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Nation • World

1he Daily Sentinel
MrtOI' elett won't fire chief
~EATI'LE (AP) -

Mayor-elect Greg Nickels says he won't
me Police Chief Gil Y erlikowsk.e, who was heavily criticized for.
&lt;!rdering officers to &gt;' ld by as Mardi Gras riots this year lett one
dead and 70 injured.
: During his campaign, Nickels said public safety was paramount
lmd that he would consider replacing Kerlikowske over what

happened.

Page B8

.

: After a series of meetings with the second-year chief, Nickels
Aid he was confident ofKerlikowsk.e's leadership. Nickels made
hi$ decision over the weekend and told the police chief earlier
rbisweek..
; · Nickel.! said he took his time making the decision, but ulti~tely determined Kerlikowske "deserves a chance here."
: . During the riot last February, Kerlikowske and other com!DA"ders ordered officers to stand by, fearing any move would
only incite the crowd further.
: The department's own investigation found that commanders
were not prepared to handle the 4,000 revelers who showed up
the final night of Mardi Gras celebrations.

..foe:
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Meigs County Health Care strategies inside today!

1hunU'f, Dece•ber 1.1101

•

Report: Too early to voucher effects
WASHINGTON (AP) Giving
students government
low-in com
money to a :t ·nd private school.! seems
to help them a bit, but it's unclear
whether larger voucher programs would
have an effect, according to a study
released Thursday.
R.esearchers with R.AND, a think
tank, also said charter school programs
seem beneficial, but that there's not
enough evidence these programs make a
dramatic improvement in learning.
"For most of the key questions, direct
evaluations of vouchers and charter
schools have not yet provided dear
answers, and the list of unknowns
remains substantially longer than the list
of knowns;· researchers said.
The study said vouchers are popular

and seem to bring modest benefits to
low-income black students in troubled
school.!. But there is not enough evidence to say whether expanding the
programs would help students in other
ethnic groups.
Calling for more long-term data on
the academic progress of voucher and
charter school students, the study said
there's little research comparing such
programs' effects to more conventional
reforms such as reducing class size and
improving teacher training.
.Federal vouchers were a centerpiece
of President Bush's education reform
effort, but Republicans could not muster
enough support for them last spring.
· New funding for charter schools will
probably be included. in Bush's edilca-

tion bill, which Congress hopd to finish
this month.
Charter schools, which have become
popular over the past decade, are public
schools that agree to improve student
performance in exchange· for greater
freedom from state and local rules.
Voucher programs ·operate in only a
few areas nationwide. About 10,000
low-income students in Milwaukee
attend school with $5,300 state vouchers. Another 3,800 students in Cleveland
receive up to $2,250 in tuition.
In Florida, children with disabilities
are eligible for vouchers of nearly S7 ,000
-about 3,900 students are enrolled this
fall.
Nationwide, about 53 million students
· attend public or private schools.

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Racine
man
us killed
in crash
:

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-· '1
y

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:! fREEHOLD, N.J. (AP) -

Negotiations between striking
te?chers and education officials broke off early :rhursday as more
~ 100 teachers who are refusing to return to work spent the
,riight in jail cells.
• Talks stopped at about 3 a.m. on Thursday when no progress
;.,.... made, according to union spokeswoman Karen Joseph. She
~d negotiations were expected to resume at 8 p.m. Thursday.
More than 130 Middletown teachers have been jailed this
week for disobeying Superior Court Judge Clarkson S. Fisher Jr..
who ordered them back to work last Thursday, the same day they
'walked off the job at 17 schools.
; "The union says the strike is a legitimate job action, even if it is
:ill~.

•

; For a third day Wednesday, defiant teachers were grilled in
;cqurt about why they weren't returning to the classroom. The
~dard answer: "We won't return until we get a fair, negotiat•cd, signed sealement." ·
·
: , .Eighty-eight were jailed 'Wednesday - including Keyport
:Mayor Kevin Graham, a social studies teacher - and three othwere ordered to report to jail this weekend.

;&lt;:rl

~ :Springfield grieves after stabbing
,SPR.INGFIELD, Mass. (AP) - Grief counselors have been
.made available for students shaken by the fatal stabbing of a high
:s'chool.counselor,allegedly by a 17-year-oid student.
: Authorities said Corey Ramos stabbed The Rev. Theodore
:Brown on Wednesday during an argument in a Springfield High
!School classroom in front of other students and a teacher.
•' •. ~rown was a Pentecostal minister who had been working in
~ school. system since 1996. He was . married and had one
&lt;lliJd, police said.
: ·:Ramos was charged with murder and was scheduled to be
~raigned Thursday in Springfield District Court.
Police said they recovered the knife in a wooded area behind
~e school. Ramos ran from the building and was arrested a half;mile a~. Hampden County prosecutor William Bennett said.
; : The argument started when Brown reportedly asked. Ramos
;10 remove a hood he was wearing on his head in violation of
;sehool rules. Brown was stabbed: five to six times in the stomach
tand chest.
1: "I think he's a young man who lost it completely;• School
:superintendent Joseph .Burke said. "He was rather withdrawn.
ii;Ie was not doing well academically:•
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litio"
.: ~• ...,...,.. resiIIISIVIII
Coa
n
' ·
1·;le)der
.NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - Pat R.obertson stepped down as
of the Christian Coalition after more than a decade ip
:cl)atge of the conservative organization, saying he wants to spend
•more time on .his ministry.
• •
' ·"People come and people go. It's a good thing for leaders to
' · ,down and o thers, younger, to come and take their pIace. I
:step
[don't see this as anything but positive for the Coalitiqn;'Robert~son, 71:,silidWe&lt;!nesday in a telephone interview from his ChrisBroadcasting Network headquarters in Virginia Beach. ·
: Robertson founded the Christian Coalition in Chesapeake,
:Va., in 1989, a year after his failed bid for the Republican nom;ination for president. The coalition became a major force in
~GOP politics in the 1990s by mobilizing conservative voters
.
!through grass roots activities.
• In his resignation letter to the coalition's board of directors,
:Robertson wrote that the organization had fulfilled aU of its 1O'·
; year goals established in 1990.
; ' :He said the coalition was pivotal in the election of Chtistian
; ~oJtSCrvatives nationwide and "without us, 1 do not believe
l peorge Bush would be sitting in the White House or that
iJtepublicans would be in conttol of the United States House of
: !tepresentatives."
:-:

:tian

head5 for Space ..,d~
; ~NalrwOUr
... UV\J
• l:...t....u

•

Democrats
drop milk
tax to gain ·
WI\SHJNGTON (AP) Senate Democrats have
dropped a proposed we on
milk in a ' bid to win passage
uf an overhaul of farm and
nutrition programs. Dairy
farmers would instead get
new subsidies directly from
the government.
The Senate opened debate
on the farm bill Wednesday,
even as Democratic leaders
tried to round up enough
votes t&lt;J pass it.
In addition to altering the
dairy program. which would
·pay farmers S2 billion over
five years, Democrats also
were offering more money
for conservation.
Senate Majority Leader
Tom Daschle, D-S.D., wants
to have the legislation on
President Bush's desk by the
end of the year, but prospects
are fading that lawmakers
can work out their differences by then. The Senate
put off votes on its bill until
next week. The R.epublican,controlled House passed a
different version earlier this
fall.
"People in rural America
need this .bill, and they need
it now," said Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman
Tom Harkin, D-Iowa.
Existing programs don't
· expire until next fall, but
farm groups fear there will
be less money for their subsidies if lawmakers delay the
legislation.
The Senate bill faces
strong opposition from the
Bush administration, which
says higher crop subsidies
will encourage excess production and make it more
difficult to get other countries to reduce their farm
spending.
A move by conservative
R.epublicans to block consideration of the bill
Wednesday was easily defeat-

I

•

DNA links man to slayings

: : FRESNO, Calif. (AP) -A man serving a life sentence for
!killing a teen-age girl was charged with murdering four others
; 8sj:er authorities said DNA evidence linked him to two of the
·
: '!.
~l"ytngs.
..
.
::: IUy Dell Sims, 66, an inmate at San Quentin State Pnson, was
•:COnvicted in !978forthemurderof17-year-oldJanetHerstem,
:~ho was found near the San Joaquin R.iver in May 1977. She
:;Was on her paper route when she disappeared.
;: Aathorities have been working to solve four similar mid: ;1970s killings.
,•

. .•

Phones ara getting smarter, storage is more portable and cheaper, TV
shows are now for sharing across the lntemet, DVDs are for the road.
and vivid color printing is getting more affordable.

support

: SPACE CENTER., Houston (AP) - Space shu ale Endeavour ed, 73-26.
. ; raced toward the international space station early Thursday to
Dairy processors withdrew
their opposition to the Sen' deliver the fourth crew to live in the orbiting outpost.
. : After nearly a week of delays, Endeavour lifted off from the ate bill after Harkin agreed
:Kennedy Space Center in Florida for an 11-day mission shortly to drop a proposed · fee on·
:before iUnset Wednesday under extremely tight security.
milk that would have raised
: It was the first shu ale launch since the Sept. 11 terrorist retail prices at least 10 per; attacks, and Endeavour's commander, Dominic Gorie, marked cent.
~ the occasion with some patriotic parting words.
The fee was intended to
~ "We're all aware that for over 200 years and certainly over the fund a new subsidy program
~bst two months, freedom rings loud and clear across this coun- that would cost $2 billion
~try. But right here and right now, it's time to let freedom roar. over the next five years.
~ Let's light them up," Gorie told Mission Control shortly before
The dairy program would
;:i:!Jceoff at 5:19 p.m. eastern time.
still likely be a major sticking
;&gt; The launch was scheduled for last Thursday but a jammed point in negotiations with
!llocking mechanism on space station Alpha forced two delays. the House, lawmakers say.
•Sfter that was fixed, had weather scrubbed Tuesday's attempt. Critics say the payments
:W-eather was also a concern Wednesday but it 'cleared up in time. would encourage overpro1; : Liftoff and its preparations took place under the guard of fight- duction of milk.
: ]!r jets, helicopters and military personnel in camouflage.
"This bill will go down, if
:• .
this is in it. The House tells

::

E-toys for the holidays

~~I~;~~aid Sen. Larry Craig,
"We've all known for a
long time that (dairy) was
the most difficult part of this
whole deal," said Sen. Kent
Conrad, D-N.D.
The White House said
Wednesday that it strongly
opposes the Senate legislation but stopped short of
threatening to veto it.

War on terrorism con1inues, AI

Two other Meigs
·residents transported to
Pleasant Ullley Hospital

Deaths

, .... •nd phoiieln one
SPif.l300 Series

Donnie Freeman, 31

The handset marries a personal digital
assl$tant and a wireless phone that
allows you to connact to the lntemet
and check e·mall. Using Palm's
operating system, the un~ has a 256color, touch·screen display. $488.98

BY TONY M. LEAcH

Details, A3

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

FIVE POINTS - A R.acine man is
dead following a two car accident on
County R.oad 7 A near Five Points.
According to the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, Donnie A. Freeman, 31, R.acine,
was killed around 6: 10 p.m. Thursday
night after being thrown from his vehicle

Gtpln
your pocket .
Plerlen 20GB
AreWlre buncle
Both hot-pluggable
and host powered,
the Pee~ess
bundle will store ·
data, Including
hours of MP3
music Illes, on
20GB disks, one ol
which Is included.
The unn connects
to both Macintosh .
and PCs using the
super.fast FireWire
transfer protocol.

DVD IRovlas on the go
PaniSOnlc DVD-LA95
Wllh a 9-lnch LCD color screen w~h a
resolution of 432 x 234 pixels, this
portable player plays DVDs and new
DVD-RAM discs as well as COs with
MP3 files, CDR and CDRW fonnats.
S711.98

$381.115

in a two car acCident.

Weather
Hlah: 40s. Low: 30s

Details, A2

OHIO

Photo-qullty printing

w,

Epeon Stylus C80
With up to 2,880 Cots per Inch,

"'~(

.'"·

the colo.r Inkjet printer spits out
20 pages per miJlJ!e o1 black text,
supports pigment Inks and even
constantly monitors ink
con~umption.
•111

Pick 3 A)': 0-1-9

.

Pick • daY: 7·1-8-9
Buckeye five: 1-2-21-34-35
Pick 3 nlpt: 1-0-5
Pick • nljht: 8-2-7-2
W.VA.

Dally 3: 5-6-3
Dally 0.6·2·2

•=

casli 15:6-7-11-12-14-20

Sharing protrammlnc
ReplayTV 4320
Connect this digital video recorder to a broadband home network and
you can share recorded prQgrams with other unHs in your .house and
with other ReplayTVs over the lntemet. The unll can record up to 320
hours ol programming. $1,9911
·

with only a "
other ~t
lll'hinit ~ the ~qion of

·Index

evtt1ts in a

PlsnH ... Ma••trAl

2 Sedlon - II Pa...
SOURCES: Tho oomp~~n/o~

Come on over to Bob's

. -This Holiday Season...
Beautiful Poinsettias

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

87
AS

A4
A3
A3

Sports

81·3,5,6

Weather

A2

C 2001 Ohio VINey Publishing Co.

"

td Red

~ White td Pink td Marble
and~ Jingle Bells Varieties

$$~$~~~*»

Shop Ear{vfor Best Sele~tion rif
Fresh Cut Christmas Trees!
cd- Frazier Fir td White Pine

f10\ days till
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AREA'S BEST SELECTION

Bobs Fruit Baskets
Packed foil ofDeliCious Fruit,
Nuts and Canily

Bulk Christmas
Candy
$Over 30 Varieties.'$

Legislation muld stop
cuts in local funding
BY BRIAN J. REED

~Christmas

~Scotch Pine

Get Orders in Early for

BACKDROP- Smoke rises frorTI'the.uss M ·
~na as the ship sinks In this Dec. 7. 1941 file
J)lloto from the attack on Peart Harbor. (AP) •

AS

84·6

Freeman was driving south on County
Road 7A when he lost control of his
Chevrolet' Geo Prizm, sliding left of center and striking a northbound Ford
Explorer driven by Alicia M. Woods, 37,
of Racine. Woods' vehicle was knocked
up on a guardrail while Freeman's vehicle exited the road. .
Freeman was ejected from his car and
was pronounced dead at the scene by
Meigs Coun,ty Coroner Dr. Douglas
Hunter. Woods and Michael T. Rizer, 21,
of Shade, a passenger in Woods' vehicle,
were transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital in ·Point Pleasant, W.Va. and later
released.
Both Woods and R.izer were wearing
their seat belts, which, according to the
accident report, greatly reduced the
extent of their injuries. Freeman was not
wearing his seat belt during the time of
the accident.
Alcohol and drugs are suspected in the
crash and a blood test has been submitted for analysis.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Office,
Meigo; County EMS . and the Porneroy
Fire Department assisted at the crash
scene

Sponaontd by

Crows Family
Restaurant
228 W. Main Pomeroy

992-5432

·SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

POMER.OY -. . Prop?sC:d
leg!Slauon · m _ t4e o.h 10
House of Representatives
.
ld . r .
d
wou e 1mmate a propose
cut m 1oca1 government
. d rev•
enue, a source reI1e on by
Meigs County commissioners in the operation of coun.
ty government.
House Bill 405 also would
transfer $240 million from
the state's tobacco settlement
for
general
operating
expenses.
Commissioners discussed
tlie proposed legislation during their regular meeting
Wednesday.
Designed to balance the
state budget and strengthen

.

·'Christmas in the Park' readied
Bv TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Ohio's economy, HB 405
, prop~es a number of fiscal
measutes, including the
.elimination of a 6 percent
cut ,·n lo I
ca government
funding.
Th at r.llln d mg
'
. d eter1s
. d b th
b d
mmhe Y ~ s~te ase on
leac . county s s es we colecuons.
Meigs County, on average,
receives about $23,000
month in local government
funds, and the commissioners haw begun the 2002
budget planning process
with the proposed six-percent cut in rnlnd.
This year. the state froze
local government funds at

a

Plu~eseeBUI,Al

.

R.ACINE - Preparations
are under way for R.acine's
annual Christmas in the Park
Thursday at Star Mill Park.
Colorful decorations of all
shapes and sizes can be found
throughout the park as park
board members prepare for
the festival .
Dale Hart, board president,
said a candlelight walk around
the park's track kicks off festivities at 6 p.m., followed by
musical performances by
R.acine United Methodist
Church Choir, under the
direction of Jennifer Hoback,
and Big Bend Cloggers.
Children can have their picture taken with Santa Claus
free of charge as they tell St.
Nick what they would like to

H()UDAY DECORATIONS - Star Mill Park Board members
inspect Christmas decorations recently erected for Thursday's
Christmas in the Park celebration. The wooden decorations
depict various 'businesses, schools and churches throughout
the village of Racine. Pictured are Ann Zirkle, left, Catherine
Hart, Libby Fisher, and Dale Hart. Also pictured Is Andy Fisher.
(Tony M. Leach photo)
see under their tree, Hart said. Racine.
The pictures are sponsored
Please see Park, A3
by Home National Bank of

Artificial Trees $Decorated Artificial Wreaths
$ Artificial Wreaths $All Christmas Tree Ornaments
'

The Hol::ter Medical Center Diobetes Support Group will meet

Two CQnvenlent LQcotlons:
1/4 Mila North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) 773·5323

•

Sunday, December 9 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's French 500 Room.

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
446·1711

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

This month's feature: Annual Holiday Dinner
All ore welcome! For more information, call

www.holzer.org

1740) 446·5080
~

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, Dec. 8

CINCINNATI (AP) A man
accused of mailing hundreds of anthrax
hoax letters to abortion clinics narionwide chatled with reporters and called
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft a
"good man" while in court Thursday.
Clayton Lee Waagner, 45. was charged
with a firearms violation at the I 0minute hearing in US. Magistrate Court
and ordered held without bond. He was
arrested Wednesday in suburban Cincinnati after using a rented computer at a
copy-printing store.
He told reporters on Thursday that he
was surprised when Ashcroft added him
to the FBI's most-wanted list, which
occurred in September.
"Ashcroft's just doing his job;' he said.
"I understand he's anti-abortion also.

1 - 1311'~1·

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He"s a good man."
Waagner, who escaped from an Illinois
jail earlier this year, had $8,986 cash in
his pocket and a loaded ,40-caliber
handgun tucked into his waistband
when he was arrested without incident.
Waagner had been se~n at another
copy shop in October in the village of
Woodmere just east of Cleveland.
"The people did recognize him," said
Mike Campbell, of the U.S. marshal's
office in Cleveland. "He just came in
there and used the computer."
Authorities say he is the primary suspeer in hoaxes t ommitted against 280
clinics last month. The clinics received
envelopes containing white powder and
letters signed, "Army ofG6d."The powder was not anthrax.

CAPTURED - Clayton Lee Waagner,
one of the FBI's 10 most-wanted tug~
tives, is shown in this Hamilton County
Sheriff Dept., photo, taken after he was
arrested at a suburbl!n Cincinnati printIng-copying store. (AP)

02001

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Shooo&lt;l T-..o

R11n

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accused of mis-spending

Small contributions

LANCASTER (AP) - Attorneys for a former sheriff
accused of public corruption told jurors Thursday that state
auditors and deputies exaggerated bookkeeping mistakes to
make it appear he •committed a crime.
But prosecutors said Gary DeMastry can't place the blame
on anyone but himself and said he abused his position when he
was Fairfield County sheriff.
DeMastry is accused with his wife, Penny. of spending more
than $340,000 over four years on personal travel, dining and
entertainment, then lying to investigators about it.
Jurors deliberated in the case for more than four hours
Thursday before breaking for the day. They were set to resume
Friday morning.
DeMastry, 46, was county sheriff for eight years. He ran for
re-election but was defeated in the Republican primary in
2000.
. He is being tried now on 50 of the 343 counts filed against
h1m. Penny DeMastry, 44, will be tried later.
Conviction on the most serious charge - engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity - carries a maximum I 0-year prison
sentence plus forfeiture of their property and government pennon.

Colder on the weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colder weather will be
moving in on Friday night
and Saturday, with some snow
flurries possible.·
Where it isn't snowing, it
will be raining, the National
Weather Service said.
High temperatures on Saturday will · be in the 40s.

Highs on Sunday will be in
the 30s. Overnight lows will
be in the 20s.
,
The record high tempe~a­
ture for Dec. 7 was 69 in 1998
and the record low was -1 in
1882. Sunset Friday night will
be at 5:06 p.m. and sunrise on
Saturday at 7:40 a.m.

Charities get fewer donations
CLEVELAND (AP) - Many of Ohio's charities say they
fear donors tapped themselves out with. contributions in
response to the East Coast terrorist attacks.
Monetary donations are down at a time when the flow
. would usually be at its heaviest, although the Sept. 11 tragedies .
have msp1red people to continue giving in other ways mcludmg vo]unteerism.
In Lima, the West Ohio Food Bank sent out an extra appeal
before Thanksgiving to make up for some regular donors who
skipped gifts, said Executive Director Bambi Markham.
"Three top donors said they sent theirs to Sept. 11," she said,
adding she hoped to recoup $8,000 to $10,000 with the additional appeal.
The agency, though, already has started making cuts, eliminating one employee and cutting houri for others. It also is no
longer making deliveries to its clients, which now must pick
up the supplies themselves.
For the Catholic Charities ageney in Cleveland, slow giving
and reduced government funding are a concern. The agency
prov1des 400,000 meals and 75,000 nights of shelter a year in
an eight-county region.
"Our short-term horizon is not looking too favorable," said
·John P. Klee, executive vice president.
· The agency spends $89 million a year, 60 percent from the
government, such as_ shel~r subsidies. It receives up to 15 percent of 1ts contrJbuaons m December, but it was not yet clear
whether those traditional donors would give again this year.

I'

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Ohio to announce dosed prison
·

COLU:vrnl:ls ((I.P) -The state is to announce on Friday
wh1ch pnson 11 will close to save about $19 million. It will be
the first time Ohio has shut down a prison because of money
. problems.
· The state has not identified which of its 34 prisons will be
closed but earlier eliminated seven from consideration. State
employee unions are lobbying to close one of Ohio's two privately run prisons.
The Department of Rehabilitation and Correction decided
, on a closing after Gov. Bob Taft ordered state agency budget
cuts to help plug a $1.5 billion hole in Ohio's two-year budget.

Baby found dead under sitter

'

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TOLEDO (AP) -Workers
at the Jeep plant that· builds
the strong selling Liberty said
Thursday that DaimlerChrysler AG has agreed to
bring back hundreds of laid
~ff workers, likely ending the
threat of a strike.
Workers had been threat"
ening a walkout because they
were working 60 hours a
week, and they said the excess
overtime was creating health
and safety problems.
·About 550 of 1,100 plant
employees will return to
work by April, reducing the
work week to 50 hours, said
Nick Vuich: United Auto
Workers Local 12 chairman
at the plant.
uThis will avert a strike,"
Vuich said. "There's no doubt
in my mind."
Workers are upset that they
a,re working I 0-hour days
and sever• !. Saturdays each
month even though hundreds
of others have been laid off
since the automaker stopped
making the Cherokee and
slowed down Wrangler production.

Vuich met with DaimlerChrysler leaders Wednesday
at their suburban Detriot
headquarters and agreed to
the provisions.
More issues, including out:
sourcing and other health and

CANTON (AP) -A woman baby~sitting for a 5-week-old
boy suffered a massive stroke and collapsed on the baby, who
died.
When the baby's father, Dang M. Nguyen, arrived home
Wednesday night, he found him partially covered by the sitter's
body in the living room.
~e picked up his son and tried to resuscitate him, said Maj .
R1ck Perez of the Stark County Sheriff's Department.
.
Ne1ther he nor paramedics arriving at the home were able
to save Chuang D. Nguyen. The child, born Oct. 30, was pronounced dead at a hospital emergency room.
The baby sitter, Lan Bac, was in critical condition at Aultman
Hospital, Perez said. Investigaton have not been able to talk to
her.
. Star~ Co~n~ Coroner James Pr~tchard said that his prelimmary mvest1gat1on shows the baby s death appears to be accidental suffocation.
The_ child and the sitter were last seen at noon Wednesday.
lnvesagators have ha~ trouble que~tioning the baby's family
members, who are Astan and speak httle English, but the father
was able to provide some information, Perez said.

Volunteer Shannon Holmes tosses a bad green pepper as he
sorts them at the Cleveland Food Bank In Cleveland. Holmes
and a group of vountears from HSN Catalog Services help out
at tha food bank checking donated prod!Jce. The holiday season traditionally marks the heaviest flow of contributions to
charitable organizations, but this year many groups say they
fear donors tapped themselves out with contributions to Sept.
11 relief funds. (AP)

Telephone replatlons set
The prisons department at first tried to trim enough money
through a hmng freeze and early retirement buyouts. But officials said the closing became inevitable after Taft ordered more
cuts. in October. ·
"With the new budget cuts there weren't many options left"
said DRC spokeswoman Andrea Dean.
'
T~e department last month tried a final option, asking the
states largest employees union to give up $21 million in annual ?vertime pay that prison guards receive for showing up a few
nunutes early for a roll call briefing.
. The Ohio Civil Service Employees' Association refused, say-.
mg the state could find better ways of saving money than eliminating benefits guaranteed by a contract.

Jeep worken Say 550 Jobs

be added
safety concerns, need to be
resolved before the union
will pull its threat to mike.
"We had a good meering. It
was productive:U said DaimlerChrysler spokesman Trevor
Hale.

The
Joint Implant Center
Specializing in total
hip and knee replacement

(AP) - Highlights of rules the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio approved Thursday that allow telephone utilities to
raise certain prices without regulatory approval:
'
• Caps basic telephone and Caller lD at existing rates for as
long as the company remains under the plan.
• After being in the plan for two y~ars, allows an increase up
to t 0 percent each year for second telephone lines and call
wa~tmg,_ and up to double the initial rate for third phone lines,
call tracmg, nonpublished number service and other serVices.
• Provide advanced telecommunications services such as
high"speed and broadband Internet, to specific parts 'of coverage areas no later than two years after joining the plan. ·
• Offer an enhanced "lifeline" program to households at or
below ISO percent of the federal poverty level.

Urgent Care!!
No Appointment Necessary
7 Days A Week •. 9:00am - 9:00pm
Network Providers For
• Medicare -·
• Aetna
• Anthem
• OU Employees
• Central Benefits
• Ohio Health
• Medical Mutual

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

Our next clinic date Is Friday, December 21.
Call (614) 461·8174 for an appointment.
- 11~1L

•

~~;Grant Med1cal Center
OhioHealth

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

fltay. DIICI•Irer: 7,1001

Anthrax hoax suspect takes relaxed view

Ohio weather

IICl l

PageA2

.Fddav,Dec. 7,2001

Attack

.

fNmPI&amp;eAI

•

.

"When you're young a lor
: SYRACUSE - Donnie Allen Freeman, J I, Syracuse, died of it passes over your head,
.on Thursday, Dec. 6, 2001, from injuries susained in an auto and you find it hard to
; lccideot.
believ" thin~, even when
; : He W2S born on Feb. 25, 1970 in Gallipolis, son of Melvin you know they're true," Story
;freeman ofRacme and Lmda Rigney Mills of Racine. He was said Thursday.
lmmediatdy after the
; l construroon laborer and attended Racine United Methodist
• Church.
attacks, the hospital went inro
:: Surviving, besides his parents, •re his wife, Tara Dawn Wolfe a blackout situation and she
:freeman, two daughters, Ashley Nicole and Jessica Lee Free- and her fellow students were
: man, and a son, Michael Anthony Freeman, aU of Syracuse; two placed on 12-hour shifts as
, llrothers, Joe Freeman of Gallipolis and Doug Freeman of they worked to protect
patients against the possibility
: ltacine; three sisters: Jeanette "Nutty" Lunsford of Portland
of
a mainland arrack.
:and Shari Eblin and Judy Hawley, both of Racine; ~is grand~
"We worked for 12 hours
mother, Nawaza Smith of Middleport; his mother-in-law,
and
then went to class, so it
Sh1rley Jude of Syracuse; father-in-law, Clarence T. Wolfe .;f ·
long Bottom; a brother-in-law, Anthony Todd Wolfe of Mid- didn't leave us with much
time:' Story said.
.ll!eport; and several nieces and nephews,
, Services will be held at 2 p.m . on Sunday, Dec. 9, 2001, at
Fl!her-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev_ Brian
Harkness and Rev. Doug Cox officiating. Burial will follow at
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Frieqds n1ay call ar the funeral home on Saturday from 5 to
9p.m.
PapAl

Bill

.11om

LOCAL BRIEFS

"Since Sept. II, I've been
depressed, and I can hardly
watch television without
remembering what I saw."
After graduating from the
POMEROY - Units of
nursing program at St. the M elbf1i· Emcr~ency Service
Joseph's, Story served as a answered o;rvcn calls for aSSISU.S. Army nurse at Camp tance on Thursday. Units
Atterbury in Indiana in 1945, responded as follows :
where she cared primarily for
CENTRAl DISPATCH
quadriplegic and paraplegic
9:47 a.m., Powell Street,
patients.
Betty Pooler, ' Pleasant VaHey
"So many of rhe boys who
Hospital;
came into our hospital were
12:15 p.m. , Mulberry
injured by 'friendly fire,' and
Avenue, Terri Smith, Holzer that was hard to see," Story
Medical Center;
said. "It made your heart
5:32 p.m.; Willow Creek,
ache.
"When someone says, 'Oh, Julee Meadows, HMC;
I 0:46 p.m., Middleport
you used to be a nurse,' I tell
them it's like being a moth er. · Police Department, Shawn
0 nee you 're a nurse, you 're Francis, HMC.
POMEROY
always a nurse."
12:57 p.m., Pomeroy Pike,
Victoria Nonmn, O'llleness
Memorial H ospit.&amp;! ;
· through
the
settlement
6:09 p.m. , Auto Zone , A.
would not be affected under
Jackie Petrie, PVH .
H.B. 405.
SYRACUSE
Other measures in the pro6:12 p.m., County Road
posed legislation include bud7A, Dol)nie Freeman,.dead on
&lt;
h
get cuts oor t e House and arrival, Alicia Woods, Michael
Senate and their legislarive Rizer, Melissa King. Elizabeth
agencies, and the Ohio Smith, refused rreatment .
Supreme Court, and a S15
million initiative to .help with

EMS log calls

2000 levels, but because
communities to embrace Mei~ County:&lt; sales tax revthem -World War I veter- cnue has decreased signifians on t h e bl oc k w h o cou ld candy this year, the county
· fi
te II th em ab out sacn 1ce, has suffered a smaller cut in
·
h
'd
st ree ts w h ere k 1 s m t e local government funding
guise of"junior commandos" than was anticipated.
workforce development and
could roam freely, picking up
The bill also proposes the economic development ' in
scrop for the war effort.
transfer of $240 million from Ohio's 29-county Appalachi"There were no crisis , the Tobacco Use Prevention an region, which includes
counselors called in," said af)d Control Foundation Trust Mei~ County.
David Wright, who was F!!nd, funds received by the
In other business, the comgrowing up in Shrewsbury, Sate of Ohio in a class-action missioners approved transfers
Mass., in 1941, and now lives lawsuit againsttobacco manu- . of funds for the Probate
in Tuftonboro, N .H. " My facturers, to the state's general Court, Juvenile Court, Clerk
father was in the Navy, the revenue fund.
of Courts, Board ofElettions.
guy up the street got gassed ' Money from the trust fund Community Corrections, dog
in the Marine Corps, a cou- goes to tobacco use preven- warden, Recorder and Litter
pie of guys had been in the tion education, and to fund Control and Recycling.
Army.
efforts to ban smoking in
Commissioners Mick Dav"The old-timers were per- public places. Educational enport and Jim Sheets and
fectly willing to talk about programs and biomedical Clerk Gloria Kloes attended
· "
•research programs funded the meet1' ng.
II.

Moment
f•om Page AI

,Joh n Kennedy, perhaps man
landing on the moon, now
'the terrorist attacks - people remember where they
. were and what they were
doing.
"There aren't many days in
,.your life you can do that,"
said AlfJacobson, 77, of New
Jondon, N.H., who counts
Pearl Harbor, high school
graduation, his wedding day
,and JFK's death among them.
-.. Dec. 7, 194 I, was a lazy
Sunday- a day for God and
football on the radio. Ralph
LaPerche,
then 19, played
d
hi
pinoc e with a bud Y in
, Rhode Island. Joe Conners
, was at a Savannah, Ga., movie
house with his dad.
. "I was at a tea party,
dressed in my pretty dancing
clothes when we got the
.news," says Elizabeth Estelle
of Phoenix. "I thought,
,'They're going to kill all our
..eligible young men."' (She
found one, John, and they
,wed shortly before he went
.overseas to fight in 1943.)
Many of those who can
still remember that awful day
were children then, of an age
that allowed only the barest
:comprehension of what had
:taken place. Warner Bartlett,
·then 6, recently interviewed
while waiting for a bingo hall
to open in Las Vegas, said he
did not know what a harbor
was, much less Pearl Harbor.
· ·· Like the children of Sept.
· 11, tbey drew pictures of
American fla~ and planes .
'going up in flames.
Unlike many children
:today, they had close-knit

In Pittsburgh's Polish Hill

Grange to meet

SALEM CENTER- Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will hold

nark
r1
from Page AI
"Racine's Christmas festival
is always ,suc~essf~l and we are
very excired about this year's
event," • Hart said. "We
encourage everyone to come
out an d ]1ave a goo d time

Art display

open tomo• tow
MIDDLEPORT The
artWork of Delores Long will
remain on display ar rhe
Riverbend Arts Council from
11 to 4 p.m. tomorrow (Saturday) for rublic viewing.
Refre&lt;hmems '"II be served.

To perform
POMEROY - Junior and
Rita White and Ralph Cook
will ·present music at the
Ch~ster Courthhouse open
house Sunday afternoon at 2
p.m. They will also be entertaining at Overbrook Nursing
Cenrer on Tuesday at 7 p.m .
The public is invited to both
events. There is no charge at
either event .

while we celebrate the 2001
holiday season."
In case of inclement weather, festivities will resume at
the Legion Hall across from
the park, he added.
Besides access to free
refreshments and a bonfire,
those in attendance also have
an opportunity to win a
Lloyd Middleton doll.

'-------------------~-----------------------

u5 wams aga•·nst gi·VI·ng "r.all·ban Ieader amnesty

t

Appeals court hears Michigan dispute, will rule later.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-41.60
Arm Cool-19.54

AAzo- 45.36
AmTaclliSBC- 38.37
........... '""' -43.51
~'T&amp;r.:: 1a.oe
-llll'lk One- 39.04
:)lll-9.90
oi!ob Evans-23.84
llagW!unet'-49.95
~-2.60

:ctennng SlqliJ- 525
l:ly HcAdng- 10.112

Col-16.24
.00-13.87
.[)uf'a11- 44.97

•

•

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•

'

Their Annual Chrisunas
dinner and fun night will be
hdd on Dec. 15 with a
potluck su pper at 6:30 p.m.
Men1ben are reminded to
bring their food items for the
food bank if they have not
already done so. Degree practice will be held following
supper.

neighborhood, priests walked ·
the neighborhood, offering
solace, recalls Kitty Dlugons- .
•
•
It
.
ki, now 84. "Everyone felt
"] have no idea where Mullah Omar is,
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. officials in dignity' in the Kandahar area or some
sorry for eacli other."
place
in
Afghanistan
be
consis\ent
with
of course I want to arrest him . I have
but
:have
warned
Afghan
opposition
groups
At the White House, President Roosevelt had just fin- that American support will be cut off if what I have said, the answer is no," Rums- given him every chance to denounce terrorism and now the time as run out,"
let Taliban leader Mullah feld told a Pentagon news conference.
ished his lunch when he got ,they
·Mohammed Omar go free .
The Taliba!l began surrendering Kanda- Karzai said.
a call at 1:40 p.m. about the
Karzai~ who was slightly wounded by
assault in Hawaii, where ' it ! Following reports that the Taliban may ha.:, the. last city .under their control, on
:be ready to give -up their.final stronghold Friday. Jwo months of continuous US. the errant U.S. bomb that killed three
was mprnipg. .
' of Kandahar, Defense Secretary Donald bombing and advances by opposition An~erican soldiers and si~ Afghans on
Sim1larly, many families
:H.
Rumsfeld said Thursday any deal must forces drove them fro in most of the coun- .Wednesday, had earlier refused to say
had barely risen from their
whether he would offer or has offered
include bringing Omar to justice. Omar's try.
noontime Sunday meal Taliban sheltered Sept. tl terror suspect
"The Taliban is finished. As of today amnesty to Omar.
then the. special meal of the
If Omar is not killed in the fighting, the
Osama bin Laden when the radical Islam- th~y are no longer a part of Afghanistan,"
week - when they found
Ic militia controlled most of Afghanistan. said Afghanistan's interim leader, Hamid United States would "strongly prefer" that
out, too.
"If you're asking, would an arrangement Karzai. He said that Omar is missing and. he be captured and handed over to the
The attack killed 2,390
Americans, Rumsfeld said.
,with Omar, where he could, quote, 'live would be arrested if he's found.
Americans and drew the
nation into a world war that
would claim more than
405,000 U.S. lives.
, "It made our generation
grow up really fast," said Jean
Now, whichever side loses
who may in some cases have admissions policies discrimiCINCINNATI (AP) Davis, 75, of Denver, who
ask
the
had gone to the movies that The University of Michigan better academic qualifications. nate against whites in favor of could directly
less-qualified
minorities.
Supreme
Court
to
consider
an .
David Herr, the lawyer for
day in her native Spokane, considers race in deciding
The nine appeals court appeal.
Wash. "We were all adults in · which students to accept white plaintiffs challenging
Just prior to the hearing, at
judges
- seven whites and
undergraduate
because diversity improves the Michigan's
our teens."
education of all its students, admissions policies, said the two blacks - took both cases least ~00 activists rallied a halftile school's lawyer told an university appears to be using under review and are to rule block from the court building
race-conscious policieS" to try later. A three-judge panel of in support of the admission
appeals court Thursday.
"In order to achieve that to correct years of discrimina- the court was to have heard policies. Rain didn't discourbroad diversity, we need to tion agains~ blacks and other the di sputes Oct 23, but age activists from Michigan,
agreed to bypass that usual first Ohio and Kentucky from
..
Federal MoJJi- .95
Premier - e.oo
ta!Ce ethnicity and race into minorities.
USB-19.39
Rrickwel-17.96
"The 'remedy for that is not step for the issue to quickly go holding the rally on Fountain
·account," John Payton told the
Gannall- 70.45
Rocky 8ools- 6.24
Square.
6th U.S. Circuit Court of having more discrimination before the full court.
RD Shel-46.88
EJectrlc -37.76
GKNLY-4.50
Seara-45.70
discrimination in the
Appeals.
Harley IJavklson- 52.53 Slmey's-ZI
Payton said the university admissions office," Herr told
Kmart-6.00
Wai-Mut-55.62
Kroger- 25.45
Wendy's-29.35
considers race among other the court.
Lands End-47.88
Worligl:lh 14.84
The co urt heard two hours
factors including academic
Ud-1424
NSC-18.79
Dally SllCk reports IIIII the achievement and economic of arguments from lawyers in
Qak t-MI Flwlcial-16.00 4 p.m. OOsilg quolesofthe status. The university's polici.;, two consolidated lawsuits that
OVB-24.00
previous day's 118nSae11ons, JlllMj8d by SrrOih do ,not exclude anyone, he .
· BBT -34.99
~VI~~,:~~;:~';",,J' :':aw
Parlnllr.l at Advest Inc. of said. '
Peoples -16.74
r..a._,....
Pepsioo-47.46
But opponents of the university's use of affirmativeaction policies said they can

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0 IJiniOn

The Daily Sentinel

--~B=J the Bend
Neighborhood charity project spreads joy to those in need

_The_o-..any_Se_nti_·ne_I

Fildey. D1c1mt• '· 2001

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: Thank you for

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
7~2-2156 • Fu: 982·2157

your column about appropriate gifts
for Kniors. Like many families, we,
too, have wrestled with the "what do
we ger for people who have everything?" gin dilemma. Last year, our
family finally hit upon a solution .We
discussed it with our grandparents.
They ag=d that it would be more
ADVICE
charitable for us to give something
to people who lack everyday necessities.
their mailbox, and we would pick
We adopted a banered children's them up. Our goal was for every
shelter. Those little ones are truly child in that shelter. to wake up on
. refugees. They need everything from Christmas morning to find packages
toothbrushes and hairbrushes to of necessities and a few playthings.
baby formula and diapers - not to
The project created so much
mention toys and games.
excitement among our neighbors
To our delight, our neighbors got that we coUected enough . for two
involved in our project, too. for shelters. There were pillows, socks,
·w eeks, on Thursdays, neighbors underwear, bath products, cold medwould leave donations in a sack by . icines, books, towels, baby clothes,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
Publisher

J...mLn. W til' HliltJr liN

Dear
Abby

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

W~DIIW-

1'hJ sAIHUtiiM lftJ ,... JOI ..... A/I ~~fun

tdili11r •JUI•IUt N a,~~ UtdJul,e IIMNI1 Mil UlqluNu ............
No lltui~n'd traHT will 1M ,.wulaML Ulun daMitl N lll tOiM UUll. ......, . ,
111r s•bjutln

h svn, nm p nunlllidft.
Tlu opiniom rxprns~ fir dtt
ut IINCMMUIUD/du OltlD Mill..,
PwbliJhing Co.. 's- ~iwrillliHMrd, ll•lftl odNrwis1 14ot«L

tD/uul.,....

OUR VIEW

Remember
LAtest generation can
relate to Pearl Harbor

'

Sixty years have pa..,ed since the infamous attacks on Pearl
H arbor.
Unfortunately. like so many other anniversaries, for some
Americans the significance of Dec. 7. I 94 I , has deteriorated.
Thousand1 of World War II veterans die every year. There
simply aren't a·s many people around to tell the story that there
were, say, 10 years ago. Ten years from today, only a handful of
those veterans will remain.
Witness the fact that the Pearl Harbor's 59th anniversary
went largely unnoticed by the latest generation of Americans.
That's because on Dec. 7, 2000, these youngsters probably
couldn't fathom the possibility of an attack on American soil.
After all, the America they grew up in was, for t)te most part,
a land of peace and security.
The Cold War is just another boring history book term for
them. Desert Storm is merely a quick-hitting umilitary exercise" in some faraway desert.
As for the meaning of the "greatest generation?"Who knows
what Gen Y-ers would say.
But some, if not all, of that naivety vanished Sept. n,-2001.
Now youngsters are taking more interest in current events.
With that comes a newfound appreciation for past events, espe.
cially Pearl Harbor.
They've heard the compari~ons of the attacks on New York
and Washington to the one on Peat! Harbor. Perhaps they saw
the recent movie bearing the same name that featured some of
today's biggest stars paying tribute to yesterday's heroes.
Or maybe, just maybe, they've talked to Grandpa or even
Great-Greatpa about Pearl Harbor and World War II.
Whatever the reason, the interest in remembering Pearl Harbor is once again keen. That's the way it should be.
Baby Boomers and Gen X-ers can learn a thing or two from
this latest generation. We, too, need a gentle reminder about the
.importance of Dec. 7, 1941.
This day of infamy should not be forgotten - not 60 years
after the fact or 60 years from today.
Dec. 7, 1941 is a permanent reminder to all Americans, no
matter how safe we may feel, that our bel&lt;ived homeland
remains forever vulnerable.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

''

Today is Friday, De c. 7, th e 341st day of 2001. There are 24
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Sixty years ago, on Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese forces attacked
American and British territories and possessions in the Pacific,
including the ho me base of the U.S. Pacific Aeet at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii .
On this date:
In 1787, D elaware became the first state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution.
In 17\!6, electors chose John Adams to be the second presi·
dent of the United States.
In 1836, Martin Van Buren was elected the eighth president
of the United States.
In 1842, the N ew York Philharmonic gave its first concert.
ln 1946, fire broke out at the Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta; the
blaze killed 119 people, including hotel founder W. Frank
Winecoff.
In 1972, America's last moon mission to date was launched as
. Apollo 17 blasted off from Cape Canaveral.
In ·1972, Imelda Marcos, wife of Philippin~ President Ferdi.
nand E. Marcos, was stabbed and seriously wounded by an
assailant w ho was then shot dead by her bodyguards.
In 1985, retired Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart died
in Hanover, N.H., at age 70.
In 1988, a major earthquake in the Soviet Union devastated
northern Armenia; official estimates put the death toll at
25,000.
In 19\15, a 746- pound probe from the Galileo spacecraft hurtled into Jupiter 's atmosphere, sending back data to the mothership before it was presumably destroyed.
Ten yea rs ago: Fifty years after Japan's sneak attack on Pearl
Harbor, a 'visibly moved President Bush led the nation in serv:ces commemorating the anniversary.
Five years ago: T he space shuttle Columbia landed · at the
Kennedy Space Center, ending a nearly 18-day mission marred
by a jammed hatch that prevented two planned spacewalks.
One year ago: AI Gore's lawyer, David Boies, pleaded with
the Florida Supre:ne Court to order vote recounts and revive
hi s prcsidcmial campaign. Republican attorneys called George
W. Dush the certified, rightful victor.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Eli Wallach is 86. Bluegrass singer
Bobby Osborne is 70. Actress Ellen Burstyn is 69. Sen. Thad
Cochran, R-Miss., i~ 64. ABC News anchorwoman Carole
Simpson is 61. !Jasebal!" Hall- of-Famer Johnny Bench is 54.

'

.

etc. E:ach child · also got a large gill:
basket, including a nonbreakable tree
ornament to help him or her
remember this holiday. The cost was
small when spread over so many
families, but the rewards couldn't
have been ·greater. We felt our project embodied the true spirit of
Christmas. It sensitized our children
to the needs of others all year long.
Because it was one of the best hol idays we have ever had, we're repeating the drive again this year. When
people join together, everyone CAN
make a difference. - SANTA'S
HELPERS IN PHOENIX
DEAR SANTA'S HELPERS:
They certainly can. Witn ess the
incredible amounts of money raised
by the Red Gross and the fund for
the families of the people who perished in the Sept. 1 I terrorist attacks.

Frld11J, December 7, 2001

With that in mind, I hope that

stared down by Bud didn 't get the
message. For some reason , !Jud didof charities in their local communi- n't approve of her and cleverly
ties this year. Because monies that spooked her away. That great animal
would ordinarily have been donated should run for office. - STILL
to local charities were diverted to LAUGHING, ENCINO, CALIF
the East Coast tragedies, many charDEAR STILL LAUGHIN G:
ities in other pam of th.e country are
Whether Bud approved of her IS
having difficu lty raising enough, to
beside the point. The woman was a
meet their budgets for 200 I.
guest in his owner's house.As lon g as
Remember, folks, charity begins at
home - and by that I mean the the owner is home - and presum·
ably in charge - the owner is supcommunities in which you dwell.
DEAR ABBY: You should he posed to be the one who decides
arrested for printing that hilarious who is welcome.
If Bud had been my dog and
story about Bud the St. Bernard. •
While I was driving alone on the pulled that routine, he would have
freeway, I remembered reading about found himself in the doghouse in
him in your column and began to more ways than one.
laugh hysterically. I'm .sure the other
drivers thought I was mad!
Dear Abby is 1Vritre11 by Pauli11e ·
What a dog! The woman who was Phillips a•d da11g!Jter Jeamre Phillips.
reader~ will be sensitive to the needs

SOCim SCRAPBOOK
Breakfast

time were made when the Meigs County Church of Christ
Women's Fellowship met recently at the Dexter Church.
POMEROY -Again this year the Meigs County Historical
It was decided that money from the money tree would be
Society will host a breakfast with Santa.
sent to the "New Hope Ministry." Gifts for shut-ins were disIt will be held at the Museum on Dec.1 5. Breakfast will be cussed and Peggy Bole was named to select the cards and buy
served from 9 to I 1 a.m . Craft sessions will be held for the chil- ,the gifts.
.
dren. Cost for the breakfast is $3 for adults and $2 for children.
Announced was a· dinner for the needy to be held at the
Reservations may be made by calling 992-3810.
Pomeroy Church of Christ. A•holiday dinner will be held at the
pexter Church after worship services Sunday.
· The concert ofTom Shelton at the Bradford church held last
week as also noted.
.
POMEROY ·- A holiday basket bingo fund raiser will be
New officers were installed with each one being presented a
staged by the Holzer Medical Clinic to raise funds for needy fam- tree ornament. They are Paula Pickens, president; Pat Thomas,
ilies.
vice president; Ann Lambert, secretary; Charlene Alkire, !reaTickets to the event to be held on Dec. 18 at 6 p.m. at the . surer; El~anor Hoover, card lady; and Ida Murphy, news
American Legion hall in Middleport are on sale now at the Holz- reporter.
er Clinic or may be purchased from any employee. ·
Selection of carols led by Peggy Bole opened the meeting
The prizes will be Longeberger baskets and pottery, mosdy with Kathryn Johnson giving devotions. Readings included
·, "Some Definitions of Christmas" by Bole; "~usy Schedules" by
Chtistmas items.
All of the proceeds will go to\Wrd providing Christmas for!ocal ,,Allegra Will; "May Your Christmas be Blessed" by Paula Pickfamilies in need.
ens; "Christmas Wish"; by Kathryn Johnson; "My Christmas in
Heaven," by Pat Thoma; and "Ready for Christmas" by Ida

SAINTS AND SINNERS

To celebrate

and create

You might not call him an oil baron,
·exactly. but .Fred Krupp's interest in
black gold- "Texas tea"- is probably
on the par with that of Bush, Cheney
and the Beverly Hillbillies.
The big difference is that Krupp operates on the principle of "the miracle of
plenty from a lot less" - the miracle
found in the story of Hanukkah.
Maybe you know the story. The temple in Jerusalem in the second century
COLUMNIST
B.C. was being desecrated by the Syrians. Idols of the pagan god Zeus were
erected in the Temple, and the Jews of for only a few hours at most. But mimethe day were required to offer sacrifices · ulously. the tiny amount burned for
to him. Eventually, devout Jews could eight days. It is in commemoration of
stand it no longer, and a revolt ensued. this miracle that the Jews were instructThe uprising was led by a priest named ed 10 light 1 menorah (candelabra) in
Mattathias and his five sons.
their homes for eight days - a custom
When the old man died, the mantle that still prevails.
.
fell on the third son,Judas, who took on
Hanukkah this year begins on Dec. 9
the surname of Maccabeus, which and ends on Dec. 1.6.
means "hammer." His followen were
calleq the Maccabees.
diTo FredfKrE u~p, who .~s, · thDe ;xecutive
~.t da •" ! ad h.
h
rector o nvtronmen.... e.ense (one
. U n""'r 3 u s e ers 1p, t e revo1t f h 1
d
· 11
·a1 f b
"dl w·chi th
h o t e argest an most m uena o t e
·
tal
· )
d
f
spread rap1 y. 1 n ree years, t e
agenctes ~ trustee o
Maccabees were able 10 recapture and . env1ro~e.n
rededicate the temple. ("Hanukkah" the _Coahaon on the Envtronment ~nd
means rededication.)
Jewtsh Ltfe, the story of Hanukkah ts a
According to tradition, when the vic- story for today. ,
torious Maccabees entered the temple,
In · the Env:ron~en~~ Defense
their first desire was to light the lamp. new.~letter, Krupp wrttes, The ~racle
But to do it properly, they needed con- of Hanukkah was to make a httle oallast
secrated oil. The Syrians, however, had longer.. Each of us: can . perform our
wantonly destroyed every cruse - with own ~:racle of mlk:mg a little go a long
the exception of one small vial, which way with COI\Servanon and energy effilay in a corner.
ciency.
The Jews proceeded to light the lamp,
"There's a funny thing about miracles.
but it was obvious that the oil would last What is truly special about them is not

George
Plagenz

a miracle
that they are magic. It's that they are
••
.
real ,
Krupp gives his readers several suggestions on how we can perform our own
real miracles of "plenty from a lot less"
and reduce U.S. dependence on foreign
oil. Here are some:
• Get out of the car and walk in the
fresh air.
.• When you buy a car, buy th( m95t
fuel-efficient model that meets. your
needs. ln this way, we can save millions
of gallons of oil- oil that won't have to
be bought overseas and won't be turned
into pollution.
1
• We can conserve electricity by hav- '
ing a candlelight dinner, and by singing
songs instead of watching television. We
can turn off. the computer games and
spin the dreidel.
Hanukkah can be more _than just a
celebration of light, says Krupp. It can be
a source of moral ·enlightenment. Pollution and waste are a desecration of the
temple of Earth.
When the Maccabees found their
temple in shambles, they went to work
with "The Hammer" and fixed it. We
can get to work rebuilding our temple
the Earth and hammer home the sacred
responsibilities we have to our planet
home.
When· we are finished, God will
answer - big time - with the same
miracle of"plenty oflight from a lot less
oil ...

(George R. Plagenz is distributed by
Newspaper Enterprise Association.).

Holzer plans fund raiser

Card shower
planned
.
.

Murphy.
Next meeting will be held Jan. 24 at the Pomeroy Church of
MIDDLEPORT - Friends of Mary Barrett, 37422 State ' Christ, with Dexter to have devotions, and Pomeroy to have the
Route 124, Middleport, have planned a card shower for her: She program.
·
is now recuperating at home after having been hospitalized. ·'

Fellowship plans Chrlsbnas .
,
DEXTER -

,,.
•)fh

lq

. !j

It~

For what feels like the first time, talk of
tightening or even closing the borders is
not the last confidence exchanged by kindred souls in a dim nook, but an actual
ice-breaker at cocktail parties.
Is such frankness a sign of a new day
after Sept. 11? Hard to say. It may instead
be testament to the resilience of the survival instinct, even now - even after all
these years ofbeing taught a terminal kind
of tolerance. The sudden outbreak of
common sense cou)d just be the result of
a fear-fueled adrenal rush that has temporarily scrambled everybody's pre-programmed responses.
Regardless of the reason, immigration
policy has become topical . .Used to be it
wasn't mentionable, certainly not by
politicians - and woe to a body who
blurted things out a Ia John Rocker. Of
course, only a few pols are bold enough to
say what's what - including Reps. Tom
Tancredo, R -Colo., Virgil Goode, I-Va.,
possibly Elliot Engle, D-N.Y - but that
d 0 esn't mean the issue hasn't become
urgendy newsworthy.
After all, 19 foreigners just shattered our
lives.
·
Three of them carried expired visas and
faded into the national woodwork. As for
the other 16, it was shamefully easy for
them to enter and remain in the country
by the book. We now know the names of
93 of the I 04 mainly Muslim Arab immigrants charged in the Sept. 11 investigation with federal crimes ranging from
using fake ID to possesSing phony hazmat
licenses. Little wonder, as a recent FOx
News/Opinion Dynamics poll discovered, 90 percent of Americans would like
to see tougher limits on immigration from

Diana
West
COLUMNIST
counQ:ies ''thought to be connected to

terrorists."

gal aliens live in this country, mosdy from
·Mexico. Before the attack mi. America, the
big srory was President Bush's proposal to
extend amnesty to millions of Mexicans
here illegally. Sept. I I put the kibosh on
that. But now the issue is back on the
table. With it should come a fearless assess·
ment of all the implications - including
the deeper entrenchment of multiculturalism, the further spread of bilingualism ,
and the growing Mexican activist claim to
vast reaches of the American Southwest.
In a development the State Department
might find of interest, police in Southern
California's Orange County hammered
out an agreement with Mexican Consulate officials in October to accept nam e
cards issued by tile 46 Mexican consulates
in this country as valid 10.That means that
illegal aliens from Mexico will-no longer
be deported from Orange County for not
possessing American- issued papers. Green
cards, schmeen cards; citizenship, sehmitizenship: a $27 Mexican ID card (Mexican
birth certificate required) will do the
trick.Just a week or so ago, the· San francisco Board of Supervisors approved a resolution urging law enforcement and other
local agencies to follow suit.
Even with our eyes on the borders, it's
all still a blur. Maybe not even Sept. 11
will revive a beUef in nationhood or a
touchstone culture. Maybe a majority of
us actually look forward to the multicultural, multi-lingual conglomeration of
peoples that the future promises. But these
are fundan1entals to ponder and discuss in
relative calm - not ~bile people, events
'!lld pulse rates are moving 59 quickly.

Community Calendar 11
publlahacl •• efree aarvloe to
non-profit gi'Oupe wlehlng to
ennounoe IIIMtlnga and epeclal avanta. The calandlir Ia
not deelgned to promote
11111 or fund•raleara of any
typa. ltema ara prliltacl only
•• apace parmlta al1d cannot
be guarantaacl to Ill prlnlacl 1
epeclflc number of daya.

POMEROY - Meigs County
PEAl m~ellng Friday, Meigs
Senior Center. Lunch to be
served at noon, meeting and
program to follow.

Also intrigning is another finding: 65
percent of Americans favor "temporarily
sealing U.S. borders and stopping all
immigration in the United States during
the war on terrorism." There's a thought: a
temporary moratorium. Such a breather
would give newly minted Americans time
to assimilate, while the nation could watch
its pulse drop before debating a national
immigration policy - something which
doesn't really exist today. Preventing
American office buildings from being
blown up is a vital part of immigration
policy; but not its ohiy concern. We need
to apply some of that newfound, possibly
short-lived frankness of ours to tb,e stilltaboo topic of non-Middle Eastern immigration and what it means for the nation
-not in economic terms, not in political
terms, and not, please, in the racial terms
that stop discussion cold, but rather in
strictly cu)tural terms. What happens to a
nation when massive blocs of foreign pea-.
pies ·enter its lifestream with little intention of assimilation?
(DimJa West is a. colwmtisr and editorial
Between 8 million and 10 million ille- :vriterfor TI:e Wasili1Igton Times .. )

'

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.' .

.
· ."
.·
·

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 602 w111
hold lis Christmas Dinner at the
Legion Hall on Friday at 6 p.m.
Dinner will be catered at t~e
cost of $6 per plate. Each
member and guest are asked to
bring a $5 exchange gift.
MIDDLEPORT - Children's
Crusade at River Valley Apostolic Worship Center in Middle·
port, through Sunday. Services
at 6 p.m. on Friday and $aturday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sun·
day, with Rev. and Sister Ploch .
Rev. Kevin· Konkle, pastor,
Invites lhe public.
POMEROY - Fun, Food and
Fellowship at God's NET In
Pomeroy. Games and free
nutritional meal for teens, 6 to
10:30 p.m. Friday and Satur·
day.

SATURDAY
POMEROY
Return
Jonathan
Meigs
Chapler,
Daughters ol the American
Revolution w111 meet on Satur·
day at the home of Rae Moore.
Business meeting, program at
12 noon, followed by Colonial
Christmas buffet. Members to
·. , bring gifts .for veterans. Hal '
Knean as guest speaker.
'

To all area businesses who helped

IIlG:::::::::::::=:::::::::::;::::::::J:!JIII
make our Fall Festival a success.
Mason Elementary PTO

'

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

.' .

time to talk immigration

A Special Thank You•••

'

' '

WASHINGTON VIEWPOINT

Health Club following its annual Christmas party at the
Rock Springs Church o n Thursday.
The November meeting was held at the home of Frances
Goeglein with Barbara Fry, president, openi ng wi th The
Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the flag. Devotions by fry
were reading including "Be Satisfied" and "Rainbows of
Happiness."
Office r reports were given and seve ral get well cards were
sent. A report was given on supplies given to the Pomeroy
Homeless Shelter.
The program by Fry included Dorothy Jeffers on cholesterol; Morris on " Wh ere's the Fat?", Phyllis Skinner on
"Smart Bandages", "A Tutkey Sandwich You··can Trust," by
Frances Goeglein; and "The History of Thanksgiving" by
Barbara Fry.
A contest was con(iucted by Dorothy Jeffers with Morris
and Skinner .winning. The hostess served refreshments.

.

'

'•

aub prepares holiday baskets

POMEROY- Baskets for the sick and shut-ins of the
Plaps for remembering_others at Ch~is~~.Lcommunity will be prepared by the Roc.k Springs Better

FRID~Y

TODAY IN HISTORY

' I

•

Page AS

'

DANVILLE
Danville
Church of Christ will conduct a
weekend meeting, wllh services
on Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sun·

day at 8 p.m. with Denver.HIII.

meeting Monday, 7 p.m., at
church. Members to bring
SUNDAY
seeret sister gifts. Those with·
RUTLAND - Dixie Melody . out a secret sister are asked to
Boys will sing at Rutland
Freewill Baptiet Church at 11 :30 : bring a $5 gift to exchange.
a.m. following Sunday school. Kathryn Hart and Julie Campi&gt;aetor Paul Taylor Invites the bell will presenl the program
public.
and Ruth Simpson and Lillian
Hayman will serve refresh·
GALLIPOLIS
Burlingham ments.
Modern Woodmen holiday ·din·
ner at Golden Corral Sunday
Rocksprings
, POMEROY
from noon to 1:30 p.m. Those
Junior Gardeners, Monday at
attending who are over 12 will
get $4 off a buffet dinner, and 6:30 p.m. at the Roek Springs
children 11 and Wlder will eat United Methodist Church. For
lree. The dinner Is for members more· Information call Valerie
and their families and friends.
Nottingham, 985·3383
POMEROY - Holiday Con· ·~TUESDAY
cert at Trinity Church, Sunday,
RACINE - Racine Board ol
2 p.m., with Trinity Choir, Trinity
Bell Choir and Community Public Affairs,· Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Band. Soup and sandwich at the Racine Municipal Build·
lunch from 11 :45 to 1:45 at the lng.
church.
WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup·
M,I,DDLEPOAT - The Mid·
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 and dleport Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Auxiliary, Christmas _potluck.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Sunday, 1 a.m.
Library with Jeanne Bowen as
MONDAY
hostess. Martha Hoover to
RACINE - Bethany Dorcas · review "The Tontine" by
Sonshlne Circle December Thomas B. Costaln.

Diamond Earrings
BeliR 14ll IDid
1/4ct.*ll-...
112 ct. •aaa-....

One carat
Diamond Solitaire

1CL'1311

'1188ieg.•31oo

PIIIICESS CIT 11110110 HEART

PENDANT

1/4 ct. satin Gold

ROUID DIAMONDS
1/4 ct. LW. '299
1/2 ct. LW. '899

1ct.tw.tn•

1/4 ct. t.w. '220
1/2 ct. t.w. '150
1CI.LW.'19B

sgg

What do IQll want for Christmasl

Yoa La-ve Leard tLat qastloa a ~d tim&amp;
Come Lear Low tlae Micldleport Wdren'• &lt;loir
wwen tlud qasti&lt;~J~ ill tlleir muical

Micldleporl Cluda oHlrilt
Suda1 Dec.~ at 7pm
La tLeFamil1 WeCe.ter
0. tlae. comer ol5~ ud MAiD
.
www.middleportchurcb.org

TWO LOCATIONS:
CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE, GALLIPOLIS • 446-2842
91 MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT • 992-6250
EXPER'r JEWELRY REPAIR SERVICE • FREE PARKING • FREE GIFf WRAPPING
HOURS: 9-8 Friday, 9·6 Saturday, l-4 Sund~y

I

�Fdc'ey, Dlt; 7, 2QQJ

J~~!:
· ~A~6::·~~~D:a~llv~~~n~tln~e~I----------------------~P~ome:=~~~y~,M~I=dd=~~~O~h~~~-------------------------F-rl_~_Y~·-~--·-7~,~---1

ASK HOLLYWOOD
.:.mth
ts
•
k
Can you tell me about Weiss' personal and Freddie Sr. married? G'!1J
~ ge JUn
life?- M.J.l., Santa Maria, Calif.
ing, N.Y.
A: You i:an see Michael T. Weiss in the

BY Hou.v Wooo

200 I movie "Bones," and you can hear
. Q: My stepdad remembers a movie his voice in the animated TV series "The
about two teen-agers who go to a junk- Legend ofTarzan." Andrea Parker's recent
yard and build a spaceship out of car work has been limited to "The Prepam. They use it to get the scrap left by tender" TV movi~s. but I'm sure she'll
the moon landing. He also said that Andy pop up in something soon.
Griffith starred in it. Does this movie .. To answer your second question, Weiss
exist? If so, is it available on video? is a Chicago native and began his acting
D.Y., Calhoun, Ga.
career as a child, appearing in several TV
A: Your stepfather's memory for ' commercials. He is 6-feet-3-inches tall,
obscure television is outstanding. Andy and he was born on Feb. 2, 1962. He
Griffith starred in the 1979 TV movie earned a 13.EA. from the Universiry of
"Salvage." Griffith's character faces two Southern California. His first major role
challenges - building the spaceship and was that of Mike Horton on "Days of
maneuvering around the bigwigs at Our Lives" in the late '80s. Weiss is a
NASA who are trying to stop him. The multi-talented guy. Not only can he act,
movie was the jumping-off point for but he can also name each state in the
"Salvage I ," a TV seri es that ran for 20 • United, S!iltes in alphabetical order, he is
episodes. Unfortunately, the film is not a. ce'rfili~a"s~uba diver, and he can wiggle
·
h1s eats. l'&lt;fon't know whether I can get
available for rental or purcha.e.
Q: My favorite show, "The Pretender," any more personal than that without
has been taken off the regular show time, being '!Ccused of stalking.
and now all we get are reruns. Please! Is
Q: I loved Freddie Prinze on "Chico
there anything else we can see chat has and the Man." Ca~ you tell me who
Michael T Weiss an d Andrea Parker in it? Freddie l'rinze Jr.'s mother is? Were she

A:

Coundl.

R.D., Flush-

Prinze (born Frederick
Karl Pruetzal) married Katherine
Cochrane, the mother of Freddie Prinze
Jr., in 1975, but they divorced in 1977.
Sai:lly, Prinze died in 1977 aftrr shooting
himself in the head with a .32 caliber
pistol. There's still some debate aver
whether it was a suicide or an accident.
If you have cable, you can see reruns of
"Chico and the Man" on TVLand at 5
a.m. EST. Check local listings to make
sure of the time. (I haven't be.n up at 5
a.m. since I was coo young co know better, so I'd tape it if I were you.)
TRIVIA: Freddie Prinze changed his
name from Frederick l'rueczal to indicate that he was "The Prince of Comedy."

(Send your questions to Ask Ho/ly Wood,
c/o Newspaper E"terprise Associatimr, 200
Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. 10016, or
write to HollyWtwd851rotnrail.corn. Because
of tire volume of mail, perso,.al replies cmrrrot
be provided.)

Dress up the holidays with fashion books
(HarperResource, $60) is for
the bride-to-be, anyone who
longs to be one and anyone else
who app re ciates a fabulous
party
Wan g is considered one of
the top bridal fashion designers
and she shares her wisdom. For
example, a full skirt can overwhebn a petite bride, an A-line
is the mqst versatile and an
asymmetrical hemline is best
for brides with long legs.
The book, how~ver, goes
beyond selection of the gown.
There is practical advice on
shoes, jewelry, headpieces, flowers, music and stationery sandwiched between scores of
beautiful photographs. Of
course, the "wedding album'' a~ ·
the end of the 250-page book
features famous brides (such as
Sharon Stone and ' Vanessa
Williams) wearing their Wang
gowns.
Anna Wintour, the editor in
chief ofVogue and the ultimate
fashionista, wrote the foreword.

POMEROY - New officers were elected at the recent
meeting of the Lydia Council
of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Elected were Sherry Shamblin, president; P2ula Pickens,
vice president; Charlotte Hanning,
secretary;
Diane
Maxwell, treasurer; Sherry
Smith,
mother-daughter
chairman; Tracy DJvidson,
missions; C harlotte VanMeter,
carcls; and Nancy Morris,
reporter.
Plans were made for Vicki
and D.]. Smith co have charge
of the teen Christmas pro-·
gram, with Cherie Williamson
and Sherry Shamblin to handle the younger children. Wet~
come bags will be hani:lled by
Paula Pickens and Charlotte
Han.ing for the first service,
and Gerry Lightfoot and Carolyn Nicholson for the second
service.
Brenda Bolin was appointed
to handle communion in
December. Items needed for
the kitchen this month are
plasti c ware and for the "pack
the pantry" project, dried

Apo~~o~;.-..

Kevin Konkle. Putor
Sundly, I 0 a.m. IIDd 6:00 p.m.
W J J y, 7:30p.m : Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

beans, noodles and potatoes.
Pickens thanked those who
helped with the !25th
anniversary celebration of the
church. Carolyn Nicholson
talked about the angel tree
project in which the group
participated, and Jackie Reed
was named to check on a
needy family to be remembered.
"Be thankful" was the'devotional theme ust!d by ~ham­
blin with scripture fiom
Psalms. She read" A Thankful
Heart," by H elen Steiner
Rice.
It was noted that sunshine
baskets had been presented to
Eileen Bowers,Walter Morris,
and Eleanor Hoover in
November. Thank you notes
were read from Vera Richardson, Cameron Smith, and
Suzie Will for October sunshine baskelli.
Attending the meeting were
Pickens, VanMeter, Neva
Chapman, Britrany Collins,
Caitlin Williamson, Lightfoot,
Shamblin, Smith, Nicholson,
Maxwell, Jackie Reed, and
Hanning.

~

C1J1e~t

A-Foidl
NewUmaROid
Sandi)', 10 a.m. ancl7:30 p.m.
WccbteD.y, 7:JO p.m.

' " ' I I Jill\ 11! ( olld
Ubortr ~1113' et Go&lt;!
P.O. Bo~:467 . Duddi.na 1...ane
Muoa,W.V..
PuQ:

MominJService li :OOa..m.
Evenina Service • 6:00p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:30p.m.

510 o...rst.. Middlepon
Sunday achool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II Lm, llld 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Rulloadflni ...... ChlU'do
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
Wm'lhip • 10:4S LID.

I

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

i16U9e

PuWr: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:40 Lm., 7:00 p.m.
WedncJdoyServi&lt;a-7:00p.m.

Sllnr Ru Bapdlt.
Pastor: Jotm Sw1010n
Sundoy S&lt;hool - IOo.m.
Wonhip • l·la.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7:00p.m.
ML Ualoallopdol
Putor : David Wueman
Sunday School-9:4~ a.m.

Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wodneoday Servi&lt;01 • 6:30p.m.
·lett' •wllllpdll Claurda
Great Bend. Route 124, Racine, OH
·
Putor : Daaiel Meca
Sunday School. - 9: 30 a.m .
SWKLayWonhip-10:301.m.
W - y Bible Study· 6:00p.m.

.' "(740) 985-3539

Old- Fno wtlloptlll Cltordt
2860 I SO. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday S&lt;bool -10 a.m.
Bvonlq- 7:00p.m.
'lblulday Servlcoa • 7:00
llltlatdolopdot CIJurdJ
It, Rt. 143 jUII oti IlL 7
Putor: !lev. I - R. Acne, Sr.
SlllldayUDIIlodServloo
WonhJp.J0:30ua.,6p.m.
Wednetday Services 7 p.m.
7

VlctorJ llpdlt 1
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•
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•
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• Carhartt clothlnQ
• Christmas sweatshirts
• Nume~us Qlft
certlflcates
• Leather merchandise
• Gold earrlnQs
• Ruby necklace
• Amish portrait
• Hike merchandise
• Hartwell hare
• Handmade snowman
• Woterfoll/candle
• Herbattea
•Pottery
• Radio Ryerwavon
_ _ _ _.J,.II.. &amp; much more!

TIDBITS

P~tlet~atilff ;ffet&lt;-elw.lftc

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AJ:waya &amp; Forever Gift
.::Shoppe
Artisans Shoppe
Ctndy'a Crafla
Clrpenter General Store
Cbapman Shoes
Chester Landmark
Clark's Jewelry
County Candle Shop
DAN's
.
Fruth Pharmacy
i!l

(

8

v

,

Hartwelitlouae
Hearts Aglow Candles
&amp; Gifts
Herbal Sage.Tea Co.
K&amp;C Jewlera
Locker 219
Middleport Department
Store
'·
Office Service &amp;
Supply
Ohio River Bear Co.

· Quality Furniture Plus
Quality Print Shop
RltiiAid
Rlverbend Ctalte Mall
Sue'e Seleetablee
Swleher &amp; Lohee
The Febrlc Shop
The Wicker Buggy
VIdeo Touch
Weaving Stitches
Wheele &amp; Deals

f

'+

*

if

-G. .
( IIIII'

h.,] ( Iii

hi

Richord-

Wonblp . II
G.... E...... Cloorclo
326 E. Main St., """""'Y
Rev. James Bcmlcki, Re&gt;J. Kathuin Pollet

Rulland FrH WIU .......

lit

. Pastor: Re&gt;J. Paul Taylor
SWJday School , 10 a.m.

4'

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

~

SecoadBoplloiChurdt
Ravenswood, WV
Pastor. David W. McClain

Salem St.

~

•

- . . . . . Clotudt otCIIriao

....... Boll_

"" ond Main
Puwr: AI Haruon
Youth Miniller: Bill Frazier

F-F........... C.--delwctlriot
Putor: Rev. Fl'Mklin Oiclcenl
Serv&amp;ce: Fridly, 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

,..._(M't•: t)
Pallor: Rob Brower
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Wontdp • 11:00 a.a

Putor-loft'ieyWollace

---lillie

lit and lrd Sunday

ClolU'do otCioriR
Pulor.Tmy Stowatt
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonlfip · 10:30a.m., 6:30p.m..
Wcdnetday Services, 6:30p.m.

l'aolor:B&lt;bSundly SeMGI - 9 a.m.
Worship 1,0 a.m.

Don Chordt otCioriR
Pomeroy, HltriaoD.&gt;JillC Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pal.tor. Roaer Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

-Cioofol

Suodly Scbool - 9 a.m.
Wanhip - I0 LID.

.....,.
•. ,_RDd-

Wunhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sebool· 10:35 a.m.

• Sunday achool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednc&amp;da)' ~yer meeling· 7 p.m.

.......... Plobt ChlU'do &lt;ICIIriot
LID.

Communioo , 10 a.m.
Swmy Scbool- IO:lS a.m.

YOUih-5:30pmSundoy
Bible S!Udy W"'""""y 1 pm
'lndbory Ch•rdt otCIIriao
Plltor. Jim Eaton
39558 Brodbwy Rood, Middlepon
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:30 a.m.

._

WeoloJuBible_Ch_

1ltundoy-. 7 p.m.

7S Pearl SL, Middleport
Pastor. Rev. Doua Cox
Sunday Wonllip - 9:30 p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Sen-ice·.7;30 p.m.

-~
--Fia&lt;:e

~- Clo- otChdol
MiniJior. 0oua Shomblin

I

CIIIial "...-~~or-·

Monlolllllr

RaUer Soclety/Prleathood 11:05-12:00

Puttlr:O....,..Studor
Sundoy Scbool· II a.m.

s~

P11tor: DaYid Ruuell .

lntenection 7 and 124 W

SL Potd Lulhtru Churda
Comer Sycamore&amp;: Second S1., Pomeroy

'

CooiYIII tJaltad Mea:allct l'lrllll
Putor: Holto KllliO
Coohllle CJwdl
Mtln ol Plfth SL

Chardo
Sundly School • 9:30a.m.
WonNp • 10:30 un., 7 p.m.

Sundoy Scbool· 10 ~m.
Wonlrlp • 9 ....
'IUaoday Servi&lt;oo • 7 p.m.

s-, Scbool· 9

~m .

Wtntdp 10 Llil.

Mt. Olive Ulllted Mtthodict
Off 124 behind Wilkelville
Pastor: Rm&gt;J. Ralph Spires
Sunday School , 9:30 a.n:a.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

( ltllnltol'(;od
ML Morioll Chardo otGool

If 1 "

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

frtltlt Goopal Chwrdt
. Sunda.y School , 9:30a.m.
W«&lt;hip, 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncldly 7:30p.m.

ut C\udl

•

ar.d-

SundoySdlooi·IOo.m.
Wontdp ~ II a.m.
w*' u~•Y Servicet. a p.m.

ML Olin~ eo.a.untt, Cll•n:h
Putor. Lawtmee Bush

Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Evenlr1g • 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service - 7 p.m.

..... a......
Su~y

Co. Rd. 63
Sdtool -9:30a.m.

-

t030

'\,1/ .II I ' IH

Mile Hill Rd., Racine

Melp Coopendve Ptrith
Northeast Cluster
Allred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Pastor: James Satterfield
Sunda)' School- 9:45 a.m.
Evenina · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Rutlaad Cll•rch ol God
Putor: Ron Heath

Cheater
Putor: Jane Beattie
Worship· 9 a.m.
School • 10 a.m.

Sunday Wonhip 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
7

MW! port Chudleldte pe_,_
Pulor: A1Jen Mtdcap
s ·undly School - 9:30a.m.
Worship, 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodncoday Sorvloa ·1 p.m.

_

......._.,

Putor: Allen Midellp

,_--

, It, It IJ.tll
·,

(

-Rev.KrillniRobillaott

llontooa.ute ....bflarloa Cbftlt .•
Wonb.lp • 9 a.m.
Sunclly School· 9:45a.m.

I

Mtddleport_b,.......
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonblp • 10 a.m.

llltllll ll,l\

\d\ll ll l . . l

'

7

'W"'....
--rrllldro1odrtY Servi&lt;oo • 10 Lm.

t

J '
Mulbeny H~. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor. Roy L.awinsky
:Jaturday Services:
Sabbath School-2 p.m.
Wontup • J p.m.

Mont Cltopd ChSuadly IChool , I 0 a.m.
Wc;nhlp • II a.m.
Wcdaeldly Service. - 7 p.m.

-a.-a

I'•

10 ~ ...

...-c-...,

'

t'r

IJ4

Sundoy School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

p.m.
Wade 1 y Service • 7 p.m.
.... c- £') Qan:la
0«111. IU
l'ollor:Edaotllln
Sundl.~ School-9:30a.m.
- P • 10:30o.m., 7:30p.m.

'lbwnMipld.,461C

Sunday School • 9!•$ a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m.

lkllool -

I'"""" ·6

j

St Rt 124, Raclno
Puler: Wlllla Hoblc:k
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Bvtnlq · 7p.RI.
W - y ServiCM • 7 p.m.

-

1411 • . . , _ SL, S)nC\110
·11ev. Mia 'l1toalpooo,Puo

lundoy lkltaot. 10 ~m.
Worahip • II Lm.
Wtdl day 1 p.m.

Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship· 11 a:m.

Bvanplllt: Demb SarJ:ent
Sunday Bible Study, 9:30a.m.
Worabip: 10:30 a.m. uxl6:30 p.m.
Wednelday Bible Stbd.y, 7 p.m.

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

Pua1Brioo-

~-9: 00Lm . .
Sundoy S&lt;hcol· 10:00 o.m.

P '

...

lundoyB_.,.7p.m.
1ltundoy - . 7 p.m.

-

lillll ' I',IJI

I

eouu....,

Sokto
Clturda
Ueving Ro.d, West Columbia, W.Va.
Putor: Clyde fem:U
Sund.ay School9:30 am
Sunday evenina Kn"ict 6 pm
Wednesday tervicc 7 pm

Pua:a...am-aaw-

-·rioo-

WmblpSorvlco:tO:lO.m.

Cltordt .. Cbrtot

f'ulcc': .... ....

Cod'• nmpae or Pralle
31663 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Putor. Wayne: Ba!colnl
SerVices: Thun. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday sen-ice
established,

Sllldtty lkhoo!IO ~m.
s_....,,30p.m.
· Wol lk7 Service. 7:30p.m.
_ _,Tti_CIIordt
Iaiiey Rtro RDI4

...........

IIi. JoluJ .......... ~
PlneOnwe

Norman WiU, IUpedntendcnl
Sundaywcnhlp-10:30a.m.

PuiGr.ThmaDudwn

Sundn.y- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
-y-7p.m . .
Jr.'£": lC
')~ .
S?S Peul Sl. t.Nr"1por1

Sundoy lkbooi·IOLm.
Wtrnblp • 9 ....
~tt 1 y-7p.a.

Our S.¥foar Lu...l'lll Cburdl
Walnut and Henry Sta .. Raven•wood,
W.Va .

Servicu: Saturday 2:00p.m.

--C..ullyCioordt

Wonlllp • to ~m.

-ySmlea7:30p.m.

Datar Churdt trlCioriR
Pulor: Nathan Robinlon
Sunday ochool 9:30 o.m.

a•

Cormelol-RiciM, Oldo
,._DewoyneSiuller
Sundoy Scbool · \1:30 . ..
Wonltip ·10:45 ~...
Bible ,!lludy Wod. 7:QO p.m.

S.:rarnenl SaMca 9·10:15 a.m.
Homemaldaa moellq, 111 Tbun. • 7 p.m.

Chrdo tiClriat
-PblllpSSunday S&lt;bool: 9:30a.m.

'-aB..-

Swxlay, 2:30p.m.
eu..~

altt·r-l&gt;;t\ Saitlh

I

... c:...,. Clotmlt

'nl' M •WI'FeiDwclllpMlalarJ
New Lime Rd., Rutland
· Plnb:r. hv. MarJam J. Robinaon
II&lt;M&lt;oo:W-y,7:30p.m.

7

noon

PtiCor: Robert Mutllt
SWlday SChool· 9:30 Lm.
w.ntt1p. t0:30 ~m., 7:30p.m.

S.rior

Rt.338. Antiquity
Putor: Jeste Morris

Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 .....
Wonb.lp. 9:l0 a.m. and 7 p.m.
• Wednelday • 7 p.m.
· Pddly • tellowlhip service 7 p.m.

~

St. Rt. i60, 446-6247 or 446:7&lt;t86
Sundly Schooll0:21).11 ~m.

LottrtUo ctutadut Ctntrdo

hit Goapel Cloordt II 1M Uri..

hnltlr. Sle-we Reed

Putor:'DowoyneSiudet
Samdly School- 10 ....
. Wonhlp 9a.m.
w.bleaday Servlcel- I 0 a.m.

111eCII-olJ-

WonbJp • 10un.,6:30p.m.
--.ySeMcoa-7p.m.

-

........

lli&lt;brJ Hila Clturdt ot Chrfat
EvupU1t Mike MooR
Sunday School, 9 a.m.

Putot'feraa DI'Vil
Sunday ICII'Viee, 10 a.m.
W t :ley lt:I'Vk:e, 7 p.m.

Stotdoy SciJool. IOLm.
Wonhlp-9a.m.

Wodnesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Youth Minil.ter: Bill Ambapr
· Sunday School~ 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., IO:lOa.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Senices · 7:00p.m.

Puor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. A 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp;. Vooth 7 p.m.

A-IG-IU'.I.
923 S. 11tlnl SL: Middlep&gt;n

Sunday Sctlool· 9:U Lm.
Wriip· IO~ts a.m.

Pastoo Donald Balis
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
WOflbip • 10:30 a.m. aod 6 p.m.

New ur. VktorJ ea.cer

JnJ Oelqoa C...k Rood. O~lipolb, OH

Wedally7pm

~-10:30Lm.

Lourti alii Free M - Cbldl

O&gt;ntu of St. Rl I U ol Bntllbury Rd.

603 Seoood Alle. Muon
. 773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.

Sundly School- 9:10 i.m.

Hyted Ru•Holtoell Church
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:4~ a.m. , 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study aod Youth •'17 p.m.

Ratlaad Cbardlel Chrkt
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10;30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Kdlb-

"FuU.(loopel Chot&lt;h"

Suaday SdJool, 9:15 Lm.
Warship • 10 Lal.
Youth Fo-oltlp, Sundoy • 6 p.m.

I

Sunda)' Sl;hool • 10 a.m.
Wornhip - 7 p.m.
Wednclday Service. 7 p.m.

......... John ol Polly Wide

Plae Grove Blbh! llolln. Chun:b
112 mile off'Rl 32S
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdoesday Service · 7:30p.m.

'i

Ciifton, W.Va.

" -ure Caler

llodtS,...
Putor:

Sundly Sc"hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:)() p.m.
Wcdncadly Sen-icc - 7:30 P·•·

-a.--

7

R-otSiwoDH.U..Citordt
Lcadlna Cm:k Rd. , Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina

Pomcroy - · Co. Rd.

. Pator: Rev. BIGwood

Sdftmil&amp;e CD••nalty Chrdl
.
Pucor: W.yne R. Jewell
Alii Stnft a..dl
Sunday Service~· 10:00 a.m. a. 7:00p.m.
Alb Sl., Middleport- hstor: Glenn Rowe
Thunday . 7:00p.m.
$w¥11y Sdtool · 10:01) LBL
S-y S&lt;nice ; 6:00p.m.
llolold.. Llle Clo•· I hy Service · 7:00p.m.
~ N. 2J'Id Ave., Middleport
Putor. Mike FuRman
Pallor: Emetkua lawrence Foreman
47439 Reibel Rd., a.....
Won.hip- lO:OO am
''~" • •• Miry o n d - Cook
Wcdnelday Servlcel - 7 p.m.
s.da.y S4nk:a: 10 Lm. A: 6 p.m.
Wodrladay 5a'viceJ • 7 p.m.
c-. Tobe..-a.-

Mb •••

Cohill)' I'IJarla t'1u9o1
Hmisonvillt Road
Pastor: Olarlcs McKemie
Sunday Scbool9:30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Cohory Bible Clo-

l'uWr: Midloollluhl
Suadly School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wed! day Scrvica - 7:00p.m.

Wonbip,9a.a.

31057 State Route, Jl.S, LanpvUe
Puoor: Oary Jac:Uon
Sunday tchool • 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship · I0:30a.m. .t: 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

...,.

ot ctlriot
.......... Ricioe Rd.

Sundly School - 10 a.m.

Dott.... H-ChlU'do

Sunday S&lt;hool -9:30 ...,;,
WOI'Ihi~ 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednclday Servkes • 7 p.m.

c

PMtor: Brian May
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 7:00 p.ID.
Wednesday Bib&amp;c Study - 7;00 p.m.

U...led Faltb Churtb
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By·Pua
Pac.or: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sundly School • 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoelday Service • 7 p.m.
. . Goopal ..... 33045 HUand Rold, Pomeroy
Puler. Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
BYenlna: 7:30p.m.

ML Hen11011 United Bnthm1
In Cia"-: Churth
Texu Communily off CR 82 ·
Putor: Roben Sanders
Sunday School • !UO a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servias • 7:30p.m.

Eden United Brtlhren In Chrtl!:

2 112 miles north of RccdiYillc
on State Route 124
Pastor: Re v. Robct1 Maskley
Sunday School · II a.m.
Sunday Worship ·. 10:00 a.m . .t: 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m.

1\aeldty 4: Thul1dly • 7:30p.m.

Churc:h of the Nazarene
Putor: Tete11 Waldeck
Sundly School , 9!30 1.m.

S.dliledMI New 'IHtriment

fll .

' I

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·

4
ill;
~

•,

¥:

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I

""

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

~

• I

Davle-Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance
Products+
Financial
ENCIES Inc. Service&amp;
·

White funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740·667·3110

•

2M looiiJ s.....l ..... Mil 1111,01145760
74H9HI41
212 E. Main Street
- t. flllrr . _
Po me~ 590 EAst . . 5kNI • P-r. 01145769
I

740..992-5444

~earforll

1\.eal Qestate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
740-1192-3325

Marketing Prowtv
Since 1971

·

ANDERSOfi

Prescriptions
992·2955

01(111/ty and Service Alwaya
Eatllblilhed 1913
Ave.

106 BUlTERNUT AVE.
Po~OY,OH

,.

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

992·6454

'Flowers Tor all occasions"
6n1alfrr'J
~lrt &amp; 6afttp
ftMI iU
IIM•••n

Ingel's Carpet

HOME
106

FLOWER

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'

I

I

I

• t

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

EWING FUNERAL

992-2121

1

740-992·2844 740-992-41218

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

FUNERAL HOME
"We accept Preneed Transfers'
(304) 882-8200
Lundy Brown James Anderson
Directors

•let Ill •nd yOY t thou£hfl wftfl ....l CINI

"-' I. lent, Jr.· Dlredtr

992-3785

Bill Quickel

'*"" 't1'4' '¥ *+·~f'li,: 'f f+±t ~ 4; hif.t~~ jo ~~ti:l\'f hd.! tJ
••

Uwt, W.Va. Rt. I

~·

+.

..

,_._

Main SCRet, Rutland
Suodly Wonhip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Ser'J~7 p.m.

f.

!j

.

F--Chrdt

7

•

•.A

After you have mode yaur 14 purchases - flU ou~ ·
the back of card and return to .any listed merchant
·
(card will be Issued after I st purchase).

-Keilb-

i

Worahip . 10:30 a.m.
Wechsdly ~ - 1 p.m.

·PM&amp;or. W. .Diam Jllllis
Sunday School ,1 0:00 a.m.
Momiaa Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
SUII!Iay Service - 6:30p.m.

a

Swwlly Scboa1., IO&amp;.IIl.
Wonbip 11 ua.

Wonbip • IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdncld.ly SctviceA • 7 p.m.

. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday EYcnina - 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

. ,. ¥1
To be eiiQible you must make a purchase of $20 or t :
more at 14 partlclpatlnQ stores.

,..

I

WIUtt'• o.,el Wa*:)w
Coolville Rood
Putor: Rev. Phillip llideDow
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

- " " ' Cloudtti!M-

Wonbip:9a.dt.

W«&lt;needay Sel'\licu. 7:30p.m.

if
.&amp;.

Swdy Scbool - 9:10 Llll.
Wonbip- 1 p.m.

Swad&amp;y School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m..
Wedl 1 y Services • 7 p.m.

-ltcidi-

Sundly ScMol and
Hoi)' Eudwi5t II :00 a.m.

Antiquity Bapdtt

~

-

Sundio.y Schaal • I0 a.m.

- . . , . W-Cio- otCioriR
332260aildren's Home Rd.
Sundl)' Sclkd ·I I a.m.

-

i...

•

Bald KMb, on Co. ltd. 31
Putor: Re&gt;.JioF WUllood

- . . Cloordo ., ... N PIIkr. Rev. Samuel W. Bu~

plw

I

-Goaooi-

0

l'lllor.tlev. llatlcnGnoo
SuDdly Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Won11ip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncadly 5erYk:el • 7 p.m.

' YServica • 7:3() p.IIL

Wed

I

a..r~tltWN

l'lllor.Boii-

¥

~J
.&amp;.

-.,.,o .........

~--9

S..aa)' sa.ooi" 9:4J LID.

,_..., Cloon:ll "'Clortot
212 W. Maio St.
Mini.llcr. Anthony MOI'I"ii
SUftdly Schoo,( • 9:30 ua
Wonhip- 10:30a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesdly SuviceJ • 7 p.m.

Pbkr. JIID Lllveoder
Suadiy Sdluoi· 9:30 Lift.
11 I

~c=-­
~(5-)

7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;4th Sun)
Wednesday Senolce . 7:30p.m.

•

---

SIIlldly Sc11oa1 • 9:30 ..._
IO:JOUl.
No Sunday or W I d y N'iJbt S.V~
WonbipSUv~

Wonhip • IO:lOa.m. lftd 6p.m.
tfey S«vic.w: 7 p.m.

'llleodoyServi&lt;a-7:30 p.m.

Honford. W.Vo.
P&amp;lt(M':Jim Hughes
Sunday . ~hool· l111.m.
Wonhlp . 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

if

_

s-llySclk*,IO:lOUL

,._._...

I

~Rood

_,Citonlt.,... _

••

_,_,_·7mp.m..mco

Pastor: Rc'J. Gilbert Crail. Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.

(f

ML M.-Bop41Jt
Fourth &amp;. Main St .• Middleport

"H·

For more Information call
BetsyNicodemusat992-2239
::i.ID·-:a;C.:

FomtRoaBopdot
Pastor ; Arius Hurt
Sllftdly School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

,

Sunday School , 9 a.m.
Sun. 'Wurnhip • IO; I0 a.m.., 6 p.IJL
Wc:Oitidloy Servioe • 7 p.M.
CartatOII.Iail:t
I I' I a....

n 11M

SuadaJ' School- 9:30 UL
Wotlbif - 10:30ua..6 p...
w. ~ yS.W.. - 7p...

""""""'" 9:!0 .....

Sooond ol Lynn. """""'Y
Pucor: Rev. Crai&amp; Croum.an
Wonbip 10:25 ....
Sundl)' Sehool9~1~ a.m.

IID1

Flilb Bopdot Churdt
. Rollrofd SL, Muon
Sl'ftday S&lt;hool • I0 a.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.,6p.m.
Wedneaday Services , 7 p.m.

a

GraltomU-Worshlp - 9:30a.m. (I at a. 2nd Sun),

t;

Drawing to take plgce
Monday, December 17. 200l

diS

52.! N. 2nd SL Middleport
Putor: Jamn B. Keeaee
Wonhip- lO..m., 7 p.m.
WedneodayServlcet·7p.m.

......

a,.- 011nt1 flldle H•

~-·9:lOL..

Trtolly~

l'llur.
Sunday SchOol. IQ:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
BibJ&lt; S!Udy · 1 p.m.
Coaununiry of ChriM

---

-yScl&gt;ooi-IO:lOL&amp;

( IIII:CI l ' :_:,lilllll,il

O.W.~

"""""""...
Worship Senice • 9

------· SdwrRidp

Woraliip . IO'AS a.a. 7 p.a.
W ' I J S.W. · 1 p.m.

-.,.JO:lOLII.

llud'onl Clttudt a(Chrfat ..
ChrllduUIIoo

Purchases must be made between November 2,
2001 and December I 5, 2001.

-

161 M-.y Ave.-.,.. 992·.... WI""! E. Heiu
511. 0.. 4:.U.,: J5p.ID.; M&amp;A- ' :JOp.a
Sun. Con. -1:4.5-9:I' a.m.,
Sun. Mau . 9:30a.m.
o.lky M.M . 1:30 &amp;.Ill

P(JI

. . . , .. t:)O ....

Cl1111rdul GM tiP:&amp; z 3 J
OJ . W1liJo Rd. airS&lt; IlL 160
....... PJ. c:Joopa..&gt;
Suodly Sc:bool - 10 l.Jft.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wcdncldl)' s.vica · 7 p.m.

Bible Study, Wodneltlly,6:l0p.m.

992-2156

t

East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Puux: E.l...atnu O'BcyiiDl
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • IO:•s a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodntldly Sen-ices · 7:00p.m.

Across from Chester Skate-A- Way

S't:/iscripe today.

Second Billing
The main speaker at Getsburg the day Abraham LinIn delivered his immortal
fecrysburg Address was not
llincoln .The man billed as the
rjlain speaker that day wa.
&lt;!:ongressman
Edward
~verett. Everett gave the
maj or address, speaking for
tWo hours, and only then did
I:incoln get a chance to talk.

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

ftntSott .............
4)872 Pomeroy-

St. Rt. 7 N.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
Daniel w. Shriv'tf-~L{)CAL FOLKS.

l·

--c-.'-

-

....-: M II

. .eftift.

~'- olCioriR

· Refreshments
Drawing for Grand Prize

• &gt;- '

~

-

Apple ..t Seooad Sta..
Puaor: Rn. Dlvid RIJqeU
S-ySdiOol-.JW....... JO~ .
~
Service~- 6:30 p.a.
Wed:ne:ldly Secvk:el- 6:30 p.m.

t.&lt;orniq......., 111111 e-.,. . 1 , .
Wcdncldly 7 p.m.

Hopollopdot Churdo (Sott"""'l

Candles • Gifts • Gift Baskets
Wr11aths • Lots of Christmas Items

' "

Unfelt Spin
, .The Earth spins on its axis
lnd m~v~s around the sun -·
" why don't we feel anyt.ing' . The reason is that
.,aintaining a constant speed
'as exactly the same effect ~·
' ot moving at all; both are
. ates of inertia. We can only
I changes in speed. So it the
rth ever started to spin
ter, or if it slowed down, we
uld indeed feel it.
·

NeU Teftftlftl

Uldo c.......... Cloudt
Pri&lt;e Hollow Rd.. Rudond
Puaor. JobD Swaa1011.
Sunday Scbool · 10:00 a.m.

Home·Town Candles

Daniel W. Shriver has been
deployed to the waters of
southwest Asia aboard· the
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier U.S.S. Theodore Roo. sevelt.
Shriver is a 1990 graduate
of Fort Frye High School in
Beverly and the son of Jah·n
and J0 yce Shriver of Coal
Run . He is the husband of
the formh Carrie Brockman
and .father of three children.

COAL RUN Na~y ~· ·:·~·•It
Petty Officer Second Class

'

Suaday Servk.a· 10:00 a.m. a1 7 p.m.

Saturday, December 8
10AM-4PM

"•

TUPPERS PLAINS Cpl. Eric Marcinko, Jr., 26th
MEU (SOC) has been
deployed to the Mediterranean Sea aboard the U.S.S.
Bataan.
Marcinko is a 1997 graduate
of Eastern High School and

"'-Ciortot

............. Cluud&gt;
Putor: Mark Moaow
6Ch ond Paimot' SL. Middlepon
Sunday School - 9: IS a.in.
Wonblp • 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Weme.day Service- 7:00p.m.

a

Edc-Marcinko, •

ee...,

rn s.3td Ave.. Mkk" port

MILITARY NEWS
the son of Eric and Malxina
Marcinko of Tuppers Plains.
He joined the Marines after
graduati!'g high school.

I

11-v...,.

.

I. ~:;

fill..._ Oldll4t

_..._ ool Wud Rd.
, _ , J - Miller
-yScl&gt;ooi.JO:lOa.m.
s_....,,JOp ....

new officers

F~ddi~

•••
Oz," modeled by the stars
NEWYORK (AI') -"Fash"Gowns by Adrianu 1s a themselves, are among the
ion" is more than the season's
hot look. It's culture. It's enter- familiar credit to film buffi. Fans black-and-white photographs
of fashion can learn about the included in the book.
tainment. It's rich in tradition.
•••
"Fashion" also is the tide of a Hollywood costume designer
in
"Gowns
by
Adrian:
Th
e
Celebrity
hairdresser Serge
new offering from National
Geographic Books (SSil) that MGM Years, 1928- 1941" Nor.mant takes modern -day
(Abra1m, $39.95) .
&lt;tars and transforms them into
delves deep into the closet.
Adrian had a relationship icons of yesteryear in "Femme
The 240-page visual journey
with
stars such .S Greta Garbo Fatale" (Viking, $35).
- complete with 200 photos
In the book's text, Women's
of runway and real- world and Joan Crawford that would
clothes - cuts a wide swath of make any 21st century red-car- W~ar D~i!Y and W magazine
fabric, examining what we wear pet designer blush. He was executive editor Bridget Foley
and why we wear it. It's among Crawford's exclusive designer at explains how Julia Roberts' jetthe sryle-centric, coffee-table MGM and be's •the one who blacl.&lt; bob representing the
books in stores this holiday sea- decided . to accentuate her "new woman" of the 1920s and
son chat might make the perfect shoulder; and cinch her waist, a Britney Spears' wholesomegift for the fashionista on your look that was copied over and yet-sulty starlet look fiom the
over again by women across the '50s are more than hairsryles.
list.
country
in 'the · 1'930s. Accord- They are .soda! commentaries.
Cathy Newman asks fashion
Many of the book's subjects,
designers, editors and curators ing to author Homrd Gutner,
who
was
the
next
including
Ellen Barkin, ElizaEdith
Head,
about fashion's role in the
star of the movie-fashion beth,Jijlfley, Heather Locklear
world and if it really matters.
world, dec4red Adr!a'~'s broad- and Julianne Moore, are NorTurns out it does.
"We dress to say, 'Look at me. shoulder look as the most mant's own clients, although
This,;, a moment that ma![ers.' important influence on Ameri- spme are unrecognizable in the
"period" photographs shot by
In;.telebracinS"fas)lion; ~~e­ can fashiolt , .. ,,.•..,,'.
brate our ·culture; we celebrate
Costum~s. from "Grand ·Michael Thompson.
. our spirit; we celebrate our- Hotel;' "The · Philadelphia · ...... .,..... , .· • • •
Story" and "The Wizard of
"Vera Wang on Weddings"
selves," writes Newman.

a..:.

De Dally Septlqd • , . tJ

Sueda)l Sc:hooiiO lnl-

------................

·-·- ···-- .. - ·

···---··- ·- ..I

.

.

.. -

always &amp; 'Forever

Sift Sfiop
&amp;18 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH

992-1161

Office SErvice &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-6376
,,

�•

Page AI

Amenca at War
•

The.Daily Sentinel

Friday. Danrhr 7. JOI1

Leahy anthrax letter identical to one sent to Daschle
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
anthrax-uinted letter to Sen. Patrick
Leahy that investigators opened this
week is identical to the letter to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, two
g&lt;:IVernment officials said Thursday.
Scientists at the Army's biodefense
laboratory in Fort Detrick, Md.,
opened the Leahy letter Wednesday.
The event had been delayed more
than two weeks while technicians
tried to determine the best way to
protect the evidence retrieved fiom
the letter.
The FBI hopes testing on the Leahy
letter will help track down the killer

who sent mail containing the deadly
powder to politicians and the news
media.
The Leahy and Daschle letters both
state in part, "09-11-01 You can nor
stop us. We have this anthrax" and
conclude, "Allah is great."
Technicians worried that an electrostatic charge could develop as the
envelope was opened and send
anthrax spores flying out of the envelope and losing them to investigators.
Because of an electrostatic charge,
some of the anthrax from a letter to
Daschle "literally jumped off the
slide" as ~b technicians tried to exam-

Transporting sea-based soldiers to land

Moving
Marines
A mix of •lr mu.cle

ine it under a microscope, said a government lawyer outside the FBI who
is familiar with the problem.
Two government officials said
Thursday that the wording of the
Leahy letter is identical to that of the
Daschle letter.
Examining contents of the Leahy
envelope will be a lengthy process,
said government officials, who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
"Testing will not be co!"pleted in
the next few days," said an FBI official.
"We expect it to be weeks before all
the results of testing are in:'
The suspected anthrax powder

around all the edges and was loaded
with so much anthrax that "you could
feel the powder inside;' an FBI microbiologist said in a recent interview. He
said there were billions of spores.
The Leahy letter was .in one of 630
trash bags filled with congre&lt;sional
mail that was set aside after che
Daschle letter was found. It took
investigators a week to find a suitable
warehouse to facilitate the search of
potentially dangerous material in the
unopened mail. It took two weeks to
build a conuinment area inside the
suburban Washington facility where
investigaton could test the mail.

from the Leahy letter will be sent to
various labs for analysis.
The letter itself must be decontaminated and irradiated before it can be
tested for fingerprints, DNA and
fibers.
· The Daschle letter and another letter to NBC News anchorman Tom
Brokaw also were tested at Fon Detrick.
The Leahy envelope was found by
government investigators Nov. 16
among mail quarantined after the
Oct. 15 discovery of anthrax in the
Daschle letter.
The Leahy envelope was taped

T

he Marines are traditionally
· via hellooptars and Navy landing craft
to shore. A MEU may also be ·
among America's first military
forces to respond during a crisis.
designated Special Operations
Based on Navy ships, a Marine
capable (SOC), mearing ~ Is uniquely
Expeditionary Unit (MEU) has a
qualified to conduct missions such as
strength of at1out 2,200 Marines and c:Mtian evacuation. peacekeeping and
Is made up of three combat elements antl-tem&gt;&lt;tsm. The entire Ioree of Navy
-command, ground and aviation. The amphibiOus ships and embarked MEU
ground element, numbering about
Is known as an Amphlbtous Ready
1,200, Is transported wtth its own
Group (ARG) -Its mission Is to rapidly
artillery, armored vehicles and tanks respond anywhere in the world.

Warplanes Bomb
in sup~rtof

Lllncllq the tla ape

-to""""'

=--

-utt

..

\IIJhlde~

House bill would earmark $2.9 billion for bioterrorism

Reinforcements sent
into replace men
1n ••friendly fire"

' .

••
t

WASHINGTON (AP) The United States has sent
reinforcements
into
Afghanistan to replace the men
kiDed and wounded in the
. deadliest "friendly fire" incident of the Afghan war, Pentagon officials said Thursday.
Defense Secretary Donald
H .. Rumsfeld said at a Pentagon
briefing that he has ordered an
investigation into the mistaken
· bombing Wednesday .that
· killed three Army Green Berets
soldiers and wounded 20 other
Americans.
An Air Force B-52 dropped
a one-ton bomb near· the soldiers afier they had called in an
airstrike against Taliban forces
near Kandah,ar.
Six anti-Taliban Afghan
fighters also were killed and 18
were wounded.
The sixth anti-Taliban fighter died after being evacuated
for medical treatment to the ·

USS Bataan, located in the
Arabian Sea, Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said
Thursday.
"We are replacing the people
who were killed and wounded," Marine Corps Gen. Peter
Pace told reporters at the Pentagon.
Rumsfeld, recalling the Dec.
7 anniversary ·of the attack on
Pearl Harbor and the heavy .
casualty toll, said at a briefing
that even more Americans died
Sept. 11 "because we were
under attack" fiom terrorists
harbored by the Taliban in
Afghanistan. "The improbable
can happen, and it has." he said.
The secretary, interviewed
Wednesday on CNN's "Larry
King Live," caDed the B-52
accident a terrible tragedy.
"Our heart goes out to the
families and the friends of
those fine people," he said.

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~R.

5CROOfif

Donald Rumsfeld
tinue to drop "cave-buster"
bombs on the mountain
hide-outs, ranging from
500-pounds to one ton
apiece, Pace added.
Asked if the cave complex ·
would be the last area U.S.
and opposition forces would
attack, Defense Secretary
Don,.ld H. Rumsfeld said
that there are still "pockets
of Taliban and ai-Qaida
fighters in non-trivial numbers," throughout the country and outside urban areas.
This presents a problem
for assisting refugees, Rumsfeld said, acknowledging
that such dangers are preventing humanitarian assistance from reaching all'
Afghans who need it.
"The people on the
ground are doing, in many
cases, ihe best they can.
They're trying to provide a
stable, secure . situation.
There are criminals. There is
disorder. There has been
war," Rumsfeld said; adding,
"It's going to take a little bit
of time."

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December 11, 2001

7:00PM
At: Rejoicing Life Church
Middleport, Ohio
(7 40) 992-6249
Sponsored by: ·
Mid-Valley Christian School
Admission: $5.00
A Great Holiday Show

FAMILY FUN!

&amp;seba/1 hearings, Anderson sigiiS, Page B2
Gonzaga tallies upset, Page BJ
Jtard~ hits make mark, Page 85

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.

Page 81
FtW.y. Dacamber 7. :ZOO I

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Eastern disposes of Lady Cats, 54-29
BY JoN WILL
OVP CORRESPONDENT

PnlpC

I

,

..

nu.tlay'a o.~

• Meigs 42, 'IV!llsb140

• Easlom 54, Trinble 29
SotAhem 65. Federal Hodcig 00
GalaAan 63, Pl. Pis
i 39
Wallen ffi,
28
Qio

"**

River"**
nor-

00, 'Mlod Quty !II

the Eagles as she dominated underneath, scoring 19. Mansfield helped
GLOUSTER Eastern Lady keep the pressure offWatson by drainEagles are at it again.
ing three of five three-point goals, as
On their second road game of the well as a short jumper for 11 points.
week, the Eagles traveled to Glouster Sandy Powell hit from downtown as
to battle it out with TVC foe Trimble. well. as she continues to improve
The Eagles were 2-1 going into the upon her outside shooting capabilicompetition. Thursday night was the· ties.
opening night. for the TVC Hocking
"Sandy made some nice entry paSsDivision · play, and the Eagles are es, and is continuing to help us out on
P'!ise~ to ':"~e ar~other run at the fiom shooting from the outside,"
Hocking DtviSton tide.
· Lady Eagle coach Paul Brannon said
The Eagles make quick work of the
Eastern came out of the gate hard,
Lady TomcaiS last mght, 54-29. StaCie and jumped on the Cats for a 19-6
Watson put up b1g numbers ·agam for first quarter score.

Some hodge-podge defense, however, enabled the Tomcats to play with
the Eagles and match them point for
point in the second and third quarters.
"I really got on them hard about
their defense after the third quarter.
That made the second quarter in a
row that they had matched us point
for point." said Brannon.
Brannon's chastising did its job. Little did the Tomcats know that their
last bucket in the third quarter would
be their last of the night. The Eagles
held the Tomcats scoreless the entire
fourth quarter, and poured on an
additional 12 points to finish off the

NCAAMin'aF
'l1llndtl(s
Cent. CclrnadiUSt. ill. McutSt..
Mary's, Mel. 69
1Jelayllll978, Hgl ~63
Hay Cross 78, BroNn 63
looa 82, Fairfield 78, OT
Marist n, Siena 69
New Ha npalie 96, New 8 US! id
Col. 51
Nagara 71,l..l¥Jia. Md. 51
lMlC 78, Q.ir4llac 71, OT
~92, Monil BroNn 78
Elon 97, ElJefield 81
Geotgetmn 70, SoUh Caroli1a 68
Georgia Sot.hm 86, Savamah
St.63
Georgia St. 90, Mercer 79
• .... 17. Radbd 83
N. Arizona 67. 4Jew1 tJ 52
Slel9on 104, w. Caroli1a 102, 20T
Tenn.-Martln 76, Middle TenI

opposition forces

WASHINGTON (AP) The aviation combat element
Initial wave of helicopters
Flxed·wing aircraft
After
'n'oopsand
In
U.S.
warplanes have begun
provides air support to Marine
,
predetermined
deliver lightly armed assault and attack
delivering
equipment
ground lorces and Is made up or a i
waves, lartdlng
troops ~nd is cooralnated
helfcoptera protect their loads,
assemble in
providing close-air supp()rt
heUcoptera and crah form a line
with ground landings.
the landing and
landing
mix of helicopters and anack jets. ·
opposition
for Afghan
aboul200,.....1n
landing craft
provide air suPPOrt craft return
Fo41ow-on
front of the ships.
to the Ships
C-E-~Ighl
while stiR on
to the troops.
troops fighting ai-Qaida
hellcoptefs detlwr
lhe Ship&amp;.
for more.
PrinciPal uaault and
Movemenlhl
whlcles
heavy
forces
near cave complexes
transport,...... ,....Can
The landing
planned so all and other
oany up to 25 troops.
in the mountains south. of
craft, upon
tanding craft equipment.
AV-aBHII.......
leaving the
In each wave
Jalalabad, a senior U.S. miliMarines' vertical take·
ohlps . .
reach land at
usembleln
theaama
off- landing ......ft.
tary official said Thursday.
drdea alonglime.
uaed lor close air
Osama bin Laden, prime
aide about 100
support.
yanlo-.
suspect behind the Sept. II
. AH•1W~Cc*a
Gu,..lp ..ad tor •-=.•rmontd
terrorist attacks, is believed
reeonnaiP&amp;noe.
to be hiding in the caves.
e.cxwt and
U.S. Special Operations
fire support.
Forces
are working with
CH-1138 ~ Slolllon
. America's largeal helkxlpter, uMd for
opposition troops in the
heavy lift and
area,
collecting ,information
aaaault. Can
aorry up to 55
on the locations of suspecttroope.
ed hide-outs or enemy
troop concentrations and
lAnding Crwft Air Cuehlon (LCAC)
then
relaying it to U.S. warRe8d}t to r••pond
Hovercraft that can carry troops or
planes above. Pilots are using
An Amphibious Ready Group Is composed of three or four .
tanks and other vehlctes at high speed.
ships .. and tr&amp;f'Sports a MEU and Its equipment to the
the information to target
shore on landing craft.
Amphlbloue A . . .ult
Lllndlng Cr•rt Ullllty (LCU)
their
satellite-guided
Ship (LHDILHA)
Uaed to ferry heavy vehicles, iroops
weaponry, Marine Corps
Can carry 1 ,685 to 1, 710
and cargo.
troops; space for 41 to ·4 6
Gen. Peter · Pace told
Mllcoptel'lli and one to
.., Fep.orters at a Pentago!l
four lar&lt;flng craft.
Dock~lng
• Bhlp (LSD)
briefing. ·
. for
canfour1andlng
cony •so """""'.,..,.
Pace, the deputy director
AmPhlbiOue • •
craft and a
Vehicle (AAV)
hellcopter,Jandlr:K~
area,
:
~
AmphtbiOUO
" ""''.• ~. o(,the JoinJ,,,C~ie~s of.S~?ff,
• Atraonnet
Tr11-r1
that can operata
sa1d the tactic IS supponmg
Dock(LPD)
on land and In
Can cany 840 to 930 troope;
opposition ground forces
Mter; can cany
apace for four hellc:optere
18 troope.
who are moving through
and one landing crart.
the valleys in the Tara Bora
1bny Luge, Wm. J . C.stelloiAP
SOUifCES: U.S. ~ ~; nt. N-.lln.lltut. Guk» to lfN ~ •nd .A~It of fhfl U.S. ANt
cave complex.
"They're able to see the
caves that are active, they
can see the caves that are
not, and we're.able to provide much more direct support to them," Pace said.
bioterrorism efforts, including money to
WASHINGTON (AP) House mittee's ranking Democrat.
The tactic has been used
Sens. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. and Bill buy 300 million doses of smallpox vaccine
Republicans and Democrats on Thursday
successfully in fighting to
introduced their answer to the nation's Frist, R-Tenn. introduced a $~.2 billion bill - one for every American.
wrest control from the TalThe House bill would authorize more
growing concerns over bioterrorism - a in the Senate last month. No action has
iban in the northwestern
$2.9 billion proposal to increase vaccine taken place on that measure but already than $1 billion for states and health care
cities ofKunduz and Mazarstockpiles, train health officials and protect aides report more than 70 senators have facilities tq improve preparedness and train
e-Sharif and the southern
$450
million
for
the
Centers
for
personnel;
sigued
the
bill.
food and water supplies.
stronghold of Kandahar, he
"This is a down payment ... a down payMembers of the House committee hope Disease Control and Prevention to
said.
ment on what we chink is necessary to pro- to bring their bill up before the full House upgrade their facility; $1 billion for the
U.S. warplanes will conHealth and Human Services secretary to
tect this country;' said Rep. Billy Tauzin, as early as next week.
If the two chombers pass different ver- expand national stockpiles of medicine and
R-La., chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, which drafted the bill. sions, it would be up to House and Senate vaccine; $100 million to protect imported
food; and $100 million to develop emerThe measure sends resources "directly negotiators to craft a compromise.
President Bush has proposed spending gency response plans for drinking-water
and quickly to those in the fiont line;' said
Rep. John Dingell of Michigan, the com- considerably le51 money - $1.5 billion. on systems.

The Daily Sentinel

fading Cats.
The Eagles had some great defensive play fi:om Alyssa Holter, as weD as
Tiffany Bissell. Both helped shut
down the Tomcat leading scorer
Hooper.
Senior Whitney Karr made her
debut as she is returning fiom an
ankle injury suffered during volley ball. Karr's playing was limited, but she
still managed to hit two field goals and
two for five fiom the foul line.
"I'm glad to see Whitney able to
play again. even if it's just a couple

Pleue-bst.m.B2

...

a.-

Meigs
girls win
•

aga1n
BY JiM Soul58Y
OVP CORRESPONDENT
ROCK SPRINGS - Sophomore Jaynee
Davis and Junior Shannon Soulsby combined for 29 points Thursday night as the
Meigs Lady Marauders held off a comeback
attempt by the Wellston Lady Rockets to
post a 42-40 win at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
·
The Marauders (2-1) grabbed an early 4-0
lead on two Mindy Chancey baskets. Wellston gut on the board at the 5:57 mark on a
three pointer by Abby Thomas. Kim my Cremeans' two pointer was offiet by a pair of
goals by Jaynee Davis and Shannon Soulsby'
s two pointer. An Alex Massie goal made it
12-10 Meigs after one qiiarter.
Both teams struggled from tfie tield in the
second quarter. Samantha Pierce canned
Meigs' only basket from the field during the
quarter as the Lady Marauders went 1-12.
Wellston got four points fiom Dusty Cremeans in the quarter. Cremeans' goal with
2:18left pushed the Rockets in fi:ont 16-14.
Soulsby hit two free throws at the 1 :23 mark
to tie the score at 16 all at the half.
Meigs opened a 29-20 lead at the end of

neesee71

Bel St. 113, Ind.-Pur.-A.~ 89
Dn1ke 93. Ark.-Pile EU 64
Missouri 117, Soulhem u. 67
Oald!rd, Melt 93. Delroit 67
Ta1 m as 79, SMU 62
. lllE'74, WasliiiOP162
Cailania 118, Sai't LoUs 63
E. Waslillgklli 59, Idaho 48
Ga "¥ 67, Fresno St. n
f'ewetdle 78. Soulhem Cal n
Saaamei liD St. 85, Cal St.-Fuler1Cn79,0T
Wyoo1i1g 86,
Nor1hiklge 64

cs

NBA

1'hlndly'l a.ne.
Mltl•neiSSOCaeaa Ill;, Memphis 80
Wasi i liP I 85, H&lt;ltJstcn 82
· ~95,T~89

Chailoae 95, Por1land 89

Marshall
outlasts
Radford. 67-63
RADFORD, Va. (AP) Tamar Slay's go-ahead 3pointer with 1:01 remaining
hrlped Marshall defeat Radfqrd 67-63 Thursday night.
· Slay scored 20 points for
Marshall (4-3), and J.R. Vanhoose scored 26 points and
had 15 rebounds.
: - Nosa Obasuyi scored 14 .
points for Radford (4-5) and
Kndrey Savtchenko added 13.
: "Radford (4-5) led ·by 6 at
ihe half, but lost Mike Hornh)Jckle to a left knee injury.
The senior guard, one of
Radford's consistent high
icorers, contributed 8 firstpal£ points.

:Atlanta Falcons
to be sold .
; FLOWERY BRANCH,
Ga. (AP) -Arthur M. Blank,
to-founder and former chairman of Home Depot, is buying the Atlanta Falcons for
$545 million, giving the team
new ownership for the first
time in its 36-year history.
Blank's family investment
company, AMB
Group,
anno~nced the ·sale. Final
details of the transaction are
pending, with the closing
expected by March.
Blank also is buying the 12
percent of the team sp)it
between Atlanta venture capitalist John Imlay and media
executive
Tom • Watson
Brown.

•••••
Send your local sports news
tQ
the
. Sentinel
at
sports@mydailysentinel.com.

....... _Melp,82
BIG SHOTS - Aorida quarterback Rex Grossman, left, Oregon QB Joey Harrington, and Miami QB Ken
Dorsey pass the football around while posing for photos prior to the Home Depot College Football Awards,
Thursday. (AP) ·

Dorsey.and Crouch ·share

top quarterback awards
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) - Miami quarterback Ken Dorsey won the Maxwell Award and
Nebraska:s Eric .Crouch took the Davey O'Brien
quarterbaok trophy Thursl:lay night during the college football .awards show.
Dorsey and Crouch are two of the four Heisman
Trophy finalists, along with Florida's Rex Grossman
and Oregon's Joey Harrington. The Heisman, college
football's top individual award, will be presented Saturday night· in New York.
Dorsey, who led No. I Miami (11 -0) to a perfect
season and a spot in a national title game in the Rose
Bowl, was chosen over· Grossman and Crouch.
"With all the talented guys here, I'm just happy to
be here with those guys," Dorsey said. ''I'm most
proud of being 25-1 in my career. As a Californian I
cannot wait for the Rose Bowl. I just can't imagine
this. I mean, the other guys are so good. I'm excited
that people think about me that way."

The Maxwell, voted on by Division 1-A coaches,
the Football Writers Association of America and
members of the Philadelphia-based Maxwell Football
Club; goes to the best all-around player.
Dorsey completed 184 of 318 passes for 2,652
yards with 23 TDs and nine interceptions.
Crouch won the O'Brien quarterback award over
Grossman and Harrington. Crouch, who led N ebraska to an 11-1 record, ran for 1,115 yards and 18 TDs,
imd passed for 1,510 yards and seven scores.
"I had no idea I would win chis," Crouch said.
"The other quarterbacks that are here are just as
deserving as l am. This is just unbelievable and my
family is so happy. There is nothing that can happen
fiorrl' here on out to match this."
Before the awards show, Crouch received the Walter Camp Award as top college player, edging Dorsey,

Meigs wrestlers
.open ·saturday
·

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The Meigs Wrestling
Team will open the season this Saturday during the Meigs Rotary Invitational.
The event, which will run fro in 10 a.m. till
4 p.m. at the high school, will consist t&gt;f five
teams: Meigs, Trimble, Zane Trace, River Valley, and Wahama.
Troy Bauer, Meigs wrestling coach. expects
a good year from his squad and said everyone
is returning from last year's team, including
seniors Nick McLaughlin, Zach Davis, Joe
Rupe,John Krawsczyn , and Ben Mitchell.
"Our ream has put in many hours of conditioning and participated in numerous
spring and summer tournaments," said

Bauer.
"The extra work has definitely helped and
l feel that our seniors have a good shot of
making their way into the state tournament
at the end of the season," he addod. "We also

PIMH-Aw•rds,82

P I - IH Wrestle, 82

Southern keeps Federal Hocking winless
BY ScoTT Woi.FE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Another great effort
and clutch shots going down the
stretch led the Southern Tornadoes to
a 65-60 .Jri-Valley Conference triumph over the Federal Hocking
Lancers Thursday night in Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium in Racine.
Southern, 3-0, 1-0, used a 15-of-23
night at the line, and 7-of-11 stint in
the fourth quarter to help seal the

wm.

r

The Tornadoes were led by junior
guard Amy Lee who had 23 points,
five steals, and five assists. Sophomore

Katie Say~e tallied 18 points and ten
rebounds, while Brigette Barnes was
the third Southerner in double digits
with 13 points and a great floor game.
Junior Rachel Chapman had nine
points, and Deana Pullins two.
F,deral Hocking. 0-4. 0-1. was led
by Tracey Sidwell who netted 22
points, including six three-pointers
that kept Federal Hocking in the
game during ·the second half. Sheila ·
Gilchrist had 15 points and 12
rebounds, Renee Stevens had nine,
and Kristie Manning six.
Southern trailed after a hard fought first period 14-16, as SidweD
;

ignited the Federal attack with tWo
three pointers· and Gilchrist hauled
down four points off the rebound .and
a good pass from Faith Gilders.
Southern kept pace with a couple
Barnesi steals and a Sayre three-pointer, while Amy Lee ended the frame
with thr,ee points.
Southern started to get into a
rhythm in the second period, but each
time they started to pull awi')', Federal
wol!1d launch a three pointer. Sidwell
knocked down her third of the night
and Renee Stevens knocked down
another io keep the Lancers close.
Meanwhile, Lee, Sayre, and Chapman

each netted four points to lead Southern to a 29- 27 halftime score.
Southern came out hot early in the
third frame and Federal hit a cold speD
that enabled Southern to build up a
seven point advantage. Sayre led the
charge with a three pointer, but seconds later Sidwell answered and Federal cut the score to four points. A
Gilchrist free throw later cut the SHS
lead to thre,e point&lt;, but a Barnes steal
and lay-up g;tve SHS a 48-43 lead at
the end of three frames.
Southern built up several seven-to- ·

Please SH Southem, 12

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P-. 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Selig whines about high salaries
WASHINGTON (AP) - &amp;s.,ball conunis'sioner Bud Selig 12iled against high player
salaries during a cong=sional hearing when: his
plan to eliminate two teams was met with skepticism and hostile questions.
Selig. trying to sway public opinion in the
ownen' never-ending conflict with the pbyeri
association, repeatedly
told the House Judiciary
Committee
hearing
Thursday that his sport's
financial problems were
caused by • "system that is badly flawed."
He claimed baseball ownen sustoined a $232
million operating loss this year - $519 million
with inten:st payments and depreciation added
in - and pbced the blame on salaries that have
skyrocketed in the quarter-century of free
agency and salary arbitration.
Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura, also testifYing
before the committee and se•ted next to Selig,
doubted the·claims of brge losses.
"I have a han:! time believing it, Mr. Selig, that
they're losing that kind of money and still paying
the salaries they're paying;'Ventura said. "That's
asinine.These people did not get the wealth that
they have by being stupid:'
Ventura blamed unfettered spending on players, citing.the deal free agent Barry Bonds is likely to receive.
"Mr. Bonds is going to get over S100 million,
no doubt. Mr. Jason Gimlbi, they've said he'll go
well overS 100 million;Ventura said. "The problem out there is they're paying their employees

duced legislation to repeal
baseball's 79-year-&lt;:&gt;ld antitrust
exemption as it applies to fr.mchise moves and elimination,
also was skeptical of Selig's figures.
"The sununary information
they have turned over to us is
meaningless in the absence of
learning details concerning
SeliC
related party transactions,
salaries and fees received by the
ownen and their faonilies, and the impact of stadium acquisition loans by stadiums;' he said. "In
essence, what they have told us is, 'We lose
money, but we can't trust you with the del2ils: "
Con\mittee chairman F. James Sensenbrenner,
R-Wis., also wasn't convinced.
"Maybe I was asleep in Economics 101 class,"
he said san:astical)y.
Just four teams - Toronto ($52.9 million), Los
Angeles ($45.3 million), Montreal ($38.5 million) and Arizona ($32.2 million) - accounted
for more than half the industry's oper.~ting loss- .
es. Operating losses exclude taxes and interest.
"Ownen struggle;' said Selig, who brought
along an accountant to vouch for the veracity of
the numben."Ifthey don't spend money, they're
called 'EI Cheapo: If they spend more money,
they have problems."
Ventura doubted the need for a new stadium
for the Minnesota Twins, who along with the
Montreal Expos are the leading candidates for
elimination. Selig claimS the 1Wins need a new
too much money."
ballpark to survive, but Minnesota lawmakers
Rep. John Conyen Jr., D-Mich., who futro- have failed to support public financing.

M LB

.

'

.

Southem·
fnwnPapB1
· eight point pads in the final round, only to
have them erased by either a Federal Hocking
bunny shot under the basket or a three-point
play. At the 2:45 mark, Southern led 58-51 and
had the ball. Southern took an ill-advised shot
and Federal rebounded, but also missed. The
Tornadoes then took another untimely shot,
and beat Southern down the court on a Lackey score, 58-53.
· After a Southern illegal scre~n and South: ern time out, Sidwell hit a long three-pointer
· for a 58-56 score. Southern's Amy Lee then
: drove the lane and scored on a twisting lay-up
: for a 60-56 tally, but again Sidwell answered
: with a three to cut the lead to 60-59. South. ern called time out.
. : Southern missed a good inside shot, hut
: Sayre got the offensive board and made a key
: bucket, 62-59. Gilchrist then hit the first of a
; bonus, hut Sayre grabbed the rebound on the
; missed second shot, 62-60. Amy Lee hit an
! important free throw, then after a Lancer miss,
; Brigette Barnes was fouled and made both free
: throws to give SHS a 65-60 tally, to seal the
: game.
, Ashley Dunn and Tara Pickens were credit: ed with playing great post defense, and gettfug
: crucial rebounds late in the game, while the
. entire Southern team earned praise for a great
: hustling effort and great clutch offensive
: effort.
...;__

..

Southern hit 24-of-58 overall, hitting 22of-51 two's for 41 percent, hitting 22-of-51
two's and 2-of-7 three's, while netting 15-of23 at the line. Federal Hocking hit 20-of-58
overall hitting 12-of-.35 two's and 8-of-23
three's, while netting 12-of-21 at the line.
Southern had 30 rebounds (Sayre 10,
Barnes 6, Chapman 5) compared to Federal
Hocking's 39 (Gilchrist 16, Sidwell11). Southern had 16 steals (Lee five, Chapman 3, Barnes
3); nine assists (Lee five), 24 turnovers, and 20
fouls.
Federal Hocking had 11 steals (Stevens,
Manning 3); 12 assists (Stevens 5), 30
turnovers, and 18 fouls.
Federal won the reserve game 42-29 led by
Brandee Hart with 21 points. Southern was
led by Ashley Roush with seven, Joanne Pickens and Jessica Hill with five, Susan Brauer
four, and three each from Heather DuffY and
Nicki Thclrer.
Southern hosts Hannan, WVa. on Monday
in the new elementary gym . .
Southern IS, Fodlral Hocking 10
Federal Hocking 16
11
16
17
60
Southern
14
15
19
17
85
F - 1 -~~~ (00)- Amber Goodtellow 0, Natalie Wiliams
0 2-2 2, Toacoy Sidwell&amp; 0·2 22, -Stevena 3 1·3 9, Kristle
Manning 1 4-6 e, KelleY Lackey 1 ll-1 2, Faith Gidels 1 2·2 4,
Sheila Glldwlst 6 3-8 15. Totals: 20 12·21 60
- ( 6 5 ) - Rachel Chapman41·29, Brlgetie Bames 53·
313, Doonna Pu11lna1 O.Q 2. Amy Lee 7 9·14 23, Katie savos 7
2·2 18, Aahloy DUM 0, Tara PICkens 0. Total&amp;: 2415-23 85.
Thl80 po1nl goalo-Fed Hock 8 (Sklwol 6, Stevens 2).Southem
2 (5a)'1112).
Aol&gt;oundo-Southern 30 (5a)'le 10, Bamel6, Chapman 5). Fed·
eoal Hocking 39 (GIIcMst 16, Sldwol111).
Steals-Southem 16 (Lee five, Chapman 3, Barnes 3). Federal
Hocking 11 ( Stevena, MIMing 3)
Asslata-Southem 9 (Lee fiVe). Federal Hocking 12 (Stevens 5)

_____ ________ ___

Indians sign Anderso o one-year deal
CLEVELAND (AP) · - night. "I ca '
it to get last
Brady Anderson hopes a season
of my head."
move to Clevebnd w~
· help
erson said he lost his
him fo
swing and could never overabou
a come his problems at the
dreadful final plate.
"It was an endless cycle of
season
in
Baltimore.
trying too hard and not getAnderson, ting results,'' he said. "My
released last effort was always there. I realmonth after ize it was a horrific year for
14
yean me personally, but I'm not
with
the ashamed of it because I tried
Orioles,
the best I could."
AndenMHI
signed
a
Anderson won't hit 50
one- year deal Thursday with home runs in a season again,
the Indians, who had been but he was a bargain the Indishopping for an outfielder ans couldn't afford to pass up.
and leadoff hitter. The deal
The Orioles ate the final
includes club options for
season of a five-year, $31 mil2003 and '04.
lion contract Anderson signed
Baltimore released Anderafter the 1997 season. The
son after he batted just .202
Indians would have to pay
59
$200,000 of Andenon's salary,
points
with the Orioles picking up
below
the remaining $3.8 million
his
fur
next season.
career
That· was the perfect setup
average - with eight homen
Clevebnd general managfor
and 45 RB!s last season.
''I'm just looking forward er Mark Shapiro, who has
to a fresh start,'' Anderson said been told by owner Larry
in a conference call Thursday Dolan to trim more than $10
million from the team's $90

MLB

Awards
fromPapB1
Grossman and Oklahoma
safety Roy Williams.
BYU's Luke Staley, who
ran for 1,582 yards and led
the nation in scoring with
28 touchdowns, won the
Doak Walker Award as the
nation's best running back,
beating out Maryland's
Bruce Perry and Tennessee's
Travis Stephens.
"The way Travis Stephens
played last week, I really
thought that he was going to
be the one to win this,'' Staley said.
"It was a goal I had at the
beginning of the year and to
achieve it is something very
special. Being a running
back and from BYU it's really special, because BYU · is
known fdr ·Jieing~a ·quarterhack ~chool. This' is all
because o£ the great teammates I've had."
North Carolina defensive
end Julius Peppers won the
Chuck Bednarik Trophy for
the nation's top defensive
player, adding to the Lombardi Award he received
Wednesday as the top colJ(

.

Meigs

Rockets size. " Our goal was to shut down
Dusty Cremeans and control the rebounding,
Wellston was strong _on the boards in previous
games, but our girls stepped up to the task;'
I
flomPqeB1
Wilcoxen added. "I tried to play every girl."
•
I three quarten. Jaynee Davis who scored 10 Jaynee Davis led all scoren with ·16, Soulsby
: of her game high 16 in the quarter pushed the added 13, Chancey had six, Pierce four, Lindl Marauders in front 18-16. Again Wellston say Bolin two and Maria Drenner ·one for
: responded with consecutive baskets by Hillary Meigs.
' Patrick to grab the lead at 20-18. The lead was
Dusty Cremeans had 11 and Abby Thomas
the last of the o;oight for Wellston as Soulshy added 9 to lead Wellston.
, buried a trifeca from deep in the left corner to
Meigs won theJV game 35-13 behind a bal; give Meigs back the lead at 21-20. Davis anced attack. Xanthe Smith led the way with
: scored four goals in the last 2:20.of the quar- 8, Alicia Werry and Meghan Garnes added 6
, ter to give Meigs the nine point edge. The each, Maria Drenner, Chrissy Miller and
Marauders lost the services of Junior Kayte Renee Bailey had 4 each and Justine Dowler
· Davis at the 6:12 mark of the period with a had 3. Cassie Pittenger led Wellston with 8.
; knee injury, she did not return to the game.
Meigs travels to Miller Monday night to
; The Rockets put a scare into Meigs in the
take on the Falcons.
-last frame outscormg the Marauders 20-13.
·Two Mindy Chancey free throws gave Meigs
Melg1 42, Wellston 40
12
4
13
13
42
:a 33-22 lead with 5:14 left. But again the Meigs
wenaton
1o 6
4
20
40
Rockets rallied and Dusty Cremeans cut the Mtlgl - L!hd&amp;ay Bolin 1 0·2 2; Brook Bolin o 0·0 O; Mindy
Chancey 2 2-2 6; Katie Jeffers 0 0-0 0; Samantha Pierce 1 2-2 4;
lead to 34-28 with 2: 16 to go.
Soulsby 4 3-4 J3; Michelle Drenner 0 0-0 O; Jaynee
· Soulsby nailed a three point goal from the Shannon
Davis~ 0-2 16; Chrissy Miller 0 0-0 0; Kayte Davis o 0-0 O; Malia
top of the key with 1:07 left to give Meigs a Oranner 0 1·2 1; Xanthe Smith o 0·0 O; Alicia Werry 0 0·2 o.
16 8·18 42.
40-29 lead, two Samantha Pierce free throws TOTALS:
Wtllaton- Rachel Fultz 0 0-0 O; Dusty Cremeans 4 2·2 11.
with :5,1 seconds left proved to be valuable as Abby Thomas 3 2-2 9; Brandl Rader 0 0-0 0; Alex Massie 2 3-6
Patrick 3 0-0 6; Brook Linton 0 0-0 0; Klmmy Cremeans
Cremeans hit a three pointer at the buzzer to 7;-HIIIary
3 0·27 . TOTALS: 15 7·12 Ml
'
.
bring the final score to 42-40.
3 point goals: ~gt 2 (S.Soulsby 2). Wellston 3 {Cremeans, A.
K. Cremeana)
First-year head coach Dave Wilcoxen, happy Thomas,
Aol&gt;oundt-Molgo 23 (J. Davia S,L. Bolin B). Wellaton n/a.
with the win, said he was concerned about the Tumove~elga 18. Wellaton 15

I

I!
I '.

'

minJJtes. She is a great verbal leader on the
team. When the ia 100 percent again, she will
·definitely be a major improvement and auet to
our defensive and offensive attacks," said Brannon . .
The Eagles we~ playing on a shortened
schedule, as there was no reserve contest. The
Lady Eagles had a bit of trouble adjusting to
; the different routine of playing as soon as they
:got off the bus.
: "It's always tough to play at Trimble, but we
:did what we had to do, which was win the ball

.

I

••

Eastem
fwm.PqtB1

''.t •

..

(

"Our playing was a little bit off tonight. Our
offense was fine, but our defense backed of
tome in the middle quarters. I think that could
be because of the different routine, and hopefuUy it won't affect us much in the future,"
quoted Brannon.
Eastern will hott the South Gallia Rebels on
Monday, December 10.
II Trimble
1-m N, Trlmble 21
e.stam
1t
11
· 12
12
64
Trimble
s
11
12
o
29
hltlm - Alyall Holter 1 0.0 2, Whitney K1rr 2 2-8 e, Jeaalca
Boy1t1 0 1·2 1, Sara Manallokl• 0.0 11, Kolle Robortleln 2 2·2 8,
Sandy Powt13 0.0 7, Tarrl Wolle t 0.0 2, Stacie watoon 7 5·10
18. Totalo: 20 10·19 64
Trtmllle- Lacey Non 1 0.0 3. Mandl Ruooell 5 3·5 13, Josolca
Grandi Z 0.0 4, ~lory Hooper 4 0·1 9
Tota1112 3-6 29
Three-point goalo-Ealltm 4 (Manollold 3, Powell). Trimble 2
(Powo!, Hooper).

Baskeroa.

Page 83
FrtUy. December 7, 2001

~"~~o~?a _stil_l NCAA's top giant-killer Cardinals
enjoying
k•

.·Yo! tt h d . I
· (AP)_
Cory
• I e e a a Simp e explanatton for hiS
~:;;r-high 20 rebounds against Fresno
,, "Th ball
,.
e
s came m~ w~y," Gonzaga's 6; foot-8, 2~5-pound JUmor center said
. With a smole.
:. Seve~ went Zach Gourde's way, too
. - he toed a career high with 12.
' . The pair equale~ Fresno State's
1 .rebounding total with 32, and their team· mates had another 17 to help Gonzaga to
.• an 87-77 victory over No. 21 Fresno
... 'State.
: "It's a great win for us,'' Gonzaga co.ch
,_Mark Few said. "The big thing for us is
we came in wanting to go to wa
th
~,'.glass, and we did that."
ron e
About
Violette
whos
·
.
,
,
e preVIOUS h.ogh In
rebounds was 12, Few said:"He's going to
glass as well as any p1ayer I've had.m
the
,..
the 13 years I've been· t G
,
' Dan Dickau sco d a fonzaga
h.
.
·
.
•.
re 20 0 IS 29 pomts
· •m the second half, and Gourde, a 6-8,
249-pound JUmor, had a career-hogh 22
t. ,pomts as the Zags won their fourth
, ,straight and ended Fresno State's five- : ga~e wmmng streak.
_ . W~ play woth a ch1p on our shoulder,"
sa1d Voolette, who also scored 15 points.

lege lineman. Peppen edged in n:ceiving with 90 catches
Oklahoma's Rocky Calmus for 1,680 yards, won over
and Syracuse's Dwight Wisconsin's Lee Evans and
Freeney.
Florida's Jabar Gaffitey.
"I'm not much of an indiWilliams won the Thorpe
over
Texas' Quentin Jammer
vidual award guy so this goes
out to my teammates," Pep- and Miami's Ed Reed.
"I'm lucky my coaches let
pers said. "They deserve this
me on the field with' ·the
every bit as much as I do."
Bryant McKinnie, Miami's other great players at Oklamassive left tackle, won the homa," Williams said. "This
Outland Trophy as the best is a great honor. I do what. I
interior lineman, beating out do to the best of my ahilj.Tennessee's John Henderson ties."
Dorsch won the punting
and
Nebraska's
Toniu
award over Miami's Freddie
Fonoti.
"I'm shocked. I mean I'm Capshaw and Oklahoma's
up against a guy like John Jeff Ferguson.
The show, televised by
Henderson from Tennessee
who won it !:~St year, he's up ESPN, was presented by
for it again and ·I win · it," Home Depot.
McKinnie said. "I was nervous not knowing if I' was
going to win. l never
expected when I came to
Miami that I would ever he .
up for an award like this. It's
from . . . , ,1 ·,~
icing on 'ihe IQ:ilte. I'm. truly
have a very good groqp
shocked. This. is a big deal it
and makes it so complete."
of sophomores and junio~
Other award winners
that I'm ai!Xious to see ip
Thunday night ~re LSU
action."'
wide receiver Josh Reed
Following
Saturday:s
(Biletnikoff Award), Williams
tournament, the team wih
(Jim Thorpe ·Award), and
travel to Belpre on Dec. 1~
Purdue punter Travis Dorsch
(Ray Guy Award).
and Warren Local on Dec.
Reed, who led the nation
15.

If you ask our guys, we don t feel hke Its
an upset."
~':~either did Fresno State coach Jerry
TarKaman.
"They were the better team, they
deserved to win," Tarkanian said. "They
cut our zone to pieces. You can't beat
anybody when you get outrebounded the
way we did tonight."
Gonzaga (7-2), who along with Michigan State and Duke are the only three
teams to advance tq the third round of
the NCAA tournament in each of the bst
three years, outscored Fresno State 24-10
in the fin~! nine minutes.
A 3-pom~r by Alex Hernandez and
baskets byV10lette and D1~kau gave Gonzaga a 70-67 lead with 7:49 remaining,
and the Zags were on top the rest of the
way.
.
Gonzaga,
wh1ch
made 10 of 16 shots
.
fi
3
rom -pomt range, scored the final four
· an d t h e 10-pomt
· fimaI margm
· was
pomts,
the biggest lead for either team.
Melvin Ely led Fresno State (7 - 2) with
25 points and 11 rebounds. Damon Jack~
son added a career-high. 22 points and
Noel Felix scored 12 for the FSU.
"They just flat outrebounded us," Ely
said. "We're bigger. When 'it comes down
to it,· it's who wants the ball the most.
They did.
"Dickau 's a great guard. He came out
and did everything I knew he could do."
Dickau was 6-of- 10 · from 3-point
range and only 2-of-9 otherwise. He was
also 7-of-9 from the foul line, including
four in the final minute.
Gonzaga isn't ranked, despite the fact
that the Zags' losses were against thenNo. 2 Illinois and Marquette in the
championship game of the Great Alaska
Shootout.
Among the teams they've beaten are St.
John's and Texas.
"I don't think, for our team, it's any
motivation," Dickau said of the rankings.
"We play to become a better team
throughout the season."

The Zags have certainly done that the
ast three ears
p The ga~e W.:s the opener of the inaugural Fab Four doubleheader played
before an announced crowd of 4.632. 1n
the nightcap, Pepperdine beat Southern
California 7fl-77 on Craig Lewis' 3-poim
shot with 2.5 seconds remaining.

No. 2 Missouri 117,
Southern University 67
Clarence Gilbert scored 18 of his 29
points in the tint half, and No. 2 Missouri
hit a school-record 17 3-pointers against
visiting Southern.
Kareem Rush added 25 points, including 20 in the first half.
Missouri shot 17-for-30 (57 percent)
from 3-point range and is 9-0 for the first
time since the 1989-90 season.
Brian Johnson led Southern with 20
points. Victor Tarver and Carl Alexander
each added I 2.
No. 15 Ball State 113,
Ind-Pur-Ft. Wayne 89
Theron Smith scored 29 points and set
a Worthen Arena record with 21
rebounds il1 Ball State's victory over Indiana-Purdue-Fort Wayne.
Ball State set an arena record for points
scored, breaking the previous mark of
111, set against Lynn on Nov. 28, 1994.
Patrick Jackson added 22 points, C hris
Williams 20 and Lonm c Jones 15 for llall
State (5- 1).
The Mastodons (0-8), strugglin g in
their first season in Division I, were led
by freshman Ric Wyand's 28 points.

ran Ing exposu re
f

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - After beating two Top Five
to open the season and earning the highest ranking in
school history, Ball State won't be overlooked again. At least
teams

not this season.

The Cardinals (4- 1) moved to 15th in this week's AP college basketball team. The only loss was to top-ranked Duke in
the Maui Invitational championship game, hut that followed
the upset wins over Kansas and UCLA in d1e tournament's
tint two rounds.
Now it may be Dall St1te's turn as the favorite.
" ! would say that it'&gt; a good thing;' coach Tim Buckley said
of the Cardinals' ranking." lt gives us national exposure and it's
exettmg for our fans, but we also know the ranking is irrelevant as to what goes on on the floor, and we still have to go
out and play good basketball."
Except for the 83-71 loss to Duke and a 93-91 victory over
then-No. 4 Kansas, the Cardinals have dominated their opponent&gt;, beatmg then- No. 3 UCLA by 18 points, and Elan and
Austm Peay by 41 and 21 points, respectively. in last week's
Fmt Merchants Classic in Muncie.
Ball State plays at home againsc \vinless Indiana- Purdue of
Fort.Wayne on Thur&lt;day, then heads to Bloomington on Saturday for a game at Indiana, where the Cardinals have never
won.

One thing is fo r sure. Ball State won't be lulled by the 0-7
record of!PFW whi ch is in it&gt; first year of NCAA Division I
competition.

"They played us very tough last year:' Buckley sa~d of the
83-67 VIctory over the Mastodons a year ago. "llut our focus
bas just been to get better and better every day. When that's
your focus and you have respect for the game, it doesn't matter who the opponent is''
The Cardinals, who lost to UCLA in the first round of the
NCAA tournament two ·years ago, did not make the field of
65 last season, finishing 18- 12 and third in the Mid-American
Confe rence's West Division in Buckley's first year as coach.
But Ball State returned starten Patrick Jackson, Lonnie
No. 19 Georgetown · 70,
Jones and Theron Smith, and their greater depth allowed them
South Carolina 68
to move Billy Lynch, another starter last year, to the bench.
Kevin Braswell hit a 17-foot jumper
Through five games,Jackson is averaging 20.8 points; Chris
with 2.2 seconds left, leading No. 19
Williams, who was redshirted last year after transferring from
Georgetown past South Carolina in
Loyola, Ill., is averaging 18.0: and Smith, who was last week's
Columbia.
MAC West player of the week, is averaging 17.2.
Braswell also tied the game at 68 with
"By nature, he's a very unselfish player;' Buckley said of the
a .free throw with 47.7 seconds left and
6-foot-8 Smoth, who was the MAC freshman of the year in
finished with 13 points.
2000 then led Ball State last season at 16.3 points a game.
Mike Sweetney had 20 points and 10
The 7-foot Jones is averaging only 7.2 points but has 17
THE BIG GUNNER- Gonzaga guard Dan rebounds for the Hoyas (6-1) .
blocked shots in five games. Away from the basket, the CardiDlckau, right, shoots a three pointer as
South Carolina (5-3) was led by Jamel . nals have relied heavily on the 3-J:&gt;ointer, with Williaons (15)
he Is defended by Fresno State's Matt
Bradley's 16 points. Tony Kitchings added · and Jackson (14) hotnng more than all ofDall State's opponents
Mitchell In the closing minutes of the
12 points and seven rebounds for the
combined.
Thursday's game. (AP)
Gamecocks.
""

Wrestle:

,,.f&gt;,,.f&gt;,,

___._

game."

million payroll.
"!' m betting on the fact
that this is a player who has a
lot of pride and a strong
desire not to end his career on
last year's numbers;' Shapiro
said.
Anderson, who turns 38 in
January. has pbyed most of his
career in center field, but will
pby left field for the Indians.
In 2000,Andenon hit .257
with 19 homen and 50 RB!s.
He batted .282 with 24
homers, 81 RBis and scored
109 runs in '99.
Shapiro said batting coach
Eddie Murray thinks most of
Anderson's problems last season were mechanical and can
be fixed. Shapiro said Anderson is healthy, still plays hard
and will remain a pn:sence at
the top of the lineup.
Andenon n:places longtime
leadoff hitter Kenny Lofton,
who hit a career-low .261 in
his 1Oth year with the team
and is now a free agent.
.. Although the 34-year-old
Lofton is younger and faster
than Anderson, he will also he
more expensive, Shapiro said

-~C~o~l!!!l~ece

:Th:--_en_an..:..y_Sen_tin_e1_ _

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�Page

B4•The Dally Sentlnei=-----------.;_-~P:OI:m:~e:ro~y~,:UI:d:-dl:llePOf::lt,:~Oh!:lo;.----------:

•

Ftlday, Dec. 7, • •

Pomeroy,

a

Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

tleribunt - Sentinel We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

PITTSBURGH (AP) - A
"I'm pretty sure he's going
yeu ,ago, Pittsburgh Steelers to come into dtis game trying
wide receiver Hines Ward to gel revengt," Ward said.
made such a point of blocking '"But I'm going to continue to
New
play, week in and week out,
York Jets how I've alw:ay. pla) . rl. That's
safety
how I am. I'm going to block
Victor
him. I'm not going to changt
Green
my style for him."
'
that
Ward said the two initially
Green started complaining.
exchanged words dunng the
To his teammates. To the 20-3 Steelers victory when
Steelers. To his wife.
Green put a shot on Ward as
~. as the two teanu exited he tried to catch a low pass
Giants Stadium, Green's wife, from Kordell Stewart.
"He got up and started yapEsth_er, told Steelen safety Lee
Rowers' wife - and this is ping about it, saying, 'You
Ward's version - "That No. can't come across the middle
86 needs to calm down a little on me. I'll knock your head
bit."
off;" Ward said. "After that, I
Ward, fast developing the just went after him every play
reputation as being the NFL's and he got tired of me. By the
best blocker among receivers. fourth quarter, he finally said
said it's nothing personal, but · something to Plaxico (Burhc?ll go after Green whenever ress)."
necessary in Sunday's rematch
Burress, the other Steelers
in Pittsburgh.
receiver. confirmed that con- Talk about hitting home versation, saying Green said,
with a point.
'"Hey, man, why don't you tell

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9;30- 4:00 Chr~stmas Tree
Ligh1s. Oecorattons, ~rna·
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D!shes, K1 ~g Bedspre~d,
P_1llows. Lad1as Ski Out11ts,
mlsc.
YAIUl SALE

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YARD/CRAFT SALE
Sat. 1218 a- 4, Krodel Club·
house. X-mas crafts. collet&gt;
"' A .
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ntlque o s, numerousAvon Bottles, mise
Items, Something for E11aryANl)

Rick Pearson Auction Com~

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304 773 447
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Also, taking
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TURNED DOWN ON
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with
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· $8981 month pluo depoPetasit. (7•~•• ~'!~•· No
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.
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hoUM, 299 MuiMrry, Pom.,-oy, no petl, (740)882·
5868,

now you're starting to see
players make plays," Ward said.
.. Piax has done a tremendous
job the past couple of g&gt;mes
and Kardell now has confidence in both of us. He'll
throw the ball up and the
worst that can happen is an
incomplete pass."
The Jets will be short-handed Sunday without the injured
Aaron Glenn, their best cornerback.
"But we're the Steelers,"
Ward said. "We're still going to
run the ball."

IMflll, Very Speoloua. 2

j

(7

and Recliner,
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1838 8mm Turtdlh Mouler
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1

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Mtcldll!lott 00111, lflllaware,- monlolo, end
moow. (740)982-0298

In

rM

u - - · ·I.........,
.···---mill»

M.BitaiAN:a:

I

Gallon Fl h Aq rl
21
1
ua um
with otand, llgh~ &amp; n&gt;eka,
$00. (304)87H0116

3 V1ry

Dloablod Scoolor.
COndition.
~---:---::-:--:---:-- $1100. (140)386-7!181
Vory nice, 2-3 bedroom
S
of)lnmen1, In town, forge 4 wood bar otoolo, 75.
kitchen, LR, $500/mo, Rol- Home 1· Picture, ·$26.
erenceo &amp; depolft required . 6 Ooaw D.-, $20, Llnld
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Amulng
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(140)992-3194
Natuoal, Do. Recommended.
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(740)U 8 404 after s:oapni tlng, will accommodate Army &amp; Hunter~ Camou·
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ment Shartd Bath Ulilltltl 992·2167.
llaJiatlon 9 a month 100 ·
lncludetl, $200 par month. T-•~I
$!~
Chamtto at Sam Somtr(740)448-8677 or (7-40)256- ,...... apace or I'Wlt,
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I
r ",..,
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2 Bedroom Aponmont In &amp; coiling fon, $278 par CHICO. 1304127 3-!1855
Centenooy, llflPIIaooM fur- month, ,(814)87&amp;-1681
Baby bod ChOn'y Wood
~~ric· utllltfn.~ltl rnonth-oxoapt
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(.740)288-1135 ohor
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34521eave meuage.
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Babybtd Excellent Condl·
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Ia ·Oia,::r oral m.:,;.
(740)448-394&amp;
lriiiH, $300, (740)742- l\"~ng (Size 6) =~Com3 --•monte for rent In •"r- 8004
puler Oook, 120. (140)441-·
'~J
1108

•N

Mount Union running
back named top player

owner.

-:---,-::-:--.,.-:-:---,--=

r

$289 month. Depoltl &amp; Ref-

HE ALSO DISHES IT OUT - Steelers wide receiver Hines
Ward (86) has the ball knocked away by Vikings defenders.
Ward has developed a reputation as a hard-blocking contributor to the Steeler runnlng attack. (AP)

AHnQtli!S
L~-------.,J
···

=

-------- j
3-6

lndlon Crook Eolat•.
acra toll, west of Rio
Grondo, trom $25.900.
(140)245-5747
.

· yards all season.
"We're mrring to peak and

...,._, 90 doyo 11m0 u
Apln- call. VIM/ Muter cara.

lllflll 1-800-3111-3323 oat. not ' lnclutltld. $3751 month
170V.
pluo IIIli month oocurity depool. No Pota, (740)441Houaa for Rent In Cly Lim- ,t;.:1DII:=,_---,-::::-----:c:
ill, Dtpoolt and Rtloronce.
(7-40)448-1079
Fumtthed Efficiency, All
.
Utllltleo Pifd, Shlrod 111111.
Uncoln Hill, 2 bedroom, 51251 month. 919 2nd "Y8.,
12751* mo., $250 dlpooft, (140)4!8 3114 5
(740)982~175
Gracloul lving. 1 and 2
2 BR, Wall to wall carp~~, bedroom epartmenll at Viif'jllural Gu F...,_, AC In !ago Mlr)or and Galtlpotta. (140)448-2003 or Aparlrntnta In Mlddtoport.
(740)448-1409
From 1276-$348. ca1 740992•50&amp;4. Equal Housing
Blautllul AMI&lt; VIew ltleal Opponunftlet.
For 1 Or 2 People, Reftren·
011, ~. No Petl, Foeter Trailer Park, 740-«1· Twin RIVer TOWII'I now ac0181.
ceptingappllcatlonafor
18R. HUD oublldlzad apt.
APlUn"MJ!Nis
lor -rty ond dloablad.
FOR RJ;m
·
EOH.
(304)8 75-6679.

I'

LoN

.,

s

Notice Ia glvon by
the
Vfllaga
of
Syracuae . that 1
helrlng 1nd declalon
on a Petition to
vacate a portion of an
unnamod atrHt fllod
by WallO! Routh,
Anno Rouoh, Robert
E. lye!, and Donna J.
8yar, will bo had on
tho 7th day of

3

s

riG ..______

"!'II

I

81

acuae, 2 bedrooms. $200 A.ppllancta: Racondltioned .:..;;.::__ _ _~-depoalt,

Modtm(1~~~~ Ape!'·

Waahn OlyarJ Ranges
flelr1grat0ra, Up
80 Oayi
Guoron-1 We Sell N...
Moytag Applloncoo, Fronch
C~to.•
Ml"'•g 740 ... _..
••,
,_ '
__.
·

To

ne5

Bedroom Suit, Color T.V,
Dl~ Set, Entertainment
Center, Hldebed, Coffee
and End Tablta, Dog Cage,
Baby Bed. (140)448-9742
.D;..:
b
· ou le Oven, EIICirlo
Ronge, Avocado,
Now
Burnero, Worl&lt;o Great,
$100. Will Deliver wlltlin
arao. (140)2!18-1332

--'-"=:-c:.:.:..::_:_:-=.,.. ,

For Sale: Reconditioned
Wlllwl. di'Ytfl and rafrlgo-

ment.
,_.,-w
New apanment for rant, ~,:;.o_ra.~'f"= ~
Mlddloport, (740)1192-5304 nuo, (304)875-7388.
or 740-440-2287.
Nioe 2 br. apt,lg rooms.\,
fully equlped kit., cen1ral
healing/ cooling. washer/
dryer hookup 304-882-2523

~'-'::~.:;;;...':'--'-:"''::'-'=

Now Taking A:ppllcallona35 Wool 2 Bedroom TownhouH Apanmentt, lnctudn
Water
Sewage, Trash,
13501Mo., 740-446.()008,

I

Mayttg WaSher, $85. Hot
point Oryer, $95. Teppan
Electric Range, $95. Wasllnghouse
Refrigerator,
$150. Upright Fraezer Frost
Free, $160, Magic Chef
Etactrlc Range, Doubla
Oven, $150.(740)448-7398.
Skaggs Appliances, 78 VIne
St., Galllpoflo, OH 45831 ,

February, 2002.
Dolo: November 9,

2001

-----'·---'--=--e

rtnt lncluda WI·
ter, Hwtr, t/'llh, (740)378·
8111.
IEAUTI,UL
APA-"''
MIHTI AT IUDGIT PAa.
C!B AT JACKSON EB
••-•
'"''""''52 Watwood 0 rive
fr.om $207 to $383. Walk to
ohop I movies, Call 740448-2!188. Equal Housing
HOUSE FO~ RENT 1!18 Opponunll)l,
..,D ""E 3 .,._.. room 2
..... · "v ·
_,.,
a,
batho, 6 Rooma Totol, Nlct Mkldlaport- North 4th Ave,,
and Ctaan, Groot Location, 4 room lumllltad lj)Ortmont,
Ideal lor Senior Couple. depoaH &amp; reflftnaea, no
Phone (740)448-9539
palo, (140)992-0185.

noedad,
(304)755-5868
3br, 1 bath. New Roof. Fixer ·Umitod
Upper, Nelda finished.
Point Plea·· ... North Main End of tht modtl year 11111
_..
t m11c
110,000. (304)875-7255
All 2001 muot go, o
•
room for 2002. ep.ctatlow
3br. 2 bath Nice NeighbOr· financing program available•
hood
Point
Pleaoant Only at Fleatwood Homto
(304)875-7711
of ProotoMIIo. Toll Fret 11!66·5811-0187
4 BR, 3.5 Bath ranch with
ft large
~~-•3000
v-M, "n'!.., ,ki~•on,
OAKWOOD HOIIEI
'~- •~"
•• -·
8U
lA
new roof, 2 car anached gaPEA CENT •
40
raga,
$148,000.
Call Ova'
homeo to chOoo
(740)446·231 1
from. Drive I little llvt I
~Nro~=S~-= or
New Haven· 38A houll In
t:-touse with rumlture located
town, jult remodllld. ntw
at 443 Hedgewood Drive, OakwOOd HomN of Bar· carpet, paint, nice yard and
Gslllpollo. Part of Lola 11- bou&lt;avllla, WV. Tho on~ ona car dotacltatl IJI"'gl.
G. 1 1/2 baths, 3 bedrooms, place with L.ay·a-waye. No Pelt, would CQI\IICNr a
full basement, carpet. All- (304)738-3409
LOIH to own. $375. per
praised at 34,!500. Must
month $360 Security D•
have atlns1 213 of 11ppra18·
FIEDUCID
-a.~1. •
13041882_22• 1
ed value. Call (740)446- AJIDoubltWideOitplays
1-"M'
3801 or (740)448-0603.
mutt go. Only $886 down. Newer home near Porttr, 3
Only at Oakwood Homo of BR, 1 Beth, $4501 month.
New/ UNd H,0fMs-lmmtdl- :.:N;;;11ro;;;.'-'(::;3040::.:17::55-:.::568:=,:5-- Deposit and Rlftrtncn.
oto Poooea!On, No pay- c:
· (140)448-2801
menta until Feb. 2002. p,... Slngt• Parent Progl'lm, !:..:::::~:;;:_;_--::,.---:qualify by phone. (740)448- Easy Financing Avallabl•. Pilot Progrem, Aentlrt
3218.
(304)755-7191
Noadod, 304-736-7295.
·

Off•'·

Townhouoe

evenlnga month, Plua UliiiHII, L.(614)501.ff338.
ond Deposit Required.
(140)448-2957
3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 mUes 1 and 2 bedroom apartfrom town off 141. S4501mo. mtntl fumllhed and unfurw
lncludN water ph• dlpollt ,__j, I8CUJity depoalt,...
•(1r:.,-::~; · No pelt. qulr«&lt;, no petl, 740-992·
2218.
3 homel. 1 In Pomtloy 2 1n
Mkldltpot1. Pick
~ Chrl.ty'a Family Living,
1kJni(Vaugha,: Service 331-40 New Uma Rd., RutDelk In MlddllpOrt. Ruby ~· Ohio, 74Q.742·7403.
ApOotmenl, home and-

.we '"'

1985 Skyllno 141&lt;70, 3 bedroom. Good CondHion. Col ·•~nt to Buy --·11 tann or
""
.:.:·- County
Harold, 740-385-9948.
acreage 1n ._son
tultab!e for my retirement
1987 1~ll70, 3 br.l2bth, home. Peacefui11C8nlc rural
$4995. Will help with dollv- location not on a primary
ary. Call Kavena, 740-38!5· highway. Dele~ PQIIM~
9948.
lion occeplablt. call 27D385-8627
1991 Manalon 14x70, 3
bedroom exoelllll!nt condl·
lion, call !&lt;avena, (740)385-

$4,998,740-99
. 2-2187

Taoo

~ent,

Unit Apartment llulkl- 121 Downtown Aplrtmenta
1
Atnt. AI Eleotrlc, ldool
MlL. $58,000. (740)441 - for Stnlor PiOitlfll, One 111
14x70 Clayton Troller. 2.6 1108
TIW8o R.,..,.- One Ia 1 4
Acres, 32x40 New /:.raga. IIIIi--:--~--. R.,..,. botl1 on Fltlt Flo&lt;&gt;&lt;.
V'law
1t1tn.
Scenic
LoiS &amp;
Clean """ Nice, (140)448(304)57&amp;-2635
ACII&amp;GE
• 9539 to Vlow.
In

.

UtUe or no credit OK! Cal (740~7.U 1..a17-830(740)448 3364.
111182. FNe &amp;~matt~. EUy

s.-.

FHA/ Govemment Loantl 28x80 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- 1/2 HouM, 1 Btckoom,
Single Parent Program ly $345.00 Per Month Lcwer 4th, Gallipolis, $300

'

~h

lp,......

t~::- ITine
Jna
Me-.

2 bodroom, otov• &amp; ~rat"',new~ndowalCOJf)IC,

Wanted: Pilot Pn&gt; Catpol. 202 Clod&lt;
grom. OWn your own tono. Chapel- Pan«, Ohio.

passer than Stewart, hasn't
lhrown for more than 102

~bodo,.:' = n,et;:; ::."~.w~~~ivN~ 4_..fhal"

ori

Owneo MUll Sell to. Blttfo
Estate. 1 acre, rrw'l, Jacklon
Lake, 2 Bedroom, Kitchen, 4,800 IQ foot COmmerolal
Both. Living Room. FlO Building with 10 to 200
Heat, Ctntral Air, P~ ocru. Rio G'ondo, Ohio.
Owner financlna avtlllbte.
(740)448-3008 lftar lfltm
can (740)245-5147·

I 6 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
Month, 8.99'1!. Fbced . _..,
Rate With Air And Underplnniog 1-888-928·3426

~

with.-_ CIA. c1e1n'
rontofl. Cotnntlroial stono- $450. RtmlnQ!On 513
381m
and lit up
,....,.,
1o1'
4
Roams
&amp;
Beth,
$3001
fnJntt
available for leaae. Match master wllh 3tc1
1
""")87H564 H not - · month. 52 011..
VoCioicleo "-.
mona ~;,!375.
,..........
' (740)448 SSM!S
gena by ,.... ... , 22 ~-"
IMYI meaagt,
Deluxe 2 Bedroom Located lever action, 217 power
Wlnlill
Buy homll ·from $189/mo., at Edgt of Town. Nice Yard. ICOPt. $350. Clll (740)388T•"'"" ORierl now for- Forect61uNo,
30 Mljor Applancoo and Stor- 11934 leave._.

ftl.'q#

•~~~";.,....,;;;.,--"1
HOI\mi
19948.

r10

I

.,

-Ma-928-

740-365-7871.
New 2002 t• wide only
$7911 dOwn &amp; $155.36/mo,
CaH Nlkld, (140)386-7871. :
Nlw , 2002 14 widl. Only
$899 Down &amp; 1158 38 per

.·

be like that."'
Ward has been incrca&lt;ongly
valuable to the divmon-leading Sreelers ~ 3 recel\'e-r, m:.king 10 catches in the lm two
games. With 69 receptions m
II games, he is on pace to
break the ream record of HS
catches.
The Steelers began 1he seJson as predominantly a running tpm, but quarterback
Kordell Stewart's consrantly
improving play has gradually
led them to be much more
balanced.
Stewart has thrown for 200
or more yards four times in h~
last six games. By contrast, Jets
quarterback Vinny Testaverde,
historically a much better

~ •· llllll MYe a1ot.
llodrooml, 2 Ffoorl, CA, 1
UNCI F mflu
2 BR, No Polo, t2451 112 Both, Fully caOJ)OWd, Now anti
U
rt
month. lncludtl Wlltr, Adult Pool &amp; Baby POOl, Pi- Stooe- t - , 1m 1&lt;1$100 Oiii)Oalt. (740}448- do, Start 538!/Mo. No Petl, nauga. ONo. Ultd mattrell
3617
'--PiuiSacurltyDI!Iooft oote, - · _ . .,
tbt. Small Houle $200. 0.. R~CJ~Ired, Days: 740-448- ~ .::"!;~t
poo11, $2IIO. 1 month. At 3481; Ewnlngo: 7 4 0 - 3 6 7 - - . - - _
1
1 .
1410 LAwlo St. 13041727_ 01102, 7~101 .
740 44 4112
3318
1 &amp; -2 BR Economlcll Gu Round OlfiThblol Ill" t..l,

":i

2-112 bllhl, big kitchen - · ~~~'Je
w/ook cabinets, OR, LR oeo""""' (1•"_,._-:.:;::.. •
wlgu tog firepllco, - r l i
· - ....~--..
air, laundry room, front New 14 Wide. 3 Bedloom.
pon:h I 2·1r.! car gorogt. Onlyltfl850 F... DIIfytoy
lmmecble pen n'm. Ap- &amp; Set Up' 1
2.t28
po11llad II $125,500. Mlkl
·
offo,. Call (740)448-4514 Now t4JI70, 3 botlloom, 2
from 8-Spm, M-F, or bath. Only 1985 dowr1 &amp;
(740)448-3248 lltor tspm. , 11811.62/month. call Chlryl,

·

·-·om

24Hrs.
McCI ,8 Rolla

i.JmK.d Do No c - 111811 I lidO mo......... Bank FlnancoOniy bllo tono, 3 bodo"""',21u11
AI Oakwood In Barboura- bathl, central a!r, heal
&gt;Ala, VN 304-735-3408.
J)Uf!IP. ~ t.at, 8x8 dick &amp;
lidO
Grand
~ lllco new. vory
998 tono 2ldl olean,
tal, off SA 1110 on a private "--~ ~~
vacant oeady to
1·112 acre lot 3 bedroom, ._~
•
mov., (740,742·2247.
Newly conllructld. llogtt

I

AN reel M&amp;lltldveftlllng
ka thla fiiWIIMiper Ia

r ~ Ir·

11\lry IBilll oq. fool ION.
LOCIIted 10 mlnutn fT'am
Holzer Holpltll, 20 rninutM
'""" _,Volley Hoop!-

291

I

WANJID
To Do

r

I ~::- I t ~~ I

:

816 Main Strttt. Pt. Pl.
Completely RefulbWwd. 2
~
otory, 2 Ful Both, 3 f!od.
Countoy Croltomon Spacial, rooms. llrgt Kltcnon,
stripping, refinishing, caning Large UtHity Room. LRI DRI
repalrt and upholstery Family Am. NIW Carpet
Dec. Special 15% on all throughout. F/A &amp; AJC,
tlrlpping, and refinishing, $79,900. (740}U&amp;-~~
furnltuft &amp; kitchen cablners. (740)446-2205_or (7..,.,~
(304)743-1100
2683.
. Divorce Forces Salt! 3 Bed·
Flint Financial has been room/ 2 Balh on prtvatl lot.
proYtdlng srttall business call (740)446-3570.
loons lor 13 years. Now we
specialize In personal, car &amp; Don't Own Land? Wo Dol
.(lebt consolidation. We Lend/ Home packagea
guorontoo quality service Available. Call (740)448from a trusted name. Call 3583.
Flint Ananclal StNlces, application&amp;
hotllne
(1 - For Sale 2 Bedroom hOuM
1!66)366-0895
with gao hoot I Wuhoo &amp;
.
·
Dryer HOokup. Located It
Naed Flnanqial Help? Risk 2112 !Aatflooo Avenua.
tree opportunity, took no lur- $25,000. (304)57&amp;-2247
thor, our flnanctal lnotltullon
provldea you wllh asals· For sala by owner,
tanct &amp; Information FrH Wright St.. Pornoo&lt;l)'. 11YH
consultalion can nOw at bedroom, 1•112 bd\1. IWD
877-304-301;
car gaoaga, (140)1192-3&amp;48.

I

ML&lt;CFJ!ANI!OIJS

All Make KerOHne Heatlrt
and Forced Air Heaters Re·
paired. Small Engine Ra·
pair. Free Pick-Up and DeFull Time Dental Assistant. livery Available. Over 20
Senct Resume to: CLA 456 )4tars Experience. Call Mlkl
c/o Ga\11pohs Dally Tribune, (740)446·7604
825 Third Ave, Gallipolis,
_o_H=-4~56-:'3'-:t:. -:,.---:-:--- All of your home repairs, ad·
dl11ons &amp; .remodeling. 24hr
Get In The Fall Une.
Ice eenk&gt;r
emo
COVENANt
rgency sorv '
TRANSPORTATION
cllizens discount. 22yrs.
304 578 2085
Is L-Ing for
oxp, 1 1 •
St..-t Drivers.
Georges Portable SawniiR,
No Eloporioncef
don't haul your logo to the
NOPROBLEMII
mlll)uotcall304-6l'5-1957,
Tralnfng·Avollabla by
Top To
Cleanera,
Clllllng 1 181 845-8505.
~~~
COL Koldlra Clll
grofna6onal, and afforda·
1-80C).858..2353..
Je, homes, offlcaa, r•ntala,
-H-ol_p_wo-nt_ed_ca_rl,-ng-to-r-th-e :sn~'(7:;)~~~~~~~
aldMy, Oarot Group Home, (740)992·2979
now paying minimum wage,
new sh~o: 7am-3pm, 7am- TAl-COUNTY CONSTRUeSpm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm· TION.
New
7am call740-992-5023.
Construction/Remodeling
•
•Siding, •Roollng, •Drywall,
Ect.
304·.674· 01561304Homeworkoro
Needed 674-8688
$635 w kl P ocasaln
ee Y r
g Truck Driver. COL, full or
Mall. Easy!
No E)Q)erl· part-time. Straight truck preonce
Needed. Call I- 1 ad (740)982 •5488
800 _652 _87211 Ext. 2070, err ·

,__ _ _ _ _ __., 10:00am, Monday thru Sat·
u&lt;day.
·Bartender Point Pleasant MEDICAL BILLING
~~ose Lodge. Apply at No EKperlehce Necaaaary,
ge.
Training Provided FT/PT
Computer Required. up lei
100 WORKERS NEEDED 60 000/yo t -600-998-7094
Assemble crafts. wood
EKi. 600t
~ems. Material provided.
l(l $480+, wk.
Per Diem LPN's needed for
Free Information pkg. 24 Hr privat11 duty home care cas·
1-801·428-4750
es. Flelllble schedule and
--'-"'--:C...--- excellent pay. Fill out appllAnenrlonl
cation at Pleasanl vanay
Earn 2nd. Income without Home Health Ser.~lc.a,
2nd joiJ up to
1011 VIano St. Pt. PIHAint,
$25.-$75./hr. Pt·Ft.
wv 25550, or call (304)87&amp;·
1-800-2 18-7543
7400 or 1·80CJ.7..e.oo78 for
www.Monay-Draams.com mo'olnlomlatloo. AAIEOE

'

j ;...,.;;;;;;;;;;:
Somc:D:

Good or Bad Credit Even
Bankruptcy, Can ron Free
24 hrs .• 1-888-426-8393.

•-·
part-lime, pick up appl ......
•
l ;~r-------,
1tO
I lion at location &amp; bring back

HaP WANTID

McGregor A Aaoc11te1

I

I

::;::;:::~

Ir'6

Bring Roaome. Acqoloftlono Toying to buy 1 home and
Jewetoy, 151 2nd AYI., Gal- -108 oojootingyou due
lipolls.
to bod coedit hiotory? We
can help you. wa provide
Sal_..,n:Full-tlme,ben- mong~gos, parsonal and
efttl, retail eKperience refer· smal bu8ineu loans with
red. ApplyiiUiestyleFuml- goodorbldoredlt.Approvll
'"'"· No phone collo. Apply within 48 nra. (1!66)862in PI'"""· 858 3rll Avonuo, 1156
·
Gallipolis, OH.

Found in Pomeroy tlear Au·
to Zone, wooden cane with
11 brass handle, (740)992- AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Tee, 740-;KN;-6651 .
2075
Sell. Shlriey Speaos, 304are wooklng hard to 1111
675-1429.
Ame,lca'o food banka f&lt;&gt;&lt;
LOST
tho holiday aeuon ond we
GOLD BRACELET with dia.
need 5 hardworking, com•
0 nvera to ••n~n cars to
mond cut heart lengths.
and from auctk;;,-s, 21 yrt. passionate Individuals to
or over C&amp;ll bltweon 108m )oln our teom. Stalling pay
. Has
Sentimental value. Please
Is $7.00 per hour. 'We do
4 · 740 99 2 9716
Sand Response too EB06
and pm, 1 1 •
good wort&lt;•. Call t-866-237200 Main Street, Polnt
Drummer &amp; bass player 5342 ext. 2232 for more lncPzlfo::••:.:•c:n•:..·W:.:..:_V_:2:.:5=:55:.::o_ _ looking for musicians &amp; formation.
Lost- male Dalmatian, 2 yrs. singers to form contempo- · Work From Home Frea
. old, off AI. 33 Ct Ad 20, rary
Christian
group, Bcoklot. t-800-653-7293.
waenng pu,ple """"' &amp; ,.. (740)992-3167, 740-675·
bles tag, answe&lt;S to Tom- 2432.
~
my' Reward!, call (740)992·
1'lwNING .
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
983.2.
PAY! Assemble products at
Lost Shepherd mix, spayed
hOme. Call Toll Free
Galllpolle car..- Collegt
female, 2 blue eyes, orange t-800-467-5566 Ext. 12170 (Car'"'"' Close To Home)
collar. (740)7.42·4163.
www.homejobs.com/12170 Call Todayl740-446-4367,
·1-800-214-0452,
ENE ol West VIrginia ls now
Reg •110-05-12748,
YARD SALE
taking applications lor pack-

.r~
r

r=

Look No F..- Wo proylde
top Quality FlnanclngAaalstancland Help. Start a New
Crd for NeW Year. 1·866322-3811&lt;1

Reaponslble blbyaitlor lor 2
child""' (ogos S&amp; tO) In my
hor'M, must be from Racine
area, (740)949-2~.

Po~fton. lmmedloto
ance, competitive wages Opening. Apply In P81'80f'1.

-·~---l""d

r

IIOIIIC8;0MIV'IIIf..
• • . . . _ . . .,.... ............. __. ........ .., .... ....,_.,.._,.,.... . . . ...
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....
fllr•---hllllllflfh.,_......,...., . . ...,_....,. ..... ........
..., ..... ....,. ... ,...._ .. ,.,, t or
ttl•:lf1:¥1'
&amp; Carr 1
............... ._.......,....,., •
..
47' 1111.
•AINII ...... WuUllll 1net
......... Mtloulini, Aotof1-. ·~

• Start Your Ads Wllh A Keyword • Include Completti
De5crlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Headed

your guy to chill our? I said,
'I'm not telling him anything'
and just walkrd back."'
Steelers coach Bill Cowher
remembers, too, uying Green
became so exaspented he forgot about trying to tackle
Jerome Bettis to go ..fter Ward
or receiver Troy Edwards, who
also was blocking him.
Ward's blocking -· and his
receiving, too - will be even
more important 10 the Steders
(9-2) on Sunday with Bettis
not expected to play because
of hip and groin injuries.
Chris Fuamaru-Ma'afala,
who had carried little until
getting 12 carries in the fourth
quarter Sunday ag&gt;inst Minnesota; will be counting on
getting the same blocking to
which Bettis is accustomed.
HWe're going to run first,
pass second,'" Ward said. "As a
receiver I know that, that the
receivers are accountable in
the running game."
Even if it some Jet•' wives
get mad.
"To take it off the field like
that ... I mean, I didn't do anything illegal,'" Ward said. "It
w:IS a clean block. I didn't do
anything more than go aiier
him every time. He was always
on my side and he's the strong
safety.
"But for his wife to get
involved is a little much. [
mean it's football, it shouldn't

IIOIIL! HOIII OWNI!RI
lnterlhtom &amp; Coloman IJII,
oil &amp; tllctrlo futn101a Ineluding hi efflcltney hHt
· W
pump ••·-·~·
1 carry •
campleta line of Mobile
homa .1'1111 &amp; aoctasorlu.
IENNin•a HllcTINO 6
COOUNQ (140)441-t418
or 1-80H72-IH7

www.orvb.com/blnnett

~~;:..:.;;::::.::;::::::::;_

NEW AND UIED PUfl·
NANCEI FOR SALE! We
Jnotall, Frat Eotlmotoo, II
you doni can Ul, We bolh
looael (740)448-8308, 1·
800-291o0096.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Stool llaomo, Plpa Alba'
For Concrtte,
Chan·
.... ._.
Ml, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drains, Drlvew1y1 &amp;
Walkwaya. New 55 Gallon
Drums With lid &amp; Ring,
$7.00 Elc:h. L&amp;L Scrap Met·
ale Open Monday, Tueaday,
W - y &amp; Fntlay, Bam·
4:30pm. Cloaad Thurld,y,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)448-7300

•-1e.

'I

.... , li \

Adorable Chlhulhua pup· 80 Plymouth BtHze, 4 cyt-

ptN. Would mllkO tho par- lndtr. automatic, tin, cruloe,

rid

Sholl: wormad; a - .

o.c

morit

r

I

1 ....

H-'......

IAIIUINT
WATENPROOFINO
U""'ndfllonal lllatlme guorLocal 1
1u
antea.
rw erences r·
nlohod. Establlsllad 1975,
call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870,
HI00-287-0576,
Aogert Waterproofing.
-------,-C&amp;C General Home Malntonenc:t· Palnllng, vinyl sld·
Jng carpentoy dOOOI win·
d.,.;., baths 'mobile 'home
repalf and inore. For tree
estimate call Chet, 740.992·
6323

r

iii;;;.·~~~~:":"-,
El.EcnOCAIJ
Jb;:nuGERATION

L,~-otiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioior'
Retldantlal or commercial
wiring. new aeNk:e or repairs. Maatar Lk:enlad alee·
trlclan. Ridenour Electtical.
WV000306, 304-675-1788.

1985 Che'l' Cavtllar 4cyt, _ _ _·;..._ _ _'il
auto, AJC, 108,000 miles, II'
'
Excolltnt Condition , Wall
Chri1tmaa Special. Baby Malnlalnad.
$1999.00
I lh
·
G'ond Plano, like New, (304875-3248
n I
•·-

"--oi"""iii'iiiii"IJMIIMSiiiiiiiiO..,I

$5500. Grubbs Plono Tun- 1968 Chevy camoro 350,
:&amp;:ervlces. Call (740)44e· auto, 1800, (740)892-6705

11) 23, 30,2001
7, 14, 21, 28,

112)

IMPRoVEME2a'S

feet Chrlatmu gift for 10m&amp;- power IVIIrythlng, Mlchfl·
00)0 apoclal. Not roglllorad . Ina, 63,000!(, cloon, $8,900.
Ill ohota, wormod, potty (740)37V-2748
l'llnad, 1300. (740)2566380 can altor 1:30pm.
Llvt~'s Auto Sal... 19110
Fo'd Tamp, $1000. 1988
,. AKC Bile~ Lab- Female- 8 Chevy 0 •20 Vln, $1000.
mont1&gt;t old, alllholl, Mull 1987 FOOII Econollria van,
aall dog, $250. (740)448· SSOO 1982 Dodgo Ram
6508
V
s· !000 1984 Dod- 8an,
•
AI&lt;C Booton Tenleoo, 3 le- 250 Van, 1800. !868 Chevy
moleo t moJo
Caprlco, $500. 1984 Dotlgo
$40(1, Call Diplomat, $400, llllltl Oldo
(740)448-0495
Calall, 1800. 11192 Morouoy
:::::::;.='~~--;:--.,...- Topoz, $500. 111112 Ootlgo
ATTENTION, Now Taking Spirit, $1000. 19110 Chovy
o.po.ill on Reglste!Wd Lab Lumina, SIOO. 1a88 Otdl
Pupplll for Chrl1tma1, Cullan, $800. 1987 Old
$250. (740)448 0080
Cloro, 1450, 19111 Fo&lt;d
.
Tempo, $1100. 1989 Ford
Bl&lt;d- ·Blue Ouakor Hand Probe, 11400. 1868 Food
Tome
and
Talking. Mustang, $1200, 11188 Maz(30.4)678-4787 ,
.
do Plokup, $600, 1985
WoN pupplto (86%) 1300 Dodge 0- 250 Pickup,
rtldy
10th will 'hold till $1000. 1983 Mercury Lynx
Dec 24th. goOct
SW $800. 1985 Buick Som·
(140) 742 _:zat/:mpara· arsOt. $450. 11188 Foro F'
150 Pickup, $760. Call
1U
M~
(740)386·9303

~~

Buy, Sell or Trade

CLASSIAEOSI•

2001

Home of Geraldine Cleland
Sat. Dec. 8
10·5
Main St. Racine

Buy, Sell or Trade

EAGLES2171
December?

-::1-;-10::-:H:-:e::l;::p:-;W:;;::a-:n-;-te::-:d:;-

Sliver Thorn Bank
Spm-Midnlght
DecemberS
Dwight "Elvis" IcenhOwer

'Elvis Tribute Artisl
Dwighllcenhower
Mon. Dec. 10, 2001 7:30pm
Tuppers Plains Old Grade School
Suggesled donallon of $5.00

lnlhe

·

CLASSIFIEDSI

NOW
HIRING
$6-$8
Per Hour
Full/Part nma

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1-888·974-JOBS

COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. (AP) - Mount Union running
back Chuck Moore was announced Thursday as winner of the
Gagliardi Trophy, given annually to the most outstanding player in Division Ill football.
Moore will re ceive the ninth annual Gagliardi Trophy next
week at a luncheon in Salem, Va., kicking otf festivities for the
Amos Alonzo Stagg BowL The Stagg Bowl will be played Der.
15.
.
The defending national champion Mount Union Purple
Raiders (12-0) play host to St.John's (11-2) of Minnesota on
Saturday in the national semifinals.
The Gagliardi Trophy is named for St. John 's coach John
Gagliardi, the winningest active coach in college foo tbalL
Moore owns his team's caree r and regular season wshing
records with over 4,000 yards. He led Division Ill in sco ring
this year with 24 touchdowns and rushed for 1,843 yards,
He rushed for a team-record 346 yards l;tSt week as Mount
Union defeated Wittenberg 49-21 in the Division Ill quarterfinals.

Blake killed by Amazon
pirates in robbery
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - Peter Blake, who headed the
New Zealand crew that won the America's Cup in 1995 and
2000, was shot and killed by pirates· during a robbery of his
boat on the Amazon River.
Blake was killed late Wednesday during a holdup aboard his
119-foot yacht, the Sea master, anchored .on the Amazon in the
jungle state of Amapa, some 1,600 miles north of Sao Paulo,
state police chief Rosilene Martins de Sen a said.
· Three or four assailants approached the Seamaster in a rubber dinghy commonly used by pirates on the Amazon and shot
Blake, 53, when he tried to resist the holdup, Sena said Thursday. ·
Two crew members were treated for minor injuries in the
hospital in the nearby town of Macapa.
According to local media, the killers took a spare engine and
several watches,
Alan Sefton, ppe of Blake's friends and a spokesman for his
organization, blakexpeditions, said the crew spent two months
in the upper reaches of the Amazon and Rio Negro and had
encountered nothing but "friendly, warm, hospitable people."
Sefton said Blake's boat was anchored off Macapa in the
'
mouth of the Amazon, awaiting customs clearance
to leave
Brazil after a two- month expedition as part of a program to
monitor the effects of global warming and pollution.

'·

�• P)lfle 8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Frtclly, Dec. 7, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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

:.Ionian has big night in ft!lum

Frtcllit, Dec. 7, 2001

The Dally Sentinel• Page It 7

Pomeroy, lllddlapo....., Ohio

AUEYOOP

ACACBB

HOUSTON (AP) - Imagine how
good Michael Jordan could be if he
: practical.
.
Jordan rerurnelf from a one-game
, absence caused by a sore knee and
scored 10 of his 18 points in the founh
· quarter to lea d the W..Shington Wizards
: to &gt;n 85-82 victory over the Houston
; Rockets on Thursday night.
: h "1, (lon"t knoedw hohw he d~s itd. He
: asn t pracnc 10 t ree wee,.,, an on
h If J . h 1
t e 0 uoys e se dom even shoots
the baii,"Wa&lt;hing-

od.w give the Wizards a 60-58lead.
Mobley had II points •in the first
quarth and finished the lint half with
·17. Mobley snapped • 38-all tie with a
pair of free throws with 59 &lt;econds lefi
in the second quarter.
....... olin t .
Jordan worked out with the Wizards -onM•SIIId•Topeoll
in Houston on Wednesday, but still wasoflllllrl.......,
n't sure he'd be able to play in Thursday
4o rt
Ill '
;i;ght's game.
..• ·
(740) 949-1521
On Mondav,Jordan had fluid drained
''
"
F10lllldng &amp; 110 Days
from his right knee for the second time
Same is Cash AnDable
this season. An MRI showed no serious
Lke•·"" l. .red F Estimates
~
• · roe
domage. He hyperextended the knee
,.~~-.._...,...,
ton coach Doug
(p;:;;;;;;;;E.~;;-,
Collins
said. during preseason, and it has been con- · PorrMtroy Eagles
~
;
"Todoy was the first time he's picked up sistently sore and swoUen.
BINGO 2111
a ball . 1 don't know how he has any
"He's still a great player. I don't know
Every lhullday
j kind of timing at all."
why be's stiU playing, though," Rockets
a Sunday
II
l Jordan played his best in the fourth, coach Rudy Tomjanovich said. "He's a Dools Open 4:30
~
~.t hitting five crucial baskets to hand the good golfer and a good sandlot baseball Earty ~=start
Rockets their eighth straight loss.
player, ro I don't know what the heck
PIOgr8Qive
~
"He has tremendous confid•nce," he'• doing messing with us.
top line
Country, Dance &amp;
Collins said. "Michael can go 3-for-20
"He'&lt; probably the only one who
thursdays
Rock Music
golng into the founh quarter and he could. do what he's doing." TimberProgressive
74G-742·n09
can't wait to get that 21st shot.
wolves LOS, Grizzlies 80
Coverall on
Reasonable Rates
"He really delivered with some big
Terreii Brandon had 22 points and to
Sundays,
All Occasions. shots in the fourth quarter. We couldn't assisis, and Kevin Garnett added 20
'.' have won without him."
points ind 15 rebounds as Minnesota
; . Jordon !Jlissed Tuesday night's game at snapped a four-game losing steak with a
, San Antonio with a right knee injury, victor)lat Memphis.
BUILDERS INC.
. the first game he miSsed because of.•. · l'i!j iYasol led the Grizzlies with 22
New HomH • VIRJI
:(i injqry since March 5, 1993. He received *pof9,~·~nd 11 rebounds. Jasou Williams Siding • N~w· Ganga
VINYl REPlACEMENT WINIIWS
• Replactmnt
-:fa big ovotion w~en he was introduced sco~lf!h points on 5-for- 15 shooting
WJndows • Room
WJth the W1zards startmg hneup.
as rhe Grizzlies absorbed their second
Additions
• RooDng
"1'\1 do some li~ited practic ing. straight lopsided loss. Memphis lost by
COIIMEICJAl "~ lEIIDOOW.
· there s no o.~her way 1. II .?e abl,e to find 42 poin,ts in Orlando on Monday night.
FllEE ESTIMATES
.. my rhythm, Jordon sa1d. I cant go m!?
Bucks 95, Raptors 89
every game trymg to find my rhythm
All
d 30
· t
d s
740-992-7599
0
&lt;~~; Jordan's late show included a driving c·,';,~U' dedn dsco2re3
hpmtnM
s ~In kam
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
1•
1
h
' ,y, h'
. • A»S~l ~· a e
as os
1 wau ee
·•• ~erse ayup t at gave . was mgton• 11 - ·· • '
.
· h.
'~.• 6 • 6' 2. 1ea·d w1'th 9:07 to ·p...
,_y.
.. M omen15 snapped
.
1a five-game losmg streak wrt a
later, he hit a ' t2-foot turnarollnd VIctory ;over Toronto.
..
· jumper that gave Washington a 68-63
Glenn Robmson and Ttm Thomas
·,
lead.
each scored 13 for the Bucks, who were
')
: • Jo.rdan matched his career-low agai.im w~thoul coach George Karl , who I All M1oka Tractor
QUALITY W~W SYSTEMS
&gt;Equipment Parts
the Rockets, but it was enough. He mt!Sed·the game because of the death of
played just 33 minutes. , . ·
his father.
992-4119 t:soo-291-5600
Factory Authorized
"I felt good. I wasn't trying to overexVince Carter scored 26 points, Keon
Case·IH Parts
VIsit Our Sbow~ On State Route 33
tend myself." jordan said. "My wind was Clark 18 and Alvin Williams 16 for the
6 Milu North Of Pomcl'b}, Ohio. At Counly Road 18
Dealers
a question, but Doug was very adamant Raptors.
1000 St. Rt. 7 • No Dealers or&amp;ntractors Please
about keeping my minutes down."
Hornets 95, Trail Blazers 89
VIsa/ Maslen:ard
Coo/viU., OH 45723
Richard Hamilton led the Wizards
Lee Nailon scored a career-high 26
wv ill023477
740117
.
.
.
3
with 26 points. Popeye Jones had · I 0 points, and Baron Davis had 22 points
points and I 0 rebounds.
and 12 assists as Charlotte ended a
"I wanted him to play between 30 three-game losing streak by winning in
·
and 33 minutes," Collins said. "We were Portland.
hoping that we could keep the game in · Ita;h~ed Wallace led the Blaze,:. with
a good situation so when Michael came ·18 points, but his tecQnical foul sparked
m m the fourth quarter he could do the the Hornets to a decisive 20-1 o run in
Racine, Ohio
45n1
th!~gs he does.
.
.
the final 7:22 of the third quarter. .
740-949-2217
Portland cut the deficit from 17 to
. He struggled wtth hts shot the first
three quarters, bUJ wh;~n . t!, counted, h&lt;;..'.fi'Ve·Jwith ':07 left, .but· the Blazers
• was m a good rhythm.
•
·
" -. ·'"""'··
.
'
· M
.
couldn t get any closer.
ohley led Houston w1th 25 · · D "d u' 1 h d 18 ·
~ Ch
1 Cuttmo
·
K 1· c
dd d 12 ·
d
avt wes ey a
pomt.s 10r
arHoura
·· pomts. e vm ato a e
pomts an 1 .... d -~
· B
h d 14 b
d
otte,
an
.
.
rown
a
re
oun
s.
7:00 AM'· 8:00 PM
10 re boun ds .
N ·t
,,
d
. h' h 11
1 The Rockets led 40-38 at the half.
a~ on ",2
a ,.career- tg
\Hamilton scored I 0 points' in the third rebountk_ ".'·'
' '. ...
. .
quarter, and Jones added a pa1r of free . Scottte Ptppen had 10 potnts and
I throws with 17 seconds lefi in the peri- e1ght reboun,i:ls for the Blazers in his
first start since Nov. 13.
7

1~

....

NBA •

Cellular
Warner Ins

(7..a) 992-15827

24'121'

N-12 D.BlE Will
PUSDC

PUft

HRSTCIME.
HRST SEIIVID
$201.11 PER JOINT
REIUliRlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

·':fBgles

. Bil&amp;o2171
fuery l'bursdilg

• ' 6:30
f'rOiresslue top Die

Shade River AG Service .
"Ahead In Service"
35537 SL RL ·7 North • Pomeroy, Oh 45720

740-985-3831

...

12% Economy Stock Feed..... :.~ .. $6.50/100
t2% Equlnttl2
(Formerly Wntem Pride) ...........$5.00150
21% Hunters Pride Dog Food ....... $6.75150
s-tUck DHr Blockl ...................... $6.75
Whole Com ................................,. $5.251100
Cracked Com ............................... $6.251100

Construction

-Bryan Reeves
·· New Homes, Room AddiHons,

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

.GQrag.9i Pole 'BUitdlnga, ~dofs,

Sldln~ D~ks, Kltc;~s.
~. .

.
'

&amp;More .

·

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

ESTIMATES I

11

Tree Service

l'rolll$SIUe
Coverall on Sundlgs

Hours: Sun • Thur llam • 10 pm
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am • llpm

:~ ~..-•=lli#t~liHBI;!f&amp;(~:

4.B

: LUNCH 1
I

~t

CARPENTER Meigs Massage
SERVICE
TheraPV

• Room Addlllona6

Remodeling
• Ntw Ga111g11
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing I Gutt.,.
• Vlrtyl Siding 6 Painting

. • Patio and Porch ~kl

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Tonia

Relber

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 4577t

Therapist

740·985·3948
CONCREIF./BLOCK/BRICK

740·992·1705

• Footers, Walls, Step.t •

Licensed Massage

2t3N.2ndAve.
Middleport, OH 45760
Come In and aak

about apaclala
Gill Certltlcotu

Available

Flat Work,
ReplaCements, • Walks
and, Drhr~J , • Slencll
Crtle Free Estimales
Serving Ohio and W.V.

wv ill031712

I

11:30am · 2:()() Pill 1 5:00pm-7:30pm 1
nk I
14 yrs &amp; under F=E r 4 yrs &amp; under FREE 1
1
5-8 yrs- ·~.99 1 5-8 yrs - '3.99
1 9-12 yrs • 13.99
r 9-1 Z yrs -'4.99 ·

----- ----------------J

[740) 992-3194
992·6635

BUFFET TCfGO CDinner •• 11.191

7~

1

-

East State

I

I

992-sns

Christmas &amp;aron
Poinsettia
Many colors to
· choo~e from .
Open Mon-Sat J0-4
Closed Sunday
1112711

Phone (740)593-6671
Ath~n s, Ohio .

~~~
High&amp; Dry
Advertise Self-Storage
in this

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

space for

74{}-992-5232
1111211 mo.

$50 per

mnson BOWLIRG

month.

OPED DOWLIRG 6
LEHGUES

Qtln 71111-7!II# aWilli

• Garages

Advertise our business
on I is '-age
for one month for as
·low as 525

7122JTfN

Rocky R Hupp. Agent

Box 189
Middleport Ohro 45760
Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplemenl; Life' Insurance; '
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
: Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
·• Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

'ThE 8GI-\'\'\E.5!

l'eiJit$l
can 111nng

...--··

11¥II .. I ' 'I
17 A ' ' all?lr
II ...W
Caapu

~~Voltlfll .

5I ~porte:
-Ryan
.. 10 Did ,.,.
IIIII
12 - t o

44 ....... ,..,
41Ming

=

11 Wtb foo•d

bOling
bird
II Drtzzllng
47 2 l l - · · - 52 Pitt I ol 21 EVIl'}'
12 ~ ldn
52 Open- ll2 fanqo hOI'oo •

ar
• :-"::
50 . _

M • nomDOWN
23 ~
There are a few
-24 II Ptltd
monthly book.lets and
211.......
25Enor• ~o01,•
.~ ~
..
moue
!13 aaek •""
pamphlets with in·
27 -........ 15 ~::.:.;.:;.
211 a--.
structiou .aimed at in~~~nt
:1
Suua•+t
t.r IIIII
--.,.
32
.,211 Purple
.,_,
termediate pbyers
4 friend
30 Jlpl"lll
5llntlrr+'*
who wi&lt;h to improve.
•• Tflll
5 a.- o1
clog
57 Wrlllr
The latest is Willi5 lMhlr"l
SCots
31 PIICII out
~
Bridge Mag•zine by
• "• Wicll
.r T-'1 ,._ 7 Cllllll
Ylllty
Eddie Kantar and Dominique l'ilon. It
look• great, with 20
colorful 4-by-8.25inch Jlages. My main
caveat is that, like· iu
competitors, it is expensive.
Originally written
in French by Pilon,
the text has been
translated, impruved
and Americanized by
Kantar. He has also
added some characteristic humor. You
get instruction on all
aspects .of the game,
with bidding having
the modem slant that
you also get in this
column: limit rai&lt;es,
weak two-bids, transCELEBR'TY CIPHER
fen, and so on.
by LUll Cllmpoa
Here is a declarerCJII'crit) Cipher etyptogrlmlata crtlltd'"'"' (1110&amp;1-IIQ• ~
play problem from i&lt;J1101110 put IIIII ~· Each - I n 1111 cipher
•
'
Todtlf'• clue: z equels D
sue nine. You are in
' IK
IJ
N
JIYOU
LE
four hearts. West be,..
·
""'' . gin&lt; with three top
JYN .
INJKYW
II LOU SX
~~ ~~ t.~
spades. After ruffing
TI\E. et:::&gt;T't·IEPil~ ~'1:)
the last, how would
FTSJBYM.
IN WI J
10 f'l}.,'l' 0-l t;+,'C)UKE 'Ill\~ I
you continue?
This is the KantarJ I X D. '
JLXDPSIIZJ
Pilon auction: After
U Y. A
LX
UCMNWK
OTNMWYJ
his redouble, Nonh's
two-diamond rebid is
,YJK
forcing. though rais·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The city ot the tour C't - climate,
ing hearts immedicotton,
cante. ·• - John Gun!her on El Paso
ately isn't wrong .
WOlD
Also, the jump to four
hearts is aggressive, in
the contemporary
style of bid game on
":mbl::l··~~.
Oil. NATE . ""
C"RE 10 \l•
(almo&lt;t) every deal. low to IOI'm four simple words.
JOIN US?
However, if North ,.-,_,..,....,....,....,....,........,
THIS '
settles for three he&gt;rts, rr-"TL.,..,.Ur-C-·"TP_E,..0~--1
1'\EI'NS
2
South would go on to n 1 I I I I
w...R .
game.
~:;~~~==::-..J
. Given West's takeR A WE V
out double, a 4-1
trump break isn't un,
,
likely. With thi&lt; loy- ~:;~::;;:~:;:~
out, if you immedi- ,. A T R I T ~ : :~'
ately. play a heort, .._...,,.,.......,1'11-,r--1·..
My wile is really mad at me.
West will win with r ,
,
,
.
When she asked what we should
his ace and lead his 1-_.-'-_,~,...J__.
dolorouranniversary,lstupidly
fourth spade, promotsuggested filing lor· • - • • • •.
5 0 T ME D
ing a trump trick for 1--T~,n.:.
co.,pleto lhe chuckle quoled

..

:~

··=-

....

BIG NATE
WHO !liED
"ND Ml&gt;E
HIM KINIO
OF THE
!&gt;CHOOL?

142·2572
lllp -142·1719
11111 pep mo.

\

or::"'..

'
'

I

,

PEANUTS

:::

Comer3rd&amp;
Pan aoy St., Mla:ln
1111211 mo.

8:1

Call for Products

'if

or Opport~nlty

Jeanie Howell
740-992·7036
I'MW.I1it1:&amp;4li!sbe.am
11/30

DEER
CUT6

•

East. Instead. first cash

two top clubs, discarding dummy'&lt; last
spade, then play a
trump. If West leads
his remaining J'adc,
you can ruff with
dummy's heart king.
To subscribe, send a
check · for $49 to
· WiU-Dridge, 1251 6th
Avenue, 34th Floor,
New York, NY
10020.

,.
•

•

I FRIDAY

WRHPPED
maplewoOd lake
St. Rt.124
Racine, Ohio

UJe c11n Rllllle deer ·
summer Rusage

VOiler's
Deer Shop
SR lll, lMgMiie, Oil

742·2076

Satunby, Dec. it, 200 I
Either a friend or a n•btivt:

might be rt.&gt;~pom ible for hl!lping you m.1 kc il ~:otmtcrion in
the rear ahead that COlt)d tnm
out trt be ratlu:•r prufiublr for
you. Uc !iomc to find a way to
rt&gt;t: iprocOIC\~ .

SAGITTAI~IUS

(Nov.

2.1.

Dec . 21} -- Take a tlay oR'
fJom whntcver it is you're
u•l\in~ or etpou,ing. Pa:ople
are more intcrcstrtl today in
fun 5ocial activitic~~ th:m in li•·
ttuin.c to ont or your do:~h.
Know wln·re to look (or· ro ..
mam:e nnd you'll find it. Th~
A5tro·Graph Matd1mnkcr in·
ltl&amp;ncly r4:vrnlt whkh •ly:m art

MttlMiti('ll)ly rwrrr,·t

(Ut

fCJU ,

M•ll Sl.?S to Mot&lt;llmokor.
c/u thi~ nl.'wMr:a~'''• 11.0. Unx
17SK, Murrny Hill Station,
Now York. NY 1111~6.
CAI'I~ICOI~N (Doc. 22Jnn . IIJ) ..... Wht~htr ynu want
it or nut, yuu mitcht bi: plncod
in thr 5potliw;ht today. Kctl' in
mind there mny he mort' than
a few critin in the audhmcc
gr:uliug your }ltrf"unnancr.
t 1))

Qou. 20-Fcb.

Tr:u.lc on your },a!iot ex ..
. JlCriL'nCL'1 totlay ratlu·r than
rclcMate them to an imigniti~
r.:ant pu~ich.m. "fhl'y c:au be in-

I

.

I
.,,1'1,..,,-'T,--t e
.

.

.

by filling In the missing worda

you dovolop lrom Slop No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I .,

... UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
. , GET ANSWER
•

I

SCUM LIT. ANSWERS
Mohair- Vitsl· Orbit • GenUy • ALL this TIME
A bum demanded a wish from the genie he had re-

leased from a bottle. "Ill could grant wishes," the genie
replied, "do you think l"d be in a bottle ALL this TIME?"

949-2734

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304-7730300

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Phone 992·21 55
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NJ:A Cro..word Puaale

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strunlental in hl'lpi11g you sort
out somtthing that could go
both ways.
t'ISCES (Feb . 20-Mordr 211)
.... Your grC'atcn gratification
tu~tay t'i\11 be d~&amp;.•rivL'J from ;tctiYitie~ :tud intt•rem ~harc.•d
with otlwn . It won't b~.: a had

day if you decide to be a
loncrj it will be just .another
hu-hun1 day.
·
AI~IES (Much 21-April 19)
-- There's a strong probability
that you're soinR to h:&amp;Y~ to
deal with tomeonr rl,r'• pri-

urititl u&gt;d•y in•t"d of your
\\wn . Takt thll in nridt or

you'll ond up ff&lt;lilll very roHrictod . •

TAUl~U5 (Af"il 20-M•y
211) •• 1'hl• 1o All ..collout dAy
tn work on l.1bon o(IUYt
J«ll, oopoclolly If tlwy col fur

rro•

yuur artialic, c.·reatiYt nnd orpnlzntlnn•l Abllltl•·• ·

CEMINI (May 21·June 211)
... Fun, ~ocilll nc:civitl&lt;!l with
MOOd rolo with el11111111t of
rrl&amp;.•ndly com~,etition wll1 be
appul to you tod~y. Make
phm• to filll'ill thi1 dc:o~ire dur111~ your ltburc houn.
CANCEl~ Uunr 21-July
22) ~- You shoL1h11) 't be
whhy-w:uhy or indr:ci ~iv&amp;.·
wh~n being called upon to

rc:fl.·rce a dom cnic mnnl'r to~
Jay. If you don't t:1ke a fimJ
position , the dimtplive forCL'S
r.:ould comiuuc illl d01y.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ,
Fair-mindcdne~~

and Ml unhi ~
ared oudonk are all th3t you
need to win others over to
your position or point_s~of­
vicws. Howcvt·r. a rcstncttvr
3ttitudc will h.1ve the t1 ~1positt
t'lfcc::t.

VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sept. 22)
Takr the time to balance
your bl1dgl!t uutay if you can.
You will h.1vr leu trcubl~
thAn u!mal in clei'll'ly perceivln~ rhe diffcrc-nce ·b.,.twun
nDneuentiul nnd esuntinl
lfHmliinp;.
·~

LIUI~A

(Sept.

23·0&lt;'t. 23) •

.. l~ntlu:r t1111n p.utnklutc in

IIU11ltlons thnt ate con¥'-'nial rD
e·very~ody

todAy, you cAn
personally :~ccomJ,Ji•h a lot
1norc- if ynu opL'rAte on your
own .

SCOI~t'IO (O&lt;"t. 24-Nov.

22) ... lr mi~ht .1ppear to oth·
en that you ue on the quicl
Iitie rod ay. In rc;tlily, how t vc r, you will be wurking
hard co wci~h and balance
Se\'er;\1 criticlll iuu11.•~ with
whh:h you h01vr to dcJI.

'·

�'

•

P.- B 8 •The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TEMPO

shooting leaves gunman and co WOlter
he ran out the back door as
fast as he could."
A police SWAT team
entered nearly two hours
after the 2:30 p.m. EST
shootings, uncertain whether
the gunman was still alive.
They found Wissman dead in
an office area with an apparently self-inflicted gunshot
wound to the head and a
shotgun under his body.
Wissman had al'parently
just been fired or was about
to be fired before he left the
factory, Dijkstra said.
Brian Messick, superintendent of a neighboring factory. said a wounded Nu-Wood
employee told him that managers had instructed employees to lock down the building
and call for help if they saw
Wissman nearby, The Truth
newspaper of Elkhart reported. Sheriff's deputies could
not confirm stories that factory managers may also have

GOSHEN, Ind. (AP) Authorities say • factory
worker who opened fire on
his co-workers, I Uing one
and wounding &lt; others
before taking his own hfe,
had either just been tired
from his job or was about to
be.
They also were investigating reports that fac tory managers may have been worried
enough afler an argument
with Robert Wissman that
they warned employees .to be
on the lookout for him.
Wissman, 36, had lefl: the
N u-Wood Decorative Millwork plant Thursday morning but returned a few hours
later with a shotgun, walked
inside and opened fire,
Elkhart County Sheriff's
Capt. Julie Dijkstra said.
Tammy Funderburk said
she spoke by cell phone with
her son, a factory employee
who escaped uninjured.
"He saw the gunman com- warned authorities.
ing and he had a big rifle,"
The most seriously woundFunderburk said." He saw the ed victims were a 27-year-old
gunman shooting people and man listed in critical condi-

tionserious
and a 52-year-old
man
in
condition. Two
people were hospitalized in
fair condition, and two others were treated and released.
The nam&lt; of the factory
worker who • -.s killed was
being withheld until relatives
could be notified. ·
Misty Rushing said she
sought cover under a desk in
a small office . when the
shooting began.
"I just saw him. standing
there with a shotgun, and I
hit the floor. The only thing
you could hear was firing.
You couldn't hear anyone
screaming. He was just firing.
He was just loading and
unloading. loading and
unloading," she told the Star.
"He didn 't have no "little
gun. He had a long gun. He
had the biggest gun I've seen
in my life."
After the shootings,_police
se~rched Wissman's home in a
m!ddle-class neighborhood
about two miles from rhe
plant.
Agents from the federal

~~~=':eb:;~~~=l]

t{~:--:~RJf;;~~

~nd"beoconesthe

band's first U.S.
release; weeks later,
~ is their first song to
top the Billboard

The Beatfea perform on !hit CBS "Ed

Sullivan Show" In New York Feb. 9, 1964

cha~s.

Febi'Uiry 1964:
. BeaUes appear on
Feb. 25, 1943:
McCartney and John Ed Sullivan show and
Harrison is born In
Lennon.
immediately become
Liverpool, England, 1959: He joins
the biggest band in
to Hatpld and Louise McCartney, lennon America.
~nison.
and Stua~ Sutcliffe Jan. 21, 1966:
AugUII1958:
In a b8nd called the Harrison marries
He joins The
Patti Boyd.
Silver Beetles.
Quarrymen, a group Auguat 1860:
Aug. 29, 1966:
that in~;ludes
The bend, now called Beatles play last live
schoolmate Paul
the Beatles, goes to show, at San
Francisco's
Germany, quickly .
becoming a popular Candlestick Park.
November 1968:
local act.
Harrison releases
Mil)' 8, 1962:
film score
Producer George
Ma~ln, of EMI .
"Wonderwall Music,"
his first solo
subsidiaty
Partophone, signs
recording and first LP
Beatles to first record for Beetles' Apple
label.
contract.
October 1962: The 1969: Harrison's
BeaUes' first single, song ·something" Is
No. 1 hit In United
"Love Me Do/'
becomes a top-20 hH States for the
· Hlltrlaon In 1964
In Britain.
•
Beetles.

Pmss; ESRI

•

.Will ve puvlleh&amp;:!
Friday, Deoemver 21
In the

Story, A3

January 1988: He
hits No. 1 in the
Un~ed States w~h
"Got My Mind Sat on
You.•

11194: Handmade
Films sells for $8.5 ·
million.
November 1988:
Harrison releases
"Traveling WilbUtys:
Volume One" with
Roy Orbison, Tom
Petty, Bob Dylan and
Jeff Lynne.
June 1998: Harrison
discloses that he has
been treated for
throat cancer.
Dec. 30, 1999: He
suffers a collapsed
lung as he is stabbed
several times by
deranged man who
breaks Into his home
near London.
July 9, 2001: He
confirms that he had
radiation treatment in
Switzerland for a
tumor.

Actual Size

· '· ' iY BMAN J. ftao

H

Haskett, 82
RELAY RUNNER - Don Vaughan of Pomeroy displays his official Olympic running gear, which
Includes pants, windbreaker, long-sl~eved shirt, cap, and gloves, that he will wear during his
·participation In the Olympic Torch Relay on Dec. 18 In Huntlngtol}, W.Va. Vaughan will be a
support runner for torch bearers who are delivering the Olympic flame to Salt Lake City in
Utah for the 2002 Winter Olympic games. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Details, A6

LoCal rniln to carry torch
Bust'nes.sman

Tessa Paige WID

-- .

Mary Christmas!
Mommy&amp;.~

.

.

HIJh:~I.G\If:JOi

·Details, A2

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

Italy with

hlawlfe,
Olivia, In
2001.

:I give my permission to publish the enclosed
prepaid picture(s) and Information In The
Dally Sentinel's "Santa's Uttle Helpers".
,Signature:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
:Relations~ to Child: _ _ _ _ __

WASHINGTON
HOLIDAYS

lilclex
4 s.dlot.'U- :J2 ......

Calendars. ·
Celebrations.
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region

C2,6
C2-4
02-7
insert
Cl

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'

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by

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT, INC.
2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446·9777

I

·····------···············-··

Fax 7 40-446-~122

BY KRII DemoN

A health fair •WI!I'. hekt frll:lay In the''I!Qurtho~se annex for
emplqyees In i:ounty offlc;es. It was sponsored by_the Meigs
County Commissioners In cooperation y.'lth health end Insurance agencies. · Gholesterol, blood ~;ugar and blpod pressure checks were offered free of cha~ge, and Information
on health and nutrition was available. Here. Danny Davis,
an employee of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service, has his cholesterol and sugar checked by Kim
Hellinger, MLT technician of Holzer Medical Center. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
·

Physical Ther~py • Occupational Therapy
Massqge Therapy • Speech Therapy
'When yotJ•·:'Il'OOlie your therapy provider, consider
Medical Therapy Center"
'

Mail or Bring in this entry form to:

The Daily Sentinel
Limited Time Offer!

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

..

GALLIPOLIS - If you
asked someone to describe
the holidays, it would probably be like a Norman Rockwell painting of carols, presents, church, family and fun.
But: reality never lives up to
people's expectations, and
many folks suffer from holiday depression. .
Every time you think you
have it rough, think about
those people that don't have
anyone to share their
. thought3 and dreams with
like seniors iii nursing homes
and children , in the Children's Home. '
"We &lt;ee ~ lot of peol'le
here that have cognition
problems and . deficits," said
Cinda Saunders, director of
· Social Services at Scenic
Hills Nursing Home, "and
they may not know what day
it is or understand that it's

FESTIVE MOOD - Scenic Hills Nursing Home Activities
Director Jodie Trent, standing. tries to keep the mood festive
around the holidays by decorating the tree with
resldents.(Krts Dotson photo)
Christn\as time so, in a way,
its a blessing for them."
Saunders said that they see
a "mixed bag" of depression
around the holidays depend-

ing on each resident's background and history.
"Some people have no one
to send them presents, no

Please see Depression, AI

Holzer 'M edical ftlerapy

48 mos. 12.11%****

prayers."

A moment later, the first
lady, 6-year-old Faith Elseth
and 5-year-old Leon Patterson flicked a switch illuminating dazzling blue lights
and white stars on the Colorado blue spruce that stands
permanently on the Ellipse
just south of the White
House.

Max Cale . said Friday the
closing is a sign that the V.A.
does not care about local
veterans.
.
·""'losing 'the VA~ clinic i~
"'
Pomef9Y in light of the l'erils facing dur active duty
Armed Forces who will
someday be veterans is a disgrace," Cale said in a written
statement on behalf of the
Veterans Service Commission. "It shows a lack of concern for the health care
needs of our local veterans
and future veterans by the
V.A.
"This is just another slap
· in the face of veterans by the
PleBH Clink. A2

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

I

:vourName:; _______________________
:Address:. ________________
:cuy 1State/ Zip: _ _ _ _ _ _ __

POMEROY
Six
months after opening its
Pomeroy field center, the
Veterans
Administration
plans to close it.
The local Veterans Service
Commission called the closing a "slap in the fa~e of veterans," and has urged area
vets to contact officials to
voice their opposition to the
closing,
The 'V.A. cites a light
V~Qrkload as the reason for
· closing the clinic, · which
provides routine outpatient
medical care simi!al' to a
family medical . p~tice. . It
..,.. , o...., one day a week,
""'- r~anq
shared "luff with a field
center in Jackson. The Jacks&lt;in clinic will also be closed.
The local clinic, located in
the Medical Arts Building at·
Veterans Memorial Host&gt;ital,
will" close after business on
Wednesday, according to
Barbara
Szymczyk,
S!'okesrnan for the V.A. Medical Center in Chillicothe.
"We feel that patients can
receive a higher level of
medical care by our closing
the field centers and treating
l'atients at one of tl;!e Com-

munity Based O utreach
Centers or at a main hospital," Szymczyk said.
. 'This is not a financial
.decision. The V.A. has deter'mined that the field centers
in Pomeroy ;and Jackson do
not generate enough workload for staff to be assigned,
and based on that, the staff
assigned to those. centers can
be utilized more efficiently
at the main hospital in
Chillicothe.
"All patients served by the
field center will be transferred in the V.A. medical
system for care at either a
Community-Based Outreach Center or at a larger
V.A. hospital," Szymczyk
said.
Veterans Service Officer

Holiday depression affects all ages

A6
A2
Bl-7
A2

16

IOryouoan ... l

10.99%

'l[
• Q[ .

A4

Sports .

Child's Name:~------­
Son, daughter, or grandchild: _ ___:__
:Parent's or Grandparent's Name[s):
I
1

require him to en~ourage the
torch bearer$ in (ase of
fatigue 31;1d. to assu111e the
rio' • .ii 1'.2&gt;"
~ ~JXZ~-1.U;tp~f'C' +""J;~il!f~ o~~iat:" ~fbrmation respo~il&gt;.jl\ty of carryihg the"'
noticymg him of his accel'- torch if one of th~ bearers
ranee as a support runner cannot continue.
The Olymt&gt;ic flame will
·
who will be t&gt;articipating in
be
carried through more
BY TollY M. l.w:H
the delivery of the Olympic
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
torch to Salt Lake City in than 125 cities and 22 state
OMEROY For Ut&gt;h for the upcoming Win- capitals by ·over 11,500 t&gt;articipants during its trek
one Pomeroy business t'er Olympic games.
man whose career
As a support runner, across the U.S.
"I was completely taken by
wiD run besiqe
involves protecting people
from unexpected situations;
torch bearers and a surprise and at first won"surprised" wou)d best
runner as they make dered if the letter had been
describe his reaction after
way along a two-mile delivered to the wrong mail· recently receiving a letter
of highway near box;• said Vaughan.'"! read it
from the 2002 Winter
W.Va. on Dec. over and over and still
Olymt&gt;ics committee.
Vaughan's dury will
Pbre- Torch, AI
The letter that Don vaughan, an insurance broker,
.!'JJiledfi:Qm his mailbox con-

0 2001 Ohio Valley Publiohi,. Ca.

INFORM+TION FOR AD:

· ·

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

Richard Burns, 68
E':e Butcher, 79
Nellie Leonard, 87
Mary Newlon, 86
Jerry Taylor, 59
Edna Wetherholt, 95
!'atricia Williams, 67

Harrison dies of
cancer.

Wm. J. Castollo/AP

f'll" &gt;t·

Deaths

Nov. 29, 2001:

Harrison on
vacation In

Cite 1ight
.workload'
•
.li'i':t··· 1as reaso.:. n-,..
.lJ

Pres. Bush pressures Congress during radio address
to take up his domestic
agenda.

weatl1er

WASHINGTON (AP) Laura Bush and two children
who lost fathers on Sept. 11
lit the national Christmas ·
tree in a ceremony that was
by turns joyous and somber.
President Bush dedicated
the tree to those who died in
the terror attacks and to ·Gls
who have died in the line of
duty. "This is a year we will
not forget those who lost
loved ones in the attacks on
September the 11th and on
the battlefield," the president
said · Thursday evemng.
"They will remain in our

s1.25

(16 y8f!Jl'r5 of ~" or youtl(3er)

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms removed two
guns and shotgun shells from
the house, where Wissman
lived with his mother, the
South Bend Tribune rel'orted. Wissman was a registered
' gun dealer who ran a business
from the home, according to
The Washington Post.

SOURCE:AssocialodPrea

George Bush
·dedicates
lighting to
terror victims

nnes -

'For Chllt.JrBn OnV

":'SO!=•RCE=-='=s=-:-=••"-$-ia:-fed--""..L..:.....:::..::::.AP,J

Ravi Shankar.
Nov. 2, 1974:
Harrison becomes
first Beatie to stage
solo wotld tour.
June9,19n:
Harrison divorces
Patti Boyd, who later
manies Eric Clapton.
Aug. 1, 1978: His
son Dhani Is born.
Sept 2, 1978:
Harrison In 1972
Harrison marries
Dhani's mother,
Olivia
Arias. ,
Aprll1 0, 1970:
McCartney
1979: He establishes
· announces he is
Handmade Films to
leaving the BeaUes, produce Monty
prompting the band Python's "LHe of
to spiH up.
Brian."
1970: Harrison
July 1981:
releases solo album; Harrison's tribute to
"All Things Must
John Lennon, "All
Pass."
Those Years Af1J."
Aug. 1,1971:
featuring McCartney
Concert for
and Starr, peaks at
Bangladesh is held No. 2 in United
at Madison Square States.
Garden with friends
including Ringo

"I Want to Hold Your

•

Our Speolal page(6)

1

• Starr, Bob Dylan and

Dec. 23, 1963:

Meigs retail
merchants, Dl

~@(ID~~

.The 'quiet ·Beatle' who moved us
"Please Please Me"
becomes the Beatles'
first cha~·topping
song in Britain. The
band's first album,
also called "Please
Please Me; is
released the
following month.

MONEY

Devils bomb
Chesj&gt;eake,Bl

~~1f@O®

t----'1-~7·

Daily Sentinel
February 1963:

'

•

George Harrison 1943-2001

••

-- .

'

SPOR1S

Mrs. Claus busy
this season, Cl

..

"Santa's Helper"
111 Court Street

:\.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

- Friday 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
t~te~1ded hours by appaintmenl ·

For more Information, contact Debbie or Dave
at the Dally Sentlnal- 992-2155.

'

•'

(
.'

- - ·-t-;r---

"

446·1121

•

'·

Discover the Holzer Dif.fe•·ence

www.holzer.org·

1·800·816-51 31
t ·--- ... - . . .

MEDICAL CENTE .R

.I ..

.

... .)'

·- '

�</text>
                </elementText>
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