<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7570" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7570?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T13:05:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17981">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7455e193ee26d1deca57573272356917.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bdb7272a5c34bd1d207529c2072de6ca</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24656">
                  <text>.• .

Page 86

The Daily Sentinel

ELECTION DAY - DON'T FORGET TO VOTE!

Monday, Nove•hr 5, 1001

Bears stage second straight wild comeback win;~
BY THE ASSOCIATI

PRESS

CHICAGO (AP) For
the second straight week, the
Chicago Bean' script called
for a big rally and an overtime
victory.
Mike Brown returned an
interception 16 yards Sunday
for the winning touchdown
-just as he did the previous
game as Chicago beat
Cleveland 27-2.1. The Bears
{6-1) won their sixth straight.
Chicago beat the 49ers 3731 in overtime last Sunday on
Brown's 33-yard interception
rerurn afi:er trailing by 19
points in the second half.
Trailing 21-7 this time, the
Bears scored two touchdowns
in the final 28 seconds of regulation. James Allen tied it
when he caught a 34-yard
pass from .Shane Matthews
that the Browns (4-3) batted
into the air.
Matthews' 9-yard pass t()
Marty Booker with 28 seconds left preceded Bobby
Howard recovering an onside
kick at the Browns 47.
In overtime, Tim Couch's
pass was tipped by Bryan
Robinson, and Brown was
there again, carrying the ball
to the end zone and then all
the way out of the stadium.
Cleveland got a fumble
return for a TD from Courtney Brown on the second
play of the game, intercepted
three passes and sacked
Matthews five times.

I

moments. He jumped on Jets
safety Damien Robinsor after
Robinson was flagged for a
face mask penalty on quuterback Aaron Brooks.
A shoving match involved
both teams and an official,
and Turley emerged from the
pile without a helmet and
carrying a Jets helmet that he
threw downfield.
. He aiS'O made an obscene
gesture and was ejected. The
Saints (4-3) were penalized
15 yards, back to the 20.
Brooks threw two incompletions and was sacked by Abraham on their final · offensive
play.

Giants 27,
Cowboys 24, OT

EAST RUTHERfORD,
NJ. (AP) - Kerry Collins,
who had two interceptions
returned for touchdowns,
threw three scoring passes,
and Morten Andersen kicked
the winning field goal in
overtime.
Collins hit Ike Hilliard with
a 33-yarder to set up Andersen's decisive 42-yard field
goal in his 300th NPL game.
The victory snapped a
three-game losing streak for
the Giants (4-4), who also
picked off four of Clint Stoerner's passes in the second
half. They blocked a punt to
set up Collins' 9-yard touchdown pass to Hilliard that tied
it in the fourth Quarter.
Dexter Coakley scored on a
49en 21,
13 29-yard interception and
SAN fRANCISCO (AP) Mario Edwards returned one
- Terrell Owens caught two 71 yards, giving the Cowboys
second-half touchdown pass- (2-5) a 24-7 lead.
es from Jeff Garcia as the
Ravens 13,
49ers (S-2) kept Detroit (0-7)
winless in Marty Mornhinweg's first season as coach.
Mornhinweg, the 49ers'
PITTSBURGH (AP)
offensive coordinator the pre- ·The league's top two defenses
vious four seasons, got the kept this game tight.
Lions off to a 10-0 lead. But
Kris Brown, one of the
the. Lions mar{aged 131 total league's most dependable
yards to San francisco's 427. kickers, missed four field
Owens caught 30- and 7- goals, including a potential
yard TD passes and had nine game-tying 35-yarder in the
receptions for 125 yards. But dosing seconds for Pittsburgh
he remained annoyed at Mar- (5-2). The Ravens (5-3) got
iucci after the game.
two field goals from Matt
Garcia was 26-for-35 for Stover in the fourth quarter.
296 yards and three TDs.
Randall Cunningham, who
Detroit's only touchdown went over the 30,000-yard
came on Robert Bailey's 7 4- career mark, hit Shannon
yard interception return.
Sharpe on a 13-yard scoring
pass for Baltimore. Plaxico
Burress
caught his first pro
Chiefs 25,
TD pass, a 21-yarder, for
Pittsburgh.
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Pack 21
Trent Green and Priest
Holmes rallied the Chiefs (26). They keyed a 71-yard
drive and Tony Richardson . GREEN ~AY, W1s. (AP) scored his secortd TD ·of the Brett favre 1s 10·0 at home
game, from the 1 with 1:26 against the Buccaneers.
left. Holmes gained a seasonAllen Rossum returned a
high 181 yards and scored punt 55 yards for the goone touchdown.
ahead touchdown with three
After 39-year-old Doug minutes left. Ahman Green
Autie was knocked out with had a ·career-high 169 yards
a concussion, Drew Brees, the on 24 carries.
team's second-round pick, led
The Buccaneers (4-3) lost
San Diego (5-3) on four despite converting three
straight scoring ,drives in the turnovers, mcludmg. two
second half. His 20-yard interceptions of favre, mto a
touchdown pass ' to Freddie 17-7 lead early in the third
Jones with 6:10 left gave the quarter. Brad Johnson was
Chargers a 20-19 lead.
sacked seven . times and the
Packers (S-2) outgained the
Bucs 352 yards to 194.
Jets 16,
9
NEW ORLEANS (AP) John Hall kicked three field
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
goals and the defense forced
four turnovers in the Jets' - Steve McNair accounted
fourth road win of the season. for four touchdowns, includJohn Abraham had three sacks
for New York (5-3).
Saints . tackle Kyle ~-Turley
was ejected in the final

Uons

5.teelen JO

'•

I

Charpn20

en

•

Buccaneen 20

1

..

Saints

11tans 28, Japan 24

l

Are you~
for
high school

I

I

bMitetbaU a
wreitling?
.

'

Melp eo-ty"s

De
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Seahawks 14

Dolphins 23,
Panthen 6
MIAMI (AP) Patrick
Surtain's 29-yard TD interception return put the Dolphins (5-2) ahead to stay. The
Panthers'
losing
streak
reached seven after an opening victory.
Chris Weinke, Carolina's
29-yeaT-old rookie · quarterback, was yanked in the third
quarter after hurting his right
shoulder. Two replacements
threw their first NFL passes.
fourth-year pro Dameyune
Craig went 4-for-8 for 34
yards before h\)rting his right
foot, ann Matt Lytle finished.

!'I !

JOHNNY ON THE SPOT - Bears' James Allen (20) catches the ball for a touchdown .o ff
&lt;!eflected pass by quarterback Shane Matthews at the end of the fourth quarter Sunday agatn~ :
the Browns. (AP)
• ,
pass defense in the . NFL,
Brac;ly had a 4-yarder to
Kevin Paulk and a 15-yarder
to Marc Edwards that gave
the Patriots a 17-7 halftime
lea_d. Troy Brown scored on ·a
44-yard deflected pass in the
tfiird period.
Chris Chandler was sacked
six times, finally leaving with
a rib injury. Top draft pick
Michael Vick threw a 49-yard
pass to Brian Finneran and
ran for a 31-yard gain, but was
sacked three times.

Donovan McNabb threw
scoring passes of 8 and 54
yards to James Thrash, and
Brian Mitchell returned the
opening kickoff 94 yards for
the Eagles (4-3) . It was

ATLANTA (AP) - Tom
Brady bounced back from
throwing four interceptions
in the tourth quarter last
week. He threw for 250. yards
and three touchdowns to lead ·
the Patriots (4-4) past the falcons (3-4).
Against the most generous

·

wUh

Mitchell's 12th kick-return •'
touchdown of his carec!r•. •'
tying Eric Metcalf for tb.e •
career lead in TDs on kickoff :I
or punt returns.
. ;
: ;

~-,~=========~~~~~~

Honor
Heroes

As low as $11.95 per Mo.*
UNLIMITED Acceoo, Penonal E-mail Accounl
10 mego Pe!Wonal Web Space. Monthly rale it $16.95

1-888-657-0977
Local numbers !ru:lude:
HllllbMo, WllrT.Intton, WMt Unton, GtNnlltkl, Ch'cSevllle, O.lllpollt,
Wuhlngton CH, Mcelrttlur, P~, Ne6IOIWIIII, Lopn, Palnl
Pteulrtt, wv,
UbMon, G1a ;elliiuun, Glo....,,
MoCannelnllle, and mDNI
Find 1.1• on lhe ..- M www.dl..,.lbbl.oom
•Bued on JlllrlY sublorlptlon I'N,
..tup fM lppiNIO 1H !'IMIII.coount..

••

"".

u.,ln.

Your choice Of Two Styles... r--~-----~----------,
Please Fill Out And Return With I', ·
Ad Only $7.00
Your Payment tD:
1·
(shown' actual size)
VETERAN SALUTE
1·

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family

I
I
1:
J

,.,.
t:

In Honor of (name and rank)

I'
---,----------~

~.

1 Dates .()1 Active Duty

1---------- •t.
Branch of Service

-------~~J'

Ad With Photo- $14.00

Corporal Bob
Johnson
1991-1992
Marines
Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

MIWSSIA

AD DEADLINE TUES., NOV. 6, 2001
Tributes must be pr&lt;.~paid.
F'hotos may be picked up after Nov. 11th.

r.

f

••
I
I

1:

.

f
i

L-------------------~

'Orbe Jlailp ~enttnel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45669
(740) 992-2156

•

RUSSELl

OVP NEWS STAFF

KANAUGA ·- One man is
dead and another seriously
injured following an 8:30 a.m.
Monday explosion at Middleport Terminal Inc. on Ohio
Route 7 North.
Riehm! Ours, 50, of CroWn
City is listed in serious condition at a' Cincinnati burn unit
afi:enhe expiosion ·at Middleport Terminal Inc. burned
more tli.;.; .85 ' pe~ent of his
body.
John Pratt, 42, ofMudsoc was
killed in the blast. Both were
employees of the asphalt storage
plant, owned by Shelley Company in Kanauga.
It was initially thought two
trucks were involved in the
explosion, but at,~th&lt;?.r'ities from
Peirceton Tr'!ckirtg Ctf.; which
owned the tanker, confirmed
the 'truck was hauling a-load of
deisel fuel and a load of asphalt
material in split tanker.

a

_____________ t

IAddress:
I Phone:
· In Honor Of

BY

-------~----r
Love, (Nam!l relationship to veteran)
l

Photo of
Your Veteran

another·.

Explosion

i

Conflict/War

(Shown actual size}

.

BLAST - Amateur photographer Allan Stoneberger captured a.m. Monday at Middleport Terminal Inc. along Ohio 7 In
this scene shortly after a tanker truck exploded around 8:30 Kanauga. (Allan Stoneberger photo)
'

On Nottember 11, our nation tc&gt;IU pawe lo pay tribute to the llaowand.
~rn~n and women. tc&gt;lao laat!e proudly lenHJd their c:ounlry during lime•
em•• pnd peace.
Thil Veteran~ Day, the
Dally Sentinel
tc&gt;IU pubU.h a very •pee~
tribute honoring area t~eteraru. You can join in our •alule. by including rlae
t&gt;eleran in your life,
or decea.ed, who ha11e •ented or u currently
••~ in any branch of lhe U.S. Anned Force•.

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

NEW HAVEN, WVa. Residents and county officials are not
sure
what
you're information
ping- will be presented tonight
The meeting is when a bidder
set for 7:30
for the assets
p.m. at Bend of the closed
Area Commu- American
nity Center,
Alloys plant in
104 Butler St;
in New Haven. New Haven
Highlander
holds_ a town
~resentatives meetmg.
Will outline
Bnt
they
their Objediws agree on on'e
in acqutring thing: It is a
the pfant.
positive step in
the
right
direction.
Highlanders Core Industries Ltd., one of the compa-

If

Paid for by Letart Township Trustees
Joyce White, Clerk

I

Dragon Internet

BY MINDY KEARNI
INTERIM NEWS EDITOR

Thanksforyoursupport

In Honor Of

PleeH -

Uyoffs. AJ

American Allo s
bidder to hoi
town meeting -(~

We would appreciate your support In
voting for the 1;o Mill Renewal levy
for the purpose of maintaining and
operating cemeteries ..
• This Is to renewal the current 1.0 mill
Cemetery tevywhlch expires Dec. 31 this
year.
• For Five (5) years
'

.

expended, you are personally respons{~ ·
ble for any expenditures beyond yolU'
appropriations."
Davenport said Saturday the commissioners' letter was not a layoff
notice, but also said the commissionets
do not have the funds necessary to pay
the remaining three payrolls fur sheriff's employees - at an estimated
S14,300 each.

'

1 Your Name:

·

sioners."
Trussell's letter folli&gt;wed a letter from
Commissioners Jeff Thornton, Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheet&lt;,_delivered
friday, advising him that his payroll
line item is depleted of funds.
"If you fail to immediately make the
necessary adjustments to meet your
obligations, steps will be taken to
ensure the compe~tion of (your)
employees," the commissioners' letter
reads. "Once your budget has been

LETART TOWNSHIP

Colts :SO, Bills 14

Patriots 24,
Falcons 10 ·

additional funds for salaries, and after
having depleted aU other funds from
aU line items in my current budget, I
regret that I am forced to give you
your, 14-day layoff notice effective
Nov. 5;• Trussell's letter states. "In the
event that additional funds are appropriated, this layoff notice will be canceled by written notice to you."
"As sheriff, I have made every effort
to work with the minimal funds originally appropriated by the commis-

On Nov. 6th

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -The
Eagles, victims of five fourthquarter comebacks by Jake
Plummer, stopped three dri.
ves in the final 15 minutes
and held on against Arizona

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(AP) - Chad Bratzke helped
force two fumbles, and the
maligned Colts' defense had
six sacks.
Peyton Manning fooled
everyone on a third-and-1
when he faked a handoff and
broke to his left, scoring on a
naked bootleg from 33 yards . .
The Colts (4-3) won without Edgerrin James, the
league's second-leading rusher, who missed ~~first career
game with a sprained left
knee. Dominic
Rhodes
rushed for 100 yards and
scored a touchdown.
Nate Clell).ents had a 66yard punt return for Buffalo
(1-6 and 0-4 at home , this
season) .

POMEROY Sheriff Ralpb
Trussell notified his deputies Monday
of their impending layofiS, and the
deputies plan an informational picket
·
on Nov. 15.

Trussell provided
his employees with a
letter, dated Monday,
giving a two-week
layoff -notice. The
notice was provided
to deputies, dispatchers and other department empioyees.
"Due to the Meig;
Truuell
County
commissioners' unwillingness to appropriate

,.....;....._~~~-----, '

Eagles 21,
cardinals 7

(2- 5) .

iii

an Nov. 15 I

Sheriff delivers layoff
notices Monday

Redsklns 27,
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) The Redskins (3-5) won
their third straight as Stephen
Davis ran 32 times for 142
yards against the league's No.
5 rushing defense. Until Sunday, no back had run for more
than 52 yards this year against
the Seahawks (3-4).
Redskins lineback« LaVar
Arrington was carted off the
field on the first play of the
second half with a sprained
ankle.

Ho•atown Newspaper

.

Make the Change, Keep the Change!

Attttn-.

TJatDaily
sentinel ist

ing a 1-yard run, with 44 seconds left, as ·,e Titans (3-4)
extended tht . aguars' losing
streak to five games. He has
passed for nine TDs in his last
four games against Jacksonville, with no interceptions.
McNair was 27 -of-34 for
241 yards passing, with 10
carries for 74 yards. Eddie
George, who has never missed
a game in his NfL career, carried 22 times for 70 yards
despite knee, thigh and ankle
injuries.
·
The Jaguars (2-5) were hurt
by video replays for the second straight week. McNair's
final TD plunge stood despite
the replay showing he might
have lost the ball before crossing the goal line.

•

Sentinel
I Section .,.JD Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports

Weather

5. 10

3

Allays. AJ

AFTERMATH - Arefighters work to extinguish the remnants of a Monday explosion that killed
one man and seriously injured another, (MIIIissla Russell photo)
The cause of the explosion
remains unknown, but the
tanker truck was believed to be
fueling at the time.
The driver of the. truck,
Barry Jividen, was not injured.
A thick black cloud billowing

Low: :sos
Details, 3

Lotteries

2
6-1!
9
4
3

PIMH -

Marauder pride

Hlp: lOs

Toclay's

nies bidding at the courtappointed auction for. the
assets of American Alloy;, will
host the town meeting for. all
former American AllaYs
employees and .interested cjtiL
zens tonight. The meeting is
set for 7:30 at the Bend Afea
Community Center, 104 Butler St., in New Haven.
Highlander representatives
will outline their objectives in
acquiring the plant. They will
also give a time cable and
answer questions from the
public.
Company officials said
Highlander is the only 'bidder·
to date that has submitted in' ' ·
written arguments to the
baflkruptcy court their inten- :
tion to reopen the smelter
operation and return it to full

OHIO
Pld! 3: 2·9-2; Pld! 4: ()-3-&amp;-9
lluc:bye 5:2-12-21-24-29
W.VA.
Dally 3: 2·7-4 Daly 4: 7· ].{)-()
Cash 15: 2· 1()-14-t&amp;-20-25
0 2001 Ohio Vallev Publistling Co.

from the burning tanker truck
could be seen from miles away,
spreadipg the smell of burning
asphalt into the air.
Med-Flight was called to fly
Ours to Cabell Huntington
Hospital.

Firefighters from Gallipolis,
Rio Grande, Centerville and
Middleport were called to the
scene and troopers from the
Gallia-Meigi; Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol were dis-

PIMH-BIIIf.AJ

•

Meigs High School Marching Band performed Saturday durlr«•
the fifth annual Tri-State Marching Band Festival at James F,.
·Edwards Field In Huntington. Under the direction of Toney
Dingess, Kenny Bond and Dave Deem, the Marauders received
superior ratings In Color Guard, Majorettes, Percussion, Winds
and Overall Band In the Cia~ AAA division. (Dan Adkins photo)

·Analysts pre~ict /20/o ·interest cut today .
1

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal
Reserve is prepared to cut a key interest
rate for the 1Oth time this year in an effort
to cushion the economic blow from the
terrorist attacks.
Against a backdrop of plunging consumer confidence and soaring unemployment, economists worry that the ec_o nomic picture might get a lot worse before it
gets better.
A big fear is that consumers, whose

spending accounts for two-third• of ·aU
economic activity. will continue to cut
hack as the job market deteriorates, further
undercutting a weak economy.
"The danger from a continued decline
and a negative spiral is very substantial. The
fed need&lt; to break that cycle;• said Lynn
Reaser, cbief economist at Bane of America Capital Management.
Most economists believe Fed Chairman
Alan Greenspan and his colleagues will

order another cut to a key interest 1'2te called the fedetal funds rate - when they
meet Tuesday. The Fed's chief policy-making group, the federal Open Market Committee, is expected to announce i~ decision
in the afternoon.
Many economists are predicting a halfpoint reduction, which would mark the
third cut of that size since the Sept. 11
attacks. But some economists believe it will
be a more moderate, quarter-point move.

Novemller Is Natlo•l Ho111e Care Monlll
'7he Heart of Americdn Health Care"
When you choose your home;ca.re provi~er, consider
Holzer H0111e C we of Hofur Medical Center MEDICAL CENT
(740)446·5301 or

Holur Honae Care of Vele• r
Memotfal Hwpltal

Discover the Holzer Difference
Y

www.holzer .org

992·3231
I

. •i
'

�.

--~By the

Tue1d1y, Nov. 8, 2001

Bend
Dad~ life with second wife is cause of children~ thanks

PageA2

_The_D_ail_ySe_ntin_·e_I

DEAR ABBY: The letter fiom
"Desperate for a Life of My Own,"
whose
daughters
successfuUy
th'Wirted his attempts at love after
his wife of 47 yean passed away,
landed right in our family's back

Abigail
Van
Buren

yard.

Mom died suddenly in June of
1982, a mere three months after we
ADVICE
helped my parents celebrate their
40th wedding anniversary. Seeing
Dad so broken and old at the funer- By the end of the year. he called to
al, we ached for him and worried inform us that he was seeing ':Jane,"
, about his health and future. Silly us! a widowed longtime friend, and that

..

Social Seatrity responds
to terrorist attacks on America

••

.

BY VAUIU THOMPSON
SOCW. SECURITY Ofl'ICE, AlHENS

•

·

In response to the horrific
acts of terrorism against the
.. country, Social Security initiat-

ed a series of actions designed
to ensure continuity of its
operations and a. quick
response to those wbo need
Social Security services.
.• Social Security is worlting
. with officials and employers in
: the alrected areas to assist fam' . ilies who may be eligible for
. Social Security benefits. Emer. gency procedures will provide
the most prompt and efficient
. processes for taking claims and
paying benefits to the victims
: and survM&gt;rs of these attacks:
• People applying for sur. vivor benefits using Social
Security$ toU-free number, l.800-n2-1213, will have their
claims processed at the time of
their call.
• Survivor claimants who
;choose to file at their local field
'office will have their claims
, processed at the time of their
~

'

I
'

f

visit.

'

.

of clerk Otlt Follrod.

'

. ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury .
Townahlp Trustees, Tuesday, 6
p.m. at the township building
on Rocksprings Road.
MIDDLEPORT- UnHed Fund
lor Meigs County, Business
Aller Hours recaption Tues·
d 5 t0 7
R. rb d
ay,
p.m., IVe an
Arls Council, as kick-off for
2002 camilalgn.

' TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY- Eagles' Auxll' 'iary, 7:30 Tuesday at the hall.
POMEROY- Revival, Cal·
vary Pilgrim Chapel, State
Route 143. Pomeroy, Tuesday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. each .
evening. Rev. Bill and Naomi
Tillis preaching and si.nging.
· ALFRED -Orange Township
•, Trustees, regular meeting,
: : Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the home
•,

MIDDLEPORT- Mlddleporl
Ministerial Association.
Wednesday, 6:30 a.m. at
Overbrook Center.
MIDDLEPORT- Revlvalser·
vices, Middleporl Church of
the Nazarene, through·Satur·
day, 7 p.m.; sunday, 1o:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev. Pat
McGue of Hurricane. W. Va.
evangelist; Rev. and Mrs.
Jerry Boggs, song evangelists.

.
,

•

and

LOCAL EVENTS

Community Clllncllr Ia pubI · llthtd • • ,.. IMI'VIot to .
, ,non•proflt groupe wlthlng to
. tnnounot mtttlngt 1nd
tpeclal evenll. The atlendtr
' 11 not dlllgnld to promott
' u1ea or fund·l'llllll'll of any
; . type. ltema al'll printed only
aa apace permlta and can·
not be guaranteed to be
' printed a , .....lllc number of
....v
· days.

f:

1:

.•
•
I
I

•
••

I

.

.~actod l-loatt Chutch Bazaat
Thur1day, Nov. 8 starting at 4:30
Mulberry Ave.
'
Pomeroy
Dinner • Booths • Games· Baked Goods

I

,.

they were being married. I was
speechless (a rare occurrence,
according to my wife), but quickly
gave my blessing along with my
brother and two sisters. We knew
that Mom and Dad were soulmates,
but if Dad was lucky enough to find
love again, who were we to deny
him?
Dad passed away last June, three
months after we celebrated his 80th
birthday. We're heartbroken, but our
grief is tempered by thoughts of
Dad's happy and full 18 years spent •

~offs

ainton Robert Holsinpr
. REEDSVILLE -Clinton Robert Holsinger, 81, ReedsviUe,
doed Monday, Nov. 5, 2001 , at his residence.
Born Jan. 29, 1920, he was the son of the late Alva and
Martha Barbara Holsinger, and a member of Eden United
·Brethren Church .
He was a retired heavy equipment operator and lifetime
. member with Ohio Operating Engineers Local 18.
. He was also preceded in death by three brothers, RusseU,
Clifford and Winnie; his first wife, NeUie; and three infant chil'dren.
SurViving are his wife, Franceo- Halsey Holsinger; three sons
and daughters-in-law, Larry and Nancy Holsinger of Racine,
Paul and Wanda Holsinger of Hockingport, and Roger and Tia
Holsinger of Reedsville; three daughters and sons-in-law, Co'n . nie and Bill Moodispaugh of Little Hocking, Carol and Ben
Owens of Hockingport, and Rhonda ·and Jack Lyons of
Racine; three brothers, Alva Holsinger Jr. of Reedsville, Rodney Holsinger of Greenfield, and Virgil Holsinger of
Reedsville; four sisters, Fannie Bigley of Reedsville, Donna
Webb ofThe Plains, Emma McHenry of Belpre, and Virginia
Carter of ReedsviUe; and 16 grandchildren and17 great-grand- ,
·children.
·
·
· Services will be 11 a.m. Thursaay at Eden United Brethren
Church in Reedsville. Officiating will be Pastors Jay Hubbard
. and Eric Ross. Burial will be in Eden Cemetery. Friends may
visit on Wednesday fiom 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
·

with Jane. Hi.l life was honored by and they could have been prosecuthundreds of family and friends at his ed. What I say to "Desperate" is simfuneral service. I know 1 speak for ply this: Sir, if you are fortunate
the rest of the family in saying that enough to find love again in the
we owe Jane an eternal debt oflove autumn of your life, go ahead and
and gratitUde for sharing her life jump in, right after you tell your
with Dad. We embrace her as part of daughters to go take a flying leap!
FORTUNATE . SON,
the family and will continue to do so
LONGVIEW. WASH.
until the day she leaves us.
DEAR FORTUNATE SON: It
Your advice to "Desperate"
neglected to address one small appean your father had many blessdetail_. Unless .they had obtained a ings in his life - not the least of
court order, the wiretap his daugh- which were his children. Thank you
ters put on his phone was illegal, for such an upbeat letter.

Slow doum and smell the roses

Medicare and You 2000.
More than 38 million
Medicare beneficiaries nationwide should have found the
latest Medicare information in
their mailbox. The Medicare
handbook, Medicare and You
2002, arrived at beneficiary
households between September 15 and October IS of this
year.
The handbook contains
basic
information
on
Medicare. including covered
services, enrollment, rights,
health plan options, supplemental insurance, help with
health care costs and phone
numbers for more information. ·
This year's handbook comes
in several additional versions.
Braille, large print, audio tape.
and Spanish. The Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services want to make sure this
important information reaches
as many beneficiaries as possi-

.

...... ,............ 2001

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

. •
The
, agency's
_disaster/emergency . policies ble.''
The handbook explains
, and procedures allows for the
coverage
and services that are
: acceptance of airplane mani' fests, lists of employees fur- new this year, including:
• Glaucoma screening
' . nished by employers and
• Clinical trials
• . other statements that would
• Treatment .for m~cul~r
,place the worker at the scene
: .of the tragedy as proof of degrneration
. ,death.
• Medical nutrition therapy
• New rules for joining and
. , • Survivor benefits will be
• payable for the month of Sep~ leaving health plans
tember. These payments will
• Immunosuppressive drug
,, be made in October.
coverage
In addition, those who suf• Medicare Personal Plan
fered critical injuries as a result Finder
• Expanded telephone sermay be eligible for Social
, Security disability benefits.
Vlce
· Those who are already
If you have Medicare and
receiving monthly Social . don't receive a copy of
' Security and Supplemental Medicare and You 2002 in
Security Income benefits your household, or you need
should be auured that their an additional copy, or if you
benefits will amve on time.
would like to have any of the
1, Social Securityi web site, , publications described here,
, www.ua.p, hu current call 1-800-MEDICAR (1,•infOrmation. including provid- 800-633-4227) or visit
.,ins a..link 10 the PlmGov.gov www.medicare.go on the
, web li~ rhac COilllinl a lilc of Internet.

"••

••

government agencies
other resources.

$25 drawing every hall hour
Adult Dinners $6.00
Children under 12 • $3.00

In today's hectic society, we
hear that we need to .. slow
down and smell the roses."
That is good advice .
Caught up in the busyness of
our lives, we may need to be
reminded of simple ways to
enjoy life.
Here are some tips you may
want to try.
• Avoid the early morning
rush. Prepare for the day
ahead by getting things ready
the night before.
• Take the time to organize
your home, work space and
hobby area. The less things
are cluttered, the more calm
and peaceful your day will
be.
• Limit time watching television.' Time in front of the
TV is time taken away, from ,
family communications and
activities. In addition, set
aside a time and place where
you can go ·by yourself to
think or do what you w~nt to
do. Tpis simpk activity can
really get you rejuvenated.
• Be a little impulsive.
Don't be restricted by your
daily routine. Change it occasionally to revitalize yourself.
• Live below your means.
Resist the inclination to buy
everything you want. Only
buy what you really need,
·even though you may be ' ~ble
to afford more. See if you can
live and enjoy yourself without spending any extra
money. Find creative ways to
see how you can save money.
• Have a positive outlook.
Don't let things get you

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

it.

• Learn to say, ''Non to

Becky

traer

.down.
.
• Listen to what your body
tells you. If you"re a night
owl, schedule tasks that
require a lot of attention during that time period. Make
sure you rest when you need

things that demand your
time, energy and thoughts;
things that are not high priority in your life. We pilt too
much emphasis on being
uSuperhuman."
• Discover how to simplify.
Set goals that are realistic, not
ones that are unattainable.
• Schedule enough time to
get things done. Master the
·a rt of delegating· responsibilities to others. Allow time in
your daily, weekly or month~
ly calendar to "catch up."
• Plan for fun. Allow your-

self to have "play breaks." A
five minute break can make a
big difference in how i'lvigorated and relaxed you may
feel.

..

(Becky Baer
is a Meigs
County &amp;tension Agent for
Family and Consumer Sciencts/Community
Development.)

Bobby Ray Reynolds

SUBSCRIBE
TODAY! .

992;_2156
$:

Francis G. Fugaro, JVI.D.
(

I ' ' I'

•

I \ I' ' I;

I

'' ''

,\

I

I~

!

I

I )I

'I 11•

~
):
~
~

~

I

~

,.
::

is accepting patients at his following offices:

! Meeting slated
•
j

2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

1

:
:
:

675-7100

j
•

. '

,

e (Thursdays &amp; ~s)

882-3134

L0 CA L BR I £ f S

I
I

e (Mondtlys &amp; 1Jusd4ys)

138 Main Street
New Haven, WV

·j

MASON, W.Va. - Bobby Ray Reynolds, 64, Mason, died
Sunday, Nov. 4, 2001, at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
He was a laborer with Local 543 in Huntington.
Born April I, 1937 in Gallipolis, son of the late Raymond
and Frances N. (Gibbs) Reynolds, he was also preceded in
death by his father-in-law and mother-in-law, John William
and Iva L. Ingels.
Surviving are his wife, Janice I. Reynolds; three daughters
and sons-in-law, Cindy S. (Richard) Koblentz of Chester,
Frances L. (William) Smith of Mason, and Janet R. (Virgil)
Hartley of Rutland; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Raymond
W. (Penny) Reynolds of Langsville, and Bobby R. Reynolds of
Mason; and 10 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Graveside services will \le Thursday at 2 p.m., at Gravel Hill
Cemetery in Cheshire, with Pastor Butch Cochran officiating.
Friends may call Wednesday fiom 6-9 p.m. at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home, Mason. .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;__.::···;___ _ _ _'
,

RACINE
Re14rn
jopathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will meet at I 0
a.m." Saturday at the Racine
Lib~ Mrs. Ferman M,oore
will be the guest speaker.

Senior Center.
The meeting
be a
Thanksgiving potluck at Middleport Church of Christ,
noon.
Take a copy of your favorite
recipe and a covered dish. ·

will

Veterans Day .

I

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Plan dinner

'

celebration

MIDDLEPORT - Abun•:• dant
Grace Church on South

POMEROY - Drew Wet&gt;:ster Post 39, Pomeroy will hold
its annual Veterans Day observance at II a.m. Monday in
fiont of the Meigs County
Courthouse. Rev. Gerald
Koster, Columbus will be the
guest speaker.
AU veterans organizations are
invited to patticipate. Local residents are urged to attend to
honor veterans who have
served their country.

· : Third Avenue will offer a free
: Thanksgiving dinner on Nov.
• 17 fiom 2 to 5 p.m.
The public is invited.

· Widows to meet

Lambert
Insurance Agency
a division of Peoples Insurance

is moving!

Peoples Bank has strengthened our Insurance
division through our partnership with the
Lambert Agency of Pomeroy. The new
headquarters will be in the Middleport office of
Peoples Bank which allows us to offer a wider
variety of services.

MIDDLEPORT -Wid~
~ FelloWship will meet Friday,
: Nov. 16, instead of Nov. 9, due
~ to the flu shot clinic at the
,

LOCAL STOCKS
; AEP....:.43.76
I M;h Coal- 21.90
: Alao-41 .19
AmTIICIYSBC-38.52 '
: AaHinllnc.- 41.15
, AT&amp;T-15.90
' Bari&lt;One-34.71

I

~

BU-7.88

·

, Bob El/11116 -18.99
' BagWomer-44.30
: Ctauplal-2.45
: Cl&amp;nW"o Slqla- 4.94
. ; Clly Hokt"G- 9.37
' Cd-13.111

; DG-14.70
I

Duf'all- 42.02

Feden!IMtvJ- .58
~~--)8.36

"'"""'- 64.70
Gao.- .Elactrtc- 38.n
GKM.Y-3.70
Ha!tay DINidooo- 48.10
Knwt-6.58
Kroger- 2427

l.iV1ds End- 33.94
Ul.-11.91
NSC-17.92
Oak Iii Frvrdal-15.50
01/B-22.50
BBT-33.54
f'eclllel- 17.51
Pepoi:o -48.61

f'n!mler - 8.50
--14.02
Rocky Bocls- 5.72
RDShlll-5120

Seata-43.63
Shonoy's- :0
WIJ.Matl- 53.90
Wenct(s- 27.34
Wc&gt;1hll\jbl 12.95

Daly 8IOCk rapons are lhe
4 p.m. dolllr9
d
"" pnMcus days 1l'lll1l&gt;
acllons, prcMded by Smll1
Pamoos
Inc. d

""*"'

........... 81-

.,

•

The Daily Sentinel
0 en House on
Come to our p rober 8tb

tbursda4~3~::::oO p.m.
frolll ·

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concem in all stories is

to be accurate. II you know of an
error in a slory, caU the newsroom

at (740) 992·2156.

Newe Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
DepMmen1 extenttons are:

For additional information or to simply find
. what this relationship can offer you, contact the
Middleport office of Peoples Bank, 97 North Second St,
Middleport, Ohi~ or call:

740-992-6661 or 740-992-6641

O.MI"IIIIIIIInoger

Ext. 12

"-wa

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other services
AdVartlolng

Ext. 3

Clrculollon

Ext. 4

Cloaalflod Ada

M- fJuawrrl Bal.rrl ~ic:~- .II-.
.1/o,.,.,,J, "~'~ Ma1L.rl pot,bw &amp; ~
,.,,. "--4 &amp;1. Utu., ...JJ &amp; '-••ml

Ext. 5

To send •m•ll
newsOmydallysentinel.com

On the Web
www.mydailysentlnel.com

II

(U~PS 213-1180)
Ohio Volley Publlolllllfl Co. '
, Published avery a~emoon. Monday

through Frldfly, 11 t Ccurt Sl.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poatmaamr: Send address corrections to The Cally Sentinel, 111 C'ourt .
St., Pomeroy,o()hlo 45769.

Subscription

rates

By c.nt.r or motor route
Ono$2
Ono man1h
SS.70
One,...,
$104
D1lly
50 cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay the
carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit will be given
carrlar each week. No subscription by
man permitted In areas where home
carrier service !a avaUable.

Mall subsatDIIDn
lntldo llolgo eo'IAOiY- ••

13Weel&lt;s
26 Weeks
52

w....

$27.30
$53.82
$105.513

RltH outside Melga County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

S29.25
$56.68
$109.72

of concern to the suff. Hegrdus &lt;.:~ i d .
uThe commissioners have
refused to do anything to
fnMIPitceAI ·
improve safety . and staffing
Davenport said the commis- issues at the sheriffs departsioners are ultimately responsi- ment;• Hegedus said. ..There
ble for compensating deputies .has been a lot of discussion
for time worked. but he said all about replacing vehicles in the
ofTrussell's funds will be used fleet once they reach the
to do so before any additional I 00,000-mile threshold, but it"s
funds are appropriated, if those only been discus.!ion.
funds are available.
..These vehicles are considThornton said that enough ered a safety hazard once they
funds will remain in Ttussell's reach. a certain age, but the
budget lines through year"s end commissioners have uken no
to pay fur ''some staff," but not steps to replace even one or
for the entire staff, and that a two cars a year."
wholesale layoff notice to all
"This is an unfortunate situemployees was not necessary. ation for both the staff at the
He also noted that Trussell was sheriffs department af!d the
notified in March that he public;' Hegedus said... Everywould likely deplete his payroll .. one is aw:ue tliat heightened
fund before year's end if then- security is the order of the day
current spel\ding levels contin- in evety community, and in
ued.
Meigs County, deputies are
The deputies, meanwhile, being laid off, without any sug~
mainuin that based on 2000 gesrion as to how the public
expenditures, the payroll line safety is going to be mainitem was under-appropriated tamed."
at the beginning of the year.
Trussell has managed a savAs Trussell's letter was deliv- ing. in the cost of housing
ered to deputies, their attorney, prisoners this ybr, but those
Joseph Hegedus of Columbus, savings will not be enough to
was delivering a letter of his carry payroll through year's ·
own - a picket notice - to end, partly, the commissioners
the Ohio Employment Rela- say, because funds were transtions Board.
ferred fiom the housing line
Deputies plan t&lt;f picket at item into other non-payroll
the courthouse on Nov. 15. lines.
That picket, Deputy Kevin
Hegedus said some counties
Dugan said, will be an infor- in Ohio, including Washington
marional picket by members of County, have turned to a halfthe Ohio Patrolmen's Benevo-, percent sales tax, which
lent Association.
·requires no vote liom the pubHegedus said the deputies' lie, for law enforcement costs.
labor relations .attorney, wages
"The wages and benefits for
will be only one of several deputies in Washington Counissues that deputies will address ty are among the best in southwiih their picket.
eastern Ohio, and it's because
The safety of the depart- of that commitment;' Hegedus
ment's fleet of cruisers, an issue said.
which is now in arbitration
"In most conununiries, citibetween the deputies and the zens are willing to pay a few
commissionel'S, and the condi- cents more to ensure that their
lion of the county jail are also communities are &lt;.:~fe."

thing.
Locally, Williamson• said the
clooing of the plant had an
effect on New Haven mere
fnllil Page AI
chants. He said without the
workers stopping by stores on
production.
American Alloys closed their way to and fiom work,
undpktedly in January 2000, some stores have felt the negaleaving about 125 workers tive impact.
Thomas Kearns of Clifton, a
unemployed. Many of the
workers had been employed former worker at American
there for 25 to 30 years; and Alloys, said although .orne of
thee average pay for the plant his co-workers have found
positions elsewhere, he believes
was about S14 per hour.
Mason County Commission many of them would come
President Rick Handley said back if the plant reopens.
Linda Zuspan, a member of
he sees the meeting as positive.
Handley said he doesn't think the Christian Brethren Church
Highlander would come to of Mason, which held a food
Mason County just to see if pantry for the unemployed
American Alloys workers, said
there is interest in the plant.
.. They can look at our she just hopes a lot of people
unemployment figures and will show up for the meeting.
"I think it is positive ·that the
know we need jobs.'" Handley
company is coming.'' she said.
&lt;.:~id... They will have no problem' getting skilled workers. ..1 just hope a lot of people
Mason County has always show up so the company
knows we are interested in the
been proud of their workers:•
plant
reopening. The county
"I just think it would be
great for the former employees needs the jobs."
who haven't found a job to get
Zuspan's church opened a
back to work;' Handley con- food pantry for the American
Alloys workers in February
cluded.
Grayson "Pat" Williamson, 2000, a few weeks after the
.
mayor of New Haven, said he plant closed. '
They continued the pantry
is thinking positive about
until NoVember 2000, serving
tonight's meeting.
.. , think it is a great thing as many as 80 families. She said
because we sure need the many helped with the pantry,
including businesses, plants,
jobs;' he &lt;.:Jid.
organizations
like Bend Area
· WiUiamson noted the economy in the county ;., "not the CARE and other churches.
.. It was really a community
greatest" and said any way to
·
improve that would be a good effort," Zuspan said.

Alloys

Blast
from Page AI
patched to divert traffic fiom
the area.
Middleport Terminal !nc.,
located beside the. Gallia
County Rural Water office,
supplies asphalt materials to
Shelley Co. for paving purposes. The truck was hauling a

petroleum-based product simi_lar to liquid asphalt.
One concern Monday was
the contaminated run-off liom
the water used to douse the
blaze.
The runoff conuins liquid
asphalt and other hazardous
materials that must be contained and a clean-up . creW
specially trained i.n hazardous
materials containment w~s
called to the scene.

The D1ily Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCA.L BRIEFS
EMS runs

pended one-year sentence, and
was ordered to participate in
the 'Community Corrections
program and to serve SOO
hours of community service.
She was also ordered to seek
employment.
Mayle was sentenced to one
year in prison.
Crow also sentenced Scott
E. McKinley to four one-year
sentences on countS of cultivation of marijuana.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs Emergency Service
answered five calls for assistance
on Monday. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:23 p.m .• Sycamore Street,
Charles Hatfield, Pleasant Valley Hospiul;
4:36p.m., Butternut Avenue,
Kali Collins, Holzer Medical
Center.
B EFDSVD.l.E
8:26 a.m., Ohio 124, Grant
RACINE - Risa L Sayre,
Doring,
Camden- Clark
28,
51285 Ohio 338, Racine,
Memorial Hospital.
· ,was cited for failure to control
SYRACUSE
5:21 p.m .,J':Im Street, Beulah by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Pa~r&lt;?l following
Cornell, HMC.
a one-car accident Sunday on
TUPPERS PLAINS
3:4 I p.m., Sumner Road, 338.
Troopers said Sayre was eastChaz VanSickle, treated.
hound in Letart Township at
1:42 a.m. when the car she
drove went off the right side of
· the road, struck a utility pole
and came.to rest in a field.
POMEROY - A Racine
The car · was moderately
woman is being charged for damaged.
inducing panic by the Meigs
County Sheri1fs Department
fOllowing an incident with a
gun.
.
POMEROY - Marriage
Sheriff Ralph TrusseD said licenses have been issued in
Sherry Wolfe, Racine, . was Meig. County Probate Coun
arrested after allegedly taking to Frank Edward Bobo, 74, and
an overdose of prescription .Linda Sue Davis, 55, both of
drugs and having a gun in her Middleport; Steven Eugene
possession.
Palmer, 18, ·and Ilene Nicole
Wolfe was discovered by Pflueger, 16, both of Pomeroy;
deputies attempting to leave Russell Charles Aagg, 35, Syraher residence in a car with a cuse, and Erica Jean Gingerich,
20-gauge shorgun in the fiont 23, Athens; Patrick Edward
seat. Following her arrest, Kyle, 21, Kingston, and Jennifer
Wolfe was transported to Ann Roberts; 16, Middlepon;
Holzer Medical Center where and to Gary Thomas Rydershe was charged with inducing back, 19, and Carrie Dawn
pam c.
Adkins, 28, both of MiddleIn other matters, Jason port.
Roush of Reedsville reported
to deputies that someone
entered his home on Partlow
Road through a padlocked
POMEROY - Judgment
door. Roush said a Ruger actions have been filed in
Blackhawk pistol was taken Meigs County Conunon Pleas
fiom the residence.
Court by LaSalle Bank, N.A.,
Trussell alSo said:
Orangeburg, N .Y., against
• Mike CoUins of Reedsville James Milliron, Pomeroy,· and
was arrested and jailed on a others, alleging default on a
charge of domestic violence;
promissory note in the amount
• Jackie Tanner of Middle- of$26,797.08; and by Conseco
port was jaile~ on a charge ·of Finance Servicing Corp,,
domestic violence. ·
Tempe, Ariz., against Diane
Milliron, Middleport, and others, alleging default on a
promissory note in the amount
of$50,474.40.
A personal injury suit has
POMEROY
Meigs been filed by Regina NewCounty Grand Jury, meeting brough, Albany, and others,
on Nov. I, has issued indict- against Richard Ashy, Liberty,
ments against three defendants: W.Va., demanding a damages
• Robert Troy Schoolcraft, award in excess of $25,000,
38, Pomeroy, on a charge of relating to a September 20,
illegal assembly or possession of 2000 auto accident.
chemicals for manufacturing
drug., and illegal manufacturing of drugs. ·
• Carolyn A, Yeauger, age
POMEROY Donald
unreported, Pomeroy, on seven Todd Smith is a candidate for
counts of felonious assault, Pomeroy Village Council. His
against sheriffs deputies Kevin name was omitted fiom SunDugan, Daniel Leonard, Ben day's rep on of candidates on
Davidson, CliffThomas, Ron- today"s ballot.
nie Spaun, Adam Smith and
Mark Boyd, and a count of
abduction.
• Stephen D. Clar)c, Jr., 27 ,.
RACINE Village of
Pomeroy, on three counts of Racine will be picking up
assault on a police officer, and leaves on the follpwing dates:
escape. He is accused of assault- Wednesday, Elm Street to Main
ing Deputies Ronald Spaun, Street; Thursday, Main Street to
Donald Mohler and Cliff Vine Street; Friday, Vine Street
Thomas .
to Yellowbush.

·Driver dted

-

Issued licenses

Judgments flied

Issued

indicbnents

Name omitted

AU leaves are to be raked to
the curb for collection. If possible, please remo've any sticks

Women
sentenced

or trash.

POMEROY
Two
women were sentenced last
week in Meigs County Com~
mon Pleas Court on drugrelated charges.
Wendy L. Long and Christina A. Mayle apP,eared before
Judge Fred W. Crow III on
charges of possession of crack
cocaine, a fifth-degree felony.
Long was St!menced to a sus-

More le~ve coUection will be
scheduled in the future.
Linda Blalr (The Exon:ist,
Scariest Places on Earth) dated
'80s pop sensation Rick
Sprlngfteld and funk master

Rick James.

Rutland Vll~age

VOTE YES
on

2 Mill Levy Renewal
for current expenses
Pd for by Rutland VIllage, PO Box 420. Rutland, OH 45n5

I

I

�• •

PageM

Op1n1on

The Daily Sentinel
.

•

......,.....

Inside: .

• . . . 2011

The Daily Sentinel

Eastnn volleybo/1 banquet, Page A 7
Rio Grandt spqrts, Page A 7
Football news, Page A 10

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

'l'uesUy. November&amp;, 2001

111 Court St., '-oy, Ohio
740 182·2158 • Fax: 112-2157

MONL\\v's

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ctwiM w. Govey
Publ..her

~lngEcltor

Clwlene lto.lllch
o.n-1 iiiMIIIgw

,.,., .....................

HIGHLIGHTS

R. Sh8M'I L.ewt.

.,~

I*M tc.yHII
Coubullw

ScoREBOARD

................ All,.,.

NBA

. . lfllljfel .. .....,_ ...,., ..... liM~..,..,.., 0 I It
.........
N•
1J
1 ...., lril Jw a tc: hi L1t1Wt ,._, ........ ..., ..,. ' 1
....,_,.
"d

..... --....... '-'( .............
n...,.._ap•:&amp;MIIMa.~w.w
,.c..~

.. ,.,r m·
~.

.

I

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

.
'

Today is Tuesday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of2001.There are 55
da~ left in the year. This is Election Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 6, 1888, Benjamin Harrison won the presidential
election, defeating incumbent Grover Cleveland with enough
electoral votes, even though Cleveland led in the popular vote.
On this date:
In 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln
defeated three other candidates for the presidency.
In 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected to a six-year term as
president of the Confederacy.
·
In 1893, composer Peter llyich Tchaikovsky died in St.
Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.
In 1900, President McKinley was re-elected, beating Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
In 1906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected governor · of New York, defeating newspaper publisher William
Randolph H;earsi.
In 1913, Mohandas K. Gandhi was arrested as he led a march
of Indian miners in South Africa.
In 1928, in a first, the results of Herbert Hoover's election
victory over Alfred E. Smith were flashed onto an electric sig11
outside the New York Times building.
In f956, President Eisenhower won re-election, defeating
Democr~t Adlai E. Stevenson.
In 1976,13enjamin ,L. Hooks was chosen to be the new executive director of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, succeeding Roy Wilkins.
In 1977, 39 people were killed when an earthen dam burst,
sending a wall of water through Toccoa Falls Bible College in
Georgia.
Ten years ago: Kuwait celebrated the dousing of the last oil
fires ignited by Iraq during the Persian GulfWar. Actress Gene
Tierney died in Houston at age 70.
Five years ago: A day after being re-elected, President Clinton threw a party on the White House lawn; that same day, he·
received resigt~ations from secretaries of state, defense, energy
and commerce. A cyclone struck southeastern India, claiming
an estimated l,OOO'Iives.
·
One year ago: On Elec!ion Eve, George W. Bush and AI Gore
campaigned through the final hours of their run for the White
House, seeking last-minute momentum ·in a costly and
exhausting race to become the nation's 43rd president. Surgeons in Manchester, England, separated conjoined twin girls,
. a procedure that involved allowing one of the girls to die, while
giving the suwivor a chance at life.
•
Today's Birthdays: Director ,J-1.ike Nichols is 70. Country
singer Stonewall Jackson 'is 69. Singer Eugene Pitt (The jive
Five) is 64. Singer PJ. Proby is 63.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~-··GM~e

Even with a win over lowly
Temple, Miami moved into
national title territory in the
Bowl Championship Series
standings.
The Hurricanes, sitting
third in the rankings for two
weeks, rose to second place --'ahead of Oklahoma and
behind Nebraska - in the
latest BCS standings released
Monday.
Miami (7 -0) defeated Temple 38-0 on Saturday, and
surged to a 1.22-point advantage over Oklahoma in the
five-pronged formula used to
rank teams. The Sooners (8-1) ,
beat Tulsa, 58-0.
Nebraska (10-0). a 51-7 ,

Bany Bonds.
ull:us fie for
freeagenty

Anti~war protesters

I

NFL

-Oalcland 38, Denver 28

Just wrong
Given the outpouring of patriotic sentiment since Sep(. 11 and
the strong suppon . for the we of force against those who
planned the attacks in New York and Washington, many Americans likely were dismayed by anti-war protests in Washington
over the weekend.
But those who protested the likely military retaliation are
neither unpatriotic nor un-American.
They're just wrong.
In their protests, the demonstrators attempted to walk a very
fine line that simply won't hold up in the real world. The
attacks were crimes rather than acts of war, they claimed, and
the perpetrators should be brought to justice before an international tribunal. Well, no and no.
· First, the attacks clearly were acts of war. The United States
is entitled, even obligated, to use military force to protect itself,
by attacking those responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks or preemptively attacking those who would attack us anew....
Moreover, Americans need to be aware that terrorists are
likely to attack again regardless of our response. They did so,
afier all, afier the first World Trade Center bombing, which was
treated as a crime and for which several people were convicted.' Due to limit~d military responses, terrorists successively
attacked an American military barracks in Saudi Arabia, two
Americari embassies in Africa and the USS Cole in Yemen.
It is all too painfully obvious that forbeamnce and criminal
prosecution haven't worked. War is justified. '
But .so is dissent, even if it's wrong. It's a cherished part of our
heritage and instrumental in shaping policy, because it forces
the people in power to debate and disclose theirthinking, and
to foster public understanding that any policy includes .risks.
Those like White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, who issued
the chilling admonition that Americans must "watch what they .
""-Y•" would seek to defend America. by dishonoring what it is
about. The objective, rather, is to allow everyone to have a say,
but also to act.

into BCS
No.2

Seattle 123, Orlancb 119, 20T
LA. Clippers 109, Atlanta 86

NATIONAL VIEW

• The Scranton (Pa.) Times, on recent dnti-war protests:

Miami
slides

e Broncos

Mooldlly'a GMM

wf/..,O.W.lllrllq

don't see
the evidence in ftont of them

Raiders th

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

It~

time to start•capturing territory for aground war

After nearly four weeks of bombing, its
time for the United States to help antiTaliban rebels seize some ground in
Afghanistan. according to one of America's foremost acadeinic expens on that
country.
"We need to be inside Mghariistan conducting guerrilla raids - not just bombing from a s:!fe distance;• said Professor
Thomas Gouttierre of the University of
Nebraska at Omaha's Center for
Mghanistan Studies.
Promising targets include not only the
northern town of Mazar-e-Sharif, a
much-publicized objective of the Nonhero Alliance, but also the large Shinand
airfield near the northwestern city of
Herat, which is under attack by forces
undet rebel leader lsmael Khan.
The Pentagon announced Tuesday that
U.S. ground forces ai:e assisting the Nonhero Alliance, but other expens ""-Y that, so
far, Khan is getting no aid from the United States.
In an interview, Gonttierre ·said the
United States should try to win suppon
among Afghan groups by offering
weapons and money and ey making it
clear that their country will be rebuilt
afier the war and that its post-Taliban government will not be dominated by Pakistan.
"They are all sticking their fingers in
the wind to see which trends are building," Gouttierre said, referring to
· Mghanisran's disparate ethnic leaders.
"They are waiting to·see how committed
we are going to be."
Although elite opinion in Washington,
both liberal and conservative, is beginning
to question the Bush administration's war
plans, Oouttierre said, "It's premature to
""¥ it's not workinS' We didn't have plans
in place on Sept. t 1."
!',. colleague of Gouttierre 's, former U.S.
Ambassador Peter Tomsen, said U.S.

Morton
Kondracke
COWMNIST
· bombing has weakened the Taliban and
predicted that "If we handle this right, we
could win in the Nonh by the start of
Ramadan (Nov. t 7) and defeat the Taliban
by the end of the year."
Tomsen was the U.S. special envoy to
Mghanistan from 1989 to t 992 and is
now amba.&lt;sador in residence at the center
Gouttierre heads.
.
A former Peace Corps volunteer and
graduate student in Mghanistan, Gouttierre. speaks two Afghan languages and
was a United Nations political ofli.d!r
there from 1996 to 1997.
"We don't want to repeat the mistakes
of the Russians by just bombing from a
distance," Gouttierre said. "We have the
advantage of not wanting to occupy the
country We need to make allies and be
better guerrillas than the Taliban."
As a first step, he said, the United States
should help the Nonhero Alliance capture Mazar-e-Sharif and help lsmael Khan
capture Shinand.
Khan, an ethnic Tajik, was a leading
commander in the war against the Soviet
Union who later resisted the Taliban. They
captured him, bui he escaped and now is
leading a re~llion that's captured the
Northwest province of Ghor, near Hera!.
Mazar-e-Sharif and Shinand are "reasonably unassailable redoubts which could
serve as supply depots and staging points

for raids elsewhere," Gouttierre said.
"From Shinand, it's a straight shot to Kan- _
dahar;' 'the Taliban stronghold in Pashrundominated southern Mghanistan.
"We could get a lot of Pashtun.s on our
side;• he said, referring to the dominant..
Southern tribe that so far has not 'rebelled,
against the Taliban.
.
"They hate having their foreign policy.
and social customs dictated by Arabs;' he
said, referring to Osama bin Laden's AI- ,
Qaeda organization, which finances and.
ideologically influences the Taliban.
,
To enlist the Pashtuns, he said,"We have
to talk to them ourselves, not work
through Pakistan, The Taliban, when it
took over the country, dimmed other· ·
groups, so we have to rearm them and '
give them food and money.
'
"Most imponantly, we have to ""-Y it:
over and over. again: 'We're going to be'
there after this war and help reconstruct ~
the country; which we didn't.do afier the'
Soviets were driven out."

, Gouttierre pointed out that it didn't:
help U.S. credibility when Pashtun rebel '
leader Abdul Haq was allowed to be cap- ·
tured and executed by the Taliban law
week, with the CIA calling for protecJ"
tive air strike too late to save him. "It·
looked like Keystone Kops."
But he said that another imponant ·
Pashtun rebel, Hamid Qarzai, has returned
to Southern Afghanistan and may be able'
to rally his people against the Taliban.
.Both Gouttierre and Tomsen stressed
the irnponance of allowing Afghans to
run their country afier the war, not be
dominated by Pakistan, whose intelligence service, the lSI, helped install the
Taliban.
Gouttierre and Tornsen's advice se'ernssound to me. President Bush should listen·
to it.
'·

a

(Morto" Kondracke is tX£cutive editor of,
Roll Call, the newspaper 1/f Capitol Hill.)

.,
,,

NEW YORK (AP)
Barry Bonds, Jason Giambi
and five members of the AL
champion New York Yankees
were among I04 players to file
• for free agency.
Nearly two-thirds of the 161
players potentially eligible filed
on the first day. In the past, relatively few players became free
agents on the .day following
the World Series, the opening
of the 15-day filing period.
. The large number this year
may reOect a rush by players to
become free agents befo~ the
expiration of baseball's collective bargaining agreement on
Nov. 6. Unless teams decide to
lock out players, free agents
can sign with new teams staningNov.20.
Chan Ho Park of the Los
Angeles Dodgers, the top
available pitcher in the market,
filed, as did Cleveland outfielder Juan Gonzalez, Arlan.ta
right-hander John Smolti,
Houston outfielder Moises
Alou and San Diego outfielder
Tony Gwynn, who is retiring.
In the stan of what figures to
be . ~ ,.major, ll'anSforljl)ation of
the Yankees, who lost Game 7
of the World Series to Arizona
on Sunday night, first baseman
Tino Martinez filed along
with third baseman Scott Brosius, left . fielder Chuck
Knoblauch, infielder Randy
Velarde and reliever Mark
Wohlers.

Indians dose
Wickman deal
CLEVELAND (AP)- Bob
Wickman closed on a $15.9
million, three-year contract
with the Indians, and probably
ended John· Rocker's stormy
stay in Cleveland, too.
Wickman sigt~ed a deal
through 2004 with a team
optipn for 2005.

winner over Kansas, remained

first with 2.62 points, fol- .
lowed by Miami at 6 .61
points and Oklahoma at 7.83
points. Last week, Miami
trailed Oklahoma by just .12
points.
The standings determine
THE MAD BOMBER? - Oakland quarterback Rich Gannon (12) passes in front of Denver defensive end Kavika Pittman,
right, and Raiders tackle Barry Sims Monday. (AP)

•

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) The Oakland Raiders realized the danger of taking too
much satisfaction from a
midseason victory over a
lirnping
opponent.
Still, that
opponent
was
the
Denver
.,
Broncos and al)y victory over the
former
·beasts of the
Gruden
AFC West is
a cause for great celebration
for AI Davis' team.
With Rich Gannon and
Tim Brown leading the way,
the Raiders returned all of
the Broncos' best shots on
Monday night, beating their
archrivals 38-28 in a victory
th.at affirmed the westward
shift of divisional po111er.
The win was the first over
Denver in seven tries for
Oakland coach Jon Gruden, ·
who finally cleared one of the
few remaining hurdles in his
quest to pass Denver as the
AFC's most consistendy outstanding team.

"Gruden wanted to win who watched the game from
bad," Raiders running back his customary box, must have
Charlie Garner. said. "He was enjoyed watching Shanahan
trying to downplay it, but it finally leave Oakland without
was the back of everyone's a victory.
"They did a really good job
minds."
In a testy game featuring mixing it up in the short
plenty of the late hits, hard passing game," Shanahan said.
blows and questionable "I was very impressed with
sportsmanship that always Gannon, the way he scramcrops up when these teams bled and ma~e plays and
get together, the · Rlliders · · showed a lot of discipline."
ended ·a seven-game losing
The bad feelings between
streak agairuit the team that the franchises trickled down
ruled their division for sever- to the field on Monday night.
a! years.
Denver's Kenoy Kennedy and
"It wasn't our Super Bowl Oakland's Greg Biekert
tonight;' Gruden said. "At the delivered hard hits on the
s:!me time, we wanted to win borderline of legality, while
badly."
Denver's Bill Romanowski
Oakland (6-1) won the .and
Oakland's William
division last season but lost Thomas got persona] fouls
twice to Denver. Altogether, for nasty blows.
the Raiders dropped 11 of 12
meetings with the Broncos
Ple•se SH Rlllden, A7
and coach Mike Shanahan, .
who has taken extra pleasure
·in repeatedly beating the .
team tha( fire!! him more
than a decade ago.
Davis, the Raiders' iconoclastic owner, and Shanahan
still are disputing $250,000
Shanahan says Davis owes
him from his contract. Davis,

WASHINGTON TODAY

Democrats aiming for clean sweep ofgovernors in (02
BY WILL LEmR·
WASHINGTON- Democrats appear
to be in a strong position to win governors' races in New Jersey and Virginia next
Tuesday, and the party is predicting their
advantage could help Democrats farther
down the ticket.
People in both states think voter turnout
- alwa~ unpredictable - may be more
of a wild card than llmal.
"Tun10ut is the key;• said B.J. Thornberry, executive director of the Democratic
· Governors Associ;ltion. "We are well-positioned, but nobody's been through this

before:'
She said voters conld react to the chaos
and anxiety since Sept. 11 by going to vote
as an aCt of patriotism, or they ~flaY just be
distracted from politics.
·
Her counterpart at the Republican
Governors' Association, Clinton Key,
describes his party's candidates ·as "down a
few points, but not out."
In New Jersey, Republican Bret
Schundler, former mayor of Jersey City,
was behind Democrat Jim McGreevey,
mayor ofWoodoridge, by double digits. In
VirgllJ.ia, Democrat Mark Warner, a _hightech businessman, was ahead of Republican Mark Earley, former attorney general,
by anywhere from six to t 0 points.
1
Key said the races have been tough for
the GOP because the Democrats had run
statewide before, have been running
steadily fur the last year or ·so, and were

"Democrats running as Republicans:·
Democrats ""-Y their advantage comes
from the Democratic candidates running
toward the political middle, leaving
Republican opponents on the conserva_tive fringe.
The Democratic N ationa! Committee
has been researching how it can sharpen its
appeal in the red states, the broad swath of
states through middle America, more rural
and conservative than the Democrats'
strongholds on the East and West coasts.
Democrats hope to take over the New
jersey Assembly after a favorable redistricting, and hope a strong Warner showing
could boost Democrat Tim Kaine to the
lieutenant governor's office .in Virginia.
Den;~ocrats will rely on their can~dates'
appealing to suburban voters to gain victories in both states. Bush and Democrat AI
Gore essentialiy split. suburban voters in
2000, with Bush heavily favored in southern suburbs.
GOP pollster Linda DiVall said Republicans should.be very conscious of the centrist formula needed to win the suburbs.
"It's something the R epublicans need to
be reminded of;' she said. "These candidates were placed on the fringe - either
by their opponents or by earlier positions
they couldn't get away from."
T]je Republicans might have been
helped if President Bush had can1paig11ed
for them, but he has been too absorbed
with the anti-terror campaign.

"The president suppons both of the!O
candidates," said Republican nationat
Chairman Jim Gilmore. "But he also feel!i
it is imponant to be president ofDemoc~
rats and Republicans.''
,
Gilmore, who is governor of Virginia~
said the GOP has contributed $3 million;
to each of the campaigns. I;&gt;emocrats ""-1.
they have spent almost that much, bu~
won't specifY.
A two-state sweep would give Democ_; ·
ratic national Chairman Terry McAuliffe
the perfect trophy to rally Democrats fori
2002 - when two thirds of the governors:
will be up for election and both the House:
and Senate will be at stake.
:
"It sets us up perfecdy for 2002," said:
!'1-cAuliffe, who ""Y' the elections ~ not a:
referendum on the White House, but mat,
be on Republicans' "stale ideas:·
A victory in Virginia would highlight ~
successful Democratic sttategy · of high-:
lighting solid education and a strong economy, while plllying clown divisive issueS
like gons and abortion.
'
AI From, who staned the Democratic
Leadership Council on just such a premise
in the mid t 980s, ""~ that approach haS
worked for some Democrats for ' more
than a decade.
·
"It's moving to the center, while holding

ATfENTION !!!
FORMER AMERICAN ALLOY EMPLOYEES
&amp; '

INTERESTED MASON COUNTY CITIZENS
Ltrs bring Industry Jobs back to Mason County
HIGHLANDER CORE INDUSTRIES LIMITED
Invites all interested parties to attend a special
. Informational meeting.

Tuesday, November 6, 7:30PM
New Have_n Community Center

(Will Lester coo.m politics, and pollingfor Th~
Associated Pres~)
'

'I

with

Dragon Internet
As low as $11.95 per·Mo/
UNLIMITED AccHs, Penonal E-mail Accounl
10 megs re ..onal Web Space. Monthly ralels $16.95

1-888-657-0977
Local numben include:
tiUeboro, Wilmington, Welt UniOn, Otetnfteld, Clrclevllt, o.lltpolll,
~ CH. MoCartttur, Pomeroy, NIIIOIWIIII, LogM, Polnl
.,........WV,~UWM,...._.,.,,Qao;g kt 11,0~,

MDC iiiel•vlle, ...t mDI'III

,.""won the wb 81 www.41a;o;ibbti.aom

et'

me.

•leNd on~
1 Q;lplhm
....., ... eppiiMio ... ntw .ccountt.

CALLING
ALL
AMATEUR
PHOTOGRAPH
ERSJ
The Daily·Sentinel is looking for the
dozen best photos of Meigs County,
people, places, or events to be used in
a special "Year 2002" calendar.
Winning photos will.be included in
the calendar, along with the
photographer's name and town.
OmCtAL RULES
1. All photos must t be taken by en 11n11t.ur photographer, 18 yurs or older, ·
who currently rakiH In Melga Count)'.
2. Photos mutt Include tfthtr Melga County people placH or eventt.
3. Winning and runners-up photot will bKome the property of the Point Plea11nt Regltter.
Photogrepht1'11 or winning and fURIW'a-up photo. will be nkMJ to alvn a rwiHH to Ohio Valley

Publllhlng lor OIWIInd promotiOOII purpo111.
4. Photogrwphln of winning photos wMI bt aaktd to obtain a photo rtleaM from any aubJKI ,,
photo, oth.,. than the photographer's lmrMdlata r.mlly.
5. All dedalona of lhe Juda- will be nn~l.
8. 1'he Sentinel l'fterYII the right to rt)Kt any photo.
Wr!tt nemt. !lddrl11. end pborw oumbfr go lh1 back of photo antrlta and mall to:

Interested parties are Invited to come and listen to Highlander's
Representatives outline their objectives in acquiring the "Smelter Operation"
Project, time table, and answer any questions you might have.

on to your base," said From. "Elections ~
won in the center."·
·

Make the Change, Keep the Change!

~i~~~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
n

Highlander is one of the bidders, bidding at the court appointed Auction for the
assets of American Alloy this month.-Highlander is the only bidder to date that
has submitted in written arguments to the bankruptcy court their intention to
reopen the "Smelter Operation" and return it to full production.

Local Contact Number for Further Information:
Spouse &amp; Ferguson, PLLC
Charleston, WV 304-342·9100

Please see acs. AIO

The Daily Sentinel Photo Contest
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
HURRY! ·Deadline is Frida , November 9, at 4:00

' 'j

I

�~rtbune

Tueeday, Nov. 6, 2001

Ohio

Pomeroy,

- Sentinel -

Tue•"-Y• Nov. 6, 2000

i~ter

CLASS I ·F IE D

! 1)
\

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
I ' I I

I I\ I

'I

I

I

.

The O.lly Sentinel • Page A 7

I ,

11 t&lt;

We Cove
Meigs,· Gallla,
.And Mason
CQun.tles Like
No One
Else Can!

In one week With us.

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS

Dlsolay

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

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each, Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
or Gai-age/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To : Ohio Valley Publl5hlng, 825 Third
Avenue , Gallipolis, OH 45631

Ads

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Buslneu Days Prior To
Publ ication
Sunday [)lsplay: t : OO p.m.

Thursday tor Sundays

HOW I.0. WRITE AN. A0.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. .
\'\'\lit

'\1

I \II '\l"

lho

r-------,..1

IWWANIID

Emn mulliN,.,..... Dftlhl lr8l
I 9by ... . , lnCI only ... ftnl "-ttDn.
...... ,
&amp; Ceca Uan . . ._IMdllln the fhl ~ tdldon.
1M,..,.. Fa6r Houafnll Aot of 1-.
kc I .... IOOIIfll MJ
In 'IIDtMfon of

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

......... -

Oestrlptlon • Include A Pl"lce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needl!d

. . ....,.COih,..iltW.

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

lltio

U.UWANm&gt;

Iro

IWWANIID

Ir

1 Aggresalve : Horne

=

I

the..._

Ir ~~ I~~~;::, r
"!ll.l'D

~

IL.rm_lloUiEHOID..;Gooos
____.

Health Need a JOB7
Pari· time Sales hoi~ Must Loan Available! All types ot 14x65 Shultz 2 bedroom. All mr•o
Tara Townhouse Apart· For Sale: Recoridltloned
1
Agency seeking energetic, Want a career In .NUAS. .be dependable and avalla· credit welcome. No fees appllai)Ces,
dishwasher,
JiUR lbNr
. ments, Very Spacious, 2 washers, dl)'8f8 and ralrigo
Roommate wanted to share organized lnc:ll'iklual to act ING7 Nursing Assistant bfe immediately.
Call up front. CALL TOLL FREE W/0, 8x16 covered pord1.
Bedrooms, 2 Floon, CA, 1 erators. Thoq:leons Appfi- ,
oxponoos. N&lt;:o Homo 11 In· .. ccmmunlty and p/lySician Cla8888 are being offered (740)441-1134ll
1-1168-207-5028.
$7,500. ~304)875-6295
15 Cou~ Streel. 2 Bed· 1/2 Bath, Fully Carpoled, ance. 3407 Jocklon Aveterested please. 5enc1 shOrt educator. Home Health/ on Nov. 26, 2001. UY~ 1re ,...
f00fl'11, 1 1n blthl, Kitchen Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poot, Pa- nue, (304)675-7388.
bio and ralenoncoo 1o PO Medical exporferoee a plua, a caring, compa8S100ale lll.sNI;$
LOANSI LOANSI LOANSI 18 Wide. Only $185.00 Per with IIOVe and refrlgeratOf tlo, Start $38Wo. No PeiB,
,
Bol&lt; 502, Ctleshlre. OH not required. Agency will . person, you could be a part 1
TRANNc
Problem Paying Bills? In Month, 8.99% Flxad lntereM orr Street Patklng, C'lole tO l~ Plus Security Deposit Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cllrt&lt;
train. Apply In person at at OUR Healthcare Taaml
O~~t ? GBaOOdk, Ba d~ orWnoel Rate With Air And Un- Schools and Downtown Required, Days: 74()..t.t8 • ~ ha pei Aood • Poo~n'~ •
45620 ,
3084 STAT 160 Gallipolis, Conlact Judy Hart, LPN, incr~ 1 1 ·
n rup 1c,
· derplnning 1-888-928·3426 Aree. $5951 monlh p1uo de- 3481; Evenings: 740-387• ,
• .
~ ~ •
SWF seeks Sugar Daddy _o_r_phone
__•_l_(7_40_144_1_·_'4_n_
. atructor al 740-992-6806 Ollllpollecar..r CoUege come. Call Toll· Free 1·
poSit and Reference. No 0502,.740-446-0101.
~162. Free Estimates. Easy
nd lnfur
OR 740-742·2370 OR Slop (Carooro Close To Home) 868-498·9488.
1970 Hil~rest, 2 bedtoom, ~ ~ 740 )448-4928 .
fonanclng, 110 tlayo oamo u
3s.matkl~ ~~ ~- Langs:
Attention I
By Rocksprings Rehabllita- Ca!l TOday! 740-448-4367.
new appliances &amp; carpel,
.
3 Roome and Bath. 46 Oliva caah. ViatJJ Master Cen::l.
ville, OH 45741 .
Eam 2nc:l. Income without lion Center located at 36759
1-800-214-0452.
MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO, good condition, $3,000 2 bedroom home aose to Street. UtilitiH Paid. Stove Drive- •· little save alot.
A~-~Road, Pomor·
Aegi90-05·1274B.
DEBTCONSOUDAliON, neg. ~740)949·9308
and Aofn~rator No POll
2nd job up to
~..,.. .. _
CALL (408)810-7480
'
!own, basemoot. River view,
~
· New Aollyoon 59 11-71
ANNoliN&lt;:EMI'Nr
$25.·$75Jilr. Pt·FI.
ay, and fill out a Class~
24 HOUR RESPONSE
1985 Skyino 14x70, 3 bed· $425/. monlh: 3 - . . , In $475 pOuo d090Sit. Referen· 112L double pane doublt
1..S00.218·7543
plication! Equal Opportunity 1110 ".................. """"" ....
--~-~·
· ··
room. Good Condition. Call town, 1·112 batha. OQOd lo- en Required. (740)446· wlndowwiltllrnallflawinvl·
~..,_ _ _ _ _ __ , v
Employer
Encouraging
,.,u,;,....r.LU\l,~
I"KUI'I'..Mil.nAL
Harold, 740-385-9948.
calion. $500/ month. Refer· 3945
nyl $85. Good Folding Strol·
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or Workplace
Diversity
SERvi&lt;Ei
encea and depotit required. BEAUnFUL
APART· kH' sa. 35• white storm door,
New Stylist at LaMarca StU. Shirley Spears, 304· (EOEEWD).
1SI time buyers- Govem- (740)446-3844.
MENTS •·T BUDGET PR~ $25, load of hardwood
Beauty Salon Candace 675-1429.
ment loans- ·buy loans &amp;
"'
525.
(Hannon) Tucker &amp; Fonda
LPN'sl RN's needed tor Pe- All ol your home repairs, adTURNED DOWN ON
sale· (7401446 •3093 Qak· 2 bedroom house State CES. AT JACKSON !I· blocking
Umere,
White. November . Perm
COME GROW
dletrtc home care cases In diUons '&amp; remodeling. 24hr SOCIAL SECURJTY ISSI? wood Supercenter
Route 7 SOuth ol 'Middl .. TATEI, 52 Westwood Drive (740)441-o&amp;25
special $25.and up Facial
WITI-f USl
..... ~ ....1heast Vlnlon Coun- emergency service, sanior No Fee Unless We Wlnl
$300
th frQIJI $297 to $383. Walk to
·B·z a~
·~ ~
1-uuu
•••·582·334'";)
SizeFirm
bed, . nbrass
W. .ln n
• , maru-•res.
, .......
... we are expanding our clrcu~ ty,
Pomeroy and Rldne citizens discount. 22yrs.
28K60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- (pan,
head board
740)9Q2 .(1~ a man ' shop &amp;. movies . Call 740· Queen
polntment. (304)675·3040 latlon staff to better serve Areas. Immediate Employly $345.00 Per Month
·
448·2568. Equal Housing
·
rna reD,
Walk Ins Welcome.
our customers. We are took· '"'-"nt A"ailable. LPN's $16
8.99% Fbted lnt8fesl Rata, 2 could be 3 bedroom Oppof'lunlly. ·
PurchaSed new. S150· Cell
7
"~ hour,
• RN's St7 per
1~••• 112•~3425
houoa for rent on 1st Sl-1
~~..:..:.:..·=v..:.c:..:...___
...... Chrt ' F n Ll 1 after 5prn. (304)8 5·5652
- - - - - - - - - - - lng Ior a person that haS per
RETIRED LONGABERGER ~lghenergylevel,setl·motl· hour. Shift/ Weekend Shnt
Amazing First Tlma Home In ~n. WI/. .Com~taly 331 :JY:ew ~~'I Rei vFfu~~ To Sell: Love seat, light
Reasonable prices. After- vated and enjoys working Differential Off8red. Please
Buuars.
Govemment remodeled complete!y fur· 1 nd Ohio 7.. ,._ 742:·7403 brown, good shape. S40.
noons (304)675-4172 No wtth people. Must have de- Call Primary Care Nursing
BaCked loans. No credit nlshed. All ktlchen appllan· Apaa
·~8 nd 1 118 ' (304)876-8188
•n::•::w.:er~le::a::v•:..::*·c__ _ _ pendable 1ransportatlon, ba· Service at .(800)518·2273.
cea and utensll1, towels,
·
ra r ;,;;;p;;;;.;;.;;;.;;;;.____,
:
k
needed. (304)755-558 Urn- slleels and ocl. .. need noth- rentalo. Common:lal llore·
SJooimNG
1
1d
Single while male seeks ~Ia ~mf~~~r ti~O:.':a~~ :::Ask:::,:for:::.,:.P.::hyl!::::lls:...- - - -:"ed:.:..Off=•:..r.---~,....- lng to move In but your fronts avatlable lor lease.
G&lt;looi
females 25-45 for tun tlmea position and otters an com· Make money tor Chlistmat,
Assumable loans- Many clothes. Close to all power Vacancies now.
...._
•
and more, ~epty to P.O. panu benefits Including sell Avon. Can (740)446·
types available. Call for de- plants, aU SCR's and con- F ~ ........ 3 rooms and
Box 83, Vinton, OH 45686. heaith tnsurance, vacation, 3358
llructlon wo~era welcome. um ........ ,......,.
• Auger Red Label ovt~r &amp; un·
-ntor~··oupersonal days. and' ,401J&lt; =~
, --:,-:,,...,...--,-,-. :-'",c119c,'':'(\c..40:.:1446
"':·~·3cc~.;."':·•u·--::Serious lnqulras only :~.plu~le:~ow;.,~~~~ . der 12 gauge, lull. mod &amp;
.... ,.
r... · plan. We are part of a large
PART TIME AN
Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 please. If not hOme pteue and Deposit ReqUired No skeet tubes, hunt'i:.cwith
(24 ~:.,.ksaccopn~~:anue)
company that offers excel· Fill in posllkm available at
bath, save $5,155. delivered luve measage, ~304) n3· Pets or smokers (740}446· twkle, $795; new
hnel
&amp; set up qn your lot lnclud· .57:,:84::::.,·- - - - - - 1519
·
Hollo site, for pistol or shot·
lent career advancement Scenic Hlllslor Days &amp; EveVisa &amp; Mastercard
opportunities. F9r lntei'Vklw nings. Great Pay! Wondertul
ing skirting &amp; fiberglass .:::::.::...._ _ _ _ _ _ gun, $200, 740-992.0228
...;;.C;,:rod;:i::_lo:;;r,:D;;:e:;:bi;,;lca;;;,rd;;e;..,. consfdaration send a oover Team to wort.: with! Please
steps, Coles Mobile Homes, 233 2nd Ave. Convenient to GraciOus living. 1 and 2 leave m8888pe.
letter telling us why you are stop by to fill out an applicaU.S. SO EaSt, Athens, Oh, DowBantoW~~~~1 bedroom apartments al VII·
GIVEAW.4.V
the person we are looking Uontoday.
740·592·1972.
112 th,
wt
e lag&amp; Manor and Alveralde
.AN'rJQlu
..__ _ _ _ _ __.~
lth
==~--~-and Refrigerator. $490/ Apartments in Middleport. L_ _ _ _ _ _ _,..,
""~
for along w your resume
PART TlME
Final Days, Nationwi&lt;le In· month plua depolit and Aef· From $27&amp;-$348. Clll 740- ..,
$ Tum your rummage &amp; • S ~lr:c:-: :S~· V~~~
OFFICE PosmoN
ventory
Reduction! erences. No Pets. (7.t0)446- 992·5064. Equal Housing Buster'&amp; Antlquu Now
4926. ·
unwanted items lnlo cash, Ushlng Co., 825 Third Ave., We have a part-time posl·
(3041736-3409
Oppor1unltin.
Open. Anllqueal Amish Fur740-992·9734 or 740-742- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
~ ~:.':~.~:~n~t
HoHy Park Trailer on Ccmer 3 Bedroom House, $550/ Nice 1br. All Electric. Near niturt 202 4th Street. (Be_1_408_
. -----tioo requires computer and
fenced In lot. 90x100 In Ma· month
plua
depoait. high school $300 month + hind C~tna I A~~e
Data Enuy Poslllon, M·F malh skills, mull enjoy
son wv. Asking $22,000, (740)387-7802
Deposit. · ~304)675·3100 Buy &amp; II 304)87 1
Doberman Pinshcer PupCall (3041773-5482
or 3 ·Bedroom, 1 112 bath, Daytl.me, ~304)675·5509 Buy or sen. Riverine Anti·
pies. 4 months old to give 6.~ .30. Windows know!· working with people, be
(304)372-6592
basement, large family Evenmgs.
.
quee, 1124 Eut Main on
away to a good home. Call edge helptul will train, send able to organiZe your wont
resume
to:
The
Dally
Sentiand
be
available
for
ached·
Umlted or No Credit? Gov· room, lOcated In Pt. Pteas" Nice 2br Apartments large SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740~740)256·6390
.
nel, PO45769
Box 729-14• Pomer· ullng between the hours ol
ernment Bank Finance Only , ant, W.Va. (740}446-0924
mon,s, fully equiped' kltch- 892·2526. Ruu Moore,
Free puppies, mixed, cute, oy, Oh
8:00am anc:t 5:00pm. MonA,t Oakw~ In Barbour&amp;· 3 Bedroom. Route 160 Ev· tn, Central Heating/Cooling, =""""'::::::::·c__ _ _ __
ready to go, (740)992-9229. Dental Hygentist Needed day through Friday. For In·
v1lle, WV 304·736-3409.
ergreen. $3751 month plus washer &amp; Dryer hookup. S·-·a ·~~·biee on·~ "1"
Pan Time. (740)446-2409. terview conskieration send
~-u ..
Lo!.T AND
:..:::.:..::=J.:.:~:::.::::::._ your resume and covar let· references, Honest, Dedi·
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. deposl~. (740)446·8189 or (304) 882·2523
In Mkk:Uepoe'l. Dolls, glusL--~F:;,:OOND;::
.;::;.._.,J Domino's now taking appli· ter or Attention of Diane Hill, cated, Hardworking, 34yr.
Only $19,850. Free Delivery (740)448-6885.
North ·ard Middleport 1 ware, Alllddln mamela. and
.,
catlona for sale drivers, Gal· Ohio Valley Publishing eo., old Female with Upbeat
&amp; Set Up. 1-688·928-2426
bedroom fumlahed ap!,n. more. (740)992.()298
and Pomeroy loca· 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Poaitlve AHitude, Always A plO
. HOMFS
Buy homes from $199/mo. , ment, no pels, depoail &amp; ref·
M-ISCEI].
Found : Beautiful 10· 12 llpolls
1•~
tlonsonly.Applylnpereon. Otlio45631.
Smile. Available ANYTIME
New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 F.oreclosures, 4% down, 30 erences.(740 )992 -o165.
week old Male Collie· ShepEASV
WOAKI
EXCELLENT
lor
lnleNiew.
(740)44
I
,9590
·--fUioiiiRiioiiSALEiiiii;;,-'
bath.
Only
$995
down
&amp;
years
at
8.6%
APR.
For
list·
=:==:....:.:=:...:=:....._
herd Mix on Cora Mill Road ~•vj•---bl nnva........ t Salesperson: Full·time, ben· Leave Votcemall.
$,89,62/month. Call Chel)'l, lngs 1·800·319-3323 ext. Now Taking AppllcatlonaBetween Bridge and Laurel rl'\' _ , , 8 ..,. .............. a
fi
1a1
1
122
"'neon
D•·-.
3 or 4 740-385-7671 .
1709.
35 W.lt 2 Bedroom Town- 10•10•8 Kannel $1llD.ac
home. Catl Toll Free
e ts, re I experience re er- I would like to sit with the
N
lin•
Include
" ..
• 1111 ._.
Road. Call ~740)379-2883
8 Paint Plut. (304)675-4084
house ApartmlniS,
1 • .., .. tJ7 5568 Ext 12170 red. Apply at Lifestyle Furni- elderlu7 in their home. Phone bedroom, lull basement,
l ·
lure. No phone calls. Apply (304)875-a 781
many new features . Close New Double Wide. $195 For Rent· 5 room house. 2 Water
Sewage, Trash, - - - - - - - Lost long haired CalicO cat, ~ ·
to schools and shopping . Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 bedrooms, Gaa
Heat. $350IMO., 740-~.QOOB.
Chloe, 9th &amp; Main. Reward. www.homefobs.Oom/12170 In pel'80n, 858 3rd Avenue,
1 (740'f'T"'W
.."·1370
Jeans, $2.00;
cclorconTV,
"·ery &amp; saFULL 1111! AN POimON. Gallipolis, OH.
Superior Home Mainte- $64,500. Call (7401 446· Bath · Free De I....
Oakwood Apls., 1 Bedroom, SSO.OO;
6" TV, 23'
$20.00;
(304)675-5114
Scenic Hils Nursing Center
STN
nancQ. We do all Repair&amp; on 8310 or (740)446·2425
up. 1·886-928·3426
Oak Hlh, OH. 3 Bedroom Efficiency. Between Town crete states. Guido Glrola·Lost· 4 yr. old female red ls accepting applications for
. .
A
homes. Carpentry, plumbing
Nice 28x60 Double Wide brick Cape COdr Basement. and Holzer. No Peta. Ideal mi. 132 Butternut.
Dachshund on Brister Ad .. a full time RN. 7 to 3 and 3 SCente Hill&amp; Nursing C?~re ..a Decks, Trenching Inside 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
·
$4751 month. Reference lor-Single Peraon. Oeposll
Cootville, 'Friday Nov. 2nd, to 11 shifts. Great Benefits, nursi~g home, ~lalizlng .1 n and out. (740)441.Qt13
(304)675-5332
sattmg on rented lot In
Cal c1 0)448 3929 11
JET
Expo•once "ay and more Alzhe~mer a bare, rs now h1r·
'--'--'--~.......- - Point Pleasant area. 2K8 Afquirect (740)384·5682 or
I ( 4
~
a er
(740)887·0606
"
r
·
11 lh
1
1 (740)245·9382
8pm. ~
. AERATION MOTORS
.
•
than competitl~e Wagesl ing 3 full lime STNAs lor 10 Will clean houses or offices, 3 bedroom, in Middleport, wa s, erma pane w nRepaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Lost While Cat with Calico cau SCenic Hills at to 6 shift, 2 lull time for 2to experienced, non·smoker, call Tom Anderson alter ~~s j~ to sal:. ~II ·p1101 Program, Renters
Stock. Call Aon Eva~s. 1·
689
Face and Tail Female. Van- (740)446•7150 or stop by 10. 2 part time stnas lor 2 lcJ .have references.
call Spm, (740)992-3348.
\
·
aa
or Neec::ted, 30 4-736•7295.
Twin Alver Towera now ac- eoo-S37·9S28.
col Centenary Road. CaM and fill out and application 10.11 lntarested, please stop (740)992'-9761 leave mas· 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Ranch _A_o...,se_m_a"'ry-:.- - - - - :.:::::::::::.:::::.::.;:::;:.::;::.__
ceptlng applcatlona for
(740)446-6253 PM.
.
· by and pick up an appilca· sage.
OAKWOOD HOMES
Why rent? government 1BA. HUD subsiOizad apt.
Full time Waitress Needed. tion any weekday from
Style. 1 acre mil, whirlpool,
backed loans from $490 for elderly and disabled. Lovely Set Miniatures.
Small blonde female recant- Apply In Person. Holiday 8:00am to 4:00pm
Will hau l away. clean out, parllal basement. vinyl sld·
SUPER CENTER.
down. (740)446·3093
EOH. '
. Some antiques, antique
ty had pups Found at Fla· Inn· Gallipolis
.
.
clean up Of move ~most ing wrap around deck, Over 40 Romes to chose
(304)675-8679.
printers, Drawer, approx.
track Grocery. (304)875·
·
Therapy poaition wanted. anything. Call (740)446· Ele~tric and gas heat. front Drive a little save a
MOBD.E HOMES
100 pieces. (740)256-8445
2897
Help wanted caring rar the Positive, anergmlc, punctual 7604
County Schools. 12 miles Ia~ I Oakwood Homes of
FOR" RENT
$90.
- . - - - - - - - , elderly, Darst Group Home, peracm needed to work In
from Gallipolis. Patriot area. Nrtro. (304)755·5885
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom ::::::.__ _ _ _ __
now paying minimum wage, Doctors office. Apply in per·
Paved RoaO, Appraised at
REDUCED
apartment, In town, large Metal shetves, $10: Work
YARD SAlE
new shirts: 7am-3pm, 7am- son Complete Care Chiro$62,000 Asking $55,000. All Double Wide Displays
2 .bedroom mobile home In kitchen, LA, $500/mo. Aef· benches $50; New irregular
L::::;:::~ Spm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· practicBehlndBurgerKing.
8~
Forlnlo. (740)446-8715
mus'.go. Only$995down.
~~~=rt, no pots, 740· ....nl:os&amp;depolltroqulred. jeans, $2.00: t:loor casing
7am. ca11740' 992 "5023·
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
(}ppoR11JNI1Y
.
5
room
house
Point
Pleas·
Only
at
Oakwood
Homes
of
&lt;:')446•3844
~~~S:.~~ Blower,
1
1 2 Bedroom Mobile Home.
YARD'SALELPN (1FT or 2PT) Ala You plasma donors, eam $45to
ant, with lot. 2 car garage. Nitro. (304)755-~5
SPACE
GAUIPOI...LS
A Nurse Looldng For A Re- $60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly.
INOnCEI
1 1/2 ~th. $43,000. Family Single Parent Program . CJoae to Town. (740)256·
RDlr
MOIIILE HOMI OWNDI:S
L~--~----""· You
warding Career In Which Call Sera-Tee. 740·592· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Reloca11ng. (304)675-7741 Easu Financing Available. 6574
lntartherm &amp; Cole-man gas,
can Truly Help Others? 6651 .
I
oil &amp; electric furnaces In·
5
Family 11101·1 t/03, If So, You Need To See ust
lNG CO . recom~ends that Brick Ranch, El&lt;cellent Con- (304)755-7191
2 Bedroom. 5 min. tram 1 Mobile Home Lot Phone eluding til elllclency heat
11109:11110. 2 2/10 milet lntervtewa Are Now Being WAN.TEO: E xp erie ncad you do business with people dillon, No outside mainle·
B
town, $2751 month, $250 (304)675-8984
pump systenw'." We carry a
on M111 Creek Road. Infer- Conducted For A Professio· Roofmg &amp; Carpenter Fore- you know, and NOT to send nance, 2 Bedrooms c/ pos·
~
depoalt. Absolutely No Pets. '
complete line ol Mobile
matlon: (740)446·,052
nal LPN (1FT Or 2PT). Ap- man's, valid driver's license, money through the mall until sible 3rd In panially finished
AND BUW&gt;INGS
(740)446-9342
Mobile fllome lot lor rent In home parte &amp; accBISOriel.
~
pticanta Must Posaeas A hand tools, reliable trana- you have Investigated the basement, Large Attached 1
$300 Middleport 125 per month BENNETT'S HE"TINQ
AucnON AND
Team Spirit With The Ability ponatlon and relerences re· offering.
car garage c1 large work Orflce building, Mirersvllle, 2 br. traler for ref1t.
(740)992_3194
COOLING (740)«&amp;-I411
F'LF.A. MARKET 1
. To Interact Wltn Elderly quired. . Local work, e~ecei·
area . $80 000 Gallipolis 600 sq. fl., ale, · covered month + Oeposlt. (304)458·
or 1-aoo-e72-el67
1.,-oi.iiilliiOOiliiiiliiili;.,..J Aesldants &amp; Their Families. lent pay tor right person, Do you need a mortgage or Ferry, wv. (3o4)675-2747 parking, S2751ma; trailer 2549
· Mobile Home Site for rent, www.orvb.com/btnneH
.
Co
Medication Background &amp; onuses, vacation. Apply at new car? Are your bills
.
spaces S1201mo. 614-878· 2 br.' Traller. Mason, All utili!· SandhiU Rd. behind Fox's
Reck Peal1""'
.n AuctiOntiOnoom· Supervisory Skills A Plus Christian's Conatructton, backed up? We. can help. For sale by owner: Nice bi- 1661 .
Pizza. (304)675-7566
pany, u 1 1linG auc
r. But Not Aaquired. Benelits Inc., 1403 Eastern Avenue. We offer fast reliable sarv- level home on 1 acre near
1..01s &amp;
les paid. Furnished, 1300
NEW AND USED FUR·
8
:e'::i Include: Paid Vacation, Paid Gallipolis, {740)446-4514
ACREAGE
Virginia 304:773·5785 Or Meals, Pal1ial Paid lnsurp. family room with fireplace, ·--iiiiiiiiiii;;,.... 5268
16x80, $100 per month, call
.
s
ance,
DlscounlS
&amp;
More.
InWANTED:
Full·
time
posl·
Ple
so
c
an
toll
free
.
1·866·
•
.,
you dont Call us, We both
5447
1
30
6
2
46
0
terested Proleasionals May lions available at 8 com·
~un room. New centra hea~· 2.7 acres, uneven Ulrraln, In 3 bedroom mobile nome In Ed at Country Homes, 74(). Loose! (740)446-6308, 1·
WANIDl
call Or Stop By Monday- munity group home lor peo- Established Sr\Qt'lalty Store mg &amp; ale system. On~ ml· Welt.htown, $2700, please Middleport, . no . pets, :99::2:.:·2:.:1.:67:.:·----- 800-291..()()98.
ro BUY
Sun. 9-4, 1113 Washington pie with mental retardation for Sale. Call ~h~r 5:00pm. nute ott Route 7 ' but sllll pri· call (6S0) 563· 3753 • Leave (7401lN2·5858.
Trailer lots on JerichO Aoad. Plau alation 1with 2 nal't'W&gt;,
740 985 3981
1,~--~:o.iiiiii;.,-,.J. St., Ravenswood, WV, 304· in Bidwell. 1) 12· 9pm Fri· (740)446·8148
· vale. ( ) •
name and number
Tel. (304)895·3534
5 r00ntht old. Askt,;g"'$55.
273-5893 Slop Byl You'll Be day· earn- o1pm Salurday·
Newly con~tructed, single - - - - - - - AP.
(740)448-6861
A~soiute Top Dollar: U.S. Glad You Dkll
8affi· tipm Sunday; 12 ~9~ Start Your Busln8ss To- story 1600 sq. toot home. 3 Pa11lals of land. ~304)576~
S1I&gt;Jer, G~d Cains, ProofMonday. 2) 4- 11 pm Sun· day... Prime Shopping Can· toea ted 1o minutes !rom 9929
FOR RENr
PolYester ren,nanta more
sets, 01amonds, Gold
.
day; 3:30· 11 :30pm Mon· ter Space Available At AI· HO\zer Hospital, ~0 minutes Indian Creek Estates, 3·6
rn
;;:;;~=====i than 75 ya(J:Isr. se• wfela.
10
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· Pan time dnver needed to dayf Tuesday; 3:30· 10:30 fordable ~ale. Spring Valley from Pleasant Valley Hospl- acre lots, west 01 Rio 1 and 2 bedroom apartHOUSFJIOLD
$25, ~740)965-4409.
M.T.S. COin Shop, 1~1 Sec- cover vacations or sick Wednesda~l Ttlurlday. Re- Plaza, Call740-446-010t
tall off SA 160 on a private Grande, from S25,900. ments, fumlstled and untur·
GOODi
Ruldentllf Home Owner•
1· 12 acre lot. 3 bedroom, (740)245.5747
nlshed, security deposit rl- ..,
and Avenue, GaiHpolls. 740- teava. Flat bed truck deliver- Quirements· High SChOOl Oi446-2842.
ing building materials to·JOb ploma/ GE.O, valid driver's
2-1/2 baths, big kitchen
qulred, no pets, 740. 992. , Appliances: Reconditioned Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus
sllea. Mutt be able to carry license and good driving re·
MONEY
w/qek cabinets, D~ . LR Looking To Buy A New 2218
W
A
gas tumaces Including oil
I \11'1 1n \11 '\I
heavy .material
Call cord. Excellent benefit pack·
TO LoAN
wi"BS log fireplace, central Home? Don't Have Land?
·
as hers, 0 ryet'S, anges, ·and
electric gaa fuma"ol H\ II I ...,
••••
• air,• laundry room, 1ront We Dolll Hurry Only 10 Lots 1 and 2 Bedroom Apan· Guarant88dl
Refrigralort, Up
110 Dayo
1740)2'•
---~
age. Salary: $6.00/ hour.
WeToSell
New ceo · HI EH~Iency Heal
116
I
Send re~me to: Buckeye CREDIT PROBLEMS Hav· porch &amp; 2·112. car garage. Lelt, 304·736-7295.
menta , Deposit &amp; Refer· Maytag Appliances, French ~~~psi~~!~~~~g ~:=
IIELPWAN'TED
Commun1ty Services, PO
.
.
·
Immediate poS8B&amp;slon. Apence. HUD Approved. CityMaytag 740-4WB-7795
.1..__ _
_ _ _ __, A1 PIIFI Stay o Home 0p- Box 604 , Jackson, OH lng Fman:c1al probl~ms? Is praised at $125,500. Make Nice .4 acre tract near (740)44 ,_1519
,
· package.
.,
porlunltyl Average $1000- 45640 . Deadline: 1.119101. Bad credit, no cre&lt;:ht, or
offer. Call (740)448-4514 Gallipolis- easy terms,
BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;
S6000/mo. Flex Schedule, Equal Opportunity Employer bankruptcy the root .of y~r !rom 8· 5pm, M·F, or (740)446-3583
2 Bedroom, washer/ dryer C0mptete U&gt;Jing Room Fur· COOLING (740)441-9418
McClure's Restaurant nr:tW Eliminate commuting &amp;
problems? Call us loday.
(740)446·3248 aher Spm.
NiCe River and Creek Front- hookup. 7 miles from Ho~· nlture. $400. (304)675-6986 ar 1..aoo-872-5117.
hiring an 3 locatlonl, ruu or Oaycare Paid vacation Bo- WarehOuse/ Delivery per· PREMIER CREDIT AE·
tal. (740)U1.01H
Couch &amp; chair, dineHe set,
www.orvb.comlbennett
Rio Grande Area, ,2 Bed·, age Lots, Public Water~
beds chas twl bed
part-lime, pick up applica- nusesiT~alning Progr~ms. son. Full-time, benefits, Ap- SOURCES. •An t~ flnanTrailer
14ft. Utility tandem
I. n I ,
tion at location &amp; bring back Established lnt'l Coopers· ply at Ufestyle Fumllura. No clal help you need , 1-866- rooms, 1 112 Bath, L.A., sewer, survey tn~p ava!IB· 3 bedroom apartment, $400 Hldea bed'
axle $1100. Water Heater
1
•
1
n
phone
calla.
Apply
on
per·
257·5445,
Specializing
In:
Kitchen,
large
Level
lot.
ble.
Call
for
deta1ls.
Homeper
monlh
plut
deposit
and
baby
•
stove,
m
era·
between
9:30am
&amp;
0
son, 856 3rd Avenue, Gal· peraonal, consolidation,
Immediate
Posaessl&lt;u'l , ste&amp;d
Band,
Broker utilllles on 3rd Street, Ra· wave, drop leal table. LP Gas 40 gal. $150.
10:00am, Monday thru Sat· www.GoaiS2Success.com
(304)875-4288
"'
(304)682·2405
Cine, Hud, ,'740)247-4292 (740)448·9742
bu~ness,
888·7Sot·S430.
lipolis, OH.
mo rtgages, au to. $27,900 . ,'740)"•
- · 2801
urclay.

L

I"ER!ioN.w;

740 1448 7444 1

r

I

Ij

RIO GRANDE ATHLETICS

Redwomen fall to 0-2; Redmen even record

30

the .field and were 19-of-24
~tripe.

j

I

j

I

7:30p.m.

Redwomen volleyball close out year
with three defeats
.
HUNTINGTON. Ind. - · The University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball squad closed out the 2001 campaign, by
losing its final three matches of the season at the Huntington

8

r

I

1

r

I

I

t

19Q8 Chevy CaYaller. 8k or
7k with trade oeo.
(3041"3-6357.
1999 Neon. 2 door, Auto,
Air. 47,000 miles. $4500
080. (740)2M·I233
1999 Ponllac Clrand Prill
4dr. V·8, aulo, AIC. very
~ condlllon. Aoklng
.eoo. (304)87H440

rL.-.-::::::O:::;Iiiili.....I

I

i \NU
JU
S.

r
r

I
I

r•O .

I

I

j

r

I

s

r

~=*=~':
304-n3-

r

FOR

I'

~~:H ~~d0~u~~oli~s~~~ ~0 ~=~hs. ~~:!a~~~~:

I

;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;,....,...._,

j

~~b~n'oe!os~~3~4)~~~ ~~g~ lo:Juqui=~~~~ :~E~r~~s~~~-~~

r

j

I

a

I

1

Rio Grande evens mark at Indy Toumey
FORT WAYNE, Inl NAIA Division II No. 6 Rio
Grande followed its opening loss with a victory in game two
over St. Francis (IL) in the consolatioh game of the Sport One
Tournament at St. Fr.mcis (IN) University.
Rio Grande (1-1) used a strong second half to claim a 68-63
win. The Redmen trailed 36-34 a[ halftime. ·
Twa P235 15 Inch tires
Ri
I dby a patr
·
f
t I....,
•
'o Jo Dtlan..v
S30. Two P 205 14 Inch
o was e
o . pos p-1ers 10 sem r
e
-1
tires, 120. 17401387.n29
(Archbold, OH) and sophomore Sean Plummer (Portmore,
Jamaica) with 13 po.ints apiece. Plummer · also topped · the
rebounding · chart with seven. Freshman Nat · Moles

riO

HoME
e....;iiiiioiiiioiiiiiiiOi-,.J

IMPRoVI!liiENI'S 1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG .

::,S =m:.,~~~ d~ ~~='!.=:O:::~:

2 MIKed IalNo

but ntedo work,
$2500; 93 Cavalier, auto,
looko goo&lt;!, runo goo&lt;!.
$1500, (740)9H-6586.

nlshod. Eslabllohtd 1975.
CaH 24 Hro. (740) 4460870,
1-800·287·0578.
Rogers Walerproollng.

runo,

River Bend
1 toClinic
'~t~~~~~
1
lor

85. Pontiac Bonneville,
30,000 actual miles. Excellent cond"lon. V-8, auto, air,
~740)256-1417 or ~740)2588228.

C&amp;C Ganoral Home Maintenance- Painting, vinyl Bldlr.g, carpentry, doors, win·
dows, bath&amp;, mobile horne
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chet, 740.992·

~~::::::~~~ ~=~r lor

91 Chryaler LeBaron Convertible, $2,000. ~740)367·
0850 ~740)387-7272 .

(B'-'&gt;k • 1 yr old)
Adunpug(m)
Adun Coll'-

s...reiCoon

hound a
Olhar doga, nice &amp;

16

j

percent) fiom the charity

·

Next up for the Redmen:' a trip to the Bluegrass State and a
match-up with 2001 NAIA Division I Final Four participant
Pikeville College on Saturday evening. Game time is set fot

I

rtment

(79

genlle

lh

. AKC Golden Relrtaver
? Pupa, Blonde and aa-.
Parents on premises.
~: ~eady Noveni»er 111. $250,, $325. No Sunday calla.
1 (740)245·5358
· AKC rtglstered minlatura
" Plncher puppies,' black &amp;
; tan, 8 weeki · old, $200,
~740)742-0310.

'•i Cocker

YHr,. .1111 Acrou

I ,Dilly S.otlool

BULLEtiN I 'OARD
&gt;- '

·,

·'l'"col••• locll .......,.
110"'

col••• locll Suotloy
WL OUI OfRCI.IY 992•2155

Spaniel Pupplesl
r! Full Blooded . Paranl on
' Promises. $150. ~740)44621188

.• Rotweiler Puppy, male, 11
,. monthl old. dog bOx, chair,
collar, food. Has all vacclna·
• lions. $150 080. No Pa·
Hllp Wlnlld
'• pers. (740)441-0950 ~Days), _ _...;..._ _ __
·'' (740)441 ·9858 (Evenings)
UKC Rat Terrier pups.
• StSO. Cash Firm. tails
1
" docked mother &amp; father on
1
'~ premises (304)743-3308

~~ r

FRurrs&amp;
V~ErABUS

,

1

~ Richards

Brothers Fruit
Form.
APPLES
ANO
MUCH MORE. 24 mlleo
North ol Gallipolis on Coim·
.• 'Y, Rood o!ll. (740)2118-45&amp;4.
.: Vlrgll'l ·Berry Pa1ch, East .of
Syracuse oo ~oute 124 has
turnips &amp;~ Purple asparagus
roots, (740)992·7449.

.,

Smith and Nick Cardone each added 12 points.
·
The Redmen shot a blistering 23-of-43 (53.5 percent) fiom

The Cougars (9'-0), one of night, finished No. 5 in the
three teams without a loss, final poll of the 1996 season.

NOW
HIRING
$6 • $8
Per Hour
Full/Part

nme

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1-888·974-JOBS

or Trade

in the
Classifieas!

Oregon, No. 8 Washington,

Miami,

Nebraska,

Florida,

No. 9 BYU,' No. 10 Florida

Oklahoma and Texas.

State,

time in five years at No. 9 in

coach Gary Crowton, were

The new Bowl Championship Series standings come
out Monday. Last week, it was

State, No.12 Michigan, No. 13

the poll, and Oklahoma, Florida and Texas held steady fiom
a week ago and Nos . 3-4-5.
BYU, which beat Colorado
State 56-34 last Thursday

.

No. 13 last week.

Miami, 38-0 winner over
Temple, received 55 first-place
votes and 1, 781 points in Sun-

Nebraska first, followed by
Oklahoma ana Miami. The

day's balloting by the 72 sports
writers and broadcasters on

final BCS standings will determine which teams play for a

the AP panel. Nebrask~ had
the remaining 17 first-place

national

votes and 1,745 points.
In the USA Today/ESPN

title

in

When Kennedy hit Gannon ns he
dived out of bounds in the second quar.ter, the Raiders were worried Gannon
had a concussion. But Gruden gave Gannon a pop quiz naming the three
potential audibles in one of the Raiders'
offensive sets - and got the answers he
wanted .
After Oakland scored and got the ball
back, Gannon went back in the game to
complete six straight passes on another
scoring drive.
"I think he got hit in the head, and he
got mad," Gruden said. "Some guy. are
like that. It shakes them into another

18 Syracuse, No. 19 Georgia
and No. 20 Georgia Tech.
Colorado was. No. 21 , fol-

Louisville.

No. 24 Auburn and No. 25

Marshall romps
HUNTINGTON, W .Va.

(AP)

-

Tamar Slay scored 23 points and J.R.
VanHoose had 20 poims and 18
rebounds to lead Marshall to a 112-76
victory over Worldwide Basketball in an
exhibition game Monday night.
Slay, who made 10-of-21 shots, was
one of five Marshall players in double
ftgures.
Marshall never trailed. Latece Williams
began a 16-3 run with a layup two minutes into the game. Another Williams
layup finished the run and gave Marshall
a 24-9 lead with 12:56 left in the half.
Williams scored eight of his 19 points
during the run .
Monty Wright's 3 - pointer gave Motshall its biggest lead, 108- 71, with 1 : 16
remainin~~:.

\

olina, No. 15 Illinois, No. 16
Stanford, No. 17 UCLA, No.

Tennessee moved up a spot
to No. 6, followed by No. 7

play, while Jerry Rice caught three key
passes for 47 yards. Gannon was 25- of-34
for 243 yards and three TDs.
"I thought we really had a good plan,"
Gannon said. "Jon's approach was excellent. We got into a real rhythm on
. offense."
The Broncos/couldn't capitalize on the
running of former MVP Terrell Davis,
who looked sharp in his return to Denver's lineup after missing six games following knee surgery.

Rose

Maryland, No. 14 South Car-

Bowl on Jan. 3.

Gannon frequently found Browh, who
was around for all of the Raiders' failures
in the rivalry. He had two touchdowns
among his nine catches for 95 yards.
Zack Crockett rushed for two scores,
including a 3-yard plunge with 7:06 to

the

Washington

lowed by No. 22 Michigan
State, No. 23 Virginia Tech,

zone."

Raiden

(

·

No.

II

The Cougars, under first-year

I'

'

are

coaches poll, the top 5

crac)ced the top 10 for the first

ftom Page .AS

Buy Sell

and Wll aix-for-lix aerving with one ace. Wheeler had 22
assists and, a team-high, 15 ·digs. Posey collected six kills and
nine digs, while Gretchen Craig (Gillipolis, OH) had
seven dip, two blocks and twO block auiata.
The final match for Rio Grande was a three-game defeat at
the hands of Cornerstone (MI). The scores were 16-30, 9-30,
and 16-30.
. DeGerrho recorded nine kills and five dip. Wheeler
had 10 assists, six digs and was six-for-six serving. Posey had
nine digs and was six-for-six serving. Craig played solid
defensively with nine diga. Brown added seven digs and
went seven-for-seven serving with one ace. Jill Thomas (New
London: OH) registered six digs.
Brown ended the season as the team leader in kills (357),
DeGarmo waa topa in auiats (427) and 1erve ace• (48),
while Posey was the team leader in digs (390).

BYU is making a move in the AP media poll

Aealdential .cr commerdal The Associated Press Top 25
91 Unootn TO'M'ICir and its wiring new service or re- poll.
a beauty! Air ride, auto light pairs 'P.tasler Licensed elec..
dimmer. (740)446-9523 or trtciaO. Ridenour Electrical,
Miami (7 -0) and Nebraska
(740)446-1443
WV000306 304-875-1786.
(10-0), the other major college
'
unbeatens, remained 1-2 in

.

Australian ShepherO pups,
.. NSOR. Current health re·
cords, $70, (740)949-2128
~ evenlng!lleave meuage.

6323.

(Charleston,WV) scored 12 points, including 6-for-6 at the free
WV)
throw line, and sophomore Jason Beller (Cross Lanes,
added. 10.
Pat Pachciarz paced St. Francis with 13 points, while Greg

(IN) College Quad Match.
Rio Grande (12-24) dropped the first match to Huntington,
17-30, 27-30 and 24-30. Chelsea DeGarmo (Patriot, OH)
and Andrea Brown (Williamsport, OH) posted strong numbers.
DeGarmo bad 10 kills and seven dip, while Brown
added nine kills, tO digs and was 12-for-12 serving •
Jessica Wheeler (Piketon, OH) registered 24 assists a11d eight
digs. Kim Posey (Amanda, OH) posted five kills and nine digs.
Stacey Mervis (Logan, OH) had six digs .
The Redwomen then dropped a three-game match to·
Go.shen (IN) College, 25-30, 13-30 and 26-30. Brown tallied
nine kills, six dig; and was 10-for-10 serving to lead the Rio
attack. DeG1rmo added seven kills, nine dip, two blocks

'

..

'

�•
lbnt:Wy, Nov. e, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor"., Ohio

The O.lly Sentinel • Page A 8

'

______N
__E_A__C~ro~··~ww~o~r~d~P~u~·~·=•=·~·____ :
PHILLIP

ACROSS

I Dcooe'l

SIMCI ltM
nua••m*-

otlaullng ollmeotone
oGravel• Sind •Topsoil
oflll Dirt ollutch

~

101111 IISSELL

..

C~CTOIIS, IlK.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948
COIICIEif/BI.OO(/BIICI

COISTIUaiOH
•New Homes

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

•Garages
•Complete

• Fool&lt;n, Walb, Stepo•
Flat Work,

R&lt;pi.C.mtnts, • Walks
aod Driv.. • Steadl ·
Crtle Free Eadmalel
Strvlna Ohio ud w.v.

.....

Euenj Thursday
6 &amp;mday

. 6:30
Progrmlue top
Tllufsdags

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Progressive Couerilll

740-992-1671

on SUndays

10128TF

71&gt;2/lfN

WVIOJ1712

I 4"

1'
Kandl

.

Disc Jockey

CARPENTER · MeigJ Massa~
SERVICE
Therapy

• 111 atr"la.l a Plumbing
·-~
•-.eaa-

Tonia Re1b8r
Ucert58dMaasage

Local 843-5264

Therapist

740-1192-1705
213 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760

•VIorllldlftgAPolntlng

·-IOidl'wci!DocU
Free Estimates

Come In and ask
about apecllll
0111 Certlllcatn
Available

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

-·"""
Public Nollce
FIDEIIAL
EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT

AGENCY

FEDERAL
INSURANCE
ADMINISTRATION
Prop Dlld Flood

~­ for
DIIImiiiNIIIOnl
v.rtou• CommunHIM
~~~~:unty,
AGENCY:
,_I
Emergency
Manlgement Agency

ACTION:
PrapcWrula.
SUMMARY:
TechniCIII
Information
or
comment•
are
IOIICitld on 'the
pro110aad modified
ball (1% annual
chance)
ttood
elevatlone lhown In
1M pNIImlnary Flood
lnauranca 9tudlal
and Flood lnaurance
Rate Mapa lor thl
oommunllln llllld In
lhl table below. The
baH ftood lllvatlona
are lhl -lo lor the
floodplain

Rocky R Hupp. Agent

Box 189
Middleport Oh1o 45760

• RaGm 'JdiUOMA

flit ct 'hi

-MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO. ·

Public Notice

Medicare, Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
PensiOn &amp; 401K Rollover-.;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

appropriate flood
Llttlo L.aadlng
lnauranca premium Creak:
rataa lor the new Approximately 0.1
building• and their milo upatream of the
content• and lor thl VIllage of Rutland
11cond layer of corporallllmHI
lnaurance an exlatlng "Elevation In tnt
building• and their (NGVD)
ccntenll.
Exlltlng/Modlllld
Purauant to the None, '578
provlalona of 5 USC Approximately 0.9
I 05 (b ),
I h e mila upstream of tho
· Admlnlatrator,
I o VIllage at Rutland
wham authority haa corporate llmlto
bean delegated by 'Elevation In feet
thll Director, Federal (NGVD) ,
Emergency
·
Exlotlng/Mcdlfled
Managemant Agency, . None, '578
hereby certlfl11 that Communlllaa
the
propoud Affected: Melga
modified
flood County
elevation
(Unincorporated
determination•, If A,..e)
Kerr Run:
promulgated, will not
have 1 elgnlflcent Juat upatream of the
economic Impact an Vlllagot of Pomaroy
a eubetantla( number .. corpp,r~ellmlta
of amall enlltlea. A · 'Elevation In feet
flood
alavallon (NQVD)
determination under Exlllllng/Mcdllled
Section 1313 forme None, '578
the boola tor now Approximately 250
local ordlnancaa, feet upstream ollhe
which, II adopted by Vlllega ol Pomeroy
a local community, corporate llmHI
will govern future 'Elevation In leal
conllructlan within (NGVD)
the flaodploln areo, Exlatlng/Modllled

Service
Country, Dance &amp;
RockMuslc

740-742-n09
Reasonable Rates
All Occasions

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows• Room
Additions • Roonng

'

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING
VINYliiPUCEMEIT WillOWS
·AIIYIIZEIIIII.UM88·

COMMElCIAl arol UliDENTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• FREE INSTALLATION
• FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
0 FlJLLY WELDED
• SO YEAR WARRANTY

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

992-4119

1-800-291-5600

VIsit Our Showroom On Slate Houle 33
'Miles North Of Pomeroy, Ohlo,Al County Road 18

• No Dealers er Centractors Please

VIsa/ Maotertord
wv 11023477

Jeff Warner. Ins.
992-5479

&lt;=hAna f\iteh~n
Eat In &amp; Carry Out Restaurant

Ohio River:
Approximately 2
1111111 upatream of the
downatraom county
boundary
'Elevation In feet
(NOVD)
Exlallng/Modllled
'575, '578
AI the upalream
county boundary
'Eiavotlon In feat
(NGVD)
Exllllng/Modllled
on Ita own, or *803, *802
purauant to pallcleo Communltlta
eotabllahld by ather Affected: Meigs

River
'Eievtllon In teet
(NGVD)
· Exlatlng/Modllled
None, •sao
Communlllea
Affected: Melga
County ·
(Unincorporated
Araaa)
Approximately 1.1
mllea u~tream of the
confluenca with Ohio
River
*Elevation In feat
(NGVD)
.Exlsdng/Modllled

(Unlncorpcreted
Araaa), Vlllagee of
Middleport, Pomeroy,

C9mmunltle1
Affected: Melga
County

Ra c I n e ,

(Unincorporated

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

m1 , . . . required by
IICtlon 80.3 of the
program reguletlona,
IN lhl minimum lhll
era raqulrad. They
ahould not be
oonatrued to mean
thl community muat
chllnge any exlallng
ordlnano•• that era
more atrlngent In
tllelr floodplain
management
requirement•. The
community may at
any lima enact
atrlcler raqulremento

Federal, State, or County

regional ontlllaa,
Thill propoaed
modified IIIVIIIOnl
will aloo be uaad to
calculato
the

and

Syracuee.

None, •510

Areea)
~

I'

~d.~ 1i

•t.tt~

97 Beech St.

IHdNn ofGI age~.

for,.,.........
.. . .
992-5827

LOcotec:lln F'or1'li.a J.

cal

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

FtlANkLY, ~'M IN NO/lf
Of A COI,Ofi.IN6 MOOO

24'120'

••

11·12 DIUBlE Will
PUSTIC
FIRITC8ME.

• •

'·

TOOAY.

.. '·,

~

•

-

l I

.::if lJ/167.112

•

BUFFET TO GO !Lunch •• 'UII
BUFFET TO GO !Dinner •• &amp;.991
Howardl.
Writesel

::==goo

••

•;:.;:,\-

10 .....
llllliia181twe
12 ....
41
1tll8llar

~~~ u:~'3

.,=.

-

v _,....
EM4
I 0

.._

do ling

22 Gape open
24 'llrlln'e

• t

long"

2111......

a

C.

12~,_

........

DOWN

31 ~ton

•

41 Pi ;r lin

23 Fora

aecond

mint
30 -T-'ellghl 5 ~

bulb
32 College
o11g.
33 AriiNr of
Iennie
37 Kitty-

41 W771 t

......

3 1111
- . ...

~

....

-••
=.,..· a:;: .,:=n.
- -.._
-

I Put a lid an
2 Runupa
4 ...

·:l:'""

01111 1 n G OppDIIng
21lohlm
44 ......
22Thl"tlanol1ln

41

5011wd

u-•

%7CIIInt

:t.....
211-...g

• lcapala)
7 tenor

c:Kyoto

55WII

31 Querloil

MOpen

35~
fMIIng

57 Mlnd-

34Go

I CRy-

3tPeek

tSurmwTY

40 Feline babY·

. -

53 IV plua II

21

mnd01111
reaollng

new insigh~ despite
the appucnt repetition. This deal is almost the same as yesterday's, East now
having the diamond
jack and South the
diamond 10. Assuming West leads his singleton diamond, how
can the defenders defeat the contr.tct?
South"s four-spade
overcall wouldn't win
by LUll Campoa .
universal support.
ColtbrltyCiphorCfYPIOGIO!"O.,.by ......
Probably an expert
pooplo, pat IUid _.u. Elllh
Olio clphorllando loi . . - .
panel would vote in
TO&lt;ay's clue: S equals G
favor of one spade."
IHMXKDPXDAR
CKX
' C I I
When you have the
VLXXIOCKKHVII
IN F X
highest-ranking suit,
you enjoy an advanQTA
NDIIAKTPXDAII,
TIIXETI
tage because you can
outbid the opponents
OX
AH
DXXU
ALXO
at the same level.
QNIILHW
HE
WTIILXU.'Double-dummy (all
cards face-up on the
IILXEENXIU
table), West can
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'It would be great to be the George
drown the contract by
Foreman ol tennla and come back Into Daviil Cup.' - · (Folly'
starting with any card
two-year·old) John McEnroe
except a trump. Dot
the lead that makes
defensive success most
difficult is the obvious
Reorro.nge letters of the
diamond two. If East
four scrombl«&lt; words betakes dummy's queen low to form four limple words.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

FIRST SERVED

-In flcm--

THE BORN LOSER

$288.88 PER 181111'
REIIURlY

'ToMA.~~ ~ ~lf".IJE 1...001~ '::IJMf. ""'I ...-WT M!TI.J:l P. Tll£lmN'R£ ... ..,.

::&gt;!""'··· [ WI\:) ~ r.... L.0:5fl{ ~

AA.VE. t.n:ANI3 TI:OOJ:&gt;T lro.l Tl'ftol

I

i
r-~~,~~~~~~~~1
~~--~~·L_

Shade River AG Servi.c e

...,

"Ahead In Service"
35537 St. Rt. 7 Nord!• Pomeroy, Oh 45720
_$Q

12% Economy Stack Flld •••...•••. $8.501100
12% Equine 12
(Formerly Western Pride) ....••.•.•. $5.00150
21% Huntera Pride Dog Food ....... $8.7.5150
Sweet Uck Deer Bloclta ...................... $6.75
Whole Com .................................. $5.251100
Crackad Com ............................... $8.251100

even
""u CioLV
a "'irror.
'.

r+
i

x~·~

us.

~~

~u c~"

"'

'
nose..

tr

i

____________·_ u

0

1'i

a I
s
appo I ,ng.

u ...

..

""'"-.

an

•
..

.

-

~--------------~·

e

c

t&gt;

WE AADA

600DTIME
AiAIN
TODAV
DIDN'T WE?

/

ausea .

PEANUTS

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per
month

IS TloiERE .
ANVTHIN6
VOU'D L.IKe

on

"'on.

L"-

rnov

- ur in9
i •
~

O

t1r
~h~tk1M

~l.e

.',

~

:

I

i

•i
•

LA!

.
~
.r

\,/)

~-

..

~

Sunset Home
Construction

I

with his ace and bsivcs .,
E B E ML M
West a diamond ruff, ~--:-.r-...:r.~r.;..-T-.;.;,r--l
1
the contract will
I 12 I I I ·
make if, as we saw
· ·
yesterday, South tack~ ,....--R-E
__M_E_G__
les trumps by cashing .
3
the ace and cont'inu- ~~
ing with the queen to

I .I I

pin West's jack.
The defcnden need
to win two spa d es,

MA't'BEWE

COULD TRV
SOMETNINi

one heart and one
diamond. To do this,
Em can duck trick
one. Or he can win
with the diamond ace

TO DO

and shift to a heart or
club. Or, the most interesting, he can return the diamond jack
at trick two -- but
only if West doesn't
ruffl How can the defenders work all that
out? I know not!

I TUESDAY

Bryan Reeves

I

.

I~--,rT-Tt-.....--T-1·
E L K- N L 1~:;;1 · While describing my stay at a
g 16 1 1
fabulous theme park, my young.I .
. .
eat niece exclaimed, "That's my
~==::!::::~::::;:~ favorte
1 pace
1
t h at I've----- ---

I

1

.

N0 V 5 U E

II"

I'. I§. I. I. I. . ·.._.
Compl••• tho ch•cklt Q•oltd'
V br tilling In lht mining wordo
you davalop from olap No. 3 below.

SCIIAM·LITS ANSWIRS
Towarcl- Flirt- Judge- Greasy- FATIGUES
"I said attention!" the sergeant yelled to the recruit "I
am at attention, sir:· the recruit answered, "but my FA·
TIGUES aren't."

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

Wcdnesdny, Nov. 7, 20111
Many opportunih-:5 will be
opened up to you in the yc.u
.1lu:ad tim could prove ludc.y
for you both m personal and
career maucn~. Your optimjsm

\\\,ill help .you &lt;;;.pit.tlizc on
th~.·m.

.•

SCORPIO. (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -~ Hold ~ood thoughts
throu~othour tht&gt; tby ,

rl'gardlcss
of what dcwlops. Your pusi·
tive think.inK ('ould b•: equally
as pcrtiru.•ut to YOll r succc~s
t(.)day a~ your kuowlcJgc and
know-how arc. Scorpio, tn·at
yoursl'lf ro a birthtby ~ifl.
!;t:'n d for your Anro-GraJ'h
prcdictiom fur the. year 3hca.d
by mitiling S2 and SASE to
Astro-Guph. C/0 thi5 m•ws-

paper. 1'.0. Uox 167, Wil:kliff&lt;, OH 44092 -0 167. lle
sure to st:'lte your zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J.
0£'c . 21) -- Someone you'll
be dosdy associa ted with to day wilj t11m out to be extremely lucky for you. She or
he is on a rull ami you'll be
ab le to sh&lt;trt' in your pal's
good f&lt;)rtune.

C APRICORN (Dec. 22J;ln. I 9} -· Some kil1d of an

alli:wce which m:~y have been
c~ t:'lblished t(u ouc )Hirposc

'I
'

:'.:t ••

umn tries to otTer

(7MI)

middleport, OH

(lD'xlO' 610'x20')

aL-

11
11 'l'alnl '-1 10 II Mt WI,
-won ... •
llnlolt
17 llllfllh
., UlNA . .

Df•5er'FMt

Qpea~nc t.t:

_,.._,.

lightenment (sometimes known as educat.i on). Today's col-

TIN

740-985-3831

confluence with Ohio

Thlaa alavallona,
together with _the
naadpl•n

J,l hour CCft

Cellular

Btltrtnetd Elevation

17A(a).

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

" q.

.... ,._

I

to 1 lliiiOI

II,._..!....._

14a....tor M ' -

t AII.J
611: .. l

""' J'IMitil

~

tc.rtainmcnt and en-

I!

mile• upatream of

(NFIP).
DATES:
Tho period lor
oommant will be
ninety (80) daya
following lhl aacond
publicatiOn of theaa
propoaad rulao In 1
newapapar of locol
clrculllton.
SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION:
Tho
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency
glvea notice of the
propOIId
datarmlnlllana of
bllioa
flood
alavatlono,
In
acoordanca with
llctlon 110 of the
Flood
Dluatar
Protection Act of
tm (Pub. L. 113-234),
17 lilt. 180, which
lddld IICllon 1313
to lhl Nlllonal Flood
lnlurancl Act ol1111
(Title XIII of the
Houalng and Urban
Development Act of
!HI (Pub. L. 10·
441));42 u.s.c. 4001·
4121, end 44 CFR

CHILD
CMlE
SERVICE""

I

State Route 338
Fri. Nov. 2nd 10 6
' Elevation In feet
(NOYD)
Sat. ~Jo v 3rcl I 0·4 1066 2n.d Street • Mason, WV
ExlaUngiMadllled
(1000 rt from the bridge)
Door pr1Les
None, '593
Communltle~
Tel: (304) 773-5800
Refreshments
Allected:
Melga
County
Rt. 124 ffiinersuille, OH
(Unincorporated
Hours: Sun - Thur llam- 10 pm
740-992-4559
Arne)
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am- llpm
SUgercamp Run:
www thr cou ntrvcandlftshop.t om
Jual upatream of
State Route124
'Elevation In feat
0 C/""
I
(NGVD)
14.99 1DINNER 16.99 :
LUNCH
ExllllngiModllled
I
I
None, '801
1
•
I
1:30am-2:00pm
5:00pm-7:30pm :
Communlllel
I
I
Affected: · Meigs
14 yrs &amp; under FREE ,4 yrs &amp; under FREE 1I
County.
5-8 yrs- '2.99 1 5-8 yrs- '3.99 ,
(Unincorporated
, 9·12yrs-'3.99 1 9-12yrs-14.99
Areas)
.,
1
I
I
Approximately D.8
----------------~---~'
mile upstream of
State Route 124
'Eiavatlon In feet
(NGVD)
1
Exlallng/Modllled
None, '601
·communities
Affected:
Mel go
County
(Unincorporated
Areea)
Indian Run:
Juat upetreem of
Roofing • Home
Slota Route 124
Approximately D.9
Maintenancemile upatream ol
State Route124
Gutters- Down
'Elevation In teet
Spout
(NGVD)
Exlatlng/Modllled
Free Estimates
None, '8(!2
Communities
949·1405
Affected:
Meigs
591·5011
County
(Unincorporated
Aroel)
'Elevation In teet
(NGVD)
Pub!lc Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
ExlatlngiModllled
None, -&amp;02
Meigs
County Hall, 320 East Meln · VIllage or Syracuao
Communltlea
Courthouse,
100 East Street,· Pomeroy,
Allected:
Meigs
Second
Street. Ohio.
· County
Mapa evallabla ot
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Send comments to the Syracuse VIllage
(Unincorporated
The Honorable John Hall , 2581 Third
Arua)
Vlll11ge ot Middleport Blaettnar, Mayor of Street, Syracu'ae,
the
VIllage of Ohio.
'National Geodetic
Maps available lor Pomeroy, 320 East
Vertical Datum
Send commenll to
Inspection at the Main Street, Pomeroy, The Honorable Larry
Middleport VIllage Ohlo457B9.
ADDRESSES:
Lavender, Mayor . of
Hall, 237 Race Street,
Melg1 County
the
Vlllag• of
Mlddllport, Ohio.
VIllage of Racine
(UnlncarporaiDd
Syracuu, 2581 third
Send commants to
Area e)
P.O. Box 281,
Maps available at Street,
Mapo available lor The.Hanorable Sandv
Syracuse,
. Ohio
Inspection at the lannar•lll. Mavor ol tho Racine Vlllege 45779.
the
VIllage
or
Hall,
405
Main
Street,
Melga
County
For
further
Courthouse, 100 Fasl Middleport, 237 Race Raclna, Ohio.
Information please
Street,
Middleport,
Send comments to contact the Map
Second ·Street,
Ohio 45760.
The Honorable J . Aaalatence Center
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Scott Hill, Mayor of toll free at:
Send comments to
the VIllage of Racine, 1-877-FEMA-MAP (1Mr. Jell Thorton, · VIllage of Pomeroy
P.O. Box 375, Racine, 877·3311-2827)
Prealdent of the
Mopt available at Ohla45771.
Malga Countv Board
(11) 6, 13, 2001
the Pomeroy VIllage
of Commlaalonera,

lneurance Program

Advertise
in fhls space
for $25 per
month

$321.00 PER JOINT

Hill's Self
Storage

Communlllal
Affected:
Malga
County
(Unincorporated
Areas)
Unnemld Tributary
to Kerr Run:
Jull upstream of the
VIllage or Pomeroy
carporetallmlla
'Elevation In . feet
(NGVD)"
Exlllllng/Modlllld
None, '578,
Approxlmatetv 50
feet upatreem of the
Vlllega ol Pomeroy
CO'P9'ale limite
'Elevation In laat
(NGVD)
Exlatlng/Modllled
Nona, *579
Communities
Affected: Malge
County
(Unlncorporeted
Areas)
Unnamed Tributary
to Woll Run:
Approximately 750
IHt upotream of the
conlluence with Woll
Run
'Elevation In fall
(NOVO)
Exlltlng/Mcdlllld
None, '582
Approximately ~50
feet upstr11m of the
canlluence with Wall
Run
. 'Elevation In feet
(NGVD)
Exlatlng/Mcdllled
None, '582
Communltlel
Affected: Melga
County
(Unincorporated
Are10)
Raae Cruk:
Approximately 0.8
mile upatream of the

oommunlly
Ia
raqulrld to althar
adopt or ahow
evldanca of baing
alreedy In ollaot In
order to quellly or
1'9maln qualified lor
participation In lha
National
Flood

.

229.00*

740-992-7599

·J ohnellun:
Approximately 200
laet downetra-.n of All Makes Tractor &amp;
State
II o u te
Equipment Parts
331'Eievallan In tnt
(NGVD)
t'octory Authorized
ExlaUng/Madllled
Case-IH Parts
None, '587
Communi!...
Dealers
Affected:
Meigs
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
County
(Unincorporated
Coolville, OH 45723
Areoa)
Approxtmatolv 0.7
74D-887-G318
milo upatraem of
State Route 338
'Elevation In feet
(NGVD)
Exlallng/Mcdlflad
None, '587
Communltleo
Affected:
Meigs 29670 Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio
County
(Unlncorporatlld
45771
Areaa)
740-949-2217
Groundhog Creak:
~Juat upatroam of
State Route 338
'Eiavallon In laet
(NOVO)
Hours
EKiatlng/Modlfled
7:00AM - 8:00 PM
None, '593
Cammunltle•
Allactad:
Mel go
County
THE COUNTRY
(Unincorporated
CANDLE SHOP
Area•)
Approximately 1.7

.

8

None, '579

IIIIIIUrea that each

elevation

BUILDERS INC.

L·.

Roqflng • Gutters · Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

dlllrmlnlllane,
-ver, lmpoao no
reatrlctlon unl111
end until the local
community .
volunttirllv iodopta
IIOodplaln
.
ordinances In accord
wnh theae otovallona.
Evan If ordlnenctt
are adapted In
compliance with
Federal alandarda,
the
elevation•
praacrlbe how high
to build In the
llaodplaln and do not
prohibit
development. Thua,
thla action only
forma the baela tar
future local actlona. It
lmpoees no now
requirement·, alllaoll
It hel no economic
Impact.
LIIIIU
end
ownera of real
Rroparty In the
following
communlllel, are
ancouraeed to review
thl preliminary Flood
lneurance Studt"
and Flood lnaurance
Rata Mepa and to
eubmlt commanta to
the itpproprlete
community
rapraaentellvea 11
llatad
below.
Propo11d bale flood
alavallono along
II o o d
• o u rca 1
atudled In dolall are
1hown on the flood
prollleeln tho otudy.
Th 1
prop o a e d
modllled b.. o flood
elevation• are 11
followa:
SOy!Jlt of Flooding
end Lgqallpn of

l'llllftlllrMnt

The

Public Notice

Public Notice

BISSELL

,.

lll4

Harold Rosenberg,
an art critic and
.:author. wrote, uThc
purpose or education
is to keep a culture
from being drowned
in senseless repetitions, each of which
claims to offer a new
insight."
Obviously,
the
main aim of these columns is twofold: cn-

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

,

YOUNG'S

131U

A A Q II I I I I

2/Z71 m&amp;pd

P/8

•

Nodlt

••••

Pomeroy

Eagle$ BinGO 2171

-....

t I
6QJIIIJ

~.

II=.

.I:HtJ
t KQfl4
6 I tJ

•••• l

-

._,~· -~

·-.....

.....
. '"

UCIIOf •10~·- '*-.

:=tar

...........
•u...-

ALDI!Il

I'

cnuld tum out to benefit you
,in :motht'r :~.rca totl:ly :u well.
It'll prow to be a rewarding
partnenhip.
AQUARIUS G•n. 20-Feb:
19) -- Don't pomic if you get
m:uchcd in a tompetitivc dc vdopntem mc:lay a~ainst an
inclividu:~l whose tr.1ck rccnrc.l
is st1pcrior to fours. 1'hc odd:s
will be 111 your f.wo r.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
--Treat negative events today
as if they' re goin~ to turn
around in ytl ur t:wor. :1nd
thar's -exactly what will h.lppcn. A mon~. ph ilo sophical
outlook will be your key to
5\ICCl'!'..~.

ARIES (Mmh 21-April19)
-- No 111attcr how badly yo u
may have (3ilcd 1\t Sl,)tllcthing,
this i5 :a good day to try, try
aKain . If )'OU keep at it, before
this day is ovt.&gt;r, chance~ arc
you'U re.1lize great n •cccss.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- The good will you pro-

ject today will nrikc a responsive cmd wirh someone
you've had trouble with,
stimulating this pcrson to do
thin~ for you she o r he
wouldn't have done othcrwnc .

GEM I Nl (May 21-Jun&lt; 20)

-- Even if at ti~t you don't
think it'~ possible to corrl'ct a
mistake that got you into
some trouble, there will. be
ways to tum things around today. You've still got wh;u it

.. takes:""

·

CANCER Qunc 21-July
22} -- Let go of the li ttle
things today, and conccntr:ltc
on matten th:1t are large in
scope. Thar's where you'll realize your biggest mcccs~cs at
this time.
LEO

Uuly 23-Aug. 22) · -

You may not know of 1t at
this time, but so mcOtll' who
h:~s your hcst intl·re:;t~ at heart
may be doing somethwg for
you that you m•cd. Y uu could
lc:101 of it later in the d:ly.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S&lt;pt. 22)
-- Get invo\v.cd today with
people whom you nms1dcr
your fncnds, bec;m~~: you
could dt!rivc sumc.• benefits
thrm1gh them . Your cxpcct~­
tions and thein will bl' in
good hanuony ::.t rhi~ time.
LIIJRA (Sept . 2.1 -0ci. 23) - If you gwt: her enough tuuc
today, Lady Lu.:k wdl t'Cl lll&lt;'
through fo r you and help you
improve your lot in hfL•. Re maill o prinmti r. nu nutter
what happcm.

�•

'

Page Al~

The Daily Sentinel

••

•

"-•",,_;;.-'

~

2

3
8
5
7
4

2
1
..
8
5
7
3

8

8

,
12
18
15
9
10
13

12
13
19
,.
9
10
11

~

~

1

1. ....

2.-

I

Playoff games moved to Bengals' stadiu"1

l$oWI Championship Series
,...

~

I

~

1

3.0111ohoma
•- ~•

5. T -

~=
.. .,..,.....

. ---·St.

10, ~
11 . S1Inlofd
12.13.11rij1iam Yqung
14. Floridl St. . ..
15. Mllylond

1

......"' ........ -..

lc'ot*-

~

2.0
1.0
3.5
6.0
5.0
7.0
3.5
8.0
11.5
12.5
17.5
14.5
9.0
10.0
12.0

M
1

~

. 1.00

2.13

3.17
5.50
8.33
8.50
8.50
8.17
7.33
11.33
7.81
11 .17
,._33
16.50
13.67

U

•
23
72
18
6
&lt;0
25
48
37
45
2
1
22
1Q9
35
• 79
~

1

2

3
8

4
6

3
2

6
2

1
3

4
10

2
11

6
7

8
9

6
4

~3
2

. ~27

-~4

5
,
1
9
14

' 10
8
9
5
13

9
17
12
14
11
13
10

22

17

23

14

~4

3

4
12

s

10
15

15
13

~13

5
14
9
15
18
10
,

0.92
2.88
0.76
0.24
1.60
1.00
1.8ol
1.48
1.80
0.08
0.04
0.88
4.38
1.&lt;0
3.18
~

1

l
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
0
2
1

~

1

3.92
8.71
8.93
12.7&lt;
13.13
15.50
15.8ol
18.85
21.83
25.91
27.21
27.55
27.89
29.90
29.83

N

2
5

3
2

3

3
4

8
4

12
9
6
10
14
18
15

9
5
11
8
12
18
17
14

~18

10
11
1
12
14

13
15

~13

Tot.
2.82
5.51
7.83
12.74
13.113
14.80
15.84
17.55
~1 . 13

25.51
1!8.21
27.55
27.89

29.70
211.83

1

2
4

a

~

·1.3
.0.1
·1 .1
.0.0
.0.0
.0.7
.0.0
-1.1
.0.5
.0.4
-1.0
.0.0
.0.0
.0.2
' .0.0

io

~11-r

Poll A - - T h o - ol Tho • ...,.,..... Press . . - poll and USA Todoy-ESPN coaolles poll. Other&amp; r-.;ng vcteo are cal·
-lnorderi11Cr11vad.
.
COIIlp i1or A - - Tho o1 Andaroan &amp; Hester. Colley Malllx. Richard Billingsley, Kemetli Massey. David Rothman, Jeff
SOgortn, Sc:o_, lloword. and 11m Peter Wallo~ ranklngo. Tho axnputor"""""""' will be delormlnod by averag-

CINCINNATI (AP) - The four Division
I playoff teams from Cincinnati won't have to
travel to Dayton to play after all.
The Ohio High School Athletic Association has agreed to let St. Xavier play Princeton, and Colerain play Elder on Saturday in
Paul Brown Stadium.
"We want the games here - one game,
both games," said jeff Berding, Bengals director of sales and public affairs. "We initiated
the call in the first place."
Callers to radio sports talk shows had been
trashing the Bengals since the OHSAA last
week scheduled the games &gt;1t Welcome Stadiurn in Dayton. Callers assumed the Bengals
did not want rhe games in their !-year-old
stadium.
OHSAA Commissioner Clair Muscaro was
quoted inThe Cincinnati Enquirer on Monday as saying that the association had talked to
the Bengals about playing the games in Paul
Brown Stadium, "but the bid rhey submitted
was prohibitive."
The Ben gals swung into action Monday.
They put out releases saying they had. asked

last Thursday to have the games, and that th~
did not set the reported $90,000 cost of corytract services such as stadium clean-up.
•
"We didn't set the price," said Bengals p~ident Mike Brown. "It was set by the count~"
Hamilton Counry owns the stadium, wki.;h
can accommodate 28,388 people in the lowtr
bowl alone. Welcome Stadium's capaciry 3s
II ,000.
Berding noted that even if rhe OHS;t\1\ had ·
SIOO,OOO in eJ!penses, it could net $150,009,
based on $5 tickets times 25,000 fans a game
for two games, minus expenses. .
I
· The St. Xavier-Princeton game will beglh
at I p.m. One hour after that game is corn•
Pleted, Colerain-Elder will begin.
,.•
Tickets for the doubleheader are $10 tc, r
adults, S5 for students. Tickets will be sold &lt;~I
·the participating schools, and public sale ~f
tickets starts at the stadium at noon Satu~.
Colerain, St. Xavier and Elder are ranked 12-3 · in the state, respectively. All three are in
USA Today 's national Top 25: Colerain is N"J&gt;.
7, Elder No. 17 and St. Xavier No. 19.
.:.

'

Ing ... rarililngL Tho ~ and ... be ilaregarded.
lei" ot ilo - - Rlnll o1 -lllronglh _ , . . _,. o111er Divlllon ~A looms dMdad by 25. This ~ Is calculltod by
lho ~ rooarda ol ttio 1oam"a oppouent (88.8 porcont) and 1he cumulllivo W011IIo6s recordti ollhe team•a
.... - · · (33.3 poroonl) .
_
point for_, -'*&lt;ring lhe 111111800.
a...y Win C•-·•~- Tho qua1ty win ... ,... ,., wlft rowan110 vorylng dogroM teams thai defea1 owonents ranktd among
lio tap 15 In Ire-, 11onc1ngo. Tho boooo point oca1t ,.. Jrorn o high ol 1.5 polnll for a win over lhO 1&lt;ll&gt; ranked 1Nm to a
low of 0.1 foro W:tory """'lhe 15111-ronkod.BCS 1eam. Tho flnll BCS ~Widing~ will dotormlne flnll quallly win polniS. ff a team reg...,. o . - y - o _ , .... ttw&gt; onco during the ~~- quali1y win polntl will be awarded jus1 once. Ouallly win polnto
. . --Jrorn11i0 ........ ol
axnputor
and--

MarYs Tee Time ·Grill

n••rg
.__-One
1

•

poll-.

--rank

T. Glenn claims discrimination by NFL
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)Terry Glenn could soon be
adtling his name to yet another legal dispute.
..
The Patriots' wide receiver,
who has five arbitration hearings and a criminal case pending, was cleared on Monday to
sue rhe NFL on his charge
that the league failed to consider his chronic depression
when he was suspended four
games for violating its substance abuse policy.
In a charge filed wirh the
Equal Employment Opportuniry Commission in Buffalo,
rhe former Ohio State standout argued that he missed a
drug test because of the ailment, which is a fed~rally recognized disabiliry under the
Americans with Disabilities
Act.
Glenn's agent, James Gould,
said he received a "right to
sue"letter from the EEOC on
Monday. The EEOC procedure is designed to discourage
only the most frivolous lawsuits and does not take sides in
rhe case; it merely acknowledges that rhe claim, if true,
could be a violation of the law.
Glenn has 90 days to decide
whether to file a lawsuit,
Gould said.
"We're trying to work it out
with both the NFL and the
Patriots and find a peaceful
resolution," he said. "If we sue,
I am certain we would pre-

vail."
Neither the NFL nor the
Patriots would comment on
rhe complaint.
"1 can't speak_ to those
issues. As much as I, would like
to give you a lot of comments," ·New England coach
Bill Belichick said, cracking a

BCS

from Pip AS
which teams play in the
BCS' national tide game in
the Rose Bowl on Jan. 3. The
rankings are based on a formula that incorporates the AP
media and coaches' polls,
eight computers, strength of
schedule, won-lost record and
bonus points for big wins.
Miami, ranked No. I in the
AP media poll and the. USA
Today/ESPN coaches poll,
jumped past
Oklahoma
thanks to the computers and a
stronger schedule, which also
takes into account results of
·teams Miami has already
played.
For example, Miami defeated Florida State earlier this
season, and the Seminoles (62) improved to 14th in the
BCS standings after beating
Clemson on Saturday.
Tennessee (6-1) moved up
three places to fourth, with
Texas. (8--1) fifth. Rounding
out the BCS' top 10 were
Oregon (8-1), Florida (7-1),
Washington (7-1), Washington State (S-1) and Michigan

FLY YOU FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

TUesdiiJ. Nov. .a..r a. 110l

smile, "I just can't."
Asked how Glenn's depression was involved in the
missed drug test, Gould
deferred to Gleim's lawyer,
Dane Butswinkas. Butswinkas
did not return a call seeking
comment.
Glenn has missed the last
two games with a hamstring
injury. He was not in the
Patriots' locker room on
Monday during the 40 min~
utes it was open to reporters,
though he was in the Foxboro
Statlium parking lot beforehand, wearing sweat pants and
a sweat shirt and sitting in a
securiry cart talking on a cell
phone.
The ADA, enacted in 1990,
is best known in sports as the
basis for Casey Martin's suecessful campaign to ride a cart
on• rhe professional golf tour.
More generally, it bans job discrimination against the disabled and requires employen
to offer reasonable accommodations to disabled people
who are otherwise qualified to
perform a job.
Glenn had been in the
NFI:s substance abuse program for rhree years after an
initial positive test. He never
failed a subsequent test, but
earlier this year he was
unavailable for a random test
- a violation of the policy and he was suspended four
games on Aug. 3.
Because of the suspension,
the team withheld most of
Glenn's $9 million signing
bonus. On rhe day the suspension was announced, Glenn
left the team without permis. sion and Belichick suspended
him for the remainder of the
season.
(6-2).
BYU (9-0), the only other
major college unbeaten team,
made the rankings for the fint
time, in 13th place.
Nebraska's
2.62-point
breakdown was: 2 points for
poll average, 1 point for computer average, 0. 92 for
strength of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a 1.3bonus point cjeduction for
beating Oklahoma on Oct.
27.
The bonus award - new
this season - is based on a
sliding scale from 1.5 · points
for beating a. first-place team
down to .1 for a win over the
15th-place team. The bonus is
awarded after the other elements .are calculated.
Miami (6.61) had I point
for poll average, 2.83 for
computer average, 2.88 for
strengrh of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a .!point deduction for beating
Florida State.
·
Oklahoma (7.83) had 3.5
for poll average, 3.67 for
computer average, 0. 76 for
strength of schedule, I for
won-loss record and a 1.1point' deduction for beating
Texas op Oct. 6.

That suspension was overturned by an arbitrator, and
Glenn returned in Week 5 to
catch seven passes for II 0
yards and a touchdown against
the San Diego Chargers. Five
other grievances - including
one seeking the return of his
signing bonus remain
unresolved.
"The (first) suspension was
kind of like the bad tl)!e that
gives off the poisonous fruit,"
Gould said. "Everything followed from it."
Glenn also faces charges of
assault and battery and intimidating a wimess in connection
with a dispute May 15 with
rhe mother of his son.

--- Course-- -·· arRrverside Golf
RR 1Box 35 Mason, WV 25260
''We're Not Just For Golfers Anymore"
Open to the public
Dally Lunch Specials Monday-Friday

,_,.,.._andla••'"'"""
.25~ 'Jth.,;,Nitj/J
-'1 'kla"'ec1 1 ny

Nitj/J
:;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- J

._..,_,.._,:ties
\\latch Monday NiQht
FootbaU on the Bill
··
Screen Food • Drinlul •
· ~·
Dra.wlnas a.t the end or the
"
tat quarter and Ha.U-time

Call today for canyout, banquet reservations, or more Information
304 773-5354
800 261·3031

Fall is one of the most wonderful times of the year in Alabama. So come
the crisp days and postcard sunsets on the RoBERT TRENT JONES
GoLF TRAIL. With eight sites and
378 championship holes across the
state, there's one' within driving
range of.wherever you ore.
And, now is ogreat time to plan
a trip to Alabama to s:ee the
new" GRAND HOTEL, port of the
Resort Division of the Trail. Now
undergoing a $30 million ·
renovation, The Grand Hotel is
becoming even grander.
Coli today for tee times
and hotel reservations. Fall is
a Grand time on the Trail.
11

•

.Tenn. man...

rs
•
•
Winners 1n
local races

testifies in
-Byrd case

Testimony claims
Byrd was passed
out in van
DAYTON (AP) - A
Tennessee man testified
that a man se)"ltenced to die
for the slaying of a clerk
during a 1983 robbery
near Cincinnati was passed
out in a van during a second robbery that same
night.
Public defenders called
Bobby . Pottinger Jr. of
Nashville to the stand
Tuesday,
an
apparent
attempt to show it was
unlikely John W Byrd Jr.
stabbed Monte Tewksbury
during the first robbery at
a convenience store.
In earlier appeals, the
Ohio Supreme Court
found that Byrd being the
knife-wielding robber in
the second robbery supported testimony that he
fatally stabbed Tewksbury.
However, Pottinger contradicted himself several
times Tuesday,
The testimony caine
during the second day of
hearings before U.S. Magistrate Michael Merz. The
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals delayed Byrd's
execution in Sei?tember to
allow for a h~aiing on his
claim of innocence.
If Merz recommends to
the appeals court that
Byrd's claim is legitimate
·and the panel agrees, Byrd
will be able to ~k the
judges to overturn his
death sentence.
U.S.
Also
Tuesday.
Supreme Court :Justice
john Paul Stevens denied
· the state's request to stop
tpe hearing while the full
court decides whether to
hear another request to
clarifY rhe magistrate's role.
· Stevens said allowing the
hearing to proceed would
have no effect on the status
of clarification request.
Pottinger, who testified
from Nashville via video. conferencing, also testified
it was he - not Byrd who along with John
Brewer robbed the second
convenience store. But
Pottinger at first testified
that Brewer had a knife
during the robbery, then
said he never saw a knife.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

oters cast ballots in township, village and
school
board
races throughout Meigs County on Tuesday. Unofficial results from
the Meigs Counry Board of
Elections show that 5,745 of
Meigs Counry's 14,402 registered voters reported to the
polls, just under 40 percent.
Ruth Spaun and Larry
Wehrung, pictured here,
were among the voters at the
Pomeroy 2 precinct, which
votes at the Pomeroy Firehouse.
As they approached the

BY PAM WIWAMION
OVP NEWS STAFF

NEW HAVEN, WVa.
"We want this factory and
we're here to convince you of
that, and to allay any fears that
you may have that we're not
serious,'' Highlander Core
Industries Ltd. Industrial
Researcher Leighton Wolf said
at a town meeting Thes9&gt;y.
"We're here to spend a lot of
money to get this plant back
running and employ people
and have this plant running on
a long term basis."
Wolf, along with co-owner
of Highlander Ariel Ness,
spoke to more than 100 people garhered at the Bend Area
Communiry Center.
Highlander is just one of
two companies left in the bid~
ding process for the American
Alloys plant that closed its

Hlp: lOs
L-: JOS

Sentinel
2 Sections - 12 P11p1

Hotel
Clear

voting booths, voters in all
precincts were advised to
check their ballots for
"hanging chads," a term
which would have drawn
quizzical looks a year ago,
but drew understanding
smiles Tuesday; as residents
remembered the historic
2000 presidential election
and its suspenseful consequences. There was less
drama in this year's Meigs
County elections, and fu11
results are reported in today's
Sentinel.

Brian J. Reed photos

Bid8er hopes Alloys ,f~mt
will serve as foothol in U.S.

Todlly's

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

POMEROY- Township
trustees, village officials and
school board members were
.elected Tuesd~y in each of
Me1gs Counry s 27 precmcts.
Two trustees were elected
in each of the counry's 12
townships.
Unofficial results in township trustee races (with
write-in candidates noted)
were: Bedford: R.obert F.
Hawk,211, Ronald L.Wood,
140; Chester: Alan Holter,
383, Blair Windon, 335;
Columbia, DON CHEADLE 185 GRANVILLE C.
'
'
.
STOUT, 192, CurtiS A.
Johnson , 77; Lebanon:
KEITH E. FITCH, 164,
JOHN R. KRIDER, 94;
Lawrence H. Hayman, 41,
Charles R. Lawrence, 87,
Timothy D. Lawrence, 50, .
Lawrence Johnston, 12 (WI),
Woodrow Richard, 8 (WI);
Letart: David Graham, 77,
Bob Morris, 90; Olive:
WILLIAM R. OSBORNE,

Election Day

Plelln-Byrd,Al

'

Hometown News,.per

MelpCounty's

AS

Wolf explained that if they
acquire the plant they will
begin a ramping up period
immediately, taking from six
months to a year to bring the
plant back up to 'operational
capaciry and spending at least
$2.5 million in the process.
Or1ce the plant is operating,
Wolf said they would b'e looking at hiring at least 150 people, if not more, at an average
gross salary of$20 an hour and
operating all three furnaces
with the possible addition of a
fourth.
"The union has the right to
be a bargaining agent in this
bankruptcy. That's a given."
Wolf explained. "Under bankruptcy ·law in the United
States and under your union
contract, it says if you sell the

Pleese see Allur. Al

U

1

a 15 ury: . war
·
Durst, 888, B1U Spaun, 743;
Sc1p10: ROBERT BUTCHER 144 (WI) PHILIP L.
En;"IN SR ' 93 K .
"-w
.,
•
evm
Payne, 84, Robert L. Jewell,
72,BobbyW.Vance,57,Crug
Hanmng, 17; Sutton: KENNETH R. GUINTHER,
537, ROY f. VANMETER,
545: Grover Salser Jr., 427.
V1llage and school board
races were dec1ded as fol~
PluM- Vol-. AJ

Bond.issue~

Carleton levy
fail at polls
BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Meigs
County voters in Tuesday's
election defeated the Carleton School/ Meigs Industries' 1.6-miU continuing
levy and the Meigs Local
School District's 2.67-mill
bond issue, and passed the
Meigs Counry Tuberculosis
Clinic's half-mill replacement
levy.
Carleton Sthool
/Meigs Industries levy
For a seventh time, ·voters
rejected an additional levy for
Carleton
School/Meigs
industries.
The levy went down by an
unofficial vote count of

3,541 to 1,941. Approval
would have allowed the
Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities to expand
the current level of services at
the faciliry, move ahead with
capital construction projects,
and replace two buses and
two vans.
"It's a very disappointing
loss, however, the voters have
made their decision,'' said
Steve Beha, executive director
of
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries.
"The MR/DD Board will
meet next week to go over
the results and consider all of
our options," he said. "We are

Pleeu -

Polls. Al

Local 4-H .teens selected for state team

Details, A3

Lotteries

POMEROY - Meigs County has
t;,_,o new 4- H ambassadors.
Theresa Baker and Ashley Hager
were officially inducted into the State
4- H ambassador program during the
2001 Ohio 4-H Youth Expo at Ohio
State University in Columbus.
As a part of their service as ambas sadors, they will begin a year of active
service promoting 4- H and working

OHIO

B2-4 Pk:k 3: 6-7-6; Pk:k 4: S.Q-4-4
BS llucMve 5:7-17-27-30-31

A4 W.VA.
Dally 3: 5-2-3 Dollly 4:7-7-7-6
Cash
25: 17·19-2(}-22-24-25
B1.3.6

A3
A3

doors in january 2000, leaving
about 125 people unemployed.
The other Spanish based
company is Ferro Atlantica.
Today, a judge will hear final
bids and agreements before
making a decision as early as
next week as to which of the
companies will be the new
owner.
Highlander held the town
meeting to educate the communiry about the company
and their intentions to operate
the faciliry.
"We are definitely going to
invest here in the people and
definitely going to invest in
the faciliry," Ness said. "I can't
say definitely how many years,
but we have taw materials for
over 100 years. For su.re, we're
talking at least a decade.
Hopefully many decades."

211, JACKIE L. WEST·
FALL, 168, Brian Keith Bailey, 129, Garry Bowman, Jr.,
87, Michael Haynun, 127,
Jerry L. Larkins, 122, Paul
Life, 31 (WI), William Ayres,
3 (WI); Orange: John A ..
Rankin 122 Roger Ritchie
160; R~tland: CHARLES
BARRETT JR
358
STEVE LAMBERT J34•
Charles Williamson' 185:
Salem: H. DANNIE 'LAM~
BERT 138 CECIL STACY.
12 9 {iii) , J~ckL. Ervin, 111:
K .hH
46
es1t . b ypes, E;d
d W

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

with elected county officials.
Baker and Hager have also been
selected to represent teens from across
the state on the State 4- H Working
with Teens Team.
The state;.,ide group includes Ohio
4-H professionals, volunteer; , teens
and program partners who will be
working over the next three years to
strengthen and expand Ohio 4-H teen

programs.
Theresa is the· daughter of Rick
Baker and Sherrie Baker of Reedsville
and has been an active member in the
Meigs Counry Shepherds 4-H Club
. for eight years. Her major project
interesJs include lambs, first aid, physical fitness, dothmg apd food and was
also ~ Fash10n Board member.
P I - IH THill, Al

Look lor the Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Department at the

7th Annual Health Fair ancl Flu Shot Clinic
sponsored by the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc., and

POINT CLEAR

C?jllo!nd ~tetA\arrtott.
800.949.4444
www. rtjgolf. com

the HMC Community Health and Wellness Department

Friday, November 9
9 • 11· AM and 1 • 3 PM
Melg• Multlpurpo18 Senior Center In Pomeroy

RESORT &amp;
GOLF CLUB

800.544.9933

'

www. marriotgrand. com

.

Public invited! For more information, call
-.
992·2161
'I

••

•

•·

'·

.

,.

I'
,i\

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="458">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9903">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24658">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24657">
              <text>November 6, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1024">
      <name>holsinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="278">
      <name>reynolds</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
