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oa•.-•t•v•

Sunday, December 16,2001

Galllpoll.. Ohio

make another late charge
f

BY Awl

The market, which had been exproing
some pullback following Wttb of strong
NEW YOR.K Attracted to Wall rallies, welcomed the late-day advance.
Street by cheaper pn,es, investors on Fri"Money managers w.mt to buy . and
day again set aside nagging pessimism many missed the run from ·bte Setr.• mabout the economy and indulged in some ber;' Bleier said.
late-session buying.
Lukewarm economic data tikely kept
The market retraced its moderate I~ the market from moving up sooner in the
and turned positive by late afternoon, a session, because investors are anxiously
move that analyst&gt; deemed encouraging awaiting concrete proof that a recovery is
especially on a Friday when investors often underway.
sell to reduce risk going into the weekend.
The Labor Department said its closely
"The fact is that (being) down in the watched Consumer Price Index showed
morning and up in the afternoon tends to no change after falling 0~3 peocent in
be a bullish indicator;' said Scott Bleier, October as America's first recession in a
chief investment strategist at Prime Char- decade' continued to hold down inflation.
ter Ltd.
Also, the Federal Reserve said output at
The Dow Jones industrial average fin- · the country's factories, mines and utilities
ished up 44.70, or 0.5 percent, at9,811.15 was down 0.3 peocent last month, the 13th
after falling as much as 29 earlier, accord- decline in the past 14 months.
ing to pretiminary calculations. The Dow's
But Friday and Wednesday aside, the
performance mirrored .that ofWednesday, market was weaker this past week amid a
when the blue chip index turned positive spate of layofli from such companies as
in the last 30 minutes of trading to eke out American Express and Aema and profit
~ 6-point gain.
warnin~ from Ciena, Lucent TechnoloThe broader market followed the same gies, Merck and Bristol-Myers Squibb.
path as the Dow, another repeat of
The litany of grim news reminded
Wednesday's trailing.The Nasdaq compos- investors that economic weakness will
ite index rose 6.67, or 0..3 peocent, to carry over into 2002, pushing back the
1,953.18, and the Standard &amp; Poor's 500 rebound they're anxiously awaiting.
index advanced 3.69, or 0.3 perc'ent, to
The Dow has not had a close above
1,123.o7.
'
10,000 this past week, after crossing that
~

.I

CUNIIIIII1111
BUSI;iE 'S WRITER

Mill shutdown ends way
·of life for East Chicagoans
BY REX W. HUPPIIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.EAST CHICAGO, Ind. Not long ago, the only thing
S(an Machaj feared was being
O\ltfished.
But now, huddled around
the familiar corner of a bar,
sipping cool bottles of beer
well before noon, it's clear to
everyone - his buddies, the
bartender who puts up with
their barbs and anyone who
looks in Machaj's eyes - that
he his worries are many.
Machaj is frightened about
the future, scared of looming
c~r and house payments, afraid
of being a 54-year-old steelworker without a job.
Like countless others in
East Chicago and nearby
cities, this sturdy man knows
only steel. He's worked at
Cleveland-based ·LTV Corp.'s
Indiana Harbor Worb mill for
36 years, starting when he was
18. The job gave him security,
good benefits, money to raise
his kids and take fishing trips
with the .guys.
.
"That job ended this month
for Machaj and about 1 ,600
others, as the bankrupt LTV
· Corp. shut down its rusting
steel mill on the banks of Lake
Michigan. Before long, the
mill's more than , 2,500
employees, hourly workers
and managers, will lose their
jobs.
. The Harbor Works employ, ees aren't the only ones who
are hitting the unemployment
tine. The nation's unemploy~
ment rate currently rests at
5.7 peocent- a 6-year high
- and economists expect it

milestonrlast week for the fint timujnce
before the Sept. 11 terror attaCks. Having
suffered triple-digit selloli Mondar and
Thursda)l the Dow ended the week &lt;town
2.4 peocent.
"We've lost the euphoria we bad;' said
Todd Clark, co-head of trading at WR
Hambrecht.
The Nasdaq had a weekly loss of 3.4
percent; the S&amp;P 500, 3.0 peocent.
Wall Street's gains on Friday ended up
being spread across an array of sectors.
McDonald's, which reaffirmed fourthquarter earning~ estimates, rose $1.16 ID
$26.80. Home Depot climbed $1.81 to
$49.81, and Mict050ft advanced $1.17 to
$67.44.
)

Kneen
Environmental Nursery Trade
Show.
Over SO counes will be
given by nursery landscape
and turfgrass experts. The
Short Course and Trade Show
is held at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. The
·trade show encompasses both

Sexton
ftomPapD1

were

Among the stocb investors sold
~ompanies that posted disappointing earn.

exfoliated skin and excess
crystal, leaving the area
mS".
instantly smoother.
"Collagen producing cells
Oracle slipped 10 cents to $14.57 on
news that sales of new software licenses .
ki
alled fib bplunged 27 percent during the quarter , :~?.ur s Jan : ~ xt
ro
ending Nov. 30, and that profits slid 12 H "Wh'exp m ul te dobn. xfi
· bw'
"-·-- ·
en snm a e y e omes! souw-.m:: lianon,teygom
·
h
· to
p ·r
peocent as sales o f Its
areaJ
hri ld
s ve e · fie"
mode, promoting · a new
. .c. th
Gannett "" 75 cents to S6 5 .20 ...er e
Ia
f k.i "
country's largest newspaper publisher said yo':,nEgerh yetr 0 t s n.t t k
.
tin
, . fu bo
ac
rea men
a es
It was .cance g n~ years~ r a ut
between 20 and 30 minutes
80 of Its top executtves,followmg the lead • d
d·
f h b d
of other major publishers struggling with a
epen tng 0 t ~, 0h Y a~a
difficult business climate for newspapers.
r,oTuh want tr~a~e t'h s be skat f.
eroomtsm e ac o
the salon for privacy and we
phy
relaxing music it's
plete review.
Getting
organized
to quite a nice experience."
According to Pro Peels
review your financial plan

Smith

fromPapD1

may be less complicated than
it was when you did the first ·
time, but it still pays to be
thorough. Here are a few key
items to pull together:
• Employee benefit state- .
ments.
• Insurance .Policies.
• Securities records.
• Tax records.
• IRA and 401 (k) records.
• Copy of your will.
• Registrations of ownership.
• Updated beneficiaries.
Yes, doing a financial
review will take some rime
and legwork, but can you ,
think of a better way to get
the new year off on the right
foot? And besides, what else
are resolutions for?

pares to the rate of return
assumed
in your original plan.
to go ,much higher as the
If it has changed significandy,
United States struggles to dig
consider adjusting it accorditsel( out of recession.
ingly.
But companies in all indusIt's ·time to review your
tries are continuing to cut
investments in the stock marback; this week alone, health
ket, too. Market performance
care giant Aetna Inc. said it
may have changed your finanwas cutting another 6,000
cial profile. You and your
jobs while telecommunicafinancial advisor considered
tions provider Qwest Com- . your risk tolerance when you
munications
International created your financial plan
lnc.'saying it would eliminate initially, but it may be differ7,000 jobs.
ent,now. Also the perforIt's been a devastating time mance, of your investments
for the U.S. steel industry in may have 1 skewed the balparticular, with nearly 30,000 ance in your portfolio, changjobs disappearing in the pasi ing the overall percentage, of
16 months. More than 20 assets you have invested in the .
domestic steel companies different risk classes and
(Mark Smith is •n investment
have gone into bankruptcy investment
vehicles. . In exe.:utive with Smith Partners at
court since late 1997, hurt by reviewing your plan and port- Advest Inc. . in irs Gallipolis
low-cost steel from foreign fotio, you'll have an opportu- office.)
companies and, over the past nity to decide if changes are ·
year, by the flagging economy. needed.
·
LTV filed for bankruptcy last
The new year may also be a
December, blaming imported good time to reexamine your
steel for driving prices down. will and estate plan. If you
For most at the lakeside have a plan in place, it should
mill, it's· too soon to even be reviewed annually to make
grasp what has happened. It sure you're taking the greatest
can't be possible that this advantage of any changes in
once-mighty mill, which the tax laws.
Wills are 'important regardcranked out 3.5 million tons
of steel a year, is done, and less of the size of your estate,
that these workers will never your marital status, or
again march in to the clang of whether you have children.
metal and the flicker of sparks Perhaps you'll want to conspraying · off acetylene torch sider changing how your
estate will be distributed,
flames.
"Most people have been either through direct benefiworking out here since they ciaries or trusts. You may also
were 18 years old," said Ker- be inspired·to use federal unimit Kutzer of the United fied eslate and gift t3x credits
Steelworb of America Local by allocating some of your
I 011. "They've had mothers assets to your heirs while
and fathers retire from here. you're still alive. The advantages and disadvantages can be
It's just devastating.".
determined by doing a com-

Organizations observe Chrisbnas, AS

grower displays and allied
indwtry displays of pesttodes
to harvest equipment.
Pre-registration by Jan. 4 is
suggested. For registration
material, please contact the
Ohio Nursery and Landscape
Association, 72 Dorchester
Square, Westerville, Ohio
43081, at 1-800-825-5062.

(Hal K~tn is Meigs County's
Extension .gent :for agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio State
University.)
brochure, outcomes vary
depending on your age, skin
type and condition. Each
ctient has a personatized treat. ment plan but most see visible
differences after the first treatment. 'JYpically, a series of 410 treatments is required to
reach a desired goal, followed
with a maintenance program.
"So far, all of my clients
have .loved the experience
and have seen immediate
results;' said Sexton. "It's kind
of exciting to see."
Among the 'many certifications, licenses and awards Sexton has received, she is ·a
trained clinical care specialist
in microdermabrasion, as well
as her associate, Sandra
McFartand.
For an appointment, folb
can call 446-2933.

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

.Whafs inside

Stude
score well
on test

Wrrn
SANTA

Eastern tops
local scoreboard

;Jags beat Browns, BI

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Deaths

TUPPER.S PLAINS
More than half of Meigs
County fourth-graders have
met or exceeded year-end
reading expectations on the
Ohio Department of Educa.
tion's fourth-grade proficiency tests.
Slatewide, nearly 50 percent of Ohio fourth-graders
have met those expectations,
and Meigs students in all
three school districts have
scored above the state avorage.
Doris Well, elementary
supervisor
for
the
Athens/Meigs Educational
Service Center, said 56 percent of the third and fourthgraders in Eastern Local
scored at a proficient or
advanced level on the test, 55
peocent of those in Meigs

Aileen Wehrung, 87
Mary Wells, 93 .

SPORTS

Details, A3

Prep basketball highlights
. · begin on 11
Advertisement for Employment
•

•

GaNta County Children's Services Board Is seeking an
experienced and motivated EX«utlve Director to direct,
mailage and Implement the activities or the Gallla County
Children's Services and the Children's Home. A
Ba~lor's De1ree In Human Services, Business
Ad~nlslratlon, PubUc Administration or related field
with a minimum or five years mana1ement or
administrative experience Is requlrecj. A Master's Degree
woul4 be preferred. A beginning salary of $45,000 plus
beneGts will be offered. GCCSB Is an equal opportunity
employer. A complete job description may be obtained by
calling 740-446-4963. Interested applicants must have
resumes to Mr. Kall Burleson, President, Gallla County
Cblldren's Services, 83 Shawnee Lane, GaiUpolls, Ohio
45631 or FAXED to (740) 446-2063 by Decem~~ 20,

2001, 4 p.m.

'

Hllh: as, Low: lOs
Details, A2

OHIO
Pick 3 Uy: 6-8·1

.'

• .I'J9! 4..dft;..~-3·7·1
Bonus Ball: 28

W.VA.

Dally 3: 9-6-7
DallY 4: 3·7·6-7
·
Poi' Mbal: 8-11-13-22-37 (11)

Index
2 Sections- 12 ...,_

Calendar
CJassifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituari.es
Sports
Weather

Shoppers!

•

POMEROY - A rocking
horse made by Tom Smith of
Pomeroy took first place in
the Pomeroy Merchants Association's annual homemade
wooden toy contest Saturday
at Farmers Bank.
With his big tractor-trailer
outfit, Gary Gibbs of Racine,
took second, while third place
went to Brent Zirkle of
Pomeroy for an articulating
camel.
George Wright and Scott
Walton, both woodworkers,
judged the 28 entries on the
basis of craftsmanship, amount

H~

11,Vliday

Plu~-Tnt,A3

Parrt1ers ·Ba r1k hosts
wooden toy contest

~ P-19-22·2.4.3&amp;45

Kkktr: 1-9+3'8·2
'Pick :5 nl1ht: 4-3·6
Pick 4 nliht: 2-7- 1·6

Last C
j a,ll For

Local, and 51 percent of
fourth -graders in Southern
Local.
Southern Local did not
administe~ the test to third
grade students last spring,
according to state's results.
This is the first time .that
Ohio schools have administered the test in the fall, and
the first time that fourthgraders had the option of
taking the test in the spring
of their third grade year.
Fourth-graders will have
two more opportunities to
take the test later in the
school year.
The purpose of the test is
to certifY a fourth-grade
level of literacy and to identify those students who are
in need of intervention. The
state, as the result of Amended Senate Bill 1, has effectively scrapped its "FourthGrade .Guarantee," which
required districts to retain
students unable to pass the
test until they were able to

AS
82-4
BS
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1, 3, 4, 6
A2

c 2001 Ohio Ve11ey Publishing Co.

of work involved, detailing,
and finish. Several pull and
articulating toys, trains and
trucks, games and puzzles,
were included in the entries.
Tammy Zirkle was chairman for the contest.
Gift certificates of $50 for
first, S25 for second, and $10
for third to be used at any
Pomeroy business with membership in the Merchants
Association will be mailed to
the winners of not only the
toy contest, but those of the
cookie and candy contests
h~ld last weekend.

W

7u7ie~

7D- Saue~

I

I

UP T0 50%
STOREWIDE

ith · just a week left until Christmas,
many boys and girls visited with Santa
Claus 'at the Meigs Museum on Saturday to put in their last-minute requests - and to
de~onstrate their good behavior. The Historical
Society's annual "Breakfast with Santa " is a
Christmas tradition at the museum, for both aduits
and children. R.ev.William Middle..:..:arth was hard
at work on the griddle, filling plates with pancakes
and sausage, and Santa had his work cut out for
him, too, as boys and girls took thel.'&lt; turns carefully speUing out their Christmas listsjAfter breakfast, children were invited to take part in a holiday
craft, and to enjoy the museum's holiday decorations and historic toy display. At leas! 50 people
attended the event, according to th~ museum's
director, Margaret Parker. (Brian J. R.e'C!d photos)

OPEN DAILv--7

9:3o ·. 5:30p.m.
Open sunday
1 p.m. · 4 p.m.

._~

--~

.

~:.Palient

'

Why go to the North Pole and back
searching for the pe.rfect gift, when
everything you. need can be found
tight here in Meigs County?

TOY JUDGING - George Wright and Scott Walton judged
the 28 entries on the basis of craftsmanship, amount of
work Involved, detailing, and finish. (Charlene Hoeflich
photo)

Rights

The nexdlrne you visit the Hospital. be sure to see the Patient
Rights posted in the lobby areas, or pick up a pamphlet at the
Front Desk. Holzer Medical Center recognizes the importance of
respeeting your rights as a patient. If you have questions or
concerns, be sure to call the Hospifal's Patient Representative
for assistance.

.

(740) 446·5568
"

'

'I

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

' .

�r
'•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

· Tu•day, Dec. 18
AccuWeathe,. forecast
0

l-

l:14'/43'l .

ol Columbua l:ll'/"' l

•

~
KV.

~~~ -~ W. VA.

0 2001 AccuWeather, Inc.

_..

0 ---~-

Sunny Pl. Qoudy .Cloudy

....

Monday. DeceMhr 17. 1001

. .

Silowers

T· SIOtmS

"-1.' '

Rain

.. ·• "'

Rutrills

Snow

Ice

Cloudy and cool rest of week
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The rain will subside on
Monday night and an overcast and cool day was foreca st
for Tuesday, the National
Weather Service said.
Highs on Tuesday will be
· in the 40s, not much warmer
than the overnight lows.
Not much change in the
· · weather is expected through

CINCINNATI (AP) -Taxpayers m
Cincinnati have paid a S2 .36 million
pnce for lawsum alleging police
improprieties over the last 10 years,
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
Cincinnati has faced 137 lawsuits in
the past decade, and city officials have
written checks for 56 of the 93 cases
closed through October, the newspaper
reports.
Of the 137 total cases, 63 included
accusations that officers used excessive
force. Twenty four of the suits cited discrimin ation by officers because of race,
ethnicity or sexual orientation.
Most of the settlement money compensated people who accused police of
roughing them up, shooting them,
M acing them, loosing police dogs on
them or inappropriately killing their

loved ones.
Bui checks also went out to people
who accused officers of charging them
with crimes they did not commit,
searching them without authority or
confiscating money without any proof
that they were dealing drugs. ·
And the amount of payouts appears
to be increasing, the newspaper reports.
The city paid between $30,000 and
$63,000 for deaths at the hands of
police officers until last year, when it
paid a S200,000 settlement to the
mother of Lorenzo Collins. Collins, an
Mrican-American menu! patient from
Avondale, was shot to death when he
confronted officers with a brick in
1997.
Then in July, the city paid a record
settlement of$700,000 to Robbie Wit-

against the family since the 1970s.
Phil Burress, president of the Sharonville-based anti-pornography group Citizens for Community Values, said he thinks
local or county officials in Monroe eventually will initiate legal
action against the Aynts for their store.
" His (Aynt's) day is coming when he will be held accountable for the filth in that store," Burress said.

the rest of the week, with
partly cloudy skies and tem peratures in the 40s.
The record high temperature for Dec. 17 at the
weather station was 6 7 in
1984 and the record low was
-12 in 1989. Sunset Monday
night will be at 5:08 p.m. and
sunnse on Tuesday at 7:48
a.m.

Jazzy.nutaacker

Attomey fights for killer
· LEBANON (AP) -A lawyer for a man convicted of stran. gling his prison cellmate said that prison officials should never
· have put the two men in the same ceU.
' Timothy Hancock, 31, of Lima, was convicted Dec. 4 of
' aggravated murder in the death of Jason Wagner, 25, of Lan- •
' caster: The Warren County Common Pleas jury rejected Hancock's insanity plea and recommended that he be executed.
Judge Neal Branson was scheduled to sentence Hancock on
Monday to the death penalty or life in prison.
Hancock's attorney, Patrick Long, said Hancock and Wagner
should have never been in the same ceU at the Warren Correctional Institution.
"It's not a defense to an aggravated murder," Long told The
Cincinnati Enquirer for a story published Monday. "But I felt it
was a good argument why he should not get the death penal-

. ty."
'

FBI fourth in bank robberies
CINCIN1'!ATr (~P) -Bank robberies hit an all-.time high
in Greater Cincinnati this year, helping to rank the southern
region of Ohio fourth nationwide in heists, the FBI said.
That's compared with a ranking of eighth in 2000 for the
FBI's southern Ohio rlivision, which coven the 28 southern. most counties and includes Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton,
• Middletown and Portsmouth.
Despite the high numbers in Greater Cincinnati, the city still
ranks second to Columbus, which has had 126 robberies so far
this year and historicaUy outpaces Cincinnati. Columbus had 94
heists in 2000.
·,
As of Friday, ·83 banks have been robbed since Jan. I in
. Greater Cincinnati, which includes Hamilton, Clermont and
: Brown counties. Nearly all of those robberies were in Hamilton County.
Dayton, however, dipped to 39 robberies from 61 in 2000.
The Cleveland FBI field office, which covers the rest of the
state, reported 160 bank robberies so far this year, down from
· 1 71 last year.

Site to get more monitoring wells
U)'.JIONTOWN (AP) -Two new monitoring wells Will be
. installed in January to check levels of benzene at a closed. landfill that was declared a federal Superfund cleanup site in 1984.
The wells will be used to supplemet)t, and perhaps replace,
' two weUs at the 30-acre toxic-waste dump, the closed Industri' al Excess Landfill in Stark County between Akron and Canton .
Repeated tests of groundwater have found benzene, a chemical suspected of causing cancer, in troublesome levels under the
dump. There is no evidence that benzene has moved off site or
. poses a threat to neighbors, officials say.
· , The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency feels that ben. zene is "definitely a concern" at the landfill, said Ross del
Rosario, the site manager for the EPA.
Concerned Citizens of Lake Township, a local organization, is
concerned by the benzene levels but its officials are more troubled by reports of radiation at the dump. Federal officials insist
radiation is not a problem there.

: Flynt says Hustler store a success
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jimmy Flynt said he un-derestimated
interest in his Cincinnati-area Hustler Hollywood adult entertainment store.

·
.

·
.

A Lima ballerina leaps through the air during ·Journey through
the Snow ' In a jazzy Interpretation of "The Nutcracker" matinee performance at the Veteran's Memorial Civic Center In
Lima. Lyn Mulcahy and Liz Knlppen of Lyn's Academy of Dance·
directed the performance. (AP Photo)

Medina puts
police blotter
online for
all to see
MEDINA (AP) - It's the
Information Ag~ answer to
the qu estion: What were the
police cars doing down the
street last night ?
Police in this fast-growing
Cleveland suburb alongside
Interstate 71 have placed
their daily blotter on the
Internet. The blotter briefly
summarizes calls ranging
from lost dogs to emergencies.
Listings from a recent day
included officers cqecking
on a suspicious persoJ;I trying
to open a car, a motorist
who thought someone was
following her, and a boy who
had been tripped in school ·
and hurt his kn ee.
"The more people who
see it , the better educated the
publi c is about what we do
on a day-to-day basis," Chief
Dennis Hanwell said.
The logs are posted Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays
and soon will appear every
weekday.
The site includes what
beats officers walk after midnight, when red lights turn
to flashing yellow caution
a,td what time stores, restaulants and ga s stations dose . ,

"The biggest headache so far is keeping the place stocked ,"
said Flynt, brother and business partner of Hustler found er
Larry Flynt.
•
,Flynt said about 250,000 customers visited the store in Monroe, which marked its first anniversaty this weekend.
.T he reuil outlet, which sells sexuaUy explicit videos, sexual
aids and Hustler apparel, is Flynt's first expansion beyond the
Hollywood, Calif. original.
·
Though he would not reveal any sales numbers, Flynt said the
Monroe store outsold the HoUywood location last year,
prompting he and his brother to speed up progress o n simila r
outle ts natio'nwide.
1
"They can sec th e crazy
Flynt said his downtown Cincinnati store is much less profthmgs people call the police
itable. He said he continues to pperate the store as a testa ment
for," said Janice Schultz, who
to maintaining a Flynt- ow ned store in C incinnati and H amiledits the log. "Some of !'his
ton Coun ty, which have brought several high-profiled lawsuits
stuff you couldn 't make up."

•

.

tenberg, of Silverton, who claimed an
officer punctured his lung and fractured his spine when he tackled him in
a MadiSonville convenience store.
Wittenberg, who has Alzheimer's disease, entered the store with a drill in
1999 and was tackled by officer Robert
Hill, who was called to the scene.
Deputy Solicitor Pete Heile called
the Wittenberg case unusual and said
overall, he believes settlements are not
.
.
1ncreas1ng.
"It's a function oflooking at the case,
looking at the facts, looking at all circumstances surrounding a piece of litigation;' he said. "The facts are very dif"
ferent in many cases. They may appear
the same, but obviously they are different situationS."

COLUMBUS (AP) Buckeye Egg Farm, repeatedly
accused by neighbors and the
sute of violating poUution
laws, objects to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency's
decision to regulate larJ~e-scale
feedlots like factories and
sewage-treatment plants.
Buckeye Egg filed a twopage appeal with an EPA
review panel last week, saying
it does not meet the sute's definition of a "confined animal
feeding
operation;' The
Columbus Dispatch reported
Sunday.
The company's attorneys
said it would be unlawfi.tl and
unreasonable for Buckeye Egg,
which p1;0duced 4 percent of
the country's 2.6 billion eggs
last year, to obtain the ndl;essaty permits.
The EPA said that explana·
tion is not good enough.
"They can claim anything
· they want, but we have documented numerous discharges
(spills)' into the waters of'the
sca~e:· Heather Lauer; an EPA
spokeswoman,' told Th~ · Dispatch.
.. Messages seeking comment
were left Sunday on the voice
mail of the company and
owner Anton Pohlmann.
According to documents
filed with the Environmental
1\eview Appe;tls Commission,
a panel that reviews EPA

The Dally Sentinel • Paae A3

LOCAL BRIEFS
Meigs County recorder
posts recent land transfers EMS logs calls

Aileen v."eh111111

POMEROY
Meigs
County Recorder Judy King
reported the following transfers of real esute:

Burton. to B&lt;lntAien Smith, Bnmt A.
Smith, deed. VIllage 01 Mldcllel&gt;o&lt;l.

POMEROY - Units of
the Meig. Emergency Service
answered eight calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as foUows:

7:24 p.m .. Spring Avenue,
Sueshal Kennedy, HMC;
11:16 p.m., Pomeroy Police
Department, Teresa Dressler,
treated;
Sunday, 8:23 a.m., Third
Street, Tracy Rickenbach,
HMC;
8:26 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Scotr Ramsey, treated.

Jacky
Coughe,...,r,
Betty
POMEROY - Ail"en Grace Wehrung, 87, Pomeroy, died
Coughenour, wandll McKinney,
Saturday, Dec. 15, 2001 at h~ n:sidence.
Caru1 Young, Mllcclm Young, Patsy
Sh" was born in Min..rsville on Sq&gt;t. 24, 1914, daughter of
Rothgeb, Ruby Coughonau&lt;, Milk
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the late Ernest and uticia Jones Rea. She was a homemaker Kerry ..__, ~ t-t.uer, l&lt;nn Coughenour, Deborah Coughenour,
~,
ID
~A.
deed,
!'~~r,ID~on·I~Satu!day, 11 :44 a.m., Kingsand a memb..r ofTrinity Congregational Church.
Kevln
Hetzer
to
A.
-~~.
·
·
_,
"
....,_,,,
bury Road, Freda Mahr,
Surviving are her son and daughter-in-law, Harlan Craig and
Holzer Medical Center;
Thxanna J. w.,hrung, and daughter and son-in-Jaw, judith Rea
Cox, David eo•. to
TUPPERS PLAINS
· and Jim Sisson, all of Pomeroy; grandchifdren, Jeffery Harlan
1:41 p.m., Spring Avenue,
Biu, VICky L. Blaa, deed , ~i:" to Deborah K. Buck, deed.
Sunday, 8:26 a.m., Ohio 7,
Wehrung, Jonathan Wehrung, Debbie Evans and Tom Werry;
Dennis Robinson, HMC;
Bruner Land Co. to Jason A. John Jelfer1 10 Thomas E. Molden,
great-grandchildren, Harlan Wehrung,Jonathan Wehrung,J.T. Dellavalle ~~ Columbia
5:13 p.m., West Main Street, George . Homer, CamdenJudy Molden. Bryan S. Molden, right
.......,,
·
otway.
Calrk Memorial Hospital.
Evans and Jo!dan 'Evans; a sister, Ernestine Faplknet of Jack- JarMa C. ,Britton,
Sam
E\&gt;lin, HMC;
Linda A. Britton, to Jamo Edw
8
Robert
McMillen,
Geraldine
ard
Baer,
Rebecca
Ann
.sonville, Aa.; and a brother, Don Rea of Minersville.
-~len. easamenl.
Baer. Lany Ladd Bourne, to Timothy
Besides her parents, She was preceded in death by her hus- Sue Ellon Jonson, Edwin D. John· Bentz, Pamela Bentz. deed, Village
band, Harlan Henry Wehrung, and her brother, Stanley Rea.
son, Jeffrey L. Cramlet, Tori Cramlet, of Pomeroy.
At Mrs. Wehrung's request, there will be no calling hours, and to Richard c. Cramlet, - d. Roger Lee Spencer, doceued, to
Labauou.
Phyllis Eileen Spencer, alfidavit, Sal· ·
private graveside services will b.. held for the family.
Joeeph D. Sayre, Sr.• docea88d, to labury.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice, DIJde A. Sayre, al!ldavit. Sutton.
Joe C. Ritchie to Carl vanover.
Meigs County Branch, 115 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Darrell Young, Mary Young , 1o Daniel Jacqueline Vanover. deed. Sutton.
J. BatJrnan, Charlotte A. Bauman, Aileen Wohrung to ThOmas Craig
Ohio 45769.
deed, Bedford.
Weny, deed, Village ot Pomeroy.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher-Acree Allee Jane Flanagan to Arnborse Dorothy J. Morris to carot J. Abbott.
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) World Trade Center that lost
Louis Flanagan, deed, Village of Michael S. Morris, Susan L. Baker,
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
SyraCilSII.
Krista L. Wingo, deed, Village of Mfd. Five New York City firefight- I 0 men on Sept 11 . Pictures of
Robert R. Hersman, to Plllll Spty, dlepott/OIIve Township.
ers rode triumphantly up to the fallen were displayed on a
Kathy Spry, deed, Salem.
. Jeny Warner to Gene Warner, deed, Pasadena's Old Firehouse on poster as the cycling firefightDonald Peterson, Pea~ Howery Scipio.
Sunday. the last stop of a cross- ers listened to speeches from
MIDDLEPORT - Mary EUen Wells, 93, Middleport, died Paterson , to Dennis Wayne Tolley, Roger K. Stout to Gina M. Geremia,
country bicycle tour that local officials and a rendition
deed, Columbia.
deed, Columbia.
Sunday, Dec. 16, 2001, at the extended care unit ofVeterans Edward A. Crooks, Judith A. Crooks. James Wasley casey, Jr., Rhonda
began Nov. 11 at the site of the of" America the Beautiful."
to Gregory Lloyd Wiseman, Sandra Lynn Casey, to Robert S. Farley,
·
• Memorial Hospital.
World Trade Center.
"To be able to meet them
deed, Salisbury.
She was born on Nov. 6, 1908, in Cheshire, daughter of the K. Brown, agreement.
A ·crowd of supporters face to face and be part of it
Blondell J. Miller to David F. Hanson, Rachel Coon Pridemore, Millie Coon,
late Arthur M. and Emma Scott Rife. She retired as manager of Nina J. Hanson, deed, Lebanon .
to Leading Creek Consarvancy Dis· greeted the men with cheers for a few hours, it's a dream
the Betsy Ross Baking Co. oudet store in Middleport after 27 William Todd Zuspan, Darla Zuspan, tricl..."'""t
,... of way, Vlnton.
lieny S· Foelds, Jodl M. Fields, Steve J. Bass, Emily bass, to LCCD, and shouts of"F- D- N-Y! F- come true," said Pasadena fireto
years in the bakery business.
D-N-Y!" Children clamored fighter paramedic Jim Todd,
dead, Chester.
.
right of way, Salem.
She started working in the bakery business in 1947 by greas- My~le V. 1.-n to James lee Bax· Jennner L. Fackler. Ben Fackler, to
for autographs.
40.
ing pans, panning bread and sweet rolls, the donut belt and ~~i ~: to carey L. Loar, LCCD, right of way, Rutland.
The firefighters completed a
The firefighters pedaled
cakes and pies, and returned to panning bread. AU her years Lisa D. Loar, deed, Village of Gina Renee Weaver to LCCD, ~ght
2,757mile
trek
not
to
raise
down
to Georgia from New
of way, Salisbury.
were in the same location, and for three former bakeries: The Pomeroy.
funds, but to express thanks to York, then cut across the South
Covert Baking Co. in the 1940s, the Ohio Valley Baking Co. in Helen Long, Thomas R. Long, Geor- Ma~ory Ann Warner to LCCO, right of
the nation f!&gt;r the support they · to the West Coast, greeting
gia Bosomwor1h, Peter P. Boacm- way, Salisbury.
the 1950s, and Holsum and Betsy Ross in the 1960s.
worth, to Jeanie M. Ridenour, Floyd Glenna L. Stitt, Tracy Stitt. to LCCD. say has overwhelmed thelfl weU-wishers and sleeping in
right of way, Salem.
She was a member of Old. Kyger Fre..will Baptist Church D. RIdenour. deed, Chester.
Tl G
d D ld G
d t
Robert
E.
Milliron
to
Peoples.
Bank,
m roun s, av
roun a, o since the Sept. II terrorist firehouses along the way.
and attended several local churches.
acucks.
They rode about 100 miles a
.• deed.
·
LDCCvldD, H~~ w~~Columbia.
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law: Marjorie and N.A
Cass Cleland, Tranton J. Cleland, to
a
~·· • ·~rasa Hosack, to
"It was beautiful, over- day, trailed by a support van
Chester Wigal of Middleport and Donna and Richard Jones of Donakl C. Cleland. Shannon M. Cfe. LCCD, right of way, Columbia.
Judy K. Saul to LCCD. right of way, whelming, great support from driven by a sixth firefighter.
Pomeroy; a son-in-law, Bob Fisher of Middleport; eight grand- land, deed, SUtton.
the country," said Matt Hor"It's been a very long trip, it's
· Joaa Delgado. Maria Delgado. to Ru11and.
children, Sue A. Grogan Simpson, Larry G. Grogan and Terry Kristin Marie Torres, deed, Vjlage of Rick Kama to LCCD, right of way,
nung, 30, who was wearing been a great trip, and I wish it
L. Grogan, all of Middleport; Kimberly Jones Quinn of Sims- Middleport.
Columbia.
bicycle shorts and a red plastic would not end," said Dan
bury, Conn., Brett A. Jones of Racine and Susan L. Jones of Ruth Palmer to Mark Jon Paul Nol- Cacit Johnston, Rebecca Johnston,
firefighter's hat. "We intended "Pappy" Rowan, senior memson, Michelle Leigh Nalson, ease- to LCCD, right of way, Salem.
Columbus; Bruce R. Fisher of Middleport and David S. Rsher mont. Salem.
Henry Rne 10 LCCD. ~ght of way. on thanking people, and peo- ber of the firehouse and the
of Houston, Texas; six grandchildren, a great-great-grandson; Paul Black, Mlchaal J. Hill, Mindy K. Salem.
Joseph Vlny Ia LCCD, right -of way, pie came out and thanked us." bike tour's mastermind. The
three stepdaughters and several step-grandchildren and great Hill, deed, Sutton.
Hornung and the other fire- other riders were Hornung,
Paul Black to Michael J. Hill, Mindy K. Rutland.
grandchildren.
.
Hilt, easement, Sutton.
ROdney M. Pierce, Pauline B. Pierce, fighters come from Engine Sal Princiotu, Drew Robb
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her first William L. Dodson. Mary Lou Dod- to ROdney E. Pierce, Jr., deed, Olive.
Co. Nine/Ladder Co. 33, a su- and Gerard Dolan. Ralph Perhusband, Asa Edmond WeUs, her second husband, Ernest WeUs, son, Gene A. Dodson, Agnes Dod- David A. Lewla, Kathryn S. Lewis, to
lion less than a mile from the ricelli followed in the van.
her daughter, Emogene "Jean" Fisher, twO brothers, Raymond son, Patricia Burton, Wayne Dexter Sue A. Kauff, deed, Chllter.
and Marion Rife; a sister, Glenna Shuler; and a stepson. ·
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 19,2001, at
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport. Burial will follow
at Gravel ({ill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 2 to 4
·and 6 to 8 p.m.
NEW YORK (AP) -With less than
"I am spending less, just buying toys $206 billion.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice two weeks left until Christmas, retailers for my friends' children," said Judy
That would make .it the worst holiMeigs County Branch, 115 E. Memorial Dr., Pomeroy, Ohio struggling with ·disappointing sales Boudreau, from Jupiter, Fla., shopping at
day-season retail performance · since
45769. .
slashed prices further, but it might not Macy's in New York. "I have to be more 1990, when sales were basically
have been enough for some to make conservative, given what has happeneo:f
unchanged.
sales goals.
to my inves~ent portfolio."
Sales at Bloomingdale's were running
For retailers, the disappointments of
"They're desperately trying to move
formance rather than the proabove expectations this weekend,
out merchandise, but they are not doing the season keep growing.
ficient level.
The Thanksgiving shopping weekend, according to chairman Michael Gould.
Districts have three options so ·successfully," Kurt Barnard, president
for sundards who score below of Barnard's Retail Trend Report, said while solid, failed to give merchants the But at K-B Toys, which operates 1,400
flomPqeA1
basic: a district can promote a Sunday. "This is the home stretch, and relief they were hoping for, and sales stores, the weekend's sales were up only
student without intervention they are whipping the horse, but the have been limping along since then.
do so.
_in the low single digits from a year ago.
The Washingtot:~. D. C.-based National
. Now, the decision to retain if the teacher and principal horse is responding only sluggishly."
Spokesman John Reilly said sales of
Despite the abundance of bargains, Retail Federation predicts total holiday
students who fail to pass the agree the students is academigame consoles · and game software were
reading test rests with the caUy prepared for grade five, many shoppers - nervous about job reuil sales, which excludes restaurant
and auto sales, will rise in the range of strong, but toys sales were unchanged
local school districts, Well promote the student and pro- security and political unceruinties
2.5 percent to 3 percent, to roughly from a year ago.
vide intensive intervention if were reluctant to splurge.
said.
A promotion or retention the student can be successf\11
decision is allowed to be . in grade five with assisunce,
based on whether a student or reuin the student in Grade
meets the basic level of per- 4.

w-.

~O:Y
t:::.·

::i,~~~~~J. Kee­

NYC firefighters complete
cross-country bike ride

Mary Wells

Egg fann objects.to

~ EPA's

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

•

City foots the bill for settlements

Ohio weather

"""'·

PageAl

lllondav. Dec. 17. 2001

regulations
enforcement actions, Buckeye .
Egg said the persnits exceed
the EPA's authority-and duplicate existing permits.
Last October, the EPA
ordered Buckeye Egg and two
other large ·feedlots to apply
for persnits required by the
federal Clean Water Act. The
companies wen; singled out
for poUuting rivers and
streams.
EPA officials are reviewing
persnits filed by Daylay Egg
Farm in Union County and
Andreas Farms, a dairy operation in Tuscarawas County.
The permits originaUy were
·intended to clean up factory
drainpipes and sanitary sewers.
Extending them to megafarms
is a reaction to dram.ati c
changes in the livestock industry, which has consolidated
into fewer but much larger
operations.
Buckeye Egg's refusal to
apply for the permits is the latest legal scuffie between state
regulator,; and the cwnpany,
wliich has operations in \Vyandot, Hardin and Licking counties.
Attorney General Betty
Montgomery's office has filed
eight contempt charges against
Buckeye Egg, aUeging violations inclurling dumping dead
chickens in a field, polluting
creeks and causing insect infestatiotu.

Retailers step up discounting to attrad shoppers

Test

North American Muslims celebrate end of Ramadan

for the person who has everything
1year gift subscriptions to the

MIAMI (AP) About
3,000 Muslims of all ages and
from different parts of the
world slipped off their shoes,
unfurled their prayer rugs and
F«BBI MoglA- .83
Pnmar-8.90
AEP-41.50
bowed in worship at a Miami
--18.115
USB-18.116
Aral Call- 19.87
Rocky Boots- 6.18
Grnltl-6620
Nrlfl-".50
stadium Sunday to mark Eid
General Elactrlc- 37.85 RDShel-47.43
Am~-38.115
. ai-Fitr, or the Feast of the End
Saln-48.19
GKNLY-3.90
Astland lno. -43.45
Harley DIMdaon- 52.74 Shoney's- 27
of Fasting.
AT&amp;T -18.13
Wai-Mort- 54.06
. Kmatt-5.76
Bank One- 37.1!5
Facing east toward Mecca,
Werq/s-29.23
f(roger- 20.51
BU-9.66
one
oflslam's holy cities, worLMdo End- 44.110
BobEWn-24.47
wat•IQIOI• 13.79
lii-13.87
shippers chanted "God is
Borg\'oWnor-49.23
NSC-17.97
0.1 .... 1 2.39
Deily l9jXIrtS 818 ...
great" in Arabic and kneeled
Oak HI Ffnln:lai-1S
Cllam*1g Shqls- 5.11
4 p.m closi1g
f1a
to the ground and listened to
previous clay's transac.OVB-23
City l-loklr1j - 12
llona, pro;ited bo; Srril1 the imam's sermon at the Pro
BBT-34.89
ca-18.66
Paoptee- 18.35
DG-13.90
Stadium.
Papolco- 47.&gt;48
Dol'ool- 41 .&gt;48
cParrletl
....· - n:. of Player
"It's a very happy day with a
very heavy heart," said Rafiq
Mahcli, an imam from a Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., mosque.
Mahdi asked worshippers to
(USPS 213-IMO)
think of Muslims in areas such
Ohio Yltlay Publtthtng CO.
as
Palestine and Afghanistan
Publlohod evory afternoon, Monday
lhrough Friday. 111 Court Sl .,
who might not be able to celCorrection Polley
PomerOy,
Ohlo.
Second-class
ebrate.
Our main concern In all stories is postage paklar Pomt1roy.
lltmbtt:
The
Aasoclated
Press
and
to be accurate. If you know of an

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The celebration was one of ing, drinking, smoking and
many Sunday as Muslims sexual intercourse between
across. the Unit~d States sunrise and sunset.
marked the end of the Islamic
Muslims believe that the
holy month of Ramadan with Quran .- the Muslim holy
prayers, feasts and presents for book, began to be revealed to
children.
man during Ramadan 14 cenDozens of Muslims filled turies ago .
the Malcolm Shabazz mosque
This year's observance has
in New York to exchange gifts been clouded by ' fighting in
and feast chicken and vegeta- Mghanistan and the worsenbles, whi!." greeting one ?,ther ing Israeli- Palestinian conflict.
w1th a salaam ala1kam In Southern California
peace be with you .
'
"It's a fun holiday because
the fasting is over for me," said
lntisar Abdul-Aii, 12, who
chos~ a Power Puff Girls puzzle from sucks of toys laid out .
on tables.
Eid ai-Fitr marks the conclusion .of the month of
Ramadan, which began Nov. .
16. During the month, obser"f'
vant Muslims abstain from eat-

what she.meant
when she said •••

uetme
something
special for
Christmas"

Mllll subsatptlon
ln•lde Mtlgl COunty

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26 WeeKs

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52 Weeks

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Rlltn outaldo Melgo County
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•

the United States prayed
together. Leaders urged Muslims to remember teachings
about rejecting hate and
embracing humanity.

NOT

carrier may remit In advance dlrect ·to
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mall permitted In ara~.s where home
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13 Weeks

mosques, schools and forums
. opened their doors to weicome Muslims for Eid prayers.
At Crenshaw High School
in Los. Angeles, more than
l,OOO Muslims from Palestine
S h Afi.
B .
d
to out
nca to emn an

,

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Danwhr n. 2001

The Daily Sentinel

'

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74~992-2156

• Fax: 992-2157

'The Daily Sentinel

Ajghanistan\-democratic past forgotten in tragic present
•

DEAR. ABBY: When it comes td
the subject of Mghanisun, many
people write as if Mghans never
knew democracy or freedom. I am
writing you today because I knew a
very different Mghanistan.ln fact, my
husband
helped
to
write
Afghanisun's constitution in 1964,
which included universal suffrage, an
ADVICE
equal. rights amendment for women
(including provisions for equal pay),
and a separate judiciary. Women wete outside the home.
Unfortunately. the Taliban erased
members of AfghanL•un's parliament;
this from the global community's
some were judges.
mind in only five short years. They
I am deeply pained to think that
burned the books, banned music, and
many people view Mghans as illiter- forbade Afghans from congregating
ate refugees who look different and in twos or threes. People now think
live differently than Americans, when that Mghans have always lived this
in fact, we have many things in com- way - when in reality the Taliban
mon. For example, I attended high came into our country and took our
school in Afghanistan, played on a liberties and freedoms away. The Talsports team after school and worked

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Genel'lll Manager

Dear

R. Shawn Lewis

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Managing EdHor
···

Abby

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

tAn~n rn rlrr Hliuw «n wdctJtnJe. Tltq slwutd N l~n ''''"' 300 wonts. All ldtftt
ou subj«t w ~ilinr ud mun lw Jign#'d tmd i11dtuk t1ddrnt attd kltplr(Hf.t liM~.
No UIISiR"ed /1«~ will bt' p~&gt;~blislt~d. IAnen sltould h '" 11Hd 14tlt, llddTtsllltf

ine,S. "df /HNOittiUtitt,

By_..!l!!l.!l.!e!...JI~Ie!!!n~d!!...__-___. . .!Mo~ncl~ay.!:. !·o~.ee~~~~~~.,e~n·~~oo~~

,.,

. . lin',,

nr. a,ilfirms txptYuH ilr ,,.. culum" ~w
CfMSC!IUUS "''"' Oldo H11k1
PMblisllillr Co. 'r dff""-1 hlerd. •llllns otlrmf'is• 11ofed.

OUR VIEW

Believe it

iban a~regarded by many Afghans as
an occupying force that does not
teSpect the Afghan culture or way of
life.
I am thankful for the help of
groups here in the United States,
such as the Feminist Majority Foundation, who have worked tirelessly to
educate the American public about
the atrocities committed by the Taliban and to urge the U.S. goveniment to stop the human rights abuses against the Afghan people, particularly women and girls. I hope that
we will soon see ou'r constitution
returned to irs rightful place in
.Afghan society. -. SARA AMIR-

YAR
DEAR SARA: I join you in that
hope.
P.S. When the subject of the Taliban's abuse of women in Afghanistan

first appeared in this column, some
people wondered why I would print

weren't needed. However, the
policeman's first direction to the dria letter .about women in a country so ver was to turn olf the ignition.
far from our own. As we now know, Everyone should know about this.
a regime that would perpetrate such Stopping sparks that might start a tire
flagrant human rights abuses against is crucial. The people in the vehicle
half its population is capable of sup- were wearing seat belts. It would be
porting terrorism and murder any- terrible to have one's life saved by a
where.Those interested in participat- seat belt, only to lose it in a tire.
ing in the Feminist Majority FounPlease share this with your readers.
dation's Campaign to Stop Gender
- FRANK B. ADAMS JR., M.D.,
Apartheid may call 1-888-WESENECA, S.C.
WOMEN (1-888-939-6636) or visit
DEAR DR. ADAMS: Gladly.
www.helpafghanwomen.com.
DEAR ABBY: I am a retired Your suggestion is a sensible one.
family physician . Recently I was People who have just had an auto
traveling on the intersute highway accident are often so shocked and
when I observed an auto accident. A distracted that they don't think to do
policeman was as near as I, so we the obvious .
both got to the wreck at the same
Dear Abby is written by Pauline
time.
It turned out my medical services Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.

SOCIEIY SCRAPBOOK

'Smokng gun' tape should settle
all doubts about bin Laden

Alfred Christmas party held

.

'
After all o( the careful examination and analysis by the lil\li'
: tary and terror experts, it's a little hard for us to believe that
' anyone isn't convinced Osama bin laden was gloating about
: the success of the Sept. 11 raids on America in the videotape
, the government released last week.
.
, Of course, much of the disbelief tha.t the tape is a "smoki'!g
: gun" pinning the crimes on the terrorist master comes from his
ers Stepping Up Monitoring of Reli'Carner of the world, where some Muslims are convinced the ; • :Ac th~ start ofboth the civil .rights and
aiiQ..Vie'tnam-war movements, a majorigious, Political Groups" reported that
: U.S., and the western world, are looking to destroy their reli1 ty O.f Americans did not support either
the FBI will, under this proposal, no
. : gion and way of life.
ca!bpaign. But, through · teach-ihs and
longer be held to "justice Department
: Cooler and more objective minds in that region will preotMr
educational
projects
from
regulations requiring agents to show
: sumably recognize that America's government has not docneWspaper ads io marches on Washingprobable cause that a crime was afoot
, tared, altered or cast a voodoo spell on this record of infamy so
ton· - the direction of the nation was
before spying on political or religious
it says what they want us to hear.
changed.
·
organizations." Those regulations were
These are the minds that accept the Moslem belief in nonThe odds against similar organized ·
put in place after the Church Commit·violence, the minds who. are horrified that bin Laden and his
na:tiqiul opposition to the Bush admintee exposed the FBI's disgraced COIN,iJk have corrupted the teachings of the Koran into a justificaof
the
Constituisttation's
weakening
TELPRO
record.
tion for killing and oppression. These are also the minds we
COL!JMNIST
On
a
Dec.
2 episode of ABC's "This
particularly
the
Bill
of
Right$,
are
tion;
.hope will prevail to end the cycle of chaos gripping portions
much longer than they were in the
\
·Week," Attorney General john Ashcroft
of the Middle East.
1960s.
Not
only
do
polls
show
overnot only did not deny the advent of a
· The tape also served as a wake-up call to America and its ·
tJ.ons.
whelming public support for the dimin'allies in the war on terror. Bin Laden and his followers are dedAmong the FBI's urgets were anti- new COINTELPRO, but stoutly mainishing of civil liberties; but Congress - war, civil rights and black nationalist tained that he· will pursue whatever has
icated to &lt;)estroying as many of us as possible. The smirking satexcept for a few vocal constitutionalists groups, along with various 'liberal orga- to be done in the war against terrorism.
·isfactiori evident in his conversation with supporters found in
is not going to vigorously exercise its nizations that opposed certain govern- He doesn't need congressional approval
the tape shows us that the lives of thousands of Americans who
oversight powers over John Ashcroft and mem foreign policies. 11he· Communist for this assault on the First and Fourth
died unimaginably horrible deaths on that unforgettable day
the Justice Department.
mean nothing to him.
Party itself was, of course, included. But, Amendments.
As Democrat john Dingell, a long- as a reporter throughout that period, 1 During what passed for a congressionThe tape's revelations also show us that this conflict isn't
time, influential member of the House, can attest that many of the CO INTEL- a! debate on Ashcroft's anti-terrorism
about clashing faiths or political differences. It's about civilizatold the Dec. 5 New York Times, "I hear PRO probes were directed at entirely bill, the American Civil Liberties Union
'tion combatting barbarism. That Al-Qaida forces are on the run
a
lot of members saying they're con- lawful groups and ind,i,vidu:Us without. orgamzed . a Coahtton m . Defense. ~f
.and pondering surrender is testimony to the fact civilization
cerned, but not _many willing to say it any ties to Communism.
will - and must - win this war.
Freedom m Tune of N~M?ol Cm1s.
'
publicly:•
·
Finally, in 1975, the Senate Select Opposmg parts of that \ bill, wh1ch
There is insistent public opposition Committee on Intelligence Activities became law, was the largest array of ciVil
from civil libertarians, both on the left (the Church Committe~) began to hold hbemes orgamz;mons I have ever seen
and the right; but the. attorney general's hearings and otherwise investigate -from left to nght and center. In~lud­
often
unilaterat,
scorched-earth COINTELPRO. The committee con- ed were : The Center for ConstttutJonal
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
approach to the Bill of Rights takes on eluded that this FBI ~peration was "a Rights; the Free. Congress. Foundation;
Today is Monday, Dec. 17, the 351st day of 2001. There are
new dimensions so frequently that his sophisticated and vigilante . program the Amencan Fnends ServiCe c;ommlt14 days left in the year.
critics have been able only so far to aimed squarely at prev~nting the exercise tee; Gun Owners of Amenca; the
' Today's Highlight in History:
react. There hasn't been time to organize of First Amendment rights of speech and NAACP Board. of D1rectors; the
On Dec. 17, 1903 , Orville and Wilbur Wright went on the
pressure nationwide · so that Congress association, on the theory that prevent- Rutherford Institute; and Amnesty
first successful m.mpowcred airplane flights, near Kitty Hawk,
will
awaken to the separ.~tion of powers ing the growth of dangeroliS gro'lps an'd lnternanonal USA.
. .
'N.C.
is
at
the
core
of
our
system
of
govthat
Jf
enough
of
these
groups.and
t~dl­
the
propagation
of'
dangerous
ideas
On this date :
ernance.
.
would protect the national se.curity and v1du:Us also mtent on rescumg consntuIn 1777, France recognized American independence.
A
new
addition
to
John
Ashcroft's
war
deter
violence."
tiona! rights - can move from reacting
In 1830, South American patriot Simon Bolivar died in
on
both
terrorism
and
our
Constitution
The Church Committee (named for to organize a national coalition, ConColombia:
'
i
s
his
plan
under
the
exp.
a
nded
surIdaho
Sen. Frank Church, its chairman) gress can be moved to act before, as .
In 1925, Col. William "Billy" Mitchell was convicted at his
veillance
powers
in
the
USA
Patriot
Act
added: "The American people need to Rep~~lican Congressman . Bob B~r.r
'court-martial of insubordination.
- to reintroduce a current version of be reassured that never again will an says, . ThiS mass1ve suspenSion of c1vil
. In 1939, the German pocket battleship Graf Spee was scutCOINTELPRO (Counterintelligence agency of the government be permitted hbcrt1es ... Will hkely set preced~nts,~hat
tled by its crew, ending the World War II Battle of the River
Operation). From 1956 to 1971, the FBI to conduct a secret war against those cit- w1ll come back to haunt us ternbly.
Phtte off Uruguay.
·
not only monitored religious and politi- izens it considers ,threats to the estab· In 1944, the U.S. Army announced it was ending its policy of
cal _groups ·purportedly linked to Com- lished order."
..
(Nar Hentolf is a &gt;zationally re11oumed
excluding japanese-Americans from the West Coast.
munist operations, but the bureau also
But
a
Dec.
3
Wali
Street
Journal
story
m•tlroriry 011 rhe First Ame11dment and the
In 1957, the United States successfully test-fired the Atlas .
infiltrated and disrupted these organiza- headlined "Justice Department Consid- Bill of Rights.)
intercontinental ballistic missile for the first time.
In 1969, the U.S. Air Force closed its Project Blue Book by
concluding there was no evidence of extraterrestrial spaceships
behind thousands of UFO sightings.
In 1975, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme was sentenced iq feder- .
a! court in Sacramento, Calif., to life in prison for her attempt
on the life of President Ford.
In 1981, members of the Red Brigades kidnapped Brig. Gen.
James L. Dozier, the highest-ranking U.S. Army official in
southern Europe, from his home in Verona, Italy. (Dozier was
Bv JoHri'CUNNtFF
or she feels, and th e way they feel to aggregate demand - in effect, that
rescued 42 days later.)
·
NEW YORK- Economists official- becomes a factor in what happens, fiscal policy failed.
In ·1986, Eugene Hasenfus, the American convicted by
ly declare a recession exists, you might whereas the economists have to wait
Such failures to anticipate economic
Nicaragua for his part in running·guns to the C 0 nm.s, was par~·' months after ordinary folks· have until the facts are in.
perfOrmance don't prove economists are
doned, then reieased.
.i sensed it corning, e)&lt;Crienced it, ,jnd if
Sometimes the consumers are right, ill-informed and don't provide support
Ten years ago: In an about-face, the White House used the
able to, taken action to deal with it.
sometimes not. Sometimes they befud- for the typical consumer boast that anyword "recession" to characterize the state of the economy,
&amp; a consequence, economists become die the best minds of academe and gov- one could see that a recession had set in.
although spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the administration
the butt ofjokes by standup comics who ernmem, as in their recent insistence on
Consumers feel the surface vibrations; ·
did not believe there was a recession in a technical sense. Russcouldn't define industrial production or not spending tax rebates that were the professionals dig into a substrau that
ian President Boris Yeltsin and Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorother seismological terms used by econ- meant to be spent in order to avert ·or includes industrial production, employ. bachev agreed to dissolve the Soviet Union by the new year.
omists in measuring the tremors of the moderate a recession.
ment and wholesale and retail trade Five years ago: Per11vian guerrillas took hundreds of people
economy.
University of Michigan researchers deep down, where the vibrations origihostage at the japanese embassy in Lima; all but 72 of the
It's unfair, of course. Consumers s,u nd- found only 22 percent of rebate recipi- nate.
hostages were later released by the rebels; the siege ended April
ing on the surface feel changes quickly ents spent or planned to spend the
In so doing, they gain an understand22, 1997, with a commando raid that resulted in the deaths of . ....,. in their job security, paychecks, n 0.ck money, contradicting not just past ing of various factors often hidden from
all the rebels, two commandos and one hostage. Six
c;;rou
pPI'tfolios. They mix in the latest -news, behavior but the expectations of sovern- the consumer, such as the eventual
wotkers. were slain by gunmen in Che~hnya. Kofi Annal\. of
hittion, hopei and few, and ·act accbrd· ment economists.
intensity of the recession and its duraGhana was appointed United Nations secretary-general.
ingly.
· J; '"
In 1995, by comparison, a large per- tion.
One year ago: President Bush named Stanford professor
It's all subjective, perhaps misinformed cenuge of consumers spent the extra
In that regard they (Ire one up on the
Condoleezza Rice his national security adviser and Texas
·too, but it becomes the basis for what. ca.•h resulting from a 1992 executive consumer: They are sometimes in a posiSupreme Court justice Alberto Gonzales to the White House
consu111er&lt; do or don't -do in the mar- order revising income rax withholding tion to forecast the onset of the new ~-:;:
counsel's job.
·
ketplace.
rates that increased monthly incomes by econo mk expansion, months ahead ofF:
Today's Birthdays: Newspaper columnist William Satire is 72.
And. what they . do or don't do is a about $29.
the consumer who can only wait to feel •'"!
Actor Armin Mueller-Stahl is 71. Magazine publisher Bob
major factor in detenning where the
A&lt; a re,ult of this quuk in 2001 spend- it when it comes.
·
Guccione is 71. Singer-actorTommy Steele is 65. Rock singereconomy is headed.
ing behavior, the Michigan researchers
musician Art Neville is 64. Actor Bernard Hill is 57. Actor
In short, ;the consumer "knows" a suggest that the tax rebate will end uv
aolm Cun"iff is a' b~siness at~alysr for The
Christopher Cazenove is 56. Actor Ernie Hudson is 56.
·
recelsion is, in th~ oftjrtg b,Y the WI!Y. }le~ . having provided a very limited stimulus. Assoddted Press.) ·
_...
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.
~
J;
&gt;r.&lt;..
;- .

HENTOFF'S VIEW

(j.Time is rapidly approaching to save the ConstittJtion

,Nat
Hentoff

TODAY IN HISTO·RY

'BUSINESS MIRROR

Recession? Consumers are saying, (Told you so'

Rfd

~
l

"

~·-.,

~

ALFRED -The Alfred United Methodist Women gathered
at the Alfred Church recently for a Christmas dinner and party.
Joining members for Christmas dinner were gnests Richard
Spencer, Warren Van Meter, David Beattie, Clair Follrod and
David Barringer. The Rev. Jane B~attie gave grace.
A gift exchange was enjoyed by the members. During the
brief business meeting, it was noted that 63 friendship calls
were reported and drawings for progr.~m leaders, hostesses, and
. secret pols were held.
·
•, Osie Mae Follrod had the prayer calendar and chose Abel
,, Mujraps, laity worker in Zimbabwe. The members signed a
" birthday card for him.
·• Attending were Florence Spencer, Nellie Parker, Martha
.. Poole, Nine Robinson, Charlotte VanMeter, Sarah Caldwell,
" Thelma Henderson, and Mary Jo Barringer.
Next meeting will be at the church on Jan. 8 with Parker as

Pretty babies

program leader, and Henderson as hostess.

Society observes Chrisbnas
RACINE -The annual Christmas party of the Bertha M.
Sayre Missionary Society was held at the home of Martha Lu
Beegle.
Each of the members attending had a Christmas reading for
the program. Games were played with the winners being Marfl
K. Yost, Naomi Stobart, Nondus Hendricks, and Linda Grimm.
Christmas songs were sung and gifts were exchanged.
Refreshments were served by Beegle and Stobart to those
named and Geraldine Cleland, Barbara Gheen, Marjorie
Grimm, Mabel Brace, Mildred Hart, and Lillian Hayman, and
guests, Katherine Hart and Marjorie Wolf.
The January meeting will be at the Grimm home and she
will have the program.

In beautiful beds created _from tomato baskets are baby dolls
to be delivered this week·to youngste~ across the county as ·
a part of the Meigs County Cooperative Parish's program of
remembering the less fortunate at Christmastlme. Women of
five Meigs County churches joined to sew and crochet outfits
for 45 dolls and make colorful liners to convert tomato baskets into doll beds. They will be delivered to little girls in the
169 families receiving Christmas food baskets and gifts from
the Parish. The women working on the project were from the
Forest Run, Chester, Pomeroy, and Rock Springs United
Methodist Churches, and Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy. The dolls were presented to Parish representative,
Jane Beattie, second from left. by Isabelle Wolfe and Joann
vaughan of the Pomeroy Church, and Marcia Arnold of Forest
Run, left to right. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

SOCIAL SECURITY

'•

"

Spedal reminder
for couple who
share a business

"
•I

BY

EUZABETH CRUMP

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

' · What you don't know about Social
Securiry could keep you from being
;: eligible for benefits. To illustrate the
point, I have a sad-but-true-story
· about a woman and her husband who
.. worked side by side on their farm for
· many years.
.
When in her mid-50s, this woman
learned she had cancer and could no
longer continue working. She came
into our office to file for disability
· benefits. It was then that both she and
her husband learned that none of her
earnings from the business were listed
. on her Social Security record.
Although she had worked and paid
into Social Security shortly before her

marriage, this woman did not have
enough Social Security work credits to
qualify for disability benefits .
How did this happen? For some reason, although the couple tiled a joint
income tax return each year, they did
not know they needed to tile separate
self-employment schedules with their
tax return for both partners to get
Social Security credirs. And so all the
earnings were reported under the husband's Social Security number.
The couple had not known what
their earnings records contained.
Although they could amend their tax
returns for the three previous years,
there were not enough work credits to
qualify the wife for benefits.
·unfortunately, this is not an isolated
case. Many women lose eligibility . for
Social Security benefits because they
don't know their earnings are not
being posted to their records. And,
some couples choose to have only the
husband pay Social Security taxes.
While that may save money at tax time,

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar 11
published as a free aervlce to
• non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
aales or fund-ralsel'8 ol any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of day1.
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Santa will be
at the Syracuse Firehouse,
.Sunday, 2 p.m. to give out
treats.
MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens will
" · meet at 1t :30 a.m. on Monday
· at the firehouse. A Christmas
... potluck will be served wllh the

center providing the ham. lndi·
vidual blood pressure readings
will also be taken. All senior citIzens are invited to attend.

it's costly when the wife wants to file
for retirement or disability benefits .
If you and your spouse own and
operate a business together, be sure you
each protecr your earnings record and
your eligibility for Social Security benefits. Now that you automatically
receive a Social Security Statement
every year, it's easy to keep track of
your earnings record.
For more information, go to the
public~tions section on our website
www.ssa.gov and read or print this
booklet, Social Security: What Every
Woman Should Know. You can also call
1-800-772-1213 to order a copy. Or
get one at your local Social Security
ofl"tce. And remember, the information
is not just for women. The Social Security rules apply to men the same as
they do for women.

'

Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. Take shot
record. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
WEDNESDAY
Board of Public Affairs, 1 p.m.
POMEROY -Wildwood GarMonday In council chambers.
Only December meeting.
den Club, annual Christmas
party, Wednesday, 6 p.m. at the
RACINE - Southern Local home of Tunie Redovian, FlatBoard of Education, regular woods Road. Gift exchange.
December meeting, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Southern Elemen·
FRIDAY
tary School cafetorlum.
POMEROY - God's ClothLETART - Letart Township Ing Parish, Racine, annex of the
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the Cooperative parish clothing
office building.
shop, clearance sale through
Dec. 21. All ciQthing Items
TUESDAY
POMEROY Childhood prices at 10 centers. Shop open
Immunization clinic, Meigs Tuesday through Friday, 1t a.m.
County Health Department, to 2 p.m.

...

NOTICE OF OPPORTUNITY FOR HEARING

_,

"

llc&lt;ording 10 rece&lt;1lo on llo wilh lho Ohio Oepol1nllnl ofln.. rence, oadl oflht indMduall ~led btiDw ~lly hoklo llcon11111,1n
insurance lllfnlandlor o~icilor in lhl ollla of Ohio Md tach fill fli~d 10 INOf lh,t continUIIIII tGictliDn ""''""""" of Section
3905.481 oflht Rt&gt;isod Co&lt;lt lorlhl 1996-tvtl7, 1tll7·tvtll, and/or lllla.18tli ~·nee porloCI(a).

f'lrluonl 10 Socticn

•

390H82(A1 .,d

Chlpltr 118 of lit Supetinttndtnt inltndl to rtwkt til or htr lriluranct bn•.

Codt, tiCh - • 1 illt&lt;l btiDw io ht~ nolilled lhll lht
.

Each indM&lt;Iu ~ lillld btlowil h111111 notiltd 11111 ht or lf1o moy IWqUtM 1 htlmg pui1UiniiO Oh~ Rt~lld Code Chapltr .til. Tho
req,ltll n\111 bt modo on or bolo11 Fill&gt;ouary 1, 2002 . &amp;lcfl requtlllhou~ bt lddrlalld 10: Sh110n Green, Htanng AdmniJtralor. Oh10
Otpo-nl oflnsUflnCO, 2100 Slola COurl, CO~~I, Ohio 43215-1067.

. O!l/t4181 481139 STATE ROUTE
BOX 3 MASON OH 45040

LONG BOTTOM, OH 4574!

183 SSECOND AVE UIDDLEPORT OH 45760
48937 EAST LETART RD, PO BOX 2b5 RACINE. OH 4517t
804 WMAIN ST POMEROY, 011 15TH

AI lh!! heanng the individual may appear in pemn, by hit or her anoffity or l:ly such.olh~r ,..~~sentative IS is pe,rmitted to practice

belorolhe agency, or lhr indM.duil may roqueM hio or ller pooffion, 'fliU""'nlo or conttnl.,.,'" .mong and, lillie heonng, ht or ohe mov
request evidence and examne wtntnes appeanno for tnd l(llll'tlt him or her.

~1 1

If an indi'f1dual doe a not timely r1q,11111 hilling, an onter rtYOklng hit or htr lictnMithal till i&amp;lutd.

·Sttl!htn C. ....,bloh
· Slo"Counoot

"

-!:\t&lt;-J:t\\ij:l\\1~1\\1!1\!
~ ~RPPII 0"1oliltct&amp;J5 ~

(@
From the stqff at
(~~)
•
Manley's
•
) Recycling Center ~

1111

!03 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio

~

~ Paying top prices for aluminum ~
"

cans and other recyclobles
(740) 992-3894

~~

Now thru Dec:. 31st

~

Aluminum cans 35¢ per pound

~

~\1~1\V!l\\t&lt;-,fl\\ll:l\~
Rew:ler Ms In This Sedion
Prepared By Conlraa Adve11Eing, Inc.
&lt;02001 AD Righls Re~en.d

BUSINFSS
Hill's
Self
Storage
Marvin Hill, Owner
Hill's
located in Racine at29670 Bashan Road.

.

Self Storage,
phon~ 949·2217. Jlrovides a m~th needed sei'VIce
for the homeowners, mechanics and small contractors throughout this area. They feature muln-sized self storage
units which provide you with secure, convenient space for yow extra hoilsehold items as well as exira space for thai
project you've been wantln~ to undertake.
Their operation provtdes you with a private. padlocked storage facility ~vhich is available on ~ short· oc
Iong-tenn basis and is available for eon;: seven da~ a ~k. Hlll's Self Storage will prOVIde clean lire·res1stant unns
for any storage pwpose you may reqwre. Space IS available for stonng fum1ture, veh1cles, ·~arments, seasonal
products, lawn equipment, office supplies. building materials and much, much more. Their uruts are available for
both sbort·tenn and long·tenn use, and monthly, quarterly and annual payment plans are available. . · .
.
The next time you're faced with a storage proble~. remember Hlll's Self Stomge--where ~u store n. you lock !t
and you keep the key-and protection of your possessions is assured. Call them at 949·2217 for mfonnauon on therr
most reasonable rates. Theemp~ at HUl~StlfSiofllll'texlend rheir ~mrmesr wishes for a happy holiday season to all.

Pomeroy Auto Parts

Harry Cunningham, Manager

Superior Auto Body

John Davis, Owner

With automobile repair costs as high as they are today. many people have turned to the dis~m!Jll parts house for
sizeable savings by repairln~ their car themselves. The place knowledgeable people tum to 1n thiS area for top quality
auto pans and accessories IS Pomeroy Auto Parts, located in Pomeroy at 119West 2nd Street, phone 992·2139.
They feature a most complete pans Inventory of both American and imponed automobiles. They have .every·
thing for the do·it·yourselfer and the professional mechanic, and the management and employees a~ expenenced
In the automotive business. Their staff will gladly answer any questions you may have concenung wh1ch pan IS best
for your needs or how best to tackle the re{lllir you're working on. The people a.t Po~eroy Auto Parts real~ ~al auto
supply competition is fierce and go out of iheirway to assure you complete sausfacuon. Pans delivery sei'VIce IS avail·
able to mechanic shops and other automotive businesses in the area.
.
.
From staners to brakes. from headll~ts to shocks, you'll have a tough ume Nm findmg what you need at
Pomeroy Auto Parts. Remember, for the nght parts at the righl price, visit them soon. Hnppy l1olulays 10 ycm and
ycmrs, from rhe slilffat Pomeroy Aulo Parts.

"Quality" is more than just a word at Superior Auto 8ody, localed in Middleport at 105 Hudson Street..phone
992-2476. They are proud of their superior craftsmen and the qual1ry workthey produc~. From ~m~ dents m your

car's door to "nearly totaled" vehicles requiring repair or replacement o~ maJor body secuons. the1~ slcilled personnel
apply experience. knowledge and judgmenl to expertly rest~re your cars body to pre·crash conditiOn. Special auention to details durin~ the repair process assures you of the highest q~allty firushed product.
.
Autoll'otive pamting and refinishing is truly an art.The professtonals at Superior Auto Body combme the lmes1
iechniques, highest quality materials and an expert'~ keen eye lo create showroom qua)1ty fimshes. Every precauu~n
is 1aken 10 ensure the final finish matches your ongmal pamt as closely as posstble mboth appearance and qualtty,
10 protect and preserve the value of your vehicle. .
. .
.
:
.
Propeliy resloring your vehicle requires the umque combmauon of expenence. techmcal knowledge, judgmem
and the professional touch of skilled craftsmen. Superior Auto Body's professional repatr lechmques allow them to
get your car back on the road quickly, safely and at a frut pnce. I11e en fill? CI1?W ar Superior Auto Body wrslres aU of rhe
people of rhe area happy holidi•ys.

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�••

America at War
Democrats, Republicans
Ohio pays ••terrorisf' victims
trade barbs in battle over

Mondlly, Decelllber 17, 1001 .

economic stimulus package
WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate's Democratic
leader said Sunday th&lt;re is an
~~n chance of a compromise
' this week on legislation to
~timulate the struggling tcon!&gt;my, while President Bush's
budget director said "there's a
deal in there somewhere"
being held up by politics.
Congressional leaders from
both parries spoke of the need
for action, then accused the
other side of stalling for political gain and jeopardizing the
i:hance of any bill passing
before year's end.
"I've been at that table now
for two weeks," said House
M&gt;Jority leader Dick Armey,
R-Texas. "I haven't seen one
item where the Democrats
have said, •ves, we will now
accept some of your priorities."'
Denying the Republicans'
claim that they had made all
the
concessions.
Senate
Majority leader Tom Daschle,
D-S.D., said, "They want Y9U
to believe j[hat, but I have yet
to see where the evidence is."
Blocking a deal were three
important sticking points:
whether to acceler:lte some of
the income .taX cuts enacted
earlier this year, how to get
health insurance assistance to
the unemployed and whether
to repeal or adjust the corporate alternative minimum taX.
For Daschle, whom the
White House has called

obstructionist, "now's the time
to prove that he's • leader,"
said Mitchell Daniels, the
president's budget director.
"In order to maintain his
leadership position, he's got to
retain the support of some taX
and spend extremists in the

Democratic Senate c.aucus,
people for whom taxes can't
be high enough and we can
never spend too much government money. So, he's in a
delicate position," Daniels
said.
"Thtre's a deal in there
somewhore, and I think only
politics has prevented it from
happening already;• Daniels
said on CNN's "late Edition."
Despite
the
partisan
rhetoric, Daschle held out
hope that negotiators might
soon agree.
"I believe that there is at
least a 50-50 chance that we
can get a compromise yet this
week," he said on ABC's "This
Week.
Bush and rhe Republicans
want to cut the 27 percent
incpme tax rate to 25 percent
next year rather than over several years. A report by his economic advisers said rhat would
provide $15.8 billion in tax
relief next year for 33 million
taxpayers.
The current 27 percent taX
bracket begins at $27,950 in
taXable income for individuals, $46,700 for married couples.
11

Officials blame
Pa
ns for
fruitless mission
. WASHINGTON (AP) Bush administration officials
expressed wary optimism following a new call from Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat for
an end to all terrorist ·activities in Israel, especially suiCide bombings.
Secretary of State Colin
Powell said such attacks by
th• Palestinians had "blown
Up-~ 1 an American peace initiative last week.
: Arafat called Sunday for a
halt to all"terrorist activities"
in 'a televised speech to mark
Eid al-Fitr;' a three-day celebration that follows the MusColin Powell
holy month oflhmadan.
president Bush was honoring
with Israel and the Palestinithe holiday with remarks
ans, often calling for restrainr
Monday at the White House.
from both sides. On Sunday,
"Chairman Arafa! ~poke
however, the U.S. criticism
constructive
words, but
and calls for restraint were
what's important is that it be
directed at the Palestinians.
followed up by concrete
Powell explicitly defended
actions, and that's what will
Israeli reprisals for Palestinian
be measured, and th~t's what
attacks that have killed 40
the president will wait to
Israelis in recent days. The
see,"White House spokesman ·
retaliations left more than 60
~ri Fleischer said Sunday.
Palestinians dead. Prime
, "His (Arafat's) words imply Minister Ariel Sharon "has a
that he has made the decision responsibility to defend the
to exercise his leadership in people of Israel," Powell ·said.
stopping terrorism,," State
The spiraling violence
Department
spokesman coincided roughly with the
Richard Boucher said. "Now arrival of Zinni, a retired
he must turn these important Marine Corps general who
words into effective and sus- went to the Middle East on
tained action against terror Nov. 26 seeking to broker a
and violence."
peace agreement.
Powell spoke to· Egypt's
He pledged to stay in the
foreign minister, . Ahmed region "as long as it takes,"
Maher, after Arafat's speech, but the administration pulled
~n Egyptian official said. him back amid the escalating
~aher asked Powell to sup- death tolL
port the Palestinian leader,
"All of that was blown up
saying Arafat had done every- by these terrorist organizathing asked of him by the tions on the Palestinian side,"
United States andt»thers, said Powell said on NBC's "Meet
the official, speaking on con- the Press."
dition of anony.m ity,'
"The failure is not General
Maher said he hoped U.S. Zinni's, it's not the . United
~nvoy Anthony Zinni States government:' he said.
· summoned back to Washing- "The failure is with the parton on Saturday soon ties in the region, especially, I
·would return to the region, have to say, on the part of the
the official said.
Palestinians for not getting
The State Department the violence under controL"
declined to comment on the
Zinni is to consult with
. conversation.
Bush and Powell about the
· Th~ Bush administration situation meetings that
sought for most of this year to Powell said ."!ere planned all
be evenhanded in its dealings along.

lim

!

·'

Inside:

Page A&amp;

The Daily Sefltinel

COLUMBUS (AP) -A waitress at a
- In c2Jifornia, the Srate Compensadoughnut shop who got suspicious pow- tion Insurance Fund, the state's largest
der on her fingers after optning a roll of workers' compensation fund, has received
pennies. An X-ray technician who no claims to date but will pay for testing.
noticed white powder in a tissue- after
- The Texas Workers' Compensation
blowing her nose.
Commission fund does not have a policy
A Pizza Hut manager whose employ- for accepting anthrax-related claims. It
ees found brown and white powder on has received no claims to date, spokesplastic bags containing pizza sauce.
woman linda McKee said.
All three cases involved people who
- In New York, the State Workers'
feared they had encountered anthrax and Compensation Board does not have a
were considered by the state to be- in policy for anthrax claims and hasn't
essence - victims of terrorism. So, the received any, spokesman jon Sullivan
state agreed to pay a workers' compensa- said.
tion claim for the employees' medical . - Washington state has accepted and
test! and prescriptions.
paid a total of $1,200 for five anthrax"There were a couple of claims here related claims, said Robert Nelson,
where we kind of shook our heads when spokesman for Washingtop's Department
they came in, but to that person, I'm sure of labor and Industries.
it was a very stressful and difficult time,"
The claims, all involving white powsaid Jim Conrad, administrator of the de.r, came from a security· officer, two
Ohio Bureau ofWorkers' Compensation. police officers and two airline employees
Ohio has agreed to pay most such who handle cargo.
anthrax-scare related claims. It's unclear if
The Ohio Department of Health· has
other states' policies are as liberal. No tested more than 1,500 samples for
national statistics are available, but Con- anthrax since tbe Sept. 11 terrorist
rad said Ohio has been contacted by attacks, most of them suspicious powother states interested in its approach.
ders. None tested positive.

finding out."
The tape, released Thursday
by the Bush administration,
showed him discussing the
Sept. I 1 terrorist attacks with
a visitor in Mghanistan, who
congratulates him on their
success.
U.S. officials said Friday
they believe the man is Sheik
Ali bin Said ai-Ghandi, a
Saudi Arabian Islamic cleric
known for anti-Western
views.
The New York Times
reported Sunday that a senior
Saudi official had identified
the visitor as Khaled al-Harbi,
a legless Saudi veteran of bat-

Monct.y, DeceMber 17,1001

Rio
women

top Mt.

"'--I Baaketbllll
Girl a
Saturday'• Game
Gallia Academy 82, Alexander
25
NFL
Saturdlly'a Games
.N.Y. Giants 17, Arizona 13
"Oakland 13, San Diego 6
Sunday's Games
Indianapolis 41, Atlanta 27
_ Kansas City 26, Denver 23,

Vernon
BY MARK WIWAMS
RIO GRANDE SID

MOUNT VERNON
NAIA Division 11 No. 19 Rio
Grande rebounded, frorn a disappointing
loss a week
ago at Walsh,
to
defeat
Mount Ver·
non
Naiarene,
78-66,
on
Saturday
evening
at
Turley
Physical
· Education
Center.
Rio Grande (I 1-4, 5-1
AMC) went four minvtes
without scoring a point to
start the game, but collected
itself and scored 37 in the final
16 minutes of the first half to
lead 37-24.
Both teams

QT
ANTHRAX? - Aora Turnage stands at
her cash register at Plaza Donuts in
Youngstown. Turnage was tested for ·
possible anthrax exposure recently after
some white powder spilled on her hands
from a roll of pennies. (AP Photo)

ties in Afghanistan, Bosnia and
Chechnya.
Asked how a legless man
could get into Afghanistan to
meet bin laden, Powell said,
"Obviously, there is a a connectio(l between the two of
sufficient formality to it that
they were able to transport
him there, get him access and
move him into the country."
"I know for a fact our intelligence agencies are making
sure ~ know who this individual was," Powell added,
"and tracing hirn down and
determining what those connections might be and where
that trail might take us."

Osama bin Laden

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•'

Page 81

HIGHLIGHTS

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MONDAY'S

Identity of visitor in bin Laden video under review
WASHINGTON (AP) Senior U.S. officials said Sunday they still are not sure
about the identity of the man
seen visiting Osama bin laden
in a videotape released last
week.
"We're trying to get a firm
identification ofhim so there's
no question about who we're
dealing with," Secretary of
State Colin Powell said on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
"We do not know who the
other people in the . tape
were," national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said on
CBS' "face the Nation." "Of
course we have an interest in

The Daily Sentinel·

RESORT &amp;
GOLF CLUB

800.544.9933
www. marriotgrand. com

N.Y. Jets 15, Cincinnati 14
Chicago 27, Tampa Bay 3
Detroit 27, Minnesota 24
New England 12, Buffalo 9,
OT
Jacksonville 15, Cleveland 10
San Francisco 21 , Miami 0
Seattle 29, Dallas 3
Philadelphia 20, Washington 6
Tennessee 26, Green Bay 20
Pittsburgh 26, Baltimore 21
NCAA Men'e Baakelball
Sunday's.Games
Boston College 75, Holy
Cross 51
·
La Salle 71, Seton l:la1168
Sacred Heart 96, Monmouth.
N.J. 69
.
St. John's 89, Hofstra 75
Duke 93, N. Carolina A&amp;T 51
Georgia Tech 96, Syracuse 80
Mississippi 83. Tenn.-Martin
72
· Mississippi St. 72, Georgia St.
63
North Carolina 61, Bingham·
ton 60
Stetson 106, Balmont 95
Wake Forest 93, Florida St. 72
Creighton 70, Indiana St. 46
DePaul 95, Long Island U. 69
Illinois 98, W. Illinois 62
Houston 89, SW Texas 62
Oklahoma 102, Bethune- ·
Cookman 65
New Mloo '70:· New Mexico
St. 49
.
Oregon 86, N. Arizona 51
S. Illinois 74, CS Northridge
60
Southern Cal 59, Miami
(Ohio) 55

Mount Union
wins D-Ill title,
again
S~LEM,Va. (AP) -Chuck
J'1oore ran for 273 yards and
three touchdowns as Mount
Union won its sixth NCAA
D'ivision Ill title, beating
Bridgewater 30-27 Saturday
night in the Stagg Bowl.
:: The Purple Raiders (14-0)
;;rt! just the fourth team to
win six nation al champiP'}Ships in their division.
Oklahoma has seven and
J.Jabama and Georgia South~rn also have six.
· Mount Union has won 82
o£ its last 83 games, including
die six championships under
Goach larry Kehres.

Ruii keeps WBA

:- heav¥weight

·

-tftl-e

: MASHANTUCKET,
Conn. (AP) Evander
Holyfield was denied a fifth
heavyweight championship
when his third fight agair.st
John Ruiz was called a draw
after I 2 rounds of mostly
mauling .and clutching.
Although Ruiz kept the
WBA title before a partisan
crowd, the draw verdict was
roundly booed in a bingo hall
Saturday night at the Foxwoods Resort and Casino.
It was an unsatisfactory end
to a three-fight series between
the two men. Holyfield won
the vacant title on points on
Aug. 12, 2000. Ruiz took the
title from Holyfield on points
March 3.

•••••

Not seeing your ,1 team's
results . in the Sentinel? Tell
your coaches to send game
info to us via fax at 992-2157
or email at sports@rnydailysentinel.com. ·

GOOD WILL AND CHEER - Bottles and paper accumulate in front of the Dawg Pound area at Cleveland Browns Stadium
after the Browns' 15-10 loss to the Jacksonville Sunday. The game was stopped with 48 seconds remaining as fans threw
·
debris at players and officials foliowlng the reversal of a call. (AP)

Browns' game .ends
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
with beer and cups of ice as they tried
CLEVELAND {AP) -Jimrny Smith to run for safety.
.
sprinted off the field, hardly caring that
Players on both teams were hit but
his Jacksonville jaguars nobody was seriously hurt. Police made
we~.t~l!'f·,W.~p.J .gaD] e.. ·~~, ba~ :rlta~l; n&amp;~!"~ers we~ 1\0t
1'
· He na:a mo pres!mg con. immediately released.
cerns.
J.
Browns president Carmen Policy
"We feared for our lives," refused to criticize the fans .
"I don't think Cleveland will take a
the wide receiver said after Sunday's 1510 win at Cleveland. "It was like dodg- black eye from this," Policy said. "I like
·
the fact that our fans care."
ing bullets."
Enraged by an overrurhed call in the
The fans' ugly behavior began after
final minute, Browns fans pelted the the Browns (6-7) had a first down at the
jacksonville 9. After ·another play was
field with beer bottles an4 debris.
The garne was stopped, With 48 sec- run, it was rul ed that Tim Couch's pass
onds to play, for. about a half-hour · on a fourth-down play to wide receivbecause of the · VIolence. It resurned er Quincy Morgan was incomplete.
only after cornmissioner Paul Tagliabue
Bears 27, Buccaneers 3
CHICAGO (AP) Anthony
insisted.
The Jaguars (5-8) dqpged flying Thomas ran for 173 yards and the
objects as they dashed t "'· the locker Chicago Bears clinched their first playroom, and the officuls were doused off spot since 1994, beating Tampa Bay.

NFl

With a minute left in the game, thf'
scoreboard at Soldier Field flashed "Da
Bears are playoff bound" and the fans
cheered.
, Chi~~ (10-3) reached.double-digit
wins tor the first time since 1991. Tony
Parrish intercepted a pass and recovered
a fumble, and R. W. McQuarters had an
interception and a forced fumble.
The Buccaneers (7-6) had won three
m a row.

lions 27, Vikings 24
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - The
Detroit lions ended any chance they
would become the Nfl's first 0-16
team, beating Minne~ota for their first
win of th e season.
Rookie quarterback Mike McMahon
accounted for 316 yards, ran for a
touchdown and had no turn'overs to

Pluse IH NFL. 831

NAIA ~~:obined

36

turnovers in
a sloppy first

half.
The Red~omen stormed
out of the gate in the second
half:md built the lead to 47-28
with 16:48 to play. MVNC (37, 2-2 AM C) then proceeded
to go on a 23-8 run to pull
within 55-51 with 9:42
remaining.
Rio Grande was led· freshman Amanda B\azetic (Eastlake, OH) with 17 points otT
the bench, including 12 in the
second half. Angel Allen
(Beckley, WV) scored 13
points and Renee Turley
(Racine, OH) added 12. Alkia
Fountian (Columbus, OH)
chipped in 11 point!. ·
Susan Adams led MVNC in
scoring with 28 point! and
pulled down I 0 rebounds.
Jenni Davis also reached dou-.
ble figures, in scoring, with 10.
Rio overcame 31 turnovers
with hot shooting. The Redwornen made 32-of-59 shots
(54 percent).

,

Steelers dominant in win
over Baltimore, 26-21
BALTIMORE (AP) - The Pittsburgh
Steelers, and Plaxico Burress in particular, had
the last word in their running duel with the
Baltimore Ravens.
Pittsburgh clinched- the {\FC Central title
Sunilay night, dominating the
clock and the defending Super
Bowl champs in a 26- 21 victory
that culminated a week of trash
talk between the two division rivals.
.
In the days leading up to the game, Burress
insisted that Pittsburgh "beat up" the Ravens
in the last game between the tea!Jls, a 13-1 0
Baltimore victory.
Ravens tight end Shannon Sharpe responded by tagging Burress with the nickname,
"Plexiglas."

NFL

On a night when Stewart threw for a
career-high 333 yards, Burress was his
favorite target, making eight catches for a
career-best 164 yards and a touchdown to
help the Steelers (11-2) win their sixth
straight.
"Plexiglas bends, but it don't break," Burress said afterward. "When they say I don't
work hard, stuff like that, it puts a little pep in
my step. It makes me want to show those guys
they're not the only ones in this division that
can play football."
Message received.
"They played a game wortl1y of Central
Division champions," ·Ravens coach Brian

Please see Steelers. 831

.BIG NIGHT- Steelers· QB Kardell Stewart threw for a careerhigh 333 yards in defeating the Ravens Sunday. (AP)

Stopping the run will be a big key to Herd win
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - In
its last three games, Marshall
has allowed exactly 1,000
yards of rushing.
What
makes the
Herd
think
they can
slow down the East Carolina
tandern of runmng back
leonard Henry and quarterback David (;arrard?
'~Everybody knows that the

game is going to come down
to defense, because our
offense has been doing the
job all season," said Marshall
linebacker
Max
Yates.
"They've been putting up
their points. It's a matter of us
stopping the other team, not
allowing them to rush on us.
" If we stop the rushing
game, we'll be fine."
The question is not only if,
but how.
East Carolina incorporates
the option into its .offense,

which forces a defense to
assign players to defend a particular player or area.
The Pirates can quickly
mess up that defensive strategy by using misdirection running plays.
Add to that a mobile quarterback with an accurate passing arm and an offense that
spreads the field, and Marshall
(10-2) has a lot of homework
to do before Wednesday's
GMAC Bowl against East
Carolina (6- 5).

· Suffice it to say, some things
are being streSied more m
practice this week.
· "Tackling
drills," said
defensive back Terrence Tarpley. "You've got to tackle."
It's a little late in the year to
start with the basics, but that's
what Marshall must do.
"It's not hard. It's just about
being focused," said defensive
back Chris Crocker. "We beat
ourselves up with little mista'Kcs like that."
The warning signs came

long before Marshall let Toledo run wild m the MidAmerican Conference championship game on Nov. 30.
A week earlier, against
Division 1-AA Youngstown
State, the Penguins amassed
3 72 yards on the ground, an
average of 6. I per carry.
And against Ohio, the Bobcats .used the option to gain
318 yards.
Henry averaged 7.8 yards

Ple•se-Herd,U

',~

�· Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Dec.17, 2001

Monda~Dec.17,2001

\ll::ribune - Sentinel - 1\t
·cLASSIFIED

Pomeroy, lllddlepor1. Ohio

NFL
from Pep II
We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

lead the Lions (1 - 12).
Randy Moss sco~d two TDs in the
third quarter to put the Vikings (5-8)
ahead 24-20. Minnesota twice moved
inside Lions' territory in the final I 0
minutes, but could not score.

49en 21, Dolphins 0

ae- TO!Cia 4x4, 4 cyt,

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All Dlspl1y : 12 Noon 2
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Sunday In•Column : 1 :00 p.m. Sunday Display : 1: 00
Thursday tor Sundays
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52•• .. ~oE
•
' ...,.....,
sewer.security
pets.
mo. s ' s 1 tabl
m""t
•
GIVFAW y
.."'"
· .xJf'V'¥11;; •
888)388..()895.
bly 3. Basement.
Great Lo· 7 592 1972
bofhood, $375 per month, plus
depoait.
ues eec
eson the 'T'
~
drivers license and a good
II ' 1 b' k f
City
n--~
75 dAIV'&gt;Ciit Includes wa- (7'n'···~71
In Middlepor1 Dolls, glass.
~.or------· driving record. Must be able Salas F'oslllon. Immediate
ca on.
,oc rom
DU)II'4~
...,
,......
. '
(740)441-0364.
ANDik.ln..DINGs
ter, ..sewer,
garbage, ~~
ware, Aladdin mantels, and
10 work flexible hours In- Opening. Apply In Person. Need Financial Help? Risk Pari&lt;.
· Puppies to giveaway to a eluding an oocaslonal Satur~ Bring Resume. Acquisitions tree opportunity, look no lur- $47,500.
__
. (740)~9·2217 call 7am· Tara Townhouse Apan· more. (740)992.()298
: good home. (304)675-57Q2 dey morning. Pleaatoubmll Jewelry, 15t 2nd Ave .• Gal~ ther, our financial institution .
10pm. ,,
ments, Very Spactous, 2
UM··-- •••···~~--~~
· Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, ,
.~..-.JISCFLLANEOl.S
Provides you with ai&amp;IS· Comer ol Pam St. and Rlv· 4.800 sq toot Commercial
II II
Lo!rr AND
a resume by Friday, De- po •.
tance &amp; Information. Free eNiew Or. In Middleport. Building with 10 to 200 Trailer In Rutland, kteal for 1/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted,
M:Eacw.NnlsE
:
FOUND
~':r:~lea2!!~-P~~~h:1"8e, We are working hard to fill consultallon, call now at Sellirtg thousands below ap- acres. Aio Grande, Ohio. 1·3 people, good location, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· "~-lliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiioorl·
America's food banks for 877·304-JOH.
pralaal value, (740)992· Owner linancing available. (740)742~2661
tlo, Start $385/Mo. No ~ets, 1·5 drawer (che!lt of drawRio Grande, OH 45874.
thO holiday season and we
7933
CaM (740)245·5747
Lease
Plus Security Deposit ers, dark color, 14.x26~K40·,
AI'ARIMFMs
R
TURNED DOWN ON
LOS!· Y~llow Male Cat, Family Addiction Communi· need 3 hardworking, comDivorce Forces Sale! 3 Bed·
equlred, Days: 740-446- $25 and 1·5 drawer chest of
mlss1ng s1nce Ncwember 4, ty Treatmd Services- An paalionate Individuals to SOCIAL SECURITY !SSI? room/ 2 Bath on private lot 6000 Sq. foot commerical __
FOR RENr
3481; Evenings: 740-367· drawers,
light color,
2001 . Tiger markings. Outpatlenl Alcohol and Drug join our team. Starting pa~ No Fee Unless We Wlnl call {740
)446•3570.
storage with 14,000 sq. foot
0502, 740-446-Q101.
18••38 ~)1 44 ., $5(), ( 740 )992 _
Strayed from Kraus Beck CounseHng agency Is ac- II $7.00 per hour. 'We do
1-888·582·3345
of oulsidCoarea. ~all E;A 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Twin Ai~erTowers now ac- 2529
Road. Has ,been neutered. cepllng rasumes for the fol·
rk" C81 888-237
Don't Own Land? We Dol Town &amp; - untry eal 9-" menta, tumlshed and unfur~ ceptlng applications for - - - - - - - Rewardl {740)446-4488
klwing position: s.cr.tary~
Land/ Home packages tate 304-675·5548
nlshed, security c:leposit re- 1BA. HUD tublic:llzed apl. 12' Brass Bell; 27 Hunting
=~-:-----.., General dulles. Require·
Avallable. Cali (740)448L&lt;m; &amp;
quired, no pets, 740-992· for elderly and disabled. License; ,Mitcheel Reels for
A
.
monts: hlgl ochool diploma
3583.
2218.
EOH . _
peltS. (740~293
~ ~~~~.Y~e=::~
Duplex ApaBrtRmonLIR, EDacRh
ACREAGE
1 bedfoom apartment, utilil·
(304)675-6679.
AB·DOer Pro Model. Brand
iiiiiiiOiliiiiiiiii;,.,J. skill S. knowf~
wl"'
apt. has 3 •
•
·
lea Included, $325 month
new, cost over $175, will
0
-~
uvga
Kitchen, 1&amp;112 bath, lo've 'on 2 acres wo'th r sot~ up $100 deposit, (740)367·
' expe"once
In
Mlcroooft
W
_.....,
Very
nice,
2-3
·
bedroom
sell
for $125. Includes in1'n
Rick P.earson Auction Com· dows
"
one side and rent the othoo. on Cremeans Rd · off New 0847.
Excel
and
Word
and
apartmenl,
In
town,
large
structlons
and video.
f
I
pany, ul time auctioneer,
'
Good Investment property. Lima
Ad.,
Rutland, " ' - - - - - - - - $5001
complete auclion service. must be ~den~4!8ph~~:
$60,000. can (304)675- (740)742·2803 after Spm. 1 Bedroom Apartments,
iRcieposll ~·ul~:t 1 740 ) 441 ~ 1971 M·F 9"5
8
UCBnsed f66.0hlo &amp; West posses U
2495, after 6pm.
$289 month. Deposit &amp; Ref· (740~-3844
Amazing
Mellbollem
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or skills.
Indian Creek Estates, 3·6 erence. HUD Approved.
? Breaklhroughlt
3Q4.n3-5441.
For sale by owner; Nlce bl· acre lots, west of Rio (740)441-1519
SPACE
Lose 10 pounds- 200
"111!""'-~----, Send resume by January
level home on 1 acre near Grande, from $25,900.
d
k F
0 .._..,
11
04, 2002 to: FACTS, 45
Chester. Three bedroom,
1 Bedroom Apt. GaiMpolia.
FOR ftiU'III
poun s easv, qu1c • as1
WANil:D
Olive Street, Gallipolis, OH
two baths, one-car garage, (740)245-5747
water Paid. $275 monlh --. Dramatic Results. 100%
45631 or FAX to (740)446·
f.am lly room wlth II repIace, T ra II er LoI for Ren I j usI Pus
I
depos It· No . p' 18 • Nice lots, qulet country set~ "Ask
Natural,
Dr. Recommended.
10 BUY
~.or--ttitiililloio-.,1
about
FREE Sample"
-~
SOt•. EOE M/F/H
sun room. New central heat· above Addison. Phone (740)446-4043 after 6.00pm ling, will accommodale (740 )441 . 1982
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Full Tlme Dental Assistant.
lng &amp; ale system. One ml· (740)367·7878
·2 BA Apl. Newly Aemod- 16x80, $100 per month, call ~=c.:..,:=-=-=-:c--:---cSilver, Gold Coins, Proof- send Resume to: CLA 456
nute off Route 7• but still pri· want to Buy small lann or eled. Slove, Refrigerator Ed at COuntry Homes, 740- Anlique Flat Top Trunk,
sets,
Diamonds, Gold c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
vate. {740)985·3981
acreage In Mason County Fumlshad. All UtiiHies Paid. 992~2~67.
$85. (740}446·0196
Rings,
U.S. Currenpy,- 825 Third Ave, Gallipolis,
suilable tor my retirement 48 Olive St. $4751 mo. Tra•-r s~~ for rant, 5120 Army &amp; Hunters camouM.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· OH 45831.
Remodeled 3 bedroom, In homo Peacelul S&lt;enlc rural (7-40)4-W.S945
~ ~II C
onct Avenue, Galipolis, 740Middleport, call Tom Ander·
par month In Minersville· age lothlng, USA Flags.
446'2842.
Citt In The Feet Line.
son aflar 5pm, (740)992- lOCation not on a primary 4 bedroom apallmant. $150 800 sq ft oftlce building, al~ 5alellle Sales Serv~e InCOVENANT
3348.
hsllognhw~!. ..DeptafbelroredCapoii....
27D-- per month Includes water, &amp; ceiling fan, $275 par stallaiJ_on $9 a month 100
TRANSPORTATION
.......,.
.
sewer, truh. $200 deposit, month, (614)876-1681
c~a.nnels. at Sam SomBfI \1 1'1 0\ \I I '\ I
27
lo Laofdng for
M'!IIEK"~
385-98
)9411&gt;2025
vola 8 MSGT USAF retired
1740
"'I H\ H I.._
StudM\t Drlvera.
rv OJ\..I.,&amp;.
beside Sandyville, WV Post
No Expertonc:ol
BEAUnFUL
APART·
Off~e. (304)27J.5e55
NO PROBLEMii
MENTS ...T BUDGET PR~ r10 llousEHow
Trllnlng Av•ll•b• by
12:oc60 Two Bedroom All
CES AT JACKSON esGoons
tables. $25 each;
1. Banquet
Clllln 1..aaa-141-1501
Electric $350. per month in~
HOUSES
TATES 52 Westwood Drive ..,
mason jars 5 for $1 ; pres·
Holdera call .
eludes Water and sewer
FOR RENr
from $297 10 $383. Walk to
.
sure cooker, $25; 2 heavy
All Make Kero88na Heaters
Fees. Located Near Fo~e's
shop &amp; movies. Csll 740- Appliances: Aeco.nc:llttoned dutv work tables, $40 each;
Altantlonl
1..aoo-esa.2ua.
PiZza in Point Pleasant. For
446-2568. Equal Housing Washers, Dryers, Ranges, (740)992·2529
Eam 2nd. Income wtthoul - - - - - - - - and Forced Air Heaters RaHelp wanted caring lor the paired. Smalf Engine Re·
into call {304)675-3423
15 Court Street. 2 Bed· n,.,....,..rl nlty
Retrigrators Up To 90 Days
2nd job up to
elderly, Darst Group Home, pair. Free Pick-Up and Derooms, 1 112 baths, Kitchen ...,.,.,... u .
Guarantoodi We Sell New CComputtlobrl, 3PioneKid. I~M
$25.·$75./hr. Pt·Ft.
now paying minimum wage, livery Available. Over 20
116 Wide. Only $195.00 Per with stove and refrigerator. Christy's Family Uvlng May1ag Appll
F
h ompa e, yrs. 0 • p,,ce
1-600-2111-7543
new
shifts:
7am·3pm,
7amyears
Experl~nce.
Call
M
ike
HOI\00
Month,
8.99%
Fi)le&lt;llnterest
on
Street
Pal1-;lng.
Close
to
33140
New
Lima
Rd.,
Rut~
City
Maytag
;:~~-;;M
includes 17" monitor (~ew)
www. Money~Oreama.com
5pm, 3pm~11pm, 11pm· (740)446-7604
FOR SALE
, RaleWilh Air And un- Schools and Downtown land, Ohio, 740:.742-7403.
'
· and 96 SRAM and pnnter
-,.=..,.,.-:--:-:--:-- 7am, call 740-992·5023.
derpinning 1·888-928-3426 Area. $5951 month plus de- ,Apartment, home and tralfer Bassen Coach &amp; Chair Multi r= 67~~f9ac~~)B~~~
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
All of your home repairs. ad- 1st Time Home Buyers/
.
posit and Reference. No rentals. Ccmmerclal store- colored. Asking $350. Am· 0006
or
•
Sell. Shir1e~ Spears, 304- Homeworkere
NHded dhions &amp; remo&lt;:leling. 24hr FHA! Government Loans/ 1985 Skyline 14x70, 3. bed· Pets. {740)446-4926
fronts available for lease. Jsh Built Entertainment Cen- - - - -- - - 675·1429
$635 Weakly Processing emergency servk:e. senior Single Parent Program room. Good Condition. Call
Vacancies now.
ter. Holds 2r TV. Paid Delta 10" Unlsaw 3 hp. Sin·
·
Mail. Eaayl No E:ocperi· cilizens discount. 22yrs. Loans Available. Call Harold, 740-385-9948.
2 bedroom house In Pomer· Duple• apartment foo rent, 3 $1 ,000. Asking $500. gle phase motor 52• Uni·
Bu.ln... Offl'co Man~or ence
Needed. Call 1· exp . (304)576-2065
oy· $375 per mo · plus do- •-•room, Lv. Room, kitch· {304}675-7349
(740)446·3093
fence.
for 100 beet skilled nu ng 800-652·8728 Ext. 2070,
1987 14x70, 3 br.12bth· posit
with option to buy, no lMY
good 1968 model saw. A
facHity. Position is responsi· 24Hrs.
Georges Portable Sawmill,
$4995. Will help with dellv· pets, (740)69S·l244
en, 1 &amp; 1.12bath. $300 mo + For Sale: Aecondilioned
, 5 1rong, accura1e saw.
ble for blUing, collections,
don'l haul your logs to the 3 Bedroom on Route 2, ery. Call Kavena, 740·385·
utilities, Ref. raqulred, call washers, dryers and refrig· $950. (304)882·3499
304 675 5332
problem resolution, comput~ Staff Development Director mill just call304-675-1957. ( ) ·
9948.
2 bedroom, 1 bath, stove &amp; (304) 875·2495 after 6:00 erators. Thompsons Appli- Empire LP Gas Heater
er skills, telephone and at- and RN House Manager for Top to Bottom Cleaning 3.-4 bedroom, 2 baths, lr, dr, 1990 Fleetwood 2 bedroom refrigerator furnished, In pm.
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave· 65,000 BTU, $150. Chair
lentlon to detail. career op- 100 ,.,....,. okllled nursing fa- Service. Professional clean- kitchen, central heat &amp; ale, home-call Cheryl C 740- Pomeroy, 740·992-3322 Furnished Efficiency, All nue, {304)675-7388.
with Ottoman, $30. Chest of
porlunity lor right •··
,_.son ' clllty,U&lt;7\l
basement &amp; anached ga· 385_9.,
Sunpolnte ask lor Beth.
Bah
Drawers · $20 · (304) 675 ·
_
Career
opportunity
lor
lng
at
affordable
prices
a.:: 1 2002
Utilities
Paid
Shared
t
"'
E
&amp;
K
h
ll 1
r&lt;fng and
ra,. with 2 br, 1 bath, apt. bedroom/2balh 14 , 70_
•
· ""· .
enmore was ers, 535
cha eng ng, rewa 1
the right person, challeng- Residential, office, remodel- ba~. 19 acres fenced, 1 112 3must sell-call
MIKe 11 740_ 2 bedroom, 2 bath, in Mid· $1~5/ month. 919 2nd Ave., $65 each, Ta$'Ctan &amp; Whirl6
eKcellent management team 1
rdl
nd
lie ing and consuuctlon clean
dleport 74D-992 3322 ask (740)446 3945
~-- - - - - - lo work with. Facility has e)(~ ng, rewa ng a exce nrkt up. Conlidential. 992_2979 miles N. on old 33 from 385_2434
for Belh.
·
·
pool Dryers, 60. All White, Englander Pellet Stove
cellent regulatory compli· manag~ment team to wo
Meigs High School, by ap·
Gracious living. 1 and 2 can after 6pm. {740)446- model N25PDV $400 + 16
ance history, salary and with. Facility has excellent or 992•1391 ·
polntment only, (740}593· 1991 Mansion 14x70, 3 3 bedroom house In Ches- bedroom apartments at Vii· 9066
bags pellels at $3.00 bag.
benelils. Interested candi· regulatory compliance hlstcr TAl-COUNTY CONSTRUC· 6937
bedroom excellent condi- ter, c;~r, carpeting, remodeled lage Manor and Riverside
Stove sells lor $1 ,399 at
dales should apply · to:" ry, salary and benellts. In· TION .
New 4 BA, 3.5 Batti ranch with t1on, I Kavena, (740)385· . balhroom, m4ny up-dates, Apartments In Middleport. ~~e~S~~~r T:sp5p~~:= . F&amp;rm &amp; Fleet. (740)245·
9948
Rocksprings Rehabilitalion terested candidates should ConslructlonfRemodellng .
.
reasonable rent, evenings From $278-$348 Call 7405555
Center, 36759 Rocksprings apply to: Rocksprings Reha- ·siding, •Rooting, "Drywall, over 3000 sq It, large
( ) _ .
·
. Range $95; Amana Refrig· ::--~·-----:Road
Pomeroy Ohio bllilalion Center, 36759 Ect 304_674 -0l ,;. 51304 _ lenced yard, new kitchen, 2 bedroom, stove &amp; relriget· 614 501 8339
~92 · 5~6jj 1 Equal Hous~ng erator $150; · Kenmore Fiberglas Truck Topper' tor
' Jacki N'
Rocksprings Road, Pomer- 67 · 38
·
_..
new rool, 2 car attached ga- e1or, new windows &amp; carpet, 3br. house 2111 Lincoln ppo un es.
washer &amp; dryer set $275; 8 ft. Ford Sed, $250.
~~~900N e:ual (;'::: oy, Ohio 48769, Jackie 4- 55
rage, $148,000. Call $4,995,740-992-2167
Ave. No Pets. Security De- Middleport· North 4th Ave. , GE refrigerator, like new, (740)379-9381
nlty Em~er Encouraging Newsome, RN, ADON. Will Babysit at my home. (740)448-2311
posit $375 a month. 4 room lumllhed apartment. $300. Skaggs Appliances, :;--'-:-c-:-:-::-:--::-. Workplace Diversity
Equal Opportunity Employer Fenced In Yard. Sandhill
28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· (304)675·2749
depoall &amp; references. no 76 VIne Street, Gallipolis, ~lrewood , $150 Dump
Encouraging Workt&gt;ace 01- Rd. Call (304)695·J741
Com616pMiealel;r,nl SRtelrouerbt, laph:_,P21. 81y.99!34F51x.Oed0 lnpte"rerstMRaonto'h,
pets, (740)992.0185.
OH (740)446·7398 Stop In Truck lpld. (740)J79·2756
19
CooJspot now hiring for 2 verslty.
...,
3br. house in Point Pleuant
to see ua before Christmas.
ld labt
Wlii 'Babyalt at my home. ltory, 2 ull Bath. 3 Bad- 1·888·928·3426
$500. a month + Deposit. New apartment for rant
Fisher Flrlce Table and
1 edit fullti
~~tlon=~~n ~.~ ~~~.
Fenced In Yard, Sandhill room1. Large Kitchen,
No Pets. (304)875-5928
Middleport, (740)992-6304 Maytag Cryer, $150. Call al· Chairs,
Nice$25.
mutt havo"""" roforonooo
Rd. (304)891·3741
Largo Utility Room, LRI DR/ Amazing Firat nmo Home
or 740·446·2287.
lor 6pm, (740)245&gt;1946
(740)448-0198
~
The Mti'l County Council
Family Rm. New Carpet Buyere.
Government 4 bedroom houM In Racine " ' - - - - - - - thtlit ·tor tM CoCI\vMie 10011~ on Aglngrtno. It aoceptlng wm Maul Away, Clun out, throughout F/A &amp; AJC, Backed loana. No credit aoroaa tram park, nioe Now Taking Applloattona- Mollohen Carpet, 202 Clartc For aal• oouch, 1alr condl·
don, IPQiy In peroon.
rooumoo lor 1ht POIIilon of Clean Up or Movo Almoot I79,QOO, (740)440·9585 or nttdod. (304)75H588 nolghborhood, hilt pump 35 Wool 2 llodroom 'Town· Chapol Aoad, Portor, Ohio. lion, $50; dro11lng lablo
Contol Hy;ontlll Nttded ln•Homt Rtpelr Coollll,. Anylhlng, Taking conolgn· 17401445·2205 or (740)448· Llmlled 0""·
hnl &amp; oentralolr, $50C PI' houH Apa~monta, lnoludH (740)445·7444 1·871&gt;830· wllh mirror &amp; alool, oxoellonl
Pa~nmo 17401448 24011
lor/Senior Ctnttr Building mont.. Call (740)440·7804 288$.
Llmlled Or No Credh? OoV' monlh, $800 dopooll In· wattr Stwago, Traon, Otaa. Prn Eo1imtlol, Eaoy oondlllon, 130, (140)891·
·
' illlllllnt. Quallf~tlonl In•
oludot walor, oewor, lroah, $350/Mo., 140·«8.fl001, llnanol~, 80 dayt tamo 11 350;;;:.;;;..1_ _ _ _ _ __
0~111 Manqtr NttdtHI OIUGI I yllrt lliP.~tnot
Houtt wllh fumiiUrt IOOIItd 1;n~:~~k r~"t"~~~ 1140)Ma.ill1 0111 7am·
Ollh, Ill Ma~lor Card.
II 443 Hldgtwood Cnvt, Vlllo, WV sa..13t•340t,
Opm,
.
Ont 'lldroom Apt. Vlno 81. Crlvlo l•llhlo live tlot.
I Nloo Mlpll Twin ltdl
Nltd admlnltlrttlve lttl• lftCI oomprtntntlve know~
lint 10 m1~
ICigl Of ~umblng, IIIOirloal,
QaiiiPOIIa. Pa~ of LOll II·
Roome
l
lain,
UOOI
~:~~POIII,
OH
(140)181•
WOOd
kllohtn
tablt
pluo
I
Wllh Nl~ht llond, 195.
4
tponllbiii11H or buoy P"" Olrptnlry lnd AC/nllllng r1U
Bt.m~~a
(1 , I Ill bolno, I btdroomo, Moblll Home lor lilt. 1110 monl' , 51 OIIVI IIMtl.
IIIVII &amp; 4 oholrt, 1100, (140)441 OIH
11111ona1
lid prao- rtPIIr. In ldaltlon, • utt
tu11 ..
•· umont, Olrptl, AP- cambn1ot • lldroom 1 (140)440·1845
"
••
Uot. MullIIHriftll
woflt woll wllh d~~IIQ rtOOrd II fiCIUirtel.
UPHAiltl~•n
(740)ttlol471
I Oalt larnhallll plllowo
rilllurt edune. Qood organ!· tnllll nourt per - • poe•
proltta 11 114,800. Mu11 lllfll, I 40)145·80e8
~;:,:.;,~=--:-~~ 1 &amp; 1 •~ loonomloal au
wlln •• oar on lhlm, 110 '
1111on11 and onloe lltlllo rt• lion fiCIUirHIOIM worlt an
INOTIOII
hove 1111111 213 ola~~rals- New 14 Wlat 3 learoom 5 room Collage 11 1404 Ill Htll W/0 ~oooup Near
~~
j•aoh, 1140)101·7118
qulrtd. Compuilr tMptrl• -klndt lnd -lltQt. l1to 0~10 VALLIY .UILII~· ::C 1•:~u(~4 oT~~~~ 448 ' Only 111,180. ·,ru DIIIVI~ ~:~:,• ~1~; 1 N~ol,:~n~; Holn~, ~llleUI~ 11i1N~or
"""""
30• aloolno range whlll
lnotimponw. Oomponu• llrHitd IPPIIOinll ihould INQ CO. rtOGntmtnGIIhll
'
li11Up. l·lll·fll·l428 3187 '
'
monl • ut IIIH,
•
new bumoro -~ grHI'
lion 11 oommtnturtlt wllf1 0111 cana Haw~. Hum111 you ao buolfllll wtln people New/ Ulld ~. lmmldl·
ond Cepoell ~equlrtel. Model lt31 Turilltn lmm 111 ( 140)10a~em
'
lltptntnOII ability, Apply In ~HOurtl DlrtOIOr ttl 1. you know, and NOT 10 ttna alo 'oaaoolon, No PlY• New 14M10, 3 bedroom, I 111gan1 a or I bearoom (740)441·1t11
Mauttr ~fit. lavontl wllh
,.,,on 11 1III Jookoon Memorial D~vt ~om troy, mOntlllntcUgn tnt mall unlll monlo unlll Peb. 2001. ,,., batn. Only lftl down l houu, att Mulbtr!y, Pom·
loabballl and 70 roundo Drnoer and Mirror ond
Plko, Tutldly or Tnuraclay, Oh, 740·101•1111. An 101 you nave lnvoeflgaiiCI lht quollly by phono. (140)44t· 1 J!fo!!Jm~ n 1h . Call Cno!YI, oroy, no pile, (740)GGI· Modem 1 ltdroom Ape~· ammo on landolttro. MaiOnlng Ohul of Draworo
7..........1• 1 1 ·
tom·lpm. No pnont 01111. and ,rovldtr.
ontrlng.
Uti.
1111.
menl. (740)441·0380
11 oc.oo 304oi7B•UISI
loin, Ul . (140)448-0IH

:r '--·--·----I

Looking tor "Pirilnoed
Carpet L~i Conlact
Hoather at
FumitlQ,
151 2nd Ave, OalllpoUe
Mc:CI 'o R
ura
Htaurant now
hiring all 3 iocatlons. full or
pari·Uma, pick up appllca·
lion at location &amp; bring back
betWeen
9:30am
&amp;
10:00am. Monday thru Sat·
uniay.
'
Now Hiring STNA's In the
Rio Grande Area, Competl·
live Wages &amp; Benefit Pack·
age, Please Speak with Dl·
R th
.
=~or u a1 17401448

:r Ir

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-with 8 112 "- dloh. $75.

(740)4*792A .

Pontlum 1211 Ram, ll2x Co;t,

...

........,,, ·-

ra_. HI afflolirtcy 80 pluo
go '"""""'" lnoludlng oil
and . olac:trtc goo furna.
HI EWiciOney Heat
Pumpo, foaturing Tappano
fl'll Incredible warranty

.

j

Chiefs 26,
Broncos 23, OT
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Todd
Peterson, who had one kick in overtime nullified by a penalty and missed
another, made a 32-yard field goal to
lift the Kansas City Chiefs over the
Denver Broncos.
Peterson appeared to win it with his
31-yard kick in overtime. But pushed
· back by a penalty, · he hit the right
upright from 41 yards.
Then, following a punt by Denver
(7-7) and Trent Green's 56- yard completion to Marvin "Snoop" Minnis,
Peterson won it for the Chiefs (4-9)
with 5:56 left in the extra period.

r'a :

AI110S
FOR S\ul

.
·-""""

I

Jets 15, Bengals 14
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
- Rarely used tight ends James Dearth
and Anthony Becht caught short
touchdown passes from Vir:tny 'Tes-

Prtco.

19113 Ford Touruo GL. ox• ' - _ ,

ludgol Prfoed Tntntml•
tiOnO All ~. To
OVer 10 000 Trontinloilono
Rebuild ·~to. 74().245-5877:

Cell: 3»3765.

r••

J1oME

~

i.w-ioiiliiiiiiiii~

GIFI' OF GAB AND GRAB- VIkings'
Randy Moss, left, pulls In a 13oyard TO
pass desplta pressure from Lions cornar·
back Bryant Westbrook Sunday. (AP)

.Steelers
fnnnPipB1

Billick
said. "They're
BASIIIIIHT
WAl'IIII'ROOP1Ncl
Urca1dltlonal IHetlma QOar· going to be a team to reckantet. Local ref8tencel tur- on with down the line."
nlahed. Eotabllohed , 1975.
Col' 24 Hro. (7-40) 448While Pittsburgh will
0870,
H00·287-0578.
'
AOQtrl Waterproofing
enter the playoffs for the
'

NOTICE OF PUBUC
HEAR(NG ON THE
TAX BUDGET
Two coploo of tho
lox budget tor the
Southern Dlotrlot of
Recine, In Molgo
County, Ohio, ero on
fife In lhl office of !hi
Truouror, Donnlo E.
Hill Of Hid dfl1rlct.
Thoro arolor public
lnepectlon; • public
hoorlng on oeld
budget will btt hold ot
tho Southorn LoCJtt
School Dlatrlc1;
Boord of Educellon
office on 1ho dey of
January 2, 2002, ol
7:30 p.m. at the
orgoniZI!Ional
-"ng.

• II.KC Cl\oc:Ciato Lab Pup.
pin, WIM be ready for

Call (740)441-D998 1o In·
qulra.

· ATTENTION . Now Taking
· COposlto

on Aoglotored Lib

Puppies for Chrlltmu,
$250. (740)448 0080
Australian Shephard Pupploo, 2 otd merle and one
tricolored. (740)3811 8413
BeaQie Pupa, Hunting
StocK, Parents on Prem~
loea, Will hold for CMot·
maa, $8.1. (7-40)44 1-1440

110 Help Wanted

NOW
HIRING
$6·$8
Per Hour
FuiUPart Time

OFFICE
. ENVIRONMENT
1-8811-874-.IOBS

Bunnooo Klnont Phone L - - - - - - - . . 1
(304)875-5702
Full Blooded Female Saint
Bemard, Spade, $50. Reg·
lotortd Mole 5alnt Bomard,
St 00. Both Currant on vacclnatlono. (740)25US90
Full blooded Pomeranian
puppiH, 4 fomoltt, 2 , . .
with _l&gt;llporo, $300 noh.
Call (740)3fl8.91583 """ for

Donnlo

or LHvo Meotago.

~vorkle

Male, 2 112 yaara

old. Good Brttdtr, bluo and

gold. (740)448.()()39

E.

Hill,

Treaaurer

a.:...,;.:;;:...;..;;.;;;.:..._.l

Dave

Breen ChHkec:l C0nure,
oa"e, ownert rrianual, .
.young IWIII bird, $300,
(740)102-68113
Lab Pupploo, AKC, Bled&lt;,
Yellow and Chocolate,
Champtori Bloodline. Mole
and Femalel. $225.
(740)643-2288
Pomeranian Puppies with
P11&gt;0nt. Aare Colore, Ready
to Go Nqw. (740):168-8414

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Dominic
Rhodes rushed for 177 yards, Peyton
Manning threw for 325 yards and three
touchdowns and the Indianapolis Colt•
beat the Atlanta Falcons for their first
home victory since Sept. 23.
The Colts (5-8) ended a five-game
losing streak and s~nt Atlanta (6-7) to
its third straight loss.

Two 111811 wave RurNrO

first time since 1997 as division champs, the Ravens (85) can only hope to duplicate last season's run to the
Super Bowl, when they
went the distance as a wild
card entrant.
"The focus is just to get
into the playoffs. It should
be an open field," Billick

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

(12) 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
2001
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
·PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
.
OHIO
BARBARA PAYNE,
EXECUTRIX
OF THE ESTATE OF
LUCR.LI! M.
KIJoiQ AKA LUCILLE
KING, DECEASED
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 01.CY.102

·v•

RANDY E. KINO,
EXECUTOR OF THE
ESTATE OF ROLAND
E. KING, DECEASED,
ET AL.
OEFENDANTS.
NOTICE OF SALE
By VII1UI Of on
Order ol Sale ltoutd

said.
It was the sixth straight
win for the Steelers, who
have not lost since Kris
Brown missed four fieldgoal attempts in a · 13-10
defeat against the Ravens
last month.
Brown went 2-for-3 this
time, and Stewart led two
touchdown drives in rhe
fourth quarter to turn a
close game into a runaway.
Despite playing without
leading rusher Jerome Bettis
behind him, Stewart completed 20 of 31 passes in
guiding an offense that held
the ball for 41 minutes, five
seconds.
"That's the Pittsburgh
Steeler philosophy: Keep the
ball," Pittsburgh center Jeff
Hartings said. "It helps our
defense and makes the other
team get impatient some -

straight in Baltimore and is
4-0 at PSINet Stadium. It
was only the second time
the Ravens have lost at
home since last October.
Baltimore
quarterback
Elvis Grbac, who missed the
first game between the
teams, was 20-for-38 for I 59
yards and two scores. He had
only nine completions for
68 yards through three quar-

ters.

Matt Stover's NFL · record
of kicking a field goal in 38
straight games came to an
end.
Plabllc Notkn In No;.:~::~
Ravens linebacker Ray
Voor R~,ttu 16 K,...., Dtllv.:red Rlahtto
Lewis, who was in the center of the trash talk battle
out of tho Common eolo1o conveyed to
during the week, was creditPl..o Court or Molgo Jeft1ot Caroy by
ed
with 16 tackles. But Bal~
County, Ohio, In tho dooreo recorded (n
con ol 1ho Borbore Rocord of ~~ or
timore never led after falling
Payne, Executrix of oald Mefgo County,
behind
13-7 on Burress' 25. tho Eototo of Lucille Volume 31, Pege 233
yard TD catch shortly before
· M. King eke Lucille ond 234, be the Hme
King, deceued, more or 1111, but
halftime.
times."
Plaintiff, ve. Randy E. oubfacl all legal
The Ravens closed to 19·
King, Execu1or ol1he hlghwaye.
Bettis mis sed the game
Eateto of Rolend E.
Rolortnce DHd:
with a g roin injury, but he · 14 on a 14-yard TD pass
king, dectoood, el votumo 281, Pea•
from Grbac to Qadry Ismail
el., Dotendllllll upon 355, Mofgo County wasn 't really mi ssed_
a Judgment therofn Deed Recordl.
Stewart put the Steelers with 6 :36 left, but Stewart
rendllrod, being CtH Auditor'• Parcel No.: ahead for good with a 25- completed a 38-yarder to
No. 0 1 ·CY·102 In 111-00120.000
nld Couri,lhl Sheriff The ebOve deecrtbtd yard to11chdown pass to Burress to set up a 4-yard
of Molgo County, 1'1111 oototo lo oo1d •aa Burress late in the first half, touchdown run by Dan
without
Ohio, will offer lor Ia"
then connected with Bobby Kreider with 3:05 remainor
ule ellhllront door warrantlee
Shaw on a 90-yarder to mg.
oltho CourthouH In covenantt.
Pom..-ay,
Melgo Properly Addrooa:
Baltimore scored with
make it 19-7 with 8:53 left.
County, Ohio, on the 827 S . Second
Shaw had two receptions 1:14 to go on a 5-yard pass
18th day ol Jenuory, Av"Hue, Middleport,
for
100 yards ; his 90-yarder from Grbac to Brandon
2002, 11 10:00 o.m. OH45780
Ellote , was tied for the longest in Stokley. The Steelers then
tho following Iondo Rool
ot:
and
tenemen11, Approl11d
re covered the onside kick
located 11 127 S. $13,000. tho reol franchise hi story.
Pittsburgh h as won five and ran out the clock.
Second
Avenue, eo1o1o cannot btt oofd
Middlepo rt,
OH for 1111 than ·two·
45760 . THIS IS A 1hfrdt 1ho opprolatd
SALE OF THE REAL Vllut.
Ttrma of Sale: 10%
ESTATE ONLY. THE
HOME DOES NOT down dey of oolo,
SELL. A oomploto · bolonco on doflvory
legel deacrlp11on of of - · Bold oubJoct
tho 1111 oolite 11 •• to oocrued 2001 ond
2001 rtll ' 111111
toll-•:
Sltueltd In tho to ....
All thtrllf't 11111
County of Molgo, In
1ha IIIII Of Ohio, ond operated under the
In the Vlllege of doctrine or Caveo1
Middleport, end Emptor. Protpoo11ve
boundod
ond purahaH,. 111 urgacl
deocrtbtd etlollowa: to chock lor Ilona In
Bolng Lo1 No. Forty the public recordo of
(40-112) ond on.. half. Molga County, Ohio.
Said Lot lo known tha Molgo County
and dlsllngulehed (n Shorlll mokoo no
Behan's Addition to gu1rentu 11 to the
the Town of Shallleld, IIIIUI Ol1111e prior to
now Mld!floport, ulo.
Ohio, In told County, Douglao W. Lillie,
bttlng lha oomo reol Allomey lor PlelnUII
(12) 17, 24,31

I

AKC Registered Cocker

Colts 41, Falconi 27

.

RIICI, 110011 oond. lll•lllle, rr~;ro'&amp;m'i''1
$300.00 304-57&amp;.3384

----

spaniel Puppies for S&amp;le.

P~ttrioto 12, Bills 9, OT
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. (AP)
Adam Vinatieri kicked a 23- yard field
go al with 9 :1 5 left in overtime, and the
New England Patriots moved nearer to
a playoff spot with a win ·over the Buffalo Bills .
The Patriots (9-5) have won four
straight for the first time in two years.
·The Bills (2- 1 1) lost for the seventh
time in eight home games .
On New England's first drive in
overtime, David Patten lost the ball
after catching a pass and it was recovered by Buffalo's Nate Clements.
" . Initially ruled a fumble, referee Mike
Carey determined by. a video review
that Patten's head was out of bounds
while he was still in contact with the
ball, and the Patriots kept possession.

• p1ut Trallor. ExC811ont Con-

cellont condition, $2&amp;00,
_,_17::"40:')981;.385e~=~-,.,-,.,c-:
1993 Thu- LX, 3.8
Ll1or Engine, Automatfc
Trarts., Moonroof, 110,000
peckagt.
BENNETT'S HEATING l mlloo, Good Condition.
CDOUNB (7-40,.......18 54,000. (304)875-8494
or1~.
1995 Porlllac Grand Am
GT, 2 Door· WltiiO, Aula,
Ulld Rainbow wtth Ill At- PW, Pt., CD, lotdtd, Loob
. tach...,to. Llko Now. and Runo Groll. (740)4*
3945a~er5pm
' (304)875-1725
Uatd rornu--, runo QOOd 1898 Gt.IC aor-, Aula,
72K, $4495. U94 Grond
$75.00. (7-40)441o2075
Am, Auto, 881&lt;. $3Nfl, 1993
Grand Am, Auto, 101K,
$2995. 1107 IJimlna 991&lt;,
$1295. COOK MOTORI
(7-40)448o01 03

Chnotmao. (740)367·0659
or (740)3J9.2350

taverd e, ond t h e N e w Yo rk J ets rallied
in the fourth quar •er t o b eat 1he
C inci nnati B engol s.
The J ets had ·dropped five stnight
game s in D ecember. The victory kept
New York (8-5) firmly in 1he AFC
playoff picture.
Corey Dillon topped 1 ,000 yard•
rushing for the fifth strai ght season and
scored two louchdowns for Cincinnati
(4- 9 )_

rlkM~ ~~- chance to pick on the league's worst
~
passing defense, be threw an intercep·

17" Monitor, Free -.ry
dhiOn.
Good
and Ill up. $1811. (740)2511- I fleD Pontiac Grand Am (7-40)448.()795
8514
";;id;;;ii;iiii;;;;o;;;;
P I I ;llat Harne 0wMta

tion ond lost a fumble .
·Seohawb 29,
Cowboyo 3
SEAULE (AP) Ric k y Watters
ond Sbaun Alexander eoch rushed fo r a
touchdown, and the Seattle Seahawlu
remained in the playoff r.ace by beoring
the Dollos Cowboys.
The Seohawks (7-6) ended a twogame winning streok by the Cowboys
(4-9) in a driving roin and strong winds
at Husky Stadium.
Watters ran for his 78th coreer
touchdown in the first quarter, and
Alexonder scored his 12th rushing
touchdown of the season in the final
quorter. Watters' right ankle was
injured on the second play of the
fourth period .

r• MorortcYCUfS I.

:.=.

r10 ·

cot

••

:::=:-:-.

I

j

Eagles 20, Redskins. 6

1888 Chevy Tracker •x4
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Donovan
M011L1 110111! OWNERI
.
wtth lock4n hubo, 4 cyl. 1.8
lnlorlhoom &amp; eo..n IIU. Como S. OU l.lrQt Olio 1tar tng1na. 5 ep., 11,000 McNabb overcame a career-high three
oil &amp; " " ' - ln. play of Jotvt b..,. -..... mltoo. now Urn. runo &amp; interceptions, throwing touchdown
eluding hi offlcloncy hilt Apparot and John
lliob llko now, 1740)11112~ oytlemo. Wo carry I , ,__,
73S8
passes to Freddie Mitchell and Todd
comploto line ot Mobllo - · • SeiH.
:--::::7":'---:-c Pinkston to lift the Philadelphia Eagles
home parts 6 W TIDt'lll
1898 Dodge 1500 laramie/
IINNln"B HEATING
Carmlchael't Farm I Lown SLT V8, 4x4, T/ wheel, over the Washington Redskins.
COOUNG {740).MI.t418 2rrMot-ofHOtzttHOf. ...... htalld mlr·
The Eagles (9-4) are 6-0 on the road.
or 1-.&amp;7MH7
pftof o n - Plko. GtJ. """· p/wlndowo, p/lookl. p1
----·llpollo, Ohio. (740)4*2412 - . club Olb ofdfng. blck They hold a three-game lead over the
glut, b/ Unor, vinyl OOVOf
NEW AND 11810
VII.NMAR VM 1800 T -. ounnlng boards, chrome Redskins (6-7) and New York Giants
I'UIINANCU POR IALEI - . - 3 polnlhllall, 12,1110. - · Mlcholln LTX NS in the NFC East with three games
Wo 1.-, Free Eotlmotoo, ,- . - 4' ffnllll · - . tk.. .w/10,000 mllot,
• 11 you doni Cllluo, Wo both 111M In ,erato. 1850. !ltilppfng oun vi.Or, 60,000 milt•. remaining.
l.ooul (740)44118308, 1· lVII-. Locattd Ioiii out· $14,500, (740)388-7581
The Redskins had drives reach
eoo.:ZV1.QOH.
. lldt of HuntoYtNo. N (258) :::---:---'--=-:---:::7='-':::=-::"-:-=,- 77eo11435 www.maynarc10· 87 Attro Van, 58,000 mlloo, Philadelphia's 21, 20, 7, 35, 30, 20, 16
Prfnctu Diana Doll, $200. qulpmtnt.oom
air, oruloe, II~, PW, PL,
Cabbege Patch (Drota),
AMIFM Clsael1o, dual elr and 1, but only managed two field
$50. Clb!Ntge Pttch
Jm;srocx
bqo, ABS, - I t 7, like
(Joana), $50. (740)11112·
- · Mutt etlll (7-40)379&gt; goals by Brett Conway.
9237
,.
~
21341Mve.,.__
NEW IUIO IIIEO STEEL Nubllll Buok for Safo. Call
Titans 26, Packers 20
~eoo=:
~ 1140)448-7Ma.
,
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Steve
no1 Flat 11or Stttf Grollng Riding
. Cali fof lrtfor·
McNair threw for two touchdowns
2000 70• SIOOO. and 283 yards as the Tennessee Titans
F.,; Dralno,' D"-Y• &amp;
~R
Walkwo10. New II Gallon
(7-40)379&gt;2895
Drum• With Lid &amp; Ring,
preveqted the Green Bay Packers from
11.00
Each.
L&amp;L
Scrap
Mat·
~-2000
Hondt
XReo.
Like
. h.mg a p 1ayo ff berth .
a1o 0pon Monday. Tuttdly. ~
Now. (74013888358
c, me
Wodo61doy &amp; Flfday, sam- 2000 Squero biiH ,_ 2001 113 Horlay Davldoon
The Packets (9-4) needed Atlanta,
4 :30pm. Clottd Tlluroday, $1.25 - - 1 mila on Rt. 2 Sportota' Still u,_ war. Tampa Bay and Washington all to lose,
Saturday
&amp;
Sundty. N (304"'--·8 's
(740)446-7300
·
·
"''~
ranty, 1 mllol, wf1h for· and they all obliged. But the Titans (610
0uallfy hay · fof lslt, 11.110 :':.~ (7c,:,~ro2
\·~
. A~klng 7) played the unaccustomed role of
4~
Notda 252C TracFont Cell belt; (740)HW111 0
.,.....,
~ S30 In box. Boya 20"
97 300 EX wtth oo spoiler· by playing keepaway from one
~ ~ ~~~~~ ~ ~".t,,:g:.~ llllhauat, em plaetlc, - of the NFL's best offenses.
..,.... a &amp; ,k~-- ~·---M A-::~:!' cam, '""' bara, much more,
- · $80.
-"~
txcellln1 ;~r:- 12500.
Brett Favre came in leading the NFL
~~6.':,\.;= ~ ~~";:~ Farm. ilpt•""~,.~:,;,(7.40~~23:-1·8-.., with 25 touchdown passes. But with a

a

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

• tnch.1de Phone Number And Addr111 When Nttdtd
• Ads Should rtun 7 D•v•

t24k m11ot, QOOd . . . - ••
$4500. (304)675&gt;1888

oe:,;

• Start Your Ads Wit!\ A Keyword • Include complete
Dltcrlp~lon • Include A Prlc:e • Avoid AbbreviJitiDnl

Successful Ads
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To Help Get Response ...
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20 Words 7 Days • Each Jtem Priced
• No Commercial Ads
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Or Garage/'t'ard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

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on 5000 and eooo ::::-:-:---:::-:-:~- cisco (10-3) won for the sixth time in
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SAN FRANCISCO (hP) Zack
Bronson intercepted two passes, and
the San Francisco 49ers defeated
M 1am1
' . to move cIoser to a pIayo ff spot.
The 49ers , who blanked Buffolo 350 two we eks ago, posted consecutive
home shutouts for the first time in
fr h ' h '
anc tSe 11tory.
Garri s·on Hearst rushed for 103
yards. giving him I ,042 yards in his

The Dally Sentinel• Page 83

C9

~ A

heartfelt TliANK
a,
YOU to all businesses
•and individuals who
contributed in any way to
the Southern Elementary
Harvest Carnival. We
would also like to
extend our THANKS to the families
that attended the carnival.
Southern Elementary K-4 PTO
Southern Elementary 5-8 PTO

\

·'
I

'

'.

,,

�--------------------~--------~------~·~-Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~nday,Dec.17,2001

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

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
BOWLING LEAGUE

tl

s.Por·

MASON. W.Va - Lilllo John's ot Pcmemv ..,.. nome

Couroo - 2; 9. Powel's
lleluo 8&amp;-42; • · Syra..,. Country Morl&lt;el 80-ell; 5. Toz'l ....,_ 47-81 ; 6.

lhe wimof in tho Wodo wlay N.ghl Bowling lMgu&lt;o, OUI·
distallCWig Pine Hilla Golf Couno tor tho filii time in .-w·
""' nights ot IICtion. Ut1lo Jo/Vl'l too&gt;. ... ,..., high
game with a
puohtng tho teom score 10 671&lt;1, wNte
Pine Hill. 111142 loot lho toam high wfth I~
Individual ~ were Loren Coteman (21•) f1tler
SIOYO But1on (19511n tho menrs r.g11 game, l!urtM
defaaled Ccieman in 1hl menla hiQh senet. tn !he wom·
enls divnsion Margaret Eynon ~217) defeated Oonie Wil

Moigo ln&lt;Mirloo 1&amp;-1 10.

T...., High Gamo -unto Jahnl o1 f'l&gt;ri~~&lt;O! 726
Toom High
Golf Couroo 111118
Mento Hi~#&gt; Clarno - I.Loton Cotomon 214, 2. Sieve
eo""" IllS; 3. Joel&lt; Follroij •as
Mana~--' Sl... l!urtM 528; 3. lor8t1 Coleman 512, 3. Joel&lt; F..rod 508.
Woolen's ~ Clarno - t . Margarwt Eynon 217; 2. Dol·
tie Wid 195; 3.JMnle Roble 181.
Women's High Sorios - 1. Marvarlll EjiOOO 532; 2. Dot·
tie Will 523; 3. JeanJe A~ 449.

ne

--Pine ...

(111SIIn tho high game oatOQOIY, -Margaret Eynon
clain.::t the 'tAiin over Dotlie Will, 532 to 523 in the wom·
anfa high series.
Wadswadly Ntghllowtlng LMgue Stlmmary
4.Uttle John's of Pometoy 87 ... 1; 2 Pine Hills Golf

FRANK CAPEHART
• OVP CORRESPONDENT

!f*e

·;
"
in anqtha; ~ Pttitr~.· eve~.
Na~e Roush had drilled a three~ eVeryone !hi~thed .Wib -~~ shoottng
pointer and scored on transition in that (2+-58). The Lady ,_.,.. p-a~b'ed 37
opening frame, but wu injured in a col- rebo~nds to niatch the ~Van gali.

: .37-20.

'

!ilion during the second cant!) to force
In the Van squad, Smidi:;.tn~le!i 6fher out. But J~nnifer Flowen and Whit- ~njnside, White lia~ 6\tt.lt~* foJ ten
. ney I&lt;hight stepped in to keep it rolling, poin~. and point au~ )Oiuuon calli!~~
, . . . ~~'""' ..... :
'. while J~ica Young and Kathy Sehil~ ~ ~e.'~j· ::
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ginia, but Garrard w:tS 25:)\:if-4 1 for 280
yards passing.
from PageBl
An offense can get nervo'!s if it has to
score a lot of points because· the defense
per carry in piling up 1,432 yards this is not only giving up plerity of yards and
season. Backup Art Brown was second points but is allowing the opposition to
with 313 and Garrard was third with eat up a lot of clock till\e.
·
194.
"We not going out · ~here thinking
West Virginia fans remember East .we've got to outscore this team," said
Carolina for a 327 -yard rushing effort in Marshall offensive lineman Steve Sciula victory over the Mountaineers in · lo. "Our defense will step up. They
1999; including 95 by Garrard.
always do."
Last year, the Pirates were held to 1
Well, not lately.

'

1

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Fri &amp; Sat 11 \
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Sundays

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am ·

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1
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••

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month

•

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Advertise our business
. . :.,on t. is·'-a ,e
~ ·fo·rene month·,.or as
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Phone 992·2155
..

THOU6HT
SANTA CLAUS
SAl..
"• ""0'

,
1-10, HO!u

i 1---,'

!'L~~~~~~~===;~~~;~=~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~.;;::!!~J
:

;

~

21 "ThlaGlbaon

WHt
...N
I'UI

N.O.
1•

JNT

Allpasl

ln. "The Importance
of Being Earnest'" Oscar Wilde wrote, "I
never travel without
my diary. One should
always have something sensational .to
read in the train." ·
East made a sensational play in this
deal. First, though,
look only at the West
hand. What would
you lead against three
no-trump after a Stayman sequence has
told you that the
dummy will have four
hearts and declarer
four spades?
You have nine
points, and the opponents presumably
have some 26. So,
partner has ~bout five
points . Leading a
spade, a heart or a
dub ·might work, but
each is surely unwise.
It is most sensible to
select the diamond
eight, the high card to
deny an honor.
Given that lead,
how should the play
proceed?
Declarer starts with
seven tricks: one
spade, four hearts and
two diamonds. He
will presumably play
on clubs to get the
extra tricks he needs.
To defeat the contract, the defenders
must establish and run
the diamonds first.
Declarer calls for
dummy's diantond
jack. Now is the critical moment. Suppose
East wins with his
king and returns a
diamond to duoll)ny's
ace. Declarer loses a
club to West, wins
the diamond continuation with his
queen, ioses another
club, and claims an
overtrick when West
is out of diamonds.
Instead, East played
an encouraging diamond I Q. Now the
play went: club to
West's queen, diamond to dummy's
ace, club to West's
ace, three diamond
tricks to East for one
down.
you
arc guideline:
trying to esThe
If
tablish a suit in which
· declarer has two stop-

•
'

'

•'

....
...."
..t:.

.."",
••
....,
"••
..
••..
••

· cellular

Jeff Warner Ins.
9&amp;2-5479

Home lmpronments

Siding • Remodeling
Pon:hes • Decks .
Add·on's • Roonng
Quality Work
FREE ESTIMATES
Bill Doerfer

r
I

'
I
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&amp;Stmdly
llaGrs Open 4:30

Early birds start
6:30

Progressive top line
Thursdays .
Progressive

Coueroll an Sllldays

.'

'

';

time.
SACITfARIUS (Nm•. 2JDrc. 2 1) -- You'n.• not likl'ly
to promote or try to se ll
somL•thin~ tudily that you

I.

don't believe iu , ;and that'~
what m;~kes ym1 such a ~ood
5alc ~pe nOIL Your Crt'dibility
invites people w rc~pond .
Major ch:mges :uc ahead for
SatCnarius in the coming yrar.
Send for your ~~~ro-Gr.tph
prediction. by mailinM S2 and

SASE to Amo- Grof&gt;h, c/o
thio now1pop.r, 1'.0. Ilox
17·5ti, Murray Hill Stothm,
Now York, NV 101M. lle
sur~ to nntl your Zmlll( R\~1.

C:AI 11liCOLl N (•)ec. 22·
Jnn. IV) -· .Thoro 11ro cortoin
tl1111t1 wbcm 1ft not wrunR tu
.
;.,

~::.n•a

.-

32 AHimtallve
34 Standard
35 unanrac-

let yu&lt;lr

~onurou1nouoru

pro·

vnll evur rrnctlcnllty, nnd to·
duy nony br "'" o( th'l'• &lt;loyo.
'L11 your love (or o~lon lrl·
umph.
·
1\QUAI~IUS

(Inn. 20-P&lt;•b.

I~) •• Ahho&lt;1ilh ynn onny fuol
n Vl'f)" •'r'-'n~ tuuul li.1r C'U111•
1•nnlonohl~• todAy, 11&lt;11 J&lt;lll

\

I

26=

5=out

24

ID

7

36Finlahod

25

Emleoftloo

u...

Rllcelnc~

Petar-

PQA
37 Did nothing
I Look
31 Fllttan
lnltn11y
40 Rival
I Errllnt Gl
41 Actor M11
ltltua
-Sydow
10 So. .
42 Uahar'a

'ZT Natural
28 Roolodge
21 Plgmenta
31 Bueball'l

Tommie

Auguat

queot

36 C.nllinkar·
OUI

20 Styilah

1-ZiclonO

tlve

35 ScJ.IIcraft
31Foreand3t Taro dish

22Hoa1anup 41 Conlendlng
42 .....Ilion
23 Get-43 Cllvelancfo
lorollort

Parla
4 Jane Of

33 Uh'a

.....

44 Aull
herOine
44 Large cal
47 Non-flying
bird

48

ooe•amote

50 Tofu
conathuent
51 Nabokov
heroine
52 Aunta, e.g.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
~ty Cipher cryptogromo aro cruled hom quotations by famoua

people, put and present. Each ..tter In tM cipher standi tor another.

Todsy"s cluB: J

'DK-VEZVZ
EK

NB

SXZE

SKR .I J

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EXAVL

IALI

oquats D

HBIDH

UCKD

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HDZll

EBPZH

DB
NKT
AH

XIZCAVM

EBPZYH.'- WKXV
HEIAVNIYL
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Chicavo
11111 of lh~ greal A.merlcan ciliea. -

a great American eily. Pel'tlaps II Is lha
Norman Mal!er

is

!HAl DAILY Q ~
PUULIR \::)~

WORD
GAME

- - - - - - Ealtod by
Jlearronge !etters of
0 lour
scrambled word1

the

be-

low to fOrm four simple words.

GOTESO

I I 1I I I
2

I

II

I
I

EVVER

ll I

After attending a party lor
my nephew my sister-in-law
~1 asked, "Have you ever
':~~~=~~=~.,noticed. that couples without
.children know just how you
GA y 0 y E should raise ---·· ?"
o

Ir-.,lr:-"-ri-TI-r-1-iI
0 A0 UI

"'1": ::

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Complete the dtuckle quoted

bv fdling in the

mining

words

you "develop from 1tep No. 3 below.

6 . UNSCRAMBlE
A~OVE lETTERS
TO GEl ANSWER
SCIIAM-LETS ANSWIRS
Indoor. Murky- Logic - Fibber. BRICK ·
You can't find decent mechanics anymore. I had my
radiator flushed and to conserve water the mechanic
pula BRICK in'it.

a.III\Y

t.•lcnts to constructivl.' uses in
the year illu·ad, because your
potential f&lt;,r achieving thin~~
of a ~ ubst:llltial n:tture ;m; bettcr th•m they've been for ~omc

~

PGmet Ill les
BIIIG82171
Eue111 Thursdey

helloa
31 Vonl-'&lt;

Tuesd:1y, Dec . 18,2001

Put .your time , effom and

.ALIDL

-

2

-----. ~\(g~~lvl-·
.....

).

''

light or

11 Curvy
ahlpe

3 Srbl.,ln

Forum

30

12=.

1 Julbel'a

~

24 Dll1rtctl .
27 out or

E•st
1'11111

coualn11

DOWN

22 Wa&gt;Jol

them up -as quic~y as
possible .

'

·-

leall"

pers, make him use

r

FOR WI

IIIHMIWIIII
•• Tnica Inti
$108 ..... Tnd
1.1111 .

l ALIJJA'(S

:

WIIWAIMS
lL©~rlM~~
FIREWOOD

-·""'

L&amp;L Tire Baril
..

t4AIL.
(At$ All.

FIRSTCO•E.
FIRST SERVED
$200.01 PER JOINT

WVtttn3477

992·6215

·New Hom••· Room·Additions,

Q Ill

Openlnlltad: '!!

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~·

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14

• No Dealers or Conlractors Please

0401 812·3048

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall .
8t More

INT

6 Mila North Of PomtroJ; Ohio, AI County Road 18

Free Estimates

Bryan Reeves ·

",.,

J '.

tKIOtfJ

A

wwm

14...._.
55Wo1M
15 -r.lrln ... 55 J o d i ,. PvL'a
57 Aolln
I' f II iOn
HpOI1
11..., a • 51 Yin
11 HonUd
baii"CII
20 8roolui end 5I Holklly

Dei~: Soulh

229.00*

V. C. YOUNG Ill

l

I

K Q IS

• Q'.

8

• Polio lnd Pofch Dlckl

7/22MI

.,

•

.,.,......

50 Wino
MIWd

1) T....,..._. 53 Uprilllng
gem
S. Pwbala!Mft

.
..... ...
6

VIIYliEPI.ICUIEIIT WillOWS
·IllYSitE 111111111 IIBIIB •

•Now Go• Ellclrioat 1 Plumbing
• Roofing I Qutlora
• VInyl lldlng I Pllmlng

2422

!2 lt.. l

.. KIGJ

RomociOIIng

1.~ -~

1 T..,tacte

9 A J 4

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

•NiwHomea

I

: ROBO'l'MAN

~~~

lOBEII BISSELL
COISIRUUIOI
•Garag•

WY10317ll

4 A QI

Reaaonable Ratel
All Occ:aslona

I

P/B

s

•• 1 2

Meigs Massage CARPENTER
SERVICE (740) 992·3470 BUFFET TO GO (Dinner·· 11.99)
Therapy
• Room Addltlona &amp;

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

KI I I

... $

740-742·7709

lop line

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service•

•

45Aetuma
41UMa

4 SIMU
I l'ow cp.
11 Ope1•'1l

Vulnenble: Both

:
: away by the half-time.
ing canned five and ll.oush one in the
! Early on, Wahama leaped out to a long range barrage.
quick 18-8 lead before Van cut it to 1812 after orie period, using big 6-foot-Z Young hauled down hlne rebounds to
center Smith as anchor, the Lady Bull- go ¥lith one aoal _inside,, while Shiltz
dogs socked the defense in hoping to sn~red seve!) c~ronu, collected four
! stem the Falcon charge. But, that djd not p01nt.S, aild pa~sed . off fo~ two asststs
t work as Sayre tipped the T)et for a ~ againSt the taller h~ts. . .. .
.
and deuce, then Bleuing really ,•Hhf
~~. ~ 111 ·~tP,}Wc\~.~~· .
. -~ nets'On fire with four conseculb'e ~••· ~bile l{nijbC- ~
tt~ridl, ·
{ 'ar\d;it ·was all Wahama at the half-lime, • had. (WO s~ &amp;II' atilft al4 blocked shbt

[i

. ...
.. n.

WoN

Country, 0.~ &amp;
Rock lluelc
Houra ·
7:00 All • 8:00 PM

ACROSS

.JITII

service

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

~~:~:~ t~;~~:re~;o~~~~ a:;,s';~~n~ !~, ~~;~h~:~=~~;~~h~:;l:~

I

OISe Jockey

really rose to the rebounding challenge
as the local gals took over at every phase
in great style.
All Makes Tractor &amp;
· Blessing and Sayre formed a torrid
•Equipment Parts
tandem in offense. Blessing, still playing
Factory Authorized
at less than full throttle, blistered the
Case-IH Parts
strings with 32 points, snared ten carDealers
oms. ditched out eight assists, and
IOOOSt Rt. 7Soulh
blocked three shots in an excellent allCoo/vlllfl, OH U7Z3
around performance that leaves her just
740 ••, .....
six points from the 1,000-point mark.
Sayre turned in another glittering
game of husde to disrupt Van on defense, .
ripped the nets for 18 tallies, had four
boards, two blocks, a pair of assists •.and

VAN, W.Va. - Blistering full-court
press and torrid long range shooting by
the Lady Falcons combined to burn the
hosts, Van's Lady. Bulldogs, Friday night
in a 63-42 win, running the Wahama
' Lady Falcons' slate to 3-0.
Wahama came out pressing to shock
the hosts early. Full co urt pressure and
ball hawking turned in transition goals
for an early lead,Van adjustt;d some and
went to a tight 2-3 zone to force the
Falcons outside. But, disaster came when
the hot-handed Wahama shooting

;JJJI

Kand L-

Hot Wahaina trounces Van
Bv

PHILLIP

ALDER

.111 yonC' wilt Jo. You'll be cxtremcly selective in making
sure _your choic~s fulfill your

requ 1rements.
PI!)CES (Feb. 20:. . March 211)
-- What you Jo for other~ today may s~elll rather efforllcss
to you. but wh:1t m:-~kes it so
is . h beco mes easy when
you're motivotted by umdlish
urg('~, :~mJ things arc done out
ofct~ring.

ARIES (MOlr("h 2!-April19)
-~ Put the wisdom you have
learned from 11 painful. past
experience to good u5e today ~
when confronted with something Rimil~r . This time the ~
outconte will be mon f:~vot·

. •ble.
TAUllUS (April 20-May
21)) •• Evon if it toke• a "'"

and or thlrd rfl'ort to ochiovr
a. cnrur obj•ctlvt, know thAt
It will oil work um If yon noy

lhr cu 11 r11 • Once YUIIIOt yu11r

sltw1, ~lnn't vnr ufT,
GEMINI (Moy 21 ·JIIno211)
•• Vu11r
hnvt r i&lt;kud tho
ri~ill paroon 1o trbhrm •
1i1Un1iou thnt nfl'~m nil. Your
lluolli~tlit mnnnor nn~ oblll1y
In b• n P"""''k" mokoo you
'"" rl~hl chul", 111d thoy'll
knuw h.
C:IINCEI~ Quno 21 ·J&lt;dy

P"'"

22) -- Co-wo rk~n Will arpreciatc how a·.1dil_y }'Oll imti\1
org:~nizatio11 :md order in a
chnotic ~itu ;n iou tb.1t arises at
· work md~y. They, in turn ,

will fo!lmv any posilivr

t'X:llll-

ple you set.
LEO U"IY 23- A"g. 22) --

Sm;Jrt yo u. You 'JI know that
th" best way to cope with an
anti-~oci:1l perso n roday is ro
smot1'1 c r him or her with
kin dm•5s and :.ffectio n. lt '5 a
S\J rc-firr appruach no o n e ~JII
resi~ t .

VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Scpt. ·22)
-·To your credit, the.• ~rcater
portio n of your r-fforts and
energie~ today will be to pro~
vide md care for those you
love. Wh at you feel for them

j5 ,1 ~OWfrfullll~?tiVilh)T.

LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - The conthusl tl ~l11 ycm Lil~pluy
IU1Iny for nil tloni yo11 do will
bt~ r:untttl(ium n8 yuur Anoclnrtl whmm your dt'nultlun
fur llvl llK· II will h' l~ thon1

fnl botwr nbm11 tht.~m• ~I Yn
St.:Uili'IO (0&lt;1. 2o-Nuv .
22) -· ll•• on th o ron!t• n•
luukmll cn~lny (nr thlnM- nr
~I 1U 11th'n' tluu .:uultl m., kll' ur
~!Wf ynu 111011\l)". h' ~ nn illlllr·
l'Uinl( c:ydv wluirt ymt CY \IItl

~1.11\t!r tltl.', murr: GIITninKR
I1W\ tt ~' tlinll \1111111.

.

ur

�Page 86

Bas

The Daily Sentinel

BY !liE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Blowout &gt;fter blowout can get boring
even for the Cameron Cruies."
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Top-rankrd Duke's latest victim in its
19-game winning streak was North CarThe Washington Wizards ""' playing their
best baskttball in yean. The same can't be said
olina A&amp;T, which went down 93-51
about the New York Knicks.
Sunday.
Richard Hamilton scored 27 points, and .
The fans at Cameron Indoor Stadium
• " .
I
·.
Michael Jordan added 21, rallying Washington '~
haven't had much to worry about with
from a 19-point deficit and
the Blue Devils having won every game
leading the Wizards to a 93except one by 12 points
88 victory over the Toronto
or more. So they got
Rapton. on Sunday.
creative early against the
Jorden
W:~Shington extended its
Agg1es.
se'ISOn-high winning streak to six games, its
Midway through the
longest streak since a six-game run from Dec. 15-26, 1997.
first half, Duke guard Jason Williams had
"Like I told them ... it's good when we win, it's a great feel18 points and North Carolina A&amp;T had
ing," Jordan said. "That type of winning attitude has been lost
11. The fans known for their wit and sarin Washington .
casm started chanting "Jason's winning."
In New York, the Kniclq failed to defend the 3-point line, and
Wi!liams had all of his points in the
the New Jeney Nets hit a franchise-record 14 3s in a 114-96
game on those six 3-pointers, and Duke
(9-0) pulled away.
victory.
New York lost its fourth straight. The Knicks had only one
Williams played just eight minutes in
four-game losing streak in JeffVan Gundy's six-plus seasons as
the second half after straining his groin,
coach, yet Don Chaney already has his fim after ~oaching the
but said he will ready when the Blue
team for jl!st five games.
Devils face No. 9 Kentucky in the Jinuny
"It'! still early, it's still new. We're still trying to undentand his
V Classic on Tuesday.
vision,"Knicks forward Kurt Thomas said. "A new coach comes
"I'll be OK," Williams said. "It hurts,
in and he has his own vision of what he sees the team doing. It
but I'll be ready to go against Kentucky."
takes time, just like when you bring new players in."
Duke, which hadn't played since beatIn Toronto, Jordan held Vince Carter scoreless in the second
ing Michigan 104-83 on Dec. 8, scored
half, and Chris Whitney made three big 3-pointen in the fourth
the first 11 points of the game and built
quarter to help send the Rapton ro their fourth straight loss.
the lead to 21 midway through· the first
"Just Jordan's presence on the floor got Chris Whitney two
half.
wide open 3-pointen for us to b"'ak that game open," Wash"I thil!k every team wants to knock us
ingtOn coach Doug Collins said.
off, but we're not going to let that hapCarter scored 19 points in the fint quarter and 23 in the first
pen," said Chris Duhon, who had 13
half before Jordan denied him the ball in the third. Carter shot
points and six assists. "We like being on
Q-for-4 in the second half.
top and we're going to fight for every
"It took me a whole quarter just to undentand what his teninch to stay there:·
dencies are, and how I could take his rhythm away;• Jordan said.
Williams finished 6-for-10 from 3"We wanted to shut him down as much as possible and make . point range and had five steals. He is 19the other guys hurt us."
of-37 from 3-point range over the last
The Rapton, who led by 19 in the first quarter, lost for the
three games after going 1-for-16 in the
sixth time in seven games and called a players-only team meetprevious three.
ing for Monday morninp:.
Duke, which tied an Adantic Coast
Conference record with 18 3-pointen
The strvggling Knicks were no match· for the Nets (15-7),
who are in sole possession of fint place in the Adantic Division
against North Carolina A&amp;T last year, was
at the latest date in team history.
10-for-28 from long range. The Blue
Devils held the Aggies (1-7) to 26 percent
Kerry Kirdes made five 3-pointers and sco"'d 27 points,Jason
Kidd made four 3s and finished with 18 points and 14 assists for
shooting, the fifth time in the last seven
New Jeney, which shot 14-for-24 from beyond the arc.
games their opponent shot under 40 per· "The team is very optimistic and having fun. There's no other
cent.
way to put it," Kidd said
Mike Dunleavy, Duke's second-leadi~g
The Knicks, losen of four straight to the Nets for the first
scorer at 18 points a game, had just two
time in more than 15 yean, are searching for answers.
on 1-of-7 shooting. He turned his right
Allan Houston scored 23 for the Kniclcs, who allowed a season-high point total.

• •
w~

ti

king of the NCAA.

NBA

EAT THIS - Wake Forest's Antwan
Scott slam dunks over Florida State's
Adam Waleskowskl Sunday during the
first half at Joel Coliseum In Winston. ~lam, N.C. (AP)

M1lp Couilt(s

ankle in the first minute of the game and
played just three minutes in the second
half. but Blue Devils coach Mike
Knyzewski said he should be ready for
Kentucky.
Bruce Jenkins had 24 points for die
Aggies.
.
"I learned something about my team
tonight," North Carolina A&amp;T coach
Curtis Hunter said. "I know certain guys
who will dig down and do what I need
them to do and there are certain guys

Whars Inside

p

RIO GRANDE SID

MOUNT VERNON
The University of Rio Grande
men's basketball upset a top 25
ranked
NAIA Division II team
for the second week.
end in a row
with a 102-94 win over No. 25
M~unt Vernon Nazarene on
Soturday at the Physical Education Center.
· Rio Grande (6-7, 4-0)
remained unbeaten in the conference portion of its schedule
with the victory.
Junior forward Jerry Barlow
(O,tway, 0 H) was .a man
among boys as he led all scorers with 33 points. Barlow also
pulled down five rebounds, had
three steals, made I 0-of- 1 1
fre~ throw attempts and was
\1-of-14 shooting from the
field.
. Kenny Chaffin led Mount
Vernon (9-5, 1-1 A!v!C) in
scoring with 24 points.
MVNC jumped out to a 156 lead four minutes into the
game behind a pair of threepointers from Chaffin and Phil
Argento. Argento pumped in
22 points for the game.
The Cougars held a 29-21
advantage when the Redmen
went on a 9-2 run to move to
within a point (3 1-30) with
7:35 to play in. the first half on
a tip by Joe Martin (Toledo,
OH). Martin scored 11 points
in the game.
Rio Grande scored seven of
the final nine points of the first
half, to trail 44- 40 at halftime.
The Redmen g\abbed their
first lead of the game (50-49)
at the 18:19 mark of the second half on a jumper by senior
Joe Delaney (Archbold, OH) .
Delaney would post !lfloubledouble for the Redmen with
20 points and 13 "'bounds.
' The game went back and
forth in the second half with
Rio surging ahead only to
)lave the Cougars come back
and tie the score.
The Redmen put the game

..NAIA

away in the. final four minutes
at the free throw line. They hit
16-of-20 down the stretch
from the line.
Other Redmen to score in
double figures were Jason
Beller (Gross Lanes, WV) with
14 points (4-of-6 from threepoint land), and freshman Nat
Moles (Charleston, WV) added
12 points to the balanced
attack.
In addition to Chaffin and
Argento, MVNC also got double figure scoring from Lenny
Foyer with 15.
The Redmen shot 61 percent (34-of-56) from the floor
for the game and, including 8of-15 from beyond the arc and
68 percent (26-of-38) from the
charity stripe. Rio also won
the rebound battle, 33-29, and
committed only 11 turnovers.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Southern California stopped
doing. the things that built an
· 18-pomt lead m the first half,
and Miami of Ohio was ready
to pounce.
,
But senior Sam Clancy
scored two consecutive baskets
and Dav1d Bluthenthal hit two
free throws during the final
four minutes to help the Trojans survive a scare and beat
the RedHawks 59-55 Sunday.
"'They really slowed it
down and we seemed to lose
our intensity," said Clancy,
who had 15 points but only
one rebound in 39 minutes.
The Trojans (6-2) led by 15
points with eight · minutes
remaining and appeared to be
on their way to a blowout
victory.

No. 10 Dlinois 98,
Westem Dlinoil 62
Frank Williams had 17 points and reserve
Luther Head added 14 for the lllini (8-2),
who pulled away with a 20-5 run early in
the second half. Illinois finished 11-for-19
from 3-point range with Head, who
~tered the game 1-fur-3 from beyond the
an:. going 3-of-5.
Shawn Mason had 19 points for the visiting Leathernecks (4-4).
No. 11 Boston College 75,
· Holy Cross 51·
Troy Bell scored 24 points and Kenny
Walls had as the Eagi.S (9..0) won their
25th consecutive home game. Bell went 5for-6 from the free throw line and is 37-of39 over the last ihree games.
Brian Wilson had 13 points for the Crusaders (4-4).

Georgia Tech 96,
No. 13 Syrai:use 80
Clarence Moore scored 20 points for the
Yellow Jacktts (4-5), who took control
with a 13-0 run that gave them a 34-17
lead in the game playeq at Philips Arena,
Kueth Duany had 20 points for the
Orangemen (9-2), who lost their second
straight and played their third c01..ecutive
game without coach Jim Boeheim. He is
expected to miss one more game following
prostate surgery.

No.19Wake Forest 93,
Florida St. 72
Darius Songaila scored 29 points and
Jamaal Levy added 15, both career-highs,
for the Demon Deacons (7-2) in the
Adaritic Coast Conference opener for
both teams.
Monte Cummings scored 16 points for
visiting Florida State (3-4), which had 22
turnovers.
No. 24 Oklahoma 102,
Bethune-Cooknian 65
Aaron McGhee scored 20 points as the
· Sooners (7-1) topped the 100-point mark
for the second straight game. Oklahoma
beat High Point 107-63 on Saturday
night.
Cage Moses and Brian Cox each had
11 points for the visiting Wildcats (2-5),
who were outrebounded 40-19.

Will be open now through
December 24th from 9AM
until6PMfor your
shopping convenience.

SHIRTS fiHD OTHEJt GOLF
EQOIPMEHT fiHD LOW.
LOW PRICES

MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL
Singlcz Playqr Duqs - 1650° 0
Couplqs Duqs - 1750°0

:Gertrude Finlaw, 80
Mabel Herron, 91
:Billy Hill Sr., 69
1ohn Irvin, 82
:Scottie Tripp, 35
Aileen Wehrung. 87
Details, 3

LOOK BUT DON'T TOUCH - The dangling and sparkly ornaments and lights on the Chtl$~­
mas tree can be hard for curious pets to avoid, but pet owners should take special precautions to prevent unhappy hOlidays for both pet and owner, said Alden Waitt, Meigs
County Humane Society president. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Holiday. finery can harm pets

IUp: so.. Low: . .
Details, 3

Pkk .:S d.y: 2..()-9

Rainbow Classic in Hawaii.
He received four stitches to the
left side of his head after getring cut during the game.
After
USC's
Brandon
Granville missed two free
throws, Johnson missed an
opeq 3-pointer that would
have tied the game.

USC's Desmon Farmer had
his basket disallowed because
of an offensive foul. Farmer got
fouled with 26 seconds left and
made one for a 56-52 lead.
Robert Hutchinson also made
one of two free throws and
USC dung to a five-point lead
with 18 seconds left.

MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING AND
LITTER PREVENTION
,.

RECYCLE STATS
JANUARY 1 THRU NOVEMBER 30, 2001
l.C

·,

:t

Pick 4
3..()-9-6
. 11 1; :;0~15-2~30

BY BIIIAf! J, RDD

,·~ENTINEL

' Ml'lilatd: 4-2-3
~4

l!ljllt: 9-().0-2

fi.VC'
3: 5-11-4
DII!Y.4:7-5-3-3

Calli 15: 1-3-7-15-19-23

lnclex
I

calendar
Classifieds
Comics

2
6-8

9

-Dear Abby

2
4

Editorials
MQVies
:Obituaries
·sports
Weather

CANS- Aluminum
CANS-Steel
GLASS - Clear
GLASS - Bro\\11
GLASS - Green
PLASTIC-No. 1·2Color
PLASTIC -No. 2Jugs
NEWSPAPERS/MAGAZINES
PAPER- Office Mix
.PAPER- Computer
CARDBQARD
TOTALS

"

1)15
24,680
19,450
29,815
4,790
6,505
5,315
m,77S
5,188

1,342 .
10,085
3690
,
1,905
845

.().

3)45
2,455
71)SO
1,865
.0.

72J7S

40,100

347,171

137,38%

1,045
10,825
5)60
4,495
1,171
3,835
2,195
88,829
415

Busiam
Schools
.0.

5, 7, 8, 10

3

: c 2001 Ohio Volley Publlshlna Co.

~ daystlll

POVNPS

~Christmas

.().

630
555
29,786
53,139
1,100

35.~

119,260

268,235

'154,730

4,440
. 1,935
1,867
706

l13,418

POMEROY- No cat worth owning can
avoid batting at a string of colored lights or a
bright Christmas ornament, and hardly any
dog can avoid digging into a pile of gifts or
sniffing at a poinsettia.
Pet owners will agree Christmas wouldn't
be the same without their furry friends, but
some of the Christmas finery we take fur
granted can pose serious safety risks fur
household animals. Those who are considering a kitten, puppy or other pet as a gift
should reconsider, said Alden Waitt, president
of the Meigs County Humane Society.
Some of the bigger risks for pets are electric lights, tinsel, ornaments and angel hair,
Waitt said.
111
"Angel hair, made from spun glass, is mur-

(304) 773-5354 or

1

-3031

Waitt offered tJ:le following pointen for pet
owners:
• Cover or ack down electrical cords.
• Don't leave burning candles where they
can be upset by excited children or animals.
• Avoid bubble lights. For dogs and cats,
they are moderately to lethally toxic, depending on the amount of methylene chloride
fluid ingested or inhaled .
• Hang tinsel and ornaments high on the
tree.

• Avoid the use of noise makers and confetti for the New Year's holiday. They can frighten a pet and cause him to bolt out an open
door or seek safety elsewhere. Confetti can be

RECEIVES AWARD - Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar, right,
presented Council President John Musser with a plaque
Monday for his dedication and commitment while serving on
village council for eight years. Musser's term officially ends
Dec. 31. (Tony M. Leach photo)

PIIIII-Pitl, S

SponiOred by

The Qaily
S.entinel
992-2155

Amateur photographers honored for calendar submissions
'

fROM STAFf REPORTS
\
two photos, "Huckleberry
POMEROY -The. work of · Friend" and "Cutting Hay";
amateur
photographers Gloria Klees of Pomeroy for
tim;&gt;ugh out Meigs County will "At the Festival"; Duane B.
be highlighted in The Daily Wolfe of Racine for his two
Sentinel's 2002 calendar, to photos, "Backyard Visitor" and
appear next week.
"Mail Po~ch Barn·:; and Joyce
The calendar will feature a ·E: Manuel of Racme for her
variety of portraits, landscape . two photos, "All-American"·
scenes, and seasonal pho- and "Hometown Christmas."
tographs, all of Meigs County
A third .photo subrrutted by
people and places.
Manuel will be used as the feaPhotographets whose photos tu~ photograph on the calenwere selected are: Lila VanMeter dars cover.
of Chester, for her photo, '1an··we are impressed that so
uary C;mlinal"· Sharlee Evans many talented photographers
of Pord:ind f~r "A Pordand submitted photos for our calenWinter"; Roberr A. Bailey of dar ~roject," said Charlene
Long Bottom for ··camp Hqefl~e~. general ~ager .o f
Kiashuta"; Brenda L~slie of The Daily Sentt~el. It was difJ:: ,;Lo Oak F
., . fi.cult ~ choose JUSt 12 for pub- PHOTOS CHOSEN - Debbie Call, account representative for The Dally Sentinel, recognized
R utland 10r
ne
arm, li . "
some of the·Meigs County photographers whose photos were selected for The Daily Sentinel's
Dirk .Kreiss of_ Reedsville for ';!non.
.
"Del~:~ Queen at Lo¢k 20";
We hope that Meigs Conn- 2QQ2 calendar. Pictured •. fr1m left, are Call, Joyce Manuel, Sharlee Evans, Lila vanMeter and
Dllane 8. Wol!e~ (Brian J. R ed photo)
Gina Tillis of Rutland for
PleiH - Photol, S
',
.
··~

'

'

;.

Holzer Medical
Equlpntenl, Inc._
.

85~701

.

OXygen .smd Related Services..
M~ical Equipment and Supplies.

Riverside Golf Course
Masc;m, West Virginia

~~~ti:! fs0!~; ttixi&lt;:;;{vaitt Said. ~.,,

3

TOTAL
3,602
50,030
30,435
38,082
7,512
14,215
11,180
367,643
60,ffJ1
1,100.

NEWS STAFF"" -;" · "

3

IJ

Synme
Curbside

der on human skin and causes irriation to the
eyes, skin, and gastrointestinal tract in nonhumans;'Waitt said.
Several Christmas plants are poisonous to
animals, including holly, ivy, balsam, juniper,

Humane Sqdety o.ffers
tips for safe :christmas

01:110

But the RedHawks (2-5)
erased their double-digit
deficit with a 16-4 run, indudmg 10m a row, to dose to 5552 with 2:21 remaining. Alex
ShortS scored nine in the spurt.
Shorts scored 19 points · for
Miami, which was stopping in
Los Angeles on its way to the

·'"On behalf of council,Jolni
Musser will be sorely misse4
and his absence will be felt for
a very long time," said Mayor
John Blaettnar.
·
BY TONY M. Weft
'"John has been like my
SENTlNEL NEWS STAFf
right h~ for many years and
POMEROY
The his comlnitment to council
·achievements of Councilman . goes beyond words," hci
John Musser were ·acknowl- added. "He is personally
r
· •
edged dunng Monday's regu'bl
,_._
,
f Po .
v' j]
responSI e ror securmg
..,.. meeting. o
meroy - ,numerous grants and L,,...
"- be ·
en
!age C cil
oun ·
. ed by instrumental in developing
M usser was recogmz
th vill .,
fellow council members for
e · age.
.
. to the
Dunng the meenng.
his "dedicated serv1ce
.
community" and "unyielding Musser was presented wtth a
commitment with d 1 p'
plaque for his hard worl&lt; and
eve o mg
hi
hi! . IE
the ·village" while serving as ac" evements ~ e m o ce.
council president for eight
I would hke to thank
council for their unwavering
yean.
Musser, whose term ofli- support and am extremely
cially ends Dec. 31, chose not honored to have been elected
to run for office this year council pres~de~.t ~unng my
because of a desire 10 spend e1~t-year term, saJd Musser,
more time with family and to
Even though I won):
concentrate on penonal busi- ' physically be at the counci,l
ness ventures.

Musser ends
term ·Dec. 31

:Rams top Saints, 5

Drop-Oil' Racine
Sites
Curilside

Riverside ,
Golf Course

ng
councilman
recognized

0

who won•t.n

Rio u sets Mt Vernon Southern California survives Redhawk scare.
BY MARK WIWAMS

•

r.

Duke still the
Jordan has his
Wizar&lt;Js on the rise
NBA

Time out for tips, 2

Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
Division of Recycling and
Litter P.revention

·,, '..

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

Discover the Holzer Difference

2B81 State Route 160 • Gallipolis
~:~~
.. For more information, call
••

www.holzer.org

.'"-',

'

·v~.

-'*'

. •..

(740) 446·4095

.

'Y'

_;,...

____ --

----

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