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                  <text>Past Coundlors Club

Sunday, November 25, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

BEF promotes new Bidwell management team
BID~LL -- Bob Ev.uu

Call, 65, began his first his

Farms Inc. has promc !d three
tnanagen at the &lt; npany's
!hod production plant at BidWell.
Company
officials said
the promotions are part
of the succession plan for
the Bidwell
plant, following the retirement of W.
Lowell
c.! I
"Buzz" Call,
yice president of production,
~er 45 years of service.
Call started with the company in December 1955, and in
:iddition to his responsibilities
as vice president of production,
he has concurrendy served as
!nanager of the Bidwell plant.

job at Bob Evans soon after
graduating from Rio Grande
High School.
"It was the first job I ever
had," said Call. "It (Bob Evans
Farms) just kept growing,
adding new people and adding
new products. I have been
around long enough to see the
company grow from two
plants in Xenia and Bidwell to
six plants total."
"For the past 45 years, Buzz
Call has committed himself to
this company and his employees at the Bidwell plant," gjd
Roger Williams, executive vice
president of food products. "I
am · honored to have had the
opportunity to work with

' ..
h1m.

In addition to his involvement with BEF. Call has been
an active member of his com-

munity.
He has served on the board
of directors of Ohio Valley
Bank, and is a I ' ember of Gallipolis Lions l :Jub, Vinton
Masonic Lodge and Fellowship
Baptist Church of Gallipolis.
Call and his wife Betty have
four children, and reside in
Gallipolis.
David Morgan of Rio
Grande has been promoted to
manager at Bidwell. He will be
responsible for food production, quality and safety at the
Bidwell
location, which
· employs about 90 people and
helps support the company's $1
billion in annual sales.
Morgan was formerly assistant plant manager at Bidwell.
A 1969 graduate of Southwestern High School, Morgan
started working for BEF in
1971 as a sausage processor. He

is also vice president ofthe Rio

the plant. A 1975 graduate of
GAHS. Kuhn beg:an working
for BEF as a sausage processor
at the Bidwell plant.
He resides in Gallipolis with
his wife Cynde, and daughter, .

Grande Memorial.Associa!ion.
Daniel Woodward has been
promoted to assistant pbnt
manager.
He was formerly sausage
room foreman. In his new Jody.
position, Woodward will assist
Morgan in his operatio~l
duties at Bidwell.
•
Woodward is a 1974 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School, and began working for
BEF the same year as a sausage
processor.
.
He is a member of Gallipolis
Elks Club 107, coaches a local, ,
T-ball team and assists with the
RIO GRANDE -- Amy
Bay Scouts of America. Wood- ~~· Bowman-Moore, the Edward
ward and his wife Sheri, and , Jones investment representachildren, Seth and Olivia, · live in Gallipolis, will host a
reside in Gallipolis.
,"Financial Workshop for the
Alan Kuhn was promoted to Individual Investor." This fivekill floor foreman. He was for~ ; reek workshop. will assist
merly kill floor group leader at mdivtduals m settmg finanoal
and investment goals.
The class will provide an indepth look at the matly different types of investments available to and suitable for
in,vestors who are working or
retired.
McDonald Investment in
"Whether you are interested
Cleveland said that wbn't be in-tr1aximizing your long-term
easy.
illl*tment returns, reduting
"It will be tough because of yo&amp; income taxes, or .maximarket conditions, particular- mizing
your
investment
ly if they remain the way they
are," Cummings said.
1

Banking company adds 150 employees
. CINCINNATI (AP) Fifth Third Bank has added
.J150 people to its investment
and trust unit in an effort to
boost revenues and profits.
Neal Arnold, the bank's
¢hief financial officer, says the
fast-growing banking company needs to do a better at selling investment products.
Arnold has taken over the
job held by Michael K. Keating, who left the bank last
month as head of the investment unit. Fifth Third hopes
to boost revenues and profits
in its investment unit 18 percent to 20 percent a year, up
from about 11 percent now,
Arnold said.
That unit has contributed
,5?34 million; or ·8 percent of
t~e company's revenues of
a~out $3.9 billion so far this
y~ar.

"Only one out of every, 16
of our automen has an
investment accou11t 1trith
· 1111 and we neetl to tlo a
better job reaching tlum,"
Arnoltl said.
Arnold said the new hires
are sales associates in places
such as Dayton, Cleveland,
Indianapolis, Chicago and
Louisville, where banks or
thrifts that Fifth Third
acquired had no presence, or a
small presence, in the investment and trust business.
Fifth Third's recent S5 billion acquisition cif Grand
Rapids, Mich.-based : Old
Kent Financial Corp. will
bring 80,000 businesses arid
1.5 million people as potential
customers to the investment
unit.
"Only one out of every 16

Kneen

learning more about self-suf.ficieney on a farm at the next
meeting of the Athens Chapter of the Ohio Ecological
fromPapDI
Farm &amp; Famijy Association
session on weed control and a (OEFFA) on Dec. 9.
look at possible marketing
The program will start at 1
opportunities will be present- p.m. at the Athens ·county
ed to complete the day's Alternative School in Stewart.
activities.
Butch Mitchell, the agriculThis school will be held at tural instructor, will be the
Washington State Communi- featured speaker. The school
ty College in the Community has a greenhouse, cold frame,
Room, located at 710 Cole- market garden, "chicken tracgate Drive, Marietta. Regis- tor," fish pond, shop, soils Jab
tration begins at 9 a.m. and and. student cooperative.
the day adjourns at 3 p.m. A
·A poduck meal will begin
registration fee of $7 will, be the meeting at 1 .p.m., folcharged at the door. Reserva- lowed by a tour and meeting.
tions may be made by calling If interested in attending,
the extension office at 992- please bring a dish to share
...16696.
plus your own table service.
For further information,
Are your children interested call Chapter President Ed
in agriculture?
Perkins at 664-3370.
Learn how one local voca(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
tional agriculture high school · Extension agent for agriculture
is assisting the next generation and natural resources, Ohio State
offarmers in growing up and University.)

•••

of our customers has an

investment :account with us,
and we need to do a better
job reaching thern," Arnold
said. "This is a busine$$ than
we can and will beef up.
Analyst Fred Cummings of

-Smith ·

income, you shotJid plan to
attend this informative class;'
Moore says.
The workshop will begin on
Tuesday,)anuary 8 and con!ffiue every Tuesday through February S.These classes will meet
on the campus of the University of Rio Grande, -202
Anniversary Hall, from 7 to
8:30 p.m. The textbook may
be purchased for SS.
For information or to
reserve a seat,· contact Amy
Bowman-Moore, (740) 4419441, or Dale Whitt of the
Adult and Contil)uing Education D~edt of the University ofRio Grande at (740)
245~7325.
.

.t,l

a1

Melp County's

What's Inside

actually "raise" or "lower" the
federal funds rat~. Instead, it
buys or sells government
securities.
When the Fed buys the
securities, it pumps money
into the ' economy and
increases
bank reserves.
Increased availability means
banks will charge each other
less to borrow excess reserves.
Voila, the federal funds rate
decreases. To slow down the
economy; the Fed sells government securities, taking
money out of circulation and
lowering reserves, which will
cause the federal funds rate to
rise.
·'
lt'l an.Ari -This is more
art than science. typically, it
takes about six morlths before
changes the Fed makes to its
monetary poliey affect the
economy direcdy. That's why
the issue is so body debated.
So far this year, the Fed's
Open Market Committee has
made cuts an unprecedented
10 times,l1ringing rates to 40~
year lows -- a signal fi:om Mr.
Greenspan that the Fed will
go to great lengths to jump
start the economy.
.

Have you heard_about

CollegeAdvantage·"?

Hometown News,.per

Ashcroft to defend tribunals
BY JoNANllfAN D. SALANT

woman Mindy Tucker
and committee chairman Patrick Leahy
said Sunday.
"We really want to
know, and I think the
country needs to
know," said Leahy, DVt., on NBC's "Meet
the -Press." "And
frankly, the criminal

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON --Attorney General John Ashcroft, facing criticism
from some members of Congress over
the Justice Department's anti-terrorism
campaign, plans to lay out his case at a
hearing.
Ashcroft has agreed to appear before
the Senate Judiciary Committee in
early December, department spokes-

HERE COMES

Wahama falls in semis, 5

'

Ayward Jone$, 77
Christine Walker

,OHIO
Pick :J N!pt: 6-5·2
..lkiL4.Nijlit: o- 2-2·3

~·ru..,:~1+21-2347

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anta Claus, Frosty the Snowman . and
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer left the
confines of the North Pole Sunday afternoon to take part in Pomeroy's annual
Christn,;,s parade festivities . .
A large crowd of people lined Main Street to view
the many Christmas-decOrated floats, cloggers, fire trucks,
and the Meigs High School
Marching Band officially kick
off the beginning of the
Christmas holiday season.
parade,
Following the
numerous children had die
opportunity t~ visit wi~h
Santa Claus inside the mi11}park on Court Street. Jace ailp
Brett Casto, pictured at right,
read Santa their gift lists in
hopes · of informing St. Nick
of 'o/hat they expect to see
underneath their tree on
•Christmas mbrning. (Tony M.

Hlp: 15, Law: •11
Details, A3

~·

justice system is going to be better if
we have the explanation of what's
.
gomgon.
Some lawmakers have said that
recent actions to fight terrorism go too
far in usurping civil liberties. For
example, more than 1,000 people
remain jailed after being rounded up
fOllowing the Sept. II terrorist attacks.
President Bush's recent order allowing secret military tribunals to try

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Santa Claus

Deaths
Details, 3

ease, insect, and weed control
in vegetables, fruits, · lawns,
' frotnPapDl
ornamentals, flowers, and
landscape, as well as insect once,'l'ibrant economy. into
fromPageDI
control in the home, and recessi?n· The Fed reduces the
This program is open to.. many other topics.
money, supply to rein in the
The
Samuel
Bossard econol!'y before it enters an
the public and is an excellent
educational opportunity for Library has offered access to inflatiol) spiral.
livestock producers who have the Ohioline for nearly a year
Res~e Requirement-land to manage and are look- and K-Mart is planning to The fi~~ instrument the Fed
ing for profitable alternatives offer the same service in the can manjpulate is the reserve
to cow-calf operations. Partic- spring of 2q02. OSU Master require'llent - the amount
ipants should keep in mind Gardeners are' also currendy of deposits a bank must. hold
that this program will empha- working with Davison's in "reserve." This is a very
size practices that contribute Landscape as potential coop- powerful , tool that the Fed
to a low-input management erators in the program. The seldom uses; its impact is too
1cheme.
on-line community may strong.
For more information, access the Ohioline from their
The ~ICO~t ~te
please
' call the OSU Exten- computers at: http:/ /ohio- The secOnd vehicle the Fed
sion Office at 446-7007 .
line.osu.edu.
c'lntrols ,i! the discount rate
Ag news
A program on ewe nutri- --· the irierest rate banks pay
A horticulture program to tion during gestation is to borrow additional reserves
assist the gardening commu- scheduled for Monday, begin- from the,fed. This mechanism
nity has . been established in ning at 7 p.m. at the C.H. is not V~!')' powerful; it is used
cooperation with Quality McKenzie Agricultural Cen- mainly ~ an indication of the
Farm and Fleet and the Gallia ter. OSU Extension Sheep Fed's intentions.
County Master Gardeners. Specialist Roger High will be
Fed~l Funds Rate Quality Farm and Fleet cus- here to speak with members The f,ed's most commonly
tomers now have access to of the Ohio Valley Sheep emplq~ed strategy is to
gardening information locat- Association and other inter- ' charige "interest rates." This
ed on Ohio State's "Ohio- ested producers.
refers.,to the federal funds tarline," which ·is a database of
aenn!for L Byrnes is Gallia get rate - the rate banks
fact sheets designed to help County~ Extension agent for charge each other for
(K. Ryan Smith is an invtstcommunities solve lawn and agriculture and natural resources, overnight loans drawn on ment executivt with Smith PartOhio State Univtrsity.)
garden problems.
exces\ reserves. The Fed can't ners at AdvtSt In&lt;.)
Quality Farm and Fleet
customers may access this
database through an OSUsponsored computer located
at the information desk in the
center of the Gallipolis Quality Farm and Fleet store.
uLawn and Garden" is
offered on the program's main
menu. From this point, cus"
U'
.
tomers can access a broad
With college costs rising twice as fast as inflation', college savers need a plan that
range of topics including discan make the most of their savings. ColleguAdvantage is 1 great way to save for college,
with tax benefits and investment choices to help your money grow over time.

Bymes

•

"We are confident in the
abilities of these thtee employees to continue to lea4 the
Bidwell plant with the same
dedication that Buzz conttibuted to the company for
many years," gjd Williams.

Edward Jones investment
representative to host
financial workshops

highlights, ]

~

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h,'

:1

kiCker: 4-4"2·2·5·7

DII!Y 3: 0·7·9
DillY •: 1-6·3·2

I'Utua•:ll: 11H2-2H7-42 (30)

Sedloll- II Pllpl

2

6·8
9

Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

2

4

3
3

5, 10

Sports

Weather

GOP

debates
.depth
of cuts
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob
Taft has said ror more than
seven months that the state
can't take any more budget
cuts.
Senate
President
Richard Finan, a fellow
Republican, says he doesn't
buy it.
Taft and lawmakers hope to
compromise this week on a
plan to balance Ohio's $1.5
billion deficit: A joindegislative committee begins hearings Tuesday.
At issue: Disagreements
over allowing Ohio ·to join a
multistate lottery, increaSing
taxes on businesses and carving an additional $42.6 million out of state agencies.
Taft and lawmakers also are
at odds over how much of the
state's rainy day fund and
tobacco money to tap.
Nationally, at least 27 other
states have instituted budget
cuts or are considering them,
and 20 may dip into reserve
funds, . according to the
National Conference of State
Legislatures.
"The news is not good,"
according to the NCLS
report, published last month.
"With only a few exceptions,
state fiscal conditions have
taken a dramatic downturn."
California Gov. Gray Davis,
for example, has asked agency
heads to prepare plans to cut
15 percent fium their budgets
for the 2002-2003 fiscal year.
Taft and Finan feuded two

Pkk•J Day: 3-2-&lt;l
Pick ~ Day: 3-3.{1-6
W.VA.

Calendar
Classifieds.

BUDGET

Bv ANDREW Wfl •u HUUINI

_.,111 a.ll: 30

I

PIMH- Alhaoft. J

AP STATEHOUSE CQRRESPONDENT

:.fac1J.~p.hotos)
:",

noncitizens has drawn fire from both
Democrats and Republicans, ~ has
Justice Department approval of eavesdropping .on conversations between .
defense lawyers and some terrorist suspects.
'Just a few" weeks ago, the administration asked us for new authority to
declare· certain crimes terrorism w

3

Cl 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

days till
Christmas

I'

.
.
Holiday travelers brave congestion, security
PI•H -lludpt. :J

With CollegeAdvantage
'

• Proceeds can be used at almost
any college in the country

• You control the withdrawals
• You choose from five portfolios

• You can contribute as little as $15
a month or as much as $1o,ooo per
year free of federal gift tax

BY UsA A. FLAM

• You get tax benefits

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Spon110111C1 by

··MASON

Announces The Opening Of Their New Location

On November 26th
At 196 East Second Street In Pomeroy
(Formerly Beneficial Finance)

Please c~ m~ to rese~e a ~pace a.t my next discussion on the benefits of CollegeAdvantage
or to rec~ave information, mcluding a complete offering statement on how it might be .
appropraate for yo~ college saving needs. Read the offering statement and participation
agreement carefully before investing or sending money.
·

J.E. Morrison &amp; Associaaes

GRAND OPENING- OPEN HOUSE
Friday, December 7th
Stop In For A Free Quote
Join Us In The Celebration
Sign Up To Win
2001 Ohio River Bear Limited Edition Christmas Bear

196 East Second Street •

Ohio • 992·3381

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P.URNITURE
2ND STREET
MASON, WV

Lisa Chong arrived at Los Angeles
International A;rport an hour before
her scheduled departure - about half
the time recommended by her airline.
But Chong, who was headed back to
Dartmouth University on a US Airways flight, didn't encounter any problems: only a handful of people were in
the check-in line.

"I actually thought it would be more
crowded. This is good, compared to
other years," said Chong, .27.
Not all travelers were so fortunate
on ~ .. nday Across the nation, millions
o [ travelers braved congestion and
i " creased security as they returned to
""ports, highways and railways at the
cori Clusion of the first major holiday
weekend since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.

Final ligures on the number of holiday travelers were not expected until
later in the week, but Sunday was still
shaping up to be one of the busiest
travel days of the year.
Several airlines said their flights were
almost at capacity.
"All the terminals are full,'c saiq
David Rogers, as he waited at Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport for
his flight home to Mobile, Ala:

A RtJistert.fi lnvcstmenl AdYJNr

December 6,2001 at 7:00p.m.

November Is National Home Care·Month

Jim Morrison, Certified Fin1111cial Planner
530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Samuel L. Bound Memorial
Library
7 Spruce Street

/'The Heart of American .Health Care//

740-446-1986

Gallipolis, Obio

J~~m~. E. MorriJOn is 1 Re)iiiCRCI RepraenwJvc of tnd offers '
!«UIIUCJ lhrouah Walnul SltecC SectMities.lnc.(WSS), Mcmbt:r
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Highways were also busy. In Atlanta,
where three major interstates cross,
traffic moved well but volume . was
heavy. New Jersey highways were also
clogged.
"There's only so much asphalt out
there," said Lynn Fleeger, director of
public affairs for the New Jersey Turnpike.

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Mom recoils .from suggestion that son may be .mentally ill
DEAR ABBY: Lost summer, we
visited my husb•nd's out-of-stote
relatives, including his "Uncle
Pete." Five yean ago, Uncle Pete
was diagnosed with schiz;ophrenia
and I don~t know what else. He is
receiving therapy and t•king medication. To me, his behavior is still
very strange.
ADVICE
During our visit, Uncle Pete
mentioned that, in his opinion, our
8-year-old son displ•ys signs of However, I pion to return the book
men~ illness. I was speechless and and say, "Thanks, but no thanks,
didn't give him a chance to go into and please mind your own busispecifics. I exploined th•t our son is ness!" I'm •fraid if I don't put an
OK, but shy around people he does end to Uncle Pete's meddling he
not know well. Uncle Pete says it's · will continue with his " mission."
Now I'm trying to figure out
a sign of anti-social behavior.
why.
this bothers me so much. I
When we returned home, Uncle
Pete sent us • book about children think it is the term "mentol illness"
and mental illness. His note s•id he and the stigma attached. How do
we handle this uncle? - ANGRY
didn't want our son to have a miserable childhood like he had. My MOTHER IN TEXAS .
DEAR ANGRY MOTHER:
~usband told me to write • note of
Your husband is. half right. Keep
thanks - ignore it, •nd let it go.

Abigail
Van
Buren

the book, but DO ·read it. And
th•nk Uncle Pete for being so concerned and caring, bec•use th•t's
the place he is coming from.
Please don't be put off by the
term "menrol illness." It's a broad
definition that can cover problems
both large •nd small, •nd it's no
reflection on your parenting skills.
However, mental illness can be
genetic and run in families. So, as a
wise mother, you should have your
son evaluated, just in case Uncle
Pete has spotted something that
needs to be treated. If your son
passes the exam with flying colors,
you can then assure Uncle Pete that
the experts say there 's nothing to
be concerned about. End of story.
DEAR ABBY: I need your
help. I ani being married next summer. I am 23 and have been with
my fiancee since high school. She is
very possessive and insecure. When
we go out, I find myself looking at

other w&lt;&gt;men and wanting to be
with them. I think she knows,
because she gets an attitude and
then tells me she w•nts to leave.
She's older than I am and comes
from a broken home. In the beginning, my parents hated her. That
made me want her even more.
Now she's like a habit.
I have no one to talk to about
this. My parents have finally
accepted her, and I feel tr•pped.
Sometimes I think they just want
me out of the house.
At this point, our plans are pretty.
much made. I don't know what to
do. Sometimes I feel that she thinks
my family is nice because hers is so
messed up. She has very few
friends.
I know this wedding is a mistake,
but I don't have the gnts to call it
off. We were both lonely people,
but now I am always miserable. If
the wedding goes through, I know

we 're doomed. Please tell me wh•t
to do. - NUMB IN NEWYORK
DEAR NUMB: It's going to
take all the couroge you can
muster, but call off the wedding and the sooner the better so that
some of the deposits for wedding
. expenses can be refunded.
While your fiancee's reaction
won't be ple•sant, trust .me when 'j
tell you that it would be worse _:
and far more expensive - if you
back out of the union once you're.
married. And once children come
along, you're tied to her for life. ..
You have a lot more maturing tQ
do before you're ready for mar~:
riage. You need to become more
confident in your choices, more in
touch with your feelings, and inde~
pendent of your family before
making a lifetime commitment t~
anyone.

BY VALMA THaiSocial Security is part of almost evety
elderly American~ life. Social Security pays
monthly retirement benefits to more th2n
31 million retired workers and their family
members. Nine out of ten Americans who
ore age 65 or older get Social Security
retirement benefits.
Benefit amounts are' based on each preson's lifetime earnings from age 22 through
the ~ before retirement. For workers
who retire ot age 65 in 2001, the average
monthly Social Security retirement benefits are:
• $636 for a worker ·with low lifetime
earnings;
·
• $1,051 for a worker with average lifetime earning!; and
• S1,536 for a person with maximwn
lifetime earning.;.
·
You must be "insured" for retirement
benefits. This means !hot you must have
worked ond paid enough into Social Security. For retirement benefits, you mnst have
40 work credits, which is about ten yean of
work, to qualify.
- Full retirement benefits are payable at age
' 65 for people born in 1937 and earlier.
Beginning with people born in 1938 the
age for full benefits is gradually rising. It

I

I

if you're eligible for both your
own retirement.beniftt and
spousal beniftts, you will get
your own beniftt first. q your
betJtjit as a spouse is higher
than yo11r retirement bentjit,
you'll get a combination
of bentjits equaling the higher
sporue benefit.
will reoch age 67 in 2027 for people bo~
in 1%0 or later. But reduced benefits will
continue to be available as eorly as age 62.
If you're eligible for both your own
retirement benefit and spousal benefits, you
will get your own benefit first. If your benefit os a spouse is higher than your retirement benefit, you'll get a combination of
benefits equaling the higher spouse benefit.
For more ihformation on Social Security retirement benefit5, log onto our website, www.ssa.go , or caD toll-free, 1-800772-1213 or visit your local Social Security. office and ask for the booklet, Retirement Bene6t5.

Security payment
Here's good news from Social Security.
More than 50 million Americans will be
getting bigger checks. This year's cost of
living increase for Social Security beneficiaries goes into effect with the payment
for December that people will receive on
Jan. 3, 2002, or on their regular payment
date in January.
Supplemental Security Income recipient5 will receive their increase with their
December 31, 2001 payment. The two
point six percent increase brings the average Social Security payment for all retirees
to $87 4. As in the past, the annual cost of
living increases are based on changes in the
Consumer Price Index.
This year's increase signals the fact that
inflation continues to be low, especially
good news for elderly and disabled people.
Inflation is one of the biggest challenges
people living on· fixed incomes face. The
annual cost of living. increase guarantees
people that the base for their retirement
income will continue to remain strong for
as long as they live.

•••

(111/rea Thompson is manager
Fifty million people to get bigger Social Security office in Athens.)

of tl~e

Social

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.·

by saying what they wiD do
for Thanlcsgiving.
Ella Osborne was reported
home from the hospital.
The Dec. 12 meeting and
Christmas supper will be held
at the Chester Masonic Hall
dining room at 6 p.m., and a
$3 gift exchange will be held.
Secretaty Esther Smith and
Treasurer Jean Welsh gave
their reporn.
Ruth Smith read a poem, "A

MONDAY
'· SYRACUSE - Spectll mttl·
lng, Syracu11 Vlllega Council,
Mondty, 5:30 p.m. mayorUs
office, to dlscuaa wages.

·,

RACINE - Regular meeting,
Southern Local Board of Edu·
cation, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
the high school,
MIDDLEPORT - OH-KAN
Coin Club to meet, 7 p.m., Trol·
ley, ~tation. Drawings, coin auc·
lion, refreshments.
:

.

. ·POMEROY - Veterans Ser·
vice Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, 117 E. Memorl~l Drive.

i REEDSVILLE - Reedsville
U,n~ted Methodist Church to
serve 10up beans and com·
bread, hot dogs and dessert on
Monday at 6 p.m. Public 18 lnvlt·
ed.
.

'
••

·TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO meeting,
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. at Star M111
Pari&lt;. Potluck planned.
POMEROY - Meigs County
HeaHh Department childhood
Immunization clinic:, 9 to 11
a.m., 1 to 3 p.m. TueSday. Bring
shot recorda.

'

fnwnPaael

en CNN's "Late Edition."
: "I think the administration,
:ind the attorney general
~ecificaUy, need to come forWard in the next week or so
lnd spell out in more detail
that the lines are, how they'll
4raw them and define them,
iJl terms of applying these
IJ!ilitary tribunals:•
:Sen. Richord Shelby, R~a . , noted on NBC that the
Supreme Court upheld miliary tribunals during World
War II.
t "These are extraordinary
times and I believe you have
rp have extroordinary measJ,ijs," said Sh~lby, .rankjng
Ij.,epublican on the Senate
lhtelligence Committee. "We
&gt;:re in a war · and I believe
President Bush is on the right
track here.
· "I think of the victims in
New York. I think of the victims .;&gt;ver here in the Pentagon. I think of the victims in
out emboisies. I think Mof the

~Potter'
•

victims in Khobar Towers (in
Saudi Arabia). There has to be
justice, and this will be justice;' Shelby added.
In a related matter, a Jnstice
Deparrment memo outlined
the questions for federol
investigotors to ask 5,000
male foreigners, aged 18 to
33 . The men come from
countries in the Middle East
and elsewhere, and entered
the United States after Jan. 1,
2000. While the men are not
suspected of any crimes, officials hope they can help with
the investigation.
The memo, first reported
by the Detroit 'Free Press, tells
investigators to ask whether
the person knows anyone
who has fought in a war; anyone who acted in a "surpris- .
ing or inappropriate way" to '
the Sept. 11 attacks; anyone
involved in terrorism or w~lc-J
mg to carry.- out terrortst1
attacks; or anyone with access
to guns, explosives or chemical or biological weapons
such as anthrax.
Shelby rejected any assertion that the department wos
engaged in racial profiling of
Arabs . "You've_ got to go
where the evidence leads
you," he said.
•

rules box office

' LOS ANGELES (AP) •iHarry Potter" is laughing all
the woy to Gringotts bank,
where wizards stash their loot.
: -However, while the boy
wizard conjured up record
gobs of money over the
Than~iving weekend. over:Ill box office revenues were
4own compared to last year's
lloliday period.
: "Horry Potter and the Sorctrer's Stone" grossed $58.6
;,;Ilion from Friday to Sunday
and $83.5 minion for the five~ay Thanksgiving period,
P..shing its total to a whopPing $188.1 million in just 10
days, according to studio esti-

evening of dinner and music
presented by

A special meal &amp; babysitting provided for pre-school

MIDDLEPORT - Christine Y. Walker, Middleport, died on
Sunday. Nov. 25,2001 at her residence. Arrangements are under
the direction of Fisher-Acree Funeral Home and will be
announced upon completion'.

.

Heighton 11 hoataae. Frankie
Hunnel will review "Ahab'l
Wilt,' by Sana Jtttr Nulund.
Book exchange. ·

5 and under free

Christine Walker

7---------~------------

Jean Welsh and Thelma
· White conducted games.
Also attending · were Opal
HoUon, lnzy Newell, Mary K.
Holter, .Betty Young •nd
Goldie Frederick.

Tickets must be purchased in advance for
a $3 donation at the following locations:
- Middleport Church of Christ Office
- Farmers Bank, Pomeroy
- Riverbend Craft &amp; · Antique Mall

RACINE - Aywud Coolidge Jones, 77, Racine, died on
S.turday, Nov. 24, 2001 •t his residence.
: He was born M•y 9, 1924, in Flat Fork, W.Va., son ·ofthe late
Coy and Annie Horper Stanley. He was a retired steel worker
and coal miner and wos • veteran of the U.S. Army Air Force
during World Wor II. He was ~ member of Shade Dale Church
~ Harmony, W.Va.
.
, Surviving are four daughters and three sons-in-law, Patrici3
Ann McCoy of Nework, Brenda Joy and Jack Handley of
Langsville, and Wanda Sue and Bob Wood •nd Kay and Bill
Robem, all of Racine; two sons and daughters-in-law, Ronald
V. arid Mory jone~ and Roger Lee and D•nette Jones, all of
Racine; 23 grandchildren, four stepgrandchildren; 15 greatg..ndchildren, and nine stepgreot-grandchildren; two halflirothen •nd six half-sisters.
· Be~ide~ his porents, he was preceded in death by his wife,
~nsy "Mae" Jones; a daughter, Kimberly Lou Jones; two sons,
Ayword Curtis Jon&lt;~ and Jam&lt;~ Harvey jones; and a grandson,
J!..onald V.Jones 11-.
, Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Shady Dale
Church in Harmony with the Rev. Larry Jones and Rusty
Voien officiating. Burial will follow at Shady Dale Cemetery.
Friends moy call at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine on
Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

~ey could be tried in the
eourts of America," Sen.
fticha~ Durbin, D-Ill., said

Prayer for Those Getting
Old;' and Margaret Amberger,
"A Little Pill in my Hand."
Delores Wolfe, Laura Mae
Nice, Betty Young, arid Doris
Grueser won door prizes.

Atlllllle,awt C::""" gf C::llrllt Cltcdt
December 14 &amp; 15, 2001
Dinner served at 6:15pm
Music begins at7:00 pm
f•ullv .Qfe C..ler

AywardJonn

•

LOCAL HAPPENINGS .
Community Ctltndtr It · WEDNESDAY
publlthtd M I IIW MTYICI to . POMEROY - Middleport Lit·
non-profit grour,• wlthlng to 1111ry Club, 2 p.m. Wedneeday,
tnnounat 111111 nge end epe- Pomeroy'
Llbrtry.
01111
olll tvtnll. The oalendtr 11
not dttlgned to promote
ulll or filndof'llure or any
type. 11111'11 111 prtnlld only
u ,.,_ permllt end otnnot
bt guertnlltelto bt prlnlld 1
tpeoltlo number or dtye.

D of A meets

Ashauft

To list your community event in
the 2002 Meigs County Visitors
Guide~ contact Betsy at
992·2239 no later than
December 10~ ·zoo1: ' '"·

-•

mates Sunday.
That gave the film the best
three-day and five-day numbers ever for a filin over
Thanksgiving, squeaking past
the totals for "Toy Story 2" in
its debut two years ago.
With theaters reporting
solid repeat business, "Harry
Potte(' should hold well
through the end of the year.
"I don't know where we're
going, but wherever we're
going, we're happy with it,"
. said Dan Fellman, head of distribution for Warner Bros .,
which · released "Harry Potter." "We're going to have a
huge Christmas."

The Daily Sentinel
Reader
Services
'
Correction Polley
Our main Concern in all stories is
1o be acc:.Arate. II you know of an
enor In a story, call lite newsroom
at (740) 992c2156.

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The main number is 992·2156.
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NeWII

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Other service&amp;

Edition

Monday, December 24th
Advertising Deadline: Monday, December 17th

@

Noon

To Place Your Greeting,
Call Debbie or Dave at 992-2156

The Dally Sentinel • Page AI

SOCIEIY NOTEBOOK

•

992~2156

Meigs County Tourism is
currently in the process of
completing the Master
Calendar of events tor 2002.

PCJfllfJrOy, Middleport, Ohio

•

Subscribe today.

Coundlon meet
CHESTER - Past Councilors' Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America,
met recendy at the lodge haD
with Erma Cleland and
Dorothy Myers as hoste~ses.
Laura Mae Nice, president,
presided at the meeting, and
. read from St.John Chapter 14.
The Lord's Prayer and Pledge
to the American flag were
recited.
Members answered roll call

Nov. 26, 2001

Dear Abby is written by P~uline
Phillips and daughter Jeahne Phillips.

0

Soda[ Security -A key part of life for most.elderly Americans

~.

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Ext. 4

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through Friday, 111 Court St. ,
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CHESTER
Chester
Council 323. Daughtrrs of
America, met recently at the
lodge hall with Councilor
G•ry Holter presiding.
The Pledge of Allegiance,
Pledge to the Christian Flag,
and the Lord's Prayer were
offered in unison. Julie Curtis,
J.P.C. , read Psalm 49.
It was . reported that Ella
Osborne has been hospitalized
and Harlan Ballard is in a
Parkersburg, W.Va., rehabilitation center.
Recording Secretary Mary
Jo Barringer read a letter of
congratulations from Bertha
Stapleton, stote councilor.
The · Miscellaneous Committee will have a silent auction at the Dec. 4 meeting,
and officers wiD be nominated.
Mary Jo Barringer read
"Remember When,u and
Erma Cleland led the lodge
members in a game.
Also attending were Esther
Smith, Doris Grueser, Ruth
Smith, Everett Grant, Shirley
Beegle, Mory K. Holter, Betty
Young, Opal Hollon, Sandra
White, Charlotte VanMeter,
Goldie Frederick, Jo Ann
Ritchie, Thelma White, Laura
Mae Nice.

lnduded
in listing
POMEROY - Local student5 will be included in the
35th annual edition ofWho's
Who Among American High
School Students.
The recognition is based on
nomination by high school
principals and guidance counselors, national youth groups,
churches and educational
organizations, based on students' academic achievements

and involvement in extracurricular activities.
Students 'included are: Joeline Allen, Amanda Combs,
Kate Hamill, Melissa Nevil,

Chad Sheet5, Casey Spolrich,
Aaron Trout, Alicia .Young,
Brandice Drenning, Jessica
Gaston, Elizabeth LaPort~.
Leslie Nicholson, Megan
Skidmore, James Strawser and
Elizabeth Wooten, all of
Albany;
Janet Ridenour, Adam Wolfe
and Stacy Smith, all of
Chester; Erin llush, Jameson
J&lt;;&gt;hnson and Holly Jackson, all
of Langwille; Tricia Congo,
Jennifer Goeglein, Alissa
Larkins, Abbi Thompson, Tara
Fisher, Beth Gregory and Jessie
Sargent, aU of Long Bottom;
Nellie Chaffins, Delana
Eichinger, Jessica Hooten ,
Amanda Langdon, Monica
Moon, Emily Stivers, Derk
Johnson, Nickolas Mclaughlin
and Brandon Ramsburg, all of
Middleport; Nicole Black,
Brent Buckley, Zach Davis,
Juley Eblin, Candice Fetty,
Alyssa Petty, Grace Kitchen,
Sara Mansfield, jessica Roush,
Rebe cca Taylor, Anlanda
Yeauger,Jaclyn Bradbury. Carrie Crow, Trista DOerfer, Cacy
Paulk, Brittany Hauber, Whitney Karr, Jenny Long, Nicole
Phillips, Elizabeth Russell and
William Woods, all
of
Pomeroy;
Tyler Johnson, Portland;
Michael Ball, Rach~l Elliott,
Kenneth Kiser, Rachel Marshall, Mindy O 'Dell, David
Snodgrass, Brandi Codner,
Nathan
Harvey,
Shauna
Manuel,Jessica Nance, Lindsey
Smith and Jennifer Zielinski,
all of Racine;
Da&amp;ne Connolly, Tina
DelaCruz, Elaine Putman,
Tyler Simmons, Carrie Wiggins, jeremy Connolly. Sandra
Powell, Danielle Rucker,
Thomas
Simmons
and
Christopher Wilson, all of
Reedsville; AlisoR
Hays,
Gabriel Jenkins, Joseph Varian,
Sarah
Houser,
Staesha
Kennedy and Shauna White,
all of Rutland; Sarah llall,
Syracuse;
and
Nichol
Honaker, Jason Miller, Kimberly Marcinko and Billie Jo
Welsh, all ofTuppers Plains .

Marines land'···
near Kandahar

t:
•'

KABUL, Mghanistan (AP)
Striking at the last center of
"Taliban power, Marines landed
Monday outside the southern
l;ity of Kandahar and set up a
desert airbase, a U.S. commant,r said. The northern ·alliance
said its troops were "cleaning
Qllt''·pocket5 of resistance in the
newly fallen city of Kunduz in
the north.
At the scene of a bloody
prison uprising Sunday by captured fighters for Osama bin
Laden, heavy new explosions
and gunfire rang out Monday
in Mazar-e-Sharif despite
assura'nces that the insurrection
had . been quelled. A fighter
inside said holdouts were barricaded inside a tower, firing
rockets.
The deployment of Marines
near Kondahar marks a perilous
new phase of a conflict that
until now had focused on U.S.
airstrikes targeting urban infrastructure and backing up the
opposition northern allianceplus limited ground missions by
several hundred American special forces fanned out in small
units across Afghanistan.
Kandahar, the Taliban's home
base and spiritual center, has
come under fierce bombardment since the U.S.-led military campaign began Oct. 7,
and the Tali ban have vowed to
fight to the death rather than
abandon the city. In the last
three weeks, they have lost their
grip on\ •three-quarters of
Mghanistan , plus the capital,
·
Kabul.
Loud eXflosions rocked the
area
around
Kandahar
overnight and early Monday,
with bright flares iUuminating
the night sky, a witness in the
city said. Trib;U leaders said their
fighters, backed by US. bombardment, had pushed tu within five miles of the ciry.
Most of the top Taliban leadership is believed to be holed
up in and around Kondahar.

•L.

Jl!l~~~!!!ll!l Tribal leaders

OPERATION

were trying
to negoti ate

ENDURING

FR&amp;E• IQM

a handover
of the city.
Ferried in
by
helicopter, the
vanguard of
Marines
seized
a
secret desert
airstrip
within

LOCAL BRIEFS
HMC;

EMS logs calls

11 :46
p.m.,
Veterans
POMEROY - Unit&lt; of MemorUI H~pital, ~
the M etf,'&lt; Fme rgency Service Long, treated.
RACINE
answered 12 ralls for assisSaturday, I :39 a.m., L.-tt
tann.· over the weekend. Units
Road,
assisted by Syracuse,
responded as follow&lt;:
trailer fire, Kenneth lUter ~aCENTRAL DISPATCH
idence, Thonw Adkins, crat&gt;Saturday, 12:41 p.m., Wolfe ed.
Pen Road, John Dean, Holzer
RUTLAND
Medical Center:
Saturday,
10:34
p.m.,
5:43 p.m ., Hysell Run Crouser Ro•d, Ryan B.trneu,
Road, Gillian Casto, treated;
treated.
10 :25 p.m., Pomeroy Cliff
SYRACUSE
Apt., Janet Norman, treated; . · S.turday, 1:25 p.m., Forni
Sunday, 12:02 p.m., Hamp- Run Road, Daniel Hadden,
ton Hollow, Cierra Clelland, HMC.
HMC;
TUPPERS PLAINS
5:36 p.m., Noble Summitt,
Saturday, 7:~6 p.m ., Bashan
Julia Moodispaugh, Pleasant Road, Joy Daily, HMC;
,
Valley Hospital;
·Sunday. 12:47 p.m., Forni
10:3 1 p.m.. Mulberry Run Road, Mildred Panons,
Avenue, Dako ta Morshall, PVH.

Budget
..... Page 1
weeks ago over the Senate's
refusal to back Taft's tax
increases, which total about
$465 million over rwo years.
The Senate also proposed an
additional, $42 .6 million cut
to state agen cies .
Taft said Senate lawmakers
lacked the political courage to
enact the tax increases. Finan
said SeuJte Republicans; not
the governor, had the guts to
stand up for taxpaye rs.
Finan also took Taft to task
for his mantra that the state
couldn't afford any additional
budget cuts.
"That's what he said when
we did the regular budget last
year, if we cut any furthe r that
that was jeopardizing public
sa fety and everythi~g. and yet
he proposed 6 pe rcent more
and sa id, 'We ca n absorb
thal,"' Finan said.
Taft ordered the 6 percent
cut, or about $600 million,
last month when his budget
director revealed the $1.5 billion shortfall.
"Now sudde nly we can't

fi)l \'l' '\

som ~ ob'it.HJ e:-.

absorb 8 percent, which is 2
percent more. ! just don't buY
that," Finan said.
Taft first worned agaituC
additional budget cub in
April, when he gathered his
top officials at a news confer-.
ence to whip up public ~
port against budget cub ~ing
pushed by state lawmakers.
"We'te cutting into bon~
and tissue and nerve here:' he
said April 18.
He held an identical news
conference Nov. 15, marshaling his environmental, health
and aging directors, among
others, to warn against more
cut5.
"We have cut, we have cut,
we have cut:' T•ft soid. "We
are cutting into the bone

here."
Squeezed berween Taft and
Finan are House Rep\lblicans, who oppose the riiulti.state lottery, support more
modest packages of ·· .tajc
increases and appear c~QI
toward additional staJe budget
'
cuts.

a.

ul'm

fle~ible,"

Ho~

Speaker Larry Householder, a
Glenford Republicon, soid la?t
week. "I have not painted
myself into any corners." '~

.

.I
.\

Travel
from Pagel
More
travelers
were
expected to drive to their
holiday destination, while a
decline in air travel was predicted because of the weak
eco nomy and fear of flying
since the airborne attacks.
Overall, the nu1;1ber of Americans expected to travel over
the weekend was expected to
be down 6 percent since last
year.
Los An geles International
Airport spokesman Harold
Johnson sa id an estimated
690,000 passenge rs went
throu gh the airport over the
Thanksgiving weekend, a 25

striking distance of Kandahar,
their commander said.
"The Marines have landed percent drop from the same
period last year,
and we now own a piece of
Chicago's airports were
Afghanistan:· Gen. James Mat- expected to experience their
tis, commander of the attack busiest day since Sept. 11, but
task force, said from aboard the th e numbers are ltill not back
assault ship USS Peleliu . Aft er to normal, ,a id Department
securing the sand airfield, of Aviation spokeswoman
troops set up landing lights so Monique Bond. Passengers
fixed-wing transport aircraft
I
.
experienced ong 1mes at
could land with more troop&gt; security checkpoint5 on Sunand supplies, he said.
day but flights were generally
Word of the fall of Kunduz
running on time.
At Detroit Metropolitan
in northern Mghanistan came
from the northern alliance,. Airport in Romulus, Mich. ;
went
smoothly
whose troops were trying to things
consolidate their .hold on the throughout
the
holiday
city. Militant holdout5 ·were
k d
1
believed to still pose a serious wee en
as peop e gave
. themselves extra time to get
threat to the alliance forces,
through ti ghter secu rity,
who first entered Kundu z Sun'&gt;p ok e,~ l n :ul
Mik~· Co nway
day.
fi h
0 I 'aid .
Pro-Taliban lg ters . "'
"We had great 1~earher all
-toward the town of Chardara.
the w ay across the country."
to the west, with alliance tro ops
in pur:uit, said alliance foreign
ministe_r Abdullah, who uses
one name. Thousands of others
have surrendered over the past
two days.
The · alliance acknowledges
that pockets of ~esistan ce
remain in Kunduz - ' particu~
larly from hard-core Taliban
from Kandahar and from foreign fi ghters loyal to bin Laden.
"Our

•

'

he said. "The monito'n
looked great."
An aviation industry analyst, Terry Trippler ofTrippler
&amp; Associates Inc. in Mit!,.
neapolis, predicted that the
airlines' holiday business
would turn out to be better
than expected, and said the
period was crucial fo'r the ai~­
lines' futures.
"It was critical to the airlines that they pull off this
Thanksgiving weekend so
people would say 'Thanlcsgiving was all right,'so we will fly
at Christmastinie,"' he said.
·Another aviation consultant, Michael Boyd of The
Boyd Group in 'Colorado, had
predicted 25 percent drop in
air travel for the holiday
weekend.
"This will be a bellwether
of what consumers think;' he
said. adding numbers should
be known by Wednesday. "If
it's down less than 20 percent,
what we have is a rebounding.
economy for air travel."
Amtrak
reported
•n
increase in train travel, but did
not provide figures. The company added 75,000 seats,
more than last year's Thanksgiving holiday period, when
567,000 people rode on the
passenger rail service during a
7 -day period.
At Boston's South Station
new security me~sll.~ put iro
place·by Amtrak. no.w prohibit non -ticket holders from
accompanymg travelen onto
platforms.

a

... J l't' m cl:t111p-

.md

_\U il"lL' h-''&gt;h

ranee, mostly from the fOreign
Taliban," Abdul Vadud, military
attache at the Afghan embassy
in neighbori~g Tajikistan, said.

',

•••

•••

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
••••.,...... d .. 21. 2.1

;; Inside:
1, Meigs

banquet, Page A 7
• NFL Roundup, Page A 10
••

Page AS

•

Moncbly, November Zl. 1001

OK,~ ... "TH\~

ti IT....·dJR \J.ir
~t)...

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fu: 992-2157

MONQA.Y's

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chllrtn W. Govey
Publisher

The Daily Sentinel

I ~

CtiiiMne Hoeflich
Genenl MI!Mg~~r

I
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.,

u..n,. dw ....,_.,. w-.... J1tq dMIJJIN Jw diM Jll ..... All.._,

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•

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intelligence sources.

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Tribunals also do not have to conform to all of the constitutional contortions imposed upon domestic criminal courts for
dealing with evidence and testimony.
There are no "exclusionary rules" or prohibitions against
"hearsay" evidence, for example, under the stricter military tribunals:
The use of such tribunals of course has a long history. Following World War II, for example, tribunals were used to deal ·
swiftly with the Nazi instigators of the Holocaust and with
Japanese commanders responsible for atrocities committed during the war.
Terrorism is one means qf warfare, and more than 20 years of
treating acts of terrorism as isolated criminal events has dismally failed to deter terrorists and their sponso". Take for an
example the defendants in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103
over Lockerbie, Scotland.
·
After bringing the perpetrators Libyan intelligence agents to
an international court, they now rest easily in prison.
The process never touched their commanders or the Libyan
government itself.
If U.S. law enforcement agencies at home or military· forces
abroad should capture terrorists, then a military tribunal is the
best means to deal with them.

I

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l

I

JI

!

I

Today is Monday, Nov. 26, the 330th day of200 I.There are 35
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 26, 1942, (&gt;resident Franklin Roosevelt ordered
n:ition')'ide gasoline rationing, beginning Dec. 1.
On this date:
In 1832, public streetcar service began in New York City. The
fare: 12 112 cents.
In 1825, the fi"t college social fraternity, Kappa Alpha, w:is
formed at l,Jnion College in Schenectady, N.Y.
In 1940, the half-million Jews ofWarsaw, Poland, were forced
by the Nazis to live within a walled ghetto.
In 1942, the motion picture "Casablanca," starring Humphrey
Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, had its world premiere at the Hollywood Theater in New York.
In 1943, during World War II, the HMT Rohna, a British
transport ship carrying American soldie", was hit by a German
missile offAlgeria; 1,138 men were killed, including 1,015 American troops.
In 1949, India adopted a constitution as a republic within the
British Commonwealth.
In 1950, China entered the Korean conflict, launching a
counter-offensive against soldiers from the United Nations, the
United States and South Korea.
In 1%5, France launched its first satellite, sending a 92-pound
capsule into orbit.
In 1986, President Reagan appointed a commission headed by
former Sen. John Tower to investigate his National Security
Council staff in the wake of the Iran-Contra affair. ·
In 1990, Japanese business giant Matsushita Electric Industrial
Co. agreed to acquire MCA Inc. for $6.6 billion.
Ten years ago: The Stars and Stripes were lowered for the last
time at Clark Air Base in the Philippines as the United States
abandoned one of its oldest and largest ove"eas installations,
which was damaged by a volcano.
Five years ago: OJ. Simpson finished three days of testimony at
a civil trial in Santa Monica, Calif. President Clinton ended his
12-day Pacific trip with a stopover in Thailand. Major~league
baseball owners revmed course, approving the same collective
bargaining agreement they had rejected just three weeks earlier.
One year ago: Aorida Secretary of State Katherine Harris certified George W. Bush the w.inner over AI Gore in·the state's pn;sid(mtial balloting by a 537-vote margin. Haiti held its presidential
election; a former president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, won by a
huge margin.
·
,
Today's Birthdays: Singer Robert Goulet is 68. lmpre'.'ionist
Rich Little- is 63. Singer Tina Turn~r is 62. Producer-director
Bruce Paltrow is 58. Singer Jean Terrell is 57. Pop musician John
McVie is 56. Actress Jamie Rose is 42. Country singer Linda
Davis is 39. Country singer Steve Grisaffe (River Road) is 36.
Thought for Today: "Some minds remain open long enough
for the truth not only to enter but to pass on through by way of
a ready exit without pausing anywhere along the route."- Sister Elizabeth Kenny, Australian nurse (1886-1952).

•

I

511

24

Clavelaud 18, Cinrmati 0

~

Mlooa 20, San Diego 17
.... New Englald 34, New Orleans

Try this
• The Intelligencer ofWheeling, W.Va.: President Bush's
order establishing military tribunals to try suspected terrorists
captured either at home or abroad is a welcome sign ·that the
administration may cast aside the failed policy of treating terrorist attacks as crimes rather than 'acts of war.
Military tribunals offer many advantages in dealing with any
captured terrorists, not least of which is the ability to protect

av 19, Sealla 1

.•:.• f'llalult134, Ta

NATIONAL VIEW

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28, N.Y. Giaris 10
,.,.• 8Claldand
'ioe24. MsorMie21
etago 13, Mi111esw 6
.; ~N.Y. Jels
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PI!IA

Military tribunals best means
of dealing justice to terrorists

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eigs drops opener, 38-33

HIGHLIGHTS

R.S.....Uwla
IIINglng Eclltol'

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~Gina

-

'10!tlr*&gt; 107, PI ila:J8JHa 88
- LA. CliRJas 90, HoustJn 83

Sadlle 99, lrdllna 88

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Goklan Slala 101' New Jasey 86
LA. L.ahas 100, Da"Ner98
Mlln'IINCAAHoope

l#:zr has provided ·us with strange new allies
Soon after the terrorist attacks on the
World Trade Cente~ and the Pentagon.
Colin Powell harshly named Sudan as one
of the seven nations sponsoring terrorism.
And in 1996, the Vnited Nations had
placed sanctions on its Khartoum government for the same reason.
But now, having enlisted Sudan in the
war against terrorism, the Bush administration has killed the Sudan Peace Act;
penalizing Sudan. The bill, which was
COLUMNIST
passed by the House (422 to 2) on June
13, would have banned foreign oil companies investing in Sudan's oil explorations been killed or enslaved. He said, "We
from American capital markets.
Catholic bishops are united in mind and
And on Sept. 19, when the United heart that the oil business is fueling the
Nations Security Council removed its war in Sudan.There is no way we shall shy
sanctions on Sudan, the United States away from this reality:'
abstained - thereby further exculpating
Colin Powell and George W. Bush have,
our new partner in the war agaimt terror- however, managed to sily away from a pasism for Sudan's own continuing responsi- sionate statement by the secretary of state
bility for the enslavement of black Chris- earlier this year: "There is perhaps no
tians and animists in the South. Gang greater ttagedy on the face of the earth
rapes and ethnic cleansing of black today than the tragedy that is unfolding in
Sudanese from lands under which there the Sudan:'
are oil reserves accompany these raids.
And House Majority Leader Dick
Khartoum already gathm some $2 mil- Armey said of state terrorism in Sudan
lion in oil revenue per day fium its part- before Khartoum became our ally: "Peonership with such oil companies as Talis- ple are being tottured, mutilated and
man Energy of Canada and the state- killed solely because of their Christian
owned China National Petroleum Cor- ·faith."
poration.
But the Boston-based American AntiIn the New Republic issue of Oct. 22, Slavery Group - which, for years, has
Michael Rubin, a fellow at th7 Washing- brought Americans the horrifying news of
ton lnstltute for Near East Policy. report- . these atrocities, including the testimony of
ed - after recently returning from Sudan ,rescued slaves - has not shied away. These
- on the govert1p1ent bombing of a vii- abolitionists illusttate the shame . of the
!age in the South "near a church packed silent and complacent world, including
with children listening to a Sunday ser- many of our current allies in the war
man." Fifteen children were killed in against terrorism.
ano'ther bombing in the week of Oct. 15.
On Nov. 7, the American Anti-Slavery
Reporting from the Sudan Catholic Group filed a $1 billion lawsuit against
Bishops' Conference in Kenya, the Sept. Talisman Energy Inc. of Canada in the
28 issue of National Catholic Reporter United States District Court for the
quoted Macrarn Max Gassis, a bishop Southern District of New York. Among
from the Nuba Mountains of central the plaintiffi; was the Presbyrerian Church
Sudan, many of whose parishione" have of Sudan. The Reverend John Sudan

Nat
Hentoff

Gadoel, Pastor of the Pmbyterian Church
of Sudan charges:
'"Talisman is on the front lines of abuses
in southern Sudan, and it is time they are
held accountable for their role in the brutal jihad' that is killing my people."
On Oct. 4, Sudanese Vice .President Ali
Osman Taha inspired a brigade of
·marauders · on . their way to southern
Sudan, "The jihad' is our way and we will
not abandon it. and will keep its banner
high."This man·is among one of our allies
now.
The lawsuit charges Talisman with violations of international law for participating in the ethnic cleansing of black and
non-Muslim minorities in Sudan. Eventually the plaintiffi - says ·attorney
Stephen Whinston - could be expanded
·to millions "whose families have been
broken, whose lives have beert 'sllattered,
and whose villages have been burnt:'
Mr. Whinston and Carey D'Avino, the
other lawyer representing the victims of
the barbarous Khartoum government,
were among a team of attorneys who succ
cessfully sued German and other corporations that, during the Nazi regime, had
compelled many people into being forced
and slave laborers. Those victims won a
$4.3 billion settlement under the A!i'en
Tort Act, which allows non-U.S. citizens
to sue in this country for crimes against
them committed abroad.
·
I trust that Colin Powell and George W.
Bush will not be offended by this lawsuit.
Our ally in Khartoum certainly will be.
There is no question that we are in a war
against a network of quinteSsentially evil ·
enemies; but let us not hide from ourselves the evildoers we have asked to join
with us. Nor must we forget those innocent people who continue to be their victims - while we avert our eyes.

(Not Hentq[ is • nationally renowned
authority on the First Amendment and the Bill
qf Rights.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

'

Like agood parent, government should be nurturing
BY JOHN

CUNNIFF

NEW YORK- In dealing with constituents, governments concerned with
promoting economic progress can benefit
from a lesson familiar to any parent: Strike
a balance between security and self-sufficiency.
Too much security can thwart Initiative,
leaving a nation's potential economic
development unfulfilled. Too little can
deny benefits to those who really need
assistance to fulfill their role in society.
The reminder comes in a worldwide
study of new-business initiatives for the
Kaufman Center for Entrepreneurial
Leadership, a Kansas City, Missouri nonprofit organization. It is only one of the
findings, but a significant one since entrepreneu"hip is equated with economic
growth and renewal.
"If a country is to fully realize its potential for entrepreneurial actiVity;' the report
states, "government should avoid creating
a welfare state where everyone is provided for regardless of pe"onal initiative."
The study. conducted last year among
the adult population of 29 countries by
Babson College, London Business School
and IBM, shows countries with a finely
woven social safety net ranked near or at

the bottom in small-business formation.
necessity, as opposed to opportunity seekHeading the most-entrepreneurial list ing.
were Mexico, New Zealand and Australia,
If a country is to realize its potential for
followed by Brazil, Ireland and Hungary. small-business formation, it contends, "its
At the bottom were Belgium, Japan, Sin- government should avoid creating a wel·gapore; Israel and The Netherlands.
fare state where everyone is provided for
The study showed most European regardless of personal initiative."
Union nations, along with the United
The researchers . explain that since
Kingdom, were among the least entrepre- entrepreneurship "is the means by which
neurial. And, while ranked in the top 10, societies extract value from innovation;'
Brazil and the United States showed sharp they propose that increased investment in
declines from 1999.
technology development has positive
The so-called GEM study, fnr Global results.
Entrepreneu"hip Monitor, distilled what
And they point out that a consequence
it called propositions that seem to apply to of encouraging entrepreneurs is the
all countries regardless of their level of inevitability of business failures, while
economic development.
contending that such failures should never
The first of them is that "a strong com- be confused with pe"onal failure.
mitrnent to edcuation, both general and
In fact, they argue that in the broadest
entrepreneu"hip-specific, i&lt; clearly justi- view business failures are necessary for the
fied across all national contexts."
efficient operation and adaptation of an
The study "clearly identified govern- · economy, since a failed business's resources
ment regulatory burdens as a major deter- are reallocated to more productive uses.
rent to higher levels of entrepreneurial
The GEM program is scheduled to
activity;' especially in regard to time con- - expand the number of participating counsumed and cost&lt; involved.
tries .in coming years, the goal being to
It also found "a strong negative associa- extract new and more precise explanation" between the level and duration of tions for business formation and success.
jobless benefits and the occurrence of
aohn Cunn!lf is a business onalyst for The
new-business creation that results from Assodoted Press.)

~Gina

8oatJn U. 70. SL Peler's 58

0"9* m. Oral Flcbei1s 68

~

Sai1l Joseph's 81, CobraOO 15
Troy SL 73, Maine 71, OT
' tli.NI104, Pcl1land 62
89, ntana SL -49
-·.. aAier
DePa1J 107, 'lllt.-1gstMn SL 69
,1, N. ~ 83, Wls.-Gteen Bay 79
:. L01'M-fvb 108 94, TCU 90

BY BuTcH

COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

· CHESHIRE -They looked like two teams still trying to
find their ways.
With only one senior on the court for either team Saturday night, River Valley and Meigs opened the girls' high
school basketball season with a lot of questions .
The Raiders jumped out to a sizable first half lead, but had
to overcome a rough second half to defeat the Marauders,
38-33.
"It's the first time I've seen them in gaine competition, so
I've got a lot to learn about them .... try to put them in ihe
right situations," said first-year Meigs head coach Dave
Wilcoxen. "I think tonight, we had some kids that were
maybe placed a little · bit wrong on the floor. We need to
work on that. I'm not disappointed."
River Valley junior Nicole Watkins led all score" with 11
points as the Raiders led 23-13 at halftime.
Also for the Raiders (1-0), sophomore Tarra Minnis and
Brittany McDade each scored eight.
"We came out with a lot of emotion, as you should with
your first ~s-~me of the year, especially in front of the home
people;' said River Valley head coach Tom Weaver. "We were
running our sets and we were getting good looks. Our
defense was getting the ball back for us. Our press was work. "
mg.
For Meigs (0-l),junior Shannon Soulsby and sophomore
Jaynee Davis each scored eight to lead the Marauders.
Davis scored seven of her eight points in the third quarter
as the Marauders cut into the River Valley lead, 32-28.
"We lost our offensive patience in the second half;' said
Weaver. "We tried to get them to tun sets and they were
.breaking down. It came down to maybe one pe"on to not
being where they should've been. We showed our inexperience in that second half." '
A basket by Kayte Davis and a 3-point goal by Samantha
Pierce to open up the fourth quarter lifted the Marauders to
their fi"t lead of the game, 33-32, but those would be the
last points to be scored by Meigs on this night. ·

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l'l*d!"~. Hawai eo. W19oonsiu57
Flllhi"-·
LSU 84, Mercer 54
, ,_
S..&amp;llli Place

TNnlfllace
·., . Vanclarbilt 69, 01lllanooga 57
1"·'' l-lanl*ln 83,Flllh
Hawai Pacllt 76

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91r•allh !"'. .• Akron 90. UJerty 58
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No1n! Dame 85, Morrnouth, NJ.

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Soulh Floii.la 69, l'ilt!ibi.Jiltl63
~.W~.w~~ty Hoopa

l'l*d.l " -

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Filii!"-

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.. .. Kent SL 75, UC lllline 84
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Sewnth Pllce
Oakland, Mittl. 77. Robert Maris
•1. 53

-·

Nonnanwins
Skins Game

INDIO, Cali£ (AP) -With
one big birdie putt and one
· --routine par, Greg Norma11
managed to recapture a bit of
his old magic in the Skins
Game. He played well, enter~
'tained fans and earned a cool
$1 million.
Norman's birdie putt on the
-::17th hole put him in position
to be the big winner in the
·' •annual Thanksgiving weekend
J•event, and he followed it with
f·a two-putt par on the 18th
•, :hole to win his first $8~0.000.

,. Miami and
·.... Rorida atop AP
,..
Top 10
• NEW YORK (AP)
.•, ,Losses . for Nebraska and
. ·.Oklahoma turned into big
, _.. gains for Florida, Texas, Ore- ·
gon and Tennessee in the AP
,. J;ollege football media poll.
. ; While Miami (I 0-0) was a
r near-unanimous choice at
....No. 1 in The Associated Press
Top 25, Florida moved up to
.•·No. 2,Texas to No.3, Oregon
1 ·to No. 4 and Tennessee to No.
.,. 5.
1 •• • Nebraska (11-1), beaten by
Colorado 62-36 on Friday,
·.: fell four spots to No. 6. The
Sooners fell to No. 11.

..

PREP FOOTBALL

Moorefield bounces

NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF A FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT
IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT (FONSI) '
COMBINED NOTICE

NoyZI 2001

Wahama, 52-12

"· ' JiaV~I~IJ7.~~SL89
1
Sport 1bln Uauallunll
.
Hllwlll Clll

1.

Please see Opener. A7

SKYIN' -Meigs' Brook Bolin (rear) shoots over a pair of River Valley defenders in Saturday's
tip-off game of the 200Hl2 girls' hoops season. River Valley won 38-33. (Dave Harris)

BY GARY CLARK
OVP'CORRESP0NDENT '" '

speed they had to go with,
their size and strength;' Fa)MOOREFIELD- Dur- con coach. Ed Cromley said
ing a two minute span the following the playoff loss.
Wahama White Falcons' "They have a very talented
Cinderella football season team with an extremely
came crashing to an abrupt strong interior line. We
end at Moorefield High weren't able to get the presSchool Saturday afternoon as sure on Fisher (MHS quatthe 8th rated Yellow Jackets terback Adam Fisher) like we
capitalized on a pair of Fal- needed too and that was a
con turnovers in running big factor. They had time to
away to a 52-12 Class A throw the football and that
semifinal victory.
enhanced their running
An interception Ja~e in the attack. We gave it our best
first half led ·to one Moore- ·shot. They just came out and
field score while a fumbie on took care of busipess."
the second half kickoff
Fisher completed 18-of-24
resulted in another six point passes for 194 yards in addigift and for · all intents and tion to a stable of Yellow
purposes that was the begin- Jacket running backs rushing
ning of the end for the for 306 yards on the day.
· Mason
County
crew. Moorefield got 92 yards on
Moorefield would later show the ground from Jimmy
why they've reached the Fields while Adam Homan
championship game in each and Anthony Carr picked up
of the past six seasons as the 84 rushing yards apiece.
Hardy County team would Fields, Homan, Carr and
tally 46 unanswered points to Eddie Mongold all tallied
turn the outing into a rout. two touchdowns each on the
Wahama gave the larger, day for the Yellow Jackets.
more experienced Yellow
Wahama would total 135
Jackets a challenge for most yards on the ·ground and 119
of the first half before the yards through the air with
decided size advantage began Adam Rickard running for
to take its toll on the smaller · 32 yards followed by Gabe
Falcons. The post-season set- Lambert with 28, Ryan
back concludes the Bend Mitchell with 26 and BranArea teams 2001 grid cam- don Hankinson with 25.
paign with a 9-4 record Bradford Clark connected
while Moorefi"eld (10-2) on eight of 19 passes for 119
moves on to face Wheeling yards and a touchdown with
Central in the · state finals Anthony Mitchell and Clark
next week in Wheeling.
scoring touchdowns for the
"We knew they would be
bigger and stronger but what Pluse see F.tlmns, A7
we didn't expect was the
'·

S AVER REPAIR
LINIC
I
TUESDft "OVEMBER 17th 1:30-4:00 PM
FRUTH PHARMACY

TO Alllniereatod Peroono, Agencleo, and Grou..-:
The Melga Cou~ Comml11lgnera. propo111 to requlat the St1t1 of Ohio to releaM Federal fund•
under section 1 (II) of Title I of the Houelng and Community Development Act of 1874, 11 emended;
section 288.of Tille D of IIIII Creneton Gonuleo Nllllonel Affordable Houotlng Act (NAHA), I I amended;
and/or Tille IV of the B-art B. McKinney Homelaoo Aaala!Jince Act, 11 amended; l&lt;l'be uoed lor the
following prolecl(a):

11 hao been determined that auch ·Requeot for Relaaoe of Fundo will not conotltute an action
algnlllca,.tly affecting ihe quality of tho human onvlronmeni and accordingly the Mt(go Coynty
Camml11lonera, h•v• decided not to prep•re. en Envlromental Impact Statement under the National
Envlronmentel Polley Act of1 Hll, 11 amended.
.
Envlron...,n!JII Review Rocordta) (ERR) lor each altha Projecijo) llotod above have-n conducted by
the Mtlgo CouniY Commlaalonero. TIM ERR(a) documonto liM envlronmonbll revlowo of the proloct(s)
and m.... tully- forth tho l'llsone why ouch otatement 11 not required. TIM ERR(I) are on tile end
available tor the publlc'o examination and copying, upon requ111, betweon the houra of 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday (axcept holld.oyo) at the obovo addreaa.
No further environmental review of ouch prc)ectlo propooed to be conducted, prior to tiM requeal lor
releou at F-lunde.
d11crlbed with tho Federel lunda
any comment• regarding tho
decJ1Ion, 1relnvttld to aubmlt
ottiM ilddrHo above lloted
thll combined notice.
lo lloled Immediately
NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST A RELEASE OF FUNDS (NOVRROF)
To Alllnteraatad Persons, Agencies, and Groupa:
On or about, but not before, Die. 18. 2001 , the Melg• Cguntv Commlttlonera will request the State of
Ohio Ia releaoe Fedora! lunda under Section 1 4 (g) of ntl.- I of tho Housing and Communlly
Development Act ol 1974, •• amendedi Section 288 of Tille II of the Cranston Gonzales National
Affordable Houotlng Act (NAHA), aa amended; and/or Title IV of the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless
A11l1tanee Act, 11 emended; to be uled for the project( e) llotild lbove.
The Mtlr. Countv Cgmmltalgnara plan to undertake the project( a) deacrlbed above with the Federal
fundi eT.a above. AnY' Interested peraonr agenclea, and/or groupe, who have any comments
regordlnm the environment, are Invited to oubmlt written comment• for consideration to the Mtiul
County kommlaalone(llt the ltddreaa above lilted prior to Qtc. 20. 2001.
The Melga Countv Commlaalpnera are certifying to the State of Ohio, that Meigs County and .1.111
Jbornlon In hllllhor official capacity •• Prteldlnt of CouniY Comm(oalonoro, consent to accepi the
jurtodlctlon of Fed.oral courts If an action 11 broughi to enforce reoponolbllltlea In relation to
environmental reviews, declalon-maklng, and actloni and that these responslblltles have been
ootlftollocl.
Tho logo! afloct of iho cortlflcatlon 11 thai upon Ito approval, the Molga Counlll Commlulonaro may
uae the Federal fundi, and the State of Ohio will have ullafled Its responslblltlea under the National
Environmental Polley Act of 1981, •• amended.
The Stale of Ohio ..:macceptan oblectlon to Ill approval of tiM rela11e of lunda and acceptance of the
certification only If It 11 on one of the following g_rounda: (a) the certification was not, In fact, executed
~the reoponolble entity'• Certifying OH!cor; (b) the reoponolble entity hao lolled to make one altho
two ftndlngo pursuant to Section 58.40 or to meke ihe written determination required by S.ction 58.35,
58.47, or 58.53 for tho project, 11 applclble; c) the rooponolble entity has omitted one or more of the
stepa oetlorth at aubpart E of 24 CFI'I Part 58 tor the preparation, publication, and completion or an
Environmental AaHaamenti d) the reaponslble entity haa omitted one or more of the atepa aet forth at
Subparto F and G of 24 CFR Part 58 for the conduct. prepar111on, publication and completion of an
Environmental Impact Statement, e) the recipient hn committed funds or Incurred coo11 not
authorized br 24 CFA Part 58 before relea1e of fundi and approval of the environmental certification
~ Stele, or I) another federal agency acting purouant to 40 CFR Port 1504 has submitted a written
finding lhalthe project II unoatlafactory from the otandpolnt of environmental quality.
Written ob)ecllona must be prepared and aubmltted In accordance with the required procadure .(24
CFR Part !8), and mu1l be addre•sed to the: Slate ol Ohio; Envlronmen..l Offlctri Offlce .of Houalng
and Community Portnerohlpa; P.O. Box ·1001; Columbua, Ohio 43216·1001 .
Objecllona to the Releaoe of Fundi on ba111 other then thooe alltild above will not be conolclera&lt;l by
the State or Ohio. No ob(actlono received after Jan. 8, 2002 (which lo15 dayo after It 11 antlcl.,.ted that
the State will receive a request tor release oi Iunde), will be conalclenKI by ihe Slota of Ohio.
The addreoo of the cartllylng olllcer Is:
Jeff Thornton, Prealdenl
Malgo County Courthouoe, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

786 N. 2nd, Middleport

••

I,

"

.,.

�Monday, Nov. 28, 2001 .

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

: llonday, Nov. 28, 2001

~rthune-

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1r r~ IMe1gs
• honon .,-ra·11 sport athletes

Sentinel-

CLASSIFIED

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

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Brother•
Farm. APPLES

StOOD

Fruit
AND

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Ao
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1740)3117·'m4 111VS alun*1um Iepper lor 8'

lill73-17
,.,..,a-y,
Ford
1fl85 a-y 5-tO 14500 1ruclc
111-va bod,
Dodgo,

010(304)87~ '

· 1235080,(740)992·7VIO

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MUCH MOll!. 24 miiH

• North o1 Gaillpollo on eoun- 1987 Font Econotlne van
BASEMENT
wilhwheelchllrNtt.
WAT!RPROOFINOguor••
, 1887 Chryoter Now$4,500.
VOlker U•~uelftlonelllfltlma
:
$600. (304)8~
...... L.ocaJ not- tu••
ntlhod. E-lahod 1875.
FARM
F-250 4ll4 Rt&lt;1 Cal 24 Hrs. (740) F.oviPMt:Nr
123.000 mlieo. Chw 0170,
1-800·287-051fl.
/
~~T1rao. saooo. Rogorw WaltHproollng.
'84Donal\.le11'GraioTratl• with Dump. 500 buthel 11197 Aa1ro LT Van, lull C&amp;CGtnoriiHomiMalrM~---·dual - · auto,lront &amp; -air, ..._ Palnting, Ylny1 ole!_,,,
alectrto
jack, roll Ieath« - · radio, CCI &amp; tno. carpentry. doora. wino
•'""'·
(304)8
- · 72 ,0000 miles. 1b - . befhl, , _ home
7s- 1847 .
•
Hlllt ntata. $9,000. ropalr ond mort. For frea
510
L""''
· MFSO. Mower, (740J448- 1362
ellimatt call Chit. 740-1192rake, MF12 - · 3 wag- 1
6323.
en. Jog oplitttr, df&amp;e., buth ~ Exp~oro&lt; Span, 4.0 vhog, elc. (3D4)8754S69
:.
YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor, 94
~~~~kept.
517·1100, (740) ~
16
1 975
3
· polnthi1Ch,S2.tso.
~ orse
~ •· flnlllh mower, 1999 Rid
ZR2 -11610 · 4, 4 Reoldentlal or comri1trdal
allllln crote, $650. Shipping so OOD mlloa. Fully' AutO: :;~·M:'oo r;.,r:.,or..:
IVIIlobll. Located ,.... out•
'tie •.,;"~·
~-'I
cD. Air, trielln. R - E ~·
o1 Huntavllo, I'J (256) ma
(740l3•r••WVDD0306, 304-675-1788.
ne-94:16 www.maynarde-

I'*

•rid

1\.egister
(394) 675-1333
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 :DO p.m.

All Olsplay : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Monday-Friday tor Insertion
In Nellt Dly's P1per

Publication
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday DISplay: J :00 p.m.
Tht.~r5dav

For Sundays Paper

for Sundays

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

S

••----"'!""-.
:~~cd= r ~ I

Private Party Ads Under $100

20 Words 1 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

1

.

toct·-·

Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

qulpmonl.oom

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lntlude Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

6

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I'F.R&lt;!oNAI.&lt;;
,
' $100 reward for the return
,,' of
stO1en P1g (yard orna •
men!), black &amp; whit&amp; liber' glass pig approximately 3'
: tall &amp; 4' long, stolen out 01
, yard In Syracuse, has a 101
, of sentimental value belong
to rather who recently
passed away. it YOIJ have
ar(740Y o99nfonna2
502tion plea40-so992call
I - 3 or 7
'

lbuWANDD

11

Be Your Own bossl
Never 9 to 5 Again
Eam Up To
•~
.,,..,., ••1\1\1\/mo

PTIFT

1 BCJ0-810-0705
•
www.CaahNowAndForever.
com
·

- _ _ __,.___,,,__
COME &amp;ROW

WITH US!

We are expandtng our ctrcu-

116

1

IDLPWAMm

URGENTlY
NEEDEDplasma donors, eam $SO to
$60 per week lot 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call SeraToe, 740·592-e&amp;St.
Attention!
Eam 2nd. Income' without
2nd job t0
up
$25.-$75./hr. Pt-Ft.
1-8()(),218 7543

· ·
www.Money·Dreams.oom

fallon llaff to beltar ...,._.e
our customers. We are look~ Part time Church Secretary
'
.
.
lng for a peraon that has Posiliort Good Peopte SKIIs
. w~ '!~all? St~rt meetmg high energy level, self- mOll· and Computer Expertise
: Oh10 SJ~Ies tonight, call ton vatad and enjoys working Needed. 20 Hra. (740)446·
, free 1·800-766-2623 Bid with people. Must have de-- 7925
, 1621.
pendable transportallon, ba·
sic computer knowledge. We are working hard to flll
·
ANNouNCEMfNTS This Is a full time salaried Amer.lca's food banks for
~..__ _ _ _ _ __.~. position and offers all com· the holiday see.sor1 and we
.,
pany benefits Including need "'10 hardwol1dng, com·
Middle Age Professional heafth Insurance, vacation, passionate IndividUals to
, OWM looking tor Professlo- personal days, and 401K Join our team. Starting pay
, nai WF, 30-SO. Respond plan. We are part of a large Is $7.00 per hour. 'We do
, with lener and picture to company thai offers &amp;Keel- good work". C&amp;ll 1-888·237·
: EB7 200 Maln Streel, Point lent career advancemenl 5342 ext. 2232 for more·ln, Pleasant WV 25550
opportunities. For interview formation.
consideration send a cover 141
letter toling us why you arel
lk.5INB
Would l!ke to have small the r'lrAI'IIN't: we are looking
"""·--~ .
·~ ha 1rho sa dog that Is
e-·-..
'"""""""
~.......
u
for along with your resume
already house lralned. to Paul Barker Circulation
Please call (304}675-3264 Director 81 Ohl~ Valley Pub- Galllpolla c.,.., COllege
Ushlng Co., 825 Third Ave., (Careersc.roaeTo '10""')
GIVEAWAY
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
can Todayl 74o-440'4367,
_
1-80D·214-o452,
:
o•~• ENTRY FTR=•90-05-t274B. ·
~·~
'"
• 6 beautiful puppies ready No Experience Needed. 1110 ··~ • ~ ._,.,....
: ror
caring
families.
Training Provided!
LnJSCilJ ANF.OUS
'(740)441-1707
M~I--1Bif"ng.Upt.o$60K.
~•
Computer required.
, Free puppies, 6 weeks old, 1-800-240-6197 Dept 956 Free report, show you how
mother Is Shepherd/Collie
www hDnmed M
to receive unlimited gotd
mix with good lemperament,
---and silver coins. CaU toll
. (304)882·3145.
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT inle, Hln-526-11957 J.D.
,
PAY! Ataembte prOducts 11 •M3392.
I S~all
~upples,
Short
home. cafl Toll FrN
: HRired MiK breed. (304)675- 1-800-467·5566 Ext. 12170 Good or Bad Credit Even
' 5702
www.homejobs.com/12170 Banluuptcy, Gall Toll FrH
,
.
24 hi's., 1·888-426·6393. ,
AUCI10N AND
Full end Pan Tlme H~p
MARKET Needed at CltgoJ Unte HEART ATTACK/STROKE
L~---iiiiliiiiiiiiiiittorl· Johns 14 located In Cents- VICTIMSJKIDNE't-LIVER
,
nary. Apply in Person. Mon- PROBLEMS? II you used
, Rick Pearson Auction Com- Fri. &amp;am- tpm.
any of these products be, ·pany, full time aootloneer,
.
fore your event, you may be
· complete auction service. FuU and Part nme Help enlltled to monetary damag:·
' Licensed lt66,0hio &amp; West Needed. Chevron/ Llnle eel Baycol, Vloxx, Metabo: Virginia, 304-773·5785 Or Johns ft6 located In WD· IDe, Ptavtx, Fen.Phen, Re. 304-n3-5447.
kesvflle. Apply In Person. zulln, lml!rex, Lamlsll, L.olro·
Mon· Fri., 9am- 3pm.
I nex, Propulaid, Products
W·~
·
"'""'EW
containing PPA·Ephedra.
1
'
TO BUY
HomiiWarUra
Nudecl Gall now about your legal
L~----::iiiio.-.,1 $635 Weekly Processing rights- James Aolshouse
Mall. Easy! No Expert· practlcea law only In MN·
Absolute Top Ddlar: U.S. ence
Needed. Call 1- Assoclales throughout the
, Silver, Gold Coins, Proof~ 800-852-8728 Ext. 2070, US 1-800-876-4572
sets, Diamonds, Gold 24Hrs.
;:·
·
Rings,
U.S. Currency,11110
W.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· McClure's Restaurant now
ANDD
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- hiring a• 3 locations, full or
To Do
448-2842.
part-time, pick up applica·
tlon at location &amp; bring back All Make Kerosene Heaters
I \11'1 tl\\11 \I
between · 9:30am
&amp; and Forced Air Heaters Re·
.., I II\ It I ...,
10:00am, Monday thru Sat- paired. Small Engine Re·
i!II;;;IOp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;~~ urday.
pair. Free Pick-Up and De·
lhiPWANIED
llvery Available, Oller 20
WANTED: E xperlenc ed years Experience. Call Mike
..,._ _ _ _ _ __.~Roofing &amp; Carpenter Fore- (740)446-7604
man's, valid driver's license,
IATTENTIONI
hand tools, reliable trans· All of your home repairs, ad·
WORK AROUND YOUR portatlon and references re· dlllons &amp; remodeling. 24hr
SCHEDULE
qulred. L.ocat work, ex:cel· emergency seNice, senior
S25- S751 hour, PTI FT tent pay tor right person, clllzena discount. 22yrs.
· All training provided
onuses, vacation. Apply at exp. (304)576-2065
www·-....tweah~com
Chirat 1an •s c onatruct1on,
,,__.........
Inc., 1403 Eastern Avenue, Family
Man/Handyman
1 ~~~'tw92
--------Gallipolis, (740)446-4514
~=~~~~~~nc~~s~~Bn Y~~
SActionsS- SSBring$$eot.... Free Estimates
SSSCashSSS
Part time FIN'S and Pari (304)n3-5584 Ask ror Don
AI Easy as ASCI 2 week time LPN's needed tor 100
COL Trainll'lg· Great Pay bed skilled nursing facility. Georges Portable Sawmill,
And Beoolits. Training and EKcellent oppor1unity lor the don't haul your kJgs to the
Placement Available
right candidate to wol1!; with mill just call 304-675· 1957.
No Exnarianca Necessary an axcapllonal nursing
,._,_
1i
Ti a u
ct
CALL Amerlmex!
team. Excellent starting pay, op '! 0 om eaners,
5801 HWY 31 E.,
opportunhlee lor pmfesalo- professtonal, a~d aHordaClarksville, IN 47129
nat growth and benefits. In- ble, homes, oH•ces, rentals,
1·888-209-0817
terested candidates should aonstrucUon and remodeling
AC02t9
apPy to: Aockspfings Flaha- cleaning. {740)992-1391 or
billtatlon Canter, 36759 (740)992-2979
• 1==~~a=:.:.=D R~nga4576R9oadE, Poml~ Will Haul Away, Clean Out,
items. Material provided. ~:-:"~ E-....:. quaE vy- Clean Up or Move Almost
To S480+ wk.
e~-"w"' .. .,....r~-~r- Anything. Taking ConsignFree Information pkg. 24 Hr. ging ortq:Jlace u••~~norty. menta, Call (740)446:-7604
1-801-264-5625
PART· TillE
__
_
OFFICE POSmON
Overbrook
Center
is cur- We have a pal't·lime
. PDti·
renlly accerpdng
applications
B
for a tuA dme 11 -7lhlft LPN tion ~at our s.inel of·
~~-·
andparttlme3- 11 and 11 •7 fice tn Pomeroy. TNt poat·
vrruiiUll"III
shift lPN. Please contact Uon ftQul~es ~ ar)d
Kristle Madden for more In- math lkil1~, must enjoy
INOncEt
fonnotlon or atop by our working Woth people, be OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
front office for an appllca· abfe 10 ~ your work ~NG CO. recommends that
tlon. E.O.E.
a~ be avllllat* for IChed- you do buslneu with people
::::;::.::;::;:::__-::,..-,-.----:- uhng between the houra of you know, and NOT to send
AHn: Pomeroy Postal pos- 8:00am and 5:00pm. Moo- money throogh the mall until
lions. Clerks/carrleralao11• day through Friday. For In- you have inveetlgatad the
era~ Noexp. required, sene- tervlaw consideraUon send offering.
fits. For eiC8m, salary and your raaume and cover let- - - - - : - - - - : : testing Information can, tar or AltenUon of Diana HIL Start Your Bustnees To(1130) 393-3032 8xt. 7151 Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co., day Primo Shopping Can8am-8pm7days
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, let' '$pace Available At Af·
AVONI All Areao( To Buy., Ohio 45831 ·
-Rate. Spring Valley
Sell. Shirtey Spearo, 3()4o sat"-"'"' Full·tlme, ben- PlaZa. Call7~101 .
875-1429.
elits, retail experience refer·
red. Apply at Ulestyle FumlHelp wanted caring for 1M lure. No phone calls. Apply Buy Sell or Trade
elcleriy, Darst Group Home, In pe-~. B5e •~ Averue.
t
now paying minimum wage, GalltPo'Ti~: OH . ~u
In the
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm- WOf'lc From Home. Free
7am, call740-992·5023 .
Booklet. 1·800·853-7293.
I

3324.

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Desc:rtptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Adl Should ftun 7 Davt

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M~Yert~Hmentstorrul
Htltl whh;:h I• In
vtolattan af thlll••· Our

1st time buyers· Government loans· buy loans &amp;
saki· (740)446-3093 Oak·
wood Supercenter

hereby
lnfOI'IMCI that 111
C~M~IIngs MMr1Jied In
28K8030r48edroom,On·
thl• rJ"WIPitP'fi 1,.
IYtllllbteonanequtll . ~ 99 t34F~~: 1 :.~stM~~~
.__ _....,:;::::::;;::;:::r.;":;•::;'"::;.·. . .1 1•888.928•3426
r.ciel'llnt

rld

.:..:==:...:..:=---Amazing First Time Home

I

Buyers.
Government
Backed loans. No cred61t
needed.
(304)755-556
FOR SME
Limited Offer.
·
Assumable loans· Many
10.5 Acres with 1999 Fleet· types available, Call for de.wood Modular Home Near tails. (140).We- 3583 .
Gallipolis. Excellen1 Corldi·
tlon. Private, Coun1ry Set·
,
ling. Stocked Pond. Addl· Big 16 wide, 3 bedroom 2
flonal 7.5 Acres Available. bath, save $5,155, delivered
Call Janell Call at Canlury &amp; set up on your lot lnclud·
21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular ing skirting &amp; fiberglass
~ (304)834·2598 or Office cteps, COles Mobile Homes,
1-800·731·9011). •
U.S.592
50 1972
East, Athens, Oh,
,...-,..-,.....----..,..-- _740- "
·
3 Bedroom on ~oula 2, End of the modal year salel
(304)675-5332
All 200 1 must go, to make
3 bedroom 1 bath with room for 2002. Spacial low
IarOe llvlngrOom new gas tlnanclngprogramavallable.
appliances alld ~c upstairs Onl)' at Fleetwood Homes
completely
re~ovated of Proctorville. Toll Free 1·
$37,500 (740)992-4485. • 888·065·0167
HOMFS

For sate by owner· Nk:e bl·
level home on 1 icre n'ear
CheBIB&lt;. Threo bedroom,
two baths, one-ear garage,
family rol?m ~lth fireplace,
sun room. NeW central heat·

Flnal Days, Nationwide In(:~)716-3409 Reductlonl

limited Or No Crectlt? Govemmenl Bank Rnance Only
AI oakwood In Barbour&amp;~~e&amp;o:'~:=ettu':~ ~: Ville, wv 304-736·3409.
1 (7401985·398 1
vae.
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
WellRanch,
Baths'
hood.

~

+4: Corrwli:IDn•t.-*lnlhefhi:IIWIIWIII....._

1

LOANS! LOANS! LOANS! 3 bedroom, fn Mlddloport, New Double Wide. $195 2 beOroom, new carpon,
Paying Bills? In call Tom Anderson after Per Month! 3 Bedroom, ? covered pa.tfo. wid hookup,
Debt? Good, Bad, or no Spn, (740)992·3348.
Both. Free Delivery &amp; Set,. no pets, (740)992-2167.
credit. cBankruptey
· Wei· 4 ~-- Cape Cod with up. 1.._..
"""928·341'lA
11 ~-'1 f
..u
a-.
f I
••-- ldoal
~~~~;..-~..... ·~- '" 1•
-~"
-auti U Rive&lt; • ouorot!O'Q ~
garage on ·level 1 acre lot Nice 28K60 Double Wide For 1 Or 2 People, Referenwith jrees, Eastern Local ttl
ented lot lfl
0epot1t N0 P ta F
CREDIT PROBLEMS, Hav· Schoel. cia, clheat, full 8PoelnntgPe_nallrnt a-·. 2•6 ceo,T
p'
e..,:_ .. ~,
..
·- .. ttr railer artc, 7...._..... •
lng
Financial
problems?
Is
hal BINI II, Tuppers Plains walls, thermal n:•ne win- 0181.
Bad credit, no credit, or
taf.
Ch t
·
~
.:-:''--:-::=-::-::-----::-~
._a
wa , near
es er on dOws, priced to sate. Call -::
-nkruptcy the root of yoor State Route 7, clean &amp; well (304)675-3889 aak for Clean 2 BR Trailer, Refrigprobemo? Call us today: . malnlalned (740)9fl5-.4335 Rolemary
erator and Stove Included.
PREMIER CREDIT RE·
.....:.':'-:"'=::'
CIA, No Pels. References
SOURCES 'All the rtnan- 5 oeoroom houae with 12
OAKWOOD HOMES
Roqulred. Gall (740)388clflf hell) voU need\ 1-866- acrea. (740)992.()449
SUPER CENTER.
8956 or (7.a)388·9053
257·5445, ~illzlng in; 818 Main Street, Pt. Pl. Over 40 homeSIO chose
pei'ICinal, coniolidatlon,
Completely Refurbished 2 from. Dnve altttle save I
AllunMENI!;
business, mortgages, auto.
FOR RDlr
F 11 Bath 3 Bed- loll Oekwood Homes of
2
.
SIQry,
u
-K h
Nllro. (304)755-5885
--Mea- Ia Auoclatea rooms. Large
ltc en, ---'-":::-.,..,--'-Truing' "to•-buy a home and large Utility Room, LRI OR/
REDUCED
1 &amp; 2 BA Economical Gas
F
fly
"
N
C
banks are rejecting you duo am
nm. aw arpe1 All Double Wide Displays
Heal, W/0 Hookup, Nea r
to bad crecm history? we throughout. F/A &amp; .AJC, must go. Only $995 clown. ·Holzer, $295 to S379 Per
can help you. We provide ~J:O:S.~~79:~r Only at Oakwood Homes of ' month, Plus Utilities, Lease
mortgages, personal and 2683
or
· Nitro. (~)755-5885
and Deposit Required.
small buslness loans with
.
Single Parent Program. (740)44e.2957
good or bad credit. Approval 1053 VIne ·s.ree1, Middle· Easy Financing Available. :--::-::--:--:----:within 48 hrs. (866)862· port, $25,950, 3 bedrooms (304)765-7191
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
1t58
trenced yard, (740~992·
menta. furnished and unfur·
7003
u. --..........
nlshed, security cleposit rePRot"El\MONAL
D\..allrt~
qulred, no pets, 740-992~
SEIMOli
122 Klneon Drive. Newly roAND llulwiNGs
2218.
modeled, 3-&lt;l bedroom, full
~
1 Bedroom 4n•rtmenta,
basement. New ffumaoa, ·4 600 sq foot Commercial
,..._
Flint Financial . has been nearly new roof &amp; vlny1 sld· e'undtng with 10 to 200 S289 month. Deposit I Ref·
provfdJng small business lng. Quiet neighborhood acres Rio Grande Ohio erance. HUD Appraved.
to;ans for 13 years. Now we c.., to sc~-J . shopplnl~ ,·ewne~ financl a~allable: (740)441-1519
spaclaUza·ln personal, ear &amp; $64,500, call (7-10)446·8310 Call (740)245-5'147
1br. Very Clean, Available
debt consolidation. , We or (740)446·2425.
.
Dec. 1&amp;1. Now taking Appllguarantee quality service
l..oTs &amp;
alfon ( )87 975
Ira
I led 08
Call
c
o. 3D4 S-4
F'r: F~ ~I Sa ~
Newty constructed, single
A~v·Gil
n na
N • ap- story 1600 aq, foot hom~.
~
pflcallons hotllne (1· Located 10 minutes from
888)388.0S95
2 Bedroom Apt In CentenaHolzer Hospital, 20 mlnut~ 4 acres, 1 mile orr At 7 on ry, appliances furnished.
. from Pleasant Valley HOspi· Eagle Ridge Rd., utilities utiH I
ld
·'~ric
Need -Financ~al Help? A1sk tal, oft SR 100 on a private avalable and driveway
let pa except 1111- ' •
tNNJ opportunity,~~ ~o fur· 1·112 acre lot. 3 be.droom. there, $20,000 Firm, call clean, $2851 month call
thor, our financial onslltullon 2-112 baths, big kitchen (740)992-5620 after epm.
1740 )256- 11 35 aner 5:00.
provides you w11h assls· w/oak cabinets DR lR
·
tance . &amp; inlorrriatlon, Free w/gas log flreplice, c8ntrat 9 acres, $18,000, between 2 BR Apt. Newly Aamod·
consullatlon, call now at air, laundry room, front Patriot and
Northup. elad. Stove, Flefrigerator
877-304·3011.
poOCh &amp; 2·1~ ear gar•-. (740)37"9257
Fumlshed. All Utlllles Paid.
R
Immediate ~lon.1i).
~r
46 Olive St. $475/ mo.
TU NED OOWN ON
praised at $125 500 Make For SOle: 60 acres on the (740)448-3945
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? offer. Call (740)446·4514 dead end of Hysell Run 3 rooms and bath, FumiBh·
No Fee Unteu We Win! rrom 6·5pm, M·F, or Road, eKcellent hunting ed Efficiency, All Utilities
1·888·582·3345
(740)446·3248 after 5pm,
property and building site Paid, Downstairs, $285/
for home. Water and electric month, 919 2nd Ave.
~
already there, $70,000 Call (T40)448-394
after 4:00pm (740 )992.
5
M
HoMJ;s 1 4293
BEAUTIFUL · APART·
OBILil
.
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
·
FOR SAu
Indian Creek Eslales, 3-11 C!S AT JACKSON ESacre lois, weal or AID •a-s •• w twood Dri
All roof • - -ltolng 14x70 Clayton Trailer. 2.5 Grande, from $25,900.· from
•~• • $297
• ~ to es
$383. Walk ve
to
1nth 1• n.w p·per..
Acres, 32x40 New garage. (740)245·5747
...bf-attothefedenll
Scenic View Estates.
shop &amp; movies. Call 740Fair Houllng Act at 1181 (304)576.2635
~rge corna~ building lot 446·2~. Equal Housing
wfllcl'l makH tt IUegaiiO
with 205' Ohio Aiv&amp;r Irani· Opportup•ty.
lldvet'tiM '"any '
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per age, elevation shot, sur· Christy's Fam!IY Living,
~. llmlt8Uon or
Month, 8_99% FJ••" Interest veye_d, appraised, serloua 331 -40 N u
Ad R t
d...~"'-L:._..__ .__ __.
..U\1
InqUiries only $40 000
ew ma ·· u •
-···~·-·-""
Rate With Air And Un· 304 882 3736 •
•
land. Ohio, 740-742-7403.
rae., calor, r.llglon, aex
derplnnlng 1·888-928-3426 ( ~ '
before st:Jn:l. Apartment, home and trailer
flmiiW ltltUI or nafloNII
Skyl'
bedLooking
To
Buy
A New rentals. Commercial s10reCMigln, or •ny intention to 1985
•ne 14lt70 ' 3
Home? Don't Have land? fronts available .tor lease.
mtke tny •uch
room. Good Condition. Call We Ool!l Hurry Only 10 Lots Vacancies now,
l)fefelenc:., llmhlltlon or
Harold, 70385-9948 ·
Left, 304-7J6-.7295.
FUrnished Apl. 3 rooms and
dl~rlmiMtlan."
1991 Mansion 14K70, 3 Meigs Memory Gardens, 2 bath plus shower, Down·
bedroom eKcellent condl- tots In Chrlstus section at stairs, Clean. Reference
Thll newt.piper wit not
tlon, cal! Kavena, (740)385· base 01 statue, 5450 , and Oepo~t Required. No
knowtngtyoccopt
994ll.
(740)992·7887.
Pets or smol&lt;era. (740)446-

I

I

"* cMI appiiM. • All ...e -...

Pro~lem

Ir

I

r

r

11nY
.,..

Maintained Brick
3 Bedrooms. 2 t/2
tn quiet neighbor·
(740)446·0203 lo

~~~S0~:81~aa:~~a~:_:rv

--"-_..::.:..:...;c__ _

New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2
bath. Only $995 down &amp;
....
$189.62/month. Cell Cheryl,
740 385 7671
River view, 5.9, ale, In·
· ·
·"
ground pool, 4 Br., finished New 2002 14 wide only
basement, 2 fireplaces, $799 down &amp; 1155.38/mo,
huge Lr., (740)992·2943
Cefl Nikki, (740)385-7671.

1

Nice lots, quiet country Illting, will accommodate
t6x80, $100 per month, call
Ed at Countru
Homes, 740·'
992-2167.
-------TraH
f
t $120
er spaceth1 orMrenl :_•• _
per mon , n· ne.....u ..;
600 oq ft office bulltil.vr, ale
..... ,.
&amp; ceiling fan, $275 per
month, (614)876-1661

1

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repolred, Now &amp; Rebulft In
Stock. Cllt Ron Evens, 1600-537·11528.
-------Mlro-. matte Preuurt ean.
...._, Uko "-. Uled v,,.,
,....,.
•. ,
little, $35 fin'n, (740)985-

==------4409
MOBILE NOME OWNERS

rib Houmon
I
GooDs
I'--------'·

intartherm &amp; Coleman 111111.
oil &amp; electric fumacea Ineluding hi !Jffk:lency heat
pump syltM'IS. We t'AirJ I
complete line of Mobile

Appliances: Aecondiliontd
w h8 f'8 0 e · Ra .....
as
'
ry ra,
nwvl,
RalriiJatorl, Up
90 Days
Guaranteed!
WeToSell
New
Maytag Appllancea, French
City Maytag, 740-448-fflS.
-------Dresser, chest of drawers.
Night Stand. (304)875-3604

home nArtl &amp; ICCIIJC"Iel.
"""
:n G •

BENNETrS · HEA: N •
COOLING "40)448-8411
or
1
www.orvb.comlbennttl

-eoo-a72_,

NEW AND USED FURNANCES FOR 8ALEI We
Install, FrH Etttmalts, If
you doni Call us, We both
For Sate: Aecondllloned Loose! (7-'0)4WS-6308, 1·
washers, dryers and retrtg- 8()0..291..()098.
erators. Thompsons ~
ance. 3407 JackiOn Ave- AmiZIIIfl
Mellboflom
nue (304)675--7388
a--.........-a.ll
'
.
, _••....,... ·
Lose 10 pounds- 200
Futon l;lunk Bed, white met- pound• eaay, quick, Ful .
al, excellent condltlon, ask· Dramatic Fleaulta. lOO%
lng .$300. Call (740)448· Natural. Dr R!lfll)qmmended,
11828 Biter 4:30pm.
I '"Aok -alioilt FREii.Biolplt'
Hot point Washer, 595. (740)441·11182
WhiMpool Dryer, $95. GE Beatleo Rocord -Albums.
Refrigerator, 595 , Hot point Some Rare. Price. $75 , Cllll
El
R
S
ect. ange, 95. Whlri- (740)882-7894 . ·..
pool Refrigerator, Uke New.
$175. Freeter, Upright, Beatlea Scarf, Bealia&amp; 196f
$125 Sk
•~N
Coloring Book and old
•
aggs ~ ancH,
' ,·
76 Vine ST. (740)446-7398 Beetles T~ Caldl. $95
lot all. Call (7 )882-?894
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark · Bob Long Defiant palnlbell
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Red &amp; Ora
aplaah
(740)448-7444 1-877-830· f:' barrel 9
9162. Free Esllmatn, Euy 3000 _,
and
financing 90 days same as
I ...., "'VW""''
COlt
cash. visa! Master Card. $,~.
Saga
Orfve.. a-little save alot.
Df'Hmcaat, 4 COidroltfa, to
New and Used Furnllure gamet, memory card and
Store below Holiday Inn Rumble Packl In original
Kanauna. We Sell grave' box, 1225. (740)446-0350
•
monuments and vases. Brother Desktop Publllher
Hours: Monday thru Satur· with color Ink Jet Printer.
day 11am-3pm. (740)446· Never boon uled. $75 .
4762
OBO (304)875-11515

=hopper,
n......_:..r:'sm-.

j

j

1519
Nice 4 acre tract near
Gallipolis- easy terms Gracious living. 1 and 2
(740)446-3583
' bedroom apartments 81 VII·
'::--'--7·'-"-'-'-::--,::----- tage Manor and Riverside
Single Grave Sit&amp;. Kirkland Apartments In Middleport.
Memorial Gardens. Lot 451· From $278·$348. call 740A-E11214., $300. Contact. 992-5064. Equal Housing
Mary-Alice (608)788-6483 Opportunities.
Unrestrlctedlll Wooded lot, Mlddtepon- North 4th Ava.,
Route 588, utilities available 4room fumlshed apartment,
$12,000 {740)245-9«8
deposit &amp; references, no :own;:;;:•::;'·------ pets, (740)992.0165.
Sue's Seiecta"'es on lhe "T' Original Army Camoflauge,
....,
SatelliiH Sales and IIMce.
Now Taking Appllcatlor1s- in Middlepon. ~Its, glass- Installation $9.00 a month.
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- ware, Aladdin mantels, and 100 Channels. 8y Sam
(740)992..0298
house Apartments, lnotudes more.
Somerville Master Searget~t
HOUSES
Water
Sewage, Trash,
USA Air force Retired. By
$350/Mo., 740-446.000S.
Sandyville WV Post Oflioe.
I'UR lbNr
(304)273-5655
Pomeroy, Naylors Run, 2 or
MN»IANEOLS
MEROIANDISE
Pool Table, Brunawtck Her·
15 Court Street 2 Bed- 3 br. apartment, w/d-hu, sir,
rooms 1 112 bath~ K"lch
~&amp;~~~':lerence~. ~
, ~~g&amp;. ~)8~~ket.
with sieve and rel~rat~~
1850 Wooden Cedar OrtgiOff Street Parking, Close to
na1 Stanclllng, 10 h long. flnltlontlolttamo ow-.
SChools and Downtown Rtver Bend Place now ac· $150. Other hand forged Tappan HI efflcilncy 90 ptua
Area. $5951 month plus de- ceptlng a~llono for 1 br. toots. (740)992-7669
·gao fumacea Including oil
posit and Reference. No Hud su•- e Apt. lor the
and
alaclric gas tuma~
Pela · (740Y&lt;"'926
ua
cas
HI
Ettfcl~ - •
~.,
elderly &amp; disabled. EOH. 2 spaces at the Memory
·
....... ,
(304)882-3121
.
Gardens (Woman at the Pumps, tealuring Tappana
2br. House 2424 Monroe
WaD), $375. can (740)446- Frae Incredible warranty
Ave. $325 month+ Deposit Tara Townhouse Apart· 2893
package.
.
(304)895-3815
menta, Very Spacious. 2
BENNETT'S HEATING a
Buy homea lrom $199/mo., Bedroom&amp;, 2 Floora, CA. 1 2 Wheel SIJlall Ullllly Trail- COOLING (740)448-8411
Foreclosures, 4% down, 30 1/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted, ar. All new tires, can be or 1-100-172·5817,
8 5 APR F II
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pa- made to Haul •· wheeler www,otvb.cort'\~Mnnett
rne::s ~~aci0~19-332;r e:~~ tio, Start $365/Mo. No Pets', with Alteration, $200. ' Watel11ne Special· 314 200
'
L•ase Plus Sacurily Deposit (304)875-231 5
PSI $2,_ 95 Per 1OO; 1• 200
1709.
Aequlred, Days: 740·446PSI $37.00 Per 100· All
Elegant 2 or 3 badroom. 3481: Evenings: 740-367- Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 Brat~ CompreBiiorl Fitdngs
house, 299 Mulberry, Porn· 0502, 740-446.()1 01 .
for $1 o. Open Sat 8-5pm. &amp; rn Stock.
amy, no pets, (740)992- Twtn River Towers now ac- evenings. Dewhurst Green- RON EVANS ENTEAPAII5858.
cepllng applications lor house Mt. Alto. (304)895· ES Jackaon, Ohio, 1-8001BRHUDsubsldlzedapt. 3740 leave message. or 537·9528
:~~s~ =h ~ 1!Ru111~ lor -lly and diSabled. (304)895-3 789
iue s and Oeposlt (740)245('"')E0.,H;,. _
Independent Heotlollfe Dlo- IIIli""'"""::""----,
,._ 87.,..,..,.79
tnbutor, Csll For Product Or
lltJnntNG
9020
- - - - - - - - - Opponunlty. (740)441-1982
Stlrrl.mi
Pilot P•ogram, Renters
'---:.::~=--'
Needed 304· 738-7295
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom S&amp;tetllte C·band 'ttlg" dish.
'
·
apartment, In town, large Remote COntrol , Control BloCk, brick, sewer plpee,
Why rent? government ldlchen, LA, $5001mo. Rei- Box, Owners manuel, U windows, lintels, etc. Claude
backed loans from .$490 erences &amp; deposit required. pick- up. $300 (740}446· Winters, Rio Grande, QH
down. (740)4Ml-3D93
(740)446·3644
1282
Call 740·245·5121.

rib

r

TO BuY

=cal'f(~~7~~-

r .~ "I
~
20 _

,red Angus. Simmestart trethenlng In oprlng. Call attor
tal

cross cows,

Drenner and Tirzah Dodson. Chancey,
Hoovtr and' Jaynee Davis each were first
team All TVC selections, with Hoover
and Chancey each earning honor•ble
mention District 13 honors. Jeffers w•s a
.secori d ll!am All - TV
· C se Iecrion. T he
team finished the ...son with a 17-4
mark overall and 15-1 in the TV C.
John Krawsczyn was next up and he
. presented members of the gol f team
which. finished runner-up in the TVC.
Team members were Josh Napper, Ben
Boo k man, J os h R ay an dJeremy B an k s.

Marauder football team. Team members
included jon Diddle, Matt Wandling.
Kyle Hanmn, Clifron Chandler, Derrick
F•ckler, Eric Cullums, Matt Holley,
Jonathon Larkins, Darrick Knapp, Brand on Bo bb, A d am W ise, Jeremy R ous h ,
Tyson lee, Daniel Thornton, Doug DiU,
Corey Longstreth, Joel Clelland, Bruce
Glover, Ross Stewart, Richard DeWeese,
1iravis Hayes, Brandon Bell, Kenny Zuspan, Jason Rosier, Jason Murdock, Jason
Myers, Evan Shaw, Nick Mclaughlin, D.
J . I',usse II , Ed F 11e,
·r N ate l e h ew, M arc.

N•pper w.11 a,second team AII-TVC per_r
former, while Ba.n ks wos the C!)merences
· most valuable Golfer. Jason Peckham was
the teoms manager. The Jack R . Slavin
Memorial Coaches award went to Napper, while .B•nks was presented the Park·
Awa rd 10r
~ th e
e r L.on8- R o dd. Ha rmon

Barr. Ray Ratcliff, Josh Ramey, Mike
I
Davis, Curtis Varin.
P. Varin , Ty er
Bune&lt;, Clay Stone, Brandon Glover,
Ryan Fnizer, Brandon Ramsburg and
Sh•wn Day. Managers were Phillip Murdock, Curtis Welch and James Haning
All - TVC a·ward s wen t t o J eremy

Moore, Ryan Stobarl, Grant Arnold and
Ross Well. Stariley and Williamson each
te~eived awaids for second-tearri all;con•
ference honors.
Junior varsity voUeyball coach J?ale
H arnson
·
'
presented h'IS TVC c h amp1on
volleyball team. Receiving awords were
Mirando Stewart, Sarah Stobart, Justine
·
Dowler, Sam•ntha Pierce, Renee Bailey,
Emily Ashley, Erin Cullunu and Cassie
lee. The team finished with a 19-1
record.
TVC volleyball coach of the year Rick:
Ash introduced members of the TVC
champion volleyball team. They included.
Mindy Chancey. Kotie
Cotrie
Hoover, Kayte Davis;
. Davis,
Chri.sy Miller, Nikki
Maria

Meigs Most Valuable G&lt;'lfei.
Meigs High School principal Dennis
.Eichinger then -introduced members of
the cheerleading squod. Junior varsity
cheerle~er awards went to Paige Bradb ury, B ran di D at'I ey, ru
•-hi ey B ayIor,
Amand:i Hoyt, Courtney Nitz, Courtney
..
van Meler, Nico Ie Burman, Peggy Duff,
Lisa Gheen, Michelle Neece, Katie Reed
ah,d Natasha Wise.
Vorsity cheerleader awards went to
Carrie Abbott, Jennifer Reeves, Jessica
Gray, Bridget Balser: Krystal Johoson,
He•ther. Phalin, Brittany Williams,
Amber Haning, Berh Phillips, lucy
Howerton, Hannah Woolard •nd Jennifer
· Youhg.
Mike.

J

J.

Rpush,'!yson lee and P. Varin, Roush
and lee were selected special mention
aU-district.
Chancey also announced that Marc
Barr and Roush were selected by the
I
r.or next season .
payers
as co-captams
Another senior will be selected to serve
•s a captain eac h game next season.
Booster president Jim Soulsby then
presented an award to Bob 'Artie Foo'
Burton for all his service to Meigs High
School the last several years.
Ash then presented awards for the
TVC All-Academic team; they included
Mindy O'Dell, Tyler B•rnes, jeremy
Roush, Nick
Gray,
Ba)ser, Kayte
Davis,
and Katie JeH'ers.

7pm. (740)862-11116

.

'

Advertise your
message

Angue heifer, maiM' angus ·

hftllers, bulla and hatter
broke malnelonguo - - .
priced reaoonlbiy. Stela
Run
Farm
Jackson.
(740)288-5395

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

Ca- tor eale.
(740)245-51184. Hell - ·
... Dry let, ond - ·

Club

=

r

25 Round eJ., Wheat. 30
Round Balee Mixed Hay,
.a.m Storedt 1100 Pound
BaiH. (740)246-9852

WANTED

Square bales was $2.00
,_ S1.5o; .1 mAo on Fit. 2
N. (304)875-4889

Part-time position available IR Meigs
County. Hours: lOPM Friday throu&amp;h
9AM Monday; sleep·over required. .
Dulles Include teachl1111 community and
AWJ,RDtS - The following Melgll Maraudtr tooJ
. tbeli
personal skiDs. to an Individual with
players received awards at TuesdayUs Meigs Fell s·ports Banmental retardation. Requirements: High quet. From left to right are: Tyson Lee and Nick Mclaughlin.
school dlplt~ma/GED, valid driver's
Second row: Tyler Barne.s and J. P. Vllrln •.
.
'
license, three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile
Insurance coverage. New starting
salary: $7.00/hour. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640• .Deadline for
applicants: 12104101.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Hoy &amp; Bright Wire no
Straw, Yoor 'Aound Dollvery
Diacount Availa-

&amp; -

ble.
Horilage
Farm.
(304)875-6124.
II~\ \'l't•l~ I I I 1\1\.

r:

FO«iTam

Auros

pSAu

1988 Sllvarado •••. Now

Goodwfench motor $5215,

1888 . Cherokee $2495.
1889 Chevy truck, V-II Auto,
$2eSO: 19116 Chavy T-.
C· 2f!QO, $5995. COOK
MOTORS. (740)448-0103
1987P8,Bult;k
·Mlfel.
v-e,
PS,
PW. PL. Low
FroniWhoef Drlvo, Nl conCIIIIonPrlct - (740)448· Good
&lt;lao MM-.

~ .

1989 Qrand Malquio, 1.o1e1-

ed, Excellent .ConCIHion,
74.70t"ml1•- $2500 oao
(740)245-5408

VOI..LI'r'BAIU. ~:lioi:_:The lVC champion Meigs Marauder 1101le)tlall was honored at Tuesday's sports banquet at Meigs High
Schilol. Front rcNI from left to right are: Mindy Chantey and Corrie
licXMr. second rCNI: Jaynee Oll'lis, llatie Jeffers and Kayte Davis .

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

r:=======.
·NOW
Help Wanted
'

I

FOJ _SaJa·
~..,_
Frames.
F~••
.. .,nn.
. 525 -....- · - •~.or
per et• long K 8CT wide
$50, 5 Drawer 1.aga1 F~
RemingtOn 1100 12 gauge Cablnel SSO. (7.W)256ftuoog guLw"·. $42025ga;uR!", ~~.1·=529:::..,__ •_ _ _ _ __
- ._,.,., '"'
Ruger 10122 wllh scope Grubb's P~no- Tuning &amp;
$200; (740)446-2905
Repalra. Problomo? Tuned? Cd The Piano Dr.
Aemlngton 870 Express, 12· 740-44(;..4525 ,
gauge, 26• vent, ,., barrel ;,.;;:_:_;:;_;:::;:_~-with SCf8W·In choke, $200; NEW AND USED STEEL
Remington 1187, 12 gauge, Steel Beams, Plpe Rebar
slug.barral, fully rifled, never For Concrete, Angle, Chan·
out of box, $180, (740)742- net, Flal Bar, Sldl Gradng
8:200
For Drains, Drivawaya &amp;
Walkways. Now 65 Gallon
.....n&gt;UV~
Drums Wlth Lid &amp; Ring,
,.,•.~:u n.l'-'1:.3
$7.00 Each. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
ala Open MOnday, TueDy,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam·
Antique buffet, excellent 4:30pm. Cloud Thuraday,
condition, 175 · (740}982• Saturday
&amp;
SundRy.
0449·
(740)446-7300
Buy or sell. Rfverine Anti·
ques, "'1124 East Main on · ::, ~'l:. ~~':r(;~=:
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 3452 It no antwer leave
992-2526. Russ Moore, ..me=saa::!!:oe::·_ _ _ __

SPORJ1NG
Gooos

~ANDD

i

Oft6o v.itey PublleNnf ,...,.. the righ'IIO NfiCt, Oil CMCiill _ , lid M MY liML Efftlfl Must bli ........ Oft . .
T\1burw lentil_, P g' 1 wllllll n f
'bh for no...,. thM tM CICMIII Dl ttw .,_.~by the ..ar .... only tt. ... -...on.
POI.JCt!.l~

BY DAVI HMRtl

OVP CO.RRESPONDENT·
Meigs High School held its annual Fall
Sports banquet Tuesday evening at Meigs
High School, the event wos sporuored by
t' b o&lt;nters. .
t h e • thletc
Master of Ceremonies for the event
wos bo&lt;nter president Jim Souhby, after
the meal Rick Ash gave the invocation.
Marauder cross country coac h M t'k e
Kennedy presented members ofthe cross
- · awau--"
country teams. R ecetvmg
.. wero
M tn
' d y O'D e II , Ad
n re• B u rd ene, H eath er
Hysell, Jessica Preast, Shannon· Soulsby
d B
d' Th
S .I
rds .
•n
ran I
omos: pecta awo
went
to Burdette for first teain All-TVC honors.
Receivin" awards for the boys' were
"
Jason Stanley, Matt Williamson, Will
K au ff, Brandyn B u m g •rdner, . G•ry
,.

I

cc..:.:.:...-:-----

r

(~r) Andrea Burdette and Matt
Williamson both received spec&lt;al awards at the Meigs sports
banquat held Tuesday at the .high school.

CROSS ·coUNTRY AWARDS -

Dave -Harris photos

1993 Food Tauruo, 124,000
mllea, Front Wheal Drive,
AC, Loaded, PL, PS, PW,
PB, Seounly Door, Good
COndition.
$3400.
{740)148 0385

Falcons

1113 PontiaC Grand AM, 4

door, oil optiono. pertaot
condition, 33.000 actual
miles, beautiful car tor
$4800. (740)992-11719

ftomPapAS ·

111114 Ford Eocon Wagon,

IIUOO miiM. Goocl Condition. $3200. (740)448-2125

(dayl), (740)448-2782 (IMIningl) ·.

1919 Camero loaded, T·
Topo. (304)675·6515 ahar
Spm.

'

\

200l Z-28 Camara 3400
mHeo. wl11tt with gray leather lntarlof. lop., lully loaded. .
$23,000. (304)895-3131
a:1 LTD, 3.6, V6, auto. runt
good 11tvaga thle, $300.
(740)843-2167. Southam
Gallia eo.
..
85 CheVy Cavalier, e,.;cellent cond-- Mull to
Appraclata.
$2500(304)675·3248
91 Grand ,.,.,_ l.OOko Good,
Rune
Great,
$1800.
(740)387-7272
1995 Ford F-350, 4 dr. dualty, power stroke dleeel,
c'ullomlzed ioalde &amp; out,
centaurus 3 package, cu...
tom palrit scheme, too many
options to 1181, garage kept.
4&amp;,000 milee, asking
$22,000, (740)W2·7519.
91 lincoln TOWACir and its
a beaut)'l AJr rkle, auto light
dimmer. (740)44e-9523 or
(740)448-1443
98 Chevy Altro COnver~ion
Van, tow mhes, excellent
condftlon. $12,000. 94 For&lt;!
Aaplra, $1.800. (740)4462273 evenings,

-·~
Dii'i•~ ..

The Daily
Sentinel

- l o l l 1M

(740)992-2155

llllrf•~

Rickal'!l that cowted I) and 13 y:uds and a 13 yard
stri~ to lambert. It was at this point though the
roof coved in on Wohanu and try :u they might they
would newr recowr.
Daniel Batb killed the
drive by intercepting a Clark offering and returning it to the
WHS 48. Moorefidd; with ti~e running out in the
opening half. moved doWn the field with Fisher
~ontinuing to hold the hot hand. With :03 "'main. ing in the half Fisher found Eddie Mongold in the
back of the end zone with a nine yard scoring toss
to giw the Yellow Jockets an 18-6 halftime edge.
The White Falcons fumbled the second half kickoff and Moorefield recovered at the WHS 31. Second. later .Ad:tin Homon •dded hi! second touchdown of the game with a six-yard scoring burst to
rrialce it a 25-6 contest
_
. Moo,.,field; with ;,. sudden •drenalin rush, would
go ori to quickly put the con~t away with three
additional touchdowns in the third canto and
another fourth period score to push "i!S lead 10 526. Fields would add a six-yard run to paydirt at the
5:04 mark of the third ·canto before Mongold
would pick oft a W:ahama pass and race 48 yards for
another Yellow Jac~t sco~. Anthony C~rr clooed
out the Moorefield scoring in the third stanza with
a 37-yard scamper before concludin(l; the Yellow
Jac~l onslaught in the linal period with a two yard
plunge.Jonathan Thomas booted four PAT kicks on
_the doy following Moorefield touchdown&lt;.
Wahama Wlied its final touchdown with 2:45 left
in the fourth :u Rickard r.m for 29 yards and Justin
Jordan picked up 17 yard! during the Falcons journey down the field. Cllrk copped the 7b-yard, 10pby series with a one-yard sneak on fourth down
to mat&lt;.. the final count )2-12.

Wah:uni

White Falcons.
Moorefield took an early 6-0 advantage aller taking the opening kickoff and marching 6 7 yards in
10 plays. Field. copped the drive with a four-yard
run but it was Fisher who ignitod .lhe Yellow Jacket
offense by completing his lint eight P"""' with four
of those coming·on the opening Mf!S drive. ·
The White Falcons took the ensuing kickoff and
promptly drove rn yards in 10 plays for the _game-'
tying touchdown. Ryan MitcheD, Brandon Hankinson and Gabe lambert all h•d runs of I 0 yards or
more during the locals long trek 10 the end zone
with Bradford Cbrk tos.sing a pair of key pass completions in the series. W:ahama knotted the scote
with 2:28 remaining in the first qu•rter when C_l:uk
hit a streaking Anthony Mitchell down· the fa~ !t&lt;leline for a 35-yard touchdown pass to ma~ it a 6-6
affair.
·
.
Moorefield would later gain a 12-6 adwntoge
midway through the second period when the Yellow Jac~l:l drove 66 yards in nine plays. Adorn
Homan wns the workhone during the serit!s with
Homan "SCoring ijom 17 yards out to give the host
team a 12-6lead with 7:10 left in the half.
'
Once again Wahama seemed mtaffected by the
Moorefield scoring drive as the White Falcons
began an apparent game tying assault behind the
passing of .Clark following the emuing kickoff.
WHS started on its oWn five' and mowd to the
Moorefield 24 yard line as Clark connected with
Hankinson for a '1:1 yard gain, a pair of aerials to
I •

•

'I

Opener
from PapAS

last points to be scored by
Meigs on this night
"I told them after (Meigs)
took that lead, I said 'this is your

challenge, let's see how you're
going to handle this," said
Weaver. "It was good enough to
win, but we've still got a long
way to go."
.
McDade scored with 4:35
left in the game as the Raiders
regained the lead, then free
throw shooting down the
stretch helped secure the win
for River Valley.
"I don't really know the dif-

ference in the game." said
Wilcoxen. "I thought the kids
sort of sat down on defense a
little better. We're way off on
our offense. We're going to have
to do • lot of work there."
"Defensively, I think we grew
a little bit in the second half."
The Raiders travel to Chesapeake on Thursday, while Meigs
will be at Federal Hocking.

In the junior vanity

gam~,

Leslie Ward scored 17 points as
River Valley defeated the
Marauders, 43- 31.

�_P_•;.ae_Aa_·_The_Da_l..;.ly_Se_n_une_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Nov. 26, 2001

Monfl!• Nov. 26, 2001

Ohio State antidpating
retum to Florida
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It looks
like Ohio State might be headed back to
florida for New Year's Day.
It is "highly possible" that the Buckeyes will play in either the Outback
Bowl in Tampa or the Citrus Bowl in
Orlando, Ohio State Athletics Director
Andy Geiger said Sunday night. The
Buckeyes likely will play a Southeastern
Conference opponent that is yet to be
determined.
Ohio State's bowl destination probably
will be known within 48 hours, Geiger
s.~id Sunday night following a conference call with fellow Big Ten athletics
directors.
!Uinois (10-1, 7-1) has clinched the
Big Ten championship and the conference's Bowl Championship Series berth.
That leal(es Michigan (8-3, 6-2) and
Ohio · State (7 -4, 5-3) - the secondand third-place teams in the league - as
the likely options for the Citrus and
Outback bowls.
Under the Big Ten's bowl agreements,
the Citrus Bowl gets to choose first, followed by the Outback Bowl and then
the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas.
"Inclination is that they'_ll pick Michigan, and then we'll go back· to Tampa,

He said the Buckeyes - 26-20 winners over Michigan on Saturday could get their bowl invitation before an
opponent is determined because the
SEC title race is not finalized.
"You'd just have to look at the standings and see if you can figure it out,"
Geiger said. "They've got games to play
yet."

PHILLIP

The SEC has a full slate of games Saturday, including a Top 10 showdown of
Tennessee at florida. After that, the SEC
title game will be played and an opponent for Ohio State probably won't be
determined until the fallout of those
games.
Teams in the Buckeyes' bowl mix
could include Auburn, Georgia, LSU or
South Carolina - which defeated Ohio
State 24-7 in the Outback Bowl last sea-

61tttlt

•.

•••
•

~

•

BIIIGO 2171
Euery Thursday

6 Sundii!J

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Pregresslue lop

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Coolville, OH 48723

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THAIS t10W I'VE &amp;EI!N
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' PEANUTS
ACTUALLY, SIR, THE
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Jeanie Howell

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591·5011

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for one month for as
low as 525
Phone 992·21 55

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High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

;

740-992-5232
11 11211 mo.

OP£0 BOWLIDG 6
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OUR

I MONDAY

NOVEMBER 26 I

maplewood Lake

949-2734

'·

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31 ··•n••
1111101 Allin
31 .........
41 ~end

::::

31~

5 UDroerl

25 Sultan'•

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44 Camlc h 1111
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32 8llctcum

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21 Dlchn~
21 llemlndtr
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7 :!:'"fCO'IIb
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310011a- tullgiHIM
n11e,
brlelly

31 Rlml
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31 Shopping
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47 AN, In
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Cllmpos
C I I lly Clphor aa1"11*1i11110ai"'"' .,. CfMiod 11om

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by I ...... put ond ~- Eeclllolltr In lito clpl'ler 1Widllor .....,__

T-Y• clue: B squals W
HAT' V

'BHTTHTZ

BUCVFBFHIJ

ATIJAR

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RVLZZ

LIUTNU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "By lwenty·one, I'd slu&lt;lled lo be a
priest, worl&lt;ed with Mae Weal and boxed with P~mo Camera."
- Anthony Quinn
WOlD

••••

O four
learrang• latt•rs of
Krambltd words

the
be·

low to form four simple word1 .

Ir-rj'r-'"1-'"1_;;1,....:~~...-1
NE VYE L

1

1-.

:==~=~=~-l

I

At this table, Cesary
Balicki (Chezaree
Balitskey) didn't have
that advantage. But at
trick two, he led the

C R US 0

I

1--.-~-"1',..;...1..-""'1..--l_
.

I

.

.

.

.

I' 1 1 1 '- ~'•

swpade ja1ck. dw1hen
A R IT E
est p aye
ow •
~
If you can't be a ·classical piasmoothly, Balicki ·
nist, turn to dentistry. There is
called for dummy's
more than one way to tickle the-king and also won .
I NS 0 V I
,. • ·- -.
nine tricks .
.
16
Complete lhe chuckle quotod
1 . . . . . .
Ualicki J'udged that
by IUI;ng In •he mlhln~ wordl
you de•alop lrom ltop No. 3 below.

I' I I .e
PRINT NUMIER!D lETTERS I'

if West had the spade
queen, he would al-

r
I' r I' I' I' I
-;:;IN;;TH~!;SE;;;S9~UA~R;;E~S;=;;:;·=-~=·~~-=~-=~·=~·~·

pecially with the 10
in the dummy -- or at
least have thought
about it. And if West
didn't have the
h
h

ICIAM-I.m ANIWIU
Kidnap· Chide- Gripe- Answer- PARKEED
' I've traveled all over thfl world," a man told the slow
cab driver, 'in some places any car doing 55 mph is
considered PARKED!'

~-::~,. ·~

'\

A.J,
f1 Sprlnllle

3e-tlll

llld

•

1

6 ~fCf~~!~1R lETTERS TO I

~:~~trc~e~~J%k~a:S~

CUT6
WRHPPED
St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio

During the bidding
and play, you can
draw inferences from
the opponents' calls
and cards. The better
you are at it, . the
more successful you
will be.
In this deal, you are
South, the declarer in
three no-trump . If
you haven't peeked at
the East-West hands,
how would you continue after West leads
his fourth-higlu;st diamond to East's jack
and your queen? If
you have loo~ed, do
you ·see how you can
work out the winning
spade play? ·
The deal occurred
during a match between Poland and
North America at the
Forbo-Krommenie
tournament in the
Netherlands last February.
You start with
seven top tricks: two
diamonds and five
clubs . A heart trick is
establishable, hut · you
still need a spade
trick . However, if
you misguess spades,
East will return a diamond, establishing his·
partner's suit while
he, West, probably
holds a, spade winner
as an entry.
At the other table,
West overcalled one
diamond, making it
highly likely · that he
had the spade ace.
Declarer, Canadian
John Carruthers, immediately played a
spade to dummy's
king. When that won,
he led a heart to his
~c·::.l and had nine

_ _ ......

3011ea-

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middleport, OH
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MANLEYS
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11
11-fll •
14 IoRI ,

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Doors Open 4:30

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457'71
740-949-2217

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7 TNOitfronl 41 _ .. . .
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Wllldowa • Room
Addldons • Roollq

Dec. 31 Humanitui:m Bowl at Boise-, ldaho,At·larsc
vo. WAC, 12,30 p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 31 Silicon Valley Classic, at San jose, C•lif., WAC
vs. At-large, J p.m. (FOXSN)
Dec:. 31 Liberry Bowl at Memphis, Tehn,: MWC vs.
CUSA, 4 p:m. (ESPN)
Dec.ll Ptach Bowl at A.danta, ACC vs. SEC, 7:30
p.m. (ESPN)
Jan. 1 Outback Bowl at Tampa, Fla.,BigTen vs. SEC,
11 a.m. (ESPN)
Jan. 1 Cotton Bowl at p.allas, SEC vs. Bis 12,11 a.m.
(FOX)
.
Jan. t Gator Bowl ;u JacksonviUe, Fla., Big East vs.
ACC, 12,30 p.m. (NBC)
Jan. I Citrus &amp;wl at Orlando, Aa.,BigTen vs. SEC,
I p.m. (ABC)
Jan. 1 Fiesta Dowl at Tempe, Ariz., BCS Big 12 "'·
BCS Pac· IO, 4,30 p.nt. (ABC)
Jan. I Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, BCS VI. BCS,
8'30 p.m. (ABC)
'
Jan. 2 Omngt Bowl at Miami, BCS VJ, BCS, 8 p.m.
(ABC)
Jan. 3 Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif., BCS J YJ. BCS
2, 8 p.m. (ABC)

...
...... ..... ....
.'
ll.... l

oltlullng oi.IIIIMIOnl
oQrtvll• Sond •Topeoll
oflll Dirt ollulch

son.

If the Citrus picks Ohio State over
Michigan, it would be the Buckeyes' first
trip to Orlando since 1996, when they
lost to Tennessee 20-14. Michigan has
.played in two of the last three Citrus
bowls.

ACROSS
1a.t

ALDER

E~gles

.

2001·02 BoWl Schedule
AD Times EST
Dec. 18 New Orlearu Bowl, Sun Belt vs. MWC, 8
p.m. (ESPN2)
Dec. 19 GMA.C Bowl at Mobile, Ala., MAC vs.
CUSA, 8 p.m. (ESPN2)
De&lt;:. 20 Tangerine Bowl at Orlando, ACC V!. Big
EaR, 7,30 p.m. (ESPN)
o~ . 25 Las Vegas Bowl, Pac~lO vs. MWC, 3:30p.m.
(ABC)
Dec. 27 Seattle Bowi,ACC YJ . Pac~tO, 4 p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 27 Independence Bowl at Shreveport, La., Big
12 "'·SEC, HO p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 28 Galleryfumiture.com Bowl at Howton, Bia
12 "'· CUSA, I,JO p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 28 Music City Bowl at NashviUe, Tenn., BiiJ
East vs. SEC, 5 p.m. (ESPN)
.
Dec. 28 Hohcby Bowl at Som Diego, Big 12 vs. Pac·
10, 8,Jo p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 1!J Motor City Bowl at Pontiac, Mich., MAC
vs. CUSA, Noon (ESPN)
Dec. 29 Alamo Bowl at San Antonio, Big J2 vs. Big
T•n,l'30 p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 29 lmight.com Bowl at Phoenix, Big 12 vs. Big
, !!au, 5,30 p.m. (ESPN2)
Dec. 31 Sun Bowl ;n El Paso, Texu, Pac-1 0 n. Big
len, Noon (CBS)

NJ:A Cro11word Puaal•

which we're, I think, excited to do,"
Geiger said of the Citrus Bowl's pending
decision.

The O.lly Sentinel • P•ge All

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

I II I III

.,. s=.------------

Ult "" 1111/le deer

summer S11JS119t

~Oiler's

Deer Shop
'YOII kill 'IJII, we dtiH 'tllr'
SR325,~lW

742·2076

,,

'''
••'
•'•

Tuesday, Nov , 27, 2001
Keep the open mind tholt

you pu~~css over, all your af..
fo1io in the ye;&amp;r ~thc.uJ. because
:.JvouKemrm in your cndeavou mittht come about in ar1
unu, ual manner. You may

need to be fle~iblc .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) ·-- Owi11g

to

your

philmophicalnaturc, you'll be
ablt• w see the bri~hter silic' of
:my uuplc:~~nt Jcvelopnu:nts
tmlory. Ymr'IJ r"alizc the d lfli ~
cult i~ m;m;tgcahlc. Trying to
polh:h up a brvkcn roman ce?
'!'he A.!&gt;tro-Graph M;atc h .
nuk cr t.'a n IH.•Ip you unJL•r~r:md

what

10

do ro

m~tke

the

rclat inmhip work . M;ail $2.75
to Matchmaker, c/o this
ucwsp,qt('r, 11.0 . Uox 1758,
Murray Hill Statiutl , New
York, NY W I5C,
CA PRI CORN (Doc. 22J;m . 19) -- Don't ask. fo r more
than you Jc~crve in busincs~
muter.. todory, but don 't ~c·
t:ept less than that either. It''
to your advaut;J.gc to be a bit
stilT-necked at this tim.: .

AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Fd&gt;.
\9) -~ You 'II have suac'~ in
your Ol iTair~. p rovidl•d you
loo k out fur rhc nnercm of

those&gt; you're involved with
to~ay. as well a~ your own.
. Deing scM-~crving. howrver,
reduces thb po"ibility,
I'ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Don 't get in the way if
things run smooth for vou today. Yon have just aS mu ch
chance of bei11g lucky with
evencs over whkh you have
no comrol as you do when

you nm the ~hpw.
.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- Don't allow your o ld pals to
su tTer today because of your
cnthmiasm for someone you
just mel. In f.1n. your tunc
should hl· devoted today co
th o:~c who arc trird .md tme .
TA U itUS (Apnl 20-M'Y
20) ·~ Th e g~nu i nc ki ndnes'
that i~ part of .you r being
might be working ovt.&gt;rtt m c
t oday . You ' ll instin cti vely
know \vhom cO help . how
much to help and wlu-n to
leave thC' pcr,on alone.

GEM INI (May 21-Jurw 2ll)
~· Success in \'0\lr aff.1irs i~ in ~
dicatcd today ' if you VIL'W life
from a p!ulosophical pcT"ipcctiVl' . Tint'\, shottht ynu 11lt"t"t
both tnu mph and d1saHer,
trc:at th em the ~1111 c .

CANCER Uune 21 -July

.,

22) ~· It look~ prc~ry p:ood tod:ay for yuu to be able to tie
do\\/11 :m armngl'menc tlr.~t has
bL'l'n elusive. Tfli s might involvr a finam:ial situation or a
second somce of earnin8'·
LEO Quiy 23-Au~. 22) -·
Your thought~ abou t how to
achieve ~omcthinK faHt' r and
n'mrc dfcct ~vcly might be bet~
ter th:m th t&gt; procedure~ of
pcnom \vtth whom you'll be
asmc1ating . Pu~h for your
m et hod~ .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep&lt;. 22)
-· Once you know where you
want to go today, yo u
shouldn't ha ve any trouble
genin~ there . Thus, in orJ.cr
to be sucn~s~fu l. have a clearly
la id-out plm1 of action .

LIURA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
- It IS critical th.a.t you lumJie
·. all - important assignm ents
yourself tod;~;y. bl'l·ause thme
with whom you'll be involvrd
aren 't apt to be as lm:kY

as

you .

SCOiti'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• M,1kc mat lers ym1've
bcl'll tnublc ro fin:dizc your
top prtontics tnd.l)', and you
Will be abil· tu deal Wtth tlu· m
cffl'l'tivrly .uni witiiOllt mur h
funhc:r :~do.

�'
••

PageA10

The Daily Sentinel

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The surging San Froncisco 49en
took full advanuge of Peyton Manning's career-wont four
interceptions.
San Francisco scored 23 points off
turnover&gt;, Garrison Heant ran for 106
yards and two touchdowns, and Jeff
Garcia threw for two scores to lead the
49m over Manning's Colts 40-21
Sunday.
At one juncture, San Francisco's offense had '"!In 35 plays and
scored 27 points. Garcia was 14-of-22 for 179 yards, and Terrell
·Owens caught six passes for 103 yards and a TD for the 49ers
(8-2).
'
The Colts (4-6) lost their third Straight game.
Raiders 28, G;ants 10
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) - Oaldand's Rich Gannon threw two of his threc;.-touchdown , passes to Tim Brown
and set up another TD witll a 20-yard pass to Jerry Rice.
The loss was the second straight and fifth in seven games for
the Giant&lt; (5-6).
Zack Crockett had a 1-yard touchdown run, Charlie Garner
scored on a 21-yard screen pass, and Brown scored on catches
of 46 and 19 yards as the Raiden (8-2) opened a three-game
lead in the AFC West. Oakland has won seven of its last eight.
games.

NFL

Steelers 34, Titans 24
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Kordell Stewart threw for two
touchdowns and ran 48 yards for another score, and Pittsburgh .
won for the tint time in five trips to Tennessee.
Stewart tosse&lt;l touchdown passes of 4 yards to Plaxico Burress
and 25 yards to Amos Zereoue. Stewart's TD run gave Pittsburgh its fintlead -17-14 in the third quarter.
He was 19-of-31 for 254 yards passing and ran eight times for
54 yards for the Steelen (8-2), off to their best st:lrt since open·
ing 9-2 in 1983. The Tiuns dropped to 4-6.
·
·
Redskins 13, Eagles 3
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Ki-Jana Carter scored his fint
touchdown in two years, and Washington shut down Don~van
McNabb to become the first NFL team to win five stra1ght
games after an 0-5 start.
The Redslcins moved within one game of the tint-place
Eagles (6-4) in the NFC East.
.
.
. .
Philadelphia had won three straight, mcludmg ns last two by
a total of 64 points. But it went three-and-out on 1ts tint five
possessions and punted on the first'seven.
Washington held the Eagles to 186 yards and seven lint
downs.
Redslcins quarterback Tony Banks completed 12 ofl8 passes
for % yards, and Stephen Davis ran for 79 yards despite a sore
back.
Ravens 24, Jaguars 21
JACKSONVILLE, Aa. (AP) - Elvis Grbac drove Baltimore
7 4 yards in the final 90 seconds, and Shannon Sharpe made a
beautiful, foot-dragging catch in the back of the end zone for
the winning points.
Grbac threw for 259 yards, helping the Ravens (7-4) suy I
1/2 games behind AFC Central-leading Pittsburgh.
The Jaguan (3-7) rallied from 17-0 down for a 21-17 lead on
Stacey Mack's 3-yard run with 1:32 remaining.
Bears 13, Vikings 3
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Chicago's defense held the Vilcings
without a touchdowh, the fint time in 98 regular-season games
the Vilcing; did not get into the end zone. The last time the
Vilcing; (4-6) went without a TD was last January- a 41-0
defeat to the New York Giants in the NFC championship.
With roolcie Anthony Thomas inactive because of a sore hamstring, James Allen rushed 27 times for 107 yards for Chicago
(8-2).
Dolphins 34, Bills 27
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) - Jay Fiedler threw three
touchdown passes, including a 32-yarder to Chris Chambers
with 48 seconds left, and Miami (7-3) overcame a 27-17 deficit
in the final eight minutes.
·
. It was Fiedler's fourth fourth-quarter comeback of the season
and sixth of his career.
. Fiedler went 18-for-31 for 262 yards and no interceptions.
Chamben, who finished with 101 yards receiving, also had a
22-yard touchdown catch.
The Bills (1-9) have lost live straight overall and eight in a row
at home.
Patriots 34, Saints 17
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - Tom Brady threw four touchdown passes in New England's lint game since coach Bill
Belichick made him the.starter for the rest of the season.
Antowain· Smith ran Ill yards on 24 carries and scored on a
screen play for New England (6-5).
.
Brady completed 19 of27 passes for 258 yards, with TD tosses covering 41 yards to Smith, 8 to Troy Brown; 22 to Charles
Johnson and 2 to Marc Edwards.

Cardinals 20, Chargers 17
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Roolcie Bill Gramatica's 42-yard field
goal with l second le.ft helped Arizona overcome Doug Au tie's
two touchdown passes in the fourth quarter.
San Diego's lcicker, fourth-year veteran Wade Richey, made
just one of three short attempts in the first half and was booed
· when. he lined up for extra points.
Arizona (4-6) won consecutive games for the lint time this
year.
,
San Diego (5-6) lost its fourth straight game and for the SIXth
time in eight games.
Autie finished '33-of-44 for 308 yards with no interceptions.
Arizona's Jake Plummer was 19-of-31 for 241 yards, with one
touchdown and two interceptions. ·
· Falcons 10, Panthers 7
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Atlanu stopped Carolina 6
inches from the goal line early in the game, then held the Panthen an inch short on a key fourth-down stop with under 2:00
to play.
.
.
The Panthers (1-1 0) have lost 10 straight games. Atlanta (6-4)
.
.
improved to 4- 1 on the road.
Atlanta's Bob Christian ran ror 78 yards, mcludmg a 4-yard
touchdown, and had five coltches for 44 yards.
Chiefs 19, Seahawks ·7 .
·
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Trent Green, who came in with
the most interceptions (16) and lowest quartetback rating (62.6)
in the !&lt;!ague, was 16-of-26 for 256 yards and d1d not get pcked
off
·
.
Seattle (S-5), which had won two in a row, lost in Kansas C.ry
for the 1Oth time in 12 games. The Chiefs (3-7) won for the first
time in five outing; at home.
.
Kansas Ciry's Priest Holmes gained 120 yards on 26 carnes
and caught three passes for 70 yards, including a 55-yarder
I

•

Hysell named Police Officer of the Year. l

MollUf, Nvve•ber 26. 2001
.

'

Niners profit from Peyton
Manning miscues

-

.-

Browns take Ohio Battle II, 18-0
CLEVELAND (Al') - Shutouts are rare in the NFL. and down. 'vlitchdl threw an incomplete pass.
Dill.:&gt;n carried twice, picking up three y&gt;rds, and the Ben.in the case of the Clevoland Drowns, nonexistent for seven
g;al&gt; decided to got for it on fourth down. Mitchell, one of~
yean.
NFL's slowest QBs, tried to roll left, but was sacked for a 9:.
Until Sunday.
The Browns forced seven rurnoven- five on interceptions yard loss by Courtney Brown and Rudd.
" When we got the fourth-down stop, we felt like we coulll
- and got their tint shutout since 1994 with an 18-0 victoput the goose egg up," Brown said.
, ,
.
ry over the bumbling Cincinnati Bengals.
It
wasn't
tough
to
do
with
the
Bengals
g•vmg
D1llon
the baY
"My tint one, too," Cleveland linebacker Dwayne Rudd
just six times in the second half.
said proudly. "At.least my first one in a long, long rime."
"That 's the best guy on their offense," Browns safery Earl
Phil Dawson kicked four field goals, Kevin Johnson caught
a touchdown pass and the Browns (6-4) didn't need much Little said. "Why not give him the ball?"
Dillon didn't speak to reporters after the game.
:
offense to beat the Bengals, who have been outscored 68-20
Bengals coach Dick LeBeau benched Kitna at the s~rt of
in losing their last three games.
·
the third quart". Mitchell, who had not uken a snap thiS seat
Cincinnati's troubles didn't end when the game finished.
The Bengals' charter jet was grounded by mechanical prob- son, finished 4-of-12 fur 38 yards.
Neil Racken missed two field goals for the Bengals, whos¢'
lems at Cleveland's Hopkins International Airport and the
promising 2-0 start has quickly faded.
.
. •:
team was forced to ride buses back to Cincinnati.
"There's a little bit of doubt in everybody's mmd n~
"We just feel terrible about ourselves," Bengals quarterback
now," Kitna said. "That's what happens when you're not play'r ,
Jon Kima said before boarding the plane.
,
Kitna was benched for Scott Mitchell after completing just ing wen: ·
·~
The Browns got .inside the Bengals' 20 four times in the filit;
eight of 19 passes and throwing two interceptions in the lint
half,
but didn't get their first touchdown until just 26 seconcr
half.
..,
Cleveland came in focused on stopping running back Corey before halftime.
Kitna was picked off by Ray Jackson, who returned it 52
Dillon, who had averaged 144 yards in his five previous games
against the Browns. Desp.ite missing suspended tackle Gerard yards to the Cincinnati .I 0. Two plays later, Couch hitJohtns&lt;&gt;p
in the corner of the end zone over backup cot·net·bac:k K.evijl
Warren, the Browns held Dillon to 63 yards on 20 carries.
"Cincy goes as Corey Dillon goes," Miller said. "We knew Kaeshivarn.
if we could conuin him, that we'd have a pretry good chance.
Once we did that, we could really go after them."
The shutout was the Browns' first since blanking Aritona
32-0 on Sept. 18, 1994. And with five more interceptions,
Cleveland now leads the league with 25 picks. after getting
just 20 in the last two seasons combined.
Browns coach Butch Davis, a former defensive coordinator,
was particularly proud of the shutout - . just the fifth in the .
league this season.
"It's a great compliment to a great defensive effort," Davis
said. "You can play the same, and if it's 18-7, you don't feel the
.
same."
Johnson caught a 6-yard TD pass in the fint half and Dawson kicked field goals of23, 27,22 and 33 yards as the Browns
avenged an early season Joss to the Bengals.
Tim Couch went 16-of-27 for 189 yards with two interceptions for Cleveland.
Cincinnati's best scoring chance ended like all of the Bengals' other drives -with nothing.
On the first play of the fourth quarter, T.J. Houshmandzadeh
returned a punt 86 yards before being caught from behind at
Cleveland's 5. But instead of giving Dillon the ball on first

'

Whars inside

Water rate hike passes first hurdle
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINa NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Increasing
water rates to help cover the
costs of operating the water
department topped the agenda
of Monday's Pomeroy Village
Council meeting.
Council approved the tint
reading of an ordinance that
would raise water rates so as to

Bucs bounce Rams, 5

provide the necessary funding
for capital improvement&lt; and
proper maintenance of the village's water system.
"Operating expenses at the
water department have risen
signilicandy while the generation of income has nor:' said
Mayor John Blaettnar.
·"This proposed increase, if
passed, would definitely help

cover the rising costs of operating the village's water system,"
he said. ,
Blaettnar said increased
water rates would generate an
additional $2,750 per month, or
$27,500 per year, and that the
average monthly water bill
would increase by $2.50 and
the minimum monthly water
bill, by St.

Deer harvest

Unda Jett, 62
Cierra McMillan, 41 days
Christine Walker, 30

Blaettnar added that money
generated from the increased
water rates would not go
toward the funding of the village's proposed new water
treatment plant.
11
The new water tream1ent
plant would be funded through
grants, not money obuined
through
these
proposed
.
" sat"d Blaettnar. "Co;vmcreases.

ering current expenses at the
water department is council's
main objective when considering the passage of this ordinance."
Blaettnar said the last time
village water rates increased was
January 1995.
Voting against the ordinance

Middleport sewer
project on schedule
· Extension
granted due to
changes in plans

Details, A3

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT
Although the general contractor has been granted an
extension,
Middleport's
sewer improvement project
continues on schedule and
should be completed by
year's end.
Becky Hays of Floyd
Browne &amp; Associates, the viil~ge's engineering firm, met
with Middleport Village

Weather
Hlah: ...,Low:IO
Details, 3

THE BIG FOOT- Cleveland's Phil Dawson boots a 27-yard '
field goal out of the hold of Chris Gardocki in the second
quarter against the Cincinnati Bengals Sunday. Dawson
kicked four field goals but missed an. extra point on the
Browns only touchdown in Cleveland's 18-0 win. (AP)

Council during Mo.nday
evening's regular meeting, to
discuss the project.
Hays and Jay Shutt attended a construction meeting
with the Middleport Board
of Public Affairs earlier
Monday.
BPA granted B&amp;L Construction of Ashland, Ky. a
58-day extension - until
Feb. 27 - to complete the
village's $1.1 million project,
which involves the repair and
replacement of lift stations
and the village's dry weather
overflow system.
The improvements are
designed to correct a num· ber of violations cited by

PluM- Sew•, 3

OHIO

,. ~ . -~
~if;t~·~ 1~ ,··~ -~
:7-14-16-22-36

. Pick 3 nllht: 4-6-1

!'lck 4 fliiht: 6-0-0-4

W.VA.
Dai!Y 3: 6-5-3
.
Dailj 4: 5-6-5·4
casli 15: 4-7-11-13-19-23

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

Index
1 S1r:ll1•- 10 ......

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

2
6-8

9

Dear Abby

2

Editorials
Movies

4

3
3

~bituaries

Sports
Weather

5,7,8,10

3

c 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

.-.days till
Christmas

Warm and sunny weather and a big 'hunter turnout contributed to an Increase In the deer har·
-vest on Monday, as hunters took to the woods for the first day of gun season. According to
·ODNR Wildlife Officer Keith Wood, hunters tagged 1,170 deer this year, up from 1,099 In 2000.
Jerry Dean of Salisbury, N.C., bagged this elght·polnt buck at Roush's Ranch, and, checked In
at Jeff's Carryout in Pomeroy, one of the county's many deer-checking stations. There were no
injuries or incidents Monday, Wood said. Neighboring Gallla County saw a less dramatic
Increase In the harvest: 1,132 this year, compared to 1,123 last year. The season continues
through Saturday. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·

A ribbon cutting ceremony was held Saturday to announce
the grand opening of the Artisans Shoppe, located on West
Main Street In Pomeroy. The shop is affiliated with the
Meigs County Artisans Association and features hand-crafted items made by local residents. Pictured are Justin Diddle, left, project coordinator, Courtney Butcher•. director of
chamber operations, Meigs County Cominis~loner Jeff
Thornton, Betsy Nicodemus, director of Tourism and Retail
Development, 'Santa Claus,· Ben Roush; "Rudolph," All~
son Brown, and 'Mrs. Claus,, ' Janet Leffle. (Tony M. Leach
photo)

Taft fights budget cuts, urges state agencies to ~pend less
SponiONdby

1

(

• .I'\. I

I

II ' ( ) I

I ' •

IURNPIKE

COLUMBUS (AP) - As lawmakers prepare to
debate further cuts to state agencies, Gov. Bob Taft
on Monday warned his department heads to limit
·
spending.
Taft also released a report showing that the number of state employees under his control as shrunk by
1,052 since he took office almost two years ago..
The reductions were in three areas: workers who
took offen of early retirement; not filling positions a.•
they became open; and layoffs. A breakdown in each
category was not available Monday.
The total loss of 1,279 employees since January

In a memo to his department heads,
Taft asks them to avoid unnecessary
travel, discretionary spending and
hiring additional staff.
1999 was offiet by hiring 227 employees in the
Department of Rehabilitation Correction, Taft said.
"When exploring options to balance our budget,
we need to remember that cutting into our state
agencies' budgets more than we already have has an
impact on people's lives," he said.

In a memo to his department heads, Taft asks them
to avoid unnecessary travel, discretionary spending
and hiring additional staff.
Restrained spending will save money the state
might need if the economy worsens, he said.
House and Senate lawmakers meet Tuesday to
compromise on a plan to address the state's $1.5 billion deficit.
Taft, a Republican, generally supports the plan by
his fellow Republicans in the House, who are in the
majoriry.

Patient Rights
The next time you visit the Hospital, be sure to see the Patient
Rights posted in the lobby areas, or pick up a pamphlet at the
Front Desk. Holzer Medical Center recogni:z:~s the importance of
respecting your rights as a potient. If you have questions or
conc.erns, be sure to call the Hospital's Patient Representative
for assistance.

POINT CLEAR

C{JwuJ ~~rr!g!l.
GOLF CLUB

800.949.44 44
www. rtjgolf. com
'{

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,.

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MEDICAL CENTER

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