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Historical Society offers Chrisb11as events, AS

•

•
Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

..

:What's inside

BUDGET

THE GREATEST GENERATION

Cou
proves
anges

'

Deaths

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Tracy Amos Delozier, 68
·FraJJ&lt;:es G. Kearns, 74
:1da·e. Paugh, 92
Hershel L Tennant, 67
Details, A3

.

Weather
Hlp: 70, Low: 50
Details, A2

OHIO
Pick 3. ~ 1·6-7 .
Pick 4 Nl&amp;lil: ·1·6·5-1 ·
Buckeye 5; 6-11-17-25-28 .
Pick 3 ~: 2-9-3
Pic~ 4 Dey: o-5-9-1
W.VA.
Dally 3: 9-3-3
Deily 4: 3·1-6-7
.
Cash 25:3-6-12-14-19-20

Index
2

Sections - 20 Pllps

Calendar ·
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

AS
BS-8
B9
AS
A4
A3
A3

B1-3, 5-6
A2

2001 Ohio Valley Publ.ishing Co.

32

days
till
Christmas

PATRIOTIC
,.... Stanley Butchar, 87, checks the 26x14-foot flag that hangs on his
barn, In rur$1 Wellington. Butchar, a WWII veter&lt;,~n, served In the 37th Ohio Division, of the
145th fnfantry, in.the Philippines. and was the personal driver for ,General Douglas McArthur
for three-months. (NJ Photo/The Morning. Journal, Raul M• Walsh)

Ohio ·man was.personal
driver for Gen. MacArthur
ORAIN (AP) - A man who
took orders as Gen. Douglas
MacArthur's personal driver said.
he barely uttered a word to his
lege~dary passenger and got away
'-"'ith ortly one tongue-lashing.
Stanley Butchar was chosen to be the personal driver for the military leader for three
months in 1945.
"We'd captured Manila and we were stationed there," Butchar said. "I was driving as
a chauffeur for my colonel, Richard Krutz,
who was from Avon Lake.
"The colonel selected me to drive as
MacArthur's chauffeur. They gave me a
choice and asked me. But what else was I
going to say except 'yes?'"
Butchar, 87, of Penfield Township, served
with the Army during World War II as a
member of the 37th Ohio Division of the
145th Infantry.
He recalled his first minutes driving for
the illustrious commander.

L

"I was scared. I was shaking. But he was
pretty quiet in the command car, a Packard
lirno. I never asked him nothing. I was a corporaJ at the time. I never had a problem,"
Butchar said.
The post where MacArthur stayed was a
15-minute drive from Manila. Butchar said
' he spent many days driving that stretch of
road back-and-forth.
"He always called me but only by my last
name," Butchar said. "Other than that, he
never said much at all."
However, there was a time when the general laid down the law.
"I had to wait all day for him one day,"
Butchar said. Briefly leaving his post at the
Packard unattended, Butchar returned to
find an angry MacArthur.
"I want you to be here at all times in my
command car," Butchar recalled MacArthur
ordering.

Please see Driver. A3

POMEROY Meigs
County
commJsstoners
approved transfers of.fiinds
and other appropriations
adjustments for ·various
departments during their
regular
meeting
on
Wednesday.
Transfers were approved
as follows: Advance transfer
of $500, Probate Court;
advance back of S 1,1 00,
grants office; transfer of
$5,500, Clerk of Courts;
transfer, S150, Board of
Elections; transfer, $329.72,
Clerk of Courts; transfer,
$293.33, Commissioners;
transfer, $1,216, CommisSIOners.
The
commissioners
approved the appropriation
of $4,500 representing
grapt funding for the litter
control program ipto the
sheriff's budget.
Sheriff's deputies · Bill
Gilkey, Mony Woqd and
Dan Leonard attended

The commissioners
approved the
appropriation of
$4,500 representing
grant funding for
the litter control
program into
the sherijf's budget.
Wednesday's meeting to
invite the commissioners to
a public meeting to be held
on Nov. 29.
The meeting, to be held
at Meigs High School, will
be a forum for discussion of
the half-percent income tax
increase requested by Sheriff Ralph Trussell and the
local deputies' union for
use for l;J.w enforcement.
The ·public is encouraged
to attend the meeting,
which will begin at 7 p.m.
!?resent were Commissioners JeffThornton, Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets,
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Window open

for tax amnesty
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - Taxpayers are urged to act quickly
to take advantage of the
Ohio Tax Amnesty program, said Meigs County
Auditor Nancy Campbell,
who said the program is a
"one-time only" opportunity that won't be offered
agam.
Tax amnesty, the first in
state history, runs Oct. 15,
2001, through Jan. 15,
2002. Application forms are
available m Campbell's
office.
Campbell said the tax
amnesty is an opportunity
for eligible taxpayers to settle their tax debt at the
lowest possible cost.
Eligible taxpayers are

those with a tax liability
unknown to the Ohio
Department of Taxation,
the agency conducting the
program. If the taxpayer has
received a bill, assessment
or been contacted for an
audit, he is not eligible for
the program.
Campbell said those who
are eligible and pay their
delinquent taxes in full during amnesty pay no penalty
and only half the interest
normally charged.
Taxes for which amnesty
is offered are: personal and
school district income, sales
and use, employer and
school district withholding,
pass-through entity, corp&lt;i-

Pieese see Tlx, A3

'

PB&amp;J's slate Christmas toy benefit concert
BY TONY

M.

WCH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Sponsored by

~e:FdWNiQIIM@

I

[URNPIKE
446·9800/1·800·272-517

POMEROY - For many und~t­
privileged youth in Meigs County,
Santa Claus will arrive this year in the
shape of a flamboyant Chicago blues
legend, complete with Native American headdress.
In an effort to collect Christmas
gifi:s for local disadvantaged children,
the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society,

better known as PB&amp;J's, will be holding a special concert, titled "Tunes for
Tots," at the Court ·street Grill on
Dec. 2, featuring Chicago blues artist
Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater.
Clearwater, who wields a left-handed guitar while wearing his colorful
trademark headdress given to him by
Cherokee tribesman, i·s considered a
legend in the blues genre for his stellar song writing abilities and high

octane stage performances that leaves
audiences in awe and always wanting
more.
His resume includes musical collaborations with an all-star list of blues
entertainers, including Chuck Berry,
Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, Hubert Sumlin, Magic Sam, Luther Allison and
Carlos Santana.

Please see Concert, A3 ,

Are rou a candidate for
welSh! loss surgery?
Q lam 100 pounds or
mort ovtrwti&amp;lu.

Eddy 'The Chief' Clearwater

To LEARN MoRE or to schedule an appointment,
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toll free at (866) 821-4541

Q I havt Lritd other

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For afree brochure on weight loss surgery, call (866) 821 -4541

'.,I

.:

�hio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Saturday, Nov. 24
AccuWealher• forecast lor

;•.\,

ICY.

PageAl

•
,•

More Ohio law students pass bar exam

•

RegentS lobbied to regulate admissions
at public schools with high failure rates.
"It was an unfortunate use of public
funds to produce very mediocre results"
at some schools, said Edmund Adams, a
Cincinnati attorney who chairs the
regents' Performance Committee.
But law school deans convinced a special commission that the five public law
schools did not need another level of
regulation.
Adams, who called the ability to pass
the bar exam "the bare minimum test of
success at a law school," said he thought
passage rates of 85 percent and up indicate a successful program.
Adams said many Jaw school deans
have worked hard for 'improvements.
The University of Toledo jumped

from a 63 percent passage rate in 1999 to
85 percent this year. Law school dean
Phillip Closius credits reduci11g t~e
number of students to raise quality, evaluating curriculum and adopting all
attendance policy.
'
Steven Steinglass, dean of CSU's
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, sai'd
his school has made classes more
I
demanding, with an emphasis pn the
legal writing program to help studenJS
on the essay portion of the exam.
CSU also developed special preparation workshops, Steinglass said, noting
that the university serves many nontraditional students who may attend Ia~
school part time.

• 2001 Aa:uWedler, k1c.

()······
-.
__

,.,

SUnny Pl. ~

Oou:t1

ShowR T4lOnnl

Rein

Fbriel

...

Light display goes on block

BLUE CREEK (AP) -Built up over decades into dozens of
holiday displays with millions of lights, the Rudd Christmas
Farm in southern Ohio drew ·up to 200,000 visitors in the
1990s.
~
When it opens on Friday for the season, the free attraction
Sunset tonight will be at will be stripped down to one small display and a group of car5: I0, and sunrise on Saturday is olers.
at 7:27a.m.
Owner Carl Rudd and his family auctioned off the rest last
Weather forecast:
year as Alzheimer's disease slowly drains his ability to manage
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows the displays.
in the lower 50s. South wind
around.10 ·mph.
Saturday. .. Mostly cloudy·and
COLUMBUS (AP) -A fairly obvious clue led Columbus
warmer. Highs in the mid 70s.
police to the suspected culprits in the Brutus the Buckeye
South wind 15 to 20 mph.
caper.
Saturday night...C:Ioudy with
The costume for the Ohio State mascot had been reported
a chance of showers and permissing inside a stolen car. When patrol officers spotted the car
haps a thunderstorm. Breezy.
behind a building near campus, they staked it out.
Lows near 50;
Two men ·approached the car early Thursday morning. One
Extended forecast:
of them was wearing a striped, scarlet-and-gray shirt with
Sunday... Showers likely with "BRUTUS" in block letters on the front.
a chance of thunderstorms.
That's the mascot's shirt.
Highs in the lower 60s.

Mild, wet weather in forecast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.Mild weather should continue into the weekend for the tricounty area, the National
Weather Service repofted.
Saturday will bring breezy
southerly winds that will help
push temperatures into the 70s.
Showers and thunderstorms
will be possible throughout the
day and will end late. Lows will
be in the 50s.
Drier air will work into most
of the area Su.nday, with showers lingering across the north.
Dry weather will continue
across Ohio next week, with
highs slowly falling back into
the 40s and lows in the 30s.

Missing mascot due left

ACLU may seek deregulation
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio's Bureau of Motor Vehicles
may not deny that Buckeyes have the right to "HSMICH," but
fans just aren't allowed to express the sentiment on their license
plates.
'
.
In fact, a seven-member committee ofBMV employees automatically rejects all requests for "hate"-"H8"- plates, as well
as those that include profanity, drug references and ethnic slurs,
the Plain Dealer reponed Friday.
Some free-speech advocates want to limit the government's
ability to censor such automotive expression.
'
A Franklin County Common Pleas judge ruled in May that
special license plate applications are public records.
'

Doctor sues insurer
AKRON (AP) -A Tall111adge doctor is suing a manage~­
care provider that ~e says wrongly withheld 10 percent of fees
for services he provided.
.
:
Dr. Nicholas Rimedio, a family practice physician, is asking a
judge to force SummaCare to pay back money the insurer keP,t
under a "withhold" policy. .
'
'
Withhold policies were a common managed-care concefit
through which insurers kept a portion of previously 1\egotiated .
fees to cover costs.
·

"The indflstry just cannot s11rvive in the USA
unless yo.u have a 11ery small, specialized
operation. Yo11 either change, or yo11 die."
Rocky chairman end chlel uecuiiVIJ

"The industry just cannot
survive in the US1ess you
have a very small, s ecialized
operation," he to d The
Columbus Dispatch. "You
either change, or you die."
More than 97 percent of
shoes sold in the United States
are importS.
Rocky Shoes already has
manufacturing operations in
Puerto Rico, as well as the
Dominican Republic and

China.
The headquaners and a retail
outlet will stay in Nelsonville,
about 55 miles southeast of
Columbus, and the warehouse
will remain in nearby Hocking
County, Brooks said.
Brooks praised the productivity and efficiency of the
plant's workers, many of whom
laughed and cried through
their last day.

Mike Brooks

.
'
Smathers, 53, md
she
dropped out of high school to
take the job at age 17.
"We didn't think we were
going to go this -way;• she said.
The plant's closing adds to •
numerous factory closings and
coal industry layoffs in
Appalachia over the past six
months.
'
len of the 29 Appalachia
counties in Ohio meet federal
and state standards for economically distressed communities, based on jobless rates and
the percentage of peopl.,; living
in poverty, according to the
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio.
"I don't know what in the
world the government's going
to do," Collins said. "The
American people need jobs:'
Collins, 61, has a grandson in
the Air Force and, despite her

Urgent Care!!

current wartime jitters, ss at

least thankful for his job secu'

rity.
"I ·tell him to stay put;' she
said. "He can't lose it to

_,;;,..;;;.;..;;..;;.1 51 0 W. Union Street
Athens, Ohio

Medical

Associates (740) 594-7979

•

•

Tracy Amos DeLozier

POMEROY
Meigs to S.rah J. Parker, deed, Lebanon.
County Recorder judy King
Amy Leger, Chartet Leger, Julie
Slezak, James Slezak, to Slezal&lt; and
COLUMBUS -Tracy Amos DeLozier, 68, Columbus, died reported the following trans- Leger Land Co., dMd, MIO:IItport VltMonday, Nov. 19, 2001, in Mount Carmel West Hospital, fers of real estate:
&amp;age.
laiTy
Farley,
Louise
Farley,
to
J. Randall Hill, Regina E. W81s,
Columbus, following a brief illness.
Waldo
Allen,
Marta
Allen,
deed,
Regina E. Hil, toJameo R. Hill, Regi·
· Born April 3, 1933, in Callia County, daughter of the late
naihl~r111 ' ~· -~rwoodoio. Am L
•Pearl and Marie Amos, she was a graduate of Cheshi17 High Chester.
Federal Nauonar Mongagt 1o Eric
P "'· u.....
·
Y ·
·~--- •--• Underwood, to Cha~es Rusaelt,
D· Johnson, AmY D• "'"""~'•
School, and retired liom Ohio State University Hospital.
~. ~-• Rutland
~.
·
She was a member of the Jehovah Witnesses Kingdom Hall Chester.
Martin Ploroe to lnteriink CommuAlan Grodzlnsky, Susan GIIJfand,
. ..__
to Cart W. Lawrence, Amy Lorenzini,
, in Columbus.
noca~~. easement.
deed Rutland Village
Suryiving are two brothers, Galen Amos of Columbus, and
Garay Martin to lntertink CommuTe0y E. HiM, J'.u.ce K. HHI, to Terry
Luther Qana) Amos of Cheshire; six sisters, Jennie McNeal of n~&lt;J:;s~~rn:r:~ lnle~ink Com· E. Hill, Janice K. Hill, doted. Olive.
West Milton, Lavada Barcus of Middleport, Lydia (Joe) Chest- munications, easement
W~lard M. Nelaon, Josephine F.
J'll1 Gheen M ue1 G"-- Ba Nelson, lo Mark Jon Paul Nelson,
nut of London, Ohio, LyvomU.. (Roy) Boggs of Pomeroy,
an
·-n. r- Michelle Leigh Nelson, deed, Salem.
•
Myrtle Craft, Carol Craft, to Robert
Oretha Rider of Bidwell, and Maxine (David) Harner of bara Gheen, to Daniel Gheen, deed,
Albany; a half-sister, Mary Qames) Myers of Marion; and many ~::'in A. Taylor to Rentals Ray Craft, deed, Orange.
Unlim~ed. deed, Middleport Village.
Beneficial Mongage Co. to
, nieces and nephews.
Larry J. Ball, Rita D. Ball to Timmy Cha~es F. Chancoy, Melissa L.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, George R. Hood, Heidi A. Hood, deed, Rut· ~ncey, ~ Salisbury.
Hoi eteConrans idaamorial Hospital to
DeLozier; two half-brothers, Bruce Rogers and Alva Amos; and , land.
Evelyn
.
Thoma,
deceased,
to
zar 801 led Health Systems,
a sistef, Delores.
vlt
Sal
deed,
Pomeroy Village.
H rd W Thorna, Sr" aflida ' ·
Rentals Unlimited to WMIIam Fink,
Services were Held at 1 p.m. today, Friday, Nov. 23,.2001, in 1 .J:~~Margaret
L.
Henderson, Beatrice Fink, deed, Middleport VIIBigony-Jordan Funeral Home, Albany, with Jim McCloud offideceased,
to
Clyde
V
.
Henderson, lageN.
J PI
ciating. ~urial is 3 p.m. today at· Gravel Hill Cemetery, atrodavlt, Village ol Middleport.
ancy . antz, deeeaaed.
Cheshire. Visitation was held in the funeral home today prior
Henry L Hensley, Beverly Hens- Everatt E. Planlz, deceased, to
ley' to Roland E. Goodwi n, Sherry S. Ernest VlrgK Plantz, affidavit, S.lls·
to services.
Goodwin, deed, Village ol Pomeroy. buryE.
VI II Plan
L Rose Kaulz, deceased, to
mest rg
tz, caroline S.
Robart L. Kautz, Jr., William F. Kautz, Ptal&lt;inzntal, to Ke.!,!o~·.. Kinzel, Lori A.
Deborah R. Speck, certifocata ol · e •deed, .,;,.,.,ry.
·
transfer,
Chesler.
Emptro
Mortage to calvary Bible
HARTFORD, W.Va.- Frances G. Kearns, 7 4, Hartford, died
Larry May, Phyllis N. May, to Joe Church, deed, Middloport Village.
Thursday, Nov. 22,2001, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
C. Ritchie, deed, Salisbury.
Keith M. WOods, Ge~rude Woods,
Larry May, Phyllis N. May, to Joe to Thomas Woods, Mary Lynn Davis,
Born Aug. 5, 1927, in Letan, W.Va., daughter of the late Mil•--• p omaroy VIIII age.
Brende Darlene Woods, Theodore R.
RI'tch'08, ~.
,lard and Reta (Lieving) Roush, she was a homemaker, and a C• Paul
E. Hoffman, Maxine Hoffman, WOods, Cheryl Ann Michaels, deed.
member of Hartford Baptist Church.
to Tarry Hoffrnen, deed, Chaster.
S.lisbury.
Paul E. Hoffman, Maxine Hoffman,
Chester H. Gorrell, Donne Joanna
Surviving are three daughters and sons-in-law, Paulette and
to Stephan Hoffman, deed, Chester. Gorrell, Micheel D. Gorrell, Patricia
Charlie Cundiff of Pomeroy, Sheryl and Harold Carson of
Batty L. Levacy Ho~er to James R. McVay Gorrell, to Jack A. Gorrell,
Rutland, and Mary and Scott Thomas of Letan; a daughter, Elselsteln, Alberta R. Eisalstein, deed, Olive.
Chester H. Gorrell, Donna Joanne
Rhonda Kearns of Hartford; two sons and daughters-in-law, deed, Chester.
Gary C. Harper, Cha~otta A. Harp- Gorrell, Michael D. Gorrell, Patricia
Buddy. Eugene and Tina Kearns of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and er, to Steven R. Peckham, easement, McVay Gorrell, Jeck A. Gorrell, to
Timothy and Marsha Kearns of Long·Bottom; and 16 grand- Rutland.
Michael D. Gorrell, Patricia McVay
John
W.
Tillis,
Donna
M.
Tillis,
to
Gorrell,
deed, Olive.
children and 15 great-grandchildren.
Stuart W. Pullins, Susan K. Pullins,
Joseph Roush, Richerd Hill, Jan. She was also preceded in death by her husband, John Kearns deed, Pomeroy Village.
nifer L. Roush to Roscoe Mills, SanJr.; three brothers, Ivan Roush,Jay Roush and Leonard Roush;
Katherine J. Musser to Richard L. dra J. Mills, deed, Sutton.
David Bumgardner, Shirley Bumand five sisters, Vivian Phillips, Dana Robinson, Helen Clark, Baker, Michelle L Baker, deed, Rut·
land.
gardner, to Arthur E. Brarcher, Bon·
Grace Brooks and Victoria Ohlinger.
Warren G. Bleck, Sharon Black, to nie K. Starcher, to Columbus S®th. Services will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Foglesong-Tucker Roger Black, Sharon Black, deed, em Power, o:lght of way, Columbia.
Billy Hill, Jr., Vicki L. Hill, to Colum·
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. William "Bud" Rutland Village.
Esther Black to Roger Black, bus Southern Power, right ol way,
flatlield officiating. Burial will be in Broad Run Cemetery. Sharon Black, deed, Rutland Village. Sutton.
Chase Manhatt11r1 Bank, Chase
Phil Erwin, Brenda Erwin, to Tlmofriends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 11 a.m.
Bank of Texas, N.A., Texas Com· thy R. Erwin, deed, Bedford.
'until the time of services.
·
marce Bank, N.A., to Mallssa D.
Brett Friend to Columbus Southern
Johnson, deed, Olive.
Power, right ol way, Chester.
Sarah Elizabeth Cramlet to
Douglas E. Hauber, Brande
Richard C. Cramlet, Sue Ellen John- Hauber, to Columbus Southern
son, Jeffrey L. Cramlet, certificate. Power, right of way, Chesta.r
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Ida E. Paugh, 92, Point Pleas- Lebanon.
Donald Goan Jones, Jr., Mellua J.
Callr Might to Sandra Kay Gerey, Jones, to Columbus S®lhern Power,
ant, died Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2001, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Rutland.
right ol way, Olive.
: She was a retired practical nurse at Lakin State Hospital, and &lt;feed,
William M. Wellman. Gloria J.
Tlmothy S. Jackson, Rebecca A.
was a member of Grace Baptist Church in Point Pleasant.
Wellman, to William Morgan, Ruth Jackson, to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Lebanon.
· Born March 20, 1909, in Salt Rock, W.Va., she was a daugh- Morgan, deed, Bedford.
William
e.
Morgan,
Ruth
Morgan,
Robert Lintz, Clara LintZ, to James
ter of the late Elmer Gill and June McComas GiU.
to Mark A. Grueser Trust Agreement, , R. Sheets, Jennifer L sheets, deed,
· She was also preceded in death by her ·husband, Joseph C: -d. Bedford.
Scipio.
Homer P. Parker, Sarah J. Parker,
Maureen Bums to Debra Zdonialc,
!?augh.
Mahlman, to Sarah J. Parker, deed, Rutland . .
: ·Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Joseph (Kay) Sarah
deed, Lebanon.
Scotto A. Usle, John D. User, to
Paugh of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., and Jack (Emma Jane) Paugh
Homer P. Parker, Sarah J. Parker, Peoples Bank, N.A., deed, Sutton.
of Bowling Green, Fla.; a brother, Paul Dewey Gill of Salt
,Rock; and seven grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren avd
Amnesty is not available for
&gt;two great-great-grandchildren.
;!,
real estate property tax.
~ Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Foglesong-Tucker
:funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with Pastor John D. Smith offiInformation is available by
~iating. A graveside service will be held at the family cemetecy
ftom Page AI
calling
1-800-304-3211
iat Susie Chapel in Cabell County, W.Va. 10, on .Saturday at 1:~0
~p.m.
rate franchise, public utility between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
excise and personal property Monday through Friday, and
;. Friends may call at the funeral home liom 6-9 tonight.
i
r
,' tax previously unpaid as owed • at the taxation depanment's
., on or before May 1, 2001. site, www.state.oh.us/taxl .
f'

·

Frances G. Keams

.

....
..,.

OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, November 25,2001 .
12 Noon- 5 PM
Parade at 2 PM
Santa will be in the mini park
immediately after the parade

The Pomeroy
Merchant's Association
invites you to celebrate

Hershel L Tennant'

~ RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. -

Hershel L. Tennant, 67,
~ (tavenswood, died Wednesday, Nov. 21,2001, at jackson Gen.;eral Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
', He was born Dec. 5,1933 in Fairview, W.Va., son of the late
Lawrence and Mary Price Tennant. He was a retired l!mployee
.efiUiser Aluminum and Ravenswood Aluminum, and was the
ewner of Raven Lanes.
.• Surviving are his wife, Donna Frank Tennant of
1ltavenswood; two sons, Kelly Tennant of Dunbar, W.Va., and
~im Tennant of Michigan; a stepdaughter, Tara Capehart of
,Rudand; three sisters and two brothers-in-law, Manha J. Gal:lagher of Fairview, Juanita and Lawrence Johnson of Danville,
'lll., and Doris and Allen Simpson ofWana.,W.Va.; a half-broth~r.Joseph Tennant of Fairview; and three grandchildren.
:: He was also preceded in death by his sister, Louise Hibbs; and
his brother, Alfred Tennant.
. Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Roush Funeral Home,
'Ravenswood, with the Rev. Allen Stewart officiating. Burial
~ill follow at Jackson County Memory Gardens, with military
:rites to be conducted by Ravenswood Post 6669,VFW. Friends
:inay call at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. today.

.
-:
.'..

COMING SUNDAY
Remembering Pearl Harbor inside T•po

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,.

.Driver

«J lived through hell

from PapAl

that's all over with.
This, what happened to us, is brand
tleJV , , , (b11t)
America is still tlae
best cotmtry yet."

in wartime, but

"He was still a good soldier
and I respect and admire
him," Butchar said. "I remember that he did smoke his pipe
in the car," he said of
MacArthur's famous corn cob
pipe. "But he never asked me
nothing and I never asked
They were all younger than
him nothing."
Butchar, who came to the me. And the horrible way that
United States from Austria in they died."
Last week, Butchar and his
1930, said he's deeply hurt by
terrorist attacks on th~ World son placed a giant American
flag on the side of his barn.
Trade Center and Pentagon.
"I lived through hell in
"You know," said the veterwartime,
but that's all over
an, choking up, "I never used
to cry, not even when I left witb. This, what happened to
us, is brand new," said
my mother. But I cry for the
people who died on Sept. 11. Butchar, adding, "America is
still the best country yet."

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End of the line for U.S.-made Rocky Boots
NELSONVILLE (AP) THe last pairs of Americanmade Rocky Shoes and Boors
rolled otf'the line as the company closed its Nelsonvilfe
plant to move production to
Puerto Rico.
The last 67 jobs at a plant
that once employed 300 will
move early next year to Pueno
Rico where wages are lower.
Judith A. Collins and Gracie
Smathers worked side by side
for 36 yean. Neither has ever
held another job. Now they
face a job hunt in their 50s in
an
already
depressed
·Appalachian econ\)my.
"I'm the end of the line,"
Collins said, well aware that the
phrase she• always used , to
describe her position boxing
boots now carries a second,
painful meaning.
Rocky chairman and chief
executive Mike Brooks said
shutting down production
Wednesday at the plant' was
inevitable. The company, started in 1932 as the William
Brooks Shoe Co., lost $5 million in 1999.

. Frtdlly, Nov. 23, 2001

FriHy. November l:S, 1001

CLEVELAND (AP) - More Ohio
law school graduates are passing the state
bar exam on their first attempts.
Ohio Supreme Coun figures show
that about 82 percent of the 825 law
school graduates who took the licensing
test for the first time in July passed. That's
up from 75 percent last year.
The University of Akron and Case
Western Reserve University each had 85
percent passage rates, improving liom 78
percent and 81 percent, respectively, last
year.
Cleveland State University law graduates posted a 75 percent passage rate, an
8 percent increase liom last year and
CSU's strongest showing on the exam
since standards were raised in 1997.
A few years ago, the Ohio Board of

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LOCAL BRIEFS
Plan dinner
POMEROY Annual
Bailey Christmas dinner will
be h~ld at the Carleton
Church on County Road 18,
Dec. 1, at 5 p.m.
Those attending are asked
to take a covered dish and a
gift exchange gift. Women are
asked to take • woman Us gift
labeled "woman," men a gift
marked "man," boys a gift
marked "boy," and girls a gift
marked, "girls." The cost of
gilts is not to exceed $3. For
more informaton call 9927749.

Dinner offered
REEDSVILLE
Reedsville United Methodist
Church will serve soup beans
and cornbread, hot dogs and
dessert on Monday at 5 p.m.
The public is invited.

Club 1neets
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. on Wednesday
at the Pomeroy Library with
Olita Heighton as hostess.
Frankie Hunnell will review
"Ahab's Wife" by Sena Jeter
Naslund. There will be a book
exchange.

Issued licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Coun
to Ricky Allen Priddy, 41, and

Concert
fnHnPageAI
Besides touring across the
U.S. and managing his Chicago-based blues bar/restaurant,
Clearwater regularly performs
in Switzerland, Russia,
Thrkey, Uruguay and Brazil.
Jackie Welker, president of
PB&amp;j's, said that instead of a
cash admission, those wishing
to attend the concen must
bring a new childrens' toy
valued at $15 or more and
present it at the door.
"Since PB&amp;J's inception,
the support we've received
has been tremendous and we
feel thiupecial concert is one
way to give something back
to the community;' said Welker.
"There are many families
within the county that are
having an extremely rough
time. Christmas should be a
time of joy, not sorrow," he
said.
Welker said the charitable
event was planned earlier this
year and that money made
from previous PB&amp;J's concertS was set aside to help
fund this special project.
"When
Eddie
was
approached tp participate in
this event, ·he jumped at the
opportunity because that's the
kind of person · he is;· said
Welker.
"Eddy has performed for us
a couple of times before and
he's always been well
received. He is fully aware of
our county's economic situation and he doesn't want to
see any children go without
over the Christmas holiday;•

f4ftalyour
-.-.ounc1111 ilslo:
news@
mydailysentinel.com
Connie Ann McDaniel,
both of Rutland; and
Damon Louis Stapleton,
and Lelah Maxine Lee,
Pomeroy.

50,
to
70,
67,

Plan meeting
POMEROY
Ohio
Patrolmen's Benevolent Association of Meigs County will
hold a public meeting on
Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
High School cafeterill, to discuss the proposed half-percent sales tax increase for law
enforcement. The public is
encouraged to attend.

Grant received
POMEROY
Meigs
County has received $45,000
in grant funds from the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources for its Recycle,
Ohio! program .
Gov. Bob Taft and ODNR
announced a total of S7 million in grants to Ohio cities,
counties and regional solid
waste districts, to support
recylcing collection, waste
reduction activities, awarenes$
campaigns and liner prevention programs in local communities throughout the state.
The Gallia-Jackson-MeigsVinton Solid Waste District
received a $90,000 award.
he said.
"If we can help out just one
family, then our endeavor was
a complete success," said
Welker.
Local blues rockers Phil 'n
the Blanks will kick 'the
evening oft' with a performance at 5 p.m., followed by
Clearwater at 7 p.m.
.
.Welker added that gift drop
boxes can be found inside the ·
Court Street Grill and
~pencer's Music for those
who want to donate a toy, but
don't want to attend the concert.
"We understand that some
people who wish to donate a
toy will not be able to attend
the concert. The drop boxes
are being placed inside local
businesses so those not
attending can still be part of
this wonderful gift-giving
experience," he said.
Welker said PB&amp;J's is looking for additional merchants
who would be interested in
placing a gift drop box inside
their business. Those wishing
to procure a drop box can
contact Welker at 992-6524.
Following the concert, all
donated toys will be collected
and sent to the offices of the
Meigs County Department of
Jobs and Family Services,
where they will be distributed
to needy families throughout
the county.
The Pomeroy Blues al)d
Jazz Society is an appreciation
society committed to the
sponsorship and promotion of
live blues and jazz music.
within the tri -county area.

�•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•

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Op1n1on

friUy, Nottn'w 2J, 2001

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,_.u, odl.~ 11111&amp;

NATIONAL VIEW

omy
Internet sales tax raises
even bigger issues for states
• Star Tribune of Minneapolis, on Internet sales tax: Taxe.
on Internet services have made the news again with the expiration of a moratorium on taxing Internet access fees.The Senate balked, reasonably, at extending the moratorium unless
Congress also addresses a thornier issue: requiring Internet
retailers to collect existing state and local retail sales taxei. Congress should allow states 10 require those collections. If it takes
an extension of the access-tax moratorium 10 win approval, the
bargain would be a good one.
If you buy something online that would be taxed in Minnesota, you are supposed to pay the tax anyway. Haven't done
that? Neither have almost all other Minnesotans. But the tax is
still owed; the problem is that the state has no way to collect it.
The issue is ,i mportant for two reasons: States are losing billions of dollars in tax revenue each year through uncollected
sales taxes for online purchases. And because those taxes go
uncollected, most online retailers enjoy a price advantage of 6
percent or more over Main Street merchants, who must collect
sales taxes. That violates a fundamental principle of taxation,
which holds that the same tax rules should apply equally to all
items in a taxable class, whether it be income, property or retail
sales. Taxing a book purchase made in a local store but not an
identical purchase made online violates that principle....
While the effort to simplify sales taxes is commendable and
should go forward, online retailers protest too much ..for years,
retailers that combine catalog sales and retail stores have collected sales taxes on mail orders. Software to computerize the
.process, linked 10 ZIP codes, already is on the market ....
But applying sales taxes to online retail purchases is much the
larger issue. If it takes an extension of the access-tax moratorium to win states the right to tax online purchases, that would
be significant progress. The Senate should hold out for no less.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is friday, Nov. 23, the 327th day of 2001. There are 38
. days left in the year. Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 23, 1971, the People's Republic of China was seated
in the U.N. Security Council.
On this date:
In 1765. Frederick County, Md., repudiated the British Stamp
Act.
In 1804, the 14th president of the United States, Franklin
Pierce, was born in Hillsboro, N.H.
In 1889, the first jukebox made it&lt; debut in San Francisco, at
the Palais Royale Saloon.
In 1903, singer Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the
Metropolitan Opera House in New York. appearing in "Rigoletto.''
In 1936, Life, the magazine created by Henty R.. luce, was first
published.
'
In 1943, during World War II, U.S. forces seized
control of
Tarawa and Makin atolls from the Japanese.
In 1945, most U.S. wartime rationing of foods, including meat
and butter, ended.
In 1959, the musical"Fiorello!," with music by Jerry Bock and
lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, opened on Broadway.
In 1963, President Johnson proclaimed Nov. 25 a day of national mourning following the assassination of President Kennedy.
In 1980, some 4,800 people were killed by a series of earthquake. that devastated southern l taly.
Ten years ago: Yugoslavia's rival leaders agreed to a new ceasefire, the 14th of the Balkan civil war.
five years ago: A hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767
crashed into the waves ofT Comoros Island&lt;, killing 125 of the 175
people on board. forty-fOur people were injured when an
Amtrak train derailed on a Secaucus, N.J., bridge. Following a
four-day visit 10 Australia, President Clinton arrived in the Philippines for a surhmit ofAsian-Pacific leaders.
One year ago: In a setback for AI Gore, the florida Supreme
Court refused to order Miami-Dade county officials to. resume
hand-counting election-day ballots. · Meanwhile, Gore's lawyers
argued in a brief filed with the U.S. Supreme Court that the high
court should stay out of the Flor.ida election controversy.
Today's.Birthdays:Actor Michael Gough is 84. Blues artist R..l.
Burnside is 75. Broadway composer Jerry Bock is 73. former
Labor Secretary William E. Brock is 71. Actor Franco Nero is 60:
Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas is 57. Actress Susan Anspach is 56.
Actor Steve Landesberg is 56. Singer Bruce Hornsby is. 47.Actor
Maxwell Caulfield is 42. Actor John Henton is 41. Rock singermusician Ken Block (Sister Hazel) is 35. Rock musician Charlie
Grover (Sponge) is 35.Actrcss Salli' Richardson is 34.Actor Oded
Fehr is 31 R.apper Kurupt (Tha Dogg Pound) is 29.
Thought for Today: " We arc incredibly heedless in the formation of our belie&amp;, but find ourselves filled with an illicit passion
for theni when anyone proposes to rob us of their companionship."- James Harv'il' Robinson , American historian

WEST'S VIEW

For Sara Jane Olson, fairness has become irrelevant
8Y DIANA WJST
One overlooked detail in the Sara Jane
Olson case is the matter of where the
former
revolutionary-turned-privileged-housewife was driving when the
law nabbed her. By the day of her arrest
in 1999, it had been almost a quarter
century since Olson changed her name
from Kathleen Soliah to go underground as a fugitive, popping up as a
doctor's wife and mother in Midwestern
suburbia with a busy schedule of volunteering, gourmet cooking and oodles of
explosive-free activism. Needle.s to say,
Olson didn't make it to her appointment
that day; too many federal agents and
policemen surrounded her new minivan.
Now that the well-coifed, 54-year-old
ex-member of the Symbionese Liberation Army has finally, if rtluctandy,
pleaded guilty to conspiring to blow
policemen to smithereens, her destination the day of her arrest offers a grim
punchline to a sorry story: When apprehended for her former life as a domestic
terrorist, Olson was en route to the
Ronald M. Hubbs Center for Lifelong
Learning in St. Paul, where she taught ...
citizenship. According to the Minneapolis Star Trihune, she taught this course
"every Wednesday for years."
Scary thought. Imagine the curriculum: "False ID and how to . find it";
"E1&lt;plosives, your rights and the police";
"Remaining a fugitive while driving a
minivan." But no, this was a lady in disguise. A hallmark of the Olson case is the
way she hoodwinked friends, neighbors
and even family members into believing
in: her in11ocent ordinariness - or so
they say. Something tells me, though,
that turning a blind eye is a reflex action

friday. Ncma•ber n. 2001

SOCIETY . SCRAPBOOK

Thoughtful gifts
for seniors are those
that last all year

e:TrA&lt;il.,.... - " " " " " ~--~r.e:;.~~--~

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

for the grizzled ex-hippies, or "progres- guilty. This turn of events doesn't bode
sives:' as . they like to be called, who well for sales of that wacky cookbook
published in the heady days after Olson\
make up the Olson circle.
arrest:
"Serving Time: America's Most
"Everyone is sad, because she does not
deserve to go to jail," longtime friend Wanted Recipes," by Sara Jane Olson_,
Mary Ellen Kauza told the Los Angeles Her family and Friends. (Outre touch
Times, still attesting to Olson's blame- even Olson might regret: "Photos in the
lessness, if not innocence, even after the book," the Star Tribune reported, "show
guilty plea. "She would never have Olson vamping for the camera; in one
copped this plea if she had an option." she holds a spatula in one hand, hand"
..
The newspaper went on to explain that cuffs in the other.")
the prevailing view among Olson sup- · "If this was going to be the outcome,
porters - some of whom put second I think she should have done this two
mortgages on their homes and emptied years ago," Olson friend and fund-raiser
their savings accounts to help make her · Kathy Cima told the Los Angeles Times.
S1 million bail - is that Olson had no The voice of disgruntlement? Hardly.
choice but to plead guilty after Sept. 11. Cima explained that Olson's chances of
They, along with Olson herself, actually acquittal were greater two years ago
believe she is another victim of the ter- when the prosecution had less evidence.
rorist attack. "Sara had no choice but to
The absence of outrage is startling.
plead guilty to something she did not do Olson's admission of guilt seems irrele.~
because she had no cha.nce of getting' an vant to those who now cling, limperimpartial jury after Sept. 11." said Hadas- . like, to the belief that a "fair" trial for a
sa Gilbert, a member of Olson's defense woman accused of terrorism at home is
committee.
impossible while the nation fights tel"
On one extremely offensive level, this rorism abroad. But is fairness at issue?
argument is sacrilege. On another, · it's Holding reality at bay may come as nat~
plain goofy. Because Arab terrorists urally as recycling to the Olson circle;
recently massacred 5,000 AmericaJ1S, it but here it comes in language any ex'doesn't follow that American jurors are hippie can understand: Sept. 11 raised
champing at the bit to convict a Min- America's consciousness to the level
nesota doctor's wife for crimes she did- where violent assaults on democrac~,'
n't commit 26 years ago.
whether aimed at two 2,000, may no
Then again, as even some Olson sup- longer be justified by facile apologists
porters must be wondering, inaybe she citing root causes, American hegemony,
did commit them. After all, Olson was youthful indiscretion, Kent State, The
never exactly willing to face the music. System or daddy. The prosecution
going so far as to seek one trial delay by believed it had the evidence to convict .
arguing there weren't enough Latinos on So, obviously, did the defense. Sara Jane
the 1976 grand jury that indicted her Olson will be sentenced on Dec. 7.
(request denied). Now, after all the bake
(Diafla Wt&gt;t is a columnist and editorial
sales are over and the pension plans have writer for The !MJshington Time~ She can be
been drained, Olson decides to plead contacted via dwest@washingtontimes.com.)

DEAR ABBY: It's the
time of year to consider
iwhat to buy people for
Christmas gifts. As a senior
who is also handicapped, I
would . like you to know
about one of the nicest gifts
I ever received.
; last year, my neighbors
presented me with a calendar. They told me to circle
one day each month when
I
lhey could take me out to
dinner. I selected the 15th.
They pick me up and take
me to a nice restaurant I
·· could never afford. I greatly
enjoy their company.
: Each time I get into their
car - even in July - I wish
them a Merry Christmas.SENIOR IN RICHMOND
HEIGHTS, OHIO
~ DEAR SENIOR: What a
Jerrific idea. It seems no
ooner are the dishes put
:;way from Thanksgiving
• ~inner than it's time to start
.,Christmas and Hanukkah
:thopping. And that means it's
~me to publish my list of gift
.ideas for senior citizens.
Readers, if you plan on
, &amp;ending holiday gifts, first let
qte tell you what NOT to
lend. Forget the cologne,
"'Jtershave and dusting pow.lers unless you have first
?hecked to see if they are
welcome .'· Scents are highly
.~istinctive (no pun intend• .s,d), and not eyery perfume
_:f.'orks on every person.
- Never give a pet to anyone
"~nless you are absol~tely
, ~ertain the person wants one
. ~d is able to properly care

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Meigs DAR meets

Society offers Chrisbnas events

POMEROY -"AU previous American wars had at least one
important feature in common: They took place somewhere
else," said Rae Moore, speaking at a recent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
' "Protected for nearly two centuries by broad oceans and
docile neighbors, the United States simply has not had to face a
significant military threat over here. But all of that changed on
September 11 ,'' said Moore, "when the worst crime in American History took place.
"In the aftermath it triggered the greatest dragnet ever
known. Along the woy the American public has been introduced
to a confusing mass of names and faces and has learned of more
links between them than· anyone could ever untangle."
Moore talked about the 19 men who spent months in the
United States preparing·for the hijacking and told the story of
who they were, where they came from, and their activity not
only here but in other countries. She said the terrorist organizations they represent have an extremist ideology and have managed to acquire a reach that trembles governments from Bosnia
to the Philippines to Uganda to Asia into all of Europe and the
United States.
She then discussed globalization, describing it as interdependence, commenting that "we see benefits of this every day but
now we are seeing the risks. For the past decade, globalization
has been understood as an economic process with its roots in the
trade of goods and service.. But the characteristic of our new
world is not the movement of products or money, but people."
"Globalization will continue to spin people around the world
and however terrorism is beaten it won't be by American Border controls. Though ai-Qaeda has its roots in Afghanistan, it is
coming to light that a groWJ'hg number of the new fighters were
born and raised not in the Arab lands but in the Muslim communities of Europe," she said.
Moore decried the Takfiris as followers of an extremist Islamic ideology which creates hard core extremists which are trained
to hlend into what they consider corrupt societies in order to
better plot attacks against them. She said they are men who are
assimilated into host societies.
She spoke of biological warfare, the need for vaccine., and her
surprise in finding out that there had been no smallpox inoculations since the late 1970's.
She concluded by saying that "We are stumbling over scruples
against an enemy with no scruples. Our rule must be the end
justifies the means, otherwise our way of life and civilization will
be over."
Abbie Stratton, regent, announced the next meeting for Dec.
8 at the Moore home. She asked members to take gifis to be sent
to hospitalized veterans.

POMEROY -"The Night Before Christmas" will be the
theme for this yearUs Christmas display at the Meigs County
Museum.
Residents are being invited to join in the !25th year of the
Meigs County Historical Society by attending the annual holiday dinner, bringing in historic items for the display, and participating in three contestS to be held.
Emphasis of the display will be on items from the late 1800s.
Residents are encouraged to bring items to the museum for the
display. Plans call for the display and aU the decorations to be in
place before the annual holiday dinner to be held on Dec. 7 and
remain for public viewing through December.
Reservations for the dinner are now being taken. Residents
planning to attend are tn make their reservations by calling 9923810 before Dec. S.The cost is $10.
This year the historical society is offering three contests for
county residents to participate in - swags, wreaths and talcum
powder sachets.
1 he swags and wreaths are to use live material and be made
in a style consistent with the late 1800 time period. Sachets are ·
to be made of any material and design representative of items
from that same time period.
The entries are to be brought to the Meigs County Museum,
144 Butternut Avenue, by Dec. 5 for judging. Prizes will be
awarded to winners. Selections will be made hy vote of dinner
guests at the annual dinner.

information transferred from
the recipient's records.
Payment of utilities for a
month or two can be sent
directly to the utility- then
let the recipients know they
have "extra" money to spend
as they wish.
A cordless phone or
answering machine is · a
handy gift.
Membership in a gym if
the person wants to exercise.
A magnifying glass.
A cuddly robe and slippers
with non-skid soles.
Sweatpants, sweatshirts and
jogging shoes . .
For someone who has a
pet, send it a treat- a can of
dog or cat food, or a rawhide
chew's tick or catnip toy.
A subscription to a magazine or newspaper you know
the person will enjoy is a
thoughful gift.
Because medications are
expensive, a gift certificate w
the neighborhqod pharmacy
would be much appreciated.
(Trust me.)
Stationery and stamps
.come in handy year-round.
Community C.landar Ia
J'or 11.
publlahed
11 s ftee ..rvlce to
-" Do not give wine or liquor If you send them, be sure to
non-profit group• wlah1ng to
.lb people unless you're sure include felt-tipped pens, too.
announce meeting• and apethey imbibe.
Loneliness is the ultimate
clal events. The calendar 11
',; Candy, nuts, confections poverty. Holidays can be
not dealgned to promote
sales
or fund-rsl..rs of any
lnd fruitcakes make beautiful depressing for people who
type.
llema
are printed only
~gifts for folks who aren:t
as space petmlta end cannot
are alone. So, if you know
counting calories, but have
be guaranteed to be printed a
compassion for those who someone who could use an .
specific number of day1.
:;..are, and don't lead them into outing, give him or her the
·-·.~
SATURDAY
best gift of all - an invita,.,.. temptation.
PORTLAND Lebonan
' ,~: With the price of groceries tion to have a meal with you
Township Trustees, 7 a.m. Sat::; ~oing through the roof, and your family..
urday at the township building.
,: ~any people on fixed
If you ain't givin', you ain't
MONDAY
'' '\,ncomes would appreciate a livin '!
SYRACUSE
Special
gift basket of goodies. How
meeting, Syracuse Village
~pout small cans of tuna and
Council, Monday, 5:30 p.m:
Dear Abby is written by
.&lt;;hicken? Also include crackmayorUs office, Ia discuss
Pauline Phillips and da11gl•ter
wages.
.c~rs, assorted flavored instant
cpffees, herbal teas, soup Jeanne Phillips.
thixes and cookies.
: Gift certificates are always
.welcome: for groceries, hair'cuts, manicures, dry cleaning, restaurant meals, theater
·
Perm Sale
tickets, videos and department stores. And don't forget
prepaid long-distance calling
Includes perm, cut &amp; style
cards.
· Facials • S11i
Not all seniors drive, so
Wax-$5
, bus passes and coupons for
Ch.Utma•
Gift Certificolea
senior transportation or taxis
Available
are always welcome.
Large-print calendars with
'family birthdays. anniver'saries, etc., marked and personalized with family photos
. , :.
Racine, Ohio
(740)949-2817
'make useful gifts. as do large:jirint address books with .

, •i

•

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
RACINE- Regular meeting,
So)IIJ\em High School, Monday,
7:30 11.m. at the high school.

TUESDAY
RACINE ;...., RACO meeting,
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. Potluck planned.

History book coming soon
POMEROY - Meigs County History Volume 3,latest publication of the Meigs County Historical Society, will be delivered in early December. according to a letter received by Margaret Parker, president,' from the Walsworth Publishing Co.
Delay of the book was due to transportation of the proofS in
September following the terrorist attacks in New York, Parker
said.
The books will be a limited edition of 1000 copies, which
includes all books ordered republication and a very limited
number to fulfill the publishers requirement.
"When these are gone, no more will be available, so it is suggested that anyone who wishe. a book order it immediately to
insure a copy is available," Parker said.
Once the books are in pickup dates will be announced.
Still available at the Museum are the limited edition !25th
anniversary Fenton bells. Only 125 of the bells were crafte&amp;
They sell for $30. Also available are the Ohio Bicentennial coverlets in two different designs depicting significant Ohio sites .
They cost $50.

f'-IE. CoUNfftY
CANOL£ S'-IOP
New Holldav Hours:
Mon-Fr110AM • 6 PM
Slturdtly 10AM • 4PM

Weekly Specials Nov. 26- Dec. 24
SR

992~559

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SJI.OReg.$48

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

'End time' remains a tradition in.the Christian world
The best-selling novel "Left Behind"
(Tynedale House, 1996), which is about
the world coming 10 an end, has people
thinking again about what the Bible calls
the End Time.
In 1950, Billy Graham told an audience,
"We may have another year, maybe two
years, then I believe it's going to be all

over.''
The evangelist no longer predicts when
the world will end. Now he says, "I do not
know the day, the month or the year. God
alone knows."
But, Graham goes on to say, "What we
see happening today may well be a preparation for God's intervention in human
affairs, when Jesus Christ will come and
set up a new.social order." Not exactly the
end of the world, but certainly the end of
the world as we know it.
Among the biblical signs pointing to
the la.&lt;t days, Graham mentions the "perplexity and distress in the world, the
breakdown in morals, and more-devastat. an d more-fre quent wars."
mg
Most people are probably inclined to
agree with the scientists who recently predicted that the world can look forward to
about 5 million more years. Then it's
going to be all over, they say.
Like Graham, today's believers in tbe
Second Coming refuse to be pinned
down to any specific date fur Christ's
reappearance. Those (mostly evangelicals)
who believe that histoty is nearing its final

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST

In a vision, Daniel hears the question
''How long will the Holy Place be given
over to be trodden down?" The answer
comes back "for 2,300 evenings and
mornings." Daniel was trying to figure Ol!t
what that could mean when the angel
Gabriel told him that the vision points if
the end of time.
-:
Miller figured out that 2,300 days w,;s
only a little more than six years. Obviou;c
ly, the world hadn't come to an end siJj;
years after Daniel's vision. Then h~
remem be red a passage in which the Lo~
said "I count one day for evety year." ~
. By determining the year in which
Daniel saw his vision, then adding 2,300
years, Miller arrived at 1844.
•
Miller's movement became the sevo;
enth-day Adventist Church.
:;
While most Christian churehes beli~
in the Second Coming of Christ, ~
give it a symbolic or spiritual me~
They don't look for the literal return af
Christ to this planet, as Graham and othCI;
evangelicals do.
:·
Christ's return, says a Lutheran pasto~
"will be genuine and real, but not nece{•
sarily in the flesh." But a Seventh·~
Adventist pastor says, "His cmning will be
accompanied by convulsions of natur6:
Christ will literally come in the skies~
According to this view, the dead will b1:
resurrected at that moment and tl}t
1,000-year reign of Christ on earth ~
begin, to be followed by the final jud~
ment.
,
~
. (Geor:ge R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newf:-

man told the gathering that it might be
their last opportunity to get together.
There hasn't been so much interest in
the end of the world since that morning
in the autumn of 1844 when William
Miller's followers climbed the hills and
housetops around Hampton, N.Y., and
cocked their ears for the sound of the last
trumpet.
It never came.
Many of the people were dressed in
homemade .uascension robes," confident
that on that morning - Oct. 22, 1844the Lord would return to earth in fulfillment of Bible prophecies.
When the Lord didn 't appear, Miller
and his disappointed disciples concluded
that they had made a mistake in their
arithmetic. The con·tinued to maintain the
end was near, but they set no new date.
Miller, an Upstate New York farmer
who became a Bible student, made his
curtain use words like "soon," "near," and calculation that the world would end in
"imminent." At one conference in 1844 mainly on the basis of a passage in
paper Enterprise Association.)
~erusalem on biblical prophecy, the chair- the book of Daniel.,

(

A Cut Above

,.

a

~-~--~U&amp;ribtlia• ·

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
525 North Second, Middleport, Ohio

CELEBRATES24TH ANNIVERSARY
November 25, 2001
Rv. James Keesee, Paslor &amp; Founder- Invites The Public
Special speakers: Evangelist Dr. Bruce D. Cummons, Founder of Massillon Baprisl Temple, Massillon
Baptist College, Ohio Massillon Christian School, Evangelist Dr. Kenny McComas ·Founder of Rittman,
Ohio Baptist Temple. well known writer.
SERVICES: Sunday, November 25, lOAM· 12 NOON -2:30PM
. Lunch will be served in the GYM after morning service.
There wilt be special music in all services.
'
There will be a nursery available for all services.

0

%1NTEREST
FDBIIEYEII

S8e Store

'JIJOO
IIIJNTII
&amp;:.9

�Fr!d!rt, Nov. 23, 2001

Pelle A I • The Deily SeaUMI

Frld8y, Nov. 28, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

LOW-FAT COOKING:
Sbdflnp
WASHINGTON (AP) -Typical' stuffings or dressings for
Thanksgiving and holiday dinners are high in fat and loaded
with relined carbohydrates. They are prime candidates for a
remake, to offer diners other choices, and the American Institute for Cancer Research has worked out some substitutes.
Although these alternative recipes are retooled, they are still
recognizable.
"Holiday dishes are special, part of cherished family traditions," says Melanie Polk,AICR's director of nutritional education, "but holiday foods can also be made more healthful without sacrificing the rich flavors we expect at a festive meal."
The three following AICR recipes include some easy beneficial changes: they call for the use of whole grains; they avoid
sauteing vegetables; they include a variety of leafy greens or
root vegetables; and they avoid the use of additional meat, substituting full-flavored items such as mushrooms, toasted nuts for
extra texture, or dried fruits for a tangy-sweet flavor.
One stuffing is cooked stovetop, which trees up oven space
for other holiday dishes th•t need to be baked. The two
remaining stuffings are baked in a pan, following the warning
of health experts not to bake stuffing imide a turk(y or other
poultry, to avoid possible food-borne illness.
Because Thanksgiving Day dinners may include extended
family members and friends, the recipes have been designed to
produce large quantities. Leftover stuffing can be stored two
days in the refrigerator or frozen for several weeks. (Longer
periods in the freezer wiU cause flavors to dissipate.) Experts on
safety practices for storing large amounts of stuffing recommend using several small containers r;tther than one large one.

W'dd Rice Stuffing With Portobello Mushrooms
I tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons canola oil
1 large onion, diced
1 garlic dove, minced (optional)
8 1/4 cups nonfat, reduced-sodium chicken broth
I 112 cups wild rice
I 112 cups long-grain brown rice
4 to 6 porto bello mushrooms (stems discarded), cut in 112inch-thick and 1-inch-long slices
112 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
1 tablespoon dried sage, or to taste
1 cup chopped green onions
1 cup chopped almonds or pecans
Salt and freshly ~round black pepper, to tast&lt;!
Heat a large, nonstick pan over medium-high heat until very
hot. (If necessary, a smaller pan may be used, but food wiU need
to be cooked in batches.) Place. 1 tablespoon oil in pan and
heat until very hot. Add onion and garlic and saute until onion
is translucent and mixture is ;golden.
Add 4 1/2 cups broth and bring mixture to boil. Add wild
rice, reduce heat to simmer, cover pot, and simmer 25 minutes.
Add brown rice and remaining 3 3/4 cups broth to pot.
Bring mixture to boil and immediately reduce heat to simmer.
Cover pot and continue cooking until both wild and brown
rice are barely tender, about 35 to 40 minutes.
While rice is cooking, heat a large, nonstick pan over medium-high heat until very hot. Place 2 .teaspoons oil in pan and
heat until very hot. Stirring constantly, saute mushrooms, cooking in batches if necessary, depending on size of pan, so they are
not crowded. If cooking in batches; transfer each _finished batch
to a bowl and begin process again, using a little more oil each
time, until all mushrooms are sauteed. When rice is barely tender, mix in parsley, sage, green onion and nuts. Cover and cook
on low heat about 5 minutes longer, or until green onion is soft
and rice is tender.
Remove pot from heat, uncover and allow rice to cool
slightly. Add mushrooms and stir until well combined. Add salt
and pepper to taste and more sage, if desired.
Serve immediately or store, tightly covered, in refrigerator for
up to 2 days. Reheat chiUed stuffing before serving.
Makes about 11 cups of stuffing or 22 one-half cup servings.
Nutrition information per serving: 148 cal., 5 g fat (less than
1 g saturated fat), 22 g carbo., 5 g _pro., 223 mg sodium.

-- -

•

Books from a lthankfuf tee11 and her mom
note that says, "I'm nuts about you!"
Ali, it seems, is a chip off the old
Have you ever thanked your letter car· (writer's) block. In 1994, her mother,
rier? What about the pope?
Robyn Freedman Spizman, wrote a simiIn ''The Thank You Book for Kids: lar book for adults and older teens, "The
Hundreds of Creative, Cool, and Thank You Book: Hundreds of
Oever "Ways to Say Thank You!" Oever, Meanincfid, and Purpau&gt;t\al
(Longstreet, 148 pages, $12.95, ages 9" 12), Ways to Say'IbanltYou." It has recentAli Lauren Spizman, 14, teaches children ly been released in a redesigned, hardcovhow to write a proper thank-you note.
er edition (Longstreet, 113 pages,S12.95).
The author, a model and actress, fills her
Spizman, an Atlanta TV personality and
book with creative expressions, letter- consumer advocate, offers creative thankwriting tips and plenty of sample letters. you ideas and information about eti~
The back pages pair off' several letters Ali quette, famous quotes, writing chain letwrote to celebrities, including former first ters and sending virtual thank-yow.
lady HiUary Rodham Clinton and Disney
Spizman also touches upon making
head Michael Eisner, with their replies.
homemade thanks and stresses that they
Although the book might appear a tad have special meaning because you took
too goody-goody to reluctant thank-you the time to add your special touch.
letter-writers, it is a quick read bursting Among her ideas:Assembling a bagels and
with clever ideas. Children and younger lox platter for a friend and adding a note
teens are sure to relate to the language, that reads, "Thanks a lox"; and "showerwith sentences sprinkled with "fun!cy" ing" a friend with thanks by sending a
and uawesome."
basket fuU of shower gels and body lotions
As the book progresses, the thank-yous for a totally indulgent gift.
jump off' the pages. In a chapter called
The book is designed as a gift book,
"Spreading Thank-You Kindness," Spiz- with a page in fiont for a personal inscripman writes about holding a door for a tion. So if someone gives you a copy. don't
stranger, recycling, and celebrating your forget to write a you-know-what.
birthday with a good deed. Another chapMaggie has plenty on her mind.
ter introduces "Thank-Yous You Can
Sometimes you know something is
Gobble Up." Among the corky ideas: fill- wrong even though you can't put your
ing a jar with assorted nuts and adding a finger on it. Such is the case with 1 1-year-

BY MARIA Cooat

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT£R

old Maggie Calhoun, in Elizabeth Van.
Steenwyk's novel "Magie In th•
Mor!Jiq" (Eerdmans, 128 pages. S16,
ages 9 and older).
It's 1941 and the United States is on the
brink of war, but Mal!gie has more
important things on her mind. Her mom's
expecting a haby, she and her brother have
been sent to live with their aunt and uncle
for the summer, and her whole family
soon will be moving to California becau~
of her dad's new job.
The book does an extraordinary job of
capturing the reality of a gid coming to
terms with growing up, even when it _....,
comes to thoughts that cross over amid
serious discussions: ''Grandanna looked
outside before answering as if she might
find a reason hanging from the cherry
tree."
While the novel touches upon a heavy
issue, the language remains light enough
to not overwhelm the reader. "Wisps of
her hair had escaped from her tighdy
wrapped bun at the back of her head. It
made her look as if she might be wired to
something electrical."
· "Maggie in the Morning" looks at the
\vorld of one gid as she discovers a family
secret. and reveals the true power cf
friendship.

.... ....

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DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY RINGS

1/4 ct. ...... $299.00
1/2 ct. ...... $599.00
1 ct. .......... $999.00

10k and 14k Gold!

LIW.Cntk- Cbrdl
Pritt Hollow Rd., Rut1and
Paslor: John Swanson
Sunday School - IO:OOa.m.
Morning Service II:OOa.m.
Evening Service - 6:00p.m.
Wedftelday Service. 7:30p.m.

••
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1-le~uts:

Aglow
Candles: &amp; Gifts:
g6474 Puch r:otk Ro.d
Porne10y, Ohio

(740) 992-951g
·www.hoatfl:agiOIIICIIndler.com

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Hand pouMd ~cented Candl~
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•

Wonftip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

HarriiOOviUc Rotd

-IIWie Cllorcb of Cltrill
Pytor.'!Orry

Sunday S"itool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:.'\0 a.m.

s....ut

t'lnl Southel'll B.plht
41872 Pomeroy Pike
•Paswr:' E.
O'BryatK.
• ' Sur~y S~l· 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p - l~.i n.m., 7:00 p.m.
'Wtdnesday Service.• 7:00 p.m.

t..¥mar

PasiOI'! Rc'll. Dewey King

Zlao Cb... ofCitrlot
P(nncroy, Harrisonville R.tl. (Rt.l43)
Paltor: Roaer Waoon
Sunc;lly ~hool ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m .• 7:00p.m.
Wedneidly Service• - 1 p.m. ·

Fh~t Baptisl Cburdt
Pa~tir': Mart Mooow

su• ~hoot-9:30a.m.
SUDday worship -7 p.m .
Wednc:lday Jftyer mttllna- 1 p.m.

'""""""""

Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Wnnhip - 10:1.5 am., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Wonblp Scrvlee • 'lJ a.m.
Communion • 10 a.m.
SundaySc:honl-10:1.5a..m.
Y...... ~, 30 pn Swtday
Bible Study Wednuday 1 pm

Radne Flnl B"'""'
Pas1or: Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 o..m.j 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~ • 1:00 p.m.

Bndltur,

Putor: Jim Eaton

Run Bat~till
, Pa~tur: lotu1 Swanson
Sunday School- lOa.m. ·
WUiship · J la.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvk:ei- 7:00p.m.

r..uret crurr...
~,_,

MLUnlon ......
llnllfonl Cb""" ofauill
Cona of St. RL 124 .t: Bndllut!i Rd.
Mlndta: Dou.1 Shamtitm
Youlh Mini•r: Bih AmberJer
Sunday School· 9:)0 a.li.
Wanhlp • 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Wednelda.y Suvicea -7:00p.m.

Sunday School-9:4S un.
Evcniag ·6:30p.m.
Wednc5day Services · 6:30p.m.

1,
Sunday School - 10 a.m. ·
Evening • 7:00p.m.
Thunday Services· 7:00

HUiolde lloptlst Chardt
St! Rl- 143 jUJl off Rt. 7
PasLOr: Rev. Jamn R. Aaw, Sr.
Suoday Unir.ed Service
Wonhip • IO:JO a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCC!I -7 p.m.
VIctor, Baptist....,......,
52S N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pl!ltor. James B. Kce!ICC
Worship· IOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • oll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnc:sdly ScrYiccf · 7 p.m.
FonotRulloptlst
••. Pa5l01': Artus Hun:
~ SUpday SdtooJ • 10 Lm.
&lt;(

,.,.

Dooakl BIIIJ

IWiftiCiill Mitt MOOic
,_ ·
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
-hi~· 10 a.m.. 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday ServiCes ··7 p.m;·

Wanh.ip- 9Lm.

r....n-• Cloriltlon Chuido

Putor: Robert Muuer
Sunday S;dtool - 9:30a.m. ·

Worship · 10:45 a.m .

Ao)lhtolty Boptbl
Sund11y School -9:30a.m.
W1~ip

·

10:4~

R.m .

SundaY F:vcning- 6:00p.m.
Pustor: Mart McComas

-

Drxter Cburdl of Chrllt
Pasmr: Nathan Robinson

Oar S.riour lAitberaa Claurth
Walnut and Henry Stl., Ravenawood.
W.Va.
,
Putor: David Rusaell

Sunday IChool 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday wontup. 10:3o·a.m.

SL Paul LuUienu Chordl
Corner Syemorc &amp;: Second St.. Pomeroy

SUnday School - ~0 a.m.
Evening· 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvita · 7 p.m.

Wo11hlp ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne&amp;day Servlces ·• 7:30p.m.

of ( ;od

Mt. Moriah Church lA God

Se&lt;oadhp&amp;tCIIordl
·Ravc~•wood, WV
P&amp;sror: David W. McClain

P~or: Jirn'c!l Swttcrfield

Sunday School- 9:4.5 a.m.

Evcnina • 6 p.m.
WcdncAday Service.• · 7 p.m.

Ru- Churtll of God
Puttx: Roo Heath
StmdayWDnhip - 10a.m.,6 p.m.
Wednelday Service• • 7 p.m.

IJodd prt Chudl
Orand Street
Sundoy School· lhm.
.Wonhip-lla.m.
•
Wc:dnooclty Se1vicct. 8 p.m.

ML 011,. Vnltod Mllhodlol
Off 124 behind Wilkenjlle
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9;30 a.m .
Worship -10:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Thausdny Services - 1 p.in .

'lbn:h Cbardt
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worshl
10:30 • m

.&lt;

Mtlp Cuupe.. u•• ..._
Northcut Ou1ter
Alfred
Pu1or: Jane Bt.rtie
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II •.m., 6:30 p.m.
~.

lhltor: Jane Beattie

I

-'"'"*'

Sunday Sdtool -9:30a.m.

""-: ........ Waldetk

White fuheral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. 0 hlo
· SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors' .

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Sunday,Nov.25,2001
1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
TWO WCATIONS:
CORNER SECOND
AND GRAPE, GALLIPOUS ~2842
'
91 MIU STREET, MIDDLEPORT 992-6250 (on the "T'?

• Expert Jewelry Repair Service

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Holiday Hours!
9-8Mon-Fri

Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

9-6:30 Sat

ANDERSON

1

1-4Sunday

Financing Available
Fret Parking
Free Gift Wrapping

·'

l ' \t.' IIIIJ -Il.l\ \dH IJ1i o.., l

.'

.

.

.
Mulberry
Htl. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor; Roy Lawinsky

Sauuday Services:

·sabbMh School • 2 p.m .
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

{ nill"d lilt' I h n·n
Mt. Hei'IDeh United Brethren
In Christ Chul'th
Texas Community off CM IP
Pastor: Roberc Sander!~
Sunday School- 9:30 11.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 ll.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wi.-dncsday S~rvicc5 -7:30p.m.

ML Olive Cn~~mu•lly Churth
Putor: Lawrence 8u9h
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Hvening • 1 p.m.
Wedneday Service ·1 p.m.
Unlkd Falt.b Church
R1. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pa 5s
Pastor: Rev. Rotlert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Eden Unllrd

D~1hrtn

In Chritt

2 112 miles north of Reedsville
•
on State Route 124
P11stur: Re&gt;~. Robert Matkley
Sumhl)' School • I 1 a.m.
Sunday Worship . 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wcdnesdlly Services l 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday YOU1h Service · 7:30p.m.

Filii Goopel L l p 3304S Hiland Road, l'oltl&lt;ro)
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sl!ndaY School • 10 a.m.
EveninJ7:30 p.m.
1\Jelday &amp;: Thunday ·7:30p.m .

Soulh Bethel N.. 'lnbmal

Joppa

SteriiDI SliVer

Saturday, Nov. 24, 2001
10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Mlddlepurt ""bJfcrlon
Sunday School- 9a.m.
. WorShip • tO a.m.

' Faith Gaoptl Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10;45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday 7:30p.m.

Mtddlrp1rt Churtb or ... Nu:anDe
Pallor: Allen Mklc:ap
Sunday sChool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 6:10p.m.
Wednelday Service~· 1 p.m.
hator: Allen Mkk:ap

Olurch of the Nau.rcoc

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School,· 9:4$ a.m.

Sunday Khool- 10 a.m.
Worship- I I a.m.
Wednelday Service - 7 p.m.

'\a i.J I'I "IIl'

Wonhlp - 9 a.m.

U.......,vllle ....,byf&lt;riaa Church

Mont Chapel Chutth

.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
ThW'Mlay Scrvi~B • 1 p.m.

·

Worship- II a.m.

Dyeo•llle CammuniiJ Chu"h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.rn.
Worship · I 0;30 a.m., 1 p.m.

•

Wunblp. gjQ a.m. u• .t: 2nd Sou~
7:30 p.m. (3nt A 4dl Sun)
Wodncllda)' Service· 7!30 p.m.

G~UaltMMttbrdllt

•·

SundaySchooi-IOa.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 :.~0 p.m.

lletbeiCiwdt
Townlhlp ltd., o46IIC
Sunday Scbool - 9 a.m.
Wotship • 10 a.m .
WedDeaday Service~· 10 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:4$ a.m.
Worship~ II a.m.

Putor: Rev. Kriwla RobilliOil

Huel Coa~m.....,. Cburdl
I
Off Rt. 124
Pl'lstor: Edael Han

Coot.WOUIIIIOdMotloodlotl'ufolt
Putor: Helen KlliHI
CoolvUie Church
Main .t. Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Scrvl&lt;u • 1 p.m.

Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Churtb ol Chriaa
:~·
lnterse&lt;:tiOO 7 and 124 W
;..;..&gt;
E•..gclilt lleM~ S"'&lt;'nl
'"j
Swalay Bible Study· 'lolO ~m.
Wonlilp: 10:30a.m. and6:30p.m.
Wodaetday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

s,_ nnr UIIIIOd .......,_

1411 Bridaeman S1., S)'1'11Cu~e
Rev. Mike Thompaon.Putor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evcnlna - 6 p.m.
Wednctday Service - 1 p.m.

biiOl': Brian Hlltncu
· Sundoy S&lt;bool· 10 i.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
wednctday 1 p.m.

Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Evcnlns - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

s,......M-.

Wedneaday · lp.m.

PineOnwe

P.u10r. William Hobad1.
Sunday SChool • 10 a.m.

Faith Valley 'nlbernde Church
B•iley Run Roatl
Pastor. Rev. Emmcn Rawson
Sundly Evcnillj: 7 p.m.
Thurtday Service· 7 p.m.

Wonhip. 9 a.m.

St. lob Lttlloru &lt;.'llula .

Pentec:eltal A-.nbly
St. Rt. 12&lt;t. Racine

Pa.lor; Sam Andersun
SundaY School 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7:30 p.m.
Wednuday Service · 7:30p.m.

Pulor: Brian Harknets

I ulhn.111

a.dniDe Olurcb fiiDf'llt~
PallOr: Philip Srunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wor'lhlp Sel\'iCe: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Kulbmd F~ Will B1ptbt
Sa1t:m St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

~15 Pwl St., Middleport

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

r

( ·lrurdt

Mlddlepuot c-..unlty Cllurdt

l!ootLetar1

Home_.na: meetina:. Ia Thun. -7 p.m.

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

11ar1ton1 Cllordl ol Chrilt Ia
CllrlltlaaUDioa
Honfonl. W.V..
Putor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School- II a.m.

Wcdilcldlly - 7 p.m.

Wonhip . 10 a.m.

SICrlnWnt Service 9-10: I~ a.m.

Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Putvr: 'Theron Dwbam

Mo.... Siar
Putor. Dewayne Stutler
Sutmy School - II a.m.

....

.~~ ·""

Saatm COIIUD•biiJ Chutth
Uc:vina: Road, Wett Columbia. \\o. \'a.
Puor: Clyde Fi!m-11
Sundly School 9:30am
Sunday cvcninJ IICIVkc 61'Jm
Wcdnetday wrvice 7 pm

Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Wonbip • 10:45 a.m.

CIIrilltiiA-0.,St. RL 160, &lt;146-6247 .. 446-7486
Sunday Schooli0:20-1J a.m.
Reliol Soolotyll'riellhood II :05·12'00

God'• Temple or llralle
3 1! &gt;65 McQuire Rd ..,nrncroy, Ohio
Pa~nr: WB\ •
olm
Sen•ice~: l11u1
'l() pm
New church N• • Si 1• ~rv lcc
est11blb. J

Harrlooovllle c ...munll)' CHrch

Bible Study Wed. 7,00 p.m.

Wdnh&amp;p- II Lift .

ML Morlob lloptbl
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rcy. OUbert Craia. Jr.
Sunday Stlhool • 9:30 Lm.

Ca.....r.SUtiOo
Canbol.t: Duhon Rds.
Racine. Ohio
Pallor; Dcwayne Studer
Sundt)' School· 9:30a.m.

n. Cltlll'dt oii-

Service~: Saturday l:OO p.m.

1'1111 BtUe¥en' Pellowshlp Mlnlltry
New Umo Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: R.ev. Maraarc1 J. Robiroon
Serv~: Wcdnceday, 7:30p.m.
Sundly, 2,30 p.m.

Wedae.day Ser,ylcea • 10 a.m.

J.

IJickorJ 11111 Chura '!f_!;brilt..
' - ·- ·

llolbau7
Putor. Dewayne StutJer
Sunday S!.:hool - 10 a.m.

I . ttlt · r lla 1 ..., ,l l lt l '

. • iii-

LonJ Bottom

Worship- 9 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 ~m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m. and.6 p.m.
W-y Scr&amp;e ..7,00 p.m.

S.Yior

R.L338, Anllqutt)'
Pastor: Jesse Morrit

Pastor: Sieve Reed
Sunday S'-ilool- 9::\0 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday· ft:llowshii'J service 1 p m.

SuQy School · 10 a.m.

M•- Ckrch

Full Gaoptl Cllurrb oflbe U.t"l

Faith Full Gooptl Cllorch

Saownlle

Rov. Muk Mithat:l
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:45 a.m•• 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Stud)' and Youth - 7 p.m.

Rutlud Cbun:b ol Oarkt
Sundlly Sc::hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Pastvr ; Da~id Wiseman

-~

Pallor: R.on Acree
Sundly School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhlp- 10: Jj un.

HYtOII- u.u- Clourch

Ntw Lite Vldory Ctnltr
3n3 Gcor)Cti C~ Ror.d. Oallipoli1, OH
Pastor: Bill S111en .
Sunday Servicea • IOa.m. A 1 p.m.
Wedaeldly- 7 p.m. tl Youth 7 p.m.

Aboadut Gnceii.F.I.
923 S. Thinl St., MlddiPutor Ten:11 Davis
Sunday lltr\'ice, 10 a.m.
Wednesday acrvicc. 7 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thuflday Scrvlca • 7 p.m.

SundoyWonhlp · 9,30p.m.. 7,30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Bndbury Rood, Middleport
Sundtly School -9:30a.m·.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

SU•~r

a.-

Sunday :khool - 9:30a.m.

Bible- Cllordl
l'wl St., Middleport._
PMtt. Rev. Ooua CoJ.

!9l~8

Paon John &amp;

Sunday School· 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip-IOa.m.
Yooth Felklwlhlp, Sunday - 6 p.m.

7~

a..... of Cllrllo

"Full-Gospel Chun:h"
Pany Wade
60] Second Ave. MlliiOil
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wtdnelday 1 pm

lto&lt;kSprlDif

w..,..

Clit\oo, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a,m.
Won;hip . 1 p.m.
Wednesd11y Service - 7 p.m.

Appc I.Mt Ct;nrer

Pulor: Keith Rader

PlM Groft 8tblt HollMII Cllurdl
lll mile off RL 315
l'uloc Rev. O'Dell Moaley
Sunday ~boot ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7:l0p.m.
Wedneolay Scrvl&lt;e · 7,30 p.m .

Tuppt.. l'lal. Clltudl ofChrilt

6th. .-.1 ralmcr St., Middleport

Pastor: Rod Brower
WontUp- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10;35 a.m.

J..oadina Creek Rd.. Rutland

Putoo Rev. Blackwood

Sund.ay School· 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnetiday Setvke - 7:30p.m.

Sthwntllc c.....llity ClnuU.
Pulor: Wayne R. Jewell
Alb- Cllurdo
Sundly Scrvim. 10'00 s.m. .t: 7'00 p.m.
Ash St., Midd.ltpOrt· Putor: Glenn RO"A·e
Thursday . 7:00p.m.
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service • 6:00 p.m.
Ro)oldoc Life Cburclt •
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.
.S00 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Fon:man
llontiiO.Irach M l Pastor: Emerilus Lawrence Fortman
47439 Reibel Rd .. Chester
Worship- 10:00 am
PastOfll: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Wednesday Strvices- 1 p.m.
Sunday Servif;ea: 10 a.m. dt 6 p.m.
WcdneAday ~tvictt. 1 p.m.
CUfloa: Tabemaclt ~

-.or

-of-U.U..Ciourdl

c.J'af'J Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.

Wonhip · I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

IWICkpol
Sunday Sc;boul- 9 a.m.
Wonhlp- IOun.

Wunhip- 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdly Service- 7:00p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOBhip - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:)0 p.m.

Communlq etCiuill
Poftland-Racillc Rd.
Pu«r. Michael Oulll
SuDy School· 9:30a.m.

Milltlaullw
hAor: Bob Robi111Dl1
Sunda)l Schoal· 9 t .m.
Wonhlp - 10 t.m.

Pa!!tor: Charles M£Kmzie
Sunday Sdlool9:30 a.m.

Fairview Bible Ctuof'dl
l..ctan. W.Va. RL I
PulOr: Bri.Mt May
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.
Wonhip ; 7:00p.m.
Wfdnc:sday Bib~ Study · 7:00p.m.
Faltb re~o •..,. c.-.rur Cllrtso
Putor: Re-.. Franklin Dtcketu
Servta: Friday, 1 p.m.

(It lin ( 1111 r r llt''

llodi4Middllport)
Pallor: Rob Brower
Sundly Sc:bool • 9:30 a.m.
Wuntlip ~ ll:Oih.nL

ComiT ...... CUpol

Puaor-Jef'flo!ly Wallace
Ill ond 3nl Sunday

nnt

I

11111-SIIel
P11sar &amp;Selka

lleoo Ctotudltl Cllrlol

Ptnorot
Ba;cllt
Ed Main St.

I

LAYAWAY tor Christmas - Onlv 10% Down!

Wol'lhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.ra.. 1 p.m.
Wc:dnctday Serlk:et- 7 p.m.

SLU".da)l School - 9;30 a.m.
Woohip.t0:30a.m,
Wodnesday Service· 1 p.m.

Pastor: Willill'l'l Juais
Sllllday School · 10:00 un.
Momins Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30p.m.

Pa.uor. Bob Robln1011
Suadly Scbool· 10 a.m.
Wonblp • 9 1;111,

DaofHio H.u-CII....
31M7 Stare Roorr 32.5, Lanpvlle
Pastor. Gary JICklon
Sunday IChool - 9:30 t.m.
Suoday WOf'lhip- 10:30 a.m. A 1 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer service. 7 p.m.

Sunday smoot - 9:30a.m.

Coolville ROid
Pa.ttor: Rev. Phillip Ridenow

Pertla.t Flttt Clll•rd ot ta. N•umw

,

ll.v. -~""" 11llil

Maio SU'CCt, Rutland
Sunday WorUUp-10:00 a.m.
Sui.d.y ~W..7 p.m. ·

Mld6port ChaM of a.n.t
.5th IOd Main
Puror: AI Huuoo
Yc:Ntb Minittcr: DiU Ftuier

Wblla'o Cllapd WHieyoa

Sunday School. - 9:30a.m.

Pu&amp;or: Keith IUdct
Sundlly ~ • 10 a.m.
Wcwsb.lp. t l a.m.
I'MI&lt;lr.

nw

ReV Jicrbcrt C111tt:

-Citor&lt;bollbePul:or: Rev. Samuel W. B•ye

-.......

SIMKiaySd!ool...,
Holy l!ucharilt I I :00 a.m.

Wcdlelday Stfvica - 7 p.m.

Ba&amp;d bob, Of\ Co Rd. 31
llcv RoFr Willford
Sunday School· 9':30 •.m.
Wonlllp- 7 p.m.

Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnnday SenoK:o • 7 p.m.

Wonhip - IO..m.• 6 p.m.

HOfl&lt; lloplbt Church tSoolhmt)
.570 GlllQt Sl,. Middlcpor1

I

i!

Pwor.BobRoblliiOII

- . . . . , - Cloordo tiCiulot
3!226 a.Ikhn'•- Rd.
SU8dly smool • 11 a.~

·-G..,.r-

~

S..S.y Sd~ ·9:30a.m.
Wonnip-11 a.m ., 6p.m.
WcdDcsd.y Servk:es • 1 p.m.

S_.y School- 9:4!lla.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wo:lntlday Stmctt • 1:30 p.m..

GrMe ......... Clurd
326 e. Main St.,........,.
Rev. I ..... Bcmactl.. Rev. Kamarin FOIItr

Wonhip SM-icc 10'30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wadladay Ni... Sen-len

SMDdly School • 9: 3() L m.

PMtu:

......,. "-"")

111 W. Maia SL

Sunday School · 9:l0 a.m.

-,c.otdotltllt-~.. t . -

a...r CIIMrdt rldlt P'

~a...

MUll.., AN!Ion)' SUOOay Sdlool- 9:l0 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedaaday SeMces. 7 p.m..

Putor: Neil TmMnl

F.., WID lloptbt Ckf'dl
• Old lletltel
28601 St. Rt. MiddJCport

...

,....._.

KiophwyRood
hNor: Robert Vance

Wonblp • l0:30a.m..IU'Id6 p.m.
lll' '
My Servites · 7 p.m.

~~&amp;ladly ScMol • 9 ....
Wonllip . IO.m.
'l\ladly Scftica- 7:30p.m.

-....,c.oratla.rtot

Masoo. W.Va.

BaptlstCb.......
Great Bend, Routt 124, kine, OH
Pas1or : Qaniel Mecca
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Woobip- 10:30 a.m.
'Wednesday Bible Study -6:00p.m.

s.dt.y StMd - IO:lO a.m.

--·tl-·7o00p.m . -

I P"' " 1'·11

I

, ••

,....._. _

s..layScbooi·IOa.m.
-.o-Il a.m.
W' '&gt;S.Vktl-7p.m.

WonNp . ~30 a.m.
Bible Study · 7 p.m.
c.m.-.y of Oui.

Rult..d nm ..,._. Chof'dl
Sunday School- Y:30 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:45a.m.

••
•

From Suggested
Ret ail Price!

Salnday Sckaol - 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Servkle- 7 p.m.

.

I

-.,.;,)!) .....

---

-"'-~~

NcwUmtRC*I
Sund.y, IO a.m. Ind. 7:30p.m.

·,

~ - IO:lOa.m.

Dolley .... ·lolO .....

Su,nday !lChonl -9:30am.
Wonhip - II a.m. aud 6 p.m.

;

'--

1

Sundly School· 9 a.m.
S• WORbi.p - 10:10 LID.. 6 p.m.
Wc:dnetdly Serviec - 7 p.m.
c..teW .....
(.'k,Q

Sr,._a...dtltleN
••
....... Mitt Adklno
Sunday SdklocM • 9:30 .......
Wonhlp • 1O:lO LDL. 6 p....
W~y krvi«t· 7 p.m.

s..dl)' ~ - 9:30 ....

-PJ.c,._

s-. Mlu- ~30 ....

.._. Sunday Servicn- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

'·

ct

"Vnhip - IO:&lt;tS a.ra.,7 p.ra.
~y Scnicel · 7 p.m.

-·School· 10:30 Lm.

OJ. -ltd. a«SL R1. 10!0

$wL 0... -8;4».1.5 LilLo

Ooodtti-Qrio

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SAVE 50°/o TO 10°/o

c:...:.

Ullnty "-""' tiGod
P.O. Box461,l&gt;udd.ing LaDe

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Necklaces &amp; Bracelets

Sa 0.. "''~' I !(I.a.;- ,,30 p.m.

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PlESE
FUTURE

&amp;1-v.-o,

Krvink.oKJt,,._..
Sueday, 10 a.m. IDII6:00 p.~
-W-odoyy,, 7,)0 ~a; Youdo Fri. 7:l0p..._

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SMdlly S&lt;hool· IO:JO a.a.
Evmirla • 1:30 p.IIL

873 S. lod A.._, MiddJcpoct

' - r . Bob~
Wuahip • 9;lt) LDL

Apple IIIIISecood 511.
Pulor.ltn Dlvtd R&amp;lildl
s_,
IIIII Wunltip- IOLIIL
l!vtola&amp;- 6,JO p.m.
..... 'wy 5efvka. 6:30p.m.

a....liotl- QrlooAp.oolk

•I

ewel:ry

The o.Jiy Sentinel • PaQ! A 7
!uadlyScbooiiO.,..
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Wedladly 1 p.m.

HOME

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Eetlbllehed 1813
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740·992·2844

992-2121
106

Crow's Family Restaurant 4'i•"'••, l!lntt .:funeral
"FtJBturlng Kentucky Fried
A.-n

w. Main St., Pomeroy

74 992

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1&amp;51 NYE AVE

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Lundy Brown James Anderson
Directors

264 Sooth Sttotttl A••· • Mlil'''"· 01145760
740.992-5141
..... R. flsiMr· Dlroclor
590 EA•• M srr"' •,_.,, 01145769

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9'

992-1161
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I

�Pete A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy, Mlddlepol1, Ohio

/

Friday, Nov.

23, 2001

f\

~-·_YSen_tinel_ _ _ _ _. .; ;. A. . ; ; .; m; ;. .; ;. ; ;.e; ; . ;n~·-.; .c. ; .; cl__
;. _.8t...;;.......;;W~a--r_ _ _Fttday_.._Nov_•-:a_be~--!._!!

r_Th___..e

More people aiding in hunt for Osama bin Laden

l e Qiver"
•

.·

Shop Pomeroy aur(ng~ the.Pome~r.oy Merchants

...

OPEN HOU$,~~ $QNOA.l : NOVEMBER 25
~j~~v:~. ·12 - 5-IJm·
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.-7
--.-h-e--1~-i-~-14-~-(--.

~

.: .,N;(r:
+
Parade 2:00 pm ·.
.
.'. :~·- -nta ln the mint.:park ,'
I

A simple solution for helping your wishes come
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see an Item you wish were yours, simply ask us to
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!• BANG!, Afghanistan

Immediately after parade

(AP)
After the heaviest fighting
in 10 days, anti-Taliban forces
; kept Kunduz tighdy encircled
: Friday while commanders
~ from both sides discussed the
: final details of a surrender by
; the Islamic militia.
·
The Taliban representatives
~ to the talk&lt;, including Deputy
t Defense Minister Mullah Fazil
l Muslimyar, took word of the
=surrender deal back to their
t fighters in Kunduz and
•1 returned Friday to the talks in
, Mazar-e-Sharif. . the other
major city in northern
Mghanistan, to finalize details, a
~ northern alliance commander

J-

1

Dazzling Doll Display Tour-

*Wreath6
S110Wtntm * D800~ SIMe
*HaMd pa!l'lt&amp;l vvrn.aow

Upstairs - Clark's Jewelry
12-5 pm

Sign up for our·
"'HcJnd Painted Santa Face"
• Refreshments will be served during
Pomeroy's Open House on Sunday.

Ea$1:: Main

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ll2 East Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-3785

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Fighting---that-· raged .. ·on ·
Thursday after a 10-day lull all
but stopped Friday, apparendy
as word ofthe impending Tal2iban surrender of their last
: northern stronghold filtered
back to the front line.
The front Jines remained
unchanged Friday, and only the
crackle of small arms rang out
in the no-man's land be~n
Taliban and alliance positions.
The tanks that had advanced
closer to Kunduz pulled back,
and tome alliance troops
marched back to !heir bases.

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Charles Rime, R. Ph •

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CAIRO, Egypt (AP)
I U.S. troops and Afghan
. bounty hunters may eventually track down Osama bin
Laden and his top lieutenants, but experts warn that
won't mean the end of 'his
terrorist al-Qaida network.
One of the most serious
threats, say the experts, comes
from' hundreds of Muslims
who ·' have over the past
decade received military
training at al-Qaida-run
camps in Afghanistan and
who later left to rtsume norlmal lives in their native .
countries . Many rema_ined
·committed to the cause,
becoming
members
of
"sleeper" cells.
Another threat, they say,
comes from veterans of the
war against occupying Soviet
troops in Afghanistan in the
1980s. Many of those men
·· "feel nostalgia about the days
of the war," said Dia'a Rashwan, an expert on Islamic
groups.
"They see what the United
States is doing in Afghanistan
as a world religious war in
which Islam is one party and
'the other is a superpower
;that strikes' without mercy.
his 'puts before us a real
ossibility of these people
rganizing strikes against the
nited States, Brotam or
Israel."

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!Experts:
lal-Qaida
1may survive

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interceptions of radio or phone
transmissions, data gathered by radar,
spy planes and so on.
Still, good tips from humans can
flesh 'o ut intelligence already gathered by military or CIA reconnaissance.
And now that the Pentagon is
more actively promoting a $25 million reward for information leading
to bin Laden's capture, officials are

ously afraid of the Taliban are more
comfortable about coming forward,
defense officials say, Taliban have
been captured and thousands have
defected, all potentially adding to the
body of information.
US. troops and intelligence operatives have mort {reedom to !llove
across vast parts of Afghanistan, and
spy planes fly freely in the skies over
the country.
Several hundred US. special forces
commandos are on the ground setting up roadblocks, gathering information, looking for people and
watching the movement of supplies.
They've raided abandoned Taliban
and ai-Qaida · compounds to find
documents, computer disks and
other bits of information.

Kunduz

«

Owner· Clarice G. Krautter
Manager • 'Thrry Farrar, Sales • Paille Cleek
. Judy Bunpr, Jody Hupp

'

expecting to get more of the useful
and not so useful information from
human sources.
"We get scraps of information
from people on the ground saying
that they understand that this has
happened or that's happened,"
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said this week.
"Where we get information that
leads us to believe that al-Qaida and
Taliban leaders are gathered . , we
have been targ~ting those facilities"
with bombs, he said.
,
Long before the war started, U.S.
intelligence agents were working
with Taliban opposition. And since
the Taliban's rapid retreat from an
estimated three-fourths' of the country, tribal fighters or citizens previ-

•

. \ ...(

740~992~1702

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Intelligence gatherers a~e
getting a nesv pool of ·
"l11unat1 iutelligtt~ce"­
something U.S.forces
lamented 11ot having
imong/1 of at tht outset
o.f the Afglla11 war.

Anti-Taliban
forces
besiege

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new pool of "lu!fnan intelligence"
- something U.S. forces lamented
not baving enough of at the outset
of the Afghan war.
They could get ~lues that help r
point the way for special operlltions
forces hunting down bin taden, 1
America's most wanted: terrorist, and
the Afghan rulers who sheltered
him.
And from some of the newfound
sources they'll get little or no,thing of
value.
"We don't conduct a commando
operation on the basis of rumors
from ex-Taliban soldiers," Goure
said.
"Most of what ope~tions are
based on is technical intelltgence," he
said, referring to satellite photos,

'

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WASHINGTON (AP) One
day, an Afghan farmer might rtport
seeing Osama bin Laden's convoy
J'3SS by. The next, a Taliban prisoner
could tell where to find one of aiQaida's secret hide-outs.
From U.S. Green Berets to Taliban-turned-informants to 'disaffected ethnic ·tribal leaders, there are
more
people
in
thousands
Afghanistan able or willing to tell
what they know now that the country's. form~r repressive regime is on
the defensive.
"You get something from those
people," says Daniel Goure, an intelligence and defense expert at the
Lexington Institute think tank in
·
Washington,
Intelligence gatherers are getting a

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Inside:

Jiilhama in W.va. sem!finals, Page 83
No. 10 Illinois wins, Page 84
MAC football preview, Page 85

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page p·ossible.

FRIDAY's

.HIGHLIGHTS
Girls Basketball
Saturday's Game
Meigs at River Valley

Previews Friday
·
All Tlma Eat•m
• w•ton CliP. ,.._. H•pahlre 300
Noon · Friday · NBC

• ....hG...,.IIotl....
The Busch Series has completed Its season.

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chlcke.n

• Crettun.n Truak
The Truck Series has completed It$ season.

·

228 Main St.
Pom•oy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window .

-KltYin Harviell, 4,813
JeffGreen,4,089
JasOn Kelter, 4 ,637

T~St-rt,4.608

:t.

Joe Rutt~. 3 .570
1'rlllll KYIPII. 3,547
Scott Rig•. 3,526
IJol:lbof Ulboole. 4,391 Tgroj Raine•, 3,87!1
Rlelky Henclrtck. 3.412
Ru~ Wlllace. 4,372 Mn.e MCL.aiJ8hlln, 3,962Terry Cook, 3,327
D. Earnhardt Jr., 4,369 Jlm!Ne Jotmton, 3.871 Rick Crawfonl, 3,320
l&lt;win Harvk:ll. 4.318
Cnad little. 3,8&lt;16
Dennit seu.r, 3.306
J.rr Burton, 4,2~ ~ Wall.ce, 3,?99 Cov Gibbs. 2.87!5

t.
•

• NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading into this weekend's race. Last
week's ranklngs are In parentheses.

Th• ttta. race 11 over
Second In U.. point•, too
WOrl polo, 1odlhe rwootlopo
Luck wont bad down otntcft
Strllllled In aecOINI haH
Fnt-c:~loalnl MCond-plact
I
Dnlah at Atlanta
I
7. (-) Bobby Labonte Hlo ncond Ylctorw
of the INIOn
8. (8) Kovln .Horwlck Stortod In back,
flnl1hed neer front
9 . (7) Joll Burton
Never mede hla preHnDtl felt
10.(10) 8111 Elliott
Stlll.1dd)' lrom victory

i

1. 11) · Joll GOrdan
12) Tony Stewart
3. 15) D. E&lt;omllordl Jr.
4. (3) R1ckw Rudd
5. (4) Dale Jarrett
•• (8) Sterllnc Marlin

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FROM LAST W!EK
WINSTON CUP

"C .. CI)

HAMPTON, Ga. - Jerry
Nadeau could have bl!en
callec:l Mr. Novl!mber ...
almost.
Nadeau was on his way to
becoming the
Winston Cup
season's !9th
race winner of
2002. He was
going to defend
his championship In the
NAPA 500

at

Atlanta Motor
Speedway:
In the words
made somewhat famous by
college football
commentator
Lee Corso, "Not
so test, my friend ."
On the last of Sunday's
325 laps, Nadeaus
Chevrolet ran out of gas
coming off the 1,298th or
1.300 turns. Off the 1.300th
turn, Bobby Labont~·s
Pontiac sped ~st.

Nadeau wound up fourth .
Labonte, Sterling Marlin and
Kevin Harvick all whlued by
' him in the flnel eaoni;~lna:
moments.
Ttle last-lap intermlnglln&amp;
Of Nadeau's a&amp;ony with
•
ubOrlte's ecstasy was buf
the final wrinkle In what had
already become a rather offkilter day.
The first four flnlaf1ers had
begun the race In positions
39. 28, 38 and 41,
respectively. Those drivers Labonte, Marlin, Harvlck and
Nacleau - co uld not neve
turned lhe race more inside·
out had It been a pair of
SOCkS.
Jeff Gordon Clinched the
Winston Cup championship,
his fourth, with a sixth-place
finish. Tony Stewart's ninthplace finish enabled him to
catch and pass Ricky Rudel
for secon&lt;l place in the
standings. Stewart enters
the season's final race 376
points behind Gordon and
26 ahead of Rudd .

FEUD Of TH! WHK

Sterllnlf Mariln w. Jeff Gonion

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.....,...: This race,
orlt:inally scheduled lor
September, was po_stponed

If there were any dlscouralln&amp; words where Gordon's
fourth championship was concerned, they came In the
Atlanta PDit·;ace press conference from Marlin, Yllho
said: ·Jeff Is a great driver, but he stepped rl&amp;ht inlo
one of the top rtdes when he came in. He had Ray
Evemham with him. When you surround yourself with
load people-look at us the past couple of yeara. we
had a 15tt-.- or 20th-place car. You get &amp;ood eQulpm.nt,
you ca n ao:

NAICAR Tille -k'o

-·D.- llYn h1o

opinion: "It Is true that Jeff Gordon haa always had
great equipment, but it Is also true tflat t.e has made
the 'best Of l'lls opportunities, and It b8&amp;an long before
he arrived in NASCAR.~

·-....,...........
...........

Sept. 11 . ... A year ago, this
race became the only
NASCAR race ever run with
restrictor plates at 1 track
other than Daytona and
Tallade&amp;a. Tha ~ experiment
will not be repeated....
Burton led all 300 laPs last
year.

Dear NASCAR Thi' Week.

like 10 Mve ·i, f~•Ho.o
1bout a 111ct1rack. I would
know if they Itt" buildinJ
IriCk In Erie. Pa. lllnlki'SI.IIId '
I
be wed for a NASCAR rxt". If 10.,
when it will be open?
I would

NV tno ... f!! 110 pku!s lfw 1Nildi11g
u l,.rl: ,.. •ll~osl 1101 a INCI: lltul

Brett Bodine
Winston C..p Serloa
BJ Mam. Dcrtta.
NASCAR This Week
In the micH990s. the
Winston Cup praae area
was full of men whO
doubled as driVers and car
owners. Alan Kulwicki
even wort a championship
In 1992, and driYeflllke
Darrell Weltrlp, Ricky
Rudd. Geoffrey Bodine and
Bill Elliott tried their hand
at lt.
The only survivor of that
era Is Brett Bodine, and It
has always been a
struale.
Now an uncettaln
economy and wartime
conditions have made It
even tolJiher. Bodine Is
frantically trying J~ finalize
sponsorship !lea s that
will ensure the vlltNIIty of
his team.
.,., 42
Wife: Diane
Child: Heidi (24)
Hometown: Chemuna.
N.Y.
cldet. Mike
Hillman
Cer: No. 11
Ralph 's/Wells Far&amp;o
Financial Ford Taurus,
owned 0 Bodine ,
,
Carwr •uttttleal 440
starts, one win, 16 top.flve
finishes, ~0 top-10
finishes, flve poles, nearly
$11.4 mfiUon In earnln•i
Fl,.tl: Start (May 25,
1986, at Concord, N.C.),
pole (Oct. 4, 1990, at
Concord, N.C.), win (April
22, 1990, at North
Wilkesboro, N.C.I

X
Dear NASC~R Thil Wtek,
I've bee11 aenina our paper for
about two yea111 now, and my
12-yen-old son hu collected the
piofiles ofdrivm and WDIIdtrl why
he hun't •~ n pruriles of the DEl
dri~· en. Peny dnvrn. Jac .. Routh,
Andy Pemell\d RCR?

''""

hldleuatrw

X
Delr NASCAR Thia Week,

--. .....
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.

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JaiiiCIIIIr,/~

~-..........
, 11UICIII-

..... t" .. +.·

--.. ..
,...

a:ood economy of Juat &amp;ettina

by, and In a downtumed
economy, It's eonna be hard
to han&amp; on. That's exactly
wtlat lOOkS Uke IS
llepponll\l: Tho has taken a downturn.
•Jhe second team of
some of these two-car
teams that Is sponsored at
a lesser level than the
owner WO!Jid like, but at a
level he can make It work,
can't make It work 00w With
less money. FortUnate~, we
have really tried very hai'CI
to keep our fixed cost and
our ovemead a1 low n
ponible wtth our buslnesa
so that we could survive on
possibly 1111 money than
Wfi recel~ this :;ear. By no
means are w. one of the
better-spenaored cart, but
we wtre·sponaored at a
level that we could survive
and see an Improvement In

performance.·

••••••••••••
i wno once drove In a NASCAR race
weerint a business suit?
2. Whaf NASCAR champion auffered severe leg
Injuries In World War II?
3. What great driver spent almost a year In the fedefal
penitentiary In Chillicothe, Ohio?
'
~4\

I hav.e a question about rbe
URd in NASCAR.
I know there ia almost nothina
stock about a NASCAR racer
tXOOJM: that it muat follow the 'body
, s hape of pmd~tion from a line of
an AIMrican auto manufacturer.
Wh~ are the most tpart-orientcd
models from the manuracturen not
Wlnt~ uacd (or NASCAR Pbtforma?
II tel!ml that Corvette, Camaro,
flrcblrd. Viper and Mustana would
be more losical choices to race .
They are inherently more aerody·
namle tl\an the can currently u1ed.
Pl111 they look 1 lot ben.erl
modeja of cars

UOSu~or JOjunr '£ UOISII\10 'II:&gt;OlS ~llOIJlS
JO UOidWBI,JO 6t61 &amp;ln liM OljM 'UOJAij p&amp;~ '1':
(PJI~l PflJSIUU
J~UJnl SllJn:) 'l

••••••••••

IIIII Fowltr
liiNa, TU:II
ofi~n

Jfl' lro1•t&gt;

tmndul'd tllr

samr thlfrg ourseJvrs. Attire 11er:v
lmrr. It J~rmJ odd'""' NASCAR
dotJ 1101 prtsemly_lltn~ a serla for
suc1t Cill'!.

•••••••••••

Fan Tips

•Daytona: From the Birth or
Speed to the Death of the
Man In Black {Warner Books
Inc., $29.95) Is Ed Hinton's
narrative history of the
Daytona 500 ..
Hinton, who has covered
NASCAR alnce 1974, takes
the reader an the W1J'i back
to the orlf,lnl of automobile
racin&amp; on Daytona Beach In
lhe early 1900s and
desCfibecl the culture that
spruna from those early,
Informal festivals.
In effe(lt, Hinton uses the
Daytona 500 as a launching
pad to tell the story of
NASCAR, founded end
headquartered there. It's a
fine bOOk, definitely a cut
above most of the dozens of
stock car raci ng books now
available. ·

pi-'"'

lr Monte Dutton ·
NASCAR This Week

- - thot tho opllt

....

the

1.0--.
WIMMtCnwen,l...,_

"""'In

tf-rtlh. Mol.., ·

Loudon, .......

..,.. wtn bo hi.., 11r111o
...ond . . . . . . .,.
Croen'alrlt.-.rr,
. .llert....... ~1he

....,_.
Mart ti'MII..

.

Morttno_, Iii., wtU bo

Fresh on lhel'ftlsofllill Ell ion I victory II Horne!tead, Fla., NASC.o\R officials made Brules ldj~~S~~"~Y;tt dEsillf'Cd
to shghtlyilllpf"(Wethe FoolTIIUillland
slightly hii'Kicnhe Dodae lntrepld
'i'""he Tlliii'IIS was alkw.oed a 112-inch
"'tidtt:u'' on itJ ll08e bekMi the ~;C~Wof
lhe litWTt air dun, and 1M lnll'tl)id will
hove: tht: wnc area rtduced by I inch.
Thtrt ~uno ,to,- ir1 Daubom, Mich.,

""""'·

"To br very candid about it. we're
disappointed and frumted thai
NASCAR d100IH 1D iljJ'Kll'tOII ~
and do M'lmethinl!lm than what we
think itijl.uinyiO lake-co make our cars
compttib\Ot." Fonl~ Grq; Spethl Mid.

-·Goncrai--

a

remains
unclw why N.UCAR 'MNid not
equalize the tntirr f~eld, choosing
instead to auill Ford
"Since thtre has 1t0t bcm a
NASCAR wind-tunnel test Iince
March, one can ooly wumc !hid the
dwlF! annowv:ed IOday were liMed
on IN: rtsull:l. ~ 111 the racdnltk. Ford
j~ ~ the lop four spot! in Phoenix
too weekll ago. while lhe la!lt Pontiac
win \WI at Oristol in
d&lt;
only Ponti~~e win at a hi
ll'lltk
this entire season \W at
in July.
"We know that Joe Gibbs Racina

X

DODGE MAkES A DIFFER,
ENCE: Docige hu ufli.iul l~ 1UT1e oo
bolrd u CVI"pllnlte !lpOI1SOr fOr
NASCAR\- Raclns- d&lt;
nalimwidepoints pqrwnlbat~
driven II local shorl tncb.
Some ~how the series cou ld
be called the DodiJC Racing Series,
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Dave Harris or Debbie Call
•

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Illinois
misfired with regularity and
played like anything but a
ranked team . in the second
round of the Las Vegas Invitational.
, By the time their game
~gainst Pennsylvania was over
rhursday night, the lllini had
justified their No. 2 rating.
· Frank Williams scored 22
points' and second-ranked Illinois shot 70 percent in the second half en route to a 78-71
victory over Pennsylvania.
The Illini (3-0) trailed 45-34
at the half and didn't take the
lead until midway through the
second half
Damir Krupalija scored to
give the Illini a 61-60 lead with
10:23 remaining. The teams
traded baskets until Illinois took
the lead for good with 7:06left.
Nick Smith and Robert
Archibald each added 11
points, and Brian Cook had 10
for Illinois, which shot 7 1 percent from th e floor in the second half. Krupalija had 11
rebounds as the IUini outrebounded the Quakers 34-26_
In other second round
games, it was Georgia Tech 70,
E. Illinois 65; Southern Illinois
66, Iowa St. 57; Saint Louis 85,
Hartford 52.

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Ford, Pontiac teams not happy with latest aero changes

---,....It

JONESBORO.Ark. (AP) Arkansas State announced the
firing of football coach Joe
Hollis on Thursday during the
closing minutes of the Indians'
final game of a dismal season.
Arkansas State finished 2-9
with the 28-22 loss to Division
1-AA opponent Nicholls State.
Arkansas State president Les
\Vyatt issued a ,. statement
announcing Hollis' termination as both football coach and
.Interim athletic director. The
'statenient ~· released dur\ng '
the fourth quarter.
Hollis, 54, a former assistant
coach at Ohio State, has been
diagnosed with prostate cancer
and is scheduled to undergo
surgety next month.
"I'm going to be fine;' Hollis said at his weekly news conference Monday.
He was 13-43 in five seasons
with the Indians, who have lost
19 of their last 22 games. His
football contract was to continue through the 2004 season. .
In August 2000, after a 4-7
season the year before, Hollis
spoke of the problems of
coaching at ASU.
Hollis came to Arkansas
State in December 1996 after
six seasons on the Ohio State's
staff of then-coach John Cooper. For the last five years at
Ohio State, Hollis was offensive coordinator.

rve heard rumors that he is
plannina on retiring from n~~ina.
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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Michigan's Grant ~o,w.man has never
been afraid to be dilferent.
Bowman grew up in Blacklick,
Ohio, and although he only needed
to drive about 20 minutes to watch a
game at Ohio State, he was a Notre
Dame fan.
When it came time to choose a
college, after a standout career at St.
Francis De Sales High School, he
chose to be a Wolverine .
It doesn't end there.
Bowman, a sophomore, mi!ciikenly
put on one blue and one black sock
to go along with his sport coat and

slacks before the Iowa game a month
ago and after playing well, superstition took over arid he decided to
continue wearing the same socks
before games - and not to wash
them .
" I don 't even know where the
other ones are," Bowman said with a
grin.
Bowman is not a joke on the field,
however.
The 6- foot- J, 287-pound defensive
tackle provides a sturdy presence.
Michigan, whit'h. gives up just 75.1
rushing yards a game, leads the Big
Ten and is tied for seventh in the

nation in rushing defense in part
because of players like Bowman .
All season. Michigan 's linebackers
and coaches have credited the defensive line for raking on blockers, which
allows players like linebacker Larry
Foote to roam tree and make tackles.
Bowman ranks third among Michi gan 's interior defensive lineman with
13 tackles, including seven for loss es
and three sacks. He has also recovered
a fumble.
uGrant Bowman has done an outstanding job here," Michigan head
coach Lloyd Carr said. "He is very
smart and very strong. He was a great

•

wrestler in high school.'"
So, how did Bowman manage to
escape Buckeye country?
He was recruited "on and off," by
Ohio State and by his childhood
favorite , Notre Dame, but neither
school offered him a scholarship.
Bowman insists he's not bitter.
"I ended up where I'm supposed to
be," he said. "'I feel like fate brought
me here."
That· docsn 't mean Ohio State fans
have forgiven Bowman.
" ! know my family comes back

Farve
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FonnerOSU

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I' m 1 bi&amp; RUIIy WaiiiCC fan fnd

·so It has put uS In a
difficult situation. 1 feel
very confident that we're
lOIOC to be funded Ot&lt;, but
we're even at the point
rl&amp;ht now where we·ve
atartad brand-new
~otlatlons with people,
just to make aure we have
some~ln&amp; as a backup
plan. We just started
speaklnt: to new
......,.. tlte IJU:dOI'IHp
....... , . ....., ~We h8V8 companlel and new
about 25 -percent of what
I)I'Ospectt. Unfortunltfly,
we need committed to us ' tnls It a bad year not to
alr'eecly. We're In tina!
have another rear on your
negotlatlon5 with probably
deal, but we didn't and we
another 25 percent to 50
just have to do the beat we
percent, but It has bee'n a
can wtth what we've 101·
stfuale. The economy prior W8're just tryln&amp; to pt It
to Sept. 11 was questiondone and make It happen .~
able, and then, when our
ltW.••, J'Cintoa
national dl881tar happened, 1111 , . - In NAICAII?
n..- ever;t&gt;ody....,
"We've warned them 11
more cautious wtth their
owners, and I think we've all
mor1&lt;olll\l budpts, end
shpwn our concern, thlt this·
they" AHM~iuated their
could happen. We were
positions.
already on the edie In a •

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second In points and has
finished In the top 10 In
10 of his last 12 races .
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hastened Gordon's fourth
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THE PLAINS - Eastern
and Southern will join Athens,
Alexander, Feder:U Hocking,
Logan, Meigs, NelsonvilleYork, Trimble and Vinton
County in Friday's annual
Athens County Shrine boys
basketball preview at Athens
High School.
· Southern will face Alexander
at 6:30 p.m., Meigs and Trimble will play at 7:70 p~m., and
Eastern will take on Athens at
9:30p.m.

I

HarriPIIk. I'L

Rtctly Rudd. 4.582
&amp;. Sterllrc Merlin, 4,566 . Ina Bitl'lti, 4,!109
I. O.te Jarrett. 4.'1 78
Elton 5aw)'ef, 41,100

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1.
I.

1997

by tile terrorist attacks of

PROFilE

TOd~.3.597

TOP TEN

'.

300
Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway
(1.058-mile track), 300
laps/317.4 miles
~:Noon, Friday
LBt ,..,., winner: Jeff

-Jklo Spfa&amp;ue, 3.87G

2.

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Whet : New Hampshire

Burton
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Rusty Wallace. Ford,
132.089 mph , July 7, 2000
R.u ....t: Jeff Burton,
Ford, 111 .134 mph , July 13,

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

U I4.984
'
l.. JeffC
GMicl1,

992-5432
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WINirONCUP

for area boys
hoopstea1115

••••••••••••

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

Page 81
Frlcllly. November 2:1. 2001

Prep Sports

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

The Daily Sentinel

THANKSGIVING TOUCHDOWN - Dallas Cowboys' Troy Hambrick (43) rushes for a 1-yard touchdown late
.in the fourth quarter in a losing effort against the Denver Broncos In Irving, Texas Thursday. (AP)

Lears rail falls short as
.Cowboys all to Broncos
IRVING, Texas (AP) -Ryan Leaf nearly earned a
place in Dallas Cowboys ' lore alongside Thanksgi.ving
Day heroes C lint Longley and.Jason Garrett.
C oach Dave Campo might have cost him the ·
chance.
Leaf's bid at th e biggest comeback in team hi story
fell short in the Cowboys' 26-24 loss to the Denver
Broncos on Thursday, in part because Campo decided not to go for a 2-poin~ conversion midway
through the rally.
Jason Elam's fourth field goal gave Denver a 26-3
lead early in the fourth qu arter, and the Broncos were
on the verge of th eir largest blowout of the season .
Instead, Denver nearly squandered a second stra ight
fourth-quarter lead. The Broncos led Washington 103 on Sunday and lost 17- 10.
Leaf started the comeback by directing a 71-yard
scoring drive, Dallas's first tquchdown drive in mne
quarters. Leaf threw for 59 .yards and Troy Hambr ick

scored on a 1-yard run .
Just 43 seconds later, Reggie Swi nton returned a
punt 65 yards for another score as Dallas closed with in 26-16 with 7:29 left.
Campo initially called for a 2-point conversion ,
even sending the play to Leaf. H e chan ged his mind
during a delay and Jon Hilbert kicked the PAT.
Dallas could have closed within eight points with a
successful 2-point conversion. Instead, the Cowboys
trailed by nine and needed two sco res to beat the
Broncos.
Dallas wound up scoring only one more time, gettinganother 1-yard touchdown fium Hambrick w ith
1: I 0 left. Hilbert kicked again, then tried an onside
kick.
'
Denver's Detron Smith held o n and the Cowboys
went away losers for the fo urth straight game, the last
three with Leaf.

PO NTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Brett Favre and
the Green Bay Packers pi3Yed another wild
and memorable game at the Silverdome. This
time, it was the Detroit Lions who absorbed
a forgettable loss.
Favre passed for 252 yards and two touchdowns and the Packers survived a late rally
by winless Detroit. beating the Lions 29-27
on Thursday.
The Packers, who nearly squandered a 16point lead, won on the road against Detroit
for the first time in five years and for just the
second tim e in the regular
season since 1992.
Green Bay (7 -3) moved
within a half-game of NFC
Central-leading C hicago.
"For 10 years, the games
here have always been like
this - turnovers and a lot
of wild things," said Favre
"'I'm just than~ful that we
Farve
got this win, because we
. have come in here and lost
with .better records and better teams."
Next season, the Lions will play in a new
stadium in downtown Detroit.
Favre, who had thrown 10 interceptions in
his last four games, completed 18 of 26 passes without an interception. He has thrown at
least 20 TDs for an eighth stra ight year, a
streak th at trails only Dan M arino's 10 consecutive seasons with 20 or more TDs.
Ahman Green r:m for 102 yards and a
touchdown and also ca ught a 35-yard TD
pass for the Packers.
Detroit (0-1 0) h.S lost its last seven by an
average of 4.6 points.
" It eats at yo ur gut," team president Matt
M illen said.
While the Packers don't feel bad for the
Lions, Favre has a soft spot for Detroit's firstyear coach Marty Mornhinweg, who was
Favre's quarterback coac h when the Packers
won the 1997 Super Bowl.
''I've been rootin g for Marty all year,"
Favre said. '" I told him th at before the game
and again after, but he already knows. That
team doesn't deserve to be 0-10, not the way
they played. Pretty soon, Marty will have
them turned around and they will be winrUng these games."
The Lions again cam e close to th eir lirst

Please see Laaf. 81

Please see Lions. 8:1

Struggling. Kitna safe as Bengals starting QB
"Jon Kitna IS our running the offense, the llcngal s
C IN C INNATI (AP) Things
quarterback,"
start going bad and the Cinci nn ati
threw only six touchdown passes and
Lelleau said. ··we .averaged a leagtte-low 122 yards per
Bengals change quarterbacks. It 's an.
think
that
our game.
annual event for the NFL's worst team
of the past decade.
offense has dramatiThe Bengals got Kitna as a free
cally improved. We agent, kept Mitchell and Smith as
So far,Jon Kitna has defied local tra'dition.
'
think that maybe the backups and redesigned the offens e,
numb ers don't even which still revolved around running
The Bengals have slipped to 4-5
and Kitna's passer rating has plummetrefle ct th e growth back Corey Dillon.
thar we have shown . K.itna had a terrific debut, cornpleted to third-worst in the league. He has
Kltna I o n that side of the i ng 18-o f-27 for 204 yards in an
thrown more interceptions th an
ball."
opening w in over New England that
touchdowns and produced only seven
Th e Bengals arc in the bottom third left hi s passer rating at 101.5, well
points in the last six q uar ters.
Kima insists he can sti ll produce_ of the league in passing, but it's still an above average. He didn't throw an
Coach Dick LeBeau is going to let improvement over last season. With interception in a win over Baltimore
him keep trying.
Akili Smith and then Scott Mitchell the next game.

It's been generally downhill since
then. The !3engals have lost five of
their last seven ga mes, Kitna has
th rown 10 interceptions and the passer rating ts down to 68.9.
On ly the Carolina rookie C hris
Weinke (65.3) and the C hi efS' Trent
Green (62.6) have lower ratings .
Kitna has thrown nine touchdown
passes -three more than the Bengals
had last season - and he's done much
better than either Smith or Mitchell
did last season, but the losses are
bringing closer scrutiny.

Please see Kltna, 8.1

�.
•

hae a 2 • The 0.11y

Friday, Nov. 23, 200t

Sentinel

Ward hopin road to Pro Bowl won't
be blocked y unhappy defensive backs
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Hines Ward is
trying to become the lint receiver to
block his way to the Pro BowL
It's not that the Pittsburgh Steelen
wide receiver can't catch the ball - to
the contrary, as he leads them with 59
catches in nine games, a pace that would
break the team record for receptions in a
season.
But what separ::~tes Ward from most
receivers and irritates opposing
defensive backs - is his blocking.
Although he is much smaller than his
listed 6 feet and 197 pounds, he often is
used to throw key blocks on Jerome Bettis' runs or when other receivers catch
the ball.
"He's the best blocking receiver in the
NFL, and nobody else is even close,"
Steelers offensive coordinator Mike
Mularkey said.
Most NFL star receivers are pass catchers first and fast runners second, and
blocking is something they don't really
do very well, if at all. But Ward, who
came to the Steelen three years ago as a
not-very-hyped fourth-round draft pick
after playing quarterback at Georgia,
brought a much different mentality with
him to the pros.
Aware his lack of size, world-class
sprinter's speed and star credentials might
be viewed as liabilities, Ward tried to

bad one. LeBeau ulked to
him this week about limiting
the mistakes and taking fewee
risks when the Bengals fal1
behind.
"The thing that we have to
grow through. really, is
knowing that the way to win
the game is to stay with what
we do even though we may
be 10 points behind in the,
third quarter," LeBeau said.
"We don't have to run for 70.
yards every time we touclj.
the ball. We don't have to
throw the ball 50 yards."
.,
· Although the Bengals' season has surted to crumble,'
LeBeau seems ready to stick.
with Kitna for the near
future.
"I think that by and large;:.
we have made steady
progress," Leaeau said. "We
have had a couple of bad
halves, but that happens in'
the course of a season."

Kitna
.........1

Kitna threw two secondhalf interceptions and fummake an impression in every way possi- his way out of a three-year slump.
bled
in a 20-7 loss to Tenble.
What's surprising is, on a team that
If that meant blocking with a fullback's chose wide receiven (Plaxico Burress in nessee on Sunday that lefi
mentality was necessary, well, he was 2000 and Troy Edwards in 1999) on the the Bengals with a losing
ready to do it, even if taking on corner- first round of the draft in consecutive record for the first time this
backs and, especially, much bigger safeties years, it is Ward who is emerging as a star, season and brought questions
risked exposing him to injuries that
"I've come a long way since getting about changing quartermight hamper his pass catching.
drafted by Steelen, since having two backs.
"Anytime you go through
"They don't like you getting in their wide receivers drafted ahead of me,"
a
losing streak, the quarterface all day," Ward said. "You can tell they Ward said. "So to have your peers respect
back's job is the first that gets
get mad. They don't want some receiver you is special."
looked
at," Kitna said. "In the
hitting them all day."
Ward's style has its downside, coo.
Ward's physicality at a position known Wl.ien his blocking so agitated Browns first half of that game, I
more for passivity is being noticed safety Earl Little that Little warned he played about as weU a&lt; I can
around the league. Opposing coaches say was coming after him, Ward hit him so play. In the second half, I
his blocking is a factor their defensive hard it caused a concussion. Ward was made a couple of bad decibacks cannot ignore. And Jaguars receiv- fined $5,000 by the NFL for standing . sions that cost this team."
That's the reputation that
er Jimmy Smith was so impressed by atop Little following the hit.
Ward's tenacity that, following the Steel"That's the way we play football, and Kitna brought from Seattle:
ers' 20-7 victory Sunday, he walked up to we've been doing it all year. If he studied He'U make some nice plays,
Ward and said, "You've got my vote for , any film at all, he's got to see me doing then undercut \hem with a
that to guys,"Ward said.
the Pro Bowl."
"I've always looked up to him, tried to
Still, Ward's perseverance seems to be
be a receiver like him, so for him to carrying over to the other Steelers
come up and say something like that will receivers. When Edwards threw a key
stay with me for the rest of my NFL block on Ward's touchdown catch SunSubscribe today.
career," Ward said.
day against Jacksonville, coach Bill
. 992-2156
However, it's not like Watd is being Cowher grabbed Edwards and carried
used as a smallish tight end, even if the him nearly 20 yards ,back to the bench.
Sceelen lead the NFL in rushing. His
"That was great to see," Ward said.
ability to make difficult catches, especial- "I've been doing. it for those guys all
ly diving grabs along the sideline, has year, so maybe those guys can do it for
helped quarterback Kordell Stewart play me, too."

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
. .

.

AMD1 gh2
Now, when I go down there,
I don't try to flaunt my
Michigan stuff.
"I respect Ohio State and
fnwnPIIaeBl
all their great tradition. I have
with all kinds of stories," he family and friends who root
said. "My mom changed her for Ohio State. I have friends
license plate to 'UMICH 60,' from high school who have
and I know she got some been calling me this week
harassment around there and telling me the Buckeyes
when she was driving are going to beat me because
around.
they're Ohio State fans and
"As for me, I might wear a everything. The rivalry goes
shirt or something, and I through everybody."
Bowman knows that as well
might get a few odd looks.
When I was younger in like as anyone.
sixth or seventh grade, it was
He grew up in the Columthe cool thing to wear Michi- bus-area where the date of
gan and be sort of rebellious. the Michigan game is circled

· Lions
fnHnPipBl
win this season, missing a chance to
send the game into overtime when
rookie quarterback Mike McMahon
threw an incomplete pass on a 2-point
conversion with 10 seconds left.
'
"We let another one get away,"
Detroit's Robert Porcher said. "I don't
know how to put into words how I
feel."
A defensive TD gave Detroit a 13-10
lead late in the lim half, but the Packers scored the next 19 points and
appeared to be set to win easily.
But McMahon, who was 9-of-20 for
89 yards with a touchdown, kept
Detroit's hopes alive.
"I have the utmost respect for Charlie Batch, who is a class gny,'' Green Bay
coach Mike Sherman said, "but when

Leaf

on calendars.
Now he attends Michigan
where players know a lot will
. be at stake in the regular-sea, son finale against the Buckeyes.
"I think that everybody
that grows up in the state of
Ohio or Michigan, regardless
of whether they're in Columbus, or Cincinnati, or the
Upper Peninsula, knows how
important this rivalry is,"
Bowman said. "It was always
just a huge deal, and it was
always fun to watch growing
up and see all the big games
by different guy5.1t's so exciting. I went to a game here

Mike M~Mahon Call)e in the game, it
turned the whdle game around."
Lamont Warren's !-yard TD and
McMahon's' 2-point conversion run cut
the deficit to 29-21 with 1:17 left. After
Todd Lyght recovered an onside kick,
McMahon threw a 29-yard TD pass to
rookie Scotty Anderson on a fourthand-8 with 10 seconds left. But McMahon scrambled and threw a pass
through the end zone on the 2-point
try.
.
•
Batch was 8-of-19'for 118 yards with
no touchdowns, an interception and a
fumble before McMahon, who played
· one series in the first half, came on
midway through the fourth quarter.
McMahon refused to fuel a quarterback controversy that has started percolating in Detroit.
"I still have a long way to go," the
fifth-round pick from Rutgers said.
"Charlie is definitely the man.''
Detroit's james Stewart, who missed

when I was younger, and I
went to a few at Ohio State.
"After watching that when
I was growing up and being
able to be in it now makes it
all the more special. It's one
of those things where you
don't even realize the enormity of it until you're gone.
Probably a few years down
the road I'll look back and
think, 'W()w, what an opportunity I had.' When I was in
high school, I always thought
chat would be something that
I would love co. be able to do,
playing in one of those
games. Now I have that
opportunity."

the previous four games with a sprained
right anlde, rushed for 102 yards on 14
carries.
. Green Bay took a 7-0 lead on Green's
26-yard TD run before Detroit's defensive TD put the Lions ahead for the first
and last time.
Chris Claiborne sacked and forced
Favre to fumble at Green Bay's 8. James
Hall scooped up the ball for the score
to put the Lions ahead 13-10 with 3:43
left in the half.
Green Bay responded by driving 81
yards on nine plays, capped by Favre's
!-yard p~ss to David Martin 18 seconds
before halftime.
Green turned a short pass into a 35yard TD . catch, which he ran
untouched, to make it 24-13.
After another Longwell field goal.
Green Bay's Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila
sacked Batch and forced a fumble just
outside of .the Lions' end zone, and
Warren pounced on it for a safety.

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"To make two 2-pointers,
back-to-hack, the percentages were not with us,"
Carnpo said. "I thought it
was a better chance to take
the point and get the onside
kick. No, it wasn't a bad deci.SIOn.
. "

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The O.lly Sentinel • Page a 3

W.VA. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Wahama making long trek to Moorefield
8v GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

MASON, WVa. - For the third
consecutive week the Wahama White
Falcon football squad faces a difficult
challenge in its post-season ambitions when the Bend Area team
makes a long trek to Moorefield
where they will clash with the 8th
rated Yellow Jackets at 1:30pm in
Class A state semifinal tourney
action.
The 12th ranked White Falcons,
the highest seeded team remaining in
any of the three classes, continued its
Cinderella climb hto the Class A
final four picture and are within one
&gt;&lt;ictory of its first ever state football
championship berth. However, the
Mason County gridders road co the
state finals sends the local eleven
through Moorefield against a veteran
playoff squad in the Yellow Jackets.
"They've got a very good football
team," Falcon coach Ed Cromley
stated. They have size and speed and
are very versatile in that they can run
and throw the football.
Moorefield is rich in playoff tradition so we'll have · to guard against
getting caught up in the long journey and the distractions that go with
it playing so far away from home."
The Yellow Jackets are seeki11g its
sixth straight trip to the Class A state
finals and are currently riding a seven
game winning streak that includes a
pair of post-season victories.
Moorefield lost its first two games
of the regular season to defending
state champion Wheeling Central
(34-20) and to Class AA Frankfort
(36-20) before beginning its string of
victories. Wins over Petersburg (586);TygartsValley (57-22); South Harrison (42-12); East Hardy (48-7);
Berkely Springs (34-18); Westmar
MD (54-8); and Pendleton County
(26- 12) followed before playoff victories over 9th ranked Paden City
(46-0) and top rated Midland Trail
(50-16).
Moorefiel!I averages 41.3 points
per game offensively while giving up

Todd Crites (6-0 195). Chris Green
(6-7 330) will man one tackle posiCleuA
tion with Ryan Kesner (6-1 285)
First round
starting at the other tackle slot. The
Matewan 28, Fayetteville 6
tight end is expected to be senior
Midland Trail 45, Guyan Valley 6
Jacob
Wilson (6-1 205).
Moorefield 46, Paden City 0
"There's no question we'll have to
Mount Hope 29. Cameron 20
Van 48, Meadow Bridge 16
handle their ~ize up front," Cromley
Wahama 14, Parkeraburg Catholic 7
said. "Myers and Kesner are their
Wheeling Central 47, Buffalo 14
best linemen while Myers and freshWilliamson 40, Valley Fayette 18
man Reed Williams (6-2 190) appear
to be awfully good linebackers for
Second round
Friday
them. Myers has good size for a cenWahama 40, Van 16
ter but we don't line up across from
Williamson 46, Mount Hope 20
center so .he'll have to chase us to
Saturday
block us added Cromley."
Moorefield 50, Midland Trail16
The backfield features a pair of
Wheeling Central 28, Matewan 0
junior running backs in Adam HolSamlflnala
man (5-8 170) and Jimmy Fields (5Saturday
8 180) while sophomore Eddie
No. 12 Waharoa (9-3) at No. II MooreMongold (5-9 160) figures to open
field (9-2)
at wingback. Senior Adam Fisher (6No. 3 Williamson (11-1) vs. No. 2
2 180) will be the Yellow Jackets
Wheeling Central (10·2) at Wheeling
quarterback with senior Daniel Barb
Island Stadium
(6-0 170) and sophomore Anthony
Championship
Carr (5-1 I 180) slated to start at
Saturday, Dec. 1
· wide receivers.
Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.
Holman is the leading ground
gainer with 1045 yards on the season
15.5 points per contest to the oppo- while, Fields has picked up 612 yards
sition. Wahama and the Yellow Jack- on the year.
ets have met in playoff competition
Fisher has thrown for 181 0 yards
once before in opening round action and 18 touchdowns with 14 of his
in 1987 with the White Falcons 233 pass attempts being intercepted.
falling by a 30-7 decision at Point Barb is the main target of Fishers'
Pleasant. The Bend Area team has aerials with 52 catches for 864 yards
also played one previous contest on. and 12 TD catches.
the Moorefield High School turf in
Fisher isn't expected to be a major
1997 when WHS absorbed a 40-20 threat running the football as the
setback against East Hardy.
senior signal caller has carried the
The Yellow Jackets strength lies in pigskin only 12 time~ this season.
its massive front line where they
Wahania is coming off what ma)l
average over 6-1 and, 248 pounds per have been its biggest win in White
man. "We smashed them (Midland Falcon history as the locals overTrail) up front. We controlled the whelmed a heavily favored Van squad
game because we physically domi- by a 40-16 margin.
nated them at the line," said MooreWHS has beaten 5th ranked Parkfield coach Alan Fiddler following ersburg Catholic (14-7) and 4th
the Yellow Jackets huge win over top rated Van on successive Friday nights
ranked Midland Trail.
for the right to visit Moorefield in
Anchoring the senior dominated the Class A semifinals.
MHS interior line will be center
For the third consecutive week the
Derek Hyson (5-I 0 280) along with Bend Area team will' be decided
guards Josh Myers (6~2 195) and underdogs against an experienced
W.VA. PLAYOFFS

playoff contender in Moorefield.
"They have a great deal of tradition and experience when it comes
to the playoffs," Cromley said. "They
do make mistakes though and we
have to be ready to take advantage
and capiulize on their errors when
they occur. We've been underdogs
befor~ so that's not really a factor.
These kids have worked hiud this
season and will give it their all on
Saturday. We had an exceptionally
good practice on Wednesday where
the junior varsity didn't want any
part of the varsity for the first time
this year and that's an encouraging
Sign.
Wahama is expected to be at full
strength when they clash with the
Yellow Jackets on Saturday. Junior
Justin jordan was nuning a bruised ·
thigh and had his playing time limited against Van while junior David
Smith suffered an ankle injury in the
contest but both are cle·ared for
action on Saturday.
Probable starters on the interior
line for the White Falcons include
seniors Scott Johnson, J.R. Parsons;
Shilo Staats and juniors R.T. Roush;
David Smith and Alex Marcum.
junior Aaron Davis and sophomore
Aaron Faulk will see time at split end
with senior Adam Rickard and
sophomore Anthony Mitchell at
wide receiver.
The WHS backfield should consist
of seniors Bradford Clark at quarterback · and Brandon Hankinson at
running · back along with juniors
Gabe Lambert and Ryan Mitchell.
When asked if the Yellow Jackets
might look past Wahama and on to
next weeks possible rematch with
Wheeling Central Fiddler was quick
to reply, "with the experience
they've (Moorefield players) had
playing in five straight championship
games, our kids understand you take
them one at a time. That experience
helps. They aren't going to overlook
anybody".
Kickoff time is set for I :30pm at
Moorefield High School.
'

.

UC hopes
to stop
Memphis

bowl bid
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)
-Tommy West says
mental focus is the only
thing standing in the way
of Memphis becoming
eligible for the school's
first bowl game since
1971.
The Tigers (5-5, 3-3
Conference USA) face
Cincinnati (5-4, 4-2) on
Saturday, a win away
from the six needed to
be in contention for one
of the league's four bowl
slots. And West has
worked to make sure his
team is as prepared mentally as they are physically.
"We've had a tendency
as a team to not be very
fundamentally sound at
times. It's not because
they don't know, it's
because they get all this
hype, they get to jumpin'
and bouncin' and they
kind of (orget," West said
earlier this week. "Mentally we'll spend time on
how you approach and
play in big games."
The Tigers, who had
been floundering after
losing three straight
games, got back on track
last weekend with a 4210 victory over Army.
But West knows they will
face a tough opponent in
Cinc;innati, who won last
year's matchup 13-10 in
overtime.
"If we, don't do the
things we're supposed to
do, Cincinnati will kill
us,'' he said.

We UJi/.! ~ ·
jM811e~t
ai 5:00a.m..
~ _2)~

gea.UJH,

Brand New~ Pontiac
Sunllra Sun l Sound

"It's always nice .to find a ties."
way to win," Broncos coach
Mike Anderson, ;who
Mike Shanahan said. "We had gained 1,487 yards last s~ason
a chance to put it away a in place of Davis and Gary,
number of times. We strug- 'ran 33 times for 118 yards
gled a little bit. We have co and a touchdown.
execute better offensively so
Brian Griese was 17-of-29
we can put people away. It's a passing for 171 yards with a
credit to win that game with touchdown and an intercepas many missed opportuni- tion.

ftomPapBl

Friday, Nov. 23, 2001

llrlnd New 211112 Chevy

Brand New 2002 Chevrolet
Monte Carto LS Sport Coupe

S.Sellel Ext. Cab Pickup

qa,B50* 821,950* qa,950*
• Sunroof, CD System
• AlllomaUc, Air Conditioning
Alar Spoiler, Tilt Steering

Sllverldo Sportllde Pickup

~8,950*
• Vortec V-6 Power

Exlended cab 4Door 4x4

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Z71 Avalanche 4Door 4x4

823,95 830,550

• Vortec V.a Power
• Aulomlllc, Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stento, Tilt Steering

• 5300 V.a Power, Z71 Equip.
•CD Syatem, Locking Dlff.
• TIH Steering, Crulae Control

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Styled Wheels

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stll8o

2001 ChevY

2001 Oldsmobile Alero

2001 Chevy Tracker

2001 Chevy Monte

2001 Chevy Blazer

Lumina Sedan

GL Sedan

2 Door 4x4

Carlo LS Coupe

LT 4 Door 4x4

• SUnroof, Sport Pacl!age ·
• Alllnlnum Wheels, Keyless Entry
• Po,...- Seat, Windows, Loeb

Farmers Bank
Is offering incredibly low.
rates on financing the purchase of a used car or trl•e•
These great low rates mean affordable Spcoal LOW rates arc ~lsn
av&lt;1ilable on tt1e purdl&lt;lse
low monthly payments for you.
of new cars or trucks

Leaf had seven completions
worth I 09 yards in the fourth
quarter, and completed 16 of
.32 passes for 193 yards.
Leaf might be headed back
to the bench. Quincy Carter
has recovered from a hamstring injury and could
~turn against Washington a
week from Sunday.
: "He showed that when
'things are clicking he can
'make some nice throws,"
Hambrick said. "I'm happy
that he didn't gee down and
·show the side that everybody
:wants to-s·ee!'
· The Broncos, winnen for
:only the third time since
:starting 3-1, went away with
.a nother injury to a key
·offensive player.
Running back Olandis
Gary broke l bone in his left
leg on the second drive and
likely is out for the rest of the
season. However, Terrell
Davis could be back riext
week at Miami.

Karen's Greenhouse
&amp; Country Gardea Center

50447 SR 124 • Racine, OH

949-2682

• Wreaths • Gift Selection
·Trees • 2 Floors of Crafts
• Grave Blankets
Several In-house Speclalsl
Door Prius Dallyl
Brln9 vo~1r ccrmoanv

YEAR
2001-2000
1999-1998
1997-1996
1995-1994
1993-older

RATE
6.99%
7.49%
7.99%
8.99%
10.99%

TERM
60 mos.
54 mos.
48 mos.
42 mos.
36 mos.

APR
7.17%*
7.69%** '
8.28%*** .
9.32%**** '
11 .57%*****

~ t-.:1 en rNnmtln lol!n a'YIO.I'II d sao.ooo fer • ttrm c1 eo IY'ICI'Ih.II'ICII'IIttf pl'f!'!enl11'n01.1'11 woJd bt S3e7.eo Wll1

Sedan

· 950*
• Automatic
, Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

~2,450* · ~2,950* ~3,550*
• Pow. Windows, Loeb, Mlrrora
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
Cruln Control, Tilt Steering .

• ~malic, Air Conditioning
• Power Sea~ Windows, Locks
• CD System, TIH &amp; Cruise

Automatic, Air Con&lt;lllonlng
Power Windows, Loeb, CD SyL
Alum. Whlela, Tilt &amp; Cruln

qa,150* ql,B50*

• Power Sell, Wlndowl, Loeb
• Alumln11n Whllla, CD Syan
• Crulu Control, Tilt Steering

• Power Seat, Windows, Loeb
CD Syatem, Aluminum Whlllill
Tilt Steering, Crvltt Control

• TBJao, Tags, Tnle Feas e~ra. Rebate inclooed In sale price ol now vehlcletlsled •l;-~ aapllca~a. "Oil approved credit. On ..rected mod81s, Not responsible tor typographlcalenors.
Prices Good November 23!d 11uo\)gh Novembe! 251!\.

....

. CHIYROLil

WI'U.II,_.

Sulek
It's all

@

gocXJ

&lt;2&gt; Oldsmobile,
. . . . . OUIMCDOCI0'

, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And, Custom Van Dealer.
Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
CLOSED THANKSGIVING
- 8 pm
Sunday 1

I

t

�-

. rr--._)

.'

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Nov. 23, 20o1

r•:. Frld8y, Nov. 23, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

. Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~·

FROM ALL OF US

Middleport "The. hristmas Village"
Sunday, N
her 25, 20001
1:00 p.m. .4:00 p.m.

Antiques &amp; Gifts

-Christmas Parade- Satur
. December 1, 20016:00 p.m.
- Candlelight Servi"'_
. _.,., f'on the T" 6:30 p.m:
- Santa at Peo
Bani&lt; 7:00 p.m.
•

220 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio '

Holiday Shoppingl
• Breakfast All Day!
• Home Cooked Meals
• Fresh Ground Coffee ...;w.....,.
• Homemade Desserts

'

••

740~992~9115

-shirts 5 12 ea. or 2 for

OPEN

HOUSE

• Alpine Trees On Sale ·
• Selected Fall items On Sale
• New Christmas Decorations
&amp;. Ornaments In stock!
• Berry Garland

Sunaay 1-4pm

Stop in anJ sample our Aspen SpKeJ
Drink Juring MitJJkport's Open House
SunJay 1-4 p.m.

25%0FF

992~5205

'

II.J-

I

NOVEMBER
1·4PM

• Stop In and register for prize
drawings!
• Always free Parking!
• Layaways Welcome
•In-Store Specials...

;~
~
....
~
~·:

-.

InGELS.

•Clothes • Nurse Uniforms
• Levi's • Carhartt
• Belts • Boots • Knives ·

CARPET

The gift of gab for life.

Happy Holidays!

Unlimited nlvht and weekend minutes, 400
anytime minutes and Nationwide Lonv
Distance for only $39.99 a month. For life.

•

t"t·"wo""

North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

PAJN'fBAJ,I.
. S1JPPIJES

$7l.llll

Eyee

Noklo 51M auggeoted .... n pr1ce

-$10.00 , Moll~n oervlce - ·
$0 FREE Your price alter rebate
(Credit check, octlvatlon lee, ·~d ealoo lax oppty)

• BrL:Ial SUppb~

PLUS got on -ltlonal $351n uvtngo When AUT
$38.111 monlhly
400

• Balloons

Middleport Flower Shop
"For All Your Gift Giving Needs"
&lt;d Hol/aay centerpieces
&lt;d Christmas Amrngememt.sJ
&lt;d G{ft Blls/cets
,..,.,.,.,
&lt;d Snaclc Bllslcets
&lt;d

•

740-992-7713

• 99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio ·
(740) 992..0~8

Free• Layaway

93 Mill Street

wireleu HMce agr~n1 and calling plan brochure All alrtime it billed In full
minute lncremen1s and carmot be carried over 10 any month. Unlimlt.ct nlghtl and
anyt!me mlnutea\8-nd nationwide long distance available u long as you
ntmaln on the same ell lbleAT&amp;T.

Middleport, Ohio

Selectables

992.0538

Mon - Sot

H'o oil

I AT&amp;T Wireless. All Rights Reserved. New activation, credft approval, $35
lvation fee, annual contract a cancellation lee and a Digital mufti-network phone
irwd. 2-year agreement required to quajify tor certain benefitt. Subject to tennt

39239 Bradbury Rd.

Saoalfa'• l'kc a Safety
Mlddlcpon a GaUipoU.
ToBI'nca8GO-.J5.J-0837

Come in Juring MiJJ/eport's
Open House for refoshments!

v- contnoct.
..y~~me

·SI;uff~ Animals

Hours: 6 am - 8 pm
7daysaweek

• Crsf'l; Suppb~

WI-. wol- your IICII-n lee with o olgnod two -

up for on ATIT
IIICI

Coaae 1ee • d111'1n1
OPEN ROUSE

see us during

OPEN HOUSE

pelntb.a.•coa •••e•accaeeod-

Sue~

Up toS11 SIn total lllvtnp ....._ o lwo-,.ar 011 ""Nnl.

• Expanded dining area
• Dally
• Desserts

.'

' 137-C N. Second • Middleport,

992-6376

1-5

740-992-o459

Dan's Your Christmas.I
~hopping Headquarters
For lhe Whole family

OFFICE 'SERVICE &amp; SUPPLY
0

~un

Jewelry &amp; Fl•ll• Avallllble

· ALL Atnsoam
Holltlsy D800ratlone &amp; Gtfte

I

10-5

(Req. $16.00)
Also 10% discount on all ticketed Items!

Cemetery Arrangements

Nnu Owner. - RA.y ff MAndy Redman ·

145

N. Seco;H

992-3533

Ohio ·Rifer Bear
Check out our newest
limited editions
including
•Nippy• - Snowman 2001
&amp; ·uncle Sam 2001•

We also have the latest in
Gund &amp; Russ available
253 N. Second Ave.

Middleport, nhr,

• Holiday Giveaway

.,. STOP BY .FOR REFRESHMENTS
AND DOOR PRIZES!
.

5L,EPat~.§~
• l-lolidlly C:uds
• Papllt Goods

~""9' Now;..~r&amp;t -·.

INGEI:S
·
106 N. 2nd Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
(740) 992-263~

• Mugs

Financing &amp; Layaway Avariable

992-4055 .
,.·

·--

0601 2001 TW . Total dllmond ......... 114 CT. TW r-.1• .23 10 .21 lW.

�Fnda~No~23,2001

P-e- B 8 • The o.tly Sentlnei~-----------P.ioll.mellri.io.iiy,IIIMII.Idiildillleiliipo~rt,i.Oi.h•lo~--~------~

ij!;ribune - Sentinel - 1\e
CLASSIFIED

•. --.od,- What would Pitt-West Virginia
1M Eril*nr Spon, 4.0 V·

.. oonrool. 60.000 . - .
Mpl. 117.000, (740)
~181 or 5tl-lt75.

We Cove

111118 Explorer Spon, •.0 VI,. toeded......... ad, pow-

er tunroof, 50,000 mlas,
gorogo koP-117.000, (740) .
1149-0101 Q( 5t1-lt75.
11109 Rod ZR2' S10, •••.
miiM. Fully Aulamalic. CruiM.
Air,
(740)379-2'788

eo.ooo

co:

In one week With us

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
.

AU. STEEL BULDING,
40x26was $7,780, now

l\egister

$3.910. 1·800-292-oi".

(304) 675-1333

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE Aii AD.
~~!!ut.~

Successful Ads
These Items

\'\.111 '\1 I \II \.I"

r

I'ERsoNAis

O.lly Jn•Column : 1:00 p.m.
Mondl't·frlelay tor Insertion

All Display: 12 NOon 2
Business Days Prior To

,..._.tMfltlhl•.._t'llfiOI.Ot~MfiiiiMiftY ....

frvmU.publl " noromiRianofMIIIIuatkasswi&amp;.
rMe oenl appl.... • AI ,_. ...... 4ildua I
; .. n

f' t

bed skilled nursing IICility. emervencv Hrvico. senior
Excelktnl opportunity for the cUiztnt dlscounl. 22yrs.
rlgh1 cand~181o wort&lt; with o&gt;q&gt;. (304)576-2085

r'-------rlI
-ng

ar-----;;.o.,
r
I

I

i

Vol:;:!':

YARD SALE

I
I.

:=:::::::=:::·
YARDS\u;-

GAUJPOUS

lered. Send resume to:
POBox887
Jackson, OH 45640.

t.o-ooiiiiiiiirriiiii._.. _.....;....;_..;...;_.,..;..;.__

Goiilpoiis, OH.
URGENTLY

NEEDED-

p1aama r1onors.
$50 10
$60
r week :rm2 or 3
hou:Sweeki

Call Sera-

7.40-592~1

1l

ec.

.

Work From Home. Free
•
Noed o rallable, raopon~bll Bookle1. 1-80().653-7293.
Moving Sate. In Side, 540 mature parson with maiU3rd Ave., Sat. 24th. 9- 7
nance · &amp;Kperkmce, Part-~1411
.
Bui'INm;
time. Retirees welcome.
TltAINING
AUCI'ION AND
COntact 1-800-319-3718 OJ
1 . FU.A MARKEr • (3,04)522-7020.
Dwlrbrook Center 18 cur Ollllpollaear- Collte
Rlclc p
Aucilon Com·
· . • (C.raers C - To Home)
UC1- ron11y accopting appilea1ionl Cali Today! 74().448.4367,
sarvico:
UcenaadH8,0hlo&amp; Weellhlh LPN. PleaH contact
Virginia, 304·773-6785 Or Krll1le
more ln-lllV M~' ··-~
304-n3•5447 · .
formation or 110P Ill' our •
••.JSCFI.LANWUS •
m
llron1 olllct lor an IPPfiCI·
.
ni\NIID
tlon. E.O.E.
.
10 BuY
•
Free repon, •hoY! you hOw
L.llio_____ Per Diem LPN•o needed lor to ractlvo unUmhed gold
private mrty home care cas- and ailver COins. Cell toll
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s: 88. Flexlbl"e aohedule and lree, 1-877-526-6957 i.D.
Silver, Cloid Coins, , Prool axcellom pay Fill out oppll· tM3392.
•
seta, Diamonds, Gold cation at Pl~asant Valley
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· Home Heetth Services Good or Bad Credn Even
IA.T.S. Coin Shop, 1 ~
1011 Viand St Pt. Pieasom: Bankrup1cy, cau TOll Free
~~ue, Galllpol
WV 25550, or call (304)675- 24 hnl .. HI811-428-83V3.
7400 or 1-800-748-0076 for
WANIID
I \ 11.'1 l I~ \II ' I
moral""'"'-. MIEOE
To Do
'-I I \ I I I -.
·
---·
Overbrook Center, 333

::S::..

~ate auctl~

:c,a:~=~~~=~i.':
-Ia&lt;

r

m:

I'll

I

110

lbl.rWANIUJ
1
...__ _ _ _ _ _...
~

Full and Part limo Help
Needed. Chevron/ LIUio
Johns 118 located In WJI.o
keaville. Apply 1n Person.
Mon- Fri., 9am- 3pm.
-----'---::-Help wanted cal1ng tor the
alderty, Darat Group Horne,
now paying mlnimllm wage,
shii1JI· 7am-3pm 7am.
~ 3tXn-u m '11 m
7 • r:all 40-~ !o:!a P •
am,
•
·
Atttntlonl
Earn 2nd Income wflhoul
2fMi job up to
S25.·S75ftlr. P1-Ft
1-800-218-7543
_... Money·Dreama com
·
•
·
--::---,:--,-:-:;-

7

2

Page S1reat, Middleport, Oh
II currently aoceptitg aQPifcatlono 1o&lt; 111 upcoming
nursing oulstanl clua
whicll wli bogn on
bor 3rd and will run 1hroutil1
December 1•th. Appttcalions will be accepled
ttwough November 29,
2001 . Pieuo o1op by our
fronl office for en application
or oontact l&lt;rtatie Madden ..
(140) 992~72 lor rnor.ln1o lion EO E
rma
· • · ·
Part time Church Soc-r;
PoBitlon. Good People Ski"'
and Computer Expertise
20 Hra (740)446·
7926 .
.

red Bene'
ftta. For ·~· sa..ry end
teatlng intomlation call,
c : 3 7 : : : s old. 7151

No exp. rvqui

~llbll on • IIQUII
-unity b1ML

riO

' Nice bl·
For sale N' owner:
level ho;~ on 1 acre near
Chtiater. Three bedroom,
two baths one-car garage
•
•
'
lamHy room wl1n 11replace,
sun room. New cenlral heat·
ing &amp; ale system. One ml·
nute oil Route 7, buUIIII privale. (740)985-3981
.
4 bedroom Cape Cod wit!
garage on level 1 acre lol
with 1reae, Eao1ern Local
School, cia, c/haa1. lull
balarnon~ Tuppers Plains
water, near Cheater on
Slate Route ~· clean &amp; well
maintained, ( 40)IIII5-433S
Newly conotnrcted, single
stor; 1600 sq. foot home.
Locatad 10 mlnu111 from
Holzer Hoapi1al, 20 mlnu188
lrom Pleasant Valley Hoapi·
tal, oil SR 160 on a privale
1·112 acre lot 3 bedroom,
2·112 baths, big kitche~
w/oak cablno1a, DR, L
log fireplace central
I t nd
lron1
a r. h au ~ ' : , ' ra

wl-•

2 12

m

s

remodelng roaring bath
.,..,. dr;Wall
paln1lrig trim
win·
Fi.. EatimaiM.
(304)875-n38

ln1erlor
door.

All Make KeroMne Heatera
and Forctd AI Heaters Aer
paired. Srnatl Engine Aepair. Free PICk-Up and DeNvor; Available. Over 20
yoonr ~· Cal Mike
(740)4-4&amp;-7104
.
Family
MarVHandyman
preasure washing yard
maintenance clean up
eel... .
Fre8 EstimateS
(304)n3-5564 Ask lor Don

WANTED: E.wperlenced
Roofing &amp; Carpan1er FCK.. Georges Portable Sawmill
man'a, valld ·driv«'olicense,
haul your logs 10 1~
hind 10ola, ..rfable trans- mill just cali304-675-1957.
~~ ~~ Top To Bonom Cleaners
~u · 1 rl ht ' 8 • prolessiOnal and atforda~
ent pay or g person, ble home! 'offlce!l rentals
onul88, vacation. Apply 81
' tructl ' and reinodeli '
Chrlatlan'a E Cons~ctlon, =~ng ~40)992·139, ~
~i~~(7:;::.4~~UO, (740)992·2979

r

:0.:

1

IAC!uded. Ed at Country Homes, 740- 200 amp elecWtc
992·2117.

1

5

month, (814)878-1881

Now 2002 14 wide only
$799 dOWn &amp; $156.38/mo,
Call Nikki, (740)385-7871 .
.
New Double Wide. $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2
Bath. Frao Delivery &amp; Sat·
up. 1-868-928-3426

"""* 11CJ.

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.

1

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Cell Janet! C811 Ill Century
50 East Atttena Oh
21 Homes &amp; Land ~cellular 74o~592-1972'
I
'
1 (304)834-2596
Office
·
1.60Q.731·9011).
End ol the model year salel
AH 2001 must go, to make
3 Bedroom on Route 2, room lor 2002. Speci11 low
(304)675-5332
financing program available.
Only at Fleetwood Homes
3 bedroom, 1 bath with of Proclorvllle. Totl Free 1large IMngroom, new gao 868-S65-0I67
appliances and ale, upstairs
completely
renovated,
$37,500 (740)992-4485.
Nice 28&gt;&lt;60 Double Wide
setting cln rented lot In
Poinl Pleasant area. 2•6
8~6 Main Street, Pt Pi. walla, thermal pane win·
~etely Refurl:llahtd. ~ dowl. priced to sale. Call
story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed· (304)675·3689 ask tor
rooms. Large Kllchen, Rosamar;.
LaFrgell U1Rillty RoomN • LCRI DA/1
OAKWOOD HOMES
am Y m. ew arpe
lhroughout. F/A &amp; AJC,
SUPER CENTER.
$79.900. (740)448-9585 or Ovar 40
chooa
(740)448-2205 or (740)448· from. Drive a little aave a
2883.
loU Oakwood Homes ol
House For Sale
Nttro. (304)75S-5SS5
6 Room House In Pt. PleasREduCED
ant on 2 lots Fenced In All Double Wiele Displays
Yard
S29
Call mull go Only $995 down .
(304)675-6188 and leave Only at Oakwood Hornet of
message.
Nitro. (304)755-5885

or

-to

Ooo

r16

Hotars

1

I

Stove, Ritlt1gerator, CJA,
S&amp;orage Building, Water,
Sewage, Trash Paid.
to Wai-Mir1; No Pe111. DeP.sll. (740)245-6693

FOR lbNr
15 Court Street 2 Bod·
1 112 ba~ KitChen
wlth stove and refrigerator
Ott Street Pal1d'1; Close 1
•
Schools and ' owntown
Are~. $5951 mo~th plus deposr1 and Aoltrence. No
Pets. (740)448-4926
·
213 br. House In New Ha·
van. Slore within walking
distance. $350 month +
S2CO. Depaoli. (304)882·
3652

c-

rooma.

:rara Townhouse Apart•
menta, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms. 2, Floors, CA. 1
112 Bath, Fully Carpotod,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Patio, Sllrt $3651Mo. No Pets,
Leaao Piua SOcurilj Deposit
Required Oap: 740•446 •
3481 . E~onlnga· 740•387•
0502• 7
01
'
·
Twin River Towers now accapting appliCations lor
1BR: HUD subakllzed apt.
lor elderly and disabled.
2br. House 2424 Monroe
EOH.
Ava. $325 month+ Deposll.
(304)875.fl679.
(304)895-3815
3 BR In Midcllep0r1.
Call (7.-0)446-0855 be- ., &amp; 2 BA Economical Gas
tween Sam and 4pm.
Heat, WID Hookup, Near
Hotter, $295 to $379 Per
Why rent? governmenl month, Plus Utilities, Lebe
backed loans from $490 and Deposit Required.
- n. (740)448·3093
(740)448-2957

0

40-148-0;

r

ble Btunawlck Her
Hage a4x8 drop pockal

Pool Tl

S •
•
•
1500. (304)675-5067
R n - " - OWnaN
TaptJOn HI-.CJ 90 pius
gaa furnaces includ5ng 011
and
electric gas fufnacea
Hi Efficiency Heal
·
~
Pumps, featurl~ Tappans
Mlscn.rANEOUi Fraa Incredible wa~anty
MllRctwiDtsl;;
package. ,
., BENNEn S HEATING I
COOLING (740)448-.. 18
1850 Wooden Cedar Orlgl· or 1-8CI0-8?2-58117.
nal Stenciling, 10 h long. www.orvb.comlbenMtt
S150. Other hand forged 5atelllte C band "hhn• dish
-'Controi
tools. (740)992-7869
R
1
1
6wne~~1r~anuel
U
•
•~
1
For Sale Four Tire!, Size pckup. _._ (740
190 70 14. Good Tread $15 -:'2::.:82c:....-::-::--.,...,.-::-::-::=
Each or All for $50. Walt~ino Sl&gt;ocial: 314 200
(740)448-1987
PSI $21 .95 Per ICO; 1' 200
For Sale: Quitting Framea, PSI $37.0Q Per 100; All
$25. flbergla81 Truck Top- Brase Compresal(lf'l Fittings
per 91• long x 60" wide, In Stock.
$50. 5 Drawer Legal File RON EVANS ENTSRPRISCabinet, $50. (740)256- ES Jackson, Ohio, 1-8001529
1537·9528

r

IH\ \.'1 1'111 \l\ll!l'\

I

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C

)448-

Per Hour

Ohio

ENVIRONMENT
1-888-974-JOBS

Auros

.. t966 Sll~erado 4x4, New
' Goodwrench motor $5295.
1• 1988 Cherokee 52495.
:, 1989 Chevy truck. V·8 Ay1o.
~ $2650. 1996 Chevy Truc k,
· C· 2500, $5995. COOK
MOTORS. (740)448·0103

!, 0365 .

:·; =199:::.1"Ecl"'l,..~.....,,,:::988=B;;:r:::.,.::..,:::.
'-' 1986 Ranger, 1e&amp;3 Ranger,
"' (740)388-844t ill.. ......
vj sage, will retum call.

Jenlce L Young
Chrilloper T. Wolle
CommiiStonere of
Juro111

,.. 1993 FOrd Explorer, LoadExcellenl C~ndltlon,
Aoklng $6500. (740)448·
2715

,,, 23, 2001

,. ed,

~ Gets 30 mpg, Runa Great.
" PW,
PS, 5 opd 11d.
0011 not
oil, t82K
. ~ milia.
$4500
firm .
(740)4&lt;16-1282

rs.

u•;

·
Whom H lily
Conotm:
On TUeadey, the 4th
dey of December,
2001, 11 8:00 o'clock
t.m., et the office ol
the Commleelonera
of Juroro 111 Mllge
County, Ohio, Jurora
will be publicly drown
for the Januory 2002
:.,.,.,·,. or the Common

To All

45711.

fl eel,

~ 1990 Honda Accorc:l LX,

November 18,2001
.

Pine Court of Hid
County.
Above Jury drawing
will be held et tho
Mtlgf County Board
of Electlone locllld
11 117 E. Memorltl
Drive, Pomerpy, Ohio

· t987 Buick Le5abre, V-6,
1
PS, PB. PW, Pl, low Miles,
Front Wheel Drive, Air Con·
dltion. Prlca ~educed, Good
Goa Mlltaga. (740)446-

1990 GEO, as~ing. 5600
• 080, (740)992·0396.

or

$6-$8

roRS.W:

., 19118 Grand Marquis, LOacf.
Excellent Condition,
t.: 74,701 miles. $2500 OBO
1 (740)245·5408

Oflloe ol

Commlell"'**
Jurora, r.tttge County,

FuiUPart Time
OFFICE

:;;:==--:--,--

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiquea. 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2528. Russ Moore,
owner.
,
Sues Selectables on the "T"
tn Mkkl1epon. Dolls, glasaware, Aladdin rnanlels, ,and
more. (740)992.()298

Revllld Code,
SIC. 2313.20

HIRING

e.:..

I

NOTICI! OF
DRAWING JURORS

NOW

4o

6 4G

SALE

Help Wanted

I$r~~~:·

j

I

Pri.estley has responded by throwing
for nine touchdowns and no interceptions during a three-game winning
streak against Temple, Virginia Tech and
Rutgers, and the Panthers average 220
yards passing per game.
Playing at West Virginia also is a concern to Pitt, even though the game isn't
a sellout.The Mountaineers attracted an
announced crowd of slightly more than
30,000, or les$ than half of Mountaineer
Field's capacity, for last week's upset loss
to Temple.
"It's crazy," Pitt defensive end Bryan
Knight said. " The fans down there are
crazy. It's going to be a really different
atmosphere than what we've played in
before. We just have to be focused, and
we can't let the fans bother us."

Central State making
plans for football's return

:ocou':c/~=

rllooed

tionit

510, MF50, Mower,

- · MF12 baler, 3 ona, log opllllor, dilc., bush
. hog. ole. (304)6754889

"':a

=~gt!,S:..\_!l~ :=C':J~~~oa,

r•o

!long

I

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r

ter.

plays when they needed them just like
they have all season," Northwestern
defensive end Napolean Harris said.
Northwestern threatened Illinois late in
the game with two touchdown passes
from Kustok, and had a chance with the
ball on its own 12 with 2: 18 remaining.
.However, the Wildcats failed to get a
first down, missing on four-straight pass
plays, and Illinois ran out the clock.
It was the iixth-straight loss of the season for the Wildcats.
"It was disappointing. We gave ourc
selves a chance to'win in the fourth quarter. Illinois made the plays that champions
make;' coach Randy Walker said.
·
Kustok was 19-of-41 for 266 yards
with four touchdown and one interception. Torri Stuckey ran for 122 yards on
20 carries.
Neither team had much success stopping the other in the fii:st half.
Illinois drove to the Northwestern 7 on
its first possession, but turned the ball
over when Rocky Harvey fumbled.
The Illini opened the scoring on Peter
Christofilakos' 34-yard field goal, and
made it 10-0 on Kittner's 10-yard ID
pass to Brian Hodges.
Kittner completed 12 straight pa&gt;
attempts at one point in the first half an•
was rarely pressured by the Northwester·
defe nse.

$125; kHchon cablno1,
white • $90·' ·-all
-~-~
~..
.._
TraRer space fpr rent, $120 wan:kobe, $30; (740}992PI&lt; month, in Mlnen~vllle; 5503.
:OOc:llngftoff ~.bu$1 ~f 0· peal~ ~A---'-:---::-:-:--:-bol-::-,-m

· 14•70, 3 bodloom,· 2
New
bath. Only $995 down &amp;
$189.82/montn. Call Chor;1.
740-3116·7871.

taineers also worry Harris because of
their spreod offense, a system West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez is credited
with developing. South Florida
employed the spread offense in upsetting Pitt 35-26 in the second week of
the season .
Pitt also began the season using a no~
huddle, spread offense, but Harris discarded if after a 1-5 start and went back
to a pro-style offense that seems to fit
quarterback David Priestley much bet-

No. 10 Ulini earns share of Big ten title

I=

"-·a:

,.!:,

AI Oakwood In Bart&gt;ouroviUe, WV 304-736-3409.
·
New 14 Wkfo, 3 Badrrxrm.
Only $19,85(1 Free Delivery
&amp; Sat Up. l ·fi88.1128-2G

l:r"J:r..;:.e~.'::l':lact~
:J3 . 7

1 6

.

best guy named Bryant on the field Saturday. Most definitely."
The "other" Bryant had six catches
for 148 yards and a touchdown a year
ago as Pitt opened up a 38-9 lead over
West Virginia before settling for a 38-28
victory following consecutive blowout
losses to the Mountaineen in 1998 and
1999.
And Bryant - Antonio Bryant, that is
- has come on strong recently with 10
catches and five touchdowns in two
games following a slow start caused in
part by a sprained arikle.
No matter, Pittsburgh .coach Walt
Harris conceded that throwing against
ihe Mountaineers will be a problem
because of their strong secondary, led by
safeties Shawn Hackett and Rick Sherrod.
West Virginia's pass defense is good,
holding five teams to fewer than 100
yards passing and averaging a nation's
best 122.2 yards per game allowed. One
reason, though, is the Mountaineers'
rushing defense is soo bad, giving up
216.7 yards per game and more than
four yards per carry.
"But their defense has always been
tough, and I love their safeties," Harris
said.
..
Despite their record, the Moun-

r

I

I

AE COnltructlon

don,

HOI\ES
POll SALE

PITTSBURGH (AP) - The crowd
in Morgantown won't be nearly as big
as those for most Pitt- West Virginia
games. With both teams owning losing
records, and students away for the holiday, this isn't one of the more compelling matchups in the rivalry known
as the Backyard Brawl.
Still, it wouldn't be a Pitt7 West Virginia game if the1"' wasn't verbal s~ar­
ring emanating from the two campuses,
separated by 70 miles of interstate highway and more than 100 years of notalways friendly competition.
This time, it took West Virginia cornerback Richard Bryant to get the
attention of the Panthers (4-5), who
could get back to . 500 by beating West
Virginia (3-7) Saturday and stretching
their current winning streak to four
games. ·
Asked about his possible matchup
with Pitt star· receiver Antonio Bryant,
Richard Bryant brushed off the other
Bryant's All-American honors and
Biletnikoff award from a year ago as if
he were a freshman who had never
caught a pass in a college game.
"I don't know anything about the
guy," Richard Bryilnt said. ''I'll have· to
wait until I watch some fum and get
back to you. All I know is, I'll be the
.

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

Umlted Or No Credit? Govemment Bank Finance Only

thla nunpsp-r.,.

I

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er11.

R~~~4il
5
.;.

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Final Daya, ~~
vantor;
Redoc1 n
7
(304) 31Hl409

I

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-.,.ln-lllo1111
11111 ' - - In
-

I

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urdly.
-nlcal EngiVoroatHe In Plumbing and
HVAC. Beneli11 package ol·

1B1 time buyers· Govern·
menl loans- buy loans &amp;
sale- (740)446-3093 Oak·
wood SUpon:onblr

rivalry be without verbal sparring?

4

2218 ·

Haroy Mums $3.00-.
Elegant ~ or 3 bedroom 1 Bedroom Apanmenta, for $10..Open S.t 8·5pm. &amp;
- · 299 ....-.y, Pom- $269 month. Depooi1 &amp; Ref· IIYW1ingo. Oowhursl oroy, no peta, (740)992· ororfce. HUD Approved. houoa Mt. Alto. (304)111155858.
(140)4'1-1519
37.40 leave me age. or
(304\aas3789
Houle lor Ront: 3 BR, 1 1br. Ver; Clean, AYIIilable '=;~,...;;;~';;;i;ijj;[i;
1111h, $500{ month plus "!1~ Doc. 1a1. Now taking Appil· lndoptnden1 - · 011111oo and Dopoolt (740)2-· cailons. (304)87H875
tributor. caH F&lt;K Product Or
9020
•~ •~ in~-~-·- Ollt&gt;ortunlty. (740)441-1982
2 ~-~~...,.,.
.._.n... ...Pilot Program, Renters ry, appliances fumlahed.
JET
- · 304-738-7295.
uiiiRioo paid okcepf oiac1rlc,
AERATION MOTORS
·
clean, $2851 month call Ropalred, Now &amp; Rebulh In
Moalu:Jbmi (740)258-1135after5:00. Slack. Call Ron Evano, 1·
FORJbNr
800-537•9528
1
Var; nice, 2·3 bedroom
·
apartment, In town. large
2 •·•
15001
Rol
iii'Uroom, new ca•.,..... , kitchen, LA,
mo.
• 2 apace~ a,t lh8 Memory
ccwered pa11Q, wid hookup, orencea &amp; dopool1 reQUired. Gardeno (Woman al 1IMt
no poll, (740)992·2167.
(740)448 31144
Well), 1375. Cell (740)44828:.:9c:_
3 _ _ _ _ __
Beau11tul ·River View Ideal
F
Or a...-... A----01'1":
or 1 2 • _,....., •• ..-... ,. ~
FOR RENT
2 Wheel Small UtiHty Traii::';"'T~
p~'t
:WHa~~ ~
0181.
Nice loll, qulo1 oou~!"' • with
Altorotlon,
$200.
tlng, will aocomn~ e (304)675-2315 .
Rolrig- 18k60, $100 par month, 01111

9948 .

28•6030r4Bodroom,Only 5346.00 Per Month
8.99% Fixed ln1erao1 Aa1t,
1---928-3426

-?

1 and 2 bodroom apart· Grubb'l Plano- Tuning I
rnen18. luml- and unlur· Ropalra.
~
nlshod, ..,r11y dopooi1 ro- Tuned? Clll Tllo Plano ;
qulred, no pets, 740-992· 7~

Buy-'"""$1118/mo.,
ForooiolurM, 4% dOWn, 30
yoaraa18.5%APA. F&lt;Kiiot·
lngs 1-800-319-3323 ext
1709.

198~ Mansion 14K70, 3
bedroom excetlenl condilion, call Ka...,., (740)385-

lblo ....,.porwlll not
knowl11f11YIIIIIIOpl
odvortJ--rwoi
·~
Htlte which ltln
'lk*tlonottMJiw.Our

t: "==I

=.

Looe 10 pouncfa· 200
2 t;IR Apt Newly Aemod·
. pounda uoy, qulcic, Fill
oled. Stove, Rol~gora1or
Drarnallc Reaulia. tOO%
Furnished. All, Utilllea Paid.
u--~Natural, Dr. RIC Dill. . . . . .
48 Olive St. 54751 mo.
~
'All&lt; obou1 FREE Slrqlle"
(740)441,3946 .
GoOIJs
(740)441-1982
rooms
and bath Furnish·
Baby bod Cherry Wood
3
Single Paron! Program. ed Efflole
' Ali Utill11es Appliances: Aeoondl11ooed Complete $75. c._ Ploy·
Eaay Financing Available. Paid, Dow";!'o1olra, $2851 Waoher8, Dryots, Ranges, pen 120. c._ -*111
(304)755-7191
nth. 819 2nd Ave. Rel~gra1ors, Up To 90 Oap Highchair, 140. (740)992·
·
.
Guaranleedl We Sal New
3945
3452
Lors &amp;
(7 )448Moy1ag Appliances Franch =-"=--c::----:--::--A
BIAUTIPUL
APART· City May1a11, 740-44e-n95. Baa1181 Record Albums.
1
~
CIIEAGE
• MINTS AT BUDGET PR~
~· Prica, 175. Call
Cll AT JACKSON El- For Sale: RecondHioned (7411)682 78114
4 acres, 1 mile off' li,1 7 on TATES, 52 W081Wo0d Drive washers, dr;oro and rel~g. Bea1fal Sea~ Bea1180 1884
Eagle Ridge Rd ., u1111Uoa from S2971o $383. Walk lo orators. Thourpoorra Appll• Coto~ng
ond ole!
avalable and d~veway ohop &amp; movies. can 740· arrca. 3407 Jacfclon Avo· Bea11H Trading •Cordi $115
there, $20,000 Firm, call 448·2588. Equal Housing nuo, (304)875-7388.
lolail Call (740)882
(740)fl92.5820 after6pm.
Ollt&gt;ortunity.
Hot point Waaher $95
.
•
9
$18000 Cluioiy'o Family Living, Whl~pooi 01::, $Q5.
Brother ~ ~·
acres,
' •
33140 Now umo Ad Rul· R.....__._ 95 H01 point wl1h oolor Ink Je1 Pnm..
Po1rto1
and
Northup.
..
. • ..,..._,
.
Never I&gt;Hn uoed S7S.
(740)3711-9257
land, Ohio, 740-742-7403. Elect. Range, $95. Whlrt· 080 (304)675-6515.
Apor1monl, horne and lraler pool Refrigerator. Uko Now, "-"-"c:..;:'-"-'-'-~-Fmmad~ ~
For Sale: 60 acnt1 on lhe ronllll. Commero1a1 aiOre- $175. Fruzor. Up~gh~ F - f&lt;K 125 tor
raised 11 125.500._i.4ako dud end ol Hyooli Run Ironia . . , _ lor - · $125. Skaggo Appflonces, milled a trucf&lt;load, pint fire~Her. Call (?40)446-1514 Road, """'11on1 hunting VIelma.-.
78 vtne ST. (740)448-7398 wood lor $16 a 1rucldoacl,
from 8· 5pm. M·F. or
Fumillhod Apt. 3
ond Moilohon Corpat, 202 Clerk
&amp; -Fllnl Flnonclal has been (740)448-3248 ahor 5pm.
already there 570 000 Call bath pluo
Down· Chapel Road, Port&amp;r, Ohio. na, (7 )
.
providing email buslneso
'
Claon. Rtfarenco (740)448·7..4 t-6n-830·
4 .00pm
1 40)992• 'olliro,
loans lor 13 years. Now we River view. 5.9, ale, In· 11
and Dopooil Roqulred. No 9162. Fret Eatlmates, Eaoy NEW AND USED FUfl.
specialize In personal, car &amp; ground pool, 4 Sr., flnllhec1
.
Petl or emokera: (7~)448- financl 90 clays same u NANCE$ FOR IM.EI Wt
debt conaolldation. We basement, 2 tlrepl.aces, Indian Creek Eatatn, 3-e 1519
caah ~aal Master Card. lnatall, F'" Elllmllel, If
guarantee quality service huge Lr., (740)982·2943
acre lola, west of Ala
Dhve. a- lltlla save alol
you dont Call ua, WI bOth
from a trusted name. Call Well- Maintained Brick Grande, from $25,800. Gracious living. 1 and 2
LOon! (740)448-8308, 1·
Flint Financial Servlcae, ap- R neh 3 Bedrooms 2 112 ( 740)245-5747 .
bedroom apartmonte at Vii· New and Uoed Furniture B00-29HJ0911.
pllcatlona
hotllne
(1- 8
•
'
lage Manor and Rlvel'llde Store betow Holiday IM
888)388-()895
Baths 1" ~u.:,; ~~~~bo;- Large · comer building Jot Apartmentl In Middleport Kanauga. we Sell grav~ NEW AND USED STEEL
0
hood. 174
•
with 205' Ohio River front- From $278-$348. Call 740- monuments and vaaea. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Need Financial Help? Risk see.
·
age, elevation Shot, aur- 992·5064. Equal Housing Hours: Monday thru Satur- For Concrel:e, Ang&amp;e, Chanf,.. opportunlij, look no fur·
M
lb.ml veyed, appraised, serious Opl)onunl1fal.
day 11am-3pm. (740)448- nol, Fil1 Bar, Stool Grating
ttler, our financial institution
OBILEC~....
inquiries only, $40,000
A
4782
For Drains, Ortvewaya &amp;
provldea you with assis·
FOR""""
. (304)882·3738 before li~Jm. Mlddilporl· North 4111 ve..
Walkwal'l. Now 56 Gallon
IIIICO &amp; Information Free
.
4 room fum- openrnant,
SPolmNG
Drum• With Lid &amp; Ring,
conoui1a1ion, call new at 14•70 Clayton Trailer. 2.5
no
· GoOIJs
Bn-304-30t 1.
Acres, 32x40 Newt.:rage. WeDo111Huny0nly10Lota
'
.
--ev~ &amp; F~
TURNED OOWN ON
Scenic
View
11a1ea. Left, 304-736-7295.
Now Takl~~atlont- Remington 870 Exprau, 12 4:30pm.
rJ'uroday,
36 Wao1 2
SOCIAL SECURITY IS8t? &lt;3041576 ' 2635
Town- - · 26' vanl, rib i&gt;lfral S.turday
&amp;
Sunday.
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
Melga Mlmor; Gardens, 2 Apartmonll, Includes with acrow·ln choke $200· (740)448-7300
t -88S-5&amp;2-334 5
Amazing Firat Tlme Home Iota in Chrlltus 88Ction at Water
Sewage, Trash,. Remington 1187 12 'gauge'
Buyers.
Govemment base of statue, $450, $3!01Mo., 740 He 0008.
II ba 1 t 11 ~ad ~ New Woikl F.amoua Tntad. ·
Backed loans. No credit (740)892-7887.
ol
~~~ 17 1742• miU, $100. CaJi (740)992·
needed.
(304)755-5586
Pomeroy, Nay\Dra Run, 2 or
'
•
3452 It no enswer feave
Hmm
Limited Offer
Nice
4 8CI'8 tract ' nMi' 3 br. apartment, wld·hu,llr, 8200
mauage. l
.
GailipoHs· oaoy torma, &amp;OCurlty dopooi1, roloroncea, A
M 'n
llba
243
FOR
Assumable loans- Many (740~583
call (740)182-8886.
~~er 2
ld
c:nlll~ Original Army c8mofta\IQI,
types available Call for de.
w
x
o en
Sa1tllltes Still and HMcl,
10.5 Acres whh 1999 Fleet· tails. (740)448·3583.
~~r~":,!J,:· ~"1 ~ =ng"=:.!:":.~7 ~ ~oo~: conditioh, lns1111111on 59.00 a month.
wood Moduter Home Near Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 A-Et/204., $300 . . Contect. Hud Subaldlza Apt. lor 1IHi
100 CNonntil. By S.m
Gallipolis. Excellent COndl· bath, save $5,155, delivered Mar;·AIICI (60!1)78&amp;84113
elderiy &amp; dleabled. EOH.
··~- .
SornoMilo- Soargont
lion. Private, Country Sat· &amp; 881 up on your io1includ·
(304)882·3121
~,.....,..,
USA Air'""" Attired. By
ling Stocked
PQnd
Addl· Is~g ~~~~Mobile
kl I
&amp; llbO
I
SOndyviilo WV Poll
7.5 Acres
Available.
.:na:,
Taldng Applications, 2 Bfl,
.
(304)273-6655
. 0111ca.

auto.

p:;a:.:

ony

-.calor, roflglon,lomllill- or nolianol
origin,., ony lntonllan 111
mokoany IUCh .
ptefllreonce, llmlt8tlon or
dltcrimlnatlon....

''

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t6Wlde. Only$195.00Por
Month, 6.99% Fixed lrOeRate Wllh Air And Un·
derplnnlng t..aa&amp;-928-3426
•·•
1985 Sl&lt;ylne 14x70, 3 ~
room. Good Condition. Coli
Harold, 740-385-9948.

iWir.tltw:e, llmltltion cw
dltcrttrnnatton beNd on

r'O

ON.

r
~
r

""'lcll- ••

e•cop11onal nuralng
team. Excollonl11arting pay, Will HI"' Awav,

C- Out,
-'OM!o- ~ Up
~ or 'Move Almost
oppo&lt;1unl1ift lor ,..,
nal growth and benefits. In- Anything. Taking Consigntereeted candldltH shOuld mtrltt. Call (740)446-7604
apply to: Rocicoprlnga Raha·
bllltalion CoRn1edr, p38759
Rocksprings oa , omer·
oy, Ohio 45789, Equal OpporUtJtv Employer Encour~
aging Woltq)lace Olventlty.
OrPolntJNrn'
~
PART· TIME
INOTICEI
OFFICE POSITION
We hove a parNimo pool• OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
SenUnel ol· lNG CD. recommends that
ANNouNa!MFNis plan. We are part of a large lion open at our
W\11 do business with people
oompany that offers excel- flee In Poi1 .. oy. Thll posf- ,.....
lent career advancement t1on requires computer and you know, and NOT to 96 ~
oppo&lt;1unl1ioo. For in1ar """ malh sklla, mUll enjoy money through the mali unUI
Middle Age Prolesaionai ~ a cover working with people, be you have Investigated the
DWM
for Profesalo- letter lolling ua why you ... able 10 organize your work one~ng.
nal WF, 30·50. Respond the peraon we are looking and be available lor achedwith letter and picture to for along with your I'IIIIUme ullng between the hours ot Start Your Business ToEB7 200 Main Slree1, Point 10 Paul Barker, Cln:uiltion 8,001m and 5:00pm. Man- day... Primo Shopping Cen·
Pleaaant, WV 25550
D l - at Ohio Valley Pub- day thflll9l Friday. For In- 18r Space Available At AI·
--,.-.,.-,.-=-::-- llshing Co 825 Thinl fwe 111Niew consldera11on Hnd lcrdable Rate. Spring Valley
- 1 7 - 2 4 , 2001
Gall~·
45831
.• your ....me and cover 101· Plaza, Call740-446-0101 .
NO Trespaaalng or Hunting
'
.
tar or Attenuon ot Diane Hill,
ol ony kind on 1ho Raymond EASY WOAKI ExCELLENT Ohio Vliiay Publishing Co..
MoNEY
Sml1h Farm.
82•
Third
Ave
Gallipolis,
10
LoAN
P A Y I - on&gt;ducia al Oh"lo •~•t
..
.
Would like to have small
home. Call Toll Free
._.. •
short hair hou8e ;log 1ha11a 1·800-467·5566 Ext. 12170
CREDIT PROBLEMS, Hav·
WORKIAlTENTIOAROUNDNVIOUR lng Financial problems? Is
already houae trained. www.homajobo.oorn/12170
Please call (304)675-3284
Bad credit, no credH, or
Full and Pa~ Time Help
SCHEilULE
bankruptcy the root o1 your
Needed at Citgol Little
$25- $751 hOur, PT/ FT
problema? can .. today:
Johna t4 localed ih Can1a·
All training provided
PREMIER CREDIT RE·
GivEAWAY
~
• nar;. Apply In Pa111Cl11. Mon- www.- o r.com SOURCES 'All tho llnan·
Fri. Bam- 1pm.
- or Cal1
clal kaa.. .,.:,, neect• 1-866Frae puppiea, 8 weolca old,
1-800-848-8492
·~.. • •
.
257
mo1har Is Shophord/Collle H-orkMI
·~·~= ln.
mik wl1h good 1empenomen1, $635 WHkiy Proce..lng 100 WOAKEIIt NEEIIED :::.-. rno&lt;tgagao,
(304)882·3145.
- · Eaoyl No Experi·
cra111. wood
::--::----::---:- once - · Coli 1· l18ml. Malerlai provided. LOANII LOANII LOANIII
Pupploa to giveaway to 600·652·8726 E•t 2070,
To 1480+ wil.
Problem Paying Billa? In
good·
nome.
phone 24Hra.
Free lnrormatlon pkg. 2.. Hr. Debt? Good, Bad, ar no
(740)448·9552
MacH 111 with 5
1.SOI·284-5625
credit Bankruptcy WeiSmell Dog, Snort Haired job .;parlance.
P1aaaant Valley Nursing and coma: Call Toll· frn 1·
Mix breed. (304)675-5702
on llllp8rience. Cali lor Ap- Rehabilitation Center cur· 1188•498-9488 .
polntrnent. Monday· Friday, ron11y hllan opening lor on llcQ._ 1 , . _11101
Wsr AND
16am· 3pm. French City Tool Actfvitill ASBI-L Elcperl· Trying 10 buy a hOme and
FouND
Inc. (740)448-2835
once In Long Term care.,.. banks are rejecting you due
~
porlonca prefarred. Atlt&gt;ly 11 10 bad credH hlotor;'1 we
Mike monoy lor CM-o. Pleasant valloy Hoapltal can nelp you wo pro~do
Femal
Whit Cot ~Avon. Call (740)448· Human Resources. 2520 mo~gageo personal and
Long ~al' Phone (ao:)675:
Valley Or. Pt. Plaaaant, WV email buak- loana with
·~
.
.
McCiure'a Reataurant now 25550. AAIEOE.
good or bad creclt. Approval
1hi"
II 3 •-· ~ lull
I hi 48 h
(886)862
.,ng a ~~~...
or Saioot""""": Fuii·1irne, ben· w1 n
111.
•
11
Loot In Vicinity ol R1 218. par1·11me, pick up Oj)f)lica· - · rolalioJ&lt;parience relet·
58
Collle· Lab Mik. Brown. 1lon It location &amp; bl1ng baci&lt; red. Apply at Ufaotyle Fumi·
l'llof&amp;mONAL
White S1~pe Down Nose. - . . n
9:30am
&amp; ture. No phone cells. Apply
call (740)25H349
tO:OOem, Monday thru Sat· In por11011. 858 3n1 Avenue,
SF.IIYiql!
....,..._

I"' ~:;e It"

AI,...H111o-olng
In lhll naeugpsper II
oubjoctta11MtFolr-1111A.,al1118
h U!Ogolbl

an

iltion 01111 10 boner sarvo
our customerw. We are looklng for s p81"101'1 that has
h~ enetgy loYol, oeif. mo1J.
va1ed and enjoya wor1dng
with people. Mull hoVII dopendablo lranoporta1ion, ba·
ale computer knowledge.
This Ia a full lime aalarled
poolllon and onera al com·
pany benellll Including
heal1h inouronce, vacailon,
pe rsonal dava and 40IK

.,..

,.pan IIIII for no -.thin . . OOIIIoftM . , _

Shl~ey Spears, 3o4- time LPN's neod8&lt;l lor 100 diUonl &amp; remodeling. 24hr

$100 reward lor lho ratum 875·1429.
of stolen pig (yard omaman1), blaok &amp; whl18 fiber·
COME i!IOW
giMa pig _.oomalely 3'
WITH USI
1a11 &amp; 4' .....,, - . , ou1 o1 We are -""'ng our cln:u·

-..

Mall To: Ohio Volley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Golllpolls, OH 4~631

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jnc:ludt A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include PMne Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

limo AN'S and Part AllolyourhomoropaiiO,ad·

yord In Syrocuoo, has a 1o1
of sentimental value belong
to father who recenUy
puoed away, H you hove
any lnformalion plaoM calf
(740)992·5023 or 740-992·
3324.
---.,..,:-::----::-Why wall7 Start muting
Ohio alngln tonight, call toll
free 1·800·788-2623 old
1821.

20 Words 7 Days • Eath Jtem Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tlc:kets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

In Nut Day's Paper
Publication
Sunday In -Column: 1:00 p.m . Sunday Display : 1:00
Thur5day for Sundays
I
For Sundays Paper

I'IAVONIAIAreasiTbBuyorPa~
" ""'""""' lr" """"""' II'" ~
Sell.

Private Party Ads Under $100

Display Ads

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 7

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else can!

Word Ads

Ohio

Pomeroy,

RACO FOOD DRIVE
Racine
For Meigs Coop Parish
11/24/01
8 am to Noon

Public Notice
In tho Court ol
Common Plaaa, Melgo
County, Ohio, Coao
Number 01·CV-Q48,
Eric J. Toylor va.
Luclndl l)tweon, II 11.
O.fendent Lucinda 8.
DII!I&lt;IOn, whole leal

piece or l'ltldenctt II
DEED RECORDS
kn-n 11 3rd I t - t ,
Apartment 12, Rlclne,
Notice It given by
Ohio 45771·1107; but' the
VIllage
or
whoet preeent piece Syrecuee thll e
or
realdence
It hearing and clecltlon
unknown, will take on 1 Petition to
Notice on March U, Ve""" 1 portion ohn
2001, Eric. J. Tl)llor unnelned etl'llllllad
tiled hie Complelnt In by Weller Rouah,
elSe number 01·CV· Anne Roueh, Robert
'11'1, In the ·Court or . E. llyer, end Donne J.
Common Plue, llllge Byer, will be heel on .
County, Ohio, ellegll'fl the 7th . dey ol
thet
l.uclnde
I. Februtry, 2002.
Deweon negligently Dele: November t,
operated her motor 2001
Vlh)Cie ClUeing I
colllalon, I'IIUIIIrig In Sharon
Cotlrlll
lnJurlae end deml(let Cleric
to Plolntlfr lrlo J,
Toylor.
Defendant ~ 23, 30,2001
Lucinda S. Dewopn
) 7, 14, 21, 28,
1
ahell take .notice thll
lhl has twonly·elght _ _ _ _ _ _ __

a.

(28) days to llle In
PubliC Notice
Anower
ro
11111 - - - - - - - - - Complolnt.
NOnCE OF
Ctt) 2, t, If, 23, (12)
DISIOLunDN
7
Dleeolutlon ol
------Cofpondlon
Public Notice
To Whom hilly
---:::::::::::::-::::-NOnCE OF
Nllllce lo he!My given
PENDENCY AND
thtt
linter Con·
PRAYI!ROF
etructlon Ctimplny,
PETITION TO
lno.,
In
Ohio
VACATE A PORTION
CorporaUon, by virtue
OF AN UNNAMEO
ol 1 NIOiutlo.n ol the
STill!IT
oherlholdlre, l(lreld
SOMEnMES KNOWN
to
diiiOIVI
end
AS A PORTION OF
comr.ltltly wind up Ita
CHURCH STREIT
life II, end IIIII a
ON THE SOUTH
oerlllloete to !hat
SIDE OF 7TH
elliot Wtt lllld on
·STREET AND
October 31, 2001, In
BE1WEEN LOTS 24
lht OIIICI · or 1111
A 25 OF
seorllary of ..... ••
BUFFINGTON'S
ADDITION AND THE Columbua, Ohio.
l'hll Harrloon,
DEED RECOOED IN
PI'Hiclent
VOLUME 287, PAGE
207, MEIGS COUNTY

ao

c-: .

11111e. as

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ken lea.1t a limited schedule by 2004.
Marshall is encouraged by the
Marshall is helping lay the
number of times· he's been groundwork for reviving the
asked when football will return football program.
to Central State University in
"We have a lot of male stuWilberforce.
dents who say, 'Hurry up. I
''We have people calling 11.1 all want to play before I graduate.'
the time, 'Will you play football A lot of people are looking &gt;I
in the fall?"' Marshall, the playing and being involved."
·school's sports information · Central State, about 15 miles
director, said in a recent tele- east of Dayton, won NAIA
phone interview.
national championships in
"In the area around us, if you 1990, 1992 and 1995.
say you're from Central Stare,
"Football is really important
the first question out of their to this school," university
mouths is 'When is football spokesman Jim Cleveland said.
coming back."' ·
"The alumni are quite dedicatFootball hasn't been played at cd to (reviving) it. We have a
the · historically black school couple of$ 100,000 pledges and
since 1997 when the National more promised. We're pretty
Associatim1 of Intercoll egiate opti~stic about it."
Athletics suspended the football
Restoring the football proprogram for allowing ineligible gram is part of a general overplayers to participate.
haul at Central State, which has
The Ohio Legislature issued included constructing new
its own suspension in 1997 buildings, rebuilding finances,
when it bailed out the then- increasing enrollment and
enhancing campus life, Clevefinancially troubled ;chool.
A plan to restore football at land said
Central State, which won three
"AU of that took precedent
national championships in the over football," he said. "We feel
1990s, was adopted by the now is the ti~e for football."
school's board of trustees in
School officials stress that priJune.
vate money will pay for the
Under th e pl:on, Ce ntral State effort.
" We don't want anybody to
would have to raise at least $1.5
million in private fund• to field say we are robbing other proa teanl. School officials said that grams at Central S13te in order
if the funding comes through, to start the football program,"
the school could be playing at Marshall said.

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-~---B-8_.•The---DI--1~--~---~----------~----------------PomMU~~~Oh~

Friday, Nov. 23, 2001

'Ibey ~ no shot at the division tide
and already have their lim winning sea!Ofl since 1994 in the bag. But the Bowling G=n Falcons still have a lot to play
fur.
If the Falcons (7-3, 4-3 MAC) beat
Thledo on Friday, they'll have their lim
eight-win season in seven yean and an
outside shot at being the third team liom
the MAC to make a bowl game this season.
More important than that, they'D have
a chance to win bragging rights.
Yes, its rivalry week in northwest
Ohio. This week marks The Game for
Toledo and Bowling Green, and the Fa!cons wiU be iooking to even the score
afterThledo's 51-17 win bst year.
"That's what makes c&lt;illege foothaU
dill'erent than pro football or dilfen!nt
than any other sport," Bowling Green
coach Urban Meyer wd ''The rivalries
are so intense."
"This is the one they want," Meyer
said, referring not on!y to his pla}'en. but
the &amp;ns and the alumni, as welt
Meyer is in his first Y= at Bowling
Green, but he lcnowl a thing llt tWo
about riwlries, having coached at Ohio
State under Earle Bruce.
"One of the greatest coaches I've -r
been aroutid was Earle Bruce," Meyer
said. "And if we wttre playing against a
Big Ten tean4 ·if they .weren't a good
team, we'd M!ost take that win today
and ptactict ag;ililst Michigan."
The importance of the Bowlin8
G~een-Thledo rivalry w.IS reinfurced for
Meyer at a coaches association m~lin8·
Findlay coach Dan Simrell, a friend of
Meyer's, W2lked in and, without saying
anything. started talking r.o Meyer about
the importance of the g:une.
"He didn't even say conptulatioru or
good luck," Meyer wei, "he was abo!Jt
one inch away liom my face and told me
how important that game was."
Rockets (8-1, 5-1 MAC) coach Tom
Amstutz, in his first Y= as coach after 21
years as an assistant at Toledo, also understands the meaning of the game.

•

..

6 4 I J I
• 1 I It

740 .. 742-3411

FIDandil&amp; " 90 Days
Llcenlc!d, Insured • Free Estimates
•

.. '

BISSELL
. .ILHUINC.
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err rr!lll•lllllilllllll

~

'

*229.00*

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740i882·75

• FRI!F.INSTAIJ.ATIOJII
• FRE.E IN HOI.U: I!STIMA'I'E I
• FULLY WELDED
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FIIITCI•E.

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992-4119

-te

1-800-291-5600

Of,_,,

VIlli Our Sbow.- 0. Slllo
33
6 Mllto N Ollie, AI c:-1 Rood II

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vlll.i-....M
WV~77

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8210.00 PEl JOINT .
IEIUURLY
$32J.OO PER JOINT

740-992-1705

,..

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' &amp;10'X20')

:~ "*

II

1

I

WIICH 4.11 •DIIIIIIR
"·"
I

' 11:3Qam- 2:00pm : 5:00pm-7:30pm
yrs &amp; under FREE o4 yrs &amp; under rr.u::.t: •t
: 5·8 YfS- '2.99 I 5-8 YfS ~ '3.99
o 9-12 yrs N'3.99
9·12 yrs -'4.99

:4
I

I

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

IUPIIET TO GO ILUIICII- 'Uti
.TO IDinnu -~ te.llt

'

213 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, OH 45780

COITMIIn and uk
about lf*Oiall .
Gift c.rtlflcaln
Avallabla '

11atWerk,
·
Ropla(ema11, • Walko
aad.Drl... • Stendl

Cnte Fno l!lllouta
.Seryi.. OhloudW.V.

949-1405
. 591-5011

NeW Home•
Gel'lgel

Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE ESTIMATES
74M92·1671

f1ocky

n

Htrpp fi&lt;JCI11

Box 1 HI}
r, l lddl('pOrt OfliO
1

·hi()()

M!'&lt;ficare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension&amp;: 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Hoine

..

(

Adverti-se ,in
this space for
s100 per.
month

TI-lE CLERK SAID,
'' '(OU MUST MEAN
A 'PITH'I-IELMET"

Call for Produ
or Opportunity
: Jeanie Howell
!' 740-992-7036

1

i
•

•

11~"""'
High&amp; Dry

CUTfi
WRHPPED

Self-Storage

llaplewtod Lllle
. . St. Rt. 124

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

740"992-5232
1111211

ma.

Rlldne, Dhll

949-2734
U1e

till,.*"

,:,

OPfR BOWLinG • .
LfiiGUES
.1... -l...-

VOiler's
Deer Shop
'YIW till '11, Ill 1M 'II'

SR315,LiiSIII,i1

742·2076

the trick and cleared
the spades. Declarer
- - - 1 could have cashed out
for one down , but
immediately played
-.w1 another diamond, so

'{()U WERE RI611T.. u

.
N ·VEMBER 23 I
. ~r~':~~~~~':~~A~Y*~~~~~~~;~~~~;;;;;.~;;;;~~~;;"'lf;;;;~;;;;;;~

rl

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L.....L:L-1-.L-..J...--L--l

you

de\lelop

e

PRINT NUMBERED LETlERS IN

-.

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS

from

1tel) NCJ. 3 belaw.

I

·~::;:;;T~H~E~SE~S~Q~U~A~RE~S~:;:;;;;;;~~:;:::::;=;::::;:~~
TO GET .O.NSWER

$CRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Gravel- Peril- Rebel- Morrow- BI:LOW PAR

Overheard at golf pro tournament: "I think golfers are
happiest when they're feeling BE~ OW PAR "

-~

, pepp,lp ·:n the right time . A

be m.lllc in yo~u; 5ocial zones
in the year r~head. Th ry cn n

ihet'tial ,inVOlveinenrs.

innucnc( YllU to trnvd iu new
circle .~ where! you 1m.y realize

gn;arcr mmu t•.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 2 1) -- Mllch to your
surpti~e . yo u might discover

today

th~t

w meone you
d idn't give a hoo t
abOlU you i~. in reality, quite
anxious ro become your pal.
Astro-Graph year-ahead prccho u~ht

dil·tium make great Ch ristmas
stocki11~ ~turfcn for all signs of
th e 2odiac. Mall $2 for each
A5tro~Graph .

c/o th'is

P.O . llox 1(,7,
OH 44092-0167.

Uc ~ure to statr the zodiac

~i~ns

ym1 de~ ire.

CAVIUCORN (Doc. 22J•ro. I~) •• Th"o I! mu&lt;h to
g11in toLiny by M;Ctdi\K lnvulvc&lt;.l
in in .. dclHh rouvrrutiom
with pals. They couh.l httve
' kuowl ~ dge tll ~hnre with you,
while there will be things
you'll be able tdl them.
AQUAI~IUS (}oro. 211-Frb.
.19) .... You pwst!ts a knnck to ...
ell\)' for tl01t1t; and uyiug nlt
the riMht thintt( to th t- riKht

(

I" I I

Snturday, No-.·. 24, 20(11
There's a good chaucc .that ..
nMny new acquaiucanc~ will

new~pap e r ,

I

I

Cabnr

••

WkkliiT,,

,

world, " a man told the slow cab
'--"'--L.-..1-.l.-...J
driver, ."in some places any car
W A ·R S E N ~~~~ng 55 mph is considered - ··-·
1
5
,.
G)
Como/•'• ohe chuckle .quoted
·= _ . _ _ .
by Iii tng In the milling words

Barclay
Dridge Baron
Suppostpaid
plies. Callfrom
(800) 2742221 to order.

to

'·~·

1 1 I' 1

LOOKS PATI-IETIC! u

the ace and continued
with his last spade for
two down. Unlucky.
_ _ _....;....;;....;.....;..._...-' The book is $19.95

-·•

DEER

AFTEll PUT ONE
ON, liE SAID, ' MAV811

West wen't in with

month. ~-~
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FrH Eltl"""'

·;::;~~::~~~~·-;;-;-;·:;~·-~·~·==~·-~--:· i··w:-:~:~::17:1z:::!~::::::::. :.::~
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If you would like to .
-Flomlng
learn something about
4e lion
Ralaln
28
Pill
ota
47 Main rc1a.
Japan and get bridge
IIIII
4e Join
deals thrown in, buy
'ZTIIIYaclty
21 Roman
41 Whlla
"S:umorai Bridge" by
Robert F. MacKinnon (Master !'oint
• Lallque 50 33 Pub.minded
. Press) . It contains
51~ol
some interesting per35Ughl
brown
54~
spectives, but be
37 Cly
follower
p 4 'I II
wamed that there is
sex and violence, the
bridge analysis is occasionally imperfect,
and there are several
typos .
In this deal. how
would you plan the
play in three notrump after West
.leads either a fourth' highest spade five to
your jack or a high
club
seven?
~ ON4Y TOVG~fl&gt;
After the spad&lt;&gt; lead,
~teL.
South had eight
tricks: one spade,
three hearts and four
dubs. But if East got
on play, clearly a
spade return would be
fatal. So, declarer imCELEBRITY CIPHER
mediately played a
by Lula Campoa
diamond to dummy's
~Cipher~ . . '-quolallonl
peeplt, put ond ........ Eooh -In ll1o clphOt ttandlloi anottoer.
king. When that
. Today's clue: R squats S
dropped the queen,
'YG
PNLCPG•JCL,
I'T
.... South continued dia~. ~ SUI?£ TO
Wf-lf.\1-\ER.. '(00 ~'i' t~-.Em monds to win 11
RPYTILT
PJ
VL
H
AW·
crnve:'&lt; YOUR.
IT Qli:. NOT ! tricks.
!:&gt;11\C.e~rt'&lt; ro
That was the corBLRP,
NJWULT
NBPF
ZHL
1l\EJ.\ ...
rect play in diamonds ..
but the wrong play
NLRP
HCT
VJMLT
NBPF
on the deal! MacKinAW8ZJ
IHWCLWH.'
non should have
made decla!er try for
..
HC' PI"JCG
KYICC
a 3-3 . heart split first.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The value of marriage Ia not that
However, when West
adUHI prOduce Children bul thai Children produce adulla.' discard~ on the second
Pater De VI1H
.
round, then South
lill"m:IEII:IJII;l ==---.,plays a .diamond to
SPtnv! ~eRe,
L---.J the king.
SPIT$Y! 1!1\T TtiiS
At the other table,
PAPER! EAT IT UP!
Roarro·ngo Ionon of tho
West led the Club
four acrambled won:::ls be:
seven, giving nothing low to form four aimple worda.
away. Now it was
natural to play a diamond to dummy's
i1ine. However, East
won with the queen
and, knowing ·his
partner had four
spades, shifted to the
....--,:-,O_N_'f_O_U_IT---., spade 10· West wori ' I G E P R I I"':~•
"I've traveled all over the

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ACROSS

ALDER

t

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"Ahead
In Service"

......

PHILLIP

Cellular

Shade River AG Service

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

MAC
PREVIEW
"It's a great rivalry:' he said. "It's UllWly a lot of fun 10 play in."
But Amstu!Z is also worried about getting his team rtady.
"I know right now, we jmt c:mte off a
win and our team's head is kind of up in
the clouds right nfiW:' he said. "I'm trying to get them back on the ground .and
get them focused on jlllt One game."
Will the rivalry make it easier for his
playas to focus?
"I sure hope it would," Amatu12 wd.
"Th:tt's a real challellge for us. We're
going to have to go b:ltk to'SOme hardnosed coaching to get their feet back on
the ground.''
··
Both teams m comirig off big wins.
Toledo beat EWm MichiQIII in the fog
Saturday to clinch a spot ill the MAC
tide g:une and w:11 inviie'd to the' Motor
Cjty Bawl· on Dec. 28, in ·Pon~ Mich.,
ap;ainst an oppbtlent:fiom Conference
USA. The •Falcons beat Northwutan
43-42 behind an ouiJiandina petformance liom sophomo,~e quartsbackjosh
Harris, who bad alnlolt SQ0 y;uda of to\&amp;1
offense and thmv for thrif Ull!chdowns,
ran for IWo and caught 11110• .' . •. · ,
In Other .MAG ,· ~ ~·;Wkkend,
BaJ1•State plays .at Wdtern Michigan,
Eadem Michigan travels to Akron ·and
Miami of Ohio plays at Kent State. In
non-conference play. Central Michigan
plays at Boise State, Northern !Uinois
plays at Wake Forest and Ohio plays at
North Carolina State.
Manhall hosts Young'lt:own State. The
game w.IS added after the Herds Sept.lS
conte!t at Texas Christian and
Youngstown State's meeting with Toledo
were caUed off due r.o the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
.
.
MarshaU, which will playThledo in the
MAC championship. has accepted a bid
to the GMAC Bowl on Dec. 19 in
Mobile, Ala. The Herd wiU play the No.
2 team trom Conference USA.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 9

AUEYOOP

Titles decided but Falcons
.have plenty to play for
BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

l

day by philmopllically tte-:1ti11g

fc~v 1p(:"tsO;IlS might be ~ho se

:1!1 eve11tS and happenings as

wlth· whom you h;n•c co m-

hcing opportune, i tJ .H('.l d of
so mcthinlo!: sc riom with whidt
ym1 have to contend.
LEO (lu ly 2.l-Atl g. 22) -- A
~ccrc t for gamin g sonwthing
for your~clf today is to be sure:
othl'r:s wi-th whom yuu 're involved witl1 do C&lt;Jll,illy ;u
wel l. They'll back you :lll the
w :~y :111d hope you win so thar
tlu~v c.m wm .
VlllGO (Aug. 23-S&lt;pt. 22)
-- What rnakes you such ;
good' convt't\atio!lalist today i~
that th e topkl you choose w ill
be about things involvin~ oth~
en, leaving them belicv ins
you're truly interested in

l'ISCtlS (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
' -- Any activity tha t reinforce'S
your f:iith :md basic philosopllies will have :' positivt' impa~t

on you today. The

wi~-

' dom ;md strt-ngth you'll gain ·
will be effectively \ISL'd m

rime.
AlliES (March 21-April

I~)

-- Lady Luck might place y011
in the I!'Xact spot you need 10
b~ in to day in orJer to Ket in~
volv ed in a money making
proposition. Use your head as

to juH how much yo\1 w:ant to
get involved.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -~ There may b~ a lot
more to gain today if you

·work in tandtm with othen
rathtr than on your own. Unions oiTer your greaten poni ...
bilitie1.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.... [fyou wunt to find

yo~1nclf

few strides ahrnd o( tho•r
who ·try to outdo you, simply
:1.

fnllow your 11mbitiom 111stinch todAy . They'll ij:Uidc
yo~1 ri~ln to til\! victory drdr.

CANCER Umoe 21-july
22) -· Play lif• lik• a game tu-

them.
LIDRA (S•pt. 2.1-0ct. 2.1) - There i1 ai lot of material op~
• portunity around you today,

so keep your !!yes peeled for

~

litu:.tion from which yo u
could either make ur 1ave

money:
SCOitPIO (Occ. 24-Nov .
22) -~ To dQy'~ Mpecu indica!~

hnpomun use' for yo ur cwo
ben auru, which are yotlr

ltatlership qualhir1 and orta;•m·
· lutiont&amp;l abilities. Pm them to
~ood me~ .

�-.

Pege B 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

~

•

* •

..

•

MONEY

SPORIS

Publisher Chuck
Govey retires, Dl

TEMPO

Bowhunting
tournament. 85

Remembering
Pearl Harbor, Cl

•

tmts

Gallia·seeks SEOEMS proposal

NeMmaker

Meigs can't use sales tax
to cover sheriff's shortfalls
BY IIRlAN J. REED
TIME~ENTINEL

r.y

Alii, ~ pink
cadillac$ and eponymous cosmetics company made her one
of the most famous women in

Mlly

sJ.25 ·

STAFF

POMEROY - Proceeds
fiom any incre&lt;ase in Meigs
County's sales tax cannot be
earmarked for law enforcement purposes, the executive director of the Ohio
County
Commissioners

Association .said.
Larry Long told Meigs
County commissioners Friday they can increase the tax
by their owri resolution, or
through a ballot initiative,
but that state law restricts

PluHHel.oni-AI

County exploring emergency medical services options
BY KEVIN KELLY
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS - ·Gallia County commissioners have agreed to a citizens' request to
look into the possibility of obtaining emergency medical service through a system
operating in neighboring counties.
Commissioners voted Wednesday to seek a
r.._roposal from Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services with the understanding
there is no commitment fiom Gallia, Com-

American business, died Thursday at her home in Dallas,
Texas. She was 83. (AP /Dallas

•, •1

1
James (Fannin) Barry, 78
Floyd L Brickles; n
Harry Lee Criss, 82
E. Lucille Huffman, 78
LindaJett
Edgar W. Kidwell, 50
Pearl McKictrick, 90

. I
i

' t!,

'
. :i"
. ,,.

1991 GEO

1997FORD

t996CHM

PRISM

TAURUS

S-10PICKUP

Auto, V6, AC,

f/414t~4Dr

Power Equipped

IC00592

ss 850
.t-'30.01

2,950

5

IC0124l

.

5

5,~50

BY KillS DoTSON
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS Deer
season brings in hunten
from all over the tri-state
.area who interject lots of
money into the local economy.
These outdoorsmen and women - eat, sleep,
drink, fuel their can, check
their deer, and play here, all
of which means an increase
in revenue for many local ·
• busine,sses. ·., .
..~ ·'"We 'ltattelf lli~' drivethrough
deer
check
because, frankly, it eliminates
us hearing, tNo, I'm next!'"
said Robbie Jenkins, owner
of O'Dell Lwnber.
"We had 700 deer come
through last year. It's quite a
show. The first day and the
following Saturday the can
will be backed up all the
way to Mitch's Green

Details, AS

FINANCING

Only 48,597 mil•

5.99o/o.
' for 36 months

..

.•.

MUSTANG
f!.ut,~

MERCURY
COUGAR

6.9%

...3550

for 60 months1

Y6 Leather

sg,ggs

"''"'........

-~·

weatlair.

~elect vehicles)

Hl&amp;h: 10. Low: 10
Details, A3

t.

FOCUS

2000RANGER

J1ll4t """'-"
:a To Choose Froml

SCXLT

.

Nlio,AC, PW&amp;.L, CNIM,
.f-'3210

143560

$13,9.95

$12
I 995
.
.

GRAND
MARQUISGS
....,, va, PW&amp;.L,

I t o -.. from

5

MUSTANG

.5

Auto, V8, PW&amp;L,

J'i4l9s·

IIICN881

13,995

RAMSLT ·

A&amp;®;~·P

13

Cruise,
ntt
.t4l7 I

T-Tops,Auto,
V6,AC,CD
.t4.2HI

Index
• Se-flaa - 21 ...,..

'15,995

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

C2,C5
C2
02-7 .
insert

Cl
A4

AS
A2
Bl-6
A3

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishi"' Co.

30
------J

days .
till
· Christmas

-~

~
•

·I

.

$1.~95
·· ;. ; '"

..

your lnvwst111ent to
Just •nybody.••

Refy upon the people

...

thllt know your
-lllcle ......
FACTORY TRAINED
TECHNICIANS

or less • Diesel vehlcles

IIOTORCitAFT

,fPT WBE

Motorcraft"'
WIPER BLADES
Starting
at

extra.

FORD MOTOR CO.

I

$

$4400

FORD FACTORY •BUG SHIELD
Starting
at

SPLASH

FLOORMATS

Sla~~ing

House."
Mike Marchi S&lt;lid he usually sees about a 10 percent
increase in business during
gun season at Marchi"s Carryout.
The William Ann-Best
Western Hotel manager said
all 25 of their rooms for
Nov. 25 through 30 sold out
more than four months ago.
"We usually sell out during both gun and bow season;• said Super 8 Hotel
owner Lori HulL "They
usually reserve a w.eek but
some leave after they get
their deer.
"We started getting reservations they day they left last

I .WANT THAT ... AND THAT ... AND THAT •.'.
Williams, 4, picks out Chtlstmas
presents Friday at ~g Kmart on Upper River Road In Gallipolis with help from his mom
Stephanie. The stole opened at 5 a.m. (MIIIIssla Russell photos)

Tis t~season ':
to go st. opping
Adam Thomas, 6, ch
s out the Christmas
present he and his .d Larry bought for
"Mommy" Fridlly at
ui Davies Jewelers,
Second Avenue In G · oils. Sales associ·
ate Lynne Hopkins 151
on in approval of
the choice.
;~

year."
Hull also said she esti-

PIHHHeHuntln.A5

• Service inclu s up to· 5 quarts ol MotOrcraft oil and new
Motorcralt oil fllter •-ferform Multl-15olnt Vehicle lnepecllon
• Lube • Ch'eck andiftll necessary fluids • AH In 29 minutes

Why trust

PluM He Services. AI

businesses
welcome hunters
with open anns

Morning News, File)

. lr

missioner Skip Meadows said.
"I'd hate to have to go with SEOEMS, but
it's strictly a monetary issue," said Meadows.
"We"ve got to explore all options."
The aorion comes as the county struggles
with a right general fund balance affected
throughout the year by a slumping economy
and lower-than-expected sales tax revenue,
part of which funds Gallia's EMS.

Installed

Sponeored by

BY MINDY KEARI'IS

·JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.

TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF .

2150' Eas1ern Ave.
Gelllpolla, OH 45831

740-446·9777
Fu .740 UH122

THE AREA'S ONLY .
TRI•CERTIFIED DEALER

'

!

140-446-9800.•1-800-212-5119
.,

Sat. 9-5

T

• •

• •

.POINT PLEASANT,WVa.
- 28-year-old Danny Arthur
m~y have been snatched from
thiS world prematurely, but
friends, colleagues and teachers
have vowed that he will not be

forgotten .
Subway; Manhall University
Mid-Ohio Valley Center and
Marshall University Bookstore
have joined to begin the
Daniel J. Arthur Memorial
Scholanhip. The first recipient
•· will be chosen before the Janu-

ary semester begins ~t MU.
Arthur, of Point Pleasant, was
shot and killed at his home on
Oct 2, 2001. He was a single
father, manager at Subway in
Gallipolis, and a full-time student at Manhall.
Arthur's friendly, outgoing·

Please see S.fety, A5

nature made him a friend to
many. He was described a:; a
loving, caring father to two
girls, Jodie and Chelsea; a hard
worker who was ·tt:ying to
build a better life for himself

PleaH He Arthur, Al

·Holzer.Health Hotline
.\

8 AM - 12 Midnight

L I N C Q. L N

A D VA N T AI I

POMEROY -Thanksgiving is over and hunten in
both Meigs · and Gallia
counties have had their fill
of turkey ... now they're
ready for -wniaoal.
More than SQO,ll(j(j (:leer
hunters are expected to take
to the woods as Ohio's deer
gun season officially begins
Monday, Ohio Department
of Natural
Resources
(ODNR)
Division
of
Wildlife reports.
Keith .Wood, ODNR
wildlife officer for Meigs
County, said good weather
and increased deer populations should play an important role in the nwnber of
deer kills this season and
that safety should always be
on the mind of every hunter
who ventures out into the
field.
"With favorable hunting
conditions and a deer population about 7 percent higher than last year, we expect
to see between 105,000 to
110,000 deer taken this gun
season," said Wood.
"As always, the ODNR is
stressing hunter safety and is
urging all sportsmen to
wear a vest, coat, jacket, or
coveralls.that are eithe• solid
hunter orange or camouflage hunter orange. A
hunter orange hat or cap

1·800-462-5255

9.

HOURS:
Mon • Frl9-7;

TIMES.SENTINEL STAff

Memorial scholarship honon slain resident

BED RAILS
$

sso4o

BY TONY M. I..EAcH

.

~·

$8150 ·
.

Deer gun
season opens
Monday

PREMIER
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Ask your physician about medication concerns.
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- - - --;r;---

l

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