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                  <text>Page 10

The Daily Sentinel

Read all of your area local happenings on 2

Mondllf, Dece111ber J, JIG I

Auto-matica! Gramaticas both make winning kicks in OT
Pabluls n, Jets 16

'

OAKLAND, Dli£ (AP) - Bill Gramatica flipped out ali-.
matching his older brother's feat.
EAST RUTHERFORD. NJ. (AP) -Adam Vinatieri kickrd a
Granutica kicked a 36-yanl field goal with 7:31 left in overtime
28-yard field goal \vith 6:~ left, and New England snapped New
and the Arizona Cardinals upset the Oakland Raiden 34-31 SunYork's four-game winning streak, tightening the AFC East standdoy.
· ings
Earlier in the day, his brother,
It · was the seventh win in nine games for New England [7-5)
Martin, made a 21-yard kick in
.
d 1:
since :in early-reason loss to the Jets (7-4).
ovemme to sen ampa Bay past
Ratl)'l'ng from a 13-0 halftime deficit, the Patriots won behind the
Cincinnati 16-13.
Arizona (S- 6) won its third efficiency of quarterback Tom Brady, who picked apart the Jets' soft
straight. Gramatica celebrated his zone, and a revitalized defense.
fourth field goal of the day with a
Brady found David Patten on three passes for 44 yards to set up
somersault.
the winning field goal.
The Raiders (8-3) had won 10
straight regUlar-season games at home. Jerry R.ice caught a 2-yard
CLEVELAND (AP) - Steve McNair threw two of his three
1D pass on fourth down with 12 seconds left in regulation to tie touchdown passes to Derrick Mason before leaving with an injured
it.
elbow, and Tennessee kept its slim postseason hopes alive by defeatDavid Dunn fumbled a punt on the Oakland 25, setting up Gra- ing Cleveland.
,
matica's game-winning kick.
The Titans (5-6) hadn't looked like a team just two years removed
from a Super Bowl berth for most of the season before beating the
CINGINNATI (AP) - John L;~h'l'o-;ed Corey Dillon to Browns (6-S) ·
fumble at the Cincinnati 3, leading to Martin Gramatica's 21-yard
The Browns, now 0-5 against the Titans since returning to the
fitld SoaJ in overtime for Tampa Bay.
league, wanted to show they were a playoff-caliber squad and even
The Buccaneer.; (6-5) ·won consecutive games for the first time chaUenged the Titans during warmups when the teanlS got into a
this·season. Gramatica 's kick came 5:06 into overtime.
shoving match at midfield. .
Cincinnati (4-7) rallied for 10 poinl5 in the last 4:29 of regulation.
McNair didn't play most of the second quarter after bruising his
Dillon caught a 6-yard touchdown pass from Jon Kitna that tied it lett elbow. He sat most of the fourth period and finished 11-of-17
. with 8 seconds lett in regulation, wrestling through tacklers Dexter for 244 yards.
Jackson and Jamie Duncan to reach the goal line.
I],
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - ·joe Hom, denied a touchdown in
CHICAGO (AP)- Leon Johnson scored on a 1-yard run with the fint quarter when he coUided with an official, caught a 17-yard
5:34 left, and Chicago held off winless Detroit when Jason Hanson scoring pass from Aaron Brook&lt; with I :31 remaining, giving New
missed a 40-yard field goal with 21 seconds left. ·
Orleans the victory over Carolina.
It was the third miss of the day for the normally reliable Hanson,
The Saints (6-5) had to rally despite holding the Panthers (1-11)
who had made 13 of 16 field goals entering the game.
to 150 yards in offense.
Chicago (9-2) clinched il5 first wintting season since !995 by ralThe Panthers, losers of 11 straight after a season-opening victory,
lying against the Lions (0-11), who lost starting quarterback Char- scored 10 straight points to take a 23-20 lead on John Kasay's 51lie Bitch -possibly for the season- to a shoulder injury.
yard field goal with 2:40 remaining.

NFL
ROUNDUP

Titans 31, 8nJVms IS ·

Bua:aneeas 16, Bennis I 3, or

BealS

Lions 10

Steeleas 21, Vilcinft 16 .

PITTSBURGH (AP) -Troy ~~:ro had all but disappeared from Pittsburgh's offense, re-emerged with a 12-yard seering run and a big special-teams play, and the Steelers held off Minnesota.
The Steelen, 9-2 for the .first time since !983, were cruising with
a 21-J lead and Vikings quarterback Daunte Culpepper out of the
gap~e with a sore left knee early in thefourth quarter. ·
Backup Todd Bouman threw two TD passes, and Vikings (4-1)
recovered a fumble inside the Pittsburgh 10 with 2:13 remaining.
But on fourth-and-goal from the 24, Bowman overthrew Randy
Moss in doubl~ coverage in the end zone.

.'

Cowban 20, Reclskins 14
Md

LANDOVER.,
tAP) - Emmitt Smith got his first touchdoWn of the season, Quincy Carter got the first touchdown pass of
his career, and DaUas beat Washington for the ninth straight time.
The Cowboys (3-8) snapped a four-game losing streak and ended
a fiVb.game winning string by Washington (S-6).
·
Smith's 5-yard touchdown run in the lint quarter started the
scoring, and rookie Carter's 64-yanl pass to Raghib Ismail, who beat
Pro Bowl cornerback Champ Bailey down the riglit sideline, was
the big play in the fourth quarter for the Cowboys.

Dolphins 21, Bnnos 10

MIAMI (AP) - Kenny Mixon returned his first NFL interception 56 yanls for the go-ahead score, and a fumble on the ensuing
kickoff set up another touchdown to help Miami rally past Denver.
The Dolphins came from behind in the final period to win for
the fifth time this season, including four of their past six games. They
improved to 8-3 and moved a game ahead of the New York Jets in
the AFC East.
Brian Griese and the Broncos, sputtering again on offense with
an injury-plagued receiVing corps, feU to 6-6.They've never won in
six games at Miami.

Bob Davie's luck with
Fighting Irish runs out
' ,.

SEATTLE (AP).-

R.ian LindeU, who inissed twtce m the final

LindeU was wide right on a 43-yard II')' with 4:25 left in the
· ran
fourth quarter, then was wi de 1eft on a 48-yard attempt as time
•out.
The Seahawks (6-5) received the kickoff in overtime and went
62 yards in 11 plays in 6:23 to position Lindell. for their winning
points.

49els 35, •

SOtJTH BEND, Ind. (AP)Bob Davie stressed character
during his tenure as coach at
Notre Dame. Athletic director
Kevin White was looking for
something more tangible: wins.
White praised Davie for
bringing good snldenl5 and good
people to Notre Dame during
his five years as cooch and for
supporting the players' academic
progress. That wasn't enough,
however.
Davie was fired as coach at
Notre Dame on Sunday, a day
afier the storied fuotbaD program
completed il5 second losing season in three years.
''These are expectations that
he have ofall ofour coaches in all
of our sporo;'White said. "Howe-A!r; ~ also expect and intend
to excti on the field and there,
unfortunately,' our results and
progress have been disappoint-

gami!S three times under Davie,
whose 35-25 record gives him
the third-worst Winning .percentage in Irish history at .583.
"I'm the first one to stand up
here and say that we may not
have won as many games as what
would be expected;' Davie said.
The Irish went 9-2 during the
regular season last year, and Davie
was rewarded with a five-year
contract before an embarrassing
loss to Oregon State in the Fiesta Bowl.The Irish started this season 0-3 for the first time in
school history and finished 5-{,.
White described· giving Davie
a new contract a "misread."
"A year ;go at this time, I
believed that we had turned the
comer under Bob, and that we
were prepared to reclaim our traditional standing · among the
nation's elite coUege football pro. "
grams,"White said. "Today, I can
mg.
The Irish lost six or more no longer say that.

Whars inside

o

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Garrison Hearst ran for 124 yanls
and a touchdown, and Ahmed Plummer had two of San Francisco's
four interceptions, leading the 49en to their first shutout.
During their implausible run to a tie for the NFL's best record at
9-2, the 49en specialized in escaping from trouble.They've already
matched an NFL record with four overtime games, and they had
only one win by more than ·10 points.
But against woeful Buffalo (1 -10), the young 49en pounded the
Bills with mature, dominant performances on both sides of the baD.
Jeff Garcia was 19-of-27 for 189 yards and two TDs, completing ·
his tint nine passes.

residents say
BY TONY M. lEAcH

Packers maul Jaquars, 5

Deaths
·edward A. Rqbinson, 78
Alice V. Wagner, 73
Rorence Wines, 83
Details, 3

Rams 35, Falcons 6

ATLANTA (AP) - . Kurt Warner threw four touchdown passes,
MarshaU Faulk scored three times, including his tOOth career lD,
and St. Louis rebounded to beat Atlanta.
St. Louis (9-2) was coming off a dismal 24-17 home loss to Tampa
Bay on Monday night. The RanlS lost three fumbles, and Warner
was picked off on the final two possessions.
Warner was 17-of-23 for 342 yards, his seventh 300-yard game
this season. Faulk was on the receiving end of three touchdown
passes, the last a 65-yard play that made him the 13th player in NFL
histQry to score 100 touchdowns. He is tied with Franco Harris on
the career list.

NEW HEUPORT - Meigs County commissioners met Monday with Scipio Township Trustees
Monday morning to Inspect the coul)ty's .new heliport in Harrisonville. Pictured are Janet Graham, left, Randy Butcher, Scipio To1!fl'lshlp trustee, Roger Thompso~. Harrisonville firefighter,
Robert Butcher. Scipio Township trliatee, and commissioners Mick Davenport, Jeff Thornton
and Jim Sheets. [Tony M. Leach photo)

Harrisonville heliport complete
BY TONY M. LEACH

"Now, helicopters can
land safely while .also
saving precious time.
The heliport will
really help injured
residents in this part
of the county. "

cult for pilots to find a secure
area in which to pick up
HARRISONVILLE
pa,tients."
Accessing patients in rural
"Whenever
someone
western Meigs County will .
needed to be flown to a hosbe much easier now that
pita!, the helicopter had to
construction on a new heliland in either the road, a
port in Harrisonville has
field, or a spot near Harbeen completed.
ri$onville Elementary, which
Meigs County commisoften alarmed the students,"
Randy Butcher
sioners met Monday with
added Randy Butcher, Scipio
Scipio Township Trustees to
....
h'
inspect tqe heliport that lies sprin~ of 2000, heliports such &gt;Owns 1p trustee.
"Now, helicopters can land
adjacent to Harrisonville Fire as th1s have proven to be
D~partinent.on Ohio 684. . - ~~-r~_!'lely benefi9r.l ,w.'th safely .while also ~Vil)g P.reCommissioner JotT''llhorn7 savmg-li_ve..;a_nd' !rai)Sf"!\t!~g
ton said the concrete heliport mJured mdJv1duals to hosplwas funded through a $8,600 tals in · a timely ' fashion," In thiS part of the county.
"We would like to thank
· grant from the Governor's Thornton said.
both
the commissioners and
Office of Appalachia and
"Prior to the construction
more than $2,000 in match- of the heliport, the western everyone who .was involved
ing local funds.
~ide of the county had no with the heliport's construc"Since the closing ofVeter- specific areas for medical tion for their support."
Also inspecting . the new
ans Memorial Hospital's helicopters to land. The
emergency room in the remote location made it diffiPINM Heliport. ]
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Weath•r
Hlch: 70s, L-: 40s
Details, 3

CLUTCH PERFORMANCE -Arizona's Bill Gramatlca kicks
the winning field goal against Oakland in overtime as holder
Chad Stanley (12) awaits the call Sunday in Oakland. (AP)

OHIO
'Pick 3 (day): 8·2·6

Fall Is a Grand Time on the Trail

I I

:f~~4,(~1!Y)h'la=_71-~ "' ·'•
u.~e S:' ''·"
.....J..,r

Piclt 3 (nlaflt): 0-6-2

Pick 4 (niJht): 9-o-6·4
W.VA.
Dally 3: 6-8-2
DallY 4: 1-2-7-9
Casli 25: 1-9-11-23-24-25

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

'

Index
1 Section - 10 Paps

.,

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

2
6-8
9
2

4
3
3
5,7, 10
3

c 2001 Ohio V11lley Publishing Co.

~~~; t~~~~ ~~~~=d:ni~ _,...,io~ p
·-- e
~::~om

FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT - "If my
people humble themselves and
pray, and seek my face, and
turn from their wicked ways,
then will I hear and forgive
their sin and heal their land.'.'
That's the message of 2
Chronicles 7:14, which will
serve as the basis for a reconciliation prayer service tonight
in Congress. Local pastors also ·
will conduct a community-

wide reconciliation service
this evening at Rejoicing Life
Church.
The National Day of Reconciliation service in the
Capitol Rotunda is closed to
the public.
"This is about the nation
that has pushed God out of its
institutions, homes, and communities coming back to God
and showing God that we are
a nation that honors and

•'
\fv

I' I'OIIIAL BANK

Racine 949-2210
992-6533

'

ATHENS- Dr. Eric Hasemeier of
Athens announced today he will seek
election to the Ohio House of Representatives 92nd District.
The new district includes Athens,
Meigs; and Morgan coun\ies as well
as a western portion of·Washington
County. Hasemeier will be running
as a Democrat in the May 7, 2002
primary election.
La_...,;:
Hasemeier, 47, is the founder and
Haiemeler

'

reveres Him," U.S. Rep. Tom
Delay said in a press release.
"This is the first time that the
leaders of the country have
come together like this in the
last 40 or 50 years."
The doors of Rejoicing Life
Church will open at 5 p.m.,
and the local service is
. planned for 6 p.m. It is sponsored by Middleport Ministerial Association and Meigs
Ministerial Association.

Middleport Church of Christ kids choir will perform a musical at
7 p.m. Sunday at the church's Family Life Center. Pictured are,
first row from left, members Tori Wolfe, Taylor Tucker, Bre Bonnett. Joshua Myers. Emma Perrin, Ben Hood, Garrett Riffle.
Brad Hood, Phillip Morehead; second row, from left, Nicki
Smith, Zach Sheets, Emily Glass, Emily Kinnan, Jess! Meadows, Shellle Bailey, Marissa Snyder, Kerr! YanReeth, Cara Lawless, Amber Hockman; third row, from left, Lindsey Myers, Brit·
tany Frazier, Cassidy Tucker, Justin Myers, Matthew Hosken,
Jacob Riffle, Ryan Jeffers, Chad Bonnett, Megan Dunfee.
Trevor Nichols l.s not pictured. Rochelle lawless and Marie Snyder are the directors. [Contributed photo)

medical director for
On Call Medical
Associates, a health
care organization
that operates clinics
in Athens and Nelsonville.
Hasemeier said in
a press release· that
he is running to
improve the state's
economic develop-

ment efforts in southeastern Ohio.
He also wants to address current
health care issues and find long-term
solutions to the state's funding of
'
education
.
"I can make a difference and will
work hard to see health care, economic development, and school
·funding get properly addressed in the
Ohio · House. We can do better,"
Hasemeier said .
He promises a vigorous campaign

in every t.:ounty.

'
'

Hasemeier is a graduate ofVirginia
Tech and has a masters of business
administration from the University
of South Carolina. He has a doctorate
of osteopathic medicin e from the
University of North Texas.
He was an associate dean of Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine before founding On Call
Medical Associates. Hasemeier and
his wife Cathy have four sons.

To celebrate the one-year anniversary of the Hospital
Front Lobby and Gift Shop renovation.

POINT CLEAR

Cilllfuut ~iA\arraott.
RESORT &amp;
GOLF CLUB

800.544.9933
www. marriotgrand.com

Friday, December 7, 200 1

MEDICAL CENTER

3a00 • 6a00 pm • Main Lobby ancl Gift Shop

Discover the Holzer Difference

Refreshments will

be served.

Special Gift Shop promotions will take place!

·All are invited!

www .holzer.org

For more information, call (740) 446-5056.
I

•

.

Open House

.

.

nl

·Reconc~liation service planned

FROM STAFF REPORTS

'•

.

POMEROY - Two residents told Pomeroy councilors Monday they are fed
up with handbills being
stuck on their windshields.
raise water rates so as to proLisa HiD and Lola Proffitt vide the necessary funding
say the individuals placing for capital improvements and
the advertiseproper maintements on car
nance of the vilLisa Hill and
windows are
water sysLola Proffitt say lage's
damaging the
tem.
vehicle's finish
the individuals
The proposed
and creating a
rate
increase
placing the
trash problem
would generate
with the dis- advertisements on an additional
car windows are $2,750
carded handper
bills.
Both
damaging the
month,
.or
women
$27,500
per
vehicle's finish and
requested the
year, and the
creating a trash
village's curaverage monthly
problem with
rent
ordiwater biD would
nance
on
the discarded
by
increase
advertising
$2.50 and the
handbills.
devices
be
minimum
examined so a
monthly water
possible revision could recti- bill by a Sl.
ty the situation.
Voting against the ordiAfter looking at the cur- nance were Councilmen
rent ordinance, Mayor John Larry Wehrung and Brian
Blaettnar informed Hill and Shank.
Proffitt the ordinance would
Council also approved the
be referred to the ordinance final reading of an ordinance
committee .for possible that would provide additionchanges in the wording and
PIHM- H•lldblllt, J
.
·
'
·'
·

Doctor to ·seek 92nd House District seat

•

.••

the newly revised ordinance
would be presented at council's next meeting.
In other matter.;, council
approved the second reading
of an ordinance that would

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Saints 27, Pallllled'S 23

8.0 0.949.4444
www. rtjgolf com

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

five minutes of regulation, hit a 24-yard field goal with 8:37 left in
overtime to lift Seattle over San Diego.

Ravens 39, Colis 27

BI)LTIMORE (AP) - R.od Woodson set an NFL record with
his I Oth career interception return for a touchdown, going 47 Y,.rds
with 1:34 left to clinch Baltimore's victory over frustrated Peyton
Manning and Indianapolis.
The Ravens (8-4) committed four turnovers, but rallied to win
for the fifth time in six games. In each of those five victories, the
Super .&amp;&gt;wl champions either trailed or were tied entering the
fourth quarter.
The Col15led 27-26 until Elvis Grbac threw a 5-yard touchdown
pass to Qadry Ismail with 13:29left.
Woodson broke a tie with Ken Houston for most career int-.ceptions tor a touchdown. It was the sixth time this season that
Manning threw an interception that was returned for a score.
The Colts (4-'75 lost 'their four straight, their longest losing streak
since 1998.
,
.

.

s,,hawks 13, C1IIIJfJIS 10, or

t •.

1\J

'I

�n..ct.y. Dec. .. 2001

Page Al.

J the Bend

_rhe_n_any_Se_nti_·ne_I_ _ _

s

•

Batterer's pent-up anxiety ernpts in escalating violence

I

DEAR ABBY: First, thank you
for providing years of excellent
advice and comfort to the American people. 1 must, however, take
exception to your response to
"Never Been Hit Before," whose
wife slugged him in the jaw while
he was driving on the freeway.. I am
a psychotherapist. There are some
important things to know about
domestic violence:
The abused husband should
know that the situation will escalate. The type of anger she displayed
is never about the issue. This is
about the release of pent-up anxiety in the abuser. The abuse will
escalate because it takes more and
more anger and violence to get the
abuser to the physical release she
needs. Think of cocaine and how
the "high" keeps demanding larger
and larger doses of the drug, and
you get the picture. That is why we

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

call such people "rageaholics."
The most probable reason the
wife stopped going to anger management classes is that, like most
abusers, she doesn 't WANT to
change. She has what she wants a victim upon whom to focus her
rage in order to get release. That is
why so .many abusers cry and feel
loving toward ·their victims· afterward. They are not remorseful, but
momentarily grateful for the short-

lived end of their own terrible anxiety, most often caused by feeling
insecure and out-of-control about
their own lives. They will use their
victims again and again when the
anxiety returns.
Abuse of this sort is an addiction.
The children are being emotionally harmed every time they see and
hear their father abused. He should
·gather them up and leave, or make
sure that his wife does - without
the children. Neither he . nor his
children are safe. What is to prevent
her from driving her family into
oncoming traffic next time, picking
up a weapon, or in his absence
abusing the children when she
needs to feel in control again?
· The loss of her husband, children
and home might convince her to
give up her addiction. Even then,
however, there are no guarantees.
All we as professionals can do is

Children~

1001 Chrisbnas

stamps now available .

attend to the safety of the rest of
the family. The husband is obviously capable of making changes and
must be urged to do so - not
given the job of being his wife's
therapist by explaining her challenges to her. It co uld trigger the
next outburst of violence.
Please rethink your advice to this
m::in,Abby. He's in a dangerous spot
and must get out. - CYNTHIA
MORROW, PSY.D.
DEAR
DR.
MORROW:
Thank you for your letter, a short)
course, really, on why barterers do
what they do. I received a stack of
mail critical of the advice I gave to
"Never Been Hit Before" - and it
was deserved. Mea culpa. "Never"
needs to seek professional help,
both legal and psychological,
before his wife's outbursts further
traumatize him and their children,
and 1 hope he wastes no time in

Becky
Baer
TIPS

A carton of milk can be purchased in
the school cafeteria as the lunch beverage. Pudding cups that don't require
refrigeration can serve as dessert.
Prepare a safe lunch by keeping everything clean. Wash hands before starting
the preparations. Wash fresh fruits and
vegetables thoroughly before packing.
Clean the lunch bag or box each day.

Kenny Rogers comes to Huntington Civic Aren~
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. The spirit of the holiday season comes alive at the Huntington Civic Arena on Friday,
December 7, 2001 when
Kenny Rogers' "Christmas
From the Heart" arrives at 8
p.m. This is a re-scheduled
date after last year's show was
canceled due to extreme
weather conditions in the
Midwest.
All tickets distributed for last
year's show wiD lie honored at
the show this year. Marshall
University student tickets
· issued last year, however, wiD
not be honored. MU students
wiD need to hive new tickets
issued for this year's show. Students will need to bring their
ID and their old tickets to the
box office in the Joan C.
Edwards Performing Arts
Center to exchange for a new

'CI~ristmas jrom

the Heart' will

arrive in H11ntingto1t Dec. 7, at 8 p.m. ·
Tickets are on sale. now.
ticket this year.
"Christmas
From The
Heart" is a true celebration of
the season. Direct from its run
on Broadway, the show will
warm the hearts of young and
old alike. The New York Times
is hailing it as "A glorious
homespun family delight.
Delicious, warm, loving and
~
"
LUll.

As the curtain rises, Rogers
takes the audience on a musical journey through life in · a
small town - complete with
snowfall - performing such
standards as "The Christma.&lt;
Song," ulet it Snow," and
"White Christmas." A nativity
scene comes to life as the chil-

. . .
.
dren and ch01r JOm Rogers for
hts spe.ctal performance of
"The Chosen One," featuring
standards like "Silent Night,"
"The First Noel" a\ld 'Joy to
the World."
The stage transforms and
Rogers appears as Hank Longley in a special look at a new
Christmas story, "The Toy
Shoppe," written by Rogers
and friends. Here we find a
magical toy shop filled with
toys, which come to life and
celebrate the joy of the holiday season by saving the spirit
of Christmas.
Tickets for the show are on
sale now. Prices are $36, $38,
and $40 plus taX. Half-price

tickets are available for youth
17 and under. Groups of 20 or
more receive a 10 percent discount. Purchase tickets by calling (304) 696-6656 or bY, visiting the ticket · offic~'''in t!Ve
Joan C. Edwards Performirfg
Arts Center on the Marsh:Vl
University campus. J'ic~ets ate
also available by callingJicketmaster at (304) 523-~757 or
by visiting any Ticketmast~r
outlet including select Kroger
and Waves Music Stores.
Tickets can also P.e. 91'&lt;;\ered
online
·
at
www.ticketmaster.com. Ticketmaster.com is now offering'•
"Deal of the Week" for Kenny ·
Rogers "Chr istmas From The
Heart" in Hun tington. TJle
first 20 online ord ers will
receive a free copy of Kenny
Rogers Christmas From T~e
H eart CD.

REEDSVILLE
Olive
Township Trustees regular
meeting, Wed., 6:30 p.m.,
township office on Joppa Rd.
Call 378-6149 to be placed on
agenda.

PAGEVILLE- Scipio TownMIDDLEPORT - Middleport Community Association, ship Trustees to meet 6:30
Tuesday, 8;30 a.m. Riverbend p.m., Wed., Pageville Town
Hall.
Arts Council.

COlUMBUS (AP) - A
·judge fined Buckeye Egg
Farm $25,000 Monday after
·finding the company , guilty
of discharging contaminated
egg wash into a creek near its
central Ohio farm .
. Judge Gregory Frost of
Licking County Common
· Pleas Court also ruled that
the company improperly
released storm water at the
facility on July 25.
: Attorney General Betty
Montgomery filed the contempt charge - the seventh
9f eight charges against the
~ompany- on Aug. 6. Each
violation carried a maximum
f,ne of jail time for the person responsible and a daily
fine of$10,000.
Frost ruled Monday he
would . not jail company
cwner Anton Pohlmann,

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - MiddleTUPPERS PLAINS - Tupport Masonic Lodge 363, 7:30
pers Plains VFW ladies Auxilp.m. Tuesday.
1ary WI'JJ have a potluck dinner
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
at6:15meeting
p.m. preceding
the regat '7 p.m.
on
County Chamber, general ular
membership luncheon, noon
CLYllt
to 1 p.m., Overbrook Center.

#A----•
A

NEW
OcEAN' I ELE~EN
Btorri"'JOeorgo c-....""",..,

::J~"':'':":...,:-:":":"::
011

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IOr rou oa111 ... )

9.99%
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up.to

1

up to

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)Orrouo•nget)

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upto

48 mos.

APR

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to be accurale. If yoo know of an
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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Wesleyan
Holiness Bible Academy of
Point Pleasant to perform at
the Middleport Wesleyan Bible
Church 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.

'

~

l.S 1o1Y U?ETITE. .

••

Downing Childs Insurance Agency
(740) 992-3381

E.!;;~

196 East Second St. • Pomero

Other services

Limited Time Offer!

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

..
Low
9.848.93
9. 703.90
II ; dhlgh: 11,722.96
Jan. 14 , 2000

8.000
L.-:;,...;:,-'--~"'-'

SEPT.

OCT.

7,000

NOV.

DEC.

1.4QD
1.300
1,200

1'1:1.-frornt.129.90

1,100

Record high: 1,527.46
Marcil 24, 2000

SEPT.

OCT.

NOV.

DEC.

3,000
2,500

1,904.90

1'1:1.---

2,000

·1.33

High

Low

1,925.35

1,896.98

1,500

llecord high: 5,048.62
NOV.

DEC.

Heliport

.·LOCAL STOCKS

Col-17.35
OG-13.50
DuPonl - 43.42

Circle meets

1.000

Marcll10,2000

AEP-41 .50
Arch Coai -19 .94
A/Q.Q - 44.37
AmTeci&gt;SBC- 38.07
Ashland Inc.- 42.96
AT&amp;T-17.44
Bank One - 36.80
BLI-9.47
Bob Evans- 22 .61
BorgWamer - 46.26
Champion- 2.70
Charming Shops 4.94
City Holding - 10.69

RACINE - The Racine
American Legion Auxiliary
Unit 602 will hold its Christmas dinner at 6 p.m. Friday at
the Legion Hall. Dinner will
be catered at $6 per plate.
Each member and guest are
asked to bring a $5 exchange
gilt.

RACINE - The Bethany
Dorcas Sonshine Circle will
hold its December meeting
Monday at the church at 7
p.m. Members are to bring
Secret Sister Christmas gifts
to the meeting.
Those without a secret sisPOMEROY Return ter are asked to bring a $5 gift
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, to exchange. Kathryn Hart
Daughters of America, will and Julie Campbell wiD premeet Saturday at the home of sent the program and Ruth
Rae Moore. The business Simpson and Lillian Hayman
meeting and program will wiD serve refreshments. All
begin at noon, followed by a ladies of the community are
Colonial Christmas buffet.
invited.

1,000

Low
1,125.78

Dinner set

Federal Mogul - 1.02
USB-16.80
Gannett- 68.80
General Electric
38.92
GKNLY - 4.35
Harley Davidson
50.98
Kmart-5 .61
Kroger - 25.37
Lands End- 45.30
Ud. - 13.n

NSC-18.93
Oak Hill Financial ;-15.85
OVB-23 .25
BBT-34.49

from Page 1

Peoples- 18.95
Pepsico - 48.78
Premier- 8.62
Rockwolt - 16.82
Rocky Bools - 6.05
AD Shell- 48.90
Sears-44.35
Shoney's - .27
Wai·Mart- 54.58
Wendy's - 28.53
Wol1flington - 15.20
Dally stock reports are
lhe 4 p.m. closing
quoles of lhe previous
day's !ransaclions, provided by Smilh Partners
al Advesllnc.

ment,.as of Oct. I, 2001, the
sum of $100, and each
employee in active part-time
employment, $50.
from Page I
Council also:
al compensation for village
• approved the mayor's
report. for November, which
employees ih 200 I.
The ordinance stipulates tot;lled $17,335; 1
the village shall pay each full• approved an increase in
time employee and salaried the 2001 general fund by
employee in active employ- $3,000.

Handbills

landing pad was Janet Graham who, along with her
husband, Harold, donated
the parcel of land that the

new heliport sits upon.
"Basically, my husband and
I thought the heliport was a
great idea ::ind we wanted to
be part of this project," she
said. "We're ~xtremely happy
that our donation will benefit the community."

Grenade deemed harmless
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MINERSVILLE - Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
investigated the discovery of a
potential explosive device in
Minersville Monday, but officials -later deemed the grenade
inoperable.
Sherif!' Ralph E. Trussell said
deputies were dispatched to
the residence of Calvin Freeman to investig,ate 1a possible
'explosive device Freeman discovered above the entrance of
his home.
'
U~on arriving, deputies

·found a hand grenade resting
near the front door of the residence. Dep uties immediately
secured the ,cene and contacted a bomb squad in Dayton to
examine the grenade.
After closely examining the
device, bomb squad officials
said the grenade was inoperable and of the military store
variety. The grenade was disposed of in the county highway pit b~ deputies and members of the bomb squad.
The incident is still under
investigation, TrusseD said.

'

•

WASHINGTON (AP)President Bush's homeland
security chief asked Americans
to return to a high state of
alert Monday, citing threats of
more terrorist attacks, possibly
aroUnd "important religious·
obserVations" this month.
Federal officials said the alert
should ·continue at least
through the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in
mid-December. Homeland
Security Director Tom Ridge
did not mention any religious
faith but said officials took the
"convergence of different religious observations" into
account when they decided
another alert was in order.
"NoW,... is not the time to
back off," Ridge said. "Obviously, the further we're
removed from Sept. 11, the
na~ural tendency is to let
down our guard. We cannot
do that. We are a nation at
war.
Monday's warning, issued by
.the FBI to law enforcement
nationwide as well as to the
general public, was the third
since the hijacker attacks in
September and the anthrax

m
letters
October.
The
FBI
issued the
two others
on Oct. 11
and Oct. 29.
Ridge did
not cite a
specific
Bu1h
threat, but
said U.S. intelligence had seen
an increase in the volume of
information warning in genera! of more attacks.
"The quantity and level of

threats are above the norm,"
Ridge said, "and have reached
a threshold where we once
again should put the public on
general alert."
Bush reviewed the analysts'
conclusio)lS and "he approved
our decision to go forward
and make the announcement,"
Ridge said.
Asked if he worried that
Americans were becoming
jaded by the repeated alerts,
Ridge said the process of
warning the public "is an art,
it's not a science. There ~rq

shadowy soldiers. This is a
shadowy enemy"
The FBI issued the earlier.
alerts in the days after the U.S.
military launched airstrikes in
Afghanistan Oct. 7, targeting
Osama· bin Laden and his Taliban protectors. Bin Laden is
the prime suspecf in the Sept.
II attacks.
Ridge urged c1t1zens to
view the current alert as "a
signal to be vigilant" and asked
that they report suspicious
behavior to local authorities.

..

Correction Polley

·TilE ONI.Y TiliNG

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home .
of Clerk Osie Follrod.

which the state had requested, because evidence did not
show that Pohlmann directed or ordered the company
to violate environmental
laws.
"To the contrary," Frost
wrote, "the evidence presented convinces this court
that when the matters were
brought . to his attention,'
Anton Pohlmann instructed
employees to act in a responsible and cooperative manner."
The egg wash, which
spilled on Aug. 5 into a tributary of Raccoon Creek
near the company's Croton
facility, increased the amount
of ammonia in the water.
The spill killed about · 30
minnows and turned the
water bright pink, state officials said in August.

The Daily Sentinel

&amp;AlliE

If your Insurance rates are
RIGGER TI\AN loiY bigger than your pocketbook .. ,
STOMt.CI\. •.
come to us tor a FREE POLICY
EXAMINATION I We mlghl be
able to SAVE you mona~!!

To meet

.0.89

High

•

Reader Services
RATE

3,500

9,000

Memben are asked to bring
gifts for veterans. Hal Kneen
will be the guest speaker.

:Court·fines Buckeye
Egg Farm for spillin
egg wash into.cree Bush tells nation to go back on high alert

· incredibly low rates on
financing the purchase
of a new or used ATV!
Get the ATV you've
always wanted at a low monthly payment that you can afford!

Retellterma expire
Dec. 31 2001.

1'1:1.---

1,139.45

POMEROY - Florence Carol Wines, 83, Middleport, died
on Friday, Nov. 30, 2001, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen-ter in Pomeroy following an extended illness.
She was born in Darwin on April18, 1918, daughter of the
late Delmar and Ella Ann Hudnall Whaley. She was a homemaker.
. · She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Lula Belle
elark Qohn) of Athens; two sons and daughters-in-law, Manning Milford and Rita Dorst of Gallipolis and Delmar Donald
·and Mary Dorst of Hilliard; a sister and brother-in-law, Clara
and Robert Powers of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; 10 grandchildren,
.17 great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Clyde Wines Jr., three sisters and three brothers.
: Services were at 10 a.m. today at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, with burial to follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
. Friends called at the funeral home on Monday from 7 to 9
·p.m.

Farmers Bank is offering

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
TUESDAY
County Family and Children
. ROCKSPRINGS - Regular First Council to meet Wed., 9
meeting, Salisbury Township a.m.; meeting room at DepartTrustees, 6 p.m., township· ment of Job and Family Services.
building.

9,763.96

·0.84

Florence Wines

Thursday.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County PERl meeting Friday, Meigs
·Senior Center. Lunch to be
served at noon, meeting and
·
to follow. ·

RACINE - Scottish Rite,
Wednesday 7 p.m. Racine
Masonic Lodge hall.

800

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered five calls for assistance on Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:47 p.m., Ohio 7,
Richard Hoffman, refused
treatment;
6:59 p.m., South Second,
Anne Davis, Holzer Medical
Center;
9:57 p.m., Ohio 143, Reva
Musser, HMC.
,POMEROY
7:45 p.m., HMC Clinic,
Rolland Smith, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
12:08 p.m., Kaylor Road,
Phyllis Allan, treated.

10,000

. MIDDLEPORT- Alice V.Wagner, 73, Middleport, died on
Sunday, Dec. 2, 2001, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She was born June 18, 1928, in Gallia County, daughter of
the late Cecil' and Emma Wildman Searls. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are five daughters and three sons-in-law: Jackie and
Keith White of Racine, Robin Wagner of Middleport, and
.Peggy and Mike Caton, Gloria and Sam Gibbs and Wanda Patterson, all of Pomeroy: two sons and a daughter-in-law, Thomas
Sarver of Pomeroy and Edward and Reba Sarver of Portland;
II grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by two h us.bands, Tom Sarver and Charles Wagner, and an infant daughter,
·Rhonda Annette Wagner.
.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine with Rev. Dewayne Stutler officiating. BurIal will follow at Letart Falls Cemetety.
·
' Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. today.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar Is
published •• a free aarvlca
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special aventa. Tha calendar
Is not designed to promote
sales or fund-ralaara of any
type. Items ara printed only
as '8paca pennlts and cannot be guaranteed to be
prl?l~ a specific number of
days. _ .

EMS lop calls

11,000

-Allee V. Wagner

Dear Abby is writW1 by Pauline
Phillips a01d daughter Jemme 'Phillips"

Wash all containers before refilling. Dp
not reuse paper or plastic bags that holp
the food.
Be aware of storage temperatures. Keep
hot foods hot, cold foods cold. An insl.l-'
lated lunch bag can keep items cold
longer. Frozen meat is a wise choice for a
sandwich filling. The filling stays . cold
enough to prevent food poisoning, bm
still thaws by lunch time.
Frozen juices can serve as ice pack,,
Use a wide-mouth thermos to k e~p
soups, stews and chili hot.
If the lunch will be at room temperature for more than a couple of hours, do
not use eggs, meat and creamy mixtures.
Peanut butter and hard cheeses would be
safer choices. A can of tuna can · be the
filling if a can opener is included, in. the
lunch box.

12,000

ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. Edward A Robinson, 78,
Zephyrhills, Fla., died Friday, November 30, 2001, at Hernando-Pasco Hospice Care Center in Dade City, Fla.
Born in Apple Grove, W.Va., he was a construction superintendent and an II year employee of Publix Supermarket in
Zephyrhills, Fla.
He also was a U.S. Navy veteran who served in World War II.
He is survived by his wife, Marjorie Robinson of
Zephyrhills, Fla.; a son, George Robinson of Kalamazoo,
Mich.; a sister, Clara Mae Sargent of Racine, Ohio; two brothers, Raymond Robinson of New Bern. N.C.. and Howard
Robinson of Racine: and two grandcbildren.
• No services are planned.
Arrangements were handled by Whitfield Funeral Home in
Zephyrhills, Fla.
.

sack lunches should be nutritious,jlavoiful, sqfe:

When planning them, remember the
lunch should provide one-third of the
day's nutrients. Follow the food gl\ide
pyramid for variety in meals. Include
foods from the grain, vegetable, fruit,
meat and dairy groups.
Sandwiches are good choices for the
main course because breads, meat, cheese
and vegetables can be used. Vary the
breads, fillings and condiments. Choose
items that your children like.
Fresh fruits and vegetables add taste and
texture to lunches. Dried fruits, such as
raisins, dates and banana chips, add variety
to the meal. Trail mix is a good way to
furnish different types of dried fruits.
Canned fruits and juices are also excellent
choices. Raw celery, green peppers and
carrots are easy vegetables to fix for a sack
lunch.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Markets roundup

Edward A. Robinson

getting it.
DEAR ABBY: My daughter is
10 and in the fifth grade. She's begging me to let her shave her legs. I
know a few girls on her ba~ketbajl
team shave, ~ut 1 think it's ridicu lous for a girl her age.
1 believe 10-year-old girls ar~
supposed to have hair on their lc~.
My girlfriend disagrees. She says [f
my daughter is uncomfortable with
her appearance, 1 should let her
shave. Should 1 relent? - MOTHER UNDER PRESSURE
DEAR MOTHER: 1 see no
reason to refuse your daughter permission . Girls her age want to
blend in, and if shaving her legs
will help her to do that, then I vote
with your girlfriend.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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J::ollegt hoops roundup, Page 10

PageS

The Daily Sentinel

'h!IIMy. D•n•b• 4. 2001

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

i•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chartes W. Oovey
Publisher

Dl•ne K8y Hill
Controller

'""*· Allilfkn

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11M opbtlog rxprnrH Ill dw coiPtJI hW. .,.. tiN eM,....., uf dN 011411 ""'-.1

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Managing EdHor

Utkn lo dtt nlilor,. wtco..v. rJr.q rltoiM k /nr U.. Jttl

No_..,_

,HIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn Lewis

Cha,._ Hoeflich
General Manager

Won will

ltDt ~.

hlllillabcz c•. \' HiloNIINMM. ••• ~· twUd.

,
f

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I'NpD I ,,.
•
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~ &amp;ll'i Pcillll). Scm Gala :J)
~ Gllli Ac•lemy CIJ, F11ila d 56
~59, Fildeta ttdli11145
BMrti R ~CIJ. Cakhd 45
• I u Ale \Wey 46, Polti1 o:dl
f-'. 34
• N I • de Vat&lt; 67, Mk :Jl
~ Oak Hl112, WtMiily 43
S. 'IVI!I I o48, V_, I1 slug 37
Berne lkion 37, Tmtala 34

.
'

• American Press, Lake Charles, La., oo homekssoess:
Census Bureau figures show that more than 170,000 homeless
people were in shelters on a spring night in America last year.
Disagreement has arisen among advocates for the homeless
over how truly that number reflects the population. Those who
think" the number is too low fear that it will" affect the funding
the homeless will receive.
The National Coalition for the Homeless is OK with the
figure. The _group says any count would be inaccurate because
homelessness is a temporary condition and not all stay in shelters. Shelter population fluctuates with the weather and meals
provided.
We believe there is a larger issue than whether the Census
Bureau figures of the homeless are correct. ...
·
The National Coalition wants Congress to designate the
hoflleless as a protected class with the civil rights that go along
with it. The coalition wants minimum wage increased and
indexed to the cost of housing.
· Advocates want Congress to eliminate the five-year limit on
families receiving federal aid under the Temporary Assistance
for Needy families program ....
The group wants education, training and searching for housing to count in the work hours required of those receiving aid.
The coalition also wants the homeless to have access to workstudy, PeU Grants and other assistance th~t would encourage
education.
... ,

TODAY LN HISTORY .
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

Today is Tuesday, Dec. 4, the 338th day of 2001. There are 27
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 4, f783 , Gen . George Washington bade farewell to
his officers at fraunces Tavern in New York.
On this date:
In 1816,James Monroe ofVirginia was elected the fifth president of the United States.
In 1839, the Whig Party opened a national convention in
Harrisburg, Pa., during which delegates nominated William
Henry Harrison for president.
In 1875, William Marcy Tweed, the ~ ' Boss" of New York
City's Tammany Hall political organization, escaped from jail
and fled the country.
In 1918, President Wilson set sail for france to attend the
Versailles Peace Conference.
In 1942, President Roosevelt ordered the dismantling of the
Works Progress Administration, whi~h had been created to
provide jobs during the Depression.
In 1942, U.S. bombers struck the Italian mainland for the first
time in World War II.
In 1945, the Senate approved U.S. participation in the United Nations.
·
In 1965, the United States launched Gemini 7 with Air force
Lt. Col. Frank Borman and Navy Cmdr. James A. Lovell
aboard.
In 1978, San francisco got its first female mayor as city
Supervisor Dianne Feinstein was named to replace the assassinated· George Moscone.
In 1980, the bodies of four American churchwomen slain in
El Salvador two days earlier were unearthed. (five national
guardsmen were later convicted of murdering nuns Ita ford,
¥.aura Clarke and Dorothy Kazel arid lay worker Jean Donovan.)
Ten years ago: Associated Press correspondent Terry Anderson, the longest held of the Western hostages in Lebanon, was
released after nearly seven years in captivity. Patricia Bowman
testified at William Kennedy Smith's trial in West Palm Beach,
fla., that Smith had raped her the previous Easter weekend. Pan
American World Airways ceased operations (however, a new,
smatler version of Pan Am was later formed.)
Five years ago: The Mars Pathfinder lifted oft from Cape
Canaveral and began speeding toward Mars on a 31 0-millionmile odyssey.
One year ago : In a pair oflegal setbacks for AI Gore, a flori da state judge refused to overturn George W Bush's certified
victory in florida and the U.S. Supreme Court set aside a ruling that had allowed manual recounts. PepsiCo agreed to pay
$13.4 billion to acquire Quaker Oats. European Union farm
ministers approved a six-month ban on animal products in fodder, part of an extraordinary plan to stem growing panic over
mad cow disease.
·
Today's Birthdays: Actress-singer Deanna Durbin is 80. Game
show host Wink Martindale i~ ' 6 7.Actor-producer Max Baer Jr;
is 64. Rock musician Bob Mosley (Moby Grape) is 59. Singermusician Chris Hitlman is 57. Rock singer Southside Johnny .
Lyon is 53.Actor Jeff Bridges is 52. Rock musician Gary Rossington (Lynyrd Skynyrd; the Rossington Collins Band) is 50.
Actress Patricia Wettig is SO.Jazz singer Cassandra Wilson is 46.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

It's time to build a tunnel under Pennsylvania Ave.
WASHINGTON .Washington
audiences groaned watching "The
American President" in 1995, when
Annette Bening, playing an environmental lobbyist, apologized for being
late getting from Capitol Hill to the
White House because traffic was bad at
Dupont Circle.
The writer of the movie, Aaron
Sorkin, who later created the TV hit
"The West Wing," undoubtedly knows
by now that you don't go from Capitol
Hill to the White House by way of
Dupont Circle.
L
But as groaning }Vashington drivers
know, the dosur~ of Pennsylvania
Avenue in front of tire White House following the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing makes the journey downtown
al~ost as torturous as Bening described.
Pennsylvania Avenue used to carry
2,000 cars per hour across town. Now,
the roads dnvers have to negotiate
Instead - I or K streets -are mvanably
clogged.
Intermittently, there has been an inadequate alternative route when the Secret
Service allowed- E Street on the other
side of the White House - but that
route has been closed since Sept. 11,
with no reopening in sight.
c
. years, w hat
.
Meantlme,
aor t h e Iast stx
used to be Pennsylvania Avenue from
15th Street to 17thStreethasbecomean
ugly testament to the power of terrorism: a macadam wasteland surrounded
by Jersey barriers and used only for
roller-hockey games.
Local politicians and some members
of Congress appealed for the reopening
. of Pennsylvania Avenue prior to Sept.
11, but they've been largely silent on the
point since then.
But the National Capital Planning
Commission has come up with a number of re.commendations that could

Morton
Kon&lt;h::Jcke

.

Nobody said coalition would be free Of difficulties ;
'

8v GEORGE QEDO,t,
WASHINGTON -The government
of Uzbekistan has irked U.S. officials by
refusing to open a bridge that could
become a lifeline to an estimated 3 mil.lion hungry people in Northern
· Mghanistan. ·
Trucks could. carry 15,000 tons of
food across the bridge each month, but
U.N. officials are reduced to making
deliveries by barge. The process takes
time, something the hapless Afghans
lack, especially with the onset of winter.
The Uzbeks worry that if the bridge is
opened, Tal,iban militants could use it to
escape into Uzbekistan, which would
cause securiry problems. The State
Department says an Uzbek rebel group
has links with alleged terrorist mastermind Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaida network.
Getting cooperation on the humani-·
tarian aid front in Afghanistan, as well as
in the overall anti-terrorism campaign,
has not been easy for the Bush administration.

Few countries are able to give all-out
support. Many show their support in
undramatic, politic~lly uncontraversial
ways, such as by sharing intelligence or
freezing terrorists' assets.
But as the administration has implied
on many occasions, it would be a mistake to ask friendly countries to act in
ways that could be politically destablilizmg.

I

No doubt, Spain would do the United
States an enormous favor if it were to
transfer to U.S custody eight men, mostly Arab immigrants, who were detained
recently and have been charged with
belonging to al-Qaida.
But Spain wants guarantees that the
United States won't try them in military
tribunals and won't execute them. The
administration apparendy is not prepared to make such concessions.
White House spokesman Ari flei~cher
disposed of the issue Tuesday when he
said, "Nobody asked Spain to extradite
anybody, so it's not a relevant issue."

due there in early December.
The United States already has some
1,000 trOops in Uzbekistan. Although
the former Soviet republic has balked at
allowing the United States to hit
Mghanistan from Uzbek bases, it has
agreed that soldiers can be based on iiS
territory for search-and-rescue and
humanitarian missions.

1

The two countries now are acquiint....
ed enough to argue. Besides the spat
over the bridge along the Mghan border,
they are at odds over aid levels.
Powell promised the Uzbeks significant foreign aid, but the two sides are
said to be far apart. A senior Uzbek delegation is in Washington this week to
discuss the problem.
Lurking beneath the surface in tile
relationship is human rights. The International Crisis Group, which monitors
global hot spots, says Uzbekistan's
human rights record is "ofteri abysmal."
The pro-democracy group freedom
House ranks Uzbekistan ·among the
world's least-free countries. It says opposition candidates were barred from competing in January's election against tire
longtime president, Islam ·Karimov.
It added that an alternate candidate
who was allov,:ed to run voiced support
for the incumbent's policies and even
said that he himself intended to vote far
Karimov.

For his part, Bush seems pleased that
Spanish ·officials were able to corral the
eight suspects. Bush said he "can't wait"
to thank Spanish Prime Minister Jose
Maria Aznar when the two meet
Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the United States and
Uzbekistan are in the getting-to-knowyou stage, and the process has not been
easy. Uzbekistan bas not loomed large
on the U.S. priority list in recent years.
In normal times, the country wouldn't
get a second glance. But as neighbor of
Afghanistan, California-•ized Uzbekistan
has been emerging from its previous
obscurity.
Secretary of Defense Donald H.
Rumseld has visited the country twice
since Sept. II, and news reports - the
State Department won't comment (George Gedda ha.&lt; covered foreign '!lfaars
·
say Secretary of State Colin Powell is for 71te Associated Press sinre ·1968.)

a

\

•

Senior Stacie Watson scored a careerhigh 28 points as the Eagles powered
their way past Alexander to their second
TVC Ohio Division victory. 54-39.
After their last victory CM:r Wellston,
the Eagles are 2-1 vs. Ohio Division

8.

teams.

Watson opened up
The Eagles came out early and
the second quarter
jumped on the unsuspecting Spartans.A
with a hard-fought
barrage. of points from Watson and bucket underneath, and preceded to add
Alyssa Holter put the Eagles up 1().,6 another two-point goal for the Eagles .
with three minutes left to play in the Sandy Powell hit her third shot of the
first quarter. The Spartan's quick-hand-

second quarter to up the Eagle lead to
10, with. 24-14lead.
"Sandy Pow.:ll stepped up tonight
and hit some nice shoa. She could score
14 or more points on any givm night;
she is just that rype of player. Wirh this
being only her second year of organiud
baslretbaU, she still has a little bit of
experience to gain, but that will come
with playing time," quoted Coach Paul
Brannon.
Watson added rwo more from the
fuul line, to make the score 26-16 at
balfiime.
Katie Robertson got in on the action

at the stlrt of the second half when she
grabbed a rebound and put-in back up

for two.
"Katie plays very physical. She is lacking only in the experience area, which
many of our playe~ are. Other than
th;lt, she· is fining in nicely for us at the
post position," said Brannon .
Watson continued on her rampage of
scoring. when she powered her vny to
the bucket, drew the foul, and completed a three-point play.
"Stacie is hard to stop. I cannot say

PIIIH_E...11,1D

NCAAMan'aP I , ..
Mond•(W a-Cr9*' 67, v. 75
Canel77, lt1aca 45
Darmol.fl89, c
I .. St 62
Mal. I 16. llaltloid 38
Ncrf.e ' n 74, LOJOia, Md.ll3
St Firacia, NY 82, Cart. Ca I . . .
91-lStEIII
, Alllbllma 74, C111111anooga 68
&amp;iler76, ~tl56
' llailt*il81, CoAlin St e9
I

WASHINGTON TODAY
.

ed guard in uPorte,
kept them in !he game
throughout the first
quarter. However, at
the end of the first
quarter, the Spartans
found
themselves
trailing !he Eagles, 14-

OVP CORRESPONDENT

I

can effectively be barred from the street:
which is so far from the White House
that no car bomb could threaten it.
While the future of Pennsylvania
Avenue and E Street is being sorted out,
the NCPC recommended efforts to at
least make traveling across D.C. less of a
nightmare - such as synchronizing traifie lights, erecting signs, improving intersections and restricting parking on som~
streets.
COLUMNIST
And, as Cogbill testified, "Pennsylvan~
Avenue between 15th Street and 17th
restore traffic flow and make the Street has been unsightly for too long."
grounds in front of the White House He recommended that it be "redesigned
more than an eyesore.
as t beautiful, landscaped civic space th;lt
As NCPC Chairman John Cogbill welcomes pedestrians and that respects
testified to the Government Reform the historic setting of the White House.
subcommittee on the District of
"We believe it is possible to create a
·Columbia on Nov. 2, "Closed streets, distinguished public space and promehastily erected Jersey barriers, concrete nade that maintains the historic integriplanters and guard huts on Washington's ty of the street and permits the inaugurmonumental core ... are unsighdy and al parade to follow its traditional route."
do not reflect the landscape of a free and
A new transit service is being planned
open democratic..society"
. fo~ ~o":'ntown D.C., which would pe':=
The NCPC recognized that Pennsyl- mtt hmtted \&gt;us ~~velruonJ;OPennsylvarua
vania,may have to be kept closed for the Avenue, but thts_ would, 9nly partially
foreseeable future but it recommended solve the traffic rughtrnare.
the possibility of' building a reinforced
The pl~rming commission is also rectraffic tunnel under the avenue in front ommending that a study be cond~cted
f th Wh'te H
to protect the monuments m the nuddle
o Tunnels
e
I channel
ouse.traffic under major of. 'T'
wash'mgton more b eaul!'full y th an
.
I
. 1 di
With concrete Jersey walls.
~affic c~cle; esev:hhe .- . ;:cu
ng
The Senat.e is well along .ih way .to
upont Ire e - so, t. eoretlc ·y, a tun- inaking its perimeter security look
nel that could contam a truck bomb attractive. The House has only begun
blast to avmd damage to the White thinking about the matter.
·
House could be constructed under
It's long past time for Congress to help
Pennsylvania Avenue.
improve the situation downtown. Mem.
An NCPC task force also suggested hers may be able to drive up to the
building a tunnel under E Street either White House and park conveniendy oR
as a supplement to or as a substitute for the grounds. But for the public, it's a
pain.
the Pennsylvania Avenue tunnel.
It's not dear to me - or to city officials -.why the Secret Service has
(Mortoo Kondracke is executive editor oj
closed off E Street to begin with. Trucks Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)
'

Lady Eagles upend Alexander, 54-39

.

\

NATIONAL VIEW

Census figures only fuel
debate over homelessness

'TuEsDAY's

· 1114111,.11, \\tndwap 65

' McNeeea St 67, ~tid! St 00
. Md.·Easlam Shore 85, Florida
A&amp;M54
·
- '-'8li 77, Fla. hilllliialianal59 ·
~ 'X I W 78, I oo. I aMalome

BY ntE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROCK HILL, S.C.- JR.VanHoose scored
26 points and pulled down 13 rebounds to lead
Marshall to a 71-65 win over
Winthrop on Monday.
The Thundering Herd's
Tamar Slay added 16 poiniS,
all in the second half, and
Latece Williams had 10.
Greg Lewis scored 26
' points and had eight rebounds
fur Winthrop (2-5). Marcus
Stewart and Pierre Wooten
also reached double figures
·for the Eagles with 12 points

a3
, N. Carolila A&amp;T 76, Delllwara St

113
" Noofcl&lt; St 19, MO!gll1 St 68
Carolila St 113, Howald 58
I SoUh Carolila 67, PrcMdence 48
1' 'Tem.-Maitin 111, Bellllll, Tern Sl
•' Tae ese 11 St 86. Ask72
· ~ Tedl74, VMI73
" Delroit 95, E. Miclliga I 89
EvinNie rrr. Mimi (eti&gt;) 113. or
rdll\a St 74, t.biay St 68
Maawt 89, SaR l..ais rrr
~ 10, 'l'laxla a 1rrr. 20T
L Alk.-IJIIe Radl92, Ceri.Ar'lcaKa....,.
Sl•

s.

each.

";' s.!iallflli1St:72; S. Ulali61 · ·

DP&amp;T CI\;B_,
a&amp;i... llhlp

v •

- ~77.Comediwt65
j'

1l*d Pilei

•J

Georg&amp;'t•hlii•90J•60, P1iubl

51

~ Turley

hqnored
· bJAMC

~

~ CEDARVILLE -

University of Rio Grande forward
Renee Turley (Racine, OH) is
the American Mideast Conference Player of the Week,
for the week of November
26-December 2.
,, The 5- to senior ·averaged
20.3 points per game while
leading the Redwomen to
three AMC victories.
Turley scored 17 points in a
92-73
decision
over
Cedarville, in which she came
olr the bench; scored 22
points during a 68-53 win
versus Houghton; and added
22 points (15 in the second
chalf) in an 88-75 victory
-against Roberts Wesleyan.
11 Thrley shot 50 percent from
11he field and hit 18-of-20 free
.throws (90 percent). She
,recorded 13 rebounds, 10
;_assists, and six steals for Rio,
ranked No. 20 in NAIA Divi-sion II.

,,

Nebraska

hopes live in

BCS

NEW YORK (AP) )'lebraska, all but out of the
11:1tional title chase after a 6236 loss to Colorado on Nov.
would play No. 1 Miami
fur the national championship
if LSU beats Tennessee on
.Saturday.
The Bowl Championship
Series standings confirmed as
much · Monday,' ranking
Miami first, Tennessee second
Jlnd ,Nebraska third.

;23,

:·

The

res ranklnga:

1. Miami; 2. Tennessee; 3. Nebras.1&lt;a; 4. Colorado; 5. Oregon; 6. Flori·do; 7. Texas; 8. IllinoiS; 9. Stanford;
10. Maayland; 11. Old&lt;!~; 12. .
Bringham Yoong; 13. Washington
'State; -14. Washington; 15. South
Carolina.

"'

VICTORY IS SWEET- Green Bay's Brett Favre (4) smiles as he walks off the field with teammate Antonio Fre&amp;man (86) left, following Monday's game against Jacksonville. Farve led the Packers to a comeback win. (AP)

Pack storming
Jacksonville ·
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - The Green Bay
Packers' victory over jacksonville wasn't nearly as
easy as Brett Favre made it look.
Just ask the Packers, the Jaguars - or Favre.
Favre threw for three touchdowns and ran 6 yards
for the game-winning score with 1:30 left, rallying
the Packers from a 14-point s.econd- half deficit in a
28-21 victory over Jacksonville on Monday night.
"That was a battle," Favre said. "This was one of the
better wins I've been a part of, considering all of the
circumstances." ·
'
The Packers (8-3) overcame nine penalties and
several missed scoring opportunities. They dealt the
struggling Jaguars (3-8) their eighth loss in · nine
games.
Favre completed 24 of 42 passes for 362 yards to
help the Packers stay one game behind Chicago for
the NFC Central lead with the teams set to meet
next Sunday. The three- time NFL Most Valuable

Player improved to 7-0 lifetime as a starter when the
game is tied after three quarters.
The only interception Favre threw was nullified by
a pass interference call that helped Green Bay score
its first touchdown.
Green Bay coach Mike Sherman couldn't recall a
better performance by his quarterback.
Favre rolled around left end · on a bootleg for the
go-ahead score. It was his first rushing touchdoWn
since Oct. 25, 1998, and ended· the longest such
drought of his career.
Ahman Green ran 13 yards with a shovel pass for
the Packers' firstTD. Favre also threw 43 yards to Bill
Schroeder and 1 yard to Bubba franks to tie the
game at 21.
Mark Brunell led the jaguars to midfield on their
late desperation drive, but he was sacked on secondand-short, and two plays later lost a fumllle to end yet
PINH- fftre, 7

The Eagles led 37-35 early in the second half.
But Ronny Dawn tied the· game eight seconds
latet pn a short jumper and Slay's 3-pointer
®m the corner put Marshall (3-3) ahead to
stay at 40-37:
The Herd built the lead to nine points with
13:25 left, befure the Eagles chipped it back to
~ with 4:45 remaining.
EV8111Wle 67, Mlami, Ohio, 63, OT
EVANSVILLE, Ind. - Dan Lytle scored 19
points to lead three players in double figures as
Evansvitle beat Miami of Ohio 67-63 in overtime Monday night.
Lytle scored six of his points during the overtime period and put Evansvitle ahead fur good
at 60-58 with rwo minutes to play when he
mai:le a layup, was fuuled and hit the free throw.
The Purple Aces (2-3) hit just 59 percent
from the fiee throw line. while Miami (2-3) hit
nearly 82 pen:ent from the line.
Adam Seitz scored 14 points and grabbed
seven rebounds for Ev.msviUe (2-3), and Jan
Hanavan scored 11 points.
. I&gt;oug Davis led the RedHawks with 19
points, fotlowed by Alex Shnrts with 16 and
Juby johnson with 12.
Detroit 95, E. Michigan 69
YPSILANTI, Mich. - Thrrell Riggs scored
19 points and ~bbed nine rebounds as Detroit
Mercy beat Eastern Michigan 95-69 on Monday.
.
All five starters for the Titans (4-1) reached
double figures, including Willie Green, who
added 17 points.
R)l3!1 Pril1man scored a career-high 24 fur
the Eagles (1-4).
Ricky Cottrill, wbo entered the game with a
22.9 scoring average after making eight 3pointers Saturday, was held to a season-low IS
points.
Prillman scored his team's 6rst 10 points on
an assortment of low-post moves as the Eagles
took a 15-9 lead. But the Titans answered with
a 21..0 run and cruised to a 47-37 halfume lead.

Eastern honors fall ·sports athletes
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS - A large
number of area athletes were honored
with a fine banquet and awards ceremony re.cently, when the EaStern Athletic Department and Eastern Athletic
Booster hosted the 2001 fall sports
banquet in the high school gyrnnasi- ·
um. Athletes, parents, and friends were
treated to a buffet style meal.
John Abdella, one of the premier
coaches in Ohio, was introduced as
the gues t speaker. Abdella challenged
the future Eagles and cited what it

takes to become successful, praising Browning, Aaron Brooks, Tyler Lee, Chevalier, Andrea Grueser, Brittany
Eastern for its fine back- to-back sea- Codey Gerlach, Cory Shaffer, Jarrod Davis, Jennifer Thoma,
Chelsey
sons.
Bentz jonathan Cowdery, Ryan Wood, Erica Lemons, Ashley Boyles,
Sheryl Roush then awarded the Nave.' Joey Vales, Brandon Walker, Jennifer
Goeglein,
Kimberly
members of the Jr. High Cheerleading Anthony Crites, and Cain McKirmey. • Marcmko, Holly Brodenck, and
staff Honored were Kimberly Castor,
Eighth grade team members were Amanda Mc~&lt;mght.
Tiffany Durham, DanieUe. Carroll, Taylor Boyd Charles Wilson, David
Ken Tolliver then honored the
'·
·
k R h 2001 golf team. Team members were
Alyssa Baker, Courtney Jon~s. Aman- Maxson, Chns DaVIs, Dere
ous • Steve Shepard, Adam Wolfe, Jonathan
da King, Ashley Welch, aqd Dyana Nathan Cozart, Terry Durst, Shawn 0 wen. Bran don F't
h Ada m Cheva1c •
Hawthorne.
Reed, .Charles Hensley, Brandon Her, and Ryan Wachter. Special golf
Coach AI Green then :presented · Goeglem, Bnan Castor, Bryce awards were presented to these fine
awards to the members of the JUmor Honaker, andjosh Marc~nko.
young men during the golf portion of
high football team . Seventh grade
Next, Jenmfer McBnde presented the Eastern fall Sports banquet-Ryan
team members were Josh Nelson, awards to the high school cheerleadPIN
Alh.....
7
Derek Weber, Alex McGrath, Justin ing squad. Cheerleaders were Abbie
H •

�P8ge A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

m:rthune - Sentinel - l\e
C L A S .S I F I E D

•

:Tueedly, a.c. 4, 2001

~ter

re:-1

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· •·

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Defensive Player; Jon Will, Best Lineman; and Cody Faulk, Don
I Jackson Sportsmanship Award. (Submitted photo)

0:,·

·

ic!

B937 (740~

(740)388-15e1

EASTERN FOOTBALL SPECIAL . AWARDS -

Special Awards
presented during the Eastern Fall Sports banquet went to,
front, from left, Chris Lyons, Coach's Award; R. J. Gibbs, Best
Back; Garrett Karr. Best Offensive Player; and Travis Willford,
AII·TVC; Back.Cccy Faulk, Coachl's Award; Ben Holter, Best

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r----'·

.

Black Anoua Bull. ApJxOld- 1991 Jlm"'l&lt; !l6llllll m11oo
oxlondM ' warramy
=·ft~oldac!\"= $12,llllll. (740)445 8657 al:
and i,;ij'"';.,,.., S800. le=.;r51im~::..·- - - - !740)2!l6-6782
12 Ford F·150. 4x4~ v.a, 4 .,
Club Calvaa for• eale. Speed, 3' IIH, 35 lirn,,
(740)246.5984. Heat- GOCJCI Condlllon. $2750.
or. Dry let, &amp; n d - . {740)367.o1!311
98 et.y SobtJrban, 4d,
HAY &amp;
1$19,750. . LT Package,
GJIAIN
(740)448·31!44 dayo or
(740)448-11555 .....,,_
ITII!tlt 1100 lbt. 2yll old. whh

r

Roaldontill- aw,..

Round btlee o1 hay lor eale.
(740)849-3089

·~-iC)'IIIlpluo
gu 1u~ lnctudlng oil Squaro baioo woo u.oo
and
gao 1uma· oow $1 .50, ,1 mile on Rt 2
ooo. . iji _ E-..cy Hoa1 N. (304)875-1808
PumF1't1· leaediiUb~leng Tappana Ha• &amp; ar1 ht Wire Tlo
ree ncr
warral)ly
,
gnr .
package.
· straw, Yaar 'Aound Delivery
BENNETT'S HEAnNG &amp; &amp; Volumo Dlacouni AValie-

-rio ,

&gt;COOLING . {740)418-9411 blo.
Herllega
'011-.en-5117.
{3041875-5724.

F"

M&lt;rmiii:Yazs I
•

87 300 EX wllh. iOta o1 0.·
,....
I'I1I1M ACADEMIC AIJ.oTVC -Honored by the Tri·Valley Conference
12500.
(740)448-2318 ·
for their performance as student-athletes were, from left,
K
· ·
Kawuakl &amp;Oil Drifter 2llllll Chris Lyons, Ben Holter, Jon Will, and Garrett arr. (Submitted
Blue wlndohleld ' photo)
Farm.
-~ 70illl
~~~...,.=-~.,.
.
::;;

ontf

'

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J.

www.arvb.conllbannett
RoH·away bod $25; foam iiiiifiO,_,_,_,_;;;;;;;;;;;
rubber 75ll37xe.s· $5.00; ro
Aums
I
oot· now; $10: Comfort, ,_
FOR!i.\u
$10; bar tiCQI, $10; ~ead·
Aluminum Slol Rim and
:~:~$100; Phona {740)441· 1879 Camaro
lor eale =·n:-:s·ti~OO..i.,

RS

Rowing - - Exorclw,

W.
'Watertlna
'PSI
., Spacial: 314 200
..1.115 P• 100: 1" 200
•PSI 137.00 Per 100: All

·~-Comp- Flltlngo

RON EVAN$ ENTERPRIII-ES ,.,_,, Ohio. 1-800&gt;5;17-9528 I
WHfTE'B METAL
,
DI!TECTORI
,Ron Allloon, 568 \VatiOn
.Road, Slqwoll, Ohio 45814.
(740)446 4336
:wando' : Coal &amp; Wood
'Stove, like new. Acouatlc
;guitar, Halii)Oiiy Aco&lt;Jolk:
gulilr, Ftnder Acouii!C gul·
lar. Hot Wale' Haaler lor
moblle homo. 110,.. com.
1preator &amp; ka-.. Heatar.
{304)875-7183
.

r

cr-·

lor -«can ba - ·
1400. (304)875-2153
1985 dhavy Ca- 4eyL
.~ 1uu
-llllll
1uto, rv1.1,
mites,'
1
Excallenl COndhlon, Woll
Malntalnod.
S1m.oo
{304875-3248

datachlib!O . lace, $75.
{740)371).2635
:,_.,:......,_ _ _ __
ludgat Prlctd Tranlml•
-All TYPoa.- To
Owir 10,oo(fTrantmlealona,
Rebuild Kill, 740-245-5877,
189j) &amp;rillrd, $750 Dr Boat CeH: ~85.
Oifw'. {740)441-1083
' l li\ lll '-.
1993 Ford Tauruo GL, rod, IIO!I""-~~--"""i
- · 118,llllll mllel, ga· r1D
HoME
roge k&amp;pl, -lenl oondl· , ~
tlon.l3,llllll {740)892.zlllll
IAIEIIENT
19D3 Gtond Am, 2 Door.
WAlERfiROOPINQ
Auto, 1011(, $21i5. 1884 UI'IXJndltlonal Jtt.tfrne guar~
Grand Am. 2 Door, Au1o, antae. Lccal ....,.,rcaa·rur.
681&lt;, 131115. 1111M Cavalier, n l -. Etlabiilht&lt;l 1S75.
2 Door, Auto, 1131&lt;, 82495. Call 24 Hra. {7401 4481993 Co-. 4 Door, Au· 0870,
1-1100-287.0578.
to. IIIII&lt;. $2195. COOK II(). Rogers Waierproollng.
TORS. (740)446.0103

1995 Chevy Calllller, 4 cyl.,
•~r--=----- 15 lpeod, 2 door. Ale.
•
BtDUliNG
90,500 mllao. 13800.
Surfl.ml
{7401441.()156
1
Lw-.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiO.._.I 1995 Neon Air TIH
• Block, biick, pipM. 110,0illl mnO., ROct, i
w-.llnlols, otc. Claude Door, Runt Oooo,
Wlnlers. Rio GOindO. OH 080. (740)256-1233
'- Call7«b245-5121 .
1 ~~Aoclllm,Ex·
celleint Condition, Always
lllr______., malntllnM, Loodad, AI·
•
IQyad Whtala, New TirH,
Mul1 Soli (7401HUII02
·
~
'
I
-~--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio_,. 1995 PontiiO Grand Am
'
GT, Aula, PW, · PL, CD,
2 Full Bloodied Rltterrter Looks and Auna GrNt.
, Pupp/111. Had flrat lhoil, (7401448-31148
WormeQ. 8 wks old.
{740)268-1997
1997 Chevy Malibu. Excel·
lent CondMion. {740)441·
12 mal• AKCG't pupa, =38:.:88;:..._ _ _ __
11lwks
Old,
Champion 1998 Kla Excellent
· Bloodline. {304)675·«12 Condilk:n CO. AJc Spoiler
: Daya alk for Jan~ Night8 Tinted WI~. 0,. ow;
. (304) 895-3322
or. C.H (74014*08D3 or
AKC Black lab- Female- 8 {7&gt;101448-15511
· months old, all ~ f...\.111 2001 Z-28 Clmaro 3400
dog . $250. &lt;740)448· mllet, whllo wl1h gray Ieeth•
er lntarlor. 6ap.. 1u1~ loadM.
AKC R"'!!&amp;lered Cloldon R• $23,llllll, {304)885-3131
; t~overa. S200. Great CMet· 76 El Cimino ss with La·
mas Gift. 1740)388-61172
gulna ·lninl and, Now RoBird· Blue Quaker Hand buin 355, Aulornltto. B&amp;M
. Tame
and
Talking. R.l- Slilfler. Ntw Hug, {304)675-4787
gor, Oranga Pain!, New
1
·
WhMII and Tire~, Muat 5ee
Blue iltrmtlt Klttlna 175. ~~38
. 7-ll238 aftar .6:00,
lach. {304)875-5702

..

~
Car Co PlaYer .... rwrnoto,

C&amp;C Gtnaral Hcmt Malnto"""""' PalnUng, vinyl lid·
lng,
dooni, wtndowl, ballit, homo '
~r and more. For tree
llllma1t call Clil1, 740-8112·

.._11)'.

r

I

••Billl iill323;;:.,·-=----~-.
Fucnuc.uJ I

i

--Roaldontlal or commercial
..,.
-~
~ ..ng. new M••- « ,._
palro. Muler LJconud alec·
trlclan. Ridenour Electrioal,
WVIlllll306, 304-675-17811,

I

PUBLIC NOTICES

nuta Ul1lilug 1300·

RDluGDtATION

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
CJO.CV·124

front etepl · of the
Melga County Court
HOUII on Thursday,
Oecember 20, 2001 11
10:30 a.m. of aald
· CONBECO
day, the following
FINANCIAL
dHcrlbed realealalli:
SERVIClNO CORP.
Sltu1tad In the
lka OREENTIIEE
County of Malgl, In
FINANCIAL
, IM Stall of Ohio, end
SERVICING CORP. In the Townehlp of
Plaintiff
Sutton 1nd Vlll•ge o1
Syracuae,
end
boundld
and
dNcrlbld u followa:
MINTER V. FRYAR,
FIRST TRA~
JR. akl
SIIUIII In Sutton
MINTER V. FRVAR,at

•••

p~raance

OhiD Nmpoptr AssociDiiDn
Byrecuu
and
bounded ·
and
daacrlbld oa followa:
On tho North and
Eaat by the County
Road and on 1hl
South by aold Lot
NO. 12 and on 1he
Wall by tha Eaot line
of the Alley weal of
aald Lot No. 12, the
11me

being

the

teal •toll alluote In
tho County of Molgo
and State of Ohio,
and bounded end
daocrlbld •• followo:
Town Lota Number

Thirteen (13) and
Fourteen (t4) In
Buffington'• Addition
to the Town of
Syrecu... with the
building IMrwon.
Current
d11d
recorclacl on 05/11115
(n Volume 20, Page

length of 111d Lot No.
12, and tan (10) fHI
wide, mo,. or ~...
THIRD TfiAC~
848.
AIIO, the following
Currant

Ownera

Nome: Minter V. Fryer
Jr. and KathiHn M.

Fryar.

Proparty Addreu:
12•7 Church Street,
Syracuu,
Ohio

•sne.

Permanent Parcal
Numbar:
20·
00170.000,
20·
' 00171.00, end 20·
00172.00
' Appralud
ot:
132,1100.00.
Term• of aala:
c ..h. cannot be oold
for laoa than 213rdo of
tho appralaacl velua.
$1,000.00 down on

dey or aale, ctJih or
certified check,

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

In

Public Notices in Newspapers. Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.

Townahlp, Malga
County, Ohio, 1nd
being Lot. No. 'IWIIVI
(12) In Buffington '•
Addlllon to the Town
ofSyreouM.
SECOND TRAC~
Aleo, the following
deacrfbld real Hlall,
altuata In Sutton
Townehlp, Melga
County, Ohio, to-wll:
Lying and being on
the North aida of Lot
No. 12, In J.F.
Bufftngton'a Addhlon
to tho Town of

Oahtndlnll

b111nce
on
confirmation olulo.
RALPH E.
TRUSSELL, Sheriff
Malga County, Ohio

or an

Orctar ol Sale to me
directed from eold
Court I~ tho obovo
antltlacl action, I wUI
IXPOII to 1111 It
public auction on the

DENNIS REIMER CO.,
L.P.A. By: Dannla Raimer
(Reg. 10031t01)
Adam L. Groao (Reg.
110065382)
Anomeya for PlolnUff
P.O. Box 881, 8808

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

Ravenne Rd.

Twlnaburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201

CLASSIFIEDS!

(11) 20, "l:T, 2001
(12) 4, 2001

:"s:\e

suy, s_arr ~(~~·~
.

I~ thl Yt'' (.

CLASSIFIEDSI
110

Help

Wanted

roch ureal Sat Is fa ell o

j

40

RJ. Gibbs, Brad Parker, Jon
Will, Jeremy Connolly. Michael
Taylor, and Chris Lyons.
Five young men were honored for their first team, AllW achter and Adam Chevalier TV C footb.tll honors- Chris
who were named Most Lyoru, Ben Holter, Jon Will,
Improved golfers; Adam Wolfe, Travis Willford, and Garrett
the Coach's Award; and Karr. Karr w.lS also ~amed me
Jonathan Owen the Don Jack- league's Most Valuable Offenson SportSmanship Award .
sive Player.
Next, Coach Scott ChristSpecial Awards presented
man honored the 2001 Eastern
during the Eastern Fall Spans
football team, which posted a 9banquet went to Chris Lyoru,
2 overall mark and made the
Coach Awan!; R . Gibbs, Best
State playoffi for the secOnd year
Back; ·Garrett Karr, Best Offenin a row.
sive Player All-TVC;
Cacy
Following are members of
Faulk, Coach's Award; Ben
the 2001 team: Darren ScarHolter, Best Defensive Player;
brough, Cody Dill, Brent HensJon Will, Best Lineman; and
ley, Chris Connolly. Tyler WineCody Faulk, Don Jackson
brenner, Andy Francis, Bryan
Sportsmanship
Award.
Minear, Chris J\1yers, Ross
AD-District players were RJ.
Holter, Derek Baum, Ken AmsWill.
bary. Zack Faulk, Tyler Fauik, Gibbs, Chris Lyons,
Ben
Holter,
and
Garrett
Karr.
Eric Batey. Josh Clegg, William
Team managers were lUrie
Woods, Kevin Marcinko, Nick
Hayman
and Brandon Batey.
Weeks, Vinson Martin, Cacy
Statisticians wete Stacie Watson,
Faulk.
Other team members includ- Whitney Karr, and Janet Caled Cody Faulk, Roger Chad- away.
T.V. C . AD-Academic honwell, Brent Buckley, Chaz VanSickle, Brandon Werry, Travis orees were Kimberly Marcinko,
Batey, Travis Willford, Andy Jonathan Owen, Chris Lyons,
Mora, Eric Needs, Jimmie Put- Jon Will, Ben Holter, and Garman, Garrett Karr, Ben Holter, rett !Urr.

Jon

·~

.

lifY

Jaguan

fromPap5

~p

!:r,'·J;!·~~

another close loss.
Jacksonville blew a late lead
for the fourth tirpe in six
games, and threw yet another
distraction onto a pile that
includes Jimmy Smith's recent
positive test for cocaine and
Tom Coughlin's potential candidacy for the Notre Dame job.
They looked bad doing it,
committing Ill yards in penalties, more than enough to nulSmith's 116-yard receiving
night.
The Jaguars also had four
turnovers.
And with the game tied at
21, Mike Hollis had a chance to
give the Jaguars the lead with
5 :12 left. But his 42-yard field
goal hit· the lefi upright and
bounced back.
• Favre rallied the Packers
li:om a 21-7 deficit within a
two minute span of the third

q\UI'Ier.
Most of the damage came at
the expense of cornerback Fernando Bryont, who has made
himself one of Jacksonville's
numerous distnctioru this season, as the most outspoken critic of the soft-zone defenses the
hlM used to blow all
those leads.
Playing in the man-to-man
defertse he liked, Bryant surrendered the 43-yard TD to
Schroeder to make the score
21-14.
The Jaguars lost a fumble on
the ensuing kickoff. and Favre
looked Bryant's way again,
h ooking up with Antonio
Freeman for a ·29-yard gain to
set up the tying touchdown.
The Jaguars were in a zone
defense that time.
Jacksonville went up 21-7
early in the third quarter when
Tony Brackens sacked Favre
and forced a fumble that Aim,ley Battles scooped up for a 60yard touchdown return.

Athletes

Good, Body very aol·
ld, No - · No berne. Ml·
- . Runt Oooo.
KlllC. S800. {304)578:._.;__ _ _ _ __
711 Cl1ow 1 Ton Dullly 12

I·IIii

Nonie Traoi&lt; Manuel 1nio&lt;1mill. Lil&lt;e Now. $100., 20"
Bicycle $15., 3 N 1 Fillier

Price game lablo. $30.
'(31W)87S.1431

'/;.'If

=·: : ""·

r

(28 RAM, 20 GIG l-ll,lnlo~
net roody, 1T i!'OiiiiOr lnclJded, F'" Dlllvtry and
-p. ·- · Cali (740)2!56·
_6514.
,Nice '\.owety" Electric Dr-

3

1&lt;!.:

:!'••

rz

:::-'7--:---,.--- ::'"~Lao~Soi~ 19D3 Ford F·250 XLT 4x4,
Now Pentium 4 COI11fl"ler, 11or1. chiu - n g. $1200.
T':,:ka~~=·

•

bod""'"'·

'

t::Dodoo SPECIAL GOU: AWARDS-

Special golf awards were preOldo sented during the Eastern Fall Sports banquet at Eastern Hlgh
,._, _ -. ~~ School . Pictured are, from left, Ryan Waechter and Adam
Sl*ll. l1llllll. 11110 et-v Chevalier who wre named Most Improved golfers . Adam Wolfe,
7 ~ not pictured, won the Coach's Award and Jonathan Owen, not
~. ~~oo. 1~
plctltteurded,hwon) the Don Jackson Sportsmanship Award. (Sub11400. 1818 Ford m
P oto
lluotang, 11200. 1818 Mu· ,._ _,__ _,r--"" Plcilwp taOO , ees
Dadge D.' 250 .Pickup,
ltllllll. 1983 Moloul)l l.ynk
SW, seoo. 19815Bulclc Son&gt;'
S480. 1985
FordCall
F·
150· Plcilup,
1750.
(740):W 1!03
.
'1'lllJcxs
I
~
FOR!i.\u
•

=-~·1

• AERATI&lt;ilfMOTORS '
LMsroc:K
,Rapallld, Now &amp; A-In ~
.=:~-~ Evona. 1' 18.monilloldRtg.bt-..g

CoffM

From •-.••••, C&amp;li 740- !ega, $25. {740)448-V4211
-·• ~
leaW
892-5064. Equal Housing
I m1111g1.
Opportunities.
For Sale: AecondUioned
1 Bedroom Apartmonta, - - . diyn and rofrio3 bedroom houae In a- ~·
••- monlh. ~·
·3407
Thcimpoonoo
~· &amp; All· J-~--- Applitar, leue, dapoatl &amp; ftrat erenoe. HUD Approved. ance.
...,.NNI, "'ve.
month rent, evenlngt (740)441-1519
nue, {304)875-7388.
{614)501-11339.
G E w !~pool 1 Bedroom Apt. Galllpolll. • • h
.
. ,..,
3
1 balli, 2 mllet Water Paid. $275 monlli S6S INICh.. While
f"'"' town off 141. 1450/mo. piuo depo.W. No Pail, Dryer, sao. G.E.
lncludol p1ua depoall (740)U 8 4043 alilr B:llllpm Almond DI)IO!I, sao oooh.
and reference. No pets.
Call after ttpm. (740~· •
4'740)445 4824
1br. Vrlly Cljian, Av~ ,~ ,
,
.
Ooo. lot Now ta~ Appll- GE lno1ohlng-. &amp; ~
~~~~~lepoJ! callont. (304)875-4 5
orator, $150, call {740)11112·
8am and 4pm.
2 Bad""'"' Downtown Gal· 2077.
llpolll.
Newly Painted. :::c:.:._,.- --::--3 homal, 1 In Pomeroy, 21n P1oalo Cal {740)11811-7174 , Now and Used F.umlturt
Middleport. Pick up app11caS1ore bolow Holiday IM Ka•
lion al 1/aughanl SaNa 2 BR Apt Newly R01110d- nauga, Ohlci. UIIOd ~
~ in I.!Kkiioport. Ruby elM. S1ovt. Rol~ijEto1or Mil, drMMni, ..,_,
Rantala
. Fum-. All Ulllilltl Paid.
bunr-·
PIIQI Program, Rtntoil
81:0~~ 14751 mo. - · ~::::!.~
-.304-738-72115.
,._,.............,
7740~4~1~6~4~782~·-'--rent in Syr· _
3
Buy homoslrom $199/rno., .._, 2 bedroomt; S2llll Maytag Waaller, $95. Hot
Forecloaurea, 4% OOM1, 30 depooll, ren1 lncludeo wa· poinl Dryar, $86. Tappen
yurs at 8.5% APR. For 1111· tor, IOWOr, 1,...., (740)378· Elec1llc Range, $95. W881·
lngs 1-1100-319·3323 ext 8111 .
inghoust
Rolrlgtralor,
1709.
$150. Upright Freezer Fn:.t
3 bedroom unfurnished Free, it 5o, Magic Chef
Elenant
apartment
for rant In Mklrle- Electric Ran....... Daub..
~ 2 or 3 bedroom port
All -~Ia
includ•·
house, 299 Mulba"'f, Pom•
..,... nceo
ov.n, $150.{740)448-7398.
;~~ no pet&amp;, {7401992· ~;.No pots, :pi~ Skaggo Appllancaa, 75 Vine
,
"""" per mon • Ul
81., &lt;lalilpoll~ OH 45631 .
-urlty dopo&amp;ll requirM. -:-=-:--,--....,.:-::lor Rani In Clly Um· Cali aher Bpm, (740)992· Mollohan ~·- 202 Clail&lt;
Ill. Dapoai1 and R.llorance. 7081.
Chapel ~:P;,..., Ohio.
(740)448·1079
3 """""and balh Furnliih- {740)448·7444 1-Bn-830Newer home near Porter, 3 ed Efficiency, Ali Utllliea 9162. Free Eltlmatel, Ell)'
BR, 1 Bolli, $4501 monlli. Pak!, Downstairs, $2851 llnanclng, 110 daYs I8ITi8 a&amp;
Oepollt and ReferencH. month, 819 2nd Ava. caah. VIle/ Muter Card.
(740)448-2501
{7401448-3945
•·lillie aavo alot
MOBilE HoMm; IIM!ENTSAUnFiiU:rLBUftft~~SrolrnNG
I
.,._, ,...",.
r.,..,..,.,_
FUR Rmr«
Lw--oi"""""'~:;::.,._,J
CES· AT JACKSON El- ,
bad""'"' mobll6 homo, al 'f!':~Sf :~
~ 1938 Bmm Turklah 2
etectrlc, In c:ounti)', no ~ta, •""" &amp; -•-s. ~-II 7An... good too. Vary Good Concllo
,....
• ....,
""'"""
....,..
"'V"'
tion a-&amp; ~--~HUD appnwod, {7401742- 446·2588. Equal Houslnu
·
2014
Oppol1.unlty.
wtth 70 rounds &amp; ammo on
Bandoleara.
$100.
2 bedroom, new carpon, Middleport- North 4th Ave., ·{304)875-2352 '
coverM patio. wid -up, 4 room lumillild apartmenl.
no pets (740)992·2167.
depo&amp;lt &amp; &lt;elarencae, no Soik! Cherry Gun Cabinet.
'
p&amp;la. {740)8112.0165.
Holda 12 Long Guns and 4
2b Mobile H
lthl
PI t 1 (304)576-2505
Ci~ Umlts of ~~~ ~eas~ Modem 1 Bedroom Apart- 1!1Ji'0,r.;8.,.;;;.;;.;.;..;.;;;.;.;;_"I
ant. {304~75-2359 call after mont. (740)4 46 0390
,...
ANnQuEs
7pm
Nice 2 BR Apt., Just past · - - - - - - - '
2br. New caipel, WID Hook· Holzer Hoopital. (740)441·
up, No Pels. (304)67S-6291 OHM.
Buy or sell. Riverine Aftti.
Nice
......
lg
\ ques, ,,24 Eut Main on
b
2 r. -··· rooma. SR 2-4 e ptvi"'Alt'AA 40Beautiful River View Ideal
1 .. R~""l4oora
7
For 1 Or 2 People, Refaran- fully equlped kit. , central 992-2526
ces, Deposft, No Pets, Fos- heating/ cooling. waeherl
•
ter Trailer Pal't!., 740·441· dryer hookup 304-682-2523 :owno-:_r.,..._ _ _ __
0181.
Rentel'l wanted: Plot Pro- Sue'sSelectablesonthe"T"
I gram. Own your own home. In Mlddtepon. Dolls, glau.tu"JuuMI!.nJ~
Uttle or no credit OKI Call ware, Aladdin mantels, and
FOR RENr
; (740)446-3384
more. (740)992-Q298

:!.~

__

- . g Opportunlly.
and &amp;id T - Dog Cllgo,
Gracloul living. 1 and 2 Baby 11«1. (740)448-17~
bedroom apartments at Vll- COffee Table Set- plica
3

=n=

"*:. ":.:.,

:ooi-•.

E~

Hldeb.d.

tk:k. 1

f

- . . . , 01)'018, Rangaa,
Relrlgra- Up To 80 Dayt
- 1 Wt Sell May1lg Appliancoa, Froncll
City Mayiog, 7~7786.
11«1
Sun ~TV

ome':"'Sol

••
=: =·=·•::
=
"'*·

1

-•.0..

Appliancee: Recondltlonad

Gallla Manor Apsrtmonla,
138 Buhl Morton Rd. Qalllpalii Accopllng Appllca·
tion lor a 1 Sadroorn, HUD,
SubaldizM Apartment tor
Eldelty and Handlclpped.

.

seoo.

pound&amp;· 200 Ubor1y Saila.
~~.,::licea~...
~ Carmlchael'a F11m1 &amp; Lawn
!Na~uiOI, Dr. Recommlndld. ~
~
. ~~~REE Semple" lipolla, Ohio. !740,....;2412
~.=-llobybtd~"":-'Ex:=cei.,.ioni--Condl-. !~ Lowboy, 24' Long,
lloir, 1400 - · Aoklng -var Toll and R•-·
11200. Quarter Carat Mer· 1881 OMC Jimmy, 4d,
,.qulo lllolmood Enaeaomont Oooo Condllion, S3llllll
,.Rklg {Size 6) $200~ com. oooh. (74014411 81144
P\llor Dtok. 120. (740)441- Cou-430 TriiCIOr Willi
1108
Blaila. Wldl Front End,
""""'For Sale: Ook TV Sland, '""'"-" fl.l~n-·-'fno
'.
$50. Fiofal Chair with Nice &amp; Str
' 13200.
i!illchlng olio- man, 150. (304)875-3824
OP S 1 - Exon:IMr, $65, Farm Troctor, Ford 2illlll,
Cal(740)258.15211
U.. - · Drift Conirol,
Grubb's Plano- Tuning I Dlff~ ~Roll Bar,
Repalro, Prcbltma? NHd
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr. ,0 ~le. 'a. 400
7~5
{304)57H888
•
Haoly Mum&amp; 13oo oooh 4
•lor 110 0po11 ~ a.5pm a Pun Behind - · 42"
DMMJioc o..O.. Buoh Hog Po\ralld
houoa Mt Alto. {304)8811- by an 11 H.P. . _ En3740 loava mttMge. or gina will\ Eltolllc Of Pull
k {304)885-3789
111111. Oiit
- · llloi - ·
..
'
1800.
(304)578-2111111
Hot Springo Spa wllh Thoro·
. r. E,.,allont Rololller, Troy BUt n11er,
ri)OUtlo · "
!740!441.0S1B
:""mSHP, Ko11itr ~
' lndopondeo• Hatlialfe Die'
:lllbolor. ~Fer~ Or
1982
IOpport4 lly. !740)44

"*"

ea-... ._

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v::

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Now Doullle Willa. S1115
..........,
Per Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2
FOR Rl!li'T
·.
Balli. Free Del/wry &amp; Sal·
up. '1-1188-928-3426
15 COurt Stroot 2 11«1·
rooms, 1 112 balhl, Kllehon
Nk:e 28x50 Double Wide wllh 1i10Ye &amp;nd - l o r.
setting on rentoo lot In 011 Streel Perldna. Clooe to
Point Pleasant area. 2x6 SchOola and Downtown
Will, lliarmal pone win· Anoa. $5951 monlh piuo •
dowl, prlctd to &amp;ale. Cal poll! and Referooco. No
{304)875-3588 ask lo' Pall. {740)448-4926
Rosemal)l.
2 badioom- {Muiborly
OAKWOOO=S
Ave.) lor 11111 or tile, w/d
SUPER CE
.
-up. ror. ...... depoe-

o•poree cash. A COilpietparenllil~oLa=. ~~r. wwwJ~onoy-Droorno.com atantngwagowlth-ol
~:-c:-c=:::-::-:::::::- blnolllllncloo.d 111140.00
~le~~h=8 1~ 11.!:- Aftenllon: RN'S &amp; LPN'S per field day worked, with a
~ ~=~
como pert olllio· p!K&gt;t pro)· Arcadia Nu&lt;Oing Canter A ~~;;c&amp;~~':Yup lo
loti Oakwood Homos ol
act oua!IIIM applicants lull lime mkfnlz ohl~ Is worked. we pn&gt;Vido paid ·
Nitro. {3041755-5885
may receive up to $40.00 available. Wt
excellent training, exetllent BENE·
Oakwood Homo of Bar·
:'e::'-~ remp"::.;:entC~Ij ~~:~~.:o~~u:. =~ FITS, 401(k} RETIREMENT
boursville, WV. Tha only
~40!•••33791181&lt;
lor Rob- anoe, com~llllvo - · • plan, CREDIT UNION, Lay
place w'th Lay-a·ways.
•• ~
•&amp; TI8YOI Pliy.
(304)736-3409
ert.
and opportunities
for~-•act- over
Pre-employment
DRUG
vancement. It you are a TEST and a vallcl Orlvera
18 w~· ......, $19500 Pe&lt;
Let ua do your Holiday bak· team player who enjoys
...........,
·
·
lng- P.ios, Cokes, COoi&lt;let. working with lhl -.Jy, ap. 1.1Mo(dh, 8.99% Flxoo lnlonlll
PomeranIan- mIn Ia lu ra poo- ply.ln Pfi'SOn •
- - - 9:oo- cense
Rate With Nr And Un.
Ulilnor-•
COL 18Ia requllld.
p1u ...... Class A
dies milled, $35.00ea. 4:00 or call Kathryn SOmera 1· LIUI notreclerplnnlng 1.._92S.3426
{740''"&lt;JW&lt;1
ville o 0 N
qulred. Dualill.cl calble.-lor
1985 ...,,,.,. 14x70, 3 ~~
,...........
• · · ·
may become ollg
_,,
Aroadla Nursing Center oompany aponsorad COL All Make Kerosene Hea18J8
HOf'ttEi
I room. Good CorKIDon. Clll
GivEAWAY
Eut Main Streel
..inlng.
and Forced Nr Heaters ReSAlE
Herold, 740-386.Q948.
COolville, Oh
The nghr..-.. will bt P\'llld. Smal Engine Re1'011.
re&amp;ponliblt, goal-ng
p81r. Free Pitk·Up and De1991 , Manelon 14x70, 3
' 1740-687·3156)
4 beautiful puppies ready
E.O.E.
lndlvldualawtthateam-orl- livery Available. Over 20 816 Main Street, Pt. Pt. bedroom txcenent eondl·
lor
ca&lt;lng
lamllios. AVON! All A""'sl To Buy 0 , oniM ·~·
YHlO Eicpelilnce. Ceil Mike Completely Rolurt&gt;lslied. 2 lion, Call Ka.....,, {740(7401441-1707
Soil. Shl~oy Spears, 304- On~ sonouo hanl working {740)446-7804
1101)', 2 Full Balh. 3 Bod- 911411.
~
good Indoor 675·14211.
lndivl&lt;luall
naad
appy,
roomo. Largo Kllchen, 28x503 or 4 Sadroom, OnFr.. ld·-· 10
WE WILL liE TAKING AP· Wm Haul Away, Cieon O.t, Largo Ulllily Room, LRI DR/ iy 5345.00 Por Month
home, 1 gray, 1 gray/White, Drummer &amp; l:!ass player Pl.ICATIONS ANO INTER·
Clean Up or Move Amott _Family Am. New Carpel' 8.99% FUCed Interest Rate,
.:,1,::ca::ll=.co·.o.:&lt;7..:40::)::992:.::...·1..:17..:9::,,-:- looking lor musicians &amp; VIEWING ON DEC. B/01 AT Anyihlng. Ta~ng Consign. throughout. FIA &amp; A/C, Hl88-1128-3426 ,
c:
· ~ngora to fonn conltlii1i0' THE BEST WESTERN INN. menta. Cal {740)448-7604 $79,900. {740)448·9585 or
Glvoaweyo Pupploa, Black rai)' Chril11an group, 701 W. MAIN ST. RIPLEY,
{7401448-2205 or (740)446· 5 Ropo'a Save Up to 50%
Lab mlxoo aolkl black· one {740)992·3187 740-675· W.Va. FROM 9AM UNTIL
2663.
{304)736-3315
dail&lt; brown, {740)256-6919 2432.
•
5PM. -bring lwo
I
Amazing Rill Time Homo
Mi•ed Bnrod Pupplo&amp;, Six EASY WORK! EXCELLENT ~~=::.on
~-· ~'!"'2FBaoroaalli·onSapl~:.~- Buyars.
Govammenl
weeks old, Huiiky/Shepanl PAVIAI&amp;ambloproductlat •··
~""""'
·~"
~.Backed loans. No c'Mil
Beagle {3041576·3344
homo. Call Toll FrM
~~~~~~~~~~r
· cal {74014411-3570. .
neMoo.
{304)755·5566
Lo!rrANO
I HIOIH87-5588Ex1.12170 P.OBOX565MARIETIA,
INOT1CEI
Don1 Own Land? We Dol Um~MOiilr.
www.homejobo.com/12170 OHIO. 45750 EOE
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Land/ Home packara End oiiM .._1year salol
FOUND
ENE ol Wost Villtinle II now
lNG CO. .-nmonda 1ha1 Available. Call (740)448· An 2001 mual go, lo mal&lt;a
taking oppllcallont tor PICk· McClure'&amp; R-urant now you do buslneu wllh people 3583.
"""" lor 2002. Special low
Lost: Corgi, Small Brown/ aging ~·nment, ru~ou rale hiring all 3 locations, full or YOtJ know, and NOT 1o send 1 Tl
financing J]rogram available.
White A.... No collar family
-....
,....,
pan-time, pick up appllca- money through the ~I until at
me Home BuyeraJ 0 1., 1 Fl lWood Homes
""""'
Ia $7.25/hr. Also, laking ap- Uon at location &amp; Dring back you have Investigated the Sing!
FHA/ Government Loanal 01n'p'.!..--~llo ~011 Free 1•
pat, Reward. {7401388-0128 pilcationa lor machlna oper·
Pi t p
·~~fl
"
anytime/leave meuar.
atora, starting pa• 18 batwoon
9:3Qam
&amp; offonng,
e
ran
rogram 1188-565-0187'
'
I O:ooam, Monday thru Sat·
Loans Avallabla. Call
Lost: Shephenl mbc, opayed {$~~~~1ntor=:.,~: urday.
Start You' Bu&amp;lneat To· {7401448-3093
UmltM Or No Credi1? Qov"~·-·day Primo Shopping Conommont Bank Finance Only
1
2
emele, blue eyes, orange psnance required! pay Part·limo dletal)l aide naad· tor 'Spa.. Available AI AI· 2 BR, Clly School Dlalrlc:1. At Dokwood In
toliar, 17401742-4163.
scala ball8d on oxperier&lt;:e. M lor 100 bed &amp;killed,.... fordable Rite. Spring 1/ahy {~~)2 Gallipolis, $38,000. ville, WV 304-738-3409.
Full btnoflts aller 3 monilia. lng laolllly. ln-.too appli- Plaza, Call74().448.()101.
58-6702
AUCI10N AND
I Minimum of 2 good referen- cants should apply to: Rock·
For sale by owner- Nice bl· Must un 1999 16x80 Grand
fi'u!A MARK£r
eel thai ,_II bt vorllled, 1\p- &amp;p~ngo Rl1iabllila11on CanMoN£y
I level home on 1 acre near MB"!UOB mobile home, 2•8
·---lliiiiiiiiili._.l ~,: tge~ : : : :
~r, d 367~9 Rock~~g: - 10 loAN
. Chesler. Three bedroom, walla, shlrVed roof, 3 bedR~k Pean10n Auotlon Com- ~nla, 115 Jack Bu~lngome 4~;69. Eq~~·~~ioortunlty
): ~m~ll!':,~ra· ~; {~~:ee~:J28·Illlll
pany, full time auctioneer, Dtive, MIIWOOCI, wv 25262, Employer
Encouraging McGregor ' Aatoelllea aun room New central heat:
complete auction service . ,Attn: Human ReiOIJfCel.
Wor1&lt;place Diversity,
Trying to buy a home and 1 &amp; a/ · t
REDUCED
Licensed 166 Ohto &amp; West
bankl are refectlng you due ng
c sys em. 0 na m-1
VIrginia, 304:773.5785 Or Full Time Dental. ~nt . Full-time Crew Leader poal- to bad credit history? we nute off Route 7, but still prl- All' Double Wide Displays
304_n 3-s«7
5and R..ume to. CLA 458 lion , day shiH, houi3 val)l, can h&lt;ilp you. We provide veta. (740)985·3981
must go. Only Sll95~wn.
.
cJo GallipoliS Dally Trt,bune, minimum wage. Apply at mortgages, personal and For Sale trade or root Com- anN. ~ a(~~~~5885 ea of
WANlllll
1825 Third Ave, Gall polla, Meigs lnduatries 1310 Car- amall busineu toana with 1 rt bl 2 1 3b · 2 112 1tro. 07IJO'O ·~
OH 45831
5 S
OH N0
o a o s DrY '
ro BvY
·
letOn t. yracuse,
·
good or bad credit. Approval bath home beakte OOinmun- Single Parent Program.
· - - - - - - - ' 5alea Position. Immediate phone calls please.
within 48 Ius: (868)862· 1ty building on Rt. 33 In Easy Financing Available.
11 !56
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s. Opening. Apply In Po""".
Golln Tho Fall LaM.
Hartlonl, WV {304)875· {304)766-7191
Sliva,, Gold Coins. Proof- Bnnu flesume. Acqula!Uons
COVENANT
~ 12484
alia, Diamonds, Gold JHpol-l 1)', I 5I 2nd Avo., Gal·
TRANSPORTATION
1 " -- Now/ u-·• u . -• • lmmedl· Wlntor-llprlng Salel
Rl
CU
8
I Laald g lor
i&gt;rAlVI~~
•
~·Ta~ng OnlelO now or dalklngs. U.S.
rrency,·
•
".1,
ate Posseslon No pay- ery in February, 'March &amp;
M.T.S. Coin Shop, ,51 S.C. Truck driver- must have
Fllnl Flnenclal haa been mentt unlit Feb.' 2002. Pre· April .
and Avenue, Gallpolla, 740- COL, a!' brakes, haz·mat II·
F•
qualify by phone. {740)448- Final Cilrence
~-2842.
cense,
covering
the
NO PROILEMII
providing small business 3218.
On 4_2001 sectional homes
Maaon/Galtia
area
Tnlnlng
Anll8ble
by
kJana
for
13
years.
Now
we
&amp;
3-200Z models on display
I \IJ'I 0\ \II'\ I
{740) 742 •2511 , 1-800·637: Calling f 111188458505. apoclallzeln 111""'""1, ca' &amp; Newly conatructad, alngla plus 8 Bingle 18 wide homo•
..,I I ~ \ I ! I "
8217
COL Holders Clll
debt conaollclatton. We story 1600 sq. foot home. at huge savings.
tlr""_...;.;;;.....;.;,__,
·
1~58-2353.
guarantee quality aervlce Located 1a minutes from SpKIII order ,
HO. IIELP WANTID I plaama
URGENTLY
NEEDEDfrom a trusted name. C&amp;lt Holzer Hospital 20 minutes
home 1 4tcluced
donors, earn $50 to Help wanted caring for the Flint Financial Servlc8s, ap- from Pleasant Valley Hospl- your new
a r
$60 per week for 2 or 3 elderly, Darst Group Home, plicaUons
hotllne
(1- tal, off SA 160 on a private ~'!i~~ Moblll....,...
hOura weekl\1, Call Sera· now paying minimum wage, 888)388-0895
1-112
lOt 3 bedroom 15266 US 50 East
'
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amacre ·
.
•
100WOAKEASNEEDED Tee, 740-592-8851.
5J)m 3pm·, 1pm 11 pm.
2-112 baths, big kitchen A!hena0h45701
AIMmble cratta, wood
We are working hard to flU 7 ' 11740-992-0023
Need Fmanclal Help? Risk wloak cabinets, OR, LR 740-592-1972
i1ems. Material provided.
am, ca
·
free opponunlty, look no fur· wfgu log fireplace, central
To S480+ wk.
Amarlca'a food banks for Homeworker•
Needed thar, our financial Institution air. laundry room, front
Frae lnformaHon pkg. 24 Hr. the holiday seaaon and we $635 Weekly Processing provldEt&amp; you with assls· porch &amp; 2-1/2 car garage.
·
need 5 hardworking, com- Mail. Easyl
No Experi- lance &amp; Information, Free Immediate possession. Ap~
I
1-801·264·5625
passionate individuals to enca
Needed. can 1- consultation, call now at praised at $125,500. Make
B
Arcadia Nursing Center join our team. Starting pay 800-652-8726 Ext. 2070, 87Ni04-3011 .
offer. Call (740)446·4514 __ AND l.lllJ)(NGS •
STNA2-101Mtlsavailable. 18 ' 7·00 per hour. "We do 24Hra.
from 8·5pm, M·F. or
Full and Pert·time poeftiona good work". Call1-888·237·
TURNED DOWN ON
(740)448-3248 after 5pm.
4,000 aq foot Commercial
Building with 1o to 200
avalable. We ofter excellent 5342 ext. 2232 tor more in- Work From Home. Free SOCIAL SECURITY /BBI?
benefits that Include Health formation .
Boottlet. 1-800-653-7293.
No Fee Unless We Winl
Owner Must Sell to Settle acres. Rio Grande, Ohio.
1:888-582-3345
.Insurance, .Ott&lt;. Life lntUr- Mainlenanee position In s.-IMJ
o • ...-............
· Estate. 1 acre, mil, Jack~ Owner financing available.
ance. competitive wages nlor apartment building.
~
Lake, 2 Bedroom, Kitchen. Call (740)245-5747
and opportunitiBI for ad- Part-lima poeltion with do1'RAINrNc
Bath, Living Room, FlO
li
limited
Heal, Central Air, Phone Three Unit Apartment Buildvaramant. If you want to "Including but not
(740)448-3038 after epm
1ng In Mercerville. 1 Acre
joln our team, we are now lo apartment preparation, O.lllpollaC....... eon.g.
~
I
MlL $58000 (740)441 accepting applications or J*ndng, minor repair and (Career~ Close To Home)
Moan.E JloMFs 1 11 oB
' ·
contac:l Kathryn SOmerville, preventative maintenance.. ca• Todayl 740-446-4367,
FOR SALE
FOR SAI.E
D.O.N.
Send resume with reference
1-800-214-0452,
__
•
An:adia Nu&lt;Oing Center
to The Dally Sentinel, PO
R:lllll.QS.1274a.
105 Acres with 1999 Fleet•
East Main Strtet
Boll 729-16. ~ may
I wOod Modular Home Near 1-'ll70 Clayton Trailer. 2.5
Lms &amp;
Cootville, Oh
~required 10 aubmitd to1~
MJSCEI 1ANF.X1l.S Gallipolis. Ellcailent Condi- Acres. 32x40 New garage.
A~~•M
(740-667-3156)
lice check and rug - ·
tlon. Private, Country Set- · SCeniC • View Estates. ·---~~-;;=;;;.-,.t
EOE
EEO
ling. Stockad Pond. Addl· {3041578·2635
,
-~~ 1 ~ p· a r t • 1 1 m 8 Collectable-•115 Year~ and tiona! 7.5 Acres Available.
9 Plus acraa. Electric and
Are you Int.. __. n ..,....
14K70 2br mobile home
coming a State Tested houHkHperllaundry staff Still Cooking• Hardback Call Janell Call at Century wlth pPil
CJA C$ • water· available. located on
Nurae Aide? If you would needed for 100 bed tklllecl COOkbook· 900 old and new 21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular · 00 a ances,
ied':· SmokeY Road. $16,500.
like an eiCCitlng, rewarding nursing lacllity. lntltf'ested raclpaa. Donation: $20 .00 + t (304)634·2596 or Office {304~5~~~1 !:'.home. (740)375J-9257
'
career In heahh care, we appllcanltl ahould apply to: postage, Chester Court- 1-800-131·9Cit1 ).
1
have the anawer fOf' you. Aocktprlngl Aehabllllatlon house Aettorat!on, Call
eave m888llge.
Indian Creek Estates, 3-6
SCenM: Hilla Nursing Cenr.r center, 36759 AocklpriOnhg&amp;
l (740)992·7281
3 Bedroom on Route 2. NeW 14 Wkle, 3 Bedroom. aGcrraendolots,lrowmoat So25r 900Rio
ia ortering a nurse aide Road, Pomeroy,
o
0 1ve
•
• ·
class. It wll begin Decem· 45769 Equal Opportunity Good or Bad Crodn Even I3IW)67S.5332
•
Only $19•850· Free " 1 II' (7401245-5747
1
928 2426
ber 6th, You mult epply EmploYer
. Encouraging ::rup~~~~s-~'"
3 bedroom. In Middleport, &amp; Set Up. -888- "
Want to Buy smaH farm of
8
·•
•
thla WHk In peraon ~~ Workplace Olvel'lity.
call Tom Anderson alter New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 acreage In Mason County
SCenic Hills. Alk for 81&amp;- Saleaperaon: Full-time, ben· 11M
WANJm
15pm, (740)992-3348.
bath. Only S995 down &amp; suitable ·for my retirement
ph!lnlel&lt;emper.
efltl, retail experience referTo Do
For Sale 2 Bedroom hOuse ~,!g9=;;r· Call Cheryl, home. Peaceful scenic rural
Reaponllbfe babyllner for 2 reel. Apply at Lifestyle Fuml·
with gas Mat &amp; W11her a
• •
·
location not on a primary
children (a""' 5 a 10) In my ture. No phone calli. Apply Truck Ortver. COL, full or Dryer Hookup. located at New 2002 14 wlda only highway. Deferred poaae•
home, l1lUit be from Recine In peraon, 856 3rd Avenue, part·tlme. Straight truck pre- 2112 Madison Avenue. $799 down &amp; $155.38/mo, slon acceptable. Call 270Galllpolla, OH.
·
lerrM. 17.W\092·5468
$25,000. {3041578-2247
Call Nikki, {7401385-7671 . 385-9827
a,.a, (740)941).2455.

11:111:-""!""-----.

a

..~...:: I

r'a

LABORER
EARN AS VOU LEARN.
Start building for your Mure
now by lolnlng our P.,...
slonalteam and leam 11io
1~11110 blcome a High
Pressure Cleaning Manance Technician.
All Poaitlool roqulre ~
TRAVEL OWide ol W.va.
COfnpany provldle lodging,

Concl- 82 Gold l!lulok Laoabnl

lnil -

t.n: :::··d.-, -::: Pici&lt;-\Jp,
1871 314 Ton inlamallonll
304 VB Engine,

or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Sunday Dlsplty: 1:00
Thursday ror· Sundays

loMDI' . . . . . .

f•omPaps

•

·
-{7ol0~1315
-il. ·'
._ .............
-............... ~;.;.:;;~:.::.:.=-~-1111 I'1IWioulh - · 4 .,._
~ .. Low .. 3.5% - · ... rwllu, .........
on 5000 lf1d eooo SeriM power evtirythi!IQ. MichelT - .. u Low at lno, 53,000K. - · $5,800.
4.4% on UIIOd T - . with {740)37N748
John 0... C&lt;0C111 AppioLlvtly'a Au1o Saioe- 11110
1111
..
Fonl Temp, 51llllll, 1981

: Loaa 10

(304) 675-1333

,..._.
I OhiD
:lin..v...,"
Ratlalsc .tt.,••
be
fiOUCID:

•

(7-40)7~·7e05

• Steel AND
BIIYnl.- Pip. nHI.
Alibl.r
!For c.-.. Mfle, Cllonnol, Fill Bor, Orlli&lt;1a
For Draine, Dt1Yewaw I
~· Now 55 dolion
D111m1 Willi Ud &amp; RinG.
,.S7.oo Each. L&amp;L SCiOp Mil·
olloOpon Mondoy T - y
•Wodnoaday &amp; Friday,

t

1\egt!iter

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lncl~de Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• lnchlde Phone Number And Address When Netdtd
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

good
- . 111911
SOl·
um ...A·l
condition

-

san&gt;

·Favre

¥-.

;4:30pm. Closed Thursday ................................ Chevy 0 ·20 Van, $1000.
•.Saiu)'::l
&amp;
Sunday:
1987 Ford EconoHne Van,
~!740
7300
Como Soo Our Largo Dlo18112 ~a:
play ol John ,...,.,., VOn, l1llllll. 11111{~
. ~.,. ~ 1 "'" Appatoi and John lltM :,::;:::.·,1

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

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

":.t-~

1aei Font Clown

•

The Dally Sentinel • Pllge A 7

~~

• eoo.2111 -ooua.

l

In one week With us

r·

-"=;;;;;;;

NIW AND UUD I'Ufl.

We Cove""---7
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Gua..nboedl Postage, luppilet

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

Rush Self
Slan'I&gt;Od Envalopei GICO Dept
1438, AntioCh, Tn. 3701
Sla~ l mmedlalol~

NOW

HIRING
$6·$8
Per Hour
FuiUPart nme
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1-888·974-JOBS

�Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2001

The Dally Sentinel• Page At

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHlLLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

1 AJ1101ing
1C1
5 ......... -

Public Nutlcesln NeiO'SJNlpers.
Yuur Righi to Know, IJdivr"'d Rlahllo Your Door.

... ....
• I ' I I

.,._.nnlng. A..o. 1 as del· Wftt olotlg
ploce
of
lond the Iouth u... of ........,,Ohio . .
beginning eo lftl WIUIIII Street I Pormenent Porcel
Well
ol
the dlollnce of 140. eo Number; 11.00412,
OOIIIEt:OIIANK,
INC.
Southeoat comer of fell to on Iron pin 11 1a-oo433, 1e.oD434 '
Lot 410; thence Weel the truo piiCI of ti-OCM35
beginning 24 112 leet boglnnlng lor the APPRAISED AT:
Ptalnttll
1longlht South line porcel
hortln
-vool 11ld tot; ·thlnce tnteniled to be • TERMI 01' SALE:
DONALD MARTIN, et North eo - pe""let conveyod; . thence c..... Ctnnot be IOid
11.
wllh the Eeot line of IIIVtng lite South Nne tor te1e then 213rdo
11ld tot; !hence Ell! of Wetzgell Slrett, of the opprelaed
24 112 feet; thence South I dog. 30' Ell!, volue, ' ' ,000.00
Pomeroy EOQiea
South eo teet to the 1 dlttence of U.OO clown on dty ot 1111,
cllh
or
certified
BINGO 2111
COURT OF COMMON piece of beginning. , ... to on Iron ptn;
check,
bolonce
on
M.
The
preml•••
thence
South
II
dog,
Every
Thullday
PLEAS, MEIGS
Intended to be, 11'W.IIt-nceol conllrmlllotl ot .....
COUNTY, OHIO
I SUnday
conveyed herein 17.17 to on Iron
Doon
Open 4:30
In pureuence of 1n being tho premlllt pin 111 In 1 11one RALPH E.
Early
birds
start
TRUSSELL,
Sherlfl
0 - of Slit to me dttdtd by Michie! well; thence North I
dlrtCIId from tlld Wltlglll to Honrj dog. SO' Wtll I
6:30
'
dated d l - of. 31.00 1111 Melge County, Ohio
Court In tho ollovt Patrick by PJOgrellive
entitled 1ctlon, I will November 17, 1177, · to on Iron pin on lhl
top line
elpOII to 1111 11 ond Dlcemlllr 31, South llrie Of Wetlglll DENNIS REIMER CO.,
Thursdaya
L.P.A.
public ouctlon on the 1178, ond rocoo dod In Slrtel; thence North
front 111p1 of lht VOIS. 47 11 Pege 310 15 dog. Eltl, llong By: Denniallllmer
.PJOgrellive
Melli County Court ond Vol. 51 II Page. the South line ol (Rag. IOG31101)
Coverall on
houll on Thuradly, 171 ol the A - of Wttzgell Straet, t
Sundays,
J1mn c. Wrwt11mort
December 27 , zoot Deed I of Melga dltllnce of 18.00 et 10:30 A.M. of llld County, Ohio.
to the pltce ol (Rag. 1100411771)
Attomeyator
dty, tho following
Alao, the following btglnnlng,
-.!bed rMI 11-: d"crlbed premia.. contelntng thlneen 8ubllliUIId Plaintiff,
Sttueted In the tltulllclln the City or. IIIOUundllle (0.0 13) Coni ICO FJn•nce
·County of Mllga, In P-oy,
Melgt of 1n aero, mort or Servicing Corp. lkl
BUILDI!RI INC.
Groen ,._ Flnenclll
!he Still of Ohio and County, Ohio end .....
New Ho11et • Vlayl
the
VIllage of bounded
1nd
Tht
obove llntiCing
·Sidiiii•NewGorqa
Pomeroy
• n d -rlbed 11 lottowa, deacrtbed root 111111 Corportllon
·
•Repla&lt;tmelt
boundtcl
to-wit: lllglnnlng on .... ourveyed Augutl P.O. Box Ill, HOI
end deacrlbod 11 tho South aldl of 1, 1171 end w•• 11-Rcl.
Wlndowi • Room
tottowa:
Wetlglll Stroll II lhl llkln out ot e llrger 'IWinlblirg, OK 44017
Addlltons o'Roaflnl
llllng In 100 1crt Northwoat corner of percel ol' rMI • - (330) 42HZII1
[QMMROAI. anUEliOIIIIW.
101 no. 303, In Tllwn 2 Ell:uobllh
mon.tutty de eorlbed
end Ronge No. 13 Schotnletn'l
lot; In Voluf!le ;171, Plgl (11)28, 2001
FREE ESTIM.t.TES
beginning _ 11 The thlnce South to lhl 211, llalge County (12)4, 11,2001
northwtat comer of 1 Nonheall comer of Dlld Record•. It te
1ot formerly owned Clinton Slthl'a tot; Intended to oonver
Public Notice
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
by Mlchlll Witzglll; thtnct Weal to the ell ot thl remaining
thlftce South I del· .Etll lint of Win. F. rtel allatl to the
Notice Ia hortby given ~~=-=
Eett 313111t; thlnco Scllotnllln'a
lot'; gran1111 formerly lhll
the Melga County
South 85 dig. Well thence North to the ownad br Glne Aecordt Commie1ton
104 112 1111; thine• Southwett corner of Menclllnl
ond ahall
m. . t
on
Nonh I deg. Well. John Regln'a lot; C - ' a
December 14, 2001, tl
313 feet; thence thtnCI E..t to the Menchln1
not 10:15 em In· the Mllga
North 811 dig. !lat Southllot corner ot hlrttolon conveyed County Commllllonerl
104 112 1111 to lhe aald Rtgtn'a tot; br the 11ld Gtnl olflol,
• Equipment 1'1111
place of beginning, thance North to tho Menchlnl
and Nancy Pl!klr Ctmpbtll
Factory Authorized
being the Mme lot NorlhHII corner of - Clemente Menohlnl
SIOretary
conve,.cl to Henry 11ld Alpn'a 101 ond or the grantor·
· Cue-IH Parll
Schoteln by V.B. to llld • WeJIIIIIII heroin. AllerlftOII: (12)4
Horton end S.W. Strlll; thencel!lll to volume 271, Pogo
Plibllc Notice
Pomeroy by deed the · plue
of 215-lnd Volume 274,
d111d April 11th, btglnnlng. R...,..nce Page 113, Melge
3115. Reference Deed Vol. 150, Pege County
Deed
p-: Volume 141, 2... Dtld Recorda, Recorde. Purthor
Page 124, Deed Mtlge County, Ohio.
Excepting
1nd
Recorde,
Melga
hceptlng .the Reaervtng to the
County, Ohio.
following dlacrlllld, Gront111o their hllrt
The following rMI eltlllaHUIIIdln ond 11etgna 1e
cleeortbed real etllte tht Stott of Ohio, :- recordld In Volumo
attuated In the county of Melgo, 271, Pege 178 olthl
County of Melgo,' In Vllloge. of Pomeroy, Deod, Recorda of
the City of Pomeroy, Towne hlp Two (2) ' Melgo .counly, Ohio,
liounded
and North;
Renge the right otlngro••
-rlbed ealollowe: Thtnten (13) Well; end egr111 to the
llllng lhl Eeet hill of end a p1rt of Lot4to; gerogeloc- on the
Lot No. 410 end bolng
more 0.013 aore ol r111
'
! .
boglnnlng et the pertlcultrty
11tete deacrlbed\-'
Southlltt corner of dlacrlbod 11 tollowa: heroin. Sub)oct to II),
Lot No. 410; thenc11 Commencing at the teg~l hlghweya end
Weal elong the South Northeoat .corner of .e -manta ol record·
,
Houra
line of aeid · Lot 80 ttld Lot 480 11 Reference Dted:·
lt.ot: thence Nonh delln. .ttd In Pill VOlume 311, poge
7:00AM • 8:00PM
pereltel with the Eeat Book 2, Page 17 of 213, Matga County
lint 10 teet; thenoe thl ·Melgt County D. . d
Rtcorde.
Eut 80 ,.., to the Pill Recorda; a1 td Current Ownera
Eutllne of 111d 101; .,Oint eleo being thl Nome: Dontld Merlin
thtnce South eo flit Soulh line ot Wetzglll ond Chrlety Mtrtln.
to. the ploce of Stroll. thlnce South Proporty Addrou:

Cellular

301 Wlllltlll Slrtet,

BISSELL

35537 SL Rt. 7 Nortb • Pomeroy, Oh

740-985-3831
12% Economy Stock Feed .......... $8.501100
12% Equine 12 .
IFonnerlv Weatem Pride) ...........$5.00150
Huntm Pride Dog FoG&lt;! .......$1.76150

Uck Deer Blocka ...................... $6.75
·corn ........... ":.................... $5.251100
Com ............................... $8.251100'

New Homea, Room Addltlone,
Garagee, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, DtVwailll
a More

FREE ESTIMATES!

· a•

au• ·

97 Bftch St.
mlddlepert, OH

11
........

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

(10'1110' 610'1120'1

1111111
Wlllllil . . .
to

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

lnbMUI• . . •Iw

I

· cj~JI
Kand L

Disc Jockey

Service ·

Country, O.nce &amp;
RockMuelc

740-742·7709
Rea11011abll Rata
All Occttslans

CARPENTER Meigs Massage
SERVICE
Theratr~

·---

• Room Addition..
Remllilllllng

• Eteolrkral 6 ~umblng
• Roofing &amp; Quttera

• VInyl Siding I Pelntlng
• Petlo •nd Porch Decile

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-8215

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Rtclno, Ohio 45771

Tonia Relber
Licensed Massage

Therapist

740.9115-3948
CONCim/BlOCK/BRICK

740.992·1705

' Footers, Walls. Stepi •

213 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, OH 45760
Comelnandaak
eboutapeclelo
Gill Ctnlftcoltl
Avolllble

-.Ohio
•
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Flat Work,
Repl1Cemenl1, • Walka
and.Drlns • Stencil

Crtlt Fret Elllmalet
Se,.,.lna Ohio and W.V.
WVI03171l

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1671

'"''""

Rocky R Hupp Agent
Box I il9
fv11ddlcporl. Oh1o 4o 160

"

Local 843-5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medi.cal
• Nursing Home

••
j

40:...'1-"'otJ-2422
IIICMIUm

22

•

'TJlASH

I

•
• ••

'

'229.00*
• FREE INSTALLATION
• FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDIID
Jl,-lllllllilo.J • 50 YEAR WARRANTY

QUALITY WINDOW

FIIITCI•E.
FIISTIEIVD
S20UO·Pa IIIII
IEIUUILY
8127.01 PEIIIIIT

Vbit Our Show"""" Oa Stale Roult 33
' MD• North Of
Oltlo; At Co...ty Rood 18

.....,.,,..y,

• No Delllen or Conlracton Please
Vlu/ Multr&lt;ard

·

WV1102J471

flet'l Tlllndll!l
6Sulldq
Dears Open 4:31

Early birds start
.&amp;:38
Progresslue ltf
Thursdays

1066 2nd Street • Mason, WV

THE BORN
,... LOSER
Qc&gt;N'i '&lt;OJ ~&lt;J:.N..-1 ze: 1&lt;\0t-lt.'&lt;

~

BUT 1\ WILL e;JY II !

TRUE ...

I~N'\ f;:\11::~\i',\t&lt;.IC:&gt;?

J60
BllllfiRDS

I

Ruttan•. Ohio

To l!oE SAVIN&lt;;.,

llvlllible to rent
for parties

"JUST
!'\'(

21
21=- ·~

BlsoDJ...

request

0

CIIIDaiDJ

742-2572
Kip -742-7709

HubbarcJs
Herbalife :
Greenhouse Independent
Syracuae, Ohio

t

~ .,..,

·

r;;qe "''

•

: WNCH •4.tl :..-NNER •1.11 :
I

I

II :30am- 2:00 pm : 5:00 pm- 7:30 pm ':
'14 yrs &amp; under' FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE '
•I 5"8
yrs- ·~.99 1 5-8 yrs- '3.99 :
.
, 9-12 yrs -'3.99
9-!Tyrs -'4.99
1

I

I

t

· 992-me

Now open for
ChrislmM &amp;ason
Poinsettia

Many colors to
choose from
Opea Mon·S.t 10-4
Clooed Sunday

---------------------'
1
BUFFET·TO GO (LUnch .. 4.111
BUFFET TO GO (Dinner •• '8.111

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

OPED IOIILIIIG 6

lfBGUfS
. .7pm-7dlltlllltlt

'Advertise _, .our business
on I is ~age
for one month for as
low as s25

Phone 992·21 55

.. AND THEN STAND HERE FOR TEN
MINUTES HOPIN6 IT WON'T COME ?

Distributor

BUS

Call for Products
or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell
740·992·7036

-

CUT&amp;

--

2 Common

31

Mike Lawrence has
lnllllll
30oh't ......
put out another ex4 Deucaa'
=.!'~
cellent CD-ROM:
Honey·
~~Conventions." He'
moon"
40
Abnlpt
covers many of those
41 Dollwra.
in common use today,
motuge
.. T-ro'
but also includes a
org.
few recommendations
of his own, and mentions dealing with interference. During
each ·section, he tells
you whether he
thinks the treatment is
indispensable, or
worthwhile but not
vital, or dangerous for
those with poor
memories.
There are. many
bidding quizzes and a
few declarer-play
problems, though I
have produced this
deal from a pair of
bidding hands given .
on the disk. You are
in four spades. West
CELEBRITY CIPHER
leads the heart nine.
by Lull Clrilpoa
East wins with the ace
~Cipher~ote-IR&gt;tnquoltllonolly- .
and shifts to a club,
pooplo, put and....-, Etch- lnlho clpl1or- tor-.
Todroy's clew: J ei/UM U
West taking two
tricks in the suit.
·zoawuwxo KY I K I' Q · w
Then West exits with
a diamond to your
ZKAKOJIKCQ
LJ I
ZKWAHOZ,
king. Having lost
three tricks, should
KS
UKSPKO
PWCKOR
.,
you cash the spade
CWIIJG,'
KOPGXGOS
ace, hoping to drop
the king, or should
YHPO
BHTBWOZ
(18471.
you enter dummy by
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The lhousJndt ol warbltra end .
ruffing the third heart
lhrushes, the richly blo11omtng megnotte1 ... d1llghted my
and follow with the
eye.•- John J. Audubon on Loulolona
spade finesse?
South opens two
clubs, strong, artificial
and forcing. North
responds two dia- T~~:~;~T
::~:
mends, waiting. He _ _..;..__....::,_..;;;;: l~ltod ~, CLAY 1. POIUN - - - - - . holds either a bad
ltearrang• l.ften af the
four scrambled words be·
hand (fewer than
eight points) or no low to form lour 1lmpla words.
decent suit to show.
C L U il E K
South's two-spade re1'T1- ,,..-..,--I
1
bid is natural and .
_ . . 1
. 1
.
forcing.
Finally, ~:::::~===~-1
North's jump to four
K0 EV E
spades promises sup- 1--.--,.,,..-l..--.--1

I1--,-,-r,-..,
I 12 I
=·=:-:::::
I
BR f
'
I . f.

port (I prefer at least '-::~==·
four trumps, but Law- ,.
renee doesn't object
G A Y r,
to only 1hree) but denies an ace, king, void
.
..
or singleton.
M h
t' II
P R E H 0 G
fi-

taki~~ ~~: ~~;a~~ .

I

3

single-

One down and out fellow to
anot her: "I don'! want to complain, but I'd have to save up just
be--·--."

Ito

1--,--,--,,..-..:,1'1:4-,l~s-1 Q
_

_

e

.

you

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
ton spade king, he
THESE SQUARES
probably would have
led a third club, conA UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
V
TO GET ANSWER
veniently putting you
into the dumniy for
SCIIAM-LETS ANSWilS
the trump finesse.
Double • Cleft- Emend· Avenge- CEMENTED
The disk costs S64
I
grew up in a tough neighborhood. You know how
including postage .
parents bronze their baby's shoes? Well, mine were
Full details can be
CEMENTED.
found
at
http:/ /www.mi-

ITUESDA~

•

•

DECEMBER 41

WRIIPPED
maplewood Lake

st. Rt. 124

22) -- It's best not to ask for

949-2734

Wednesday, nee. 5, 2001
The year ahead i~ :m excellent period to further your
knowledge either concerning
your work nr your future .
What ym1 gatht•r ami as.~imi ­
latc will greatly improve your
chance~ for big success.

Ull Cllllllllfl dtlr

~Oiler's
Deer Shop

742·2076

r

CANCEil Uu11e 21-j11ly

Racine, Obit

summ~rsa

Complete tho chuckle quoted
bv filling In the missing wordt
develop from alep No. 3 below.

I I I

•

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc . 21) -- Don't be unduly

•'

•

uffcnd..-d today if modatc5 aren't receptive to your ideas
ami thou~ht!&lt;.. T hat fiery tem per of youu could cauqe you
to ~:r.y thin~s you 5houldn't.
Trying 10 pah·h np a broken
rouJ:ul Cl'? T he Amo-Graph

'YIIIII.IIrcliil'll(,
Slll5, !II!MII!,ill
Canw3rdol

All.-.

if West had

11

DEER

••

11esse is correct. Also,

...........

~

11 711

p-

DOWN

0

IT ON
SILL .•
PUT

(1000 ft from the bridge)

Hours: Sun • Thur llllm - 10 pm
Frl &amp; Sat 11 am • llpm

,_

S@\tg\llA-L&amp;'E!fS•

KNOW TAAi JOI&lt;.E.

t&gt;UCI&lt;. 1:!&gt; SUPPOSE!&gt;

11/18 pd 1 mo, :

. Tel: (304) 773-580~

,._ Jt

33 Tlfllllllllw
34Sipl

VIm llftiC.EIT WillOWS
-111Yilll....U . . .•

992·4119 1·800·291-5600

........

-

c,_ •IS lltconl
Exi*b. .~

25 Gaall
Gllmpoo
27 Stunn-

Eat

we.t

::c.

20c-o
•~tg•

I( ••

Open1nc lull: • t

. 6itAMMA~

•NewHomaa
• Garttgea
Remodeling

""'

t 1t I 4 I

bealer.ICNth
Both

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

month.

•Compltle

12
63 -IIDL 1 '
54W~
column

•••

MOftlA.fTE~Y

$50 per

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUCTlOII

11
17-1
lllmonta
11=

w:~

•uu

•

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

11f121t

P/8

.
.....
4

54 lllx up
55E!111"""
57,_
ltllo.nelglt-

.AQJIIII
• I[ Q J

!6

spac·e for 740-992-5232mo.
YOUNG'S

yI

•• 7

A Q 11

J+

In this
21271 mopd

•

IIHUI

r-- n..-M:JIIj@jJiQj3f,!! .~----;,

Bryan Reeves

I

u

53 .......
- .........

• .........
111........
12KM1o13Arm1ST-

Vu.lnet~Wr.

Advertise

Construction ·

• J

9 I I' It
• J t J

992-5479

740-992·7599

in this
space
for $50
per
month

e Q

.. ...'

Jeff Warner Ins.

se,ooo.oo

"Ahead In Service"

45 Ealy451nc.CGUIIn
45 Fll guy
51 -.y

Matchmaker ran hdp you un..:
daHand wh01t to do to make

.
••

the relationship work. Mail
· $2.7 5 to Matduuaker, c/o t!Jis
newspaper, P.O . Ilox 1758,
Murray Hil! Station, Nt·w
York. NY 10 I:;6 .
CAI'IliCOitN (Dec. 22Jan . l'J) -- This i~ not the
time to make lar~e finan'"ial
co1 nminncms of any kind .
What you do iu hme today
'auld produ'e long-term
r:unincatiom. Sleep on thin~

·,•

••

•

''
••I

li~t .

AQUARIUS

U•"'·

20- Feb.

19) ~- Any promi~e you make
totlay under durcn will be
dc~:ply re!ented by you. You
either won't honor the com~
I I

i

fin.ancia1 favors from friends
today. If you ~et a ne~:uive
re~ponse, you won't like them
anymore, amJ if you can't pay

miunent or do a Jou$y job if
you do. Uoth eau hurr your
reputatio11.
PISCES (Feb. 2U-Mmh 211)
--There's a KtJOd chaJJCf; you
could make t~ing5 harder on
your1df than need be· if you
brhave ra~hly tod;a)'. You
need rime tO opL•ratr effectively and leave yourself some
wi~le room .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- Agt~in today you could find
yourself caught in the middle
between two quarreling
friends. If their situation continues to flare up, you might
be wise to a•mid the-m for a

th&lt;"m b;a·k promptly, th~y
won't like you.
·
LEO Uuiy 23- Aug. 22) -- 'It
will be to your disadvantage

today to have an active imagi·
n:nion if you use it ro conjure
tlp negative though ts when
trying to make an importa nt
deci~ion.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
-- Persom who usually pick
up your overlo01d may be no-

when: to be- found today. so
you had bcner be prepared to

fend for yourself, especially if
an important job nnut be

while .
TAURUS (April 20-M,y

done.
LiUilA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Due to comp1icated d~vel­

2U) -- It's not hke you 10 be
hasty or impuhive in handling
either rarccr or pcnonal m~~;t­
ter~. yet today that's exactly
what ym1 may do . UJ!fortunately, the results cou ld be
daniaging.
GEMINI (M•y 21 -June 20)
-- l)o IIOt 3CCcJrr:U~ your saks
pitch ~od:l)' if you find what
you have to offer is being rejected. Continu~ a ~oft ~ell,
which may wurk in time, bec:m~e a homl sell definitely
won't.

opmems with a friend today,
it might be difficult for you to
deal diplomatically with your
pal ou you nonnally would. It
might be wise to walk away
inst~:1d.

SCOilPIO (Oco . 24-Nov.
2:!) -- It won't be enough to
be tenaciou~ tod:~y in order to
achieve an objective: you're
going to have to employ a
great Je:.l of uct al~o. DisgruJJtled co- workers could bt
Jisruptive .
I

I.

•

l
I

\
j

•

�Page 1(!

The Daily Sentinel

Students achieve honor roll, Al

~.December"- 200f

•

No. 2 Missouri hangs on to beat Billikens Duke a.lock at No. 1~
ST. LOUIS (AP1 · · Although the wrong guy took the final
shot. things turned , :''just right for No. 2 Missouri.
Point guard Wesley Stokes, known more for his flowing [,.clts
than. his shooting touch, made a tough IS-footer at the bu22er
as thr Tigers beat upset-minded Saint Louis 69-67 Monday
night.
Stokes is the team's filth-leading scorer with a I 0-point average and had been 1-for-6 tiom the field before hitting the game•
winner that kept his ·ream unbeaten.
"That's probably what they wanted, to make me take the last shot,"
Stokes said. "But I don't think it paid
off for them this time.''
Stokes was the thin:! option in the final sequence and he hit
the shot over Marque Perry, who had tied it with 4.8 seconds to
go with a 3-pointer over Stokes. The final play was designed for
Stokes to drive to the basket and kick the ball out to either of
Missouri's big scorers, Kareem Rush and Clarence Gilbert, if he
didn't have a layup.
"I was like 'Wes, Wes, give me the ball:" Rush said. "But I'm
happy Wes took it."
Saint Louis coach Lorenzo Romar saw it as a no-win situation.
"He's the guy that people say, 'WeU,let him shoot: but when
the game's on the. line, he's capable of doing what he did:'
Romar said. ''I've watched him since he was in high school and
he's always done that."
Arthur Johnson led Missouri (8-0) with 16 points and 14
rebounds, his third straight double-double. Rush and Gilbert had
18 points each for the Tiger;, off to the school's best start since
the 1991-92 team began the season 11-0.
Missouri, which won despite going 1-for-10 tiom 3-point
ran~, hasn't been ranked this high ~ince the 1989-90 team was
ranked No. 1.
"l'rrl not sure what that gets you, maybe a cup of.coffee,"
coach Quin Snyder said. "The neat thing about it for me is my
&amp;mily can check our boxscores out and watch SportsCenter and

TOP 25

see highlights. Other than that, l dorl't have much use for it."
Perry had nin• of his 20 poinu in the final minute for Saint
Louis (2-4), wht• · has lost three straight at home to start the sea. son.The last tim! .hat happened was in 1991-92, when the Bil·likens finished 5-23.
.
Kenny Brown added 12 points and nine rebounds for Saint
Louis.
Romar unloaded his frustrations on guard Josh Fisher during
a second-half timeout, and it kept his team in the game. With
9:01 to go, he became enraged at·a charging call on Chris Braun,
throwing his jacket on the court and drawing a technical that
helped Missouri rake a 54-48 lead, and a few minutes after that
he exhorted the crowd to cheer.
"We've lost enough as far as I'm concerned," Romar said.
"You've got to know your •team and this team probably just
needs more of a kick in the pants."
Players were shocked at first, then they responded.
"Coach Romar keeps us on our toes," guard Drew Diener
said. "I don'tthink I've ever seen him take off his coat before. He
wanted to give us a spark and really get us into it and we came
back really strong."
Gilbert started slow and finished strong for the second straight
game, missing his first four shots and finishing 8-for-.15. G'ilbert
scored six straight points for Missouri in a late stretch that provided a 62- 56 cushion with 2:34 to go, and also had two free
throws in the frenzied final minute.
Missouri has taken two of three since the in-state rivals
resumed playing after an IS-year absence. The schools do not
have a contract for next season and Saint Louis, at this point,
appears more interested than Missouri jn keeping the series
alive.
"Obviously, nothing's official, but Quin has never said 'Hey,
we're not playing,"' Rornar said. "So I don't see any reason why
it wouldn't continue."

No. 3 Maryland 77,
Connecliad 65

•

Tournament MVP Lonny Baxter had 24 points and 10
rebounds and Juan Dixon added 16 points to lead the Terrapins
(6- I) in the championship game of the BB&amp;T Classic.
Baxter was 8-for-I 0 tiom both the field and the free throw
line at the MCI Center as Maryland won its sixth straight.
UConn closed to 60-53, but Dixon scored in the lane and Baxter made two free throws and the Huskies never got closer than
nine points.
Caron Buder score&lt;! 20 points for the Huskies (3-l),now 1010 under coach Jim Calh(/un against team ranked in the Top 5.

No. 16 Alabama 74.
Chattanooga 68

,

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.......

Duke received all the firstplace votes in the AP college
basketball poll Monday, the
first time the Blue Devils have
been a unanimous No. I since n. 1op 25 ...._ 1n 1"M
a .·
Preu' nwt'a colllgt b 7 11*1 poll.
the 1991 -92 season.
wfttt ............... kt J*"'* I
Victories over Iowa and
111""'9h Doc. 2, polftl!l
on 25 poinll lor • first.,...
Clemson last week kept Duke -vole through
one point for a 2Sthvp''O'
(6-0) unbeaten and the ..,..andpnW~ouoro-:
•
defending national champion
Pv ·
- &amp;.o 1,7$0
Pta
1
got aU 70 first-place votes and 1: Duke (7U)
HI 1,647
3
2. t.lsaouri
1,750 points from the nation- 3. Maryland
5
5-1 1,574
..., 1,434
If
4. Kar1U$
al media panel.
6-1 1,-t19
4
Missouri (7-0), which beat 5.4--1 1,392
6
G. f!Orida
S.1 1,2:60
Jackson State and Grambling 7. Arizona
HI 1,23(
8. VIrginia
a
State last week, had 1,647 9. Syracuse
&amp;-0 1,124 12
14
&amp;-0 1,081
10. Oklatoomo 51.
points and moved up one 11.
).1 1,068
13
Kantuclty
7
place to No. 2, .the Tigers' 12. 1owa
6·2 1,009
!HI. 917 11i
13.·
Booton
College
highest ranking since they 14. Stanford
1t..
S.1 764
&lt;1-1 704
were No. I on Feb. 20, 1990. 15; Boll St.
5-1 495 ·2f
Alabama
Since Duke was a unani- 16.
HI 454 ~
17. Marq\JOUe
4-1 450 19
mous1~o. I for five weeks in 18. 5alnl Joseph's
18
5-1 435
19. Georgetown
the 1991-92 season, when the 20. UCLA
2-2 429
10
IH 390 24
Blue Devils .repeated as 21. FretnO St.
11-2 362 2IJ
22. Men'4lhl•
national champions, three 23. Wake Forest
5-1 320 25
&lt;1-2 271
22
Michigan 51.
other schools have received all 24.
&lt;1-2 101 . 11;:
25. W. t&lt;entucky
the first-place votes in t~e
•
01horl rocolvlng . -: Oklahoma 85,
weekly balloting.
Notre Dame 78, COnnecticut 65, Georgia
I

Eagles
from Page~

enough about her. She works hard, and it
pays off for her in games like this. She really
proved how good she can be tonight," said
Brannon.
The battered Spartans attempted to put
some pressure on the youth of the Eagles by
-jumping into full court pressure late' in the
.third. However, after a timeout, the Eagles
were able to weave their way up the floor and
forced Alexander to stop pressing. They also
had to tighten the lid on LaPorte again, as she
had scored six consecutive points.
Coach Brannon assigned Terri Wol(e and
Alyssa Holter to the job, which they did well.
Laporte · only scored twice throughout the
remainder of the game. At the end of the third
quarter, hope was fading for the Spartans as

'

'(

Business
to open •in
EastMe1gs

Kansas was a unanimous

choice for three weeks in
199{&gt;-97, and North Carolina
was for one week the next
season. Last sea;on, Stanford
was a unanimous No. 1 for
three weeks.
Maryland moved up two
spots to third this week, while
Kansas jumped four places
after a 105-97 victory at Arizona, the Wildcats' first loss of
the season.
'
Illinois
(6-1),
which
received three No. 1 votes last
week, dropped from second to
fifth after losing 76-63 at
Maryland in the Big TenACC Challenge.
Florida, Arizona. Virginia,

·

63, Cincinnati 50, S. Illinois 43, Southem
Cal o&amp;2, Butler 40, Indiana 36, South FJoril;.
da 25, Temple 22, Texas 22, Gonzaga 17;
Creighton t3, Mississippi 12, MasiJachu.-.
sens 10, Tennessee to, Ohio St. 8, Penn
8, Miami 8, MlssissliJii St 8, Utah St. 1.
Texas Tech 1.
..

••

•
Syracuse and Oklahoma Stau;
rounded out the Top Ten. It
was the first appearance thii
season in the Top Ten for Syracuse (8-0), which moved up
from 12th, and Oklahoma
State (8-0), 14th last week.
Kentucky moved up two
places to lead the Second Ten,
and was .followed by Iowa,
Boston College, Stanford, Ball
State, Alabama, Marquette,
Saint Joseph's, Georgetown
and UCLA.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Wellston tips Meigs, B1

Deaths
:Margaret Wise, 75
Details, A3

HANDBEU. CHOIR - New to the music program at Eastern High School Is a handbell choir
directed by Chris Kuhn. Members performed for the first time at the annual holiday open house
of the old Chester Courthouse. Performing, from the left, are Brittany Hauber, Denise West.
Carrie Crow, Nichol Honaker, and Thomas Simmons. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

HandbeiPchoir performs

Weather

··I

Hlp: 70s, L-: 50s
Details, A3

MIDDLEPORT
HOLIDAY GIVEAWAY

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

in Gifts and Merchandise!

.Next Monday they will do conce~
for students an Salisbury and Harrisonville
celebration .elementary schools. Also, Dec. 15 at 7 p.m.
without . ,. the group will join the brass quartet ·
the sound ofbells?
and co~ bal'll! at Eastern HiglfSchool

OHIO

Register Weekly at Participating Merchants

Plck .J d1y: 5-9-2
Pick 4 d1J: 8-4·2·5
·
lludc•t• Flve:'2·20-24-34-35
.Pick J nlaht: 2-9-8
.
Pick 4 .nliht: 3-7-2-8
W.VA.

MeiS' Counry's only high
s,~:hool handbell choir performed for the first time Saturday at the Chester Courthouse holiday open house.
Directed by Chri~ Kuhn, the
II Eastern High School students presented a medley of
familiar carols. Later rhat same
day they performed for · the
Eastern Teachers Association.
Next Monday they will do
concerts for students in Salisbury and Harrisonville elementary schools and then on
Dec. 15 at 7 p.m. the group
will join the brass quartet and

.

Dally 3: 7-5-3
Dilly 4: 8-3-2-0

c.sti 25: 3-5-19-20..24-25
•

Index
2 SectiDRI - ll PttiJIII

Calendar
c;lassifieds
Comics

AS
82-4

85

Dear Abby

AS
A4
A3
A3

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports ·
Weather

°/o INTEREST

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SH Store For Details

B1,3,6
A3

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91 Mlll St.

Middleport, Ohio

992~6250

Stop in fr register to win this
Lane 5' S!lper-sizea stocking
stutrea with assortea games,
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PleiN -

Choir, .U

burg,

TUJ?PERS PLAINS - A
steel fabrication business,
expected to open this week,
will become the first business
to operate in East Meigs
Industrial Park.
WeCan Fabricators is a
locally owned company specializing in customized
structu'ral steel for business
and industry.
MeiS' Counry's Jeff Cox,
who has worked as the general manager at Viking Fabrication, is the factory's owner.
The firm will lease a
5,400- square-foot facility
. built •by the Me iS' Counry
Community Improvement
, Corp. with financial backing
tiom the Ohio Department
of Development, other state
funds and private financing
·through Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.
"The Tuppers Plains location offers WeCan direct
access to Ohio State Route 7
and their markets in Belpre
Marietta
and
and ·
Ravenswood and Parkers-

WVa.,"
Economic
Development
Director
Perry Varnadoe
said.
We Can
Yamlldcle
is expected to employ 30 when fully
operational, Varnadoe said,
and will offer employees
competitive wages and a full
benefits package.
The shop is now operating
on a limited basis, he said,
while finishing work is completed on the faciliry.
The industrial site is located on . properry formerly
owned by Ohio Valley Man"
ufacturing Co.
It is considered a prime
location for economic devel'Opment because of its proximiry to Ohio 7 and U.S. 50,
and has been improved by
the CIC with the infrastructure needed to attract small'
manufacturing firms and
other light industries.

Officials reach

•
compromises on

budget deficit
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio would join a multistate lottery and local governments would not lose
state funding, under an
agreement reached Tuesday
to balance the state budget,
House
Speaker
Larry
Householder said.
Householder, a Glenford
Republican, said he had a
bare majority of . "two to
three" votes to pass the budget plan, needed to parch a
$1.5 billion budget deficit.
The plan includes a commission to study gambling,
whi ch helped persuade
conservative Rep~blicans
with concerns about the
multistate lottery, ·House.
holder said.
"That meant enough. for
them that they felt they
were doing the responsible
thing," he said.
The plan balances the
budget through a combination of cuts to state agencies, tapping the state's rainy
day fund , borrowing from
Ohio's share of the national
settlement
with
maJOr
tobacco companies, and
requiring more financial

,..----, institutions that
loan
money to
pay taxes.
It also
ratses
money by
requiring
Ohioans
Taft
who lease
vehicles or boats or business
equipment to pay tax on the
lease immediately, rather
than over the life of the
lease.
Democrats, in the minority in the House and Senate,
oppose the plan, saying it
uses too much tobacco
money, meant for antismoking efforts, and does
not adequately fund higher
education.
Taft praised the plan, calling it responsible and fair,
and said he 'fOU!d sign the
bill that incorporates the
compromiSe.
The budget committee
was preparing to meet again
for a final vote Tuesday
night after a day of closed
door negotiations among
PleiM -

Buclpt. .U .

Love Lights a Tree
sponsored by the ~nierican Cancer Society and Holzer Medical Center
•

A special holiday event honoring loved ones and helping aid cancer research
.i

, Frida£ December 7, 200 1
6:30 pif • Gallipolis City Park

54

Alex
8
8
4
19
- 39
Eastem - Kyrstal Baker 1 o-o 2, Alyssa Holler 2 ().1 4, Tiffany
Bissell 0 1·2 I, Kalkl Robertson 1 0-Q 2, Sandy Powell 5 Q-0 11,
Jessica Dillon 1 0·0 2, Stacie Watson tO S-9 28, Terri WoHe 2 01 4. Totals: 22 9-18 54.
Alex - Jessica Jordan 1 0.0 2, Erica s&amp;ms 2 4-4 B. Jessica
Whlllach 2 o-o 4, Sarah WOOds 2 0·0 5, Sara Kaufman 1 0·1 2,
Elizabeth LaPorta 7 4-618. Totals: 17 8-1139.

f

introducing handbells into the
regular music department.
Agreeing it was a good idea,
the board ordered the bells last
summer.
They arrived in late October and practice began.
Handbell £hoir members are
Jennifer Hardson, Billie Jo
Welsh, Darlene Connolly,
Becky .Baylor,
Brittany
Hauber, Denise West, Carrie
Crow, Nicol Honaker, Thomas

WASHINGTON (AP) Two American .soldiers . were
killed and 20 wounded in
Afghanistan Wednesday when
a B-52 bomber missed its target, the Pentagon said.
An unknown nun;&gt;ber of
opposition fighters also died in
the incident north of the last
Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, said Pentagon spokesman
Lt. Col. Dave L~pan. That is
where oppositionI foro~~$ ~are•• ·
trying to overthrow . tlie .
besieged former ruiers o.f the
country.
The troops were hit when a STANDING GUARD - An Afghan civilian looks on, right, as a
B-52 flying a bombing raid in U.S. Army soldier from the Tenth Mountain Division, center,
support of anti-Talibln forces and a northern alliance soldier guard a jointly-Qperated checkdropped a bomb near them, point set up inside Bagram Airbase, north of the Afghan capiLapan said.
tal Kabul. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

Acquisitions

96" Trestle table,
ballEt claw
and
six

concert band at Eastern High
School for a Christmas program.
The Eastern handbell choir
is a "first" in musi' education
programs in Meigs · Counry
schools.
Kuhn had rung bells with a
choir before coming to Eastern as a music teacher but had
never directed one.
Her love and enthusiasm for
handbells. led her to approach
Eastern Local Board of Education about the prospect of

Two U.S. soldiers killed

days till
Christmas

0

for a Chrlstmas program.

AMERICA AT WAR

C1 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Vaughan· Bassett Sleigh Bed
lwtith letrther panels, match,lni
triple dresser w{landscape
'mirror, Et 5 drAwer chest·

5

.

HESTER .
-What's a
Christmas

Over $3000

Dundee double reclining sofa
with drop down table and
massage and matching
·rocker recliner.

;Want to hear the handbell choir?

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

e.otem 54, Aleunder 39
Eastern

STEEL FABRICATION

1.

Temple.nabs Badgers in lOT

they trailed 20-38.
Eastern began to sub freely in the ' fourth
quarter, getting as many people on the floor
and in the scoring column as possible. Alexander showed some iife late in the game, but it
was to· !.ate for the doomed Spartans.
. . With Watson scoring 28, and Powell's I 1, the
Spartans went down to defeat 54-39. Alex's
LaPorte was a strong factor in the game, and
the Eagles had .some trouble before they finally tightened the lid on her outside shooting
game.
The Eagle JV team set the tone, as they
defeated the reserve Spartans 40-16. Jennifer
Hayman led all scorers with 12.

CHRISTMAS TuNEs

VUhars inside

•

CHAUENGE THE SHOT Maryland's Drew Nicholas
(12) goes up for the shot In
front of Connecticut's Emeka
Okafor (50) Monday. (AP)

records: most points (47), field goals (18) and
field goal attempts (38). His 47 points matched
the second highest total ever against a Wisccmsin team- equaling the mark of Bill Bradley
of Princeton on Dec. 21,1963, and falling just
short of the record of 50 points scored by Purdue's Terry Dischinger on Jan. 27, 1962.
But he fell well short of the Temple record of
73 points set by Bill Mlkvy in 1951 against
Wilkes, which coincidentally is ihe alma mater
of first-year Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan.
AlexWesby added 14 points forTemple.
Freddie Owens had 23 points and Devin
· Harris added 21, both career-highs for Wisconsin (2-5). Harris, a freshman, took a schoolrecord 20 3-point attempts, hitting six, and
accounted for half of the team-record 40.
The Badgers trailed by as many as 14 points
early in the second half, before rallying behind
the hot shooting of Owens and Harris.
Owens scored seven straight points in an 1 t0 Wisconsin run that was capped by two free
throws by Harris and tied the game at 39-39
with just over four minutes remaining.
The Badgers took their biggest lead, 50-44,
on consecutive 3-pointers by Harris.

Hometown Newspeper

••u

Rod Grizzard and Terrance Meade each scored 16 points for
the Crimson Tide (6-1), which set a school record with 35 3point attempts.
Alabama used a 23-4 run to rake a 61-44lead with 11:05 to
play, but Chananooga (2-5) came right back with a 20-7 run
that made it a four-point game with 45 seconds left. The Crimson Tide, who finished 13-of-35 tiom 3-poin~ range, closed the
game with a 6-2 run.
Clyde McCully led visiting Chananooga with 20 points.

MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Lynn Greer had
aJready hit two big shots for Temple. It was
midway through the second' overtime and he
wasn't sure he would even be able to walk out
of the building.
The 6-foot-2 senior was able to play those
final minutes and· he finished with a careerhigh 47 points in Temple's 70-67 double-overtime victory over Wisconsin on Monday night.
"We were sitting there during a timeout and
I felt my legs shaking and my arms shaking,"
Greer said. "I didn't know how much more I
had left.
. "I just told the guys, 'We.'ve got three minutes left and we can go home.' We gave it our
aU those last three minutes and came away with
the win."
'
.
Greer hit a 3-pointer with I 0 seconds
remaining in regulation to tie the game 53- 53.
He forced the second overtime with another
3-pointer with just .3 seconds left.
He then scored six of the Owls' I 0 points in
the second overtime, including two free throws
with 13 seconds remaining that gave Temple
(3-2) its final margin .
Greet left with a handful of Kohl Center

Melp County'$

AP18p25

To donale $10 for,q personalized Christmas Ornament per honoree,
contacl ~lmie McFarland at (740) 446-5679 or
Kim Painter at (74~'446·5365 before Noon on Friday, December 7.

'

.....

~--~--· ·--·-·-

..

~--

---· --------------·------

--

(·

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org
••

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