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Page 88

Nation •

The Daily Sentinel

tkwueless man faces charges
DALLAS (AP) -A homeless man was charged Thu....Uy with
robbery and evading &gt;rrest after allegedly stealing a tr:lctor-trailer rig
and bding police - a chase through residential areas and across

highways.
National new. outlets broadcast the chase live Wednesday afternoon.At one point the truck caught fire, sending smoke into the air
and fiery tires rolling into traffic.
Senior Cpl. Chris Gilliam said police believe robbery was the
motive in the 90-minute chase. "We think he just wanted the
truck;' Gilliam said.
Bumice Wilson, 41, was jailed Thu....Uy on a $333,500 · bond,
authorities said.

Q ews clear spill fawn liwer

Fridlly, Novemhr I, 1001

WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Supreme Court agreedThu....Uy to decide
whether s,' ools may give drug tests to
nearly any h :lent involved in after-school
activitie;, from the chess dub to cheedeading, without evidence the student or the
school has a drug problem.
Critics say such broad testing is unconstitutional and a step toward universal
screening. Supporte~"&gt; say it is necessary in
the face of drug use by young people.
"I felt they were accusing us and convicting us before they had given us a
chance," ·said Lindsey Earls, who sang in
her high school choir and participated on
an academic quiz team when testing began
in Tecumseh, Okla.
Only children involved in competitive
extracurricular activities were tested on
the theory that by voluntarily representing

the school, they had opened themselves to
greater scrutiny than other students.
"The·board rud perceive that there was
a drug problem among the students, and
wanted to help ... give students a reason to
say no," said Stephanie Mather, a lawyer for
the school. "It was a deterrent. A student
could .say, 'I want to participate in this band
competition, so I'm not going to do that."'
The Supreme Court ruling, expected by
summer, could answer a question lingering
fiom a major 1995 case, when the court
said a school with a pervasive drug p~b­
!em could subject student athletes ·to drug
tests.
.In that 6-3 decision, the court did not
address schoolwide testing, or extracurri~~
ular activities apart fiom athletics. It is not
dear whether an answer in this case would
' apply to all extracurricular activities, or

only to competitive pul"&gt;uits.
The National School Boards Association
has no estimate for the number of children
involved in extracurricular activities
nationally, but the Oldahoma school said it
assumed its policy would cover a large percentage of students.
The case involves a decision by the
board of education in rural Tecumseh, 40
miles fiom Oklahoma City, to begin "suspicionless" drug testing in the fall of 1998.
The board had considered testing all sru- '
dents in the school district, but settled for,
the smaller program in light of previo\1$
court challenges elsewhere. ThLlchool
acknowledges that students invSI'ved in
such activities as band and the pompom
team are not more likely than others to be•
involved with drugs, and has said there was.:
no severe drug problem in the school.
·

vote Idle drops

Inmates' suit gels approval
UTILE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -A federal judge has granted classaction status to a lawsuit that accuses the state of violating the rights
of mentally ill inmates by delaying psychological examinations and
treatment.
The class-action status, granted Thu....Uy by U.S. District Judge
Stephen Reasoner, means that all county jail lnmates ordered for
state hospital treatment or evaluation will be included in the suit.
Bettina Brownstein, who represents the American Civil Liberties
Union in .Arkansas, and fellow lawyer Paul James 6led the suit in
August on behalf of former Sebastian County jail inmate James M.
Terry They argued that Terry was held for months without getting

MONEY

TEMPO

Gallia Academy

Lakin-area
nitro levels Dl

Elvis is back in
the building Cl

footbaii ·Bl

-

Court to decide whether schools can give drug tests

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - An Ohio River shipping chatmel was
s!mt down Thuf'&gt;day as crews cleaned up thousands of gallons of
gasoline spilled from a barge that was punctured when it rubbed
against a metal barrier.
Worke" skimmed some of the spilled fuel from the river, but
most of the gasoline was evaporated by sunlight, the Coast Guard
said.
"The weather right now is in our favor;· Coast Guard Cmdr.
William Marhoffer said Thuf'&gt;day.
treatment for a psychotic disorder.Terry was eventually moved to a director of security for Simon Marketing Inc., embezzled more
The barge held 1.5 miUion gallons of gasoline, and the leaking state hospital.
than $20 million through the scam. Jacobson, of Lawrenceville, Ga.,
tanks held 315,000 gallons, but Coast Guard officials said it WdS not
Brownstein and James say the delays in evaluation and treatment has pleaded innocent.
·
immediately clear how many thousands of gallons had spilled.
represent cruel and unusual· punishment, a violation of the U.S.
Constitution's Eighth Amendment.
, NEW YORK (AP) - Anthrax decontamination at the city's
largest mail-processing center is costing about $5 million, postal
supervisal"&gt; said in federal court.
The New York Metro Area Postal Union is demanding in a lawmit that the Morgan Processing and Distribution Center be closed
for a complete cleaning. No New York postal workef'&gt; have shown
anthrax symptoms, but union lawyers argue that anthrax, found on
five mail-sorting machines, is more widespread and dangerous than
postal officials have acknowledged.
Supervisor Robert Daruk said Thu...day that the center would
have been closed if there was a real threat.
"There isn't anything more important to me than the safety of
the people I work with;' he said.

SPORIS

Jury·ponders slaye(s fate
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The jury that found a black man guilty
of killing three white men and iJ\iuring two othm in a racially
motivated shooting rampage now faces the task of deciding
whether he should live or die.
Ronald Taylor, convicted Thuf'&gt;day, faces either the death penalty
or life in prison without parole.
His lawye" acknowledged that he was the shooter but said he
suffered from delusions and paranoia, believing whites were pel"&gt;ecuting him and other minorities.
Prosecutof'&gt; maintained Taylor knew what he was doing and purposely targeted whites.

12 more handed inclicbue11ts
JACKSONVILLE, Aa. (AP) - Twelve people were indicted
Thuf'&gt;day on conspiracy charges in a $20 million scam involving
McDonald's promotional games, the U.S. attorney's office said.
Earlier, 21 people had been indicted for the theft and distribution
of high-value game piece; from McDonald's promotional games
such as Monopoly and Who Wants to be a Millionaire. Eight people have pleaded guilty. to conspiring to commit mail fraud.
The 12 new suspects were indicted for conspiracy to commit
mail fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of five yea" in
prison and a $250,000 fihe plus restitution.
Prosecutof'&gt; allege that since the late 1980s, Jerome Jacobson,

MIAMI (AP) -Votm in this week's mayoral election improved
their technique when using punch-card ballots, cutting by half the;
rate of uncounted votes fiom last year's disputed presidential vote. :
Only 2.7 percent of the mayoral vote was. discarded Tuesday;
because vote" chose either no candidate or more than one. That
•
n.umber was down from 5.4 percent last November.
But given the heavy media coverage explaining how to use
punch-card ballots, elections officials were still surprised that so
many people would cast ballots containing so-called overvotes oi
undervotes.
!
"It's still bothersome that there are any overvotes;· said David'
Leahy, Miami-Dade County elections supervisor. "The ballot dear,
ly said to vote for one mayoral candidate. Who in their right mind'
would think you could vote for two mayo" in the city of Miami?'~
&lt;

Conclit"s son plans campaign
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - Rep. Gary Condit's son, who scuttled
plans to run for state Assembly after his father became embroiled in
scandal, revef'&gt;ed course and decided to run for state Senate.
Chad Condit 61ed a notice of intent to run Wednesday for the
seat currendy held by Sen. Dick Monteith, a Republican who is
seeking the elder Condit's congressional seat, according to the
Stanislaus County elections office.
Chad Condit, 34, has been collecting signarures for his father's reelection bid even though Rep. Condit has not announced whether
he will seek another term.

•

tmts

1.25

5

Meigs County
closed

Rutland
students
explore

:patriotism

BY 8llwl J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph
Trussell cited a budget
crunch when he closed the
Meigs County Jail a week
ago, but he and his jail officer say the antiquated facility may not reopen any time

BY TONY M. WCH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

RUTLAND - "I'm dirty, batde
weary and tired, and I have been cheered
by U.S. soldiers fiom Valley Forge to
Afghanistan. My name is Old Glory and
long may I wave."
Fifth grade student. Clayton Bolin's.
poem on patriotism set the mood for
Friday's Veterans Day a"embly that took
place inside a red, white and blue decorated Rudand Elementary gymnasium.
Even though Veterans Day is officially
celebrated on Nov. 11, the school's gymnasium was filled to capacity Friday
afternoon as students, faculty and residents came together to honor the scores
of brave men and women who gallandy
fought in American waf'&gt;.
"This assembly is very rewarding for
the students because it broadens their
knowledge about wbat Veteraqs Day is all
about," said Rusty Bookman, principal at
Rudand Elementary.
"It's important that they understand
the concept of freedom and what sacrifices our great country had to give to
obtain it, especially in light .of what trans~ired on ~ept. 11 ;• he added.
•• Chuck Bookman, Principal Bookman's brother and U.S. Army veteran,
spoke briefly to the crowd about the
importance of patriotism and the
unbreakable bond shared between veterans.
"The sum of love and respect equals
patriotism," said Bookman.
"Patriotism is why the U.S is the greatest country in the world and the veterans

soon.

REMEMBERING - Students of the school remembered 163 Meigs County veterans
who gave the "ultimate sacrifice" by placing small American flags Inside memorial
shaped like the county during the Veterans Day assembly held Friday at Rutland Elementary.. (Tony M. Leach photos)

a

here today will definitely agree to that."
"We are not just soldiers who fought
in wars, we are b'rothers and sistef'&gt;, a
uttited family that will always stick
.
together;' he added.-· •
FolfoWing an introduction oflocal veterans who were in attendance, including
members of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion of Middleport, the
Rudand Elementary Choir, under the
direction of music teacher Sharon Hawley, sang inspirational versions of "God TRIBUTE - Maegan Dodson, above,
Bless the U.S.A.," "This Land is Your sophomore at Meigs High School, per·
formed a rendition of 'Taps" at the event.
PluM- hbtDIIa111, M

Deputy Mony Wood, who
is charged with supervision
of the jail and its operations,
inventoried a list of deficiencies for the benefit of Meig;
Counry commissioners last
week - deficiencies which
he says must be addressed
before he will assume
. responsibility again for the
jail or its prisoners.
TrusseU closed th.e jail a
week ·ago, hoping he said
then, to save payroll and
other funds through · staff
t:eductions and food costs. A
full-time cook is now on
paid vacation, Trussell said,
and · i part-time cook has.

been laid off.
The jail housed a maximum of 10 prisoners, mostly misdemeanor offenders
and those awaiting court
appearances, and has long
been deemed inadequate
and/ or unsafe by jail inspectors.

While the bottom line n
at the heart of last week's
closing, Wood said he would
not endo= the reopening
of the jail until a number of
safety
concerns
are
addressed.
The jail, Wood said, diP
not provide adequate medical or dietary supervision
for prisoners, and does not
offer commissary services to
the inmates, all required by
state law.
Deputies, for the past two
years, he said, have been
unlawfully administering
prescription medicatioru to
prisoners.
"At least two inmates have

pfzn•-...U.M

Laptops improve home health care efficiency
BY KRIS DoTSON
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

Brand New 2002 Pontiac

Brand New 2002 Chevy

Brand New 2002 Buick

Brand New 2002 Chevy Z71
Avalanche 4 Door 4x4

~lii· iiiJ5i· ~a:oio· i2i,i5D· 825,

• 4 Speed Automatic
• Air Conditioning .
• Cruise Control, CD Syltem

• Power Seat, Windows, Lacks
• Keyless Entry, CD System
Appearance Pkg,, Tilt &amp;Cruise

• V-6 Power, AMIFM Stereo
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

• V-8 Power, Automallc
• Chroma Whaals, CD
• Air CondHionlng, Tilt &amp;Cruise

• V-8 Power, Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Power Windows, Loeb, MIITOI1
• Keyless Entry, CD System

130,55

• 5300 V-8 Power, Z71 Equlp.
• CD Syatem, Locking Dill.
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Home Care
is enjoying success both for its staff and
patients with its new laptop computers.
Now having a patient's home health
care information at their fingertips, communication between disciplines is a
breeze.
"It allows us to coordinate patient visits and patient care better," said Director
Connie Carleton, RN,BSN.
For example, when a physical therapist
makes a patient visit, he/she can actually
pull up the last nurse's notes fiom his/her
visit, which provides better information
on which to base their care.

from nursing and physical therapy are
completed twice a day so most current
patient information is available to all
HHC employees at one time.
"We can access most of the patient's
HHC information in an instant," said
HHC nurse Julie Wamsley.
"It tells us exactly what the doctor's
Connie Cllrleton, RN, BSN
ordered so we can better follow his plan
of
care.And if, for example, I haven't seen
They can see trends, progress and
problems. A patient's pertinent HHC a patient in a week, maybe her blood
history is available immediately as pressure has changed, her medication
opposed to going back to the hospital or may have been adjusted and physical
therapy may have made some great
waiting for a staff meeting.
"This saves us time, money, and strides - this information is invaluable
improves quality of care," said Carleton.
The laptop transfers of information
PreaM'- Lllplopa. M

"Our communication and
documentation hal really
improved which allows tu to
better reach our ultimate goal
which il excellent patient care."

HIJII:HI
Low: JOS

Details, A3

Calendars
Classjfjeds
Comics

2001 Chevy

2001 Pontiac Grand Am

2001 Chevy Tracker

2001 Chevy Malibu

Cavalier Sedan

2001 Pontiac

SE Sedan

2 Door 4x4

2001 Buick LeSabre

LS Sedan

Grand Prix SE Sedan

Custom Sedan

~0,150* ~2,150* ~3,550*
• Automatic
• Air C~dltlonlng
• AMIFM Stereo

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
Power Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Till &amp; Cruise

• Automllic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks, CD
• Alum. Wheels, Tilt &amp; Cruise

qa,I50*

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;
Air Condlllonlng
CD System

~5,750* ~7,150*
• CD System, Alum. Wheels
• Cruise Control, Tilt
Power Sea~ Windows,

Editorials
Obituaries

;aS~p!.!O!Jrts.i.....-----"B'-':1::-"-8 Wahama playoff highlights. B1

• Power Seal, Windows, Loc~s
• CD System, Alum. Wheals
• Till Stsering, Cruise Control

to Friday's playoff game in Lancaster. See complete story
inside, page B1. (Dan Polcyn photo)

Equal opportunity advocates pursuing goals
want their aims .met.
"If there's any message that I can leave
with you, when this thing started, it wasn't about money;• said Dick Fisher, executive director of the Coalition of Rural
and Applachian Schools. "What we
BY KEVIN KEUY
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
wanted, and still· want, are educational
GALLIPOLIS - Advocates of equal opportunities for our children.
"Tnat takes money fiom the state," he
opportunity for Ohio public school students are willing to discuss a settlement continued. "Until we can address that
of their grievances with the siRte, but still issue of not being abie I'! generate

Coalition leader
updates area auditors

C2
02-7
insert
A4
A6

;tSt~Ol!C;t!k~s______D.u_l

Gallia Academy head coach Brent Saunders gives some
final instructions to senior lineman Aaron Burnett (64) prior

c 2001 Ohio valley Publishing Co. '

November

money' for schools, we'll remain in this
sin1ation;' he added.
Fisher spoke to a meeting of the
County Auditors Association . of Ohio
Southeast District, hosted Friday by GalJia County.
Fisher, whose organization has been
involved in the decade-old DeRolph vs.
Ohio case challenging how ·the state

, _ - Collltlon, AI

IS National Home Care Month

"The Heart of American Health Care"
• Taxes, Tags, Title Fees extra. Rebate included in sale price ol new vehicle lisled where applicable .. ··on approved credit. On selected models. Nol responsible for typographical errors.
Prices Good November 91h rhrough November 11111.

....

CHIYROLI'T
WIUIIntl...

Buick

@l

h:'s all goo'O

&lt;2:) Oldsmobile.

When you choose your home care provider, consider
Holzer Ho111e Care Of Holzer Medical Center MEDICAL CENTER

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

1740) 446-5301

oee&amp;e~·

Discover the Holzer Difference

or

Ha-=, Ho111e Care of Veterana
Me111orlal Holpltal
992-3231

•

a

'..

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�•
~~~-·-·~-~KV~~-i_u_us__-_J_e_rdn_._~----------------·---R
~~~tC~·~~~~~----------~------~~~·~··~~~··~·~·~·~·r~t~t.~~~~
~geA2

Noveln... 11,2001

Public defender exits Byrd hearing

VALLEY BRIEFS
DeiiJ slated
CHESHIRE - Richard L.
Ne.t, stores supervisor at Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.~ Kyger
Creek Pbnt, recently receiW!d
his annivenary award for 35
years of lhC, service to !he company, Plant Manager Ralph E.
Amburgey said.
Ne.t joined OVEC on Oct.
25, 1966, as a laborer in !he
labor department. In I 978, he
tranSferred 10 the stores department as a stores attendant.
In 1981, ~ W2S promoted to
storeroom supervisor and in
~ Nul
1994, to stores supervisor.
Neal and his wife, Sandra, reside in Gallipolis.

Vaccinations set
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County He.tth Department will
offer influenza vaccinations throughout the county !his week
and lhrough !he monlh at !he following locations: .
• Tuesday -Vinton Village Hall, 9-10:30 a.m.
• Thursday- Mercerville Fire Station, 9- 10:30 a.m.; Crown
City Village Hall, II a.m.-12:30 p.m .; Clay Head Start, 2-3:30

p.m.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County Local Schools will be on a
two-hbur delay We~esday. Interim Superintendent Charla
Evans announced.
Teachers and administrators will report to their assigrunents
at ih~ regular time to participate in inservice programs, Evans
said.
Students riding buses wiU be picked up two hours later. All
students should report to schools two hours later than ihe regularly scheduled report time. School will be dismissed at ihe
regular time.

Spedal11zeeling
GALLIPOLIS -The City Commission will meet in specw
session Monday at 7 p.m. in the Gallipolis Municip.t courtroom, City Manager E.V. Clarke Jr. announced.
An executive session to discuss employment of personnel is
scheduled.

off
JACKSON - The reg.dar SEOEMS District Board of
Trustees meeting set for Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Lewis Family
Restaurant in Jackson has been canceled. A special SEOEMS
district board meeting has been scheduled for Nov. 27.
A detailed notice of the special meeting is forthcoming.

• Friday - Grace United Melhodist Church, 9-10:30 a.m.
• Nov. 26- Greenfield Township Fire Station, 9-10:30 a.m.;
Cadmus Community Center, II a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Patriot
GALLIPOLIS -TRIAD will meetT'uesday at 10 a.m. at the
Lodge Hall, 2-3:30 p.m.
.
Gallia
County Senior Resource Center.
• Nov. 27 ~ Centerville Village Hall, 9-10:30 a.m.; Rio
Grande Municipal Building, I 1 a.m ..-12:30 p.m.; Bidwell- .
Porter Trinity Melhodist Church, 2-3:30 p.m.
According to guidelines issued by !he Ohio Department of
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local School District will
Heallh, !he vaccine will only be available to residents 65 and
dismiss at I :05 p.m. on Wednesday, ,d ue to teacher inservice.
.
older, :ind persons wilh chronic diseases ai !he time.
The vaccine is offered at no out of pocket expense to Gallia
County residents. Clients wilh Medicare Part B should present
!heir card at !he time of service.
The influenza vaccine is available every day, 8-11 :30 a.m. and
1-3:30 p.m., at !he heallh department to residents who meet
!he above guidelines.
LONG BOTTOM - An informational meeting will be
For details, call !he nursing department at 441-2950.
held Friday at 6 p.m. at the Long Bottom Community Build- '
ing to discuss future plans for Portland Elementary School. All
those interested are urged to attend.

TRIAD to meet

To dismiss

Plan meeting

Free shots

GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by
!he Gallia County Health Department on Thursday from 4-6
p.m. at the health department, 499 Jackson Pike.
.
•
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will meet on ·
Children in need of inununizations must be accomparued by Thursday for Thanksgiving dinner at Our House. Members
;1 parent or legal guardian, and bring a current immu~tion
should meet at the home of Carol McCullough at 5:30 p.m., ,
record with them.
and dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Additional services, such as blood pressure checks and preg-_
nancy tests, will be offered during the evening hours at the
health department.

Plan dinner

Open house

POMEROY - A grand opening celebration and ribbon
cutting will be held at the Artisans Shoppe on West Main Street
at 10 a.m. on Nov. 24.
POMEROY - Meigs County Courthouse will dose on . The shop is affiliated with 'the Meigs County Artisans AssoMonday in observance ofVeterans Day.
cation and features hand crafted items made by local residents.

Courthouse dosed

Got the right Christmas tree? Middleport can use one
If you ~ a 25- to 30-foot
tree which woijld make a
good Christmas tree for Midvillage,
Myron
dleport
Dullield would love to hear
from you.
Again ibis year the tree will
be placed on the T - a real
centerpiece for the town - in ,
a permanent holder constructed ihere last year.
The annual parade, to be
chaired by Mike avd Debbie
Gerlach, has been set for Saturday, Dec. 1, at 6 p.m. and Will
be followed by the annual candlelighting service by the tree
at 6:30 and visits with Santa at
Peoples Bank at 7.
The tree, of course, needs to
be in place and decorated
before then.

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY
educational exhibits. And it's ·
free. The public is invited in
from 1-4 p.m·. both days to
view the exhibits carrying out
the theme "Christmas Cheer."
And if you're having trouble
getting into ·a festive holiday
mood, it's sure to give you a lift
and a little inspiration.

...

If you're having company in
for Thanksgiving weekend, a
nice ·outing would be to take
them to the variety show at
Meigs Middle School on Friday night.
The abundance oflocal talent is sure to entertain. Tickets
are on sale at Swisher and
Lohse and HanweU House in
Pomeroy, and Middleport

...

Next weekend, Nov. 17 and
18, a Christmas flower show
staged annually by Meigs
County's multi-talented garden club members will be held
at the Senior Citizens Center.
It's always wonderful, what
with the variety of arrangements, wreaths, displays and

6unbap -Gtfm~ 6mtinel

...

c-.lty-H-,r...

Hardly anyone votes against

()!;..

Our ..ta ...,..mIn aD-~~ lobe
ICCUnl~ If J011 kDOW of ID error iD I

caD .....,..,_ II (7.40) -

:134Z,.. Pumeroy: (740) m.ms. We w111

cbKk your ial'ormatlon aad make a
comdlon it warnllted.

E111trtd u tceOIId c!au m1ili11J m1ncr II
Pornav)', Ohio PDit olfiOe.
Mlmlllr. Tile Auocilu:d Pru&amp;, IUid !he r;MIIo
Newsplptl' Auocitlion.
·
POSTMASTER! Send lddrHa correeti11111 kt 'The
Sunday·1ill'lel Sentinel, 825 Th1rd Ave.,
Ollllpoli&amp;.Oitio 45631.

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The mala number IJ . 44,·2342.
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To Send E·Mall
pltribune•eurtkaneLcoat
-

It was in 1971 that Veterans
Memorial Hospital started
Home Health Care.
Tuesday, the 30th anniversary of the service will be celebrated in conjunction with
an observance of National
Home Health Care Month.
Paula Eichinger, director, has
planned an open house for
Tuesday at 2 p.m. and invites
everyone in to celebrate the
· founding of a program which
has contributed immeasurable
to making life a little better for
those confined to home by illness.

Publilhcd every Sondly, 125 Third Avr..,
O.llipoli1, Ohio, by th: Ohio Valley Pllblishint
eo.r,..y. Second clau poltajt plid 11 Olllipoti1.

Correction Polley

-

...

(USPS llJ.liD)

Reader Services

llor)',

Department Sto;e and the
Ohio River Bear Co. in Mid~
dleport. The proceeds are
divided between the two
sponsors, Riverbend Arts
Council and the United Fund
for Meigs County.
A change to remember there will be only one show,
on Friday night at 8. Director
Myron Duffield felt that one
show is enough since the auditorium seats several hundred
people.
Incidentally, one or two slots
for performers are still open, so
if you're interested make that
call to Myron today.

Pomeror

Tbe main nomber h 99Z·ZI55.
DepOrlmmlnle-. .,.,

The Sunday Tune~-Sentinel will not be ftiPO'IIIble
ror ld~IIICI ,.,.menu 111111110 carricn.
P'Liblbher raerw• the ri&amp;ht to ldjust ra&amp;ea dllinJ
1hc aublcripciot period. Sllbecription fl1c chanpt
may be implemented by thll}liRJ the du1111ion of
, lhr: aublcription.
DdJ and Sw!diJ

MAILSUISCKIPI'IONS

·---or £111106

•

conversation Is Invited to have a Em hearing test to see II
this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you for
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-...·~ 0········
. SomJ

PI Cloudy

Cloudy

T......

-

Rein

-

-

..

.· · ~,;;;;:::::;::;_;::=------------------'

&lt;VALLEY WEATHER
:·,.Dry, cool well into new week
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

' The National Weather
:·service says a dry cold front
~ will create mostly clear skies
. . :~unday. Overnight lows will
jJrop into the 30s.
· ' Dry weather is forecast to
.~ontinue well into next .
.:'o/eek. 'T he next batch of
·~howers is predicted to
~rive Wednesday, when a
.':warm .front is expected to.
,:enter the lower Great Lakes. ·
.: . Sunrise Sunday is at 7:12

.,

Weather forecast:

·. ~· Sunday... Mostly sunny.
. J;Iighs in the mid 50s. North

wind around ,1 0 mph. .
Sunday · night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 20s.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 50s.
. Monday night ... Mosdy
clear. Lows near 30.

Commissioner flies charges

Man anested at airpoit

JACKSON (AP)- Charges were filed Friday against a Jackson County commissioner accused of punching a fellow commissioner, the sheriff's office said.
The Jackson County sheriff's office said Wendell Brunton
was charged with assault. He's accused of punching David Wolford in the face during a commissioner's meeting.
The charge is a misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of six months in jail and a S1,000 fine.
Details of the fight were not immediately available.

NORTH CANTON (AP)- A man has been charged with
carrying a concealed weapon after airport security workers
found six loaded handguns in his car,
Ralph Harter, 52, of Sistersville, W.Va., was picking up his
wife Thursday at Akron-Canton Regional Airport when Summit County Sheriffs Deputy William Stokes searched his car.
The Federal Aviation Administration requires vehicle searches now because the short-term parking lot is within 300 feet of
the airport terminal.

Lorain lays off workers

Extended forecast:
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Wednesday and Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows ,in
the mid and upper 30s and
highs in the lower 60s.
Friday... Partly·
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the lower 60s.

LORAIN (AP) -A $2 million deficit is forcing ihe city to lay
off 55 workers.
·
Mayor Craig Foltin· said 36 laborers, six police officers, eight
firefight~rs and five nonunion workers wiU be laid offby Nov. 23.
"It had to be done· before the holidays to have any impact on
next year's budget," Foltin said.
Public housing programs, school resources officers and the Safety Town program for children could suffer from ihe loss of manpower, Police Chief Cel Rivera said. The city also has not filled
four vacant police .positions.

.:aoard OKs
.., RIO GRANDE -Advisory committee
,. l'nembers and their terms for the Gallia-Jack.son-Vinton Joint Vocational School &lt;District
·were approved by its board of education dur. ing ia recent meeting at Buckeye Hills Career
·Center.
" - The board also accepted .the donation of
'''math, geometry and art books ti:om Gallipolis
. Developmental
Center.
·' . It also authorized application for Ohio
Department of Education-Career Acade~y
, Professional Development grants (Alhed
·Health Career Academy Model and ConstrueIlion Trades Career Academy Model) and Ohio
·Department of Education/Ohio Board of
; Regents (Ohio Higher Skills Partnership lni•.-tiative).
·
:·· Textbooks were also adopted.
:~ , Larry Marr was presented with a resolution
of appreciation following his retirement after
·27 years with the JVSD.

office's future role in the case.
The move foUowed disclosures that
Bodiker's office earlier failed to reveal
several sworn statements from another
inmate who says he committed the
crime.
Prosecutors hod pointed out inconsistencies in the documents and put a witness on !he stand who heard a secondh'!lld confession from Byrd.
"We're satisfied this week demonstrat-

ed clearly this artual innocence claim is
absolutely unbelievable," said Joe Case,
spokesman for Ohio Attorney General
Betty Montgomery, on Friday. "It bolsters the state's case that this is a last- ditch
effort to delay the inevitable."
Montgomery is "deeply disturbed" by
the week's revelations about'missing affidavits, Case said.
"The withholding of evidence from o
court that is trying to-determine whether
someone should be put to death or not is
just outrageous," Case said.
Montgomery's office will wait to see
what Bodiker. does and discuss the hearing with prosecutors who were there
before ·deciding whether to report
Bodiker or his staff to attomey discipline
authorities, he added.

I would like to thank everyone who
supported and voted for me in my running
for the Gallia County School Board. ·

With much appreciation,
Sheila Regan

.

memben

'

In the Adult Center Division, the board
approved part-time hourly contracts for Roy
Brown, Richard Eubanks, Lois Knadler,
Dewey McDaniel, ·Timothy Miner, Matthew
Morse, Mike Null, Rex Phillips, Lili Roush,
Angela Saylor,Jeanetta Shriver and Beth Stewart.
In personnel matters, the board:
• Granted applied academic program supplemental · contracts to Marlin Baker, Joan,Cornelius, Doug Crabtree, Elva Davis, Debra
Elliott, Lewis Hamilton, Dexter Hulse, Tom
Neal, Sheila Oehler, Phil Powell and Jerry
Shook.
.
• E~ployed work-study workers.
.
• Employed Patricia Weatherholt as a substitute teacher for the current school year.
• Employed Amanda Ehman and Ruth
Thompson as non-certificated substitutes.
• Employed Tracy Kimble as Information
Technology instructor.

'·

Thursday,
November 15, 2001•.
6:30 _,:8 :30PM · ,,, '

.•

.;Youth gets fine, probation for cross burning
' .

· • LANCASTER (AP) - A ina! mischief. He made the Sue Doyle-Wenger and her
·Jhigh school student has been admission Friday before Fair- family in Carroll. Daylefined S100 an&lt;\ placed on field County Juvenile Court Wenger, who is white, has
,probation after saying he Judge Steven Williams.
two adopted biracial daugh: pl~ceq a burned cross outside
He is one of three youths ters, ages 13 and 11. Her two
:a home.
each charged with two sons at\d the girls attend
: Lee .Little, 15, a student ~t counts of criminal mischief Pickerington schools . .
~Pickerington High School and two counts of ethnic
Williams, at the request of
:;ear Columbus, also was intimidation, all
misde- Assistant Prosecutor Denise
~rdered to apologize to the meanors.
.
MacFadden, dismissed one
' :home's residents and attend
The charges involve a count of criminal mischief
:counseling and a work pro- burned wooden cross left in and two counts of ethnic
l gram alter admitting to crim- the front yard of the home of intimidation against Little.

20% Off
Tope's Already Reducet/ Prices Storewide*
• SjJiciAioffir g&lt;Jotlfo' Nov. 15, 2001 6:30 ·8:30PM
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'··----·~·------------------------------~------I

.'~Plant to be sold or shut down
'

wq.osTER (AP) - A . and is no reflection on their
northea1t Qhio manufactur- productivity or the quality of
i ling pl!ht hurt by reduced their products," the company
·
~ales of.racks for communi- said,
! catio"' equipment could
Mike Hooper, president of .
' close ~early next year if a Crown North America, said
I buyer·can't be found.
Friday that the company
Crown North America hopes to find a buyer and
:
informed its 191 employees had several prospects. Anothand state labor officials earli- er alternative is closing ihe
er in , ~he week that layoffs plant until business picks up,
could liegin by Jan. 4.
he said.
The decision was based on
He said the notice about a
"economic factors beyond possible
shutdown
was
the control of the employees meant to keep employees
' aAd managers of this location informed.

l

1

HEARING AID CENTER I

·Ica~..-.131.._ I

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t n Avenue Galli lis Ohio
,I
TUESI)AV, NOV. 13,2001
I
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(740) 446-1744 • 9to 4
·
I Call Toll Free 1-8~4-52651or an Immediate appointment 1
I The teate will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid S!!!!clallst. I
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Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by

0

The move followed disclosures
that Bodiker's office
earlier failed to reveal several
SII'Ortl statements frorn anotl1er
inmate who says lie
cotnmitttd the crime.

'.

(Charle.ne Hoqlicll is general
manager '!f'The Daily Se .. ti"el i"
Pomeroy)

----------REE HEARING TESTS

DAYTON (AP) - · The widow of the
clerk stabbed in a 1983 convenience
store robbery sat through every minute
.of this week's federal hearing to determine if the man convicted of kiUing her
husband is innocent.
" I don't know what's. going to happen,
but I'm hoping that the truth has finally
come out," Sharon Tewksbury said after
testimony ended Friday.
A team of public defenders for John W.
Byrd Jr. were trying to prove his innocence in the hearing so he' could seek
anoiher appeal of his death sentence.
Friday, Ohio's public defi,nder asked
U.S. Magistrate Michael Merz to allow
hirnielf and his team to withdraw from
the case. David Bodiker's action raised
·questions about the public defender

1 .-

Stay warm and if you haven't
gotten your flu shot yet, call
the Meigs County Health
Department. That agency has a
couple hundred vaccine shots
for the general public..

~~~Pfi~'bY'';j·jp;;;;;ii'~'i;·;e;·!~~

11ome carrier JerVM:e i• mi.llble.

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econorrllc decline our nation
faces."

~ =~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·.~~

IDiide Gllilla Collnty

Doportmltll

giving themselves a raise.
So we commend Congressman Ted Strickland, who cast a
"no" vote on legislation that
will give members of Congress
a $4,930 a year pay increase.
We liked his comment in a
recent news release - "It is
unfortunate that the House
has passed legislation containing this very generous pay
raise, while ignoring pressing
issues vital to the well-being of
the nation.
"Instead of giving priority
to legislation dealing with biological threats, the patient's Bill
of Rights, education and prescription drug benefits, members have voted to take care of
their own needs. Many Americans will find this pay raise
ironic, considering the rising ·
unemployment and looming

0

than a g;une -

a war for
control of Mythosplicre. :
Martin soon discovers that
things are not .S they seein,
people are not who they
appear, and !Ianger lurks
around every virtual turn ;in
"Mythosphere."
'
Martin's story is only one
strand in a complex weave 'of
story lines involving humans
and gods, both in and out .of
dynasty.
the virtual playground. The
The Harts have set their people and beings that Marvirtual world far from their tin meets include a beautiful
own home in rural Meigs female knight, a serial killer,
County. Their joint creation, various fairies, a dragon, and
"Mythosphere," is a virtual
numerous others, both mysplayground located on· a
terious and deadly:
remote island in
the
True to the spirit of
Caribbean.
"Mythosphere," the Harts
A virtual vacation land, visuse the Internet to &lt;leliver
itors may choose fi:om
among the island's "divi- their work in digital form to
sions:' including Camelot, readers. In addition to the
the realm of king Arthur; the traditional "trade paperha&lt;;;k
desert city of Saba; Byzan- edition:' an electronic e&lt;Jitium, complete with the city, tion of "Myihosphere" ll];ly
a small forest, and a large be purchased on the World
.
plain inhabited by barbarians; WideWeb.
The book in both
and, the island of Venus, a
forms
is
available
through
realm of sexual adventure.
Each di~ion of"Mythos- Third Millennium Publishphere" is .governe.d by a ing, a leader in the electronic
member of the extended publishing industry. Its catafamily which owns and oper- log includes works by such
notable personalities and
ates the island retreat.
Like the Greek and authors as Stephen King and
Roman gods . whose names Shirley
MacLaine. The
they adopt, each member of paperback
version
of
the family exhibits their own "Mythosphere" sells for
personal eccentricities. And, $13. 95; the electronic edition
just as the ancient deities is available (as a PDF file) for
competed endlessly for SS. Third Millennium Pubpower and authority, the gods lishing's catalog is available cn
of the Harts' "Mythosphere" line at www.3mpub.com.
are continually embroiled in
A reader's journey in
forrning strategic alliances "Myti)osphere" need not end
and competing rivalries,
with either the paperback or
Jupiter and Juno quarrel electronic editions, however.
over Jupiter's marital infideli- The Harts have created . a
ties. Mars is an ambitious and
webJ)age that offers additioninsecure mama's boy. Diana,
al information about their
the moon goddess, is cool
creation - and, the people
and enigmatic, but has probwho inhabit it.
,
lems with intimacy.Venus, the
The website (http://meadtoken dumb blonde, has the
only clear set of values in the hall.homestead.com/about~
myth-ns4.htrnl) presents a
family.
One storyline focuses on detailed account of the virtuthe fictional character 'Ilevor al world's history, geography,
Martin. Martin, a fair athlete genealogy, and society.
The Harts also use the
and mediocre student, is not
to invite readen to
website
sure he W21!a to squander his
graduation money on a vaca- participate in the future
tion trip to the island; not development of their virtual
until he m~a Diana, one of world.
Jack Hart, Ph.D., is a prothe Olympians.
fessor
of English at the UniOnce in "Mythosphere,"
Martin finds himself caught versity of Rio Grande.
up in a contest between Catherine Hart is a substitute
Diana's division, Samarkand, teacher in the Meigs Local
and Mars' Camelot. Martin School District. The couple
discovers, however, that the ~ide on a family farm
competition is far more a war Rocksprings Road.
·

POMEROY Virtual
reality
meets
classical
mythology in a new book by
local authors Jack and
Caiherine Hart.
The novel, "Mythosphele:•
vividly presents the treacheries and complexities of a
virtual-world operated by an
extended family who style
themselves as Olympians, !he
gods of their own digital

COI:IPON

1

PageA3

•

Send to: military personnel~ friends; or
Let them experience "home" through
k.-J~:lCr!: of beautiful Meigs County!

Are you 45 years of age or older?
Do you have a family history of diabetes?
Q
Have you had unexplained weight loss?
.
Have you delivered a baby that weighed more than nine pounds? l....-....,....~
Do you complain of excessive thirst, hunger,
or frequent urination?

H LZ E R
CLINIC

Thanks
Everyone who re-elected
as a.Harrison Township Trustee.

·

Mar8aret Adkins

.

Holzer Clini~ has a program 'to help you with all
aspects_of your diabetes care .

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring;·

�••

•

0 IJinlon

PageA4

West

Sunday. November 11. 1001

Page AS
Nove•hr 11. 2111

ARC aims to improve Internet, roads
Gllllpolle, Ohio • POIMI'Oy, Ohio
Point PluNnt, W. Ve.

lloollliiOWii W/41"

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charln W. Govey

. R. Shewn Ltwle
Meneglng EdHor

Publleher
Lany Boyar
Advmlalng Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controlllr
VA.

l..ltUrJ tetN tdllol' liN wdto.t. Dq ~ N J.u lAM J«J wonlr. All,.,.
an 11fb}«t to edllbfr atul...,t 1M up~ tiM iMIMMIIMrfl• oM ,.,.,.M,..~
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hblhllillf Co. 'J ~~ ~ llllhll .,lf'Whf 11011fl.

·~

0 ~·-·····

OUR VIEW

5uMy Pl Cioudy

Remember
Twice a year, Americans gather to remember the sacrifices,
hardships, heartbreak and victories veterans of all of our wars
endured so the United States can preserve one of its most precious l'ossessions, democracy.
Sunday is one of those days of observance,
Like Memorial Day, veterans, families and friends gather in
parks and cemeteries at the II th hour of the 11th day in the
II th month for Veterans Day and reflect on the significance of
what our armed forces, past and present, have done and will
continue to do in keeping our society free and secure.
The meaning carries special weight now that we are
involved in a war against terrorism, battling hatred of this
nation and its ,policies that took thousands of fellow Americans'
lives on Sept. 11.
,
If we had become complacent about security within the
borders of this country, it was shattered forever. 9-11 was a
· sobering reminder that as one of the world's leaders, the U.S.
needs a strong military for protection of its citizeni, as it had in.
the past, against enemies foreign and domestic.
And there have always been men and women who answer
the challenge. We need to remember them and th01e who preceded them, from Valley Forge to the Persian Gulf, who willingly interrupted their lives so that we on the homefront will
never yield to a monarchy. a dictatorship or the anarchy terrorism promises if it ever succeeds in toppling civilized societies.
tiistorically. Veterans Day is observed on the date and hour
of the armistice that ended "the war to end all wars" in 1918.
Veterans of that conflict who survived the horrors . of the
world's first mechanized battles came home to fold their experiences into the fabric of our heritage through celebration of
that day.
It is only right that we should recall their sacrifice and those
of every soldier who has fought for America.
Whether you observe Veterans Day Sunday or Monday,
which is the federal holiday, please take the time to participate
in ceremonies honoring our veterans.
.
. It is comparatively. little to ask in return for what they have
gtven.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cioudy

-

T-

Alln

Fkrrioo

Snow

leo

. New concoune open

•

Honor our veterans today for
what they do for freedom ·

• 2001 Acc\IWMlhef, Inc.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
wouldn't be enough money to pay their
salaries either.
When you leave your job at the end of
Dear Editor:
the day, your problems remain there until
I will never forget the sadness and grief
the next day. These men come home and
I felt (and many of my parishioners) on a
continue
to see the bruises on the chilSunday· summer morning almost five
dren or the person lying dead due to a
years ago while pastoring a chur.ch in
failed drug deal.
Mount Orab, Ohio.
Think, Meigs County. Maybe these.
It was a beautiful morning for worshipexamples 1 have given seem like nothing
ping God. The service and sermon fed
compared to the horrific attacks of the
my flock , however, I noticed a few young
last two months. But, who knows
people and their parents were missing
• what
tomorrow
may
bring.
·
from worship. When the service concludThere is no doubt these police officers
ed and we had the receiving line outside,
and
firefighters would respond in the
the congregation, and I immediately
Dear Editor:
noticed a softball tournament in progress.
What are our priont1es in Meigs same heroic manner. How many of you
In fact, they had been playing all morn- County? Obviously, safety and security would like to walk one day in their shoes?·
·
·
are not at the top of the list.
Cheryl Sntith
mg.
Middleport
The message sent to the participants
Apparendy, it is more important to
(girls 12-14 years old), the congregation remove buildings fur offices, make little
and me was that softball was more impor- parks and make the decision makers who
tint than worshipping God. Afterinvesti" sit behind the desks more comfortable.
Dear Editor:
gation, I soon discovered it was a small
I was under the impression that the
The Meigs County Humane Society
number of individuals who made the commissioners were elected to work for
decision to play on Sunday morning.
the residents of the county. Is it in our would like to publicly thank a retired
A young lady who was a member of best interest to no ·longer have any law Meigs County businessman (or his
thoughtful and most welcome donation ..
the church was a star player on one of the enforcement in the county?
This past October, Jay Hall generously
teams was pressured by her coach to parHow will the commissioners react if
ticipate. She made the choice to play soft- one of their children is missing or their offered to upgrade the heating/ cooling,
system at the Meigs County Thrift
ball on Sunday morning and later apolo- home or business is vandalized?
gized to me. ·
How patriotic we all became on. Sept. Shoppe,located in Middleport.
We accepted with great enthusiasm. .
On Sunday morning, a similar situation II. Yes, those hundreds of firefighters and
Our dedicated volunteers have been:
will happen with the Veterans Day parade police officers in New York and Washinghere in Gallipolis. A small group of peo- . ton, D.C., are heroes. But don't we have managing in the winter with a small·
pie has made the decision to have a those same dedicated people in this stove, but in the summer, it is sometimes
parade on Sunday morning, the primary county? They deserve a job to raise their dreadfully hot witH just funs to cool the
worship times for churches throughout families and, maybe, a pat on the back volunteers, customers and the occasional
Gallia County.
now and then.
canine or feline visitor.
I was told and already know the signifThey risk their lives on a daily basis to
Working through his attorney, Bernard·;
icance of the 11th hour, the II th day of help the battered women, the molested ·Fultz, Mr. Hall arranged for Foreman and:
the 11th month when the Armistice was children and tty to keep drugs off the Abbott to upgrade. the heating/cooling' '
signed. However, is this more important streets. Maybe the commissioners need to system and we all expect to he· toasty this· ·
than worshipping God who gave us this reevaluate the distribution of county winter and cool in the summer.
land, the God who gave us the ability to funds.
Come and visit us at the Thrift Shoppe, ·
fight for our freedom, the God who sent
I'm sure there are those who say my shop for the holidays and help contribute
his only son to die for our sins and give opinion is biased. I would have to agree. to the welfare of animals in the county. '
us everlasting life?
I'm one of those mothers who started
Alden Waitt-·
For some, apparencly it is not· impor- sitting by the scanner over 10 years ago
President, ·
tant.
when my son joined the sheriff's departMeigs County Humane Society ·
Another important fact is that people, ment. I was listening as a deranged man
Athens
our veterans and especially young people shot at the officers, wondering if mine
in [he marching band will have to make a would be shot. I hoped that he rememchoice, to worship God or participate in bered all his training about traps or other
this parade.
hazards during drug raids. I prayed that
Dear Editor:
I enjoy the Veter•ns Day parade. 1 sup- God would keep them all safe.
I read the "NASCAR This Week" page
· port our veterans. 1 have family members
I think it's time the residents of this in the Sentinel every week and enjoy it
who served and fought for my freedom. I county realize what a bunch of HEROES very much.
would love to hold my 4-year-old daugh- we · have here. They're underpaid, over1just want to say "thank you" to· all the
ter and 19-month-old son high on my stressed and for the most part, unappreci- businesses that sponsor this page.Without
shoulders and point out the marching ated.
you, we probably wouldn't l)ave it.
men and women who served our counThank God our wonderful fire departAnn Zirkle
tty.
ment are volunteers. I'm sure there
Racine

Making a choice

However, I will not because worshipping the God of us all is more important
to me. I plead with this committee to priC
oritize your lives, put God fint, and move
the time to 1 p.m. on Sunday. I know our
veterans, young people and my family,
who love to Worship God, would deem it
a privilege to honor those who protect
our freedom.
Rev. Jonathan S. Kollman
Gallipolis

Heroes right here

J.telcome donation

Today is Sunday, Nov. 11, the 31Sth day of2001.There are
SO days left in the year.This is Veterans Day in the United States
and Remembrance Day in Canada.
Thday's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 11 , 1918, fighting in World War 1·carne to an end
with the signing of an armistice between the Allies and Germany.
On this date:
In 1620, 41 Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower, anchored off
Massachusetts, signed a compact calling for a "body politick.''
In 1831, former slave Nat TUrner, who had led a violent
insurrection, was executed in Jerusalem, Va.
In 1889, Washington became the 42nd state.
In 1921 , President Harding dedicated the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Ce.metery.
In ' 1938, Kate Smith first sang Irving Berlin's "God Bless
America" on network radio.
In 196S, Rhodesia proclaimed its independence from
Britain.
In 1966, Gemini 12 blasced off from Cape Kennedy, Fla.,
with astronauts James A. Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr.
'HARDBALL'
aboard.
In 1981, stuntman Dan Goodwin scaled the outside of the
100-stoty John Hancock Center in Chicago in nearly .six
hours.
In 1992, the Church of England voted to ordain women as
BY CHRIS MAmti!WB
The fact that Bloomberg happens to be
priests.
WASHINGTON -The great mayor a Republican tells you something good
In 1993, a bronze statue honoring the more 'than 11,000
Fiorello LaGuardia once said, "There is no about the overwhelmingly Democratic
American women who'd served in the Vietnam War was dediRepublican way to coUect garbage."
people of New York. They want a growncated in Washington D.C.
The grandchildren of those New Yorkers up to run their city. and they don't care
Ten years ago: The United States stationed its first diplomat
who time and agam elected the "Little what partisan button he sported to get on
in Cambodia in 16 years. to help the war-shocked nation
Flower'! have not forgotten his admoni- the ballot -- or how much of his own
arrange democratic elections.
tion.A city flooded by Democrats has once money he spent to·get his message across.
Five years ago: Phan Thi Kim. Phuc, who as a child was capagain chosen a Republican, Michael They simply wanted someone who could
tured in a Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press photograph
Bloomberg, to be its life raft.
_
get things done. They knew that Mike
running naked down a Vietnamese highway fleeing a napalm
The reasons have everything to do with Bloomberg had built an empire in business
attack, laid a wreath at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washwhat happened to this city two months communication from scratch. That histoty
ington.
ago. It switched the job description of New made him a good bet to rebuild th e world's
One year ago: Republicans went to court, seeking an order
York mayor from "only Democrats need greatest city from the rubble.
to block manual recounts from continuing in Florida's razorapply" to "opening for strong executive
The fact that Bloomberg is Jewish, supthin presidential election. A cable car crammed with skiers and
with business savvy, proven track record."
portive of abortion rights and gay rightJ&lt;.
snowboarders caught fire while being pulled through an Alpine
The next ma}'or ha1, as everyone in this ·' and a New Yorker tells you something
tunnel in Austria, killing ISS people. Lennox Lewis won a
countty knows, a job to do. He needs to about the post-Sept. 11 Republican Parry.
unanimous 12-round decision over David Tua in Las Vegas to
shake otfthe horror of Sept. 11 and get this
While New York lost the World Series in
re.tain his WBC and IBF heavyweight -titles.
' city moving again. To get that job done, seven, I am thrilled that they came back to
Today's Birthdays: Fonner Sen . William Proxmire, D-Wis., is
voters have picked a can-do Americ.1n sue- win every game at Yankee Stadium. New
86. Author Kurt Vonnegut is 79.
cess story, Michael Bloomberg.
York cheered those three victories with

Offering thanks

Mayoral election says something about new GOP

-

greater love than I have ever seen in a professional sport. The fans knew they were
cheering themselves.
Winning at home is, after all, a huge part
of this war.
And while we go about winning the'
early, vital battles here at-home, we need to·
carry on the fight in Mghanistan. We need
to bring New York justice to Osama bin
L1den ard his whole wretched gang. That,
too, is a nonpartisan job, come to think of
it.
Just remember -what La Guardia said:
'There's no Republican way to collect·
garbage."
(Cirris Mart/rei/Is, author of "Norv, Let Me
Tell ·\1&gt;11 Wlrat I Really TJ.ink" (Free Pres~
2001) aud "Hardball" (Timclwoue Books,
1999), is a llatio11ally syr1di11Jted colu~tmist for,
the &amp;m Frmuisco Chronicle m1d tire llosr. qf
"Hardball" "" CNBC and 'MSN BC cable.
chmtne/s.) .

•

CHARLESTON (AP) -Yeager Airport's new S2.8 million
Concourse C is now open with two new loading bridges and
a waiting area that adds 18S seats.
The four-gate concourse offers passengers more comfort and
convenience and eases commercial aircraft congestion at the
terminal's east end, Yeager Airport Director Rick Atkinson said.
The concourse includes a ground-level loading bridge built
to accommodate regional jets. It can telescope out to a length
of 90 feet and serve three parking positions. ·
' "It can handle all the regional jets, plus larger aircraft up to
757s and DC-9s," Atkinson said.

Pipeline survey gets nod
BECKLEY (AP) -Dominion Transmission won permission
Friday to cross private property in Shady Spring to survey and
collect data for a proposed 200-mile natural gas pipeline.
. Raleigh County Circuit Judge Robert · Burnside said he

PRESTONSBURG, Ky. (AP) - The
Appalachian Regional Commission
agreed Friday to help businesses across the
13-sta[e region get improved Internet
connections, a move seen as critical for
economic development.
Also, the ARC agreed to pay for constructio!l of a $200 million tunnel through
Kentucky's Pine Mountain, scrapping a
plan to widen a stretch of highway across
the mountain.
Jess White, the ARC's co-chairman, said
eliminating a digital divide in Appalachia
IS as cnncal the distressed regmn as the
roads that have conne~ted isolated mountam conunurubes With the rest of the
nation.
Researchers presented a study to the
ARC that showed residents and business-

· " We've taken the cu!VI5 out of the povement. Let's take the curves out of the digital highway;• said Mabel Murphree, director of the Appalachian Regional Office in
the Mississippi Development Authority.
Murphree said the lack of high-quality
computer connections in much · of the
es in Appalachia have far less access to region makes it difficult to recruit new
· high-speed Internet access than the rest in businesses that need high-speed Internet
connections.
the nation.
The Appalachian portion of Mississippi,
Sharon Saover, a researcher from the
University ofTexas, said eastern Kentucky according to the University ofTexas study,
has the most ground to make up in the is second only to Kentucky in the smallell
digital divide. She said only 13 pen:ent of percentage of businesses and residents with
the population had high-speed Internet digital subscriber lines, cable modems or
access last year. That's fu less than the other means of high-speed Internet :acas.
nation as a whole and far less than any Mountain counties in southern New York
other Appalachian state.
State ranked third lowest with 39 percent.

Resttlrchers presented a study
to tht ARC tht1t showed
residents and busiue.sses in
Appt!lt!cltitl ht~r•e Jar le.ss access
to laigh-speed Internet access
than the re.st itt the 11t1tiou.

col!ld not override state code that permits private companies Smith said. She was struck by a pickup truck and suffered head
hke railroads and utilities to conduct surveys or research for injuries and died at the scene, Smith said.
building or c~nstruction in accordance with federal regulation s.
Smith said the driver of the pickup is "pretty much in pieco;s."
Donuruon s plans to construct a 36-mch transmission line
from We.st Virginia to North Carolina has stirred up antipipeline sentiment and a barrage of court battles and legal
injunctions here and in Virginia.
HUNTINGTON (AP) - Tri-State Airport has gotten its
Burnside said he was not ruling on the larger issue of conparking lot back.
·
struction of the pipeline, but was allowing the company to conThe Federal Aviation Administration gave the airport a waivduct the archaeological and environmental studies.
er Friday from its rule banning parking within 300 feet of air..:
port terminals. The ban was imposed after the Sept. It terrOrist
attacks.
The parking lot reopened after airport officials learned of th~ .'
MARTINSBURG (AP) -A 14-year-old girl died Friday
evening alter falling down a hillside and into the path of an FAA's decision from U,S. R ep. Nick Rahall's office. Parking is
oncoming truck.
still banned in front of the main terminal, said Tri-State GenerThe teen-ager, whose name has not been released, was from al Manager Larry Salyers .
Inwood, said Berkeley County SheriffW Randy Smith.
There are a couple of changes for security reasons. The lot
The girl was walking with her sister along an embankment now has one entrance instead of two, and travelers must submit
parallel to state Route 51, lost her balance and fell into the road, their vehicles to an inspection by a security officer.

.FAA gives airport waiver

Teen dies in tumble

Residents to be in torch ftln for Olympics PROUD TO BE APART
MORGANTOWN - One is a former
Olympian. One is a great dad. One reached
a milestone birthday. One fought of( cancer.
The local list of torchbearers for the 2002
Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City is varied
- and very interesting.
for William Bonsall of Mor~ntown, it's
his third time around.
He competed as a gymnast in the 1948
London summer games. lt was a postwir
Olympics in which athletes lived in old military barracks and Axis nations were banned.
In 1996, l)e ran the torch through his
home neighborhood of Philadelphia for the

Adanta summer games.
This time, he's one of 30-some Appalachian-region residents who will carry icidesryled torches' through the streets of Morgantown and Uniontown, Pa., come midDecember.
"It's not very far, but it's a fun thing," said
the retired \Vest Virginia Univeniry coach,
referring to the one-filth of a mile he will
run near the Mountaineer Mall.
At the Olympics, Bonsall placed 12th in
vaulting. He .was · an automatic torch-run
pick as a former Olympian.

Brockovich firm takes on Philips Lighting
MORGANTOWN (AP)
- The law firm that hired
Erin Brockovich is now going
after a West Virginia light bulb
factory where attorneys say
thousands of people were regularly exposed to mercury,
berylliwn and other hazardous
chemicals.
· California · attorney Ed
Masry wiD meet Monday with
!hundreds of potential plain tillS
in a class-action lawsuit he
plans to file against Philips .
Electronics and the Philips
Lighting Co. plant in Fairmont. Brockovich, whose
exploits inspired an Oscarwinning Hollywood movie,

Mountain
Party prepares
for 2001
elections
CHARLESTON (AP)
After making its first foray
into West Virginia politics
with a candidate for governor,
a revived Mountain Party is
preparing for the elections of
2002 .
Denise Giardina, the party's
candidate for governor, won
about 2 percent of the vote in
2000, nearly twice as much as
the party needed to win a
spot on the ballot for the next
four years, releasing it from
the chore of circulating candidate petitions.
Virtually unheard from
since last November, the partY,
held the first of several organizational meetings in Morgantown last week, said Gary
Zuckett, a spokesman for the
party. Another meeting is set
for Nov. 13 in Huntington at
the Beverly Hills Presbyterian
Church.

Pt~ul "Sparky" Zepp,
per~onnel manager at

Philips, declined to
comment on the
allegt~tiotJs tht1t
. employees were exposed
to ht~miful chemict~ls.
also may attend the gathering.
Philips Lighting, which at its
height employed 2,700 people
at the north-central West Virgmla
factory,
routinely
exposed workers to al least
nine dangerous chemicals, a
statement from the Masry &amp;
Vititoe firm charged Friday.
Paul "Sparky" Zepp. person-

nel manager at Philips,
declined to comment on the
allegations. The case is to be
filed Monday or Tuesday in
Marion County Circuit
Court.
Workers in the rwo-story
plant were forced to endure
long hours in temperatures ·
over I 00 degrees, with ·poor
ventilation and without proper protective gear such as respirators and impermeable
gloves, the lawyers said.
"There were douds of ~ust
so thick inside the plant 'that
often it was difficult to see
across to the other side of the
building," their statement said.

..

Revival Me~tings
Sunday, l"Jovember 25 through
Wednesday, November 28 with

Dr. Billy Martin

Faith Baptist Church
3615 Jackson Pike
Halfway between Holzer Hospital
· and Bob Evans Farm ,
Sunday Services: 10:45 am, 6:00 pm
Monday ·Wednesday 7:00pm
Questions? Call 740-446-2677

OF YOUR LIFE.

Subscribo todDy: 446-2342 or 992-2156

Auto- Owner• lluurance

Ufe Rome Car Buslnus
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114 Court Pomeroy

992-6677

ANNUAL
TURKEY
DINNER ·
Ruttand Grade School
THURSDAY, NOV. IS, 1001
Serving Starts - 5:00 p.m.

Tickets - $5.00
Rutland Vol.' Fire Dept.
nc~ceta IV1111obll 11: Ouollty Prlrit Shop, llutllnd Dip!. ltore, Jae'e
COuntry Morkll, Hilltop Grocery, Pomlf'OY Flower Ship ond lillie Daor.

• 1

�•

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

5
Roy E. Clldwel

Obluaries

Laptops
flwn ..... AI

Gllnser 1lllr Knolls

COLUMBUS - Roy E. Caldwell, 80, Columbus, died
Thu~y. Nov. 8, 2001, in Mount Carmel East Hospital,
Columbus.
Son of the late Wyman and Frances Caldwell, he was the
owner of Caldwell Roofing &amp; Siding Services. He was a
member ofWhitehall Post 8793 of the VFW and Bexley Post
430 of the American Legion.
Surviving are his wife, Margaret "Bobo" Caldwell; five sisters, Alma McDonald, Hazel (Kenny) DeVault, Opal
(William) Saundrrs, Kathren Butcher and Alajean Caldwell;
a brother, Kenneth (Patricia) Caldwell; a sister-in-law, Ina
Caldwell Muhis; and several nie.ces and neohews.
He was also preceded in death by tWo brothers, William
and James Caldwell.
Services will be 7 p.m. Sunday in Evans Funeral Home,
4171 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus, with the Rev. Homer C.
Humphrey officiating. Burial will be noon Monday in Ohio
Valley' Memory Gardens, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Sunday after 4 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Disabled
American Veterans, 35 E. ,Chestnut St., Columbus, Ohio
43215.

R..UFe:ais
SCOTTOWN - Roswell Ferris, 72, Scottown, died Friday, Nov. 9, 2001, in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are three brothers, Marshall Ferris of Chesapeake, Willard Ferris of Proctorville, and Russell Ferris of
Scottown; and two sisters, Ella Danford of Chesapeake, and
!Jma Ferris of Portsmouth.
Gravesidr services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Miller
Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville, on Monday from 10-11 a.m.

lona V. Hupp
LONG BOTTOM - lona V. Hupp, 77, 33175 Smith
Ridge Road, Long Bottom, died Friday, Nov. 9, 2001, in Vet"
erans Memorial Extended Care, Pomeroy.
Born July 30, 1924, in Meigs County, daughter of the late
Max and Effie Beaver Manuel, she was a homemaker and
owned a farm with her husband, Arnold Hupp.
She was a member of Freedom Gospel Mission and Ladies
Aid of Apple Grove.
Surviving are a daughter, Jean (Ken) Bass of Clifton, W.Va.;
four sons, Jim (Opal) Hupp of Letart Falls, Chuck (Nancy)
Hupp of The Plains, and Ed (Sharon) Hupp and Rock
(Carol) Hupp, both of Long Bottom; 15 grandchildren and
·16 great-grandchildren; a sister, Flossie (Ernest) Bush of
Middleport; and a brother, Joe Manuel of Letart Falls.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Arnold
Hupp; four brothers, Charles, Max Jr., Don and Tom; and a
sister-in-law, Edith Manuel.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with Pastor Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will
be in Letart Fall• Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral'
home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.

Alice Grinstead Miller·
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Alice Grinstead Miller, 85, New
Haven, died Friday, Nov. 9, 2001, in Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Sept. 9, 1916, daughter of the late Richard and Susan
Elizabeth, Grinstead, she was a member of American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 140.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Floyd
Miller; seven brothers, Harry, Clay, Bryan, Thomas, Richard,
Walter, and Robert Grinstead; and five sisters, Iva Fry, Mary
Aumiller, Sarah Grinstead, Helen Knapp and Ella Roush.
She has more than 400 nieces, nephews, great-nieces and
nephews, and gi:eat-great~nieces and nephews.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Anderson Funeral
Home, New Haven. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday. ·
Memorial contributions can be made to the Wahama
Alumni Scholarship Fund, in care of 'Patty Noel, 31455
Snowden Ro~d. Pometoy, Ohio 45769.

Bulah Josephine Nonnan

'
---unbav
'linus· jeutiattl

Sunday, Nov.11, 2001

to me becaUK I know right
away wh&gt;t nu~ing intervenBIDWELL - Gilmer "Bill" Knotts, 91, of Bidwell, passed tions mo needrd.
away Friday, November 9, 2001, in Grant Hospital in Colum"This helps me ensure my
bus, following a brief illness.
patient is getting the best cmo
He was born April 6, 1910, at Linden, WestVirgini:o, son of possible,"' Wamsley added.
the late William Knotts and Melissa White Knotts.
And th&gt;t's not the only
He was a retired employee of Gallipolis Developmental Cen- advantage these little computter, formerly the O.H.E. of Gallipolis. Previowly, he was e~ provide.
employed by the TNT Plant in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
All
Medicare-certified
He was a member of Harris Baptist Church in Harrisburg, HHC agencies are required to
· and the Springfield Grange.
complete and submit special
He married Kathryne Denney on August 22, 1941, and she assessments called OASIS.
preceded him in death on December 14, 1988. In addition, he
With the use of the laptops,
was preceded in death by his wife, Ruth Rocco, in 1%6; a this process is strearttlined.
granddaughter, Donna Kay Heister; and two siste~ and two The nu~e is abl~ to enter the.
brothers, Louise Morris, Ethel Knotts, and Curt and Charlie required information direcdy
Knotts.
into the syst~m. thus eliminatHe is survived by their daughter and son-in-law, Sandra and ing a middleman and lots of
Noel Heister of Canal Winchester; and a grandson, Otto Heister ofTampa, Aorida.
· Also surviving are two stepsons and a stepdaughter, Rick
Ooanna) Rocco of Akron, Robert (Cheryl) Rocco of Akron,
and Judy Schuh of Akron; several stepgrandchildren; and
nieces, nephews and a special niece, Judy McCulty of GallipoflomPapAI
lis.
Services will be It a.m. on Tuesday, November 13, 2001, in reported violations to the
Vinton Baptist Church, with the Rev. Alfred Holley and the Adult Parole Authority, and I
Rev. Ronnie Lemley officiating. Burial will be in Vinton can unde~tand why," Wood
Memorial Park. Friends may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral said. "The jail will ·not reopen
Home in Vinton, on Monday, November 12, 2001, from 2-4 until these violations are
and 7-9 p.m.
addressed, and I will not be
responsible for the jail or any
prisoners until they are
Ohio University. ·
addressed."
Asked what can be done to
The decision to close the
resolve the money dilemma, jail was made shortly after
from Page AI .
Fisher suggested a grassroots
effort to lobby legislators.
funds public schools, updated
Because the inequity issue
auditors, guests and local is keenly felt in rural southern
school officials on the status Ohio schools, Fisher said
of the case.
some encouragement can be
After three decisions since found in that the legislative
1997, the Supreme Court has leade~hip is familiar with the
decided to reconsider its rul- -situation.
ing from earlier this year
Speaker Larry
House
directing the state to modifY Householder is from Perry
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) the funding formula. Attorney County and Adams County's
General Betty Montgomery Doug White stands to Ken Kesey, whose . LSDissued feelers last week about become Senate president, "but fueled bus ride became a
bringing all parties together I don't. know their positions symbol of the psychedelic
1960s after he won fame as a
to discuss a settlement.
on schools," Fisher said.
novelist
with '"One Flew
''We're hoping, as a ·coali"What we really need is a
tion, to have a settlement tax increase, but nobody's Over the Cuckoo's Nest,"
died Saturday morning. He
conference and we're willing going to say th&gt;t," he added.
was
66.
to negotiate for structural
Asked by Gallia County
Kesey died following canchanges in the funding for- Auditor Larry Betz if equality
mula," said Fisher, who substi- would ever be a reality in cer surgery on his liver at
tuted for William Phillis as Ohio schools, Fisher said "that Sacred Heart Medical Censpeaker.
wasn't the expectation.
·· ter, according to a nursing
Phillis is executive director
"Right now, we have no ·supervisor who would not
of the Ohio Coalition for level of educational opportu- · give her name. The hospital's
Equity · and Adequacy of nity paid for and guaranteed Web site listed Kesey as
Funding, one of the lead by the state of Ohio," Fisher "dec~ased." •
organizations that pursued the said. "That's our only hope."
After studying writing at
DeRolph case into a Perry
"There's a real problem Stanford University, Kesey
County court in 199 t. The down here," Pike County burst onto the literary §Cene
court issued its ruling finding Auditor Ted Wheeler said, cit- in 1962 with "One Flew
Ohio's school funding proce- ing instances of classes con- Over the Cuckoo's Nest,"
dures unconstitutional three ducted in aging 'buildings. "If followed
quickly
with
years later, which was chal- anybody doesn't think so, "Sometimes
a
Great
lenged by the state.
bring them down here and ,Notion" in 1964, then went
Earlier this year, Ohio jus- have them take a tour."
28 years before publishing
tices turned the responsibility
Another topic discussed his third major novel.
for fixing the funding prob- during the meeting was the
But "One Flew Over the
lem over to the Legislature, state budget. County auditors Cuckoo's Nest" became
which pledged $1.24 mi)liorr have been encouraged to join much more widely 'known:
for education in the 2001-03 a lobbying campaign to con- thanks to a movie that Kesey
budget.
vince legislators against cut- hated. It tells the story of
But that commitment, cou- ting local government fund- R.P.
McMurphy,
who
pled with a struggling econo- ing, now frozen in the new feigned insanity to get off a
my and declining revenues, spending plan, or eliminating
prison farm, only to be
has in part prompted bu.dget
it.The initiative has bee~ lobotomized
when
he
cuts in what's been dubbed
"robbing Peter to pay Paul" launched by the state County threatened the authority of
scenario to meet the court's CoJlUllissioners Association. . the mental hospital.
directive.
"The commissioners' point
"We don't think this should of view is that this is a good
• Home Oxygen
happen at the expense of fund," said CA.AO Executive
other agencies," said Fisher, a Director Frances Lesser.
• Nebulizers
retired Perl)' County educa- "Obviously, the lobbying
tor whose coalition is based at effort won't stop."
• Sleep Disorder
'

Jail

Coa

paper.
"Our communication and
documentation has really
improved which allows us to
better reach our ultimate goal
which is excellent patient
care," said Carleton. "Our
patient satisfaction rate is 99100 percent every quarter."
This past September, HHC
participated in a Medicare
survey that proved it was
deficiency free.
· ."A large part of that survey
was on OASIS. I think.. the
laptops really helped us meei
the time frames for completion of the assessments," she·
said.
is
Home
November
Healthcare Month Holzer
Home Healthcare can be
reached at 446-5301.

:Taliban acknowledge
:they lost Mazar-e-Sharif
KABUL, Mghanistan (AP)
-The Taliban acknowledged
· Saturday that they lost the city
of Mazar-e-Sharif, and an
opposition commander said
an attack on the capital,
Kabul, would start within
days.
Following the capture of
·· Mazar-e-Sharif, an opposition
commander,
Mohammed
Mohaqik, said anti-Taliban
forces quickly seized three
northern provincial capitals
Shibarghan in Jo:tjan
province; Aybak in Sarnangan
province; and Maimana in
Faryab province.
' There was no comment
from the Taliban on the opposition claims, and no foreign
·· reporters were in the area.
· · However, taking Aybak would
": cut the main escape route for
' 1 Taliban soldien withdrawing
... from Mazar-e-Sharif to
Kabul.
If the other northern towns
.' have also fallen, the Taliban
may be abandoning large
· ~ths of territory populated
·by ethnic minorities and
redeploying ·their forces to

Trussell was notified· by the
commissioners of a payroll
deficit.
Trussell has extended a layoff notice to all employees
until Dec. 5, but he and the
commissioners have pledged
to .work to find the' $16,500
needed for the final payroll of
the year.
Trussell will continue to
house prisone~ in the Noble
County jail, where a negotiated fee agreement is in place,
and in jails at Middleporr,
Nelsonville and Gallipolis.

Patriotism

(AP) - In 1980, Bruce
Springsteen got his first
number-one album, with
"The River."
In
1987, Sly Stone
showed up over an hour late
to his comeback concert in
Los Angeles. When he got
there, he was arrested for
nonpayment of child support.
In 1988, the TV comedy
"Murphy Brown," starring
Candice Bergen, · made its
debut on CBS.

OHIO VALLEY
MEMORIAL GARDENS
When thinking of your loved one, think of us and our
services at Ohio Valley Memorial Gardens. We offer
personal consultations with one of our.caring staff
members at your convenience. We also have a newly
completed mausoleum with immediate availability.
For more info~mation, contact Tonya at

. .

(740) 446-9228

'

Kesey

,.

gone."
The capture of Mazar-eSharif was the biggest success
since
President
Bush
launched ai~trikes Oct. 7 to
force the Taliban to hand over
Osama bin Laden, chief suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks on the United States.
With Mazar-e-Sharif in
opposition hands, the U.S.-Ied
coalition can open a land
bridge to Uzbekistan, 45
miles to the north, to rush in
humanitarian goods and military supplies to anti-Taliban
forceS.
Mazar-e~Sharif also has a
large airport that could be
refurbished for American and
allied aircraft to conduct
humanitarian missions and
mount attacks against the Taliban from within Afghanistan.

UNITED
NATIONS
(AP) - President Bush, in a
warning to world leaders,
said Saturday all nations are
possible targets of terrorism
and must join with the United States in a campaign to
prevent more attacks. "Each
of us must answer for what
we have done or what we
have left undone," he said.
In his first ap!fearance
before the General Assembly,
Bush outlined specific tasks
for member nations: crack
down on financing for terrorists, deny them sanctuary,
close their camps and seize
the operators. "These obligations are urgent and they are
binding on every nation
with a place in this chamber," the president said.
"Every nation has a stake
in. this cause," Bush said. "As
we meet, the terrorists are
.
pIanmng more murder, perh aps ·m my count ry - or
per h aps l·n .yours... H e

"Every nation l1as a stake in this caust. As wt
meet, the ttrrorists are planning more murder,
perilaps in my country- or perhaps in yo111s."
warned that Osama bin
Laden and his al-Qaida network , would use nuclear,
chemical and biological
weapons as soon: as they
could . "No hint of conscience would prevent it,"
Bush said.
He spoke before a gathering of 40 world leaders and
I 00 foreign ministers a few
miles from the site of the
World Trade Center suicide
attacks on Sept. II . A long
round of applause filled the
cavernous hall at the concliJsion of his remarks.
Bush came to the world
b?dy in a bid to strengthen
hJS . fragile antl-terromm
. coahtwn . A gathermg numb
f , .
I d
h
er o 10re1gn ea ers as
d
·
expresse concern m recent

Thanks for your votes
and support.

LONNIE BOGGS
Green Township Trustee

days about the U.S.-Ied military action against bin
Laden, his network and the
Taliban regime.
Bush was meeting late Sat-

urday with Pakistan President Pervez M usharraf, a key
ally who has given the United States staging areas for the
war against Afghanistan .
Threatened by internal antiU.S. sentiments, Musharraf
says civilian casualties in
Afghanistan are fueling perceptioll:s of an unjust war.

.'
Rio· ~11ncle Elementary would like to thank the
folllow~nQ businesses and Individuals for their
donallonstolhe2001 Foil festival. Your
Qeneroslty Is Qreally appreciated!
Rodney Supply Company
The Ar1 School
Ohio Valley Food land of
Spri119 Valley
Spri119 Valley VlcMo
Dairy~

Fruth Pharmacy
JanlferreU

Wai-Mart
Swords Carpet
Restoration
University ofRJo Grande
Rtneu Center
Clyde Evans
Main Street Photoejraphy
Maynard's Quilts and
Fabrics

1:0. Taylor
Holzer Clinic
The Wiseman AQency
American EIKirlc Power
(Gavin Plant)
C.C. Caldwell Truckl119

Central Supply
VlllaC)e Roral
Rlo Grande BP

Little Caesar's
Skyline lanes
McClure's Reslouranls
Family Dollar
ofSprinQ Volley
Subway
Ohio Valley Bank
Skalesvllle USA
Farmer's Bank
Uncia Johnson
MarQaret Evans
Turnpike Ford
Donnie llo99s ·
Peoples Bank
Bl9 River Electric
Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture

Little Caesar's
· ludCJG D. O.On Evans

Frvth Pharmacy

IPowell suggests turning

·•; Kabul into an 'open city'
•

Equipment
• Hospital Beds
• Wheelchairs
• Lift Chairs
Ohio Valley Memory Garden$ announces our annual
Christmas observance dedicated to the memory of your loved
ones with a candle placed on their grave on December 2nd
with a rain date of December 9th.

In Memory 01:

Name of Deteased
Date of Death

-·

Donated By

WASHINGTON . (AP) . ~· Afghanistan's capital should
•. become neutral territory if
: the anti-Tali ban northern
: alliance is able to oust the rul: ing militia from Kabul, Secre: tary of State. Colin Powell
•' s:n'd .
: The Taliban's front line,
: north of Kabul, fell under
· attack Saturday from Ameri'' t can B-52 bombers and other
~ warplanes. .
:: Also, the Pentagon said it
: had halted the search for
: Bryant L. Davis and declared
~ the machinist's mate fireman
.. : apprentice dead. On Wednesday, Davis, 20, of Chicago, feU
• overboard from the USS Kitty
: Hawk, one of three aircraft
~ carriers deployed in the Ara' bian S~a for the war.
It was not known how
, • Davis went overboard.
:' The Taliban acknowledged
Saturday that it lost the strategic city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Aided by U.S. bombing,
·;! opposition troops said they
were pursuing Taliban fighters
:. as they retreated.
Powell said Kabul residents
fear and mistrust the ·northern
alliance, one reason to make
the capital ne~tral territory as

*

us with your doDitlon, minimum of$5 pu randle.
II you are unablt to pla&lt;elhe andle, Ohio Volley Memory Gordens will pnovldelhb
'
servkt:, wltb a minimum donadon of$ 10 per candle.
Candia may be picked up at the office lht week before the :Znd through the evening
ol lhellpdn1 S&lt;rvkt. We will light the candles between 5 p.m. &amp; 5:30P.M.

Address
P\eue m11ke t'hfflll paytble 10 Ohio \'alley Mtmory Gtrdtn• Candlt LIJI!tlna

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens
1229 Neighborhood Rd.
Please include any
446 • 9228
new addrc" for next
Wt: NEl:D GALLON JUGS

Sund.y, November II, 1001

. WASHINGTON (AP) probably very important to
' The anthrax mailings proba- the offender. They may have
bly are the work of a man been the focus of previous
• who is tamiliar with haz- expressions of contempt
;:. ardous material, works where which may have been com;'!, he has little contact with municated to others or
•. other people and may have observed by others."
held a grudge against the · The FBI has come under
.:;. addressees, the FBI said Fri- public criticism for itS inabil.,.. day.
ity to answer many of the
l:: In a fresh appeal to the · questions surrounding the
;:' public for help in solving the anthrax attacks. Sen. Dianne
"!IJlthrax mailings, FBI officials Feinstein, D-Calif., took the
t, released a profile of the sus- bureau to task at a congres' pected mailer.
sional hearing this week.
The ,profile,· developed by Feinstein received an FBI
'
• the·)· ' agency's
behavioral
briefing Friday afternoon that
; experts, does not address the lasted so long it delayed a
• question of whether the perbriefing for the news media
. son is foreign or from the
by nearly an hour.
United States.
While profiling the suspect
FBI officials said the penon
in some detail, the FBI said it
may work in a laboratory and
"is apparently comfortable has reached no conclusions.
"No suspects are ruled
.working with extremely hazardous material. He probably · out," said FBI behavior anahas a scientific background to lyst Jim · Fitzgerald. "No
some extent, or at least a groups are ruled out. There's a
possibility it's al-Qai"'-relatstrong interest in science."
ed.
There is no direct or clear
The person "did not select
his victims 'randorttly,'' mak- linkage between this incident
ing the effort to find the cor- and any cell or network."
rect address and ZIP code of. · The person who mailed the
.. each victim and ensuring that letters "lacks the personal
skills necessary to confront
proper postage was used.
NBC, the New York Post . others,'' the FBI said, suggestand Sen. Tom Daschle, D- ing that the man may have
·-\&gt;.D., were selected, the FBI held a grudge against the tarsaid, because "these targets are gets for a long time.

P1tut oome by Ohio Valley Memory Gardens or 011 out the form below and stnd to

FLASHBACK

defend Kabul and other
strongholds of the dominant
Pashtun ethnic group.
"This morning the city is
quiet," said Karim Khalili,
spokesman for the Shiite
Muslim opposition, said of
Mazar-e-Sharif. "There is no
fighting. AU the Taliban are

profile of anthrax

a

the "ultimate sacrifice for the
freedoms we enjoy today."
As each name was read
aloud, an assortment of small
American flags, each representing a fallen · veteran, was
placed into a Meigs Countyshaped memorial to remind
those in attendance that their
local heroes had not been forgotten.

r

Bush tells UN: All nations are targets

FBI dosing in on

Ken Kesey, novelist of
'One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest,' dies at 66

BIDWELL - Bulah Josephine Norman, 81, Bidwell, died
Saturday, Nov. 10, 2001, at her residence.
Born Dec. 10, 1919, in Pinson Fork, Ky., daughter of the
late Martin and Rosie Collins Hill, she attended Faith Valley
Church on BulaviUe Pike, Gallipolis.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Glen R.
Norman, on Oct. 10, 2001; and by two brothers and a sister.
Surviving mo nine children, Glen E. (Martha) Norman of
Front Royal,Va., Clem U. Norman, Peter M. Norman, Kathy
(Arthur) Wojtaszek, Rita (Cecil) Yost, Trianzy Johnson, Rethel
(Don) Isaac and Debbie Oohn) Manley, aU of Bidwell, and
Patricia A. (Harold) Russell ofWellston; several grandchildren
from PapAl
and several great-grandchildren; three brothers, Truman Hill
of Pinson Fork, Bob Hill of Cleveland, and Juniot Hill of
South Carolina; and three sisters, Rethel Strunk and Sophia Land" and "Heroes."
The assembly concluded
Marks, both of Cleveland, and L~ly Shampu of Bidwell.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in Faith Valley Church, with Meigs Local Superintenwith the Rev. Junior Preston officiating. Burial will be in the dent William Buckley reading
Norman F•. ily Cemetery, Bidwell. Friends m~y call at the names of 163 Meigs
McCoy- Moore Funeral Home,Vinton, from6-9 p.m. Sunday. County veterans who gave

America at

PageA7

years mailing

was Berlin after World War II
before the city was divided
into U.S., Rwsian, British and
French sectors.
"That is what we are thinking about," Powell said at the
State Department. "It's happened many times in history."
When the forces that now
comprise the U.S.-backed
northern alliance ruled Kabul
from 1992 to 1996, around
50,000 people were killed in 1-- Self-employed? Recent graduate? Newly divorced? Are you paying more than you can
fighting among rival warlords.
really afford for personal health Insurance? Or ore you taking the risk of being
The need for a broad-based
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government in Afghanistan
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It's fast and simple. Call our toll-free number. Toke a few minutes to answer some simple
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Bush and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
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move forward and one that
represents all the interests of
the people of Afghanistan,"
Bush said at a news conference with Vajpayee.
A spokesman for one of the
Afghan opposition commanders, Gen. Rashid Dostum,
claimed U.S. Green Berets
participated in the battle. A
Or
at
senior defense official in
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�•

Page AI

Nation • World
Report: Verizon still charging

Sullchly. Nova•lb« 11,2001

Tobacco auctions begin this week:

NEW YORK {AP) - RHidents and business owners without telephone service in lower Manhattan since the Sept. 11
attacks ate still receiving monthly bills, according to a published
report.
Verizon, normally required to offer rebates for service outages
exceeding 24 hours, successfully lobbied the New York State
Public Service Commission for a suspension of such regulations, The New York Times reported Saturday. Verizon said that
any customer who complained would be given a rebate for the
number of days that service was out.
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer told the Times that the burden of arranging refunds shouldn't be placed on customers.
"It makes no sense that when you can't reach out and touch
them, they can reach out and bill you," Spitzer said.

CARROLLTON, Ky. (AP) - The
photo on the waU at the Growers Tobacco Warehouse shows smiling workers
gathered around tobacco bales three
years ago, when 13.8 million pounds of
tobacco were sold, the best season ever.
The picture has become a relic,
memorializing a marketing system in
decline and holding on for dear life.
On the same auction floor, burley
farmers now deliver truckloads of leaf
for contract sales directly to Dimon Inc.,
which buys and processes tobacco for
cigarette companies and overseas markets.
In an adjoining building that could fit
inside the main warehouse, workers have
stacked a few short rows of burley grown

River temporarily reope~s

'

"I don't think auybody is
lookitrg for a good sales seasoil.
The mood is not real good."
Denny Wilton, · - - di..ctor o1 the
Burtoy Auction W e - Auoclation

by farmers still loyal to the auction system. Auction sales will start there and at
other Ktntucky warehouses Tuesday
amid diminished e'l'J'ectations.
"I don't think anybody is looking for
a good sales season;' said Denny Wilson,
executive director of the 'Burley Auction
Warehouse Association . "The mood is
not real good."
In the past year, burley farmers abandoned the auction system in droves,
signing contracts to seU leaf direcdy to

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The stretch of the Ohio River
that was closed due to a punctured barge leaking gasoline
reopened friday night but was to close again 12 hours later,
U.S. Coast Guard officials said.
The 1 112-mile stretch of river between the Big four Bridge
and the Portland Canal was to close at 7 a.m. Saturday so crews
could resume cleanup during daylight, Lt. Steve Garcia said.
hardest I've had to make in my life."
Garcia said the Coast Guard expects the area to reopen per"I love the department;' Kerik said. "I love the people who
manendy by Saturday night.
work here."
Barges have been waiting since the Wednesday night accident
Kerik, 46, previously had indicated he would move on when
to pass through the. restricted area.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's term ends Dec. 31, but he had
reconsidered in recent weeks after Bloomberg expressed interest in reappointing him. .
"

in the rescue effort.
"I offer a warm welcome to the delegation from the New
York City Fire Department, so many of whose member'i lost
their lives in the terrorist attack of Sept. 11," the pope said in
English, addressing the delegation at Mass in St. Peter's Basilica.
"May AlmightY God grant the bereaved families consolation
and peace, and may he give you and your fellow firefighters
strength and courage to carry on your great service to your city;'
John Paul prayed. "With the promise of my continued prayers, I
invoke upon you and your families God's abundant blessing.."
Among the eight firefighters in the basilica was Daniel A.
Nigro, who was promoted after the attacks to chief of department, the highest uniformed position in the force. He replaced
Peter Ganci, who died at the World Trade Center.

Commissionen leaving posts

NEW YORK (AP) -The city's police and fire commissioners, both central figures in the city since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, plan to leave their posts after Michael Bloomberg takes
VATICAN CITY (AP) - New York City firefighters preover as mayor next year.
sented 'Pope John Paul II with the whit~ helmet of their chapPolice Commissioner Bernard Kerik said Friday that his decilain who was ki)led at the Word Trade Center, and the pontiff
sion to turn down the offer to remain was "probably one of the
prayed Saturday for the families of the 343 firefighters who died

Pope gaeets NYC firefigllten :·

JIM ROGERS &amp; ASSOCIATES
f?lfal(eialcfe.rv-t~e.t &amp; hr4'~0./fot­
ATHENS•LOGAN-POMEROY

Patriotism overflows at Veterans Day ceremonies
)

pital in West Los Angeles.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Brimming with a renewed "The average person, includsense of patriotism and ing the veterans, is becoming
respect for the military, Amer- more appreciative."
At a song-filled ceremony
icans across the country are
turning out this holiday to friday in HoUywood Hills,
honor veterans and remember fil'efighters and police officers
the heroes from the Sept. 11 sat prominendy on the stage
next to a plaque memorializterrorist attacks.
Many ·say they are attending ing the Sept. 11 attacks.
Barbara Alderson Raga
Veterans Day celebrations
lWith a new kind of pride and brought her 12-year-old
veterans say they are enjoying daughter, Suzie, to the ceremore respect. Speakers are mony at forest Lawn Me~
drawing speCial attention to rial Park for the first time.
Americans
fighting
in
"I think
the
Mghanjstan and the firefight- contel(t
oiwhats gomgin9ll,.!n
ers and police officers who the wo~Jd. this is of great
died in the World Trade &lt;;:en- mterest, Raga md as she
ter.
gazed up at World War II
"I think it's a different fighter planes in the Condor
response and more respect for Squadron flying over.
veterans because of what hapIn O'Fallon, Mo., as many
pened September the 1.1 th," as 1, 500 people are expected
Councilman Nate Holden Sunday for the dedication of a
said after attending a ceremo- new .veterans' ~emorial ..that
ny at the Veterans Affairs hosconSISts of a platoon of

cer~nlr

bronze boots.
Veterans said they weren't
anticipating so many participants before Sept. 11.
Sheldon Hartsfield, president of the Mid Rivers chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of
America, said he is. greeted
warmly when he's out in
public these days, and is
thanked more strongly for his
service when he appears on
behalf of veterans' groups.
Wallace Levin, chairman of .

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

San francisco's Veterans Da'y
parade, said he expected this
year's event to one of the
biggest ever.
"I think that Veterans Day
has never been as important as
it is this year;' he said. "I just
hope it helps the morale of
our troops and our people.
The front lines this time are
not just in Afghanistan, they
are in New York and Washington. The war is in America."

t•*•*•*•*•. •. •. •.

••

-

~ ~
"'

-

,

.

"V

lt

.

_l

l

Thank You for your .,
d • th
SUpport UriDg e
November 6th Election.
~ A. ~
7,f14(ee

*.
*"*"*"*"*"*".

0•

0•

As you know, Jim Rogers and Associates has a tradition
of providing great customer service. And to make It
better than ever, we are pleased to introduce
our new Meigs County managing agenL,

•*•.t

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t
t

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tobacco companies.
Jerry Stafford, owner-operator of
Growers Warehouse, expects only I million to 1.5 million pounds of burley to
be sold at auction under his roof, down
from about 5 miUion pounds last season.
Meanwhile, the amount of burley sold
under contract to D!mon at his main
warehouse will be five to eight times
greater, he said. ·
Stafford, a warehouse operator since
1968, was reluctant to climb aboard the
contracting bandwagon, but said the
trend forced his hand.
"When you're in business and you see
thing. changing, you have to change
with it," he said. "That's the bottom
line."

Erin L. McCorkle
Erin has strong family ties to the area and Is a graduate
of Alexander High School. She Is also a graduate of
Cumberland College In Williamsburg, Kentucky. Erin Is
licensed In life and health as well as property and casualty :
and available to handle your current and future needs In the _
insurance and flmincial plannllig arenas.
Feel free to stop by our office on Hiland Road and
welcome Erin to the Nationwide family.
33105 HILAND ROAD, SUITE I • POMEROY, OHIO • 45769
PHONE: 740/992·2318 OR 888/445-\)426 • FAX: 740/992-6892

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Social Security overhaul plan .
tempered by talk of benefit
cuts, lack ,of cash, deficit
WASHINGTON (AP) -·
'Benefit cuts, a looming deficit
and a need for money from a
strapped federal budget are
some of the chaUenges facing
President Bush's Social SeCurity commission.
The President's Commission
to Strengthen Social Security
began laying out the framework Friday of a plan to let
younger workers invest a portion of their payroll taXes in
the stock market.
Balancing the books is proving to be a monumental task.
The commission acknowledged that it may require cuts
in benefits to future retirees
and an infusion of cash from
\he government, which is facing difficulties of its own.
The panel had been leaning
toward a plan to tie future
retirement benefits to inflation
instead of wage growth. That
would help ease Social Security's funding problems, cutting
benefits for younger workers.
· The idea is stiU being considered, but the commission
now plans to recommend several, less politically painful
options to the president
instead of a single, fix-all
approach. The report is due in
December, but the Bush
administration does not plan a
real push until after next year's
congressional elections.
·
''I don't think there is a silver buUet that says .this is how
you get there," said commissioner Gerald Parsky, chairman
of a _Los Angeles investment
firm.
"It definitely appears that

.,

there have to be different policy trade-olE," added co-chairman Richard Parsons, chief
financial ·officer of AOL Time
Warner.
Creating personal Social
Security accounts "will help
fiU in the hole" of the $3.4 trillion shortfall the system faces,
but "it won't fiU in the hole
completely," said commissioner Olivia MitcheU, a professor
at the I,.Jniversity of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.
Social Security is expected
to start paying out more in
benefits than it collects in taXes.
by 2016 because of an influx
of baby boom retirees.
Bush's $1.35 trillion, 10-year
taX cut, approved by Congress
in the spring, already has taken
a toU on the federal budget.
The economic stimulus package working its way through
Congress . now, plus the
renewed . focus on defense,
make paying for a Social Security overhaul practically
impossible, critics say
"We're going to see more
deadlock and no action for
some further number of
years," said Robert Greenstein
of the Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities.

WUl. prep tourney roundup, Pagt B2
Browns/Steelers preview, Pagt BJ
Outdoors, Page B8

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Page 81
Suncl.y. Ncwelllhar 11, 2M1

SUNDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Baseball
lawyen to meet
again Monday
NEW YORK (AP) Lawyers will meet again
Monday to discuss the legal
fight by basebaU players
against eliminating teams, and
a top union official caUed the
owners' sta~ce "preposterous.'~
In Chicago, a management
labor lawyer told general
managers that contraction
would take place by Dec. 15,
according to a high-ranking
team official who spoke on
the condition he not be iden!ified.
. The lawyer, Frank Coonelly, said clubs would draft players from the eliminated franchises in the reverse order of
their 2001 won-lost records
and that management did not
intend to honor no-trade
clauses, the team official said.
Owners voted Tuesday exactly 100 days before the
start of spring training - to
eliminate two teams before
next season. While no teams
were chosen, Montreal and
Minnesota are the leading
candidates, with Florida, Oakland and Tamp a Bay also pos- .
sibilities.
If the Expos and Twins are
eliminated, Montreal outfielder Vladimir Guerrero
would be the likely first pick,
going either to Pittsburgh or
Tampa Bay, which both went
62-100. Twins shortstop Cristian Guzman and pitchers
Eric Milton and Brad Radke
would be other top picks,
along with Montreal pitcher
Javier Vazquez.
CooneUy and Rob Manfred, the owners' top labor
lawyer, did not return telephone calls seeking comment.
Gene Orza, the union's No.
2 ollicial, said friday that
management negotiators previously informed the players'
association that it was too late
in the year to eliminate teams.

Dodgen decline
Shaw's S7.05
million option

The · commission wants to

let workers have access to an
investment plan similar to the
Thrift Saving. 'Plan for federal
employees. A portion of a
worker's payroU taxes could be
invested in only a handful of
portfolios with varying risk,
including stocks, bonds,
money 111arket accounts and
various combinations. ·

Inside:

NEW YORK (AP) - Jeff
Shaw's $7.05 million option
was declined Friday by the
Los Angeles Dodgers, and the
reliever was among three
players to file for free agenCy.
Atlanta outfielder Bernard
Gilkey and Milwaukee reliever Lance Painter also filed,
raising the total of free agents
to 145 among the 158 players
potentially eligible. The
remainder can file through
Nov. 20.
Shaw, 35, gets a .$1.25 million buyout. The right-hander
was 3-5 with a 3.62 ERA and
had 43 saves in 52 chances last
season. He has 203 career
saves, including 129 since the
Dodgers acquired him from
Cincinnati in 1998.
"We felt there were other
options out there that we preferred at this time," new
Dodgers general manager
Dan Evans said. "lt'U be difficult to replace his save total,
but I'm confident we will."
Los Angeles exercised a
$675,000 option on infielder
Dave Hansen and a $450,000
option on shortstop Jeff
Reboulet. Both would have
been eligible for free agency if
their options had been
declined.
The Dodgers declined a
$575,000 option on infielder .
Tim Bogar, who spent most
of last season on the disabled
list. He receives a $25,000
buyout and can become a free
agent.

'

•
BY R.

SHAWN lEwis
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

LANCASTER - John
Glenn outlasted Gallia
Academy 31-21 Friday
night in a back-and-forth
Division III, Region 11
semifinal at chilly fulton
Field.
Galli a Academy came into
the contest having feasted
on big plays 1hroughout the
season.
Friday night, the big plays
bit back as John Glenn's
high-powered
running
attack scorched the Blue
Devils for 315 yards ... AUCentral District wingback
Darren Derwacter led the
attack, ~acking up 222 yards
on just 16 attempts.
Detwacter's assault on the
Blue Devils began early.
The senior took a counter
handoff on the Muskies'
first play and rambled 65
yards down the john Glenn
sideline. Gallia Academy's
Bobby Jones made a diving
tackle at his own 11 to save
a sure touchdown.
Two plays later, wingback
Brent Riggle reached Blue
Devil paydirt from nine
yards out. Chad Donley's
kick made the score 7-0 at
the 10:59 mark,
A spirited crowd of more
than 2,000 Gallia Academy
fans was silenced by the
rapid attack.'
Returning Donley's kickoff to their 35, the Blue
Devils turned to senior
standout Jones to answer
Derwacter's early fireworks.
Jones · ran on three
consecutive doWns, advancing the baD to his 50. But
the drive stalled after a
botched snap from center
and a two-yard run by
senior quarterback David
Brodeur.

Pl....... Dtlvlls...

Glenn a
tough ·

old man,
uh ...team
BY BuTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

LANCASTER John
Glenn Muskies?
·
Why not Astronauts?
Or Rockets?
Or even Mercury?
Who knows, but it didn't
matter Friday night as the
Muskies defeated Gallia
Academy in the Division III,
Region 11 semifinals, 31-21.
"We thought for us to win
and be successful, we had to
run the football," said John
Glenn head coach John Kelley. "fortunately, we were
able to do it."'
And do it, the Muskies did
with 315 yards on the
ground, 222 of which came
from senior Darren Derwacter.

DEVILS FALL- Gallia Academy's Cole Haggerty returns this kickoff during the Blue Devils' 31·211oss to John Glenn Friday at Lancaster. (Doug Shipley)

"He's a great player," said
Kelley. "He can do those
kind of things. You've got to
· be aware of him at all times."'
A scary mo111ent came in
the opening quarter.
He had runs of 65 for a
touchdown and 51 yards, to
set up a Chad Donley field
goal.
"The line did an excellent
job," said Derwacter. "I saw
huge holes. Our line just
stepped up and dominated.'
Just prior to Donley's field
goal attempt, Derwacter feU
to his knees and pad to temporary leave the game.

PluH-GIHn,B2

Thanks or the memories, Big Blue
LANCASTER - "Ladies and·
gendemen, the ' 'snotknockers' have
left the building."'
A wonderful journey came to an
end Friday night as GaUia Academy's
most successful senior class played its
last game in the blue-and-white.
fittingly. the contest was a playoff
game. After aU, this group of 16 young
men is the first in school history to
qualify for three straight postSeason
trips.
"I could list all of them and brag
about them all, but I'd probably leave
somebody out," an emotional Coach
Brent Saunders said following the
Blue Devils' 31-21 loss to John
Glenn.
"We've got 16 seniors, but one of
them hasn't been able to play since an

.,...,...."=

R. Shawn
Lewis
BEDEVILED
injury early in the year. Those 15 kids
that played mean so much to me.
Most of them are three-year lettermen.
It was Saunders who gave the Gallipolitans their cherished moniker.
"I kinda picked up the nickname
'snotknockers' because these kids really get after it," he said. "They play

.

hard. They're hard workers, and they'll
be successful in life.
"Hopefully, they've learned something from this game that will make
them better on down the road. I'm
really appreciative of the seniors and
what they've meant to me the last
three years. I'm so proud of my
coaching staff and the players for all
the hard work they put in.
"It's been really a great . postseason
experience."
Indeed it was, and it was an even
better three years for Blue Devils fans.
We'll miss you, 'snotknockers."
You've brightened our fridays and
filled our minds with memories that
wiD last a lifetime.
I know you're down right now, but
the pain will fade and the good times

will rise to the top. You gave your aU,
and that's all you can do in life.
On behalf of Blue Devil fans everywhere, thank you for another great .
season.

•••

KUDOS TO BIG BLUE FANS
Hats off the faithful who pitched in
to get the hoys a chartered bus ride to
friday's regional semifinal. These same
fans also paid for the team meal at
Golden Corral in Chillicothe.
It's reassuring to see that even in
these hard times, people can dig deep
to help a good cause. Give yourselves
a round of applause.

•••

THE RIGHT STUFF
Pl.... IH Lewis, B5

White Falcons open
playoffs with 14-7 win
BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

MOVE IT Wahama's Ryan Mitchell advances the ball
against Parkersburg Catholic Friday. The White Falcons won
14-7 to advance In the W.Va. prep playoffs. (Tim Tucker)

i

School and extends the FalMitchell also came up big
cons grid season into next defensively for the White FalPARKERSBURG - Talk weeks' quarterfinal round cons with six tackles and it
about your big play capabili- competition.
was MitcheU who picked off a
ties.
Rickard stunned the Cru- Parkersburg Catholic pass in
Adam Rickard and Anthony saders with a 92-yard touch- the final minute to seal the
Mitchell
provided
the down gallop midW.y through victory.
Wahama White Falcons ·with the third quarter before
"We were a little rusty
two electrifYing contributions Mitchell hauled in a 4 7-yard offensively, but our defen'.r
Friday night to lead coach Ed scoring pass from Bradford played hard the entire ga1 . ·
Cromley's Bend Area footbaU Clark in the final period to physically drained WHS coach
eleven · to an exciting 14-7 afford Wahama its seven-point Ed Cromley stated following
opening round playoff victory margin of victory.
the
emotionally- charged
over Parkersburg Catholic.
affair.
"AU
week long, defenRickard tinished the contest
The Class A, post-season with a game high 189 yards on sive coordinator James Toth
victory was witnessed by a the , ground in addition to thought we would be able to
large Mason County delega- catching a 10-yard pass and hold them to one touchdown
tion, at Stadium Field on the recording nine defensive tack- and that our offense would
campus of Parkersburg High les on the night.
Please - Felcons, B2
I

�Pege 82 • io1dlp l:i111rf -ioentinel

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

WEST VIRGINIA
PREP FOOTBALL

Mt. View upsets
No.2 Wayne
7 5 yards while Martinsburg
Josh Parish scored one got 100-yard performances
touchdown and passed for from two running backs.
another to lead No. 15 , Jesse Keysencored on runs
Mount V1ew to a 1'4-12 of7,11 and 53 yards. He finupset of No. 2 Wayne m the ished with 115 yards on six
state Class M high school
·
S
m
h rh 1
carnes. teve weat e o tz
. ~- 'gh
I
ffi
F
P ayo
n~y m t.
rushed for 165 yards on 19
MountV1ew (7-4) avenged carries, including two TDs.
a 34-6 loss to Wayne in the
. th
nd
1t marked J~t
regular season.
e seco . ever playoff VIctory for Mar.
ill
M aunt V Jew w pay
1 m ti b
(to- I)
·
the quarterfinals next week
ns ~rg
·
.
Philip Barbour finuhed 7against the winner of Saturday's
first-round
game 4.
No. 7 W. Wn.soN 40,
between No.7 Frankfort and
No. 10 Magnolia:
No. 10 S. VAIUY 7
Wayne . (9-1), last ·year's
Woodrow Wilson's Mike
Class M runner-up, got just Mandeville threw three
33 yards rushing from touchdown passes, two to
Robert Pratt and 51 yards James Singleton.
from Chris Coleman.
Woodrow Wilson (9-2)
NQ. 1&lt;4 ClAY CoUNTY scored on six of its first seven
7, No.3 RAVENSWOOD 0 possessions and led 40-0 after
Damian Meadows'10-yard three quarters. .
TD run gave Clay County
Jamie Berry rushed for 215
{8-3) its first-ever playoff vic- yards for Spring Valley (7-4),
tory.
which is winless in three
Clay County avenged a playoff appearances.
31-0 regular-season loss at
No. 8 N. MARION 26,
Ravenswood (9-2), which
No. 9 G. WASHINGTON 6
committed four turnO'iers.
North Marion's Mike
No. 8 WYOMING E. 6,
Potoczny rushed 23 times for
No. 9 INDEPENDENCE 0
I 06 yards, including a pair of
Kent McBride intercepted
4-yard TD runs.
two Independence passes,
Nick Parrish blocked a
blocked another pass and
forced a fumble. One of his punt and recovered it in the
interceptions came with 16 end zone to give North
Marion (9-2) a 6-0 lead in
seconds left in the game.
Tank Tunstalle scored the the tint quarter.
Cortez Lacy rushed 16
touchdown
for
only
Wyoming East (8-3) from 7 times for 79 yards and a 2yards out. He finished with yard TD for George Wash-80 yards rushing.
ington (7-4).
Independence (8-3) comNo. 2 RivERsiDE 55,
mitted four turnovers.
No. 15 H. HOOVER 3
No.6 POCA 27,
Riverside (10-1) amassed
No. 11 TOLSI,4. 7
532 rushing yards in the
Poca's Matt Santmyer rout.
score&lt;\ on a 70-yard interNate Wright had 183 yards
ception return and on a 2- ·on 11 carries with three
yard run at Charleston's Lai- TDs; Rusty Taylor had 108
dley Field.
yards on 14 carries and two
Down 7-6 at halftime, TDs; and Willie Whetstone
Poca (8-3) scored three TDs had 161 yards· on four carries
in the second half to advance and twoTDs.
to the quarterfinals.
No. I 5 Herbert Hoover
Tolsia (8-3) was in the (6-5) opened the scoring on
playoffi for the first time Alex Amick's 26-yard field
since 1977.
goal in the first quarter. ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

aass AAA playoRs

I

Class A.playoffs

Jay Forsythe had five
Jarrod Pitiman amassed
catches for ! 28 yards and one
316 all-purpose yards to lead
touchdown as No. 3 University held off No. 14 Mussel- No. 11 Mount Hope to a 29man 14-9 in the first round 20 upset of No. 6 Cameron
of the state Class AAA high in the first round of the state
school playoffi Friday night. Class A playoffi Friday night.
Pittman rushed for 139
University (10-1) will play
in next week's quarterfinals yards on 19 carries. He
against the winner of Satur- opened the game with a 91day's
first-round
game yard kickoff return. He
between Hampshire and added a 64-yard TD run on
fourth. down in the third
Parkersburg.
University scored all its period for the final margin.
points in the first quarter.
Jared Maynor added 123
Forsythe ·caught a 25-yard yards rus)ling and one TD for
TD pass from Eric Bacaj and Mount Hope (8-3).
the pair hooked up on a 49Roger Kupfer rushed for
yard pass to set up Craig Ver- 97 yards on 19 carries for
bosky's i -yard TD run for a
Cameron (8-3). .
14-0 lead.
No. 4 VAN 48, No. 13
Bacaj completed 7-of-12
MEAoo;w BRIDGE 16,
passes for 145 yards.
Allen
Gilmour
Van's
' Ryan Horn rushed for 98
yards on 24 carries for Mus- rushed for 282 yards on 29
selman (6-5), which scored carries while teammate
all its ·points in the fourth Steven Adkins had 23 rushes
for 184 yards. ,Each scored
quarter.
three touchdowns.
'
No.5 PAllK. So. 27,
Van (10-1) led 20-8 at
No. 12 C. MIDLAND 14
halftime and scored 21 unanParkersburg South's Matt
swered points to. put the
Shamblin, playing his first
game at quarterback this sea- ·game away.
son, threw for 200 yards
Jesse Neely had 87 yards
while running 'for 102 yards. rushing to lead Meadow
He threwTD passes of 11, Bridge (7-4).
No.3 WILLIAMSON 40,
57 and 14 yards and scored
on a !-yard run.
No. 1&lt;4 V. FAYE'ITE 18
Chris Jackson rushed 17
Parkersburg South (10-1)
led 13-0 at halftime
times for 171 yards for
Cabell Midland (6-5) got Williamson (10-1), which
an 8-yard TD run from will meet Mount Hope in
Patrick Wagoner and a 10- . next week's quarterfinals.
yard TD toss from Cameron
C.J. McKenzie returned a
Guill to Lance Pittman.
kickotf 78 yards for a score
No. &lt;4 MAR.TINSBURG 47, and jason Johnson had three
No. 13 Plm.Jp BARBOUR 6 , cat&lt;hes for 138 yards and
Freshman Nathan Sowers , anotherTD forValley Fayette
re!'Jrned the opening kickoff (6-5).

~

Sunday, Nov. 1f, 2001

-

Mason County supporting Wahama football
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - If there was
one thing that could be said about the Class
A football playoff Fri&lt;by night between the
w.thama White Falcons and the hO&lt;ting
Parltersburg Catholic Crusaders, it would
be thar everything came in waves.
Starting with the waVes of suppon that
came from the stands. Fans there to see
w.thama play began arriving around 5:30
p.m. in large groups, and by the time the
game starred at 7:30, the Wahama side was
pushing about 800 people compared to the
150-ish that came to cheer on the Crusaders. Good job you, Mason County, sports
fiends.
And Wahama's cheers weren't limited to
just Bend Area folk and Wahama staff, faculty and patei)IS. Point Coach Steve Safford
was there showing support, as were Big
Blacks Kevin Thompson, Seth Matheny
and a few others. Another coach from
Point, Bill Buchanan of the Lady l&lt;nighu
soccer team, was there, as was one of Safford's assistants, Dave Darst, and even
co:iches from Eastern.
But then as the game began, the ne~
wave that was seen was the defensive
onslaught by the Crusaders, holding
Wahama out of the endzone during the
first and second quarters while leading their
own attack with Josh Hicks at the wheeL
Hicks, a senior t:illback who had proven

Dan
Adkins
FROM THE SlotUNES

himself to the Cnlsaden with his road runner-like Speed, is also one of the top 20

Sunday, Nov. 11, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

6unb~p

l:imrf·iotnlinrl• Page 83

.· For once, Steelers-Browns happy to see each other

later and making good on the PAT, also,
tying the game up, 7-7.
At one point as I stood on the sidelines I
witnessed Wahama sophomore Anthony
Mitchell come off the field and begin to
jump up and down facing the aowd. waving them on to cheer louder and longer. I
don't think they could have since the
screams of support had become a deafening
itw- by this time, but it's iliv.Jys great to see
that kind ofplayer interaction with the fans.
And as the clock slowly ticked away the
remaining minute with Wahama holding
Parkersburg Cathqlic down 14-7, the
Mason County fans rose to their feet, with
hands in the air because they knew the end
was nearing for the Crusaders. There was
nothing left but yet another victory for the
Mason County squad and an upcoming
game against Van. next week (Van defeated
Meadow Bridge in Fri&lt;by night action also,
48-16).
And finally as the chilly night came to a
close, the final w.ave of the evening came
from the Falcons themselves as they bid
their host! an unfortunate farewell.
On a dosing note, it was good to see so
many people make it to the game. Let's
keep up the spirit and cheer them on to a
state championship.

CLEVELAND (AP)- Sure the
• . Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland
·. Browns hate each other. So do
~. their fans. Al~ays have. Always will.
But for perhaps the first time in
, · thei~ storied rivalry, the longtime
: AFC Central foes are actually glad
; . they'll see one another this Sunday
.J "' at Cleveland Browns Stadium.
,, In fact, if they could have, the
· Steelers and Browns would have
, . played last Monday.
: · "Some losses 1... . more than
,; others," said Cleveland cornerback
r . Corey Fuller. "But you have to
.' bounce back."
:. On Sunday both teams will get
"' the1r chance to get back on the
~-.. field one week after this topsy~ , turvy NFL season of parity and
· funny bounces was cruel to both of
them.
:
?
Pitlsburgh (5-2) was beaten 13, ' 10 by the Baltimore Ravens, who
" only ~ad to watch Steelers kicker
r
Kris Brown miss four field goals ; two in the fourth quarter - to
' wan.
. ,
"
Cleveland, though, had it much
,. worse .. Clinging to a 14-point lead,
' the Browns (4-3) gave up two TDs,

scorers in the state, according to information compiled by the West Virginia Sports
Writers Association. Holding down the
No. 19 spot, Hicks has scored 116 point!
this season, while teammate Vince Black has
scored six field goals. giving him a spot in
the top t 0.
However, once Cromley and Company
came back from the halftime break, the
wave. of offense was imminent as senior
. Adam Rickaid litetally ran past the entire
hosting crew to score the Falcons' first
touchdown in the opening two minutes of
the third quarter. Senior Ivan Cadavid
made good on the PAT. giving the Falcons
a 7-0 lead
But the hosting Crusaders answered that
(DQn Adkins is QsportJ writer for tht Point
with a w.ave of offense of their own, notching their first score not even fuur minutes PlttUQnt Rtgisw).

- one on a despe~ation pass - in
the final 30 seconds of regulation
before losing 27-21 to the Chicago
Bears in overtime.
Forgetting those painful losses
Was nearly impossible this week,
and in a way, bonded the rivals.
·
"We had opportunities and we
squandered them;' Steelers coach
Bill Cowheuaid. "What Cleveland
went through happened fast. It was
hard to believe it happened when
it was over.
"I think getting over those is a
big challenge for both teams. That's
the thing you recognize in this
business; you can't rest any time.
You have to move on. That's going
to be it, which team can sustain
focus and overcome bits of adversity that are inevitable for every
team this year."
Inevitable is one thing. What the
Browns went through at Soldier
Field was inconceivable, and Butch
Davis was beaten for the second
time in his coaching career by a
"Hail Mary".
The first came on Doug Flutie's
famous pass for .Boston College in
1984, when Davis was Miami's

Browns

Football
defensive coordinator.
"I hate it," Davis said of the
prayer-answering plays, quickly
swigging some water as if to wash
out the bitter taste of defeat. "Two
in 27 years."
Nothing could have prepared the
Browns for the waning seconds as a
certain win turned into a bitter
loss. They had already begun their
nash-talking when the Bears rallied.
.
And if Chicago's players thought
Cleveland had begun celebrating
too early, well, quarterback Tim
Couch said the Browns had good
reason to.
"I think if they would have been
in our· situation they would have
been doing the same thing," Couch
said. "I think it's human nature if
ypu're up by 14 poin~s with two
minutes to go, and the other team
has the ball, you're going to win

the game.
" That's the way it happem every
Su11day. This is something that has
never happened io the league
before."
Couch had gone 120 passes
without an interception when his
second pass of overtime was tipped
and returned by Mike Brown for a
TD. It not only cost the Browns a
win, but a share of first place with
the Steelers, too.
Couch can 't wait to make his
next throw.
"I'm anxious to get back out
there," Couch said . "Even though
we lost that game and it was a
tough loss, I think we proved we
can play with great teams on the
road.
"Both teams lost tough games. I
think it will tome down to who
can · put . it behind them fastest.
Hopefully, we're the team."
If Couch seems eager, Brown
didn't wait to get back on the field.
At Cowher's suggestion, Brown
had a private kicking session at
Heinz Field this week.
·
He took he&gt;lder josh Miller and
long snapper Mike Schn.eck with

him and tried to boot away the
pain of being the first NFL kicker
in four years to miss four field
goals in a game.
Brown was 11-of-13 this season
before the misses and said he 's not
going to tinker with mechanics
now.
"The first thing you've got to do
is believe in yourself. You've got to
go out there believing you 're going
to get the job done ," he S&gt;id.
"Nothing needs to be c hanged.
Nothing needs to be looked at and
scrutinized.
"The bottom line is that I didn't
get the job done. It was unfortunate that I cost us the game, but
I've got to move on."
Two teams feel the same way.

Attention
Winter Sports
Coaches

E-mail your schedules to:
sports@mydailytrihune.com
sports@mydailyregister.com
or
sports@mydailysentinel.com

'

Glenn

with a 10-yardTD run with 1:14left in the
"That was big," said Kelley of the 73-yard
game. adding the exclamation marl&lt; to the .play. "They can do that. They're a big play
team."
game's final outcome.
flomPapB1
"Ah. man. That was just great. because it
The key moment fur the New Concord
sealed die game;• said Derwacter
team came late in the third quarter and early
The Muskies also had to overcome a cou- in the fOurth when the Muskies, up 24-21,
Derwacter was able to return shortly
thereafter.
ple ofbig pass plays, one by Gallia Academy halted a pair of Gallia Academy drives.
"It was the excitement "f the game and receiver Josh Perry from 73 yards out from
"Arrt time you can stop those guys, it's
he had some big runs;• said Kelley."He plays· Andre Geiger for a touchdown late in the big," said Kelley. "They had a nice game:•
so han!. It kind of gets the best of you, every second quarter, and another from · quarterjohn·Glenn will meet Columbus DeSales
once and awhile."
back David Brodeur to Perry for 50 yards to Nov. 16 in the regional finals. The game site
set
up another score in the thiid.
Derwacter also capped off the scoring
Y{ill be determined to&lt;by.

Ohio Prep Football Scoreboard
(1) Hilll)rd

SOmlftnola
-'11M
I

-----

Galla Academy
.. .. Jolln Glom

··.. JG -

7 7 7 0 - 21
10 7 7 7 - 31

Bnlnl Riggle II 11.11 (Chid Donley
klr:lc) 10:58
JG- Chad Donley 29 jj0814:39
GA- Tv Sinvnonl3 run (Ciajlon Saunders

'

JG - Tyler
. Ra,.- 3 run (Chad Donley
·, klr:lc) 2:12
' GA - Joo11 Peny 73 C8l!:h 110m An&lt;1n!
; • Golgor (Clayton Sauncln

"· kick) 1:03,

TNnl_.,

GA- David e.-.r 10 run (Cia}'lon SaUI1' ' dan; klr:lc) 9:42
' JG - Bnlnl Riggle 8 caiCit 110m Mike
l'acl1ula (Cilad Donley klr:lc)

•

---

- ~ol8

JG-Illlmln0..-10oun(CIIad0on;,· ley kick) 1:1~
L

Gllllpollo
12

Alii_,.

,- , R~

-

, Plllllng_yaroo
, . Talllyaroo 225

145

Furnblettbst

410
6169

Puntllhg,
S8dce '

-4-31.7

''

1

"\j

Pe Mna 1w1ere
Kyle Outley 1-28
ilfant Riggle 2·20
Darren Oerwacter 1•17
Oltlo H i g h -

At Clayton Northmont .
(1) c~. Wyomng (1o-t) vs. (4) Cddwaler

Roglon4
At Paul Brown StadiUm, Cincinnati
(1) Cln. St. Xavle&lt; (t!Hl) '18. (5) Cln. f'rinco.
ton (8-3), Saturday, 1 p.m.; (2) Cln. Colen!Jn
(11.0) w. (3) Cin. Elder (1Jl.1), Saturday,
one hour after tirst game
DIVISION H
All
F~dlly. 7:30 p.m.
Regional Anoia
Roglan5

(9-2)
AI Canteoville
(7) Homiton Badin (6-5) vs. (6) Day. Oek·
wood (9-2) •
DIVISION V
Rt~~lonal Anoia

aomn

-II

Frldoy'a-no

llM8ION I
N. can. - 1 0 . Maaalllon Jacklon 9
DM810NR
"""" Lake 17, 14
Chardoll 14, WlllougtOy S. 13. OT
Cln. McNicholu 2-4, Day. Conoll7

Coli. w....... 35. Lexington 7
G!Ml 34, YO&lt;JngO. Chaney 0
New C.~ltle Tocumleh 16, Colo.
Beecllcloft 13
101. St Francia 31, Tel. C&amp;rt1. cart&gt;. 0
- I l l Butler 30, f'lqua 0

DIVISKIN II
- 6 8 , New Rk:hmond 26

AtTBA
(5) Chardon (11-4) YO. (3) G..., (9-3)
Roglan 8
AtTBA
(I) A""" Lake (11·1) vs. (2) Tot St. Franc;is
(to-1)
Raglan 7
AITBA
(5) Colt. l'iattorson (9·3) vs. (2) New
caoltte Tot:umaoh (11·1)
Roglon

Gallla 21
Poland Samnaoy 21, Hubbard 14
Sonbuoy Big Wa~u124, ~Hard 22 .
DIVISION V
Bedford Chanol35, wetllngton o
Cln. N. COllege Hi1135, Colt. Ready 13
Ll&gt;ef1y Canter 13, She- FaiNiew 12
Marion f'teasant 28, Oolphaa Sl. Jolln's17
N. Uma S. Range 31, Wamon JFK 13
Sidney Lahlllllll 211, en Reodlng 10
Smlt!MIIe 36, Saral'orlllle Sllonandool134
't*.-'c: :'1Rald Monro. Cent 19, Crooklvllll3

-

Oltlo HlgiiSohool Alh- - -

AtTBA
(4) Vandalia Butloo (1o-2) 118. (31 Cln. Mc/'i-.s(B-3)

..........

Region 1

John Glenn

·Fu-

12
45-315

65

·; Total yardl 3BO

The Meigs County Blken Association woald like
to tbank the following baslnesses and
Individuals for their contributions In helping
. make the 2001 Toy
a success.

\ Penaltleelyarda
}'unt&amp;'a.g.

.

• Sacks

(H)

8-52
3-23

3

DIVISION. '

~Finllo

Samnaoy (1 HI
Rt~~lon

At KM1 St. Dbr Stadium
(1) Lakewood St. Edward (11.0) ... (4) War·
ran Harding (1 o-1 1
AI Permo Byero Field
(7) C1e. St lgnatiuo (7-4) va. (3) Solon (I().
1)

.

Region 2
AIAitr. RullllerBoiM
(t l Maeaillon )Nashlngton (to-t 1"" (4) can.
McKinley (6-2)
Regional Flnalt

AtTBA
(2) N. Con. Hoovo&lt;(11·1) va. T8A

10

AITBA

(1) Sonbuoy Big Walnut (12.0) vs. (6) Bellovue (1().2)
Rt~~lon 11
AITBA
(B) Colt. DeSatao (7-5) vs. (2) New Concord
John Glenn (1().2)
. Region 12

AITBA

(1) Betllrook (1().2) \IS. (3) Kettering Aile&lt;
(9-3)
DIYI8ION IV

lltot8 · Pol~ngo
llM8ION
I

~

a

Colt. DeSaloo 28, Conal FIA!un l'lW 14
All=~
Kettering Alte&lt; 45, WuNngiDn C.H. 0
Mentor Lake C.!h. 22, Alcr. Hoban 16
. AITBA
New COncord John .Glom 31, GaHipolis (5) Monier Lake Calh. (1Jl.2) vs. Poland

·o

Alii downs
• Ruahellyardl
' • Alt/Coil1pllnt
' · l'a&amp;ti(1Q Yardl

liS. (4) Oubl~

. (1) Ironton (I HI) vs. (5) Portsmoulh (1Jl.1)
AI Zanesville Sulsberger StadiUm
(2) Newall&lt; l.k:klng Valley (11.0) liS. (B) Lancastec Falrlklld Unloo (1().1)
.
~ante

(7) Oublln Coffman (7·3) \18. (3) Reynoldsburg (9-2)

- 2 8 , Mldlnl Highlll)d 14

211-110
6-13-1

M'Contpllnt

I •

'

Da,_., (11.0)

Sdoto (11Hl
At WesteMie North- StaOlum .

lcaflng0U!1111W)'

Falcons

RtiiOnal-nola
A l l - llllunlly, 7 p.m.
Rt~~lon

13

AI Bedford S1ewort Field
(1) Can. Cent ca!h. (11-2) YS. (4) Chagrin
Fal~

11o-11

AtRaverma

(7) Alcr. SVSM (11-3) vs. (6) Alcr. Manchestor

(11-2)

AII-TBA
Region 17
AITBA
(1) Bedt'on:t Chanol (12-&lt;l) vs. (2) N. Uma S.
Range(12·0)
'
Raglan 18
At TBA
(I) Marian Pleasant (12.0) w. (3) Liberty
Conlee (12-&lt;l)
Region 18

AtTBA

.

.·

(8) Smithville (1H) vs. (2) Woodslletd Men"'"Cent (1().2)

Roglon20

AITBA

(1) Cin. N. C.llege Hill (11-1) vs. (3) Sidney

Letunan (9-3)
DMSIONVI

Reglonll SOIIIIflnola
All Saturdlly, 7 p.m.
Roglan 21
At Manstiold Madison Ram Fiokl
(4) Tiffin catven (9·21 vs. Mogado&lt;e (11.0)
At VermiUon Safl6r Flefd
·
(2) Cuyahoga Hta. (11.0) vs. (3) Clii&gt;BDnburg
(8-3) at Vermilion senor Field
Rt~~lon 22
AI Uma Bath
·•
{6) Pandora·Clllboa (8·3) vs. (5) Cols. Grove
(9·2)

At Lima Senior
(2) McComb (1Hl) vs. (3) Dola Hardin
(1().1)
Roglon23
At Sloubenvll" Holding Stadium
(8) Wellsville (7-4) vs. (4) Shadyoido (1().1)
AI Newatlt White Aald
(2) Glousrec Trill'ble (1Jl.t) v&amp; (3) DaiWIIIe
(1().1)
.
Roglan 2-1
At Piqua Alexander Stadium

(11 Maria St~n Marion Local (to-t) vs. (4)
CedarVille (1().1)
AI Huber Heights Wayne ~"'!&gt; Sf8d.
um
(2) s. Cha~eston SOU1heasrem (11.0) ...
(3) Covinglt&gt;n (11.0)

,,
Since

tell

-@MI+J

I

O:AZROCK.

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Your Interior &amp; Specialtv Supplier

Region 14
AI Foeloria Memorlal Stadium

(1) Kenton (11.0) w. (5J'H&lt;lron (9-21
At Shelby S~l.. Field
(2) Ontario (11.0) ..... (3) castalia Margaret•
Ia (1().1)
Roglon 15
At Ironton TanKs Memorial Stactium

•

•

No

\

f

At Glove City 51adlum

Dlvlllon II, Region 11

kick) :311

.
own ~ight yard line. Rickard PAT kick to knot the '""re at
"We didn't play particularly
broke through the center of the 7-7 with 7:47 remaining.
weD," Catholic coach Darmy
. line and cut to the near sideline
Wahama answered right back Ter 't stated following the
and outraced the Parkersburg as Clark hit Mitchell in full lo
, ""! (Wahama) wanted it
fnNnPageB1
catholic secondary for a 92 yard stride for a 47-yard pass play to a bn . ,, ,ore than we did and
need two touchdowns in scoring bunt. Ivan Cadavid put the Falcons in front to stay. they de,erved to win."
Wahama kept Hicks, a 1000onler to win and we were for- booted the point after to give Cadavid's PAT kick was aue
and Wahama once again yard rusher during the regular
iunate enough to get those twQ Waharna a 7 ..{J advantage.
scores. I give assistant coach Joe
The Crusaders came right enjoyed iu seven point edge at season, bottled up for most of
johnson a great deal of credit back as Hicks broke loose on a 14-7.
the evening with Hicks finishThe
Bend
Area
defense
then
ing the night with 135 yardS in
for calling an excellent game 42-yard run to the WHS two
and the kids executed those where Jordan caught the speedy took control of the contest as 30 carries.
The WHS secondary picked
plays to give us what we need- running back from behind with Aaron Faulk and Scott Johnson
ed."
a TD saving tackle. · On the came up with . huge stops of off two Crusader passes and
Wahama, by virtue of it! han! Crusaders' next play, Hicks tried · Hicks at the line of scrimmage. gave up just two receptions in
fought first round triumph, will the center of the line and the Catholic was forced to punt and seven Catholic aerials for a mere
advance into quarterfinal round ball .was jarred loose with J.R. WHS got a mammoth 56-yard nine yards.
The White Falcons will likely
action next weekend against · Parsons coming up with the run from Rickard on a third
t~
retain
possession
down
play
travel to Scott High School
fourth-ranked Van (9-1). The fumble to thwart the host
for the Mason County eleven.
next Friday evening to meet
Bulldogs rolled past 13th-rated teams' game-tying effort.
The WHS !h-ive stalled at the 4th-ranked Van as the Bend
Parkersburg Catholic wouldMeadow Bridge last night at
Scott High School by a 48-16 n't be denied however as on iu Parkersburg Catholic eleven Area team goes after iu first ever
score to set up the Falcons' next · next possession the Crusaders where the Crusaders received quarterfinal playoff victory. The
playoff encounter on the Boone rode the running of Hicks to one last shot but Mitchell ·official date and time won't be
County turf.
march 48 yards in 11 plays for picked off~ ZackTennant offer- confirmed until Sun&lt;by during
While Rickard and Mitchell the tying score. Hicks plunged ing to seal the Crusaders fate second round playoff meetings
supplied the White Falcons •in . from a yard out and Vince and give the White Falcons the at the WVSSAC office in Parkersburg.
with the two biggest plays of Black split the upr~ghu for the exciting victory.
the evening the duo was joined
in the limelight by several teammates who also furnished huge
contributions in the playoff victory. Justin Jordan chased down
heralded Catholic running back
Josh Hicks to prevent a Crusader touchdown late in the thin!
~un
quarter and one play later J.R.
Family Dollar
O'DeU Lumber
Parsons recovered a Hicks fumGeneral
Dollar
ble to turn Parkersburg
K&amp;CJewelry
Catholic away empty-handed.
Shear Illusions
Clark Jewelry
Bradford Clark delivered a
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home
Hartwell Hou!ie
perfect pass to Mitchell for the
Acquisitions Jewelry
Wagner's Hardware
winning score and Scott JohnComer Restaurant
Star Supply
son came up with several big
lngel's Furniture
Five Points Express
hiu defensively as did Gabe
Snouffer's Fire &amp; Safety
Lambert and Ryan Mitchell,
Twin Oaks
just to name a few.
Middleport T-shirt Shop
Racine Home National Bank
"We received some big, big
Little John's Foodmart
Always &amp; Forever
plays from several play)'rs but
SuperiorAuto Body
Country Candles
this was truly a team victory;'
Dottie
Turner
Realty
Racine Service Center
said Cromley. "''!fe had a good
Ohio
River
Bear
Co.
Meigs Liquor
week of practice and that is a
McCiures
Middleport
credit to our younger players
Candy's'Hobbies &amp;Crafts
that don't normally see a lot of
Napa Auto Body
Country Kitchen
action. Our first team could go
Thomas Do It Center
Andersons Furniture
out there and run over our subForeman &amp; Abbott
Ritchie's Auto Sales
stitutes in practice but that's not
Valley
Lumber
·Larry's Bait Shop
the case. They (second team)
Pomeroy Food Shop
Cindy Conley
'
make our first team unit work
Locker219
hard and that is a huge key to
Henry and Dorothy Clatworthy
how we perform on game
Office Service &amp; Supply
Lakeview Tavern
ru'ghu...
Middleport Department Store Hudnall's
Defense was the name of the
Dan's Boot Shop
Judy Kay's Restaurant
game throughout the first two
Hearth
Lighthouse
~iddleport Tire Shop
quarters as neither team could
Mitch's
Produce
Kroger
.
mount what could be considVaughans
ered a serious threat. Wahama
·PoweR's
Millies Restaurant
turned the ball over three times
Crow's Steak House
in the games' first 24 minutes
Subway
Domino's
but the defense came through
Pizza Hut
Speedway-Middleport
time and again to keep the
Speedway-Pomeroy
-Pepsi Co. - Cheshire
Crusaders out of the end zone
McDonalds
Auto Zone
as the two teams went into the
&gt;
Farmer's
Bank
Goodtimes
.
halftime intermission dead· Uptown Dog
locked in a scoreless tie.
· Forest Run Ready Mix
Rickard gave Wahama iu first
BaumLumber
Ridenours Supply
lead at the 4:00 mark of the
Baxter's
third period after the White Falcons were pinned back at their

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GALLIPOLIS OH

�Sunday, Nov.11, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, 01\lo • Point Plenlnt, WV'
•

.

HI

SUnday, Nov. 11, 2001

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

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -The
fi-game losing streak. An undercurrent of dissent in !he locker room. A
season on the verge of s6pping away.
For )"'ats, this has been Cincinnati
Bengals tmitory In 2001, however,
it's the Jacksonville Jaguars who feel
the pain.
Cincinnati, believe it or not, is playing like a playoff contender.
The Bengals head into Sunday's
game at Jacksonville with a 4-3 record
and a potent running game led by
Corey Dillon. They're a victory away
from hitting the hallWay point with a
. winning record for the first time since
1990, the last time they made the
postseason.
"A lot of teams are like us, with
coaches giving the same speech: 'Here
we are. It's an eight-game season;"
Cincinnati cornerback Tom Carter
said.
The Jaguars, on the other hand, are
in the very Bengals-like mode ofjust
trying to win a game.
· They're off to their second straight

LEFT_; Gallla Academy's Clarke Saunders is consoled by teammates, including Scott Saunders (61) during the closing seconds of Friday's game. (Dan Polcyn)
·
A~VE- Bobby Jones (33) carries the ball behind the blocking of Ben Doolittle (74). (Doug

Shipley)

BOTTOM MID'DLE -

Quarterback David Brodeur carries the ball. (Doug Shipley)

·-112

1
1

,

•

·'
cun

I

1

nancy lawney/ahelly huklna
avalee llwilher/sandy 90tewoocl
dndy lltlloy/~ndy haf!is
jlcklt knlghVnency oh1inger
batcus/roblr&gt;hudoorl
tile colllna/Wanda
boxdorfer

f W.Va.

$nutta"""' .... 'llrglnlo high -

-

-

1

1 ·.

Flnolrwulta

saturday
(7-3) at No. ·1 Mor-

~rg (8-2)

CluoAA
Frldly

Clay County 7, Ravenswood 0
MoUnt Vlaw 14, wayne 12
Oak Hln 36, Jamea Mon.,. 35
Poca 27, Totsla 7
~ Eaat 6, ltrtdtdopet-rtdtdet"'""'""' 0

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'WAM

: This is one fad I hope never
:catches on at Mqrnorial Field.
Give your pennies to the
United Way or some other
.worthy charity and recycle
;your plastic jugs.
· Those are far better·uses for
:them than being obnoxious.
•

NatlonwldeGI)

FlAIR

Insurance &amp;
Financial Services

G)

-"="

f

John
Glenn's
Darren
Derwacter is by far the best
running back the Blue Devils
faced this year. The All-Central District wingback racked
up 222 yards on just 16 carries.
He may be the best player
Gallia Academy saw all year.
Period.

~ennies.

on Your Side Every Minute or Every Day

992"5479

fnnPapBl

: ~Congt~'t'!lations to the
thousands ofBlue .Devil faithful who made the two-hour
trek to Lancaster. You lookc:d
great. I wish I could say you
sounded great, but my ears are
still ringing from the John
:Glenn fans' constant rattling
:Of milk cartons filled with

THERE FOR YOU

Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Street

Lewis

.

,·

RlvO!Iide, 8 polnla

SltUrday
No.
18
Grafton
(8-41 ot No. 1 ljridgoport
playoffs. .

gantown (9-1)
.
liO&gt;. ft Hampshire (8-2) at No. 6 P -

Gallipolis, ·starting from its
29, came out firing after the
break.
Jones ran for two yards,
Perry caught a 50-yard bomb
and Jones followed with nine
more yards. Brodeur capped
the rapid-tire drive with a tOyard jaunt to paydirt at the
9:42 mark.

bod&lt;y anderBon/penlse -

JOUnd ot .... -

~. 18 ~County

half.

bOI&gt;bldoiiOO'mary groeo
daJteneli-y ~,..
diana bodf&lt;lrJcela mccoy -

Prep Scoreboard·~
.

3
JYoodrow Wlloon 40, Spring \IIIIey 7

think speedwise we're probably pretty much the same.
They've got a nice, balanced
attack."
john Glenn (10-2) advances
to play Columbus De Sales
next Friday in the regional
championship. The perennial
powerhouse knocked off''
Canal Fulton Northwest 28- ·
14.
Gallia 'Academy finished the '
season · with a 9-3 mark. The ~
loss ended the Blue Devils''
third-straight playoff cam-paign.'

kan/mary burlon 1

jayce quilal&gt;'norma Olll1ieY t

1

(to-o)
•
No. fO Magnolia (7-3) at No. 1 Frankfort
(7-31

No.t31-(8-2)w. No. 4 Wllllamotown
(9-1), II P a - . g South, 7:30p.m.

lilivorllkle
- 9
Wnlvt111fy55,
14, -Musselman

•

bod&lt;y .-roo&lt;Vcella mccoy
diana bodldnldonlao richards _
da~one sloftlmary burtoo
jayce qulllenlrita lllavin

1

ClauAAA
•·
Frldoy
Marttnoburg 41, Philip Barboor 6 .
-l.taJton 26, Georga Waahlngton 8
tall&lt;erlburg South'&lt;'. Cabell Uldland 14

.

bol&gt;bit kllr/mary groeo _

tJoCbj -.~kay dlloa

.1
1
t

CIHtllkle, 10 painla

.

Rhrln'd'

-bill

collins
Oindy ataley/Wanda bo•dorfer
jean hanklns.jan tabor
linda mldkiMran mcewen
sandy ~aflelly haskinS

"I don't know if we could
have done a whole lot better
tonight," Coach Saunders s:iid.'
"I felt we played about as
good as we can play."
Injuries and illness forced
the Blue Devils to juggle their
offensive line this week.
· "The injury Oast week) to
Clayton Saunders and Weaver
being sick- Weaver probably
shouldn't have even dressedwe made a move, but we still
probably should have been
able to execute better:' Coach
Saunders said.
The Gallipolis mentor had
nothing but praise for his
Muskingum Valley Conference foe.
"They made some adjustments. They've done a good .
job:' he said. "They're good. I

•'

f
1

lildcle
sue
~=-bll-

Saunders' PAT gave Big
Blue its first lead at 21-14.
The team traded the next
two possessions before the
Muskies changed tactics on
offense. The Fish took to the
air and caught Gallia Academy
off guard.
Senior quarterback Mike
Pachuta led the Muskies 011 a
10-play, 52~yard scoring dtive
that culminated with an eightyard reception by Riggle.
Pachuta completed three passes on the march for 48 yards.
Donley's extra point put
john Glenn back on top 2421 with 2:49 left in the third
quarter.
Galli a Academy couldn't
muster a serious threat the
remainder of th~ game, and
Derwacter tacked on a I 0yard touchdown run with
time running out to make the
final score 31-21.

•

1

•

r.

II

Taylor isn't guaranteeing anything
whenever he does return.
"Everyone is saying when I get
b•ck, this thing is going to tum
around," he said. "Not necessarily. It's
only going to turn around when M
stop nuking foolish mistakes, like get·
ring penaltirs at certain times, and noc
finishing games right."
Sounds strikingly similar to the
kinds of words spoken in Cincinnati
over the years.
But tlllnjp can change quickly in
the NFL these days, and the Benpll
are solid proof.
"I think in these next five games, I
.would love to see us win four:' Kitna
said. "Is it over if we only win two and
we're 6-6? No, it's not over. We're still
in position. But I'm not just trying to .
be in position to get in the playofli. I
want to win our division."

tho I8CClf1d nino holoo wero aJ1ematlng lhol which In R - ' • '"""' 4.5 to t.S
painta. The laot 9 holes played was a IWO pe- bolt boll with ha~
. Clmllkle Lad~ hold the load with one point oolrG Into tho last nino holes and lOOk 3.5
paintolo ri'lonlldea 2.5 winning the lourriamenl !&gt;)'lwopojnllo.
·
Rita SlaYin and Diana l!ocllln, caplalna for Rivollklo - t e d a trophy 10 Avalee
caplaln for Cli-. The trjNJvuo - - u their traveling trophy for
the tournament
·
They plan 10 play at Rivalllkle neld yoor and alternating oooraoo theraaller.

1

John Glenn took possession
on its 24 following a 31-yard
ullt by junior Shannon Shipey. Th~ Muskies launched a
nine-play, 64-yard dtive that
culminated with a 29-yard
Donley field goal.
Derwacter again proved the
Blue Devils' nemesis as he'
gain~d 62 yards on the dtive,
including 51 yards on the
same counter play that set up
the Muskies' first score.
· This time, however, Gallia
Academy was able to return
tire.
The Blue Devils drove 65
yards in 10 plays and put six
on the board when junior
fullback 1'f Simmons took it ·
in from the john Glenn three.
Clayton Saunders' point-after
made the score I 0-7 with :38
remaining in the first quarter.
The dtive was aided by two
Muskies' penalties, one for
unnecessary roughness and
one for pass interference.
Yellow tlajp were a common sight on the John Glenn
side of the ball Friday. The
Muskies were penalized eight
times for 52 yards.
jones ran three times for 14
yards on the successful possession and Simmons logged 18
yards on four totes.
The touchdown inspired
the Blue Devils defense, and
the Gallipolitans forced John

Is

cal Taylor will come back Sunday.
After watching his team disintegrate
from the sidelinrs the last five games,

two-

BOTTOM LEFT- John Glenn's Darren Derwacter rushes for a couple of his 222 yards.
(Doug Shipley)
·
.
·

from Pap II

Kevin Hardy took the unusual stance
of publicly questioning the coaching
staff, suggesting the Jaguars should
have played a more aggressive, manto-man defense when the Titans
marched 59 yards for the winning
talk about it," Kitna said "It's not score.
It was criticism rarely seen in this
being cocky or arrogant or anything
like that. Instead of just trying not to franchise's seven seasons under Tom
embarrass yourselves - not to be 4- Coughlin's iron fist. But Coughlin,
12 again - why can't we be 10-6? who still has the full support of owner
Why can't w.: be 11-5? That's the Wayne Weaver, says the defense won't
goal, not just to be 8-8 and say, 'Well, change much.
The coach insists he hasn't lost conwe did better than last Y"ar:"And why shouldn't Kitna think big? trol of his locker room.
He is, after all, the quarterback who
"Have you ever been in a losing sitled the Seattle Seahawks on a game- uation where there wasn't some
winning, 67-y.ud drive .in Jacksonville grumbling and mumbling?" Coughlin
last season. The Seahawks were 3-7 at said.
the time, and the Jaguars were strugThe grumbling is growing louder
all around !he city. The Jaguars are
gling just as much as they are today.
Some players in Jacksonville's nor- aging, injured, broke and 9-15 since
mally 11'21lquil locker room are upset defeating Miami 62-7 in the 1999
- with the .losing, and with the posi- AFC divisional playoffi.
tion the coaches a"' putting them in.
They're ~opi':lg Fred Taylor's "'t_Urn
After last week's loss linebacker from a grom mJury nught turn thmjp
'
· around, although Coughlin is skepti·'

GALLIPOliS - C1- Ladioo &amp; Rlvetlldo Ladioo ploved lholr nm annual RIYO!t:up
,.,._at Clmllkle Golt ...... on SUnday,~ 20. :loot.
.
There""'
"
8
teomo playing 27 hOiel. changing tho IO!IMI and Ieima .,.,.
...h nl""- The formol conollted ot nine-holt ICflmbie wNdl d-1001&lt; 5-t painto,

sw;-.

BOTTOM RIGHT - Shannon Shipley (88) gets set to connect on a punt. (Dan Polcyn)

Devils

2-5 start. They have blown doubledigit leads in the last two games. Some
defenders att beginning to question
!he soft zones the coaches have called
down the stretch in the last two I~
es, against Tennessee and Baltimore.
. "We're not very good right now:·
Jaguars receiver Jimmy Smith said.
"Cincinnati is a much better football
team than we are, and that's why they
are where they are in the division, and
that's why we're dead last!'
Among the ugly little streaks
Cincinnati could stop this week is a
six-year stretch without winning two
in a row on the road. The Bengals
won at Detroit 31-27 two weeks ago,
and had a bye last week. ·
Cincinnati also could improve on its
2-10 record after a bye.
But many Bengals are looking weU
beyond those negative numbers, and
thinking playoffS. Quarterback Jon
Kitna, an offieason free-agent addition
who has helped spearhead this revival,
is the loudest of the optimists.
"There's no reason to be scared to

Cliffside ladies win first annual ladies
golf Rivercup against Riverside ladies

.

room, but Gallia Academy
turned to an old Logan stand~
by - the double pass - to
stop the bleeding.
Sophomore Andre Geiger
caught . the first pass from
Brodeur at his 27 and then
tossed a wounded·duck .about
40 yards to a wide open Josh
Perry. Perry waited for the
duck, bagged it and then took
it to the house with 1:03
remaining.
Saunders' kick made the
score 17-14 going into the

Pege •

Bengals start playoff push against struggling Jags

Division Ill, Regio'11 Semifinals - John Glenn 31, Galli a Academy :z 1

Glenn to punt after five plays
on the subsequent drive.
The Blue D~vils rode their
newfound momentum down
the field, driving 34 yards to
the , Muskies 23. But Jones
came up inches short on"
fou~th and five, and john
Glenn took over on downs at
its 19.
The play was doubly painful
for Gallia Academy as the Blue
Devils lost standout s~nior
center Aaron Burnett with an
apparent broken hand.
"We did put together a nice
dtive," Coach Brent Saunders
said. "We thought that we
could have scored when we
·had the ball down there. That's
·when Burnett, we thought he
may have liroke !Us non-snap•
ping hand, and we made a
quick adjustment. That may
end up being something thai
really hurt us."
Saunders moved Nathan
King to center and called an
ailing Matt Weaver into
action. Weaver had been batding
flu-like
symptoms
throughout the week.
Fueled by the defensive
stand, the Muskies rumbled 81
yards in 10 plays for a touchdown. Again, Derwacter provided the bulk of the yardage
on the same coUnter play, this
one going for 38 yards.
Donley.'s PAT made the
score 17-7 with 2:12 remaining in the half.
The Muskies appeared destined to have the emotional
edge headed into the locker

6unb4p l!:tmrtl-6tntittfl •

•••

PINAL THOUGHTS

It's been an interesting year
covering Gallia Academy
:football, to say the least. I
:appreciate your many phone
:calls and suggestions, and as
"we continue down this
adventure we call newspapering, we'll strive to keep get-

'.'

.'

''

Cillo"

Flrat!OIM1d
Frtdoy
Mount Hapo 211, Cameron 20
48, Bridge t8

You'll never look at banking
the same way again.

van

Wahama 14, Patl&lt;ereburg Cothol~ 7
Wlllamaon 40, Valey·Fayotte 18
.
llolunloy
No. 15 BullaiO (8-41 VI. No. 2 Wheeling
Central (fl-21, of Wheeling loland Sladlum
No. 9 Paden City (8-2) at No. 8 - (7-2)
No. 18 Guyon Valey (8-:4) ... No. 1 Mklland T111il (8-2) at Oak Hll, 7:30 p.m.
No. 10 Ma-.. (7-3) al No.7 Fa,_;lle
(7-3), 7:30p.m.

ting better.
I, like the players themselves, need to fill a great void
right now.
What am I going to next
Friday night?
I won't see local celebrities
Bob Hood or Tommy and
Kevvy (mark me down as Fan .
No. 2 in your club, guys). I
won't rub elbows with local
legends Odie O'Donnell and
Hobart Wilson, and I won't
ask my old pal Mogie for a
pregame prediction.
· Toughest of all, I won't see
the Blue Devils.
Allow me to salute you.You
filkd my Friday nights with
excitement and made me feel
like I was right d9wn on the
field with you.
Some folks in my profession frown when their fellow
journalists are caught cheering in a pre.ss box. This season,
I said phooey on them.
Y'all made me feel like
cheering, so I cheered. Bah
humbug on those sticks in the
mud!

•••

I '11 close this edition of
"Bedeviled," which reads .
more like a Lifetime movie of
the week script than a sporcy
column, with this positive
thought:
How many days until basketball season?
(R.. Sl1a1Jin Lewis is managing
editor of Ohio Vill/ey Publishing
Co.
E-mail
l1im
at

....

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Sunday, Nov. 11,2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point ~ WV

: · SUnday, Nov. 11, 2001

&amp;unbp l&amp;imtt1-6nnntt • Page ·8 7

SURVIVING AIDS

NASCAR

Magic Johnson thriving 10 years later

Harvick having memorable seilson

,
Itt JoHN NADIL
IE' SPORlS WRITER

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ten yem latH, he is
playing ball against guys half~ age. He i&lt; running
a smaD empire o(theaters. coffeehouses and restaurancs. And hi&lt; smile - the one that launched a
thouwxl ads - remains as wide as ever.
"I fed wondnful," Magic Johnson said "E'-"')'thing is great, wonderful. I cdelnate life and I tive
every &lt;by. Every day i&lt; a hotiday for me.... Nov. 7
won\ be any different"
Exactly 10 yem ago- Nov. 7, 1991 .- many
dtought that one ofbaSketball's most dazzling players had been handed a death sentence.
He stood at a packed news conference at the
Forum, the scene of his many triumphs with the
Los Angeles Lakets, and announced he was retiring
at 32 because he had the AIDS virus.
Now, he takes the AIDS cocktlil - combinations of medications that have kept some people
with the virus from developing acquired immune
deficiency syndrome - allowing him to focus on
hi&lt; business, and not just the business of staying

alive.
''The medicine has done iiS thing; I think I've
done my part," he said la'st week. "And God has
done his part. It's mind over matter, too.l've nevet
felt I would be sick or get sick. I thought I would
be here."
Johnson wasn\just any basketball player. He was
~e of the best evet, teYOlutionizing the g;une as a
6-foot-9 point guald.
Just as he would change the face ofAIDS around
the world
·
"He was just as concerned about other people as
he was with hirruelr,' recalled longtime friend Lon
Rosen, Johnson's agent from 1987-98. "He· was
concerned about himself, but he said he was going
to use this as a way to educate people.
"He did, and continues to do so:•
When johnson made his announcemen~ most
people didn't understand the difference between
someone being HIV positive and actually having

AIDS.
"I really though~ just like everybody else baicall)l that at a certain point it would start deteriorating his body, he would just be a shell of what he

playing days, isn't surprised
"He; an amozing man, I saw that immediately;'
Ovi1i said. "I woBed with him fur yem, I speak
with him all the time.Years ago. I gave him a bunch
ofbooks and mogazines to read, I set him up with
some.meetings. He was like a sponge.
"The end resulu speok for themsei\1\!S, look at
what he's done:·
.
Jolmson - who belit:w!&lt; he got the AIDS virus
by having unprotected sex with women - exercises on a daily basis, and still plays baskelball. Last
Friday night, he led his all-star team of sevaal former NBA players against Michigan State in an
exhibition game in Lansing. where his pareniS and
Turon still tive.
And Johnson i&lt; a vice president with the Ukers,
fur whom. he coached briefly and made twO
comebacks since his initial retirement
"His anno\Ulcement was huge, particularly for
African Americans," said Phill Wilson, the founder
of the African American 'AIDS Policy and Thlining
Institute in Los Angeles. "The day he announced,
my voice mail shut down because there were so
many calls.
"His announcement showed AIDS was not just
a white disease, not just a gay disease. And that was
SURVIVOR - M~ Johnson, center, waves to critic:d. Hes been a remarkable role model, as a
the crowd as he leaves the floor followi~ an exh~ human being. an African American, a man living
bition game against Michigan State on Friday, Nov. with the HIV."
And living in excellent health, according to Dr.
2, 2001, In East Lansl~ Mich. Michigan State
Michael
Mellman,Johnson's personal physician for
beat the Magic Johnson All-Stars 89-87. (AP)
the last 20 years.
was;' said Ken Turner, a close friend of johnson's "Theres nothing experimental, nothing highfor 25 yem.
tech;' Mellman said of Johnson's medication.
That certainly hasn\ been the case.
"Anyone who can affotd health care can affotd
Now 42,Johnson is a most busy man. Most of what he's doing. He's as healthy as he looks:'
his time i&lt; spent in business, where through his
Mdhnan ,declined to discuss dte medication
Johnson Development Corp., he has wotked to because he did not· want other HIV-infected
bring economic development to troubled urban patieniS to change their regimen to copy Johnson's.
areas by opening his trademark Magic Johnson
As for the future, Johnson· has given every indiTheaters, Starbucks coffeehouses and T.G.L Fridays cation he'll continue hi&lt; business endeavors.
restauraniS.
And healthwise?
And just last month, he added to his menu of . "We have no idea;' Mellman said "AIDS and
business ventures with the purchase of the Fat- the virus have only been around a couple decades.
burget restaur:mt chain.
Ten yem ago, we dido't know what to expect, so
Hollywood super agent Michael Ovitz, who there were no expectations, only questions. I'll take
served as a mentor of sorts to Johnson during hi&lt; every 10 yem he gelS, and hope we don't

we

BY JaM FIIYEII

don't know enough."
Johnson led Midligan State to the NCAA
championship as a sophomore in 1979, and the
Laken to the first of their five NBA tides in the
1980s as a rookie the following year.
The capper came in the sixth game of the NBA
Finals.With Kareem Abdul-]3hbar sidelined with a
sprained ankle,Johnson had 42 points, 15 rebounds
and seven assists in a series-clinching victory over
the Philidelphi.a 76=
Johnson was three inonths shy ofhis 21st birthday at that time.
Michigan State coach Tom lzzo was an assistant
under Jud Heathcote when Johnson played at the
schooL It was lzzo who told Heathcote ofthe bad
news I 0 years ago.
'
"He was just sick, he didn't ~ much," lzzo said.
"It was like a bad rumor that lllllted out to be
true."
Johnson made his 6m comeback in 1992, shortly after playing in the Olympia. Some of his
Olympic teammates, most notably Karl Malohe,
expressed discomfort playing against him. so Jollnson retired ap;ain before the season began.
Years later, Malone said:"Maybe l shouldn't have
said tha~ but I meant what I saidYou're young, you
don't know a lot of information on it. I said What
I said"
Johnson's second comeback began Jan. 30, !996,
and lasted the second half of the 1995-96 season
before he retired for the final time. At that stage.
people knew much more about the virus ¥td
AIDS.
,
Since then,Johnson has immersed himself in \he
business world along with family - his wife,
Cookie, and three children. None have tested positi~~e for the virus.
•
Although not a major AIDS activisqohnson still
contributes time and energy, serving as event chair
and master of ceremonies at a major AIDS fuqdraising event in late September, as he has done for
years.
Wilson and Hattie Babbi~ executive director of
AIDS Action in Washington, were effusive in t!&gt;eir
praise ofJohnson, but both pointed to a negative
aspect involvin11: the present.
'

IE' SPORlS WRIIER

pri&lt;ed along the way. And that; just beause

Kevin Harvie~&lt; bent dawn to pick: up
his Busch ' - champ·;..,.,l.,;,
-~
~"'' trophy and
almost threw hi&lt; '---'- ~wlbe ""--'~
""'-'"' ~~

LOS ANGELES (AP) - ·r---:
Mike Burke is experiencing
the thrill of a lifetime this
week as one of 84 participants in the Los Angeles
Dodgers' adult camp, playing
ball, making new friends and
meeting some of his heroes.
Ask those around him,
though, and they'll tell you
he's the hero.
"I've been treated like I'm ·
royalty or something, I'm
just a plain old guy from
Brpoklyn," Burke said by
telephone from Dodgertown
in Vero Beach, Fla., where
the camp is being held. ·
CHATINQ WITH LEGENDS - New York City firefighter Mike
Well, not exactly.
Burke, center, · talks with. former Brooklyn Dodgers' Duke
Burke is a member of Snider, right, and Carl Erskine at the Los Angeles Dodgers
Engine 201 in Brooklyn, adult baseball camp In \lero Beach, Fla . Wednesday. (AP)
N.Y., a firehquse that lost
four firefighters to the ter- campers receive instruction themselves.
"He represents more than
rorist attacks on the World from former Dodgers stars.
Team ' spokesman John himself by being here," said .
Trade Center two months
Olguin
said it was decided to Carl Erskine, who pitched
ago, and he has experienced
firsthand the horror of invite someone from the fire for the Dodgers from 1948ground zero, being involved and police departments in 59. "He represents our redis- ·
in recovery efforts from the New York due to their covered respect for the uniefforts on and since Sept. II . form he wears. These people
beginning.
"That's how it started, the do'ing great things in public
Burke was scheduled to be
on dury Sept. 11, but traded fire department accepted, it service have always been
shifts to play golf with a couldn't have worked out there. It's sad to say that it
couple of fnends from the more perfectly," Olguin said. took a tragedy for us to ·
"They loved the idea, and regain that level of appreciafirehouse.
They were on the third this is the guy they found." tion."
Burke said Monday's wife
And it just so happens the
hole when they heard the
.first airplane hit the World guy they found is from asked him for his autograph.
''I'm taken aback by the
where
the
Trade Center. Shortly there- Brooklyn,
of impression firefightkind
Dodgers
played
until
moving
after, they were on their way
to do whatever they could to to Los Angeles in 1957, and ers have on people," Burke
help, and it's continued a fan ofthe team since child- said. ''I'll neyer forget this,
never, I'm going to come
hood.
since.
•
"It's
an
honor
to
represent
back next year.
"I didn't take a day off for
"When I'm on the field,
the first two weeks," Burke the department," Burke said.
"It's
great
to
let
my
hair
I'm
like, 'This is awesome.'
recalled. "I'd go home for
half-an-hour, and see my down a little bit. I do feel a When I'm in my room, I'll
wife and dog, then go right little funny being here, but just call the firehouse, see
my captain told me, 'Go, how everybody is, see if they
back to the firehouse.
Mike,
you need a break.'
found our guys, feel kind of
"You want to be there,
"To eat breakfast and din- . normal."
·
find your guys, you want to
Chris
Gutierrez,
the
carry them out. You don't ner with Duke Snider, Davey
Lopes,
Maury
Wills,
Rick
Dodgers'
coordinator
of
want anyone else carrying
them out. It's a family, we are Monday, Ralph Branca, guys , baseball information, said
brothers, we are all brothers. like that, it's just unbeliev- Burke has been an inspiraWe go to work every day, we able, a big thrill. Words can't tion to those attending the
don't .know if we're going explain it. I have my first camp.
child on the way, I'm sure
"He's a real humble. guy,
home."
The 30-year-old Burke is it'll be better than this. But just a real nice person,"
attending the six-day camp it'll be neck-and-neck as to Gutierrez said. "Everyone
free of charge. The 84 partic- which tops which. Don't let wanted to meet him when
they found out he was here.
ipants play baseball most of my wife know that."
As word spread that Burke A lot of people have J&gt;een
the day, and use the same
facilities as the Dodgers do was in camp, many ·campers telling him he's been theraduring spring training. The and ·instructors introduced peutic for them.''
I

.,..-•w'fi

silver cup weighed close to 100 potmds,
· and HaMel&lt; wasn't prepared fur it.
. ~he got it off the ground and held
II high enougb for everyone to ~ the
25-year-okhlri~ felt as ifd_1e weighl of
the world had JUS! been lifted off his
shoulders. .
. For
the ~ marlted the
high pomt ofan emotional, bumpy season
that turned the raw rookie into a champ10n.
"This one,....
, - has felt like five, I~·"
... ~
Harvick said. "Then: were times when I
didn't want to he ot the DCC tnck, when
I didn't even want to leave the house. One
look at that trophy makes it all v.urthit-.d.;"h we did, ~~·1~'5
--.d.'-h we saai.... ,~~'5
ficed,evecythingwestruggl.edwith,itjust
wipes it all away!'
No one has grown more and had to do
it under as nwch scrutiny as H2rvick has
this season. AJ the lq'lacernmt driver fur
the Jarc Dale Earnhardt, every decision he
made was studied, 0'-"')' mistake magni-

J:larvick.

driver in NASCAR histay to compc:1r
in the ...,...•s aw top series. He'll have
.added ;b;'wmscon Cup rookie of the
....... tide to the Busch ..........u-.1..;., he
,-·'t'~~"Y
wrapped up last ~ at North Carotina Speedway. and he'D probaiXy finish
in the top 10 in the Cup Slllnding&lt;.
He did it all in a season of on-lite-job
training, when Harvicl&lt; learned the han!
way there was Jiale rooni for error.
"No one 011 that aack wants to Q.lt
ali)On&lt; any Slack, &lt;Ver)One waniS to be
the one to put the rookie in hi&lt; place:' car
Ridwd Childres~ said. ..1 , always
=that way., but the neat thingts about

series this SCISOll, Harvie~&lt;..., bumped up
to WlliSIOO Cup to fiB Earnhardt's mid.
Tiur alone ..., a daunrina task, bur com-... in the Busch
. bined with also running

Kevin
hes 1101
take it. He's going
to fightisback
andone
earntohis.........·-.--W&gt;V&lt; he
"U-"- there , _ -'"I"-·
..~,~
~··· W!JeU'Iu. ---,.
could have handled certain situalions, but
it took him some time 10 ~how big
a magnifYing
under."
That's whatglass
..._ he was
when
__ ,~.,;_h
''"t'l"''u

'"'•7ww'5

changes in the blink of an eye. as it did
when Earnhardt was killed in an accident
on the final lap of the .-on-opening

Daytona 500.

Harvick. discoYered by Earnhardt and
delivered to Childress as his eventual suelied.
cessor, was watching the race on 1V at
When the Wm5ton Cup schedule con- home in North Carolina. In an instant.
dudes after races Sunday in Homestead, evecything changed.
Fla., and two 11101e dates, he'll be the lint
Instead of simply running in the Busch

I

series, it was enormous.

Harvick thought he could pull it off
=ily, and a lint iucerned tike be \WUid.
He made his Cup debut in R.oclcingham,
N.C, in Ftbruary. finishing a respectlble
14th. Two ~ later, he got his first victory,eamingrespeafiomhi&lt;fellowcompetiron and a legion of Earnhardt fans
~ to 6nd a replacement for their
fMxite driver.
But the highs were short-lived As the
season """"" on. Harvick got tired and
sometimes a lia!e '-'-'-'-And
his ...,.,.•....,.._
u•~
~ and unapologetic nature - the
characreristics Earnhardt spotted in him
and the fms saw as a tm1inder of The
lnrimidaror- began to annoy his._...
Soon, he was bumping and banging!'-;8
ooer the tnck, earning unkind v.ua!s
from trWJY NASCAR veterans. It hit its
low point in September, when Bobby
Hamilton, angry about contact the two
had on the tnck, accused Harvick of trying to be Earnhardt.
A few months ago. Harvick might have
answaed back. But in a season ofgrowth,
hes fuund that the best approach is to
keep hi&lt; head high and say lia!e.
''The bigge&lt;t lesson I've learned this

year i&lt; to keep my mouth shut because
nobody wants to hear a driver gnpe
· and
ace like a .......... he said.uThat's han! to do
,_, say hurtful ,...,__ tike I'm
when .......L.
t"-"1"'
w~w
trying to he Dale Wnhardt.
''That's just disrespectful to thesih••tion.
all of us m in. Theres not a person in this
organization that wouldn't take Dale back
in a h=tbeat None of us ;asked for any of
this."
And no one ],;new what c.. expect,
especially Childress, who wasn't even sure
he still wanted to be part ofthe sport after
E=lhardt's death.
Waking up the day afrer Emthardts·
memorial service and making the trip to
Roc"'"""·~
the next race was the
~'b'-" .or
hardest thing he ever did. When he """t
back last week, with 1-Luvick on the verge
of winning the Busch tide, ~ had
-----'
·.t.-1.1..
~=~b;d,.gone out there this year
andnotbeenabletoachieveourgoalsin
the Busch series and struggled to make
Cup races and had been just running laps.
this year would have been a nighlnlal'e,"
atildress said. "But the way he pulled this
off. it helped eYeryone go orL"
And so they went full cin;fe last weekend, with Harvick wrapping up his title
on the same track where Earnhardt
earned his record-tying seventh and final
championship.

'

Economy adds stress to sponsorship hunts
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Talk in the NASCAR garage area
each fall revolves around who is driving
for whom the following season.
It's no different in the waning days of
2001. But with a slumping economy.
car owners ~ discussions this year
about sponsorship have a greater sense
of urgency.
"When you've got owners like Cal
Wells and Andy Petree still looking for
sponsors, that says a lot for the economy;• said Mike Brown, general manager of Bill Davis Racing.

Brooklyn firefi hter loving
it at Dodgers antasy
camp
.

..

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plsns•nt, wv

Petree has been looking for a sponsor
for the No. 33 Chevrolet since the
spring, when North Carolina-based
. Oakwood Homes announced it was
leaving. The company pinned the decision on the slowing market.
"It's been one of the toughest yean I
have seen," Petree said. "The economy's in such a pinch that people are
putting off decisions until later in the
year."
Petree says Square D will remain the
primary sponsor of Bobby Hamilton's
No. 55 Chevrolet. But Oakwood and

driver Joe Nemechek, who won Sunday in Rockingham, N.C., are gone.
Petree said he wanted to keep
Nemechek in the car, but he let him go
as the search for sponsors continued.
No doubt, the car owner will spend a
portion of his weekend in Homestead,
Aa., continuing that chase as well as
trying to win the Pennzoil 400.
Nemechek will drive next season for
Tnvis Carter in the Kmart Ford.
Jimmy Spencer is leaving that ride,
reportedly to take a three-year deal
with Chip Ganassi.

Meanwhile, Cingular Wireless, which
sponsors one of Ganassi's Dodges, will
jump to Richard Childress Racing.
Cingular it will .sponsor a· third Winston Cup car for Childress.
That decision, however, had lia!e to
do with finances.
"Clearly we want to be in the winner's circle," said Cingular spokesman
Clay Owen. "It does make good business sense for us."
Childress was the car owner for six of
the late Dale Earnbatdt's seven Winston
Cup titles. ·

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Page88
Sunct.,. Nove•h• 11,2111
r;elebrations begin on C2

W.Va. Fishing Report

P~ge Cl
sunct.y, ........_ n. 2001

CtW" ESTON. W. L (AP) - cra~ttal!l and live bait. ~
atlfnw and
11w
- .....Vilginia
'*'II~
""""' ~'--good
~lied
- . b 'lW
e~nt at olhefs. Anglers are
·~
caJWsg waleyw from MWWrl areas
BEECH FORK- U..io _.,.;. olh laka. Walera a.movng no
- , one fool below """"* . . . , . .... in . . . . . . 101 to lead.
Mel
*I lllwll.. laU .-.d til '
making talgela for .......

;

.......
1

.......... Aloglels.,. a toying gru~ "'*''I ...... _.~jigs andldlck·
COiidiilil:w• .... cakll1ii1Q . . . . . balta. Tailwater anglers . . llill
nice 'Ntgl)le. latgemouth bas. cal:loing trout 1ium the ""'"'"""
op"edi&gt;Maand-~ sb:ldug which OCCUinld en Oct. 25.
moulh l!lallld ....... being Hot lures indude pcu:urbail. com
andlpiw181'S,
CIIIJIIhl fill1ing . . . . . . . _
SUTTON -lalre Is appll)ltlrnatel
Cllll"'bal!l- ..... - .
.,.. . . being caught cAlli .... '" 12 feet ab&lt;MI winler recrealion
dell* while Ulling nlio-- level. Lal&lt;ot and tailwalar are c:laar.
- ~jigs. Calfioh ... hilfisloingnumbers
lhe """'"'""
..
good·
ol bus,
ting aligf...,a illn and cl**-1 lver.
spoil.
The
hal
........
· BLUESTONE - lalcot is II summer ,... r •• level. 1.a1cot and 1111- llbe jigs. live ball and rapalas. One
- . , clotlt. A lew bus may bot anglar iilpOiled caiChing 52 bass in
.,... outing this past -'&lt;. Crappie
awglil en bail amund
roclly poinls. llluegillillhing is good atB stil baing cat9'd with •••• WJWS
around fteh attractors in aboul10 to
and weed beds.
Smal jga. worms and niglitclaalalls 15 feel of water. Bluegill have been
""""·bean "'""'' utul 'lor catclllng caught en smal jigs and l'8dworrn8
buaandaunlish.
alllllfld fish atbacto.s an! BURNSVIU£ - 1..ake lo lflPIOlii- are.
ccves.
~-~~
baing
from lhe saugaye
_..,
matoty feel below and en shai10w sandy pointl in lhe
AICnNIIicn level. lJike ....
.... c:laar. Bass fishing has been lake lala in the allemoon or ovening.
TYGART -lJike is appiOllimataly HUNTING WOMEN- The Dianas, are a small sorority, of female bowhunters, shown in this October 2001 photo, that spent
good ... lor angleiw "'*''I
lUbe jigs or 10pwa1e1 lures. s~ oiled 45 feet below sunner recreation the opening week of West Virginia's archery season for deer in Monroe County, W.Va., hunting at Stoney Brook Plantation. The
......... lJike and tailwater are dear. A
. . being cough! along - - tishery . survey this week silo- group has been trawling together for 13 years, to some place where game Is abundant and they hunt for deer ilr antelope or
.... throughout lhe lake as lhe
. ..., Clllltinws to drop. This is .., baas and walleye holding in 10 feet elk. From left are: Kily Richey, Dorine Easterbrook, Cathy Beutler, George Gardner, who is a supporter of the group, Jeanne
just ollshore afler dark. As Richman, Ann Clark, Ann Hoyt, Marilyn Nicholas and Midge Rafferty. (AP)
80CIIIht- to caleh good fiUI'IIo ol lhe waler dropl, beas are -.g
..... of .. they feed heavily
llelor9 winter. Crappie action has activotly along the shcnlne. Boat
been good lor anglera U8ing jigs or anglers should start fishing with
Anglerl rapoll .-.g two dee!&gt;&lt;IMng cranlcballs cast to lhe
tuge muoky,
be amund llhorelina 10 locals feeding fish.
50 - . '?" lhe ...... lhill pall Smallmouth bass can be caught en
-.Although nol hooked. .,... fteh rnir•lOWB or a 3-inch tube on a 1J8..
jolla wed lhe lunleto lhe boat thl88 ounce jig. Bess are being caught In
10 to 121eet ol water before midday
lfnw. Ci88llng quite a bit of and
then move Into shore later in lhe
exdl8inent for lhe anglenl.
day.
watleye have been caught in
EAST LYNN - Lal&lt;e is approld· 30 feet
of water during the past sev·
GAP MILLS, WVa. (AP) goddess' name as their own.
have to be, because we range in boots custom-made any more:'
malely two feet below winter 19Ci&amp;- eraJ weeks
on
jigs
and
mirwKMS.
ation level. Laks and tailwater are The best walleye fishing In the lake The Dimas are a small sorority.
Wherever they go now, they age fiom the early 40s to 80."
Now, when they visit a spot on
c:laar. Anglels are catching saugeye
but
saong
srrings
tie
them
find
themselves
on
the
receiving
Kay
Richey,
the
Dianas'
presitheir
annual pilgrin!ages, the
and black bass. Saugeye are being starts at dusk when walleye move
Into shallow water at night to feed. together.
t'nd of an inordinate share of dent, says the group "has helped · Dian as' merribers focus their
caught fishing 50-plus feet The only boat ramp open is on the
Bowstrings and heartstrings.
anention. Small wonder. Their malce it very clear that we can be attention on the game ro.uning
lium ahoie near lhe on jigs Pleasant Creek Wildlife Managetipped with miMOWS and grub!.
Bowstrings because the Dian:.s roster reads like a "Who's Who"

I

Dear
Abby

s.uv-

5

around--

mo.-..

-.....to

Sisters by chance, huntresses at heart;

group of women travel and ·hunt together

clllo•••

Black bass anglers are using men! Area.
aanldlei1a. spimers and plastics in CHEAT LAKE - Several 16- to are bowhunters. Accomplished
and around ..,_ lo catch aome 19-inch wali8ye _,collected ~ur· . ones. Important ones. And ~
lng a DNR fishery survey lhis week.
nice largernoulh and 8pOII8d baas.
Many 10.inch walleye were also col· year, they travel as a group to
Trolling with small sucl&lt;ers and lected,
survival of waleye some place where game is abunmusky lurao has provided !10"'8 hits stockedIndicating
last
spring.
The lallleeding
by musky. Calllsh are being caught
period has started and all fish are dant and they hunt for deer or
on chiclcen - and nlghtcrawlers. leedlng aclivotly. The lake level will antelope or elk.
R.D. BAILEY - Lal&lt;e is approld· nuctuate several feet daily during
Heartstrings because they've
mately 10 feet abowl winler 19Ci&amp;- lhe
wlnler and boat access may be
ation level. lJike and tailwater .are affected. Cheat Lake was the sac· been hunting together for 13
clear. The winter launch ratllll is
best lake lor bass fishing lour· years now, and over the years
open. A lew walleye are being ond
naments
year and has also
caught in lhe upper section of the remained last
good this year. Large- they've developed bonds of
lake. Lilla bail Is wOOdng best and mouth bass can bot caught in the friendship that bridge the miles
lias also produCed a lew nice spot· twc backwaters near the dam and In they live apart fi:om one another.
led - · Trout are being caught in shallow shoreline araas throughout
"We all love to hunt. but we
lhe tailwater.
the lake. The two embayments at
STONECOAL LAKE -The lake is the West Penn Recreation Area enjoy the camaraderie even
_.....,.taly five feet below sum- near the· dam ~rovide convenient
more;' says Ann Clark, one of the
mer recreaticn level and clear. The sho18llne or pier fishing.
group's founding members.
BUilaoe temperature of the lake Is
CENTRAL WEST VJRGINIA 60 degraes. Bass ftehlng has been Arae
rivers are low and clear. Fall "Every evening, ~r we're fingood Tn the lake lor anglers lll!ing trout stocking has filled the Crenber·
spinners and livot bail111011nd sllUC- ry. Shavers Fork. Elk and Williams· ished hunting. we share stories
ture. Alew walleye are being caught nvers with an abundance of trout. about what we saw and what we
on deep-diving plugs and night· Spruce
Knob and Buffalo Fork lakes experienced. Those times are
crawlers. Big crappie are being have been extremely producfive and
caught by troiUng minnows and jigs. continue to yield large trout. Com, every bit as precious to us as the
Jigs and miMOWS are also wcrtdng pcwerbaH and spinners seem to be time we spend hunting:'
lor crapflle anglers whc anchQr near wcrtdng well for trout The Tygart,
This year, they gathered their
beaver huts. Trout fishing has been Buckhannon and lower Elk are low
lair, with some fish being caught on and dear. Smallmoirth-bass fishing memories at West Virginia's
powerbaJt and spinners. Anglera are has been good on these waters. Stoney Brook Plantation, a
alii catching some musky, and badi· However, ball are particularly wary 5,000-acre private hunting prellonally November is an excellent due to low water conditions.
lime lo enccunler one ol OHIO RIVER - Graat condiUons serve in Monroe County. They
StonecoaJ's ,.,.,_,. musky.
on lhe Ohio River are providing hunred for deer, and they got
STONEWALL JACKSON - Lake some good fishing lor boating and three, but mostly they enjoyed
Is approximately one loot above lhore anglers. Boat anglers are
- r recreation level. Lake and catching some nice black ball while each other's company.
lallwater are clear. Anglers repcrt throwing crankbelts and spinners
Theirs is a tight-knit sorority,
that largemouth bass action has Into rocky areas and rubber worms as one might expect of a group
been excallenl this week, with In and around any type of cover.
crankbeits and spinnerbaits wctldng Fishing the mouths of tributaries that numbers just nine.
well along lhe shcrellne. Carolina- with minnow- and grub-tipped jigs Is
They came together in 1988
rigged lizards and wcnns· are ~ro­ wotldng well lor sauger and saug· after a casual dinner conversation
duclng lots of quallly IIIII weighing eye. Minnows used up In lhe lribu·
three pcunds or mere. A lew calllah taries will catch crappie. The araas evolved into an invitation to
are being caught on nlghtcrawlers around the locka and dams are hunt an exclusive private game
,and chicken liver. Saugeye action grsat lor while basa, black bass,
'has been good lor anglers using sauger and saugeye. Catfish are preserve.
"Severo of us were at an
mlnnow·tlpped jigs along old being caught In these area on cut·
roadbeds and on sandy pclnta In lhe balta, chicken liver and night· archery-industry show in Las
main lake. Some crappie al8 being crawlers. Shore fishing is good lor Vegas;' Clark recalls. "We were
caught with minnows around stand· caHish while using chicken iiver and
lng timber and bridges In aboul15 to nlghtcrawlers. Minnows and night· chatting with Bob Eastman of
20 laet of water.
crawlers are being used to catch Game Tracker (Inc.), who had a
SUMMERSVILLE - Lake Is freshwater drum.
approximately 55 faet below wlnler KANAWHA RIVER - Anglers al8 hunting camp in Michigan
recreation level due lo the lake laking advantage of the good condl· where he hosted customers and
being drawn down lor a mandatory lions of the Kanawha River lo catch field representatives.
10.year lake lnapectlon by the COE. great smallmoulh, largemouth and
"Marilyn Nicholas suggested
Lal&lt;a Ia muddy and lallwaler Is clear. spotted bass while fishing the
The winter launch ramp is open shorelines with crankbalts and spin· that the company host an allbehind lhe picnic area near the ners. While bass, sauger, saugeye,
dam, but the area Ia muddy and a 4· walleye and black bass are being ladies bowhunt. Bob kind of
wheel drive vehicle will ba required caught at the looks and dams on snickered at the idea, but then
to back boats Into the water. minnows and artHicial baits. Shore another friend, George Gardner,
· Althcugh the lake Is muddy and anglers are catching several nice said, Hey, let's talk. This has
accesa Is limited, fishing Is oul· caHish and freshwater drum on
potentiaL"'
slandlng. Smallmouth are hitting nlghlcrawlers.
Fourteen women were invited
to that tint hunt. Kay Richey,
currendy the organization's president, says they immediately hit it
off.
•
"We had such a bonding;' ihe
!'lys. "It could have ended after
that first hunt, but we decided
that we wanted to keep it
going." .
. The next year they went to
Colorado. They've since crisscrossed the country, sampling the
hunting in Ohio, New York,
Wyoming, Texas, Alabama,
Nebraska, Wisconsin and, now,
West Virginia.
At first they called themselves
"the J\U-l.ady Bowhunters:'
"But when we said it, people
thought we were saying Old
Lady Bowhunters,"' Clark
recalls, laughing. "So we. needed
a name change."
At their inauguru hunt. GardBIG KILL - Rod Young of Scott Depot, w. Va., killed
ner
had given each of tlie particthis atypical animal on opening day of archery season.
ipants a medallion embossed
The 17·point buck was harvested in Addison Township
with the image of Diana, the
and had a 23-inch spread and down-turned tines.
Ro~ goddess of the hunt.
(Submitted photo)
Two years after the hunts
began, the group adopted the

Big Buck

,,

within the archery industry.
Ann Clark and Ann Hoyt are
National An::hery Hall of Fame
members. The others have distinguished an:hery or bowhunting resumes, as well.
Individually and collectively,
they've had sizable impacts on
sodety's • view of women as·
hunters.
"The publicity we've received
has helped identifY women more
strongly with bowhunting," says
Cathy Beucler. "Also. a lot of
people think you have to be
young . in order to be a
bowhunter. We prove you don't

ladies and still be good, ethical
hunters:'
Their impact on the archery
industry has been equally profolmd
" When we began hunting
together, we couldn't get clothes
and equipment that fit us,
because everything was made for
men," Clark recalls. "We started
bringing it to the manufacwrers'
attention, and they started listening."
"All the big manufacwrers are
now carrying entire lines of
women-specific clothing and
gear;' Richey adds. "Our clothes
fit; and we don't have to have

near their tree stands.
They don't need to worry
about the thousand little distracting details that always seem to
pop up. because they have a selfdescribed "lackey" to attend to
their needs.
Since the Dianas' initial outing. Ganlner has tagged along
with a single-minded goal: to
malce the women's adventure
more pleasurable. A renowned
hunter in his own right, he particularly enjoyed the pampering
he received at African safari
camps, and pledged to extend
the same courtesies to the
Dianas.

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ADVICE

..

Patriots are
people with
courage

, DEAR. READERS: Toda)l
Day, we celebrate the
sacrifice and patriotism of our
nation's military. Many gave
their lives to guarantee our freedom.We """" our veterans and
those men and YAlmen currently serving in the military a deep
debt of gratiJUde. I salute you
as do
readers.
, In honpr ofVeterans Day, I'm
reprinting an essay on patti~
fum that was written by the
granddaughter ofPhyl Erickson
bf Coon Rapids, Minn. The
}'lung lady, Jenna Guimaraes,
\vas only 12 at the \ime, but she
tmderstood the importance of
this aspect of our freedom.
PATR!Of!SM
· by Jenna Guimaraes
"! pledge allegiance to the
flag of the United States of
America, and to the republic fur
which it stands, one nation
under God, indivisible, with lib~rty and justice for
. Every day
classrnates and
1 recite this oath. By doing so,
we promise to be true to our
countty. ourselves and our fellow Americans.
· In school we study the history of our country, learning
about those who lived long ago,
who stood up for theil' beliefS,
risked· their lives, homes and
safety to give promise to a better life to their descendants.
Because of these . people, our
country is a great place to live.
Though we are younger than
most countries, many look up
to us for protection, leadenhip,
!upport and friendship.
. Patriotism can be shown in
many ways, even by ordinary
people. Mary Hays, otherwise
known as Molly Pitcher, is one
of them.
Molly Pitcher carried water '
to the soldiers during the Revolutionary War. When one of
the soldiers fell fiom heat stroke,
Molly shot the cannon for.him.
Molly loved her country so
much that she risked her life in
battle, even at a time when
women didn't fight.
We don't have to risk our
lives to show our patriotism, but
I am grateful to those who did.
: DEAR. ABBY: I've been
~orrespondirig with this great,
· Wealthy guy named "Howanl."
We met dupugh an inttoducpon service and exchanged
photographs. During our telephone conversation last night,
jle mentioned that he doesn't
like women who have had
breast implants. Howard likes
chesty gids - which I am - ·
but I DO have breast implants.
He told me this after I purchased a nonrefundable plane
ticket to meet hlm at his home
in Los Angeles.
: Howanl says I'm gorgeous,
but he 3S$Umes I am naturally
endowed. Abby, I wanted to tell
him, but since I have already
purchased the ticket, I think the
!&gt;est thing to do is to tell him
face-to-face. I know he will be
~urt because he is clearly smit!en with me - and the feeling
is mutual.
· We have a ton in common.
and despite his wealth, I find
him down-to-earth and kind. I
am a sincere person and don't
Want to pull the wool over his
eyes. Have you any suggestions
bn how I should handle this?D CUP IN DE'IROIT
: DEAR. D: Once he meets
you in person, he may realize
\hat your finer qualities of
~hich come from within putweigh your two faults. If he
~oesn't, thep the loss is his.
~

an,

••

my

my

an:·

an

~.

•

Dwight Icenhower: the man
who would be Elvis
BY TONY M. LEAcH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY
Even
though Elvis Presley permanently left the
building in 1977,
one
Meigs
Co).lnty man is dedicat~
ed to keepinulie _Kil}8.t"'" .
of Rock~ lhemory
alive for future generations.
Clad in a goldsequined jacket and
. sporting four-inch
sideburns, Elvis
impersonator
Dwight Icenhower
of Pomeroy commands
respect
every time he hits
the stage. His uncan- .
. ny ability to mimic
Presley's
gyrating
movements and distinc.tive voice has won him
both local and national
acclaim as one of the premier Elvis impersonators
on the scene today.
,
Icenhower said he firs~
became interested in Elvis at
an early age when his mother

PI•••

Itt

Elvis.

...
......
·

Dwllltt Icenhower

Cl ,.

And the magic begins...
Harry Potter
books, movie
. gain fans
seeking escape
MARTHA IRVINE
AP NATIONAL WRITER

Once upon a time, a little
music or a Fred Astaire
video would've calmed
Ruth Sexton as she
unwound with her cats and
tropical fish after the train
ride home from her Washington workday. Then ·a
plane. struck the rtearby
Pentagon. And an anthrax
scare temporarily shut
down the office ,building
where she works. ,
"! found that I could not
escape the horror that · is
going on," the 53-year-old
Maryland resident says . .
So Sexton did what a
number of Americans have
done since Sept. 11 - she
.
If
·)

looked to a young wizard
with big round glasses and
a knack for escaping evil.
And she's been reading the
Harry Potter series ever
since.
Though its Nov. 16
release was plann~d .well
before the attacks, rhe
s6ries' first movie, "Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's
Stone," is also providing a
vJelcome distraction.
"In a world of chaos utter chaos at the moment
- to have a movie like
'Harry Potter' pop up is
extJ:aordinary," says actor
Ri¢'hard · Harris, who plays
Ha~.[y's bearded mentor
Professor Dumbledore.
· Those who have tracked
the Harry Potter phenomenon for a while are not
surprised that the stories
are winning a new group
of fans after the attacks.
uHarry's always one to
reach out and accept the .
help of friends and to
.admit, 'I'm not the smartest

and I'm not the fastest, but
we'll get through this
together: And that's a really
comforting message right
now," says Rebecca Sutherland Borah, a pop-culture
expert at the University of
Cincinnati who has taught
classes examining author
J.K. Rawling's best-selling
senes.
Borah, too, knows people
who have recently started
reading the books. She also
has watched online discussion groups dedicated to
Harry Potter become
places . for people to bond
and talk about their
anguish over the attacks
and the war in Afghanistan.
And many who have
already read the Potter
series are returning to it as
literary comfort fo 0 d.
That
includes
Pam
Huber. She had borrowed
all four books from the
library and Snish.ed .'them
well before Sept. ·1 1. But
after a stressful day working

.,,..
'

in media relations at the
University of Dayton on
the day of the attacks,
she was so drained that
she stopped by a bookstore on her way home
and bought the entire
series.

"The clear-cut difference between evil and
the heroism of a young
boy - it's just what I
needed," says Huber,
who went home, put
.her "sweats on,
plopped down in
the recliner and
decompressed
with the first
book."
Many say
the hunger
for good
prevailing
over evil
- namely,
Har.ty outfoxing
the
villainous Lord

Pl-ste
Harry, C8

•

�..

Celebrations-

Jerry Juniper and Lorrl Lauderrnllt

Sunday, f*lvember

·PageD
SuiiMy, Nov...ber 11, :Z001

_j

Halstead-Knox engagement

POINT
PLEASANT, their daughter, Christi Lynn,
W.Va. frank and Jean to Paul Knox Jr. , son of Paul
Holcomb,
along
with and Darlene Knox of Gal- ·
Richard and Susan Halstead, lipolis.
all
of Point
Pleasant,
The wedding will take
announce the engagement of place in May.

Jerry attends Marshall University and will graduate in
May 2003 with an assoCiate
degree in applied science in
information
technology I network administration .
The couple will wed at
Mount Moriah Church of
God in Racine, Ohio, at I :30
p.m. on Dec. I. A reception
will follow.

lipolis, and Dreama McGuire
of Cairo, W.Va.
The bride-elect is a 2000
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School. She is currently employed by Holzer Me'd ical Center.
The prospective groom is a
2001 graduate of Buckeye
Hills and South Gallia High
School. He is currendy
employed by the Gallia
County Junior fairgrounds .

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Sunday, November 11
ADDISON - Preaching ser·
vice at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.

United Methodist Church, 10
a.m., with weigh-in from 8:45·
9:45 a.m. More information,
call Janet Thomas at 3670274.

ENO - Eno Grange 2080,
7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Veterans
Day activities, noon-?. Free
lunch prepared and provided
by the men. Music by local
musicians.

CADMUS - Soup supper at
meeting of Walnut Township
Crime Watch, 6 p.m. , Cadmus
Community Center.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County District Library Board
of Trustees will meet at the
library at 6 p.m.

GALliPOLIS - Grief syp·
port group will meet at BosSl!rd
Memorial
Library,
noon ,
Switzer Room.

Wedneeday, November 14
MORGAN CENTER - Morgan Center ChrlaUan Holiness
Youth Group will weloam• For·

ADDISON - Baby shower
lor Bonnie Phillips, 7 p.m.,
Addison
Fraawlll Bapllst
Church.

BIDWELL - Prospect Baptist Church Services, Sunday
School 10 a.m., worship aervloe11 a.m.
CROWN CITY - Paator and
Councelor Monlt Sh..tt will
bl guall epeaker II Ellzabelh
Chaptl Church, 10:40 a.m.
ana8 p.m.
Monday, Novtmber 12
CHESHIRE - TOPS OH
f1383 will meet at Cheshire

Ietty lhlttl

Kevin Flelcle and

Rutherford, Elder Law AHor·
nay.

given 4, 7 p.m.
BIDWELL - Prospect Baptist Church Services, 7 p.m. ·

'I

Tue1d1y, Novtmber 13
GALLIPOLIS- PERl meet·
lng al the Senior Citizens Can·
rer, 3 p.m. with speaker Shtrrl

I J\'IN( ~ B( )( )i\1 • I HNIJ\;( ~ IH )( ):\1

Bl -:1 HH )( )i\1 Sl !ITLS

l\1anv
. 'I'(, &lt;:h( )( )SC Fr( u n!

Sheets-Fields engagement
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. David Sheets of
_jteedsville and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Fields of Syracuse
announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their children, Betsy A.
Sheets and Kevin C. fields.
The bride-elect is the
· granddaughter of frances
Carleton of Pomeroy, and
the late Harry Carleton and
the late Ezra and frances
Sheets.
. She is a 1998 graduate of
Eastern High School and a
2001 graduate of the University of Rio Grande with a
degree in business. She is
currently employed ·at Ohio
University.
1 Her fiance is the ~randson

ofWalter and Anna Roush of
Syracuse, and Clyde and .
Dorothy fields of Hartford,
W.Va. He is a 1997 graduate
of Southern High School
and attended Hocking College. Currently, he
is
employed at Toyota . Motor
Manufacturing in Buffalo,
W.Va.
An open church wedding
will be held on April 13,
2002, at 3:30 p.m. at Faith
Baptist Church in Mason,
W.Va. The music will begin
at 3 p.m.
A reception will follow
immediately after at the
New Life Center in Middleport.

DTENTION

i;

Unschooled
inventor
• Thomas Edison invented the
; movie camera, the electric
; lightbulb, the phonograph ; even wax paper. All told, he had

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MASON, W.Va. - William Pt. Pleasant.
LANGSVILLE - Mr. and Powell of Rutland.
J. Davis and Cathy J. Rowe, The groom is the son of Mrs. Jerry and Linda Jacks of The couple had small
both of Mason, were united James P. Davis of Sod, W.Va., LangsviUe announce the wedding
at
Langsville
in marriage Oct. 22, 2001.
and the late Phyllis Parsons recent marriage of their Church of Christ on O ct. 27,
Rev. Herman Jordan of Davis.The bride js the daugh- daughter, Sherry L. Jacks to 2001.
The couple resides in MidLeon performed the ceremo- ter of Kathryn L. Meredith of Terry L. Powell Jr., son Mr.
and Mrs. Terry and Marilyn dleport.
ny at Battle Monument Park, Phoenix, Ariz.

groom, and Jeremiah Brown,
brother of .the bride. The
groomsmen
wore black
Ralph Lauren tuxedos with
black tie and vests.
The flower girls were BreElle Cremeens and Ramsey
Warren, cousins of the groom.
Ringbearers were Caleb and
Joel Craft, friends of the bride
and groom. Ushers were Nick
Craft· and Michael Warren.
Guest book attendant was
Lehanna Craft.
Soloist Matthew Holley
sang selections which included "You Are My Everything"
and "I Do (Cherish You)."
The reception of finger
foods immediately followed at
the ·church. The couple's four
tiered wedding cake was
adorned with pink and white
mini calla lilies.
'
The bride is a 1997 graduate of Ohio Valley· Christian
School, and a 2001 graduate
of the University of Rio
Grande with a bachelor of
science degree in psychology.
She is employed at Infocision
as a program supervisor.
The groom is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, and a 2001 graduate
of the Univel'Sity of Rio
Grande With .a bachelor of
science degree in elementary
education. He is employed
with the Gallipolis ·and Gallia
County school systems as a
substitute teacher.
·
The couple honeymooned
at Myrtle Beach, S.C. They
now· reside on Valley View
Drive in Crown City.

more ·than 1,093 inventions in
his lifetime. When. he opened
his factory in Menlo Park, NJ.,
in 1876, he said it would produce "a minor invention every
10 days and a big thing every six
months so." And it did, Edison~
who was known as the "Wizard
of Menlo Park;' had only three
months of formal schooling.

of

Bigger breasted bi~ds get legs to stand on
GALLIPOLIS - Doesn't it
seem like there's more white
meat ori turkeys these days
than there used to be? WeU,
we're not imagining it.
In fact, bigger breasts (on
turkeys that is) is one of the
most popular trends in turkey
breeding from the past few
decades: Poultry breeders have
responded
to
consumer
demand for more white meat
by wing old-fashioned genetic
selection to breed turkeys with
· Jarger breasts, where most of a
turkey's white mea~ is produced.
Unfortunately, that trend has
not been without complications. At first, larger breasts
were accompanied by leg
deformities such as bowing
and buckling, because the legs
just weren't strong enough to
support all the weight up top.
·Some turkeys became lame,
and, in rare cases, suffered bro-

Friday, Nov. 16, 2001.
Call (614) 221-6331
for an appointment.

ken bones. The problems cost
the poultry industry $32 million a year in production losses.
Sa; the researchers went back
to the drawing board and started looking for ways to breed
large-breasted turkeys that also
have stronger leg muscles and
bones. An Ohio State University agricultural engineer is
teaming efforts with Ohio
State poultry re searchers to
identifY precise chemical and
physical characteristics that can
increase bone strength.
for example, they've found

CAT'SMEOW
Lupton Block Building 1999
On Back:
The Lupton Block BuDding, unique in both materials and
design, was built of sandstone in 1894. Constructed by Dr. J.
A. Lupton, it wllli the sight of the first library In Gallipolis In
1895. The building is on the National Register of HIBtoric
Places.
Gallipolis, Ohio
1999 ,

In stock at the
Chamber of ·
Commerce Office
at 446-0596
Cost: $20.00

llir-f

!1111

Aunt et~'a eolleetton
·of Fin• Amlab fhlnjl

."ehrJatma&amp; in the eountey"

0penHouse
Saturday, November 24th
0:00 a.m. til5:00 p.m.
Aunt Cilzra has decked the hall, filled the
skigh, trimmed the mes and now would like
· to invite you to our 6th Annual Christmas
in the Counrry Open House. Once a$.ain,
our fine Amish furniture builders from
Holmes and Wayne County, Ohio will be on
hllnd to speak with our customers.
Take a few minutes on SaturdAy,
November 24th from 9:00 am til 5:00pm to
cekbrate the beginning of the Christmas
Season. Enjoy some hot spiced cider and a
sUMet Amish mat and hat!t! a day filkd with
friends and fol/owship at Aunt Clara's
Collection on State Route 141, Gallipolis,
Ohio.

Aunt etara'a eolleetion .
of Fine Amish Thtnaa
4 miles wnt ofGaJlipolis on State Route 141
740-446-0205

This free offer is limited to the first 3 callers with a measurable
hearing loss of 25-40 dB JYI'A and are new to our office

._;..s__

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November t 4.. t 5.. t 6
9 am to 5 pm

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Joint
Implant

•'

By appointment only

•.
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Surgeons, Inc.

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COLUMNIST

that the overall bone strength is that bigger birds can be more
affected lzy its content of coUa- susceptible to disease, such as
gen, a protein that combines fowl cholera and Newcastle
with calcium salt crystals, and disease virus. Fowl cholera
the presence of two chemicals, attacks the bird's major organs,
pryridinoline and deoxypridi- but usually the birds show no
noline.
symptoms before dying.
Newcastle disease affects the
in addition to breeding lines
with stronger legs, the respiratory
system,
and
researchers are .looking at although the death rate from
dietary improvements that this virus isn't high , it does
could enhance the effect · of affect growth and reproducthese and other chemical fac- tion. Turkey breeden are now
developing birds that are more
tors to increase leg strength.
Another challenge: It seems resistant to these diseases.

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For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

We rq:rtt any bKonvenltnce tbls may
han ulllld eur aastomera.

Becky
Collins

GALLIPOLIS RETAIL
MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

•

,. Our next clinic date is

Powell wedding

•

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The Star Wan "St.rftJbttr" video
game for X-Bo11 also featui'!IJI on
II, will not be available at thll
due to the m.nufacturer'• delay In
shipping.

Davis wedding

Is our ea
em ·a
sance
We have a FREE solution!

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The Kmart November 11 1 lOOt
w.eekly ad circular, oa paae 11,
futures the BUIU Rllyma "Geneslt"
CD. Thllltem wni not be IVIIIIble ..
this time due to the rKOrdlnattudlo'•

chanp of re~ date.

Mr. and Mre. Terry Powell Jr.

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Ohio Health

KIIAIIT

. . . GALLIPOLIS - Melissa
_]Claire Brown and Adam
. Bradley Clark were united in
. 'marriageAug.11,2001,at the
·first Baptist Church of Gallipolis, with Pastor Alvis Pol.. lard officiating.
, The bride is the daughter of
.. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jay ·and
. Martha Brown of Gallipolis.
.. The groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Mark and Lois
Clark, also of Gallipolis,
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a Maggie Sotterro Couture gown.
The two-piece corset gown
featured a double box pleated
· skirt, chapel-length train and
single tails featuring a double
-row of crystals.
The corset-style strapless
' bodice was richly embellished
· ' with crystals and pearls. The
' bride's three-tier chapellength veil was held in place
by a rhinestone tiara. The
. , bride carried a bouquet of
white roses accented with
·, miniature pink calla lilies.
' · Amanda Brown, sister of
the bride, served as maid of
··nonor. Bridesmaids were
" tvlisty Smith and Elizabeth
: Brown friends of the bride.
:0 The bridesmaids wore floor
'1 length ~ky blue gowns and
7£arried bouquets of pink roses
-~ ~ccented with miniature pink
·&gt;calla lilies.
't
•
The groom wore a black
j Ralph Lauren tuxedo with a
·~ white vest and tie. Jason But:; ler, friend of the groom,
:l served as the best man. - ·
:: Groomsmen were Chad
:~ Shamblin, friend of the

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Subscribe today.
446-2342 or 992-2156

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ENGAGEMENT RINGS

The

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

Mr. tnd Mre. Adam Clark

Tobias-McGuire engagement
GALLIPOLIS - Amanda
Lynn Tob~as and Jeremy Glen
McGuire are announcing
their
engagement
and
upc~ming marriage.
-The bride-elect is the
daughter of Linda Follis of
Gallipolis, and the granddaughter of Betty and
Orville Tobias of Crown
City.
The groom is the son of
Ivan Glen McGuire of Gal-

~

Mr. and Mre. William J. Davis

Jeremy McGuire ancl Amanda Tobin·

LAudermilt-]uniper engagement
Paul Knox and Chrlatl Halstead

Galllpolla, Ohio

.Weddings

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MASON, W.Va.- Patricia
Laudermilt
of
Mason
announces the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of
her daughter, Lorri Ann taudermilt, to Jerry Thomas
Juniper, son of Sam and Sandra Juniper of Point Pleasant.
· Lorri attends MarshaJJ
University and will graduate
in December 2001 with a
Master of Arts in. teaching.

11, 2001

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VALUABLE COUPON!

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With Purchase of ADy

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Advanced Bearl.q Center
1122 Jackson Pike
Gallipolla • Spring Valley P)ag

Mel Mock BC-RI&amp;&amp;AWI'~

Beari:DI Bealthcare ProfeasioDal

Call 740 441-1971 or 800 434-4194

�~II'

Sunday, November 11,2001

Sunda~NovendMw11,2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio

,uut

Care of Veterans Memorial
Hospital to celebrate 30th
anniversary and Home Health •
Care Month at open house, 2 :
p.m. Tuesda~ in o11ice In VMH :
building. Public Invited.
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are

WEDNESDAY
_
MIDDLEPORT - Middle-: .
por1 Lilerary Club, 2 p.m. :
Wednesday at the home of :Pauline HOr1on. Betsy Horky •
will review Rifle CrossingS by ••
Winston Churchill.
::

.. or _,. type. n.m.

prlo I d only M IlPKe !M'mlta end C81'1not be gueranteecl to be PI b11ed a specific
number of days.
SUNDAY
POMEROY -

Power Team
member Mitch Hodge in services at First Southern Baptist
· Church 41872 Pomeroy Pike
·at 8:15 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
on Sunday and 7 p.m. on
Sunday thru Wednesday.
Performing feats of strengths
sharing his testimony. Public
invited.

Mt 111111 Mn• .,.... McKJnner

McKinney wedding

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GALLIPOLIS Kelly
Renee' Broyles, daughter of
Robert and Grace Broyles of
Gallipolis, and Brian Lee
McKinney. son of James and
Cindy , McKim1ey of Crown
..!City, were united in ma'rriage
on Oct. 6, 2001, at First
Church of God in Gallipolis.
The ceremony was per·
formed by Pastor Dan Ben.nett.
The bride is attending
Ohio University and is working at Amazon.com.
The groom attended Ohio
University and is a manager of
a local Subway Store.

Davis wedding

Kimberly Broyles, the sister-in-law of the bride, was
the maid of honor and Joseph
McKinney, the brother of the
groom, was best man.
Whimey 'Terry, cousin of
the bride, was flower girl and
Jarrett Durst, ·cousin of the
groom, was ring bearer.
Attendanrs were . Jessica
Dickens, Jennifer Allen,
Michael Broyles, who is a
brother of the bride, and
David Houck.
jessie Edwards was an usher
and Chris Bullion of Gallia
Acaderoy High School provided music.

GALLIPOLIS Evan
John Davis and Jennifer Kate
Lewis are announcing their
marriage.
The couple exchanged
wedding vows in a priyate
ceremony on July 2, 2001, in ·
Cadettsburg. Ky. :
The groom is the son of
Evan and Elizabeth Davis of
Oak Hill, and grandson of
Sarah Elizabeth Aberaeron,
Wales.
The bride is the daughter of
Phil and Tina Lewis of Vinton, and the granddaughter of
Roben and Barbara Lewis of
Thurman.

The groom is a 1994 graduate of Oak Hill High
School, and a 2001 graduate
of the University of Rio
Grande. He is currendy
employed as a teacher by
Welhton City Schools, and is
attending the University of
Rio Grande.
The bride is a 2000 graduate of River Valley High
School and is attending the
University of Rio Grande.
She is employed by the University of Rio Grande.
The couple honeymooned
in the Bahamas and ate now
residing in Gallipolis.

TUESDAY
ATHENS - Athens Park·
isonUs Suppor1 Group to
meet Tues., 1 p.m., OUBieness Memorial Hospital.
Annual Thanksgiving luncheon.

POMEROY- Home Health

'

"On Fifth Avenue, every second person
is wearing red, wldte and blue. It's a way. to sllow
solidarity and respect for tl1e victims wlro
died and survived.,

...............
son is wearing red, white and
blue. It's a way to show solidarity and respect for the victims who died and survived,"
says Brian Rennie, the head
designer for Escada.
Escada, which is based in
Munich, Germany, recently
opened its new U.S. flag~hip
store in New York with
otic styles in every window.
"I was nervous about
putting it in rhe window of
the new store because I didn't
want it to be misconstrued
that we were trying to cash in

patri-

on the tragedy:• says Scotsman
Rennie.
'
But, he adds, ·~the clothing
is a very powerful, bold statement to say we're still here."
The Stars &amp; Stripes collection, which ranges from
embellished jeans to cocktailparty clothes, was already in
production when the attacks
occurred. Even before the
pro-America
sentiment
flooded the fashion industry,
retails buyers from around the ·
globe were very enthusiastic
about the new line, · Rennie

TUPPERS PLAINS- East- .::
em Local Schools to dismiss ~·
at 1:05 p.m. on Wednesday, :
due to teacher in-service.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Local ::
School District annual Tille 1 •
•
parent meeting, Salisbury. :
Elementary, Thursday, 6 to 8 . ~
p.m. Wendy Halar, assistant :
superintendent, to discuss : . ·•
TiHe 1 programs, pullout, in- : :
class model and replacement •
classes. New standards for
language ar1s and math will
also be discussed.

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Adkins

reports.
"At first it was kind of
tongue-in-cheek and I asked
'Will the rest of the world like
it?' It surprised me, even then
when we showed it in July,
that .~t ft such a good reactiOn.

GALLIPOLIS -

Mr. and

Mrs. Rex Adkins of Gallipolis

Mr. and -Mrs. Ray S. Hall

recendy celebrated their 60th
wedding anniversary.

Hall 50th anniversary
and Debbie
Coolville.

Hall

of

They married Nov. 8, 1941,
in Booneville, Ark. The celebrated with close friends and
members of their family.

CELEBRITY

,...."'
....

In Honor of
Cpl. Joseph Mingus
2/17/68- 3/13/70
USMC
VIetnam/ Purple Heart

Love,Lynn&amp;Famlly

In Honor of
E2 Michael Macomber
8/8/2001 to Present

HAVY
Love, Mom &amp;

Ret~

In Honor of
Sergeant
George E. Jones
1951 -1953
ARMY
Korea War

Monday, Nov. 12, 6-9 pm
&amp; Tuesday, Nov.13, 10am-7pm
"Enjoy some holiday refreshments
as you browse through our
wonderful display of Theme Trees"

to yo• ... wltll 41
,.,.,.,• . ,lUI]

•

'Bytr'r O.t~let'
111m ... 10• wtU
b••U,Iblolo
r1gtmr to will
a anlfu~
odUioo ''"'''""'

Register for door prizes to be given .
away during this holiday open house
and let us help you get into the
wonderful spirit of Christmas.

Gallipolis City Schools
Classified Veterans
Millard Foley
John Johnson
Jack Parsons
ZatSalmons
Robert Smith
Tom Walters
Dale Watson

Low, YourFamlly

In Honor of
StaffScJt. John Sisson
1988 - Current
AIR FORCE
EndurlnQ Freedom

Love, Your Family

Love, YourFamlly

. World War II
Love, Your Family

In Honor of
In Honor of
In Honor of
TSGT
Clinton (Ed) Stanley
1956-1977
AIR FORCE
Vietnam

1. Do you have to be able to take care of yourself to live at Wyngate?
A. No. Many residents at Wyngate live completely independent while ,others receive complete
care. When you move to Wyngate, we complete an individualized care plan to ensure your needs
are met and that you ·are only paying for services you need'. Wyngate has nurses on staff 24·
hours per day and we provide 24-hour emergency monitoring. We can provide assistance or
complete care with bathing, dressing, and grooming needs, as well as toileting and incontinence
care. We can also provide care for residents with memory impairments such as dementia. Our
staff can supervise and administer medications as well as special diets. Physical, Occupational,
or Speech Therapy and Hospice services can also be arranged as needed.

Love, Lovlnq Wife Palsy

'.'

.

4. Can you bring a pet to Wyngate?
·
A. Yes. You are welcome to keep your pet within your new apartment home.

•
5. Do you have to be mobile or able to walk to live at Wyngate?
A. No. Many residents at Wyngate use a wheelchair to get around. Our professional nursing staff
is readily available to help residents in wheelchairs with transferring within their apartment as
well as other areas throughout the community. Motori zed wheelchairs and scooters are also
permitted.

Fore more informaJion, call Wyngate aJ 740-441-9633 and
.
·
request a free information packet.
.
Feel free to stop by WYngaJe any time for a persolllll tour of our communtly.
WYngaJe is located aJ 300 Briarwood Drive, Gallipolis.

.·

In Honor of
E2 Shawn Taylor
1-2-2001-Present
National Guard Armory

In Honor of
James Travis
Mooney
Jonuory 1999 - 2003
U.S.M.C.

In Hono~of

In Memory of

Charles E. Fields Jr.

S/Sgt.

PFC

6/1/1967 ·10/30/969
Morines- Two Purple
Hearts
VIetnam

Charles E. Huber
1966-1970
U.S. Air force
VIetnam

Love, Judy, Chuck, Dottle,
Heather, Anqle, Autumn
&amp;Jason ·

Love, Wife
and Doughters

In Memory of

In Honor of

S.Sgt

S. Sgt. Joe R.

CalvinW. Waugh
1942-1946
Army
World Wor II, European
Theater

Jeffers II
1971-1980
Army paratrooper

Love, Your Family

Love,
Sisters &amp; Bro

Love, Dad &amp; Mom

In Honor of
C.P.L.
'

3. Does Wyngate provide short term or respite stays?
A. Yes. At Wyngate, there are no long-term lease/ rental agreements. Rent is paid on a daily or
monthly basis. Most residents have made Wyngate their petmanent home, while others have
chosen to stay for only a few days, weeks, and even months. Many come to Wyngate to
complete their recovery after a hospital stay or rehabilitation. They stay with us while they
complete therapy or until they are well enough to go home.
·
·

Love, YourFam/ly

Army

Most Commonly Asked Questions About Our Assisted Living Community:

.
Are vehicles permitted?

In Honor of
Cpl. Ralph Durst
1951-1953
ARMY
Korean War

In Honor of Ollie M. Burchett ·
1944-1946

About Wyngate of Gallipolis:
Wyngate of Gallipolis strives to serve residents by providing the high~st quality services in
comfortable surroundings. We offer services that enable seniors to maintain dignity, respect,
independence, and privacy. We foster good relations with family, friends, and the community.
Most of all, we strive to provide quality healthcare while bringing joy and happiness into the
lives of our seniors.

2.
A. Yes. We encourage· residents to bring theic vehicles. We want our residents to maintain their
independence as long as possible.

Stroll throughout our expanded store,
fllkd with specilll gift items, collectibles
and beautiful decorating items for the ·
holidays with items such as:
• Blue Sky (Our Exclusive Line)
·• Cat's Meow • Boyds Bears • Lang

cfatateJ

In Honor of
PFC Wayne Sisson
1944-1945
ARMY
WWII

A Licensed Assisted Living Community

(Jpfln 91ou.Jfl

•

They are grandparents of
(AP) - Celebrity birthday. Country singer Barbara
Jacuelynn, Brad and Brett
Fairchild is 51. Actress Megan
Parker, Ashley Putnam, Eric for the week of Nov. 11-17:
Nov; 11: Author KunVon- Mullally ("Will &amp; Grace') .is
Needs,
Kelley
Needs,
negut Jr. is 79. Comedian 43. Bassist David EllefSon of
Steven Needs, Ricky Hall Jonatlun Winters is 76. Jazz Megadeth is 37.ActressTamala
and his wife Karen, Susan singer-pianist Mo&lt;e Allison is Jones ("The Brothers') is 27.
and her husband . Scott 74. Singer-guitarist Andy Par- Actress Anne Hathaway ("The
Cogar, Larry and Shane tridge of XTC is 48. Singer Princess Diaries") is 19.
Marshall Crenshaw is 4 7.
Nov. 13: Actor Jack Elam is
Hall, and step-grandparent!
Actress Demi Moore is 39. 85. Producer-director-actor
ofJanet Calaway, Anita Cal- Actress Calista Flockhart Garry Marshall is 67. Actor
away Morrisey and her hus- (".t\lly McBeal'l is 37. Actor joe Mantegna is 54. Actress
band Tom, and Nicki Philip McKeon ("Alice") is Sheila Frazier ("Superfly'l is
R ·o ush; and great-grandpar- 37. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio 53. Actress Whoopi Goldberg
is 46. ActreSS Tracy Scoggins is
ents of Taylor, Justin, and is 27.
Nov. 12: Actress Kim 42. Comedian Jimmy Kimmel
M d'
N d
d Ab ' ·1
a 1son ee s, an
1ga1 Hunter is 79. Playwright- ("The Man Show," "Win Ben
and Jarred Cogar.
actor Wallace Shawn is 58. Stein's Money') is 34. Actor
The couple requests the Singer Brian Hyland is 58. Steve Zahn ("Joy Ride,"
Singer Neil Young is 56. "Happy, Texas") is 33.
omission of gifts.

Wyngate of Gallipolis

,.Ghrt.JtmtJ.s QtJ!lJ,.

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Adkins 60th anniversary

TUPPERS PLAINS -Ray S. Hall and Leoma M.
Hauber Hall of Coolville
will be honored by their
children and grandchildren
with an open house reception for their 50th wedding
anniversary on Saturday, 58 p.m., at the old Tuppers
Plains Grade .School.
The Halls were married
Nov. 27, 1951. He is retired
from Marietta Industrial
Enterprises. His wife is a
homemaker.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Hall have
two daughters and a so~m - law, Teresa and Erme
Calaway, and Crystal Allen,
.
·d
a II o f 1iuppers PI ams; an
'rwo sons and daughters-inlaw, David and Kay Hall of
Little Hocking, and Larry

'

Cordtt1//y lnotfes you to af!end a

•

• Suppon children's frirndChildren have to make their ships.
own friends. Parents can't con• Mal&lt;e your J:hild's friends
aol kids' social lives - as welcome in your home .
much as they'd liu to.
• Be a good friendship role
But tlut doesn't mean !"'r- model and teacher.
ents can't help.
• Provide a wide range of
The book "~t Friends, . friendship and group opportuWorst Enemies: Understand- ffiti~.
ing the Social Lives of Chil• Make friends with the P"rdren"· (Ballantine Books, ents of your child's friends (and
$24.95), written by Michael enemies).
Thompson and Catherine
• Empathize with your
O'Neill Crace with Lawtence child's social pain, but keep it
J. Cohen, offeJ:S 10 suggestions in perspective.
for parents to help their chil• Know where your child
dren forge lasting friendships:
stands· in the group. If your
• Don't worry so much. child in trouble socially, step in
Remember tlut you gave your to help. If your child is popular
child a sociable start in life.
or accepted, heJp him or her to
• Recognize the crucial dif.. be a positive moral leader.
ference between friendship Don't act like a middle schooland popularity. Friendship is er younelf.
more important.
• Take the long view.

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BY THE ASSOCtloTED PI!ESS

Fashion: It's time to wear your stars and stripes
NEWYORK (AP) - Stan
and stripes are chic fashion
looks. Red, white and blue is
now ·the must-wear color
combination.
These familiar - and clearly patriotic - styles are a far
cry from the grommet-cov"
ered belts and leather jodhpurs that were touted as the
reason's hottest styles before
Sept. 11. ·
.
But from the fund-raising
flag T-shirts. to beaded 'flagemblazoned gowns, designers
and retailers are using Americana clothes to comfon and
coun customers in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in
New York, Washington and
Pennsylvania.
"On Fifth Avenue (in New
York City), every second per-

lheel •

What parents can do to
foster young friendships

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community C.lendar Is
publahed a a trwe aen-1ce
to IIOflo1ll ollt groups wishIng to m.tlngs
and.,....~. The calendllr Is not clesltned to
prom tit ..._ or fund-nls-

U 'Cim...JJ•

II

FrankE.

Cpl. David L.

Woodall
1942-1945 .
United Stoles Army
World War II, Normandy
Invasion.

Woodall
1968-1970
United States Marine torp
Special forces C.A.P.
VIetnam

Love, Crls, Brandy,
Rachel and family

Love, Crls, Brandy,
Rachel and famll

Joe R. Jeffers
1942-1945
Army MODel 101Stlnf
Revt. WWII

Love,-Your Family

Love, YourFamlly

In Honor of
Lance Corporal
Brandon M. George
2000- Present

U.S.M.C.
Stationed lwakunl, Japan
Love,Dad, Aunt Michele,
Georve

InHonorc&gt;f

In Honor of

In Honor of

S/Sgt.

S/Sgt.

Sgt. Major

Robert D. i&lt;IHle

John J. Jeffers
1942-1945
Air force
WWII

R. Keith Jeffers
1968-1995
Army paratrooper
Vietnam

Love, Your Wife
&amp;Family

Love, Family

1964-1967 VIetnam
Army
1972-1989
Air force

Love, Your Family

..
•

~

In Honor of

In Honor of

Ben Clay
1940-1946
Army • Battle ofthe Bulge
Invasion • WWII

Personnel Senior

Love, Wife Emlstene,
Family, Friends and Edith.

In Honor of

Sergeant Lawrence
''Tom" Wooten

PFC

In Honarof

Lawrence Akers

Jack Jeffers
1945-1951
US Navy

1942-1944
Army Air Corps
World War II

1968-1972
Army
VIetnam

Love, Your Family
Love, YourWifeSharl

.,

'

Love, Family

�!}

Page C6 • jjjlollllllap llhnn •rntinrl

Pomeroy=MiddleportoGallipolls, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sundav. Nov. 11, 2001

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

Remembering Our Fallen Heroes
And Saluting Those Defending Our Nation.

.

... ...

Veterans Day November .11th

We remember those who served with honor and courage, and remember those who gave their lives to defend our fr~u·om.
May we never take for granted the Important contribution these brave men and women haYe made to this great nation .
May we salute those who are now defending ciur great country and wish them well.

.•

The Gallipolis City
School Distrld
wishes to salute
all former
students who
have served in the
United States
Armed Forces
and those who
are presently
serving In various
locations around
the world.

.

''

In Memory of
'

.
..
..
•
•
•

.

Cpl. Ralph M.
Triplett
1969-1970K.I.A.
Army

VIetnam
Love, Family&amp; Friends

In Honor of

· Senior Air Man
Jay L.Swaln
1992-1996
Air Force
Desert Storm
Love, Wife Robin

In Honor of

David H. Zirkle
E4
1960-1964
U.S. Air Force
VIetnam
Love, YourWlfeAnn

In Honor of .

In Honor of

In Honor of

Sgt
·Nathan E. Halfhill
6/98 -Present

PFC nffany L.

SQt. Robert "Bf'

Martine~

9/00- Present

Workman
1997- Current ·

Army

ArmY

Army

Love, Main &amp; Dad Hollhlll

Love, Dad, Mom,
Sarah &amp; Belle

t

••

lnHonorof
Honor

Shelly Smith
Senior Airman
June 93- Aug. 98
Air Force
Haiti

RemoJ. Rocchi

In Honor of

U.S.Anny

Ser9eant
Lewis A. Scott
1944-46

World War II -with the I 041h division In Germany•.
Purple Heart Recipient. Proud to bean .American

Love, TheSkldmoreNieces
PeQQY, Penny &amp; Becky

Love, Mom, Dad, and all
your family

Army

WortdWarll
Love,Your~,Fornlly

Bosnia PeacekeeplnQ
Love, Your Fomlly

•

'

..•

"..
."

'

,,
•

'

1
"lnHonorof

Gary K. Willford

HT2
U.S., Navy 1967-70
Retired Navel
Reserves Jan. 23,00
VIetnam

..
•

Love, Cody campbell
Grandson

Gemma Glrolaml
Case I
1943-1945
Waves

In Memory of

In Honor of

Robert N. Gilmore
1947-.1951

WWII

Korean

Lance Corporal
Joshua Hooten
CurrenHy servlnQ
Marines

Love; Bralher Guido &amp;
easel Family

Army
Love, youroranddauvhter
&amp; DaUQhler

Love, Fomlly
Love, Your Family

In Honor of

S/Sgt. Lyle Hysell
1943-1946
U.S. Army Corp of
EnQineers

.'

'

In Honor of
In Honor of

PFC Thurman L.
Montgomery
1941-45
U.S. Army

WWII
love, Wife Hazel, Son Bill,
· Dauohters, orandchlldren &amp;

WWII

PFC Jason Gill
1999- present day
Army

Chester L. Mayes
Machinist 1st class
Jan. 44- Jan. 46 .
. U.S. Navy
WWII South Padflc

Love,Mom&amp; Dad

In Honor of

Sergeant
Clint Smith
Aprll94- Aug. 97
Army
Haiti

lnHonorof

Captain Kevin
Nicholas
1995- Present
I Amm~ R. Riley, Kansas!

Love, Mom, Dad &amp;
all

Ser9eant
Leslie I. Burnette
1943
Army
WortdWarll
Love, GronddaUQhter
Shetlee

· Love, Your wife Leona
&amp;Fomlly

'

,:

In Honor of

Corporal
HughBearhs
1941-43
Artlllary Army
Phlllplnes
~ove, Your Family

lnHonorof

Cpl.
Kenneth H.
1946-48
Army
Love, Wife Vlrolnla &amp;
Fomlly

In Honor of

TechSgt
William Arnott ·
6/1 0/68 ~ 5/30/80
Air Force
VIetnam

,..,'

..·
..
'

Love, Stefanle

lnHollOrof

Capt. Sidney B.
Edwards (Ret)
1954-77
U.S. Marine Corps
. VIetnam
Love,

CPO Kenneth M.
Cole
1951-1973
U.S. Navy- VIetnam
3 Bronze Stars
2 Purple Hearts
Love, Your

lnHonor.of

Thor Carsey (Jake)
Army
WWII- Staff Sargent
We love you, Dad
Kenny, Louise (Weaz)
Judy Kay

In Honor of

In Honor of

In Honor of

Lance Corporal
Dannie Harbour
1965-68
U,S. Marine Corps
VIetnam

S/Sgt.

Private
Carl E. Nelson
1946-47
U.S Army

Love, Grandson Ryan
In Honor of

Ralph Nelgler, Jr.
Jan. 1943- Dec. 1945
Army

· WWII
Bruce,Kenny,PeQQY
&amp; Grandchildren

In Honor of

In Honor of

Sgt.
Trevor L. Cardone
June 1984- Present
Army

MasterSargeant
. Roger L. Nelson
1981-Stlll ServlnQ
U.S. Air Force

Love, Paul &amp; Jan Cardone,
parents

Love, Your Family

In Honor of

Sp4
Steven Grady
PaulL. Grady
1989- Current
1966-68
(Navy) Army Natlcmal
101 st Alrbourne Army
Guard
VIetnam
Gulf War
Love, Mon &amp; Dad

In Memory of
Pout easel - USN
Gemma easel- Wave
Gino Plerattl- USA
Bruno Pierotti- USA
Jimmy Fontona- AAF
Cort Barsotti- USMC
Bruno CIIICI - USA
nm Sisson -USA
John Strickland- USA
Lyle Hysetl- USA.
Renzo Menchlnl- AAF
From Guido &amp; Fomlly
In Honor of

Ronald R. See
Mayi961Nov. 2001

u.s. Air Force

Love, Brother
Roy H. See and Family

Love, Wife Cathy Grady

Seaman IE
Carroll L. Teaford
1942-45
Navy

S.Sgt.
Charles W. Berry
1966-86
U.S. Army
VIetnam

In Honor of

Staff Sgt. ·
Jason Arnott
6/1 0/92-Present
Air Force
War on Terrorism

T. Sgt. Chester G.
WlgaiJr.
1976-92
U.S. Air Force
Desert Storm

Private
Gayle Salyer
1953-55
U.S. Army

Love, Your Fomlty

Love, Your Wife, Opal
and FAmily

World War II, European
Theater
Love, Your Family

U.S. Army
Korecin

In Honor of

In Memory of

Love, Brother
Roy H. See and Family

Guy E. See

Glenn E.•See
Sept. 1945Jan. 2nd, 1947

Love, YourFGmily

U.S. Army
· Korean
Love, Brother
Roy H. See and Family

U.S. Army
WorldWorll
Love, Brolher
Roy H. See and Family

Love, sister, Opal
andfomlly

In Honor of

VIetnam- Desert Storm

ArmY

S.Sgt. ·
Richard A. Berry
1982-92
United States Air Force
Desert Storm

In Honor of

CteUO;See
Dec. 4th, 1950 Sept. 8th, 195 1

May 11, 1950
Nov. I st, 1952

Love, Sisler, Opal
and family

In Honor of

Love, Wlte Ecllltl, 3eona,
mothtr, family • frltndl

1878-78
Nmy
:atloMCI In Germany
Love, Your family

CarterL.

SSMB 3rd CIGII
1844-48
Navy
WWII
Barbara

,."•'
,.
,.
,.'

.

'"

••,,
•,.
•

'
'

,,

S. Sgt
CalvinW. Waugh
1942-1946

Army • Navy • Alrforce •
NaUonal Guard • V!Mnam
War • Honduru

Debora PenlnQtr
Goodland

""

,.

Petty Officer Ill
Sgt. Ronnie Waugh
1970-1974 Navy
1975-1997 Army

UJ65-87

,.""

•'
•
·'

In Honor of

Purple Heart, Tank Driver
Love, Fomlly • Grandklda Pa~W•. V1r11n1a Jam•, Donnie

Donald 0. Doles

"

In Memory of

Love, Mom &amp; Dad

Love, Your Fomlly

Corporal Garland
Omar Sunders
1841-45
Army
WWII

,,,

In Honor of

WWII

Sp4
Kevin L. Grady
1992-95 (Duty Dates)
Army National Guard
3664th

WWII

Bill Williamson
1963-67
Navy
Vlttnam
Lovt, Dauohter Jantt

In Honor of

''

In Honor of

In Honor of

''W.I.A"

Love, Wife Eileen Clart

1!::::::;:=====

Love, Your Fomlly
In Honor of

Harry kenneth Clark
1945-46 1950-53
Army
WWII- Korean

PFC
Clyde E. (Shorty)
Bennett
1841-45
ArrnyWWII POW .

lnHonor

Lance Cpl.
· Brandon George
Sept. 2000 - Present
Marines- Japan
Love, Grandma
Karen Miller

In Honor of

Sp 4 Robin D,l=lc•'
1967-70
Army
VIetnam

6

Love, Sharon &amp; Brad

•1

Private First Class
lanSmlth
March2001Marlnes
Love, Mom, Dad
and Family

In Honor of

In Honor of

Harlan T. Fllllnoer
Private
3/30/54-1/21/56
U.S. Marine Corps
at Peace Time
Love, Dauohter

In Honor of

Sc;,t. James R. (Bob)
Cochran, Sr.
1944-75
Air Force/Army

WWII

Seroeant Leslie
Beck
1944-46
Army Field Artillery

WW'I

Love, YourWife&amp;Famlly

Love, Grandson Ryon
...
'

In Memory of

,.

In Honor of

In Honor of

Ronald R. See
May1961Nov. 2001

PFCishmael
Argabright
Jan.1943-Nov.1945

",,., .

U.S. Army
WortdWorll

',.

u.s. Air Force

Love, Brother
Roy H. See and Family

,,.
'I

In Honor of

In Honor of
•,,

'

Love, Wife June
Children: Gene, Velma,
Jud &amp;Jiaula

In Honor of

Sergeant
Shane Smith
Jan. 92- Nov. 99
Army
Samolla, Haiti

SM/GGT
James A. Barcus
1954-89
U.S. Air Force

Love, Mom, Dad &amp; Family

Veterans Day Is a time to honor all those who have
unselfishly served in our armed forces, risking' so much
to preserve our nation's high ideals and hopes for the
future. To those dedicated servicemen and women,
we say, 'Thank You."

In Honor of

Corporal
Dwitt L. Roberts
1941-1945

Ranford E. Cox
1945-1947

..

Army .
World War II
Love, Your Family

I Anttv- Public Affairs Officer
Servlno In Soraje¥o,
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Love, Mom
Love, YourWife&amp;Famlly

In Honor of

PFC.

Army
WWII
,

Captain
Jeffrey Settle
1991 - present

In Honor of

Walter Allie GM 3/C
1943-46
U.S. Navy

WWII

Love, Gary, Jane Ann,

Love, Your Family

In Honor of

In Honor of

TechS
James W. "Bill"
Fowler
1943- 1946

In Honor of

PFC.
Ernest R. Thlvener
3/17/44-12/17/44

A.F.C
Ralph Mitchell
Aug. '51- Aug. '55

Army
World War II

Love, YourFam/ly
Love, YourFam/ly

•

In Honor of

Vernard Fallon
Technician 5 77th lnf.
1942-45
Army
WWII South Pacific

Army Infantry
WW2, Killed In battle In
Germony
Love, Wife
and Doughlers

Air Force
Korean
Love, Wife, RosaiH

Lance Corporal
Brandon M. GSloraeJ
2000- Present
U.S. Marine Corps
sta~loned In Japan
Love, Jeff, Mom &amp; Derrick
In Honor of

Staff Sgt.
George "Buster''
Sprague
1941-1947
U.S. Army
WortdWarll
Love, Nephew
Jim Adams

�SUndlly, Nov. 11, 2001

ri,WV

ELVIS HI PERSONATOR- Dwi8)1t ICenhower of Pomeroy sits
on a downtown bench while singing a variety of EMs Presley
songs to passing pedestrians. Icenhower's ability to mimic
Presley's voice and moves has won him both lOcal and national acclaim as one of the premier EMs impersonatOIS on the
scene t.oday. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Elvis
. . . . . . . . (1

Voldemort is certainly
part of the appeal. But
Borah says she has cautioned
•ome agoinst reading the
fourth Potter book. whith is
cbrUr than its predecesson.
"It just hits a litde too
claie to home," she says,
notin_g thot some tharacten
are ltilled.
That warning isn't deterring Natalie Quick. a_ 23year-old Seatde reSident
h bou gh tsomeof the
wo
books last month and read
two and a half of them in
just five days.
She says there·s no comparing reality with Harry's
life at the Hogwarts School
of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
"Sept. 11th makes me think
of Sept. 11th," Quick says.
"Not Harry Potter."
Escaping the h~~ron , of

ESCAPIIQ- Ruth Sexton reads J.K. Rowt~'s "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" aboard the washington
Metro In Silver Spring, Md. Sexton began reading Potter's
adllenblres as an escape from the evil of the Sept 11 terrorist attacks. (APJ
.

the ~al world has often
been especially difficult for
thaie dooest to the attacks.
Harrison Ascn. a 9-year-old
fiom Manhattan, has been
collecting pennies 'to contribute to victims• families.
He also went with his parents to poy respects at a fire
station near their home thot
lost oeveral firefighten in the
World Trade Center col-

b pse.
Mosdy, though, his parents
have been trying to shield
Harri•on _ who still likes
. to weJ the glasses fiom his
H
p
H
arry
otter
a oween
costume - fiom as much
stress as they can.

n

j

adJ, Pages D2- 7

-

..

SUndllf, Nave..arer 11, 2001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
ink""'

Tltis cltart shows how local s/Oeb of
per;(ormM /an wetk.
F.lll:h ""':. closingfigum tw prvvidal by Ad.- of Gallipolis.

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34.71

35.41

35.79

35.99

35.115

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7. .

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18.99

20.34

19.62

19.85

19.31

2.40

2.43

2.36

9.37

9.65

9.35

9.35

...

14.87

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16.10

14.73

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Will-Milt, 2145E&amp;stem Alia, (!.tO) «1-1066
'Nai-Ma't, 11 WIIIMarUn., (J)a) 265{iD)
Cllls$lc PlaD, Q E. tu'ol. {7~288-0016
~ 100 INIIIt.Wt Ct., (740} 286-6964
wai-Mirt, 520 N. i!fterson St, (n) 615-SDJ

MOI . .ItiMn

camm.. 6518 Mall"'·.
13041983-2355

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14 SWJb!rl Co..rt Pma. C1l!strut lkl..
(])4) 598-2450
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oo.tJ645-mo

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IKXl FoXCroft Ave., (:114) 263-8755

800 Fomofl:
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- 263-90115
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Millcrd TelelilCrle. 10717 S.R 139,

(74018:10-2151

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Hiltql c:emer, 2736 Sdo!o lt., (740) J55.(X)58
Pile PIIZI, 1233 SUIIud ~. f3CMl487-3855
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(304) 255-7737
P1:e C0111tY PeM1.72QW. Enmlttlw.,
(7401 947-7101

CHARTINI - Dave Nibert of the Mason County Public Service District checks up on one of the recorders uSed at the
denltroflcatlon plant that details the activities of w11ter pumps In the area. (Pam Williamson photo)

~

... County finds nitrate levels

+

6.58

6.114

6.75

6.61

6.50

Klager
Landa End

24.27

24.10

14.211

24.14

114.24.,

33.94

35.74

4~.15

42.90

44.115

11,11

12.40

1:1$

12.1111

1$.012'

17.92

17.41

BY PAM WIWAMION .
TIMES.SENTINEL STAfF

17.66

17.95

17.92

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Anuzingly enough, thousonds of residents in M3Son County are making
use of 3 million-dollar device every
single day ond they don't even know
it.
Mason County Public Service District rec~ntly began operating a denitrofication plant built at Lilin to
reduce nitrate levels in almost 3,000
residents' drinking water.
"The aquifer in that area has high
nitrogen nitrate levels. Oth~r than
that, the water was extremely good,"
said Dave Nibert of the PSD.
The Lakin facility utilizes 3 massive
amount of water trapped in an underlying bed of sand, gravel and rock. The
water does not come from the Ohio

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6.50

8.50

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53.83

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al.11

'1:1.111

28.04

'1:1.18

12.95

13

. 13.66

13.30

13.83

The basics of
convertible funds
like characteristics that the
managers hope will allow it to
During times of market outshine the morket's perforuncertointy, convertible funds mance during good years ond
can make sense. Not ouly do allow it not to fall not quite as
they typically provide attractive f3r during down markets.
income, but the equity-sensiA look at the fund's perfortive ones give investors an addi- mance this year and in its
tional boost: upside potential.
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Chris Wiles is the president
of its portfolio is made up of a
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mandatory preferred stocks (37 helm since it began in Novempercenti. As a result, the fund ber · 1997. Convertible securiwill have some stock-marketPIMM-filnds,DI
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Classifi~d

-., t

really distinguish between a
good or bad impersonator,"

would listen to Presley's music
and wotch his movies on television.
t"
"My mother is 3 huge Elvis ge.
Icenhower
said he is anxfan and his music was always
pbying in our home." he said. iously awaiting the world
"Elvis has thiS charisma that competition in Las Vegas, not
no one else has ever come fur the prize money, but for
close to emubting, and I sup- the opportunity to perform
pose l picked up on this when with the original members of
I was younger;• he said. "I the Jordanaires, Elvis' back-up
used to sit. in my room for singers.
"To perform with the Jorhoun listening to his records."
However, it would be fomi- danaires is a dream come true.
ly reunions that eventually Eve~ if l don't win, the
brought out the spirit of Elvis chance to sing with these
musical legends is a major
in Icenhower.
"When I was 5 years old, accomplishment;' he said.
"Don't get me wrong, I'd
my great-aunt had this cane
which resembled a micro- love to win the prize money,
phone. So, during family get- too. I would probably invest it
togetllers, I would get up in in new equipment that could
front of them with this cane handle much larger venues,
and imitote Elvis singing," like 3uditoriums 3nd· civic
centers."
IcenhoWer said.
Icenhower's future plans
"You could definitely soy .
·
·b·1·
f
h
or!
rfi0
es laid mclude the poSSI 1 1ty .o
otouring with one of m3ny
those e Y ~e ~(,c
tfue ~bun whor , hor kmdy large tribute shows that travel
ha
ture tn ute s ow, eJO e .
't . until across the country or per ps
1 .call .t
rom
~ ~asn
.
a permanent job in Las Vegas.
Icenhower s JUmor year m
"I really enjoy performing
high school th3t he realized , .
, h
.
bs
.
uld
b
tnbute
theater,
owever,
his ElVIS o esSlon co
ea
there ore numerous opportulucrative career.
nities in Las Vegas for an Elvis
"Toney Dingess, director of
impersomtor;• he said. 'Tll
the Meigs Marauder Marchw:tit till after the world coming Band, knew I was an Elvis
petition and then weigh my
fan and asked ifl would sing a
options."
few ofhis son&amp;\ in their annuDespite
the
reh3shed
al variety show;' he said.
images of 3 bloated, drug
"I agreed to do so and went
3ddicted crooner that society
about learning the material. I
likes to embrace, Icenhower
did the show and was
said he prefers to portray Elvis
astounded by the crowd's in 3 positive manner:
reaction," Icenhower said. "So,
"So many impersonators
I started doing shows around over exaggente Elvis' 3ppearthe area and the money start- ance in their routines with
ed coming in.
the tight, cheesy jumpsuits,
"l guess it kind of snow- big sungl3sses and karate
balled from there:'
chops. l prefer to concentrate
Icenhower recendy won on the good memories," he
the tide of the Eastern United said.
States' Best Elvis Imperson"I'll study his moves over
ator during the Foothills Fall and over for hours on end just
Festival in Marysville, Tenn. to get it perfect and I believe
He qualified for the competi- \the f3ns appreciate the effort
tion after taking top honors in because I've h3d people 'come
the "Search for Elvis" contest, up to me after a show, crying,
which was staged in Septem- saying my performance has
ber at the Sternwheel Regat- brought back special memota in Charleston, W.Va.
ries fo~ them.
Icenhower performed in
"It's a good feeling and it
front of 6,000 Elvis fans dur- makes me more determined
ing the festivar and was to give the 3udience all I
judged by a man and ~is wife have." ·
who
were
personally
Regardless of Icenhower's
acquainted with the late passion for impersonating
entertainer and another Presiey, he said once he steps
woman who had attended · off the stage, he is DWight,
many of Presley's concerts not Elvis.
over the years.
"Some impersonators c3rry
For his efforts, Icenhower the persona of Elvis home
received $1,000, a $400 gift with them. I don't like to do
certificate toward a jumpsuit that. I don't say 'have mercy'
from the clothing company or 'thank you very much'
where Elvis had his outfits when I'm at the grocery
made, and an all-expense paid store. It's disrespecrful and it
trip to Las Vegas, Nev., where looks silly.
"And I don't like fried
he'll compete in January
against 50 award-winning peanut butter and ban3na
Elvis impersonators for the s3ndwiches either. I tried it
"World's Best Elvis" title.
once 3nd I'll never eat it
If he wins, Icenhower will agam.
"Overall, I try to be as probe presented with the world
fessional 3S possible when
title and $50,000.
"It was such a rush per- impersonating Elvis Presley. I
forming in front of so many feel he deserves the respect. In
die-hard Elvis fans and I'm the U.S.'s history, there has
truly honored· to have won in been 43 presidents ... but only
·
Tennessee because they can one king."

Inside:

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIAT10N

Have a business news item?
Give us a call at (740) 446-1341. ext. l:S
, --------------~----------------~~--------~

lower in Lakin area water

River.
High nitrate levels hove only been
A number of agencies examined the found dangerous to children under six
3quifer area, but could not find an months, causing methemoglobinemia,
exact source for the rise in nitrate lev- or "blue b3by syndrome;• 3nd persons
els so the water was requiJ,"ed to 'qe with immuno deficiency, but public
··· treated before being distributed.
, safety is not something the PSD takes
The new denitrofication plant effec- lightly.
"Our job is to supply safe drinking
tively removes b3cteri3 with chlorine,
filters nitrates using a saline ·solution woter and we take it very seriously:•
and pumps woter to a central reservoir Nibert said. "It's our job and we're
before it is dispersed to smaller local going to do it."
The Safe Water Drinking Act was
pumps and residences .
"It's very similar, if not exactly like a passed by Congress in 1974, focusing
water softener, except the resin is such . on providing safe water at the top, but
th3t it selects the nitrogen ions," Nib- it was amended in 1996 to include
items such as annual consumer confiert said.
dence
reports, cost-benefit analysis,
Nitrates are not visible to the naked
eye, but in those with weok immune strengthening microbial contaminants
systems, high levels of them can cause and disinfection byproducts protecthe blood to h3ve difficulty delivering tion, and source water assessment prooxygen in the body, Nibert explained.
. Please- Lakin. Dl

Time for fireplace,
chimney maintenance
POMEROY - Cooler
weather hos begun and
homeowners are starting
to use wood stoves ond
fireplaces. H3ve you had
your home chimneys and
flues checked ond cleaned
out?
Household fires may
easily be started 3s creosote
and pitch from previous
year's fires are igoited
within chimneys. Birds,
squirrels and mice nesting
material may block proper
venting and catch on fire.
Take the time to prevent a
household fire, check out
the chimney ventilation
before you use your fireplace or wood stove.
Have you stocked up on
your firewood needs for
the winter season? Cooler
temperatures m3ke a
.cheery fire in the hearth or
wood sto"" a delightful
place to be around.
Unfortunately, unw3nted cre3tures moy be corried into your home on
thot lood of firewood used
to stoke the fire. Insects
md spiders find a stack of
firewood on ideal place to
hibernate through the cold
1
se3Son. Pests include: bark
beetles, Carpenter ants,
woods ,
Pennsylvania
roaches, grubs, borer beetles, 3nd the occasional spider or snake.
Follow these helpful rips

Hal
Kneen

to keep the creatures at
bay.
Wear gloves when carrying firewood. Bring only
enough firewood into the
house to be burned immediately. Firewood .stored
inside the home over 3n
hour or so may warm up
enough for the insects to
emerge from within or
under the . bark and start
their spring activities early.
Do not store firewood in
heated garage or bosement
fur the same reasons.
During the summer
months, store firewood
outdoors in an open orea,
as far awoy from the house
35 practical, to keep out
insects, dirt and debris .
from your home. Stack
firewood off the ground to ·
elimin3te wood rot ond
pest problems. Never stack
. firewood against the house
as wood loving insects
then have direct access to
your home.
Place a nin resistant

Phae- KAHn, Dl

More on growing
dairy heifers
GALLIPOLIS - For the
second in a series of 3rtides
regarding dairy heifer development, I promised local
readers a cose study. As discussed in previous articles,
growing dairy heifers professionally hos tremendous
potential for livestock producers in this area. The primary obstocle however,. is
securing a contract with a
dairy whose needs match
the growers facilities and
capacity to grow the heifers.
An association of interested and potential heifer
growers W3S recently formed
in the Burley Belt. The organizational structure and
management influence of
this associ3tion provides
credibility to livestock producers who are interested in
securing contracts with
dairies.
In this cose, the 3Ssoci3tion directors h3ve committed to negotiatin g with large
and mid- sized dairies on
behalf of their association
members. It is the intent of
the directors to match the
needs of cooperating dairies
to the skills ond f3cilities
offered by its members. This
allows paired growers and
cooperators to maintain .
individual contracts that may
differ from other dairies and
heifer growers within the

\j

I

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

same associ3tion.
One option intended for
implement3tion is for the
assoCiation to identify the
dairy, arrange transport3tion, ·
and coordinate the pick-up
of3-400 pound heifers from
the cooperating dairy and
deliver them to the corresponding growing farm.
The heifers may stoy at the
growing farm until they are
7 months pregoant, 3t which
time they will be shipped
back to the original d3iry.
During their development months, contracts will
specify vaccination schedules and parasite control
requirements, as well as
nutritional requirements and
appropriate growth 1 rates.
Depending on the requirements of the dairy 3nd the
skills of the grower, the
heifers may be bred either
by natural service or by artificial insemination.

PIM18 -lyril... Dl

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• Page 02 • iounbap IJtmrf·iorntmrl

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•- - - - - - - -

Happy Ad

oallon lklllo. Sind ruumo plan. Wt aro pan of a largo
to Eduoaro P.O). Box 383. oompanv that o"ors "col·
Pt. Ptoolllll.
25550
lont oaroor Odvancomont
oppo~un~IH. For lntorvlow
Aroadla Nursing Contor · oonoldorallon und 1 cover
11 now aooeptlng tpplloa· 10n 11 111
h
llono for Pull limo RN'o ond
or
ng uo w Y yo""ro
LPN't lor Midnight lhl~ and 1111 paroon wo oro looking
STNA'o aftomoon poolllona, lor along wllh your ruume
Pull and Po" limo. Wo ollor to Paul Btlrlcor, Clroulallon
"
Dlrootor al Ohio Yalloy Pub·
~&lt;collanl oonollto !hal In· llohlng eo., 625 Thltd Avo..
oludo H11llh inouranoo, Clalllpollo, Ohio 415e31.
40H&lt;, Llle ln1uranct, oompatiliVI Wlgll ond oppo~u· - - - - - - - nilloo for odvanoomont. If Ccok llx Ptrolan Pilaf, Ka·
you art a team pll~tr who bOObl, Dtlllrtl. Trlln
ocoko to lllc lood and ovtr·
onjo yo WO rielng wiIh Ih1 ot d• 101 fOOd prop. Mu' II Ull
eriy, 1ppl~ In perton be·
twun 84 or oall J&lt;athryn IIOvtl, gnllo, ovono, kftohon
UIIMIIII. 2 YHr txp. At·
SomorvIll1 ,D. 0 .N.
Arcadia Nuralng Center
CIU 1ttd. 40 hour work wnk.
Eall Main Stroot
$11.eo/ hour. Galllpollo. OH.
Coolville, Oh
CcrttaC1 Efmaoll. (7401258·
740!!7·3158
8072

wv

eoe

\

maintenance
workers,
1 d
exper ence
trreenhoule
•
managers and
workers needed.
Pay b8 1 d
e on
experience.
'IBkl
ng
applications
M Frl
on· .

Call

(740) 843·1249
ONLY OVALIFIED

PEOPLE NEED
APPLY!

HEI.PWANJm

0

1 1

zlce

Pleaae Include 8 resume
wllh ap~lcation. DeadiiMis
N
15
ovem r
· · e are an
Equ~ Opportunity EITII]byer
and Provider.

RNsiLPNs-PRN-~ou choose

the days you wish 10 woof&lt;.
edl Ho
H 1• A
m
•
me 88 lrr gancy
18
aggressive!~ growing and
In need of Uald staff. Apply
to Pete Sommer, 430 2nd
Ave., P.O Box 987, GatllpoPosition Announcement
lis, OH 45631. 800.481PART TIME YOUTH EM· 6334
PLOVMENT SERVICE AC·
TIVJnES CONSULTANT
Posting Date: November
7,2001 .
The Univeraily of Rio
Grande, through the Crosa
Help Wanted
Roads Program ta laking
tical'
1
rt 1

w

..

~:lh E~r;oyo~:t S~~e

Activities Consultant.
This 16 hour per weak
grant
funded posiUon will w-.._
"""
with Y.E.S. casa manager In
Meigs County to conduct
supportgroups;OJganlze,
and Implement field trlma
..srd ~~r dlheulles as aS·Ica I
1 gn
01
econom I Y
vulnerable youth ol Meigs
County.
Oualillcallons for the posttlon Include 8 BacheiOtS or
Associate Degree In Soc£&amp;!
Workorrelatedfleld.
Preference will be given tc those
with previous e~eperience
working with young adults.
All caiiOo'dalesshould submil a current -sumo, in·

'"

eluding lhe names and addresses of lhree references
bel
lh d dll
IN
ore 8 ea ne 0 ovember 20, 2001to: Phyllis
Mason, SPHA, Director of
Human Resouocos, Unlver·
slty of Rio Grande, PO Bo•
500, Rio Grande, OH 45674
e-mail: pmasonOrio.adu
fax: (740)245-4909. EEOI
~AA~E!!CI!lfl~l~oyl!e:;r._ _ __
POSTAL JOBS Up to
$18.35/hour. Hiring for
2001/2002. Paid training.
Full Senellls. No experience
required. Toll free 7:30am11 pmCST 1-888· 726-9083
x1705.

Would you like to
help us fill
America's Food
Banks?
Would you like to
help save lives
through further
Diabetes and
Arthritis research?

0

11"

wv.

co'

cou.

116

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11

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Ha.rWANJm

FAST GROWING
Noaded RN to covor atta'l Pt. PIMIInl Children'•
NESS NEEDS CASHIERS ol. absence to servlca ap. VIII- SubstHu1e • Must bo
&amp; COOKS, PART TIME, proximately 175 children In a High School graduate or
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS, 8 pteachoola In Athens GED accepted. Pnw. Exp.
SEND RESUME TO: ntE COunty. Applicanta must be with prasdlool children preDAILY SENnNEL, PO willing to have a criminal Jarred. Must 1&gt;o 1B yaors of
BOX 721-01, POMEROY, background check. Outlea age. Send reaume to F'er·
Ott 45768.
Include medical tracking, vt- IONll Supervl10r River Vallion and hearing screens, ley CDS, 805
St., t215,
FULL TlME RN POSITION. growth and developmenr Huntington,
25701
Scenic Hilla Nursing Canter charting and teaching about
fo accepting applications lor hoallh and salely to both RN Supervla'6r (FT) coordl·
a full time AN. 7 to 3 and 3 1:hildren and adutta. Excel· naUon-aupervlalon patient
to 11 shlfta. Great Benefit&amp;, lent camputer and organlza· care. licensed In OH and
Experience Pay, and mora lion skills aa well as reliable
Must have P.P.S. ex·
than competitive Wagnl transportation are a must. perience and familiar with
Call
Scenic
Hills
at Schedule must be flexlbls medicare
and
JCAHO
(740)446·7150 or stop bv with both morning and aftor· guidelines for nome health.
and fill out and appNcation. noon hours required. Work Management e~eper1ence of
GROWING
BUSINESS hload Is approxthlmatpely 60 clinical ataft a must •eon.
ours a mon ·
ay Is tact Pete Sommer Medl
NEEDS HELPI Work-from- $20.00 per hour with no Home Health 43 2nd
Home. Maii-Order/E-COm- benefits. Contact Sally Ave PO 98•7 G 111 11 ·
merce. $522+/week PT Hocking Public Preschool
·• · ·
' a po 8
34
$1000-$4000/woek FT.
Coordln~tor at The Athens· ~~II ~~:riipaseoo-ka 4ge81 nc·63ud
www.happyda~s123.com 1· Mel
Ed ' tlonal Se
•
888-625-9742.
Can't: sou.rRl hi nd
lng haaHh Insurance and
nua ~ulte 1o~. a Athe~~ 401 (k) Included.

wwwCUhOnTheTable
. tara from home. Full or part·
.cam time. Noexper!enceneceawwwhpnmedcom
sary. Easy1 Arrt houral Call
•
STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Have tun mooting otlglble Rick PNrson Auction Com· SSSSSWEEKLVI Stay-at· U.S. Digestl-617-520-8071 Oomlno'l Pizza or Point
Processing 24 hour recording.
Pleasant now hiring Full·
ling... In your aru. Toll· pany, full time auctioneer, Home
complete aucllon llrvlce. HUOIFHA Mortgage AeTime &amp; Part-Time ufe clriv·
!reo 1-800-AOMANCE, ext.
1 · No Experience Re· ARE YOU EARNING What ers. CompeJitlve Pay &amp;
UCensect t6e,Ohlo &amp; West
9735
Virljnla. 304·773-5785 Or QUired. FREE Information You're Worth?!? Need Help flexible Schedule Apply In Help wanled caring for the
SWF oaeka Sugar Daddy 304-n:l-5447.
Caii1·B00 · 50 1·8832 lmmediatetvll
$500· pe,..., 420VIand Strset. Pt. elderly, Daost Group Home,
ss. sand photo and inlor· ...,.,_,..-..,._,..----exl.1300
$1,500/wk PT,
$2000· Pt.
now paving minimum wage,
matlon ro POB 103, Lang&amp;· Mebane Antique Auction www.projectrefund.com
$7000/wk FTt Mallorder
.
new '!!'Jitts: t1J.m·3pm, ?am.
ville, OH 45741.
GaUery. Pre1ents Quality $lOOO's WEEK' 'Y POSSI Business Full Tralrilng EARN $25,000-$50,000/yr, s'pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm:::::::..::'--:::'--:-'-..,--- Antique Auction MEBANE, BLEI Processthg Mail
Free bklet. 1-888-932: Medical insurance Billing, 7am, call740-992-5023.
Why walt? Start meeting NC. No Reserve, No Buyers
a e
e
7
9 Needed Immediately! Home
OhkJ singles tonight, call ron Premium. Monday, Novem· Home! No Experience Nee· wwwthrlveondr8amscom
Computer Needed. FREE· HOLIDAY
CASHit
free 1-800~766-2623 ext ber 19th 4pm. Ear1~ pre· easaryl Free Details! Call 1·
·
·
Website 1_800 _291 •4683 $40KI$70K year potential!
1621 .
Ylew; November 181114•9pm 61)0.755-2027 (24hrs)
ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Dept. tiOS
·
Proceas Medlcoi·Cialms. No
&amp; November 19th Ham. s1soo A MONTH PART· Crafts,
Toys,
Jewelry,
Experience needed . Full&gt;-~-~·~-- · I ALL ITEMS ARE FRESH TIME, $4, 500 .$7,200 full Wood,
_Sewing, Earn Extra Cash For The Tr~lnlng. Computer At;t·
l'IJ"lMA)m...I!Mr.l"tJ;,
TO THE MARKET.
Ume. WORK IN HOME In· Typlng ... Great Pay! CALL 1· Holidays &amp; Bayondl $300- qu~rect
1-888-314-1033
· - - - - - - · Civil War and PoiHical !rom
lienal Com
800·795·03!0 E•l- 201 S9001mo
PTIFT
Free 0ept.301
·and Ohio Several per· ~mapervl
, SOtS and~~aniS". t24hra)
lni9/Full Training. 1-888Disney Vacation. 7 days, 6 aonal item ; A Stanba
81EHl894
Homtworkera Needed ·•
1
nlgtlts 0 Ramada. Good tor - - - ·
theo
F 1T)' Tralnltig. FREE Booklet
AttenUon Work From Home. www.simplacashblz.com
$635 weekly processing
1
1
59
0
1 year. Sacrifice $199.00 ' "..,.,.....,..
· ·
1·800·892-7485/Rich- $500- $2500 month PT
mall
(614)896-2730
Ohio VoluntHr lnflntry In· esYouOeserve.com
$3000· $7000 month FT: EASY WORKI EXCELLENT Easyl No experience need·
: - : - - : - - - - : - - - - eluding COV photo. kl uni· ATIENTIONI W k F
Free Booklet
PAY! Assemble products at ed.
Henderson Storage Rentals form, CDV of his Wife, A•
or
rom
www.successvision.net
home. Cell Toll Free
Call1·800·490-9450 24 hrs.
hu-4 storage unitl avalla· union badges from Galiipo- ~ U~a~~~rWJ::~:
{800)995-7365
t-800-467·5566 Ext. 12170
ble now. (304}875•2900
lit 1698, Meigs COunty C811 Now·. 8n·283 ••og
www.homejobs.comt12170 LPN'sl AN's needed lor Pe~.,-'-:.:...::..:...::..:,c:...:c:.:..:._ 1887, 15th. Forty Rounds
"OQ
ATTENTION! WORK FROM
dialrlc home care cases In
Middle Age Professional Army Corps, GAR Pomero~. www.beabeliever.com
HOME! $500/$1500 rna EASY WORK! EXCELLENT the Southeast Vinton Coun·
OWM looking for Prolesslo- Oh~o. 1861 Veteran 1886
Part-Time. $25001$5000 rna PAY I Assemble Products. ty, Pomero~ and Racine
Sronze Star with Flag and
SActlons$·$$Bring$$·
FuiHima. Great for Moms! Call Toll Free 1·800·467· Areas. lmmedi 11 1e Employ·
I
WF
30
50
A
d
na
•
• · espon
"~
wnh tetter and picture to Eagle, Honorabte Discharge
$$$Cash$$$
Free Info. 886-628-RICH.
5566 Ext. 11577
ment Available. LPN's $16
EB7 200 Main Street, Point 1861·1885 present~ by the
As Easy as ABC! 2 week www.SmartWork4U.com
Full time Waitress Need d par hour! AN's $17 p~r
Pleasant,
25550
State of West VIrginia with
COL Training- Great Pay
. 9 · hour. ShlfV Weekend Shift
~==.;.:.;~=-- ribbon, 1899 soldiers Reun- And Benefits. Training and ATTENTION I
Apply In P.erson. Hohday Differential Offered. Please
November 11·24, 2001
ion, Pomeroy, Ohio, Rock
Placement Available
WORK FROM HOME 1
Inn· Gallipolis.
Call Primary Care Nursing
NO Trespassing or Hunting Springs Fire Grounds 1900,
No E~eperlence Necessary INTERNATIONAL COMPA· Good Money! Weekly! Proc- Service at (800)518·2273.
of any kind on the Raymond very rare American EncousCALL NOWI
NY RAPIDLY EXPANDING esslng
Mall I
Free Ask for Phyllis.
Smith Farm.
tic Tiling Co. Aanublfcan
1-888·209.Q6H
$ 1ooo s~"O TIFT
S
Co
-..
• 'VVVfiVI P
suppllesi ..Postagei . . BO- McClure's Restaurant now
'
AET1REO LONGABERGER tate
nvention 1895, Za·
•It Qualified
FREE
BOOKLET/WILL NUSESI OET~ILS : ·RUSH hiring all 3 loCations,' full or
'
Reasonable prices. Attar· nuvllle, Ohio. Republican
SAn'ENnON$
TRAIN HI00-005·9834
LONG SASE . Applebee, part-lime, pick up apP.Iicanoons (304)675-4172 No College League button, and WOO: From Home. Eam up www.2tST·CENTUAYHO· Dept . .ACG 1749, Montgo· lion at localion &amp; bring back
answer leave I
other political buttons, Ca to $1500-$70001 month. MEBIZ.COM
meryvllle, PA 18936-0749
belween
9:30am
&amp;
T1
1000. ,. nd •• S t
·
. 1890 Chicago Pollee Board p
ol
LOC imp 0
Is
art
mel Full Time. ATIENTION:
WORK Govern-! Jo: m, mo a~ urru a ·
r veman
..... ,
d8
GIVEAWAY
badge
(8001329·4498 lor free FROM HOME: Mail Order $11.00·$33.00 per hour po·u-r:::,
Yc_·_ _ _ _ _ _
~-------.,.1 OTHER ANTIQUES
boc:*let.
Busi~ess. Need Help im· tentia~. Paid Tral~lng/Full - Mechaojcs &amp; Machinisls
.,
Et~nt
fumllure, line an.
modoately $522+/w'~ PT Bene!1Is F0 r mo 1nl
---·-·-·... _.
•••ACCESS TO A
re erma- Accepling applications lor ·
•
2 Cats, Mala, 3 years. neu- fine china, character flgur- PUTER?
PUT IT
$1~·$4000/week FT. Full lion call 1-888-674·9150 mechanics &amp; machinists for
tared, ahota up to date. Fe- lnea, crystal and other WORK! $25JHA·S75/HR. Training
Free Booklet. ext. 3234
dayfevenlng shifts. Heavy
male, 1 112 years, spayed, glau, ware, sterling and sttwww freedomdteamlng com
shots
to da 1740
rpt t 50
PTIFT FREE INFO. 888· soo-4se·?7BI
'
GOVERNMENT
JOBS. ~uly equlpmenlexpenenco
up
te.
)388- ve a a,
year collection 867-4 184
Wildlife/Postal ••n~ 0 year. a plus. Benefits lnclu.de
8201
of miniature cup and sau·
"'""""
health d t 1
ti
d
,.--,--- - - - cere,
pottery, tapestries, www.JMH.omeBiz.com
ATTENTION: WORK FROM Paid Training &amp; Full Bene' en a , vaca on an
• Free kittens to good home. loads of other quality anti· ••ATIENTION"• Work From HOME $500·$2,500/mo FT tits. Call TOLL·FAEE for In· 401 (k) P,lan. The Olcklrson
ques and collectables. A Home! $500·$.2, 500Imo. PT $3,000·$7,000/mo FT Free fo. SUn·Frl. 9am-10pm/EST. Corporallon, P.O. Boll 750,
(740)448-7730
FT F
Booklet.
1·888-3.29•2114 x1.203
~~7n,f 52 71; phone
'-.;.:.....;......;;.;;..._ _ _ very Important auction of a $3 000$7 000/
Free ~ter.ed mate ahep- local family !fl the Ohio and B ' o.
kmo.i
e r~ www.2attalndreams.com
Govamment Postal Jobs
m~~~lu= ~ Kanawha RlvorValley.
www.lmpresslvellfe .com (800 )949 · 4561
Up To $18.35/Hr.
MEDICAL/DENTAL BILL·
Friendiy; G 'at Compa
DIRECTIONS: From Char- (800) 701-8689
AVON! All Areas! To Bu~ or Hiring tor 2001102
lNG COMPANY has lmme• re
n
teston, WV 4 112 houra, 1-n .
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Benefits/Pension
dlate Openings for People
7
( 40)367·5033
South 10 1-74 Corridor South "'"OOVT POSTAL JOBS** 575. 1429.
to Process Claims. $151•888 •726. 9083 Ext. 2000
Good Watch Dog. Part Box· to l-40 east to Exit 153, Me- To 18.351hour. Free Call
·
CST
$45/hr. Potential. Will train.
7 30a 11 00
er, Very Smart, Needs ener· bane, 119 North to Hwy 70 for Appllcatlon/Examfnalion BUSINESS PROFESSIO· :
m- : pm
PC Required. Call Now! 7
gefic person to care lot him East 314 mne on left. AIR· Information. Federal Hire, NALS, We Naed Your GROWING
BUSINESS Days 1-800·935·3971 Ext
(740)448--1692
. PORTS: Raleigh/Durham Full Benefits 1·800·842· Skills! 2t Yr. Old lnt'l Com- NEEDS HELP! . Work from :::*2:::1.::9_ _ _.:__ __
8nd Greensboro, Motels 5 1659 ext. 125 7am-10pm pany Expanding! Seeking hoinel Mail.arder/E·Com.
Larr AND
minutes
from
auction. est. 7 Days
Motivated People To Have merce. $522-t/week PT. Own a P.C.? Put II To
$1 000 $40001 k FT
Work! Up To $25·$75 HR.
Home-Based· B~
FOUND
Hampton. Inn (919)563·
slness. Full
•
w
. 800- PT/Ft For a free booklet
100WORKEASNEEDED
L,~-------,1 5400, Hollda~ Inn {336)229·
Assemble craf1s, wOOd
Training, Peid . acations. 921-8538
call: 1800 )226 _5948 or visit
· 5203. TEAMS; All purchas·
It
'M t rl 1
ld
888·383..2054
I www.dream2bfree.com
us online:
Lose, black and wtlte Sibert· es ro be paid In full tn us
ems:,. a$ 9 a prov ed. www.Wise8iz4.com
=G:..RO
.::..:.W
:;.IN
:..G
::.._
B:;.U:..
SI:.:
N:..ES
_S
_
Ca
an Husky, blue eyes, bllnc;t. lunds on da~ of sale b~
ro 480+ wk.
www.New shTools.com
lost on Leon-Baden road. cash, cashiers check, trav· Free Information pkg. 24 Hr.
COME GROW
NEEDS HELP!
1-80 1·264-5625
458-1781 or leave message elers checks, VISA or MA·
WITH USI
Work from home..
at 895·3522
TERCAAO, Company or Act Now!
We are expanding our clrcu· Mail- order/ E· Commerce
NO EXPERIENCE NECES·
:---:-::---::--:::-,--- personal checks only If ac· Be Your Own Boss From ration stan to better serve
S522+1 week FtT.
SARYI Fulllraining provided
Lost: Rewardl Chocolate companied by a bank tenar Hamel Fortune 500 Campa- our Cl.l&amp;tomers. We are loa~· $1000- $4000/ wee4c: FT
lor last moving Home·
lab named Harley. 4 years applicable to this sale. n~ Needs Help! 51500 _ tng lor a person lhat has www.lncredibtarewards.com Based business! You deold. White around the CONCESSIONS AVAILA· S80001MO PT/FT Free In- higtlenergy level, self· moti·
(800)418-8501
cide Hoursl Free informs(740)448·6358 BLE: Located In Central fOrmation Call Now!
vated and enjo~s working
tlon. 920·924-8400
mouth.
,(740)448-o898.
North Carolina between 1-800·390-1241
with people. Mull have de· - - - - - - - - www.AchleveDreams.cam
Burlington &amp; Durham. For www.BaaicProfltl.com
pendable transponatlon, ba·
Help Wanted
more deU.IIt, contact JON
tic computer knowledge , ;:========~
PART TIME AN
LAMBERT.
1·80Q.583· Admin Aut. Pt. Pttuant•, Thll II
lull limo oalarled
Fill In position available at
11005, 9191·~·2424 Fax: AA+rotovam or BA dagrtt pollt~ an&lt; otlors all com·
Scono Hlllolor Davs &amp; Eva·
(910)583·3974 For more In· In rellvam f~d prolorrOd. pony btnofllo Including
ningo. GrNI Payl Wondorlul
formation &amp; photol vial! Mult have computer, orgen· h"lth lnturenoe, vacation,
Team to work with! Please
www.mobanoaucllon .com lzallonat an good communi· poroonal dayo. and 401K
Experienced
llop by to 1111 out an appllca·

45620

110

IIELPW~

PART· nME
OFFICE PO&amp;ITION
We 1\avt a part-1ime pool·

Uon open at our Sentinel Of·

llca In P01111roy. Thlo pool·
lion requires compu1er and
math lkllll, must a"'oy
WOrking with people, be
able to organize your work
and bt available lor IChedullng bttwten the hours ol
8:00am and 5:00pm. Mon·
tla~ through Frida~. For ln.
lervlew contiden" ' 1nn send
your re1ume 1nd c. ~::r leitar or Attention of Olana HJII,
Ohio Yalley Publishing Co.,
825 Third A'l., Gallipolis,
:Oh:-:-lo-::4-~"'-1_.:-:..,.--Pan-time sile1 manager

12 nn Pie Safe, Tall Primitive Linen

SATURDAY, NO

10:00 .

-

J~'

~· ~ I~

,
_1 '

-

'

LICited tram Clleshlre, Ohio. &amp;o 3 1/2 mlln aut
RL 554 11M Wllkh far signs. IIIII IIe seiUIO Ute

needed for email apartment
community in Syracuse.
Please send your reaume
to: Vfckv laWIDn, 249 WI~
kins Lane, Wytheville, Va
24382 orcall704-357-6000
•

Ford 3610 Tractor 475 Actual hrs. spin out
wheels, Ford LGX 125 lawn tractor, Ford
disk, Carry all, Good Ford 501 mowing
machine 6 ft. plade.

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

POSTAL JOBS. • Up to
$47,578. Now hi""". Full
Benefits &amp; Retlre.;~t. FOI'
ApplicatiOn and lnftt: 1--800337·9730 Dept. P·829 .
Bam 1Opm (EST)f7 daya
•

fURN ITURE

Sofa, La2 Boy recliner, rockers, Mltsublshi
color console TV, chairs, desks. 6 ladder
back chairs, drop leaf table, kitchen
cabinet, 3 f?C· BR suite, maple bed,
chlfarobe, fr!Qidalre ·21 CF frost free
regrigera1or, Tappan microwave, Cold

---------

Help Wanted

NEED

HOLIDAY
CASH?

· Clttlll~tt• ca- Collogt

Do you need a mortgage or
new car? Are ~our bills
backed up? We can help.
We offer lut rellablt aerv·
Ice, and our protestlonal
llllr--~----. stan Ia on hand to help.
toll rree. 1·Be6·
(Careers Close To Home)
catl TOday! 740-446-4367
1·800-214-()452,
'
Reg 11190-05-12748.

GREAT HOURS,
BENEFITS, AND
PAY COULD BE
YOURS-CALL
TODAY FORA
PERSONAL

li!d ~~ I~~":a~"
!.oo--;;.:,:~;:,;::;,_.1
BLACKSTONE
PARA·
LEGAL STUDIES. Compra·
htnslve, affordable, Home
Sludy legal training since
1890. Free catalog: 1·800826·9228. PO BOX 701449
Dallas. TX 75370 or
hnp:Jiwww.blacksto'netaw.ca
m

INTERVffiW

AND MAKE
YOUR
HOLIDAYS

Would you like to
help us provide
relief to people all
over the world?

BRJGH~ER!!

We need your help!

1-888-237-5342
EXT. 2341

Eam $90,000 YEARLV ropalnng, NOT replacing,
~ong cracks In Windshields.
1-80().828-8523

u:C:
www ............:............

1
· . - · - - · x.com

:--,-,,----Earn A Guaranteed US$
150,000 Per Vtar. Chaok
out
EARN VOUA COLLEGE htlp:llwwN.ArmcllalrTycoon
DEGREE QUICKLY, beth- comlronyol\andar1a
.
elora, Masters, Doctorate, :=.:~:!.::=:==--­
bv correapon&lt;ence baso&lt;l Eatablishod Specially Store
upon prior education and for Sale. Call after 5:00pm.
ehon stud~ course. For (740)446--81o48
FREE Information bOOklal
phone
CAMBRIDGE
STATE UNIVERSITY 1·
800·964·8316.

Join our team at
lnfoCision!

I double
plows, yard toots, lot of lumber, deh1omoora.
lard press wheel barrow, &amp; mol'e.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON tlf66
Elt£CUTORS: Dane SChutter! • Pllll Sinon

77Hll5 or 773-5441

Ext2221

Or stop by
242 Third Avenue

,

Gallipolis, Ohio

GED
Get your HS equivalency di~
pfoma with our easy home
study course 1·800~569·
2163 old 310.

PUIUC
AUOION
Amish Home
IIWthlmrl••

1•--·•

'"~'"'"
I_._

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

liM

. , _ ~ llonwil

Sells a llle Nil•• It 111far A... $16,000.00 Ill

c..-.

15585 lkatl Rllllt1141,
OWo (Gallbt Co.)
Fi01D US Rl. 3.5, RloOnncle, 0 . 111&lt;o St. Rt. 32S S to St. Rt. 141,
IUJD riaht &amp; 10 approx. 7 mi. 10 Cadums, 0.
Nioe Amish
home on •730 IC. Conti•fnl of 3 bedrm., liviDI tm, kitellen, fitll
bath; hardwood 8-.; home boa own toptic &amp; Co! wa1er all on
a niCt11.ot wJiarae I ou tplnlp. Terms: $2,000.00 down at 1imio
of sale; balenoo due by 1211712001 olllored !teo&amp;: ciMr oflions
or mcxtppa; *!:J~~~

...
Public Sale and Auction

ESTATE

AUCTION

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

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY

740-245-9868(horne)Or
740-245·9866 (bam)
"l..cenHd • Bonded By Slate Of Ohio"
Calli Or Approwd Check Only Good Food

"Not RftPOIIIIble For Accldtnll
Or lost Property!"

AIHI&lt;JIIf fl111NITURE

TERMS: CIISH'OR CHECK WilD

A.,.............
.,,...,,..._,.._,...,,....,-........
..........~•.,:.
ABSOLUTE REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Public Seta arid Auction

Call 1-888-237-5342

Press (PeQc;~ed), Oak Wash Stand
W/curved Front, Oak Side Server,
Library Table, Cast Iron Bed, Fanc:v
Oak Sideboard W/mlrror, 2 Old
Trunks, VIctorian Era Pictures
Burnside 13 Pot Belly Stove
(Thompson ·&amp; Francis, Ga111polls,
Oh), Old Steamer Trunks, Pope
Gosser China, Etched Crystal, Old
Lamps, Ansonia 1913 Cast Mantle
Clock, Newer Acrosonlc Baldwin
Plano w/bench (Sells w/reHrve),
Lots &amp; Lots Of Old Books (some
Rellc;~lous), Small Stands &amp; Tobias,
Cutter Quills, Misc. Linens, Cast
Iron Banks, Old Sports Gcimes,
Gene Autrey Wallet, American
Rver Stock Car Race, Wrou9ht Iron
Pitcher Pump, Slone Ju9 w/blue
Stendi(Hanscom Bros., Phil., Po.),
Weller Vases, Wall · Ware,
Ironstone Water Pilcher, Betty
Boap Items, Costume Jewelry,
Baseball Gloves, Old Bottles, Fruit
Jars, Milk Bottles, Crocks &amp; Ju9s,
Jodlte, McCoy, Brush, Shawnee,
Hull Art, Granite, Depression Glass
(Pink &amp; Green), Cast Iron Skillets,
Old Kitchen Items, Misc. Smalls,
MuchMore ....

Public Sale and Auction

- -.
•"JA(*.".:otlllto:"..............................~...................
.,.
..-,.. ~ :.:-.,..-......

.,.../........ ..... ....

110 Help Wanted
Gl/ISSWI\RE &amp; MISC

Help Wanted

NOW
HIRING
$6-$8
Per Hour
FU11/Part Tl me

OFFICE
ENVIRONMEtJT
·~
1·888·874-JOBS
_uo_n-toda--~Y·------=========

110 Htlp Wanttd

Gallia Meigs Community
Action Is seeking a Housing
Program Developer
Developer work• wl1h po1ea11ol homo buyon,
ttale 1nd federal fllndlna 10urcu, and conlrador
In olnate family homo bulldtna proJect. Ma1h,
tomputer, and organizational tklll1 ntc:ettlr)'.
Real Ellate and •oclot ~enlceo bockaround
helpful. Wllllna to 1raln ouertlvo, onthuotu11c
candidate. Salary commonourate with experience.
R11ume wl1h work hllfory and oxperlenoo ptuo J

reference• can be mailed to Houaln1 Developer,

Community Action, Do• 272, Cheohlrt, OH 45620

~....................~ ·Lb~y~l~t/~19~~~~-~F.~.O~E....................r-........_J
\

Tom'~

Do you want
Better Pay,
Better Training, and
Better Opportunities?
,I

Then you better hurry!
lnfoCislon Is now hlrlngl
Come Join us In recruiting vo/untHrs
owr the phon• for maJor non-prom
oroan/zaUons•

Earn up to $7 .00/hour
*Weekly bonus proQram
* Paid tralnlnQ
*Insurance and 401-K
* Paid vacations and holidays
* Full time shifts available
Call TODAY for an Interview!
1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901

paanut jar, Haviland casserole &amp; platter, Cobalt glass,
Toby s, Vasllne pitcher wnld, depression glass. Flo Blue plates,
salts, Cobalt &amp; clear stemware. Blue ridge. sev. pes. cut glass.
wash bowl &amp; pitcher, tWo beautilul decorated earthware pitchers,
wedge wood plate, cut glass dresser box wnid, relish tniy, hand
painted plates, glass baskets, stemware, punch bowl, Athen(a
red &amp; white plates, compotes, hand painted Bavaria vase
I colonlo•l figurines, bulla eye compote, Spaln pitcher, sliver o~
I g~ass boUle, cut glass pin holder wnld, Buffalo pottery pitcher,
1 stc&gt;ne jars, A.P. Donaho jar, 8 pl. setting William Rogers silver
1 ~ltsk•eRtos;ger Smith sliver butter dish, candleabra, laney silver
1'
hoof Ink well, matching pair viet. picture frames &amp; sev.
more, outstanding prtnts, prints sign by J.L. Trenast roses.
ceoliets. Marquerites. Lllas 113 etc. Viet. shadow box frame, 5 vol.
Set of works of Shakespeare, sad Irons, candle mold. cast-Iron
Viet Seth Thomas Clock, Steeple clock, oriental rugs: 1o·

•

AUCTION CONDUCTED BV

RICK PEARSON AUCTION COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON o1165
I!MECUTOR: Richerd A. l.onl
ll3·5ll5 or llJ·I44l

TERMS: CASH OR CHfCK WilD. lllulf have benk teller ol mdl1
unleu known to lhl Auction Compan.,

�Sunday, Nov. 11, 2001

I'•'""'"'\' • Mhlti"'Jtutl • (;niiiiHIII!I, Ollkt • Polnl Pklmwnl, WV

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• •5001
(740)441 -1917
112.000.

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Hr.! acre
lot. 3 bedroom,
2·112
balhs,
big kilct1en
wloak - · DR. LR
IWJIIIIog fltepleco, air, laundry rooni, ffonl
1101011 1. 2-112 car garage.
invntdlate poerer·lon. At;PiOlMd II $125.500. Make
olfar Call (740)U6:4514
Mol', or
(740~ol8-5pm.

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.

TAT&amp;, 52 W ' c od Drilooe
lromi297101183.-"'

~ CoiJn. 2 llodowu, doyer o11op &amp; C11 746:
•hookup. 7miies!romHofP• 446·2561. Equal Housing
lly l.al , _ T- 01- 1ai. {740)UHJ117
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!2IOOISTS'Il!flT,GAI.IJPOOS.If00456ll
Allen C. Wood, Broker· 44&amp;&lt;1523
Kl!nllorgirl,llnliler·~l
Jeanette lbJ!B,. 256-1745
Panlia
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c.t.dr..lt.il.IUtSii(7411)313:1M6

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monlh. flr&lt;&gt;o91Def)OOit Required .
lfoL5f:s
' BoJy
(703)451·2591
i1omol 1107 - . ...
L,._..,;I'OKiliiiOiRI'M;;;::,...,J. F-r01, .,.11
- . 30
"
1'0111at8.5% APR. For 111•
2 SA, 1 112 Bath on U2 inga 1..aoo-319·3323 ext.
o1 p
""'"' t709
..,.
rcpony. _...... .:.:.;:::..
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-ta111 · and Aj)polntmeo1l to

~~L;;d'h'D;;;bi;;j,j;?
Uved in Dt..olll1 ill?
Only $500. Daltvorl lo rour

riO

Paymanbo.
.
.
~ t• ~ 3 ~
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lDw

t-800-891~m

1~·88~FIM~-~O:;~;""'~Y
~~;Soi~IJ~:~·Bf0~
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For Rent· 5 room - · 2
car- Con: bedroomo,
Gas - .

Boocll!l Hila
IM.

1.,.?0, 3 badooom, 2
&amp;

(740)U6-1370

1 ~:~CIICI1aoyl.

Double Wide. 11 V5
p.,. Month! 3 -...u, 2
Balh. Froe DeiMiy l Sol·
up. Hl88-1121-3o128
Nice 28x80 Double Wide

-oom. Mnlng on

.-_.. (7.001949-.......
·11185 Sl&lt;yllne 14x70, 3 lJod.
room. Good Condition. C.H
- · 7oJ0.385--.
.
11194 14a?O Oakwood, 2
Boclroom, 2 lui - . 3 ""'
..... · ...... (740)387·
0107

lot In

rontocl

· priced 10 1010.
(304)875-3689
Ilk Call
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$36,975

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OAKWOOD
HOMeS
IUPEII Cl!lllU.
Over40_lo_

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, _ HO• H10 .. A.

lrom. on.. a lillie- a
1011 Ookwood- ol
Nllro. (304)75HI85

111 Ume buyefll- Govem-

IIEDUCED
mint toana- buy loans &amp; AI Ooubte Wide ottptays
1181o- (740)446-3093 Oak· mUll go. Only $885 - ..
-~ler
Only .. Oakwood- ot
Niltc. (304)75HI85

For All Y!IIJr Advertlling Nftd•

The Ametq, Community

Classified~!tNelwol1&lt;

1-800-821·8139
or visit our website:
WN-w.americancommul\ityclassified.com

~- - .-....
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iij.4 Second Ave., Callipolie, Ohio 45631-091\j
740-446..0008 7 40-441-1111
•

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800 -280·2574

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eva~~~mooezoomnet.net

If you love tho outdoors thle ho1111
perfect lor yoou. This 3 bedroom, 2

Real Eltatl General

Gt
--

SYRACUSE • College Street • A 1'/, skiry home
with a full basement Has a front and back
pon:ll. Thera ill 8 rooms, 3 bedt00m11, &amp; one
balh. Has a newer roof and nice

LENDER

1.

OFFICE
•
•
•

SC15plla ....... P' ••

ond-... .., •fili.iw•'-'11-"ilail••
fri7.U ...... Ii&amp;lllltl-4:11t..m

appfi&amp;neft &amp; carpec, P01nt Pleuant area. 2k8
OOOd condition, $3,000 waHl. thermal pane win-

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lot

3-011111-.aOlioo
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balh. Only -

11 Wldo. Only 1195.00 Por
Monlh, 8.119% Fixed In,._
Ralo Wllh. Air Ard Undelpinning l.atlll-928-3428

new

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(304161$-8872

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If\ Cora Mid FlaM. 4144 NNt
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2 BA.Motlie ,4i10 2
Cat! ....... t1. no pets.
Coni,
•
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1112-51139
-.l.liliOYood.$350.

54751 ......_ ~~.~:~::"*
~· (7401! ......
(7«1)2., ··~
23:121'&lt;1A... CO.o..,1101•10 Plol Po-. OoowooM• .. 2 - ....... 1 _304-,...1'211.
112 Balh, K Why glliiO:WIM.
on&lt;l Rofriglralor. - - - t..... 5410
......,pluw...,_ano:lflol· -.(740jtii'OP3
· No •Polo. (740)4&lt;1&amp;-

5
10,000 Of hunlofl
1 1 - - $18.000
so. Golla 31 ...... " ' in """lu!My, 131,000!
-

Homoi ...

t•-=· ,."'. . ·'"""
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l 'o 4,.,.outl t»IWIJI l Lloll
_...,.
IUOUtS, 1 lfl ltaltll&gt;. K*:tiiOn $200

ifti. room10&lt;2002
fllllllCing ~
...,_ -1•S2700, ploUo
St&gt;ociolto.
· ' .Ioiii a low a1 111o

...... 011Rcute7, bolllilpriYOlo. (740)985:3981
F,. Sole: c ..... City, 3
- - -·
2
Bah,
!740125e-t7..,
FORECLOSED
GOVT
HOMESI 10 OR LOW
DOWNI TAX REPO'S l
-PUPTCIESI
OK
CREDIT! FOR liSTING!
CAU 1-800-501-tm oxt.
1113·

p.,..,rf, IUAdltJ~~W.IIMJby ..,M"""w So~nt OIUo for O..r A Quart•r Cenlury"

bathroom mobile home res~ng on 45 acres
of land could be what your looking for.
also offers a metal garage, wash
hunting cabin and farm equipment. Call
information. •197
MINI FAIIM WITH A BARN. Just mintJies
town this home has a beautiful ·-- ...
valley in lron1 of ft and it's located on
on Stale Route 218. This home also
3 bedrooms 2 baths. And Priced to
Ca!IIO view 111111
LISTING

n~e .

Very

2·3 bedroom

eMnCeS &amp; depOsit

tequirecl.

(740)U6-3644

r

Moblo Home Sile for rent.
Ad. behind Fox'e
Pizza. (304)675-7588

, _ tats, quiet COUi1lt)'

t

per-·

DREAM HOME. A beautiful Cape Cod Seuing on a

lf'UIY knoJIJmtdit 123 acres. Home is only 2 yWI
old. Feature• a formal enlty w/ beautirul t:laircue
leading to 2nd le\'el,large living room, fonn;ll dining
wl IJ. bow window, bedroom suite 011 main level and
bach w/ whirlpool tub. _Complcle kiL~o:hen w/pantry,
lqe country porch acros,. the frool. 28:d0 garage
with a separate work out room. Gas heat from your
last long! SHOWN BY

HOUSEIIOI.D

Goons

RUSTIC HILLS • A one stoty home with a two
story very large bedroom suile, with it's own
bath. Has a large bedroom, an average
bedroom downatalra, and a family room, dining
room, kHchen and bath al downataira. Houae
looU very nice 8YirJwh8re. You will love H.
Aloo has a storage building. blaclttop

ASKING $20,DDO,

NEW LISTING • COlJNTRY LIVING AT IT'S
BISTI 100 )'ear old home \:Ompletel)' updaled wilh
all lhe t:Om(orU for the 21st ~.:entury. Over 2200
square feet of 111pacious livinJ. Main floor includc1
modem kilchen wlbreakJast bu, walk-in pantry and
firsr Roor laundry wihalf b1th. Open noor plan
includes a Jreat room w/ massive hearth and
fi~place, dintng arr:a a Hbrary wlbookshelves. Main
level featUrcli imponed wood panelina, beamed
:i!~nJ'· Berber carpet . Open staircase leads to
ltoC')' with three large bedrooms, full blth and
walk-in linen closet. Let 10meone else makt your
mortaap pooym~~~With the adjoining two bedloom
feel of living space wilh
room, laundry room and

S&amp;O,DDO.OO
VIEW· Words cannot deecrlbe how

HIGH STREI!T·

PORTLAND

-to

with 2 bedrooma. a
laundry room. big
living room and kiiDhen, alao haa a lui
booemenl The heating and air corldHI•onlrtg
fairly new and the roof Ia
parquet wood floora In the

IUFI'INGTON

LANDING- An IXICUIIve IUtHfiYI8ion
dealgned for lovera and
bollaral
You won't balllve the
lUlu....
h buutlful Ohio
lor
100'- dock, riding
ring, picnic - r . riding trolla
muCh mo,.. Certttln reatrlctlona lll!)ly.

bolt""'""·

neat.

ana

Lot prlcea and . . . . . YllY 1lCDOfdl"'l
to the part,.... amanlflol. CttH rot
moractnolal

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

Sherrl L Hart ......·............................ 742·2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818

Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-8181
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlca.............882·2258

NEW LISTING- This 4.5 acres nvlls located
on Gage Road, and irs just waiting lor yoo ki
put your houae on ~. There is an Oversized
Metal building already on it. Call for further
108taJ'IS 1202
Live In atyle In one of the flnelt homu
county! This home has 4 bedrooms,
baths with hard wood lloora, a jet
copper plumbing and oak doors, too
more to menllon. For only $270,000. Call
view. 1189
II your looking for affordlblllty and
location thla could be Ill Right In
Galllpolla. Check oul lhis cozy home
onering 3 bedrooms and 1 1/2 ba(hs. PLUS
Have all the conveniences of living in town.
Call to view I 1186
Srnalllamlly7 Well we have !he Ideal home
with 2 bedrooms and a bath . It sets on 1
acre mil. Located right in the heart of
Mercerville. This home is priced to sell. Call
ki view 1182 t30.000.00

CROSSROADS. Good
on Pleasant Hill Road,
Green Elem eruary School
ljR.ealler/Ciwnood. Only $1 7,500. NO. 305

SOUTH THIIID AVE. • Live In one aida and
rant the other. Thlo well kept duple• has lola ol
newer updatH. Ono aide has 2 bedrooms and
an updated bath. The olher has 3 bedrooms
with an updated kitchen and bath. Bath have
equipped kitchens, tharmopane windows,
newer doors and storms, plua many more
t)ltraa. The patio, porches, and landscaped
yard make the outolde enjoyable alao. Two
very nlce homes In one, with an eiflclent
healing systom.
$79,500.00 ·

Appliances: Reconditioned
WaSOers, Dryers, Ranges ,

.. u,"tt""'•"ll halll

Aefrtgrators, Up To 90 Davs
Guaranteed! We Sell New

Stutw •ircpl~

Maytag Appliances, French
City Maytag, 740~·7795.

\ttfJii.ant..""r l'atka~L'
l\fJ K:~l, W~ls

Mora Landi W~')l(l.11j.fcres of land
leas. Locat~~rea . Call to
$54,000
It alii Alghtln Townl Close to It
ho~&gt;pin!l Is wlli;.IP'IIIal!lg distance
and molt"'flat't&amp;klng for land
may be for you. Give Allen •
ask for 12030.

uu~ ~ fHI

w" ..atk-..11•

colonl1l
l•k• vi . .•
...,_ and a refined classy loolo

just HUtla of Lo1•n

M-Il 8:30-I:UU. S.c. ¥~ :01

all on 2 acraa.

Room~:F~u~r·J~~~~~~~~~~~~C~l&lt;~IO&lt;d~·~~~--

-·

llreplece.

Rial Eltatl General

Cj/~ q{

rlmi/.1

~

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446-6806* Branch
Office
23 Locust St.
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

Gallipolis, Ohio
. 45631

140.22 Wllk:h the River from your
beckyard? Entoy the view from
your boat d9ck or back deck. this 1...
110 mil wl1h s 2 BA 1 balh moblo
home/vacation camper Is just lha
thing for str888. May be room lor a
gardan. LOca!Od 81 7183 St. Pl. 7
Soulh. Reduced!
f.40a TRULY OEUGIITPIIL HOllE
Prell)l u a pk:turo. Very wei
planned otono lind frame IOI1Ch
home off11111 3 bedrooms, Wll&lt;-ln
elooel, 2 luH balht, channing living
room wnlroplace. New oak cablllne lhe kitchen. Range, rofrlgarall&gt;',
dishwasher, and compactor all stay.
Utility room is extra large. 2 tier deck
in lhe rear with 36' lnground pool.
Many lruh trees, flowers. and
ehrubs. Sprinkler ayate.m In the rear.
2 car attached garage and a carport.
2 1110ry bam biJik!lng. Blacktop and
cement drtveways. A home you'll be
proud to own. VL Smith 446-6806
t33IO FABULOUS BARGAIN·
Brick &amp; vinyl 6 BR, 2 BA home on
private 1 acre lot. Family room ,
living room wnl,..placa, OR, and
large utility room In this one with full

ba~;;.i""l.meleianCil.,.A~ttached 2 car garage
1
2 car
as well

...

..

for

llti-~1..,..

tor

M027 INVESTMENT lOCaled In Ak&gt;
Grande. 4 bedrooms, 2 balha, 2
kitchens, basement and garage. 70'
x 17Z lot. 290 College St. Great
Income and Jocatlon. Priced to sell.
I
446-6806

S

Large home in town, new

l

bualneoe??? This
bulid lln~·ls locking for a new bualneaa
sql fl . Loca lad on lhe edge
Call fo r more inlorm.'l1ion . Ask

999, 4 BR, 2.5 BA, 2 car
:~~;rh,~v~i•nyl siding, nice
I

. Needs some TLC tlut

priced rlQhl at $79,900
t4021 SPACE FOR

REAL

COUNTRY LIVING Newly rebuilt 4
bedroom,

tr you ere looking for investment property

2

baths

Wlhuge

equipped klk:hen and Smith Oek
cabinets., Family rm. launchy rm.,
carport &amp; dBck. 15 acres mil
fenced. 2 tithing ponds. This Is a
family location that otfara privacy.

. have nveral ta on.. Call and ••k tor Allen.
We a,. olwayo glocl to halp you oell or buy
properly. Pantel property 11
Give ua • cell, we
~·

.

Green Twp. VLS 446-6606

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIIIGHAIIIIlll, BROKER-·- ........ 4111101
GAIL IILVILL!............ t .......- •••.:.•••• ttll201

wlllllow utility coa11 on

JOHNNE R\JSSELL-..................--.317~

DAVID INYDEP.___,,_.,.,........... M14458
WILMA WtLUAMSON ................. 740-288-00311
OUR WEB PAGE

Bodrooml,2
Kilchen wlt1Hng
room, ganll!n tub,
Cathoclral celtlnge, IXMti1ld
above ground pool, cellar
biJittlng, lloroge """'· 3
delacllecl
garage,
bladdop
driveway, hlnced lot. 2.2 acraa 11111.
Appolnlmenl only.
M017 ~ 383 loft, Cormal
lid. 3 bedroom, 2 balhl, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME · Oak
kltchon. ceramic lila In kl1ciM1 &amp;
balhl. NEW CARPET thiOtl!lh 0111,
toiOOC V ACRE TRACT 01 vacont nelural decor,' 5 ACRES MIL
ilnd localod oo SR 588 $75,000.00 $105,000. Triah or Dave
VIrginia 446-81101$
133V7 IN THE CITY Huge Family
14037 DEUGHTFUL HOME Clean home w/4 BRa, 2 baths, kl~ LR, DA,
comfortable· PLUS Income located porchea, partial basement. Priced
on SA 160. 4 Bednna, 2 batha, righl· ... lhll OUIItandlng off...!
approx. 314 ol an acre. Live on tIt Vacant, ready 10 wllcomt you, VLS
1~ &amp; rent tower leVel tor $100.00 44B BB08
mo. would make a good Mother-InLaw Sultl. Income can hlfp you 14033 THIS HOME FITS THE
PICTURE
Of
own lhll good homo. Owner moving HISTORIC
out of town. Call 10 Jnepect, this will tlALLIPOLI8 • Home laalui8o S
SR. and 1 bath with oustom
not laat. VLS
cablnett In kitchen, very large lot
13312 CARPYOUT BUSINESS lhst flu. polerlllfll for MVOIOI
and CONVENIENCE STORE FOR opllonl, let ua show you lhl1 home
SALE. New Blann a)'llem. Building wllh groat location todoyl ,
biJiR 1o a1ata code. Continuous
HOME
•
INCOME
opera~on alnce 11118. Prica Includes 1401111
lnwntory. can Johnnie 367-0323 or INVESTMENT 128 &gt; 130 Bula'ltlle
Pk. 3 btdrm, 3 bath living quartora.
4of8.6806.
t403(J.
IT'S
PERSONALITY Aloo 18' x 32' ga10ge plua 30' • 20
PLUSI
ACRES.
HOME· building 112 ac. ollana. good ~&amp;los
BUILDtNtlS Old laohlon cha1111 loc. Priced 10 oe!l. VlS
with modem convenience ln ttlis 4
BR, 2 story home, 2 baths, I40H COMMERCIAL BUILDING
Olive &amp; 3rd. 2756 oq. ff. mil. Oily
(whl~pool tub). lovo~ equipped
water, sewer &amp; gas. All Inventory
ldtlfamUy rm combo wlharclwood
available too. Owner wants actlonl

floors, cherry cai:Mneta. Enjoy
viewing the country from every
wondow. Formal dlrling rm &amp; LM

wlbeamed ceilings. Porch &amp; patio
•72 ACRES of beautiful rolling Janel.
Paslure, woods &amp; some timber,
pond a mineral nghll. large bam
&amp; boJIIdlnga. Call VLS 448-8806
LOTS FOR SALE ON SR 518- 6

a _,

lot In a convenient location? 3
BR, 2 BA, 2 car garage, newer
roof, newer vinyl tiding, newer
heal pump, lencocl backyard and
12 x 14 storage building. Great
prk:el

TRliH IN'tii!R.-...........................-..ol41.tof88

llodroom 2 belh flinch over lull
balement wilh 2 car garage and
flnlshocl lamily room. Home ll1a on2
""· m11 in Honnan r..... S&lt;lloolo.
Jult minulel trom downlown
Galllpollt. Thlol home features a
beatJtllul lanclocaped lawn, wood
polloi IIOVe end canlral air. LOcaled
jua1 off Rock lick Ad. on Mablt Dr.
In nice nolghbo!hood. Have a
gerdan and raise ooma flowora but
ma1ct oure 1o 1oo1o at lhil. Call
Jollnnlo 11 367-0323 today lor an
appointment

Acr• $40,000

Tastefully

decorated 4 BR and 2 112 BA,
Oak craffod kl1chen and gu lev

nlture. $400. (304)67~1186
Complote Uv1nQ

LOCATIONIII LOCATIONIII
many comfor1e and conveniences
"e&lt;l;oclntown in this 1 1/2 st01y home with
18 and a beth. Some comforts
"'
llr&gt;CIUIII! a stroll through the pork, shopping or
to the movies and the schools are
walking distance. For more Information
this home, Give Allen a call. Ask for 1172
I tr1TO LOTS AND MORE LOTS Six lots In
hlllalll,or'• HUI Subdivision. All six lois for juat
,500.00 f201S
VACANT LAND
ACRES mlllocaled close to town.t2020
Looking lor land In a nlca location? Just a
miles oul of Gallipolis (Green Twp.), we
have 2·acre tracts to 6·acre tracts M/L.
County water also available. There are some
reotrictlono. Call and ask lor 12022.
· have 1everal 5 acre plut tr1c1a
tor building lhal drum hotna. All
utllitlaa are avallable and each lot has
read frontage .. 'Restricted . Near Holzer
Hospital. Ask lor 12028.

MIDDLEPORT • Here II a horne with pottntlll. could be
!Iva In ono, rant ono or llvtlln h whole nouae. Total
batha up, 1112 baths down, F.P. tleckl and porcnoa.

CHIIIITY IIOAD • EAITEIIN SCHOOL DleTJIICT • Immediate ro:allllon.
1.08 acres 'Mth an older manufactured home, han btllllment, 0JC18
adtlllon, 3 bedtooma. Privalli courrtry selling. Homo naedo rapaira.
.
ASKING $14,100

....

ling. will aco:ommoda"'
181:80, $100
cal
Ed .. COilnlly Homol, 7...,.
992.Z1e7.

NEW LimNG -A IRJNTER'S PARADISE OF
W ACRES MORE OR LESS ... And a WIFE'S

MIDDLI!PORT • This one lloor
frame hOml hu vinyl aiding, newer
front porch, and Interior repalra.
Home hat 2 badrooma, 1 bath .
Currently I ~ental unit:

.Joe A. Moore-Broker 441-1816
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia .Hays· 446-3684 Care Caaey-245·9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
, Candace
446-7412

apartment, In town, large
kilclleri, LA, $500'mo. Rei·

992-2259

Henry

•••

_.l.r. ._. . .·. . "ta. .......~.......lt· ~:·~. Ir Mo:::.~i!":·' lr Mo:~~,.,.., Ir ~ I

~ 3 llodroom, 1 112 - ·
7
(880)5113-3 53. IMw .. ';'e Cll,.,...,.._ - . Iorge t.mltr
01 - · TOI F... 1· ...... and,._
ond -lillingol Oooow II- iiiOiOI, in P!. ......
1188 5111 01 f1
85- T
"""'*''I- illlltd
11111. W.Va. (740) 448 f1nll
111- t111oWncl-. - - . - . . ,.
3 BocloODII'L- 110 e..
-IOiy
Roductionl ogo. see.ooo. 1 ..,. 1o1. Lalgo """"" bulklina 101 13~...., ptuo
(304)~
118,000. (740)258 8137
206' Olio I-- · (740)UH18 ..~OfNoCtd?Qov.
=~~ -~ (740J 4481SIIf.
Bri finlnco ()rjy ~ CiMk " - M
$40 000 3 8R in - - &gt;o'i.
AI Ookwood In ..,_ loll. d J1io (301)1112·373tlbol... sj, Col (7.00)448 0855 f».
YIIO, wv 304-73WIOI.
Oianclo, '""" Uf.IOO.
·
(740)245:5747
Nloo 4 ,... net .....,. 3 BR. 2 Bah Duple"'
Locat.cf in Crown City. "-'=.;:..;:.:..:;____ tllli;l ~Ill easy terma, Downtown. Ahow VIIW f..o.
Nowtr
~2e::...~ te."1~~Au:; (740)4413583
· Rot.
-.y 1800 oq. fOOl-· Coopot,
Htol W.Do111Huny()rjy10l0111 Nloo l01 for Solo. 2 rnlloo Cll'hd. $3751 tnonlh, 1300
locolocl 10 mlnuiH from Pump..., CIA 2 - a. Loll, 304:1311:1211.
1rom
llmilll, 115,000. ......., (7o1Cl)41&amp;.iiii4V.
HalzOI' HoopllaJ, 2 0 - rage.
U1111~ Building.
5 ,.,.. III1CI largo lllngo.
lnO &amp; o l e -· OM

PcJm.vr •lll'"'zp

lllo;Da CO.· r_. ..,...., 011 sueet P~ 0001 10
rw. Aeq (61•~ ... AoqunL (7~
SRIIIIt. 3 1 - """· Sdo&gt;o4l and Dowo..•• -lorf!Off.28 1oom2':':"' T • = : - : : : : - - i n - N a ~·~s---.,,...-,...-"7"121.000 ., s .,.. ,._ .5595/monlh p1u1• ll\otiOII1 ..,.. n • • - No on
511.
_
~ (~l- ~st
~~ 1 ~ •• ~ -

1 ue.ooo .,

1

Nov. 11, 2001

bottom,
Beautiful light and airy 3 BR
home on t/2 acre ri)JI. Quiet

peaceful setting and,..,onn&lt;nl;yd 1,.0
18
minute• from town. 1,
posseasionl PRICE REDUCED
lhlt 3 $129.500

I

_ .., .• ~
BR 1 Bath gem In a quiet

neighborhood close to schools
and shopping. Call aoon, may

Townehlp location far only
$11,100. 8flek ranch on large
level lot with many fruit trees ,
,_,,.. ana nice garden spot.
copaeod
llaoiiP.2 Don't let this great deal pass you
lA. All clly utllltfu, city ochoola.
UvlJIQ room with wood burning
fireplace, full blalmtnt, large
wood deck and largt p.atlo In
bocllt. Veryallordablel $54,000

14019
COMMERCIAL
LOT·
JackS(In Pk. Gallipolis, OH Corner

nol 1101 11 thla price, $1111.100

1133 8r1nd n•w QUALITY
BUILT home on 2 level acre•

111111 Very nlct ~ BR 2 BA homo
with IIOIId 8 penal doora, 1011 ol
hardwood Roaring, Smith custom
kitchen and 2 car Qltrage.

·. 1142 Beautiful two 11ory log

lot with greaf potential.

INHM with 1 breathllklng view

ot Chartall laka. 3 BR, 2 lull BA,

t4040 GAEAT INVE8TM~NT
PROPERTY Two homes plus an
extra lot. Uva In one, rtnllha other

whlripool lui&gt;, fonnal IIYing room

witt'l bay windOw and tlrtp.lace,
niCe ~ ott family room. c.tl ua
~may be 100 '"'"'

to pay your mortgage. Priced to
sale. Call Wilma today lor a

-r·

showing.

'•

Vlllt US OAIIR81t WWW.EVI.....en.c•
''

'

�Pomeroy•

r. _...,!;;;~~·=-_.lr
~~~~~~=

~

v.. ..........

• ---

c.vldlan 1113 n t'dtllill or c::cnxaeecial
00
tonv. ., 1200 - - · · - ,.
lcM _ _ ....... _

..mu. - -

~
:""~
-.a-.
$10.000 Nog.

-

1 • Fool " " ' -• 4 ad.,
long bOd, Col (14014 .. 0140 -

Tllo
Mlddl

Ylllo1o
t

~por

-.r.
od. Gotloo, ~ 18,000
-

F

--•

Conc1Mon.

SllllDD. 1740l37N1-te
liM f ·2li0. 4X4, Rod.
123.000 _Ctvomo

1, 2001

of
I
•

1

•4

u

,, _ _ . . . . . .

0

-

-

17401

nr.; AOOO.

£1055
.
1llllll Joop Q1o; Cloo Spcwt

Hltll1 ~ 4.0L. e qt.. 5

- ..d..
'* en-.
111. t.ug.
4 -.. -

-

tiloo. F• H • ~.
$7,800. (140)245-! 513

Gnco KoP. 75.000 ....._

1101 FORI ~ Duty
F250. 4x4, 7.3 -

=

- ·S2i:;'•
.!!"- CoD.P(1~~

1131 •

41,000

•

·

......-

12 FORI f.1li0, 4x4, 300
lcly. 5 op., tappor, S4100.
(7-40)742·2780.

T••••--.
&amp;

I

dopa._..

budgeting,
and
l'dalm.lilllla 10olaronco wtth long
ron- plonnl- for
•;·•.
1U80
37ft. 460 loi:llltloa. *ppl. -lo.'W
FORI.
Pul ear. 1nd dotllllad lilt of
_ . . . . .... ..,be
plok1d up at tllo
Public Works Office
HoME
237 Rno Street,
1MJwwDmmi 1
. Middleport, Ohio.
Appllc:ollona muat be
I•II!!IFMT
181unuod on or boforo
WATERPROOFINII
- l b a r 11, 2001 at
u._ldluouol utotime guar- 4:00 p.;n. Tho Yllogo
- .._ -...,..fur- rooorvea tho right to
- · e - 1915. raJeot and oil

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

riO

~10, 24 ::0:~-om: :f!c~~:..:
~ -.ptoollng.

·
C&amp;C Gonoral Home Mo1ntef'llnllng, Wlyl old19811 Goldwlng t!iOO, ..,.. lnll· C8!p111tiy, - . win- _ IMC!y~
, ......, - . , balha. moiJIIa home
MOO
- .. nopolr and ...... f«"""
• (740
call Chol. 740-992·

=""'

w
. .aa

4· - i · - i ·

PaiDicml'
· Mil~---~
I
I
~--WHEREAS, In ontcoro(DI.... 1.,.)
accordance
with P23
..,.
Sootlon 13 of tllo StO.k $ 10'71 $1l.13
Choltor or tloo City of $11.11 $11.11 $12.40
OaiUpollo, tho City ~ OIIICOra
Manager
hoe =:"
recommended
In
111 •11 112.40
writing tllo poor1ga or $12.11 113.40 $13.12
Ordlnonco or an ~ ...... , .
-vwncY - I n W · •
ardor to provide for
_..._ _
2002
1
the
liWIIIadllto ="-t~o.' Slop
proHrVIIIon 01 tho 1• Slop
Stop,! Stop
poooa, -Hh, oolety ' • .._ ~ • .._ 1 . .loll
and wallero of tho ~~ • · ....,.. •
01 _..., of tllo City of ......
Oolll;ollo and to P17:
lela far tho
1 Sl.t7 $8.17 $1.41

r-

sn.U

z;

::;:~ oporallon~"":t ~0.41

munlclpol .......orn=r• (DI•• --.....,
oorvlcel and lo
:··-• -

r,:: a

..... far PD.

110Y d
ro 1orne 1 0 r or o 1
Pollee- I »II I
NOW 1

TH~REFORE IE IT
ORDAINED by• tho City
C
I I
I Ill
omm •• on o
•
City of Galllpollo,

-ofOiolo:

SECTION 1: BASIC
PAY PLAN
Tho following
.... rongao poylblo
blw lilly oro herob"
-tohoctaooboalo

l13.4t $13.14 114.48

D' aO.•

$10.58 $10.t7 11US

- . 1 :11103
•-• •
w.gellanpNo.;llllp
~IPIIALT,ANO
I; . . 2; llllp 3; llllp
·
•DDitG
lAND
4; 1111p I; Slop I; Joll
Purauant
lo
1111o;
Ruolullon No. ~
P17:
23, 1 1 ·to, tho City
. , .10
CotWmlulon
on
$10.11 $1D.D
0
November
II,
2000,
CotNMnlc4lllono
tho City M1nager
OIRnta (DI I - )
odvertlaod In tho
P23:
Oalllpollo
Dolly

•.33 ._... ••

$11.01 $11A1 $11.11
$12.21 $12.72 $13.11
Pelrol OIIICOro
P2A:
• 1 ~- • 1z.7211 • 11
• ~ •
~
$13.11 114.22$14.77
Dol •"'·

SECnOit:S: EFFECI1VE

DtaE
Tille Ordlnonoo alloll
be In fun ·foroe and
OffiCI rotroootiVa
November 1, 2001,
upon po..... oo on

IO

;:""'to-~·.
D: ""*"'- '

2001

AT1'ES'r. Dannlo W.
1
W-a, Clark 0 tho
City Commloolon
P24:
Richard A. Moore,
$11.71 112.23 $12.11
Prooldont af tho City
$13.15 I13.1T$14.20
ComDetac:ll...
T•
1ore go 1ng
ua
Ordinance 11 hereby
laglnnlng November approv•d to •• to
1, 2002
form.
Wage Range No.; Stop Douglu Cowloa
I; Slop 2; Stop 3; Stop Gallipolis
City
4; Slop I ; Stop I; JOb Solicitor
Tille;
The
foregoing

$1.31 $1.14
$8.11 $10.:12 Sto.•

DonnloW.WGolllpolll, ltato of
Oellll all City "u ~n 11 r Ohio, 111o bid of
No\U 0
11,2001
_ . , -~-. lllc.
11 '*'~' doalorod tho
PubliC Notice
lowoal and moot
----~::.:..:...._ rooponollllo bid for
OMIINANCI! 11:111111-71 Aopholt; and loddlng
AN OIIOINI.JICE
1onc1 and tho- bid

~:~\jl:dc:ll~o'1u'::

according
Cllortor.

to

City

, . _ , I -......-

of gonorol clroulotlon

flr111
al:
Sholly
MatortiiO Ina, 1141
ltoto Route 7 N,
Oolllpollo, OH 4113'1
llo awdod • ccwobect
lor
Aophalt and
Sodding loncl at tho

--on
=

In
the
City
of
OalllpoUo, eooordlng
ro law and tho CIIOitor
of the Cttr,
of
Oolllpol)o, Oh o for Mli I

::C.~· and lloddlng

·
1
: ' . ~l:,o:.:

Tho
bId a oro1111aby nJoclecf.
oubmlnad ware Iliad
•
with tho City .........

f u l l - ..... .....,. ..
tho · -d portDII
..,. ol
bJ low. or
MIII!D: Now-or I, •
2001

w-.

ATTitrn

.

Commit ton
Rlch1rd A-. Moore,
Proal- of tho City
~

..:1c110r
o.nnta

·

w- '

w

Oo~llpoiii.City Auditor

_ . . . .. par tho bid

Mlnogar; ond
the

bid ofIISloolly
Inc.
tho 1
-·
and
111011 rftponollllo bid
for Alphall 1301 and

Sec.ond Annual
Arts &amp; Crafts FaJr
and
Spaghetti Dinner
Kyger Creek
Middle School
November 17, 2001
9:00-4:00

t-402 for $27.25 par ton
and 1404 for 121.71
par ton. loddlng Soncl

for $1.75 par ton.
NOW, THEREFORE,

IE IT ORDAINED by
tho City Commloalon
of tho
City
of
RaaiEIIIteGellll81

•••
'

IIIOOiodvoillagODUI

111 ) 2, 4 , 7 , I, I, 1l ·

RANGES

REAL ESTATE
St.~e 1943

~~fJfdAe

www.BIG-.BENDREALTY.COM

For More
Info ...

_1~ee,

Be, &amp;ut

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ·

~

446-2342 .
or 992-2156

tho Cltyll At lhe.and of Cotton
Lane, you'll find this IIP8Cious
trl-level home that - offera
wonderful privacy, while not
sacrHiclng eonven1enc1. 4·5
BR home with 3 baths. LR,
I
FR. media room and

Rossell D.
Judy DeWitt .............................. 441-0262
'llmmie DeWitt.........................24S-0022
ACIIIAGI!I .-y with
...., flantogo and buldlng COutttv avollablo. Approx. 2G

13
'

goo thlo

--1

BLACKBURN'S
TREE SERVICE

VFW Ladies Aux. 4464
Nov. 14th 7 pm
VFW Dining Ropm
113 3rd Ave.

ATIENTION GRAFTERS!!
Guiding Hand School is .
having a CRAFT SHOW
On the day of the
CHRISTMAS PARADE.
December 1, 2001
Nazarene Church 9 am • 5 pm
If you are interested in setting
up a table to sell your crafts
please call 367· 7371.
Each table Is $20.00

..........,.r 11, 2GOt

DEADLINE 2.00 PM. FRIDAY -146·2342 OR 992-2155

"Home and
Garden Party"

44 -2422

tabulation, whloh lo
k1pt on fill by tho
Puroh11ing Aaent In
111o .omoe of lho City
WHEREAS,

j;unba~

BULLETIN BOARD

' 256-1682 or
Cell phone 441-4298.

Top, Trim, Remove,
Stump Grinding
Firewood

until 12:00 noon, on
Frlcloy, October 11,
2001, at which 1111!0
..., .... duly ,, . . .
and road: Tho bid II

occ• pt
1 n d 00 ci'Hied by tho City Communlcotloiw
- l - I o n , wlllch In . Commloolon, unleeo Olllc:oto ltllajMolclloro)
thl opinion of the
-lfi&amp;CIIled:
--------------Middleport loord of SEcnON 2· POSITION
Rul Ealllttt o-ral
Public Aflalro may be AN D
'sA L A R y

""*

*-

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

Receive a free Make-over.
color analysis, or skin
analysis between the hours
1:00 to 6:30 MondayFriday. Call Misty at

Tho
loregolng
Ordinance lo lleroby
approved to 01 to
price_. lbovo.
form
lloctlon 2: Tho Douil co toe
CIIJ
Auditor lo 0 lllpolla
CltJ
lllllooti!IICIIO
hlo
tho City of Tho
forogohig
Oolllpollo,
Ohio Ordinance 10 horofly
payable to lllolly cwrtlllad 00 10 lunda
Motorlola Inc. 01 tho ocordlng to CltJ
dlroctlon of tho City ~,

Raul &amp;111111 Genlral

- ooldll211t
- · Ownor- to
...

loctlon 4: Thlo
O r d ' - alloll llo 1ft

ACCePTINGAND
loiiONbyucaptoll.
Donnlo w.
RIUICI"'tt liDS FOR
loctlon 1: Tho Clerk of the City

..1 71 112.23 $12.11
•• • Om
PalrDI ,..,.

,~ ~!!;JI:n ,.,:nd or~ ~~:1

tho a p p l - anciiO ; "
0000 :r po:':~:,01

P:M:

SIUZ $1U7 112.10

~No.! llllp-.:: 1 1CW
1 •

I Stlp2; 1111p3

se;'lit

· : llallii • ..
A
IP
W
nd
Cla1a I
1101' 0
We I sa• Tn tc•ot
PLIIant
I pdolrlodtuoorl
conoo. n v
-II be .._.able
f
the
omploto
or
d
1 c
:.~::.:!.::. of1 ::..
•
lllllaga a Water ond
Wa&amp;IO&amp;ator 11oo•r•tt
Plante Including but
not nmttad to ladb
toot 1ng, gr 1t on
......, , _ 1lw10tlll0 ac....,lng, pumpln,,
Ml\'PII.- To llouoll£upl,..
IMr 10,000
groundo kooplng,
T - c-. 740-245- record
kooplnl
5877, Col: 33Hleli.
~- :

r "··-

..... _....
,1.do=~
::!:.,.;
,_.,.
bar
llellnnlnst No-

1-

•
1114 a., S t o - To~. F.-.y ~

lallowlnl 1'23

~Sunda~No~11 , 2001

llttmrll· ~rntinrl • Page D7

PubliC Nob

PubliC Notice

$11.71 $11.11
$11.58 112..02 $12.4
$12.10
olooolflcatlon.• ore _ , . ~OIIfiHII&lt;IC•onua
.._._~~-In

Tho
p ~ rMJc.w•

tho
City
lo • __,. ' __,. '
oppllcetlono and de ol r 0 u a
0 f ~·
roou•. . •
lor
o oatobllalllng _ , . . .
$1M $8.21
IM&amp;II1
far f;
Mf Ordor of . . . $812 $1D.27
I

Wol••&gt;•.

=-~~r~1418-

Aw

-

. 30H15-111111.

II·,,M:.

=•

NO.

PubliC Notice

11100, (7..,...220e.
1111 ~-· F·- 11181- . _ _ 300
•••
_,
.._
011or ooi.Wy2--$2500
T - tor (304)87H745- 5pn. «
(1-tCJ1215 IDI4
•
a
1110 Oodgt ~ ""' ._., 1uue 300EX. 13.200 ceo.
Ia Cob. - · Good CCII 8 ' 1 1 - low OX·
Bed~. Tow
' zw n&amp;.(140.J31'1-8258
•
• '
5!K, EC, SUSOO. (7401041· IM -TAX 450ES.
14.250 117 Hlnlo TRX
1110 faftl ..._ lCLT. u- 711,
1111111 Y...,.
-Cillo, ..... v.e. 5 Ill.. :ISO
$3.500.
· 12100. [740)742· (740)245 ~
2710.
~ ~~ ~~·......
111113 Oodgt Gtontl c.n- ·
- -... Hollol&gt;
CiOO eo...
,_ Good. Bloclt T Bag,
Uko
'=':.1.!:17.:40)440-::!:.::....:•114::.:.7__ - . ,.., 1 1a.,.. Col
[740)21511042
111113 F o o l - XL. 4.0
t.n. 7 I
.,.._ b-.

=

PubliC Notice

MJR&amp;¥UD

t•.....,

New. 11,20Qf

• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pta aunt, WV

Wear red or a stniw hat for
extra tickets. Bring friends
and relatives everyone
. welcome. Food, Fun,
Games, Prizes, Gift for who
brings the most guests.
No shipping or taxes on
orders ·

. . ·rurkey
Shoot
Sunday
Nov. 11, 2001
10 am- .?
Gallia County
Gun Club
Revival

Serenity House
sArves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or

1·800·942·9577

Walk-Thru
Misc. Household Sale
Nov. 10·13 Open Daily 9 am

Hunters Safety
Course

Near Bidwell Post Office

November 17 &amp; 18
To register call
Noreen Saunders

Slug Shoot

(740) 446-4612

15132 St. Rt. 554

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Every Sunday at noon until
Deer Season

All Ages Free Class
Flexability/Strstching
Tuesdays 5:00 pm
Presbyterian Church
Facilitator· Barb Epling
74 ·446·1516

PART TIME BANKING
OPPORTUNITY
The Gallipolis Office of
Peoples Bank NA Is in need of
a flexible team-player for the
part·time position of Customer
Servica Representative
(Teller). Must be available 25·
30 hrslwBak Mon·Frl. between
8 a.m. and 6 ,p.m. and Sat. 8
a.m. to Noon. Competitive
wagss and benefits. Submit
resume and cover lstter lo the
office at 349 Third · Street,
Gallipolis, OH 45631. or email
it to c;aresrs@pebo.com.

at Countryside Baptist
Chapel
Friday, November 16th
7:00pm
Saturday, November 17th
7:00p.m.
Sunday. November 18th
10:45a.m.
·
.with Pastor Paul Brewer
speaking
Countryside Baptist Chapel is
located on Skidmore Road
','.~ · 5 minutes past Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 in Kerr.

1;.;';;""'~

Closets To Full
We Can Helpl
Bring us your like new family
clothing, jewelry and
decorative i'ems
OnceAG in
354 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH
441-9340

VFW Post 4464
Activities Honoring
Vetsrans Day
Sat. Nov. 10, Kali Kaki KarokB
8 p.m. - Midnight
Patriotic Theme
Sun. Nov. 11, 'Vsterans Day"
After Parade, Noon until ???
Free lunch prepared and pmvlded by
the man. music by tho Bulavllla
Ramblers, public lnvHad, come Olio
come all, no cost lor lunch or karaoke

Hunter Safety Course
Nov. 13·15·17
Guyan VFD Firehouse
Mercerville
To register call 256·1961

.,..

. '

. ' '

LEVU LOTI· Appro•. 112 ocre with
Mlablo. Nice place to
I """'"· ROdney ami
pOOIIo -

120,000.00 5 Aaes approx.
In Gallipolis. Handy
looollonll214t
.

&amp;cliiiOi!CoiidiiiOiii

LOTII Ulle M any excavating

Monufoctured
- · .mos
LOOIONQ

hoiMs

1'011 A LOM Here are

2_- . . lola
public
•••liable.
Not -for a ond
big
ptloo. l14,li00 lor them both ond
lo roquooting your oltflr.

-

ACIIIAOE

UITINGI

114

112

-""' lonn
frontage,
land
and Ideal
t'Alr1ting land that II adjocenl to
Woyn;o Nollonal F01rest 12140
TWO ACRE L0181 Rio Grande
. . . eo...ty- available.
12133
.
LOT..PRONTAQE ALONG SR
110 It BULAVILLE PIKE handy
- · looolioo. '--· pobl~
utllltloo 1valllblo. -lill or
oornmerclll. Selling below the

l)ftce tor

~1.iKii:oo i

asking

4 bedroom ranch
home situated on approx ..45 acre
lot. LMng room,2 ear attached
lllratl'· lJoo yoor lmaglnatlor1 on
thlo one...irnmedlote p o - - l ·

one! lnveatment or
starter proper1y. 2 Bed .......
thong """"· k l - &amp; morel
11030 Second Ave. l213tb
LOOKJ $22,000.00 wHI buy you
price

on

Yoo'lllle
taking advantage of all tho
work &amp; Improvements this
sailor put Into this homa.
Roomy, niulll-lavol home wHh
a graal countryskl6 panoramic
view. The spacloua layout
provides all kinds ol room. 3
BRs. 2 wllh pilvato balhs, 3
baths all together, 2 car
auachod garage. Now roo!,
new lurnace, l,·ground pool
with new Hner, new bla!'i&lt;IOP
dllve. 4.28 acres. Conlanili)'

No Interest No Payments
New exerythlngl Lots of
windows. Loto of room. Over
2400
n. Groal plical

aiWO. $185,000 HOO

U N T I L

'

J U N E

1,

2 0 0 2

thil smaller 2 bedroom home,and

Iota! Silualod In the clly of
Gallipollal Can't

nnd em
If Your're
1
C.ral- LHo ... Than coma
view this Immaculate, low
m.alntenance brick ranch

- - valuo. l21-te
NEW
USTINGI
HUNTERS
PARADISE g;ul hunting ......, 101 Just the In between size on
up ll1d IMCiy lor yool Approx. 85 home oltualed at 1026 Seoond Ave.
complete wlll1 lroo otando,
teed tot and co.ey cabin to warm up 3 BR, 2 baths, family room, living
ln. Au.1fly. . . . . . _ collin room, bleemtnt, covered front
and morel tal3tA
-...... bath CO&lt;Jnty water,
- a n d toioplmo lll'licoln ta&lt;:t.

offering LR with fireplace,
dining area with b1autllul

lover.
Ito
games. You get tho idoa. 3
BR homo with 1 .5 baths.
Largo family room, LR, oat In
kitchen. EKiia doep lot wllh

~ a oornblnatlon of c:loanld
l l 1 d - lend, pond and Willi 1
balutlful vlew.l2182

11111

woOd floor open to large
kHchon, 3 BRa, I 1/2 baths,
plus lull basemant oHoilng
hugo FA wllh llraplaca
bar area. Now add a 2 car
garage, an In-ground pool and
tho conve•lent location, lhia
homo truly Is a winner. Pilced
at $142,000.
. H11

••a

LT133 Llwn Trootor
• 13-hp, ovorhosd-valvo engine
• 5-spsod, shift·on·lho·go transmission
• 38-inch mower deck
• More than 9 sttachmsnls available

own1t1
kept thlo brlok l ~l•yl 1!1loval.ln lmmaculale condition
that all y&lt;llf will have to do Is
move ln. Olfeilng ~ BRa, 2 1/2
BA, LR open In dining room,
Lg. aun·Ht FR, 2-car gorago,
lg. screened In porch
w/covered patio. area
ultdemuth. Thla 11 a 11oma 10
app18Cialo. Prlaod at $128,600

NOW$1999

H30

NEW PRICE f4f,IOO.oat 1 112
Sto;y homolhlt 1111 Iota ol TLC. 2·

I.Xl!l5 Llwn r......

3 &amp;.di'OCirM, Jiving room wrtn
fl...,...., - · 2 detached
ga11g11 and lollde more! Mutt ...
thio ·one to appreciate. Owner
motivated to Mil. requeatlng an

•15 hp engine

• Automatic trensmission

1,200 oq.
ft. o1 IMnc~ opoce aroo w1111 an
additional 2000 oq. ft. wh~h lo used

ol!trl121 01
1141 SR 211 $88,000.00 1 1101y

• 42-lnch convertible mower deck

prtHndV 11 01rpentera lhop but

""":h

could be

Wlyl lklod
home. Living
room, clnlng liM, klt&lt;:hln. laml~
room and 2 balls. 2 ca. al1achild
· Centlll air, Clly ~&lt;haolol

u!Niy converted Into

additional Nving area. tMtal pole

bam 30 • 60 with t6 x 60 -lion
on nch oJQo. Portlol~ woodl\1.
fenced puturt. 11llablo ·
Private! lOlling. caa 1or dttalll and
appointment IOdlyl 121:11
PRICE DROPPED TO tM,UOO.OOI
1 t/2 Stooy home ~tuoled on nice
level lot. 3 bedrooms. encloltd
lront porcll, loogo ldtchon &amp; dining
a111. Side pooch. Dotached garage.
OWNER WANTS SOLD! MAKE AN
OFFFAI 12035

12148

FACEUFT WHERE IT COUNTS!
That Ia what lhe owner. gave 10 lhla
2 11to1y homo conveniently looatl\1
In _,, 3 Bedmoma, 2· full balhil,
IMng """"· kitchen, front pooch,
IMI' - . dotachl\1 gara110 ond
mcll0fl2t2G

Don't

house II your wi~ipo•oer
weak. Boca"""
II
push all your
Cha11111ng 2 slo;y wllh 4 BAs,
2 baths, large LR, FR. DR.
Alwaya wanted lo own a
with 2 stalowoys? ... Tall
original 111m. Lata ot
. PAIGE REDUCED
Irs a bargain af

COUNTRY, BUT CLOSE TO TOWN CONVENIENCE! Aalsoel ranch home resting on nice lraad lot. Main level
CGnliltl of ovef'llzed living room open to formal dining area, eat-In kitchen, 3 bedrooma, family room with
flrtpllce, arage and concrete drivel Immediate poneaslon112085

fOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR A
FREE' QUAliTY HOMES IN COLOR BOOK I f f '

MEIGS COUNTY

~42~~e1n;e{

NEW UmNGI SOUTHERN COLONIAL HOME In excollenl condHion.
Lovety .tl
your hart with all its SOuthern charm.
Fo~l I
as wellaa a nice cozy famly room. Eat-In
to home by breezeway. Master bedroom &amp;
ft. sttualed on appro~~:. 66 acrea with pond &amp;
2 Car detached garage and workshop. Many
by appointment only 10 call and make this dream
.MIDDLEPORT. Older home with

charm and , great location near
school, grocery, etc. lote or room
here lor the family. Give Cheryl a
call lor more detalls.t2110

3111 112 N. 3rd SlrMt. One llory
rtloed ranch, 2 badrooma, living
room, kitchen &amp; bath, garage,
basement. Priced right $38,000
12134

' 36112 SR 124.. $79,000 3.29 .
acres comes along with this ranch
home. Living room, dining room,
klletlen 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2
car detached garage. Lovely
pond, llull • - &amp; berries. Loll go
...112130

Evergreenll Eaoy to
$44.900 your payments will ba
cheaper lhan rani. 3 BR home
with 1 bath on a nlco lot
Several outbuildings. Quiet
country location . Don't
htlltato...won't laatlong. 1203

2nd
upper I polentlal. This 4 BR
house needs soma attention,
but has lots ol potential to ba a
vary rMce home. s rooms In all
Including LR, DR, FR. 2 balhs,
oat-In kllchtn. Could be
converted to a duplex fairly
oaslly. Nice yard. 011 """'
parking. 147,80011 1110

lvarywh8roll
Tills · low
inolntenonce btlck &amp; vinyl
ranch ot1ere 3 IIRs, 1 bath,
large LR. nice kltcltort with 1011
ol eablnilll open lo dininG arao
wllh F18nch doers that open
onto the back deck. ovarolzed
2 car garaga plua 2 storage
buUdlnal that oltar tho
. polllibillty of a workohop a~ea,
largo laval lot with aceo81 to
Raccoon Creek. Priced to 1011
al $92,000. 1102
. Allordllblo I Roomy... Multi·
level floor plan will allow you
to anjoy all this house has to
oHer while keeping out ol each
ollto(s way. 3 BRa. &amp; 2 baths.
large eat-In kitchen, living
room, family room and 2-car
garage. Good storage- good
privacy. Pricad at $89,900.
1231
133,500 IIUYS MORE THAN ·
YOU THINK. Graat Count;y
IOCIIIon. Located on Llltla
Bullskin offering 1.5 acra m/1,
2 bedrooms, 1.511eths mot&gt;llo
homo in good condlllon. Also 1
car carport and storage
building. Pilei\! to soli quick.
133,!1DQ 1120

B~fore shopping for your New Add.ress ... stop by ours:

David WIHmen, GRI, CRS Brokar
Carolyn Watch, GRI 441-1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robart Bruce 446-0621 Rite Wiseman 446-9555

J.B.

Gl'Di ~~ •DII

..-_

-

I.

Hurry in today
and Save!

• 18-hp engine

G••• Tractar

• Automatic tnmsmi11ion
• 48-inch convertible mower deck

NonHNG RuNs L11n A

www.JohnDuro.com

Carmichael•s Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc.
Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital • Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412
Offer trw:ll ~DfUirY 21, 2002, .,b.)tot to IDI)I'OYI(I Cr.cll\ on John Dttrt C:rtCIR FIIYOIYI!\1 Plln, for non-commttcltl UH onfV, No doWn P~Y~T~tnt rtQUirtd. Afttr l)l'omotiOI'IIt !&gt;friocl, riNinot ,Ohirp
will btJin to eocrue It ; ,w ~. Ottwr 1peclal r1t11 II'ICI tlrm mQ biiVIIIIbll, II'IOiucllnt lnltlllmtnt flnlnclr'll Mel flnanclnt tor oomm~ro1 1 1 ..,.., A¥11111»11 1t ptrtlcll)ltll'll dttlff1,

DEERE

�•
Page 08 • 6unlla!' 1J:unrt -6tntintl

Funds
fnNnPqeD1
ties are something that have
been near and dear 1 · his heart
since gnduate sch. I, and he
considers them a lascinating
sub-segment of the market
place.
Here's more from Wiles
about convertible securities
and the Rockhaven Premier
Dividend Fund:
Q: Tell me a little about
convertibles.
Wiles: There are convertible
preferreds (stocks) and convertible bonds. And there is
very little difference between
the two, except for where they
fall within the capital structure
of a corporation.
The first convertibles were
issued in the late 1800s by railroad companies that were
rapidly expanding westward.
Convertibles have predominately 6lled a niche in which
you have a young, fast-growing company that needs to
raise capital and can't get the
money they need to grow
fiom their friendly neighborhood banker, or they find the
high-yield bond market too
expensive. Or they choose not
to do an initial public offering.
So, historically. it's the segments of the market place that
are growing fast that have
been the biggest issuers of
convertibles. In the late 1990s,
it was tech and telecom, and
now we're seeing a lot of
health care, biotechnology,
drugs, generic drug companies, etc., issuing converts.
Q: What about the fund?
Wues: We keep about 40
securities in the fund, stay fully
invested, and run sector neutral to the Merrill Lynch Convertible Index - that's the
broadest convertible index out
there. (Sector neutral means
that the fund will hold the

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

same sector weightings in its
portfolio as are in the index.)
Where we place our bets is
on picking names. You know,
picking the most attractive
underlying .equities. We
believe ·that if the equiry does-

n't work, the convert isn't

Farms and dties need each other
GALLIPOLIS- Get your
popcorn! Get your peanuts!
The buttery aroma of fresh
popcorn for sale drifts
through th ,, :rowd. The baseball bat cracks as the ball
soars into the outfield stands.
The fans cheer and rush to
retrieve the home run ball.
What does this baseball
game have to do with
National Farm-Ciry Week?
Everything!
National Farm-Ciry Week,
which runs Nov. 16 though
Thanksgiving Day, has been
proclaimed each year by the
president ·of the United
States to emphasize successful
partnerships between rural
and urban residents who
make our food and fiber systern the envy of the world.
"Partners in Progress," the
theme of Farm-Ciry Week,
recognizes the interdependence among those wbo 'produce the products those who
consume the prod~cts, and all
those in the production and
marketing chain between the
producer and consumer _
because farmers and ranchers
do not work alone.
Farm workers, processors,
shippers, truck
drivers·,

going to work. So if yo·J get
the equiry story wrong, you're
not going to make the money
you thought you were going,
to make on the convert.
Q: What's the most misunderstood thing about equiry
convertibles?
Wiles: People underestimate
the upside potential and the
total return potential on the
securities.
Q: Who is the Rockhaven
Premier Dividend Fund bestsuited for?
Wiles: Anybody who is
looking for equiry exposure
and yield.
We try to play in what we
call the "sweet spot." That's the
total return part of the convertible market, and this fund
is designed to give investors
anywhere fiom 70 percent to
75 percent of the market's
upside, and then protect them
somewhat on the downside,
too.
But people should not buy
this fund if they think they are
buying a defensive bond fund.
That's not who it is targeted
for. It's really targeted for equiry investors who want total
return. Another place where
we've found it to be very useful is with foundations,
endowments, or any entity
from PaaeDI
that nee~ to pay out income
but also has long-term grow:h cover over your wood pile to·
considerations.
keep the wood dry. When cold
Dian Vujovich ~ most recent weather arrives, pieces of firebooks include "101 Mutual Fund wood can be moved closer to
FAQs" (Chandler House) and the house for easier access. This
"10-Minute Guide to the Stock firewood should be stored on a
Market" (Macmillan). To learn rack, patio, deck,. or outdoor
mort about mutual funds, visit her storage box, not on the
l#b silt at: www.diansjundfrte- ground.

Kneen

bies.com.

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Sunday, Nov. 11,2001

Smith
GUEST VIEW

inspectors,

agribusinesses,

marketers, advertisers, retailers and consumers all play
important roles in the
incredible productivity of
our nation's food and fiber
system.
So how does baseball rel~te
to agrtculture and Farm-C1ry
· Week? When you look at the
stands at the baseball game,
many of the fans are mvolved
m agnculture even though
they may b~e. m the ~1ry.
Nearly 25 million Amencan
workers, about 17 percent of
the total . U.S. wor~force, is
mv~Jved m . producmg, processmg! ~llmg and trading
the· natiOns food and fiber.
Only 4.6 million people, or
less than 2 percent of the
~arion's population, actually
hve on farms. The umforms

This year's actiVIties are
under the capable leadership
of Rutland Garden Club and
the Rudand Friendly Garden
Club. There are two classes
open to the public to exhibit.
The Horticultural Plants Class
includes plants and/or twigs
grown at least three months by
the exhibitor.
The second class is. an Invitational Arrangement Class "Tramping Through The
Woodlands · Gathering Some
Pine" in which you are to
include some weathered treasured wood. No need to preregister for these two classes,
however they must be in place
by noon. Exhibit hall will be
open .to designers only bc:fore
noon. This free event is open
to the public. '

•••
Are you looking for ideas to

decorate your home for the
consideration, I have made holidays?
The Meigs Counry Garden
the difficult decision to leave
Clubs
are holding their annual
OSU Extension. I have decidf1om PapD1
ed to accept a position with · holiday show entided "Holithe Southern Ohio Agricul- day Cheer." This year's show
The financial agreements tural and Cornnilmiry Devel- will be held Nov. 17 fiom 1-5
of such contracts may vary as opment Foundation, the p.m. and Nov. 18 from 1-4
weD. Some successful growers
organization locally known as p.m. at the Meigs Counry
Senior Citizens Building,
are purchasing the heifer the "Tobacco Foundation."
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
calves at set price below the
fu a _foundation field repmarket value; and then selling
resentative for Gallia, Jackson,
them back to the dairy at a set
· price that is also below mar- Lawrence, Pike, Scioto and
ket value. The obvious advan- other southeastern Ohio
tages of this are lower start-up counties with tobacco base, I
capital requirements, and the wlll retain the opportunity to
opportunity to share the work with and assist tobacco
financial risks and repercus- producers. My·departure from
OSU Extension will be effecNEW YORK (AP) - Bill
sions of death loss.
tive
Nov.
30,
2001;and
I
will
said he expects that his
Maher
This provides significant
incentive for conscientious begin · in my new role on late-night talk show won't be
around much longer.
producers to manage inten- Monday, Dec. 3.
The opinionated host of
My final thoughts to you as
sively for disease and accident
"Politically Incorrect"
ABC's
prevention. Other dairies are an agent will be published in
said his criticism of the U.S.
more
comfortable
with the Dec. 2 column.
retaining ownership of the
Qennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia military after the Sept. 11 terheifers and would therefore Counry's Extension agent for rorist attacks has hurt his relabe more interested in negoti- agriculture
and
natural tionship with the network.
"Could we keep working
ating a daily fee.
resources, Ohio State UniverBecause the association is sity.)
willing to supervise and
ensure that the heifers are
managed according to the
terms of the contract, potential cooperating dairies may
There will be a delinquent land list containing
become easier to recruit. Furthe description of the property as it· appears on
thermore, it provides better
the tax list, the name of the person in whose
opportunity for small farms to
participate and diversify their
name the property is listed, the amount of
operations.
taxes, assessments, and penalties due and
The members of this assounpaid as of the August 20()1 settlement. Said
ciation appear to favor the
value of cooperation; howevlist shall be published twice in the next sixty
er, this rype of set up is obvi(60) days in the Daily Tribune, a newspaper of
ously not for everyone. Forgeneral circulation in Gallia County, Ohio in
tunately for GaUia Counry,
tobacco producers here have
accordance with Section 5721.01 of the
been cooperating for over a
Revised Code of the 'State of Oho.
decade and are weU versed its
values. Now, it is time to start
thinking about applying those
· Each person charged with real property taxes
advantages to other comand assessments of public utility property taxes
modities.
on a tax duplicate in the hands of the Gallia
For more . information
about the heifer growers assoCounty Treasurer may pay the full amount of
ciation discussed in this artisuch taxes before such date.
cle, please call the OSU
Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
To avoid additional interest charges on
A mineral meeting and
December l, 2001, the taxpayer may enter into
dinner for cattle producers
scheduled for Thesday begina written agreement with the County Treasurer
ning at 6:30 p.m. at the C.H.
to pay one-fifth (115) of the delinquent taxes,
McKenzie Agricultural Cenplus all current taxes prior to the day interest is
ter. The Ag Center will be
closed on Monday, so if you
to be charged.
want to RSVP on Monday,
please call Rio Hardware at
Larry M. Betz
245-9745.
Departing OSU ExtenGallia County Auditor
sion: After much thought and

Jill

Bymes

of the p!oyers are likely·made
of cotton or other natural
fibers grown by American
Furthermore,
farmers .
peanuts are grown by southern farmers and popcorn is
grown by farmers from
around.the country. Even the
ball would not be possible
without
cooperation
between agriculture and
industry - the outer covering of the baseball is made of
cowhide.
However, the connection
does not end with baseball.
Many of the products we use
in our everyday lives come
from plant and animal
.byproducts · produced by ·
American
farmers
and
ranchers. The
products
include pharmaceuticals, Xrays, adhesives, detergents,
crayons, paper, shampoo,
lotion, cosmetics, fuel, tires,
lumber and drywall.
About 17 percent of raw
. U.S. agricultural products are
exported yearly with total
exports exceeding $50 billion. All this means more jobs
and higher wages across the
nation . .In fact, U.S. agricultural exports generate more
than $115.6 billion annually

in business activity throughout the country.
fu we prepare for the
upcoming holiday season and
baseball's World Series champions are crowned, it is only
appropriate that we recognize the vital farm-dry part7
nerships that have done so
much to improve our lives.
Rural and urban communities working together have
!JUde the most &lt;# our rich
agricultural resources, and
they continue to contribute
to our health, well-being and
to the strength of our economy.
Cooperation is the key,
Neither the farm nor the ciry
can exist without the other.
Instead, the interdependence
of the two creates jobs, products, markets and relationships that continue to make
our nation strong.
So, during National FarmCity Week, look to your
community for this ruralurban relationship and · be
proud of how it works and
thrives. .

Lakin

one problem for another in
certain places," Nibert said.
"People don't realize· how
fragile the ground water supply is. We're blessed with an
abundant supply here now;
but it's just fragile. Once it
goes away, you neVer get it
back."
The new Lakin facility
began operating at the first of
September and is under daily
monitoring.
·

from PageD1
grams.
West Virginia received primacy and has the authority to
implement the SWDA standards in its jurisdiction.
"We could have gone
somewhere else and drilled
weDs, but we would just trade

Melp Coullty's

•
mo n

•

'

Some businesses
don't plan to
change anything
Bv BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meigs Cjounry's
Clean Indoor Air Act went into
effect today, but the health department wiU leave enforcement efforts

HometOwn Newsp•per

n 1n

up to local low enforcement agencies.
The ban ·on public smoking was
passed in September by the Meigs
Counry Board of Health, and makes
it unlawful to smoke in any enclosed
public place, and in the out of doors
if within five feet of the entrance to
a public place:
Offices, elevators and waiting
roorns are included in the list of
plac~s were smoking is banned, and
so are bars and restaurants, but at least

one bar owner said Friday it will be
business as usual in his establishment
·- smoking ban or none.
Sonny Gloeckner said his generations-old tavern on Pomeroy's Main
Street will continue to welcome
smokers.
"As of now, I don't plan any
&lt;;hanges at all," Gloeckner said. "I've
been talking to some other business
owners, and it seems that they aren't
going to make any changes either."
Gloeckn.e r and a number of other

bar and restaurant owners have
helped lead an opposition campaign
against the ban, cloiming it will harm
their businesses and infringe on their
r.ights as property and business o~n ­
ers.
"I'm doing this as a consideration
for my customers," Gloeckner said,
"but I'm also doing it for the sake of
my own livelihood. There's no doubt
in my mind that taking the ashtrays
off my tables would hurt my business, when customers can easily trav-

BY LINDA MATTSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GOD BLESS AMERICA! .
ROCCHI'S POOL &amp; SPA

FREE TESTS- Screening for cholesterol was one of several services offered at Friday's health fair. Here Claudia Thomas of
Home Health Care draws blood from Helen Boggs, Langsville, one of several hundred residents who took advantage of the free
test. (Charlene Hoefllck photos)

together? Yeah, but there'd still
be that tension and that conflict," Maher told Talk magazine for its December/january

THE NEWS

issue.

:sso _st. Rt. 7 ~orth
CalhpOIIS , OhiO

"They're not going to
change and I'm not going to
change.

Ple•H-a.n.s

Veterans Day
sees more
pu
interest

(Jill Smith is organizational
director for the Athens-C.IIiaLawrence counties' Farm
Bureau.)

(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
Extension agent for agriculture
and natural resoun:es, Ohio State
University.)

PEOPLE IN

el to Athens, Gallia or Mason Counry to do business, and be welcome."
Health Commissioner Norma Torres said the department will concern
itself with education, rather than
seeking out violators.
"We're interested in getting the .
information out there because otlr
role is educational, not enforcement,"
Torres said Friday. "Our interest is in
the health aspect, and we're doing

Veterans Day celebrations
were infused with a new
spirit of patriotism this year
as the nation also marked the
two-month anniversary of
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
In New York Ciry, that
spirit energized the oncefading ritual of military veterans and politicians marching through midtown Manhattan. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
and
mayor-elect
Michael Bloomberg were
cheered Sunday as they laid a
wreath at Madison Square
Park, the starting point for an
18-block parade.·
"It is a day in ,which all
New Yorkers and all Ameri·cans now understand maybe better than ever what our veterans have done
for us," Giuliani said.

Rocco Brienze, 66, an
Army veteran from New
York, said he was attending
the parade for the first time
in 40 years. "We came here tp
show the terrorists we are
not afraid of anything. Li~
goes on, and we are n~t
intimidated," he said.
In the tiny resort town of
Branson, Mo., thousands
stood shoulder-to-shoulder
to watch the 67th annual
parade that is said to draw
one of the country's largest
crowds.
~n !'!lllJ.Yally W:u-m wind
blew over the sea of mosdy.
red, white and blue as bands,
color guard units, floats and
soldiers paraded through. The
town's 6,000 residents were
expecting 150,000 guests for
a weeklong celebration

P I - - v.t.nna, 3

Hundreds take part in health fair

(74-Q) 441 9896
•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

variery of health issues, and
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
find out about free and lowPOMEROY - When it cost health care services availcomes to cost· and comfort, able in ihe counry.
Before the doors opened at
senior citizens seem to have
gotten the message loud and 9 a.m., there was a long line of
clear that prevention is the seniors waiting to get in. One
best course.
commented that she came an
They turned out in droves at hour early because she didn't
Friday's health fair at the want to miss out on the limitSenior Citizens Center to get ed number of flu shots availtheir flu shots, have their hear- able.
ing and · cholesterol checked,
Another said he didn't want
learn about the soothing effect to get anthrax and think it was
of herbal teas along with the '' the flu, so he was getting the
benefits of massage to relief shot.
stress, pick up literature on a
A total of 485 flu shots were .

rig.l)t around the corner,

· can bet on that! · · · ·

.;,::' ·"·-.•"'

AUDITOR'S DISPLAY NOTICE

given Friday, ·said Norma Torres, Meigs County health
commissioner. The vaccine
was given to seniors 65 and.
older or those with chronic
disease in acc~rdance with a
directive from the Ohio
Department of Health.
A second clinic will be held
Tuesday at the health department, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3
p.m.
"Anybody can come and
get the flu vaccine:' saip Torres, since the local department

PIHs•- H..lth, J

THE TEA LADY - Maureen
Burns of tlie Herbal Sage Tea
Co., Rutland, discussed the
medicinal effects of tea for
relieving stress and other aliments at the annual health fair
at the Senior Citizens Center.

HONORING OUR HEROES - United States Marine Corps
veteran Marllou Goodfell of OwensbOro, Ky., salutes as the
84th annual New York City Veterans Day Parade passes.
Goodfell served in the Marine Corps from 1955 to 1970. (
AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)

•
~

Toclay"s

Sentinel v
1 Sedlon - 10 Plt(leS

•

Calendar
~li!SSifi!:d~
Y!mic~
Edito[i!ll~

Qbjtuaries
SRQrt~

'

W!:atb!:r

Hlp: !101
L-:JDt
Details, 3.

Lotteries
5

. said he has met With the Southern Local
Board of Education regarding acquisition
SYRACUSE - The · refurbishing of of the Syracuse Elementary School.
the tennis courts~ financed through an
Council entered executive session to
Ohio Department of Natural Resources di&lt;cuss negotiations on acquiring the
NatureWorks grant, is all but completed, school property.
Robert Wingett, grants ad1ninistrator,
In ocher business, councilman Bill
told Syracuse Village Council.
Roush asked if resident&lt; should be conThe final phase is the electrical portion cerned with public safery if the counry i~
of the. work, Wingett said. Wingett also left without police protection due to the
BY KATIE CROW

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

OHIO

!H! Pick 3: 3-5-5; Pick 4: 8-6-3-2
!! Super LoiiD: 2~32-35-48
4 KicMr. 1-3-6-2-4-2
~ !N.VA.
Pllwerbllll: 7·13-16-33-38
(13)

s.z. Hl
~

Tennis courts nearing completion

Cl 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins co.

recent threat of layoffS in the sheriff's
department.
"Absolutely not," Mayor Larry Lavender said. "Our local police. officers, Mark
Bolin and Scott Barton, will continue to
provide law enforcement protection in
the village of Syracuse."
Walter Roush and !:lob Byer met with
council with reference to vacating an

Please see Tennis, s

Holzer Mecllcal Equlp111ent, Inc.
Oxygen and Related Services.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (740) 446·1711
Open 7 Days A Weeki
~--

NOW ACCEPTEDII

ME o 1c .A L cENTER

2881 State Route 160 • Gallipolis

Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information, call

www.holzer.org

(740) 446·4095

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