box and nu:h Ia for now paying minimum wage, orues, vacation. Apply at
ANNouNo:MI!Nts lute. e Family· Attired nMit lhHta: 1am-3pm, ?am· Christian's Construction,

- p t e.... Send llhorl
blo and ref..-..- to PO
Box 502, Cheshire, 011
45820.

r

..._ _ _ _ _ _,J

-

tlpOI, (IO-CIII,

Longabetglr.

Wlntor Selo. 11/DI/01•7.

-

I

waxing, maniCUres. By ap-

~:~ .. .,.
aARO~

v

. Walk Ins Welcome.

•
Single white male Hlks
femalel2s.45 for fun timel
and more, Aeply to P.O.
Box 83, VInton, OH 45686.

I_,"f:

Adonllllt kittens, free to 1 Set. only, 9-4, fioa Hollow
litttr trained, R&lt;l. 2 rnHtl- ol Raclno
(740)143-5268.
ofl 124, mllc.ltoml.
Dobonnan Plnahctt P•p-- DrM ofl Pomtroy
plea. o4 monlhl old to c;vt ·Pike, Nove~r 1. 2. 3,
away to a good horne. Call hugo. (740)11V2-o210.
gcod horne,

r

(740)25U390

YARD 5,w;.

Pr, PI..IA..MHr
•

Medium llze fllmllle dog,
mult giYiaway. Comfort&amp;· __
ble indoore or outdoora.

•F'otiGI
i~~------··
(31M)875-81132

btMd dog at Wahama High

- - Cll 724-e52-o821
Found- ftmaiO black lab
mix dog on St. Rl 7 ,_
Clltollirw, (740)048-7825 "'
140-892·7075.
Fo•nd· Bea 111 1 10 12

I:

c

_ _ _,,,.far'""'
....,. -h Ia In

INOTICEI

•

lntldt Rtar Pitta . Saft.
2221 Jtllttton TIIUr. Fri.
Set. &amp;ometltlng fat E.erv·
body.

.

.

roc.......
L\.ll\rll

I

Equal Opponunlty Employer
.
.
Warehouse/ Oahvary pereon. Full-lime. benefits. APply at Ufastyle Fumnure. No
~.c:,aJ 1srd. IIppA ly on Gapn·

r

eon, ~ 3
"ipolla, 011.

venue,

-

.

AVCTION AND

old, weanng rtd ool·

-

I'

(EOIIEWO).

Itt. ff you hsvo seen thla

puPI'II,
pleaeo
cell. Riel&lt; Ptaraon A&lt;ICIIon ComtWIT 11111! liN
(740)387-781 f or (740)387- pony, fuN tJmo . . . . - . Fill In f)OIIIfon IYII~ ot
71528. Reward
complttt aoctlon Mrvtco. Sconic- for Clys• E..
. _ _ fiOti,OIIIo &amp; Weat nlnga. Groat Pay! Wo.,dttful
LA&gt;ol· ofl white dog wfth VIrginia 300-773-578&amp; Or Team 10 -1 Pleaaa
- . lo complete~ - · :JCM.n:i-5447
11011 Dy 10 flout an appllca·
lut _,on Keeba"JJh Rd.,
· ·
11011 -Y·
child's pet, child hean broWANn!D
lean, $10 Reward. (740)QBSro 1Jvy
Pan~poti1IOn ~
44831eavemessagawillre- ~
.In
cc.mtvOIIIolmo·
tum call.
oon
mv, WV, to OOfl'lo
AbiOiutt Top Dollar: U.S. plett' ln1uranoe exama,
Loot: W!1ite Cit with Clllco Sliver, Qokl Colna, P,..... blood &amp; urtne oollectlona.
Faca and Tall Femafo. van- tate, Olamonda, Ootci Fax rao•m• to: 300·7elcol Clntenary Road. Clll Ringe,
U.S. Curroncy,- 11M or ·mill to Pt110nnel,
(740~63 PM.
M.T:S. CcWI Shop 151 Seo- PO a:J• 148 Dunbar, WV

r

.

SrMIIfemale recent·
ly twd pups Found at Fie·

I

ond Avenue

441-211-4.2 '

ca.mPotte 740'

·

track Grocery. (304)875·
2897

-------.

r~:::::::::::
I........ r
!I

28084

•

oxp. (304)578-3008

tax

.

·

HOMES

•

FOR SALE

"'

araa. Non Smoking. Any
Shlfl. can (7401258-8904 or
(740)258-9350 leava mes·

Family . Man/Handyman
praoeora W&lt;llhlng, yard
maintenance, clean "P·
oct.... Fret Estimates
(300)773-5564Askfor0on
Gloi'QIS Portable sawmill,
don, haul your togs 10 the
mlltuat call304-875-1957.

TION

.
'Wt Oo It All" Free Eltl·
.,.__ _Full-limo, bin- matu, 67•-06231874 ·3855
tllto,
rotor·
.
tWI.. Apply It
Fuml- Will etlan houlea or onlces,

=

==tamunl~ and~

r•

Fomlty tt/01·11103, Medical r.
!~
11108-11/10. 2 2110 mlloo not
~·"N'
.., MIU Crtel&lt; Road. lnfor- lroln 11111 ·In.._~, w I
mlllon: (740)448-10112
. 30M
tlll~'r' It
_______.;__ or pi\OI1t at (740)441·1~'
Fumlt•ro- Clothing, Mlao.
·
·
Como See- 8:00.2:00 No..2 &amp; 3_ IIH Hilda Atltnlion Woo1t From Homt.
DrfY8 Spring Vlllay araa
$500· 121!00 month PT.
'
'
S3000· 11000 month FT.
Qarega Selo. November I, FrHilooi&lt;ltt.
2, 3. 8:30am til 5:00pm. www..not
Ciotfling and Mile 529 4th
(ll00)1185-?3e5

e

"211';

Alit

•

· ·
Hugo Moving Sel• Christ·
.,.. lteml, crafls, clothel,
J.•mll•ro &amp; much moro.

1059·2nd Avenue.

Attention!

Eam 2nd. lncomt without
2nd Job up to
S25 ...1Mv. l't-FI.
1-800-2111-7543

I

-··e

~

h(71Vt) rtf~IRCIS, call
~ 9112·97 1 leave mao·
Gal 18QO.
1
~ BM"'Y
Will haul away cleen out
I
nng
clean up or movt almoai
I
1111c,rJ:tr~ ~ anything. Call (740)446!.....,
triOn,
7504
..-ITNA
In ....,, 85e 3rd Avenu.,

GalllfiDIIt, 011.

r

Schools and Downtown
Arsa $5951 month plus deposit and Reference. ·No
Pete. (l40l448-4 92e

nye, (304)fi7S.7388.
1972 Grand!JIIIe trailer, 3-.,a , badroo;n home ciOM t0
bedroom stove refrlgera- town baHmtnt Alvei' \Ww Smokars Only. $300 depoa·
tor, $aso0,(7401742_2790_ s-211i month: 3·bedroom 1,; 11. 5350 month. (740)4Ml- Mollohtn Corpol, 202 Clarl&lt;

town, 1-112 bathe. Good location. $5001 month. ReferenCaa and deposit required.
(740)408-38«.

8585 or (740l••e-22011.- Chopet Road, Porter, Ohio,
for VIrginia.
(740)448-7444 1-877-830BEAUTIFUL
APART· r~~~~ct'•.i~mates, Easy
MENTS AT IUDCIET PRI· llh 'tl'i---• M~

(740)992.0542.

448-25118 . Equal Housing Pun:hued - - $1!50. call
Oppononlty."
after 5pm. (304)875-5852
Teat Sofo. Good Condllon.
Christy's Faml~ Living (740)367·732S
33140 New Uma Rd Rot:
land Ohio 740 .702:7403 Whlnpool Wuhor, $95. GE
Apartment.'homs and trait« Dryer, $95. Whirl~ Rerentals. Commercial store- frlgeretor, Sllli. G Eltctrlc
fronts availabl~ tor lease. ~=:r, 01~=~ 5 ~ens;ooe
Vacancies now.
Hot Point Washeri 0
Furnished Apt. 3 roomo and Set, $300. Very Nice Hot

2 Bedroom House. Stove.
Refrigerator
Furnished.
$2751 month, $150 deposit.
733 3rd Ave .,. (740)446·
3870 or (740)oW6·0061 .
Sto Oulch Colonial Hlsl

4 2 9

2

1e Wide. Onty S195.00 Per Dis. ~- Pl. 4br. 2ba, ~
Month, 8.99% Flxed _
lntortll carpet &amp; paint, fronl &amp; back

:•• ::OF

: ·*

8.99% Fixed lntereet Rala. 112 Belli, l&lt;llchen with Stove Pets Of smol&lt;era. (740)448t••·-~8-••~
and Relr...... ator. $490/ 1519
~•• - •
.,....
.
monthplusdoposltandRef·
Gracious living. 1 and 2
3
bedroom mobile home lor erencn. No Peta. (740)448- bedroom at VN·
88
:· 992
electric, 4928.
aage Manor and Rlvel'lldl
(7 )
.
3 bedroom house tor rent Apanments in Middleport.
Assumable loans· Many $350/mo &amp; electric ga~ From $278-$348. Call 740fypae available. Cal for de- heat. (700)843-5546 .'
992-5064. Equal Housing
tab. (740)408-3683.
Oppon..,.tles.
3 Bedroom House, $550/
Big 18' wide, 3 bedroom 2 month
plus
deposit. Nonh 3•d, Mlddlepon, 1
bath, eave $5,155. delivered (740)367-7802
bedroom fumlshed apan&amp; 181 up·on your lof klclud· mont, no pats, depo~t &amp; reflng eklnlng &amp; fiberglass 3 or o4br. House all new Ap- erences, (740)992.0t85.

.=

Skaggs Appllencos, 78 VIne
Slr8el.(740)448-7398

..--~---....,

j ~.
~---U\1\JUliilliiii-·

'

Ruger Red Label over a. undar 12 gaoga, f\111, mod &amp;

skeet tubes, hunted with
lwlca $795
Bud\nol
Holtq' lito, ~:.or shot·
g•n, $200, 7'"·992·0228
~

leave me...ga.
ltepa, Cole• Mobile Homea, pllances. To1al renovation NDw Taking Applications- Auget Super Radhawk with
U.S.
East, Athens, Oh, Moat sea. Ref. &amp; wort&lt; re· 35 West 2 Bedroom Town- scope ring and ammo. Uke
740 ·592· 1972·
~ 167 ~~:~ 8 be eolld. house Apanments, lnclooas new, $450. (740)44t-1851
Final Days, Nationwide In·
.
W
. ater
Sewage, Trash,
New Ha•en. (300)882-3772 vontory
Redoollonl B•y homes ·from $199/mo., $350/Mo., 740-446-0008.
•-~~
(304)738-3409
·
Foreclosurel
4%
down
30
"'""""""'
1
Brick Ranch, ExoeloniCon·
· tarsat 85 %APR For'nat- Oakwoodt\pta., 1 Bedroom, ..__ _ _ _ _ __.~
dillOn, No outalda malnl&amp;- l.inlted Or No Credit? Gov· rnge. 1·800·319·3323 ext Efficleooy. Between Town
'
nance, 2 Bedroome cJ PD&amp;' emment Bank Finance,!· ly 1709
.
· and Holzer. No Pets. Ideal su,ter 8 Antiques Now
albia 3rd In pantat~ finished At Oakwood In Bartle ,_..
·
for Single Person. Depolit. Open. Mtiq&lt;1881 Amish Furbasement, Largo Attached 1 villi wv 304-738-34011
Pilot Program Renters Call (740)446-3929 aftsr nlt&lt;lre 202 4th St-. (Ba·
car garoga cl largo wort&lt;
'
,
·
Needed, 304-736-7295.
Bpm.
hind Criminal Recordl) We
area. $80,000 Gallipolis New 1• Wide, 3 B e d r o o m . B u y
·.::...:':..Sel::.:..::ll.:.(300::.:..::):.:87:..:5-:..1..:208...:....
Ferry. WV. (31M)875-2747 On~ $19,850. Free Oeflvory Why rent? government Small 2 bedroom housa In F R
Sel Sm II &amp; Set Up. t.e88-1128-2028 backed loans from $490 Eureka, $300 month, $300 Buy or 1811. Rlvonne Anti·
or ant or
•·
a
down. (740)448-3093
depoeit. No pets. relereflC811 qoee, 1124 Ea.st Main on
House $2!50. Montl1+ $200. Now 1•x70, 3 btdloom, 2
req&lt;lired. can after 5:00pm. SR 12~ E. Pomeroy, 740Deposit. (304)727-331 B bath. Only $9115 down &amp;
(740)36'"2560
9112-2!28. Ruee Moore ,
from llpm-llpm.
$189.82/mon1h. Clll Clleryl,
M
H
owner.
For sale b)' owner: Nice bf· 740-365-7871 .
ODD.I! 0MES
Tara Townhouso Apart- :.:::::::__ _ _ _ __
level home 001 acra near Ntw Double Wide 5195
manta, Vary Spacious, 2 Sue'e-bleoonlha"T"
Ch861 Th
~room
·
Bedrooms. 2 Flocro, CA, 1 In Mlddloport. Dolls, glasser.
rH ..,_.
' Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted ware, Alluktln mantels, and
two bltha, ona-car garoga, Bath. Frea Delivery &amp; Saf. 2 Bedroom Mobile Homa. Acun Pool &amp; Beby Pocl p ' moril. (740)892.0298
lamlly roomN with ~"('~~· up. 1·8118·9211-3426
Cloao to Town. (740)256- tio, Sten S3651Mo. No;..;.:
•••~room. ow con a ·- •
xed
6574
Leass Pfue Secunty Depaoli nr-o...- - - - - ,
lng &amp; 1/c syalem. Ont ml· Nice 28
Ooubl~ Wide 2 Bedroom 5 min from Aequlrecf, Days: 740·446·
~~
nute off Route 7, butstllll)rl· ~ttlngp on rented lot ·in town,
si month,· $250 3481 ; Evenings: 740•367.
527
1~~
vate. (740)985-3981
oint leasant area. 2&gt;&lt;8 d-'t. ••-~ute'' No Pets. 0502. 740-448-0IOI.
.
walla, thermal pene wJn- "'l-"""" ~ ,,
Newly conatructed, alnglt dow&amp;, priced t o -- Clll (740)oW6·9312
Twin RlverTowers-ac- 87Chevy5-IOBiazorQood
SIOfV 1800 eq. foot homo. (304)875-3SS9 ask lor
osptlng a~lcatlons 1
s
~-Located 10 mlnutea !rom Roeemary.
2 Bedroom, Fuel 011 Heat. IBR . HUO ';bakllzed ~~haJ)I $3200. OSO, _,.
Holzer Hoipltlll, 20 minutes
Washer and Dryer, 5300/ 1
...,,
4 HP 220 volt Air COmpf'ee.from PleasantVolleyl-loopl·
month
pl•o deposit. orekiertyanddlsabled.
good shape. (300)875tel, off SR 180 on. private
llt.aNF8s
(740)408-21187
(304~~&amp;!79.
7930
lot. 3 btdooom,
AND BI.III.DINGS
2 bedroom, State Rc""' 18.
Army
2':t/2
112 aero
bltho, big kitchen ~
• Evergreen. $325/ month.
Flage our 37th year. Sem
wloak cablnOit, OR, LA
(740,..8~189
Upolalrs Apartment SIOYt
Se I
wlgal log flreplec., central ontce building, Minersville,
.
Refrigerator
Furnished' SOmeMIIe Mater
air, launctry room, front GOO tQ. tt., ale, covered 3 bedroom mobile home In Cloae to Wai-Mart 34 112 ~-~ Air force A.US: : :
8111
port11 &amp; 2·112 car QlfiOI. parf(lng, S2751mo; trailer Middleport
no
pets Smithers
Ave . $2751 . Salea/Servlce/lnatallatlon
immediate ...-on. AI&gt;- tpoctl St20/mo, 814-8711- (740)992-MSB.
" month, $150 "' dtpoall. sa.oo a month 100 Chsnpraloed at St25.500. Makt 18411.
(740)~ or (740)448· nets by Se..... ·'lle wv Post
offtr. Call (740l..l-oti14
lAm &amp;
3 Bedroom Trailer, 3 miles 006! .
·~, ..
from 8·5pm, M·F, or
A
from town on 588. Refrlger- =:.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ Olflce. (3001273-5855
1
(740)448"-3248 aftor 5pm.
CREAGE
ator, Stove Furnished. Very nlco, 2-3 bedroom llg lcrHn TY. Tokt on
Rio G · - A
Bed
.
$3251
month, $150 deposit. apartmant, In town. largt omall monthly paymtnte.
r~- ree, 2
•
(740)448-3870 or (740)448- ~lchen, LA. $500/mo. Roi· G
1ed
roomo. 1 112 Beth, L.R., Indian Creek Eatatea, 3-6 9061 .
erences &amp; depoalt required. P;::.: ~=~ 18 .:~~'. ·
Kltchtn, largo Ltvtl Lot. acre ·toto, wtat ol Rio
(7401446.3644
Immediate
Poueaslon. Grande. from $25,900. 3 bedrooma:, no pets, refer·
Cherry Wood Baby Bed. ·
$27,900.(740)408-2801
(740)245-5747
oncts required. $300 ""ll'r--~---.., $75. Cosco Recinlng High
month. (740)379·2412
IF
Chal $40 Coeoo Pf ypen
VInton Dlotreoa ·Saft. LAND WANTED &amp; FOR
SPACE
$20. 'can (740) 992
2
$10.000 caoh. Great Houee. &amp;ALE Wt buy and sail land 3 Mobile Homes. $200 DeRPM"

so:

j

I

FORRfNr .

aor,

I

Camoila•giiU~A

I

i

Strait. (818)735:3113-1

www.olclond.corn

1107

(740)992·3194

-34:

Conel'ltt llaiiMII &amp; fOuntain

with pump $100" Le•g•
for rent In chelt of draWere. $So; Iron·
per month lng board, $5.00. j740)992·
2529

!:

=•.:.:•so-':--,.,..=--

.,:::,."'1.'"' dar
::"oiaw
PS..:O;,':;, ~,!:
warranty. New timing

I

j

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C

2tle.Colte.
5 mont111 old. Gen(7401258-1781
3 r. old M•le _, rode, out
or gated Jack. 51500 .
(300)576-3259
• ...;. •• stear, 1 112 yaars
-..,...
:;_ ~mttJ.eds..~g;,",:r:
(740)441-1112

Cll~n9l,OT

At Salt Lake City, Kobe Bryant scored
39 points and =de a key block in the
final minute.
The Lakers, who got 31 points from
Shaquille O'Neal, improved to 2-0 in
their bid for a third straight title, while
the Jazz, who finished the game without
John Stockton (finger laceration), started
a season with two straight losses for the
first time since 1985-86.
play.
Karl Malone drove to the basket with
Cuttino Mobley added 18 points and 30 seconds remaining and a chance to
Walt Williams scored seven of his 12 get the Jazz within two, but Bryant came
points in the fourth quarter for the across the lane and swatted the ball away.
R.ockets, now 2-0.
Bryant was fouled on the other end and
. made two free throws to put Los Angeles on top 101-95.
8YS
,
Dirk Nowitzki had 30 points and 13
rebounds and Steve Nash added 22
points in the first game at Philadelphia's
First Union Center since Game ~ of the
Gary Payton scored 25 points, 13 in
NBA Finals.
the fourth quarter, and Brent Barry
Dikembe Mutonibo had 19 points and
16 rebounds, Derrick Coleman added added 24 as Seattle won its home opener.
18 points and 11 rebounds and Matt
The Sanies, who did not make the
Harpring had- 21 points for the Sixers,
playoffs and then let Patrick Ewing and
who were without injured guards Allen
Ruben Patterson go during the offsea1verson,n.aron
•
M c Ki e an d E nc
· snow.
Philadelphia, which opened last season son, got 22 points from R.ashard Lewis.

quarter.
With 13 seconds -remaining, Denver's
bin &amp; reoullt head. Was George McCloud stole a pass and went
-ng $0200, Now-ng downcourt for a layup, which was
$2900, (740)25H800
TRUCKS
blocked by Robinson. Sam Cassell saved
·
FOR SAu:
th e ball fro m gomg
out o f b ounds , and
Ervin Johnson was fouled on the other
89 GMC Safari, very wall end, making the first of two foul shots.
kept. S3800, &lt;7• 01742·
1
d
h
2400.
.
Van Exe , who score 31 points in t e
For Sale- 1968 Ford Fl50 first half but shot 2-for-9 in the fourth,
300 6 cyl., auto, SIB50: then failed to get off a shot before time
(740)448-7877
expired.
.
.
~;::,::-..J~~.:.,:: After outscoring Utah 27-18 in the
plate, 05,000 aclllal mlltt.· fourth quarter to win in overtime two
"""' OD, now tim, $3500. nights earlier the Bucks came from
(740)446-7877
.
. •
·
behmd
agam.
"N" k d "d • h
h 1 " •n
IC
1 n t
ave any e p, .ru.~en
said. "But 1 have Anthony Mason, who with a franchise-best ~0 straight wins, is
has a great m()Ve to the basket. l have 0-2.
Gl eon R o b"mson. 1 d on •t h ave to d o 1t
·
Harpring hit a 19-footer and Cole1971 Chevy 112 Ton Plcl&lt;..,,
•x4, $1,500. (304)875-1295 all."
man niade a short jumper as the Sixers
closed to 82-77 with 7:59 left. But
1985 S·IO Bluer 4wo, AT,
Nowit2ki's 3-pointer made it 88-79, and
PW, now
w11aa1 cyln(llro.
·
1za~
now front axle, ,_ starlor,
I'
•
· the Sixen didn't get closer than six the
now anemator, good...-.
$1,800. OSO (304)875·
rest of the way.
B5U4 Leave - g a.
.
.
Michael Jordan scored 31 pomts at
~~ ~~·=· Atlanta in Game 2 of his latest come(740i2•7:2981 .
'
· back.

r

j

· Jau 101

At · Houston, Steve Francis had 32
points, including two baskets and two
free throws in the final 1:23 of overtime.
Kevin Willis hit made all four of his·
free throws and a dunk in the overtime.
Francis hit a IS-footer with I :23 left and
a running jumper with 46 · seconds to
play to give Howton a 94"89 lead. His
Milwaukee outscored Denver 25-16 free throws came .with 23 seconds to
in the fourth quarter, spoiling the

28,000 milts. $18.885.
(740)UB 8981
118 Mullang Purple 47 oou
mllas, gcoc1 .,.;ndliton.
~~~~~·= $8400.,3-oiUIOd$5,200.,New Holland 185 dlflllllllt prices. (304)875287Bos,.-JttHydonctgato tencltm axlt $9,500., F..- Safe- (2) 111&amp;1 Monte
Naw Holland 3105 St•rry Carta ss- (I) for porta- (I)
Spnoade&lt;- f a7s got tandtm ntedo motor and tronauio III,SOO., All New- BolhS1500. (740)448-71177 Nuggets' home opener.Gltnn R.obinson
:;~o'tA~~ Muat Selll t995 Hyundal had nine of his 21 points in the fourth

M

I

99 76en 92

Suns 107,
Wanion 101

dS 98
Hawks 8.8

Wi

Pistons 90,
Grizzlies 80

I

p

Firm. Call (740)205-0810, Now Farmero TobaCCO Co . .:.17:..;02::__ _ _:--::.-nga.
ill now roceiYing tobacco. 95 F-150 4x•. olr, am'lm

r

I

SAVE TIME AND

uB LIc

NOTICES

SHOP THE

~·uur Hight

:."::":·
Call740-246-5121 .

==-------::-

r-----....,

Lw------·

Strow. Year 'Round Oeflvery I
MOI"ORC\'&lt;US
iii'P,;;.;;;;;.;.;.;;;;._....,I &amp; Volume Discount A•alia~11.
Horitlge
Form. '
,
~
. (304)4175-5720.
1883 Harley Davidson
FLHT, E~tra·gllde. alec.
•· F ~~bfoa, 42 ·000 miles, turpack,
1 yr. old foma~ ox ·~·-·
2 windshields. soft saddle.
4..1175•8335. call after
2 soven week old pope, (.'o_..,;ii1Aiiiurosiiiiiiii1--"1 30
Bpm
(740)949-3089.
.
FOR SAu;
.

r

··

CLASSIFIEDS!

to Know, [)dinrl'tl Jtighl tu \'our Uour.

L~~=~=~~~=~~~;=7,;=;:~;:;======~====~rr.turw

~
For
Information
trailer, 16'.$10.000:
full metal841· Roar,
lltruliNG
Forst mort
- will
bl Nov. call:
t4. cassette,
car
1,~--..iii-iiiiiO.._.I. Roy Ma~• (31M)4175·2428 (740)992-7557.
Sepereie, eetled
lnetrucllon ·to
• r Now armarsHIB&amp;-844.
propooalt
will
be
blddore,
and
pi
brick
Block
4385
'
· _.r pas,
,.calvad 111 1111 olflca propoul lor ma m1y
~~:•a:.d~': Hay • Bnaht Wl(t no "p40
ol the Tre11urer ol be abltlntld at the

I hi

Botrd
ol
Educe II 0 n
0I
Southern
Local
School Dletrlct,
Recine, Ohio 41771,
Melge County, .:'£::11
2:00 P.M. Non
r
23, 2001. Fur (2) lUI
Ch11l1 1nd iody,
coplet
of the

olllca

ol
I hi
,._UIW, Dennie 1!.
Hill.
Slid, lotrd of
lducetlon r.. orve
the ....
_,_. 1ny
'..11110 ,.,....
•
tit bldtl or partt
oiiOV
lnd tl bide.
By o1dlr of Board
of l!ducellun of

P.O.Iox17t
!Ieoine, OH 41771
(740) 1141-22~3

~1) 11, a, :zacn
) 2, 2001

Public Notice

.

The VIUtge
Middleport
~ng

__,_r

appllcttlono

reaurn••

Public Notice

for

of
11
end

•

euperln1endlnL ·
Appllcont mutt htlrt •
Claet I Wtler •nd
Weet-eter T,..tman1
Plent
Operotor
Llaente. lndlvlduel
thall bl reepon•lblo
tor the complete
0 P •,. II 0 n
and
malntenanae of tho
Vlllllll't Wiler and
wa...nllr TrMimtnt
Pienta Including but
nat limited to l•b
11111ng, grit and
ocroonlng, pumping,

In the Court of
c-mon Pilat, llllge
County, Ohio, Ctll
1988 CAdillac Clmm•ron · Good condition wilh few ex· •
-.tllcetlone.
Southern LOCI I Number OI·CV-o41,
~·
Raconlty Painted. Needlt..ra=•:..·1::.740=)3::.79:..·,:.:92::.56:,--.,-,- ·-~~--~...., School Dlllrlct, lrla J. Tarlor ••·
motor
wort&lt;.
$350. "
Dennie E. Hill, Luolndl Dllwton,
11 11,
(740)4Ml-387• aher 5:30pm GFor 500Sale· 198,'!_ Qcldwleedlng
l'NIIeu,.r.
Pups, Blonde and Golden. or leave maaaage.
L 1_ • recen ..~ eerv
'
Dllendlnt Luclnde 8.
Parente
on
premlaea
new tires and battery.
Dtweon, wholl 1811
Aaady November lat.~ 1987 Ford Van, auto Wh..• $7500. (740)448·7977
Roaldentlal or commercial Dennie E. Hill
plaH of ,.1tdiiiCI ,,
A 11
&amp;
wiring now eeMco or ,.. Southern
Local known I I 3rd
5325 _ No Sunday calla. chair lift., 1987 Ch'l'oltr
St,..t,
(740)245-5358
New Yorl&lt;or, Looks and
lTl'O 1\RTS
lnl ·-Licenoedtlec· School
Dlllrlct, APirlllllnt , Raclhe,
12
Runo goOd. (300)87;.3734
ACCf.lil!itlRIES 1 :.an Ridenour Electrical Melli• County
AKC reglalered mlnloture 1968 • dcot Chevy cava·
. wvo0030B, 304 ~7;.17841 .' Oennle E. Hill, Ohio 41771ollll7, 1bul
Plncher puppies, black &amp; 11 $800 Call (300)882- Aro you looking for englhes
whoM PNIIO1 P.eca
tan, 8 weeks old, S200. ~ attef&amp;pm
or transmlaslonl? Give me ----.,...,..~:-:--:--:-:-:--:--:---:--- of
rllld 1 nco 11
(740)702.()310.
.
·
a call at (740)446-0!19
110 Help Wanted
unknown, will teko lloutekllplng,
Auatraflan Shepherd pupa, 1968 B•lck Lesabre, 3.11, ::..:.::...:..:.._.:.._;__ __ ~:::=;::::~:;==~=~;::::;:==:;Notice an Merch 14, ground• koeplng,
NSOR. C•rrent hMith re- pw, pi, pe, air, amllm cas· Bodgai PriCed ~~· r
JDD1 , Eric J. Teylur record
knplng.
oorde $70 (740)1H9-2128 sette, crulae &amp; ~~~. 52300 slont All Types, Aocess To
Gttllla•IHIQS Community ACtion Agency ftlld hie Complaint In reportt, 11111n11nonce,
....~.. meesaga, OSO (740)949-2131
Over 10,000 Tranomlaaiono, Ia accepting appllcltlone for lhll full cau number 01·CY· dlpll-111
Transfer Cases, 740-245·
..... ..____, 1 1 48 1 lh c rt 0 1 budgeting,
end
Cockar Spaniel Puwlesl 1968 HondaAocord LX· au· 5877, Cell: 339-3785.
1Ime poe ltlon, which will ... 0 • n e ou
ealletance with tung
Full Blooded. Parent on lomallc, runs good, looks :=..:.:..:=..:::.;:.:.:.;=___,.,-,
our Galllpolla IOOIIIOnt
Common PIIM, llllgt
Prom-. $1!50. (740)446- groat $2000. 304-875-2687 Chrome llep bars lor 1998
~
Ionoec
S
iaII a1 wIll prov Jda andlor ,.._· _,,
r•nge plennlng tor
~ducal
· • Ohio, ell-lng
~
1 1111111 Appllctllo
2968
&amp; - r 1500 Chevy pick-up
thet
Lucinda
s.
ec dotelled
•
~::....------ 1892 Grand Prix. SE, v~. extend cab, (304)875-8325.
arrange for assessment, educational, and Dawton negligently end
1111 "'
of
Rctwoller Puppy. mala. 11 /IJC, Power Windowa, New Sl 00.
d h
retponllbllhlll
etn
bo
remediation services lo youth and adult
months old, dog bOX, chair, nres. $3,000. (304)875· :::.:.;=-=--:-:-- customer&amp;. Poaltlon wlll also aeslat other operate
" mo 1or picked up •1 the
colllr~ food. Hu all vacclna· 7819
Two P235 15 Inch tires,
Vlhlole OIUIIng I
tlontl. $150 080. No Pa· 1892 Ptymooth Sundance $30. Two P205 14 Inch staff In providing a full range· ol cotllelon, reeulllng In Public Worka Olllce
employmenl and tralnlng services. 1 1 111 d d
237 R••• Stroet,
perw. (740)441-o950 (Days), Red, 2 Door, Approx: tires, $20. (740)387-7729
en
n ur
•m.ageo Middleport, Ohio.
(740)44t·9858 (Evenings) 108,000 mHos. Good Condl·
CAMPEiiS &amp;
Emphasis wlll be on serving youth age 14-- to Plelntlll Eric J. Appllco1lono mutt 111
UKC Rat Terntr pupa. lion. $1400. (740)4Ml-3674
MoroR HOMES
21. Position will require regultir relmburaed Taylor. Defendont roturned on or before
$150. cash Firm. talla after 5:30pm or leave mea- L~--llili-iiiliiiil··
travel In Gallla County and occasional ~uclnde I. Dawton November tt, 2001 at
• dOCked mother &amp; father on .age.
,
travel outside Gallla County.
ohtll ltko nolica thai 4 ,00 p.m. Tha VIllage
··- ("")703-3308
1979 Tioga Motoo- home 20', reimbursed
Poslllon requlrea a four-year d""ree ln the haa twlnty..lgh
,~ 1 ht 10
pram-. 1993 Dodge Dynasty, 360 V-8, Dodge Chassla.
vw
(281 deya to lllo en .......,., " 8 r I
$1700. New Tlrts, Good Too many new parta to lilt.
education, Ohio teaching certlflcate and a
hi reject
end
all
10 1 1 application• •nd to
Wort&lt; car. (740)258-11002 M••• ... ,0 f'W., priced on driver's license.
Anewer
Complaint.
-"!Fiwrrs~-"!&amp;~...,1'993 Ford Thunderbird, Insp. (300)882-2212
To apply submit tfle following: resume, 1111 a, 1, 18, 23, 301121 welve lrregularlllll In
·Good condition. Auto, Air,
completed GMCM appllcetlon form, copy 7
lite tppllcatlon end to
VI!GI!TAIILIS
Lealher, 80,000 miles,
ol
teachlntcerllflcete,
and
copy
of
orlver•e
.
•
c e • Pt
e nd
$3,900. . (30.)875-8957
" I It\ I• I "'
·
PM
Wed
d
eppllclllon,
which
In
f
4
I
" Homo Grown Red Potetoas. nome, (304)8~;.21189 work
INovember
cense 14,
e ore
•
nee
ay,
;:1:1=0=H=•I:;p=W=•::"'::•:;-d
the
opinion
of
tho
2001.
, Phone (300)875-27•5 After tit98 NIIUn Maxima auto,
HoME
llcatlona
marc be . obtalned and
Middleport loard of
App
3pm.
air, poWer moon rool 36,000
IMPRovtMENTS
Public Allalro mey bl
" Rlch~rds Brothers Fruit miles $15,000. 30H75- ~-iiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiir submitted at the fol owing locations:
moateclv•nllgeou•.
Ohio llepL ot Job &amp; Ftmlly Senlces
(11) J, 4, 7, a, e, 11
Farm. APPLES AND 2887
BASEMENT
MUCH MORE. 2• mllas. 1999 Pontiac Grand Prix
WATERPROOFING
44' B•ckeye Hills Road, Rio Grande
North of O.lllpoll• on Coun· 4dr. V-8, auto, A/C. Very Unconditional lifetime guar·
..
AKb9o/wh~:m•alsopu~~::~
ox/padlgrH,• normal syes.
$400 "P (740)896-I085.
·
AKC Golden Retriever

1998 300EX, $3,200

oeo.

j

::...::===----

r

I

.j.....

riD

."

SuperSonics 114,
Spun 108

Penny Hardaway scored 26 points and
Stephan Marbury had 24 points and 1O·
·
eay qtJ8Itef
hOiea mare wet1
assists as Phoenix won at Colden State.
trtlned, 12 yro . old. 18
month old gelding. Friondty.
Shawn Marion had 14 points and 16
hafttr brOkt. Both AOHA
=::=::.;::..::.____. raglsttrtd, sell bOth for
rebounds as the Suns built a big early
Uoed kllchen cabinets , $2,300 noa .. 740-702·7203,
lead and weathered a late charge for
counlanop, """' wood. 740-702-8327.
their first victory of the season.
1700. (304)875-4150
Horaa Traitor Qoooe Neck,
The Warrion, who finished last season
wantodrty
f "'leaee
C91111PtOP~!...l..tz)'·~~~~=· 1990 F-2601e 4x4, Red , After beiqg h~l9 to 19 points in ·his
1
1
with
a 13- game losing streak, have won
aetrtp or
...,. coa mno,
(304"'
5-8440
123
000 ml e Cht()nlt
"gh
I" J da
Jerry Stackhouse scored 13 of his 34
or underground. to S1800·
tv7
~•• Naw lh., $8000. return two m ts ear 1er, or n musjust two games since Feb. 7.
maka ''""" and llrokor. RegiJiertd Qoaner Horoe(7
"·..::40:c)3118-=..:905=5-:--.,. tered some vintage moves and a dunk points in the final 3 :38 as visiting
(740)387;7891
after mare. IS monlhl old, Bey, II:OOpm.
Very Qanlle. Sonny D BAR 1998 Che\0)' Ext. Clb, 4x•,
Welorffne SpaciOI: 314 200 &amp; ~)87~Linaa. ~k!,~~~i&amp;'~ ~~
PSII21.95 Por 100: 1' 200 Sl . (304
Mo...ga, WiD Retum Call.
PSI $37.00 Per 100; All
HAY &amp;
(740)448 4880
~-~ Flttlnga ~ . GRAIN
. 2, 1979 Jeep Wagonears
MnN,F.Y
RON EVANS ENTERPRHI380 V-8, 4-whaal drivoa,
ES Jackeon , Ohio, 1-800- Book a balo sole, lqiJOre Both run. (300)882-2212
537·9528
baltl $1.00 oihar hsy "P to 2000 Jeep Wrangler Sport.
Waathor Goard Diamond· $2.00. round balea '' 5 ·00 llcyl. 581). NC, Crulae, 23k
tip Truck ToolbOx. $200 -h 304-87.5-4889
miles. $18,000 (300)875l'uhUc Notlrc• In Nowspupcrs.

r

rye;

/.lk.~~.~· covered porches. Solid ref.

In other NBA games, Washington beat
Atlanta 98-88, Houston edged the Lps
Angeles Clippen 98-92 in overtime,
D II
d
d Ph"ladelpht"a 99 92
a as
owne
I
- •
Detroit topped Memphis 90-80, the Los
Angeles Lakers beat Utah 105-101, Seatde defeated San Antonio 114-108 and
Phoenix downed Golden Stare 107-101.

Detroit ruined Memphis' debu1 and g.~ve
Rick Carlisle his first victory as an NBA
head coach.
Cliff Robinson, who scored 24 points.
sparked the Pistons after they trailed
throughout the second and for most of
the third. He scored the final nine points
of the third quarter fo"r Detroit, "including a 3-pointer just before the end of the
quarter for a 61-60 lead.

Laken 105,

Rockets 98,

!e:'

""! :': •

Star1 Your Business To- Newer VInyl Siding, Roof, all other Soutt'lem Ohio. poalt $300. month each. 1
FUR
day... Pnme ShOpping Cen· Fumeco. 4 Bedroomo. &lt;M Contact"' lor moro datallo: Located In Hanlord. 2
tar Space Available At AJ. of town. Owner mutt llle. Ant~nd eo., Ltd. Acron from New Haven ~le Home kit
toroobfe Rate. Spring Valley No wand Conllectl. 31 Mefn
1
213-1315
Grade School. (304)882· Moddlepon, $125

Pf&amp;l:o, Clll 740-446.0101.

Factory 83 hours D•mp
bod, more extras $5,000.,
New Holland 1465 II" Haybtne 110,500., New Holland

37(a:,a:"-a1ee

night eland. (304)8 75-3804.
For Safe: Rocondltloned
washers, dryers and rafrfgorators. Thompu~s Appiiance. 3407 Jackson Ave-

j

6" ....S.:f" •

riO .n.-.---·
~
""""'v~u •

1703 Centenary Road. We·
tsr and Trash Removal Inclodad. Tenant P8YI efeC.
tric /IJC and Electric Heat
Washer. Dryer, SIOYe, Frfg.
Included. No Peta. Non

f."

11. Apply experienced, non-smoker.

8ctnlc Hille NurMa ::-·;
ntntngnon.IIPtCIO ng
A!zlltimlr'a cera, Ia ,_ Nrlng 3 full- STNAe far 10
to II oltlft, 2 full dma lor 2 to
10. 2 pert t1nw ltiae for ji! to
10. Nl-ed, p1tut llop
by end pklk up an applioatlon ony WHkday from
II:DOirn 10 4:110 pm

'"""""

I

FOitSAu:

r

New

•

tu,., No phOne

MoBiu! ..__

for wave, drop leal table.

rooms. 1 112 baths, Kitchen small but very clean one (740)446-9742
wHh stove and refrigerator. bedroom apartment. Coun· 0
Off Slreet Parltlng, Close to lry setting vet cloae to town1 reuer, chest of drawers,

opportunny .......

j

l)elng taken

r

l'llno8. We do all Repairs on

~·nftSAu: .. 11"0 u--w.··- ., \';'1=~720- Conair•ctlon/Remodell~g.
~
. •
....... _,.., • '
'
'Skiing, "Rooting, "Drywall,

Agg-t Homt Ho llh
YAJIDS.U.
I
G
....,..,_, ~rgedc.
a.-.::~"';;:':;::JFOI~-JS;.,,.I organized I
to act

15 Court Street. 2 Bed· Applications

MWipepll'..
1n equ~

i

Suparlor Home ~inle ·

•

~

ttl•
~on

I

For eaie- Mauaotsum two '
~ ":"· Mefss81.oMemo1j 3 llfdroom on Roulo ~.
ry ' ar no,
' ca (300)875 5332
(304)882-3684.
.
13 •-•
In Mlddl •
nANfED
-room,
""""'
To Do
~all ~~~~~d=n after

preparara Dtckl, T~nchlng Inside

·

bed:

2

r

homes. Clrpentry. plumbing
_ , . , bosy lax oftlot, andO&lt;Jt. (740,..1.0113
Pal tocallon Wt will
lral~ ~ _,,;. to· Tha TRI.COUNTY CONSTRUC·
"

P•rt·tlrne

~

FORRENr

dwelling• ~In

I

I

!ncoLir•glng Experienced Chlldcare Pro·
Dlveralty vld.r. lnlanls to After·
In my home. Indoor
and O&lt;Jidoor (lanced) play

mptoyer .
WortqMoe

Street. ut!ltiaa Paid. Sta;e Maylag Appliances, French
and Refrigerator No Pela. City Maytag, 7~·7795.
$475 ~us deposit. Rafaran- Couch &amp; chat~ dinette sat
cea Required . (740)448- Hldeabeds. ch8st, twin
3945
baby bad, alo•e. micro-

SOCIAL SECURITY 1181?
rpl ng
a must. (304)67~·6676
,bath plue ehower, Down· Point Refrigerator, New
No Fee Unleu We Wlnt 2exeo 3 Or 4 Btdroorn, Qn. 233 2nd Ave convenient to atalrs, Clean. Relerence qompresaor, $300. All Ap•
1·888·582·3345 · · ty $ 345 _00 Per Month 'Downtown.
Bedrooms, 1 and Deposit Aequlred. No pllancea
Quarantaed . .

dUztnl dlecount. 22yra.16

liM

!~500..1ed~~ '1:::' ci:~ =-~'":"..~·

cor, $35.

88 ar 8 ·
CES AT JACKSON 11- ca · LOANS! LOANSI LOANit 1993Ciayton14x80,3bed- 2 ba,droom house, Stale TATES.S2WestwoodOrlve Drtve-a·lttle 11ve alot.
Problem Paying Bille? In room, 2 bath, all efectrlc:, Route 7 South ol Middle- lrcm $297 to S383' walk to OUHn Size bed bros
DeQt? Good, Bed, or no excellent condition. $15.000 pon, $300 a month, shop &amp; mo-. Catl 740· hMd baonf, Finn .;......,

Th•r·f""rt-Sel. -,nga Road, - - ors; oman engines. Mike
=and
out • Clau Ap- (7.0)408-7804
lionlfliEquol
Opponunlty
1

FI..EA MARKET

lnlornoocllhot Ill

•

Moving- All to 10111
Friday &amp; Setu""'y, NoYorn- ~ J='t,.1 1::~
week Old Mal~~~~. shepo ber 2 &amp; 3. 1002 Main Streit. ltructor Ill 7..0 ..
pm,
•
.
httd Mix on Cora Mill Road Priced to iloill Beby/Ad•l 01'1 740-742·2870 OR Stop All ~ w~ko instal- 3br. Large Kltchon &amp; Living
Batween Bridge and la•rtl clothao, Beby/H........,d By -,nga Rlhllllllto· led; repairing lorced air kar· Room. 314 Seaoment, totaly
· Road. Call (7..0)379-2883 llema. 1/.4 mile on right on uon Center-located at 3875Q a.. ,heattfl; lawn mow- remodeled at211 7th Street

mixed puppy, black wtth
white apots over ey11. 3

f'Ndtra.,.hlt'lby

credit. Bankruptcy Wol· finn. (740)048-7127
corfle. Clll Toll· , _ I· lot time b•yers Go•em
I· 888-498-9488.
•
•
mont loans- buy lOans &amp;
MONEY TO LOAN. AUTO, salo- (740)4Ml-3093 OakDEBTCONSOUDAnON, WOOdSuperoenter
1 pALL (4CII)II80-7480
,. 70 3br Trotto $3900
•4 HDUR RESPQNSE ~)
58- 54
r.
·

lionat-.&amp;_brfngbacl&lt; Allot
home
I dbti~repars.a
~n-•
•·•-30am &amp; dttionayour
&amp; re-lng. 24hr
IU.QOam, Monday lhnl Set· tiiiOtlltncy servfw, senior

0t2-e8oe

r'd

YIOU!IIon ottbtiiW. Our

:.::=====--c:orv.a., -

houra

out of his 38-year-old body and refused
to let the young Wizards falter down the
stretch.
The teams managed only three baskets
in the final three minutes, but one of
them - the clinching play - inv~lved
Jordan. He drew a double-team 12 feet
from the basket and passed to an · open
Chris Whitney, who sank a ·3-pointer
with 39 seconds reltl2ining to ~ive the
Wiurds a 93-86 lead.

WW:::.:

310A Backhoe &amp; l.oador with reel I - . Glaea roOI,

, Plano- T•nfng &amp;
Grulllls
Repalra. Problema? Need
Tunocl7 Cafl The Pia~ Dr.
740-446-4526
Handmade doll or baby erade
axoallenl
mtllltIneae,
$100. condition,
(740)44801118
HaRiy Muma $3.00 each 4
1or110
sat B·5pm
&amp;
__,..;,.Open
Dowt&lt;u;.,
Groin.
~'Mt Alto (304)895·
·
rneeaaga. "'

ne,
'
RefrtgrakJfs, Up To 90 Days ·
3 Rooms and Bath. o48 Olive Guaranteed! We sell Naw

ago." Salary: $6.00/ hour.
.·
Send resume .to: Buckeye · Loan Available! All types ol
.
Comm•nlty Ssrvlces. PO credit weloome. NQ less 1985 Sf&lt;yllne 14x70, 3 bod·
Box 804, Jackson, OH up lronl. CALL TOLL FIIEE room. Good Oondltlon. Call
ol5840. Deadline: 11/9/01. 1-868-207-5028.
Harold, 740-385·9Q48.

• McCtu,.'l Altllallrllnt oow [ lV M~scoLANF.ou;
hiring all 31ocatlona, lull or •
Hotna pano and Cltraflt pott•timt, pick "P appllca·

,_ 11 R d Sandhill.
LOST on B••v
Ia oa 9:30-7
(Poner end) Shepherd

I

·

i

I JOB?
want a ear.. In NUAS..
INCI? N•lllllg Aoeitflnt
aa.,. being .., Nov 28 2001. H you oro
I canntl ' .....;..-..to
,;.., ooutd bo I pan
' •08

newe...,.,

Thlt
wtll no1
knowingly IOOIPt

'

per hOur . RN'I $17 per 1411
hour. f t W - S111f1
BI.9NESS
Dlfltrlllllal Offtrecl. P1eaaa 1
'flwNtNG
Call PrimatY Clrt Nurolng
Servloo at (1!00)5111-2273.· Cltlllpollt career COllege
~aw.
Alk for Pt'tyllll.
(Cireera Close To Home)
SI1R.VICES
Make money foo- Christmas, Clll TOdayl 740-446-4367. ._
sail Avon. Cali (7.0)4011·
R~~~:~~~B
TURNED DOWN bN

utday.

d.,..,..ftldon,"

.II· .time posi· OHIO. VALLEY PUBLISH·

tlclnle and good driving re·
cord Excellent benefit pack- __

I~1

,-Selo. Nov. 3ol9-4.., Mil·
IAJDIAND
ton 80 lid. Apple Clravo
WV,
go halfmltouiJtrtyt
Run !rom 1'11 2 lllm ~
tallow lighnl. ,.;,.. Pltt8 &amp;
Fllllnd Mtle, rniiCtd mite lltma

,

-

Pro-

Visa &amp; Mastercard
Sat. Nov. 2 &amp; 3 from 8Mt-1 anga, Dltcountl&amp; More. In.Credit or Debit Cards
Lawn lumlture, tovJ, clolh- lltetled PI'Ofetllonllt May
~n~.------., ing. vartoty or Htmo.
can ·ar Stop Bv Monday.
La
ard eala behind Ma· Sun. 9.., 1113 Wallllnaton
GIVEAWAY
~ In Set· St., RaYOniWOOCI. WV. :100urday and Sunday 'win· 273-5898 Slop Byl You'll Be
dows, sewing machlnea, Glad You Oldl
S Tum your rummage &amp; $ TV houHhokl mlcrow
unwanted lteq Into cuh •.JhOw.rdoor din ~~
740-992-9734 or 740-742· mite
'
g
LPN'II F\N'I needed for P•
1008.
·
·
dlaftlo horne ..,. ....0 In
------'' - Maurer r t s - PNCh t h a - VInton Coun4 Free Kltltnl, 2 rnonthl FOri&lt; (CAll) &amp; 33 North, ty, Pomeroy and Raclna
old. 3 Fomolo. 1 malo, N&lt;w. 2nd, 3rd, lola o1 craffa, Arau. 1...-lt EmplOy(740)408-9582
miac.
. .
mont Ava-. LPN'o S18

I:

-;pears, 304· grizz~ll

Now

ln11141oiWI Art

riO

a.-...,.

~- · ,_, •~ lkll Not ~ Wedneeday/ Th•rsday. Ae- (740)446-11148
Bellvlllt Lockl I Dem In Include: PliCIVICIIIOn, Plkl qolromente: High SChool 01 .
Rtedovilo. Olllo. Fn. and lottall, Partial Plkl tnour· ploma/ GED, valid driver's
MONEY

Wyntor - -

(2011 JackscinAvenue)
Now A&lt;UPUng

aduo."UM •lnY
_,..,11m-.,.

Seeklngmomolo-lrom
nome as a Stan~ lntemo- - · - · rollglon, eex
tional Dlstrlb•lor. Eam - - · $500·$1 ,000 • a Month. origin,
t.-lon lo
Represent the Flneet Well·
rnMe ...,.IUCh
ness Products, kJcal train- pn~r.,.nce, Hm. .lon or

S.ng tlonl a\ol&amp;ll,_,uJe at a com· lNG CO. recommendl that
PoMEIIoY/Mmoci: ~ For A
munlty groop home for peo- you uo buelneu wfth people
na1 LPN (1FT .Or 2PT). Apa pte with mental retardation you know, and NOT to sena
pliclnts Mul1 POllOI A I~;~ Bidwell. t) 12· 9p1 Fri- mooey through lhe malt until
5 family yard ~· 1• 2, 3, Team S9Jrtt With The Ability day; Sam· 4pm Sa wrday; you have Investigated the
loti of stuff, At. 143•
1b lnleract With EkStr1y Blm- 6pm Sunday; 1~ -9pm otterlng.
Rat6dtntt &amp; Thtlr Fam!Mei. Monday. 2) 4- 11 pm Sun~'"~.,!!'!:. Gracal·~W~ MediCIliOn -gro•no l day; 3:30- II :30pm Mon- Established Spaclalty Storo
~~
.. ~ • f':.:. ~ Boptrvloory llldllo A Pl&amp;a day/ Toaadoy, 3:30- 10:30 lor Sale. Clft after 5:00pm.

polntment. (300)875-3040

r

:g- FaltttouolngActOII"'
wfllcii_R_to

308-2480

IL,t_AP.~~:.RfNr=-:-"l ..r_~~:.RfNr;;o:~..,~

•

&lt;•l 5 acre lots for eale. 1 and 2 bedroom apan- Nice Jots, qo1e1 COIIIllry 181·
(740)367.0129
menta, fumlshad and 11111ur· ling, will acoommodale
nlshad. securtly depoal1 re- IBxBO, SIOO per month, call
2.7 acres, uneven ler1ain, In qulred, no pets, 740o992· Ed at Country Homes, 740Welchtown. $2700. please 2218.
892-2187.
caH (860)563-3753, Laave
\llld I! \"\lll .... l
name and number
1 and 2 Bedroom Apan- ;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
ments, Deposit &amp; Refer·
3 Panlals olland. (300)576- once. HUD Approved.
lfolmloul
9929
(740,..1-1519
GooDs
Lool&lt;ing To Buy A New 1 Bedroom In Rio Grande . ..__ _ _ _ _ __.
Homo? Don, Have Land? All •tilities Paid. (740)2•5- 3 Ladles Jackets, 57 each.
We Dolll Hurry On~ 10 Lots 5100
~·. $5 each. Set
2 Crock Left. 304·738-7295.
3 bedroom apartmenl, $400 Dllhn, 18 piecea for $7.
NiCe
4 acre tract near per month ptus deposit and
ltlo
Gallipolis· easy terms, utilities on 3rd Street, A• Applwa~L~'!: 81D' ryRe~ong.~
(740l4Ml-3563
cl
Hod (740)247-42~
~~···
,., ~..,...,

lllbjoollolfMI,_..

1038
or
Areas! To Buy or www teamstarllght comlklm·

. You Cln TMy ~ Olhorw7 If So, You Ntld To Set Ull WANTED:

Whlto. November Perm 27113, (740)408 1118•

special $25.i.nd up. Facial r~

Ice, and our profoaolonal
staff IS on hand to
Pleaea call toillree. 1

Sprn, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· Ina., 1..00 Eaatem Avenue, ing, QuaUJy for a new car &amp;
?am, oaii740·D92·8023.
Gallipolis, (740)446-4514
lu~eury travel. Call (304)743-

Ntw Stylist at LaMarc:e stale Route 141, 4 mitt: LPN (1FT or 2PT) A.u , ou AVON! All
Beluty 5aton Gandece out Uncoln Pike. CJothel, A Nurse Lqoklng For A A• 9ell. Sh
(Hannen) Tucker &amp; Fcnda All Stzoo, Milo. (740)448- warding career In Which 87;.1420

1200

$3.00: eait..; 11unn - · ~ ~
S30. (140)11V2·2529
·
COIIool rediD &amp; recorda&lt; YANMAR YM f500 Tractor,
S20·I'Oitabltllonltay5"TV. -.3polnthltch,$2,1!50.
S20: Croolay 23" Contol rv" Alao, , _ •· finish """""·
$40: Porteblo RCA II" TV llftt In crete, $850. Shipping
Locattd AI
JIISI(258)
out·
S20· (740"""'
,._.2529
-a\/Ollablt.
ot H•ntavil~
Everything In lha goraga, n&amp;-9035 www.maynardeSIOO. Won't laat· Ill call qulpment.oom
ttktl all, (7.0)448-ot9B
WANDD
FirtwoOd lor Sale s150 per
m llvY
truck t.oed. (740)4..1-9078
FirtwoOd For Sola. Largo T- Sew. Call (304)875Pick- ~ Load. sos. Call t868laa.. Meaaega.
f~ 01 (740)2!8LlvmocK
For Selt, Childs Table Soc·

• rncluelt Pl'lone Numbtr And Add,..ss When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

~

1:'0:·

17.500., lJMd JoM 0ooro 95 Chevy

J: ~~ ::'....:=

• lt1rt Your Ads With A ktr-word • Include: Complete
Description • Include A Prfct • Avoid Abbreviations

Ctntor

Canopy

e 1 wau ee uc s came ac .rom a
15-point deficit and defeated the Denver Nuggets 102-101 Thursday night
·despite 44 points froin Van Exel.
"When you score 31 points taking
only 12 shots,lhat's an unbelievable performance," Nuggets coach Dan Issei said
' of Allen.

SI2UO.B9VobwagonGolf,
1750. (740)388-9906
8tl..lnoolwiTowncarand 111
• -..y~,. ride, aotoligllt
&lt;lnwner. (740)408-9523 a&lt;
(740)408-1-1-43
t2 Bemotta GT, 3.1 ...,
~

18,900., lJMd o..tz 4008
•wd tractor 401"4! Aopo and 1450 (140)247-4292

coolditton, $500, (740)1HB-

Selllrday 9-4. 112 milo IIIII I'UU 11111 RH I'OII110N URGENTLY

--'--.'--'--'--Ql Eaoort Wagon LX. including 7-of-8 from 3-point "range. as
SISOO. 841 LTS Topoz. th M "l
k B k
b k ~

ti2"L=.,~::,.'-':;:

HI!ATING 1

• 11 -ldt&lt;&lt; Horbalilt DioCol F..- Product ar
• ~- (740)441-11182
JET
AIERATION MOTORS
Ropoirtd. Howl Rabulft tn
- . Call Ron Evane, 1·

- - C- lnxn SR 7 Sconlc Hill Nullillg
plurna - · eam sos to new car? Are your bills
Roommate Wanted to sharw N. FlOor TV, Colflo It ....,111 oppllcoUOno for 180 for 2 or 3 hoora WHkly. baCked up? We can halp. All root...,.. .... _ Nice Home If In- lnd end tablle, an~ 1 full time AN. 7 to 3 and 3 Can Sera·Tee) 740·592- We offer last ~lable aervIn lhla "'' r r r II

it Chryoior .._,.,., Con- · l2 000 (740)387·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
01!50 (7otUPe7-n72
As impressive as Nick Van Exel was for
-f~~~;;;;;;;;;;;:
e1 Dynuty, groat ... - . . three quarten, Ray Allen ended the
oi changed rog&lt;liarly. Good
· ht
"th
bett J'
d
tiree. Strip ot chrome 11 mg '\'1
an even
er me - an a
- -Moll drive to -acl- victory, too.
at.. (7.0)379-9061
Allen shot 1 0-for-12 from the field.

H
E--.cy - t 111,900., Uoed Ford 4810
P\11111. ltlturtng Tappane tractor 521\p :!wd ROPS
F,.. '""'edible """"ntv ~ ~ 111,eoo., lJMd

"'1.-m_,.

PI!RsoNALs

~ex.::

(740~1.17 ... (740~

-

•

r

028

"":..:~~ :=~~'";".::!

~

.. =:rms

r:

NOV.

o4wd---.:;~·------

•
-

-w-.It• a:=.. I t • t
-ng
--on

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

1182
1 lent
,Running
. . . ; -Condition.
- ,__
'
FARM

COOUIIG (14')"1 tUI ~~::-~;~.
.. 1~
Holland 7810 -··
~ . . vut., 7110
AND USED FUR- """
.....
ll.t"C'• I'OR 8A1.E1 We 125.500.,New Holand 8610
- · FrM Eotimatta, w •Wd.487
tractor ~ . .....,
"'" clont Col Ul, w. both uri!
- . ... ___
t.ooeaf (740)448 8308. 1. S23.soo.. New Holland
4
lt)l)-2tl-oollt.
3010 wd. llw:tor •21'9 lx2
Iransmleelon 1 -500. 2 years old. 17" Yal\'e, S18,500., Uoed New
.....,flor, P-., Scenner Holand 1725 Campact tracand lola ol Soflwarw. $500. tor Boorne&lt;..,... 2!hp(7:40:)21i:M~1028~::~= 185 houro suoo., Uted
NewHoiland4830:!wdtracR l f l l l l t l - - tor 551"4&gt; with 7310 T - H -c:y 90 pklo 9117 houro 1 owner

•
:

C
~ II'" ...-.. It"
I

·~

....~-~...:.
-r' rg=r . ~ ~~(7:,;: Bucks
to beat Vtan b eI and
~~Hl!!i~~:s~-:.o:::r
-p----------. the Nuggets·, lord . n gets . Wl·n

• ~....... , c, ...

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No On~
Else Can!

1

tv Road 48. (740)288-45&amp;4.

good

condition.

Alklng ancee. Looal referenoa fur·

VIrgil's Berry Patch, Eall o1 $9,800. (304)875-1-440
· • SyraooH on floutl 12• ha8 85 Etcamlno SS tnt a txt
wmlpa &amp; porpla aaparagoo
gcod cOndltl;., ·drlvta·
roota, (740)992·7448.
~~na, but need~ work:
$2500; 03 Cavalier, auto,

..

looks good, runa good,

Buy, Sel! or Trad~
11
, ••

·~. In the

~·" ~:-

CLASSIFIEDSI ·

$1500. (740)9112-8586.

1979 Jeep CJ5 will t111dt for
4-wheeler of equal valut. or
sale lor $3000. Clll ROben

Naal (304)875·8540

nlahed. Eotabllahed 1975.
Call 24 Hro. (740) 448·
0870,
1·8D0-2BHI571.
Rogera _Waterproofing.
------...,..-c&amp;C General Home t..talntenonce- Painting, vinyl "siding, carpentry, doors, wfn.
dowa, baths, mobile home
repair and, more. For trM
ootlmate call Chol, 740-9112·
8323.

GMCAA Main Oftlce

8010 North Slate Route 7, Cheshire

NQW
"HIRING

GMCAA Gallla One Stop

$6 • $8

GMCAA Metpomce

Per Hour

420 Silver Brid&amp;e PIIIZI, Gallipolis
186 M•lberry Avenue, Pomeroy
Applications may be raquested by phone
by calling 740·367·7342 ext. 27 or 740·
992-6629 ext. 27 befora NovemberS.
Gallla·Malgs Community Action Agency
Eq•BI Opportun~ Employer

FuiVPart Time
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

Eagles Club Dance
Friday 2nd · ·
Saturday 3rd
Lone Wolf Band
Racine American Legion
will be having a
HAM &amp;TURKEY DINNER
Sunday, Nov. 41h ·11 am $6.00
Public is welcome

Come party at the
Good Times
live music from Flint
Sat. Nov. 3
Halloween Party
its not too late
Wayne's Place
Friday, Nov. 2nd
Come dressed, cash
prizes for best 3
Party with live
music from Flint

1-888-1174-JOBS

r,

�,

Page B 6.• "(he O.lly Sentinel

Friday, NOv. 2, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ottlo

: Fitd-r, Nov. 2, 2001

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

i ~ALIJU.E~Y~o~o~pp-----~------------------------~~~==~~::::~~;::=--:::::::::::::::::==::=:=~

•
••

NEA
PHILLIP

•••a'·

CI'IZ,

IIAVLINGIM
DCAYATDIO

Tr- Service

• Top • Rclnoval • Trl111
• Stump Winding
• Bucklt Truck

•lllulll• tUn liteM
...... s.nd •1apooll
oflll Dill ......

·a;· I

.

•

114 mile- 11.- fnlm P01••or

.....

RIICine, Ohio 45771

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop&amp;Compare

FREE ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

"'''""
NOW OPEN

: Meigs Massa~
: Thera/1"1
Tonia Re1b8r
Licensed Massagr~

Therapist

.

740-992-1705
213 N. 2nd Ave.
Mlddlepon, OH 45760
Come In ond ook
about opec:lolo
Gill Cortlflcaleo
Available

COIKIETf/BLOCI/BIICI

...........

Re..,..._oll, • W1lkl
•nd.DriYet• Sttlldl ·
C-FrocEodm1ta

Country, Dlnce &amp;

Rocky R Hupp Agent
Box 189

r.1 1ddlepo 11 Ol11u .!5760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Ihsurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retiremenl.
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovets;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

CARPENTER
SERVICE

..

• Roam AddiUona •

-~

·-~ .

• EJa bloal a Plumbing
• Rooting • Gulle&lt;l

• VInyl Siding • Pointing
• Plllo IIIII Porch Dlc:I&lt;S

Free Estimales

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'

.

BISSELL
IUILDaRI INC.
New u.... •VltiJI
Sldi11•NnrG1._
• lleplacetltat

w•dow•· Room

~i·Roolla·

R..-onabte Ratea
All Occa,lona

992·6215

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

PRICING

IIIYliEPlUEMEITMIIIWS
-lllrllli . . .UBII·-

NOT I
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
COIIIIION PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
CoHNumbor:
CJO.CV-100
a.nellclel Mollgage
Co. of Ohio, Plaintiff

vs.

Denlel s. Black, 11 el.,
In purouence ohn
Order of Bolo
dlncltd to mo from
oold court, In tho
obovoentllled action,
I will oiler lor Hie ot
public auction llthl
door ol the Molgo
County COIIrthOUH,
· Pomeroy, Ohio on

WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
LP.A., Gtwgory D.
Woold ...... ond D. L.
Molno, Jr.
A~olor

Pl81ntlff,IOO
,..,._,

South

Columbutt,Ohlo
432118;
Tale: 814-221·11142.
(10)12, II, 2e, 2001
(11) 2, •• 2001
Public Notice

SHERIFPS SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
C-Number:
Thuraday, Nov~mber
OICY-070
15, 2001, II 10:00 Bonallclol Ohio Inc.,
·a.m. tho following,
dbellanollclol
MllfiiiiiiiO
Co. of
Situated In tho
Ohlo,okl
County of Molgo,
IIIII of OhiO, . Hauoohold Roolty
Township
of Corparatlon, Plalnllll
L•banon, Sacllon
VI.
118, Town 12 end
!Iongo 112 of tho Jono R. Wllllomo, 11
Ohio . Compony'o
11., el 11.,
·Purchlu:
Beginning at tho
In purouance of an
Northwoat comer of Order of Solo
tho umo real estate directed to mo from
•• thet conveyed aald court, ln-'the
from Goldll Hartley
entitled octlon,
: to Eothor Dolley by above
I
will
oiler
lor oole at
• deed dotod Juno 8, public ouctlon
at tho
; 1141, and recorded door of the Molgo
. Auguot 24, 1948, In County Courthouse,
• dnd book 1115 at Pomeroy, Ohio on
Plge 275 of thl tleed Thuradoy, November
:rocordo 01 Molgo 1 5, 2001, It 11:00
·County, Ohio; thlnco o.m. tho following
:In 1 Southwootorly cloocrt- rooiHiato
dlrocUon 1 dlllenco
Sltuatod In tho
,ol18 rocla along tho Townohlp
of
·Uno of Seellon 1118 to
County
of
S,llobury,
: •on Iron pin; thonco
Molgo,
ond
Slota
of
· :Eo- 1 dlotonce of 12 Ohio, and In Socllon
fodo to thl center ol 29 , ond dolcrlbed 01
~hi Townohlp road;
lolloWII:
.thence along tho
Beginning al on
:contor of Township Iron
pin In the center
rood o dlllllnce ol18 of tho
Bone Hollow
Roclo In o Northerly Rood,
on the
di...Uon; thonce In a northwoat cornor of
-torly direction 1 tho
Folrlona
dlllance of 3 roclo to Subdlvlolon.
In
tho
ploce
of Middleport Vllloge,
begiMing,
oald pin being North
·. •CONTAINING 0.7&amp; 50
dogrHo 45' w. 313
ecre•, more or le...
loot
o point In
There I• reHrved, tho from
Bono
howe-, from tho Rood; thonceHollow
oloroHid tract oil all, 15 dogrHa 28' North
Woot
gao end other 253 loot olong Hid
mlnorolo underlying road: -North 35
tho proml- with tho
right to to mlno, dogrool I 0' Well 124
remove 1nd produce loot along lold road;
Norlh 80
thl Htnl ond lor thll !honea
Wool 110
dogrooo
20'
right, to hno lull loot olong oold
road·
right of lngroao ond lhonce North n• 05:
ogrooo
to oold Woo• 100 IHI llong
.
property ond Ill other
rood, thonc~
rlghta portolnlng 1o oold 71
North
clogrno 10
Hid rourvllljon.
Pormonont porcol woot 11 loot along
oold road, lho ploco
number:
of beginning lor lhll
070De05000 .
description· thence
Proporty oddreu: South 114 t~eirooo 25 •
30588 Borrlngor Weot 403.7 !HI llong
Rldgo
Road, 0 goo Uno ihonco
Polllond, Ohio 45no North 84 'degree•
Prior lnotrumont Weol 105 IHI·thonce
reforeneo: Volumo
North 8' Eo it 211.7
14 pogo 411
lnt to tho contor of
Approllldat:
Bono Hollow Rood;
$10,000.00
thonce South 84
TERMS OF SALE: dogrooo Eolt 448.3
To be oold lor no leoo !oat olong tho oald
thon two-thirds olthe road, to tho place of
opprolnd voluo. Tho beginning
purchaoar(a) oholl contalnl~g 1.31
dopooll $5,000.00 ocroo, morl or lees.
with the oherlll ot tho Except alllogol rlghta
of woy
limo ol Hid Hie.
Por,;,onont parcel
number· 14-IIIW
Rolph E. Tru-11:
Shlrtn
Pro,..;rty oddiiH:
31427
Toyloro Drive,
FRANK&amp;

---1-:

. I'

Middleport,

Dhlo

4!1710
Prior lnatrumant

Rolph E. TruHOII.
Sheriff

rolenlnce: Volume
FRANK&amp;
82, PIIJO 371
WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
Approllld 11:
L.P.A., OtWQ~ D.
$8,000.00
TERMS OF SALE. . Wooldrki((O end D. L.
To be lold lor no leH Maino, Jr. Attorneye
thin two-thlrdo of thl tor Plllntlll, 100
apprallld value, The South Poert 811001,
purchooor(o) ahall Columbuo, Ohio
dopooll $5,000.00 432118; Toto: 114-221·
with thl ohorlll 8t tho 1M2.
limo of Hid Hto.
(10112, 11, 2&amp;, 2001
(11 2,1, 2001
flltlph E. Trulllll,

All Makos Tnu:tor &amp;
Equlpmtnl Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parta '
Deolen
1000 sr. Rl. 7 Soutll .

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

992-4119 1-800-291-5600
Vlllt Our Showroom On Stole Route 33
6 Milts North Of Jloateroy, Ohio, AI Counly Road 18

• No Dealtn or Contndora Pleue
Vlu/Mulertanl

WVHl34??

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio

eff Warner ·Ins.

(10) 12, 19, 2e, 2001
(tl 12, e, 2001
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
. COUNTY, OHIO
Coot Number:
. 01.CY-081
Benoflclol Ohio Inc.,
dbo Benoflclol
Mortgoga Co. of
Ohio, Plolntlll vo.
Oonnlo M. Lovondor,
eta!.,
In purouonco of an
Order of Solo
directed to mo from
oold court, In the
above 111111tlad action,
I will alter lor ule ol
bll
pu c auct1on 11 tho
door ol tho Molgo
County Courthouoo,
Pomeroy, Ohio on
Thul'ldly, Novombor
I&amp; 200I, 11 ;0:3D o.m.
the
following
doiiCrt- nlll-o:
• Sltuoted In the
Vlllogo of Roclno,
County 01 M&lt;llgo and
s- of Ohio, to-wit:
Beginning et the
nollhuot comer of a
cortaln lot dndod by
,; D Wall DICOIIod
~~ Mollnda Dobblno;
thonco ..., Ono
·H
d
undrt Nlnotoon
(Ill) loot; thonco
lOUth 11 right engle,
Slxtytwo (12) tnt;
thonco wool at right
angle Ono Hundred
Nlnetoon (111) tool;
thonce North ot right
anglo, Slxty·two 182)
lnt to tho ploce ol ·
· beginning.
Permanent parcal
number: II0037•.000
Property oddreoo:
708 Main Stroot,
Recine, Ohio 45171
Prior lnotrumont
rolorence: Volumo
72• P1111 2118
S2~000proOOiaod at:
• ·
TERMS OF SALE:
To be oold lor no Ieos
thin two-thlrdo of the
lpprollld value. Tho
purchooor(o) ohall
dopoolt U,OOO.OO
with the ohorlll 8t tho
111111 oluld oole.

Public Notice

992-5479

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PROBATI! DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Account• end
vouchoro of the
following nomod
llduolory hot boon
Iliad In tho Problte
Court, Melgo County,
Ohio lor approval mid
Htllt111ant.
• ESTATE NO. 21381
- Third ond Flnol
Account of Krlotlo
Mocldon, Guordlon ql
thl poraon ond • • of Amy E. Thompoon,
a minor.

Unleol oxcoptlono
oro Iliad thoroto, ulcl
ICCOUnl Will be HI
lor hearing before
Hid Caun on the 3rd
dey of Oocomber, 200
1, at which limo oold
account will bo
oonolderod ond
contlnuod from · dey
to doy until llnolly
dlopolld. of.
Any
poroon
lnlerootod moy 1111
wrlllon exception to .
oold occount or to
mlltoro portalnlng to
tho execution of tho
truet, nOt •••• th1n

llvo doyo prior to thtt
data oot lor hoorlng
RObert E. Buck
Judge
CommonPiooo
Coun,PDivlllon
Melgo Coumy, Ohio
(11) 2, 2001

RRSTCOME.
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PEil JOINT
'REGUUILY
$321.00 PER JOINT .

Shade River AG Service
·"Ahead In Service"
35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, Oh 457l0

740-985-3831

IN TH! MATTER OF
SEmEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

1066 2nd Street • Mason, WV

12% Ecooomy Stock Feed ....... $8.5111100
12% Equine 12
(Formerly Wtltern Pride) ...........$5.00150
21%. Hunter~ Prttle Dog Food .......$1.75150
s-t Lick Deer Blocko.................. $8.75
Whole Com .......................... $5.251100
C111Cked Com ............................ $8.2511 00

(1000 ft from the bridge)

Tel: (304) 773-5800
Hours: Sun - Thur llam- 10 pm
Frl &amp; Sat 11 am • llpm

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

~,;A;~- BUFFET SPECIAL ·e,;~:

tCI""'

: ~fMNCH
1
I

97 Beech st.
mlddlepert, OH
(10'x10' 610'x201

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

I

14.11

11:30am ·2:00pm

:DINNER 11.11 :
1
I

5:00pm - 7:30pm :

14 yrs &amp; under FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE 1
1
5-8 yrs- '2.99 : 5-8 yrs- 13.99
9-12 yrs -'3.99 1 9-12 yrs -'4.99

I

Advertise in
this-space for
$100 per
month

I

---------------------J
BUFFET TO GO (Lunch .....II)
BUFFET TO GO (Dinner .. '8.111

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves

HowardL.

Wrltesel
Roofing - Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FTH Estllllltel

949·1405
591-5011
~I

PM&amp;

...

THAR !! ·I'M
TR'I'IN' TO

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks, Kitchen,, Drywall
&amp;More

IDod

-..
30=..a

.,....,....,.Q

wolgh

211 Chlnge tut sa Cllrul *Ink

• Stont
10 Edoel

C::: eo:r'11n1
24 hop- II IIIIJIIgonl

12F1t Anllnnll
21 sna.. In

5I GIRl on

22 Some
EMIPall
,..

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31 ..Thla muat.f

I 1..at1on

17
18 Woncllfnood 114 group

.. , Lg.
2S Enemy

12 Cpl., o.g.

13-

21=
-

2&amp; II'II(IOflant

Porta

22 CMonly

23 ..HU..

DOWN

24 Futile

I Nub

32 Ollve-ol

38 llfawlng

25 1.-.tytng

2 L = - 27 Yvea'
3S
4C
I

lhl.-lca

33 Thin coin
M Roo! port
38 FootiYII

thumb

INolon

37 llolocold
31-.

50 "'Go eweyl" .
53- .
ohlpl

:

Llnnon'l

lovl

sa Ellctlon
wlnrilra

57

1racko
31 Coopo

7 Anglor'o
boot

nolg-

48 Sw~ t:01tor
41 Ariz.
:
nolghbor • •

55

21C':t

5 Rulo ol

44ComCopllnd
48 P1llld
47 Ropoll

•
Actrua:
Down
Chong

prison, "l'tn a pessi-

NA1»!!

mist because of intelligence, but an optimist because of will."
At lbe bridge table,
if the contract looks
too easy, be a pessimist, assuming all
breaks will be bad.
But if in danger, be
an optimist, hoping
finesses will work and
suits
will divide fa~
ALL. Tt416 FINE. Pfi.INT,
vorably. Which is
~
in today's deal? You
MAGNIFYING
are in four hearts.
West leads the spade
~LASS'!
queen .
The optimist wins
trick one, draws
.
'or~nAc.r
• ••
trumps, and takes a
club finesse, probably
into the West hand so
that his diamond king
THE BORN LOSER
is protected -- at least
'lt\®-IWI'l.E'., l~ '\'~T '{CO"""''""' 1 CQ.I'I'W~-tlL Flt-ID'Il\E
temporarily. Howlc.u~;rootm
flf.'lLM\11:. ·
F~ll'i.
ever, if it isn't South's
fl.E.W,\0(&lt;: !
day, West will proI~ f\ .)lffY! ,..--......--..duce 1hc club queen,
and lead a spade over
to his partner's king.
Then a diamond shift
through the king will
net the defense four
tricks: on~ spade, two
diamonds and one ·
club.
=7;-'"=-:-==~
The peS.imist, seeing those four potential losers, realizes he
should keep East off
the lead. He ducks
trick one. South wins
the spade continuation, draws trumps,
and plays a club to his
nine. Whether the fi-~ nesse wins or loses,
:......:l":-._1-~ l';outh has at least 10
tricks via one spade,
five hearts and three
NO, MV 61tOT14ER ISN'T WERE ..
I TI-IINK HE15 TR't'lt-16 TO
clubs.
8UNNIE5! QOOJ.I, I LOVE
l-IE
TO TilE MALL ...
DO TIIIN65 TIIAT WILL MAKE
The unluckyist (sic)
LOOKING AT TI-lE BUNNIES!
plays
against an East
1-!15 STUPID 006 1-lAPf"(..
who overtakes with
the spade king at trick·
one! Say South wins,
draws trumps, and fi nesses dubs into the
West hand. Because
South is an unlucky·
ist, West produces the
queen, and leads the
spade four to his partncr's nine. Then the
diamond-queen shift
gives the defense four .
tricks.

it

l'lffl&gt; A

Cellular

4Sn1
74o-948-2217

". J
AQ.I!J

,._....
••

c-y

=;· =

• Q J •• '

• U I

wiTtt

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Shortll

FRANK&amp;
WOOLDRIDGE CO.,
L.P.A., Gn1g0ry D.
Wooldrldgo ond D. L.
Molno,Jr.
Attornoyo lor
Plolntllf, 100 South
Poorts-t,
Columbus, Ohio
U2011; Tole: .14-221•
11142.

Advertise
In this space
for$2Sper
month

'229.00*

PD'n
l'ubliL· Nntkc."' in Nc"'SPUIH'rs.
' 'our Jti~ht w Knu\t.))t·lin•rcU H.i~htlo \'our Uour.

_0\JIT '!'ORE.

FACTORY DIRECT

c.IOAI IIIII llliDIIIIW
FREE ESTIMATES

......... ONo

BARNEY
ARGUlN' OUT

DIPOYIII

PUBLIC

Dtckl•
• Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

. 740-742-7709
'

YOUNG'S

Rooflr1g • Gutters • Siding

Rack Millie

WHl
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IOAU.
15 -Dfrot:lor
C1 I
I
,..,.__ 51 Shldl11 c:-llry
52 Shout of

Is the glass half full
or half empty? Does it
really matter? Either
way, it contains five
ounces of liquid. Or
perhaps you agree
with Italian political
theorist
Antonio
Gramsci, who wrOte
in a letter from

Service

S.rvlq Ohio ud W.V,
WVII031112

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

••

DlscJockeg

FOOien, Willi, Sttptt •
Pill Work,

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• • • tlk

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COIITIACTOIS, INC.

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(740) 992-347
IOIEIIIISSEll
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•5~-._,
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On New Tires
: With This Ad :

•

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Colobllty Cipl1er ~ 1ro CIHIMI 11om ~lfonl by lomouo
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LfNS!

Today'S cllle: N eqUIIII H

'TZ'DZ

mp

JFRIDAY

NOVEMBER21

SAGGX

AM

KNBJ

TZ

TZDZ

LXQ'K
FADP

LAYZ

JKDAGSZD
UZMADZ

JKAW

. ..

HJ.' .

LBKF

AHK
KNXG
FAH

(GZT

YXFAD)

DHCF

IBHVBXOB
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "1'1Miie'a a hole In yoor hea~
thoro't o hole In tho city.- (former New York City t,!oyor}.
Edward I. Koch
.,

bocO-

woao

lAM I
l=~~f.' S©tt~lA-"~~s·
ldllod loy ClAY a. POUAN - - - - - Rearrange leH•n of th•
0 lour
tcromblld wordi b.-

law to form four simple words.

ZAI C

II

I
1• I I .

RYTID

1--...-L_Yr-G--r-R;...,o,.,......ff,'

'My new car uses gas the
same way I drink." The fellow told
the bartender. Smiling he added,
r--::C-A-:-:E:-::F~E-:0::----. :~~ ~rsn't guzzle but it sips like :.-.

I I I'

~

1e

4
s I
_ 1
_ 1
•
•
I
'--1--'--...1---'--'--'

e

Complete rh• ehuckl· quored
by filling in the mining words
you develop hom srep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQU ... RES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

· SCRAM-LETS. ANSWERS
.
Indigo· Paper- Folio -Impact· TO PAIN
Granny says that what you don't know can't hurt you
That would explain why so many kids today are immune
TO PAIN.

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

Friday,

CONSTR
.PROJECT?
WE ¢AN FIELP

G~

!'!!".X•• • 2

Youi skl lh and t11lcnu for
being able to manage things
well will he put to extensive
usc in the year aheacl. However, many 11cnonal gains
could r~ult through the persous you h ~ lp .

0""'

21 -Ju1y

. ARIES (March 21-April19)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
... Don't be too hard Ol\ ym~r­
self today, becamt your 6i\ure
to ac hieve your objective•
could be somewhat self-created, but more due to the opposition from others.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2j.
Dec. 21) -- Unless you can
tind the middle ground in
your dealings with another
concerning a joint effort, :he
chances a~c huge that you'll
crol! ,swords today. Someone
is likely to get h~o~rt.

CAPRICORN (D«. 22-

Jan. IY) -- Don't fulfill your

-· Be particularly careful
about what you say to othen
today. You could e1tpres1

ynunelf in a tnanner anocher

finds otTemive.
TAURUS (April 20-M&gt;y
2n) - This day could turn om

to be a bUmmer financiaUy for
you if you mism:~na~ your
fundi. The losses you mcur
ntay not be- recoverable in any
kind of timely fashion .
·
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)

ambiliou! goals today at the

I

CANCER

by mailing 52 to Astro-Gnph,
01(,7. llr sure to state your
Zodiac sign.
·

992·2155

involvc~l

associ:nc over thts I~Slll' .

r;/o this new5papcr, P.O. Box

16?, Wickliffe, OH 44092-

Daily
Sentinel.

ward today when

other today. You t'ould end
ltp lo~ing a gotld friend or :~n
. 22) · - Negat1vc tl nttking today could influence every
facet of yom Ji(e , including
. your work or career. Do not

SCORPIO (O&lt;t. 24-Nov.

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

hefty price to pay.
AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Feb.
19) ·- l'ut your best foot for-

-- He careful nut 10 place too
much cmpha~is on yom \Vatm
and desires over lho5c of an-

in
social affain. Any misconduct
on your pare will bt judged
more hanhly and not readily
forgotten.
PISCES (Fe,b. 20-March 21l)
-· Should an old, serious
problem arise again today, try
to get everyone together and
•ee if there is some w1y you
can rtsolve: thinp. If left un.:n.
tended, it will feucr· even fur·
tiler.

22) ·~ Uc cau tio\1~ and prudent concerning busincu or
financial mattcn today, but
not to the point that you
come on· ~ti ngy or ti~t-fisted
wlth your friends. Get a jump
011 life by undcntandiul the
influcncet that'll iovcrn you
in the year ahead. Seond for
your Astro-Graph 11redh:tions

SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CUt.:VERTI
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

or

expenstanother. You
might get what you want, but,
unfortunately. there will be a

I

let thought pmerm inflict
their dam:tgc .

lEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) ·•
Unfortunately, should a mis·
understanding occur with a
friend today, it won't be so
easy to unwind and make
nKht again. This i~ especially
tnte _i( money is involve,t.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) .
- If you've railed to uke loiareof a touchy situation dua hu
caused you discmnfort m the
past, 1t's apt to rear 1ts up;ly
head again tod•y and this time
dcmaud repair.

.

�•

••

.'

Senatols drop stem cell push
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senators who want to ea5e the
mtrictioru Presider~ Bush has damped on stem cell research
are backing away f m a veto showdown with him over the
confentious issue.
Advocates of using some embryos for the promising mearch
dropped the language fiom a huge spending bill on Thursday
in the face of a White House veto threat. In return, Sen. Sam
Brownback, R-JUn., an abortion foe, dropped his plans to
olfer amendments that would have banned human cloning and
put tight strictures on stem cell research.
' Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Po., a leader of the drive to nuke some
embryos available for stem cell research, said that if he pushes
the bill, "I don't know how long it will take to debate" because
of Brownback's amendments.
·Stem cells can develop into any type of human tissue. Scientists hope to use them someday to treat Parkinson's,Alzheimer's
and other disea5es.

.• .

Page &amp;a

•World

The Daily Sentinel

Stockpile cutback progresses

.. WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States and Russia are
. headed toward' an agreement to slash nuclear weapons stock'piles to let President Bush's pet project, a national missile
defense system, go forward with muted Russian objections.
The goal of talks held in Washington on Thursday and scheduled in Moscow this weekend is a warheads cutback of about
two-thirds, ~th each country limiting itself to no more than
1,750 to 2,250 strategic warheads, a senior White House official told The Associated Press.
Any understanding reached probably will not take the form
of a formal treaty, with strictly scheduled reductions. Another
senior Bush administration official said the administration still
intends to withdraw from the 1972 treaty with Moscow that
bans national missile defenses for either country.
For the time being, the Pentagon has deferred aspects of tests
that would violate the landmark pact.

FtJdlf, Novsn•w J. 2111:

Researcher touts advances.tobacco company has.made
WHEELING (AP) - A Brown &amp;
researcher was the latest in a
line of win• 'SSeS defending the corporate
conduct of tl bacco companies in a landmark class-action lawsuit brought by
West Virginia smoken.
Sharon Boyce, B&amp;W's directo~ of
applied research, testified Thur5day that
the company has worked with outside
researchers to test its cigarettes since the
1930s, introduced the fint cellulose
acetate filter in 1952, followed by a charcoal filter in 1954 and a ventilated filter
in the 1960s.
Starting Monday in Indianapolis, she
said B&amp;W will test-market its latest
invention, a three-part filter that claims
ro reduce toxic gases in smoke by 25 percent.
Such testimony is important to the
Willia~n

defense because the lawsuit accuses
Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, LoriUard
and B&amp;W of manufacturing a defective
product with "willful and wanton" disregard for public health.
Healthy West Virginia smokers with at
lea5t a five-year habit w:mt the industry
to create a medipd screening program
they say could lead to the lifesaving early
detection oflung cancer, emphysema and
chronic obstructive lung disease. The case
is the first of its kind to be tried in the
United States.
The cigarette maken say their products
are inherendy risky, not defective, and
that they have done and are doing all
they can to reduce that risk .
The smoken contend that all four
tobacco companies have long shunned .
potentially incriminating, in-house bio-

challenge to the order, which probably wiU come up at a hearing Tuesday by a Huuse Government Reform subcommittee.
The hearing was scheduled for last month but was canceled in
the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

Kids: Get more sleep .

DULUTH, Minn. (AP) -Those parental plea5 for children
to go to bed can now 1&gt;e delivered with a little eXtra heft.
Beginning with elementary schools in Duluth, the National
Institutes of Health is undertaking a publicity campaign to per..
suade children to get more sleep.
For years, the NIH ha5 targeted specific groups, including
drivers, soldiers and astronauts, with the message that they need
solid sleep to be healthy and perform well. Now the message
is being brought to children ages 7 to 11.
WASHINGTON (AP) - One historian calls it a "disaster
"Whatever children do, they will do it better if they are well
for history;' but the White House insists a new executive order rested;' said Carl Hunt, director of NIH's National Center on
issued by President Bush balances the public's right to see the Sleep DisorderS Research.
records of past presidents with a need to protect national security.
'
Advocates for the release of government documents say the
executive order violates the spirit of the 1978 Presidential
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge has su,mmoned Sara Jane
Records Act and will usher in a new era of secrecy for papers Olson and attorneys in her case to a special session to deterleft behind by America's ch.i ef executives.
mine if her guilty plea remains valid in light of public declaraThe White House says the order simply sets up a procedure tions of innocence by the former Sy!Dbionese Liberation Army
for implementing the act and gives forin7r presidents more fugitive.
authority to claim executive privilege to withhold certain
Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Ficller on Thurs&lt;lay ordered
papers. Absent "compelling" circumstances, the incumbent Olson, her attorneys and prosecutors to come to court Nov. 6.
president will agree with a former president's decision to dis"I've never been in a situation like this before," said Peputy
. close or withhold documents, the White House says.
District Attorney Michael Latin, who prosecuted Olson. "I've
Bruce Craig, director of the National Coordinating Com- been in situations where a defendant comes back and asks to
mittee for the Promotion of History, claims the order is "bla- withdraw a plea, but that is not what's happening here."
tantly unlawful top to bottom." He predicted a quick legal
Olson pleaded guilty Wednesday to possessing bombs with.

· Historian deaies Bush order

Judge probes guilty plea

logical research and allowed lawyers to
choose projects. Rather than marshaling
iheir efforts into a better pn)duct, the
smokers charge, the companies spent
decades denying the link berween smoking and disea5e.
B&amp;W didn't conduct in-house biological research in the United States, Boyce
said, but it did fund work at American
universities and at a lab in England. They
have been doing that since the 1930s,
long before public debate about smoking
and health became prominent, she said.
Boyce disputed claims that B&amp;W ~
trying to distance itself from work t~!at
could be used against the company in lit~
igation. Rather, she said, researchers at
the Medical College of Virginia had
expertise in many areas that B&amp;W did
not .

intent to murder tos Angeles police officers in 1975. Free oq
bail, she immediately left the courtroom and told reporters that
she was innocent and only agreed to the plea bargain because
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks made it impossible for her to get
a fair trial.
•

Security lapse spurs evacuation ·
NEW YORK (AP) - F"deral security agents ordered the
temporary evacuation Thursday of part of a terminal at John F.
Kennedy International Airport after checkpoint screeners
failed to properly search travelers, officials said.
·
Hundreds of passengers were herded out of the area, including thos!' who had already boatded two planes.
.
The concourse, used by American Airlines, was reopeneq
several hours later after a search. Nothing suspicious was
found, airline spokeswoman Sonja Whiteman said.
'
Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Jim Peters said
FAA agents mpnitoring a checkpoint saw screeners allowing
passengers to continue through after security alarms went olf.

New 2002 Cbevy Silveirado I
LS Extended Cab 4Daor 414

125,
• V-8 Power, Tilt &amp; Cruise
• POW« Windows, Lockl,
• Keyless Entry, CD System

Cavalier Sedan

,151*

• Automatic
• Air Condillonlng
• AIWFM Sterao With c-tte

2001 Oldsmobile
Alero GL Sedan

2 Door 4x4

~2,151* ~3,551*
• Automatlc, Air Conditioning
• Power Sea~ Windows &amp;
•CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automllk:, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Loeb, CD
1 Alum. Whlels, Tilt &amp; Cruise

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

2001 Buick Regel
LS Sedan

qa,I5D*

~5,451*

• Power Stat, Windows &amp;
• CD Sya~, Alum. Whitis
Cruise Control, Tilt Steering

3800 V-6, CD System
Power Seat, Windows,
Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

.

'

• Taxes, Tags, T~e Fees oxtnl. Roba10 lrdude(lln sale p!ioe of new vehicle listed where applicable. ··en approved credit. On solacted models. Not responsible 101 typographical eno~.
~Good November 2nd Through Noverrller 4th.

Buick ' @
It's all gcoCI

l

;

•

(iZ) Oldsmobile
lUll. IIIIIIIIDIH'

Bonneville SE Sedan

·qo,I5D*

• Power Stat, Windows, Locks
1 Keyless Entry, CD Syatem
1 Cruise Control, Tilt Steering

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