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                  <text>Page D8 • a.anbap lJimtt-a.tntintl

"It has potential;· Givan
said. "The economic benefits
would have to ~ weigh.d in

North Carolina boom town feels the pinch Bridges
MORRISVILLE, N .C. (AP)
- ~ Babymoon Cafe has
wimessed an unhapt · miracle
of sorts: The rec ' -i on has
turn.d wine imo water.
Customers ace not only
drinking fewer S28 bottles of
Chianti, says owner and head
chef Joseph Leli. They are also
on:lering more of the $5.75

Jay
fnwn Page Dl

a

'

savings plans provide place
for a significant amount to be
put be put ~ay to cover the
ever- increasing costs of higher
education. Over time, an individual can contribute up to
the maximum set by each
state's plan. Currently, the
highest
maximum
is
$246,000. In some states, residents receive a state income.
tax deduction for contributing.
In short, the new plan
: allows for more flexible col: lege savings by permitting
_individuals to make larger
' contributions than what has
been allowed in the past,
while also providing estate
and tax planning benefits.
: Two parties are involved in
· every 529 savmgs plan
account the donor, or
account owner, and the beneficiMy, or future college student. Contributions made by
the donor are treated as gifts
for taX purposes, which means
they qualifY for the Sl 0,000
annual tax gift exclusion.
., Moreover, as long as no
·additional gifts are made · to
, that beneficiary for a five-year
.period, the donor can con.tribute up to $50,000 - or
,$100,000 per couple - per
;beneficiary, without federal
;:Sift-taX consequences. This
. means that larger contribu' tions can be invested sooner
:and will begin growing taxdeferred. In addition, the
account is not considered part
of the account owner's taxable
estate.
Let's look at one set of
grandparents who have a $1
million estate and six grandchildren. Under current estate
tax laws, $675,000 would be
exempt from estate taxes with
the remaining $325,000 subject to taxation. With the 529
savings plan as an option,
$50,000 could be contributed
to a 529 savings plan in i single year for each of the six
grandchildren, thus sheltering
$300,000 from taxation.
Clearly, there are several
advantages to funding ihis
type of account for the donor.
Yet there are also-tremendous
benefits when it's time to
begin using the money as the
student enters coll~ge,
Let's consider another
example. A mother has set up
a 529 savings plan account for
her son, Johnny When the

grilled vegetable sandwiches on
focacru and less of the S17.95
filet mignon whiskey tarragon.
" Like some of these people
that worked for the dot""'oms
or what-have-you last year, they
would come in here for lunch,
and four guys would spend
he says. "Where now, first
of all, you don't see those four

sso;·

time comes, Johnny can use
the account for qualified
expenses at any accredited
institution of higher education for the United States and
in some foreign insritutions.
This includes colleges, universities and graduate schools,
as well as most community
colleges and vocational-technical schools, whether public
or private. Qualified expenses
include tuition, fees, books,
supplies
and
equipment
required for enrollment or
attendance.
Furthermore,
Johnny has the abiliry to claim
tax deductions on his tuition.
As money is taken from the
529 savings plan to pay for
qualified expenses, equal portions of principal and earnings
are taken tax-free.
In addition, under the provisions of the 529 savings
plan, if Johnny quits after a
week of school - or if he
decides not to attend college
at all - his mother would
assume complete control of
the money. In other words ,
when Johnny turns the age of
majori"ty, ~e does not have
access to the money like he
would have had in a
UTMAIUGMA account.
Furthermore,
Johnny's
mother can change the beneficiary of the account to
another member of the family. She can also take the
money out of the account,
although a 10 percent penalty
_would apply for doing so and
earnings would be taxed at
her income taX rate.
The 529 savings plan can be
a powerful, flexible, cax-free
way to save for higher educa(ion and shelter !J,ard-earned
dollars from estate taxation. To
find out more about these
plans and how they can help
you fund your child's or
grandchild's education, please
contact your financial advisor
today.

aar

Caldwell is a certified
financial platoner at Raymond
James Financial Services, 441
Second Ave., C.llipolis, 4462125 or 1-800-487-2129,
member NASD and SJPC.)

f1omFSgeDl

guys."

of-town execs wrre either gone
. or cutting badt.
"There are some companies
that are doing no catering at
all," the 35-year- old Long
Island transplant, who opened
his business 18 months ago, says
during a break from the burners.
Morrisville sits off Interstate
40, on one of the vertices of
North Carolina's vaunted
Research Triangle. Until the
1980s, it had been a farm communiry with a population of
just a couple of hundred, but
the dot-com and biotech
booms sent it soaring to just shy
of10,000.

When federal economists
declared last week that the
nation was officially in recession, and h. 1 been since
Man:h, the am .c ~ncement was
no surprise to Leli. Nor was it
news to other business owners
and workers in Morrisville, a
communiry oflO,OOO that provides an apt prism for viewing
the effect of the recession on
many U.S. towns. and cities that
benefited from the long boom
preceding it.
Leli could see it in ·the empty
dot-com headquarters in nearby office packs. Companies that
used to cater big bashes for out-

Kneen

mendations.
Some pesticides begin to
slowly bre~k down once the
container is opened. Extremes
of temperatures, humidity and
light can cause products to
lose effectiveness. Reseal
opened containerS tightly, and
store where temperatures will
not reach extremes.
Mark the date the product
was bought directly on the
original container before
storing for winter. Most
unopened pesticides stored
under proper conditions
remain effective for a couple
years.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~

f1omPageDI
hold safery. Keep the following in mind when storing
pesticides: Read the label!
Many chemicals must to be
stored in well ventilated and
heated rooms. Always store
pesticide products in their
original containers and under
lock and key to keep them
· out of the reach of children
and pets. Do not store unused
portions of pesticides that
have been mixed for application. Spray tanks may become
corroded and leak. Leftover
diluted spray material should
have been applied or disposed
of according to label recom-

Extension agent for agriculture
awl natural resources, Ohio State
University.)

ty through existing resources
and neighboring counry
agents .
T h nk you to tile Gallip o lis Tribune for their
l Olltmuous support of the
Extension programming, and
for making this rype of communication with the communiry possible.
aertn!fer L. Byrnes is Ga/lia

Byrnes
from Pag{ '1

ing to take a cha,;
on me.
Your risk has been my benefit, and I will never foq;et
that.
Ag news
Remember the sheep
program scheduled for this Countyl Extension agent for
Tuesday, begin~ting at 7 p.m. agriculture and natural resCJurces,
at the C.H. McKenzie Agri- Ohio Sta~ University.)
cultural Center. Jim Clay,
OSU faculty. emeritus, will
present a model for low-input
sheep production. Regardless
of your background or type of
operatiori, those who are seriously looking for alternatives .
will benefit from the concepts ,
offered in this program.
Extension news - Until
the agriculture agent position ;
is filled, the Extension office :
will strive to meet the needs
of the agricultural communi-

Rutland Garden Club makes holiday plans, 2

Sunda~Dec.2,2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

a case-by-case basis."

applications to construction
was not a giant leap.
"One of the big pluses of
this fabric - it will take any
form or shape that you want it
to," Simpson said. "It doesn't
take · its final form until it's
laminated in epoxy."
The Japanese used the
mat""ial to reinforce buildings
against seismic activiry. In the
United States, engineers
quickly identified carbon fiber
as a possible fix for aging
bridges.
"This material is totally
flexible," Ganjehlou said. "It is
very thin sheets of carbon, like
a fabric. It goes over any
shape, any curve. Just imagine
putting wallpaper on the wall.
It's that easy to apply."
That was the case with the
Kentucky bridge, Harik said.
The carbon fiber was glued in
place with epoxy, then coated
with an additional layer of
epoxy.
"The state would have had
to repair the entire superstructure in the neKt three to four
years;' Harik said. "Cracks
were growing at a fast rate.
Now, we are confident that it
will last at least 50 years."
Glenn Givan, chief bridge
en~ineer . in the State Transportation ·Cabinet, said the
Grayson span was the first in
Kentucky to receive the treatment. It will be closely monitored, but· Givan said the
method already has been
proven in other states as a
viable option for bridge
repam.

The cost of repairing the
Grayson bridge was less than
$100,000, Harik said . To
replace the bridge in three to
four years would have cost
$300,000 to $400,000.
"The cost is not only the
bridge replacement. It's also
inconvenient to motorists. In
order to replace that bridge,
the road would have to be
· dosed. With this repair, we did
not stop any traf!i c."
Harik said many people
can't believe that a bridge can
be repair.d with a thin fabric.
"But when I teU them the
strength ofit, then they reconsider their opinion;· he said.
A carbon fiber thinner than
a human hair will break at
approximately 1 million
pounds of pressure per square
inch, Ganjehlou said. In comparison, steel used in reinforcing bridges, he said, breaks at
about 90,000 pounds per
square inch.
A number of states, including California, Ne~ York and
Aorida, have begun using the
material on bridges. Ganjehlou said the material has
become the option of choice
for repairing steel and conc~ete pillars damaged when
struck by trucks beneath overpas&gt;es.
In eastern Kentucky. Harik
used similar material to reinforce two pedestrian bridges,
one across Clear Creek in the
Daniel Boone National Forest, another across the Big
Sandy River m Johnson
Counry.

THANK YOU FOR RE•ELECTING

LARRY A. FALLON

Mllp County"s

COAL POWER

Process·
••
may reVIVe
ind
,
:Srowns fall to rrtans, 5

Deaths
Julius Cochran, 80
lecta Mae·sush long, 83
lillie Murphy, 94
Alice Wagner, 73
Judith A. 'Judy' Zirkle, 56
George D. lowery, 72
,Adda Newell, 87
Details, 3

Chester
displays holiday
decorations

·Weather
HIJh:&amp;Os,LD¥r:JOs
Details, 3

OHIO

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

(dat 6-4-Q

l!ickJ
Pick 4 dll! : 3-4-&lt;Hl

Pick 3 n t): 0-0-5
_Pick 4 nlitd:J: ~+B·L- ­

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Su,.fottO: &amp;-15-17-21-44-4!1
Bonus Ball: 18

Kicker: 7·0·8-3-1-5 .
W.VA.

Dally 3: 2-5-1
DallY 4: 9·9-4-4

Powerball: &amp;-3&amp;41-4648 (Sf)

Index
1 s.ctlon - 10 ......

Calendar
Classi1ieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
weather

l

t

Let ua copy your old family photoa.
Spedala 2-5x7'a lor $14.95. Rag $19.85.
SAVE $5.001 We also do paaapoi1
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: c 2001 Ohio Vollev

Publishing Co.

AWNEYSTUD
SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS

1071CI

OWNERS

-

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2002 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 31. Feea are Four Dollars
($4.00) lor each dog, mala or female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
llcenee by mall, complete and return application to: Nancy Parker Campbell, Melga County
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH ·45769. Encloae a aelf·addre ..ed, stamped
111velope with a check lor the price of the llcenaa.
----~------------------------------------------------------------------------------OWNER
OF DOG

Rate.

days till
Christmas

Exceptional Service.

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- "Ooohhhhh, I like that
one!" and "That one's my
favorite;' could be heard from
people leaning out of their car
windows to better see the
Christmas Fantasy lights at
Krodel Park.
Christmas Fantasy was iUu-

Please -

Coal, J

Ashcroft wants
re~igious groups

·· m-onitOR

CROKINOLE, ANYONE? - Howard Parker, who grew up playIng croklnole, brought In the old family boar!llor display at the
Chester Courthouse holiday open house. Here he demonstrates how It's played for brothers Glenroy and Alfred Wolfe.
local residents. There was a
wicker buggy with an
antique doll, along with a
wooden table and chairs, a
chM's rocking chair, a toy
. tractor, and big red wagon
fuled with toys.

a

Most of the toys were the
childhood play things of
Betty Milhoan and Beery
Dean, both active in the
Chester-Shade
Historical

Pin•• su Toys, J

Christmas Fanta~ opens to rave revievvs
BY PAM WIWAMSON
OVP NEWS STAFF

nuclear power plant converted to coal during the early
1990s, no new coal. fired
plants have been built in
Ohio since the 1970s.
Federal clean-air regulations have discouraged construction of coal-fired power
plants because their emissions of soot, nitrogen oxide,
sulfqr dioxide, mercury and
carbon dioxide cause health
and environmental problems.
. Development of cleancoal technology has caused
·environmentalists opposed to
coal-fired plants to change
their minds.
"It's hands down a much
cleaner technology than
conventional coal burning,"

minated for the first time Fri- including Pleasant Valley Hosday ~vening following the pita!, the West Virginia Lottery,
Christmas Parade and had Wendy's, McDonald's, and
traffic backed up on U.S. 35 other generous supporters.
For some, just driving
for sonic time as ;visitors drove
through, the display,'created by · through was not enough.
Main S~teet Point' Pleasant, the
A few adventurous souls like
city of Point Pleasant, the jim and Donna Roberts and
Mason County Office of their sons, Lane_ and John
Tourism and a wealth of sup- Mtchael from Galhpohs, Ohw,
port from area businesses,
PIHH- Fantasy, J

WASHINGTON (AP) Investigators are examining
similarities between the last
three terrorist attacks on
Americans, as Attorney General John Ashcroft warns that
perpetrators won't be able 10
hide behind religious or political protections.
"People who hijack a reli"
gion and make out of it an
implement of wac will not be
free from our interest."
Ashc11&gt;ft said Sunday. He suggested that federal agents
could monitor political or
religious groups despite First
Amendment protccrions if
the groups are suspec ted of
terrorism.
The Senate's tap Democrat
said, meanwhile, he might
support the narrow use of
secret military tribunals to try
terrorists.
uunder certain circumstances - very, very restricted
circumstances, depending on

how
it's
handledI'm willing
to look at
it,"
said
Majority
Leader
Tom
Daschle of
South
Ashcroft
Dakota.
"With regard to the siruation in Afghanistan in particular, trying a Taliban or terrorist or .. . people involved in
terrorist activity, clearly there's
at least the possibiliry that
something like that might
have merit," Daschle said on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
The comments offered a
preview of a Senate hearing
this week at which Ashcroft
will address criticism by both
liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans concerned
the new legal tactics will
erode civil liberties.

II'~ ,, 11,11/.rN.· IIIII· ,t ,·,·,llr ''"'''"'

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Jl,~i., '·"·~ .1/'/'h '"'''u·lw I

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

.,m I" l .rlu.~. ,.,. lmuul ro'h'o'lf/, 1.~··

J,' 1/r' l/'1\ • 'I .//t,ll\ .11 /'ru m· #(,o/o • ,1.' t•orl•h•/·,./ ,,,,/., \\.o/1 \tm•/ /«roltt.&lt;/. \o "'·''"""'"',I, 21~1/. t/•,• 1
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·

Downtown Middleport was bustling parents waited in line for a quick chat
Saturday evening with children lined and "photo op" with Santa, a candy
up to see Santa Claus, and families · cane and a refreshments.
awaiting the lighting of the community
The bank annually provides 'photos
Christmas tree on Mill Street, as the with Santa at no cost, and Smith proMiddleport Community' Association vides his service to the Feeney-Bennett
held its annual Christmas parade and Post 128, American Legion, and other
candlelight caroling service.
organizations throughout the season. ·
Raymond Smith did the honors at Others took on the persona of Santa
Peoples Bank's Middleport branch, and Claus to take in the festivities, like those
scores of anxious children and their pictured _here. (Brian J. Reed photos)

Holiday Open House

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nv ''""·License must be obtained no late than January 31, 2002, to avoid paying penalty. After this
nAtA penalty will be $4.00 for single tag and $20.00 for Kennel license.
.
.100 E. Second Street
NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
·
Meigs County A · ~ ..

CHESTER - Flavors of
an old-fashioned Christmas
were carried out over . the
weekend in decorations and
displays at the restored 1823
Chester Courthouse.
A scene which seemed
l'ight· · ouc- of a Norman
Rockwell painting greeted
visitors entering the courtroom of the restored buildmg.
It was a 1 0-foot tall tree
decorated with strings of
popcorn, chains created from
colorful paper rings, miniature angels made from paper
doilies, and a variery of handmade ornaments.
· Beneath the tree was a display of childhood toys
brought in by several older

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
new way of turning coal into
gas by removing most of the
troublesome
chemicals
involved in the process could
make building coal- fired
electric power plants affordable again .
Two companies recently
announced that they intended to build such plants in
Ohio.
Nordic En ergy of Ann
Arbor, Mich., ha.&lt; announced
plans for an 850- megawatt
plant on an abandoned
industrial
site
outside
Ashtabula in northeast Ohio.
. Global Energy, a Cincinnati-based company, plans to
build a 540-megawatt plant
in Lima.
Other than a planned

Chrisbnas i~ Middleport

'

ADDRESS
TELEPHONE

ANTIQUE TOYS- A roller coaster; a race car and a merry-go-round from the antique toy collection of Judge Robert Buck were displayed at the Chester Courthouse holiday open house.
Caitlyn Cowdery, left, and Hannah West of Reedsville, look over the toys.

An old-fashioned Christmas

.-

FOR
PERRY

Honletown Newspaper

.

Friday, December 7, 200 1

MEDICAL CENTER

3:00 • 6:00 pm • Main Lobby an• Gift Shop

Discover the Holzer Difference

Refreshments will be served. Special Gift Shop promotions will take place!

www .holzer.org

.All are invited!
For more information, call (740) 4.46-5056.

�-•"'
PaP .A'l.

IJ the Bend -

_Th_en_an_ySe_n_tin_ei_ _ _

Monday, Dec. 3, 2001

•.

DeAR ABBY: "Double Victim
· in Indiana" compared the events of
Sept. 11 to a rape. My daugh~er
~ who is 24, h3d the same fed..
in&amp;.a,ul wrote a poem expretaing it.
It ~ puhlished in our local paper. I
thought you might like to share it
with .. your readers. SHEILA
PKILLIPS, . PROUD
MOM,
QUOGUE, N.Y.
DEAR SHEILA: You have every
right ' to be proud. Your daughter's
pdem is a' knockout, and I'm pleased
to 'Share it with my readers. Read on:
'
,A BRJ;GHT, SUNNY DAY
.
by Kelly PhlDips
Is it a bright, sunny day with freedom in the air
That fosters pure fright, forcing
people to stare
Up in the sky and only to see
An epidemic of evil raping you
and me?

This shameful show of cowardice

from the weak,

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
Tell me, what is the beauty of a
bright, sunny day
When hatred erupts in a toxic display
Of blood and bones, of steel and
stones,
Of blackest black, of screams and
moans?
And so I say, let it Din a relentless
pour.
Let humanity find a way not to
ignore

End of year is a
.:popular time for retiring

·-

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
MIDDLEPORT ....., Middleport
Community Alloclltlon,
dly, 8;30 a.m. Rlverllend Arll
Council.

Tu•·

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Muonlc Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m.
Tueeday.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Chamber, general
memblrlh!P luncheon, noon to
1 p.m.. Ove~rook Center.

MONDAY
LA1!;NT.- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6:30 p.m. at
ALFRED - Orange Town:
lhe ollkle' buildlng. ··
ship Trustees, regular meeting,
.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home ot
CARPENTER - ColumiiJa . Clerk Oele, Fotlrod.
Township Trustees to meet
Monday, 7:30 p.m., lire station.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE- Olive TownREEDSVILLE - Ohio Unl· ship Trustees regular meeting,
~lege of ~teopat!llc Wed., 8:30 p.m., township
· uhildhood lnvnuniza· office on Joppa Rd. Call 378tiod''PrOg(llfl\10 provide flu vac· 8149 to be placed on agenda.
cl~ at-A~· Country Store In
Reedsville from 11 a.m. until
RACINE - Scottish Rite,
noOn.on Monday for all adult8 Wednesday 7 p.m. Racine
to~ $5 or ·presentation of Masonic Lodge h.all.
M.cilcaili'airtt. Free lminunlzatiQIIb a~ aVI!IIable lor children
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
birth ~h~'!9t\ 18 8\'a,llable.
County Family and Chll,dreo
··
First CouncH to meet Wed., 9
$YRACUSE -,. Sutton Town· a.m., meeting room at Depart·
ship Trustees, Monday, · 7:30 mant of Job and Family Ser•
p.m. Syracuse Village hall.
vices. ·
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14 states, including California, Colorado, Maryland,
Massachusetts,
Michigan,
New York, Ohio, Oregon,
South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, Washington and Wisconsin.
The program is designed to
be an alternative to a nursing
home. It receives an average
of $4,000 per client each
month from Medicaid and
Me~it~re,
. .
It will adltllm.ster, funds to
pay for a patient s dental
work .if that wor~ . cou!d
result m better nutntaon; ·~
some cases, mon~y 11
approved. ~o.· pay h~atl~~ . or
a1r ~ondmonmg btlls. The
key 11 to prevent health. care
problems from happenmg,''
according to Robert Greenwood, spokesman for the
National PACE Association.
When it becomes evident
that patients need a more

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Dear Abby is written by Pauline·
Phillips and dauglrter jeanne Phillips. · ·'

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intense level of care, they are
referred to a nursing home.
Some PACE clients are
referred by health care
. providers or a health . or
senior services agency. In
some cases, they learn of the
program by word of mouth.
To quality, clients must ,be
55 or older, live in an area
the program serves and be
judged by the state to need
nuning home level care. A
typical patient is 80 years
old.
The program last month
received a nod of approval
from the federal government.
The
U.S, Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid
made A.lexian Brothers in St.

·

Congress has set aside a
God that we a.re a na.tion
time
of
national
that honors and reveres
reconcilation lind prayer,
Him."
Tuesday, December 4.
In
support
and
A historic event will rake
cooperation with our
place Tuesday evening . Congressional leaders,
from 5-7 PM when both
several churches in Meigs
houses of Congress will
County will be open
gather (on a voluntary
Tuesday evening from 5-7
basis) together in the
PM.
The Middleport
Capitol Rotunda for a time
Ministerial Association
of national reconcilation,
with the Meigs Ministerial
fepentence, and prayer.
Association woulq like to
This is 11 closed event announce:
"' not open to the press or
'
media. ·
A Community
Congressman DeLay
Reconcilation Prayer
described this event this
Service For Our Nation
way: "This is. about the
nation that has pushed
Tuesday, 6 PM (church
God
out
of
it's
will be open at 5 PM)
institutions, homes, and
communities, coming
Rejoicing Life Church
back to God and showing
Middleport
'

TUESDAY
FRIDAY
ROCKSPRINGS - Regular
POMEROY - Meigs County
meeting. Sall.sbury Township PERl meeting Friday, Meigs
Trustees; 6 . p.m., township Senior Center. Lunch to be
building: - · ·
served at noon, meeting and
program to follow.

to

For more information, call Mark
'
Morrow at (740) 992-2755

...

Lillie Murphy

Licenses
· available ·
!

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•····Choir to.·.-.

perfonn

AUce Wagner

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0

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Judith A..

Zirkle ·

Sbci~.t~ ~~'(ch hP~;~~·. ~},~" 'tr~~tion~J a~d "'\&gt;~~rll,

ta. CV.;;·

LOCAL STOCKS

'CO .1

frQp..

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The Daily.Sentinel

Reader Services

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Door
'Prlas

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ment•

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New• Department•
The main number Is 992-2156.
Department extentlons are:
Ext. t2
· G111ml manager

"
A Spoelol Ornament Beariag The Nameo of Those You Wi.h
To Remember Will Be Placed On TI•e
MEMORIAL CHRISTMAS TREE
If Yoa Wteb To llave Your Loved One Remembered
CALL 1..304-882-8200

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Anderson Funeral Home
174 Layne Street · New Haven, WV 25265_ ··
James H. Anderson, Direcio,...

NIWI

Ext. 13

or .

Ext. 14

Other services
Ext. 3
Advertising

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Sunday, December 9th ll:OlJ.-3:00

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OPEN HOUSE

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RACINE - Racine Chapter
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town134, Or!ler of the Eaatem Star, ship Trustees to meet 6:30
Monday, at hall. New offices to p.m., Wed., Pageville Town
be installed. .
Hall.

Set·conferences

Louis the first PACE program nationwide to be peF"·
manently funded, allowin~
administrators to look int~ '
expanding the program.
.,
The PACE m~del began in
the 1970s in San Franciscq
when Chinese-Americans:
created On Lok Senior Services, a network of services
that allowed elderly residents
to remain in their family
homes. "On lok" is Can.t onese for "peaceful, happy
abode."
•
For Morris, .6 1/2 bou~
away from home each day ~~
enough to boost her inde.-;
pendent spirit.
.l

CONGRESSIONAL RECONCILATION
PRAYER SERVICE

~MS lop call~

0

Elderly find an alternative
to the. nursing hom.e·~:
.
ST' LOUIS (AP) - Lillian
Morris hasn't always had an
easy time of it. She battled
through anemia, a stroke
about 10 yean ago and more
recently, two broken hips.
But this much she knew:
She had lived on the same
patch of family land in south
St. Louis since 1939, at times
confined to bed or a wheel·
chair, and she was not a)lout
to give it up to move into a
nuning home.
That was when PACE, the
Program of All-Inclusive
Care for the Elderly, entered
the picture.
Combining transportation,
. adult day care and medical
treatment, the program is
designed to help frail and
often low-income senior citizens maintain their independence in their homes for
as long as possible.
PACE programs operate in

. .

SchoolS disinlss

RUTLAND - · Holiday party plans Joy," a story of the pilgrims and Indians
The mum made It's way to the Ametwere made when the Rutland Garden after a severe winter and a year oftribu- icas in the mid-18th century, at first ai·
Club met recently at tire home of Mat- lation, and the friendship that was shared. only a conservatory plant.
jorie Rice.
Rice's topic was '.'Late Bloomers is
Mums come in an array of color and
Tlie party wiD be held at the home of Truly an Autumn Joy." She talked about type, are economical to grow, require
Joy Combs on Dec. 17 at 1 p.m. There succulents as the perfect plant to ad and fuD sun, ample water and well drained
will be a potluck dinner and a gift the progression of color from a light soil.
·
• '·
exchange. Members are reminded to take warm pink in the summer to a
Betty Lowery read a portion of Georse
tray favors for the nursing home.
mahogany in the fall as the temperature Washington's Thanksgiving Proclamation
A , report was ~ven on the '~'!Cent cools. Sedium, she said, attracts bees and which designated the fourth Thursday as
flower show and congratulations ettend- butterflies. They like full sun to partial a day "to be devoted by the people to the
ed to the winners as well as those who shade, and well dr2ined soil.
service of that great and glorious Being.
helped with registration of guests and
In the spring she said the old stalks To promote the knowledge and practice ;
clerk for the judge.
should cut off as new growth appears. of true religion and virtue, and the
Devotions by Rice were titled "You Sedum. is virtually a pest and disease increase of science among us and gener- .
Keep ' the Faith," and Autumn. The. resistant and. quite easy to care for, she ally to grant unto all mankind, such a
arrangement for the month was an concluded.
.
degree of temporal prosperity as he alone
assortritent of fall flowers in a pumpkin . Joy Combs "talked about chrysanthe- knows the best."
vase. For roll call members talked about mums, noting that they are inexpensive,
Thanksgiving . did not beco)ll.e a
bulbs they have planted. Dues were col- available everywhere, and were once national holiday until 1863, 160 years
Jected and progr2m bqoks given out to reset)(ed for the aristocratic of Asia.
after the proclamation was made and the
the club members.
The plant originated in China. In 1910 pilgrims celebrated the first ThanksgivThe traveling prize furnished by Betty the first Imperial flower show was held ing.
··
Lowery was won by Pauline Atkins. Eva and the mum was named the flower of
Hint for the month pertained to the
Robson will furnish the December Japan. Mums were not democr2tized digging bulbs. It was suggested that after
prize.
until after World War II, she said. The bulbs are dug, they be left to cure, in tl}~,
Theme of the progrnm was "Winter is emblem of the Japanese flag is the sixteen sun for a day, then packed away in cardpedal mum not the rising sun, as so~pe . board_egg cartons with ,saw dust or peat
Near:•
Pauline Atkins read "Thanksgiving believe.
.
.
•·. -··• "-moss.and-placed in-a·-cool ·dry place.

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you for the infonmtion. I'm print:.-;
ing your letter to alert my readen ·
that stress can lead to "bingeing"
behavior that includes sex and food, '
as well as substance abuse.
So what's a person to do in an
effort to cope with stress? Recognize when you need help and locate
a support group, begin a program of.
regular cardiovascular exercise, yoga
or meditation, associate with positive·
people, and volunteer your free tinie.
to better the lives of those less fQrtUIt:lte in your local communities. AH
these are HEALTHY ways to banish ·
stress and take your ·mind off youT;
troubles. (And yes, everyone baclc•'
slides now and then; the' solution ;;·
to forgive yourself. re-dedicate yourselfto your goal and move forward.) '

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, '•, ,..._D.
Lcnruuy , .'
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Julius Codlnln

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Because you can work
. . SOCIAl. SECURilY
while receiving Social Secu.MANAGER IN ATHENS
rity benefits, it could be to
In January 2001, about your advantage for your
228,000 people filed for benefits to begin in January
Social Security retirement even though you don't plan
benefits. The· previous to retire until later in the
month o.nly 107,010 applied . year. You could apply your
for retirement benefits, and earnings that exceed the
duririg the year the average annual earnings limit to
monthly numb~r is about those months and still
15!),000 to 170,000. Why receive fuD benefit payments
for the year. The amount
the. ,i.ncre~e in J;muary?.
.T here , o,re maqy reasons person can earn and . still
for, r~tiJ:ing at the end of the receive benefits increases
year.. For one, .if you live each year. Your benefit ,
wh~J:e . winter means cold amount will be adjusted
air, snow and ice, it could be when you reach full retirea good time to give up the . ment age to consider those
daily .~;ommut~- and, ~ybe, months in which you didn't
head for sunny. warm receive a full benefit
weather. For another, if amount. And when you
yolire' due'a bonus or retire- reach full retirement age,
ment ·settlement that could your earnings won't affect
be deferred until the next your benefit amount no
ye:U';ir 'could 5a've you some matt~r how muc~ you earn.
tali 'money.
·
· ' · You can contact tis in s.WIf you're thinking about era! ways. When you visit
retiring within the next few www.ssa.gov you'll find a
months, now's the time to wealth of retirement inforcoritad Social Security. This mation, including what docwt11 give us adequate time to uments you'll need when
process your claim, take care you apply for benefits and
of any problems and be sure where to write to get a copy
your benefit payments can of your birth certificate or
bl;gin on time.
other vital records. You also
We ••nerally encourage can ·apply for retirement
people to 'notifY us about benefits while visiting the
three ·'monthS . b~fore the website.
·
Your other options for
month."in which they to
retire. In some . cases, your getting information about
choice of a retirement retirement or to file your
month could mean addi- retirement application are to
tiorial benefits for you and visit any local Social Secufiyour family. The compuu.~ ty office dr call at 1-800tiori varies ·based on your 772-1213. Be sure to uk for
earnings fOr the year and the the . Retirement Benefits
monih which you file,
booklet.

·cr.::

haw demorutnted that high le\'els
of strea can lead individuals to tum
to drugs, alcohol or tobacco in an
ananpt to alleviate their aruciety.
Stress is one of the most powerful
triggers for relapses in recovering
addicts, even after long periods of ·
abstinence.
We must all be attentive to how
we, our family, friends and colleagues
are re$ponding to these tngic events.
We must be alert to increases in substance abuse and seek professional
help, and encour2ge others to do the
same if it's needed.
Information about the prevention
and treatment of drug abuse can be
found on the National Institute on
Drug Abuse Web site at www.drugabuse.gov.- ALAN l. LESHNER,
PH.D., DIRECTOR, NATIONAL
INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUSE
DEAR DR. LESHNER: Thank

LOCAL BR1£Fs::·. :,

chased after Jan. 31, the penalty w~l be an additional J4 per
dog.1nd
$20 per kennel.
POMEROY • "- •lin~ of
• •
Licenses may be purchased
the Meigs Emergency SerHA.'RRISONVILLE - George D. ~..ower}; 72, Harrisonville, vice answered I 0 calls for at theo Meigs County Auditor's
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Julius Cochr2n, 80, of Point
assistance GOYer the ,..,.;kend. office, Meig'l' Cou'nty CourtPleasant, died Monday, Dec. 3, 2001, at Pleasant Valley Hospi- died~ Demnber I, 20011'1l his residence.
tal.
Bom February 13, 1929, in Mdcroti. Pa., he w:IS the son of the Units uiiPOfided as foDows:
house, M-F. &amp;30 a.m. till 4:30
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Art211gements are incomplete and will be announled by the lare George W. and Ida Geary Lowery. He was employed as a life
p.m.; .;r by using the blank
truck opaaror at foole Mineral and ""' an Army -.eteran of the
Satur\1-y, • 2:34
a.m., applicati'o n in The Daily SenW;Jclll!m Funeral Home.
Korean Conllict and a ~for Gen. Dan McGue.
Pom~~~liff Ap~ents, tinel or fiom Wtl).4m Dye,
Hr was 'lisa a brmer member of the Meig'l County Beagle Club · p~'bp
ey, J?ls~ .Valley M~igs Cqu11t): ~og.:.V..I'!i~n .
and member of the Harrisonville Presbyterian Churoh.
;H !&gt;:ot'!ta ;
•. •
. GALLIPOLIS - Lecta Mae Bush Long, 83, of Gallipolis,
Along with his parents, he .was preceded in death h): a daughter,
4:57 ~.m;, Ne~--~ Road,
died Sunday, Dec. 2, 2001, at Holzer Medical Cenler.
Esther McKinney; a grandson, Bradley Lewis McKinney; three asstsfed .!ii'. l'u~t: Oeorge
Born Feb. 10, 1918, in Mason County, W.Va., she was a bothers,Clyde,ClarenceandDonaldLowery; andtwosisten,Clara Lowery,&lt;leadon~mv:d;
RACINE :, - . , Southern
daughter of the late Charles Edward Criner and Nona Belle Jane Lowery,VioletMeyers.
8:09 a.m ., Rose Valley,
Local Schook .will be on a
(Henry) Criner.
.. He is SI.J!:vived by his wife, Catherine"~" E. Robson ~ asstst:ed. by Syracuse, . Ta~lor
She also was preceded in death by husbands, William M. of Harrisonville; a son and a dauf;ht.er.m-law, Tom and Debbie Hardwsck, Holzer Medrcal two-hour delay Wednesday-to
provide time for faculty pwBush, Jess~ Herman Gardner and Theodore Bailey; a daughteT, =J~~r=,~~~~;:' ~~-:.~~h~ C~~~;; p.m., HMC Clinic, fessional,do;veiQpment. .• .
Evelyn Louise Bush; one son, James Edward Bush; three a brOther~ sister-in-law, Arthur and Rose Lowery of Ft. Myers, Allie Wagner, HMC;
All buses wiD run tWo hours
gqndchildren; one great-granddaughter; one step~harln,WiUi~ Aa.;l\\'0 sisten and brothers-in-law, Betty and Ray Pyle of Clear3 :14 p.m., HMC Clinic, lat;r than qormal and no stuBl}sh; three brothers and ·two sisters, Lewis,
es an
"'
and El · R~ 0 fS hlstown Pa. siste ·
Janet Swisser, PVH;
dents should arrive a.t school
William Bush, Ernestine Moodispaugh and Virginia Allen.
water, Aa.,June
VID
te
• ;a
r-m.1 .
. .
.
law. EtheTI """'ry of Middlev&lt;&gt; ·and several nieces, nephews and
4:32 p.m ., North Third, befQte 10 a.m.
. Surv vmg are her husband,WrDiam Long; two sons, Robert ·
• . . , ,r··•
Carol Erwin, HMC;
Parent teacher/ conferences
Bush of Columbus and Roger B'!sh of Gallipolis; three dau~- co~es' will be heJa at 1 p. ' :on T~. December 4, 2001 ,at
5:48 p.m., Noble Summit
wiD be Wednesday evening
ters, Linda (Roger) Kem~er, Karen (Dorsi!) McCoy, Patner•. Fisber-Acree Funeral Home in~ddleport. Officiatirig will be Pas- Road, Marcia·, Capehart,
for the · second nine-week
(Jell) Watson, all of Gall1pohs; several grandchrldren greatGl R
d.,.., Krisana Poo ta;ak
PVH;
d hildre
d
hild
b h
·t
L Roy tor en owe an KeY.
n " ·
grading period, from '4 to 7
gran c
n an stepc
ren; one rot er; SIS ers, e
Buri:ll tvill foDow in Wells Cemetery friends may visit on MonSunday, 5:41 a.m., FlatCriner of Odd, W.Va., Hazel Nichols of ~olumbus, and Judy day December 3 , 200I, from 6-9 p.m. a~ the funeral home and until woods Road, Sandra Lewis, p.m. Parents can call the
school to schedule a confer. ' f
.
1i esday
HMC·,
Fields ~f New Haven W.Va ·and several meces and nephews.
.
• · ·•
M C
M
tmte o service on u
.
The funeral will be I p.m. Wednesday at . c oy- oore
Mem~l:Ontribulianslnaybemade.to:A.mericanCancerSoci11:56 a.m . ., ~ylberry ence if the child did not bring
a confen\rice piper home.
Funeral Home, Wether~~lt Chapel, G.allipolis, ~th Pas~ ety; Mei.f~ty-lkirl:cb..P.O.:ll'&lt;m. 7.03, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769; or Avenue, Lisa Haggy, t1MC;
Larry Drummond offictatmg. Bunal Will be m Mound l·hll Harrisonville Presbyterian Church, c/o Presbyterian Ministry in
5:08 p.m., MinersviUe HiD,
Cemetery.
Meig'l County 165 North Fourth Street, MiddlepoTt. Ohio 45760. Eli White, HMC, '
Friends may call at the funeral home fiom 6 to 8 p.m. Tues'
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day.
TUPPERS PLAINS '
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Eastern Local Scl!ool oDistrict
. THE 'PLAINS· Adela Loyse Newell, 87, former!~ of Long Bot- ·
plans pjlten~-teaclrer. :cqnfer. .
'
ionl, ' Pl~t Hill, The ~and Athens, died on Sunday, De~ 2,
ences on Thursday fiom 4 to
· REEDSVILLE- Lillie Murphy, 94, Reedsville, died Satur- 2001,at'Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
POMEROY .-. Dog and 7 p:m. Parents should call :the
day, December I, 2001, at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
kennel
, lic~ps~.~ . f9r , the respective ' schools to in'i'arige
She~ born bnAug. 13,1914 in·Looneyville, W.Va., daughter of
Athens.
t!Je late James W. and Jerushi'a . Irene WellS Stalnaker. She aitended upcoru,ing Ylflr ~re 'Q..QW. ayail- an appointment. · ·
• Born July 21,1907, on Taylor's Ridge in Athens County, she 'school ~t Long 'Bottom, and was a. former employee of East Ele- a~k, ,said ~l!flitq~ N~ncy
.
'
was the daughter of the late Clarence Leroy and Katie Davis mentar'y ,Schoql iu)d Ohiii University: and was a member of First Cam.pbeD. , . , .. ,
.
Winn and was a homemaker.
' · ·Christilin Chwcb in Athens.
'DC?g licenses are required by
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by three . s~~g are her daughters and Sons-in-law: Lois Ashcraft of law, which m;mdates every
brothers, Guy, Ralph and Floyd Winn.
Loris,~C., ~and David Lindsey of Pickerington, and Carolyn person wh&lt;;&gt; owns, kreps, or
She is survived by her husband of 68 years, Melyin Murphy; and MaX Burchifield ofCh;Ipin, S.C.; twins, joyce (Bob) Dailfy of harbor;s a dog n.tqre than 3
MIDDLEPORT - The
a 1ister, Hazel Murphy of Reedsville; and several nieces and The Plains and .Royce {Lllcille) NeweD of Reedsville; a son and . n;toq.tlw..PII\ .sh;)Q,, p\lr~p'\le a
Wesleyan ·. Holiness · Bible
nephews.
·
daugbte~-in-law, Harold 'and BellY;Newell of Ch.Ster: 14 ~d~ ' li~e~~ f9,r. th~\ ~og , before Academy · cboir 9f ·'·Point
- Graveside services will be at I I a.n!. Tuesday at Athens _children and 14 great-gr.indchildren; and a brother and SISter-m:law, Jan. 3..~ o.f e~Hh y~~r•.~ifPlpbell
Plea~aitt, 'w.Va., will pmtnt a
County Memory Gardens. There 'will be no calling hours. ··· ,Guy and Evie Stalnaker ofA)cron. ·
,
.
,.
. sa/d. .. ,
IT~~ , ~ost .o f each dog Chdstmas program, at 7:30
· Arrangements were handled by White Funeral Home. ,
Besides her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband,
Blaine,· in 1988; two grandchildren; three sisters: Evelyn Sedgwick, litense is $4 and kennel We4nesday · at Middle'pott
Pd!~ ~utti~. and Gertrude TDcy; three brothers: HuQ&lt;iTt,J~es ;md ' li~ense;~jQ.Jl~~ ~el)f!el. Wpur- We!)~yan Bible Churcll, ··
. ' - ,.
I
·1'• I
, ,
,
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·
Williain Stalnaker. .
' ' ."
MIDDLEPORT -AliceV.Wagner, 7J, Middleport, died on :·•" Se~ces Will be, lield tm Wedn~ Def. 5, 2001, at'11 a.m. at ,
, -.
from ·t.h e _c ollectio,n ofJu.dae
s-unday, Dec. 2, 2001, at Holzer Medical Center iri Gallipolis: J~ .SfSo~ Funeral Horne in Athens With Dr.James Grooms offi- ·
T~s.
Robert Buck were also fta· Arr2ngements are under the direction ofCremeens F~neral ciatin~: Burial will foDow at Reedsville Cemetery.
ture exhibits for the open
Home in Racine and will be announced upon completion.
Frii!fids may call at the funeral home on Tuesday fiom 7 to 9 p.m.
,
house.
..
·· Memorial contributions may be made to First Christian Church,
from ..._AI
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out '6o Mai.lo , rias, l&gt;oth .
24W.State St.,Athe~,Ohi.
o. ...( -, . .
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11
~J~dy'
":rl
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..
ope 11 house.
,
sel,ect~d fron;t th&lt;; va~t cpllecMASON, W.Va. --Judith A. '1udy" Zirkle, 56, Mason, died.
Decoratioqs for tile tree tion of Betty Dean also were
~
sentiment in three sentences,
Saturday, December 1, 2001, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
were
.n;tade by East~rn ele- on display, and there ~o
. Born May 18, 1945, in Mason, she was the d;lughter oft~~-.• ; : -~ ~R
"Iloy,e, it: f love i~. U9ve i~.'' .:
late Herman Ralph and Maysel G1bbs Ztrlde ~nd )"llS a hous~ ,, ,
, , , ··-" . , .
J; . ~ !:;ll3rles HumJth~J. ~~\!~ ~en taw stwJeljtS , of.. 1;\~cky deJI;lons,tp~~ the age-old art
of c,an,il)el!taipng .wa,s B~ve~\Y
keeper at Lakin State Hospital and an employee ofWal-Mart
Page AI
tive director of Main Street, Epvv~r,&lt;4, ·~~ ~eachF~·., .
·
R~ti,re~
,
.
~e.acher
Ho;vard
Felty.
,. .
.
in the craft department.
was likewise pleased with the
P~rker
brougi,t
in
a
.
crokiEntertammg
,
Saturday
. She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Jeffrey Lee and got •but ·of their car and turnout of the e\otnt, which
Brenda Zirkle of Mason; a grandson; a stepgrandson; two walkeci through the park- saw more than 400 cars with• nf&gt;l~ , bo•w\ . al!~,d~ll}.ors,tr~.t; afternoon with a medl,ey 9f
brothers and sisters-in-law, Ralph Wayne and Jean Zirkle of wide display.
in the first few hours ·of open• ·· ed j!pw to pl~y the game. Chnstmas mustc was the bell
· Hartford Loren and Linda Zirkle of Mason; a sister and broth"Qh; this is wonderful," Jim ing.
·
:· "·· Few, &lt;;m-loo~ers , had , ever ch?ir of a dozen or, so E,~t­
hea{4, pf it, , •v " , , ,
ern ,t;ligh, Sci,~ql ~tu~~'\ts
,.
' Barbara and Thomas Jo h nson o fM ason; an d severa1 , sa1'd. ''I
er-in-law,
' · Io ve 1't because my
· · ··"I think we've had •a v...v
-·' ·
:He
said
the
game
w~s
a
dlf%ted
Chn1$1:1~n .. ,
wife'.'isl,.fiom So.u th' Carolina, 1uccessful
first ·" ' nil!:ht," ·
nephews.
· ·
·
··
d • d • famjly. fay~:&gt;~if.~ wher he and
!!,was,,t,h~ fi~st pubh~ p,e r' ·Funeral services will be at II a.m. Tuesday at Fogleson~ and everywh ere you go they Hump'hr·eys sai ;• ' ·An '· 1ts
his
six
\!roth~(S
and
a
sjster
forll,la.nce
for ,, th~ group ,
Thcker Funeral Home in Mason. Officiating will be Pastor . have cltris and it's about time going to be better each week,
which ~as orgamzed less
they get it here."
we're .. going to do a · litde were, grpwillg ~P·
John Hayman.
of
crokinole,
as
Parkthan
a month ago.
Goal
Burial wiD follow at Zerkle Cemetery.
The Roberts expressed · more.
~11ndar, aft~rnoon.'s .•n.tertheir appreciation for Point
Humphreys said that due to e 1 e,;RI~\ned. is t~ shoot ,discs
. Friends may visit today from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
w.ith
lh~
tlick
of
a
fi~ge.~
into
tams,nent
md~,de4, ~~hday
J&gt;leasabi's night time Christ- ramy weather, the workers
mas parade and were quick to · were only able to set up about· s~o~1!11! , cirfl~s .. th~ ~·p~er, m\', ~'~ . pr~-:sd~d , liy t~e
decide , to dtive by Krodel to 80 percent of the displays and .. of course is the one comrng Me1gs Commumty Band
directed ' by Roge~ Williams .
visit the new display.
that more would be added up ~ith' ;h~ biggest s~ore.
An early Chinese checker and sponsored by the River· "When she (my wife) said over the next few weeks. ··
set,
wooden blocks, several bend Arts Council.
they were doing this, we said,
The display will be up until
Federal
Mogul
1.02
18
95
AEP-41.25
Cookies and punch were
Peoples - 48.63
·
'Yieah, ,we're going,' " Jim the end of the year1· ·and: lit old dolls, Pat Holter's bell
PepsicoUSB-18.48
Arch Coal- 19.99
collection,
and
;~~tiqu!'
toys
seive.Cboth
afternoons.
added, then summed• up his from ·6 oto 10 p.m. dai Y. · .
Premier- 8.50
Gannett - 68.45
Akzo-44.93
General Electric
AmTechSBC- 37.38
Roei&lt;Well-18.50
Rocky
Boots - 6.05 ' • ---~'.:..':----.:.:."-:--.:.......:· :...·~"::-----:--:-~--;------:;---------..--:-:-:-~38.50
Ashland Inc. - 42.65
11 · '
GKNLY-4
AT&amp;T-17.49
AD Shell - 48·34
dioxide emissions and .require tion ·at~ ' espe~\ally con'c erned
"O\lno'vestnienf.ii .starting
Harley Davidson
Bank One - 37.44
sears45.51
.
•
.
b
.
.
d
.
t
a .. sa~·d
...._.
.
Shoney's- .265
lower emissions of mercury · a out Its propose 1•mrts on o paY·.q..,,
. Ja'eki·~ ""'"'
52.58
BLI-9.40
Kmart-6.10
Bob Evans- 22.04
Wai-Mart- 55.15
and carbon dioxide from carbon-dioxide emissions. di~ecto~ of the ·Ohio Coal
Kroger - 25.32
28
BorgWamer - 46
~:~~~lon
Page A1
power plants.
Preside?! .. Bush ·~~tier ~his De'l'elopment Office; which
Lands End- 45.95
Champion- 2.91
Dally stock reports are: .
,
Coal and utility interests say year 'rev~rsed a ~ampa1&amp;" haftle~i1 c!'itldte.t for spendCharming Shops - ltd.- 13.92
NSC-19.39
4.94
.l'lh.me. pcrelovloslnugs:._· sa.id Kurt Waltz~r. ·clean-a.ir the proposal would · cripple P.l,edge to regulate the emis- ing titUltoii'f:$. ~(d\lqJl~m&gt;?.,P~Oak Hill Financial - qthueo~
City Holding -11.50
,
••
u•
jec~ .- tha! a»e IQ, p;$..,t. m
15.83
Col-16.82
day's transactions, pro- program_manager at the. Ohro the . Ohio e~onomy.
. ., srons. ·'
"'
commercial advancements.
OVB-23.25
00- t3.50
vlded by Sm•th Partners , Environ~ntal Council. "tf all·. . "It 11 obv1ous that whtl~we
Supporters of the legislaBBT-34.49
DuPont - 44.34
at Advest Inc.
' ·
,
,
,
..
. IS
. gomg
. I' to • h"ave a t1on,
· sponsored b Y sen. James
Construction of the new
of Ohio
s coal
plants
movea, . ar,e do, mg
tr. rds 1 Vt' ·id ''t
ld plants mighl open a hew inart'l _t_hisc we woul4 b~- clo,se_ to :. ~rama.~ic impact on our , J e o • - ., sa ' wou
keaq~ Qhio'!·higl!-!t,llfiir c&lt;,&gt;al
:: e\if1l.in~ting t)1e leadrl)g q)lse natioq ' .. economy and... ou• encourage more· investment while complyigg, wi~h clean• of ai~ po~ptiqq."
. .
competmve posrtron .. m the ; in clean-coal plants. · •
air regulations.
•Plans for the cleaner coal · world marke~lace, . . Sen .
Stille ·officials·· are opposed
. '
b~rnrrs come as Congress . George Voinovich, R.-Ohio, • to the Jeffords bill ,' but have
(USPS 213-960)
o
Ohio Y111ill' P»bll-g Co.
debates legislati~n that would said during a Nov. IS ·hearmg been quick to embrace the
Publl- e..,y -attornoon. Monday
mandate fUrther reductions in . on the leg1slatron.
promise of clean-coal techthrough Fridav. 11, Coun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio~
S~ond-ctass
· Correction Polley
Opponents of the legisla- nolo~. ,.
nitrogen-oxide and sulfurour main concern In all stories is poolaQo paid .. PornercYv.
Ml:lnblt: The AtloOiated PreBS and •
' .
to be accurals. II you know of an the
Ohio --Assoclallon.
:
error in a story, callll!e newsroom
SoOd oddreos correc· .•
at (740) 992-2158.

, , ,.

Rutland Garden Club makes holiday plans ..:

· BY VAU!EA T-PION

Community C1lendllr II
publle!led 11 1 trw Hrvloe to
non-p~
wlehlng to
1nnounoe
nge 1nd 1peo
ot11 mnta. The c1l111dar 11
not clellgnecl · to promote
Hle1 or fu~re of ..,y
lypl. !tame 1re printed only
11 1peoe pennlta lnd 01nnot
bt'gillraillll d to be prtnlldl
ipeCiflo number ol Cltlyl.

And return to the honor and the
normalcy """ seek.
Yes, let it rain.
· Let the souls cry of those fiom
wars past,
Free their tean fiom the sky.
Let them weep and cleanse us
fiom such sordid dismay
So we may once again appreciate
A bright, sunny day.
DEAR ABBY: AJ we struggle
with the emotional impact of the
large-scale damage and loss of life,
and the feelings of uncertainty following the terrorist attacks on New
York City·and Washington, D.C., we
must be aware that stressful times can
be particularly difficult for people
who are vulnerable to substance
abuse or recovering fiom addiction.
Research and clinical experience

____:Obituaries ~

•
.,

Cleansing tears erase stain of terrorist attacks

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge A3

Pomeroy, Mldclleport, Ohio

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·"Ma{ the sacred heart of Jesus be
adored;, glorified, loved . and pres~o-ed
·ihroughout the world now and forever;
Sacred Heart of Jesus, Pray for Us, .St;
Ju'de worker of miracles, Pray for Us."
' Say 1this prayer nine times a day for
nine consecutive days and your wish will
be gra~te'd. It has never been kn~~n 't~
fail.
~·· ,, ,~;~··
Upon receiving your wish, this prayer
must be published in an active newsp~~er'
.within Oii.f month. .
'I

. ' a....-.....
~~ - - - - - -......__.

l_--~------------~------------------~,t
u.
I'

,,

�..
0 p1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

&lt;

Mond.y, DIC:IPhr J, 2001

:.-=...-·

tRtdmm, R.edwomen win, Page 8
··NFL Roundup, Page 10

The Daily Sentinel

Southem girls rip Lady Vikes

~HIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn Llwls
Managing EdHor

KaY

Charlene Hoeflich

Lttun totM Nil«..., •elcolu.

n.,

8lllwdly'a

lll,.n.-~.
7JHo ~"'"'*"'tiNe.,._,.

o.n. .

RACINE - Jumping out to a 363 start, the Southern Tornadoes
showed signs of its past tradition-rich
teams in pounding the Symmes Valley
Vikings 66-30 Satunhy afternoon in a
girls non-conference varsity basketball
contest in Racine.
Southern is now 2-0 overall, while
Symmes drops to 2-1.
Again every girl did her share in
contributing to the Southern win, and
nine girls hit the scoring coluinn.
Sopohomore Deana Pullins came off
the bench to jump~start the Southern

. lkr1s

sluRM N J.u ,_. 300...,. AI',.,_,
. . .at ... .J,IId -~ltdluk
Nil IUUjpal kiUn will ,.. ,.,.,... Utt.n •lkMid .... ill rOOtl ....... ~,,

(In ~dj«t"' ~

BY Seem Wou:E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

f'ltpB I '4

D11ne
Hill
Controller

&lt;&gt;-ral Manager

Co..,~~

MDRdiiJ, Dec:1•hr :J, 2001

MoNU\Y's

Ohio Valley Publishing CO.

MlisltiiiJ

Pages

._.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

The Daily Sentinel

·~.

.,.., """•Ja; I,,.......,.,

..........
1174, Scd1 Gala 35 .
GMa
SOI.hm 88, ~'~diet~

;
H,..,.,. tlw~., oftMOINo
MIINy

IUiku olll.-.·in 1toml.

ProFacllll
Slnll(a Olmll -

~Gtvnils

MBri 21' DerM!r 10
Oibul13,Daboi110

OHIO VIEWS

Naw,. id17, N.Y.Jels 16
P ' 1... 39, hianapdls 27
~21,Mhllilda16

New Odeans 27, Carob 23
1llri1B Bay 16. &lt;l a ... 13. or

Backfire

Ten ss·m 31, CIIMillnl15

Seale 13, &amp;.1 De(p 10. OT
Dalas20, Waslillgbl14
St l..olia 35, Alnl6
MzDna 34, Oaldlnl31, OT
Swi Fta daw 35, aAialo 0

'

Military tribunals j()i, ··.
terrorists cloud image a/freedom

.

... '·.

• The (Youngstown) Vindicator: Americ:pts ate antry.
They've seen the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center
collapse before their eyes, ~nowing that thousands of men and
women were in those buildings as they crumbled.
And so it might be understandable if Americans looked the
other way while President Bush and Atrorney General john
Ashcroft promulgate orders and pursue policies that are
unAmerican.
Ashcroft has effectively suspended the Sixth Amendment
right to legal counsel by telling the Justice Department to
monitor conversations between a suspected terrorist and his
lawyer.
.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department is still holding an ·estimated 1,000 persons who were picked up shortly after Sepl. 11
without charging them with a crime
Most recently, President Bush announced that he has authorized the military to conduct trials of apprehended terrorists
and their supporters abroad.
.
These secret trials would have their own rules of evidence
and wouldn't require a unanimous finding.There .would be no
right of appeal.
In the early days of our war on terrorism, President Bush told·
the American people that one of the reasons Osama bin Laden
and his ilk hated America was because we are a freedom-loving nation.
, If the );'.resident pur~ues thi~ ill,-~onc~!ve~.!l[ategy, he will no
longer be abfe to argue that our sense ofJUStice i5 superior to
that of our enemies.
•. The Cincinnati Post: Suppose you are in Congress and
you get together with some of your colleagues and say, "Let's
give the very biggest busine~'"" in our favorite industry lots and
lots of caxpayer money, but next to nothing, of course, to the
small operators, and then let's dress it up like we are heroes.
How about it?"
This goes on, you know. Just the other day, the Senate Agriculture Committee voted for an $88 billion bill mainly benefiting large farms that have plenty of money already but do not
terribly mind receiving more if their legislative friends will
supply it.
..
.
,
· There are spokesmen for reform, those who fight for reduced
subsidies and more equitable subsidies and more reliance on
the market, \mt over time, the billions-for-biggies crowd seems
to do most of .the winning.
Even now, when you would think members of Congress
would have a keener awareness than normal of what the
national interest demands of them, they are busily up to their
old agriculture-policy tricks.
The Bush administration stands for at least some degree of
reform. It will be interesting to see whether it has the courage
to stick by its convictions when the politics get tough.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

be noncitizens, but they can include
longtime legal immigrants who are re;idents of the United States. The evidence against them will include
hearsay - rumors and other unverified
information about which a wimess has
no personal knowledge. And if a death
sentence is imposed, it will be enough
for two-thirds of the military officers
presiding to agree. (Even in a coun
martial, there must be a unanimous
COLUMNIST
vote for capital punishment.) And the
standard of proof will be "below a readamental, the House must hold hear- sonable doubt."
ings in the very near future before we
These are by no means the only
adjourn for the year." Without con- "immutable principles" .o f our system
gressional and judicial review, Barr .of justice - and our identity ·as a
adds, what the administration is doing nation - that are being eviscerated by
to the Constitution in this time of the president.
patriotic fervor "wiD likely set preceConsider that more than a -thousand
dents that will come back to haunt us people are being held secretly in
terribly."
detention without their names or the
Yet, on the front page of The New charges against them being released York Times' "Week in Review" of while their families and sometimes
Nov. 18, George Washington Universi- their lawyers have no idea about the
ty Law School professor Jeffrey Rosen, prisons they are 'beirtg·transferred to.
who is also legal affairs editor of The The Nov. 17 issue. of The Economist,
New Republic, magisterially assures us not a notably liberal publication,
that in all of these anti-terrorism reports:
courses of ~&gt;lion, "America hasn't yet
"An affidavit from the FBI, saying it
is
unable to rule out the possibility ~f
come close to abandoning any
immutable principles of its national links to the (terrorist) attacks, has been
institutions." Earlier in the article, he widely applied to keep people in cus.
had cited "American constitutional- tody who have not been charged with
•
ism" as the foundation of those institu- . such links. Some lawyers claim that thi1
inverts the normal requirement of the
cions.
The Wall Street Journal, on the other
law (by) demanding that the defen,~
hand, has derisively charaeterized critA particularly pertinent response to
dants prove a negative to . secure
ics of the Bush · military tribunals, those whb 'urge civil libertarians to
release."
.
~·
which will permit no appeals to Amer- · ·calm down is not from an academic, but
Another citize;,, Patrick Downes of
ican courts, including the Supreme in a letter by an alert citizen, Holly
Watertown, Mass., said in a Nov. 18letc
Court _ as "couch-potato civil tiber- Gaudreau of San Francisco, to The
ter to Newsday: "It would serve Bush
tarians." Appeals can he directed only . New York Times:
well to be reminded of the fact that he
to the president and the secretary of
"How do we actually determine
was elected president, not crowned as' a
defense. Yet, Congressman Bob Barr, whether certain individuals are terrormonarch." It is Bush who selects defenwho hardly fits The Wall Street jour- ists without a fair judiciJll process based
dants
for the military tribunals on his
·
nal 's cancature
- and who signed on our Constitution?"
own "reason to believe" they should be
The Bush military tribunal trials will
Ashcroft's anti-terrorism bill - says of
tried. This is the American way?
'
the president's further limiting of due be private, with no juries, and the
(Nat Hento.Jf is a nationally renowned
process and other basic liberties:
defendant will not have his or her
at41hority
ot1 the First Amendment and the
"These changes are so vast and fun- choice of a lawyer. The defendants will

Nat
Hentoff

Bill of Rights.)

''

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Dec. 3, the 337th day of 2001. There are 28
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 3, 1967, surgeons in Cape Town, South Africa, led
by Dr. Christiaan Barnard performed the first human heart
transplant ou Louis Washkansky, who lived 18 days with the
new heart.
On this date: ,
In 1818,lllinois was admitted as the 21st state.
In 1828,Andrew Jackson was elected president of the United States.
In 1925, "Concerto in F," by George Gershwin, had its world
premiere at New York's Carnegie Hall, with Gershwin himself
at the piano.
In 1947, the Tennessee Williams play "A Streetcar Named
Desire" opened on Broadway.
.
In 1953, the musical "Kismet" opened on Broadway.
In 1960, the musical "Camelot" opened on Broadway.
In 1967, the Twentieth Century Limjted, the famed luxury
train, completed its final run from New York to Chicago.
In 1979, 11 people were killed in a crush of fans at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum, where the British rock group The
Who was performing.
·
In 1980, Bernadine Dohrn, a former leader of the radical
Weather Underground, surrendered to authorities in Chicago
after more than a decade as a fugitive.
In 1984, more than 4,000 people died after a cloud of gas
escaped from a. pesticide plant operated by a Union Carbide
subsidiary in Bhopal, India.
Ten years ago: Radicals in Lebanon released American
hostage Alann Steen, who'd been held captive nearly five years.
Embattled White House chief of staffJohn H. Sununu resigned;
he was succeeded by Samuel K. Skinner.
Five years ago: Four people were killed in a subway bombing in southern Paris.

I

BUSINESS MIRROR

,

Maybe the seller should give consumers the stori
BY JOHN "CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - RetJilers and other
business people worried that customers
are loath to spend can take.a tip from the
automotive and housing industries: Give
'em the store and they'D beat a path to
your door.
This may not be the most profitable
way to do business, but it may clean the
shelves of inventory and 'give a spur to
consumer confidence, which the surveys
suggest is sagging right before the holidays.
But at the very same time, cars and

houses, the two costliest items in the
household · budget, have built higher
their already· impressive sales figures and
seem likely to continue doing so for a
while.
Giving strength to these two markets
are extreme circumstances, zero interest

financing and rebates by carmakers and
low-rate mortgages. and flexible finai1cing for homebuyers. Add smart consumers to the reasons why.
October sales of existing homes rose
5.5 percent to an annual rate of 5.17
million units, while car sales zoomed
26.4 percent, a remarkable jump in view
of an already ni:ar-,ecord year at showrooms.

The buyers are out there, as can be
attested to by anyone caught in a shopping mall trdffic jam, but they are a
canny lot who recognize they have the
seller in a noose and are cold-hearted
enough to tighten it.
They are supported by what could be
O\Cer-publicized surveys claiming consumers are depressed about world
events, their own persona) financial sitt.I7"

'
~

profits.
Such efforts might also be at · the
e_xpense of next year's sales, as buyers
Simply act a few months earlier thai)
planned. And incentives to buy ne~
rather than used have already depresso;,d
used-car sales, even of late models. You
just don't see beat-up "station" cars ip.
suburban parking lots anymore.
'·
But any negative impact of incentives.
on next year's sales may be secoQdary tQ
spurring people out of their lethargy and
letting next year takes care of itself. By
next year, sellers can theorize, the vari;;
ous depressing statistical ev1dence Of
recession might be disappearing.
Moreover, those negative consumer
surveys that feed on themselves may
show more optimism next year. And.
anyway, it might be realized that suc'll
surveys are mainly lagging rather tha~.
leading indicators.
''· ·
That is, that they are more reflective
the past and negative news events tha'h
forecasters of the future. Giving buyers
the store now might be costly, but it
could return consumers to their old
spending pattern.

ations and about warnings of tougher
times to come.
But if this is so, at least to the degree
claimed, it seems to be contradicted by
those car and housing sales, What consumers may be testing is how great a
deal they can squeeze from retailers.
they lay in wait.
Admittedly, there are consequences in
building current sales, since retailers have
already gone beyond the conventional
steps. Everything, every day, already
seems to be on sale these days, and shoppers seek more.
As a result, economists warn of the
possibility that even more extreme sales
efforts might only be at the expense of
profits. Merrill Lynch, for example,
reported automakers spent an average of
$2,261 per vehicle on incentives iri
aolrn Ctmtliff is a busi ..ess analyst for Tiw
October, an amount that can only shave Associated Press.)
· '''·

of.

\

.

.lj&amp;Nortl Qldla 83. Geolgla Tedl
77
· " IJ!ollol'ididaillllbll• 00, w. KsnUl&lt;y 75
1. Cent. Michigan 79, LDycla "

BY JoN WILL
OVP CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Eagles
held their home opener last Saturday night
against the South Gallia Rebels. Coach Caldwell's troops were excited and anxious to get
the season underway. South Gallia fans and
players were curious to see how their season
was going to begin. The Rebels have a new
basketball coach, and with a new coach, there
is always a renew(? interest in that particular
I
sport.
Eastern's final four run last year has put
th~m on top as the team to J,eat. South Gallia
came into the contest looking to knock off the
Eagles. However, things went south for the
Runnin' Rebels after the first quarter. The
Eagle defense held the Rebel arrack to only 5
points in the second and third quarters, rendering them defenseless against the Eagle
offensive onslaught. Eastern got things together after the first quarter and put the Rebels
dow!l 74-35.
. ,
Eastern drew first blood, but the Rebels
railed their troops and with a Kyle Mooney
field goal, and Josh Waugh three-point goal,
South Gallia jumped up 5-2 on the stunned
Eagles. A Jason Kimes steal and three-point

,nw-...72

: N;;b:sllll65, Wdbd 46

.

CJtW a 111. N.C.-Win*lglan 54 .
•! ltlustrl7'5. Norti T8IGIS tl9

'

1

• . 1.&lt;¥*1 MaryrrartOO, TexasMM

,78
Padlkl77,.Mdlll B 64
&lt;: Patal id 79, OleiP178
·
BB&amp;TO I:
Flrll Round
ca udu 84, Geaga \Misli 'It
~78
..
• ~ 81, Pih:ebl53
!0 '

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

QW!Cikwoll$

:' l'l.lt1le 89, Olllda1l, Mch. 71
\'

'Third Pllce
\Wan &amp; Maiy74,Akrm 62

1, 1,

'•

.

PeA

o.ne.

Slnlly'a
. Bcsblll6,1bnn:l69
. Mal (.tis 93, PI~ 87
&gt;: Dalal 120, Saclarnar*l114, OT
- Saallle 97, t.I\'81H!e 83
.0~~~1)3..~72

-· Marshall out.
~ro1ec1o in Top 2s
' ' HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
~P) Marshall's loss to
'Toledo in · the Mid-American
:conference championship
jame cost the Herd its spot in
.The Associated Press college
Tootball poll.
t-·Ranked 20th last week,
Marshall lost to Toledo 41-36
~riday night.
'
~ Toledo (9-2) is ranked 25th
J~ the AP poll this week. Mar;;hall (10-2) fell to one spot
,out of the rankings.
.. . In the ESPN-USA Today
coach's poll, Marshall fell from
·•18th to 25th, while Toledo
,q:mains unranked.
Marshall plays East Carolina
(6-5) in the GMAC Bowl on
-Dec.l9 in Mobile, Ala. Toledo
will play against a team from
Conference USA in · the
Motor City Bowl on Dec. 29
il;l Pontiac, Mich.

Southem sets
booster meeting
' I

'1 RACINE -The Southern
:1\thletic Boosters will meet
Wednesday in the high school
tafeteria.
.
'•·The meeting will be to
finalize plans for the 20012002 winter sports season and
tO make plans for spring
worts. The meeting begins at

?·p.m.
.,

.

' '

Smoltz will stay
,,. In Atlanta
~)TLANTA (AP) -

John
~oltz, who thrived with
X~ant.i after being moved to
the bullpen, agreed to a $30
lllillion, three-year contract
~th the Braves.

•••••

,I
'•
·u,
'• .
Send your local sports news
tp the Sentinel by fax at 9922)S7 or by e-mail to
sports@mydailysentinel.com

sica Myers, Ginny Young, Ashley
Crawford, and Leslie Aoyd each had
three apiece.
Southern made several young mistakes early in turning the ball over, but
still managed to jump to a 10-0 lead.
Southern's defensive intensity was at a
peak and Symmes Valley was unable to
handle the pressure, coughing up five
early turnovers. Overall, Symmes Valley committed 28 turnovers.
Leading 4-0 on an Amy Lee drive
and Brigette Barnes steal and lay-in,
Southern did not erupt until Pullins
came into the game when Rachel
Chapman got in early foul trouble.

Rachel Chapman and Katie Sayre
did a tremendous job defensively on
All-SOC center Karen Bell, who
scored 17 points Thursday against
Green.
Pullins entered the game and
zipped her first rwo shots as well as
grab a steal for a lay in, while sparking
Southern to a 13-0 first period shut
out. Meanwhile, Chapman, Lee, and
Barnes all collected two foul&lt; each
and got in early foul trouble.
The Southern bench came in and
did a super job picking up the defen-

....... -

5outhem. 7

Eagles ick up where
they le off last year

NCAA Min.. P I "''
Slnlly'a o.n.
&amp;jraalle 91, Abrly, N.Y. 65
\\ii II U i 83.l..elil1175
lliAie 96, Clti I11011 00
Fbtda 81, "llilro&amp; 65
LSU 91,1\btl• e!Ia 1151.54
rn 11 t1• St 73, Scd1 Alabama

Dismantling the Constitution: Is this Americas way?
Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson was also the chief American prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials. Earlier,
. before he was appointed to the
Supreme Court, Jackson had been
Attorney General of the United States.
"Government · power in wartime," he
wrote, "is usually exercised in haste aod
excitement when calm legislative consideration is difficult. It is exercised in a
time of patriotic fervor that makes
moderation unpopular."
While President Bush has been commendably firm and reasonably calm in
conducting the war on terrorism
abroad, he and his attorney general,
John Ashcroft, have been exemplifying
Robert Jackson's warning and another of his observations - that our
·system of government is most dangerous in wartime.
·
· Even more dangerous is that this
~dministration's more recent dismantling of our constitutional rights, like
the separation "o f powers- particularly right now, with regard to Congress
- is being rushed through.
As a Newsday editorial of Nov. 18
said of the president: "By unilaterally
clearing the way (for military tribunals
io prosecute suspected terrorists), he
has in one stroke moved to put Congress, the courts and the public on the
sidelines during what could be one of
history's sternest tests of the United
States as a nation of laws."

offense with a game-high 19 points.
Th.e sophomore speedster hit 7-of-10
from the field and also joined with
Brigette Barnes to lead the team in
steals with four each.
Amy Lee hit 7-of-1 0 free throws
and lead the team with three assists
and 13 points, while Katie Sayre netted eleven points, Rachel Chapman
and Brigette Barnes had seven and six
points respectively. Ashley Dunn and
Ashley Roush added three each, and
Tara Pickens and Brooke Kiser each
had two each.
Symmes Valley was led by Anna
Bodmer with eight points, while Jes~

DOUBLE TEAM - A pair of Eagle defenders challenge
South Gallla's Stephen Reece Saturday. (Jon Will)

play tied the game at 5-5.
Eastern began to press with five minutes
remaining, but the early ptessure was ineffecrive as Mooney and company moved ahead
12-8 .w ith 1:50 left to play. Mooney's threepoint bucket would be the field goal scored
this half. Sophomore Nathan Grubb came off
the bench and made two timely steals, the !atter of which he converted to two points, ·
bringing the Eagles within two. Simpson
grabbed a steal and converted, and the Eagle
pressure generated yet another turnover. With
only seconds remaining, the "Eagles put the ball
into Chris Lyons' hands, who hit the shot from
· half court a~ the buzzer, boosting Eastern up by
three.
Lyons momentous shot carried over into
the second quarter. The Eagle defense held the
Rebels scoreless as they went on a 33-point
tear. Finally, after an Eagle foul, the Rebels
were able to up their score by one. Foul shots
were the name of the game for both teams,
Each team missed several opportunities liom
the much frequented charity stripe. At half
time, South Gallia found themselves trailing
47-15.
·

PluM.-

Buckeyes put away
·UNC-Wilmington
The game was transformed ~~~;\~
COLUMBUS (AP) When Ohio State switched during a 5:16 span in the
to a zone defense midway first half.
The Seahawks stunned the
through the first half,it was a
change of pace that caught Buckeyes with a 12-2 run,
N.C.-Wilmington totally off scoring . six points on
guard in the Buckeyes' 80-54 rebound follows, to build a
20-·12 advantage on Tim
rout on Sunday.
"They threw us a change- Burnette's perimeter jumper
up," Wilmington cqach Jerry at the 9:09 mark.
After a timeout :it the 7:54
Wainwright said. "We came
mark,
the Buckeyes' zone
to that bend in the road and
kept going straight - right paid immediate dividends.
off the cliff. And l was right Savovic stole .the ball in the
there in the car with them." backcourt and Brian Brown
Wilmington (2-3) led by scored on a fastbreak layup
eight points midway through to touch off the 13-0 run . .
Wilmington missed aU five
the first half but had only
of
its shots from the field two field goals over the next
18 minutes after Ohio State
Please see
7
shifted to defenses.
Boban Savovic scored 19
!~~~~~~
points and made the k e y - - - - - - - - - - - ~

.,su,

steal that touched off the 13- eo=~~'~ ~~.'==t'sb=.::;~':-.l~crn.e~:: e.~~~n!!!.~;~~~
• d the of.t.NCr:coMPANYottnd!~'~~-'N·"••co~•dWitiiiM
the Stall of Olllcl, htrw ~-~ Ifill CINlMtiNSUR.
0 runt hat accompan1e
IWWI of HI ltll'- tpJIIIcltble ill ~ .nd '- tuflof!Ud 4urino ltte

.;::;-:.~~:: : ;

defensive change. Savovic hit ~~r:.~=~~~~~=~L~f::r'~~~·~~~="~~
~•ve IIH~

111tement to
tllbi!Owlllft O.C.mllir 3\ , ZtiOO:
6,..o f- 9 shots firom t he fi eld , ......
"' sa,tat.e04: u.to~'"'' u.t=~T.us~ e•pltal
000 n.•oo~~~'·
' " " " " ' UMer
· " ' · '"''
"' tullv:lrty
"'""' c!'·"'·""
5-o f.-6 firee throws and also ......
e.~tu'"
th• p11r1on
ft.,.d IM!Ow. thil -mtnl II vtMd WIIIOV1 llgnthn or

had SiX StealS, five
five rebounds "

3SSiSts

and

fn':Jr.~i:tl:r'oi~.W!gtl!ft, II.

Ohclor,

SupotMH!nct.nt

of

•cw•• 8tlltol of Ohio. O.Pimtlnl of 1nwr1nC11, Caunly
~IJACe, flit Ulldlrtlgrltd, :iUPirinllllldt~l aflnlli.....
C.

al tNo SUitt of Ohla. h.,.!l'f Cfllhllflll AMeRICAN GEN-

"He had a tertl"fic game"
ERAL Llfl! INIURANCI! COMPANY af Houtton Tx, lin
, CO"l"** Win II" 1 - af lhlt IIIII! lpplci!M to 1I lnd II
,
,
1\llhO~ltd duM; t!l - n l ~·ID lrtnhd In !hit tlt141 ilt
Ohto State coach Jtm ·~pdm
b.!IIMII allnttitlrK». lltlnlnc:NI oond!I!O!I it
~~ by •• 1nnutl 1111....-.111111 li1w bHn 11 .,....._ on
31; 2DOO· AIMII Sta.ao. t~r~~; LllbiiliU
O 'Brl"en Sal"d • "He's very O.C.mbit
U 5011 03e,7 5 ;
CI!Jittl
N ,ISO Ouu
Surplut
•
·
,
,
St' Ui271 1111 ; lnclltnl 12 .311,444:1.1 : E•Ptnd!turu
aware o f all the situations ' Nlo¥t
st)e~.~7 .~se. u~. lh• •vlhDrttJ ot"' r-_, n.rn.d
m. dclcumtnllf YIICIYJ~hll1fi\YIIIurt orHII. J. L. .
· t knows w hat's gomg
· CoYinDIIIn
Olnldor ~rlriltftdtnl of lntur- of Ohio
H e JUS
tmt · s'II 1111
of qMO, DIPIIWI'IIftl Qf tn•~~-. cour~ly
,
C~""'· Tlil! unotrllgrllc:ll. SvJ!tftnlloMMnl ollntvrlnCI
on. He kn ows t he game '
of ~t~e Slllt of Oli~ ,.,.~ e~n'~' .," MONUMENTAL
UFf INSURANCE ....ot.,ANV of 811~ MO lin com•
dde d 17 qtd
plild ¥lith 1M IIWI Of ,_IIIIIIIICIIIIiCibll 10 h trld I~ 1Uthclr3.C h Will 13mS a
dllm\llt.. CUITW!I ,,., to tnmud WI !hit 1lallo ~~ IPPRId
.
'Tl
~ll llUIIMII Ol ~IU!'fiMI . llllnlnc.ill conclllicWIIItf!Owrl
omts.
,we
1
ve
p
1
ayers
score
ns
...~~..... ~~ tllltment to lie ... bt•n •• tottowt ..on
P
tl!1btr 31t 2000· Alll!l an$124.514~304 ; UtbOiti"
for the Buckeyes (4 ... 0), who jl~iWaU~~.~~: •nco~p;~~·•" t.1 ,~I. 0~.1141~.tr~:
· 51 percent 0 f thelf
· ShQtS blkiW:IhildocuiTIII'IIIIWIIdwltha~lli~UitU.-orllti.J
S Oat! Se5.21e Uncltr lht .~ oltn. ,_110n n~m~~d
hlt
. lH
. ·
CQ\Iinalon !1. Oirlctor, Supulnltndtnt ollnlll!"llltl Of 01\10
from the field and held a 35- 1om · SU~!I
Qt 01!t~Lo.~m-.n1 otlnlllflnct, t;(lunty
Tilt! vncMfMI'.'Id , 811Dtnrlltnotfl1 of lnturtnCI
• reboun d'mg.
. ofANc£
dH $1111 Ill Ohio, "-""bot etrlifttl lhet WORLD INIUA·
21 advantage m
caMPANY or om.~·~ NE, "'' c011'4111Q Wllh 1111
"""'ol lhll lllltiPflllctblt 10 ~ 1no 11 ~o~~lhoriiltd duritlg!M
y..r 10 ltlnllct ill IIIII 111!1 •• IODI"ODI:II. tiJ.Ittnftl
Brett Bl•"zzard 1 who scored cunni
o1 inturlnct Ill llnlfldat condition II iJ.o,.,.n ...., 1!1 1nnu1i
•
"
h
S
h
k
I fU!IImtnlto 111111 DHI'IIIIclb.vl Oft Ote~mbir ll 2000:
27 POints lfl t e C3 3W S AIHII
$11B.OIB.SU; Utbilllin 11Ulo4U.4BI; !unlkll
Sl5t4 1011. ln;o!lll $1t4,517 ,12a: bpe"dlur ..
1
by
li!i UJ !IN Uncltr 1111 MJfi!.Drtty of ltlt p~t~on niiNd
last game' WaS dogged
·
Dllo..t IIIIi dol:.llmtnllt v.lid wlthaultl9lllur1 Ofltll. J . Lll
· h t an d fi n- Co'OWiiliDn
ll. Oiredor SuP!IMiendent of lnturlnCI of Otllo
d e fien ders all ntg
11nl ·s•••
cl Ohto O.Pirtm~nt oltnturtntt, County
.·15hC d Wlt
. h nme
. p01nts
. 00 - ofC~ct
. Thl undmlaftH. llvptrlr111ndlnt of l(llurtlnct
1111 Stall of Ot!lo.&amp;. Mlif.br ~~ lh11 AI!IEII.ICAN
3 NATIDNo\L
UFC: INeUAANte COMPANY OF TJC al
· 0 f.- 9 Sh00tlflg.
·
Gll~~t•tgn , TX. htJe~wlln It!• ' - ofthlt ttlll•l)f)il •
ca!H lo it lrtdl it IU!Mnucl duttno !he cun.ftl ytll ft! trlll'll•
ae1 in lh•l 11111 itt IIJI)I'Opnetl fiutint!U of lillur.ACI Ill
Stewart Hare scored 11 llntr\CIII
c:o!lditon llti!Owil or 111: •nnull ""'"""' 10 111 ...
been 11 lolloM ."" Dtttmbtr )1 . 2000. Aut It
.nts
and
Aaron
Coombs
ltJU42i"'•.
Ll.lblifiu •u·'l' ·'alui
· CIDilll n .ooo.ooo;
Pol
$urplu1 4!. 110.122. lr'lonrn. 145.1 ,IU; E•P-ndi!Urll
atM1.302 520. Unttr 1M lll'lllllfiiY of ltll PfrtOn ntnWd
bflow, !hit doc..lmlnt iiWIIId withou( IIQnltufl or M.r . J hi
h ad 10 ,
CIIV!M\llon. 11. OitlctOr. &amp;u~~tmttncllnfof tntul"lrK» ofOI'uo.

z

i:

Compl~rltl.

I'

.
'

I

'

Ell..... 1

�Ohio

• Monday, Dec. 3, 2001

•

~ribunt -

Sentinel - l!le
CLAS$1FIED

•

.t '§#·It

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-~ IF .!~ I Wells is Buckeyes' MVP A pain in the knee might
10

-.. •cruloo.-..-.
..
•

!a.brbld
EMCFIUm Cord-- a ton L.....tv... 2.t' ,,_.
don $401) Alklng
u~-..
•• $200
OUOriOf cirat Mor a..- Tall Mel Flompo.
_.._ illomond ~ .. ~ 111111 ClMC Jimmy. 4x4,
0

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Canl

•. . - •
• Ring (Sizo &amp;)
• Com- NOh. (740)44&amp;1!044
• putor Doole. $20. (740)441·
• 11 08
caa..t30

w'oldOWI.
$1500.
131MIII2·2532

TriCtor

with

l

seso.

i

: h&lt;!uM MI. Alto. (304)895-

•~Independent

Private Party 'Ads Under $100

HOW IQ WRITE

AN AQ.

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\'\'\()(\II \ II '\I.._,

r

6

1"

I

HnrWANniD

Ads

• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To : Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

•

• AdS Shotlld Run ? oavS

..

lliio

IDuWANniD

11'

10

1:5}
=

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6

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.
""--r-!s

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rooms,

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u.-. ,·-·- I
r•o . .

909

ioeltor. maine/ llfVlO
helfeFii, butll and halter
broke malneJ angus ......
-

'

prlcOO ro.-y. Slalo

1

home parts &amp;

Hoult.How

H-

r16

Grer . broke. 1740)256-

eale. (?40) 7&amp;-2?4S

LABORER
Top To Botlom Cleaners.
Nice 26x60 Doubla Wide 15 Court StrMI. 2 Bed· Graclouo living. , and 2 .L _ _ _Gows
____...
EARN AS YOU LEARN. professional, and aflorcla·
· setting on ranted 101 In rooms. , 112 baths, Kitchen bedroom apartmeniS at VI~ ....,
Start building for your tuture ble, homes, offices, rentals, Allrul Htat. •ctv.rtt•lng Point Pteasar~t area . .2_, with stoYe and rtfrlgentiOr. lage Manor · and Riverside Appliancn; ~Oitditioned
now by joining our protesconstruction and remodeling
in thta newap~~per Ia
walls, thermal pane: • win- Off Street Paftdng, Close to Apartments In Middleport Waehera, Dryers, Ranges,
Biooalloaf!l and learn lhe
cleaning. •(740)992· 1391 or
IUbiOCt to 1llodows. prlcOO to sala: Ca! SchOOls and Downtown From $278-$348. can 740- Aelrignlloft. Up To 90 Days
sJ&lt;JIIslobecomeaHi"'
(740)9112·2979
Falr--ActOII. . · (30.)675·3669 ask tor Area. $595/month pluttlo- 992·5064. Equal Housing Guaronteedl We Soli New
Pmaure Cleaning Malnl•
whk:tlto
Rosemary.
paoli and Aelerenee. No Opportunl1ln.
Maytog ApptianCos, Fronch
·
T~I·COUNTY CONSTAUC·
.-·anr
Pets.l740)446-4926
CityMaytog. 74().446.7795.
- ---:--:-:-:-:-:-:- nancoTecHnlclan.
~ 1 Attention: AN'S &amp; LPN'S AJI Positions require weekly TION.
New ......,_noe, llmlllltlon or 1991 Man1lon 14x70, 3
Mlddktport· North 4th Ave., - - - - - - - --· Arcadia Nursing center A TRAVELoutsldeoiW.Va.
Construction/Remodeling. dlllcrlmlrwllanbMedon bedroom BKCellent condl· 2 BA Near Galllpolla, City 4roamfurrUhedapllrtment, Bedroom Suit, Cotor T.V.,
lull time midnight ahiH Is COmpany provides lodging, "Siding, •Roofing. •orywall, race,~. NllgkNI, • • lion, call Kavena, (740)385-- Sc~ District, $3501 dapoail &amp; references, no Dinette Set, Entet1alnrnent
Let us do your Holiday bak· available. We offer excellent transportation, and personal Eel. 304·.574-0155/304· r.m~~a.~ statu• or nMtonll 9948.
month. Aeterencea Re· peiB, (740)992..0155.
Center, Hldebed, Oonee
ing· Pies. cakes, Cookies. benefits lhat lndude health expenoe cash. Average
674-3655
ortgln. «Oft\' I n - to 20 ldl0 3 Or 4 BedroOm. Qn. qulred. (740)256-6702
I Bedroom Apart· and End Tables. Dog Cogo.
~1:-'"a~~~~ini;~5:0g:: insurance, 401 K, lite lnsur· starting wage with cost of All Make Kerosene •Heaters
mlb any- tuch
1y 5345 .00 Per Month 3 Bedroom Duplex, 2 Blithe. menl. (740)446-0390
Baby Bed. (740)44&amp;-9742
740)446-o861
ance, competitive wages benefits included Is $140.00 and Forced Air Heaters A• ~. llm!Wion •
8.99% Fbced Interest Rata, Downtown River VIew Area.
Set
......... •
and opportunities lor ad· per field day worked, with a paired. Small Englni ' A•
diiiCI'Imltmlon...
Refartncee and Oepolll Nice 2 BR Apt., Just past ~ee
1i •
1-aea.928-3426
vancement, II you are a chance too advance up too
Aequlr·•. $3 50/ monih. Holzar HospitaL (740)441- lags.• 125. 17401&gt;
0)446 •9429
Iearn pIayer who enIoys $210 .00 per II eld day
pair, Free Piek·Up and De- This,.....,.,... wiH no1 3 BA , 1 112 ......
~·h pius waah·
0 194
, ... ~:ono.nl\V
\.UA.
G"m""
0
3949
7
2
..__ _ _ _ _ __.~ wol1dng with the elderly, ap· worked. We provkle paid
livery Available. Over
knowlnt1IY KC8PI
er and dryer. All Elootrlc, ( -tO,_...·
leave a m&amp;II8Q8.
....,
ply in person between 9:()(). training. excelkmt BENE· , yaal'l·Experi~. CaM Mike Ml\rertl..,...mt r rMI Cenlral Air and heat. Price, 3 Dedrocim houle fn Ct..· Christy's Family Living, For sale: Reconditioned
4 beautiful puppies ready, 4:00 or call Kathryn Somer· FITS. 401(k) R~IRE~ENT (740)446-7604
eNte wNch l:'tn
$5000. Will Negotiate, ter, lease, deposit &amp; flnll 33,40 New Uma Ad., Rut· walhe!'l d!\181'1 and refritlor
caring
families. vMie, C.O.N.
pktn, CREDIT UNION, Lay All or your home repairs, ad- violltlan of the'-· Our (740)448-1687
month rent, evenings land, Ohio, 74{).742-7403. eratorl 'Thornpaona Appel·
(740)441 -1707
Arcaclia Nursing Center over &amp; Travel Pay.
dltions &amp; remodeling. 24hr
rudefaar. herBy
(614)50 1-8339.
Apartment, home and tralltr ance 34o7 Jackson A'I/&amp;East Main StrHt
Pre-employment DRUG
erne-"""" aervlce, senior
Amazing First Time ~e
rentatt. Commercial store-- nut ·(30ol)67S.7388
TEST and a valid Drivers ,
.._ ..... .r
Informed lhlt 111
Buyers.
Government 3 Bedroom House, 15501 fronll available for leaae.
•
·
·Coolville, Oh
F rea kitten to good IndoOr
IJ.
citizens discount 22yrs. dweiUngtactvertllectln ' Backed loans. No credit month
plus
depolit. home, 1 gray, 1 gray/white,
(740-667 •3156)
·
· exp. (304)576·2065
thie """""" ,,.
eded
(30ol)755 5566
now.
G.E. Whlnpool Waahors.
t calico. (740)992-1179.
E.O.E.
cense is requlr0\1. Clasa A.
I
no
·
·
(740)367-7602
· n~.- 2 Bedroom , --t-" $65 Olldl. White T-n
8
8
" ~* ~·=
COL i8 a plus, but not ,...
Truck Driver. coL. full or
Limited Offer.
·
;edQe of Town. N";d, Dryer, $80. G.E. Kenrnore E~~~:~ !:,~~et!dt~':! Drummer &amp; bass player quired. Qualified candidates part-time. Straight truck pnr
oppOrtun
•.
Blg 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 ~o:c'~r. ~,:: Ma}or Appllancea and Stor· Almond Dryers, $80 each.
dark brown, (740)256-6919 looking lor musicians &amp; ~~;: ~L . ferred. (740)992·5468
JJor.m
bath, eave $5,155, delivered plus depotit, No Pete. age are prOvided. Utiltlea ~ afllf 8pm. (740~
_ _ _.;..;._c___ slngei'B to ronn conlempo. training.
Will Haul Away, Clean Out,
&amp; set up on your lo1 includ· (740}44&amp;-0924
nor lncfuded. $3751 month
.
Kinans · desperately need rarv Christian group, The rl~ candidates will be Clean- Up or Move Almost
FUR SALE
, log aklrting &amp; fiberglats
plus one monlh aecurlly de- GE matchi1g atowt 1 rerrtg.
a home · must be euthsn· 1740)992·3167, 740·67.5- reeponslblo, goalaoeklng · Anything. Taking Consign·
•
(
slope; Colee Mobile Homes, 3 bedroom, I bath. 2 mlleo posit. No Pots. (740)441· orator, St50, cal (740)992·
ized II not placed. (740) 2432.
individuals with a team-orl- ments. Call (740)446•7604 For sate 2 B8drolim t~buse U.S. 5b East, Athens, Oh, from town ofl141 . S4501mo. 1108
2077,
992 "3439
1972'
. ·eamUpto _S300.. wwkdtt- enledapproach.
· J,, · · · · · with gas heat &amp; ~sher &amp; 740-592"
~~uden;;e-:~~e~u~o~ Frenchtown Apartments," Maut"'g washer, $95, Hoi
llverlng the Galllpollo Dally On~ seoous harll working
Dryer Hookup. Located at End of the model year salol (740)446·4824
727 4th A Galllpolla Now
•KiHens- desperately need a Tribune. Must Be Reliable Individuals need apply.
~~~2 M~~~)! ~~~nue. AI 2001 must go, to make
ADceptingv~lcatlons ror a ~=rtcO~~~:ss::~
home • must be authanlzed and Have Good Driving Re-- WE WILL. BE TAKING AP··
Bl..lSINE$
• ·
·
room for 2002. Special lOW 3 Bedroom, 5 miles from 1 Bedroom, FMHA, Subll· lnghoula
Refrigerator,
It not placed. (740)992-3439 cord. Dependabl• Transpor· PLICATIONS AND INTER·
OnoRiuNrn'
Fo saie by owner· Nice bl· financing program available, Gallipolis. Call after 5pm. dlzed Apartment for Eldelly 1 , 50, Upi1ght Freezer Frost
tatlon Required. II Interest· VIEWING ON DEC. 6/01 AT
r
·
On~ at Fleetwood Hom41s (740)245-5378
and
Handicapped. fret. S150. Magic Chel
Milled Breed Puppies, SIK ed Call Gallipolis Daily Trib-- THE BEST WESTERN INN,
level home on 1 acre near of ProctoNille. Toll Free 1·
(740)448-4539
E
I
weeks ·old. Husky/Shepard uneat(740)446·2342
701W.MAINST.AIPLEY,
,INOTICEI
Chester. Throe bedroom. 666•565.()!67
. 3 BR houaeln Mlddltport.
.
qua El10lrlc flange, Ooubla
Beagle (304)578·3344
W.Va. FROM 9AM UNTIL OHIO• VALLEY PUBLISH· two baths, one-car garage.
Call (740)446.0655 be- Housing Opportunity.
Oven, $150.(740)448-73118.
ENE ol Wast Virginia Is now 5PM, PleaH bflng two ,
lNG CQ 1• recoO'Imef)dS that family room with fireplace, Umlted Or No CredJt? Gov· tween Bam and 4prn.
~ 1 and 2 bedroom apart· SkllggaSI l!lppla.-pol~
0H ;!!., VIne
Please Help Several Sweet taking applications lor pack· ........,s 01 identiticatlon with you -.·busineSs with people sun room. New central heat· emment Bank Finance Only
fum•·•~ and nfur St., Gal ..,
~ 1·
C.•Dr~
at
•~aids
I""
d
"'rt
1
1o
··~
~
&amp;
a1
o
1
3
ho-.
lin
P~.
21n
:::::::;
._":'.-ty
~.
•
Mol'~-~--.
.........own..IJVlo
ag ''V Br- men , pay ra you OR Send~ history you know, and NOT to 'Send ing
c system. n_e m: At Oakwood In Barboura- M~ Plck"'"~P... I"PPt~ca-- ·-""'· _.""' ._........, ,...
....,._, ._.....,., 202 ~·~
v..~~o
~:o ~.rande. save from Is $7 .25/hr. Also, taking ap-- and day time phone number money through the mail until nute off Route 7, bu,t still pn· ville, WV 304·736-3409.
lion at Vaughan• Service qulred, no pets, 74().992. Chapel Aold, Porter. QNo.
arva IOn or worse.
plicatlona lor machine oper- to TECHNICIAN TRAINEE you have lr'lvestlgated the vale. (740)985·3981
Mus "199918-•" Gi nd Deak In Middleport Ruby 2218.
~740)~7444 1.en~3().
1se"
RAnlstered Female Basset ators, starting pay Is P.O BOX 565 MARIETIA, ~ Offering.
•
·
.
, MN a
'
9162 F Eatl-- e ....
H00nd 1 ear ·old spayed $7.50/hr,maintenancedept. 0Hl0. 45750 eoe
.
1st T1ma Home Buyers/ Marques _mob•le horne, 2x8 Rentals
1 Bedroom Apartmenta, tinanCing;90~);"i;ne~
shots g~ Inside dog' (mechanical or electrical ex· 1·Start Your · Busl'ness To- FHA! Government Loans/ walls, shtnglod roof, 3 bad- 3 or 4br. House all new Ap- $289 month. Oepoalt &amp; Ref· cuh. VIae/ Muter Card. .
~740)992-2557 after sPm . ~!~leanbace__ onu~ped) ••f!BJ. tOO WQRKI;:RS N~EOEO day Plrtme Shopplrig Cen· Single Paralft Progcram room, 2 lull baths, $28,000 pliaf'!Q81. Total renovation erence. HUD Approved. Drive-a-little IIIW alot
•• ., ··~
A9SOmble craltt, .. ~
lor ·;;,..~ •valable At AI· Loano
Ava able.
all OBO. (740)669·9972.
A~ &amp;
rk
(740)441-1519
• 3 mont hs. Items. Material provided.
~
-......~ sPHng Veley (740)"•
•~3 f
,..
N'·s
Older Wood. 3 Pc.
ar--~----, FuII beneIIII aner
fordable
Rate.
~D"
Now 14 Wido, 3 Bedroom. Muol
rd - · at ~. be wo lid
n.;
Losr AND
Minimum of 2 good relorenTo $4&amp;0+ wk. . .
' ~laza, Call 140-44&amp;010.1. 2 BR. Cl"~ SChool District. Only $19,850. Free Deliva"" co(304)67;~76
10 • 1llr. Very _
Clean, Avallallla Bedroom Sulle,
$99.
cas that wiU be verfflad. Ap- Free Information pkg 24 Hr
''
.,
Dec. 1at. Now taking Appl· (Chnt, o,....r with mi!TOI',
1.,---~-00ND---· ply In person or send re·
1-801·264-5625.
.
MONEl' '
N(7e4a0r)25Ga6·61171po0211s, $36,000. &amp;'Set
1·888-928-2425 Newer home near Por11r. 3 cations. (304)875-497'5
Bookcaae Headboard, bed
sume to ENE ol West VIr- ------,..-,,...-........Ilion•
,
.
TO LoAN
New 14x70. 3 bedroom, 2 BR, I Bath. $4501 monlh. 2 Bedroom Apartmonl with ral'"')
~ · Exc· ,.
~N
Leist: Corgi, Small Brown/ glrila, 115 Jack Burlingame u ....... lure'o Aeataurant now
3 Bedroom on Route 2, bath. Only 5995 down &amp; Deposit and Aarerences. Stove, Reflir.-afor, Wale; (74Q)245·9448
White dog. No collar family Drive, Mllwood, WV 25262, "'"""
(304)675 5332
5189 62!
th c 11 Che 1 (740)44&amp;-2801
•-·
pet. Reward. (740)388-Q12e Attn: Human Rescurces.
hiring all 3 locations, full or McGregor &amp; AaiiOCiatea
•
· mon, · a
ry'
onty Fumlahed, $260/mo. N
anytimelleave message.
part·tlme, pick up apPIIc&amp;- Trying to buy a home and 3 bedroom, In Middleport, 740-365-767 .
deposit requir8d. (740)446-- ew and .Used Furniture
-...,.-:-~..,...-~-- Full Time Dental Asslltant lion allocation &amp; bring back banks are rejecting you due call Tom Anderson aher
AEDUCED
MOBILE Hor.m 1 7820 attar 7pm.
·~:S~.~.':Y!~!:
Lost: Shepherd mix. spayed :~r~reot~~~~~
between
.9:30am
,
:.
&amp; to bad credit hlstorv?· We Spm, (740)992-3348.
All
Double
Wide
Displays
FOR RINr
2
Badroom Downtown Gal- sate, dreaaars, chests,
female 2 blue A\J&amp;s orange 0
po s a''
• 10:00am, Monday lhru sat- can help ~· We provide
t
0 1 $99 5 ••
· 11 1
N 1 p
beda ..........h.- bunkbeda
collar. (740)742:4163.
825 Third Ave, Gallipolis, urday. J
t
•
mortgages, -perso'nal 'and For Sale trade or rent. Com- ~~Y :o~ H='Of
pols.
ew Y
alntad. . ' ....,.....,_,
'
~~~~~;...,;;....;;....;.;_...., OH 45631.
_.J • , small buainasa ·loans wtlh fortable 2 story 3br 2 112
2 bedroom, new carpon, Please Call (740)888-7174. ~~n===e~~
5alas. Poalllon. lmmwlalo good or bad credit. Approval bath •·me basld•e co.'mmun· Nitro. (30ol)7S5-5665.
c:over0\1 pallo, w/d hookup, 2 BR ........... Rernod- 7~782. •
.
. . nn.co......
Full·tlme Crew Leaderposl· ~ .a. ......ly In Pef'1Dn
)
•N
nopeta (740)992 2t67
..,.. ·-·•
Y.AftU
o3A.U!o
• uon , day shift, houl'l vary,
~~. AcqulsiUon~ within 48 hra. (866 Be2· ity building on At 33 in Single Parent Program.
•
•
·
eted. Stove, Retrigerator
1.,~:::;:;:::~ minimum wage. Apply at Jewelry, 151 nd Ave., Gal· 1158
Hartford, wv (304)675- Easy Financing Available. 2br Mobile Home within Furnished. All Utilities Paid.
I
Meigs tndusb1es 1310 Car· llpolis.
~ 12484
(304)755-7191
Cl~ Limits of Point Pleas- 48 Oliva ~t. $4751 mo.
1
YARD
SA~..&amp;
llelon
St.
Syracuse.
OH.
No
N
I u-~ H
I
edl
B~
ant
1304)675·2359 callaHer (740)446-3945
Gows
n.. o. ., • ..,. .......
phone calla please.
Sai1J1P8raon: Full•tlme, ·ben·
ERVICFS
ew -.. omas- mm ·
ate Possesion, No payAND B
·
7pm
3 apartmenta for rent In Syr·
L,-.,.;n,.;;,·•.~.......,....-iiiiiiilit'_.l :;.....;...;..=;..:;..=;;.;...._ _ aflts, retail ex~rtence refer· --Help wanted caring lor the red ApPly at Lifestyle"Fum"i· Fll Fl
i
h
bee
ments
until
Feb.
2002.
Pre·
Loo-iiiii-lliiiilliiil;.,.l
br
Ne
carpet
WID
H
k
acuse, 2 bedrooms, $200 Solid Cherry Gun Cabinet.
2
Yard Sale Dec. 3,4th. Ma· elderly, Darst Group Home, tu · No phOne 11 Appl
nt
ntnc 11 as
n quality by phone (740)446·N ~ (aci4)G75- 6~ • deposit rent lr'K:Iudel wa· HDida 12 Long Guns and 4
son 3rd. Street 9 till 4pm . now paying minimum wage, re.
Cl s.
Y provldlf\0 small butlness 3218
.
4,800 sq foot Commercial up, o ets.
1 ler, seWer. trash, (740)378· Pistols. (304)576-2605
•• 7
In p8fl0fl, ese 3rd Avenue, loan• for ,3 years. Now we
.
.
Building with 10 to 200· Beautiful River View Ideal 6,11. '
Lots of "New ndSluff. Christnew ahl3pm11pm
....: am·3pm, 11pm
7am- GallipOlis, OH. ' i ·
•-1-'lzoln pe. nal. car &amp; Newly ""nstrucled,
single acre&amp;. AIo Grande, Ohlo. For10J2Poople ReferenBl 5pm
..,........
,...,
_,
..........,...._
Gl
mlatshl us .•Na • moreh, g 7am' call7~~~992 ~~3 . URGENTLY . 'NEEDED- debt coniDlld~llon. We story 1600 sq. foot home. Owner financing available. cas, Deposit, No Pets, Foa· Nice 2 br.•~.• lg roo
· ms·. \
"""'''"'"
co ng
ew . c eap•
...,.. .......,, ·
$50
guatantee qualtiY service Located 10 minutes from C II {740)245 5747
......,.
....._
•
cheap. lfRalnsCancel.
Homeworkera
Needlld plasma ctorw;n, ea.m
to from a trusted name Call Holzer Hospital 20 minutes a
•
ter Trailer Park, 740·441- tully aqulped kit., cenlral
0181
AUC'IION AND
S635 Weekly · Processing ~,r~.-:tr:· ~~/ :ra~ Flint Financial ServiceS, ap. from Pleasan.t Valley Hospl· Three Unit Apartment BuYd·
·
heating! cooling. washer/ ~~8 .or11'::1. ~veri= InA'!
Jii...F.A MARKET
Mall. Easy! No ElCperi· Tee 74()..5"2-6&amp;s1. .
pllcations ho111ne (1- tal, off sR 160 Of1 a private lng In MeroeiVille, , Acre
APAlnMum;
dryer hookup 304-88 2•2523 SA 124 e. Pomeroy, 740once
Neoded. can 1·
·
·
. 6661388-0695
H/2 acre lot. 3 bodroom, MIL. $58,000. (740)441·
FOR RllNr
Now Taking AppliCations- 992.2528. Ruoo Moore.
~
600·652·0726 Ext. 2070. WO&lt;• Frqm ljorne. . free
.
2·112 balhs. big kllchan 1106
~
• 35 West 2 Bedroom ll&gt;wr&gt; owner.
A~k Pearson Auction Com· 24Hra.
9oo~ot. 1-600-&lt;!53-729~.
Need Flrlanoal l'telp7 Risk w/oak cabinets. DR. LA
&amp;
houae Apartments, Includes ::--:-::-c-..,.-..,.--.,--=:
pany, full lime auction88f,
.
free opportunity, look no fur· w/ga.s log fireplace, central
UJt~
1 &amp; 2 BA Economical Gas Water
sewage, Trash, SUe's Stlectabte8 on the "r
1. Heat, WID Hookup, Near $350/Mo., 740-4ot6-0008.
complete auction service. Maintenance poSition In Se- ·114)
~ .
ther, our llnanclal lnelitutlon air, laundry room. front
ACREAGE
In MiddlepOrt Dona, glati·
Licensed 186,0hlo &amp; West nlor apartment building.
· TRAINING
. provides you with ass is· porch &amp; 2·, 12 car garage.
Holzer, $295 to $379 Per :::::.:.:=:..;...:.;;.....;_;,.:=:::- ware, Aladdin mantelt, and
VIrginia, 304-773~5785 Or ~ar1·tlme position with du·
tance &amp; Information, Free Immediate possession. Ap- d"a C k E tat
-6 month, Plus Utilities, lease Renters Wanted: Pilot Pro. more. (740)992..0298
304-773-5447.
ttes lnctudlng ~t not lim_lt&amp;d
.
consultation. call now at praised at $,25,500. Make 1n 1 " ree 5 es, 3. and Deposit Required. grant Own yout' own home. lllr~.;;:;;;;,;;;.;.._.,
to apartment preparatiOn, GIUipolle ca...... coueoe an-304-3011 .
oHer. Call (740)446·4514 acre lots, west of RIO (740)446-2957
UHie or no credit OK! CaH
~~~~
WANJID
painting, minor repair and (Careers Ctose To HOme)
from 8_5pm M·F or Grande, lrom $25.900.
~ 740 )446·3384.
lYII'.oK\..tL'\ni.IIN'..
1U BVY
preventative maintenance . Call TOday~ 740-446..4367,
TURNED DOWN ON
(740)446·3248, after sPm.
(740)245-5747
3 Bedroom Apartment with
1.,
~-------P· Send
reference
1·800·2;1
~.
SOCIAL
to Theresume
Dally with
Sentinel,
PO
Reg
190-05-127.4~.
No Fee SECURITV.I!I!SI?
Unleas we Win! Owner Must Sell to Settle Want to Buy small tarm or stove and re fr1gerator· 1n- Tara . Townhouse Apart- 1 Burgundy and 1 Mauve
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Box 729·16. Applk:aru may
1-888-582-3345
Estate. 1 acre, nVI, Jackson acreage In Mason County eluded. (740 )245"5859
ments, Very Spacious, 2 wing back chairs, $100
Silver, Gold COins, Proot- be required to submh to po..
Lake, 2 Bedroom, Kitchen, suhable tor my retirament 3 bedroom unfurnished Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA, 1 each; Red toddler bed with
sets, Diamonds, Gold IE~Ee check and drug test l'ro
Bath, Living Room, F/0 home. Peaceful scenic rural apartment for 'rentln Middle- 112 Beth, Fully CArpeted, mattreBS, $20; 488 Cort~·
Rings,
u.S . Currency,- - - - - - - - - Jn~.u..a..At"ti'AJU."t
Heat, Cenlrat Air, Phone 1~atlon not on a primary port, All appliances indud· ~u~ Pool~= ~IPPa· puter with Epaon 400 print·
M.T.S. CoinShOp, 151 Sec·HOMES .
(740)44ti·303Bafler6pm
hllghway. Deterred posses· ed. No peta, no smoking. t.N.ta~usSacuri.ty". -=i er. $175. (740)446-7926··
'
.
son acceptable.. Call 210-- $350 per month plus $350 A 1 ~ D
~-:;.
ond Avenue ClaMipolls 740'
'
Coll~·•io-"175 uears and
_...... C" •• ""
365·9621
1
~
1-.. equ r_., ays: 740 --..· 2 wooden 9X7 Garage
446·2842.
p a
t
I '
._._..
"
·'
.......... ~ I.
u~aecurty depos.. requnru. 3481; Evenings: 740-387·
doors with glaaa Windows,
housek~eperitaund~ mstaii Still Cooking" Hardback
Vl"'u:.o
Call after 6pm, (740)992· 0502, 740-44&amp;-0101 .
I \1 !'1 II' \II \I
1:· ......-----..,.- - - ' ' - - - - - - - - good conditiOn. $50 each.
7· 06
..,t I\\ II I '-.
needed lor 100 bed sJ&lt;JIIed COokbook· 900 &lt;&gt;d and now 10.5 Acroo·wlth 1999 R90t·
AU:
·::.:.
.,. •- ted recipes. Oonallon. $20.00 •
Modu
-~· '
-:Twin River Towora oow ac· GE Washer, runs good,
r."ll~------, nurs.1ng IacII 1.,. 1n""ea
postage Chesler Court· wood
lar Hunft, Near
3 rooms and bath, Furnish-.•
110
applicants should apply to: ho
.R I tl
c II GallipoliS. Excellent Condl- 14x70 Clayton Trailer. 2.5 riO
u~~
led EHiciancy, All Utilities IBceRpiHonguoapplubBicaldtlonled. torpt $75. (740)446-4404
8
HELP WAN'IlD
Rocksprings Rehabilitation use99 ea
ora
on,
a
lion.
PrNate,
Country
Set- Acres. 321140 New garage.
~
Paid
Downstairs
$285.1
·
z a ·
...__ _ _ _ _ _• • Cenlef. 36759 Aockspongs (l'40) 2-7261 .
tlng. Stocked Pond. Addl· Scenic . VIew Estates.
FOR RllNr
monih, 919 2nd Ave. lor olderty and disabled. Amozlng
Mellllollom
1
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio Good or Bad Credit Even tlonaJ 7.5 Acres Avallabte. (304)576-2635
(740}446--3945
EOH.
BreBihroughll
-,
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or 45769, Equal Opportunity ElarWuptcy. Call Toll Free Call Janetl Call at Century
2 bedroom house {Mulberry
(304)675-6679.
Lose 10 pounds· 200
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- Employer
Encouraging 24 hra., 1--888-428-8393.
21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular t6 Wide. Only $,95.00 Per Ave.) for rent or sale, w/d BEAUTIFUL
· APART· - - - - - - - - - pounds easy, quick, Fast
675· 1429.
Workplace Diviralty.
11 (304)63lt-29~ bt Otflce Month, 8.99'1 Fixed lnl&amp;rest hOokup, referonces, ,depos- MENTS AT BUDGET PfU.
Dramatic Reaulta, 100%
' 11...'~, ·~~ \V.t\ilnu)
1·800·731-&amp;0H). ·co
Rate With- ·Air And Un· It, $350/mo. ~lth discount, CES AT JACKSON ES. Very nice, 2·3 bedroo m Natural, Dr. Recommended.
Arcadia Nursir.~g Center Part-time dietary aide need· ·
~ Do
derpinnlog Hl8&amp;·928-342tl (740)992·5502. .
TATES, 52 westwood Drive apartment, 1n town, 1arge •Ask about FREE Sample•
STNA2·10oh1Hisavallable. ed lor 100 bed skilled nuro·
0
..
from $297 to $363. Walk to ~tdlen. LA, $500/mo. Rei· 1740)441-1982
Full and Part·time positions log raclllty. Interested appll·
81 ft ,•Main · S~r~el,· Pt. · Pl. 1985 Skyline 14x70, 3 bed· 2 BR house, Jackson Pike shop &amp; movies. C8ll 740 • erences &amp; deposl~ required.
available. We olter eKceltent cants should apply to: Rock·
AE Construction
Completely Refu~shed. 2 room. Good Condition. Call In ROdney, (740)245·1418 446_2S68. Equal Housing (740)446·3644
~lcrows:;e, S25. 2P235 15
benefits lhal Include Health springs Rehabilitation Cen· remodeling, roofing, bath
story 2 Full Bath. 3 BeO· Harold, 740-385-9948.
BA
Ct
$4
Opportunity.
EI~Ctric, · ~~~rS::r~~~
2
1 10
251
Insurance, 401K, Ufe lnsur· fer. 3tl759 Rocksprings
drywall, Interior
roo~&amp;. Lar~ · ' K,itc~en,
.
month .
~~qulred. =~="'----nace Parts 011, $75
ance, competitive wages Road, Pomeroy, Ohio painting, trim doors, win- . Large Utility R09m, lA' OR! New 2002 14 wide only (740)441-Qt94
Furnished Apt. 3 I'OOfYt8 and
..rACE
(740) 367.n 29
·
and opportunlllea for ad· 45759, Equal Opportunity dows. Free Estimates.
Family Rm. New.! carpet $799 down &amp; $155.38/mo,
bath plus shower, DownFOR RtNr
1
vancement. If you· want to Employer·
Encouraging (304)675-7738
throughout'. FIA a AJC, Call Nikki, (740)385-7671 . Buy homes from $ 199/mo., stairs, Clean. Reference
NEW AND USED II'UR·
join our team, we are now Workplace Diversity,
$79,900. (740)446-9585 or
.
Foreclosures, 4% down 30 and Deposit ReqUired. No
NANCES FOR SALE! We
accepting applications or
.
(740)446·2205 or (740)446· Now Double Wide. $195 years at a.s% APR. For'llst- Pets or smokers. (740)446· Nice lots: quiet country set· Install, Free Estimates, If
contact Kathryn Somerville We art~ working hard to fill Christian motherof2, woukl 2683 .
_Per Month! 3 .Bedroom,. 2 lngs 1_800 _319_3323
1519
ling, w111 accommodate you dont Call ua We bolh
o .O.N.
'
· ' America's food banks lor like to babysit In my hOme,
Bath. Free DoNvery &amp; Set- 1709
elCt.
,6K80, $100 per month, call Loose! (740 ) •
Arcadia Nursing Center the holiday season and we Spring
Va!Jey area. 8 Dlvon::e Forces Salel3 Bed- up. 1-888-928-3426
·
Gallla Manor Apartmenls, Ed at Country Homes. 740- eoo- 291 -()()98 446 •6308 • 1•
East Main Street
need 5 hardworic.~ng. com- years experience with the room/2 Bath on private lot.
OAKWOOD HOMES
Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom 138 Buhl Morton Rd. Galllp- 992·2,67.
·
COOivile, Oh
passionate lndlvtd~als to same family. Rererences. call (7"40~·3570.
SUPER CENTER.
hOuse, 298 Mulberry, Porn- oils Now Accepting AppficaNew Pentium 4 computer
join our team. Startmg pay (740}446-8396.
eroy no pets 17401992 tlon lor a 1 Bedroom, HUD, Traitor space for rent, $120 128 AAM, 20 GIG HD, Inter~
(740.667•3156)
EOE
is $7.00 per hour. "We do
Don't Own Land? We ODI Over 40 homes to ehose
'
T '
• Subsidized Apartment for per month. In Minersville; net ready IT mon'ltor In·
5858
_ _ _...;:.;__ _ _ good work.". Call 1·888-237- ~~ Portable ,Sawmill, Landi Home packages from. Drive a little aave a
'
•
Eldoriy and Handicapped. 600 sq It offtce building, ale eluded, F~ee Delivel)' and
Housekeeper
Needed. 5342 ext 2232 for more In- don't haul yoUr logs to_the Available. Call (740)446- toll oakwoOd Homes of
Pilot Program, Renters ~740)446-463.9.
Equal &amp; calling fan, $275 per setup, $899. Can (740)255·
(740)'\46-2273
lonnallon .
mllluel catl30ol·875·1957. 3583.
Nll111. (304)765·!i865
Needed. 304·736·7295.
Housing Opportunity.
month. (614)876·1661
6514

I

&amp;

t-

r

8 month old Phllly. $500.

I

j

:~~~~~~.:;~~~~tm
Jackson. whnl•,
::a~~~~
oil
8fectrlc furnaces In·
lharp. $4,300.
3
,. eluding hi efficiency heat Club Calve&amp; lor
0~~~~~
· ~~g~:t:'~: accessories.
~~.~1~~=~~~~.~=--· ~=~~~
•
'

·

l'llR&lt;lClNAis
Anentlonl
" - - - - - - - • Eam 2nd. Income withOut
Why walt? Start meeting
2nd job up to
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
$25.-$75./hr. Pt-Ft.
lree 1-8lJQ.766·2623 ext
t ·600·218·7543
t62t .
www.Money·Dreame.com

.I

'

•

~

(740)388-1691

I

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH •s631'

• Start Your Ad. With A Kevword • Jnc}ude COmplete
oesc:rtptlon • Include A Prlu • Avalll Abbrevletlons
• Include Phone N~mber' And AddreiJ When· Needed

·

Cee
Bar, Lao Sanman and
Bert. Chli Breeding. $1200.

HerllaiHe Ols·
• tributor. Call For ProdUct Dr
, Opportunity. (740)44t-1962
•
JET
: AERATION MOTORS
' Repaired New &amp; Rebuio In
s-. c;,ll Ron Evans. 1·
, 800-53.?'·9528.

20 Words 7 Oays • Eactt Item Priced

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslneu Days Prior To
Publication
Jn·Column : 1:00 p.m . Sundav Display : 1! 00
Thursday for Sunday5
For suruteys Pa~r

the Ohio State football team at Sunday's team banquet
"Jonathan had an ouatanding season and clearly played the
1111 Plymouth - ·· 4 cy1o best football of his career this year u a senior," said Ohio State
CI\Jioo,
coach Jim Tressel. "He was a lead..,. for us both on and off the
overy1hlng. lno, 83.0001&lt;.-. $6,100.
field."
(740)37N748
Wells led the Buckeyes in rushing and ~eoring, netting I ,257
l.lwly't Au!c&gt; $a6M- 1090
Ford Tomp. $1000, 18116 yards and scoring 15 tOI!chdowns on 232 carrie;, an average of
Cllevy 0·20 Von, $1000.
1987 Ford EconoMue v.n, 5 .4 yards per attempt. He finUh4td the sea.•on with a flourish,
$800. 1992 Dodge Rom
Van. SIQOO. 1980 llodgo B- topping the I 00-yard mark in each of the last live pmes,
250 van. $600. 111111 Cllovy including a career-high 192 yards in the home fin~e against
Coprice, $500. 11184 llodgo
~t . $400. 1889 Oklo 'llinois. He was on his way to an e~n better day the folloWirtg
Cololo. $600. 111112 Meruo.ory
~
$600 1 - ........._ week at Michigan, rambling for ll2 yards in the fint half
,..,..,
· ......,..
Spirit. s 1000. 111110 Cllovy before sitting out the second half With leg cramps and finishLumina. $600. 1889 Oklo
Cu-. $600. 1987 Old ing With 129 yards.
Clora, $450. 111111 Ford
The 6-1, 230-pound native of River Ridge, La . now hal
T-. $1100. 1988 Ford
Pn&gt;ba. $1400. 1988 Ford 2,344 career rushing yards, a total that ran)cs 12th at the school.
Mutlong. $1200. 1988 - ·
Senior line~acker Joe Cooper won the most inspirational
da Pickup, $600. 1985
Dodge D· 2so Pickup,
player
award for the second ·consecutive year and was also
11000. 1983 Morcury Lyme
sw.
$600. 1985 Bulok Soon· selected "" the team's top defensive player. Sophomore ·tight
oroet. $4!0. 18116 Ford F·
150 Pickup. S7SO. eau end Ben Hartsock won the academic excellence award.
(7-40)388-9303
Other winnen included: outstanding player irt the Michigan
1iwcKs
game, Wells; offensive player of the yeat, LeCharles Bentley;
.-o. Q ..... .,.
L~--··-~~~..,....,iiil--.,1. special teams award, Andy Groom; tbp linebacker, Matt Wil~
1971 314 Ton lntematlonal helm; top defensive back, Mike Doss; top defensive lineman,
Plck·UP 3Q.l V8 Engine All
giaso ~ Body vory iol. Mike Collins; top offensive lineman, '!yson Walter; top receivld. No Rust. No Dentl, Ml· er, Michael Jenkins; top offensive baclr.,Jamar Martin; ou!StaitdChllln Radloll. Runa &lt;laod. ing first-year offensive player, Chris Vance; and outstanding
Bam Kept. $600. (30ol)5782989
_ _ _ _ _ _ __
first-year defensive player, Dustin Fox.
94 ,........ eto 5 .......
· --·• ~ • ...--.

I

, 3740 laave me-e. or
[JVFSIOCK
~
•
• (304)095-~
: ·Hot Sponga Spa with Thera·
.
1· peut~ massage. EXCellent 18 month old Reg. brooding
• condition_(740)441·061 8
ltock. Paint -Filly with Sonny

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For 5ala: Cal&lt; TV Stand. 101 to ~- $4.400
$50. Floral Chair wllh (304)571!-291111
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play ot John DHro Toys.
• G bb• PI
T 1 &amp; Apparel and John Detro
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ano- un ng Uberty Slfes·
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2 mllea- 01 Holzer Hot•Rocking Chair pllli on Jocklon Pllce. Gal$8-4.95.
Paint
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(30ol)G75-4064
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good.
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{304) 675-1333

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day 's Paper

~-

corp ...,., lhol llodl. Wide Front End.
:l• F.,._
iotlaPlclwp.
1§113- Ford llq- :::f ::-- ~- lnder.- ..
~. - · Colt (30ol)67S.~r!Jglll.
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l\.egi1)tet

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

_ ............... P _ S t -

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Senior wlbad: Jona.t han WeUs
.-vog, -·
outowas selected by his teammates as the moit valuable player on
&lt;laod Condition, 13000 motte on 111o lloor. -

r

Display

I,

The Dally Sentinel o Page A7

.,_

I

BENNI!TT"S HEATING &amp;
COOLjNG (740)-t4&amp;-9411
or t-lfi0.172·B987
www.o,Vb.comibenNEW AND . USED STEEL
511101 Beams, Pipe Robar
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nel, Rat Bar. Sloal Gratl'l

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$4500 • 1740)949-

Drums Wllh Lid &amp; Ring.
$7.00 Each. L&amp;L Scrap Mat·
ala Open Monday. Tueoday.
WO\Inoaday &amp; Friday, 6am4:30pm. CIOHd Thurlday.
saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
1740)44&amp;-7300
.
Now Ploneor car CD Pliyer
$100., 2·MTX3000 10" SubS
with bo.k and MTX280X
Amp wolh bUit·in crossover.
$300.060(304)675-2153
-nlllll HomeTappan HI fllficlency 90 plus
gao tumaceo Including &lt;&gt;I
end
electric goa furna·
.... HI EWicloncy Heat
Pumps. loatunng Tappans
Free Incredible warranty

pe~ge.

BENNETT·s HEATING I
COOUNO (7411)448-1411

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

now $1:50. ·1 mila on Rl. 2

onship. ·
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1987 """"- Ram Clla~r.
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e un
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Slraw Year·- Dallvory drive, 360 engine, automal· to o . m e
mcwa po on

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·

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164,000 mlln, phone
(740)992-2913
•--~---.
-----.A!ll1l8
1993 Ford F·250 XLT 4x4,
FOR S" ~
7.3 Turbo diesel, !·lpeod,
~
tow package. (740)368·
8937 (740)446·3483.
1978 Clmafo RS tor Nil
lor parto or. can be reatored. 1996 Jimmy, 58.000 mlleo
$400. (30ol)675-2153
with extended warranty.
$12,000. (740)446·0657 al·
1966 Bulct&lt; Skyhawk. 4 ler5pm.
door, Auto, Runs and drivel 98 Chevy Subuotoan. 4x4,
$600 080. (740)441· $19.750. LT Package,
(7-40)446·3844 days or
1969 Grand Marql!ll. Lood- (740)jj8 9555 ....,~ngs
eel. Excollont Condition.
74.701 miiOI. .$2500 080
MoroKcva.ES
(740)245-5401
~
199l Eaglo "~'-• 4 door, Kawuakl
Dritt11r
Au1o. Air, Power, Nlco car.
;;;1u~~:~1;itiO_iooloki ~:
sm. (740)308.0418
~·
1993 Ford Taurue GL. red.
loaded, 118,000 miles, garage kept, &amp;Kcel,nt condl·
lion, $3.000 (740)992~9

riO

=·

r•

.

-~-·

WASHINGTON (AP) Just 16 pmn into the season,
MiclueiJordan might have to
cake an exten~d break.
I rutead of practicing with
the Washington Wizards on
Mon&lt;by,Jordan was to spend
artother day in Chicago having his right knee examined
by the Bulls' former team·
physician.
Jordan lw tendinitis in the
knee, hyperextended it durin8 preseason and barely has
been able to practice because
it is !Ore, swollen and needs
fluid drained.
The best remedy usually is
rest, which means Jordan
could go on the injured list
and miss a handful of games.
If tesl!l show ligament or cartilage damage or wane, he'll
be out much longer.
"'Iluve to make sure there's
no ligament damage, and get
it treated, get it drained and
see what the docton say I

haw to do and see if I can get
rid of it," Jordan said after
S.turday night's loss to the

Orlando Magic •
Jordan last missed an NBA
game bec:awe of injury on
Man:h 5, 1993, against San
Antonio, when he was hospi-.
talized with a foot infection.
Coincidentally, the Wizards' next opponent is San
Antonio on Tuesday, the start
of a four-game road trip.
"I'd rather continue to
play;• Jordan said. "But if it's
not going to get any better
other than me sitting out long-term. I want to play
later in the season.''
Saturday night's game was
the fourth in five night for
the Wizards, but coach Doug
Collins said Jordan has been
ailing all season. Jordan's
inability to practice most days
lw made it hard to develop
team chemistry on the court.

Miami No.1 with a bullet. Early Morn1'ng Wednesday
1i
to N 2 • d
I
ennessee movl$ · o. M1xe Bowing League'
send the Vols 10

Pasadena.

;;'3ii118··-~--=--..,
VANS &amp;
Tennessee is closing in on
Rorida (9-2), which dropped
Square beloa waa $2.00
4-WDs
playing ·for a national champi- to No. 6, wam't the only top

GIWN

sideline Michael Jordan

~u0nday -threp~3R2ori~ -

10 OWing

etr
VICtory
over the Caton at The S.....wnp.

butMiami
(11..0) was No.I again,
this time it 'MS unanimous

team 10

faD.'Jexas

(10-2)1 ranked

·--r

entering S.n·...t~•\ oom...:
..-·~
tumbled· tle\ll:n spotJ to No. 10

third

after losing to Colorado 39-37 in
the Big 12 Conference title
game
,..,.,:__n (10-1), with a 17-14
~••tsv

wm·

- r ,...___

s-·-

---~

after completing a perfect regular
v•• ~"&amp;"'"' ~~. u~
s~·son Wl.th a 2 £ 24 wm· ~- up one spot to No. 3.
·~
uv•••
.·..r.o
Virginja Tech.
The Biw..oes (10-2), most
likely headed to the Fiesta lJowl
With .the win, the Hurricanes
•
clinched a spot in the Bowl jumped live places to No.4 in
Championship Seriei' tide game . The Associated Press 1bp 25 poD,
m· the Rose Bowl on
3. A fOllowed by No.5 Nebruka (11-

Jan.

win by Tennessee oYer LSU in
the Southeastern Conference
tide game on S.turday woUld

!),No.6 Rorida, No.7 Maryland
(10-1), No.8 Ulinois (10-1), No.
9 BYU (12..0) and No.IO'Iexas.

In what is develoj&gt;ipg into a competitive season, the Pine
Hill's Golf Course again picked up the win over little John's
of Pomeroy, 82/30 to 79/33. Powell's Super Valu was close in
third. with a 72/40 score.
Pine Hills claimed the team high win with 618 poina, and
also claimed the team high series with a 1766 score.
The men's High game was claimed by Chuck B.urton with a
213 over John 'JYree with a 196. Burton also claimed the series
over Sam Smith 5% to 487.
In the Women's High game, Debbie Sayre shared the big win
with Dottie Will. Both bowled a 188 for the game, while Will
claimed the Women's High Series with a 490 to Pat Carson's
469.
_......, NlaltiiiiOtl -~~~~~ Lll(lllo
Pint Hllro Got! Course 121110: Llalt John•• ot Pomeroy 79/33: - · · Bupor Voluo
12 I 40; S~ Country Marl&lt;ot 48 I 94; TIZ'I Marathon 38/73: Malg'o l n d ~~~

.

lNm High o.nte- Pine Hllll'l Golf CourH 11 o
lNm High Sorlu- Pine HMI'a Golf Course 17e8
Mon'a High Game- Chuck llurlon213, Jolin~ 186, Sam Smith 188
Mon'a High Solin- Cltuclt Burlon 59&amp;, sam Smith 487, Loran Coleman 475
wcmen'a High Glme- DaOOia Sayro la&amp;,llollla Will 1M, Pat ca- t87
wcmen't High Solin -llottlo Wi114110. Pal caroon 480, Shlrloy Slmmone 443

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

Southem

Ooor and hitting the open man. South- had two auisl!l, four steals, 27 fouls, and
www.orvb.comibennett
. ern led 52-18 after three and rolled on to 28 turnovers.
RolelC Ladles Champagne
Southern won the reserve game 21the 66•30 finale •
oram-Orid OiBI oyster Pet15
led by Susan Brauer with eleven
Southern was led in rebounding by
\'L.ody Oatolust. Mint
Condllon. $4.000 'Nogotla·
sophomore Ashley Dunn, who hauled points, Joanne Pickens four, and Jessica
.
.
ble. (740)256-1021
. ~19:::9::3-0
:-,.-nd-:--:Am-.-:2:-:D-oor-•., Aluminum Slot AI~ and
sive pace and did a good job running down eight carotns, while Tara Pickens Hill two.
·
bad s2·5; 1oam .Auto ' IOIK ' """"! 1994 nros,
Unalug.
$100.
Cra·
AolI·a'way
gear rims
and tires
wl1h lug the offense. 1\venty-nine of Southern's
Southern plays Federal Hocking
and Amy Lee each had seven and Katie
rubber 75x37x6.5" $5.00; Gltllnd Am, 2 Door, Auto, nuts unalug $300• Pioneer
ootM new, $10; Comfort, new 681C, $3795. 1994 Cavalier. Car Co PlaYer wtth remote total points came off the bench.
Thunday.
S.yre . 1ix. The te.atn out-rebounded
$10: bar slool, $10: lread· 2 Door, AIIID, l131(. 12&gt;485. detachable lace
$75'
Behind
a
24-point
second
quarter,
·
Symmes 43-30. Symmes was led by Bell
mill, stoo: Phone (740)441· 1983 cava~~ar. • eoor, All- (740)379-2635
,
,
0708
to. - · $211111. COOK 111(). · ' - - - - - - - - Southern rolled to a 37-6 halftime lead.
with ieven and Ashley Crawford six.
8ytMoao loutMi'n •0 ·····&amp;
12
Vllltey12JO 30
waterline Special: 3/4 200 TOllS. (740)448.()103
ludgal Prloed flo8nornte..
Southom
13 24 1B 14
86
Southern's
offense
slacked
off
someSouthern
hit
22-of-71
ovmll
for
31
PSI $21.95 Per 100; t• 200 11185 Chevy CIYallor, 4 cyl., olont All Typeo,- TO
8ytMoao
0-4 2 , - Myers
PSI $37.00 Per 1oo; All 5 apeod. 2 door, /IJC. a- 10,000 Tranamotlllono. what in the third period, but the Torna- percent, hitting 3·of·5 three's ~nd 19-of- 0
3,.O~O,AnnaBodrnor31-4 8, Ginny
era11 Cornprenlon Flttln(ll 90,500 mlloa. $3900. RebUild K••· 740-245-66n,
0 3-5 3,
Martin 0 ~ 0, ArWi Crawlord 0 3does tried to focus on patience in setting 66 two\, while hitting 19-ofu32 at the 8Young
In Slocl&lt;.
•
· (740)441~
Cell: 339·3785.
3,l(aylo lowman I ~ 2, C... Myors I ().1 2, Laatle
Wllaon 1
up the offense. The result was good bal- line for 53 percent. · Symmes Valley hit Floyd 1 ~ 3. KIW!O McCorflo 1 0.1 ~.
RON iVANI ENTERPAIS- 1995 Noon, Air, Tilt,
~ 2. TOIIItl: 111·28 30.
El JacltiiOrt, Ohio, 1-8(1(). 110000 mliH Red 4·
ance as six different girls • Chapman, 1o-or..so overall
20 percent, hitting Southom- Raohel Chlpmon 31·3 7, ltlgotto 6amn 3
537·9528
Door. Runs GPoo, Sl600
J1oME
~e. Doana Pulllftl71!-718, Amy l.oe3-7·10 13. Kodo
Lee, Pullins, Sayre, Dunn, and Pickens • 7-of-44 two's and l·of-6 three's.
WHITE'S METAL
OBO. (740)258·1233
1MPRovF.MJ!:rm1
Sayro $ 1-4 11, Mltlly DuM 1 I -3 3, Joonne Plcltons 0
Southern had 9 auists (Kiser 2, Lee 3); Q.t o. Tllra Plcktna 1 0.0 2,Aoltlev Rouoh 1 ~ 3. Brool&lt;e
all scored in the frame.
· DET£.~TORS
1995 Plymouth Acclaim, E•·
Aon Allison, 588 Warson celtenl Condition, Always
Kllllr 0 2-4 2. Butan Brltuor o. 1bttltl19-3 tll-32 88
BASEMENT
The Tornadoes abo showed much 16 steals (Barnes 4, PuUins 4), 17 tltrto-po~nt
Road, Bidwell, Ohio 456,4. main1alned, loaded, AI·
goole--SV a (Fioy&lt;l, Bodmer), Southem 3
WATERPROOFING
(740)446-4336
loyed WheOis. New nreo, UncondOional lllotlme guar· unselfish play in passing the ball up the turnoven, .artd 23 fbuls. Symmes Valley (lllyro 2. FIOOah).
Bun.oolc
Mull Sail. (740)446-9902
amH.
nlthed.~~~fu~
Eatabllahad 1975. --~------------~----~------------------------~--------------------------------------------------L-··
-iiiSlll'l'uFsllii'iO!--rl GT.
,9i5 Auto,
Ponrtac
Am Cal 24 Hro. (740) 448balanced attack as the placed got after it on offense. We ran
islled for the night.
~
PW.Grand
PL, CD,
0670,
1-800·287-0578.
Block brick
pi
Lookl and Runa Great Rogers Waterproofing.
South Gallia showed sotne four players ·in double figures . the court and ran the. ball up
wlnctcM. 11nt8ia":':~ Clr.:.: (740l446-3945
spunk in the fourth quarter, Sophomore Alex Simpson led and down the court well. Our
Wlntent, Rio Grande. OH 1998 Kla Sephla, Excellent - - - - - - - but as the saying goes, too lit- the J!liCir. In scoring with 13. transition hrut improved since
::Caall~7;;;40;.;·2;.;4;;,5-;;,5;.;12;;,1.~-., Condition.
/IJC, Spoiler, e&amp;c General Home Malnte.:
Tinted Windows, One Own- nence· Painting, vinyl ald-de, too late. Eutern overpow- Point guard Garrett Karr saw the scrimmage," said Calder, Call (7+40)448-0803 or' ing, carpentry, doora, win. ,
. . and
baths.more.
moblla
The third
quarter. wasn't ered the Rebels· for a final limited actidn in the second weU.
..__ _FOifl!.(U!
_ _ _ __.! (740)448·11558
repair
Forhomo
free
.
half, but still managed to
~
2001 Z·2B camaro 3400 esllmate call Chat. 740-992· much drfferent, With the score of35-74.
Eastern will begin TVC ·
2 male AKCG's pups, mllea, white wfth gray ltath· 8323
R b1
·
1
scrape
up
12
points.
Junior
. Kyle Mooney, who had 19
play Tuesday, as they 't ravel to
10wks old, Champion ., lnlorlor. esp.,lully loaded.
·
e e s scorrng on y two
Bloodline. (304)875·4412 $23,000. (304)6115·3131
Eu:cnucA11
points oft a Mooney jumper. poino, including two three- Jason Kimes netted II, and Waterford.
Days ask for Jan.- Nights
.
1304)095-3322
64 LTC, 3.8. V8, auto. runs
REm!GERA110N
As for Eastern, their lead con· point-goals, led South Gallia. the quick hands of Nathan
=~-..,....,.-'c:--:-:--:-::- good salvage IItie. 1300.
tinued to snowball.
·
74,1outh Clollla 35
Mooney went a perfect 3-for- Grubb added 10 more to the
AKC Registered Golden Re· (740)643-2187. Southern Residential or commercial
8. Gallia
12 3 2 10 - 35
.
lnevers. siod. Great Chriot·Ga
~:;I::N•:;Co;;::..-:-:-.--:-:::::::- wiring, new aervlce or r•
Eastern worked in many 3 from the foul line, and had 9 Eagle cause.
Eutorn
15 32 19 0 - 74
Brad Brannon took not South 611111 -Josh Wlugh 1 0-0 3. Kyle :
maoGih. 17401380•8972
92 Gold Buick L.otllllro. pairs. Muterllcenaodeltc· substitutes · throughout the of the 12 Rebel points in the
7 3-3 II, Jaaon- 2 ~ 4.
BIJ'd. Blue Quaker Hand leather" seats, loaded, trlclan. Ridenour Electr1cal,
one for the team but three, as Mooney
Tame
and
Talking. (740)949-1318
WV000308. 304-675-1788. remainder of the game, as the first quarter.
S1ophen R - 0 Q.t 0, ~ Fomtnor 1 ·
Eastern sported a more he took three charges on the o-1 2. S1ophen Bille)' 1 ~ 2.
l30ol)67S-4787
. starting five were all but lin1 2-4 4. Brandon c a - o 1·2 1. Totall;
night.
Blue Bermeae Kittens $75.
131!-11 35
each. (304)675-5702
Brent Buckley dominated Eutern- Jllon
3-411, GlrTott
Female Sconlah Terrier;
the boards in the second hal( Kerr 8 0.2 I 2. Cnrll Lyono 4 ~ 8. Nathen
Grubb 3 4-7 10, Alo a.r_. 8 ~ 13. ·
S17S. lemala Collie. $100;
racking up · 1 2 total rebounds. Brad Brannon I ~ 2, l!tlnt 8uclrloy 2 I· .
86 Ford Grand Marques,
$600 OBO, (7-40)992·1343.
· "We expected them to 2 5, Bro.- Worry 4 ~ 8, Austin Croeo
1 ~ 2. Cody Dll1 0.2 2. Tbtal• 32 6-17
Woll P\jpplea (96%), $300.
jump on us in the first quar- 74
l'11hlic- .'\utin·~ In ""r"~I'MIII'I'IC,
ready Doc. 10th. will hold till
\"uur Ui::ht lu 1\uu\l,lfl'liu·rl•llltlj..!hllu \"m1r lhllll',
ter. We are pl~ying with a Thrw Point Ooeia-Soulh Oallla
Dec. 24th, good tempers·
3(Moonoy 2. Waugh 1); Eastorn 2(Simpo
mont. (740)742·2669
couple very young, inexperi- aon 1. Lyono I)
tnced players, so we were pre- Aoboundo--South Glllla 20(Merrlck 0);
Eaalom 32 (Bucltlay t 2)
llree;
oevon
uood
reaervn
the
right
to
pared for a close lint half," T
Tho Eallern Local
u - OOIHa 27; Eulom 15
IDOx20
Ureo
on
rlmllt,
rejtot
any
or
111
bide
Board ot Edu01tlon 11
said Coach Caldwell of the Alol8la--South Gallla 9 (LHIM 3); Eut·
ouortld
ollee
piiCH
or
any
or
all
parte
ol
Richards Brothers Fruit
accepting bide for
em I 5 (Brannon 1)
Eagles.
·
Farm. APPLES AND
tho tole tho following or tall pipe, three . • bid. auooellful
Stealo-South Gallla 11Lowts t); Eulom
MUCH MORE. 24 miles
coleterla
tabl
.
.
bidder
mutt
eubmll
ourpluo equipment
"I thought we got out and 16 (Grubb 0)
North of Gallipolis on Coun·
uaortod atudtn poymont In full by
and vehicle:
1182 Ford Van, deoko, one wooded Cleh Or a . .hler
I \In I '-I 1'1 '1 II "
lawn
mowera, lllchlr'o dllk, one ahiMik only. loaled
free throws. He dunked off a
,\ II \ I '"II(H 1,
weede1tere, five metll office doek, bldt will be ojMnod
one
oommtrolal
at
11:00
noon
backdoor
cut, Williams assist••copped I·OD-20
electric convecllo~ 11111rn 111ndard
ing, and also hit a layup off an
--~-:--:-,---,.oven, two alx•bumor 11mt on Wecltllldlly,
assist from Brown. Williams
AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
110 Help Wanted
0% An-anclng on New John
had a three-point play and
one bench grinder, Trleaurer. 1111 II\OIIId
Deere Round and .Square
Buy
any
large
·
never
getting
more
than
Brent Darby scored on a 15elx tiling coblntto, be Olearly marked
Balers and Mower Condione
shot
on
each
trip
to
the
one
brake
ohoe
"lid
for
lurjllua·
tioners;
foot jumper.
&amp; get secnd at112 'price
rlvollr, o no work . ltlme• and mtllicl toi
offensive end and had
Ohio State scored on six of
bench, two Hilbart
laatarn
Lo011
992-9200
three
turnovers
during
its
seven
possessions
after
m11111 (for parte lohool Dlltrlct
Financing as Low as 3.5%
only),
ono
1
112
ton
AUinllan:
Llll
M.
Brown's layup at the 7 :29
. scoring drought.
on !5000 and 6000 SeriH
choln holal, and nino Rltchlo, Trenurer
Tractors. Also · as Low as
"From
our
defense,
we
got
mark and was on top 31 -24 at
AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
but IHW.
!~ 001 IIIII .f lollll
4.4% on Used Tractors with
a lot of steals and that ·was the the half.
John Deere Crrtclit Appro·
Th• ltoma wu1 111 ....
val.
a old
••
, 11. ll . . dovlllt, Ohio
breakout for us," said Savovic,
The Seahawks only had
Full/Part Time
Appolntrnont. e~n M 48772
Apply
in
person
a
senior
swingman
•
one
field goal over the first 8
OFFICE
olrongod
lor Phonll: 7oiH87a3318,
Pun Behind Mower.' 42"
Meanwhile, four Buckeyes 1/2 minutes of the second
lnoptelfon by 01lllng 740-417-11171
Bush Hog Mowor Powered
after 4 p.m.
ENVIRONMI:NT lho office ot the
by an 11 H.P. Hcnda Enwere scoring led by Terence half as the Buckeyes scored 16
1-888-974-JOBS Suporlntondtnl or (12) 3, 10,2001
gine with ·Electric or Pull
Dials' two baskets and two of the forst 18 points.
. start. One owntr, like new.
.__ _ __.;.,_ __. TrolllluNr. The board 2tc
$900. (304)578·2999

or 1-8ll0-672.ftl7.

po
. t u. a

fnnnPapS

.,.v.. ·

=-Bolli

!Or

rio

i

-y

2().

I

r . .,. . _I

Eagles
fronl PipS

co.

r

I

-4

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

PUBLIC

NOT I

tv~~~

l

osu

e•

-;::===:::;==::j
NOW
HIRING

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

.. ............. .....············

Drivers needed

$6 .-$8
Per Hour

~~~·:•::::·~~~~': ::"~::ro~··:O:h~

1

from PapS

zacn-

�Pac•M• ~Dally Seqtlnel

Mond8y, o.c. 3, 2001

Pomeroy, MJddleport, Ohio

'.Monct.y, Dec. 3, 2001

Pomeroy, Mlcldlepol1, Ohio

OOP

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

NBA Croaaword Puaale

COLLEGE HOOPS

R;o R•women put down
t ~obeds Wesleyan, 88-75

PHILLIP
ALl)II\

IIAULINOilld
DCAVA'l'INO
-tllullngtllit II'

lt{MAIIK W•"•MI

·a;

•••i•ta

(740) 992-347

°

BISSELL

..

,,,. '"' •· ,

.'

.

'

.

'

'

I

Kandt

Dlsc.Jodleg
Service

ua\JLc

River AG Service

"Ahead In Semce"
35537 SL RL 7 Nortb • Pomeroy, Ob 45710

740-985-3831
12% Economy Stock Fwd .......... IU0/100
12% Equ1111 12
.
(Fonlllllly Waater,n P~) ...........SS.OCIISO
Hunttra Prldt Dog Food .......I5,751S0
Lick Deer Blockl ...................... Sl.75
~ Cq.m •••••••••••••••••••••••3•••••••••• $5.2111 00

Crlliked Corn ...............................15.2d/100

Construction
Bryan Reeves

New Homee, Room AddiHone,
Gqragee, Pole BuH,dlnt
Siding, Deckl, Kltchene, Drvwallll
6More

FREE ESTIMATES!

7

11

' Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case·IHParls
· Dealers
1000 Sf, Rt. 7 South

740-742·7709
Reasonable Ratea
All Occasions

ao.-la

SERVICE~
UhQurCCd

UIC~

,_..,

Cl'.lknn of al CIQtl. '

LOcoMd In ~ray...
for'"'" li .... IIKJIIOn td

(740) 992·5827 :

'229.00*
• FREE INSTALLATION
• FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
•, 50 YEAR WARRANTY

; fRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tt4e OOCTOil SA"&gt; YOV'~ NOT
'
flfAOY TO GO
tiOMf YtT,
IVT Tt4i .

24'120'

11·12 DOUBLE Will

NVttses
ovrvore1&gt;

PUSTIC

QUALITY WINDOW

992-4119 1-800-291-5600

FIRST COlE,
FIRST SERVED

Vlslt Our Showmurq On Stale Route 33
'MIIC!S North OfPonle,.,;, Ohio, At Counly Roa.t 18
'

• No Dfalers or Contractors Please
VIsa I Mastercard
WV#Ol3477

·i-J.

•

97 Beech St.
ffilddleport, OH
(lO'xllr &amp;1D'x20')

P~erog·

agles

luery Thursday

(740) 992-4559

&amp;SUnday

Doors Open 4:30
urty birds stat
&amp;:30

PrOgressive top line
Thursdays
Prtgresslue

1066 2nd:Street • Mason, WV CoueraU an SUndllys
(1000 ft from the bridge) · ·

Tel: (304) 773-5800
Hours: Sun· Thur Ham ; 10 pm
Frl &amp; Satll am ·llpm

"&amp;t?.:

~i.; qi

tV"
1
1

.J

WICII •••H

I

DIINIR ••••• :

1
1

: ll:3Qam • 2:00pm : 5:00pm· 7:30pm :
1
14 yrs &amp; under FREE •4 yrs &amp; under FREE
1 5-8 yrs ~ '2.99 1 5-8 yrs ~ '3.99
: 9-1·2 yrs ~'3.99
9-12 yrs - 14.99 :

'

Ruttan•. Olllo

llualllble to rent
fll' parties
lllso DJ. on
request

Hobbards

Greenhouse
Syracuae, Ohio
992·5175

Now open for
C~tma.s

&amp;:0!011

Poinsettia
Many colors to
choose from

Open Mon·Sat 10-4
Cloled Sunday
11 7/ niCJ

'

BUFFET TO GO !Lunch .. 4.911
BUFFET TO GO !Dinner •• 11.111 ~~~

High &amp; Dry
Sell-Storage
Advertise

331.95 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

space for 740-992-5232
1111211 mo.

• 'Room Addition&amp; A

R-"11
• NI.W Garagn
•

E~lcll

6 Plumbing
• Roo«no &amp; Outtero

• Vlnrllldlng 1 PllnllroD
• Patio and Porch Dtcb
Free EB1imatea

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-Ohio
992·6215

Tonia Re1 er
Licensed Massage
Therapist

740-992·1705
213 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
Come In and aak
about opeclalo
Qllt Ceftlllcateo
AV1111oble

..

CONTRACTORS, INC,
Racine, Ohio 45771

74Q-985·3948

CONCRETVBLOCK/BRICK
• Foolen, Walla, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replatements, • Walk!
and.Drives • Sttndl . ,
Cnte Free Estimates
Sei'"IIRK Ohio and W.V.

WV#03171l

lOBEII BISSELL
CONSIRUUION
•New Homes
•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Slop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1671

""""'

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R Hupp Aqf'nl
Box 189
r.1 1dd lcpor t. Oh1o 45760

Local 843·5264
M~.dicare

Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401 KRoll overs:
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

740

llatltburn

-2422
Fully 1n1urod

$50 per
750 East State Sireet Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

nionth.

W~d

P•n

NwU.
J NT

Phone 992·2155

~

742-2572
Kip -742-7719
11/18 pel 1 mo.

Herballfe ·
Independent
Distributor

' PEANUTS

::F~;.:.:..

'

1

Call for ProductJ
or Opportunity:
Jaanle Howell:
740-992·7038

••
••
•
•

IWHI.t'a1;&amp;41..1aSD.IXIn

"

DEER
CUT6
WRRPPED

I

••
••

•

maplewood lillie

{

Sl Rt.124
Ratlne, Ohio

l

949-2734
Ule tlln mJJIIe deer
summerSIIUSdf/t

~Oiler's
'YOM ~U 'lilt, lit dill 'Ill'
SR315, lmiglvilll,~

742·2076

_ _ ___, ,------.,;,..____, .----...----..........
~

.

D

M~~

·IS LOOSE!

=~·
.....

5I Trolley
57 · - Qlrte"

II E- 10
St Pelco of
mind

c1a1o

20 Urge
22 E!Kia
22 Tfnio

r.ut

All ~- '

lllttMnLII

1 0pon

2 Ill-humored 24 llugor Rey
3 ACINII
. alai

24 ~

4~

2 7 ='•
2t Aunll otal.

"So-··

39 Runa - y

2t1

~

411'11.-1

27Bogs

31

Chanto

'

31 Nol.40 Find '

'

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~~=
43

p-

&lt;M ln..,_
45 ER picture
47 Zeul' wile
41 SUbj. ol

21 Bran
oourco
30 Conhod-

erote

Proaton'o

I!UL
IOidler
I'OIIovaN
9 lalamlc VIPa 31 Banjo
41 Curved roo1
10 Eloc:trlcll
couoln
52 MattunH
32 "Norma -"

41 Wrllar
Bagnold
43 1UO.

Chairman

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplograms are created from quotltlonll by riiiTIOIII
people, past and present. Each taltefln the cipher . . . . ror ..-.othtl.

Todsy's clue: V equals 9

KDJVZTJR
X AT

XAJYRATR,

DLO

V~BRRBFHLN

JHUAZM

FDNLBZHDR

FM

BS

XABYRDLOR

'XAT

...

T M T.'

QTZHNAXTQ

I B AL

B L

DYQYVBL

I .

ZBVHRHDLD.'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He waa playing !logtlrt all !he lime
but h.e wu really luat a big oLtvonv bOwf o1 mullt.• - ~

•· K,.rnoron Humplln~y IIOgoirt--r•' .

1

~:~:t:~T

l~ltad loy

0 Rearrange
lett•rs of
four Krambled word•
low

I

to

form

foyr

.I

~s a dummy entry, .

::::

cu.v •· POUAN _;;..._ _ __

the

be·

simple words.

I I I I

I1

·

S@ ~c{\ }A -lG t, tf Se

I

j

I"

t--,..sr-rl._lric~,....~!

nnd three dubs.
Marty sez : When
declarer attacks a suit
and you have two
stoppers, it is Qften
correct to duck.
The book costs
S 17.95 including
postage. Call (800)
386-7 432 to order.

25Jr.'non,

5 Llghl30 Comlarl
6
34 Stolve
Ill"
37 Colo. neigh· 7 Qoraldlno
bor
or P1tll
31 Hupa
8 Sgt.

dummy's clubs are
B 0 L DUE
dead, South can col1
2
lect only three spades,
two hear.ts, two dia ~ ..
,
monds' .aqd ot')e du(?:' :. :, .· f! L·· T ~ · E •
If y&lt;!l.l"~~rab the 'fjr!C •. : ' .,.•••. ·,'
club trick, he wm wlri · .
1:
your heart ihift and
continue · clubs until
N E 0 M E I~
you take yo11r ace.
With the spade king
1
declarer wi.ll rake. in
an overtnck wnh
three spades, two
heam, two diamonds

13 Pufllllalll
:13 USIIA grwd
It Mo. GillOt 31 NllliiG
21 Gorden 1m- · cry

DOWN

....-

I

•

::an

14Ac:lreM
T1tutman
11 llllant
11 Emblom
17 TaoiNI.
11 T-lhlo

• J t ..
Q 4 :1

the heart queen . As

tall DOling

Deer Shop

Advertise our business
•
on t 1s ~age
for one month for as
low ·as 525

'

.

--------------------1

I

J&amp;D
BilliARDS

2127 1mopd

P/B

IZ-~

•

Nov. 26 ·Dec. 24

Advertise

Pom~roy

C:ARPENTER Me1Z Massage
SERVICE
'her~fl

-

............ ·IH ....VI:J""

•.,

REBULARlY
$327.00 PER JOINT

BIRG02171

in this

NOW OPEN

t41~.

$200.00 PER 101111

Weekly Specials
SR 124, MIMmWe, Ohio

(740) 992~3194
992-6635

YOUNG'S

NOT

CIDLD
CARE

Mon·Fri10AM ·I I'M
SltUrdiY lOAM· .PM

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

Y Q JIG t

6 A

With the holidays
rapidly approaching •.
Ids spend the week
looking at some suitable gifts for bridge
friends -- or for yourself.
First, Marty Bergen's latest, "Marty
Sez" (Magnus Books,
2001) . You get 114
useful tips, one per
'page, covering all aspects of the game, but
most (94) are about
bidding. The book
ends with a glossary.
In this deal, you are
sitting East, looking &lt;tt
your h&gt;11d and the
dumony
(North) .
Aga in st three ·no trump. your portner
leads the spade jack.
l)cclarcr wins with
the queen in his hand,
th,•n r.llns 1h e dub
jack, partner playing
the seven.
How
would you plan the
defense?
llergen -- following
prese nt-day tournament style -- recommends opening two
no-trump with 20 or
21 points. This hand,
with so many aces
and kings, is arguably
too stn;mg, being
worth • two-club
opening and two-notrump rebid, which in
his style shows 22 or
23 points. With 24
points -- lucky you! - force to game and
hope paru\'e r doesn't
have a Yarborough . ·
You must duck this
trick . When partner
follows to the next
club, win and shift to

New HolidaY Hourt:

in this
space
for $50
per '.
month

••

Detter: South
Vvloor•ble: 8oth

EV'RYTI-IIN' !.!

VINYL BEPLICEI'iEIT WINDOWS
-MIY lllE /IIIIIBI.E BUNS-

ttGIIJ-1381

-...

11

. , ...... 01'

12 llolly Dlck'o 14 LM1t I'IOicllr
.,.._
II HltVwd

t AK5

~ N"t'

1\CTORY DIRECT
PRICING

CoolviHa, OH &lt;f/S723

•_
L8ftiiiOW
..

6 AQU
• Alt54

•

Country, Dancf! &amp;
RockMuslc '

Rio Gra·
n
de
men·
.
m
ove
to
2-0
in
AMC
••
RIO GRANDE- It's conferenCe time and the Rio Grande Rednien basketball
team is beginning to heat up. The Redmen ':"on for the second consecutive night
~tft a 79-74 win over Roberts Wesleyan, Saturday night at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (4-6, 2-0 AMC) scored the first eight points and jumped out to a
12-2 lead. Roberts Wesleyan then collected itself and went on an ·11- 2 run to move
to within one point at 14-13. The Redmen would end up leading 38-30 at halftime.
.
Rlo junior Jerry Barlow (Otway, OH) was the big scorer again for the Redmen,
polll'ing in 22 points, including nailing some pressure shots do~n the stretch. Barlow also collected seven rebounds and blocked four shots.
Roberts Wesleyan {.S-4, I -2 AMC} tool« the lead1for the first time at 62-60 with
9:21 to play in thr game and then Barlow, freshman point guard Nat Moles
(Charleston, WV) and freshman wing player Matt Simpson (Reedsville, OH)
came up with clutch play1in Rio gaining the win, 79-74. The play of the game
may have come with nine second remaining when sophomore jumping jack Sean
Plummer ·(Portmore, j~maica) . tipped ~,n,d intercep\ed .the in-bounds pass with the
~f6'te 77-7 4. Plummer rlien sJ:~~d.;th~,.~,!II.Widv pair of fre~ throws.
·.
Joe Delaney (Archbold, OH) addl'(l 14 points (10 in the first halt) !&gt;n a perfect 7for"7 shooting ti;om the .field. Plummer chipped in 10 points.
. James Aoyd topped the scoring chart with 29 points for the Raiders. Joe Rebisz
idded t 4 points and pulled down 1'1 rebounds.
"I was n;ally proud of the way our guys batded back tonight," Redmen head
'coacli Earl Thomas said. "We kept o.u r composure down the stretch, we had some
people step up and just.'make some huge plAys.

, n'

t Q

Advertise in :
this space for;
s100 per
month.

;Jj;l

.•

Makes Tractor

1 4 I

11 Kuldl'l
flllnd

~

•

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Bv MARK WIWAMS
RIO GRANGE 'SID

t

1.._.
l i . . tl

Openln&amp;lad: • J

740·992-7599

-

• 1 J

•

992-5479

· FIIUIIICIIII &amp; 90 Days
.8ame As Caslt Available
lnsuracl • Free Elti11111tel

I( . .

"·
~·
6 JIOI74

eft Warner I

(740) 949·1521

•

-~
t Pn ouuMct 10
~!

6 K Uti I

.

Cellular

.e

can't 18Y enough about the way 1he
RIO GRANDE SID
played:' Rio Granda HHd Coach oQrM • s.l •Tapeoll
•
... Olo1 .......
RIO GRANDE - The University David Smalley .ald.
of R.i&lt;l Grande women,s basketball team
Turley abo pulled own five
won for the
time in nine games rabound1, dbhed out .1 ix
and
with an 88-75 triumph had one stHl. She abo incraa•ed
aver Roberts Wesleyan her comecutive free throw• made
on Saturday night at the ltraak to tS in a row.
Newt Oliver Arena.
Freshman Angel Allen {Beckey, WV)
Rio Gr:1nde (9-3, 4-0 played big for the second straight game,
Pomeroy Eoole•
AMC) jumped out to a
·
d
h
r
BINGO 2111
3 19 1 d d I k d scoring 14 points an dis ing out 10ur
0 ;
Every Thul1day
t1
eath an
assists. Alkia Fountain (Columbus, OH)
I Sunday
ol e otn Betverge 0 ya . added 13 points and ripped down seven
b owou . u as man
b
ds J .
.
rd E .1
Doorl Open ..:30
times happens in col- re oun . umor pomt gua
m1 y
Early birds start
. Turtey
lege basketball, the final Cooper (Okeana, OH)t)scoredd
. di12 points
6:30
•
chapter wasn't written (al1 m the second hal an
shed out
Progressive
lop line
~t th'at point.
·
five assists.
Thursdays
,
Rio was clinging to a 40-37 lead at
Tr~cy R ebisz fueled the Roberts
Progressive
halftime.
comeback by scoring 27 points on 12Coverall
on
Robe~ Wesleyan" (2-5, 2-3 AMCj"' ofc t s··.~ooting from the field and
Sundays,
..
finally gained the lead at 66-65 on a Jay- P:ulling do~n 12 rebound~ (ux offenup by Chn_!lina Volpe with 7:57 remain-· nv~). Jenmfer Stuczynsk1 added 12
ing. The lady R aiders would increase pomts (10 m the second halt) and four
the lead to five poin!'· and then Rio assists before fouling out. Volpe and Erin
BUILDERS INC,
Ienior Renee Turley"':(R.acine, OH) .I.Gsh scored 10 points each.
New Homrs • Vinyl
took over.
.•
Roberts Wesleyan out-rebounded Rio
Siding
• N•w Garogot
'· ",'ro'r)ey willed the Redwomen to Grande, 40-36, and both teatns regis• Roplacemenl
victory, scoring 15 of her 22 points tered high turn!)ver numbers 'w ith RWC
Wlnd.,.s•Room
in the secon4 l)alf and was a demon committing 26 miscues to Rio's 25.
AddiUons • Rooflng
on the cou~ iq t~~ final five ~n!:h~ Redwomen aim to cont!nue their
COMMEICIAL ani IEIIOIIffiAl
utes. "Slie (1\fr~) played like • ·· wmnmg ways !&gt;n Tuesday evemng when
FREE ESTIMATES
senjor, ·-abe settled us down; I just they host Wilberforce at 7 p.m.

b

... ....

WI~'I

44 "Trt" 01 "ra"

ACROSS

1
":~:;;:~~~::::N:·
..,
r
""

I v ., I r. I

1 hb
1grew u~"1 n 8 tou gh neg
or-

hood. You know how· par111t1
bronze their baby's shoes? Will,
ANE E
mine ware ....... •.
·
7
18 aV Campltlo tho chucklt quoted
.
.
.
.
.·
by filling In rho miMing wordo
L.....L.-L.....L.....JL-..L......J you dovolop from llap No. 3 bolaw,

I

V

6

LETTE~S IN SQU~RE; I'

· P~INT NUMIE~ED

UNSCR~MILE LETTERS

FOR ANSWER

I

IIII

r I' I' I

II I

IC:IIAM·LITS ANSWERS
Victor • Quilt • /Eject • Weapon - COP/fER
The new colleague got very nervous when he heei'Ci·
his resume had gotten caught In the office COPIER. ·

I

..
•
•

Tucsll:ly, Dec. 4, 2001
Th is co uld be ll fortun.1t'c
)'t'ar aht'ad for you where the

products of ynnr fert ile imaginou ion r.:o uld become &lt;]U itt"
prolltnblc. You'll have 11111plc
npport un ity to use yo ur own
kll·a~ and conn·pts.

SAC; ITTA IU US (Nov. 23Dec 2 1) -- A pl.'ncm w ho
prcviou,.Jy rejcct,:d m resisted
your philosnp hv ami view~ on
so mething iltll;ortanl w yuu
may 11ow Jo a n ilbout f.1ce
.lll d bel-Ui liC a protOl HOili~t in stc:-.d uf a .mtag011i~ t. AstroGuph year ah c:1 J prcdictiom
nu ke ~rear X mou· Hocking

uuffcrs fo r :1 11

~igm

of 1hc Zo-

di:lc. Mail S2 for cac h t (l Astro- Gr:lp h, c/o thi ~ newspa pt•r, 11.0. Uox 173K, Murr;1y
Hill Statio n , New York, NY
I01 5R. Ue sure to Ha te the
Zod i:. c signs yo u desire

CA I' IUCO itN (Dec. 22Jml. 19) -- Me:1surcs ca n be '
r:.kcn tOlby w alter :. ncg:.tive
'iw:.tion, wh ich set• med im perviou~ to dun~c . Th i~ dranutic transforma tio n cou ld
open several tll'W upptlrtunitics fi1r yo u.

AQUARIUS Uan . 20- Feb.
19) -- (;c t t hat s ign:~turc on
the bouum line toda y or

nitie~ than usual co uld hang
around today. However, th ey
ar~ in tlu·ir early stages, so it
wdl be up to you to recognize
and devclo l' them .

someone yo u hanker ro re:un
up with . AJ~;rccm~n t~ that yo u
enter at thi5 111nc haw: cxcdIC'nc ch:mccs for succe~s .

I'ISCES (Feb . 2U-Mmh 20)
-- Ucgin today to Jo all you
p o~s ibly

LEO Unly 23-A u~. 22) -Ue more ;mcn ivc today to

can to up~rad e the

quality of yo ur perform:ntcc-.

pro.rnor~ somethin g you. feet·

It's a period when good work
will receive ~he recognition
:md rcwdrds it d.:~crvc-s.

promi~es

a number uf pcoona
benclits fo r you. I t'~ imponam
to make mmc priority time
for your intercsu .

AltiES (March 21-Aprill~)
-- Po~itive ch:m~s arc in the
'vinds at this time concert1i1 1g

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-- rotby marks the beRinninl(
of a pl'riml of time when peo -

yo ur social life. There's a

chance roll t·ou ltlmcct ~O IIll'­
onc nt'w ~oday or Hl't a frcd1
perspective on a person you
know.

ple who yo\a'vl' done ni ce
· thi.n~rs for in the pa~t will fin,i

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Co nditLons arc c:-; n·c rm·ly conducin~ tot.by to
enabl e you tO tin:-~lly put :-~ n
important m:mcr ro rest to
your sati~f.1ction . Uc sure h)
get o n 1t llOW .
GEM INI (Mav 21-June 20)
-- Don' t be afra id to m;lh
tlut ho ld pitdJ today o u
somclhiug you he~it:ltc to present. You h&lt;~ve the abilit y at
th i~ time to conv ince o 1hcn
to suppon itlca' th 3t :~ rc significan t to yo u.
·

LIUI~A (Scpo. 23-0co. 23) •
- Thl'rc lllilY be :\ few ~Iim­

way~

to

rl•np roc~te. It' ~

your

tum in th e b."tttcr's box.

mer~

of ho pe thnt reveal

thctllsclvt•s today ~oncc rning

wmcthing
whkh you
co uldn 't break through. Thl"ir
ramifications will become
mort• visibl~ with time.

SCORI'I O (Oct'. 24-Nov.
22) -- foll&lt;l\v your i ndin&lt;~ ­

tiom tod:ay that urge you to
Mrivc for lofty objcni\le•.

(:on ditiom .u e stirri n~ now
that wuhl have a profou nd,
positive cfTL'l:t on your ambitiom.

CA NCE it Uunc 21-Jnly
22) -- M ore matcri:.l uppmtu-

I

•

�Page 10

The Daily Sentinel

Read all of your area local happenings on 2

Mondllf, Dece111ber J, JIG I

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

'

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

NFL
ROUNDUP

Titans 31, 8nJVms IS ·

Bua:aneeas 16, Bennis I 3, or

BealS

Lions 10

Steeleas 21, Vilcinft 16 .

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

.'

Cowban 20, Reclskins 14
Md

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

Dolphins 21, Bnnos 10

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

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

SEATTLE (AP).-

R.ian LindeU, who inissed twtce m the final

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

49els 35, •

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

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

Whars inside

o

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

residents say
BY TONY M. lEAcH

Packers maul Jaquars, 5

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

Rams 35, Falcons 6

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

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

Harrisonville heliport complete
BY TONY M. LEACH

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

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

Weath•r
Hlch: 70s, L-: 40s
Details, 3

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

OHIO
'Pick 3 (day): 8·2·6

Fall Is a Grand Time on the Trail

I I

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

Piclt 3 (nlaflt): 0-6-2

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

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

'

Index
1 Section - 10 Paps

.,

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

2
6-8
9
2

4
3
3
5,7, 10
3

c 2001 Ohio V11lley Publishing Co.

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

FROM STAFF REPORTS

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

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

•'
\fv

I' I'OIIIAL BANK

Racine 949-2210
992-6533

'

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

'

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

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

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

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

in every t.:ounty.

'
'

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

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

POINT CLEAR

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

800.544.9933
www. marriotgrand.com

Friday, December 7, 200 1

MEDICAL CENTER

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

Discover the Holzer Difference

Refreshments will

be served.

Special Gift Shop promotions will take place!

·All are invited!

www .holzer.org

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

•

.

Open House

.

.

nl

·Reconc~liation service planned

FROM STAFF REPORTS

'•

.

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

Doctor to ·seek 92nd House District seat

•

.••

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

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Saints 27, Pallllled'S 23

8.0 0.949.4444
www. rtjgolf com

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

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

Ravens 39, Colis 27

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

.

s,,hawks 13, C1IIIJfJIS 10, or

t •.

1\J

'I

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