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                  <text>hAll A10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Oct. 22, 2001

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Southem ·to honor l97l-73 SVAC champion gridiron
•

Scoii Woull

fNP COIIRESPONOENT

RACINE The 1972
SVAC football champion
Soulhem To~ and the
1973 SVAC co-champions,
who shared the best m:ord in
school history at 7-3,:m being
honored this weekend at the
Southern vs. Eastern game
during Prescription · Oxygen
Night.
Thete will be a parade Friday starting at 7 p.m. fi:om the

high school parking lot followed by a bonfire at the high
school. The honorees from
1972-73 are asked to participate in the parade and to stay
for the bonfire.
Starting at 4:3{) p.m. Saturday, there will be a tailgate
party in the high school parking lot. The meat and drinks
will be provided for the honorees and their families. The
honored families are being
asked to bring an entree or a

dessert.
At halfi:ime of the game, the
players will be honored.
Membei'S of the 1972 team
were seniors Jay Hill, Ron
"Tree" Hill, Nick lhle, Mike
Nease, Rodney Neigkr, and
Larry Wilcoxen; and juniors
were Mike Codner, Randy
Forbes, Dennis Hawk, Verne
Ord, Gene Shively, and Jim
WiUiams.
Sophomore members were
Don Bush, Dave Clark, Buddy

Southern volleyball falls in sectional final
Pullins had an ace and Amy Lee points around a Southern tiine
(NP COIIRESPONileNT
had an •ce. Katie Sayre was 25- out to claim a 17-15 win and
ALBANY -The Southern of-30 spiking with 5 kills, forcing a third game.

BY Scon WCilR

Tornadoes came one point Rachel Chapman was 7-of-9
;rway fiom a Sectional Ghampi- spiking with one kill and
unship. but one point might as Pullins 2-of-.2. Emily Hill had
well · have been one mile. three kiUs and Lee one.
Southern defeated Trimble in • · Pullins had a terrific passing
nw games. 15-10,15- 18 in the game with 38-of-43 passes, and
6nt round semi-final, then after a perfeCt setting game with 28daiming the fim game of the of-28; Chapman was 32-of-36
match and ~ng Miller 15- passing and 3-of-3 setting; and
14, lOst the second match in Sayre was 25-ot:-26 passing.
dll1!e sets. Miller claimed the Kiser was perfect at 20-of-20
win 5-15, 17-15, and 15-7.
setting.
"If you were going to get
Southern whipped Miller in
beat and still end things on the first game 15-5 and had the
somewhat of a positive note, Falcons on the ropes of the secthis was the way to do it," said ond game. Southern led 14- 11 ,
Coach Roma Sayre. "The girls but lost the serve, then Miller
piayM-their hearts out, and we tied it 14-14. Southern got one
have everyone back for next more chance and Chapman put
~- I jqst wish we could have Southern up 15- 14, but again
come together a little sooner." Southern lost the serve and
In the Trimble win, Brooke Miller tied it at 15-15.
Kiser had ten points, and Deana
Southern's inability to put it
Pullins had ten on 10-of-10 away came back to bite them as
and 12-of-12 serving nights. Miller scored the last two

Southern feU behinq early
and came back to 6-4 and 9-{.,
but could get no closer. Miller
rolled on to the I 5-7 win and
the championship. Miller plays
Tuesday against Frankfort
Adena.
Southern's Chapman was
46-of-.52 passing and 4-of-4
setting; Sayre was 52-of-58 and
2-of-2; Pullins was 64-of-{,9
and a perfect 2lH&gt;f-28 setting;
Lee was 25-of-27 passing; and
Kiser was. 42-of-43 and 40-of42 setting.
In serving Chapman had
seven points on a I 4-of-14
serving night and 8-of-8 spiking night with five kills. Sayre
was I 1-of- I 2 serving with six
points and a 23-of-24 spiking
night and two kills, while
Pullins was 7-of-10 with an ace
and 4-of-5 spikes.

Ervin, Monty Hut, Dave
Huddleston, Tim Mauer,
Mitch Nease, John Salser,
GleM Simpson, James FerreU
and Tim Hill. Freshmen members included Danny Brown,
Rmdy Dudding. Greg Dunning, Brady Huffinan, Ronnie
Johnson, Jeff Knighting. Ken
Rose, Frank Shane, and BiD
Shively.
Rodney "Button.s" Allen
ond Glenn CoUins were team
managers for the unit coached

•

•

by the late BiiiJeweU.&amp;.istant nie Johnson, Greg Dunning,
coaches were Ralph Wigal and
John Dudding.
Members of the 1973 team
were seniors Mike Codner,
Randy Forbes, Dennis Hawk,
Verne Onl, and Jim Williams.
Junior members were Don
Bush, Dave Clark, Buddy
Ervin, Monty Hart, Dave
Huddleston, Tim Mauer,
Mitch Nease, John Salser,
Glenn Simpson, while sophomores were Ken Rose, Ron-

Randy Dpdding. and
Brown.
Freshmen players

DannY
well!

M1lpCoaat(s

Steve Boso, Joe Brown, Tollf
Carnahan, Danny Codner,
Greg Cundiff, Eric Ou.nnin&amp;
Chris Forbes, Steve Hen:;
dricks, Chris Hill, Jerry John&lt;
son, Steve Nease, Rob Waldnig
and Scott Wolfe.
Tlut team also was coached
by Bill Jewell and Jobn Du~
dlnu

........_.....,.,...

:

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMUNITY HOUSING IMPROVEMENT PROJEC'l'
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION FLOOD PLAIN DEVELOPMENT

onors
•
I

Meigs County Intends to undertake a CDBG Community Development
Housing Improvement project, funded through the IT 01 CDBG CHIP
program for the purpose of acquisition/Rehabilitation/Home Repair/
Lead Abatement activities In Meigs County. Portions of the project
may be located In the 100 year floodplain. The proposed project
cannot be undertaken In any other location as there Is no practical
alternative for the locations of portions of the project. These housing
activities can only take place where the need Is determined and 1t Is
unknown where the need will be targeted In Meigs County. however,
the possibility exists that an activity may occur In these base flood
areas. Therefore. It Is the judgment of the Meigs County
Commissioners that the benefits to low /moderate households alTected
by the project outweighs consideration of Executive Orders 11988 and
11990.

'' BY

BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Ground
was broken for the new
Charles E. Blakeslee Addition to the Meigs County
District Public Library in
Pomeroy on Monday.
Blakeslee, a former Meigs
County Agricultural Extension agent, and a 52cyear
member of the library's
·board of directors, joined
Library Director Christi
Eblin, Board President Douglas Little and board members Robert Crow, Pat
Holter, Sue McGuire, Bruce
May and Pat Mills in breaking ground for the new halfmiUion doUar expansion.
Following the groundbreaking, he was honored
with a reception in the
library's meeting room.
Blakeslee has been staying
in Indiana where his wife,

A more detailed description of the project and the FIRM Flood Maps
are avallable for citizen review at the Meigs County Grants Office, 117
East Memorial Drive, Suite 7, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Meigs County Commissioners
JeffThornton, President

Prices Good Tuesdat. Oct. 23 &amp;Wednesdat. let. 24 OilY
s American pride, continues to grow throughout
the nation, students at Salisbury Elementary spent
last week working on various craft projects that
el!c;ompass a patriotic thep1e. Fourth-grader Joey
Blatkston can be seen here stapling construction
paper for his class's project while· another elementary student
sews an American flag pin.
·

26oz.

Split

Hunts

)Chicken
Breast·-----..---....

Spaghetti
Sauce

Tony M. Leach photos

99
Pound

Post

Rutland considers annexation possibility

Cocoa or

.

Fruity

police protection and street- said.
"It wiU prove beneficial for
RUTLAND - The possi- lights.
Fetty also said that rumors local children because of new
bility of ahnexation was discussed during the .recent circulating
about
high projects being planned," he
meeting of Rutland Village water/sewer rates are incorrect added. "And those being
and that the viUage 's rates are annexed wiU be able to join
Council.
Mayor Richard Fetty and comparable to other commu- the local government, which
will allow them to have conattorney John Lentes recently nities.
"The concept of annexation trol over some of their current
met with township trustees to
discuss the issue of residents was never meant to be a bad issues."
Fetty said that anyone with
being misled about a possible thing," said Fetty.
"The village is trying to questions about the propo~ed
annexation.
Fetty said the village needs replace homes from the last annexation should attend
to grow and that annexation FEMA project and most of the council's next scheduled
provides numerous advan- people who would be affected meeting on Nov. 13.
tages, namely an increase in by this annexation already act
In other matters, Don
property values and more as part of the community," he Quicksaw of W: E. Quicksaw
FROM STAFf REPORTS

Pebbles
Stokely

Yellow

Ton:-ato

AU-Purpose

Onions

Juice
21$1

Today'•

Sentinel

24pkcube

oz.

United

79

Valley Bell

2%Milk

'

6 o;z

2 S.diDIIJ- 12 ......

Calendar
AS
Classjfieds ·
82-4
Comjcs
BS
Editorials
A4
~o~bi~tu~auri~eLs_______oA3~
"lsp.,.o""rts:-&lt;----""'B"'"L.,.3,_,6
LJW!!ie&lt;llaL!lthLJCe!&lt;lrL-____..lA""-6

Nunn Better

Dog food

Hlah:71s
Low: eo.
Details, A6

Lotteries
OHIO .
Pick 3: 4-3.-4; Pick 4: 6-4-5-6

aa ·~ s: 1-2-q-1~31
W~
o.Hy 3: ~Dally 4: 2-&amp;+3

c 2001 Ohio Volley Publishins Co.

16.5 b. Mini-Chunk
or Golden Huggett

PluM- Ubrery, A3

'

and Associates met with Jay
Dewhurst and Office Manager
Amanda Ramage last week to
discuss fees for the reengineering of a new walking trail and
bridges, which, according to
Quicksaw, is contingent on
grant funding. ·
Grants from the Ohio
Department of Natural Services and Greenspace are
being looked into by the Parks
and Recreation Committee
for the construction of a new
bridge, which will connect the
existing ball fields with the.

PleeM -

Rutl•nd, AJ

MIDDLEPORT - State
jail officials are encouraging
_Middleport to pursue its
plans for a jail at the Middleport Elementary School
building, and Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli discussed those
plans at Monday evening's
regular meeting of Middleport Village Council.
lannarelli said she and
Police Chief Bruce Swift
met with two state-level corrections officials on Friday,
and that the four toured the
elementary school and discussed its potential as a fiveday jail.
"They think it would be
perfect;' Iannarelli said. "The
ideal plan would be to construct a new area onto the
back of the school's gymnasi-

um."
The Pearl Street building
will be vacated in 2003
when the Meigs Local

School District moves students into a new consolidat~
ed elementary school. The
district has agreed to transfer
ownership of the elementary;
middle and central school
buildings to the village once
they are no longer needed.
The village tentatively
plans to use the elementary
school as a viUage hall and
police department, and will
pursue grant funds 'for the
construction of a 10- to 12man jail in or near the
school's gymnasium.
"We ne~d to do something
in the next two years anyway, or Middleport won't
have a jail," lann•relli said, in
reference to ever-increasing
regolations on existing jail
facilities.
lannarelli said a portion of
any new jail facility could be
used to house prisoners from
·other jurisdictions at a nego-

PiuM-JeH,AJ

Bloodmobile collects more than 90 units
FROM STAFf REPORTS

POMEROY - More than 90 gallons
of blood was donated during last week's
visit by the American Red Cross Bloodmobile at the Meigs Senior Center.
Donors by community were:
POMEROY - Debra Mora; Bethany
Cremeans, Timothy Hall, Gerald Rought,
Bryon Shank, Harold Norton, David
King, Paul Marr, Geoffrey Wilson, Sa~p-

son Hall, Janet Peavley, Doloris Will,
Orion Wiii,James Will, Mary K. Spencer,
BiUy J. Spencer, Dan Follrod, Shannon
Smith, Virgil Windon, Cyndl King, Marvin Taylor, Deborah Grueser,Jean Durst,
Shaula Laudermilt, Janice Haggy, Gloria
Kloes, Ginger Stake,and Jennifer Wilson:
RACINE-Arthur
Roush,
Evelyn
Mugrage, Charles T. Mugrage, Chenoah
Mugrage, Downa Arnold, Larry Circle,

Paula Brown, Roy Van Meter, Janice
Salser, Randall Arnold, Oris Smith, Stacy
Shank, Helen Bogard, Roberta Forester,
. Robert Forester, and Barbara Dugan.
PORTLAND - James Foreman;
,
LANGSVILLE
Kenneth
Longstreth;
SHADE - Greg McCaU and Trena
Noland;
Please SH Donllte, A3

Holzer Hospice sponsors a
I

Hollclay Grief Workshop

in Meigs County
Thursday, October 25 • 10 AM • Meigs Senior Center
,
in .Gallia County
Monday, October 29 • 1 PM • Y~yngate of Gallipolis

298 SECOND STRE
POMEROY, OHIO
I

PRICES EFFECTIVE June 26 &amp; 27

. I

:i
•

Plans continue for :_:
Middleport jail
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

UmH 3Piease

.,,_;

Daisy, is in
a nursing
home, and
has
resigned
his posi1.
)
tion on the
board,
effective
I
•
Oct. 31.
"This
tribute is not just for me, but
for all of •the people who
have worked so hard to make
Meigs County a better place
to live;· said Blakeslee, 91,
thanking his parents, his wife
and his daughters, Patricia
and Jennifer, who also
attended the reception.
"This building will be a
tribute to all the library
trustees who have served on
the library board for the last
89 years, and the librarians
and staff who have so will~-

All are welcome. Refreshments will be served.
For more information call (740) 446-5074 .

..
•

MEDICAL ' CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

,,

•

-·

·'

"

�•

_..,..___I__, the Bend

_The_D_aily_Se_ntm_·e_I

PageAl

1U11d.,.., Octu:tw 2J, 2001

DEAR ABBY: I am writing
about the letters you have printed
about bullying. If an adult attacks
an adult,• the victim can call the
police. If an adult attacks a child,
the child can call the police. But if
a child attacks or bullies another
child, no adult will step in. The
adults stand back and Wf things
like, "They'll work it out," or, "It's
part of growing up," or, "The bully
must come from a broken home."
All violence is wrong. Kids will
NOT work it out. Talking to bullies doesn't deter them any more
than talking to fish stops them
from swimming. Child psychologists need to remember that bullies
do it because they enjoy it. Bullies
bully because society allows them
to. VETERAN OF THE
SCHOOLYARD WARS
DEAR VETERAN: I agree
that bullying must not be tolerated
and must be dealt with on a proac-

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
live basis. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I have zero to!. erance for bullying. As a mother,
foster mother and grandmother,
when it happened in my family. a
call to the principal describing the
problem and insisting on ·a meeting
with the bully's parents usually
ended the problem. I always
explained, both to the principal
and the parent, that if the problem
wasn't taken care of, I would press
civil charges, and I meant it. If my
child was causing the problem, I

would see that it stopped.
Only once this didn't worlc when the bully's father was a
policeman. On the second interview, I suggested to him, in my
sweetest voice, that he was seriously damaging the chief of police's
public relations program. That was
the end of . the problent;:J CAROL IN PASCO, WASH.'
DEAR CAROL: Good for you.
Making sure the school princip:d is
aware of the problem is a must.
Also, taking the time to documeni
each incident is helpful shojlld
legal action be necessary. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I grew up in one.
of the inost affluent cities in tile
country. My high school was one
of the top 15. While I was bright
academically, I was a loner. I was
teased, taunted and physically bullied. Had I been wired just a little
differently, I could have caused a
bloodbath at my high school.

"""'
Coal- 22.18
Alczo-41.17

·Dear Abby is wrillen by Pauline
Phillips and daughter ]eam1e _Philfips.

LAND TRANSFERS

POMEROY - Meigs County
Community C818nd8r 18 publlllhed • a free MfVIoe to non- District Public Library will break
profit groupe wlehlng to ground for the Charles E.
announce meellnp llfld epe- Blakeslee addition to the
clal-nts. The calender 11 not Pomeroy Library on Monday, at 1
deelgned to promote 11118 or p.m. An opan house honorlng
fund-ral~ere of any type. llema Blakeslee, long·time board mem-.
ere prtnllld only 11 epace 1*- ber, will be held from 1 to 3 p.m.
miU and cannot bl gUirenlllld
RACINE - Southern Band
to bl prlnllld a epeclflc numBoosters meeting, Monday, 6:30ber of deye.
p.m. at the high school band
room.
MONDAY
RACIEN - Southam Local
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education, 5 p.m MonBand Boosters, special meeting
day at the high school.
to complete plans for basket
bingo
fundraiser, 6:30 p.m .•
SYRACUSE - Luncheon at
Meigs
High
School.
Asbury Un~ad Methodist Church
with Rev. Lois Neal, misSionary
TUESDAY
from Shawnee, Okla., 1:30 p.m.
POEMROY - Winding Trail
Monday. All woman Invited.
Garden Club, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
Har- Meigs Museum.
HARRISONVILLE rlsonvllle Senior Citizens, MonRACINE - RACO meeting,
day, 11 :30 a.m. Scipio firehouse.
potluck dinner. Blood pressures Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Star Mill
Park, potluck.
will be taken.

Jack G. Schmidt to Travis J. Usle, John D.
POMEROY Meig. County Columbus Southern Power, right ol way, Sutton.
John T. Uale, Chrialll.iale, Columbus Sou1hem Uale, deed, letart.
Recorder Judy King reported the fol- Power, right of way, Sutton.
.
L. Dean Harril, Robin Harris, to Brian K. Harris,
lowing transfers of real estate:
Karen E. Stallord. J-ph H. Stanard, to Paula J. Harris, deed, Rutland.

.I ..

Billy Flay O'Brien, Henri- O'Brien, to State of
Ohio, deed. Bedford.
Michael J. Eblin, Robin Fl. Eblin, to Eblin Family Trust Agl98ment, deed, Village of Rutland.
Carrie E. Roush. deceased, tllfmlnation OIIWe
estate, Letart
Gerald Shuster, deceased, to Rhonda Milam,
Robert Schoolcraft, deed. Village Of Pomeroy.
Carter T. Smith to LaSalle National Bank, N.A.,
sheriiiUs deed, Lebanon.
Edward 0. Anderson to E. Paul Anderson,
Esther Anderson, deed, sru.m.
Larry E. Simmons, Unda L. Simmons, to Roth·
llsberger &amp; Simon, deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Jerry Michael St. Clair, •Armada St. Clair, to
Charles B. Roberts, Calla M. Roberts, deed,
Oliva.
Ella A. Adams to Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Olive.
John w. VanMeter, Betty VanMeter, Jon ,
Richard VanMeter, to Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Let8rt.
Albert Tromm, Marjorie E. Tromm, to Columbus
Soulhem 'Power, right of way, Bedford.
E.L. Dick McDonald, Margaret J. McDonald, to
Colurmua Southern Power, right of way, Bedford.
Laela M. Tromm, Carl A. Trornn, to Columbus
Sou1hem Power. right Of way, Bedford.
Cool Country Corp., to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Orange.
Harold H. Blacl&lt;aton to ~~ Sou1hem
Power, right ol way, Chestllr. .
,
'
Ed Young, Eva Malee Young, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way, ChHter.
Jack Perry, Carolyii Perry, to Columbus Southem PO'f'ltr, right of way, Scipio.
•
Leo Bailty, Katll Bailey, to Columbu1 Southern
Power, right of way, Scipio.
Scott u..,, Janice Lilla, John D. Llale, to

NEWS AND NOTES
son, Matthew 'fYlor Combs,
born at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis on Aug.
21. He weighed seven
pounds.
Maternal grandparents are
Douglas and Janet Eblin of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Chester Combs Jr.,
Racine, and the late Hazel
Combs . Maternal great
grandparents are Virginia
Wears of Pomeroy and the
late Walter Wears, and the
late Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eblin.
Combe
Pater.nal great grandparents are the late Mr. and
Mrs. David Baker and the
late Mr. and Mrs . Chester
, RACINE Matt and Combs Sr.
Mandy Combs of Racine
He also bas a sister,
.announce the birth of their Miranda.

Combs birth

FACES IN
THE NEWS

'

and spoken with world leaders,
-enjoyed
financial
prosperity,.
friendship a~;~d love.
Please let your readers know that
the various 12-step programs can
be lifesaving resources not only for
adults, but also for young people.:
They offer acceptance to alcoholics, drug users, obese teens,
bulimics, anorexics, and even those
with emotional difficulties but no.
substance addiction.- FORMER
OUTCAST
DEAR FORMER OUTCAST: Your letter illustrates that
while the teen years may feel like a
life sentence for some, there really
is an end in sight - a bright new
beginning filled with hope. I'm
pleased to spread your message.
Twelve-step programs can ·be an
excellent resource for teens and
cost nothing to join.

LOCAL EVENTS

POMEROY - Meigs Local.
MIDDLEPORT OH·KAN
Gain Club regular meeting, Mon., Board of Education, 7 p.m. Tues1 p.m., Trolley Station. DraWings, day at the Meigs High School
library. Meeting to Include lour of
coin auction, refreshments.
Meigs high School Renovation
RACINE - Racine Council, In project. Presentation by Meigs
· · · recessed session Monday at 7 Local continuous Improvement
: · : p.m. at the municipal building.
Plan Committee, and presentati.on by Jim Huff, librarian.

'

Instead, I turned all my anger
inward and became bulimic and.
suicidal. My parents and the 12step program of Overeaten
Anonymous saved my life at age
16. I was lucky to find in O.A. a
place filled with unconditional
acceptance.
During those years, my high
school saw two suicides and several suicide attempts, all from bright
but alienated students. While
teachers and administrators offered
counseling about the suicides, they
never addressed the core issues of
bullying, teasing and labeling.
Those suicides, like the homicides
'o f the past several years, could have
been prevented if people in
authority had taken a stand for the
health and well-being of the entire
student body. ·
Since high school, I have
become a much happier person. I
have traveled in 30 countries, met

TOKYO (AP) - Sweden's
Crown Princess Victoria has
lived her life in the public eye,
and at times has been forced to
fight her private battles in the
glare of the media spotlight.
. "There are times when you
;wish you were somewhere else,
)nd someone else;' Victoria,
~eiress to the Swedish throne,
)aid last week during a visit to
Japan. "But it is also a great
opportunil}\"
: Until recendy, Victoria was
1he focus of media reports that
;he, like Britain's Princess
biana before her, was strug·~ing with an eating disorder.
Her relationship with the st~p. ron of a prominent Swedish
· banker has also been frequent
todder for the press.
: But in an interview with The
Associated Press and a japanese

television
network,
Victoria
said
the
media and
public have
come
to
understand
her need for
privacy, and
they have now reached a more
comfortable balance.
"It's a fascinating life. I get to
see a lot of fantastic thing., and
meet man)' people. And I'm
very proud of the country that
I am representing."
Victoria, 24, is the eldest
child of King Carl XVI Gustaf
and Queen Silvia. Because
Sweden amended its laws in
1979 to eliminate provisions
that allowed only sons to
assume the throne, Victoria
would be the country's first
reigning queen.

'

Columbus Southern Power, right of way, Colum·
bla. '
•
Michael B. Wayland to Columbus Sou1hem
Power, right of way, Bedford.
Jen Wayland, Deborah Wayland, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way, Bedford.
Roger L. Manley, Sr., Connie M. Manley, to
Columbus Southern Power, right of way, Salisbury.
·
Charles S. Robinette, Frances M. Robinette, to
Robinette Living Trust, deed, Scipio.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon, to Stata of Ohio,
deed, Salisbury.
ca~ e. Morris, Janet Morna, to Frank G.
Gilmore, Carolyn S. Gilmore, deed, Salem.
Chertes L. Pickett, Anna S. Pickell, to Sharon
Barr, eaaement, Bedford.
Opal R. Wickham to David E. Gaul, Belhany l.
Gaul, easement, Chester.
Roget ~- Weallall, Sheila A. Westfall, to VIctor
Chewier, Tracey Chevalier, deed, Oliva.
Paul E. Hoffman, Maxine Hollman, to Slephen
Hollman, 'Terry Hoffman, deed, Bedford.
Paul E. Hoffman, Maxine Hollman, to Roben
Hollmen, &lt;leed, Chester.
James Drown, Paula Drown, to Paula Drown,
deed, Rutland.
Charles e. Yoat, Marga181 Mae Durst, to Robert
Ryan Brown, Cynthia Lynn Brown. deed, Sutton.
Blanche J. Sman, deceased, to Carolyn L.
Smart, allidavlt, Columbia.
Zelda Dfvla. deceased, to Joyce Davia, allidlvlt. VINage of Pomeroy.
Candace 'Elaine Carleton, Hllll'Y Michael Cor·
teton, Lester M. Hawk, to Seth E. Carleton, deed,
Orarige.
'
David ·Bumgardner, Shirley Bumgardner, to
TTS Rantala, Inc., &lt;leed, Village of Middleport.
John Eric Shumway, Julia M. Shumway, to
Mary ChrisHne Hurley, deed, Bedford.

Mathew T. Cummings, Ginger M. Cummings, to
Tuppera Plains/Chester Water District, right ol .
way, Olive.
.
Donald G. Jones, Ella E. Jones, to TPCWD.
right of way, Olive.
Rusty Bookman, Margaret L. BOQkman, to
TPCWO, right of way, Sutton.
Albert Tromm, Marjorie Tromm, to TPCWD,
right of way, Bedford.
Char1es l. Plcl&lt;ett, Anna S. Pickett, Robert E.
Jacka, Coma J8Cka, to TPCWD, right of way,
Bedford.
Darrel W. Lahman, Erma J. Lehman, to
TPCWO, rillht of way, Sutton.
Mary K. Ho~tr to TPCWO, right of way,
Labanon.
Robert Murphy to TPCWO, right of way,
Cheller.
Steven Mlllhone to TPCWD, right of way,
Lebanon.
Mary K. Holter to TPCWO, right of way,
lebanon.
Charlaal. Plckstt, AnnaS. Pickett, to TPCWO,
right of way, Bedford.
·
Kart .Kobler, Karen Kobler, to TPCWD, right of
way, Olive.
Harold P. Jones, Brandy Jones, to Brandy R.
Jonaa, dead, Columbia.
Robin H. White, deceased to Gary White, deed,
Salem.
Charlene Hoeflich to Charies F. Chancey, deed,
Vinage of Middleport.
Charles F. Chancey, MeHssa Lynn Chancey, to
Charles F. Chancey, Melissa Lynn Chancey,
deed, Vilaga ol Middtepori.
Kamath Cooke, Jean E. Cooke, 10 John Beck,
Cynthia Beck, deed, VIllage of Middleport.
irvin E. Miller, Janice L. Miller, to Stephen R:
Davis, deed, Village. of Syracuse,

SOCIAL SECURITY

PEOPLE

How we try to help people
make good choices

Clint Black

••

BY

VALREA THOMPSON

While statistics indicate
that most people (about 75
percent) have a good
understanding of the Social
Security system, I'd guess
that most people don't
know a lot about the finer
details. Social Security
employees are trained in
these details.
For example, we assume
most people don't know
whether it is advantageous
or disadvantageous to elect
reduced Social Security
retirement benefits. We
show them how much their
benefits would be reduced
(as much as 20 percent for
people ~etiring at ·age 62)
and remind them that that
the . reduction is permanent. We tell them that
they will be receiving benefits over a longer period
of time.
Also, if they decide to
delay retirement past their
full retirement age, their
benefit would be increased
for each month they delay
,
retirement.
A person whose health
is not good may decide on
the ea.rly benefits as best
for him/her. A person' who
has the option of continuing to work may decide to
wait. At age 65, benefits are
not reduced because of
earnmgs.
Another good example
is the choices made by
beneficiaries with disabili-

ties who want to work.
Many fear to··even discuss
this matter because they are
afraid it will tri.g ger a
process that will result in a
loss of benefits. particularly
their Medicare/Medicaid
coverage. B)J.t we . understand the desire to return to
the workplace.
The prog'"m includes a
number of special rules that
permit
benefits
and
Medicare or Medicaid to
continue fNhile they test
their ability to work. Once
people find out about .th~se
rules. called "work incen-

tives," they generally give
serious thought to making
a work attempt. But the
choice is their own.
Social Security representatives want to be sure that
claimants and beneficiaries
have all facts necessary to
make an informed choice.
Then the claimant must
choose. It's an individual
decision, depending on
each person's
circumstances.

(Valrta Thompson is manager of the Social Security office

RAMSTEIN
AIR
BASE, Germany (AP) Country siriger Clint Black
and comedian Al Franken
performed for U.S. troops
on Monday at this staging
post for the war on terror·ism, kicking off a tour also
taking them to bases in
Italy and the Balkans.
About 2,800 people, Air
Force personnel and their
families, crowded into a
hangar draped with a huge
U.S. flag for a bill that
included other country
stars.
"They came to volunteer
their time to honor .you
and your efforts," organizerJanet Cohen, the wife of
former U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen, told
the cheering audience.

Pomeroy, ll~leport, Ohio

.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-.S.79

Swift action against bullies makes schools sciferfor all
•
,

Tueaday, Oct. 23, 2001

AmTect SBC 41 .40
Ashland Inc. - 39.118
AT&amp;T"- 18.30
Bank 0... - 33.82
BU-7.40
Bob evane '-18.23
BorgWarner- 44.12
Ct.mpb•- 2.!58
Charming Shope 4.80
City Holding - 8.93
Col-14.80
00-13.80
DuPont - 41 .86

Ftderal Mogul- .!8
USB-17.38
Gotnnett - 86.70
GeMral Eleclrto
37.81

Popobl- 47.70

Prwrnitr- UO
Aodco:ll - 15.0t
Aodcy llootl- 5
AO Shll- 50.82
llMtl- 37.11

GKNI.Y-4.33
Harley Davicllon
48.13

~~honey'~-

'AW Milt - 53.0'.

=•-27.30
• • - 13.114

Kman-7.31
Kruger - 25.10

OVB-24.50
BBT-32.53

Pooplee- 18.40

frvm.,..AI
tiated rate, and that juvenile
detention facilities might also
be included in new construction ..
Iannarelli said she and Swifi:
also t&lt;,&gt;ured · a new jail in
Reynoldsburg last week.
Council met in executive
session and accepted the resignation of Brent Manley, the
village's water and street
superintendent, based on a
recommendation from the
Board of Public Affairs.
'
According to the street
department's Kenny Madden,
leaf pickup will begin today,
with a trial run, and regular
leaf pickup will get under way
next week. Residents are
asked to rake their leaves to

Rutland
hom,..AI
&lt;
new soccer fields, and a new
concemon
stand
and
restrooms.
Marie Birchfield notified
council that the new bridge
on Main Street has a crack in
it. Birchfield said that many
residents are concerned about
the crack and water flow
around the bridge.
Fetty said he will meet with
Bob Fleuller to discuss the
matter and that Christopher
·Thomas of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
Floodplain Management Unit
will be contacted immediately.
Council agreed to switch
the village's trash service to
Harry Eblin following complaints that the trash wasn't
being picked up regularly.
Eblin will be paid $50 a
month and will supply all the
dumpsters.
Council also:
• received a $400,000

the curb so that the vacuum
can easily access them.
lannarelli said that extra
police officers will be on
patrol during crick or treat on
Thursday evening to patrol
speeding and other .traffic and
safety violations and urged
motorists to drive slowly and
carefully during the event.
Council also:
• Approved the payment of
bills in the amount of
$2,257.12, and $4,170.51 for
the Board of Public Affairs;
• Approved payment of
$363,579.89 t'or the Issue 1Wo
paving pmject to Black Top
Construction of Nelsonville.
Present, in addition to
Iannarelli, were Council
members Kathy Scott, Roger
Manley, Bob Pooler, Rae
Gwiazdowsky, and Stephen
Houchins, and Clerk Bryan
Swann.
grinder pump grant to
replace all grinder pumps in
the village. The grant also
includes new ball check
valves and floats for each tank
and portable trash pumps; '
• recommended that fill dirt
hi placed at several areas in ·
the vi)lage;
'
~ acknowledged that the
police department is focusing.
on various traffic light and
speeding problems throughout the Wlage; .
• agreed to install several
new handicapped parking
signs that recently arrived;
• recognized AT&amp;T's recent
analysis for a cell tower within the village;
• approved a motion to get
a SiX-month note · from the
b~nk to start a new insurance
coverage program;
• accepted Waste Management's agreement to credit
the village for a billing error;
• drafted a letter to the
Meigs County commissioners
stating that Rutland would
like Pomeroy Mayor John
Blaettnar to represent all
county mayors on Issue II.

Precautions foreseen at post
·offices across the country
WASHINGTON (AP) Damage from the anthrax-bymail attack spiraled; with two
postal workers dead of what
officials suspect was inhalation
anthrax and two more hospitalized. Officials were monitoring
nine others with suspicious
&lt;YmPtoms.
The Postal Service defended
a delay in looking for anthrax at
the city's central facility, where
the victims worked, and considered new precautio!l' for workers nationwide.
Testing for anthrax continued

Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Ia
to be accurate. ~ you ~ of an
error In a stcKy, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

is accepting patients at his following offices :

News Department&amp;
The main number 18 11112·2156.
Department extentions are:

e (Mond.tlys &amp; 'IllesdR.ys)

General ........,

2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

Ext. 13

Other servlcee

e (Thursd4ys &amp; FridiJys)
New Haven, WV

882-3134

Ext. 14

or

675-7100
138 Main Street

Ext. 12

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Aclvertlelng

Ext. 3

ClrculaUon

Ext. 4

Cia111fled Ada

Ext. 5

On the Web
www.mydallysentinel.com

•

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11REAK11G1 GIIIOUND - Charles Blakeslee, fore&amp;round, led
Monday'I woundbrelkl~ on a Pomeroy Librlry addition to bear
his name. Other library board members, Bob Crow, Oou&amp; Little,
Pat Holter, Sue ~Ire, Pat Mill!! and Biuc:e May, and Director
Christl Eblin, also !lelped tum lt'ound. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Ub~ry

.rn.,...Al

ingly served the thousands of
patrons from Meigs and surrounding counties." ·
Among those, Blakeslee
said, who have contributed
the library system's successes,
are former trustee Mrs. D.B.
Hartinger of Middleport,
Vilma Pikkoja, who started in
the local library as a bookmobile, and longtime board
members Pat Holter and Pat ·

Mills.

.

"Mrs. Hartingfr carried hot
water from her home to mop
the floors because we could
not afford a water heater, and
Mrs. Pikkoja walked 200
miles across Germany to keep
ahead of the R\JSSian· liries,
and in one year, circulated
over I 00,000 books as a
bookmobile librarian."
"The Meigs County District Public Library and its
predecessors have answered

Donate
(IGIII PllpiA1
MIDDLEPORT Ed
Daniels, Donna Hawley,
Robert Barton, Tim Smith,
George Harris Jr., Donna
Davidson, Jennifer Gorey,
Daniel thomas, Elaine Ralston,
Heather
Brooks,
Christopher Miller, Patricia
Bumgardner, Cheryl Browning, . Charles Cook, Rollin
Daniels, Roger Mll!lley, Sr.,
Tamara Nelson, Theresa Cremeans, Jenny Hayman, and
Bryan Wilcox;
RUTLAND Ralph
Sales, Alirian Hubbard, Raymond
Mueller,
Phyliss
Mueller, Terry George and
Marta
Blackwood;
REEDSVILLE-Betsy
Nicodemus and Carolyn Barton;
;
MINERSVILLE ....;. . Mary

millions of questions and eire
culated millions of books to
Meigs County citizens,"
Blakeslee said. "This library
has brought millions of dollars
Meigs County and has
provided many jobs for Meigs
County people:·
The new addition will be
financed through the board's
building fund, and will be
built on land adjacent to the
existing library building on
Main Street. The land was
donated by the late Dr. Hugh
M. Davis.
The library board will open
bids on the project on Nov. 2,
and construction is scheduled
for completion by the end of
next summer.
The Blakeslee Addition will
nearly dOuble . the library's
floor space, and add additional reading areas, stacks, a computer lab, and expanded office
space.
The parking area in front of
and behind the library will be
doubled, Eblin said, as part of
the project.

to

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered seven calls for assistance on Monday. Units
responded as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7:52 a.m., HiU Street, Joan
Sorden, treated;
9:46 a.m., Wolfe Pen Road,
John Dean, Holzer Medical
Center;
11:29 a.m., HMC Clinic,
Paula Sullivan, HMC;
8:59 p.m., Oliver Street,
Kelly Marr, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
CHESTER
2:56 p.m., Oak Hill Road,
brush fire, Qavid Carnahan
property, no injuries.
POMEROY
2:37 p.m., South Seventh
Street, Thomas Anderson,
PVH.
TUPPERS PLAJNS
2:37 p.m., Ohio 7, Geraldine Hawk, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.

.

Voss'
.
·LONG ~OTTOM
.
Paula Wood, Ivan Wood and
Valerie Nottingham;
WEST VIRGINIA
Ronnie Rou~h · and April
Hart;
GALLIPOLIS - Beatrice
Morgan.
Retired and Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) worken assisting the bloodmobile
were: Helen Bodimer, June
Ashley, Jane Brown, Rita
Buckley, Mary Lou Hawkins,
Gerry Pullen,Jerry Crawford,
Harris,
Charles
Peggy
McLain, Irene Bill and Betty .
Spencer. ·
Multiple gallon donors
were: Larry Circle (two gallons); Marta · Blackwood
(eight gallons): and Virgil
Windon (13 gallons).
The next scheduled blood·
mobile visit will be on Dec.
12 at the Meigs County
·Senior Citizens Center.

Americans victi.ms of
fewer serious crimes

Onomontl1
Ono-

POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Sorority will meet
on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at

Bv MICIIILI CAR'IIR
OVP NEWS STAFF

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- In
early 2000, American All~
closed its doors unexpectedly,
leaving employees out in the
cold without warning.
The future of the New
Haven plant's property, which
has been sold once but is not
back on the market, is in the
hands of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the Southern Di,..
trict ofWest Virginia.
In an order dated Oct. 17,
Bankruptcy Judge Ronald (}.
Peanon granted a motion from
Highlanders Core Industries
Ltd. to reopen the sale of the
property to bidders.
Previously, on Oct. 11, a
hearing was held for an American Alloys motion to approve
an offer to purchase the property from West Virginia Alloys
for $500,000.
During the hearing, competing bids.from Highlanders and
Kipin Industries Inc., were presented. West Virginia Alloys also
increased its bids to $800,000.
· American Alloys supported
the sale to West Virginia Alloys
based on earlier payment of
sales price, a willingness to
operate the New Haven plant
and agreement ofWestVirginia
Alloys to safeguard American
Alloys assets immediately after
the court's approval of sale.
The unsecured creditors
committee objected to the sale
because Highlanders offered to
purchase the property for SI
million and had also indicated
a willingness to operate the
New Haven plant.
.•
The committee also cited
the failure of American Alloys
and interested purchasers to
follow the agreed· interim procedural order entered on July
24,2001.

$8.70

StOol

Mal
- subsalallon
uOlgo_c&lt;LiiJ_ ..
-

w-

t3Weekl
28 Weeki

52

$27.30
$53.82

$105.58

autaldolloltJI counry

$29.25
$58.118

St011.72

To sin1
MIDDLEPORT
A
gospel sing featuring The .Pine
Ridge Boys will be held at
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene on Sunday at 6:30
p.m.

Plan party
POMEROY - Children
in the Pomeroy community
are invited to Pomeroy Cliffi
Apartments on Thursday for
trick or treat night. Tenants
and complex management
plan special activities, including a haunted ghost-ride, a
bonfire and refreshments.

Gospel sing ·
POMEROY Pomeroy
native Bruce Stone will perform a gospel sing at the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, and at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. ori Sunday.

Bankruptcy Court to decide
American Alloys plant's fate

Subocrlbera not -nno to pay toe

52 WOoka ,

PORTLAND - Lebanqn
Township Trustees will meet
at the township building on
Saturday at 7 a.m.

Plan meetin1

cafTief may remit In advance clract to
TlMi Daily SOntinel. Credit will bt g camer oach · No oubleriptton by
mall permitlod in .... l'fhoro home
carrltr HrviOe 11 avallabte.
•

t3 Weeki
28Weli&lt;l

To meet

POMEROY Return
Jonathan Meig. . Chapter
Daughters of American Revolution to meet at Pomeroy
Library on Saturday at 10:45
a.m. to mark graves.

50&lt;*1tl

Dally

lowed by the Halloween
party. Hostesses are Martha
McPhail and Margaret Stewart.

DAR to meet

ly-or.-,.,..

To send e-mail
newsOmydallysentlnel.com

I

'

LOCAL BRIEFS
St. Paul lutheran Church .
EMS runs
Regular meeting will be fol-

r ~.. - •. ~ 1 ,
~
: ·~ . '1 . ...

. 'It..

Monday at Washington's Brentwood postal facility, a week after
a tainted le~ first appeared on
Capitol Hill. Health officials
said they would elqiand testing
to 36 post offices across the.city
that received mail from BrentWASHINGTON (AP) year of fewer reported
wood, as investigators tried to Americans were victims of crimes and a 22 percent
pinpoint any other sites conta- slightly fewer serious crimes decrease since 1991. It also
minated with anthrax.
reported to police last year: · found the smallest year-toAnd authorities said postal rape, robbery and assault year over,all decline in the
workers should begin taking remained near already low same periqd, suggesting that
preventive antibiotics, with the · levels, and the murder rate the dramatic downward spi- .
number of people prescribed hit its lowest point in 35 raJ since the early 1990s may
preventive antibiotics nearing years.
have hit a plateau.
10,000 in Washington alone.
The FBI's final figures for
"Compared to the marked
cnmes reported m 2000, drops noted in recent years,
release~ Monday, s~owed the current slight decline in
very shght decreases m the the index crime estimate is
total · nuinber of murders, certain to be viewed by
robbenes, assaults an!l bur- many as no change at all
(UIPU1HIO)
glaries: The re~ort showed from the previous year's,"
Ohio Volley Publllhlng Co.
Publl- ""et'f attormon, Monday
sm~l mcreases 10 r~pes, lar- : the re ort said. "Only after
thrOUQh F~day, 11t Court St..
cemes
and auto· thefts.
. p.
f h
co
PomoR&gt;Y; Ohio. Socond-clau
_
riu;aning
the
pubhcat1on
o
t
e
next
1ew
Th e rate
pao1ag1 paid at PofNR&gt;Y.
.
'll
k
1111-. The AIIOCiatld Preas and
numbe·r of incidents per Issues ... WI
we
now
lieOhlo--tion.
. 100,000
residents
whether the figures for 20p0
- lo The Oolly
8oi1dSentinel,
~~~~~~-­
!Ions
tt1 Couft,
dropped for · all those signaled an end to the curSt.• PofN"'Y, Ol1iO 45768.
crimes.
rent downward tre~d or
Subscription rates
.
The rep.o rt marked the wer~ merely a bump m the
Ono12
nation's ninth consecutive road."

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

~~•
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Dalyltac:lc..,.._
1he .C p.m. cklllftV
. . - of "" J)IWICiw
dlly'a tranuctionl, poovldod by Slnltli Pert11M at - ' - Inc. of
Galipolll.

Landi End - 32.20
Ltd. -11
NSC -15.114
OoJc Hll F'Nitdal-18

Jail

.27

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'\

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

AlL AGES, All TIMES $4.00

On Wednesday, Pearson
granted Highlanders' motion
to reconsider the sale approval
and also establish procedure for
the auction of the properties.
The order states, "The court
finds that it is in the best interest of the creditors, including
debtor's (American Alloys) former employees, to permit
additional bidding on the
debtor's assets and to permit .
creditors and former employ- ·
ees to express preferences with
respect to offers received for
the purchase of the debtor's

assets."
A written term sheet for
interested bidders must be
established for use during bidding which specifies nonrefundable deposits and other
matters American Alloys deems
important, as well as disclosure
of the purchaser's intended use
and plans for employment at
the facility.
·Bidding on the property
shall be requested no sooner
than five days after American
Alloys files its term sheets and
procedures with the court
clerk. As ' of Thursday, these
sheets were not filed.
The court ordered American
Alloys' counsel to consult with
counsel for the unsecured
crediton committee and counsel for the employee crediton
to obtain recommendations
and input with respect to all .
offers.
American Alloys was ordered
to refund a SI 00,000 down
payment on the property
received from West Virginia
Alloys. In · addition, the court
orders whoever paid advances
to American Alloys (Highland
and West Virginia Alloys) will
be repaid to each only if that
party's bid is not accepted and
approved by the court.
According to a spokesman
for the bankruptcy court, the
time frame for any final action
on the sale of the property is
not known at this time.

�PageA4

Opinion

'lp.e Daily Sentinel

'lUnday. Odi'IIDv 2:1. 2011

111 Court SL, '-Cry, Ohio

740 182·2111• FIX: 112-2117

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
R. llhNn Uwla
Managing Editor
01.- Kay. Hill
CohiLltfler

Cllllrlene Hoeflich
General Mll1111ge1'

'·

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l'ttilbltio6Co.\ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

NATIONAL VIEW

nup
Sharing information key to.
principles of a democracy
• The (Toledo) . Blade: The arrogance of White
House press secretary Ari Fleischer, who often appears
to disdain the press, increasingly mirrors that of his boss,
George W. Bush. The President and Co. have never been
keen on sharing information with the media or· Congress or the public, for that matter. And the administrationls predilection to go it alone has only hardened since
Sept. 11.
Control types within the administration have gone
ballistic over a spate of recent media leaks revealing
information ~hat they think may have compromised
their anti-terrorist efforts.
To teach Congress a lesson, the President decided to
share information with only a handful of congressional
leaders. Mter Congress balked, he made a hasty retreat,
agreeing to continue to dispense classified information
to key congressional committees.
Certainly war is a serious business that should be taken
seriously by those who conduct and oversee its engagement. The executive and legislative branches share the
responsibility of guiding the ship of state in troubled
waters. How well the intra-governmental relationship of
checks and balances works is critical to public policy and
welfare.
·
..·
· ·.. · . .. · · .
The President says leaking classified infotmatiori when
the country has troops at risk is "unacceptable behavior."
He's right, of course. Responsibility comes with tight to
know. But also unacceptable is an imperial presidency
cloaked in secrecy and closed to public accountability.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Oct 23, the 2%th day of 2001. There are
69 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 23, 1983, 241 U.S. Marines and sailors in Lebanon
were killed in a suicide truek-bombing at Beirut International
Airport; a near-simultaneous attack on French forces killed 58
paratroopers.
On this date:
...
In 1864. forces led by Union Gen. Samuel R. Curtis defeated Confederate Gen. Stirling Price's army in Missouri.
In 1910, Blanche S. Scott became the first woman to make a
solo, public airplane flight, reaching an altitude of 12 feet at a
park in Fort Wayne, Ind.
. .
In 1915, 25,000 women marched in New York City,
demanding the right to vote.
.
In 1942, during World War II, Britain launched a major
offensive against Axis forces at El Alamein ·iti Egypt.
· '
In 1944, the World War II Battle ofLeyte Gulf began.
In 1946, the United Nations General Assembly convened in
New York for the first time, at an auditorium in Flushing
Meadow.
In 1956. an anti-Sralinist revolt that was subsequently
crushed by Soviet troops began in Hungary.
In 1973, President Nixon agreed to turn White House tape
recordings requested by the Watergate special prosecutor over
to Judge John J. Sirica.
In 1980, the resignation of Soviet Premier.Alexei N. Kosygin
was announced.
In 1987, the U.S. Senate rejected, 58-to-42, the Supreme
Court nomination of Robert H. Bork.
Ten years ago: Cambodia's warring factions and representatives of 18 oth~r -nations ~igRed a peace treaty in Paris.
Five years ago: Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole
tried to persuade Ross Perot to quit the race and endorse the
GOP ticket, but Perot refused. The civil trial of O.J. Simpson
opened in Santi Monica, Calif. (Simpson was later found liable
in the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole, ·and her friend, Ronald
Goldman.)
One year ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright held
groundbreaking tal)cs in North Korea with communist leader
Kimjong II.
· Today's Birthdays: former "Tonight Show" host Johnny Carson is 76. Movie director Philip Kaufinan is 65. Soccer great
Pele is 61. Author Michael Crichton is 59. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Barbara Ann · Hawkins (The Dixie Cups) is 58. Actor
Michael Rupert is 50. Movie director Ang Lee is 47. Country
singer Dwight Yoakam is 45. Movie director Sam Raimi is 42.
Parodist "Weird Al"Yankovic is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer
David Thomas (Take 6) is 35. Rock musician Brian Nevin (Big
Head Todd and the Monsters) is 35. Country singer-musician
Junior Bryant (Ricochet) is 33.
. Thought for Today: "Truth is not introduced into the individual from without, but was · within him all the time." Soren Kierkegaard, Danish philosopher (1813-1855).
I

The Daily Sentinel

America at War

Investigators look at foreign U.S. attacks against
exchange companies

The Daily Sentinel

ChllrtH W. Govey
Publlaher

••

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

US. shouldn't woo Muslims at expense·pf Israel :
While fighting terrorism militarily, the
United States needs to do more to win
popular support in the Islamic world but not at the expense of Israel.
Terrorist leader Osama bin Laden ' is
trying to make the Palestinian cause his
leading justificatiQn for violence. The
Bush administration should not accept
his priority list as a way of winning
Muslim hearts and Diinds.
COLUMNIST
It's a losing proposition, anyway. Bin
Laden is aiming for the destruction of
Israel, not peace, and, even if the Bush
administration muscled Israel into con- about."
cessions, bin Laden and other lslamic
He suggests establishing a U.S. equiva· eXtremists would reject them as insuffi- lent ofthe Arabic AI Jazeera satellite telecient.
vision network, beginning American
There are indications that the State studies programs in Arab universities,
Department wants Bush to return to and reforming U.S. democracy-building
former President Bill Clinton's peace programs, which, he said, are largely
plan-:- including"sharingJerusalem"- ineffective.
as .' the . bl\Sis of renewed Middle East
Satloff said the U.S. international
diplomacy. but that's likely to lead to exchange program should stop sending
failure and help the terrorist cause, not out speakers to Arab nations with a
Undercut it.
"blame America" attitude and be more
··' 'Instead, to fight bin Laden on the Selective about the journalists and schoipolitical and propaganda fronts, various ars it invites into the country.
experts have suggested a series of other
As other experts recommend, America
steps -some of which are·already being should also encourage economic and
taken, some of which are not.
politjcal reform in the ofren -corrupt
Robert ·satloff,· director of the Wash- regimes of th.e Islamic world and get
ington lnstiwte on Near East Policy. rec- them to stop spreading anti-U.S. and.
ommends that the United States anti-Jewish propaganda in their con·upgrade its media and public-opinion · trolled media.
operations directed toward Arab and
"the rage on the Arab street is nomiMuslim populations, using satellites, nally . aimed. at the United States ·and
· magazines and Well sit~s in ' local Jan- Israel," said the Nixon Center's Geoffrey
guages to convey American V:l!ues.
· Kemp, a former Reagan White House
"What most Middle Easterners ):'~!ally aide. "But it actually arises out of the
want is a U.S. visa:• he said. "We can't frustration that young peo[ile feel toward
. give everyone a visa, but we should give the corrupt and inefficient regimes they
them the intellectual equivalent - bet- live under."
ter understanding of what we're all
Islamic extremism, Kemp pointed out.

Morton

Konchacke

offers disillusioned young men an
acceptable way of expressing their rage
at their own governments .
As other experts suggest, we should
increase economic aid to countries help'ing in the current struggle, especially
Pakistan and Uzbekistan, and stay
involved in the region when the tertorist crisis has passed.
The administration is furnishing food
to starving Afghans, and, in a shift in policy, Bush has vowed to participate in
United Nations-managed "nation building" in Afghanistan once the ruling Taliban is ousted.
· Bush is doing everything possible to
make clear that we are not fighting Muslims or Arabs and that we foresee mo
"clash of civilizations," but rather that we
are at .war with the "evildoers" of worl~ .
terronsm.
· The Boston Globe reported that th~
State Department wants Bush to. reWrt}
to a plan favored by former Israeb Pnme
Mtmster Ehud Barak and Clmton1
which includes the transfer of95percen~
~f the West Bank to,the Palesnmans an~
sharmg Jerusalem m one form or
another. . .
.
.
Secretary of State Cohn Powell dt~
not deny that such a plan was afoot, but
guaranteed that the Umted States would
do nothing to threaten Israel's secunty. :
However, the Clinton-Barak plan wa~
decisively rej~cted by Arafat as insuffi;.
c1ent, and v1olent protests followed:.
Going ~ack to that plan and picking
fights w1th Sharon mtght serve shortterm U.S. propaganda goals, but it~
long-tetm trouble.
.•
_
•
. (Morton Kondracke is executive editor ".}
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.) ·

WASHINGTON (AP) Investigators are looking at
whether terrorists may have
laundered · money through
foreign exchange bureaus.
Two men faced charges about
financial transactions in connection with the terrorism
investigation, but neither been
linked to the Sept. 11 attacks.
German Interior .Minister
Otto Schily said foreign
exchange companies that
operate globally could have
been used by terrorists. He
wpuld not name specific companies but urged money
exchange firms to cooperate.
"I don't want to mention
some names, but it also
includes the role of some
companies
doing
the
exchange of money and delivering money. Maybe they are
situated in the United States,"
said Schily, who oversees interior security in Germany,
where
several suspected
hijackers lived and may have
plotted the Sept. 11 hijack. ings."He was in Washington on
Monday to meet with Bush·
administration officials.
A Saudi man who apparently holds a student pilot's
license was arrested in Missouri on a bank fraud charge.
The FBI has not tied Adel E
·Badri to last month's attacks in
which terrorists crashed airiiners in New York. Washington and Pennsylvania.
In New Jersey a man
detained following the attacks
.has been charged with lying
to an FBI agent about checks

he wrote and deposited into
his bank account
Mohammad Pervez lived
with two other detainees,
Mohammed Jaweed Azrnath
and Ayub Ali Khan. Investigators have taken particular
interest in those two men
since they were detained in
Fort Worth, TeJW, the day
alter the attacks, carrying hair
dye, about $5,000 in cash and
box-cutting knives.
Pervez was accused of lying
when he said he didn't know
about certain checks and
money orders that moved in
and out of his bank account,
according to an Oct. 16 complaint filed in U.S. District
Court in New Yotk City by
the FBI.
Badri was charged with
bank fraud for cashing
allegedly forged checks worth
$10,000, according to an FBI
affidavit released by the Justice
Department
The checks were written on
an account at Chevy Chase
Bank in Maryland that had
been closed. According to the
FBI, the closed · account's
holder was Fatmah Ibrahim, a '
woman who Badri said lives
in Virginia and works for a
"specific organization in
Washington, D.C." Badri
denied writing the check for
himself.
Authorities tracked down
the organization and found no
record of the woman, and a
forgery expert said Badri
wrote the checks, the FBI
said.

BY Wlu. LDTIR
Aftenhe terrorist attacks Sept. 11, ConWASHINGTON - Thrust into the gress quickly paSsed a $15 billion relief
role ,o f wartime leader, President Bush has package for the airline industry, a $40 bilsoared in the polls to a 90 percerit lion package to repair the terrorism damage and bolster security and are wrapping
approval rating.
The political muscle that comes with up details on an anti-terror bill that would
such a number gives him a strong hand to ' give law enforcement new powers to
lead the campaign against terrorism and search out terrorists.
try to strengthen the economy.
"The president's cu~nt approval rating
Democrats caution the clout doesn't gives him a great deal of clout in his dealautomatically transfer to partisan political ings with Congress as it relates to our war
positions on unrelated domestic issues. ) against terrorism," said Kentucky Gov.
Leaders from both parties say they expect Paul Patton, a Democrat "However, as a
the administration to try to keep a bipar-· public officeholder, I understand the ups
tisan tone on most issue_s while carrying and downs af public op.inion polls and
out the anti-terror battle in coming would not expect this same approval ratmonths.
, ing to transfer into all areas of governance
"He's getting a lot of credit for not pass- - such as an unrelated social agenda."
ing partisan stuff through the Congress,"
Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fia., s.1id Bush
said Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, a "appears to have learned from his father's
Democrat. "He's done a fine job ofknow- mistakes. I always felt that if George Bush
mg he should try to get along with One had used that groundswell of support
Democrats. His approval would be 50 from the Persian GulfWar, he could have
percent really fast if he were to use this for done some phenomenal things for the
partisan political purposes - any of the country. He seemed to rest on the laurels
extreme ·ra:x proposals', the agenda of the of Desert Storm, and the public was
religious right."
expecting so much more."
·
Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, a Republican,
Leaders from both parties said the prcssaid:"The most prof01lnd thing that"s hap- ident's high approval ratings are closely
pened is that he's become America's pres- linked to the biparti.&lt;an approach he's govident irutead of the American president. erned with in the weeks alter the Sept 11
When it comes to matters related to war, terror.ist attacks.
the political clout is unending. There's no
"He's doing now what he did in Texas;·
question on matters of domestic policy saidArizonaGov.Jane Hull, a Republican,
he's been strengthened, especially to the "He's reaching the ability to sit down
degree by whi~h they are related to the with Republicans and Democrats. It's a
anti-terror c:unpaign."
'
shame that it takes a tragedy to create that

,,
,,

spirit, but. I think he'll be able to continur
doing that in the future. The American
people have shown they like ·that bipartisanship."
Inevitably, lawmakers from both sidell.
will promote legislation that had boggt'd
down a sharply divided Congress befol'!'
-the attacks. Some Republicans sugge!t
Democrats are in a weaker position nowlo

"The president has the overwhelming
support and confidence of the American
people right now;• said Rep. JC W.1t'' of
Oklahoma, chairman of the H&lt;JUS&lt;'
Republican Conference. "I think Democrats will realize it is not t\le timt• , to
obstruct.''
Sen. Phil Gramm, a fellow Texas
Republican, said th e high approval rating
"certainly strengthens the president's ability to deal with Congress on a myriad of
issues.'?
Democratic Sen. Patty ~urray ofW:t.lhT
ington state scoffed at the notion that
Democrats will be afraid to oppose the
admini!tration on divisive doinestic issues.
"I do think he's got considerable political clout when it comes to issues of
national security:' said Mu.rray, who hcods
the committee responsibl~ for electin11
Democrats to the Senate. "But if he wen·
to ·try and take that and run with a proposal that has divided the country in the
past, like priv-dtizing Social Securi ty. I
don't think anybody would be hesitant to
oppose hin;t."'
(Will lnter ewers politics and polli11.~ .for
71&lt;e Associated Press.)
"

·'

front lines

forces.
Despite the airstrikes,
however, the opposition
northern alliance needs
more military help before
moving on the Afghan capital, the alliance's Washington representative, Haron
Amin, said Monday.
"It is better than other
days, but a lot more of it is
needed for us to make
ground moves," Amin said.
MOVING IN- Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Richard Myers, left,
Military analysts agreed accompanied by Defense · Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld,
that aintrikes against Tal- meets reporters at the Pentagon. Rumsfeld confirmed U.S.
iban forces could continue warplanes now are hitting Tallban forces In Afghanistan In both
for weeks.
the north and south. (AP)

NOTICE TO PUBLIC OF A
FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON I!iE ENVIRONMENT (FONSI)
COMBINED NODCE

To All Interested Persons, Agencies, and Groups:
The M~ County Commissioners, proposes lo request the State of Ohio to release Federal funds under Section
104 (g) Tille I of the Housing and Communlly Development Act ol1974, as amended· Section 288 of Title 11 of
the Cranston Gonzales National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Tide IV of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, as amended; to be used for the following project(s): ·

EnGironmental Review Record(s) (ERR) for each of the Project(s) listed above have been conducted by
the Meigs County Commissioners. The ERR(s) documents the environmental reviews of the project(s) and more
fully sets forth lhe reasons why such statement is not required. The ERR(s) are on file and available lor lhe
public's examination and copying, upon request. between the hours of 9;00 a.m. to 5.llQ p.m., Monday lhrough
Friday (excepl holidays) at the above address.
e adliress.
No further environmental review of such project Is proposed to be conducted, prior to the request for release of
Federal funds.
The Meigs Coynty Commissioners plan to undertake the project(s) described wllh the Federal funds cites above.
Any Interested person, agencies, and/or groups, who have any comments regarding the environment or who
disagree with lhis Finding of No Significant lmpacl decision, are Invited to submit written comments for
consideration to the Melos Coynty Commlgl0 ners allhe address above listed by 5:00 p. m. on Nov. 13. 2001.
which Is at least 15 days after the publication of this combined notice. A notice regarding the responsible entity's
lnlent to request release of funds is listed Immediately below.

NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST A RELEASE OF FUNDS ((NOIIRROF)
To All Interested Persons, Agencies, and Groups:
On or about, but not before, Nov 16. the Meigs Coynty C0 mmiS$1 0ners will request the State of Ohio to release
Federal funds under Seclion 104 (g) of Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as
amended; Section 288 ol Title 11 of the Cranston Gonzales National Affordable Housing Acl (NAHA), as
amended; and/or Title IV of the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act, as amended; to be used lor the
project(s) listed above

SEEKING HELP -An Afghan refugee woman hugs her child in
Mataky refugee camp, in Zahedan, about two miles from the
Iranian ·border with Afghanistan. The camp, which was set up
by Iran's Red Crescent, Is home to some 1,200 Afghan
refugees. (AP)

!\fghanistan's
opposition demands
·U.S. forces do more
· BAGRAM, Afghanistan
(AP) - U.S. jets blasted oil
storage facilities in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar
on Tuesday, and the opposirion reported U.S. attacks
around a key northern city
'Nhich the anti-Taliban rebels
have been trying to take for
years.
" Near the front line north of
Kabul, a Taliban rocket
slammed into the main bazaar
in the opposition-held town
bf.Charikar, killing two people including a 60-year-old
vegetable vendor, witnesses
said.
Opposition
spokesmen
complained that U.S. jets
were still not striking close
enough to the front to enable
their forces to advance.
· In Uzbekistan. opposition
spokesman lbraljim Ghafoori
said American planes were
J

•

Tuelcl8y. Odoll• 2:J. 2011

It has been determined that such Request for Release of Funds will not constitute an action significantly affecting
. the qualily of the humen environment and accordingly the Meigs Coynty Commissioners , have decided not to
prepare an Environmental impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended.

.WASHINGTON TODAY

·. Bush f approval rating soars for anti-terror campaign:

WASHINGTON (AP)
- The U.S. warplanes that
started attacking Taliban
front-line troops north of
Kabul over the weekend
may have to keep up the
pounding for weeks to dislodge the dug-in embattlemenu, milittry analysts
sa1'd.
••
American warplanes have
increasingly focused on
Taliban troops and equipment on the front lines of
the civil war between the
Taliban militill and a loose
network o~ opposition

·Page AS

attacking Taliban positions
around Mazar-e-Shadf, a key
northern city which the
rebels have been trying to
recapture since they lost it in
1998.
Ghafoori said opposition
fighters had advanced six to
nine miles toward Mazar-eSharif in brisk fightjng Monday and Tuesday. "We expect
U.S. strik~s to hit the front
lines, but they're not,"
Ghafoori complained.
Oppositio!l officials also
reported a third day of
airstrikes Tuesday along the
front line north of the capital
Kabul, the opposition official
said. President Bush launched
the air campaign Oct. 7 after
the Taliban refused to hand
over Osama bin Laden, chief
suspect in the September terrorist attacks in the United
States.

The Meigs County Commissioners plan to undertake the project(s) described above with the Federal funds sites
above. Any lnteresled person, agencies, and/or groups, who have any comments regarding the environment, are
Invited to submit written comments for consideration o the Meigs County Commissioners at the address above
listed prior to Nov, 13. 2001.
The Meigs C0 ynty Commissioners are certifying lo th State of Ohio, thai Meigs Counly and Jeff Thornton in ,
his/her official capacity as President of County Co
lssion one consenl to aix:ept the jurisdiction of Federal
courts if an aCtion is brought to enforce responsibilities In relation to environmental reviews, decislon-meklng, and
action; and that these responsibililies have been satisfied.
The legal effect of the certificalion is that upon Its approval, the Meigs Coynty Commissioners may use the
Federal funds, and the State of Ohio will have satisfied its responsibilities under the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, as amended.
The State of Ohio will accept an objection to its approval of the release of funds and acceptance of the
certification only if it is on one olthe following grounds: (a) the certification was not, in fact, executed by the
responsible entily's Certifying Officer; (b) the responsible entlly has failed to make one of the two findings
pursuant to Section 58.40 or to make the written determination required by sectiQn 58.35. 58.47, or 58.53 for the
project, as applicable; c) the responsible enl!ly has omitted one or more of the steps set forth at subpart E of 24
CFR Part 58 for the preparation, publication and completion of an Environmental Assessment; d) the responsible
entity has omitted on or more of the steps sel forth at Subparts F and G of 24 CFR Part 58 for the conduct,
preparation, publication and completion of an Envlronmenlal Impact Statement, e) the recipient has committed
funds or incurred costs not authorized by 24 CFR Part 58 before release of funds and approval of the
environm11ntal certificalion by State, or f) ,;mother federal agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR
Part 1504 has submitted a written finding thai the project Is unsatisfactory from the standpoinl of
environmenlal quality.
Written objections must be prepared and submitted In accordance with the required procedure (24 CFR Part 58),
and must be addressed to the: State of Ohio; Environmental Officer; Office of Housing and Community
Partnerships; P. 0. Box 1001; Columbus, Ohio 43216-1001.
Objections to the Release of Funds on bases other than those stated above will not be,'considered by the State
of Ohio. No objections received after (Pee. 7, 2001, (which is 15 days after it is anticipated that the State will
receive a request for release of funds), will be considered by the State of Ohio.
The address of the certifying officer is:
Jell Thornton, President
Meigs Counly
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�•10

The Daily Sentinel

Page A&amp;
lU~••-r. Ortt•

n. 2001

The Daily sentinel
NASCAR rethinks rults, Page B6
They belit:ve in..Clt:veland, Page B6

Farmers Insurance to pay $4.3 million in case~
COLUMJ:}US(AP)- Farmen Insurance Group will pay J4.3 million as part
of a settlement foDowing claims that the
company refused to insu~ homeownen
in minority neighborhoods, Attorn~
Genrral Beny Montgomety announced
Monday.
The Los Angeles-based company will
spend $3 million for grants and low-interest loaru to develop. build and rq&gt;air
owner-occupied homes throughout the
state and will pay a total of$1.3 million to
the Ohio Civil Righa Commission, the
Toledo Fair Housing C~n~r and Housing
Advoca~ of Cleveland.
Montgomery said she is confident the
settlement will ens= that aD of the company's future customers and applicana
t=ted fairly.

.1 c..mlliJI IIOj7r I

=

The settlement stemmed fiom a 1999
Lucas County lawsuit that accused the
company of discriminating in ia insurance
practices.
The Toledo Fair Housing Cen~r sued
the company after two black women said
it wouldn't sell rq&gt;lacement insurance
policies for their homes because th~ were
built before 1950. The policies pay for the
rq&gt;lacement of a home if it is destroyed.
The company through ia Ohio division
or corporate headquarters in California
instructed agena to apply these restrictive
guidelines, said Lisa Rice, the Fair Housing Center~ executive di=tor.
Agena "we~ given the message over
and over again, over a protracted period of
.time, that they ~ used to supposed to
use these guidelines, and th~ did;' she

Andy Sandl~r. a Washington, D.C.,
lawyer rq&gt;rnnlting Farmers, said agenls
followed underwriting rules ~ by
stlte insurance oonunissionm.
He said Fanners elirninah!d th~ rulc:il
'Y=5 befo~ ~ lawsuit but is happy the

matrer is resol...d.

"We ~e with the attorn~ gener.il's
office that the new rules
better
saW no reason to litiga~ over the old rule{. ·
but we deny that Farmers commith!d ant
discriminatory practices:' Sandlet said. •:
The Ohio Civil Righ1s CornmissiGa
said in 1999 that the guidelines ofnot selling rq&gt;lacement policies on older homes
isn't discriminatory, but it has the sam~
dfect because a disproportionate numb¢
of black people live in ·older houses. ; 1

=

an(i

•·

••

Singer brings smile to fa~ . :

Turning cooler by Thursday

Boy sentenced in s-.ooting

Two stabbed in fight

State to pursue lawsuit

.

.

Death sentence possible

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -A woman who admitted she doused
a mother of six with gasoline and set her on fire faces a possible death sentence after being convicted of aggravated murder.
A Franklin County Common Pleas Court jury on Monday
also convicted Lana Williams, 30, of aggravated arson and
attempted aggravated murder.
Williams admitted she set Trishella McDaniel, 32, on fire as
the two fought in a supermarket parking lot on March 9,
2000.
But Williams' attorneys argued that McDaniel, who lived
for nearly four months after being burned, died as a result of
medical mistakes.

•

ru~:~sk's civil trial on

Coming to close Ohio plant

corruption charges was scheduled to
begin Monday in the Mahoning County Court of Common
GREENVILLE (AP) - Corning Inc. plans to close its
Pleas. The state alleges that Flask authorized payments to ven- lighting plant in west-central Ohio by the middle of neXt
dors that performed no services. The lawsuit asks that Flask year, putting 300 people out of work.
·.
reimburse the sanitation district, which covers Youngstown . Officials arrived from the company's headquarters in Corn:
and Niles.
mg, N.Y., over the weekend to inform workers of the deciFlask has already been found guilty in a criminal trial of sion. City and Darke County officials were dismayed by th~
accepting $2 million in cash and gifts from vendors who did news Monday.
.
business with the sanitation !fl~:U:UU:[IJ~:n:uu::a:t:Z:lW~n:i:z::mww:n:n::a:mw~n:n::a:mw~~
district. The civil case against
him alleges improper use of
public funds but does not
allege that he directly benefitted.
On Friday afternoon, Flask
filed for bankruptcy protec-

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'

Sooners,
Huskers,
Bruins .
lead BCS:

HIGHLIGHTS

Pomeroy, Ohio .

MU'sl.eftwich
honored by
MAC
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) MarshaD's Byron
Leftwich was named the
Mid-American Conference
East Division offensive player
of the week Monday.
Leftwich threw for 471
yards the third-highest
yardage total in MAC histoty
- in a 42-21 victory over
Central Michigan.
Leftwich completed 30-of44 passes against a defense
allowing 176 passing yards per
game. He also had three
touchdown passes.
He threw for 455 yards
against Buffalo last week.

.'t•
••

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chicago loses
WRMarcus

Robinson
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP)
Bears wideout Marcus
Robinson will miss the rest of
the season with torn liga- .
mena in his left knee.
Robinson, Chicago's leading receiver the past two seasons, will have surgety within
two weeks to repair two torn
ligaments. His recovety is
expected to take up to a year.

Mia=•s
RodS
ncl
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Miami !;leat have add~d
trouble-prone point guard
Rod Strickland to their thin
backcourt.
Heat coach Pat Riley said
Strickland worked out in
Miami and would stay there
until the Heat's regular-season
opener Oct. 31 against Toronto.
Strickland, 3S, who finished
last season with Portland,
spent 10 days in jail and was
placed on two years' supervised probation after pleading
guilty last April to driving
under the influence of alcohol.

Stem excited by
Jordan retum

Tuesday, October 23rd
5:30-8:30
Ages0-12

Tufsn.\y's

:,

tion in federal court. Co)lnty j11dge Richard M . Markus sajd·
Monday that he cannot move ahead with the civil lawsl1it
lomJ A. Cliluclr """"" T- Aoln Snow
..
WASHINGTON (AP) -A serial killer sentenced to die in until the bankruptcy case is resolved.
·
j
Ohio wants the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider its decision not to hear his appeal.
·
A lawyer for Alton Coleman, 45, has asked the court to
freeze the case so he can ask the court to take a second look
SPENCERVILLE (AP) - Country music singer Ne'al
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tinued warm with highs near at it. He has 25 days fiom Oct. 15 to do so.
McCoy says there's nothing better than helping out his fans
A warm, windy and wet day 80. Southwest wind 10 to 15
That apparently stalls plans by Ohio Attorney General in a time of need.
·
is forecast for the region mph. Chance of rain 30 per- Betty Montgomery to ask the Ohio Supreme Court to
After hearing about an apartment fire that destroyed near~
Wednesday before conditions cent.
reschedule Coleman's execution.
ly everything Peggy Yan~ owned, including her tickets to
tum more seasonal.
Wednesday night... Windy
Coleman, ofWaukegan, Ill., faces death sentences in Ohio, McCoy's show, the singer gave Yaney and eight family memShowers and thunderstorms with showers and thunder- Indiana and Illinois for murders committed in a seven-week bers more tickets and promised to meet with her backstage.
= likely with temperatures in storms likely, mainly until series of killings and beatings in 1985.
"I think it's something that she thinks one of the mO:.t
ihe 70s, the National Weather midnight. Lows in the lower
important things she lost is her tickets, so we'll take care of
Service said. Southwesterly 50s. •
her," McCoy said. "It's not something I have to do, it's some~
winds of 20-30 mph are
Extended forecast:
thing I get to do."
:
expected.
Thursday... Partly cloudy,
AKRON (AP) - A 14-year-old boy was sentenced to
Yaney, 57, said she screamed when she heard McCoy's voic~
The mild weather will come windy and much cooler. Highs three years with the Ohio Department of Youth Services on the telephone Friday. She had just spent the day trying to
to an end Thursday as a strong in the upper 50s. .
Monday for fatally shooting his father.
get her life back in order after Wednesday's fire.
cold front moves across the
Thursday night ... Cloudy.
Last week, Aaron Stitt admitted to a delinquency charge of
=a. Highs on Thursday wiD Lows in the upper 30s.
voluntary manslaughter, avoiding a trial on an aggravated
be in the 50s and on Friday in
Friday.. .Cloudy with a murder charge.
chance of showers or drizzle.
Stitt said abuse and threats by his father, 48-year-old Denthe mid-40s.
URBANA (AP) -1Wo men were hospitalized after being
Sunset tonight will be at Highs in the mid 40s.
nis Floyd Stitt, led to the shooting. Psychiatrists for both sides stabbed during a fight at Urbana University in this westerri
6:41, and sunrise on WednesSaturday... Mostly cloudy agreed that the boy was abused by his father for years. They Ohio city, authorities said Monday.
.
day is at 7:51 a.m.
with a chance of rain or snow also said Stitt can be rehabilitated.
Kyle Wade was listed in critical condition at Miami Valley
Weather forecast:
showers. Lows in .the mid 30s
"I did love my father very much," Stitt- told Juvenile Court Hospital in Dayton with a stab wound to the chest. Anthony
Tonight... Mostly cloudy. A and highs in the lower 40s.
Judge Judith Hunter in a statement before being sentenced. Haney was listed in serious condition at Mercy Memorial
chance of showers and thunSunda)f... Partly cloudy. Lows "I didn't want this to happen and I'm very sorry to every- Hospital in Urbana with a stab wound to the arm. Officials
derstorms through 3 a.m. in the lower 30s and highs in body that it did happen," he said.
said the men, both 18-year-olds fiom Springfield, are not stuLows in the lower 60s. South- the upper 40s.
dents.
west wind around 10 mph.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows
The fight occurred early Sunday outside the student cenChance of rain 50 percent.
near 30 and highs in the mid
ter, where a homecoming party was in progress.
.
Wednesday... Partly sunny. A 50s. ·
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) -The Ohio Attorney General is
"There was a party on campus in which some individuals
chance of showers late. Conplanning to ask a federal court for permission to pursue a from off-campus who were not our 1tudents attempted to
~2.4 ~illion lawsuit against former Mahoning Valley Sanita- attend," said university President Robert Head.
tiOn Duector Edward Flask despite his claim that he is bank-

.

'IHIUy. October n. 1001

said.

Appeal goes to justices

0 . . . ... . . . ..

Page Bl .

UNDATED (AP) - Contrary to what Michael Jordan
believes, NBA commissioner
David Stern says he's very
enthusiastic about No. 23's
return to the league.
"Michael is going to be
great !his season. The concern
everyone has is his ability to
take the strain and the ,grind
of an 82-game NBA season,
because the NBA season is a
very difficult season," Stern
said Monday in his annual
. preseason conference call
· with reporters.
Jordan said over the summer that he felt Stern was
only lukewarm .to the idea of
a comeback, believing it
would undo some of the
prog~ss the league has made
toward turning the public's
interest toward its new generation of stars.
Jordan
termed Stern's
enthusiasm level "50-5();' but
Stern said that was not the
case.
"Any player is welcome in
our league to test his skills,
and he's going to give a lot of
young players a chance to say
they played for, with or
against Michael Jordan," Stern
said. "I think that's only a net
positive for the NBA."
"I think now what's happened is that the story more is
how is Michael going to do
against a lot of the great players that came forward last
year. I think to us, that's just a
terrific story," Granik said.

CATCH THAT BIRD - Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb tries to dodge New York Giants Mike Barrow,
Michael Strahan and Jason Sehorn Monday. McNabb was sacked on the play. (AP)

Eagles edge the Giants
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ. (AP)
- If the New York Giants have any
hopes of repeating as NFC champions,
they better develop a knockout punch.
For the second straight game, t~e
Giants did everything
but win as Donovan
McNabb threw an 18yard touchdown pass
to James Thrash with
'
to play to raDy
1:52
&gt;
'
the Philadelphia Eagles
to a 10-9 victory
Monday night.
The win was the
Reid
Eagles' first in 10
games against the
Giants (3-3) and, more importantly, it
gave Philadelphia (3-2) a half-game
lead in the NFC East.
It's a lead the Giants probably can't
fathom. ·

Cl
.

Last week, New York outplayed the
undefeated St. Louis Rams, only to lose
on a late touchdown and a turnover
within field-goal range.
Tl)is week, the Giants limited
Phiiadelphia to 57 first-half yards and
held the lead for almost 25 minutes, but
only led 9-0 at halftime.
Philadelphia got a peld goal late in
the third quarter and won with a 40yard touchdown drive set up a by 27yard punt by Rodney Williams, the
NFC's top punter going into this weekend.
New York's last chance ended when
Jeremiah Trotter forced Kerry CoUins
to fumble and Brandon Whiting fell on
the ball with 1:05 to play.
McNabb iced it with a 21-yard
fourth-dowr run that prevented New
York from getting the hall back.
"We've got to play better at the end,"

said defensive end Michael Strahan,
who had two of New York's six sacks.
"If we do that, we're 5-1 instead of 3-3.
It's something we can get better at."
The differen'~ in thq:a= was the
play of the Eagles' defense, which was
on the field for 45 plays in the first half
as the Giants put together drives of 64,
39 and 61 yards, using a co"\bined 39
plays and 21 minutes, 54 seconds in
time of possession.
However, New York had to settle for
field goals of 24, 21 and 24 yards by
Morten Andersen.
"At halftime, we talked about thi,l
being a heavyweight fight and we knew
we took their best punch," Whiting
said. "In the second half, we knew we
had the momentum because we had
held them to nine points."

.

PI--MNF,Bl

•

Miami. No. I in the AP
media poll and the coaches'
poll, was fourth in rankings
that determine which teams
will play for a national cham~
pionship at the Rose Bowl iri
January.
·
The Hurricanes, thanJ(s to a
first-half schedule ranked
92nd of 1 17 teams, were
behind Oklahoma, Nebraska
and UCLA in the first Bow!
Championship Series stand~
ings released on Monday
night.
Unbeaten Miami is on the
outside looking in because its.
first five opponents · have a
combined 8-19 record against
major colleges. The secondhalf schedule gets tougher,
with season-ending games
against Washington (5- 1) and
Virginia Tech (6-0).
The BCS rankings an:
based on a formula that incorporates the AP poll plus the
USA Today/ESPN coaches'
poll, eight computer rankings,
and
strength-of-schedule
number oflosses.
New this year are bonus
points for a win over a team ·
in the BCS' top 15. Final
standings will be released
Dec. 9, with the top two
teams playing in Pasadena on
Jan.3.
·
With the standings out :i
week later than originally
planned, the timing couldn't
'be ·better for the- BCS - the
Sooners (7 -0) visit the Cornhuskers (8-0) on Saturday.
Oklahoma and Nebrask~
are ranked 2-3 in the AP poQ
and coaches' poll this week.
Virginia Tech is fifi:h in the
BCS standings, followed by
Texas, Michigan, Maryland,
Tennessee and Washington
State. Rounding out the top
15 are Aorida, Washington,
Oregon, Stanford and South
Carolina.
The Sooners are first in
four of th~ eight computer
rankings .

lbose dam ·Yankees are
going to the Series again
NEW YORK (AP) - There was no need
for suitcases when the New York players
arrived at the Yankee Stadium for Game 5.
In a quiet form of bravado, the Yankees
knew a cross-country flight wouldn't be necessary.
"Why put any thoughts in your head when
we have the opportunity to go out and play
the game we did to win it here," Paul O'Neill
said .
Winning another AL pennant was nothing
new, but even the low-key Yankees said this
one was speciaL
They came from two games down to beat
Oakland, knocked out the •team with the best
record in baseball and gave their city something to cheer about.

"This ballclub will be remembered by me
forever," manager joe Torre said.
The Yankees wrapped up their fourth
straight trip to the World Series with a 1.2-3
victory over the Seaq:le Mariners in Monday
night's Game 5 of the AL championship
senes.
A team that looked old and tired and was a
home run swing away fiom being swept by
the Athletics, the Yankees showed a resiliency
that endeared them more than ever to their
fans in this shaken city. As unlikely as it
seemed two weeks ago, the Yankees have a
chance to win their fourth straight championship and fifth in six years.

P..•H -

Serl•s, Bl
'

OH BROTHER- Mariners manager Lou Plniella, center, watche~
in the eighth Inning during Game 5 of the ALCS Monday. (AP)

PREP G·OLF

Earnhardt
keeps
his
trophy
Banks just misses
BY DilliE

~

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Meigs Marauder sophomore
Jeremy Banks just missed qualitying for the state golf tournament that was held this past
weekend. Banks finished in
fOurth place of the 48 golfurs
taking part.
In resula that were released
this ·weekend, Banks 6red a
four-over-par 76 in the District
beld on October 1 at Cooks
Creek in Ashville. Banks missed

the state by three shots. lndividuals who advanced were Joe
Smith of New Lexington and
Dustin Welch of Logan Elm
with 73's.
Unioto and Portsmouth West
both advanced to the state in
the team competition on the
s=gth of their shared team
score of 322. Other tean1 scores
were Sheridan (325), Ironton
. (326),Wheelersburg (332), Cirdeville (343), Fairland (347),
and New Lexington (353).

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Dale Earnhardt Jr.
gets to keep his victory in the
EA Sports 500 at Talladega,
but crew chiefTony Euty Sr.
was fined $25,000 Monday
by NASCAR for a rule violation.
The team's No. 8 Chevrolet was found to be 1/8-inch
lower than the minimum
height of 51 inches during a
routine postrace inspection
Sunday. SeveraJ. crew chiefS
said the variance would have

made virtually no difference
in the car's on-track performance.
The
discrepancy
was
announced several hours after
the race and long after Earnhardt and the most ·Of his
team had left the Alabama
track for their North Carolina homes.
NASCAR said it never
considered stripping Earnhardt of his victory and giving it to second-place finish er Tony Stewart.

'That has never happened
in Winston Cup racing," Jim
Hunter, vice president of corporate communications for
NASCAR, said Monday.
"The philosophy is when
people leave the race on Sunday night they need to know
who won."
·
Earnhardt's team had no
co mm ent Monday.
NASCAR also fined Larry
Carter, crew chief for Todd'

Plus• ·-

NASCAR. Bl

�•
Tulldly, Oct. 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page &amp; 2 • The D8lly &amp;intlnal

tlertbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Pomeloy, Mldclaport, Ohio • ·
-

NASCAR

indefinite susp.ei)Sion for
alle,edly seUing =denlials.
Abo hit wid! fines for unau. lhorized parts of equipment
~ in inspection prior
to Suncby's race wm Bobby
King, Hut Stricklin's crew
chief (rear deck lid); Michael '
McSwain and Ritky Rudd's
crew chief (mr deck lid), aU
$5,000; Peter Suspenzo, Mih
Walbce's mw chief, (fuel ceU
and undefpans) S5,500;Jimmy
Elledge, Bobby Hamilton's
crew chief, (bump stops)
$2,500, Paul Andrews, Kenny
WaUace's crew chief, (rear window brae.. and unapprowd ail
dellec:tor) $2,250; Chad Knaus,
Stacy Compton's crew chief
(windshield clips) S750; and
SluJFr Labbe, Michael Waltrip's crew chief, (rear window
braces) and · Donnie Wmgo.
Jinuri Spencer's. cmv chief
(unapproved air dellector) bod!
$250.

fn•,...••

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

/

'-2.

? - .

1\egt~ter

(304) 675-1333

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

87 GMC Sonoma SLS,
18.000 mlloo, king cob,
171100, (7:fk11112-41 DO or
(740) 541
.

PriYate Party Ads Under $100

Word AdS

DisPlay Ads

Dally In-Columft : 1:00 p.m.
M.and1y-Ftid1y tor Insertion
In Nat D1y 't Piper
Sunday ln·Corumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

lusfneu D•r• Prior To
Publication·
Sunday orspl1y: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday ror Sunder•

20 Wards 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads

AU Dllptay : U NOon l

P,rlce - · IIWT Ocdgo
lmropld
V8, locka &amp;
mtrroro, groat condHton.
S59Q5, 1993 CtooYy 11500
plclcup lonQ bod, - ·
110 Help Wanted
"""""' IUIO, lOWing pock• ~----.;_......;....:;._.;_.,...;,.;;.,_ _ __
ago, oxcollont condHton. S6800. (740)985-4182

• No Tickets/Purebred An imals
Or Gor~go/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing , 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

r

• Start Your Ads With A Ktroword • Include COmplete
OHCrlptJOn • lnCIUdt A PriCt • AVOid AbbrtYiatiOnl
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 Whtn Needed

·• Adl Should Run 7 Dtyl

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,~~.

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

r

I'Disolw.s

I

H-·
$635 Wookly ~ulnp
Moll. Eaoyl No Expertonce
Netdtd. C.H I·
.800-852·8728 Ext 2070,
2&lt;1HIO.

STARTDATINGTONIGHTI
Haw fun moa11ng ollglble
singles In your aroo. Toll·
'""' 1-800-ROMANCE. ext

9735

G)
=

't~

1
iflu'WANIIID 11 •
Cloar1IOO

Portable Sawmill,

don, haul your loao to tho
mlljua1c:oll~5-1957.

"'*lociiO .. Fslr-A&lt;Iol1•
WNollmllltl n Httoll to

lawn mow-

AVON! All Anlul To Buy or ors: small onglnoa. Mlko
odvo-.....,
Why woit? Slan meeting Sail: Shirley Spoaro. 304- (740)444-7604
PlofotWIW, " " ' - «
Ohio llng!os tonight. call toll 875-1429.
dh hnlowllwo- Gil
froa 1·800·786·2823 oxt
Top To Bottom C -. . . . . ........ •x
1621 .
ptofiUional, and aJiorda. ,.........,.OINtiaMI
MIG Potyrnoto, USA" LlC blo. hor!Wa, rontail, Oltflln, 0t 1111 kolaut10n to
ANNoi!NI:EMENls Saeklng _ _, Foro- canotructton and remodeling
....
man. Job AesponUbllltiN cleaning. can eso almost
pNfet'MOt,t~tnau~oner
~
lnol-: 'Actlvaty supervtso anything (740)11112·1391 01
--··
COSTUMES, Rutland De· union mechanical craftsmen (740)11112·2978
discussions TAl ~ouNTY CONSTR'.,..
Thla ... I I r will nDI
partment Store, Thurs., Fri., •Grievance
'DallyiWeot&lt;ly jab planning
~
~
lin a ' " • " Sat, noon-7pm, Oct. 51h- 'Enoura
the
pmpao
oafoty
TION.
Now
•
Nov. 4th. (7401742·7243.
........__ ol ~ c,onatruc,tion/Remodellng.
ed\tertllemlntl ror Nil
lnlng
and
..
,..__ Rooll
'Df)'Wall
wtllelt 1o In
ragdoiOhattat-.corn
ract nopotls 'lntarfaco wl1lo
ngF
• , 1, 1111 ocrl . . low.OW
~-- H 1 ...._,
- t c woo. ardor
'We
Air rae Etll·
C OU!Upi!Mrlllrgo
matel 87 ..~ .&lt;~.a.._,.74-3855
........ ......,

r

I

6611

. l

l •
'

r

.

l.arr oWl
fOINl

I

¥fhorough 'knowledge of
mechanical systems, I.e.,
und«stands and can frau·
bloshoot and repair-·
comprasson, machanlcal

References available. Rea·
sonable rates and will promoats and anacka. 1al-

s1as.e2 per month,

r·

·

rid

.

Will do Babyalttlng In my
homo. Ha•o good reteroncea. Call (740)«8-8578

Will haul away, clean out,
clean up or move almoet
an)'lhlng. GaM (740)448·
======~ proacttva
pttcallano 'Demonllrated 7804
approach lo ul•
ty. 'Famlltor with 1oo1o out,
AUCI10N AND
tag aut and equipment looJi'LFAMAiuQ:r
lotion pmctdures. 'Fomlllar
llui!NE!fi .
1,~-.:;,~o,:;::;:;;:.,J with chemical procaulng
Otn:JirruNrry

r~
r

I

riO

Hot.mi

and ..... Iotter to MIG
Polymers USA LlC, Slalo
Route 2, Apple Grove, WV,
25502 AttanUon: Malnto·
nanoe and Engineering
Manager.
WANm&gt;
McC1ura·o Aoataurant now
u...
hlrt 1113 •-·t~ •. 11 .
ll&gt;
lw---.i"iili'"-_.1
ng
- up
~~appica·
'" or
parNtme,
piCk
tlon at location &amp; bring back
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. botwoon
9:30am
&amp;
Sliver, Gold Coins, Proof- 10:00am. Monday thru Sat·
sets, Diamonds, Gold urday
Rings, . U.S. Currency,·
NEW EPHEDRA FREE
M.T.S. Coin Sloop, 151 SOC·
ond AYeriua, Gell..,.io, 740- Looe 40tblln 2 monthllil
448-2842.
Guarantatd Rooulta.
Dr. Approytdtt
Wlnltd to Buy: Standing
FrH
Contuttatton
Timbar. (740)37&amp;-2785.
Hl88-397·3&amp;15
I \II I I 1\ \II \ I
www.oJChOalthy.corn
"I I~\ II I '
Now occopling appttcattona
ol per dtom AN
110
I for
for pen·limo
u...-..
·~·~ Htol1h. Send ro1 lfW' WANIJID oumo or roquesllor apJlllca·
• .
• lion to CLA 545, c/o Clalipolla Dally Trtbuno, 825 Third
Babyeltter needtd lor a
Avenut, Gallipolis, OH
year okl and 7 month old In 45631 ,
my hOmo. Csll after 2pm.
(740)448-7198
Overbrook Center 1o cur·
rantty hlrtng LPN'S for full
COL Driver tor Local Trash limo and port limo pooltlona.

r

2

FORSAI...E

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do bualnou wlfh ·poopto
you know and NOT to send
money lh~ tho maN unlit
you havo tnvootigalod 1110
offering.

r

Help wanted caring tor· the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paylog minimum wage,
new shirts: 7am-3pm. 7am5pm, 3pm·11pm, llpm·
7am, call 740-992•5023.
A
HOC:::.!; tl
......n
• me.
Rlllli'BH Welcome. Lifeline
Syaloma, Inc. lho leading
proYidor ol peroonaJ "'"
sponao oqulpmont Hrvlct
to OHkl?ll..aroproaonto~VOI
to tnatsll t Lltollno oorvlct
In cuatomar1 hornet IIJ'Id
provldo HNICllnd ouppo~
10 txllllng ou-.o. can·
dldato mull haYo rolloblo
tranaporlallon, onjoy driving
and hovo a paulon for
cuatomar oorvlot. Excotlonl
wrtnonondorotoommunlot•
uon aktt~ oro a mull. Train·
lng ProYidtd. If you are
lnltllsltd.
ploaoo
lu litter
your
I'MUml lnd
cover
10 Slephanto 0 1-an
384·5226 or omall:
amahontyOIItettnooyo.com
proforabty, or olll 1·800·
.
4!1-ll828 lXI. 1869.
somoono to dO aomo out·
aide work and 10m1 carJMI""
try. Sao Sarato Adams, 2388
Mill Creek Road, Galttpollo.

'

Is avallaNI. For more lnfor·
malton ptouo conw:t Krta,
flo Madden at (740)992·
6472. E.O.E.
Overbrook Canter Ia cur~ ndhlring ~TN~S !?;_~
.mo a
uma PD~~~-.
t 2 ~to Whouro ~~ are
0 8 ng 8
ava 8 · e ,are
new pay aca 8 and lnaur~
anc~ :;n~~ta. 8 1and
e 1 eran 8 ~ong
: O :8r
pa~
nus
ava 1able. For more information,
please contact Kristle Madden at (740)992-6472.
Sally Boaul)' Supply In &lt;lot·
llpolls, Now Hiring Store
Man ager. .,_
management E)(•

(') 5 acre Iota for eale.

2.1 acrtt, uneven terrain, in

I~.

Wtlchtown $2700 ~
(880)563.37!;3, Laavo
name and number

• • - 180
ff of RT
.......,."'.
BCnlll 0
·
Now ~. 3 bod~ 1 87 about 2 mtt.. down al
bath, IMng room, l&lt;ltc:h6n, Masons~f'&lt;"o
.ooo~ 30~~~~
dining, attached garage 1+ line
acre. All level. Pc)nct 3684
,
$74,900. (7-40)446-2801
Indian Creek Equestrian Ee,
tatea 3-6 acre IOta, west of
Newly conslrucltd, single Rio Grande, lrom $2 5•1100 .
ltof)' 1800 aq. 1oo1 homo. (740)245-5747
Located 10 minutes from
Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes
Pleaaant Veley Hasp!· LAND WANTEO I FOR
Ill, off SA 180 on a privata SALE We buy and Mil land
1·112 acre kJt. 3 -bedroom, all other Southern Ohio.
2-112 baths, big kitchen COntactutformoredelails:
w/oak cabinets, DR, LR Anthony Ltncl Co., Ltd.
w/goa log flroplaca, central
1-21W315
air, laundry room, front
www.alcllnd.com
pofOI1 &amp; 2·112 car garage.
immediate possession. Ap- looklng To Buy A New
pralatd al $125.500. Moho Homo? Don1 Have Land?
offer. C~ll (740)~·4514 Wo Doll! Hurty Only 10 Lota
from 8 5pm, M F. or Lah, 304-736-7295.
(740)448-3248 after Spm.
Nice 4 acre tract near
3 Bedroom on Route 2 Gallipolis- easy terms,
(304)875-5332
' (740)448-3583

I

PRotE9sloNAL
8ERvJa:s

I'

c~nt~a~ 7~~$~8,000

·
j
S FREE CASH NOW$ from

u

·

~ 1

MOIIILEHOMFS

COmpany. 2 rears eMperl~ We offer lhlft and weekend wealthy families· unloading __
ence required. DrMng Top differential along with IKPe- millions at doltara, to help
Heavy Trucks. (740)388- rlence pay. New pay 1Ca1e minlmlza ~ taxa&amp;. Write 14x8D

9688
Domino's ol Polm Pleasant
and Eleanor Locattona now
hlrln!l Full·Time &amp; Pan-llmo
5afe Drivers. Apply in pereon 420 Viand Street. Pt. Pl.
or call &lt;3041675-5858
Goaco Bapllst Cay Care
now taking appleatlonl tor
Child Care Woi'Qr. Apply In
personal Church. {304)6751921

SAu:

FOR

Kirkwood mobile
home 2 br. all elec. (nice)
$3700. 304-675·6489 or
304·675o-2698 aha• Spm
please.
·
14• 70 Holley Park with 8
81114 Slide- Out. 7x15 Deck.
Vety Nice. $4500 Firm.
(740)869-ll302
18 Wide. Only $l9S.OO Per

Immediately. WINDFALLS,
3010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
188, LOS ANGELES, CAI.I·
FORNIA 900IO
CREDIT PROBLEM? CALL
THE CREDIT EXPERTS.
LICENSED/BONDED COR·
AECT/AEMOVE
BAD
CREDIT,. BANKRUPTCY,
lAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS.
AAA RATING.
~w~:s~:~~~nte~~
1-888·567·7345.
de lnni 1 aea-g28 3426
TURN!D DOWN ON
rp
ng •
~
1963 Schult Mobile Home. 3
SOCIAL ~CUAITV ISII? Bedroom, 1 112 Bathe. Gall
No Fee Unlaas We Wlnl (740 )441 _1498
1-888-582·3345
t993 Cla)'lon t8x80 mobile
home. 3 br., 2. ba. asking
$5pm19,000
. 304·773-5885 after
HOMES
!'!!f•~...:...~ri·
FOR SAlE
ence n u..uty .. -...try • ..,
plua. Pl.... malll'ftUrM to.:
11t time b1.1yera- GovemM. Murray, Dtotrlct Mansg- Nlco, 2 BR homo 1 mtto monl taana· buy loans &amp;
or. PO Bo• 12117, Chartoa· from Galllpotta on Stott . oolt· (740)448·3093 Oak·
ton, WV 25302.
Routa 141. Gu Htol, CIA, WOOd Supercantor
URGENTLY
NEEDED Largo Scroanod In Bsclc 28x80 3 0 4Btd
Qn.
plaoma danono
••• ..; Porch. 2 Gar Garage, Car· 1I 1348 ~O p ""'"'t.iomh
• um ~ port, Alklng $55,000, A,p- Y
·
er
$80 for 2 or 3 houro -~· pralood ot $74,000. Call 8.111111 Flxtd lntoroot Rato,
Call Sora·Toe, 740·892· (7401448•1272
.
1·885·928-3425
·HBI.
3 bodfODm
mobtto homo
lor
For Ronl or. lato. S mall 1110
'MD
B•,
Iotti
tll01rlo,
-·Houoo 1250. Monlh +1200. (740)Q82•5858
1'lwNING
(304)727·3318
.
1 Dtpollt.
· fram8pm·11pm .
88 Floolwood, t8x80, 3
Clalltpolta ca- Colltgo
bedroom, 2 balh, Comrat
1- . ct- To Homo) For oato by owner: Ntca b~ otr, $20,000. (740)2!8-1510
Call Todayl740-448-4387
loYot homo on I aero noar
1 ·10()..21.(~ . ' Cl'lllttr. Thrtt bldi'OCim, AIIUmlble loan• Many
R M90-ll!-l 274&amp;
two batho. one-oar gorogo, lypoo aYlilablo. Gall for do\76 5
· tamt~ room with llroplaco, !Olio. (740)448 3583.
M-, ··~- loun room. Now cornrat hoot• Bltl 15, wid 3 bod
••oJSCI!IHNEOU!I lng &amp; 1/c oyolom. Ono ml· 1&gt;01h oavo 188 dal"l"mtd2
n~: Dlf ~outt 7, ~ilfiH P~· 6 .Ot up on your 'tot ,,:,d.
Ook llrowood, S35 a load, • · ( )985-3
tng oklrttng &amp; llborgtsoo
two or more loada, $30 houH for ule on Pott1r atepa, CoMa Mobile Hom11,
(740)7&gt;1.2-2897 or (740)992· Crook Ad.call o•oo 304· U.S. 50 Easl, Athana, Oh.
?2811 '
678-7852
740-892·1972.

r,rt

w: :c• :r\fl
perle'r

~

(740)3117-llt 29

Star1 Your Bualnesa To·
day... Primo Shopping Conteo Space Available At AI·
fordable Rata. Spring Valley 3 ..,__.
Plaza, Call 740-446.0101
._..room, in Middleport,
· call Tom Anderson after
MoNEY
Spm, &lt;740)992·3348·
ro LoAN
. 3br. Largo KllchOn &amp; living
Room. 314 Btoaement, totally
Loan A llolllol All typot ol rernodoftdat 211 7th Stcrtdlt va tiCot
No 1
Now HaYOrl. (304)882·3n2
I I CAwLLmTOLLIO
. FRootEE
up ron ·
Ra h Style Home- for 888
1
t.-.207-5028.
nc 4
3 btotf1s, 2
"'
rant
bdnn.
•
car garaga dole to high
MDNEYTOLOAN,AUTO, IOChool. 19 • OakwOod OFt
DIIT CDNIOUDA110N, GaiL Oh.catt botwoon 8,00 •
CALLJoiCIIJN0-7410
11 •00 pm In ~ cond
24 HO R REIPONSE
.
' ""'"'
·w

i

ft·

r•o

5

I

cc

I

7

i5

r-..-.ftU'III

State

Route

Prime 2·112 acre lot tor
building on-located on quiet
road, secluded area, out-

side of city limits In 5prtngllold Township. Asking
$17,1500. Coil )or more Into.
(740)448·4514 Days; or
(740)4&lt;6·3248 E11t1nlngo.

·oao.

'!llu!
.......

I.·

ctucllng hi tlftcloncy htol promt-. (304)743-3308

pump oyotemo. wa cony •
lint o1 - t o
446--2588. Equal Housing home ,.ns a ac c111 g.."'ltl.
Opponunly.
81NNIITT'I HEATING I ~

j

complolt

---·*'

FRvns&amp;
VF.CF:I'AitiD

.

Chrloty'a Family Uvlng, orC00 ~..f~1t Richards Brothers FruH
33140 New LJma Ad., Auf.
~··~·
Farm.
APPLES AND
ltnd, Ohio, 740-742-7&lt;103.
MUCH MORE. 24 miles

1

ilo::c:ltl

110 e.....~ v.canc~Hnow

on

bidloom IPI(!IIIeiU at VI·
'
LA lago Manor and Rlvlf1klo morlal marker,

I

.\1 1\ l ' l fHh

r10
YOttfans

original mllea.
(740)258-1!215

I

;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

FARM

,_---

MCtlon In Molga Memory L.,-,;~::f::i:j""""";:;iioo'_.J
Gardtnl. value approx . .,
$4500 will 101 IOI $3000
culi 'coil (740..,..S..2063 YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,

·.

•_go • - · 3 point Mc:h, $2,150.
Aleo, new 4' finish mower,
Grubb'• Plano- Tuning &amp; llllllln crate, $850. Shipping
3834
bedtoom fumllhtd tpart• Repairs. Problema? Need ~- Located just outmont, no poll. cltpoal1 &amp; Ill· Tuntd? Gall 1ho Plano Do. ol Huntsville, AI (256)
771-9435 www.maynarde3 bedroom mobile home In ertncea. uUIItiH pt:ld, 740 448 4525
Mlddle..w.
no
Nlll (740)882-0185.
quipmenloom
,...
..
,
'"'
'
Hanly
$3.00
tach
4
.
.,.--------740' 992"5858·
&lt;
MOclom 1 -oom apatl• for $10. Open-Sat. 11-Spm. &amp; YANMAA YM 1500 Tractor.
740
448
0390
3 bedroom, central air, ment. &lt; )
evening~. Dewhullt Green- diesel, 3 pOint hhch, $2,150.

'

= .·
c-..

Sman Trailer In Gallipolis.
Close to DowniOWn and
Grocery. Reference and De-

r ·-·--poelt

(740)4&lt;6·1158

IV7llliMI'..I'll3

FOR RENT

~

rn:u
I

I
•

nd 2
furr::.oomnd ~rt·

•
.
a u ur":f"d·
IOCIIiity .,...! ...
~~rr· no poll. 40·992·

·

1 Bedroom Apanmont Reo
trlgerator Range
in·

AJ6

eluded $289 Plua 'coposlt &amp;
Roro..n.o. HUD Appmvod.
(740 ,..1-1 519
'""
1 bedroom furnished apart·
mont, up~ra. (740)448·
8519 or (740)448-41127
·
2 Bedroom apartment, SVr·
acuse, ~mo. plus $220
deposit (740)378-el1 1
2br. Apt. for rent In Now
Haven. Newly ,.modeled.
Appliances
Included.
(304)882-3131

North 3rd, Middleport, 1
.~ Alto.,..-(304ge)ea5-or
bedroom lumlshed ..,.n~
~~
mont, no pots, c1opoa111 Ill· -,...~,orancoa, (7401fltl2.0185.
-.y Duly Farm Tnollor 4
b 8 with llfd 5160
Nonh 3rd, Middleport, 2 (~)875-788B
•·
·
bedroOm.
unfumllhtd
apartrnenl, no pell, dlpOift lildlptudtnt HefbaiKe OilI reforoncos. (740)992· 1rlbutor, Cd For Proc1uct Or
Ot85.
Oppornonlly. (740)411-1982
Now Takl~~tio••
JET
35 WOOf 2
TownAERATION MOTORS
Apa= 1
Rtpolotd. New &amp; Aabul~ In
~ 7~ ' Slook. Clll Ron Evans, 1·

=·

,

•

'"1'.:.'

·•

800·537-1~528.

•

Twin RIYerTowors ,_ .. .. Lt'll" lklc:tcatovo, $300, 4x4
cepling application&amp; for dog pen, $85, all good conIBR. HUD ..-zed apt dltkwo, (740) 992 •5742
for eldef'ty and dllablld.
EOH.
W.ltrltno Spooiol: 314 200
(304)67&amp;$78.
PSI $21.95 Pof 100; I' 200
PSI $37.00 Por 100; All
1111•
Comproaoton Fittings
In Slock
RON eVANS ENTEAPAIS.
El Joclclon Ohio 1-1100HOU!ifliOUI 1537·9528 '
•
,,..,._.,

1.------··
j

~

3
·

Applloncoo: Rocond~-

A 1
~-f'

r

7366

·
1
:

Ch

arolsla
1

Gantle. (740~ 1168

lli &amp;
"-~-·

I

riO

, .I

3 Roams and Bath. 48 Oll\lo
Street Utlltttoo Paid Stove
-~ """..,....aiOr
~~""" ' N0· nna.
~
.....
5-'75ploadoposlt. Rtloroncos Roq
_ ulred. (740)448·
3945

I

110 Pholl8 Calli PleaM
s-/4wr~ 71.w~t.r

.,

for Service

~cet ~or

&amp;tu ~~W

forSaiH
••tween ,, a.m. •

7 p.m.

NOTICES

~~
- ~~~

bOlos $1 00 alhar hay up to
$2.00.
bales $15.00
each 304-675.4889

roLild

o•

~------~

· NOTICI
r
I h ere Will be
ELICTIOK ON TAX ·eubmltted to 1 VOlt
LEVY IN EXCElS 01' 111 1ht people ol Nld
THITIN MLL
eubdlvltlon II I
LIMITATION
O!NIRAL ELECTION
Rev1lled Code,
to be htld In the
8tctloiii1101.11(G),
Townohlp ollutton,
~-11, 1701.2t
Ohio, It tht reguler
p Iooeo o I votl ng
NOTICE II htrlby lhlrlln, on the llh
given.
1hlt
ln. diV ol November,
purouenoe· ol I
2001, the q-Uon ol
Rllolutlon ol the lovylng o lox, In
IDerd ol Townlhlp ox-1 ol1hlo 111ft mill
TrUiteee ol the limitation, lor the
Tewnehlp 01 Iutton, btntlll ol Iutton
R1
Ohio, Townthlp lor tht
on 1he 2nd p ~ r p o • e
oI
July, IOOi, melntllnlng end

corn ,
Karr,

Large Round Bales of Hay.
St2.00 (740)245-5047

~)898'7; 1~tos for sale.

;::::==:::~---Hay &amp; Brtghl Wire Tlo

Slraw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; \lolumo Dlacount Avails·
ble.
Horttago
Farm.
(304)675-5724.

I

riO

The Eagles, victimized late
two weeks ago by the Arizona
Catdinals, got back in it ·late
in the thitd quarter on a 25yard field goal by David
Akers, who had misseil from
44 yards in the fint half.
"This reminded me of the
playoffi last year," Eagles linebacker Ike Reese said of the
Giants' 20-10 win. "When
they gOt up, they just tried to
keep the ball and not make a
mistake. We just knew if we
stayed in there and· gave our
offense a chance to · make
plays, they'd. come through."
After allowing the Giants to
get 'into their territory on
their fint possession of the
second half, Philadelphia's
defense held New York without a first down on its next
four series.
The last one ended when
Collins lhmv .a pass at tight
end Dan CampbeU's feet on a
thitd-and-4 from the New
York 23 with 6:15 to play.
What made the play so
poor was·'lhat Campbell was
open and the Eagles had
squandered aU of their time
outs.
If CoUinJ connected on the
pass, die Eagles would have

EOE

Buck a bale sale, square

For sale- ear
$2,25/bu,
Paul
(740)985-3538.

f1qm;.p81

:

City Mo)'lag, 740-448-7795.
Far Solo: AoconciiUontd
wuloora, ....__ and Ill""....,.....
•v
•
I I~\ \.., 1'01 ~ I \J IO\
eratoro. Tloompoons Appllonce. 3407 Jackson AY8nua (3041875·7388.
Auros
'
Applicatk)ns being taken for Mollohan carpet, 202 Clark COndillone~ ~.;n~~ pa~
FOR SALE
H01.St3
amaU tiut vary clean one Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. and labot wafranttncludtd
n-bedroom apo~monl Coun· (740)448·7444 Hl77·830· COM ORT
.
!UK.....,,
by -ng yet c1oao io lown. 9182. Free Eotlmalea, Euy
f
AIR EATING 95 Ford Taurus G·L Wagon.
ANDCOOUNG
102K, clean. 2 owners.
1743 c.ntonatyRoad Wa· flnanoln 90daysaarnoao
(740)441o0114
$4,400. (740)448·9346
15 Court Street 2 Bod· "" and Trash Ramovat 1,.. caah. ~iaJ Mulal card.
rooma, 1 1/2 baths, Kitchen eluded. Tenant pays elec- Drive- • · little uve alot
l-eoo-4N-007I
96 Jae Cherokee s
with stove and refrigerator. trk:. AJC and Electric Heat.
Relld1ntt11 Home owner. 4x4 4 HI h 1 port.
Off Strnt Parking, Close to Washer, Dryer, Stove, Frlg. New and Ueec:l Furniture Tappan HI ttflciency 90 plus builf ti~e s&amp;,c,~~fu~eSchools and Downtown InCluded. No Pets. Non Store below Holklay Inn, OU fumacet Including 011 Ramcharger 4x4
,:
Area. 55951 month plus do- Smot&lt;ara Only. $300 dopos· Kanougo. Wo Soil grava and
oloctrlc goa luma· (740)44&amp;·IsSz • 525 ·
posH and Aeforonco. No It, 1350 month. (740)448· monumtnla and YASoo. cea. HI Efficiency Heat ~::!.:.::..;.=_ _ __
Pots. (740)448-4928
9585 or (740)448·2205. Aak :"~\Monday llvu Sa~: Pumpo. 1ea1Urlng Tappans 99 Pontiac Grand Prix GT.
for Virginia.
47~ am- 3pm. (7 ) Free lncrtdlble warranty V-6, Auto, CO Player, Sun· : .
~ow~=m~~i:e~~e~ Applications being taken for
HEATING A ::~~~!~oor, so.c:Ki~\~~·
'
. ·
' vary ntco 2 bedroom apart· Ntco uatd lurnltura/ appllan·
(
·
ro;~ ~~~~h::""=,: manti Counlty Setltng yet coo. (7401448·t004 or ;,0,0~ ~:~8-I41S 740) 256"6180
catio~ $500/ month Refer· close to town. 1743 Cente· (740)448·2880.
www. Of'Yb.cornlb.nnett FOUR DOOR SALE, , 992
·and de It r · ulred nary Road. Water and
'
Corsica $2495, two 1991
8
(;:)448.J ' eq
. Trash Removal lnclude&lt;J . ~=~er : 1
Wanted to Ieese Coal prop· Cavalier&amp;., $1395 and
AJC. Total E11Cir1c· Tenant $tOO · 0 er $60 Vent lela arty tor small coal mine, $1995. 1994 Buick Centvry,
2 bedroom house, gas heat- pays electric. Stove, Frlg., 8 Br~k ~atural Gu Heater strip or underground, to $2895. 1993 Buick Century,
AJC, stove and refrigerator Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher · 1 ~~. Ne
• Brand N ' make lump and etroker, $2495. 1997 Lumina $4795.
turnlahecl, hookup for wash· Included. No Pets, Non -.a w 512o:~.
ffrN (740)367·7891
after COOK MOTORS (740)44&amp;
er and dryer Located on a S~rs Only $400 Oepoa- NaturaJ Gu Vented Stove e:oopm
:O::t03::__ _ _ _ __ •
quiet atreet. 'call (740)448· it. $450 mon.th. (740)~46- Tj~ 446 =er,
$1!0 . .
•
1370
·
2205 or (740)448·9585. Ask ~(
IIIII"-~---.....
233 2nd A"O. Convenient to for :,Yirginla, .
~
BVIUIING
Uvely's Auto Sales
1988 Ford Mustang $1000•'
Downtown.• 2 Bedrooms, 1 Aetldent Manager fDr apart·
~
t/2 Bath, Kitchen with Stove meflt comple 11 Manage·
• ~= C~! 0 ~~ $ 1 ~~
and Refrigerator. $490/ meht eKperienCa a plua. B
veri
$
.,
month ptua daposlt and Ref- Salary and .t.n•rtmenl Send uy or MIL Rl M Anti· Block, brick, HWtr ~pea. 1000; 1987 Ford Econollne
oroooss1&lt;oPata.(740)44B· R..,mo wHhlll
to q - 1124 Eaat Main on -.lnttla,oto. Ciaudt Van $1200: 1992 Dodge
.
Manager, ~ 53 2,:.'"Z:ue SA 124 E. Pcmtrov. 740- Wlnlott, Ato Grondo, OH Ram 250 Van $1000; 1994
4926. ·
GaNpolla Ohio 48e3l
• ii82·282B. f'luH Mocra, cau 740-245-5121.
Plymoulh Vo~sgor Van ,
3 Bedroom tn Cauntty, 2
•
·
ownor.
$1800; 1984 Dodge Ram
Bllh, Stcwo, Rotngorslor, River Band Pltct now ..,
__ ........
12D50tptovamantl$o800$; 198.,4 0 odgo
400 1987
Very Nice, Rlltlrtnoe and
Jn :eJICll
for
~
Dtpooll
Alqutrod. ctpl •g
t ono I br.
Dodgo Ram 250 Van
(740)3S8-B371
~ud Suba tzo Apt. for 1110
$1400: 111112 Marcuty Topaz
otdorty &amp; dtoobltd. Equat
AKC Aoglstar'td Wtlmaro· 1800; tQ67 Otdo Clora
Houol••r
N •M M't •-•tel d
B k Aoga 1
•• Room and Ba*
"'· Fumts h• Opportunll)'
(304)I82·3121
....
·~ ··~· - - · , ow · oOO: 1.88 u1c
td. Ctoon, Rtltllnotl and
olewa rornovtd. lot 11ooto, 1880; 198Q Oldo Cutiaoo
Dopooll
Aoqutrod. Tara Townhouao Apon·
121!0. (740)448-4412
Sup111mo 11000; 11187 Pon(740)448·1519
monll, Vary Spaotouo, 2
tiao Grond Am $400; 1111!0
aroomtlbt al 1210 Ohta ·ltdrooma, 2 Ftooro, CA, 1 85,000 BTU LP gu hoollng Baoo:.Jufptoo, tao. Ford Muston~ 1800; 11188
SWH1 1380 monwdtpotll 112 Balh, Fully Carpoltd, olovo, worma 8 rooma, (740)
7
Ford Crown IOtorlo $800;
No P .II H . ~~ I . Adult Poet I Bail)' Pool, Pt· $300; 211" oclor TV. 1200.·, Coclttr~nlot PuppiH. 11!!03 ChaFe"!. BaTarol1turutSI400GL;
• . •• r.. ,, I DVI, tlo, Stan t385/MO. No Pltl,
....
...,
goa fumaoo. &lt;30418 5- 13115 LaaH Ptua 8tou~ry Dt(&gt;OII1 ~:I,');:J.~.pultr, 11100; Full Bl td. Paronlt .on 111100; 1989 Oodgo D·250
Buy hamaa from 1189/mo., Roqutotd, Dayo: 740-440·
prwmiNt. 111!0. (740)444- ~tok·UP $2000; IQ93 Goo
Foraotoouroo 411 Clowti, 30 3481; Evonlngo: 740·387· Couc~. ohatr, hlda·a·bod, 2t8e
raokar $1400: 1989 Oodgo .
ytaflll u% ~PA. For lilt• 0102, 740-448·0101 .
IIOYt, twin bod, - . , . Jock Au-t Ttrrlor pup Cyna11V $1200; 1985 Ford •
lngo 1-800·319·3323 oxt. Vory ntco, 2•3 bedroom mont conlor. mtcrowo•oa, thoto, wormtd, Sloo: A:r'r plck·up $850; 1885 •
17011· ·
apanment, In town, largo ~porto ~,.. '"!'h aluminum &lt;740)898-7088,
~~~~~~~~: ~
kitchen, LR, S600fmo. Ref. rna. (740)+te 8742
Rltt Terrier pupa, Talla 5:00pm, Saturday 1pm·
Pilot Program. Ranters oroncto &amp; dopoo~ required. Fl-lor Sato. $150 per Docktd. $100.00 (304)675· 3pm. Cloud Sunday.
Netdtd, 304·738·7295.
(740)444-3844
lruck Load. (740)441·8478 71148
(7401388·9303
Property on St. At 143 In
Ohio, 314 milo on loll hand
side· Sortoua calls only.
(304)882·2988

ATV I TRAILER COMIO
Polarlo Trail Boto 4x4 350
liquid COOled. Garaged. tow
mlaa, one owfttlr, llwiVI
matntalntd. Superb concllltori. optional ,,_ plow.
winch, wlndlhlekl. Tralllr
hal 5&gt;&lt;1 111 bod. diamond
ptala lloof. no MI. VGC.
$4,000. (740)286-5927

Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train !he right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professionals with the desire to earn
well above average income.
We offer a benefit package,
including 401k, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and no Sundays.

MNF

been in big trouble.
Instead, New York was
forced to punt and thinp
went downhill when Thabiti
Davis was called for holding,
nullifying a punt that went
out of bounds at the Eagles
38. Williams shanked his next
punt and Philadelphia was in
bulinesa at the New York 40.
"They just kept on fighting
and we got stupid with a couple of things,'' Giants coach
Jim Fassel said. "That's how
we got beat."
New York also lost because
McNabb, who was 15-of-26
for 154 yards, stepped up with ·
the game on the line. He
started the game-winning
drive with a 7-yam run and
bought himself time on the
touchdown pass by rolling to
his right when nothing
opened up right away.
"I saw Donovan scrambling;'' Thrash said. "As a
receiver, you have to stay
alive, ~specially with him running around. I was in the
right place at the right time."
The catch in the corner of
the end . zone was reviewed,
but replays clearly showed the
catch was good.
Collins and Tiki Barber
converted on an 11-yatd pass
to get the Giants to their own
41, but Th&gt;tter stripped the
ball from Collins as he scrambled and Whiting recovered.

P.A•''"

Wanted

C

40

. NIIDIDNOW.
. . WILLTUIN.

=o:n·a
72

%ozer·w=

r

ir';;;;::·::;:;:;___.,I

B.N••ITS AVAILABL.
MANYIHIIITI
AVAI...BL••

..
..

I

0

ijr.:::;:::;:;::,:::.:.;._..,.

a•

•

l3lk to come from PinieUa on
this night. All he could do
was s1211: at the field and pop :
his chewing gum while the •
Yankees romped around the
"Down 2-0 to one of the bases.
best clubs in baseball, you
Alter two straight losses at
never, never, never doubted Safeco . Field to open the
yourselws;' Torre said in a smes, a defiant PinieUa made
toast. "This city nuded a promise his team couldn't
something like thU.We need- keep - that the ALCS
ed something like this:'
would return to Seattle for
M VP Andy Pettitte took a Game 6.
shutout into the seventh
"First of aU, I won't say it
inning, Bernie Williams, Paul again:· PinieUa said. "You live
O'Neill and Tino Martinez and learn. I just had confi- :
homered and the Yankees put dence in my team. That was :
the bumbling Mariners aw.~y it."
early and made a liar of their
Piniella looked like a
rnanaaer. Lou PinieUa, who
prophet after Seattle's 14-3
guaranteed the series would
Game 3 win Saturday. But
return 10 Seattle.
Next up for New York is the Mariners lost in the ninth
Game I of the World Series inning Sunday and they let •
against aces Curt Schilling, ·him · down again in the :
Randy Johnson and the Ari- clincher.
After Martine~'s three-run
zona Diamondbacks at Bank
in the eighth inning,
homer
One Ballpark on Saturday
the fans chanted: "No Game •
night.
61
No Game 61" ....:. as if .;
The Yankees jumped out
to a 4-0 lead in the thitd Piniella didn't know that ••
inning - thanks to thitd already.
The Mariners joined basebaseman David BeD's error
and Williams' thin! homer in ball's only other 116-win
team as a postseason dud. The
as many days.
The rest was just a formal- I 906 Chicago Cubs lost the :
ity as lhe Yankees brought a World Series in six games.. •
swift ending to Seatde 's
"Doesn't matter if you
reconj-tying 116-win season won 85 to get in the playofli
and won their 381h pennant. or 185 to get in the playof!i,"
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani starter Aaron Sele said. "It's
was among the 56,370 fans how you ·finish:'
cheering so loudly die stadiThe game turned in the ~
um shook. The win was a thitd when the .sure-handed
wonderful distraction from BeD misplayed Brosius'
the heartache and devastation grounder leading off the
endured by this city follow- inning for an error.
ing !he Sept. I 1 terrorist
Alfonso Sorianp, whose ;
attacks.
ninth-inning ho'i"er won .
After Shane Spencer's slid- Game 4, lined a 1 single to ·
ing catch ended the game, center field. Alter 'a sacrifice
Giuliani and Thrre walked
bunt, Jeter hit a sacrifice fly
arm in arm to die mound to
ro give New York the lead
congratulate the celebrating
and David Justice followed .
players.
Afterward, a simple toast with an RBI double.
Williams then hit a drive
by Torre rejllaced the usual,
towatd
the monuments · in
raucous party in !he winning
clubho,use, a gesture of left-center - where Yankee
respect to the victims of the greats from past dynasties are
honored - for his 16th
attacbc
The Yankees of Derek postseason homer to make :
Jeter, Williams, Pettitte and the score 4-0.
O'Neill hit his second :
Mariano Rivera became the
first team since their prede- homer of lhe series to make •
cessors in 1960-64 - led by it 5-0 in the fourth and that
Mickey Mande, Roger was more than enough for
Maris,Yogi Berra and Whitey Pettitte, who held Seattle
Foro - to win four straight scoreless until Bell's two-run ·
single in the seventh cut ~
pennants.
There was no more tough New York's lead to 9-2.

Vety

1,~--~""""':;;;::::;,IIIII!_.J.

'U\AJUII

WuhOro, Oryart, Ra._,
Ratrlgrot011. Up To 110 Dayo
Gua- Wo Sol New
Mo)'lag ~ FNnCh

I.JvEsTocK

..... ( )8 11-851
Mlnlalure Donkey,

riO

NIW AND U81!D FUR·
NANCII I'OR SALEI wa
lnotalcl;,!'~ Eotl':,";;..,::
YGU
oa,
=~~44e-6308, I·
·
Oak ~~-. (740)867·
8133
·
·
REIIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
AMANA· HI EfflciOIICI' 92 +
ou tumacoa Super HI em.
ctoncy Ho t p
nd AI

2000 Honda Aecon. Great
shape $2800. (304)875·

Aloo. 4' finish moM&lt;.
ltlll In crate, $850. Shipping
•••I table. Located juot out·
aide ol Huntavitto. At (256)
n&amp;-9435 www.maynarde·
qulpment.com
·

·

95 Dodge Dakota, 4x4, air,
tilt, cruise, automatic,
88,000 mllos, $2,000 080.
(740)258-1233

r~1

r.uno

waahor/dryar, $300 per
month plus qapo.it, call
(740)992·2187 Lota av~lls·
ble also.
·

13200.

87 Altro van. ss.ooo miloo,
air, crutu, IH~ PW. PL,
AMIFM ~. t1utl air
baga, ABS. BMta 7, llko
- · Mull lOIII (740)37s..
21341Mvo-.

•
~-·~
f'IOaniWel:
-T

•

:::....~" 1

78 CI10Yy 4x4, Auto. 48,000

I ,1111"&gt;1 1' 1'111"

· (304)67&amp;-5292

gr.;..,. Avalablo ~
·
For by owner (Z)
101. (740)448-6189
Gracloua ll\llng. 1 111&lt;1 2 (21 YOUfta (1) f11lo

2000 Tahoe LT laadi&gt;d. all
option• leather, sun roof,

ewnlnga 304-ll75-4212.

.

locttion .

1993 Ford F·250 XLT 41&lt;4,
7.3 Tutllo dltotl, 5-tptad.
low pecklgo. (740)388·
~ (740)444-3483.
1998 JHji Goand Chafo.
kM. (304)875-1879 l,aaw
-go.

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:

3rd row 881t, on alar 25,000
mlloa day 304-ll75-8813

fttrdar
NorthofGaJipolls
Coun
ator. , _ for - · f'l1t:e doon
. . .

,

2 BR All Eloctrlc La
'
' 'II"
An•
Mlddloport.
In Gallipolis~ Vary, Very .....,..rtnientl 1n
Nlco, No Ptta, (740)4-le· Fnlm 1278-$348. Coil 74012003(740)446-1409
11112·5084. Eqiltl Hoollng
nnnn.o.~
..,..,..,..,._.,_
2 br. on SendhiH Rei. ref. ,..
qulred, no pets 304-675· Mkkltport. Belch Street. 2

,,rom

planbl. Please send rasume..,

Rick Pea..., Auction Compony, full time auctlonaar,
complete auction aer.tlce.
Llconaod 1186,0hlo &amp; West
VIrginia, 304-n3-5785 Or
304-773-5447.

Lars&amp;

' A.--.:-... ,..,

lhlo no• POVO'.,.

1,~--..:;~~-_.J.
craft time. Please call
, __ G
~ ••-• seals and solids handling (740)444-148&amp;
~
L..UZH: lasses, Ha,,. Qfte~l, equipment, etc. •Demon~
l!tack Case, Small Fra"''"', stratod offoctlva Clllllmunl·
No tina b1 focal. On Oaalom cation skills In antH&gt;rHOnO
Ave or in Gallipolis through I::Jroup situations. PreMercervilla,
Ohio Call
drlbutn lnaludll:
(740)446-3890
•Results oriented ~roach
lo work aaslgnrnwdll Faml~
YARDSAu:
tar with Mtcroaoft Ofllca ap-

cau u

Harold 740-385-4387.
New Double Wldo s195
•
Per Month I 3 Bod room. 2
Bath. Free Dellvety I Sat·
up. 1-888-828-3426

IWIII'bkon 1ft equltl

so haYS learning ~ ... and

I

1887 Ocdgo 4X4, Good
L.ooka Good, $2000
(740)258-6997

,.r....,d...

1

4-WDs

$hlpo,

110811.! HOM! OWN!Rt UKC All Torrtor pups .
ln1trthorm I Coltman goa. $150. Cash Finn. lalls
o1 I -ric""'- ir1- -motherllathoron

e!AUTJfiiL
APART·
MI!NTS AT BUDGET PJI.
CU AT JACKSON E..
TATU,52W-Dr1vt
hom $297 to $383. Walk 10
ohop &amp; ....... Cd 740-

Now 14x70. 3 bedroom. 2
:.::•
bath. only $995 down &amp; 2 bedroom can1ra1 tooal &amp; lronll "avat~b!. lor loaoo pondo

-..~":~In
~tty~.

,.r....:~--RINr~-1 ~

·lillll-lfollllli-RINriiiili..l

--

'r.:

Appts. Tu&amp;-Sat. (304)875· vising rnainlonanca cralll CPR M.d First Aid trained.

r

t·.....

l ...

i

"''ouch

would like to WelcOme tam. Quallfle~~tlona n·
· ~u
Monlq Ebnwn Nail Tech, ch1de: •Minimum 5 }'8818 wm babyaH In my home.
to our staff.· Accepting experience directly super· Manu vaars of experl8fl08.

~~

Final Dayo, In- l.tlgt 3 bedroom, 3 - ·
YtniOIY
Rtductlonl 1&gt;111 110111.- gooago.
(304)7311-3409
Dopoall I lllortnc.,..
qutrtd. Phono (740)44e·
Umlttd Or No Crodft? GoY· 1104 01 (740)2~.
"""*"BtnkFinanctQny
At Oakwood In BlirbOurs· Why rtnl? government
Ylle, WV 304-736-3409.
bOCktd loons from S4110
Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. down. (740)444-30V3
Only $19,850. Frao Doti\I.,Y
Moelu! JloM&amp;oi
&amp;SotUp. l.-.928-2&lt;126
-n--

AllrMI--ng
lnlhlotwo P P rio

All wicks lnsta~
lod:repalrln!lloroodalrkal-

OMne healln;

t

VAN~&amp;

$5,000 and placed him on

MASTERCARD QUARANTEEDr
Bad Cltdlt1 OKI No jql&gt;? OKI
No oocurlty dopooltl
1-1100168 4821oxt 2001S

.!CALL NOW
t-88 · 974-JOBS
· PART·TIME COLLECTOR

opemlng 0111\1181'111,
leld lltx btlng:
- "PIICtmtnt ol 1
hlx ol 0.4 mill et I
rete not txcHCIIng
0.4 mlllt lor eooh
one
doller
ol
voluetlon, which
omounto to I our
...... (S0.04) lot NOh
one hundred dollart
ol velua11an lor live
(I),..,.
Tht P~llt lor Nld
election will open at
1•30 o'clock AM. end

r~meln opo~ ~ntll

Public NotiCe

Public Notice

Deled Sep1ember 7,
2001.

mill at 1 rete not
exceeding I (ant)
mille lor each one

John
N.lhle
Chlllnntlll

dOIIIr
ol VIIUIIIOn,
which emounta
to hin _.
cants ($0.10) lor Nch
"1111 0 Smith
one hund"d dollars
"D,-o· r
ol VIIUitlon lor live
·-·
(5)
.
VNn•
(10) I, 11, 23, 30,
The PoUt lor oeld
2001
oleotlon will open at
4tc
1:30 o'clock A.M. end
remeln open un111
~-P_ubl_lc_Nottco___ 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
lllddaV• .
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
onlet otthe loercl
LEVYIN EXCElS OF 0 EleoiiOM,aiMelge
THE TEN MILL
County, Ohio.

•r

LIMITATION

Bact":;:::"
380~('G),

:;:~

September

5701•11• 5705 •21
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol
NOnCE 11 hereby
oolddoy,
given
the1
fn

John N. lhll
Choll'lllln
Rlhl D. Smith

,~-rottheloerd pureuence

DINCtor

ol •
..,_
Reaolutlon of the
Eieotlont,oiMelp Board ol Townohlp
COunty, Ohio.
Truotee
of 1ho
Townohlp of Olive,
_In Memory
Roodevlllo, Ohio, ·
palled on the 5th
dov ol June, 2001,
there
will
be
I•IAimlt M,_, oubml11ed to • vohl 01
Of~ H""'-1,
the people ol oold
a,. .R. M,J,, Jr. oubdlvlolon ot •
GENERAL ELECTION
to be held In the
0.... 21,1982
Townohlp of Olive,
Ohio, et the regular
If/"",.
plec11 ol voting
_,.u,. ,-..
1horeln, on tho llh
I'Jp. II,_
dey ol November,
2001, the queo11on of
70 ,_,,..., ......
lovvlng • tax, In
70
,.,u., exceoo
olthe hln mill
llml1111on, tor tht
""",..,, . . Ill
bentlll ol Olive
rlwU...
Townthlp lor tht
GH ,.., fiMt1"•
purpo ·ee
ol
molntelnlng end

......

"""".....,.

............

1ft,.,.,

_.._,.

S..HoJJJ"""'t
Hotl.o.ptM4

Fofmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.; Pomeroy,
Onlo Is seeking a part-time coiJector (a
maximum of 36 hours per week) lor Its
Pomeroy office. We ore lookfng ·lor
someone with coiJectlons experience,
good communlcanon &amp; computer sldiJa.
Responsibilities/duties Include but not
limited to making dolfy phone coiJs.
preparonon/molllng of form collection
letlert preporatlon of r•ports. utJJizatlon
ol computer to locllllote dolly
responslblllfles. personol contoct with
customers. ftllng small claims, osslstlng full
flme collector. .

H.-.,"""
.....,....

Send cover leltor end dBtolled resume
to Formers Bonk. Altn: Humon Resources
Dlrectot P.O. Box 626. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Formers Bonk Is an Equal Housing
Lender, Member FDIC. end Equol
Opportunl1y Employer.

S.UO, m'-1 ht

AtttlltiiJu,..N.

•c... 111M mr. .,

,. t...,.,

It 6rooN "" , _

.......

B111 1"• tllih~

For,_-J..,

-"""''""'
• .._.
n.u,c..~

t.a..~,.

(10) n 1• 23 30
•• •·
,
,
2001
4tc

Public Nollce

Thank You 1o

Smith and DoiiiUl

~

expert senlee.

IY!fio..C.,

' •

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF .
NAME OF AYRRON
NICHOLE LEACH to
AYRRON
NICOLE
KING.
NOTICE
OF
HEARING
ON
CHANGE OF NAME.
Applicant hereby
glvtl no11ce to ell
lnltrtelod ptrtono
end to 1het the
opplloent hat ftled en
Appllcellon
lor
Chllnge of Neme In tilt
Court ol
operating-....... Probato
Melgt County, Ohio,
Bald Ill being:
req-tlng the chtnge
arwnewtl ofahliol1 ol neme ol AYRRON
NICHOLl! LIACH to
Cird of Thanka AYRRON
NICOLE
KING. Tht htllrtng on
the eppiiOIIIon wlh be
Tbe Community ; held the 23 dey ol
of Christ Churdt . Navember, 2001, 11
wishes 1o thank
1:30 o'clock p .m. In
everyone who.
tho Probate Court of
helped In any way Mllfll
County.
Aynon Nlcholo L.ech
with our auction
31!80 King Ridge Rd
on Sept 29th,
Pomeroy, OH 41718
A special
(10) 23

-JorroGUJ.nd-

7

auctioneer Dan

Buy, Sell or Trade
_l.,•)'

Jean for lhelr

'

'

'

.; In lilt ·;
1

I

CLASSIFIEDSI·
.

'

�..

TUe•d•y, Oct 23, 2001
;•

PORIIN'Oy, Mlddlllport, Ohio

1lle Dally Sentinel• hge B 5

A'LLEYOOP

NJ:A Crouword Puule
PIIILLII'

ACROII 311-,_

ALOB1I

Can Ut For All Your Lawn
And

•Niwllomle
•Gnget
•Canlilllll
Filma t lltg
Slop l Com!*•
FREE esTIMATES

I

· GoodDnlel

DREHEL'S

..

~

E\ILHI'HISI"

.3D

..........

Ge.Dual
. Coatractm,

,......
......-.

C011S IFl:iC IklN

......

-..... ··-9p '!!

'

•

~.:'!:!·

......,.

.....

'

.....

Tire Barn

UtUitlea

NewHomu

Owner
Charles R. Dlii

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs Couaty Falrgrouacb
Arrival:
SopL l9 &amp; Oct. 20, :ZOOl
.
10:00 a.m. • 4:00p.m.
Release:
April :r7,lOOl
A roe of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late

removal, or aoytlme ace- Is waated to
fal'1f01lacb otber thaa stated dalll.
BuUdlngspo~ce Is nnt come lint serve.
laslde Storage: $4.00M
Open Space: $2.01W
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

Cll_,

........
.•.1....,.........
CIUCIIE
-.~.~

• Nearly 2000

..

FIR'""'" ilifonoulliofl, com• to ....,. chureh 1ih.
' Suoday 9:30School;
10:30.
Su~ay Eve. 7:00 &amp;
Eve. 7:00
MITH fULL GOSP.L

llOU'U

CHILD
Advertise
CARE
In this space SERVICE"'
uchlchn
hourcae w.1c a ••
ol al agn.
for$25 per
l.OctiMd In PonteiO/'f.
for more Uomdlo • ~
month
(7&lt;111) 992·!1827

BUILDIRIINC.
Now a- •Vlarl
Sldlq • Now Guopo
• Replace•••
Wlaclowo•aAddltlolll •lloollootl

Melga County.
Dump Truck Dellvefy.
Meigs and Mason
County

C!W"I'"IIIIIIIIISIIIIIIII. :
; FREE ESTIMATES

Bob Ball

1-740·992-6142
or

. 740-992-7599 .

1·877·604·7350

,(NO SUNDAY CALLS) .

WICit'l ·•

IWJLDlG aad
IXC.\VATING
ottaullnll oLirnealoi 11
oQIIVilo Sind •Topaol
of'lll Dirt ollulch

Hill.

AU Mallei Tractor"
Equlpmeat l'artll
Fadoey Anlhorlsed
CMe-IHParts

Dealen

•

'' '

~

24'120'

•

992-4119
1-800-291-5600
,,
Villt Our Sbow.- OD State Route 33
6 MU.. North Of Pomeroy, Oblo, At Cowsiy Rood 11

Vila I M-I'W'Ii

WVIO:IJ477

&amp;81-8321

'

.ALUEL

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service
· "Ahead In Service"

.Cellular

Rocky R Hupp Agent
Box I R9
r.liddl£ ptu1 Ohm 4 1J '61)

••

•

.1 tfATf
lfiHG A I)NA

•

•

•.

0

•

.,.,.....,._._
.
;

'"

•

0, .
-~·

M0LfG&amp;JLf--Tt¥1rf'6
10 MlJGtf TO

-

..

~tM~Miflf/

..

HORN LOSER

~....o..J &lt;./&gt;.t-1 \llf.'{ Ui.L
:50Vi:.lf'.l~

::0

fi.OT, (.fi.ILI?

I

740-742-3411

Boat Tralllo;a,
. Utility Trllllra,
C.rlllu...W,
Anything Melli

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room ·ddtllon• a

9711eech st. .
middleport, OH ~

algiHid
by 10 of
or mora
mambero
the
aoclety who ora
reoldanta of Malgo
County, et leut 7
daye before the
annual alectlon of
dlractora Ia held.

CONSTf1UCTION
•NawHomM
• Siding
• Rooftng
• Remocllilng

•Oiflllll ·
• Addttlona

•Deoke

• Home Rejoatra

Fore'

E~.llill d le ,,

740 -9!~2 - 1101

or 992-27:13

Spaolallzlng In
roofing. plumbing,
drywall,

. remodeling,
~

•dclltll!lll • cltokl

F'"elllmatn
10 yra. exparllnca
l In the bullneu'
AefeNIICII

IVIIIable. Owner:
· Tarry Lltmm

Howardl.
· Wrlteset
Roofing-Home
Malritenanc•
GuHers· Down
· Spout
FI'H EtUm""

949-1405
591·5011
~·

r-=:":"~::::;::-~

TRI - COUOTY
TRIIOSPORT

1LL BE

TliERE AS
SOON AS

I FEED

THE D06 ..

•

Totally dedicate yountlf to
your ~n~eavors and you could
be luckier than usual in the

CONSTR
N:
PROJECT?

year ahead in finalizing matten to your satisfaction. They

eould yield a hefly profit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .

HELP

22) -- Take upon younelf today any mat ten that aren't beina handled properly, instead
of waiting around for those

who are in c:h~rge to figure
things out. Scorpio, treat
younelf to a birthday sift.
Send for your Aotro.Gnph
predictiOn&amp; (or the year ahead
by maiUns $2 and SASE to
Attto·Gnph, c/o thio newt·
popet. P.O . Box I67, WicklUTe, OH 44092-0167. Be
sure to state your Zodiac lilft.
SAG ITTAR.IUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) ··Your jud(ltllent Is
quite keen today, &amp;ecouoe you
look 11 thlnp from a no-nonsense penpecrive. You can realistically assess how thinp ·
ohould be handled.
CAPRICORN (Ok 22Jan. I9).•• Give priority today
to work or tasks thac can h
rewardina to you materially.
You have what it takes to

'1:1 N.
'IDfll- "~

Hi.._.." "'
•• Dry

Snodgrass' Upholstery
"HdpilfYootoR«&lt;fffYowiiOODIO'"t"

Pomeroy, 0/olo
RICint, Oillo

I

\
'o

30Diraelor

se o.m-

""""
-.

• 1'11."1'•

S1 ........
17 GMtura
21Betofklala
.1

IIUcll
......
51lllldlld
- - 10 Give e "0"
Euwwtlon
to
.... . _ 81 Humorlll
Wltllcluu
Giorgi

1111-.g

t"a....i
___..
1 0 - . ...
14 1111 de11 12124 end
12111
20 !xtlnct bird
22 Tex....
......
Ullin
24 . . . . ol

32
:a,,
......,

Ioiiar

34Jipanm
35

DOWN

c•e•w

M

,.. . .

-line

43 Slb'o Ohllcl
44 IJinoy
cc&amp;cdon
411 .... ldn
&gt;M lV'a Ricky
41110ct1

... WlooiNd
tblmovtee
undone
21 TN1
10 Solly

311~·­

-· -

loulldlng

37=·

21 Author

31 Home, in

12 VW OIIIIW

Cornlllo-

::-

ltdn.w

21"Nope"

a -- moc1e

14 Old
...-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula C.rt~J~o.

Col I ill' Clplwr 01)111ogolllll.,.- fnlm qualllionl by .......

Eaoh-lnltlt...,.,.._tor_.

poopil,j&gt;Uiond .......

Todly's due: 0 equiiM Y

'RWO

A' • . VHCD

ZIIISIO'P
-

HP

TZO

TA

VBPROI.IHOEDP.'

MOTIMO

PBZRIDBZB

' z 0 " 'til " p v

HP

TZCD

FHZ

~=·~~·:;:~·:::;~·~·~o

II

Is I I _ ;

I I' I

Wedne1day, Oct 24, 20\H

r------,
r-=~---··--------,
"'··~
~

814*22112

27

21

7-

~

I
I' I I e

I I 'I I

I I

'lllrthda.Y'

140-992-5232

~~, 11, 23, 2001

24

57 No;llot

.........

DliiCUIII

33795 HU..rulRd.

uaahwt

n .......

e

' -¥i#-~--·

Air Conditioning : Rafrlgeratlon
$49 Service gaa, fuel on, and
heat pumpa for winter

~CAN

23 Aclor

-

,......,.

se u...-

the dummy.
W0 P R E ~ : :~,
If East leads a third
My uncle invented a robot that
spade, ruff in hand L.=·~:·::;:~·~·:;:~, would do alllhe housework, but
and discard another r
he couldn't sell it. He found out it
ANIMAL
heart
from
the
MA R D E 1
wouldn'tcJo •••••••,
CRUELT't'!
dummy.
Draw
Complolo tho chuckle quolod
.
&lt;
bv filling In lhe misiJng words
bl
k
h
trumps, un oc t e
· ~ou do..lop from \!'P No. 3 bolow.
clubs, cash the heart
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS t
ace, ruff a heart in the
VI IN THESE SQUARES
dummy, :md run the
~;;=~·~~~~~~~=*=~~=*==*==~=:
clubs. Alternatively, if
g~fc:~~~~ER LETTERS TO
East shifts to the heart
.__ __. king, win with the
SClAM-LETS ANSWERS
ace, draw trumps, unPalate • Lathe • Waltz • Mohair· ATE IT
block the clubs, and
l recently attended a wedding party. The bride and
overtake the diamond groom were vegetarians, so whoever caught the bousix with du.m my's quet A:rE ITI
seven to gain access to
the clubs.
~ tL.

ANIMAL
CRUELlY!

e-~

Umntonel
Senl«&lt; 01-'1
llutUple lMI

~".:r..J•gulorly ~-Storage

candldiiH who have
mat the filing
raqulramentl will be
eligible tor election
lldl-.

WIM'S
CONSTRUatON

hill

_,..,.

caar-

·::-

Ih.tr-T_,.I-,1-.,Irrz-lrl
S I
I -ri-TI-iI

1

' i

·'

SMITH'S

21

trick two! Instead,
discard a heart from

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

Dlractora ri.r the ·-nglQ-.o
• Vlnjlltdlng 1 Pointing
Melga ·
county
Agricultural Society • P - Md Poo:oh Doob
Free Elllilriates
will be held at tha
Coon
Huntero V. C. YOUNG Ill
building at the lair
992·6215
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grounda, on Monday, ·
November 1, 200 1 • ._,_.....,,...._ __.
The poll Willie open
from 1:00 p.m. to I
p.m. on Illation day.
The ellollon ahall
1111 by bellot. lhllota
muat be marked with
an •x• oppoalle the
., It Will not !Ill
oountld. Till oaatlng
or VOila lor dlraotora
by prox111 Ia not to
be pennlltad.
Only . realdanta of
Malga
CQunty
holding memberehlp
llakell, lor at 1-111
cllye belora the data
oletectlon, may vote.
Membllra of the
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their candidacy for
the omae of Dtroctor
of the Society by
filing with tha
Saooltal)', Deb b le
Wotao.n, · .42415
Woocloo Rd., Cllofvllll,
Ohio 411723; 1 petition

HAVE '(OU 'T'A~C:.IIIG
ALONG.!

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Of VIIUitlon for I pluea of voting
continuing period or theraln, on the lth
time.
·
doy of November,
The POIII for Uld 2!)01' the qu..uon
:olectlon will open 11 litvylng a tax, In
8:30 o'clock A.M. and ••- or the Wtl mill
romoln opan until llmltallon, lor the
;7:30 o'clock P.M. of benefit of 8yracuoa
NOTICE 11 haroby uldday.
vtllago for the
glvon
thet
In
purpon of current
punu•nce of 1 By order or the Board expe-.
Raaolullon of the of Etectlonl', of Mllga . 8lld tu being:
Boord of County · County, Ohio.
a raplaoement of a
Commlealonera of
tax or 1 mill at a rata
the County of Melgo, D1t1d September 7, nohxwldlng 1 (one)
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 2001.
milia lor each ona
peaoed on tha 111
dollar of valuation,
clay o1 Auguat, 2001, John N.lhll
whloh omounllto tan
there
will
be Cholr1111n
. cenll (10.10) lor NOh
aubmiiiiCito e vote of
one hundred dollera
tha people o1 oald Rill D. Smith
of valuation lor five
(l)yura.
oubdlvlaton 11 a Director
The Polla lor uld
GENERAL' ELECTION
to be held In the (10) •• 18, 23, 30, 2001 otectlon Will open at
1:30 o'clock A.M. and
County of Melgo, 4tc
Ohio, at the regular --=--:-::-~--- remain open until
placll or voting
Public Nollc:a
7:30 o'olook P.M. of
Midday.
therein, on the 8th
doy of November,
NOTICE DF
By onter.or the Boord
2001, the queatlon of . ELECTION ON TAX
levying I tax, In LEVY IN EXCESS OF of Etectlona, ol Mllge
County, Ohio.
exceaa of the tan mill
THE TEN MILL
limitation, for the
LIMITAnON
Datld September 7,
benefit of Melgo
Ravllld COCII,
2001.
County for the llectlono 3501.11(G),
pur poI e
0 I
5705.11,5705.21
John N.lhll
MalnteMnce, copltal
conotrucllon, and
NOnCE Ia haraby Chairman
I hot
In
operation of Clrllton glvan
School and Melgo purauance of e Rita D. Smith
lnduatrlel Workohop llaoolutlon of the Director
lor peraono with VIllage Council of the
Mantel Retardellon Vllloga of Syrocuae, (10) •• 18, 23, 30,
and Developmental Syrocuoa, Ohio, 2001
Dlubllltleo.
poooad on tho 2nd 4tc
Said tlx being:
day ol Auguot, 2001,
on oddlllonol tax of there
will
be
Public Notlc:a
' 1.8 milia at 1 role not oubmlttad to 1 vole
exceeding 1.1 mlllo of the po10ple ol oold
lor each 0111 dollor ol oubdlvlolon at a
PUBUCNOnCE
voluotlon, which GENERAL ELECTION
1mount1 to olrtten to bt held In the
.T he IMIIel . . .on
canto (10.18) for each Village of Syrocuu, of thit Board or

.

••

Job
41 ......,...

In five diamonds,
XOO.I.'- .IOROI
WHCCVTIO
you have 11 tricks via
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I think ora've taken lhe fun out or
, one, he.ar~. flv11,. .dia.. , · - - by lntllllng lhlt evarybodr muat be a Champion or a
. " ~;;:-H. Hll8 Brown
monds and five clubs.
But after the ace-king
TIAU&amp;ILT C,~'O J\'- J _ /) 'C ~Q.a WOlD
of clutis have been
PUZILII p\!,jl J.'QU ~.. 'b P(/"v IAMI
,
IIIItH lor ClAY I. POLLAN
unblocked, how do
you get into the 0 IIAiorrange Ionon of iho
dummy? That will be
four ai:rambled -d• b.
low
10 '""" four llmplo - •·
no problem if, the
trumps split 2-2.
H 0 D WA
However, what if diamonds are the more .
. . . , .
likely 3-11 Then ~~~~~~~_.
there's only one soluYE NSW
tion. Do not ruff at hsr--lr-,1'1:'~

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QUA;LITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

TIUIIIPIIIII

NO'nCE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY It EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
Rovllld Code,
Sectlona 3501 .11(G),
1701.11,1701.28 .

••

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Nlnll

41 liT giilll

- ....

28 City Ofllclll

Straight to the deal
today. Look only at
the North-South
hands . How would
you try to make five
diamonds! West leads
a spade, East winning
with the king and
continuing with the
ace.
After you ·have decided upon your line
of play, study all 52
cards and detennine if
it works. If not, do
you see how to get
home!
The modem bidding is a nightmare
for a columnist! Over
South's takeout double, West's pre-emptive jump to three
spades just promised
four trumps and fewer
than nine points .
However, it's not often done with a perfect Yarborough (no
card above a nine) .
After East bid game,
South had to double
again with his rockcrusher. Luckily,
though, North didn't
pass, because East
would surely have
guessed the hearts
coriecdy to make his
contr:act. North's four
no~trump showed
length in two u.nbid

• Worka on Sundays.

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(

complete the assignments and
cash in on the returns.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb,
19) -~ Should atl endeavor in
which you're presently i n~
valved be in dire need of an
effective leader, step forw.ud
and take the reins. You're the
person who can tix this lack.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Victories in nvcral areas of
your life are likely today. but
not so much from what you
do , but from what othen do
for you. They're merely reciprocating your past 100d
deedl.
ARIES (Man:b 21 · April I9)
-~ Friend• and auociatea will
welcome your companioruhip
today, because there it an air
of otabiliry about you. You
know when to be llaht ond
when to be aertous about
tbinp.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20) •• Be llert for 1 profitable
development today that up
until now ntight not have
been available to you . It involves an inve1tment that
could have long~tenn benefits
attached to it.
GEMINI (May ZI-June ZO)

~~ A situation similar to one
you handled successfully in
the past might pop up again
today. T he facton involved
haven't changed; do exactJy
what you did previously.
CANCER Uune 2I -July
22) •• People who know you
and Jike you will bend over
backward to help you today if
they know you can use some
assistance. Don"t hold back
from accepting their aid.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) •.
Any type of p:artnenhip arnnaement or the forming of a
team that is made today wiU
work out berter than you can
anticipate at this time. Try to

finalize detaill now.
VIRGO (AuJ. 23-Sept. 22)
•• Step boldly ond meet ony
challenge• head-on inste•d
tryinr to dodae them. Any
type of oppoolrlon you encounter today will awaken
your stron1er qualities and '
your retolve to win.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0tt. 23) •
• It takes more energy to find
something to do than it does
ro follow existinJ plans. SiB"
up for a1 many activities you
can today; you're up to han ..
dling a fullochedule .

or

I'

�' - 8 I •'The O.UV Sentinel

Tul ldlly, Oct. 23, 2001

BELIEVERS IN CLEVELAND

NASCAR

Fans
star6ng to get ex:dted ~o~plaints at 'Dega J
abold the Brow11s' resurgence ~~~~~~~~~~~~
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The Cleveland
Browns didn't holler, hug or exchange
high-fives after beating the defending
Super Bowl champions. Just a few handshakes and pats on the back were seen in
a subdued locker room.
.
Outside, however, Cleveland's party was
starting to roll.
Browns fans celebrated a victory six
yean in the making by dancing in rain
puddles, doing anti-Art Modell chants
and hugging policemen.
·With' a 24-1 4 win over the Baltimore
Ravens on Sunday. the·Browns did much
more than purge a painful part of their
past or' show they can play with anyone.
They put Cleveland back on the NFL
map.
"This was a huge step for us:• quarterback Tim Couch said. "It's a great thing
to 6nally have things turned around.
Now we've just got to keep it going."
The Browns (4-2) beat the reeling
Ravens (3-3) at their own game on Sunday.
Cleveland's underrated defense outplayed and outhit Baltimore's more touted unit. The Browns relentlessly swarmed
to the ball and torned the game on a
fumble when Ravens ,quarterback Elvi!
Grbac was sacked and knocked out of the
game in the third quarter. .
On offense, the Browns . did just
enough. Despite losing guard Ross Verba
with a concussion, Cleveland's offensive .
line opened some. holes and did a better
job 'protecting Couch, who played with
poise.
And when Cleveland decid-

I

'

"Thq'rt a better team than wt Minnesota or this u tlie way we did in
are rinht now. If the plavo"S college. We haven't encountered any of
~
I W'
that.
started today, Wt wouldII 't
"Their willingness to say whatever you
deserve io be there. The Browns guys (coaches) think will give us the best
would. "
·~hance to win ~ given us the best

chance to win."
, AIMn TE Shllnnon Slwpe
Before beating llaltimore, safety Percy
Ellsworth said the Browns still needed a
ed to go after Baltimore's throat, the de6ning win to get respect. Now, they've
Browns ~ru~de the big plays- converting got one.
a fourth-and-2 at midfield and getting
"I think after this victory I can say we
TD passes from Couch in under two "-bave a pretty good lf"'D:' Ellsworth said.
nunutes. .
.
l;4vii handed out i!farly a dozen games
The tmpremve all-around effort balls on Monday for ihe win over Baltishocked every~&gt;ne but the _Browns, who more and said he tas proud of the
have grown tued of hearmg how ba.;l Browns' ability to lxllnce back after a
they've been for more than two yean.
disappointing 10-point loss to Cincinnati
"Hey, we took •it to a good f~tball a week ago.
team," defensive end Keith McKenzie
Davis was disgusted with the Browns'
said. "I don't care if people want to give performance against the Bengals, and
us ~pee~ now or not. We're not listening. made it clear to his playen during pracWere gomg to play hard. and as long as rice last week. that he wouldn't tolerate
we do that, I think we can beat anybody." another like it.
That's what first-year coach Butch
"Coach Davis was hot, he was rtt1d
Davis has been telling the Browns for most of the week;' Ellsworth said. "I'm
months.
sure his family didn't have much fun with
From the moment he was hired in Jan- him, because he wasn't fun for w at prac~
uary to replace Chris Palmer, Davis asked lice. He wanted an answer for Cincinnati.
his playen to forget about going 5-27 the He wanted to show people we're a legitpast two . seaso~, He t_old them t~ think imate, good team."
and act like wmners, and he prorrused to
The Ravens believe it, too.
someday get them a Super Bowl ring like
"They're a better team than we are
the two he. has, .
right now," tight end Shannon Sharpe
They beheve him.
said Sunday, "If the playoffi started today,
"They're willing to be coached and we wouldn't deserve to be there. The
they're willing to listen," Davis said. "We Browns would."
?aven't had one ~y come in and .say,
Playoffi? Believe that?
Well, coach, thiS ts the way we did 1t at .

rn:o

ELVIS HAS LEFT
TME GAME- Cleveland
Browns lineman
Greg Spires (96)
and linebacker
Jamlr Miller (95) force ~
fumble on a sack of
Baltimore Ravens quarterback Elvis Grbac (18)
In the third quarter Sunday.
The Dawgs' defense, which
knocked Grbac
out of the geme, has been a
key In the
Browns' return to
prominence. (AP)

.

Bengals experiencing turmoil_after loss
CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
Coach Dick LeBeau lectured
about outlook. Running
back Corey Dillon fumed
over criticism for taking a
breather when the game was
out of reach. The kicker
wondered if he still had a job.
The Cincinnati Bengals
were a little edgy Monday, a
day after their worst loss of
the season.
By losing 24-0 to the
Chicago Bears, the Bengals
(3-3) provided evidence that
they're not really all that
much better than their woeful predecessors.
One of the NFL's biggest
surprises in September is fading like the leaves. The Bengals have lost · three of their
last four games, getting
pushed around in the process.
LeBeau tried to push the
. negatives aside Monday. His
normally low-key ney;s conference started with a statement about optimism and
quickly developed an edge.
"! stood here a year ago
without a win," LeBeau said,
referring to an 0-6 start.
"Now, I stand here in front of
you with three wins and a
chance to go to 13. That's an
opportunity. I was disappointed with the way we
played. I am not discouraged
about where we are:•
The Bengals are nearing
the end of their honeymoon
with fans, who had started to
·believe this season might
actually be different from 'the
last to. The NFL's worst team.
since 1991 opened 2-0,
including an upset of Balti-

"I was disappointed

with the way we played.
I am not
discouraged about
where we are."

more.
often does when he's tired.
The 2-0 start seems to have
"If I need a (rest), I'm
gotten more than just the going to come out," Dillon
fans' attention.
·
said. "We ran four pass plays
· "Teams don't prepare for us in a row. What's the problem?
like they prepared for the old There isn't a problem periBengals," offensive tackle od."
'
WiUie Anderson said MonDillon was the intended
day. "That's the biggest chal- receiver on the 6rst of the
lenge:Teams are going to give four incompletions. Kitna
us their best. Chicago gave us said their animated discussion
their best. Teams are prepar- had nothing to do with Oiling for us."
,
Jon taking himself out after
The Bengals looked totally the play.
unprepared for what hap"He does that often," Kitna
pened to them Sunday.
said. "He has a good feel for
The Bears came into the his body. That had nothing to
game averaging only 3.1 do with it. We just had some
yards per run, second-worst miscommunication on that
in the NFL. Then Anthony play. We're talking about
Thomas set a Bean rookie something that had no bearrushing record with 188, and ing on the game."
Chicago ran for 203 yards
At that point, the only
overall - an average of 6.3 question was whether the
per carry.
Bengals would avoid a
The ;Bengals' offense was shutout. The Bears wound up
just as dreadful as their getting their first since 1993.
def~nse. Dillqn had only 30
The Bengals had two other
yards on 16 carries, and came chances to score, but Kitna
out of the game near the end threw an interception at the
of a fourth-quarter drive that 6-yard line and Neil Rackers
ended with Jon Kitna throw- missed a 39-yard field goal
ing (our incompletions from attempt.
The miss left Rackers only
the 2-yard line. Dillon later
exchanged words with Kitna. 6-of-12 this season, with six
Dillon angrily defended misses in his last nine
himself Monday, saying he . attempts. LeBeau said Moncame out of the game as he day that the club might bring

Daytom after angry driven complained conditions at those
tracks are actually more dangerous.
Driven and crew chie6 stormed the NASCAR hauler Sunday following the EA Sports 500, which was marred by a wild
16-car wreck on the last lap in which Bobby Labonte's car
ended up on its roof.
·
NASCAR spokesman Jiq)
Hunter said Monday the sane;
tioning body will use "all thF
resources we can muster" to
address the driven' concerns.
That will include using its.
new research and develoP:,
ment center in Conover, N. Q
We ·re just as anxious ~
they are," Hunter said.
.
He added, however, that
NASCAR has been trying ~
solve the problem of keeping
speeds down without hurtiitg
competition at Talladega an~
Daytona since the tracb.
opened in 1%9 and 195,9,
respectively.
:,
"We have to find a solution at both tracks, but we'll look 'at
Daytona tint because we race there 6nt," he said.
:
The 2002 season will open in February with .the Dayton)
500, a race in which Dale Earnhardt was killed last February ill
a final-lap crash.
•!
Earlier in that race, a multicar wreck also raised questioru
about the aerodynaritic rules at the two 'longest and fastest
tracks, which reduce speeds but also keep can closer together&gt;
None of the drivers was injured in Sunday's wreck, but
of those involved- and some who weren't- complained bit:"
terly to NASCAR about the rules.
"It ain't the drivers, it's NASCAR," Sterling Marlin sai&lt;\
'.'You run it all day, you're going to wreck. Every driver has
been telling them in the NASCAR trailer that it's going tq
happen:·
:
The rules at Talladega and Daytona require the use of carbu!
retor restrictor plates that limit honepower to keep can unde,t
200 mph, presumably creating safer racing. But the power-sap•
ping plates also cause cars to bunch up, which can lead to mo~
crashes.
• !.
In recent yean, most of the events at the big tracks have fea!
lured exciting racing in which many of the 43 starten remain
tightly packed throughout, often running three- and four: ·
wide.
Ward Burton, who narrowly avoided Sunday's crash, said
there's not much a driver can do except hope for the best. ·
"With what was going on in front of me, I knew it was going
to happen," he said of the wreck. "What do I do? I can't back
off. I just sit there and see if I get through it or not."
•.
Driven were especially upset because the aerodynamic rul~
at Talladega remain virtually un~hanged from the April rae~
there, despite an August test in which 19 .teams took part in ad
effort to make chaqges.
"We learned a lot but we couldn't reach a consensus:• Hunter
explained.
The next race at Talladega is in April. The Winston Cup can
race twice at Talladega and Daytona .every year.
The next step, Hunter said, is to sit down with driven and
crew chiefs and all of NASCAR's technical experts.
_
"We're going to have some discussions and get all their
input:' Hunter said. "Then we're going to whittle it down tQ
three or four things that make sense across the board and
schedule some tests and try those things."
·. ,
"We undentand the frustrations of the driven and reams·.
We're very sensitive to it. There's a balance ·out there som4
where and we're determined to 6nd it."
..;
11

i·

many

Eastern, Meigs, Southern, School
Odober23-31,
1

'

'

Nuggets acquire William~

in another kicker to audition
this week.
DENVER (AP) -. The
"We're looking into that Denver Nuggets acquired
possibility," he said.
Scott Williams and a future
He also said other lineup first-round draft choice from
changes could result after the Milwaukee in a. three-team
coaching staff analyzes the trade with Houston on Monlatest loss.
night.
"The last I looked, it was day
The Nuggets sent center
. . and
called professional football," AI eksan da r R adOJeVIc
LeBeau said. "That means Kevin Willis to Milwaukel\.
you are compensated for your Willis was then traded to
ability to play football, to Houston in exchange for the
perform ~n the football field. Rockets' second-round draft
, It d~es not say that you wtll pick in 2002.
contmue to be compensated
The Bucks had exercised a
if you do not (lerform."
· $4.65 million, one-year option

••
on Williams in June. The 6+
foot-10 Williams averaged 6.]
points and 5.5 rebounds in 64
. games last season, his second
with Milwaukee.
..
Williams scored 11 points tQ
the Bucks' 107-100 win over
,
·Denver on Monday night. .•lThe Nuggets acquired Will~
and Radojevic from TorontQ
on Jan. 12. Willis averaged 9.:6
points and 7.2 rebounds in •U.
games with Denver.
·;
Radojevic sat out last season .
after back surgery.

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