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                  <text>all of your •tocal Events' on A2

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

Mllp Count(s

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so cenh • December 26, 2001 ·Vol. 52. No 92

What's inside

www.mydailysentinel.com

A firefighting family

Blue, Gray All-Star game, B1

Deaths
Nell Albinger, 86 ·
Vanessa G. Halley, 28
Marjorie Price, 7S
Joseph Gibbs, 81
Marvin Reed, 70
Details, A3

HOUSE FIRE - Arefighters from Pomeroy, Middleport and
Syracuse were dispatched to the home of Robert Rupe on Lincoln Hill late Tuesday following a report of a structure fire. The
cause of the fire, which destroyed the home, has yet to be
determined and is still under investigation. (Dave Harris photo)

Fire
Lincoln Hil
residence

Weather
Hlp: lOs. Low: lOs
Details, A2

Club holds

dinner

ROCKSPRINGS
Rocksprings Better Health
Club held their annual
Christmas dinner at the
Rocksprings
United
Methodist .Church.
,
James Fry had prayer
before dinner.
Devotions were given by
Nancy Morris and Frances
Goeglein. Morris read the
Nativity, and a poem,
"Peace and Joy." Goeglein
gave a reading, "Evergreen
Wreath."
A thank-you note was
received from Margaret
Hughes.
Goeglein donated thank
you notes to the club.
Following dinner, Christmas trays were prepared for
the sick and shut-in in the
community.
Also attending were
Dorothy Jeffers, Phyllis
Skinner, Barbara Fry and
guests, Jim and Sue Fry.

Lotteries

•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

TH• GENERAnONS - Jeff, Tom and Keith Darst have devoted abo\Jt .50 years to the
Middleport Volunteer Are Department. Their three genetatloris ·of slervlce have seen
happy and sad times, arid many changes In the way fires are fought. (Brian J. Reed)

.

.

POMEROY - A twostory home was destroyed following a strucrure fire late
Thesday night.
According to Pomeroy Fire
Chief Chris Shank, firefighters
were dispatched to the home
of Robert Rupe on Lincoln
Hill around 9:40 p.m.following a report of a house fire.
Upon arriving on the scene,

•.. .

Three generations on Middleport force
BY BRIAN J. REm

"come a-runnin"' when the
siren sounded..
By working close by and
living even closer, Tom was
always . one of the first to
show up, and he eventually
raised in the ranks, serving
two terms as chief- in 196Q
and 1970 - and as presid.~nt
of the department for several
years.
"I was even acctised of
sleeping at the station, but
that myth was disproved
when my son,Jeff; was born:•
Tom said.
Jeff joined the department
as a full-fledged member in

SENTINB. NEWS STAFF

IDDLEPORTFor the Darst family of Middleport,
firefighting has become a
family tradition.
Tom, Jeff and Keith Darst
remain active members of the
Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department, nearly a halfcentury after Tom first signed
up.
Their story begins in 1953,
when father and grandfather
Tom Darst joined the Middleport Volunteer
Fire
Department. In those days,
many members who worked
at regular jobs in town were 1974.
"I grew up at the firegiven time off so they could

M

house:• Jeff said. "Anytime
the siren sounded I would
hurry to the station to watch
the trucks go out. I always
looked forward to helping
arourtd the fire station,
whether it would be washing
the trucks, helping with
chores or chicken barbecues,
or watering down the baseball diamonds jn the sum-

Local soldier
proposes on
CNN tel

part of the department long
before I actually was."
Jeff also served as fire chief,
from 1980 to 1993, and npw
serves as president of the

PluH ... Femlly.Al

OHIO
No drawings for
W.VA.
Daily 3: 4·1..0
Daily 4: 5·1·4-7
Cash 25: 1-14-17-21-22-24

-Index
l Sections - 1l Plllft

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B2-4

BS
AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl ,3-4
A2

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

A bittersweet Christmas for victims
BY AUDRA ANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

It was a bittersweet Christmas for many still coming to
terms with the Sept. 11 1errorist attacks as thousands
mourned loved ones and
more packed churches lookjng for answers.
"With the holidays, it's
really hard," said Kellie Lee,
whose husband Dan was
killed when American Airlines Flight 11 slammed into
the World Trade Center's
north tower. "I know now he

'

is not coming home and
there is no one there for me."
Dan Lee, a carpenter for
the Backstreet Boys' tour
who spent much of the year
on the road, was on his way
back to be with Kellie wheri '
$he gave birth.
The mother, who now lives
in Erie, Pa., says she's trying
to. make the holidays a time
of joy for Amanda, 3, and 3month-old Allison, but strug~s daily.
·
·~1 wake up and my heart
h\Jtts, but then I get one of

Allison's quirky looks and I'll
laugh," Kellie IIee. said.
Christmas makes Maria
Behr's family miss her even
more. Behr, a trader at Cantor
Fitzgerald, was among nearly
700 employees killed in the
attack.
"Maria lived for this time
of year," said her brother
George, 38, of Hampden
Township in Pennsylvania.
"She was the one who sort of
insisted on all the events of
family."

PIUH see Cope. Al

from Pomeroy,
Middleport and Syracuse discovered the home engulfed in
·flames. Crews from all three
departments battled the blaze
until 2 a.m. this morning.
No injuries were reported.
The cause of the fire has yet
to be determined and is still
under investigation, said
Shank.

AMERICA AT WAR

mertime."
"I was too young to join
back then, but I felt like I was

the state of Ohio

· firefighters

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Marine decided to use a live
CNN telecast ftom his outpost in Afghanistan to propose
to his girlfriend in Middleport, Ohio.
"Jenny, I was wondering,
will you marry me?," Tim
Fouts asked Jenny Hayman
Tuesday on the Cable News
Network's "Christmas With
the Marines at Kandahar"
broadcast.
H~!r answer before millions
of viewers was yes.
Hayman and fouts, of Flintstone, Ga., met while both
were vacationing in Myrtle
Beach, S.C., in August 2000.
At the time, Fouts was stationed at Camp LeJeune,
N.C..

Hayman and Fouts, both 22,
kept in · contact by mail and
the Internet. Occasionally,
they met halfway, she said. He
shipped out for Afghanistan
on Sept. 22.
On Monday, a CNN representative called Hayman to ask
if she could be in the Columbus studios of WBNS-TV by
9 o'clock Christmas morning.
She and her parents, Leslie
and Patricia, and brother Josh,
got up at 5 a.m. to . make 1
1/2-hour drive from Middle- ·
port, about 85 miles southeast
of Columbus.
"I was so nervous," Jenny .
Hayman said. "I thought I was
going to be sick."
Hayman said they hope to
marry in the summer.

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�PageAl

..

The Daily Sentinel

Wedneaday, Dec. 26, 2001

The Daily S1ntlt 181 • Page A 3

Wa I esby. Dac••b• H.1001

Survivor of meningitis outbreak looks to college

Ohio weather
Thursday, Dec. 27

ALLIANCE lAJ&gt;) - Six months agO.
Christin VanC•mp was banling for her
life, suffering fium the same meningitis
strain that killed two teen-agers and
prompted massive vaccination.s in
Alliance. Now, the 18-year-old has made
a full recovery and is looking tow.ard the
future.
"Her recovery has been very good,"
said Dr. Blaise Congeni. director of infectious diseases •t Children's Hospitol.
"'•r
----~ "
we 've L
uccn
very p1eii&gt;CUV•nCamp told The Akron Beocon
Journal she comiders her illness "a bad
experience," but is doing pretty much the
same things she did before she g.:x sick.
Although She no longer plans to join
the Army.V•nCarnp said she still wants to
become a registered nurse. She wiU start

-

I ...wlald !12·121"' ! •

•••••

.1eotJ" •LJI Hl"''2r I

•

-

••• ••

•••
••

Nell Albl111er

a two-year nuning prognm at HociUng to the hospital that night as a precaution.

but blood trsts showed no Mdence of
the bacteri2 that cause meningitis. Docton told her She iud the flu.
The next day, VanCamp was vomiting
every five minutes. Her neck was stilTand
her leg&lt; and feet were numb. By June 1,
Franks noticed a blotchy rash on VanCamp's thigh that resembled a picture
she"d seen on an Internet site describing
meningitis symptoms.
"When l saw the spots,! knew;· Franks
said.
Doctm:s at Alliance Community Hospital agreed to move VanCamp to Akron
Children's Hospial. The helicopter that
took VanCamp to Akron flew over her
high school while her classmates were
having graduation practice.

College next month.
But in May, it was VanCamp who was
being nursed back to health.
A student •t Mmington High School,
VanCamp and her friends were cl~ to
graduation when two students ot nearby
West Branch High School died fium
meningitis.
One of them, jonathan Stauffer, was
best friends with VanCamp's exboyfriend.
On May 30, she went to Stauffer's caUing hours, then to her ex-boyfriend's
howe. It was wann outside, butVanCamp
said she was chilled. On the drive home,
she had a hard time looking both ways at
a stop sign because her neck hurt. .
Her mother, Julianne Franks, took her

. .?

VENTURA, Calif.. - Neil Trussell J\Jbinger, 86, Ventura,
formerly of Meigs County, died Thursday, Dec. 20, 2001.
She was born in Bashan on Jan. 25, 1915, daughter of the
late Lester E. and Frances E. Ridenour Trussell . She was a
graduate of Racine High Sroool and Wheeling (WVa.)
School Nursing. She was a retired r&lt;'gistered nurse.
Surviving are a daughter, Beth Dean of Ventura; two
granddaughters and a great-granddaughter; and several
niec&lt;'s and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, AI·
J\Jbinger; a brother, Stanley Trussell; and five sisters, Constance Allen, Enid Trussell, Mildred Frank, Ine1 Canon and
Murl Ours.
Services will be I 1 a.m. Saturday in Chuck Carroll .Funeral Horne in Ventura. Burial will follow at Ivy Lawn
Cemetery in Ventura. Friends may call on Friday from 4-8
p.m. at the funeral home.

Vanessa G. Halley

0~--~-·~·
sr-

1imJ

Pl. Claoill'

Claoill'

T-

""'

-

Snotr

Cold, chance of snow continues
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cold air mass remained
stalled over the region today.
keeping temperatures well
below freezing.
And little change was
expected tonight and Thursday. Lows overnight were
expected to he in the teens
· and highs on Thursday in
, the 20s.
Snow showers were likely
t,onight and Thursday, the
, National Weather Service
, $aid, but any accumulation
should be light.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:12, and sunrise on Thurs·~~y is at 7:53 a.m.
Wr ather forecast:
Toni gh t ... Mostly cloudy
.w ith l 10 percent chance of
snow showers. Lows near 20.
West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percenf chance of
snow showers. Still cold
with highs near 30. South-

LOCAL EVENTS

..

west wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thu'rsday night .. . Mostly
cloudy with scattered flurries. Lows in the mid 20s.
Extended forecast:
Friday.. ;Partly cloudy with
a chance of snow showers.
Highs in the mid 30s. ·
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy with a chance of
flurries. Lows in the lower

20s . .
Saturday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow
showers and flurries. Highs
in the lower 30s.
Sunday... A chaQce of flurries during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows i11
the upper teem and highs in
the lower 30s.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper teens and
highs in the mid 30s.
New Year's Day... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
teens and highs in the lower
30s.

CVS ditches two markets·
, TOLEDO (AP) Drugstore giant CVS Corp. has
announced it is pulling out of the Toledo and Canton markets
and is closing scattered stores in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton,
and Akron areas.
· A spokesman for the chain said Monday it would shutter 16
,stores' in the Toledo area - 15 in Ohio and one in Monroe,
Mich. The closings will cost between 240 and 320 jobs.
. , CVS officials said the stores include a mix of fuU and part.time workers. Each store has between 15· and 20 employees.
, Spokesman Mike DeAngelis told The Blade the stores wiD
close in mid-January, but wouldn't give an exact date. Nor
':"Duld he say how many other Ohio stores would close.

Troubles subside for woman
, · AKRON (AP) -After 741 days in a Medina County jail
_ceU, 2l~year-old Audrey Iacona enjoyed her Christmas com. fortably at her parents' home, where there was little talk of her
t;raumatic past.
For the young woman and her parents, Mark and Angela
lacona, there was reason to celebrate and give thanks.
About four years ago, Judge James L. Kimbler imposed an
~ight-year prison term on Audrey lacona, who had been con..ncted on two felony counts ofinvoluntary manslaughter, child
,endangering and abuse of a corpse in the suffocation death of
.fier newborn son after secretly giving birth at home:
She was released from jail Friday.

Community C.l1ndw 11 pub- ed.
IIIMd .. a he ewvlcl to nonprofit groupa wlahlng to
POMEROY - Meigs local
announce m.tJnga and IIPII" Board of Education regular meet· .
clll 1venta. Tile calendlr 1a not ing, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
dellgMcl to pRIIII018 111M or board olfice.
funcke!Hta of any type. llllml
... prtntad only •• 8pac:e perCARPI;:NTER - Columbia
mill and cannot Ill gwm~nteed Township Board of Trustees win
to Ill prlnllld a 1peclllc num- hold their regular meeting on
ber of dllya.
Dec. 26 at 7 p.m. allhe n.. sta·
lion with organlzallonal tMeting
WEDNESDAY
for 2002 to follow.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trusleas end of the year meet·
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Towning, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
ship
Truste. win meet on Thurs·
the Home of the clerk, Osie Folday
at 6:30 p.m. at Pagevllle
rod.
Town Hall. An organizational
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- meeting wl follow.
ship Trustees, special end of
Run.AND - leading Creek
year meeting, Wednesday, 6:30
p.m., township olfice on Joppa Consarvancy District resched·
Road. Call clerk at 378-6149 to uled December meeting, 5 p.m.
Thursday.
be placed on agenda.

TUPPERS PlAINS - VFW
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Village Post 9053 will meet at !he hall in
·Council will meet in special ses· Tuppers Plains on Thursday at
sian on Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. A new 7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served at
council member wiN be appoint· 6:30 p.m. Special drawing.

Mayor •aps up a yean
DAYTON (AP.) -When Mayor Mike Turner finishes his
eight years as mayor in January, he'D leave behind a city that
reflects his priorities.
.
.
.
Proghmi to 'improve bousiilg, economic development and
'police and fire semces have been funded first. Everything else
at City Hall competed for whatever was left in the cotTers.
"We have always started with the priorities of funding for our
safety forces, funding economic development and then determining what our priorities are in funding the rest of the organization," he said. "I think those are the priorities of the people
of the city of Dayton and should probably continue in that

order."

CINCINNATI (AP) - Dan and Erion Thyen are now the
parents of Christmas quadruplets.
Seth, Luke, Ava and Emma Thyen were born about 3 a.m.
Tuesday at Good Samaritan Hospital. They were three months
premature, but they're healthy.
· The 34-year-old father said the two boys are getting a little
extra oxygen, but the girls are breathing on their own.
The 28-year-old mother had been in the hospital for several
..o\feeks.
At first the couple joked about having a New Year's Eve or
' New Year's Day bahy,but then Mrs.Thyen's water broke and the
' I
.
contrachons came.

.;I

..

·

After losing in November to state Sen. Rhine McLin, DDayton, Turner appears ready to move on. He has been spendmg most of the work days away fium City HaD rather than at
his stripped-bare mayor's office.

New job keeps ex-chief busy
CLEVELAND (AP) -When Van Harp left his job as head
of Cleveland's FBI office for a post in Washington, he knew his
work load was going to increase.
· But not this much.
Just two months after H~rp arrived in the nation's capital, a
plane hijacked fium Dulles International Airport on Sept. 11
crashed into the Pentagon, killing 189 people. The next month,
anthrax-tainted letters killed postal workers and disrupted government operations.
It's not unusual for Harp to work 20-hour days while he runs
the office that investigates federal crimes around Washington.
He's in charge of 1,300 people, compared to 300 when he
worked in Cleveland.

Residents become models

· · Family welcomes 4 newboms
'

·

CHAGRIN FALLS (AP) -Think fine wine, cigars and aged
brandy.
The Distinguished Gentleman of Hamlet Village calendar
features residents aged 80 to 96, aU residents of a suburban
Cleveland retirement community.
Mr. January, Donald Chester, holds a martini beside a fireplace
at Gamekeepers Taverne. Mr. September is Charles Hurst the self-proclaimed number one fan of the Cleveland Browns
- who poses holding a stuffed football and wearing a football
.
jersey, pants and hat.
The calendar was cre~ted to benefit the community and
highlight Hamlet. "Residents have very active, fascinating and
fun lifestyles;· said Marc Benson, president of the retirement
community. "These gendeman continue to .lead and lead with

CIRCLEVILLE -Vanessa G. Halley, 28, Circleville, formerly of Gallipolis, died Monday, Dec. 24, 2001. in 'Berger
Hospital, Circleville, of injuries received in a multiple vehicle accident in Pickaway County.
Born Feb. 13, 1973, in Gallipolis, daughter of Doris
Glover Marryn of Gallipolis, and the late William Kenneth
Martyn, she was a homemaker, and a member of South
Bloomfield Church of Christ in Christian Union.
Surviving in addition to her mother are her husband,
1)mothy Lee Halley, whom she married July 25, 1998, in
Gallipolis; a son, Timothy Aaron Halley, and a dauipuer,
Allison Jay Halley, both of the home; three sisters, Lynn A.
(Thomas) Stapleton of Coal Grove, Janette R . (Michael)
Beckley of Ashville, and Yvette G. Nibert of Gallipolis;
three brothers, Dennis L. Martyn and Daniel R. (Karissa)
Marryn, both of Gallipolis, and William Keith (Kelly) Martyn of Point Pleasant, ·W.Va.; three half-sisters, Summer
Martyn of Gallipolis, Marci Martyn of Colorado·, and Sherry Martyn of California; a half-brother, Jason Martyn of
Gallipolis; her maternal grandmother, Nora Glover of Gallipolis; her father-in-law, Mark Timothy Halley of Gallipolis; and several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her maternal grandfather,
Samuel Glover; and her paternal grandparents, Albert and
Ruth Martyn.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in the Church of Christ in
Christian Union, 2173 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, with Pastors
David Hopkins, Donald Blankenship and Dan Bennett officiating. Burial will be in Providence Cemetery, Clay Town' ship. Friends may call at the church from 5-8 p.m. Thurs,day.
.
l The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior
: to services. Arrangrments are by Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

-Ohio House members
help build homes
CLEVELAND (AP) Dorothy White struggled for
years for decent, affordable
housing, so she 'w:asn't about to
let 500 hours of labor and a
fhree-year wait deter her fiom
owning her own home.
' Her dream is now reality. A
twO-stOry house in Cleveland
wiU be dedicated Saturday,
to her own determina,tion and Habitat for Humani.1)1 with an assist fiom the
Phio House of Representatives.
White and her family have
been packed and ready to
move in fOr weeks.
:•1 was so determined to f"'l
this dream that I worked on
whatever I had to. We feel real
.bl,essed," White said. "It's so
hard to express because it is so
overwhelming, but the Habit!! organization was truly
God-sent."
Mrs. White, her husband,
Willie, and their two children
have experienced substandard
hqusing in Cleveland. So she

thanks

participated in building her
home. After her husband
injured his back, Habitat
quickly changed the building
plans to accommodate a r.unp
and downstairs bedroom.
She is thankful and says she
wiU "go and dedicate some
more hours to help another
family build their home:·
State Rep.Jo Ann Da..ndson,
a former House speaker and a
Reynoldsburg Republican,
about two yean ago started a
program linked with Habitat
for Humanity International.
Ohio lawmakers set a goal to
build 99 houses in three years.
Recently, the current House
speaker, Larry Householder,
an Athens area Republican,
helped frame a Habitat home
in Nelson..nlle.
"It's a great project that
makes you feel good and does
a lot for the soul;' Householder said. "The more seasoned
House members are up to
speed. We're trying to bring
new membe~ on bo¥d." ..

MarJorie Price
POMEROY .;_ Marjorie Price, 75, U.S. Rouie 33,
Pamer!)}', died Saturday, Dec. 22, 2001, at the extended care
unit ofVeterans Memorial Hospital.
· She was born Jan. 4, 1926 in Chicago, Ill., daughter of the
late James and Willie C. Tomlin Miller. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are five daughters, Marilyn S. Price of Columbus, LaJean Armstrong of Middleport, Jewel E. Neely of
Columbus, Allie F. Mitchell of Coluinbus and Floranell L.
Burney of Columbus; r_hree sons, Norman L. PriCe- Jr.,
Floyd L. Burney Jr., and Frederick L. Burney, all of
Pomeroy; two sisters, Jewel Welch and Sarah Hull, bo.th of
Pomeroy; a sister-in-law, Doris Ervin of Columbus; and .five
grandchildren and three great- grandchildren.
She was also precede&lt;j. in death by a sister and three
brothers.
·
·
·I
Graveside services wiD be 1 1 a.m. Thursday at Miles
Cemetery, Rutland, with the Rev. Eddie Buffington officia.ting. Friends may call at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
from 6-9 tonight.
·

Campuses.beef up security
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Increased student attention to safety, new technology and the Sept. 1 1 terrorist attacks are prompting
universities around Ohio
to beef up security.
"The safer we can make
campus, the better," said
John Delamer, director of
.public safety at the Univer,siry of Dayton.
The school has installed a
video-surveillance system:
90 cameras mounted in
residence halls, academic
buildings and the business
office.
"'What we have now is
90 extra silent cops that
don't speak or hear but
see," Delamer said.
Three years ago, Dayton
spent $4.5 million to wire
its campus for improved
Internet access. The videosurveillance system piggybacks on the network and
cost
the
university
$60,000.
Installed 10 months ago,
it's already proved useful.
A string of thefts of
expensive classroom video
projectors stopped once

the cameras went up. Police
used video images to catch
a thief walking out of a
dormitory with a stolen
laptop under his arm. And
students vandalizing property were caught in the act.
The cameras on the Dayton campus are visible and
in common areas as well as
entrances and exits .
Miami University in
Oxford uses video cameras
in areas where there have
been theft problems, such
as computer centers, said
Cathryn House, director of
safety at the school.
"I would be reluctant to
install them in our· residence-hall environment,"
House said. "We like to
communicate a sense that
this is your home. And
most people, 1 don't think,
would like to have cameras
in their homes."
Cameras can create a
false sense of security,
House said. Miami instead
urges students to lock their
doors.
Ohio State · University
also has cameras, mostly, in
parking lots,

LOCAL STOCKS .
AEP-42.99
Arch Coal- 21.37
Akzo-43.79

AmToch/SBC- 39.10
Ashland Inc.- 4&gt;4 ,77

AT&amp;T-18.35

Bank One- 38.79
BLI-9.99
Bob' Evans - 24.99

BorgWamer - 51.&gt;40
Champion- 2.75
Charming Shops 5.45
Cl1y Holding - 12.60
Col-18.99

. : BERLIN HEIGHTS (AP) - Neither IS-year-old Chris
J?enny nor anyone knowing the energetic and &lt;~ptimistic boy
~ho. dreamed of becommg a doctor could have imagined his
~llruggles now.
· ' There were days not long ago when Chris was a stellir student at Edison High School, taking honors geometry and
fhemlstry Wtth ease, gettmg almost perfect grades without
s~udymg.

; 'Those were days when lifting weights before bed was routine
and visiting his grandma after school was tradition, when the
happy face on his temporary driver's license was his normal
~xpression.

: Chris doesn't smile mu~h anymore. He sleeps a lot. He does)l't let anyone touch him, and he cries out in the middle of the
flight. An infection diminished his mental and motor skills and
• ?ltered his personality. He is unable to attenrl high school for his
~ophomore year.

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CLEVELAND (AP) -. Cuyahoga County commissioners
are hiring outside legal counsel to help resolve a budget squabble with the comity prosecu(or. .
In a special meeting Monday, the commissioners voted· to
retain the Squire Sanders &amp; Dempsey l~w firm at a cost of not
more .than $15,000.
,
The commissioners need the legal advice because Prosecutor
William D. Mason got the county's common pleas judges to
give him $2.6 million more than the commissioners ·allotted
him in the 2002 budget;
Under Ohio law, common pleas judgi's approve prosecutors'
budgets.
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of marijuana. and underige
consumption.
Wilson and Warner w~
POMEROY - Units of
both
charged with underaged
the Mdgs Emergency Semce
ASHVILLE- joseph Ga;m,.r Gibbs, 81, of A&gt;h..nll&lt;', died an-.,red six calls for auis- comumption.The three juveon Sunday, DecC'mber 23, 2001, at his residencC'.
tance on Tuesday. Units niles were charged with
He wao born in Middleport on Aupot 10, 1920, son of the responded as follows:
offemes ranging &amp;om underlate Roland}. and Meda M. Russell Gibbs. He was a wteran of
CENTRAL DISPATCH age consumption to criminal
the. U.S. Navy during World War II, and was a retired employ9:45 a.m., Pomeroy Police trespass.
ee of the Columbus Souther Electric Co., with 28 years ser- Department, Amy Atkins,
..nee.
·
Holzer Medical Center;
He was a member of the Plckaway Lodge No. 23, FA&amp;M,
7:00 p.m., Union Avenue,
and AMVETS Post No. 2256, Circleville.
Salley Mills, HMC;
POMEROY Several
Survi..no$ are his wife, Deny M. Young NetT-Gibbs; a son,
8:29 p.m., Rocksprings breaking and entering inciDan_ (Beth) Gibbs of Columbus; grandchildren, Emily Gibbs of Rehabilitation Center, Kayla dents are under investigation
Columbus, and Dr. Sean F. Gibbs of Seneca, Illinois; stepson, Stover, HMC;
by the Meigs Counry Sheriff's
Jerry W (Susan) NetT of Lancaster; step-granddaughten,
10:29 p.m., Third Street, Department.
Michelle R . (Robert) Roach of A.tbnta, Geo!J!ia, Angela S. Ryan Hill, treated.
According · to
reports,
POMEROY
(Stepheu) Gussler of Columbus, Aimee N . (Tracy) Messbarger
Riebel's Used Car Lot in
9:39 p.m., Lincoln Hill, Chester informed deputies
and step-grandsons, Trey. twins Brock and Braden Messbarger
of Lancaster; sisters Clarice Kr.autter and Charlotte {Robert) structure fire, assisted by Mid- that its office ~d been broken
Elberfeld of Pomeroy; sis~n-in-law, Juanita Gibbs of Cir- dleport and Syracuse, Robert into. Three dealer togs, the
cleville, Sarah Gibbs of Pomeroy, and Ruth Young of Middle- Rupe residence, no injuries.
keys to a 1991 Oldsmobile
port; a special niece and friends, Susan Qim) McConnell of
lWTLAND
Cutlass, and the keys to a blue
Circleville; nieces, nepheWs, cousins; good friends, Dean. and
10:45 p.m., Mulberry 1988 Chevy pick-up were
Patti Barr and their daughter, Laurie, of Ash..nlle; friend and Avenue, Margaret Damaska, taken.
neighbor, Don {Mary Jane) Smallwood;.and many other good created.
The Chevy pick-up was
friends.
·
later · found behind the
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife,
Chester Courthouse.
Thelma M. (Hazelton) Gibbs; sisters, Kathryn Werner and
In other matters:
,
Theresa {Potts) Sw:ltzel; and three brothers, Russell R., Pearson
POMEROY Several
• Linle John's Citgo ofTalpand William A. Gibbs.
people were arrested by the
pers Plains was broken into.
.Services wiU be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, December 27, Meigs County
Sheriff's
An ATM machine and an
2001, at Defenbaugh-Wise-Schoedinger Funeral Home with Department following a comundisclosed amount of cash
the Revs. Mike Hazelton and Irvin Kirk oliiciadng. ln~rment plaint caUed in by employees
was taken fiom the store;
with military honon by the AMVETS Honor Guard Services of Royal Oak Resort.
• William Starling Massar,
to follow at Forest Ceme~ty.
Sheriff Ralph TrusseD said
Reeds..nlle, reported a buildFriends may call fmm 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday, the department recently
ing on his property was. broDecember 26, 2001, at the Defenbaugh-Wise-Schoedinger received a call from an
ken into. Nothing was taken
Funeral Home, where a Masonic service wiU be held at 7:30 employee of Royal Oak
fium the building;
p.m.
.
' Resort informing them that
• Mike Johnson of Chester
Memorial .contributions may be niade to the Hospice of the resort's pool bad been
reported
a storage unit had
Pickaway County, 1170 North Court Street, Circleyille, Ohio broken into.
.43113.
Upon arriving · on the been broken into;
• Employees of Chester
scene, deputies diScovered that
park employees had detained Country Kitchen repo,r(ed
John WithereD, 18, and an someone tried to break into
the building through the
REEDSVILLE - Marvin W~udell Reed, 70, of R.eeds..nlle, unidentified female juvenile.
diedonTheiday,December25,2001,foUowingan extended iUAfter searching a cabin drive-thru .window. No entry
·
ness.
rented by Witherell, deputies was made.
All incident! are still under
. He was born on March 9, 1931, iti Port Homer, but lived in found Herbert Bare, 18,
investigation
and the sheriff's
ReedMUe his entire life.
Langs..nlle, Matthew Warner
Marvin served his country in the Korean War fmm 1951 to and Jonathan Wilson, both of department is urging all resi1953 as a Corporal with two terms of fmnt-llne semc:e.
Pomeroy, and several juve- dents to report any suspcielus
activity around local busineMPrior to to his service, he was employed by the U.S. Postal niles.
es.
''
Semce at the age of 17, carrying mail
boat across the Ohio
Bare was charged with
River to West Virginia.
. criminal tmpass, possession of
He worked at Union Carbidev'EIItem Metals in Marietta, drug paraphernalia, possession
where he retired in 1987 after 30 yean of semce. He served as of a contraUed subscance and
APPLE GROVE -A New
a church elder/deacon at Faith FuU Gospel.Church, where he underage consumption.
attended and where his son, Steve, is Pastor.
WithereD was arrested and Year's dance will be held on
Sumving are his wife of 49 yean, !)arlene Smith Reed; three charged with unlawful sexual Dec. 31 6om .8 p.m. to midsons and daughters-in-law, Stev, and Susan Reed of conduct With 1 tllinQr, crimi- pig!tt _at· th~ Ret;! Barn, locatReedsville, Craig and Barbera Reed of Reeds..nlle, and James nal tmpass, three counts of ed on Ohio 338. II pnduck
and Terry Reed of Marietta; seven grandchildren, Angela Reed contributing to the delin- dinner will be served at 7 p.m ..
Devlin of Parkersburg, West Vil'tlinia, Andrew Reed, Autumn · quency of a minor, possession Admission is free.
Reed and Jennifer Reed of Reedsville, and Jaimie and Hunter
Reed of Marietta; five brothers and three sisten-in-law,
"I feel like we have a pur- .
Dorhman and Phyllis Reed of Reedsville, Robert and Carlotta Reed ofWheelenburg, Dennis Reed of Ferndale, Florida,
pose liere," said Spc. Courtn'ey
Gary Reed of Reedsville, and Da..nd and Rowa Reed of
Risser, who left his job :U a
dispatcher
with the Ringgold
Reedsville; two sistm and brothers-in-law, Ina Jean and Ray
fi•PipA1
County sheriff's department
Weaver of Chillicothe, and Maxine and John Dupree of Fairborn; and a sister-in-law, Frances Reed of Reedsvil1e.
Behr and his wife volun- to serve in the Iowa Army
·
He ·was 'p receded in death by his ·parents, 111-.nn and Roxie teered to host the famjly National Guard.
Guardsman George Smart,
Kibble Reed; a brother, Maurice Reed; a sister, Kathleen Reed Christmas celebration this
who reported .for duty at
Smith; and an inCant sister, Rosemary Reed.
year.
Southern
· California's BurVisitation wiD beThursday,December27,2001 from 1-4 and
"I think in losing her, one
7-9 p.m. at Faith ·Full Gospel-Church in Long Bottom. Funer- ofthe things we recognized is bank Airport early Christmas
al services wiU be priva~ and held at the church on Friday, . l)tat she worked so hard at morning, gave his 8-year-old
December 28,2001, with the Rev. Charles Hall officiating. Full getting us together;• he said. daughter lwo choices -:
military rites will b• observed. Interment will be in Reeds..nlle "We've conie closer togeth- open presents at 2 a.m. ·or
wait until he got home midCemetery.
.
er."
Arrangements are by White Funeral Home in Coolville.
At the trade center site, afternoon.
She couldn't wait.
crowds of onlookers gathered
"We had to warn her if she
in freezing temperatures as
woke up too early she mi~ht
. di..nde up the food .
volunteers continued their
"The ~t part of aU w:u efforts to find the remains of interrupt Santa;' Smart said:
Some of the guardsmen
delivering the bas)cet! a day.or ..n~rims.
brought in fudge, egg ndg,
from , . .
two before Christmas. The fam"I wanted to be here today.
cookies
and other goodies to
ilies we~ so happy to receive It's difficult to· explain," said
department, about to begin his the gift. and it made w a little New York Police Detective . help make the day special.'
"l t's been a pretty upbeat
fifth cwo-year term. His broth- mote thankful for . what we Commander
Yalkin day, considering," said guardser; Craig. has also served the had."
Demirkaya, as he struggled to man Steven Monteilh, 37, a
Last yellf, Jetl's son Keith
department.
keep
his
composure. Los Angeles firefighter. "Peo· "The~ have been good and became the third genmtion of
Demirkaya said he had cele- ple are in a festive mood.
bad runes through the years;• Darst men to join the departbrated an early Christmas They're less stressful, less in a
Jdf Darst said. "Seeing people ment. ·
with
his family so that he rush, less snappy. I think that's
"Keith ucoming.along·beuer
lose their home and belongings,
could work Thesday.
the holiday that brings that
or even worse, their life, is than I expect~&lt;!," Jdf said of his
Some
National
Guardsmen
out
in people."
something that you dpn't for- son. "He has demonstrated the
spent
Christmas
patrolling
the
get. It stays in the back of your desire and · determination to
mind until some little thing become a very good firefisJlt- nation's airports, bridges and
other potential terrorist tartriggers it, and suddenly it aU er."
The job of a firefighter's wife
comes back as if it were only
NO TUEI BAAQAIN SHOWS
yes~rday."
.
is never ea$y, either, and aU :ire
ON 121211101 I 1111112
Both he and his father agree grateful for the women who
DAILY MAnNEES 12/26o1/D1/D2
GIFT CERTIRCATES
that the saddest experience was sUpport them iit their work.
"I can't count how many
the 1984 fire at Baker Furnitimes
meals were interrupted or
ture, which claimed the life of
. appointments missed, or haw
fireman Jim Daniels.
"All of the men on this caU many houn my wife Kitty
did an outstanding job of fight- spent home alone while I w:u
ing the fire, but nobody could on caU or at the scation working
feel good about that ... we lost . on equipment:'Jeff said. "Withone ofour own and we were all out her, I could never have
devOted time and energy to the
deeply hurt:'
semce
that I have."
There are good memories
A fuurth ~neration is now
too, including the early days
"on
deck." Keith's 4-year-old
when the departt'nent prepared .
son Dylan is already learning his
food baskets at Christmastime.
"We would go door-to-door way around the s!ation.
"Dylan is j!etting some
through town for two consecuparade
time on the trucks;'
tive Sundays in December collecting food or cash donatioru:' Keith said. "He will have to
Jeff remembered. "Once the decide for himself if he will be
MATINfi·S FVFRYDAV
"'
collection was done, we would a firefighter, but you have to like
1:.' '.?••/1) 1 ltU\U 1!01 102
get together to sort out· and the odds."
All AGES , All TIMES $ 4 00

i

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Obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMSioccah

. . . . . . .

Blfs probed

Anests made

MlrvlnReed

..na

Plan -dance

.Cope

Familv
-~.

�A4
The'Daily Sentinel

DICI ··21.2111

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Dec. 26, 2001
The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

111 Court St., PoiMroy, Olllo

740-1112·211141• Fu: tel-2117

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Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

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Genenl

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NATIONAL VIEW

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Too far

•'

lUS. may have to compromise
· to get its shot at evildoers

-

--------------------~----------------------------------~·~~~------------~~~· !•
PERKINS' VIEW

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Dec. 26, the 360th day of 2001. There
are five days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 26, 1776, the British suffered a major defeat in the
Barrie of Trenton during the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In 1799, former President George Washington was eulogized by Col. Henry Lee as ".first in war, first in peace and first
in the heaftS of his countrymen."
In 1893, Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung was born in Hunan
provmce.
In 1917, during World War I, the U.S. government took
over operation of the nation's railroads.
In 1931, the Pulitzer Prize-winning musical play "OfThee
I Sing" opened on Broadway.
In 1941, Winston Chur&lt;:hill became the first British prime
minister to address a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress.
In 1944, in the World War II Battle of the Bulge, the embatded U.S. JOist Airborne Division was relieved by units of the
Fourth Armored Division.
In 1944, Tennessee Williams' play "The Glass Menagerie"
was first performed publicly, at the Civic Theatre in Chicago.
In 1972, the 33rd president of the United States, Harry S.
Truman, died in Kansas City, Mo.
In 1974, comedian Jack Benny died in Los Angeles at age
80.
In 1975, the Soviet Union inaugurated the world's first
supenonic transport service with a flight of it? i:Upolev-144
airliner from Moscow to Alma-Ata.
· Ten years ago: On Wall' Street, the Dow Jones industrial
average rose to a then-record high of 3082.96. President Bush
nominated businesswoman Barbara Franklin to be commerce
secretary. Sikh separatists killed about 50 train passengera in
Punjab, most of them Hindus.
Five yean ago: Six-year-old beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey was found beaten and strangled in the basement of her
family's horne in Boulder, Colo. (To date, the slaying remains
unsolved.)
One year ago: A gunman wielding a semiautomatic rifle
and a shotgun opened fire at an Internet firm in Wakefield,
Mass., killing seven workers; a suspect, co-worker Michael
McDermott, was arrested by police.Veteran stage and screen
actor Jason Robards died in Bridgeport, Conn., at age 78.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Richard Widmark is 87. Comedian Alan King is 74. Actor Donald Moffat is 71. Rhythm•andblues singer Abdul "Duke" Fakir (The Four Tops) is 66.
Record producer Phil Spector is 61. "America's Most Wartted" host John Walsh is 56. Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk is 54. Former baseball player Chris Chambliss is 53.
Country musician Brian Westrum (Sons of' the Desert) is 39.
Rock musician Lars Ulrich (Metallica) is 38. Rock musician
j is 34. Country singer Audrey Wiggins is 34. Rock musician
Peter K;lett (Gandlebox) is 32. Actor Jared Leto is 30.
Thought for Today: "Christmas has come and gone, and I
- to speak selfishly - am glad of it. The season always gives
i.'ne the blues in spite of myself, though I manage to get a
good deal of pleasure from thinking of the multitudes of
happy kids in various parts of th.e world." - Edwin Arlington Robinson, American poet (1869-1935).

Items

I

While Supplies

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Convicted killer presses his campaign against reality ·: j
'

the death penalty. Capital punishment is an issue in which msonable people can differ.
·
: But Spain is going a hit far in refusing to extradite eight susPeCted terrorists because the United States may execute them
l'or their involvement in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Other
lluropean nations holding terrorism suspects- including Gerrhany, England and Italy - may follow suit. This is unfortunate
fl&gt;r the effort to destroy terrorist networks.
1 The countries of the world should not let differences over
iisues of punishment get in the. way of prosecuting evildoers.
• At the same time, the United States must be realistic. It's
&lt;ioubtful that many of these European nations will back down
qn the death penalty issue, so concessions will have to be made.
• The Bush administration is already working toward a com~romise so the United States can gain custody·ofterrorism susP-ets held in Europe.
: One likely scenario is that the United States may make· a
promise not to execute suspects who are not directly associat-.
dd with the attacks. But if that concession is made, convicted
tl:rrorists should get the maximum prison sentences.
j While it's regrettable that the extradition of terrorism sus1\ects may be conditional, it's more important .the t,Jn,ited States
!f.Un custody of the evildoers. The.last thing we need ni5w is a
~ig debate over the' death penalty.
.
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• f
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I

~ • Carlsbad (N.M.) Current-Arp, on the death peMity dnd
txtradition of swpecu: It's fine if European countries condentn ·

pto

.

"1 shot the (expletive deleted), and I
hope the (expletive deleted) dies:• So
laid · Mumia Abu-Jamal,. according to
eyewimesses, after gunning down
Philadelphia police , officer Daniel
Faulkner.
A form.er Black Panther, a former
journalist (who worked for Philadelphia's version of public radio's "All
Things Considered"), Abu-Jamal was
convicted of murder 'and sentenced ·t o
death. However, he has managed to
avoid his date with the executioner for
much of the past two decades.
This week, the cop killer got an undeserved Christmas present. A federal district judge ruled that Abu-Jamal should
get a new sentencing hearing, at which a
new jury could downgrade his original
sentence from deatb to mere life in
•
••
pnson.
.
Judge William Yohh jr:s decision was
mosdy cheered by cite ,convicted murderer's radically chi~ 1upporters, who,
were disappointed obly that the jurist
did not declare Abu-jaq~al innocent and
return him to society.
"We feel Judge Yohn has done a little
thing with great love and has saved a life
that never should have been at risk in
the first place:' said the cop killer's
lawyer, J. Michael Farrell.
Farrell insists that his client has spent
the past 19 years on Pennsylvania's death
row for a murder he did not commit.
That Abu-jamal didn't get a fair trial.
That he was sentenced tp murder merely because of his race and his politics.
In Hollywood, where, unsurprisingly,
Abu-Jamal:s crusade to escape justice has
become a cause celebre, they call that
·~suspension of disbelief:' The knowing
and willful denial of reality.
This is what we know:
On Dec. 9, 1981, Officer Faulkner

Last!

f

!

ly delaying the punishme~t he.so richly
deserves for taking 'the ·li.fe' of ~ Jici;lce
'
officer.
.~ ,
Indeed, said the undentan.dably out-: i
raged district attqrney, Lynne Ab~,: :
Abu-Jamal's "case was thoi'Oiighly' : .
reviewed by the state Suptellle C6urt, It! :
was reviewed innamerable'times .by·thel :
state post-conviction court." She note~ ; .
that Abu-Jamal has never testified on hi;,
own behalf at any of the court proceed-. •
ings that have been held over. the P~.~ ;'
two decades. Nor has he produced h1~ : '
own brother, who was at the soene or~ -f ..
the murder.
.; ; .
Indeed, in his 1995 book, "Live fiOIJY, L .
Death Row" (William Morrow) Abu-; •
Jamal wrote, "I continue to fight against; j
this UJ:.ljust sentence and conviction." 1-te! ·:
didn't deny that he shot the officer in ;
the face at point-blank range. He simplY,: :
professed his sentence and conviction! :
u
•
,.
I 4
UnJUSt.
,
. .
"
·It was the same ill&gt; his 1997 book,~:
"Death Blossoms" (Plough · Publishing: ;
House). While the foreword, penned by! :
Harvard University professor Cornel :
West, declared Abu-Jamal "unjustly
imprisoned for a crime he did not commit," nowhere in the book does the convicted killer himself assert that someone
other than he was responsible for the
officer's death.
That's because, while Abu-Jamal's
lawyers and fund-raisers and publishers
and Hollywood cheerleaders hav~ convinced themselves that the copvicted
killer is innocent - have suspended disbelief- Abu-Jamal himself is under no
illusion.
He knows he murdered officer Daniel ,
Faulkner. He earned his death sentence.: ;
aoseph Perkins is a columnist for The Saw :

...

Joseph
PerKins
COLUMNIST

!

.

spotted a car driVing the Wt:Ong way
down a one-way street with its•lights off.
He pulled over the driver, William
Cook, Abu-Jamal's 25-year-ol~ brother.
Cook got out of the car and started tussling with the officer. Moments later,
Abu-Jamal arrived on the scene, packing
his .38-caliber revolver.
Eyewitnesses say Abu-Jamal shot the
officer in the back. The o[J!cer returned
fire, wounding the gururian. Bur not
enough to prevent Abu-Jamal from firing off sevetal additional shots, including
the final fatal shot to the officer's face at
point-blank range.
Abu-Jamal was arrested at the scene
with the weapon that murdered Officer
Faulkner. He was taken to a hospital
emergency room when!. according to
medical personnel who treated him, he
boasted of having blown away the 251
year-old police officer.
·
And now Abu-Jamal's blindly loyal
supporters suggest that his trial, his conviction, his death sentence were all
unjust.
Please.
The only injustice is that the convicted cop killer has been able to work the
legal system for the past two decades, fil- Diego Vnion-11ibune and can be reached a(
ing appeal after dubious appeal, endless- Joseph. Perkins Union Trib.com.)

Flattor seal

Boneless

Ground Beef

Chicken
Breast
pounct

pound

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Moist li Tender ctnter cut

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POrk Loins

(jet OM

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flresh

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pound

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I

RED GREEN'S VIEW

I

For men, waiting is the hardest part, so try th~~:~ .f.
I know there are a lot of educated theories as to wby men and women are different, and these differences are never
more evident than when a woman goes
· into a stOre 'just for five minutes:' while
hedignificant other waia in the car. If
they ha~n't been married very long. he'll
even leave the car running. We veterans
know better. So, if you're one of those
filen who's spent many hours sitting in
your car at the mall, staring at the dash~
COLUMNIST
board, waiting while your Wife to looks at ·
every item in every store with absolutely
flO idea of what she went in there for, well they're the right person for the job and
here's something 'you might try.
why the other ones aren't.The only probBefore your wife goes into the mall, lem is that neither side of this equation is
.stop at a grocery store, where you go in in any way suited for these assignments.
and buy chips and soda pop and chocolate Most of the voters have never hired anybars and one of those used truck maga- one and most of the candidates have never
. zine1. Put all of that stuff beside you on had a real job.
the front seat and fold the top of the 'groThe restful years
cery b.ag over. Then before your wife goes
There are ·a lot of retired people in my
into' the mall, get her to synchronize her wthmunity, and I've noticed that retire"
watch and tell her if she's longer than the ment is 311 entirely different lifestyle. I'm
promised five minutes, you'll be in the also concerned that it's not easy to make a
b.ag. (Let me know if this works for you. It radical change during the later stages of
sure didn't for me.)
your life. So I suggest that we all start pracHelp wanted
ticing for retirement now. Here are a few
We have a municipal election going on exercises you can try that will get you
in our town right now, and a lot of the ready for when the time comes:
candidates are doing local television ads.
• Sit and stare for long periods of time.
One guy was in a suit with a hardhat on.
• Eat supper at 3:30 in the afte ~noon.
Another one had a chicken and a donkey.
• Get a really ugly bicycle.
And it occurred to me that political cam• Complain about the weather or whatpaigns are like job applications,The voters ever else occurs to you.
are hiring and the candidates are applying.
• Drive at half rl1e speed limit.
They each give us their resume and why

Red
Green

I

• Talk to total strangers about your per-._;
sonal medical problems.
. ..::
• Buy really bright-colored clothes. Old~~:
men like to be able to find their pants ~!
the dark
·
.. · ....v••
• Have long conversations With ,your~ ,: ·
spouse and nap whenever pOslihle. ,YOu"!.
may be able to combine these. ··.; /. : .,··:
Clothes makes the ·man
:· ~ :
I was on a ilight last.week, and I cc:iuld• :
n't help but notice all the ~y-haited guys' :
who were wearing jeans. That must be a, :
generation thing. I don't think my dad '.:
ever wore a pair ofjeans his whQI~ life~ Or'·i .
shorts. Or even what we would call.casual pants. He wore a suit and tie and·hat to
work. And he wore a sports shirt ~rtd dress :
pants on the weekends. Never aT-shirt. I~ •
he had to do something messy like chailgt ·[a tire, he'd take his shirt off and do it. in his ;
undershirt. It was a more formal· time. In · :
my dad's generation, everybody tried to. :
look important and dignified. These days i
we all try to look relaxed and confident. I( ;
the trend continues, we'll reach. the ulti~ . )
mate in relaxed and confident '*ar ~' :
nudism. All of our efforts to beauc4- .thea': ·
planet will have been in vain.
· . ·;:'t
QUOTE OF THE DAY:"The problem·q
with jogging is that the human knee ;
never anticipated the invention of con- ·
crete." - R ed Green '
1'
(Red Green is rite star of "Tire Red Green :

.

Show," a television series seen in tire U.S. ,on
PBS a11d itr CanadQ on tire CBC Networlt,
and the author of"The Red Green Book" and
"Red Greetr Talks Cars: A Love Story.")

Whltl or Whtat Kaiser ROlls or

1cet1

..

Cinnamon Rolls

•

s. ..

I1.01VIO.
ttiitJitAuf

3" S/ng/es................ $2.99
3' Doubles or

4" S/ng/es................ $3.99

4" Doubles..............$4.99

10 _!

Standard C..C1 Proctn Only. Not valid on advancoco~dl:.;'p~;~~,

rormtt rnm orocuslng. suttlt Signature fllm or

fl.

SAT
28 29

WED THUR FRI

26

27

Items &amp;Prices Good Through Decem~er 29, 20011n Pomeroy and
Gallipolis. Copyright 2001 Kroger Mid-Atlantic. We reserve the right
to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.

�/

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Vaughn/Appier trade in works, Page B3
Cowboy Harvey Marti11 die.s, Page B4
•

Page Bl
Wedncsdwy, Dece•ber 26, 2001

WEDNI::SQ\Y'S

HIGHLIGHTS
NBA
Tuesday's GarMS
New York 102, Toronto 94
L.A. lakers 88, Philadelphia
82

College Footllall
Tuesday's GarMS
Blue Gray All-Star Cla••lc
Blue 28, Gray 10
Las Vegas Bowl
Utah 10, Soulhem Cal6

No Shaq? No matter. Laken win
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los
Angeles Lakers still found a way to
win, even with
Shaquille O'Neal
sidelined and Kobe
Bryant ineffective.
.
In a rematch of
June's NllA Finals, the •Lakers rallied
for an 88-82 victory over the
Philadelphia 76ers on Tuesday night.
Samaki Walker had a season-high 18
points and 10 rebounds, Bryant scored
eight points in tbe final 9:11 and four
reserves pitched in significantly for
the Lakers, whose 20-4 record is the
NBA's best.
ADen "Iverson scored eight of his 31

NBA

points during a 12-41 run that gave
Philadelphia a 73-60 lead with 9 1/2
minutes remaining. but the Lakers
outscored the 76ers 28-9 after dut.
Los Angeles clid it without O'Neal,
who W2S placed on the injured list
before the game with continued soreness in his right big toe. The NBA's
most dominant big man, averaging 26
points and I I .5 rebounds, will miss at
least four more games.
O'Neal, who loves nicknames, came
up with a couple of new ones recently.
"I'm always mad and he's always
calm," he said in identifying himself as
Fire and Bryant as Ice.

In the only other
NBA game, the New
York Knicks beat the
visiting Toronto Raptors 102-94.
Bryant, just 2-of- I 4
fiom the field in the
first three quarters,
was calm when it
counted in the final
period, going 4-of-5,
including a pair of
clifficult jumpers that put the Laker&gt;
ahead 83-77 with 31.6 seconds left.
Hampered by a pulled muscle in his
right rib cage, Bryant finished with 12
points on 6-for-19 shootiflg, I 1

Watkins makes
bid for 'IWins

.14,800
•...,

8

legal

Alabama businessman Donald
Watkins intends to try to purchase the Minnesota Twins.
Watkins,
who
would
become baseball's first black
controlli~g owner, is scheduled to meet with baseball
officials on Jan. 10. He previously had talked with baseball
officials about a possible bid
for the Tampa Bay Devil
Rays.

passes SuzuiU's

payroll.record
TOKYO (AP) - Hideki
Matsui became the highestpaid player in Japanese baseball history, signing a oneyear, $4.7 million contract.
Matsui, an outfielder for the
Yomiuri Giants, surpassed the
mark set by Ichiro Suzuki,
now
with the Seattle
Mariners. Suzuki earned $4
million with the Orix BlueWave in 2000.

Raptors' coach
stable after·
stroke

Nuggets await
Issei's ·fate
DENVER (AP) - Denver
Nuggets coach and president
Dan Issei is scheduled to meet
general manager Kiki Vandeweghe on Wednesday about
his future with the team.
. The R.ocky Mountain
News, citing unnamed NllA
sources, reported Wednesday
that Issei would announce his
resignation after the meeting.
But Vandeweghe, who talked
to players before Tuesday's
practice, said nothing has
been decided yet.
· "There has been a lot of
speculation," he said. "But I'll
wait to hear from Dan."

Center Raef LaFrentz told
the Denver Post Vandeweghe,
indicated interim coach Mike
Evans would be the head
coach when the Nuggets play
the Minnesota Timberwolves
Wednesday night.
"We don't know for how
long. We don 't know anything
about

Dan 's

sicuation,"

LaFrentz said. "You'd think
they'd want to tell the players
w I1at s gomg on.
1
Issei has been on a leave of
absence since Saturday, hours
before he was to return to
coaching after a four-gam e
I

'

"

suspe nsion for making an
insensitive ~:thnic remark to a
spt.·ctator.

suring, so for me- to create the space to

get my shot, 1 have to make explosive
movements." Bryant said. "And every
time I do tha&lt;, it hurts. So I just had to
wait so that hopefully \ve could keep
the game close, then get down to lite
founh quarter, suck up the pain for
the rest of the game, pacing myself,
waiting for the right time and hitting
a couple of big shots."
Bryant combined with reserves
Robert Horry, Deveau George and
Lindsey Hunter to score all of the

Please- ukers. B:S

MONTGOMERY,
Ala .
(AP) - Forget fue quarterbacks.
It was the defensive players
who dictated play in the
Blue's 28-10 victory at the
Blue-Gray'AII-Star Classic on
Tuesday.
Northwestern linebacker
Kevin Bentley set up a touchdown with a first-quarter
interception for the Blue and
had 16 tackles. Algie Atkinson
of Kansas returned a late fumble 11 yards for a score.
For the Gray, the star was
Mississippi State defensive
back Shawn Byrdsong, who
batted down seven passes and
had an interception.
On the other side of the
ball, the short practice schedule clearly wasn't enough for
the offenses to click.
"Offense tak!" a little time
to get used to," said -Gray running back Tyree Foreman of

Japanese player

TORONTO (AP)- Raptors assistant coach Stan
Albeck was resting comfortably and remained in stable
condition, two days after he
had a stroke in the locker
room before a game.
The stroke left the 70-yearold Albeck paralyzed on the
right side and unable to speak
significantly. The stroke was
not life-threatening.

"Ph illy does an excellent job pres-

Defensive layers
make mar in.
Blue-Gray game

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -·

Bul~;k

rebounds and nine assists.

Virginia. "You've got to come

TRACK STAR- Blue Squad's Omar Easy (28) of Penn State leaps over the tackle of Gray Squad's
Joseph Jefferson (37) of Western Kentucky during the Blue{&gt;ray All Star Game Tuesday. (AP)

together and have a little continuicy.
"A week's not enough time
to get that. Some teams work
all year and don't get that."
The Gray squad turned the
ball over five times, and none
of the quarterbacks on either
team reached 100 yards passing.
The defenses had no such
trouble, with Bentley and
Byrdsong earning MVP honors.

"We jelled as the week went
on, almost as if we had been a
team for a while here," Bentley said.
Byrdsong got a confidence
boost early in his switch &amp;om
safety to cornerback.
"The first play of the game
they ran a hitch on me and I
was on it,"

NCAA

he said. "I
knew
right then
it was going to be a pretty
good day."
The Gray managed just one
first down in its first three
fourth-quarter
possessions
before Atkinson's score off
Byrdsong's fumbled punt. .. ,,
The Gray's opening drive of
the final quarter ended with
Foreman losing a fumble on
fourth-and-2 from the Gray
42. The Blue's David Hills
then missed a 30-yard field
goal.
Of the four quarterbacks,
only Alabama State's Darnell
Kennedy (99 yards) and Virginia's John Welsh (91)
approached 100 yards.
Penn State running backs
Omar Easy and Eddie Drummond both had short touchdown runs, a 11ice finale to a

topsy- turvy senior season. The
Nittany Lions began 0-4 and
missed a bowl game with a 56 record.

Ple•n ' " DefMIH. B3

Utah racks up bowl
win over TroJans
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Pete Carroll thought he had
Southern California heading in the right direction at the
.
end of his first season as coach.
Instead, th~ Trojans got knocked flat in the Las Vegas
Bowl by Utah, which stayed on the successful run it started when Ron McBride arrived in Salt Lake City 12 years
ago.
\
. Adam Tate rushed for 103 yards and a touchdown, and
Utah's defense limited USC to 1 yard rushing as the Utes
won in Las Vegas for the second time in three years, beat•
ing the Trojans 10-6 Tuesday.
The Utes (8-4) outgained USC 358-151 and
won with their defense,
which embarrassed the Trojans
(6-6) and snapped their fourgame winning streak. USC
came to Las Vegas expecting a
big win against a third-place team
from a mid tier conference- but went
home wondering what went wrong.
"I don't think t~ey thought we were comparable to
them," said McBride, who won for the third time in six
bowl trips since 1990. "They didn't think we were in the
same league. They were destroying teams in the last live
weeks of the season ... but it's a funny game."
After scoring its only touchdown on the first possession
of the second half, USC didn't get across the Utah 40 for .
the rest ·of the day as linebacker Sheldon Deckart and the
Utes' defense, missing two starters, still dominated.
."The thing I feared the most was that they would come
in here and run the football at us, hold the ball and use
the clock up," Carroll said. "They were able to do that. We
didn't play the game like we wanted to at all."

Please SH lfelas, B3

"

AND THE
WINNER GETS...
- South Caroll·
na coach Lou
Holtz, left.
stands with Ohio
State coach Jim
Tressel and the
Outback Bowl
trophy in Tampa,
Aa .. The two
teams wi II meet
in the Outback .
Bowl on Jan. 1.
(AP)

Buckeyes staying focussed
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State players mounting for the Buckeyes.
promise the problems that kept them from
Instead of talking football , former coach
playing well in last year's Outback Bowl won't John Cooper had to answer questions about
be repeated during preparations for their
linebacker Matt Wilhelm criticizing corematch with South Carolina on Jan.
captain Ken-Yon Rambo, and offenI.
sive tackle Tyson Walter suing center LeC harles 13entley. There were
"All the things that happened off
the field were things that should
also reports of several Buckeyes
not have happened, things that
violating their curfew.
It all added up to a 24-7 South
could have been prevented," senior
linebacker Joe Cooper said. "I can
Carolina victory, and Cooper was
assure you nothing like that will happen
fired the ,next day.
this year." .
As game day neared a year ago, junior safeAt this time last year, ,the distractions 'were

Please see Buckeyes. B3

�~W~'"*~n~ll~dl~~~,~~~-~~:~,~~·,~200~~1~~~~~~~~~~r:::::::::~p~~;~~--~o~y~,~.a~"~~;~~~~p=o.~~~~Oh~~::::::::~~::::::::::::::~The~~Da~I~~S~I~n~d~~~;·~P~age~~B~.3

m:rlbune - Sentinel -

CLASSIFIED

~"::.~

And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

:':=in~

=
.
:i.'.!!!,'L;ac'!:. .......
~ IIMI

...
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OH...nt
at
NATIONALCITYIIANK Appnlaed
(PlAlHTlFf)
Sti,IIID.DII
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ET AL
0111111ed ~or...,..
(DEFENDANT)
~
to ...
In ptlro uonco of •n Sherll of 11111 1

r'-

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=~~~ ~:!~ ,!:

Court In tho obove
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=~011 to 11 r1 11
10 1uct1on •t 1111
Court Houoe on
JIIIUII'y 24, 2002 8t
1D:OO '·"'· of 1111 lily,
the
1o 11 ow 1n 1
'1 n d 1'M1illlllllod In 1111 . _
of Ohio, County of
llllt;o, end Viillge of
lyroou••
end
d Bling
cilldMfoloaa:
Town Lot No.
1\Nnty Two (22) In 1111
Crookl Flrel ._d_
to tho town ol
lyracu11• Excepting
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mlnerolo underlying
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TO Place
t!Crlbune
Sentinel
YOur Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday•••
992-2157
drFaxTo
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Monday-Fricttr for Insertion

Q!splay Ads
A.tl Display : U Noon 2
Buslnt'!ss Days PriOr To
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In Ner.t Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m. Sundily Display : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
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ill
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year.
New York general manager Steve Phillips said his payroll will
temain in the $95 million range, and because ofhis·failu~ to
7 -il
ttade 11bdd ""'·
,
e, w ho will
, be paid Sb million
next season, the
tentatM deal could be me~ly an effort to sound out Vaughn on
his willingness to defer money.
V:aughn u. owed ......
·-'--'
fS 0 milli'
StS mil
,es o . 1
on next season,
lion in 2003 and $15 million in 2004. The contnct contains a
team optt'on •or
&lt; $1' millio' · 2005
· h a $2 milli'on buyout ,
..
. nm
, Wit

.:~~~~·":~~
Addr~umw.
,'~:~::f.;

1 'I Ide, 2ndCiiVIIIIICI,
Oh 441t3
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(12,1,12,1t, M,(1U lorll~l~ tollowifll

co .,. •
Ammco llocll1

Public Notice
A vllwlng will 111
hold 8t 1:00 1.m. on
D1c1- 27, ZOOt,

a,eo

High
p•rtor•!!,c•
brllclllittll
• • =••
Coote o::: ~
~Ironic c;1111
Rlllilt.r 8DICIQI48,
AlliEtANII Floor
Jlck, Klnoaton Floor
J•ek, c1 non p 11
machine, Roll •"!!lnd
floor Jilek (•ir, hiiYy

1

=~~~:::

=::.:

and Vaughn is owed $8 million of his $13 million signing bonus.
Appier iJ owed $33 million: $9 million next year, St 1 million
in 2003, $12 million in 2004 and 11 million of his S2 million
signing bonus, which is due next July 1.

on dreln eorf ,o.;
rolllre mllc oocbll
6 wr~nch~l, .¥1••
gripe roll oround
-•
6"""·
1111 Formero Benil ·

C.rt. .-

Vaughn, the 1995 AL MVP.missed all oflast season after rupturing a biceps tendon and said alter the season be would like
to leave the Angels and play for an EMt Coast team. He then left
his longtime agent, Tom Reich, for Moorad.
The first bateman hit .281 with 33 homers and 108 RBis in
t 999, his first season after leaving Boston. Vaughn sevetely
sprained an ankle when he feU into a dugout on opening day
that year and missed 23 games.
Vaughn hit .272 with 36 homers and 117 RBb in 2000.

Ohio, reoervol the
right to bid , at lhll
botli thl vllwlng •net 1111, Indio •1111drew
1111 .........
till obove eollpterel
prior to ula. Further,
(t 2) 24, 21, 21101
ltc

Public Notice
A viewing of 1
poftlon ol llut11nd
Townohlp llliod 171
(HuHon ltoed) from
11.50 milo north ot
Junction ol TR·171

Buckeyes

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

Till Flmllll link 111111

Savlngo Comp1ny
"'""'"" 1111 riglit to
ro)lct any or 1H bide
oubmr-.
The
allove
deocrlbld coll•terel
Will Ill IOid "II II•
where 11~. with no
, expll- or 1!!1PIIIcl
Wlorenly given. ' '
For
lurther
lnlonnotlon, o~jor an
oppolntmon~
to
lnopoct collaterel,
prior to 11le d•t•,
contact
lhefla
Buchi-IIIIINtal.

Donnie Nickey said he
could tell the team w.un 't
prepared.
"1, was never completely
confident, 'Hey. we'te going
to kill these guys. We'~ ptepared;" Nickey said. "I w.u
mote like, 'Hey. we better play

well."'
Defensive tackle Mike
Collins said the Buckeyes will
.a~t 4iff~~~dy this time.start-

New Year's Eve Party
Welcome 2002 with friends!

Mary's Tee Time Grill
at Riverside Golf Club

7 p.m.
Taking reservations now
(304) 773·5354
$1 0 per person
Complimentary appetizers and
champagne at midnight

~40 ,
MOI'ORCVa...ES

rlO "F..olnPMfNr
FARM
I .._______,.1
2000

r

Moiling OUr Sllel 8ooc1MIIf

FtH Supplleo, Poslagel
Slort lmm-yl

Genuine Opponunllyl
For Frea lnlonna11on.
Coli Toll Froo:
1-8811-815-1835,

I

,

fie tor their
ThiM adl , . , .
Nltl-1 Cl1111etfl41d
DAalvertlaln•ll· Thla n,...,.
Ia not Ntponalbll
llco1nla11f, , P I - fHI

....qu11re •
Rvlt~ea.

I' .

'

Gatonde dousing, led the
after the Utes controlled the baD for the fuul
5:43 in conlnlt to the team's
losing fourth-quarter leads
~r B 'gham V.oung and Air
Fon:e in the final rwo reguJar-season games.
"We wete under a lot of
triticum for the Air Force
and BYU games, butadvem'
'--· 1 "'--" McB ._,_

cheen

n

ty 11 Wn;u

.._

nuc

said.
Southern C-"r.orrua
_.
'"'" · ..~~
th··----' by
U-''"'•ucu
a
""' game
plan that seemed to anticipate
e~~ery trick in Carroll's play
book
·
The Trojans didn't reach

positi~~erushingyardageuntil

....._ through the •OU
' rth
ltlluw•Y
quarter. Carson Palmer, who
was 15-of-26 for 150 yards,
_, ___ _,
,
d
· llll&gt;KU open teeetvets an
saw other passes dropped.
D...mte
' g sco-'ess
-r' gom
= m'

the I&lt;'Cond half, Utah converted two long third downs
in the fuul 3 :30 to run out
the clock.
On third-and-14 fiom the
Ulah 9 with 3:30 left, quarterback Lance Rice hit
Michael Richardson for a 20yard reception. Facing thirdaitd-4 a minute bter, Tate
,
bounced off several defenders
for a 16-ymi .run. When Tate
SU"""d for yet another first
•.,-

ing with obeying the rules
"I guess I w.u kind of blind
put in place by coach Jim to the picrute because I - .
Ttessel.
aiW!l)'S in at 9 :30 or 1
he
· "Obviously
things
are said. "But you would have
going to change this year people come tell you, 'We
with coach, Tressel being saw this player out to 2, 3 in
thete;' said Collins, a senior. the morning. We saw this
"I'm sute he'll have curfew, other player out.' It w:~s
and people won't test him. embarrassing because as a
Because the people who have team we didn't show up. We
tested him so far- you don't didn't play weU."
win. He makes the rules, and
The Buckeyes arrived in
whatever he says goes."
Tampa, Fla., on Friday. pracCollins said be w'as told that ticed through tbe weekend
players routinely, stayed out and had Christmas off. Tressel
late befote the Outback Bowl said he won't keep the players
,Jut year.
under lock and key, but he

o;•

The pmc w.s expected

tO

draw a , tiny crowd to SaiD
Boyd
Stadium.
Instead.
J0,984loc:W and fans ofboth
teams filled the stadiun(.
,
b a bly setting
,
"'
1mpro
a ne"
attendance record for the 1~
year-old bowl.
•
The fans and the television
audiencedidn'tseeanexciC:.
ing game, but the Utes didn~
mind all
'
at •
•
Ulah scored its only ~uc~
down on 1· h~ ·-ond
~
~~
,.--,
..,
th bi
,__ k '~
sion• • ate, e ,gger ...c "'
the Utes' impressi~~e tailbal ..
tandem, bulled in on a 3-~
run.
I•
.! ,
Thanks to an amaziOJ
series of sacks and tacktil
behind the ' line by Dec"'•,:,.
....and the Utes' aggressive Jine:.
backers, USC had minus-53
·--'-rushing:~ the "'-t L,t&lt;'
r-~

m

w&gt; · -

-and just 15 total yards. :
Even kicker David Da·"'
..,.

had his string of 12 strai~
field goals snapped when ht
- . left and short on a 47&gt;ym! attempt 3:28 befote
time, Ulah pulled ahead 1~

hall.

on Ryan Kmeshiro's 26-yatil
field goal tluee minutes Ia~
, But USC drove 80 ya£\ls U.,
open the second half,scoripg
on Sunny Byrd's 1-yard
\,
Both defe~ then began 't'
dominate ag2in, with theT.pjans led by 20 tackles fro.m

rJd.

.

'

expect&gt; them to behave.
"We've talked to them a lot
about working hard to get
that balance between goihg
and playing a great football
team, and representing Ohio
State ... as well as we can ~m
the field;'Tressel said.
Joe Cooper said the pla~rs
won't let their coach down: ,
"The whole chemistry of
the team is different. The
focus is different;" Cooper
said. "I think we're going
down thete more as a tea'q,
unit instead-of-:as individual&amp;!'

in the first eigbt minutes, thanks partly 'to
good field position.
•
First, the Blue. took over at the Gr.~y's
45 on a short punt, setting up Easy's

score.

'

'

~

Bentley then teturned an interception
of Kennedy's p:ass 20 yards to the Gray ·7,
and Delvon Flowers of Arizona Stite
vaulted into the end zone.
The Gray squad put together a pair ;of
long second-quarter drives to make ' it
14-10 at halftime.
·,
Foreman capped a 13-play, 84-~rd
m;arcb with a 2-yard run, A 15-play possession, set up by Byrdsong's interception, ended with a 32-yard field goal ~y
Ryan White of Memphis,
The loss snapped the Gr.~y's four-ga~
winning streak.
,'
'
l:

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

I

H!lnti~

yards~

a

Lakers

•

Banshee, Pro-circuit
ptpes, new piston kit, never
4' Roto Tlller lor small trac- raced. Needs rear axle
tor, 3 pt. hilch, like new, bearings.
$3900.1080.
paid $1700.00, sell for (304)882·3678
$1200.00. 307·773·5099
2000 Honda XA80. Like
Long 510, MF50, Mower, New. (740)388-8358
rake, · MF12 balef, 3 wagons, disc.• bush hog, elo.
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CCIJSSORIF.S
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YANMAA YM 1500 Traelor,
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atlllln craie, $850. Shipping Over 10;000 Transmissions,
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M~a H~- ,
.,_ooiiiiiviiiiii•v-iii~iiii~iowl•

awl Dameon

who rushed for 94

Me::::!:·~~ ~~!~?I~::~3

Neill of Nevada w:as 1-for·9 for 20 yards.
The Gray's Kennedy - . 9-of-27 with
an interception. Gteg Zolman ofVanderbilt-. 12-of-23 for 67 yards.
Byrdsong also had a punt return for a
"This is a bowl pme for me right touchdown negated by penalty and fumhete;' said Easy, voted the Blue's out- bled his final attempt at a teturn. He - .
standing offensJve player with a team- still happy with the MW trophy- prohigh 49 yards rushing. "It was fun. We viding he could get it home.
meshed as a team fiom all ~r the coun"That's sweet, man;' Byrdsong said. "I
try and came together for a win."
haven't had an MVP trophydn a' while.
Todd DeLamielleure Of Hofstra shared It's a good feeling. I don't know how I'm
defensive honon for the Blue with 10 going to get back on the plane with it.
tackles, one for a loss.
I'm going to get it thete somehow."
Foteman rushed for 56 yards to earn
The game, pitting , the North against
offensive honors for the Gray. ~at,, Mor- the South, is for seniors whose schools
row ofVanderbilt (15 tackles) w.u voted wete not playing in bowf games.
the team's top 'defensive player.
The teams combined for just 79 yards
The Blue's Weith completed eight o( in the first quarter, but the Blue didn't
19 passes, with one inten:eption. David need much more. It juinped ahead 14-0

seat, club ~b siding, baCk
glass, b1 hner, vinyl cover
running boards, chrome
Spinet plano and bench wheels, Michelin l TX NS
Fruitwood 111"\ish
$600. tires, tl_res w/10,000 miles,
740-742-2731
sun VIsor, 60,000 miles,
$14,500 (740)386·7561
INsTRUMENTS

~te

v.aas
_W'Iiiii6'

levlnga~===================~~~down==·
-W1=·=th~1=00~1=e=~~~=l--.=~~==M:W~:~=q~P:o:~==u~,·~:
POIIIfroy, •

1991 Chev, ASiro Cargo
Van While 133k 52200
Ph.;,e Nap~ (304)675-2218'
=-:-'-'--'--1998 Dodge 1500 Laramie/
SLT VB, 4x4, Tl wheel,
cruise. power heat".o~
'"""' mirpi windows pi locks pi

1!!11r'------,
j
I

'

-

,..,...,

4WDs
"---oioioiiiiiiioo-,.1

I....

MLB

11

hllrlng

Defense

VANS&amp;

r ,.,. ___

'

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

I

98 Ford F-150, 4K4, auto,
65,000 miles, $13,500,
(740)949-2700

ril

I

r

end
11

(t2)21,27,21

Family Pride Lots for rent , ~EW AND USED
call
Donna
Backus PURNANCES FOR .sAt.EI
(304)675-5548
We install, Free "Eelimates,
' ~~you doni Call Ul, We bolh
Nice lots, quiet country set- loose I (740)446-6308, 1·
ting, will accommodate 800-291·0098.
16xBO, $100 per month, call ,
Ed al CounlfY Homos. 74g. NEW AND USED STEEL
992-2167,
Slttl Beams. Pipe Rebar
, For Concrete, Angle, Chan·
nel. Aat Bar, StHI Grating
, For Drains. o~vewayo &amp;
HOOlF.IIOUI
Wllkwoyo, L&amp;l screp MOl·
Goons
alo Open Monday Tueoday
Wod ad &amp; F"'..- 8 ·
nt ay
,...,.y, •m4'30pm
CloHd Thureday
A-llanctl' Atcondltlontd s"aturcl~
&amp;
Sunday'
"""
,
'Y
,
Wa1horo, DIYirt, Ra~. (740)44&amp;-7300
LIVESIOCK
97 Flair 32. llld,.oul. 454
Rolrlgratora. Up To 110 Dalo
Vonoch, aulo, loll ol ox1ra1,
GuarantHCII Wt Sell NM New Healing &amp; Cooling
.
.
10,521 mlitl (740)446Maylag 4ppllanael, Franah Syllem, 71 ,000 BTU Gal
4241
City Maylag, 740 •44e.7705, Furn~c~ &amp; 3 Ton Air Condl· , Miniature Donktyl for 1111,
O., l In H I &lt;..,
·
1\on. A Coli &amp; Thermoalal (740)38a.8488
,
Far Sllo' Roaondlllontd Roady to ln11111, 11150.
iliir;;-~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
Wloho... dfYO"' and rolrig- (740)2511·1218
Riding HorHL Calllor lnlor· r10
HOME
mallon. (740)386-83611
r ..--.-~
0 ,.10 ,., Thompoono Aaoll·
0 pl
1¥.'
......lMl'I&lt;Uiiiio-'iiii~'~iiii"iiiia
3407 J k
~~;··(304)875·;~an
VI• Amallng
UetabDIIIm
}Uy &amp;
'
'
lraok1hroughll
,
GRAIN
1411MINT
Mollohln Carpel. 202 Clark Lole 10 poundo· 200
WATIRPRDO~INQ
Chapel Road, P'ontr, Ohio. pouncll euy, quick, Fall
Unconditional llfttlma guar·
(74o) 44 e. 7444 1•871.830 • Dramatic Rt~ultl . ·100% Hay for lilt· 1100 to 1200, antte. Local references fur·
9162 Freo Ellilllllll lilly Nalural, Dr, Rocommondod, 5x5 bl\81, $12,00, 740·882· nlohtd , EOiablllhed 1876 ,
flnonelng lXI dayo ,.;;,. •• 'Ask oboul ~RII Samplo' 8373 or 740·112·2143,
Call 24 Hra, (740) 446·
cuh , Villi Malltr ¢ord, (740)«1-1982
Hay, oquaro bales. good 0870,
1·800·287·0578,
Drive·•· little IIVI • t
Baby bed Complete Cherry quality hay, call (740)992· . Rogers Waterproofing.
Wood, Cooo Aocllnlng High· $533
J. .........IU,.,.. '::
chair Both lor S1QQ 7-'-=:----,-,--..,-,. - - - - - - - nnai\IV.:.;,
(740),992-34!2. No Answer: Qual!tY hay lor sale, $1 .50 C&amp;C General Home Malnle·
leave Mnaage.
bale; free ml•ed dog to nence· Painting, vinyl sld·
•·
good home (740)985·3810 ing, carpentry, door•, winSue's Selectablet on•tWe "r Deluxe Spring Large Aiding
dowa , balhs. mobile hC'me
In Middleport. Doli a, glass- Horse, cost s150 New, Sell Quality hay for sal a. S1.50 repair and more. For f~ee
ware, Aladdin mantel•, .and for $60. Mint. (740)992· bale; free mixed dog to estlmatecaiiChet, 740·992·
more, (740)992·0298
7669
good homo (740)985,3810 6323,

rio

"*" ; ·

lllli;ll C.Unty, Ollio
....., D. Poll,.
a= neylorPilhllill

of Tlt·t71•ncl Tlts447
10111 dl...
of

0

j

NEWYORK(AP)-It'suptoMoVaughnandtheMet&gt;to
complttr a a:ade !hat would bring him to New York and send
pitcher Kevin Appier to the Anaheim Angels,
The r.emu agreed to rhe amtatM trade last weebnd, a per..... the negoaanons
. '
'dTh-"-·
son "--"'l&amp;IIUIJ,;lr wsm
sat
~- 7 on .._
me con diti'on
he not be identified. The commissioner's office then granted the
Met&gt; a 72-hour window to talk to Vaughn's agent, Jeff Moorul.
News of the tentative trade w.u first teportedTuesdaybytheLosAngelesTimc'S.
New York would like to defer para of the
SSO milli' V: ghn -·--'
·'-- ., __ ,
on au
d u~ in uK UlliU tlm:e
seasons of his SilO million, six-year contr.act with Anaheim.
The soun:e said it w.u unclear if the Mets' negotiations with
Moorad would be successful. Sometimes, teanu agree to a possible trade with liale or no intention of completing it, such :as
the Yankees' tentatM deal with Detroit for Juan Gonmez last

-.g plld :n tul.

ENVIRONMENT : : J!::W1~
1-888-V4-JOBS
.___ _ _ _ __, lor •
nce

1991 StD. 4 Tech, 5 Speed,
Runs Good, $1500 OBO,
98% Hybrid wolf puppies, 7 (7.0)441 -G868
weeks old, all males. $100. - - - - - - - Call leave message 74D- 1997 Chevy S-10 truck, red,
742-4815
V-6 engine, air, tHt. cruise,
amlfm cass., 5 sp., 87,000
AKC c. hocolate lab Pup- mUes, (740)992-n69
ptes Will be ready for 84 Docl $ . F
Chri~tmas. (740)367-0859 150 $1~ I~)~9-~·
or (740)339-2350
-='":':C:::'':'-"'":-::"=:'==97
F·150 XLT Extended
•
.
Cab 8. bed v 8
AKC Regtstered Black Lab
•
• - . auto, low
F;:'~~ aies. $200. ~~~~~· .PW, PL,
AKC Registered Cocker
spaniel Puppies lor Sale.
$250, Call (740)441·099510
inquire
,-:,-:-:d---:.-_
:CD=k:::'-:u:--:
uc a n11m1 1e memuvr
has AKC Registered lab
Yetlow &amp; black reaely lor
plck·up, Doc, 24 , 5200,
(304)875·1031
A8 I t mo'r P PP for sale
e
u Y
·
Fef!l8le, 3 months old. Tan/
Whtle, $50. call (740)2450419.
- ..
M IJSICAL' '

fr- Mer- eouCourt oi.-Co••"o'n'
Pilla, dMcl will Ill
luUid upon llll•noo

HIRING

riO

Beech Slreao. Middlepon. 2

.....,,~.-:~

·•...
1 •
1n1• •l l 10:10
.... Doc. 27, ll ._
c 1 1 ,.,..
Oll1al
••eulerdurlllt
•HIIIII.
.u,_
111

(11) M, -.21101
Blilnce due upon 2tc
Conttro llliOn of ....

An,_ •to In
-------- welconll
eltlnd

Frae incredible warranty on At 2 N, (304)875-4869

r

':!,111,.:;:.";,

~, ~E~.~-~rl~lfll~•nd
wvoooooe.
304-6 7s-1786, reguler meeting. Compeny,

Pumps, featuring Tappans Each. Until 01..01..()2. 1 mile

cloo.,.

:;:

:":':':."'..!.::a
eeoopilneo of bid.

I

r

HEATING • Hay &amp; B~ghl Wire , Tie
COOUNG (740)44f.MII Soraw. Year Roond Delivery
One br, apt In Pt Plouonl,, 2· 1'235 - · $30. 2 1'205 .. I-IOIHI7MM7.
&amp; VoltMDB Discounl Availa·
tumlahed, very clean, no rn.. $25. Saara Fumance www.orvb comlbennett ble.
Heritage
Farm.
pots phone 304-875-1386
Fuol 011 Bumor Motor wilh
•
(304)875·5724.
River Band Pt.. now ac- TranllktrrMr and P.ump, Three 5 toot SectiOn 3 Inch
II(\ "\'1'1 ll~ I\ 1111'
cep11ng oppllcatfono lor 1 br, $75. Ouaranlead, (740)367· double waD lumace or Wiler
HUd Sobioldlzt Apt for 1M 7729 "'
hH... exhauOi pope, $20
Auros
elderly &amp; dloablod. EOH,
each, (740)949-2B53
(304)882-3 121
3
hung Cradco metal -lno Special: 314 200 .._ _oiFORoiiiiioi!WEiiiiii;;,_.l
Clad ,!Jindows, e~celient PSI $2:1.95 Per 100; 1• 200 .·'
4ccopllng appllcallons al condlllo~. 32'x34 cau PSI $37,00 Per 100:, All 1968 Borella New Jaspot
THE IMPLES. 100 Momot1- (7&lt;101f!!3 S533,
Brass Compression Flttongs Engine &amp; Trans1111solon,
~~~
~ Allcwj:}l • Convonlonl IRnONStoc,!;ANS ENTERPRf• s(;;.oo)87 S.~ after 5pm,
..,..
ncomo, gu
WOLrr T~NG BIDI
~·
,
~
awiY, Priorily WIH bo g0von . Low llonthfy l"""""""la ES Jacloon, OhiO, t-800,
to IlioN wilh Income undo!
Home l)ollveoy
537-9528
91 Milsublshl Eclipse GS,
$1.750. Ao!1la ara COIIIPitl·
FREE C®f Colalog
auto, ounrool, (740)446·
ed acoon:ting to your In- cau Today 1-800-711.0158
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-------..01 (740) 11111!·7022, EHO
' ·
'
92 Dodge V6, looks Good,
BaiHI1 COUCh choir &amp; ofto.
Runs Good, $1500 OBO,
BEAUTIFUL
APART· 111011 1o!•sasO Amllh buill llloclc, ~· .....,r pipes, (740).W1.Q868
IIENT8 AT BUf)GET Pfll. ,
'
windows, hnlelo. ole, Claude ' - - ' - - - - - - CEB 4T JACKSON ES. onlertaln"'lnt ,cenler, pd Win..... F\lo Grande, ,01:1 8! FOfli ,Th~nderlllrd, lea!(t
TATES, 62 Wastwood Drive $1000, sale lor $500, Coi1740-24S.51U
or 'oeti'la, ...,,..1, PS, Pl.,
lrom $297 to $383, Walk to (304)875-7349
PW, CD. 11\V cruise. 42.000
ahop &amp; movies, Coli 740S1HI Buildings Factory
miles. loaded. (740)448·
-«8-2568. !Equal Housing Bell Qfl,tr for 275 Gallon Seconds Smali Up to SO% -4241
.
Opportunlly,
F97u68el ~ Tank, (7401368 ' Oft cau ior AvaWabilily,
TR

I·j

r

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Riverine Anti-

I

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1

One lledroom Apt 67

==
Ir
A---

Ir

- · 1124 Eas1 Main oo
houlo ,...,.,._, 1nc1u&lt;1eo SR 1)!4 E, Pomeroy. 740Walor Slwage. Tralh. :~J528. Russ Moore,
$35WMG., 740 448 0008,
•
.

:="::or

auy', ;, oelt

Now Taking AW\Ica11ono35 Wto1 2 Bedroom TOWI&gt;

you &lt;Jo busl0111 with peopM bllth. Only $99!5 down &amp; Phone (7.t0).'46-9539
you l®w, and NOT to lind $189JI2/monlh. Call Charyl,

TNinlngA-by -lhrol9&gt;1hemailuntil 740-3115-7871.
15 Coun Slleat 2 Bad·
Colllng 1 . . 1411101. you hive iOYIO\Igl1td lhe
........ 1 112 Kltohon
cot.- coli
oflaring
Now 2002 14 wkjo only wilh _ , and ........,,
UOO 811 23Q,
'
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&lt;loy,.. Prime Shopping Con- New 2002 14 wide only Area, $51151 mon1h pl.. detoday If Ja Claft(a Kenpo $835 WHkly Proc:t"'ng ter Space Available At Af- S?SQ
down
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'
once - ' Coli I· Plaza. Coii7~10L 740-385-787L
60().652·8728 Ext 207D.
2 Bedroom Houoe. South
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monl\f•11 Ha•old, 740• (740)441·1917
1011, 0ona1o to ReUoe fn. hiring ,all 3 locallona, lull or ~
dualriH, 41bany/41111nl pan·llmo, pi:k up oppilca· Look No Further wa ptOVkle 385-7e ·
2 bodloom houloln .._.
(740)89N200
11onbe a11oca""'! ~~~back&amp; 1Dp Quality Finonclng - ·· New Double Wide, $195 &lt;If• $375 per mo. p\UI deiwHn
• '- " ,
lance and Help, Siarta New Per Mon1hl 3 Bedroom, 2 pool\ wl1h option to buy no
ro~- "W!v
110:00am, - y 1hru Slt· Crodit lot New Year, 1-688- Ba1h, FrH Delivery &amp; Slt· po1a (740)8118-72.W '
urday,
up, Hlllll-928·3426
'
..,. •.,. ~·
'
2br, $325, a mon1h. Socurlty
A~ Nurses needed
1987 14x70, 3 br.l2bth, Deposit required at 1112
Mala lab Puppy, 4 monilia lor Home Haol1h SofVIceo,
$4995, Will help wi1h dellv· HoQC S1roe1 (304)757·5274
old, (740)44S-1692
Ful~llme, pan-time or par
afY. Call Kavona. 740-386- ixt 122 ,
diem caoes lor Galllo, A11&gt;
9948.
l.osr AND
ana. Mollll and Mason
TURNED DOWN ON
4 bodroom hou"'ln Racine
FotJN&gt;
couniloo Flexible ochadula SOCIAL SECURITY /Sill? 1990 Fleeiwood 2 bedroom across from parte, nl\!8
and ucOolettt pay, FKI 001 No, Foe Unloll We Wlnl home-call Cl\efYI 0 740· nal~. heal pump
,
appllcaUon a1 Plouont Val·
1-888·582·3345 '
3115-9621. 2002 Sunpolme heal &amp; canlralalr, $500 I*
LDsl·1 yr, old male Beagle ley Homo -llh S.Nicao,
3 bedrooml2balh 14 x 7Q. monih $500 doposli Indog, Whlloo Hill Road. Rtd· 1011 VIand st. Pt Pleas·
~
musl oell-oall Mike 0 740- eludes• walar. sewe1, 1raoh,
,land, nocoUar742-01D8
ant, WV 25650, or call
385-2434.
(740)949·2217 call 7am(304)875·7400 or 1·1100·
10pm,
~~~ 17&lt;46-00761or mont lnforma·
=..~·~~":t~~~~·~~nd~ 4 Rooms &amp; Ba1h $300/
~--~......................
_ ........ lion. AAIEOE
lion, call Kavena, (740}385th 52 or 'Str00t
..
REM OPTIONS POSITION All ...r
9948,
~~8 1 44e,3945 IVO
'
.Angie's Flee Maiko\· haYing OPENING NOTICE, Pool·
1n 1110.
1o
1WO &lt;loy boxollt. S1 a box lion: Roopila Provlcftr, Lo-';!';,!.:;..,
~=.~~~lp""O:~~. Buy homes from $199/mo.,
Wed 26 Thurs 27
cation: Point Plealant Area. Flit'
or 1111
.......,:r Foreclosures, 4% down, 30
, '
'
Q Uti tl
E n
C8li Nik~l. 740-385-9948.
years at 8.5% APR. For list·
'Rictc Paarmn Auction Com- ua ca on•: ll:pe ence which miiM n..... to
!ngs 1·800·319·3323 ext.
~ny. ful tims auctlonaer, Pllllen'ed but not required In
ldvertiM ...,.,.
1at Time Home Buyers/ 1709. .
. Oomplate auction S&amp;fVIce. a tluman service Hekt. High p;afMarw, Imitation ar FHA./ Government loans!
Ucenaed t68,0hio &amp; Wast : : , 'C~=~v!a;
dlau•••::ati~~n t.wMI.. ~:~: ~::t~!bl:rcog--~ Nice 4 bedroom country
Virginia, 304-n3-5785 Or or Blckgrouncl (CIB). Valid ,.., COlOr, raUglon,.. (740)446-3093
home, 25 minutes lo Ath·
.lCW-773-544~7,;;;;--, Wilt Virginia Driver's U· fMIIIIfltiCUior......,.,..
ens, will consider 'selling,
canso wi1h Proof of lnour· origin, or ony .._.... 10 2 bedroom, IlOilo &amp; rel~t· (740189f-72«
anct, Thrtt letters of reomllkeanyluch
ator,nawwindows&amp;carpet,
:•----H
p;at....rw,
lmttadon or
.-.. 995 7•• 992 2167
1nuuau. 0M1S
J...--.:~i:..::i~-.J ommenc:telion. Pleast Re·
diecrimlnllllan...
-·
• ..,..
•
FOR RENr
b:':!t:10~oi~M ~:0:
28x80 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- -.
'Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Shellll
Btll.
Phone: Thllnewnplparwtllnot ly $345.00 Per Month 2br. TraHer with Extra large
·=r, g:;.~c;:~~· PG:'d (304)7t18·5575, Or aend let·
knOwingly a:capt
~=a~:.a!~~terest Rate, Expando. Nice yard, low de·Rings, U.S. Currency,. ter 01 inlerut wlth IX!ntacl advet'llltmtntl-~-*lolnrMI
posit. Available Now.
M,T,S, Cofn Shop, 151 SOc· lnlormotlon 10: 8404
••
Divorce Forooo 5alol31led· (304)675.J3959
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 1..0. MacCorkle Avenue St. AI·
vtoMdan af lbe i8w.. Our
roonV 2 Betti on private lot.
448-2&amp;12,
belli, WV251n
_ _ ......,
ca\1(740)446-3570,
Baaullful River View Ideal
tltrotmiCitftltall
For 1 or 2 People ReterenSalts Position. lmmecnete
dwtlltnQttldwlftlnllln NewJ Used Homes·lmmedi· ces Deposit No Pets FosI \II 'I l ~~ \II '\ I
~ng~~.au~ ~!:'..=
thll:ww 1 ; . .
ale Possesion, No pay- ter 'rrailer Part&lt;, 740-44 1•
'-ol ll \ II I "
'll\"'---~--.., Jt"'"'ry, 151 2nd~-. Gal·
..-..,.,......
memo unlll Feb, 2002, Pre· 0181 ,
·~
~••,
__,_
quality by phone, 17401446.
,
110 .,_ - " ' · - lllpollo,
3218,
On Aoulo 160 In Porter, 2
our"~"~
: : : = - - - - - - Bedroom, $260/ month,
...__ _ _ _ _ _,.~ URGENTLY
NEEDED·
Nice 28x60 Double Wide References and Oeposll
2001 Wanior Excellent con- :r;.,~
2~ ~~
setting on rented lot in Required ..(740)388-9081
10
HOMF.li
Point
area. 2x_6 Trailer for Ronl or Sale
- .-tltion. Pa\lnft ot lake o·- houre weekly. Call Sere·
1Ia Pleasant
•paymen11,,,(304)874-468&lt;1·~ Toe, 740-592-6651,
wa
thermal
pane
FOR SAIJl
d ' rlced 10 I WinC II 14x60 2 Bedroom 1 112'
:,C..,--,--'"---- :':;;;:,.~==.,..:.-- ..__llllliiiiiiiiiiiio-rl ows, P
sa e. 84 Bath 'aas Heat ("740}367·
Applicallons are currently Work From Home. Free '
(304)675-3889 (606)47 - 7187, (740)388-0173.
being accepted by Over- Booklet. 1-80()..653-7293
3 Bedroom on Route 2. 4391. ask for Rosemary.
brook Center lor a full time Wyngate of Gallpolia, 8 11• (304)675-5332
·
Winter-Spring Bile
Trailer In Racine, 2 bedand part time 11·7 ahltt
li""ln ord- now lor dell•... room, carport1 nice neigh·
Aaalated
LPN · Anyone Interested cenaed
Community,
II now Living:
hlrtng 818 Main Slreet, Pt. Pl.· e-ry lgn Febru~·ary March ·,· borhood, $375 per month,
shOtJkj conlacl Kris11e Mad- for 1111 following positions: Compleloly Ralurblahod, 2 April
'
$375 deposll Includes wa·
den al . (740)992-8472 for
alory, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed- Flnei Cllrtnc•
tar,
sewer,
garbage,
more Information.
Full-time or part-tlma cooks; rooma. Large Kitchen, On 4.2001 sectional homes (740)949·2217 call 7amPart-lime LPN
L.arge Ultllty Floom, LRI DRI &amp;8_2002 modefs on display 10pm.
A•enllonl
u
Family Am. New Carpel
·
Eam 2nd. Income wllhout
throughout. F/A &amp; AJC, pfu~ 6 sing~ 16 wide homes Trailer In Rutland, Ideal for
2nd job up to
Come wof'lt In a warm and 179 900 (740)446·9585 or at ~ sa ~·
1·3 peopla, good location,
. $25.-$75./hr. Pt·Ft.
friendly almosphara where (7~)446.2205 or (740)446- Spec 11 ordef
(740)742-2661
1-800-218·7543
you can maka a difference. 2683
your ~home at reduced
www.Monty·Dreams.com Please aend rasuma to: 300
.
prices.
APAimiENrs
Brlarwood Or., Gallipolis,
For sale by owner: Nice bi- Cole'l Mobile Hornee
FUR RENr
- - - - - - - - OH 45631.
level horne on 1 acre near 15266 US 50 East
__
.
·AVON I All Areesl To Buy or
Ct'lester. Three bedroom, Athens Oh 45701
2
0
$,811 Shit1ey Spears, 304two baths. one-car garage, 740-592·1972
J ) ~ '7"~~r~~A~tt~~nt~
675·1429.
1146
Bt.l~N&amp;
i~mlly room wltl'l fireplace
B
l':se~lo·r Pera:a r5~el:~
TRAINING
sun room New central heat~
IJSINFS
'
'
8 •~:«:' 9p n=d M ~
·
ing &amp; aJc·aystem. one mi·
ANDBun.DINGS
~~~~R:~~n °~~~i~ 1~
1~ g 1 ":t · m......... ·sa u•
nute ort Aou1e 7, but 11111 prl·
Clean and Nice (7401448:
ranspo 10 ""'~' 1OfY llolllpollo ca- COllege vate (740)985·3981
Co
, ,
800
negotiable, Call (304)882- (CorHra CIOSO'TO Home)
'
,
4,
8Q lool
mmorolal 9539\o VIew,
3,4n Leave Meooage, . Coli TOday\ 740-448-4387, FS: Brand Now Homo 1800 Building wl1h ,10 lo 200 1 d 2 b d
1 ·800-21~-0452,
aq ft., 1 112 acre lot acrtl. Rio Grandt, OhiO.
an
e roQm apartDrtvll'8 wanted, no COL, 23
Reg I90.Q5-12748.
5115 ,000 . Call for inlo: Owner financing available. menta, furnished and unfur,yro, Old or Older, good drlv(740)«B.os 141 (740)&lt;W8· Coli (740)245-li747
nlshed, oecurily deposll ro·
11)0 ....... blnlflll, drug
32411
'
qulrod, no pels. 740·992·
cean, Nnloro wolcoml, 1· 11111
"'·6000 Sq, foo1 commorlcal 2218.
'
800·531-85&amp;3,
n~·~
u-·-~u
loloragowl1hl4,000aq,lool
=-:""-~::'-':--::----:To
Do
"........,
0MES
f
1
,.
~·'I ERA 1 Bedroom Apartment•
o:
•
.
S
0 OY ln.~e lrtl . ...,..
. .
'
Family Addlc:tkm Communi•
FOR ALE
Town &amp; Country Raal Ea· $289 month. Depo~lt &amp; All·
1y Trealmonl 5afY1ooo. An
~
late 304-17H11411
erenoe, HUD Appooved,
Qutpo1foni Alooholand Doug All.ol your ltonil r1lj)llrt,ICIP
(740)«H 518
18 Wlclt, 0 n1Y 11 ••
00
counoofln
•
dl1lolll
a
ttmodallng.
24hr
••,
or
Lors
&amp;
11 10
gu ~1M fol· tmtrgtnoy HNioe. Mnlor Month, I.H% FIKed lnttrtll
~ Btdroom Apt; QaUipoilt.
1....
aepl... "'' ~
alllztnl dlocount 22yro, Rail Wllh Air And UnACREAGE,
• Wa1er Pl\d, 1275 mon1h
"t~~roi"'".J::~;, ~"':::~ exp, (304)575·2Qe5
derplnnlng HI5H25·3428
pluo dtpol\1, No Poll.
,
• oq
For Ron11rlllor lalln Maoon (740)448·4043 aner 8:00pm
men\l, hl~h oohOOI dfi)IOmt Goorgea Portoblo lilwmlll 1870 Champion 12x80 2 wv , 10000 111
304
and one ( ~n,::•PtrltolOt don1 1\eul your logl IO tht bod•ao .. l, 13,000 080, 1162-2817 '
I on.
• 2 Bedroom, Wll.hlrl dryo•
In aeorknela 11td1 00
nhmpu10' mill jualaoll304-871·1157, Coli (304)875-.2-170
hOOk·up. Clooe lo holpl1al.
1111111, ow gl w IXPI•
dl c k e
(7401441·0117 Reloronooa
1
8
3
rltnce In MlorOIOft Win· Top to B01tom Cltlnlng 1885 Skyllnt 1~x?O, 3 bed· n an I tree ~·te~, Fli0 required.
'
dOWI, Exatl and Word lnd ServiCe, ProtaNionol elfin. 11&gt;0m, Good Condlllon, Call aero 0 1' wao 0
muel bo dependable ond lng 11 offordable prlooo. Haoold, 740-365·110411,
~~~~~:e 5~~~111 128 •000 ' Mlddlopon. North 41h Avo,,
4 room furnished apanmtnt,
pouet good leltphont Allldentlal, OffiOt. remocltloo .
•
ekllla.
lng end conatruotlon cllln
,
.
dtpoalt &amp; ralerencta, no
up ConfldiOIIol 992·21178 Doni Own Lind? WI Dol
pliO, (740)992·0185,
Send roourne by JanUifY or W2•1381
,.
Landi Home pookegoo
'04, 2002 IO: FACTS, 45 TR co ~
s,.,; c :~;loble, Call (740)446·
HOIJSI'3
~~~~74\))!-g.;~ Apart•
Oilve SlrHI, Galllpolll, OH
I· u
N u.
roR n - 15831 or FAX IO (740)&lt;W8· TfON ,
Now Umllod Or No Crodll7 tlov·
"""''
N~o 2 br, opo ,lg roomt\
801.f. EOE MIFIH
ConstruCitlon/RtmodeUng. tmmtnt Bank FJnanoe Onlv
luliy equlped kit., central
Htl
tid caring for tha "Siding, "Roofing, "Orywell, At Oakwood In Barboure· Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom heating/ cooling. waaher/
prl w8~ rtt Gro p Home Ect. 304·.87~·01S5130.· ville, wv 304·736·3409.
hou11, 299 Mulberry, Pom- dryer hookup 304-882·2523
lclt
e y, a
u
• 874·3855
eroy no pets (740)992now paying minimum w•ge.
Mobile Hom1 like New 68158
'
Renters Wanted: Pilot Pro·
new shlltl: 7am·3pm, 7am· Will Work for elderly day or Belonged to drdtr Petton:
·
gram4 Own your own hOme.
5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· night pan or full time. Phone (740)256·1378 altar Pilot Program, Renters Lillie or no credit OKI Call
7am, call740·992·5023,
(304)675·7981
9pm,
Naldo~. 304-738·7295,
(740)448·3384,

ANi1Qwi

u••·

t o - 11 pclrtlon of
Scipio Twp., Rood
::..':::.n,...:::,,.::
43
Paae 101 of Mliga •n lllllriY Clilectlon
County 111con11
· D.&amp;Z .,1111 to 1111 Current 0...... " - bouncllry of 1 17.111~~~~~=---'-~.., -p•oo11n1111""
23• The. liHrlno lor
F.ulcnuCAIJ
~TKIN thl.• rood will Ill 8t
.,~-iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiioool· 10.00 •·•· Doc. 17 It
R - "' common:lal g;;:":='=0 ':~
wlnng ,_ ...- or ,. r:
1 t~- c rt
palra ·-~-- oor 0 ,,. ou ,

Your Ads With

acquire Mo Vaughn

,_,....,.,.... ~•,II••·~·""'"'"'"

'

We Cove

Meigs, Gallia,

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Mets working to

1.,.... .......,...,~;.':::1

Lakers' 28 points in the final
. period - Horry and George
had seven each, and Hunter,
six on a pair of 3-pointers.
In addition, backup point
guard Brian Shaw scored a
season-high 13 points.
1\No free throws by Horry
extended .the Laken' lead to
eight, but the 76ers closed
within three on two free
throws by Iverson and a 3pointer by Matt Harpring.
However, George nude a
free throw with 13.6 seconds
left, and two more after a
turnover by Iverson.
"We had this one in tbe
bag," Iverson said. "We gave
this one away, we gave them a
gift - a Christmas gift, We
just'don't finish games out"
The 76ers made only 14 of
- 42 shot&gt; in ,the second half
a~d conunitted seven of their
15 turnovers in the fourth
quarter,
"Defense was tlle key;• Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.
"We had a 33-point second
half after giving up 49 in the
first half."
Dikembe Mutombo had 12
poin~ and 13 tebounds, and
Derrick Coleman added t 2
points and 10 rebounds for
the 7bers (11-16),

'

Lakers physician Dr. Steve
Lombardo didn't guess when
O'Neal would return, Tile
29-year-old center is eligibl~
to play again Jan, 4 when the
Lakers play host to Phoenix',
"He's had arthritis in his big
toe for a long time," Lomb:¢do said. "It just tecently flared
up, an occupational hazard,
With this kind of sport -'
running,jumping, pushing off
- it's more likely to flate up,"
O'Neal has also been bothered by soteness in his l&amp;ft
foot, and was scheduled to
undergo more tests on
Wednesday.
Knick• 102,1Uptors 9-4
Allan Houston scored a season-high 34 point&gt;, includirlg
a three-point play with 3:05
left that ended Toronto's tmai
rally, :as New York snapped a
four-game
home
losirtg
streak.
The Knicks, without Marcus Camby (sore toe), shot 6for-8 from 3-point r.~nge in
the tint quarter and held off
the Raptors in the fourth
after they twice puUed within
a point
'
LatreU SpreweU added 21
points and helped hold Vince
Carter to 15- mote than 11
below his aver:~ge ,
Morris Peterson scored 22
poin~ to lead the Raptors,
who had their three-game
winnihg streak end .

,.
I

I

�-- -

--------------·----·-a• --- . . . . . - .,

.

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

rwednelday, Dec. 26, 2001

Former Cowboy Harvey Martin
dies at 51 of pancreatic cancer
GRAPEVINE, TeX25 (AP) -When
the Dallas Cowboys drafted Harwy
Martin as a virtual unknown out of East
Texas Sl&lt;lte University
in 1973, he was a mildmannered defensive
end who used to help
fallen foes to their feet.
Martin, who died Monday night of
pancreatic cancer at 51, was in jeopardy
of being cut during his rookie season,
former teammate and road roommateto-be Drew PearsQn recalled Tuesday.
Pearson later learned. how the 6-foot5, 250-pound Marrin altered his attitude
after a meeting with defensive coordinator Ernie S~&lt;~utner.
"Ernie sat him down and told him,
'You're not going to make the team.

NFL

You're too nice; " Pearson said. Harvey
H

changed overnight. AIJ "o f a sudden, 'Too
Nice' became 'Too Mean."'
Martin soon became notorious for his
rough style. Without as much as llinching, he would smack unsuspecting quarterbacks with his forearm or step on
®wn~ offensive linemen. He also had a
quick temper and br:avado.
The week before the Cowboys pia~
the Washington Redskins on Dec. 16,
1979, Marrin received a funeral wreath,
purportedly sent by the Redskins. On it
s.aid, "Sympathy for an Impending tQss."
Days later, after the Cowroys won 3534, Martin was still fuming. He marched
into the Redskins' (Qcker room and
threw the wreath smack into the middle
of their prayer huddle, yelling, "Take this
back to Washington with you!"
Maureen Porter, spokeswoman for
Baylor Health Cue Center, s.aid Marrin
died Monday night at Baylor Medical
Center in Grapevine.
Martin's health deterior:ated quickly in
recent months, s.aid Ed "Too Tall" Jones,
the Cowboys' other defensive end in the
Martin era.
"This is devastating to me," Jones said.
"Less than a year ago, Harvey and I were
making personal appearances together."
He led the Cowboys in sacks seven
times, leading fQrmer Dallas coach Tom
Landry to call Martin the team's best
pass-rushing defensive end ever. Martin
led in sacks from 1974-77, 1979-80 and
1982. He holds the Co.,;boys record for
career sacks at 114.
"He'll be remembered as one of the
great Cowboys of the golden years," former Cowboys president and gener:al
manager Tex Schramm told The Associated Press Tuesday night. "He was a great

player, on~ oft~ tint in r--=,..---,
th~ group of th~ lint
greot poss rmhen. H~
accQmplished
mQre
than wu anticipat~
h.am."
Martin became a CQfnerstQne with Jones and
Randy White of th~
Doomsday
Defense,
which hrlped lead the
Mal till
team to victory over
Denver in the Super Bowl in 1978.
Mutin drove himself to the highest
plateau during a 14-game regular season
in 1977. His speed-rush techniques produced 85 assorted taclcles, a dub-record
20 sacks, two fumble recoveries in the
NFC championship game, All-Pro and
the AssQciated Press NFL defensive
player of the year award, and the Super
Bowl CQ-MVP award with White.
Martin is the first Super Bowl MVP
to die.
Dallas Morning News sports columnist Fr:ank Luksa tecaUed that one measure Qf Martin was that he was recog·
nized by his first name.
"He was always Har-Vey. He ne~~
no othtr identifier. He wu never called
Marrin," Luksa wrote Wednesday. "The
only public mcrerice ";co his last name
Qccum:d at 1m~ Stadiuni' afier Harvey
tr:apped the quarterback, , wllieh was
oficn. A replay screel) in the end ione
flash~ the word: MARTINIZED!''·
Opposing players feared Martin's abilities and apl'reciated his competitive-

m

1-ja:;;;;;-""

ness.
Former St. Loult Cardinals offensive
tackle Dan DierdQrf banged heads with
Martin and the rei! of the Doomsday
Defense rwice a season in the '70s and
early '80s.
. "On the field, he · was a competitor, ·
and you'd hate the guy," Dierdorf said.
"Then you'd meet him off the field at
the Pro &amp;wl or at a league function,
and you'd find it was impQssible riot tQ
like him. You'd leave him and be mad at
yourselffor liking the guy."
After retirement, Martin struggled
with substance abuse, domestic violence
and bankruptcy.
Martin was jailed in 1996 on domestic violence and CQcaine charges. He
received probation on both charges and
was sent to the Dallas County Judicial
Treatment Center. He was released after
eight months and took a job selling
chemical products. Martin also made
anti-drug speeches to children.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle

I Kandl

4~11

Racine, Ohio

7401W2217

.......

740-742·7709
RuaOIIIIble II8IM
All Ooc8lloM

7:00 All • 1:00 ....

• 1•••1
.,1.

742·1076

mniHalbllll iiiQiao;un

"

Dealers

• I'REE INSTALLATION
• FREI! IN HOME fSI'IMATE

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

' FULLY WElDED
~lilo.l • 50 YEAR WARJt.\NTY

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

t7lleedlst
llllddleplrt, OH
11r•tr &amp;11'120'1

992-4119 1-800-291-5600
Visit Our Sbow._ o.i Slate Route 33
6 Mila North Of P-roy,OIIio.AI ~~Rood II

(748) 992·3194
992-&amp;635 ·

ll.@"~lMti

111"\ ',l lil ( 1 11 1'\
~

..

Roonua. Decks

He• HDIIdMr H6u£1i
. · -IOAII•IPM
~lOAM·-

., ;b
.........
·--TIIct
....

Remodei!Dio
Dryw.U, 1111C1
Addlllo•

~Owller: 'll!rry Lomm

(740) 992-0739

Slll'nclllllll

0481 112 .llttl
..,,,_

:Weekly Sbeeialt
Nov. 26 • ee. 24
51 It'• M~ntonw~~e. OWo
(740) 9924559

'

........

............
IIIIIIIM.IIIIIt

WRftPPED

fer parties
ftlsiDJ.•

111111•11~ l.llle

5t.ll1124
llldne,lllllt '

CIIIIIIAIIy

742-2572
Kip ·742-7709
11N8 pc11

mo.

949-2734

till"*,.,

lilt

THE BORN LOSER

'.I

'

CDIIMElCW.IMidlllgDitlllN.
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS) .

Pfog*llve
top line .
Thurtdays

Advertise

Shade River AG

"Ahead In Service•
35537 St. RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equine 12
SWIIt HOI'II fled ................ $5.00150
SwwtSiull

12% SWill Horll flld "'"'"""..'' ...40150
lluntm Prldl21% dog food .........$8.1!180
Economy lttf 12% alack IHd..... $8.75150
1111111'1llllocki...................$US/100

NOW OPEN

Rocky R llupp llrlf'111
flox 189
Mr&lt;ldlcport. Oh1o 1:.7£,n

Meigs Massa~
Thera/1"1 ·

Loce 843-6264

Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
I"PJ
Mongage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
·---

_'f!!.__.

P/B
COIITRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740..985-3948
CONCRElf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen:, Walls, Steps •
.
not Work,
Rtpi•Cemcnt•~ • W•lks

140-912·1871

wv lfll31712

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Addltloos,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall ·
&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

I
I

I

1111

WNCH ..... I~-···
....
~~ "

I

: II :30am- 2:00pm : 5:00 pm- 7:30pm
14 yrs &amp; under FREE t4,yrs &amp; under FREE
: 5-&amp; yrs - '2.99 ' 5-8 yrs - '3.99 :
r 9-12 yrs -'3.99 1. .9-12 vrs -'4.99
I

"~ 1 ;. ~

I

\lack" Pockd l\lliH'"
lX ( ·o iled i hit·"
Case • Remlnaton • Buck • Schnde
.Guitars • Some Furniture • Crafts
Now Available • Tiger Sharp Ki1Jv~

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio
10AM-4PM Mon•Sat ' ·

Pii.U

2Aitlrmt1ive

3 Chago

36-

4 Soultlnglf

:J7 Dnce

5Heldup
I Widing
bird

7 Prollltc
oullt.

43 '--10

20 Wrinkle

hrL

31 Chllnge

18 Wtlkld

olowly
11 Seldom

32Gulde
33 u-

31.Jtll

---

40-

22 Penhtuon

23=:,
24 Complied

41 Pilch

45Halltlde
41 · So long!"

47 Auna.....,
41 'LucJc--

25 Crows over

Udy"

50 Lincoln

nlcloWM

28 Actor

-ook
30 Computer

""'' color

ling-

51-·

neighbor

52 Noncom

triCs to ~ain an upper

~

punches

missl~(l th~ir

mark in thi.1 &lt;leal?
Against three notrump, West led the
·~

spade king: two, nine,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celtbcity Cipher cryptograms are creat.ct from quotations by rarnoua

(7-JO) 992-590X
"'

people, paat and preunt. Each laner., the cipher standi tor another.

You might not like
South's three-notrump rebid with no
spade stopper, but
what is bette•? Three
hearts would strongly
suggest at least a sixcard mit.
First, West should
haV'e sacrificed his
spade queen under
dummy's ace. East
had made an encouraging signal at trick
one with his nine,
which presumably
meant he had the
~F===v-z:=:-:-;;t:::J spade jack. Then, if
declarer immediately
takes a heart finesse,
the defenders can cash
•...__A
out for one down.
South misplayed,
unless he somehow
knew that West had
blocked the spades.
Declarer needed eititer the hearts or the
diamonds to come in.
South should have
begun with dummy's
two top diamonds .
W~O INVENTED
When the queen
'' TI-IANK VOU" NOTE 57 '
drops, declarer has
· k
d
nine tnc s: one spa e,
one heart, three diamonds and four clubs.
llut if the dian1ond
queen doesn't appear,
South takes the heart
finesse. If it wins. declarer has nine tricks
via one spade, two
hearts, two diamonds
and four clubs -- and
&lt;"an consider taking a
second heart finesse
for at least one overtrick .

WANNA Ki'JOW!

DECEMBER 26

Advertise

213 N: 2nd Avt.
Mktllljlolt, (l,HM780

I

Today's ciiNI: M eqUIIIS 0

'OEPHZ

JUUO

LUAOH

VEX

HE

A

u.

ZRN

LRWU

HE

EK

KATZHUP,

X T Z

S E P WU P . '

ZAPM

YAKU

IIAWEHA

-

A

B R P ·p E Y Y

NALBEF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The blood In the earlh runs dH~ at
Gottylburg, but tho eye sees only an enchanted land. Norman·COuslna
.

WOlD
IAMI

O four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled worc;b

tht

be·
low ro form fnur simple words.

....-R__H.....,E_P,.....,',....,R
---.
"

hl.--,.,,,.--.,.....,,.--..,,.--.,,--1
..

1

L_...J.....-L._...J.l-..J..-.1.._...J

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rr

1 1
.

.

.

·

..,--...-----,~
.
YRDE R

~ ~ ~.

r==·I I

An old timer noticed a designer
name on the sleeve of a teens
~==-=~·:::._,jacket "Nice name," he chuckled, ..
~
"what do you call your • -. - - - • -7
L E MT H E

,. .

I_.:,....:,........,,....-r-...,_,I
1-.

-LI...JIL"...Jii._...lj--J
0 ~;~~~~: i~h~h;h~~~~~g ~~d~
·
you develop from step No. 3 b~!! low.

L-.1.'-'
· ·

~ PRINT NUMBERED

1

~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

5C:RAM-LETS ANSWERS
Should- Crept- Force· Torque- FOR OTHERS

"Success has nothing to do w1th ga1ns or accomplish
· ments for yourself," a comic to his audience. "What
counts is what you do FOR OTHERS ."

In this

Cof11tln•llk
lillotlt 'I I Dl...

Gill Citlln-•

space

. .1111111

East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Arhens, Ohio

BANKRUPTCY

............. 11111..........

..............llrnill.

•

and

can ~Ueve • deblor of financial obliaations and
arnnae a falr dlllrlbution of uteiS among
credlton, Aptnon JOina t!uouJh bankruptcy
may retaln c:crWn property, known as
"exempt" property, for his or her personal use.
'lbla may lncludl a Cll, a house, clothes, and
houllel!old aooda. You should direct any
queatloila reaardlnJ bankruptcy to an_anomey
before proceeding. For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
WIUiam Slitranek, Attorney
(740) !Pl-!025
Athens

$50 per
month

~~~

Dt•c. 1.7, 2(J()I
In the )'L'&lt;lf :l hcad sevcr:1l
II('W fimm:: ial intcrc~h ruuhl

'.

_.LIDL

~

... ·•

.
.....
.,"

·..

....
....••""
..
1.1

••

Cellular

...

Jeff
Warner
lhs.
.
High &amp; Dry
992·5479"
Self-Storage

••,

.

' .

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
11fl2/1 mo.

Advertise your business on this.page for
one month for as low as $25
Phone 992·2155

whose IBu.:~ :md dislikes ar\.· in
do sl' h,mnony with yours.
You'll be mor~ wmfortabl~
tmhy wirh their n lln)'alliun ~

T 11t1 r~tl.l)' ,

for

,_

Sunset Home
Construction·

ALL RI&amp;I-IT, WI-10 DID IT?
COME ON ! CONFESS!

. TM'*plat

•Garage•
•Compllli

Crete Free Eollmotes

;PEANUTS.

e:; 1..· BUFFET SPECIAL ·~;e;, ~

7.40-192-17~5

•NewHomas

Sortloa Ohio and W. V.

tnd_Drlvet • Sltndt

•

~

I (ill"'

l'n1

"l!ii!i:=~~~~"'-!!o;;;.t

!•

month

...JET TO GO iLuncll· •t.tl)
IU.AT TO GO fDinntr • ...H)

. ROIIRT IISSILL
CONSIRUCIION

Rllllodlllng
Stop &amp; Compara
FREE E8nMATES

Hours: Sun· nur llam • 10 pm
Frl &amp; Satll1111 • llpm

-----------~-- ·-------'

Tonia Relbir
Llcenud Muuge

•

per

Progreulve

Coverall on
Sundaya 1

space
for $50

Tel: (~) 773-5800

I

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;

In this
(1000 ft from tbe brldp)

I'~•

:1'~

10 Ll1tlt kid
12Werm-

13TII'Oiu-

1 Chaney of
fllmt

21 Width
31 Kind of rug

an overtrick.

Sldlaa• New G•roaa
• Repll«ineat
Wladows•Room
Addftlons • Roo011

1066 2nd Street • Mason, WV

.._

t Wroth

DOWN

21 Spoil
'0 Dint
21¥-t

35_.,_

8 Phytlque

out

23 TIIrong

.four. West continued
with the spade eight
to dummy's ace. Declarer fi111~ssed the
heart queen. West
won with the king
and cashed the spade
queen, but when
hearts broke 3-3, declarer took the rest for

New Ho- • Vinyl

6:30

Jt

han&lt;l. This happens in
briJ~e too.
How
many metaphorical

BUILDI!RIINC.

Doorl ap.n 4:30
Early bl~ llart

P;,..w;

T ii)C y/OULJ&gt; i
lllfVEr APPLY ~

BISSELL

a Sunday

l"u.;

thrust and counterthrust as each pugilist

TO YOu.

•

~~~
Every Thullday

t:U..

I

r&gt;ON'T y/O~fl.Y AIOUT IT, AI.···
I
A V iiLu~·AJ&gt;OEP ~

O.EfR·
CUT&amp;·.

BilliARDS

~

•

PriiNtll

¥:"-':'

5I

In boxing, we have

a111111Y
$321.11 PER Jlllll :'

J&amp;D

55,_.

21Hove•
llrong
dtlh

Today is Boxing
Day in Canada and
Great Britain. It recalls the period when
lords of the manor
took gifts in boxes to
their worket~.

Visi/M......._.nl
WV10l3&gt;177

WIWAMS

U PiOWIIIII

14 . . . . . .

II Bowthape

!WIIIIIr.
• IllS 4

llealcr North ~
Vuln...-rabk1. 1.-:ni·Wal

• No Dealen or Co!'lracten l'leue

I.\ \l\1'~

•r-..

17 Pwtod ol

Op.!nina lciHI. • K

RISTCIME,
RIITIEIID
SZIO.IIPa

...

II Sigh al

•o •

t

I

14Pwlul1l

.Kij iS

_.,.,$111__,. ·- 24'120'
II-121111U Will'
'229.00*
PliiTIC

43 Couple

!!

15EIIIn.wy

••

11m111UC~

.,..,_

42 Pubiiohing

.. a.13=.c,*.Kill ...

., ,HJJ IJ

, .
l 1\.'T

40 Gil""

c• namwy

. 6 1112

¥irtol.

-on

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

11

t .. IC.IIJ1

.. w:...

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Factory A•tboriHd
C..IHPwta

1Ftoede

• AJ I
Eul
4o.J t ' f • l
" 1111:

6 KQI

hutll

AU MaUl n-- A
• Equipment .......

ALDER

... ...

.f'..

._IJZJ,. . .I

Floc:lc lluelc

Hours

ACROSS
I

Independent
Distributor

DIKJidli!IJ
Sea flee
Country, oa- •

..sn1

PHILLIP

Hertxdlfe

740-992-7599

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

The Dally Sentinel• Page 8 5

.

B.D.

I

CONSTRUCTION
~ .IA"'I'ACTION
~ GUAIIANT!ID

Home lmpronmentA:
Skiing• Remodeling
Porcha • Dtcb
Add-on '• • Roonn 1

Quality Work

i,
••
•

MnJ 11Hirsdlg
.

&amp;Stlndly '
DOllS o,etJ 4:30
Early birds start
6:38

I

••
'•
•

,

. .. ..

·· ·

•'
••

••

tep

•
••
••
••
I

FREE ES11MATES
Bill Do.ifer

(740) 992·2979

I 'I

dcwlop (or you whkh '"·uulU
grea tly im:rea~c your e:tming
pllt~·ntial. Apply the dl"ort,
:lUti all your h:ml work will br
rcwankd.
CAI'tliCORN (Dec. 22lan . ll)) -- SliCl'C!o~ is indic&lt;ltl.'d
·tm..I;J~' in :.11 ufyuur em..lravon:
HmveVL' r, the urtc th:lt ~tand~
out illld 'ould bt the most
pmJurli\'t at this time
taim ro ym1r L' ilruingll\1\t ~c­
curi ty . Know whC're to look
(ur rum:~1wc am\ yau'llliml it.

ror-

TIH· A~trn-Graph Matchmaker iuHan11)' revet~\~ whh:h
~if,l:n~ liTe! mmnntknlly ~wrft~·t
for ynu. M:dl S2.7S tu Murch ..
nM_kcr. c/o . thi' uew'p~\'tr,
P.O. Uox 175H. Mmmy -till
Statiun, N~·w Vurk, NY
I 0 1~h .

AtlUAIUUS (J:r11. 21!-F•b.
19) ·- Thi' is till' ti.Jy fC1 wnrk
m lt

.IPY l'XistiTIK k in k~

that in-

\'ldn· .1 ~udal L'\'L'ut yn u"rc
jtlauuin~ wit h lill'IHI~. Onn•
L'''l•ry t ln n~ i' wurkl·~t cHit. it
~h ~ mid pnw~ wry Mln·cs\fill.
111SCES (Pt•h. 2t1· Marrh 2jl)
-- 'I hi~ rmdtl hl• :1 d.1v uf

ll.IJ'I'Y 1. ' 11din~~

i11 .1 m .Jitl: r of
~ •Hill' illlf'UT\.Ul(l..' Ill }'(ltl th .lt

ha'!i bc.•en hanginl!: tire, evcu if
i[ has tu he tackiL•d :tlon~ with
some otbcr matters .
Al~ms (Mar&lt;h 21 -Aprill'.&gt;)

-- T u~.l.ly

i~ &lt;Ill

ship th.111 with tho se who
rhallengl· vou a l()t.

VII~GO (Au~ . 2.1-Sept. 22)
-- If all the siBil&lt;lh :Ire ~lmilive
totby, gn nhl'ad .md t;lk.e that
cak ulnt cd ri~k that i~ requir~d

excellent d:ay

to ndtiV;ltc

~Onll'

cont :l l"U tiHH

could be help ful

impon:111t

i11 furthning nn entl•rpri~l·
vou'd like m take un in thl·
iJL'\V year. The .~CIISOll mak~~

of yuu to 1111provc you r lot m
life. The o~ids f.wor you at
this time.

recC'pt ive .
TAURUS (April 20-M:ry
20) ... Don't poHpone taking
care of financialnmth:rs tod;ly,
bcCau~c you are lm·kirr than
lllllii l H thi5 time when it
thl"lll

col11fl

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) • Try to find time todity tu
partak~ in a phy1iul ~:xcrC'ile

of some kind. You could u~c
it af\er ;~1\ th~ holiday c-adng,

ph1t ynu'll enjoy

to m11terial matters.

H•ekinJt.

·

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
... It wnn't be ~cu·-,ervin~ to
fi.lL"Lt .~

on your

Af'j'IY ym1r
~m L'owort

imer~su to~t;ty.

e-ffort~ to

thoae

thnt C"()uht aJv:mce
your most ~lromiu~ut, l'"'r.110nnl dL·~ i rc~.
cANCeR u .. ,, 21-J"'Y
22) ·- One n( )'OUr i(fl':'lte~t
;~~n·u todn)' wi11 b~ your intui-

tive pcr\'cptimn.

Th~·y t:uul~t

hL•Ip ym1 ~r~· ;atl)' in ymtr bmillL'~~ ~tc.•alint-t~ . il' Wl·ll ~~ with
pl'r~unal

'

spire,;.

SAt;ITTAiliUS (Nov. 2.1D-.·c. 21) -- Noht1dy JIC'tdl to
tell ym1 tudil)' th~t. in urdl·r
for an :JWt'l'lllCnt )'Ou'n• th.'t-tu. tiatin~ at th is tillll' ·to \t:Jnd tht

c.:1ot elf time , tht•

olll''.

LEO (luly

B- All~.

SfWIHl ynur d.1y

2:2) --

with frit&gt;nd~

doln~ ~ome­

thintc like plilying 11 a:umv•tltlw 'pon.
SCORI'!O (Ocl. 24-Nov.
22) .... Sunu.•thing owr which
you-'ve had no control. UJ
ch0111KIJ mi~ht unc.lcr~o :t trnn~­
t'tmn:ltion on its nwn t'od:1y,
without any proddj''ng frmn
ym1. You'll like w Jilt tran-

Ymt 'll Met the tcruu ynu're

rc.•nn~

mmt

lwm•lit .til ~llU.1lly . Ym1 'll do
wh:u's ri~ht.

�'Dear Abby" letters on AS

LOSS II

llblp Counly"s

•

Wbat's inside

Sou/sby,' L£ntes,·R!JusL.(•
fiound liablefior ,
more than $201 000··

@)
Mercury

== 200 I ESCORT (2 IN STOCK)

WAS$11,995 ..... *HOW$10,600
200 I FOCUS
WAS$12.995 ..... *HOW$1 1,800
2001 MUSTANG (21NSTOCK)
WAS$15,995 •..• *HOW$13,900
2001 TAURUS(41NSTOCK)
NEW ARRIVAL •••••••••••••• $14,995
~ 2000 TAURUS (21N STOCK)
:::., ,;
WAS$12,995 .... *NOW $11,900
=-" 2000 FOCUS (AUTO)
. ·
=;===::::
WAS$11,995 .••• *HOW$10,800
~ 2000 FOCUS (5 SPEED)
::;::::;
WAS$10,995 •.••••. •HOw $9700
.:::::; 1999 CONTOUR
WAS$10,995 ••.•••• *HOW$9800
::= 1999 MUSTANG
WAS$12,995 •••• *HOW $11,700
~ 1999ZX2
WAS$9995 •••.•...••. *HOW$8800
1998 ESCORT
WAS$6995 ••••.••.••• *HOW$5300
1998 ESCORT
WAS$6850 .•••••••••• *HOW$6500
1998 MUSTANG "GOOD BUDDY"
WAS$11,995 ..... *HOW$10,400
1998TAURUS
WAS$9995 •••••••.... *HOW$8800
1997 CROWN VIC
WAS$9995 ....•.••••• *HOW$8300
1997 MUSTANG
WAS$9995 •••.••.•..• *HOW$8300
1996 MUSTANG
WAS$9350 ........••• *HOW$7900

LINCOLN

RANGER
2001 MOUNTAINEER
*NEW ARRIVAL •.••.•...• $12,995
(liN STOCK)
EXPlORER
WAS $23,995 •••• *HOW $22,500
WAS$19,995 ... "HOW $18,800 2001 GRANDMARQUISLS
(21NSTOCK)
I WINDSTAR
*NEWARRIVAL ••••.•••••• $18,995
JUST ARRIVED •••••••.••••••• $18,995
ESCAPE
2000 MOUNTAINEER PREMIER
WAS$19,995 ..•. *HOW$18,300
JUST ARRIVED ............. *$22, 995
F-1 SO
1999 MOUNTAINEER
WAS$13,995 .... •HOW$12,4()()
JUST ARRIVED •••••••..•••. *S I 9, 995
2000 RANGER
1999COUGAR
WAS$9995 ......... *HOW $7800
WAS$13,995 ••••. *HOW $1~900
2000 RANGER 4 X 4
WAS$14,995 ... *HOW $13,600
2000 RANGER SUPERCAB (liN STOCK)
WAS $13,995 ..• •HOW $12,800
2000 RANGERSUPERCAB 4 X 4
WAS$14,995 •... *HOW$13,800
BUICK"
2000WINDSTARLIMITED
JUST ARRIVED •..••••.•••. • $23,995
1997 LESABRE
WAS$11,995 •••.• *HOW $1u;oo""
1999 EXPEDITION
WAS$19,995 •.•• *HOW $18,800
1999 EXPLORER "GOOD RUDDY"
WAS$11,495 .... *HOW $10,400
1999 F-1 SOSC 4 X 4
WAS$17,995 .•.. *HOW $15,800
1999RANGERSC4X4
WAS$15,995 .•. *HOW $14,800
1998 EXPLORER
1 CAVALIER
WAS$16,995 •••• *HOW $14,800
WAS $9350 ...•..•.• *HOW $8,800
1998 EXPEDITION (EDDIE BAUER)
41998CAMER0(21NSTOCK)
WAS $18,995 ... *HOW $17,900
. WAS $12,995 •••• *HOW $11,400
1998 F-1 SO
1997 CHEVY 1500
WAS$9995 ........• *HOW $8800
WAS$16,995 •••• *HOW $15,800
1997RANGER
.
1997BWER
'
WAS$7995 •..••••.•• *HOW $6850
WAS $13,495 .... *HOW $12,200
I
1993 BlAZER
JUST ARRIVED • .............. $6, ~0

I'

€

Oldsmobile.,

2001 TOWNCAR
2000ALERO V~.6
JUST ARRIVED .•.•..•.••.• *$23,995
*JUST ARRIVED .•••....... *$13,495
2000 CONTINENTAL
1997 AURORA V-8
WAS $24,995 •••• •HOW $22,600
WAS$13,495 ..•• *HOW $12,800
2000LS
1994CIERRA
WAS $27,995 •••• •HoW $2~,800
WAS $5850 •.••••••.• *HOW $4900

iffJames Soulsby, former Prosecutor John
Lentes, and Lisa Roush, who worked as
ooulsby"s secretary, liable fur more than
$20.000 in unaccounted funds.
The report u the result of a special
audit which beg;m shortly after Soulsby
FROM STAFF REPORTS
and Lentes left office. They were defeat- ·
POMEROY - An audit report ed last year in their bids for re-election.
The report said Roush, who left her
issued Thurnlay by Ohio Auditor Jim
Petro finds former Mei~ County Sher- job with the sheriff when Soulsby left

financing
.

as1ow 11

5.9%•••
11 QUalified

A puppy for Christmas

borers ·

~©1 F&lt;JIS~
"GOOD BUDDr'

WAS $10,995 .•••.. *HOW $10,400

'

-

~

CRI ......... , ' -11:

~

""""'FIREBIRD
WAS $16,995 ..•• *HOW$15,500
1999GRANDAM
. WAS $11,995 •••• *HOW $10,800
1999 GRAND PRIX
. WAS $12,995 ••.• *HOW Sl 1,800
1998GRANDAM
WAS $6850 .•...•.•.• *HOW $5500
.

'

~~Different.~

;:::
...:
~ ~~

1-

Weather

.::::::

' Hlp: :sos. Low: lOs
Details, A2

1998RAM 1500VAN
WAS$12,995 .... *HOW $11,700
1996VOYAGER
.,.,V
WAS $6950 ..•....... *HOW $5400~~
1995LHS
=
· WAS $5950 ••.•••••••••••• *HOW $5500 _

- =
--

NOBEfiER
METO BIY!I

G\ll

•••

POMEROY The
Meigs County Health
Department wiU be closed
on New Year's Day. It will
be open regular hours on
Wednesday.

Bonus Boll: 2
KICker: 3-8-4-3·9-0
Plt:l&lt; 3 (nisflt): 8-4·4
~ 4 (niJht): 9·6-1·2
W.VA.
Daily 3: 9-3-5
Dally 4: 6-6-1-4
PoweriNIII: 8-19-23-34-41 (21)

..CQ'L..AIIl

Index
2 Sectlona- IIPIIpl

'18,662
or 8379mo

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

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby .
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

. . . . IAK!KS,
PWILWIMIOWS

·''

*****************
• 5.9% lor 60 mos. to qualified applicants.

and lees extra.

9
T

HOURS:
Mon- Fri 9-7;
Sat. 9-5
Service Prices Ex&lt;ilude Tax.

MIDDLEPORT ·
George Hoflinan is Middleport's new clerk/treasurer.
During
Wednesday
evening's regula~ meeting,
Village Council approved
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli's
appointment of Hoflinan 'to
replace Bryan Swan'l• who
submitted his resignation
Wednesday.
Swann's resignation was
effective at the end of la.&lt;t
night's meeting. He will
assume a position with the
Athens/Meigs Educational
Service Center, and had
. ~ amwunced liis plans to
resign from the village position earlier this year.
(n submitting his resignation, Swann noted significant
strides in improving the village's financial condition, but
warned of tough times
ahead.
Because of the state's elimination of the estate tax,
which benefited townships
and villages, and because of
the upcoming consolidation
of the Meigs Local School
Districts, "things are going to
get tight again," Swann said.
Last year, the village
Christian and Bethany Spaun, son and daughter of Brenda and Lee Spaun of Pomeroy, spent
received $23,000 in income
Wednesday morning playing with their special Christmas present, Noel. a miniature Doberman
pinscher puppy. Now that Santa Claus has C(/me and gone. many,area chlldr~n are enjoying the
·. •..
. . . ~\~ :.: ·.
gifts they waited so long to receive. (Tony M. Leach photo)

• •

'

. •i

from the estate tax, the lowest since he has been in
office. Swann said, and
$15.000 is expected in losses
in income tax revenue from
school district employees
once Meigs Middle School
and Middleporr Elementary
School are vacated.
lannarelli said the village's
plans to use those buildings
for other purposes could
help offiet the village's losses .
In other business. council
approved .a $1 per month
hike in refuse fees for all residents in the village, effective
Jan. 1, 2002. ·Council
approved a one-year extension of a contract between
the village and Rumpke of
Wellston. at a 75-cents-percustomer increase.
' ·Councilman
Stephen
Hou~hins voted against the
mcrease.
Negotiations
on
the
increase began at council's
Dec. 10 meeting. when the
firm proposed a $1 increase
per customer in order to
absorb a rise in the cost of
doing business.
Council at that time
agreed to readvertise for new
bids for refuse service, but
Wednesday reversed its posi-

Pie81e ... Hoffm•n. A3

Runner-up

Village moves to eliminate BPA
'
BY BRIAN .J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Village Council took
its first steps to eliminate the
Board of Public Affairs
Wednesday evening.
The first of three r~)ldings
of an ordinance proposed by
Councilman Bob Robinson
was approved by a 4-2 vote
during council's regular
meeting. The ordinance
eliminates the elected board
in favor of a village administrator hired and controlled
by council.
Council members Robinson, Roger Manley, Stephen
Houchins and Kathy Scott
voted in favor of the proposal, while Rae Gwiazdowsky
and Bob Pooler voted
against.

Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
al;o opposes the proposal,
because, she has said, of the
accomplishments in improvit~f, water and sewer infrastructure since the BPA was
reinstated.
The BPA was reinstated in
1999, after a citizens' group
shed light on administrative
fail~res and potlmtjal health
haza{ds withi'l the village's
wa~
· and ·seW\lta"ge systems.
A- ) million sewer lift station ' mprovement and construcdon project is now
under way, and the BPA has
begun to consider new well
field sites in light of a problem with volatile organic
compounds in the village
water supply,
The level of trichlorethyl-

ene in the water has now
subsided.
The issue was first brought
to the council table last
month, · as the village began
advertising for a replacement
for former Village Supervisor Brent Manley.
At the heart of the proposal is the supervision of water
and street employees, but
control of village equipment
is also an issue for council
members in favor of the
elimination of the BPA.
"We need a supervisor for
our employees," Councilman
Roger Manl l'y ,i d, "but the
village can't exist with those
two boards 11 1 dispute."
lannarelli estimated the
cost of hiring a village

.......... vu..,.,A:s

Howard Caldwell"s photo of the 2001 Eastern High School
basketball team was a runner-up in The Daily Sentinel's
2001 Calendar Photo Contest. Caldwell lives in Tuppers
Plains. Landscapes, portraits and other photographic rep.
resentations of Meigs County life are depleted in the calendar, to be Included In Friday"s issue of The Daily Sentinel.
Additional copies of the calendar will be available Friday at
The Daily Sentinel's Pomeroy office.

Is ~lvlng up S~lng
The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition is
here to help you accomplish your goal.

MEDICAL CENTER

.

PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

At VAI l A C E

·

Your New Year's Resolution?

LIN&lt;;:OLN

• •

AS
84-6
87
AS
A4
A3
A3
82-3,S-6
A2

c 2001 Ollio Valley Publish ina Co.

THE AREA'S ONLY
TAl-CERTIFIED DEALER

140-446-9800 •1-800-212-5119

2597.

Pick 4 (clay): 4-5-o-1
Saprlotto: 1()-1 1-12-16-31 '37

IMIFOBD
TAIJK1JS SES
FULLY EQUIPPED
Maintenance .
Included for
3 years or
36,000 miles

RUTLAND The
office of the Leading Creek
Conservancy District wiU
be closed Monday and New
Years Day. Emergencies may
be handled by calling 742-

OHIO
l!lck 3 (clay): 7-4-2

RANGER
'11,900
or '2491110

or '699mo

Offices to dose

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

HOlFORD

'35,105

BY BRIAN J. REED

· Orpha D. Rouse, 84
Marvin. Reed, 70
Details, A3

~NllJ.\6

HoH111an named

derk/treasurer

Deaths

1994LEXUS ES900

he purchased for himself and members
ofhis family fiom a discretionary crimefighting fund.
Lemes. the report said, is alleged to
have improperly paid for car repairs and
travel expenses with public funds.
Any charges against the three must be
filed by Prosecutor Pat Story, who
Wednesday said he has not seen the
report and would not comment.

Middleport

Nebraska looks for
redemption, B1

=
LN

office earlier this year, owes $712 collected from office vending machines, $8.502
fiom funds collected fiom prisoners,
$6,286 in proceeds fiom sheriff's sales of
real estate. and SI,930 from deputies for
cellular phone bills.
. Soulsby, according to the report,
allegedly owes $727 for cellular phones
purchased for his wife and daughter, and
$80 for Sam's Club membet&gt;hip which

,.(

(740) 446·5940
'•'

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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