<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7615" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/7615?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-06T02:51:40+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18026">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/04bbb6f7bcbb2266bced6d1865b7e30d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fde3b05a404eb113a1ad4c121649c8f3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24791">
                  <text>Page D8 • ~unllap lltimtf-~tnllntl

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

Sunda~Dec. 30,2001

~:toliclays

Yahoo Inc. cleared for takeover of HoUobs.comSAN JOSE, Calif. (AI') - Yahoo!
Inc. ag=d to tak ·· ~ver Internet
CJreer site HotJobs.co for 1436 million Thursday :ofier the owner of rival
Monster.com decided not to sweeten
irs 6-month-old otTer for HotJobs.

Yahoo had made an unsolicited bid
for Holjobs two " -eeks ago in hopes
of wresting the No. 2 help-wanted
sire away from No. 1 Monster, which
is owned by TMP Worldwide Inc. of
New York.

S&amp;P

I'

dollars.
Moving out of broad-based
index funds like the Vanguard
500 Index Fund and into
fnamPIIgeD1
other types of stock funds
bier," run through your mind. means finding a fund type
Music always seems to make that will capture as much of
life's tough realities easier to th e market's returns as possiswallow. (In case you've for- ble while meeting your own
gotten, soq,g's lyrics go like investment risk tolerance.
this: "You've got to know That's tricky to do under the
when to hold 'em, know best of market conditions.
when to fold 'em, know
• Run . Running might
when to walk away and know seem like a great idea - but
when to run ... .")
run where? While bond funds
·• Hold · 'em. Most invest- might sound like the next
ment pros expect stocks to reasonable choice, there have
rebound in the later part of been an unprecedented numnext year. And because market ber of interest rate cuts this
timing, i.e. buying in when year. Even though rates are
prices are their lowest and low, they won't stay 10\Y forselling when they are at their ever. When interest rates do
peak, has never been mastered begin to move up, bond fund
by the masses, holding onto a investors could wind up with
. returns. "Because o f
good investment generally negattve
makes sense. There are excep- all the interest-rate cuts, bond
tions, of course, but if your funds uare riskier investments
tirp.e horizon is, •ay, five or 10 today than they were two
or more years, staying put years ago_..- says Mattes.
could be a wise choice.
Then, if you leave equity
And, according to Brian funds, you could be turning
Mattes,. vice president of pub- your back on the next market
lic relations at The Vangu~rd rally. Even though this is the
Group, index funds have still first time since 1973-74 that .
been good perform en. "Index the market has had two nega· funds outperformed the tive back-to-back performajority of all equiry funds
mance
years,will
hopes
that
market
turn are
around
last year and have again this . the
year,'' says Mattes." As of Dec. in the latter halfof next year.
When it does turn, even the
13, the S&amp;P 500 index funds
have outperformed 53 per- most seasoned Wall Street
cent of all general equity players aren't expecting the
funds."
20-percent to 25-percent
: So, even though · their equity fund returns they got
returns aren't rosy plus-sided in the wild 1990s. For the
ones, index funds reflect the time being, that· cycle is
market - just as they are behind· us. Instead, pros like
designed to do. ·Plus, they Mattes suggest that investors
show that actively managed look for equiry returns to be
funds have a hard time beat- in the 7-percent- to 10-percent-per-year range over the
ing it.
• Fold 'em, and walk away. next few years.
Dian Vujovich's most recent
For Thomas to sell all the
shares of her Vanguard 500 books indl4dt "101 Mutual
Index fund and walk away Fund FAQs" (Chandler House,
means a couple of things: 1999) and "10-Mi,ute Guide
First, that she'll incur an to the Stock Market" (MacMilinvestment loss. And, second, lan, 2000). To learn more about ·
that she'll have to make ml4tual funds, visit her l#b site at
another decision about what http: llwww. dianifum!freebies.co
to do with her investtnent m.

She also does wall murals
for residents who want some- ·
thing unique - a one-of-akind design on a wall in their
from PageD1
home. She once painted a
to them - like preserving the full-sized tree on a living
past - and they leave -happy," room wall and another time
painted bedroom furniture in
she said.
"( t 's not easy," .she says, an off-white with a grapevine
"because it involves Treverse and rose design.
Since she was a child,
painting, which means that
everything you see from the . Michele has been doing varifront is painted on the back ous forms of art work. She
began drawing at an early age
side of the glass."
Displaying a piece she had receiving some assistance
just completed, Michele from he' mother who is also a
explained the process of painter.
She trained under a certi\vorking backwards to create
art work which is made for fied artist in Ripley, W.Va.,
and for the past 10 years or so
viewing from the front.
She said it takes real con- has been teaching art classes.
As for h~r talent and the
centration because the design
and paints are put on in a dif- ability to make a .living doing
ferent order and any lettering something she loves, she gives
God the credit.
has to be done backwards.

.Ar~o~lysts had expected a bidding
war between TMP and Yahoo, but
TMP said Thursday it would not raise
its '&gt;id.
' ''/e are very pleased to be joining
Yllloo,'' said Holjobs' chief executive,

Don
fawaPipDI
mental Working Group. "This
is indicative of the pesticide
that's out there."
Though foreign produce
rests higher for pesticide
residue, "we're still talking
about very low levels" that
have resulted in no reponed
illnesses, said Glenn Brank,
spokesman for the California
Depanment of Pesticide Regulation.
Bernardo
Mendez,
•
spokesman for the Mexican
Consulate in San Francisco,
said little disparity exists in
standards between the two
countries.
"I don't think there is much
of a difference in standards;'
said Mendez. "Maybe in some
past yean there has been some
problem in enforcement, but
that is getting better."

•••
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
(AP) - New MeXIco cotton
farmers have declared war on a
s~ pest that can wipe out an
entire crop.

Dimitri Uoylan .
With m'enue expected to be down
37 percent this year, Yahoo is hunting
for new ways of making mol)ey
beyond advertising. Holjobs charges
employen and recruiten to post job

Boll weevil e.-.dication programs have recently been put
in place throughout the entire
state, according to New Mexico State U nivenity.
"We've just completed our
third full season of eradication," said Joe Friesen, the program director for the Southcenttal New Mexico Cotton
Boll Weevil Control Conunittee. "We've pretty much got
the infestation localized to the
Las Cruces area."
Boll weevils are insects that
feed on the pollen of cotton
plants, cousing decreased yield
and quality. They were tint dis. covered in New Mexico in
1991.
"It can be devastating,"
Friesen said. "They're very
prolific. The boll weevil has to
be gotten rid of or there won't
be cotton."
Er.dication
programs
involve tracking, detecting and
spraying fields where the .Weevils are found.
Similar programs have
already helped eliminate the
boll weevil Arizona, Califor"nia, Virginia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia,
Aorida and Alabama.

m

openings and to access its database of
resumes.
HotJobs' database of 5 miUion
resumes trails Moruter.com's 14 million,and Holjobs lost $21.2 million in
the first nine months of the year.

Giuliani nears deal with
Yankees, Mets for ballparks
NEW YORK (AP) -The
New York Yankees and Mers
could make their biggest otTseason acquisitions with the
help of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani: a pair of new $800 million stadiums.
The cost of the proposed
new ballparks, each with a
retractable roof, would be
divided evenly between the
ciry and ihe two teams, Giuliani said Wednesday.
But final word on the plan
belongs to incoming mayor
Michael Bloomberg, who
said the stadium package is a
good one because New York
is a "first-class city," that
deserves "first-class· facilities."
Giuliani, who appeared
determined to work out the
deals in the five days before
his term' expires, said he hasn't concluded negotiations
with the teams.
Under the proposal, the
state would pick up • $.150
million tab for infrastructure

improvement around Y•nkee
Stadium - including puking and a new subway station, Giuliani said.
The ciry would issue taxexempt construction bonds
to cover the construction
costs, with the teams •nd the
ciry dividing the $50 million
a year debt service.
Mets
spokesman
Jay
Horowitz confirmed the·
terms of the proposed deal. A
spokesman for the Yankees
was unavailable for comment.
According to Giuliani, the
teams would sign 35-year
leases with no escape clauses.
While there is no .deailline
looming to force a stadium
deal, the Yankees' current
lease with the ciry expires
after the 2002 season.
Giuliani insisted the deal,
believed to be the largest pri·
vate-pub!ic venture in b•seball history, would pay for
itself.

"' - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Coolville
Marine
dies in fall

RINGING IN THE NEW YEAR

•

Soldier was
stationed in
Naples, Italy

Browns topple

took advanced trammg at
. Camp Lejeune, N.C.
He has been at the Naples
base since April 2000, and
was scheduled to return
home on leave in February.
His active duty was to end in
FROM STAFF REPORTS
August 2003.
COOLVILLE - Mr. and
The Parkersburg (WVa.)
Mrs. Steve Kibble of News reported Sunday that
Coolville received word military officials told family
Thursday morning of the members that Kibble was
death of their son, U.S. alone ~nd off dury when th~
Marine Cpl. Casey Kibble, accident happened.
21.
In addition to his paren~
He reportedly died of head he is survived by three siS:.
injuries received in a fall ters, Holly of CoolviUe,Jen~
from the balcony of a build- nifer Dodson of Tucson,
ing at the U.S. Naval Support Ariz., and Andrea Kirk of
Activity Base in Naples, Italy. West Jetferson; his paternal
Casey
entered
the grandmother, Hazel Burford
Marines' delayed enlistment of Belpre, and maternal
program before graduating grandmothe~, Gypsy Newfrom Federal Hocking High berry of Parkersburg.
· School in 1999. That sumFuneral arrangements wiU
mer, he began his basic train- be . announced by White
ing ai Parris Island, S.C., and Funeral Home in Coolville.

r.tans, Bl

Deaths
Charles W. Cornell Jr., 72
Edith W. Harless, 82
Details, A3

weekends Forever Plan.

.600 anytime minutes plus

2001 ~ns with

unlimited weekends
forever for $39.95..

HI. .: 201, Low: lis
Deta~s.
A2 jl,. ~ -·
...
....
' .
....

No paper
Tuesday

plus, get a Nokia 252c
for just 1¢.

POMEROY
The
Daily Sentinel, produced on
an early deadline today, will
not be published Tuesday so
its employees can observe
the New Year's holiday.
Regular publication and
business hours resume
Wednesday.
The Daily Sentinel wishes you and yours a very
prosperous and happy New
Year.

'

order at home. FREE delivery

~Us. Cellular

1•888•BUY•USCC

uscellular.com

·

OHIO
Pick 3 Nlpt: 9-1-0

Pick 4 Night: o- 2-4-1
5upellotlo: 7-U-14-20-35-37
Bonus Ball: 32

We connect with you7

Kicker: 4-8-8-~-3-S
Pick 3 Day: 9-1-6
Pick 4 Day: 7-9-2-0
W.VA.
Daily 3: 5-8-0
DallY 4: 5-2-3-0
FOwilbll: IQ-15-27-43-45 (31)

FOr ~nesses with ftve or more lines, please call&amp;n-947-5729.

u.s. I
lllddoy
lllddoy

Kneen

Ha•atown Newspltpar

. What's Inside

Art ·

computer, this is a great time
to organize and review your
home and business expenses
and
income.
fromPageD1
Is your cash flow follow
Best for the Herd."
your plan and budget? Many
The third session held on farmers, homeowners and
March 5 will be given by · small business persons neglect
Greg Spars, regional r~presen­ this important part of their
tative, emphasizing "Herd lives. Making an annual plan
Health - Putting The Health focuses your thoughts, goals
Program Together." Reserva- and subsequent spending
tions are not needed but habits on what you want to
y;ould help in preparing suffi- accomplish this year.
cient handouts, so please call
A budget gives you
our office at 992- 6696. This
reminders on how well you
P'ogram is open to the public.
planned and enacted your
•••
plan to meet family and busiGather up those expense
ness goals. Take some time at
,and ir1come receipts, it's time
to get ready for preparing the beginning of the new year
your income tax. Tax forms to discuss and write down a
plan for your farm, household
are in the mail.
Federal farmer rax guides and business.
(Hal K"een is Meigs C01mty$
are available for pick-up from
Extensiorr
ageut for agricultl4r&lt;
our office. Whether yo u stuff
your tax items into a kitchen ,md 11af1~·ral resources, Ohio State
drawer, shoebox or the family Uuir•crsity.)

many opportunites for get-togethers, AS

llul:khlnnon

stores
Beck~!\' Cfossire Slllpplng err..
1»11255·3'190
wai-Mart, 1330 N.E - or.,
(:1)4) 255·2758
wai-Mart. 100 Bucklw1non Crossroads,
()14)473 ·11~6

ChariOIIown

c -·
CIII1!JI&gt;ull

--

CIII1!JI&gt;ull

GallpOIIs

F«-

-

Wai·Mart. Chories1r&gt;M1 P1ala
(:ll4) 724·1057

750 western Ave., V40J 702-4872
East Pointe sroppng Ctr.,
150 a,;~ or.. Ste. C8,1304) 622·2331
Wai·Mart. 550 NeW ~nt ~aza
13041 622·7191
712 Beve1y Ake, ()141636·9311
17 Mkil_, Rd., Ate. 73,
lll41 363·7881
Wai·Mart. Slygart wney Mall.
(:1)4) 363·8181
Wai·Mart. 2145 Eastern Ave.,
040) 441·1066

--

Ill lttYM1

n a Jto:A.n

"l.valo
l.valo

t.eWtsbrq

-.

Mortlnslrlq
Mortlnslrlq

IIICirpl.-r

wai-I.Wt, 11-LJl., (304) ~
1423 O!lal H\j1w8y, (301) 73'1-3900
~ 17850Garlin1GidrBI'Id.,
()11) 766-7171
Classic PlaZa, 4()8 E. HIM'On,
(7 40) 288-0016
wai-Marl 100wa1ma11 or.. 17401286-6964
1'/a(-I.Wt, 220 SOUth. (304) 788·3020
BrOOdock ~~ 12101Wir1ch!ster Rd.,
(301) 729-1047
wai-Mart. 12101 Wlncllesrer Rd .
(301) 729-3850
· 518 N. Jeftenon S1., Ste. 9, (304) 645-5727
waJ-Mart. 520 N. -'!fferson st.
(304) 645-58i!J
1345 Edwin Miller Blvd.. (3041 264-0400
waJ-Mart. 8110 Foxcroft Ave..
(304) 263·431 9
t.torg;muwn Commons, 6518 M!IJI Rd.,
(:1:)4) 983-2355

JIIOiloflon. vltk one of ourexclrltlve- opn1l.

lleCkloy

llltdppOit

C-r(
Cresaptown
Haga!down

Hedaeso~t~e

Audio COl MIE!CtioiiS.Inc.,
3144 ROiler1 c B)Td or.. I3041253·S910

"iCiniWOOd

130&gt;11327-6757
V&lt;reless ComMcations.- Brook
MOl, 2399 ~ llfOOk Rd.,IDII 842·
8835
AU&lt;IK&gt;VisuO COnCI!IJ~. 409 N. 4111 St,
IJOoii622·S/iXl
-rs c~~lar. 15300 M&lt;Mullerl HWf ,
um 101. 13041788·2d27
CelkJI8r Assoc~tes. 17)11 val&lt;y MoJI Rd ..
13011582·1500
~kJor Associates, 59 w
.Main St.
1)111678·7263
C~l Page l:amllll&lt;allons.
106 W.Main Sl. l:l:J41 754-3770

LAVIlle

,.,., woy RadiO. 1703 ~erson st.

IS Celuler, Rt 220 SOUth, (:1:)4) 788·2427

-ll, (304)
tom"""lcationl206
~ttmn
329-3299
Graftcn Enterprises, CCMaH, 1262 VOCke
Rd., ()11) 729-(1715
Smart Cllok:e.computers, 42 Na1ional
Hwy.,{)11) 722-(1885
Gary's Eiec11&lt;111cS. 118 s. Jefferson st.
{304) 645·7770

MOrpo-.

---

Muipiltown

-

OlkHII

Pl'ltiOIIOII

Prti"M:eiiJI I

SunntldiAile

SUm~

MO!'pn~

McHenry

In Touc:t'l COrrrnuolcatlons,

--

7825 sa~ Rll· Rd . ()11 ) 387-8351

eel Page eormounlcations, BOO F&lt;ocroft
Ave. Mrilsi&gt;Jrg Mal. (304) 263·8755

Olkhlll

Mortlnslrlq
Mortlnslrlq

celular Associates, 800 Foxcroft Ave..
Ma1insbulg Mall, (:il4)263·908S
Milford Telephone. 10717 SR. 139.
040) 820-2151

LAV.

LAWtsbrJII!

-

M1. Hope

oalchlll

Olkland
SUiiNik!IS01eld

~

..
HAPPY NEW YEAR - With her hat on and her horn In hand, little Tessa Will of Addison,
daughter of Cassie Nease. and John Will, Is ready to celebrate the New Year. Now If she
cari.just stay awake until midnight. (Charlene Hoeflich)

First Baby contest announced
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - Practical and fanciful
prizes from local merchants await Meigs
&lt;;:ounry's first baby of2002.
Again this year, The Daily Sentinel joins
with local merchants to sponsor the New
Year's baby contest.
To qualifY to enter the "First Baby of2002"
contest, the ·parents mwt be legal residents of
Meigs Counry and must present to The Daily
Sentinel a written ·statement from the doctor
specifYing the exact time of birth, where the
child was born, the name of the infant, the
parents and their address.
Deadline for providing that information to
the newspaper is noon onjan. 11.
In the event tll:ere are no binhs to Meigs
County paren\.'1 prior to that time, then the
date w'ill be extended day by day until there is
· a winner:
In case of a tie, awards wiU be distributed at
the discretion of the contest conunittee.

Announcement of the winner will be made
in The Daily Sentinel.
Gifts include a $25 gift certificate from
Vaughao's Supermarket in Middlepon; a baby
arrangements from FranCis Florist of
Pomeroy; a stuffed animal fiom Hartwell
House of Pomeroy; a $20 gift certificate from
Swisher Lohse Pharmacy of Pomeroy; a fiee
case of Pampers diapen fiom Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport.
Other gifts for .the tint baby of 2002
include a pair of baby Nikes fiom The Shoe
Place in Middleport; a S20 gift certificate
from Powell's SuperValu of Pomeroy; a stainless steel two-piece baby set fiom Acquisitions
of Middleport; a free meal to the parents of
the fim baby fiom Crow's Family Restaurant
of Pomeroy; a $50 savings bond from the
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. of Pomeroy; and
$25 worth of baby formula fiom Kroger of
Pomeroy.

new officials,
·6usiness dosings
{Editor's note: The following
is the first qf a tllret-ptlrl review
of 200H biggest local headlines.)

to kick off participation in
Good START, a communitybased assessment program
directed by the Coalition for
Appalachian Development.
BY BRIAN J. REED
Norma Torres, Meigs
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
County's new health comPOMEROY .- Meigs missioner, announced plans to
County's new elected officials expand public health protook office, one of the comgrams, includmunity's largest
ing a new denretailers
tal clinic for
announced
low-incOme
plans to close,
residents and a
and bids were
family planning
opened on the
program.
first phase of
y~ar
Pamida
the
announced
Ravenswood
plans to close its
Connector Project as 2001 Pomeroy discount store, citing
began.
"market changes." The 2000
January
arrival ofWal-Mart in Mason,
Meigs County's new elect- W.Va., was partly to blame,
ed officials, including County according to Meigs County's
Court Judge Steven Story, Economic
Development
Prosecutor Pat Story, and Director Perry Varnadoe.
County Commissioner Jim
James Canepa and Charissa
Sheets, took office.
Payer, assistant attorneys genMiddleport Village conducted a communiry survey
Pluse see 1001, AJ

2001
_the
m rev1ew

.. St.luta1 crut P1ala

Chestrut RicWl Rd •(304) S98-2&lt;150
wai·Mart. 5005 Greerbag Rd..

'

Index

(304)~960

NeW 8051011 Shotlili~ cemer.
4010 Rhodes Ave.. 17401456-8722
Wli·Mart. NeW 8051011 5hol&gt;l&gt;rc centef.
0401456-1325 .
Wli·Mart. 1556 E. Main St, (304)465·5367
Wli·Mart, 13164 Grrrett Hwy.,
(301)616·1066
Pire PlaZa, 1261Stafford or..
{304) 487·3855
Wai-I.Wt, 201 Greasy Ridge Rd.,
()14) 431·3454
1451 Ear1 C1&gt;e Rd,l3041 288-265S
1016 wal Sl, 13041·872-6922
Wai-Mart. 200 WaiSt, ()14) 872-62'10
wai·Mart. 900W. Slmmh foNO.,
0401 947-oo69 •

2

SPEAK OUT: What is your biggest wish for the upcoming New Year?

Section- 12 ...,_

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
82-4
8S

AS

A4

A3
A3

81, 3-4
A2

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Courtney Butch· ···
er, Ge1Hpoll1: In
2002, I would like
to sea an upswing
in our nation's
economy. It would
also please me to
see local businesses Increase tllelr
revenue because
they are lila backbone of our communities.

Roberta Dill,
Pomeroy: Having

a happy and
.healthy year would
be my biggest wish
for 2002.

Mary Eleele, Middleport: I would
like to see people of all cultures
come together and
quit arguing.
Everyone tllroughoutthe world
needs to embrace
the concept of
peace and unite to
make the Earth a
better place.

Angell Council,
Langavllle:
Undoubtedly, world
peace. In light of
what has transpired over the last
four months, an
end to botllterrorism and war would
be very nice.

• '
~ EOctronlcS. 507 N. Main Sl,
(3041538·2372
l!areYo&lt;Xlll, 1216 unr..rs~ty Ave ..
()141 296-9663
n-o celkller GroUp, !87 cr.ossroads Mall,
()141255·7737
ClloC S!lOCialtieo. 3879 Rl"odes Ave..
Ste. 101, (740) 456-3333
0&amp;0 ~services. 319 E.Main St.
()14)465-1242
HOme EnterU!Jnment PIJs. 789 E. MaW1 St.
()141465-6:nl
5kyled15N, In&lt;:, 13223 Gan'e!t"Hwy.,
(301(5J3-100J c
RON Electrooics ~2. 223 Merchants wat
MaR, (304) 872·74911
850 W. Emitt Aw.. Ste. 3. (740) 941-452S

I '

I

you
ancl

a,,
healthy
2002!
.-

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer· Difference

www.holzer.org

..

�PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

· Milldllf, December 31, 2011

Monday, Dec. 31
Al:cuWealheoe

COLUMBUS (AP) - Officials at a
hallWay house say their treatment methods - which include boot-camp style
force newly
humiliation tactics released criminals to face their chronic
alcohol and drug problems and help keep
them out of prison. .
Critics say Diversified Community Services' methods .g o too far.
Residents at the 50-bed transitional
home are often forced to wear signs proclaiming they are stupid or incompetent,
told to sit alone in a mirrored room or talk
to the wall about violating a house rule.
They also must participate in "encounters" where residents sit in a circle and
scream, cry and bare their souls as they
verbaUy dissect one another in hopes of
revealing the roots of their problems.

IICH.

, ............ !21._. ' ·

uSome of them tn:IY feel humiliated, but
humility is pan of recovery," counselor
Phyllis Hackney cold The Columbus Dispatch for a story published Sunday. "Ifyou
cannot get humbled, you cannot get

fixed."
The residents dean their rooms and
clothes, wash the floors and toile!&gt;, make
meals and conttol rewanls and punishment. And they face house rules that,
when broken, might mean the loss of
vending-machine or TV privileges for
everyone.
"Some of these guys have been through
these kinds of programs six or seven times
and just don't get it," said Linda S. Janes,
deputy administrator of community J;e&gt;idential programS for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

Swan lake
2002 to begin clear a~d cold
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Extended forecast:
Expect a clear but cold New
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
Year's Eve, with lows dipping with a chance of flurries. Highs
into the single digits, the in the lower 30s.
National Weather Service said.
Wednesday
night... Partly
New Year's Day will be sunny, · cloudy \vith a chance of flurwith highs around or just above ries. Lows in the mid teens.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy.
the freezing mark. Lows will
continue to range in the teens Highs in the lower 30s.
through the rest of this week,
Friday... Pardy .cloudy. Lows
forecasters said.
in the upper teens and highs in
Weather forecast:
the lower 30s.
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows
Saturday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of light snow.
5 to 10 above. Calm wind.
New Year's Day... Mostly Lows near 20 and highs in the
sunny. Highs 30 to 35. West lower 30s.
wind 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday. .. Mostly cloudy with
Tuesday night.. .Mostly clear. a chance of snow. Lows 20 to
Lows near 10 above.
25 and highs in the lower 30s.

Recendy released statistics indicate that
Div=ilied's graduation me is weU below
the state average for .halfi.vay-house programs. For the 6scal year that ended June
30, 48 percent of Diversified's residents
finished the program - about 10 percentage poinls belo:w the state average.
"The tougher the program, the more
likely it is that they're not going co make
it through," said Janes, whose office oversees Ohio's halfway houses.
Janes said those that make it through,
however, have better odds of staying sober
and out ofjail.
The encounter groups have taken a
heavy toU on some residents. Staff members had to remove one woman who had
an anxiety attack and restrain two others
who almost came to blows.

pipes ,pulled from walb and water-satunted floors and ceilings
when they arrived Sunday morning.
"I think this is part of the hate crimes that we have received
right afier the Sept. 11 attacks;' said Mohammed Shareef, president of the Islamic Foundation of Central Ohio. "Things have
been cooled down, but it looks like there's some new revival"
No damage estimate was available, though Shareef said the
three-story building would have to be completely renovated
because of the damage.
·
Members of the center, which serves as a mosque and has
classrooms, discovered the damage when they came for prayer
services about 7 a.m., said Siraj Haji, one of the first to arrive at
the building.

Prosecutors level accusation

A lone swan drifts through the frigid c·urrents of Lost Creek
Resevoir Sunday in lima amidst chunks snow ·and Ice. Temperatures are expected to maintain levels below freezing
throughout next week. (AP/The Lima News, Danny Gawlowski)

CLEVELAND (AP) - The city's top two prosecutors say
Mayor Michael R. White forced them to r~ign 10 days before '
he is to leave .4Bice.
White sent Law Director Pinkey Carr to the Justice Center
on Friday with pre-typed resignation letters in the names of
Chief Prosecutor Lauren Moore and first Assistant Pcosecutor
Steven Terry.
Moore said she and Terry were told to sign the letters.
"The law director just came up and said the mayor was vacating our positions," Moore said. "''m very shocked. I didn't see '
it coming. We were hoping we would be asked to stay on in the
. next administration."

•

uc, faculty reach accord
CINCINNATI (AP) -The University of Cincinnati and its
faculty have reached a tentative contract agreement, averting a
strike set to begin'Thursday.
Negotiators for the university and the American Association
of University Professors shaped the agreement with a federal
mediator last week. The university's Board of Ttustees must
approve the agreement and tl).e faculty must ratify it for it is
· final.
.
Under the agreement, pay will increase 10 percent over three
years, whi'ch is far below the 25 percent nise over three years
the union initiaUy sought, joe W. Fisher,MUP president, said.
Medical benefits remain unchanged for 2002, but talks will
reopen on costs and coverage fer the second and third yean, he
said.

Food maker's leader dies
COLUMBUS (AP) -William Williams, a co-founder and
president of Glory Foods who marketed vegetable dishes aimed
mostly at black consumers, died alter a heart attack. He was 57.
Williams, who died Wednesday, graduated from the Culinary
Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y; in 1965 and later
received a ba,chelor's degree in hotel and restaurant management from the University of Massachusetts.
He enjoyed experimenting with foods such as kale and sweet
potatoes in dishes known as "soul food." But Williams d\dn't
like the term because he felt it made people think of chitlins.
In 1989, Williams co-founded Glory Foods with Iris Cooper
and Dan Charna. Williams had to convince retailers that there
was a demand for his heat-and-eat meals. The food line now is
carried in 11,000 grocery stores nationwide.

Judg~s order new bial

first-year medical resident removed Bradley's breathing tube.
The hospital says that Bradley's illness, not the doctor's action,
kiUedhim . .
TIFFIN (AP) -Teachers at one elementary school must feel
The 8th Ohio District Court of Appeals ruled this week that
a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas judge wrongly instructed like they're seeing double this year.
There are eight sets of ~ins among the fifth and sixth grade
jury members to find against the hospital only if they believed
Bradley had more than a 50 percent chance of survival when he classes at Lakota East. elementary school.
"We say there must have been something in the water at that
arrived there.
time," said fifth grade teacher Dawn Currier.
The twins are separated during the schoot day with different
teachers to ke~p their individuality, said principal Norm ·
Elchert.
·
.
CLEVELAND (AP) -A natunl-gas pipeline that will travel across the bottom of Lake Erie could begin openting in two
years.
·
The Millennium Pipeline wiU run east of Ohio's portion of
PO!lTSMOUTH (AP) -A Peebles police officer has been
the lake, from Patrick Point, Ontario, to Ripley, N.Y.
on 11 counts of rape of six girls under age 13, the
arrested
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission voted 4-0 last
·
week to tentatively approve the S700 million pipeline, which Scioto County sheriff said.
Zane
Loper,
ofWest
Portsmouth
was arrested Thursday and is
would be the first to cross beneath the Great Lakes.
Opponents have 60 days to propose an alternative route. If be.ing held in the Scioto County Jail in Portsmouth, about 85
they do not, the commission will make its final recommenda~ miles south of Columbus. Peebles is in neighboring Adams
County.
tion to approve the route.
The indictment against Loper also lists two counts of complicity to rape, m1e count of gross sexual imposition and three
charges related to child pornography.
The indictment does not list the names of the girls, but says
CLEVELAND (AP)- Ohio State University reports that it
they
were all under 13 ·and that the incidents took place in
has kept ifs promise to use a 9.3 percent tuition increase to
Scioto
County.
improve student services.

'IWins plentiful at school

Pipeline travels under lake

. Officer charged with rape

OSU spends tuition

increase

The university has committed about $4 miUion to increasing
financial aid, expanding freshmen access to undergraduate
courses, beefing up academic and career advising and improving the student union, said Mtrtha Garland, dean of undergraduate studies.
Ohio State successfi1lly pushed state legislators to eliminate a
6 percent cap on tuition increases at public colleges and universities.

CLEVELAND (AP) -An appeals court has ordered a new
trial in the wrongful death case of a 29-year-old Chardon man
who died. of bacterial meningitis in 1998.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Members of the Islamic Center ·of
Brian Bradley's family sued University Hospitals for negligence. Shortly after a helicopter flew Bradley to the hospital, a Columbus said they discovered holes drilled in floors, water

Islamic center vandalized

Dragon Internet
Unlimited Access
As low as $11.95 per Mo.*

1-888-657-0977

Homicides hit 14-year high in Cincinnati

Local nuJDbers include;
~'o~Mr6y,, WI'Mtr,

homicide numbers remained
behind Ohio's other two
cme~. Cleveland
biggest
recorded 77 this year, while
Columbus had 76. Nationally,
the nu~ber of hom~cides rose .
slightly m the first SIX months
of this year, according to the

FBI.
In Cincinnati, the killings
have been attributed to a surge
in violence that followed three
days of rioting in April. The
riots were sparked by the April
7 shooting of an unarmed
black man by a white police

officer.
Fatal shootings
many
connected to drugs and street
robberies - occurred almost
nightly in the summer. At that
time, shooting jumped 600
percent ~ompared With a year
ago:

JMklon, w..t Union, ~l..ld, O.Uipolls,

Wsilllfntton, OH, MoArthut, Portamo.-h, Nef.onvll•, Ironton,
PolniPIN•nt. WV, Athtn.. M....._, Gtorgetown, Gloulttr,
MoC a~'~~~"''ville, •nd mcnl
floc! Ul on lht wtb .. www.cbponbhe rqm
"IIMd on Yftrtv Mlbscrlptlon r1le,
..... fM lppiiH to •II new .:count1.
Monthly billing,... ,, $115.95

Marilyn &amp; ble Are Cleaning Housel

20-60% OFF Selected Items
Wednesday, January 2nd
Thru Saturday, January 5th
lOAM - 4:30PM

!ffartwei{!Jlouse
100 East Main Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-7696

OLUMDUSPomeroy attorney Linda R.
LITTLE HOCKING -Edith M. Harless, 82, Little HockWarner is the
ing, died Saturday, Dec. 29, 2001, at her residence.
2001 recipient
Born May B. 1919, in Mount Hope. W.Va., daughter of the of the Ohio State Dar Foundalate Eden and Rose Gaspodeitrich Cunningham, she was a tion Community Service
homemaker, and a member of the Little Hocking Church of Award for Attorneys 40 and
God.
under, largely for her efforts to
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Shirley and Jim educate the community about
Mtlam of Little Hocking; two sons and daughters-in-law, the criminal law system and
Chalmber and Gloria Harless of Handley, W.Va., and David and general practice oflaw.
Sandra Harless of Wilmington, S.C .; six grandchildren and
Warner is a partner at Little,
seven great-grandchildren; two sisters, Helen Dunfottl ofWinfrede, W.Va., and Pearl Bowling of OldTown, Aa.; and a broth- Sheets and Warner.
•
er, David Cunningham ofBnnson, Mo.
In addition to regularly
She was also preceded in death by a granddaughter, Joan donating her time and disHarless Marks.
counting her fees to take
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in White Funeral Home, juvenile appointed cases in
Coolville, with the Rev. Robert Auxier officiating. Burial will Meigs and nearby counties,
be in the Evergreen Cemetery in Belpre.
Warner has spearheaded
efforts to coordinate the
videotaping of continuing
legal education classes for
attorneys in outlying regions.
She has been active in the
•
Foundation's . 2001 Fellows
Class, which is creating a children's book about the law.

•

charles w. ·ailr Comell Jr.

RACINE - Charles W. "Bill" Cornell, Jr., 72, of Racine,
Warner was honored at the
passed away at 3:01 a.m. on Friday, December 28, 2001, at his Ohio State Bar Foundation's
Elm Street residence.
annual meeting on Nov. 9 in
Born March 28,1929, in Sutton Township, he was the son of Columbus.
the late Charles 'w. Cornell Sr.. and Viola Fox Cornell.
Foundation
President
He retired at the rank of Fint Sergeant in the United States
Army afier 20 years of military service. Afier his service, he was Reginald W. Jackson of
employed with J.D. Drilling of Racine and retired from there Columbus presided over the
in 1991.
He was a member of the Racine United Methodist Church,
Racine Post No. 602,American Legion and Chapter No. 53 of
the Disabled American Veterans, and was a lifetime member pf
Post No. 9053,Veterans of foreign Wars at Tuppers Plains.
Surviving are his wife, Beulah "Bea" Cornell, whom he married August 5, 1953, in Racine; a son, Charles W."Bill" ComeU
Ill and his wife, Patsy. ofSyncuse; three grandchildren,Jennifer eral, were appointed to lead
Walker and her husband, Brandon, of Woodbridge, Virginia, prosecutors in the murder case
Kimberly Huber and her husband, Greg, ofWauk&lt;osha, Wiscon- against Tony Gillilan, who was
sin, and Joe Cornell of Syracuse, and a great-granddaughter, charged with the 2000 shaking
Natalie Walker.
death of a two year-old boy.
Also surviving are his mother-in-law, Esther Longsworth
Bill Stanton of Coshocton
West of Racine; a· sister-inc law, Margaret West of Racine; and . was hiteli as a consultant to
several nieces and nephews.
conduct a feasibility study for a
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, 911 &amp;yStem in Meigs County.
,Malcolm Cdrnell.
Carolyn S. HaUey, 52, Anna
Services were held at 1 p.m. on Sunday, December 30, 2001, M. Lynn, 33,Tikiela C. Burton,
at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. with the Rev. Brian 7, and Cherokee A. Pence, 6,
Harkness and the Rev. David McClain officiating. Burial. fol- died in a mobile home fire in
lowed at Gilmore Cemetery.
Pageville.
Visitation was held from 4-9 p.m. on Saturday, Decembe~ 29,
Eastern ·and Meigs Local
200 1.
·
school districts were celebratMilitary graveside services were conducted by Racine .Post ing improvementJ on the Ohio
No. 602, American Legion, and Thppers Plains Post No. ~053, Department of Education
VFw.
school report cards, while
Southern Local scores slipped a
point.
Jeff Cox announced plans to
open a new fabrication plant in
Tuppers Plains.
Alan Stone Co., Chesterhill,
received a bid to clear trees
which might serve as habitat
for the Indiana bat in the area
FROM STAFF REPORTS
going council m~mber Fred of the Ravenswood ConnecRACINE - Racine's water Wolfe, who declined to run.for tor.
Funding through Temporary
treatment facility improvement reelection because his job may
Assistance to Needy •Families
project is ranked 20th of 142 require him to relocate.
Hill reported he and Couni:il w:is made available as additionevaluated for funding by the
Ohio Environmental Protec- Presij:lent Robert Beegle al assistance for those families
tion Agency, Mayor Scott Hill attended mayor's court update faced with mounting heating
bills.
training recently.
said.
Judge Fred W. Crow III ruled
Hill asked that residents place
Hill and Village Council
recently discussed the applica- 3-inch house numbers on their an incriminating audio recordtion process during the regular home so they can be easily seen ing admissible as evidence in
the case against Tony Gillilan.
from the street.
meeting.
The
tape aUegedly caught the
Village representatives met
Hill also said he had
with Meigs County commis- with loan officers at Home · moments leading to the shaksioners on Friday to discuss National Bank about a loan for ing death of the two year-old
their application for state and the purchase of a one-toll son of Gillilan's girlfriend near
federal funds to build the new dump truck, and received Long Bottom.
Local signrnaker Jim Durst
approval.
treatment plant.
was
asked to provide signage
The truck would replace an
Street Commissioner and
Water Supervisor John Homan old dump truck and a smaU for use in the making of
"Mothman Prophecies," a
reported to council that flat-bed truck.
picture
starring
Marshal Dion Jon~ gave a motion
2,486,300 gallons of water
Richard
Gere
based
on the
were proc~sed and pumped in year-end report on activitid'
and reported that he would~ legendary Mason County,
November.
·
In other business, council repair the radar unit afier the W.Va., monster.
Athens Landmark purchased
expressed appreciation to out- first of the year.
the CCK convenience store
and supply company in
Chester, and announced plans
to open a full-service farm
supply store and restaurant.

2001

fnwn,..AI

Racine project nets
No. 20 EPA ranking

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

EliCit indliitlullliolld btlow it htrtl!V noiltld 11111 ht 01 tho moy ""'"' 1 hong II'IIIUinl to Ohio Rtvittd CO&lt;Ie Choptor t t9. Tht
"o~llln'&lt;lll bt motlt on or before FlllnitiY 1, 2002. SucflllqUII(Ihou~ bt lddni11tld lo: Shtran Groen Hunng AdiTiniltrotor Oh~
opol1mltlt oflnturtnco, 2100 Stelll Coutf, Coluntut, Clho 43215-10117.
•
•

ANDREWS, RAYMOND L. 008: 05114161 48939 STATE ROUTE LONG BOTTOM OH 45743"
KOUNS, EuNA L OOB: 011109123 BOX 3 MASON, OH 45040
. '
MULLEN DON E 008: 011124123 583 S SECOND AVE MIDDLEPORT OH 45760
NANCE)OBIN L COB: 12131162 48937 EASTLETART RD. PO BOX 2M RACINE OH 45711
PAULEY. PAUL J COB: 011123/35 804 WMAIN ST POMEROY. ~ 45789
'
At the ~earirlg, the indi~u~ .l'l\IY lppttr in PI~ . ~ hil or.htr tttomly or tJiJ' auch olher r~preaentative as is permne.d to precbcc
be lore the ,IQt"'Y. 01 the •n&lt;IMdull moy requell ~~or tier position, orgwnonlo or contontiontln lMiOOg and lillie heori ng he or ahe may
re~ettellidtnco and tltl""'" oitnllltl IPtlllling for ond ogoinlt him or her.
'
'
If an indi~cllti doe1 not tinwly rt~Jt 1 htlring, an order rtwklng his or h•lclnntlhll bt lnutd.

lllphtn c. - · h

General manager

Ext.

News

EKt. 13

or

Ext. 14

•

•

12

Other services
Advertising

Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Classified Ado

Ext. 5

To send e-mail
news@mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailysentinel .com

"

ttl Court St.,
Ohio.
Sooond-claas
po81ag8 paid at l'omeroy. •
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Auoclation.
Polbnllttr: Send address corrac·
lions to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.
St, l'omeroy, Ohio 45769.

News Departments

Stoll eoun111

Publllh8d fltlery afternoon, Monday
Pomeroy,

The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentions are:

On the Web

(USPS 213-IMIO)
Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

through Frtdoy,

to be accurate. It you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

NOTICE OF OJIIIORTUNIT'I FOR HEARING

P"auontnt ~~l~tondn 3eo!_.482{A) ,."'d Cllaptor llf of tile R - Codl, 11C11 lnthiduol listed below is ho""'1 notified lliot \ht
S
'fl" en,.., 1n a1o
,ah,. or h1r lriaur~nce Ucenlfl.
·
'""' ·

for community service
evening that honored service
to the community, bw and
government by Ohio l&gt;wyen,
judges and law-related organizations.
Also honored by the Foundation were Robert G. Morris of Toledo, recipient of the
Ritter Award; David A. Harris
of the University of Toledo
College of Law and Glen
Weissenberger of the University of Cincinnati College of
Law, each a recipient of the
Outstanding Research Award;
the Ohio State University Pro
Bono Research Group, recipient of the Outstanding Program or Organization Award;
Denise Herman McColley of
Napoleon, recipient of the
Public or Government Service Award; and Howard H.
Harcha Jr. of Portsmouth,
recipient of an Honorary Life
Fellowship.

Obituaries

Our main concern In all stories is

ACCO&lt;Oing to rteottl_!,on ~!~!" the Qllio Deporlmlnt of lnourtnco, eliCit olllle indMduolt lilted below currtniy holdl Hcenoos as an
IOIUIIOCI 11)101 loMOf .....,.r ~ the lialo of Ohio llld IICh 1110 flittllo ....I tho conllluing otlu-•~n ~ '
•· f S '
3905 ..S1 oflllo Revised COdo for tho 1886-1817, 1817·1111, ondlor 1..,. 111111 """'"'1101 poriod(o). -w ··~lrtmon~ o ecuon

The Ollly Sentinel • Page A3

Edith M. Harless

Correction Polley
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE

X &amp;u Jd O..t 0/ ~w.....

~ttorney hot:lored

mer

Personal E-mail Account
10 mep penonil web space. imD'\ediate activi.tiion

,.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths

Halfway house uses humiliation tactics

Ohio weather

CINCINNATI - Homi. cides hit a 14-year high in
Cincinnati during a year in
which the city experienced
~acially motivated riots and
l)nprecedented street violence.
. The number of homicides
- 61 - increased 52 percent
from a year ago when 40 people were murdered.
The number of homicides
had not reached that level
since 1987, when 66 people
were murdered, 24 of them at
the hands of serial killer Donald Harvey.
"2001 is a year I don't want
to remember a heck of a lot,"
Hamilton County Prosecutor
Mike All en told The Cincin~
n .1t1 Enqu irer for a story published Saturday. "It has been
the most stressful year in my
professional career without
question. It truly is turning
into an epidemic."
Still, Cincinnati's 2001

Monday, Dec. 31, 2001

Subscription rates
~v carrier or motor 1'0141•

oOno
... -month
One yeor
081~

$2
$8.70
$104

50 canis

Subscribers not desiring to pay the
carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit will ba given
carrier each week. No eubscrlptlon by
mall permitted In areas where hom"
carrier service Is available.

Mllll
subsatDIIon
lnolde Molgo eo'[;,;ty-••
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeka

$27.30
$~.62

$W5.56

Ratea ouWide Melga County
13 Weeks

$29.25

26 Weaks

$56.66

52 Weeks

$109.72

Marking 50 years of grantmaking, publications and programs, the Ohio State Bar ·
Foundation is the professional honorary of Ohio lawyers
and a public charity dedicated
to the promotion of public ·
GIVEN AWARD - linda R. Warner was presented a communi- understanding of the law and
ty service award by Ohio State Bar Foundation president Regi· improvements in the· justice
nald W. Jackson at a recent OSBF meeting held in Columbus. system throughout Ohio.

Meigs County native Bob
Eastman heads the company.
The search began for a· site
for a new U.S; post office in
Rutland.
Local NASCAR fans joined
racing buffi around the coun\ry in mourning the death of
Dale Earnhardt, who was killed
in a race crash in Daytona, Aa.
Ohio Secretary of Staie j.
Kenneth Blackwell spoke to
Meigs County Republicans ll,_t
the annual Lincoln Day Dinner.
Middleport Village Council
authorized a $2,000 "best use
plan" for the village's three
school buildings, which will be
abandoned by the Meigs Local
School District when ils new
buildings are completed.
Southern Junior
High
School student Wesley Burroughs spelled "solstice" to win
Meigs County's annual spelling
bee.
Meigs County commissioners joined a coalition of six
Ohio
highly-distressed
Appalachian
counties
to
address economic development issues.
Jerry Bibbee Ford of Middleport was sold to Ford
Motor Co. and closed for busi-

ness.

. Tony Gillilan was sentenced
to Jive )rears to life in prison for
the Aug1,1st 2000 death of
Thomas Mathew Parker, 3.
Gillilan entered a voluntary
plea of guilty to the murder
charge.
Changes in the Ohio General Equivalency Diploma
were announced for 2002.
Eastern Local School Board
President John Rice was
named to the Southeast
Region Executive Committee
for the Ohio School Boards
Association.
The Rev. Craig Crossman
was named president of Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce's executive committee.
Companies
was
' M&amp;E
awarded a contract to develop
plans for a new water treatment plant in Pomeroy.
. GaUia-Meigs Community
Action Agency was recognized
as a Best Practice Agency by
Ohio
Association of Commu~·ry
B&amp;L Contracting of Ash- nity action Agencies, for its
land, Ky., was awarded the bid work in obtaining retraining
for Middleport's $1 million funds for Southern Ohio Coal
sewer lifi station construction Company miners.
The American Civil Liberand improvement project.
ties
Union began an investigaBecky Wildman, manager of
the Statehouse Museum Shop tion into the use of public
in Columbus, visite~ Pomeroy TANF funds for programs at
to order Meigs County prod- Mid-VaUey Christian School
ucts for sale in the capitol's gift in Middleport.
.
March
shop.
South Central Ohio District
., Meigs County commissioners announced plans to seek Council of Carpenter&lt; filed an
grant funding to remedy a Ohio Supreme Court lawsuit
leachate problem at the coun- against Gallia-Jackson-Meigsty's abandoned landfill in Salis- Vinton Solid Waste District
and Director Lance Wilson,
bury Township.
Ohio VaUey Supermarkets alleging public records viola- ·
Inc., opened its new Save-A- tions.
Meigs County joined other
Lot store in the Big Bend
Ohioans
in mourning the
Foodland building in Pomeroy.

death of former Gov. James
Rhodes.
Pomeroy Village Council
demoted Assistant Police Chief
Joe Kirby Sr., afier Kirby
aUegedly made unauthorized
purchases.
A Good START survey of
Middleport residents found
them pleased with the community's quality of life.
Middleport Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli broke a tie vote to
increase water and ·sewer rates,
while Racine Village Council
raised refuse ntes.
Rutland Village Council
began considering annexation
of areas in Rutland Township,
in anticipation of the construction of the new Meigs Local
elementary building just outside the village limits.
Meigs County District Public Libruy Board began demolition of the home of the late
Dr. Hugh H. Davis, to make
way for a major expansion project.
Meigs County Commissioner Mick Davenport testified in
Columbus in support of additional consideration for dis.:
tressed Ohio counties seeking
Community
Development
Block Gnnt funding.
The Eastern Eagles basketball game made the "final four"
state semi-finals in Columbus,
ultimately losing to Tipp City
Bethel.
2000 Census ligures showed
an increase in Meigs County's
population, and the populations of Racine and Syracuse
while Middleport, Pomeroy,
and Rutland saw census
decreases.
Meigs County District Public Library received 20 new
computers from the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, to
help increase internet access
for the public.
Beaver Excavating of Canton was awarded a $22 million
bid for the first phase of the
Ravenswood Connector.
Meigs Coun,ty EMS began
to consider patient billing in an
attempt to address a growing
budget crunch.
Wesam Construction Co.,
Pomeroy, was tapped to complete the $2.2 million general

MATINFES EVERYDAY
12125101 THRU 1 /0t i O :l

All AGES . All TIMES $ 4 00

contracting portion of the renovation of Meigs High School.

.

APdl

1\vo dawn redwoods, grown
from seeds at the National
Arboretum in Washington,
D.C., were planted at the
Chester Courthouse by the
Meigs County Association of
Garden Clubs.
Meigs Local Board of Education voted to close Salem
Center Elementary School at
the end of the 2000-01 school
year, due to declining enrollment.
The Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center was·
awarded national accreditation
status from the National
Council on Aging and National Institute of Senior Centers,
one of three in the state and 41 ·
in the nation.
.
Melissa Grueser and Donna
Grueser assumed ownership of
Baer's Market in Syracuse
upon the retirement of Helen
Baer. The market is now
known as Syracuse Country
Mirket.
Work was completed on
clearing the Rutland-area site
of the new Meigs Local elementary building.
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency and HockingAthens-Perry CM received
$2 million in additional funding for coal miner retraining
through the federal government. ·
A
steering
committee
charged with addressing the
county's health care needs
began meeting to develop a
community health care plan.
April M. McGrath, 29, Middleport, pled guilty to an arson
charge in connection with a
March · 27 house fire in
Pomeroy.
Meigs County fiscal officials
began to ponder a dramatic
decrease in local sales taX revenue, the result of the closing
of Pamida and Jerry Bibbee
Ford, and a weakening retail
economy.
Reedsville got a new emer-

�-----------

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-0112-21118 • Fu: 112·2157

DEAR ABBY: My first husband
died of cancer in 1997. In 1999, I met
a man on the Internet - I'D call him
Roland. Roland and I have been
married for 23 months. He is a division chaplain (colonel) in the Army
Reserves, a part-time pastor in a small
church and also a marriage therapist.
Roland has suddenly decided he
doesn't want to be married anymore:
Last summer he bought a red
Corvette, and recently he purchased a
bottle of Grecian Fonnula.'A couple
of weeks ago, I discovered e-mails he
had written to other women saying
he wants a "special lady" in his life.
(Abby, that's what I thought I was!)
Please warn women about being
on the Internet, even the Christian
sites. At 55, I'm facing being single

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn LAWII
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

General Manager

z-. ..... -

...- . n.,.-...... _ _ _

MJilltcla*..,-..

A/1_

... 1141J«t,.,...., lllfll-1 H.,.,
poMU~u&amp; z-. · - .. "' . . - - ..,.

No.,.....,,_"'""' ..

lmrn. ..,,..

rr.. _

1

)

n

1

_.".., ..... _ ........................ .,... -

Page AS
Monday, DlteMhr Sl, 2001

.Wife has no cause to .reJoice for this good Christian man

The Daily Sentinel

Chllrlene Hoeflich

en

The Daily Sentinel

Montll'f, D11:1•lrtr Sl, :ZOOI

.......

ra
~

-11/orC:..)-- ................ - .

NATIONAL VIEW

..

About

·face
Offidaldom finally takes
notice of veterans' problems
• The Times-Picayune, New Orle11111, on war lltttrdns'
hed/th problems: For years, the federal government has cast a
skeptical eye on the health complaints of Gulf War veteram,
problems that veterans groups insist are linked to service in that
conflict.
But a new study of 2.5 million veterans who served at that
time, both in the Persian Gulf and elsewhere, hall prompted the
departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs to make an unexpected about-face. Preliminary results show that veterans who
were deployed to the Persian Gulfin 1990 to 1991 ate twice as
likely to develop Lou Gehrig's disease as their counterparts
who were stationed elsewhere.
Lou Gehrig's ·disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis orALS, is a severe degenerative neuromuscular disease that
usually causes death Within two to five years. The cause is not
known, and there is no cure ....
The findings do not prove that service in the region caused
the disease, and the study itself has yet to go through peer
review. But the military isn't using that as a pretext for inaction.
Instead, the Defense Department and VA made a joint .
announcement about the study results and said that Veterans
suffering from the disease, and those veterans' families, would
be offered disability and survivor benefits.
Giving the benefit of the doubt to terminally ill veterans and
their surviVors is the compassionate thing to do. Nailing down.
the cause of these ALS cases will take time, and that's one thing
ALS patients don't have. Officials also said that they would continue researching ALS in service members ....
Service members deserve to have their health concerns iaken
seriously, and in a world where chemical and biological
weapons are a growing threat, the military is going to need to
look beyond the obvious.

TQDAY lN HISTORY

Once again, basicfteedoms are subject to attack

There's no other holiday
which tend, to bind families
together more than Christmas.
With families spread out
across the country, "Home for
the Holidays" presents a whole
riew challenge of deciding
;vhere to be and with whom.
With two sets of parents and
grandparents, many times living far from each other, couples with children find decidi~g how to share \)&gt;eir time
and the direction they travel
no easy task.
But it ali works out as many
Meigs countians will tell you
when they talk about their celebrations of Christmas with
tljeir loved ones, some from
faraway places.

Jefferson had already agreed.
Consider the state of public opinion as
revealed in the First Amendment Center's
First Amendment Survey, released on July
4, b~fore the Sept. II terrorist attacks.
In this national survey, 46 percent ·
believe the press has too much freedom,
and 71 percent believe "it i! important for
the government to hold the media ir;t
check." Moreover, only 53 percent strong~
ly agree that "newspapers should be
COWMNIST
allowed to publish freely without governnity:'
ment approval of a story, and only 57 perBut, Mr. Wilson noted, Justice Brennan was wrong. The Bill of Rights was added cent agree strongly that "newspa)&gt;ers
should be allowed to criticize public ofli~
voted with the fru\iority of the Court for after the ratification.
~
RQe v. Wade which, in essence, says Mr.
Wbat I had jumbled up in my inind was cials."
In all these categories, there are sma)l
Wtlson, "declared unborn, children to be that a key part of the initial resistance to
nonhuman and, although iimocent of any rati£Yirtg the Constitution was the absence percentages of Americans who "mildly
criminal wrongdoing, not entided to the of a Bill of Rights protecting individual agree" with upholding the~e freedoms in
fundamental protections contemplated by Americans fiom violations of their funda- the Bill of Rights. But the First Amend- .
the Constitution:·
mental liberties by the new federal gov- ment does not speak of"mildly" protect-.
ing free speech and a free press.
.
That was Justice Brennan's major error ernment.
Had George Mason, James Madison,
as a jurist. He was a practicing Catholic. I
Virginia's George Mason, who drafted
have no religious beliefS, but I know sci- his state's Declaration of 1.\ights in 1776, Thomas Jefferson and others not successentifically that once the sperm and egg are fiom which Tholll.as Jefferson drew in fully lobbied for adding the Bill of Rights
united, there has come into existence a writing the Declaration oflndependence, to the Constitution, our liberties would behuman being, distinct fiom all other · was a delegate to the Pederal Constitu- uncertain, as they were during the time o(
human beings.
·
tiona! Conventiort. 0pp6sing the ratifica- the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798
That a majority of the Supreme Court cion of the Constitution which, when rat- (which were deno~nced by Jefferson), th~
has chosen to rule that these human ified, bad no specific pmtections of free Rirst World War, the. 1920s Red .Scare, and
beings are ~ot "persons" under the Con- press or free speech, among other basic the reign ofJoe McCarthy.
stitution, i! of the order of the Dred Scott liberties, George Mason .emphasized that
Many Americat)s, having been silenced
decision which cast an entire race of "freedom of the press is. one of the great and sometimes imprisoned for exercising
human beings -black Americans -out bulwarks of liberty:'
·
freedom of speech and of the press, were
of the Constitution. Another of my
Alexander Hamilton disagreed because, later rescued by the Bill of Rights.
Supreme Court heroes, William 0. Dou- he said, such basic liberties "must altoHowever, there are signs that a majority
glas, also failed, in Roe v. Wade, to protect gether depend on public opinion, and on of Americans are willing, once again, to
the most vulnerable of his fellow human the general spirit of the people and of the suspend the First Amendmerlt rights of
government. If the ~pie w.int those other Americans who appear to be insufbeings.
Another reader, Richard Dixon ofVir- freedoms, it will have them."
ficiently patriotic. And John Ashcroft teUs
ginia, caught tile in a flat-out historical
However, james Madison pointed out us that dissent gives "ammunition to
error. My correction is particularly perti- in a letter to Thomas Jefferson that rights Americ;a's enemies.''
nent in this time of national danger. I had solely dependent on .majority public
But dissent is a vital part of our heritage.
written that the Constitution was not rat- o!)inion could be curbed, and even extin(Nat Hentq[ is a nationally renowned
ified by the states until the Bill of Rights guished, when public QPinion changed. As authority on the First Amendment at~d the Bill
(the mt 10 Amend,lnents), were added. I our history demons,tes,. he was right. &lt;if Rights.)
.

Nat
Hentoff

,,

•••

Ryan Oliver, engineer for
the Florida Power and Light in
West Palm Beach, Fla., came
home for a pre-Christmas visit
With his parents, Raymond and
Susan Oliver of Racine.
He left the day before
Christmas to return to Florida
to be his family. The Olivers'
daughter, Raylene, her . husband and two children, 5 and
s; who live in San Antonio,
Texas, didn't make it in for· the
holiday, but joined in a conference call celebration on

,

Local children
remembered

POMEROY -On Dec. 1,
Wal- Mart Stores nationwide
held a promotion to donate a
percentage of store sales to
charities in their local communities.
This marks the 11th holiday
season that Wai-Mart stores
across the country have assisted
charities within the local communities.
This year, the Mason store
associates selected the Mason
and Meigs Counties Toys for
Tots organizations as beneficiaries of the holiday .fund-raiser
because of the positive impact
they make on ·the local community.
Chec ks were presented to

WASHINGTON TODAY

Terrorist attacks ended doubt about Bush leadership
BY WILL LuTER

prominent Democrat when Vermont evenly matched against Bush in poDs
WASHINGTON - Sept. 11 dramati- Republican Jim Jeffords became an inde- before Sept. 11 . After the attacks, Bush led
cally transformed a: political year that pendent in May. Then-M:jjority Leader . Gore in a hypothetical matchup by a 2-1 .
began with uncertainty about George W. 'Il:ent Lott of' Mississippi and Senate margin.
Bush's legitimacy as president after his Republicans were pushed fiom power.
The public had a favorable view of
contested election. .
Talk of balanced budgets, changes in almost everyone serving in government
The president and his foreign policy Social Security and social programs requir- and for government in general. The attacks
tean1 became clear winners in 2001 in a ing sul&gt;stantial new money faded as the had reminded them they need governpolitical world turned on its head, analysts economy tanked.
ment to keep them safe.
say. Much of the year's politics before the
Issues like national security, missile
"By suspending politics for two months,
· attacks became irrelevant.
defense and international coalition build- everybody's evaluations went up - of
"He lost the popular vote and ended the ing moved to .the forefiont for the first state legislators, governors and the presiyear wid:&gt; stratospheric poll ratings. He time in a decade.
dent;' said Bruce Cain, a political scientist
began the year as Clark Kent and ended up
"A new seriousness overtook An1erican lium the University of California-Berkeas Superman;• said con~rvative analyst politics;' said Mat)n. "It was a radical ley. "It was an interesting national experiManhall Wittmann of the Hudson· lnsti- change 6:om the-1990s when politics was ment - the less politicians attacked one
tute.
so nasty and trivial because the stakes were another, the higher the public's estimation
Public concerns about terrorist attacks, low. Now there is a real threat."
of governn1ent and politics."
. homeland defense and the anti-terror war
'Beneficiaries were the members of the , But Democrats have decided they can
overseas rearranged political priorities experienced foreign affairs team put fight politically about domestic issues,
acTOss the board. And that came on top of together by Bush - especially Defense while supporting Bush on the war. And by
a political year that was already remarlcable. Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary year's end, boih parties had resumed the
"It was a truly extraordinary period;' of State Colin PoweU and Vice President partisan political fight.
said Thomas Mann a political scholar at the . Dick Cheney, a former defense secretary.
Democrats are betting a poor economy
Brookings Institution. "We had four
Another politician whose fortunes and an easing of terrorism fears could give
mega-events over the last year."
soared after Sept. 11 was New York Mayor them an opening on their top domestic
Rudolph Giuliani. His · health problems issues in the 2002 congressional elections.
Mann described the events this way:
• "The most controversial presidential and an embarrassing divorce were domiBut any hopes they had of challenging
election in history."
nant images of the mayor before the Bush's claim to the presidency are gone. ·
• "A change in party control of the U.S. attacks. But his steady. calm manner after"Whatever happens in the future, quesSenate in mid-session."
ward earned him widespread respect.
tions about George Bush's legitimac-y have·
The intense focus on the anti-terror completely disappeared;' said Uqiversity of
• "A sudden ~ 6:om a decade of prosperity to recession and the reappearance of campaign pushed news about most politics Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato. .
deficits."
- especially the 2004 presidential race - . And the question about who can lead a;
• "And we had September 11th."
far fiom view.
sharply divided nation has been answered:
Three of those four events have helped
Dempcrats who needed to build their
"It was an awful way to get there," said
shape today's political reality. The fourth national profiles found d1ey got almost no political scientist Merle Black of Emory
the contested presidential election - has public attention for political activities.
University, "but Alhericans did find a
faded into the background.
AI Gore, the former vice president and leader."
(Will Lester covers politics and polli11gforT11c
Tom Daschle of South Dakota, the Sen- Democratic presidential nomin ee won the
ate majority leader, became the · most popular vote in the 2000 election. He was Associated Press.)

ADVICE
again, and it's no fun. Roland is sweet,
c.harming, and even says ' grace in
restaurants before a meal. 1'1\1 not the
kind of woman who " hasI&gt; 'to have a
man, thank goodness, lfut I just
thought I had met the right one.
Where did I go wrong? - DISIL-

LUSIONED IN CLARKSVILLE,
TENN.

Charlene.
Hoeflich'·
COMMUNITY
Christmas morning.
The children were sent on Ia
'
scavenger hunt of sorts when
they were told by their gran&lt;\parents to look under their
beds. There they found their
special gifts - scooters.

•••

Chuck and Barbara Downie of Wolfeboro, N.H., joined
his mother, Dorothy Downie
of Pomeroy, for the 'holiday.
On Christmas Eve, they
were guests of Janet and Alan
Downie for a dinner party.
Others attending were Janet's
sister and her husband, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Russell of
Arkansas, John Russell and
their two daughters, Kelly and
Becky of West Virginia, Mr:
and Mrs. Edison Baker of
Middleport, Rachel Downie
and William Downie Jr. of
Racine, Sam and Debbie Person of Middleport, and Phillip

and Elizabeth Swatzel of
Hemlock Grove.
• • •
Making the holidays bright
for Bob and Jane Beegle of
Racine were visits from their
daughters and continuing the
tradition of attending Midnight Mass at S~cred Heart
Church together.
Kim Taylor who lives in
Washington, D.C., and is the
on-line director for the
Republican National Committee, was in for several days.
Joining the family for the hoiiday observance were the Beegles' younger daughter, Carrie
and her husband, Greg Mellick
of Mansfield.
• • •
Joining Carol Jean Adams of
Sytacuse for Christmas were
her children and their families,
Kim . and Gregg Harris and
their children, Nicholas and
Carlie, of Wilmington, and
Todd and his wife of Hilliard.
• • •
Norma Torres of Middleport
entertained.with her traditiona! 'Christmas Eve open house
and dinner party.
Her guests included her
daughter, Kristen of Upper
Arlington, who now is a counielor, educator and social

worker with the Ohio Epilepsy Foundation; her parents,
Maria and Joe Delgado of
Middleport; Anita and Gary
White ofRudand,John Jacobs
Jr. and his wife, Alicia, of Casa
Grande, Ariz.; Mary Jacobs of
Upper Arlington; Julie King
and daughter, Gabriella, of
Hilliard; Chate Cordero who
resides at Overbrook Center in
Middleport; Charles Moody of
Cheshire, and Gladys Cummings of Harrisonville.
• • •
Christmas Eve was made
bright for Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Walburn by a visit 6:om their
granddaughter, Brittany Walburn of Gallipolis, and ·her
friend, Justin Smith. The Walburns went to Beverly for a
holiday visit .with Dennis and
Doris Walburn.
• • •
And what did you do for the
holidays?
We would be happy to hear
about your company and your
celebrations, your trip out of
town to visit relatives and
frien&lt;ls, or that family tradition
which has become such a specia! part of the holiday observance at your house.
(Chdrltnt Hoglich is gtntNI
mdn~Wf~ ofTht

gathered at the home ofTunie
Redovian recendy for the
annual Christmas party.
Ada Titus gave the blessing
· before a buffet dinner served by
the hostess. A short business
meeting was held with devotions by Evelyn Hollon reading
"Look Ahead" from Isaiah 558.
For ron call, members gave a
favorite Christmas memory.
Cards were signed for Chri!
Chapman and Janet Theiss.
MONEY FOR TOYS - Wai·Mart Assistant Manager Stephen Hollon handled fruit baskets.
Davis presented a check to William Ellis for the Meigs County
For the arrangement of the
Toys for Tots program.
month, Redovian had a Christmas centerpiece using spruce
both organizations on Dec. 19.
and arborvitae accented with
Rick Simpkins accepted the
red bulbs, candles, apples and a
check on behalf of the Mason
velvet bow. Members judged
County Toys for Tots· and
gifts before the gift exchange,
POMEROY·- Members of with the prize for the prettiest
William Ellis on behalf of the
the Wildwood Carden Club going to Debbie Jones.
Meigs County Toys for Tots.

Christmas
party _held

Maika/ £lCdlence.

I

•

Loalf C&lt;lrlr~

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendllr Ia pubo
llshecl•.
to nonpn&gt;llt grouJMI wtlhlng to

,_-.nee

Pomeroy Library.
PORTLAND-LeadlngCreek

...cl ..,..

Conselvancy DistriCt o1t1c:e
clal eventa. The C8lendw Ia not clOsed Monday and Now Year's

IIIII10UIICe . - .•

designed to promo111 ..... 01
Day. Emergencias, call 7420lund-nllaeN ot•ny type. n.ma 2597.
are printed only •
mila and '*lnot be guansnteed lUESDAY
to be prlnhld 11 apeclflc numPOMEROY- Meigs County
berol~yl.
Heatth Department cloaad New
Year's Day. Open regular hours
MONDAY
on Wednesday.
LETART FALLS -letart Town·
POMEROY- Regular Tuesday
ship Trustees end-of·year meet·
lng on Monday at 9 a.m. Organ~ night meeting of Drew Webster
zational meeting will follow regu· Post39. American Legion, post·
tar meellng.
paned due to New Year's holiday.
Naxt meeting wiN be held on Jan.
APPLE GROVE- Now Year's
15 at the post home.
Eve dance 7 p.m. lo midnighl,
Red Bam on Ohio 338. A potluck WEONESDAY
POMEROY- Salisbury Town·
meal will be seNe&lt;~. Free.
ship Trustees, Wednesday, 6
BURLINGHAM- Bedford Town· p.m. Organizational meeting fol·
ship Trustees will hold their end
lowed by regular meeting.
of year mee)ln\at 7 p.m. on
ALFRED- Orange Township
Monday at the own Hall.
Trustees, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.,
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township home ol Osie Follrod. Organize·
tiona! meeting.
Trustee&amp;, year·end meeting,
Monday, 2 p.m. 2002 organize·
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township
tiona! meellng will follow. .
Trustees, Wednesday, 5 p.m.,
RUTLAND -A Watch Night ser· township ·garage on Joppa Road.
vice will be held 7 p.m. until mid·
RACINE·_ Southern Local
night on Monday at the Rutland
Board of Education organization·
Freewill Baptist Church. Speak·
al board meeting, Wednesday, 7
ers will be Nonnan Taylor and
p.m., hlgl1 school cafeteria. To be
Heath Jenkins. ~I &amp;IngliS
will also be present. Tho public Ia followed by special meeting.
lnvHed.
RACINE - Scottish Aile, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Racine Masonic
POMEROY- Meigs County
Temple.
Right to Lifo Monday, 7:30p.m.,

..,_per·

De yeu han • phote tf 1
~otter, ekler, flehtrman, lfe.
en the Ohio River?

The Melge County
Tourlem Office needs
plotureelor their
2002 Tourlem Ouhle
Place your name and phone number
on the bac;k of your photo and
mall or bring It to:

238 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For more Information call
Betsy at 992·2239
(Miected pholoa will ...:elve photo credltl

Has Stepped Up To The Pump!
A Full Service Station For Your Convenience

•Tune Ups
• Tire Sales &amp; Service
• Brakes
• Shocks
• Rollback Services
•Full Service Pump
we'll even check your oil
fluids)

•

Holzer Clinic
Meigs
1 pm to 9 pm
(740) 992-0060

Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.)

Wheelt &amp; Dttlt
•

Holzer Clinic
Jackson
10amto10pm
(7 40) 395~71

(5) Is respected by othen
(6) Is dependable and faithful
(7) Good cook and housekeeper
(8) Good with business
(9) Good shopper and money
manager
(1 0) Good seamstress and canner
(11 ) Good education; very smart
(12) Good lover
(13) Good-looking, neat, and good
dresser
P.S. Bertha, now it's time for you to
list your husband's finer qualities. First
on the list should be his willingness to
change.
{Dtdr Abby is written by P.uliru!

Dndar Raw Ownership
Ted'i BP (forl!letly Mlcldleport BP) ~

HOLZER CLINIC

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis
1pm to 9 pm
(740) 446-6287

(2) Good worker
(3) Helped me get a house
(4) Helped me leave the farm

D.lily Sentinel.)

COMMUNITY NEWS I NOTES

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Dec. 31, the 365th and lina1 day of2001.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 31,1879,Thomas Edison first publicly demonstrated
his electric incandescent light In Menlo Park, N.J.
·On this date:
In 1775, the British repulsed an attack by Continental Army
genel':lls Richard Montgomery and Benedict Arnold .at Quebec;
Montgomery was killed.
In 1862, President Lincoln signed an act admitting West Virginia to the Union.
·
- In 1946, President Truman officially proclaimed the end of hostilities in World War II.
··
In 1961, the Marshall Plan expired after distributing more than
$12 billion in foreign aid.
In 1974, private U.S. citizens were allowed to buy and own gold
for the first time in more than 40 years.
In 1978, Taiwanese diplomats struck their colon for the final
time fiom the embassy flagpole in Washington, marking the end
of diplomatic relations with the United States.
In 1985, singer Rick Nelson, 45, and six other people were
killed when fire broke out aboard a DC~3 that W33 taking the
group to a New Year's Eve performance in Dallas.
In 1986, 97 people were killed when fire broke out in the
Dupont Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. (Three hotel
workers later pleaded guilty to charges in connection with the
blaze.)
ln 1997, Michael Kennedy, the 39-year-old son of the late Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy, was killed in a skiing accident on Aspeh
Mountain in Colorado.
In 1998, Europe's leaders proclaimed a new' er;1 as 11 natiops
merged currencies to create the euro.
·
Ten years ago: Representatives of the government of El Salvador and rebels reached agreement at the United Nations on a
peace accord aimed at ending 12 years of civil war. President Bush
arrived in Australia as part of a 12-day Pacific trip.
Five years ago: Lefiist rebels in Pl!tU released tWo diplomats,
leaving 81 hostages in the besieged Japanese embassy residence in
Lima.
One year ago: The United States finally agreed to sign a treaty
creating the world's first permanent international war crimes tribunal, joining most other countries · of the world. Former Sen.
Aian Cranston died in Los Altos, Calif., at age 86. Flemenco
dancer jose Greco died in Lancaster, Pa., at age 82.
Today's Birthdays: Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal is 93. Folk
and blues singer Odetta is 71. Actor Sir Anthony Hopki'}S is 64.
Actor Tim Considine ("My Three Sons") is 61. Actress Sarah
Miles is 60. Rock musician Andy Summers is 59. Actor Ben
Kingsley is 58. Producer-director Taylor Hackford is 57.

Abby

spouse, a list of 10 admirable qualities
be written down before expressing
anger.
My husband took your advice. He
composed a list of 13 things he
admired about me and gave it to me.
Abby, he has been a new person since
then, and reading his list has made me
. a better person, too.
Other people should try it. I have
enclosed his list in case you would
like to share it with your readers. BERTHA IN PIQUA, OIUO
DEAR BERTHA: I'm almost
hesitant to do so, for fear that you 'II
b&lt;: stolen away by someone who
wants to place you on an even higher pedestal.
BERTHA'S GOOD POINTS
(1) Good mother to the kids

Holiday offers many opportunities for get-togethers

HENTOFF'S VIEW

On the eve of the New Year, it's good
for a columnist's soul, or its equivalent, to
confess error, and the impetus almost
. inVariably comes 6:om readers.
Fcir one txample, Thomas Wilson of
Washington, D.C., notes that. I missed a
vital point when I praised the late
Supreme Court Justice William Brennan
. for opposing capical punishm~nt on the
basis, as Brennan said, that "the most base.
criminal remains a huntan being possessed
of some potential, at least, for human dig-

Dear

•

DEAR DISllLUSIONED: You
naively Pelieved that a man you met
on a Christian Web site was automatically a "good" Christian. I don't
know what problems he brought to
the relationship, but .it appears he
started having one heck of a nil'dlife
crisis last summer. Either that, or you
married a wolf in pastor's clothing.
Although you're not the kind of
woman who uhas" to have a man,
please don't lose faith . in all men.
There are some terrific men out
there, but none of them comes with a
money- back guarantee.
DEAR ABBY: My husband of 55
years used to be verbally abusive
when things didn't go right for him.
Some years ago, you suggested that
if someone was angry with his or her

"Quick &amp; Courteous Service"
;;;.~~~:.-,;---,
Ted Dexter, Owner
Monday-Saturday 540 General Hartinger, Middleport, Ohio
Cl=

ss:n~ay

(740) 992-1400

•
•

�The Daily Sentinel

Page Bl
Moncllly, December :n, 2001

Lots ·of Luck!

~aneis ~orist

Our gilt to the
first hahy of
•r
l

'

offer a
beautiful

$25.00 CIFT·

CERTI.FICATE

I

Baby Arrangement

VAUGHAN'S

for the
First Baby of 2002

SUPERMARKET

992-3471

Pomeroy FTD 992-2644

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

For The
New Baby)
AStuffed
.Anima\
from ...

Hartwell House
. 100 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-7696

The First

OUR-Gin
TO THE
FIRST BABY
OF2002 ·

,Baby of 2002
Will Receive A

A Free Case of
Pampers Diapers

$20.00 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
~ 992-2955 .·
112 EAST MAIN POMEROY, OH

The Shoe Place In
MiddlePort Will
Give The First
Baby Of 2002

From

PHARMACY
992-6491

...

786 N. Second Street •

To th(! PatBnh:

We Will
Congratulate
The First Baby
Of2002

of th(!
1~t

Baby of

2002
A Pair of
Ba Nike shoes!

'With A Stainless Steel
2 Piece Baby Set.

A$20.00

Gift Certificate

.•·•'
'

"

~ 298 Second Street
992-5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROWDS
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
WILLGIVEA

I'

~

91 MillStreet •

&gt;================&lt;
TO THE
)J

Jtc uisitions
,.ine. jtltiJefrg
992-6550

Pomeroy .

FIRST
ARRIVAL
OF 2002

FREE MEAL

To-thefirstbaby
of 2002, we wi\\ give ...

TO THE PARENTS
OF THE
FIRST BABY OF 2002

$25worthof
Baby Formu\a

CROW'S

KROGER

FAMILY RESTAURANT

700 E. MAIN • POMEROY

POMEROY, OHIO
'

,,

HIGHLIGHTS
Gamecocks'
Watson ready
for Outback

proud to

20021s
/

.

is

MoNrnY's

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) South Carolina's Derek Watson wouldn't talk to anyone
about the Outback Bowl a
year ago.
The suspended running
back wanted to be alone in
his
hometown
of
Williamston, S.C., while his
teammates tromped Ohio
State 24-7 last New Year's
Day.
Now, a refreshed and more
mature Watson seems ready
for whatever role he'll play
for No. 14 South Carolina (83) against the 22nd-ranked
Buckeyes (7-4) in an Outback Bowl rematch Thesday.
"I'm not looking to do
something special to show
people I'm here,"Watson said.
"This is an l!Xciting time. I
had he~rd abOut this experience and I .wanted to feel it
for myself."
Watson, a junior, looked
like he would cap one of the
team's most special seasons in
2000 with an outstanding
bowl performance. Instead,
he was suspended by coach
Lou Holtz for totaling teammate Teddy Crawford's car.
Just like that, 1,066 yards
and 11 touchdowns were
taken away from the Gamecocks'
attack.
Watson's
. absence, though, set the stage
for Ryan Brewer - a former
Ohio Mr. Football - to ~ush
for 109 yards and two touchdowns.
Brower also had three
catches for 92 yards and a
touchdown and was named
the Outback's MVP.
All Watson could d.o was
watch on TV. He was angry at
Holtz at first, but after the
game fully understood his
mistakes and apologized to
teammates
when
they
returned.
"I was a big part of the
offense," Watson said. "A big
part of the team .... It hurt me
inside to let myself down. But
even more it hurt me that I
let about 70 other guys down
.by not doing what's right."
After a second summerlong suspension for his arrest
for hitting a woman - Watson was reinstated in August
and accepted into a pretrial
interventiOn program two
months later - Watson came
back to the team with Holtz's
blessing. ·
"He's done everything we
asked him to do," Holtz said.

Wahama boys
fall.again ·
PADEN CITY, W.Va. Following a 3-0 start to begin
the 2001-02 basketball campaign coach Lewis Hall's
Wahama White Falcons have
ran into hard times on the
hardwood after losing a pair
of cage contests in the Bob
and Sharon Burton Basketball
Classic Holiday Tournament .
at Paden City High School.
The Bend Area cagers fell
to host Paden City on Friday
by a 59-36 margin before
dropping .a 65-52 decision to
Clay-Battelle in the consolation affair on Saturday.
The twin setbacks extended the Mason County teams
current losing slide to three
stt'aight losses as the WHS
season record clipped to 3-3
on the year.
Wahama shot a shocking 20
percent from the floor against
the Wildcats and managed
just 13 second half points.

•••

Check out Wednesday's
Sentinel for results from Saturday's Gallipolis Rotary
Wrestling Invitational.

linemen put lawsuit aside for Outback
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Ohio State offensive
und'erdog South Carolina
linemen Tyson Walter and LeCharles Bentley are
24-7 · in the Oufback
keeping their animosity for each other off the
Bowl on New Year's
field.
Day, costing coach
The two seniors, preparing for the Outback
John Cooper his
Bowl on Tuesday against South Carolina, have
job the next day.
put aside a lawsuit to become leaders on the
Walter did not
offensive line.
play in the game;
In a lawsuit filed a year ago, Walter accused
he sat out the seaBentley of injuring him with a punch after winson because of an
ter conditioning drills. Walter's lawsuit filed in
infection in his hip. Out
Franklin County Municipal Court seeks $50,()00,
everyone knew the two would
or more in damages for injuries that included a have to play together in 2001.
fractured nose, a fractured cheekbone and broken
Their fellow linemen and new head coach Jim
teeth.
Tressel say the two never clashed in the meeting
News of the lawsuit was just one of many dis- room or on the field.
,
tractions that occurred before Ohio State lost to
"It speaks that LeCharles and Tyson both feel
'

that the team is important," Tressel told The
Columbus Dispatch .
"I don't know the whys and the wherefores,
and what has gone on and is going on, and things
like that (wirh the lawsuit) . But obviously they
have not let it come in and affe ct the rest of the
group, which I appreciate."
Walter and Bentley both flouri shed this season.
Bentley was a consensus All- Am erican and also
won the Rimington Award, which goes to the
nation's outstanding center. Walter and Bentley
were both named to the All-Big Ten first team .
The common goal for Bentley and Walter,
despite their uncommon situation, was improvement and winning. It will stay that way, they said,

,.,... -

Dawson boots
Browns past
Titans
NASHVILLE,
Tenn.
(AP) - Cleveland coach
Butch Davis joked with
kicker Phil Dawson that
the game would come
down to hi~ foot. Davis
didn't know how right he
was.
Dawson kicked a 44yard field goal with 55 seconds left, and Tim Couch
threw for three touchdowns and a career-high
.336 yards as the Browns
overcame a
14-point
deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the Tennessee
Titans 41-38 Sunday.
- ..-.. "It. 1.s kind of scary,"
Dawson said of Davis' halftime preclictioh. "He needs
to go into the stock market, He actually said it was
going to come down to a
44-yard kick, and we are
going to have the wind at
our back. That is why we
kicked into the wind in the
third quarter."
The Browns (7 -8), who
ended a four-game losing
slide, hadn't beaten the
Titans in six previous
games dating to the 1995
season.
Eddie
Tennessee's
George topped 100 .yards
rushing for the first time ·
this season and his second
touchdown of the game
put the Titans up 38-24 WAY TO GO, UTTLE GUY - Cleveland Browns quarterback Tim Couc,'· right, congratulates
kicker Phil Dawson after Dawson kicked a field goal with one minute left in the fourth quar·
PIMM-Browns.B4 ter to give the Browns a 41-38 win over Tennessee. (AP)

Bengals upset Steelers in OT
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Pittsburgh Steelers have a few things to fix
before the playoffs begin. ·
Jon Kitna threw for 411 yards and
two late touchdowns, and undependable Neil Rackers kicked a 31-yard
field goal in overtime Sunday as the
Cincinnati Bengals rallied for a 26-23
victory over the Steelers.
Despite the loss, Pittsburgh (12-3)
clinched
home-field
advantage
throughout the playoffs thanks to Oakland's 23-17 loss to Denver later Sunday.

The Steelers came into the game on
one of their best rolls in franchise history - seven consecutive wins, a firstround playoff bye already assured. They
also had the closest thing to a homefield advantage on the . road. Roughly
half the crowd of 63,751 was furiously
twirling yellow towels.
That home-field advantage won't
matter unless the Steelers play a whole
lot better than they did against the Bengals (5-10), who had lost their last seven
games.
"All of the things that we did to get

to 12-2, we totally messed up today,"
safety Lee Flowers said. "Thank God
this wasn't a playoff game today."
They appeared to have the game well
in hand after Kardell Stewart threw his
third touchdown pass for a 23-1 0 lead.
All that was left was for the NFL's topranked defense to stop the league's lowest-rate~ passer a time or two.
It didn't even come dose.
Kitna threw two touchdown passes in
the final 2:46 of the fourth quarter,

Please -

Ben11ls, B4

OvtiNick. B4

Eagles ·
reoound
after first
defeat
Bv JoN WILL
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ATHENS - The Eastern
Eagles quickly rebounded
after suffering their only loss
of the season at the hands of
Portsmouth Clay on ·Thursday. The loss however, was
rather disappointing to say the
least, for the Eagles led for the
majority of the ballgame, but
when the final horn sounded
they were on the short end in
the points ca.tegory.
' The Eagles put that loss
behind them, and on Saturday
evening, they rallied to defeat
the .\dena Warrion 60-55 at
the Convocation Center in
Athens for the final game of
the Wendy's Hoops Classic.
The Eagles were without

PIIIIM-Eqi-.B:S

Meigs
girls
sweep ~t
Loga·n
BY JIM SOULSBY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

LOGAN - The Meigs
Lady Marauders and the Lady
Vikings of Vinton County
faced off in the championship
.game of, bracket I at the
Logan Holiday Tournap1ent
on Saturday.
· It was the second meeting
of the two TVC Ohio Division teams in a little over two
weeks, the first meeting coming at Vinton County on Dec.
13 with the Vikings cruising
to an easy 28 point win over
an ice cold Meigs team.
This time around it was the
free thmw line and a huge
rebounding edge that propelled the Vikings to a 70- 49
victory. The Marauders were

Please see Melp. B:S

J!Vhat and who were the top stories in _2001?
There were moments· this past
year where things were going so
fast, we all had to catch our collective breaths.
That held true in the world of
spo,rts where baseball gave us a
World Series that caught the attention of a nation when we needed it
the most.
We saw the return of one legend,
and said goodbye to another.
And, in between, there was
. enough to keep us occupied.
I had a chance, along with my
partner in crime, Dan [&gt;olcyn, to
find out what you thought of the
year 200 I, and most of you agreed,

Butch
·Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTER

the Fall Classic was definitely the
top story in one way or another.
It came at a time when America
was still healing from September's
horrific terrorist attacks.

Doug Shamblin of Pomeroy said it
best.
"I believe it helped in the healing
of our nation . The Series helped
bring people togeth er."
With the performances on the
mound of co- MVPs Randy Johnson
and Curt Schilling of Arizona along
with New York Yankees' Roger
Clemens, to the late heroi cs ofTino
Martinez in Game 4 and Luis Gonzalez's game-winner in Game 7, you ·
had many reasons to choose th e
World Series.
Baseball also saw its most cherished record broken for the second
time in three years as San Fran cisco's

Barry Bonds hit 73 hom e runs, sul"passing Mark McGwire's mark.
·
Michael Jordan's name was mentioned many tim es as well .
His Airness came out of retirement once again , putting the Washington Wizards in the public eye.
Only time will tdl how. thilt
works out .
Then' th ere was the death of one
of the greatest 'drivers Of all-time,
Dale Earnharpt, on the final lap of
the Dayton a 500 back in February.
We were all in sho ck at the news
that cam e shortly after the race.

PleiHIH Melp•. B:S
•

�Page 82 • The Dilly Sentlnei~------------.:P~o::;m:e::;ro::iy~·.:;;M~Idd;.;;leport,;;:;~O;;hl~o~-~~~-----~~

Monda~Dec.31,2001

Mondly, Dec. 3•

;~

'

.. •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'llrribune - Sentinel - 1\.egister
..,.,,.,_I

CLASSifiED

l'.11l&gt;fir S ntio.-l"oo in ~. .
\ oo , MACIIII&lt;t t.; ,.,• . Ht.lhrr,,l tli~ltll • \-r

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

IN THE «:nUIION
PLEAS COURT OF
IIIEJOS COUNTY,

.I

(}{{Ice lfofdl'~

, f(~r/cfo./u

{)ear/ll(fAf
word

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

AdS

pjsolay Ads

oauy In·Column: t :oo· p.m.
All o1sp1ay: 12 Noon.2
.H cnday·frlday tor rnsertlonPBuus1n,•.•,• Dnavs Prior To

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I $

Up To 15 Words, ·3 Days

10
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday
In·Column: t :OO p.m. Thursday
Sunday Display:
1:00 p.m.
1
For sundays Paper
for .S llnd1ys
0 11

Prtv.ti:~si'::,oo

Over lS Words 20 ¢ Per Word

20 words 1 Days • each Item Priced

• No

Com me refill Ads

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

1

Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Ads Must Be Prepaid

Moll To: Ohio valley Publishing, 825
Third
31
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 456

..._.,.....beNPOflldon ._ ... dlfof

POl tall· ONo Vllly .. 7 ,•• ,....,.. ... rlghl
TIIM a I U I Raaf' . . bt
for no
_,10M 0/f . . . . . . . . . . . . . . fnMn the Pll tl'
2

AKe~worel • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prlc:• • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run ? 01y1

• St•rt

•

I

\'\'\1 fl \1 I '.PI\ I"

r
I
1,.------,l·

,.. Hw&gt;WAN111D

l'EitsoN.wi

Ir•a

UFI YOU D!ll!ll¥11
Bo YDUII DWN,,_,. pPtlntlallll
FREE Into. Full Training.

Your Ads

With

lluiN&amp;IB
OtiumJNrrY

r·
I

llrond

3248

1o.,.. j

I

::v•

I

'

r ~ Ir === Ir•

r

Fu!A............

corm--,:

r

flii.

i

!ala 304-1175-5&amp;18

pluS-· .._,. ..,, - ·

=

r

{

r

~ I AIG&gt;~ I ~~ I

I H \ '"I'C II{ I\ 110\

Ir

r·

I

0

I

'j

.I' ,''
: j

=

i ;.__,,. I

I

I

r•a

I

G:t
............ _

__

=xporlonoo

'

r

.

S::· e:;

I

i

Moo'

.......,.

riO

•

r

I

r

I

j

' .

IQuell~.

A~aemary,

c

I

r

L,.------,.1

5251

7

'

rlO

,_. ...,.......

T~=~A,:'N

1

r

1

n-------n

9

I

I

j

=

'

I

a-·

24

.

Amos
FOR SALE

ll82-2187.
in Stock.
$1200. can alter 5pm.
Tralltr In Roctne, 2 boldEVANS ENTEIIPRI&amp;o (304)8715'7652
MoBiutlfoMFB For8altDrtve-ttweo.-.- """"·
Ohio, 1-8001ont 01010 with l&gt;lacklto!ogo - · ..,,5 I*
e37-9528
1990 Buick CentUIY 4 door,
mR SuE
building. 14x70 mobile $375 dopollt lflwpunm
8 cylinder, goOII condnlon,
homo. 15
goi111Q0,
I
Gooll8
NEW AND USED STEEL Low inlleago. C811 (304)8751870 Champion 121d10 2 odonRt. 33outaklaoiNew (740)~·2217 coli 7om·
,
Stool Booma, Plpo Raber 7555alttr5. $2000.
bod1001111 13 000 OBO. - . 112 mle 1o1m Moun- 1liiJm,
For Conor8, Anglo, CllanC81t(304)67s-2470
111-r Spom and Allovl. Trallor In A . - ldoollor ~---~':!~~ not, All Bar, Slaol Grating 19111 Chevy Corsica LT..
G- "-lion. Owners Re•
..- , . -,...~ ·-..-. For Draine, Drtvewayo &amp; Looded, $1BDO. 19112 Ply11185 Skyline 14x70, 3 bod- loealing. can (304)882·2859 ~:Ow:'f."26ar" looatlon, = · I ~ TOS:
- y o . L&amp;L Scrap Mel· mouth Colt AuiOmalic &amp; AC,
room. Good Condition. can or (304)875-0180 .
lotoyt1 Appllama, French e1a 0pon Monday, Tl»oday, $1200. (740}446.0744
7
HaiOid, ~·
Lars &amp;
AeunMiiNrs
City t4.-~~o 740-448-7795. ::-&amp;',!:;~,:::· 11192 Pontiac. High mileage.
l.arrAND
ling 1ppRcatlon1 for a lutl
MONEY
I Hl87 14x70, 3 br.l2blh,
AcltE.\GE
FORRiNr
Sat~,iy &amp; Sunda~: EMc:eUent
co~dlt!On.
"
lima 3 to 11 LPN lor nnln. I .
TO Ln\N
$4895. Will help with dallY. ~
•
For Solo: Roconditlonad (740)448-7300
(304)875·2563 alter pm.
.-OVND
And a luH lime 1 to. 7 1111 In
lll'f· Call Kovona, 74Q.385.
1 and 2 bedroom apa•· wuhorl, diVM and rotng1994 Olda Cullass Su·
LPN. We pay 111 .00 an
91148.
1 acre lot. New Araa, prlva· mon11 lumlohed and unlur· oratore. Thompaont Appll- Old old pair o1 n&gt;ller akates, promo PW PL Cruise
Found· small cream Col· hourstarungpay,wfth ·eJ!P&amp;' LookNoFurthM'Weprovlde
cy, Near Point Pleaaant. rftheci aecurtty dlpoelt ,.._ ance. 3ot07 Jacklon Av• $20; new Inlay linoleum ,
'mueS:exc8uentcon:
ored, iemalo ·dog. - · ~enco pay and ohiH diller· lop Cuallly Financing Alii• 1988 Rodmen, 14x70 Mo- Owner relocating. $450Q. ·qu~od,' no pela, 740-1192. nuo, (304)875-7388.
6'x20', R-1 electric 85000
dition, $
. ( ) .
5995.00pm740 446
fsmlly pel Neighborhood entlal. Plnoe call uo at tanco and Help. Sian a New bile Home. 2 llodroome, 2 (304)458-1593
Mollohan ca- 202 Clark hedge cutter, $10; bevor·
before
2218
Road anoa' Coli (740)448- (740)448-7150 and uk lor Cradltlor New Yaar. 1-8Bfl- 112 balho. cathedral Tex·
.,...,
ago -er. $5; (740)992· 8890
·
9·
!1632
.
Slophanlo, or stop by and 322-3894
tulod Celllnuo throughOut Indian CrNk Estataa • .3-8 1 Bedroom Aparlmon11, Chapel Road, Ponor, Ohio. 2529
19117 Burgundy and Gold
fllloulanappllcatlon.
ontlro tnoller. AC Included. acre Iota, · ....1 ol Rio S289month DepooltiRol· (740)U$-7444 1-877-830Monte cano LS Sunrool
•..-....,-----,
""""""""""""
Gu - . - r carpet. orande. trom $25,900. erence HUD Approvod 8162. Fnoa Eotimataa, Eaay Plano lor lalo, 1500; tlec- co Player Ail Powe(
Atx:nONAND
McClure'• Reotaurllllt now
Somas
Fully T~mmod. Payoff. (740)245-5747
(740}441-1519
• nnardno; 110 doi'Oaame .. trfc gullar. $100; lrUmpet, $5500 Finn fr40)&gt;446-4768 '
···-hlnng all 31ocatlons, lull or ~
(740)387-7875
caoh. Vliai caro. $100; 8 otrfng guitar, $25; ;;;:;;.;.;;;;;;.·.:.:.;;;;:.;.;,;,.;;.;,;,.
pan-time, pick up ~tuRNED DOWN ON
bod
1 llad.... Apt: Galllpotlo. Drl\le- O·lltflo alot
(740)1192-87811
TRUCKS
don at location &amp; bring back SOCIA II!CURITY 11811' 1990 Fleetwood 2
room
Water Paid $275 month
A..--c .. .,.
R"k p
Aucllon Com- botwoon
9:30am
&amp;
L
~Win! hc&gt;lno-&lt;all Che&lt;Yf 0 7&gt;4().
plua dlpoilt No Pall Wuher, $95. Dl)ltr, 195. A II 1Ual Homo FOR .,.......
~ """""
10•001rn
Monday
thN Sat· No fM ~ n•
385-9621
'
2002 Surlpolnte
e:oapri
Electric !'lange. $11&amp;. f-· , . _ H olllcloncy 110 plus ~
pany, lull time. euetlonee,r. uniay. ,
1-8118-562~
3 bed1000112bath 14 x 7().
Hou;t;s
(740)446-4043- .
Free Rol~ftralor, . $150. goa tum.c.. Including oil 1988 F250 Ext cab longcomplete auchon aarv ce.
POR RI!:Nr
c
s
2 ·~ Whl"
1 11 k waoha and 0 1 --.&amp;.~- r.• lurna'
mull
sell-call Mike 0 740-L.Jcensed lt66,0hlo &amp; West Mothtrl Dream!
15 out1 treet.
~
,tpoo · c
r
111\iU"-'
bed, 2WD, dleS&amp;I, &amp;-speed
365·2434.
VI inla 304·n3·5785 or Stay Home
rooms, 1 112 belho, Kitchen and DIYO'. $350. Relngora· ces. HI Efficiency Heat S3,500.00 neg;
Chevy
ao'1.77:j.5447
2 bedroom houaeln Pomar· with stove and retngorator. tor, Uke Now, $300. Skallllfl f'llnlio, featunng Teppens longbed, 4x4, 1979
eu&lt;o.
Bo Your Own Booal
350
1991
Mansion
14x70,
3
·
oy, 5375 per mo. plua de- 011 s.- Parking, C- to Applancos, 78 Vlno s.-. Free Incredible warranty $2,000.00 neg. 740·985·
Elm up to
bedroom
excellent
condl•
"'•~
wlfh option 1o buy, no SChoolo and Downtown (740)448-7388
~.
S5flO.S8000/Mo
3413
tlon, cal Kavena, (740)365- poalt
"~"- . PT/FT
peta
(740)898·7244
Anoa.
$5951
month
pfuo
doIIENNl:TT'S
HEATINO l - - - - - - - 91148.
All
r
o
o
f
-..
10 BuY
. HI01Hl1 fHl706
'
pollt and Roloronce. No
COOLING (740}448-11416 2001 Chevy z..71 extended
In thMnaa F F r 1:1
www.CaahNowAndForever.
2 BR, 42 112 U~n Avo- Ptta (740)44&amp;-4928
ANnQvi;s
or 1-800-872-5867·
cab, leather, CDJC8soette,
1995
16x80,
excellent
conAbsolute Top Oollllr: U.S. com
nue, S3501month pkl8 dewww,orvb,comJbenn.tt loaded, many eKtras, 8000
dillon,
will
help
with
deliver)',
Sliver, Gold Colns. Proof· RN C8se Ma_.- (FT), oo- Folr-Actcf1HI
posit. Off Straat Parking, 3 Roomo ond Balh Newly
R n Anti- Sllr Wars Collection. In· miles. $26,600 (304)675·
cal Nikki, 7&gt;4().385-9948.
sets, Diamonds, Gold ordinatlon·aupervlalon of WOicll_ft_to
Ftncod In Yanl. (740)533- Romodoled. ao..nstatro. Buy or
~n on ciOO. 47 Flguretl, 2 cases, 4363
11111111111 ~.,
Ringo, U.S. Curroney,· patient care. Llcenlld In p;...,w110e,llm."illtiol1 or 1995 Clayton 14&lt;70 2 bod- 2580
. Stove and Refrigenltor, All ~; 11 E Pomeroy 7&gt;4(). 1 lalldng, 1 laking bank, - - - - - - - - .
rooms 2 lull belho, dining
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 SOC.
Paid · 4fl Olive 892·2526. · Rusa
etc., All lor SilO. Call
VANS &amp;
dl lu• PI ,..._on area, laundr; room. central 2M5 Uncoln Avenue. 3br. , utlllt'·s
ond Avenue, Galllpoll, 7-40- OH ond wv. Must ba famll·
•
re, ( &lt;40.,..1:0815 anytime.
7
ar
with
Modlclre
and
JCA·
446-2642.
largo kitchen &amp; dining area, St-. $475. (740)448-39ol6 owner.
L~--ooii"-ioiWDsiiiii--.,1
HO guidelines for home - · Dalar, Nllglan, - · air, underpinning. 8x18 et:N~
Ul
APAIIl'
Vented OU Hooter. Ullod 1 .,
Meigs County Hllitot"lcal health. Management _... flwnftllll ltltUI or na11on11 elod porch. 8x10 building, (with ~lonces). FuQ tur·
1996 Grand Cherokee Llm8ook Volume One 740-378- once o1 cliniCal staff o mull orlflln, "' any Intention to (304)875-7118 or (304)675- nlshed buament. Nice =~T' -BUDGET ,.: Sue·~~- 00 the T ·year. (7..0)~ 16 9608
illlkllonyoueh
8270.
yanl No Peto $450 month
T JACKSON El- In Mouuleport. ·Dolls, glaoa· •r-_,~----, ited. Sunooof. Heated seals.
Fuff banefl package lrletud- pcelc&amp;WIW, llmftltton 01' 5018
plus' $300. Oapoait. call ~:~A 52 Weatwoocl Ortve ·ware, Aladdin .mantell, and
lluluHNG
Reasonably
priced.
ing health Insurance and
1st Time Home Buyeral Somerville Realty (304)875· from ~ 7 to $383. Welk to more. (740)1192-0298
dtlcrlmlnatlon,"
SUPPuFs
(304)875-1879
I \I I'll~~ \II'\ I
401k lncludod. Contact Polo
FHA/ Government Loans/
ohop &amp; call 74().
Ml
------" I II \ I( I . .,
Sommer, Modi Homo Thllntll pepr will nat Single Parent Progmm 3030, (304)875-3431
2br. $325. a month. security ·446-2568. Equal Houalng .
BkK:k, brick, sewer pipits, 1998 Jeep Wrangler, White.
Heanh. 430 2nd. Avo.. P.O.
Available.
Call
Loana
tyBox 887, Galllpollo, tlH -Deposit required at 1112 Opportunity.
w~·-, llnlols, ole. Claude Sort- top, 47,000 miles. 5
(740}448·3093
l o r roof
Street (304)757 5274
•IUUft'D
speed, 4x4, 5 disc CD
45631. fl00.481-8334
. . . . whiCI\ t.ln
·
Ch~aty'o Family Uvlng, 14 amp. portable pizza Wlnllfa, Rio Grande, OH · Changer. 740·709·6444
2 bedroom, atove &amp; retriger- 8~ 22 ·
·
33140 New Lima Rd., Rut· ovan,' $3~; Ironing bolnl, C811740-245-5121.
(ceiQ or (740)367.0323.
Saito Parson. Must have 2 -ion .. tho lrti. Our ator, new windows &amp; carpet,
3 Bedroom HOUH on 160 land, Ohio, 7&gt;4().742-7403. SS: 48"1130" work lablo, out
Attention!
$4,995, 7o40-992·2167
In- o1
lnhilnwdlhlllal
Near North Game H.S., Apartment, home and ll'lllltr of former Red Anchor ltOfe,
·
Plimi:
97 Astro Van, 56,000 miles,
&amp; hanlwlro. Sond
Eam 2nd. Income without
~
. air, cruise, lilt, PW, PL,
reaume or pick up on appil· dal•41fiCIItll'ttelcf In Divorce forces Salol 311ed- $4001 month. $400 depoalt. mala. Commercial otore- $35, go011 onape, (740)992·
2nd job up to
fronts I~Jalfable for lease. 2529
AMIFM Cassette, dual .air
room/ 2 Bath on prtvale lot . No Pet&amp;. (740)446.8.485
cation It Thomu Qo.lt Conthllnew F Fl . .
$25.·$75.hu. PI-Ft.
call (740}446·3570.
ter, 178 McCormick Rood,
nalllble on.,. eqUIII
VBcancles now.
9S% Hybrid wolf puppies 7 bags, ABS, seats 7, hke
1-600-218-7543
3br. House, with famlty
Amazing
lllltlibollam weeks old 11 188 $100 new, Must sell! (740)379·
www.Money,Oreama.com Oaiflpotlo, OH 46831
Oon1 Own Land? We Dol room, completely renovata..kthraughll
Call lea~J8 8m!:.ao8 740: 2134 leave message.
~Sale1 Pool ion I madfate
Landi
Homo
packages
ed.
All
Nowl
$500
month
Fumtohed
Apt. 3 Roome, f LoH 10 pound•· 200 742-4815
n
&amp;
HI 'I I ' I \II
-------t · 1 ~ Pereon
Available. Call (740)448· plus deposit. No Pals. nego- Bath. All Utilltlea Paid. pounds easy, quick, Faat
. ·
Auro c'ARTS
A\IONI All Aleaal To Buy or =A'~~~ Acquteltloni
3583.
.
tlablel .In Point Pleasant Downstairs, 919 2nd Ave., Dramatic Results. 100% AKC Regl ...red Black Lab
ACCFSSORIDi
Sell.
Shllfoy
Spearo,
304·
Jewell)!,
151
2i.d
AWJ.,
Gel·
lloilm;
(304)875-6876
$2851
month
.
(740)448·
Nalullli,
Dr.
R_,manded,
Pufllllol.
Males.
$200.
7 1429
6 5·
Hpotlo
FOR""Umlted Or No Credit? Oov 3br House with family · 3945
'Ask about 1'1111 Simple" (740'448 0060
DU&lt;Igt1 Prlcad Tranomli·
· d*· -·~·•tor
·
"""""
ommanl
Bank In
Finance
Qnly room,
• 2 batha,
' Iota lly re-Furnished Efficiency, All (740"'
1 1.,_.
~•
1
CIIUIIPirtnmeDII'ICt T .~
At Oakwood
Barbours,-'
11onaA1II •1ypes, Access •.o
C.. Stiff '
ra._..... mrer ,--.,.
ville WV 304-738-3409.
modeled: 2 story In Historl· Utilities Paid, Shared Bath. El trl bo La n Genie
Over 10,000 Transmissions,
A leading -""~of ..,.. 100 bod lklllod nursing II· 3 lladooom on Route 2,
•
cal distriCt, no petsl $600 $125/ month. g19 2nd Ava., OC 0 x '!'•
Rebuild Klls, 740·245·5677,
1
525
110;
~e to lndiv'id;.";';..th Men· clllty. Reoponoibllltlto In· (304)675-5332
New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 month plus deposit. Nego- (740)448-3945
.
B' banquet ..,.e.
;
Cell: 339·3785.
tal Rllardltion and 01\J•· dude tranaport of relidenta
bath. Only $995 &lt;Jown &amp; tl~ble. Must BBa. In Flolnt
Preeto 12 qt, preaay~~ ~~opmental Dlsabllltlea la to eppolntmenta, wortdng 3-4 bedloo;n, 2 baths, lr, dr, $1 89.62/month.. Call Cheryl, Pleasant. (304)875-6676
Graclo.ua living. 1 and 2 er, S~S;
jara or ;
jj;p;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;
'-lln lll"&gt;
1 klrl for
at part time with nursing ~tf to Insure kitchen, central heal &amp; ale, 74Q.385-7671 .
bedroom apartments at VII- (740)99
·
L--iiii
cirke~ S=~ wage Ia that added appolnlmenta basement &amp; attached ga,
4 bedroom house In Racine lage Manor and Riverside Firewood tor sate. ~J-40)388·
Hm.m
$in7·00 per· hou1 ~lddle1on
Apply toGay are completed. lnterelled rage with 2 br, 1 bath, apt.,
.
across from park, nice Apariments in Mlddlaport. 8264 , 1740)388-0 178.
580 SuperE Backhoe, Cab, L,_,:IMPR-;,;;O::.VFl'IIE\'I'Sil i l i-.,1
E1- candidates Should apply 10: bam, 19 acres fenced, 1112 New 2002 14 wide only neighbofhood, heal pump From $278-$348. Cell ?402-buckets 4x4, $15,900, 82 --,
181 ~0~ Carta Drive Rocksprlnga Rehabilitation miles N. on old 33 from $799 down &amp; $155.38/mo, heat &amp; central air, $500 per 992-5084. Equal Housing Firewood, $150 Dump Ford Single Axle dump truck
GaiiiP,ie, OH. Call Rhondi Center, 36759 Rocktprlngo Melgo High SCI&lt;ool, by ap- Call Nikki, (740)365-7671. month, $500 deposll In· Opponunlties.
Truck Load. (740)379-2756 Diesel, 10 it. dun'9 $4400.,
BASEMENT
8811 81 (140)446-481 4 An Road,
Pomerov, Ohio polntment only, (740)593· N 2002 14 icl
Rogers Eq. Trailer, Pinal
·WATERPROOfiNG
1 eludes water, sewet", trash,
Equal Opponun&lt;ty EmPtoy· 45789. Ritch Coo, Malnte- 6937
only (740)949·2217 call ?am· Modern 1 Bedroom Apo•· Free Gu Fumacea and Afr Hllch. Heavy, Duel Tandem Uooonditlonal lifetime guar1;~ do wn w&amp; e on
nance.
Equal
Opportunity
.
·
mont. {740)448.(1390
Condltloner Estl maes.
t call $3500 ., Ditch -'tch
er. FIMIDV.
Employer
Encouraging 818 Main Street, Pt. Pl. $155.38/mo. Call Kavena,Y 1Opm·
..,, , 4)I4 4ft• antee. local references lur,
nlshed. Established 1975.
Do •ou want to aam Wo"'"'·- Dive-~·.
Com~ Refu&lt;blohed. 2 740-365-7671.
4 Rooms &amp; Bath, S300/
(740}446·6308 or 1-flflO. st~k &amp;backlll blodlend
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4~6·
·~·r
Bath
3
•~
2
011
St
t
291.()()98.
If you don1 call
$2800.
AI
In
than minimum wage? Make
story, 2 ull
. 11:191:1" New 2002 14 wide Only month. 5
ve ree · Now Taking Applicationsbath iostll
0870,
1-800·287-0576.
1
1
&lt;he chango today! lnfoCI· URGENTLY
NEEDED· roomo. Largo Kitchen, $899 Down &amp; $155 3a per (740)446·3945
36 West 2 Bedroom Town· "'::.:we::.::::,::.:::::_,:-:-.,.
Rogers
Waterproofing.
5 ion 1 lookJ
n1 plume donor8. aam $50 to Largo Utillly Room, LR1 DR/
·
o
house Apol1menla lncludeo Orubb'o Plano Tuning &amp;
s
~81or f'"m~
$60 per week tor 2 or 3 Family Am. New Carpet month. Call Harold, 74 . Buy homes from $ 199/mo., Waler
Sewag~. Trash,
p obi. 1 N ed
00
cators0,to rna : : s 1 houra weekly. Call Sera- throughout F/A &amp; AJC 385-7671.
. Foreclosures, 4% down, 30 $350IMO 740-448--0008
:":·ea. ~ n:,mplano 8or.
l..rvt!srocK
C&amp;C.General Home Mainte11 ':':r~ :~: Tee, 740-592-8851.
~~s
$79,800. c740)446-9585 o~ New/ Used Homas- lmmedl· years at8.5% APR. For 1111·
·•
. •
40-446~
nence- Painting, vinyl sidIng a·nd ~rear· oriented call
(740}446-2205 or (740)446· ate Possesion, No pay· 1ngs 1,800·319·3323 ext one br. apt In Pt. Pleasant,.
lng, carpentry, doors, win1·888-237-5342 eKt. 2201. 140
·
2683.
menta until Feb. 2002. Pre· 1709 ·
lumlshed, very clean, no Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 3 112 year old Black !Angus dows, baths, mobile home
BuiiNEss
I ••·k ,..___ 2 BR po··•. quality by phone. (740)446· Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom pets phone 304-1175·1388 for $10. Open SaL 8-6pm. &amp; Bull, $550. (740)367-0832 repair and more. For frse
on rs wanted no COL • 23 1
rr....
__ ,,..
~ vuuayo;&gt;' • Great
•
INN
3218·
evenings. Dewhurst Green·
&amp;
estimate
&amp;KI\U'UI"fl•
Lohouse, 299 Mulberry, Pom- Renters Wanted: Pilot Pro- hOuoe MI. A"o.
u.a~·
•v
63
. call
· Chat, 740·992yrs.veold or older,• good dfiv,
.
, bly 3· aa.&amp;ment
·
lty
( 740 )992 .
Own
h
" 13041,895.
"';,;......,---~..,
23
1
1
lng record benellts. drug
cation. block from C Nice 28x60 Double Wide eroy, no pes,
gram.
your own ome. 3740 leave mesaage. or
GRAIN
II'
u .......................... J
screen,S8~orswetm'ma. 1- GlllllpoiiiCtrtlr COIIIil Park.
(740)441·0364. setting on rented lot In 5858.
Little or no credit OKI Call (304)895-3789
......,._,,..UUJ
800-531--6553.
(Ciretl'l Cloll To Horne) $4?,!500.
Point Pleasant ,rea. 2x6 Nice 4 bedroom country (?40)446-3384.
REFRIGERATION 1
Call TOCiayl 740-448-4367, For 5ale By- Owner· Cultom w1111. thermal pane win· home, 25 mlnutea to Alh· River Bend Place now 8C· Independent Herballlt Dis· Hay, square balea, good
Got In Tho ~ost Lano.
1-800-214-0452,
Buln Capo Cod Home. Qnly dows. prlcld to oale . .Call eno, will conefdar selling, ceptlng appllcatlonolor 1 br. tributor, Col For Product Or quality hay, call (740)992·
COVENANT
Rog f90.05.1274B.
2 mnoo from Clalllpollo. (304)675·3889 (808)474· (740)898-7244
Hud Suboldlze ApJ. for the Oppo•unlty. (740)441-1982 5533
~~~~~n~~~ ",'..;fo~":,'~:~
All Oak 43a1 Ilk fO!'
Pilot Program, Renrera elder:ra &amp; dlaabled. EOH.
JET
Quality hay tor sa&amp;e, $1 .50 palra. Master Licensed elec·
81udon1Drlvers.
1111 WAN111D
Tcnm, 1 F a1nd 8aD11bar
Wlmorolprlng Noodtd, 304-738-728~.
(304) 2·3121
~.!..E~.TIN~M&amp;DTR?..~.s
t In ~
.~'!! (7m1xed_ dog to tr~lan. Ridenour Electrical,
1 Taklngonlorsnowtordollv·
NoExporlonool
ToDo
arpo,
orma
nng
,..,..,_ •"
~
,....,_,~ 40)fl85-3ll 10 WV000306, 304·675·1786.
NO PRDIL!MII
Room, Uvlng -m. Largo OIY In Ftbrual)l, March &amp;
MOBILE HOMfli
Slock. cau Ron Evane, I· Qu lty ha I
Ia $1 50
Training AniiiDio Dy
Spaclouo Kitchen, Lola lol y April.
FOR RENr
. Tara Townhouoo Apart· 800-e3HI528·
bal:; ,,J m~~i~ci~ · to
Ctlllng 1 111 111111411. All ol your home ropalro, od· Olk Ctbl-. La'ru Fam ~lnal Clo,.,..
momo Vol)! Spaclouo a , . . - - - - - · - - - go011 hOmo (740)
10
CDL Dill
dltlona &amp; IWmodallng. 24hr Room, llodroont ulto and On 4·2001 -lonal homos 3b Mobil HO
II I lladroOmo 2 Floors CA I Mattrooo &amp; Box Sprlngo,
HOO Ill UN.
omargoncy Hrvlco, 1011lor !lath wHh whi~C' Tub· &amp;3-2002 modolo on dloplay r.
e mo a e..,. 112 Bath , Fully Carpotict, 18&amp;. CB Antenna (Solar Squero baloo now II .25
oiHzons ' dlooount. 22yro. Main Lovol. 3 odroomo, pluoeotnglo18wldahomos trtc, unfumlohed. No P~ AduhPoOI48abyPool PI· con), 135. Truck T-r. HCh. 1 milo on Rt. 2. N.
Hllp wantfld Cll1ng lor the OIJ). (304)878-:1088
Sotling Room and Bath· ~t hugo uvlngs.
CLocato/dS at oornors t llo Sll• 1385/MO No POll 81' Long • 80" Wldt, 150. (304)875·ol889
lldtrly, Darst Group Home,
2nd "-I. Groan Eiomanll· llpoolalordor
odor yoamoro
troo ' LaO.. Pluo Sooun~ Dopooli (740'2116· 628
"1
now pa~ng minimum wago, Goorgoo Ponablt Sawmill, 1)1. Shown By Appolntmom. your now hOmo It · Now Havon, WV. Roloron- A llod D e· 740 ~
Squaro Baloo Now 11 .00
1
naw ohllto: 7am-3pnt, 7am· don1 haul your loge to tha Call (740)4411·378~ or prk&gt;u
· ooo Roqulrod. (304)882· ~f. Evant~: 740 .387• Motol Doll&lt;, 4 Drawors on Each. Unlll 01.01.02. 1 mila
5pm, 3jlm-11pm, 11pm· iniiiJust 0111304-1175·1857. (740)448-218&amp;.
Cola'o -llo Homaa
2420
0502,' 74Q.448.0iOI.
ono ~do, lloiY n~o. 301120. on Rt. 2 N. (304)878-4888
7
7
3
am, call o40-II92·502 .
Top to sonom Cleaning For aa.:,:: ownor.
. N~o bl· l~~.Ucfh ~&amp;~~f
Baautllul Rlvor Vlow Idill Twin Rlvor Towero now ac· Po~aot ·lor Chlldo homo· Hay a Bright Wlro Tla
Holzor Sank&gt;r Ctro Conlat- SaiVIcl. Proloulonalcloan- lovel
on 1 ocro noar 1o40-ao2.1072
For 1 Or 2 PIOQlo, Roloron- ..,.,; lflllllclllono lor work. 120. 17401885-4409 Straw. Yaar 'Round Dallvol)l
11 oubakllzod opl. MDIILI HOMI OWNIIII a V&lt;&gt;umo Dlocount Avalla·
Nuralng Al~stant CIHHo lng at effordablo pnooo. C.,_r, Throo bedroom,
coo, Dopoolt, No-· F01- IBR. HUD
are being offered ltlrtlng on AHidemlal, orne., remocset- two bathl, one-car garage,
ter Trailer P'artc. 740~441· for eldlriy and dilablld. lnttrtherm l COleman gas, ble.
Heritage
Farm.
January 28, 2002. Appilcl· lng one! conatructlon clean lamlly room with llraploco,
BtiSINE95
0181 '
EOH
oil &amp; oloctrfo fumacos In• (304)675·572 •.
tiona need to be Hlled out at up. Contktentlal. 992-2878 aun room. Ntw central heat·
AND Bt.m..DINGS 1
(304}675-Ge78
eluding hi eHiclencv hUt
HSCC by January 10,2002 orH2·f3Gt .
lng &amp; aJo ayltem. Ont ml· ..._
Houte Trailer ror Rent on
·
pump •v•tems. We cany 1
for lhOH who are lnterutecl
nute off ~oute7, but atMI prl·
.
George Road Near Eno. 2
complete line of Moblla
In tJtcomlng a 81ate tilled TAI·COUNTY CONS~UC- vate. (740)085-3981
4 800 lq foot Commercial Bedroom, $200 depo•lt, 1/ery nice, 2,3 bedroom home p.1rt11 &amp; •CCHiorltis. Buy, Sell or Trade
nurtlng Ullatant.
b~~tructlon/Aemodt~~;. Remodeled 3 blclroom, In a'uilding wltt'l 10 to 200 ~7~~~)=~ ~trlc. apal1ment, In town, lerge IINNITT'I HIATINQ A
In lhe .
Home Health Agency aaok· 'Siding, 'Rooting, 'DrywaJ, Mlddloport, can Tom Ander· acroo. Rio Orondo, Ohio. :::.:.::~.:::!.===-- kitchen, LA, $500/mo. Rol·. COOLING (74:"f.M11
in Full Time CNA. Ect. 304·.874·01551304· eon erter 5pm, (?40)882· Owner financing avallatile. Mob'le Home for Rent. •( r:r:,;::slt required. :~~.:."'~~r\ett
CLASSIFIEDSI
7
(?~)441·1393
874·36~5
3348.
·
CaN (740)246-5747
(740}446·1279

r

I

_.....lldlllon. •

New Home 1BtlO 8000 Sq. loot CC&gt;INIIOIIcal Trailer lor Rtnl or 8alt, Nlclloi.. quiet COUntry Ill• Wllarllno Spoclol: 314 200
.
n., t l/2 ocra lot, otorago wlthl4,000 oq. loot 141d10, 2 -aom. I 1/2 ting, wtK accommodlto PSI $21.85 Por 100; 1' 200
1115 000 . Call tor Into o1 outak1a area. COli ERA Balh, Gu Holt. (740)3e7· 181180 $100 1* month, Cll PSI 137.00 · Por 100; All 1988 BereHa New Ja(740j44lH5 141 1740~ Tawn &amp; COuntry ReoJ e. 7187, (740)388-0173:
Edit Country-· 7&gt;4(). a- CornprMIIon Fmlngo Engine &amp; Transmission.
FS·

oq'

Why walt? Sla• mHtlng
INOTICII
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
free 1-800·788·2823 ext wwwJindPEil!rM• qwn lNG CO. ,_&lt;do thai
11321.
-•~ ~325
youdo_wlth,..,..
you ,._, anii«&lt;T
ANNooNaMf1n'S Local IJiliCIIol tl1nJuWI the moll until
..__ _ _ _ _ _•. luH·tlmo Roglllalod Denlll you lnvootlgowel ...
"
~.Submlt,...moiO -.a.
fld
1 A Oltfce Ma-r 0 1108
~l':."w.:.cot.o!'m: Sooth Thlnl Avo.. Mlddlo- Sian Your I!Usinoaa· Topo&lt;t, Ohio &gt;16780 by Janu. day... Primo lil1q&gt;pll'll Cona~=7
OIY 2, 2002.
tor Spaco Aoallablo At N·
Karl.e SChOol. o40-742·
LPN
, _ -~ \Ioiiey
7
101
2548
SceniC Hills ,. now accept· Plaza, can
'
01Vo singles tonight, caa 1011

-""""""'-

=:::l

.._emwWoMwU.Iht
nbl,~
..
. . M .... In . . fht .....uon. W.aNIIIeox
...
af 1111. •Thl•

.. .,_,.. con....,,...._ •eun.nt ,... cerd

I

r

I

fnwn,...B1

A l l -·· 11111
-reled Uncllr the
dOC1rtne ol C.v11t
Entpia&lt;. Prolpactlve

arc h.wing l t~d by Uria n Urlal"hn . onl' of
tina m ore t!'Xciting lincbac k.t!'n in the
country.
Th~n thore's t he many lin es handed
out to Minn i."SOta's Randy Moss.
Kurt Warner and Eddie George also
nude the list.
Meanwhile, cyclist Lance Arnutrong
continued his comeback from cancer,
winning the Tour de France, while riding with the Olympic torch with other
cancer survivors in Texas,

Wrc:sding aJso b'Ot a n o d tion1 amateur
g r.,at Rulon G ardne r to ... ye•. th~ ·
R ock. Wh at is th" R ock cook in', by the
way?
Yl'S, 2001 was a wild ride. Yo u never
knew wh at was coming up next .
What wiU 2002 bring? Who knows.
But one thing is clear ... it' U have to be
a whopper to top this year.

Racing fans aaoss the country
REQUESTS FOR
PUILIC MEETINOI, mourned his death and NASCAR paid
AND ADJUDICATION special tribute on the third lap of every
01«1
HI!AMIQ REOUEITS
IIAIIIARA MYNE, pwcl
.... "'WWd MUST BE SENT TO: race as announcen remained quie t to
EXECIIl'lllx
to
for 111M In HUlliNG CLERK, honor the man who drove the No.3 car.
OF THE ESTATE OF lhl public NC oocll ol
(Butch Coopn is a sports wrirtr for Ohio
01«1
Football also had its place in 2001.
LUCILLE II.
...... Coutt1y, Otolo. I!NVIRONMI!NTAL
f..iJI/ry Publishing Co. E-mail him ar IKoop·
KINO AKA LUCILLE the 111111 County PROIECllON
The amazing year the Chicago Bears
er@mydailyrribunt.com)
KING, DECEASED
Sheriff mekee no AGIHCY, P.O. lOX
PL
F
DUI1'11111oi as to ,... 1041, COLUMBUS,
CASE NO
02 ~. ol title prior 10 OHIO 41211·1 04t
hit one of two on a bonus foul , and to hang on to their 5 point lead down
(TI!LI!PHONE: 114•
RANDY E. KlNG,
Dougl11 W. Ll1111, 144·2121). "FINAL
then
. on the next trip up the court, the stretch . Lyons closed the books on
EXECUTOR OF THE Al1ornly lor Plaintiff
ACTIONS:
ARE
ESTATE OF fiOUNO (12) 17, 24, S1
nailed a trey to put the Eagles up by the Warriors, hitti ng two key foul
ACTIONS OF THE
E. KING, DECEASED,
three.
The quick hand~ on lyons put shots with 14 seconds renuining. The
DIRECTOR WHICH
ETAL.
.....:.,Pu:;b:.;;ll:;;,c
.:.:~:.::::::...._
ARE
I!
P'P'ECTIVE
the Eagles up three more notches as foul shots made the game a two-posDEFENDANTS.
UPON ISSUANCE OR
NOTICE OF SALE
the
services
of
Senior
Garrett
Kar;,
he converted on a three-point play. session game as the Eagles led by five.
THE FOLLOWINJI A .
I T ATI!D
lly virtue ol en APPLICAl10NI
and
needed
someone
to
step
up
to
fill
EFFECTIVE DATI!.
Simpson struck again before the
'!Yler's attempted three was off the
out ol the Colltmon AND/OR VIRIP'II!D PUIIIUANT TO OHIO the position . If it is possible for two to
sound
of
the
buzzer,
placing
the
mark, and the Eagles held the ball
Pleal Court ol llllge COMPLAINTS W!RI! REVISED CODE
Coutt1y, Ohio, In 111e RECEIVED, AND THE IECTION 3741.04, A take the place of one, then Nathan Eagles on top 31-22.
until the buzzer sounded .
.... ollhe . ., . , FOLLOWING DRAFT, FINAL ACTION MAY Grubb and Cody Dill filled Karr' s spot
The second half proved to be ~· difThe ice water in Lyons veins earned
Peyne, ExecUirlx of PAOPOSED 1 OR IE APPEALED TO
on the court rather nicely. The duo ferent story. '!Yier returned to the him the player of the game award pre1lte E-1 ol Lucille FINAL
ACTIONS THE
II. King lila Lucille WERE ISSU,.D, IV ENYIAONMI!NTAL
combined . for 22 points on the game for the Warriors, and what a sented by Wendy's. Lyons hit five key
King, deaeeeed, T H E
0 H I 0 REVIEW APPI!AL8 evening.
return he made. Tyler netted eight of .foul shots down the stretc h and netted
Plelntlll, va, !IIndy E. ENVIRONMENTAL
COIIMIIIION (I!IIAC)
The
Eastern
offensive
began
very
the
12 Warrior points in the third 11 total points.
King, Executor ollhe PROTECTION
(FORMERLY KNOWN
E1111e ol Roland E. AGENCY
slowly,
but
Cody
Dill
stood
on
the
gas
quarter as they outscored the Eagles
(OEPA) A I
T HI!
Dill put up a double double on the
King, deceeeld, It LA IT
W1!E K. ENYIRONIII!NTAL
to accelerate their offense. Dill kept 12-8.
evening scoring 12 points and grab11., Delandante upon "ACTIONS" ·INCLUDI! IOARD OF REVIEW)
the Eag~s alive in the first period by
The Eastern defense continued to bing II rebounds . He also blocked
a Judgment theroln THE
ADOPTION, IV A PERSON WHO
ranclefttd, bllng c... MODIFICATION, OR WAS A PARTY TO A netting eight of tlie 13 first quarter have trouble-stopping Tyler. However, picked up 4 blocks on the night.
No. 0 1 .CV·102 In REPEAL OF ORDERS PROCEEDING
points. Luck was with Eastern though; whenever the Warriors scored, the
Simpson led all scores for the Eagles
Uld Court.tlte Sheriff (OTHER
THAN BEFORE
THE at the 4 :40 mark, Adena's '!Yier drew Eagles always answered for they
of Molge County, EMEIIO£HCv
with
an impressive IS-point perfor- ,
DIRECTO R
8V
Ohio, will oflar for ORDERS);
his
second
foul,
placing
him
on
the
matched
Adena
point
for
point
in
the
THE FILING AN APPEAL
mance. Simpson was stealthy in his , :
1111 II lite front door ISSUANCE, DENIAL, WITHIN 30 DAVI OF bencli for much of the first and sec- fourth .
and 'was able to sneak behind ·
offense,
ol 1111 CourthouN In MODIFICATION OR NOTICE OF THI!
ond
quarters.
Tyler
had
an
18-ppg
Tyler
hit
three
to
open
up
the
Pomeroy,
II elge REVOCATION
defenders several times on the pass
OF FINAL
ACTION,
County, Ohio, on 11t1 LICENSES, PERIJll, ' PURSUANT TO OHIO average coming into the game, and he fourth quarter, making the tally 39-37 and cut.
18th dey of Jenuary, LEASES,
REVIUD COOlE drew heavy attention from the Eagle in favor of Eastern. Kimes responded
Eastern attempted to contain ·
2002, el 10:00 e.m. VARIANCES, OR SECTION 3745.07,'.
defense.
Kimes
guarded
a
little
too
by
getting
open
on
a
cut
to
the
basket
the following Iande' CERTlFICATEI; AND FINAL
Adena's
Tyler, but he managed 20 ,
ACTION
1nd
tenement1, THE APPROVAL OR ISSUING, DENYING, heavily, for he picked up his third per- for two points; Brannon picked up the points including nine fr9m threeIOCIIAd II 127 S. DISAPPROVAL OF MODIFYING,
,.. . sonal in the first quarter as well . With assist giving Eastern a four-point lead. point range.
Second
AYII1ue, PLANS
AND REVOKING, v 11
Middleport, OH SPECIFICATIONS.
The Eagles will travel up the route 7
R E NEW I N G
"A '!Yier on the bench, the Eagles were Kimes fed the ball into Lyons on the
45780. THIS IS A "DRAFT ACTIONS" PERMIT, LlcENI~. able to scoot ahead of the Warrior for next trip down the court; Eastern uti- on Friday January 4, to face fellow
SALE OF THE REAL . ARE
WRITTEN OR
VARIANCE
lized its pass and cut offense to burn 2001 State Finalists, the Belpre Gold- · ·
ESTATE ONLY. TNE STATEMENTS OF WHicH IS NOT an 11-13 first quarter advantage.
The Eagles came alive in the second the clock.
HOME DOES NOT THE DIRECTOR OF PRECEDED BY fo
en Eagles.
SELL. ·A complete ENVIRONMENTAL
PROPOSED ACTD, quarter. After Adena in bounded the
The Eagle defense softened, and
legel daecrlpllon of PROTECTION'S
MAY IE APPI!AL!D ball and scored quickly, the Eagles enabled the Warriors to pull within
the rul ea1111 lo ae (DIRECTOR'S)
TO THE ERAC BY gritted their teeth and got busy offen11
11
12
21.SS
lollowe:
two numerous times throughout the Adana
INTENT
WITH fiLING AN APPEAL
18
8
21-eo
Sllueted In 1he RESPECT TO THE WfTHIN 30 DAYS"''F sively and defensively. Trailing by one, fourth . Simpson again was found open Eastern t3
County of Melge, In ISSUANCE, DENIAL, ISSUANCE OF THE
the Eagles Alex Simpson pulled down on the pass and cut, in an attempt to . Adano Oallu Tyler 7 4-8-20, Nle Hammon 2 D-1 .., Scott
!hi S1a1e of Ohio, and ETC. OF A PERMIT, FINAL
ACTION.
Ga.- 2 O.Oo4, Todd Hams 1 ll-1-2. ZICk Doughty 3Da
rebound and converted to put the build some sort of lead. Tyler picked 0.7, Moll R-..on ~ 0.0.10, Z0C1c Zlckalooot 2 4-8o8.
In the Vlll1g1 of LICENSE, ORDER, ERAC
APPEAI,S
Middleport, end ETC. INTERESTED MUST BE FILED Eagles up by one. Simpson picked up off a dismal pass and quickly destroyed Totals 22 8-1""55
Eastem...,lason Kimel 3 1·2-7, Chris Lyonl 3 5-7•11,
bounded
and 'PERSONS
MAY WITH:
'
a steal on the next Adena possession, the Eagle lead.
"
Nalhon Grubb 4 1·2-10, Alex Slmpoon 7 1·1• 15, Brad
ducrl- ae lollowa: SUBMIT WRITTEN ENVIRONMENTAL
Brannon 2 D-1 ... Bnttlt Buckley 0 1·2•1. COdy Dill 8 oBeing Lot No. Forty COMMENTS OR REVIEW APPEALS and pushed the Eagle up another two
. When the clock began to wind 0.12Totals
25 9-15-eo .
(40-1/2) and one-ltoilf. REQUEST A PUBLic COMMISSION, 231 clicks. Harris evened the score with a down, the Warriors began to foul . Rebou-Adano
2"(Zickafooea 11) Eaatom 35(0111 11) ,
Said Lot 11 known MEETING
EAST TOWN STREET, rebound put-back for two, but that is Eastern's foul shooting kept their Stoafo·Adena 7(Tylllr 2), E-.n 10(Grubb 3). Tumovers
and dletlngullhld In REGARDING DRAFT R 0 () II
u ;o,
Adona 23, EU11m 17. -st·Adano 10(T)'Ier 4), Eaotem
llllten'l Addition to ACTIONS.
COLUMBUS, OHIO when Nathan Grubb appeared. Grubb heads above water, and enabled them 18(Kimoo ~~- Blockiod Shoto Eutom 8(0111 4)
the Town ol Sheflllld, COMMENTS OR 43211. A COPVl OF
now Middleport, PUBLIC MEETING THE APPEAL MUST
Ohio, In oald County, REQUESTS MUST BE BE SERVED ON THE
baing 1he ..... rNI SUBMITTED WITKIN DIRECTOR WITHIN 3
and Jones scored inside to give Vinton County a . 13-point .
eatate conveyed 1o 30 DAYS OF NOTICE DAYS AFTER FlUNG
advantage at 27-14 with 4:16 to go in the half. Meigsi
Jamee Cerey by OF THE DRAFT THE APPEAL wiTH
decree recorded In ACTION.
THE ERAC.
Shannon Souls by carried her team the rest of the quarter as
Record ol Dildo of "PROPOSED
FINAL ISSUANCE
fromPapB1
the
5-8 junior forward outscored the Vikings ll-11 the rest ·
,.
aeld Melge County, ACTIONS"
ARE OF ' IUII PI!RMI'f 11'0 .
Volume 31, Pege 233 WRITTEN
of
the
way. ln a 3:57 stretch Souls~y went 4 of 4 at the foul
OPERATE
.
whistled for foul after foul as the Vikings paraded to the line and buried three of four from beyond the arc to tally
end 234, bl the ume STATEMENTS OF MEIGS COUNTY'
more ,,or Ieee, but THE DIRECTOR'S TRANSFER STATION line a total of 36 times connecting on 25 charity tosses. The
IUble'ct all legal INTENT
WITH
34871
ROCK Vikings held a 38-15 advantage on the boards as they con- the Marauders last 13 poiim of the half. The last three
hlghWIIYI·
pointer coming from deep in the left corner with just 38 ,
RESPECT TO THE SPRINGS ROAD
Reference Deed: ISSUANcE, DENIAL, POIII!ROY OH, .~
verted several key offensive rebounds into baskets.
ticks remaining to cut the Viking lead to eleven at 38-27 as
Volume 288, P1g1 MODIFICATION,
IS S UE
. DATE
The
Marauders
lit
up
the
scoreboard
first
as
Mindy
the teams headed into the locker room.
355, IIIIDI County REVOCATION, OR 1211712001
Chancey
hit
a
left
wing
jumper
to
give
Meigs
a
quick
2-0
Deed RK«dd.
RENEWAL 0 F A APPLICATION NO(I)
The Marauders cut the lead to under ten at 38- 29 when ·
Audltor'l Par..l No.: PERMIT, LICENSE, 0853000010 FOOt
lead. Vinton's Mel Jones tied it at 2-2 at the 6:07 mark on Lindsay Bolin scored inside with the assist going to Jaynee
15-00820.000
0 R
VARIANCE.
MATERIAL
a lay-up. Samantha Pierce drilled a three pointer at the 5:46 Davis, but again the Marauders went into a scoring funk as
The above cllecrl- WRITTEN
HANDLING AT A
,..,.-. lllold ... COMMENTS AND SOLID
WASTE mark and Meigs led 5-2. Those were the last points to be they were held without a point for the next 2:50 of the
le"
without REQUESTS FOR A TRANSFER STATION. scored by Meigs for the next 6:12 of play. In the earlier loss
game. A bucket by Jones at the 4:32 mark upped the Viking
warrantlea
o ·r PUBLIC MEETING
MEIGS COUNTY
to
the
Vikings
the
Marauders
had
a
9-minute
stretch
coverunlt•,
lead to 17 points at 46-29.
REGARDING
A TRANSFERSTATION
Property Addf1111: PROPOSED ACTION 34 87 8
R 0 C K between points as they fell behind by as many as 18 points.
Meigs fought back with a Pierce three-point play and a
827 s. Second MAY IE SUBMITTED SPRINGS ROAD ','
rebound
and
put
back
by
Beth
Allen
gave
Vinton
CounA
Avonue, Middleport, WITHIN 30 DAYS OF POMEROY,
basket by Davis to get back to within 10. Hayes and Allen
!&gt;'!!_
OH4S7eG
NOTICE OF THE ISSUE
DAn: ty the lead for good at 6-5. Jones added a bucket and an old closed the quarter with baskets to pad the lead back to 14
Reel
Elllle PROPOSED ACTION. 1211712001
'.~
fashioned three-point play to push the lead to six points. heading into the final frame. In the third quarter Meigs was
Appralnd
a1: AN ADJUDICATION APPLICATION NO(I)
Holly Pridemore scored off an offensive rebound late in the out rebounded 14-0 as the Marauders were checked off the
$13,000. the real HEARING MAY IE 0853000080 F002
eellte cannot bl aol.d HELD
quarter
and Vinton led by a 13-5 count at the end of one boards time and time again by the taller Vikings.
ON
A ROADWAYS
AND
lor leao than 1wo- PROPOSED ACTION PARKING AREAS AT period.
The Vikings pushed their lead to twenty points at 62-42
lhlrde the apprelled IF
A HEARING A SOLID WASTE
Kayla Jewett opened the second frame with a three point by virtue of an 8-2 run in the first two minutes of the final
nlue.
REQUEST
OR TRANSFER
Termo ol Slle: 1~ OBJECTION
IS STATION.
bucket to stretch the lead to double digits. Alicia Werry quarter. The Marauders could never close the gap as Vinton
down day of aale, RECEIVED BY THE
APPROVED
1
balence on delivery OEPA WITHIN 30 PERIIIISION Fo'R countered with a hoop in the paint and after two Pride- hit on 4 of 6 from the field and 8 of 12 from the line in the
ol - · Sold oublact DAYS OF ISSUANCE OPEN BURNING OAC more free throws, Xanthe Smith completed a three-point final eight minutes.
to accrued 2001 end OF THE PROPOSED CHAPTER 3
play to cut the lead to 8 at 18-10. Hayley Sowers hit a three
The Marauders were led in scoring by Soulsby who
2002 , .. , eslale ACTION. WRITTEN 745-lt
taxea. ,
scored
all 13 of her points in the second quarter. The Viking
COMMENTS,
POMEROY FIRE
-----------DEPARTMENT
.
defense paid close attention to her in the second half as
102 OLD WEST MAIN
Soulsby attempted o.n ly one field goal after halftime. Davis
STREET
POMEROY OH
joined her in double digits with 10 points and Pierce added
APPLICA'I;ION NO(SJ
9. Lindsay Bolin added 6; Chancey 4, Smith 3, Werry and
EM121701E
Maria
Drenner had 2 each.
POMEROY FIRE
DEN.RTMENT
Jewett led Vinton County with 15, Jones and Pridemore
801 OLD WEST MAIN
added
13 each. Sowers chipped in with 8.
STREET
Meigs was 12 of 40 on two point attempts and 5 of 17
POMEROY OH
.
APPLicATION NO($)
from beyond the arc. The Marauders went to the line 17
EM121701F
times, hitting I 0 . Davis pulled down 5 of the teams 15
\12) 31, 2001
rebounds. The Marauders committed 19 turnovers.
•
to
Vinton County connected on 18 of 45 two point shots
If tears could build
and hit 3 of 5 three poiniers. The Vikings were 25 of 36 at
a stairway.
the foul line. Cindy Cox hauled in 9 of her teams 36
And memories
rebounds. The Vikings committed 21 turnovers.
were a lane
We would walk
. Jaynee Davis joined Pridemore and Kristi Hayes from
right up to Heawn
Vinton County on the all tournament team. Jill Bennett of
And~ou
Bexley and Lindsay Steppe of Jackson rounded out the
back
n.
No far
words
team.
were spoken,
Meigs (6-3) will be back in action on Thu rsd Jy january
No lime to say
3rd at Meigs High School as they play host to tl• e league
goodbye.
You were gone
leading Nelsonville York Buckeyes . Tip off ume fo r the JV
before we knew It,
game is set for 5 :55.
And only God
knows why.
Melgo
5
22
13
9
49
Since (cou'll never
Vlnlon COunty
13
25
16
18
70
be orgotten
Wepl:1o
Molgs; Undaay Bolin 3 0·4 6; Brook Bolin 0 o-o O: Mindy Clioncey 2 D-2 4: Katie Jeffers
HelpWanlld
you
y
Mason VFW
0 0..0 0; Samantha l'lerce 3 1,1 9; Shannon SOufsby 3 4-4 13; Michelle Drenner a Q-0 O;
A haiiO'.'.'ed place
Jaynee Oavfs'3 4,7 10; Chrissy Millar 0 D-O O: Mana Drenner 1 o-o 2: Xanthe Smllh 1 1New Year's Eve Dance
wllhln our hearts
1 3; Alk:la Werry f 0-ll2 TOTALS 17 10·17 49
·
Is where you'll
Monday 9·1
VInton COunty: Kayla JeweH 4 5-8 f 5; Mal Joneo S 3·5 13: Krlstl Hayes 2 2-2 8: Cindy
always stayl
Music by Flashback .
Cox 1 3,4 e: Holly Prldemore·4 5-7 13; Betl1 Allen 2 2-4 6; Hayley Sowera2 3-4 8; Susan
Time takes away_
Eoans I 0.0 2 TOTALS 21 25·36 70
the edge of grief,
for members &amp; guests
. But memories turn
3 potnl goaiO: Meigs 5 (Soulsby 3, Pierce 2) Vinton CO 3 (Jewan 2, Sowero 1)
back every leaf.
Pomeroy, Eagles
sadly missed by
New Year's Dance
daughter Wilma,
grandchildren
December 31st 9·12
FuiVParl Time
and ,feat·
OFFICE
grand lldren.

.....

To Place
tn:ribune
Sentinel
1\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To ;;:..::.992:::::.::"2:::15::..7_--=-~:.;;..:..:~
675-;:::52;::34:::__ _ _ _ ____..;

Cooper

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

c-

......

Eagles

...........

Meigs

NOW
HIRING
$6-$8

Per Hour

ENVIRONMENT
1-888·974-JOBS

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

�-·-

.

--

·-

- ---

~--··

-

~=84:::·:The:::::::::s.::nt:IM=I:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-P~omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

n:p•"H '·dly in the final minute:&lt;. A personal font by linebacker Kdth LluUuck
- fOr putting hill hand in Couch:~ f.lcc
ma!k on third-and-5 - k&lt;'Pt alive tht•
Browns' final drive. Dawson kicked his
second field goal four plays later for the
winning margin.
Tennes&lt;ee had one wt chance but no
timeouts, and Kevin Dyson dropped a
pass on fourth-and-2 lrom Steve
McNair, who had thrown for 274 yards
and two touchdowns.
Couch completed 20 of 27 pa..ses,
leading the Browns to a season-high 409
yards olfense. Jamel White scored 1:\\'0

Browns
fnNII .... II
rarly in the fourth quarter.
Then Couch, the No. 1 pick in the
1999 draft, took control.
He led the·Browns to 17 unanswered
points in the final 9:21, and his 4-yard
TD pass to Kevin Johnson with 5:37left
tied the game at 38. Couch threw for
137 yards in the final quarter, including
a 78-yard slant to Quincy Morgan.
"Games like this are a step - a huge
step. These are big steps for a quarterback to gu out and on:hestrate ~ win
like Tim did today:' Davis said.
The Browns gave up 452 yards
olferue to the Titam, but they stopped
Tennessee when it mattered most with a
pair of three-and-outs.
The Titans admitted they relaxed.
They had won an NFL-best 32 •tr:light
games when leading after three periods
and had been 18-4 at Adelphia Coli&lt;eum.
"I thought we had it in hand:' George
said. "But you can never count the other
team out. They made the plays to get
back in it, and we didn't help our
defense. We couldn't move the baD:'
The Titans (7-8) hurt themselves

fiomPtlpll
when most of the Bengals' fans had
fled the stadium. He threw 68 passes - ·
tied for third-most in NFL history and completed 35 for a career-high 41 1
yards.
No one had thrown for 400 .YartJs
against the Steelers since Doug Williams
passed for 430 in 1988.
"It came out of nowhere because we
haven't done it:' Kitna said "I hope this
proves - if not to people outside of our
locker room, then at least to people in
our locker room - that when we do
what we're supposed to do, we're pretty
darn good."
No matter how had, the NFL's worst
team since 1991 alw.iys seems to puU olf
a big game in December against a playoff team that looks like it's taking them
lightly.
The Steelers sure fit the mold.
Stewart's 37-yard touchdown pass to
Chris Fuamatu-Ma'afala - Kris Brown
missed the extra point- rmde it 23-10
late in the third quarter. Stewart, who
had thrown only ene inten:eption in the
last nine games, then threw four to help
the Bengals emerge from their deepest
offensive slump in 23 years.
"At the end of the year, you have
teams like this that have nothing to lose,
they're playing aU out and they end up
beating you," said Stewart, who complet-

f

:Foct...,. Aulllorlad

It looked like ~ Arena League game
early as the teams saired on the first four
possessiom and went Into halfiime tied
at 24. Cleveland had its chance to tak"
control in ·the ~econd quarter with the
scote tied at 14, when the Titans turned
the baD Oiler on two str:light dri-. But
the Browru only IIWIIged to get a field

. c-JHhrll

goal.

for at least one more game.
"f think both of us realize what's
important," Walter said. "We put the
team in ff(lnt of everything else right
now, and that's what we need to do."

Bentley agreed.
·
"Clearly I had to put it in another
compartment," he said. "I'm not
going to let him or anybody else stop
me from getting to where I want to
go."
The rest of the linemen didn't
choose sides because they were all
working toward the same goal.
"Basically, I just treat it as it's none
of my business," left guard Alex
Stepanovich said. "What happens off
the field is off the field, But when

you come in to do your work, you
have to do that work together."
"They are both good to me. And I
don't stick my nose where it doesn't
belong."
Adrien Clarke - now playing
·right tackle because of the injury to
Shane Olivea - said both Walter and
Bentley stepped up as leaders.
"I have seen a major change in
-LeCharles," said Clarke, who spent
most of the' season at left guard,
between Bentley and Walter. "He's
more disciplined now and he's more
of a leader. Any time I needed help
LeCharles has been there.
'"Iyson, he was been a great help
aho. When I went out to tackle, especially in the Michigan game after
Shane got hurt, a couple of things
that I was kind of rusty on, I was able
to talk to 1}'son in the huddle and
~~ everything straight."

• Top • Ae111oval • Trl111
• Stu111p Grinding
• Bucket Truck

P/B

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Aoclno, Ohio 46771

74Q-985·3948

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Fuoten, Walls, Steps •

Flol Work,
ReplaCements, • Walks
and.Drlns• Sltm:U

Cnte Free EI:Umatu
So.-.lngOhlo ond W.\1.
WVMOJI?I2

.. . 71!

-...
·

~I

I

•

.\' J

•

A Ill 1.

7......,

'229.00*

(748) 992-31M

su- 0.
'Mo..- orPomt...,,.,At
Colultl"llold
VIlli Our

NIIW Holklly

FIIUlE

• lilnl .....
Alltlcklllll

~. --Tnlel
IIIII

Owner: Torry Lomm ··

BISSELL
IIUILDIRS INC.
Nrw HolieS • Vlio1l
Sldlftl o' Now Gto,....

·Replier-·

Wlndowo•Roam
Acldlllooto • Roollag

tOIIMIICIAL aod IEIID!ImAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

l'a!&lt;'
l'al'\

, ...

l .

Hpure;

11411112-31141
..,.,,_,..

...~·#)
.
.
•

.

•.

Weekly Specialo
Nov. 26 • Dec. 24
!R 12•. -millo, Ohio
(740) 992-4559

Advertise in
this space for
•100 per
month··

.

" ... fOil YOV~ tiO&amp;.I&gt; MufiG, P~efl J. fOil COIJNTJY,
P~US % fOil '"Aifi,A&amp;.. PitHS J fOJ ltOGIC Al'll&gt;
ICO"L· If YOu Pltflffl&gt; J., NOW PirfS$ J. AfloiN
fOil fA~Ttt I,OOJC$, PilHS .Z fOil MITt!
ttiLI.o, Oil Pltf61 J fOit WILl-If NfLSON.
If YOV P~tel5 J., Tt¥N PltfSS J. AfloiN
FOil TtAtt-.1flllCIN6 SONGS, PllfSJ' % fOil
IJP-IfAT SONGS, 61t Pg$$ 3 fOil .... "

~~

'

t:..O.c
t4

,....~
Allp.1!010

~

LOCIII 843-5284
M~icare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
11t1W611iii
1 Nursing Home

' ill
.. """"'...

~- · ···

i\

~

(740) 949-1521
Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Available
Licensed, Insured • Free Esllmates

Sunset Home
Construction

Rocky R Hupp Agent
Box t B9
MiddiPport Oh1o 45160

Bryan Reeves

Free Esli I ales
DR Sissel C&lt;rt

BIG NATE

mRSOD BOWLID&amp;
OPfD BOWLIDG li
LERGUfS

GAI'IE!

-711111·7-IWlilll
PIII-Gim!t-flll-~

CaH • Remington • Buck • Schrade
Guitars • Some Furniture • Crafts
Now Available ·Tiger Sharp Knives

( 7-to) 992-5908
In this apace
tor

'25 per month

for
•so per
month
11-~~
·High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Advertise in
740-992-5232
this space for
Advertise your business on this page for
1 $100 per
one month for as low as $25
"month
Phone 992·2155
11111Z/1

w..n•
mecftlnl

42T11

35~

uc:-

........pi

44 Dabceohof

3llltotl

45Pet-'

31V_.a

-

lliboO

.__

M,.
.......

COIII!Io

lUg•

•

In this space
tor
'25 per month

.ALLIR
Cellular

eff Warner Ins.

992-5479
CONSIRUCTION

rno.
Home Improvement!J
Sldlna • Remodeling
Pon:hes • Decks

Add--on '• • Roonna
Qullllly Work

FREE ESTIMATES
/Jill Doeifu
(740) 992-2979

by Lula Campo•

Colol&gt;rily Cipher coyptogro. . 110 mated fmm quotailont by fomoul
poqile, put ond pmonl.
in lhl cipiiOr- fof ·
Todav'• c/ue: E IIQU.tfs S

Ir

...
'

'·

.,,..

Pome1111 Eagles
810602171
Eutlll Thursdq
&amp;SUnday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Progressive top line
' Tbursdays
Progressive
Coverall on SUndays

...."""
..

n

Till'

brt•:tks

f9r

wl)irh

)·ou'vc bc l'll ht)pin~ C&lt;Hl ld be
within th~ rc:.lm of pC'Issihillty
in tht: yt.•.tr ahcaJ. lk ~'r..:p:trt•d
ro m:tkt.• the m·t.·t.kd adjtt~t­
mt.·nr~ w ht'Jl ynu H't' t ht'
(lpt' llit l~l'!l ..

""
"

..."'..

l:tt.r llt;tt t.• J tml.Jy. Th is pt·r~on
h:t.- lwt.• n \\':Jitin~ ti.Jr tiH· uppnnuni~y . Tryinit tn p:u l'lt Ul'

,,

,,
,;

.

:1 hrukt.•Jt rum.utn:? The: A~­
tru-Gr:•}'h Matdunak~.:r c:an

lldp Yt'~' t111t.lt·r•t.11hl wholt tn
'Ju W makt.• tht• rclnriomhi}1

work . Mail ' s2.75 to M:adtTllllkcr. t/n thi~ 1\t.'W~I'"I'l'r,

1'.0. llu , 175H, .Murmy Hill
St.tthlll.
l!t\5fl.

N\.'W Yurk , NY

Al~UARIUS Q:u 1.

2li-Pd•.

11J) -- 11tJ I1 tn~t.·tla•r wirh ymrr
111.1t~·

\lhl:iy m hrit l ~ .1huut rht'
fullil hm·• Jl of~ shan•J hopt.• .,,r

•;
I

'

I

r e

I ·I I

lt)r

Tm·o;d.Jy.J.m. I. 2002

CAI'IliCORN (IJ.·' · ~1 j:tlt. I?) - - Thrnu~~h a sct:uml
1
party, SUI\l.,.'thi tl!-[ )'0 \1 \' C!
w:mtcJ tn t:h.ut~\' bm l:lckt.•d
tht.• ~'tlWt.·r to dt' ,,o nmld be

".,.,

I ·I'.

v•

fi~thrb\v---

Advertise

~

B.D.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

L_

.JOAM-4PM Mon-Sat

WWiaiiiSihnek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025
Athtu

41

4WIIIr

34 Flu

I
I ·I
I

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio

may retain cenain propeny, known u
"exempt" propeny, for his or her pe110nlil usc.
Thla may include 1 car, a houoe, clothes, and
houJOhold 1oodl. You should direct any
queatlona re1udin1 blllkrulJICY to an attorney
before procietltna. Por Information regudina
llanlttuprcy contact:

crrdom

33 Sill

After pitching a diaT R r. I L
mpnd from the .
.
dummy, Llcrkowitz
~
My mother-in-law's favorite slip
rulfed a spade, cashed
.
- . of the tongue, "The chickens have
the ht•art king, and
C 0 T 13 A B
all come home ·· • ·- • ·"
ruffed dummy's last f---.:,....-..--f--r...,.~
diainond with the
16
Complete the chuckle quoted
- J . ._ ...-L.-L-...J_L-.1
·
by fill in" in the miuing words
dub ace. Now came you develop from step No: 3 bel.ow:
the club eight: nine,
jack. Uack to h&lt;md
wilh a heart w th!'
;t&lt;:e, jt was trick 12 .
Dummy had the Q-5
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
of clubs left and West
Chinch ' Dolly- Thick · Pickup • COUCH
held the 7-4·. South
My
neighbor
went loa psychiatrist "I didn't get much
had brought off a•
help,"
she
told
me
"it took me 15 minutes to get him to
trump coup for plus
move the COUCH."
2,140.

PEANUTS

740-742-3411

· ot11ullllg ol.lmMIOnt

. cteditora. A penon golns throuJh bankruptcy

~

r-~-----.-

FREE ESTIMATES!

&lt;Grml• S.nd 1Topt011
oflll Dirt oMUillh

Clll relieve 1 debtor of tlnanciol obliii!lo111 and
IITIIlge 1 fair distribution of usels amons ·

40T. . .

r
'-==·
I
r. I r I

JOIN OU'-

\lad,-. Porkl'l Kni\l'S
8.: ( 'olkdihlt·s

BANKRUPTCY

-~~~~~
31 D&lt;&gt;lphlno'

I

HE PI D! 1111:1.1. '·
TH.A.T'S FAANCIS,
RII".HT! IN'ilTII'IG

New Homes, Room Additions,
- Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Qecks, Kitchens, Drywall ·
~
· lMore

"".

41

z=r

EachAt trick one, llerkuwitz pitched a heart
y
UKYERO
OWYK
XT8
fmm the dumn\y and
won with the spade
A' I
TU
ZMES
HAXC
N M 0.
ace. Then he carefully
NMO
-~ T W,
SRW
played a dub to dummy's king. (If he had
XWFS
crro.·cashed the dub ace,
he would have failed
(CAYITXCPYVH)
KMAE
with this l.1yout. West
NTXJYKWJ
would have got a
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION: "'ther people have analysis. I have
trump trick.) ller"
Uiah.• - Robert ~ford
·
·
kowitz cashed dum"Marylancl: Amerlelln miniature.• • T. McKelden
my's diamond aceWOlD
king and ruffed a diaQAMI
mond with his club
I 0; West discarded a
leiter• of
0 Reorronge
I1cart.
four scrambled words
Now came the low to form four simple ;:o,~~-~r---::
spade king. If West
I R O G J·' I
had" ruffed, declarer tr--,--,,.-.,.......,'-..--I
would have over-'
1_ 1 1 1
ruficu in the dummy,
=~·~·~=-~~.L.-1
trumpl"J a diamo1llllr '&gt; Y A 5 A
high, drawn trumps, t-...,.-,.--.:---,.--1
and claimed. So West
threv; another heart. L-1...- L
. ....J.L......J.L......J

·~-~'

:THE BORN LOSER

Bnrd ranes )OJ (31
bust.
Ootllli llld,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

47 Comic

IIIMCI
41 Moon god-

Tllunnan

slam interest.

I

•New Homes
• Gll'lgll
•Complete

r•VTFN

40 Soclol

-

37 Gill"'"

1-.

(2-)
31..-af

bids (cue-bids) showiug aces and gmnd-

~~~~~~~~==~----------------~--~~~~~~e~~~

IOIERT BISSEll
COIISTIUCTION

740-992-1~71

31,..,

.. r:....

2ll'rllll
30 Llngoron
31 Mo.

hearts were control-

IT's Tltl'f.!

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

55 - DOWN

judged that his haml
had great potential fur
pl.•y in clubs. {I( he
had &lt;lou blt•d · four
spades anti North had
pa"ed, best defense
collcl"ls an I; IOOpoint penalty.) rive
diamonds and live

FRAN-K &amp; EARNEST

~.1::..:~;:

~tm~oc~eltna,

(740) 992-0739

! A

20 OIICI
Tllllllnd,
21 Klll:hln

short in the majors,

WVf023477

Rooftna, DeW
Additions

I

Vllo/MIIIIrCIIrd

11~1,

Drywall, lllld

PIIIIIC

I

SWe Reule 33

1. \\1\1" .'-\
·

'••1•

I ~"•

" 54 cam.ICM
ldn

"-llu

22~
~=:.-

Press Association. The
lll'ro was David Uerkowitz, of Old Tappan, N.J., playin!(
with Larry Cohen, of
Uo~a Raton, Fla., in
the Blue Ribbon Pairs
at the llirmingh;nn,
Ala., Fall Nationals.
Two spadt•s was a
transfer to clubs.
Then, over four
spades, l.lcrkowitz
(South), knowing his
partner to be very

• Nollollin or c-l'loolo

992-6635
~(1"\. ..... 11:1~

11-12 HillE Will

RIITIIME.
1111111
S21... f11JIIIf
IEIIllllY
taZJ.IIPaJIIIT

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

971eedtst.
mldllefart; OH
ur11r 610'120'1

n ....e

41 OCIIgulw
50 l l y 51 Lullrlclill
52 Bo-

Mill(

1•

-

winner from th!! International llrill~~

In

12%' lwlet Hortt teed ........... :.......40150
Hunll" Pride 21"4 dog food .........$UIII&amp;O
Econamv IIHf 12% atock fMcl..... $8.711180
Mint"! Bloakl.................. $4.751100

mont~ ·

- · -

24'12r

2 bcw•

47 TCIII

15~
11 AcW- 53 Antlr'•
17 ......,
l'ldlo ....

f'~

Let's en,( 20111 with
the Deal of th.: Y eJr

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead Service•
35537 St. Rt. 7 North 1 Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equlne12
12'4 Swett Horta rttc~ ................ ss.oilso

2

CttM·ninglrad· • ;

in this
space
Tree Service

I

~I,;

r\

... :
AQJ t•Ut1!
91J ! I I I l J . J
• SI
• Q J 1• 1

19

Advertise .Advertise

JONII'

II; l

Wn.t

s.tlt.
111."1'
l 4

Deoolen
111110 lit Itt.

.

ed 19 of 35 for 251 yards. "It's not !he
end of the world for us:•
.
It's a hlnt of what will happen if they
don' ~.t some things straightened out
-and fast.
•·we ,did riot deserve to win this
game:· coach am GOwher wd, with all
edge to his voice. "I hape this is a wakeup call for us:'
~ckers w.as despondent when he
mis!ed the extra-point attempt that
would have won it in regulation - his
fOot slipped on the chewed-up grass
field. He slumped to his knees iii agony
as the thousands of Steelen fans twirled ·
their towels in jubilation
~ckers, only 13-of-24 on field goals,
also heard some harsh things from his
teammates. Asked what he told the kicker, Con:y Dillon said, "YQU don.'t w.mt to
know. It ain't something you can print."
The Bengals got the baD at their 1yard line in overtime foUowing a Pittsburgh punt. Kitna completed fOur consecutive passes, and Brandon Bennett
had a 36-yard run that set up Rackers'
winning kick with 4:08 left in overtime.
He got more advice as he ran onto the
field.
"They were saying, 'Just ·kick it. It's
only 31 yards. Just kick the baU;" Rackers said. "Of course, aftec the point-after
attempt, it seemed like it waS a lot
longer."
The baU went through and Rackers
covered his fuce mask with both of his
· hands, then went limp as teammates
mobbed him.

. . . . . . .1

in this
space
for $50
per

9
•

Uraler South
Yult~.,-:d1l" lklth

rassing:'

Door,.,_

I 1'111112 ~.,1,..
13 - 14 lltot busy

..KqJ SJ

A r\

"Tim Couch is a fine quarterback and
is going to be a fine quarterb:ack in this
league, and we nude him a real good
quarterb:ack today:' Titan! coach )elf . '
Fisher said. "Bottom line: You've got to
AD Make~ TriiCIGr &amp;
tackle in the National Football League,
; Equipment l'u1l
and we did not tackle today. It's embar-

U-41-

5 Tricky

p..,.
t

ACROSS
1

1 . . .-

•C~

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

...
.......

.

The 0811y Sentinel • Page as
aiUDCII:

IDs.

Outback

Advertise

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

lo place (111 ud Cull992 2156

I

Bengals

•

~.~day,Dec.31,2001

t' .\ llt't:t.ttion. I f~ pm~ihl~· tlwt
t(l

lc:l'th·dy y(')u un pull it otT

lltl\\' ,

I'IS&lt;. : t:.~

(1\·h. 2!1-M,Jnh ;2!1)
uh,JI'\'11\'1' nf

- ~ If a worth)'
y utl~ h .t~ hl'l' ll

1111t,

thii

llli~ln

\W]I lhnu~ I H
hl· thL· d . !~' tn

knuwll·d14~·

your hl•s t a llil· ~.
VIR CO (Aug. :?.l-~l'pt. 22)
-- V:tlu,Jhk im1~hts llli).;hl b~
glt-:inl•d rnd.1y tluou~h sittinl(
Jown wit h a do~c friend in
whulll you h.wc ~n:.1t respect

unwiltiiiJ.d Y nf-

on~t di ~c: us~in~ Ill

TAURUS (April 2CI-May
ll :md lin~.t thl· :tii1i n of

muc~

20) --

min~.

oth~·rs may t'llll;t' l'.ISil•r to you
WLI.ly rhan 1.1k iug t.Jrl' c,fyour

thou h:t\'t.'

dL'I.Hh

!O I11 C!

bl'l' ll on

vour
'

LIURA (St·pt. 23-0.;r. 2J) •
- Go~~ip yuu'VI:' h~·ard tlbuut a
t'ricnli COIICCr11i11~ illf\tflll oUiOII
that you ktHIW is f.1r front rht."
truth should be: pul&gt;lidy dt.•nounl.'~d today. You'r~ the
one to do it.

own t.' onq· rn~ . L'~pccially if
they pl'rt:\in h ' tin:1nn:s.
YcHJ 'II lw d~t:Khcd and thm
rt:aliHk.
CiEMINI (M"/" 21·)""' 2fl)
·- Vl•ry hL•l pf11 inf'Ornllltinn
111i .. ht Ct.llllt' your w;ty todi\y
thrm1Kh f,t.· r~mn with whom
)'tm 'll 11L' itl\'uived . Whnt ymt
karn t.'LHIIJ t.',HJn• yu u IU to~
r:tlly n·n-r~t.· a ~tmit i tlll you'w

SCOiti'IO (Oct. 24- Nov .

22) -- L~y out ycur pl .m1 for
th~ Wt."e-k to&lt;lily, bec;nat
yu u' JI bt.• "iftt.•d with du.' ~~~­
~i~ht ro rt'Or).l:illlize your illl:ain
in a mannt'r thilt i ~ L'IIJ'iiblt• nf
ovt.·r,umin~ ob~udc~ of the

bCL'Il hl)(dintl:,

CANCEl~ Qum· 21-july
22) -- Ym 1 m.ty mL' thiJ huliday lu hl' n·ry prodU\tJVt."
with some kmd ot wnrk ynu
thi~

and t·xpt•rit•m·c

ar~·

(l•ndcJ in th L' p:~ ~t . T ;tkc it.

dwmL'' ro t:tkt• un ;H

you nt•cd to h.m -

yu11'vc ,Kquircd, b~·c•u~e they

--. You'll ~ct ~ (rc'h sr.m to day, tlot only 0 11 a new yc;tr,
but hy gt.•tting :m opportunity
to vindicatl' your~t:lf with
~Oilll'lllll' )'CJ~t

:~ u swt.'~

dl e a st)(' i:ll ~ttuatiun th..1t ha~
lud yo u ~rrmic'l. Uank. un

do wlut is llt.'C&lt;.' ~5ary co
~Khit•vc iL Vktm}' is dosl·r
' tlt&lt;~n )'nu thi nk.
AlliES (Ma"h 21 -April 1'l)

past.

SAC. ITl AltiUS

(N~&gt;v.

l.l·

D~:r . 21) -· lutl'TW I)\'I.'tl with

}oo ur pl11lmophy uflifc.• lin lilt'
~l'l'rc.&gt;t~ to ~ un.:t.·~~ tml.tv . ~nd
1h.1t i~ "1111plv tn w:.nt . vthl·r~
tv dC' H \Vt•!f ,JC yotl \I Jikt• tn
do . lt l'I II.Jrk .ihiL• tllir~,.::~ r.111

tina•.

It ttnt-tht kad tu .11 1 .tdj u~rnwnr
, tiJ,,t ' ll pr&lt;lVt: v~· ry :tdValllil~l'Oll•.

I.EO {lul y 13-AII!-t, 22) -St:.trrh ymu· nh' l11or~· tnd.1y

h.li,Pl't l.

i

�Pomny. MkMiaport. Oblo

erv Best Wisll

•
• •

frOID
Ill
USI
In the year 2002,
May all your wishes ana areams come true.
But because we want you to stay alive,
Our wish·it that you tlon,t Drink a Drll'el

~

• ·

Have a Happy
. and Safe New Years Celebration!
DOWNING CHILDS;
MULLEN MUSSEl
INSURANCE

Fisher-Acree .
Funeral Home

Pomeroy • 992-3381

Middleport 992-5141
Pomeroy 992-5444

White Funeral Home

Jim-Rogers
&amp; Associates

Since 1858

7~

HOEPLACE

Dairy
Qu~en .

..

9 Fifth Avenue • Coolville

740-667-3110 ..

I

Ewing
Funeral Home ·
Pomeroy • 992-2121

(ROW'S-~

331 OS Hiland Road, Suite 1 ·
. Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2318

Stay Alert. .. StJy Srtfe~

Brogen-warner

Insurance

. Qualtiy
'Print Shop

Pomeroy • 992-6682
Middleport • 992-3345

Valley

·

· &amp; Supply·

Co.

FAMILY RESTAURANT .
Pomeroy • 992-5432

"700 North 2nd Ave.
Mlddlepo_
r t, Ohio .
740-992-3322 . '

''

Middleport • 992-6611

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
C~arles Riffle, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy

992-2955

RACINE

SY.RACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

Middleport • 992-6491

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="459">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9904">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24793">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24792">
              <text>December 31, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="523">
      <name>cornell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="529">
      <name>harless</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
