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                  <text>Sons of Union Veterans

son, AS

last

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Whars Inside

lloBialown Nawlpaper·

HEALTH CARE

s

OLIDAY

Is
strategies

Mavs beat Cavs, 11

FINANCI

Deaths

5.99
1998 FORD EXPEDITION

8

1 995

81

Details, A3

643170

SIJP(A CUAMI

~

·Weather

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Marjorie J. Malone,
Dav1d G. Smith, 89
Eula Smith, 84
Irene Thomas, 79
Arvil Wiblin Sr., 88

for 36 months ·

6.9%

BY Ctwn.ENE HomJCH

LUXURY

Hlp: 50s, Law: JOS

2002FORD
RANGER

2002 LINCOLN

11,900
or 8249•o

COUGAR

'17
300
.
'
or '344•o

8

TOWN CAR

'35,105

Details, A2

2012

•

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OHIP

Pick J

c!af: 9-9·3

'

Pick 4 d.y: 0.1-7·1
'
~ 5: 27-28-29-36-37

4 CYL., AIR (;ONDITION

or '699mo

Plcli S nlpt: 9·4·2
Plcli 4 nliht: 1-8·9·1

2002 FORD
TAURUSSEi

W.VA.
Dei!Y ~: 5·4-6

18,662 i
or •a 79Dl0 ·-

FULLY EQUIPPED
Maintenance
Included for
3years or
36,000 miles

. '22,450
or '45a•o

V6, PWR. MOONBOOF,
PWR. LOCKS, ·
PWR. WINDOWS .

·

DallY 4: 2·1·3·9
c.sli 25: 1-4-7·8·19·20

2002 MERCURY
GRAND MARflUIS

8

CANDLE SAFETY - Mlc~itlle Harris, owner of The Country Candle Shop In Minersville,
places caution labels on the bottom of her candles so as to remind the public of the dangers associated with using an open flame. crony M. Leach phOto)

Candles p~~e ri~~­
to holid(l)l pleasures

Index
.

· W, PMI. WINII011'11,
PMliAN:KS

I

2~n-llhps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials ·
Movies ·
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bv ToNY M. LEAcH

A6

84·6

87
A5
A4

A3
A3

81·3, 5, 6
A2

C 2001 Ohio \/alley Publishing Co.

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

2-wheel$2495 4-wheel

$4995:

Check and adfust camber and toe. Additional parts and
be
I
some vehleies.

$1995
Why trust
your Investment to
just anybody...
Rely upon the people
that know your
vehicle best.

FACTORY TRAINED
TECHNICIANS

I
I

MOTORCRAFT

FAST LUBE

• Service Includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and new
Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Multi·Polnt Vatllcle Inspection
• Lube • Check and fill necessary fluids • All In 29 minutes
or less • Diesel vehicles
be extra.

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TIRES

POMEROY - They are seen in Menorahs, on mantels and even on Christmas trees
throughout Meigs County. What usually isn't
seen, though, are the dangers associated with
burning candles.
"The same sense of relaxation and comfort
that draws people to candles can also distract
them from their potenti~,danger," said
Pomeroy Fire Chief Chris S~.
.
"Candles are very popular, ~dally duringthe holiday season, and peopie should be

w. '""" ••11111P tnndl: ~~· o.n...J,

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD

I
I
I
I

I

Starting
at

I

at

FORD MOTOR CO.
FLOORMATS
Sto~ing
00

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

$8150

POMEROY -

Jtpc-recl by

BED RAILS

.

_$242

$

Public input

will be vital to the success of

Installed

\ I

I

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I ' •

."' URNPIKE

II

HOG-272-$179

efforts to secure major grant
funding now available through
the Ohio Department of
Development.
Counry Grants Administrator
Jean TrusseD conducted a public
hearing during Thursday's regular meeting of the county
commissionefs for the state;s

•

•

•

•

"even projects which involve
more than one activity in the
same target area."
Eligible projects include
curbs and sidewalks, flood and
drainage facilities, . recreational
facilities and parks, public rehabilitation, historic preservation,
parking facilities, senior centers
and street, water and sewer projects.
.
"Public participation is going

PluH- Grent. .U

LINCOLN
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

Monday · Friday 8:00 am · 4:30 pm
Extended hours by appointment

446-5121
!

•

c

•

what the committee has tried

PIIIH -

IIHitlt, AJ

New middle school
going up fasf

6

Bv CHARLENE HOEfLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Construction of the middle and
elementary schools and renovation of the high school 'is
moving right along, according to Superintendent Bill
Buckley.
Reporting to the Meigs
Local Board of Education
Wednesday night, Buckley
said that the most striking
progress is being shown at
the middle school, being
constructed on the hiU above
Meigs High School.
He described it as "going
up fast" and noted that the
roofline can now be seen
. since the block is in place as
can the outline of interior
. rooms. This week, parking
lot construction got under
way. ·
Work at the elementary
school on Ohio 124 near
Rutland is not moving as

fast, Buckley said, because of
an issue with one of the contractors.
He said the parking area is
near completion, that electrical equipment is going in
place, and that the walls are
starting to go up.
The high school renovation is right on schedule, he
reported, noting that the
contractors are in Phase 4,
renovation of some of the
third floor classrooms. The
public address system in the
gymnasium is being completed as is lighting in the
building.
Work · will
continue
throughout the school year
in blocks of four or five classrooms, with students affected
by the construction moving
to modular units for classes.
Renovation at the high
school will be completed
PIIIH . . . School, AJ

Ce1der

Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy
Massage Therapy • Speech Therapy
'When yoU;,~hoose your therapy provider, consider
Holzer Medical Therapy Center"

T

A D YA NT AG I

new Community Distress program; which wiU make aVailable
up to 10 grants of$300,000 fur
maJor projects in the state's distressed A,ppalachian counties.
The application deadline is in
Febryary, and public hearings
must , be conducted in each
community applying for funds
before mid-January.
"The Department of Development is looking at 'bigimpact' projects,'" Trussell said,

Holzer 1,\ecllcal

9.

)

C.ndlu, .U

calls for pu"hc 1nput, support

·Michelin, BridgHtone, Conttnent.l,lJNiknM.. SF Goodrtch.
Mounting lnd balancing ~ be eKtra.

THE AREA'S ONLY
TRI
lED DEAL

I

PIHH-

Commissiob~r~: Grant program

Wa will meet or beat any ~ompelitor's
advertised prke on thiJIIIIJ8 lira.

WIPER B
Starting $

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

aware of the dangers associated with using an
open flame;· he added.
Ohio Department of Commerce statistics
reveal there were 585 candle fires in 2000 that
resulted in 98 injuries and $9.3 million in
damages.
Reports indicate that the holiday season is
the busiest in terms of candle fires. From Nov.
22, 2000, to Dec. 31, 2000, there were 114
candle fires; nearly 20 percent of all candle
fires in 2000.
'
"On average, we sell more candles during
the holiday season then any other time of the
year," said MicheUe Barris. owner of The
Country Candle Shop in Minersville.
"Candles are beautiful and can be used as an
excellent decoration, however, they are dan-

POMEROY - Strategies
to increase and improve
Meigs County's health care
system as proposed by a
Community Health Care
Planning ·committee were
presented at a public meeting
Thursday night.
About 75 residents gathered
at the Senior Citizens Center
to hear about the proposed
plans, to offer suggestions,
express their opinions and ask
questions.
Commissioner Mick Daven port, chairman of the comrnittee, outlined the four
strategies which the committee defined as appearing to be
the most realistic and finandally possible over the next
few years.
They are to establish a fedcommunity
erally-funded
health care ceuter with
~nd~q ho~ and urgent
care, to ptmue -options for a
critical access hospital with a
24-hour emergency room, to
develop programs to attract
and retain · Meigs County
health professionals, arid to
establis.h an Eme,rgency Medical Service task force to work
toward making that system
financially stable so they can
continue to serve the area.
. "We have to look to the
future," said Davenport, "and

to do is to come up with the
best ideas on how to improve
local health care for our peapie.
"In addition to that we have
to remember that health care
equals economic development. When you lose health
care f.lcilities, you lose money
in your county In a typical
rural· county the second
largest number of jobs are in
health care."
·
· Davenport reviewed results
of a telephone survey conducted last summer by a team
of Ohio University students
showing residents' first concern as being for emergency
ro6m service, second, reopening the hospital, and third
increasing the number oflocal
doctors.
The order of rebuilding ·the
health care system, partially
. because of possible federal
funding, would be to open a
community health center,
~ wad&lt; ~ gel!'ng a
cnncal care hosp1tal With. an
emergency room, operanng
side-by-side ~sing the same
support sel'VIces, explamed
Davenport.
He asked for the support of
the public for the proposed
plans, outlined steps which
will have to b~ taken before
the ~t applicanon can be
subnntted, and then opened
the meeting for public com-

EDICAL CENTER

Discover tne Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

1·800·816·5131
-~

..

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Ohio

.The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, Dec. 15

I .... _

)WIG"

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Sup~me Court on Thursday nomed
Howard Bellmon, a Wisconsin mediation expert, to oversee settlement talks
in the stote's decode-old fight with
schools over how Ohio pays for education.
The court by a 4-3 vote also ~jected
the Ohio attorney gene~'s· request to
exclude private attorneys from representing stote officials in the talks.
Justices ordered the .negotiations last
month after granting the stole's ~quest
to reconsider their tltif\1 ruling in the
1991 lawsuit 6Ied by a coalition of
about 500 school districts.
After twice deciding against the stole,

I•

IND.

• ) CGiumlwiWIW

•

0

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0
0

02001

•

BY TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A front moving northeast"
through Ohio caused rain to
spread across the ~gion
Thursday night and into today,
the National Weather Service
said.
Drier conditions and seasonable temperatures are
expected for the tint port of
the weekend, but showers will
return Sundoy.
Sunset today is at 5:07, and
sunrise Satutday is at 7:45a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upp&lt;r 30s.
sunny.
. Saturdoy... Mostly

i

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'•

Highs in the mid 50s.
Satutday
night.. .Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Cloudy with a
chance of rain. Highs in the
lower 60s.
·
Monday... A chance of rain
during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s and highs 37 to 45.
. Thesday... A chmce of roin
during the day, orherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the upper
20s and highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s and
highs 40 to 46.

I

Loose emu startles drivers
STEUBENVILLE (AP) -An emu spotted as it ron down
the middle of a highwoy had not been seen since it was
shooed into the woods.
Tlie flightless bird, which can run up to 30 mph, was seen
four times Wednesday, said Stote Highway Patrol Lt. George
Moier. A driver notified the patrol after seeing rhe emu running down state Route 7 near this eastern Ohio city.
"It kept coming back to the highway, and .that had us concerned,' Maier said.
The emu is second in size only to the 01trlch. An adult

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the court ruled in September thot the
cur~nt school-funding system would
be constitutional if the stote spends
more money on it.
Bellman, 64, a Toledo native, received
his bachelor's ond law degrees from the
University o(,Cincinnati. He is a Madison, Wis., .la,wyer with experience in
labor, employment, environmental ond
Indion treaty dispute resolution.
He has mediated disputes for the Federal Trode Commission, the U.S.
Nuclear RegUlatory Commission, U.S.
Department of,Agriculru~. the National Park Service, rhe Stote. ofWisconsin,
New York, Ne',Y. Jersey, Woshington and
·florida.

He also has worked to mediate o 10yrar-old rocial discrirrtination lawsuit in
the Rockford. ill., schools.
A federal ond stote government labpr
attorney at the beginning of his co~~r.
Bellman began to participate in dispute
resolutions as a private attorn~y.
.
"In very big cases such as this o~e
where the~·s a very high pro61~ ond a
~at deal of expertise on the part PD the
parties, the main job of the · mediator is
to help them develop discussions in
which they ore able to find grounds or
terms that are mutolly acceptoble," Bellman sai~ Thursday. "That is to say, the
mediator does not become the next
. level of judge."

Walsh, guitarist for the Eagles and an accomplished solo
emu stands about 5 feet tall high and weighs about qo
pounds. The bird defends itself by kicking and has sharp artist, attended Kent State from 1965 through 1967. Univet"sity spokesman Jim Szatkowski said Walsh's wife contacted
claws.
'
the university about the honorary degree, saying Walsh
regretted that he never groduated.
Walsh will receive an honorary doctor of music in recogCOLUMBUS (AP) - A grand jury likely will decide nition of his musical achievement, as well as his involvemept
whether a restaurant bouncer should be charged in the death in environmental ond humanitarian causes.
of o customer during a struggle, police said Thursdoy.
·
Police said Vincent Darling, 41, and a bouncer at Dick
Clark's Amerkan Bandstand struggled at the restourant at
about 2 a.m. Dec. 2. Darling later was pronounced dead at
EVENDALE (AP) - General Electric Co.'s jet engine
Riverside Hospital.
·
maintenance business said Thursday it has a $400 million
Franldin County Coroner Brad Lewis has ruled the de~th contract from DHL Worldwide Express to service engines
a homicide and said Darling died of blunt trauma to the for 15 years on DHL's delivery jets.
.
neck.
It is the largest air transport maintenance inve~tment l;&gt;y
Darling also had a blood-alcohol content of 0.27 percent DHL, the international package delivery company, in its 30
- almost three times the legal limit, Lewis said.
years. of opention, GE Engine Services officials said.
The ag~ement calls for GE Engine Services to:~mainrain
't he 68 Rolls-Royce RB211-535C37 engines 'that power
DHL's fleet of 34 Boeing 757-200 freighter aircraft . •
CINCINNATI (AP) - Drilling began this week on a
The maintenance and overhaul work will be doni\' at GE's
tunneJ for an interstate water pipeline to be installed under facility in Cardiff, Wales.
the Ohio River.
The pipeline will provide water service to 60,000 ~sidents •.
of Boone County and the city of Florence, about 12 miles ''
south of Cincinnoti in northern Kentucky.
·' COLUMBUS (AP) -Two of the state's Iargen publi~The pipeline, to be installed by fall, will be 36 inches in pension plans lost a combined $133. rrtillion in last month's
diameter and about 3,000 feet long. It will be installed about collapse of Houston-based Enron Corp.
,
30 feet below the bottom of the river, just west of downtown
Officials with the pension funds are still deciding whethfr
Cincinnati.
to join a class-action lawsuit with other large institutional
Remaining parts of the pipeline project will be completed irtvestors against the nation's largest energy-trading busine~s.
over the next year, with the Greater Cincinnati Water Works ., 'Enron 's stock, which traded at more than $85 a sh~re about
to begin proViding water by 2003.
a year ago, was trading early Thursday at 69 cents. Enron col:
,.
·
'
lapsed after · que~tionable-bookkeeping . practices to~ide !jebt
·~~ •reVealed and a·ptan for a .coq~petitor, ;tp wy,.rll•· I'Ompany feU through. ·
KENT (AP) - Rock legend joe Walsh will receive · ~n ·:ohio's Public: Empl(!yeea Retire!f!ent Syste.m will survive
hononry doctonte from Kent State University dlll'ins a despite losing $68 mlllion, executive ~irector Laurie Hackcommencement ceremony Saturday.
ing said.

Grand Jury to eye evidence

Sunny skies slated for Saturday

GE Services nets contrad

Pipeline drilling.starts

Enron failure. hits pensions

.. ,.Kent State to honor Walsh : ,

11

!

LTV appolntl new chalnnan

f

CLEVELAND (AP) -The
LTV Corp. board on Thursday
appointed a new chairman and
chief executive officer of the
bonkrupt company that has
asked a court for permission to
permanendy shut down ond
sell its steel mills.
Glenn J. Moran, who previously was LTV senior vice president and general counsel,
replaces William H. Bricker,
who resigned Ni&gt;v. 29 amid
criticism fiom union officials
ond community leaders. Bricker and other LTV executives
had been accused of providing
misleading information to

employees and hurting LTV by
paying too much to buy ocher
comparlies.
Moran said his focus will be
on rhe company's asset protection plan ond the possible sale
of steel assets.
LTV has been in Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection since
Dec. 29.
Under terms of an ~e­
ment approved fridoy in U.S.
Bonkruptcy
Court
in
Youngstown, LTV can stop
steel production but must keep
its mills in working condition
. to allow time to seek a $250
million federal loon guarantee

candles

unattended.

Anorher 27 pm::ent of candle fill'S during the wne peri. . . . . . Al
od we~ caused by c.tndles
gerous if not used properly;• bring placed too ciOS&lt;' to comCAMDEN, Maine -Word lw been teeemd here of rhe
COOLVILLE- Marjorie Jean Malone, 81, Coolville, died
she
said. "So, in an .tfurt to bwtible materials, fOllowed by
dearh of David G. Smidt, 89, at hia home at Camden, Maine, Thesday, December 11, 2001, at her farm hoUJe. Her beloved
inform the public obout the 8 percent due to chil~n playon Sunday, Dec. 2, 2001.
sister and brother-in-bw, Frances and !Uiph HendetsOn, -~ hidden dongen, we place cauing and 5 pen:ent caused by
Befote ~tiring to Camden, he WIS in cbarp of the ROTC at her side.
tion labrls on the bottom of individuals falling asleep withdetachment at Ohio Uriivellity, where he was also a lecturer in
Born September 4, 1920, in Athens, she was rhe doughter of every candle we sell."
out extinguishing candles.
accounting. He was a mired lieutenant colonel wirh rhe Unit- the late Dr. James A. and Fleda Doolittle Malone.
An analysis conducted by
"During rhe holiday s=on,
. ed States Air Force, and served as encutive din!etor of O'BleMazjorie was a respected music educator. She earned both a
State
Fire
Morshal
Robrrt
R
.
we
are ~rrtinded that good
nea Memorial Hospital.
bachelors and nwten degree in music fiom Ohio University
Rielage over a recent tive-yrar things come in small ~kages.
· Surviving are his wife, Helen Kau6nann Smith· two daugh- and began teaching in Athens County schools in 1942.
p&lt;riod showed 36 p&lt;n:ent of so it's fitting, chat we should
ters, Judith S. Meyer of Bradenton, Fla., and
L. LucunIn 1950, she left Ohio to teach at Louisiono Stote University
candle
tires occur in the bed- also use thU. time to . remind
tml of Rantoul, W.; two S()ru, Fmlerick Y. Srrtith of Fairfax Sto- in Boton Rouge, where she tnnscribed tune. played on notive
room, while 20 percent occur folks that dangerous things
tion, Va., ond Stuart G. Smith of Camden.
instruments by students fiom Africo and India.
in
the living room/family come in small pocbges;· said
He was p~ceded in death bY his first wife, Katharyn Morris
She repmented the U.S.A. at UNESCO International Conroom and 10 p&lt;n:ent in the Rielage.
- UTat" Smith.
'
ference in 1953 in Brussels, Belgium, demonstrating music
bothmom.
"I strongly urge everyone to
· · Memorial services ond interment were privately conducted · methods to chil~ in French.
Additionally. 42 p&lt;n:ent of exercise caution when using
by the family.
In 1954, she ~turned to OU to teach in the School of
candle ~s in Ohio were andles," he added.
Music, then, in 1958, Marjorie received an assistontship to study
music edu.cation at Columbia University. While in New York,
she completed her doctorote.
ceed, So, yes, the facility is
WELLSTON - Irene Thomas, 79, formerly of . Meigs
Matjorie worked for the Ohio Stote Department of Educaavailable and we wont to work
_ County and Jackson, died on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2001 at Jenk- tion fiom 1960 to 1973. After her ~ti~ment, she served as
with you. We think you hove a
ins Memorial Nuning Home in Wellston.
,
president of rhe Athens County Reti~d Teochers Association
very
viable program here that
,...Al
· Born Oct. 19, 1922 in Pomeroy, she was the daughter of rhe and the Alpha Lombda Chapter of Del to Kappa Gamma, and
can hoppen and we want to be
late Ira ond Jessie Greaser Morris. She W:u reti~d fiom rhe was also chairwoman for the Athens County Historical Society
port of that success."
ment.
Arhens State Hospital, where she Worked as a licensed proctical and Museum, as well as the Coolville area museum.
In response to a question
The first question was about
· nurse.
She was a member of Sigmo Alpha Ioto music honorary.
availability
of
the
Veterons
about
the cost to taxpayers,
Surviving are a son, Ray Thomas of McArthur; a doughter,
Marjorie was an active member in the Coolville United
· Jon Gettles ofJackson; and five grandchil~n ~nd seven ~at­ · Methodist Church, Coolville Senior Citizens, member of the Memorial Hospital building Davenport said there should be
none.
. grandchil~n.
Concerned Citizens of the Coolville area, and a proud 50-yrar for rhe community health cenHe explained that once a
She was olso preceded in death by her husband, Ernest member of the Modern Woodman of America, Camp 10900. .ter sinct Holzer Consolidoted
gront
is given, that same
Health
Systems
holds
a
longThonw; her son, Ron Thomas; two brothers, Eldon ond WalIn 1998, the Ohio Music Education Association awarded
ter Morris; and three sisteri, Mory Hysell, Mo~t Van Marjorie the Distinguished Service Award and published an term lease. Holzer was op&lt;rot- amount comes in every year,
Cooney and Geneva Morris.
article aboui her in the April 1998 issue of its publication, ing the hospital and emer- and that community-based
gency room when it closed last health centers receive higher
· · Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Eisnaugle-Lewis funeral Triad.
reimbun;emem from Medicaid
yrar.
· Home, Jackson, wirh the Rev. Robert Hatfield and the Rev.
She is survived by a sister and brother-in-law, frances and
Thomas E. Tope, president and Medicare.
Jock Hughes officiating. Burial will be in Ridgewood Ceme- Ralph Henderson of Coolville.
Recruitment of doctors Wa'i
and
chairmon, responded to
tery, Wellston. friends may call at the funetal home fiom 4-7
A, memorial service will be held at 3:30 p.m. on Sunday,
discussed, along with how renthe question. .
· p.m. Saturday.
December 16,. 2001, at the Coolville United Methodist
ovations would be financed,
He
reviewed
how
ConsoliChun:h, with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating.
dated got into Meigs County, :i.nd even the effect the new
The family has requested that flowers' be omitted.
the commitment it made to health center 1night have on
approved for . rhe auditor,
Arrangements are by White Funerol Home in Coolville.
improve the health system Holzer Clinic's operotion.
11
Common Pleas Court, Boatd
'
here, ond financial and other
Bernard Fultz spoke briefly
of Electioru, sOU and Water
problems it encountered trying on the responsiveness of HolzA1
Conserwtion, Probate Court
er Medical Center to the need
to br very important," said Eva
and County Court.
DELAWARE Eula Lillian Spencer Smith, 84, of to keep the hospital open.
Then he talked about the to make the hospital available,
The board approved the Delaware, died Thursday, December 13,2001, at Grady MemoLunder of the Governor's
proposed
plan for using part of and Susan Oliver, executive
Office ,o f A.ppalacl!ia. "Pari:ici- appointment ofTammy Zirlde rial Hospitol.
· the facility for a community director of the Meigs County
potion from citizens is an to the Thber:Culosis Board, and
She was born in Meigs Col!nty on February 25, 1917,
Council on Aging, on the
important criteria for appll- Jeon Weaver and Nora Rice to daughter of the late Willard and Bertha Biggs Spencer. She was health center.
"We're working with the importance of a community
cants."
rhe Meigs Board of Mental employed by Delo Sc~w as a machine operotor, retiring in
of Meigs County to health care center for the
people
Local .,..,...,.nments are 10. Retordation and Developmen- 1973.
.,
D'"-tal Disabilitie..
improve the health care system growing number of older peoprovide the commissioners
Surviving are a niece, Darlene (William) Vogt of Ashley; a
ple in the county.
he~.As a board member for 25
with a narrative project pmThe commissioners also: ·
cousin, Mike (Doris) Mooney of Delaware; a sister-in-law, Cleo
Both Fultz and Oliver are on
yeors of the Holzer system, I'm
.posa1 rio later chon Dec. 31 in
• Referred a ~quest to Spencer of Delaware; and several other cousins.
on your side. !understood your the steering committee.
. otder to apply.
vacate a portion of County
Besides her parents, she was p~ceded in death by her bus. Susan lsaoc and Karl Runser
situation:·
said Thpe. ·
In other business !he com- Road 398 (Deadmon's Curve) bond, Murrell Smith; and her brother, James Spencer. ·
He added ·that Holzer plans of the Institute for Local Govmissioners approwd a number to Engineer Gene Triplett.
Friends may call at Bennett Brown Rodman Funeral Home
of tnnsfen for ~ounty cleilart~ ~l'I)Yeci, ~ pun:hase ,'ilf in Delaware oil Sunday, December 16, 2001, fiom •5:.6 p.m., to continue o~ration of the ertunent Administration and
ments, including an SS,807 . sofiwln md equtpment and a where services will be held on Monday, December 17,2001, at long term care facility. but he Rural Development, who hove
tranSfer for Sherif Ralph E. Canon lmageRunner for rhe 11 a.m. with the Rev. AI Perry officioting. Burial will follow at said "the rest of the facility is been facilitators for the steering committee, were both at
there for you to use."
'!'russell for the final 2001 · Depat:tment ofjob md Family Oak Grove Cemetery.
the public meeting.
"We
w.mt
to
see
you
suepayroll.'
Services;
Memorial contributions may be made to the Delaware
namfm and appropriations
• . R~cessed their meeting County Humane Society, 4920 State Route 37 East, Delaware,
·: adjustments
wen!
also until Friday at 10 a.m.
.•. Ohio 43015.
HelpLine Gront of $2,252,
Those unable to visit the funeral home may log onto
and
a Safe, Drug-free Fullwww.bennettbrownrodman.com and log on to the funeral
Time Coordinators grant in
scene of the 4:10 p.m. crosh1 home's online registry.
the amount of $35,100 had
the patrOl said.
been received.
Troopers said White was
: IWTLAND ~ A teenager
It was also noted Dan
about
a
year
fiom
now,
while
northbound
when
she
:)Val injured in a two-vehicle
:accident Thundoy on County attempted to make a left turn
LONG BOTTOM - Arvil Dean Wiblin Sr., 88, of Scout the two new buildings are Romuno, coordinator for
onto
CR
12
(Titus)
ond
was
. ~oad 352 (Pauliris Hill) in
Camp Road, Long Bottom, died on Wednesday, December 12, scheduled for completion in Meill', was in Columbus
:Rutland Township, the Gallia- struck in rhe rear by a north- 2001 at Rocksprings Rehabiliconon Center in Pomeroy. fol- eorly 2003 and will be · ready attending a meeting whel)! he
is to be presented the Safe and
for occupancy that {all.
: Meip Post of the State High- bourtd pickup truck driven by lowing an extended illness.
The entire project comes at Drug-Free Coordinator of
H:vold E. Canon, 63, 35810
:way Patrol reported.
·
He was born on August 15, 1913, in Herford, W.Va., son of
a
cost
of $33 rrtillion.
the Year award.
Leading
Creek
Road,
Middle: - Misty F. White, 17, no
the late Jame. B. Wiblin Sr., ond Carrie L. Parsons Wiblin. He ·
Membership in the Ohio
Of the toto! ·amount,
addre11 available, was tfans- port.
was a railroader, a farmer, md an employee of the Athens
$26,856,763 comes from the School Boards Association in
Canon was unable to slow County Engineer.
ported to Pleasant Vlllley Hos: pita! by Meip EMS &amp;om .the in time ro avoid rhe collision.
He is survived by his wife, Lucy B. Thtde Wiblin; a son and Ohio School Facilities Com- the amount of $3,038 was .
daughter-in-law, Arvil Deon Jr. and Evelyn Wiblin of Albany; mission, with the remoining approved, along with Brieftwo brothers and a sister-in-law, James B. Wiblin of Beeson, $5,726,000 derived fiom local case subscriptions at a cost of
.
.
•
$284, and legal assistance fund
taxes.
1West Virginia, and Clair and Mary Wiblin of Parkersburg, West
The board also occepted consultant services for $250.
· Virginia; two grandchildren, Ronald (Anito) Wiblin of AlderLeak insurance with Lead1on, West Virginia, and Penny (Eric) Bingman of Amesville; ,$11, 742 in Tech Prep monies
ing
Creek Conserwncy Disliom Washington Stote Comeight great-grandchil~n; ond several nieces and nephews.
' Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by three broth- munity College. The grant trict for the Brodbury and
money will be used for the Harrisonville elementaries at
en, Cecil, Don and Delbert Wiblin.
Grove.ide services will be held at Evans Cemetery in Gay, electronic and computer pro- $24 o school was also
West Virginia, on Thesdoy, December 18, 2001, at 2 P.!"· with grams at the high school ..
Receipt of a Safe Schools
the ReV. Martin Alehouse officiating.
'
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Monday, December 17, 2001, fiom 7-9 p.m.

Dnld Sndlh

Sarah

..... 'ftlomas

Health
r.u..

.,Bnt
G

Eula Smith

fnMa ....

Arvll Wlblln Sr.

and to ti.nd a buyer.
The agreement put on hold
until Feb. 28 o permanent shutdown of LTV Steel, the nation's
third-largest integrated steel
company and producer of
about 5 percent of U.S. steel.
Meonwhile, about 7,500 LTV
Steel employees at mills in
Cleveland, Hennepin, IU., and
East Chicago. Ind., are laid off
or doing maintenance work.
There was no immediate
~action fiom the United Steelworkers of America of Moron's
appointment. Messages were
left at the union's headquarters
and Ohio District 1 office.

LOCAL STOCKS

Thete 's still time
to win this
little red wagon!

No Appointment Necessary
7 Days A Week • 9:00am - 9:00pm

Red SkeltoD (Rudolph's Shiny
New Year was touring with a
medicine llhow at age 10, and in
vaudeville by 15.

.'

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Deadline Extended To
Sunday, December 16th
.

Correction Polley
Our maln concem In aN otorieols
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error In a story. cafl the nOWII'OOm
at (74D) 992·2156.

n

(Check individual stores for hours)

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r

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You could still win $100

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Department elC1entlona are:

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bealptlon by
l!lljl ptfl!littod In • - homo
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Obituaries

Filldllf, DICIRhf 14. 200l

Ohio names Wisconsin expert to·mediate talks

The O.lly 81ntlnel • Peoe A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PageAl

SCHOOL-FUNDING

Ohio weather

0

_Frldlly, Dec. 14, 2001

...

ALL AGES, All TIMES 5 4 00

'

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'

•

'•

�. ',••..

•

;~ The Daily Sentinel

·-·

• •

PageA4

Optnton
•

Flld1J,

The Daily Sentinel

~£~
~

111 Court lt., ~Ohio
740 111'1111• Fa:
117

.. .
~:

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D•n•b• 1t. 2001
...

Ohio Vaii•Y Publlahlng CO.

•• •

Charles W. Qovey
Pubii-'-

-. J

______,.,...____
-·
,_,It",.,... ....

.'

Chulene Hoellloh
Oenerlll 'ir" IIF

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

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•

NATIONAL VIEW

' I

Lessons
They've been learned about our ·
security, except·by Congress

l.
•

.,l!.
f
j

:

I•

!
1

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I'

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:•
:

• The Advertirer-Trlb~n•. TUBn, Ohio, on lliQIOrt srcurity:
The House-passed airport security bill takes ~o heart hard
lessons already learned in Europe· and Israel: The ben way for
government to increase security is to ser high standards and let
industry worry about how to get then:. The necessary deliberation involved in a dernoGtatic rejpllarory process simply does
not allow a bureaucracy to aqjust quickly enough to changing
threats.
The Senate earlier took the politically easier way out, voting
to create a new pork barrel of 28,000 federal airport security
screener jobs. But even with provisions putting a new security
force under justice Department authority .- and therefore
with somewhat Jesser civil service protections - it was far
short of the flexible, state-of-the-art change necessary after
Sept. 11.
Israel and the Europeans already have tried government-run
airport security. It failed1 tOt the simple reason that government
moved too slow to respond to new threau. brae! and most
European airports now haVe -the world's best air passenger
security because they set high standards and leave it to private
providers.
·
Shortly after the House passed its venion of airport security
legislation, President Bush quickly· mdoned it and urged
House and Senate; confetlei .co get a finished product to his
de.sk. Coni!re!s sli~uld heed the president's wishes, thereby
allowing comp:inies tG invest in airport security upgrades without fear oflosing their lnvestmenu to federal interventlon.

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

....' TODAY IN HISTORY
;· ;

8Y THEASIOCl.t.T£0 Jlflhl
Today is Friday, Dec. 14, the 348th day of 2001. There are 17
1• •
&lt;• days left in the year.
·
:· · Today's Highlight in History:
• I On Dec. 14, 1799, the tint president of the Urtited States, ·
George Washington, died at his Mount Vernon home at age 67.
· On this date:
In 1819,Aiabamajoined the Union as the 2~nd state.
In 1861, Prince Albert, husband of Queen Vicroria, died in
London.
In 1911, Norwegian exploter Roald Amundsen became the
first man to reach the·~uth Pole, beating out an expedition led
by Robert F. Scott. .
In 1939, the Soviet Union was dropped tRJin the League of
Nations.
.
, • In 1946,the U.N. General Assembly voted to establish United Nations headquarten ln New York.
In 1962, the U.S. space probe Mariner 2 approached Venus,
.. transmitting information about the planet.
In 1975, six South Moluccan extremists surrendered after
holding 23 hos.tages for 12 days on a train near the Dutch town
ofBeiien.
In 1980, fans around the world paid tribute to John Lennon,
six days after he was shot to death in New York C:ity.
.
In .1981, Israel annexed the Golan 1-iel~ts, which i~ had
seized from Syria in 11167.
"
In 1986, the experimental ~rcraft Voyager, piloted by Dick
Rutan and Jeana Yeager, took off from Edwards Air Force Base
in California on the tint non-stop, non-refueled flight around
· • the world.
Ten years ago: President Bush and Mc.xican President Carlos
Salinas de Gortari, meeting at Camp David, Md., renewed their
commitment to conclude quickly the North American Free
Trade Agreement.
'• Five years ago: A freighter lost power on the Mississippi
River and barreled · into. the PJ\IerWal.k. complex in. New
Orleans (no one was killed). 'Il:allllJten President Ron Carey
won election to a second term (howeVer, the results Were later
overturned ·and Carey barred from a rerun vote by a courtappointed monitor who ruled that Carey had used union
money for his campaign).
One year ago: President-elect Georg~ W. Bush conferr¢d by
phone with congressionalleaddrs ofboth parties and plumed a
' ; goodwill tour ofWashington, D.C.; he also recei:ved a flood of
• 1 congratulatory calls from world leaden on his tint full day as
· 1 president-elect. U.S. businessman Edward · Pope was pardoned
11 and released by Russia after being convicted of espiMage. The
Federal Trade Commission unanimously ajlproved the S111
1 • billion merger of Amerka Online and Time Warn¢1'.
Today's Birthdays: jazz musician Clark 'Il:rry is 81. "60 Min' I utes" executive producer Don Hewitt is 79. Actor-playwright
j J George Furth is 69. Actor Hal WIUfatiu is 63. Actress Patty
: I Duke is 55: Pop singer Joyce Vi11cent-Wilson (Tony Orlando
: I and Dawn) is 55. Entertainment executive Michael Ovltz is 55.
; 1 Actress Dee Wallace Stone is 53. Rock musician ClilfWilliallllJ
• I (AC/DC) is 52. Rock singer-musician Mike Scott {The Water: 1 boys) is 43. Singer-mulician Peter "Spider" Stacy (The Pogues)
; 1 is 43. Actress Cynthia. Gibb is 38. Rhythin•a.nd-blues singer
: i Brian Dalyrimple (Soul For Real) Is 26. Model Bridget Hall is
~ ~ 24.

:!

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SAINTS AND SINNERS

Remember Andy Hardy? So are a lot if people now
'

The new edition of the "Video Movie
Guide" (Ballantine, 2002) is out. One
change I have noted is that the Andy
Hardy movies, which received a two-star
rating in the old book, now get three
stars.
I wonder if this tells us something
about ourselves - that in these days of
mounting stress in our lives we are getting to appreciate once again the things
that used to give us a good feeling, such
as the Andy Hardy movies.
A:re we coming •to realize that "the
things that belong unto our peace" may
lie more in the past than in the present,
and that our future happiness may
depend on our rediscovery of some of
the secrets we have lost in our mad rush
toward the present?
Nostalgia, as novelist John Cheever has
·reminded us, can be more than a long,
loving backward look. Finding ourselves
not in the world we love but knowing
how deeply we Jove it. there is kindled
within us the conviction that we will
~d a way to return to it in the future.
The Hardys - like .the Arnold family
on television's "Wonder Years" (coming
back in reruns) and the Berger family on
"Brooklyn Bridge" - showed us the
happiness and satisfaction that can come
from a simple lifestyle, domestic stability
and a virtuous life. When we watch
them we feel better.
Today, the Hardy family is all but forgotten. Or was. At the library where I
went a few years ago to borrow a videotape from the Hardy series, all 16 were
on the shelf. "Nobody ever asks for

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST

would have ended up on the cuttingroom floor today slipped by innocently.
In a scene from the 1938 movie, "Love
Finds Andy Hardy," Andy is tryirig to get
his girlfriend Polly Benedict (Anne
Rutherford) to let him kiss her.
She plays coy and says no.
"You let me kiss you last night," Andy
reminds her.
"You kissed me last night by force,
Andy Hardy!" she replies.
"It's good that way, too;' says Andy,
with that ever-present gleam in his eye.
Andy lived for cars and girls,
Given today's sensitivity to anything
suggesting sexual harassment, we don't
even kid nowadays about forcing our
affections on someone else. But back iri
the 1930s and '40s, Andy's antics came
under the heading of good, clean fun.
Which they were -- especially by today's
gross standards.
Something else I miss today from the
Hardy series is Judge Hardy's man-to·
man talks with Andy, which were a staple of the series.
. When Andy comes to his father after
breaking up with his girl of the
moment, the judge consoles him with
this thought: "There is no sorrow in the
world. Andrew, thai a lot of other people
couldn't match."
Trite? Maybe. But when Judge Hardy
said it, it sounded wise and comforting.
We could use some of the old-fashioned
moralizing of our parents.

them," said the librarian. Maybe that wiD
change now that the series has earned a
three-star rating.
The endearing (and enduring) Hardy
series ran from 1937 to 1946. Based on a
play · about a small-toWn judge and his
family, the first Hardy movie, featuring
the young Mickey Rooney, cast Lionel
Barrymore as the tolerant Judge Hardy,
md Spring Byington as Mrs. H~y.
The film was such a box-office hit that
MGM deci\led to make it into a series.
It became MGM's all-time biggest moneymaker. The series was a stepping-stone
to stardom for Judy Garland, Esther
Williams, Lana Thrner, Donna Reed and
Kathryn Grayson.
When Barrymore, after the first
movie, turned down a chance to continue playing Judge Hardy bee2use of the
arthritis that eventually put him in a
wheelchair, the role went to the courtly
Lewis Stone.
·
The Hardy series were made in · the
days before sexual harassment was on
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
everyone's minds, so some thin!!' that Newspaper E"terprise Association.)

WEST'S VIEW

'Files' reveal lost opportunities·on Clinton swatch
Good news, sort of, for Bill Clinton
and Madeline Albright. Having persisted
in telling tales at cross-purposes to
explain why the Clinton administration
didn't do too much about Osama bin
Laden and the AI Qaeda network for all
those Clinton years, these two erstwhile
officeholders m.ay now read from the
san1e page -literally -and discover in
the january issue of Vanity Fair what
went wrong on their watch.
With the publication of "The Osama
COWMNIST
Files" by David Rose, the former president and former secretary of state get a Jy such a brilliant idea, for example, for
second chance to see the letters and the State Department to have nixed. even
secret memoranda that they, along with a meeting between the FBI and
their top aides at the White House and Sudanese intelligence in 1998. As Janet
the State Department, once ignored or McElligott, a lobbyist who served in the
failed to act upon. The rest of us, mean- fim Bush administration, said at the time
while, get a first look at a paper trail doc- when urging the Clinton administration
umenting the futile efforts by Sudan, of to examine Sudan's info-trove, "You do
all places, to alert the United States to the realize bin Laden Jived there in Sudan
workings, the identities and the move- and they have files on his main people?"
ments of the AI Qaeda network, includThe Vanity Fair article - a dramatic
ing Osama bin Laden.
expansion of a piece David Rose wrote
Sudan, of course, is no land of milk and for a British newspaper in late September ·
honey. Indeed, it is a pit of violence, per- - reports that Sudan began rrying to
secution, and even slavery of Christians open the books on bin Laden in Februand animists. But, amazingly, there is a ary 1996, well in advance of the terrorist
"but"- beginning in 1996, Sudan made attacks that would make the Saudi-born
a series of diplomatic overtures to the terrorist infamous. That means that for
Clinton administration: Hoping to see its more than four years the Clinton adminterrorism sanctions lifted, Sudan initiated istration refused even to consider intellia campaign to establish anti-terrorism gence that might have prevented the
credentials -based on its apparently exten- bombing of the Khobar Towers (June
sive files on the AI Qaeda network.
1996), the destruction of the American
In the leisure of political retirement, embassies in Kenya and Tanzania (August
~linton and Albright may now reconsid- . 1998), the attack on the USS Cole
er .the wisdom of having rejected (October 2000), and, of course, Sept. 11.
Sudanese President Omar ai-Bashir's No wonder Mansoor ljaz, a wealthy Pakwritten offer to open his country to istani-American Muslim and Clinton
American investigators in. 1997. They supporter who participated in a series of
may now · look back on the repeated failed back-channel efforts to persuade
efforts Sudan made to share its dossiers Clinton officials to· study Sudan's files,
on ·known terrorists with the United wrote last week in the Los Angeles Times
States and reflect on whether it was real- that this blindfolded American approach

Diana
West

"represents one of the most serious foreign policy failures in American history"
But why was such potentially vital infermarion not only ignored, but never even.
evaluated?
"The simple answer is that the Clinton
administration had accused Sudan of
sponsoring terrorism, and refused to
believe that anything it did to prove its
bona fides c'ould be .genuine;'Vanity Fair
reports. No doubt this is true. But there
could be more to this scandalous foul-up
than the politicization of intelligence.
Just ask what mattered more to Clintonites in june of 1996: the news on june
25 that a truck bomb had exploded at
Khobar Towers in Dharan, Saudi Arabia,
or the Supreme Court's decision of the
day before to hear Jones v. Clinton after
the 1996 re-election campaign? Or compare another strange confluence of
events. What more likely pre-occupied
Bill Clinton and his advisers in August of
1998: the embassy bombings in Africa on
Aug. 7, or Clinton's appearance before a
grand jiiry in connection with the
Lewinsky matter 10 days later?
Given the permanent reconfiguration
of the Clinton White House into a scandal-busting spin machine, the answers to
such questions are obviou.•, if distasteful .
They may help explain, for example, why
Sudan's offer to extradite two suspected
bombers (and AI Qaeda members), made
in the days ·between the 1998 embassy
bombing and Clinton's grand jury
appearance, was met with silence except, of course, for the sound ofAmerican bombs falling on what was reportedly a medicine factory in Khartoum .
Scandal-riddled, th e Clinton administra'cion simply failed to function.That, surely, is the biggest scandal of all.

(Diana l#st is a coll•mnist and editorial
writer for T11e Washington Times. She can be
contacted via dianaww@attglobal. net.)

e~l-----!~=., the Bend
fttU1.
Dinner partner~ payment pian is difficult to swallow

_The_D_aily_Se_ntin_·

DEAR. ABBY: One of the perks
of my job is receiving free or discounted meals at local restauraniJ.
Last week I was invited to dine at
one of the best restauraniJ in town. 1
thought that "Tess," one of my coworkers, might also enjoy it, so I
invited her to share the meal with
me. I warned her that we would
probably be expected to pay for part
of the dinner. She said that would be
tine.
Halfway through the meal, our
server informed us that we would be
expected to pay 50 percent of the
bill. Tess told me she had forgotten
her wallet, and asked if I'd pick up
the tab. She promised to pay me
back, so I agreed. Then she said she
could afford to pay me only Sl from
each future paycheck, and asked if it
was all right for her to order a $10
dessert as well.

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
Abby, I was so shocked I could
hardly respond. At that Qte it will
take her a year to pay me back! I
understand that people are having a
hard time in this economy, but Tess
and I are paid the sault. I don't
exactly have a bundle of money to
spare either. How should I handle
this? FLABBERGASTED IN
OREGON
.
DEAR FLABBEI\~ASTED:
Keep meticulous recor:tjs, put your

hand out every payday - and pray
she gets a Christmas bonus.
DEAR. ABBY: I want to tell you
how my 10-year-old daughter handled a bully. One day after school,
she carne home and told me about
the physical and verbal abuse she was
experiencing at the hands of a boy in
her class. It was never-ending. I
asked if she wanted me to intervene.
She said she wanted to handle the
situation herself.
1 then suggested she keep a diary
of all the things this boy said and did
to her. I told her to take her diary to
the principal when the felt she had
enough evidence to support her
case. After several weeks, I got a
phone call &amp;om the principal of her
school. She had just seen my daughter and her diary. The boy and his
· parents were called in immediately.
The abuse stopped that day. She

Sons of Union Veterans of Civil
War remember last real son
MIDDLEPORT -The last
- ' living real son of a Union sol, dier living .i n Ohio, Sanford
Brumfield of Crown City,
who died on Nov. 17, was
- honored at a recent meeting
of Brooks-Grant Camp Sons
of Union Veterans of the Civil
War.
Meeting at the PJverbend
Arts Council building in Mid. dleport, Michael Trowbridge,
commander, report on the
death ofBrumfield, who was a
life member of the camp based
on his father, Pvt. Sloan
Brumfield.
The camp sent tlowers and
participated as pall bearers at
the interment in Rome
Cemetery near Proctorville.
The charter of the camp was
draped in his memory.
Also, the recent death of,
· John Lavery of Huntington at
· the reenactment of the Battle
of Guyandotte was remembered. The recent injury of
Alan Holter was noted and a
card was signed for him.
A report was given on the
.. preservation of Buffington
· Island Battlefield. A meeting
with the county coinmissioners is planned to discuss the
property in Portland. A meeting was held with the Portland

A report was given on
the preservation of
Buffington Idand
Battlefield. A meeting
with tl1e county
commissioners is
planned to discuss the
property in Portland.

'

letter. You and your daughter hanhim.
dled the situation beautifully.
'frying to handle the problem herDEAR. ABBY: I haw been shopself gave my daUJhter a sense of ping with my mother to find a dress
power, confidence and control over for her to wear at my wedding next
her own life. Let me add. I was mon- spring. She wants to wear a tuXedoitoring the situation froril a distance. style jacket with a long. straight skirt
Hid my daughter not been taken and a red or white bustier.
seriously by the principal. I would
Abby, my mother just doesn't get
have stepped in .
it. She thinks the Madonna lingerie
Today my daughter ii a senior in look is appropriate, and she intends
high school - an outgoing, happy. to wear it to my wedding whether I
kind , confident young woman. like it or not.
Maybe her story will help someone
Any thoughts on this? else caught in this situation. EMBARRASSED BRIDE-TO-BE
HEATHER'S MOM, MESA,
DEAR BRIDE: Just one: If
ARIZ.
there's any chance the mother-ofDEAR. MOM: Your suggestion is the-bride's outfit will distract attenan excellent one. As with any other tion from the bride, the outfit should
form of harassment, documenting be saved for another ~casion.
the incidents and building a body of
evidence was vital. I hope other vicDtar Abby is writtm by P..uli.u
tims of bullying will learn from your Phillips and daughtn jttmllt Phillips.
:

Happy Holidays
from Ohio Valley Publishing

them how different products have different values,
and helped them learn how
to spend money wisely. She
also used books and a variety of items in te.a ching her
students at Bidwell Porter
Elementary School in Gallia
County.
"It . was thrilling," Priest
said. "It worked beautifully."
Bauer said her students
learn a lot about economics
by working on the lesson
plan projects and the elementary student! get a lot
out of it, too. Bauer h~ her
students work on these economics projects every year,
and the students never cease
to amaze her with the presentations and lesson plans
they plan. This year, ·she
said, the students once again
put together some fine
leuons for the area elementary students. ·
"They did very .well,''
Bauer said about her st\1dents,

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We remember those who have passed away
a.n~ are especially dear to us.
On Thuraday, December 20, 2001, we will publish a special page devoted to thole who .are gone
but not forgotten. They will blllmllar to tha aampla below:

David

c. Andnwl

JuJr tO, tl8t·Ma¥ S, 1880

~~

The camp voted to send a
' Christmas gift of $50 to the
'"last Jiving Union widow,
Bertha Janeway ofTennessee.
' New officers elected were
James Oiler of Thurman,
commander; Alan Holter of
Five Points, senior vice commander;James Cline ofBeverly,junior vice commander; the
Rev. Tad Cuckler of Shade, ·
community concerning the secretary; James Mourning of
recently abandoned Portland Middleport, treasurer; and
Grade School property and its
Myron Jones of Oak Hill, first
potential usage in the scheme
year camp 'council member.
of the battlefield.
Installation will be held at the
A petitio!:\ with 172 names
January meeting.
.
oflocal residents asking for the
The program · for the
building to remain in the pubevening was presented by Jean
lic domain was presented to
Hilton of Parkersburg. She rethe commissioners.
enacts as Miss Rosebud of the
Work is continuing on
Afternoon Tea Sipping Society
obtaining a secretary's seal for
the camp. The members and Massage Parlor at Civil
applauded a recent letter from War events. She was dressed in
Sen. Michael DeWine indicat- full lady's Civil War attire. Her
ing his willingness to take an program was on various
applicaiion for membership to female spies of the Civil War.
Preceding the meeting the
President George W. Bush
group
. held its annual dinner
based on his great-great
grandfather's Union service in honor of the.anniversary of
from Ohio.The camp voted to President Lincoln's first declapurchase an large membership ration ofThanksgiving and his
C/2rtiticate and membership "Gettysburg Address." Tro:w- ·
medal to present to Prtsident bridge welcomed 38 members
and guests to the banquet.
Bush.

Darmhr 1t. 2111

never had another problem with

Rio ·Grande students teach economics
RIO GRANDE A
Ba11er said her stlldents learn a lot abollt
group of students at the
economics by ivork.ing on the lesson plan
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Comprojects and the elementary students
munity College got a lesson
get a lot Ollt of it, too.
in economics recently, and
then passed on what they they had learned.
•
Michelle Fraley, a. junior
had learned to area elemenFor many of the education from Circleville, said she was
tary students.
students, this was their first also worried about doing
The Rio Grande students experience with an econom- the project when ·she first
were all education students ics lesson plan. At many uni- heard about it. As it turned
being taught by Associate versities education students out, though, her students at
Professor Linda Bauer. As . receive ~ery little or no ceo- Central Elementary School
part of the _class, the students nomics education. The study in Point Pleasant had fun
worked. wnh Car~! Smnh, of economics is often very learning about economics
the proJeCt coordmator for important for new teachers and money, and she was very
the Loren M . Berry Center because there is an econom- happy with her project.
fo~ Economic Educatio~ at ics section on the state profi"It was great," she said.
. R1o Grande and the . a~vnor ciency tests. In addition, area "The kids loved it."
. . to the Students In Free students ·need to Jearn the
Cindy Chapman, a sophoEnterprise (SIFE) chapter at basics of economics so that .more from Point Pleasant,
· Rio Gtande.
they can become business and Christy • Caldwell, a
. Smith and some students leaders when they grow ·up. junior from Rio Grande,
m the SI_FE program helped
Shannon Thomas, a jqnior made their economics proto. orgamze the Free Enter- from Meigs County; said she ject fit in with the unit their
pme Advocacy Teacher was worried about how she students at Central Elemen(FEAT) program for Rio would do the economics tary School in Point Pleasant
Grande educa~ion majors to ·project when she first heard were already studying. ·
, teach econom1cs m the area about it. ... .
,"
They focused their project
"I was panicking. I had no on the hibernation of ani" classroollllJ where they were
. doing their student teaching. idea what to do," Thomas mals and cleverly tied that
The SIFE program and the said.
subject together with ecoBerry Center provided grant
In working with her class nomics.
Chapman
and
money for each student, .so at Bradbury Elementary Caldwell make banks that
that they could receive the School in Meigs' County, she looked like animals, gave the
funding needed to do their came up with the idea to students play money, and
projects, and Smith offered teach her students about had them save their money
suggestions for possible pro- assembly Jines that are used in the banks. The students
jects the students could do in in factories. The students in then learned aboui saving
the classrooms .
her class had to decide how money and spending it
"They did a wonderful to work together to first wisely.
job," Smith said. "We. really create an assembly line to
Amy Priest, a senior from
enjoyed their projects."
create a paper chain, and Gallipolis,. showed her stuOn Thursday, Dec. 6, the them to make buckeyes.
dents . examples of Native
Rio Grande students preOne of the highlights of American items that they
sented their projects togeth· the class for the students, she could purchase in their
er on the Rio Grande cam- added, was when they ate ·all classroom. The 'Jesson she
pus and talked about what of the buckeyes.
· taught her students showed

Page AS

May God's anceta
Quide yo• and
protect you
throqb.out time.
•

I. We hold you in our lhouihllllld 1111mori01 fcnYet.
2. May Ood cradle you In His- now llld ron..,..
3. F010vtr miued, never loraottaJ. May Ood hold you in lho jllllm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for lhe wonderfUl days we oharodlllplhor. My JnYm
will be with you unUI we meet opin.
l Tho days we ohanld were lweet. lloniiO.., you opin in Ood's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courqe and bnvel)' IIi II in1pi10 uo all, ond the momory of your
unilo filla us with joy and lauaht.er.
7. Thouah out of aiJhl, you'll fonJver be in my hoallllld mind.
8. Tho days may come llld ao. but lho ~- we abated will always remoin.
9. Maylho llpll of peaoe shine on your face for eternll)'.
10. May Ood's IJIICII auide you llld ~you duouahout dmo .
II. You wm aliaht in our life thai burna f....., in our hew.
11 May Ood'a araces lliine over you for all~ ....
13. You are in our lhouahu and praym from momlna 10 nlahlllld from
year 10 year.
14. We aend tlliameuaae widi aloving kiu forel&lt;malJOSt llld happi11111.
15. May die Lcrd bless you with His JIICOS and wum,lovina hoall.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY1
SEND t7.00 PER LISTING • tl2 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill OUI the form below and drop orr to

The Dally Senllnel
Willi Fondeol Memorlea
111 Cow1 St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

DEADUNE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, Noon

r-------~-~--~--------------------~----,
Please publish my tributll in the special Memory Page on Thursday, December 20.
1
Nameofd~~--------------------------------------------------

Relationship to m't-------~~-------------- Number of selected verse---Datil of binh - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Datil of passin..__________
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�.,_A I • The Dllllv Sentinel

Friday, Dec. 14,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

SOCIEIY SCRAPBOOK
POMEROY - MacKenzie
Jeanine Brooks, daughter ofJeff
and Missy Trussell Brooks of
Bashan, celebrated her second
birthday with a part at
McDonalds in Pomeroy.
Several family members
attended the party. She also
n=ceived gifts from other family members and friehds unable
to attend.
She is the granddaughter of
Peggy Trussell of Bashan and
KeUy Winebn=nner of Racine,
and Ken and Viola Brooks of
Rutland; and the great-granddaughter of Ralph and Jean
MecKenzle Broob
Trussell of Bashan, and the
great-great-granddaughter of Faye Kirkhart ofBashan. ·

Junior gardeners
turn ourds into
holi ay ornaments

"Teachers ano on the front lines of the defining challenge of
our generation - enabling every child to succeed," said Tot.
"Our Governor's Conuniuion on Teaching Success pulls together an accomplished, broad-based team of
educators, bwiness ·a nd community leaden, p=nts and lltlldena, to enable us to ensun= student success by providing the
best possible teachers. •
The Commission on Teaching Success will advise the Governor, the Ohio Gmeral Assembly, the State Board of Education
and the Ohio Board of Regents on matters n=lating to teacher
recruitment and preparation, professional
development, support and n=tention. It will n=port on its conclwions and make n=commendations by December 31, 2002.

.!"

RUTLAND -A gourd is a gourd until it is dried and
decorated and becomes a Christmas tree ornament.
The Rutland Jade Junior Gardeners under the leadership
ofJanet Bolin used gourds for their holiday craft project this

year.

UMW holds annual

POMEROY - Pomeroy Attorney Jennifer Shee!J who is
president of the Ohio State Board of Education, is one of 46
people appoi11ted to the Governor's Commission on Teaching
Success.
~·
The commission is charged with recommending policies to
ensure a caring, competent teacher for every student in Ohio.
The Commission on Teaching Success is an outgrowth of the
Governor's Commission for Student Success, whose work provided the foundation for S.B. 1 - the Student Success bill Gov.
Bob Tafi signed into law on June 12, 2001.
The new law creoted a system of high academic standards,
common-sense assessments and accountability for results,
including a process for persistently failing schools. It al.!o established the Governor's Commission on Teaching Success.

POMEROY - The annual Christmas dinner party of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Women was held recently at Crows
·
·
Restaurant.
Pastor Rod Brower and his wife, Sherrie, wen= guesrs. Oth~
ers attending were Myrtis Parker, Evelyn Clark, Martha
Hoover, Eunice Jones, Dorothy "and Janet Downie, Joanne
Vaughan, Faye Wildermuth, Polly Eichinger, Bonnie Kelly,
Leona Cleland, Isabelle Wolfe, Sue Tubb&lt;, and Alice Struble.
Following the dinner, the group returned to the church for
a program presented by Martha Hoover. Theme was "Angels."
Scripture readings wen= given from Matthew, Luke, Genesis,
Exodus and Numbers.
The women gave gifts to Good Works in Athens, the
Pomeroy Men's Shelter, and the Meigs Cooperative Parish for
food baskets for needy families.

I

At the recent Mei&amp;' County Garden Clubs Associ:tnon
Christmas flower show, they shared their expertise on how
to make an ugly gourd all covered with mold into a beautiful Christmas ornament.
Material they secured from the American Gourd Society
of Mt. Gilead on how to prepano gourds for painting was
available to visitors, and they displayed a tree aU decorated
with &lt;¥"naments made from gourds.
Gourds aren't pretty when they ~re in the process of drying, as any of the junior gardeners will tell you.
In fact they become very ugly as they go through the long
process of drying out. They look as if they are rotting, and
then they become all covered with a nasty looking mold.
However, according to information from the American
Gourd Society. mold is not a sign of rotting. Shriveling up

SYRACUSE - Syracwe Village will have a holiday decorat•
ing contest. Wildwood Garden Club will be escorting judges
around the village on Tuesday, between 6 and 11 p.m. l:'rizes
wiU be awarded in the amounts of $25,$15 and $10 for first,
second, and third place respectively.

Attua11ey atJIM!Inled to Govemor"s
Commission on Teaching_

TORA BORA, Afglunistan (AP)
Backed by intensifying U.S.
airstrikes, Afghan tribal fighters
launched a new assoult Thursday
against trapped ai-Qaida forces. Commanders said key terrorist leaders had
· likely fled Osama bin Laden's besieged
mountain base for neighboring Pak' istan.
' The whereabouts of bin Laden
remained unknown.
' Front-line commanders of the tribal eastern aUiance said they now
intended to wipe out the Atab and
foreign Muslim fighters from al-Qaida
afier two deadlines to surrender fell
: through over the past two days - the
latest ot noon Thursday.
AC-130 gunships, armored aircraft
with Gatling guns, strafed ai-Qaida
positions as B-52s circled over the

SENTINEl. NEWS STAff

Decoratlnc contest planned

·ChristmaS dinner

lS .

As gourds dry, they become very light and the seeds inside
may rattle. Once dried, they are ready for cleaning ami decorating with paints or varnish.
.
The recommended procedure to clean gourds is to soak
them in warm water for a while to make removing the
outer skin and the mold easier. Sometimes a regular kitchen
scrubbing pad is needed to get it all off.
Before painting and decorating gourds, they need to be
dried thoroughly.

ous in this one,,. he said.
Tentatively titled "X2," the
sequel is set to begin filming
in May 2002.

Chabin
loses job
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Jim Chabin, TV academy
president during the tumultuous period in which the

•
qtillion

award show's $3.5
day.
production budget, academy
officials said.

Memorial
h0n01S victimS
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -A
local art memorial honoring
victims of tho Sept. 11 terrorist attacks will be presented
Friday to New York City
police and fire officials.
"Expression of Hope" is an
8-by-8-foot memorial featuring 16 paintings that portray American solidarity and .
the heroism that followed the
attacks.
"A lot of people in the
Florida Keys wanted to feel
they were doing something
after the attacks," said Mike
Donovan, who organized the
project. "There were so mariy
fund-raisers, but I wanted this
to be differmt and let New
York citizens know that we
were thinking of them."
Donovan enlisted the help
of Rick Van Leuven, a retired
New York City police
sergeant. The two also established a scholarship fund for
children of the victims.
The memorial also lists the
names of Key West police
officers and firefighters, and
photographs of the 16 artists
who donated their work.
Officials at New York City
police headquarters will
accept it.
A similar memo~ial, featuring the works of 16 high
school students from Key
West, is to be presented to
Pentagon officials on Thurs-

Picasso work
displayed

NEW DELHI, India (AP)
-1\Vo Indian museums will
exhibit paintings, sculptures,
drawings and poetry by Pablo
Picas 50.
"Picasso Metamorphoses
1900-1972" will open Friday
at the National Museum in
New Delhi, where it will be

Santa, Pomeroy Library, 11
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
POMEROY -· Wooden toy
contest to be held at Fanners
Bank. Entries accepted any·
time before noon Saturday
when judging will take place.
Prizes will •be awarded for
first, second and third. Tamml
Zirkle, chairman of contest
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association. ·

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
POMEROY Breakfast
Fellowship, Friday noon, Mid· with Santa, Meigs Museum,
dleport Church of Christ. 1 Saturday, serving from 9 to 11
Members to take · $1 gift for a .m. Craft project for children.
exchange. -Finger foods for
lunch.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School Christ•
MIDDLE:PORT
Ash mas concert, Saturday, 7 p.m.
Street Church, Middleport, in the high school gym. Brass
concert, Fri~ay, 7 p.m. with quartet, hand bell choir, and
Forgiven 4, Earthen Vessels, concert band. Everyone wei·
JOY-FM Trio, and Jason come.
Cooper.

decorations has been a craft project this year of the Rutland
1ade Junior Gardeners. Here COdy Cook of Middleport
admires the tree trimmed with decorated gourds. (Charlene
·
•
•Hoeflich photo)

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India's National Ga)lery of
Modern Art announced the

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Available

exhibit on Wednesday.
Picasso was born in Spain
but chose France "as a favorable climate to express his
creation," said French Ambassador Bernard de Montferrand. "Picasso is the best
exafnple of looking to the
outside for influence while
you keep your identity and
enrich it."

POMEROY -

.

.

MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet at 11 :30 a.m . . on
Monday at the firehouse. A
Christmas potluck will be
served with the center provid·
ing the ham. Individual blood
pressur~ readings will also be
taken. All senior citizens are
Invited to attend.

Stone Jars
25% off
Honey
Molasses
Molasses

MIDDLEPORT ·- Middle·
port Board o( Public Affairs, 1
p.m. Monday in council cham·
bers. Only December meet·lng.
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, regular
December meeting, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Southern Ele·
mentary School cafetorium.

· Are you having special serVIces
during the Christmas holiday?

23.40

NOW 17.55
12.60 NOW
9.45
5.99 . NOW 4.50 ql
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Candles
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Live Wreaths
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Live Wreaths
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Slates
30.00 NOW 20.00
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12.60 NOW
7.60

Watching a smiling Osama
bin Laden assess the Sept. 11
terror attacks, a man who
was in the World Trade Center that day said he wanted
to smash his TV screen. Said
a Marine who also watched
bin Laden, "He needs to be
taken out."
For many other Ameri·cans, seeing the tape Thursday confirmed their already
solid belief in bin Laden'&lt;
guilt and hatefulness.
Some American Muslims
worried · that release of the
videotape, showing bin
Laden and top aides cheerfuUy discussing the attack's
outcome, would provoke a
new \vave of harassment and
vandalism against them,
while the father of a· Sept. 11
victim wished it had never
been made public.
"Whenever I saw it on

SMOKING GUN - People stop at a kiosk In New York's Javlts Convention Center to watch a videotape of Osama bin
laden. On the tape, released and translated by the Department of Defense, bin ·laden recalls the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks against America saying the destruction exceeded his
estimates and the event "benefitted Islam greatly.· (AP)
television I changed the
channel," said Anthony
Gambale, whose daughter,
Giovanna, was killed at the
World Trade Genter.
"It should be filed away

WASHINGTON (AP) aumnder, but "this is not a drill
Defense Secretary Donald H. where we are malcina deall."
R111111&amp;1d and the Pentagoni . "We want to get the terrortop general denied Thunday isa.The futeat way II if they •urlhat the U.S. goal in Afghanistan tender.... That would be wonis to exterminate al-Qaida ter- derful," the Pentagon chief said,
zoriltl.lt would be wonderful if adding that it would be the best
they sumnder, Rumsfeld said. way to gather information
"This is not a war of exier- about the al-Qaida terrorist
mination;• Gen. Richard networks around the world.
Meyer, chairman of the Joint
''To may knowledge, the U.S.
CrudS of Staff, said after being did not nix, stop or put the
questioned about a report in 'kibosh' on anything," RumsThe Washington Post that feld said.
Washington scuttled a deal that
Meyer said there is an obviwould have aUowed Osarna bin ous advantage to keeping susLaden's supporters to surrender. pected terrorists alive in order
"I personally would like· to to glean intelligence informasee people surrender;' said tion fi:om them.
Rumsfeld. The secretary said
Meyer described the fighting
those fighting U.S. and opposi- in Tora Bora - where many
tion fof!:es in Afghanistan have suspected AI-Qaida fighters are
been given plenty of options to stiU holding .out with leader

&amp; Country Garden Center

.

Missile
treaty
'
WASHINGTON (A~)
In a historic break
with Russia, President
Bush served formal notice
Thursday that the Unit~d
States 1s withdrawing
from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, :a
move effective in six
months'.
"I .
have
concluded the

•,,••

$10 Catalog Certificate

'

i
I

1

(Deadline Tuesday December 18th at noon.)

.""
•••

Mon • Sat - 9am·5pm
- Noon·4pm

,,

'

Osama bin Laden -as a "pretty big fight. ... It's war. We hope

we come out with some intelligence, that means taking people
alive...

ern-

Bush

ment's
ability io
develop ways to protect
our people from future
terrorist or rogue- state
missile attacks," Bush said.
"Defending the American people is rryy
highest
priority
as commander
in chief
and
I
cannot
and will
not
Putln
allow the
United States to remain
in a treaty that prevents us
from developin~ effective
defenses," Bush &lt;aid.
Russian
President
Vladimir Putin, who gbt
word from Bush last week
that the United States was
withdrawing, said in an
address broadcast from ·
Moscow, "This step was
not a •urprise for U'S .
However, we consider it•a
mistake."
Bush emerged from a
meeting with hi• National Security Council to
make the announcement
in the Rose Garden, with
Secretary of State Colin
Powell, Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld, Joint
Chiefs Chairman Gen.
Richard
Myers
and
national security adviser
Condoleezza Rice at his
side. ·
"The Cold War is lorlg
gone," Bush said. "Today
we leave behind one ofits
last vestiges. But this 'is
not a day for looking
back. Thi&lt; i&lt; a day for
looking forward wiih
hope of greater prosperity
and peace.
"W.e're
movmg to
replace mutually assured
destruction with mutual
cooperation," Bush sa id.

'

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&amp;J

Monday, December 17th
7:00pm

338 Second Avenue • Gallipolis
Hours: Mon - Sat 10 am - 6 pm

•"

.

at:
Rejoicing Life Church
Middleport, Ohio

JCPenney
Catalog M~rchant

at 992-2155

body rest in peace. Let us get
on with our lives."

treaty ,
hinders ,
our gm1-

Hofilagconcert

t

50447 SR 124 • Racine, OH

949-2682

away from

BIND COMMUNITY_.

to use on :y~&gt;ur next order from JCI'I!nney Catalog or JCI'I!nney.com
Stop by :y~&gt;ur nearest JCI'I!nney today!
Also available by phone or online
Calll ·800-222 -6161 and ask for TA005-0682A or log on to JCI'I!nney.com

Call Debbie or Dave

and let the government and
the CIA take care of it,"
Gambale said. "Let every-

Rumsfeld explains reason for war

the JCI'I!nney 2001 'Christmas Catalog and disccwer over
600 pages of holiday gilts and toys.
Purchase :y~&gt;ur copy for only $4 and receive a

Announce your servi~ in the
Christmas Worship Directory
to appear in the
Wednesday, December 19th
edition of the Dally Sentinel.

Jellies &amp; jams $1.00 Off 3.49 &amp; under
All Salsa $1.00 off • 14.99
All Cheeses • 1/2 Price
Dried Beans • 1/l Price
Ground Slates • 10.00
Christmas Ornaments· 10% Off
Birdhouses • 5.00 and 10.00
Bears of month • 1/2 Price 2.30
Russ Bears 20% off· 8.99-23.99
OTHER ITEMS ON SALE!
(No Consignment Items On Sale)

Karents Greenhouse

LETART- Letart Township
SYRACUSE ;_ Santa will Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at
Visit with be at the Syracuse Firehouse, the office building.
'I

DAVID CRARY

Attention All
Area Churches

Sunday, 2 p.m. to give out
treats.

SUNDAY

SATURDAY

8Y

President Bwh "has ·known
: above the point of impact.
~ The hijackings were a mar- aU along that Osarna bin Laden
~tyrdom operation, !)in Laden was behind this;'Willte House
· said in a conversation with two spokesman Ari Fleischer said, ·
''aides ·and a Saudi sheik, but referring to the terrorist
' \hose who carried . them out attacks. :'It came as no surprise
~did!J,'t . know the details until to the president."
.
The Pentagon iSsued a sepajust before they boarded the
planes.
rate 1tatement saying it released
The sheik, identified by a the tape after balancinS "conU.S. official as Saudi cleric cerm about any additional pain
:Sheik Sulayman, praised bin · !hat could be cau1ed by itl
-at job" and ~eleue apiRII the value of"-·
,' Laden for "a .,..
,... ~appeared to IUpt additional ing the world fW1y appreciate
:attack! may be planned. "No what we are up apimc in the
:doubt it is a clear victory .. , and
,
:he (Allah) will give us blessing war against terrorism.
The tape wu n=lelled II
;and more victory during this
:holy month of Ramadan:' he American warplanes intensified
' 'd.
bombing ru111 aimed at mem•w
: · Most American Muslims wiU bers of bin Laden's al-Qai~
~celebrate the ending of network struggling for survival
:Ramadan on Sunday.
in the mountainous terrain 9f
: Bin Ladm, often chuckling eastern, Afghanistan.
'
~and animated, sat with his comBin Laden's whereabouts is
:panions on the floor near the unknown - a $25 million
:corner of a spare room against a reward has been posted for
; white waU and a light brown information leading to his cap:waD. He tui:ned mirthful as the ture. "We think he's in
:discussion turned to dreams Afghanistan. We are chasing
; uncannily related to the attacks. him. He is hiding. He does not
; The tape, amateurish in qual- want w to know where he is;'
: ity but chilling nonetheless, was said Defense Secretary Donald
; released as part of an adminis'
Rumsfeld.
: tration effort to support claims
, that bin Laden was the masterWeeks ago, administration
; mind behind the attacks that officials appealed to American
: killed nearly 3 ,300 in New broadcast oudets not to air
: York, Washington and Pennsyl- videotapes made by bin Laden;
: vania. The translation of the fearing they might contain
Arabic conversation was pro- coded messages to his followers
vided by the administration.
to carry out additional attacks.

GOURDS GALORE ...,. Turning gourds Into Christmas tree

be on display at the National
Gallery of Modern Art in
Bombay frotn Feb. IS-March
30 ·
The exhibition of 122
works from French collections includes "Les Demoisel!es d'Avignon," considered
Picasso's first Cubism painting.
Also on display will be
examples of Picasso's poems
with accompanying doocUes,
montages, ceramics and
sculptures, including a hull's
head made from a bicycle ' 1
seat and handlebars.
The French Embassy and

tion due to take office in nine days,
Karzai met top officials in Kabul.
In th" southern city of Kandahar, a
group of ai-Qaida fighters hospitalized
with wounds from battle threaten"d to
blow themselves up if anyone other
than medical staff entered their rooms.
The men, who were strapped with
explosives, apparently feared retribution by Afghan tribal forces who took
over the city from the Taliban.
Snow fell Thursday afternoon over
the Tora Bora area, making it more
difficult for the ai -Qaid3 holdouts to
escape their heavily forested canyon.
After an initial easy advance, tribal
forces met mortar and machine gunfire from the ai-Qaida holdouts, said
Hazrat Ali, a senior alliance member.
He estimated the number of foreign
fighters at around 700.

M' NATIONAL WRITER

~Center rwin towers, but only

on view until Jan. 31. It will

found in a house in Jalalabad and bore
a label saying it W3S taped Nov. 9,
about a month into the U.S. airstrikes
against Afghanistan.
Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, speaking at a news conference in Washington, said the U.S. government believes bin Laden is in
Afghanistan. But Rumsfdd acknowledged there were n=ports he was out
of the country.
"We think he's in Afghanistan,"
Rumsfeld said. "We don't know if he's
there. When we find him we'll
announce it."
Meanwhile, Afghanistan's interim
leader, Hamid Karzai, slipped into the
curfew-shrouded capital overnight in
his first visit to Kabul since being
named to head a post-Taliban government. With his temporary adrninistra-

U.S. pulls

Anger, and some disgust, as Americans
watch bin Laden smile about the attacks

.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar Ia
published aa a free service
to non-profit groups · wlah·
lng to announce meetlnga
and special events. The cal·
endar Ia not dealgned to
promote sales or fund-rala·
era of any type. Items ara
printed only sa apace per·
mlta and cennot be guaran·
teed to be printed a apecillc
number of days.

At least one 15,000-pound "daisy
cutter" - and perhaps as many as
three- W3S dropped before dawn. An
Associated Press reporter saw a huge, ·
bright magenta fireball that hung in
the air and lighted the sky around 3
a.m.
The Pentagon released on Thursday
a videotape of bin Laden in which he
tells colleagues about planning the
Sept. 11 terror attacks in the United
States and smiles about their success.
"We calculated in advance" the
number of casualties from the attacks,
bin Laden tells a Saudi sheik over a
meal. The Pentagon said the video was

WASHINGTON (AP) OS:una bin Laden contentecUy
recalled the Sept. 11 suicide
, attacks against America on a
; videotape released Thursday by
: the Pentagon, saying the
~ destruction exceeded his esti:· mates and the events "benefited
• Islam greatly:·
~. "I was the most optimistic of
; them aU" in calculating the pos' sible destruction, bin Laden said
with eerie detachment. He said
"
' reckoned that burning
" he h:id
~ jet fuel would "melt the iron
' structure" of the World Trade

•

LOS ANGELES (AP) Director Bryan Singer won't
say much about the upcoming sequel to the hit comichook adventure "X- Men."
The story is shrouded in
secrecy, but he can reveal this:
It's set for release on May 2,
2003.
"I can tell fans that we 'II
have some new characters is
this one, some of them young
and others old," Singer told
The Associated Press on
.Wednesday.
Last year's sci-fi epic "XMen" starred Patrick Stewart
as benevolent psychic Professor X and Jan McKellen as
megalomaniacal metal-shifter
Magneto, leaders of two rival
factions of mutants.
Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, Halle Berry as Storm and
Rebecca Romijn-Stamos as
Mystique also are expected to
return for the sequel.
Singer said the plot will
involve a war between
mutants and the humans who
fear them. "The stakes are
higher and bit more . danger-

ago.

.

SHOWBIZ BRIEFS .:
sequel slated

canyon where the foreign fighters
have been trapped since fleeing their
nearby Tora Bora cave complex in the
eastern White Mountains three days

OsamabinLaden
recalls the
11
attacks in
tape

.

•

X·Men

Frld8y. Decen~ller IC,lOOI

ABM

•

aftermath of terrorism disrupted the Emmy Awards, is
losing his job, sources said.
The executive committee
of the A-cademy ofTelevision
Arts &amp; Sciences decided
Wednesday not to exercise a
renewal option on Cha~in 's
contract, academy sources
said, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
The academy and Chabin
had no comment, representatives for both said Thursday. It
was unclear when Chabin,
the academy's highest-ranking paid executive, would
leave his post.
He has been president for
three years, serving under
former academy chairman
Meryl Marshall-Daniels and
her successor, Bryce Zabel,
who was elected in August.
There had been reports of
friction between Chabin and
Zabel.
' The Emmy Awards, originally scheduled for Sept. 16,
were postponed after the
Sept. 11 attacks on Ne~ York
and Washington. They were
reset for Oct. 7 but called off
again afier U.S. attacks began
on Afghanistan.
The academy and CBS,
which was broadcasting the
ceremony, decided to delay
the awards.
The Emmys eventually
took place on Nov. 4. The
delays, and a shift to a Stllaller
auditorium that allowed for
fewer ticket sales, took a
financial toll on the academy.
Increased security and the
first postponement alone
added S1 million to the

PageA7

Afghan fightetS continue to pound

1Y CHt.,. • lloiFuCH

•

at War·

The Daily Sentinel

I

'

J.

•

�•

P!q! A 8 • The Dally Sentinel
SwdlySchooiiO.,...
Momifta wonllip II Ml E'ICII!q - 1 ...
Wedtadly7 p...
Qoom., . - Cloriol ..., _
V.llll..ard. and Ward Rd.
Pular. JllDCI Miller
Sw)day School - 10:)0 a.m.
Evc:aiaa - 7:30 p.m.
RJ...,Valey
Apouolic Wonhip Q!Mft

373 S. 3«1

A,. ., ~

( .II

N~w

Lima Ro.d

Suodly. 10 a.m.IOd 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.f11.

~~blytlGod

P.O. 8os. 467, OuddiD&amp; L...aoe
Muoo,W,VL
Pulor. Neil TeruwM

Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m.. and 7 p.m.

UttleC- lloptJoiCburdl
Price Hollow Rd., Rutland

Pastor: John Sw1111son
Sunday School - 10:00 Lm.
Mornm, Service 11:00 a.m.
Evenina Sei"Yice - 6:00p.m
Wcdncsd.y Service - 7:30p.m.

lhpe Bapdot Chomo (Soutbrnol
570 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I 1 un. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi\.-c - 7 p.m.

hnlil

---I

I

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOOlhip - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy F1nt S.ptW
f.wMainS1 .
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Worship - 1&amp;.30 a.m.

F1rs1 Southem Blptllt
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pasmr: E. L..amarO'Bryanl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WorshifJ - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servi'-oes- 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Churdl
Paswr: Marte Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepon

Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
WorsiUp • 10:1:5 a.m,. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Raclnt flnl Baptllt
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 11.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Sliver Rua bplkt
Pastor: John Sw11nson
Sunday School- IOa,m.
Worship· II a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
ML Union Baptkt
Pastor : DavKI WjKmllll

Sunday School-9:4.5 a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen'ice~ · 6 : 30p.~ .

Bedllehtm Baptlsl Chul"(h
Great Bend, Route 124. Racine. OH
Pas10r : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Sunday Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wedntsday Bible Study • 6:00 p.m.
Old O.thel Fne WID Baptbl Chordo
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Evening-7:00p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:00
Hllhide Baptist Cbo"'h
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 1

Pastor: Rev. Jameli R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

VJctory B•ptkt ladtpende•t
:525 N. 2nd St. MiJidlepon
Pastor: Jamc:s E. Keesee
Worship . IOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptbt Chureh .
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senoices · 7 p.m.
Forut Run U.ptilt
Panor : Ariu8 Hun

326£. Main~.. ~ -

Pastor: Rev. Gilbm Craia. Jr.
S.unday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4:5 a.m.
Ani:Miulty Baptllt
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Worship- 10:4.5 a.m.
Stmday Even.ing . 6:00p.m.
Putor: Mark McComas

Ratlaad Frw Will S.ptilt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Sobool · 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
S«ond S.pdlt Churcb

Ravenswood. WV
Putor: Da\lid W. McClain

Insurance

Products+
Financial
ENCIES lne. Services

(Mlddlopod)
Putor. Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II :00 a.m.

-

........,

RockSprlnp
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip - JOa.m.
Y~uh Fcllowlhip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Pearl St., Middleport.
Putoc Rev. Doua Co~~:
Sunday Worship. 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday Service· 7:30p.m.

"'"' ...--···'

Sl. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7416
Sunday Scboall0:20..11 a.m.
Relief SocietyiPriCIIhood ll :05-ll:OO

Oi•rc:h .t Cbrllt
PaatGr: 'Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ipServicc: l0;30a.m.
B'ible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

St. Jobn Luthenn Olurth
Pine Gro\le

( ' hurrh ol Cod
Mt. Mortafa Church of God
Mile Hill Rd .. RaciDe
Pas1or: J~~mes Satterfield
Sunday Schuol • 9:45 1.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Chun:h of God

Pastor. Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

~eaforb
.Real ~~tate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
740.992-3325

Marketing Pro_11~

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
'We accept Preneed Transfers"
(304) 882·8200
Lundy Brown

James Anderson

Directors ·

Dignity •nd S.rvlce Alway•
Eatabllahed 1913

992·2121

Pulor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
J)ya¥1Ue

c.._..,

Cbomo
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WGflhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive C0111111unlty Cbureb
Pastor: Lawrmce Bush
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service· 7 p.m.
Ulllttd Faith Church
Rt. 1 oo Pomeroy By-Pus
Pa~~tor:

Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Full G01pel Ll1htboutt
3304:5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp;7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday- 7:30p.m.

~

z...t«, •..&amp;. At-"

1551 NYE AVE
(740) 992·214181
Pomeroy, OH 45789

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
FLOWER
106 8umRNuT AVE.
PO~OY,OH

'Rowers for all occasions'

Ingel's Carpet
169N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

992-6454

.......

(JII~ttttm

6no:ifltt 'Ill
~~ n &amp; 6afetp

-·-·...

IOU 223

IIMII . . . 11

~~--

NCAA Men'e Ba1ketball
Thuraday'a Gamn
• Army 71, Stony Brook 60
: Rutgers 63, Hartford 53
· Selon Hall 95, Fal~eigh Dick·
inson 73
Appalachian St. 91, North
Greenville 44
: Lipscomb 87, Reinhardt 73
Louisiana-Lafayette 81, Loy·
ola, N.O. 61
UCF 100, Chicago St. 67
. Minnesota 95, Md.·Eastern
Shore 48
Valparaiso 98, Goshen 54
Sam Houston Si. 81,
Louisiana-Monroe 73
Texas-Pan American 69,
Lamar 58
Arizona St. 72, Montana 51. 69
· Colorado 106, Southern U. 74
NBA
Thun~day'a

Gamea

Cha~otte

104, Toronto 90
Delroit 99, New York 97
Denver 89, Memphis 86
Indiana 106, Houston 106
Dallas 102, Cleveland 82
O~ando 105, Golden Stale

100 ""!!

·~~

,,_ -'

•

r

PtotecoDI "-tmbly
Sl. Rt. 124, Racine
Putor: William Hoback
,Sunday Schooi·IOa.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

SYn&lt;UIOilnt Uultod Preobytorltut
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robiru;on
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · ll a.m.

HurilonriUe PrabyteriM Churcb '
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9 :4:5 a.m.

Middleport Prabylerlu
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 ~.m.

,., l' lllh - ll;ll ' " ' l' llli 'l

.

Pastor. RGy I..awinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p·.m.
Worship · 3 p.m.

I nill'd Brl' lhn·11
ML Ht.,.._ United Brt*iftn

In Christ Church
Tc,.at C(lmmunily off CR 82
Pastor: Rq!Mlrt Sanden
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship-10;30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Eden Ulllttd Brt"~ren Ia Cbrlst
2 112 miles nonh of Reeds\lille
on State Route 124
Paator: Rev. Robert Martdey
Sunday School • II a.m.
Sunday Wo111hip - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

ICrc)W's Family Restaurant

'P-•u. ~ ~ Satu

Boy.
. Wahama 49, Hannan 29
Cabeii·Midland 57, Pl. Pleas·
ant 20
'

Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Pastor. Clyde Fe""ll
Sunday Scbool9:30 am
Sunday eveniDJ service 6 pm
Wednesday tervice 7 pm

South BeUtel New n.tammt

"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chick,.,"

•

Fed.Hock 59, Eastern 45
• Vinton Co. 50, Meigs 22
: Waterford 62, Southern 47
• Gallia Academy 53, Aihens· 49
: Logan 31, River Valley 28 '
• Marietta 53, Pl. Pleasant 48
• N.ville-York 50, Wellston 39'
• Warren 53, Jackson 32

Salem co....•nl'J Church

'

Faith GGapel Cbomo
U.ng BotiOm
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Prep Ba1Uibllll
Thumey'l Games
Girt a

establiShed.

y
'
Mulberry HIS. Rd .. Pomeroy

Mono Chapel Cbwdl
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Weclncsday Service - 7 p.m.

R&lt;odnlloFollowlhtp
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday &amp;:hool - 9:30a.m.

I, Oil 45760

EWING FUNERAL
HOME

Huel CoaunuaiiJ Chto"'b
Off'Rt. I:M

Middleport Cburcb oCtM Nu.nne
' Pas1or: Allen Mi~
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Won~blp. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
We4nelday Services· 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Rttu:funml

Pomeroy .

Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

\ ; 1/;i l"l' IH

Cbwtor

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Meln
992-5130

Rev. Mike Thompsun,Pwitor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenina - 6 p.m.

SUJ'ICI&amp;y School- 9:30a.m.
Wonlli ' 10 lO

Pastor:'Jane Beattie
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Service• - 7 .

.r-.l.laH,.Ir.·Dir-

S~Million

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Thrdi Church
Co. Rd. 63

.

S11nda.y Scttoo&amp;IO I.IP;
Bvenlnj • 7,30 p.m.
Wednclday Service· 7:30p.m.

God'stmapleofPr*
31665 McQui~ Rd . Pomeroy. Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services; Thun. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday &amp;ervice

Sunday Eveninj; 7 p.m.

GrandStm:t

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worsbip : 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Servicea - 1 p.m.

Mlddleport~Cburdl
51S Pearl Sl., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson

Tlunday Service- 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WOrship- II a.m. ~r
Wednesday Servic:ea- 8 p.lfl.

ML OU,e United Metbodld
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spi~s

Cal_,. Blblo Cbordo
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor. Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wcdnelday Service - 7:30p.m.

B.UCy Run Road
Putor. Rev: Emmett Rawton

Hrit...,..... Church

Grabam Ualtod Mothodlot
Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3td .t: 4lh Sun)
Wednesday Senoicc - 7:30p.m.

PastGr: Theron Durtwn
Sunday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wodneldl.y .. ;, p·.m.

Fal* V.O.r 'llobemttdo Chum.

BetheiChon:b
Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:4.5 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

740..992-5444

·-

.--·Momflii'star

Cool .... Vnltell Metbodllt Parilb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Churt:h
Main &amp;. Fifth St
' Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
1\Jeaday Services · 7 p.m.

St Paul Lutberu Cllurrb
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St, Pomeroy

590 EAst .-··""""'
. 5lroot. ,_,,,
Oil 45769
Dlr-

......

Pasto(': Brian Harlmeaa
Suoday S&lt;:hool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednesday 1 p.m.

Our Sarioar Lulki'UI Church
Walnut 8lld Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

I

992-3785

lllmilonl'llle Community Cbun:h

Raeloe

Woobip . 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

264 Stollo s....u .... "I I
740.H2·5141
Street

212 E. Main
Pomeroy

Camei·Suttoa
Carmel ~ Bashan Rdt.
Racine, Ohio
Pallor: ~Wll't}C Swll~
Sunday School- 9:30 t.m.
Worship -·10:45 a.m. ·
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

I ulhrran

Molp C..rotlvo Parlott
Nonheasl Clu5tcr
AI.fred
Pastor: JllDC Beanie
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship • I J a.m .. 6:30 p.m.

'11M Bditwer&amp;' Fen.w.blp Mllllltey
New Lime Rd., Rolland
Pastor: Rev. Matpret J. Robinaon
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Eull.etart
hltor: Brian Hartnen

I nitrd \lrllwdi'l
Hard'ord Cll•rcb ol Chrtd In
CbriltlanUolon
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim HuJhel
Sunday School • II a.m ..
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ~enices • 7:30p.m.

Putor: Dcwayne Stillier
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesd.aySenices-IOa.m.

PaltGr: Dewaync Stutler
Sundlly School- II a.m.
Wonhip .- 10 a.m.

MOO

Faith FdlowUip
Cbrtat
Pastor: Rev. Frsnklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Setvic:es: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Wedneolay . 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowabip aervice 7 p.m.

-..,

BY JoN W:u.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

fainlowlllblo Qordo
Letart. W.va. Rl. I
Pulor: Brian. May
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
WMhip- 7:00p.m.
Wednea:lay Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

Fall Gospel Clnln:b ol the Llvlna:
S.vlor
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris

FaltiiFldl ~ Clnt"'b
Lona:Bottom
· Pplor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a,m. and 1 p.m.

s........

t.•RI CUII'Frw Medlodkt Cban:h
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday S~;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sm·ice - 7:00p.m.

Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thun. - 1 p.m.

Putot Teresa Davit
Sunday IICnke. I0 Lin.
Wrdne1da.y service, 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Hock nabs Eastem, 59-45

HIGHLIGHTS

Wonh.iprJO:JOa.m.
Wednesday Servia • 1 p.m.

New LHe Vktory Cealer

Abuodul Gnco R.F. L
923 S. Third St .. Middleport

Salem Ceater
Pastor. Ron Fie~«
Sundly School - 9: 15 a.m.
Worship· 10:I :5 a.m.

H,..U Ran Holl~~e~~ Cburdl
Rev. Mart Michael
Sunday School · 9:3D ·a.m.
WOrship. 10:4.5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth · 7 p.m.

W..,._

3773 Georzes Cmek Road. GallipGiis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service8 - 10 a.m. &amp;. 1 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. &amp; Youdl7 p.m.

Rutlud

1~

Tbe Cburda of Jetul
Chrt.tolLI.tter-0.,. Sltnti

173-5017

Service lime: Sundly 10:30 a.m.
w.dnesday7pm

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Scrvicca - 1 p.m.

FRIL\W's

Cool,;o, Ruad
Putor: Rev. PbiUip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:301.111.

Putor: Wayne R. Jewell
Alb Stnd Chrdl
Sunday Services. 10:00 a.lft • .t: 1:00 p.m.
Ash St., Middle8ott- Putor: Olenn Rowe
Thursday - 7:00p.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:00 p.IQ.
Rejoldq Lire Church
WodncJday Senoicc- 7&lt;10 p.m.
S00 N. 2nd Ave., Middlcpon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
JbnatO.,_.MIPastor: Emeritus Lawrenc~: Foreman
474~9 R~ibel Rd., t:.bcster
Worship- I0:00 am
Pilton: P.ev. Mary and H.-old Cook
Wednesday Servicc:~ - 7 p.m.
Sunday Servicct: 10 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wedne!lday Service5 • 1 p.m.
Clifton 'llobomado Cllwdl
Clifton, W.Va.
Appe Ute Center
Sunday School - Hla.m.
"Fuii-Oospel Oaurch"
Worship · 7 p.m.
Pul:on John a: Patty Wade
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
603 Second Ave. Mason

Pastor. Rod Brower
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

w....,... _ _ Chtordl

IWd Knob, on Co. Rd. ll
- . Rev. . _ Wulfotd
Suoday School · 9:30a.m.

StbenvlDe Comnaullltr Qurdl

....... Chapel
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship- IOa.m.

Jlble Crowe Bible Boli.Mia Clturrb
1n mile off Kt. m
Pasror: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· i :lO a.m.
Warship- 10:30 •..,_, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

'

Ponland-Ra:ine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
- Wonhip-10:30a.m.
Wedocsday Scrvic:ca • 7:00p.m.

H-

-Goopei-

c.-ror

(lil t&lt; I ( lll ll'l It&lt;·,
c-=··hJ ofQI'Iet

Puaor. BOO Robituon
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.

Ll.npvllle Cbrildan Cbun:h
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Since 1971

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667·3110

Bob Robintoo
SIIDiily School • I 0 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetin,a- 7 p.m.

lntdlnrd Chum. of Chrltl
Comer of St. Rl. 124 &amp;. Bradbllt)' Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
YoUth Mini&amp;Cer: Bill AmberJer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., I 0:30a.m., 7:00 p,m.
Wednelday Servlc:et -7:00p.m.

992·3978
Full line of

Sunday Wus.hi~IO: OO a.m.
Sunday Scrvicc-7 p.m.

ladin&amp; Creek Rd., Rulland
Pasror: Mev. Dewey King

Rutland Cblurch ol Chrkt
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worsh.ip- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

Agency Inc.

FOftllR•

Rote ofSUroa Boll- Cllurdt

Brodbury Cbllldl o1c•""
Pastor: Jim Eaton
395.58 BI'IKI:Iury Road, Middlepon
Sunday School· ~ : 30 a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m.

Sfrlftllt First Church ol Gocl

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

rdo
Putor. Rev."Amo11illis
Main St~ett. Rutland

HarriiOilville Road
Pastor. Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:00p.m.

lilppen Plaia Churtb or Quilt
Instrumental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
CGmmunion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School -·iO:IS a.m.
Youth- :5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Smdy WedneJday 1 pm

Pacor. William lusti.l
Slllldty Schoot -IO:OO a. m.
MarninJ Wonhip - 10:4! a.m.
Sunday Service· 6:30p.m.

l'lllor. keith Rader
Sunday Sc:bool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Calwary Pllcrllll Chapel

Zloo Clotrc:b ol Cbrlot
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.!43)
Pastor: Roaer Watson
Swxlay School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • l0:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.

-Fino Clotudotl ... _

Jllat-

Dul'llle H.._ Cllurdl ·
310S7 Slate Routt: 325, Lanasvlle
Pastor. Gary Jacbon
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday wcnh.ip- 10:30 a.m. A 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer AerVice - 7 p.m.

&amp;e.rwallow.Rklat Cbu~ ot Cbrlat
Pastor.Teny Slewan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsh.ip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servica • 6:30p.m.

Suodly Scbooi. 9:30 ......
Wonbip - IQ-.l0a.m., 6:30p.m.
W~y Servkes · 1 p.m.

Swtday Seloool • 10 Lm.
Wonhip . 9 a.m.

No - , . « - Y N;,ltl Srni&lt;ol

WW.'s(.'Mpel

aW

Me;.g_. Co.uruy:. Ol.detr FlorUt

352 East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

'
•t..t utlthd your thollghti
wrth IJIICI•I Clllt'
740..992·2644 740-992~98

Mv srace is suffieient
for thee: for mv
strensth Is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
Office Service &amp; Supply
137-c N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-6376

FriUy. D•CMtber 14.2001

/

~?p. m.

..,_a....lotltloePutor: Re~. Samuel w. Buye

F' p;lw

ll n l il ll '"

... _

PaAor: Re~. lklbett Gnle
Sunday School - 9:30 LIIL
Wonb&amp;p • II a.m., 6 p.m_
Wednesday SeiVice~ - 7 p.m.

-Kcith~

s .....ySchool..,.
Holy Eucharitt 11 :00 a.m.

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Scbool • 10:30 a.m.
Pas10r-Jeffrey Wallace
Iil and 3rd Su~y

Sunday School- 10 Lm.
Worship • II a.m.
MI. Moriah Baptist
Fourth A Main St., Middlepon

f ' a.rdll

Rev.JuraBemKki, ~

Mlddlepol1 Cloordo ol Cbrtat
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister. Bill Frar.it:r
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 8: I:5, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Cbomo o1 Cbrlot
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evanacliat: De~i• Saraent
Sunday Bible Srudy · 9:30a.m.
Worahip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

I

Sundly School - 9:4S a.m.
Wcnbip • II a.m.
WedDesd&amp;J Services - 7:30p.m'.

Page 81

Clterdo

Suadly Sc:bool • 9:)() a.m.
WonbipScrvK:c IO:)()a.m.

-

s-lay Scllool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • IO:JO a.m. aod ~p.m.
w ky Servicc:s • 7 p.m.

C-.11-.r
Asbwy (Syno:uoel

"Mnltip - 10:10a.a, 6p.to.
W I 1 y Service · 7 p.m.

-.a.-.v-

t

~Qordlfl

The Daily Sentinel

Kiapllury .....

PaMor. Ju l.Aveadtt

PutocBobRobbuon

Gnce E&amp; ,

I

.._..,.~~tMP'

- . . . 10 ......
n.e.dly Sc:nica- 7:30p.m.

Suacky Stbool9: l,_a.m.

Pomeroy W•llkh Cllurc:b fll Ckrill
33226 Children'• Home Rd.
Sunday School - II ua.
Wonhip - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneidly Services · 7 p.m.

llftter Chum. ofO.W
·Putctr: Nathan Roblnaon
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Nomwn WUI. superintendent
Sunday wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

w

-

Inside:
l%hama tops Hannan, Page 82
Baseball trades abound, Page BJ

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
~

•

Pauor.J_ . . . .
Sunday~ . ' .....

Wonhip 10:2S Ull.

212 W. Main St.
Minister: A.otbooy Morria
SWiday School - 9:30 a.ro.
WOI'ihi~ 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnnday Sc:rYk:cS- 1 p.m.

Reed~

I

..__s.._

-~L,.... ­

-.., a ...... o1 a.rtat

Hkkoi'J IIliis Chu~ ofChrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonh.ip • 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesdaf ServiceJ -7 p.m.

Wcnhip .
I y Scrrioc1 • 1 _p.111.

Paolor.ReY. CtaiaC..U....

Su.ndly SdkM " 10;30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Bible Study • 7 p.m.
Community of'Chritt

Pulor Mike AdtiDI
Sway Scbml - 9:l0 a.m.
- , . 10:30 ...... 6p.a.
ys.vic.a • 7p.a

"Mlnbip - 9:JO .....
SWiday Sdlool • IO:X) a.a
F.-,rat Sundly o( Moadl - 7;00 p.aa. wn-ioe:

~Qorcll

C.....~a...dl

Keao Cburcb., Chrtol
Rutland First .,..., Cburc:h

7

-School·II a.m.
10 .....

W '

s,-c..om..t.--

---.. - 16-.30 .....

:&gt; J
OJ. w..u orr St. R.t. 160
-.,pj,,_..

a-dlt6Cerii4Pr

Silver ltdJt

Wonhip • IO:.. S a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednndly S«vitet - 1 p.m.

Sunday- . 111:30 .....
'-s-taySeloool - 9-.30 ....

s-dly Scboal: tll'ld Wanhip- 10 a.m.
Emili Scrvkw- 6:JO p.a
'Mldftetday Setricel - 6:30 p.m.

---

frkllly, Dec. 14. 2001

VoQnlip : !I:JO .....

-ReY. V.vi&lt;l~

Sua. MaN - 9:30a.m.
Dtiky ,._. - I :JO a.ID.

'I

......,

AjlplollldSecood S...

--C..Qorcll
161 Molbony A.._, """""'&gt;'•99Z.j101
Pu4ot: Rev. WIMer f. Heiu
Sa. CaA. 4:4.5--S: ISp .• .; Mau- SdO p.m.
Swt. Co.. -1:4S-9: IS a.m.,'

Kevin Konkle, Putor
Swxlay, 10 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday. 7:30p.m.. ; YOUib Fri. 7:30p.m.

Ooordo ., c.dol
AJIO"'OK: Failh

...._

Pomeroy. Mldcll!por".. Ohio

· Vikinp fine
Moss for mouth
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Minnesota Vikings fined
receiver Randy Moss at least
$10,000 last month after he
verbally abused a group of
corporate sponsors on a team
bus, according to publi~hed
reports.
The Vikings were preparing
to leave Veteraf!s Stadium on
Nov. 11 after a 48-17 loss to
the Philadelphia Eagles when
Moss boarded the bus and ·
found the seat he wanted .
occupied by a sponsor,
according to several unnamed
witnesses cited by Twin Cities
newspapers in their Thursday
editions.
The St. Paul Pioneer Press
reported that Moss was fined
:it least $10,000. The Star Trillune reported he was fined
15,000.
• The Vikings, like most other
~FL teams, typically invite
tpp executives of the companies that advertise with them
to road games.
:. Moss asked that his seat and
"those around it be vacated.
:The sponsors initially did not
know whether Moss was serious, but when Moss raised his
~oice and demanded they
J)lOve, a few sponsors changed
·seats. Moss sat down and the
bus departed, the witnesses
said.
No one from the organization would comment. Moss
and his agent also declined to

s

comment.
This season, Moss has been
fined $20,000 by the NFL for
three infractions - two for
taunting and one for wearing
an unapproved cap on the
sideline during a preseason
game.
Moss is a former football
and basketball standout at the
forrr\er DuPont High School
in Rand, W.Va., and played
football at Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va.

•••••

Send your local sports news
to the Sentinel by e-mail at
sports@mydailysentinel.com
or by fax to 992-2157.

On a night that began on a bad
note, the Eagles' song only grew sadder, as Federal Hocking beat E'IStern
59-45.
The Lady Eagles were without the
services of star center Stacie Watson.
Watson was sitting out due to a tender
ankle, an injury she suffe~d against
South Gallia on Monday.
Watson's injury put the team in a
jam, for it is not easy to make up the
20-point average Watson brought to
ihe team. The Eagles did have the fuU
use of senior forward and defensive
specialist Whitney Karr. Karr is com-

ing off an ankle injury, and played her
first full game of the year. .
Federal Hocking came into Thursday's game boasting a very large roster
as far "' size is concerned. The Lady
Lancers played a very physical game,
one the Eagles weren't ready for.
Eastern got into foul trouble early
and often in the game. Postmen Katie
Robertson and Whitney Karr both
picked up 3 fouls in the first half.
The struggling Eagles traded blows
with the Lancers and matched them
point for point. With a minute
remaining in the first, the score was 77. Katie Robertson helped the Eagle

offensive effort out by hitting 2 key
free throws to keep the game tied.
However, Federal Hocking was able
to reuke the lead with a Lackey field
goal. Sara Mansfield drained a· threepoint goal at the buzzer to give Eastern a 12-10 first quarter lead.
Beginning the second quarter,
Whimey Karr didn't uke much time
to up the led to four, meanwhile racking up her fourth and fifth points of
the evening.
Eastern's offensive spurt continued
when Mansfield dished it off to freshmen Ter~i Wolfe for another ~
points. After the bucket, the Lancers

called a timeout to regroup, trailing
16- 10 with 5 minutes remaining in
the first half.
Soon after Karr picked up her third
foul, leaving the Eagles a gap in their
defense.
It didn't take long for federal
Hocking to find that gap, and soon
poured in 11 unanswered points uking the lead 21-16. Eastern was able to
scrounge up four points, yet still
trailed at the half 23-20.
A three-point goal by Tracey Sidwell set the tempo for the secol)d half.
The Lancers soon jumped to a 30-24

PIIIM_Eu...._ll

Mavericks help
keep Cavaliers
down in dumps
DALLAS (AP) -This time, from the outset as coach Don
the Dallas Mavericks didn't Nelson went with "small ball"
· need a huge game from top lineups that had Nowitzki at
Dirk
Nowitzki, center and point guards Nash
scorers
Michael finley or Steve Nash. and Hardaway playing in tan- ·
Finley's 22 points and 17 dem for long stretches.
The Mavericks also did a
each from Tim Hardaway and
·
Nash sent the better job on the boa·rds. holdMavericks to a ing a 48-38 rebounding edge
· I 02-82 victo- despite the small lineups. Dairy over the las lud been outrebounded in ·
Cleveland Cavaliers on Thurs- seven of its previous eight
day night.
games.
Nowitzki added 15 points
Lamond Murray had 23
and Adrian Griffin had nine points for Cleveland. Jumaine
points and a season-high 11 Jones added 13 points and 10
rebounds for the Mavericks, rebounds and Bimbo Coles
who lud lost three of their contributed 13 points for the
previous four.
Cavaliers, who had won four
Dallas got a career~high 39 of their previous five.
The Cavaliers were without
points from Nash in Tuesday
night's win over Portland. point guard Andre Miller,
Nowitzki has scored 30 more · sidelined with a bruised right
more points eight times and shoulder. Miller's streak of 185
Finley has had four. games of . consecutive games and 140
30 or more this season.
straight starts came to an end.
"We got everyone involved The Cavaliers listed Miller as
from the beginning and got day-to-day, and Coles got his
into a good rhythm," said fin- first start of the season.
ley, who went 10-for-17 from
Dallas took a 77-64 lead
the field and had eight into the fourth quarter after
rebounds and four assists. "We building an IS-point lead, 60played with . energy from the 42, early in the third quarter
start and when we do that, I on three ·consecutive baskets
· iike our chances."
by Juwan Howard.
Hardaway went 4-for-8
Cleveland got as close as 81from 3-point range and Dallas 70 early in the final quarter,
made eight of its 17 3-point but Nash scored seven consecshots to beat the Cavs for the utive points to trigger an 11-2
third straight time.
run that extended Dallas' lead
OUTA MY WAY- Cavaliers guard Ricky Davis (31) drives the ball against Mavericks forward
D~llas pushed the tempo to 92-72 :
Michael Finley during the second quarter in Dallas Thursday. (AP)

NBA

Charleston brings
down the Redmen
Bv MARK WiWAMS
RIO GRANDE SID

CHARLESTON, WVa. - The University' of Rio
Grande Redmen basketball team fell to NCAA Division
II power Charleston (WV), 80-63, at
the Charter Communications Hoops
Classic at the Charleston Civic Center
on Thursday.
Charleston (5,-1) jumped out to a
19-61ead and were never headed. UC lead 44- 18 at the
half.
~
Rio Grande (5-7) had a three~game winning streak
snapped with the defeat. Sophomore forward Sean
Plummer (Portmore, Jamai ca) topped the Redmen scoring chart with 15 points. Jo e Martil;l (Toledo, OH) added
13 points and Jerry Barlow (Otway, OH) chipped in 12.
.
Plummer pulled down nine rebounds.
Charleston was led by Kalan Smith with 16 points.
Kyle Bixler added 12 points. BarrettWilliams scored 11,
off the bench, and Emory Ogletree h~d 10 points and 12
I
rebounds.
Rio Grande was plagued by 26 turnovers and was outrebounded 37-33.
.
Charleston built the lead to 31 points (63-32) at the
14:53 mark on " pair of free throws by Ogletree. Rio
Grande would make a run, getting l:!ack to within 11
points (70- 59) with 4:18 to play on a dunk by Plummer.
Rio shot 45 percent (25- of- 56) from the field, 29 percent (6-of-23) from beyond the three-point arc and 87.5
·percent (7-of-8) from the fr~e throw line.
UC countered with 48 p.e rcent (33-of-69) from the
floor, 47 percent (7-of-18) from the three-point land and
64 percent (7-of-11) from the chariry stripe.
The Redmen outscore,d UC 43-32 in the second half.

NAIA

..

Waterford beats Southern
BY

Scon WoLFE

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

WATERFORD ~ Running into a Waterford buzisaw,
Southern Tornadoes
the
dropped their first game of the
season Thursday at Waterford
High School, where the hosts
claimed a 62-4 7 win over the
Tornadoes.
Southern drops to 4-1, 1-1,
while Waterford is 3-2, 2-0.
Waterford was led by
Heather Fulmer's 19 points,
while Mallory McCutcheon
and Alicia Polen each snagged
14.
Southern was led by

Brigette Barnes ·· with 15
points, while Katie Sayre·
added nine, Amy Lee seven
and five each from Deana
Pullins and Ashley Dunn.
Waterford blitzed the Tornadoes with a lightening fast
fast-break. jumping to an early
4-0 lead, a lead they never
relinquished. Waterford simply
came out to play and rammed
the ball right down Southern's
throats and the Tornadoes
were never ready to get back
to defend the break.
Still, Southern managed to
be in the game at 13-8 at the
end of the quarter. Southern

went back-door on the Wildcats

numerous

times,

but

missed lay-up after lay-up.
Overall, Southern missed 25
shots from the lane.
The defensive inadequacies
of Southern were compounded by the inability to put the
ball in the hole. Southern hit
just 6-of-25 in the first half for
24 percent despite getting
good penetration from its
offense.
Additionally,
Southern's
output dwindled at the foul
line, where after being perfect

Plun ... Southem, Bl

Vikings freeze out M·aruaders
BY JiM SouLIBY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

McARTHUR - During the course of a
day, nine minutes and 48 seconds is not a long
period of time, but in a high school basketball
game, it is a different story, and it must have
seemed like an eternity for the Meigs Lady
Marauders at Vinton County Thursday.
That was how long \hey went without scoring a single point in a disappointing 50-22 loss
to the Lady Vikings.
The Marauders (3-2) went from the 6:17
mark of the second quarter to the 4:29 mark of
the third frame without putting the ball
through the net as shot after shot seemed to

rattle in and out for the ice cold Marauders. In
the meantime, Vinton County was faring a little better stretching a 10-point lead to 18
points in that same time frame.
The game looked as if were going to be close
in the early going as Vinton County's Kristi
Hayes put the Viking. up 2-0 on two free
throws just :31 seconds into the game. Mindy
Chancey, back from a one-game absence with
the flu, tied the score at 2-2 with a jumper
from the right side. After a a bucket by Mel
Jones and a trey from the top of the key by
Hayley Sowers, Jaynee Davis took a pass frOm

PluH ... Melp,Bll

�Friday,Dec.t4.2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Paqe 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

White Falcons beat Hannan in Hoops Classic, 49-~9
BY DAN ADKINS
REGISTER SPORTS STAFF

CHARLESTON,W.Va -It
was a day of county
matchups, victory and losses
Thunday as
all
three
high school
vanity boys
basketball
teams hit the hard court during games of the second
Hoops Classic, sponsored by
Charter Communications,
with Coach Lew Hall's
Waha~White .. Falc?ns
returnmg on a positive note
after defeating Coach Wayne
Richardson's Wildcats of
Hannan, 49-29, in the tournament opener.
Later in the afternoon, the
' Big Blacks of Point Pleasant
suffered a gut-wrenching loss
the Knights of Cabell-Midland, 57-32.
The Hoops Classic is a
three-day exhibition-style
tournament, the brainchild of
' Tex Williams, longtime coach
at St. Albans High School, the
University of Charleston, and
the old Charleston Gunnen.
Last year saw 33 teams make
the trip to Charleston to participate; this year 4 7, and
Williams said he's aiming for
I 00 teams by opening the
Classic up to girls. teams.
Williams Red Dragon team is
the only team playing twice
this year, . facing George
Washington Thursday and
then Nitro on Saturday.
In opening round action,
Coach Lew Hall's Falcons
jumped to a quick 6-0 lead in
the opening two minutes
behind two lone backboard
bonanzas and one assist by
junior
Gabe
Lambert.
Wahama would continue on
the scoring tirade and hold
Hannan scoreless until the
remaining last minute when
senior Bruno Barros slipped
one in from the corner of the
key to open the scorebook
for Hannan. The Falcons
went on to close the quarter
with a strong 12-3 lead.
The second quarier saw the
floor-pounding Falcons hit
an even more aggressive beat,
increasing their lead to 26-4.
By the end of the fint half,
Hannan would end up 2-of30 from the field while
Wahama was 11-of-40.
"I don't think we shot the
ball very well here today,"
said Hall, "especially not
underneath, which is important on this court. We did not
post up very well, so that's an
area of opportunity for us
during upcoming practices."
Lambert and fellow junior
Steven Roach lead the
Wahama squad with 13 and
12 points, respectively, while
senior Ryan and sophomore
R. T. Roush would round out
the top three scoring spots
with six points each.
Leading Hannan was senior
Jason Powell with 11 points,

PreP

I.

!
I
l

.
'••

•

r

i

while freshman Dillon Sabotsky, sidelined recen9y with an
ankle injury, returned to the
hard court with seven points.
His brother, senior Mark,
rounded out Hannan's top
three with five points.
Absent from Hannan's roster Thunday was sophomore
Greg CoUins, a powerhouse
and on-court leader who suffered some serious ligam•nt
damage to an ankle Tuesday
night against Duval and will
more than likely be sitting
out the next three to six
weeks, according to Richardson.
"Right now we're really
watching the ankle's swelling
because if it doesn't go down
over the next couple of days,
(Collins) could be looking at
surgery very soon," Richardson said. "He told me he hurt
the ankle early in the game
Tuesday night, but kept playing on it, which I guess shows
how bad he wanted to stay in
there."
Wahama's injury list also
got another member Tuesday;
Hall said that six-foot-two
senior
Jason
Simpkins
sprained his ankle during
Classic play and will be
benched for a while, also.
Coming out headstrong in
the third quarter, Hannan
started hearing the sounds of
th• net swishing from their
backboard with twelve points
recorded, while at the same
time holding the Falcons to
only 10 . points. The teams
would go neck-and-neck in
the final round, though, with
13 points each as Hannan's
fate was sealed.
'the Sobolsky brothen, a
potential force to be reck-·
oned with in upcoming
Wildcats .games, proved
height is a determining factor
by taking on the Wahama
combination of Lambert and
junior Heath Rickard; towering firecrackers in their own
right at six-foot-four and sixfoot-two. Throw in there
Wahama's Roach at six-foottwo and you've got a lot of
action going on inside the
key.
"! was very please;&lt;~ with
both Mark and Dillon, today,"
Richardson said. "He's been
sitting out with a bad ankle
and hasn't practiced with us a
lot, but I think once ne gets
some time in and finds his
niche, he's going to do very
well for us from both ends of

the court."
Following the Mason
County match up, Williams
and other members of the
Hoops committee awarded
Most Valuable Player awards
.to Hannan's Stacy Cooper
and Ryan Roush
for
Wahama.
The White Falcons take a
breather for a few days but
will hit the court again Dec.
18 when they play host to
Wood County at 7:30 p.m.;

Southern
fhHII PapB1

in the first quarter at 4-of-4, the Tornadoes. tailed off to a 7of-19 mark at the half. Overall, Southern shot 10-34 from the
floor the second half for a meager 29 percent and 17-59 for the
game,' also 29 percent. From the line SHS went 11-of-24 for a
chilling 46 percent.
Southern got in early second period foul troubl~ and fell at
the half to 32-19.
Southern made some runs in the second half, but each time
Waterford .would storm right back. Southern twice cut the lead
to eleven, and on the last occasion had the ball three straight
times, but failed to score in cutting th• game to sing!• digitS.
Southern went 0-of-4 at the foul line, a stat alone that would
have cut the WHS lead to single digits. It was not to be, how•
ever.
After three rounds Waterford led 47-33. Waterford scored
only two field goals in the final round as four Southern girls
fouled out, sending WHS to the line where they hit 9-of-19 at
the line in holding on for the 62-47 win.
Southern dropped the reserve game 38-32. Southern was led
by Ashley Roush with nine p~Jints, and Joanne Pickens with
nine, while Nicki Tucker added' six. Ktisten Sciance led Waterford with 1 1 and Kayla Miller added nine.
ot WI lit lol d
WllalloldG,Iol-..47
Southom
a
11
14
14
47
wall!lord
13
19
1!
15
112
SOUTHERN- CNpnan 1 2·3 4, Brigotto BarnMa 2-115, Dtona Pullna 2
1·2 5, Amy Lee 3 1&gt;2 7, K.llle SaY" U·U, Alhloy Dunn 2 1-3 5, Joanne Plckllll 0 o2 o, Tara Plckon• o 1-2 1, Alt&gt;ley Roullh o. Bnloko 1&lt;1111 0 1-4 1. Totola: 17 11&gt;2447.
WATERFORD- Ba1hany Hucl&lt; 1'2-6 4, Joanna Bulchol1 0 G-1 0, Alana Mlllor 0, Mal·
l o o y - 5 2·2 14, Jocondo Smllh 1 3-6 5, HooillOr Fulmar 8 :H 28, Allola Polen
311·13 14 CUolo McKown 1 4-4 6. Totala 19 22-37112.
Th,.. point goall- Soulhlm 2 (BaiTIII 1,
1): w.ertord 2(McCU1&lt;'-' 2).
Reboundl- Southom $S (Sayre 7, OUM 8, Bamll 5); Wotorford 35 (Fulmor 10).
S1oolo- Soulhlm 14 (Bimll 4); Watorford 15 (Polen 5)

s.""

Tu..,..,. -

An11t1 -

•

•

Southom 18, W.te!1ord Z4
Soulhlm a (Lee 4) ; W.terlord 7 (Fulmer 5)

Hannan expects to play host
to Van Friday in the newlyremodeled Wildcat gymnasium at 7:30 p.m. Construction on the gymnasium and
th• new concession stand
addition has kept any home
games from being played so
far this season by the boys or
girls teams, but Hannan athletic director Kent Price said
things should be cleared away
enough by Friday.
Cabell Midland 57,
Point Pleasant 32
In their second hard court
match up of the season, the
Big Blacks of Point Pleasant
·took on the powerhouse
Knights squad of Cabell Midland and found they couldnt
mettle up enough to pull out
the win.
The Knights (2-0) were led
by two players in double digits, seniors Mark Patton at
six-foot-nine with 18 points
and Ryan Stoler at six-footfour with 14. Rounding out
their · top three was senior
Cameron Guill with six
points.
Point Pleasant was led by
senior guard Casey Villars
with 10 points, while junior
Kevin Zerkle hit for five and
juniors Stephen Handley and
T.J. Deshuk marked for four
each.
"Size was a definite problem for us today," said Point
coach Rich Blain. "Cabell has
a full squad of just huge players and · underneath they
knew what to do with that
extra advantage."
The game started qn a pos-

Friday, Deo. 14, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

draft

·McGii

Yankees, BoSox seal dea.ls

from Braves

Eds: UPDATES with Pirates trading pick

(Milwaukee), left-bander Steven Kent (Ana-

. DM.LAS (AP) - The Tampa Bay Devil heim) and thin! baseman Jason Grabowski
;IUys
right-hander Kevin McGiinchy (Oaldand).
·bom Atlanta on Thunday with the fint pick in
The Marinen did get a player when Pitts·the major league dnft.

.aected

McGiinchy, 24, misted l.uc 1e110n with a par·
Cially tom right rotator cuff.
In two 1ea10111 in the majon,
••
he is 7-3'with a 2.?5 ERA.
•
Th·dw playen ~ cho:• .
·
sert in the majorleague pot: tion o( the draft. Playm picbd for $50,000
: must t:emain on the active IVItm of the teams
( .that drafted them throughout next season or
' -be oft"errd back to their Conner teams for
~ :.25,000.
.
.: Teams occuionally .lind stars in the draft.
• ·George Bell, Kelly Gruber, Mitch Williams,
E~ Mantei and Jeff Passero were all selected
t m pastyan.
.
Seattle !ott four players in the draft: rlghties
Jeffrey Farnsworth (Detro[!) and Jorge Sosa

. _MLB

A CROWDED SPOT- WahamaUs Aaron Faulk (#30) goes over the rest of the

squad

. to get the rebound during first half action against Hannan Thursday. (Dan Adkins photo)
·•

mve note with both teams
The Knights came out of each named Most Valuable
scoreless through the firit, the half-time break ready to Player following the game.
Point, 1-0 going into· the
minutes before Patton woul~ score, though, pounding the
unleash with three in a row: net fur 14 points in the third Hoops Classic, takes a· break
en route to the Knights' 16-.~ and fourth quarter to Points over the weekend and return
to hard court action Dec. 18
first quarter performance: , eight and eight.
Point would prove in th'e f The second half saw Point when they take a road trip to
second half they could hold hit 7-of-27, while Cabell was Jackson.
'
their own and hold back the,' 11-of-34.
aggressive Cabell offense, hit~
Villars and Patton were
ting for 10 to the Cabe~ •
Countians' 13.
,'· --------------------------------------~---By the end of the half, ·
b
h h h
Point would shoot 8-of-20 '
14 points Y w ic t ey
•
trailed. When it was all said
from the field to Cabell's 12- It
and done, the Lancers had
·:
Pap 81
racked up 59 points, as
of-33.
------------~
, --------------------------- .,
opposed to Eastern's 45.
the final count of 50-22.
· ' ing the lead 21-16. Eastern
"We were beat by a better
Davis who tillied six points ·was able to scro~n~e up four team tonight. We didn't proled Meigs; Lindsay Bolin · pomts, yet still trailed at the duce offensively. we made
added 4.
'J• half23-20.
silly fouiJ, and it caught up to
PageB1
Holly Pridemore led Vinton · A three-point go~l by us in the end," said coach
Lindsay Bolin and hit a lay- County with 12,Jewett added •Tracey Sidwell set the tempo Paul Brannon of the ·Eagles.
up to bring the Marauders to SowerundBethAllenhad for the second half The
Sophomore Katie ' Robertwithinthreeat7-4.Thatwasas 7' h
'Lancers soon jumped to a 30- · son led the offensive attack
close as Meigs would get to
~cei. was a dismal 7-of-51 241ead.
for Eastern with 11 points.
a · cl din I f- '' The . Eagles showed some · Sara Mansfield and Sanpy
the hllstlingVikin&amp;' the rest of tio
the W7lf. A basket by Kayla ' l 0 ~m ~n~ ~e·
:!lw~arl 'ai they pulled'~&amp;· '*:ithiii ''Po~ell :. each': contr'ibuted ( 7
' '
.' '
Jewett made it .14-8 Vinton Marauders connected on 7_ .tw,o points and 'maintained a po1nts.
County after one frame.
f. 13 fc~ ul h
d ' ulled ~o-point deficit throughout
In the Resetve contest the
oo sots an p
,
.
L d E gl
..
· ~
The second quarter was a d
ds led by , !he third quarter. The Eagles
a y a es were v1ctonous,
28 b
night:tnare fur the Marauders Down .th re ounW.
d still trailer;! at the end of the 21-12. Morgan Weber had 10,
as they hit only 1-of-10 field
": WI chseve;[. erty an ''third, 32-34.
~
followed by Jennifer Hayman
goal a!t&lt;!mpts and after a Davis So by ea ha. our.
' · The Lancer. jumped on the with 6 points.
.
.
Lady Vik.in&amp;' were 19- " '"'
.
~
h for ,our
~
bucket brought
the deficit
f_The
55 fro th fi ld . cl din .! r.agles m the.ourt
F-.1 Hocking 59, Entorn 45
back to 10 points at 20-10, the . ~ f. 8 m e e hm u . g straight points thus escaping Eastem 12 8 12 13 - 45
drought was on. Although the
-o ~
odn
tected
ree-pomt the 2-point grasp the Eagles Fed Hock 10 13 11 25 - 59
EASTERN - Krye1al llakor •1· 0·0· 2,
.
d
nl
10
attempts
an
conn
. on ~ h' ~h ld thro gh
h th'rd AJy88(1
Vik.i
Holler 3 G-2 6, WhH~ l(;lrr 2 ·1·3
. n&amp;' ma.nage o y
10-of-20 from the line. The ; " au e
u out _t e I
5, Jennifer Hayman 0 1-2 1, Sara Manspomts of therr own the rest of Vikin controlled the boards ,, . penod. From there tt ~s all field
1 4-5 7, Katie Robertson 5 f.1 '11,
the half. the damage was done
. &amp;'.
Lancers. The Eagles nussed Sandy Powell3 f.2 7, Toni Wolfe 2 2·2 6.
'
'
and the visiton were in a 20- pulling 10 36 rebounds. .
shots, and didn't rebound. The Totals: 16 10..22 45
FEDERAL HOCKING - Natalie Williams
point hole as the teams went
Vmton County made It a_ fatal wound came when the 1 o-o 2. Tracey Sidwell 4 4-4..13, Renee
to intermission 30-10.
· sweep by wmnmg the JV' fouls began to add up. Key Stevens 4 6·10 14, Tri~ha Jo~nson 0 2-2
2, Keleey Lackey 4 3-4 11, Flll1h Gliders 4
The thin:l stanza began to game 33-28 despite a comejf players Whitney Karr arid Sara 4-412, Sheila Gilcrlst 2 N~~ s.~· rotals: 19
59.
.
give the impression that nei- back ef!'ort by Me1&amp;'· Xanthet. Mansfield fouled out early in 2().26
Three Point Goals - Eastern 1(Mans·
ther team was going to score S~th led the way With 21 the fourth quarter. Eastern field) (Sklwell1).
Eaaoem 31 (Karr 6).
until Chancey hit a jumper pomts, Justme Dowler had finished strong, but without ReboundsAssists - Eastem 11 (ManStield 3).
from the wing 3:31 into the thre~, Ma.na Drenner and those key offensive producers, Turnovers- Eastern 25.
Steals - Eutem B{Robertsoo 2, Holter
quarter. The Marauders would Chnssy Miller two each. Rat- wasn't able to overcome the 2).
score no more points in the cliff led Vinton County wilh
quarter until Katie Jefl'en hit 11.
two fiee throws with but :09
Mei&amp;' will host cross-&lt;:ounlefi.Again,Vinton County did- ty rival Eastern Monday night
n't fare much better as they with the JV game getting
only managed five points in underway at 5:55.
.';·
the entire quarter and took a
M McArthUr
cl
35-l4 lead to the last period.
Vinton County 50, Mllgo 22
The last quarter was more of Meigs
6 2 4 6 -'
{;(
22
the same story for the
Unlimited night and wHkend
v. County 14 16 5 15 Marauders as their first points 50
mlnute1 and 500 anytime minutes
came on a Michelle Drenner MEIGS - ~y Bolin 2 0.0 ol&lt;l!in&lt;IY
Char&lt;ey 1 (\ 1 2; Katie Jo;t.,. 0 2·2 2;
for only $50 • month, for life. ·
two-pointer 5:16 in. By this s.....nlha Pton:e 1().0 3; Michele o......
time, the Viking; had built a 1 ().0 2; Sl1amon Souloby o: Joynee,Davis
2 2·3 6; Marla ilnlrr&lt;!r a 1·21: Brook Bolin
S1UII
-5165M(It I J-ptqt
31-point advantage. The final 0:
Xanlha Smith 0 1-2 1; Alicia Werry 0 1·2
.IIIUIQ
....... _ play of the game seemed to 1; Ctwf08y - 0. TOTALS 77·1322.
....
Your ..... """' 1lbll1ll
COUNTY- Kristi Hayes 14-68;
sum up the entire night for Vlt&gt;ITON
~dllclt,oal
11!'P111
Mol Jonas 1 ().0 2; Hayley- 2 2-4 7;
Meigs as Vinton County's Belh Alon 2 34 7; Holy Pridemonl 8 ().0
12; CO&gt;&lt; 0 1·3 1; Kayla 5 0.2 10;
Susan Eberts launched a rain- Susan
Eberts 2 0.1 5. TOTALS 19 10.20
bow from half court that hit 50.
goa~ - Meigs 1(PieR:e) VI.,.
nothing but net as the buzzer Thffi&amp;jllint
too COunr; 2 ( -.Ebe&gt;1s)
.
. sounded, ending the game at Turnovors- Meigs 16 Vtnton County 11 .

Ea·stem
flom

Meigs

hom

J;;,

!. ;;,;

-

........,,........ ••wllll•J ,........
I ••llld-...

Advertisement for Employment
Gallia County Children's Services Board Is
seeking an experienced and motivated Executive
Director to direct, manage and Implement the
activities of the Gallla County Children's Services
and the Chlldren's Home. A Bachelor's Degree In
Human Services, Business Administration, Publlc
A!lministratlon or related fteld with a mlnirilum of
five years management or administrative
experience Is required. A Master's Degree would
be 'preferred. A beginning salary of $45,000 plus
benefits will b~ offered. GCCSB is a~ equal
opportunity employer. A complete job description
may be obtained by calling 740-446-4963.
Interested applicants must have resumt;s to Mr.
Kall Burleson, President, Gallla . County
Children's Services, 83 Shawnee Lane, ~allipolls,
Ohio 45631 or FAXED to (740) 446-2063 by
·
December 20, 2001, 4 p.m.

H.-.......
"
__
.
.
.
...........
..,..,,..__
.-.......... .-·-···
. ...............
.,,..,...,.m....,-.a..,
;I-··----........
,._....
,__
_........
_....
•.,.....
O!m.lllll

v

burgh selected shorutop Luis Ugueto fiom

Aorida and sold him to the Marinen.
Kansas City was the only other team to lose
more than one player. Toronto selected righthander eorq.Thurman and San·Diego picked
righty Ryart Baerlocher.
Otben selected were right-hander Miguel
Asencio by Kansas City from Philadelphia;
right-hander Joe Valentine by Montreal from
Charlotte; shortstop Felix Escalona by San
Francisco from Houston; and outfielder Ryan
Christenson by Milwaukee fiom Arizona.
Eligible for the draft are playen not on 40man msten who have three or four years of
professional experience, depending on
whether they were older than 18 when they
signed.

- 'NASCAR raises age requiremen~
CHAIUOTIE, N.C. (APj -- NASCAR
on Thursday set an age ttquirement of 18 for
participants in its ~or series, another move
in iti push for stronger safety measures.
Beginning in 2002, all dr~. crew members and other participanll in .the Busch
Series, · Crafts-

NASCAR ~~e. an~~~
N.ASCAR

. Touring Series'
must be 18 or older in order to compete. The
age requirement matches the existing standard for th.e Wiriston· Cup Series.
·
"It was in the best interdts 'o f safety, competition and· profeuional development that
we institute these new age requirements,"
NASCAR President Mike Helton said.
"Younger competiton need at much experience as they can accumulate before competing at NASC.ARJ professional levels."
The age requirement will immediately
affect driven like 16-year-old Kyle Busch,
younger brother ofWinston Cup driver Kurt
Busch.
Kyle Busch's age carne up in November
when sponsor Marlboro prevented him from
racing in a Craftsman Truck race. The objec- ·
tion fiom Marlboro was based on an interpretation of the agreement between big
toba~c~ compal)ies and scate attprneys geneta] that precludes lhe involvement of persons
under 18 yean old in events sponsored by the
companies.
Under the new requirement, the sporuor
i.!sue wpuld not have come up because Kyle
Busch will be prohibited to race in major
NASCAR-sanctioned events for at least
another year.
Also, drivers like 21-year-old Casey
AtwOod will be less·likely to break into Winston Cup until later in their careen.
Atwood was 17 and had · become the
youngest pole winner in BUICh history when

he caught Ray Evernham's eye in 1998.
Evernbam had Atwood continue to hone his
skills in the Busch s•ries then hired him to
drive one of his Cup can this year.
But under the new requirement, driven
like Atwood will be relegated to the lowlevel N AS CAR Weekly Racing series, likely
pushing back by yean the time they will be
ready for Winston Cup.
Helton said that was NASCAR's goal in
setting the age requirement, as well as a concern over the welfare of min on.
. "They need to hone professional driving
skills, knowledge, and judgment that is best
learned at the local level, as with the Weekly
Racing series:· Helton said. "After the age of
18, and with this experience, younger competitor. shonld b• better prepared for regional or national competition.
"We also considered the possibility of a
young person's education being interfered
with, by the demands of competing in our
larger divisions. NASCAR values education,
and would never want our racing to be a distraction in that pursuit."
Other rule changes passed this week
included the requirement of helmets and fire
suits to be worn by over-the-wall pit crew
members and a mandate that any crew member .involved in fueling the car must wear a
full-face h~lmet and a fire-resistant "head

sock."
And for the first time ever, the rules book.
will require drivers to wear a firesuit. Before
now, NASCAR had only recommended that
a driver wear fire resistant clothing but there
was nothing in the rule book that prevented
a driver from climbing into the car wearing
shorts and aT-shirt.
NASCAR also said Thunday that fire
extinguishing equipment must be located
inside the race car within the driver's reach
and must have a visible, operative pressure
gauge.

·White Sox, Bucco's make trade
'

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Pirates had a SS2 milThe Chicago White Sox got lioQ payroll last season they
the quality starter they felt are cutting to $48 million,
they needed after slipping to while the White Sox, who
third place last season, won the AL West in · 2000,
acquiring right-hander Todd had. a$[17 million payroll in
Ritchie from the Pittsburgh 2001.
·
Pirates in a five-player deal
'Some general managers
Thursday.
are questioning why the
The
Pirates would even be interpitchingested in dealing Giles, clearthin Pirates ly is their beJt player, but
got
three general manager Dave Litright-banders - Kip Wells, tlefield insim he would do a
Sean Lowe and Josh Fogg deal only for proven .players.
and ·also sent minor league . "Giles is the type of player
catcher Lee Evans to the you build around," Littlefield
White Sox.
said as the winter meetings
However, the White Sox in Boston began to wrap up.
didn't come away with the "However, we lost 100
player they most wanted games last season and we
outfielder Brian Giles, who need to explore all avenues
has averaged 37 homers and to get better."
111 RB!s the last three seaRitchie's affordability and
sons.
durability made him auraeThe Pirates are listening to tive to the White . Sox. The
offers for Giles, a proven run right-hander, 35-32 the last
.producer who is .affordable three seasons, will make
by current-day standards $3.25 million in the second
with a $45 milliop contract year of a $5.25 million, twothat runs through 2005. Bllt ,year contract and is not elia limited trade clause allows gible for free agency .for two
• . him to be dealt to only six more years.
'teams, and the White Sox
"In our financial situation,
1
we can't afford to be a playaren't among them.
Giles, who lives in San er in the free agent market,
' Diego during the offseason, so we have to be creative,"
would accept a deal to the White Sox general manager
Padres, Dodgers, Giants, Ken Williams said. "We have
Rockies, Diamondbacks and to find a player who's on the
Braves. His brother, Marcus, verge of doing something
is a Braves infielder.
great. We don't have the luxGiles reportedly would ury to just write a check."
expand that Jist to include
The 30-year-old Ritchie, a
the Mariners and the Yan- longtime 1\vins minor leakees, but not for another guer, had a breakthrough 15small" to mid-market team. 9 season with Ptttsburgh m

MLa

'.,

The Otlly Sentinel • PIQ8 B 3

1999 before slipping to 9-8
in 2000. He lost his first
eight starts last seasqn, but
recovered to finish 11-15
with a 4.47 ERA for the
NL's worst team.
Wells, 24, went 10-11 with
a 4.79 ERA in 40 games
with the White Sox and
spent time at Triple-A Charlotte. Lowe, 30, was 9-4 with
a 3.61 ERA in 45 games for
Chicago. Fogg, 25, spent
most of the season in Charlotte, but also made 11 relief
appearances in Chicago and
was 0-0 with a 2.03 ERA.

BOSTON (AP) -While the New York million , one-year
contract. Arizo na
Yankees added Jason Giambi to their loaded announced a $500,000, one- year deal with
roster, their biggest rival got rid of its most Jose Guilll!n, a contract the outfielder agreed
to wee~ ago.
difficult problem.
The Boston Red Sox
Boston was looking for pitching, and in
traded troublesome out- Oliver the Red Sox get a 31 -year-old leftfielder Carl Everett to the bander who went 11-11 last season with a
Thxas Rangers early Thun- 6.02 ERA in 28 starts for the worst pitching
day for l•ft-hander Darren Oliver.
staff in the major leagues. Oliver allowed 260
Boston had been trying to dump Everett runnen in 189 innings.
since last season. He clashed with two manEverett is owed $17.15 miUion for the next
agen and hit .257 with 14 homers and 58 two seasons, a commitment that made it difRB!s before his season ended Sept. 8 bec:ius• 6cult for Botton - his fifth organiz:ttionof a knee injury.
to find takers.
"We're certainly not blind," Texas general
"It was a trade that was necessary for the
manager John Hart said. "Obvio.usly, it's well . team to move forward. and I think it was needocumented the prob)fm! Carl has had in essary for Carl to play in another market,"
Boston. At the same time, we recognize the Red Sox general manager Dan Duquette
opportunity a new fiesh start in Texas will said, adding the trade "wasn't made on the
provide for Carl."
basis of his overall sk.ills."
While Barry Bonds, juan Gonzale~, Chan
Oliver has one year remaining on a $19
Ho Park, Gary S~effield and Scott Rolen miUion, three-year contract. He has a $5 milwaited for their futures to be decided, the lion salary in 2002 and is owed $4.5 miUion
Yankees ended days of anticipation by of his $6 million signing bonus, with $1 .5
announcing their $120 million, seven-year million payable in 2002 and the remainder
deal with Giambi.
the following year.
The former Oakland first baseman is the
Boston ilia gave free agent John Burkett a
first big free agent to change teams this off- tour of Penway Park in a bid to bolster their
season. He fits perfectly for the Yanke., as rotation. b•hind ace P.edro Martinez.
they tty to add more power and patience into
"I was really impressed watching him
pitch," Red Sox manager Joe Kerrigan said .
their lineup.
Giambi, 30, is the perfect. combination of "He's really a lot smarter pitcher now. He
the two, leading the American League in on- understands that pitching is more than power.
base percentage (.477) and slugging (.660) He understands that pitching is more brains
last season. He replaces Ant baseman Tino than brawn."
Martinez, who hit 34 homen, but only had a
Duquette also met with the agent for free.329 on-base percentase.
·
agent second baseman Dret Boone, who has a
Giambi hit .342 with 38 homen and 120 $23.5 million, three-year offer to return to
RBis last season for the Oakland A's, finishing Seattle. It is not known if the Red Sox are
second in voting for the AL MVP award after interested. ,
There was no word on whether the
winning in 2000. His left-handed power
stroke is ideal for Yankee Stadium with its Dodgen would trade Sheffield or re-sign
short right field.
Park, the top pitcher iin the free-agent marNew York also reached a preliminary agree- ket.
·ment on a S10 miUion, two-year contract
Park is represented by Scott Boras, who has
with Rondell White and a $12 million, two- kept an unusually low profile during the first
year with pitcher Sterling Hitchcock.
four days of the five-day session. Bonds,
The Yankees also completed a trade that Boras' other big free-agent client, has no
sent reliever Jay Witasick to the San Francis- known offers other than a proposal to return
co Giants for outfielder John VanderWal.
to the San Francisco Giants.
In two other moves Thursday, the New
Philadelphia coruidered deals for Rolen,
York Mets signed free agent outfielder Roger eligible for free ageney after next season.
Ce~eno to an $18 miUion, four-year deal. Manager Larry Bowa called Rolen the best
Cedeno set a team record with 66 st•als in third bas•man ever, better than Hall of Farner
1999 and stole 55 bases last season with Mike Schmidt - a former Phillies teammate.
Detroit.
Rolen doesn't want to discuss an extension
Also, Pittsburgh acquired three right-han- with the Phillies, who have talked with Baltiders from the Chicago White Sox on Thurs- more and Seattle about a trade.
day, getting Kip Wells, Sean Lowe and Josh
"I don't know if he's at the stage where he
Fogg in exchange for righty Todd Ritchie has decided to get out and pursue free
and minor league catcher Lee Evans,
.. agency:' Bowa said. "If he is, there's nothing
In the major league draft, former 'Atlanta 1 that could change his mind. It sounds like he
pitcher Kevin McGlinchy was selected with wants to pursue free agency."
the first pick by Tampa Bay and the Seattle
Among playen eligible for salary arbitraMarinen lost four playen.
·
lion, Milwaukee outfielder Mark Sweeney
On Wednesday, reliever Norm Charlton re- agreed to a S515,000,one-year contract.
signed with the Mariners, agreeing to a $1.25

M LB

Reds hire Knight, Lefebvre as coaches
CINCINNATI (AP) Ray Knight, dumped as the
Cincinnati Reds manager in
July 1997 in
favor · of
Jack McKeon,
ts
rejoining
the Reds as a coach for the
2002 season.
Reds manager Bob Boone
said Thursday he is adding
Knight and Jim Lefebvre to
his coaching staff for 2002.
Lefebvre will be the team's
hitting coach. Knight's role is
to be determined.
Knight ,played for 13 years,
including six with Cincinnati. He W3 a Reds coach
from 1993 to 1995. As manager of the Reds in I 996 and
the first half of the 1997 season, his record was 124-137.
He later worked as an ESPN
commentator.
Lefebvre last coached in

MLB

the major leagues as Milwaukee's hitting instructor in
t 998-99. His prior coaching
career dates to 1978 and has
included service with the Los
Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants and Oakland
Athletics.
Knight and Lefebvre join
returning coaches Don Gullett, Ken Griffey Sr., Tim Foli
and Tom Hume. Gullett
returns as pitching coach and
Hume as bullpen coach. The
assignments for Foli and Griffey are to be determined.
The Reds also placed third
baseman Brandon Larson 'on
waivers in order to open a
spot on the 40-ma.n roster for
outfielder Juan Encarnacion,
obtained in a trade that sent
Dmitri Young to Detroit. Larson clhred waivers and then

was outrighted to the Reds'
. Triple-A Louisville affiliate.
Larson made his major
league debut for Cincinnati
this past season, appearing in
14 games, including . eight
start$.

Follow
your

teams in
THE DAILY
SENDNEL
'-------------------..1

O'Dell's
CaseD Sale

1110 20% on anv case
knHepurchasel

O'DELL LUMBER COMPANY
VIne Street at Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio .
740-446·1276 •

E

634 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992·1500
(

'

••

�Frid8y,O.C.14,2001

PO!Y*Oy, Middleport, Ohio

Qtrtbune- Sentinel-

'

t
AB-D0ot l'lo · Brand
0011 $1715, . .
:=..:..!125.~
~
.
(7 -....,1-1871 u.F r.-5

lEW AND 111m ITUL I 0 Quartor Old Quartor
lloamo, Plpa Robar ~ - SadFor Concrtlo, fvVro, Chan- Clo. Uto:l Twlco. 111500 lor
niiF , FllfD Bor, Groting II. (740,..1.QIItlfl
-.or r:un., ilrfvoqyo &amp; :-::---.,.,..----Amlllfll
II · ' tram wa~~w;a~ Nft 55 Gdon Athen8 Uvesaock SUM.
· ~1
Druma Wrth lid &amp; Ring llllurda 0
15
1IIHIW.
,..
y
L.10 - - - 200 $7 ·00°~
- ·. l&amp;LS::oipMat-' lpm, s,-1:11
ea.l CaK,'
poundl - ·
Foot ~ ()pan y. T.-y, Brod Cow Sale. AI eon.
0,..,..e~c "-AAL 100% ·~liiidly &amp; Frtt.v, ~ ..,...... w ' ••· Haul....... 0r. ... · · · -·
~ Thuroday, 1nu Avallololo. (740)8112-

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l\egtster
~~~-~~--~----~---

Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

-...

: BalliJIII-.

• Stlrt Your Acll With A ICeyword • Include Complete

Otlertpdon • Include A 'rice • Avoid Abbreylatlons
• lncludt Mione NumMr AtiCI AdCir111 Wften Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day•

r
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I'ERsoN.us

CilLO CAlli WOIIICIJII OlltM Mlfllllt -

G&amp;IRpolll- Coilogo
N11D1t1
Noed - . . , . . . (Caron CloiO To Home)
Do you ~ a 10 11t11 10 ~ ,. Call Todlyt 7-40 4411-1387,
makt a
1ft a ~-rvi'IM fOr buoy ...,.
chlkl't lffo~ p - lerr'o1111 hoerlllg aid PliO'
~ Ia
lot Jill!- tiol. Mull- woft(llllihflnk 1 hit . . meturt ...._ Qoocl Ofllll1i'
WNII)CIIIId--lor lllfonlland-111111,.
., lilor
lor qull'ld. Compu1of lxptri•
or boltiwiooll!r enoolmportrorit.· ~-·
oon Coidv.~SO:.
=.:.,~-::
lloo lnc*ldi p&amp;IIIC~ollng In , _ II 11.
J-.
,....,,.IICIIIII1111~101i«&lt;lo bUIIdo Pikt T - or 1ltonda
·; , : ; ;
1n0n1- ~.
co111. y,

Why walt? stert mooung
Ohio singles tonight. cal loll

=

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Tnm your taxea- helplsonng olheniDonatelhlo..~r..~
~ ••
dusirios. Aibany/Aihona

l

GIVEAWAY

112 easaen Hound&amp; 4wlco
old. (304)675-68311

::-:-~::---:--::---:-:-::

· 2 Han Beagle Dogl, 1-112
. years old. (7-40)258-1232 or
(740)258-1968
Adorable puppies need kN·

.
•

,.

,./PhOne

blllaYior. -

haW

HS Cllplomal ClED, Ytlld Piouai'!l \llllly Nurolng and
- . 1 - and bo wll- 'Rohabllltallon ~ qur·
lng to fr&amp;nspo~ Child,.,, rontly haa opanlngo lor
May 1110 lncludl ., _ . llllod Nuralng Aaololtnil.
110na1 Satufday PR!IIram. - h o u r -. 'UII-IImo
Exparilnce Willi Cllfldron lnd pa~-~... poolllono
prt~tn~c~, Villi our - • - ForntorelnlormaII - ·.....,._11111 fOr ep- lion. -Anglo Ciolanct,
Pllcllion,oppiy In~. or(D~ •
AN!'t5t,ralfl0·
IOnd II1IJ/,..,... to: .
PRtmRA
CUTIR
• --··- tor ·--,.,-10 ~
Kef'l Hatbl8on.
........,...w
~,..l 8ooOiaill1 Carpot 11La~:O Collllet
3378 RL 110 E.
Fumlluro,
HunilniJIOn,WVR
ISUndAwi,Galilplllo
lOa/ AA

c...

.!/
,.,s-.....,

·

ing homo 304·675-3029
leave message, wiN rotum
cau.
Free 10 good Indoor homo
malo purebrod Bloclc Lab
flUP!ll' 9 w1cs old. Male pure
·
bred wire haired Jack Ruo- Conotruatldn Labororo . not
sen Terrier 1 yr old. can afraid ot hllghta. 17.00 Plf POtting
740·992-3354 or 740-1167- hour 10 IIIJI. ('1'40)H8 :1141
971 2.
or (7o40)33N818
Tho Unlvorolty ol Rio
"::--'--::---:::-::-~- Cool
......., lot Clrandt Ia taldng oppilcl·
MiKed Breed Puppleo, SlY·
opol , _ ·-·,.
2 110r11 fOr part• Will .......
en weeks old, HuSky/She- IIMoodllail~ rillctnlgttt poilceofllooro. Aot;onoibll·
pard Baogle (304)576-3344 pooitlons. In ........, - · 1101-lltl Plrollllon of
mull: haW good reftiiiiCII
· '"
•~AND
llhlololotlltiCooMII- ~·till~~
'-""'
- ...... In
•N
FOUND
_, _ , filii!'·
1111111 publloiiiCI UIWMI1y
Don1al ~~~ , . . _
· enG IIlii
Ia.... For more
LOST• vellow Malo Col Port Tlmo. ..,.... •A()O. 111ij ''
•
-.--• · dolallod iilor't-' OOI\Itcl
ml881ng since November 4, ENE of -llltglnla 1o ltoio •ll Willi. ~ Pallco
2001 . Tiger mart.lngo. taking!!!~~!**· Cl1ilf 11 (74Djll4i-m5.
(IIY
laf
. A rdl (740)446-4486
~-•1-,. -.lalllllg ~
~
ewa
plicla1lcll•laf moaNno - · ileallon.,
,• - · alarllng pay 1o law
~
~r;r'"-:A~UCI10N==·AND~-,~~(~_:,~~dapl. roqUIJOd. OPOtA
•
., _ _ _ .,
. •· lion noc:tuary. Mull bo
Fil!A MARKET J&gt;ll.lonoo roqul...t) po;y • - ror IYI!llng, holl·
.
ICIII bUod
~and ohlfll.
lhoUiclaubAucll·on F"day "- f'th F,. _ _ monll1l.
~. • .' MlnJ-·-of2
-~· 1 011 ~ _.,.
. and
"
6pm at9 W Horton St Ma
nMn
""
....
·•
010 Ifill will bo \illllllcl. Ap- of OPOTA '*'illoallon
WV ..:., I
son,
, ~·· o """"""" ply lit paloon ., IOnd ,. ""' d &lt;Ill Ill Delor Christmas, 304-n3- ,IUIIIt 10 .1NE of Wool
11, aoo'1.•1...._•,
8100
~
"'"'"~
::::-.-::----:-:-:::-::-- alnla. 118 Jodi ~- lion muo1 bo •• r•tlld to:
1
Rick Pearson AuctiOn Com- 011¥1 Mlnoo£1~
11212,
Phvlll Muon, PHA
pany, full dme aUCIIonlor, Al1r'l: HumOr\ finer,,..,
til.- of H1fnln
complete auction HrYICo. Ex-'11n...,. .....,_.,_
· 11111 010
LlcenaedtOODhlo&amp; Wtll
~· - · . . , . . . _ U:~... oltyofRioClloncfo
Virginla 304:773-5785 Or Aorat DIIIDftll' ntll:lld lor
P.O. loi;IDQ,
1
304-773.5447.
pan llmil pOittltn In 1 I!IDCllondo,OH4M74
~ ':::· Netcfo 10 F... (740)tol6-4800,

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~ "'lkln·•M--=·
.:;'~

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AbSotuto Top Dollar. u.s.
Sliver, Gold Colna. Proclf·
1811, Dlamonda, Bold
Rings,
u .s . currency,M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sa:&gt;
ond Avenue, Gallpollo, 74Q.
448-2842.
I \1 1' 1 IJ\ \II'\ I

'I H \ I&lt; I '-

.;...,l

· ~ft1'll1ol""'...;;;;;.._ _

JIFLp WANTI!D

100 WORKERS NEEDID
Assemble cralla, IIams. Material provldod.

To S4BO+ wlc.

I

Free lnfonnatlon J*Q. 2&lt;4 Hr.
1-801 -~7110

Allentlonl

Earn 2nd. Income wllhoUt

•

2nd job up lo
$25.-$75./hr. Pt-Ft.
1-800-218·7643

!

www.Money-Oreama.com
AVONI All Aroool To Buy or
Shirley Spaore, 004675-1429.
Bol.

I

l

llual""" Ofllqo Manoaor
for 100 botl lkllad nurolng
locllly. Poalllon 1o rooponolblo lor blllng, ::olloctlono,

I problem .-..uon, oom;ul·
oldiiO. telephone lind at, lonlloniOdai:III. Ca-01&gt;
r ponunlty for right ·
1 ohailonglng, - n g and
"ceiltnlrlillnllglililnl:llm
IO.work will:. Foclllty hoe ••·
celltnl regulatory oompllanco hlotorr, Hlory oncf
bonollll. I n - candldalfl ShOuld opoly to:
Rocklpringo Alhlbllliatlon
Clntor 98759 ~
Road,, Pomeroy, . Dhlo
45769 Jackie Newaomo
RN ADON Equol ()ppclrtu:
: If

~~'"li!'fl

.

•.,...,.ace w·-~·•·
Full Time D-1 - . ,,
Sond Rosumo to: CLA 4118
c/o Gallpollo Dally , . _ ,
625 Third Avo Clllllpdllo
OH 45031.
'
'

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TliAHII'OIITATIOII

Ia LMidNI 10r

NoS

._OHwlo.

Will Haul Away, Clean Out,
Cloon Up or Move Almost
Anyllllng. liking Conalgn'
monta.Call(7o40'""-7804
,..-.r

'

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OtiutJ'liNIJY
IND1'1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO
mends that

~·dobU=wl1hpoople
y0;; know, and NOT to aend

oflartng.

ltart Your Bu1lneso Today... P~mo Shopping G:entor 9pacll Available A1 AI·
- R a t e. sr.~;g Valley
Plua, Cal7o40·
101 .

i

=

*

I'

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all
818 Main Stroot, Pt. Pl.
Completely Relulbl-. 2
otory, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bodrooms. Largo Kltohon,
Large Utility Room, LA/ DR!
Family Rm. New Carpel
throughout. F/A &amp; AIC ,
$79,900. (7o40)446-flli85 or
(7-40)446·220!1 or (7-40)44112883.
Be the tal Family In INI
New home. No Malntanance, Vinyl Siding. BIIUIIlui Carpet, Tiled Kitchen
and EniiY, 3 BR, 1 llalh. AI·
tachod Clarago. Fill 1 Aero
Lot with Smoll Pond. Country surrounding, seuoo.
(740)448-2804

MllNEv
ro L&lt;MN
.

i.Qoto No Furlhlf Wo p:oYido

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=1ft

lido

rrNIIUIP:::' . .

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1111)386-0885.

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r.:';i,":·oyatom.

:=e:rr

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$f7

""'!'!!!'
"---oii"""""iiiiiiii--'

per month lnctudtt water, •rm10f"""~~----,

tate 304-l?a.&amp;6'8

- · truh, szoo dopooll,
· (740)949-2025

1887 14x70, 3 br./2blh, 2 wifll- Ill-up
on ~--- ~. o11 ••-..
-..--• ""'
.._
ooy,
U ~~-. ~ Umo
Ad..
Ruflond,
11846.
(7-40)742·2803- Spm.

8

mga

10
h::J;t ':. BriCk Cottage. 2 BR, poooi·
CDL ....,_ 41111
E - r con holp you, Wt provl:fa bly 3. BaiOmont. Clratl Lo. l-100--ll , E
w..o."ilill bl· mortaogeo, peraonal and calion. 1 block from City
,_..,._
omalf bullnoaa loana wl1h Park.
(740)441-0384.
Holp ~cering fol ·lf1i Wfllty,
·
IIOOdorbotlcrodH.Approval 1&lt;17,1500.
~. D1t11 ~ Homl, Tho Molge Coumy Council livlthln
~• hrs. &lt;668' 882" eomor ot Park St. and RIY- I*!/111G rftlnlmuin - · on Allng. Inc. lo aooopclng 1188
ervlew Dr. In Mlddlopon.
- ohlllli 1tflll.ltpm, ,.,. ' - - lor ""' . - , ol
l'loorfli510NAL
Sailing thouaando bolow Ill'
lpm, 3;m-flpm, 11pm.
Rapalr Coo.-.,___
proloal value, (7-40)99271rft, eal 740 HI IIOPt
tarl8lrilor Canllr lkllldlng ~
.,...,.....,
• 7933
H. - - , ., ~ilo!!" InDludo I yoaro ~~~ -ruptoy Anomoy Loulo DlvolllO FOIWI !lalol3 Bad·
-~-P1rf.llld . . , , . . _ 1tnow1- Cannamo, local appoint- roo&lt;n/2Balhonorlvalllol.
Mall.
No
ottgecjplumblng,...,.lcal, montror-&amp;:a..,_,lonca, coii(740)4411-3570.
lOCI
1• 1111p1ntry •ltd Aelhooting 8f4-221
.
iiJo.IU..Ut. Ill. 1070,
In llltltlon, 1 1111
Oon't Own Land? W. Dol
•-·
··
lo NqUired. Councry CraHtman Spaclal, Land/· · Homo fiiDkegM
· lltjl ~ . . -pool- llrlfllllng.
oonlng Avollablo. Coli (7-40,..8·
MoCiu!W'I - . " ' llcin
on ropalro. onct upholotory 3583.
hlrlna Ill 3 locadona; .tuht rr• 1 . . Md e ......... In- Doo. opoolal 15% off all Du IIX ·~~mon~ EIOh
pa~·~mo. Diolt .up 111iP1fCt1o . .. . . · applllonto lhOuld otrtPf)lng, oncf rtllnlohlnD, apf haa"'3BR LR DR
lion lllocaillr! ~-btlnU
~~·
turliiiuro &amp; khchon - -· KltOhln 1&amp;112 bolh 'ilvlln
-oelt
I ::IOem
•
!. (:104)743-1100
ono
ind ""'lhf 01111 ,
10:00om ~ l11r\l ill.f'
Dri¥1
,
'
urdly. '
,
Dh. 1
tit . Alii
l'llrtl f'lnanolol hao boon ~ lnvellmont properly.
. flrt811'1ov.fdor.
.
!;"~ding omoll bu1lnno feO.OOO. Coli (304,875Joilrlnf
c
.
ror 13 voara. Now wo 2495, after 5pm.
Rio Clrandi .
OR .. ENTLV
NII!,DJD- ot*lailroln poroonal, cor &amp; FOr aalo by owner: Nlca blllvo ~a..,..donoll.- -10 dab! oonaolldlllon. We - homo on 1 lora _ ,
ago, Pltiut tpaM Wilf1!)!. 1110 joor lor I or 3 auaroniN quality urvlco Chollor
bod""""
ant 01 llulh 11, (74Cf14* ~ra WMidr. DaH . .,.. '""" I 1nll1ld name. Call
·
'
4148
1M. 7~11',
Ant 1 ' - 1 ~· ap- :"",eo:,."'::~~'::·
So
Wotlt· ,
it . F
llilcatlona
holllne
(t · am.,
Nowcantral IHiot'
,::...,..., .. flilltla -· ~-roe
0no m~
-l'or ':IOcollonll
NIICf ~ Help? Rlak nute on Rovte 7, buUIIII Plf·
loitot!lll
!too -""'lly, loot&lt; no fur· VIlle. (7-40)1168-3911
No Trovol, NO Cold Oallngi
thor, ow llnanclol lnalllullon ,
provldoo you wllh ual1· Romodalod 3 botl"""", In
PIUii
linea &amp; Information, Froo Mlddilpoll, coil Tom AndereM 1
71 .
oonoullatlon, can now at aon tlflor &amp;pm (7-40)992·
Alii l o t - Wo1ng
877·304-3011.
3348. '
'

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19110 F'l8olwood 2 botlroom lnclan CIMk l!alallt, 3-6
homo-call Cheryl 0 7-40·
Iori
1 0t Rio
385-9621. 2002 Sunpolnto ..,.
' 3 bodroom/2balh 14 • 70- ~:=,)r.a- ;~ I25,1100.
must 8011-call Mike • 740385-2434.
Troller Lot for Aont lull
1991 Mlllllllon 14x70, 3 oboVo Adeloon Phone
(304)6!5·5332
bedroom excellent condl· (7-40)387-7876 ,
3•4 bedroom 2 baths lr dr lion, call Kavena, (740)385kitchen, coniral htot &amp;'we: 9948.
Want to Buy oman form or
b
1 &amp; allochod go
acroogo In Muon County
asemen 2
- 1994 16KB0 Mobile Homo ou~o lor mr railromont
1 bath
wllh br, f
' apttii on Aero lol With 24x32 Do- Mml. PtiOIIful - * : rural
:::1:;;'~ l~acon"".;'kt"";'i :,:, ItChed Garllfje. (304)876- • iocatlon rmt or&gt; a prtmory
·
1.......
"-~~
Meigs High Sohool ~ ap- -·
,..,.way. - · - pouoepolntmonl only, (7-40 593·
lion occoplablo. Call 27().
1999 18KBO Fi4ltlwOOd trail- 385-ail27
8937
or hOmt, 3 bid"""", 2 ful
balhl, central olr, haat
3br. 2 balh Nice Neighbor- pump, gu hoel, 6X6 dick &amp;
tlood
Polnl
Pleaaant Undlrplnnlng, Ukl new, Ylry
!304l67H 711
clean, vacant roady to
• BR 3 5 Bath ranch · - movo, (740)742-2247.
•
' .
"'"'
over 3000 BQ tt, large 2 bedroom, stove &amp; refl1gern'"encedwroolya2rdca
, ,••
--~~-· ator,nowwindowl&amp;carpot,
'
·-·-Cal 1&lt;1,995, 740-992·2187
15 Court Stroot. 2 Bod-

I

lop Quality Flnancing _,_
ilnco ond'Hoip. Stan a New
:y, - , enG boololto. 1,. 0 rodl1 fOr New Year. 1-686Ollndldlltle lhOuid 322-38114
appty10: ~bllltillon o-r, 38758 T - - • - 1 : 1 •
llacl-. Rood, Pomor·
ID ~ oome lind

ln-....,

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~-·
1'1111 hliP wl1h dollYCa ~-- 7.._"-_.-:_

TFU.couNTV CONSTAUC.
TIDN.
Now
FOR&amp;u!
~
ConlfruotloniRomodellng.
'lldlng, 'Rooll!'fl, "Drywall, lot Time Homo Buye"'
lot. 304-.814·01551304- FHA/ Government Loans/
874-38U
· Single Parent Program
Will ._~-• at _ home Loans Available . Call
Fa...;'T,;" Yord'."'Sandhlli (740)448·3093
Ad. Call (304)895-3741
3 Badroom on Routt 2,

r:,nu

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HOME!i

riD

C:::t.::::l:&amp;. ·=
....:. 411~:~· =::. :.r:rodll
!==nlly
NO

1985 Skyline 14x70, 3 bodRIOIT\, Good Condition. Call
Harold, 7o40-385-9848.

,
,
lng and oonllructlon clean
up. ~Ual. 992-2979
orll92-13111 ,

Will llobyoit at my home.
Foncod In Yard, Sandhill
RG. (304)185-374 1

~

18 Wldo. Only 1185.00 P&lt;tr 2 -oom Traler, All oleo- 1 Badroom Apt. Gall&gt;oflo.
MOnth, 8.99% Flxod 1 - ltll, 1300/mC&gt;, 1200 dopooll. Weier Paid. 1275 month
Ralt Wllfl /&lt;Jr And Un- (7-40)387-0147.
plus dapoaH. No Palo,
dorplnnlng t.a&amp;M211o3-428
(7-40)416 4~ oiler.6:00pm
2 BR Mobile Homo, No
Wll...,4prlolllflolo.
P111.$2ot51monthlncludal TwinRiwrTowenonowacToldng now lot dollY- - · $100 ~11. oppiiCallonllor
OIY In Fobruory. Mar&lt;:ll &amp; (7-40)446-3817
tllli.HOO..-odapl.
Apo11.
Booutiful Rlwr View Ideal lor~ ancldllablod.
For 1 Or 2 People, AoloNnEOH.
~=~
DopooH. No Pill. Foo(304)67H67ll.
piuohlnglo18-- .... Trallor Pori&lt;, 7 - 1· ---,---:c::--,-.,-0181 · '
ot hugo • ....._
Vtry nlco, 2-3 bodroom
1pea1a1 ;;;;;;"'
Trailer In Rutland, kltal for aparlmenl, In town, Iorge
your at 1-3 pooplo, IIIICid location, kllchon, LR, 1600/mo. Rolplcoo.
(7-40)742·2881 ,
.,.,_ &amp; dopooll requlrod.
Calo'o -. ~~ (740)448-3fl44
162M us Eut
AalmluNJll
Alheno Dh 48701 '
liOR RBNr
""'a;:
740-8112·f972
FORRENr ·
&amp; 2 8R Economical Clu
..........,
Hoo~ WID Hooku , Neor Nice loll. qultl country aet·
AND BuilDINGS
Holzer, $295 10
9 Per ·tlng, will accom..OO.te
w/gea log fl~. ctn1rll
.
month Pluo Ulfllllel LeaN 161110,.$100 par month, call
all, loundry rvom. front 4,800 oq loot Cornmen:lol and 'DepooH R~rod. Ed at Country Homea, 740porch &amp; 2-112 cor garogo. Building wl1h 10 to 200 (7 .......~ 7
992-2167.
lrftn'llltllte potiiiiiOfl. Ap- acr-. -,.Ia Grande, ONo.
"'"~r-v-~~
:------:---:--:::-=
pralood at $125,1500. Mll&lt;l 0w11or flnonolna Trailer space for rent, S120
oftor. Call (7-40)448-4514 Call (740)248-8147
· 2 BR Apt. Ne'My Remod- par month, In Minersville:
from ·s-Spm, M-F, or
eled. Stove, Rafngerolor BOOoqftolllclbulkfing,llc
(7-40)446-32411 oltor Spm,
8000 Sq. 1oo1 001111111ffco1 Fumlshod. All Ulfllllea Paid. &amp; .,.;nng ian, $275 par
owogo Willi 14,000 oq, fool 411 Ollw St. 1&lt;1751 mo. month, (814)678-1681
·
Molllu: 1JoMBs ~ aroo. Call ERA (7-40)148 3845 ,
·,
\din 11\\.l•hl
1 lbwn &amp; Country J1oai Eo- bldroom aparlmtnl, 1450
~
JIOit !iAUt
4
Hau1o wifll tumlturo locatod
at 4«1 Hodgowood DrN.,
Gallpajlo. Part of Lata 11 Cl. t 112 balho. 3 bodmomo,
full - .
Apprallod at 34, ·Mull
haw •• 213 of app&lt;aJo.
1&lt;1 value. Call
3801 or (740)448 01103.
Now/ UIOd- lmmodl110 Pmoolon, No paymonll unll Feb. 2002.quallly by p!lono, ( 740)+183218.
Nowly construclod, olngto
110ry 1800 oq. fool hOI!II.
Locolod 10 mlnutea from
Holzer Hoopilol, 20 mlnuiiO
lrom Pltuant Vlllty Hooplo
lll.oi!SR tao one Plfvato
1-112 .... lol 3 botl-.
2-112 balha, btg ki1Cilen
w/011&lt; cablnlll, DR, LA

r

~~..;;.odu ="'\!'..~!] u,~~ ;;~)446-~~~,000

bo 11 VIlli age or-. SaiN Poaltion. lmmodlalt
wllh floral -gil oxpett- DooninQ. Apply In P - .
lnOIIn!lmuol haW a ~ flitng Ffoou:iia: Mquloltiona
driYOrl llConao and I giJociJIWIIry, 181 2nd Aw., Galdriving-· bo dio 11po11a.
to 1ieJi11ie hOUra Itt- .,.. ~ ...._ . I ~OiUdln(l a n - Saiut• ~· ..-N--·-not=lt
..,,_l,oror
day 11111Ming. PINM oubntit ·,oo~ ~ ~
to
a I'Mumt by ~rlday, D•
•
· - alth· NO l&gt;hono cllty.
-""'l'Y tor
Calli Ptouo. PO eo. 211, till lfltll paraorl, ahalltlngo
RIO Otanttl, OH4it874.
~:•::
.OIIIn~tll ==•~*'......,..'
hill IU0-111:1

IL ~~It~~ lr

(740)441•

':

_,,.lnd'

~
zr.'·

-lll'&lt;&gt;llrllm

"""""'.............,,.

·F4D)698-8200

TUIINaD DOWN ON
IOCIAL SECURITY lUI?
No F11 U,_ We Wlnt

a-

lroe l·iiOil-768·21123 oil
1621.

It

,

P .

, •
BI!AunfUL
APART- Applloncea: A-nod
MENTB,AT BUOClfET PRI- Wuhora. 0ryo11 Rongn
CES AT JACKSON ES- . Aol....._., Up .,:0 90 Da,.;
'"""'
••
'"'
TATI8,52Wiolwood0rlve Guarantel&lt;ll WI Sell New
from $29710 $363. Walk to Maytag Appiii(ICII, Fronch
111op &amp; movill. Call 740- Clly Maytag, 740-4467795.
....,_2588. Equal Housing ....;;......;...;;.._ _ __
Opponunity
.Coooh &amp; Chair Mulli
·
Chrloly'o Famll~ Living,' colorod. Aaldng ~- AJn.
331-40 New Lima Rd., Rut· Ish l!ulll EnloMI"'"""' Canland, Dhlo, 7-40-742-7-403. tor. Hotdo 27" TV. Paid
Apa"""""' home and trailer $1,000. Aal&lt;lng $500.
renlala. Commoroiol otore- (304)875-7349
fronts evallable for ltaaa. - - - - - - - Vaconcioa now.
For Sale: AocondHionod
n...o•• oparbnonllor rent 3 . wuhoro, dryonl and retrlg~ Lv Room ldl.;._ ........ Thompoons ,Appll·
on 1 &amp; ll2tJOih $300 mo + anco. 3407 Jaol&lt;aon Avtullltieo' , Ref. ~ .. ~, _, 1 nuo.(304)675-7388.
·~·~ ~
(304) 875-2495 altor 6:00
G. E. &amp; KII1IIIOJO - .
pm.
S&amp;5 oach, T_., &amp; WhiM·
F I1h•" Eff'•'All poo Drytrl, $80. /&lt;JI While,
um ~
~~ncy.
Call altor Spm. (7-40)446UlfHIIot Paid, Shorld Balh. . 9066
$1251 month. 811 2nd Ave., ·:::::---:--::::-:::-:-:--:
(7-40)446-3945
ClE waahor $85: Whirlpool
Graclouo living. 1 a-• 2 dryer $85, T._, EIOCIIIc
·~
R
$85 Amana Aoir1gbedroom aJ!Inmtntl at Vii·
$1Jo;
Kenmore
~Manor a n d - · w - • d-r 111 $275·,
.,...llmonlo In Middleport.
a .,.

1

•=

At

r

UmHod 01 No CrodH? CloY·
ommont Bank Finance Only
At Oakwood In BalbouroYllo, WV 304-736·340;,
MobiiiH
for Sale ;
1 70
1
Cambnc:.' 3 Bl&lt;lroOm, 2
Balho, (740)246-90118

Now 14•70, 3 botlroom, 2
bath. Only 19115 clown &amp;
1189.52/monlh. Call Charyl,
740-385-7671 .

~~

=

3bf. llouao 211f Uncoln
Aw. No Plfa. Saourlty o.
pool! 1375 o month.
(304)875-2748 ·

~4 s!:~only 3br. hOUit ~ Polnl-nl
' mo, 11500. I monlh + ~·
7

Call Nll:ld, ( o40)385-7B7t .
Now 2002 14 - · Only
$899 Down &amp; 1188.36 par
month. eaa Harold, 7-40385-7871
·
Now Double Wldl. $195
Por Month! 3 -oom. a
Bath. Frao
&amp; Saltlp, 1-1188-1126
·
Oakwood Homeo of Barbouravlla, WV. Tha only
place with Lay·o·woyo.
(304)736-3409

oa.=

12ldl0 Two Bedroom All
Eloctrlo $380. par month Includal Wator and Sewer
F -. Loooted N10r Fox'o
Pizza In Point PltaMnl. For
lnlo call (304)675·3423

No POll. (304)875-151128

r

=-

Hardy M...,. 13.00 each 4
for 110. Open Set. 8-5pm. &amp;
evonlngo. Dewhu..t G...,_
; hou11 MI. Alto. (304,695·
37-40 ltavo mesaage. or
(304)695-3789
.
. Independent HerboiHe Ole·
tributor, Call For Product Or
Opportunity. (740)441-1982
JET
AERATION MOTORS
. Repairad, New &amp; Rebuill In
, Stock. Call Ron Evans, f·
.. 800-537-91!28

· Good Condition $76. Mar·
" tog Dryor Good Cond~on
$50., Admiral Refrigerator.
GOOd Condition. SISO.
- (304)n3·5270
I

Y,'"'"

Pnncoaa Diana Doll, 1200.
Cabbage Patch (Dreos),
S50.
Cabbage
Patch
(Joanl), $50. (740)992· 9237

•~-

.._ _ _ _ _ __,
•
Buy or otll. Riverine Anti·
quaa, 1124 Eul Main on
SA 124 E. P"""""l', 740·
892·2626. Ru11 Moore,
owner.

,

"

"su-0-,1-~-~--.bl-n""·on-111--.,..::-

8

In Mlddltpo:l, Dollo, giUaworo, Alttddln mantell, and
moro. (7o40,H2-D296

I

. !'.!~.!.~
................. •

'-IPiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiior'

.

-

t·• drawer c•-t of draw·
"
·-

az"s~~~~~.::.;,~~~~~

drawers,
light colOr,
18"1138"•44", $50, (7-40)992·
2529
-::--:---:-:--:--:-:--:-12' Brua Ball: 27 Hunting
Uoenao: Mlleheel AMI lor
peril. (740)446-8293

ML!iiCAL

1NsnwMJiNIS

I

Plano. Hamlllon by Baldwin,
Good Condlllon, Noodo
Tuned.
$800
OBO,
(740)245·5870· anytime
Saturday, SUnday. AHor
5:00pm Monday·Frtday,
Special reduced price until
Chrtstmaoonly. Baby Grand
P&lt;ano . Naw
condition,

King Clreulator 5tovo Modal
K8 24" 11ro bOK. $265.,
Largo dry froezo box. 22 cublc fill copaclty. S225.,
phono(304)67r;.2834
riO
MaytOg Washer (2 apeod) ,

:

r"

0342

- 251 27 MPCl 118 GMC ScJno.

, =-=~=-:::-:-:-:::::;
·
S5QOO.
Call Grubba Plano
Tuning (7-40)4411-4525.

~.........,

r

r

MoiuRcY&lt;lJ!S

!f.slJ='

&amp;ed, (740'4~·2857
(740)446·4794

or 2000 Honda CR 125, Naw
144 Big Bore KH, Too m..:h
to 1111. (7-40)4441·7311
98 model Toyota 4x4 4 cyl
5 ap, 42,000 miles, .k, alar: 2000' Hondo XR60. Uko
00 , adult ownod, malnlo· · Now. (7-40)388-8358
nance records, (740)992· 2001 1183 Harley DaYidaon
24118.
, Sporlllfr, Sill Undar Wer'l'lnty, 815 mlloa, with forward Controls, Asking
VA!l'j&amp;
SII800. (740)742-4SOII

r

4-WDs

I

r

-

u~··:rs "'"- ,u-~
...,..
..,....._

1889 Ford Aoroetar, 3.0 En- ~

NFL

over the Jets.
·
Both teatns will almost surely make the playofli. But Pittsburgh'• stakes are higher: home-field ad'II2Jltage in the AFC, for
one thing.
. This is by far the toughest game (on paper) the Steelen have
left. Paper doesn't mean much these days. Maybe Brown misset another extra point, but ...

S118JUUBllS, 13-10

JIOR 8.u.E

A

P.

&amp;

2000 Clrond Chorokoo Larodo V·B, Loaded, 151&lt;, Excel·
toni condition. (304)875·
71548
·

AMIFM Cuaette, dual air

NOW
HIR. lNG
$6 • $8

Per Hour
Full/Part Tlm8

Fil

M

1

Dallas (plus 5 112) at Seatde
All the Cowboys' wins are in the NFC Least.

SEAHA.WKS, 17-5
Jacksonville .(plus 2 1/2) at Cleveland
The Browns are exhau•ted and injured.
The Jaguars are exhausted and injured.

LkeDMd l'rldkll
Nuteo hll

.

. JAGUJlRS, '17-U

n..

JCinlenlled,pleuo

Adanta (plus

4)

at Indianapolis

Has anyone noticed ,that Peyton's cold •treak started when he
broke his jaw.
Don't blame

him.
fALCONS,

SEJlSON: 95~81-8 (apread); 115-60

malad
. Human Relourcel
at 740-992-2104,
Mortdaf floi'1Mip
Frida•, hm. 4 pal

fume and 10 haled her name that
ahe went by Chrissy unril eiJhlh

Minneapolis. He specialized in
the pommel horse and tho rinas.

Jf'lde.

r.blk Nolkn 111 Nt wrsPipm.
Yuur Rl.ht lD K~. OtUYII'td Rl&amp;hl to Your Dear. ,

NOnCE OF
PENPI!NCY AND

... :~:%

. VAOATI! li POIITION
OF AN UNNAMID
ITREIT
Excellent Salary and Beneftl&amp;
SOMETIMII KNOWN
AS A POIITlON 01'
Send resume to Human Resoun:'es,
CHURCH STRII!T
Plell58nt Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr.
ON THE lOUTH
WV 5550
S(DIOI' 7TH
Pt. Pleasant,
l
ITRII!T AND
Or fax (304) 675·6975
AJIOI
II!TWI!EN LOTI 24
L...-----..::":::.:=~-----.J
UIOF

'

'

I·

·'

up).
(atnlJht up).

Cb.lrllaut Carpenter (AnBtll
was ntlllllld after an A'&lt;On per·

Peter Kra111e (Six Fttt Ulllhr)
waa a aymnasl growina up in

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Hospital Ia currently
accepting resumet1 for 1 RN • Critical
Care Coordinator (ICU &amp; ECC). BSN
·preferred. Previous mana1~ment
experience preferred.

31-17

LAST WEEK: 10-5 (apread); 11-.4 (atnlpt

IUI'FINGTON'I
ADDIT~ ANP THI

DI!I!D IIICODID IN
VOLUIII! :1171 PAQI!
107, Ml!ioa. COUNTY
DIID RICOIIPI
Notice Ia glvan bf
the
Yllllga o
lyraoua• lhlt a
helrlng and cllclalon
on a Petition to
V~rtlon of an
unna
alrMI flied
by Wallar Rouoh,

. '.
j

Charg- .

Arizona (plus 5} at New York Giants (Saturday}
The Carcb are playing harder.
CARDIN.U.S 17~16

·1

Rli:nUGERATION
• ~
Rllldtntlal or commercial
1999 Yamaha 4200, ••cal- wlnng, now aarvlco or ,.
lent condlllon - · bag~ palro. Mutor ~old o1oc&amp; windshield ' 8800 mllu trldan. Rldltnour Electrical,
1&lt;1200 (7o40)Se2~
, WV000306, 304-675-1768.
'
OTORCYOL'I

Minnesota (min\15 3) at Detroit
·
Is thi• Detroit'• win? This week it fincb another way to lose:
a safety in the final seconds on a •nap over the head of the
punter.

Green Bay (min\15 2 1/2) at Tennessee
Are the Titans still trying?
PJlCI(BllS, 27-17

Sldllod Nunlnc Cenler
lwoahnJI!edlole
opeoolqCortloe
loDowiDI:

e

1-888-1174-JOBS

.AHMINT
WATIIIPROOI'ING
Unoondltional lifollmo guar·
antH. locol roloroncn furnlahod. Eoltbllahed 1875.
Call 24 Hro. (740) 4411087 0,
I-800-2S7-D 578 ·
Rogoro W.lllfllroollng.

Ir

BUCS,10-9

llAJI&gt;IUlS, 28-21

li:nl""'-~~=--.,
·~=======~::::=='·====~
JloME

rep~~lr and more. For free

'

Tampa Bay (pl115 3} at Chicago
The points are for home field, which doesn't mean much
these days. The Bua are on their annual late playoff drive.

Oakland (rilinu• 4} at San Diego (Saturday}
The Raiden have to find a way to stop the run. The
en jll5t have to find a way. period.

Veterul Memorial

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

·

bogo, ABS, lOIII 7, llko uUmall oall Chlf, 740-91128323
'
now, Mull aetn (7-40)3792134 laavomeaaage.
Eui:cnti&lt;:Al1

EAGLES, 17-6

New England (minu• 4} at Buffalo
New England should be a little wary.
.
PATRIOI'S, 19-6

;======~~~:::;;::::;:;,

I

112 Chevy Sllvor 4x4, PL,
PW; CD, Blut &amp; Sllvor,
127,000 mn... le,500. .,.,-~-~::--:-=::(740)258-1617 (740)441 - C&amp;C Clonoral Home Molnii411 8
·none• Painting, ~nyl lki87 Attto Van, 56,000 mtlaa, lng, carpentry, doora, wlnair, cruln, till, PW, Pl, dowl, baths, mobllt heme

Philadelphia (minus 3) at Washington
The Eagles are s~o on the road and will be more prepared
than the fint time.

CHIEFS, 24-23

110 Help Wanted

IMPROVFJIUNTS
lim, Ural w/10,000 mlloo, '-IPiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiitr
r,:,s0h'."(io40~88~11n,

SAINTS, 29-28

-----:-::-:-":":'-:--:;:;-::~~-~~-

Buelgot 'f'rlnamloalone AI~, Acctlas To
=.:g·Kno, =J.~"n:
Call· 339-37e5

U% on
UHCICredit
Traotoro
with gtell,
liner, vinylchrome
. cover riO
John
Deere
App"orunningt&gt;' boardl,
whoalo, MlchiUn LTX A/S
1

St . Loui• (minus 6) at New Orleam (Monday night)
The Saints have beaten the Rams in three of their four meetings the. past two years, including a playoff game.

Denver (of!} at Kansas City
Off because of Brian Griese. ChiefS playing better lately.

Point Pleaeant
Jackson
, Open lata avery day

L-~~UIO~~Ulli=:f~"""I,,.J
I)
--•

·

-'9ERS, l-'·20

JETS, 2-'·3

.Gallipolis

con-

j

Miami (plus 3 1/2) at San Francisco
Jeff Garcia didn't pass his fint big-game test. He's at home for
this one.

CRIMINAL RECORDS

, M; POWOI Steering, Twp 1988 Wave Runnoro
Po- Brakoo, 121 ,000 PIIIO Trailer Exoollont
mlltl, Aaklng $1600. dillon.
Good Prlco.
~~-446-4122, (7-40)4-46· (740)446-07115

0% Flnanclng on New John 1993 4 door S-10 Blazer
Oaere Round and Square 4K4, auto, Tahoe Package,
Balers and Mower Condl- 124k miles, good condHion,
tlonera.
$41500. (304)675-1868
................................ 1WB Dodge 1500 Laramie/
SLT V6, 4K4, T/ whHI,
Financing aa Low 11 3.5% cruloo, power hlllod mlr·
on 5000 a:id 5000 Sorllt rora. p/ windowl, p/ lOCke, p/
Tracto:s. Alto 11 Low ao oeat, club cab lkllng, back

MOilLE HOME OWNERS vo .
1ntert&amp;halloctrlcrm
&amp; Cole:TIInfu gu
l ' ................................
ol1
macao nelUding hi offlcloncy hoat Coma Sol Our Largo Dlo·
flU"'C&gt; IYIIfiT!O. Wa carry 1 ptey ol John Dooro Toyo,
complota llno of Mobile Apparel and John DHro
homo pant &amp; IICCOIIOiita. Llbarty Saleo.
IINNI!TT'S HEATING A
COOLING (7-40)448-8418 Carmlchaol'l Farm &amp; LaYin
or 1-BOQ.872-7
2 mllea weal of Holzer Hoiwww.orvb.oom/blnrol11
pltal on .tocl:aon Pike, GalNEW AND U8EO
. ilpollo, Ohio. (7-40)446-2412
FURNANCEB FOR 8ALEI Now 271 MUMY Forguaon
Wt ln...h, · Free EatimaiBI, Tractor 2001 Model, one
lr you dont Call ua, W• both owner. Would lb tradt and
Looul (740)448-&amp;308, 1- allo would Finance the
800-291-ll09&amp;.
Tractor. Plica $22,1500. Call
Watorllne Special: 3/4 200 Jake Somerville (304)s7r;.
PSII21.95 Per tOO: 1"200 3030
PSI S37.oo Per 100: All YANMAR YM 11500 Tractor.
Braoo Comprolllon Fmlngo diesel 3 point hllch S2 t'50.
~OSN~•NI ENTERPRI8- AIIO, 'new 4' llntlh' mOwer,
!8 ~ OhiO 1-800· otlllln crate, S61i0. Shipping
•
avalllbie. Locatod full out·
537 9526 ·
•
tide of Huntsvtne, AI (256)
Ulod refrlgeralor, runa IIOOd 776·9431 www.maynarde$75.00. (741!1448-2076
qu lprnent.com .

I

ma, Original Owner. Air, Au·
1o nn &amp; Crulee 51M Long

~ Runa GOOd, Lookl ~
FARM

If Kris Brown hadn't misled four field goals against Baltimore
in Pituburgh five weeks ago. the Steelen wollld be home free
in the AFC Centnl and the !Uwm would be
scnmbling for a wild-card playoffberth.
But Brown missed them, Baltimore won
13-10 and Pituburgh leads the !Uwm by
two games as it heads co PSINet Stadium for
a •howdown with the reigning Super Bowl champs.
Baltimore, favored by 3 points, has won five of six. But nothing has come easy for the Ravens, who are not nearly as dominant on defense as they were last year in part because of
injuries, in part becall5c, like most Super Bowl champions,
they'w been unable to •u•tain last year's level of intensity.
On the other. hand, everything but the kicking is going well
for the Steelen, especially on defense. Jerome Bettis may be out
this week, but the combination of Amos Zereoue and Chris '
Fuunatu-Ma'alafa filled in competendy in last week's 18-7 win

period.

Season's Greetings from
CRIMINAL RECORDS
Just arrived!
Tons of T·shlrts, Compaot
. Discs, Body Jewelry;
Hata and morel
Mothman T·Shlrts
3 styles· 4 colors
New Book
MOTHMAN: FACTS BEHIND
THE LEGEND,
CD Rom Version available
also In stock nowlll

I

F001liM1 Wllfml

Cincinnati (plus 9} at New York Jets
The Jets don't wiq in December. The Bengah don't win,

Come party at Good llmes
Usten to the best In Southern
Rock &amp; Modem Country.
Catch the lron-HotH Band
Uve Sat. Dec. 15th 10 till 2

1!!11'------,

or Leave Meltlgl.

~

VIKINGS, 22-21

To any person who contributed
to lhe benefit for
Dwight Icenhower &amp; Matt
Justice on Dec. 10
THANK YOU for your support.

c

Now Total Clym 1000 ExarciH Sra- by FHnooa
Outot, $150. (740)446-2272

-~

EaQtes 2171
Dance Dec. 14
High Country
8

oa-,

Lillie or no crodll OKI Call ·ammo on Bandolooro .
(7-40) U6 3384 ,
' SIOO.OO 304-875-2352

4 Roomo &amp; Both 13001
month 52 Olivo' Stroot
(7-40~
'
5 room Collage 11 2404 112
Monroo Aw. Now Point,
carpot Vinyl (304)875•
3757 ' '
'
1 and 2 bedroom opart·
. mon11, lumlahod and unlur·
Buy homao lrom 1199/mo., nilhod, IIOUrily dapooit ,._
Forwoloouroo. 4% down 30 qukod no pall 740-9112
at8.5% APR. Forllat- 1111. '
,
•
ngo 1-800·319·33.23 elll. :-':-.;;..---:---,-1'100.
~~~apa~;nt~:~
EIO!jenl a or 3 bldroom 1100 depoilt, (740)987houoo, 2911 Mulbony, Porn- 0847,
oroy, no pall, (740)992·
5888.
1 Bedroom Apanmenll,
$2811 month. Dopoolt &amp; RefPilot Progrom, Rontora oronct. HUD Approved.
Netded, :104·738·7295.
(740)«1- 15f9

!!'..!

°·cv.!::

I

j

I

--:--:

::-'~:-:-.:"'-:::-::--:--:

11Y DAVE GOI.IItiEH

=~~~~·

ttomer

7 352
•-•
Mldd'fumlohed, very clean, no
2 -roomo,
~port, pate phone 304-675·1368 . - - - - - - - $325/mo. "Piuo depoSit,
Modal 11138 Turkish Bmm
(7o40~-DI1e
:::~•;:::.!~ott&gt;!.':: =~rdrlfl~nd88ro"~=
River Band Placo nbw acClpllng oppllcaliOno lor 1 bf,
Hud Subaldlzo Apt. lor lha
-rly &amp; dlaabled EOH
(304)1182-at 21
·
·
:-.;_,_::---:---::-Toro TownhouH Apartmonto, Very Spaoloul 2
81&lt;1100mo, 2 Fiooro, C..:, 1
112 Bolh, Fully Carpotod
AduH Pool &amp; Baby Pool, p1:
UO,StenS38M.1o. NoPtll, .
~ Pluo Sacurlty Dopoolt
Roqulrod, Dayo: 740·4463481; Evonlngo: 740-3670502, 740-446-D10t .

mli'!Ru:

I

Empire LP Gao Heeter ATTENTION. Now Tal:lng. ~~lte.~~le, $2300.
u..:..'i=a~j
65,000 BTU, $150. Chair Oopolill on R~ Lab
.
A
fOrwith Otloman, $30. Chosl ol Puppies for Chrlllmos, 97 Chryolor Clnuo, V-6, .,..
.
u~
Drawera, $20. (304)675- $250. (7-40)448-0060
to, elr, till, crui•, ~.ooo
.
I. ~=lalrotlff
175
5358
A I 1'- S.....,.-~ p
mll:ll,
1&lt;1,000
080.
. •·~
~=-:::==::-::·
us ra .n ,..,.._. up- (7-40)255-1233
......
Energy Mate wood bumlng pleo, 2 oed modo and one .
.
Colllmbua, Ohio 43215
. ,Jurnaoo.., Mhormollalleolly blcolooed. (7-40)388 6413
'i111rrietoy 'VIIIego 1r''\alang &amp;14-228-7272, Ext. 210
: confrollld, (7-40)992-7212
Bee le Pups Hunflnn ataltd bld8 on""' aalel of (11) 30, (12)7, 14, 21,
gl
'
• lhl lollowlng Ylhi!&gt;lea: 1994
Englander Pellet Stove Stock, Parents on Pram· Chlvrolol Caprice (Crulao~ .:28;;;.._ _ _ _ __
. . - 125PDII $400 • 18 lsoo, Will hold lor Christ· minimum bid of Sl ,500: bego pallell at $3.00 bag. mao. 1&amp;5. (740)441-1440
1995 ciievrotel Monllo corPublic Notice
Stove oallo lor $1,399 at Bird- Blue Quaker Hand lo, ,..nlmum bid of $5,500: --~--'---Farm &amp; .Ftoot. (740)245" Tame
and
Talking. 11190 Hyundl Hatchblok, In the Court of
5555
·(304)675-4767
minimum bid of 1200: 1862 Common P ' - llelp
F........._ Trucl: Topper for
Chlvrolol Chovello, mini· Cou
Ohl ' C
. 8 -~"Ford Bad 1250 Chrlotmaa Pupplll AKC mum bid of 1200: Mull ..., N ntyb•
·
'
· Reglslaoed, Clorman Shop- Pollco Chief Mark Prollllllor um er 01 • - - .
(7o40)37ll-ll381
herd. While, Black Tan, Sl~ ~._uon. AI 'blda Eric J . Taylor va.
Fisher Prlco Table and ver. SI50·S200. Aak lor mull ba roceivod by Do- Lucinda
alii.
Chalro,
Nlco·
$25. Tommy (304)882-3486
ctmbar 17, 2001 at Defendant LUCinda 8.
(7o40)446-0t96
·
Full Fomalo Saint ~~~ ~:S~ o.-on, whoM leal
Froozer Baol o400 10 600 eamard, Spada, $50. Reg. Pomeroy Dh 48789 Coun- place of reaklence Ia
lbl. hanging weight $1.50 1 - Male Saint Barnard, ell ,_,.;.,, rlghlo ... occopl known al 3rd at ....,
Olb, wrapped 10 cuatomer S100. Bolli Cuoeno on Vee· or rejoclany or ali blda.
Apartmant 12, Racine,
order. (304)675-21118 beloro clnllionl. (740)256-6580
Ohio 45771-te07, but
9pm, Dlpoalt Roqukod.
Full blooded Pomeranian
1'lwcKs
whoa• preaanl place
· Cl.l. .too- Harley DaYidoon, puppleo,41emoiea,2malas ~
FOR&amp;I..E
_of
raaldonca
Ia
$95 Solar con ca Ar&lt;an· with papera, $300 each .
unknown, will taka
na, ·135. Floral Chair with Call (740)3118·9563 Alk for 1991 GMCSonoma4x4El:l Notice on llarch 14,
Matching Ofloinan, $50. oavo
Cab, Auto, M:., TIC, u ·v. 2001, Eric J. Taylor
Call (7-40)258-1529
Groen Cheeked Conuro, 6, Topper, Lata Now, 134K flied hla Complaint In
Sharp. $5800. c . .a number 01·CV·
--.;_,_..;.,_ _ _--:-:- ca~. owners manual, Mlloo.
. Cllno 28 Inch Bike, $10. ~
(7o40'....,Hl013
·
h
rt f
, (304)67 5-2315
young, owoot bird, 1300,
r041, In I e ou o
::-'-'!"-:-~'-'---::--;--:: (7-40~· 58113
111115 Chivy s-to Long 81&lt;1. Common PINI, llelp
Qrubb'a Plano· Tuning &amp; P
1 P pploo with Auto, 4 cyl., Clood motor County, Ohio, llleglng
~".!'"~-C:.~~110N~ P=~!;'. ~.Roady lind body. Tr~~•lltolon 11 tlllt Lucinda S.
'· 10 Go Now. (740)31111-8414 out. Aaldng 1500. (7-40)4467
5

~~~~,:~~
':;
;:'~~.'::."" &amp; amrr,~n
.tor Balh.
,.
Ono t&gt;r. apt In Pt. Pleaaam,. (304)6 5-2

3 bedroom houM !n Chlllor, dr, aarpotlng, rwnocllll&lt;l
Now 14 Wide, 3 Bodroom. bathroom, many up.daloo.
Only $18,650. Froo Dollvlry ,.aaonoblo rent, ovonlngo
&amp; Sot Up, Hl8fl-112fl-24ae (814)801-83311.

... ___

'=·

DH (740)446-73118 Stop In
M~· North 4th Ave.. lo oae uo bolore Chrl81mu.
4 :oom lumlohod apartment,
dopoaH &amp; relerenceo, no Maytag Dryer, $1110. Call aipate, (740)992-D165.
tor &amp;r&gt;m. (7-40)245-5946
•~ 1 Bad
•••
Mollohan ea-. 202 Clari&lt;
;;;;'(7-40~ ....-n· Chapel Road:-Porter, Dhlo.
.
(7-40)....,.7444 Hl77-830New apartment for rant 9182. Froo Elllmates Easy
Mldcleport, ( 7 -40) 992 .~ · llnanclng, 90 days aamo 11
or740-4411-2287.
caah. VIII/ Mullr Card .
Drfv&amp;. a-111111 IIVI liol.
Now
Tokln~tlor,._
35 Will 2
Town8folmNG
-Apartrnonll,
...,_
Water
Sewage, Includes
Traah,
uuuu.
S350IMo 7o40-446.Q006
"
'
1938 6mm Turt:lah Mouaer
OnoBI&lt;IroomApt. VInost. goodroo. VoryQoodCondl·
Goillpolla, 0t1 (7-40)367- tkln. Bayonet &amp; Scabbard
71188

j

j

=·

~6X6D~JX~ ~~0~ ~~.:==~I c~~u~: Fsi:=~u;:;~=:

8.119% Fl•ad lnternt Rato, Sd:oolo and Downlown
Hlll8·ll26-3428
Aroe. $5051 month pius depolll and Roforenca. No
5 ReJ&gt;O'I Savo Up to eD% Poll (7-40)446-11128
(304)736-3315
'
.
1br Sman HouiO $200 n.
AmB ulng FI.-I ~mo ~ pMII, $250. I month.
uyors.
owr m n 1410 Lawla St. 1304)727Backed loane. No crodll 33f8
nal&lt;led.
(304,755-5588
UmiiMIOhr.
2bldroomhouootnPomorEnd ollhl . . - VIII' oy, SS75 . . mo. plul deAll :ioo1 muot go to mal:o posit wl1h llpllon to buy, no
"""" lor 2002 sPoclll low polo, (7-40)888-?244
· avaRnonclng ptQgl'li!\
· 2 bldroo:n, 1 bath, iiove &amp;
Onlv al f'leltwood Homll rotriQorator lumllhod, 1n
of ProctoMIII. Toll FI'M 1· Pomoroy, 740·11112-3322
-~187
aakforBalh.
.

,..-fill',...,.

~~~-=

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 1 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garoge/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

All Olsplar: l l Noon Z
BUIIRIII Days Prior To
PubliCitiO"

FIB

:

~eellrk

PlsPiay Ads

11

;:ro

(304) 675-1333

~ It~

c

,,._oi
_o,,

AD NOW ONLINE

I': ~~raw~ 11:• lfruw-IIRD
I

I

:W..OC::
,_liOn

Orfu

Brown ••••

t,, roa

RIACH OVIR 185,000 PROSPECTS

\'\'-Ctl '\4 I 'II ' I "

D-eon Mlll. . ntly
AlnngiiRirrll 1MY
- • ~~
• -· IROIOf .,.
~ 10 ._,.....
,_......,
..,....,
..., ...,
vehicle ceuelnt a enl' of the allove
co•alon. reaultlftllft MMid uct' , 1 pl1ar
•..,.,... anc1 - . . . . 1o 11w . . ..,. .......,
.,... _. s.n.oto'
u r
s.-y. 2322, (7-40~1.
to Plaintiff Eric ~. 740 ••1210.
(7-40,..1-111112
(740)448-730Q
Aiding- Cal lor lnlor·
,..
.,.,...,.
Defendant
Antiquo Flat Top Trunk, Old pr. _ , ll:atoa. SZO: malion. (7-40)3116 fl358
DallaL L.
Lucinda I . Pawaon (12) 12, 14, 11, 21 ,
$85.(740,.....,.0196
-$35·, lnfoRy-~.~~
u.~ •.
··wwth,.tal .... notice lhet 1001
~-"~
-· ~
..... ..
Dlleoldlnl
lhe l1aa -ly-elght 4lc
Armr &amp; Hun:ers Camou- hodgoculter, $10, " " GRAIN
cv 010
(28) daya 1 file an
~~'t cooltr, S5, (7-40)992·2529
In purouanCII of an Anawar
to
lhlo
Public Nollce
SQ. o. mort11: too Pentium t26 Ram, 52x Cd, 2000 Square balta now Order of Sole lnlha Complllnt.
_ , . _ 11 Sam Somor· 17" Monhor, Froo doliYory 11.25 - .. 1 -on Rt. 2 .,,_ - · 1
(12)1
. &lt;til~ MSGT USAF rocirod lind .., up. 1499. (7-40)2511- N. (304)875-4869
wW offer for Hie at ~:=!~~~~~=
Sotndv'Aio. wv- 8514
~ha
pulolto a....-, .. the
Public NOIIoe
Ofllol. (:104)273-5855
a.-, o1zo ~.eo!..!."'-~· St .so Melga
county
~Pllow
Cllrdon
,_
"-·~·....... oopiMoftlle
,- Flrowood, 11110 Dum!&gt; c:uawl:ld, 1300:
dol,
-·
NOTICE
• Tru:ok LGod. (7-40)3711-2758 125: Crochot baby bl:lnkot. (740)IH=
Round
hoy lot-· Ohll!, In ttoe above
tax Illidge! for liMo
•
S15. (7-40)241-11700
n a - County on
loulllern Dlelrlot of
• • 18" "'"VV dol. 9 OOII'I&gt;itlo
"·y 111
• ~~- ~ •-n. . ry
2001
'
~
On
Saturday, Racine, In llelga
• • outftt1. Md &amp; •
'Pial. Alllcl!lnUII HanwOwneta 1"141
, ,..
,,.
v.
.._
•• Dl c 1 it
12,2001 .t
- onnolro. ollolr- 1111 ,_, Toppantlofllcloncy8Qpluo Slnow, Yilt '
DoliYiry 10:10
a.m .,
the
lha H
Counly, Ohio, - on
10 00
: 1250. (7-40)2411-0777
gas , _ Including o11 ~.-- ~ A -· toll-Ing cleoorlbed N.:.to:.r· 1 •nk ~"1' file In ""' ..... "' . .
1'1
•..,, Da tw"\11 I •
,•
and
gu fuma- - ·
Horlltgo
Form. rMI - · In ••
•• 2 Mapll Twin Bad• - -· ~- 1 (304)67~4.
t~- co ty 1 .._._ offer for aale at H.ofllld M llulo
11 e
"~-~Y
.
.,..
un
o
•
..._
81u..aM·n
till
••-- with Night Stand' I JH;, i'un1lo. foaluring 1-na
. .... -~ of Ohio and
u~
• (7-...-•.........• ,....
k ,...
-rklng 101 -.:
Froe lncrodlbla warranty
In- .....
the VIII •
I
..,. lnapoctlon; • publle
•
paci:ago
age 0 ~. . _ , , , . ,
• 2 pc. Mocl1lnlc loolcltoot, BENNETrB HEATING A
.
Alll08
llldll pMitowl:
1tt4 Chavrolll haarlng on aald
budgal will be llrlld et
: roll oround, com~ate COOUNG (740)44H4te ~
FOR&amp;J..E
~~
Cevelllr
th•
loutllem l.ocll
ot1.80Q-872-6887,
Sltualad lit !he Stat. V1111101oiC144tll731
lollool lllalrtol,
•· Rongor 1100. 6 fooiiiUCk www.......cortVbonnotl 1993 Ford Tauruo ClL, tx· ,
4201
IHrd of lducatlon
; 175, 74G&gt;8112-6633. U:roct Rainbow wifll ell At- c•llent condition, 12500, of Otolo, County of, 1117 Fonl , . _
•• 3 Dolo Earnhardt plllowa tachmonto. Like Now. (7-40)1165-35511
Melgl and In the Vlntii'MCUtmHUC omoe on the day ol
J1nuary 2, :10112, at
'
(3041875-1725
w
-~vl._ofMI~IIIr;...:: lll2l
•. w11!t 13 car on tt:om, $20
'•~ "~--• LX, 3.8
PARCEL ONE: lelng
7 :30 p.m. ot the
: · each, (7-40)9112-7335
~&amp;METAL
Liter Engine, Automatic Lot Number One
1•01~mablle
organlutlorlll
....
DETECToRS
Trano., MooiiiOOI, 110,000 H u - and.._,._ Vlntl031fmiiCIW3
30" nongo, mont, Ron /&lt;JHoon, 58B Wallon mllot, Good CondHion.
, :121111
• ,_ bll'ntll'l.· grill. Road Ohio 45614 $4000 (304)675-8484
One (171) In Pllllllp
. . lnt -~lo I
1 a'""'
• 175 (740....,_,
·
•
·
' ·
Jonoo Third Aclcllllon
a • .,., na Pennia 1!. Hill,
•:
•(741!)441 4338
1995 Chevy ~.um~no, at,ooo
Pump 'lnlck
TrMturer
125-.h:
mlloo,allw 1 111, reguVIIIIIHD1CAP1tll't20
, muon jaoa 5 lor $1 : prea'"'"""""
lar malnt"""""" carpoll
....-~
•
1172
(12)10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
• ouro oooMr, $25: 2 heavy
SVI'I'uEs
kept,
nlco,
34,995, ..'::e~LNu~~
1877 Ford P1 00
17, II, 11, 20, 21,
2469
• · duly WOlf&lt; · $o40 _ ,
(7-40~Hundred and S.V.Oty· Truck
1001
: (740)8112·2!129
Bfook, brlcl:, plpao, 1995 Glllncf Am, S3500. 1Wo (172) In Jon. . YlntF10GNY43884
• Bluo Coucf1 and Chair Sol.
~&lt;):",.;,.~ 66,000 mlloo. (304)1182- Addition 10 . .ld Tile Ierma of lila
2616
Good Condition. $150, Call7.0.245-612t . •
VIllage, except the ~~NHoult.N-•
l-!'!!"-"""~!!1"!~
5
' (7o4D)254H2 f
1995 Pontiac Grand Am coal or any mlnet'llll
,,.. •uOnl1
CMIImao lllml, village
GT, 2 Ooor· While, Auto, unclefiYing the aurfaM lank reMrvea the
houan, 8 llghlod, 8 unllg\1· ~
_ PW, PL. CD, loaded, ~ and the rlgllt to mine arltl ~~ orejeotr
10 ·-uw••
. ed. Laogo coromic 1roe lind
and Runa Clreat. (740)446- the eeme both Of oil - other mloc. Homo. (7-40)'145- 2 yr. old mate boKer, good 3945 altor Spm
whlcto are raearved any unit- the Mil
44118
watchdo1j, good with chll· 1996 GMC Sonoma, Auto, hereby to Will ~- el any 111M.
72K, $44JH;. 1994 Granct Huclaon and Lillian P.
COmputor Plon0&gt;1 IBM &lt;Iron, (740)992-D441
•
·'
Arn, Auto, 68K. $37115. 111113 Huclaon.
Compa-. 3 Y"· old. f)llca Adorable Chihuahua pup- Gronct Arn, Auto, to'tK,
Alao kn-n • 142
1 - 17" ...,.,., (new) pies. Wovld mal:o tho par- $2695 111117 t..umiNo 99K
and te SRAM and printer feel Chrlalmea lift lor some- 14295· COOK MDTDI'IS IIIII 8lrwt, 1111111oport,
$500(~....~~ 79
PBC.,I:aoo(.• )67~11 ono ot*lal. Not regltllrod. 17-40)446-otoo
OH 487110. ·
-,...
&lt;1304 ~ 1o1 ohoto, wormed, potty
'
laid
Premleea
0006
trained, S300. (7-40)258Apprall. . d
at
Compuflrlzod Treadmill, 6390 Callaltor 6:30pm.
1999 Chevy lilnlna, Iliaci:. S17,100.00 and DMnol
$75. 51a~master, $25 and AKC Boaton Torrlera 3 to- Clroy Interior, 27,000 niiH be IOid lor t,_n
Like· Now Fltnou Flyer. maleo, 1 male. 6 ~-- loaded 304-1182-3339
twO•thlrda of tlllt
L(7"!'.':~. 1 ,~~ssage
at Shots· wormod, $400. CaD 89 Bara1fa ClT, V-6, Auto, -nt.
'---.;.~-::-:~-:----- (740)448-0495
Cold A!C, Sunrool, Runa
TERIII OF . SALE:
_ Della tO" Unloaw 3 hp. Sin· AKC Chocolote lab Pup- Good, St ,100. (740~1 · 10% of appr1l1ed
· gle phMe motor 52'" Unl- pin, wm be ready for 1083
v•lue down, I'H'Ialntt
' lence. 1988 modal saw. A Ch~llmao. (7-40)367·0859 94 Ford Eacort Wagon. upon,.,..ofdee!f.
alrong, aocurate saw. or (740)339-2350
89,900 mlloo. Clood .cor. Ralph E. Tru-t,
. 950. (304)1182-3499
AKC Aeglolorod Cocker (7-40)446-2762 (ovonlng,, Shariff of !IJialga
Drooaer and Ml"or and opanlol Pupplea lor Solo. (7o40,..t-2l 25 (daytime)
County, OH
Molchlng Chosl o1 DraWOill Call (740,..1-D9911 10 In- 95 Dodge Neon, 112,000 Wellmlln, Welllller!l, &amp;
Both, $85. (7-40)446-0196
quire.
mlos. Now Tl:os, B - .
Rile Co., L.JII.A.

"'**'

In one weelr With us

8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

If not for Kris

'

~'

We Cove
Meigs, Ga'llla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
.else cant

Monday thru Friday

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

•

Anna Rouoh, Robert
1!. lyer, 1ncl Donna ~.
lyor, will be hod on
the 71h doy of

Fobrullry, 2002.
· Dolo: November
2001

••

Sharon 8 . Cott~ll
Cilrl&lt;
111) 13, 30. 2001
12) 7, 14, 21, 21,

2001

�F"*J,

Dec.

14, 2001

Frkily,~.14,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

B7

AIJ.EYOOP

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - biy in
the season Indiana ecmh Jerry Yeagley
didn't think he had enough experienced
playen to reaeh the semifinals of the
NCAA tournament for a fifth straight

year.

NCAA

A season-opening
loss at home to St.
Johns ga~ him fUrther doubts. Then he
lost several key playm to injuries and
had to start three freshmen and -ra1
sophomores.
But Indiana ended up winning the Big
Ten and the Hoosien ( 17-3-1) will meet
St.john's (17-2-3) in the semifinals Friday night at Columbus Crew Stadium.
Stanford (19-1"1) will face North Carolina (19-4-0) in the fint game.
"We were not a final four eonrender at
the beginning of the year," said Yeagley.
whose team has been to the semifinals
15 of his 29 seasons. "This team has
eome as far as any in terms of developing fiom an OK team into a very good
one."
Yeagley was most concerned about
starting a freshman as his defensive midfielder for the fint time, but Danny
O'Rourke- who led Worthington Kilbourne to an Ohio state championship
last year - has more than found his role
on the team.
Since that 2-1 loss to St. John's, Indiana's defense has allowed only four goals
and has had 16 shutouts.
"0 'Rourke at defensive midfield is the
hub of the team," Yeagley said. "He has
really improved and is now one of our
best athietes." '
Yeagley says this time his defense is
ready for Shalrie joseph, who scored and
had an assist in the fint matchup. and he
thinks his team can weather the Red

Storm's asgressive play at midfield.
"We think they ha~ the best midfield
in the eountry," he said. "But we are not
the same team we were when we fint
played them."
Yeagley also credits his team's suceess
to the offense of All-American forward
Pat Noonan.
"Pat is the best college player in the
country and he proved that by searing
two speaacular goals to get us into the
semifinals;' said Yeagley, whose team beat
Clemson to adwnce.
St. John's comes into Friday's match
with confidence having beaten defending national champions Connecticut to
win . the Big East Conference and beating top-seeded Southern Methodist in
the quarterfinals.
But coach Dave Masur doesn't want
his playen thinking about any previous
wins - especially over Indiana.
"I don't know if that gives us a lot of
confidence ... I think it probably works
the opposite way." said Masur, whose
team is making its third quarterfinal
appearance and won it all in 1996. ·
"We don't like to look at things in
terms of who we have beaten," he said.
"We just want to keep them focused on
the task at hand and let them enjoy the
whole experience."
Red Storm are led by Jeff Mateo, the
Big East Midfielder of the Year, and
Joseph who has scored four of his team's
last six game-winning goals.
Masur moved Joseph, who was an AllBig East Forward and the team's leading
scorer last year, to sweeper after injuries
depleted the team's back line.
Joseph, who this year was an All-Big
East Defender, helped St. John's limit
opponents to under eight shots a game.

Contraction: gonna happen
BOSTON (AP) - Talks on an agreement that would put off the elimination of
teams until after the 2002
season collapsed Thunday and the union
resumed its grievance in
the case.
1be sides were close to agreement on a
deal Monday, but three days of tallcs failed to
reSolve dr.rli:ing issues separating the sides.
"We wanted them to acknowledge that
we have the right to contract," Rob Man. fred, management's top labor lawyer, said
"They just got too narrow.We felt they were
limiting our rights as to when and how we
can contract. We felt we were better offlitigating the issue:·

M LB

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There appeared to be little - if anything
BUILDeRS INC.
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New Ho.a • Vf•yl
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18 Shlckl

EMt
Pan

Pau

Allpau

It is great the way
information can be
sent so easily around
the globe . via the
Internet and e-mail.
Yes, based on, for example, Sept. 1I, one
could look on this a
lot less favorably .
However, I believe
we must continue
with our nonnal lives
as much as possible.
So, here is a deal
from New Zealand.
Vii Gravis runs a free
Web
site
at
www .bridgefun.net.
He reports that several declarers went
down in four hearts.
First,
though,
would you rebid two
diamonds or three
hearts with that South
hand? If you bid three
hearts, partner will
surely raise to four.
But if you settle for
two diamonds, maybe
you would get to the
laydown three notrump.
At all tables in W dlingion, the capital of
New Zealand, West
led his singleton club.
East won with the ace
and returned the club
two, his lowest card
being
suit-preference signal for diamonds. So, after
ruffing', West shifted
to a low diamond.
The unsuccessful declarers won with ihe
ace, played a heart to

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BIG"NATE .
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2021 Gullow
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1M SORR't', M~AM ..I CAN'T
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•

I FRIDAY

After winning with
the diamond ace,
South cashes the heart
. - - - - - - - - - - - - . ace, unblocks the
LET'S 6ET THESE CARDS spade ace, and crosses
AND DISHES PUT AWAY
to dummy with •
IJEFORE HE COMES I-lOME.. t
AI h
h
rump.
t oug
there is still a trump
out, it is in the East
hand. So, South
cashes dummy's three
black-suit winners -first the club kingqueen, then the spade
~~__. king -- and discards
all of his diamond losers. Declarer brings
home an overtrick,
not an undertrick.

'0ECEMBER 141

1

Friday, Dec. 14, Z(KJI
The succe5sful methods you

develop to channel your cnergieJ, ambitions and hopes in
dl(• year ahead will prove to
have a f.1r greater im~'act on
your successes than you first

.ALLDL

suspect.

Cellular

Pomeroy fillies
Btn&amp;o2171

concepts you formulate today
should not be put on the back
burner fot future initi:t tion.
They are n1ore likely to take
ofT beuer and easier now
while they're hot.
.
S~gittarius, treat yourself IO
a birthday gift. Seud for }'our
Astro-Graph p~edicdoru for
the yrar ahead by mailing 12
and SASE to Astru-Graph,

I

ciO this newJpaper. P.0. llox
1758, Murray Hill Station.
New York, NY 10156. De

. fUel'lJ Tbursdag

992·5776
Now open for
Chrislma!l &amp;:aron

6SIIIuy
Doers Open tlD
Early birds start

Poinsettia
Many colors to
choose from
Open Mon-Soll0-4
Closed Sundoy

6:30
Progressive top Une
Thursdays .

mo

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J.
De,, 21) -- New ideas or

•

Pragresslue
Cauerell on SUndays

sure to 5tate your Zodiac sign.
C~PRICORN

(Dec. 22'-

Jan. 19} -.- Sometin1es it i'
wise to ~lyon a hunch or intuition and cflis may be one o(
those days. If you get a feeling
("Onceming a comml!!rcial deal,
your chances of it being correct are jlOod._

·-•

AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Feb.
19) -- There is ju~tifkation for
any optiminic feelings , you

I
I

\

mom'*
2Croolt

28 Patuno

mom

2t Choir port
30 Sir-

32 Blylh or

radio

undora
33 Pool NIH
111m

oponotono

12 Honey·

combunlta 35 Brldgt
-

13 Sid run

18 Air-pump
37 O.C..
lbbr.
winner
22 Comporoble
Laurence
23 Up 1111.-

24 Be In debt

25 Topu
"' ruby
27 "The

34 Cftyneat

5 :'.:""'

Phoonll

36langtlmo

6 Stick
around

38 11111-dlk'l
cousin
39 Alplna call
41 llorglllll.

lndoclolon
8 Moor

-

41 Upt01r
42 lllby food

45 Reonu••11
46 Tug

a-··

IICIIIOI\wriltr48JU&lt;Ige
29 Tolstoy
49 Rulllan
llal.
rulo&lt;

31 Turklth
official

7 Show

40 Focufty

43 Conoolldate

African

4Qulck

SO Ireland·
54 Cllge

,.......,__,..._

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ·
C.lebrlty Cipher cryptograma are created from quotations by famous
PtOPit, pa11 and pr11ent. Each letter In 1he cipher stands lor another1
Today·s clue: D equals Y

'XFYXSIK

YN

YA

IE Z SA

X Y A 0.

AFZ

LZEFSLN

J S N A

swzevx ·s o

IE Z SA
-

s

YN

SWZEYXSG

K C

AFZ

XYAYZN.'

WSYJZE

GKEWSG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: • Millon must have traveled In
Michigan before ha wrote the garden pa~s of ~aradlsa Lost,"
-Hamel Martineau (1837)

WOlD
OAMI

0 ::::'':~·mb~:·'~r':/1

I

::

low ro lorm four simple words.

I

1

1Now

9 Amateur

Suddenly they were
RODI ON
stuck in the wrong 1-...,..;.~...:....;._:.,...._,..,r-l
1
hand with three unavoidable diamond :=~==~~
losers: two down,
R UKy M
They should ba ve . 1-....;..;....;....:.......;,...;.,..--1
played more slowly.
.
.

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PHILLIP

\

I I I I 1

I

•I
I
~======~

I

COl I G

I I · j I'
·

·

·

·

, ..~

.

I-

,..- 8-R-E- 8- 1-F..._.....,,

I" I" I. I. I.

1
6

~
•

.

1.

I,

You can't find decent mech.J.-ics anymore. I had my radia'tr
flushed and to conserve water
mechanic put a -----In it.
•

t~e
'

f t Complete rhe chucklol quored!
V
by lill;ng In the mlulng wcrdt
you de~elop from step No. 3 below~

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTE·RS
TO GET ANSWER

SCiiAM·LETS ANSWERS ,
Humble - Taffy- Favor- Typist-FLAT TIRE
There's an old proverb granny likes to quote. H goes
like this: "The journey of a thousand 'miles begins with a
FLAT TIRE."

may be having today . Your
chart inJicate~ this is one of
tho!e days where your hopes
:~nd expectations ca:n be realized.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Try to develop something
you, think has both social and
commercial
potential today . Your will
have the bt-~t ch:~nces for success if you include only di.:.
reedy involvC"d pC'rsons.
ARIES (March 21-Aprili9)
-- Give your time and :mention today to that new endeavor in which yo u've suddenly become interested. It
has Jots of promise to be quite
fortunate for you.

TAURUS (April 20-May ·
20) -- Don't be timid today
about going il.fter a challenging objective, became you're
now in in excellent cycle for
accomplishing your ai111s. Any
obstacles can be quickly overcome.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
--There's a good chance tlut
today you could meet som~­
one who~e interests and ideas
merge well with yours. This
new anocia1ion could turn
out co be :'1 dyn:lmic one.

CANCER (lune 21-July

I

22) -- It's timl' you take action on all those certain
changes yo~1've been thinking
about for;~. long time. You are
in a fortuitous cycle tq bring
new ide:~s imo being .
LEO Uuly 2.1- Au ~. 22) ·- If
you arc in nerd of a business
favor today, you'll have bener
luck going to someone you
know socially than you will if
you ask an associate. He or
she could be a competitor.
VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Elev;nc you r sigh tS and
shoot for higher objectives
than usual today. Everything
points to the fact that you can
make impre'!'sive nrides now
where your Work or c:~.reer it
co'ncerned.
LID11..A (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Developments that need
your special touch for management :~nd rt-organization
-m;ay vit- for your attention today . lnsrincrively, you'll .know
what needs to be fixed and
how to do it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Sniff out where th~
good dcab are today, becau5e
you have a good nose, not
only for businen, but for adding extensively to your earn-

ing;..

'

�Page B8

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel
•
•

: WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush iiM&gt;ked executive
privilege for the first ime Thursday to keep Congress fiom seeing
documents of prose• ors decision-making in cases ranging fiom a
dOcades-old Bosron .••urder to the Clinton-era fund-raising probe.
"I believ~: congressional access to these documents \Wuld be contiary to the national interest," Bush wrote in a mel)'lo ordering
Attorney General John Ashcroft to withhold the documents fiom a
House inve&lt;tigative committee that subpoenaed them.
The decision institutes a dramatic change in the way the administration intends to deal with Congress atier years in which the Justice Depamnent, sometimes reluctandy, shan;d sensitive investigative
documents with lawmakers.
·
Republicans and Democrats alike excoriated the decision, suggesting Bush was creating a "monarchy" or "imperial" presidency to
keep Congress for overseeing the executive branch and guarding
~nst corruption.

. WASHINGTON (AP) -The government asked a federal judge
l:hunday to hold the American Red Cross in contempt of coun
fc)r repeated violations ofblood safery regulations.
_
: The Red Cross has committed "persistent and serious violations"
of federal regulations over the past 16 years despite a 1993 court
order mandating improVements, the Food and Drug Administration
charged in a motion filed in U.S. District Court in Washington. ,
The FDA so_ught' court penuission to tine the Red Cross $10,000
a day for each new violation it discovers, fines that could add up to
millions a year.
The coun tiling caps a year of sharply escalating tension between
the FDA and Red Cross, which provides about 45 percent of the
nation's blood supply.

•Gods' waaps shooting
HAGERSTOWN, Md. (Al') - It's a Wiap.
Filming of the Civil War film "Gods and Generals" is ending this
week, with actor Bo Greigh on Wednesday reciting one last line,
relling a fellow Civil War soldier how to recognize the enemy:
"Dang fool, shoot the man who's shootin' at you."
Director Ronald Maxwell, who spent at least four years getting
the $54 million to finance the movie, got it on film in 71 days.
Most of the filming took place in WashingtOn County, Harpers
Ferry, W.Va., and Martinsburg. W.Va.

FBI appe...ls for l11f01 Illation
NEWARK, NJ. (AP) -The FBI said Thursday that the Postal
Service will send out fliers to the public in an effort to find whoever mailed four anthrax-laced letters fiom central New Jersey.
: The fliers may include details such as excerpts fiom the FBI profile about the suspect, a handwriting sample fiom the tainted letters
and a reminder of the $1.25 million rew;u-d residents can receive for
providing information that leads to an arrest and conviction, FBI
Special Agent Sandra Carroll said
: "It's just to keep the information out there," Carroll said.
. The fliers will go out to residents of the Trenton and Philadelphia

TEMPO

WASHINGTON (AP)- Retail sales
plunged a r·cord 3.7 percent in November as con,~ "!1ers, buffeted by huge job
losses, terrunst att2cks and a recession,
got the holiday sales season off to a dismal start.
The Commerce Department said the
record drop in retail sales followed a 6.4
percent upward surge in October, also a
record. That big increase was caused by a
huge jump in auto sales as Americans
responded eagerly to the free financing
offers that deale-rs used to get shoppers
back into showrooms following the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks.
In more positive news Thursday, the
Labor Department reported that the
number of Americans filing first-time
claims for unemployment benefits fell by

86,000 last week.
It was me biggest decline in weekly
jobless claims in nine yean and provided
reason to hope that the huge wave of
layoffi that oeo:urred following the terrorist attacks may be abating. The big
decline left total new claims at 394,000
last week.
The country's first recession in a
decade is keeping a lid on inflation. A
third report sh~ed that wholesale prices
fell for a second consecutive month,
dropping 0.6 percent in November atier
a bigger 1.6 percent plunge in October.
The November decline was led by
another big drop in energy prices, which
offiet rising prices for autos and toba€co .
Outside of food and energy, the "core"
rate of wholesale inflation was up 0.2

areas, where the investigation has been based, and perhaps throughout New Jersey, she said.

Deaalhumt lewes 2 hurt

.....

percent in November after having
dropped 0.5 percent in October.
The retail sales repon showed that auto
sales, which had surged 24.2 percent in
October, fell 11.9 percent in November.
Even without the wide swing in auto
sales, retail sales would have been weak
last month, dropping by 0.5 percent following a 0.8 percent rise excluding autos
in October.
Some analysts said the retail sales report
was not as dismal as the overall decline
would indicate. They noted that auto
sales were expected to fall back atier a
.record-setting month in October and
some of the other weakness reflected
price declines for gasoline, rather than
falling sales.

aves takes on

The Mothman
cometh, Cl

Retail sales plunged a record 3.7 percent

INSIDE

SPORTS

ai-Qaida starts

Rose Hill, 81

to crumble, A8

•

.,

tmts
NeVJSmaker

s1.25

FREAKY FRIDAY

Access
road
nea
rea

. Rich must p1ovide doaatw:nts

NEw YORK (AP) - Lawyers for Marc Rich, the fugitive
.
financier whose pardon stained President Clinton's departure fiom
PACIFIC, Mo. (AP) -Three Union Pacific coal trains CI2Shed J office, must turn over documents withheld fiom a grand jury inves- in a chain-reaction accident Thursday that injured six railroad 1 tigating the pardon, a judge ruled Thursday.
workers, twO seriously.
.
U.S. District Judge Denny Chin said the lawyers could not use
The accident happened jllSt before 6 a.m., about 35 miles west of cttorney-client privilege or other legal issues 'to shield ' themselves
St. Louis.
.
·
m demands for documents and testimony.
Union Pacific spokesman John Bromley said one train had . ''The Marc Rich lawyers were acting principally as lobbyists,
stopped because of heavy rail traffic in the St. Louis area. The sec- ""'rking with public relations specialists and individuals.- foreign
ond train rear-ended the first, then the third train hit the wreckage. gOvernment officials, prominent citizens and personal friends of the
"The investigation will be centered on why the second train
ident - who had access to the White House;• Chin wrote.
failed to stop," Bromley said.
ey were not acting as lawyers or providing legal advice in the
·tiona! sense."
·
, The 42-page ruling provided a glimpse of a grand jury investiga' that has proceeded largely in secret since Clinton pardoned
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 74-year-old man who received a self- Rich, who was indicted in 1983 by a federal grand jury on evading
contained artificial heart has died, eight weeks atier the device was \{IQre than $48 million in income taxes.
implanted, doctors said Thursday. He was the third recipient of the ( ;
....
.
pioneering device to die.
Doctors at UCLA Medical Center, who implanted the AbioCor
']IARTFORD, Corm. (AP) - Pratt &amp; Whitney's striking
heart into the patient Oct. 17, said the man died Wednesday.
The man, whose identity was kept confidential at the request of ni\:hinists voted Thursday to end their walkout, accepting a new
his family, was the fourth of six people who have received the arti- contract offer that included improved job security at the jet-engine
-'lLC
.
IUiW,Cf.
.
6cial heart and the third of them to die.
~fthe 3,957 union memben taking part in the vote,2,954 vated
The first recipient of AbioCor heart, Roben Tools, died in
Louisville, Ky., on Nov. 30 atier almost five months with the plas- ~~ept and 999 voted to reject the offer. Four ballots were leti
tic-and-titanium device in his chest. He was 59. His death was
"The strike is over. We have a new three-year contract with Pratt
blamed on severe abdominal b)eeding and organ failure caused by
&amp; Whitney aitcrati," said James Paren~ a union spokesman who
his long-standing health problems.
anyounced the vote totals.

f

Machinists ending sblke

an

TAKING A BREAK - U.S.
Marines froin the 26th Marine
Expeditionary Unit stand
watch at the Kandahar International Airport in Kandahar
as they prepare coffee just
after dawn. At right is Cpl.
Kelly Hardin of Washington
State. At center is Sgt. Jerry
Brown of Pace, Fla. (AP
P.tloto)
Story on Page AS

Deaths

',.

J?ngineer: Project
about 70% complete
BY KEviN KELLY

TIME$-SENTINEL STAFF

STORM'S AFTERMATH - Joe flo5e, owner of French Gallia County Friday. The National Weather Service estiCity Press, paused while picking up remains of his busi- mated winds with speeds of up to 60 mph, leaving damness' sign, a victim of high winds and that swept through age and power outages in their wake. (Kevin Kelly)

.

•I

\

Gertrude M. Finlaw, 80
~ary C. Miller, 61
Details, A6
\

,_

'niUDI' - The
remains of the roof
~!ring the walk·

Roof at River

GALLIPOLIS -The first phase
of the new access road is expected to
open for traffic this week atier temporary striping is completed.
But motorists shouldn't get too
used to the situation. Portions will
close in the spring when the contractor completes paving, said Phil
Roberts, project engineer for Ohio
Department ofTransportation.
Another 1-1/4 inch ofasph~t .~
be added to the surface bef'ore .ilie
road, stretching from GKN Sinter
Metals to Burnett Road, can be dedicated, Roberts said. He estinlated
paving will be done in March or
·Apri~ depending on weather.
· .' B11t
project, now 7.0 .percent
complete and covering 2.46· miles1 is
ready for traffic as ODOT S\Udies
the impact on Burnett and what
needs to be done to improve flow at
the site.

me

8Y

lflah:sOt,Low:JOS

"Sedlons- 32 ......

Brand New 2002 Pontiac
Sunflre Sun &amp; Sound

Brand New 2002 Pontiac

IJ3,l50*

122,550*

• Sunroof, CD 5yltem
• ~lc, Air Conditioning
• Rear Spoiler, ntt Steering

Grand Prix GT Sedan

• Sunroof, Kayleaa
• Onstar, Polished Alum.
• CD System, nit &amp; CNIII

Silverado Sportsldt Pickup

llrlnd New 2002
Extended Cab ZR2 4x4

cs

• 4300 V~, Air Condlllonlng

• Vortec V-6 P • Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo

• Keyllla Entry, CD Sylltm
• Totally Loaded!

C2-8
02-7
insert
Cl
A4
A6
A2
81-8
A3

Cl 2.001 Ohia Valley Publishins Co.

.Trailblazer LS 4 Door 4x4

'18,250* 121,450* -125,

KEVIN KELLY '

TIMEs-SENTINEL STAFF
AND R. SHAWN lEWis
. ' OVP MANAGING EDITOR

Details, A~

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

· days till
Christmas

• 4200 6 Cylinder Engine
•16" Alum. W11ee11, Trail• Hitch
• CD Sylltm, nH Steertng

GALLIPOLIS - Winds packing .
speeds of up to 60 mph swept
through the region Friday.as part of a
storm system that blew off portions
of roofS, prompted scattered power
outages.and snarled traffic in Gallipolis when traf!ic signals went off..
Winds diminished by Friday
evening, but not before the roof to
the covered walkway at River Valley
High School's en.trance was torn
apart.
Gallia County Local Schools Interim Sup~rintendent Charla Evans said
.students and faculty heard a "thud"
about 1 p.m.
The remains of the roof landed in
the school's empty swimming pool,
and the area has b~en cordoned ·off
with yellow "caution" tape.
Thankfully, Evans said, no one was

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

Spon•orad by

2001 Chevy Tracker

Alero GL Sedan

2 Door4x4

2001 Buick,
Regal LS Sedan

q2,75D* q2,15o· qa,
• Automlllc, Air CondRionlng
• Power Seat, Windows, Locks
• CD Syllem, THt &amp; CruiM

• Automatic, Air
Powtr Windows, LoW, CD
Alum. Whlela, ntt &amp; Crul11

• CD Syatam, nit &amp; CruiM
• Automlllc, Air CondRionlng
• POWII' Sea~ Windows, Locks

~5,350*

• 3800 V~. CD Syatem

• Power Seat, Window•, Lockl
• Crulle Control,
Slllring

n•

• Taxes, Tags. T~e Fees eidra. Rebate included in sale price of new vehide lis1ed wllere 8j)plicable. "On approved credt On selected mcxlels. Not iespr,sllfe for typographlcoJ 011011.
Prices Good Der:embar 12th Through Decembar 16111.
'

.

..., '

CHIVIOLIT

MUll_.

.

PONT1AC
.....,..
....... ,

Buick

@

It's a II godC:I

2001 Chevy Monte

JIM'$ FARM
EQUIPMENT; INC

2001 Buick LeSabre

Carlo LS Coupe

Custom Sedan

qa,a

entrance.
(R. Shawn Lewis)

near the walkway when the accident
happened.
"There are no students located in
this vicinity at an;· she said, "and students in classrooms were not in ~ny
danger."
In :idditirin,lunch was over ~nd fhe ,
' '
cafeteria is not near the area. ·
The covered walkway is used by
students boarding •nd exiting school
buses. Bus riders were diverced to an
alternative entrance through the
gymnasium Friday afternoon.

In the short term, county maintenance workers will remove the old
roofing materials, and a tarp . will be
used to cover the walkway.
As for the long term solution,
••
Evans is uncertain~
· '",We'le going i0c.have to look at the
overall condition' 'of the canopy and ·
assess that before we rnake a recommendation to the Board of Education."

qJ,750*

Whlll1; CD Syatam
P~ Sell, Windows, Lockl

• Power Stir, ·WJndowe, Locka

CruiM Control, ntt Steering

• ntt Steering, CiuiM Control

2150 Eastern Av41.

Gallipolis, OH 45631

740-446-9777
Fax 740-446-8122

POMEROY - Often overlooked
because of its recognition a.• being a
stopping point for touring blues
musicians, Court Street Grill in
Pomeroy has been acknowledged for
its "'historical integrity'.' and "~o~e­
worthy culinary ex}lerience" 'i n ·a
newly-published restaUrant guide. ·
Titled,"A Taste of Ohio History: A
Guide to Historic E:ueries and Their
Recipes," the publication is an index
of the top ?9 restaurants i11 'Qhio that
exude historical significance while
providing quality cuisine for its customers.

Jackie Welker, owner and proprietor since 1998, said Court Street
Grill was fashioned from a building
constructed in 1864.
The building once housed a phar' macy, evident from the huge. wooden apothecary cabinet lo cated
;.ll~liind the liar, and following ~bol­
~shment ofProhibition in the 1930s,
became a restaurant under the name
. it is currencly known.
Welker said the distressed look of
the building's interior, which
includes the original brick walls,
plank floor and once-painted tin
ceiling, adds to the restaurant's bluesy

Pleen- Acala, Aa

.Racine
-obsetVes

holiday
spirit
FROM STAFF REPORTS

ambiance and glves patrons a "down
home" feeling.
"When you walk in, the vibe is
similar to a Delta juke joint, which
were very prevalent in the southern
states in the early to mid 1900s," said
Welker. .
"I've had several b)ues performers
who hail from the south comment
on the building's atmosphere. In fact,
Johnny Rawls, a blues guitar player
from Mississippi, walked through the
door, lookef 'around, smiled, and
said, 'I'm p.c;sme."'
Besides the intensity of its live

RACINE - The songs " White
Christmas" and ",W inter Wonderland" seemed a little our of place
Thursday night at Racine~' annual
Christmas in the Park celebration.
With the uncharacteristic, balmy
weather, perhaps "Mele Kalikimaka;· the Hawaiian Christmas song,
would have been more appropriate.
However, about 125 people still
turned out to ring in the holidays at
Star Mill Park and at the American
Legion hall.
The Star Mill Park Board produces the annual event.
A candlelight walk around the
park kicked off the observance, with
participants singing traditional
Christmas songs, and en,ding with
the first verse of the patriotic "My
Country 'Tis ofThee."
Afterwards, celebrants gathered at

PIMHIHGrtii,Atl

Pleese see Holldey, All

Pleaae -

Storm. All

Court Street Grill wins statewide notice
BY TONY M. lEACH

2001 Oldsmobile

I
lh the school's
empty swimming
pool. No one was
Injured. The oovered walkway Is
used by students
boarding and exiting school buses.
Bus riders were
diverted to an
alternative

• Alum. Wh11ll, CD System

To lliRN MoRE or In S£hedule an appointment,
call one of our cuslnmer service representatives
wll free at (866) 821-4541

-·-

...

HOLZER

{ I . , ! II~ I r &gt;I~
(
I'. ',1'1,' 111. , "
\\
,1·11""

I

For af"' bnxhull on wttghlloss 511!&amp;&lt;1): call (866) 821-4541

I

I

I

-

.

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