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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Duke's Jason
choice as a
BY THE ASSOCIATf PRESS

I

Jason Williams who led
Duke to the national championship last season, was a unanimous selection Tuesday to The
Associated Press preseason AllAmerica team, the first player
on every ballot since I 996.
· The junior guard was joined
on the team by Stanford's
Casey Jacobsen, like Williams a
returning first-team All-American; Missouri's Kareem Rush;
Frank Williams of Illinois; and
Kentucky's Tayshaun Prince,
the lone senior selected.
Jason Williams was on each
of the 72 ballots from the
national media panel that
selects the weekly college basketball poll, becoming the first
unanimous preseason pick
since Tim Duncan of Wake
Forest five years ago.
Williams averaged 21.6
points last season - the first
Blue Devil to lead the Atlantic
Coast Conference in scoring
since Danny Ferry in I 989 3.3 rebounds and 6.1 assists.
He was the only player to rank
jn the lop 20 nationaUy in
scoring (15th) and assists
(19th) as Duke won its third
national championship.
The top-ranked Blue Devils

J. Williams

Ru1h

iams a unanimous
All-America

lost national player of the year NBA draft to return for his
Shane Battier and fifth-year senior season with the Wildforward Nate James, but cats. The 6-9 . ·ince belied his
Williams, who averaged 25.7 thin frame by p~aying at power
points in the NCAA tourna- forward last season and wound
ment, will lead the way as they up a second-team All-Ameritry to become the first team to can after averaging 16.9 points
repeat since Duke did it in and 6.5 rebounds.
1992.
Jacobsen is going to draw a
Rush, the preseason Big 12
lot of attention ti-om opposing
player of the year, Wolf' the sec- defenses this season as the only
ond-leading vote-getter with
returning starter for the Cardi47, one more than Prince and
nal. The 6-6 swingman avertwo more than Jacobsen.
aged 18.1 points in a balanced
The 6-foot-6 Rush led the
offense as he became Stanford's
conference in scoring last seafirst-ever All-American. He'll
son with a 21.1 average. His
run at national postseason look for his shot more and
honors was hurt when he that's not a bad thing considermissed seven games with a ing he hit 5 I percent from the
thumb injury on. his sh~oting field, including 47 percent
from 3-point range.
Qeft) hand.
Frank Williams returns to
Rush, an honorable -mention pick last season, sc~red 29 the Fighting lllini after being
points in the Tigers' 94-81 loss selected Dig Ten player of the
to Duke in the second round year and a third-team AllAmerican. The 6-3 guard, who
of the NCAA tournament.
"Even though people are averaged 14.9 points, 3.7
talking about him the way rebounds and 4.4 assists,
they are now, he should still get already has said he will enter
better. And he can," Missouri the NBA draft after this seacoach Quin Snyder said. son. last season ended on a
"There is a lot more there."
sour note when he went 3Prince, the Southeastern for- 15 from the field in the
Conference player of the year, 87-81 loss to Arizona in the
withdrew his name from the regional final.

Prince

F. Williams

Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2001

Cowher to Brown:-Take out your .
frustrations out at Heinz Field ~=
PITTSBURGH (AP)
exhibition games when the
The way Pittsburgh Steelers weather was much different,
coach Bill Cowher sees it, before going wilie right on
kicking a footbaU is like riding three of his four misses.
a bicycle. And Kris Brown
Still, Cowher doesn't think
needs to get back on his bike an unfamiliarity with the
as soon as possible.
, wind currents that blow off
Brown, who had on~ of the the city's three rivers through
worst days ever by a Steelers Heinz Field's open end had
kicker in missing four of five any effect on Brown's misses.
field goal attempts in a 13-10 I') Three Rivers Stadium was
loss Sunday to Baltimore, got a enclosed on all sides and,
vote of confidence Tuesday while it could be windy, the
ti-om his coach - and sorrie grandstands cut down some of
advice.
the wind. At Heinz, the wind
Cowher suggested that, after blows directly into the stadipractice ends Wednesday, um through the open end
Brown should go back to where the scoreboard sits.
Heinz Field and kick at the
Brown, who kicked a
windy end of the · stadium career-long 55-yarder earlier
where he missed two critical this season and was 11-of-13
kicks in the fourth quarter.
until Sunday, was told by
"He should go over there in Cowher that his role has not
an empty stadium, about the changed despite the misses.
same time (that he kicked
"If we get the ball to their
Sunday), and get back on the 30, that's a minimum of three
bike, so to speak," Cowher points in my mind," Cowher
said Tuesday. "He should go said. "Outside that, you have
back over there, at the 'same to take into consideration the
spot on the field, and go lcick." conditions, the scenario of the
Unlike Three Rivers Stadi- game and the wind. But, to
urn, wbere the Steelers were
based from 1970-99 and also
practiced, they now have a
practice facility and offices on
the opposite side of town and
don't work out in Heinz
Field.
As a result, Brown had only
two games of Heinz Field
experience, plus a couple of

me, ti-om 48 yards and in, that's
three points with our guy."
Cowher, a former spe~al
learns coach, joked that, 'l
coached those guys for tWo
years, and that's why I moved
on."
"It's a lonely position, and it
really require~ mentally
tough, focused individual."
Cowher said. "You can sim~
late everything you want, bjit
there's nothi11g like ~ing Ql!l
there by yourself. You can simulate it all you want, but Y!:&gt;~
still have to do it."
&lt;
Wide receiver Hines W:i~
said Brown was distraugtl~
when he reported Monda!
Numerous teammates putted
him aside and told Browi!
they weren't blaming him fi&gt;t
their first loss in six week.&lt;. .:.
"His head was down a little
bit, but you can't fault Kri.;!'
Ward 'said. "lie's going :to
make some big kicks for us.:So
let's get ready, for Cleveland.
He's feeling pretty bad now,
but what's t~e sense of hatg;
ing on it?"
•

THE NEW GOAT - Stealers
kicker Kris Jackson reacts
after missing a potential
game-tying field goal against
the Jaguars Sunday. (AP)

EASTERN.VOLLEYBALL BANQUET

~~Ctl!d Hl!~tt Church B~z~~t
Thursday, Nov. 8 starting at 4:30

'
SPECIAL AWARDS - Special Awards at the Eastem
volleyball
banquet went to, front, 1-r, Whitney Karr, Best Spiking Percentage; Janet Calaway, Best Serving Percentage and Most Points
Scored; Tammy Bissell, Best Spiking Percentage; Back-Kass
Lodwick, Best Defensive Player; Tiffany Spencer, Don Jackson
Sportsmanship Award; Janet Ridenour and Tiffany Hensley,
Most Improved; and Ashley Hager, Coach's Award.
SENIOR AWARDS - Senior awards were presented to these
nine girts at the Eastem volleyball banquet. Pictured are,
front, 1-r, Ashley Hager, Janet Ridenour, and Tiffany Hensley.
Back-Amanda Yeager, Tiffany Spencer, Whitney Karr, Tiffany
Bissell, and Janet Calaway.
·

Mulberry Ave.

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

'
MMN: e.eawtrJ 8"'-1 l1hc,.,.
- .11-

.llawtmle,raU.. Mt»'serJ ,..atalo.d &amp; ,.a.,
sn ••-. &amp;1. 4ku, 40/J 1. leu..t

a division of Peoples Insurance

is moving!

Peoples Bank has strengthened our insurance
division through our partnership with the
LaQibert 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.

HOLIDAY TREASURES

Novem

.0o p.m.
'{bursday,
6
from 4:30 to .

FALL CRAFT SHOW

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

NOVEMBER 10, 2001

740-992-6661 or 740-992-6641

2312 Jackson Ave, Point Pleasant, WV
Sponsored by;
Mason County Community Educational Outreach ServicE
Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club

Melp County's

SMOKING

Peoples

Bank

Hometown

News,.,.,

dosing
aimed at
saving costs

MOVING ALONG

BAN
Bowling
Green
approves
regulation

Trnssell
anticipates
making next
two payrolls

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BOWLING GREENResidents in Bowling
Green on Tuesday passed
Ohio's first ballot initiative
regulating smoking in public places,
The northwest Ohio
town approved a Clean
Indoor Air Act with a vote
of 62 to 38 percent.
The ordinance prohibits
smoking in most indoor
places, including aU retail
stores, dining areas and
waiting areas. Bars are
exempt from the regulation and smoking in
restaurants will be permitted in special ventilated
rooms.
The baUot initiative was
begun by an asthmatic resident who formed a citizens' coalition and collected 1,200 signatures to get
the issue on the baUot.
"Seventy-five percent of
Bowling Green residents
are non-smokers who want
to protect their health,"
Andrew Schuman said.
"They don't want to
breathe
second"hand
· smoke. This ordinance
allows families, the elderly,
employees and asthina sufferers to enjo}' clean indoor
air when they're in public."
The ordinance ·will go
into effect five days after
the Wood County Bo;ml of
Elections certifies . the
results of the election. It
provi&lt;les for a graduated
system of penalties.
Meig&lt; County's smoking
ban, approved in September, goes into effect on
Nov. 12, although the
Lucas County ban after
which it was modeled has
been halted by a court
injunction, until the Ohio
Supreme Court rules on its
constitutionality.
A bill which would
require approval from
elected officials before any
smoking ban could be
implemented was passed in
the House ofRepresentatiaves last week, and awaits
action from Gov. Bob Taft,
who has pledged to veto it.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SETllNd BEAMS - Work on the second phase of the Ravenswood Connector project continues as .worl\ers prepare to set beams and finish earth moving efforts. When completed, theconnectorwHl be a two-lane, limited access highway on a four-lane right of way, connecting U.S.
33 with the Ritchie Bridge and 1-77 in Ravenswood, W.Va. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Construction moving on schedule
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~~~~~~~· IVE POINTS

Bridge
beams
are
b ·
et~g
_set,
dramage ptpts
iqstalled and exit ramps '
are taking shape as work
on Phase II of the
Ravenswood Connector
continues on
Proiect
J
schedule.
Greg
Huffman,
Ohio
Department ofTransportation
(ODOT) project engineer for
Phase II, said Wednesday

WASHINGTON (AP) -Welfareto-work programs that combine job
searching with education may offer the
best approach for keeping people off
the roDs and earning more, a government-funded study says.
The study followed 40,000 single
parents for five years ·starting in the
early 1990s as they moved from welfare to work in six states. The Department of Health and Human Services
issued a summary of the finding&lt; on
Wedne&amp;day, several weeks before it
plans to release a report.
Some welfare recipients were randomly assigned to programs that

'lbcllly'l

Sentinel
Calendar
Classifieds
Corriics
· Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

progress on the second of
three segments of highway
geared toward connecting
U.S. 33 with the Ritchie
Bridge · and
I-77
at
Ravenswood is "moving along
as scheduled" and no significant problems have been
detected.
"We're currently setting
beams for the westbound
bridge that spans State Route
7 and are preparing to set
beams for the eastbound
bridge," said Huflinan.
"More than half of our dirt
work is finished and twothirds of drainage pipe has
been laid," he added. "Progress

is moving along quite nicely
and there is nothing unusual
to report."
Huffman
add~d
that
motorists should expect possible delays today and Friday
because of the setting of
bridge beams over top Ohio
7. Work on the beams is
expected tQ · take place
between noon and 5:30 p.m.
Phase II will encompass
about four miles of highway
beginning at the end of7 near
Five Points and ending .20
miles east of a Sutton Township road in the Morning.tar
area: The scheduled date for

PIMM-PhiMII,AJ

a

H!p:SII
Low:th
Details, A3

Lotteries

AS

OHIO
82-4 Pk:k :S: 3-7·2; Pk:k4: 9-7·3-9

85

M

Suf*Lollll: 12·16-23-26-34-35
ICid!r. 9-2-6-7·5-9

A3 W.VA.

81,3-4 l'oouerbal: 2-4-6-17·25 (31)

A3

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishin' Co.

POMEROY Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell
hopes that dosing the Meigs
County jail, at least temporarily, can help aUeviate a budget
crisis within his department.
Trussell said Wednesday he
expects to make all but one
payroll between now and
year's end, by closing the jail
and by transferring aU remaining money into his payroll
line.
his
Trussell
provided
employees with two-week
layoff notices on Monday, following a letter from Meig&lt;
County commissioners advising him that he would be
unable to meet the last three
payrolls of the year.
· Trussell and his deputies
have maintained that the sheriff's budget was under-appropriated by more than
$110,000 at the beginning of
the year, but Trussell hopes
that the closing of the jail an~
the layoffS of jail staff might
help him make payroll
through the year.
"I dosed the jail temporarily on· Friday as a budgetary
measure," Trussell
said
Wednesday."! don't know if it

will be permanent. Last year,
Sheriff James Soulsby spent
$723,000 on the operation of
his department. 1bis year, the
commissioners appropriated
$610,000."
"I hope that I can save costs
by laying off the part-time jail
cook and eliminating other
expenses related to operating
the local jail at least through
.
..
1h1s year.
Trussell's full-time jail cook
is now on paid vacation, he
said, while the jail is closed.
The jail housed 10 prisoners, · mostly misdemeanor
offenders serving short Sentences or awaiting co_u rt
appearan&lt;&gt;es. .
The county has a contract
with Noble County commissioners for reserved beds in
their jail, and 10 prisoners are
now being housed there, in
the smaU Middleport jail, Gallia .County and other area
facilities.

,.,... _ ..U.AJ

helps people off welfare

Mixing.education and

, 2s.cti1RI-12 .....

.
0 n House on
Come to our pe
ber 8th

Saturday, 10 am • 5 pm
POINT PLEASANT MIDDLE SCHOOL

Pomeroy

Dinner · Booths • Games· Baked Goods

Lambert
Insurance Agency

HANDMADE

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

"This might be the most
t1fective program as opposed
to one Joiused solely on
employment search or solely
on pushing people into
education. "
Goyle HemiKon, INd author of the ltudy
conducted by lhl M111power Demonelnllon
R-chCorp.
emphasized immediate job searching,
interviewing skills and resume writing.
Others entered programs that provided
longer term skills and education such

as help getting a high school diploma.
Some were placed in a mixed program
or none at all.
·
Without a program, about threequarters of the welfare recipients
found jobs and more than halfleft welfare during the five years, the study
found.
The 11 programs studied did little to
improve on this rate of new employment, but nearly all h'elped people get
jobs faster and earn more from work
over time.
During the five years, the increase in
earning&lt; over those not in the programs r~nged ti-om about $1,500 in

Grand Rapids, Mich., to about $2,500
in Atlanta.
A program in Portland, Ore., had the
best results: Those in the program kept
their jobs longer and earned about
$5,000 more for a total five-year
income of about $26,000.
The Portland progr.un mixed shortterm education with job searching.
Counselors also encouraged job seekers to wait for good jobs rather than · ·
taking the first offer.
"This might be the most effective
program as opposed to one focused

....... -

Welfare, AJ

Magistrate erupts over non-disclosure of affidavits
happened .
Byrd, 37, faces electrocution in the
1983 slaying of Cincinnati-area convenience store clerk Monte Tewksbury. A
federal appeals court postponed Byrd's
execution in September to aUow for an
investigation of his claims of innocence
by U.S.. Magistrate Michael Merz.
. John Brewer, who was with Byrd at the
store, confessed to the slaying in affidavits
in 1989 and in January. Byrd's attorneys

. DAYTON (AI') -A federal magistrate
exploded in anger Wednesday when he
learned that a man· who says he committed the crime for which another man sits
on death row had given two more affi.·
davits that were never disclosed.
The ·disclosure sent the hearing on the
merits of John W Byrd Jr.'s innocence
claim in a new direction. The-magistrate
called Ohio Public Defender David
Bodiker to the sta~d to explain what

didn't disclose the 1989 document until
this year.
During Wednesday's hearing, attorney
Lawrence Greger, who is representing .
Bodiker, told Merz there are two more
affidavits from llrewer that were never
disclosed.
That prompted Merz to take aim at
Bodiker.

, ..... -

'~yr~~, AJ

National Radiologic
TeChnology
Is ~Nov••• 4 • 1·0
Hdzer Medical C~ter salutes our
Radiology Department during
this special week:
I

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.bolzer.org

•

�By the Bend

Thursday, Nov. 8, 2001

PageAl

_The_o_any_Se_ntin_ei_ _ _

Clear, cool going into weekend

'•1.2011

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Benifits·jor ex-POWs lighten widow~ burden
DEAR ABBY: When you printed my letter about the thousands of
former prisoners of war who had
never gone to the Department of
Veterans AlUirs about benefits av:UIable to them, you touched many
li..,.. It has enabled many former
POWs and/ or their spouses or widows to finally receive benefits due
ADVICE
them. We AmeriJ;an Ex-Prisoners of
War have been extra-busy because of
1945.
.
what yPU did.
She told me: "I have four sisters.
Our work is :ill volunteer. The We all agree that this is the most
rewards come when we get letters excited our mother has been in a
like the one I'm enclosing from very long time. Words do not ·ade"Mrs. K." in Oklahoma.
quately express our gratitude.''
Mrs. K.'s daughter talked with me
Abby, if you would consider
about her father, who died IS years including Mrs. K.'s letter in your colago. It turns out I was in the same umn, it would no doubt reach more
German POW camps as her father. World War II and Korean War POWs
His best buddy and I could write who need a nudge. FRED
nearly identical letters ,about our CAMPBELL, SAN ANGELO,
,
furced march in blizzard conditions TEXAS
P.S. Another nice thing you did was
in nonhern Germany in January

.Dear
Abby

i
I

to forward a letter to me from a Ms.
Moore in New York. She had seen
my letter in your column and wrote
to ask for help in locating someone
who might have known her father, a
bombardier/navigator who flew flying missions out of Assam, India.
(Naturally, the plane's name was "My
Assam Dragon.") Ms. Moore never
knew her father. He died on his last
mission in World War II. I put her in
touch with the China-Burma-India
Association.
She said in her letter that her father
was pan of a Moore family in Harrison County, Ky., going ~ck 200
years. Well, my mother was a Moore
- and HER family came out of
Harrison County, Ky., same era. So
it's possible .you have connected
some kinfolks.
DEAR FRED: It's letters like
yours that make writing this column
a thrill. I'm gmtified to know that we

Chrisbnas projects

RACINE - Christmas projects and events were planned
. when the Racine American Legion Auxiliary Unit 602 met
Thursday evening at the Legion hall.
Plans were made for taking donations for a drawing on a
Christmas basket to fund a candidate to Buckeye Girls State in
the spring. The drawing will be held on Dec. 2 at the Racine
·
Legion dinner.
.
It was also voted to support the Christmas in the Park celebmtion with a monetary gift, and to honor three local vetemns
at the November meeting.
The annual Christmas pany was set for Dec. 7 at the Legion
h.U at 6 p.m. Cost of the meal will be $6. A SS gift exchange
will be held. Reservations should be given to Mary Ball,
Kathryn Hart or Julia Campbell by Nov. 23.
Past president, Mary Ball, installed officers for the coming
year. They are Julia Campbell, president; Lois Sterrett, vice pres. ident; Nancy Russell, secretary; Kay Graham, treasurer; and
Joann Wilford, chaplain.
Martha Lou Beegle conducted the dmping of the charter
ceremony in memory of Addie Norris, Shirley Abels and Carrie Roush. She was assisted by Naomi Stobart and Jeanette
Lawrence.
The program for die evening was given by Gral)am and Wilford.
Refreshments were served by Mary Ball and Opal Diddle to
Kay Graham, Libby Wilford, Thelma Walton, Edna Knopp, Julia
Campbell, Bernice Theiss, Lois Sterrett, Naomi Stobart, Martha
Lou Beegle, Jeanette Lawrence and Joann Wilford.

•
':
•:

AEP-43.75
Arch Coal- 22.09
Akzo-42.60
AmTeci&gt;SBC- 38.04
Ashland Inc. - 41.91
AT&amp;T -16.03
Bank One- 35.79
BLI-8.20
BobEvans-19.62
Bo&lt;gWamer - 44.46
Champion - 2.43

Charming Shops 4.75

Clly Holding- 9.35
Col-14.50
DG-14.73
OuPon1- 43.21

Pepatco - 48.87
Pramjer -

8.50

Rockwell-14

Rocky Boots- 5.73
RD Shafl- 50.68

46.94

Kmart-8.75
Kroger- 24.25
Landi End-42.15
ltd. -12.59
NSC-17.B8
Oak Hill Financial- 18
OVB-24
BBT-34.()1
Peoples - 18.38

•

Sears-43.63
Shonay's - .28
Wai-Mart- 53.63
Wendy's- 27.99
Worthington 13.68
Daily atoc:k raparta are
lhe 11 p.m. closing
quotea at 1he previous
day'stransactiona, provided by Sml1h Pan·
nera at Advest Inc. at
Gallipolis.

We want your photos!

-

&gt;

#2111

:·

..

'

Daily Sentinel
Holiday Gift Guide

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, regular staled meet·
lng, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Elec·
tion of officers, refreshments.

Buy Now and
Beat the Rush!
Friday and
Saturday Only!

.

...·

•

,.•'

::,.
••

•,

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Board of Public Affairs,
rescheduled. meeting, 1 p.m.
Friday.

Wilbur H. Rawley Sr.
POMEROY -Wilbur H. Rowley Sr., 86, of Pomeroy, died
on Tuesday, November 6, 2001, ajSt.Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg. West Virginia.
He was born on August I, 1915, in Jackson County, West Virginia, son of the late Edgar C. Rowley and Coral Balser Rowley.
He was an elder and a Sunday School teacher at the Bmdbury Church of Christ and the Bradford Church of Christ. He
was a self-employed carpenter.
Surviving are his ~fe of 66 years, Matilda Hunt Rowley of
Pomeroy; two daughters and a son-in-law, Laura Harrison of
Pom~roy. and Leah "Katie" and Jim Parker. Venice, floridaa
son and daughter-in-law, Wilbur H. and Charlotte Rowley of
Ironton; seven grandchildren, Johnnie Harrison, Danny Harrison, Steve Parker, Cathy Petersen; Michael Rowley, Angela
Kettell and CW4 Rod Rowley; 15 great gmndchildren and five
great-great grandchildren; a sister, Leah Paxton of
Ravenswood, West Virginia; and several nieces and nepb~.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by three brothers, Clay, Everett and Grovner Rowley.
Services will be held on Friday, November 9, 2001, at 2 p.m.
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Doug Shamblin officiating: Burial will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may c.U at the funeral home on Thursday, November
8, 2001, from 6-8 p.m.

tion and employment programs worked, but the job
search progmrns 'put people to
work faster and cost the govfiomPapA1
ernment less money than the
solely on employment search education approach.
or solely on pushing people
"We did not see the
into education:· said Gayle expected payoff with the
Hamilton, lead author of the group for whom hopes were
study conducted by the Man- highest;' Hamilton said.
power
. Demonstration
While people in the proResearch Corp.
gmms earned more from jobs,
The 1996 welfare law must their total income remained
be renewed next year, and the about the same as the amount
Bush administration is formu- of welfare they received
lating its position on how it · declined, Hamilton said.
should be changed. HHS offiThe programs studied were
cials said this latest study in Adanta; Columbus, Ohio;
could
influence
those Detroit; Grand Rapids; Oklachanges.
homa City; Portland; and
Hamilton said both educa- Rivenide, Calif.

WeHare

Byrd

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

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error In a story, calllha naworoom
at (740) 992·21541.

Newa Departmenta
The main number II 992-2158.
Department extentlana are:
Gentrll 11111nager
Ext. 12
-·

Ext.t3

or

Ext. 14
Other service•

AdYIIrtlalng

Ext 3

,.• '

ClrculaHon

Ext. 4

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Clanlfled Ada

Ext. 5

,.'

..••
.
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new:::~:n~!~~com
On the Wtb

The D811y Sentinel • P•ae A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS
County Fair Board Monday
night.
Karen Werry, incumbent,
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service was re-elected. Others elected
answered five calls for asssi- were Jim Watson, who had
tance on Wednesday. Units previously served on the
responded as follows:
board, Wes Karr, David Bun
CENTRAL DISPATCH and Brenda Johnson.
10:01 a.m., · Ohio 124,
The new board members
Claudia Springer, Pleasant fill vacancies created by the
Valley Hospital;
death of Roger Spencer, the
12:20 p.m., Blake Road, moving out of state by
Jack Gorrelle, St. Joseph's Leonard Koenig, and Bill
Hospital;
Buckley, who did not run for
4:15 p.m., Long Run, another term.
Karen More, treated;
The fair board consists of
10:02
p.m.,
Apple IS members, with five being
Grove/Dorcas Road, Betty elected each year for threeSpawn, rreated.
year terms. On Nov. 19, the
RACINE
board will meet to elect offi6:28 a.m., Rowe Road,
cers for 2002.
brush fire, Don Johnson property, no injuries.

EMS lUllS

Changes
meeting
POMEROY - The regular meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education
scheduled for Tuesday has
been changed to Nov. 20,
Superintendent
William
Buckley announced today.

To meet
CHESTER Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will bold their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Chester Town
Hall.

Parade set
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon Christmas Pamde will
be held on Dec. I at 6 p.m.
Information is available by
contacting -992-4093.

Plan camival
Brewer has never changed
his story that he was the
killer, be added.
•
Prosecutors were disturbed
at the revelation.
"What other documents are
there that they are also not
turning over?" asked James
Canepa, representing the
state.
Merz will recommend to
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals whether Byrd's claim
is legitimate. If he rules for
Byrd ~nd the panel agrees,
Byrd will be able to ask the
judges to ovenurn his death
sentence.
Byrd bas said he .has chosen .
to be electrocuted to illustrate
the brutality of capi.tal punishment. He would be the
first inmate ·t o die in Ohio's
electric chair in 38 years.1\vo
men have died by lethal injection since Ohio reinstated the
death penalty in 1981.

The Daily Sentinel

,.

•

Obituaries

Transporting those prisoners
will continue to be a burden
on the depanment, Trussell
said, and has been a co,n tributing factor to the high payroll
expenses. •
"With our workload in the
'
community. it's necessary to
staff an extra penon almost
' every day to take care of these deputies work each shift fur
ttansports:'Trussell said. "I can't safety reasons. A dispatcher
take a road deputy off the job works each shift, and other
fnwnPipA1
:: to transport prisoners to Noble dep~ties are scheduled to all~
• County or anywhere else.''
for time off fo~ ~thers.
Merz c.Ued it "reprehensiDeputies have agreed to take
~e co~lonen .expect ble" for the public defender's
• 'hour-for-hour compensation to discuss the matter at .thelt office "to sit on the fact that
• )' time instead of overtime pay, . ri:gular m~eting today.
there are two more affidavits
• : Trussell said, which has helped
"Ours IS the only depan- of John Brewer and let him
eliminate costs, and all fund$ ment in the county which testify from this witness stand
have been transferred into the works 24 hours a day, seven that there are only two afti.
- payroll fund in order to make days a week," Trussell said. "It's " davits and then not correct
:
payroll until year's end.
imponant that they remember that until be's long gone."
Bodiker tur11ed over one of
•' • "I have kept all the bills up that.''
•
the affidavits, which was taken
June 15, 2000, and said his
'
'
Ritchie Bridge to the inter- .office was stiU looking for the
'
section of 0 hio 124 and ·· other one. He said the afli.
'
County Road 35 (Portland), davit he turned over is identi,.
and Phase III, which recently cal to the one Brewer made in
from PapAl
sold
to Kokosing Construc- 1989 and that the other affi'•
davit was simply a draft of the
• completiqn of the project's tion in Columbus.
• second segment is November
Once constructed, Phase III January one.
will complete the segment
2003.
· He was unaware of the
Cost of the Phase II seg- from Morningstar to Portland other two affidavits until this
••
ment will total $21.3 million. Road.
week, Bodiker said .
The ~ost of the 16-mile
Meanwhile, work continues
on the first phase of the pro- connector project in its
ject, involving six miles of entirety has been estimated at
"Super II" highway from the $75 million.

~·&amp;u.,~

Wednesday, November 21

to date;' Trussell said. "I have
kept the bills paid, but there
may be some bills. left over at
the end of the year that can't
be paid, so that we can keep
deputies on the job.''
"There may not be any
money to pay for gasoline, car
maintenance or other expenses
until this matter is resolved.''
negotiated
contract
A
between the commissionen
and deputies requires that two

fNIIIPIIpA1

Your Business
in the

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
F~tllowshlp at God's NET In
Pomeroy, 6 to t 0:30p.m. Friday
and saturday. Nutritional meals,
non-violent video games, com·
puler 'programs, board games,
pool fables, for teens.

Federal Mogul- 1
USB-18.33
Gannett- 85.68
General Electric 39.35 .
GKNLY-4.20
Hartay Davldaon

Jail

Kick off
the
HolidaY Seaso

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs·
day at the hall. Dinner at 6:30
p.m.

Breakfast

planned
RACINE - A pancake
breakfast will be held Saturday by Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church at the Sut·
ton Building on Bashan
Road. Donations 'will be
accepted.

Youth lock-in
RACINE - Racine United Methodist Church will
hold a youth lock-in on Friday, 8 p.m. to 8 a.ni.. Saturday.
Youth from seventh through
12th grades are invited to
attend. There will be refreshments, speakers, games and
worship all with a "Survivor"
theme.

Clothing
available
RACINE - God's Clothing Parish in R~cine, an
annex of the Cooperative
Parish Clothing Shop, now
has winter clothing available.
The shop is open Tuesday
through Friday from 11 a.m ·
to 2 p.m.

POMEROY Pomeroy
Elementary School PTO will
sponsor its fall festival, "Spirit
ofAmerica" on Saturday with
games, door prizes, cake walks
and other activities.
Dining area will be open at
5:30 p.m., with games begin- .
ning at 6:30 p.m. All events ··. MIDDLEPORT Midwill conclude at 8 P:m·
dleport's
Rejoicing Life '
·
Church, 500 N. Second Ave.,
invites all vetemrts. their families and friends to join the
POMEROY- A marriage
congregation in saluting and
license has been issued in
honoring veterans.
Meigl County Probate Coun
There will be a patriotic
to Arlie J. Moss Jr., 18,Athens,
musical program performed
and Sonya Rae Powell, 18,
by University of Rio Gmnde's
Shade.
Grande Chorale. A free luncheon will follow. For more
informaton, call 992-6249.

salute planned

Issued license

File divorce

POMEROY - A divorce
action has been filed in Meigs
County Probate Court to
Ginger
Stake, Pomeroy,
against Ted R. Stake, ~ong
Bottom.
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed by
Christopher R. Stout, Syracuse, and Jessica M. Stout,
Long llottom.

Fair board
members
. elected

(USPS 21M110)
Ohio Yllloy Publllhlng CO.

Publllhed OYery afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 111 COurt St.,

-ted

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Socond·ctass
pootagt pold II Pomeroy.
...,_, The
Press and
tht Ohio
Aaloeiatlon.
Poltm11t1r.
addreu torree·
tionlto Tilt Doily Sentinel, 111 COUrt.

POMEROY - Five members were elected for threeyear terms on the Meigs

Newrg::r

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

Sub1crlptlon rates
ly-ormororrouto

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52

LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
sing, Friday, 7 p.m., Faith Full
Gospel Churcil. Long Bonom.
Praise Team and CORE Drama
Team from ·Bethel Worship Cen·
ter will be there. Fellowship will

2

1

... lla•

follow.

JlLcqu.i.sitions 1in.e Jewefrg
Subscribe today.

LOCAL STOCKS

winners announced

Community C1Iend1r 11
publlli*lll 1 " " eervloeto
non-profit groupe wlehlng to
1nnounae mHilng• 1nd 1peo
alii lftnta. The a1Iend1r 11
nat d11Ign1d to promot1
ulu or fund.f'IIIHI'I of 1ny
type. Item• 11'1 printed only
11 ·~ permlll 1nd 01nnot
blgu1r1nlHd to 'Ill printed 1
IJIICiflc number of clly1.
·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

t

Highs 51 to 56. Northwest
wind 5 to to mph.
Friday nigbt... Mosdy clear.
Lows near 30. Light and variable wind.
Extended fol'KIIt:
Saturday... Mosdy sunny.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Saturday
night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
cloudy.
Sunday... Partly
Highs in the lower 60s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the upper 50s.
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs near 60.
Wednesday... Pardy cloudy.
Lows 37 to 42 and highs in
the lower 60s.

Grange proJect

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs SWCC
annuli planning meeting, fol·
lowed by board meeting, Thurs·
day, 10 a.m., Pomeroy Library.

-·

were able to help Mrs. K. from Okla- ments. One of the most puzzling wa•
homa. I am frequendy told tlut bouts of swollen feet. Mr. CarnpbeU
when I print a letter, the wrirer hears recognized that as a possible sympfrom long-lost friends and acquain- tom of ischemic heart disease.
Fortunately, my husband kep1
tances. But in the case of Ms. Moore,
good
records, and we bad an autopI'd say 200 yl:ars is a record. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for sy done when he died. Those record!
printing Fred Campbell's letter. My enabled the VA to decide favorabl)
on my behalf and determined tha1
husband has been deceased since
after all these years that my husband'•
1986. He was a B-17 pilot during
death was, in fact, service-related.
World War II and was shot down
The additional benefits I am now
May 4, 1944. He was a p1isoner -of receiving have helped relieve
war until April 29, 1945, and the tremendous financial worries fm
conditions were deplorable.
me.
After reading the letter from Mr.
Had I not seen your column, I
Campbell, my daughter contacted would not have pursued a review o1
American Ex-Prisoners of War for my husband's records. You have promore specific information about the vided a wonderful service to yom
legislative changes regarding former readers. Thank you again. - MRS.
POWs and special benefits available. K., WIDOW OF AN AMERICAN
Mr. Campbell followed up my EX-POW
daughter's inquiry person.Uy.
· Dear Abby is wrillen by Paulint
Foq·ears before his death, my husPhillips and daughter }tanne Phillips.
band suffered from puzzling ail-

ALBANY -Tiffany and Steven Vance of Albany announce Johnson, 44 years, in November were noted. Members reportthe birth of a son, Steven· Vance II, on Nov. 2 at O'Bieness ed. recuperating from surgery were Kim Romine and Hilber
·
Quivey.
Memorial Hospital, Athens ..
Fact sheets on ladybug beetles were banded out by Rosalie
Johnson.
•
The December meeting will be preceded by a potluck at
6:30 p.m. Roy and Opal Grueser will provide turkey, dressing
and gravy.
POMEROY - Results of the county Grange judging were
The meeting concluded with an in-house auction. Bill Radannounced at a recent meeting of the Hemlock Grange.
ford was auctiopeer.
The first place winners in the various categories were Rosalie Story, stuffed toy, decorated straw hat, Quilts Class C, and
photogmphy promoting grangers, family portraits, animals and
other creatures, and holiday happenings.
The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few
Other winners were Rosalie Johnson, counted cross-stitch;
guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are in focus
Nina Craddock, plastic canvas; Sara Coulombs, quilts Class A;
and
have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; hqwever,
and Helen Quivery, quilts, Class B.
please
Include a print along with 111e negative.
A Thanksgiving· potluck dinner was held preceding the
meeting conducted by Story. It was announced that the Gmnge
still has cookbooks for sale at $12 each.
Roy Grueser legislative chairman reported on the new Society Security web site primarily for women.
Benefit applications are available online, he said. He also gave
~E49tu
a humorous reading on cows.
.
The Grange voted to sen&lt;;! a donation to help defray cost of
legislative reports to each Grange. The officers conference was .
2()()1
announced fo~ Nov. 2 at 6:30 p.m. at Star Grange. Member1 ,
were reminded to take canned goods to · the December meeting.
It was noted that the Quitters had purchased a new

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•
•

Sunny but cool conditions
woO be the rule on Friday as
high pressllJZ builds into the
region, the National Weather
Service said. Highs locally
will be in the 50s.
Temperatures will moderate
into the weekend, forecasten
said, with highs Saturday and
Sunday mosdy in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be . at
5:22, and sunrise on Friday is
at 7:09a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain showers. Lows in the lower 40s.
Northwest wind 5 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday... Mostly
sunny.
"·

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
microwave and swe.e per for the Grange. The anni:versaries of
Birlh announced
Margaret and Harley Hanning, 62 years; and Rosaloe and Fred

Auxiliary discusses

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

1lVO LOCATIONS:

.

• Free PorldnQ
• Free6iftWrappln9

, crJP./IEA SECOND AND GRAPE. GAWPOUS #6-21f1
91 MIU S77t£ET. MIDDLEPORT fi11.Q10

•up.rit]_lf;,Kipllll Sm!i&lt;t

liltlll•lll ~;_

Advertising Dead.line
Monday, November 19th
12:00 Noon
Call Debbie or Dave
at 992-2155

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the moment tlltJ it. down.

OH • 992-3671

992-2156

•

'

•'

�......,...

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

~unMiay,Nov.8,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

n .lldllf, "!'I I •• I. 2001

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

-

.. .

.: The Daily Sentinel

I

&gt;

111 Court ... Pomeroy, Ohio
740 112-21111• Fu: 1112-2117

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Char1u W. Oowy
Pub!....

et.rlll• tto.lllch
G11'1e1'111M8Mger

R.Shnn~

Manqtno Editor
DieM Kay Hill
Conll'oller

\
I
ij
...:.J
f.J
ij
,
J
j _/_,. :.) .:.J..r J .J

NATIONAL VIEW

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

Res

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,

Tite ~lish adminiKration deserves
; crellit for UnilateWly slashing long-term
intereSt rates last week by ending sales of
30-year government bonds. The resulting
drop in mortgage rates could provide the
average homeowner who refinances with
a monthly savings of$150 to $200.
Rival Republican and Democratic
stimulus plans would iljject far more
money into .the economy- $70 billion
to $100 billion· but the Internal Rev,COLUMNIST
enue Service has announced that it cannot process hew rebate checks this year,
no matter how fast Congress moves.
Moreover, the tax holiday has bipartiCongress ought to answer President san backing, with Op-Ed pieces written
Bush's call to pass a Jll3jor recession- on its behalf by advocates as disparate as
fighting stimulus package by the end of Alan Blinder, a former Clinton administhe month (and he should start negotiat- tration economic adviser, and Grover
ing on it right away), bur that wouldn't Norquist, president of the conservative
have an immediate elfect. If Congress Americans for T"'C Reform.
c~'t move, quickly on a full economic- . The Washington "P05t's Gienn Kessler
samulus p,;ackage, at least 1t o':'ght to uncovered some potential problems with
approve a .na~o~ sales tax hohday-. the proposal. Some state legislatures
this week 1f posstble - to boost ChriSt· woil!d have to· reconvene to authorize
mas retail sales.
the holiday, and there'd be auditing
. Bmh should endo~ the sales tax hoi- expenses. But sales tax holidays have
•day. to.o. Under a. bill co-sponsored by brought out crowds of shoppers in the
Sens. Olymp1a Snowe, R-Maine, and seven states where they've been tried.
Patty Murray,ul,Dj-~ashb., the feder;J gohvBesides, some stimulus beats no sti~uernrnent wo
re1m urse states 10r t e
'd 1 h..
di
sal · 1us. And, at the moment, Congress seems
b
gh
··
.
gli
revenue they 05e v 1 suspen ng es
~s for 10 days during the holiday sea- to e .cau t up m partlsan wran ng
son, which begins Nov. 23. The cost that will.at least delay passage of a broadwould be about $6.5 billion. Rep. Lind- gauge stimulus bill until late this month
sey Graham, R-S.C., introduced a similar at the ~arliest. Senate Democrats seem
measure in the House and noted that in deternuned to pass a spmulus package
some states the Savings on a new car almost as heavily skewed to lowermight amount to $1,000 or more.
mcome ~':'ps as the House Repubhcan
With consumer confidence falling to measure ." lllted toward nch people and
its lowest level since February 1994, and corporallons.
.
.
ChrislltJ!IS sales p05sibly heading for their
The Democrats evtdently believe they
first year-to-year drop since 1953, the have to take a hard line in negotiations
sales tax holiday would seem to be the with the House and with Bush, who'
fastest way .to pump money into the insists that the ~timulus limit "spending"
economy · - without diminishing the even when it comes to a boost in unemlong-term federal budget surplus.
ploymenr benefits and help for the job-

Morton
Kondrncke

Today is Thuflday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 2001. There are
·
53 days left in the year.
Tollay's Highlight in History:
Olj Nov. 8, .1 923, Adolf Hitler launched his first attempt at
; seizing power with a failed coup in Munich, Germany, the
j "Beer-Hall Putsch."
On this date:
In 1837, Mount Holyoke Seminary, a college exclusively for
women, opened in South Hadley, Mas~.
·
' · In 1889, Montana became the 41st state.
In 1932, New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated incumbent Herbert Hoover for the presidency.
In 1933, President Roosevelt created the Civil Works
Administration, designed to create jobs for more than four mil. :lion unemployed.
· In 1942, Operation "Torch" began during World War II"as .: ·1,: ,; •
·u.s. and Britis? forces landed in f~th NotthAil:i.!a. : ··• .: , ! ~~:/li-'~~
In 1950, durmg the Korean conflict, the lint jet-plane battle
· '·

· .

.t:·::.' · ,· ,

:~~~~~r.:,u~~~:.orce Lt. RusseliJ. Brown shot down a

·'

; In 1960, Massachusetts Sen. John R Kennedy defeated Vice
:President Richard M. Nixon for the presidency.
· In 1966, Ronald Reagan was elected governor of California.
In 1988, Vice President George Bmh won the presidential
·election, defeating Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.
: In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans winning
:a majority in the Senate while at the same time gaining con;trol of the House for the firs1 time in 40 yean.
: Ten yean ago: The European Community and Canada
:imposed economic sanctions on Yugoslavia in an attempt to
stop the Balkan civil war.
. Five years ago: Three days after his re-election, President
;Clinton ~d a~ news conference that there '!~ways are· lot
:Of hard feelin " after elections, but he urged Republicans to
:put aside poli ally charged investigations and work wit~.lrim
;to balance the dget and enact campa•gn finance reforlq_'t'l
: One year ago: A statewide recount began in Florida; ~blch
emerged as critical in deciding the winner of the 2000 presidential election. Early that day, Vice President AI Gore tele;phoned Texas Gov. George W. Bush to concede, but called back
•about an hout later to retract his concession. Waco special
:counsel John C. Danforth released his final report absolving the
·government of wrongdoing in the 1993. siege at the Branch
'Davidian compound in Texas.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Norman Lloyd is 87. Actress June
Havoc is 85.Jazz singer Chris Connor is 74. Singer Patti Page
.is 74. CBS newsman Morley Safer is 70. Singer Boni:Lie Bram:Jett is 57. Singer Bonnie Raitt is 52. TV personality Mary Hart
:is SO. Playboy Enterprises chairman and chief executive
:Christie Heffler is 49.ActressAlfreWoodard is 48. Singer-song:writer Rickie Lee' Jones is 47. Singer-actbr Leif Garrett is 40.
Actress Courmey Thorne-Smith is 34. Actress Parker P05ey is
·33. Rock musician Jimmy Chaney is 32. Actress Roxana Zal is
:32. Singer Diana King is 31. Actress Tara Reid is 26.

"a

•

•

.

.

a.

~l.abonW,4.069

156.440 mph, Nov. 10, 2000 oiUICit;;;;;u;Q;;IIAH;a,;;;DoNA:OJ;;IO;;;N;;Al.;;-

s-

WJtat: Pennzoll400

WheN: Homestead-Miarnl

!Fla.)
11.5-mile
track), 267 laps/400.5 miles
When: Green f1ai drops at
12:30 p.m., Sunday
.,._ ,..._ wtnner: Tony
Stewart

t&gt;ock quallfylnc

Jack Sfneue. M10
Ted ~. 3,5tl

JIIOn l'.eller, 4,531

Joe Ruttr'IIBII, 3,570

Onllll Blftle. 4,344

Elton ~. 3,925

Tl'a\Oil Kwapll, 3,S47
Scon. Rigs, 3.526

Too, Raines, 3,854

Ricky Hendrictl, 3,412
RlckCrewford,3,320 .

,Kennr w.n-. 3,711

·

~Gibbs.

2.
3.
4.
1.

Tony Stowort
Ricky Rlldd
Dolo Jornll
D. Eomhonlt Jr.

8 . (8) Storllnl Morlln
7. (7) loll Burton
8. (8) Kevin Horvlck
9. (9) Ruoty Wolloco

was secood and fourth in

those two races.

Your1Um
1111111 ,_ Olr lllllen

llur NA.sc,AR Th i~ Wed:;
Often in • Win~ton Cup race,
when one car i~ tryina to pau
l!nolhef, it Will bump il from behind
tu facililalt that pau. Benny Par·
Jons will
~He pul the old

2.875

-•&gt;'·

chmmc bumputn him .-

Whll WI.\ the l~t year Winslon
lwd chrome bumpeB?

lkllton,Ky.
o'l q11ld: lkuu:t u/ ,.., #Nidtl-('ar
rolltcrlmt ttiiJ loll 11 ~·u.1 lilt lutt

1970• .

X
Dear NASC.... R Thll Week.
Aa a lonatlme follow er of

NASC...,R. II dlsnarbl and hum me
to sa: dlat a talemed and very Clip&amp;·
hie driver;. out of the Winston Cup
pkture. MOfllll Shepherd b one of
lhe pealt:st driven In Wimlon Cup
history. and with the correct sponsor, would definitely be 1 top- 10

and Kevin Har~ck, who won
the Busch Grand National

ROCKINGHAM, N.C.- The
Pop Secret 400 had a
certain timeliness to driver
Joe Nemecnek ana owner

championship.
The dual celebration
featured two distinct styles.
wallace atop;:&gt;ed his caret
the atert-flnlsh une of North
Carolina Speedwl!lly, climbed
fro.m his car Md waved and
bowed to tne fens.
Harvlck left what lOOked
llka ·cnlnet• character• on
tht track with hlttlrtl ,

1'111 team at tht end of the
yttr, and ht'l won only

twloo In 2eo Wlnoton Cup
atlrta . Wlnnlnt hat btln 1
rtrt accomp!lahmtnt ror tht
3a-y.ar-old Ntmtchlk, ao to
trtnllllt, It Wit 1bout 11

billl it lOti.
Mow DIJ Will It for Petree?
Pllti'H own a two Chevroltt
tt•ma·, 1nd ant of them th1 No. 33 that Ntmtohlk
drove to·vlotorr at North

Caro\lno SJ&gt;OOc!WIY - IICkl
tponaoral'tlp for 2002.
A.IIO lbOUIII bllll It lltl.

IUIOH
'

I

I~AIID

NATIONAL

ROCKINGHAM, N.C.- A lot

: w11 heppenln&amp;et the end of
i

SeturdJY'I Sam's Club 200,
which pleated only Kenny
Wallace, whO won the race,

contelllkr.
Give thi1 man 1 chance. He has
ahudy proved himself. Moraan
Shtphtrd Is llill ror rtll. Move
ovtJ. youna fellu.

wm

WINSTON CUP

O.flfW.A Jiillll'stwo__.:u , C..w' 1 ... . _ _ .....
7' ..............All
....... ...., .....

lyMontoD.._
NASCAR Thlo Weak
't'ou have to Jilve John .t-ndrenl credit for
patlanoe 1nd loyalty~
··
Alone with Petty EnterpriHI, the t11m
thet fteldl chit No. 43 Oodi•· And rani h11
been In 1 lent slump. HI raallzee tha
hlttorlc Importance of the union, howevtr.
Ht drhltl 1 cer with tnt number once

modo fomouo b)' NASCAR~ wlnnl,..ot
cr1vor, Rlchor&lt; Potty, one And,.n\11 tho
ntp,ew o' anott'ltr of raclnl'l 111-tlmt
biUtat namea, Indy 500 winner and
~rmula

:z::
...
o
GI 'a •

·IY .lciM Rwl .

.
I wolfed d6Wrt the esiay like popcorn,
~ ·B~'s hair has glown · not because f necessarily agree with

CL lXIII
CL
·-

cum,

:::1~0

N&gt;CL

Ll) · - NO::=ji

CJ

·----.,.·-.,.

_.llilttrtHom 11 If

~""--.clrcutt
~~~~- ,..,,

11H.IIOM-tllol.
Tho I -.........
wonMUI,....IIIId81
. . l..lrtlll......, . . .
-

.._,, camlnt.._

... .._... hlo ....
..

ll, Bobb)'

...,IMI.

L..bontt,- ........,.
en ,routa ..

lund., .. _

.. bll

for Stewart _,.,., ht

-·

lo clllll"!! -111141!
,., ...tnc1 piiCt In

drl~lnl

cnemolon Merlo

bitter, lit reoently connrmtd ht would be
back with tha tllam next r••r.

FONTANA, CoiW. A.lthou1h Pie did not win the
1arlt1 champlonahlp - that
honor fall to Jack Spraaue Ted Muaarave did win tht

"'"'
wtfll: 38
Nancy

·chnd,..: Jarttt (will turn 8 an Dto. 13},
Ollvlo (e). Amollo (1)

moat racea of any driver,
cementln&amp; that dletlnctlon
with hit ttYenth victory or

Hometown: Born In B•thlehem, Pl!l.,

the' aeaaon. Spra&amp;ua won a
record third champlonlhlp.

D~rl.h11ton,

S.C.), win (July S,1997, at

What,,.,... futu,. ,...,., ·au•lntte

II UIUII for ntlt Yllr. I mtdl I '
commitment to ~It' and 'Tha Klnt'

(Rionor&lt; "-ttl'l woy bock whon. ThoY
OII&lt;Od mo lllhlt WII&amp;Oint to Dt OM, ond I
told tllom I'm 101n1 to ltiJ, I btiiM In
thtiUYI on lhlo tMm. ftla 1'111 toam,
lnd onoe WI

ctn cto11 In on thiiHirtl 1nd

PIICII J&gt;Ort of It, M'll bt In 100&lt;1 IIIIIJ&gt;O. I
modO 1100&lt;1 mOYO wltll tnt
'"""' piOifam. anc whtn you lOt to the
otlllllll&gt;fOCIIm, you·,. Jull not ou,.,'
'Wlllt-ft-towlllf'YoU'YOpt
to hiYO o pretty 100&lt;1 d., to win. Thlnp
l1oYO to 10 lllftt, one lht lncl of tho doY
think~

hal lot to be whln you're It your bitt,

You'll be rtCin&amp; with o IUJ ond p,.tty much
hiYI him under control. Ht'lltnd up
drlvlnt IWI~ from yoU tnd tnd up wlnnlnt
tht 1'108.
"You alt there tnd wonder how thtt
happened. I don't think any r~ae bathlrl

Craw ohlaf: Grea Steedman
C1r: No. o43 Cheerloa Dod&amp;e Intrepid,
entered by Petty Enterpriatt
CltMr etetlltla: 259 startt, two w1n1,
13 top.5 fin lahet, 35 tOJ&gt;10 flnlahes, four

me more then lndlenipolll (Brickyard
thla ~r. l don't think tht rllht ctr won lha
flct . lt't fruatrtti"IIO me btcauu we
wer• In po1ltlon to do ao much better.
There wee a lot of luck In that.·

• NOT: Joe Nemechek
has a victory and twO top.

ll'fll'"'

Wf' ltopl'
111111.

JOifftO"'

Dt• NASC!.R. Thi1 W.. k,
W. have betn h11rlftl for y11n
thll the fin• 1r1 No . I , but
NA.SCA.R It thoWiftJ u1 thll money
II r11lly NOl I ,
1 think It I• a dl•ar•c• th1t

ESPNr'llPM ZNIJ'"" I'IIVI to lntlrvltw "tht world'• ball drivtn" In
thl pll'klnalot or on lhl1ldl of thl

rwd outtldrllhe trKk . Thank aoud·
nul 1111 drlnn hne tnoual'l
f'llpecll tO do lholllniii'\'IIWI ,

C1n )IOU lmiJhlt lnllrYitwlnl
Mlch••l Jorcl••ln tht parll. lnJ lot
be;tiiH ISPN It not lllowtd
IMkll'llt Ill di ..I'IC't!
Come on , NASCA.R, 1now u1
tl\at f1111 IN mort lmpontnt thu
money. lAI BSPN blc:lt wheNihly
btkMia. After all, PoA dldn'lpt you
whtl'l :rou 11'1 hldly. It wu fant
1nd ESPNI

Mark Coftlltl')'

N.nll Cant.n, Ohio

•oo}

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

•The "Stars and

• NOT: John Andrettl has
not finished In the top 10

since Bristol In Ma~h .

fsu1•

a

Stripes~

Pontiac that Ken Schreder
drove eartler thlir. fall at Dover
Oown1 Is now Delnl offered
In a 1:24-scale reptlc:a that
will directly benefit the
American Red Cross' Sspt.
11 Disaster Relief Fund.
For every mOdel sold at
$55, $30 will &amp;o directly to
tne fund.
The ear can be ordered
online from the NASCAR Store
area at www.n~~Dm".aDm.

1. Who once mistook the white fill&amp; for the
checkered flea In e Daytona 500 quallfylna: race?
2. At what track did Richerd Patty break Tim Rock's
record of 18 vlctor:es In a -teason?

10 finishes In his last
three races.

rltowr thlr to

X

Oaytona B11ch, Fla.)

lf.W up In lndlerispolla

••••••••••••
Who'aHotWIMRNot

-'1

·

world

nouocln hll bellollhll thin&amp;• would lot

FEUD Of THE WEEK

Breast catUer is an abomination, not a rite ofpassage

Ont

Andrtttl,
Tht 011t two ·llltone hiVe btln
pertloularl~ tOI.IJtl. b1.1t Andrtttl t111 never

OIIAniMAN'TIIUOK

aplnlon: "Everybody makes mistakes, and whether
Earnhardt made one in the first turn of the first lap Is a
matter of opinion. It was a costly crash for Petty, thou&amp;h.
because Rocklnlham has always been h~a best track .~

h~

for writing. Wl' dan't

If wr 'd C'UII Shrpltrrd fH!t oJ

drlvrrs lrt 11/JitHJ, iHit
c:rr1ulrtty lw.i lrcuJ o wlid C"WYrr.

tbr

poles, neerly $11.5 million In eln'iln&amp;t
PI-: Shirt (Oct. 3 , 1993, o1 North

Wllkaaboro, N.C:); pole (Stpt. 1, 1995, at

pott·ract tnCinHulnln&amp;
llCifCIII to Itt, IM.tlt
tlllrtml,lttvlnt not onlr
flattened tlrtt •nd broktn
tntlnt IJI!rta, but tctual
pl1011 of hit Chtwallt
ttrtwn an tha trick aurftct .

The crash started with contact betwMn Petty and
Earnhardt. who went on to flnlsh 15th. •rm not iOing to
say anything bad about Junior,~ Petty said, ·becauta I
saw on television that he hung the moon, and I'd hate
for the moon not to come up ,tonight."
N.UCAR Thlo
Monlo Dutton II•• hlo

Tllt.tillh

kiiOW

In flo!, Horvlck took tho

Petty aMI em Elliott were eliminated trom contention
In 1 crash on the very first lap of the Pop Secret 400.

Mulo .......l
IMien·poHI

......,,.,0

thanka to apudy burnout
that occurred about 200
yti'CII back to~ard tum one.

Kyle Petty va. o.le Ellmhlnlt Jr.

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

C11pt'~B

at leal two r1c"

Wtll, NtmtOhtk II ltiYin&amp;

race .... Evet'y previous winner

••••••••••••

10. (-) Joe Nllll'lechek Became 100th driver to win

Andy Petree, both wiMin&amp;
down ttle seaton wlttl ttlelr
oacka to the wall.
How bll wea wlnnlnl tl'lt
Pop Secret 400 to
Nemechak?

Joe Nemechek is

-nc..,.,.,....

All ..., bul tllo c1y1"'
Chlolnc down Rlldd In polnto
Tryl.,tohokl on to HCond
Could'&lt;• UMCI o cetlllon
IInce -ond ot Homootood .
ln8HChhrlel
WOUld 1... othlnl win
DlupJIOinllnl ot "Tho Rock"
LeiHOooon olllllip
Juot on oiiMH'on totoly

fROM lAST

~:

the only two.tirM winner of lh's

Cup.... Only 15 points
Jeff
Gordon
separate Jeff Green (secoM)
Tnlak •. "1)11C NCOI'II:
and Jason Keller (thiKI) In the
Bobby Hamilton Jr., Chevrolet, points stendln&amp;s.
157.490 mph, Nov. 10, 2000

Teammate Bobby Labonte

TOP TEN

(2)
(3)
(I)
(4)

,_Old: Jeff Burton.

wt.n: 1:30 p.m.. Saturday Is now competing in Winston

John Andretti

Mille Mclau&amp;llllfl. 3.835Terry COOk, 3,327

Chedllltle,3,'1'84

Wh8t: Miami 300

.....,.: Homestead·Miami
( A o . ) - (1.5-mlle
track), 200 laps/300miles

Notlblt: Stewart started
seventh and 13th in winnirta
both l)fevious Winston ':up
races at Homestead....

R~

Ford. 129.605 mph, Nov. 15.
1998

·· · PROfiL~

Jimmie Johnson. '3. 759 Dennis Sfluer. 3.306

•· Kevin klrvk:k. 4,000
10. Jeff Bu.-ton, 3,983

-=

RKe IWOOfd: Tooy Stewart,
~~~40.335 mpt), Nov.,

Steve Park, Chevrolet,

KIWi'l Harvidt, 4,751
.t.ff Grwen, 4,546

1. ill ltll Gordon

RYAN' S VIEW

•''

Rudd, 4,42-4

WINITON CUP

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

NASCAR This Week writer Monte Otltton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading into this weekend's race. LJst
week's ranking is In parentheses.

(Morton Kondracke is executive editor '!f
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

AstraZeneca, fot example, sponsored
Breast Cancet Awareness Month. Until a
bedt in ~e
a revelation Ehrenreich- who knows if! would be as reorganization in 2000, this company W:ts
tor a' middle-aged ~man who, Wltillast offended as. .she by the fluffy kitsch and also a· leading producer of pesticides,
year, couldn't have teased a wave from her ·. smiley-face attitudes if I were stricken? I "Ehrenreich writes, including acetochlor,
hair ifslui'd plungedher head into a Mix- loved tlie piece because she· said' the classified by the EPA as a "probable human
'
.
"·
'IJ'Wter.
·
.'·
unsayable.
carcmogen.
.
" The hair b now the· only physical sign of
In these super-sensitive times when we
As an experiment, Ehrenreich posted a
Ehrenreich's recent bout with breast can- navigate conversations as if tip- toeing Statell)ent on one of the i:nany breast cancer.
across a floor of puppies, such unrepentant cer Web sites. She listed her complaints
Well, the hair and the eye-popping essay candor - about anything! - stands out about treatments, insurance companies,
in this month's Harper's magazine.
like .red chiffon at a convent.
environmental carcinogens and "sappy
Ehrenreich, the former Time magazine
"So far I've gotten positive responses- pink ribbons:• She received a chorus of
columnist and author most recently of 'Oh, thank goodness somebody finally said rebukes.
"Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By !t' - but I'm waiting f\'r the hate mail,
Many women who have suffered
in America;· blasts what she describes as too:· she said over iced colfee in a cafe near through the disease, Ehrenreich said, don't
the pink-ribboned, teddy-beared, feel- · the UC Berkeley Graduate School of see how "you can get through the treatgood cult that has turned the horrible dis- Journalism. Ehrenreich, who has a Ph.D. in ment experience withour convincing
ease of breast cancer into some kind of a cell biology, is in Berkeley teaching a five- yourself it's a makeover."
transformative rite of passage that elfers week course on essay writing and another
"The potential harm in all this," she said,
Women . spiritual upward mobility and in sociology.
"is the intolerance of the human variance
endless opportunities for self-improveWhen she was diagnosed, her primary of emotion. You're slapped down, if yo~
· ment.
·
emotion was of righteous anger. She hated e~press ,anger. There's something wrong
"So pervasive is the perkiness of the that the existing treatments caused horri- wtth that."
breast cancer world," she writes, "that ble nausea, hair loss, disfigurement, !hatFor her, breast cancer will never be a
unhappiness requires a kind of apology."
tered sexual confidence, lost time at work. · source of identiry or pride. It is an abomiAnd: . " ... obedience is the message
She found m.t while the richeyt and nation that cannot be tied up nicely in a
behind the infantilizing theme in breast- m05t mainsttean1 breast-cancer organiza- pink ribbon.
cancer culture ... Y(/u are encouraged to tions looked for "the cure," they weren't
"! know this much," she writes. "I will
regress to a little·girl state, to suspend crit- spending much time or money unmasking not go into that la•t good night with a
ical judgment and to accept whatever environmental causes of the disease. teddy bear tucked under my arm."
'
measures the doctors, as parent surrogates, Hooking up with environmental activists
aoan Ryan is a rolu•nnist for rile San Franchoose to impose."
might chase away corporate donations . cisro Chronicle.)

R~..

COMING UP ON THE CtRCUtT

'•

.

.

_.....

J, Tony Sl~rt. 4.349
4. Dell JMretl, 4,2t&amp;
1. Stell Ill&amp; Man in,' 4,231
e. Ru•tyo 'Mtfllce, 4,118
7. D. Eamharcrt Jr•• 4.095

.

.Jess to maintain their health insurance
coverage.
The Senate Finance Committee is
scheduled to mark up Chairman Max
Baucus's $70 billion .stimulus bill tomorrow. And Democrats want to add $20 billion or more to expand unemployment
benefits and help those out of work keep
their health insurance.
Instead of going tbrough weeks of
wrangling, both parties ~ould well start
negotiating around a prop05al being put
together by the Senate Centrist Coalition, headed by Snowe and Sen. John
Breaux, D-La. Snowe sensibly maintains
that the Senate would be in a stronger
bargaining p05ition if it passed a bipartisan package by a large margin instead of
matching the House's slim majority for a
highly partisan measure. The House bill
,
•·
passed 216-214.
Last week, Sens. Snowe, Breaux, Ben
Nelson, 0-Neb., and George Voinovich,
R-Ohio, drafted an agenda of tax cu~
and spending that would cost between
$85 billion and $90 billion.
·
The centrist prop05al, still far from
being in its final form, includes items
common to measures backed by House
Republicans, Senate Democrats and the
president, plus 'Ways of overcoming partisan splits. The measure skirts Bush's veto
threat by giving jobless workers a tax
credit instead of a subsidy for health
insurance and· skews individual tax cuts
to middle- and lower-income, taXpayers.
It drops soq~e of the House's more lavish
corporate tax breaks, but grants faster
depreciation schedules when companies
invest in new plants and equipment.
It's clear that Republicans and Democrats are going to have to compromise to
produce a final stimulus package. The
sooner they do it, the better.

· ·

2.

992-5432

...

- -

2001 POINTS STAHOIHGS

i. Jeff Gonion. 4,750

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drtv•Thru Window

Tax holiday.may ·be route to go to stimulqte sales

• Fort Worth (fix••) Star-Telegram, on railroads as ~.on·
.al asset: . America's much-maligned national rail ne.~k,

·

228 Main SL

KONDRACKE'S VIE:W

aoo

Noon • Sunc&amp;ay • NBC
• C11ft1MM Ttuck,
The Ti'uck Series has oompteted its season.

. Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

It took a national tragedy for
Amtrak to win supporters
.Amtrak, is finally getting some respect from Congress an.d,'the
:traveling public. Unfortunately, it to!')k a national tragei;ly and'
the threatened collapse of the airline industry to drive home
the message that rail travel is an essential component of the
nation's tranSportation triad: trains, planes and automobiles.
Amtrak, which before the attacks carried about 22.5 million
passengers a year on 22,600 miles of track, says its ridership
nationwide jumped 17 percent during the six days after the
·attacks.
: ... Now Congress is considering measures to increase the
government's parsimonious funding for Amtrak - $521 million for this year.
Although the figu~s are not directly comparable, Congress.
allocated $33 billion for highways and $12 billion for avialion,
and that was before the $15 billion bailout of aviation.
Some lawmakers also want to repeal a 1997 'Jaw, the Amtrak
Reform and Accountability Act, which requires the rail network to end its reliance on federal operating subsidies by 2003
·or face liquidation ..). /
: ... Sept. 11 broug!lt~renewed debate about the need for a
: viable national rail network, whether it makes money or not:
: Amtrak already was proving that trains are an atttactive alter: native to planes ·in densely populated areas, mch as the heavily
: congested Wasqington-Boston Northeast Corridor . apd
; between San Diego and Los Angeles.' And rail travel makes
; sense environmentally. In th~ Northeast Corridor alone,
: Amtrak says, annual ridership between New York and Wash•
: ington is the equivalent of 7,500 fully booked Boeing 757s or
; 10,000 fully booked DC-9s.
·

All 11mB E•t•m
• lluoch Grond Notlonol, Mloml
1:30 p.m. · Saturday · TNT
• Wlnlton Cup, Penruoll 400

•

1.111• Pillli!u" ~l&amp;dl

.L96l Ul ":)'S 'liiQWnjO:) 'Z
j ·oos euo~ea &amp;tH u1• 01 uo 1uM iHl
S96l Ui uazuaJOl paJ:t 'l

••••••••••
Stewart says

QUICk enough. Htwing lhl;.pcrfCJI'Il\ai'II:C
X
of the lirts full off is a pan of what
OWA.ND Fr\MILIA.R: Control)'
make~ RockinghHm·s roce !WJ miJ('h
EveryoM knows ·Nonn Carolina fun for us, becuuse when !he tim ¥lew 1o popular belief. most l'llhe Winston
Cup driYM do r10t wilhcwry I'ICe Wll!
out.lhedriver M." to slt'p up:"
Speedway i~ han! un tire;.
in a fur-11ung metropoh5like ChiciiJO
According to Tony Stewan, that's
X
Ill' l..ali Veiia.~ .
not such a t.l thing .
"Rockingham i~ one of the old
"When a suy's handling lOtS away
OWNS ONE TKACK, RUI.E.~
un:l hed.Jesn't have the pnfUI'ITiilll(.1! of A.NOTHt-:R: Manins11llle Speed""a)' MlU!dby~ and ooc: of the rt,llular :\top
nn
the circuit.'' Brett Bodine said. " It's
his tii'C.'i In fall blck on,ttwl'swhfn he'll ~klcnt Cluy Campbt ll . w.M ~a~
slow down," Stewllrt e"ptaincd. "And realized~ lifeloig&lt;Ram by ra;.,ng ~m­ ci&lt;R 10 hune. You don't toaw: 10 take a
that gi\'es other drivers, if !hey ha\·t 11 car ited lute niUOels dli• ytar ut (lll'll'&gt;~-ay hi I!. IonS nip 10 get lhe~r . It's ju.'lt Ol'le
tifat', drivinl! well, the oppu11unity 1U Spttdwuy in Asheboro. N.C .. woo the oftho!icplaces that J think~ drive~
pass. Wt went to !11'\Jhe pi~ thi~ 'JC111. tr.r."k ~;hl!npioo~hip and clo&lt;ied the sea· look fOI"&lt;&lt;ard toaoing to becuuse it is a
lot of fun to !'Ia 111 Nockillj!~lln l ."
like BrisiOI (Tenn.), where the perform· !ion with h i~ fifth victory.
llliCr of the tire!i llidn't fnll off and you
Original!~. Campbell plnn~~ to
X
ooukl run 140 IIIJ"on a M:l of ti~.
rom pelt in ~hoot 15 of the season~ 27
BOOKENDS FOR JACK: LK~t
"As long llll )IOU were in fmnt of weekly mre; then:. butaftcrtllkingthe
someuoe. the guy behind you could n't mints lead tarly. he decided((] go for wed: J~lf Bunon !live luck RouMl his
.50th Win\lon Cu p vk1ory 11.~ o cur
get around you becau~ he just Wli~ n·t the title.

OWMI'. Row;h'sfmt w115 Mark M~~rtin'~

IIJ-DIIttl&gt;n

NASCAR This Week

vktory at Rockingham in 1989.
like so lonJ11g0that I won
"k
that firw race," Martin said. '1think I

-.m

u ntitlld for J.,k (RooM\) u I
Wll!l fnr mytelf. II w&amp; ai~JaiCk '! first
Wi~Cupwin. He 11ot his SOth rlre
this pu1 weekend in Phoeni• with Jeff.
but I will always have the tir.d ooc:."
Will!

X
YOUNGEST EVER: By winnin~~:
the pole 1151: week ·at

Phoeni~.

Ca.&lt;it)'

Atwood. 21. be&lt;:ame 1he youn~:est
dri~er ever to bt eligible for lht f'Cb .
10.2002.800wti!ret Shootout in Day·
tooa. Atwood beo;:ame ~ third rookie
- Kun Busch lll'ld Jason l.effltr \loiOI'i
pobellllier - to eam a pdt'ntial !4ol: in
the Shootou1 .

• Joe Ntmtelhetl NIIIY
hat two OMW Cttlflt,

c•r oWMr, ......,. '-~:ret,
af tt.
bast In tt. Dushwu.
n..t '-••1 of
eapartiM GllrMI In handy
WitS Onctl OM

•• NHMolllk dttmlnated

.........
.,.
h&lt;h Andy Potroo

of
RICIIII'I two drivers Ml
won till• Hlton, Bobby
H.cnHton won ttte aprtnc

raoe •t TllladtCI.

...

992-2155

'

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

tho Pap Socrot 400 ot
Norttl C1rolln1

Call The Dail.y Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

·l

&amp;l
z

0

:::1.

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I

1\)

CD

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•

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'

-

Ridenour
Supply

Cttrll C.Mr hokla
tht offtcl1l Utlt, bid hit

Place Your Business's Ad here

II. -~

I''

See us· tor Your Stlh~
Power Tools &amp;
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War with tires

MIINJ,;

II

I1
I

I

�.-

Page A&amp;:

America at

The Daily Sentinel

a .....,. Nonnhr e. 211

Pace said it offered a "rather
unique" view of the bombing campaign.
"You 'II see two vehicles,
one pull up next to another.
You'll see an individual walk
between the two vehicles
just before a guided munition destroys both vehicles,"
said Pace, vice chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
On the other side, Pace
said, some anti-Tali ban fight,
ers are so dedicated they
have charged on horseback
against Taliban tanks. American special forces troops are
helping some of the rebel
groups with supplies, ammunition and tactical advice.
"These folks are aggressive. They're taking the war
to their enemy and ours,"
Pace said.
So far, the al-Qaida casu.alties · have not included the
network's leader, Osama bin
Laden, Rumsfeld said.
"We'll find him," Rumsfeld said. "On the· other
hand, he could show up
today, dead, an~ I'd be
delighted. But al-Qaida
would still exist."

·

I

!
.,

Paul O'Ndll said.
The government made a.;
major move Wednesday
toward blocking the money
behind the terrorists suspected in the Sept. 11 attacks on
the World Thlde Center and,
Pentagon.
Pmicknt Bush announced .
the United States was targeting two organizations,largely ,
underground
currency
exchanges known as hawata., •
funneling large amounb of;
cash to bin Laden&gt; al-Qaida.
network.
!
The organizations,AI Taquaj
and Al-Barakaat, operate in,
more than 40 countries, and
channel funds thlough com-•
panies they run.
·

WASHINGTON (AP) Investigators have exposed
sevaaJ pieces of Osama bin
Laden's financial network in
the past two months, from
honey and diamond dealers
to U.S. money-wiring' oudib
sending millions to Somalia.
But U.S. officials concede
they have a long way to go to
fully disrupt the secretive
empire that finances bin
Laden's worldwide terrorism
operation.
"I think it is not possible to
know yet how many more of
these kinds of organizations
may exist and what other
inventive mechanisms may
exist that we haven't discovered yet:' Treasury Secretary

I
CHECKING THINGS OUT - In this handout photo from the
U.S. Navy, aviation ordnancemen perform final ma111tanance
checks on l()()().pound laser-guided bombs
net prior to flight operations Tuesday,
Theodore Roosevelt In the Arabian Sea.
launching airstrlkes against targets In
Photo/U.S. Navy, Dennis Taylor)

on an F/A-18 Horaboard the USS
The Roosevelt· is
Afghanistan. (AP

'J'HuRsoor's

HIGHLIGHTS
ScoREBOARD
N8A
w~.o.n..

Toronto 109, Golden State 92
New York 82, Cleveland 64
Boston 104, Washington 95
lndana 116, Sacramento 104
Detroit ffl. Chicago 73
Utah 96, Atlanta 89
L.A. Clippers 108, Memphis 92

2MI

Vincent criticizes MLB owners over vote
NEW YORK (AP) - A day after
baseball owners voted to gee rid of
two clubs, former commissioner Fay
Vincent criticized owners for making
their decision without consulting the
union.Baseball's labor conttact expired at
midnight Wednesday, and talks about
shrinking the major leagues appear
likely to get caught up in negotiations
for a new collective bargaining agreement. The union maintains owners
n"l!d the permission of players to
eliminate teams; management disagrees, saying it has to bargain only on
the mechanics of contraction, such as

dispersing players.
In Minneapolis, a hearing was
"The· law-Yen in baseball have been scheduled for Thursday in Hennepin
so wrong ill labor matters," Vincent, County District Court, where District
baseball's commissioner from 1989- Judge Diana Eagon issued a tempo92, said Wedngday._"It probably puts rary restraining order against the
baseball 6ff on the wrong foot. and Twins and major league baseball.
that's too bad."
The Metropolitan Sports Facilities
During the World Series, manage- Commission sued Tuesday to compel
ment asked that players be available the Twins to honor their lease to play
for a meeting Thursday, one person · in the Metrodome, which runs
f~ar with the talks said Wednesday, through next season.
on the condition he not be identified.
Minnesota Attorney General Mike
Several players were expected to Hatch said Wednesday he plans to file
attend, but there was a chance the a federal lawsuit against major league
meeting could be scrapped at the last baseball if owners move forward with
contraction. The suit would claim
minute, the person said.

back.
Marine Corps Gen. Peter
Pace, vice chairman of the
Joint ChiefS of Staff, said U.S.
special forces troops are with
opposition units coordinating
airstrikes, which alliance commanders said · helped them
breach some Taliban defenses
sc;&gt;Uth of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Speaking Thursday by satellite telephone, opposition
spokesman Ashraf Nadem said
his forces had captured another district, Sayyat, southwest of

owners·are illegally folding two teams
to increase market share for the rest.
"If you had 30 owners of banks get
together in a room and agree to buy
out two of the banks for purposes of
increasing their market share ... you'd
have an antitrust suit filed by some_body," he said. The owners are interfering with open competition, he said.
U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn.,
said he would introduce legislation
Thursday that would revoke major
league baseball's antitrust exemption,
hoping to use it as leverage in pre-

,. ....... VIMII't.IP

TUPPERS PLAINS
Janet Calaway, a star player for
the Eastern Eagles and both
the District
13 and TriValley Conference
Hocking
Division
Most Valuable Player
was selected
to represent
Calaway
the district in
the NorthSouth All-Star game to be
played November · 18 in
Wooster. The state All-Star
game assembles the best talent
fiom across the state of Ohio
and is traditionally played at
Wooster High School · ill
•·
Wooster. · • • .. • · •
' In addition to tlie local
honors, Calaway led the 40team district in voting at the
recent coach's meeting. Calaway was a top setter and
server as well as a great allaround player for the Eagles
who went 19-4 on the season,
15-1 within the l'VC. Individual awards at the EHS banquet went to Janet Calaway
for Best Serving Percentage
und Most Points Scored.
Calaway is the daught~r of
Ernie Calaway of Alfred and
Patty Aldridge of Reedsville.

Mazar-e-Shari£
The Taliban denied losing
the district and told the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic
Press that three opposition
attacks south of Mazar-eSharif had failed.
The Taliban's Bakhtar news
agency said the northern
alliance was still 15 miles south
of Mazar-e-Sharif and that
opposition claims that they
were within four miles were
false.
U.S. jets also bombed in
eastern
Kunar
province
Wednesday, killing.three civilians and .injuring six, Bakhtar
claimed. An empty school was
also flattened, it said.
The reports could not be
independently verified. The
, Pentagon has denied Taliban
claims that more than five
weeks of bombing have
inflicted widespread civilian
casualties.
Along the Kabul front,
Khan, an opposition commander, said U.S. bombing there
overnight had been "very
effective" and that two Taliban
tanks and an anti-aircraft position were destroyed.
' •

' t •

'

Buckeyes win
exhibition

'

Sn,ow Is right aro~nd the corner,
•
·:tou can bet on that! .
~

COLUMBUS (AP)
Brian Brown scored 17 points
and Brent Darby had 14 as
Ohio State cruised to an 8260 exhibi.tion victory over the
One World All-Stars on
Wednesday night.
Zach Williams added 10
points for the Buckeyes, who
scored the game's first 18
points. ·
Ohio State shot 33-of-62
from the field and took
advantage of One World's 19o~57
shooting and 21
turnovers, including 12 in the
first half.
The All-Stars, made up of
10 former college players,
committed 10 turnovers and
missed nine shots before finally scoring on Kevin Simmons' 3-pointer with 10:21
left in the fir1t half. ·
Simmons, who played at
UNLV. led One World with
16 points and eight rebounds.
Val Brown added 10 points
and former Ohio State guard
Neshaun Coleman · scored
nine points, all on 3-pointers.
Ohio .State opens the season
Nov. 18 at home against
Winthrop.

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New Jarsay 3, Atlanta 2
Florida 2, Pittsburgh 0
San Jose 2, Oelas 2, tie
Detroit 3, Phoenix 1
CalgaJy 3, Anaheim 3, tie

In all-star game

~

'

a...,.. Novtn'• a.

Wednnc~~~Y•a.­

Kabul, Afghanistan. According to relatives of the homeowners,
a man and his wife were killed in the event that they blame on
the u.s. led air strikes. The grandmother of the deceased Is
shown picking up Items from house. (AP Photo;Amlr Shah)

Enter to win at any Farmers
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Page 81

NHL

BOMBING - A ,home Is $tlOwn afte[ It was.hit by a rocket In

Most of the military activity,
however, has now shifted to
the far north, of the country
around Mazar-e-Sharif and
northeastern Takhar province
on the border with Tajikistan.
Pentagon officials reported
Wednesday that the opposition
northern
alliance
appeared to be making gains
south of Mazar-e-Sharif in
fluid and chaotic fighting, in
which anti-Tali ban troops
charged tanks and armored
personnel carriers on horse-

NBA Roundup, Pagt B3

Investigators piece together~
bi~ Laden's mqney trail · --:: ,

taliban and opposition report fierce·fighting
JABAL SARAJ, Afghanistan
(AP) - Afghan opposition
forces said Thursday they were
advancing steadily toward the
key northern city of Maz.ar-eSharif with the help of roundthe~clock U.S. bombing. The
ruling Taliban, however, said
they pushed back several
opposition attacks.
Both sides said fighting was
intense south of Mazar-eSharif, which the Taliban
seized from the opposition
northern alliance in 1998. An
opposition victory would
allow it to open a supply corridor fiom Uzbekistan, and
direct troops toward Taliban
strongholds further south.
Also Thursday, wimesses said
U.S. jets and at least one B-52
bomber dropped dozens of
bombs on Taliban lines at the
fiont north of the capital,
Kabul. Opposition spokesman
Bismillah Khan said,"however,
there were no immediate plans
to launch an offensive in that
area.
Huge plumes of smoke billowed fiom Taliban positions,
which did not fire anti-aircraft
guns as they have done on past
bombing runs. It was unclear
whether the guns had been
knocked ·o ut or whether the
Taliban were saving their
ammunition.

The Daily Sentinel

s,

Pentagon reveals hu~n toll of bombing
WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. airstrikes in Afghanisun
have killed scores of Taliban
and
al-Qaida
fighters,
although precise numbers are
impossible to confirm, the
Pentagon says.
The terrorist network and
its Taliban allies still have
between 40,000 and 50,000
troops
in
Afghanistan,
Defense Secretary •Donald
H. Rumsfdd said Wednesday
in a television interview.
Twice a day, he said,
reports cross his desk deuiling Taliban battlefield dead,
from a half-dozen to 20 at a
time.
For the first time in the
monthlong bombing campaign, Pentagon officials
released a video Wednesday
that depicted a human victim of the bombing. The
fuzzy images from a plane's
gun camera showed a figure
emerge from a vehicle shortly before being obliterated
by an American bomb.
In introducing the video
clip showing the destructive
power of the U.S. weapon,
Marine Corps Gen. Peter

•••

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I

&lt;DefifJ~t y~ur:se£f
with a sn~~, ~!ron

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&lt;Wonder(and!

Players opt for
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Gallipolis, Ohio

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NEW YORK (AP) - San
Francisco
first baseman
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were among the 12 players

NOW ACCEPTED!! .
I

'

l
•

Morales'

catch?
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - One
catch was Seth Morales' indelible stamp on
Purdue football history.
A year ago, the Boilermakers toOk on Ohio
State in a game where the winner would
control ill own destiny for the Big Ten
championship. The
Boilermaker&lt; entered
the fourth quarter
trailing 20" 10, but
Drew Brees threw a
pair ofTD passes to put them in fiont 24.-20
with 5:59left.
·t
On Purdue's next possession, Brees' pass
was intercepted by strong safety Mike Doss
whose 33-yard return set up a touchdown
run by Jerry Westbrooks for a 27-24 Ohio
State lead.
"After that interception my heart was in
my throat;' Morales said. "I didn't know what
to say. I didn't know what to do."
But Brees did.
On Purdue's second play after the kickoff,
he connected with Morales for a 64-yard,
game-winning touchdown with less than two
minutes remaining. Purdue won the Big Ten
and played in its first Rose Bowl in 34 years.
Morales was Brees' fourth option on the
play called "Yellow 74XZ-pole."
Vinny Sutherland, john Standeford and
A.T. Simpson were all covered. Morales, the
fourth option, was able to get behind the
blown zone coverage of Doss and cornerback
David Mitchell.
"It's like a one-in-a-million play:• Morales
said. "I don't think I caught a ball all year on
that play.:•
Purdue coach Joe Tiller said having the
fourth receiver make a catch so late in the
game made the play even more remarkable.
"Normally that doesn't happen at the end
of the game because the team is fighting the
clock in addition to the opponent," he said.
"It i.vas a great job by an experienced quarterback. It was (Morales') biggest catch since
he's been to Purdue, and as a result we were .
able to win the football game.''
,
With the rematch set for Saturday, Morales
said it was impossible to think of Ohio State
and not think about that play.
"We had a group of guys last year that
pulled it together," he said. "Drew was able to
make a play, and I was able to get behind the
defense. It was a play of a lifetime. I'll alwa}'1

Purdue
vs.

Ohio State

BIG DAWG- Cleveland defensive end Co!l~tney Brown (92), shown here chasing Green Bay's Brett Farve,
dominated In his first game back after an Injury. (AP file)

Courtney Brow11 dazzles·
in ·o1 debut for Cleveland
BEREA (AP) - Courtney Brown had watched
fiom the sideline for six weeks. He needed just ·one
minute to show the Cleveland Browns he was worth
waiting for.
On his first play of 2001, the defensive end made
the tackle. On the next snap, he scooped up a fumble
and ran-25 yards for a touchdown.
He spent the rest of Sunday running over the
Chicago Bears.
"1 wasn't surprised," Browns quarterback Tim
Couch said. "We see him do that to our guys every
day. He's in my face all the time in practice."
Brown, playing his first game this season after missing six weeks with an injured knee, had a dazzling
debut in Cleveland's stunning overtime loss to the
Bears.
No. 92 was all over the field,.r·
Brown had three sacks, forced a fumble, batted
down two passes, and made seven tacldes. He scored

the touchdown, hassled Bears QB Shane Matthews
and dropped more than 66,000 jaws at Soldier Field
with a dominating performance.
And he did it all as a part-time player.
"Oh, man," Browns defensive taclde Gerard Warren
said. "He's something. I knew what kind of player he
was, but he opened it right. He.showed he's 100 percent healthy ready to rumble."
Brown sprained his right knee during the preseason, an injury which initially was supposed to keep
him out for two weeks. But soreness lingered, and the
Browns held out their top defensive player until they
were sure he was ready.
He was on Sunday.
"He played phenomenal:' Browns coach Butch
Davis said. "He was just short of exceptional in the
sense that he far exceeded the expectations of any. body on our coaching staff had with him coming

PleaH -

Brown, B:S

remember that."

Crooksville coach assaulted after win
CROOKSVILLE (AP) - · As fans
rushed the field to celebrate a high
school team's playoff victory, the coach
. wound up with a black eye.
Crooksville head coach Dough Clifford said a parent confronted him after
last Friday's 35-21 win at Chesapeake.
... There was another adult involved
. in the confrontation I didn't see coming, who hit me fiom behind:' Clifford
told Columbus television station
WBNS on Wednesday.
The Crooksville Exempted Village
School Distl'ict called a special meeting Tuesday to discuss what action
might be taken against the parent,

"There was another adult
.involr1ed in the cotifrontation.
I didn't see coming; who hit
mefrom behind"
Crootcavllta cooch Dough Clifford

whose identity was not released .
The altercation occurred as fans
surged on the field following the victory that sent Crooksville to the
regional semifinals.
Clifford said his face was cut and
bruised and his shoulder was separated.
Cro.oksville Principal Steve Pompey,

visibly upset at the end of Tuesday's
board meeting, said the "protection of
the school's coaches" is paramount,
The (Zanesville) Times Recorder
reported.
A report· was filed with the
Lawrence County sheriff's office in
Ironton, but Sheriff Tim Sexton
declined to release it. Chesapeake is in
Lawrence County, about 110 miles
south of Columbus.
"As it stands right this minute,
Coach Clifford will be with his team
on the field as weU as the team member whose family wai involved in this
altercation;· Pompey said. "Absolutely

nothing is going to happen to the
player or our coach ."
·
District
Superintendent
Jeff
Childers said it was a shame that "such
a terrific night had to end up marred.''
"This team played one of the best
games I've ever seen it play that night,
aJ;&gt;d they were a!) so overjoyed about
winning:· Childers said.
Duane Warns, an assistant commissioner for the Ohio High School Athletic Association, said the association
would not get involved.
"If someone hit a coach, then the
.school would probably have to .take
ca~e of it," he said.

�Thuraday, Nov. I, 2001

hge 8 2 • The Dlilly Sentlnei-------------~P:OI:m:•:o:'l~·U:lddl:•:p:-G:&lt;f'~.,~Oh:lo:.__________ll!!

m;rtbune - Sentinel - Regi~ter
C L A S · S I F I E .D

~-.-8Y lHE ........,IATEO
••,.,.
10
tUn. $450.
PRESS
lead with a three-point play dut e~ low for a Knicks opponent.
(740125f.t28S
E""ry now and then. the Toronto !Up- an 11.0 run with 7 :1&amp; left.
PistoDJ 97, Bulb 73
&amp;~";t.'l..w.
1887 ~ t.a ..,, ton are credited with an inordi11.1tely
But the Wizards never led again as 6w
At Chicago, Cliffonl Robinson scored
8uy
~ C.. p pp~aa 4 qt.. - ·
4 dr., large number of blocked shot! .
Celt:ia scored in double figures, led hy 23 points and rookie Zelijko Rebraca
11
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Da11.1 Barros added 14 points to help
' AKC ..giJ'Jrtd !,"'~~!:~ ton were credited with an NBA-reconl defender., had 31 poinn on 11-of-15 Detroit to in fourth start victocy after a
: Suo'a s 1 ,._on .. .,. I (31M)$7S-4075 ... 24 blocked shots in a victory over Gold- shooting, was 8-of-9 from the line and season-opening loss.
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. added 10 rebounds and nine assists.
Jerry Stackhouse, who scored a fnn'"""'· (740)992.0298 ·
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Hakeem Olajuwon had nine blocks,
Pacen 116, Kinp 104
chise-best 57 points in his last game
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111112-Surtini. Good Toronto beat Golden State 109-92. The Miller added 20 and started a 17-1 points.
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Pllltz· =...!old"'::·~ -good coodllon St.SIIO Raptors set the previous marlc of 23 fourdt-q~er run. as Indiana handed
Clippen 108, Grizzliet 92
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March
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its
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the field, put the Pacers ahead 98-97 with after three losses .
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Rookie Pau Gasol scored 24 for Mem•• 2
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4
· • lize copy Anlonluo Violin Long 510, MF50, - · Ext J'.:."""~~
attempts in the thin!, when he had 20 history
Strildlvarius,
$200. , . , MFI2 balor, 3 wog. Boci
· 11 paci&lt;a '
·
• his
-• ~
· ·
·
: (740)448 08113
ora, lag opltto&lt;, -··...,. 551&lt; :c-~
(740)4go: pomts to tie . team reca"' 10r pomts m
Shareef Abdur-!Uhim led the Hawks
; 5, concrete parking lot flag, liD. (304)8'1S'S88
08113 '
· 40'"1 a q~arter. Ca~r last had 20 in a quarter with 25 points.
bumporo,
S15 oach. YANMAR YM 1500 T - tw.l f. 250 414 Red aga1nst Phoerux on Dec. 30, 2000.
Knicks 82 Cavalien 64
(740}44I·1812
::\:"· 3~
$2,150: 123,000 mlioo. Cnrome · "Finally," Carter said. "It was a good
At New York 1.ar:e11 Sprewell and Allan
("-net;~Kneekehill~~~ 11111 k. ':., $850.
~:Slloeo, $8000. feeling to actually step up and start hit- Houston sea~ 14 points each and
....
• "'~ ~. Uocaltd lull OU1
.
th .
h ..
111ra now. - . twice, Coot iildo or "' tasei 11195 Jeep Cheroloio Sport. tlng e JUmp s ot.
Charlie Ward had three of New York's
~ take $25. (740)687· 778-0435 - .m.yna- ~ 0u1pu1, 4,0L. 1 oyl., s
DannY, fortson's jumper gave Golden eight 3-pointers as the Knicks ended a
..,.....com
--~•,:.en:""~· ~ State a one-point lead early in the thin!, three-""me losing streak
Ar&lt;lquo Hand Toolo 1850'1
b .,.,
~ II
ed . h
.,.....
.
Saw Forged Iron Etc. S35IJviiiOCK
, Ex llooA Condition, ut .oronto 10 ow Wit • 15-3 run as
Andre Miller had IS points and Lam·
$150. (740)992·7669
~
•
~ ~'ffl3.-. Carter · made three 3-pointers. He later ond Mufray added 12 points and 10
Bllutllul Gold Frornod 18 monlli Old o- -~
h1t consecutive 3-pomters, gtvmg Toron- rebounds for the Cavaliers Cle,.,land's 64
Elhan·AIIonOclagonMim&gt;f.
...,..
~ 11189 Ford Super Duty
21
. J d . h 1·181 ft . h
.
35'x3S' Pllloct Condition. e-e::""~~~ F2150, 4x4, 7.3 ..,...r toa
-pomt ea Wit
·
e m t e points were one more than the reconiNew S250, aoldng $125. Ben Cloiii 10 11200 - ·· Ext. Cob, 41,000 thrnl.
(740)258-&amp;145
(740)388-1501
.
. Jlliloo, /IJC, P/W, Pll, o\UioCeltic:&amp; 104, Wizards 95
Dlnl Room table/ chal
melle, $28,800. (740)441·
leal~pads. Oueo~ Ann~ 1 yw old Gliding. Kid 8131
At Boston, Michael Jordan scored 32
SJyte, cherry tlnlsh. $75. llnli&lt;o,S8DD. (740}44HIII88 .,_ _ _ _ __, points, the inost in the five games of his CWH OF THE TITANS Jau center
Working walhtr &amp; EIOCiric AOHA and APHA - t o r P''~~ l'damllcvll.ls
comeback, and =ve Washington an 81-80 Greg Ostertag tries to block Hawks center
Dryer, $40. takos boCI&amp;. The&gt; aale, 1110 yeonlngo ana Ll_ _ _ _ _ __.
.,..
mu .organ workS uo. woanllnga, SAYRE FARMS, ~
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:.N:a:zr~M=oh:a:m:m::ed::,::(2~)~we=d:n:e:sd:ffY:::_·(~A=P~)-~===~~~~~~~~~~
(304)675-2428
(304}M-3319 or (304)675- 1888 Goldwilll 1500, ..,..)
Fireplace Insert 0&lt; Free 3-496
iced, ready lo go, lilklng
Baseball owriers want to eliminate ~ Minnesota sold 5,600 sea5on tickers
Standing. (740)446-7859.
aay quartoo- mare wall 15500, (740)992-o:!87
•
financially
weak teams that took a large last year and is selling season plans for
Fln!wood"" Sale. $150""' trained, 12 yra. old. 18 19911 Hailey Daviiloon
share of the $1&amp;0 million in revenue next season. Single-game sales don't start
bud&lt; l.oac!- (740)441-9&lt;176
~~'to'/t Sportater Conv. to 12C~.
_,
.
Uow
Milos
end
Loll
"'
"""'
sharing money that is being transferred until Feb. 1.
'
,..,otorild, 1111 bollt lor cMoma, g.,.._ gas tank,
742 7243
Grubb'o Plano- Tuning &amp; $2,300
~40- • · _, bart a platona
fiom tJ:le large market! to the small matFlorida Gov. Jeb Bush, a brother of
Repolra. Problema? NMd 740-742
·
alto lnclucltd. 110,000 Nag.
venting the elimination of the 1Wins.
kets thiS year.
President Bush the former controlling
Tuned?
rtd 1"17"0 448 Call
4525Tho P ·
LlnQooln
bull blaclc
4yiJI. Call
5pm, (740)448-4440 otter"· · n 1922, t h e u· .S . S upreme C ourt d ecr'dCommission~r .B ud Selig said the two awner of the Tex.;;. Rang~n. · called · the
Hardy Mumo $3.00 eac1o 4
S:.~
1886 300EX, $3,200 oao. ed baseball was a sport and not intentate te~ms to be elimmated would be deter- decision to eliminate teams ''a fairly Drator 110. Open Sat 11-5pm. &amp; 11.., "'' lued 4 &amp; ..,. old Claod coodllou will&amp; lew ax· commerce, and was exempt from rmned later, ~ut other owners md ~on- conian measure."
-nga. Dewhonl Cl,_. . Umoual
(740!1'118- tru. (740):J711.9256
.
)a
liouH Mt Alto. (304)8115- 27811 n """"·
~"
antitrust ws.
tteal. and ~mnesota. were the pnmaty
"The economics of baseball are pretty
1998 """ Cot 400 +wi&amp;Oll·
3740 leave message. or
·
"This is a good shot across the bow,"
ch01ces,
With
Ronda,
Oakland
and
bl
k" h
'd · f
Lau d erdal e. "fl.n d
4
·
'bill"
ea , e sat m ort
• (304)895-37&amp;;
Saamon billy goat. 1 112 :".:. i:l:\r,=.~.':,; Wellstone said. "It's a meJsaaf' to owners,
11
B
ampa
ay
more
remote
possr
ties.
,
.
.
.
lndopondJoO HolbaiWo Oil- year old. 11110. lD wNio ,pl- .Condition. (304)175-7851
.,.
There
is
little
support
among
baseball
s~
they
ve.
done
somet.hmg
a
b~le
mgebibuiO&lt; Coil ""' Procllct ar
sz.oo
OiiCh.
you might get people angry enough and
Qppcortin1y (740}441-1982 304)175-11121
tm
,
_
TRX
450ES.
owners to remain in Montreal which mous, whrch IS to say, WeU, were gomg
$4.2150. 11187 _
TRX lose the exemp"on"
u
,
JET
HAY &amp;
·1 70, 11,150. 1888 Ylmlhl
Some courts, most notably the Florida averaged just 7 ,&amp;48 per game at Olympic to allow two teams to survive and two
AERATION MOTORS
GiwN
350 Wolverine, $3,600.
· Repalrod, New &amp; Rebuilt in ~
(740)245-2453
Supreme Court, have read the decision Stadium la5t seas&lt;&gt;n. Minnesota contend- teams not to survive.' .
"My guess is it'll be up to each .com' · Call Ron Evans, •· Duality toay, $1.75 bale; Hailey
more narrowly and applied it only to the ed for much of the season and averaged
800-537·9528 ·
Umoualn bull calf, 8 mon11is JJI8ta
reserve clause that ties· pl.ayers to their 22,287 and drew 1. 78 milfion The munity to show the kind offan support
- - - - - - - - old, (740)1185-31110
Black
Lota Boya .-ntor cloUleo, Sq
teams - an interpretation Hatch agrees 730,000 increase fiom 2000 was the that exists in order for the Marlins an
size 12 $35 all or'""- uaro baloo woo $2.00
wr'th.
highest in the AL.
the other three teams to stay in maj• ·
sz5 now $1.50. Round Baloo
1 S!O bod 11
However, 1\vins awner Carl Pohlad is league basebalL"
~ley wood oo..:'.~~· stoo: ~uRI$15;.. ~~·~aile
"The issue today is did those people
pliono (740)448-6690
· ·
C
get together to act like a business and, if dose to Selig and could receive far more
Bush and other political leaders ha1
·
Hay &amp; Bri!lhl Wire Tie
· Lovoly Stt Mlnlaturea. Straw YNr 'Round Dallvory
so, does an exemption ~pply to them?" in a. contraction payment than he would expressed little enthusiasm for a publi '
· Some antiqull, antique &amp; v.l.ma Dlaoount Avella luclgol , _ TJonaml• H
if he sold the team.
fi11.1nced ballpark in South Aorida.
- prlnlera, Orawor, appi'OI. ble. Horltaga
Fann: olona All ,._, To
atch said,
. too p1ecea. (740)258 8445 (304)175-57:14
av..r to,ooo·T......,Iulona,svo.
·
Tranarer Cue•, 740·24611177 Col· 339-3'7115
II~\ \""II If I I \ I I I 1\.
And h1s kneel
"I I&lt;\ ll I ._,
"Feels fine," he said in his
MOilLE HOllE OWNERI
Auros
=;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
; lnte.UO.nn. Coleman gas,
~r
u~10
baritone
whisper.
.. oil &amp; eloc:trlc " " ' - in- ~
FOR ALE
,
........,
eluding hi efficiency heat
IMPitovF.M»n's
Imagine what he'll do
pump systems. We carry a 1893 ~ CUtlau, 4 dOOr,
when
he and his knee feel
complete line or Mobile ..nd color, -ery op11on;
IAIEliENT
back in his first ballgame."
great.
i1orYw porta &amp; 11CC81100ries. now Urea, 3.1 IMI, one own·
WATIRPROOFING
Happy Ad
: BENNETT'S HEATING I or, a beauly at $4,200, Unoondlllonal iifellmo guar·
Shoplthomt...
.
Davis
wanted
to
break
in
The 6-foot- 4, 265-pounder
COOLINCl (740)448-9415 (740)992-11719 or 740-nJ. ontee. Local relo"""""' fur·
Brown slowly, limiting him to used his speed to ger past
or 1.-.a72·51117
5186.
nlohed Eatabllshed 1975
www.orvb.comfbennett
·
·
35-to-40 plays. But when left Brockermeyer, .and he over- - - - - - - - 1995 Oidl 98 Elite, 4 dOOr, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 448·
• NEW AND USED FUR· boautllul
baby
blue 0870,
1·800·287.0578.
end Keith McKenzie broke powered the tackle by pushNANCEB FOR SALE! We w/matchlng iHihor . this Rogers wate;proollrlfl.
his ankle in the first quarter, ing him straight back in the
.. Install, Free Estimates, If beauty hal 5400 mllil, fN- - - - - - - - you doni Coli us, We both ery option 11 11&amp;11 loW ~.
Brown was forced to play pocket
• Loooel (740)448-1308, 1· $6800, (740)992-11719 or =":::"'u~:::
more than he or the Browns
His most impressive play
=800-29HI098.
740-n:l-5186.
lng, carpen7JY, doora, .,..,.
could
have
ever
expected.
Nowbook (Yellowtown) now 1985 Pontiac Grand Prill. dowl, balha, mobile home
came on a fourth-and-4 early
available fO&lt; gilt oi S5 per Runo Groat, High Mllea, ropa~ end more. For frao
"As
guys got hurt we had in the fourth quarter when he
.. copy. To raHrvo copy ~ny New Parte, Mirror oatlmlto can Ctoat, 740-882·
no other recourse;• Davis said . beat Brockermeyer, sacked
. phona (740)4411·3719
Right Side Damage, lt300 832=.3;;.·~---~"'1
"It was play him or play with Matthews and forced a fum(740)388-oo&amp;. 8· r'"' El.i!cnucAJJ
I 0."
ble the Bears recovered.
· Old Open Top Buggy r•
REriuGEJIATJON 1.
· - · Great Yard ~rs- 1998 Ctoavy Cavallor. 8k Of ~--iiiiil-iiiiiliiorl
There
were
moments
when
It was the type of play the
' lion (~•)882 2••7
7k with trade 080.
· ~
•·(304)713-11357.
Aoaldonllal or commorolll
it looked like Brown could Browns envisioned Brown
Play llltlon 1with 2 games,
.-nng, now Mrv1Co or ••
handle the Bears hy himself. making routinely when they
· 5 months old. Alldng $55. 91 Chryttler Lalloron Con· palro. Maator LlcenHd oloc. (740)4.46-8118t .
vertlbla, $2,000. (740)387· trlclan. Ridenour Eloctrlcal,
He
was unstoppable, manhan- selected the former Penn
.
OS!Il (740)3&amp;7·7212.
Wl/000308, 304-675·1766.
Polyester remnante m01e
dling Bears veteran tackle State All-American with the
than 75 yards. ss• wide, 91 Uncoln Town01r lnd Ita
Blake
Brockermeyer.
No. 1 overall pick in the 2000 .
$25 (740)995·4409.
a baautyl Air rlda, aulo light
lob Manley
Buy, Sell or Trad,e
'
dimmer. (740)4.46·9523 or
"He
responded
like
a
draft.
llg 150
Rooldantlol HOilil
,(7,.::40:!:)4411:;:::·;;,1443:;:::_ _ __
· · ' lntht · · , '·
champion," Davis said. "He
Last season, Brown made
Tappan HI eH~Ionoy 90 plua ,
gao rumacoo lnoludlng oil Lively 1 Auto SalOl· 1987
FromAn Of
and elootrlo gao fuma· Pondoo Cll'll'od- Am, $400.
don t yo know? played the run well. He pres- three sacks in Cleveland's
HI EH~~ Moat 1883 Maroury Lyn1 8W,
sured the quarterback. He Week 3 win over. Pittsburgh,
HaDIW llrthday
Pumpa, featuring Tappano seoo. 1985 Bulok Somorlat,
pursued. He got winded. He but reconled just 1 1/2 sach
FuiiiP•rt Tlmo
Free lncrHibla ' warranty $400, 1883 Oeo Traclctr,
WVIY•. Nancy
$1000. 11118 Oidl Cutllll
took
himself out a couple of during the last 13 weeks ofhis
OFFICE
HIAllNQ 1 Suprtmo, 1800. 11182 EogOI
times just to try to recover rookie season.
ENVIRONMENT
COOLING (r.0)448-9411 PrwnO.r, seoo. 1gaa Ford
or 1-..r.l4111'1
. Crown
1800. 11110
and
rest, but that was more
Davis thinks Brown can
1-888-874-.IOBS
wwworvbO&lt;Hiilbannoll Ford Mulling, $400. 1889
than to be expected. He just thrive on a def"ense that has
·
·
Olda Cudau Sup;IJIMI,
1500. 18118 Buick Rogal,
played outstanding."
more weapons than it did a
Trallor 14ft. Utlliy tandem $800. 1987 Olda Cioro,
The ever-humble, soft-spo- , year ago.
axle $1100 Water Hooter $450. 1992 Maroury Tooaz,
LP Gas 4o gal. s1so. $800. t 989 Oldo Calolo,
ken
Brown was more critical
"It's tough when you're the
)675- 4268
1500. 1884 0 - Dlplo(304
!:::!::.::::::::---- mat, $400. 1884 l'iymouth
of his play. He said there were only guy expected to put
Wanted to lease Coal prop- Voyager, $1800. 1884
some
"little things that I need pressure on the q11arterback;'
arty for small coal mine. Oodgll B·250 Van, 1800.
Developer worlct with paiOndal llamo buyon,
atrlp or underground, to 1992 Codoa Rem 250 Vl!lln,
state ud tedenl t\ladln110Urte1, 1nd L'Otllractor to dean up," but it's han! to Davis said. "We now have a
make lump and stroker. $1000. 191j7 _Fafd Econol!ne
In olnale family bomt bulldlna project. Molh, imagine him doing anything lot of guys who can do that."
(740)387-7891
alter Van, $1200. 1968 Chevy().
computer, alld orpal••llonal lkllla nHutar)'. better.
6:00pm.
20 Van, $1000. 1988 Ford
But not as well as Brown,
Re1l Estate and sod1l services baek1roulld
Mustang, St200. 11190 Cllt"I
didn
't
know
exactly
how
who'll
have a tough time top.
Walenlno Special: 314 200 vy Lumina, 11100. 1988 Ford
helpf'ul. Wllllna to train auertlve, e•lh•lutlc
PSII21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 Eooort, $400. Call (740)388............ Salary comme..uraiO wllh uptrltnct. I would play. But I felt com- ping his season debut.
PSI $37.00
Per tOO;
All ::;::_
9303 _ _ _ _ __
Rosu111 wllh work blotory and tlperlttt&lt;e plus J fortable
Brua
eompresaion
Fittings
and
confident,"
"I knew he was going to do
reflrenen can be m1lled 10 Hou1lna Developer,
In Slock.
Brown
said.
"I
felt
pretty
that,"
safety Earl Little said.
Community Action, Bax l7l, Cbealtlre, OH 456:10
RON EVANI ENTERPRII- 1990 Buick Skylo.. 140,000
by
11119/111.
EOE
good."
EB Jaci&lt;aon, Ohio, 1-800- mlleo. St ,000. (304)675·
"He's ·a machine."
537-9528
7878

: -202 4lh-. ~
, :::'

-

ortt':!·

P'
(;"40,:&lt;2:

:r

In one week With us

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Rick -

_ , pig (yon! omamont),
black 1 -libo&lt;gluo pig
~ 3' tal a 4'
long,- OU1 o1 yon! In
~. hu a lot .......
montal YliuO -.g ID lao
ther whO recentty ~

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IIFuWANnD

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away, wyou toave any lnlor·
motion
pillH
call Abooluta Top Dollar. U.S.
(740)W2-5023 0&lt; 740-882· HSI~, Goid_~· pG,oofold.
3324.
~.
"~-.
~--=-=-- Ringo. U.S. Currency.·
RoommateWinladto ....rt M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Soc· Nice i1orYw MIn- ond Avenue, Gal!pollo, 740«6-21M2 .
........ pleaM' send lhort
blo and rlfotoo-. .....a
wavailable ID PO
Box 502, CMihlre, OH
45820
1118
HFuWANIID
SWF l8lkl Sugar Daddy
35+ IWid photO end lnlor·
10 POB 103.i.angs· At Pt/FI Stay O Homo ap.
vllle,OIH5741.
portunllyl Average 11 01)().
w.... wall? Stan ___ ,
$8000/mo. Flex SChedule,
Ohi:,~~~ng~oa · -·;~ Eliminate COmmuting &amp;
lreo HIOO·766·2623 ext Daycara. Paid Vacation, lie&gt;
1821 .
nuaaan'ralning Programs.
Establlilhed lnt'l Coopera·

011

FULL TillE AN POimON. ... at... Ma_. lull Suporio• Home Malnt•
nanco. Wo dod Aopah oo
homes. Carpentry, pluntllng
Oacko, Trenching lnslda.
ahd out. (740}441.0113
.
than competlthle Wageat ScenloHIIIoNuralngCore,a Family
Man/Handyman
Call SConle Hilla II nuralng homO apoclallzing In preii&lt;Jrt washing, yard
(740)448-7150 or atop by Alzholmor'a cara, Ia now hlr· maintenance, cloan up,
and fill out and application. lng 3 full time STNAI tor tO .ect.... Free Eatlrnataa
to e lhlft, 2 full - lor 2 to (301)773-5564 Alk tO&lt; Don
F Ntime W a l t - - 10 2partlimoatnulor2to
~ly In Peraon. Holiday 10: 111-. p1oa1e atop don~ha 1P""""!.,.Sawmill,
Inn- Galllpolla.
by end plcl&lt; up an appllca·
' u your ..... to ll&gt;o
lion any weekday lrom mill juol call ~75-1957.
GROWINGIUIINIII S:ooamto.,:OO pm
NEEDS HELPI
Top To Boltom CIHners,
·~~ 1- ~
Tha Souiliom Local School profMSional, and allonla·
.
'UVII\ lVIII UVIIIVo
Mall· Ofdet/ E· Commerce Dlttrlcllo ac:c:eplifili appllca· ble, homes, ofllcea, reniiiO,
5522+/week PT.
Ilona lor oobstltult bus driv· construcllon end remodeling
StOI)().S4000/weekFT ora. Drivers must toave a cleaning. (740)992·1381 or
www.lncrldlble-.com CDlllconae wllh a bus driv· (740)992-2979
(800)41H501
er'a endO&lt;Sement. Training
·
can be arranged. Phone
Domino'o ,_taking apoll· (740) 949-2669 tor fu.UO.rjo
cationllorufo drlvora, Go~ inlormatlon.
llui1Nmi
ilpolltt and Pornotoy loca· Please send Inquires to
OtrulrnMrY
Ilona only. Aj)ply In porsoro. Jamee Lawrence, Supenn- ·~
tendent, Southem Local
INOnCEI
Help wanted caring for IM ~~x ~T_'!SoRacine, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
eldlfiy, Darlt Group Home,
. .
IS an lNG co. recommends that
nowpaylngmlnlmumwage, Equal Opportunity Employ· youdobu~nellwithpoople

All IMI-""' wiling

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FORSAIE

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-

moneythroughthemalluntH
you have lrweatlgsted lha
offering
·
·
Do you noed a mortgsge or
new car? Are your bills
backed up? We can Mlp.
We offer fast reliable service, and our professional
staH is on hand to help.
Please call toll free. 1-888496 8807
·
Established Specialty Store
tor Sale. Col atter 5:00pm.
(740)446·8148

1

r

r

I

Firlt 11mo - . . 2 bodooom -

~

IUunFUL
· APART·
li!HTS AT llUDQET PRIBacl&lt;ed loano. No credit 11112-«138
Cl!l AT JACKION £8.
- · (304)75Wiill LintTATII, 52 Woa,_ Dr!Ye
ltod Ollor.
2 Bedroom Trailor locatad from $21710 11313. Wllk to
on St Rl 588. Dopoolt end lhop 1 Col 740Aloumable loan&amp;- Many Rllerot-. (740}441-weo 448-2114111. Equal Houttlng
~ . - . Col lor ... .. (740)245-58110.
::Oppo!lurity!:!:::=:!:.'- - - (740}448-3683.
· 2 Bodroom, 5 min. from Chrlaty'a Family Uvlng,
:!t,ll' wide, 3 bediOOhi 2 •".175/ month, $250 S3!40 New Lima Rd., Rut·
--·• ..
15
1
· - ' 155,-ild dopaollAboolutolyNoPota. ,land, Ohio, 7,4().7"2-7403.
· &amp; • up on 'fWI lot lnclud- (740}448-93&lt;12
AportmenJ. homO end lrallor
lng lillrtlng I fhrgilll .
rtnllil. ComrMn:lal atorec15 Court St...t. 2 l!ild· Ironto available lor ·
U.S. 50 Elilt, Allionl, Oto, _,.., 1112 balha, Kllctoon Vlcaneleonow.
740-592·1872.
with - . illld nrlriQefator. .:.====;_;_;__
Ofl St- Parldng, C- to Fumllhod Apt. 3 """""and
Final oars. Nlllonwkll In- SchOols and Downtown balh piUI shower. Down·
vanlory
ReduCtion I • - . ••~• rnonlh pluo "·· atalro, Cloan. Rafartnee
(304)736-3408
~- -~
~
and Raf,renco. No and Deposit Aequlied. No .
Limited Or No Crildlt? Gov- alii. (740)448-4926
P..- or i0iio1&lt;o&lt;w. (740)4.46·
......., Bani&lt; Finlr&amp;co Only
:1:.51c:9.,--::--:--:--:-::
At o.kwood In Barbour~- 2 BR, 1 112 a.th on 112 Gracious living. 1 and 2
ville WV3CJ4.736-3409
acre ol Property. $350/ bod"""" apartmanla at VII'
'
rnonth.lmmedlaltAvollalllll· lago Manai' and R NoveriJwidlnlloubl oldo? ly. (81.,)471-4265. Near Apartments In Middleport.
Only 1500. De11vo!o ID ywt 8ucl&lt;eye Hills' Career Con- F""" S278-$348. Call 740~.ko.a~~~ . Paymonta. IM.
992·!5084. Equal Housing
2 could ba 3 bedroom =Opportunilles==:,::::c.·-:.,--:-:-New 14 Wldt, 3 Bedroom. house fouant on 1st Street
OnlyS19,850.FiMDelivor)l 1n Muon, wv. Complaloly ~BRApl Very Nice.
Buyoro.

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· rUhed.J Aildtdwn llfJPllan- NICe 1br. AI Becb1C. Near
ANNiluroKnmomi 1888·754-5430.
7am, call740-992·5023.
Fill ,t~'!!~11!.,;~ble at
For aalo by owner. NiCe bl10nly4x70, s~':r'=· coo and utenallo, towelo, lolgli scliool. $300 month +
- - - - - - - - LPN''"'' AN'8 ---.aed I P Sc ~HI 118 lor 0 8 8 &amp;
level home on 1 acre nelr 1 .
lheatl and ect... need noth- Depoalt
(304)675-3100
' - - - - - - - · Aggreaalve Home Health . ...
I!Uf;ru
or e- en....
~ EveChesler. Three bedroom $ 89.62fmonth. Cali Chtlyl, · lng to ITIOVII in but your D 1 · (304)675 5509
'
011ney VacatiOn 7 days 8 Agency eeeldng energetic, :·~~~~.!'~u~ ~::~· ~~a~ :f::o;:?::.'!
two baths, ~r gsrsge: 740-385-7871. .
clothes. C- ID all power E:t,l';.
nlghil 0 Ramacia. Good for ()(glnlzed Individual to act ly Pomeroy and Racine stop by to 1111 Ojjlan apollca·
lamlly room - !lreplace, ' New Double Wide. $195 planto, all SCR'o and con- Nica 2br. •·•rtments, Iorge
1 year. Sacrlf~e S11i9.00 u communlly and phyalclan Afeas. lmmed~le Employ- lion today.
.
sun room. New central hut: "-&lt; Month! 3 Bedloom, 2 atructlon wor1uora welcome.
..,...
(814)89Bo2730
educator. Home Health/ ment Available. LPN's s16
lng &amp; ale system. One ml Bath. Free OttiWNy 1 Set- 5erioua Inquire~ cmly rooms, fuly equlped ~
--------Medical experience a plus, per hOur, AN's $ 17 per Therapy position wanted.
nuteoHRoute7,butltiNpri· up. 1-888-828-342&amp;
pleue.lf not home pleale en,CentraJHeatlno'COO!ing,
Mlddte A Profnalonal nol required. Agency will hour. Shift/ Weekend Shift Poaltive, energetic, punCtual
vate. (740)885-3981
leave ma ape. (304) 773- Waaher &amp; Dryer hookup.
DWM
for Profeuio- train. Apply In par110n at Differential Offered Please person needed to work In
.
Nice 28x60 Double Wide c5:764=·;__-,-___ (304)882·2523
ng
30IW ST R'T 180 Gaillpc&gt;ls,
·
Doc
oft'
.10
For Sale: Crown Clly; 3 oottlng on rented lot In nal WF. 30·50. Respol)d O&lt; phona al(740}441-1471. Call Prlmaiy Core Nursing
tors ICO. Apply jler·
l!ildrooms,
2
Baths, Point Pi....nt ar8a 2~ 233 2nd Ave. C0nwn1ont 10 Oakwood ApiB., 1 Bedroom,
with tehltf' and picture to
service at (800)518-2273. son ~m~te Care Chlro(740)256-1744
wall• thermal ,..· win- Downtown. 2 Bedtooml. 1 Eflk:lency. Between Town
EB7 200 Main Street, Point Arcadlo Nuralng Center Ask for Phyllis.
pracl~ Behind Burger King.
- : priced to":.... Col 112 Balh, Kllcllen- Stove end Holzer. No 'Pe~. Ideal
- . WV 25550
II now accopling appllce· McClure's Restaurant now URGENTLY
NEEDED·
3 bedroom, in Middleport, (304)875-3689 ask for and Relrlgerator. $4901 lor Single Persoo. Depoait
RETIRED LONGABERGEA llono lor Full time AN's and hiring all 3 localooe, full or plasma donors, eam $45 to
call Tom Anderson after AooOmoily.
month plus depollit and Rei· Call (740)446·3929 alter
Roaaonable pricea Atter- LPN'a,lor Mldn!W&gt;t Blilft. and part·llme, pic!&lt; up apollca· $60 tor 2 or 3 hOurs weekly. Start Your Business To- 5pm, (740)992·3348.
-·No P..-. (740)4411- 6pm.
noons (304)675-4172 No STNAs afternoon PQI!bons, lion at location &amp; bring back Call .Sera-Tee, 740-592- day... Prime ShOpping canSingle Parent Program. 4826.
::!:,:::__ _ _ _ __
.30
Full and Part time. We oller betw 8
&amp; 6851
ter Space Available At Af· 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Ranch Easy Financing Available.
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom
9
INWif' leave f.
exceUent benefits that in- 10 .~8 ~ Monday ~~ru Sat
· ·
tordable Rata. Spring Valley Style. 1 acre mil, whlttpool, (304)755-7191
3 Bedroom, 1 112 bath, apartment, In town, large
elude Health lnaurance, rday '
· WANTED: Experienced Plaza, Call740·446.0101. panlal buement; vinyl aidbasement, large family kitchen, LR, $500/mo. Ref·
GivEAWAY
401K, Ute lneurance, com- u ·
Roofing &amp; Carpenter Fore.
lng, wrap around deck,
room, located In Pt. Pleat- arencea &amp; depOiit required.
Lw______,.. petltlve wages and oppor1u- Needed RN to cover a leave man's, valid driver's license,
MONEY
Eleclrlc and gas heat.
I
~ant, W.Va. (740)44&amp;4)924 (740)448·3644
.
-.
nHiea for advancement. II of absence to service ap- hand tools, reliable transro LoAN
. COunty Schools, 1~ mUes __ AND U\J~ • 3 Bedroom Route 160 Ev- =~-~---.,
S Tum your rummage a S you are a team playBf who proximately 175 children in ponation and references refrom GaiHpolls. Patnot area.
ergreen. $3751 month plus
SPACE
~tad items into C&amp;lh, enjoy&amp; wor1dng with the eld- 6 preschools In Athens CJtlred. Local work. excel- CREDIT PROBLEMS Hav· Paved Road, Appraised at OHice building In Miners-- ClePOIIt. (740)4.te-61 89 or
· R»n'
740-992-973-4 or 740-742· erty, apply In person be· County. Applicants must ba lont pay for right .,.,..,., In Financial problam~? Is $62,000 Asking $55,000. ville, 800 sq. ft., e/o, OOV· (740)4.46 8865.
~
FOR
.
740)446-871 5
1o408.
tween 9-4 or call Kathryn willing 1o hava a criminal onuses, vacation. Apply at ~ ecf
red'
For
inlo.
(
erect
parklrlg
calling
fan
1
~:1e,~~.N. Cen
background check. Duties Chriatlan's Construclion, bank~pt~:eeroot tQ~;our Newly constructed single $275/mo., 614-&amp;71-1881. ' 2br. Traler. Melon, All Ulllit· Moi:Mie Home Site tot renl,
'2 Call. Male, 3 y181'1. neua
ng
ter inctude medical tracking, vi· Inc., 1403 Eastem Avenue, problems? Call us today:
story 1600 sq. tool home.
lei J*CI, Fumllhtd, $300 Sandhill Act. behind Fox's
- · iihots up ID date. FeE=~ sg,eel
slon and hearing acreens, Gallipolis. (740)446-451"
PREMIER CREDIT AE·
located 10 mlnulos lrom
Lars &amp;
PartOn, 2 People min. Pizza. (304)675-7566
malo, 1 112 yea;a, spayed,
740667·J156
growth and development WANTED· Full· lime
. SOURCES, "AN the llnan· Holzer Hospllal, 20 minutes
Aaui'AGE
$200. Deposit (304)773·
up lo dale. (740)31111charting ond loachlng about ~-· bl
poOl clalllelp you need' 1.866lrom Pieuant Valley Hoop!5268
Nice lots, quiet counlry set·
8201
EOE
health and safety to both ,...,..., ava11 a e at a com•
off SR 160
tlng will accommodate
181
Attention!
children and adults. Excel· munltv group home for~ 257 ~· ~~:in:
l-1/2 acre lot o; :Jrivate 2.7 ac:res, uneven terrain, In 3 bedroom mobile home In 16x8o, $100 per month, call
Free pupptel, mixed, cute,
tent computer and Oll)Bnlza- ple with mental retardation pe~a •con
n,
·
room, Welchtown, $2700, t'leue Mlckllepor1,
no
pets, Ed at Country Homes, 740.-y to go, (740)992-112211. Eam 2nd. Income wolhout lion skiUs as well as reliable In Bidwell. 1) 12· 9pm Fri· bu~ness. mongeges, auto. 2·112 balhs, big kllchen call (660)583-3753, Leave (740)9V2·5656.
992·2187.
.
2nd job up to
.
day· Bam- 4prn saturday·
wloak cabinets, OR, LR name and number
$25.·$75./hr. Pt·Fl
transportation are a must 8a '. 6 S nd . 12 .g ' loan Available I AN types of wlg&amp;s k&gt;g fireplace, central
Small Trailer ciOII to groLosr
,W)
Schadule
fiexltJie
m pm2) u4o ay,1pm sun·
pm credll wocome
1
No r888 a1r,
· 1aundry room, front Partlalaofland. (304) 6- eery 110re and dovmtown
~
1·800-218-7543
lthboth roost1 be d
h Monday.
1
\ lll(t !I \'.llhl
57
3
rOUND
. www.Monay·Dreams.com w
houmornngan a er· day· 3.30• 11 .30 pm Mon· up front. CALL TOLL FREE porch &amp; 2-112 car garage. 9929
Gallipolis. References and •Ill'"""'!~--;;;;;;~
noon
rs required Worlt da ; Tuesda .. 3·30- 10·30 1-888-207-5028.
Immediate possession Apdtpoalt. (740)446·1158
- - - - - - - - load Is approximately 60 y
)', '
.
praised at $125,500 Make Indian Creek Estates 3-6
UOUii!JIOIJ)
~ur.d :~=~~~a: AVON! AI Areasl To Buy or hours a month. Pay Is ~==tHih~~~~~~: LOANSI LOANSI LOANS! offer. Call (740)446-4514 acre lOIII. weal ot' Rio
Aoom.o&lt;NJs
Gooos
Coolville Frida Nov 2nd' 5811. Shirley Spears, 304- $20.00 par hour with no qiD a/ GEO g Ud d ' Problem Paying Billa? In from 8·5pm M·F or Grandt from $25900 - FOR RENt
. -.
.
(740)887-o&amp;06 Y .
' 875"1429·
~=:~:. p~~~~~~~esc~~ ~ce~ae and ~ drlvl~:e~ ~r:~l. G~~kr~~~), 0~~~ (740)446·3248,after 5Pm· (740)246-5747
, .
Appliances: Reconditioned
.
COME GROW
· Coordinator, at The Athens- cord. Excelle~t benefll pack· coma. Call Toll· FrH 1· Rio Grande Area, 2 Bad- Large corner building lot 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
Lost._ Reward! Chocolate
WITH USI
Meigs Educational Service age. Salary. 58.001 hour. 868-496·9486.
rooms, 1 112 Bath, L.A., with 205' Ohio River front· merits, jumished and untur- Retrigrators. Up To 90 Days
Lab Mmed Harley. ,. years We are expanding our clrcu- Center, 507 Richland Ave- Send resume to: Buckeye
Kltcheri, large level Lot. age ekwatlon ehot sur· nlshed, I!Bhlrity deposit re· Guaranteed! We Sell New
old. White around the tatlon statl to bener serve nue Sulle 108. Athens. Community Services, PO MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO, Immediate
Possession, vey&amp;d, appralaed, Hr1oua quired, no pets, 74C-992· Maytag Appliances, French
mouth.
(740)«6-6358 our customers. We are look· Please Include a resume BoK 604, J~ckson, OH DEBT CONSOUDAnON, $27,900. (740)448·2801
Inquiries only, $40,000 2218.
City Maytag, 740-446-779ft.
,(740)446.()898.
lng lor 8 .,.,..,. that """ wllh application. Deadline 11 45640. Deadhna: 1119101.
CALL (408)tllll-7480
(30-4) 882 .3736 belora 5pm
high energy level, sell- motl· November 15. We are an Equal Opponunity Employer 24 HOUR RESPONSE
· 1 and 2 Bedroom Apart· Ct:xnplate Living Room Fur,
YARDS..W:
vated and enjoys wortdng Equal~r1unltyEmployer Warehousel Delivery per~
Moon.EIIoMF.s Looking To, Buy A New menta, Deposit &amp; Reier- nitura. $400.{304)676-6986
::::;;::::;~=~· with
people. Must have de- and Provider.
F 11 f
be 111 ApS
S
Home? Oont Have Land'? ence. HUO Approved.
pendable transportation, ba·
.
ERVIC£.';
FOR ALE
We Doll! Huny Only 10 lots (740)441-1519
CCUCh &amp; chair, dinet1e set,
1 ~t~~~~ Fu:tu~ No
ale computer knowledge Part 11me driver needed to
Lett 304-736-7295.
Hldeabeda, chest. twin bed,
·
1
Y.uwS.W:.
This Ia 8 full time salarted cover vacations or . sick phon~l;rtt"'I"Iy on g:r·
TURNED DOWN ON
'
2ApanmentaAvallabla,2br. baby bed, atove, mlcro14xBSShultz 2 bedroom All
G~
poslllon and otters all com- leave. Flat bed truck deliver· ~I OH
venue, I· SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI? appliances
dlstlwasher Nk:e 4 acre tract near 2217 North Main Street. wave, drop leaf table.
~Lw-lllliiiiiiiliiiii-rl· pany benefits Including ing building materials to job
s, ·
No Fee Unlesa We Wlnl W/0, ex 16· covered porch: Galllpolla- easy Ierma, $275/monlh, $100/Deposlt. (740)448-9742
.....
haallh Insurance, vacation, lites. Must be ~ble to carry 11«i
B~
(740)446-3583
No Pe,s. Utilities
blCiud·
.
57,600 . ,304 )675-a295
1_888 •582-3345
11/09/01 and 11110101, personal days, and 401 K tleavy malanal . Call
TRAINING
Nloa Alver and Creek From· ad. (304}675-4900
:or Sale. Reeondltioh~d
3374 St Rt. 141, Name plan. We are part of a large (740 )245 ·5366
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per age L.ota, Public Water and 2 8edroom washer/ dryer e:ara,T~=so~
~~~':orkld~lnf:tl~;e:o.ro~ company that offers e&gt;Ceel·
Galllpolla Career COllege 10
Month, ~. 99%. Fixed lnter881 HWer, survey map avella· hookup. 7 ~lies from Hospl- ance. 34o7 Jackson ~e8o e8anie Bab'
1i
lent career advancem_ent
(Careers Close To Homa)
HoMiiS
Rate With Air And Un- ble. Call for details. Home- tal. (740)441-0117
nue, (304)675·7388.
Ox,
Wt
~tt:· oJJI)Oftunllles. For interv1ew
PART· TIME
Call Today1740·446-4367
FOR S..u....E
derpinnlng 1-888·928-3426 stead
Bend,
Broker -.:....-'------ :_;.;.;.:c.:.;:.:;_:.:.:=--,ueen ae
·
r consideration send a c:over
OFFICE POSITION
1-800-214-0452, '
.
(304)882-2405
3RoomsandBalh. 4601!ve Freezer, $45; dinette sit,
ItemS.
lener teHing us why you are we have a part-time poslReg 190-05·12749.
t970 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom,
Street. Utilities Paid. Stove $25: dining tabi* (seats 8)
the person we are looking lion open at our Sentinel of·
. 10.5 Acres with 1999 Fleel· new appliances &amp; carpet, ,
and Refrigerator No Peta. with 4 ohalrs, $100, call
4 Family Flrsl f!me S&amp;le. for along with your resume flee in Pomeroy Thls posl· 1'70 ••··~ ... ~~·- wood Modular Home Near good condition, $3,000
$475 pius deposit. Aeleren- (740)992·2472
Rodney Community Center. to Paul Barter, Ci~latlon lion requiru ~puter and
,.,.~r..uu;:t
GalliP~JIIs. Excellent Condi- nag., (740)949-9308
cas Required. (740)440.
November
I· 10. Nic:e Olraator It Ohio Valley Pu~
.
. lion. Private, Country Sat·
riD
Ia"'··
Mollotlan Csrpet 202 CWI&lt;
Clothing. Ail alzoa. Toyo, llshlng CO 825 Third Avo math oklll:,h muat snjoy
.
ling. Siockod Pond Addl· t985 Si&lt;yllno 14170, 3 bedllou!iEs
~
Chapel Road, PollOI', Ohio.
Comf01t.1. Shot~-- mite, I Gr.lllpolla, OhJo 46831 .
., ~rll:l;g. w 1 1 people, b~ All of your home rep&amp;irl, ad· tlanal 7.5 1\cres Av~llable. room. Good condition. Call
FOR RENr
(740)«6·7444 1-en-830·
8 ,3
~n ~· ftour ~~ dltlona &amp; remodeling. 24hr Call Ja.nall Call at Century. Harold, 740-385-9848.
..,
North 3rd, Middleport, 1 9162 Free Eatlmatu Easy
tll4.
0
IIP.I'"'~....,":!:"---., Coolspot Ia hiring tor fuel ~ling be:;!t,~ t~a ~r• ai =~~c:nc~ls:~~t~' ~~~~~ ~ 1 H(~l6s~ ':: JC~=r0 1994 14x70 Oakwooel, 2 6Ntroomb• ~nd latQiuttorage. !:,~~,.:~~:::site::;: flna~ino , 90daMyaaainaaa
4 Y.uw SA1z. ~- ouhlor &amp; iloll Mlp, 8:00am and 5:00pm. Mon· .,. (3()1) 57a-aoo8
r
BOOroom, 2 lull balh, 3 ton w at,room. Pllrtdild "'"""'" (740)1i92.()185
ou.o. VIa
alter Card.
~/MJOOUt mull bo ablo to work all doy lhrough Friday. For In·
p.
t-BOil-731 ·9011 1·
halt pump, otove, (740)367· carpet lhrougl&gt; out. 13501 .
'
· · Olivo· a·llttla uvo alot.
"'~..,;iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiPI· shlita, alao 4 to 12 oook, torvlow oonaldoraUon oond Good O&lt; Bad Credll Evon 122 Kl
Dri 3
0807
month. Dopoall Roqulrtd. Now Taking Applleatlono- Now Ro!lyoon 59 tl4wx71
-,
mull: bl able to worll till your reeum• and cover lat· Bankruptcy Call Toll Free
neon va. or •
·
(740).-&amp;1·21581
35 Wtll 2 Bedroom Town· 112l
lb
721 Oliver St., Middleport, midnight, 1top bv tor an ap. tar or Attanllan af Diana Hill, 24 hrt 1·8'88·426·83Q3
bedroom, full ba•tm•nt, 11t tlmt buyara· Govern•
houu Apartmtnll, lncludea wlneso!o~lt~'~~~~~~awdolunbvll~
Hanclarton'a raaldlnca plklatlon RT. ~ Coolvlllo Ohio Vallay Publlahlng Co
.,
.
many now laoturoa. Cloao mont loanl' buy loono &amp; Buy homaa lrcm I18Q/mo., Watlr Blwaga, Traoh
' Oh
'
'
' ea5 Third Avo Galnpolli' 1111
WANTiiD
l'o ,oohoola ond ohOpplng. ulo· (740)448-3083 Oak· Foraoloaurta, 4% down, 30 ii380IMo 740
0008 ' nyll85. Good Foiling Strol·
·
'
·
Ohio 4ae31
.,
'
To Do
. 154,500. Call (740)441• wood Suporoontlr
Yllrl at U% APR. For 1111·
''
.·
lor 15. 38" whitt otonn door,
oanlal Mygonllol Naaded
·
6310 or (740)~·2&lt;125
8a
On- lnga 1-8D0·318·33a3 111.
US, load ol hardwood
0
Part :nma. (740)~·1408, ~111· limo &amp;aloo holp· Mull
HIM Ml PLIAHI
~~~
P~roo'r.ionth
1108.
Tara
Townhouoo
Apa~·
blocking llmora, 125.
3 Bodroom on· Roull 2 2~5xeo
1 F·
bo dopondlbll and avail&amp;• • 1 ~ •• f
CT
(•")" 7• 11332
'
• • t •
•·
a monll, Vary Spooloua, a (740)441·0525
bll lmmedlallly
Call noooat- ·~" rom
- . ••
.18% l•ed lnllrtlt Rata, rOr non •• room ONUH, lldlcoma a Ploo;a CA 1
7~= ~~ ~1e~~~~:;~~=r:r 740}441-R:Ma '
:::•.:rA~:g:t:~~g 5 room hoUil Point Ploao· t•SIH28-34ze
r1"fol:'1'310Clu Hoat. 1/l laih,' My cOrpotOd, :•T,r:u~~ ~~~110~·
ooln Ava. Nov. ~~~ 5P111~· Call~~ ' " ' 8a1Mperton tor Ohio Valloy ~rs Oflloo E1p. Foltuna ant, '"'" lot. ,a 011 garage, OAKWOOD HOMII Oak Hill, OH. 3 lldroom ::,•::,:~~~.
~~)e ~~ bafoli lpm:
10pm, No\1. 10th. ...,.!pm. tol00'487·eM8 !111. 11170 ~mory Clar!lan, lull 0&lt; """
Componlaa, Ratall Bua. 1 112 balh. f43,DDD. Family
IUPIR CINTIR.
brick Capo Cod. -mont. LHM Pluo SlourltY Dlpoalt
CMIItmM ldau, Naw ·www.homo)obl.oom/12110 lima, wa train and fumlan OWner5yra.,OhlropraOtiO Ralooallng. (30-4)175-7741 Ovtr40hOmHtaohou
147111 monlh, ~allrtnoa Raqulrld, Oaya: 140-441· ••-~----..
·--~ ........
illdl ' Call (740)""
~nagar
5yra.
••• ,.' EvonInga: 7'"--7
-·~
1
' ·-~.,~ • ......,
,..,.. '
- · ·•a••
•• Oflkla
EXCELLENT
rteonl/1ocal
Srlck Ranoh, !xoollonl Con· Irom. Orlv11 11"1
"1Raqulred. (740)314•111U or ~
~- ·
"""""'"'
-~=:0::~0:::~&amp; :.'iC:'~:.,:~=~ torappt.Tonya,
rolorenooa,.Honalt,Dedl· dillon, No oulalda malnll- loi!QokwoodHomoaor
(740)241·1311
, . 0502,740-441'0101.
~
GooDs
.
ginning o1 HOfl hoUr.
' COOK'!! PART Tllll, SaiiiPirton: Full·tlmo, ban· oiled, Ha-lng, 34yr. nanoo, 2 l!ildrooma ol pol· Nllro. (30-41 755 ' 5115
Pilot Program, Ranllra 'I'Mn Rlvor Towort now ao:;...,...;-,-~--~-, PULL TIM•, ALL IHII'!W, 11111, rotallolpeJianoo rtlar· old Famalo with Upboll
olblo 3rd In ponlally flnlahld
~IDUCID
Nlldld, :!C+731·7205.
ooplliifltppllcatlona lor Modo! 1831 Turl&lt;lah Mauaor
Vllld 1111 New and Uaacl liND NIIUlll TO: THI red. Apply II Ufoolyie Fuml· Polltlvl Aftltuda, Alwaya A baHrnant, Lorge Attaohld 1 All DouOII Wlda Dltplays
11~. HUll oublldl.lod apt. 8mm ~lnt wllh layonlt 1nd
lloma. Fri. Nov.lth, Sat. DAILY IINTINIL, PO turo. No ptoona oallo. Apply Smlll. Avallablo ANY TIME car garaga of largo work mull go. Only 1~85 down. Why rant? govornmont lor aldoily and dlublild. .8oabbar!l, 10 Roundt emm
Nov. 10th. Ill Englllh lOX 72to01, POMI~OY, In perot)n, 8&amp;5 3rd Avonuo, for lnllrvlow. (740)441-8&amp;110 araa. $80,000 &lt;lalllpoilo Only II Oakwood Momoa of bockod loano lrom a4110
EOM.
ammo on 8andoloaro. I1DD.
Road. 8-4
OH 457H.
Clolllpolla, OH.
' LIIVI Vo~omall.
Forry, WV. (30")875·27"7
Nllro. (30-4)755·5115
down. (740)441·30Q3
(304)171HI711.
(30-41875·2352

I

I

•P•-

.. . . ,.._.. M ........ AliA at 1-. •TNI

I Set Up. 1-888-828-2428

you know, and NOT 10 send ...,

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-·- -

--oror any OiiWilloo&amp; 10
,..
IUOit

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. new lhiftl: 7am·3pm, 7am- er.
1111"-----..., www.Goals2SUOC8BS.com 5pm, 3pm-1,pm,. 1lp~-.
t

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•AI..........

AmUinu

I

.

• No Commercial Ads

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio valley Ptlbllshlng, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

1 • t r ~~ It ~.=- Ir

~~

I
•

6

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

Wo.....

......... :a :a lid ....._ •Curi'IIIINIII :aMI!

auctloo-, Scenlo Nulling Centar Ume, aond to Tho
compiotl auctiOn Hrvlu. II IICCOC)IIng ~ lor Dally 8anUnel, PO Bo1
~ 1611,0hlo &amp; Weot a full timo AN. 7 to 3 end 3 J2t.8, - o r , Oh ol57l8
Vlrglnl.l, 304-nJ-5785 Or to 11 shlfll. Great Blnefits,
304-nJ-5447.
Elcpe&lt;1enee Pay, end '"""'
S1NA
.

pony. lull -

150 IWlld lor ""' totum o1

::z"d.,.":r:;'oo;:.;w u:n':.;

:

• .............................. . , .... .., ............................ ...

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

• Include Phone Number And Address When Heeded
• Ad's Should Run 7 Oar-s

6
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"mbuna , ......

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

l'l!llsoNAIB

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...... ., ........ ......_..., ....., .... ..., ..... ....._
..., .... _...,..,a................
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.................
................................
POI.JCIIS:ONo...,..

• St1rt Your Adl With A Key-word • Include Complete

tI

·

~~~~""8..= ~it ~~~4

Monday thru Friday

,.

513

t 1.:,0::.,

To Place
1\egi~ttr
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad. (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
.Call. IOCiay•••
1112-2157

I \.f-..

I

:==-==.:
..
tor"""

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW

\\\.4\l \.1 I

*·

... :'.:..:=_-.. --..,_
....

:

Word Ads

3

~7------=: ~~~ =: ·1! ~ ~ Block party In Toronto! Raptors reject 24 shots

•
AnHq;.o -,.,.
•• 01oon.·
~-

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

()lf!ee lfo,q,~ .

The Dlilly Sentinel • Page a

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

::~j~APr:.:. a:=~=i;i_;;=j;ir;:::::~i:;Sow!;=::;-~--====~N~B~A~R~O~U";:N;";D~U~P;-...!!!=.::=:!!..:==:~~~

Th&amp;nd8y, Nov... 2001

7

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'

12

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Vincent
. ft•aPepBl

Dr.·=·
:.:.·=- "::
r=;•

.

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F'o

s

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Brown

I

ftomPqeBI

Bu frof!' t~e Classlfledsi

.

?:;.

NOW

HIRING

awn.•

$6.$8

P.•rfect

Per Hour

=":fr1

v-.

Gallia Meigs Community
Action is seeking a Housing
Program Developer

• •i

�.........
P8ge B 4 • The Deily BltltiMI

--

-~

·--

____ ··-"""'"_____ ,..

.....

TIMncley, Nov... 2001

Pomeroy, lllddll!por"., Ohio

~~~~~~----------------

Thuntda~No~8,2001

NFL BLOTTER

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro .. word Puzale

Jets' Robinson fined for

-on
·-· -

PHtLLIP

ACAOSS

ALDER

1 Olnltlr

flptinc in came with Sllnts

6

•

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Kt 4J I
1
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HE's BRINGriN I
'fOU M&amp;RE.!!

••

'229.00*
0 FUIINSTALLAT!ON
0 FREE IN HOME EST!MATE

(O(JLI&gt; YOU MAICf
IT .S'NAPPY1
%'MAN
ENI&gt;ANfifllel&gt;
$PfCif$.

0 FULLYmLDED
• ·~ YEAR WARRANTY

QUALITY WINDOW

992-4119 1-800-291-5600
VIlli Our Sbow,_ 0. State Route JJ
'MO.. NorthOII'aoao,.,OIIIo,AI CowltJ Rood II

The Vlllege of
Middleport
lo
,.quilting
•ppllcellono end
r11um11 for 1
w t 11owor

• No Dealen er Coatneton Pleue
Vila/Mutarcard

l'uhll&lt; Nntl...,.ln Newspnlll'rs.
Ynur Right to Knnw, lldinrcd Rlphl to \'our !)nor.

November It, 2001 e1 Ju-ieptambor,
4:00 p.m. Till Vllllgl 2001
11mpllng

WVlllll3477

RIITCIME.
RIITIEIIED
$2•.11 PER JOINT
IEIIllllY
$321.11 PEI.JIIIT

I CION'\ K~O'ol W~Y 'M.Y CN,.l,IT
OCI~G&gt; ~ f&gt;- "fi)(E.O*II-K.0/1£,,

P"
'"I
IT "-LW"-YS ~ UKE. ['M.

BroKE '!

noripubllc oohool

olw18r frOm 111101110

,...,.... till right to period.
.Deportment
of
reloct 1nd 111 Tho
RACINE, lduallllon.
IPPIICIIIOnl 1nd to VILLAGE DF will II...
Anr
plriOftl
·wolve lrregullnftlla In 1111 - H r y ellpo hiving lonowlldge ol
8UJ*!nllndsnt.
. 1111 oppllcltlon 1nd to to enourl I hot . I'IQ181 dllor!miMIOry
Appl- muot lwve • • co 1 p 1
1 n d ldlqUIII monltor!ntl proollo.. In tho·
of
Cllee 1 W1t1r 1nd llfiPIICIIIon, which ln. will be porlormld In , recrultmlnl
W.-llr T!Mbiwnt the opinion of the · 1111 fuluN.
IIIUdlntl, ldllllllion•
Plenl
Opor11or Middleport Boord of For oddltlonel omplovllll!ll.
Ll01n11. lndlvlduol PubliC AlliiN m1J bl lnformellon conllot IOhollrohlpo/loln.n.
Holmen, 1
. welvere,
·lhlll be roeponolbll mOIIIdvenllglouo. John
for tho complete {11) 2, 4, 7, I, e, 11
Dporalor 11 Mwt20 lduCIIIOnll
operetlon
end
orMt-2288.
progr1m1,
or ...__ _ _ _ _..
1111lnten•nce of the
Public Notice ·
A~l
e1hlllllolll-moul
Vllllgl'a Waler end
lnformttlon II 1110 er totlvllllt lhould
WwiWwellfllwblw.tl '••ft •up COPPER
evallablepfromS thlf conttcl the Ohio.
U.S. E A
I I
D1p1r1ment
of
Plante Including but .......,..,.
not limited to leb TAP MONITORING
Drinking
Wellf l!duCIIIon, 011101 ot
tooting, grit tnd VIOLA'IIOH PUBLIC Hotline {1·101)..42•· Student tnd Femlly ·
ocr~~nlng, pumping,
NOTICE
4711).
Progromo, EquiiJ
'""I I ling,
AIIUtlftOI
lft'd
ground• keaplng, Public
weter (11)7,8,8,2001
Complll- loollon,
1101~ 2nd Street • Mason, WV
record kllplng, ~·=r:!'~::'= 3tc
11 Iouth Fro.nt
(1000 ft from the brldp)
111 1
reeullllon to porlorm
Tel: (304) 773-5800
budgeting,
and leed tnd copper
43211·4111, (114)
••lellnco with long reduced trl••nnuel
ou.
411 4
r1na• pl1nnlng lor monitoring In order
Public Notice
.All oompl81nto•
Hours: Smt • Thur llam • 10 pm
IICIII!lla. Applloallone to enouro thet ••f•
mode ' will
be
end det1ll1d llel of weter II being
NOTICE
lnvfltlgoitld prior to
Frll:
·
. Sat 11 am ·'llpm
.
reeponelblllllla con be eupplled to the
the loeu1nce of 1
"Greco Aoldlmy charter to the Hid
plckld up 11 tht conaThuiiiii'.R •ciNE
~i ;~- BUFFET SPECIAL
Pullllo Worko Olflce
•
"
•
ochooL•
237 RICI Stroot, VILLAGE OF weltr IChOOI, locoted II
I c;,w"
I •
II!Cidloport, Ohio. •r•tem felled to 5331 81111 Street In
21, 2001
I WICH ..... •Dill&amp; ..... :
AppiiCitlono muet be perform
thlo AlbenJ, , Ohio h11 1111 ,a,t.1.2001
f
I
I
.......,_ on or before monitoring during 1M ,. q u ute d
•
1 11;30am- 2:00pm : 5:00pm-7:30pm 1

·Cellular

eff Warner Ins.

992-54;'9

=::.:::--·

"Ahead In Senice"
35537 St. RL 7 North • Pomeroy, Oh 4S720 I

BIG NATE

!

740-985·3831.
12% tconomy Stock Fwd ......... $UCII100
12%Equlne12
(form111y Wlellm Pride) ...........$5.00150
21% Hunllra Pride Dog Food .......$1.751!0
SWelt Lick Deer Blockl."''''''''''''''''''' $1.75
15.2&amp;'100
.................................251100

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

I'D)

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH
nrx1r &amp;111'1120'1

(740) 992-3194
992-6&amp;35

10111'.

Tree Service

I

BACK IN SC~OOL AGAIN ..
1 TRIED TO MAKE fit( D06
I-IAI'PV, I!UT ALL [ DID

-~
11130

1

'(011 MAVEN T MET

SNOOPY: THIS

M'{ DOG, HAVE

15 OUR NEW
PRI~CIPAW ..

't'OU, SIR 7

IT'D BE NICE, SIR, IF '(OU
RETURNED HIS SALUTE ..

j

---------------------~
'

IU..IT TO GO ILUIICII•• ••.111
au•FET TO IDI•r 'l.llt

co

H

sunset Home ·
Construction

.

• Stump 'rlndlng
•'Bucklt Truck

HoworciL.
Wrltestl
Roofing • Home
MalritenanceGuttera· DOwn
· Spout

YOUNG'S

Bryan Reaves

New HomM, Room Additions,
Garagea, Pole Buildings, ROofl,
Siding, Deckl, Kltchena, Drywall ·
·. 6 More
. · .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

949·1405
591·5011

'•••ne a

Frld:~y ;

740·742·3411

·-----

PRUI8TIMAT£S
. 740 ··1111

992-e215

··~

•

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.

ON

Rnc ky R H11pp llq&lt;'n l
Hox 1119
r,:11dcllrport Ohtn lr1/bD

\

Local 843-5284
M¢iclire Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement.
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Hom~

•

j

•.
••

.

r

4

•

PROJECT?

~

5 Frrdllrg

31 Lummox
33

21

morMI

yword-··

~r-r-

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41

44 8wlng

iiiUIIC
45 . _ ..
.... I B.A.
hOull
fT Promllllia
llldlo llulf 41 Hoodwln(
A Wll a~ ind 411
ol
ltlldlar
~
IOUIIIPollr
humor
uplafll
11 Willi
"EICUII
Ulldont
IIIII"
!13 llllmll
Lib

eo....,•

Eur........
-r-.r-;r-

• Slretil

rT

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula C.mpoa

'

~ ClphorcryptOgrl!lll ... - ' " " " .......- . , . . _
-'"• pootoftd .,_,, Eooh- In h oiphlr- lor anolhor.
T~)ll clw:

'U'V

POUYY

E

AIIKLW•OIIKL
U

NEP

IlK

L equ8 K

PIIKTNDUOID.

KBGBD

I!

ACKT

RAIIPW

CF

YMGP

PIIKT.'
YIIDPDOI!
YWKK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All ~ wtttlng II IWfmm/np under
wartrand holding your braatti. - ·F. Sco1t FitZgerald '"'
·

1:~~~:~' S©'\t~1J.-~~tfS•

Ulte~ ~y

ace (discardin!l a dub
from the dunimy),
ruffed a .d iamond in
the dummy. cashed

II I I 1 I I

WOlD
GAM I

,OILAN

four scrambled worda M·

low ro lorm four almplto words ..

r--::-:-::-:~-:---,1

N0 E F Y L
2

the club ace, ruffed a
dub in· hand, ruffed a
diamond with the

I

.

.

.

-

I
.

T HCAL
'--r-yr,..T"""'1·

~~~~~:;::"~'"~'~

queen,
the
spade ·and
ace.
With his preparations
I p V O T g~
nearly complete, · Is I I • ·Comic to audience, "I didn't
Merblum ruffed dum_ . . 1
_
have a dog when I was a kid. I got
a pet ant instead. I paper trained
my's last dub in his
hand, then exited ·
N0 RM E 0
ilona piece of-·---- - -."
·
with
trump. East . f.~11ia-1 0 Complore 1ho chucklo quoled
won with the king, . 1
. 1
. 1
_ 1
. . .
by filling In the milling wcrd:~
but had only hearts
you develop lrom alop No. 3 below.
left, so he had to conA PRINT NUMBERED
a
cede a trick to dum~ lETTERS IN SQUARES
my's heart king.
A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS'
Merblum won five
V FOR ANSWER
.
spades, one heart, two
SCRAM·LI!TS ANSWERS
diamonds, one dub
Oddity- Maker· Lanky· Coyote- ALREADY
. and two diamond
Many
things can't be fixed . Instead of coming up with
ruffs in the 'dummy.
new
things
I think we should be able to fix the things we
Plus 450 raked in alALREADY have.
most all the matchpoints.

Nov. 9, 2001

bdorc.
SC:ORI'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Someone With whom
you've had an arrangement in
the past may contac:t you
:~gain today with ~ bit of infonmtion th:at could be quite
beneficial to you pen~onally.
Get a j ump on life by under~tanding the influence• that'll
govern yuu in the yen ahead.
Send (ur your Anro-Graph
predh:tionl by mailing. $2 to
Auro-&lt;~rnph, C/0 thil new-..

pAper, 1'.0. !lax 1~7. Wirk- .
liffc, OH &gt;44092·0167. De
~ure to "ut'o. your zudltlc •ian.
SAGITTAIUUS (Nov. 23.
IJe&lt; , ll) -- In ordor to
cac:hievc 111Cti1U In tl(c:, h dcpendt uptm hmY much we
know anJ not wbo we know.
liuw.:vcr. tCidlly tht: former
tnAY be what en1powcn yuu

1"

Phone 992·2155

·

-

e....... unll

nccnneli· 4 FNICO .... 25

-..

Don't hcsit:Hc to t:tke on

· ~age
~

2tW

23

24

CLAl a.
·
•. Roorrongo letfon of tho

~omcrhing yon'Vl' never done

.:, for one month.for.as· '•'
', ~· ,., "'· ldviai-525 ~.~.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

22

t1n11
3 Dill

l)ing_
diamond 'fith
que~1i,b\s·
dedarer
•hed
the
dJ'•Inond
Ca

life endeavor:&gt; will be hettc:r
than ever in the year ahead.

Rtmodellng
Stop~Compall

F,.. &amp;timet..
V. C. YOUNG Ill

1 lleclpoq!J.

2-

glfll

.

YllUr mental fi[ncs5 w han:..
die dJallcngc~ or larger-than-

• ·l!ttlltkMII I Ptt.lmblng

Pointing

J2 .........

I
1
I r:-;..:.:.+,r=r I
1

•

• lllaom
llte111 a llllrlfl. ·

.vtnwt-...

couofn

21 llldtlll
Ellllm

·-

'

FREE ESTIMATES!

Fffl Elflmllfl

7-

55 "Alii Dr. -• t P I II
opollon
17 , . . . . 5I - 11 WlrwiCit
1
20
12
21 Komol
5I E-oo
11111¥1-ltoldlr
II
22 W111C1111a
DOWN
tt ChOre
:15 Clilmp•o
21 Senor'a

Agamst Merblum,
West ?tade th~ unfortunate . lead of a low
diamond. After win-

a

WAS Nul.KE 141M SICK ...

I

• Top • Rall\ovol • Trim

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

'l'c5,51R, IT'S GOOD TO BE

chunll

1

52

All~

==:::t::::ltt:::::j spade
cashed

PEANUTS

Call for Products
or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell
740-992-7036

:4 yrs &amp; under FREE o4 yrs &amp; under FREE 1
I
5-8 yrs- 12.99 I 5-8 yrs - 03.99 I
: 9-12 yrs ~'3.99
9-12 yrs -'4.99 :

~
~~~~~~~~
~ t
"'" ico "··

Herballfe
Independent
Distributor

-t.tg,:

~~~~~~~~

I

Hoi"'"'- ...
.• r.::-1...... 54lnlfl......
•~.:~and=::~
t::.:~
o It':......., =~
::Z.. ~
:=- a =:"..,.

In a Chicago or
rubber-bridge game,
every deal is a separate
entity. Also, you
don't worry about
overtricks. Just making or breaking the
contract is all that
matten. In a duplicate
tournament, though,
everyone plays the
same deals. And in a
matchpointed pair
event, your score on
each deal is calculated
\&gt;y comparing your
result with the other
pairs who held your
cards. The more tricks
you win, the higher
your score.
This layout occurred during the
North
American
Open Pairs Championship, held last
March in Kansas City,
Mo. The winners
were Doug Doub and
Fnn'k
Merblum,
Connecticut residents
who arc former leammates of mine. It's always great to sec
friends be successful.
Merblum opened
with a modern-style
weak two-bid: never
mind the suit quality,
feel the pre-emptive
effect.
Most South. in four
spades )ost tllree tricks
(one spade and two
hearts) to score plus

;J

c or no

~::~~~~::' o ~1~

..

'~~~~~i~~

='

- ding 50LIIol
ISPg
1 1a11

....

420. ' I

Shade River AG Service

41

14 SIOul&amp;op

Openlna lead; • t

CAN I SORR'f SOME. PARFUME,
LOWEEZ't'? LUKEY'S TAl&lt; IN 1
ME OUT TOltlNNE.R.

41 I' I liol

much?"

A Q IJ

:a• .... ••

BARNEY

44 . . . . 1dn

II .,.,, -

Detler. East
Vulnenble1Neither
....
WM Nltl111 !Mt.

FIDaDciDII: 90 Days
Sune As Cash Anl!ahle
Lkellled, r-nd. Free EstJnMtH

...,

KI

.JO

(740) 949-1521

a_
...

liY
11 .....

• Juttlt
•

h lllflll&amp;ie'

• llcllool17
40 llrick

cltecll
.....,
7WIIiigto

u..a1
•
•

PUBLIC
NOTICES

:M

'·

ttl 1\CCOhlrlllh A ~11.

CAI'It CORN (D•c. 2l- ·
Jan. 19) .... Plan~ you have
with frlcond1 or l'-ulincu anodJtcs today shoul\t turn out

adjustmcntll or chan~ .

those constructive change~
you'v·c been wanting to in
your home or office. You'll

. AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Feb.
19) -- Put yom mind to lind

have a good _head for what
nectb to be done.

better than you cxpeded.

Don't make any last minute

additional ways of adding to

CANCER Qunc 21-July

your income today, because

22) -- You 'rc the one who
should speak up today regard-

your clear thinking at this

ing an issue or cause about

time could put you· on to

something th01t will

b~

which you and others feel
strongly. No one else can do

quite

bt.:"ndidal.

it beucr than you.

PISCES (Feb. 2CI-March 20)
-- This will not be ont: or

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -Give top priority today to
niattcn uf finam: i;~l ~itotnifi­
cancc to yoll. It's a better th~n

those days where people will
let you down. Those who
have made promises to you

aver.1gc d~y for landing in the

will live up to their pledges
:an~t como through fur you :u
a1feed \lpon.
ARIES (Mmh 21-April IY)
•• Whal wu tc;mah to tu:cClm..
pliah ln.tho pllt couple or tln)'1
may be R piOt't or cake tu do
today. Try unct! more to
tackle tha1o ia1k1 or auian-

profit column.
VIRGO (AuK. 23-Sopt. l2)
.. .. Fril.mJs will find how you
cxprtu your1clr to br: more

appealina than uau,al tod•y.
You won't h~ave to tay any"
thing profound or come on
ltrcna; your natural 1olf will
CRI'I)' the bolt.
LllliV. (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Throu&amp;h a chain of .venu
not or yuur n11klnR, you
· could end up belna financially
v~ry luc:ky today. h may be

nt&lt;lltl you hod to thelvo.
TAURUS (Apill 20·Moy
20) •• Uolh !)an Cupid ond
Dame Forrunc: n111y tctm up
today to do 101nethina nice
(or you ln tht romance de·
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�FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Melp County's

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2002FORD
EXPLORER
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7,450

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. '

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY BRIAN J. RHD

ers and other staff on Monday. The jail
closing, initiated by Jail Officer Mony
Wood, was cited as a cost-cutting measure.
His employees have rallied around
TrusseD, and agree that the responsibil -.
ity for paying salaries lies with the
commissioners. They say the payroll
line is depleted only because the commissioners underappropriated · in the
January budget process.
The commissioners opened their
regular meeting on Thursday to a
packed room , mostly deputie s and

other sheriff's employees, and their
fam ily members.
"In January 2001 , I submitted a
requested budget in the amount of
$723,000, based on previous expenses
and the anticipation of increased salary
step raises," Trussell read from a prepared statement. "The board severely
reduced that request and appropriated
only $610,000, a reduction of over

POMEROY - A layoff of sheritl's
POMEROY - Meigs
deputies has been averted, at least temCounty residents should
porarily,
and officers say a one-day
vo~ on any new sales tax
and implementing such a
petition drive shows public support for
$117,000."
tax, immediately and witha sales taX for law enforcement. (See
out voter approval, would
"The commissioners arbitrarily set
related story).
not help .a funding crunch
Nearly a week after Meigs County
PI--D•p..... A3
in the sheriff's office in
time.
That was the consensus
among Meigs County
commissioners • Thursday
when
Sheriff Ralph
Trussell asked them to
consider immediate imple_mentation of a half-percent
sales tax, which the commiSSioners can legally
impose without a vote.
• On behalf of the local
Ohio Patrolmen's Benevol;ent Association union,
BY BRIAN J. REED
Road, Scipio Township;
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Smith Road, Bedford Town· 4eputies Bill Gilkey and
POMEROY Meigs ship; Vance Road, Rutland
J:&lt;.evin Dugan presented
County will submit six pub- Township; Morning Star and
petitions bearing more
lie works projects for fundc Pine Grove Roads, Sutton
~han 700 signatures which
ing through th e Issue II pro- Township, · project cost,
'!'ould appear to support
gram, and the county's local $270,540.
mch a sales tax if its revcommittee met Thursday to
• Village of Rutland,
~nue were dedicated solely
assign ranking points to replacement of residential
law enforcement.
.. J'.mssdl· said · sucli
-· ·' a tax
those projects.
grinder pumps, project cost,
' Engineer Eugene Triplett, $287,000.
would not only help ease a
Commissioner Jeff Thorn• Village of Pomeroy, congeneral
fund
budget
ton, Salisbury Township struction of water treannent
~ch in his department,
,., but also to, generate funds ·
Trustee Ed Durst, Robert plant, project cost, $1.2 mil• -·
Hawk, and Gcorb"' Wright; lion.
:vo ·
fol'lhe ope,i'atidn--of a ne.y, .,
representing Pomeroy Mayor
• Tup ers Plains-Chester
local jail, which could be
\
John Blaettnar, ranked the Water District, consttuctio~
built largely through state
projects based on presenta- of booster station and
and federal grants.
· .
·. t! ~~ . '
\ tions made yesterday.
· enlargemen1 of water lines in
The corruirissioners and
' .
. &gt;
The projects, in local rank- Letart Falls area, $438,000.
former Sheriff James M.
POMEROY -The wallsof
Located behind the Meigs restoration of the beaqtiful old
• Village of Middleport,
ing
order, are:
Soulsby discussed the posthe Pomeroy Masonic Temple County Courthouse, the build- ~rick structure wert aban• Meigs County, paving of street paving to include
sibility of pursuing those
Ci!ffie tumbling down Thursday ing, originally constructed as ~ned because of extensive
State
Farm Roa~. and paving North Third Avenue, South
grants in past years, but the
· morning as work crews began an armory, was donated to the damage from water, which 1
of streets in the Chester Third Avenue, Mill Street,
board has maintained that
demolishing the century-old county in the early 1990s after
flowed into the building from
community in cooperation total project cost, $199,400.
the county would be
building to make room for a years of use by the lodge. Over
the
abandoned
mines
in
-the
with the Chester Township
The local committee
unable to afford the
proposed new parking lot.
the years, portions also housed
hillside
behind.
Trustees, total project cos_t, assigned point values to each
increased operation costs
The interior had been the draft board office, the plat
Tentative plans call th~t lot
$150,793.
project, and those projects
associated with. a new jail.
burned out by the J'omerqy map office, and offices of the
• Meigs County, replace- will now be submitted to•
Trussell said revenue
fire Department Saturday in Board of Elections and Ameri- and one adjacent to be develment
with box culverts of Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valoped
into
a
parking
lot.
(Tony
could be generated from
_ prepara\ion for arrival, of the ~an Cancer Society. ·
demolition crew.
· ·
other counties needing jail
Early discussions about M. Leach photo)
seven bridges on Smith
Pluse -11111111. A3
space, in arrangements sim~
ilar to that between Meigs
and Noble County.
Commissioner
Jim
Sheets said he would not
consider any tax without
"
the approval of the voters,
BY TONY M. LEACH
dents to continue donating blood
"We need continued participation so large donor response has ensured that
and Mick Davenport and
SENTINEL NEW$ STAFF
because
blood
donors
are
needed
we are prepared to respond to em er- enough is being collected to supply
Jeff Thornton indicated
RACINE - Even though blood every day," said Cheryl Gergely, gencies whenever and wherever they both planned and emergency patient
they would be hesitant to
banks across the nation are reporting spokesman with the Red Cross.
needs.
do so too.
occur," she added.
surplus
levels,
the
American
Red
Cross
The local Red Cross has·a daily col·Trussell and union mem-·
"However, because we've had such
Gergely said the Red Cros.s works to
hers urged the . commiswill be holding a blood drive at South- an overwhelming response, we may be ensure that the supply of blood match- lection goal of 1,050 donations to
sioners to enact the tax at
ern Local High School on Wednesday limiting the number of people on a es current demand from hospitals. meet the needs of patients at over 110
once, and to allow voters to
to collect more blood just in case of a given day in hopes of sustaining this Although blood banks around the hospitals in parts of six states.
referendum the tax off the
Gergely added that the Red Cross is
major emergency.
outpouring of support over coming country often face a shortage of blood
"We encourage Meigs County resi- weeks and months," she added.
since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a
Pluse ... tu.AJ
Pleue IH Drive, A3

·tops Me1gs ·
Issue II rankings

,

994FORD
AEROSTAR

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Commissioners Jeff Thornton, Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets notified
Sheriff Ralph Trussell that he was out
of money and unable to make another
payroll, the commissioners, Trussell and
deputies met face-to-face to discuss
the -budget crunch.
With around $20,000 in transfers
approved Thursday, Trussell said he will
be able to pay all staff for an additional twO weeks- through Dec. 5.
Trussell closed the Meigs County
Jail on Friday, and issued official 14day layoff notices to deputies, dispatch-

County~ng

,

5

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Sheriff, qfficers promote
immediate sales tax

We can now panthsavlnvs alonv to you

5,950

15~995

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PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
IHSTOCKII

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1999

2000 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

2001 MERCURY 1, 2001CHEVY
TAHOE LT
GRAND MARQUIS

Offi·cials:
Must vote
for ariy
new tax

HoiMiown News,.per

E-150

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1803081

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'

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Southern to host local blood drive next week

WHEEL ALIGNMENT
'2-wheel$2495 4-wheel

•f

s4gas:

Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional parts and
labor
some velllcles.

'1995

......

Wllytnlat

FAST LUBE

• SeNice Includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and new
Motorcraft oil lUter • Perform Mu!II-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check and 1111 nec8888.ry fluids • All lf1 29 minutes
or less • Diesel
be extra.

..

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

RelY upcHt tM ~PDIIID-plele

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MC'I'OtlY TltAIN.D
TIICHNICIA...

FORD MOTOR.
FLOORMATS

Sto~ing

$4400

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We wl !iiMt or
any compeHtor's
advwtised prke on thi same Hre.
..,. . ... BF GoodtiOh.
~. Ill' :1Q: II C .....
ContiiWitll,lmiAeVAL.

... ..........
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Sentinel

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$8150

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$242

cedure being used to
treat the mail was
based on a study conducted by the Armed
Forces Radiobiology
Research Institute .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Mike
De Wine questioned Postmaster General John Potter on Thursday to make
sure· that a Lima, Ohio, company contra cted to decontaminate anthraxtainted mail was using proven technology.
De Wine said when he first contacted
the U.S. Postal Service about the
truckloads of mail being sent to Titan
Scan Technologies, he was told the pro-

"There were errors
in th e study and a
final draft hasn 't been
signed
off
on,"
DeWine told Potter

DeWine

during a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing. "That's not what
we're riding on here today, absolutely

correct?"

·

Some 45 truckloads of mail are being
transported from the closed Brentwood
postal facility in Washington, D.C., to
Lima, where Titan is using a technology normally 11sed in medical product
sterilization to cleanse the mail, which
could be contaminated with anthrax.

The Holzer Medical Cenler Diabeles Support Group will meet
SundaY, November 11 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm in lhe Hospital's French 500 Room.
This monlh's feature: Cooking demonstrations.

rr

HOURS:
Mon - Frt 9-7;

•

c 2001 ohio valley Publishing co.

.THE AREA'S
TAl-CERTifiED

(

Sat. _9-5

Lotteries

ol!Sl!I'!O.u.rtsw_______,B"-'1'-"2.:.·3-....5"'- Cash 25: 5-ll-13·17·19-24

4

DeWine
wants
mail
properly
santitized
.
.

.

,.CI1a;,9;SSwif.l.§je,.d. ._s--.,----'B""-4c·6,. Pick J: o-9-1; Pick 4: 2-9-4-2
,.C,.o.,m_,_,j,cs..______.B.......
7 •wtt18 s: !).8.13-20-23
~Ed~it~oruri~al~s________aA4~ · wy~
,.O""b....,jtu..,awri.,.es,________uA3.._ O.lly 3: 3-ll-9 O.lly 4: 5-1 +6
-"W..,e,.a,_.th..,e,.,r'--_____.A2_

n~

Law: JOs
Details, A2

~ca~l~enwd~a~r________uAS~ OH~

BED RAILS

SPLASH GUARDS

Hlp: 101

••••••••
• •
•
.

LINCOL
PREMIE
EXPERIENCE

November 12, 13 and 14 from 2:00 • 5:00 pm in Conference Room C
of the Hospital's Education &amp; Conference Cenler.

www.holzer.org

All are welcome! For more inFormation, call

v
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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

(740) 446·5080

.

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'".•

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