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                  <text>Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy, MlddleP9rt. Ohio

Monday, Nov. 12,2001

CO'LLEGE FOOTBALL

20011ri-Valley
Champs

Manhall breaks into the Top 25
CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
fourth with 25 touchdown
(AP) - Marshall ent=d The
passes. He has three 400-yard
Associated Pn!Ss Top 25 footgames this s.ason.
ball poH Sunday for only the
Leftwich needs 706 Y2rds in
second time in school history.
his final two games to surpass
moving into the media rankPennington's school-record
ings at No. 24.
3,799 yards in 1999.
"That's exciting," said MarThe biggest surprise has
shaH coach Bob Pruett.
been MarshaD's young receiv"HopefullJo; we can get into
ing COrp5.
the Top 20."
Sophomore Darius Watts
Marshall finished the 1999
ranks third in the nation with
seasQn 13-0 and ranked No.
1,156 receiving yards and is
10 in the final AP poD behind
among II semifinalists for the
Heisman Trophy finalist Chad
2001 Biletnikotf Award, given
Pennington and a senior-laden
to the nation's top wide
team.
Division title. .
receiver.
This year, the task has been
"It's been a heck of a year so · Redshirt freshman Jpsh
chaHenging. The Herd .was hit far, the "\OSt hectic year we've Davis has 727 receiving yards,
by the NCAA suspensions of a had;' said Pruett, Marshall's and junior Denero Marriott
dozen players for receiving sixth-year coach. "You've got set career highs in his last three
extra work benefits. Ten play- to almost. look at those kids games, including 132 yards
ers missed three games and who were suspended just like against Miami.
two others sat out one contest. they were injuries. There's
MarshaH has home games
MarshaH has never revealed games where we've had six remaining against Ohio and
the players involved in the sus- starters out for three games or Division 1-AA Youngstown
pensions, .which came two more."
State. The latter game was
da~ before the Herd lost in
The mai~stay , for Marshall added to the schedule this year
the season opener to then-No. has been Byron Leftwich, who after the Herd's Sept. 15 con1 florida, 49-14.
has solidified his status as the test at Texas Christian was
Marshall has won eight Mid-American · Conference's canceled because · of the terstraight games since, including top quarterback.
rorist attacks.
a 27-21 victory Saturday at · He has completed 67 perMarshaD .will play in the
Miami of Ohio, that clinched cent of his passes (230-of-344) conference
championship
the Herd's fifth-straight Mid- and ranks third in Division 1- game Nov. 30 at the home of
American Conference East A with 3,094 passing yards and the West Division winner,

which is still undetermined.
"We felt like we had a
chance to have a good footbaU
team but a lot of other people
haven't," Pruett said. "We've
just got to finish. As the old
adage
goes, 'Remember
November! We can't look at
where we are. We'ye got to
look at where we've got to get
to."
The two remaining opponents won't do anything to
strengthen MarshaH's status in
the rankings, but defensive
coordinator Kevin Kelly is
taking precautions to ensure
there won't be any letdowns.
"Our goal at the beginning
of the year is to be in· the Top
25. The bowl picture is out
rlie?e.too. Those are two pretty good incentives for the kids
to strive for;' KeDy said.

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Melp County's

·Middleport: BPA or l!illage adm· istrator?
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OHIO DIVISION WINNERS - The Eastern Eagles captured
their 5th straightTri-valley Conference volleyball championshiP
this past season in addition to claiming the 2001 Division IV
Sectional Crown. Pictured are, front, 1-r, Ashley Hager, Tifferiy
Bissell, Janet Ridenour, Tiffany Hensley, Alyssa Holter. BackAmanda Yeager, Tiffany Spencer, Katie Robertso!l, Whitney
Karr, Kass Lodwick Tammy Bissell, Janet Calaway.
•

MIDDLEPORT "Middleport needs a village administrator."
At Monday evening's regular
meeting of Middleport Village
Council, Councilman Roger
Manley suggested that council
consider hiring a village adminis-

rrator to replace Village Superintendent Brent Manley, who
resigned last month.
An adyertisement is now soliciting applications for Manley's
replacement, with a Nov. 16 deadline.
Manley said that replacing the
elected Board of Public Affairs,
made up of Myron Duffield, Don

Stivers and Bernard Gilkey, would
provide needed employee supervision, and restore council's authority in public works matters .
Referring to 1998 action by
council to dismiss the village
administrator and replace him
with a reinstated BPA, Manley
said the decision to eliminate the
position of village administrator

was made too hastily, and that a
trained and licensed village
administrator should be hired
instead of a village superinten dent.
"We should have eliminated the
man, not the position," Manley
said.
Brent Manley was in charge of
supervising village street . and

PVHWellncss Center
Thursday, November 29,2001
Noon to6 p.m.

Buckeyes back into Big Ten race

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Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospital

Auxiliaiy
&amp;

HONORING
f\'
"
Cs
0UR ............... \VD

American Red Cross

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H"l •

embers of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion of Pomeroy, and various VFW and
DAV posts observed Veterans Day Monday in
front of the Meigs County Courthouse. The
remembrance service included 'inspirational
speeches, a church beD salute and the singing of"America the
Beautiful." The service ended with a firing squad ttibute by
Drew Webster Post 39 and the playing of"Taps" by Karen Griffiih. (Tony M. Leach photos)

'

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

....... -Council, AJ

FROM STAFF REPORTS

'·

• FREE Gift To All Donors

water department employees,
although stre.et workers fall under
the purview of council.
Street Superintendent Kenny
Madden Jr. is now temporarily in
charge of supervising those
employees, under the direction of
Mayor Sandy lannarelli.
· lannarelli voiced opposition to .

Grant awarded to
combat predatory
practices

Blood Drive

OHIO STATE FOOTBALL

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) a .lot of confidence, he's get- a field goal, a safety and Well's
-AU of a sudden, Ohio State ring a lot of help from a young
finds itsel f in the thick of the receiving corps and the guys 15-yard run across the grain.
Big Ten ra~e.
up front have matured and
After the Boile•makers cut
Wins· in their final two done a good job. Steve is very, · it to 12-9 at the half on a field
games --Illinois on Saturday very focused."
Vance had the biggest goal and Hance's !-yard bootand at Michigan the week
after - would give the Buck- receiving day of his career, leg, Ohio State controlled the
eyes
at least a share of the con- catching seven passes for 138
1
yards _ including two dra- second half. The. Buckeyes
ference crown.
But it's not as though they're matic one-handed grabs. One outgained the Boilermakers
sitting around diagramming went for 31 yards on a third_ .
243 89
scenarios to get a trophy.
and-5 play and the. other
"We're the only ones who resulted in the touchdown.
Vance returned on Tuesday
can control what we do anyway, so we haven't really had a from his father's funeral .
"He always told me to do
whole bunch of discussions
about, 'WeH, we need Indiana the best I can do," Vance said.
to beat Michigan State and so- "I knew he's looking down on
and-so to beat so-and-so,"' me, especially on that end
Ohio State coach .Jim Tressel · zone catch."
said. ''Because if we don't do
Jonathan WeDs carried 21
our job, it's irrelevent."
times for 101 yards and a
Ohio State (6-3, 4-2) touchdown.
became eligible for a bowl and
P!!rdue (5-3, 3-3), which
also remained just a game out came in ranked last in the Big
of first in the Big Ten with Ten in otfense, struggled aU
Saturday's 35-9 victory over day. Quarterback Brandon
Purdue.
Hance completed just I 0 of
Steve Bellisari threw three 22 passes for 122 yards and
touchdown passes, and Ohio was intercepted by Donnie
State's defense intercepted Nickey, Cie Grant and Derek
three passes and forced two Ross.
safeties.
"When you play a fine
"We've got something to defense like that, even the
play for," Bellisari said. "Now smaHest mistakes are magniwe've got to go out and make lied;' Hance said.
it happen."
Hance also was tackled in
BeUisari has been booed at the end zone for a safety by
home all season for his Kenny Peterson and Matt Wilmediocre performances. For helm in the third quarter. After
the second straight game, a wayward snap from the shothowever, he seemed to make gun formation, Hance picked
aU the right moves.
· up \he bouncing ball and
Bellisari completed 14-of- intentionally fumbled it out of
20 passes for 263 yards with- the end zone for another safeout an interception. His ty in the first half.
touchdown throws - all in
Asked how Hance played,
the second half- covered 53 Purdue coach Joe TiDer said, ''I
yards to Michael Je~kins, 13 learned a long time ago if I'm
Y2rds to Ben Hartsock, and 7 not happy after a disappointyards to Chris Vance.
ing performance to keep my
"Eleven of his last 12 quar- mouth shut."
The Buckeyes took a 12-0
ters were what I had .always
hoped," Tressel said. "He's got lead in the first 10 minutes on

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

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POMEROY In an
effort to increase awareness of
equal housing opportunities,
Gov. Bob Taft recently
announced that Meigo; County will receive a $15,000 grant
to help educate residents
about predatory and abusive
lending practices.
The Ohio Department of
Development's
(ODOD)
Office ofHousing and Community Partnerships reported
that the grant money is being
awarded through the New
Horizons Fair Housing Assistance Program and will be
used to conduct an aggressive
predatory lending practices
educational program.
The program will ir\clude
the development and countywide distribution pf fair housing materials and the purchase
of advertising space on billboards throughout the county
to educate the public about
predatory and abusive lending
practices.
In addition, the county will
conduct two training sessions
for residents and local service
providers about predatory
lending.

GOURDS
GALORE - Paint·
ed gourds for
decorative use In
arrangements
and on wreaths
will be a feature
of the Christmas
flower show Saturday and Sunday
at the Senior Citl·
zens Center.
Here, Pauline
Atkins, left, and
Janet Bolin, finish
up a wreath decorated with ornamental gourds.

Garden·Club slates·annual show
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Things of
Christmas such as bells and
baubles, snowflakes and sbrs, candles and colored lights enhancing
traditional and contemporary floral designs will be featured in the
Meigs County Garden Club Association's annual show this weekend.
Always .a highlight of the holiday season, t~e · free flower show

Today's

Sentinel
l Sectlns- 1l Peps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

ments carrying out a "Christmas
Cheer" theme, club members will
be exhibiting a variety of decorat\lllhen: Saturday and Sunday
ed wreaths and swags, suitable for
indoor or outdoor use, have exhi\\'here: Senior Citizens Center
bition table displays, show creative
gift wrap, and exhibit gourds
Vllhat time: 1 to 4 p.m.
galore, all decorated for the season
will be staged Saturday and Sun- or made into craft items.
All of the entries are. to be in
day at the Senior Citizens Center.
The public is invited to view it place by noon Saturday and judgfrom 1 to 4, p.m. either day.
In addition to floral arrange,........ sh-.A:s

IF YOU'RE GOING ...

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Hl&amp;h:IOI
Low: JOI
Details, A2

Lotteries

AS

OHIO
62-4 Pick 3: 7-3-4; Pick 4: 8-4+5

65 Bllchlvu: 7·14-11·28-36
A4 W.VA.

A3 O.ity 3: 9-6-1 Daily 4: ~5+5
6i.H.6 cash lS: 5-10.16-22-24-25
A2 o 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

"The
Fair Housing Assistance Program helps
Ohio residents ·
access
quality
housingTart
one of life's
most basic needs," said Taft.
"I'm pleased Meigo; County
will use these grant doUars to
educate local citizens about
equal housing opportunities
and how to avoid predatory
lending practices," he added.
The New Horizons Fair
Housing Assistance Program
provides funds to local government to affirmatively
advance fair housing opportuniti.,. Affimllltive f.lir housing strategies are designed to
address locaUy assessed needs
and commitments, while
advancing the state's f.lir housing goals.
The program is funded
with Ohio SmaU Cities Community Development Block
Grant Program doUars and is
administered
through
ODOD.

Sheets
appointed to commission on teaching
.
. .

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Jennifer Sheets of
Pomeroy was one of 46 people appointed by Gov. Bob Taft to Ohio's first Governor's Commission on Teaching Success.
·sheets, president of the State Board of
Education, will serve as one of three vice
chairs of the commission, the governor's
office reported.
Sheets has an extensive background in

Sheets

education. Sho was first
appointed to the State
Board of Education in
August 1995 and then
in 1997 was elected
president.
Prior to that, she had
served on the· Meigs
Local Board of Education. for three years. A
Pomeroy High School

graduate, she received her B.S. and M.S.
degrees in home economics from Ohio
State University, and ner law degree from
Capital University, Columbus.
She is a partner in the firm of Litde,
Sheets and Warner. Her husband, Jim, is a
former Meigo; High School teacher.
The commission, charged with recommending policies to ensure a caring,

Please see Sheats. AJ

November Is Ncdfonal Hospice Month
' POINT

In observance of this special month, Holzer Hospice will
provide FREE blood pressure, cholesterol and
. glucose screenings at

CLEAR

·C(JIIDITuJ ~~.,\\arr1ott.
'

BREAKAWAY- Ohio State's Jonathon Wells skitters past a
Purdue defender in Saturday's win. (AP)

800.949.4444
www. rtjgolf. com

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10 AM· 12"Noon

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MEDI.CAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�_Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

PageAl
lUelclay............. 11. 2001

. Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2001

Deaths

Hotel chain takes Columbus sign law to high court

Ohio weather
Weclnnday, Nov. 14

__

Oiae.~.
·. ~····
Pl Cloudl Cloudl
T· - . S...
.,SumJ

COLUMBUS (AP) -A squabble over
a hotel chain's sign located near a highway has made its way to the Ohio
Supreme Court, which must decide
whether the city's sign ordinance violates
businesses' &amp;ee speech rights.
Attorneys for the city of Columbus and
for Suburban Lodges ofAmerica Inc., will
argue the case before the court Tuesday.
The court's decision, expected early
next year, could have implications for
county, city, village and township zoning
ordinances throughout the state.
Columbus regulates words and graphics
on signs facing an interstate that is no
more than 660 feet away and whose
speed limit is at least 50 miles per hour.
The restrictions, put in effect for traffic
safety and aesthetic reasons, allow only
information that is essential to identifying
what a business does or sells, such as
names, logos, addresses and the product or
service offered.
In 1998, the A!lanta-based company,

which specializes in "extended-stay
rooms," asked the Columbus Graphic
Commission to allow it to post the phrase
"weekly rates" on .its sign at its eastside
hotel along Interstate 70.
When the city refused to grant a zooing variance, Suburban Lodges appealed
to the Franklin County Common Pleas
Court.
The court ruled that the city's restrictions over commercial signs were unconstitutional, but the lOth Ohio District
Court ofAppeals dido 't agree, sending the
case to the state's highest court.
- Suburban Lodges argues that the
restrictions are unconstitutional because
they do not directly advance the government's interests of traffic safety and high. way beautification and they prohibit
more speech than necessary to meet those
goals.
"Why would you insist that two little
words 'weekly rates' is a traffic safety matter or a visual clutter matter? It isn't," said

David Young, the attorney representing
Suburban Lodges.
He. said Columbus is the only city
nationwide where Suburban Lodges are
located that has tl'fused to allow the "two
totally unobjectionable words" on the
company's signs. Not allowing those
words changes the company's message
completely,Young said.
"The message is fundamental to its
financial objectives ... because it is very
different than any of its competitors;' he
said. ~It goes to the very heart of its message."
But Dan Drake, the attorney arguing
the case for the city, said Monday that any
regulations, including those covering .the
size, color, graphics or location of a sign,
change a message.
"No matter what regulation you use,
it's going to indirectly affect what you
want to convey;' Drake said. "This is just
a simple matter for Suburban Lodges of
changing their sign, but they won't."

Expect little change in weather
able wind.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
There won't be many dayto-day changes in the area's with areas of smoke. Highs in
weather this week, thanks to a the mid 60s. Southwest wind
stationary high pressure sys- 5 to 10 mph.
tern.
Wednesday night ... Mostly
Skies will b~ mostly sunny clear. Lows 35 to 40.
and temperatures slightly
Extended forecast:
warmer as the result . of Thursday... Mostly cloudy.
southerly winds, the National Highs in the lower 60s.
Weather Service said. Highs
Thursday night ... Mostly
will be in the upper 50s to cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
low 60s and lows will be 35- ~ Friday... Mostly
cloudy.
45.
Highs near 60.
These
conditions
are
Saiurday... Mostly
clear.
expected to extend into next Lows in the lower 40s and
highs near 60.
weekend, forecasters said.
Sunset tonight will be at
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
5:17, and sunrise on Wednes- near 40 and highs in the mid
day is at 7:15a.m.
60s.
Weather forecast:
Monday... Mostly cloudy.
clear. Lows near 40 and highs near
Tonight ... Mostly
Lows 36 to 41. Light and vari- 60.
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lnlstees to pick president
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland State University trustees
were poised Tuesday to select from among three educators
under consideration to be the university's next president.
Michael Schwartz, who headed Kent State University ·fiom
1982 to 1990 and is now interim president at Cleveland State,

' is one of the three finalists for the top job at the school, which
has about 16,500 students.
Other candidates for the post are Glenn Corlett, dean of the
College of Business at Ohio University in Athens, and James T.
Harris, president of Defiance College in northwest Ohio.
Schwartz was named to the interim post in April, after Claire
Van Ummersen announced she would be leaving the job to
become vice president and director of the American Council
on Education's Office ofWomen in Higher Education.

Busing deal stalemates
DAYTON (AP) - The decision whether to abandon an
order that led to cross-town busing to integrate Dayton schools
likely will be returned to a federal judge.
School board president Riclcy Boyd said Monday he expects
that Chief US. District Judge Walter Rice will have to resolve
the dispute.
"We haven't been able to settle anything," Boyd said. "It's up
to the court now."
In July, Rice set a deadline of Tuesday for the state, Dayton
schools and the local NAACP chapter to strike a deal to end
busing or face court hearings to decide the matter.

GE makes airbus engine
CINCINNATI (AP) -The engine that fell from ·an American Airlines plane that crashed Monday in 'NewYork City is
made by General Electric Co., the company said.
GE was not aware of any recent operational problems with its
CF6-80C2 engine, said Rick Kennedy, spokesman at the head"
quarters of GE Aircraft Engines in suburban Cincinnati. Witnesses said the engine fell from American Airlines Flight 587.
The Airbus A300 plane was en route to the Dominica(!
Republic with 255 people aboard when it crashed shortly after
takeoff from Kennedy Airport. ·
·
GE's jet engine division sent two flight safety investigato;s
Monday to New York Ciey to help the National Transportation
Safety Board investigate the jet crash in the Queens borough of
NewYmk, Kennedy said.

Ex-nominee wins Navy job

Superintendent makes promise

WASHINGTON (AP)- After withdrawing from a controversial nomination for the US. Environmental Protection
Agency.'s top enforcement officer, former Ohio EPA director
Donald Schregardus has turned to the US. Navy.
Schregardus was expected to start Tuesday his new job as
deputy assistant secretary of the Navy for the environment, a
position that does not require Senate confirmation:
"Senator Voinovich is obviously pleased that Don will still be
in public service and using his depth of knowledge and experience to continue protecting public health and the environ-

FOSTORIA (AP) -The city's school superintendent thinks
voters may have turned down a tax levy three times because
they don't like her.
So she's offering a deal: Pass the levy Feb. 5 and she will &lt;JUit
at the end of 2003.
The 7.4 mill, five-year lery would generate $1.5 million a
year.
Superintendent Sharon Stannard, who has led the district for
nine years, told school board members Thursday about her
offer.
·

Auditor plans to release report on online
COLUMBUS (AP) -The some public school superin- of the Ohio Charter School
state's largest charter school tendents, who accused eCOT Anociation, said the audit
kept inadequate enrollment of exaggerating enrollment, procen has helped both the
records during the first two causing their districts to Jose school and the state.
months of last school year, funding to the charter school
"The biggest plus for this is
even
before
the
numbers
were
according to a report to be
it alerted the school and probverified. Meantime, some par- ably the Department of Edureleased Thesday.
The report, an audit of the ents complained about long cation early on abuut probElectronic Clanroom of delays receiving computers.
lems and gave them an opporCharter schools are publicly tunity to correct them," RamTomorrow · or eCOT, also
criticizes the Department of funded, privately operated sey said.
Education's oversight of the schools free from some state
Michael Towns, whose son
school's process for receiving regulations. They must pro- Antiwan
and
daughter
state aid for its enrollment, vide their estimated enroll- Michelle were eCOT stuaccording to sources familiar ment. in July to ·receive state
dents last year, has generally
with the report. The sources money. They also must indigood things to say about the
spoke to The AssoCiated Press cate from which districts they
school
despite several probwill take students.
on condition of anonymity.
The state then deducts lems.
According to the report by
After being promised comthe state auditor, the school money from those districts for
puters
in September, they diddoes not owe the state money, the charter scl!ools and is to
reimburse them if charter n't· receive them until
the sources said.
eCOT would not . address school enrollments don't meet November. Once the computers arrived, the phone lines
specifics about the audit, estimates.
Stephen Ramsey, president · weren't hooked up.
which examined enrollment
and funding figures from September and October of 2000.
"Overall, we're very pleased
with the auditor's recommendations and will comply with
them," said eCOT spokesman
Brian Usher.
The state raised the issue of
counting enrollment at an
online school when eCOT
asked the Education Department to sponsor it, spokesman
J.C. Benton said Monday. The
Lucas County Educational
Service Center ultimately
sponsored the schooL
"We are working closely
with eCOT as well as the
auditor's office to iron out
some of the problems we
encountered with enrollment
the first year," Benton said.
The brainchild qf two
Columbus
businessmen,
eCOT enrolled more than
2,000 students in its first year,
quickly becoming the state's·
largest charter school and one
of the biggest of the dozens of
new online schools around
Tlckoto a..llable at: QuatHy Print Shop, RuUand DepL Store, Joe's
the country.
Country Market, Hilltop Grocery, Pomeroy Flower Ship and ot the Door.
It also drew criticism from

Curtis Balthaser, 95, Langsville (Danville
Commumey), died Monday, Nov. 12, 2001, in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born Oct. 20, 1906, in Amanda, son of the late Chauncey
and Anna Thomas Balthaser, he was a retired beef cattle herdsman, Ohio State University.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Edith Lay Balthaser, on Nov. 23, i973; and by a sister.
.
Surviving are three children, Eugene and Mary Balthaser of
Jackson, Judy and Wayne Ringl!'r of Fremont, Ind., and Pat
Garrett of London; and 19 grandchildren.
Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday at
Kossuth Cemetery in Salem Township, Auglaize. County.
Arrangements are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the scholarship
fund of the Ohio Cattlemen, I 0600 U.S. Highway 42,
Marysville, Ohio 43040.

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9,606.1 3
9.408.58
Recanl high: 11,722,98
Jan. 14, 2000

Sheets
from PageAl

competent teacher for every
student in Ohio, is an outgrowth of the Governor's
Commission for Student Success, whose work· provided
the foundation for S.B. I the Student Success bill Taft
signed into law on June 12,
2001.
The new law created a system of high academic standards, common-sense assessments and accountability for
results, including a process for
persistently failing schools. It
also established the Governor's Commission on Teaching Success.
· "Teachers are on the front
lines of the defining challenge
of our generation - enabling
every child to succeed," said
Taft in the release.
"Our Governor's Commission on Teaching Success pulls
rogether an accomplished,
broad-based team of educa-

tors, business and community
leaders, parents and students.
to enable us to ensure student
success by providing the best
possible teachers."
The commission will advise
the governor, Ohio General
Assembly, State Board of Education and Ohio Board of
Regents on teacher recruitment and preparation, profes. sional development, support
apd retention. It will report
on its conclusions and make
recommendations by Dec. 31,
2002.
The commission's first
meeting is Friday from 9:30
a.m. to 3 p.m., in Ballroom 5
at the Greater Columbus
Convention Center, 400 N.
High St.
Taft will attend the public
meeting at I p.m. to issue his
charge and ask the commission to make recommendations to promote teacher success and student achievement
in Ohio.

AUG.

. NOV.

Nov. 12,2001

S
- l.. crll
• d&amp;
~·-

Poor'•500

7:59 p.m., Ohio 7, Roger
Clouse, St. Joseph's Hospital.

1,118.33
F&lt;:t dllngo""'" ~

.0.18
Low
1,1l98.32

Record high: 1,527.48
MOIOh 24, 2000

AUG.

SEPT.

Daily Sentinel
Holiday Gift Guide

""""'·

ehould be abfe to land using one engine.

.Wednesday, November ·21
MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

lor your support!

The Daily Sentinel

Roy F. VanMeter

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Correction Polley

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Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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postage pald.at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and

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Mallsu~on
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13 Weeks
26 Weeks

$27.30
$53.82

52 WeekS

$105.56

Rates Outside Meigs County

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

·

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

Show

NOV.

3,1!00

from PapAl

3,000

ing will begin at 1 p.m. The
rules used by an accredited
judge will be those of standard flower show practices.
In the artistic classes,
arrangements must be the
work of the exhibitor, while
in the horticulture classes,
plants must be owned and
grown by the exhibitor for at
least three months prior to
the show.
Special
awards
for
exhibitors will be best of
show, reserve best of show
and creativity in artistic
design for adults, and best of
show, reserve best of show in
arrangements, and sweepstakes in horticulture classes
for the juniors.
One class in the artistic
division, "We tramp through
the woodlands and gather
some pine," is open to the
public while exhibitors in
the other nine classes must
belong to a garden club.
Those classes are:
• "Bring home the holly,
the best of its kind," including a traditional or modern
Madonna;
• "Spruce up the parlor,
garland the door," indoor
and outdoor wreaths and
wall hangings;
•
"Snowflake
the
pinecones, .two dozen or
more" to include artificial

2.500
2.000

P.i dllngo- ~

+0.64
H~

Low

1,848.00

1,782.48

1,500

Record high: 5,048.62

1,000

March 10, 2000

NOV.

•

N'

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-44.15
Arch Coat- 22 .04

Akzo-43
AmTeci&gt;SBC - 37.94
Ashland Inc. - 41 .86
AT&amp;T- 16.04
Bank One- 35.76
BLI-8.36
Bob Evans - 20
Borg Warner - 43.73
Champion - 2.41
Charming Shops -

4.95
City Holding -

9.50

Col-15.22
OG -14.31
DuPon1- 42.33

Federal Mogul-1 .48

USB-17.97
Gannett- 65.61
General

Electric

39.43
GKNLY-4
Harley Davidson

45.99
Kmart -6.18
Kroger - 23.62
Lands End - 44.95
Ltd. -13.24
NSC-17.80
Oak Hill Financial 15,07

Peoples- 19.20
Pepsico - 49.02
Premier - 8.55

Rockwell-13.77
Rocky Boots - 5.84
RD Shell - 51.05
Sears - 43.17
Shoney's -

.25

Wai·Mart - 55.58
Wendy's- 27.83
WO&lt;thlng!Ori - 13.87

OVB-24

Dally stock reports are
the 4 J.m. ctoatng
quotes
the previous
dly'a tranuctlona, provided by Smith Part·

BBT-33.79

nera It Advolt Inc.

from PapAl

200

OCT.

1,840.13

Council
Three mlnut.l•fttr It dtpartld 11om New
F. Kennedy ll'ltelnltiDnll A1fp0tt
' Ill Alrtlul A300 boUnd lor

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District has issued an outage
for Wednesday, from 9 a.m. 1111
I p.m., in Sutton Township
for the following locations:
Bashan Road, from the intersection of Morning Star Road
to Ohio 124; Tackerville
Road; Greenwood Cemetery
Road, Oak Grove Road to
Bowman's Run Road; and
township roads 643 and 1061.
On~e water is restored, residents will be under a boil
advisory until further notice.
In the event of inclement
weather, work will be
rescheduled for Thursday.

TUPPERS PLAINS

1.121.71

Thanks

Serving Starts-5:00p.m.
Tickets - $5.00
Rutland Vol. Fire Dept.

9,554.37
F&lt;:t c:lwVO- ~

High

Your Business
in the

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 19th
12:00 Noon
Call Debbie or Dave
at 992·2155
•

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered four calls for assistance on Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:37 p.m., Mill Street, Guy
Bing, Holzer Medical Center;
9 p.m., Ohio 143,Cassandra
Tolley, O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
4:31 p.m., Union Avenue,
Deborah Dailey, St. Mary's
Hospital.

LANG~VILLE -

To the Sutton Township

Rutland Grade School
THURSDAY, NOV. 15, 200 I

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS nans
Planned outage

Markets roundup

Kick off
the
Holida~
Seaso
'

ANNUAL
TURKEY
DINNER

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Curtis Balthaser

lee

ment;' spokesman Scott Milburn said Monday after talking
with Schregardus' new boss in the Navy.
Environmental groups, however, continued their campaign
against Schregardus, calling the Bush administration appointment "a deliberate and backdoor attempt to continue down a
clear anti-environmental path."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Manley's suggestion, and
commended the BPA, and
its president, Duffield, for
accomplishments
made
since 1998.
"(Duffield) has done a lot
of legwork, research and
paperwork in the last three
years on his own," lannarelli said. "Who's going to do
that if you eliminate the
board? A village administrator · doesn't have time to
supervise employees and
1
projects and search for
grant funds at the same
time."
Councilman Bob Pooler
agreed.
"I don't think this is the
right time," Pooler said,
noting that the village is in
the midst of a sewerage and
water system repair program.
In other business, council
approved the p\lrchase of a
1999 police cruiser to
replace an aging cruiser in
need of expensive repair.
Police Chief Bruce Swift
met with council to discuss
engine problems with Car
2i, and was authorized to
purchase a car from the
State Highway Patrol surplus program, at a cost of
$6,625.
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
and
Searles
Marathon in Pomeroy have
both determined that a new
engine is needed in 21, and
repair costs range from
$1,300 to $4,200.
Funds for the car's pur-.
chase will come from
$7,000 set aside earlier in
the year for an Issue II program match, and subsequently not needed, said
Clerk/Treasurer
Bryan
Swann.
lannarelli said several res idents have offered Christmas trees for village use, in
response to an item in The
Daily Sentinel.
Manl ey noted that the
village's refuse contract will
be up for renewal in January, and suggested that
review of the current con.. tract with Rumpke ofWellston begin at once.

· "The biggest problem we
face now is with our citizens, not Rumpke," Manley
said. "There's no reason
why they should be carrying eight tons of trash out
of this town every day."
Several times this year,
the council has discussed
problems with trash coming into the village from
other areas for pickup.
snow;
"There's even trash in
• "Let's frost a window and
front of empty houses," frame it with lights," includManley said.
ing lights and candles;
Manley also commended
• "Sketch a joy bell and
Mike and Debbie Gerlach Santa in flight," design show· and the Middleport Com- ing motion;
munity Association for
• "Hark to the kitchen one
planning this year's Christ- busy small child," exhibition
mas Parade on a Saturday table picture;
- Dec. 1 - instead of
• "Chomps down a stacked
Sunday this year.
cake, 10 layers high;' creative
Ianarelli said leaf pickup parallel design;
will begin on Tuesday.
Council also:
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$53,24.93;
• Approved the mayor's
report offees and fines collected in October, in the
amount of $3,296.20;
• Approved an ordinance
accepting 2001 replacement pages in the village's
Codified Ordinance book.
Also present were Coun cil members Rae Gwiazdowsky, Stephen Houchins,
Robert Pooler and Bob
Robinson.

• ''Fling on th e glitter and
starlight the tree," traditional design, your choice;
• "While Grandma relaxes
with hot spearmint tea," still
life.
In the junior division the
artistic arrangement classes
are: "Join in the laughter,
grin ear to ear," a favorite
design including a toy; and
"December and Christmas,
the best time of year,"
including evergreens.
The horticulture classes
for juniors are painted gourd
or gourd craft, and terrariums in the age categories of
up to 8 and 9 to 18 years of
age.
·
Horticulture sections
open to adults for exhibit are
broadleaf evergreen, needled
evergreens, berried branches,
and houseplants.
There are also educational
classes for gift wrappings
which must include some
plant material in the classes
of gift for a child and gift for
an adult. A class for decorative gourds is included and
the Master Gardeners will be
there with a display on bulbs
for gifts and winter bloom.
Rutland Garden Club and
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners are chairmen for the
holiday show this year.
The entrance decoration is
being handled by the
Friendly Gardeners, the class
signs by Chester Garden
Club, the J)hotography by
Winding Trail; the ribbons
and entry tags by Wildwood
Garden Club; the clerks and
ribbon placement by Rutland Club, the placement by
Shade Valley, the hospitality
by the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners.

is accepting patients at his following offices:

e (Mond/Jys &amp; ThesdRys)
2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleas_ant, WV

675-7100
e (Thursdays &amp; Fridays)
138 Main Street
New Haven, WV

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
J

"

"

�·-

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

:._~;. . . ;eo_a_ny_Se_ntm_·_el_ _~._, .....:B=-f th~

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: I'm writing this
for the couple who questioned the
bar bill from their wedding. The
caterer claimed they had served
seven drinks per person.
I attended an elaborate wedding. I
am diabetic, can't drink alcohol and
have a bad foot, so dancing was out.
I spent the entire evening at the table
while everyone else danced. Each
time guests returned to our table, a
server would take new drink orders.
After a few sips, the couples would
head back to the dance floor. The
server would then dear the drinks
from the table. Abby, some of the
guests had taken only one sip.
I told the server the people would
be coming back to the table. She
replied that she was instructed by the
bartender to remove all drinks when
people were not at the table. I'm sure
that's the reason the bar bill was so

111 Court St., ParMroy, Oltlo
74C»H·215&amp; • fu: 112-2187

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

w.

Chllrlene Hoeflich
General Manager

A. Shawn Lewle
M1111egtng Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

w tlu b!IJw wlcorfl•. Tlt9 •lrtndtiiM 1ft•...,. .WlfllfYb. All 181m
,..,QJ«, '" Mililtr tJ1td •11dbt rtpt4 .u iMIWIIMrnr ..- ,.,._. ......,._
~

11n

No Ulitud /nun wiD k plllHillttd. Litten t....U N ill jOII4 ...., IIMreuflet
lftiUI, llol ptnOifttiUNI.

1'lk oplnlotu UptYIIM ill tilt Ct1burl1t b.Jow 4n II• CMIIUIU •ftJu (Mio """'
hblbltittl Co. 'I dltorlGJ boatd, M11lm «hwwiu ,.,.,_

NATIONAL VIEW

Tough job
Operating transit center requires
•
political and technical skills
• The Boston Globe, on global seCIIrity: The task of operating an international airport and seaport in an era of global
security concerns exceeded the experience and skill qNirginia
Buckingham. She was wise to realize this and step down voluntarily as executive director of the Massachusetts Port
Authority. But Buckingham's departure, effective Nov. 15, only
leaves more pressing questions about the future of the agency
and its director.
Buckingham, wl1o served as chief of staff for former governors William Weld and Paul Cellucci, was schooled in the art
of public relations. But that didn't go far enough on Sept. 11,
when terrorists hijacked two jets out of Logan Airport and
crashed them into the World Trade Center in Manhattan. Security at Logan wa.• found to be porous, while every nook and
cranny of Massport appeared plugged with a hack hire, including the head of security, Joseph Lawless, who had served as the
driver for ex-Governor Weld.
Buckingham had to have known for weeks that she hid no
future at Massport .... It is difficult to make a graceful .exit from
an agency as embroiled in conflict as Massport. But Buckingham comes close, leaving afte.r the initial furor but before the
Carter commission reveals the full extent of Massport's weaknesses under current leadership....
Undoubtedly. the Swift administration will focus on profes·
sional credentials for future executives at Masspor1. But the top
job, or jobs. demand both technical :lnd political s1cills. Nothing is more important than the safecy of the roughly .2.2 million passengers who use Logan in a busy month. But its .leaders must also understand the environmental and economic
concerns of Bostonians. Without political savVy Massport's
director could be manipulated by the board, airline lobbyists, or
other constituencies.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Nov. 13, the -317th day of 2001. There are
48 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 13, 1775, during the American Revolution, U.S.
forces captured Montreal.
On this date:
In 1789, Benjamin Franklin wrote in a letter to a friend, "In
this world nothing can be said to be certain, except dea~h and
taxes."
·
In 1927, the Holland Tunnel opened to the public, providing
access between New York City and New Jersey beneath the
Hudson River.
In 1940, the Walt Disney animated movie "Fantasia" had its
world premiere in New York.
In 1942, the minimum draft age was lowered from 21 to 18.
In 1956, the Supreme Court struck down laws calling for
racial segregation on public buses.
Iq 1971, the U.S. space probe Mariner 9 went into orbit
around Mars.
In 1974, Karen Silkwood, a technician and union activist at
the Kerr-McGee Cimarron plutonium plant near Crescent,
Okla., died in a car crash.
In 1977, the comic strip "Li'lAbner" by AI Capp appeared in
newspapers for the last time.
In 1982, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated in
Washington.
In 1985, some 23,000 residents of Armero, Colombia, died
when a gigantic mudslide buried the city.
Ten years ago:The U.S. House of Representatives approved a
Senare-passed bill guaranteeing many workers up to 12 weeks
of unpaid leave for fa111ily emergencies.
Five years ago: A grand jury in St. ·Petersburg, Fla., declined
to indict police officer Jim Knight, who had shot black
motorist TyRon Lewis to death the previous month; the decision prompted angry mobs to return to the streers.An all-white
jury in Pittsburgh acquitted a suburban police officer,John Vojtas, in the death of black motorist Jonny Gammage in a verdict
that angered black activists. Sgt. Loren B. Taylor, a drill sergeant
who'd had sex with three women recruits at Fort Lconatd
Wood, Mo., was given five months in prison and a bad-conduct
discharge in the first sentencing of the burgeoning Army sex
scandal.
One year ago: Lawyers for George W. Bush failed to win a
court order barring manual recounts of ballots in Florida.
Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris announced she
would end the recounting at 5 p.m. the next day- prompting
an immediate appeal by lawyers for AI Gore. Joe Mullen and
Denis Savard were among those inducted into the Hockey Hall
of Fame.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Jack Elam is 85. Actress Madeleine
Sherwood is 79. Producer-director Garry Marshall is 67.
Country singer-songwriter Ray Wylie Hubbard is 55. Actor Joe
Mantegna is 54. Actress Sheila Frazier is 53. Actress-comedian
Whoopi Goldberg i~ 46. Actress Caroline Goodall is 42.

'n111cl.,., Nau

Guest at wedding discovers source of bar bills inflation

'nl•dey. Navm'w I:S, 2001

•

Charles
Govey
Publllher

Bend

Page AS

lr

Dear ·,Abby
ADVICE
high for the physician's wedding.OBSERVER FROM NORTH
CAROLINA
DEAR OBSERVER: Yo4 could
be right. Thank you for an ey~brow­
raiser of a letter. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Years ago when I
organized functions featuring a hosted bar at high-end hotels, I.11oticed
that as the events drew to a close, the
barmen would crack the seals on several bottles of the good stuff. We

would then be charged f'or the open
bottles. Presumably, the barmen and
their friends would have an extremely pleasant evening- and be credited with ringing up additional revenue for the hotel. Seven drinks per
guest wouldn't be out of the ballpark.
.
Once I discovered this game, I
made a point of monitoring the bar- .
men more closely. I instructed them
not to break any seals during the last
half-hour of the function and to collect opened bottles before the barmen left. After each event, we used
the remaining liquor to throw a
thank-you party for the secretarial
and administrative staff who had
helped to organize the function but
hadn't been able to attend, a gesture
that was much appreciated.
I can understand the sticker shock.
The host probably paid for numerous

full but "opened" bottles. ~ KENNETH B., CLAREMONT, CALlE
DEAR KENNETH B.: What
you are describing is fraud and the
exception to the. rule in the hospital·
ity industry But thank you for the
warning. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: As "social director" for the firm I work for, I have
encountered many instances of careren inflating a liquor bill, or guests
tiom other parties crashing our open
bar.
While it's highly unusual, I don't
blame the couple at all for doublechecking on their guests' consump·tion. Seven alcoholic drinks per person is certainly questionable. Could
the mari and his wife have consumed
seven drinks each and driven home?
I think not! And I can't imagine
othe.r guests making up the difference - unless they all had to be car-

ried home.
1 applaud the couple's refusal to
assume the bill was correct. I'm sure
tlrey struggled with the decision to
contact their guests, but considering
they were talking about a bar bill of
approximately S3,500 for 100 people, how can anyone blame them for
not wanting to pay for a caterer's or
bartender's mistake?
NO
LONGER RIPPED OFF IN
ATLANTA
DEAR
NO
LONGER
RIPPED OFF: While I agree with
you, it was clear from the signature
("Appalled") that the wrirer was very
put off by the host's request. Penonally, I always double-check my bills,
because they sometimes contain
errors. And darn it, I have yet to see
one that's in my favor.
Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Recognized for effort

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Getting
too creative will obscure the writer's subtlety ·
.
.

A few weeks ago, The Wall Street Journal carried a column criticizing Secretary
of the Treasury Paul O'Neill. Before· the
writer got down to busihess, he had some
good things to say about the gentleman:
"He ~ smart, seasoned, and poses uncomfortable questions that others would
rather avoid."
That sentence was trotting along quite
nicely until the writer got to his second
comma. Then lie fell off his horse and lost
his parallel stirrups. Mter two adjectives,
COLUMNIST
"smart" and "seasoned;' .the writer lapsed
into the verb "poses;' and .his sentence The vestry's agenda that lists old business,
collapsed. With a little work, the sentence new business and the treasurer's report
could have been recast, perhaps to say that should not stumble into "whether ro fire
O'Neill ~ smart, seasoned, and "gifted the seXton."
•
with the skill of a good reporter: He poses
A White House correspondent got it
uncomfortable questions" and so fo!lh.
right last month in reporting plans for
Here is another example, this one from assembling a new government in
a piece in the Christian Science Monitor AJghanistan. He wrote: "The di~cussion so
disCU.Ising il)filtration of the Taliban. Pen- tar is aimed at creating a viable and broadetration will be fearfully difficult: "Groups based coalition government, beginning
are small, close-knit, and operate in areas economic rebuilding, and providing a .
less accessible and les1 fat)liliar to U.S. security force that would keep the peace."
agents," The writer needed a match for
The editors of Merriam" Webst!!t's Die"limall~ and "close-knit:"
tionary of English Usage scoff at the rules
In "The Living Chureh;' the editor on parallel construction. Violation of the
revitweli a committee's report on the See· rule, in their view, is merely a venial sin.
ofOmterbuty.The comlnittee had looked Bosh! · If we are making a table, we do
at specific areas "in which the archbishop poorly if one leg is a quarter-inch shorter
of Canrerbury
his ministry: as than the other. three.
biShop of the Diocese of Canterbury, as
Let me change the subject. Several readMetropolitan of the Southetn Province of ers have inquired recently about the
the Church of England, as Primate of All rhetorical device bY·which we damn with
England, as ecwnenlcal leader, and his faint praise:"He's not a bad baritone" and,
responsibilities within the Anglican com- "She's not an u~ctive woman." The
munion."
device ~ called . litotes, pronounced
Scylistically speaking, that was hash. In either Ll£-toh-tetize or lie-1'0H-reeze.
such .constructions, the elements must be · It's a useful device, but don't overuse it.
kept as patallel as railway tracks. If we are
Its lineage is ahcient. In the Book of
describing a bountiful breakfast, Yll: ought Acts we read of a silversmith named
to avoid "ha.n1, eggs, toast, grits, sausage, Demetrius whose silver shrines brought
and .Putting ketchup on the hashbrowns." him "no small gain." The fellow created

James

Kilpatrick

exemses

a

"no small stir:' ,After that uproar ceased,
bystanders were "not a little comforted"
when the apostle Paul ministered to a
young man who had survived a bad fall.
Later on, Paul and his followers survive
shipwreck and wind up on an island
called Melita where "the barbarous people
shewed w no little kindness."
A couple of years ago, a traveling company staged "Cabaret" in Washington. The
Washington Post's critic had a few words
to say about the lead singer. The words
were not unkind: "She has a sturdy, if not
versatile, voice, and her dour rendition of
the show's signature rune is not unaf!ecting ..." By this we are led to understand
that her voice was not really affecting; it
was j!!St not unaffecting. In the sa.me vein,
a book reviewer for the Post conunented
that Allen Ginsberg's worth as a poet "W::ts
certainly not negligible." As for Gregory
Corso, "he is not at all a bad poet."
The Smithsonian's eponymous magazine carried an article on outdoor cooking along the Pecos 6,000 ·years ago. .A
photo depicted researc~ets tossing ' prickly-pear pads on a cooking p1t. The. process
"is not entirely dissimilar from a New
England clambake." To · have .~d the
process was sirtrilar to a New Englan&lt;,l
clambake would have strained the pruden,t
sensibilities of the editors. Thus the procc:Ss
was not entirely dissiinilar.And the prickly pears were not entirely edible.
If you writers villllt to employ an occa'ionallirotes, go to it. But keep in mind
that it is not unlikely that your subtletY
will be missed.
.
(Readers at!! invited to send dated cita- .
lions of usage to .Mr. Kilpatrick in CIII:O of
this newspaper. f:Iis' e-mllil address is kilpat](at)aol.com.)
jamesJ Kilpatrick is acolumnist for Unlver·
sal fuss Syndicate.

Parent meeting planned

·Certificates and medals for "extra effort" were presented to
Southern Elementary students at a recent recognition program
at the school by American Electric Power representatives Gary
Jones and Sam Hawley. Presented awards for their past nine
'Weeks work were from the left, front, Jaclyn Mees, John Hawley,
·Stephanie Pyles, first grade reading; Clayton Moore, Andrew
Roseberry and Dylan Roush, second grade reading; and .back,
.Braxton Thora and Tiffany Cundiff, third grade mathematics;
and Dustin Salser, Lynzee Tucker and Michael Manuel; fourth
grade reading, picture with AEP representative Jones.

MILITARY NEWS
Jason P. Riley

Justin Gilmore

Living up to ideals easy to do when little is asked
After several dozen U.S. Senate
staffers tested positive for anthrax but didn't fall ill - the House of
Representatives suddenly shut down.
Some say you have to go back to the
War of 1812 to find the last time a
chamber of Congress closed in an
emergency.
.
So what if anthrax wasn't found in
the building housing the representatives? So what if a regimen of amibiotics would almost certainly clear up
any infection if they were, in fact,
exposed? It wasn't as though they
were bombarded by poisonous fumes
or the bacteria of some incurable
vir11s.
..
Didn't matter. Couldn't risk it.
This may be insensitive, but here
was my first reaction: They can send
our sons and daughters off to die in
the unforgiving hills of Afghanistan;
they can tell us civilians to hang
tough, to return to normal, to "not let
the terrorists win." But when faced
with the first hint of danger, our leaders ran for cover.
Already these terrorists saw our
presid.ent take refuge the day of the
attacks in a bunker in Nebraska. (Perhaps such extraordinary caution was
prudent, but reports now suggest that
Air Force One was never threatened
after all.) The terrorists have seen our
vic.e president retreat to a secret hiding place; Dick Cheney's absence was
so complete for several weeks that
rumors spread that he had died or suffered a debilitating heart attack. The

terrorists even saw, if they were paying
The terrorists alrc~dy have succeedclose attention, California Governor ed in disrupting our travel, our econGray Davis decide, briefly, to lease a omy and our sleep: Now they have
private jet so he could avoid comrner- managed - with a few spores of
cial flights. He soon understood his anthrax- to disrupt our government.
gaffe, change&lt;) his mind and has conWhat could be a greater morale
tinued to fly with the common folk.
booster for bin Laden and his cutHome of the brave, indeed.
throat fanatics? What better way to
It is easy to live· up to ideals when reassure the terrorists that their ' plan is
little is asked of us. Our leaders talk working?
beautifully about strength and resolve
And what better way to fuel the
when addressing welfare, education, extravagant fears of American citizens
camp;:&lt;ign finance reform. ("We will who already are stockpiling gas mask~.
stand strong and resolute against those Cipro and bottled water?
·
'w ho would dare trample tho rights of
Some might say our leaders should
gun lobbyistS to treat us to long week- take whatever steps they deem necesends at the Bermuda Marriott!")
sary to ·feel safe, just as the rest of us
But now, with our homeland direct- do. But they aren't like the rest of u~.
ly attacked, "strength" and "resolve" Their cole in a time of crisis is no less
must be more than words on a Tele- critical than t.he roles of the firefight:
Promp-Ter. In times of danger and ers, police and emergency medica:!
anxiety, a country must confront the technicians in New York.
elemental question, "Who are we?"
These workers did their jobs in the
And like it or. not, our leaders are the face of unthinkable devastation and
ones who carry the answer to the ·rest danger. We should expect no less from
of the world.
our highest elected officials.
During World War 11, King George
The latest Gallup Poll shows that
VI and his wife, Queen Elizabeth our trust in government is the highes't
(now the Queen Mother), stayed in it has been since 1968. Six out of 10
London in Buckingham Palace during people say they trust the government
the Battle of Britain. Prime Minister to do "what is right" just about always
Winston Churchill practically had to or most of the time.
be dragged into bomb shelters during
We need the government to be
the Blitz. When they refused to give in worthy of that trust. Our leadership is
to fear, they sent the message - to the the face we show the world. Let it b,·
world and to their own citizens - , a courageous one.
·
that Britain was undaunted,
ljoan Ryan is a col!m~nisr for rlre San
Symbolism is even more important, Fra.ICisco Chronicle. Send comments to her
I would argue, in a war against terror- in care of tlris newspaper, or mrd her e·
ism.
mail at joa~~ryanifgare,com.)

"

the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. jack Needs of
New Haven,and Mr. and Mrs. ted Riley Jr., of
Middleport. He is the brother of Jamin lU!ey
of Norfolk, formerly of New Haven.
Specialist Riley is due to be home on leave
in late December for a month before deploying to his next auignment in Germany.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va, jason p, Riley, former resident of New Haven, and
graduate of Wahama Hilth
School, is nearing compfetion of a two-year tour of
duty in Pusan, South Korea,
where he is stationed with
the 74th Signal Company.
RUTLAND- U.S. Army
Riley 11raduated from
PFC Justin Gilmore is curbasic trainmg at Fort Jackrently stationed at Fort JackRiley
son, S.C., in September 1999
son, S.C., after finishing his
and from Advanced Individbasic
training.
ual Training at Fort Gordon in Augusta, Ga., in
He is a 2001 graduate of
November 1999.
Meigs
High School the son
His military oc~upation specialty is in the
of Michael and Deborah
field of conununicanons.
Riley currently has permanent change of
Gilmore of Rutland, and the
station orders to go to Stuttgart, Germany, in
grandson of Esther Black
Gilmore
January 2002, where he will be stationed with
and the late Warren D. Black
the 11 Oth Special Forces Aitbone Battalion at of Rutland, and the late Elza and Evelyn
Panzer-Kaserne.
Riley is the son of Judy Smith of Norfolk, Gilmore of Pomeroy. He also has two sisters,
Va., and John Riley of Middleport. He is also Brandee and Brianna Gilmore of Rutland.

RYAN'S VIEW

BY JOAN RYAN

place on his paper punch critter. Stacy Macomber received
fifth place on her paper punch critter, second place on her
SALEM CENTER - Membership awards were presented scarecrow, third lace on. her woodsie creature, and eighth
at the recent meeting of Star Grange held at the hall.
place on her coverup.
Dorothy Bolen was honored for 65 years of membership
In other business plans were made for Thanksgiving dinner
and Patty Casto Young for 25 years in Star Grange by Master and fun night on Nov. 17, beginning at 6:30 p.m. Fourth
Patty Dyer.
degree .ritualistic team practice was set for Dec. 1.
Ohio State Grange delegates Avanel Holliday and Vicki
Smith reported on resolutions and activities at the recent
Oho State Grange convention held in· Hudson. Carl Hysell
was named police officer of the year and his nomination was
POMEROY - Annual Title I parent meeting of the
forwarded to the National Grange.
· Janet Morris received first place for her e.mbroidered table Meigs Local School District will be held at Salisbury Elecloth and it will go to national competition. Star G.range mentary School on Thursday, 6 to 8 p.m.
Wendy Halar, assistant superintendent, will discuss the varcommunity service report placed first and was also sent on to
the national level for judging.
ious Title 1 program including pullout, in-class model, and
Other awards from state session include a certificate for replacement classes. The new standards for language arts and
deaf report to Janis Macomber, chairman, 15-year secretary math will be discussed.
award to Opal Dyer, blue ribbon and certificate to Janet
Students from each school will present a program.
Morris for women's activities report, and a certificate for
Title 1 teachers from each of the buildings are Beth Lawdonating 20 ABC quilts.
son, Bradbury; Paula Chancey, Harrisonville; Liz Story and
A first place plaque for essay contest went to Janis
Teresa Carr, Middleport; Janet Hoffman, Kim Barrett and
Macomber for the 21-40 age group, honorable mention honors to Maxine Dyer for her doily, and honorable mention to Bryan Zirkle, Pomeroy; Barb Mathews Crow, Salisbury; Ron
Drexler and Pam Vogt, Meigs Middle; Jennifer Hoffman and
Avanel Holliday for a jumper.
Star Junior Grangers winning awards were Justin Midkiff, Kathy Sargent, Meigs High, and Linda McManus and Shirley
seventh place on his recycled plastic bag craft, and fourth VanMeter, Rutland.

Star Grange honors members

LOCAL EVENTS
TUESDAY
ATHENS -Athens Parkin·
son's Support Group to meet
Tuesday, 1 p.m., O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital. Annual
Thanksgiving luncheon.

•

I

class model and replacement classes. New stan·
dards for language arts and
math will also be dist'tlssed.

Grange will host a CPR
course, 7 to 9 p.m. at the
hall. For more information
call Janis McComber, 742·
2163.
.

POMEROY- Entertainment by Junior and Rita
POMEROY- Home Health White and Ralph Cooke will · APPLE GROVE - Round
and square dance at the
not take place Thursday
Care of Veterans Memorial
Red Barn, 8 to 11 p.m. line
evening
at
the
Senior
Citi·
Hospital to celebrate 30th
zens Center as earlier
anniversary and Home
dancing, clogging, with live
Health Care Month at open
announced. It has been
music.
house, 2 p.m. Tuesday In
rescheduled for Nov. 29 at
office in VMH building. Pub- 5:30p.m.
Community Calendar Is
lic invited.
REEDSVILLE _ Riverview
published as a tree service
Garden Club, Thursday,
to non-profit groups wish·
WEDNESDAY
lng to announce meetings
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport 7;30 p.m .. Program by
Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Michelle Garretson on paint· and spacial evants. The
Wednesday at the home of
ing tote tiags. Each mem·
calendar Is not designed
Pauline Horton. Betsy Horky bars to take own bag. ·
to promote sales or fund·
will review "The Crossing" by Reedsville Church of Christ. relsera of any typa. Items
Winston Churchill.
Take gifts for nursing home, are printed only as apace
finger foods, and money for
parmlta and cannot be
TUPPERS PLAINS - East· dues.
guaranteed to be printed •
ern Local Schools to dismiss FRIDAY
at 1:05 p.m. on Wednesday, SALEM CENTER- Star
specific number of days.
due to teacher in·service.
POMEROY- Rocksprings
Better Health Club, Wednes·
day 1 p.m. at the Home of
Frances Goeglein.
THURSDAY
pOMEROY - Meigs Local
School District annual Title 1
parent meeting, Salisbury
Elementary, Thursday, 6 to 8
p.m. wendy Halar, assistant
superintendent, to discuss
Title 1 programs, pullout, in·

.,

********************
*
- BJhQ'$ 11'111~ RCPIIJR *

**
**
**

lit Q~•iw'6.1Julo

~a1.4

**

ike Bing - Owner - 27 years e:xper1ence
Randy Bing- Technician - 5 years expe~ience __
Jim Bing, Technician - 12 year exper1ence

Mike, Randy, and Jim
.
Formerly of Ford Garage In Middleport

!*

..£.. _

*

!~fj~~~~***/f1~~~~~.

but not lor I
Ohio Tax Amnesty

Now lhrough January 15, 2002
The Ohio Department of Taxation has a money-saving, conscienceclearing program just for you: a limited·time tax amnesty program for
delinquent taxpayers who are eligible. If you pay your back taxes in full
before the January 15, 2002 deadline, you can avoid any penalties and
pay only one-half of the interest you currently owe. If you or your
business has fallen behind in paying Ohio taxes, now is the time to
take advantage of this once-in-a-lifeiime opportunity. Opportuni_ty is
knocking ... but not for long.
Amnesty is available only for certain taxes and to persons or businesses
that have not been billed, assessed or contacted for an audit. Keep in
mind, after the amnesty period we' will be stepping up our enforcement

and auditing efforts. Don't mi.1s this deadline!
For more Information calll-800·304-3211 or visit www.oblo.~oy

••• Dc11U111
....

··-

�hge A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Nov. 13. 2001

RACINE -Jason Cappon, son ofJoe and
Shirley Neigler Cappo of Waynesboro, Va.,
wa. a winner in the Augusta County Parks
and Recreation's NFL Punt, Pass and Kick
competition in the boys 8 and 9 group.
He advanced to the Regional IV sectional
· and is one competition away fiom the Fed Ex
stadium for the Washington Redskins Punt,
Pass and Kick Championship. He is the
grandson of Beulah Neigler and the late
George Neigler of Racine.

Cappon

Art dasses offered

at Senior Center

POMEROY -A variety of art classes are being offered this
month at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
A rag pillow class with Pam Schatz as instruction will be held
on Nov. 19 and 26, fiom 6 to 8 P·1"· The cost of the pillow and
all the materials will be S1 0 and those attending must take a
sewing machine to the class. No experience is needed for the
class.
On Nov. 29, Michene Garretson will do a denim or sweatshirt
painting class. Those enrolled will paint a snowman scene on the
shirt. All paint and brushes will be provided and the cost is $12.
Only 20 will be accepted into the class.
Other painting classes are continuing. Beginners can start at any
afternoon class on Tuesday from I to 3 p.m. There, the beginner
strokes and techniques of painting are taught. The cost is $7 a class
and brushes are to be purchased Ol! the fint visit. Garretson also
teaches that class.
·
Garretson is also teaching a class where members paint a snowman on a metal shovel. Cost of that class is SIO and all paints will
be provided. It will take place at 8 p.m. on Nov. 26.
To register for any of the art classes, call Patty Pickens, activities
director, 992-2161.
Other special activities at the center this month include an
Alzheimer's awareness candlelight memorial service in observance
of Alzheimer's Month. The event will ~e place at the center on
Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. Those planning to attend are to take a candle or
flashlight. Leno111 Leifheit is in charge.
Next Thursday, the diabetes group liom Holzer will be at the
center with Gwen Fisher to speak on traveling with diabetes during the holiday season. The class will meet at 10:30 a.m ..in the
conference room.

Center were made during a recent meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club at the home of Joy Combs.
The show- is annual hosted by the Meigs County Garden
Club A11ociation. Theme win be "Christmas Cheer." Garden
club members were reminded to furnish sandwiches and
cookies for the show. Schedules have been distributed to the
club members.
It was announced that Meigs County w.iU host the spring
regional meeting, which will also be held at the Senior Citizens Center.
Pauline Atkins, president, reported on the regional meeting, where the club received a superior rating on its program
book and certificates for participating in regional flower
shows. She was named outstanding garden gardener in the
reg10n.
Officers for next year were elected. They are Atkins, president; Dorothy Woodard, vice president; Maijorie Rice, treasurer; and Betty Lowery, secretary.
Flowers were taken to a church by Atkins during the
month. The traveling prize furnished by Rice was won by
Chelcie Stearns. Lowery will furnish the November prize.
For ron can members displayed a colored lead.
A fall theme was carried out in the program with Combs
talking on pampas grass, a plant native to South America
which is described as the star of tht winter garden, the most

A strong marriage has several key components. The following elements ire examples
caf what people who have been
in long-term marriages regard
as important considerations:
• They value their spouses as
their best friend.
• They really lil}e the other
person as a person.
• They view marriage as a
sacred, life-time commitment.
• They share similar goals
and laugh together a lot.
Partners can employ several
different strategies in order to
help lay the foundation for a
strong marital relationship.
Here are some ingredients to a
successful marriage:
• Commitment to the partnership - This is essential if
the marriage is going to last.
Commitment supplies the
basic foundation for the couple
to handle problems while
going through difficult times.
• Mutual trust and respectThis allows the couple to
accept their differences. Each
mate should have the integrity to live up to their responsibilities and promises.
· • Good cocnmunication -

Choir to present
Chrisbnas musical
COOLVILLE - Coolville Community Choir, under the
direction of Sue Matheny, will be presenting the musical "Portraits of Christmas" compiled by Phil Barfoot.
· The choir is composed of men, women and children fiom
various churches in the area who come together each year to
celebrate the holy season. The cantata will be performed at four
locations as follows:
St. Paul Lutheran ·church, Pomeroy, 3 p.m. Dec. 2; Belpre
Heights United Methodist Church, Belpre, 7 p.m., Dec. S;Tuppers Plains United Methodist Church, Thppers Plains, 7 p:m.
Dec. 6, and Coolville Elementary School, Coolville, 7 p.m. Dec.
9.
\.

popular of all ornamental grasses grown in the country.
The· plumes grow up to I 0 feet tall, she said, and range in
color from green to greengray. The leaves are sword shaped
which accounts for it being known as the "cutting grass."The
flowers are called ~'inflorescences" because they are long slender spikes of tiny delicate flower clusters, which give the
plumes their feathery appearance. They have a silky look
when first sprouting and become fluffier as they mature.
Propagation is best achieved by dividing them in the
spring, she said. As for harvesting pampas grass, she recommended cutting the.plumes for drying just before they open
up, to help prevent disintegration of the flower plumes.
Rice talked on perennials for fall, listing sedum and asters
as plants which take cold weather and a mild frost, and create
a cascendo of colors to complement the foliage.
Fall perennials with their colorful flowers bring a vivid
burst of life to a 'graceful decaying garden, she said, suggest.ing allium, fall crocus, hardy begonias, Joe pye, amsonia,leadworth and chrysanthemums.
Read at the meeting by Stearns was an article published by
Hal Kneen, Meigs County Extension agent. He said to keep
deer away f!Om your flowers, mix together an egg, one quart
of water and lots of garlic powder. Put it in a spray bottl;
with a coarse nozzle and then coat the plants.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Tips for a
long-lasting
•
mamage

'·

Christmas flower show
discussed at dub meeting
RUTLAND -Plans to participate in the Christmas flower
show to be held Saturday and Sunday at the Senior Citizens

Becky
Baer
FAMILY
Feeling; and thoughts need to
be continuously shared. Having a sounding board who
supplies positive feedback and
shows appreciation for your
uniqueness can create the inti-.
mate sharing on which marriages thrive.
• Conflict management c
Resolving conflict so that it is
satisfactory to both parties can
actually strengthen a marriage.
• Forgiveness is the key for it
to work. Spouses must be willing to forgive and forget.
• Life skills, such as money
management, home management, decision making, and
personal development These important abilities form
the foundation of family life.lf
partners feel inadequate in any
of these areas, there are lifelong
learning opportunities, classes

and workshops that can provide the information to help
them make the most out of
their lives.
• Sincere caring - Both
husbands and wives. should
care for each other's needs as
much as they do their own.
• Demonstrating genuine
The couple
affe.c tion should discuss with each other
their wants and needs on love
and sex. Sharing love, adrniratio.n and passi~n for one
another affirms the marital
relationship.
• Realistic expectations Spouses cannot fulfill all
desires. Being flexible and
constantly re-evaluating your
expectations, both individually
and as a couple, can encourage

reasonable aspirations.
• The marriage comes first
- Reserve time, energy and
money to work on the maritaJ
relationship. Prioritize pers~:
a!, work and family time ·s&lt;;&gt;
that the marriage is given full
attention, not just leftover
•
time.
A strong marriage . requ~
war!&gt; and commitment from
both spouses. The married
couple should alWays be looking for new and innovative
ways to make their marriage
richer.

(Becky Baer is a Meigs County
Extension agent for fomily and
consumer sciences/community
development.)

Thank You for

re-,elec~tirag

David Graham
&amp;

Bob Morris
Letart Township

County Court cases processed
POMEROY - A number
of cases were recently
processed by Meigs Col!nty
Court Judge Steven L. Story.
Those fined were:
Mike Craig, Pomeroy, coo18 only,
-nlng oroer, lhree days jail suaponded, menacing; John D. Brtctdes,
Syracuao, $30 and costa, seal beft;
Kurt llndlnger, Logan, $310 and
COlli, overtoad; Chad L. Bean,
Allany, $30 and coo18, speed, $30
and coall, seal bell; MaHhew S.
Koster, Melville, W.Va., $50 and
coo18, apeed; Eric Woldtke, Elvira,
$50 and coal&amp;, speed, $30 and coo18,
aaat be~; Palricla J. Davldsoo, Mlddloporl, $30 and costs, speed; Brtan
C. Rltchhart, Syracuse, $20 and
coell, child rastralnl; Randall R.
Smith, Syracuse, $30 and coall,
opoed; llmolhy J. Sallsman, Portland, $30 and coo18, 88al be~. $20
and coo18, Blqlllgn; Tamara L. Zuapon, Muon, W.Va., $30 and ~.
opoed; Randall Johns, Long Bonom,
$30 and COOII, speed; Johnny B.
Hoback, RaOlne, $30 and coals,
opoed; Ryan L McNamaia, ludlow,
VI., $30 and coots, speed, $30 and
coo18, seat belt; Kannelh K. Snyder,
Mlddlepon, $30 and costa, seal beft;
Dennis R. Buzard, Tionesta. Pa., $30
and COlts, aoal bell; Joanna L.
Hoalhaley, CooMIIe, $30 and COlli,
Mil 1*1: Chrtslopher HuHon, Rut·
land, $30 and coo18, apeed; Douglas
E. Ka~, Chagrtn Falla, $30 and
cosla, apeed; Slephen L Demeter Ill,
Aleron, $30 and costa, speed; Michael
K. Brannon, Whoeleraburg, $30 and
coo18, apeed; Eric C. Johnsoo, Middleport, $12 and costa, apeed.
Kenneth M. Currence, Middleport,
$20 and cosla, speed unsafe for con·
dltiona; R. leroy landers, Pomeroy,
$25 and coats,. failure to control; Julia
E. Slover, Racine, $50 and coots,
lhree days jail suspended, one year
probation,

wrongful

entrustment;

\lldlle L. lambert, Middlepol1, $200
and 001118, 10 days jail suspended to
line conamanl, IWo years probation, rastttullon, 10 counta passing
bid checks; David Kennedy,
Guysville, $30 and costa. speed;
Sabrina Morris, Racine, $25 and
coo18 on each counl, three days jail
auapended on each count, one year
probation, restitution, four counts

puling bad checko; Raben Cundiff,

Middleport, $200 and cosla, 10 days
)all suspended to lhree, one year probation, jail suspended upon proof of a
valid licenH within 90 days, drtvtng
under suspenolon; Diana K. Roberts,
Racine, $25 and costa on each counl,

restitution, lhree days jail suspended
on each counl, one ysar probation,
IWo counta passing bad checks; Man
McGrath, Albany, $25 and coo18 on
each counl, restitution, lhrae days jail
suspended on each, one year proba·
lion, IWo counts passlng bad checka;
Bobble J. Kldd, Rutlal'ld, $100 and
costs, lhree days jail suspanded
upon proof of a valid license within 90
days, driving under FRA auspenolon,
$25 and costa, no headllghte; Teresa
L. Reeves, Albany, $100 and cosll,
lhrae days jail suspended, forfeiture,
one ysar probation, wrongful entnlst·
ment.
Charles R. Dill, Jr., Pomeroy, $58
and costa, spaed, $50 and cosla,
possession; James A. Withrow,
Pomeroy, $1,000 and costa, 30 days
)all auapended 1o five, 18 days house
arrest, on year license suspenaton,
90 day Immobilization, one year probillion, drtvtng under tho lnfluonce:
Mary J. Francia, Pomeroy, $30 and
costa on each count, IWo counts no
seal beft, $30 and costa, speed, $25
and costs, IWo counts fictitious
plales; Eart A. Goode, Racine, $100
and coal&amp;, 10 days jail suspended,
one year probation, disorderly conduel; Nicholas E. Burt&lt;e, Pomeroy,
$200 and costs, one year proballon,
three days jail suspended upon proof
of a valid Ncense wilhln 90 days, drl·
vlng under suspansion, $25 and
COBia, reckleas operation, $25 and
costa, failure to control; Ricky D.
Reeves, Albany, $85-0 and costa, 10
days jail suspended to three, six
monlh license suspension, one year
probation, jail and $500 suspended
upon completion of RTP School wllhln 90 days, drtvtng under lhe lnftu·
once, $250 and cools, 10 days jail
suspended th three concurrent, one
year probation, driving under suspanslon, $50 and costs, dlsorde~y con·
duel; Harten W. Bare, Jr., Langsville,
$30 and costs, seal belt; Lasts l.
Watson, Reynoldsburg, $40 and

costs, speed, $30 and costa, seal
belt.
Steven R. Neville, Racine, $75 and
costa, posseaslon, $50 and cosla,
drug paraphernalia, $50 and costs,
reckless oepratlon, $500 and costa,
30 days jaN SUSpended IO 10, IWO
years probation, drtvtng under sus·
penalon: Mary Jeffers, Rutiand, $25
and costa on each count, 10 days jail
suspended on each count, reslltution,
IWo years proballon: Michael W.
Holdar II, Rutland, $22 and costa,
spaed, $200 and costa, 10 clays jail
suspended to three, one year probation, jail suspended upon proof of a
valid license w~hln 90 days; Brandon
Hill, Racine, $25 and costa, underage
consumption;
Cheryl
Hysell,
Pomeroy, costa only, drug paraphernalia; Dave Elkins, Pomeroy, coals
only, drug paraphernalia; Eric D.
Shoulls, Racine, $30 and costs, seat
belt, $20 and costs, failure to control,
$20 and costa, operating unsefa vehl·
cle;Oavld P. SmHh, Pomeroy, $20 and
costa, failure to display registration;
Jesse Thomas, Middleport, $850 and
costs, · 10 days jail suspended to
three, six monlh license suspension,
IWo yeara probation, jail and $500
suspended upon completion of RTP
Sch~l, driving undar lha Influence.

Larry Wehrung
Pomeroy
Village Council
"'-vy, Ot\le

To the voters.of Lebanon Township
who supported me ...

Thanks!
Charles R. Lawrence
for by the candidate· 52279 Portland Ad. Portland OH 45770

.

'

Tuescbly, No¥enlber 1 J, :ZOO I

TuF.soAv's

'·

Pujols,
Suzuki

HIGHLIGHTS
ScoREBOARD

top

NBA
Monday'• Ga!Ma
Golden State 86, Memphis 79

Utah

rookies

105, Ol1ando 98

NFL
Monday'• Game
Baltimore 16, Tennessee 10
........ College Baaketball
TOURNAMENT
Pretaaaon NIT
RnstAound
Arl&lt;ansas 64, Maine 47
DePaul 70, Fordham 61
Michigan St. eo, Detroit 10
Oklahoma 66, Cent. Connecticut St. 44
Syracuse 78, Manhattan 58
Wake Forest 79, N.C.·Witmington 78
NHL

NEW YORK (AP)- lchiro Suzuki was looking for a
shutout.
The 28-year-old Seattle .
outfielder became the second
straight
Japanese
player to win
the American League
Rookie of
the
Year
award
but
was disappointed one
._......___. voter
put
Pujolt
him in second place.
"] was a little embarrassed
to be called a rookie here in
the United States," he said
Monday through a translator.
11
1 was so
relieved
today when I
heard
this
announcement I won
the Rookie
of the Year
award
because I felt
this was an
Suzuki
award
I
·should have
won without any doubt."
Suzuki, who came to the
major leagues after nine seasons in the Japanese Pacific
League, received 27 of 28
first-place .votes froljl a panel
of the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
"If I won this award, I had
wanted to win unanimouSly."
he said.
Albert Pujols of St. Louis
was a unanimous choice for
the National League rookie
award.
"It's a pretty good honor,"
the 21-year-old Pujols said.
"You only get it one year, and
so I'm happy I got it."
Suzuki was the first rookie

Monday'• Game
Buffalo 5, Florida 3

Bengals will .
resod after prep
games
CINCINNATI (AP)
The Cincinnati Bengals have
decided to resod the middle
of their field because of damage caused by two · high
school marching bands that
performed during playoff
games held at Paul Brown
Stadium over the weekend.
The Bengals tried to pre~
vent the schools' marching
bands from going on the field
at halftime Saturday, arguing
they would harm the grass.
The Bengals' decision was
sharply criticized by high
school football fans. Mar~hing
bands regularly perform · at
halftime of Bengals' games.
The stadium was built and
is owned by Hamilton County. The Bengals operate it as
part of their lease.
County
commiSSioners
held an emergency meeting
Friday night and ordered the
Bengals to let the bands" use
the field. The Bengals wi:re in
Jacksonville, where they lost
30-13 Sunday.
The grass already was
shnwing wear and tear following a game Oct. 21 against
Chicago. There were bald
patches in the middle of the
field.
The team said in a statement Monda)( that the middle
of the field will get new soc\
following a game this Sunday
against Tennessee. The Ben gals
are in Cleveland the next
weekend.
The Bengals could try to
make the county pay for the
new grass.
Coach Dick LeBeau said
the high school games didn't
do much damage to the. field.
"I took a look at it," he said
Monday. "I think the field is
very playable. You can tell
they've been playing some
football out there."
He added with grin, "I
don't know what a marching
band field looks like."

CHARLOTTE, N .C. (AP)
- NASCAR said that it can
do little to improve · safety at
its small U.S. tracks, where a
newspaper
investigation
found that 150 people have
died since 1990.
NASCAR sanctions 92
shari tracks, but doesn't have
the resources to set and
enforce safety rules at those
events, NASCAR vice presiden\jim Hunter s~id.
"I don't think we can
ass ume a bigger role than we
currently do," Hunter said in
Homestead, Fla. He gave no
reasons for the stand in an
interview published Monday
in the Charlotte Observer.

bf' Cllldldilti •1M I Llnooin ffta,

•

Page 81

NASCAR: Small·
tracks unsafe

Thanks for your vote
lmd support.

~'Me~ for

The Daily Sentinel

McGwire shocks everybody, F'tlge 84
8CS standings, Page 86

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Named winner

Inside:

FIND A SEAM -Tennessee QB Steve McNair, right, is stopped on

a quarterback sneak from the

1-foot line by the Balti-

more defense with no time left in the fourth quarter Monday, (AP)

·Ravens outlast Titans
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - The
officials gave Tennessee one final chance
at the end zone, and the Titans knew
they would put the ball back into the
hands of quarterback Steve McNair.
So did the Baltimore Ravens.
This time,. the Rav!'ns stopped
McNair short of the goal line with no
time left Monday night, preserving a
l6- 10 victory that will rank among the
wackiest finishes ever.
"We knew that's the only thing they'
wanted to do," Ravens linebacker Ray
Lewis said. "They weren't going to put
the ball in someone else's hands. If you
watch film on them, you know that
they run quarterback sneaks an awful
lot."
McNair thought he had scored the
winning touchdown on .just such a
sneak minutes earlier on a hurried play
with the clock ticking down. Officials
signaled a touchdown, but confusion

Baltimore 16

Tmnessu 10
then reigned over an offsides penalty.
Officials talked with ea~h other, then
Tennessee coach Jeff Fisher and Baltimore coach Brian Billick.
Finally, referee Bernie Kukar said the
offiides penalty had been a dead ball
foul, moved the ball about a foot fiom
the goal line and gave the Titans one
last play.
"Who wouldn't sneak ·it on the !yard line?" Baltimore linebacker Jami~
Sharper said. "Our big dogs up front,
Goose (tony Siragusa) and Sam
(Adams) blew up the middle, and he
couldn't get any push. Then he tried to
come around the outside, and me and
Corey (Harris) smacked him."

The Ravens started sprinting toward
the locker room, a few bottles and cups
flew onto the field and Titans receiver
Derrick Mason threw his helmet down
and kicked a pylon.
The Titans could have thrown the
ball, but Fisher said he thought McNair
would find a way to score.
"We thought we'd jam it in, and the
game was going to be over," he said.
McNair, playing with a sinus infection, was weak and not as sharp as he
needed to be. He was 27-of-48 for 256
yards passing and a touchdown. He also
ran sbj: times for 19 yards.
"They stopped us. I can't explain it ...
things happened so fast. I felt myself not
penetrating, so I tried to go the right
and it wasn't there," he said.
Now the Ravens (6-3) have won
three straight overall and five of the last ·

Pleue see Rookles~ID

Please see Ravens. 86

Eagles, Meigs dominate AII-TVC volleyball
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY - Eastern dominated the first
and second team volleyball selections for the
Hocking Division Tri-Valley Conference
All-League team v.o ting
held last week at Alexander
High School. Eastern's
Janet Calaway was named
as the league's Most Valuable Player, sharing the
marquis with coach Pam
Douthitt, who was named
Coach of the Year.
Joining Calaway
Calaway
on first team were teammates Tammy Bissell and
Whitney Karr, respectively outside and middle. hitters for the league champion Eagles.
Eastern won the league with a 15-1 conference mark and 19-4 mark overall. Eastern's Ka.c;s Lodwick earned second-team

honors for the Eagles.
Rounding out the first team nominations
was Jessica Altier of Miller, Rachel Chapman of Southern, Becca Mauro of Miller,
and Lacy Nott and AUory Hooper ofTrimble. Second team honors went to Sarah
Springer of Federal Hocking, Katie Sayre of
Southern, Tracy Huck and Alana Miller of
Waterford, and Mindy Spencer of Miller.
Belpre's Michelle West and Meigs Coach
Rick Ash were named Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division Playet of the Year and
Coach of the Year respectively during the
recent meeting of area Tri-Valley Conference schools.
Meigs, the Ohio division champion,
placed three girls on the first team, led by
senior outside hitter Corrie Hoover, junior
setter Mindy Chancey, and sophomore outside hitter Jaynee Davis . Rounding out the

2001 All-Tri- Ullley Conference VoUeybaB team
Ito~•~• DlvtiiDn

OllloDiolotan

Ftmtaom

1'1111-

. (PWne, oolllol, year, poollloo)) - Undsey Wool, Alaundof, 12, OH; ·CoMo
.Molp, 12, 011; Mlchollo w.loit,
Belpre, 12, S; Mind\' Clloncy, Molp,11,
'8; Myi&lt;ala Stophtna, Bt~re. i 1, OH; Ell·
laPorte, Ale..,_, 10, MH; Court·
ney ~ortar, Nel~anvllla· York. 12, OH;

i~.

school, yar, pooltion)
.-.. c a "!*· .......,... 11, 1; JMIIaa
~ltier, Miler, 12, OH; Rachel Chlpmln,
SOUihom,11,

Mil;_,-·-

a..ca

...,._ - · ....... 10,011.

12, MH;
Mew&lt;&gt;, - · 12, S;
laCY Nott, T~. 111., S: Abt Hoell*,
T - , 10, OH; Wlllb•t !Con', IMlem,
12, MH•

Mitty ArmotronQ. Aloxancw, 12. S;
Bethany Allen, Vinton County, 11, OH:

Saran Sprlngor, ~ 11,
OH: Kottt 8IVI'a. _ , 11, OtWH: •

Andrea Vett, ~. 12, OH; Kollo ,.,_
Molgo, 11, B; Emily Cartoon, No&lt;sonville, •t 2, detenle; ·Ue4anle Jon11, Vln·
ton County, 12, t.IH.
MVP- MlchOIIO Wtlt, Btlpro
COICh olllo yar -RICk A&amp;h, Molilt

Tracy Huck. W.terfortl, 11, MH; Alono
Milar, Wat8rford, 11, OH; K.- Lad I II;

--

Please see TVC. 84

-

--

iaelom,

10, DH: Mind)' ~• ._,

11, MH.
MYP-

-

.~~n~t

carr •.,....,.

COICh of 11o Yoor - -

Daulltlll,

Nebraska, Miami still kings of the BCS heap
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nebraska won big, Miami
didn't, but both unbeaten teams
remained on course to play for
a national championship in the
Rose Bowl.
The Cornhuskers held lirst
place and the Hurricanes were
second in the Bowl Championship Series standings released
. Monday, with third-place Okla-_
homa gaining ground on
Miami.
Nebraska, 11-0 after a 59-0
victory over Kan~as on Saturday, strengthened iiS lead atop

,.,.,...

Foi'=BCS
the rankings that determine
who plays in Pasadena on Jan. 3.
The Huskers have 2.20 points
under the BCS formula, while
the Hurricanes, 8-0 after an 187 win over Boston College, followed with 7.31 points.
The Sooners, 9-1 after their
31-21 win over K.msas State,

had 7.89 poiniS,just .58 behind
Miami. Last week, the Hurricanes held a 1.22-point lead
over Oklahoma.
The BCS standing; are based
on a formula that incorpo111tes
the AP media and coaches'
polls, eight computers, strength
of schedule, won-los~record
and bonus poiniS for big wins.
Miami retained its No. 1
ranking in this week's AP poll,
willie Nebraska replaced Miami
atop the coaches poll. The Hurricanes also lost ground in the

computers.
Oregon (9-1) moved up tWo
spots to fourth place. The
Ducks,whobeatUCLA21-20,
have 11.97 point' and are just
·ahead of fifth-place Florida (91), with 11.98 poiniS.
Texas (9- I) dropped one spot
to sixth, followed by Tennessee
(7-1), Washington State (9-1),
Stanfonl (6-2) and Illinois (8-1).
Nebraska's 2.20-point breakdown was: 1.5 poiniS for poll
average, I point for computer
average, 1 for strength of sched-

,.

ule, 0 for won-loss record and a
1.3-bonus point deduction for
beating Oklahoma on Oct. 27.
· Miami (7.31) had l.S ,points
for poll average, 3.17 for computer average, 2.64 for strength
of schedule, 0 for won-loss
record ·and no bonus-point
deduction.
Olclahoma (7.89) had 3.5 for
poll average, 3.67 for computer
ave111ge, 0.72 for strength of
schedule, 1 for won-loss reconj
and a !-point deduction for
beating Texas on Oct. 6.

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2001

' 13, 2001
Tueed•y, Nov.

Qerlbune - Sentinel CL-ASSIFIED

r

=== l.,r__~-~-&amp;..._.~lr.._....r.~.&amp;..._,

Potynter r4111nant1 mor• Squar• bales was $2.00
75 yards. 58" wide,
now $1 .50. Round Bates
~. (740)985-4409.
wu $15. now S10. 1 mil
on At 2 N. (304675-4868
~-5Piague.
$30. 2 P235 15 ...... $30.
Hay &amp; Bright Wire T1o
!1'40)S87·7729
Straw, y..,. 'Round 0eavery
- 11 •llaiHomoOwnoro &amp; Volume Diocount Avaiia1
90 plus ble.
Henlage
Farm.
gu' ' "Hl-leo~f
" - lnct&lt;Jding
oil (304)875o5724.
and
Oleclfic gas fume·
- · 11 Ellicltncy He&amp;!
Pumpl. teaturlng Tappana
:::.O:.ncreditllo warranty
Aums

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties like
No One
Else Can!

rid

c.IUC.....-ty.OH

BENNETT'S HEATING

a"

FORSA!E

(7 40)388-9055

(304) .675-1333
Private Party Ads Under $100

Display Ads

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

Thursday ror Sundays

POIJCIII: Ohio Vlllly " ...h'nl ,..._ thl rigtlt
,.,...... ltntinM A a'
. . be I I p C No for no MOf'e thM
..,. 1oM 1M' •IQMMI6 ............ frOM trw

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jnc:lude A Price • Avolel Abbreviations
• Include Pnone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

ro

,,,41\,41\11'1"

I

I'ERsoNAls

116

IfllJ'W~

------=--

call

(7.t0)992-5023 or 740-982·
3324.

=r:·

Roommale Wanted to share

:::S.;.!': '&amp;:::; :!1
bkJ and references e-mail
addrasa 11 avalable' to PO
Box 502 Cheshire OH
•
•
45820
swF soeks Sugar Daddy
35+ sand photo and lnlarrnation to PCB 103, l..angs·
villa, OH 45741 .

~=-m~t=ul~

Oaycara. Paid Vacation, 8onuaaruTralnlng , Programs.
Established Inti Coopera1
1
o
n
www.Goals2Success.com
888·754·5430.

i

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring alt 3 lOcations, full or
part· lime, pick up appiJcJ·
lion at location &amp; bring baCk
between
9:30am
&amp;
1o:ooam, Monday thru Sat·
urday.

=

Ir

-

Male 3
C
2 a18 •
' years. neuterad, .shols up lo dlte. F•
male, 1 112 yeare, apey911,
shols up to date. (740)3888201
-------Free kittens to good home.

(7-40)448-nao

u-~ male ............
~....F'" · - - herd mix. Includes new dog
hou&amp;e. food, acceuoriH.
Frady, GreotCompanlonl
(740)387·5033
Good Wa1Ch Dog. Part Box·
er, Very Smarl. Needs energetlc person lO care tor him.
(740)446--1 892

FOUND

a..-.

Lost• black and White S- ·
an Husky blue eyes blind
Losl on
roae1:
458- 176 1 or leave massage
at 895-3822

Leon-Baderl

For sale by owner: NICe bl·
·level home on 1 acre near
Chester. Three bedroom,

I

I

c:v

I

i

1

I

r

wV.

I.
I

L.ost- In the Rocklprlngs Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
area. IWO bule, (740)9925836
Domino's Pizza of Point
=.:.,_::---::-::-~~ Pleasant now hiring Full·
Lost Reward! Chocolate nme &amp; Part-nme safe drivL.ab named Haney. 4 years ara. Competitive Pay &amp;
old White around the A lbl Schad Ia ,..., I
·
ax e
u . ~y n
mouth.
(740)446-6356 person 420 VIand Street. Pt.
,(740)446-()898.
Pl.
...,,....~-----. :.::__ _ _ _ _ _ _
AUCilON AND
-.... .,. • ·u ·.... ~
sateaperson: Full·time, ben·
r w l1'.11'UU\£J
elite, retall experience reter·
red. Ap~ at Lllestyte Fuml·
Rick Pearson Auction Com- ture. No phone 3calla~ Apply
pany, full lime auctioneer, In pe1'801'l, 856 rd Avenue,
complete auction service. Gallipolis, OH.
l.lcensed 166,0hio &amp; Wast Bee St
M
1 11
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or 1
or; anager ~
304·773-5447.
h~ ry S:nt='"=~ 801
7 21-8 Pornerat,• Oh 41718
w~
t
I
..,___11&gt;-BI.W
____...1
ITNA
sCenic Hilla Nuralng Ctre, a
nurolng homo optcial~lngln
AbiOiute Top Dollar: U.S. Atzhtlmtr'l cart 11 now hlr·
Sliver, Gold Colna, Proof· lng 3 full limo STNAIIor 10
HII,
011mond1, Gold toe lhllt, 2 full time tor 2 to
Ringo,
U.S. Currency,· 10 2 pari limo - l o r 210
M.T:S.ColnSIIop, 151 Soc· 10.IIInloruted 1-IIIOP
ond AVIIIUI, Galllpollo, 740· by. and pick up ~n appllca·
:44&amp;-2lM2.
lion •nv weekday from
a·ooam IO 4"00 pm
'
.

I

r

r

/'

I \11'141\\11 ' I
',I II\ 14 I '·

tAction... ABrlngls-

SSSCUilnt
AI Euy u ABCI,2 - k

COL Training- Greol Pay
And llonolill. Training and
Placement Available
No El&lt;JIIrlence NIONNry
CALLNOWI
1·888·209-ll617
•if Qualified

~~~~.:'::~=•

(

~:r:;t 88~~~~ =:~8~1~(7~~;~nt " t s m
''edl
18 c r-e e 0 mer, I'll
Home Health, 430 2nd.
Ave., P.O. 987 • Gallipolis
o. H 4563 1: 800 •481 •6334
Full benefit package lnctud·
ing health insurance anCI
401 (k) Included •
Salesperson for Ohio Valley
Memory Garden, full or par1
time, we train and fum ish
leads, Call (740)446-9228
for appt. Tonya.

r•o

BUSINB

I

0PPoR1UNJI'Y

INOnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know, and ~OTto send
money through the mall until
you have investigated the
FAST GROWING BUll- offering.
NESS NEEDS CASHIERS
&amp; COOKS, PART TIME Do you_ need a mortgage or
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS' new car? Are your bills
SEND RESUME TO: THE backed up? We can help.
DAILY SENTINEL, PO Wa offer fast reliable eervlOX 721-08, POMERDVI Ice, and our professional
OH U71D.
slaff Ia on hand lo help.
·
Pleue call toll tree. 1-888·
FULL TIME AN PO&amp;mON. 4118-8807
Sctnkl Hllfa Nuralng Center
11 acclj)ting oppHcatlono for Slart Your Buslntll To·
a full time RN. 7 to 3 lnCI3 cay... Prime Shopping Ctn·
to 11 lhllte. Greet llonoflll, tor Spact Avallal&gt;t AI AI·
E•porlonco Pay, and mora lordabiiRati. SpringValley
than competitive waglll Plaza, Call740-448-0101.
Call Sctnlc
Hilla II
MONEY
(7.01'-'5·7150 or atop by
Lo
and IIIOUiandlppl~allon.
ro AN

·

1 ..

Help wonted oaring lor tho
ll~rly, Darat Gmup Homo.
now paying minimum wago,
new lhlfll: 7am.3pm, 7am5pm 3pm-11pm 11 pm7am: call 740-802-5&lt;&gt;23.
RNIILPNa·P~N·you chooH'
lht Clayl you wlah to wo~ .
Mtcii·Hoi'M Health Agency
Ia aggreulvely growing and
In nttd ot fltld staff. Apply
to Pttt ·Sommer, 430 2nd
A
PO eo 987 G1111
vt., ·
•
'
po~0H . ~ 5831 · 800 "481 '

I

i

Tht Southom Local 8ohool
Dlllrlclltaocoptlng oppllco·
tiona lor tubot~uto buo drlv·
ert. Orlvtrt mutt have 1
COlllctnHwithabuadriv·
tr'l enctornmtnt. Training
can bt arranged. Phone
(7.0) IG·21!11!1G tor tur1htr
Information.
PI•••• atnd Inquire&amp; to
Jamtl Uiwrence. Superin·
tandenl, Southtm L.ocal
Schoola. Box , 76 , Recine,
Ohl0 45771 SLSD 11
an
·
;~ual Opportunity Employ·

r

from Gallipolis. Patriot area.
Paved Road, Appraised at
$62,000 Asking $55,000.
For lvfo. (740)446-8715

PART TIME AN
Fill In position available at;a
___
two baths, one-car garage,
Scenic Hills lor Cays &amp; Eve8U'iiNE'll;
family room wHh llreplace,
nlngs. Great Pavl Wonderful
Fllnl Financial has been sun room. New central heatTeam to work With! Please •
• providing small business lng &amp; ale system. One mistop by to flll out an appllcaloans for 13 years. Now we nute off Route 7, but still prl·
lion today.
Galllpolla C.reer College specialize in personal, car &amp; vate. (740)985-3981
~Careefa Close To Home) debt consolidation. We
PART-TIME
Ca11Todayl740-448-4367, guarantee' quality service For ·Sale: Crown Cily, 3
OFFICE POsmON
1-800·214-0452,
from a trusteCI name. CAll Beclrooms,
2
Baths,
We have a ptlr1-tlme poaiR:·90-05-1274B.
.Flint Anancfal Servicts, apo. (740)256·1744
lion open al our Sentinel or-~176
pllcatlons holllne (888}222:~
flee In .Pomeroy. This poslMlscFJ 1 AMX&gt;US 8191
. LoeBI~ In Crown
~:
tlon requires computer and •
•
very pnvat!!l, 14x65 pee
math skills, must enjoy
Need Financial Help? Risk Bulh Mob!~ Home. Sets on
wcrldng with people be Good
Bad ~-edh E
rt 'ty
k
• 75x150 Beautiful Landscap•
or
VI
van 1rea oppo um • 1oo no 1ur ad fenced in lot 24x38 Gaable to organize your work Bankruptcy, CaH Toll Free ther, our financial institution rage. 8x12 Utility Building.
and be available 1or scheCI· 24 hrs., 1-686-426-6393.
provides you with ass!&amp;· Why pay rent when you can
u~ing between _lhe hOurs of 111
u1
lance &amp; lnf~rmatlon, Free own? (740}258-1222 for full
s.ooam and 5.00pm. MonnANIF.D
Clonsulta11on, call now at details
dey th'""1jh Friday. For InTo Do
877-304·301 1.
·
tervieW contlderltlon send
MollnEFORSAu:l'f&lt;ll.mi
"
your reeume and COWM" let· All M ka K
H t
nJRNED DOWN ON
ter or Attentton of Diane Hill.
a
erosene 88 ers SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Ohio Valley Pubilthing CO.. and Forced Air Healars Re-No Fee Untess We Wlnl
1125 Third Ave.. Geiii~IO. paired. Small Engine Re·
1·888·582·3345
Ohlo 45831
""' palr. Free P~k-Up and De16 Wide. Qnly $195.00 Per
'
livery Avellable. Over 20
n
Monlll, 8.99% Axed 1 Pleuarll Valley Hospital 11 years Experience. Call Mike
Rate With Air And Un-=-,:-:---::--::-- currahtly accepting ruumos (740)446-7504
derplnnlng 1-888-928·3426 '
AVON!'"
""' Araal!l 1•10 8uy or tor a fuli·tlme Speech PathS.ll. Shirley Spears, 304· ologlst. Musl possess a d• Allotyourhomo~rs.ad·
1985 Skyline 14x70, 3 bed·
675-1429.
. gree h'om an approved ditions &amp; remoele!lng. 24hr
room. Good Condition. Call
school for speech language emergency nrvice, senior All ,.., Htatl tldveriiUig Harold. 740-385-9948.
COME GROW
pathologist Licensed In lhe citizens discount. 22yrs.
In- _ , ,
WITH USI
slate ol
Contact Debra el&lt;JI. (304)576·2065
oubjo&lt;l to the Fldoral
1994 14x70 Ookwood, 2
We are expanding our clrcu- Long at Plo-nt Valley
Fair Houllng Act of 1168
Bedroom, 2 full bath, 3 lon
f
II
•• niH d
·
( 40)36l
latlon staff to better serve Hospital, (304)875·4340, am Y
ml . an yman
wtueh m~~bl it lllepl to
heat pump, stove, 7
our customers. We are look- ext 1381 AAIEOE
pressure wash1ng, yard
advertiH ...ny
· 0907
lng lor 8 peqon that has
•
maintenance, clean up,
pNfennc.,llmlt.tlonor
bu
Go
1st 11me
high anergy revel, self- moti- Pleasant Valey Hospital 11 eeL. Free Esllmates cllcrlmlnltlon baed on
yersvernvated and -wous working currently accepting resumes (304)773-5584 Alk lor Don
ment loanl!l· buy loans &amp;
_.,..,
riCO,color,rellgton,sale· {740)446-3093 Oak·
with people. Muat have de- for a full-time Occupa~l Georges Portable sawmill, tamllillttltu• or Mtional wood Supercenter
pendabla tranapoftatioo, ba· Therapiat. Four to rive yeara don't haul your ~ to the orftln, or •ny Intention 1o
ale computer knowledge. ol lormal education and Ill! 1 !304-875o 1957
.-ony28x6030r4Bedroom,Qn·
Thl1 Is a full time salaried bache&amp;orlmaatar ot science m us ca
·
ptlt.rtnce, lllmttlitlon CM
ly $345.00 Per Month
poaltlon .•nd offers all com- degree or equivalent In oc- Superior Home MalntedltertmiM'IIof1."
8.99% Fixed interest Rate.
pany benefitl!l lnclldng cupational therapy from an nance. we do all Repairs on
1-888-928-3426
health insurance, vacation, accredited Institution. Cut- homes. Carpentry, plumbing
Thl
personal days, and 4011C rant WV license. Contact Decks Trenching lnakie
llllftPiplr will not
Amazing Firat Tlme Home
plan. We are part of a large Debra Long at Pleasant Val- and o~t. (740)44l-o113
knowingly KGtpl
Buyers.
Government
company that offers excel- ley Hospital, (304)675-4340,
advertiHmef"'tl for,..,
Backed loans. No credit
lent career advancement ext. 1381 .AAIEOE.
Top To Bottom Cleaners,
...... whlchl1ln
needed. (304)755-556 Lim·
opportunities. Far Interview
professional, and aHorda·
vlolallon of thll.w. Our
!tad Offer.
conaldaratlon send 8 cover . R~ Supervisor (FT), coordl· ble, homes. offices, rentals,
rndef's •re hereby
letter telling us why you are nat.lon-supefVislon of patient construction and remodeling
lnformtd thtlt •II
Assumable loans· Many
·
n 401992 1391
dweUing• adverltud In
types available. Call for de1118 person we are 100kl ng care· MUcenSed In OH and c1eamng.
"
or
tails. (740)446-3583.
7
2979
40)992·
Director at Ohl~ Valley Pub- medicare and JCAHO Will Haul Away, CIH.n Out,
opportunlly bUtt.
Big 16' wide, 3 ·bedroom 2
llshlng Co.• 825 Third Ave., guidelines for home haallh. Clean Up or Move Almost
bath, save $5,155, deliVered

:~r ~:OS:~.r0~~~~: :·e~sta:1a:i~~~· V:~h

2 Bedroom Trailer located 1 Bedroom OeluKO Apt., ,

r.o.-

lksNEs'l

on Sl Rt 588. Oeposll and Carpel lllrough-out, unlur· ,
Ralerances. (740)441·9060 nlshed. Central Heat. Off ·
or (740)245-5690.
Street Parillng, All Utlitlel
Fumlshed except eleotno.
2 Bedroom, 5 min. lrom (7~)446-2602
town, $2751 month, $250 :..
· -~--:::--:-::-;dopollt. Absolutely No Pels. 1br. Very Clean, Available
{740)446·9342
Oec. 1St. Now la~ng Appil·
cations. (304)675-4975
3 br. 12lc60 $200 a monlll, + =.;...;~--'-----

I

Deposit, utilities. No Pets. Very nice

Gallipolis
Ferry
Area.
AND BUIUliNGS
(304)875-4088
3br. 2ba. ~ 6x80 Nice Coun.
W Lot near Town of New
Haven,. (304)882·3534
erecl parking, ceiHng tan. Animal lovers wanted, 2
$275/mo., 814-870.1661. · bedroom, 14x70 mobile
home on 10 acres, 15 min.
1...o1s &amp;
north of Pomeroy, $425 mo.
ACREAGE
plus deposit &amp; utilities, Tu·
__
• ner Realty 740-992 _2886.

~~rt=rPe:!n~ro:~: ~: &amp;~s~ :2 ~~~:~ ~~ee:i:~gft.~n.::.'n:!:

rLo.------_.1I
LosT AND

r: ~~OMFS Ir AP~ I

I

OAKWOOD HOMES
SUPER CENTER.
Over 40 homes to chose
front Qrtve a little save 8
loll OokwOod Homes of
Nltm. (30oi)755-588S
REDUCED
3br. Horne Fufty Remod· All Oouble Wide Dllplaya
elocl. Ready to Move lnl. ""'
Qnly $995 down
$39,000. 211 7th St. NH. ~ly
Homos Ot
(30ol)882·3m
Nitro. (304)755o5885

banks are rejecting you due partial basement, vinyl sidto Dad cralt history? We lng, wrap around deck,
8

j

TRAINING

~~

2 Story 4br. willl fireplace.
Basement, Large Garage
on 5th Street, In New Haven
$50,000. (304)882-2937
3 Bedroom on Route 2,
(304)675-5332

MeG,... &amp; Auoc..... 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Ranch
Trying to buy a home and Style. 1 acre nul, whlnpool,

man's, valid driver's license,
hand tools, r&amp;llable trans- smal business loans with
pottatlon and references re- good or bad credit. Approval
qulred. Local work, excel- within 48 hrs. (866)882lent pay tor right person, . 1158
onuses, vacallon. Apply at
Christian's Construction,
Inc., 1403 Eastern Avenue,
~
Galll~ls, {740)446-4514
SEiMCEs

I

oftMift.

Ir'o .= Ir

CRE91T PROBLEMS, Hav·
lng Ananclal ~? Is
Bad aedlt, no credit, or
bankruptcy the root of your
problema? call ua - y:
PREMIER CREDIT RE·
SOURCES, 'AIIItle linen·
Clal help you need', 1-888257-S.WS, SpeclaMzlng In:
peroonol, conac;ldallon.
business, rnorlgages, auto.

I

Gnmnu•u
••~:on.n'"'•
..__ _ _
_ _ __.~

II
I

IfllJ'WAmm

LPN'al AN's needed lor Podlatric homo care cases In
the Southea8l Vinton County, Pomeroy and Racine
Ateas. Immediate Employment Avallablo. LPN's $16
per hour, AN's $17 per
hour. Shift/ Weelcend Shift
D i l l - Offered. Pleaoe
Call Primary care Nunllng
service at (800)518-2273.

Arcadia Nursing canter
Is now accepting appllca·
:::::::..::c:..:.::.:_cc...___ Ilona lor Full lime AN's and
Why wait? start meeting LPN'a tor Midnight shift aoo
Ohio singles tonight. call lOll STNA's afternoon positions,
tree 1·800·768-2823 aKt Full and Part tfme. We .offer
1821.
a~ceMent benefits that inelude Heahh Insurance.
401K. Ute lnaurara. corn-~ 1 petltiva wages and opportunltlal for advancement If
you are a team player who
Disney Vacation. 7 days, 8 enjoys wortdng with .the eld·
nights 0 Ramada. Good for arty apply In person be1 year. Sacrifice S199.00 tw~ 9-4 or call Kathryn
(614)898-2730
Somerville D 0 N
' . . .
Arcadia Nursing Center
Middle Age Professional
East Maln Street
DWM looking lor P Coolville, Oh
nel WF, 30·50. Respond
7&lt;t0887-3t58
with letter and pletur. to
EOE
EB7 200 Main StrOel. Point
Attention!
Plelll.nt, WV 25550
Eam 2nd. Income wtthout
Novembe&lt;17-24, 2001
2nd )ob up to
NO TJ001l111181ng or Hunting
$25.·$7S.Ihr. Pt·fl.
1-80().218-7543
ol any kind on the Raymond
www.Money·Orearns.corn
Smithfann.

r

l 'i6

URGENTLY
NEEDED·
plasma donors, earn 145 to
$80 tor 2 or 3 hours weetl.ly.
Call Sera-Tee, 740-5926851 .
.
GROWING 8USINESS
100 WORKERS NEEDED
NEEDS HELPI
-crafts, wood
Work 1rom home.
1tom1. Motorial pmvided.
Mal~ order/ E· Commer&lt;e
To 1480+ wt&lt;. .
$522+1- PT.
Frwlnfom'llniol• pkg. 24 Hr. Ask for Phyllt.
$1QOO- $40001 week FT
1.eQ1-264-5625
www.lncredlblerewards.com
Make money tor Christmas,
(800)418-8501
A1 Pt/Ft Stay 0 ~ ap. sell Avon. Call (740)446- WANTED: Ex per I en cad
portunltyl Average 11)1)().. 3358
Roofing &amp; carpenter Fore-

of
stolen pig (yard ornament),
black &amp; white fiberglau p1g
approximately 3' fall &amp; 4'
long, out o1 yard In
Syracuse. has a lot of oenti·
mental value belong to fl·
thor who recently palled
IIWIIy, il you haw any - please

"'TTENTIONt

Wori&lt; From Home. Eam up
to $1500-$70001 month.
Part Tlmel Full Time.
(800)329-4498 lor lrea
booldet.

$50 reward for the return

mation

lbuWANDD 11

ontw...,......._ .. ,......IOE,..,..a.•.U,...

.,. ....,. oontk••• • c:wr.nt,..

rlo

H~
c: •• .,.

FOR~

~ 018~~rrt~ yo~r ~~~~~:~

0 5 •- ··'th 1 99 fl
1 . """''es m
9
eatwood Modular Home Near
Gallipolis. Excellent Condl·
lion. Private, Country Set·
ting. Stocked Pond. AddiUonal 7.5 Acres Available.
Call Janell Ceil at Century
21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular
, (304)634-2596 or Office
1-800-731·9011).

122 Klneon Drlve. 3 or 4
bedroom, full basement,
many new features. Close
to schools and shopping.
$64,500. Call (740)448·
8310 or (740)448-2425
3 bedroom, In Mlddiepol1,
call Tom Anderson afler
5pm, (740)992·3348.
Newly conatructtd, olnglo
Olory 1600 oq. loot homo.
Located 10 mlnulto lror)l
Holzer Hoapltal, 20 mfnutll
from PltaAnt Valley Hoepl·
1al,oHSR160ona prlvolo
1·112 aora lot. 3 bedroom,
2·112 botho, big kltohon
w/ook cablnoto. DR, LA
w/gu log llr1placo, oonlral
air, l1undry room, trent
poroh &amp; 2·112 car garage.
lmmedlal1t poueaalon. Ap·
pralted at 1125,500. Make
offer. Call (740).48·4514
from 8-Spm , M·F, or
(740)446·3248 artlt' Spm.

I

I

"oan Avallabltl All iyptl of
credit wotoom1. No 1111
up front. CAU TOU FAll
1·8e&amp;·207-5028.
LOANII LOANII LOANII
Probl1m Paying Blllt? tn
Debt? Good. B•d. or no
credit. Bankruptcy Wei·
come. Call Toll- PrH 1·
886-481S-8488.
MONIVTO LOAN, AUTO,
DIIT CONIOUDATION,
CA'LLJ401)11D-7410
24HD RREIPON•'

J

Wtll•
Ranch,
Batha
hood.
-·

Malnlalnld Brlck
3 Bedrooms, 2 112
In quiet neighbor·
(740)448-0203 to

j

I

__

I-

SPACE

FOR RtNr

•·
•

Nice Iota, quiet country set·
Hng, will accommodate
16x80. $100 per month, cal ·Eel at Country Homes, 740- 2 llf&gt;IC!'S at the Memory Cora Mill Road. 4844 Near 992·2167.
Gardens (Woman at the Cora. 2 BR MobHe. 1.Cx70, 2
\ II IH I I \\llhl
well), $375. Call 1740)446- Porches. Lorge Yard. $350.
2893
Rei. Req. (8, 4)878·5532
iiii:IO~;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r

I·.

Hot.5EHow

Small Trailer close to groGoons
eery. store and downtown ~,_ _ _iiiiiiiiiiiiioo_...
GaU1polls. References and
deposit(740)446-1158
Appliances: Flecondhlonad
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
4 Cemetery Lola for saleAPAlm.tEilmi
Aefrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
Mound Hill Cemetery, $325
. FOR R1!Nf
Guaranteed! We Sen New
each or all 4 tor $1 ,000.
Maytag Appllailces, French
(740)388·9194
City Maytag, 740-446-n95.
1 &amp; 2 BR Economical Gas - - - - - - - Indian Creek Estates, 3-8 Heat, WID Hookup, Near Complete Uving Room Furacre lots west of RJo Holzer $295 to $379 Per
$400
Granda, 'lrom $25,900. month: Plus Utilities, Lease nitura.
. (304)675·6986
(740)245-5747
and Deposit Requlrect For sale- single bed head- (7-40)446-2957
board (brass finiSh), $75, ·
L.arge corner building lol
(740}992·2842
with 205' Ohio Rlwr front· 2 Apartments Available, 2br.
age, elevation shot, sur- 2217 North Main Slreel. For Sale: Reconditioned
veyeCI, appraised, serious $275lmonth, $1001DAnnsit. washers, dryers and relriglnqulriH only, $40,000 No Pets. Utilities not i~ud- aratora. Thompsons Applf..
(304)882·3736 before 5pm
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave. ad. (304)675-4900
(304)87"~7388
.
Nice 4 acre tracl near
nue,
~
•
Galllpolll• eaay terms, 3 Rooms and Bath. 46 Olive GE Washer, $75. Tappan .
(740)44CJ.3583
Street. Utilities Paid. Stove Dryer, $65. Both Wht1e AI·
· ·
·
and Relrigerator No Pels. mono GE o~r, $6 5. can .
$475 Required
plus deposit( Referen-_ after 8:00. (1.t0)448-9068
., ..
Looking To , Buy A New ces
7401446
Home? Don1 Hove Land?
·
we Oolll Hu~ Only 10 Lots :39=:4=5==,.----:-=:::Left, 304-736-7295.
. BEAUTIFUL.
APART Hot point Washef, $95.
MENTS AT BUDGET PIU· Whirlpool Dryer, $95. GE
Nice "ot tor Sale. 2 mlle!l CEB AT JACKSON ES· Relngerator, $95. Hot ~nt
1 $ 15,000. TATES, 52 Wesfw&lt;&gt;Olj Drive Elect. Range, $95. Whlrltrom Clly Umta,
(740)446-4766
from $297 to $383. Walk to pool Refrigerator, Like New,
shop &amp; movies. Call 740 _ $176. Freezer, Upright,
•• E
H
$12!5. Skaggs Appliances,
4462
• iKI 8• qua1 ou81 ng 76 Vloo ST. (740)446-7398
Opportunity.
Christy's Family Living, Mollohan Garpet, 202 Ctark
33140 New L.lma Rd., Aut• Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
HOlS!li
land, Ohio, 740·742-7403. (7~)446•7444 1·877·830·
1 Apartment. home and trailer 9182. Free Estimates. Easy
FOR lbNr
..,
• rentals. Commercial store- financing, 90 days same as
Court
Str•et.
Bed·
!~oacant~a va ilabwle' for lease. cash. Vl181 Master Card.
2
15
..,, ......
Drive- a-little save alol.
rooms, 1 112 baths, 1Ci1chan
·
with stove and refrigerator. Furnished Apt. 3 rooms and
SPOKI1NG
Off Street Parking, Close to bath plus shower, DownGooos
SChools and Downtown stairs, Clean.l. Reference
Area. $5951 month plus d&amp;- and Daposft Hequlred. No
posit anCI Aalerence. No Pets or smokers. (740)448- ·Model 1938 Turtc.lsh Mauser
Pets. (140)446-4926
1519
8mm Rifle with Bayonet and
Scabbard, 70 Rounds 8mm
2 eR House, South on St R1 Gracious living . 1 and 2 ammo on Bandoleers. $100.
7. Rei. Required. can bedroom apartments at VII·
(740)441·1917
IAage Manor
Rddiverslde
partments 1n m 1 1aport.
ANI1Q{.D

2.7 acres, uneven terrain, In
Wek:htown. $2700, ptaase
call (660)583-3753 Leave
name and number'

r

I

a

rl0

2 BR, 1 112 Bath on 112
steps Coles "~lie Homes 1 acre of Property. $350/
mvu
month. Immediate Avallabill·
U.S. 50 East, Athens, Oh, ty. (614)471·4265. Near
740"592"1972·
Buckeye Hills career Canmod 1
11
End of -the
e year sa e tar.
All 2001 must go, ·to make
.
room lor 2002. Special low 233 2nd Ave. Convemenl to
financing program available. Downtown. 2 Bedrooms, 1
Only at FleetwOOd Homes 1/2 Bath, Kitchen wl1h Stove
of Proctorville Toll Free 1- and Refrigerator. • $490!
month plus deposit and Ref868•565.0167 ·
erences. No Pets. (740)446·
Final Days, NatiClnwfda In- 4926.
vento'ry
(304)736-3409 Reducllonl 3 BR house In Middleport.
Call (740)448·0855 be·
Llmhed Or No Credit? Gov- tween 8am and 4pm.
emmenl Bank Finance Only
At Oakwood In Barbours- 5 rooms and large storage.
ville, YN 304 _738 •3409 .
New bathroom. Upgraded
carpet through· out. $3501
Niver L.lved In Doublewlde? month. Deposit Required.
Only $500. Olllvlrl 10 your (703)451-2591
lot
Low
Payments.
1.afliH! 91 •8777

I .
•

j

2·3 bedroom

apartment,' In town, large :
kllchen, LR, $500/mo. Rei·
erences &amp; deposit required.
(740)446-3644

==="----- - - - - - - - -

89 00

j

L,-------,.1

•"'!.
~~5~:;~·~:::1 C~~u~~~ ~.o.------_.1·

Q............tunities.
-~"-"------NClrth 3rd, Middleport, f
bedroom furnished apart·
mont no pets Cleposil &amp; ref
.
•
arences, (740}992·0165.

Now Taking Applications35 West 2 Bedroom Townhouse Apartments, Includes
Water
Sewage, Trash,
$350/Mo., 740-446-0008 .
Oakwood Apta., 1 Bedroom,
Effl cIa ncy. Between •1own
and Holzer. No Pets. idsal
for Single Person. DeposH.
Call (740)446-3929 alter
6pm.
""-------Tara Townhouse Apart·
menta, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 flooro, CA. 1
112 Bath, Fully CarpeteCI,
~u~ Pool &amp; Babv Pool, Po·
tlo, Start $365/Mo. No Pats,
LHM Pluo Security Depoolt
Required, Days: 740·446·
3481: Evenlngo: 740·367·
0502, 7~·448·0101.

Sabathia, who

ERA.

cOO.

r46

MoroRcvas

I

18711 Harley Dlvldson FLH
o r - . all original. 900

reliever Kazuhiro

Be~10re Iast

Sasaki.

year, th e o n1 y Mar.mers '
I
. had been AIvm
. D aviS
. m
.
payer
to wm
1984. Seattle paid the Orix Blue Wave
$13 , 125 •000 after the 2000 season r.
.or t h e

rookie pick in the

criteria of what a rookie. is in the truest

word," said

Assenbeimer,

who was surprised he w:11 the only voter

his

•

,.,.,

He played

McCovey

(1959), Vince

78

games in the outfield, 55

ballot.

at third base and 43 at first base in

"That's nothing against Ichiro."
Sa b a thi·a d isagree d wi th that view and

becoming the sixth St. Louis player to

thought Suzuki was the top rookie.

Wally Moon (1954), 'Bill Virdon (1955),

"The award is for first-year players in

t he

big Ieagues,an d hes• defin iteydeservI

. o f tt,
. "he s:u'd. "Theres
' not an argumg
ment about.that at aU:'

win the rookie award. The others were
Bake McBride

(1974), Coleman, and

. Worrell (1986).
Todd

PujoIs got toO points, fco ll owe d b y
Houston pitcher Roy Oswalt with 82,

mlteo$9500.
on r -40' Y - rnotor.
New York Yankees second basellWI
and Philadelphia shortstop Jimmy Rollins
7 992 •2670 .
1981
Thunderbird
Runa
~99:!•520
"gh
S
ki
h
hi
h
AI~
So
third
h
7
llx14wail&lt;-lnc:ooler;Tinter·Good.Goodwo!lcw.$800. ~
~ ·
n tsto utu ,ten gave mat ree10nso
rianowas
· wit 35points,
with44 . St.Lo.uispitcherBudSrnithand
natlortll bruahhog; 25000 IJ40)446-n30
1979 Honda Ct&lt;500 Cu•· year contract that guaranteed him
and Angels shortstop David Eckstein was
Cincinnati outfielder Adam Dunn had
BTIJ nature! gos Warm
tom 10 000 milea Onve S\4 088 000
Momlng alove, (740)992- 1984 Camoro Z28 "'cellent ohaH ~adera E~cellant :.._..;'~.;;,;,·;.;.;..• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,fo.;,u;;rth;.;;,;_Wl~·th:.:.;s:;ix:::.
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,:o:;n::•:_po~t::'n::t:.;e::a::c:::h::..- - - - - - - - - 2735
body and runs great, Conc1ffion ~ a regulate Aigner Knee high Boots, 3 (140) 742-3172
rectifier . to run. ~50.
Inch splkt hill. wine -.,, 1987 C~ Nova 1.8 Iller, (740)258-1283
like new, wore twice, Cost 4 c:yt., auto, l!llr, 4 dr., new 1993 Honda Goktwlng Alj).
1109 lake $25. {740)687· tiroo. AM'FM&amp; CD 113,000 Looko like Now. $8,000
.;.36..:.52_ _ _ _ _ _ _ miles, very~ 304- (30ol)571•3259
882-3922 leave message.
firewood lor salt- $25 lor
1995 Kawasald 220 Bayou
mixeCI 1 II'UCklold. pine fire- 1987 V.W., Sun roof. R• $1000. (7-'0)245-5309
'
wood tor $15 a truckload, buill motor and TranamloPublic Notices In Newspapers.
dllcount lor l8niorl &amp; voter· &amp;ion. Many New Parta. Sell· IQ97 Honda
300
an;:•:.:·('-740.:.::;1114:.:.:i-060.:.:;:.:5:..._ _ ing Due lo lllneSI, $800 Utility 2 wheel drMI. $2500.
Your Rqbt to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.
.::
oeo. IJ40)44Hl7SO
(30ol)875o3745 alter 5pm. or
firewood lor Slit. $150 per
•
leave mesaage.
truck Loed. (740)441·11478 1V88 Ford EICOTI, New
.
Brakeo, Timing Batt, Bat· 1999 Honda TAX 450ES,
~Advance- 6 lOry, Water Pump, $750. $4,250. 11167 Honda TAX
adopt
or
allow any llmio anaot tile
FEDERAL
olevetlonl
(NGVD)
!."PI"• SlOO. Nlntendo 64 Very
Dtpendlble. 70, $1,150. 1998 Yamaha
ovldonce ol being olrtctlrrequlrementa praecrlblt llow high
EMERGENCY
f'llll 7 tapes, $125. {740)256-11243
350 Wolverine, $3,500.
Exllllnglllodlfled
alr. .dy In e11act In on Ita own, or to build In tha
MANAGEMENT
1J40)245o5887
IJ40)245o2453
NIHW, -.o2
1989 PtyrrlO\Jih Aoclalm. 3.0
AGENCY
order to qualifY or purauant to pollclll ftoodpllln and do not
Comrnunkleo
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; Litre Eng., Front Wheel 2000 modal Harley Oavkt·
FEDERAL
remain qualified for e118bllollecl by oilier prolllblt
Affocled:
Melgo
R-'ra. Problema? Need Drive, 4 dOor. Good Condl- son Heritage.soft tall, 9500
INSURANC!'
partlclpetlon In 1111 Federal, Btate, or development. Thue,
County
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr. tlon. $1200. {740)446·8512 miles, $15,000, 740-992·
AOMINISTRATION
Natlon•l
Flood regional enlltleo, lhlo octlon only
740-446-4525
2&amp;70, 740-992·8520.
(Unincorporated
1990 Buick Skylatlc 140,000
PropoHd Flood
lnauranca Program The11
propoaed forma tile Hill for
Areal) '
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 miles. $1,000. (304)675·
Auro PARIS &amp;
Elevellon
modified elevetlono Mura locaiiiCitonl. H
(NFIP~
•Eievetlon In fill
tor $10. Open set. 8-Sprn. &amp; _78:...7.::8______
ACO!SiORJES
Dlllrmlnatlone lor
DATES:
will 1110 be uHCI to lmpoaoo no now
(NGVD)
evenings, Dewl\urot GroanVartoue CommunHieo
Till period for calculate
the NQUirement-, of IIMII
house Mt Alto. (304)895- 1991 Plymouth Voyager, LE
ExlaflngiModlfled
comment will be approprlete flood II haa no oconomlc
3740 leave message. or edltlon, very good condition, Budget Prlcld Tr~~nsmlaNone, •eo2
In r.ot,~ounty,
(304)895-3789
Loaded,
Please
Call ol0111 All Types, Accaos To
ninety (tO) dayo lnaurance premium lmpoct.
Communlllea
.
.
. {740)446-2738.
Over 10,000 Transmfollowing 1111 HCond ratoo for 1111 now
L111111
and
Affected:
Melgo
lndapendent Hefbalife DisTran1lar Cases 7..0.245pubiiCiltlon
of
theM
OWftlfl
Of
rill
AGENCY:
building•
end
their
County
trlbutor, can For Product Or 1992 Pontiac Sunt;rd. Good 58n Cell: 33&amp;-3785.
Feclerll E1111rgoncy propoHCI rulea In 1 con18nl8 and for 1111 property In the
Opponunlly. IJ40)44H982 tires, good cortditlon. $1,500
'
(Unlncorponlted
Management Agency newopaper of local aecond leyer ol fallowing
FIRM. (304)682·2052
CAMftllS &amp;
A. . .)
ACTION:
clrculdon.
1
lnaurance on 11lallng communltlea, are
1994 Ford Explore&lt; E MoroR HOMFS
AERATI&lt;i'rMOTORS
PropoNCIMI.
SUPPLIEMI!NTARV
bulldlnge and tllelr .,.aauragad to review
•National Geodetic
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Bauer, leather interior, all
INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
1111 prallmlnary Flood
C01i&amp;ent8.
Vertical Dltum
Stock. CaH Ron · Evans, 1· pw. pdl, power aeata, well 1990 Gutf straam, 37ft. 480
The
Foderal
Purauanl to tho lnourance Sludloo
1100-537·9528.
mainlalned (740)742-3172. ford. 41K, 1998 Pull car,
•
471&lt;, {740)245-5752
TIIChnlcal
provlllono of I UBC end Flood lnouronce
Ellll'llncy
ADDREBSES:
- - - - - - - - 1994 Grand Prix, whitt
Information
or Managoment Agency IO&amp;(b),
tho 11111 Mapo and to
Melgo County
o..,! H\ I( I "
Lots Boys winter clothes, wttinled windows &amp; CD
comment•
ere glvao notice of the Aclmlnl-,
to· aubmlt commonta to
(Unlncorporatld
tolze 12, $35 all or will sepa- player, $4,000, 1740)992· iftp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
whom IUthorl!y hu . the
lollcltld on 'thl propoHCI
opproprlate
Arlll)
rate. Sill bed Hner, $25. 2209, 740-992·2476.
r10 , _ _
HOME
propoaod modlflad detormlnatlano of baen del1g1t1d by' community
Alhley wood burner, $100. ..
·
_ :.__
Mapa available for
flood 1111 Dlroctor, Flcleral IIPIIIInlltiVII I I
phone (740)446-6890
1995 Buick Skylark, Very .._...i.,..,...,iiiiioiiiloiiii•.......,iiiiioiiiio'•• b111 11% onnuol baoe
lnopoctlon 11 tho
::::::.:.:.::..;.:::..:=.:.:;;__ Good ·Condlllon, Sharp, "
In !meogency
chance)
flood elevations,
lilted
bolow.
Mala•
County
$2800. (740)245·9060
BASEMENT
lllvatlona ohown In accordance with Management Agency, Propond biN flood
CourthouH, I 00 Feat
Waterilne Special: 314 200
WATERPROOF1NG
Second
Street,
PSI $21 .95 Per 100; t• 200 1995 Grand· Am, 2 Door, V- Unconditional lifetime uar- the prollmlnary Flood SIICIIon 11 0 of tile hereby Cllrtlflll' that elevation&amp; along
DilUtor tho
propoaed flood
IOUrCel
Pomoroy, Ohio.
PSI $37.00 Per 100; All 6, Auto, $2895. 1994 Cava- amee Local rete~ fur- ln1urence Studlal Flood
flood oludled In cle1811 Ill
Send commentl to
Brass Compression Fittings liar, 2 door, auto, ' 2495· ished E labllshect 1975 and Flood lnouranca ProtiiCIIon Act of modified
In Stock.
1997 Lumina, Loaded,
(140} ...... Fiola Mapa fer tho 1173 (Pub. L. 13-234), elevlllon
ohown on 1111 flood
Mr. Jeff Thorton,
4
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- $4295. 1993 Cavalier, 4 0870
H!Oo·287-ll576 . communhiH llotld In 87 8181. 110, whloll detormlnetlono, If proftiH In the etudy.
Prealdont of the
•
.
. . tile table below. Till lcldlcl Section 1383 promulgated, will net Tho
Es J k· - Oh'&lt;&gt; 1·800· door, $2195. COOK MO.
propoud
Mol go County Board,
537·9~8~, ,
'
TORS. (740)446-0103
Rogers Waterproofing.
llltn flood elevallono to tile National Flood llave 1 elgnlflcant modlflld beH flood
ot Cornmlaalonera,
are the beelo lor lhe lnaurance Act of 1HI IIConomlo lmpiCI on liiVIIIOnl Ill II
8UIIJ)ING "'
11 995 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Melge
County
Runs Great, High Miles, C&amp;C G9ne~l Home. Malnte- floodplain
(Tltlo XIII ol t~e e oubl18ntlal numblr
Courthoun, 100 Eaot
~
Many New Partl!l, Mirror nence- Pa1nllng, v1r,yl sld- management
Houolng and Urban of amell ontltleo. A
Second
Strut,
RI{Ilt Side Damage, $1300 lng, carpentry, doors, win·
meiiUIII that laCh Dlvolopment Act of flood
:elevation ·
Ponlel'Oy, Ohio 457118,
3a• storm door. complete 080. (740)388·0438, 6· dow~. baths1 mobile home
Ia 1818 (Pub. L.
dol8rmlnellon undar
$60; Four 54~ shuners, $10; 10pm.
re~1r and more. For free community
4001· Section 1383 formo
VUIIJII of Middleport
14' porch· railing with spinesltmate call Chat, 740-992- required to either 448)),42
1997 Jeep Grand Chero- 6323
4128, and 44 CFR the boalo for now Approxlmetely 2
dies. $25. Call (740)446· kee, Fully Loaded, Leath81, .;,;;;,;....
· ..,.._ _ _ __,
local ordlnancea, mllel upetrum ol tho .
· Mapa available for
Help Wanted
87 .4(1~
4188
56K, Amethysl Color, One
ELEC'fRICAJJ
_ _:_:::.!::...:.:::::;:__ Theoe olevatlono, whicH, If adoptlcl by downalream cauntv
lnopoctlon at the .
Block, brick, sewer pipes, Owner. Excellent Condition.
Rf.nu:GERATION
together wltll tho • local community, boundary
Mlddloport
VIllage
windows, lintels, etc. Claude $13,000. Call (740}446·
ftoodpbtln
will govorn futuro 0 I!I1YIIIon In foe!
Holl,
237
Race
Streel,
6702
Winters, Rio Grande, OH ·
alter Spm .
Residential Clr commercial
ccnotruotlon within (NGVD)
INIIIIJIImenl
Middleport, Ohio.
.
.iiCalrl7..;40-.:.;;245-,;,;;.5;;1.;;2..;1._ _"t 1998 Chevy Malibu, wl1ite, wiring, new service or reExllllng/Modllllcl
--NqU~by tho floodplain area,
Send
commenta
to
130,000 miles.
$6000 pairs. Master Licensed olec·
Section 10.3 ol the The
IIIVIIIOn
'571
The Honorable Sondy
~
{740)441·4041.
trlcian. Ridenour Electrical,
program ragulatlona, detennlnatlonl,
At tho upatream
1
lannarelll, Mayor of
1,--oitiliiliiioiiiiilo-,.1 78 Buick Lasaber, Runs, WV000306, 304-1!75o 1788.
era tile minimum 11111
COUnty boundary
the
VIllage
of
- - · lmpon no
Needs Work, $200. Call
aro requlrod. They rellrlotlon unleoa •i!lovotlon In feel
Middleport, 237 AICI
AKC Boxer Pups. Fawn. 3 (740)992·2092 or (740)992·
ohould
not
ba and until tho local (NGVD)
Stroet, Middleport,
females, 2 males. $250. 3452
conatrued
to
meon
l!xlallntngiiiiiMikodldlfiiCI
community
Ohlo45710.
(740)388-8803. Deposit will :..:::::..
· - - - ' - - - - To get a current
•
tile community muat voluntarily edopta "103, "1011
hold.
79 camaro, Rebuilt Motor
weather report,
Conimunlllel
- --,.---...,..---:- and 355. 60% finished . Just
chenge any exlodng ftopclpleln
'village of Pomeroy
FuJIIPart nme ordinance• that ora onllnan- In -onl Alfaotod: Melgo
AKC Registered Gold Re· needs put together. $2000
. check the
lrlevers, $225. (740)388· 080. 1740)245-9502
OFFICE
more. etrlngont In wHh
olevltlona. County
Mapa avollable at'
8972
(Unlnco,nrportonalllllclod
thalr
floodplain
:.::.::.__ _ _ _ _ _ 89 Gao Tracker, 4 cyl., 5
Even
II
ordinance•
the Pomaroy • VIllage
ENVIRON MEt-IT
INIMJ111111111
ora odopted
In Areea), Vlllogel cl
Hall, 320 Eaot Main
Full blooded Australian speed. 4x4, Runs Great.
1-888·974-JOBS requlrementa. Tho comp1t1nco with Middleport, Pomaroy,
Shepherd, no papers, 9 mo. $1800. (740)256·1457
Street, Pomeroy,
and
communiiY may at Faderal atandarda, Racine,
Ohio.
old, black &amp; white. $ 75 · 91 L.lncoln Towncar and its
~U,!I_,___,_ - .
Send cammant• to
~(7.:_40::!1::992:::.;·0:.:2::60:__ _ _ a beauty! Air ride, auto light
Lllllo
Laadlng
The Honcrablo Joh •·
Pomperian Puppies, M or F, dimm~r. (740)446·9!323 or
C-'&lt;:
Blaettner, Mayor
$250 each. f740)388-8642 (740)446·1443
Approximately 0.1
the
Vlll•a•
Reg. Rat Terrier f&gt;uppies. 97 Chevy Monte Carlo,
mlle upellllm of lhl
Pomeroy, 320
Trlcolored,
$100. keyless start &amp; enuy, power
Ylllog• ol Rut11nd
Moln ~. Pom &gt;y,
(740)532-2677
every1hlng, SDK miles,
.
COij»&gt;iW
.. IImtta
Ohio 45718.
=.;...~~--=-- $9,500 080, 1740)992·
· 0 II1VIIIon
In fill
;;eo
FRUTIS&amp;
.;,02;,1,;.5-------.
VIllage of Racine

PUBLIC
NOTICES

r

I

r

C.u 2 'tt,..

r

u.s.c.

r

I

.

r

to-

NOW
HIRING

-

•srs.

$6-$8

Per Hour

Sentinel

..

VF..GETABLE'&gt;

r

'fii1JCKS

I'URSAIE

Richards Brothers Fruit '--lllilliiiitliiiiiii;.._.l
Farm.
APPLES
AND
MUCH MORE. 24 miles 87 Ranger, Standard, 4x4,
North of Gallipolis on Coun- Runs gOOCI and lookS good.
ty Road 46. (740)266·4584. $2500 080. (740)245o9502
Virgil's Berry Patch, East of
Syracuse on AClute 124 has
turnips &amp; purple asparagus
roots, (740)992-7449.
I \H \1 "il l'l 'l II S
,, II\ I -.,lot"

1982 GMC Pick-up, V-8, ps,
pb, auto. aJc, new pa.lnt,
new wheels &amp; tires. new dl·
amond plate toolb9~~:. looks
good. r\Jns great, asking
$3.000, (740)949-2621 .

u-

=~~HIICI
Nane,•f7•

Mapa IVIIIIble It
the Recine Village ·
Hall, 405 Mlln SlrHI,
Racine, Ohio.
Send commentl to ·
The Honorable J .
ScoH HIll, Mayor of
tho Vllloge of Racine,
P.O. Box 375, Roclno,
Ohio 45771.

Approxlmatoly 0.1
mlle upotream of thl
Ylllago ol llulland
· _,oolllllmlta
'llov111on In feel ·
.(NGVD)

lltllllnaiModlfiiCI
None,*571
. Communnlel
d:
Mala•

Village of Syrocun
Mapa available 11
the Syracuae Village
Hell, 2581 Third
Street, Syracu11.
Ohio.
Send comment• to
The Honorable Larry
Lavendllr, Mayor of
tho
Village
of
Syracun, 2581 Third
Str. .t, P.O. Box 268,

I"

SyrecLiae,

Ohio

457N.
For
further
Information ple101
contoc1 . tho Map
Aoalotance Center
toll free II:
H177·FEMA·MAP (1·
877·338-2827)
. (11) 13,2001

•

10 cups &amp; saucers. Pfalllgran Blue Yorl&lt;town, $3 set
also sugar and creamer with·
lids, $!3 lor both. (740)6673652.
.,.,-.,-...,.,.,-.,.,---.,-12 by 24 building to glveaway to tear down or leave
Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. Buy homes lrom $199/mo.,
::•l:..l:..t...:c(304=):.;87;.;5:..·68;,;:;.72:_~Only $19,850. Fr11 Oellvery Foracfoaurea, 4% down, 30
-:&amp; Sot Up. 1-888·928·2426 y,eara at8.5% APR. For list·
19 Aluminum Storm Wln4 70 3 ~
2 ngo 1·800·319·3323 oxt.
dowl wllh ocruna. 32x67
New 1 x ,
1709.
·
and 32•81 . 1100 torall. col&gt;
bath. Only seae down &amp;
Twin River ToWfil now 10· (740)446-8588
.,
$18U12Jmonlh. c.n Cheryl, 1-ioull For Rent 2br. $27!.
oeptlng applioallont for
740·388-7671.
$200
Dapcolt.
Call 1BR.H0Douboldludlipt. MOIIL! HOM! OWN!AI'
New Double Wiele. $185 . (304)1!175-8872
tor elderly and dlubled.
lnterthtrm &amp; Coleman Qll,
p1r Montlll 3 Bedroom, 2 Houtllor Ronl, 2 Bedroom
(304)~~~5e •
oil &amp; oiiOtrlo tumac11 In·
Bath. Frat Dellvlry &amp; set· Dopooll and Rolertnoa. No.
eluding hi offlclonoy holt
up. 1·888·92&amp;-3428
Polo. (7401 448. 1278
- - - - - - - - pump oyotomo. We carry a
1 and 2 bedroom apart· oomplatt line of Mobile
Nice 28x80 Double Wldt Oak Hill, OH. 3 Bldroom mtnllfOmfat'ltd anCiunlur- homt partl &amp; acctll0r1tl.
uttlng on ranted lot In briok Cape Cod. Bailment. niJheci NOurlty depoalt ,._ IENN!TT'8 HEATING 1 .
Point Pleaun1 area. 2x6 $47!1 month. Rtlerenc• qulred.' no p•ta, 740·992· COOLING (7110)448·8418 ·
walla, th•rmal pant win· Rtqulrtd. (740)384·5682 Clr 2218.
or 1-8QO.I72-5tl7
~
dows, priced to ult. Call (740)245·9382
www.orvb.oonVbtnnttt
(304)1!175-3689 atk for ·
1 Btdroom Apartment•, NIW AND UIID AJR~mary.
Pilot Program, Renters $289 month. Deposit I Atf·
Needed, 304-738-7295.
areno1. HUO Approved. NANCII FOR' IALEI We
(740)441-1519
Install, Free Ettlmatel, 11
Single Parent Program. Why rent? govamment
you dont Call ut, We both
Ea~y Financing Available. backed loans from $490 Large 2 BR Apt. Vlry Nice. Loosel (740)448-6308, 11304)755-7191
dOWn. (740)446-3093
NoPeta, (740)448·3644.
800·291 ·0098.
.

-room.

others were

.329 •ve-ge, 37 homers •nd 112 rum.

MEROIANDISE

--

NL The

(1994) and Scott Rolen (1997) .
Pu,;ot. set an NL rookie record with
, ..,
130 RBis. and led the Cardinals with a

In Middleport. Dolls, glassware, Aladdin mantels, anCI
more. (740)992.0298

JnJM...U..I..Al'lr.uv,:,

utunimous

Telegram in Elyria, Ohio.
"I j'ust felt that Sabathia better met the

::-~-:-:--~---=
Sua's Seiectablts on lhe "T"

u - . . ._ _

ninth

Frank Robinson (1956). Orlando Cepeda

Buy or self. Riverine Anllquea, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992 2526 Russ Moore
.
'
owner.

r

32 first place votes in the

Coleman (1985), Benito Santiago (1987),
Mike Piazza (1993), Raul Mondesi

not to have Suzuki No.1 on

pi, , keyless ,entry,
red,
·
1
h
d
· h
511 999 080 (7401742 • maJOr eagues, was t e secon stratg t
7200
Seattle payer
I
· h
rd ~ U ·
to wm t ~ awa ••o owmg

aU

(1958), Willie

•

Loredo 4x4, new tires, pw, ki, the first Japanese non-pttcher m the

Pujo!s got

NL, becoming the

Sabathia got one first-place vote, from
Chris Assenheimer of the Chronicle-

I(

Good Condition.
Suzuki s 242 hits were a rookie record
1M 000 mile$. S5900 090
· and the most for anyone since_Bill Terry's
7.4c)H 6 0805
JeepGrandChe.254forthe 1930NewYorkGtants..Suzu11197

door,

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

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

Publication
Sunday Olsplty: 1:00

C.C.

had 75 points after going 17-5 with a
4 .39

4--

20 Words 7 O,ays • Each Item Prl.ced
• No Commercial Ads

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business. Days Prior To

saooo.

vrs a $75,000 bonus for

Cle..,]and pitcher

ftomPep.B1

to win a batting title since Tony Oliva
!995 C~ Suburban. in 1964 . Suzuki batted .350 with 56
WMe, Grey Oolh. 4•4.
F100t1Rear Air, Hoot, Third stolen bases, becoming the first player to
89 ·000
Seat .
miles. lead the ma;or leagues in both ca•......,ries
$14,500. IJ40)387-18D3
,
- .. 1995 Dodge CaraYirt. 3 since Jac~e Robinson in 1949.

-:--"':::;;====::....

l\egtster

Suzuki, who

winning. had 138 points, easily beating

sense of the

COOLING (7401446-9416 , 968 Chevy Nova 11 55
or
1.-.&amp;72·5'
Cou pe. New ~·to
~- ·~-·
• -.OI'Yb.cornlbenueo
·
350• Auto on lloo&lt;. lbout
z riJo leng1lt cloth coals, 300 miles. 350 lurbo 1an1.
IIlio 12graanandneny. $S ~of Now Partl. $7500.
a piece. f7401687•3652
! I695-3078
40 eon- Blot:lts (New), 198 1 CJ7 Jeep Orange fl.
11112"l&lt;15 1rr. $25. 1• 314 berglaubody 3o4 4 . -.
copy Antonius Violin $5000
(740)441·
,.tr-arlus.
$200.
4041
{740~
.
·

:!'o

Rookies

1994 F·250, 4ll4, Red.
123,000 miles. Chrome
Wlwtk. New r.ea.

n.n

The D•lly Sentinel • Pqe B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

e,

78

=.:;....______

\

992·2155
.·

. '

�......

. ... _

Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crosaword Puzzle

McGwire announcement

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

II ·IUI

9

.. 0 I

I

.....
...•• .....
••
••

~~~~

Service

PNJessMtlp

......

(740) 949-1521

I'Nfii

FIDaDdna &amp; 90 Days
Same As C'llh Available

..

'

1\CTORY DIRECT
.. PRICING

BISSELL

IDIIIrecl • Free £etlinatn

Advertlae
'
•

In thle apace
for$25 per
month

'-229.00*

.....~

Cellular
04"!:'.1 ;~~· ....

•

)..•• -··---~-

fXPftti~NCf1 wft.L., ~

I

St40Ut.l&gt; SAY S'O!~-- 1~l

24'120'

TwO YfAtt6

11-121.80

742·2076

lMo~

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

FIRST SIDED ·
8200.00 PEl 111111
REIIWILY
8327.00 PER 101111

Houn: S1111· Thur llam • 10 pm
Fri &amp; Sat 111m· llpm

MANLEYS
SELF STORACE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(1D'll10' 610'11281

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rinding

· fi~; q_-M:Iilj@jiiAj34!! :&amp;;..
l(il""

I
1

WIIICH ...11 IDIIIIIIIIR " · "
: 11:30am • 2;00 pm : 5:00pm. 7:30pm
1
I

14 yrs &amp; under FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE
: 5-8 yrs ~ '2.99 : 5-8 yrs ~ '3.99
I
9·12 yrs ~'3.99 · I 9·12 yrs ~ 14,99
I

,

YOU'VE E.OT' A HUGE
GLOB OF PE...NUT
~TU(K

• Bucket Truck

Roofing • Home
Maintenance-

Gutters·.Down

ROBERT BISSELL
COISTRUmON
• New H011111
•Gerigea
•Complete

. Spout
Fret E11tm11e1

949-1405
591-5011

ON

.....

$ItT

r...

l'lnleng flgles
110&amp;02171
Euerv Tbnllg

Herbalife
Independent
Distributor

Elltg birds sttrt

Call• for Products
or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell

&amp; SllnNt·
DlorsOpeaQ

6:311

l'rolresslue top line

'llllnll!ls

l'rolresslue

Couerlll111 SUtldlys

Cooking Hints

~

ITUESDAY

~elf-Storage

DUR
CUT6
WRHPPED

24 'qom·-

DOWN

cln:le

'l7 Run- (go
wild)
21 PIMtetOpe
22 Pun on(ecl1111001y)
33 v.m34 Exllnct bini
35 Muocullr

-m

38 _......,.
'l7
38
3t

7 -......... 30 loft IIIUII
!A
31 .......

• Ga.~ ~v-.

• Type o1
10 Conclwry

• SCIIe41 : " ' ,•

14 AU!Ot8,1o
So= abii

43

~

wert DOtl
44 Mit. o11!cer
41 -..-.
..n
41 O!am41 Ra=
41 Dr

tt Cobbln..too11

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20 S!Mgy
Wolmtlr
nppronl
2 "F,..Wmy• 22 -lim

-

......
-

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c:.nn.

In

3 llcycl...

rap1c1a
23 Prunlc! oil

4 Nl,.._
,_

24 Pledge
1111u1e
25 Two""- 52 ~

ononoter
5 -de
colOgne
I Llwyer"a

21 P-ol
cltcln
21 DHmlola

lellond

lor -

.__

eo lloon

X

53Hydr

•

boneuflk

54 Rand of

"11m ,_.

..~

deg;:;....
;.;,......,r-:2t::.,o.Pollutlon;:;;

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-In

by Lula Campoa

~ Clphor Cl'jJIIogrornlare crulod from quo11- by 1omouo
_,., ..... and ,._m. Eoch
lho clpllor- foi anolhor.

Today's Clu.: P equals H

'Z

NIHL

XA

OZRAZYH

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NIH L

L HZ V I

Z

LHEHID.'

AEHWHVA
VIE

APIJRC

G J. E

a" .·

ZDVPXOZRC

LZYRHXAP

Pfi£VIOUS SOLunON: 'I gol to k.- virtually all 11m owneta
... Gene Autry wu 11m nfcell one.• - (Former Armhelm Angel)
Dave Winfield ·

"".,. ;.,•

THPAUTZZDLAIILIT

"t

d. fi'il 'tJ .&amp;'\"to. ' _ f) 'C ~ ~ 8
p~

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WOlD
I AMI

1411•4 ~, CLAT 1. POlLAN_;;_..:.·- - - ORoortango lollors al lho
four scrambled warao bo·
low ro form lour slmplo words.
·. . - - - - - - - - - .
T I XA L y
£
2

now
unmakable·.
South continued with
.
k.
f
d ununy ••·acemg o
hearts, then ruffed a
low heart, but East
discarded a diamond.
Declarer couldn't do
it all and · went one
.N E N H A
down, ·
,·
-&gt;--'!:'-"' There ' are · other . ·
• .
.
ways to g~i ~Oitt.d,. bu~ ' ..
:;:
the s1mple ~pproach I
.K Y N I K 1=_~,'
,
works with this layout
~
When returning home after a
and with the oppos- .
.
.
.
.
short trip across the border. an ofing hands swapped. . - - - - - - - - - - , ficer smiled, "Congratulations for
Immediately start
0 L E !l U 0
'looking······ your photo."
with dummy's top
16 () Campier~ !he ckuckle quo10a
.1
three hearts and dis- L.-1..
. .....I.L-.J.-.J.--1.--J.
by lill;ng ;n tho mlq;ng worao
'II
you dtnlop from sf8p No. 3 below.
~ card your diam.o11d
NUMBERED lETTERS IN
IJ loser. Suppo~e they $ PIINT
THESE SQUARES
•) try to cash a high diamond. Ruff, play a
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
trump to duinmy, ruff
a heart (with the
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
spade ace if necesMishap - Rocky· Chief- Beckon • ICEPICK .
sary), draw trumps,
The host of a party 1 attended kept the house very
and claim.
cold. Instead of using a corkscrew to open the wine he
used an ICEPICK.

I .1 I I

I

I I I' I I I
1. I : I' I

I IS I I

lllaplMIId Like

st. RL 124

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

· llldne, Ohio

740-992-5232

IJir tlllllllkl tim

1111211 mo.

NOVEMBER13I

lllpl'bue

Altton

Who cares?

740-992·7038
. 111.10

"""~~
High&amp; Dry

in a bowl, the water
can either be put in
first or added la5t.

11 ........

-r-

Dridge
Today
magazine, a bimonthly in a smallpage format, began
life
in Jamaica,
Quee1Js. Dut for the
last few years it has
been edited by Matthew Granovetter in
Netanya, Israel . In a
varied content aimed
squarely at tournament players, it includes an unusual bidding panel, which is
moderated by AI
Roth. He marks the
readers' and experts'
calls based on what
would have worked
at the table.
This deal was described by Martin
Hoffman .
How
would you plan the
play in six spades after
West leads a diamond? Would your
line work if you
switch the East-West
hands?
Note that North
did not start with a
strong jump shift because he had a twosuiter and partner
opened in neither ·
suit. A strong jump
shift is made either
with a · two-suiter
when partner has
opened in one of
your suit~. or with a
one-suiter.
At the table, declarer won with dum-

..

When mixing dOq food

eo ,_,__
~~~

21 .:..
23~

II

FACE.

"

----------~----------·

HowardL.
Wrltesel

Paa

4NT

then cashed the king
::====:::;;====::J and
queen of spades.
The contract was

;;

I

BUfFET TO,GO ILUncll·· ••.ttl
BUFFET TQ GO IDinMr • 'UtJ

r ...

my's di:unond ace,

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• Middle
Ep 111m
~

.ICQ.It

ning for his client, who's vacationing out
of the country. Tellem has !tid one conversation with Jocketty.
"It's early at this point. It's jwt beginning;'Te~em said.
Another possibility at first base is Tino
111&amp;0 Z171
Martinez, a free agent after winning four
E_,TIII
tiiJ
World Series titles in six years with the
Yankees. The Cardinals also could move
&amp;S ...
NL Rookie of the Year Albert Pujols to
Dlersllllelt31
first base and sign an outfielder like MoiEql**itlrt
DlstJidley
ses Alou.
ill
Pujols wasn't sure how McGwire's
retirement would affect his future. He
Country, Dance &amp;
11lnlgs
RookMUIIc
started at fuur po!i.tioru last year, includhe I:Mrlll 740-742·7709
ing 31 at first base.
R-bleRIWtl
"It doesn't matter where I play;' Pujols
All Occulonl.
said. "I just want to be in the lineup every
... ./ '
day and do the best I can for my team!'
On the other hand, the Cardinals
might prefer keeping costs down a bit.
MI.I LHM INC.
The payroll was S74 million last year and
NewU....•\IIIJI
projects to $80 million this year, with 22-...•New-a...
garne winner Matt Morris, among othIIIYII.....:.EITWI1• .•.1•W•II
•Rep's
t
ers, due for a large r.lise. .
·lllfllll. . .ll . .ll·
Whl&amp;nn•Ro.
Jocketty said last week that he's trying
A'ddiiiOtu • Jtoollq
to reduce the payroll to $70 million, 'IJ'"OOII. .. IBIDIJmll :
which would leave next to nothing ~n . FREE ESTIMATES
with McGwire's departUre.
740!992-7599 .
McGwire batted .187 in his final sea•
,(NO SUNDAY CAllS)
• FREE INSTALLATION
son with 29 homers and finished with
• FREE IN HOioiU:sTIJMATE
583 career homers, fifth on the all-time
• FULLY WELDED
list. He was the single-season home run
• 50 YEAR WARIIANTY
king for three seasons after hitting 70 in
1998, waging a season-long race with
All MUll Tractor
Sammy Sosa of the Chicago Cubs.
QUALITY WINDOW C!VC!'M1
Equlpmentl'lu1s
Barry Bonds broke McGwire's record
992-4119 1-800..291-5600
Faetery Aatborbed
this season, hitting 73 homers.
C..·IHI'Iu1s
"1 got close to him when we shared the
Villi Our Sbowroo• Oa S!lle Roule 33
home run race," Sosa·said in a statement.
Dalen
' Milot Nortb or Pomeror, Oblo, AI Coun11 Rood 18
"He must have a good reason for his
• No Dealen or Cootradors Please
decision.
Vlso/M-""'rd
wv li023477
"The way he declined the money from
the Cardinals so that they can bring
someone else into replace him ... that's a
class act. I will never forget him."
Teammates were shocked at the news,
no matter how it was delivered.

Bryan Reeves

w

1

or' Belpre and Courtney Porter of Nelsonville-York. ·
' •
·• ,
Meigs' Katie Jeffers earned second
· team honors.
Bethany Allen. and
ftomPepB1
Melanie Jones earned second team from
first team honorees were Belpre's Vinton County, while Milly Armstrong,
West, Lindsey West and Elizabeth Alexander; Andrea Vest, Belpre, and
Laporte of Alexander; Mykala Stephens Emily Garlson, Nelson~York rounded out the second team.

.

ACROSS

ALDER

ST. LOUIS (AP)- Mark McGwire's big-spending New York Yankees to bring
retirement announcement came at the in Giarnbi ancl it mi&amp;ht r.lre u much u
perfect time for the St. Louis CardirWs, S20 million a year.
even if they didn't appreciate the w:ay the
Giarnbi's agent, Am Tellem, said he
news was delivered.
expects 6-to-8 teams will be in the run-

~Oiler's
Deer Shop

•='= u=:r
IS= -·In

PHJLLIP

shocks owrieri, players
On Monday, general manager Walt
Jocketty, manager Tony La Russa and the
rest of the front office convened in
Phoenix for annual organizational meetinS'. Though still a bit in shock to have
learned of McGwire's future via fax, at
least they can begin discussing ways to
spend the resulting $30 million windfall.
McGwire did his best to soothe ruffled
feathers by telephoning general manager
Walt Jocketty ON Monday night, a day
after the news broke. The fax arrived at
Busch Stadium late Sunday night, so the
team didn't see it until Monday morning.
"I just hope that how this has been
handled over the course of the past 24
hours, I think we'll get through that real
quick;' team president Mark Lamping
said. "I think everyone would agree that
as we look back on Mark's contributions
to St. Louis that we celebrate all the
things he did for this franchise:'
Team spokesman Brian Bartow said
McGwire apologized to Jocketty, saying
the announcement was supposed to be
made Monday after he returned from
vacationing in Mexico. McGwire said the
public relations firm he hired jumped the
gun.
"It happened a little sooner than he
thought;' Bartow said.
McGwire, who retired after two
injury-plague'd seasons, walked away
from a $30 million, two-year contract
extension he agreed to last spring hut
never signed. Among the options to
replace the 38-year-old McGwire is a
player who's done it successfully once
before: Jason Giambi.
Giambi, who has admired Ml;Gwire
since their days togetlt~r in Oakland,
· replaced Big Mac on the Athletics in
· 1997 when McGwire was traded to St.
Louis.
Giambi won the AL MVP last Season
and could win it again this season after
·h itting .342 with 38 homers and 120
RBis. But the Cardinals will probably
have to compete with Oakland and the

Wednc~d.w,

949-2734

PROJECT?.

Nov. 14, 2(XJ!

Signific:~n·t develo~lments
could be in store for you iu
the year ahead regarding your
penonal fmanci;~l statu!. M~t
of them will be due to Pa~t

SIIIIIIWUU.

u

nccnmpliduncntS that ar~ now
lH.·ing arknmvlcdttcd.
SCORI'IO (Oct. 24-Nov .

N

.22) -- Somcrhing you didu't
think you could afford may
come your way today through
· the Sl'Ucrosity of a penon
\~ who thinks a great deal of
you . Thil rel;aionship will

uke on new leg~. Trying to
patch llp a. broken romance?

Remodeling
Stop lo Compare
FREE ESTIMATI;S
740-992·1871

The Astro-Gnph

Match- ·

maker can hl'lp you underna nd what to Jo to mnke the
rchuiomhip wllrk. Mail S2.75
to Matclullilker, clo thi.•
n~:wapa.pcr, P.O . Box )(,7,
Wickii!Tc. OH 44092-ll lr&gt;7.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Det'. 21) -- Your construc11ve
ability to face bsues 'quarely
and deal with life realinki'llly
will hcl~· you muk~ a monumental problem aecm tasy to

Roc ky R Hupp Agen t

Box 189
Middlep o rt. Oh10 45 760
LocaiiJ43.5264
M{'dicare Supplement; Life Insurance; ·
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer·&amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
Mortgage, Major Medical
• Nursing Home

t:~ke c~re

oflOdi'ly.

(Dec. 22- •
Jan. I tJ) -- This C"ou)d be a
rt•d-letter day for you fin:mda!ly, 11rovidcd, o( t'oursc:,
you ta.kt advanta[l¢ of th(' opCA I'RICOI~N

: U!:.~--L.!!;::~=-~~

·.
I

',

s.

portunitie5 handed to you.
They can open up new ave mte~ of revenue.

AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Feb.
I?) -- IJon't leave any impor·

tant matters t1p to inclTeL·tive
peen tot.lay. You're the only
one who 5hould be in charge
because of t he co mpetent way
you can handle people and

situarions.
I'ISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
-- Something i! happening tocii'ly that will furtlter your intert5tS, but it may be happening behind the scene.•. Even

so, you 'II nill be the prirn:u:y
bentf~ctor .

AIUES (Morch 21-April 19)
-- Juu when you think nobody appreciate• you, kudot

could come y.our way today
for the wonderful way you
conductr-d you"tlf with your
peen. It may mrt something
new.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20} -- Your care('r and fi nance.• may both p:ct a hiM
boost tud01y, yet there may
nut be a relationship between
the two . .Eadt 1uccess could
come :.txnrt independently of
the other.
GEMINI (Moy 21-Jun o 211)
... A sitll.ltion you hnrulled

well in the pau m;ry serve as
th(' blueprint for so methin~.o:
that needs tending today . Soci:~l elements may be inVolved.
CANCER

Uune

21·July

22) -- Things you C'ompe
tt•ntly m:m:age fOr yourself and
od1ers today co uld '\pi!! over
into other are.n of your life.
Long-teml benC'fiU may come
about 3~ t he result of your ef4

forts.
LEO

Uuly 23-Aug. 22) •

V:our ability lu Sl'l' chin~ fro m
tlu: other guy's penpe,tive is
what make~ you such a masterful nel(otiator today. You
will focus primarily on . the
pa~t

an d t h~ future .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
... Two Important, ambltiou~

objectives may mery:e toiethcr to provide propulsion
tor euch other. Once thre fint
one

i~

nailed d'a wn tight, che

other will qtrickly follow .
LIDRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
Credit your charm and charisma today for winnintt over
to yotrr ~ide someone who is
very special to your prc~ent
plam. It pay! to be a nic'e
guy /K,1I.

�Page 86

The Daily Sentinel

2.-

3.. Olttttut..

·--

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7.T••
I8.. ::::.:.1"'' SL
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10. 11. MicNgln
12. loioly1ond
13- =:,Young
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15. SytoeoM

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2.3. 01dahoma
4. Cll1lgon
5. Florida
t

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7. Taw

M

8. Washing1on SL
9. S1anlonl
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11. I.IIct»gan
12.Molylond
13-=Young
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of----Rank

E&gt;pllnollon Key
Poll A - - The av1111g0 of The Associaled Pross media poll an&lt;t USA Today-ESPN coachea poll. 01hers racolving VOiaa are
colculo1edln Older racalvod.
CGmputor ~~--The """"'00
&amp;· Colley Matrix, Rlchald Billingalay, Kennolh Massey, David Rothman, Jell
Sagarin, Matthews Scilppe Howard, aOO the Pater Wotfe computer rankings. The~ component will be detennined by aver·
oglng oiJc ranklngo. The ~ and will be disregarded.of
llnlngth compared to other Divl8ion 1-A 1eams divtdeO by 2S. This ...,_tis calculated by
n•;ng tho cumu~a~~v~-.- ,_altho loam's opj)Of1eflt (66.6 pe&lt;eent) and lfle cumulalive WOI1I1ooa I1ICOI1Is altho
_ , •• &lt;&gt;PIJOOiiiila' - · · (33.3 peiCOilt).
l..oaM.,. One point kif -.~ooa eluting tho aeuoo.
.
COo-ooui The quaiiy win ...,... IOI,t will reward to val}'i'lg deQree8 teama that deteat OJlll(lf18i1ls lllllked lllllilng
1101011 15 In tho ~ -.go. Tho bonus polni ocale wit renge fn&gt;m a hlgli of I:S polnto for a win over lfle '"'' ranked loam 1o a
"""of 0.1 kif a YiciOfy over tho ISih-lllllked BCS Iaam. Tho- BCS atand&lt;ngs will dot8mitne Ilnal quality win poonla.lla t.. m revllfella vieby aver a taam """" Ihlin once during tho regular 11a1011 quality win polnla will be awanled jUot once. Cualily win
polnis are -.cied fn&gt;m tho taam's
ol poll averaga, CO&lt;rli&gt;Uier avetage, oeheclule rank and losses.

-..?e

1

-,Win

-1

Steelers look like a playoff team
PITI'SBURGH (AP) -The
Pittsburgh Steeler; can only
hope the second half of the season is as good as the fir&gt;t half
w.u md that w.u much,
much better than even th~
could have expected
Throughout training camp, a
sqbstantial number of Steeler;
said their ~I closing run of a
season ago wasn't an anomaly.
but rather an indicator they had
turned the corner and were
close to being a good team

again.
Their self-confidence didn't
sag during a season-opening
21-3 loss in Jacksonville that
seemed a replay of all the bad
moments of the previous three
seasons combined, or when since they ended a run of three
they didn't play again for three AFC tide game appearances in
weeks because · of the terrorist four years in 1997:
attacks and a bye week.
- The defense has played as
Since then, the Steeler; (6-2) consistendy over a half-season as.
have gone 6-1, winning four in any since the Steel Curtain of
a row on the road while losing the 1970s. The Steeler; have
only to Baltimore when their allowed only 90 points - every
usually reliable kicker, Kris other team has yielded at least
Brown, inexplicably missed four 115 points - by combining an
field goals in a game they dom- aggressive pass rush with strong
inated statistically.
cornerback play and a muchThey lead the AFC Central improved defensive line.
with five home games still to
In Sunday's 15-12 overtime
play, including Sunday against victory at Cleveland, for examJacksonville (3-5). So, as the hoi- pie, Browns quarterback Tim
idays approach, the postseason Couch ·had some success
that proved so elusive to them throwing early. Steeler; defenin the recent past is but a few sive coordinator Tim Lewis
more victories aw~ from adjusted by playing cornerbacks
becoming a reality.
· Dewayne Washington and Chad
All this from a team that was Scott closer to the ~ne of scrim22-26 while missing the playoffS mage in single coverage, meanthe last three seasons and had ing Couch had to wait longer
only one Pro Bowl player in the for his receiver; to get open.
last tiM:&gt; seasons combined.
With the Browns unable to
And, for a few very dis- run the ball well enough to
cernible reasons, it would seem force the corner; of£ the line of
to be the best Steeler; team scrimmage, they were held to

Ravens
fi'CNII Pap 81
six in this series. They
couldn't feel any better
about themselves with five of
their final seven games at
home.
"(Winning) on the road in
an environment like this has
got to mean something,"
Baltimore coach Brian Billick said. "I don't know

holding the ball for more
than 35 minutes.
But the Titans' special
teams botched two field
goals. Joe Nedney missed a
48-yarder wide left, then a
holding penalty erased a 24yarder, and a bad snap 'led to
a turnover.
The defense also allowed

RESURGENCE- Jerome llet-

tls (with ball) and the running
attack are a big reason the
Steelers are playoff bound.
(AP)

58 y:mls in the second half, and
Couch was sacked seven times.
- Jerome Bettis has been as
good as ever. Bettis, the NFL's
leading rusher over the last five
seasons despite several knee
injuries, has stayed healthy, with
predictable results. His \63 yards
Sunday represented his fifth
100-yard game in eight games,
and he is on pace for one of [he
best seasons ever by a Steeler;
running back.
·
"He's the best back we've
seen this year;' Browns linebacker Brant Boyer said.
An offensive line that
replaced longtime All-Pro Dermontti Dawson has stayed
injury-free and played remarkably consistently for new line
coach Russ Grimm. "'

Elvis Grbac, who had a 57yard TD to Qadry Ismail in
the third, to drive the
Ravens down for Matt
Stover's third field goal, a 30yarder with 3:06 to go.
"This is a rypical finish for
us with the Titans," Baltimore tight end Shannon
Sharpe said.

Browns hot about Ward's hit
BEREA (AP) - Earl Little remembers
seeing only black and not feeling his arms or
legs.
Lying on the ground unconscious, Little
had no idea that Pittsburgh wideout Hines
Ward taunted him following a knockout
block in the Steelers' 15-12 overtime win on
Sunday.
Little knows now, and on Monday the
Cleveland Browns safety cracked back himself.
"That's cowardly," said Little, who sustained
a concussion on Ward's hit. "Hey, I like hitting
people, too. But you don't stand over the top
of somebody on the ground not moving.
"I could have passed away. I could have
been paralyzed. You don't have to go out
there and act like a jerk."
Just before the two-minute warning of the
first half, Pittsburgh quarterback Kardell
Stewart completed a short pass to running
back Amos Zereoue in the left flat.
As Litde attempted to get into the play,
Ward came back up field and flattened the
strong safety, who bounced into linebacker
Dwayne Rudd before crumbling to the
ground.
With Little down, Ward stood over him for
:r moment and appeared to flex his muscles
and gloat about the knockout.
Ward's actions incensed the Browns, who
were still hot about it on Monday.
"You don't do that," said linebacker Jamir
Miller. "You had a clean hit. Let it be. You
don't have to rub it i~. That's what he did ."
"l.don't feel good about that," said Browns
rookie defensive tackle Gerard Warren, who
was fined S35,0QO.earlier this season for a hit
on Jacksonville QB Mark Brunell. "Everybody talks about my hit on Brunell. Well, I
didn't get up celebrating."
Little said he avoided a similar shot earlier
in the game from Ward, who nailed Baltimore
safety Rod Woodson last week on a play
where he peeled back to make his block.
Browns coach Butch Davis said the team
will send a tape of the play to the NFL offices
in New York for review. The Browns thought
Ward's hit was illegal because Stewart's pass
· was still in the air when Little got belted.
The Steelers were given the day off on
Monday and were unavailable for comment.
•Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher doesn't meet

"I Jon 't fetl good about that.
Everybody talks about my hit on
Brunell. J.JHI, I did11't get up celebrating."

the media until Tuesday.
Cowher got dragged into the Little-Ward
episode when he got into a shouting match
with Browns cornerback Corey Fuller during
and after the game.
· Fuller immediately confronted Ward and
drew a 15-yard penalty for taunting Little.
Moments later, Fuller walked toward the
Pittsburgh sideline when Cowher stepped in
and began swearing at him.
"He (Cowher) comes up and starts talking
this and that," Fuller said."! know I talk a lot.
But he's an ex-player. He should know sam(
of the emotions that are out thete. He was
talking like a player, telling. me to shut up."
Following the game, Fuller and Cowher
crossed paths again. This time, Fuller said
Cowher used profanity.
"That shows a lot of immaturity;' Miller
said. "I don't want to judge anybody, but
coming from the head coach? We're all professionals here. We have mutual respect for
each other. For him to go off and ~a that on
the field, especially the head coach. Hey, that
says a lot."
Davis said he didn't think it was approprjate behavior for a coach to swear at a player.
Little said Ward's hit knocked him unconscious for 30 seconds. He remained down for
several minutes, and as he got his senses back
he immediately thought about things other
than football.
"The fir&gt;t thing I thought about was my
daughter; and my family watching the game,"
he said. "I've never been carried off the football field before. For a while, I didn't know if
I could move my arms or legs. It was pret~
scary!'
·
So, too, will be the second meeting
between the AFC Central rivals on Jan. 6 at
Heinz Field.
"When I have an opportunity to get him
(Ward) next time within the rules, I will," said
Litde. "If I have to wait until next year, that's
OK, too."

NFL Week'10
~ •che~ule
Sunday, Nov. 18
N.Y. Jets at Miami
Seattle at Buffalo
Atlanta at Green Bay
Philadelphia at Dallas
Cleveland at Baltimore
Tennessee at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Carolina
Indianapolis
at
New
Orleans
San Diego at Oakland
Jacksonville at Pittsburgh
Detroit at Arizona
Washington at Denver

Hours

lor
Deer Season
Wewdlopen
/o4B~

cd 5:00 a.~n.

d/-04 ~ee.t SeaJ.&lt;Jn

Chicago at Tampa Bay
St. Louis at New England
Open: Kansas City
Monday, Nov. 19
N.Y. Giants at Minnesota

URSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2001

~usin,esses ~e

Sure &amp;
• Meigs Marauders
~e fl Part Of 'This Year's
• Southern Tornadoes Special f3asketba/l
Preview Edition'

Mllp County"s

Court

slates
final
hearing

6

Hailed as
~tatewide leader'
in ~!fare rifonn
BY BRIM J. R&amp;D
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY MiNDY KEARNs
OVP NEWS STAff

NEWHAVEN,W.Va.Nov. 27 was set as the final
hearing date in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of West
:Virginia ON the American
Alloys plant m New
.Haven.
: The date was set during
!I bid hearing held Tuesday.
Bids were received for
lhe assets of the plant from
bbth West Virginia Alloy
'
.
afl,d H1ghlander Core
fndustries Limited on
1\lesday.
' ~ A court
offici;ll said the
.
union from American
Alloys, as well as creditors,
bave until Friday to file
9bjections on either of the
f&gt;ids. If no objections are
~ed by friday, a final hearlog will not be held Nov.
27, but a final order will be
~ntered by the court on its
decision.
Americm Alloys closed
unexpectedly in january
2000, leaving about 125
workers
unemployed.
Many of the workers had
been employed there for
25 to 30 year;, and the
average pay for the plant
Was about $14 per hour.
'The plant opened in
1952 and has gone thrOugh
s~veral owners. American
Alloys purchased the plant
in \988, after Foote Mineral Co. clased it in 1996. For
the two years in between,
state officials wo&lt;ked to
keep the plant open with
an employee-ownership
deal.
Representatives
from
Highlander came to Mason
County_ on Nov. 6, and
explained their intentions
at a town meeting held in
New Haven.
"We're here to spend a
lot of money to get this
plant back running, and
employ people, and have
this plant running on a
long term basis," Leighton

..

PI••• -

Local merchants are joining their shopping mall co~nterparts by hanging the evergreen and red
bows to encourage the early-bird Christmas shopper. Holiday ftags and evergreen boughs adorn
the Victorian lampposts in Pomeroy, and shop owners are decorating their windows. stocking
their shelves and planning their holiday promotions in hopes of a good holiday season. Nellie
Wright and Dale Riffle, Pomeroy Village employee, put the finishing touches on decorations at
the corner of Main and Court streets on Tuesday. Christmas parades aren't far away: Pomeroy
plans Its annual parade and merchants' open house for ·Nov. 25, and Middleport merchants
have set their open house for Nov. 25, and parade for Dec. 1, at 6 p.m. (Brian J. R~ed photo)

BY TONY M. I.EActt
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - Students in
Eastern Local School District and
employees of a local business were evacuated Tuesday following two bomb
threats.
Officials believe the two incidents
may be related.
Deputy Scott Trussell said students at

Sentinel

Sports

Weather

11171'!----

IF Tflll 16M 'T ~

REC:USION

1

•

IT'&amp;

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IN fUSTORYI

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Good times come and go..,

,

but the nlld for GOOD
FARM/RANCH Insurance II
conatantl Set us...
we're AG apecllllltsl
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(740) 892-3381

AS

Hlp: 70s

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Please 1ft Swi.W, AJ

OHIO

a.aeye 5: 4-20-24-31-36

A4 W.VA.
A3 Dally 3: 2-&lt;Hl Dally 4: 9-5-8-2

81,5-6,8 Call 15: 9-)2 14-17-19-25
1

A2

diately evacuated to the school's football
field and transported home by bus.
A section of Ohio 7, which runs parallel to the school, was temporarily
closd while a search for the reported
bomb was conducted.
After a search, officials found no evidence of a bomb.
"The evacuation was very smooth

and professional and no injuries were
reported," said Trussell. "The school did
an excellent job of evacuating the students il) a timely fashion and succe&lt;sfully avoided ~ potential life threatening
incident."
In a matter which officials believe may
be related, employees at Millennium

Please He Threats. AJ

Cl2001 Ollio Valley Publishina Co.

POMEROY - · For the first time ever
Meigs County will join in the global celebration of "Tellabration!;' the highlight of
National Storytelling Week being observed
this week.
A gathering of storyteller; has been
planned for Saturday at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building auditorium at 7 p.m.
"At the same time we're sharing stories

here in Pomeroy, people all over the globe
will be telling and listening to their own
tales;' said Donna Greene, who has orgJnized the event.
"It's exhilarating to know that we'll be a
part of a worldwide event right here in our
own conununity.
"For people who have never experienced
a storytelling performance, this will be a
great opportunity. We have a terrific lineup
of storytellers who are donating their out-

standing talents in support of this event."
She said that she wiU be joined by 1:)1-.
Rich Greenlee, Ri ck Duff and Linda
Cochran to bring an exciting program of
humorous tales, folklore, stories that touch
the heart, and mu ch more.
Greenlee grew up in coal mining towns
in rural Appalachia and has lived the stories
he tells of coal miners and their families

Please see Story. AJ

American Smokeout
is Thunclay, November 1 5

The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition of Gallia and Jackson
Counties encourage you to be smoke-free on Thursday!

TJ'le Daily Sentinel

Dave at Ext. 15 or Debbie Ext. 16
For More Information

SOOINEL NEWS STAFF

84-6 Pld! 3: 5·8-3; Pick 4: 4-&amp;7-9
B7

Ea&lt;tern Elementary· and Ea1tern High
School were evacuated around 9:45
a.m. after . school officials received a
\'hone call infonning them of a bomb
located inside the buildings.
· As fire department&lt; from around the
county, and State Highway Patrol and
Meigs County Sheriff's Office responded to the incident, students wen: imme-

BY CtfARUNE HIIEFucH

Lotteries

Advertising Deadline·. Friday, November 23rd, 2001
Call 992-2155

ro help people on our programs become self-sufficient,
not only by assisting the unemployed in finding jobs, but by
-wrking with our young children, to encourage them to stay
in school and to help them
succeed by putting supporting
services in the community."
During his 22 years at the
Meigs County office, which
has since been fanned from
three different agencies, the
staff has grown from 12
employees with a $500,000
budget to a staff of53 year; and
a S9 million budget, providing
public assistance, child support
and children's services.
The agency also provides
services once offered through
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
Swisher has also encouraged
the U niver&gt;ity of Rio G=de
to locate the Meigs Center
here, Varnadoe said, and has
worked to obtain a new Geographic Information System
for Meigs County, to be used
in future economic development projects.
"Mike ha1 also been a strong
supporter of the construction

.Storytellers to participate in global 'Tellabration!'

L-:JOs

Details, A2

The

CLY'Ilt t &amp;A'Oit

Michael Swisher

Bomb threat spurs school evacuation

Court. AJ

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

MiDDLEPORT
Michael Swisher of Syracuse
has been named Mei!lo' County's Per;on of the Year, and will
be honored at the Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council's Person .of the Year banquet in Rio
Gr.lllde on Thursday.
A Gallia County native,
Swisher is director of the
Mei!lo' County Department of
Job and Family Services, and
was selected for the honor
because of his conuninnent to
economic development for
Meigs County, said Economic
Development Director Perry
V..rnadoe.
Swisher helped the Mei!lo'
County commissioners in
developing an economic
development ptogr.llll using
funds through the Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families
program in 1997
Meigs County was the fir&gt;t
in Ohio to use these welfareto-work funds to fuster eco.nomic dev,eJopmenl and job
Greation, and other counties
have since followed the county's lead in doing so.
"Mike has been i leader
statewide in changing welfate
as we know it to an employment-based program;' Varnadoe said. "Some say that he
brought the state kicking and
screaming along the way."
"Public assistance is no
longer a way of life, but a
bridge to transition 10meone
into ajob;'Swishersaid:"l have
tried to be a catalyst for change
0

Tod.(s

Ron Logan

Swisher gets
Person m·
the Year'

American
:Alloys date set
for Nov. 27 ·

• Eastern Eagles

To everyone in the
Meigs Local School District
who supported and voted for me.

Ho1Mtown Newspaper

DECK THE

25KIIou-11Paps

what."
The Titans (3-5) find
themselves in serious danger ·
of missing the playoff's after
winning an NFL-high 13
games last season. They only
have themselves to blame.
Similar to their playoff loss
last January, the Titans outplayed Baltimore but came
up short on the scoreboard.
The Titans limited the
Ravens to 55 yards total
offense in the first half, and
piled up 318 yards total
offense against the NFL's
second-rated defense, compared to 238 yards for the
Ravens.
Tennessee played its preferred style of keepaway,

•

CLEVELAND NOTEBOOK

Bowl Championship Series
...

KER'S DOZEN FEATURED IN ALL-DISTRICT. Bl

lUesd.y. Nov...ber 13. 2001

,,

For more information on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-5940.
'

•

•'

,.

•

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