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                  <text>Gs'llpolla, Ohio

•

Kneen
ftiWIIPapD1
to allow the top of the soil to
freeze, normally this is
lietween Thanksgiving ·and
Christmas.
· This year it looks like it will
be closer to Christmas or
New Year's Day.
The straw needs to be
pulled away in March. Don't
remove the straw from the
walkways, use as a mulch in
the w.alkways and if needed,
fur late spring frost protectionl.
. h
b
b d
·P aces m t e straw erry e
where standing water can
ace urnulatemay b enefit from
digging surface ditches to
·drain excess water away. In
·th.e long run, when you create
new strawberry · beds, form
th~ beds so that they are four
to five inches higher than the
surrounding ground and
slope the entire field so water
drains away.
If yi&gt;u haven't raked off the
dead strawberry leaves, do so

Invest

r.... ,...D1

•
B!aancial goals - Because
your needs and goals are different from everyone else's,
your investment strategy must
be similarly unique. So, for
tXample, if you want to retire
~arly and travel around the
.....Orld, you may rieed to invest
far differently from yoqr
neighbor, who plans to work
until 70 and then pursue hobbies around the house. A
6nancial professional can help
YoU craft a plan based on your
itfdividual goals.

· :• Chooaing appropriate
iavatments - · To imple-

It is the biggest mass jailing of striking
teochers since 1978, when 2.65 were locked
up for 18 day.; in Bridgeport, Conn., according to National Education A· ociation

spokeswoman Darryl Figueroa.
It is so busy at the courthouse that hearing!
have been ;migned to three judges.
The teacher-s, who makr an average of
$56,000 annually, are fighting a move to
increase.their health care premiums by up to
$600 per person, per year. Curreotly. they pay
$250.
None of the district's 10,500 students have
been in class since Nov. 28 and the two sides
remain far ·apart. The Board of Education
received a death thnoat this week in a m~
left by a caller.
"It's become a
Schools Superintendent Jack DeTall.&lt;l &lt;:lid.
The teachers have been called before judges
in alphabetical order- how else? -starting
with the As on Monday, the Bs on Tuesday
and moving into the Os, Ps, Qs and Rs by
Thursday.
Many have made impassioned, Patrick
Henry-like speeches about willingness to suffer the consequences of their defiance, their
love of the job, and their contempt for Board

war:'

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

• Ignoring short-term
ups and downs - To be a
good investor, you must
ignore - or at least overlook
..:... short-term price fluctuations. If you regularly jettison
investments that, for whatever
...;;~son, are going through a
down time, you run the risk
of incurring trading costs and
sabotaging your · long-term
strategy.
A financial professional can
help you avoid these mistakes
by showing you what to really look for in investments. For .
example, if you own stocks,
your financial professional

=

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..._.Ill faa, blllMI Ill ftlvor, m. ~....,. •

r..u,, yuv ,..._ oryourwtr.

ar-t llalidl)' J1ft fer,..-

Chocolately Chip Cookies • 50% Reduced Fat
l V4 cups all-pMrpoae flour
I teupoon baklna soda
J.lllealpoonoolt
cup (I otltk) 60% oil spread
314 &lt;Up anouloted oupr
314 cup pockod lllbt browa - r

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saiL In I..... boWl, beat tprud, ......olated tupr, . , _ ,
oupr, IDd YIJIIIIa wltb elodrlc mber uodl &lt;rtlllly. Add - .
beat ...0. Grodu.Uy lldd llour mblllre, boodaa welL Sdr In
clllpo. Drop by ""'udod . . . . _ onto Ulllftued &lt;OOide
.-_lloke 8-10 mlauta or unW Bghdy bmwuod.
Coololl&amp;hdr; mno•elmm .....de ohoot to wire roeiL
1b make llllfter, chewier cookies, add 1 or l tablapootll
UDiweeten£d applesa.ce to the eu mbture.
Ma.. 5 do""" cookie&amp; Nutrition Information per oooldeo 70
Colorleo, l.5 gramo total fat, (Z.O ...,.. anU.ble total fat). A
dMik: cbocolate chip &lt;OOide coota1nr 4.5 (lnllll total fat.
111/IH'fftllllo• obtabtod froM Till Amlri&lt;llll Dklllk AuO&lt;lod&lt;&gt;n

For ,.... Info........., ....- tbe Canllo•U&lt;Uiar Health

C.......un.tot-, Jadyn s-. RN, BSN at the Melp

c-~y

0

3

~

percent to 80 percent is co • ·
mon. In some cases they ,
given ~ just to nolieve .
owner of the
paying the annual fees
'
lnteteSted in buying or
' ·
ing a house? Let Bruce
Williams' "House Smart" be
guide. Price: $14.95, plw
shipping and handling. Call:
(800) 994-6733.
(Send your questions tq:
Smarr Money, P.O. BoX 503,
Elfers, FL 34680. E-mail !1).(.
brucebrucewilliams.com.
r
6
Questions of general inteteit
will be answered in futut.
columns. Owing to the vo
ume of mail, personal replies ·
cannot be provided.)
,
Copyright 2001, Newspaper Enterptise Assn.

ftl
•••Cou
Whirs Inside

OfF 10 JAIL - Two unidentified Middletown TOWilshlp, N.J., ~achers hold their handcuffed hands up as
they and their fellow COlleagues are led from a courthouse In Freehold, N.J. Moving down a list alphabetically, a judge ordered more striking teachers to jail
Tuesday for defying his back-to-work order. (AP)

Stocks·beginning to show
signs of small.recove.ry~~t'i'i
"

n;spop5jbility1

Your

,

.

'

~

......~ f .-'rf," .&gt;

l

whether we'no in a new bull
market or not, I'd iay certainly · not. We've elqlerienced more of a snapbac~
from the artificial lows c~r
ed by the tragedy of 9-11 :·
The stock market collapsed after the terrorist
attacks on Sept. 11 and set
2001 lows 10 u 1 later. But
the market has posted
turnaround · in recent we&lt;
thanks to lower interest rat•·
and upbeat economic forecasts by big-name companies.
·

time since befono the temir-

1 'is! attacks, nm~ng opti-

':m;.m that tlte bulls are noady
'tP.&lt;·niA':wjld on Wall Street

' ' ~II: ~... ' · · ·
·
I ' But many analysts antion
that the Dow's 220-point
rise on Wednesday and its
sudden move past the 10,000
barrier still aren't enough to
signal a prolonged upturn in
~ market. .
"HaviJ18 pierced through
10,000 is a good thing, and I
. think market sentiment will
be buoyed quite a bit,'' &lt;:lid

'

Details, A3

Weather
Hlp: 40s. Low: JGs
Details, A2

Bv CHARLENE lfoEFucH

OHIO

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

DallY 4: 3-1-1-3
l'llu

al.. 17·2&amp;-31-35-48 (35)
..

Index
'

2 Sections -12 ,.._

calendar
Classifieds
Comics·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

All Scre,e~gs .\: lnfo~ation A-re Provided As A Public Service

AS
82-4
85 ·

A5
A4

A3
A3
B I ,3,6
A2

0 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing eo.

days till
Christmas

&amp;

,.

.

Hea/&gt;inq Scree~inqs

Tours Of
The facility
Are
Avai 1abl e
Upon

'·

R
'
· eq~~t
1

• Pulse Oximetry''&gt;creeninqs

·

. • Demonstrations,qf Adaptive ~quipment
'

~

• Information on Nutrition, ~,dY.an~e Oiredives,

Sponsored by

'1bnrBank/n-•..

. '• ...~
'

.-

'

' ..

Conhnenc_~: Proqra.!~&gt;

· I!!Jt;armenBankQ
- ··~~M~ga~
211 W•tt hcond ltrwt, Pomeroy
7~2131

Route 7 P.O. BoX'331,Tuppera PC.Int
740-817-3111
104 U - Alvw Rood, Gllllpol"'
7-2285

Dalf Rehabihtiofi, Alzheimer's ~ Stroke Support Gro~ps, Smb~,nq
Cessation

&amp; V,~lunfeerinq

·

J

...

..

ft

VALLEY NURSING
&amp;:REHABILITATION CENTER

••

' +-·-· .

NOntaltTcWN.

R.N.; Meigs County health
coJ1Unissioner.
She suggests "thinking big"
particularly when shopping for
youngsters under thnoe who have.
a lot of hand to mouth activity.

, ....... Slhly, AJ

Please He Tllpu, A3

.to fequest school building
BY KAnE CROW
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

SYRACUSE - · Syracuse 1 residents ano
being encouraged to attend a Southern Local
school board's Dec. 17 meeting 'to support of
the transfer of Syracuse Elementary to the
village.
Robert Wingert, grants admipisrrator, met
with Syracuse Village Council Thursday and
urged members to attend the 7 p.m. meeting
at Southern High School, as well as all interested residents regarding the disposition of
Syracuse Elementary.
The village plans to formally asJ&gt; the building be deeded to the village.
Petitions, located in local businesses, ano
being circulated in support of the transfer.
The petition reads, "We the following voters and residents of Syracuse and Minersville
urge Southern Local School Boar4 to deed
the former Syracuse Elementary S~hool and
it surroundings, 3.28 acres, to the Village of
Syracuse so that the building and land can be
preserved for establishment of a community
center and for related public purposes."
Wingett said he has 200 signatures so far
and persons are going door tp door seeking
signatures.
In other business, council met with Solicitor L Carson Crow regarding the demolition
of abandoned houses in the village. Crow
advised council that houses cannot be burned
without notiryjng heirs of landowners
through legal advertisements in the newspa~
per.

laste test

Robert Wingett, grants administrator, met with SyrtKI4se Village
Council Th11uday and urged membeu to attend the 7 p.m. meeting at
So11thtm High School, as well as
all interested residents regarding the
disposition of Syracuse Elementary.
A buffet reception was served in honor of
Katie Crow and Thcker Williams, outgoing
council members. Crow was presented a vase
and Williams a plaque in honor of their years
of service on council.
Mayor Larry.Lavender and council extend'ed thanks to Volunteer Fire Department
members for putting up and decorating the
Christmas tree in front of the Municipal
Building and the garden dub for signs, lights
and hanging wreaths.
.
Clerk/Treasurer Sharon · Cottrill advised
council. that local government revenue .will
be ,less due to the decrease in sales tax revenue
but gave no specific projections.
.'The following were appointed to the Volunteer Firefighters Dependence fund Board:
Councilmen Bill Roush and Mony Wood,
Eber Pickens Sr., Ralph Lavender, and Gene
·
Imboden.
Officers named to Syracuse Volunteer fire
bepartment for 2002 were: Eber Pickens Sr.,
fire chief; Ebe.r Pickens Jr., assistant fire chief;

Pluse -

CouiiCIL AJ

The best cookie bakers and candy makers with entries In the
Pomeroy Merchants Association's holiday contest were select·
ed Saturday judging by Lesa Carpenter of New Haven, left, and
. Janet Bolin, Rutland. There were more than a dozen entries In
each category of the contest at Peoples Bank, Pomeroy. Th~
winners In the cookie contest were Donna Edwards of New
Haven, first, with date-filled cookies; Edith Harman of Rutland,
second, with peanut blossom cookies; and Elsie Folmer of
Pomeroy, third with lemon bars. Winners In the candy contest
were Jennifer Hoback of Racine, first, with Smoothles; Macel
S. Barton of Reedsville, second, with coconut bonbons; anp
Sharlee Evans of Portland, third, with ~easy peanut butter
fudge. Prizes will be awarded to the winners. On s·aturday,
Farmers Bank will host the Merchant Association's homemade
wooden toy contest. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
·

~.---~

....

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446·5568

{204) 675 - 5236 .

'I

.,.

"Things small can create a'
choking hazard for little childnon
so all parts of a toy should be,
larger than the child's mouth,';
she. said.
"Watch out for marbl.S, small
balls and buttons, wheels which
come off, and eyes that come out.
Little children pull, prod and
twist toys so they need to be weU
made with tightly secured parts.

a

P~~ANT

Haltlllle,.nment at 74CW92-6tll6.

POMER.OY - 'Tis the ~a­
son to be shopping, but as '\llY
seuoned shopper will teD ~u,
there's more to it than "making a
list and checking it twice,'' particularly when it comes to buying
children's toys.
·
"Put toy safety at the rol{llf
your list, and when in doubt, do
without," advises Norma Tornos,

"Put toy safety at the top
of yo11r list, and when in
. doubt, do without."

The next time you visit the Hospital, be sure to see the Patient
Rights posled in the lobby areas, or pick up pamphlet at the
Front Desk. · Holzer Medical Center recognizes the importance of
respecting your rights as a patient. If you hove questions or
concerns,,be sure to call the Hospital's Patient Representative
for assistance.

.'

0

1

Patient Rights

,,

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TOY SAFETY - Shopping for toys during the holidays can be exciting and fun, but safety needs to be
at the top of the list when selections are made. Jamie Penlngton of Middleport checked out a wagon of
Legos at Mason Wai-Mart Saturday with her 3-year-old son, Gage Larkins. To be perfectly safe all parts
of any toy going under his Christmas tree should be larger than his mouth. (Chartene Hoeflich photo)

_Toy safety belongs at top of ~ish list

Lolteites

Kicker: 2-D-4-5-8-7
Pick 3 nl&amp;ht: 8-l-8
Pick 4 nljllt: 4-7-D-3
W.VA.
O.I!Y 3: 1-9-3

Pleasant Vall~y Nursing &amp;: Rehabilitation Center
Thursday, Dtcember 13, 2001 • 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

• Blood Glucose &amp; Blood Pressure Screeninqs

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration is weighing whether to make public a
videotape in which Osama bin ....---..--...,
Laden says he was pleasantly
surprised by the extent of damage from the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.
On the tape, bin Laden recalls
tuning in to news shows hours
before the attacks, waiting to
hear reports about the destruction, a U.S. official said. Bin L...l....,_....Uc....Jt..:..:...J
Laden also says that after the
bin Laden
first plane struck, he told those
with him that more devastation was coming.
Vice President Oick Cheney said the iape shows
clearly that bin Laden was behind the attacks.
.A key consideration for the administration is
whether releasing the tape would help win over
Muslims who doubt the veracity of U.S. claims
that bin Laden was behind the attacks.
Sen. Bob Graham, 0-Fla., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Monday the tape
should he made public. "I believe if you have a
choice between treating the American people at
arm's length and as adults, you treat them as adults,
and they .s hould have the opportunity to see this
tape," he said on CBS' The Early Show."
,, "It~, ; .. equa!ly.important tha.t the world see this
tape because there are still some place~ where :
. d"Jere is suspicion ~boutrvhether there is evidence
tb link bin Laden to the events of Sept. 11," Graham said.
.The same stance w~ taken by Sens. Joseph
Btden D-Del.~ who chairs the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, and Chuck Hagel, R-Neb.
"The world needs to see this," Hagel said Sunday

Lula Cirde, 85
Pearl Curran, 70
Gretta Thomas, 86
Velma Sargent, 95
Jerry Taylor, 59

~ 12·14-15-23-39-40
Boaus . .U: 13

ANNUAL HEALTH FAIR

Screeninqs
,,

Bush administration dedding
on future of videotape

Deaths

·'

'

Tapes sliow
Laden
behind

Patriots drill Browns, Bl

Pick 3 dey: 9-1-2
,Pick 4 daY: 1-2-6-2

.

• Bone Densiflj Screeninqs (Noon to 2 p.m.)

CHIIISTMAS SHOP~ING

9-11 aHacks

NE~YO~ (Ai&gt;)-:- The .'· Tim·~{~~•:' •MJ,j
Dow·• mdwtrials · finished officer for We!IS·~s.1.fi•
above 10,000 for the first vate Client Services. "iJ.'tt&gt;

·--

• Speech

H0111elow11 Newspaper

...

We feel Good About'·
Making You feel Better...

• low Vision

•

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bought classroom equipment wid{ her awn
money, and never complained or liled a
worker's compensation claim. She was
excused after telling the judge she had two
young childnon to cano fur.
'•

Time-shares ano alm05t impossible to seU. When they do sell,

Reducing Fat Just in
Time For the Holidays

•
*
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out:'
'
Dozens have avoided jail by pl&lt;afling hardship - high blood pressure, sintl!Q parenthood, an elderly parent in need of care. Fisher has been lenient, but not always ipi:ltient.
Special education teacher Kate Cosgrove
told Fisher in a long monologue )tt1W she

of no place where one can
invest funds at a reasonable
return and still have money
"readily accessible" without
penalty. It's unlikely that this
money will allow you to retire
completely at 55. Unless you
pnopared to take very subVegetable growers, just a
stantial risk - which could
reminder that there is still
result in a capital loss - the
time to register for the
unhappy fact is that you will
Meigs/Washington Winter
have to ·settle for a relatively
Vegetable School set Dec. 12
modest return on your investat Washington State Commu- ment which is no where near
nity College from 9;30 to 3.
·
f enough to fUnd a· notirement
11~o-an d-o~e~ half h ours
0
in such a short period of time.
. pesttctde
trammg
wtll
be
DEAR BRUCE: I always
.
S
..
gtven. weer cor~ var~enes, remember that you have said
pomble marketmg tdeas, time-shanos
a bad investinsect management, disea~e ment, but I can't remember
contrQl and weed conrrol will why. I went to a presentation
with your advice in the back
be discussed.
.
of my mind, and I didn't buy.
Call 992-6696 for details.
So \vhy are they a bad mt.est• • •
(Hal Knten is the Meigs ment? - B.A., via e-riiail
DEAR B.A.: I don't considCounty Agriculture &amp; Natural
er
time-shares an investment
Rtsources Agent, Ohio Stale
in the traditional sense. It is
Univenity Extension.)
virtually impossible to get a
substantial portion of your
may stress the necessity of money back if you decide to
evaluating companies' funda- move to some other venue.
mentals, management and One can rent a facility in the
competitive position. Once time-shares area for less than
you're familiar with these fac- the loss of return on capital
tors, you can make informed plus the carrying charges
time- shares charge.
investment decisions.
If a time-shano cost $25,000
You can't change the economy or control what happens plus a $500 annual maintein the markets. But by stick- nance fee, for example, you
ing with your investment could prudently invest that
strategy, and by working with same amount and get a
a qualified financial profes~ $2,000-a-year return. For
sional, you can go a long Wl1y $2,500 it is likely you could
toward controlling your own rent a nice property in the
destiny. And that's no small same area, have all of the privileges and not have your capiachievement.
· (Amy &amp;wman-Moore is a tal tied up. Then you could
fimmdal planner with Edward choose to go elsewhere the ,
Jones Inveslmmts in its Gallipo- next year or not take a vacation at all, if you so desired.
lis ~ce.)

ml!nt your investment strategy, you'll need the right
investments. A financial profetsional can help you choose
tire ones that best fit your
needs.
: 4
Staying discipUned It's· not always easy to stick
with an investment strategy.
Many investors are tempted
t'o chase "hot" stocks or time
the market. Neither of these
sa:ategies will be successful in
the long ~ term. A financial
professional can help you stay
disciplined by suggesting such
techniques as dollar cost averaging investing a set
amount of money at regular
intervals.

.•'

of Eduption leaders.
"I ay to teach my students this CO\Dltry is
&amp;ir and just," Guenther, 57, told~
Court Judge Ira Kmmwt this week, her
~.&lt;lice breaking. "In this procas, the law is not
&amp;ir and just. Sometimes, good people have IX)
stand up to fight an WJiust law,~\ what
I'm doing."
·
·
Judge Clark.!on FisherJr.,~ the
back-to-'M!rlc order, said he _
on the
one-week :.a terpu because he W2S conru
IJ
cerned fines 'M!uld not get teachers back to
work.
"You are holding the keys to the~" Fish. er told one group of strikers."AnY time )'00'
want to come out, let me know 2!lli you are

now before you straw the bed
in for the winter. The leaves
should be comp05ted or at
least removed from the area as
many diseases· and slug eggs
may overwinter on the
foliage. Spring diseases such as
botrytis or grey mold has
been found to have been
reduced 50 to 75 percent
with proper leaf sanitation.

•••

AHred Un;,ted Methodist celebrates Chrisbnas. AS

fOr

teachen trade
FREEHOLD, N,l. (AP)- History teocher
Barbar.a Guenther h... 't nUssed a day of cbss
in .37 &gt;'='· Now, siK ; spending her day.; in
a 9-by-9 jail cell, locked up along with scoteS
of,ocher stri1cing teacher-s in a bitter lesson in
civil dilobedience.
Among them is Arline Corbett, 57, a \'Ueran Iacher who jokingly says she is so lawabiding she still has the" do not nomooe under
penalty of law" rag. on her old mattn:sses.
Then theno is physical education teacher
Steve Antonucci, who w.as the toast of the
rown last weekend after coaching the Middletown Township High School South Tigers
ro a state fOotball championship.
1\vo day.; bter, he wos in jail. eating bologna
sandwiches and standing for twice-a-day head
counts with ·alleged killen, caijackers and
petty crooks.
"This is the n:wanll get," the 30-year-old
c~ told a judge before being led away in
~dculti like all the others.
'
~y midday Thursday, more than 160 strikmg teachers in well-to-do Middletown
Township had been jailed for violating a
back-to-work order. They are the 6nt New
Jersey teachers to be locked up in 23 years,
~d some 600 more could follow suit.

·:r·

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�Ohio

-the Daily Sentinel
1\lulllly, Dec. 11
Aa:uWealhare forecast for da

NEWARK (AP) Buckeye Egg
Farm has reached an agreemenr to settle
a case with neighbon who won a $19.7
million jury verdict against the company for yean of odors, flies and poUution.
The agreement was reached Friday
and will become official when the
paperwork is 6led in Licking County
·Common Pleas Court this week, said
John Sproat, a lawyer for the neighbon,
and Tom Rosenberg, a Buckeye Egg
attorney.
They declined t9 discuss specifics of
the sr:ttleinerit. Judge Gregory Frost said
Saturday that he knew tbe sides had
reacl\ed an agreement on a settlement,
but he declined to ""lease terms.
Both sides compromised their claims,
Rosenberg said Sunday. He said the
agreement would end all litigation by
residents in northwest Licking County
against Buckeye Egg.

•
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· Mondllf,DIC

o. 2001

Monday, Dec. 1

-~
· ~ . . . . t .!:;: .,
Sflowtn
Rli'l

T4:lnnl

. F\Jnlel

Snow

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Weather Service says a warming trend is
on the way.
· 'Light rain in the southeast
will end on Monday night.
Clouds will decrease with sea$Onable temperatures. Lows
will be tiom 25 to 30. Sunshine Tuesday will boost temperatures into the upper 40s
aM low 50s.
· High pressure provided a
dry and seasonably cold night
a¢ross the state. Some high

on the way .

clouds drilted into the south,
with clear skies elsewhere.
Early morning temperatures
were from 25 to 30. The high
wiU remain in control of most
of the state's weather ·into
Tuesday.
The record high temperature for this date at the weather station was 72 degrees in
1971. The record low temperature was 8 degrees below zero
in 1958. Sunset Monday will
be at 5:06 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday wiU be at 7:43 a.m.

Escaped convid captured
LEBANON (AP) - Authorities captured a convict who
Walked away from a prison work camp.
Frank Kruse, 31, was captured at a home in .C lermont Coun·~ and returned to the Lebanon Corf"ctional Institute on Sunday, nine days alter he escaped tiom the work camp in Warren
: County.
'Kruse is serving a three-year sentence for operating a
methamphetamine lab. He has been in prison since September
: and was working at a dairy barn on prison property when he
· w.alked away. He was considered a minimum-security inmate,
authorities said~
·
·
An infor111ant's call early Sunday led police to the home,
where he was captured about 6:30a.m.
· Kruse surrendered peacfuUy, said Sgr. Ken Ward of the
Lebanon post of the State ·Highway Patrol.
.Lebanon is about 25 miles north of Cincinnati.

Jurors in Fairfield County Common Pleas Court .we"" to
resume deliberations Monday morning in the case against Gary
DeMastry; accused of spending mof" than $340,000 in public
money over four years on personal travel, dining and entertainment, then lying to investigators.
Jurors deliberated nearly 12 hours on Thunday and Friday
before taking the weeke.n d off.
,
DeMastry is being tried now on 50 of the 343 counts 61ed
against him.
Conviction on the most serious charge - engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity - carries a maximum I 0-year .prison
sentence plus forfeiture of their property and government pen-

Lula Mae arcte

how egg prices hold up. Rosenberg said.
Bu~keye Egg produces 4 percent of
the country's eggs, 2.6 billion last year.
Its neighbors near Croron in central
Ohio have complained for yean about
environmenw problems.
Their· lawsuit was one of sevetal
against Buckeye Egg. The state has filed
contempt charges for violations such as
spilling contaminated water into a cf"ek
and failing to stop large outbreaks of
flies.
"It still smeUs awful, and we've still
g.&gt;t the flies," said Dan Perkins, one of
the plaintiff! in the Licking County
lawsuit. "It's just as bad, if not wone,
than it was 15 years ago."
Rosenberg said the settlement leaves
pending only a similar lawsuit 61ed by
thf"e families in Marion County, along
with one set of contempt charges 6led
against the company by the state.

activity to the Games.

Ohio man killed in aash

-

Sheriff's trial in fourth week
' LANCASTER (AP).- The public corruption trial of~ former sheriff is heading into its fourth week.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The Taft administration has bypassed
the State Controlling Board and . awarded a Cleveland-based
company a $27.7 million advance payment for a statewide radio
communications system months ahead of schedule, The
Columbus Dispatch reported Sunday.
The payment was arranged alter TRW Inc. officials complained about the financial strain caused by more than a year of
delays in building the system, the newspaper said.
Work on the first phase of the system is still under way.
The state's 1998 contract with TRW for the $328 million system requires that each phase be completed and tested before the
company is paid for that part of the work.
The Ohio Department of Administrative Services agreed to
remove that requirement by amending three provisions of the
contracr, documents obtained by The Dispatch show. The
changes apply to the first phase only.
Such f"vi!ions usually must be approved at public meetings of
the Controlling Board, an oversight group of six legislators and
an appointee of the governor who serves as pt1!sident.

Gretta M. lhomas

·velma M. Sargent

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Thursday, December 20, 2001, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone

.Ms. Cirdo
.Mr.Dunt
.Ms. Houck

WIIIIIGII Plymirc
Sa!Dintha .Panous
Nikila Young

SECOND PLACE

Craig Hensley
Kara Olbom
Ryan Davis

l•cc~mltaDY your lrtbute.

THIRD PLACE

Do.vid C. Alldrewa
July lO, 1881-May II, 1880

Alan Watson
Hannah Prall
Salah Wachter

May God's angels
guide you and ·
protect you
throughout time,

... DISTRICI' ~- Nikita Young...

MEIGS LOCAL MTPQLE SCHOOL
HOMEROOM fiRST PI;ACE
Ms. Halley
Mr. McCall
Ms. Wolfe

Ms. Evans
Ms. Dunn
Ms. Durst
Ms. TriPJllett

Ms. Hubbard

Britlany Harri1011
Dolllld Neal
Kaylce KCnnedy
Kyle Bogs
Albley Ebenblch .
Heather Orlbam
Chris Craddoc;k
Alexa Vcaoy ·

SECOND PLACE
Frankie Stewan
Felicia See
Ben Coppick 1r,
Tyler Uttle

Renee Colbwn
Lacey Stobarl

Michael Ball
Robert Foreman

TIURD PLACE
less Mowery
Sammy Ackcnnan
Brenden Black

Alw.,aln our he&amp;rta, ,
John o.nd Mono. Alldiewa o.nd
lo.mlly

Daniel Runyon
Hannah Williams
Diania Canlcrbury
Brittany 1effers
Nath!micl Davis

SQUTHERN LOCAL
HOMEROOM

FIRST PLACE

$ECONQ Pl,ACE

Mr. Wickline
Ms. Neal

Salah E1 Dabllia

Ericka Cogar

Daniel Lawson

Ms. Manuel

Cltelsea Freeman

Lindsey Buzzard
BriiUICY Young

I. We hold you in our lhoughu and memories forever.
2. May God cradle yoo in His arms, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never fOI]!olten. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared IO!Itther. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
S. The days we shiU'ed were sweet. I long to see you again in God"s
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory or your
smile fjlls us with joy and laughter.
7. Though ou1 of sigh~ you'll forever be in my heart artd mind.
8. The days may come and go, bullhe times we shmd will always remain.
9. May the light orpeace shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
11. You were a light in our Hfe thlt bums forever in our hearts.
12. May Ood'spaccs shine over you for all time.
13. You ... in our lhoughiS and prayeiS from morning to night al)d from
year to year.
14. We send this message with a loving kiss (or eternal rest and happiness.
IS. May the Lon! bless you with His graces and wann,loving heart.

;•

r---------~------------------------~--Piease publish my lribute in the special Memory Page on Thursday, December 20.
1

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Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
Oivision of Recycling and
Litter Prevention

MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING
AND LITTER PREVENTION
(740) 992-6360

Circulation

Ext: 4

Ctaaslflad Ads

Ext 5

To aend a-mall
OntheWeb

•

•

•

l l y - or
OnoOnontclftth
Onoyoor

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered nine calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as foUows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, I 0:13 a.m., Ohio
124, assisted by Reedsville, ida
Cowdery,
Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospiul;
II: 15 a.m., Maples, Sarah
Travitt, treated;
2:09 p.m., Country Mobile
Home Park,. John Baxter,
treated;
3:24
p.m.,
Ohio
124/Painter Ridge, Diana
Carman, refused treatment;
8:05 p.m., Elmwoqd Terrace, assisted by Racine, Vicki
Boso, Holzer medical Center;
9:45 p.m., Grant Street,
Bonnie Belcher, treated;
Sunday, 5:30 p.m ., .Ohio
124, assisted by Racine, Ted
Coppick, Jackson General
Hospiw;
8:15 p.m., Pomeroy Cliff
Apt., Shannon Harland,
HMC.
RACINE
Sunday, 2:46 p.m., Plantz

aub meets

.safety
funPIIpA1

Remember if you can get it
off, so can your child."
She also cautioned about
toys corning in from second
and third world countries and
the need to check for lead
paint. If they have the Good
Housekeeping
seal
of
approval or the mark of
approval from the Consumer
Product Safety Commission,
they'"' probably O.K. for kids.
"Look for the manufacturer's age-appropriate guidelines on packaging. That's a
good source of information
for parents and othen purchasing toys," Torres said.
"But "'member the ulti. mate decision as to safety is
the responsibility of the purchaser."
·Last year there were an
estimated 165,000 tcry-f"lated
injuriet nationally, the U. S.
Consumer· Product Safety
Commission reports.
About half of those were to
children under 5.
Most were rnidor injuries,
although some were listed as
serious, and othen as fawities, the t1!port indicated.

Council
ftom PapAl

Doy Nitz, first lieutenant;
Bryan Justis, second lieutenant; Brandi King. third
lieutenant; Jeff Bable, captain.
Officers for emergency squa.d
are: Eber Pickens Jr., chief;
Bryan Justis, assistant chief;
Tammi Bable, captain.
Officers for the fire department and emergency squad
were appointed as follows:
Dave Lawson, President;
Brandi King, Vice President;
Mary
Pickens,

.

motor....,,.

ROCKSPRINGS
Rocksprings Better Health
Club will meet at noon
Thunday for Christmas dinner at Rocksprings United
Methodist Church. Cookie
trays.for shut-ins will be made
following the dinner.

To 111eet
MIDDLEPORT
Widow's Fellowship will meet
at noon Friday at Middleport
Church of Christ. Memben
asked to bring a $1
exchange gift and finger food
for lunch.

=

Meeting
planned
TUPPERS PLAINS
The VFW 9053 wiU meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
organization's hall in Thppers
Plains. Dinner wiU be at 6:30
p.m.
While riding toys af" the
source of many fatalities,
some are related to childf"n
choking on balloons, small
balls, and small toy parts, Torres said.
"Caf"ful selection when
buying toys and proper supervision of children at play is
still and always will be, the
best . way to protect child=
from toy-related injuries,
emphasized the health commissioner.
She urged those selecting
toys to read the labels caf"fully for warnings concerning
potential choking hazards,
and then to examine the toys
· carefully before making the
purchase.
December · is "Safe Toys
Month" and parents need to
be reminded that "all toys are
not for all childf"n," said Torres.
"Most of the toy-f"lated
incidents involving young
children a"' preventable and
this is why we urge consumers to 'think safety' when
buying toys for that special
child this holiday season."

.KNOW DIAMONDS,
KNOW YOUR JEWELER.

· The bitterness of poor quality remains long
after the sweetness oflow price is forgoten.

carrier m1y remit In advance dirtct to
The Dally S.ntlnel. Credll wtll bO given
eomor _ , · No aubo&lt;ripllort ill'
man ·permlntd in areas where home
carrier Ht'VIee It available.

Mall subscription
lnstde Metge County

13 Weeks
26 WeekS
52 Week&amp;

13 Weeks

1

·

S27.30

212 East Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

S53.82

$105.5&amp;
Molgl County

· $29.25

26 Weeks

$56.66

52 Weel&lt;s

• 1109.72

·.

.
·

Also present were council ·
member( Donna Peterson
and Bill Roush and members-elect, Eric Cunningham
and Michael VanMeter. ·

'

$2

.

wom:m.

P'""'·
~IF
"'*-"''
!'4'"'-"''~'~--;&lt;q
:
You 1DON'T

S8.70
S104

·

Secretary/Treasuf"r.
Appointed as Syracuse
EMS Trustees were: Eber
Pickens, Sr., Eber Pickens Jr.,
and Bryan Justis.
Lavender reported a $50
donation was received to be
used in the holiday home
decorating contest with $25
for first place, $15 for second
place and $10 for third place.
Joy Bentley will be chair-

Dolly
50 conlo
Subleribtrs no1 desiring to pay the

...... -

newsOmydailysentlnel.com

www.mydailysen1inel.com

•

Road, Addie Cummings,
Pleasant Y2lley Hospiw.

-TRIVIA

Reader Services

DEADLINE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, Noon

... DISTRICT WINNER- Sarah El Dabaia...

EMS lop calls

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

THIRD PLACE
Brittany Hill
Bonnie Allen
Whitney Riftle

information."

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
FROM OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING
AND THE DAILY SENTINEL!

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND f7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop oiT to
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With Fondell Memoriee

... DISTRICT WINNER- Brittany Harrison ...

.

tta
ks
d
error a ( Sen pUmP
.
pr1ces to two-year 1OW

but nolforgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

Hied- ollhelollowln&amp; FREE verses below to

Hl'lMI!ROOM FIRST PJ.ACB

on CNN's "Late Edition."
On the other hand, Gehad
Auda, a professor of political
science at Cairo's Helwan
University. said broadcast of
the tape would create a "pro.paganda splash" but "not cause
any ~mover iri public opint.&gt;n."
"It won't make a difference
to those who ate hostile to
America whether the tape is
made public or not," Auda
said. "This is a matter of~lief,
not a matter ·of clarifying

being interviewed or meeting
with a cleri~. He speaks In
Arabic and discuSses. the terrorist attacks, according to
Cheney, who said he had seen
parts of the tape.
The
ai-Qaida
leader
expresses surprise and pleasure
at the amount of damage done
to the World Trade Center, the
official said. Another official
said bin Laden indicates on the
tape he had expected the rwin
towers to coUapse only down
to the level of where the
planes scruck.
Bin Liden's comments show
he had specific advance
knowledge of the time,
method and location of the
attacks, the officials said.
A third official said the tape
suggests the ringleaden of the
attacks did not tell all the
hijackers that · their mission
would end in death.
U.S. officials declined to say
how the United States
obtained the tape, which one
described as amateurish and
apparently made with a handheld video tamera. The Post
said it was discovered during
the search of a private home in
Jalalabad, Afghanistan
Bin Laden has not publicly
taken re&amp;ponsibility for the
attacks, though he has praised
them. U.S. officials have said
they intercepted communications tying bin Laden or auociateS to the attacks, but have
refused to release any materials, citing intelligence concerns.
Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz expressed irritation that · anyone would
doubt bin Liden's guilt.

Cheney said it is not his
decision whether to release
the tape but indicated the"'
was reluctance to do so.
"We've not been eager to give
the guy any extra ·television
time:• he said.
Cheney · confirmed the
POMEROY- Gretta M. Thomas, 86, of Pomeroy, died on
Sunday, Dec: 9, 2001, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. tape's existence, disclosed by
Arrangements are being handled by Fisher-Acf"e Funeral The Washington Post in Sunday editions, and other officials
Home in Pometoy and will be announced later.
described the contents on
condition of anonymity.
The tape provides dear
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Velma M. Sargent, 95, proof the leader of the alof South Charleston, formerly of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Qaida network was behind the
Dec. 9, 2001, at CAMC-Memorial Division in Chatleston.
· attacks on the World Trade
She was a homemaker and member of Pilgrim's Rest Prim- Center and the Pentagon that
itive Baptist Church in Clay County.
' killed about 3,300 people, the
Born Oct. 12, 1906, in Clay County, she was a daughter of vice president said on NBC's
the late Walter and Bessie (Vaughn) Undecwood.ln addition tO' "~eet the P~:· .
.
. He doet, tn fact, display IlKher parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Glenn'
Sargent; daughter, Madeline Murphy; three brothers; three sis- ¥ nificant know)~ of what
ters; and three grandchildren.
.
· happen~d and th~res. no doubt
Survivon include a daughter and son-in-law, Ernaline and about his resporwbility for th~
John Teeuwissen of South Charleston; four soris and daughters- • attack o~ September 11,
in-law, Cecil and Phyllis Sargent of Leon, Paul Sargent of Point ' Cheney satd,
Pleasant, Herbert and Barbara Sargent of Denver, Colo., ~ · The tape shows bin Laden
Ronald Sargent of St. Albans and Sandra Sargent of Columbus, '
Ohio; three brothers, Elder Darius Underwood of Gallipolis, "· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ohio, Fred Underwood and Dewey Underwood, both of fair- 'T.
·
mont; 31 grandchildf"n, 71 gf"at-grandchildren, and 20 great1
great-grandchildren.
·
•
The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Crow-Hussell ~
Funeral Home with Elders Hubert Sean and Ron Sargent offi.
ciating. Burial wiU be in Gravel HiU Cemetery, Cheshire, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral home .from 6 to 9 ·p.m. TuesLOS ANGELES (AP) six months ago," said Jeffrey
day.
Gasoline prices have plunged Spring, a spokesman for the
more than 40 cents a gallon Automobile Club of Southern
since Sept. 11, reaching a two- California.
year low.
"Those good · ol' days are
The average retail price of a back:' said Cyndi Burrough,
gallon of gasoline, including aU 49, as she 6lle~ her car for 99
grades and taxes, was about cents a gallon at an Arco staSUS on Friday, down more tion in the San Fernando Valthan 8 cents per gallon in the ley. "Everybody, get your gas
past three weeks, according to cans out."
'
the Lundberg Survey ofabout
Honolulu had the most
8,000 stations nationwide expensive gas surveyed at
f"le~ed Sunday.
.
.
$1.70 per gallon on average. In
Its the lowest prtce smce Atlanta the avenge was just 90
March 1999, when the nation- cents. '
al avenge was about $1.08.
In some cities the average
(USPS 213-11111
gas price dipped below a dolOhio Vllloy Publlohlng Co•
lar a gallon, to the joy and
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Frida)", 111 Coun St.
amazement of drivers.
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
OhJo.
S.COnck:lall
Dixie Carter (FQIII/!y Law) of
"It Was. $2 a gallon less than
Our main concem In all stories Is pootago paid al Pl""eroy.
Mclemoresville;
Tenn., aspired
10 be accurate . If you know ot an Mombor: Tho. Associated Presa and
to
be
an
opera
singer.
But, at age
tho
Ohio
N
o
r
Alloclatlon.
,
error in a story, call the newsroom
Poo-:
5ertd
addCO&lt;TtOo
7,
a
tonsillectomy
gone
wrong
at (740) ~92-2156.
Ilona lo The Dally Sonllnol, 111 cou~ .
ended
that
dream.
51. , F'oo1oroy, Ohio 457111.
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The main numbef Is 992-2158.

Subscribe today.
992-2156

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

Tapes
fnh'll PllpA1

BELPRE .:._ Pearl Ann Curran, 70, Belpre, died Sunday,
December 9, 2001.
·Born April21, 1931, she was the daughter of the late Sarah
Jane and Alvin Anderson and was an active member of Little
Hocking Evangelical Methodist Church.
Along with her parents, she was precede&lt;! in death by an
infant daughter, a brother, a sister, and a great-grandson.
She is survived by her husband, Lewi&lt; Curran Jr., of Belpre;
a son, Alvin and Paula Curran Sr., also of Belpre; two daughters, Linda Davis of Belpre, Brenda and Nathan Steakley of St.
Marys; two brothers, Alvin Anderson of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Harold Anderson of Aorida; two sisters,Vivian Lott ofParkersburg, W.Va., Dorothy Lott of North Carolina; five grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services wiU be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Little Hocking
Evangelical Methodist Church. Officiating will be Wayne
Vogelsong.
Burial will follow in Oak Grove Cemetery in Walker, W.Va.
Friends may visit on Monday from 6-8 p.m. at White Funer-·
al Home in Coolville.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

.MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING
·&amp; LITTER PREVENTION
..•2001 RECYCLE POSTER
CONTEST WINNERS

. RODNEY -Jerry Lee Taylor, 59, of Rodney;'died Saturday, Dec. 8, 2001, at his residence.
Born Aug. 21, 1942, in Gallia COunty, he was a son of he
late Orland Taylor and Leona D. (Cremeens) Taylor. He was
employed for seye_ralyean in the construction trades, the parts ·
department at SOuthe.tern Equipment Co., and was fonnerly a patrolman with the Gallipolis Police Department.
A U.S. Air Force veteran of both Korea and Vietnam, he was
a former member of Post 4464 Veterans of Foreign Wan, and
had served as 'a fif"fighter with Gallipolis Volunteer Fm ·
Department.
Surviving are his wife, Mary A. Brumfield Taylor; daughter,
Tanya Taylor of Rodney; stepmother, Hazel Taylor of Gallipolis; and sister, Carolyn Joyce Adkins of Bimble, Ky.
In addition to his p=nts, he was pt1!ceded in death by his
wn, Lance C. Taylor, and a brother, Roger Wayne Taylor.
The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Cf"meens
Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Ronnie Lemley officiating.
Interment will be in Ridgelawn Cemetery at Mercerville.
Friends may call at the funeral chapel Monday, 6 to 9 p.m .
Military services will be ·conducted at the graveside by the
Gallia County Veterans Service Organizations.

Pearl Ann Cunn

Report Parn•ent skips channels

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft has vetoed a complete
bill for the first time in his three years in office.
The legislation would have established an interstate compact
with Kentucky to prepare for the summer Olympic Games in
2012, had Cincinnati been chosen as the host city.
"It's kind of moot," Taft spokesman Joe Andrews said Friday
in explaining the veto. "Cincinnati did not get the nod fqr the
Olympics."
Taft has made 1everal other vetoes, but aU wef" line-item
vetoes of appropriations bills.
.
. The bill, written by Sen. Louis Blessing Jr., R- Cincinnati,
would have created an Ohio-Kentucky Olympic Coordination
Authority to oversee a local coordinating committee if Cincinnati were the host city for the Games.
The bill also required the authoriry to provide a guarantee of
as n:111~h as $,400 million as. insurance against a pet lo"' by the
Games. In addition, the state would have been required to
divert some tax revenue generated by the increased economic

Jeny Lee Taylor

RACINE - Lula Mae Circle, 85, Racine, died Saturday,
Dec. 8, 2001, in Dants Private Care Home in Pomeroy.
Born Feb. 18, 1916, in Muskingum County, she was the
daughter of the late Floyd and Gertrude Dixon Wilson. She
was a homemaker and a member of Carmel United Methodist
Church, where she held numerous church offices, and was a
volunteer with Meigs COunty senior citizens.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Homer M. Circle; two wns, Virgil Circle and Dale Circle; two grandchildren;
a sister, Opal Wilson; .two brothen, Virgil Wilson and Roy
Beechler; a stepgreat-gnndchild; and a son-in-law, Joe Sayf".
Surviving are thf"e daughters, Dorothy (Robert) Harden of
Racine, Donna (Doyle) Multi of Mansfield, and Dixie Sayre of
Racine; two sons, Harold (Rebecca) Circle of Long Bottom
and Carl (Dottie) Circle of Racine; a sister, Wilma Snyder of
Columbus; 14 grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren, and thf"e Sttpg"'at-gnndchildn:n; numerous
nieces and nephews..
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Carmel
United Methodist Church. The Rev. Dewayne Stutler will officiate and burial will be in Carmel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral home, Racine,
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.The body will be taken to
the church one hour prior to the funeral services.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church, c/o Rev. Dewayne Studer, 48411
Ohio 124, Racine, 45771.

CARROLLTON, Ky. (AP) - A car veered off Interstate 71
and overturned Sunday, killing an Ohio man and injuring his
wife, state police said.
.
Daniel Bickley, 58, of Lakeside-Marblehead, was a passenger
in the 1995 Ford van that crashed about 3:15 p.m. He was
ejected from the van and pronounced dead at the scene.
Police said Bickley's wife, Delores, 60,lost control of the van,
which went off the road into a ditch and overturned.
SIOn.
Delores Bickley was flown to University Hospital in
He also has been charged with theft in office, money laun- Louisville, she was in serious but stable condition Sunday night,
dering, tampering with evidence, obstructing justice and ot~er emergency room nurses said.
offenses.

. Taft vetoes Olylllpic bill

The Dally Sentinel • PIQe A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

lee

.....

~arming trend

"Now wr can turf\ our attention to
becoming ~ good neighbor," Rosenberg
said.
The jury verdict Sept. 9 ordered.
Buckeye Egg and its owner, Anton
Pohlmann, to pay the $19.7 million to
21 neighbon who blamed the company
for noxio~ odon, fly infestations and
water pollution. The company has 7.5
million chickens in barns in northwest
Licking County.
Damages wef" awarded to each plaintiff individually. The amounts range
from $671,210 to ll)ore than $1.2 mil·
lion. .
After the ~rdic~. Buckeye Egg attor-·
neys said the company was exploring its
options on liow to pay the plaintif!S,
including trYfng to f"ach a settlement or
61ing for bankruptcy.
"We are optimistic ·that this will allow
us to "avoid b:lnkruptcy," depending on

Pomeroy, Mldll1port, Ohio

'w1e,Jee1

Buckeye Egg reaches agreement

Ohio weather

I-

PageAl
•

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(740) 992-~785 - ... .

~uu-~u~liildsa~.;;;a

�_The_o~_·Y_~_noo_ei_ _ _ _~BytheBend

Page~

The Daily Sentinel

oen•t• 10. HOf

DEAR AB:hY: I am responding to
the letter from • A Reader in St. Louis,"
who W2S indifferent to sex until she
rediscovered a loving relationship with
her hwband and learned the true meaning of intimacy.
Her letter nude 111e wonder how many
women whose sex drive has diminished
or disappeared have husbands like mine,
who regan4 the ronuntic side of love-

111 Court St., ~.Ohio
7~·2158• flex: . .2117 .

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
A. ~h-. lAIN
MenlgJng Editor

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Cll8lllne Hoeflich
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making_as "sissy stuff," saying ureal men"

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· Mo•d.y, .,....._ 10, 2001

Cheap thrills in bedroom are poor substitute for intimacy

The Daily Sentinel

Chti!M W. Qoqy
Publ..,_

Page AS

ow,...,
'6

NATIONAL VIEWS

0

don't act that way.
My husband's inuge of a real nun is
any actor in a porno· flick. Unforrunately, I am partly to blame for his attitude. I
admit that we were both hooked on
porn films as a turn-on. When we had
sex, my husband expected me to writhe
in ecstasy, moan and utter expletives for
several minutes - just like · the porn
actresses did. Never was rhe word "love"
mentioned. It was as if it didn't belong in
this scenario.
Because my husband has no other bad
habits, doesn't cheat, and demonstrates
his love in everyday acts of kindness, I
went along with this play-acting for
many years. However, the arousal I once
felt from this contrived sex wore off for
me a long time ago. It hasn't for him,
though . He can't understand why I've
gone from being a hot tamale to a cold
fish.
When "Reader in St. Louis" wrote that

;.

man
RYAN'S VIEW

Harrison was a vital
part of the Fab Four
• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on Gtow•
Harrismz:
Gec;&gt;rge Harrison's death from brain c~ncer at age 58 is
another unwelcome reminder of mortality for many of those
who grew up as the Beatles transformed not just modernmusic but modern culrure. It's also a reminder of Harrison's
indispensable contribution to the incredible success of"The
Fab Four"- and his commendable ability to overcome the
ego-swelling excesses of rock-star idolatry....
Though he classified his music as secondary, and he
inevitably rates secondary status in the Beatles' pantheon
behind. the remarkable song-writing team of John Lennon
and Paul McCartney, Harrison captured an appreciative
audience.
He wrote and sang the Beatles' versions of the popular love
baUad "Something," the upbeat "Here Comes the Sun," the
haunting "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and other memorable tunes. "And unlike most rock musicians, Harrison produced a right-wing anthem of sorts in "Taxman," his musical
protest of Britain's then-near-confiscatory tax policies. That
Beides' song became one of the few rock tunes that decries
big government.

• North County Times, Escondido, _C alif,, on Mideast .
violence:
Irresponsible violence from both sides in the bradi-Pales~
tinian conflict is threatening to give Osama bin Laden exact·
ly what he wanted: a descent into warfare that threatens the
stability of the region and possibly the world. Seldom has it
been plainer that the law of an eye for an eye leaves both
sides blind.
Islamic terror organizations Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah and others bear a large part of the burden. After repeat·
edly resorting to suicide bombings to attack civilians, including women and babies, these terrorists undercut their tiresome claims to outrage when Israel responds by assassinating
their leaders.
But Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is no innocent
either. His attacks .u pon Palestinians have been disproportionate and ill-timed. Surely Sharon knows that his at;tions
are undercutting the U.S.-led war against· terrorism. And he
must know as well that his provocative attacks risk turning
the Central Asian campaign against the Taliban and ai-Qaida
into, again, what bin Laden wanted: a religious war....
The Middle East is entering a death spiral and the United
States is losing patience with both sides. It is in both sides'
interests that the violence stop. This is also a national security interest for the United States. ·
While the Palestinians are losing what little political support they have in Washington, Israel is facing the loss of support that took generations to achieve.

• The Philad•lphla Inquirer, on the Segway Human Thns·
porter:
Tamp down that urge to scream: I want one!!
Before going wild about the newly unveiled motor scooter called Segway Human Transporter (known previously
under the code names Ginger and IT), it's worthwhile to
raise some thoughtful questions:
·
Are pedestrians · iQing to risk being run down by yet
another contraption with wheels?
Should children be aUowed to drive them? If so, how will
their allowances cover the $3,000 price?
Does ·the world really need a machine that ma.kes Americans walk less? It's been said the new device from visionary
inventor Dean Kamen is a more important .invention than
panty hose. But will panty hose stretch enough to cover the
expanding thighs of Segway users? ...
After it becomes widely available in about a year, it's easy
to imagine the 65-pound Segway, which looks like a lawn
mower with big wheels, transforming the urban landscape.
Suddenly, so many trips that required transport in a twoton, gas-slurping, air-polluting, traffic-jamming vehicle
would be handled by a minivehicle using a battery costing
about 5 cents per day to run.
. Trips to the post office, movie theater, snack shop, hairdresser - even smaller work commutes - would all be
Segwayable. True, the new thingy goes only 12 mph, and you
probably wouldq't take one out in a rainstorm or blizzard.
But the benefits - no costly parking garages, no gridlock,
no fender benders - outweigh a few limitations.
Urb~n planners better get their Segway thinking caps on
fast.
Segways and pedestrians probably don't ·mix. Bike paths
will do for now, but start thinking Segway trails. And also
about Segway ~torage spaces. Helmet laws should probably
apply.
The whole SegWay thing could turn out to be a bust. But
in the meantime, don't inv.st in any new parking lots.

Practicality, not politics please
Markina was raised by the state of California.
Her social worker has six thick files
chronicling her childhood: her series of
foster homes, her many schools, her
interactions with governmental services,
her stays in juvenile haD.
When I met her, she was 16, angry,
and back in juvenile haD, this time for
assault.
"She should be in a residential mental
COWMNIST
health facility," Markina's probation officer told me. "But I don't know of a program that will take her, and I don't have constitutionality - it has been .about
time to do the research on what else practicality.
might be out there. I have headaches · Imagine a flooded basement. Instead
every day trying to figure out what to of searching for the source and patching
up the leaks, you -continue to bring in
do."
She candidly predicts that" Markina bigger buckets and more workers to bail
will someday seriously hurt someone. the rising water. You spend fantastic
·Then a judge is likely to send her to an amounts o f time an d money on the conadult prison. She'D serve the time, get sequences of the problem instead of on
out, hurt someone else, rerum to prison, its causes- which pretty much guaransetve more time and so on, until perhaps tees you'll be employing bailers ·and
buying bucke~ until the end of time.
she herself comes to a violent end.
· Thfs much is clear: All the punishment ,, It our go:il is 'to reduce juvenile crime,
California can heap on Markina won't we won't get ·very· far by slapping juve.shape her into a decent human being. niles with longer and harsher sentences.
The state already had that chance and We need to be p~tching up the holes in
these kids' lives before they're beyond
blew it.
I have all the Markinas of the world in patching.
I know you have heard this before.
mind while the California Supreme
People
have ·been saying it for decades.
Court hears arguments chaUenging the
constitutionality of Proposition 21, the Yet, the juvenile justice system still rarely
· get-tough-on-kids law that voters passed prevents children like Markina from
last year. Among many questionable pro- marching inexorably toward adult
visions, the law demands longer sen- prison. The system fails them in enough
tences for certain juvenile crimes and ways to fill a book.
The most glaring of these is mentalmakes it easier for prosecutors to try
health
care.
teen-agers as adults, thereby sending
It is the rare ~hild at juvenile haU who
more teen-agers to adult prisons.
I hope the Supreme Court finds the hasn't been sexually or physicaUy abused,
law illegal, as the state Court of Appeals usuaUy by a fawHy member. They have
did earlier this year. But my opposition been twisted by, trauma and hardened by
to Proposition 21 has never been about betrayal. Only consistent, vigilant care by

Joan
Ryan

doctors and professional counselors has
any chance of safte1,1ing their anger and
aggression.
But doctors and coun.&lt;elors are expen-

sive.

minimaUy trained and earn little mor¢ ,
than fast food cashiers. Many group·
homes are simply human warehouses; c
troublemakers are parked ther'e until:
they become adults, are deemed "reha-:
bililated," or run away.
-~
Probation officers and social worke~
know their clients need more than thi~.(
~.
but where can they send them?The fc:W:
beds in the psychiatric hospitals that are·
available to j:uvenile-haU kids are alwaYJ:
fuU. There's one ranch for San Francisco'•
boys and none for girls. There are toqfew psychiatrists under contract with the
county to provide reasonable outpatien~ .
services.
And we haven't even talked about the
help that the families need.
,
Imagine ifProposition 21 money were
spent instead on comprehensive mentalhealth care for kids in trouble. Maybe .
juvenile crime would drop, and we '
would have to scale back 011 all the new .
juvenile detention centers and prison~ '
that California keeps building. An&lt;;! "
maybe we would use those construction:
doUars to build more sch9ols.
,,
Isn't that a radical notion?

Angela Payne, left, and Denise Grimm were pledged to Xi
~emma Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority; In .c eremonies
held at the home of Linda Bates recently.

Church celebrates Chrisbnas
ALFRED -Alfred United Methodist Church held its annual
holiday dinner following church services on Dec. 2. Pastor Jane
Baettie gave grace before the carry-in dinner.
Attending were Sarah Caldwell, Thelma Hendenon, Vietor
Bahr, Russell Archer, David and Mary Jo Barringer, Richard, Florence and Tim Spencer, John Taylor and Bettie Bow, Uoyd and
Doris Dillinger, Derrick Bolin, Shelia, Dan Tiffany, and Kirk
Spencer.
NeUie Parker, Elsie Marie Sargent, Charlotte VanMeter, Janice
Weber, Melvin Tracy, SheUy England, Bill and Diane Calaway.
Mike and Debbie Murphy, Michael and Sharlene Carmean, WID
Poole, CuUen and Brendan Lind, Marlene Donovan, Robert,
Kadina, Rachel and Andy Brooks, Uoyd, Ruth and Heather
Brooks, Debbie, ·Kathryn and AUison Barber, Pat and Joe Mayhew,
Tom and Carolyn Taylor, Nina Robinson, Brian Taylor, Erin and
jackie Brooks, aU local, and Joyce St. Clair of Lancaster.

aoan Ryan is a columnist for the Sat~ •
Frandsco Chronicle. Send comments to her in.
care of this newspaper or send her e-mail at.
joanryan@s.fgate.com.)

Lest we forg•t
••
Nov. 11 is an important day.
Some caD it Remembrance Day; some
caDit Armistice Day orVeterans'Day. For.
me this year, it was a day when we were.
having a smaU dinner party. My wife sent
me out to get a few last-minute groceries, including liquor. r arrived at the
liquor store only to find that it was
closed. I checked the "hours of opera·rion" sign.

It said the ~tore opens at 11 a.m. _I
checked my watch. It said 1I a.m. I
grabbed the door and started shaking it.
Then I started yelling into the store for
somebody to open up. "Hey! Come on'
It's 11 o'clock! What's the problem?!"
Then I looked at my watch again and
noticed that not only was it 1I o'clock, but that it was also November 11 . And
then it hit me. I was spending the tw~
minutes of silence yelling at somebody to
open the liquor store. 1 looked around :
sheepishly to see if there were any wit- :
nesses. Just a lone taxi driver parked at :
the curb. The name of the cab company ·
was "Veteran's Taxi.~ That was not my
finest hour.
·
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "If your :
wife is having fun an.d you're not, you're:
still having way more fun than when:
you're having fun and she's not." - Red :
Green

(Red Green is the star cif "11~e Red Greeu .
Show/J a television series seet! it1 the US. ott :
PBS and ill Canada ott the CBC Netrvork./

Our Speolal page(e)

•for Children Onl:(
'

a

where too often the "counselors" are

Named to honor roll

VVho in his right mind would go skydiving?

Green

Abby

New pledges

Therapeutic hospitals and retreats safe; productive places that are far
removed from the violence .that has .
defined these children's lives - are espe-:
ciaUy expensive and are seen by many as:
luxurie• that bad kids
. don't deserve.
.
So we send kids to group homes,

NORTH · OF FORTY

Red

Dear

(16 y6Sl'tJ of~" oryou~6r)

Will be publlah&amp;f
Friday, Deoomber 21
In the .

.Daily Sentinel

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK

..

One hobby that I've never understood
is skydiving.
I believe everybody has a voice inside
that reUs them not to do dumb things. (If
you're married, yo.u have two of them.
And the loud one isn't even yours.) This
voice stops you from doing idiotic things
like stepping into oncoming traffic or
quitting your job to become a mime. Or
jumpihg out of an airplane.
· Skydiving is crazy. But they teD me that
COLUMNIST
if you get a bunch of guys to go with
you, it's not crazy, it's bonding. So I suggest you go skydiving only if you can get hot back then too - three gold chains,
a bunch of guys to go with you. But first, four chest hairs and five bucks worth of
you aU have to ask your wives if it's OK breath mints. So what if you could wa*
with them.lf the wives say "no," the guys up to her table and lay this on her, "Who
don't go. And if the wives say "yes," I'd say loves ya, baby?" Would you care if. they
were playing Dancing Queen? No,
their marriages are in serious trouble.
because "you bad," my friend. And she
Those were the ~ays
You and your wife pretty much see knows it. ~o forget about ABBA. You just
eye-to-eye. Or as close to eye-to-eye as have to ask yourself ... do you feel lucky,
married people get if they look at each Punk? And if th e ,answer is yes, make love
other. But her taste in music is becoming not .war."
Husband-speak
a problem. If she's not playing " Dancing ,
Communication
is great, but you have
Queen," it's either "Waterloo" or ucan
You Hear the Drums, Fernando?" She's to be aware that there are things you
worn but three ABBA's "Greatest Hits" should never say to your ~ife. Here are a
CDs and aU -of your patience. What you few examples:
• uThis is all your fault."
have to understand is that she's not just
• ''I think your sister's lost weight."
listening to music. She's reliving her life
• "What have you done to your hair?"
the way it was before she met yo_u. And if
• "Let's not do anything special on our
you could go back in time, you'd see her
the way she see~ herself- at a disco in a anniversary.' '
• "The company would never fire me."
rube top with three l'ounds of blue mas• "It seems like we've been marrie-ld
cara and a Harvey Wal)banger. She sure
forever."
looks hot. Of course, you looked pretty

cation is vital. Marri2ge counseling can
help you to achieve it. Please don'r wait.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 67-year-old
widow of two yean. I live alone in the
country, about a mile from a small twostoplight town. My problem is that a nice
gentleman who lives about seven hours
away has been coming to see me from
time to time, and he caDs me every day,
ADVICE
sometimes twice a day. He would like to
come to see me and stay at my house,
"sex isn't entertainment," that line reaDy since he lives so far away. I am reluctant
hit home. The truth is, I haye come to to let him because I don 't. know if it
this same realization, while my husband would be proper. I trust him, but I don't
has not. And, after 30 yean of marriage, want to do anything that would embarhe ptQbably never will .
rass my children and grandchildren.
In spite of aU the advice we hear about
What do you think? Should I let him
experimenting with sex in different ways stay at my house? - LONELY IN
to keep the excitement in a relationship, SOUTH CAROLINA
take it from one who's tried it all : Cheap
DEAR LONELY: By aU means aUow
thrills don't last forever and can even him to come and visit - it's the only
have a damaging effect if. there is no way the two of you wiD be able to decide
communication or intimacy between whether the relati.onship .has
furure.
Ioven. - BEEN THERE, DONE IT However, because there are no secrets in
ALL
a community as smaU as yours, invite one
DEAR BEEN THERE: It's time you of your grandchildren to "chaperone"
and your husband attempted a new kind during his visits. If the relationship
of sex thriU - a frank ant:\ honest con- becomes romantic, the two of you should
versation about what is and is not going arrange to take some trips together. The
on in your bedroom. If you haven't ver- tongues may stiU wag, but at least you 'U
balized your feelings to your spouse, you have a degree of privacy.
cannot blame him for continuing to do
Dear Abby ;, written by Pauline Phillips
what he still thinks is "thrilling" to both
of you. I agree with you that communi- and daughter Jeamre Phillips.

GALLIPOLIS -The foUowing students hav~ been named to

the honor roD at Ohio VaUey Christian School: First grade: Sarah
Absten, Corey Barlow, Jordyn Benson, Joshua Blevins, Richard ·
Bowman, Chance Burleson, Meg:;.n Cochran, Madison Crank,
Brady Curry, Caleb Curry, Alexander Haddad, Oliver Lentz, Elise
Long, Riley Nibert, Crai~Terre-Blanch, aU A's.
Second grade: Bryce. Amos, Jennifer Blevins, Katharine Blod. gett, Peter Carman, Michael Fahmy, Alex Gagucas, Paul Miller,
Micaela Owens, Kimberly SaUee, Sarah Beth Sydnor, Ben Tillis,
Samantha WestfaU, aU A's; Bransen Barr, Kayla Brumfield, Chase
CaldweU, Joseph Jarvis, Sama11tha McClure, Erin MitcheU, Tori
Vanfossen, Andrew Voss, William Workman, B.
Third grade: Zachary Barlow,Joshua Curry, Tyler Eastman, Allie
Hamilton, Alexis Henry, Daniel Irwin, Eticia Irwin, Kathleen
Long, Lindsay Pennington, Kyle Scott, Divya Shenoy; Valerie
Terre-Blanche, aU A's; Sarah Clary, Olivia Kostival.
Fourth grade: Hali Burleson, Rebecca Evans, Cameron Lentz,
Heather Mahan, LindSey Miller, Natalie Stone, Melissa Srump,
Julie Tillis, AU A's; Amanda Allen, Joseph Beaver, Brooke Bowie,
Ashley Coughenour, Chelsi Kearns, Jonathan VanMeter.
Fifth grade:Annee Carman, Grant Foster, Quinton Nibert,Jastnine Owens, All A's; Joseph Absten, Jasmine Gibeaut, Alex
Pasquale, Henry Patrick, Koby Queen, Cara Sandell, Kyle
Scouten, Alex Trent, Andrea VanMeter, Tara Workman.
Sixth grade: Jonathan Beaver, RicheUe Blankenship, Lindsay
Carr, Zachary Carr,Vaneetha Christopher, Matthew Christopher,
'JYler Kearns, Heather Moran, Nicholas Stevens, Laurel Stone,
Brooke Taylor, Heather Wagoer, Christopher Williams, aU A's;
Sarah Clarke, Ashley MitcheU, Megan Sheets.
Seventh grade: :E}randon Coughenour, Kalee Edmonds, Julie
Hussell, Stephanie Jarvis, Drew Scouten, aU A's; Jade Gibeaut,
Megan Mahan, Garrison Salisbury, Crystal Thomas, B.
Eighth grade: Sara Beckley. Vanessa Burris, Jacob Eldridge,
Joseph Esmaeili, Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Cory Ketley, Keith Peck,
Zachary Weber, aU A's; Kelli Irwin.
Ninth grade: Aimee Agustin, HaUie Carter, Kaleb Eldridge,
Sarah Eldridge, sarah Smith, Elizabeth Stevens, Chris TerreBlanche, aU A's; Annie Carter, Kerry Carter, B.
Tenth grade: Dianna Jarvis, Lindsey Wheeler, Alyssa Zirille, AU
A's; Brody Blankenship, Hannah Burleson, Joshua Jarvis.
Eleventh grade:Jeremy Evans, Kelsey Salisbury, Christina Taylor,
ADA's.
Twelfth grade: Amit Agrawal, Andrew Blankenship, Demara
Brown, Sara Henry, Gabe Jenkins, Michael Jenks, Ginny Miller,
Chad Mourning, Rachel Tucker, aU A's; Stephanie Buffington,
Elizabeth Rice, Cody Smith.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar Is
published as a "" s•rvlce to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting• and special even... The celendar Ia
not deslgn_ad to promot• sa lea
or lund·ralserl ol any type.
Items are printed only as
spsce perml.. end cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

port Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Library with Jeanne Bowen as ·
hostess. Martha Hoover to
review "The Tontine,' by Thomas
B. Costaln.

secret sister are asked to bring a

POMEROY - Joe Brockman,
Title Ill attorney, will be at the
Senior CH!zens Center Tuesday
to answer legal questions for
seniors regarding living wills,
power of attorney, and estate
POMEROY - Rocksprings .planning.
Junior Gardeners, Monday at
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Bloodmobile, 1
6:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church. For
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- to 6 p.m. Senior Citizens Center.
more Information call Valerie
Nottingham. 985-3383

$5 gift to exchange. Kathryn
Hart and Julie Campbell will present the program and Ruth
Simpson and Lillian Hayman will
serve refreshments.

MONDAY
RACINE - Bethany Dorcas
TUESDAY
Sonshlne Circle December
RACINE - Racine Board of
meeting Monday, 7 p.m., at
church. Members to bring secret Public Affairs, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
sister gifts. Those without a the Racine Municipal Building.

THE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT OF
THE
MEIGS
METROPOLITAN
HOUSING AUTHORITY HAS BEEN
COMPLETED. THE REPORT IS
AVAILABLE AT THE OFFICE OF THE
MEIGS HOUSING AUTHORITY AT 117
EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE, POMEROY,
OHIO DURING. BUSINESS HOURS OF
9: 00 a.m. THRU 5:00 p.m., MONDAY
. ; THRU FRIDAY.

...... •

JEAN TRUSSELL
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
MMHA

The

'

Joint Implant Center
Specializing in total
hlp and knee replacement

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total joint
replacement, we offer office hours at 3554 U.S. Route
60 E Barboursville, WV.

Our next clinic date Is Friday, December 21.
Call {614) 461·8174 for an appointment.

~~~~
Grant Medical Center
r r11·
OhioHealth

Actual Size

Tessa Paige WID
Merl}' Christmas!

Mommy&amp;.. Daddy

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�,,

Alfterica at War

The Daily Sentinel

Toledo-based planes answered
TOLEDO (AP) Ohio Air
National Guard plan~ l)ased at Toledo Express Airport were the first
outside lhe ~t Coast to answer lhe
Air Force's call for hdp during lhe
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, military
officials said.
Had a hijacked plane lhat crashed
in Somenet County, Pa., continued
~tward on lhat day, or had terrorists taken over another aircraft in
Mid~tern air space, it would have
been the responsibility of the Guard's
!80th Fighter Wing to shoot down

lhat plane.
"They had lhe fuel. They had guns.
Thafs what was needed," ,-,tired Lt.
Col. Alan Scott, who has been analyzing lhe attacks for the Air Force,
told The Blade for a story Sunday.
"It (the fighter wing) just had a
phenomenal response on Sept. II ;·
said Col. Robert Marr of the North
East Air Defense Sector in Rome,
N.Y., the man responsible for coordinating air defense ·strategy in
response to the attacks.
After the fint of two planes taken

over by terrorists cruhed into lhe
World Trade Center, Marr ordered
jeu from bases in MassachusetU and
Virginia to head toward New York
City and w..,hington respectively.
Those onkrs came too late to P'""vent a second plane from crashing
into the trade center and another
hijacked plane from hitting the Pentagon.

When a fourth plane deviated
from its ~tward flight path and circled counterclockwise around the
western Cleveland suburbs, the

a

.

'

''

'

.

'

.' .

WAmNG - Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force
Gen. Richard Myers rela~es In the Green Room at CBS's
studio In Washington, before being Interviewed on 'Face
the Nation'. Myers said Sunday that the fighting around
Tora Bora, Afghanistan, has been fierce with surrounded bin
Laden ai-Qalda operatives "fighting for their lives' . (AP
Photo/CBS, Karin Cooper)

Rome command center began calling ~ acrou the nation for help.
That included a phone call to Toledo, which sent jets into the air heading eastward at 10:17 a.m., 16 minutes afkr the command center began
making iu calls.
"They basically just took aircraft
.that we,-, just being set up for training missions and launched out to
help defend the ski~ over North
America, wherever they could;: Marr
said. "The response was .very, very,
very quick."

2. The pilot receives the
inlolmation and drops the
bomb, which 'sees' the laser
and strikes the target. ·

2. The pilot receives the data
and the bomb Is program·
med with the coordinates. It ·
strikes the target.
AdvantagH; Bomb Isn't
obscoold by dust or smoke.'
Flaws: Wrong coordinates
will direct bomb oil target.

Advantages: Pilots don't look
lor targets, reducing exposure
to enemy fire. Bombs follow a
moving target.
Fllwa: Bomb ooulil miss Ha
cloud of dU$ or smoke ollew'es
target lrom laser beam.

SOURCES: SplcJIIII'ot&lt;ol: A Guido Tour of U.S. Anny /lp«iBJ Forr:ao;
ted Press •
....

!
r

'

day mis~rable, alltlje better,"'
she said.
.·
Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge · said the
closeness tHis year of Christmas and Hanukkah to Eid alFitr, the joyous three-day
.feast that ends the holy
month of Ramadan, could
be tempting to terrorists
who have a history of striking during religious obser-

vances.
"We do know that the
next several weeks, which
bring the final weeks of
Ramadan and important
religious observations in
other faiths, have been times
when terrorists have planned
attacks in the past," he said.
Eid al-Fitr, fixed according
to the sighting of the new
moon and varying from

AI'

I

Slain CIA officer being.
buried at Arlington "
National Cemete•y
WASHINGTON (AP) He was a covert warrior who
fell in battle, P.e only American lo die at the hands ·o f the
nation's
enem1es
m
Afghanistan.
CIA
officer
Johnny
Micheal "Mike" Spann was
being buried at Arlington
National Cemetery on Monday with full honors from the
Marin~ Corps, where he was
a captain of artillery before
joining the intelligence service 2 1/2 years ago.
Spann, a paramilitary officer with the CIA's Special
Activities Division, was killed
at the Taliban prison uprising
at Mazar-e-Sharif on Nov.
25.
Rioting prisoners shot and
killed him as . the uprising
began. He had been interviewingTaliban and al-Qaida
fighters, including American
John Walker, captured after
their surrender in the nearby
city of Kunduz, a former
stronghold for the Islamic
fundamentalists.
Director Ge9rge J. Tenet
and other senior CIA officials

It's unclear what role Toledo's jeu
played before lhey were joined by Air
National Guard jeu from Syracuse at
10:44 a.m. The fourth plane cnshed
into a western Pennsylvania hillside
between 10:02 and 10:10 a.m.
Toledo Air Guard officials declined
to talk to the newspaper about what
happened on Sept. ll, even in general terms permitted by the military.

country to country, fa.lls
around mid-December this
Hanukkah , which
year.
began Sunday evening, runs
through Dec. 17.
Ridge's warning stemmed
from multiple, nonspecific
threats for this period, but he
made it clear that the ·calendar figured high in the government's concerns.
He cited the first World
Trade Center attack in 1993,
which fell during Ramadan,
and a foiled series of attacks
planned around New Year's
Day 2000, timed both for
Ramadan and millennia! celebrations. In recent years,
Eid al-Fitr has been marked
by violence in Indonesia in
1999, and in Bahrain, Egypt
and Israel in 1996.

•WASHINGTON (AP) For the first time in 45 years,
thousands of fifth-graders
from Rorida will not board
chartered trains for their
annual sighueeing trip to the
·
nation's capital.
The visit this year is off,
more fallout from the terrorist attacks. All ovef the country, school officials are canceling long-distance field
trips or venturing closer to
home. Parents are jumpy, too,
. h
h ld
about sen di· ng t eir c i ren
too far away.
"We just didn't feel that it
. was appropriate at this time
to chance it," said Neal Trafford, principal of Manatee
Elementary School in Lake
....
, h , Fla.
wort
In New York City, officials
were worried that school
buses carrying students .to
the Bronx Zoo might be
delayed and unavailable to
take other students home
fro11.1 school m an emergency. The · trips were
scrubbed.
Many teachers planning to
bring their classes to the

nation's capital say anthrax
scares or other incidents
could close museums, manuments and congressional
offices, leaving the visitors
with little to do while in
town.
ParenU have asked school
boards to cancel trips beyond
county or state lines, or travel that requires an overnight
stay. During a recent school
board meeting in Saratoga
S ·
Ny
ked
pnngs, . ., parents as
how many bridges a bus
woul&lt;! cross to reach Boston.
But in Charlotte-Meeklenburg, N.C., and other districts have eased their trip
policies since Sept. 11, when
even w.alking field trips were
canceled, but limits remain
on children's time away from
school.
"We are still much more
cautious," said Charlotte
schools spokeswoman Norot
Carr. "We have certainly cut
·back on the number of field:
trips for · elementary anji
middle school, and the earl¥
years of high school."
'

Page 81
MondiJ. Dece111her 10.1001

MONfio\Y's

HIGHLIGHTS

Marauders win Meigs Invitational
BY PAUL U. Pouml
OVP CORRESPOND!'NT

NCAAMan'aB I II ..
Slnlly'a~·

lora 75, CaisUJ fl5
La,Ui, Md. m. a Pelar'a 59
Mah 01, Saaad Haart 61
Martlll 00, Aider 00
Gea\lla 96, Georgia Ted182
I oo • i 1&amp;1 alayatE 84, Bir1ri11t
~72
~ 79, Debtit 54

s. CanJhi Sl89, CCllllll8l CanJhi

61
Draka 85, trdtvla Sl 71
. this Sl 72, Cert t.td Q31163
I Sl 92, lli:hJIB Sl38
Ole Sl63. tnd.-PI.w.~ 70
Saii Lcllis 63, ClerM!r 49
Cal Ptity-SlD 75, E. Wasli gtcu
70
Sl Mlly's, Cal. 95, uc Sins Quz
39

Mill"""

NBA
&amp;nlly'aO...
Phoerix 91, TO!Irtt 90
Debtit 105, Houslcn 77
5acran tEll ttl 95, Miami 88
LA~ 00,

.

Cl'tartala 78
NFL

l Slnlly'a 0...
DelaS 20, N.Y. Girnts 13
New Oltears 28, Attanla 10
BlAIIo25, Camh 24
Gn!en Bay 17, ()1cago 7
Sl Lcllis 27, San Fnn:isOO 14
HIM En.-.ud 27, Cle'ia id 16
PI~ ia 24, San Diego 14
Tllf11lll Bay 15, Debtit 12
....,_.ulle14, Clnclnnatl10
fvlin ~ 42, Teu mae 24
Waslh~) 120, Artzona 10
f'llllbiiV118, N,Y. ..... 7
Clllldlrtd 28, Klrtsas City 28
ClerM!r 20, Seide 7

Brunell, Jags
eel~ Bengals
CIN&lt;;::I:NNATf ' (AP) ."Mark Brunell threw two
touchdown passes, including
an 11-yarder to Keenan
McCardell in the fourth quarter, to lift Jacksonville over
Cincinnati, 14-10.
The Bengals (4-8) matched
their franchise record with
eight sacks - rookie end
Justin Smith had three - but
couldn't stop Brunell when it
mattered. The loss extended
the Bengals' streak to 11 years
without a winning record.
Brunell, hobbled ·for more
than a month by pulled muscles in ·his. right thigh, also
threw a 17 -yard pass to Jimmy
Smith in the first quarter.
Smith liad nine catches for
119 yards for the Jaguars (48).

Miami sits at
AP No.I spot
CONCERNS - C.J. Aldrich talks to students from California
and Utah on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washing·
ton. School officials nationwide have e~pressed concern in
long distance field trips, including Visits to the monuments
in the nation's capital, following the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. (M' Photo/Terry Ashe)

The Daily Sentinel

NFL ~ek 13, Page BJ
College Hoops, Page B4
Irish eyes smile on 0' Le11ry, Page B4

gen.

. planned to attend Spann's
burial, along with many of
Spann 's colleagues in the
Directorate of Operations,.
the clandestine· service. The
agency was allowing covert
officers - who try to keep
their identities secret - to"
decide wheth.e r to attend.
The CIA will hold a pri~
vat~ service for him Tuesday;,
spokesman Mark Mansfield
said. He described employees
as saddened but resolute i"
the agency's counterterrorism effort.
"The importance of the
mission is what keeps people
energized and focuseal
~"
Mansfield said.
The length of Spann's m itary service did not qualifY
him for burial at Arlington.
At his family's request, Prelident Bush signed a waiver
allowing him to be buried
there, a White House
spokesman said. Of the
260,000 people buried ·at
Arlington, only a few hundred were buried there ~fter
receiving a waiver.

Inside:

By then, President Bush had issued
an order to shoot down the fourtli
plane before it hit any potenti.al tar-

After attacks, schools
cancel, restrict field trips

Terrorism's datebook: nming attacks
for maximum emotional impad
·
WASHINGTON (AP) The warning from the White
House to be on high alert
this holiday season recognizes a tactic use!I by terrorists in the mountains of Peru,
the back alleys of Belfast, the
Middle East and Oklahoma
City: Time attacks for maximum emotional impact.
Often that means an
anniversary date or holiday.
Whether it's casting a pall
over Christmas or forcing
the public to remember an
event that drove the terrorist
to violence, datebook terrorism is all about proving who
controls the agenda, said Joan
Deppa, a Syracuse University
communications professor.
"They're saying, 'I've got
your attention, and by the
way•. if I can make your holi-

MllldiJ. Dan•hw 10. 2001

quickly on Sept. .11

Troops likely to be in
Afghanistan · a long time
WASHINGTON (AP) government that can guarU.S. soldiers probably will antee that, in the future, no
he in Afghanistan for a long terrorist will once again find
time, despite the Taliban's sanctuary or safe harbor in
collapse and opposition Afghanistan," Cheney said
forces surrounding an al- on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Qaida hide-out, military
That goal, he said, could
officials say.
take ••yean of involvement"
More American forces and would rely &lt;in aid agencould be sent to Afghanistan cies and perhaps U.N.
to help in the hunt for peacekeepers over the short
Osama bin Laden, other al- term.
Qaida leaders and officials of
U.S. troops are unlikely to
the disintegrating Tali ban.
remain in Afghanistan to
"We may send in some," provide secu~ity for food
Depury Defense Secretary and other humanitarian aid
Paul Wolfowitz said Sunday. distribution, added Air Force
"The most important thing. Gen. Richard Myers, chairfor the American people to mali of the Joint ChiefS of
understand is our objectives Staff.
- remain very largely to be
"This global · war on terdone in the future. Enemies rorism is going to require
that are half-defeated can ·be military forces for some time
very dangerous and they can to come, perhaps, and one
take a long time to clear thing we don't want to do is
out."
·leave large legacy force (of
U.S. forces would not anti-U.S.
fighters)
in
occupy Afghanistan, but Afghanistan," Myers said,
would hunt down top T.alMilitary officials believe
iban and al- Qaida leaders, Osama bin Laden probably
continue humanitarian aid is in the Tora Bora area, a
efforu and help support a complex of caves and 'tunpost-Tali ban government, nels in mountainous eastern
the officials said on Sunday Afghanistan.
television news shows.
U.S. speci.al forces troops
"We're not eager to have with the anti-Tali ban forces
the United States come in there "are trying to get tlleir
and become an· occupying eyes onto some of these tarpower in Afghanistan. That's gets" to help with airstrikes
not our purpose,"Vice Pres- and ~id the . opposition,
ident Dick Cheney S.id.
Myers said. The fighting in
"We want to see to it that the area is fierce, said Myers.
what is left behind gives the
"The al-Qaida forces that
Afghan people the opportu- . .. in some respects are
nity to develop a strong rep- trapped up lhere are fighting
resentative government, a for their lives," Myers said.

Page A&amp;

NEW YORK (AP) Miami is No. 1 again in the
AP media poll, but there's a
new No.2 for the fourth consecutive week: Oregon.
The Ducks (10-1) rose to
No. 2 in The Associated Press
'final regular-season poll,
ahead of No, 3 Colorado (102),No.4 Nebra&amp;ka (11-1) and
No. 5 Florida (9-2) .
Tenq~ssee was second last
week, but tumbled to No. 8
after a 31-20 loss to LSU in
the Southeastern Conference
title game.
In the final Bowl Championship Series standings,
Miami was first and Nebraska ·
second, setting up a Hurricanes-Huskers national title
game in the Rose Bowl on
Jan. 3 and creating a chance
for split champions.

ROCK SPR1NGS - The Meigs
Marauders opened their season with
wins in all four of their duals to capture the first place team trophy at the
Meigs Invitational wrestling tourna·
. ment Saturday
Meigs posted wins of 60-18 over
Wahama and . Trimble, 60-12 over
Zane Thee, and 54-30 over lhe River
Valley Raiders,
•
Winning first-place, individual
medals for lhe Marauders were Matt

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) Nebraska quarterback Eric
Crouch was awarded the
Heisman Trophy, joining
Johnny Rodgers (1972) and
Mike Rozier ('83) as the
Cornhuskers' only Heisman
winners.

medals for the Raiders· were Zack
Davis at 119, Riley Rice at 130,Joey
Graham at 189, and John Manley at
215.
Receiving second place med.als
were jessie Levacy at I 03, Morgan
Anderson at I I 2, Robert Hersman at
135, and B. J. Browning at 140.
The Wahama White Falcons tied
Trimble for third place, both posting
1-2-1 records. Wahama heat Zane
Trace soundly and tied Trimble 3636.
Winning first place individual

medals for the White Falcons were
Perry Ellis at 103, Jeshua Branch at
125, and Scott Johnson at 275, who
came in second place in the voting for
the tournament's Most Valuable
Wrestler trophy.
, Placing second for Wahama were
johnny Barton at 145 and Bradford
clark at 160.
Meigs and River Valley will travel to
Vincent to wrestle in the Warren Invitational next Saturday,

Troy Brown key
in Browns' loss
to Patriots, 27-16
Former Herd
star returns
puntforTD
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) Troy Brown returned a punt
85 yards for a touchdown,
caught seven
passes and still
wasn't satisfied
after New England's latest victory.
Neither were his teammates. A 27~16 victory over
the Cleveland Browns on
Sunday and lhe Patriou' surprising 8-5 record puts them TWNTEP - Patriots WR
in good shape for a playoff Terry Glenn catches a pass
berth - but it's not good Sunday, which was just his
second game of. the seaenough for them to let up.
QO.AHEAD SCORE - Patriots wide receiver Troy Brown (BO) celebrates with teammate Antwan
"Everybody would say I son. (AP)
Harris after returning a punt 85 yarqs for a touchdown against the Browns Sunday. (AP)
had a great ·game today. I
thought it was just good;' field goals, Tebucky Jones, TerIt seems like a smooth path decisions and lost another Davis became coach . Still, the
Brown · said. "I saw a lot ·of rell Buckley and Anthony
loss seriously hurts their postto
their first playoff berth in game by three points.
things I could have done bet- Pleasant intercepted passes
On Sunday, the team that season chances.
ter and I think that's what and the defense held Cleve- three years, but the Pattiots
"You can't go in and watch
wa5 third in turnover ratio in
land without an offensive are cautious.
keeps ·me going."
film
and say we had 50 good
"We're definitely in the dri- the NFL committed four
Wh'ile quarterback Tom touchdown
Brady has been the poster boy ' "Every ~me we win makes ver's seat as far as being in the turnovers while forcing just plays and I 0 to 15 really rotten, lousy plays," Davis said.
for the PatriOts' resur!lence, he · the next one bigger," Patriots playoffs," said Brown, the two.
"You can't turn the ball over
was merely steady Sunday as coach Bill Belichick said.
!98th player drafted in 1993,
"We're not a good enough
and
you can't give up punt
some of his teammates made
New England, 7-2 in its last "but "Buffalo bothers me a team to turn the ball over,"
returns for touchdowns."
key plays.
nine games, plays at Buffalo lot. They've lost some dose quarterback Tim Couch said.
Brown's touchdown put the
Antowain Smith ran for (2-10) next Sunday then faces games."
They are better than. the Patriots ahead to stay, 17 - I0
touchdowns of 1 and 5 yards, Miami at home before finishSo have the Browns (6-6), Browns who went 5-27 the
Adam Vinatieti kicked two ing at Carolina (1-12).
Please - Browns, B:S
who dropped two overtime last two seasons before Butch

NFL

Walsh upsets Redwomen Ohio State stays
By MARK WIWAMI

RIO GRANDE SID
NORTH CANTON -Walsh University
(3-5, 3-2 AM C) upset NAIA Division II No.
14 Rio Grande (10-4, 4-1
AMC)
in
American
Mideast Conference action
at Walsh University's P.E .
Center on Saturday afternoon.
The loss was the first in AMC play for the
Redwomen. The win was the third straight
for the Lady Cavaliers, who started the season,0-5.
,
Rio Grande jumped out to a 9~2 lead. The
lead was short-lived as the Lady Cavaliers
used fine guard play to take a 38-31 lead to
halftime. Emily Mongillo scored 12 of her
game-high 19 ·points in the first half. The
game was tied three times in the first half,
with Walsh taking the lead for good at 30-28
on a jumper by Kerri Tolvay.
..
Walsh built the lead to as many ~· 14 poinu
in the second half (56-42), before Rio clawed
l
back into the game at 63-59.

NAIA

Senior Renee Turley led
Rio in scoring with 16
points, she also pulled down
nine rebounds. Freshman
Alkia Fountain added 12
poirits (all in the second halt)
and seven boards, while fellow rookie Tiffany Johnson
· posted 10 points (eight in the
first halt) off the bench.
Turley
' Mongillo
and
Kerri
Andrews led Walsh in scoring with 19 points each,Jana Smith added I 1
points off the bench, hitting 5-of-6 from the
field and Ashley Norman chipped in 10
points and hauled in seven rebounds.
Mongillo was the top rebounder for the Lady
Cavaliers with eight.
Rio had a terrible shooting game, connecting on 22-of-6 7 shots (33 percent). The
Redwomen were a perfect I 5-of-15 from the
free throw line.
It was the second time in three years that
Walsh had up set the Redwomen in Canton. ·

Red men,topple Walsh
Bv

MARK WIWAMI
RIO GRANDE SID

Crouch wins
Helsman Trophy

Krawczyn at the I 12 pound weight
class, John Krawczyn at 135, Matt
O'Brien at 145, Matt Mullins at I 52,
Nick Me Glaughlin at 160,who was
named Most V.aluable Wrestler for the
tournament, and Joe Rupe at 171.
Coming in second for Meigs were
Zack Davis at 189 and Bruce Adkins
at 275.
The River Valley Raiders came in
second place by posting wins of 48-30
over Wahama, 66-12 over Zane Trace
and Trimble.
Capturing first-place individual

NORTH CANTON
The University of Rio
Grande (5-6, 3-0 AMC)
moved its winning streak to
three games as they upset
NAIA Division II Walsh (7-2,
4-1 AMC) on Saturday afternoon, 79-7 5.
The loss for Walsh, snapped
a seven-game winning streak.
Rio led 35-30 at halftime as
junior Jerry Barlow (Otway,

"NAIA
OH) scored 17 of his game
high 28 points in the first
half.The second half saw nine
ties and four lead changes.
Rio took the lead for good
with 43 seconds to play on a
putback by Barlow. Rio
extended its lead to four
points on two free throws by
sophomore Cain Vandall at
76-72 with 32 seconds to

play.
J. R. Oglettee pulled Walsh
to within a point at 76-75
with an off-balance threep,oint jumper with 16 seconds left. After Ben Holt
fouled, Barlow split two free
throws and gave Rio a 77-75
advantage with 12 seconds to
play. Walsh missed a golden
opportunity to tie the game
1
when Jason Hamilton missed

PleeH He Rldmen. 83

undefeated, 83-70

COLUMBUS (AP) - As
expected it was a loss, but
Indiana-Purdue-Indianapolis
coach

NCAA ~~~ter

also
looked at it as a mammoth
step for his program.
Bohan Savovic scored a
career-high 25 points including nine in an 11-1
second-half run - as Ohio
State remained unbeaten
with an 83-70 victory over
IUPUI on Sunday night.
It was the first time th at
IUPUI had played a Big Ten
team.
"I can imagine the selling
Jitn had to do with his
team," Hunter said, putting
himself in the shoes of Ohio
State coach Jim O 'Brien,
... He was probably trying to
say, 'Hey, these guys are a
pretty good basketball team.'
That's probably a tough sell.
I'll bet half the kid&lt; on his
roster have no idea where
our school is located,"
Hunter said he hoped the
14,382 in attendance came
away with new respect fo~
IUPUI.
The matter of respect
worked both ways. Hunter
couldn't pronounce Savovic's
name - he called him "No.
21."
Savovic hit 10-of-13 shots
from the field including 4-

Will Dudley (43) scores
against Indiana Purdue·lndl·
anapolis' Charles Price Sunday. (AP)
of-7 3-pointers and also had
five

assists . His

previous

career best was 23 points last
March against Penn State.
O'Brien said that Savovic's
consistency sets him apart.
"Boban, more than anyone, has been playing exceptionally well,''I O'Brien said..
"He seems to have his hands
in on everything. He's shoot-

ing well, he passes, rebounds

Please see OSU, B:S

�~

B2 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Dec. 10, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio .

tster

mribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

~.

Dec. tO, 2001

and

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
.Else Canl

=:r: a
1

MUTING '

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,. ........, • bad , •
cMr II ' I' r a...ct on
- . oolor, roliglon, MK

the 888~88 OIGG. .

Muon/Gallla
aroo.
(740)742·2511, 1-800-837· Need Flnanclol Help? Rill&lt; tooiilllol-.or8217.
-_...,ay.-nofur· or-ko..,..,.o1o
-·our -lnatltutlon - . .;;...,;.;;,_
RIIPCIIIIiblli blbylilt8r for 2 providea you with aula· ,....... , ... a
children I - 6 &amp; 10) In my tanoo &amp; lnfonnotlon, Free
11110 kl•-•.
home, must bolrom Raclno conoultalion, call now at
..... (740)849-24!5S.
877-304-3011 .
1bll iLDA ' 1 11 . . noll
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
TURNED DOWN ON
plasma donora, earn $50 to SOCIAL HCUIIITY
odvw-•wntolorroool
$80 per for 2 or 3
No FH u-. We Wlnl
,. ~.olwll~lowlo'".OUr
hours waokly. Call Sora·
I 1181582-3345
•• •
·~
Tec,7«l5928851.
.....,. . . ....._,
w~ From Homo. FrH
d ·.•lool oowd
...- . ol-In
...:::.:'~ I · - · •
+=•
~s:.-72113.
JloMEs
--•P"I..
2

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-7

lf.16
•

a.--

~

••.1wuAb

riO
I
.

.,-""'"'
r 'a'tonan..-·

I

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3

I

paired Small Engine Ae- Completely Retulbllhed. 2

pair Free Ptck·Up and De- stooy, 2 Full Balh. 3 Bed·
llvefy Avallablt. Over 20 rooms. Large Kitchen ,
years El&lt;perionce. Cal Mike LJUge Utility Room, LRI DR/
Faml~ Rm. New Carpel

(740)&gt;W&amp;-7604

throughout.

f/A &amp; AIC,

All of your home repairs, ad- $79,900. (740)&gt;W&amp;-9585 or
dltlons &amp; remodeling 24hr (740)448·2205 or 1740)446-~ · ••. -··
emergency

se,._,,

MniVf

::'(~)g~~~ 22yrs.
·
Georvoa Portable Sawmill

,.;uo.:~.

r ~ 1r

r

A!'llllvn.DINGs

or 1~

Indian Creel&lt; Ealalea, 3-8 2 BR Apt. Newly Remod- Double

Oven,

Avocado,

Electric
New

www.--••tt
NEW AND UHD FUR·

NIINCEII'DIIIIILEI We
lllltall, Free &amp;tlmatee, If
you doni Coil us, We both
l..ooMI (740)4488308, I·
::800-::.:29:::1:..-0098==·=--==NEW AND UHD ITEEL
Steel Boamo, Pipe Rebar
For Concntte, Angle, Chan-

~ ~ 1 :'• ~c:::1.

Walkways New
Gallon
55
Douma
Lkl &amp; Ring
S700 eac:h"LaL"-•Mel:
aiSDponMonday';'"T;;;.,
w-~---- &amp; F~- ·-~-Y
·-Y. - ' "
•:30pm. Cloled Thu~y.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
Amulnt
--m
lr-ughll
•-200
10 pounds-

w-

$25,900. Fumlahod. All lJtltltleo Paid. Burners, Worka Great,
&lt;18 Olive St. $4751 mo. $100. Will Deliver wHhln
l.'tt&lt;lllu JloMEoi
(740~
..... (740)2611-1332
~ " .. Want to Buy small 1arm or IIEAUnFUL
A•o\111'. For Sail: Recondltl(lnod
·~.....u;
• acreage In Maoon Counly
•·
suitable for my 101h'""""' MENTS AT IUDOET PHI- - · dryoora and ralrtg1987 14x?O, 3 br./2bth, home. Peecefut acenic rural CI!S AT -JACKSON U. era\orl, Thornpeorll Appl~ pooode eaay, quick, Fast
54995 . Will help with dollv· L"""lg.tton-· ~-•~ ~ TATES. 52 Westwood Drive anco. 3407 Jaclooon 'Aw- Dramatic Rtisulta. 100%
" "
~·-·- ~- f - $2117to $383. Walk to nue, (304)875-7388.
Natural, Or. Rocommeod8d. •
~Call Kavena, 740-385· accoptablo. Call 271). olio!&gt; I movloo. Can 740'Ask allout I'REI Sample"
·
385-91!27
446-2568 . Equal Houolng - . . , Clrpet, 202 Ciarlo (740)441·1982
. ·
t991 Mansion t4x70, 3
Qiportunlty.
· =4~·::~·/'r.:fn~ ' Army &amp; Hunlero Campu·
bedroom o•ctllenl condl·
Chrillty'a Family Uvlng, 9182. Froo Eo11matoo, Easy ftage Clothing, USA Flags.
lion, call Kavena, 1740)385·
33140 Uma Ad., Rut· flnancklg, 90 daya oamo as sa- Sarvlce In·
9948.
land, Ohio, 7.t0-742~7.COO. cuh. Vlul Muter card. atalatlon S9 a month 100
lloiHli
Aporbnlnt, IDno a n d - Drive- a · - .... alol.
......,_, at Sam Sornoo·
1994 18JC80 Motillo Home
FOR fbNr
rentala. COmmeoclal ...,..
vtlo'e MSG USA r.lloed boon Aero lot. With 24•32 Defronll IYiilable tor - · Now and Ulld Fum1tu011 aide Sandyville, ·wv Post
Itched Garage. (304)675- .
·~--~Stote Holidey Inn Ka- Office (304)-5855
7937
1/2 HouH, t Bedroom, ·-·~ .-..
nouga, Ohio. UNCI mattrHI
·
"~
.
Lower 4th, Gallipolis, $300 New apanment for rent, eett, drenera, cheats, Baby bed Cherry Wood
1999 18JC80 Fleetwood trail· per month. I740)44H8n Middleport, 1740)1192·5304 bedo, ooucheo, bunkbodo, Complete $75. COoco Play·
er home, 3 bedroom, 2 full or(140)256-1972
or7~7.
baby blda, entertainment pen $20. Coaco Reclining
baths, central air. llaat
"""'""· - · dlnettea. 1· Highchair, $40. (740)992·
pump, gas heat, Bx8 dock &amp;
Furnished EHicl~. All 74Q-.446.&lt;1782.
34521eavo meosage.
underpinning, Nke neW, very 15 Court Street. 2 Bed·
... "",
clean, vacant ready to """""· 1 1/2 baths, Kilchon UUII1itl Paid, Shored Bolh. Round Ook Tabla/ 18' Leaf, Computer for Sale: Printer
move, (740)742·2247.
wllh stove and refrigerator. $1251 monlh. 819 2nd Ave., 4 Cholro and Recliner, AvaMable. IBM 200 MHZ
Off Straet Partolng,, "Cii·OBO to (740)446-3945
(7••...,..........
Pentium 1 •~5 com~q

i

Grande, from
(740)246-5747

I

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2 bedroom, stove &amp; rerriger· Schools

and

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"tU,......_..._,..,

Downtown

bac:

•

-

4 p1oca badroom aune.
olze bad wllh mat·
, _ •~ '740)742·
8004 • ~. '
'
....... HUD Apprond .......... _
Record(740)441-1519
=.,~b,y..., Rangoa,
1 ~.oom. &amp;M n~l........ D....._tora, Up To 90 o.~
,......_ ~............ G~'""" -~ w •-• Now,.
Water Paid. $275 month ""'"'"-1 e plus dopoolt. No Poto, Maytag Appile..,.., F""""'
(740)448 1043 aller 8:00pm Clly Maytag, 7~7795.
, Room Eftlclency Aport·
SuH, ~ T.V.,
ment Shnd Beth Udlltlei .Dtr'lllle Sel, Enlilltalnment
Included, $200 por month. Center, H - . CoHN
(740)44&amp;-8877 or (740)256- and End T - , Dog Clge,
1972.
llobVBed.(740)&gt;W&amp;-9742

acre lola, west df Rio elect Stove, Refrigerator Ringe,

Or

•

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-oom

I

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'llr----.;..;-.,

1r

derplnnlng 1-888-928-3(28 nilhed, IICUrity dtpod ,.
m5 Skyllno 14K70, 3 11a1- qulrod, no polo, 740-892·
room. Good Concltlon. Call 2218.
u.~ 7 ••-•~•
~-. ~·~·
"i Bedroom Apartm.11e,
Buwai
1288 month. Dlpoltt &amp; FW-

s

r ..

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

1 &amp; 2 BR [conomlcll Gu lotobllo lol for In IIOIILI - · OWNERS
•Hoot, WID Hookup, NMr ~~. 5125 por mo.. h. . U.,m &amp; Coleman gu,
Holz•, $2GI5 1o 113711 Per (740)illi2-311M
oil &amp; " " ' - lnmonth, f'tul ~ . . _
eluding hi ofllclenoy '-1
and Oopolfl Roqulrod.
po.mp 1y11omo. w. cony a
(740)&gt;W&amp;-2857
comp1oto line ol Mobllo
18 Wkllo: Only l11111.00 Per
~&amp; •
•1eo.
Month, 8 . - Fhood 1 - 1 and 2 badroom apart·
lflxl'lf'HO!)J
IINNI!TT'I HEATING A
llale Will No And lJn. - . fumlltood and unfur· ~
GooiJii
• COOUNG (740~11

Comer of Park St. and Rlv- ator. new windows &amp; carpet, Area. 15951 month plus deervlew Dr. In Mlddlapcrt. $4,995, 74()..992·2167
posit .and Reference. No
U.
825 Third Ave, GaiNpolla,
Solllnj) thouaends below apPoll. (740)448-4928
st: Shepherd ml•. spayed OH 45631 ·
don, ilaul your 1oga to 1hi pralsal ' value (740)992· 281C60 3 Or 4 BdO&lt;&gt;m, On'
!.,..Ia, 2 blueeyea, orange
I"! •••
~
ly $345.00 Per Month tbr Small Houao •~ De7933
collar, (740)742·4163.
Help wanted caring lor tho m" ua1- 304-875-1~7 ·
8.Fixed lnter081 Rate, posH, 250 _ 8 ,;;;;'h. At
:
eklecly, Darot Group Home, Top To Bottom Cleaners, Olvoroe Foroos Sale! 3 Sad· 1-888-928-3428
1410 Lewis St. 1304)727·
~
~~
m
~~~
W
~~
proftlllonal,
and
afforda·
room'
2
Bath
on
private
lot.
Repo'e
save
Up
to
50%
3318
5
AUC'I10NAND ~·-· ~··~· 78......,.. ... 7 ~ .. -. ble homea o111cea 10011a1s call (740)446-3570.
I'BI F'u:AMARKET
5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· coriatnrctloliand..moo.l,g
.
1304)736·3315
2 bedroom&amp;, Mlddlepo~.
1,~--iiOiiliiiiiiiiiii.... 7am, call 740-992·5023.
c-lng. (740)892·1391 or Don t Cffln Land? We Dol Amazing First Time . Home $325/mo. plua dopooll.
·
H
(740)992 2979 ·
Land/ Home package&amp; B
G mni t (740)992-0175
Rick Pearson Auction Com- omeworQra
NHdtd
•
Available. Call (740)446· uyers.
ova e~
jlony, lull time auctioneer, 5835 Weekly Procelllng TAl-COUNTY CONSTRUC· 3583.
Backed loano. No credit 2 BR, Near Golli~ls. City
complete aucuon service. Mall. Eaayl No Expoof· TION.
New
.
needed.
&lt;304)755-5 566 Schoof Dlotrict, $350/
Ucented 166,0hlo &amp; Wnt ence
Naaded. C81l 1• Conttruction/Remodellng. Fo~ sale by owner, 299 Umlted Offer.
month. References Re·
VIrglnla, 304-n:l-5785 Or 800·852-8728 EKI. 2070. "Siding 'Roofing "Drywall Wnght St, Pomeroy, three End of lhe model
oal 1 qulred. (740)256-87o2
1
24Hrs.
E t '304 674.0 155l304 bedroom, H/2 baths, IWO
year
304-n:l-5447
~
c·
'·
· car oarage (740)992·3648 All 200! must go, to make 3 bedroom llouoe In Cillo~
McClure's Restaurant now 674-3855
.
'
. room ror 2002. Special klw tor ·--.. do~lt &amp; fl-~
"~"~
·~ all 3 IUWI
•···tlona, ••1
•- bl - II nancIng program avaIIa ble. month
' 'rent •••evenings
·~
;
10 Buv
""'ng
lt,llll or Truc:IC Drtver
COL full or For saIe by owner: Nl.io.- - - - - - · · part-time, pick up applica· paiHime Strialghufuck pre- level home on ~ acre near Only at Fleetwood Homes (614)50t-8339.
~baolute Top Dollar: U.S. ~:'w':.nlocatl~:~g:~g
ferred. {i40)e92·S488
~st!:~hs, :~~=: ru.:.:J~o~~;· Toll Free 1- 4 Roome &amp; Bath, $300f
Sliver, Gold Coins, Proof- 10:00am, Monday thru Sat- Will Haul Away, Clean Out, fBmlly room with fireplace,
month. 52 Olive Street.
seta,
Diamonds, Gold urday.
Clean Up or Move Almost sun room. New central heat· Umlted Or No Credit? Gov- (740)446-39-15
Rings,
U.S. Currency,- MEDICAL BILLING
Anything. Taking Consig~ lng &amp; ale system . One ml· emment Bank Anance Only auy· hom 8 from 51991mo
M.T.S.ColnShop, 1515ec· No E
.
N
menio.Calll740)446&gt;7804 nuteo11Aoute7,bu!SIIIIprl· At Oakwood In Barbours- F
.,.: 4%down sO
1
: : =ue· Gallipolis, 740- Tralnl~~~~ded~~~:
vate. (740)9S5-39B1
ville, YN304-?36-3409.
y:.r: at~;'% APR. For 11St•
.
Computer Required. Up to
House With furniture located Must sell 1999 16x80 Grand lngs 1·800-319·3323 ext.
l\tt·r~n''l'l
80,000/yr 1·800·998·7094 rto
Bl.!i~Nmi
443 Hedgewood Drive. Marquee moblle home, 2•8 1709.
o..,l It\ It I ..,
Ext 6001
·......_._ _ _ ,
Gallipolis. Part of Lots 1~ - wans, shlnHied roof, 3 bed·
vrrvouurm•
G. 11/2bat~
2 or 3 tledi'I·-r
'W'Iom
•-lllliiiioiiiiiiiiiiili-'
,,., 3bedrooms, room 2 fu I .baths $26000 El..,..•nt
.._
il11Q
I Offk:e:
lull ba"""'enl. carpet. Ap- OBO' (740)669 9972 '
houae, 299 Mulbony, Porn·
IJap WAN!m
"-"""lit Noedoclll
INDTICEI
praised al 34,50(1. Muat
'
·
·
eroy, no pele, (740)992·
.1
.
Full Part Time
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· ilave at loaal213 of apprais· New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. 5858.
SATTENTION$
.
Prov~·~~O:,rable lNG co. recommendo thai ed
value. Call (740)448· ~~,s~~:8150aa:;:6~:=ry HouH for Rent In C\tv Um·
Call Shane Vlllll~
I""' do bu~neos with people 3801 or (740J448-o80 3.
Ito. Ooposll end Refawlce.
~en From Home. Eam up
...
you know, and NOT to send
(7'")•••·1079
to $1500·$70001 month.
1-I00-375-817J
money through the mall until New/ Used Homes- lmmedl- New ~4x70, 3 bedroom, 2 ...... ._,..
Part Time/ Full Time.
or Fax Resume To:
you have Investigated the ate Possesion, No pay- bath. Onty $995 down &amp; New Haven- 3BA hOuse In
1·30+937-4865
offering.
mente until Feb. 2002. Pro· $189.62/month. Call Cheryl, ~wn. jul1 remodeled. new
(800)329-4498 for free
'""
ly
)446 740-385-7671
booklet.
Own a compulor'l Earn
quail
by phone. 1740
•
.
carpel. palnl, nlca yard and
3218
$450-$1500/mo. PT, 12000- Start Y~ur Business To·
New 2002 14 wide only one car detached garage.
·1oo WORKERS NEEDED $4500 tulttlme, call 1-800- day... Pnme Shopping Cen- Newly constructed, single $799 down &amp; S~SS.:Wmo, No Pets, would consider a
AIHmble crafts, wood
379-1152 or visit
ter Space Available AI Af- &amp;lory 1000 sq. foot home. Call Nikld, (740)385-7671 . Lease to own. $3?.5- per
items. Material provided. auccel8400.com
fordable Rate. Spring VaHey Located 10 minutes from
month, $350 Security DeTo~ wk.
Plaza, Cai1740-448-0~01 . Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes New 2002 14 wide. Only po&amp;it. (304)882·2241'
free Information pkg. 24 Hr. Per Diem LPN'S needed for
from Pleaaant Valley Hospl- 58 99 Down &amp; $155.38 par
1-801-428-4750
private duly homo care cao·
MONEY
tal, off SR
on a pnvalo month. Call Harold, 740· New Houae, 3 BR, 2 Baths
1. 1-112 acre 180
Anentlonl
eo. ~~lble ~~·apapln? ~
ro LoAN
lot. 3 bedroom, 385-7871 .
:~e~al~~lde~~'7.'~
. Eam 2nd. Income wlthoul ~:~n'"atp~~BIInt Vall.;
. 2·112 baths, big kitcheRn N~w Double Wide. $185 Pets. Call (740)446·2300
,
2nd job up to
Home Health Services, Look No Funhlr We provide wloak cablneta, OR, L Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2
$25.·$15.nu. Pt·Ft.
1011 VIand St Pt Plea~ant top OuaUIY Financing Aula· w/gaa log llreptace, central Batt'! . Free Delivery &amp; Set· Pilot Program, 1Rtntera
HIOQ.~16·7543
wv
25650 ' i (304)87S: tanco and Help. Slart 1 New air, laundry room. fronl up. 1-·928·3428 ·
Needed, 304-738-7205.
www.Money·Oraams.com 7400 Dr 1~0:48-0078 for Credit for New Yur. 1·866- porch &amp; 2"112 car garage.
u~·•
II
ion "~oE 322·38~
Immediate J)OIIIIIIon. Ap- Oakwood Homes of Bar·
LT.l\.IDil£ a.urv~M
pralltd 11 $125,500. Make bouravme_. WV. The only
FOR D....i..:- , . . . . - - - - - - - more n orma1 .I'V'V~
1
Lay·a-wayo.
""""''
.
AVONI All Aroall To Buy or
MoQrogor a Alooolelee offer. Call 1740)448·4514 Pace
w It"
"
Sail. Slll~oy Spears, 304· Salol Pooltlon. lmmt&lt;llltl Trying to.~Y. a homo and trom 8-epm, M·F, or (304)738·3409
,
br.
plul
don.
Looai·
14 70 2
875·1428.
Opening. Apply In Person. boni&lt;loll~f'lng you duo 1740)448-32&gt;18 after epm.
Wlnter-lprlng hlo
ed bohlnd Fox'l Pizza In
Bartender Polnl Ploaoanl =~~~\";Oc!~~~~~ ~bot!,: y~. ~!'f,..~: Ownor Mul1 Sail to Sottlo Taking ordtre now for dollv- Point PI-nt. '$435. por
Mooto Lodge. Apply al 1..,1, ,
rt
1 1 d Eotalo. 1 acn, m'l, Joolcoon ery In Fobcuary, Mon:h &amp; month which lnoludoo wat•
Lod-.
.mo 1g·~~ 11 • P''!!'~ 1 nllh Lako, 2 Bedroom, Kltohon, Ap~l.
end oowar. Call (304)875----:~·-:-:--=-::--:-:-:- Baloa:
lma f -•,... -nl w Balh, Living Room, F/0 Plnol Cllronoo
3423
• Cit! In Tho Plat Lane.
1 lcll lllea ~ 1 alnol good or48
bod orodll. ~rovll HNI, Conlral Air, Phone On 4-2001 lactlonol homu
COVINANT
·~-For~~ a ~jg::n
hll. (I )182 " (740)448 3038aHor lpm
&amp; 3-2002 modale on cloplay 2 BR, Well to Wall Clr'Pit,
TRANIPORTAnDN
Sohoolll
~UI 5 llngll 15 wldl homu Natural Gao Fumaco~ AC In
II ..-ng ""
No TIIVII, NO Cold Cllllngl
MolniE HOMI!Ii at huga Nvingl.
Gallipolll. 1740)441-2003 or
lludont Drl-.
E•oollent Salary
JIOR SALE
lpaclal"""'
(740)448-1409
No bPiffonool
Pluo -llsll
your now home 11 roduoed
NO P"DILIMII
CIIII-.?HI7I
p~011.
BaauiHul ~lvor Vlow ldlal
Training Avollablo by
lllk lor Sillno Vlllllng
14X70 CllytOn Trailer. U Cott'l Mollllo Homea
For 100r 2!loop~~,Calling f-Ill 141 NUl.
Acrol, 32x40 Now gorage. 152118 US e4l Eoot
on, opo~ • No ro~, ooCDI. Holdoro oall
Subway now hiring lor oloaSotnlo Vlow Eltetoo. AJhonl Ph 45701
lor T11ilor Parto, 740-441·
UOO IIIII 230.
1~ olllfl, apply within.
(304)878-2835
740-892·1972
0181 .
...
my, Reward!, call (740)992- Sen[_Resume to: CLA 456
9832.
c/o WIHipolls Dally Tribune.

~

,......,....._..Ait,1-. •niOo"""-·1

14•70. 2br mobile home,
wllh oppllamM, CIA. ~n,
and .., up on ..mod lol,
(304)875-&amp;84 N not IDno,
1oow "
•go

lou•••·......

JIOR&amp;I.£

.

·101 Time Homo B~rt/
Cllllljlolll ca- COfil90 FHA/ Govemmtnl Loano/
(ca..... c- To Homo) Single Paront Program
Coli Today I 7~7 Loanl Available. Call
1.fiQI)-214-G442
• (740)&gt;W&amp;-3093
R , _127.&amp;
·
::
·
3 Bedroom on Aoule 2,
1170 ....._._....._._., ···---•
(304)875-S332
"~
3br. 2 bath Nk:e Nalgllbor·
hood
Point
Plnaant
7711
Good or Bad Credit Even I304)876~ ~ ~~:reo 4 BA, 3.5 Bath ranch with
"
·
over 3000 eq h larvo
WANJED
fenced r.ard, new ·~.
To Do
now roo 2 car attaci1ed go·
rage, '$1&lt;18,000.
Call
(740)446-2311
All Make - . , Hooters
and Foooed Air Hoatars Ae- 818 Main Streel, Pt. Pl.

1..

.. ....
::...~on==a.::~~~~::~r:~

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B)!" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,., . . . . . . . . .

l'mlsoN.us
CHILD C A R E - Bolli-:
I'Hnt Flnonclll nu .
NEEDED.
oflts, rotallo..,..,..ICI rwfor. providing email bullnHO
SWM age 50, new lo 11ea, Do you IIIW 1 _ , . to rod. Al&gt;l&gt;ll' at Llflltyto Furnl- IOOno for 13 )'0010. Now.,.
~ng SWF, lllim to fit In make a dlfloronco In 1 '"'"· No pl1ono colla. Al&gt;l&gt;ll' -Mztln poiiOIIII, C8l &amp;

I

_.MY .... .., IIIN.~·=·~·~·=-~-~~~

POI.JCa:
,.._.,
_
'niiMII
• I ONo
Alii v.lley
n g· ,Publlehlng
w11 be ..........
lorftahttolldlt,
.. MON u..
a. ooetol
. . . , _ eece : , rtiJ•. . . . . ...., ontr tM.,.. ......,._ w.
nor
tt. c..: a .... _..,. ... .,.....,. ......
tn~~~e~...._ w,_~...,.....
a
. . . ...,.. . . .

ot••
•AI,.._.,

I

Gracious living. 1 ilnd 2
bedroom apanments at VIlage Manor and R Apartmenll In Middleport.
From $2~ •••• Cal 740Houolng
992
Dppoltunltloa.

.soe4:E;"ii

2$6 MHZ

Vented Gas Haalal', Nearly
-New, Brown Enameled. 3050 000 BTU $250 ~1118.
3- 8 h. Cou~ter
,
Pale Gold. 1740)441·

=:,
j

p:;ium

II,

s3So ·

wfth 14* Monllol'll, Both lnltmel· Ready. Terms Avail·
able with Down Paymont
end Refeoonco. Coil Fleddy
111or 5 pm. (740)446-21132

FreoZ&lt;Ir 8aof 400 to flOO
. 1bs. hanging weight $1.50
Olb, wrapped to oo-..r"
Ordllr.l304~7 s-2198 -..
• llpm. Depoalt Requloed.

I

MkiOieport· North 481 Ave ..
SrotmNG
4roomtumlllhedapartment,
GooiJii
deposit a roftronceo, no ~
poll, (740)992.0185.
1938 emm Tur1(llh t,touaer Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Modem 1 Sadroom Apart• good too. Vory Good Condl- . Repalra. Problem1? NNCI
ment. (740)446-0390
lion. Bayonat &amp; Scabbard Tuned? Call Tho Plano Dr.
with 70 nda &amp;
77•40~~~~6!::~!;5~25~.,...--::--:Nice 2 br. api.,lg roomo.\,
rou
ammo on :':
fully equlpad kit .. central Ba ~!!..
$IOO. Handmade Basket Rack.
heatlnjf cooling. walher/
"'' ~~
$50. 1940 Wood Playpen,
drver hoot(up "'"'" ...-. 2523
$25 ' - w I Loom
.,
-·
WInc"••i
~P eav ng
'
•._ er 97 18 gauge $10 · (740''J~~&amp;.A'&gt;78
Now Taking Applications- $450. Ramlnglon 513 TFi ":""'-"
' ~.:::.......-=::=:,::......,--:

1304

~:e~,:~nc=~ :~: =:,::,r ;;~h5~~ ~; :r:ro~ :~a-=:

Water

Sewage, Trash, gens by Marlin 22 Magnum evenings. o.-.urst Greenlever action, 2x7 power house MI. Alto. (304)895Renters Wanted· Pilot Pro- acopa, $350. Call (740)388- 3740 leave mHtage. or
Cffln
·
home 89341save...,...ge.
(304)8116-3789
e~:·or no ~~raKI Cali
Independent Herballfe Dis(740)446-33&amp;4.
.ANnQvEs
I tributor, can For Product Or
River Bond Place now... .
Opportunity. (740)441-1982
ceptlngappllcatlonsfor1
bl'. Buy or sell. Alvennt Anti- JanltrolA30-10,21/210nair
Hud S
lhe
uboldlzo Apt. for
qu... 1124 East Main on ilandler Brand new 5 year
elderly &amp; dloabled. EOH. SR 124 E. Pom..,y, 740- wananly willoacriflce, $300
(304)882-3121
992·2526. Russ Moore, Cilll740)992·5309.
Tara TownhouH Apart· owner.
New Tolll Gym 1000 E•er·
ments, Very Spacloue. 2 Suo's •-•-·bloa on the .,.. clae System by Fliness
Bedroom1 2 Floo CA 1
.__.aa
0u
s
72
1'1,
•
In Middleport. Dolls, gtaasest, 150. (740)446·22
•
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, ware Ataddln mantels and
AduK Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Po· mo.,; (740)992.0288 •
. Nordic Track Manuel IIOOd·
Ito, Star1 $365/Mo. No Pttl,
.
mill. Uke New. $100., 20•
LeaH Plus Sac&lt;lrity OepooK
Ml'lCFJJ..ANF.o Bicycle $15 .. 3 N 1 Fisher
Required, Days: 740.«6·
MERCHANDISE
Price game table. $30.
3481 ; Evenings; 740.387· __
, (304}675-1431
0502. 740-446-0101.
29 Galton Fish Aquarium Older Stereo In Excellent ·
TwlcepnR1ngtve~~lionnowforac- wfth stand, light, &amp; rocks. COndition. Turntable, Dual
....,..._
$80. (304)675-6065
Cassette Woodgrain SpeaktBR. HUO subSidized apt.
era, $100. (740)441·0901
for eidecly and cloabled. ~ v.tooe1GDloodaabledc ~ter. evenlngo.
EOH.
e~
ondnlon. · ;;-So:;;ll:;-d..;B;:.ra::a-o-=a-nd"7""::W::-co:-u-:g:::ht
(304)875 -667i. ·
' 11 · (740)3&amp;8·?561 · Iron Flrtptace 511 SIIU tn
4 wood bar atoola, S?S. Bo)(, Make a nlc4t Gift. Colt
Very nlco, 2·3 bedroom Home lnlerlor Picture, $2 5. $49.95 will Hll for $25.00
&amp;partmenl, In town, large e Draw Dreuer, $20, Uned (740)985-4408
kitchen LR eltlVI/
Ref O
'
' -mo.
• raperlea, $26. (740)2~5· Super Nlntendo with Two
eroncao
depotll raqulrod. :.:..::....:-----1111
(740)IIS&amp;3841
Controlllra and Eleven
Great Chril1mao Gift, Jolt Gameo, f184l 080. II no
Gordon '24' Jaokot. Now, anowor,leaw m-ge.
SP.I.a:
Novtr ~ed. Medium, Trampollno, 575; dog pon
FOR RINr
Bluo/ R l100. (740)8811· 10,8•8, t100: Igloo dog
~
· 81153, or moooage.
hou1o, f28; VCII otanil
w/gl- door, t25; floor
Nloa 1011 qulot oounby 101,
JET
modtl 25' TV, 1150; owing,
ling, will aooommodato
AIIIATION MOTORS
Ul; olil (740)992·11818 al·
181&lt;80, t100 por month, 0111 =~~ &amp; Rlbulll In tor Bpm.
Ed at Countll' HolftH. 740- 800-&amp;37 9521 on Evano, 1· "'w~at;.:;ori;;;lno;_s~r.:-:-la.,-1:-'J/'"'4:-::200::
882·2187.
•
·
.
Pll Ut.95 or100; 1' 200
Trollor opaoo for lint, l120 Nice 'l..oMry" Elootrio Dr· PSI 137.00 Por 100; All
par month, In Mlnerovlllo; gon Willi Benoh (Playa, but Bruo COmproulon Flltlngo
800 aq Ho111oo building, 110 noedl IIHII ropalr) UO In Slook.
1 oolllng fan , l275 par Larger X·Mu Artlllolal TrH. NON IVANI INTBIIPIIIImonlh, (814)878-11181
1120. (740)24e-11448
' II JackSOn, Ohio, 1-800637-9328
$350/Mo., 740 446 0008.

r
r

1

I

I

1

I

j

I

121

·

~

quarterbeck Hurt Werner
passes under Pl'ftiUI'II from
the 49era' John E,.lber&amp;er

'-

Sund.Y. (AP)

four

agauut

7

h~~4Corrl., 5!200.

.I·-

'11&gt;1&lt;* king- 4114

~-.~~=-~

T--

touchdown on his lint punt
return in th= )'\'an, and llegan

Upshaw forced ~nt Gtml's
on a 2-pOint com.omion

fumble

with 1:381ell

Leading28-20,0akland(9..3)
stopped the ChiefS at the 4 wicb
games. missed 3:03 to play. But Rich Gannon
burgh's only
Joss · in 11

:.r'ooo. (304)875-7712
111113

OAKI.ANQ Calif. (AP)Tim Brown ran 88 ·-~ for a

·

field goals and an extra fumbled with 1 :49 left while
pomt
agamst New York (7-S).
stretching for a lint down that
2000
0
But he """"'
--~- ....
L
.L-- - ·"--~ ..L. n -'~ur """"' to would L
u;m: ~""' w n
($04)876- medium-range kicks and Chris to Nn out the clock.
I:. =•~Orfuanwu-Ma'afala ~ a . 1Trent G~ who passed for
~.:..~fl,:au=. 11182 Camero RS. V-8, .::~~ ~ yW touchdown as a replace- ;253 yards and two ~ bit
Wormed. 8 will okl. w1t11 air, $2500, (740)742- Coldb. 127!10. ~t for Bettis, who missed his Tony GollZ:IIet for a 24-yatd'ID
2357
f140l258- 11197
(740)317-0231
lint 111m in 54 g;unes becawe Q( 11 seconds later. But Upshaw
Aclorablo ChlhuaiMII pup- ' 111113 ChoYv CovoliOr RS. 4 WAICro Vlln. 58,01)D- iniuries.
put a big hit on Grem on the 2pioa. Would mako lhe por· door. Automatic, Air, PS, llr, CfUIII, tiM, PW, PL.
o
fact~ gift lor""""'" PB, Till, Crulll, NN FM loiNFM c
111, dual 11r
The touchdown came after a point tty, causing a fumble.
ono ~. Not~ Radio. Cloon Cot, Good bogo, - · -~~ 7, 111&lt;8 79-•--' cUM. feah•""~ KmdeJl
Buca 15 llDDI 12
111 lhota, - · polly Tlroa. Now - ,.
(740JS71T-v
--...
•
minus-2 yards passing.
and four 10uchdowns, leading
trolnad , $300 •. (740)258- 17 Shooolrirtg Rldgo Ad, 2134- n
go
Stewm's completiom of 29 and·
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)
The r~....._. closed within Minnesota .,... Tennessee (S-7).
83IIOClll- 8.30pm·
OHorC::(7~
yards to Hines Wml, who l{eyWwnJobnson caughta13~"""7•
r-·
N&lt;C 8CIIon T - 3 f• 111113 Fonl_'lltunll GL, ...
t.lJir4rYOill·
mode 10 carches for 124 ymls. yatd IOuchdown pass wicb 45 13-0 at lulftime, tied it on
The Vikings (S-7) scoml four
maloo, 1 m1to. e colient - · $2150D, ~
•
nds
. .
his"Eminia Smidt's 1-yard run and . touchdowns in a 12-minute .
Sholl- -.ned, S400. Col 1740)81&amp; 3158
·
Rams 27, 49en 14
seco
remauung.
wx scorab d "th ,... __ . J 3-•M-'
h
th.
d
d
1llfltl
(740)448-04 95
1995 .........., s-1u . .....,
=lour-.1cop1.2 'ST. LOUIS ·(" 0\ - Mmhall ing - l i o n of the season, and went ea WI uuu::rs T-v stretc spanning e secon an
-~,
=I
·-r
pass to Jackie Harris, set up by third quarten.
AKC- Pup. Fawn with OBO. 111117010
- - gooot " ' - '
,_, Faulk scoml two touchdown• · Tampa Bay kept Detroit on r-.-..J..
_, _ _. .,;n on .L,_.
Randy Moss caught ·--n
Muk, 8 old. vii l800
. (304)875- Jiavo tltto, U
ftnn, ..:..~ Ku ,.,__ ..._ ___ for
k ~
-•-•"-"""'" 11 T-v .,......
ywu-••
$250. (740)388 8803
8115
~40)992-3443
' •ftor IIIIU
rt .......er UJRW
two tnc 10r a wUU&lt;U ICUOII.
and-l1.
passes for 158 yan!s, including a
ATTENTION. Now Taking 1995 Grand Nrt, S310U. :30pm.
u StLouis won a matcbup of Johnson bad 10 receptions for
s.Jnti 28,Falcon110
73-yatd'ID call:h widt 2:35lell
Otpooilo on Regilll ~Lab 118.000 mltea. (304)882· 2000 CR 125, Now NFC West leaden against San 101 yards, including a tS-yml
ATLANTA (AP) _ Rookie
Broncos 20, Se.hswlu 7
1
2518
t't&gt;.\)

,
• II t . .
ISle, &amp;aol-

= ":.

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

.., ..... ...,.. .... ....,...,_. .. ,. n

Brown,

• (304875.3241

Mar&lt;ury- Mao·
Condition.
~
No
Ruat.
NC, Bluo/ Novr
~ •
2 F"oeat. Squmi Oogo. Wei ..._ l11115. (740)245 5416 dov-e.~
Staotod. $200. E8CII.
lont 000 ' " '·
132
71411
(304)875-8

2o Words

In Nt)Ct Dlf•s Paper
· Publication
Sundly In-Column : t:OO p.m. Sundav Dlspi.Jiy: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
Thursdoy for Sundoys

• Stlrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prfce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Jnclfoldt Phone Number And ACI&lt;Iren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 DIVI

mlli:

'"~-----..... quil, E-tnt

Private Party Ads Under $100
7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Plsolay Ads
All Display: 12 Noon 2

oharp. l3,8UO.
IMr
2741
CBI.
(740)992·7MU. S300 or F·1!10, 30D e cy1 135,UOD . cnrni,... another emtic ,...,.. by
Equal T -.
m11oo, nico, n.ono ... :··-.. •
rr-·1115 awvy ~.,.,. - . 52,000, 1740,_. kiCker Kris Brown and Jerome
- · NC, !UI,DOO
1701
.
Bettis' absence.
.

VANi&amp;

SIJioftm;

r

during

I~~~:: r~ 4-WDs goals last who~
lie~
moncb
Balli··-Sar!oawaoon.
... """'-··~. Runogood.
rNn!-.onoJ:: NFL. ~in Pi-

BvluMNc

C:: 40- 45-5

aclae-1

'JIIIJIRPIII JIUM-RimS

1 ...,. -

• - -..... Ciioxlo
Rio Grande, PH l.aQ good. (304~

(304) 675-1333

Busrnen Days Ptlor To

r•

- . _ ....... pipes,

. 1\.egtster

Otlly In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

-m.:: ;\ ~ 1rve1 they last

-:.--:ooo

J

wttm:'IIIETAI.
DETECTORS
Ron ~. 568 Wateon
Rood, Bidwell, Ohio C56t4.
(740)44tH336

w.-.
7 2

Pilllbwgb Steelen mcbed a

~ I:~;;;.. -~":~~~i!-2 for
- - . .. 11183 Dido Oolta. • ~ ;.~ Iloilo¥ the lint time ~ lhe 19701
malic-,.
wtcb an 18-7 w:rory
the
-.,Groot- 1740JS71Newbit.JeuonSunday,IMI'-

~·

i

BYlHEAUDCIIJEDPRESS

PITI'SBURGH (AP)- The

n awvr -.,. 314 Ton.

F'" ; ,..-1, WMonty

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Monday·FrldiY for Insertion

steelers, R.ams
· Improve
•
to 10-1

~~~~-~-~--...,
-~.
12000
F....
' !740~3~7.-

-

~HI 1~,= :=:.~ago

In one week With us

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

=

rsa:~-=·lr
1r
~ 1
~~=~:!..~~~~~0..,~

525.

Word Ads

Pomet oy, lllddleport, Ohio

I

-at r,_,- ...

111

=-.

::r'fl-)
Chrlolmea·
4°4'8 0080
~~-===--

_

1995 Ponllac Grand Am

~. ~~:=: ~~ r..~ ~ loll~~

'::!::l (740)'I*
!-l. $3011, 78 El Comlno ss wltll La· roadyOoc. tOth, ,..iholdHII gulno '"""end, Now R•
Bird- Blue Puakor Hand

r=-)875-4;~

14411111- Kit, Too much Francisco.
tollll. (740)&gt;W&amp;-n11
·
The victory, coupled widt

Talking. :;:;

Wei! puppies

(740)448-2318

XT-350

~~~~":...T:!

.=""------ r

'"~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...,.

CMatmao Special. Baby
Grand Plano. Uke Now,
$6500. Grubba Piano Tun1ng Sarvlcea. Gall (740)446-

I

4!25

P'l"

FRvns &amp;

10

VD&gt;EI'AIII.Ii.!i

94 FOrd Eacort w-n.
89,900 miln, Good "C.r.
(740)448-2762 levtnlng),
1740)441-2125 (doytlmt)
94 Nl.an Mulum. Sharp.
7 1
(304)8 5-8 32
95
112,ooo

~Noon,
Ca~'

=h

Richardt Brothers Fruit
Farm. APPLES AND 1740J.W8-7311

=:

·=

j

j

~

Ao

Tnl-

1uc1go1 -

half~

26-for-4~

r
-:-

J =~V:":..lo~

EQuiPMENr

·. A·-~

N

•
Jo"

0% ' - ••ng on ew .. n
Detro Round and Square

r

r.tmt.tlloMa; Favre got career victory No. 100

==;,.':,1
~.
5oo· man ca~a~...
T,T.

minimum bkl ot $1

•

' an 24 ft

1llfltl ·c:aul,
Frotot -

EICCollont conal-

~~~~~":"~.~; u.;,_ 17411i38'1 8844, S82DO

r..= :: ':"',!": =.c::".,::::,"':"tJ:

un!:."::'C:..,.

................................ ~::::":: ~~ ~2r.\",: ~l ':!!

r

'I'RtJcss

.,,, ..
FOR"""""

1991 Chevy S.IO, 4 cyl.,
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn Standard, $400. (740)448·
2 miles west ol Holzer Has- .t999
pital on Jackson Pike, Gal·
llpolls, Ohk&gt;. l740)448·2412 1991 GMC Sonoma 4K4 EKI
:--:-~-;---;::;-;-- Gab, Auto, AC, TIC, 4.3 V·
8 ton Lowboy. 24' Long, 6, Topper, Lola Now, 134K
Beam Tall and Rampa, Mlloo.
Sharp. 15800.
1991 GMC Jimmy, 4K4, (740)44Hl013

:::\).£~~:,'l4e

=

0870,

1-800-287-11578.

Rogorl W.1tlploof~IG·

(5-8) li:om losmg thetr sixth
consecutive game. .
The Eagles (8-4) tmpltM!d to

en

~dte

Bears.

n.u._
.......,_,

28 CbJ.·"'" 26
•

oou

just

NewYorlc (5-7), a Super Bowl
team last season, scored on three
ofi1.11int four possessions. Dallas

was behind
d

d
own an

13-3, without a

first

with Carter havin

g

I

Reelmen
fmmPIIp81

assists. Hamilton added 19
1997 s- 10, 78,000 lll:lluGDA~
the ftont .,nd o( the .bonus .
Mllol, Now Tlroa. Garago
poinl.1 and pulled down six
Allla Chalme,. WO In- Kopl, S850D. (740)387-71135 RHklenllal or commercial )vith five seconds lefi:. Barlow
creased Bore Sleevet PI•
wiring, new IIIVicll or ,...
boards, and Holt scored 13.
tens and Ringe. Good Tires, 9&amp; QMC 2 dr. 5 ap., 8 pol,., ,.._ Llct.-lloo- .ihen iced the game with two
Rio shoi 53 percent (28-of·
Many New Parte. (304)882· cyl. topper 72,000 miles IriDian. Aldrtnour ElectriOII,
3236
S8500. OBO 3()4o875-6278 WV000308, 304-875-1780. charity tosses.
53) from the field and 64 perSophomore Joe Martin
New 271 Massey Ferguson
cent (16-of-25) from the line.
Tractor 2001 Model, One
added 16 points (on 6-of-8
owner. Would like trade aOO
The Redmen will step out
shoo,ing) off the bench.
also woutd Fl11ance the
Tractor. Price $22,500. Call
Senior Joe Delaney scored 15 of conference on Thursday
Jake Somerville (304)675·
3030
points and freshman point whep they face NCAA DiviTractor, International Harll!'•rd Nat Moles chipped in sion II power Charleston
vester Farmall Cub with BelI 0 points (aJI in cbe second IY/V) at !he Charleston Civic
ley Mower. Looka ,Good,
Runs Good, Turf Tlrae.
budget Will Ill held It . halt}.
Center. Game time is set for
PUBLIC NOTICI!
(740)3811-8644 $1500.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC the Southern Local
the 7 p.m.
·topped
Barlow
School .,._,
YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor, HEARING ON THE
TAX BUDGET
Boord of l!duo1tlon
diesel, 3 point hlleh, $2,150.
Also, new 4' flnlah mower,
oiiiOe on 1111 dly of
111111n erato, $650. Shipping
TWO copltl Of the J1nuary 2, 2002, 11
available. Located just out- tax budget lor the 7:30 p.m. ol tho
- o1 Htrnlavillo, AI (266) Souttt.rn Dletrlol of 01111nllltlonll
776-9435 www.maynarde· Roclne, Jn llelge
ntMIIng.
qulpment.com
County, Ohio, .,. on
ftlo In 1111 oftlool of the
r-u..r, Dennie E.
Hill of 111d dlllrlct.
,.,.,. IN !or publiC
Windshield For 63 Chevy
lnl,.ctlon; • public
Truck. l304)576·2458
hearing on uld

r

10 Quarter Old Quarter
HorH Gelding. New Sad·
die. Used Twice. $1600 for
all. (740)441.Q888
5 yr. old Thoroughbr.li
Golding with _ . . . $750.
(740)388-8319 or (740)3811-

r

98011.

HAY&amp;:
GJWN

~~Round Sales,

(7401256-

Ground ear com: $90.00
ton, your aackl, soybean
meal ivaltab!4, Long Bot·
tom, Ph (740)985·3581
Quality hay tor sale, $1.50
oale: (740)985·3810
Round baloe of lily lor 8818,
(740)94&amp;-3089
Square balea was $2.00
now $1.50.. 1 mile on Rt. 2
N. (304)675-4869

Donnlo 1!.
fluiUNr

Hill,

(12) 10, 11, u, 13, 14r
17, 18, It, 10, 21,
21101

Ja

k

=~then t&gt;!: %,., ~ore a · ~..:=

his only

yatd scoring Nn on

carry of the da)\ lifting New
OrleansoverAtlanta.
The ~ts (J -5) reversed an
Oct. 2!loss to the Falcons (6-6),
who m 2-5 at the Georgia
Dome

Billa 25, Panthers 24

DENVER. (AP) Frero
lacin th

dri:
earl:
half, &lt;1mw Denver

Brian

Gus
· ·=&lt;!

~e ~nd

in
10 two

third-

quarter scOieS.
The Broncos (7-6) sacked ·
Matt Hasselbeck five times and
held !he Se:atde (6-6) running
game in check.
Terrell Davis, starting his second straight .. me in an in;ury.

.,.....

"

ORCHARD .PARK, N.Y. plagued season, ran for 109
(AP) _ Bcmdon Spoon's 44- yards.
ym1 interception return and
Reda(rjN 20,
Travis Henry's 1-yatd scoring
Cardill8b 10
h lpedrall Butfal li:oman
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Tony
clefiJ.
O
Banks threw for 210 yards and a
The Bills (2-10), who snapped touchdown, and Stephen Davis
a' six-game losing streak, came rushed for 110 yan!s in Washingback against a Carolina team (1- ton's sixth victory in seven
12) that
lost 12 straight, gatnes.
including nine in which the
Davis' 1-y.m:l touchdown run
Panthers had cbe lead or were after Banks' 40-yatd pass to Rod

haS

their second straight smce cbe tion return cut Carolina's lead to accomplish the extnordinary
rookie quarterback returned to 24-19 in the third quarter and turnaround.
cb lin
'
e
eup. .
Henry's dive with 7:51 remainThe Cardinals (5-7) didn't

C&amp;C General Homo Malnte- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - """""" Painting, vinyl aklang, carpentry, dool'll, wlnrebounding· chut for Rio
dowo, baths, mobllo homo
repair and more. For frH
with nine.
llllmlta Olll Chot, 740-992·
Ogletree led Walsh wicb 28
:::83iii2;;1·~!"""--~..,
,.
poinl.1
and dished out four
Eu!x:nacA1I

r

Willi

3-4 at home.
~ G~ Bay took over the top
Cowboys 20, Glantat3 tied. in dte second half.
Gardner put WashingtOn ahead
spot m !he NFC Centnl.
IRVING, Texas (AP) . "'-"'ng 24-6 the Bills' come
Qui
Ca
ruJied Dallas
u-..w
'
- 20..3 with 8:20 remaining.
Both teams are .9-3, but ~
ncy
~r
..
back began when Alex Van Pelt
WashingtOn (6-6) lost !he tint
Packers swq~t Chicago. which li:om a 10-pomt clefiat, tluow- bit Peerless Price for a 7-yard five games of the season before
lost on the road for !he lint time ing for a career-best 194 yan!s.
bd
·th 1 co d left in winning its next five, becoming
.
tb
.
. Th C '-~H (4- 8) wo touc own ~
se n
smce e season opener agamst
e
ow~T:
.
n the lint half. Spoon's intercep- the lint team in NFL history to

=and Mower Condl· 1990 Hyunda Hatchback,
· '··
minimum bkl of $200; 1982
................................ Chevrolet Ohtvette, mini·
.... bkl o1 $200; Flnanclng u Low Ia 3.5%
lbltimore.
must 11o r-....i by o.
Green broke a 7 -aJI tie late in
·
camber t 7 2001 at
the
third quarter Wl'cb a 1 ~&lt;--T-~
•• ....1
4.4% on UNCI Tractoro with 11·ooam at tiw Ctoc1c'l Of.
-INT
:"' Deere Credit Appro- ftc8. 320 Ell! Main - .
touchdown fUll. He ~e the
45789
Pomeroy, Ph
· eoun- • - · LOCol - - 1ur1 tint running back in 20 aomes
11
to top .100 yards

Come see OUr Large Display of John Deere Toys,
Apparel and John Deere
Uborty Sales.

~t

hdown

Proehl for I 15- yards and two 1Ds against the ~poc:nt
ymtscore m the lint quarter.
Nru top-,ranked pass defense,
Packen 17, ~ 7
but couldn t prevent cbe ~-

=~Is~=
:.::~~·.:U:z! e~~~=:
..
!:'"
~hlng, Michel· Reb\llkll&lt;llo, 740-245-15677, GR,EEN BAY, WIS. (AP) 1 \In I "' t'l'l It "
{;4o;N.2748
deoii,15,9DO. Call: 339-3785.
:::J Alunan Green ran for 125 yan!s
,\ t t\ 1 .... 11 1c h
r.ll'--::-----, ::...::::=.::==---CAMius" ,~ 1 and a touchdown, and Brett
FARM

-~y Deuce McAllister tossed a

SO-yard

• bitting Ricky

W

=Hof

iO

game-winning,

Faulkranfora6-yardscorein
The Uons (0..12) ' - l o s t
L.aako cbe lint quarter, and his 3-yml cbeir last nine games by a total of
touchdown carch put the P,.ams 38 pomts.
.
.
.
abe:ad 2.1 -7 at cbe
!he
Eqles 24, Cbugwa 14
Boo\1'8 &amp;: Moro1181 49en (9-3). Faulk, who has
PHILADELPHIA (AP) IQt Sou.&amp;
scored five touchdowns !he last Don0111111 McNabb passed for
~
ks bad 88 •• ~
25 221 oM~ and two 10 bdowns
Two 1988 waw AuM t't&gt;.\l wee •
T-- on
T~~
.
uc
'
PIUI Tralltr. Emlu eon. carries and five Catches fur 19 and Bnan Dawkins returned a
dillon.
Good
Prloe. yards.
.
fumble 49 yaids for a 'ID for
7
&lt; 40)441-Q785
Wm!er W2S
for 294 Pbilalklphia
San Diego,
AuroPAiml&amp;
yards and one inten:epoon,a!Jo
Doug Fluue tluew for 3lY1

.::0, ~':i7~2889- : ~:,.:Ss.,~ :,: - ._ ,_gor, ara.;:rr Paint, Now o:ie:l:a":e ~
~ I~-7~"'.,:-.=.

r

the

Bears' loa at G!ftn 8a}l gave St. drive aiM at the Detroit 13. He
Louis !he best record in the con- bas 93 recepliolll for !he Bua
ference (1(}.2).
(7-5) this season, a career high.

,

'88'

YAMAHA

carch on fourtb-and-8 to ,__

the

lng finished !he rally.
Vi"-'- 42 1
24
MIN;;:rPOLIS '(Ap) -

n--·

his fint
348 yards

Todd Bouman making

'

NFL start, passed for

osu

from Plp81
and guards well."
Zach Willianu scored 15
points, Sean Connolly came
off cbe bench to score 14 and
Brent Darby 12 for the Buckeyes (5-0).
Antoine Lewis had 19
points, Lance Williams had 13
and Charles Price 11 for the
Jaguars (3-3).
.Although
they
never
trailed, the Buckeyes who
shot 54 percent ftom the field
- struggled for much of the
first 25 minutes against the

Browns
frwnPIIpB1

scored a touchdown until Jake
Plwruner's 10-yanl pass to MarTay Jenlriru with 1:16 tO play.

Jaguars.
The Jaguars cut Ohio
State's 41-36 halftime lead to
48-45 on Lewis' power move
inside wicb 15:37 remaining.
The Buckeyes, however,
then went on cbeir tear to
take command.
Savovic started the run by
bitting a reverse flip off a long
fastbreak pass, then later
added a 3-pointer, a 1 0-foot
Callaway and, after stealing the
ball at rnidcourt from Taj
Hawkins, a layup.
· The spurt put the Buckeyes
in front 59-46 with 11:37 left.
The lead never dropped
below double figures again.
said Smith, who gained 76
yards on 21 carries, "We got it
going at !he right time."
Cleveland's only lead was
10-3 on Corey FuUds 49yard interception return late
in the fint quarter. The
Browns added two interceptions to their NFL-high 25 .
Smith tied the game with a
!-yard Nn before Brown's
punt
return touchdown.
Brown also achieved career
highs of 85 catches and 1,033

with 3:28 left in the first
half. He got two key blocks .
lleednllle, Ohlu
"I saw Lawyer (Milloy)
45772
I'll-: 740-le7-331t,
corning to kick out the last
110 Help Wanted
74HI7-107t
guy I saw, and the next thing
end
velllolo:
lni)IICIIon
oelllnO
~
1113
l'ord Van, the
ollloebyof
lht
I saw was (tackle) Richard
11wn
mowert, 8uperlntandeni or ~'-'· 10,1001
Seymour creaming the kickweedlltlrl, live Tlutul'lr. Tht bollrd
er," Brown ·said. "It W2S free
rtOIPPtd 8·00·20 NllrYN the rlghlto
11r11, 11ven ueed ,.,.., any or 10 bide
sailing from there."
1001120 IINI on rime, or 1ny or all perle of
· Vinalieri's 38-yard field
HlotWcltllal pliO.. I bid. 8uooeellul
yards.
ol telr: pipe, lhree blddlr mu11 aubmlt
· goal made it 20-10 before
Notes: Brady was 1 9-of-28
utalerJ• tablu, payment In 1un by , . . - - - - - - . . ; · Cleveland cut the lead to 20..
ueorted atudenl onh or 081hlt~
16 on field goals of 39 and 22 (67.8 percent). It ended his
dHkl, one woodod ohtck only. lelltd
streak of games at 70 percent
Pleuant Valley Hospital Is currently
•IIOher'l deek, one bide will Ill o,.ned
yards by Phil Dawson.
accepting resumes for a RN ·Critical
metal olllcio dllk, 11 U:OD
noon
or more at four. Only Joe
But the Browns didn't score
Care Coordinator (ICU &amp; ECC). BSN one commercii I Eoetern 8t1ndtrd
Montana, with eight, had
again.
preferred. Previous mana11ement
electric oonveollon Time on Wedftllday,
·
more. ... Jamir Miller had two
~ rred
oven, two ol•-llumor Dll:lrnlllr 11, 1001 In
Smith's 5-yard touchdown
rl
$6~$8
expe ence pre e
•
eltctrlc n~na••· one the oflloe · ol the
came with 2 :43 left. His knee sacks and leads Cleveland
Yetaa wood litho, TmeuNr. lid ehould
Excellent S11lary and Benefits.
one bench grinder, bl ol11rly merked .
hit the ground at the 1 before with 10 . ... Terry Glenn had
four catches for 76 yards in his
Send resume to Human Resources,
elx filing coblr)lla, "Bid lor SurpJue
the baJI crossed the goal line,
FuiVPart
une brekt ehot 1ttm1" end mlllod to:
but the Browns didn't chal- second game with the PatriPleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr. rlvellr, one work
•••torn
Loco I
OFFICE
ots in a season in which he
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
bench, two Hobart lchool Dl~rlct
lenge the call .
ENVIRONMENT
Or fax (304) 675-6975
mlxere (lor perta AHinllon: Llae M.
"It took us a tittle while to was sidelil)ed ,by two suspenonly), one I Ill lon llllchll, TrMIUIW
1 881 874-.1088
get the running garite going," sions and a hamstring injury.
L------=A::AIE::;;O::~:------.J chain holll, ond nina soooa State Route

----========---...,
0

Tho Eoetem Local bu1 -~~Boord of Educetlon le
Tho Item• will bt
IOaeptlng bide lor I 0 I d
II
II ,
lhl 1111 lllllollowtno AppolnbMnll oen 111
eurplue oqulpmont , arranged
lor

181

Pleasant Valley Hospital

NOW
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Per Hour
nme

�__.....

____
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..

!P~t~f£;!14!:•!Tht~~~~~~:•~~~..~~~--~--~------------_!!~.~Mpo~Oh~

Mond8y,

~~Dec.10,2001

o.c. 10, aoot

NCAA

up

enth straight fUn"'·
Up by 17 points at halftime, the Terrapins used a 12-.2 run to make it 57- .
32 with I 1:35 remaining, assuring
thenuei"Va of extending the nation's longest . non-conference home Win
streak !0'"8 I, I run that began in 1989.
When Mouton was finally pulled, he
teeeived a warn\ ovation fiom the Cole
Field House of 14,327.
Willie Green led the Titans with I 5
points. Detroit, which went 25-12 last
season, wu coming off a 26-point Joss
to Oakland Univenicy.
Maryland limited the Titans to 29
percent shooting, forced 1I tumoven
and took advantaae of six blocked shots
by Holden in talcing a 40-23 halftime
leacl
The 'lempins made 11 of their tint
15 shots to go up 23-10. It was 11-7
before Dixon hit a jumper to spark a
10-0 run that included two baskets by
Mouton.
.
Detroit missed I 7 of its lint 21 field.
goal attempll and went more than six
minutes without a basket before Greg
Grays hit a jumper to make it 29-13
with 5:35 left in the half.

No. 24 Mkhlpa St. 92, Nldaolb
.
St.JI
Marcus Taylor hail 18 j!Oiftts to lead
six playm an double· ft811res as the

Spartans (5-J) eXtended their hQme
winr1inJ strait to 49 pniei..
Michipn State opened- the game
with t27-2 run· and led 53-12 at halfhimself.
time after outshooting Nicholls State
Mouton went 5-for-7 from the field 58 percent-13 percent.
·
and contribute&lt;~ four rebounds in 18
Ronnie Price had .1 0 points fllr the
minutes as the Terrapins won·their sev- Colonels (1-5).

O'Learyto lead the Irish
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - One
of George O'Leary's earliest memllries
llf Notre Dame
folltball is of sitting
with his father, listening to games on
the radio.
On Sunday, O'Leary was entrusted
with the future of the storied program.
The former Georgia Tech coach
replaces Bob Davie, w~o was fired a
week ago. The Irish lost six or more
games three times under Davie, whose
35-25 record gave him the third-wont
winning percentage in Irish history.
O'Leary led Georgia Tech to a 52-33
record in seven seasons and five straight
bowl game appearances.
"My job is twofold, ro graduate our
athletes and to win a lilt of football
· games:' the gruff, no-nonsense·O'Leary
said. "I'm coming to Notre Dame to

NCAA

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win games and win a
lot of them. That's
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The . Irish, whll
haven't finished in the
Top 10 since 1993 and
last won ·a national
championship in 1988,
hope O'Leary can get
Notre Dame quickly
O'Leary
back
among
the
nation's elite programs.
O'Leary guided the YeUow Jackets to
one of the most successful runs in
school history. They earned five straight
bowl invitations and beat rival Georgia ·
three years in a row.
From I 998-2000, the YeUaw Jackets
went 27-9 record - a .750 winning
percentage.
O'Leary, 55, is the oldest coach hired
by the Fighting Irish. .

Construction
Bryan Reeves

New Homea, Room Additions,

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Sieling, Deckl, Kltchena, In;
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It

11 liS
IIOIIaltero
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...-

35 Enormouo

37 lllcllhlng
31 s-.
neighbor

20
- 40
-bopplf
22 Thlrtkoto
41 .
..
23 TOIN1d24 -Nn•

2 Foil kin
3 Geneala

ble. There are ·s uecessful lines, but
South would most
I i kely ruff in the
dummy 'and continue
with thedaceEaud a ~-

I J I R N E K I L 1·
I-"'1,1T'l.....,

other
spa e. and
astSouth
sp 1ts
his honors,
wins with the king.
Now South must try
to pull off a trump
coup. He needs to be
in the dummy at trick
12 to lead through

IFI

East's remaining J-9
of spades up to I1is

center

42 SKY-

.

,- .,.,-T""-r......-l
1
.
.

:=~~:;;::~~=!-...1

I rn-,1--rl-,.1 I
UT S 0 J

1--.

T.t-1

~==-:;:·::::~·;:::;:·~· HENT r
I

I

_

r

"I don't believe it.l" a man multered while listening to a political
candidate. "He sounded sincere
without being · · · · • -I"

,_
-N'

.

.

KRYI FS

16
~

I.

I0
.

e

Complele the chuckle quo1ed
by filling in the miuing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PR.INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN I
I 0-6. But that posiTHESE SQUARES
tion is · uuattaihable . .
He can ruff the third
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
round of a red suit in
hand, but while doing
SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS
that, East discards
from . the other red
Couple - Waver · Trait· Modast • DIVORCE
My wife is really mad al me. When she asked whal
suit. East must score
we should do for our anniversary. I stupidly suggested
two trump tricks.
filing lor DIVORCE.

11100

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

IU..IT TO GO ILUICh .. 14.HI ~- .. S'~..,,.....
au••n TO GO !Dinner - '1.111 '~ rwrtMIIt'f

1 Topoluo't

..,..,_,,.

1

~

1

I

DOWN

29Swlndle
30 Monkey
hll¥ono
31 Prtllr for

-b

34tlpMI:h

25 Stntll bn
43 Supormon
One unforeseen ad33 llo. tor
26 Gereglola
ella•
hunter
vantage of having a
Llbr..
1111d
44 Hollon
4 Shored
34 Glance
Dllllgglo
45 Clah
foodmNI
Web site is that I can
laaclvlouoly 5 Rule
27
Part
ol
OSU
dr•- ·
correct howlers in my
35 SWimpy
e "Gollyl" In 28 eon.dry 46 Penn.
34 Cuotomo
neighbor
column. The btest are
UK12wda.) 30 GtMk "Z"
34SHdiHI
32
Popoye'o
47
0og
11g
7
Hubbloo
Aug. 6, Sept. 12 and
orongo
Olivewuma
8 Summer21. Also, I can add
48 Gnome
houtt
.some extra analysis for
whkh I didn't have
space in the original
article. (Sept. 14 has
been expanded, for
example.) All is available
at
http:/ /www.phillipalderbridge .com .
Deep Finesse, the
deal-analyzing program, has greatly reduced writers' erron.
However, one must
be careful comparing
double-dummy
(when you know
where every card ·lies)
and single-dummy
analysis (what you
lll(ould do with the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
opponents' hands hidby Lula Campo• .
den).
Colebrlty Clphet ayptog""" are cmtod !tOm qu01allonl by lamous
~.put and proMo11. Each - I n the clphor alandolor another.
Take, for example,
·
Today~ clue: E .c,uals D
my deal of Sept. 14,
reprinted here .. I made
'FD
EPN
YWFDPN,
Y
West defend against
YYD'N
PAPN
UFRR
RFBMX
four, spades by cashing
two clubs before
1H
YX
X II P
YP ZP
·y P D X F W D
shifting to a heart. It
was then a matter of
WT
X II P
U W Z. E
'G W Z D:'
declarer's tak;ing the
trump safety.play:
HIIFRFH
IIVYSIZePZ
low to dummy's ace,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "Chicago Is a great All,!erlcan city.
foll'!wed by low to
• Perhaps 11 Is lhe last of lhe greal Ame~can cities. - Norman
his to.
Moller.
·
However, Dennis
Kibler, from Irvine,
Calif., pointed out
that West does much
':~~:~' S©\\~1J.-~"Elf~"
better to lead a third . _ _;.,_ _.:..;_...:; ldllod ~. CLAY R. POLLAN _,;.,;..,
· ,- - - club at trick three.
Rec:urang• letters of ·the
four Krambled worda be·
This would probably be fatal at the ta- low to form four simple worda .

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CAI' I~ICORN

(D". 22·

Jan. I~) -· Onet a~oln today
an old. loyal frieoid of youn

Local843-5284

may provr to be an r!'Ctrcmrly

M!'(licare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

valuoblt •lly. Your r•I hll a
way of (I:Cnerating de-velopnu~nu

(rom which you can
both btnefit.
AQUAJ~IUS {/Rn . 20-Feb.
19) -- Your possibilities for to

fulfill your ambitions and

.

'•

"

LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22) -·
Things 111ight not have been
to your liking in the last cou-

cmdd

profit in

to

' New York. NY 11!156. Ue
sure to ~tatr your Zodiac sigu.

Ohtn ·ll1 /flO

circum!lt:.ance~,

some manner today in larger
than usn.1l w:.y~. T:tke advantr.~e of ir.
Major changes are ahend for
Sagittarius in the coming year.
Send for )'OUr Astro~Graph
predictions b)' mailinp; S2 .111d
SASE to Astro-Graph , c/o
175H, ML1rray Hill Station,

FJnx 1HC!

lat ed

today, Thu~. it'U be important
for you to keep an opC'n nund
and be receptive to new i de~ s.

thi~

Ror:ky R Htlflfl J\qr·nt

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mardt 20)
-- Two individuals, · in unreeach tearh You a trick or two

b~

maner that is of pt•rsonal ~ig­
nificancl' tu you. If it should
r£'quire a hit of a risk on your
part, she'll help you become a
winnl'r .

today. Go after those thin~~
that are the most important to
you.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·

might

. 22) -- Lady Lut:k mi~ht give
you a big boo~r roday in a

achieve your ohjt'ctives are
several notches above moual

Dec. 21) --Through a ~mm;c
or penou that is not your
usual conduit for g~in, you

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· YOUN 'S

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

AUEYOOP

No. 3 Ma~nd shows no
mercy to Debolt, 79·54
COU.EGE PARK, Md. (AP) There will be times this season when
Maryland won' be able to rely excluliwly on its inside-outside combination of Lonny
Baxter and juan
Dixon.
If
Sunday
night\ pme against Deaoit wu any
indication, ~ resr of the,Terrapins \11) will be up to the task.
On a night when Baxter picked
two quick fouls and Dixon missed all
four of his 3-point attempts, No. 3
Maryland \lied a balanced attaCk to
breel:e past Dettoit 79-54.
In the only other game involving a
tanked team Sunday. No. 24 Michigan
State beat Nicholls State 92-38.
Baxter scored 17 points and Dixon
added 12, but they Wfte aided by Tahj
Holden (14 points),B}'(On Mouton (13
points) and Chris WilcOx (8 points,
four rebounds, two blocks).
"That's what happens when you have
a great team like we do. So many people can do so many dift'erent things;•
Baxter said. "We know our strengths
and weaknesses on the courL"
Mouton usually starts at small for. ward, but he came off the bench in this
game after missing seven! days of practice to attend the funeral of his broth~. Kevin, who was found shot to death
in fiouston on Monday.
His return proved to be inspirational
for his te:unmates and soothing for

Pomeroy, Middleport, Oh~

ple of day5, but t.he end results
are not represe ntative or be·~innings. Today could prove
thai point with a happy conclusion.

VIRGO (AuK. 23-S,po. 22)
-- Should you get involved in
something new that has gre;,.t
promise and hope, don't be ·
· ~fraid. to think in expansive
terms, The picture is bigger
than you 111ay realize.

TAURUS (April 20-May
2U) -- A11 opportunity to p;~r­
ticipate in somrthing mean-·
ingfut, or perlup~ even miite~
rial, whkh you ve never rully
undemood wiJI ariRe n~.1in todny. This time you'll 8rasp its
run pt1ttntinl.

LIURA (Sepo. 23-0ct. 23) •
.• You are in a trend ri~ht
now (or being ablr to produce
more lavishly than ~11u:~l.
Whatever it ia in whkh )'OU
are engoged today could yield
large benefita.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
il a
bit bettrr today th:m molt
~~ Your fmanci;l picture

SCORI'IO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) •• Formulate plans to(by

d11ys. If you takt the timr to

that would wr~ve yom fhture
intention~ with yom a5 pira.tiom. Working with a new
blueprint thai complrmentt
one another could m.;ak~.· your
drcanu rralitie! .

look around a bit, c:hances are ,
you'll ~ec a way that cDLIId

help your earninss ~ignifi­
cantly.
CANCER (June 21-July

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�Hemlock Grange 25-year membe1s recognized, l

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Southern beats Hannan, 5

BY 8Rwl J. REED

Gretta Thomas, 86
Wavelene Voris, 78

essica Rosier, left,
and Rhonda Wagner, Art 2 students
MeigS Local High
School, spent Friday
morning painting winter scenes on the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's
front window as part of
a . class project geared .
toward educating students about window
painting
techniques
and careers in art.

Details, 3

FOUR YEAR
WARRANTY

Weather
Hlp: 50S, Low: tels

Details, 3

Lotteries
I.

OHIO
Pick J day: 2-2-o

.

W.VA.

Dally 3: 1-7-o

DailY 4: 1·9·6-9
Cash125: 5·12·13·15-16·18

Index

uxx··

HOSE SYSTEM

... e:?

'

Photos by
Tony
M. Leact.
'

'

I S.diH-10 .....

calel)diu
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

2
6-8

9

2
4

3
3
5,7,8,10
3

Sports
Weather

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishi"' Co.

The ORIGINAL Wet/Dry Vac
days till
Christmas

PoWer cha•g~
II
·

COLUMBUS (AP) - Cheap
power sold in the southern twothirds of Ohio could prevent the
state from reaching its goals fqr
competition for some electric
utilities, the state's chief regulator
said Monday.
Ohio's electric restructuriqg.
law, which took effect Jan. 1 {'o
requires the state's publicly owned
utility companies to send 20 percent of their residential customers
to competitors by the end of a
market development period,
which is in 2005 for most of the
utilities .
In northern Ohio, where electric bills are ·the highest, many
customers are looking for new
power providers, figures from the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio showed. However, in the
southern two-thirds of the state,

BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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LOWI!'S'Is 1 10111.- trodemarli of LF Corporodon.
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SponiiOred by

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The Legislature in 1999
restructured Ohio's $11
billion electric power
industry. Distribution and
transmission of electricity
remain regulated monopolies for the state's utilities.
movement Is slow'•or not occurring at all, the figures showed.
The number of residential custamers
switching to
new
providers ranged from is percent
in Ohio Edison's northeast Ohio
coverage area to a statistically
insignificmt amount ,among Dayton Power &amp; Light's customers.
The Legislature in 1999 restructured Ohio's S11 billion electric
power industry. Distribution and
transmission of electricity remain
t gulated monopolies for the

state's utilitie&lt;.
The numbers are simple economics, said PUCO Chairman
Alan Schriber. In areas where utilities offer cheap power, outside
energy providers are hard- pressed
to qffer lower prices, so customers
have little reason to switch,
Schriber said.
Consumer advocates, however,
placed some of the blame on federal regulators, who have yet to
approve plans to set up regional
transmission groups that can move
large amounts of power across
several states.
"You can't have a competitive
retail market if you don't have a
competitive wholesale market,"
said Dave Rinebolt, director of
Ohio Partners for Affordable
Energy, a coalition of consumer
groups.

Friends rally to back
Icenhower's litle shot

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SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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POMEROY -Elvis Presley
once sang the bright lights of
Las Vegas can set one's soul on
fire.
However, as one local impersonator will learn, it can also
burn a hole in your pocket.
In ·an effort 'to help cover
elq)enses for Elvis tribute artist
Dwight Icenhower while , he

competes for the tide of
"World's Best Elvis" in Las
Vegas, Nev., next month, the
Friends of Dwight support
group will be holding a special
benefit on 1\1.1onday at . the
American Legion/ Feeney Bennett Post hall in Middleport.
Tided, "Viva Las Vegas," the
benefit will . capture · the

Plu..... 11de.J

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport residents
must wait at least two more weeks before
learning if refuse service rates will increase .
in the new year.
·
Meeting in regular session on Monday
evening, Middleport Village Council rejected a ·proposed increase in refuse, rate&lt; for
2002 md will now go through the. bidding
process for a second straight year.
Todd Rumpke of Rumpke of Wellston,
the village's current refuse service provider,
presented council with a second-year contract rate increase of S1 per customer - to
$8.50 per month, and $7.50 for senior citizens.
Rumpke is completing a one- year contract with the village for residential refuse
service, and that contract contains an option
to renew for another year. Last night,
Rumpke proposed increasing service fee&lt;,
because, Rumpke said, costs of doing business have signi6candy increased.
On the motion of Councilmm Bob
Robinson, council pitched a "compromise"
75-cent increase, and Rumpke later countered with an 85- cent hike, which council
rejected by a three-to-four vote, with._Council "" muahct• R:aget • p,f&amp;tdey, S~heri
Houchins and Kathy Scott voting in opposition.
"I understand that operating costs have
increased, but I can't believe they have
increased enough to justify a S1 increase,"
Houchins said.
Scott said she was concerned that an
increase would affect the customers, who
now pay $9 and $8 per month, respectively.
''I'm not voting for any increase until l
know what the customer is going to pay,"
Scott said.
·
Council will advertise for new bids for
2002 refuse service and will open those bids
at their Dec. 26 meeting, but Mayor Sandy
lannarelli said last night the re-bidding
process will likely result in a higher rate
increase than Rumpke proposed under the ·
current contract. Iannarelli also said Rumpke has also provided good service to Mid,
dleport's residential customers.
,
"They're doing a good job, and I'd hate to
lose them;• Iannarelli said last night. "But the
rates are probably going to be higher later
this month · than what was proposed
tonight."

Please see Hike, J ·

FRIENDS OF DWIGHT- The
Friends of Dwight Support Group
will be holding a benefit on Mon·
day to help cover expenses for
Elvis tribute artist Dwight lcer~­
hower while he competes for the
title of "Worid's Best Elvis" in
Las Vegas, Nev., next month.
Besides casino-style games and
an Elvis karaoke contest, assort·
ed crafts, Mary Kay cosmetics
and an autographed football
signed by various members of
the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles
will be auctioned off. Pictured
are left. Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce Director of Operations Courtney Butcher, Icenhower, and support group member
Julie Campbell . (Tony M. Leach)

Shop-V~ II 1 '"llllttfld trodemork of

Shop-VI&lt; Corporation.

'll'uen.c"' and LockOn'" ort tnidemlrkl of

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•'

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