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••

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
'{

800.544.9933
www. marriotgrand.com
,.

(740) 446·5568

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the HolzerDifference

www.holzer.org

�Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2001

PageAl
The Daily Sentinel

•
•

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
didn't know what was wrong with
me, and they didn't stick around to
6nd out. I was lost and alone.
I want to tell "Scared" fiom personal experience: TELL SOMEONE
WHAT
HAPPENED
RlGHT AWAY! Go to a support
group. Share your experience. CaD
your friend and tell her. CaD a botline if you wish to remain anony-

-

Hysell honored

served in the West Virginia National Guard for
seven years. He also worked on the Pomeroy
SALEM CENTER - Carl Hysell, Meigs Police Department and is a deputy with the .
County Juvenile Officer, was named Police Meigs Cunty Sheriff's Department.
His nomination has been forwarded to the
Offi~er of the Year at the Ohio State Grange
national level.
Convention in Hudson recently.
HyseU was nominated by Carl and Janet
Morris of Star Grange #778 for hi! dedication
to the Juvenile Court and Sheriff's Department for 28 yean.
"(Hysell) has worked with the youth of our
community and has been very influential in
the lives of our teens, not only in helping
them succeed in life but has spent his own
money at times in different ways to help the
youth," Janet Morris said. "Having worked in
the Juvenile Court, I know how many houn
are required of the Juvenile Officer. It definitely is not a five day a week, nine to five job.
You are on call 24 hours a day, seven days a
k ..
wee.
.
Hysell spends extra time helping the youth
find part-time jobs, taking them on trips for
sports event, to visit prisons, etc. Several years RECEIVES AWARD - Carl Hysell receives~ '
ago, he helped start a boxing program for Pollee Officer of the Year honors from Laddie
youth, and helped buy uniforms and other Marous, Master of Ohio State Grange. Francis
White, right, Ohio State Grange Lecturer and
needed supplies.
Hysell is a 1958 graduate of Rui:land High Community Service Chairman, and Carl Mor·
School and Ohio Peace Officen Training, and ris, left. are also pictured. (Contributed photo)

Young Readers'
DaJ
•
Students at' Mid-Valley
Christan School in Middleport participated in
National Young Readers ·
Day on Nov. 7, and
depicted
characters
including "Marmee" from
Litde Wofllen and Caddie
Woodl~wn. The celebration also
included a .
National Theater for Chi!- .
dren play sponsored by
AEP and featuring Louie
the Lightning Bug, pictured
here.
Sherry
Beschel, an amateur writer wntmg. Mayor
Sandy
of children's books, also lannarelli read her favorite
visited the school, work- childhood story, "The Liting with fourth- and fifth- tie Red Hen," and stressed
grade students on story the importance of learning

TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO meeting,
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. Potluck planned.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department childhood
Immunization clinic, 9 to 11

..

Avoiding
dating violence
Teen dating violence is on
the rise. Experts predict that
12 percent of high school
and 20 percent of college
stUdents become involved in
relationships that have physical, emotional or sexual
abuse.
·
• Teenagers who have been
abused as children, seen violence in their parents or

community,
who
are
involved in drugs and alcohol, or have friends who
abuse are more likely to victimize
their
partners,
whether male or female.
These abusers have difficulty
resolving conflict, so they
turn to abuse to express
their feelings. ·
Adolescents who most
likely · will become victims
tend to have dated a lot,
consider their turbulent
relationships very serious
(but don't want out), ·use ,
drugs and alcollol, don't
chave support fiom others,
have friends who are abused,

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
don't know what is acceptable dating behavior, have
been sexually abused in the
past, and don't attend
church.
Girls are more apt to be
victims of emotional and
sexual aquse. They also
become injured more often
than boys.
Parents should be alert to
abusive warning signs in
their children. Many times,
adolescents will not tell their
parents because they think
abuse i.! normal behavior.
Also, som~ parents do not
believe the abuse is as serious as it really is.
Parents should pay close
attention t~ their teenagers. ·
They should be aware of
their teens' bruise~. their fear
of their dating partners,

whether they always cover
for them, and if they don't
want to partic.ipate in hob_.:
bies and activities they have
_
enjoyed in the past. ,
Parents can help their
teens avoid abusive relation-·
ships by helping them set
dating behavior guidelines
prior to dating. T~ey can
help them learn ways to
resolve conflict. Parents
should explain the abusive
warning signs to their children and where they can get
help. Parents need to listen
to their teenagers and be
there for them. They can
help the abusers by helping
them seek
professional
health.
·

_,

lnddents probed
POMEROY - A number o( incidents is currently being
investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
According to reports:
• Bob Barker of Sumner Road reported that his house had
been shot by a paintball gun;
• the Cool-Spot in Tuppen Plains reported that shrubbery
around the business had been destroyed;
• Delbert Steams ofKeebaugh FoUrod Road reported that two
gates on his property had been destroyed;
• Dennie Nutter ofVineyard Road reported that his home had
been entered through his gatage. Nothing was reported missing;
• Jeffiey Peal, also ofVineyard Road, reported that his mailbox
had been knocked of its post;
o' Harold Brewer reportl'd his home on Ohio 248 in Chester
had all the windows broken out;
• Norman HyseU of Eagle Ridge reported a small, two-tone
truck hit his mailbox and continued on;
• Tina Cowdery of Reedsville reported that her son's Honda
XR-50 was stolen;
• Wenolyn Windon of Flatwoods Road reported that her purse
was stolen.

,.-

VALLEY WEATHER

Christine walker

' •'

Rain expected to continue

RUTLAND- On November 25,2001, Christine "Chr.is'iy"Yvonne Bass Walker entered into the Kingdom of God.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
percent.
~he was born March 20, 1971 in Elyria to John L. Bass of
Wet weather can be expectWednesday... Partly cloudy
"Dexter, and Stella M. McNemar of Cambridge.
ed across the area for much of with scattered showers. Con.
tinued warm with highs in the
Chrissy was a 1989 graduate of the School of Cosmetol- the remainder of the week.
brief
break
in
Except
for
a
mid 60s. Light and variable
.&lt;_1gy of Meigs High School.
1
· .,; On April· 20, 1991, Chrissy married the love of her life, the rain early Wednesday, wind, becoming south around
showers and drizzle are in the I 0 mph early in the after.Eric S. Walker of Rutland. .
She was an employee of McClure's Restaurant during high forecast through Friday, the noon. Chance of rain 40 perNational Weather Service said. cent..
school and a 10-year employee of CVS.
It will be cooler, with high
Wednesday night ... Partly
Surviving in addtion to her husband and parents are brothtemperatures mostly in the 40s cloudy with a chance of
ers, Steve (Emily) Bass and Joshua Bass of Dexter; paternal
each day.
showers. Lows in the lower
g:randmother, Ora Bass of Syracuse; paternal aunts and
Sunset tonight will be at 50s.
tincles, Lenora (Jack) Offenberger, Barb (Richard) Koker, 5:08, and sunrise on WednesExtended forecast:
~herlii (Roy) Rinehart and Dave Bass; maternal grandfather, . day is at 7:31 a.m.
Thursday... Gusty showers
)ohn McNemar of Cambridge; maternal aunts and uncles:
Weather forecast:
and thunderstorms likely.
John Jr.; Michael; Michelle, Julie and Bruce McNemar;
Tonight ... Showers likely. Highs in the mid 60s.
father-in-law and mother-in-law, Rod and Dianne Walker of Lows near 50. Southwest wind
Thursday
night ... Gusty
Rutland;sister-in-law, Candance (Scott) Gheen; and many 5 to 10 mph becoming light showers and thunderstorms
northwest. Chance of rain 60 likely. Lows in the mid 40s.
loving cousins and friends.
She was preceded in death by her paternal grandfather,
teonard Bass.
1
electrical fixtures for the
i:, Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, November l•
lights. The
community
~8, 2001, at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene, with PasChrisl)nas tree is to be
for Mike Adkins officiating. Burial will follow at Carmel .
installdd on the "T" later this
Page 1
f emetery.
.
week. ·
.
t Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday, Novemlannarelli said crews will
Ohio Environmental Protec;l)er 27, 2001, from 6-9 p.m. at the Fisher-Acree Funeral i: tion Agency, including the begin rcutting brush on the
;_Home in Pomeroy, and an hour prior to service at the discharge of raw sewage into riverbank after the first of the
..(burch.
·
·
year.
~e Ohio River.
Police Dispatcher Dean
'
Myron
Duffield
•.
president
~ .~emorial contributions may be made ~o Ho~zer Hospice,
took council
JV!etgs County Branch, 115 East Memonal Dnve, Pomeroy, of the BPA, said the extension McKnight
members
on
a
tour of the vilis
necessary
because
the
board
$:&gt;hio 45769.
approved changes in the pro- lage's website, which he
ject's electrical plans, and not designed. Ohio Department
because of delays on the part ofTaxation requires that local
~
••it
of the contractor.
tax forms be available online
J
Hays said paving damaged beginning Jan. I, 2002.
In addition to access to the
on
Beech and Laurel streets
Federal Mogul- 1.21
--6.40
~P--42.21
will be repaired before the forms, the public will be able
USB-18.23
--16.65
)1m Coal-21.32
Rocky Boots- 6.22
N&lt;zo-44.61
Grmett- 67.51
contractor leaves the project. . to access general information
t:lD Shel- 48.94
~Taci&gt;'SBC- 39.&lt;¥!
EJoclrlc-41.32
Duffield also reported to about village departments,
GKM.Y- 4.()6
Sen-45.41
,Ast*lndlne.-42.-42
council
that BPA member community events and access
Hai1ey
Dililltdson
51.76
Sln'ey's.28
•lir&amp;T -17.11
WN-Mall- 55.75
Lnk One- 38.85
Kmart-8.85
Bernard Gilkey has been related sites through the new
Wendy's- 30.11i
Kroget- 25.23
l!t.J-9.50
appointed
to serve as an act- Middleport website.
Lands End- 51.11
Watliingkli 1 14A2
·!loo E...-.-21.94
The address for the site is
ing utilities coordinator until
W-14.07
8org\\Wi&amp; 46.10
NSC-19.43
Daly stlCk repoiiS .... the a village superintendent is www.eurekanet.com/'"'lllidttiOitploil 2.56
Oak~ FilaniJBI-15.75 4 p.m. ciooiR.l
Q1BII11i1g Sl'qle - 4.99
cillie
dleport, but McKnight said
OVB-23.50
p!9Vious day's tni!ISaO- hired.
CiiY Hc*q- 10.41
tions, pteMded by Snilh
BBT-34.64
Col- 16.97
Gilkey will not be paid for · the address will likely change
00-15.01
-19
Pameis at InC. c1 his service, Duffield said.
when the village changes
Popoloo -48.99
Galp-Ws
Ouf&gt;a1- 44.50
Internet providers.
The
village
has
received
'
•
•
Council also:
four applications for the posi• Approved payment of bills
tion of village superintenin
the amount of$7,367.46 in
dent.
Middleport's
Christmas bills. $6,625 of which was for
Parade is Saturday at 6 p.m., a 2000 police cruiser;
(USPS 213-VOO)
Ohio VII'-Y Publlllilng CO.
• Set the second meeting in
followed by a community
Publllhecl every afternoon, ~Y
December
for Dec. 26, due to
through Friday, 111 coun St.,
candlelight service at 6:30
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
p.m. Santa Claus will visit the Christmas holiday.
,. Our main concem in all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy,
Also present were Council
Member:
The
Associated
Press
and
with children at Peoples
• 10 be accurate. If you know of an
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
error In a story, call the newsroom
members Rae Gwiazdowskv.
Bank, N.A., at 7 p.m.
Poatmaeter: Send address correcat (740) 992·21 56.
tions to The Dally Sentinel, 111 coun.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said Stephen Hou chin s, Rog~r
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
village crews have been work- Manley, Bob Po oler, Bob
•
News Dep1rtmenta
Subscription
rates
.
ing on street decorations, and Robinson and Kathy Scott,
' Tho main number Is 992·2156.
By C8nier or motor route
Depanment extontlooa are:
have repaired a number of a~d Clerk Bryan Swann.
One-k
$2
one mont11
$8.70
Ge-.1 mon....
Ext. 12
J'

(Becky Baer is Mefis Coun·.
ty Extension Agent fur. Family
and Consumer Sciences!CoiHmunity Development.)
----------

MORE LOCAL NEW{\.
11:
·MORE LOCAL·FOLKS
. . , ,•
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992-2156

i

Sewer
from

to read, and the joy of
reading for pleasure. The
day concluded with a
game, "Who Am I?" (Contributed photo) '

,

I

the Platinum Gas Saver than the
22% claimed by the developer."
In addition to this government
study, the Gas Saver has received
patents for cleaning out carbon
and raising octane, making
premium fuel unnecessary for
most vehicles.
Joel Robinson, the developer,
commented: "We have sold
almost a half million Gas Savers.
To our surprise, as many people
buy the Gas Saver becauSe it
extends engine life (by cleaning
out the abrasive carbon deposits)
as buy it to increase gas mileage

or to raise octane. n
For further infon)lation call:
1·800-LESS-GAS
1·800·537·741?

'

LOCAL STOCKS

.-

I

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22%

f

MID,DLEPORT- A Cheshire man was injured in a one-car
accident early today on Ohio 7 near Middleport, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Caleb T. Shuler, 23, 204 Riverside Drive, was transported from
the scene of the 2:04 a.m. accident to Holzer Medical Center by
Meigs County EMS. He was later trea~ and released, a hospital spokesman said.
·
Troopen said Shuler was northbound in Salisbury Township
when he apparently feU asleep. causing the car he drove to travel off lhe left side of the ·road, and strike a ditch and culvert.
The car was moderately damaged. Shuler was cited for driving
under the influence, failure to control and a seatbelt violation.

Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Sherifi'R2Jph E.TrusseD said deputies and memben of the Middltpon and Pomeroy police departmenu responded to a large
6ght involving 10 or more people Saturday morning at Good
Times on Oh10 7.
After being·pursued into the woods, Flint Greer,39, was arrested for fighting/fleeing and later released.
In other matters. Richard Lee Robinson was charged with
improperly handling firearms in a motor ..,hide after boeing
stopped by deputies on Bear Wallow Ridge .
A load~d Winchester 30-30 rifle, reportedly discovered in
Robinson'S vehicle, was later confiscated by deputies.
In ' other matters, Steven Shuler of Langsville was arrested for
marijuana: possession and drug paraphernalia after boeing stopped
for a speeding violation.
Shuler was also cited for driving under suspension and having
fictitious tags and is currently boeing held in the Middleport Jail
awaiting his coun hearing.
.
John Casto of HyseU Run Road was arrested for two counts of
domestic violen~e following an alleged altercation with his spouse.

Senice set ,
MIDDLEPORT Heritage Quartet fiom God:s Bible
School will perform on Friday at 7 p.m . at the WeSJey.m Bible
Holiness Church in Middleport.

Party planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - OAPSE Charter 448 Christmas
Party will be held on Dec. 8 at 6 p.m. potluck dinner at Eastern High School. Those attending should bring a SS gift
exchange gift.

To perfonil
POMEROY -Junior and Rita White, and R21ph Cooke
will present a music program at the Meigs County Senior Center on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. The public is invited.

POMEROY -Several people were recently arrested by the

a.m., 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesday. Bring Elementary School. Information
shot records.
is available by calling the center
at 667·0441.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport Lit·
POMEROY- Junior and Rita
erary .Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, White and Ralph Cooke to per·
Pomeroy Library.
Olita form a musical program at
Heighton as hostess. Frankie Senior Center, 5:30 p.m. Thurs·
Hunnel will review 'Ahab's Wife" day. Public invited.
by Sena Jeter Naslund. Book
exchange.
POMEROY - Alzheimer's
Awareness candlelight vigil,
THURSDAY
Senior Citizens Center, ThursTUPPERS PLAINS - The day; 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Adult Basic &amp; ·
Literacy Education program
SATURDAY
(ABLE) will hold an open house
SALEM CENTER ~ Star
on Thursday from 9 a.m. until Grange will meet .on Saturday,
2:30 p.m. at the center, located with potluck at 6:30 p.m. and
in the former Tuppers Plains meeting at 7:30 p.m.

engine is pollution, this 22% of
each gallon would nonnally bum
when it reaches the platinum of
the catalytic converter.
Unfonunately, the convener's
platinum bums this fuel in the
tail-pipe, where the heat and
energy produced from burning
this fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vcbicle.
But when the Gas Saver adds
pllltiaum to the air-fuel mixture,
22% more of each gallon
bums inside the engine so that
22'1&gt; fewer gallons are requiml
to drive the same distance.
After studying this process for
five years, the goverl\ment
concluded: "Independent testing
shows greater fuel savings with

Driver injured

Arrests made

""*"'

"""*'"

Open house
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers Plains Adult Basic &amp; Literacy
Education program (ABLE) will hold an open house on Thunday from 9 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. at the center, located in the former Tuppers Plains Elementary School. Information is available
by calling the center at 667-0441.
·

Grange meets
SALEM CENTER - Star Grange will meet on Saturday,
with potluck at 6:30 p.m . and meeting at 7:30 p.m. A baking
contest will be held.

Plan revival
RUTLAND - Revival services will be held through Dec. 2
at 7 p.'m. each evening at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.
Evangelist Heath Jenkins will be the speaker, and special
singing is planned. Paul Taylor, pastor, invites the public.
....... ...
&gt;4 '"I
~

-Hike
from Page 1
was
Councilman
Larry
Wehrung.
·
Council also approved the
6rst reading of an ordinance
that would provide additional
compensation for village
employees in 2001.
The ordinance stipulates
the village shall pay each fulltime employee and salaried
employee in active employment, as of Oct. 1, 2001, the
sum of $1 00, and each
employee in active part-time
employment, SSO.
If passed, the ordinance
would take effect on Dec. 4. ·
In other matters, Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
displayed newly purchased
infection control kits and first
responder kits that the police
department will place in all of
its cruisers.

Proffitt said infection control kits will protect officers in
case of exposure to contaminated blood, anthrax or other
hazardous materials.
Proffitt added that first
responder kits, which include
items such as cold packs, seat-

"'

belt C!ltters, blankets, bandages, an oxygen mask and
neck brace, will aUow policemen to administer medical
assistance to those injured in
an accident before EMT per·
sonnel arrive on the scene.
Blaettnar said all village
police officers will be
instructed on the specific
attributes of each piece .of
equipment and how to prop_erly use them in an emergency situation.

1·

, Council also:
• approved a resolution for
the adjustment of appropriations in the general fund;
• granted Donna Greene
permission to put new ceiling
tile inside the Pomeroy
Municipal Building's auditorium. Greene has already
painted the auditorium and
uses the area for storytelling
events for both children and
adults;
• approved the hiring of
Shannon Walker as a parttime, call-in only police officer for the village.

I

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

Federal ColUumer Protection has confirmed the occuracy of the fuel saving described in this advenisement.

BOSTON • National Fuelsaver
Corp. of Boston has developed a
low cost autOmotive accessory
ealled the Pllltinwn Oas Saver
which il JUirlllteed to incmue
au mlleaae by 22'1&gt; while
meeliliJ all emluion alllldlll'ds.
With a tlmple connCI:Iion to a
VIICUWD tine, the Ou Saver adds
mlm~•coplc
lijlllllitica of
plllinum to the air-fuel mixbue
cnterina the cnailte.
Platinum has the unique abitity
to make non-burning fuel bum.
With platinum in the flame zone,
you increase the percentage of
fuel burning in the engine from
68'1&gt; of each gallon to 90'1&gt; of
each sallon, a 22% increase.
Since unbumt fuel leaving an

aena McMillan

; RUTLAND- Cierra Lynn McMillan, Rutland, 41-dayold daughter of David A. McMillan of Rutland.• and Alanna
Grimm of Rutland, died on Sunday, Nov. 25,2001, at Holzer Medical Cen~~r.
She was born·pn Oct. 16,2001, in Gallipolis.
. Surviving in addition to her parents are her sister, Morgan
Alexis McMillan; two brothers, David Cy McMillan and
Zackery J. Grimm; paternal grandparents, Phyllis and Ellis
McMillan of Long Bottom; maternal grandmother, Patricia
Cleland of Point Pleasant; W.Va.; and several aunts and
'Uncles.
• · She was preceded in de~th by her maternal grandfather,
-Wayne Cleland.
' Graveside services were held at 1 p.m. today, Tuesday, Nov.
27, 2001, at Bradford Cemetery. There were .no calling hours.
•Arrangements are by Fisher-Acree Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Commun lty Cllender Ia
published 11 • free nrvlce to
non-profit groups wllhlng to
announce meeting• end lpecllll IVllnta. The calender Ia
not dellgned to promote
nle1 or furid·-r.ln.-. of any
type. 1tem1 .... printed only
11 1p1ce pennltl 1nd e~~nnot
be gua111nteed to be printed •
,.,.clflc number of dey1.

POMER?Y - · Linda L. Moore Jett, 62, Chester Road,
Pomeroy, died Saturday, Nov. 24, 2001, at Holzer Medical
Center, following an extended illness.
. She Wlls born Oct. I, 1939. in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Carl E. and Mabel Davis Moore. She was a retired
~~hool bus driver for the Meigs Local School District.
. Surviving are her daughter, Lisa Kaye Jett of Pomeroy; a
JISter and brother-in-law, Marlene and Jeff Wilson of
Pomeroy; two nieces and a nephew; and several aunts,
,uncles and cousins.
· Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday in Ewing Funeral
Borne, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith Rader officiating.
~urial will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may
~.111 at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

SOCinY SCRAPBOOK

'

LindaJett

doesn't give anyone the right to take
mous. If you don 't, you'll have diffi- rapes ~re acquaintance rapes.
Assault victims: Please don 't boe advantage of that mistake and •omculty making and keeping relationships for the rest of your life.
afraid to speak up. People are waiting mit a crime against you. There is no
I finally received help, and now, to help you. If you wish tb remain doubt in my mind that my attacker
five years later, I have found a won- anonymous, go to the Internet and . had done this before and would have
derful, patient man I want to spend visit www. 911 rape.org to learn done it again. Believe me, it is a
the rest of my life with. I couldn't about your options. Read on:
wonderful feeling to know that
have done it if I hadn't spent time . DEAR ABBY: "Scared and because of my actions, he'D never
talking with a counselor and meet- Alone" has plenty of company. Five put anyone else through what I
ing others who have gone through months ago. I got drunk at my grad- endured. NO LONGER
similar experiences. It's not your uation party and was raped by my ALONE IN MISSOURI
.
fault. You are not alone. The sooner friend's brother-in-law. He caUed me
DEAR
NO
LONGER
you share your experience, the faster two days later, and my sister over- ALONE: Bravo! The attacker has
you'll heal. - LIVING AND LOV- heard my end of -the conversation
power over his victim only if that
lNG AGAIN IN PENNSYLVANIA when he denied raping me. When
DEAR UVING AND LOV- she confionted me, I burst into tears person remains silent. To paraphrase
lNG: Bless you for writing. A 1998 and told her everything. She told art old saying. "Speak the truth and
-.
Centers for Disease Control Srudy our parents for me and we all went the truth shaD set you free:•
revealed that one woman in six in to the police.
Dear Abby is writtttt by Paulillt
the United States is a victim of rape
"Scared" must understand that
or attempted rape. Eighty percent of everyone makes mistakes. But that Phillip&lt; and daughtt;r )&lt;anne Pl!illips.

The Daily Sentinel• Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

'IUesdlly. Non•~• 27.2001

Rape vidim ~ isolation ends when she finally speaks out
DEAR ABBY: "Scared and
Alone in BrittOn, Mich." i.! NOT
alone. Five years ago. I went through
the exact same experience.
!,too, had been drinking heavily at
a college party and was raped by a
guy who bad been rny good friend
for years. He was a close friend of
my boyfriend's, and I didn't know to
whom I could rurn. So, like
"Scared," I remained silent. I was
afraid of what the guy might do to
me and of what people would think.
I thought if I told, I'd lose my
friends.
Sadly, I lost my friends anyway.
After the rape, I lost my ability to
trust people or let anyone get close
to me. I became unable to open up
to people without thinking they had
some hidden agenda. My friends

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel's
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Monday, December 24th

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Call Debbie or Dave at 992-2156

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

CharteM Hoeflich
General Manager

l: Bowling results, Page 7
- Marshall, Ohio post wins, Page 8
Miami tops BCS rankings, Page 10

1Uesd.y, November 27. 2001

~'1b'm1. Solll~

liC)(AC,. ~~~It,~ AN'0-

~11)- 'IOtii$'C

~··~

•s.(.t IG'~"fl
~"N&amp;M ONLA9r~

R. Shewn a.-11
MaMglng Editor
Ill.- Kay Hill
Controller

; HIGHLIGHTS

~1\-11l&gt;"m'- 'GEt'fi'T'~

GI~MWT' ANt&gt;~'1b n~J.IN"OIA~
l~t:JW;.At4t&gt;-

OVP SPORTS STAFF

&amp;:rnan\ru)

~10·•••o·.

Pllptloapa
Girls
Manda{• Gina
eve a1 Fedalat floci&lt;i l!lil
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57
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Milll9

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NATIONAL VIEW

Troubling
Beljing up security along
Canadian border imperative
• The Buffalo (N.Y.) ·News. 011 security at the U.S.-Canadiall border. The intentions were good and the instincis were
right, but the actions now being proposed by the Bush administration to beef up security along the northern border f:ill far
short of meeting the need.
News that the administration doesn't want to provide the
funding to hire new border agents and Customs inspectors,
despite earlier calls for a tripling of staffing at bridges and other
checkpoints along the U.S.-Canada border, is especially troubling along the Niagara, where one of the four international
highway bridges was shut down so its current staff of inspectors could be shifted to other locations. Both security and commerce will suffer from a shortsighted shortchanging of these
crossings....
It's worth noting that a terrorist was caught sneaking into the
United States from Canada late in 1999 for a "millennium
attack" on the Los Angeles airport, and an Osarna bin Laden
operative was arrested trying to cross the border in June.
Meanwhile, law enforcement officials suspect two of the Sept.
II terrorists entered New England by ferry from Canada and that the 4,000-mile border. currently guarded by 832
agents as compared to the 9,000 assigned to the shorter Mexican border, has road crossings left. totally unguarded at various
times of the day or night.
Local bridges are open and watched around the dock, but
they .also double as major commercial crossings. U.S.-Canada
trade remains by far the largest trading partnership in the
world, and there is growing concern that the crossings are
·
·
becoming chokepoints. ...
The government is confronted by a wide and expensive
range of security needs, from vaccine stockpiling to military ·
deployments. But increasing staffing along this border offers a
double-barreled chance to bolster security and speed commerce that is vital to the nation's economic recovery. The
promise should be kept.

I

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Nov. 27, the 331st day of 2001. There are
34 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Nov. 27, 1901, the U.S. Army War
College was established in Washington, D. C.
On this date:
In 1910, New York's Pennsylvania Station opened.
In 1942, during World War U, the French navy at Toulon
scuttled its ships and submarines to keep them out of the hands
of the Nazis.
In 1945, Gen. George C. Marshall was named special U.S.
envoy to China to try to end hostilities between the Nationalists and the Communists.
In 1953, playwright Eugene O'Neill died in Boston at age
65.
In 1970, Pope Paul VI, visiting the Philippines, was slightly
wounded at the Manila airport· by a dagger-wielding Bolivian
painter disguised as a priest.
In 1973, the Senate voted 92-to-3 to confirm Gerald R. Ford
as vice president, succeeding Spiro T. Agnew, who had resigned.
In 1978, San francisco Mayor George Moscone and City.
Supervisor Harvey Milk, a gay-rights activist, were shot to
death inside City Hall by former supervisor Dan White.
In 1983~183 people were killed when a ColombianAvianca
Airlines Boeing 747 ·crashed near Madrid's Barajas airport.
In 1985, the British House .of Co':llmons approved the
Anglo-Irish accord giving Dublin a consultative role in the
governing of British-ruled Northern Ireland.
In 1989,107 people were killed when a bomb blamed by
police on drug traffickers destroyed a Colombian jetliner.
Ten years ago: Israel signalled its anger with what it regarded
as the high-handedness of the United States by. rejecting an
invitation to attend Mideast peace talks in Washington on Dec.
4. The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution paving the way for the establishment of a U.N. peacekeeping operation in war-ravaged Yugoslavia.
Five years ago:A federal judge blocked enforcement of a California initiative to dismantle affirmative action, saying civil
rights groups had a "strong probability" of proving it unconstitutional. Evan C. Hunziker, an American jailed by North Korea
on spy charges. was set free, ending a three-month orde,U.
One year ago: A day after George W. Bush was certified the
winner of Florida's presidential vote, AI Gore laid out his case
for letting the courts settle the nation's long-count election.
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien's Liberal Party won a
third straight majority in the House of Commons.
Today's Birthdays: Actor James Avery is 53. Caroline Kennedy
Schlossberg is 44. Rock musician Charlie Burchill (Simple
Minds) is 42. Rock musician Charlie Benante (Anthrax) is 39.
Rock musician Mike Bordin (Faith No More) is 39. Actor
Fisher Stevens is 38. Actress Robin Givens is 37.

•

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•

•

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Congress may face a .'peifect storm' on health care
Except fur a bioterrorism package, Congress is likely to pass no health legislation
this year - despite the fact that major
crises are unfolding in health. ·care costs,
delivery and quality.
failure to address longstanding problems
- plus new facton such as the recession
and surging insurance costs - mean that
"a 'perfect storm' is about to hit our health
care system;' warns Henry Simmons, president of the bipartisan National Coalition
on Health Care.
A study released last ~ek by the Coalition indicates that health inswance costs
are likely to rise by 34 percent between
2000 and 2002, causing 6 million Americans to lose health insurance and raising
the number of uninsured to nearly 45 million - the highest level ever.
And this estimate does not include the
likely effects of rising unemployment
caused by the reces&lt;;ion and the Sept. II
terrorist attacks - nor the cuts in Medicaid caused by state budget shortfalls.
The chances are that health care while yirtua1ly ignored by Washington this
year - could again become the nation's
dominant political issue, much as it did
between 1990 and 1994.
The failure of the health care reform
plan of furmer Fint Lady (now Sen.)
Hillary Rodharn Clinton, D-N. Y, in 1994
essentially scared politicians away fiom
thinking comprehensively about problems
that have only festered in the meantime.
Her refurm model - government-run
managed care - is now widely regarded
as badly conceived, but no one has developed a new one beyond piecemeal adjustments in the existing system.
And larger partial attacks on the problem - such as proposals for Medicare
refurm - have fOundered because of ideological conflict between Republicans and
·
Democrats.
In the meantime, much as warnings
about international terrorism were
ignored fur years, so have reports indicating that the health system is "broken:'
A 2000 study by the non-profit Institute
of Medicine estimated, for instance, that
between 50,000 and 90,000 persons die
every year because of medical errors by

IS-percent increase through the Senate,
but the House adopted the Bush number.
The issue is supposed to be resolved by a
House-Senate confi:rence.
Next year, sources say, Bush again may
give NIH less than a full boost because it
allegedly can't spend what it has although it might help if Bush named· a
new NIH director to give the agency
leadership.
The administration reportedly also
COLUMNIST
intends to cut Medicare payments to hospitals once again - ironically, because the
administrator recommending the cuts,
doctors, hospitals and HMOs,
Instead of concentrating on patient care, Thomas Scully, formerly was head of a
institutions in the health system are hospital lobby that fought to reverse Clinincreasingly focused on their financial bot- ton-era cuts.
Also ironically. Scully's successor as head
tom line, causing quality to suffer.
In 1997, the federal goverrunent cut of the Federation of American Hospitals,
Medicare payments to providers in order Charles "Chip" lWm, helped write the
to save money. Strapped hospitals cut care legislation that imposed th.e 1997 cuts.
and demanded that nunes work overtime, Kahn's group is now running ads designed
causing them to leave the profession in to forestall Scully's new cuts.
· Instead of cutting. the Institute of Meddroves.
Insurance companies are simultaneously icine recommen~ed that the goverrunent
raising premiums, dumping Medicare ser- provide up to SI billion over five years to
vices, denying benefits and forcing docton help hospitals and doctors acquire up-todate information systems - computers
to see more patients in less time.
And doctors, thrqugh patients' rights and software - to prevent record-keeping
,
••
legislation, are trying to inflict their old errors.
Famed cyclist Lance Armstrong, in telenemesis - malpractice lawyers - upon
vision
ads, touts the possibility of every
the insurance industry and HMOs.
There's not only a "perfect storm" rag- person's carrying his or her medical
ing in health care, but a civil war as well - records on a wallet-sized "smart card," but
- and those suffering from it are patients the country is miles fiom that.
A private group, the Task Force on
and the uninsured.
Meanwhile, Congress is doing nothing. Health Care and· th.e Economy, has sugMedicare reform, including a prescription gested that investmentS in such technolodrug benefit for seniors, is dead. SO is gy could help spur recovery in the hardpatients rights legislation. Aid fur the unin- hit computer industry.
But the main burden of the National
sured never got off the ground, frozen out
Coalition on Health Care's new "perfect
by President Bush's tax cuts.
storm"
study is that the country needs
Bush even backslid on his promise to
continue the process of doubling the comprehensive reform of its health delivNational Institutes of Health budget over ery system - starting with. an insurance
five years, despite campaign rhetoric pro- system that covers everyone.
The Coalition is not recommending
nouncing research to be the key to saving
any particular system Canadian,
dollars as ~ll as lives.
private
but
it does
employer-based
or
Bush recommended a 13-percent
increase instead of the IS percent required recommend that work start on one soon.
to stay on pace for doubling by 2003 - a Smart politicians should get the message.
(Morton Kondracke is exerutil'e ediwr '!f Roll
shortfall of $700 million.
Call,
the newspaper '!f Capitol Hill.)
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, has pushed a

Morton

Ko:ndr.lcke ·

WASHINGTON TODAY

GOP chairman quietly prepares for 2002 elections
BY WILL LEITER
WASHINGTON - For the past two
weeks, GOP national Chairman Jim
Gilmore has had to endure this: Democrats openly bragging about the 2001 election results; personal taunts from the
Democratic chairman; and reports of
grumbling within the ranks of his own
party.
He says he's not fazed . .
"It does not irritate me. It's their job to
put their best toot forward;' the Virginia
governor said of the Democ9ts. "My ouly
response is congratulations."

Democrat Jim McGreevey won the
governors' race in New Jersey and Democrat Mark Warner took the governor's job
in Virginia two weeks ago, while Republicans won the New York City mayor's
race with billionaire Michael Bloomberg.
The day after the elections, Democratic
national Chairman Terry McAuliffe spoke
of his Republican counterpart by name
several times, referring to "poor Jim
Gilmore" as he predicted Democrats were
on a winning streak that would extend to
2002.
.
"Now Republicans have to go back to
their playbook and figure out how to win
elel:tions," McAuliffe said.
Gilmore, a blunt-spoken former prosecutor dismisses the taunting and says he
hasn't changed the Republican game plan
for 2002.
He wants to expand the party's base to
include more Hispanics, women and

blacks. At the same time, he says the party
should support President Bush's agenda
and campaign on a platform of"keeping
taxes down, while providing a good economic stimulus package, international and
internal security from terrorism as well as
accountability and quality education."
He says he sees no reason to drastically
overhaul the GOP's strategy
"On Election Day, we did not suffer a
wipeout;' Gilmore said. "It was · a split
decision. We won the mayorship in New
York, won a landslide in the Virginia
House of Delegates, won judicial races in
Pennsylvania, special elections in Mis-

souri."
He acknowledged the two governors'
races were the contests everybody was
watching. But Gilmore says he's penonally unaware of criticism within the party
ranks.
"The only place I saw that was in the
newspapers - and it was unattributed,"
Gilmore said.
Several top Republicans around the
country said privately this week that few
people blame Gilmore for the election
losses, but they've heard scattered grumbling that he attempted to distance the
national party and the White House fiom
the gubernatorial candidates. Gilmore
responds that the national party strongly
supported both Republican candidates for

reason to speculate about Gilmore's future
as chairman. Three days after the vote,
Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer made dear
that the preSident was behind Gilmore.
"The president has faith and confidence
in Governor Gilmore and the job he did," ·
Fleischer said.
The public reaction from top Republicans is typified by the comments of Connecticut Gov. John Rowland, head of the
Republican Governors Association. "Governors and national committee people are
extremely supportive of Jim," Rowland
said.
.
Party officials around the country say
the core Republican message of fiscal
conservatism -will work if blended with
proposals that address voter concerns on
issues like the economy. education and
health care. New York GOP chairman
Sandy Treadwell said it's also important for
the party to have "a message of tolerance
and indusion."

MERCERVILLE Southern
pulled away early from South Gallia
and never looked back.
After a steady first quarter, the Tornadoes took control of the game in
the second quarter, resulting in a 6328 victory in high school girls basketball Monday.
Southern led 14-6 at the end of the
opening quarter, but the Tornadoes
outscored the Rebels 24-6 in the second frame to take a 38-12 halftime
lead.
"I thought the girls used their
heads a lot better," said Southern

head coach Scott Wolfe. "We've got a
very young ballclub. I don't have any
seniors on the team. I start three
juniors and two sophomores."
"I thought we played a better mental game in that quarter than when
we started out. I wanted to make sure
we didn't give them a new breath of
life."
Katie Sayre scored 15 of her 17
points in the. first half for Southern
(1 .-0).
"She's really going to help us going
down the stretch;' said Wolfe. "She's
getting better on a daily basis.:·
Also for the Tornadoes, Bridgette
Barnes scored I 0 points, Deana

Pullins added eight and Ra chel
Chapman chipped in with eight.
All 11 players scored for Southern .
Meanwhile, for South Gallia, things
got froin bad to worse as Sarah
Wright, one of only two or three
players with any varsity experience
last year, left the game with ,welling
in her right knee.
"As far as the first half goes, we
played hard," said South Gallia head
coach Justy Burleson. "When Sarah
Wright went down, that really hurt
us. We've only got a couple of girls
that can really handle the ball.
"That's one of the things we work
on everyday in practice is our ball

..

handling. We've just got a long ways
to go.
Holly Haner led the Rebds (0-1)
with 20 points.
"We had to have (Haner) step up
and be a leader," said Burleson. "She
knew that. She and I have talked
about that several times. She not only
played rhe forward position, but she's
also got to play a small guard 'for us.
She's got to help us get the ball down
the court fqr us; ·
Each team had its share of foul
shooting as Southern was 17-for-28
at the free throw line, while South

Pluse see Southem. 7

MenPlis 911, Sacrarnentl94
•

Phoet ix 111,lllllh 104, OT
NCAA Mini Haapl
lbidliy'll gana
adnel71, Comel62, OT
·'· ComecticiJ 110, New Hali!JShie
'58
DQI8SI18 82, \lemoH7

GeorgeloMl103, GlliiTtllirg Sl.

.,., .. 69
•: . layola, Md. 74, Faile911Jicki').
~ - SCX'I43
'
Mamaltan 111, Loog lslinj u. 84
r •
Ohio 80, Navy 74

Alablml76,lllllh61
Arkansas Sl. 90, Jackson St. 79
....: Ausli1 Peay 75, Malian, Ind. 42
1
Belo oo • 65, Mictle Ten m ee
.If~ 59
·' . Ooamlle 71, Appalaclian Sl69
Fla. lnlematioual82, lnd.-1'16..fl.
'·
. II Wayne8Q
Fum111178, CarT1Jbel75
Geor\ja
61' 5amloo:l55
tJ ,,
·/
ft1Nm:t 99,
Nol1hridge 65
·: ~83,Bellule... l ' Cookman 73
•
'
. . . . . 96, Slll!lheld 46
[,., Miami 74. Florida Alanlic 48
New Orleans 61' l\lolfol( Sl. 54
··t" Old Dorohon72, DelawareS!.
Jl" 61
"' Radlcrd 85, N.C.·Wioi.,.. I 72
, , SolAh Carolina 83. ETSU 65
"1
The Citadel ffl, Wiliam &amp; Milly
62
;:;•' W. Carolna.133, TOCcoa Fals 58
. ·.: 45W«J.Nabsma 54, Southem u.

cs

IMlllord n, AorldaA&amp;M 12
Md.-Eas111m Shore 65, E Mlchl-

".

;'"

11 .. ~61

TexasA&amp;M 91, TexasA&amp;MKi ogsllile 70
" " T-Tech81,l1TEP56 ,
~. Long Beach Sl. 81, cs Monlar8y
"8ay46
· 1. MonlaiiB Sl. 73, Jarnestw.n 58
~ Sl. 65, San Diegl56
l•;t . SotAhem Cal73, uc Sanla Bar·
,., bera 62
.
Wpmg 71, Denl'er68

'"

..
~ · :ZOO Club tickets

on sale
., TUPPERS PLAINS
:•• 200 Club tickets are currently
• on sale for Eastern High
~··.: School boy's basketball. Tickets may be purchased from
any of the playerS. Also new
- Eastern schedule !-shirts are
also available.

•••••

•
The name of Megan Gar(. nes was left ·out of those
receiving awards at the recent
· " Meigs High School Fall
=- •· Sports
Banquet. Garnes
" received an award for junior
varsity volleyball.

..

• r

- 1,,

· I.

'

'"...,

·. .·

Bucs run over Rams
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Once
again, an avalanche of
turnovers was to blame for a
St. Louis Rams' loss.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers capitalized on five
Rams giveaways and also
blocked a punt in a 24-17
victory Monday night. Mike
Alstott ran for two touchdowns, Warrick Dunn's 21yard run broke a fourthquarter tie and the Bucs also
got away with a dubious
fourth-down call in the
fourth quarter to revive their
playoff hopes.
"I feel like our best football is in ftont of us," Bucs
quarterback Brad Johnson
said. "We showed that we
can play with anybody and
beat imybody."
Tfoe Rams (8-2) had three
fumbles and two interceptions, giving them an NFL,_ leading 32. That's what the
Buccaneers (5-5) ':"ere
counting on.
A potential sixth turnover
was reversed when Kurt
Warner's arm was ruled to
be in forward motion in the
second quarter.
"We just looked at what
was realistic," said linebacker
Derrick Brooks, who tipped
a pass to set up the fiqal
interception. "Realistic is
that they score a lot of points
but they lead the league in

BY JON WILL
OVP CORRESPONDENT

BELPRE - Eastern Lady
Eagles.
.
No matter what sport,
when you say their name, you
are referring to a very talented school of female athletes.
Basketball season is now upon
us, and the Lady Eagles
opened up their season visiting the Golden Eagles of Belpre.
With three seniors, the
Lady Eagles are hoping for a
repeat of last years TVC
Hocking Division crown.
Against a young and talented
Belpre team, the Eagles
showed that they would again
be force to reckon with in the
Hocking Division. However,
Belpre belongs to the Ohio
Division, and when they
flexed their muscles Eastern
found them one point short
of victory. Down by two
points with only seconds
remaining, Belpre's Blackburn
drained one from downtown

turnovers."

The Buccaneers went 90
yards in nine plays on the
winning drive, with Dunn
skirting the sideline for the TOUCHDOWN- Tampa Bay fullbac;k Mike Alstott (40) pounds his way through St. Louis'
score. He appeared top step Rich Coady (38) as his teammate Brad Johnson (14) signals touchdown Monday. (AP)
out of bounds at the 5, but
the Rams had used their two in the St. Louis backfield.
instant replay challenges and
u I've had a rough season,"
were unable to contest the Sapp said. "But I had some
play.
·
opportunities tonight and I
A big game from defensive took advantage of them."
taclde Warren Sapp. who has
Warner has thrown It
been quiet much of the year, interceptions the last four
helped the Buccaneers' games, and the Bucs picked
defense control the Rams. him off twice in the waning
Sapp, who had just · three minutes. Marshall Faulk also
sacks corning into the game, wasn't much of a factor,
had two, forced a a fumble,
PIHH see MNF, 1
and spent much of the game
Farmers Bank is offering

~

1111/ttPIII expire

81. 2001.

NEW

'
..,I.

USED
'"

to give the Golden Eagles the
one-point, 40-39 victory.
The game began with a
very slow pace, typical for a
season opener, especially
when both teams have some
very young talent on the

Please see hstern. 7

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financing the purchase
of a new or used ATV!
Get the ATV you've
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011:.

.,.

Eastern
drops
opener,
40-39 .·

·

Gilmore says the biggest challenge in
the 2002 elections could be Democrats
running what they call "centrist" carn.paigns that tend to blur differences with
Republicans. The winners for governor in
New Jersey and Virginia have been
described as centrist Democrats.
"We have to guard against the day that
all the Democratic candidates are running
as conservative Republicans," Gilmore
governor.
said.
After the elections, the Bush adminis(Will Lester covers politics dnd p/IJ/ing for·
tration quickly made clear there was no The Associated Pres!.)
I

;IE 1139

NFL
lbldiiJ'a Game
TafllJII Bay 24, Sl.l.ouis 17
NBA
lb idli{l Gina
Delroit 105, Orm:b 100
New York 88, Allanta 83

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

't.

Southern blows :through R~bels, 63-28
BY BurCH CooPER

'"nlljw:t"'

71M,u.ifHuurrntwlill*~lrinr--IMCM11MUfl/tiNOW.
~ J ' U j . Co, 'J ~ boanf. •taku ......UI,..,....

'TuEsDAY's

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No ...,..... ldkrt will H ,.,blalt«L Ldnr dtl1tM .. U. , . - ,.., ..... o ' 4
~._

Page 5

~~AMz:,-

Ohio Valley PubHshlng Co.
Publisher

'IUIIUy. Noan'• 21,2001

The Daily Sentinel ·

~'To ~AM&amp;QIC.IIN

111 Court St., p_,y, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 882·2157

Charles W. Govey

PageA4

RATE
8.99%

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up to

APR

48 mos.

9.55%*

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d 1744.011.
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APR isA'n.IBI ~ Rarle. ~ll.bjldiOcredt~ . PPR's baled Clllowl tee cJ S75.001r!d $10.00\'SI Doom~ may t. ~ . . .
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'

ctuve

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Limited Time Offer!

Call Now!
• Pomeroy 992-2136
• Gallipolis 446-2265
• Tuppers Plains 667-3161

if;'

.'

F B Farmers Bani
v v ..
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'I

~.e'reYourBaJ.lk
fot.·' ~
...
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'

'•

�Pllge A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Nov. 27,

~----------------------------------------~
~ribune - Sentinel · l\.e

CLASSIFIED

I

tiO

i

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

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- Now t4x70, 3 bedroom, 2 no pots, f1 40l992•21 6 7.
fl-40~
$150. Other 'hand forged
Bless you all lor ovorythlng plan. Wo 010 p8l1 of a largo urt1ay.
llcQqgot &amp; Anocbath. Only $995 down &amp; Beautiful River Vl&lt;lw Ideal j4110
.
SPA&lt;E
I tools. f140)IIIi2·7669
you gave"'
God Bless oompany lhal offers excel- URGENTLY
NEEDED- Try!~ to buy a homo and
u-I $189.62/monm. Call Charyl, For 1 Or 2 " - · Reltron- I
you All.
lent career advancement p&amp;e
donors
S50 lo be.nks are rejeCting you due
numL')
740-385-7671 .
cas 0epos11 No Pets Fos2 Wheel Small uu~ Trail·
Jank:e -Bobby Reynolds.
opportunities. For lntervtew S60~r week :,m2 dl" 3 to bad credlt history? We
FOR SAlE
ter'Trailer Park, 740-441• Nice ~ q let cou~~
er. All new tires, can be
considerallon send a cover hours weekly. Call Sera· can help yOU. We provide
New 2002 14 wide only 0 ~ 81
1\1\lt,
u
.... 1 011• made 1o Haul 4- wheMer
=--.,...-,---,--,----,-:::-.,-- letter telling us why you are 'Ti 7~S92-8851'
mortgages, personal and
f
1199 down &amp; $155 38/mo,
·
ling, wlll accommodate wflh Alteration, $200.
Arst Holzer's Annual Christ· the person we are kloklng ec,
,. · ·
small boslneaa ·loans rwlth N~y i::Qstrucled, slngl9 Call Nikki, (740)385-7671.
16x80, $100 per monlh, can (304)675-2315
mas Craft a~ ~ke Sale. for along with your 1'81ume we are WOI1dng hard 1o fill good or bad credh. Approval 91: ... , t
sq. foot home.
Clean 2 BR Trailer, Reffig- Ed at Country Homes, 7.40- ::.:.:::.:.::..:::;.:~--~
2nd Ave, GallipoliS. Novem· to t=taul Barker, Circulation America's food banks lor within 48 hrs (866)862- ~:ated~Opl minutes from
REDUCED
eraiOr and Stove Included. 992·2167.
2 wooden 9X7 Garage
bar 30th. December 1st.
Director at Ohio Valley Pu~ the holiday season and we t158
·
.
zer
tal, 20 minutes All Double Wide Displays
CIA, No Pets. Reference&amp;
doors wfth glass window&amp;,
flailing Co 825 Third Ave need 10 h rdwo1kl
from Plaasanl Valley Hoapl- must go Only S995 down. Required. Call [740)388· Traler space lor .,.., $120 good condition, .$50 each.
Middle Age Professional Gallipolla,
lo t 8 1 dl ldng,
I'R&lt;ImlooN.u
taA, oft SR 160 on a private On.ly at Oakwood Homes ot 8956 01 (740)38a.9053
per month, In Minersville; OE washer, runs QOOd,
45631 _ ·•
DWM look!~ lor Prolosslo·
pass .nae n Slav uaa 0
"-·
1•1/2 acre lot. 3 bedroom, Nitro (304)755-5685
800 aq
building, ale $75. (7-40'"~·~
nal WF, 30-50. Respond
Join our team. . rtmg P4Y
&gt;XAnCI!S
2-112 batl'ls, big kitchen
.
&amp;
$
,_,.,.._._
with letter and picture to
DATA EN'l'AYFTIPT.
Ia $7.00 per hour. ~e do
w/oak cablnata DR LA
I
AP.urJr.mNrs I mor':"(lt4f)8a~6.1~5 per Amazing
.....bollam
EB7 200 Main Street, Po&lt;nt
No Experience Needed. good work". Call Hl88·237• Flint Flnanclltl has been w/gas IOfl fi...,r8co, central
B!HM$
. FOR RllNr . .
'
.
-ldllrouglill
Pleasant, W\1 25550
Training Provided!
5342 ~· 2232 for monl In- providing small business air, laundry room, front
AND BWJXNGS
-lose ~0 pounds- 200
-''-'-'-'---'----- Medlcel Billing. Up to S60K. lonnatiOn.
loans lor 13 yoors. Now we pon:h &amp; 2·112 car garage ~
1 &amp; 2 BR E
lcel G
pound• ea-. quick, Fast
Would like to have small
Computer required
·
conom
as I'll"-~-----..,
ahort hair house dog that Is 1·800-240-8197 Dept .956 1'40
BuritNE'iS
I specialize in personal, car &amp; Immediate pnsusslon. Ap- 4,800 sq foot COmmen:iaJ Heat, WID Hookup, Near
llolmtow I Dramatic Resulls. 100%
already house trained.
\mwhpnmedooffi
1'ltAINING
debt consolidation: We praised al $125,500. Make Building with ~ 0 10 200 Holzer, $295 10 $379 Per
Natural, Or. Recommeuded.
•
• guarantee quality service . offer. Call (740)446-4514 acres. Rio Grande, Ol'lio. monlh, ?tus Utilities, ·Lease
Please caU (304)875•3264
G&lt;:xlM
. •Aak; about FREE SampeDrummer &amp; ball player Gllllpolll c....., COllege from a ttu&amp;ted name. caN trom, B--5pm, M-F, or Owner financing available. and Deposit Required.
{740)441-1982
looking for musCians &amp; (Ca1'881'8 Close To Home} Flint Financial Services, ap- (740}J46-3248 alter 5pm.
Call 740 245-5747
(740)446-2957
Appliances: Reconditioned
GIVEAWAY
to tprm contempo- C811Todayt740-448-436'7, pllcatlons
hotllnt
(1·
Wash
0
R
I singefs
rary
Chrl'titian
group,
1-800-214--0452,
888)388..()895
River_ view, 5.9, ale, Inl..oTs &amp;
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
e~. ryBfS, anges, Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4
~
(7-40)992·3187, 740-675·
ROll 190-05-12748.
,
grour&gt;:l pool, 4 Br., finished
ACREAGE
menlo, lumlahad and un1ur- Relrtg...-_ Up To 90 Days for $10. Open Sat. 8-5pnt &amp;
8 beautifut puppies ready 2432 .
'
t76 Need Flnancl_al Help? Risk basement, 2 fireplaces,
nlshed, security deposit re· Guaranteed! We Sell New evtmnge. Otwhul'll Greentor
caring
families.
ML&lt;icEu.ANmus
opportumly, 1()01( fur· huge.:Lr.. (740)992-2943
ff Rl
French house Mt. Atlo. (304)895quired, nD pets, 740-992_ Mayrag Appliances,
7
95 · s!~J )!~~o measage. or
(740}441-1707
ENE of West VIrginia Is now
.
ther, our financial Institution Well- · Maintained Brick 4E ••,rosA,11d m11•Ado
• 711100 2218.
City Maytag,
- - - - - ' - - - taking applcallons for packprovides you with aasisage
ge
., Uu t as :;:::::_______
·~
Small puppies,
Short aging department, pay. rate Free report, $how you how tance &amp; inlormatlon, Free Ranch, _3 Bedrooma, 2 1/2 avalable and driveway 1 Bedroom Apartments Dresser, chest of drawers. :=.:.:::::.:.::..:::____
Haired Mix breed. (304)675- is $7.25/br. Also, taking ap- to receive unlimited gold consultation, calt now at Baths '"7 quiet neighbor· there, $20,000 Firm, call $269 month. Deposit &amp; Aef: Night Stand. (304)675-3604 Independent Herballle Ois5702
plications for mactllne oper- and sliver coins. Call toll en-304·3011.
~~· C 40)446 "0203 to (740)992-5620 after 6pm. erence. HUO Approved. For Sale: Reconditioned ~~~~~ t,:,~~
"111"""-:"----...., ators, stMing pay Is lrse, 1·8n-526-6957 I.D.
washora, dryers and rslrift .:.:::=.:::.;;!:..!:~~...:.:=
518 000 belween (740)441-1 519
9
ll
AVCI'ION ·~
I $7.50/hr; maintenance dept. tM3392
TURNED OOWN ON
u~.- I acres,
· ·
ora10
•~r
JET
~""
(mechanlcalorelectrieal ex·
SOCIALSECURITYISSI?
IYIUIIILI!."""""'
Patriot
and
Northup. 1br. Very Clean, Available
rs. Thorn~
.,_.a.......,..
F'LFA MARKEr
,_ience required) pay Good or Bad Credit Even No Fee Unless We Win!
FOR SALE
(740)379-9257
Dec. 1st. Now taking AppU- ance. 3407 Jackson AveAERATION MOTORS
r...-itiiiilliiliiiiiiili_.l
~·
.
nuo, (304)675-7388.
Re!iafred, Now &amp; Rebuilt In .
....
scale based on experience. Bankruplcy, Call Toll Free
~ -888·582·3345
For Sale: 60 acres on the ca1ions. (304}675--4975
Slack. Call Ron Evans. 1_
Rick Peai'IOI"' Auction Com- Full benefits after 3 months. 24 hrs., 1-888-&lt;t26-8393.
14x70 Clay1on Trailer. 2.5 dead end of Hysell Run 2 Bedroom Apartment, Futon Bunk Bed, white met- 800-537-9528.
pany, lull time auctioneer, Minimum o~ 2 good releren- HEART ATTACK/STROKE
Acres, 32x40 New garage. Road, excellent hunting Stova, Refrigerator, Water al, excellenl condition, ask·
complete auction service. cas that wit be verified. Ap- VICTIMS/KIDNEY-LIVER
Scenic View Eatates. property and building site only . Fumlshed . . $260/mo. lng $300. Call (740)446- ~~--:c-:::---:cLlcensed 168 Ohio &amp; West ply In person or aend ~ PROBLEMS? If
sed
HOMii8
I (304)576-2635
for home. Water and electric deposit required. (740)446- 8626 after 4:30pm.
Mlro-' matic Pressure CanVIrginia 304:n3-5785 Or sume to ENE of West Viryou u
fOR SALE
almady there, $70,000 Cal 7620 alter 7pm.
ner, Uke New, Used Ver;
glnla, 115 Jack Burlingame any of these products be16 Wide Only $195.00 Per aher 4:00pm (740)992Hot . point Washer, 195. Uttle, S35 llrm. (740~
304-nl-5447.
~
DArive,HMIIwoodR . WV 25262, f00
°'"trtlyedoutroovemonnte,18
Y011
ry dmaamay~
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest 4293.
2 Bedroom Apt In Centena- WRefhlngo~poora'rorD, 'Y"95r·_ 595
H01 ·poGnEt 4409
·
"'·ua:.u
tin: uman esources.
• 10.5 Acree wilh 1999 Fleet- Rate With Air And Unry, appliances furnished.
$9
ro BUY
es1 8ayC!", Vioxx, Metabo- wOOd Modular Home Near derpjnnlng 1-868-928-3426 Indian Croak Estates, 3-6 utilities paid excepl electric EJect. Range, $95. Whirl- MOillE HOME OWNERS
1
'---oiiiiriiiiiiio""'_.l Full and Part Time Help life, Plav1x, Fen-Phen, Ae- Galllpotis Excellent COndi·
aero lots, west of Rio clean, $2851 month call pool Rehigerator, Uke Now, lnterthtrm &amp; Coteman gas,
Needed at Cltgo/ Little zulln, lmitrex, Lamlsll,l.olro- tion. PriVate, Country" Set· 1985 Skylne 14x70, 3 bed- Grande, from $25,900. (740 )256- 1135 abet' 5.00
S175. Freezer, Upright, Oil I electric fumacB&amp; lnAbtolute Top Dollar: u.s. JoAns IJ4 located In Cente- nex, ~ropulsld, Products ling. Stocked Pond Addi· room. Good condition. Call (740)245-5747
· ·
$125. Skaggs Appliances, · eluding hi efficiency heat
Sliver, Gokl Coins, Proof· nary. Apply in Person. Mon- contalmng PPA·Ephedra. tlonal 7.5 Acres AVailable. Harold, 740-385-9948.
2 BR Apt. Newly R9m0d- 76 Vlna ST. (740}446-7398 pump systems. We carry a
sets, Dlal'tlonds, Gold Fri. Bam- 1pm.
Call now about ~our legal Call Janell can at Century
Large corner building lot eled. Stove, Refrigerator
complete line ot Mobile
Rings,
u.s. Currency,· Full and P rt nm H 1 rlgh~- James olshouse 21 Homes &amp; land (Cellular 1991 Mansion 14K70, 3 with 205' Ohio River front· Fumlsl'led. All Utilities Paid. ~~~~~rpe.~0=. ~: homeBENNEpaTT~S&amp;HaccE.'!..asorlesNQ1.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- Needed C~ ron/e
practices law only In MN- 1 (304)634_2596 Of' Office bedroom excellent condi· age, elevatlo.n shot, ~ur· 46 Olive St. 4751 mo . .... ......,
""''
1P Associates
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 7-40· Johns ,;
~ted In WI~
throughout the HI00-731 •90111 .
lion, call Kavena, (740):185- veyed, appra&lt;sed, senoua (740)448- 3945
(740)446-7444 1-877·8:W· COOLING (740)448-1411
16
44&amp;-2842.
kesviMe. Apply In Parson. U.S., 1~-4572.
9948.
inquiries only, $40,000
9162. Free Estimatea, Eas)' or 1.....-r.l-5117
Mort- Fri., 9am- 3pm.
1111
W.•~
I ,053 VIne Street, Middle- 1st time buyers· Go'lern· (304)882·3736 before Spm . 3 apartments lor rent in Syr- ~:::~i~~!? daMaYa'toaamer
Corads. www.orvb.cornlbennett
~ $25 950 • bed
2 bedrooms,
$200 Drive- a· _,.
"'o~"~
Do
_.., . . ... rooms ment loans- buy loans &amp; Looking To Buy A New acuse,
d
d
little
save
alot
I \II'IIJ\\11 \I
11
11
Help wanted caring for the
'!'•ii;;,'-~-,.1 tranced yard, (740)992· sale- (740)446·3093 Oak· Home? Oon'l Have lend'? epos ' ren no1u es wa'
NEW AND USED FUR·
"I In II I "
elderty. Darst Group Home, An Make Kerosene Heaters 7003
wood Supet'Center
We Doll! Hurry Only 10 Lots ~e;; 1~ewer, trash, (740)378· New and Usad Furniture NANCE8 FOR BALE! We
iT1iitO~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I now paying minimum wage, and Forced Air Heaters Releft, 304-736-7295.
Slore betow Holiday Inn, lnataU, Frat Estimates, 11
lfELp WAMm
.new Shifts: 7..,.3pm, 7am-- paired. Small Engine Re- mode122Klledneon3 D4rillbede. Newly ,••,, 2Bx60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On3 nJOIT1I and bath, Furnish- Kanauga. We Sell ' grave you dont Cafl us, We both
5pm, 3pm-11pm, ,1pm- pair Free Pick-Up and De- b
• ·N
r~, u ly $345.00 _Per Month Meigs Memory Gardens, 2 ed EHiclency, All Utilities monuments and vasea. Loosei (740)446·6308, 1..__ _ _ _ _ __.1. 7am, caJI74().992·5023.
· A 11 bl Ov
asement. ew nurnace, 8.99% Fixed Interest Rate, lots In Chrislus section at
u-·- Monday --·
Sal
800-291-()098
1.Ivery
•
va a e.
er .20 nearty new roof &amp; vinyl sid- 1-888-928-3426
base ' of statue, $450, Paid, Downstairs, $285/ nuu~:;o:
u•n•
ur·
.
years
Experience.
Call
Mike
lng.
Quiet
neighborhood
(740}992-7687.
month.
919
2nd
Ave.
day
1,am-3pm.
C740)446·
NIW AND USED SlEEl
IATTENTION!
Homeworker•
Needed
4782
WORK AROUND YOUR $635 Weekly Processing (740)446-7604
close to school &amp; shopping. 3 BR, 1 1/2 bath plua waSh·
(740)446-3~5
Steel Beama, Pipe Rebar
SCHEDULE
Mall. Easyl No Experi- All of
$64,500, call (740)446-8310 er and dryer. All Etectnc, Nice 4 ac're tract near BEAUTIFUL:
APART· Nice Older Wood, 3 Pc. For Concrete, Angie, Chan·
$25· $751 hour, PT/ FT
your home repairs, ad- or (740)446-2425. ·
Central Air and heat. Price, Gallipolis· easy terms, MENTS AT BUDGET PRI- Bedroom . Suite,
$99. nel, Flat Bar, St~l Gradng
ence
Needed. Call 1All training provided
800·852-8728 Ext 2070, dltlons &amp; remodeling. 24hr
.
$6000. Will Negotiate, (740}446-3583
CES AT JACKSON ES· (Chest, Dresser witt'! mirror, For Dralna, Dnveways &amp;
emergency service, senior 3 Bedroom on Route 2, (740)446·1687
Boo
w lk
N 55 G
www.getwealthyandwlse.com 24Hrs.
citizens discount. 22yi'B. (304)675·5332
Single Grave Site Kirkland 'rATES 52 Westwood Drive
kcase Headboard, bed a waya. ew
Ilion
or Call
exp.
(304)576-2065
Amazing
Firat
Time
Home
Memorial
Gardens·
.
Lo1451·
from
S297
to
$383.
Walk
to
with
ralls
•.
Exc.
Condition.
Drums
With
Lid &amp; Ring,
Salesperson: Full·tlme, bent ·BOD-846·8492
Govemment A·E112f4., $300. Contact. shop &amp; movkts. Call 740- (740)24S.9448
$7.00 Each. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
- - - - - - - - efits, retail experience reler- _:...:__:._ _ _ _ _ 3 bedr~m . 1 bath with Buyers.
Man/Handyman larg~ llvmgroom, new gas Backe(! loans. No credit Mary·AIIce (608)788-6483
446·2568. Equal Housing
"~-·I "w"ed~~-&amp;Fyrlda,Tyu.~.!.·
SAcllonsS· $$Bring$$red. Apply a1 LHeslyle Fume Family
pressure washing, yard appliances and ale, upstairs needed .
(304)755 .5566
Opportunity
o:JI"UKJJM;i
•~~~
$$SCaahSSS
lure. No phone calls. Apply maintenance,
clean up, completely
renovated, Umited Offer
Unrestrictedlll Wooded kK,
.
·
Goons
4:30pm. IDsed Tl'luraday,
M Easy as ABCI 2 week In person, 856 3rd Avenue, act....
Free Estimates $37,500 (740)992·4485.
·
· Route 588, utilities available Christy's Family Living,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
COL Training- Gfeat Pay Gallipolis, OH.
(304)n:!-5564
(7-40)«8-7300
Ask
lor
Don
Assumable
loens·
Many
$12,000
(740)245·9448
33140
New
Lima
Rd
..
Rut·
Reml~ 1100
And Benefits. Training and
12: ~uge
In Middleport, types available Call for deland, Ohio, 74Q-742•7403.
'"'""'
Placement Available
Overbrook Center 11 cur- Georges Portable SawmiN, 3callbedroom,
Tom Anderson alter tails. (740)44B-3se3.
Apanment, home and lrailer
1425; Remfngtoo New WOrid Famous TreadNo Experience Necessary rently accepting appliCations doo'l haul your logs to lha 5pm, (740)992·3348.
rsntols. Commercial store20 gouge, $400: mHI, 5100. CIH (740)lm·
CALL Amerimex1
lor a lull lime 11-7 shift LPN cm::clll.clu=st::cca:.:;::.ll.:.:J04.8:..:..:::c7.:.5·..:.19::c5::c7:...
.
Holly
Park
Trailer
12x60
fronts
available
for
lease.
wUh scope 3452 II no answer leave
5601 HWY31 E.,
andparttime3-11 and11-7 ::
5 bedroom house with 12 with add ·on. Needs moved
Vacancies now.
.meeeage.
10
Clarksville, IN 47129
~Itt LPN. ptease contact Top To Bottom Cleaners, acres, (740)992o0449
off lot in Mason. $4,500
H()tQ:S
I
:::-::':'---7'-::--:--1·888·209-0617
Krislie Madden for more In· pbrol le~~~ 1 • aff~ aHotrdla· 6 room house on 2 acres of Firm. (304)773-5482
,
FOR RENr
Fumished Apt. 3 rooms and
ANnQUES
Orf(;nal Army C&amp;mollauge; ·
AC0219
formation or stop by our e.,,.....,.:;., o ...es. rena s.
I
II
bath plus shower, Down·
Setellltee Sales and service
---~==---- front office for an applica- construction and remodeling ground, or more Info. ca New Double Wide. $195
stairs, Clean. Reference
Installation $9.00 a month.
100 WORKERS NEEDEO tion. E.O.E.
cleaning. (740)992·1391 or (740)247-3125
Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 15 Court Street. 2 Bed· net 0
11 Required No
100 Channels By sam
Assemble crafts, woocl
·
(740)992 2979
Bath F
n ....li
&amp; Sol rooms, 1 1/2 baths, Kitchen a
epos
Antique buffet, excellent Somerville Master Seargont
•
816
Main
Street,
Pl.
Pl
.
·
rea
.......,
very
Pets
or
smokers.
(740)446·
condition,
$75,
(740)992USA
Air force Aetl~ By
Items. Material provided. Part lime Church Secretary
~irsstove and refrigerator. 1519
0449.
.
$ai'\Auullle WV Post ,_;._c.
To $480+ wk.
Position. Good People Skills Will Haul Away, CIBan Out, Complele!y Refurbished. 2 up. l-888·928·3426
Free lnlormation pkg. 24 Hr. and Cbmputer EKpertlaa Clean Up or Mo\le Almost slory, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed- Nice 28x60 Double Wide Scho~~et :~~kl,o::o"w' 0n G 1
llvl
1
d
·(a04}273-56ss
v•nw
rae oua
ng.
an 2 Buy or sel. Riverine Anti· "-'-"'-"-='---1·801·264-5625
Needed. 20 Hrs. (740)446- Anything. Taking Consign- rool'fl&amp;. Large '\ Kitchen, setting on rented lot In
mants. Call (740)446-7604 Large Utility Aoom, L.AI DR/ Point Pleasant area . 2x6 Area. $595/ month pius de· bedroom apartments at VII - ques, 1124 Eaat Main on
Family Am New Carpet
posit and Reference. No lage Manol' and Riverside SA , 24 E Pomeroy 74oA~I
~79=2~5-----------throughout.· F/A &amp; A/C, :!s, th.ermal pane win- Pets. (740}446-4926
Apartments In Middleport. 992 _2526 · Russ Moore Beetles SCarf, Beatles 1964
II '\\'\( 1\ 1
Eam 2nd. Income without· WANTED: Experienced
s, pnced to salt. Call
From $278-$348. Call 740- owner ·
' Coloring Book, and old
2nd fob up td'
Rooting &amp; Carpenter Fora. =;;r;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 579 ,900 . (740 ,446 •9585 or
75-3689 ask lor 2 bedroom, Pomeroy, $300 992-5064. Equal Housing
B~
I
(
,
•
or
(
)
•
(304)6
·
Beatie• Trading Carda. 5
740
2205
740
446
446
$25.-$75./hr. Pt-Ft.
man's, valid driver'allcenae,
OPPoRnJNrry
Rosemary.
per month, $300 deposit, Opportunities.
Sue's Selactables on tne -r tor all. Call (740}682-7894
2683 .
hand tools, reliable trans·
1-800-218-7543
www.Money-Orums.com portatlon and reference&amp; re- L,
OAKWOOD
HOMES
17401992.0175·
Middt e~" · l&amp;hed
No"h 4thrt Av~, In
Middleport. Oolla, fP8S· Boo long Dollont pa_,l
For sale by owner: NICe blSUPER CENTER.
ware, Aladdin mantels, and gun. A«t &amp; ~?range tplalh
quired. Local work, exc!'el·
4
8
1
- - - - - - - -. lent pay tor right person,
INOTICE I
level hOme on acm near Over 40 homes to chose
~ 0 p~ 18~~~)j~9-:lis. de':~t u~n relar!:e::SnO more. (740)992.029&amp;
~ 4• barrel, 9 voh hopper:
Attn: Pomeroy Poalal post· onuses. vacation. Apply at OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· CheSter. Three bedroom, from. Drive a little save a
pets, {140)992.0165.
MlW11'JI.ANEOl5 13000dl psl nttrogen lank tnd
2 BR house, Jackson 'Pike ·
era e. 1 year old. Colt
lions. ClerksJcarrierslaort· Christian's Conatrucuon, INQ CO. r.commends that two baths, one-car garage, loti Oakwood Homes of
In Rodney, {740)245-1418
Now Taking ApplicationsMER~
$~,200, Millar S700. Saga
ers. No exp. required, Bene· Inc., 1403 Eastern Avenue, you do business wlth people lamlly room with Ureplnce, Nitro. (304)755-5885
you knOw a~ NOT to send sun room. New central heat35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
Dreamcast, 4 controller&amp;, 10
fits. For e)lam, salary and Gallipolis C740)446~4514
testing Information call, .::..::..::cc.c::'.:_.;,:__ __
money th;OUQrllhe fTlall until ing &amp; ale system, One mi· Single Parent Program. 3 B8droom House, $5501 houae Apartments, Includes Beatles Record Albuma. games, memory card and
plus
deposit. Water
Sewage, Trash, Some Rare. Prfce, $75. Call Ru111ble Pack! In original'
(630) 393-3032 ext. 7151 Work From Home. Free you have Investigated the nute off Route 7, but still prl- Eaay Financing Available. month
oHering.
vote. (740)985·3981
(304)755·7191
[740)387-7802
$350/Mo., 740-446.{)()08.
fl-40)682-7894
bo•. $225. (740)448.Q350
8am-8pm 7 days
Booklet. 1-600-653-7293.
AVON! All Aroasl To 8uy 0&lt;
Sal. Shirley Spears, 304675·1429.
-------8eYourOwnbosll
Never 9 to 5 A~ln

::!a

,F

PART·lliiE
OFFICE POSITION
We have a parHtme f)OSIt1on OI)Orlat our Sentinel ol·
flee In Pornonly. This f)OSItlon requires computer and
math skills, must enjoy
world~ with peaplo, be
able to O&lt;gOnlie your worl&lt;

j

... . .

I

••,.,..,.-·

r:

,c:on;

Ottto

I

r

for 11162 Oh-Kan.
P18aHcall (304)675-7552

l'ree

no

40-446--n

1 18 7 89

salary: $7.0Mtour. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline ror

12/04101.

Equal Opportunity Employer.

PUBLIC
NOTICES
SHERIFPS SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
OO..CV-124
CONSECO
FINANCIAL
SERVICING CORP.
llul GREENTREE
FINANCIAL
.
SERVICING CORP.
Plaintiff

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MElOS COUNTY,
OHIO

public auction on the

0385

l

1989 Grand Marquis, Load·
ed, E)lceltent Condition,

74•701 mllos. 52500 080
(7-40)245-5408

Ranu because Martin Gramatica missed

intercepted Johnson.

a

receiver Isaac Bruce coughed up the ball
on a reverse to set up Alstott's 7-yatd

ball

score for a 7-3 Bucs lead and Sapp sacked

goodness for out defense. It got the
back for us twO times."

I :4 I

to go in the third.

-------.,1

·

r

Warner and forced

it 17-9.Alstott set a fr:mchise record with
47th

Eastem

l'11hiM: S111ii'1!~o iu S•••rr•
Y:111r lli;:hllb 1\mt~A.IIrlhrrtd IU~:tnlu , .Ill.,

court. Three minutes into
the game, the Eagles were all
tied up four. Belpre put some
early full court pr.essure on
the Eagles hoping to force
some turnovers from the .
young Eagle gua~ . Eastern
handled the pressure well but
their offense seemed a litde
sluggish. Neither team was
able to convert any of numerous turnovers on \:loth ·ends of
the court. That is when the

called a timeout to regroup,
but just couldn't get the
wheels turning on offense.
With a couple of timely three
pointen, and several forced
turnovers Belpre pulled within two points with a minute
remaining. Eastern misse.d
several foul shots down the
stretch, enabling Belpre to

game turned into a very, if not

stay within two, which is all

tremendously, physical one,
which sent one Belpre player
to the hospital with
knee
injury.
·

they
needed. With
:03
remaining, Belpre's Blackburn
calmly put up a shot that
would win the game or lose

The game came to a turn-

the game. With nothing but

,.,..,,.J

front atapa of the to lhe Town of
Malga County Court Syrocuu
ond
and
Hquae an Thu!Mey, · bounded
-blr 20, 2001 II ~blclll ~!oWl:
On lhe North lind
10:30 o.m. of oeld
ar, the following Eaat by 1111 County .
-rlbedrMI-: Ro1d end on the
Slluol•d In the South by aald Lot
County of Melgo, In NO. 12 altd an the.
the lillie at Ohio, Md Wellbythlllltllna
In th" Ta""'ahiP. at of the Alley WHI of
sunon ancl Vllllltll ot llld Lot No. 12, lhe
Syrac·uae.
and ume being the
bounded
and length of Hld lot No.
lblacrlbed •• lolloWI: 12, and tan (10) ,_,
wkla,mONorllll.
FIRST Tf!ACT:
THIRD TIIACT:
Situate In 8uttan
Townahlp, llelga Alao, the follOwing
County, Ohio, end l'lll ...... llllllleln
being Lot. No. ,.....,. tile County of Melga
(12) In BuHington'a and Slota of Ohio,
Adcllllon to 1111 Town . and bounded 1nd
claiCribeclll followl:
oiSydcUM.
Town LOla N&amp;Hnber
SECOND TRACT:
Alan, thl following Thirteen (13) and
-rlbeclrMI ......, Fourtaen (14) In
allu•te In Sullon 8ulllngton'l Addition
Townahlp, Melga to the ·Town of '
Sy11cute, with the
County, Ohio, to-wit:
Lying and being on bullcllng ""'-·
Current
deed
lhl North aida of Lot
No. 12, In J.F. racorclad on DI/111'H
8uftlnglan'a Addition In Volume· 20, P1g1

.....
Name:
,..,...

framPaps

a

ing point for the girls in green
net, Belpre pulled the game
when senior Sara Mansfield out for a 40-39 victory.
brought the Eastern crowd · to •
"The girls played outstandtheir feet by draining a threeing tonight. They have nothpoint attempt to boost the
ing to be ashamed of. EveryEagle lead 8-6. She was soon
one played their part, we just
answered by a steal and buckhad too many missed foul
et by Belpre's Whitney, tying shots and had too many
up the game. Stacie Watson
turnovers," said head coach

Appralaed

11:

Terma of aole:
aelll, cannot be aold
lor Ina than 213rdl of
lhl lppralaed VIIUI.
S1 ,000.00 down on
diV of 1111, oaah or
c;ertlllad check,
bolance
on
oonll1'1'111111on of Nil.

RALPH E.

TRUIIEU, Sheriff

Melga County, Ohio

Help Wanted

2001 Z·28 Camero 3400
miles, white with gray Ieath•
er Interior. 6sp .. lully loaded.
$23,000. (304)695·3 t 3 t

NOW
HIRING
$6·$8
Per Hour

·

Paul Brannon.
"She [Mansfield] shoots the
ball real well, and helps open
up the inside for the post
when she is hitting from the
outside."
"We are only playing with
two of three senion tonight.

Mansfield again rocked the
gym with her second trey on

Whitney Kart is hurt, and
when we get her back that

the evening, forcing Belpre to
call a time out with 3:30 left
to readjust their defense. Bel-

will

be a tremendous help on
the offensive and defensive
sides of the court," comment-

pre jumped back into the
press with
two minutes
remaining and pulled within
two points trailing 22-24 at
the half.

ed Br2nnon.
Eastern will play host to
Wellston on Thursday as they
continue inter-division play.
In reserve action, the Eagles

Belpre came out steaming
to start the second half and
soon with a couple forced

defeated Belpre 23-26 and
were led in scoring by ]ennifet Hayman with eight

from the
Mandield
shut on
when she

1W3 Ford Taurus, , 24,000
miles, Front Wheel Drive,
AC, Loaded, PL, PS, PW,
PB, Security Doot, Good
Condition .
$3400.
(7 40)446-0365

career touchdown, eclipsing

three putting Belpre down 10
points with only one quarter
remaining. ·
.
Belpre came out again in
full court pressure and was
able to jump on the Eagles to
pull within five with five
minutes remaining. Easter

and

som~

great

A Jessica Dillon to Stacie Watson assist tied up the game
and a Mansfield three-pointer
put the Eagles up 31-26.
Mansfield was now 3-for-3

1092 Llnaoln Town car, EJI·
ec. series, 4 door, 1 owl'llf,
every option, heW_ tires, very
beautiful, looks rlBW $4800,
: [740)992-6719 or 740-n:l5186

to set up a

36-yatd field goal by Gramatica.
Alstott's second touchdown run, an 8-

pressure jumped ahead 26-24.

'

a fumble

yatder with 8 :36 to go in the thin!, made

turnovers

l

goal attempt. Wide

"You can't throw an interception in

r

sv

25-yard field

that situation," Dungy said. "Thank

i

"riO

Hakim fumbled on a punt return in

10, but ihree plays later Brian Young

''2,100.00.

Mailing Our Sales Brochures!
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Start Immediately!
Genuine Opportunity!
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can't win like

the lint quarter, but it didn't hurt the

turned up the heat underneath
scoring four straight at
Property Addrall:
1247 Churoh StrHI, · the end of the first.
Syr1cuu,
Ohio
Belpre relinquished its full
41778.
court pressure at the stare of
Parmar~anl Parc:al
Number:
20the second, and Eastern
0017.0 .000.
20· jumped through the open
00171.00, 1nd 20·
door to take a 17. I I lead.
00172.00

PS,

us.

down on fourth-and- ! from the IUnu

Current Ownart
Minter v. Fryar
Jr. 1nd KolhiHn 11.

1988 Silverado 4x4, New
Goodwrench motor $5295.
1986 Cherokee $2495.
1989 Chevy !ruck, V·8 Auto,
$2850. 1996 Chevy Trude,
C· 2500, $5995. COOK
MOTORS, (7-40)448-010:1

'-'!'!'!"..

In pur1anca of an
Order of Sale 111 me
dlrectod from •eld
Court In lhl lbove
entitled action, I will

expoae to •••• at

IH\'\..,I'(IUI,IHI'\

all

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

Club Calvee lor sale.
(740)245-5984. _ , Seek81', Dry Ice, and Genesis.

Hay &amp; Bnghl Wire T1e
Straw, Vear 'Aound O.Hvery
&amp; Volume Discount Avails·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
(304)875·5724.

you

was

that."

james Wilder.

Delendlnta

column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

said. "It

Turnoven, mistakes,

the !Urns to. Jeff Wilkins' rhree field

.,_

$8.00

Hakim

his

•VI·

Advertise your
message

foot,"

despite being outgained 210-95, holding

MINTER V. FRYAR,
JR. •Ill
MINTER V. FRYAR, et

1987 Buick LaSabra, v-e.
PB, PW, Pl., low Miles,
Front Wheel Drive, Air Con·
dillon. Price Reduced, Good
Gas Mileage. (740)446-

that would have given his team a I 0point lead. Johnson's sneak got a fint

had three tum oven in

"Once again, we shoot ourselves in the

life,John Lynch intercepted Warner again
with 2:26 left.

Insurance coverage. New starting

Square balea waa $2.00
now $1 .50.. 1 miD on At. 2
N. (304)875-4869

s

19-for-39

is something we wanted to do."
Dungy made the finish interesting after
deciding against a chip-shot. field goal

Rams

Az-Zahir Hakim had given the !Unu

school dlploma/GED, valid driver's
license, three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile

w.•

uti

forced $Orne turnoven defensively, which

mental retardation. Requirements: High

UvFsm

25 Round Bale, Wheat. :w
Round Bates Mixed Hay.
Bam Stored . .1100 Pound
Balas. (7-40)245-8852

riO

r

County. Houn: lOPM Friday through
9AM Monday; sleep-over required.
Duties Include lelichlng community and
pel'!iODIII skills to an Individual with

Angus heifer, malnel angus
helfert, bulla and halter
bmko malnol 11f111US - ..
prlctd reaaonably. Slat8
Run
Farm
Jackson.
fl-40)288-5395

r

was

goals. The
the half. ·

The Buccaneers led 10-9 at halftime

•

j ••--_

i

...

MNF
,, ,..,

"We didn't play particularly well all the
time," coach Tony Dungy said. ~But we

ltmaGolA110N

20 Bred red Angus, Simme- ,
ta+ aoea cowa, start freshani~ In aprlng. COli af1or .
7pm. (7-40)682-6116

r....""'""'""'""'""'""'_.!

I

---=========================

with

Mo-.

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

EAALYWEDNJ!SDAY MIXED
PINE HILLS GOLF COURSE
76128
liTTLE JOHN'S OF POMEROY
71/lJ
POWEU'S SUPER VALUE
64/40
SYRACUSE COUNTRY MARKET &lt;16/58
TAZ'S MARATHON
YJ/65
MEIGS INDUSTRIES
18/88
TEAM HIGH GAM!!
PINE HIW GOLF COURSE . -... 724
TEAM HIGH SEiliES
2003
MEN'S HIGH GAME- CHUCK BURTON 218 SAM SMITH 204
STEVE BURTON 200
.
MEN'S HIGH SI!IUI!S- SAM SMITH WI JACK FOLLIUJD SJO
STEVE BURTON 520
'IFOMEN'S HIGH GAME- DOTilEWILL 198 MARGARET
EYNON 171 SHIRLET SIMMONS 161
WOMEN'S HiGH SI!IUI!S- DOTTIE WIU 504 PAT CARSON 449
SHIRLEY SIMMONS 449
'

Bay 34. After a 28-yard punt return by

LOokl~

·•

riO

Canon.

---------=.:_.:_.:.::_::,::_.:.:_.:__::::..:.:_:~.---==.:::=:::·

--------C&amp;C Gsneral Homo Malnle-...,, vinyl oldlng, carper&lt;ry, - . . windOwl. baths. mobile home
- " and ...... FIX -tDcall Chol, 740-992-

applicants:

r

and tram high series honon.
Chuck Burton edged Sam Smith, 218-204, in the men's game
high. while Smith took the game series 5-46-530 over Jack Foilrod.
In the women\ division Dottie Will edged MarpR!t Eynon 198171, while. Will took the women's ioigh series 504-«9 ovtr Par

Part-time position available in Meigs

qulprnonl.com

ft-

r

"Wtmr
WA1ERPIIOOFIIII
Uurxo-wl guar·
~· Loc11 111":•-lur·
nilhed.24Eltllblilhed
C8l
fl-40) 1875.
0870,
1-ll00-287-ll576.
Rogora Watorproollng.

H

The Early Wednesday morning mixed bowling league saw Prne
Hills Golf Cou,., again cake the win 76/28 over runner- up Little
hn't of Pomeroy with 71/33. Pine Hills aho won tram high game

Donnie Abraham intercepted a fourthand-! 0 pass with 3:48 to go at the Tampa

YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,
- · 3 point hitch, $2,150.
Alto, , _ 4' finllh mower,
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available. Located just ....
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776·9435 www.maynardl-

FOR RENr

~

three times
Bolden, who has won 18 of
Conference clwnpionship game his last 20 stons, only practiced
-'- 11·ttu·,,. out •-k
·th -..:....J.. Sunday "'"""t. but ~
.,..,.
..,
,... wee WI
..-•'fYJ
·-·
~back SfUSIIlS·
porticularly sharp and """-!
Toledo co:!Ch Tom Amstutz good mobility during non-consaid Mon-'-· that Bolden · txt drills
-J
·
returnai to proctice Sunday fur
"l •fdt ........ Bolden said '"I
th c~ '
'
oL•
&amp;"""'
e w" lime m mote uw• a Just wanted to get a couple of
"""k and will be _..,, for No. throws in and - back to throw'~J
.,••
20 Marshall.
ing the ball a liale bit."
" I could see the eyes sparldllig
Bolden underwent 2!1 MRI
in our offense apn;' Amstutz before rhe Bowling Green game.
said
"We didn't know if it was a
Bolden nlissed rhe Rockers serious thing or just back
&lt;&lt;21 I
G
'' Amstu
~
oss at n-·•'uvwwog teen on spasms,
tz . said "1bis is
Fritby.
not the fint time this year his
His absence had a big impact back has botheRd him:'
on the offense. Junior college
Bolden a 5Ciliol: has thrown
c
B
J
_,
'
'
tra~•er
nan
ones sbrtr:u 12 touchdowns and r:m lOr three
ogamst the F:llcons and threw more while complebllg 68 perthree touchdowns and two cent of his ,...,.. this season

WANTED

:,:0

rio

~

sacked

The Rarm tied it on a 1-yatd pass from
Warner to rookie Brandon Manumaleuna and Faulk's 2-point conversion run

510, MF50,
rsq_ MF12 - · 3 wag..,., log aptlllor, clio .. bush
~..... (304)6754869

St=

c:\!!,:..

r

and was

for 291 yards. "It's tough to not go out
and do your part."

wheals, electric Jack, roll
tarp. (304)675-111(7

r

did.

~~~;!i

int=eplions

;:===11=0=H~.e=lp=W=a=n=te=d==:::::;

ulo, -

L~

LOCAL BOWLING

quartelback Tavan=s Bolden will
5tut in Fri&lt;by's Mid-J\merian

_ _ _....,..,.,.....,.,,...,.....,,.,......,......,---- today;' said Warner, who

or with Dump. 500 buohal

copaclty, -

P22560R t 6

Tokdo

The loss lmocked the !Urns into a tie
$600. (304)675-3734
R8tiderilial or commen:tal for the NFC West lead with the surpris1994 F-250, 4x4, Red, wiri~. , _ oorv1ce or ro- ing 49ers, who play at St. Louis in two
123,000 mills. Chrome pairs. Licensed stoc- weeks.
- · Now Tlroo, $8000. btcfan, R - Eloclrical,
fl-40)388-9055
WV000306. 304-675-1786.
"We just made w~ too many mistakes

'fM Donahue 16' Grain Tflil.

S:S. A-Truck-;::

:tter :e

Of

(AP) -

hall
minutes. Mars
Faulk also wasn't
.......
:ji;;;·~~--~.., much of a factor, gaining 66 yards rush1987 Ford Econolino van
l!u:cntK:AIJ
ing and receiving.

I \In I "l 1'1'1 II"
,\ I I\ I " I ( It h.

Mobile-

II Chivy Suburt&gt;on. 4x4.
LT PIICiiago,

r
I~~=r,:,.~;:;

• 5358

,.....

or 511-ie75.

TOLEDO

I

r

C

· To

1972"""' F70U 20 n. All· t O l - l fl-40)441·1826
I bed TNCI&lt;. 381 Englna 119.986 - · $1&lt;f0!0 OBO.
• (740)36H374i0
HIM!

:Pupa,

....·-

8*0111

1 3 lfOOd ttrea

11995 F4nl F-350, 4 dr. d&gt;J.
1/ky, power llrol&lt;e dloMI,
•.. __
•. ..........
cullomized3 inside.
&amp; out.
paclcago, ....
o.Ado&lt;al&gt;te Chihuohua pup- tompalnlscllemo too many
: plos. Not regiotored. 111 options to fill, goO,go kOpl.
" shots,
wormed,
potty 45,000
miles,
asking
11: trained, $400. (7-40)256- $22.000, (7-40)VV2·751V.
16390 Cal altar 6:3(1pm.
•
1995 Chivy 5-10 $(,500.
.. AKC Golden Retriever OBO (304)875-69116
Parantl on premises. :;;
..,
&amp;
• Ready Now. S25o-$300. No
•ANI
:Sunday calls. (7-40)245·
4-Wils

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publlohln~. 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

M '*4~ ............. ,...... OI" . . . . . MW"edlll_, .... r.rw.WIUIIIII be

1::: r

0::,. I

FOR SUE

·-

•j

ntbul•l iidiwiA
.... ...,.~ .. .-., .. .,...~IIIV
MY lou
thll ,...._ fronltM p ' 5 ' ; ar
rt11., 4iill a"'* ,.._ Co:: ,
•C.,.... ..... OMd ...... •AI

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Corw-·

pipea, 1979 GMC 3x3 C... Cab,
eto. Claude an. Hillsboro Bod wi1h
: - · Rio Grande, OH Racks. -.ut 350 Enofno.
: COII7-10-2•s-5121.
11000 OBO, (740)36H374

f-

0No....,a •'.. ._
ar..,.,..
.. ....,.con,.....,,
POUaES:

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

\\'\lll

&amp;

01

" - . bricl&lt;. -

:

Business Days Prior To
Honday•Frlday for Insertion
Publication
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Dl5play : 1:00
For Sundays Paper
Thur5day for Sundays

1011

j

: ~

(304) 675-1333

All Display: l l Noon 2

'

~ANS ENTERPRIS:~.-..... Otio, Hroo- ~

l\egister

72,0000 -

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In one week With us

Dillly ln·Column: I :00 p.m.

r.:":;'::i.,""::,_~~ ·

,Jo,:-.,::t..;: ;,:r:=t :,&gt;70:, 't:i

-

The O.lly Sentinel• Page A 7

111t7 Aobo LT Van, lui

·· 59 ·000·
1352
s1aoo. f1&lt;10)406.
1111111 e....,.. Sport, •.o v-

lnoLdlng o1 Runo
Gtu1.
Jllil .... f140)387-m2
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1=::-k!'::::.:"

:

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

-

n II - - - (304)675-32&lt;8
T - H - . . , 1111 pta 81 Grond An&gt; LaaU Goad. -

•

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

-:;:_

~.

:=o. =~ · =-=:-·

I

Djsplay Ads

Pomeroy, Mlddlepolt, Ohio

.!~ Ir l~ I urs Bolden

Pool T -. - - .... 85 Ct&gt;evy

. . , . _ _ 7.

Word Ads

2000

three-point range.
nailed the book
the third quarter
drained her fourth

Southem
from PapS
ern was

I 7-for-28

=m

....,.. 40, Eaotorn •
12 12 12 3 If If
4 14 -

39
&lt;10

Eutern -Jn81calloyles 1 o-o 2, Sera
Manlllold 4 2-6 14,Kalle- 1 o-o
2, Seiid)' Powell 1 0.0 2, J - Olllon 0
4-5 4, Slacla WaiiOn 8 2-6 14, Ton! Wolfe
01-31. Totall: 13 9-21 39
8elpre- Blackbum 6 o-2 13, Mlnka 4 0.0
10. M. S-..21Hl8,Coall2 !1-4 7, Von
Dylle 2 0.0 4. Totalo: 18M -40
Th'"'Polnt ~11-Eutern 4 (Manalleld
4). 8elpre 5 (Blackburn I, Minks 2,
Stovena2).
we really need to work on
our backside

rebounding,"

said Burleson. "That killed us
all night long. We knew We
had a lot of work to do."

at the

free throw line, while South
Gallia went 10-for-21.
But, one of South Gallia 's

was

points.

South Gallia plays host to
South Point orl Dec. 3.

"I

thought the South Gallia

kids husded really well;' said

Fuii/Pirt Time
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

biggest problems

the boards.
"A lot of things are evident

They played as han! at the

1-888-974-JOBS

that I've been making points

end of the game

about

all

under

along and that was

Wolfe. "They never gave up.

the first:'

as they

did at

�The Dally Sentinel• Page A 9

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MAC BASKETBALL

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

Marshall, Ohio post wins

PHILLIP
ALDER

neede~

di~n

..• ,.••
•

w...
• q •• '

••

•

•

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cub Available
Ll«nsed, Insured • Free Estimates
•

NO CLEAN

BOWLS!~

CHILD

cARE ·

SERVICE"'

I'::·-

ct'IICIMn d dlaga
LoccJted In Pomefor.
fOr men lubu 6011 cct

(7ol0) 992-5127

24'120'

1·121011lE WIU

PlAine

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED
$201.00 PER JOINT
REIULIRLY
8327.00 PER JOINT

2nd Street • Mason, WV

P111!1resslue ·
Cwerall on SUidlys

.,
BORN LOSER·

.

IHJ AAT 1\&amp;N..lTIFU... ~----,

J6 D

,

BllllfiRDS

i

4

' 0'

MDR~IIW:o ! I 00

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P"

ITTN(D I~ .

ot-lE I..O.XJY UTILE

..m\\ULI\~

~WR.N&lt;£ W

G.OIN&amp; \0 &amp;. 1\
(.w..'( ""''( I

1\ DN-\PE.KOO

R!T

E:.'/E.K'/\1-\IN&amp;!

I

740-985-3831
12% Economy Stock Feed .......... $8.50/100
12% Equine 12
(Formerly Weatem Pride) ...........$5.00150
21% H1111ters Pride Dog Food .......$8.75150 .
Swwt Lick Deer Blockl ...................... $8.75
Whole Com ...........:...................... $5.251100
Cracked Corn ...............................$6.251100

JONES'

Tree Service

• Top o Removal • Trim
• Stump 6ri nding

Hours: Sun • Tbur !lam • 10 pm
Frl &amp; Sat 1l am. llpm

New Hames, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall

!More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

••w.t
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................ EIIl .......
•IIM&amp;.I$U.II•Erf

0

740-992·5344

HOURS: Mon • FriS.S: Sat t-1

• Room AddiUona &amp;

' Tonia Re1ber

A.modallng

Licensed Massage

• NewO.rtgee
• Eleclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 1 Gutter•
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pllnllng
• Petlo and Porch Dtckl

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Raclno, Ohio 45n1

7 4(1.985·3948

Therapist

CONCRETf/BlOCK/BRICK

74o-992·1705

• Footers, Walls., Steps •

213 N. 2nd Ave.

Flat Work,
ReplaCemenb, • Walks

Free Eslimates

Middlepon, OH 45760
Come In and ••k

992-6215

Gilt Cerllllcatoa

---

V. C. YOUNG Ill

about •~clale
Avollabla

1

and.Drives • Stenclt
Crtte Free Estimates

Serving Ohio and W.V.
wv 103t712

2n7 1mo pd

ROIERIIISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
74().992·1671
1&lt;12!11'N

Rocky R Hupp. Agent
Box 189

M1ddlcporl Oh1o 45760

Local 843·5264

7 40-'+"+lrl- 2422
II8CIIIIUm

(740) 992-3194
992-6635 .

"tri ~: space for
•DINNER .....
I

WNCH ......

'I 11:30am- 2:00pm

I

I

I

1

5:00pm-7:30pm :
14 yrs &amp; under FREE •4 yrs &amp; under FREE
1

I .

5-8 yrs- 12.99 · :

5-8 yrs - 13.99

o 9·12yrs-'3.99

o 9·1~yrs-'4.99

I

I

,

~ullylnourecl

$50 per
month ..

--------------------1

BUFFET TO GO !Lunch •• 4.111
BUFFET TO GO !Dinner •• 11.111 ~~~·

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
Free Estimates

949o1405
591o5011

•New Hames

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Mr,dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
o Nursing Home

(lO'xlO' 610'1120')

I

in this

Howardl.
Wrltesel

Tire
Barn
44087 Wlppla Road
Pomeroy
CARPENTER Meigs Massage
SERVICE
Therapy

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
ffilddleport, OH

• Bucket Truck

YOUNG'S

Advertise

Advertise business
•
on s'-age
for one month for as
low as 525
Phone 992·2155

.,

II , - 57 Out o1
17 Tille lhoW
conlrol
hood Joy
5I Epoch
18 Folnl..._ 51 Makl
20
Neon
K~ 1 0 21 Big Ton 1C1L
_.,,

It Q J
JU

:t,;

23 _ . . _ I I AbiUion

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
1111211

mo.

BIG NATE
UI&lt;.E Tt11S! no 'fH15
HOt1EWORo&lt;.. :t HI'.D Tt&gt;
WRITE
5

request.

ToV. . ~M

5,._1'\E WOI&gt;.t&gt;

WRO~~

!~OWIT

.......

W1IOII6 !

1..001(\

Clllllanny
142·2572

Hlp ·742-7709

mASOn BOWlinG
OPfll BOWlinG 6
lfii&amp;UES
-.71111-7dtl!lsaWIIII
...·lill1lllt- r.l- Pdls.

304-773-0300
Comer3rd&amp;

Pon•ov St..1111211
Mason
mo.

I

•

WoiW.Hett::64UeSbe.IXIII
•

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Cfllllltlke

33 FedExnvol

25 . . . . . . . 41

3401-.
35 Groin

25 Elghl, to
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52

36 Mop llbbr.
37 Ivy l.elgl.ll

21 Flolry gom
30 "Tun.

53

36Toond-

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31 Flnl
orcllenl'l

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50

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IChool

31~

o10 0u1r1 or oo11

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cololfMI

Nor..n,:.~g

bird

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CELEBRITY CIPHER .
by Lula Campoa

~ Clphof c~•ro croalod 11om quotaiiOnl b y people, paso and
EICh
llie cipher
Today's clue: V ~~~ P

_.1.

'8

VXBAN

XJ

VXBAN.'-

8

-lor..-.

-In

JZKXAOaT

B

VXBAN

IIJ

UKWZWMEK

(I B 0 P

YW .KKELBA)

' E N0 Z NW,

YKKR LT

VMWJ K• •

_- ----

other
W tat? spade,
If East the
has suit
anmust be splitting 4-3,
Jnd you will concede
only four tricks: three
spades and one club.
Your contract is safe.

...

NOVEMBER 27

1-.

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"Say lhis line,' lhe officer lold a
suspected felon . When the felon
stepped forward he said instead,
1-r"'TT_O,......N,...I__,F,-Y...-~.--- -·- ---what I said!"

.

·

.

.

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you

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Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling Jn the missing word!

develop

hom

step

No.' 3

below.

PR INT NUMBERED

~~~~LE~T~TE~iS~IN~S~Q~U~A~RE=Sr]:[]~~[:[}]
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Evenly . Scour- Irate - Vision - IVORIES
If you can't be a classical pianist, turn to dentistry .
There is more than one way to tickle the IVOR IES.

j

••
•
''

Racine, Ohio

949-2734

•
'•

I

~Oiler's

Deer Shop

I

!

·mapteWOid lake
St.Rt. 124

t

win with dummy's
king. If East is void,
you can pick up six
club tricks. Here,
continue with the
diamond ace, a diamond to the ' kino,
eand the club jack. It
loses to East, but so

••

740-992·7036 \

Ult can IIMIIe tiHr

Now
go two.
back You
and
win
trick
play a club. If West
.J~~~~ .discards, finesse .
When West follows ,

I r J1 J I

Call for Product'
or Opportunity~I
Jeanie Howell ~

742·2076

24 Campue

0

....

l

SRll5,~111

41 KNyyom or
&amp;lllill
.
41 a..

1

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Herbalife
Independent
Distributor

'YIIIIi/l 'tJil, 11'1 mBJ '!I'

-

23 lflrlo-

II

11111 pd 1 mo.

S/lfllt1ltf S4IJSI

..Nightllne'" 45 Whll hll

· urokll-

-

lllsl OJ. on

DEER
CUT6
WRfiPPED

DOWN

32~"11

'

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4143 - pollalt
44 Dad'lled

.........,

v--

24 Sci*M
27 =:,led Into
21 Sllolley

•37 Fit""*
Perchld

10 ftllghbal
-·
14PIMII18 20 Koppel ol

0

Rutland, Ohio
IIUIIIable te rent
for parties

11

55 Wlald on

F-

• tbgug~~ful W!'sl.,yvi!J ~~ , _1B A K
B. 0 K
reali~e he has no entry
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Winnl01g Isn't worthwhile unleu Or.,
to hts spades. (If East
hu oomethl~ liner and nobler l!ehlnd H.
(fOOiball coachJ
has the heart ace, deAmos Alonzo tagg
'
darer bas everything
111aPu'zziiALI1~y dft'II'O ,&amp;\.,. { _ /) '1:1 ~a.. a WOIO
else and nine tricks.)
Pl.!,:) J.'o"U ty). 'b P(/•..., GAlli
1-\1\N\) IN TME HOt1E •
So, West will shift to
E~lto~ ~r CLAY R. POlLAN _;;__ _ __
WORK, PEOPLE '
the heart six at trick
Roorronge · leoten of lho
lour scromblod words bo·
three. With this lay- low oo form lour simple words .
out, you will lose two
spades, two hearts and r.....,
· ,.H_A-r-T..,...,S,_A.,...M-.--1
one club: one down.
1
1 1

(1000 ft from the bridge)

Tel: (304)'773-5800

.fo='~

11 Unlllol ...
rht1 a
52 ... , I
1*1

15 Cllorlattoo ol
...
• . . . _ . 55Ticly

We have all been
guilty of playing too
quickly.
I once
watched someo ne
t:oke five minutes over
a play -- and get it
wrong. Maybe if he
had pondered for another minut e, he
would have worked
out the key inference.
But probably not.
In this deal, you arc
in three no-trump .
West leads his fourthhi ghest spade. East
wim with the ace and
returns a spade. Over
to you, Mr. or Mrs.
Thoughtful.
With no singleton
or void, . North is
.right to respond three
no-trump.
Clearly you will
make use of dummy's
juicy club suit. And
you can ·afford to lose
a club tri ck. However, might the opposition get to five tricks
before you · reach
nine? Maybe.
. Suppose you finesse
the spade jack at trick
two, which looks to
be a harntless enough
play. Against many a
West, you would be
all right. He will win
with the queen and
return a spade to your
king. However, a

(740) 949-1521

l'r1gresslue t011 Une
Tlllndiys

i-t 1i

QO

Stop, think

810602171
fuerglhurRay
6 Sundo'ly
Doors Open 4:30
fMII lilnls dirt
' 6:30

Bryan Reeves

IIIli!

OpcninM W.1d: • •

REJECTED- Shepherd's Shannon Layton (20) fouls Marshali's J.R. YanHoose,
left, as Marshall's Tamar Slay, right,
blocks Layton's shot during the first half
Monday. (AP)

35537 SL RL 7 Norlh • Pomeroy, Ob 45720

Q '3

t

vulnrrabkt: Both
Wf'lll Nwtt. Y.att.
I HT
l'lu
3 NT
AH 11111

*229.00*

"Ahead In Service"

•

•

ll&lt;iiler. .......

Jockey
Seruke·

Shade River AG Service

.....

.....

A KJ l

Kand l

Sunset Home
Construction

....

ti!MI..

Pomeroy Eagles

Nil

Job
44 lionel'•
AI;~ w~IIF

ilnd

11 - 12 Fbl bert
13 Toplco kll'

.o\Jta

992-5479

2Ah0ur~l

-c.-,

IR11n-47T....

I I I

4 2

• I It I I
• • ' 4

Jj

I.L"'"'

II 17-tl

.. AKIIIJf

eff Warner.Ins.

1\CTORY DIRECT
PRICING

v-··

4

.,.

Cellular

~;~~~===~-~~~a•ll

41

1 Ia no Ionge• 42 " -

.ALIDL

HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP) rebounds. Freshmen Ronnie Dawn and
Coach Greg White felt a sense of. Keith Ardrie had 11 and 10 points,
urgency after. Matshall started the season respectively.
with three straight losses.
For Archie, a 6-7 walk-on forward,
Division I! Shepherd w.u the remedy they were his first c•reer points.
White w.u looking for.
Ryan Jones scored 18 points to lead .
J.R.VanHoose scored 21 points to lead Shepherd (0-2).
six MotshaD pbyets in double figures ·in
Ohio 80 Navy 7-4
a 96-46 victory over Shepherd on MonANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Sonny
daX mgbt.
.
. ,
Johnson came o(f the bench to score 18
. We
a wm. I
t care who points in the second half in Ohio's sea11 was agamst, White sard. We knew we son-opening 80-7 4 victory over N•vy ;:,._ _.:._ _ _ _.J ~
were gorng to wm tho game before rt on Monda .
,------st&gt;rted.
y
·
ome~
E~
~ .; ll"e· I"
"I h
h
did
d . b f
Johnson, a transfer from Cleveland
21
1
t oug t we
a goo JO o stay- S
d · b · h fi
&lt;
·
'f ·
· m
· · t he fra mework of w h at we were tate, score erg
Every Thu--·
rng
. t rn t e· nal .our rrun,......,,
....,;
t d s
b f b. k b 11 . utes and had rune rebounds for the game
a Sunday
•• ,.ng 0 0. 0 muc 0
as et a IS
Obi b I
. . . I
confidence, and we displayed that."
~s
o, t e ast DtvlSlon team to open Doors Open 4:30
Marshall (I-J) easily avoided going 0 _ rts_season, pulled away from the MrdEarly ~3: start
Disc
3
1
4 to start the season for the first time shipmen ( - l·
ProgNtlllv
since 1964- 65 _
Navy led most of the way and was
lop line~
Country, Dance &amp;
Shepherd's 46 points were the fewest ahead by nine before the Bobcats came
Thursdays
Rock Music .
allowed by Marshall since last January, back .. A basket by Johnson wrth 9:22
Progreulve
740-742·7709
when Eastern Michigan also scored 46. remarnrng ned the game 57-57, and
Coveraa on
Reasonable Rates
Marshall shot 58 percent from the Steve Estercamp hit a jump hook with
Sundays,..
All Occasions
floor for the game, scoring often in tran- 7:35 left to give Ohio its first lead of the
: sition and using its considerable height second half.
BISSELL
• advantage for easy inside baskets.
The teams traded the lead five times in
"That's a lot better percentage than it the next few minutes before Johnson
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vloyl
h~ been tbis year," said the 6-foot-1 0 tipped home a missed free throw to put
Siding
• New Gonga
VanHoose, who ' hit 10-of-15 shots, the Bobcats ahead for good 69-67 with.
VIIYLIEPI.ICBIEITWIIIDWI
• Rtpla&lt;eaaeat
3:03 to play. In the next 90 seconds, he
mosdy on layups.
Windows • Room
·IIIYSilf. .III.E • • • •
MarshaU dressed just six scholarship drove for a field goal and hit a pair of
Additions
•
Rooftng
players and pbyed three walk-ons.
free throws to make it 73-69.
COMMIIOAL..,] IBIOIIffiAl
Two pbyets are serving an eight-game
Brandon Hunter led Ohio with 19
FREE ESTIMATES
suspension for taking extra work bene- points and Patrick Flomo scored 16.
~Is. It was part of NCAA sanctions that
Francis Ebong, who hit 8-of-9 shots 740-992-7599
mcluded a dozen me.mbers of the (oot- from the field, led Navy with 19 points, (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
• FREE INSTAU.ATION
0 FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
ball team.
scoring 14 in the second half. He was
• FULLY WELDED
Marshall has declined to reveal the blanked in the final four minutes, as
• SO YEAR WARRANTY
suspended players. However, forward Navy began to rely on outside shooting.
William Butler and backup guard Jehiel Lewis finished with 16 for the
Monty Wright missed their third games Mids.
of the season Monday night.
QUALITY WINDOW
·· Equipment Psrts
VanHoose scored 15 points in the first
992-4119 1-800-291-5600
Factory Authorized
half as MarshaU raced to a 48-19 halfCase·IH Parts
Vlsll Our Showroom On State Ruute 33
time lead. He hit the fitst two baskets of
6
Mila
North Of Pvmervy, Ohlu, At CoU11Iy Rood 18
Dealers
the second half to start a 21- 3 run.
1000-St. Rt. 7 South
• No Dealers or Contractors Please
The Herd's biggest lead came on a
VIJa I Masterurd
Richard Wilson layup with 2:50 remainwv 11023477
ing to make it 94-34.
Shepherd couldn't get anything going
offensively in the first meeting between
the schools. The Rams corrunitted 23
turnovers and shot just 32 percent from
the floor.
Tamar Slay added 17 points for Marshall. Redshirt freshman Enoch Bunch
had 16 points and 11 assists. Latece
Williams had 11 points and 1 0

ACROSS

t..
'•

:

i

I,

Nov. 2R. 2001
When :1 Saginnri:m is lucky,
they're llll-:ky in bill ways. The
year al~t·ad may be.• jll~t one of
those kind of ft'.ll'S, because it
shows mort' promise t han
u ~ual to improve your lot in
life.

SAG ITTARI US (Nov . 23IJer. 21) -- It might be.• wise
today to take a seco nd look at
somet h i n~ work. wi'ic in
which you're involvt'd at this
time . You m.1y happi ly dis ~
nn:er you wcrc11 ·t t;lking full
ndva11tagc of a ll it~ be11cfits.
A~tro-G raph year ahc;1d I'Te diuiom make ~rcat Chri st111as
~tockit • ~ ~tutler~ for all signs of
the Zodiac. M:dl S2 for each
w Ast ru -Gr.1ph, c/o rhi~

nc\\'sp:"lpe r, P.O . llox 1758,
M11r ray Hill Statio n , New

York . NY IOI SR. llc !lure to
state the Zodiac ~ig:us you d~: ­
~J re .

CAI'R ICOilN (Dec. 22-

Jan . 19) -- Fortunately for
yo u, your judgment i~ e., pe·
ci.1lly ~ood toJay, because you
1111~ht llc rt•qmred 10 mak e. a
dl•ci sion wi 1hout realizin~ its
fu ll 5Jgmli ra nct!. The result~
w1ll lH.' ~n·a.t.

AQUARIUS

U·"'· 2U"Fcb .

Jl)) -- It bl·lmun·~ yo u to be
p.lrtin llarl~· intlmtriou~ and

I

tlutl usual in ma trt·rs you ei-

W~dncsllay ,

productive tod,ay, because the
re\Vards that come from doing
~o will be tar larger than anyant' th o ught.

'I'ISCES (f-eb. 211-March 20)

-- f riends m .:~y view you

ther originate or handle yourself. Take penon:ll cmuro!
over ventu res or endeavors
tl~o~l could be unporta11t to
your inlcrcsts.

posite gender will find you e'i. pecially attractive and ap pealing. Make th e most of it if
yo u're single.

LEO Qtolv 23·Aug. 22) -l,crmit your intuitive pcn.:ep·
tions tO guide your actions tod:~y, e~pccially in m:nrers tlut
affe ct your rcput;~tion, flnanct!s or career. T h cy ~ ll be
right on tr-.1ck.

ARIES (March 21- April I~)
-- T o your credit, yom instincts to serve and &lt;: heri sh

Vll{GO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-- F"rie111.is or as~od :1tC'~ who
have been hu:ky for you in

more f.worably than un1al to-

da y, but member~ of the op-

those you love will be verv
pn.&gt;no!Jnced today . The pe r~
~on-:.1 rewards yo u'll goarncr in

doing ~o will be .pricelcs~.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) •• Talk w those w ho
mi~ht have the sol utions conccrnillK a matter that h;JS you
conccrnl•d . Chances arc the
ri~ht penon with the right an SWC11i will be able to offer you
a plethora ofide:u.

GEM INI (May 21-Ju nc 20)
-- Somc1hi11g nnher fortunoHe
in a material ~cnse could hap pen for you today, not necessarily from yom efforts. but
fr.om on ~ who may not even
know you. It'll be pure luck.

CANCEil Uunc 21 -Jul y
22) -- .Vnu co uld he luck ier

I

the past JH' ••pt to be !O again
tod ay. Make it ~ point to get
together with o ne or more of
them, if yo u h:wcn 't had any
plans to do so.

LIURA

(Sepo. 23-0ct. 23) •

- An c•pportunity to increase
you~ eilrnings today is waiting
for you to take advantage
its beneficial o trerings. Look
a_round and you mny find one,
possibly throllgh a se,onU
source.

or

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Someone who ~hares a
mutllal lll tl·reH with ,yo u
co uld he extrl·mcly impun:mt
today in · helping you fn lfi ll
this objc~.:tivc. Much of w hat
occnr~ may bt• tlut• w the
~uiti:m cc ofl:Hly Lu,·k .

•

�Pllge A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Riverview Garden Club prepares for Chrisbnas, 2

Miami, Florida 1·1 in BCS standings
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Miami and Aorida moved
closer to playing lhe biggest
game yet in !heir long, ofien
bitter riwlry.
The Hurricanes and Garon
settled into first and second
place, respectively, in lhe Bowl
Championship ·Series standings released Monday.
·
And aU indications are that if
bolh win lhe rest of their
games, it's on to !he natiorul
championship game in the
Rose Bowl on Jan. 3.
Miami (1 0-0) and Aorida
(9-1) have met 50 times since
1!}38 - lhe series is tied 25aU - but never with the
national tille on the line for
bolh teams. Last year, Miami
beat Florida 37- 20 in the
Sugar Bowl, just a few days
after players from each team
duked it out in a Bourbon
Street brawl.
Wilh Nebraska and Oklahoma losing - the Huskers
were first, the Sooners third
entering the Thanksgiving
weekend - the latest BCS
standings underwent major
changes.
Texas (1 0- 1) jumped to
third place, with Nebraska
(11-1) fourth, Oregon (9- 1)
fifth and Tennessee (9-1) sixth.
Miami, ranked No. I in lhe
AP media poU the past seven
weeks, had 2.92 points in the
BCS standings. Florida had
6.95 points and Texas was next
at 8. 77 points. The next lhree
teams were wi~n 1.39 points
of each other - Nebraska at
10.48 points, Oregon at 10.87
and Tennessee at 11.87.
f
The BCS ratings, which
determine who plays in
Pasadena, are based on a formula that incorporates the AP
media and coaches' polls, eight
· computers, strength of schedule, won-lost record and
bonus points for big wins.
The final BCS standings will
be released Dec. 9.
"Miami and Florida are in
control, it's up to them," said
Jerry Palm, who operates a
Web site that ,closely monitors
the BCS standings. "If one
faDs, then Texas and Tennessee

are in the best position, but it
depends on who dse falls and
how hard."
Palm said Nebraska, despite
its b2-36loss to Colorado, and
Oregon, which plays Oregon
State on Saturday, are still in
the tide chase, "but would
need a series of upsets and
then hope the computer
works in 'their favor."
Miami pbys at Virginia Tech
(8-2) on Saturday, while Aorida plays host to Tennessee and,
with a win, moves to the SEC
rille game Dec. 8 against rhe
winner of Saturday's AuburnLSU game.
The Hurricanes' 2.92-poinr
breakdown was: 1 point for
poD average, I point for compurer average, 1.1 2 for
strength of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a .2
bonus point deduction for

•

beating 14th-rated Washington 65-7 on Saturday.
The bonus award - new
this season - is based on a
sliding scale from 1.5 points
for beating a first-place team
· down to .1 (or a win over the
151h-place team. The bonus is
awarded after the other elemonts are calculated.
Florida (6. 95) had 2 points
for poD average, 3.17 points
for computer average, .88 for
strength of schedule, 1 for
won-loss record and a .I point
bonus deduction for beating
15th-rated Georgia 24- 10 on
Oct. 27.
Texas (8.77), whicli plays
Colorado for the Big 12 tide
on Saturday, had 3 points for
poD average, 3.83 for computer average, 1.84 for strength of
schedule, 1 for won-loss
record and a .9 bonus deduc-

rion for beating seventh- rated
Colorado (9- 2) earlier this
season, 41 - 7.
Illinois was eighth in the
BCS ratings, followed by
Oklahyma, Stanford, Maryland, BYU, Washington State,
Washington and Georgia.
Last year, Miami missed !he
.national title game by .32
points. The Hurricanes finished third behind unbeaten
Oklahoma and Florida State,
which lost its only game to
Miami .
For !hose looking for a most
unusual finish lhe season, Palm
offers this: If Oregon State
beats Oregon, Tel(as loses,
Miami loses big, Aorida and
Tennessee both lose, "it could
end up. Colorado and Nebraska in the Rose Bowl."

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Du.ke and Illinois stayed 1-2
in lhe AP college basketball
poll Monday, while three teams
dial reached championship
games of preseason tournaments moved into the·rankings
for !he first time this season.
The Blue Devils (4-0), who
opened defense of their
national championship last
week by winning lhe Maui
Invitational and beating Portland, stayed No. I wilh 67 tintplace votes and 1,747 points
from the national media panel.
The Fighting lllini (5-0).
who won four games last week
in taking lhe Las Vegas Invitational, stayed second, receiving
the other three No. 1 votes and
1,672 points.
The three new reams in the
rankings were BaD State, which
came in at No. 16 after its
impressive run in the Maui
Invitational; Marquette, which
moved in as No. 23 after winning the
Great . Alaska
Shootout; · and Wake Forest,
which held ·the 25th spot after
reaching the finals of lhe Pre,
season NIT.
Missouri, which won the
inaugural Guardians Classic,
moved up .rwo spots to No. 3,
while Arizona, which didn't
play last week, moved from
eighth to No. 4.
Maryland and Aorida each
moved up one place to fifih
and sixth, while Iowa, Kansas,
Virginia and UCLA rounded
out the Top Ten.
Stanford was 11th, followed
in the Second Ten by Syracuse,
Kentucky, Oklahoma State,
Boston College, Ball State,
Western Kentucky, Georgetown, Saint Jo~ph's and Memphis.
The bst five ranked teams
were Abbarna, Michigan State,
Marquette, Fresno State and
Wake Forest.
BaD State, which was last
ranked in !he 1988-89 season,
opened lhe Maui Invitational
wilh a win over then-No. 4

Highlandu has
committed to reforbish
the pl1mt and to bring
it into opuation by
July 1, 2002.

pay a total purchase price of mitred to refurbish lhe plant
$2 million, with $1 million to and to bring it into operation
be paid at closing, and the by July 1, 2002.
remaining $1 million to be
The company said it intends
paid one year from the clos- .. to commit a minimum future
ing.
compensation of S15 million
A $1 million earnest money over five years to the former
deposit was paid when lhe bargaining unit employees and
signed the order approving the offer was accepted on Nov. 16 has entered into negotiations
sale Tuesday.
and is to be applied against !he with the USWA. In the asset
· Under the terms of the purchase price at dosing.
agreement, Highlander will
A!la,.. s
Highlander has also com-

r;.•- ...

Deaths

Morarity takes
reins as Southern
board president

Katherine
Gardner Johnson
Clair Might
Fred Willet, 77

22.04
24.81
25.49
27.25
38.32
37.13

Details, 3

PW
I

BY TONY M. LocH

3
2
4

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Actual Size

6
5
7
11

8
9
13
15
10
12

Weather
HJah: JO, 1.8w: SO

1~

.

E.lplo-~

to-

Details, 3 ·

"'"''"*"""

wlri""""""'"'

Tes5a Paige WiU
Merry Ou'Jstmasl
Mommy &amp;. Daddy

Kansas. The Cardinajs (2-1)
then beat then-No. 3 UCLA
before losing 83-71 to Duke in
the title game.
Marquette (5-0) beat Tennessee, Indiana and Gonzaga in
winning the Grear Alaska
Shootout and moved into the
Top 25 for the first time since
a three-week run in 1997-98.
Wake Forest (4-1) beat Fresno State in the Preseason NIT
semifinals, then lost 74-67 to
Syracuse in the rille game. The
Demon Deacons were ranked
aU ofbst season, getting as high
as No.4.
Indiana (3-1) was the only
team that played last week to
fall out of the rankings. The
Hoosiers, who were 20th last
week, sandwiched wins over
Alaska-Anchorage and Texas
around the · Great Alaska
Shootour semifinal loss to
Marquette. ·

_

OHIO

SJitly:ti-5.0
• Plclj.-.. -8-4-2.0
Buclwye j; 1(1.11·13·29-37

Please enclose a self-addressed
envelope with your entry to return your
photo. Only one subject per ad please.
All ads must be prepaid.

Dlllly :S: 3·5-9
Dally 4: 4-9-6-3
C.sfi 15:4-5-13-16-18-19

Index

:r give my pennisslon to publish the enclosed
I

:prepaid plctutlsl and Information In The
'•'-'"...)' Sentinel's "Santa's Little Helpers".
·:signature: ___________
:Relationship to Child: _ _ _ _ _~-

2
6-8
9
2
4
3
3
5,7,10
3

Sports

C&gt; 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Roc~priii(IS
ltEIIABIUTA110N CENTER

!Please 11mlt to 1'2 words): _ __:._ _ _ _ _ __

CaU todily for 11 persot~~~l tour.

Calendar
Classifieds
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Dear Abby
Editorials
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Weather

Child's Name:------"----:Son, daughter, or grandchild: _ _ __
1
Parent's or Grandparent's Name(s):

Mau t1w right clwi'ce.

BY BRIAN

• FREE Gift To All Donors
Mail or Bring in this entry form to:

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospiral
Auxiliary

The Daily Sentinel
"Santa's Helper"
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

&amp;

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I

For more lnformalion, contact Debbie or Dave
·
at lhe Dally Senllnal- 992-2155.

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.

LliJ Holzer

~Clinic
88 E. Memorial Dr.

····-----------------·----···

UTLAND - The dictionary
defines a hero as one admired
"for great and noble deeds."
'By anyone's definition, Donald E. Yost
Jr,, was a hero.
Yost, the son of Donald and Peggy Yost
ofRudand, died last year at the age of21,
while attempting to save a child from a
burning house. For his act of heroism, he
has been honored posthumously by the
Carnegie Hero Fund Commission.
The Carnegie Fund was established 97
years ago by industrialist a11d philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. ' Sin{:e that
time, nearly $25 million in grant funds,
scholarship aid, death benefits and other
assistance have been awarded in the

RECEIVE GRANT - A $3,500 grant from
the Carnegie Fund wtll be used as seed
money for the purchase of a therr!]al
Imaging camera In m'e.mory of Donald E.
Yost Jr. Yost's parents, Peggy and Don
Yost, are pictured center, presenting the
funds to Rutland Fire Chief Dave Davis,
Assistant Chief Ray Willford and Pres~
dent Henry Cade.

Carnegie Medal in their son's honor. The
medal is given to those who risk their
lives to an extraordinary degree while

PleiN -Yo1t.J

RACINE
Marty
Morarity was appointed
Southern Local Board of
Education president during
the organization's regular
meeting.
Morarity was recently
nominated by board members to fill the unexpired
position vacated by former
President Bob Collins.
Collins' resignation as both
president and board member
was accepted during the
board's last meeting because
Q( rinu; cwurraints induced
by Collins' work schedule.
Mor:irity, whose term wiD
end Dec. 31, 2003, took the
oath of office and began presiding over the meeting.
After discussing personnel
iss)les, the board approved the
following substitute teachers
for the 2001-02 school year
on an as needed basis: Ann
Barr, .John . Chilmonik,
Amanda Pratt and Courtney
Roush.
A supplemental contract
was approved by the board
for Scott Cleland as the
freshman boys basketball
coach for the 2001 - 02 school
year. Cleland was a volunteer
assistant in basketball last year
and football this year.
In business matters, a contract between the board and
the Southern Local Education Association was accepted, pending approval by the
Southern Local Finance
Commission. The contract
will be in effect from July 1,
2001, through June 30, 2002.
Five Star Driver Training

.Mi~dleport secures water supply in
~aoreclby

PVH Wcllness Center
Thursday, November 29, 2001
Noon to6 p.m.

J. REED

Yost's parents have received a bronze

Your Name:____________
:Address:.____..:________
1
City I State/ Zip:-- -- - - - -

Blood Drive

.
R

BY BRIAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

heroes' names .

1

AMOUNT ENCLOSED: $_ __
For
pictures at $10.00 EACH.

Yost memorialized
through Carnegie grant
I

1 Sedfon- 10 Pqft

looking for ICing-term c.,., you can
count on the team of healthcare professionals at
Rocksprings ~ilitation Center to create an
atmoephere of caring and compassion.
We're committed to helping our residents
enjoy life to the fullest.

local hero remembered

Pick :s nlafrt: 9-H ·

W.VA.

'~:¥hen you're

CARNEGIE HERO- Donald E. Yost Jr. has
been honored posthumously with the bronze Carnegie Medal for
his heroism In the April 2000 house fire which claimed his life and
" lhs~of · the .cJl,lld he attemp~ to :e~g~e. (Tony.M. Leach phOtos)

Pick 4 night: 5-2-1·5

Duke, Illinois atop AP Top 25
BY '!liE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
American Alloys will be
reopened by the end ol the
second quarter in 2002 by
Highlander Core Industries
Ltd., after an order and notice
approving the sale o( the
·plant's assets to Highlander
was filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern

District of West Virginia on
Tuesday.
American Alloys accepted
Highlander's auction bid on
Nov. 13 and entered into an
asset purchalie agreement on
Nov. 20.
Interested persons had until
5 p.m. Monday to· file any
objections to the sale, and
since non e were received,
Judge Ronald G. Pearson

-led Pre$8 media poll and USA Today·ESPN coaches poll. Olhenl raceMng vo1os are

....-11ve

Cui''""'""'

Buckeye basketball, 5

Daily Sentinel

2.112
8.95

calctllaledln on1e&lt; . . . . -.
Cc&gt;lnpoMr A - -Tho 8\181000 of Andolwor1 &amp; Hestar, Colley Malrlx, Rlchanl Billingsley, Kenneth Maaaey, David Rothman, Jell
Sagarln, Mal1hows Sctippo-Howard, and the Polar WoHa compulef ranklngs. The computar campanen1 will be dotennlned by &amp;\18f·
aging ah&lt; ...ndngs. The hlghoot I01d - w i l l be dlonoganfed.
Schodulo - - Rank of - u l e a1T8nglh """1J8nod
DMsiOn 1-A loama clvlded by 25. This
Is 1181ctlla1ad by
deiBfminlng 1he
-vlou """"""of 1he 1aam'a owonent (66.6 peroon1) and 1he cumulal!ve -vlou racorda of the
team'a
--·
(33.3 ...-o).
~ - One pol,. lor each lou during lhe aeaooo.
,
Cluoltty Win
The quality
will raward 10 val)'l"'l !lolli8es1oama 1ha1 dafea1 oppon- illnkad among
1he top 151n U.. ~ atandlnga. Tho bonus point scale win fiJIIQil from a high of 1.5 points lor a win over 1he lop oankad 1aam Ia a
low of 0.1 lor a victory over the l51tN.,kad BCS lollm. Tho final 8CS standings will delsmllne nnal quality win points. If alaam 11111'
la1oni a victory over alaam mora than once during tho rogular.....,. quality win points win be awarded just onca. Quality win
points ore daduelad fRim 1he t..m'a1Dial ol poll._, compuler average, achadulo 10nk lind ID888s.

"""""""Ia

OVP NEWS STAFF

(16 y~are of age or you~~r)

-

BY MINDY KEAR,.

•for Chlltiren OnV

JICiwl Championship
Series
__ ........,_.25
~

HoMetown N. .spaper

:

Pomeroy
;.;, 992-oo&amp;O

MIDDLEPORT - Public
works officials in Middleport
have taken precautionary steps
to protect the public water
supply in light of the Sept. 11
terrorist atta cks.
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs has enac ted a security
plan designed to protect the

water supply f~om terrorist
attacks or other attempts at
contamination, said Myron
Duffield, BPA President.
The plan , Duffield said, is
part of an overall emergency
water plan which also addresses contingency plans for flood s
and other possible contamination events.
The water emergency plan

was adopted prior to the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks on New
York City and Washington,
and addresses general threats
to the water supply, while the
security plan addresses specific
terrorist- related
threats,
Duffield said.
Security measures included
in the security plan include
additional steps to prevent

A supplemental
contract was appro~~ed
by the board for Scott
Cleland as the
freshman bl1}'s
basketball coach for
the 2001-02
school year.
School of Gallipolis was
granted permission to use a
Southern High School classroom for driver education
classes. The driver's school
would be responsible for any
dama ~l . th~t might o ~nn
and classes would be open to
Southern Local students
only.
An increase of$.03/$1,000
on the life insurance coverage the board has with CoreSource on all employees of
the district was approved and
will be in effect Jan. 1, 2002 .
Currently, the district is paying $.21/$1,000.
The board also;
• approved nmnil)ations for
the position of Southern
Local Board of Education
vice president. Ron Cammarata, current vice president, will finish out the current year;
• granted Patricia Circle
leave without pay for April
11-19, 2002. Circle's husband
is making a trip to Florida for
job training and she will be
accompanying him;
• approved pick-up and
discharge points for 2001 -02
students as worked out by the
superintendent, transportation supervisor and bus drivers.

light of attacks

intentional ·contamination.
Vent&lt; and access hatches on
the village's water towers have
been rebolted and secured, and
a metal ladder which allowed
easier access to the main tank's
lid has been re1poved.
The village has also installed
additional lighting around
tanks and other facilities, and
will consider beefing up the

lighting system even more
with a 360- degree lij!hting
system.
In Middleport, water is
treated at the well and stored
in metal tanks. Contamination
of the water supply by outside
forces is unlikely, Duffield said,
and the sheer volume of any
contantinant required to~

....... -w.... :s

To !.£Am MoRE or to schedu!e an appointment,
cal! one of our customerservice representatives
to!! free at (866) 821-4541

HOLZER
For af~r&lt; brochu~t on weighii~K&lt; "''U'Y. «dl (866) 821·4541

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