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.\,10• The

Sentinel

•

·ara~ makes PrO Bowl .along Mavs make it :lo·in a row·by

with six Ravens,.six Bucs ·

NEW YORK (· !) - Tom Brady, New
England's fourth-string quarterback last season, was voted to the Pro
•
Bowl on Wednesd:ty after
·~·
···~··
... leading the Patriots to the
......:"
playoffs.
Brady was one of three
quarterbacks on the AFC
,
squad along with Rich Gaonon of Oakland and Kordell
Stewart of Pittsburgh. Stewart was another
'o utsider - he had had three consecutive
p;;or seasons and was a major question mark
·entering the season.
· The quarterbacks for the NFC are Kurt
Warner of St. Louis, Brett Favre of Green Bay
and Jeff Garcia of San ·Francisco.
.
, Brady, who took over this . season for the
injured Drew Bledsoe, is just the fifth quarterback to make the Pro Bowl in the year of
his first start. The others are Dan Marino in
1983, Favre in 1992, Warner in 1999 and
Daunte Culpepper of Minnesota last season.
Also making the team was Garrison H earst
of San ' Francisco, who came back from two
¥ears off with a severely broken ankle to gain
1,149 yards going into the season's final

......

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....

m

week.
The st1rting lineups will •e announced
later.
One third of the voting was done by fans,
one third by playe" and one rhird by coaches.
The Baltimore Ravens and ·Tampa Bay
Buccaneers led each conference with . six
players apiece, even though the Bucs are the
NFC's final playoff seed and the Ravens still
haveo't clinched a playoff berth.
Baltil)1ore middle linebacker Ray Lewis
was among the group from last year's Super
Bowl champions to make the squad for the
game, which will be played in Honolulu 6n
Feb. 9. Defensive tackle Warren Sapp leads
the Tampa contingent.
One oddity · was the selection ·of three
members of the Carolina Panthers, who are
1-14 .on the season and go· into the final
.week seeking to avoid becoming the fi'rst
team ever to lose · 15 consecutive games in a
single season. The Panthers selected are kick
returner Steve Smith, punter Todd Sauerbrun
and tight end Wesley Walls.
Atlanta and Cincinnati were the only team
without .Pro Bowlers.

·stewart caps comeback

'

year as Steelers' MVP
. PITTSBURGH (AP) After three seaions in which
everything
went wrong;
. Kordell Stewart is
?laking up for
•
· ~..,·· hiS
failures
• * f 11!::1~ ......
... ,. ~ . ** with a season
in
which
nearly everything has gone
right.
Stewart,
whose
rem.arkable comeback has led
the Pittsburgh Steelers to ~
turna!pund of their own, on
Wednesday became only the
third quarterback voted by his
teammates as the Steelers' mpst
valuable player.
The, honor came only minutes after Stewart learned he
would play in the Pro Bowl for
the first time in his seven-season career.
. "Could you · be any happier
for the guy?" coach Bill
.Cowher said.
The dual honors weren't a
surprise for the player most
respons_ible for the Stee!ers (123) holding home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffi after missing the postseason
for three straight seasons.
But, after being benched the
previous two seasons, expelled
·from the quarterbacks' meetings and shuffled off to a parttime job as a wide receiver,
Stewart's resurgence has been
just short of startling.
"I don't . have to say anything," Stewart said. "Everything speaks for itself. When
you have things happening in
this fashion, and you try to put
it into words, you don't have to
say anything.
"We are 12-3. I am going to
the Pro Bowl. I am the MVP
of the Pittsburgh Steelers. What
else can I say?"
Considering his previous
two seasons, .when he was

..

m

benched at the end of the 1999 seasons .
season · then, after temporarily.
He won't throw for as many
regaining his starting job, was touchdowns this season as he
demoted again before the 2000 did in 1997 - he has 14 going
season, he probably could have into Sunday's game against
said a lot:
· Cleveland- but he has passed
Stewart again credited offen- for a career-high 3,037 yards.
sive coordinator Mike Mula- He also had only five interceprkey. and quarterbacks coach tions 'in his first 14 games
Tom Clements for giving . him before throwing four Sunday
the confidence to be the player in an upset loss at Cincinnati.
he was in 1997, when his dual
"But l;ve never taken a deep
ability to run and throw made breath and said, 'Man, I'm
him a multidimensional threat MVP of the team, I'm in the
unrivaled among NFL quarter- Pro Bowl,"' Stewart said. "It
backs.
doesn 't stop here; this is only
"They gave me the opportu- part of it. We have a few more
nity to be the leader of this things to·get accomplished."
Stewart becomes only the
offense, to play the game the
way I play, which is running third Stee\ers MVP since quararound, making plays, throwing terback Neil O'Donnell won
the ball," SteWart said. "I just in 1995, t~e last time they
knew it was going to be -much reached the Super Bowl.
better because of the chemistry Jerome Bettis won · in 1996,
we had ... I thought the sky was 1997 and 2000 and linebacker
the limit for this team."
Levon Kirkland wqn in 1998
Since throwing for 3,020 and 1999.
yards and 21 touchdowns and
Stewart and O'Donnell are
running for 11 touchdowns in the only quarterbacks to be
1997, when the Steelers played honored since Terry Bradshaw
for the AFC title, Stewart aver- won in 1977 and 1978. No
aged only 2,028 yards, nine other quart~rback has been
touchdown passes and 12 chosen since the Steelers MVP
interceptions the next three award was first presented in

U"t; •

at

beating Bulls; Cleveland wins

•
Mll'tt County's

knee in the first quaner, but in the first half as Boston
The Dallas Mavericks are returned and finished with won its $eventh consecutive
on the verge of the longest 16 points as Sacramento home game.
winning streak i~ the NlJA . pulled away with a 16-5 run
Antoine Walker scored 30
•
thiS •eason.
in the fourtb quarter.
points with nine assists, Paul
Steve Nash
Lakers 87, ,NuJgets 86 Pierce had 24 points and
had 24 P&lt;!ints
Kobe Bryant scored 28 eight rebonnds and Vitaly
11 points, including a 20-fuoter Potapenko had 10 points and
and
assists, and Dirk Nowitzki · that barely beat the shot nine rebounds.
scored all 18 of hiS pomts m clock with 55 seconds left, as
Nell 92, Grizzlies 74
the second half .Wednesday Los Angeles won at Denver.
Jason Kidd had 14 assists in
night, leading the .Maveri~ks
Rick Fox had 17 points 26 minutes, and Now Jersey
to theu 1Oth straight wm, and Samaki Walker added 14 held visiting Memphis to a
1p7-97 over the Chicago (l.Oints and 11 rebounds for season-lqw seven points in the
Bulls.
lhe Lakers.
second quarter.
.
· For the second straight
Denver,1osing for the sixth
Reserve ' Aaron Williams
. game, the Mavs won despite time in seven games, got 25 scored a season-high 20
the absence of Michael Fin- points from Nick Van Exel points, Kerry Kittles added 18
ley !strained left hamstring). and 22 from Vashon Lenard. points and K!nyon Martin
If they can beat the New
76ers 102 Suns 81
had 15 for the Eastern Con'I
'
k
k
Yor Knic s at Madison
Allen Iverson scored 29 ference-leading Nets, who
Square Garden on Thursday . points, and three oth.e r won for the fourth time in 6Ye
night, It would be their 11th Philadelphia players scored at games.
•
·consecutive wm one least 15 as the 76ers used a
Tintberwolws 95, Bucb
mo~e than_the San Antonio 36-point third quarter to
77
Spurs had m December.
win at Phoenix.
At Minneapolis, Kevin GarThe defending Eastern nett had 22 points and 19
Nowitzki ~nally got. on
the board With. a 3-pO!tlter Conference champions, off rebounds, and Anthony Peeler
With 7:24 left Ill the thtrd to an 13- 18 swrt, enjoyed added 18 points for the Timquarter, but .the Mavs had their most onesided victory berwolves.
Both teams' .rosters were .
trouble shakmg the Bulls. of the season. Dikembe
Ron Anest had 15· poi~ts in Mutombo scored 18 points, depleted by injuries. Milwauthc penod to keep Chtcago . Aaron McKie' 16 and Matt kee's top three scorers -· close as Dallas led71-68 after Harpring 15. Harpring also Glenn Robinson, Ray Allen
three penods.
· had 10 rebounds.
·
and Sam Cassell- missed the;
Artest tied his career-high
Spurs 97, Pistons 85
game, as did Joe Smith and
with 29 points before fouling
Tim Duncan had 20 points Terrell Brandon of the Wolves.
out for the Bulls, who had and 15 rebounds, and San
Cavaliers 113,
woh two straight under new Antonio won its second
Warrion 98
coac~ Bill Cartwr!ght.
straight as five players scored
At Cleveland, Lamond
Kings 105, Clippers 91 .in double figures at home.
Murray played for the first
ChriS Webber had 21
Steve Smith added 15 time since straining his lower
. points, 1U rebounds and s!x poiilts, Malik Rose 13, David back Dec. 22 and scored a
assiSts as Sacramento won Its Robinson 12 and Charles career-high 40 points; Murray
Smith 10.
shot 16-of-23 from the field,
fifth straight game.
All five Kings starters and
Detroit, which has . l!lst . mostly on jumpers.
Scot Pollard scored in double eight of nine games, was led
Rapton 95,
· figures as they improved to by Zeljko Rebraca with 17
'liall B1ezen 84
an NBA-best 18-1 at home points, while Chucky Atkins
VjljCC Carter scored 28
with their 11th straight win added 16 after moving into points as Toronto built a 20at Arco Arena - a record for th ~ ltarting lineup.
"
point thini-quarter lead and
'Celtics 110, Magic 94 held on to win at Portland,
the franchise since it moved
to Sacramento in 1985.
Kenny Anderson scored all handing the Blazers their sixth
Vlade Divac .sprained his of his season-high 19 points straight Joss.
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NBA

PPO
kno
,,

'

approve
S3.
bu~get

Commissioners impose 5
percent ruts across board
.BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Miami wins the big one, 81

GLASSES GALORE - A hundred or. so poor South Americans will be able to see better because of the eye-glass collection of Meigs High School JOG class students. Here looking over the glasses, seated from left, are
Mike Dorst, Zack Shuler, Calvin Holley, Shawna Davis and Justin Oiler, and standing, the Rev. William Mlddleswarth and Jeff Warner representing the Lions Club, with Mike Walker, JOG Instructor. (Charlene Hoeflich)

~.~.t!.i!t A Hall, 22

Local Lions contribute to needy

Or.. carol Sholtis, 62

Alta L Swain, 100

Jcimes 8aer, 52

William t Martin,

72

. ' Hlah:- Low: 201
.

ng•••

Details, A2

.-

Commissioners
named

.. POMEROY Meigs
C.o unty Common Pleas
Judge. Fred W. Crow III has
appointed Janice L. Young
of Reedsville and Christopher T. Wolfe of Racine to
the Meigs County Jury
Corlunission.
.

Pick 4 (dty): 3·8-2-3
auckev• s: 1·6-23-33-36

Pick 3 (nll!lt): 3-4-6
Pick 4 (nljht): 6-2-6-7 ·
W.VA.
.

Dai!Y 3: 9-o-8
• ·
DallY 4: G-6-6-8
·
Clsli 25: 3·8-14-16-18·22
'
'

•'

, BEREA (AP) - Courtney
Brown!s second NFL season is
of!ieially over.
The defensive end, bothered
\&gt;Y injuries since the preseason, became . the 17th player
placed on injured reserve
Wednesday by ti-le banged-up
Cleveland Browns. •
Brown, the l'lo. 1 overall
selection in the 2000 draft,
missed 11 games this season
with injuries to his knee and
ankle. The defensive ~nd
sprained his right knee in the
!lrowns' final preseason game
~nd sat out the first six games
this .season.
····
He made his first start on
Nov. 4' at Chicago and
l'fturned a fumble for a touch-

•

I

I

Index "

not lor long.

down on ju'st his second play
back. Brown also had three
sacks and knocked down two
passes against the ·Bears . '
Brown played the next three
games, but sprained his left
ankle, while making a tackle
during the first quarter against
Tenne'ssee on Dec .. 2.
Brown had been listed as
doubtful before sitting out the
past three weeks, and the
Browns decided 'io place him
on IR before the ~easou finale
this Sunday at PittSburgh.
Cleveland leails the NFL
' with 16 players on JR . Safety
Percy Ellsworth was on IR
before being released recently.
Brown made 4 1/2 sacks as
a rookie last season.
,

I

two teams.

In the team high aeries and team
high game, Pine Hilla won both
~lively wllh scorns of 709 and
Chuck Burton '215) and Margaret
Eynon (210) won the game high
totals, white Burton (529) and Dottle
· Will (~84) won the high series In their
respective divisions.

· The Summ11ry:

1. Little John's of Pomeroy 95141;
2. Plno Hills Goll Course 92/44; 3.
Powell's Super Value 88/44; 4.' Syra·
cuse Country Market 60176; 5. Taz'a
Marathon 55181 ; 6. Meigs lnduslries
18111 8.
High Team Game - 1. Pine Hills
Golf Course 709.
High Team Series- 1. Pine Hills
Golf Course 2064.
·
Men's high game - 1. Chuck Bur·
ton 215; 2. Sam Smith 210; 3. Sieve
Burton 180.
Men's high sarles - · 1. Chuck
Burton 529: 2. Sllm Smith 503; 3.
Loren Coleman 501 .
Women's high game - 1. Mar·
garet Eynon 21 ; 2. Donie Wlll207.
Women's high aeries - 1. Donie
Will 584; 2. Margaret Eynon 521; 3.
Jeanie Roble 476".

1

. .
. 2 .~•diana: - 12 . . . .

•

calendar .
Classifieds

.
Ohio Tax AmnesiY
Now through Janary 15, 2002·

85

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

The Ohio Department of Taxation has a money-saving, conscience-. ·
clearing program just for you: a limited-time tax amnesty program for
delinquent taxpayers who are eligible. If you pay your back taxes in full
before the' January 15, 2002 deadline, you can avoid any penalties and
pay only one-half of the interest you currently owe. If you or your
business has fallen behind in paying Ohio taxes, now is the time to
take advantage Of this once-in-a· lifetime opportunity. Opportunity is.
knocking ... but not for long.
.
. .
·

. A3 .
., 82.4

Comics

A5

A4
.A3
'A3
81,3-4,6

A2

Weather

. in addition to learning_ skills to pre-

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

•

IS

The 40 students in Walker's class, children, and fit them with glasses. ·
For the Pomeroy Lions Club, the
OMEROY - A col- pare them to move into the work project has been 'Ongoing fpr more
lection of old eyeglasses force, occasionally do service pro- than a quarter century.
by the Pomeroy Lions jects geared to teaching them to be ' To residents who have old eye_
Club for the poor p~o- contributing members of society.
glasses in drawers not being worn
.
pie of South Amenc~ . Every year, the local Lions Club anytl!ore, Warner suggests that they
go! bi~er Thursday when , a class collects several hundred pairs of be donated to the Lions Club.
~f _M~jgs .. High Schqol studen# ~· gia1s~ ~ and. s)llp~ ~hi!n'l ro Ohio · "They can be left at my office, it .
coT!tri!&gt;uted nearly a hundred pad; State University. There&lt;, they are that's convenieBt'!·~ said Warner of
Mike Walk~&lt;s students ill, ~~· machine-tested for prescription, Warner's Insurance on Second
Jobs far Ohio Graduates . 000) labeled and set aside until summer Street in Polneroy.
collected the eyeglasses as a com- when a group of OJ}tometric stu':Just think of all the people in
munity service project and Thurs- dents make a trip to South Ameri- South American today who are
·
·
day afternoon turned them over to · ca. ·
seeing better because someone
JetfWarner and the Rev. William
The students do eye testing on donated their old glasses to the
Middleswarth of the Lions Club. · the residents there, both adults and Lions Club," he added.
BY CHAIIL!NE HOEFLICH

Details, A3

•

MASON, W.Va. - In the final
standings for the First half of the aeason, Little John's of Pomeroy edged
Pine Hilla Golf Cour'se In ~hal has
become a great battle between tha

0 lOIIl Ohio Vlhy f'l!blllhint Co.

'

.

Accident v~~im dies at St. Mary's
Hall was airlifted to the hospital b6und at 1:50 a.m. when she
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - A · )lours after the Jeep Cherokee she attempted to navigate a left curve,
Cheshire-area woman has died of drove went off Ohio 588 neat the went off the left side of the road,
injuries suil'ered in a one-car acci- intersection with Safford School struck an embankment and then
dent last weekend near .Gallipolis. ' \lfld McCormick roads and struck a
struck the house.
Jaela A. Hall, 22, 8751 Ohio 7 fhouse early on Dec. 29, the patrol
The family has scheduled private
North, was pronouncecl---dead at reported.
·
.
3:35 p.m. Thursday at St. Mary's 1 ' The vehicle crashed into a wall graveside services for Sunday.
Hospital, Huntington,' W.Va., the of the residence, owned by .Friends may call at Fisher-Acree
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State ,!Vtichael Trowbridge o( Gallipolis. F.uneral Home in Pomeroy on Sat' The patrol said Hall was west-· urday from 6-9 p.m.
Highway Patrol learned. 1
.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

.

;

·ohio HMOs losing.patients, money
COLUMBUS (AP)
After
gl:()wing strongly . through · the
1990s, · enrollment.· in Ohio's
.HMOs started 'to decline in 1999
as health mainten:ince organizadans lost millions ·of dollars and
' started cutting seryices or raising
prtll)iuhn, according to report
- ·released· Friday. ·
Employers, frustrated ·with
higher costs and concerned abo11t
fewer choices, are iearching for
alternatives, said Allan Baumgarten, a health care analyst who
prepared the fifth annual report
on the health ofHMOs in Ohio.
. "They see the double digit

a

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•

increases with no end in sight 250,000 by September, Baumand they say, 'What are my garten said ..
opGions?'" Baumgarten said in a
The top four HMOs now have
telephone interview from Min- 60 percent of the market, while
neapolis.
many smaller plans have withEnrollment -in. HMOi nearly drawn from Ohio and some hosdoubled from 1.5 million in 1.992 pitals that once operated HMOs
to p.e ak at 2.8· million people in' decided to get out of the busi1999. Enrollment has since fallen ness, he said.
to less than · 2.6 milli6h, or 24
A,bout 25 HMOs are operating
percent of Ohioans, as of July in the state, down from .37 in
2001.
.
1998, Baumgarten said. The
'f~e ~].umber of senior citizens number of Medicare HMO
enrolled in Medic~re HMOs, set "Providers has gone from 19 to
up as an alternative to traditional just a handful, and many Ohio
Medi~are, also has declined, from ,counties
have no Medicare.
· ·~ ·. P~Ic of 300,000 in 1999 to • HMO available, he added.

if

.

PIMH ... Buclpt. A3

Commissioner 1ho1 uton in ICU
~OM

STAFF REPORTS

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Mejgs
County Commissioner JeffThornton remains
in Pleasant Valley Hospital following emer~
gency surgery last weekend.
Commissioner
. Mick
, bavenport, who conducted
Thursday's regular board .
meeting in Thornton
absence, said Thornton
underwent
emergency
abdominal surgery on Saturday.
Though he is expected to
fully recover, he remained
Tllomton
in the hospital's intensive
care unit on Thursday.
Thornton, a Racine Democrat, was first
elected to office in 1996, and was elected the
commissioners' president in 2000.

s•

) '1. I

.· IS ·Oivlng up Sllloklng

Amnesty is available only for certain taxes and to persons or businesses
that have not been billed, assessed or contacted for an audit. Keep in .

•

·Your .New Year's
Resolution?
.

mind, after the amndty period we will be stepping up our enforcement
and auditing efforts. Don~ miss this deadline!
·
' .
For more Information calll-800·304·3211 or visit www.oblo,py

.

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•
• •

.. .

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t'

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The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition is
here to help you accomplish your goal.

..

•••
I

POMEROY -· "We have to get leaner and
together if we're going to get through
this," Meigs County Commissioner Mick Davenport said, noting that county officeholders
wiU have to tighten their belts to get through
2002 .
Davenport and Commissioner Jim She~ts discussed the annual
"m're going to
appropriation '
process and acrosswork with the
die-board budget
legislature and
reductions . for all ·
state officials
county departments
to reduce
during their Thursday meeting.
our workers'
Davenport
compensation
presided at the
costs, and look
meeting.
closely at our
On Wednesday,
the conunissioners
health insurance
approved an annual
plan and'
budget of$3.66 milpremiums to see
lion, down from :i
some preventive
$3.67 rnillion budmeasures can be ·
get for 2001. Those
appropriations
taken ta reduce the
include . 5 percent financial strain."
cuts in all county
offices
financed
Mlck Da""'P'P'I,
County Commluloner
through the general
fund. No department was spared, Davenport said.
Those cuts in appropriations were necessary.
Davenport said, to offiet increasing costs of
meeting unfunded state mandates, hikes in
workers' compensation and health insurance
premiums, and a drop in local sales taX revenue.
"We're going to work with the legislature and
state officials to reduce our workers' compensation costs, and look closely at our health insurance plan and premiums to see if some preventive measures can be taken to reduce the finan"
wo~k

OHIO
Pick 3 (day): 5-4-3

.courtney Brown goes on·IR

Leaden
-

Lotteries
'

Wednesday Night
Bowling League

THE~GIFT OF SIGHT

'

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MVP - Steelers quarterback
Kardell Stewart, shown
scrambling agir'lst the Lions,
ws honored as the Pittsburgh
team Most Valuable Player. ·
(AP file)

•

~·. Girl Scout Dairy, A5

Ohio

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·~·

···-- ... 'L-.

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MEDiCAL CENT .ER
Discover the Holzer Difference

I . ·_

www ~holzer.org ·

. ·,(7 ' 0) 4~6;..5940
.--

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. T.he Daily Sentinel

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Ohio

•

Snow remains likely on ~unday
BY THE ASSOCIATED Pftf;SS
cloudy. Lows near 30.
Southwesterly winds "wilf
Extended fonc:ast:
continue to .bring milder air
Sunday...Snow likely. Severinto the region on the week- --..1 inches possible. Highs in the
end with highs generally in mid 30s.
th~ 40s.
Sunday night ... Snow showSnow will spread across the ers .likely. Any accumulation
·area Sunday and some accu- expected .to b~ light. Lows 24
mulation was possible, the · to 29.
National Weathe~ Service
Monday... A ·chance of snow
said. . ·
.
showers in the morning, oth01(ernight lows ' wiU be in erwise partly cloudy. Highs 31
the 20s.
to 36.
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy
Sunset · tonight wiU be at
5:19, and sunrise on Saturday with a chance of light snow.
is at 7:54 a.m.
Lows 18 to 23 and highs in
Weather fonc:ast:
the upper 30s.
Tonight ... Mosdy
clear.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 205. Sou the Lows .in the upper 20s an4
west wind 5 to I 0 mph.
highs in the mid 40s. ·
· Saturday.. .Increasing clo,uds. · Thursday... Partly cloudy
Highs in the mid 40s. South- with a chance of showers.
west wind I 0 to 15 mph.
Lows 33 to 40 and highs 4 I to
Saturday
night ... Mostly 46.

·Page A2

~tomes

Allzo-~.111

of Ohio's S70 million dwe of a side
agreement to the S206 billion settlement
that 46 states reached in 1998 with four
of the ~tion 's biggest tobacco companies. 11Je states sued the industry to
recover ~alth costs assoruted with cigarette smoking. The payments will continue for q yean. ·
"It is , designed basically to replace
income ~m declining sales in tobacco
leaf," said Ed Cruttenden, e.xecutive
director• for tobacco programs for the
Ohio Department ofAgriculture.
Last we.ek, the state mailed 6, 776
checks roqiling $3.6 million to tobacco
growen, C.ruttenden said. Thats in 'addition to the,J8.5 million paid,out over.the
last two yean, he .said.
Ohio ranks seventh nationally in tobac-

co production, but accounts for only t .63
percent of the toeal national nmlcet,
Crullalden said. Production in the state
has dropped from 22 million pounds ip
1998 to 1-4 ,nllion pounds i11 1999 and
seven million pounds m2000, he said.
Part of the drop is due to lower quotas
set by the U.S. Departinent ofAgriculture
on tobacco. That means the federal government will help make up the lost
tobacco sales, Cruttenden said.
The growers' share of the settlement
likely will take a hit from the SI.S billion
budget coiTection bill .that Gov. Bob Taft
signed last month. However, the amount
won't be determined until legislation
authorizinj!; the next\ two years' spendina •
from the settlement is ·approved later this

year.

i·

land his single-engine plane at Sikorsky Memorial Airport on ·
Sunday evening, spend the New Year's holiday with friend Evelyn
Sandor and later fly to her home in Rorida.
Those plans were. shattered when Hageman, a professional flight
instructor and retired Cleveland police cap~. and' his Piper
LIMA (AP) -Two people were killed and seven wounded Arrow never arrived at the small airport in Stratford.
As the houn went by that night, Sandor heard radio reports
. . when gunmen bunt into an apartment and opened fire Thunday
night, police said.
· about a missing plane and began to assume it was her friendi.
. Police Sgt. Glen Crawford said early Friday that the names of the
A police officer later confirmed her fear. .
dead and wounded were being withheld until relatives were noti),
one-fifth mile on foot.
KETTERING (AP) .fied.
.
Sarah · McClelland, 102,
Many well-wishers lining
·crawford said several gunmen were involved. He wouldn't com•
.
'1
propped the Olympic torch the . streets waved small
' The temper~
ment on a possible motive for the shooting.
BREWSTER (AP) -A fifth child died following a N&lt;!WYear's
in her wheelchail' as she American flags.
· The ·wounded o,yere taken to Lima Memorial Hospital and St. Day house fire, raising the blaze's death toll to six.
joined the cross-country ature was in the low 20s, and
Rita's Medical Center. No information was available on their conEight~n-month-Old Bryce Kahrig died in Children's Hospital
relay Thursday. She finished some in the crowd were .
. ditions. Nursing sup,ervison at both hospitals referred further ques- Medical Center ofAkron on Thursday night, a nuning supervisor
the mute with ihe help of a bundled in blankets.
. tions to police.
said.
. walker, · then flashed a
"It's exciting to see that
Volunteer firefighter Chris Kahrig lost his wife and five of his six
thumbs-up sign. ·
there's so m.uch spirit and to
children
in
the
blaze.
.
"I
feel
great,
only
tired,"
see
that pl!ople in the U.S.
SDON m01e
Dixie Kahrig, 28, who was sev~n-months pregnant, died Tuesday
McClelland, the oldest torch are so, excited about the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Researchers have determined that peo- along with Alyssa, 7, and Zachery, 5. Keyawnu, 3, and Dawson, 2,
carrier so far for the 2002 Olympics and that the Sept.
ple with round heads have a greater risk of sleep apnea and chron- died Wednesday at Children's Hospital.
Olympics, said with a smile. 11 events haveq't put a
1c snoring than those with thin faces.
.
"I enjoyed it. I'm glad I damper on any of these
"As the head gets relatively wider, the airway becomes relatively
could walk part way."
events," said Maria Turney,
narrower from front to back;' said Dr. Mark Hans, chairman of
,.
McClelland lived ilot')e at 50, of Kettering.
orthodontics at Case Western Resetve Univenity School.of DenCLEVELAND (AP) - A federal judge Thursday denied
her home in nearby Xenia
She said it was inspiring to
tistry.
.
requests to delay the corruption trial of U.S. Rep. James Traficant.
until she feU in' September, see McClelland carry the
Apnea is an interruption of breathing usually caused by blockInstead, the judge split the trials ofTraficant and c&lt;H:iefendant
breaking her shoulder in torch.
age of the airway in the back of the mouth. People with apnea typ- Richard Detore and delayed Detore's trial to allow his new lawyers
four places. She moved into
"It makes me feel like you
ically snore loudly.
time to prepare their defense. Traficant's trial will begin· Feb. 4 as
an assisted-living center to never'know how long you're
Hans and five other Case Western researchers compared head scheduled.
recuperate, then fell again in going to be around and
shapes of 60 snoren and 60 others who had no history of snoring.
Detore was indicted in November on one charge of cons11iracy
November, breaking her hip. what life holds in store for
to violate federal bribery laws by serving as liaison between his forGern Creech, director of you."'
mer employer, U.S. AerosNce Group, and Traficant. Both men
the center, s;Ud McClelland
McClelland was nominatmaintain their innocence.
was determined to walk in
.e d to be a torch bearer by
AKRON (AP) -A New Jeney judge ruled that a former MedTraficant, a Youngstown Democrat, :.vas indicted in May on
the relay despite lier injuries
Jessi McClelland; her 22ina County man, convicted of ltilling his first wife, is responsible bribery and conspiracy charges. Th~ wvernment claims he acceptand even trained for it.
year ..old. great-granddaughfor his second wife's apparent death.
. ' . ed gifts and favon in exchange for using his. influence on behalf'of ' ·
"Our therapist caught her
·
Betty Fran Gladden-Smith has been missing since she disap- local businessmen.
out in the parking lot .with ter, 'because of her long life .
and 'independence. Until her
. peared from her condominium in Princeton, NJ., in 1991.
the walker," Creech said. .
Judge Maria Sypek ruled Thursday in a civil case that John David
About 11,500 people will injury, McClelland had lived
Smith, who was convicted last year in Wayne County Conunon
carry the torch during the alone, doing all of her own
Pleas Court for the murder ofJanice Hartman of Doylestown, also . CINClNNA'IJ (A~) - L~wyen defending Ohio's concealed
13,500-mile, 46-state . run cooking, cleaning and garmurdered 'Gladden-Smith.
weapons law have aslced a judge to remove himself from a case
that began Dec. 4 iii Atlanta dening.
At 14, Sarah McClelland
Sypek, 9f Mercer Vicinage Superior Court in Trenton, N J., said challenging the constitutionality of the law.
and will end Feb. 8 in Salt
Smith devised a plan 10 destroy evidence and conceal the body,
They contend Harriilton County Conunon Pleas judge RobeR
Lake City. Olympics orga- sold liniment, vanilla and
according to court documents.
·
Ruehlman can't make a fair ruling because his wife and baby were
nizers said . they did not pepper .door to door on
kidnapped at gunpoint ouuide a strip-mau•camel'llshop in-198?.
know yet whether anyone horseback. Married at 18,
Richard Ganulin, an auillant city aollcliOr for Cincinnati, and
older than McClelland she and her husband worked
. Jonathon B. Lowy, senior attorney a! the Brady Center to Prevent would be jolnlntr the relay. a 97 -acre farm. She 1tlll
DAYTON (AP) -A co11nty i.)emocl'lltic Party chairman want. Oun Violence In Wuhinaton, D.C., flied the motion Wednttday.
In Lima, later Th11rsday, drove a ti'aetor when 1he was
the party~ top 1tate.. po1t.
·
The city of Cincinnati Is a .defendant In the cue, alons wllh
some. peoplt Joltred or In her 80s, and· drove a ear
·,~
' Montsomery County Chairman DeMII Lieberman announced Ohio and Hamilton County.
walktd alonpldt the flame, until she wn_MJI']y I 00,
Thunday he wlll11ek 10 ou111tate party Chairman David Leland,
McClelland arose at 5 a.m,
which wu on Ill way to Fort
L
,
.
who won thutate po1t over Lieberman in 1995.
to
prepare for the relay and
Wayne, Ind.
~.........
1111101111
·.~
Liebermani 1upporten NY the ttate party hu floundered in the
"I'm thrilled chit day hat powered up on her reg11lar
SANDUSKY (AP) -A b~lcen sprinkler at the clty'J new fiiepatt sewn Y''"• with R~;publicant holcllng all statewide admlnilflna)ly come," tald torch car- breakfast of Raisin Bran, a
tntive elected offices and live of aeven teall on the Ohio Supreme hous~ flooded the administrative offices and lounge.
··'
rier Victoria Clark, a bus dri- cracker. and orange juice, her
Court.
Ojrpet, armchain and office furniture were wet, but not
great-granddaughter said ..
ver liom Perrysburg.
Some Democrats are worried the party is late wembling a slate icantly damaged, said Jerry Fields, a technician with a com~
After she finished the
McClelland drew · cheers
.of candidates for this Y'ar's statewide elections.
.
hired to dry out the building. The station's wallpaper will :be
in this Dayton suburb when route, McClelland was
replaced in some areas. .
·
'
she handed the 3-pound hugged by well-wishers and ·
Damage estimates were not available.
~
torch to a relay organizer, tben gave a thumbs up to
IIIIIGWS
The sprinkler . head broke Tuesday night after it froze, then
stood up from the wheel- runners who were following
"
MILFORD, Conn. (AP) -John Hageman was supposed to thawed, because of a cold air leak, Fields said.
·chair and completed the in a bus.
'.
•;t••

102-year-old

] die In Sh00t1111 iliidd111l

torcli.canter gives

thdmbs ·up after relay

.

(I

.GALLIPOLIS - Jaela A. Hall, 22, died Thursday. Jan. 3,
2002.
She was the daughter of jack Hall of Galli~lis, and Mary
Hall of Columbus.
·
She was preceded in death by grandmother. Mary lou
Proffitt.
.
S1rrviving grandparents include Raymond Proffitt of Port.
land, and Marlene Hall of Cheshire.
Private graveside seivices will be held• Sunday. Friends may
call at Fisher-Acree Funera.l Home, Pomeroy, from 6-9 p.m.
· Saturday.

'

· Ohioan held responsible

· Lawyers $t!ft judge's femoval

c-l.t.t-1ft· d' th

•i

tiar!l£-

.Seirch for pilot

Seeking a Sponsor for the Head Start
Program in Gallia and Meigs Counties
The Head Start program In your community needs a new sponsor. We are looking for
community-minded, community-based organizations ·Including faith-based organizations
• which are Interested In operating this quality program serving low-Income preschool
children from three to nve. Appllcanll must be non·pront (public or private) or for-profit·
· organizations able to provide aervices within the communlly.
'

~

.

, .Urgent Care!!

. .2

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

~

Alta L swain
MERCERVILLE -Alta Leona Swain, 100, Mercerville,
died Thunday,Jan. 3, 2002, inm Beverly' Health and Rehaliilitation Center, Columbus.
.
1
Born Dec. 25, 1901, in Gallia County, daughter of the late
Lee and Lucy Bos.tick Cremeens, she was a Jtomemaker, and. a
member of MercerviUe Baptist Church.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Ernest
Swain, in November 1972; a son, Parker Swain, in January
2000; a sister, Oma Violet Swain; and a brother, Ferrell Cremeens.
Surviving are 2 son, Irvin (Audrey) Swain of Columbus; three
grandchildren, five great-grandchildren and five great-great~
grandchildren; a daughter-in-law, Edith Swain of Columbus;
and a brother, Raymond Cremeens of South Poidt.
Services wiU be I I a.m. Monday in Cremeens Funeral
Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Bruce Unroe officiating. Bur)al will be in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mercerville. Friends may
call at the chapel from 6-8 p.m.
·
. Sunday.
.
.

Currently, there are 344 children enrolled·in the Head Start program In the service area ol'
Gallia and Meip counties it an annual budget of approximately $1.7 million. The former ·
' sponsor, ACCESS: A Center for Counseling, Education and.Social' Seriices, no longer' .
operates the program. We are therefore seeking a new sponsor, who will be selected on a
competitive basis from local .organlzatlgns who apply. Head Start Is supJ19rted Jointly by
the Federal government and the local com~unlty. Programs must follow Federal ·
regulatlou, but each community has wide latitude to clUte a pJ"Oiram· that meell locally
deltned needs and goals. .·
.
•
Organizations wllh experience In providing community service and an Interest In possibly
becoming the Head Start program sponsor are encouraged to request an application kit by
making ":ritten request by mall, fax or· e-mail to Muu.reen Patrick or William Sullivan at
the Administration for Children and Families, 233 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 400, Chicago
Illinois 60601; FAX 312/886-5373; mpatrlck@acf.dhhs.gov or wsulllvan@acf.dhhs.gov. For
addi,lio~al Information about Head Start or the appll~atlon process please call 312/886·
4917. There will be a public meeting on February I, ~2 fro"\'J am • 3 pm at the Gallipolis ·
Holiday Inn. For Information on this, please use the above contacts. ,
.
1

,

......

POMEROY -James Edward Baer, 52, of Pomeroy, died on
Wednesday, January 2; 2002, at his residence.
He was born on October 12, 1949,in Gallipolis, son ofthe
late Edward Leo Baer and Ruby A. Rice Baer.
He was a m~mber of the last class to graduate from Pomei'?Y
Jiigh School, Class of 1967, a graduate of.Ohio Univenity, and
was employed as an accountant at Pechiney Rolled Products.
(ie was a veteran of the U.S. Army and was in the National
Guard Unit at Point Pleasant, West Virginia. He attended the
Enterprise United Methodist Chureh.
_
Surviving are his wife, Becky Will Cotterill Baer, his son and
~daughter-in-law, Edward Thomas and Tricia' Baer, and I',VO
.daughters ,and a son-in-law, Tricia Danielle and David Jackson
and .Cynthia Ann CotteriU, all of Pomeroy; a grandson,
.Matthew James Jackson of Pomeroy; his sister, Jane Ann Bourne
(Larry Ladd) of Sierra Vista, Arizona; and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be at 1 p.m. on .Saturday, January 5, 2002, at
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Keith
Rader and Pastor John Jackson officiating. Burial will ·follow at
Beech Grove Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, January 4,
2002, from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society Meigs County Unit, P.O. Box 703, Pomeroy, Ohio
.45769, or to Holzer Hospice, Meigs County Branch, 115 East
. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·.
/
"'

•

ATIT-111.114

-One-38.84
BU-10.81
Bob E..-.- 25.33
BoogWMw 52.50
Chan.,oon - 3.03
Charming Shops -

5.95

Cily HHoldioldio'ICitg
12.75
Col-20
DG-15.&gt;10
DuPont - 44.05

Pepsico- 46.79
P - - 8.60

GKNLY-4.20
Hartay

RO 81*1-49.08
Seara- 47.54

·Budget
llamPBpA1 ·

(!

cia! strain;' Davenport said.
"In the meantime, it's going
to be important that all county
officials and department heads
· work together to control
costs:' he 2dded.
Davenport . said workers'
compensation premiums for
the county were· $32,000 for
last year, compared to $6,000
for the previous year, and that
the cost of providing health
insurance to employees is up
$70,000.
Racine Mayor Scott Hill
sub.tnitted, and the commissionen accepted, a bid proposal for submission to the Ohio

Shoney'a - .37
WaHMrt- 57.98

Kroger- 20.62 ,

Wendy's- 29.74

lJincls End - 50.10

Ltd.- 15.51
NSC-19.81
Oak Hill Financial 15.60
OVB-23.60
BBT-36.08
.;....

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Ia
10 be accurate. If you know olan
error In a story, caR the newsroom
at (7&gt;10)992·2158.

Newa Departmentl

The main number Ia 992·2156.
Oepanment extantlons are:
Generai1MfU11181'

Ext 12

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or

Ext. 14

Other iervlcea

(U.... 213-...,

Ohio Vol~ Publllllng Co.

Publllllod M1Y ~~~- Monday
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· Ohio.

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Metotbor; Tho Alaoclalt&lt;l Prill 111&lt;1
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acklrou conocttonoo to,Tho Qtolly Sentinll, t11 Court.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio ~789.

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Subscription retea

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Tho Dolly Sontinll. Croodl1wfll'l&gt;o giYOn
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corrler oorvlco Ito ovalloblo/
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I
13

MaU
subaaiDtlan
'lnoldeiiO!iia-c:CllftiY-~ ~

w26W-

' 153.82
$27.30

52

S105.51l ·

w-

13WHko

' ~~=

oulolde Melt• Couilly

121.25

,:=:~

Wonlllugton """ 14.10

.Oaiy stock repolls are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes ol the previous
day's transactions, pro-

vided by Smith Partners

al Advestlnc.

_

LOCAL BRIEFS
ODOT hires ·

new staffer

in

..

Issued licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in
M_eigs County Probate
Court to: Adam Paul Walker, 19, Dexter, and Jennifer
Leigh · Priddy, 16, Middleport; James Mitchell Conley, 18, Middleport, and
Tosha Rana Jenkins, 20,
Middleport, and to Eric
Shane Walker, 30, Middleport, and Robyn Rebekah
Stewart, 29, Middleport.

Scott anniversary

d•• 18.&amp;4
Rocky Boots - 5.80

Kmert-1.09

54.15

MARIETTA - · Ohio
Department
of Transporta~
Surviving are her husband, Dr. Lawrence j. "Larry"Yodlowski, whom she married June 7, 1974, in Weirton; a sister, Joann tion (ODOT) Dist.rict I 0
(Thomas "Thm") McDonald of Michigan City, Ind.; and sev- Deputy Director George
M. Collins has announced
eral nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews.
.
of
appointment
She was also preceded death by a sister, Irene Lesko; and the
Stephanie
Fi!son
as
public
an intant brother. .
Mass of Christian Burial will be 9 a.m. Saturday in St. Louis information officer for Dis,
trict I 0. ·
Catholic Church, with Monsignor William R. Myen officiatFilson began her duties
ing. Burial will be in St. Paul Cemetery, Weirton. Friends may
with
District I 0 on Dec. 31.
call at McCoy~Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, GalA native of. Meigs Counlipolis, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
A prayer service wiU be held at 9 p.m. in the funeral home. ty, Filson holds a bachelor's
In lieu of flowers, memorial tributes may be made to Holz- degree in communications
er Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631; the from the University of Rio
Atperican Cancer Socie!)l, 138 Marietta Road, Suite D; Chilli- . Grande: While cQmpleting
her' college ellue..tion, she
cothe, Ohio 45601; or to a charity of choice.
worked as a reporter and
newspaper designer with
both the Jackson JournalHerald and the Jackson
Times-Journal.
After college graduation,
•
Filson began employment
with the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune. She performed
SHADE -- WiUiam C. "BiD" Martin, 72, of Shade, died on various duties at the Gallia
Wednesday, January 2, 2002, at Holzer Medical Center.
County newspaper includHe was born in Pomeroy on June 24, 1929,son of the late ing reporting, page design,
William Clifford Martin and Freda Faye Whaley Martin.
photography and copy edit, He·'l-etired after 38 years as foreman in the composing room ing before holding the
of the Athens Messenger. He was a member of the lnterna- assignment editor position
' tiona! '!YPographic Union. He w.as a member of the Shade prior to her recent hiring at
United Methodist church.
.
ODOT.
.
' Surviving are his wife of 53 years, Joy Lea Jones Martin of
"I am thrilled to have
Shade; four sons and daughten-in-law,William D. and Kathleen been given the opportunity
' Martin ofPickerington,John E. and Judy Martin ofYuma,Ari- to represent the Ohio
zona, Jerry and Kathy Martin of Columbus, and Timothy G. Department of . Transpiraand Patty Martin of Charleston, West Virginia; two daughters tion in this capacity," Filson
. and sons-in-law, Peggy Lea and Malcolm Grueser of Shade, and said. "Effective communica- ·
Penny W. and Paul Galloway of N,ewark; 14 grandchildren and tion is an important ele1 ·nine great-grandchildren; three sisters, Cora Ann Shaffuer of
ment in any organization.
.Fries, Virginia, Carol Arkel of Zephyr Hills, Florida, and · My goal is t&lt;:&gt; strengthen
Dorothy Earles of Chesapeake; two brothe~ Richard Martin this link to the public and
of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Larry Martin of Lima; an media within District 1O's
uncle, Leo Martin of South Point; an aunt, Clara Powers of niile county area." .
, . Point Pleasant, West Virginia; and severa.J nieces and nephews.
ODOT
District
I0
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his daugh- includes Athens, Gallia,
· ter, Amberetta Jo Martin; and a brother.
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
, , Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, January 7, 2002, Morgan, Noble, Vinton and
,in Fisher-Acree Funera.l Home in Pomeroy, with Pastor Jim Washington counties.
.Stewart officiating. Burial will follow at Shade Cemetery.
Filson recently relocated
,,Friends may call at t~e funera.J home on Sunday, January 6, . to Marietta, where she
,2002, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
resides with her husband
Chris and son Sawyer. ·.
Lo I

Rac:k

.eavidoon

fla.

Department of Development
for its Distressed Areas grant
program.
The prognm provides up to ·
$300,000 on a competitive,.
basis for mUltiple-phase projects.
Racine has · submitted a
combined project with the
Portland Community Center
Committee for funds to com.plet'e a water treatment facility
improvement project, a new
fire truck, and a heliport in
Portland.
In other business, conunisc
sionen:
• Approved funds transfers
for the Clerk of Courts;
• Set their organizational
meeting far Jan. I 4 at t 0 a.!".
• Recessed until Friday at 11
a.m. for payment of bills.
•

The.
Daily Sentinel
.

M'dlcal Director

-.olltoc. -~ .-·

Peopleo- 18.50

USB-20.85
Gannalt-61.85
a.n.ral E1ectrie
&gt;10.61 .

William c. ·a11r Martin

James Baer

'

·~· Eric:Hasem~er~ ·o.o~ :

AmTec:h/S8C - &gt;10.17

F - Magt.il- 1.05

Obituaries

Network ·Providers For
' '
~ Meaicare ·
'•

Nearly every county In tbe United States has a Head Start 'program, and since Its begln11lng
In 1!165, 20 miUion children have berteftted from Its services. Children from Income eligible
families receive needed education, social, health, mental health, dental, nutrition, and
dlsabllltlesrelated services. ?arerits are directly Involved In shaping the program for their
~hlldren. Prvgram sponsors work closely with other agencies in· the community to provide
these services.

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Carol M. Sholtis Yodlowski, 62, Gallipolis, died Wednesday, jan. 2, 2002, in Holter Medical Center.
Born july 9, 1939, in WeirtOn, W.Va., daughter of the late Stefan and Mary Pattress Sholtis, she was chief of staff at Holzer
Medicaj Center, an~ retired from f-!olzer Clinic's Department
of Oncology on Dec. 31, 2000.
·
Slie 'earned a R .N. degree at Mercy Hospital in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, her certified N une An11thetist Certification at
the University of Cincinnati in 1966, a bachelor of science
from XaVier University in Cincinnati in 1970, and her medical
doctorate degree in 1973 at the Medical College qf Ohio in
Toledo.
She had numerous professional memberships, served on on
the board of trustees of the Univenity of Rio Grande, thr Ariel
Theatre Board of Directors, and was a member of St. Louis
Catholic Church ·in Gallip&lt;ilis, Cliffiide Golf Club in Ga)lipolis, and the PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens,

a

Study: Rounclheads

No delay in natkant trial

YocllaMid

Dr. carol

. . A. .IWI

'

COLUMJlUS (AP) -The $2,000 that
Noble Cowuy ·farmer Robert Meyle
received last year as part of a tobacco
growers settlement fund didn't go far in
helping his family out in their livestock
business.
·
. lt'just about c~en the taxes he pays on
his 128-acre farm near. Sarahsville, about
100 miles east of cJJumbus. But otherwise, it would be difficult to follow his
dream, Meyle said Th,ursday.
"If you worked at McDonald's you'd
make just as much, but you are workitlg
your own land," he said.
Meyle, 40, grows only about two acres
of tobacco. The rest of his fami is .pasture
for his. family's herd of about 50 head of
cattle and trees harvested for timber.
Soon, he will gel anoiher check as part

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-43.84
"""'
Coal- 22.46'

II&lt;

The O.lly Sentinel • P1qe
- . A3

1

•

Checks totaling $3.6
million
going
to
farmers
.
.•

..

-

ov. Middleport, Ohio

Ft'd

•

'

File
dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions ,
for dissolution of marriage
have .been filed ;n Meigs
County Common -PJeas
Court. by Lois Ann Barrett
and Danny D. Barrett, both
of Langsville, and DonaldA.
Proffitt and Samantha M.
Proffitt. both of Pomeroy.
Dissolutions have been
granted to Howard L. Barber and Barbara J Barber,
and to Beverly Ann Collin;
and Robert E. Collins II .
Divorces have been granted to Alice Jane Bergman
from
Robert
Frank
Bergman, and to Joseph A.
Anderson from Donna Sue
Anderson.

. Plan benefit
RACINE - A benefit
will be h~;ld for Ted Coppick at Southern High
School on Saturday at 5:30
p.m ., with food and door
prizes ' and a hymn sing. All
singers are welcome. Information i~ available at 9493130 or 843-5294.

Boosters meet
POMEROY Meigs
High School Band Boosters
will meet on Monday at
6:30 p.m. in the high school
bandroom.

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service answered four calls for
assistance on Thursday.
Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL t;IISPATCH
2:26 p.m., Seneca Drive,
Marjorie Leonard, Holzer
Medical Center;
·5:12 p.m., Hysell Run,
assisted by Rutland, Virginia
·
Michael, HMC.
POMEROY
· 4:28 p.m., Mulberry
Avenue, Stacy Johnson,
refused .treatment;
6:30 p.m., HMC Clinic,
Cassandra Morris, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992 · 2156

. NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Jerry and Phyllis Scott will celebrate
their 45th wedding anniversary with family and friends at their
home, 214 Fifth St., New Haven, from 2-5 p.m. Saturday.
· They are the parents. of Lesa Carpenter, and· Kevin and
Matthew Scott.They are the grandparents of Chris, Gabe, Josh,
Matt, Quentin and Jourdan, and the great-grandparents of Noah.
They were married by the Rev. Anthony Menngs at Richmond, Ind.
l'

the sacred heart of ·Jesus be
a~9red, glorified, loved and preserved
throughout the world now and forever.
Saered Heart of Jesus, Pray for Us, St.
Jude wor:ker of miracles, fray for Us."
S"ay this prayer nine times a day for
nhi~· consecutive days and your wish will
be aranted. It has neve'" been known to
, 1'~May

fail. : .

Upo., r,eceiving your wish, this prayer
must be published In an active ne~s.paper
within one month,
'

..

ALL AGES ALL TIMES $4 .00

I •

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�•

ay the Bend

•

The Daily Sent;inel

Page AS·

_Th_e_D_ail_y_Se_nti_·n_ei_ _ _ _

'11114.,......., 4. 2i1J.

.-·

Memorial quilt won't benljit victims Of Sept. 11

111 Cowt St., PofMror, No\i:;r740 112·2151 • Fu: -..2157

I.

DEAR ABBY: My best friend of
12 years is a quilter, pattern designet
artd teacher. She recendy showed me
a pattern she creatl!d as ~ memorial
to the S~pt. U attack on Amerka.
She pfans to seU the pattern a5 well
as teach its construction at a local
quilt shop. Shl! dQe$ ~OT plan to
contribute any portion df the proc.eeds to arty charitable organiZation
connected with .the attack. This has
shown . .me· a side of her I did not
want to discover.
Abby, her actions have tainted my
feelings toward her and I don't know
how to react OVer tlie years, we
have supported each other through
many trials and tribulations, but this
is completely different. Please advise
me. A long- time relatkmship hangs
i? the balance. ....-'APPALLED IN

.

Ohlo·Valley Publlahlng Co.
R. Stlllwn Llwla
ManiQing Editor.
Dl8ne tc.Y Hill
Controfler

•

NATIONAL VIEW

•

'

Contrary
SAINTS

Economi~

• Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal, on Bush~ use of executive
privilege: On what iisue do George W Bush and Bill Clinton
share common- cause? The same one on which' congressional
ltepublicans and Democrats, and the public they' represent,
should unite in o pposition: Using ~xecutive' privilege to frustrate legislative oversight.
President Bush invoked th e privilege to keep the memos of
prosecutors on coim oversial criminal cases out of the hands of
the H ouse Government R eform Committee.
·
T he move com es against a backdrop of t ension between the
Hill anq the White House on administration secrecy. Lack of
'ldministration consultation before a decision to use military
tribunals to try some terrorism suspects in secret angered som~
senators. Frustrated by the president's stonewaUing tactics,
Congress' General Accounting Office is considering a lawsuit
to force disclosure of the names of energy executives who met
with Vice Pmident Dick. Cheney in closed door energy policy meetings. .. .
.
Congress has a' constitutional responsibility to oversee the
operations of agencies in the executive braffch. In this instance,
the coi:nmittee was examining the decision-making process of
prosecutors in cases ranging from '60s vintage Boston murder
· to the probe of fund-raising under Clinton.
The B.ush invocation argue~ that legislative branch access to
prosecutOrs' 'm emos would be contrary to the national interest.
Let the executive argue that position to the judicial branch of
government Members of both parties shbuld make good on
(the) ihreat to draw a legal line in the sand between presidency and monarchy.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· Today is Friday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2002. There are
361 days left in the year.
Today's i;lighlight in History:
On Jan. 4, 1.896, Utah was. admitted as the 45th state.
On this date:
In 1821, the first native-born ·American saint, Elizabeth
Ann Seton, died in Emmitsburg, Md.
In 1885, Dr. William W. Grant of Davenport, Iowa, performed what's believed to have been the first appendectomy,
on 22-year-old Mary Gartside.
In 1948, Britain granted independence to Burma.
In 1951, during the Korean conflict, North Korean and
Communist Chinese forces captured the city of Seoul.
In 1960, French author Albert Camus died in an automobile accident at age 46.
I~ 1965, President Johnson oudined the goals of his "Great
Sqciety" in his State of the Uhion Address.
In 1965, poet T.S. .Eliot died in London at age 76.
In 1974, President Nixon refused to hand over tape
recordings and documents subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee.
In 1987, 16' people were killed when an Amtrak train
bound from Washington to Boston collided with Conrail
ehgines approaching from a side track in Chase, Md.
In 1995, the 104th Congress convened, the first entirely
under Republican control since the Eisenhower era.
Ten years ago: President Bush, visiting Singapore as part Of
a Pacific trade tour, announced "plans ,t o shift to Singapore
the Nary logistics command that was being evicted from the
Philippines.
Five yean ago: President Clinton, in his weekly radio
address, took credit for policies reducing teen-age pregnancy, and said he would work for even greater reductions over
the next four years. Real estate mogul Harry Hel10sley died
in Scottsdale, Ariz., at age 87.
· One year ago: It was announ ced th at George, the politics •
and lifestyle magazine founded by the late John F. Kennedy
Jr., would .fold . Orchestra lead er Les Brown, known for his
"Band of Renow n," died at age 88.
· Today's Birthdays: Actress jane Wyman is 88. Actress Barbara Rush is 75. F.ootball Hall-of- Fame coach Don Shula is
72. Form er qeavy.weigh t boxing champi on Floyd Pattersbn is
67.Actress Dyan Canno n is 65 . O pera, singer Grace Bumbry
is 65. Country singer k athy Forest.e r (The. f orester Sisters) is
47. Actress Ann Magn uson is ~6. R ock musician Bernard
Sumner (New Order) is 46. C oun try singer Patty l oveless is
45. Rock singer Michael Stipe (R.E. M.) is 42. Actor Patrick
C assidy is 40. Actor Dave Foley is 39. Actress Julia O rmo nd
is 37. Ten nis player Guy Fo rget is 37. Country singer D eana
Carter is 36. R ock musician Benjamin Darvill (C ras h Test
D ummies) is· 35. Actor Jeremy Licht is 3 L Ac tress-singer Jill
j o nes is 27.
·
·
.
· .
Thought for Today: " Very few men arc wise by their own
counsel; or learned by their own teaching. For he that was
o nly taught by himself, had a fool to his master."- Ben Jonson} nglish dramatist and eoet (1572- 1637) .
'

·•

•

v

Abby

..

:•ss

•

use of executive privilege
raises stoneivalling charge

..

Dear

Please warn your readers never to alcohol my entire life. She never
leave such detailed information in a gave me a chance to prove I am a
purse or wallet. - ]ElUlY IN good penon.
WINTHROP HARBOR, ~.
Austin is one of my best friends.
DEAR JERRY: I agree. that it's . Should I try talking to his mother or
too 'much information for a person . · give up and accept the fact that
·to be carrying around, Mu~h safer Austin and Lcan only be friends? and more effective would be to sim- . WONDERING IN KANSAS
ply wtite on the back of the card: ,. DEAR WONDERING: NothReward for the Return of this ing you can say will make his mothPurse" and a current telephone er feel less threatened. You have just
number.
gotten a glimpse of what it's like to
DEAR ABBY: I am a senior in be an "older woman" who's perhigh schooL At the beginning of the ceived as robbing the cradle. . In
school year, I started dating"Austin," another three years, the situation wtH &lt;il
a sophomore. His mother is very be different. However, for now, you
,
protective ~nd made him break 'up and Austin may have . to remain
with me. Her only reason was that I school friends only.
.
'\.1
am a senior.
.
Pauline Phillips and her . daughter
Abby, I am a straight-A student. I jeanne Phillips both shart the pseudohave never tried drugs, cigarettes or nym Abigail V..n Bu,..,n.

I

Bush~

I

..) donate (or not) is highly penon2l.
Sine' I do not· know your friend's
6nancial situation, it would be presumptuous of me to criticize her.
('~ Please stop being so judgmental. I"
DEAR ABBY: My wife recently
~ bought a new purse. Insjde, was a
-----~ preprinted "Important Data" caid.
·
ADVICE
•.·~· On it, the owner is supposed to li~t
her driver's license number, her safet
~'
ty deposit box, checking and savings
THE U.S.A.
.
accounts. car insurance carrier, and
DEAR APPAlLED: To the
fire insurance and life · insurance
of my knowledge, the chari e compames.
organizations connected to . 'e
Just imagine how valuable that
attack_! on the World Trade Cenrer information would be to a thief
and the Pentagon have received a should ·my wife lose her purse or be
substantial amount of money. I~ is the victim of assault. With that inforthe local charities that are sufferirlg. , mation a person could steal · her
I see no reason to end a longtime identity and run up thousands of
friendship. What people' choose to ·. doUars worth of expenses.

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~:AND

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Big ·Bend Area Girl Scout Diary

'

SINNERS
.

downturn may have a silver lining qfter all

Will the recession now gathering
· momentum in America turn out to be
good for us? C ertainly not if we are
among those wh() have lost theiCjobs in
the economic" downturn.
But for someone who has enjoyed aU
the material things in life ·and who has
never had to do without, a recession can
have a salutary effect.
I heard a young mother say the other
day that in her family's next house they
are not going to have an electronic dish•
. washer as they. have now because her,
children are missing out on "the wonderful experience of doing dishes."
While .a child is Hkely to consider it a
chore and even grumble about it, doing
cfuhes with someone else (in my ~ase, it
wall my sister) can be fun and enjoyable.
The conversation is easy and informal,
and in some ways, it is a better way to
bring people - even adults - closer
together than sitiing around the dining
room table.
The recession we are starting to live
through will force us to do without
more and more thin~. and ihere is a
good chance that we will be happier for
it. There is a self-satisfaction that comes
from seif:.denial .that cannot be matched
by self-indulgence. Did you ever know
anyone prouder than the person who has
succ.essfuJJy lost 25 pounds by giving up
the foods she or he loves?
Many of us grew up as recession's chil~n, and we enjoy bragging about how
hard we had it when we were young. We

days when, every so. often, the voice or
one of us would ring through the house,
"Who left the bathroom light on?"
But many of us have forgotten to teach
our children these lessons we learned.
"We do too much for them," said
Bertrand Russell , the British philosa-·
pher.
"Tiie capacity t() endure a more or less·
monotonous life is one which should be
COWMNIST . acquired in childhood;' said RusseU.
"Modern parents are greatly to blame in
'.
.
1 this respect. Th~y provide their children·
have carried ni~ny of these habits with with fat too many passive amusements\~
us 1hrough adujf years.
.
su~h as shows and go_od thin~ to eat.
There is a stoiJ Norman Vincent Peale
The.y do not. real1ze the 1~porrance•
teUs about a train trip he took when he . to a·child ofhavmg one day hke anoth.:'.
was in his 60s. He was Jugging three suit- er - except for somewhat rare occacases off a tr:ii'i&gt; while redcaps were sions .Too much travel, too much variety ·
standing aU around.
''
of impressions are not good for. the:
He could welf have afforded a redcap young and cause them to grow up meafor each suitcase and before he left pable of endurmg fru1tful monotony.
"Constructive purposes, do .not_ e.Sily'
home, his wife h; d told him explicitly,
"Norman, be . sure to get a redcap to ~o~m the~selves m a child~ mmd 1f~e iS.
carry your bags."
livmg a life of d1stractt~ns and disstp~1
He had .said he would. So why dilln't ttons, for, m that case, h1s thoughts will,
he?
,
' · ' · al\Vays be directed toward the next plea- •
"Some faint ~oice from the past," says sur~ rather than toward the distant
Peale, "some echp of the rigid economy ·achievement."
,.
. "
taught me in childhood spoke up sternWeD, 1f "!'e haven t taught thes~ thmgs
ly in the bacll:t. of my mind, asking to our children, maybe they Will learn '
whether it were' really right to pay for a them on their own when ::th~ wo~der-.
service you could perform just as weD ful world of domg wtthout · will agam be.1
yourself."
.
the norm.
In our home today, we are aU careful
about turning the lights!out. That, I am
(George- R. Plagenz is a colu!Hnist for
sure, is a throwback t~ my childhood Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

George
Plagenz

'

RED GR,;_EEN'S VIEW

I '

Marriage vows deserve:.;: disclaimer, like commerdals ·
IH

They have ads on television now
where the last half. or the commercial is ,
devoted to the announcer talking really
fast while· he or she explains everything
that could possibly go wrong with the
product. It's called a disclaimer, and
they do it to avoid. legal action later. r
think it's a g(&gt;od idea, but I'd like to see
it on marriage vows.
"I now_ pronounce you man and
wife." (Read this next part really fast.)
"Some common sidll effects include
disagreements, . hurtful comments,
unacceptable tone, bankrtlptcy and
children. The success of this marriage is
the sole responsibility of the parti~i­
panrs, and there is no warranty, eiiher
expressed or. implied, by any friends,
neighbors or relatives . Before entering
into this agreement, it' is suggested that
you consult with a member of the clergy or a bartender. Prolonged use could
lead to old age, if yqu're lucky. Void
where prohibited. You· may kiss the
bride."

Diversity adversity

standing ovation. This BUY is getting a
dozen or more of these things, while.'
most people never get a standing ova~;
.tion in their whole lives. That's wrong.
/1. standing ovation is a wond_erfu)
'
·thjng. It means that people hav'e so
much respect for you they feel com;;,
pelled to get up off their butts for a few. ·
seconds. Standing ovations also give
your ·detractors a ahancc to leave thC
room without being noticed, so yo~
COWMNIST
end up with a lmaUer. but more sup;
'r
portive crowd. In any: case•. it's a real
have been ·ibrisformed into 33 flavors cQIIfidence booster. Many people whq,
of vanilla. ti'used to be a big world with receive. standing ovations actuaUy go ott
thousands
different businesses. Now to deserve ·them.
.
:·
it's more like· a smaU town where everySo, to aid in building a better, mon;: ..
body's related to each other. It might positive society, I think we shoul~ all b~
look friendlier. in the short term, but more .generous with our standing ova-e
tli.e kids can turn out pretty scary. · ,
tions. If Dad hangs onto his job fot
What's in a name?
another dily, Qey, everybody on· theiC
I've been around long enough to , feet. Or if Mom got that dress to do 'up: ·
notice that some of-these new things or the Jpds came home from school
they're coming· up with aren't new at with straight .A's, or came home fron1:
aU. They're just old things with new . school, or just came home, well, let's ge~
,n ames. Here 's a short sample Jist so that up and gi.ve themu big standing 0:
you 'll b£.. able to recognize lack of Wouldn't that make us all feel bette~
progres~ when y&lt;&gt;u see it:
about one another artd ourselves? It wC
New name old name..
had ·more standing ovations, we'd hav.C
E-mail Telegram
fewer failures, . fewer ·overeaters an"
New-car r~bate Your change
· fewer pregnancies. It's just harder to geE
Virtual reality Dream
·into trouble when yo_u're standing. . :
· Multi-!asking Motherhood
QUOTE OF THE DAY:"Aman wil~
lntert:icing with :Talking to
pay $2 for a $1 item he needs, whereaS·
. Siation wagon SUV
·
a woman ·will pay $1 for a $2 itetn thai&gt;
Networking liqns' Club
she doesn!t."- Red Green
.
. :

Red

Green

of

. They teD me that diversification is an
important part of any stock portfolio.
Put some-money in butter and some
money in guns. as the economics profs
would say. Mutual funds' were created
to satisfy that exacs need, but, in ·the last
few years, · they've . gone and changed
the ·game on us. With the onslaught of
all these mergers and acquisitions and
hostile takeovers, instead of a large
number of~1ode rately sized businesses,
we're end i~ up with a much smaller
Compute~ Friend
'
number of . enormous mulii- national
How much ,can you stand?
c orpora ~ion s . Now the guns and butter
· I 'was watching some ·senator giving
are 'all ow ned by the same guy. The his retirement speech , and, after every
diversification is gone. ~ utual funds co up]~-of sentences, he would ·get ·a

(Red Green Is the star of ·"The ReZ
Gree11· Show," a television series seer~ in th¥.
U.S. 0 11 PBS and the author of "The Re.f;
Green Book" and "R ed Green Talks Cars~
A Love Story.") ,.
·.
~
''·

DROP US ALINE.

121 Third N, Cllllllpollol, Ohio

...

7~:13&amp;2

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.

111 Court St., Po1110f0Y, Ohli.
740-892·215&amp;

Cookie Cftlnch ·
.·set for Saturday

Daisy Troops

A tour of the Pomeroy Christmas list.
the Middleport Christmas Council.They will do an evalLibrary was taken on Dec. 31
The troop had a combined parade.
uation along with the leader,
Christmas
party with Brownie · Salem Center Troop 1254 parents, and sthooL
Pomeroy Daisy members . followed by lun.ch adt
attended a bt;e&gt;Wnie meeting McDonalds. Four girls from troop 1015. They ha&lt;l. a gift attended the Nutcracker BaUer
This survey is to see how
MIDDLEPORT -· The and were shown how to earn Salisbury were added to the exchange, enjoyed activiti.es show in Charleston, W.Va. • ..
annual cookie crunch will be
troop
and refre,hments.
.. Several girls attended the Girl Scouting helps the girl~ .
try-its.
·
held at the Family life Center
Nine of the girls received
Next meeting wiU be held
Courtney
and
Hailey service unit's Secret Santa with self esteem, working with
of the Middleport Church of their Dany pins in a simple on Thesday from 3 :30 ·p.m. to attended the Car Care Badge event at Rocksprings Nursing others and listens to other
Christ Saturday from 1 p.m. to ceremony. One more girl was 5·15
adults.
· p·m · at Pomeroy Elemen - event held at Imperial Tires in Home.
Mason, W.Va., and completed
3 p.m. and anyone interested added 10 our troop.
tary.
Southern Troop 1204 meets
Pizza, chips; brownies, candy
At
th
t'
Southern Troop t 120 is a few steps towards the badge. after school on Monday's, 3 and pop were enjoyed for their
in participating or observing is
invited to attend.
ano er mee mg a
t' ·
lei
th ·
Kristine Davis was selected p.m. to 5 p.m. On Dec. 3 the
Christmas stocking was deco- cGonrl ISnumg,Y~or'Iing . on elr
Christmas party. A gift
The event is held in prepad,
d
D
th
1
cout
ways
ry-1t.
·
as December's Super Girl troop made snowmen to
,
r
h
I G ' I rate an on ec. 31
e . 0 D 29 h
k d
exchange was done. The troop
rat10n tor t e annua
1~ group toured the Pomeroy , . n ec. . •.t ey war e on Scout because of her great girl replace the turkeys for their
Scout cookie sale which wiU L 'b
d h d 1 h · d the Law actiVIty and planned scour-a!titude and character.
jars and discussed plans for a invited Jessica Durham and,
1
get underway soon. For the M rDary ladsn
a
unc a t their ceremony for · next
Chelsea Freeman.
Kristine, Amber, Brittany, Christmas party.
.
R
b
cona
.
hTh
d
.
lei
coo e crunc hJ
, usttn o son
mont .
ey rna e smores. .and Courtney have completed
On Dec. 10 the troop
will be there to defend his tide
Next meeting will be Tues- They also had their Cookie the Looking Your Best badge. worked on a requirement for
from last year.
day at the Pomeroy Elemen- Training for . the upcoming
The troop's next meeting the Sports Sampler badge and
cookie sale and made their wiD be held Monday at 4:30 one on Model Citizen badge.
Anyone interested in partie- tary SchooL
, Th~
Meigs
County
~astern Daisy Troop. mem- troop goals.
ipating is asked to caD Joyce
p.m. at the Middlepor.t G~mes were played.
Romines at 949-2509. ·
hers attende1 the S~cret Santa
A few new members joined Church of Christ.
On Dec. 17, another Cadette/ senior Troop 1180
On Jan. 19 from 3 ·p.m . to· 5 event at Rocksprings Nursing the troop.
Salisbury Troop 4290 held requirement for the Sports attended the Secret Santa
Home:
p.m. a "Just for Girls Health
.
Tile next meeting will be on its Christmas party this month 'Sampler was done. The girls event held at Rocksprings
Day" will be held at the FamThe Middleport/Rutland Saturday,Jan. 26 from 1 p.m . to with Troop 1180 as weU as showed their assigned first aid Nursing Home. The scouts
ily Life Center.
· r~f Troop met on Dec. 31 • 3 p.m. at the Racine Library.
caroling at the Rocksprings treatment for an accident. The had their Christmas party with'
. All w 0 men from 5- to 95R ·
,.
. .
They wiU hold their Investi- Nursing Heme at the Secret leader handed out patches for
Junior Troop 1290. They are
iears old .are invited to attend
egular meetmg wtll be. , t!,l,re Rededication Ceremony Santa event. .
nut sells and a sm;ill flag pin to
now working on their leader-:
this 'information se~siori.
held at ~ p.m. every Monday at 2 p.m.
.
~
Several girls attended the wear on their vest or sash.
· Ohio University medical at . Mtddleport Church of
ReedsviUe Troop 1067 host- Car Care Badge event held at
They were also told that ship .pin. Several girls partiCistudents wiD be on hand · to Chnst. Terne Houser IS leader. ed the Secret Santa event at Imperial Tires in Mason. Sev- their troop was selected to do pated in the Middleport
discuss dental health, nutrition
Rocksprings Nursing Home eral girls also participate&lt;) in an. evaluation
from Christmas ~~::_--r.,...
(emphasis on calcium), exerwith several girls attending
from the troop.
cise and fitness, vital" signs,
height and weight, vision; ear,
Middleport Troop 1015
nose, and throat screens; prop· made ornaments ~ith the
er handwashing techniques; giril' pictures in early Decemll!ld lots of hands-on learning ber.
·
Reedsville Troop 10'42 was
experiences.
Jessi, Jalmle, and Rachel co-host for the Secret Santa
The cost il $3. .
attended the Service Unit's event at Rocluprings Nurtlng
·· For information, call Jerrena Secret Santa even! at Rock· Home. Several airls from the
Eberabach at 992-7747. •
1prlngs Nu~sin1 Home.
troop ltttndtd.
On feb. 9 a "Valentine'•
On Dec. 17 with Troop
Middleport Troop 1276 parDay Throuah the Aps" dance 1276, they had their Chriltmas tlclpated In the Middleport
wlU take plicf at tht Rudand party. Rifre1hm1nts were Chriltmu Parade. Joyce, Ash·
Voileyball, Baaketball, Football, Wreatllng,
Civic Center.
terved and the slrls e~oyed ley, Jennifer, Halley . and
Cheerleader•. Band Members, or any other winter
The dance will be for any the activities 11 well as the &amp;1ft Courtney participated at the
~irl who would like to join exchange.
Se~ret Santa event held at
sport with a speclal ad ln the Tuesday, January
Girl Scouts. Those attending . Pomeroy Troop 1271 has Rocluprings Nurting Home . . .
·
29th Edltion of the Dally Sentinel.
are invited to 'dress up in an had a ·leader change due to,
Several troop members went
h!storic era costume if they family illness. Dee Swartz is to the . Overbrook Nursing
Home for a talent show and
wish. There will be contntl, leading the troop for now.
story telling, and more.
.
The troop had 16 girls earn caroling.
.
·
' Any scout bringing a non- their "Girl Sports" Try-it
The troop members made a
registered girl to the dance ,badge and 19 girls earn their , picture frame craft as a gift for
who joins, wiD receive a patch. "lets Pretend" Try-it badge.
someone ·spe_cial on their

Senior Troop "

Brownie 'ft'oopS

· Junior Troops

Show Your Appreciation To
Your Favorite Team Member!·

.

DIGIWIIII

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2002 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 31. F..1 are Four Dollara
1
,.,... ""' for eectt dog, ·malt or fe!N!It. Kennel FMa are 1\vtnty Dollare ($20.00). To obtain
llclln.. by mall, complete and return tppllcatlon to: Naricy Parker Campbell, Melge County
Audlto.r, 100 E. StCO."Ic:f Stratt, PO!Mroy, OH 457111. El'icloaa a . .lf-addretted, lfllmped
envelope with • check for the price of the IICan...
.
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OWNEROFDOG~---------------------------------­

~DDRESS--------------------------------------~

TELEPHONE

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AGE

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COLOR

., Year Month Male Female

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· TOwNSHIP

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BREED , FEES
IF KNOWN PAID

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(Actual size 1 col x 4")
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for only

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Name::____________~------------------------------

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Message: _____________________________.:______

NOTICE: License must be obtained no late than January 31, 2002, to avoid paying penalty. After this
~.
penalty will be $4.00 for single tag and $20.00 lor Kennel license:
, ,. •
,
100 E~ Second Strwt
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NANCY PARKER
II
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,
'County•

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IIIII._.I.M.;..WILIIIIIIIIUUI• DIID•--.....,~-:-::-:-~~----~~--~-jp~m~~maJI•IIrmlllll!t.·JMIIIJ..... _.._II,-rt. Oblg

a...,,_
a.til•t
'WEW. ... W11111.4.

-y-·-__,

• 'w.y SdlooiiO---~ll-ll\otoioi-7a-

1

•k Won11J9 CtMa"
173 s. !nl Avo.. Middleport
KoYio Koalllo:,Sundi)l, 10 LID. Md 6:(10 p.m.
W.' ;1• 7:30p.m.; YOUih Pri. 7~ p.m.
As

Qonlo.,

.

Putor: Neil Tonnanl

,.

Sundoy Services- 1&amp;.00 un. ond 7 p.m.

bc:k G.... &lt;llrWillll a.ntt.
Pa8r. RicbotdSundriy School- 10:30 a.lll
Wonhip • 9:30 1.m.
Bible Sludy - 1 p.m.
. ~oomwnity of ChriM

Gncel~la '

P01nrruy Ftnt Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.

Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 8~(ji a.m., 9: 4~ an1 &amp;: 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Flnt Bapdit Cburcb .
Pastor: Muk Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School- 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship · 10:13 a.m.. 7:00-p.m.
Wedneflday Service-7:00p.m.

Putor : fJaniel Mecca
Sundll\' \L h•.ol - 9:30a.m.
Sund a~ Wo&gt;~-, hlp - 10:30a.m .

W:tdneaday Dwle Study · 6:00p.m.
Old llethel F"! Will Boplill Cburdo
'l860l St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - IOa.m.
EVening-7:00p.m.
Tbur:sday Service• - 7:00

Hlllolde Bopdot Churtb
SI. Rt.143justoffRI. 7
Pastor: Rev. JIUllcl R. AcrR, Sr,
Sunday Unified Service
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WednesdAy Scrvkea -7 p.m.

fotllo Bopdot Church
· Railtold St, MUon
Sunday Sdtool- 10 a.m.
Wonltip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
WDietdiy Services· 1 p . ~.

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PariCho'pol
Sundly School • 9 a.m.
Worsltip- 10 jl.m.

_....

Zloa Cburdo of Chrlot
Pomeroy, HarriiQI'Iville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Wa1$0n
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdneaday Scrviccs-7 p.m.

Putor: Rod Brt,li!Wet

Wonblp- 9:30.o.m.
SundAy School· 10:3' o.m.

Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer mectina-7 p.m.

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· Pu10r: Kelm - . -

Sundoy School · 9:15 LIIL
Worlhip • I0 ui.
'
Y011ih Pellowthlp. Sunday-~ p.m.

Ito- -

Wtoleyoallhle H - Churtb
75 Pearl ~t.. Middleport.

SeAem Ceatet f
Putor: Roo.~
Sundoy School - 9: IS ....
Wanhip -10:13 ~

Putor: lte\'. Doua Cox
·Sunday Worship- 9;30 p.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7 :30p.m:~

HYJOII Run Holt,_ C~urtb ·

-..,

Wonhip • 9 a.m. , ,

\Vedneodly Serviceo - I o1:m.

.

I

ltlckwy lllUs Church o1 Chrlol
Evmaelist Mike Moore
Sun4ay School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 Lm .. 6:JO p.m.
Wtdnc.'lday Sen-ices • 7 p.m.

alll'r- ll;l\

""i11h

"

noon

·:t'~ • ·

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I

Eoot Lotort

Putor. Brion H~

~tlh &lt;T :tn

Sunday School- 101.11.
Worsbip • II a.m.
.Wednesday 1 p.m.

J

Our Sa..tour Lutbo,.. Chun:b
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenawood.
W.Va.
Putor: David Rusaell
Sunday Scbool - 10:00 a.m..
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Gnhoa!UIIltMWonhip · 9:30a.m: (Ill tl2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m
.(Jnl.t 4111 Sun)
Wcdneodly Servi&lt;e • 7:30p.m.

.ra.oc Dlvid W. McCIIla

..

l\lt. Olive Vatted Mtthatiloa

ML Marloh Churdl ol God

Mile Hill JW., Racine
Putor: ·June• Slttcrfleld
Sundly School - 9: 4~ a.m.
E!venina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m. •

Molp Coaporod,. Pu1ob
NCIIIheutCiutter
Alfrocl
Putor: Jane Beattie
SWidly. ~hool· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp·lla.m., 6:30 p.m.
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Poitor. WIUiom Hoback

'suoo.y School · 10 •.m.

Evenlna • 1 p.m. ·' ••
. Wednclday Servlce1 - 7 p.m.

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Harrtoan..tlle Pnob:rtertaa Cburth

''

Wonhip'• 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:4!1 a.m.

Cbttrth

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Mlcldltparl Pnob11trlon
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhlp- 10 a.m.

Dyentllt Catutualty Churdo
SWidly School· 9:301.111:
Wonhip- 10:30 1.m., 7 p.m.

• \( IIIII ILl\
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Saturday Service.:
Sabba.th School • 2 p.m.
Wanhip- 3 p.m.

Wanhlp • 10:4la.m:, 7:30p.m.
W-.cJ.ty 7:30p.m.

ML Ho,_ Ual... l..tlt,..
. lo Chrlot Church
Tcxu Comfttunlty off CR 112
Puwr: Robert Sanden
Suncloy Schaal· 9:30 o.m.
Warship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 ~.m.
Wcdneidoy Servkeo • 7:30p.m.

on.......,

Sunda~

School - 9:30 o.m.
Worthlp , 10:30.Lm.,, 7 p.m.
Wodnoodly Servi"' • 7 p.m.

-y

Pula..Jup-

....,

' lJOoll Hllllld Rood.
Pui«:RayH.Suodtf School· 10 a.m . •
E• ..... 7::10 p.DL
'l\lc:odly • . Thurldoy' 7:30p.m.

Cbun:b of the Naareno . ·

p.,..,, -.m.. \Vatdet:k

..

.._vii... Bmlonalo Chrllt
2 112 miles north Of Reod.lvUie
on State Rou~ 124
1'11tor: Re~. Robert M.t!ey
. Sunday Scita!&gt;l· 11 o.m.
Sundoy Wanhip- 10:00 o.m. .t 7:00p.m.
We;dnudly Servicca · 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Yciutb S&lt;rvi&lt;e ·7:30p.m.

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S.tb Betbol N•w 'lilluMot

SW\day Scbool- .9:30 a.m.

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Real Ofstate
218 E.

·

.

Products+
Financial
.ENCIES IDe. Services

1111 Quickel ·

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

992·7028'

Florist
Mei«• County~ Olde" fl&lt;&gt;1rilr
East 1\Aain

Pomeroy, Oh

•

:36; 3, Mayfield Village 1\Aayfteld 28;
4; .Pickerington 21; 6, .Uberty Twp.
Ulkota Eaat19; 6, Strongsville 18; 7,
Cln. Moeller
16; 8, Dayton
Cartol/ 16; 9, WadswOrth 11; 10,
·s'*n 5.
.
DIVISION II - 1, Sl. Parla Graham
· (3) 30; 2, Akron St. V·SI. Mary 27; 3,
Olmllled Faile
15; 4, Cuya.
falls Walsh Juu~ 14; 5, Chagrin
F'!'lls Kenston 13; 6, Cols. Hamlnon
' Twp, 12; 7, Cola. Di1Sale8
11; 8,
Sandutky Pttldna 10, Oak Harbor
10,Franklln 10.
'

.

MLB conlractlon

1061JurrERNur AVE.

unlikely

POMIIOY,OH 992-6454
'Aowers for all-occasions•

FUNERAL
HOME
Dl(lnlty and s.mc. Alwayt
Emblllh.cl11113

992·2121
1'08

Aw.

6noufftr'f
:ltre &amp; 6af!tp

FUNERAL HOME
'We accept flreneed Transfers"
(~)

88.2:8200
•
Lundy Brown James An,dersan
Directors

..........

CI'IMIII l'lft

W

aLways &amp;

Sift Sfiop
518 E. Mltln St.

Pomeroy, OH

•

~==~~==~--!99~2~-1~16~1--J .

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ~ther sign baseball is
unlikely to eliminate any teams
this y=, the Minnesota 1\vins
~ailed a news conference for
. .friday to announce their new
..Nnager, with Ron Garden~
~re expet ted to get _the job.

lp

~Forever

'

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COLUMBUS (AP) -The
second of eight weekly state
wrestling polls fq~&amp;&gt; 2002, as
compiled by the Ohio High
School w ·restling ·Coaches •
'Association:
DIVISION I - I, Lakewood St,
,Edward (4) 40; 2, Maaalllon Peny

16; 4, Dena 13; 5, Sycamore
Mohawk 12; 6, Seachwood 11; Cln.
Reading '11; Vertallles 11; Cln,
Madeira 11; 10, GrandvleW'Hta. 10

FLOWER

•Lit Ul Mnd yaut tfloujhtl with ~1.111 -.•

740-892·2844

NewYottc 108, Dllali101,0T
Houstln 99, Detroit '17

DIVISION Ill - 1, Bedford Chanel
(3) 30; 2, CVCA 18; :i, MartiRe Feny

SErvicE &amp;
137~c N~ 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

P...e· p

nes. are No.1!

•

\Miami Wins fifth Associated ·Press title.
•

RL 7
B~-Puo
Pootor: Rev. -E. Smith. Sr.

Na•••iN

WATERFORU -· In their first
game of 2002, the Eastern Lady Eagles
were ousted by the Waterford Wildcats ·
40•33,
The Eagles went scoreless the entire
first quarter and. early
foul trouble added to
11
the Eagle worrtes.
However, · the Eagles
scrapped their way ·back into the game
and led by seven points going into '!he
fourth quarter. The Wildcats produced a
20-point fourth quarter as opposed to
the Eagle six points.
Waterford jumped to an early 4-0
lead witb buckets by Fulmore and
McCutchen with six minutes remaining
In the first period. Eastern made seve.ral
attempts f1:9m underneath the bucket,
but could not manage a point. The
Eagles' scoring . drought cdntinued
throughout the first quarter, and Waterford soon mounted a 10-point lead.
The Eagles did not give up and were
soon back in ths ball game. Whitney
Karr broke the ice for the Eagles, with a
kiss off the glass at the 7:30 mark of the
· second quarter. While the Eagles were
getting ready to strike offensively, the
defense was able to stymie Waterford to
seven second-quarter points. Stacie WatIN THE OPEN - Miami's James Lewis carries a pass interception for a 42-yard touchdown against Nebraska
·. son earned her first points of the game
In the second quarter of the 88th Rose Bowl Thursday. (AP)
•·
from the foul line, putting the Eagles
within closer reach of the 10-4 deficit
..
they faced. Sara Mansfield followed up
with a huge three-point goal, making it
a three-point game. Terri Wolfe combined with Watson and Karr on the next
two plays answering the buckets of
Burchett and Smith for Waterford
\'ASADENA, Calif. (AP) including a 39-yarder for a touchWith :53 left, the Eagles' Katie
Ten yean after the Miami Hurri-'
down,. and safety james Lewis
Robertson dre:w her fourth personal
caries last rtlltd the college foot"-·
took. an interception 47 yards for
foul and forced Coach Brannon to pull
ball world and a year after being
a TD as the Hurricanes finished a
her from 'the action.
frozen out of the title
perfect season with a
'~Katie is "a great asset to our team
game, they are · No. 1
near-perfect
perforoffensively and. defensively, sometimes
again. ·
mance.
she gets· overaggressive and tries to
Miami left no doubt at
''If you have any · more
block every shot. It really hurt us not
.
•
12
0"
the Rose Bowl, opening
questions, we re
- ,
having her. in there to reb,ound and play
a .34-point lead in the first ·
Miami's.AII-American safety .
defense in the second half, quoted Eagle
half against Nebraska on the
Ed Reed said. "There's a lot
Coach Paul Brat:tnon.
way to a 37-14 victory Thurs- '
of people saying they should be
One-of-two efforts at the foul line by.
day night.
Ken
here. Jf they _were, they would have
Terri Wolfe and Jess Dillon made. it a
Even the Cornhuskers Vj'~re Dorsey threw for a career-best 362 gotten the same· treatment."
five-point game at half-time. .
impressed.
yards and three touchdowns, sharing
In winning ,its fifth national title
The Eagles came out screaming in the
"I think anyone would have . the MVP award with Andre John- - third at the expense of Nebraska
third quarter. Sara Mansfield drained her
struggled with them the way tl).ey · son, who had seven catches for 199
Miami defeated the Huskers
second three-point goal .on the night
played," Nebraska coach Frank yards.
.
.
·
PluH- hstem. BJ
Solich said.
Clinton Portis ran for I 04 yards,
Pleaa - ·canes, B:S

'n1lndly't GIINI
OakAit 114, Goldan Sial&amp; 102

"

Mulberry 1111. Rd.. Pomemy
Putor. Roy Lawinsky •

SWTexas67, Nlcihols St. 58
s. J:bJJIUlSt 78. M:t~~eeeB St 75.
T8ltBit-San Anlc!io 75, SE La. 54
Boiite St. 61, San Jcae St. 52
Cal Poly-SLO 61,Utah St. 58
Fre&amp;OO St PU, Rica 61 .
1\Aontaiia St 84, Wfbelr St. 62
New Melclco St 77, New OtteMs 62
Sac. St. 82. T&amp;Xal A&amp;I\A-C.C. 69
TIJsa 76, Nevada 58
UC IM1e 58, Cll St.-Fulerkln 58
UC Rillantlde 73, Long Beach St PU
lie Santa Balbara 76, Idaho 53 .

or

SynciJoe f1m United Pnobjttrtu
PaSkJr; Rev. Kriunl RohiniOft
Sunday School· IO·a.m.
Worship· IJ. a:.m.

-----------------~~~;;;;~~~~~~;;~~==:-~~~~~~;~:~::-=~~=--:~::=-:-~::-:-:~:-~=-~~~--~~--------------------~

DaYle-Quickel Agency
INSURANCE
Full line Of
Insurance
1

·'

Pm-llolA-biJ
St. Rt. 124, Racint

Voi... PIId!Chtll'tb

.....,.,

WOnh.ip - 9 a.m. .
Sundoy School · IOun.
Tbunday Service• ~ .7 p.m.

Pasoor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School9:30 wn
Sunday evenina service 6 pm
Wednesday ·IJa'Vicc 1 pm

ML 011" Cammualty Clourdl
Pu&amp;or: Lawrenee Bueh
Sundoy S~l· 9;30 Lni.
EveniiiJ - 7 p.m/
WeclrteQy Service • 7 p.m.

· ·Sunday Sci&gt;aal· 9:30 o.m.
Wanhlp. 10:30 L!ft.; 6•30 p.m.
Wednetday Servlcoo - 7 p.m.
Pui«:AUenM!cbp

a..t.r

~Community Chu.reh
.Ueving Road, West Columbia; W.Va.

•

NCAA Min'• Bakltb.lll
Thul'ldlly'a 11111111
_Colgate 102, Bethany, W.Va. 71
Delaware 51, Jlimes 1\Aadison 50
Qrexel 84, Va. Commonwealth 73
Faitfleld 77, Cenlsius 69
G. Waal i ~ 192, St BortiMirUe 86
Hofiill a 67, Old Dominion 58
,Sacred Heart 77, Robett Motris 69 •
Siena 79, lona 70, OT
Wapf81, St. Fl'llllCis, Pa. 60
Centenaty 73, Texas A&amp;IIA 63
Geotge 1\Aason 60. Wm. &amp; Maty 71
High Point 93, Cov!11111nt 60
Loulslana.J.afayatta 75, S. Ala. 54
J.latyland 92, Nodolk St. 69
.
Motellelr:l St 92, Tela em a St 72
Munay St 90, Tem:--Martin 76
Stejlllll!l FAustin 73,.tfN St. 86
T!llneme Tedl90, E. Kentucky 51 .
'E!Owllng G11181182, C. Michigan 81
lH.'Chlcago 82, Detroit 61
lnd.·Pur.-1~. eo; S. Utah PU
Loyoia, Q1ioago PU, Cle-veltlld,St 63
ClakiMd. t.tcti. 811. Chk;qgo st 77
Ark-lillie ~· 84)·Notlh 1liJcas 74 .·..
~St. 78, benvar 58
Hawaii 70, UTEP 58

.Sunda.y School- 9: ~ a.m.

Putar: lilian M\doap

J '

McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Putor: Wayne Balcolm
ServiccJ: Thw-s. Niles 7:00 pm
New church No Sunday ~~en-ice
• established.

ton,a- ·

'

:If._ Lm.

MJddaip.n ClniM ot e111t

3166~

1'11111 a..J Cloun:h

'\.it .I I I I ll

Pulor. Jane Beattie

S-llnt Clourdo oiGod

"

Miami 37, Nebraska 14

.

God~o Temple of Proloe

Off Rt. I;!A
Puto&lt;; Bdlel Htut·
SundAy School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

I

~Cio·
Co. Rd. 63

Sundoy School·

NCAA Footb.lll
Thuncllty'l Olmt
RO.Ibowl Bowl
At Pill~

Full Goopel Church ollbe Uvlna
Snlor
Rt.J38, Anliquity
Pasror. Jeuc: MorTis

SWNS.y Khool- 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • I I o.m.
Wednotd+y Service - 7 p.m.

\
He •• s &amp;a.-..
•
Gnnd ·llii-Suoday School· 10 a.ni.
Wanhip • II a.m.
w.ctnaoday Servicet - 8 p.D).

' OIHI4 behllld WIIUovllle
P1110r: Rev. Ralph Spira ·
SWidly School - 9:30 o.m, '
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
n.unday Servlc&lt;t . 7 p.m.

'' '

New Life VIctory Ceoter
3771 CJeorses Creet Rood, Gallipalls, OH
Pas1or. DiU Slaten
Sunday Serw:icca • 10 a.m. A-7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;. Youlh-,7 p.m.

Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

BY JoN.WILL
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Gallia Academy 84, Marietta 23
Rock Hill 58, Chesal)eake 44
Jackson 41, Logan 36
Vinton Co. 58, Belpre 51
Nelsonville·York 60, Meigs 48
Southem 83, Miller 41
·S. Webster 63, Green 42
Warren 67, Point Pl11888nt 41
Waterford 40, Eastem 33

CliftOD, W;Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Mot.a..,otc-..a

letboiChurc:ll
Tawnohlp Rd., -t68C
Sundoy School - 9 o.m.
Wonh!p • 10 a.m. '
Wldneodly Scrvicot ·10 o.m.

Sun4oy Scliool - 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

( ' h11 rrh ol ( .od

-c-....,

Coal&gt;lle Ualted Mttbodloi l'lrlob
Pu10r: Helen Kline
Coolville Chun:b, 1
Moln .t Flfth St.
Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Wonh.ip-9a.m. '
Tuelday Services - 1 p.m.

SL ..... Lathe,.. Chtudl
Cornu Sy~ A SccOod St., Pomeroy

Prep Batblbltll
Thul'ldlly't Glimw
Girl•
iltlelWlder 38, Wellston 38
Athena 43, RiVer Valley 33
Fed. Hocking 59, Trimble 38

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Putor: Rev. Black~
St.~nday School · 9:30 a.m.
· Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

603 Socand Ave. Malan

Waterford

~-.

'.

Col....,. lillie Cluudl

s,.,....eMlooloa

.Putot: Briaa Hukneu

Worihip . 9:00a.m. "
Sunday School·· 10:00 a.m.

Pulor.Jim HuJ:be•

Wcdne~y Servicet_• 7 p.m.

Letan. W.VI. Rt. I
Po-.BriooMoy
Suhday School-.9:30 Lm.
Wonhlp • 7:00p.m.
Wcdneodly Bible Soudy ·7:00p.m.

foltb ·-·~""c.....
Putor: Rev. Fnnklin DickenJ
Service; Friday, 1 p.m.

773-3017
Sen-Ice time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedneodly7pm

falls·to

·--Ch-

1411 8rkf&amp;eman St., Syracu~e
Rev. Mike Thomplon,PutoiSundoy School - 10 o.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wodnaday Sm'icc • 7 p.m.:

Roo:lDO

Page"Bl
Frlcl.y. ••••ny 4. 2102

Eastern

(\

.

Sundoy School- 10 u~{
Worship - 9 a.m. :1
Wednesday • 7 p.m. ''

SL Jal10 Lulhmut Ckurth
PiacOrove

Sunday School · II a.m.
Woi1hlp • 9;30 a.m., 7:30 p.rn.
Wednnday Scrvicea- 7:30p.m.

Ravt111wood, WV

Swlday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
-p·I0;30LII.,6:30p.m.
- - . - - 7 p.m.

MkWieport c--otty Cloardo
575 Peod St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoOIJO a.m.
EveniJ'II- 7:30p.m.
Wodnefllay ~rvlc, · , 7;30 p.m.
foltb Vllloy Tohemacle Churdl
Bailey Run Road
PuiOr: Rev. l!mmeU Rawson
' Sunday Evenia.a 7 p.m.
'J'hurJday Service • 7 p.m.

'

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HIGHLIGHTS

W...,sday • 7 p.m.

1
MorW•saar
Pu10t: Dewayne Stutler. ,
~ Sllndi)Ls..l .:. 8 1a.m.
Wonbip • 10 a.m.

Sacrament Service 9-10: 1.! a.m.
Homematin&amp; meet1nJ, llt1bun.- 7 p.m.

Hartford, W.Va.

S«aodllopdot Chun:lt

--a....JotfllloRev. s-1 W. B•yc

Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.

WonhiR,;-10:4~ a.m.
BU&gt;~ Study Wed. 7•00 p.m.

lllr!ot oll.ollcr-Day Sololl
Sr. Rt. 160, 44&amp;-6247 'or 446-7486
Sunday SchoOl 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Saciety/Prieathood ll :Ol-12•00'

w..,.. .

.. l.'llopol

Coolville Rood
..._Rev. PlliltipSWidly School • 9::10 Lm.
Worahlp- 10:30 •.m.
Wodnc1411y Sttvket- 7 p.m.

.

Racine, Ohio
PutoJ: Dewaync StuUCJ
Sllftday' School· 9:30a.m.

n. Churtb ol J -

Llnpoille Clufodon Churth
Pu1or: Robcn MuM
SundaY School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Rullo,.. Cbu,.. ol God
Puwr: Ron Hath
Sunday WonhiP- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.

_

. Hanloon..tlle Commulllty Churtb
Paator: Theron Dwlwn

CarmelA 11u1w1 Rda.

Hartranl'i\\•rdo ol Chrlot Ia
Ch-Vnloa

Salem St.
Pur.or: Rev. Paul Taylor .
·sulKily Scbool - 10 Lnt
Evenlna • 7 p.m.'
Wcdnclday Service1 - 7 p.m..

·fl.'
'·1

Carmei.Suttoll

Daily Seritinel

frun.A.v's

Wonloipo 7 p.m.

.s-lay Sdtool· 9:30 a.m.
-,.tto.m.,6p.m.
w l llly5crvk:a-7p.m.

The BdeYen' feiiDWiblp MIDIIiry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev.·Miraaret l. Robinson
Servicet: Wedncsd.y, 7:30p.m. ·
Sundo~. 2:30p.m. ·

Putor; Dewaync StuUer
Sunday School • I 0 +;ji\i;

Ll ..... CIIIIFJ&lt;e Metbodlot Churtb
Putor: Donald Balla
· Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m. and6p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.

'·\

R u - fno Wllllaptlot

._Willford

,..,_ -..t- 9:l0Lm.

l.onJBOitom
Paator: Sttve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woi-ahip. 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
WC&lt;lnelday. 7 p.m.
Friday · foliowlhip service 1 p.m.

Sunday School • 10 ..,..
Wonhip •.9 ••m.

-

••
•

-~ .. c..Rd.31

• . Chtll'tb
Folth l!ull G

S.O...Oie

Rev. Mark Michael
· Sunday SchooJ - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:.4!'i a.m., 1 p.m.
ThurMLay Bible Srudy and Youth. 1 p.m.

Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.M.
Wanhip:.l0!30 Lm. and 6:30p.m.
Wcdnoodly Blblo Study - 7 p.m.

'

·-c:..,.ol-Rev.

~CIIordtti
.N
_
..._ .
_
IJnle •

AbuadantG,_JI,II.L '
923 S. 1blnl St., Middleport
Putor 'lere!lll Davia (
Sunday tcrvice, 10 a.m.
Wcdnaday aervicc, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wanhip- 10:30 u•.
Thunday Servlceo "jf ,p.m. ·

...,._

I

Appe Ll!e Cenltr
· . "Full-Oatpcl Chun:h"
Puton John 4 Patty Wade

' RockSp...,

..

(

Pine Grofe Bible HollaeN O.arcb
1f2mileoffRL32ji
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10!30 am., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Comer of St. Rt 124 &amp;'Bndbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Strnflblin
YoUm Minister: Bill Ainbcraer
Sundfl;y School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

d

. _...,...._

•

Sd.....tlle c-n.uaJty Churdo
Putor: Wayoe R. Jewell
~ Strwt Clludl
Sundly Servieea- JO:OO a.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m. ,
AJb 51., Middleport- Putor: Olenn Rowe
Th.unday _ 7:00 P..m.
Sunday Sthoot • 10:00 a.m.
· ·
•
,.
Suaday Service - fi:OO 'p.m.
Rt,Joldna Life Chuldl
Wednesday Scrvke • 7:00p.m.
.500 N. 2nd Ave.. Middleport
'
PUtor: Mike Foreman
llantlt Ouu.cb M1allltritl
Putor: Emeritui Lawrence Foreman
47439 Reibel Rd. Chester
Wixlbip- 10:00 am
Pulon: Rev. Miry ODd Hlrokl Coot
Wcdneidoy Servi&lt;et • 7 f.m: .
Sundly Smicu: 10 a.m. A 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senoloea,- 7 p.m.
, CUIIoo Tobentode Cburtb

MIMmllk

RooeofSboron H-CIIordo
Lcadin1 Cmdl: Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Dewey King '

Churth ol Chrlol
124 W
Evanpli11i Dennil Saraent ·

, Aatlopdty Bopdtt
Suncloy School · 9:30a.m.
Wanhlp. 10:45i.m.
Sunday Evenina - 6:00p.m.
Putu: Mult McComu

I

Puror: Rob Browr
Swxlly School-9:30a.m.
Worship- II :00 a.m.

lnU~I'IeCtion 1 and

Foratlbm Baptist
'· Putor: Ariu.s Hun
~ Sunday School · lOa.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

MLMCirlab ..ptj,t
Faunh .t Moin Sl., Middleport
Putot: Rev. Oilbett CralJ, Jr.
Sundoy School - 9o30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:4~ a.m.

H,.tb~rt)

Qold, •

._____

Woabip- 1&amp;.30 ....
No luadly OJ T.
hy JlliPf Semce;J

c-ulty ol Clorlot
Purtlord-Rodne Rd.
Putor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School· ~:30 a.m.
Wpnllip • 10:30 Lm.
Q: ~wednetday Setvi~ -7:00 p.m.

Putor: Bob Robinoon
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Sunday Schooi9:3Q Lm.
Worship . II a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Dnter Chu,.. ol Chrlol
Pa1tar: Nathan Robinson
Sunday IChool 9:30a.m. ·
Nonnan"Will, supcrimendenl
· Sunday wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

52' N. 2nd St. MiddlepOrt
Pastor: James E. Kee~~ee
Worship - IOa.m.. 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Set\'ices -7'p.m.

Putor: Bob RobilliCXI
Suaday Sc:hool - 10 •.m..
Wonhl,p • 9 a.m.

cot • ..,. Pllplon a..pot
HarriJOnviUe Road
Putor: Charlel McKenzie

Reedmlle Churth oiCbr!ot
· Pastor: Philip Stwm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Vlctery Boptlot ..............

-

~
s..dly Sdlool- 9:30 ....

MonUD&amp;Wonllip • 10:4lo.m.
Suaday Service ~ 6:30p.m.

IF--

Don.W.- Churth
Swe Route 32ji, Lanasvlle
Paator: G..-y JacksoD
Sunday school - 9i30 a:m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m, .t: 1 p.m.
Wednelday prt)'ef servke - 7 p.m.

Bredl'ord Church of Chrilt

- - Boplilt Cbu«h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH'

Flo-

310~7

Rud"!'d Churdl ol Chr!ot
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 a.m;, 1 p.m.

Mt. Vaiun Baptllt
Pastor : David Wiseman
• Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
Evcnina: ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 6:30p.m.

•

Putor: AI Haft100
Youlh Mlnisttr: Bill Frazier
Sunday SchOOl • 9:30a.m.
Worship: 8:1S, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvk:e~-7~p.m .

Brodbury Cburtb or a.rtot
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39ll8 Bradbury Road, Middlepan
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Sliver Run BaptiJt
Pastor: Juhh SwMsun
Sunday School · IOa.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea-7:00 p.m.

US a.rc:.tla.P'

fwd'ewd P'lnl Qlld eltM NlltiiDO
Puloc William Juais
• S-y S&lt;hooi·IO:OO a.m.

Wonhip- 9 a.m.

v,•...__ Rood

__

SwldQ Scbool· 9:30 .....

,_

lnJtrumental
Worship Service • 9a.m.
Communion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10: U a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sundily
Dible Study Wednesday 7 pm

PllStor: Rick Rule
Sunday Sl.:hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdncsday.Scrvices - 7:00p.m.

-...

r

'Buckeyes looleforwanl, Algt B4
·College and pro hocps, Page B6

~e
.

.

~V...

Wonbip • II '&amp;m.

lltppers I'Wo Churtb of Chrlol

Rodne t'1nt Boplilt

Eaktpalw
Putor: Keith bdcr .,
Sunday Sebool· 10 a.m.

lllllt
Main Stft!Ct, Rutland
Sunday W9f11Up-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servic~7 p.m.

Putor:Tmy Stewart
Sundily School -9:30 a.in.
Worsltip - IO:JO·a.ffi .. 6:30p.m.
wednesday Servi&lt;:es. 6:30p.m.

Ftnt Soutllem Baptilt
41872 POmeroy Pike

Sunday School- 9:4-' a.m.
' Worihlp • 1,1 a.m.
Wedoelday Servk:et· 7:30p.m.

Pu"": Keith Radp
SUtlday Scllaol- IOLm.

Barw...., Rldp Churdl ol Chrlot

Worship- I0:30a.m.

AINy(S_....)
Pu1«: 11o1&gt; Ro!&gt;it-

.

Ken Church til Chrilt
Worship- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10!30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffre'y Wallace
1st and 3i'd Sunday

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:~ a. m.

cM-.t~

'
,.,a.m.

~

Wonlip. 10:30 .:. . . . 6 p.m.
w t -ley Semce. • 7 p.ll.

Wonbip • 10 Llll.
. '1\aaidiy Slnil:lll- 7:30p.m.·

Sun4oy Sc:hool ond
Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Mkldleport Cloardo ol Chrlol
' !'ilh and Main

Rutland Flnt Bapdst Chun!b

'---

326 B. M.Ua St.,~
Rev. James Bemacti, Rev. Katharin Palter

_Sunday Scbwl - 11 a.m.
Worship- IO..m., 6p.m.
Wednoiday Servicca - 7')o.m.

Hope Bopdtt Clourth (Soulbem}
S10 Grant St., Middleport
sUnday 5Chool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - II am. aud6p.m.
Wedneiday Service- 1 p.m.

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

-·-~-.y
Pw«:
Rev.&lt;:roller•
Wonbip 10:25 Lm.
Sundiy 'SdMxJI9:J'ji a.m.

,_..., CINudl ol Clllrlll
:i12 W. M.in St.,
Miniatu: Antbooy M«rit
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-I0:30a.m., 6p.m.
Wedne&amp;dly Servica • 1 p.m.

"""""''
w- Church o1 a.rtot
33226 Childttn'a Home Rd.
....

R1 7 • •
....... '9•!0 .....
Suodi)-·IO::JOLIL
- - , . o1 ilooob ·7:00p.m.-

Suodly-·IOo.m.
Woabip. II ...,,
Wed! d1y S..ioel· 1 p.m.

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-----

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Sui.. -.,.IQ:IOLI!L,6p.m.•,
w t ty s.rnc. • 7 p.a

Solidly- • 9:30 ....
Wunllip · IIUOL11.,6p.IIL
Wrl I Y - · 7P:il.

Wmlip· t0:30o.m.

0

ly-·7p.m.

IIJ-CIIordttllllot'
PIIAor MUle A*ml

s-w SCboul' 9 .....

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lJbaty _...,. ol God
P.O. 80l41&gt;7, Dliddina Lone
M""" W.Vo.

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_ , ldooOI· 9::10 .....

Clooordi tfGooltlft I' '
OJ. Whilo ld. oil 5I. Itt. 160
PMtor: PJ,
£ '

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\'wlllhh 11! ( ,od

Wanhip-9::10UL

....., ldtool• lO;JOa.&amp;

E. . . . S«&lt;iooo 6:30p..,_
Wr t • )I ttnioN. 6:30 p.111.

SoL Con. US.5:1Sp.ll1.;- 5:30p.m.
Sua. Con. -1:4s+.ts a.m.,
Sun. Mua - 9:30 ~.a~.
Doiloy Mala·. 8:30 Lm.

,_c.....

lopoolollo: Palm
.. NewUmaRoild
Swxlly. 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
-730 '

.... Dowtd_

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4.·20Q2

o.Jii~•~P;I;;i.Bob;;'ia.......,.::;;ii:j;-----~Woo;;~;:.7,1 o,;..•~,:.....
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s..diJ S . . - WcriWp. JO l.a

by 7 p,ISL

' 161'hTh
--~Qua
oey Ave., '-'&gt;y, 992·51911

Sdlool· IO:Jd LDL
...... . 7::10p.m.

•

¥' $

AR*_. 1ooooo1 Su.

~
,lm

frlcleY·

•

NEW YORK (AP) - There's no
debate. Miami is No. I. ·
·
The Hurricanes ended talk of a split
national. championship, completing a
perfect season to win their fifth
national title and first in 10 ye~
unanimously.
!,;,
, Miami (12-0) received all 72 firstplace 'votes in the final, post-bowl
Associated Press poll of sports writers
and broadcasters early Friday morning.
to_ earn 1,800 points.
The Hurricanes finished the seasort
as the nation's only major unbeaten
team with a 37-14 victory" over
Nebraska in the Rose Bowl onThurs-

day night. .
"It's an unbelievable honor," Miami
coach Larry Coker said. "It's tremendously gratifying to be around such
great players, to be able to coach kids
at such a high level."
Coker joined Michigan's Bennie
Oosterbaan (1948) "as the· only firstyear head coacpes to win a national
·title.
A Nebraska win in the Rose Bowl
might have created the fourth split
title since 1990. The Cornhuskers
would have automatically been
crowned the champion of the USA
Today-ESPN coaches' poll, but Ore-

N-York d'rops Meigs

gon would have had a shot at being
the AP winner, which is selected
independently.
"I just would have liked to have a
shot," Ducks quarterback Joey Harringt&lt;5n said.
Oregon, which beat. Colorado 3816 in the Fiesta Bowl, finished !'if?, 2
in .the AP poll - its highest i-ankT'ng
ever. Florida was third, followed by
Tennessee and Texa.1. The coaches had
. the same Top Five as the AP.
Nebraska feU from No. 4 to No. 8,
behind Oklahoma and"LSU. Colorado
and Washington State rounded out the
Top 10.
·

BY ScoTT WOLFE

'

..

"

PIHH ... MIIp.I!IJ ,

Pluse see 11tle; BJ

Southern moves to

BY JtM Soui.SaY
SENTINEL CORfU;SPONDENT
ROCK SPRINGS - The Nelsonville Lady Buckeyes
came to Meigs High School Thursday night sporting a perfect 6-0 record, and thanks to a 19:f run in the second
quarter and a 10- 1 run to finish the gMne, posced a 60-48
win over the Meigs Lady Marauders-to stay perfect on the
season.
'
·,..
·.
·
'
The Buckeyes pla'ced four players in double digits and
out-rebounded Meigs 41-28 as they won the hard-fought
contest. Meigs committed 23 costly turnovers in the disappointing setback.
; ·
The Marauders start~d slowly as thejl~nnected on only
one of their·fint eight shots, but the Bu,!:keyes were havingshooting woes of their own and by virtue of a Samantha
Pierce bucket and a Linci"!y Bolin free th!&lt;&gt;{., the Marauders led 3-2 at the 6:04 mark. Junior forwartl Shannon Sbuls-

Coket; took over for Butch Davis
after the Hurricanes finished No. i
last season. The Hurricanes started the
season ranked ·No. 2 a~d moved into
the No. I spot for good on Oct. 6
when Florida lost to Auburn .
The dtle completes Miami's return
to prominence. The Hurricanes finished with a 5-6 record as recently as
1997, 'but Davis rebuilt the team ·
before leaving to coach the Cleveland
Browns.
•Coker took over and moved Miami
into fourth place for the m~st AP

S6NTINEL CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK - Again paced by a balanced
scoring attack that utilized twelve players,
Southern went to its bench early in posting a
63-41 Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division win over the Miller Falcons in Dunlap
gymnasium Thursday night.
Southern, 8-1, 3-1 moves into a. seconq
place tie with Federal Hocking behind league
leading Waterford (4-G).
Miller drops to 1-7, 0-4.
Southern placed nine people in the scoring
colilmn led .by a pair of sophomore sharpshooters; Katie Sayre, who tossed in 13 points
and also le.d the team in ste:ils with eight, and
sophomore Ashley Dunn who netted ten
points and grabbed seven rebounds.
That duo was followed by a trio of nine

'

a~ 1

point games from Rachel Chapman, Brigette
Barnes, and Amy Lee. Freshmen Brooke
Kiser and Joanne Pickens each Added four
apiece, Susan Brauer three, and Deana Pullins
two.
Miller was led by Ashley Hinkle with 16
points, while Samantha Britton added twelve •
in two fine individual performances. Emily
Winnenburg, Malarie Altier, Amanda
Spencer, and Amanda Gill rounded out' the
.scoring with Jour, four, three. and, two point
efforts.
Soudarn ·went up 7-0 on a tremendous ·
surge from junior swing-guard Brigette
Barnes, who penetrated fwice off the: dribble,
then tossed in 3-4 free throws to start the;,
game. Hinkle hit a three to cut into South~

PluH ... Soulhern. B4

'

�,.
-

.

•

Pomerpy, Middleport, Ohio

c

Frtday, .J8n. 4,

'C!ttibune-· Sentinel~ l\e
L - a·-. s s 1 P 1 E D
·~ .

.,.Redmen stave.off
CedarviJie·in OT

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One

In one week With us

..

-t:.
.

(304) 675-1333
~····

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In Memory of
ARDIT11
BARTON
who passed

the perfect
Job ...

116
.
1

IIELPWoom

Need help
paying for

Daily
·Sentinel ·
Classifieds

992·2156

·xMAS.
lillll dille IIIPI oad
parl·dllle day pooldoao
available. E.m rr$6.00 to $7.00 par .......
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nt.l315 to odlodlllt
OD

IJtiA!nlow,

away Ten Years
ago today 1-4·92.
Our lo11 II
Heaun ~ Cain.
Gon.Bu1No1
Fo,.,.,llen.

Sadly mi$Sed by
Faml!

NOW

HIRING

BTHBLORR

$6·$8
Per Hour

thank you to all
who have
remembered her
throughout the
year-and at
Christmas with
cards, vlslls and

Full/Part Time
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1-888 1174-JOBS

CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio is seeking an
exjJartencad consumer (fan Offlcar for Its
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be computar lilarate and possQss good
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ATTN: Hu11111n Reaoun:ea Dlractor

expresses a

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Year ruu or peace
and happiness.

"'

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Northvlew Senior

Living center
267 N. Main St.
Johnstown, Oh
43031

th CJ

u, rom •

111

JfJ d

e•
.,

fORKEDilUD
SPORTSIIUID CLUB
lfllmT SlfOOT
fwJimUJeng

Slla•av. .1111. 6

.Mondays and Thursdays
. 6:30- 7:30 pm
Baginnlng Jan. 7th
Riverside Golf Course
Instructor·

with six minutes remaining. Eastern now trailed by
four points . Sandy Powell
followed suit by draining
her own goal from behind
the . arc, making it a onepoint ball game.
Mansfield connected with
Watson for an assist to put
th.e Eagles up by one with
3:40 remaining in the third
quarter. The Eagles no":
possessed the lead for the
first time all evening. Watson found an open Alyssa
Holter who pushed the
Eagles up another two
clicks 23-20. At the end of
the third quarter, Holter
made a steal and lay-'up to
give the Eagles their biggest
lead yet, 27-40 . ___ __
Little did . the Eagles ·
know, that the Wildcats
were not going down without a fight . The fierce Lady
'Cats fought their way back
with four straight points to
start the fourth period.
. Meanwhile the Eagles failed
. to convert the next possession by missing five consecutive attempts. Waterford
W•l•rfard 'J• Eeltern
•
'finally grabbed the ball and Waterford
tO 7 ' · 3
"20 - 40
sent Jeconda Smith barrel- ·EaStern 0 12 15 · 6 - 33
EASTERN - Alyas• Holler 2 0·0 4,
ing do).Vn the floor to tie up Whitney
Karr 2 1· 2 5, Sara Mansfield 2
the game 27-all with 5:15 0·0 6, Sandy Powell 1 0.0 3, Jessica
Dillon 0 1·2 1, Stacie Watson 4 2·2 10,
left to play. .
Terri Wolfe 2 0· 1 4. TOTALS 13 4·7 33
Terri Wolfe added two 'for, WATERFORD - Joanna Burchett 2 0·
0 4, Mallory McCutchen 1 0·0 2, Jecon·
the Eagle cause to regain da Smith 5 2·7 12, Heather Fulmore 4
the lead, but thal was the 3·4 t 1 , Alicia Paten ·a 1·3 1, Cassie
Mckown 3,3·610. TOTALS 15 9·20 40
last the Eagles saw of the Rebounds- Eastern 31(Holter 8)
lead that night. Waterford Assists - Eastern 9 ( Wolfe, Holter 3)
Turnovers - Eastern 13
crashed the bqards hard and St8als - Eastem 8(Wolte, Holler 2)

Tdle
from Page B1
championships ever. trailing
onty · Alabama (six), Okla- The.Top Twenty Five teams In The AssoPress lil'lS'I college football poll, with
homa (seven) and Notre ciated
tirsl·place votes in parentheses, final
. Dame (eight).The Hurricanes records, total points based on 25 pointS
also won titles in 1983, '87, fot a first place vote through one point for
a 25th place vote and previous ranking:
'89 and '91.
Maryland, which lost the
Aac:ord l'ta Pvl
12.0 1,800
1
. Orange Bowl 56-23 to Flori- 1. Mlamt (72)
.
tt·t
t,725
2
2.
Oregol"!
da, finished 11th, followed by 3. Rorido
10·2 1,611
5
IDinois, South Carolina, Syra- 4. Tennessee
tH t,58f
a
5. Texas
11·2 t,374 9
c~e ·and Florida State.
11·2 1,373 10
The Seminoles' sueak of 14 6. Oldllhoma
10.3 t,350 . t2
7. LSU
straight Top Five seasons 8. Nebraska
11-2 t ,348
4
1().3 f ,335 3
ended .with their lowest finish 9. CoiOfB.dO
since being unranked 'in the 10. Wuhington Sl. 10·2 t,074 13
11 . Maryland
t0·2 1,065 6
final poll in 1986.
12. Illinois
10·2 t ,045
7
9-3 975
14
Stanford, Louisville, Virginia 13. South carolina'
1().3 656 16
Tech, Washington, Michigan, 14. Syracuse
t 5. Florida Sl.
~
686
24
Boston College, Georgia, 16. Stanford
9-3 673
tt
Toledo, Georgia Tech . and 17. LrxJ!sville
11·2 621 23
8-4 437 15
BYU were the final I 0 teams. 18. VIrginia Tech
8-4 414
21""
19. Washington
Boston College and Geor- 20. Michigan
8-4 325 t7
gia Tech moved into the final 21. Boston College
8-4 3t6
22.
Georgia
8-4 277 . t6
poll after bowl wins, while
t()o2 237 25
23. Toledo
Ohio State and Fresno State 24. Georgia Tech
8-5 176
dropped out after bowl losses. 25. BYU
12·2 144 19
The Southeastern Conferreceiving votes: Marshall 117,
ence led the way with five Others
Fresno St. 104, Hawaii 95, Ohio St. 59,
teams in the Top 25, while the North Carolina 56, Texas A&amp;M 41, Mlchi·
Big East, Pac-1 0 and Big 12 gan St. 37, Ar1cansas 31, Clemson 9, Utah
9, Mississippi 6, Alabama 4, 'Pittsburgh 4,
all had four.
•
UCLA 4, Iowa 1.

Canes
'

PO Box 626 Pom.roy, Ohio 45789

Cost, $6.00
The publiC le walcome.

.........

though the Hurricanes beat the opened the scoring with a 49-yard
·Seminoles.
TD pass to Johnson, then found him
,..
So Miami went out and finished as for an 8-yard TD with about 3 I / 2
the nation's only major unbeaten minutes left in the- .half. Between
from PageB1
"'
team.
those TD passes, Portis had his TD
· on N ov. 23 .
"The entire team deserves · to be
a 6· '2- 36 wm
run, Lewis returned his interception
The 'Canes, who take a 22-game MVP," Dorsey said. "Qur defense
winning streak into next season, stepped up to the challenge and did a and _Dorsey hit tight end Jeremy
manhandled the Huskers. They held great job. Our offensi've line, Shockey on a 21-yard TD pass - all
the nation's leading rushing· offense receivers, everybody did a great job in 3,:53 .
And just like that, Miami made the
to 197 yards on the ground and just against a great team."
259 total yards - nearly . 200 yards
Johnson added: "I felt like I had 53-year-old Coker only the second
undet,Nebraska's average.
·
,s omething to prove, so I brought my coach to win a national title in his
The ~ssociated Press poll of sports · 'A' game."
· rookie season. Michigan 's Bennie
writers and broadcasters voted Miami
The stunned Huskers, beaten .62-36 Oosterbaan did it in 1948.
No. 1 ''!nanimously, giving the Hurri- . by · Colorado in their previous 'game,
Crouch ran 22 times for 114 yards.
canes ' their first tide sine!' the 1991 · had no answer for Miami's speed and
and
lost a fumble, and completed five
season.,.
ferocious defense. The lopsided' score
Miami picked up the trophy award- raised even more questions about of 15 passes for 62 yards with . an
ed by tlie USA Today-ESPN coaches' whether Nejmska belonged in the interception.
The· Huskers finally SfOred on Judd
poll following the game.
:OCS title game.
,........ .
Oregon (11-1), a ,38-16 winner
"We didn't play well enough to Davies' ·16-yard run with 2:39 left in ·
over Colorado in the Fiesta Bowl on make it a competitive game in the •the third quarter, and DeJuan Groce
Monday, finished second . in both end or in the first half," Solich said. added a.71-yard punt return for a TD
polls .. Nebras~a (1 t-2) dropped four "!;'rom that end of it, it certainly was- early in the fourth period. •
places ~tid finished No. 8 in the final n't the matchup everyboqy dreamed
· Although Huskers fan1 made up
AP poll,, and seventh in the coaches of."
.
.
most of t]le ' crowd of 93,781, it was
poll. . .
.
.
. ~e~ra~ka and tts Heum.an Trophy"Thec 'nly thing I'd be dtsappomt- . wmmng quarterback, Ettc Crouch, the 20,000 or so o~ange-clad Miami
ed in rs:·~hat we dldn'~ get a shot," promised ~~ere would not be a repeat fans who did most of the cheering.
Crouch picked a bad time for one
Oregon q,uarterback Joey Harrington of the pmful performance agamst
said after watching the game in Colorado. They were wrong, u":ahle of the worst games of his record-setPhoenix. "You. caq speculate all you to do much agamst the Mtamt · ting career. Miami's d.efense swarmed
want, but I know we have a very defense until the game was already the option ~nd rarely gave him room
good foofball team.''
. . o~.t of re.a ch.
to run as Nebraska lost two games in
We talk about talent .all along, but a row for the first time since 1990 .
Before the season started, M1~m1
players vowed they WO!lldn 't allow the thins,, tha_t se.t tha team . apart is • "We turned the ball over, and that's
the comp1,1ter-driven BCS standings character, Mtamt coach La_r ry Coker
what killed ' us," Crouch said. "'We
to determine their bowl fate. In said. "They refused to give m, refused
2000 Florida State was chosen over to flinch, and they got the job done knew Miami was that type of
defense, they live oft tu movers. We ·
Mia~i to play Oklahoma in the DCS week in and week out."
title gam~ · at the Orange Bowl even
Douey, now 26-1 as a starter, .. got dow? too far."

Farmers Bank Ia an Equal Houolng Lender
Member FPIC and an Equal CJ.pporlunlly

The Racine American Legion ·
"602" will be having a
• Staak &amp; Noodle Dinner
Jan. 6, !1:00am

Eastem
,.
,

soon ted by two p'oints_
With time ticking dow.i.
the Eagles were forced w
foul in attempt to regain
possession of the ball. Casste
McKown hit four key fool
shots to make the g:i_me a ;6
point
two · posseSSion
spread. The next few de!perate Eagle. attempts we~e
off the mark. and Watetford
went on to defeat tile
Eagles 40-33. ·
.
' "We played a' very good .
·ball game in s·everal different ways , tonight. Our
offense was very patien~.
aild we made several goo:d
looks to the basket an:d
were able to score from 'lll
areas of the c_ourt," said.
Brannon.
· ·
"We couldn't buy a buc~­
et in the first quarter an,d
that hurt us. But, we
bounced back, and · even
.took a seven 'point lead. ~e
played hard and have nodiing to be ashamed of," said
Brannon.
·
The loss was the Eagle$'
first loss in the TVC- Hocl(ing Division. Eastern wijl
try to shape up for eros~country
rival
Raci~
Southern. Southern travels
to Eastern Qn Monday.

•

6

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Your LINK to

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'

In Memory

lifetime guar
antee, Local refarences fur:

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Steil Bearno, Pipe - r Mlnlatu10 Donkeys lor Olio. Cell 24 Hro. (740) 446· .
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tor, sewer, garbage,
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APAKIMENfS
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741).
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Rooidontl6r or commercial
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IIIICh. 1 milt on At. 2 N. C:,lan. Ridenour Eloctncal,
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(304)676-18811
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Call (740)246-1 4
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1 Btclroom Apl. Oalllpoila. 0182. F11l Eatlmatoo, lily N; ;,.,..;. work JUio, IIIIi' Oft At 2 N. (304)876-18811
Wotor Paid. san monlh flnanolng, 10 Cllya ~ u 01 tormtr I'IIIIMohol - · Mav 1 lrlaht Wire Tit
plue dopoall.. ~ Pota, Ollh. VIlli Maatar ... rd. Nl, gooellhlpt, (740)111· IIIIW. YHr 'llound Qell¥try
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ordination-supervision

• RIO GRANDE -There is an old adage !hat sometimes
• Its better to be lucky than good. That adage was never'more
true in referring to Rio Crande,r 78-76 overtime win over
Cedarville op Thursday ~ning at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (10-8, 5-0' AMC) committed an unthinkable
27 turnovers and made only 20-of-36 free throws (56 percent) at\d yet still won the game. ·
'·
"'I think our defense was the key:'·Rio head coach Earl
: Thomas. The Redmen held Cedarville (7-9, 2-3 .hMC) to
38 percent (29-of-17) shooting fiom the field, including 8of-42 {19 percent) from three-point land .
Rio jumped out to a 20-8 lead on !he stn;ngth of a t0-2
run. Cedarville stormed back with a 15-2 run, of its own,
to take a 23-22lead.
Rio would led 34-29 at halftime.
• Junior Raridar Luts stepped up with 17 points and five
· rebounds to lead the way for Rio Grande. The former Wellston Colden Rocket nailed a critical uifecta to give the
Redmen a 75-72 lead with 58 seconds remaining in overtime.
.
Jerry Barlow added 15 . points and six rebounds bef~re.
fouling out: Sophomom Jason Beller and Joe .Martin each
scored 11 · points with Martin pulling down 16 rebounds.
Cain Vandall chipped in 10 points and dished out six assists.
Josh Cast led all scorers with 19 points for Cedarville. He
· added six rebounds and swiped five steals. Greg Cuiler tossed
in 15 points off the bench; Jason Weakley scored 13 points,
including a double clutch three that sent the game into the
extra session: while Justin Lower chipped in 10 points.
Rio Grande'was dominating ,on the glass, out-rebounding
the Yellow Jackets 48-32. They were 26-of-50 (52 percent)
from !he field and 6-of.12 (50 percent) from beyond the arc.
Wid! the victory, Rio Grande has now won 18 American
Mideast Conference games in a row.
. ·
.,
The Redmen make the return uip to Cedarville on February 5.
·
Rio will host Geneva College on Satutdiy night. Game
time is set for 8 p.m.

__

OpaHtloanndt wvcero.·MuLIIIc~~·famled~~~ ~KII,IImltatlon or air, undetplnnlng. 8K18 cov- 10pm
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~
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·-•
with Medicare and JCA·
-·nr~.
(304)975-7116 or (004)675- • Rooms &amp; Bath, $300/ (740)446-3644 ·-,,..
Repairs. Problema1 I
Sliver, Gold Coins, Proof. ar
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Tuned?
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'
Spl·- pi
d be h
Book Volume One 740·378· BOK 987, Gallipolis, OH
-lnguclv1111M&lt;IIn
$7911
doWn &amp; $t55.38/mo,
.
aiOIIveEut,Pomoroj,OH.
,...~ ""
Fru~"'lfnl:; s:O·
6270.
45831. 600-481-6334
• lhll noo r r ' Call Nikki, (740)385·7671. Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom Age and lncomt g u - lndopondtld HOiblllfo [)lo. 740-742-2731 .
.
an oquo1
houoo, 299 Mulberry, Porn- apply. Priority wll be ~ tributor Coil For Procluot Or
~. Po~~_,__
Now 2002
erov. no i&gt;eta, (740)992·. $8,760.
to thooo wllh Income....., .:O~pp~o:;;trt::unl=ty~·.::(7...:40.::)44c_1.:.."=11182'...,...ng
. .,..y 11mmpedlalo
n .traon.
$799
downt4 wide
&amp; only
only 5858.
Ronta art compul•
1 \l l 't 'n \JI ' '
Bring Resume. Acquloltlona
$155.38/mo. Call Kavena,
ed according to your In·
JET
'I I U\1!1...,
Jewelry, 151 2nd Ave., Gal·
740-365-7871.
Nice 4 bedroom country come. For ·further delaill,
~ERATION MOTORS iirtiiiii~--F.=ARM:"""'--""1~
jj;ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; llpolla. .
u~
homo, 25 mlnuiOO to All&gt; call (740) 8i2·7022. EHO Repaired, Now &amp; AIIIILi~ In
110 u--'"•The
•theno·Melgo
ESC
~~
New
2002
14
wide.
Only eno, will conaldtr ooillng,
RT Slock. Coil Ron Evano, .f· EQuntr.mn' .
nu.r .,~.,~
"
FOR&amp;i..E
$899 Oown &amp; $165.36 per (740)698-7244
BI~UTIPUL
~PA • 800-537
1
9828
Governing Soard haa a
month Call Harold 740·
MENT11 AT BIIDOI!T PR~
·
'
.
~
noed to fil tho unexpired
365-7B71.
. '
Pilot Program, Ronllra CE8 ~T J~CKSON ES.
680 SuperE ·Backhoe, Cab,
Attontlonl
torm of the ~rd member 3 Bldroom on Route 2,
Needed, 3()4.738-7295.
T~TE8, ~ Waelwood Drive Mattrou &amp; Box Sprlnaa, 2-buckota 4K4, $15,900. 82
Eam 2nd. Income without who ropreoonio Elllem Lo- (304)676-5332
Now Double Wide. S195
M
liOME'I from $297 to $383. Walk to s95 CB Mtonno ·(Solar .Ford Single Axle dump truck
2nd lob up to
cal Schoo Dill riot. All appl~
Per Monlnl 3 Bedroom, 2
OBIU
ohop &amp; movleo. Cal 740- 'coni $35 TNc:k Topper, ' Olootl, 10 n. dump $4400.,_,
$25.·$75./hr. Pt·ft.
caniS mual re~de In lhe 816 Main Street, Pt. Pl. Belli. Free Delivery &amp; SOl·
FOR RIM '
446·2588. Equal Housing 111 • i.ong ~ 60" wide, $50. Rogtrt Eq. Trailer, Pinal
1-800·218-7643
Eilotern Local School 010- Completely Reiulbllhed. 2 up. 1·886·1128-3428
•
Opportunity.
(740)2156-15211
Hitch. Heovy, Duel Tandam
www.Money·Oreamo.com trlct In Molgo County. story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bad- Now/UoedH""""·Imrnedl· Baautlful River View idool Cnrlaty'o Family Uvlng,
~&amp;""~lllwltcbla~~"!~~"
PleaH submit a letter olin- rooms. Large Kitchen ,
F 1 Or 2 pal\nla Aeferen
Metal Delle 4 Drawer~ an • - ~
..,. ... ..,. ll
--:-:=~-:--:-::-::--'' toreot and rooume to Mr. '-- Udllly Room, LA/ OR/ ato Posseolon, No pay· or
_,..,
· 33140 Now uma·Rd RUI·
•
·
trailer $2800 All In good
:AVON!AIIAraasiToBuyor · John DePoy, President, Family
~,.. Rm. New Carpet man.sun
I . Ill Feb
Pre- ceo
Deposit
No Poll, -44
Foe·• Iand , Ohlo, 7•~
liclofor
Vll'/Chllda
nica, 301120.
, condUion.
,
OWner
. · 2002 ·\.t.t•t r'Tr
lief Park
._.7••'1~- -.-. one
p rfect
home- wor1dng
Sltli. Shirley Speart, 3()ol. Athano·Molgo ESC Goyom· throughout. F/A &amp; AJC, quality by phone. (740,....... ;, 81 a
. ' 740 1 Apartrnef11, home and trailer ,!,. $20 (740)Q86.4409 roiOcating. (304)4511-15113
675-1428.
lng Soard, .!07 Richland $79,900. (740)446-9565 or 3216.
·
rentalo. Comlnofclil otore·
·
Ceoual Port nme Oiroct Avenue, Su~e 108, Alhena, (740)446-2205 01' (740)448- Nice 28K60 Ooub\e Wide House Trailer lor Rent on ~onl~avaliallle .lor ltlot. MOBILE HOME OWNEII8 =3RppiY~ ~:;» ~~·
Oh 45701. Application 2683.
setting on rented lot In George Road Near Eno. 2 aca • ,_,
lntortherm &amp; Colomlln gu,
•
,
• • ·
Ce1'11 Staff
daadlno It January 7, 2002.
R
. Point Ploaoanl area. 2K6 Bedroom, $200 deposil, Furnllllod Efticloncy, All oil &amp;· -ric fu,_ In- AI~, now 4 finish mower,
~~e~d:~·:.:~ :::::;:: Tho AMESC II an equal 01" :'~. ~. BG;o~ walla, thermal pane win- $275 month. Total Electric. UUIItloo Paid, Shared .Bath. eluding hi lffiC!;noy heat :!~~toLe!:: ~~
tal Retardation and Devel· portunlty employor/provlder. catk&gt;n 1 block lrom City dows, pilcod to sale. Cell No Poll. (740)386·9326
$1251 month. 919 2nd Ave., pump:r.,ot~o,
~:%u" llclo o! Huntavllle AI (256)
· opmonlal Dlaabllltlao Ia URGENTLY
NEEDED· 'Park.·
(740)4.41.0364. ~il67t::!-8w=474 ' Trailer. for Rent or Sale, _(740)448-3945
'J: .:....0..:. 7711-5435 www.maynarde·
looking for caaual pert time plume donorl, oam $50 to 547,500.
••
· 14K60, 2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 Now Taking Appllcatk&gt;ne-- BINNm'l HEATING a qulprnent.oom
wor1&lt;el8. Startl"'l wogo Is $60 per week lor 2 or 3 For Uleby owner· Nice bl· Wln10f·Sprlng Belt·
Beth, Gas Hoot. (740)3117· 35 WO.t 2 llodrilom Town· COO~H418
$7.00 per hour. Apply today houra weekly. can Sera- level home on 1 &amp;ere near Taking on:lera now ror dellv· 7187; (140)388.0173.
pause Apartments, lncludea or 1
LlvarocK
7 592 6651

. .
.

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128d0 3Or 4 BldiOOm, On- lndlln CrNk EotaiN, u Qraoloua livinG. 1 and 2
Old Old fjllr 01 railer - ·
JIOR SALE
ly 1345.00 Par Month "" Iota, -~ of Rio bldiOOIII aportmontoll VI~ ~. ~· ~. 120: ,_ Inlay llnolaum,
INO'IICII
Ut% Fixed Into,_ Rail, Ortnda, from t25.800. • Minor and ~ ::,:%;::~\ W.
~~~; •=~ ~=nollt'r'T~:'mt=~
74'7
OHIO
VAUEY
PUBLISH·
1.aaa-828-:!Qe
(740)245-11
~rt~.~
••
M~.:
~•
.......
,
p~
Sll; (740)882· $1200. Call after 5pm.
South Third Avo., Middle- INO CO ,_,mondo lhat
"'"' .,.,..._....,
....,...__ ••M•
(304'"75-78~
port, Ohio 45760 by Janu· you do"""- with poop1o Dlvon:o fOICOI SaloiS Bod882·soe4. Equal Hqull!rlg
, J40 UB 17M.
,..
ary 2, 2002.
you l&lt;noW: and NOT to Hnd IOOift/2 111111 on ptlvato lot.
Opportunitloo.
For Sale· 1'1~ lloollionlll Homo ow-. tm Buick ConiiJry 4 door,
LPN .
moooy Ill~ tho mali until call (740)448-31570.
Miclilloi'Crt· North 4th AVO.,
• .
ond
Tlj)ptn Hlofflcloncy 110 piUI 6 cytlndOr good condition
•--nic Hllo lo now aoc-· you havo inYIItlgllld tho Don't Own L.ond1 W. . 001
HouiEs
4 100111,_ opoHrriont, "~
gao ·Including oil Low mlltiQe. Cell (304)67S:
~w appllcaHona for a ~·
•·
FOR RIM
"""""'t
· · v. and
gao fun.·
7555 ottor 5. •~.
lng
full offeri~
....
.
Landi Home pac-ga•
uw.,.,.. &amp; .~.,ertneet. no ..
anae. ,3407
Jackeon
cea. HIlloctrlc
Efticleqcy
Heat ====-=~.;_
time 3 to 11 LPN lor 1111 ln. Start Your Buolneoo To- ~~ablo. Call (740)«8· 2 Bed
Hou
5outtl pet&amp;, (740)QG2.0185.
,.., (304)678-73118.
P-. tiaturlng Tappano 1991 Chevy Corsica LT,
And a lull time 110 7 1111 In day Primo Shopping Cen·
room
'"·
Modem 1 BOdtoorn Apart· ,
. FtW lnol*llblo ,..r111 nty Loadad, $1800. t992 Pfy.
LhouP~·,:rt~ pay ~~~h~• an tar·~ . ·~~~~~~ At AI· . UmltedOrNOCred~?Gov· ~c:tateR~~~.;/R~j ment.(740)44600110 ··
P:: ·AlmQul:s
pookago..
mouthColtAutomatlc&amp;AC,
1 II!NN!TT'8 HEATING a $t200. (740(446-0744
rlonce nga':''lhlft d:. fordable~- Spring Valley omment Bank Finance Only (7401441 .1917
One Bedroom Apt. 67 Vine ~
entiat. ~~... .call uo al Plaza, Coll 740-446.() 101 · AI Oakwood 736
In =ul8·
Slroet. Oallipoilo, OH.
~o:'.=n~~8418 1984 Olda Cutlasa Su·
(740)446-7t50 and aok for
MONEY
vllo,WV3Q4. '
.
2bedroomhouoelnPomer· (740)367-7886
Buy or .... Mil- - - - - promo, PW, PL, crwoo,
1 ~···
Stephania, or atop by and
Now 14 Wldo, 3 Bedroom. oy, $375 per me. plus dequee, 1124 Eall Main on
·
· ·85,000 miles, oxcelent Con·
1111 out an application.
10""'"""
Only $t9,8!0. Free Delivery posit with option to buy, no One br. ~tIn Pf. Pfauant,. SR t24 E. Pomeroy, 7&lt;10- watoltlno Special: 314 200 dltlon, $5995. (740)446·
=-====---&amp; Sot Up t.aaa-928·2428 poll, (740)698-7244
· fumlohld, very clean. no 992·252e. Ruoo Moore, PSI $21.95 Par tOO; 1' 200 68110 before 9:00pm.
McCiuro'l Rootauront now Look No FurthorWo provlda
·
··pets phone 304-675-1386 - ·
PSI $37.00 Per 100; ~II
hiring aH 3 locations, lui 01' top Quality Financing A8sll• t987 t4K70, 3 br./2bln, 2 Bedroom, $3501 month, n--te- -~.· Pt'lol p.,:
Cornptooolon Flltlngo 96 Gl8nd Am, 4 dr., purple,
J!Ort·tlme, pick 14&gt; ·appilca· tanco and Halp. start.a Now $4995. Will help with dellv· $t50 dapoalt. Water and -· •• , . _
Suo'o Solo,.._ on tho"'" Inauto, air, 61,000 miles,
tion at locallon &amp;bring back Credft for Now Year. 1.aaa. ery. Cell Kavena, 74().365- Traoh Paid. 1601 Graham gram. Own your own hon)e. 1n Mldillollort. Dolo, glUe- RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. clean, $3,995, ·(740)742·
betwoon 9:30am
&amp; 322•3894
School Road. (7401448- Utile or no credit OKI Cell """'• Aladdin rnoniale, and I!S Jackaon Ohio 1-IOCJ. 3602, 740-742·3164.
9948,
tO:OOom, Monday thru Sot·
0050
(740)448-3384.
·• · ,_., (740)982-02111
537-9628 '
'
TRUCKS
urday.
l'RoFF.ssloN.u. 11968 Redmon, 14x70 Mo- 2br $325 a month Security Rlvsr Bend Ptaco now IC
~
REM OPTIONS POSITION
SERviCE!
~):
~~~ ~ ooP.,.ii ~oqulred, at 1112 ceptil:l"lcaUona for 1~
~
~
fOR SALE
OPENING NOTICE. Pool·
turld Ceilings throughout Hogg Stretll (304)757-8274 Hud
dlze Apt for tho .........' oiiiiiiiiilo"""'""
tion: RHplto Provider. LoTURNED DOWN ON
entirt trallor. AC lncludad. oxt. 122
.
eldsrly &amp; dloabled. EOH.
2001 Chevy Z-71 extonded
cetlon: Point Pleasant Area. SOCIAL SECURITY 18817 Gao Hoot. Btlber carpet. 3br. Houu wllh family (304)862-3121 .
OOUCh, ohllr &amp;- · brlcfc, - r plpeo, ceb, lelthor, c:::-~
Quollllcatlona: Experience No Foe Unleu We Wlnl Fully Trlmmld. Payoff. room, complete~ :renova.t· Tara Townhouse APIIrt· 'man for 1350. Amllh bulft windowo;!nlalt. Ole. C"'!"~e ~· .~~ (304) .
875
pretorrod but not required In
t-868·582-3345
(740)36H67S .
ed. AN Ntwl s5o6 month mente, Very Spac:iouo, 2 ontonalrlment contor, pd Wlntort, Rio Orondo, OH
a human oorv~e field. High
plus"""""'t No Pela ~ - Bldroorna 2 Floor1 CA 1 $1000. lllo lor S500. Cel1740-245-5121.
--------School Diploma, TranaporA
1990 Fleetwood
-......
"··~
'
' • (304)875-7348
A
home-call
Cheryl2 bedroom
O 740. tlablei In Point. Pfoaoant ' t/2 lllth,•Fully Calp8tod,
199 Chevy Silverado LS,
latlon, Criminal investigation
, Alfuft PO!li &amp;Baby PO!li~~· Eloctr~ box L.awn Gonia,
.......,
4K4, 3 dr., one o.,.ner, black,
365.9621 . 2002 Sunpolnto (304)675-e676
of Background (CIS), Valid
tlo, Slart $385/MO. No.....,, StO; 8' banquet ~. $25;
f'OR"!fAlE
94,000 miles, vortoc V·S,
3 bodroo1'11121*h 14 x· 7().
Woot Virginia Driver's Ll·
muot HI-call Mike 0 740- 3br. Hlcuee, with family LeaaePfuoSecurity~ p,.ato12qt.-reCXIOk·
St4,300, (740)74.2·3602,
.;;:~.t~:.::f
365·2431
room, 2 baths, totally rt- Required, Oayo: 140-4-4e- $26· Muon jars S.lor $1; ge,. Hybrid - pupploo, 7 •740-•7•42··..3~164'!'"'.~~-"1
ommendatlon. Ploaoo Re- All roo1- -lng
·
•
modeled. 2 iltory In Hlllorl· 3481; Evenings: 740-387· (7:.0)992·21!211.
-old, all malto, sroo.
apond to: REM Options
lnthlt-lt
t991 Manolon . 14K70, 3 cal &lt;lotrlct, no petal $800 .0502,740-446-0101. ,
Cell loavo rnouaga 74(). I'~
VANS&amp;
Coniacl: Yollnda Moore or l4llljlot to tho F bedroom eKcellent condl· month plus dapoolt. Nago- WI AW. r.
Fl,_lor ..... ~40- 742-4815
.
4-WDs
.
Sholto Boll. Pnone: hlr Houalng Act crt 1111 lion, call Kavena, (740)365- liable. - · In Point 1' c~ng : :,:" 112&amp;4, (740)361-01 .
.
(304)788·6575, Or oend let· wllldlmotcoo Hlllpt to 9948·
Pteuant. (304)875-667ll . 1BR. HUO IJUblidlzed Opt. Firewood, $159 Dump ~pplc~= ~:/:. t991 Cnov. Astro $2Cergo '
tor or lnloreot with contact
- - "II!IY
1995 16K60, eKceNtnt con- 4 bedroom hou08 In Rlclno lor tidally and dlubled, Truck Load. (740)37N788 (740)4 46 0060
Van, White, 1331&lt;, ,200.
Information to: 6404 IHtloii•ICII, llrnltotiOn or dillon, wll help wtth dallvery, acroos from park, nice
EOH.
F au Fumaceo and Air
Phone Napa (304)675-2216
~•2t,v:;'uo St. AI· dlocrlmlnatlon-on call Nlk~. 740·365-9948. nelghborhqod, hoal pump
(304)675-6679.
C:.ilontr EotlmaiN. Coil AK.C Reglalored Cocker
Grand Cherokee Um·
1996Sunrool, Heated seata.
,::;.:::,:~:0::, 1995 Clayton 14K70 ~ bed- heat &amp;control air, $500 per ·
,
· (740)446 6308 or 1-800· apanlel ~upploo lor Sale. lted.
RN Caoe Manager (FT), co- origin, or any Intention to rooms 2 lull .bethe, dining ~~:J!·
.::~s\'ra!;:· Very nice, 2·3 bedroom 281~. 11 you don1 call S2!01nqk.Coll &lt;7.40)441.()9881o ReasonablY
pneed.
Locol

r ~I .
.

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 word• '1 Ooys • Ea&lt;h Item l'rl&lt;ecd

Includes Free Yard. Sale Sign!$ •
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'

12 Noon 2
Prior To

h-eel/if

-··

Emily Callson adding a
field go2l. Chancey canned
all five of her points in the
lan period.
Soulsby led all scorers
by theiJ took over for with 21 points; Davis
Meigs. SCIIIIiby nailed a two joined her in double figures
pointer~ the 3:55 nurk to
with 14.
give Meijla 5-2 advantage.
Lacy Whidatch led the
Soulsby ,§l&gt;ok a pass from winners with 14, Emily
Pierce and buried a three Hill had 12 and Standall
pointer {fom the right cor- and Maiden had 11 each.
ner to ~sh the lead to 8-3,
Nelsonville moves to 7-0 ·
after an Ashley Standall and sits atop the 0 hio ·
hoop cut the lead to fo.ur, Division of the TVC. Meigs
Soulsby again hif off the falls to 6-4 and is currently -.
Pierce usist and the lead two games behind t~ fro·nt
was 1o'..:4. Courtney Porter running Buckeyes.
answered with a hoop for
Nelsonville coach Tom
the Laay Bucks, but ,again Ricardi felt . that his team
. Soulsby this time takiri'g a didn't play up to their
pass from Jaynee Davis potential. "'Meigs played
connected on a trifecta hard and Soutolby is a good
extended the Marauder shooter,'' the Buckeye
lead. Davis found the buck- coach added.
et with less than· a miqute
Meigs
coach
Dave
left in the pe.riod and Wilcoxen said that his team
Meigs finished the. first played with more intensity,
eight;'minutes with a 15-7 but was not happy with the
lead. Soulsby tallied 10 of way the Marauders shot the
her game high 21 points in ball. "Shannon (Soubby)
the fr~me.
played well and provided
Davis and Soulsby con- some offense," he added.
tinued to fuel the MaraudMeigs was 17-of-53 from
er offense in the second . the field including 3-of-12
period as the two account- from beyond the arc. The
ed for all 11 Meigs points. Marauders connected on
Meigs built its biggest lead 11-of-19 free throws and
of •!he night at the 5:58 · collected 28 rebound~ led
mar.k at 21-9 after consecu- by Dav.is who · coltared
' tive ·-baskets by Davis and eight. Meigs dished out 15
SQ!llsby. Then, as has been assists led by Pierce with
the . case in several games five and recorded 10 steals
for the Marauders this sea- led again by Davis with .
sot\, they fell into a scoring · three. Meigs committed 23
drought managing only five turnovers.
points in the next 5:58 of
Nelsonville went 19-ofp(ay. Nebonville in the 57 from the field including
meantime began to chip . 3-of-5 from three-point
away at the Marauder lead. land. The Buckeyes went to
The Lady Buckeyes finally the foul line 30 times, hitcaught and passed the ting 19. Freshman Whitney ·
Marauders with only 15 Maiden pulled in 13 of her
ticks left in the half as Ash- teams 41 rebounds. The
ley S~ndall connected on a · Bucks recorded .14 . steals
three-point play to give the led by Standall with seven
Bucks the lead at 28-26.
thefts. Nelsonville had
Nelsonville pushed the eight turnovers and the
margin to 10 points at 38- same number of assists.
28 with 4:37 left in the
Meigs gained the split by
third quarter and seemed to winning the JV game 40be in command. But once 28. Xanthe Smith notched
':again the Marauder Ladies · 14 for the winners followed
fought back. Meigs went ·by Renee Bailey with nine;
·.··on a 9-0 run with Souls by · Alicia Werry added five
; providing six points and Maria · Drenner chipped in .
''Pierce adding a three that with four.
brought Meigs to ~ithin .
Meigs ·will try to end a
one at 38-37 with 1:30 left two-game losing skid as
in the third quarter. Lacy they travel to Belpre MonWhidatch put Nelsonville day night to face the Coldup by three at the end of en Eagles.
t:hree quarters with a buckNoiiOIIVIII•Yorit 80, llalgo til
et in the paint.
' • N-vlllo 7 21 12 20 - 60
Davis · brought
the Mtlgo· t5 It 11 ' 11 - tl8
IIEIQI - Llndooy Bolin 0 1·9 t;
Marauders close again as BIOOk Bolin 0 ().2 0; Mindy Chlncoy 1
she opened the final frame 3-4 5; Katie Joffors o O.CJ O; Samanlha
Pltrco 2 0.0 5; Shlnnon Souloby 8 3·
with a bucket inside. The , 4 21; J.oynao Davis 5 4-8 14; Alicia
game . remained
close Warry 10.0 2. TOTAL&amp; 17 11·111 48.
NEL80NYILLE: - Rando Patton 0 3·
throughout the final frame; 4 3; Alllloy Standall 4 3-8 11; Laoy
Whltlatcn 5 3-414; Emily Hlil3 4-1 t2;
a'',Mindy Chancey basket Courtnay
Porter 2 1-2 5; Emlty Calloon
with 2:35 left cut the visi- 1 2·4 4; Whitney Molden 4 3-4 1t. •
18 19·30 60.
tors lead to 50-47. The TOTALI
Throe-point goalo - Molgo 3 (SOulot&gt;y
L;!dy Bucks then iced the 2. Pie roe 1): Noloonvlllo 3 (Hill 2 Whll·
ga':ne from the foul line as lolch 1)
they connected on 8 of 11
the rest of the way with

..........

SPEC~TODVP

l\egister

All

Meigs

BY MAIK Wtee••

.

REACH OVER ~~~~000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW

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

•

•

Else Canl

Display Ads

x.:·

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-...:..------~~-"'""1",-"':':'-::""=--.:.~.:0I~m::•:.;o;::y~,,:M;,:;Idd:;
. ::..,.~::~~·~Oh:;;.:,:;lo.:__ _ _ _"'1,:-----""":"-..;.T,;.;he,;..;;D.;;a,;.;lly:...;;Se~nt_lne_I_•':"P_age;;..._B..,..3
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ptt.Rmlllenll&amp;
flllllly fir medkll
apease$.

BudSI!ItOnl
f

.,

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�Sanlfnel

2~2

• ' - .
COLUMBUS,

The Dally SenUnel•

Ohio

Buckeyes: QB's :apply

Ohio ('AP) - Steve running back) in the Mr. Football mtBeUisari pondered his Obio State legacy ing. One of the school's ·most- prizt&gt;c.l
I
anCl put it best:"lf quarterback signees since Art Schlicht"r
this is the last in 1979, Zwick will have _to hit the
people ground running - physically and menthing
remember, it's a tally- ifhe hopes to climb past the four
. '
i good thing."
upperclassmen .ahead of him on the
Bellisari followed an atrocious three deptli chart.
quarters in Tuesday's Outback Bowl
Who~ talres the first snap from the
• with a startling four-touchdown come- replacement for the AU-Big Ten Bentley
·back, onlf to see the Buckeyes lo5e 31- Wc&gt;n't be required to ·carry the brunt of
28 on 'a last-second South Carolina field the offense.
Michael Jenkins, Chris Vance and
goal.
The three-year starter at quarterback ·Chris Gamble aU established themselves
had his finest hour in his final hour, pass- as quality receiving targets. Lydell Ross
ing fpr -320 yards and tWo touchdowns and Maurice Hall showed much promise
and running for another.
as freshmen running backs, and the line
•
His critics would say it wouldn't be should be deeper and as good as the one
difficult to pinpoint his best game. His it replaces.
.career at Ohio State was marked by as
On defense, Darrion Scott, Simon
many blown plays as big plays. He had a Fraser, Tim Anderson; Will Smith and
19- 12 record as a starter. Off the field, Kenny Peterson give the Buc~ a
DUI charges cost him starts in the final solid ·front wall. Matt Wilhelm will call
rwo Ohio State games.
the defensive plays frotn his middle line- _
Now the Buckeyes will find out what backer spot. The secondary will have
life without Bellisarl is like. Will it be holes- with or without Doss - but
paradise. or will his absence mean a none that -can't be. patched.
rocky transition to Crai~ Krenzel - or
Tressel was' hired after John Cooper's
maybe to a kid who liasn't graduated 13-year tenure was severed after a loss to
from high school yet?
South Carolina in the 2001 Outback
Bellisar'i and· the rest of the starting Bowl. He now knows his players and
~ backfield, tailback jonathan Wells and they know him. The comfort level for
~ fullback Jamar Martin, _aU played their each should go up, as should the expec: last game in an Ohio State uniform. rations.
"We made progress,'"Iressel said of his
Same goes for offensive . linemen
• LeCharles Bentley and Tyson Walter, first Ohio. State team. "I'd like to have
! - defc;nsive linemen Mike Collins and Tim been'better than -7-5, absolutely."
_.
! Chearwood and linebackers Joe Cooper · It may be simplistic, but in both of the
and Courtland Bullard.
Outback Bowls the Buckeyes fell behind
;
It is also unlikely that strong safety early. Under Cooper, they folded up like
! Mike Doss will return, passing up his an old card table.
"A yeilr ago we would have quit senior season just as cornerback Derek.
Ross did a month ago. There are rumors you know that and I know that," Wells
that tight end Darnell Sanders might said after the big comebacK fell just
• also join them.
short. "We stayed ·in there and that's due
If so, the 2002 Buckeyes will be dra- to coach Tressel and the coaching staff!'
matically different from .this year's 7-5
The 2002 schedule provides many
·
land -mines. For the first time in history,
version.
Krenzel wo\lld figure to have the Ohio State probably will play 13 regular
inside track. to replace Bellisari, with season games, hosting the Pigskin Classic
Scott McMullen- the season-long No. in late August and adding a fourth non2 - .also in the running. The radio talk · conference opponent as allowed by a
show experts will have six months to new NCAA rule.
The Pigskin Classic opponent -may be
wonder if first~ year coach Jim Tressel
, doesn't trust Kr!:nzel, who led the team .Color.~do; Kansas or Kansas State, Tressel
to a ·rare victory at Michigan but then said. Ohio State most likely would host
the game, giving the Buckeyes a record
got a quick hook in the bowl game.
"I'm sure he'll use that experience to eight home games.
his advantage,'' said Tressel upon the · Tressel said he and his staff would soon
team's return on Wednesqay night.
begin looking at their options.
A long 'shot I? start is incoming fresh"This is a quiet period for recruiting,
man justin Zwick, the runner-up (to fel- so we'll take a look at everyone in the
•. low -Buckeye recruit Maurice Claret!, a program,'' -he said in the chill outside the

NEA Croaaword P!l'nle

~ ----~--~----------~~--~~-­
'

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from

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13 Til 'II

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45?20
Equine 12
12% Swill Hor.. fetd ................ $5.00/50
~Wiet Slull
12% Sweet Horae feed ................ $4.40/50
Hunter~ Prllle 21% dog food .........$8.95150
Economy Bttl12% stock fetd..... $6.75150
TI'IICt Mlnti'II .BIOGkl....................$4. 751100
18% L er C111mbele ...... :.............. $8.15150

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• 50 YEAR WAIQIANTY

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

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97 BeediSt.
middleport, OR

~2-4119

1-800-291-5600

VIlli Out!i!lowroom 0. SW. a..... 33
6 Mlleo North o.t,.Pon-.J, 0....., AI Coun1y Rood 18

(lD'xlr &amp;18'1120')

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992-6635

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FIRITCIME,
FIIITIUIED

An SO

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$321.11 PER JIIIT

• No OO.lero or l:oalntCtoro PI,_
Vita I MMten;anl
( "W\' 1013477

1.\\1\I'S

'MlWA!~

1MGI~

(() ',-.., 11;1( \1(1 '\

1':"'!'1""1"'1

Rooftn1, Decks

=

Remodellna,
Dryw.U, liiJd
AddltloDB

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•NewHOmei

• Top • Re1110val • Trim
• Stump Grinding

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COISTRUcnOI

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• Bucket Truck .

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. ....

740-91~1671

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1M/Ill&lt;

1-!AA.T
FOR?
.'

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·Advertise in-this space for
s1oo per

month
.

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•

••r---1

. Same As Cash Available
Licensed, Insured • Free Estimates

Local 843-6264

''

M!'(iicare Supplement; Life Insurance; _
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp; .~
Dental, Retirement,
Pension&amp;. 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; M~jor Medical
• Nuning Home ·
'

""""""'

Sunset Home
Construction

BISSELL
BUILDI!U INC•
NewH-•Vi•JI

Bryan Reeves .

_Sidlna • Now G.,.
• Replacement
Wlndowo • Room
Aclclllloiu • Rooftna

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740...2·7599

740-742-3411

..

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I.•

1'u. ~-lAVE TO

6ET8ACKTO
'I'OU ON fi.IAT..

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Guitars • Some Furniture • Crafts
Now Available ·1l1er Sharp Knives

217 E. 2hd; Pomeroy, Ohio

''

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CONCRETE/BLOCII/BRICK

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In thll 1pace

In th11-IP8ce
for
'25 per month

for
'25 per month

....•
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.

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East State Street Phone (740)S93-6671 Crete Free EoU,.oteo
Athens, Ohio
Scrtlna Ohio ond w.v.

B~tact: ,.c,

At1on1e1
..
-Athtat

,,.••

740~992-5232
t111211 mo.

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

B.D.
CONSTRUCTION
~MmMC111W

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Homt Improvements
Siding • RemodeUng
Pon::hes • I&gt;Kks

BIIIGOZ111
Euerv 11usdlg
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FREE llSTIMATES
Bill DOI!tf.r

Thursdlys

(740) 99.2-2979

P111resslue
Ceverell 01 5undlgs

•

CAI'IUCORN (ll,•c 22J.m. l'J) -- It nli!-!.IH tln;tll~·
d;~wn on )'nU tod.ly tlu1. rh~·
world du~,·~ JH)t :tlw.ty~ opl'ratt'
on your ~d !ctlulc or rinwr;~bl~: .
If you l'r.u c'r:'lstiu:Hl' \\'hcrt'
~·our dmit·~ · ar~· nmn•na·d,

••

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m :t~· tin.\ rhi~ out pr&lt;nl fo.
Tryir 1~ to pnrr.:h up :111rnken

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Th l' A~rrn - Gr ;' ~'h
M;1lrhuwh·r t·.m. !1dp yuu 1111 lll·utand \\'hat to do to mak t•
the n:btioH.;hip WNk. M.1il
52 .7:; tu Matchmak er. c/o thi\
l)l'WS]'apt·r. P.&lt;J . ll,.ox 17:;H,
Mumw I iill Stati~m. Nl·w
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iu the yc:•r ;, ht•:td . Be your

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992-5479 .
Self-Storage

33 795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohw

tun·~ ybu

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Cellular

~~"""'
High &amp; Dry ·

34 CDmoo-

4PIUCIYtr
31 "Wolf Man"
5 TomblChaney
• locotle
31 ltapnDI

t;tg
a f.worite
to
havewas
at least
live diamonds. Now Sontag,
with exc&lt;;llent distribuiion, had no hesitation in bidding game.
Sontag ruffed the
heart lead, and playec.l
two rounds of spades.
A moment later, Sontag ruffed hi~ spade
loser in the dummy,
and a monwut after
that ~- Sontag is a
very .{hst player -- he
dropped the club
queen o!Eide to register an overtrick for
plus 62() and ) 1 international match points.

S;Jttm.by,J:m. 5.. ,2(1(1[
So hJ II~ .1 ~ ym1 r·~·m.1in discipllnt·~l. opt·n•tillil intlL·~wndt•nt
of (lthi..'J1i i11 t•ndl•;JVtlrs or Vt' ll·

I
I

nnd,Drina • Sttntll

can relieve a debtor of ftnanclal ~~!!tationa and
arnnse a fair dlltribution or .., GIOIII
crediton. A peraon going throuah bankruptcy
may retain certain property, known _as
"e~empt" property, for his or her pel10nal
This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
houacholdJOOCb, You shoUld ~reel any
queatlona 111JIIdi11J benlauptey to an attorney
before Proceedina. For lnformatiolt reprdina

INiybe

-out•
living

24 Stlmpy'o

25

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41~1n

42 EYI otZII
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Army recruil to large drill sergeanl, "You 're the lype of soldier
I've always wanted to serve with
rr~~i~~~? you don 't take the---:

I I 19 -1. O

-

.

,

PRINT NUMBERED

LETTERS

,

I'

Cornplere rhe c:huc~l• quoted
by filling in the missing words

you develop from srap No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSW·ERS
. Squeak- Breed· Ounce- Unwise- WEEKENDS
One married woman to another: " Give a man a fish
and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you
get rid of him on lhe WEEKENDS!"
..

______,C ahnr

&lt;

~

Flo! Work,
Repla£ements, • Walks

.BANKRUPTCY

3~.

23

40~

....

~

• Footen, W1ll1, SCe}Js •

wv 1031712

•

'
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(740) 99 2-590S
,.llCIIne, Ohio 4Sn1
740-985·3948

1 Gurlooth
2 Dlsc:loM

!7Eplc

The se.-ond Ucr21 Bodypllrl
31
Expectod 50~~muda Bowl semifinal
&amp; WindoW
10 ltrrlve
rtver
lllnl8
was between USA-2
32 DIJI!&gt;IInlo 54 Cauerole
3t Dlvulaect
33 Woolly
-1 CINII ile(Rose Mcltz&lt;:T-Kylc
Larsep, Chip Martdlew Stansby and Alan
Sontag~l'cter Wcichsel) and Poland.
The match wJS
never tlramatic, with
the U.S. !cant enjoying the-lcad- througl,-..out.
This swing was
g~ncratcd by the
Americans in the auction. In -the other
room, Stansby opened
the Ean hand , with
two diamonds, which
was Fl;nmcry, showing 11-15 points with
four spades and five
hearts. In response,
M&lt;trtel invited game
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by jumping to three
by Lula Campoa
hearts. This looks agColobrl1y Cipher CfYPIOgromo ono cnoolod I"'"' quotallono by tomouo
people, pat and prnent. Each letter in the cipher atandllor another.
gressive with only
Today~ clue: X equals K
seven points, but he
UK
U G U II T Co'
'T'HG
PTHGS
-had a fit in l&gt;oth sui to,
which always jllstifies
·awe U II C .0 1 D Z II E P Z D ozws
an- overbid . Also,
knowing the oppoUWCCTWPGO.
WBK
liB
UK
nents had a good fit iri
the min-ors, perhaps
Kill!
RW$'0
. ITHMCRO
W
he could freeze them
VIIIIX.'- PAMCTW
OFWIOIII
out. And that is exPREVIOUS SOLUTION: •j was never hunQ up on I chMtV
actly what happened love song. I always wrote aboul hanky lanka. -Lorena Lynn
- three hearts was
passed out. Stansby
J---:=1 '=:-had ft:-:~ , t_o.p .\osers,
but that was ouly 50
TIAT DAILY
WOlD
poillls to ' Poland.
PUIZLII
Wcichscl's double
over the two-heart O Rearrange iatters of
tcrornblod wordo bo·
raise is tinappctizing low lou'
to farm four simple words.~ .
with only rwo spades,
but he was too strong
DE L DUP
to pass. Then, when t-1"'1-~1"'2;-lr--rj-1
West continued with
. .
_ . 1
_
C:~ ';&gt;41~~ three hc;ms, Weichsel 1":~=~~==::---'
was happy to .raisc his · . , •
~ RY K0
3
pa.-tner because Son -

' fl

CON'IRACtOIS, INC.

aoq.-J&gt;.

od
11111ybH

DOWN

member

I

New Homes, Room Additions,
Gar~•· Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Deck1, Kitchens, Drywall COMII!IOAI.IIitl IEliiiiiiiiAl
AMore
FREE ESTIMATES

P/8 .

13

10~=- ·

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21 PortlliiH of
30 Welrdtr

It

• Ctutl8r

" 12 Enibltm

51$1Dnn

21 Family

I

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flucky fl Hupp Aqcnl
llox I H'J
r.11ddlt•prHI OhiO ·l'o71i0

• enlmal
3501d-

...._ ... ! .....__,_='-----=:::....-~

. (740) 949-1521
FIIIIIIICing &amp; 90 Days

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO:·

••

Semifinal

M'l2r

· C..WI'artl
Dalen
1110D .. Rl. 11oc1M

• William
(7.-o) m.m5

19

. • Regionl

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6 Ill II 1

7:00AM- 1;00 PM

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14 •cqo I od
15 Rock

... .,

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Advertise in
this space ,for

·-......

•• Jpa t
7 c._

11Holl

1

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service~

tiowtd'•
4olla-

4......,

1•.:=:

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each added three-pointers in the tilt,
while frosh Joanne Pickens grabbed several important rebounds and added a
follow-up jumper for a score. The frame
PapB1
ended 55-27 as Miller's only two field
ern's lead, 7-3, then a Sayre follow-up goals came from Winnenburg and Altijumper and Lee steal and lay-in made it er; the &lt;;lther four came from Hinkle free
12-3 as_Lee completed a three point throws.
play with a free throw.
Southern starters saw only about two
Britton nailed a jumper to make it 12- minutes of action in the fourth round as
5 as Southern stalled out offensively · SHS rolled on to the 63-41 win.
Southern hit 27 -of-80 for a cool 34
until its offense jump started with a 2-12 full court trapping defense. ·1 iouthern percent, hitting 3-of-11 three's, 24-69
got several steals and pulled away to a rwo 's, and was 6-of-11 at the line. ·
23-1 1 first period lead with Chapman Miller hit 16-of-46 for 35 percent, hitand Sayre the main scoring beneficia- ting 1-of-7 three's, 15-of-38 two's, and
ries.
8-of-14 at the line.
Southern emptied its bench early to
Southern grabbed 49 rebounds (Picksave energy for an important 3-game ens 8, Chapman 7, Dunn 7), had 27
run over the. ne¥t five days and to give turnovers, 27 steals (Sayre 8, Dunn 5;
_its younger players some valuable expe- Barnes 3), 11 assists (Barnea 3, Lee 2,
rience. Frosh Brooke Kiser did a good Chapman 2), one block (Barnes 1), and·
job running the Southern point in the 14 fouls.
second period and tossed in four points · Miller had 25 rebounds (Britton 7,
as did Amy Lee and Katie Sayre. All · Hinkle 6); 43 turnovers, 12 steals, five •
twelve -Southern players saw action in assists, and 12 fC!uls.
ihe second quarter as Southern gave
Southern goes to Symmes Valley SatMiller several different lc;Hiks.
urday and goes to Eastern Monday.
Tara Pickens again did a great job pn Miller hosts Nelsonville-York Saturday.
the boards, ending the gall!e with a
u ,' Mlllor 41
team-high eight reboui!ds. Pickens also Soutlllm 23loclflletn
10
18
8
83
did a good job in the post qefensively in Miller
11 8
8
14
41
SOUTHER!'!- Aachel Chipman 9, Br1gone Bomoo 9,
helping anchor the various SHS defens-_ Dtona
Pulllno 2, fomy 1ft 9, Ka11o s.y,.13, AINIY Dunn
es.
10, Jolnno Pictcenl 4, Tara Ptckono O, -llft&gt;olct Klolr 4,
Aahley 'A'"'III 0, Suoan Brauer 3, J --HIH 0.
Southern waltzed to a 39-63 halftime TOTALS
27 8-1113.
MILLER - J~lo Chooaor 0, Emlllt Wlnntnburg 4, Brl·
.lead with a balanced all-around effort.
Southern came out like a thunderbolt onne Hinkle 0,• Aman0o Spenotr 3, Mllllltf Aruer 4,
in the third fr3me and blitzed to a 55-23 ~"::il'.t:o.~o~C'~ 8o8.~:h.:1. Hinkle 18,
Th,..·point goalo- Soullllm 3 (Chapman 1', Sayre 1,
lead before Miller closed out the frame Brauor 1); Mlllor 1 (A. Hlnldo).
'
With four points. Ashley Dunn hauled RobciunOo- Southtm 48 (PICkono 8, Chapman 7,
Dunn 7): Millet 25 (Bn110117, t11nklo 8)
in several important rebounds and once TumovtC'J - SoUIIlom 27: Millor 43
Sttalt - Soullllm 27 (Soy,. 8, Duno 5, Somes 3),
spearheaded the Southern fast break, Miller
12 (Hinkle 51
while notching six of her ten points.
Aoalills -Southam 11 (Btmoa 3, Lee 2, Chapman 2),
Susan Brauei; and Rachel Chapman Miller 5.

42=..

1 llltlln

ALDER

NCAA

j

ACROSS

PHILLIP_

1

wll Hnnuthhl.-; }'ou'rc \mn•r · ..,
ruin o~

I'I~ CUS (r••h, lii·Mm·h l ll)
•• U!iJ.Iil)' liil'll lll dun'l l1111l
JUIIHHIIH' wlr~l II 4-'~ll'im.i l~

"'"'Ill lhOIII ,1),1111\'1'. hill IH•

•
r •

-~
' day pri\'~H· y may he lllttrl' im portant . Kl'l'P lhi~ io mind

'i.hmi\LI yum iutt·n·~t ~t·t thl·
bt'i"it' nf y1iu .
A lUES (Mard1 ll-1\pnl I'J) .
-- It's no t t!UlHit-th that you
)nay ht• t"apah !t· of nm~\,•orrhy
&lt;1Chit'\'l'l11l'I1U .t otf;l\' if lliOS&lt;.' in
•your rr~dre " arl'n't'. Unf'imt~­
\'()tlr t'lft'(ti\"t'l1c.'~S will
bL· lt'S~tlil•rl hy your .tllit·~.
TAUilUS (April ~11 - M,y

untelv .

.2U) -- Ahhotlgh your way to
dn smm· thin~ may lw \wtrer,
anJ }'lit I know it. if your hm~
w : mt~ th i nt.:~ dmlt.' :1 n ·rrain
\\",1)' today. ~ umply with. his nr
lll'r \\ i~l a•s . Ll•t the ' chip~ 1:111

tJu:y 111.1y. . ,
. CEMINI (M.1y 21-jllne :!n)
·- U11til you\:c ht•c n m tlw
tn·nd tt'S ollld h.:Stl·d )&gt;Umt·rhing
W ht!H'

Giv~ l l Jl your individual int~· r­
c~u today if tlsk rd to work in

(onjtmctiun wi th nthrn. You
don't h.Wl' to b~ upst•t " or
compc.titiH' . It's in yuur hands
to 111akt- this .1 'h:1r111011iom
d;lv.
VlllCO (Aug . 2]-S&lt;f''- 22)
-- Analyze yuur t'.'.: \'l'~lJiturc-s
of hu~ fn s~e \(!ht'rt• you can
t•co no mizt•. Tlru~. wht•n you
~o ~hoppin~ today you will
h&lt;~V L' a better handle o n whAt
you sho uld or shuultlllllt rur clu~t:&gt; .

~

LIURA (Sc·pt 2.1-0ct 23) ()clt.'~au• o;o me. of YlHif

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...

;The Daily Sentinel

·Knicks·slow down Dallas in
Maryland .wins without
lonny
Baxter
"

COLLEGE fA .K, Md. (AP) L . When ond-leading scorer. and guard Juan Oilton
m01t te_ams lose :heir best big nun, it's (17 points), but Norfolk State couldn't
viewed as catastrophic.
. adjust.
.
When No. 8 Maryland found out it would
"AJllf time you take our a p•e :e like that,
have to playThurs- it's going to affect thom ," Jones said. "Someday night without times it affects them mentally more than
'
inj ured
center physically. They lose a kid like Baxter, a
. Lonny Baxter, the Terrapins merely dipped senior, and the. new guys come in and have
into their sizable reserve and didn't skip a to shake the rust off."
beat. ,
That wasn't the script on Thursday. Wilcox ·
"When you ' look down the bench and see -scored six early points off inside jump hooks
(Baxter) in street clothes, it was a funny feel- · that the Spartans were powerless to defend. ·
"He has a great j ump hook, which he
•ing," Maryland coach Gary Williams said
after the Terrapins beat N orfolk State 92:69 shoots fiom about" II feet," Williams said of
for their 84th con; ecutive home .victory over Wilcox. "If you want to block it, it's goala nonconference opponent.
tending. He shoots it down. He does sol}le"1 wouldn't want to play without him for thing that puts a buzz into the crowd." :
While Wilcox frustrated the Spartans eil!'ly,
very long," Williams added.
But junior forward Tahj Holden · emerged Holden totlk command midway through the
fiom a scoring slump with a season-high 16 fil}t half and Dixon closed the doo~ cin Norpoints. Reserve Ryan R andle, a junior col- folk State at the start of the second hal(
lege transfer, added a career-high 12 points
Holden's tO-foot baseline jumper ignited a
and eight rebounds as Baxter was hardly 25-7 Maryland run that produced a 37- 17
· missed in Thursday's only game involving a lead. Dixon had eig!M points in an 11-3 run
ran!Ced team. ·
that started the second half, with the TerrapChris Wilcox starto:_d in Baxter's place and ins taking command 56~31 on his 3-pointer.
scored njne points in the first half. Maryland
Though Maryland contil"ued its impressive
blocked 15 shots - including five each by streak ·over nonconference visitors to Cole
Randle and Holden - the fourth most in Field House - the Terrapins haven't been
· beaten there since 'Coppin State turned the
. team history and most in 13 years.
Baxter's sprained right ankle sheuld be-tr~cok--in DeeembeF 1989 - Williams is quick
· better by the time the Terrapins (11-2) play to point out that the most recent victories
host to North Carolina on Jan: 9, but were hardly the cakewalks they appeared.
Williams was pleased with the ·'fay other
players stepped up. .
.
.
~'It was great to see (Randle) have the
poise when he went in there," Williams said.
"It didn't look like he felt any extra pressure." ·
Randle took his most impressive game at
Cole Field House in stride.
"I just went out and did what the coach
told me to do and played hard," Randle said.
"I just want to get in and play bard and be
the key player."
The loss was the fourth straight for the
Spartans (3-10), who fell to 2-9 on the ro·ad.
Norfolk State coach Wil Jones had pre. pared hi_s team for the Terrapins' inside-outside game featuring Baxter, the team's sec.:

TOP ]5

-.

Urban lqend to
make debut, Cl

MONEY

INSIDE

Textile Country: A
dying im:lustry, 01

Creed dominates

•

NeVIsmat.

•

William S. .Guthrie, 89
Cathy L Leffingwell, 53
Stephen McComas, 56
~arie R. Sturgeon, 79
Jack Codner, .71
Jaela A. Hall, 22
•Casey Kibble, 2,1
'
Details, AS
'

GALLIPOLIS - Flu vaccine is being olfer,ed at no out
of pocket expense to Gallia
County residents by the Gallia County H~alth Department.
The · vacciJle is available
daily from 8 p.m.'fo 11:30
a.m. and l p.m. to 4 p.m.
Protection from , the flu
develops about two weeks
after the shot is given. Flu season in the U.S: runs from
Noven\ber through April, and·
the department advised · it's
not too late.to get a flu shot if
yOU haven't gotten one yet. .
!;'or deciili, .call 441-2'150.

.

Must (wait and see' how
91 f1 h~' affected economy
•

'

TRIBUNE NEWS STAFF

Calendars
Celebrations
Classffieds
co~ies

C2·3
C1·6

02-5
· insert

.

, n .

Dear Abby ''

Editorials '
obituaries ·
Regipn i
Sports •
wi!at~er

,,

! A4 '
A6

• A2.
'.

81·8
A3

, Cl 2001 Oh.IQ Valley Publlthl"' Co.

the name to
Shoppe and -left DQ. They ·
moved to the present loca.tion at the corner of Sec. ond Avenue an!i Olive
Street in 1969.
Success was grand and in
1977,
the
Snedakers
opened a second restaurant
on Jackson Pike.
jeff has worked at the
Shake. Shoppe since 1964,
and in 1983 he and his
wife' Vera bought the two
. shops fiom his parents.
Their son Tim works at
the Jackson Pike store,
· marking the third genera\ion of Snedakers to be a
part of the family business.

THEIR OWN
BOSS - Pictured
·from left are son
Tim, Jeff 'and
wife Vera
Snedaker at the
Jackson Pike
Shake Shoppe.
The Snedakers
bought the busl·
ness from Jeff's
parents In 1983.

....... _
'

Sh•ke Shoppe, AS

PIAH IH Economy, A1

Southern
add·~. . .

AuditOrz·:·Busilless owners
\(r

must still report. on·taxes
Tax amnesty program
end.s]an~ 15

· c.Q!tltnuni[y center.
RACINE Southern
,vac:ate:d at the end of
BY KEviN KEliY
Local Board of Education
. school · year,
,
TIME5-SEI'jTINEL
srAFF
contin11ed a discussion of :. wl1~•
1dents were moved ,
GALUI'OLIS
So
you're
a business owner
the fate · of Syracuse EleSouthern Ele- ·
and have less than $10,000 in personal propermtntary School and the
School.
, ty that's exempted .from taxation in Ohio.
(eaf estate su'r rounding it
asked SuperGt:eat. But you still have to file the property's
during· it( recent. meeting,
James Lawrence
value on persol)al property taX forms.
• offering three options to
the village Qf •
The owner won't be taxed if the amount is
.
Syracuse.
thl:ee·)ptio:ns
for
disposal
or":
under
$Hl,OOO, bu! the law requires the value
Syracuse Village Council
still .be listed on.the report, Gallia C 0 unty Audihas requested that the
,· ' ·,
·
tor Lariy ·M. Betz said.
. building and grounds· be · ,
' It'~.. n.o t; pbiy important {Qr k~?,ing a full
transf~rred to the village for '
FROM STAFF REPORTS

• Air Conditioning

•

• AMIFM Stereo .

....

CHIYIOLIT
WWU.IItHIIII"

Buick
lfi •II

local economic picture is' improving, but the events of
Sept. 11 and their effect on the nation's economic climate make the local picture harder to
understand, said Meigs' economic development
director. '
Manufacturers who,
. earlier last year, had
begun to consider locating in Meigs have put
their plans on hold until
the nation's economy
stabilizes, Perry Varnadoe said, but he predicts
a "good rebound" and a
continuation of last
. attractyears' progress m
ing new industry and
V.mldoe
' retail business to tlie
.
t.&gt;'
.
' •
•
·· ,.- ··-·· .. ,_ ·..,, • ~o!fimuntty. ._.,_
The''"tJjl~ing of WeCan FabriCators in thi
East Meigs industrial Site at Tuppers Plains,
gro~ndbreaking on the Ravenswood Bridge
Cormector and {J.S. 33 between Darwin and
A!hens, construction of new school-buildings in
the county's three di$tricts and the formation of
a health care steering committee are all positive
economic indicators, and shpuld bode well for
the'local economy, Varnadoe said.
"Overall, it's a positive time, Varnadoe said.
" O~r. new road£ ;are, under construction, and in
the 'Joitg te~in. that'~ the best development we
can have, for~s · and for the next generation."
"We're very lucky that the projects got started when they did. We were right under the
wire. They began at a time when the state is cutting off money for.highways."
Varnadoe said Jeff Cox's opening of WeCan
Fabricators in Tuppers PI.Uns, whidl is expected
to be in full operation early this year, is an
important development, both economically and

ALLIPOLIS Fifty-plus years
later and the
family•owned
Shake Shoppes are still
putting smiles on their customers' faces and good
· food in their bellies.
Frank
and
Marge
Snedaker opened what was ·
then a ·Dairy Queen in
1951 at the corner of Second Avenu~. and Sycamore
Street in Gallipolis. It was
the first DQ in this part of
the state, ~ccordin_g to their
son jelr, who is the currell.t

.

4 Sedhnl- 24 ~

BY BRIAN J. REED

TIMEG-SENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY ~ Meigs Counry's

BY KR• DoTSON

'building

•'

' Taxtt, Tags, T~e FHe tXIrl. IW&gt;IIe Included In sale price or new vehicle ll&amp;ted 10t1e1e epplicablo. "On approv8d Cledit. On soloded models. Not ruponslblt for t)1&gt;ogrlphlcaJ 811011
. Prien Good January 2nd Through Jll/lllary 61\.
·
·•
·
·
·

fMeigs
County

Half-century of
Shake Shoppe
leaves record
of satifaction

G

.

ECONOMY

roductive
LONG TIME EMPLOYEE - Randy Scott .
works as assistant manager at the Shake
Shoppe, and has been there since 1971.
(Bryan Long)

President Bush will sign an
education bill In Ohio Tues. da~. The bill Is worth $26.5
· billion. The money will pe
l!Sed to help Ohio students
receive a l:letter education.
Story on A8 '

1.25

1

1001 was

,

Ind• .

•Automatic

years

•

• •

• Crul•, nh, Chroma Pkg.

17,150*

mt

.and still

avall8ble ·

2001 Oldsmobile...
Intrigue GX Sedan

•

. I

'

Fi

Flu vaccine

2000Chevy
Cavalier Sedan ,

the charts, C4

tmes

iflali:!Oe,~::JII
· Details, A3

• 5300 V-1 P-, Automltlc
·• CD Syttlm, Locking Dllf.

.

•

NBA

125,95

-r

I

N EW YORK ' (AP) tbne, as New Yotlt opened the, Rather than call timeout;
Determined tli avoid another extra session with a 7-0 run. though,' coach Don Nelsotj
disheartening loss, the New )llcksQp had a season-high 17 motioned for his team to pusJt
York Knicks assists, including an alley-oop the ball upcourt. Bucknet
foiP)d a way pass to Marcw Camby for a could manage only a 45-fool
:
to summon. 105-98 lead with 30 seconds heave that wasn't close.
sow: energy left in overtime.
Hornets 114,
just when it lookeq ~ if they
Camby scored a season-high
Warrion 102
,
were falling apart. ·'''
.
26 jloints, and Houston added
A snowstorm at Charlotte
The Knicks recov~.,OO from a 19 for the Knicks, who had lost kept the crowd below 1,000 a!
frustrating lull early in' the third live of their previous six home the Hornets won behind
Baron Davis' 28 points, 1 i
quarter, shut down ~-scor- ~es. ·
ing Dallas for ne~rly' l!e min"We finally got the job .assists and 10 rebounds. . :
eat the done," Sprewell said. "It was
After Charlotte lost forWard
utes and went on to
Mavericks 108- 101 in over- one of those ~es where we PJ. Brown with a spnined I~
time Thursday night. .
bad been in this situation ankle, and with center Eiden
New York's victory.£,revent- before and \!re haven't gotten Campbell and guard David
ed Dallas from extending irs the job done. Tonight we got Wesley limited in the first half
wi~ning streak to .11 j~ a row, the job oone."
because of foul trouble, the
wh1ch would have ·qed the · Nowitzki had 30 points and Hornets' reserves easily , han~
franchise record.
"
16 rebounds, Steve N&lt;~Sh died Golden · State's. starters,
"I didn't want to come back scored 19 points and , Greg building a 64-48 halftime lead;
in the locker room with tire Buckner. bad 17 points and
Antawn Jamison had · 24
same feeling," Allan l;{buston eight assists for Dallas, which points and 12 rebounds to lea&lt;!
said. "There was a stretCl when hadn't lost since Dec. 10 at the Warriors, who lost their
we started talking and bringing Utah.
third straight game.
some energy, and it got. rp the
Michael Finley played for the
Rocbu 99, Pistolll 97
Steye Francis tied his caree(
point where our energy came first titrie after sitting out two
_back arid we started to tt}l'to be. ~es with a stnined ham- high with 36 points, including
the old Knicks - de(~nsive string. He missed his first four a running jumper with two~
intensity and getting stops late shots and finished 3-for- 15 for tenths of a second left that gave
in the game."
,.-.
ejglit points, sitting out the Houston the victory.
Kevin Willis scored I 0 of lili
Immediately before hat, entire fourth quarter. .
thinss looked ·bad fo the
Dallas lost for the first time 12 points. the final quarter as
Knicks.
·
,II
in 15' games when scoring lQO the Rockers beat the Pistons at
.
· Houston for the ninth stnight
Dirk Nowitzki convert~d a points or more.
four-point play early in . the . New York had a chance to time. Eddie Griffin added 19
third quarter, and Othella Har- take the lead as the clock ticked points for Houston.
Jerry Stackhouse scored 2g
rington and Latrell Spn!weU inside 10 seconds with the
pick~d up technical foutqfor score tied 94-94. Houston points and Corliss Williamson
argumg.
•
. · ··
missed on a drive to the basket, added a season-high 25 for the
The Mavericks took a 72-63 and
Johnny
Newman Pistons,' who have lost nine of
lead, but the Knicks sud~y rebounded for Dallas.
their last 10 games.
stopped unraveling. Spre:tlfU
made two high-flying du){ks
off no-look passes from M.k
Jackson, the Mavericks mi'd
Rotozlll, Mllwaulm•• Import,
16 consecutive shots :ind e
Toolbox wonii .SIOOD.
fourth quarter . was tight ·• e
Lost on IR 7 a 11 overpass
whole way.
,
n•r fairground .,.d....day
In the only other NI;IA
games, Charlotte defeatf!i!
morning 7:00
Golden State · 114-l 02 a~
anyone ~ltlllnforluatlon.
Houston beat Detroit 99-97.
PIM. . contact
Sprewell scored 22 points,
Steve . . . . 741-IH•IIII.
· including the first five of over-

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Sllverldo ext Cab 4 Door 4x4

.,. -

•

TEMPO

OT

a.-n.

· CAN'T STOP ME·- Maryland's Steve
Blake (25) drives aga_lnst Norfolk State's
Chakowby Hicks during the second half of
Maryland's 92-69 win Thursday. (AP)

...

•

.•

•

.

I

.

-...:-

•

. record, but helps the county
collect a reimbursement
fiom the state, Betz said.
The rule :).lso · applies to
West Virginia businesses .
operating in Ohio, he
adiled.
'
·
" I know of companies or offices that have machinery
or equipment or inventory,
or all three, aQd the personal
properry taX rerurns their accountants,_file don't
reflect any.of it," Betz. said.
"The exemption does not excuse the need to
file or report personal property valued at less

PIHH -

Auditor, A1

• j

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

To I.I.ARN M_oRE or to schedulean appointment,
call one ofour customer service n:pll!Senlatives .
tollfrl£ at (866) 821-4541
.

•"

@

goOCI

HOLZER
For afrrr brochurr on wdgiu loss SUIXCI)( call 11166) 821-*541

-

•

A;

·--~"'-----..,._.,-

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...

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•

-

·---·----·· -----·-.............til
of.

•

•

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