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                  <text>Page 10

The Daily Sentinel.

With the MVP award and
the Rookie of the Year award
already among his accomplishmenu, Allen Iverson
added another that might
have seemed a bit overdue.
.With 30 points, 11 assis~
and 10 rebounds, Iverson had
the
first
triple-double
·
of his NBA
career as the
Philadelphia 76ers defeated
the Los Angeles Clippers
·116-92 Monday night.
"It feels good to finally get
one. It took me six years,"
Iverson said.
- The Sixers never trailed
after the first basket, had runs
·of 14-4 in the first quarter,
19-5 in the second ,and
opened a 22-point lead in the
third. .
.
Harpnng had 19 pom ts
and 12 reqounds, Dikembe
Mutombo had 16 points and
12 rebounds, and Aaron
McKie added 14 points for
the Sixers, who shot 5l.6
percent.
It was Philadelphia's first
game at the First Union
Center since.Dec. 21, follow~
ing: a seven-game road trip
through the West. The players
wore headbands for the
fourth straight game, a sign of
unity after the · latest rumor
that coach Larry Brown is
going to quit.
"I was concerned about
this game because I thought
we'd be tired," Brown said.
"We started out with such
life. I think when you start
out and it is too easy, it is very
difficult when a team comes
back at you. We handled it
very well."
·
TimberWolves 109,
Pistons 93
At Minneapo,lis, Kevin
Garnett scored. 23 points and
.Gary Trent had a season-high
20 as the Timberwolves won
their fifth straight game.
. Garnett added 12 rebounds
and Trent 10 as the Wolves
dominated the boards, 51-30.
Minnesota had six players in
double figures.
The Wolves erased an early
seven-point deficit with t_heir
most productive quarter of
the season. Minnesota scored
38 points in the second quarter, with Trent scoring eight
during a decisive 27-10 run.
Trent's three-point 'play
with 3:21 left in the third
q10arter gave the Wolves their
biggest lead, 85-62.
Jerry .Stackhouse · led
Detroit with 24 points and 10
assists.
Hornets 94, Nuggets 80
At Charlotte, PJ. Brown,
who missed (::harlotte's previous game with a sprained
ankle, had a career-high 22

A
.
NB

.
'

. !,

'

POll
from PageS
edge in first"place votes but
leads
South
Charleston
Southeastern by just eight
points. Russia, with 123

CIRCUS SHOT - Philadelphia 76ers' Allen lvarson (3)
drives in for an underhand
layup Monday. (AP)
rebounds and Elden Campbell' added 21 points and 18
rebounds.
·
Tmil Blazers 96,
Cavaliers 72
At Cleveland, Dale Davis
scored 20 points and grabbed
15 rebounds to lead the Trail
Blazers, who won to start a
string of four road games in
five' nights.
Seven of Davis' rebounds
came at the offensive end as
the Trail Blazers dominated
every. aspect. Portland had
lost seven of its last eight on
the road.
Zydrunas llgauskas scored
11 poinq; to lead Cleveland,
which has lost six of eight
and now embarks on a six·game Western trip.
Instead, Cleveland shot 35
percent from the field, was
outrebounded 47-37 and
trailed by more than 20 points
for most of the second half.
Magic 98, Celtics 87
At Orlando, Mike Miller
had 27 points, ninerebounds
and five assists as the Magic
gained their third straight
1
wn.
Tracy McGrady added 21
points for Orlando (18-18),
which reached the .500 mark
for the . first time since Dec.
13. McGrady was limited by
the flu, but still shot 9-for-18
with seven rebounds and six
assists.
Paul Pierce had 20 points
for Boston, which l9st for the
fifth · time· in eight games.
Antoine Walker added 19
p 0 ints and·nine rebounds.
Boston closed within two
poi11ts on Walker's layup with
three minutes remaining, but
Orlando closed the game on a
12-3 rurt.
Spurs 9.0, Knicks 79
At San Antonio, Tim Duncan saifk four free throws in
the closing minutes · and
scored a team-hillh 21 points.
A 3-point basket by Charles
Smith put the Spurs up 81-68
with fewer than five minutes
remaining, but the Knicks
charged back with nine
straight points to pull within
four with 2:35 left.
Duncan's foul shots reignited the Spurs, who finished
the game with a 9-2 run.The
backbreaker for the Knicks
was a 3-pointer by Bruce
Bowen that put San Antonio's
edge back into double-digits
with 43 seconds left.
Allan Houston paced the
Knicks with 22. ·
SuperSonics 100,
Bulls 88
At Chicago, Gary Payton
scored 26 points to lead Seat-

NCAA

tie to its eigl;th wi1; in nine
g~mes.

Vin B~ker added .13 points
and Rashard Lewis had 12 for
the Sanies, who scored 32
points off of 25 Chicago
turnovers. The Sanies also
dominated the Bulls inside,
getting 48 points in the paint.
Ron Artest scored ·26
points and Ron Mercer
added 16 for the Bulls, .who
have lost four strai ght after
winning their first two under
coach Bill Cartwright.

points, Centerburg (122) and
Tipp City Bethel (120) are
lurking nearby.
The poll continues for
seven weeks with champions
in the 56th annual poll ·
announ~ed at the end of the
regular season.

Hason

2001 ~2002

pollS for The Assoclat·
ed P'resa (records through games of Jan.
8):

DIVISION I

Record

Pta

7.()
9-0
8·1
10·1
9.()
6·1

241
212
153
153
97
69
• 66
60
53
52
52

1, COlo. Brookhaven (17)
2. Tol. St. John's (3)
3, 'Cfn. Wlntoo Woods (4)
Hamilton (3)
5, Dublin Sciolo (1)
.a, Warren Harding (1)
7, Dublin Coffman
a. Lakoloood St. Edward
9. Cots. Independence
1o, Shaker His.
Wooa1er

6-1

s-1
s-o
6-2
9..Q

Others receiving 12 or more points: 12,

Sprlnglleld South 44. 13, Tot. Sco1t 39. 14,
Tot. Cent. Cath. 37. 15, Ctn. LaSalle 36.
1a, Conlon 111eKinley 23. 17 (tie), Center·
viNe. Westerville Soulh 21 . 19 (tie), E. "lv·
0rpool. Xenia 20. 21, Zanesville 18. 22,
Cleve. Glenville 18. 23, Lancaster 13.

DIVISION IV

. DIVISION II
I , AI&lt;. St. Vln.·St. r.lary (22) 7·1
235
2, OhaWII·Giandorl (3)
9.() , 161
• 3, Warrenavii!H«s. ·
9· 1
150
9-o
112
4, Cantoo So&lt;ilh
&amp;, Dcv8f
e-o
88
85
a. 51. Bemard Roger Bacon 8·2
7, Willard
7·1
a. Footorla (3)
6·1
72
9, Port Clinton
9-o
71
10, Wash. Court House (1) ' 6.()
a1
Others receiving 12 or more polnta: 11, lawn 47 .~ 15, Defiance Ayersvme 48. 16,
"OUdolwllle 53. 12. Nllto 111eKinley 44. 13, Cots. Wellington 34. 17, Berlin Hiland 26.
Cote. Beechcrofl 43. 14, Cambrl&lt;lge 42. _1&amp;, McComb 2,13. 19, Reedavllle E111tarn
15, Whllel1all· Yearling 37. 16, Bellevue 34. 23. 20, MIAster 22. 21. Sycamore Mohawk
17 (tie),. . New ConcOrd John Glenn, Sun- 21 . 22. Sugarcreek Garaway 17. 23 (lie).
, bury Big· Walnut 26. 19, Golllpollo Gatlla Lanc8stor ·Fishor Cath., St. Henry 16. 25
Acad. 25. 2Q, Youngs. Ursuline 20. 2 1, (tie), Covlnglon, Ft. Recovery, Old Fort 13

n

Hometown Newspaper

What's inside

HOUSE FIRE

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS

Distri-ct could

save up to
$24,000 on
fuel expenses

Deaths
Thereon A. Johnson
Kathleen Kittle, 84
William Thorla, 30
Details, 3

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Pomeroy ~an ·survives
fire, listed as Serious' .

Hlp: 40s. Low: 40s
Details, 3

.

'

6

'

Consumer
a edit soars

Man st-!ffering from ,burns, lacerations ifter fleeing blaze
the up stair s bedroom.
His twin brother, Blaine,
POMEROY
· A who was · downstairs when
Pomeroy man is in . serious the fire star.ted, rece ived
condition at Cabell Hunt- minor burns when h e went
ington Hospital, Hunting- upstairs to ass ist Dwayne .'
ton, W.Va ., where lie was Blaine was treated at the
trarrsportep by MedFlight scene.
. ·.
f b '
d
..fior t re.atm~ nt o . urns _an • Rick Blaettnar, acting fire
other InJUries suff.ered Ill a chief for the Pomeroy Fire
fire Tuesday mormng.
Department, said that when
. Dwayne Qualls is being firefighter s arrived on the
treated at the hospital for scene at 6:51 a.m., flames
burns to the upper part of were shooting out of the
his body, along with severe second floor of the wood
lacerations suffered · when· , frame, two cstory house
he broke out a window in located at 1761 Chester
BY CHARLDE HOEFUCH

• WASHINGTON (AP) ~
f).mericani increased their
qorrowing in November by
tpe largest amount on
record. A big rise in a\'to
loans spurred by z.ero-interest rate financing offers led
the way.
C.e~~e'r 'ttedit sOared by
a seasoitlny"';ldjusted $19.8
billion in November, or a
14.6 percent annual rate, the
Federal Reserve reported
Tuesday.,
, : The dollar increase was the
biggest since the Fed began
record-keeping in January
1943 and the percentage
iNcrease was the largest since
November 1995.
Economists were expecting · consumer borrowing to
rise, but by a lot less around $3 billion to $4 billion during the month.

Northwest Airlines Takes You To W&gt;rid-Class Golf
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Clsl115: 7-8-13-16-19-22

Huntsville,

Index
..

''

Montgomery, and

Calendar '
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaties

·

eight Trail sites. Experience ~78
· holes of some of the best and most
1.100.949.4444
WWU( rtjgo/fcom ·

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Flyer magazine listed the Trail

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2
6-8
9

2
4
3
3
5, 7, 8, 10

Weather

tiM
NORTHWEST
\J

c 2001 Ohio VaHey

A I R L I' N E So

D]FSfacility .
offers swices for

3
Publ~hins

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

"one-stop"

• 1Hdloii-10Pipl

Mobile and you're in

o~

co.

center for
th,ose seeking · work
and those
seeking
'trained
empl?ye~s

w:as g1ven
to
Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce members during their
Tuesday meeting.

Teresa Lavender ·of the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
discussed the center and the
services it provides.
One-Stop Centt;rs were
implemented in Ohio counties las t summer, as the result
of the Workforce 'Investment
Act of 1998. That legislation
consolidated 17 workfoce
programs, including the Job
Training and Partnership Act
OTPA), and placed services
offered through those programs in local' control.
Working with GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency, University of Rio
Grande, Meigs Cou1;1ty Economic Development Office,
and the Experience Work&lt;
Senior Workforc e Solutions,
Green 'thumb prograni,

Holzer

of yours.

I

•

neW''"

'

•

''

among other programs, the
center offers resume preparation, job search, and other
services', and offers a resource
center providing updated job
listings , and ed'ucational . and
financial aid and labor market information.
The center is located- on
the second floor of the DJFS
offices in Middleport.
·~No
longer will our
clients be limited by any eligibility
refjuirements," ·.
Lavender said." Anyone who
comes into the door seeking
employment will be gladly
served."
~
Lavender said that the centers will also be valuable to
employers see king specifically- trained workers, because a
special employee/ employer
·match syste m will be used .

I

~

•

POMEROY - Meigs Local School District could save
$24,179.79 in the cost of natural gas this year because it participates in the Metropolitan Educational Council (MEC)
self-help gas program, a MEC press release said.
This is the third year that Mei!l" Local has gone .with
. MEC in an effort to reduce utility costs.
·
The first two years after deregulation of g.S, the district
contracted with· a subsidiar-y of Columbia Gas. ·
This year it is in the self-help natural gas service with
Enron Energy Services as the provider.
In talking with Superintendent William Buckley Tuesday,
he said that despite Enron 's bankruptcy," the district shouldn't get hurt, although the savings might not be quite as
much."
He said that if Enron is unable to fulfill its contract, then
the backup would be through the Columbia Gas consortium of school districts.
Buckley said that . the tremendo us buying power allows
MEC to purchase products in larger quantities and that
translates into savings for member districts.
Because of the Enron bankruptcy and the possibility of a
change o( supplier, the superintendent acknowledged that
the savings might not be the $24,000 MEC has. proj~cted
and the distri ct had planned on.
·
MEC is made up of more than 143 school districts and
related agencies in central and southern Ohio.
It reported that last year, l89 MEC member school districts· and re1ated agencies that subscribe to th e MEC SelfHelp Gas Program saved $2,971,165, based on a price comparison with c.,lumbia Gas (August 2000-July 200\ actualized volumes) .
This is the 15th year MEC has teamed up with a provider
to bring school districts savings on natural gas. The gas supplier transports. natural gas to schools using Columbia Gas lines .

Thornton remains'
·in trauma unit
fROM STAFF REPORTS

HUNTINGTON, WVa . Meigs County
Commissioner JeffThornton is expected to fully
recover from a second surgery performed las t
weebnd. •
·
Meigs Co unty Commissioner Mi ck Davenport
said Tuesday Thornton remains
in the trauma unit at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va .,
following a second surgery on
. Saturday.
Thornton was fir st admitted
to Pleasant Yalley Ho spital in
Point Pleasant, WVa., the
weekend of De c. 29 for e~ner­
gency gastrointestinal surgery
Thornton
and was tran sferred to the
Huntington ho spital on· Friday
after spe nding a week in the intensive care unit
at PVH .
.
.
A family member reported Monday that
Thornton was in critical condition following his
second operation·, but is expected to make a full
recovery.
"He's coming along a · lot better," Davenport
said .
Davenport conducted last Thursday's regular
commission meeting in Thornton's absence.
Thornton, a Racine Democrat, was elected in
1996, and is now serving his second term. In
2001, he was elected president of the Board of
.C ommissioners.

Equip111ent, Inc•.

Oxygen and Related ~ervices.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.
'

Rates will vary dependlnQ on point of departure, season, and hotel. Price Is per person, based on double occupancy at
rpre·selecled hotels. Does not Include taxes and surcharQes. Some reSirlcllons may apply. Subject to avallablilly. May not
be available in all areas. These advertised prices will Increase affer.february 14, 2002.
Tum 1M ctn!IIUon•: T11nl '-riH, Air lrml tickGI:I mu1t IN booked by Stllltmbtt 30, 2002 and llml tomp!ftlld ~ NOYtmber 13, D2.loeldlt R-..lrttMMt:
Tri'ltlls Pllrmlttad on Nonhwnt Alrllnft and on Nonllwe&amp;l Altllnk lliglltl operalld by Mtuba ~Uon and hprm Alrllnelllnc. Rutmlo!M 1111 TJcb~Nw:
Ticket• mll!t Ill lulled 11 least 14 lllVI prior 10 Mptlttlll. Same day standby ptrmined. Uptra!!tl 1ft not ptrmitttd except WOr1dPtrb t111t card USIQrldft,
Sa.IUrday n~h t llll)' tequlftd. Maximum stay 30 11m. Stopovers art net ptrmlllld. OIMI Wa-,JDouble Ooen Jaw Iff not perm ~!ltd. Fares art not ~ombiOibhl 111111
NW pubNSI"Itd tarn. Not 'II lid with any otllt r dlsc!alnts, coupons or travetawanli. tNI11111 Mil CIIICIHaUon; Tlcbll art non retullllabl61. Cllanon kl return~
and date permtlled lor 1 SIOO admlnlstratl¥t In, howt\'tr any tha~~Qt must mttllhe condition• olthe
pun;hlsed.' Nam.- chlf!Ufl not PKmlttKI once
ticket hli been Juued. Worldl'elil Mllt11t Pnsenger1 1r1 el~iblt for WorldPetl!s millage crtdlt~ Mlftlloltll Taatllf111: Puunger Facility cflarges D1 up to
$18 roundtrip Pill pmon. ami $2.75 ladtrat exclu to ptr ttlght SIIQment apply to lirllrn. AtlighiiiQmtm Is fiellnld ua rakeoH and.• llrnling.

a.m.
Cause of the fire is
unknown , th e. acting chief
said. He 'also noted • that
there was r)o in surance . The
Middleport Fire Departmcnt was on th e sce ne to
assist.

One-stop employment
center open for business

MIDDLEPORT An
overview of
a
new

•'

Birmingham,

ea&amp;y driving range of 21 courses

Road, Pomeroy.
The fi re was contained to
two seco nd floor bed rooms, Blaettnar said, with
only water, smoke and heat
damage to the downstairs.
Thre e tru cks and 14 fire me1,1 Were there until 9:29

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

emplqm,~

w.vA.
Dally 3: 3-6-9
P•IIY 4: 4-8-1-2

and golf packages. Visit the Trail

Trail stops in

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OHIO ·

included.

hotel packages.

.I

Lotteries

3 rounds of

•

'

Weather

DIVISION Ill

1' Waal1. &amp;.dt Can. (6) 10·0 ' 150
2. S.C. Soulheaetem (1)
s-o
142
3, RuBOta (1)
e-o· 123
4, Centorllu'lj (7)
• 7·1
122
5, 11pp City Bethel (6)
IH
120
8, MeG. Up. Sciolo Val. (1) 9.()
104
7, Zenesvtlle ROMCrane (3) 8·1
60
8, Convoy Crestview
8·1
75
9, BrlstoMflo Bristol ( 1)
9·1
72
10, Set&gt;nng McKinley
7·0 • 68
Others rteelvlng 12 or more points: 11,
Shadyside (1 ) 59. 12, sandusky St. Mary's
(1)49. 13, Dalton (I) 48. 14, Sidney Fair·

AWp County's

Tuesday morning fire. (David Harris)

Springboro ta. 22, Ravenna Southeast 15.
23, Akron Centrai-Hower 13.
1, Wheet•r•burg (8)
' 9.Q
205
2, waynesville (6)
9.()
173
3, Ca88town Miami East (4) 9·1
160
4, Zoa.vlfle Tusc. Val. (3)
9.()
144
5, Marion Pleasanl (1)
7-Q
1'20
6, Newton Faits (2)
8·1
98
7, Clove. Cant. Cath. (1 )
8-1
60
6, Versailles 8·1
67
9, Elyria Cath. (2)
IH
65
10, Bedloro Chane! (2)
6·1
52
.Haviland Wayne Trace
7;.1
52
Other1 receiving 12 Of more points: 12,
Canal Winchester 50. t 3, Findlay Liberty·
Benton 41 . 14, N. Lima S. Range 38. 15,
Metamora Evergreen 33. 16, Bloom..Car·
roll 24. 17, Cardlngton-Uncoln 22. 18,
Brooklyn 1!1': 19 (tfe), Cln . Madeira ,
WOOdsfield Monroe-Cenlrlfll12.

to

a1

FIRE- Heavy damage was incurred to the Quails home on Chester Road, Pomeroy, In an early

~- AP PREP HOOPS P.Ou. .
COLUt.1BUS, Ohio (AP) - How a SIBle
panel of sports writers and broadcasters
rates ot15o hlgh school boys basketball
taams In ttJe; first ot seven weekly regular·

••

Gonzaga hordson in ·m
ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (AP) - Gonzaga
The loss snapped New ,Mexico's (10-4) eightguard Dan Dickau will relish his scoring in 011er- game winning saeak.
time. Ruben Douglas will anguish overhis missed
Dickau also had 10 iwists and no rurnovm
opportunity at the end of regulation.
while playing aD 44 prinutes.
.
Guard Blake Stepp led th~ B~' scoring
No. 18 Gonzaga beat New Mexico 95-90
' Monday night because of with 20 points .
Dickau's . solid shooting in
No, 5 Oklahoma 69, Connecticut 67
overtime and Douglas' failure
in Harford, Conn., · Ebi Ere's driving jumper
at the foul line late iri the with 16 seconds left, Oklahoma's only field gqal
final seconds of the second hal£
· over the finalS 112 minutes, gave the No.5 Soon•
Dickau scored eigh,! of his 19 points in over- ers a victory over Connecticut (8-3).
Ere, a junior college transfer, finished with 24
time and Gonzaga (-13-2) survived an ill-advised
technical and a big second half rally by the Lobos. poin.ts and nine rebounds as Oklahoma '(12- 1)
Dickau got the chance to take over in overtime won its 11th sttaight game.
when Douglas missed two free throws with 7 secHollis Price .added 17 paints for Oklahoma,
onds left in regulation and the game tied at 78.
which finished with a 45-32 rebounding advan''l'm sure people will ~!..yell on those free tage, including 28-12 at the offensive end.
throws," New Mexico coach Fran Fraschilla said.
Caron Butler led the Huskies wicq 25 points,
"They'll be. talking about them 30 years from while Johnnie Selvie had 12, and freshman Emeka
now."
Okafor had 11 points, eight rebounds and eight
.
Douglas' missed free throws seemed to cfrain the blocked shots.
. Lobos, and the Bulldogs- no strangers to presN~ 19 Wake Forest 87, Navy 65
sure - seized the opportunity.
In Annapolis, Md., Cr:rig Dawson scored 21
"We wanted to come out aggressive," Dickau points, all on 3-pointers, and Wake Forest (12-3)
said of the overtime. "I wanted to attack the rim never trailed.
and set the tempo for the rest of team."
Darius Songaila had 18 points and 12 rebounds,
He did, going 6-for-6 at the folll line and Taron Downey added 15 points, and Josh Howard
adding a short jumper that put Gonzaga ahead to 14 for Wake Forest.
stay at 91-89 with 35 seconds left. Forced foul ,
Jehiel Lewis led the Midshipmen (5-1 0) with
·
New Mexico picked on Dickau, who hit four 14 points.
foul shots in the final 19 seconds.
No. 24 Butler 62, Cleveland St. 45
Gonzaga, one '?f only three teams to reach the
In &lt;;:leveland, Rylan Hainje and Thoinas Jackround of 16 in the N~,AA tournament in each of son scored 14 points apiece for the Bull,dogs (14.
.the last three years, overcame New Mexico's sec- 1 overall, 1-1 Horizon), who looked rusty early in
. ond-half rally an'd a hostile crowd of 17,423 in their first game sin\e losing.the conference openhe Pit.
er to Wright State in double overtime last iNeek. ·

'

Literary Club reviews Civil War book, 2

........,......, .. H02

Iverson gets fi~ career triple-double
BY THE ASSOCIATED !'fiESS

.

M E o a cAL c E NT E R

288 7 s;pte Route 760 • ~allipolis

Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information,.call

www .holzer .org

.

(740) 446·4095
..•

•

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~edne.a.v,Jan.t. 2002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

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Ohio weather

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS
.,

Tburadlly, JM. 10
\

Pabol dtes Radne man

\ J

Kathleen Kittle

•

.
DEAR ABBY: My wife died .
· two yean ago. Sinre then, I . have
had health problems that make it
difficult co live alone.
I tried an assisted-living complex, ·
but when I added up the expenses,
my son suggested I move in with
them. I thought it was a good idea
becaus~ I would rather give them
the money.
The -problem is my 1 ~-year-old
granddaughter, "Vane,.a." My son
and his wife are intelligent people,
and I don't understand how they
have raised this selfish, inconsiderate, insolent, demanding brat. Vanessa. thinks the world revolves around
her. If she doesn't get her way, she
yells, screams, and says terrible
things to her parents - and they
take it! I want to. get up and slap
her. Even though she is my grand-

1-117"*·1

•

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
daughter, I find it difficult to like
her.
'
Abby, there are no rules, no discipline, no punishment, no guidelines
whatsoever in their home. I can't
take her behavior any longer. I want
to move out at the end of the
month. What do you think? HAD IT IN DENVER
DEAR HAD IT: Please don't
blame your granddaughter for this

situation. In a household where
there are no rules, no discipline, no
consequences and no guidelines,
her attitude and behavior are logical.
It is possible that a better living
arrangement for you might be to
share a )lome or apartment with
someone closer to you in age. Your
local area agency on aging may be
able to steer you in the right direc~
tion. However, before you make auy
hard and fast decisions about
changing your address, I urge you '
to have a frank talk with your son .
and daughter-in-law about the reasons you're making the move.
DEAR ABBY: I have read your
column for more years than I can
remember, and have always wanted .
to read tbe very first letter that
appeared in your column . Would

you print it ~gain?- AIMEE IN
MACEDON, N.Y.
DEAR AIMEE: With pleasure!
The letter appeared 45 years ago
today, on jan . 9,1956. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I have never
written to a paper for advice
before, but need help desperately
and cannot talk to my family ot
!j'iends about my problem. I am a
private secretary to a well- known
executive in the Bay area. I have
been employed by him for five
years. You may think this sounds
cheap, but we are deeply in love.
His wife speaks . to him only when
she wants money and he has no
respect or affection f,;r her.
He has told me repeatedly that I
am the wom~n he loves, but we
can't consider marriage because it
would ruin him financially . and

socially. In addition to an excellent
salary, he has given· me an automobile, a fur coat: and he pays my rent .
When he takes business trips, I
always go along. I am not getting_
any younger, yet I feel one day he;
will make me his wife.-What do you;
think? - ' CONFIDENT
DEAR CONFIDENT: I think
your boss is a super salesman! He
did a terrific job when he con-:
vin ced an intelligent girl like you to
give up a decent, respec table life of.
her own to be available when he:
whistles . Of course he won't marry
you. Why should he? He is getting
the whole show for 'the price 'o f the ·
amusement tax.
.

.1 Calumhe l!fJCr- I

- •.
:

o-.._,.,
.
,_.
..
..
.. __
&amp;my PO. Cloudy

1

I

fPaulirte Phillips and her daughrer :
jeanne Phillips sl1are the pseudonym ·•
Abigail Van Bi&lt;ren.)
·
:·

...

.

end is every bit as crucial as
, why they start and 'how they
are fought. He believes, she
said, that far too many wars
end quite badly.
She made reference to Ireland whose war has been
going on for hundreds o'f
years, the Balkans, Lebanon,
and Cambodia. Heighton said
that America's Civil War could
have ended just as badly, but it
didn't and the reasons are
addressed in Winik's book.
This author's position,
according to the reviewer, was
that the very survival of the
United States was in ·doubt
until the very final days of the
war.

French Revolution· ending.
The author, said Heighton,
wrote in detail of the last days
of the Civil War, with General
Lee reluctantly agreeing to
surrender and General Ulysses
Grant agreeing to let the
Southern soldiers keep their
guns and their horses in order
that they might survive'" they
returned to '!heir ruined
South. Lincoln's vision of "a
tender peace, a magnanimous
peace" had been achieved.
And a few days later, after
Lincoln's assassination, peace Is
once again assured amid the
uncertainty when Lee wrote to
co'uti.trym~n."
Jefferson Davis saying no to
He did not want the coun- further resistance, and deplortry to have the chaos of the ing the assassination of Lincoln.

Calcium important for healthy body
Calcium is an important nutrient for
healthy bodies. It is a mineral th~t help~
make strong bones and teeth. It is also
used in muscle contraction, blood clotting, and maintenance of cell membranes.
If we do not get enough calcium over
the course of our lifetime, we may develop a disease known as osteoporosis. This
illness is due to lack of bone density. It
primarily affects older women in the
form of a "hump" back and brittle bones.
This disease is the main reason why
elderly women tend to break hips when
they fall. The bone den~ity is not enough
to withstand the accident.
It is recommended that people
between the ages of 19 al)d 50 get 1000
milligrams of calcium daily. Individual~
over the age of 50 require 1200 milligrams. Unfortunately, many young
women average 200 to 300 milligrams
less than the recommendations.
Most of the calcium we take in comes
from dair;y foods. Many times the young
women who consume very little calcium
feel that milk products have too many
calories, "so they avoid them. This
decreased calcium intake can have devas-

The reviewer that perhaps
the ending month of the Civil
War set the tone to this day for
the United States to show
courage against its enemies,
but generosiry upon victory.
Leah . Ord, president, conducted the meeting with the
club collect being given by
members. Jeanne Bowen,
chairman of th.e nominating
committee, gave the committee's report recommending
that the present officers be

Becky
Baer

tating results later. To prevent this, lower
caloric versions of dairy foods may be
eaten, such as nonfat yogurt, skim milk,
and lowfat cheeses.
Dairy products, however, aren't the
only sources of calcium . By eating a variety of foods, we can help ensure that we
consume the appropriate amounts. Whole
grains; broccoli, spinach, mackerel,
salmon, and tofu are good non-dairy suppliers of calcium. Even though these
foods do
not have a lot of the rnineral, when
eaten regularly and plentifully. they contribute significant quantities.
(Becky Barr is Me(gs County$ Extmsion
Some foods such as orange juice, bread, agmt for family m1d cOt!Silmer scienceslcomarid ready-to-eat cereals are now being ""mity developmetrl, Ohio State U11iversity.)

~••
••

"'

SOCIEIY NOTEBOOK

bined into the presentation. Delta Epsilon Chapter of
Nixon has been a natural Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternihistory guest speaker O':J the ty will celebrate its 30th
Princess
and
Holland anniversary of maintainGALLIPOLIS - Guest America cruise lines, and ing chapter status at the
lecturer and Alaska expert has been interviewed by University of Rio Grande .
A celeb~ation is planned
Brent Nixon will discuss CNN, NBC's ·Jane Pauley,
"Cruising in Alaska" at 7:30 and numerous local radio at the Buckeye Hall · of
Fame Cafe in Columbus
p.m. on· Saturday at the ~nd television programs.
Ariel Theatre, 426 Second
His specialties include on Saturday, May 4 with a
Ave.
technical climbing, white short program, dinner, and
His presentation is spoh- .water rafting, sea kayaking, dancing.
The fraternity will also
sored by Princess Cruises, and alpine and Nordic skihold
a golf outing earlier
AAA of Gallipolis and the ing.
Ariel.
His firm has produced an in the day at a location to
Those. planning to attend educational
videotape, be announced.
For details, contact Todd
hillecture should RSVP by "Humpback
Whales,"
Reigle, class of '88, at
calling AAA at . 446-0699. which Nixon directed,
614-799-5609.
There is no admission fee.
wrote and narrated. '
Alpha
Sigma
P.hi
Nixon is president of
More than 3,000 'copies
National Fraternity was
Adventures in Nature, of the tape, issued in 1998
founded
at Yale University
Cashmere, Wash.
and rereleased last year, have
on Dec. 6, 1845, and has
He will discuss travel to · been sold.
over 60 chapters · nationtowm
like Ketchikan,
Juneau and Sitka, and make
Delta
a presentation on Alaska's
Chapter has initiated over
dramatic
scenery
and
·, 400 men from Oh10, the
wildlife.
United States and internaCulture, history and
tional countries since its'
RIO
GRANDE
-The
chartering.
wildlife will also be com-

URG chapter to w~~~

celebrate 3oth
anniversary

'

t

Our Special Page(s)

will be published

~psilon

•

...
...

Thursday
~-.. :
February 14th
\&gt; ·'
in The Daily Sentinel •••
Also a special section is availafile
~~

9.

for In Memory Valentine Pets

'

~•...

~:·

'.•

\·: ~'

a

••••'''.

9 ...

~~ ::
\&gt; ' '
... ~ ·

Community Cn'nndllr Ia published ae a free eerv1ce to I'IC»

9

profit groups wishing to
announce n=;sllngs and 8peclel
events. The calendar Ia not
designed to 111111110111 lllllell or
fund.nllaera al any type.lems are
. printell only Ill space pennlta 81\d
cannot be gual'llldlllld 10 be priMed a speclllc number al daya.

'

~ .

'I'

... . .

~~~;

.
..
•... ·'.

The ·Daily Sentinel

9 ·'

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Lutheran Church, 6:30 p.m. Pro. gram by Jane Walton. Host·
esses, Ruth Riffle, Velma Rue
and Reva Vaughan.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern
Local Board of Education, orga· ~{
nlzatlonal meeting, 6:30 p.m. lot· ..,-..;:
~
lowed by the regular meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW .'ii
9053 meaHng, Tuppers Plains
hall, 7 p.m.; meal, 6:30 p.m.

..

~ ~:

~~ :~

Reader Servicts

...\&gt;... ..,'•,
,

.

.

.~ ·

~ ::

1o be accurale. II you know of an

~... ·'
'• :;
~- · :.
~ '

News Departments

VALENTINE PETS

error In a story, callllle newsroom

.. - - - - - - - - - - - - - "
~

at (740) 992·2156.

The main number Ia 992·2156.
Departmen1 elCientlons are:

~ :l

FRIDAY
Pet's Name:
.
~·
POMEROY - Widows Fel· ~
\1
••
lowshlp, Friday, Grow's Steak
House for lunch.
• Owner's Name:
' • ~
LONG BOlTOM - Hymn sing +I
I\)
at Faithful Gospel Church, Friday,
7 p.m. Delivered will sing.
~\) Address:
·
, ...
~ City/State/Zip:
' ~•
SATURDAY
• 1 Amount.'Enclosed:
~
RACINE - Racine Grange
•'
For
·
Pictures
at
$6.00
each.
~'~&gt;
genealogy workshop, 1 p.m. B\
-1
.
~
Racine. Openings still available.
Call 949·4000 to register. (
: ~~.~.~~~····~~·~.~~~·~··
' .

~

::

o-nolmenager

Ext. 12

Hoe

Exl 13

or

Ext. 14

,,

Other aervlce1

·'
·'
t

:·'(
;

Advertising

Ext 3

Clrculltllon

Ext. 4·

Cleso,_ Ad8

:

·

Friday,

111

Cynthia Nixon (Sex and the
City) has been acting since she
was 14. and once perfonned in

Court St.,

Correction Polley , · Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class
Our nialn concern In all stories Is , pootage paid at Pomeroy. ·

•~~~~ ~;Brt~; I~ th~.-.~,';y f~r~"w~~ ;o~;;.;.;;.~~i~:· •\&gt; ;:
Valentine Pet. c/o The Dally Sentinel, '
111 Court-Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ·
For more Info: SISI2-2165

(USPS 213-110)
0111o Volley Publloh1ng Co.
Mlohed every attemoon, Monday
ttlrough

... ....

'

.

LOCAL STOCKS

......

LOCAL

Services will be 1 p.m. on Friday in Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery.
friends may call on Thursday from 2-4and 7-9 p.m. at the
funeral home. Masonic services will be conducted at 8:30p.m.
by Pomeroy-Racin.e Lodge 164.
A complete obituary will be appear in Thursday's Sentinel.

Mixed signals from·Wall Sb eet

•... .
~· ..
.\. ..
9

thereon A. Johnson

..

9

"For Pets Only"

Company told.to pay up.

leaders surrender
to new govemment

•

Ext. 5

To eend e-mail
,I

neweOmydallysentlnal.com

' On the Web

.

www.myd~llyaenUnel .com

:

Menoboo. Tile AaiOCiatod Pres• and
the Olllo Newapopor Alloclatlon.
POotmlmr. Send address correctlona to The Dally Sentinel, 11t Coull.
st., l'cmerov. 0111o 46769.

. '
plays Hurlyburly and The
Real Thing at the same time.

1he

onoo..,

S y - ar motor route

$2
$8.70
YMt .
$104
Doolly
.
. , 50 cents
Subacrlbers not dellrinQ to pay the
carrier may remit _In advanCe direct to
Tile Dolly Sonllnet. Creel~ wll be given
canter ooch - · No subocnptlon by
maN permitted In areas where home
·carrier aervlce Is available.

ono month

J'
'

1-+"'

78%
72%
61%
57%

Terrorist attacks on.Amerlca
Identifying terrorlats
High gasoline prices
Defending against terrorlam

~!!~$27.30

-

13 Wettca
26 Wetlcs
52 WHkS

$53.82
$105.56
outalde Motga County

""

$29.25

$56.89
$t09.72

RonklnQ 1he most closely followed stories 'of 2001, only the gas price spike

came anywhere near lo terrorist auacks.

'

·'

\

!

Attomey reaches deal
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) -A prosecutor who. was arrested
on a prostitution charge has agreed to a deal that allows the
charge to be dropped if he attends collnseling and performs 90
days of work.
Duane F. Osborne, an assistant county attorney in Fayette
County, was arrested last month in Covington for allegedly
offering S40 for sex with .a plain-clothes officer.
Osborne entered a "diversion" agreement Friday with the
Kenton County attorney's office, which could give Osborne a
clean record, Kenton County Attorhey Garry Edmondson said.
In .exchange, Osborne must attend psychological counseling
for a year and do 90 days worth of free work for his employer,
Fayette County Attorney M~rgaret Kannensohn.

Woman accused of slaying .
,

-

- .

•··. 'L

.\

BARBERTON (AP) -A woman has been charged in a hi ~­
skip accident that killed her father after a New Year's Eve party.
Mildred Van Meter, 32, of Coventry Township, was drinking
with her boyfriend and father, Kenneth, at a members-only bar,
Barberton Police Lt. Bill Pfeiffer said.
After midnight, Kenneth, 54, of Green, left the club to walk
home, Pfeiffer said.
·
Mildred Van Meter, whose driver's license had been .suspended for failing to pay Jraffic fines, left the bar in her boyfriend's
. black 1996 Dodge Ram truck a short time later, Pfeiffer said.

·Village protests hiring
EVENDALE (AP) - Officials in this Ci.ncinnati suburb said t4tTY
will research ways to rescind the hiring of a police officer whose fatal
shooting of a black man last year prompted riolli in Cincinnati.
Village officials are not prorirising, however, to reverse that hiring.
Mayor Doug Lohmeier told about 20 residents Tuesday night that
he and other village council members underestimated residents'
response to ·tlie hiring of Stephen Roach.
"We did not consider the magnitude of the controversy," the mayor
said, adding that village officials tried to find the best candidate.

Group requests Investigation
COLUMBUS (AP) -Backers of a campaign to put a dntg-treatment issue on the November ballot asked state investigators Tuesday
to determine whether members of Gov. Bob Taft's administr.Ition did
anything wrong by holding lneeting&gt;; to discuss the issue.
Ed Odett, a Columbus lobbyist representing the Ohio Campaign
for New' Drug Policies, forwarded his request to s~1te Auditor jin1
Petro and Inspector General Tom Charles.
The group wants to put on the ballot a constitutional amendment
that would require judges to send nonviolent first- and second-time
drug offenders to treatment programs rather than to prison.

-TRIVIA .
Barbara Eden (Sabrina, the·
Teendge Witch) was banned '
from showing her bellybutton in
4.1 Dream of Jemmie because of
NBC's fl0 navel" rule.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2 156

01

The moat followed stories of
according to a recent poll:

Subscription rates

13WMI&lt;a
26WMI&lt;a
52 -

Deputy shot.to death

William •Erik' lho.ta

Friday... Rain or snow showers likely. No snow accumulation
expected. Daytime temperatures nearly steady in the mid 30s.
Friday night .. : Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows
25 to 30.
·
.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. .
Highs in the mid 30s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows
in the mid 20s and highs in the upper 30s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the niid 20s and highs 35 to
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan {AP) -The Taliban defense and
40.
justice ministers and several other high-ranking leaders of the
Tuesday... A chance of snow showers, otherwise partly
ousted.ruling militia surrendered to officials of the new.Afghan
. cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s and highs in the mid 30s.
government and have been freed, a Kandahar commander said
Wednesday.
J~lal Khan, a close associate of Kandahar Gov. Gul Agha, told
The Associated Press that the defecting Tali ban met officials in
the Kandahar government and received general amnesty after
recognizing the nation's new interim administration headed by
NEW YORK (AP) - Divergent signals on the nate of ·
Prime Minister Hamid Karzai.
business left investors cautious and prices mixed bn Wall
They have been allowed to go back to their homes and live
Street Tuesday. Upbeat comments from Microsoft and Tiffany
. with their families, Khan said.
encouraged the market, but disappointing statements from
"Those men who have su~rendered are our brothers and we
Gateway, Ciena and AOL Time Warner limited stocks' abilihave allowed them to live in a peaceful manner," Khan said.
, ry to advance.
"However, they will not participate in politics."
· Blue chips were weaker, falling back moderately after
They include Mullah Ubaidullah, the defense minister, and
weeks of rallying, but tech shares managed modest gains.
Nooruddin Turabi - the one-ey~d. one-legged justice minisAs companies begin releasing fourth-quarter , sales and ter who imposed some of the Tali ban's harshest edicts:
earnings and some warn of weaker results, analysts said a
Otherj are Abdul Haq, former security chief of Herat
pullback is to be expected with investors cashing inprofits province', an ancient cultural crossroads where the Taliban's
from recent.rallies.
crude, extreme Islamic rule was never well-accepted, the minThe Dow Jones industrial average closed down 46.50, or ister of mines, Mullah Saadudin, and senior officials Raees
0.5 percent, at 10,150.55 after falling 62.69 Monday to quash Abdul Wahid, Abdul Salam Rakti, and Mohammad Sadiq.
Intelligence Ministry officials in the capital, Kabul, would not
a three-session, 238-point winning streak.
comment Wednesday on the reported surrender and amnesties .
In Kandahar, Khan said they were in line with general policy
granting amnesty to Taliban who recognize Karzai's government.
Negotiations on Tahban surrenders have frustrated the U.S.led coalition, especially the apparent escape last week of leader
Premier8.60
Mullah Mohammed Omar whb reportedly had been surroundF
Mogul.95
AEP-43.85
USB -! 20,94
Rockwell- 18.68
Arch Coal- 23.22
ed in the mountainous Baghran district nortlj of Kandahar.
· Gannea- 89.91
Rocky Boots - 6.60
Akzo-45.07
Marine Lt. James Jarvis, in daily briefing to reporters at the
AD Shell-46.36
General Electric - 36.95
AmTech/SBC- 39.74
Kandahar
airport where more than 300 al-Qaida and Taliban
GKNLY-4.40
Sears60.40
Ashland Inc. - 46.26
Harley Davidson- 53.49 Shoney's - .31
AT&amp;T -18.89
prisoners are ·being detained, voiced no objection to the release
Kmarl-5.05
Wai-Mart- 57.114
Bank One - 38.19
of
the former Taliban officials.
Wendy's- 31.03
Kroger- 20.35
BU-10.36
0
"We're not in the business of determining who should and
Landa End- 51.10
Worthington - 14.08
.Bob El/li'IS- 25.114
i.ld.--18.08
BorgWamer- 52.91
should not be in custody right now," Jarvis said.
NSC-20
Dally stock reports are the
Champlon-3
In Washington,Ainerica's top general,Joint Chiefs Chairman
Oal&lt; HID Ananctal-15.95 4 p.m. closing quotes of
Charming Shopa- 6.35
the previQus day's trans- Gen. Richard Myers, said Tuesday that U.S. troops wrapping up
Cl1y Holdng - 14
.k OVB-23.60
Col-19
. BBT-35.74
actioos, provided by Smllh . operations at the bombed-outTora Bora· cave complex near the
Peoples .,-18.40
Pa~ners a1 AdVest Inc. of
DG-16.14
border with Pakistan had seized two senio'r al-Qaida members,
Pepsloo- 47.60
. Gallpolls.
DuPonl- 44.20
their computers and 'cell phones.
Besides the computers and phones, "some small arms and
training documents were also found," Myers said. "We're
exploiting those as we speak." The Americans are looking for
clues to future al-Qaida operations and organizational details.

~• •·

EVENTS

Alaska expert
speaks ~Ariel

•

9

••

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

..

Extended forecast:

•

'

...,.

· Tonight ... Becoming cloudy. Lows near 40. Southwest wind
near 10 mph.
Thursday...Cloudy with a chance of light rain. Highs in the
upper 40s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Thursday night:..Cioudy with a chance of light rain. Lows in
the mid 30s.

r
~
among the... . ~- :
.. ~Pet Valentines! r
~
.
'f

._

Weather forecast:

for outstanding 'talents.
Hostess was Dana Kessinger. .,
Next meeting will be on Jan.
16 with Gay Perrin as tht; ,
roviewer.

~ Picture ,our pet

.

•••

retained for another year.
The group voted unanimously to re-elect Ord, president; Frankie Hunnel, vice: ..
president; Gay Perrin, secretary, and Heighton, treasurer.
In response to roll cal'! mem- , .
bers named a friend admired

••

Rlin

The rain will change to snow showers as colder air invades
the area Thursday, forecasters said.
Colder temperatures in the 20s arid 30s will remain across the
region into the weekend, with the chance of snow showers
continuing through Sunday.
It will be breezy on Thursday with southwesterly winds 1015 mph.
Overnight lows will be mostly in the 20s, the National
Weather Service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:24, and sunrise on Thursday is at
7:53 'a.m.

•,

.·.~~~.·.·~~.·.·~~ .· ..·~~ .

fortified with calci'llm. Check the label to .
determine the amount that they offer.
•
Vitamin D. enriched products and sun- , •
shine help our bodies absorb calcium.
The absorption r:ite also depends on the ~
needs of the body, the foods eaten, and \&gt;
the amount of calcium present in the •
foods. Absorption tends. to decrease with
•
age in both men and women.
Cooking may destroy the calcium in ~
some foods. To minimize this affect, cook \
foods in very little water and for the •
shortest period of time possible.
••
You may wonder about the use of cal•
cium supplements. They can contribute ~
some to your body's nutrient needs, but it ' ~
is still better to get your calcium from •
foods.
.•
If we make a conscious effort to con•
~ume dairy products regularly and eat a
wide variety of foods, we should get the
amount of calcium that we need for
healthy bodies now as well as for the rest
of our lives.

r......

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

t

Only then did the United
States truly become one unified country, as it had not truly
become even after the Revolutionary War.
The reviewer continued by
telling how Winik credited the
extraordinary success of the
final peace in part to Abraham
Lincoln who so desperately
wanted the bloodshed to stop
after four years.
He made a dramatic statement to his generals, "There
must be no bloody · work no hangings - when this war
is over. These men must be our

._,

Rain turns to snow showers

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

EAST MEIGS Jay
Winik's book "April1865:The
Month that Saved America"
was .reviewed by Olita
Heighton at a recent meeting
of the Middleport Liter~ry
club held at the Eastern
Library.
The reviewer said that the
author and historian who has
had a distinguished government career, now is a regular
contributor to the Wall Street
Journal.
His first book "On the
Brink," a chronicle of the end
of the Cold War, won wide
acclaim, she noted.
According to Heighton, the
author believes that how wars

Cloudy

OHIO BRIEFS

ZANESVILLE (AP) - A Muskingum County sheriff's
deputy was shot to death T!.!esday night while on patrol, the
sheriff's department said.
The victim, Robert Tanner Jr., 39, was an, eight- year veteran
of the department, said a spokesman, Sgt~ Dan Marks.
·He said Tanner was working patrol duty at, about .6 p.m. in
Falls Township, northwest of Zanesvtlle, when he radioed in a
license plate number to the dispatcher's office and said he was
being flagged down.
Dispatchers tried to contact him a few minute~ ~ater and he
didn't answer. Marks said two people called the sheriff's office
POMEROY -· Word has been received here of the death of soon after that to say they had found Tanner's body in the road.
William "Erik" Thorla, 30, at Akron City Hospice Center in
Akron.
·
Local survivors include his father and stepmother, Bill and
AKRON (AP) - An employment agency that hired two
PebblesThorla ofPomeroy, and his grandmother,Virginia Hendricks of Racine.
former Canton men who were arrested fo llowing the Sept. 11
He is also survived by his mother and stepfather, Kathy and terrorist attacks owes the state $131 ,000 for unpaid vJork,e rs'
.
Larry Kinsey; four sisters, Jennifer Stanton, and Heather, Tiffany cdmpensation insurance,
If
HV
Connect
of
Ohio
does
not
respond
to
the audit by
and Hollie Theria, and his grandmother, Irene Grocott, all of
feb. 1, the case will be submitted to the state attorney general,
Akron; ~nd several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins.
A memorial ·service was conducted on Dec. 29, 2001, at said Robert Glenn, spokesman for the OI.io Bureau ofWorkers' Compensation.
Adams-Mason Memorial Chapel in Akron.
Ohio ,law allows the state to recover up to 10 times "the
amount owed, which would be $1.3 million.
The bureau began investigating H V Connect's payroll in
RACINE -Thereon A. Johnson, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan . November on the suspicion the firm underreported the number of its employees who require insurance.
8, 2002, in Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.

~

'

Club membei'S hear about America and War

POMEROY- Kathleen Kittle, 84, Pomeroy, died Monday,
Jan . 7, 2002, at her residence.
'
She was born on Aug. 28, 1917, in Griffithville, Lincoln
County, W.Va., daughter of the late Winfred and Emmermay
Hodge Miles. She was a graduate of Hamlin High School and
Beauty School. She attended Victory Baptist Church.
Surviving are her husband, Richard D. Kittle of Pomeroy; a
daughter and son-in-law, Patricia and Benny Dent of Pomeroy;
and a sister, Sapho Dent of Pomeroy.
'
. .
She was also preceded in death by her son, Arthur Kittle; her
granddaughter, Kimberly Dent; her sister, Sally Browning; And.
her brothers, Troy, Shirley, Edward, Buster and Clyde- Mills.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. Burial
will take place at 11 a.m. Thursday at Meigs Memory Gardens
Mausoleum. friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 1 p.m. until time of services.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice, Meigs Counry Branch, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

PORTLAND - CarlL King, 26, Racine, W:ls cited for failure to control by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol following a one-car accident Monday on Ohio 338.
Troopen said King was eastbound in Lebanon Township at
7:10 a.m. when he lost control on slush-cov!!red road, spun
around and struck a bridge concrete wall.
The car was moderately damaged.

·'

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~
AlfAUTIIlJL
MillO li;!
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lllllOIDOfiii[Ri*il:":'~ ";j' 7:15
KATE &amp;lEOPmD '":,;'" i 20. 955
i:35

oam:l

�Opinion

'The Daily Sentinel

PageM

•

The Daily Sentinel

Wad••'sy. ••••srr t. 2:;

, Plrp gills poll, Page 8
Colltge hoops, NBA, Page 10

.

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PageS

The DaUy·sentinel

Wednesday. Jan....., ~•· 2002

•

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-21541• Fu: 1192·2157

WFDNF.ID\Y'S

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

HIGffiJGHTS

. R. ·shewn LIWII

Eastem ·drops Southem, 76-Sl

Managing Editor
•

BY ScoTT WOU'!
• SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Diane_Key Hill
Controller

Chart- Hoeflich
·O-ral Malllg8f'

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hbiUIWct Co.\' tdiiMUd boGr4, .,.,_.,. Olll~nt~ill filMed.

Ea81em 76, Soutnem 52
Ganla Academy 60, J~~ekson 49
Blllprt 78, Nelsonville-York 57
f.t. .Frye 55, Quckeye Trail 44
~IOOfTI:Carroll 69, N. Albany 54
pheiiP'tlke 56, Rock Hill 50
Ohio Valey .Chris. 84, St. Joe 67
Trimble 53, Federal Hocking 49
Warren 58, L~n 55, OT
Wall aton n, Vinton County 56

NATIONAL VIEW

-.

Shoe bomber's arrest proves
need for continued vigilance
• The News Tribune, Tacoma, Wash., on the shoe
bomber: Alleged would-be terrorist Richard Reid has
actually done the world a favor by showing that even as
the war against terrorism winds down in Mghanistan, the
need for vigilance has increased ....
Reid's near-successful attempt to carry out yet another
terrorist attack against an American airline is troubling.
Some security analysts believe the attempted bombing
could presage · a new wave of al-Qaida suicide attacks
agains~ the American flying public. That remains to be
seen. But one thing is clear: Determined, sophisticated
terrorists can still strike at air. travelers despite the rush to
improve technology and training for ·airport security staff.
In Reid's case, the breakdown in the · Paris airport's
security system was technological. Reid was able to board
the airliner because the metal detector c.o uldn't identify
plastic explosives. A new machine capable of detecting
traces of explosives might have stopped Reid from boarding the plane, but it was still being tested.
By boarding a commercial flight, Reid has shown
another gap in current airport security systems. But plugging a known gap in security isn't a problem. It's anticipating new terrorist tactics - ard finding new ways to
strengthen security systems - that will challenge airport
and government officials for the near and distant future.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 2002. There are 356
days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 9; 1788, Connecticut became the fifth state to ratifY the
U.S. Constitution.
On this date:
In 1793, Frenchman Jean Pierre Blanchard, using a hot-air balloon, flew between Philadelphia and Woodbury, NJ.
In 1861; Mississippi seceded from the Union.
In 1861, the "Star of the West," a merchant vessel bringing reinforcements to federal troops at Fort Sumter, S.C., retreated after
being fired on by a battery in the harbor.
In 1913, Richard Milhous Nixon, the 37th president of the
United States, was born in Yorba Linda, Calif.
In 1945, during World War II, American forces began landing
at Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines.
In 1957, Anthony Eden resigned as British prime minister.
In 1%4, anti-US. rioting broke out in the Panama Canal Zone,
resulting in the deaths of21 Panamanians and three U.S. soldiers.
In 1968, the Survey&lt;,. 7 space ·probe made a soft landi~g on the
moon, marking the end of the American series of unmanned
explorations of the lunar surface.
In 1972, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes, speaking by telephone from the Bahamas to reporters in Hollywood, said a purported biography of him by Clifford Irving was a fake.
In 1980, Saudi Arabia beheaded 63 people f6r their involvement in the November l 979 raid on the Grand Mosque in
Mecca.
Ten years ago: President Bush declared his trade visit to Japan a
success, saying Japanese officials had agreed to increase imports of
American cars, auto .. parts, computers and other goods. (However, U.S. auto executives traveling with Bush sounded less enthusiastic.)
Five years ago: A Comair commuter plane crashed 18 miles
short of the Detroit Metropolitan Airport, killing all 29 people on
board.
.
One year ago: Linda Chavez. withdrew her bid to be secretary
of labor because of controversy over an illegal immigrant who
once lived with her.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Herbert Lom is 85. Author Judith
Knmtz is 74. Football Hall-of-Farner Bart Starr is 68. Sportscaster Dick Enberg is 67. Actor Bob Denver is 67. Actress K Callan
is 66. Country singer Big AI Downing is 62. Actor-singer Jimmy
Boyd ("I Saw Monuny Kissing Santa Claus") is 62. Folk singer
Joan Baez is 61. Actress Susannah York is 63. Rock musician
Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin) is 58. Pop singer Bill Cowsill is 54.
Singer David Johansen (aka Buster Poindexter) is 52. · Singer
Crystal Gayle is 51. Rock musician Eric Erlandson (Hole) is 39.
ActressJoely Richardson is 37. Rock musician Carl Bell (Fuel) is
35. Rock singer Steve Harwell (Smash Mouth) is 35. Rock
singer-musician Dave Matthews is 35.
Thought for Today: "Living is ·a form of not being sure, not
knowing what. next or how. The moment you know how, you
b'egin to die a little. The artist never entirely knows. We guess. We
may be wrong, but·we take leap after leap in the dark."- Agnes
de Mille,American dancer-choreogr•pher (1905-1993).

•
•

•

•
'•

.'

NCAA Men'a Baakatball
Tueaday•a Gamea
Falrlleld 95. St. Peter's 75
Pittsburgh 66, Rutgers 58
St. John'• 71, Miami 60
Syracuse 85, Seton Hall 70
Clemson 68, VIrginia 5Z
pavldson 83, Chattanooga 81
ttouston 69, Tulane 66
N.C. State 77, Aortda St. 62
N.C.·Ashevllle 68, Liberty 54
Soillh Florida 74, So. Miss. 54
UAB 83, East Carolina 54
UNO-Greensboro 80, VMI 74
Elowllng Graen 91, N. Illinois 61
C::lnclnnati 71, Charlotte 58
fup A. Wayne 79, Chicago St. 62
Indiana 83, Michigan St. 65
Saint Louis 92, DePaul 74
Arkansas 75, Mlsslsaippi St. 84
Oklahoma St. 68, Baylor 57

PERKINS' VIEW

Debate arises over payment for aviation security;
The air traveling public will take an
extra hit to the pocketbook starting next
month - a surcharge of up to $1 0 on a
round-trip ticket. This new "security fee,"
as it's being called, is exj&gt;ected to generate
some $900 million this year. It will be
used, said Transportation Secretary Norm
. Mineta, to "implement new aviation secu·
rity measures."
At lea&lt;t one advocacy group objects to
the new fee on grounds that the funds to
pay for aviation securitY should come out
COLUMNIST
of the general treasury..
"The argtiment we made to Congress Committee Chairman Tom Harkin
was that this was law enforcement activi- blocked the Senate from approving
ty," said David Stempler, president of the Magaw. The Iowa Democrat was in a snit
Air Traveler's Association. :'You don't get because Republicans wouldn't go along
charged every time you make a call to the with .a vote reauthorizing the farm subpolice."
sidy program through 2006.
Stempler has a point. The new security
, Hire better screeners. The federal govfee amounts to a· de ·facto tax on airline ernment taking over passenger and bagpassengers -- on top of' the ticket taxes gage screening from private firms _ like
and departure fees the flying public. beleaguered Argenbright Security _
already contributes to the federal treasury. hardly means that air · travel will be any
Yet, this is one semi-frequent flyer who safer. Not as long as .the same 28,000
is more than happy to pay an extra five to screeners are still stationed at airports
10 bucks on a round-trip plane ticket to throughout the country There needs to be
get the best aviation security money can some serious turnover in the screener
buy.
.
ranks. The pedigree of workers entrusted
And toward that end, these are the mea- with protecting the flying public from
sures that need to be taken:
hijackers, suicide bombers and other
• Confirm John Magaw. The newly ere-. asso.rted terrorists must be upgraded. It
ated Transportation Security Administra- goes without saying that screeners should
tian is s_upposed ·to take over aviation be subjected to· crimin.al background
security from the Federal Aviation checks. And that those with felony records
Administration on Feb. 17. Yet Magaw, should be disqualified from holding down
President Bush's nominee to head the airport security jobs.
, .
start-up agency, has yet to receive Senate
The flying public also has a right to
confirmation.A former head of the Secret expect that airport screeners have at least
Service and the Bureau ofAlcohol,Tobac- a high school diploma. For it hardly
co and Firearms, Magaw appeared before impires confidence in the competence of
the Senate Commerce Committee the the screener work force to know that
week before Christmas. Every committee one-quarter are high school dropouts (or
member supported his nomination. His worse).
confirmation was expected before the
, Deploy the latest technology. The
holidays.
. metal detectors and X-ray machines curThat was before Senate A~riculture rendy used by most of the nation's airports

JOSeph

PerKins

to screen passengers and carry-on bagga~
date to the 1970s. State-of-t}_le-art ait:port
screening would employ bqdy scannen,
modified X-ray machineS that can see
through clothing and detect such danger;,
ous items" as ceramic knives and plasti&lt;!
explosives. It also would screen all carry~
on luggage with-an explosives detection
unit that operates something like a CAT
scan.
Facial recognition technology -can b~
brought online to compare passenger
mugs against the digital photographs of
800 or .so susp~ted terrorists. And new
high-definition, thermal imaging cameras
can be used at airport checkpoints to
ascertain whether passengers respond
truthfully to security questions.
Of course, some of these technologid
have yet to be perfected and must still be
modified to ensure they are not unduly
intrusive or burdensome to air travelers.
That aside, these new security techriologies offer a quantum improvement in passenger and baggage screening,
· • Practice self-defense. United Airlines
recendy announced that it plans to instal!
stun guns in the cockpits of each ·of il!l
planes and train pilots how to use -them.
Other major =riers ought to follow suit.
And the airlines also might consider giv~
ing theit cabin crews the means to protect
themselves and their passengers from terrorists. If not ~th Tasers, then at least with
. pepper spray.
Also, the folks flying into and out of
W.lshington's Reaga,n National Airpol't
should not be the only air travelers prif-1
tected by armed sky marshals. An under•
cover marshal ought to be on every flight
. out of every major airport · during peak
hours.
Sure, this security measure and otheis
will .cost a few bucks. But isn't thai what
the new aviation security fee is for?
,

S.Diego St. 82, Tx. A&amp;M-c. C. 79
Tx-Pan American n, SW Tx.73

.,

NBA
•
Tuead1y'1 Game•
Washington 96,CIIppers 88
Atlanta· 101, Portland 92
New Jersey 104, Miami 95
Memphis 84, Toronto 81
l ·a kers 121, Detroit 92
Houston 88, New York 86
!;&gt;alias 95, Denver 94
Utah 98, Phoenix 84
Milwaukee 113, G.State 97

Reds re sign
Sean casey
·: CINCINNATI (AP)
~-Star first baseman Sean
~asey and the Cincinnati
Reds agreed Tuesday to a S4
million, one-year contract.
· Casey, 27, hit .310 with 13
home runs and 89 RBI's last
~\Cason and led the Reds in
· garnes played (145) and seven
11ffensive categories.
The Reds still have four
players eligible for salary arbi, l!t'ation: third baseman Aaron
!3oone,
pitchers
Danny
Graves and Scott Williamson
~nd outfielder Juan EncarnaCIOn.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

The Reds also signed Pete
Rose Jr. to · a minor league
c.ontract. Rose has spent 13
years in the minors with six
different organizations, earningjust one major league prorpotion.
He played 11 games with
t)le Reds in September 1997.

Element of danger will restore fear factor to driving

Redmen soccer

l was driving on the highway yesterday,
doing about 20 percent over the speed
limit, and I couldn't believe how the
other cars were flying arouhd me. I
haven't been ' passed and cut-off that
much since my dating years. Drivers consistendy go way over the speed limit and ·
try Indy 500 style maneuvers, and I think
l know why. It's because they make cars
too well now. My first car was a '52 Pontiac .
COLL,JMNIST
· It wa' a tractor with a back seat. You
didn't dare go fast or take a hard corner in
that baby. Even 'standing still it was dan- most men. They suddenly wish ·they'd
gerous, due to the fire hazard. But now paid attention to what she was saying at
the cars are aerodynamically designed dinner. So the likelihood of the man
with tuned suspension and air bags every- coming up with the-right gift is excruciwhere. We've made cars so safe that peo-. atingly remote. And if you have married
. pie feel comfortable driving dangerously. friends and neighbors, it gets worse,
That was a mistake. I find that people are . because your gift will be compared with
ar their best when .they're a litde bit what the other women received. In many
scared. So we need to put an element of cases your offering is not just inappropridanger back into the driving experience ate, but also cheap. WeD, here's a way to
to get those crazy drivers under contiol. explain the whole situation to your )\fife.
It's amazing wpat a man will try when he Remind her of how criminals are often
thinks his car is safe. Same thing with Ills sentenced to 100 hours of community
marnage.
service to pay for their crimes. And how
The gift message
couimies that initiate wars have to pay for
There are a few times in the year when their indiscretion. Well, it's the same thing
a man is expected to come up with a with wife gifts. The low-end, seemingly
worthy gift for his wife. Her birthday, thoughtless gifts that you give your wife
their anniversary, Christmas, that kind of are straight from the heart and have no
thing. This is always a difficult time for

Red
Green

(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for The Sail
Diego Union-Tribune.)

other purpose than to remind her that she
is cared for. Whereas the big gifu like trips
or cars or jewelry that the neigh~rs give
their wives are probably restitution from a
husband who strayed and is noW paying
for his indiscretion. My feeling is that any
gift over $100 dollars is a peace offering.
Mind you, the whole theory goes out the
window when it's my birthday.
Body talk
·
If you're trying to get the respect and
admiration of your co-workers, you have
to pay attention to your body language
while you're on the job, Even thougla
what you're saying might be forcefully
eloquent, your posture or movements cam
und~rmine your credibility: Here are a.
few habits to avoid:
.
.
.• Don't tuck your pants into your
socks.
,
. • Don't use analogies. that involve videQ
1
games.
~
• Don't wear a tie with writing on it. • When discussing the company'J
future, don't keep rubbing your forehead
. • Mahagement shouldn't wear running
shoes.
' • Don't overuse the expression "Holy
Doodle."
(Red Green i5 the star cif "The R£d Greet~
Show," a television series seen in the US. O(l
PBS and in Canada on.the CBC Networi&lt;,1

and the author cif "Tile Red Green P&lt;!ok. ").

2.

.

Eagles.
Southern started o'u t hot behind a
good passi!lg game and 13-point
effort from Dallas Hill, who notched
eleven of his markers the first half.
Hi.ll sat on the bench nearly all of the
third quarter in foul irouble and after
a short stint in the fourth round was
sent to the bench with his fifth foul at
the 5:17 mark.
Freshman Craig Randolph tossed
in twelve points; Jordan Hill added
nine, Nathan Martin eight, and Justin
Connolly (another fifth-foul victim)
notched six.

Southern led early 10-6 on buckets
by Dally Hill, Jordan Hill, and Macy
Rees. Cody Dill countered with a layin, and on the next possession, Grubb
nailed a three from the corner to give
Eastern its first lead at 11-10. Connolly hit an eight foot jumper to again
give SHS the lead, then Chris Lyons .
tied it at 12-12 before Craig Randolph put SouthXn up 14-12, a score.- .
that stood to the buzzer.
Dally Hill drilled a three to put
Southern up 17-12, but then Eastern

Please see Eastern. 7

•

~

-.caglo.com

RACINE - Behind an explosive
44-point second half; the Eastern
Eagles broke open a close game and
pulled away from a 34-29 halftime
tally to defeat the archrival Southern
Tornadoes 76-52 Tuesday night in
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium.
Eastern, 9-1 and ranked 19th in the
first Associated Press poll, is now 5-0
in the Hocking Division of the TriValley Conference, while Southern,
after a good start, drops to 5-4 and 3-

Eastern was led by Nathan Lee
Grubb's 19 points; 12 of which came
in an explosive second half. Grubb
paced the Eagles during tile half as the
Eagles shot a blistering 15-of-22 fiom
the field for 68 percent. Eastern's passand-cut offense hacked huge holes in
the SHS defense as all but five Eastern
baskets came from the paint.
Senior Garrett Karr added 12
points, four steals, and eight rebounds,
and Cody Dill added 12 points and .
eight rebounds. Brent Buckley also
had an outstanding game with eight
points and seven rebounds for the

..

to host dlnics

. RIO GRANDE - The
university of Rio , Grande
. will host three soccer clinics
quring the month of Febru~·

: A goalkeeping clinic will be

1

held February 2 from 9 a.m.
to Noon . .A passing and finishing clinic will be held on
February 9 from 9 a·. m. to
Noon (session I) and 1 p.m. to
4 p.m. (session II). A dribblil)g
and conditioning for soccer
dinic will be held February
l6 from 9 a.m. to Noon (session I) and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
(session II).
. Rio Grande head coach
Scott MQrrissey ·a nd assistant
eoaches, Tony Daniels and
Steven Rarnsdale will do the
coaching. Members of 2001
NAIA Final Four Redmen
team will also assist in
~emonstrating th~ drills. ·
The cost of the clinic is $20
per session.
For more information con~ct Scott Morrissey at (7 40)
245-7126.
: Each session will last
approximately three hours.

.,

Rio Redmen beat NDC, 83-56 Rio
women

BY BurCH CooPER
ovP SPORTS STAFF
RIO GRANDE It
wasn't going to be a good
trip for the Notre Dame
College men's basketball
team Tuesday at tire Newt.
The men's team is in its
first year of existence at the
former women's school.
Also, their hosts, No. 17
Rio Grande, were seeking
an impressive 20th straight
American Mideast Conference win.
The outcome was never
in doubt as the Redmen
defeated the Blue Falcons,·
83-56.
"' (Notre Dame) played
hard and I thought ·they
·did the right things," said
Rio Grande head coach
Earl Thomas. "They tried
to zone us a litde bit to
control the tempo."
The Redmen were able
to spread the ball around
offensively and under the
glass.
Jerry · Barlow and Jason

.•

Plellse see Racl-~. 7

OVP SPORTS STAFF

MY SPOT - Rio swingman Matt Simpson prepares to jockey for position ·with Notre Dame
College's Nate McKibben in Tuesday's AMC conference game. Rio won xx·xx. (Bryan Long)

.RIO GRANDE Rio
'
Grande head coach David
Smalley was not in the least
,..---, confident
when
his
No. 20 Redwomen took
on
1-13
Notre Dame
College
Tuesday at
the
Newt
Oliver
Arena.
Turley
After all,
Rio Grande was upset earlier
this year to a one-win league
opponenet Seton Hill back in
December.•
"We didn't feel comfortable, because Seton Hill on
Dec.· 19 came in here 1-10
and they put a whippin' on

Please see Rio. 7

Gators hire Zook
to replace Spurrier
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Ron Zook tutned out to be
just the kind of friend Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley
was looking for.
.
He was the kind of friend who would accept Foley's job
,....,.......,,........,......., offer; and take on the daunting challenge of
replacing Steve Spurrier.
·
Zook, who spent the last two years as
defensive coordinator for the New Orleans
Saints, will be introduced as Florida's 20th
head coach Wednesday, Saints coach Jim
Haslett said.
Foley q~et with Zook for about two
hours Tuesday after another good friend,
Denver Broncos coac h Mike Shanahan,
Zook
turn~d down the job. On Monday, still
another friend of Foley's, Oklahoma coach
Bob Stoops, also said "No" to the Gators. ·
'
Like Stoops, Zook is a former defensive coordinator at
Florida, although his tenure wasn't as successful.
Zook held the position from 1992~93, before Spurrier
demoted him to special teams coordinator and linebackers
coach in 1994. He did such a good job in that position that
Spurrier was going to give him the job back fot the 1996
season. But Zook chose to leave Florida for an assistant's job
in the pros, in hopes of adding to his resume so he could
someday be a head coach.
.
He spent three seasons as-special teams coach with the
Steelers and one year as defensive backs coa~h with Kansas
City, before js&gt;ining Haslett in New Orleans. The Saints were
a top-1 0 defense last season, but struggled this season, allowing 160 points in their final four games .

Show Your Appreciation To
Your Favorite Team Member!
Volleyball. Basketball. Football, Wrestling,
Cheerleaders, Band Members, or any other winter
sport with a special ad In the Tuesday, January
29th Edition of the Daily Sentinel.

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Screamln' Eagles!
loue mom 6 Dad

·colts fire Jim Mor~
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Bill Polian thought the lndi. anapolis
Colts needed a simpler
defense. Jim
Mora
believed the
Colts needed to get
better players, not fire
defensive
Mora
coordinator
,
Vic Fangio.
So, the &lt;;:olts made a
choice opTuesday.They fired
Mora.
"My feeling was that we
;

I

needed a change in defensive
approach," Polian said. "Not
because Vic isn't a good
coach. He is. Not because his
system is not good. it is. I just
thin'k with the young players
we have, we need a diffef&lt;'nt
approach."
Mora could have kept his
job, if he'd agreed to fire
Fangio and agreed to work
within certain conditions.
But he refused, even though
Fangio told Mora not to
worry and Mora said Fangio
had been offered the Houston Texans' defensive coqrdi-

Pla•se see Mar.. 7

GO ZHCH!
Good luck

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Please fill out and return with your pay111ent to:
Go Team C/O The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.,
I
I

DE . \DI.I~E: ~:00

Pomero~,

Ohio 45769

11Ui.i3\.i\i

WE

\In 2J

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ __ __
Message:_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _ __
Phone:-,___ _ _ ____cc.J\•ddress: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _~
City, State, Zip: _ _ _ _,__ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

�•

Weclnaadey, JM. 1,1002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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4rc60 1000 _..

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11111 t7 Astra Van. 511000 . ail, cruloa, til,'
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Ford E·150 Van. 1860. _ . . c
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11r
Hay lor IIIII! Moo&lt;:ury Topu. $800. bogl. ABS, 7, '111ca
Allo, s goo41 er.doO ..,: 111112 ~ Ram von, nw, (740)3711-

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tf K 4053
1994
3
r;:~~K MoroRS.: .t99S Chevy S.to EiiCollont
:;...:;::..;.:::...:.:.::.._ _~ condition. $3500. (304)875-

•

·• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

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Hall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
lffOI'

12 :wllbe..-lniMtlrll ................. . _
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(304)458-tn5
1997 Mllnt• Carlo LS, Lt&gt;ed.eel,
Must Sell! $5300 Rnn.
(740,_...788

== I

1997 Oldo Cutlaso Su·
prame, 4 dr., 41,000 mlloa,

·

~~9ed, $8500, (740)992·

New 2002 14 wide only 12K60
all electrtc. Twin River Towont now ..,. Sue's - on the "T" COrnploto Sit Woltd BOolt
$799 dqwn &amp; $155.38/mo, $350/m0nth, Includes water copting appllcatlona tor In Mlddlaport. Dolls. gill&amp;- Encyclopedia with ltand,
Call Nikki, (740)385-7871. &amp; t-. Locatad ba- I BR. HUO aubaldlzed apt. ware, ...-, and $85. End Table, 125. Smo11
hind · Fo~a Pizza 111 Point tor elderly and diUblad. more. (740)892-02911
Boyo Bike with Training
New 2002 14 wide only Plaaaanl. Can (304)675EOH.
Whaolo, $25. Wing Back
$799 down &amp; only 3423
(304)875-6678.
Ml!iiCI1J!.ANtXJUI Chair, Burgundy, $95. 2
$155.38/mo. Call Kav..,.,
MEIIcHANili!E
Nice Area Ruga, $40. Coni740-385-7671.
t4K70, 3 badroom, 1111 " ' - · $25. sa-.
New 2002 14 ..w~
,.. Qniv• haat, $300 month, $150 do- 3Romodaled.
Aoomt and Bath,
Newly
$75. (740)448·
Downstairs.
1 set ot chromo - . , . Syatem,
7928
742
740
FR~~.'l?~~~~:~:ng. IJIIHpoiiiC... Col• 4112 yr. old Cottage style $899 Down &amp; $155.311 par 2714
poall. no paill, 1 &gt; " 51ova and Rolrlgarotor. All runnlngban~lofaldondcab, - - - - - - - (Careers Close To Home) housa,near rtvor Mason monlh. Call Harold, 740utllllles Paid. 411 Olive Diamond toolbox, oloHifl Rrowood tor Nie, (740)247.
ADOPTION
Call Today! 7.w 446 4387, area, near Walmart lg. 385-7671 .
2 bed&lt;OOm mobile home lor 51raet. $475. ~740)4&lt;16-3945 ="::~~Intact w;:f. 2961.
.
Blnhmolhori We promise to
love your baby' unconditlon·
, R
1-800-214-0452,
porch, lanced yald 304·n3· Nice 26x60 Ooubla Wide rent, no pall, (740)892·
d
Chevy Sl
Reg lfgo,os, 1274a.
5452
senlng on rented 101 In 5858
IEAUnFUL
APART- vera o, aU for $300, NEW AND UIU n£EL
ally lhroughout lites Joya McCI urea estaurant now
,
p I t Pie
MENTS AT BUDGET Pfll. (740)1165..c149
Steal Beamo; P1pa - r
and Challenges. Conlldon· hiring all 3 locations, lull or
2
8
WANm&gt;
1818 Main Street, Pt. Pl. on
aunl· area. x 2 Bedroom Mobile Home. CES AT JACKSON ES..
For Concrete Anglo, Cha"'
tlal. Legal. Call Margaret part·tlmo, pick up. aWiica·I'IIO
at location &amp; bring back
To Do
Completely Rolulblahad. 2 walls, thermal pane win· Close to Town. (740)256· TATES 52 Westwood Drive 4 Sheets, While Mart&gt;lo nel Flat Bar Steel Grating
and Leo 1-868-203·0333 tion
between
9:30am · &amp; •
• story, 2 Fun Bath. 3 Bed· dows, priced to salo. Call 8674
trom $297 to $383. Wllk to 60x25x1, $tOO 080. Ca~ For Dralno, ' Driveways &amp;
Goln Conlldonco In An 1o'00am. Monday thru Sit··
roomo . Large Kitchen . 4391
(304)875-3689
(806)474· 2 ·Bedroom
.
.
ask lor Rooe~N.
Trailer, All alec-. lhop &amp; moYioo. Cd 740- (740)992.3452' no .,._ Wllkwaya. L&amp;L Scrip Met·
Uncortllln World. Loam et· urday.
All ql your home repairs, ad- Large Utility Room, LA/ DR/
..._ •
446·2568. Equal Housing leava meaaage.
ala Open Monday, Tuaaday,
Iactive sell .dalense moves
dnlons &amp; rerriodellng. 24hr Family Rm. New Carpet Only $850 down and (~40
A - • Comrlnlenl -~ &amp; Fr1day, flam.
1$200 depoolt. OIJporlunlty.
today at Jay Clarl&lt;'s Konpo
Need a JOB?
emergency service, senior throughout F/A &amp; NC, s 181 .38- month""'• you
WOlFF ••u~NQ Bl!
4·"""'" ~~ Tlluraday
Korate School. 740°742·
Want a Career In
cHizens discount. 22yrs. $79,900. (740)448-9586 or 8 , _ ;;;;.;,• . Calli:aoo. 2 badloom, lor- or·run~ Beach St.. Mlddlaport, 2 Low Moni;'i~ S.lu"',d;iy ""'&amp; Sunday'
2546
..
NURSING?
oxp. (304)576-2086
(740)448-2205 cir (740)448- 1137-3238 Ilk lor Mike.
quiet comm•"""', nice clean bedroom lumlohod apart,
n~.
(740)448-7300
·
Nurslnq Asrllstant Classea
2883.
·
hOrne 1740)992 2187
mont, ulllllles paid, dapOIIt
Horne ~ery
are be:ng offered on Jan. Experienced care taker for
Pilot Progtam, Sl~ Pa'
•
&amp; references, no . pets,
FREE Color catalog
New s.ntenlal 22 Rifle,
GIVEAWAY
14, 2002. II you are a car· ak:k 0&lt; 'elderly. Reterencas. F"'e188~
Nice bl· rent. No Craditi Bad CredH, 2 bedroom, Fumlshad. In (740)992.0185
Call Today l-800-711 .0 156 Fancy 51ocl&lt;. Sarnl Auto.
~~------_.1 ing, compassionate person, (304)373-7244
ov
on acre near and Government Loano .tor the Country, $2751 month
www.np.etotan.corn
$1&lt;15. Call (740)448-1127
you could ba a part ol OUR
Chester. Three badroom, Ronlora. Own Your New plua $200 dapOIIt and utiiH· Christy's Family Living,
Free Rottwellar/Oalmataln Healthcare Teaml Contact Goorges Portable sawmill, two baths, one.-car garage, Home Today! 17401446- loa. cal (740)256-8202
33140 New Lima Rd., Aut· Firewood $50 Dump True!&lt; Pinch Pleat D - Antiquo
miK puppies, black with alit· Judy Hart, LPN, Instructor don~ haul your logs to the !emily room With llraplace, 3570.
· land, Ohio, 740-742· 7403. Load. (740)379-2756
Sltln Light Beige and dacolle white on them, very play· al 740.992.6606 or 740. """just cal 304-675·1957. sun room. Now central heat·
2 BR, All Electric, 51 Rt 7 s, Apartment, hoiTIO and trailer
rating Rod. WDIIIt 1 8 to 10
lui, (740)992.0739
.2370
•
Bott
C 1 lng &amp; ale system. one ml- Special Financing· Down 10 mllea trom town, Rotor· n~ntals. Commercial store- Firewood- $45 pickup lolfl. ft. Window. $75 tor an:
742
•
•0P . to
om lean ng nute oH Route 7, but atMI"""' Pauments aa low aa 1%
· a d D • R fronts avaUable for lease (740'"1.0109 Local 0811 ...__ (740)875-~
Free lo good home Pup·
.
. OR
ServJce, Profeastonal clean· . vate (740)985-3981
.,..- '
.
, ences n
apoa"
•·
.
~
,
Y· ,..._...
.-gg
pies. Part Eskimo white Stop By Rocksprings Reha· .ing at affordable prices.
,
Prequallfy by phone, qulrad. No Pets, $2751 Vacancies now.
ery, $20.
Rel:ld iU..I Homl Ownlra
740 441 1569
spltz/Australlla"n shepherd, ~111~ 1 1onA Ceknter kxatRad dat Resl~ential, offiqe, remodels FS: B(an.d Now Home 1600 (740)44&amp;-3570'
month,
)
•
' can Gracious living. 1 and 2 First Elvis Plate made, Tappan HI efftclency 90 plua
3 (
Beaulilul with good dlsposls
oe springs
oa • lng and construction cl&amp;an sq ft. , .1 1~ acre lot, We have approximalely 20 after :30pm
bedroom apartments at VII· Black &amp; Whlta. Valued ovet gu fumaca. Including oil
lion.
)6 5.
Pomeroy,
and
1111
OUI a up. Confidential. 992·2979 $115,000. Call lor Into. used homes tor under 2br. Tn1llor In Country $275 lege Manor and Riverside $600 aaldng $250., Antique and
-ric geoluma·
1304 7 1487 __ COppotaasrt A?typll~atlorl E~al or992·139t.
;;,p.:;;;;.;;;.;;..;.;;;;..
(740)448·4514/ (740)448· S2.ooo.can1-81J0.837·3238 montn, · s1oq. oopoall. Apartments In Middleport. Iron doll .. c10g bed. $85. caa. HI !Otllclency Heat
lJJS'r AND
~n w~~yor ~·
3248.
lor Info.
(304)576·3117 or (304)582· From $278·$348. Cd 740- (304)882·2438
Pumps taaturlng Tappana
FOUND
co~atyg(nEgO,EEW~O·)P aco 0 •
o.-~
9303
992-5064. Equal Housing
Free incractlblo warranty
L.,---'l~~-.,1
ve.~
.
Opporfunltlot
Floral Prinl Couch w/rnatch- ......
~
BultNF1l'l
MOBILE lloMEs
AND Bun..oiNGs
3 &amp; 2 BR Mobile Horne In
.
I valancel allo Chllir to ,_.age
.
Found- youl malo~ vi· ~-=-~~~ ~~ f:·t;rgg
Ol'l'olrnMlY
FOR S.W.:
Porter. You Pay Qeposit Modem I Badooom A!&gt;ln· ~. Excallonl Condition. ~~~.:J"S17:C,~ 1~ ·
clnlty ot kaatemll lg~ bad nursing facility. Excel· '
Commercial Building lor =~UtllltleO. Call (740)3811- ment. (740)448.()390
$700. (304)874-3837 or o r 1 - .
5
8
~:,:;; .= ' ca lent opportunity lor chol·
INOTICEI
14•80 alap/sldlng 2K8 Rent. Cedar Slreot, GallipoNorth 3rd Av"""", Middle- 458-tn
--'
.
longing and rewarding ••· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· walls., 14K70 slap/siding lla, OH. (740)256-6661
3 bedroom lrafler on Stale pori, 1 &amp; 2 badroom lurnlotl- For Sale: Lawn E"' Snow . blower, Ronchklng
Lost Ladles Blmold Owned penance. Slon on bonus. tNG co. recommonde that 2x8 walls 3br. 2ba .. Late
Roule 1431n Pomeroy, flrot ed apartmenll, deposM &amp; glne. Aak lor Jr., Phone Pro, two-alega, 8 HP, 2e"
by Senior Cltlze~ Needs Great start rates. excellent .you do bualness with people model double wldas 3br. 6000 Sq. foot comrnerlcal month rent plus deposit referencee,
no
pels, (74o)256-11 02
wide etectrlc stan new
8 trom lnsld~ billfold regulatory compliance hlato- you know, and NOTto send 2ba lree delivery &amp; setup. In alorage with 14,000 sq. loot Hud approved, (740)992: (740)992.0186 .
fii!Per&amp;
.·
~S500:::::'·:..!(:.:740::!:)992~-2389=:.'__'
·
· ry. Interested candidates money through the mall until house financing to qualified of outside area. can ERA 9523
Free Gal Fu11'11C81 and Air 992-4187
should apply to: Rock· ou have lnvesllgaled the buyers. (606)474·4391 .or Town &amp; Country Real Eo·
Now Taking 1\ppllcatlons-- Conditioner Eatlmateo. Call SunwoltTOM!ng Bed. $500.
Lost: EaiTing l'oith Nice vary springs Rehabllltallon can- ~flaring.
·
(806)4747568 after 5
tat~ 304-875·5548
3 bedroom, 1 balh all eloc· 35 Weal 2 Bedroom Town- (740)448.1J30!! or 1-800· (304)n3-6000
tmlll white atones {pierced) ter, 36759 Rocksprings
tric, nice cla~m home, no house Apartmenta, Includes 291-0098. If you don't call WOOd lor sale, S35 8 load
AI Krogars Gallpolls t-5-02. Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio Start Your Business To· 1970 Champion 12K80 2
!"'.:eD:r:=c:v:; pets, (740)992·2187
W$~ ~~:oh, us we -lose!
dailverad Call Randy Cox
Reward. (740}448·2380
45769, Jackie Newsome, dey P~ma Shopping Can· bedrooms. $3,000 080. en
rblio
·
·•
·
(740)3117.7
·
RN Director ol Staff Dove~ ter ·space Available AI AI· Catl (304)875-2470
building. 14K7D mob Ia Baautfful · River View Ideal
Full Size Ba- Bad, AI
• 833 .
.
.
opmenl. 740·992·6606. lordabla Rata S nn Valla
home. t5 plus Acres. l..ocat· For 1 Or 2 People, Retaren· Very nice. 2·3 bedroom wood. Chlldtl Honda Power
AUCI'ION AND
Equal Opportunity Employer Ptaz C H740k~ 101 Y 1980 Hillcrest, Nice Cond~ ed on Rt. 33 oulllda ol New ceo, ~t. No Poll, Foe- apartment, In town. large Wheels. Complete Ousen Two Coloman Pop-up
8• 0
F'l.&amp;I.MARn:r
Enoouraglng Worl&lt;place Dl'
· lion, 2 BR. Gas Furnace. Havan. 112 mile to"" Moun- lor Trailer Pari&lt;, 740-441· kl"""", LA, $500/mo. Ret· wot.-. $35 ·tor - h Clr'nllorlwlth carlO!l'l 1987
versity.
.
PI«Jt.miioNAL
Canlral AC, 1 Ownar, lalneer Spom and Alloys. 0181.
.......,. &amp; depoon required. Item. (740)446-2805
and 1989 Naad Work' Good
.
$7500. (740)256-1914
Grear Location. Owners flo.
(740)448-3844
Wlntar p ject Both F
Rjck Pearson Auction Com·
SERviCE'&gt;
locallng. Call (304)882·2859 Mason 3br. Trailer. $285
Hanly Mums $3.00 each 4
ro 94 · 222
or
pany, lull time auctioneer, ..... A""_,
1985 Skyline 14x70, 3 bad· or (304)875.0160
plus depoe~. (304)875-nll3
SPACE
t0&lt; .$10. Open 1111. 8-5pm. &amp; $t400. (740 9- 5
complete auction service. iiNI..,. ~Mntatlv.
TURNED
room. Good Condition, Call
·
FOR JbNr
aveningl. Dewhurat Green, li N ,__I
c
Licensed 1166 Ohio &amp; Wast Large National Company SOCIAL SE~R~ 0;SI? Harold. 740-385·9948.
Lars &amp;
Trailer In Mason next to
house Mt. Alto. (304)895- .,;;'lit ... ~-naaw halna
VIrginia 304:n3-5785 Or Seeks Rep for Local Area, 'No Fee Unless Wo Win!
ACR£AGE
Wal-mart, CA , covered
3740 leav• meaage. or
on 13 different aaws.
.n:j.
$600 waekly .plua comml•
1987 14,70 mol&gt;llo homo, 3
carport 740-992·3981
Nice loll, quiet country set· (304)8115-3789
112 price, $14.00 each.
5447 · ---., slon plus bOnuS8I plus lull
304
aP.:.;.;;~;.
1·888·582-3305
bedrooms ' 2 full baths
.
tlng, will accommodate
(740)+411-1127
'
'
stove, refrigerate~. heat 2 Laval Acres with Mobile
WANm&gt;
APAKI1IIENI'S 118x60, $100 par monlh, call ~~·· Holballfe Die- watortlnrSpectai· 314 200
benafita. 1st year earnings,
BUY
FOR RI'Nr
Ed at CounirY Homes, 740- tributor, Call Fe&lt; Product Or PSI $2l 85 Par 100. 1• 200
pump, some new carpet, Home an&lt;f 2 itot'j garage.
70K. FOK Raaume:
10
~
• 50·
992·2167.
Opportunity. (740)441-1982 PSI $3T.OO Per ioo· All
new water Hnea, new vinyl Mason 80 Road, . Ashton ~
(757)473-3547
.
Brass ~ Rtd
house replacement wins loss than 2 mllaa from 1
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Scenic Hills lo accepting apJET
ngs
1S
dowa, very good condition, Route 2 $48,000 (304)273· and 2 bedroom apart· Trailer Spot lor Rent. 2
Sliver. Gold Coins, Proot· pllcatlons for a 32 hour a
menll, lumlahad and unlur· Milos Out of Northup on IJn. AERATION MOTORS
n~sitting on rented lot; 0918
sola, Olamondo, Gold week fill· In LPN lor the 11-7
·nlehed, security deposit re- coin Pike (740)448-8044 Repaired, New I Robuilln A EVANS ENTERPRISR
s c
qulred, no pata, 740·992·
·
Stock. can Ron EVIIflll, t· ES Jacklon, Ohio, 1-800All I'Mieatate advertising $12,000 or bast offer. Call
shift,
Stop
by
and
fill
out
an
(740)367.0521
lngs, U. . urrency,· application or call Pam
In thla new1paper Ia
~;:::;;:::::::; 2216.
800·537,9528.
:.53:;;7.. ;·8;;:528::..,_ _ _ __
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
.
IUbfecllo
the
F...,.l
14x70,
3
br./2bth,
1987
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- Caldwell lor more lnlormas Fair HDUalng Act of t•
._':.
Bedroom Apartments,
Watkins Productas double
$4995. Wll help with dell
tion. (740)448-7150
11
446-2842.
~
~
$289
month.
Depoolt
&amp;
Ret·
King
Size
Wltarbed
with
12
sttangth darl&lt; and white ...
whiCh IMkea It llltg~l to
ary, Call Kavena, 740---.iFORIIiiiiRI'Nr;;oli._.J
eronce.
HUO
Approved.
Houii!How
Ora-.~.
$126.
nllla, oploeo, aalveo, llnl·
I \ 11'1 I I\ \II \ I
Scenic Hilla Is accepting opldverttae ..,ny
9948.
L
(740)+11-1519
Gooos
. (740)116 6982
-andmanyOtnorprodptk:adons tor 3-11 Fulls dme p~ehnWI:w,llmhallon or
..,I I&lt;\ I I I ...,
.
· coil (740)949-3027
1990
Reelwood
2
badroom
RN Supervisor and a 3-11 diiCrtmlnatlon baled on
• t ·3'Bedrooma Foreclosed 1 Bedroom Apt. Gallipolis.
Largo pi&lt;;kup load miKed ··: :=:..=:.!:..:::!:::::=.:...._
Part· time RN Suparvtsor, rt~ee, eOior, rwligiOn, Mx home-call Cheryl 0 740 Homes From 5199/Mo., 4 Water
Paid. $275 month Appllancaa' Recondllloned nrowoott will local~ White Frlgldare Wllhar/~
Please slop by and till our ftmlllll atatu1 Of' nauor:.l 386·9821. ~2002 Sunpolnt().8 Down, 30 Years at 8.5% plus dopoail. No Poto, Waahera, Dryera, Ranges, $45 00 94&amp;-2567 avanings' or aet. $200. White Hoipolnt
3
bedrooml2bath
14
•
7
an application or call Pam vrlgln, or any Intention to
40- APR. For Llatlngs, 80().319- (740)IIS 4043 alter e:OOpm Aotrlgratora, Up To 90 Oaya
'
stova $100. Almond GE Remust sellnCall Mike 0 7
3323 Ext. 1709.
Guaranteed! Wl Sail New Ma- and Box Springs, l~gerote&lt; $150. (304)875Caldwell for mora lnformas
malta anwo auch
385-2434.
1 br. Fumilhed Apt. LMng Maytag Appliances, French $116. Quilting Frameo, $25. 2708
Are you aamlng whal you tion. (740)446-7150
preference, tlmttatton Ot
3
t
bedroom,
$3001
mo.
plus
room. kitchen. bath. AM utiit· City Maytag, 74().448.7795. Truck Topper, Flllerglau :...:;,:_-e·---~·are worth? $1 ,500·5klmo
qtacrlmlnatlon,"
1991 Mansion 14x70,
References res lea pd. Except Electric,
Back and ...; Sliding WI~ Word Proceasor, Brother
Free. lnto·B00-221·1487.
bedroom excellent· c:ondl deposit.
qulred.
Stove
&amp; Retngera· (304)875-1365
For
Silo:
Reconditioned
dowl, 91"1ong • fKf - · POP300Colorln~Jet,Like
Thl~
INIWipa,-r
will
not
lion,
call
Kavena,
(740)385
SOCIAL WORK P081nON:
tor
A/C,
Gallipolis.
washans. dryen1 and ralrlg- $50
Naw,
$150.
Phone
Are you Sarlous About
9948.
knowinGly - p i
Program Coordlnato~ post(740)448-3687
t
5
Coun
Street.
2
Bed·
orators.
Thompsons
Appil·
·
.
(740)379-2727
Worl&lt;lng From Home? Call lion available for a reslden: · odvortloornonte 10&lt; rMI
rooms, 1112 bethl, KIIChen ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- Metal Desk, 4 Drawera on
1991 Manalon 14K70, 3
Now For Free lnlorrnitlon. tlal program for people with
nlatl which II In
2 bedroom house In Pomer· witn atovo an&lt;f relngerator. nuo, (304)675-7388.
Ona Slda, 30x20, V.ry Nice
8uJuliNG
bedroom,
Will
help
with
de
•
1-885-601-4358
mental ralardatlon In Bids vloleliol'l of"the llws Our
385oy,
$375
per
mo.
plus
doOff
Slraet
Parking,
Close
to
Portact
tor
StUdenll
HomeSiJJ1Rmi
livery,
call
Harold,
740·
www.auccns41Mme.com · wall. Re3ponslbilltles
rNC~eraare lleleiJy
posit, wRh option to buy on Schools and Downtown Fumlture tor sale al89 Gar· work, $20. (740)985-4409
9948.
c1uda the days to- day SU·
Informed that au
land contract, no pats, Area. $595/ month plus do- llold Ava. Stove. Retngero·
,
.Attention!
poolt and Ralaronca. No tor, Waaher and dryer, an&lt;f IIOIILE HOllE OWNERS Block, brick, II8WII' pipes,
Earn 2nd. Income Without per.tislon of tha homes. -111191 advertlood In ., 1995 16x8D, excellent con- (740)898·7244
Must have on year e,.perl·
Pats. (740)446-4928
Bedo and more. (740)448- lntenhenn &amp; Col"""'n wlndows, llntela, etc. Claude
thll .....pi&amp;PM'IN
2nd Jqb up to
dillon, will halp 'Mth delivery,
BR, 42 112 Lloooln Ave·
71!81 or (740)448-9780.
oil &amp; -ric 1urnacea In· Wlntero, Rio Grande. OH
ence and a tour year degree
$25.-$75./llr. Pt·A.
available on an equal
call Nikki. 740·385·9948. ., 2nue,
$3Wmonth plus da· 2 Bedroom Apartrnant, all
eluding hi oftlcloncy heat Ca11740-2e-512t .
In a human services field:
opportunity bl...,
1-800-216-7543
· 1995 Clayton 14&lt;70 2 bed · posit. Off Street Parl&lt;lng, utilities . Included. $400/ Lalit Model GE Washer, pump ayatoml. We carry a
,www.Money·Orearns.com previous personnel superv1·
slon prelarrad. Valid dnvar's
rooms 2 lull balhs, dining Foncad In Vard. (740)533- month, $100 daposlt. ${00. Late Model W1ilrlpooi complete line ot Mobllo
license, three years good
area , laundry room, central 2580
(140)367:0811
Dryer, $75. Other Wuhers home partl &amp; ICCIIID•i 'la Lw-..O~IIiiiiiiil:O...J
air, underpinning. 8K18 cov.
and Dryers, $85 eaCh. AI· BENNETT'S HEAniiG 6 AVONI All Areaal To Buy 0&lt; driving aKparienco an&lt;f ado·
HoME&lt;; .
ared_J&gt;OICh. 8•10 building. 2·3 bedroom nouse lor rent 2 badroom, 2 story apan· mond FF Whlrtpool Retrtg· COOLING (74(1)448-1411
Sail. Shirley Speare. 304, quata aulomobllo Insurance
required. Must live wtthln 30
FOR SAlE
~304}675·7~16 or (304~75- In Pomeroy, no pet&amp;, not ment for rent In Syracuse, erator, $lOO, Call after or 1:oiDO:I12..JII7
AJ«: Chill8M PUQS, Shots,
875-1429.
.
mlnulea/30 miles ol home. L,___;;:,;:::;:;._.J. 5018
Hud approved, plck·up ap- $200 dopooit, $330 per 6,00pm, 1740 )448-901!8.
www.orvb.-nMtt
Wormed, Now Accepting
plication at 6 Cave Street, month rent, · rent Includes
Deposita to hold, $350,
Domino'• now taking appii0 Flexible hours. liberal ben·
cations for sate drivers, Gals etit package. Salary: $2~ 3 bedroom house tor sale For sale- 16x70, 3 bedroom, Pomeroy.
water, sewer &amp; trash, Mollohan carpet, 202 Ctark
(740)388s9325
llpollo and Pomeroy loca· 25,000/ year. Sand resume ori land oontract, (740)992· ·2 bath, call 740-385-9621
.
(740)371HII11
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Amazing
U.llbollllll· ~::-c:-----ask lor Charyl.
3 badroom homo Minersville
(740)448-7444 I·Bn·830- Brseldhroughll
AKC Roglsterad Labrod()(
Ilona on~. Apply In paroon. 10' Buckeye Communliy 5868
Services, PO Box 604,
·
area, rivaf' view, $450 per River Bend Place now ac· 9182. Fllt8 Estimates, Euy Lase 10 pounds· 200 Puppies, Excellent Hunting
Domino's now taking appll· JackSOn, OH 45640·0604. 3 Bedroom on Route 2, lAS Special! We'll match ~onthit refe~ requ=, ceptlng applications for 1 br. flnancln~, 90 days same as pounds easy, quick, Faat Prospects. Firat Shots &amp;
cattona tor sate drivers, Gal· All resumes must be pool· ~675·5332
~t ~~~~e)~~.~;~~!~: 7~
Hud Sub~dlze Apt. tor tha cash. laa/ Master Card. Dramatic Results. 100% Worrnedi (740)448-0080
992~~r8 nerno5pm· • elderly
IIJ&gt;oils and Pomeroy loca· marl&lt;ed by 1116102. Equal
~
ft
&amp; dloabled. EOH. Onva- a· Hnlo save alot.
Nalural, Dr. ROCOIM18nded.
tiona only. Apply In parson. Opportunlly Employer:
1
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Sot up a s.
3br housa In Point PIOU· (304)882·3121
.
S
$ · "1\ak about fREE Sample"
Orivera wanted, no COL, 23 STNN CNA Part· time pool· :::;.;r:;:.~~;~~~O)~~~a Limlled Or No Credh? Gov• ant~ No Poll. (304)875· Studlollitlcloncy opanmant, ~~';:,'· Aa~, ~rs~· F.:: (740)44t·l982
yra. old or older, good driv· t1on available on all ahlfta. 3583.
ernmentBank
FinanceOnly 5929
$225 u ntumi·~
$2501 ur· Fr" Aefrl~erator• $150 · AT&amp;T Anlwer?nn
At Oakwood In Barbours·
'""""'·
"• Service
' • ..,
lng record. bonell1s, drug Scenic
HUla
Nursing
Center.
ville
WV
304•
3br.
House,
Fenced
Yard
nlahad,
$300
depoalt,
wlitor,
Whl~pool
tack
Waahor
$15.
(740)448-1127
Plano. S•- &amp; Ciarl&lt; Conacreen, seniors welcome. t
738
3409
110
Stop
by
and
out
an
appll·
Partial~
.Remodeled
home
·
·
·Henderson.
Deposit,
Rotor·
lrasn
Incl.-,
Middleport,
and
Dryer,
$350.
Rafrigerll·
Baby
bed
Complete
Cherry
1 1 "G:,oo Cond
800-53HI553.
cation or call Pam CaldweU on Coffman Street In Jack· Musl sell· 14K70 mobile once, No Pets. (31).4)675· (740)581-0849, (740) 596- lor, Like New, $300. Skaggs WOOd S60 Call (740)992· ~ n ke
Ilion.
more Information. son. Nice Out Building. home, call 740·385-2434 4082
3466,
Appliances, 76 VIne Street. 3452.'no anSwer leave mets (14fJ~rna me an offer.
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT tor
$42,000. (740)446·7899
ask lor Elaine.
(740)448·7388
se-.
,....--2.238
·
PAYI- productl at (7401448-7150
I \In I .., I I 'I I II '
.
4 Rooma &amp; Bath, $3001 Tara TownhOuse Apart·
=~;::_-----.,.homo. CaH Toll Free
,\ I I\ I .., II II h.
URGENTLY
NEEOoO· Remodeled 3 bedroom, In New 14K70 3 br/2bth Only month. 52 Oliva Street. menll, Very Spacious, 2
·~~
Bed, Cornjlloto, 1125. ·Col·
1-800-467·5568 Ext. 12170 •Piaams
oam S50 lo MiddlepOrt, call Tom Ander· $975. down and St69.64 (1.W)448-3945
Bedrooms, 2 Roora, CA, 1
~""""'~
lee and End Tabloo, $76.
www.homojoba.com/12170 $60 perdonora,
week few 2 or 3 son after Spm (740)992· per month, Call Nikki, 740t/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted, -. Hide be&lt;S, $75, Mlcrowaver
iiiiir;;;;;~~""!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
·'
385-7871. .
9 rooms, 3 baths. CIA and Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Buv or sell. Rlve"ne. Anll· Si~~nd, $25. (740)448-97~2
HAY &amp;
Experienced ·eashler Need· nours weekly. Call Sera- 3348
Teo, 740-592-6651 .
·
Heat $500/ mo. (740)448· tlo, Start $365/Mo. No Pets, '
"
GJWN
ed (304)895-3803
Remodeled 3 bedroom, In New 14x7D. 3 bedroom. 2 4734.
Lease
Plus
5ecurlly Deposit ques, 1124 East Main on Grubb's Pianos Tuning &amp; L--:..~=-1
Required, Days: 740·"46· SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- Repairs. Problema? Need
.
Plano Player tor emal char· Wanted- drummer tor rock, MiddlepOrt , call Tom Ander- bath. Only $995 down &amp;
country,
blues
band,
son
after
5pm
(740)992·
$1
89.62/monlh,
Call
Cheryl.
Pilot
Program,
Ranters
3481 ; Evenings: 740·367s 992·2526. Auaa Moora, Tuned? Call The Plano Dr. 4x5 Round Balet Of Hay.
lslllltiC church. ,If Interested (740)992·7818
3348. ,.
·
740·385·7871.
Needed, 304·736·7295.
0502. 740-448.()101 .
ow~ar.
740-448-4525
$10 each. (740)367·011!8
pleaee call (740)388.()414

Help wanted caring tor the Sales Position. Immediate 3-4 bedroom, 2 baths, dr,
elderly. Oars1 Group Horne, Opening. Apply In Parson. kllchan, central heat &amp; ale,
Wt\y Y¥&amp;11? Start meeting now paying minimum wage, Bring Resume. Acquisitions basement &amp; attachei! ga·
shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am· Jeweliy, 151 2nd Ava., Gal· ·rage with 2 br, t bath, apt.,
Ohio singles tonight, call toU ,_
3pm·t1pm, 11pm· .llpoiil.
bam, 19acreslanced, 1112
,,... 1·800s766-2623 ext Spm,
7am, call740·992·5023.
miles N. on old 33 !rom
11121 .
140
~
Meigs High School, by apLIFE YOU DE$ERVEI 1
polntmant only, (740)593·
Be YOUR OWN BOSSI . ·
TiwNJNG
. 6937
l'f:RsoNAL&lt;;

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:=~,-=~~ Need help
::d':;n,ry~~. ~= paying for
Dodge Oynaaty, $3!26. The
XMAS
Cant will ba - 118 ~ tor
.
•

tha llsteG price or ·tor 'the
hlgheat offor. Bids will ba
Full OIIH! •l&amp;ht •nd
accepted until I 2:00pm P81'l-tillll!doy poalllona
Wednooday, January t8, available. l!om rr..m
2002.
more. lntormallon
contactFe&lt;GMCM
(740)892• U.OO to $7.00 por boar
8829 or (740)387-7341. p1a1 polmllaiW&lt;IItly
~':!i~:==m":.~ boa~ Beopartofa

The ftunlly of

HARRYK. '
CLARK
.woliLUlke to (bank
Rev; Bob RobltiBOO,
Richard Ash, Kenny
WIKKIDB, Mary
Deniz. 0~. WllhereU,
Brenda
Cunnlngluuo, Ann
Cozart, Home

I

Heallb 'Nurses Aids,
Hospice, all of our
• ud.famlly
friends
for lhetr prayers;
love amd ldndnetiS In
our f!me of deepest

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I luJve .o11/y •lipped
from your view
. I rurt l, dllll you .,;..

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ihatli is nOthing at

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... 1!1'11 &amp;lill
CaU Ill# by my old
falitJIIIlr ~~~~­
SPialc io 1111 In lltt
easy ""'I• whkh WI
always used.
Put no dilference ·
lrtlfl your tone;
wear n&lt;; forr:td air
of stn.mroily or
sorrow:
l..auflt as we alway•
llwBhid at tltl littU
.}okll IOfnlttr. Pllly,
&amp;mlk, aiUithlllk of

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tluJJ II always was.
Lltii'JM .,..,.,,.
wllh~ut an effort,
wllhout a IIYICI ofa
•luMIPw In lt.
aU tluJJ il

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n.eQnt.

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CLASS!FIEOSI'
· Help Wanted

.!

NQW
.
HIRING
$6- $8

Per Hour
Full/Part Time
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
t

1-888-974-JOBS

CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio is seeking an
experienced Consumer Loan Officer for its·
Gallipolis, Ohio Branch location. Qualified
candidates will have 1·3 years, direct
lending experience in personal and real
estate (1·4 family) financing transactions,
be computer literate and possess good
customer relations skills. The Farmers
.Bank offers a competitive salary,
commensurate with experience, and fringe
benefits package. Send cover latter and
detailed resume to:
Fanners Bank • Savings Company
ATTN: Human Reaourcea Dlrac:tor
PO Box 626 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Farmers Bank II an Equal Houeing Lender
Member FDIC and an Equal 0pporlunl1y

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH, .
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
·FOLLOWING AREAS:
DEl \ILSI'H'I\LIST
· Previous experience helpful.
State of the art equipment.
Great working atmosphere.
We offer a benefit package,
· including 40lk, meilipal and
·retirement benefits, a five day ·
work week and no Sundays.

No Phone calls Please.
~Clarence •Ieider ·
aetwHn to a.m. a 'I p.m.

\

Page 5

~~~: i;~2~~9 ~"nrd:~ai~~~ !o;:!!3~3t~::.,:~~~u~al~~~
free throws, then Dill hit a
free throw for a, 23-19 tally.
· Dally Hill and Nate Martin
'tal' d
"
d
cap1 IZe on two tOrce
turnovers and put SHS up
25 - 23 , b ut at t h e 3 : 14 mark
of the second canto Buckley
hit a goal to tie the score at
25-25.
Karr put Eastern up 2725 on a pair of free throws,
then Tornado Connolly
swished a bucket to tie at
.27-27 . Bndley Bnnnon hit
a pair of free throws around
an SHS turnover for a 30-27
Eastern lead. and Hill pulled
the score back to one point.
with a pair of charity tosses
of his own. That came with
23 seconds left in the half
and was as close as Southern
came the rest of the night.
Eastern nn the clock down
. to 5 seconds and Karr hit a
jumper just inside the arc for
a 34-29 EHS lead~
Despite being outrebounded 25-11 in the fint
half, Southern was still in
the game. Southern's defense
caused Eastern to cough up
the ooll more than Coach
Caldwell liked, but the veteran mentor adjusted at
halfrime in fine-tuning his
offensive scheme.. ·
The opening two minutes of the second half were
tl\e difference in the game. ..
Eastern came out primed
and ready to play with a
more intensified fullco\)rt
pressure and halfcourt manto-man. The Eagles also
drove · the lane, challenging
the Tornadoes to pull up and
take the charge. No one did.
EHS went up 40-33 forcing SHS to call a quick time.
Eastern notched (our more
marken before Nate Martin
hit a trey to pull SHS to 4436, but a 10-0 Eastern run
that saw Karr, Lyons, Grubb,
Buckley, and Dill jump on
the scoring Merry-go round, proved·to be the final
blow, 54-36.
A ' Randolph trey ·at the

ern 's hot streak more than
doubled the Tornados' output. The final stood 76-52.
S
h
h . 21 f. 61
out ern
1t
-ooverall for 34.4 percent ftom
· ·
t h e fi1e ld, h 1ttmg
6-o f.-1 5
trey's and 15- of-46 two's,
while netting 5-of-8 free
throws. Eastern hit 26-of52 overall for 50 percent,
hitting 1-of-9 three's, 25-of43 two's, and 21-of-29 at the
line.
Eastern had 35 rebounds
(Buckley 7, Karr 8, Dill 8)
compared to Southernis 16 .
(D. Hill 5) . Eastern had 12
steals, eight assists, 21
turnovers, and 18 fouls,
while Southern had 11
assists,
11
steals,
13
turnoven, and 27 fouls.
Southern won the reserve
game 53-49 led by Wes Burrows with 24 points and 12
rebounds, while Curtis Neigler added 12, Derek Teaford
six, Aaron Seliers six, and
Josh Smith five. Eastern was
led by Josh Hayman with
11. Andy Hysell eight, and
seven apiece ftom Derek
· Baum, Darren Scarbrough,
and Ken Amsbury.
Southern hosts
Nelsonville-York Friday for
Home
National
Bank
Night. Admission will be
free for all fans compliments
of the bank. Eastern hosts
Trimbl~.

-71.-112
It llaclna

Eutarn

12 22 22

20 -

76

Garrott Karr ~ U 12, Chrla Lyona 1 5-8
7, Nllliln Laa Gn/bl) 7 4-5 19, AloJi
Slmpaon 2 ().() 4. Brad Brannon 0 3-43,
Andy Hysell 0 1·2 t • Brent llucklay 4 ().
0 8, Travis WD~ord 1 ().() 2. Bnlndon
Worry D1-2 1, Austin Crou 0, Cody 0111
5 2-4 12. TOTALS 27 21-211 76.
·IIOIITII!RN - Nata Martin 3 D-1 6,
Crola Randolph 5 0.1 t2, Curt CrouCh 0
2·2 ~. Mocy Raas I ().() 2, ~ustln Connolly 30.08,Cunla Nelglor 0, Qelloa Hill
5 2·2 13, Josh Smith 0, Jake 0,
Jordan Hill 4 1·2 9. TOTALS 21 5-8 52. ,
Threespolnl goals - Eaatem 1

(Grubb). Southern 5 (Marlin 2, """"
Hill)
Rebounds - Soulham 16 (0. Hill 5);
EU1ern 35 (Buck!OY 7, Karr 8, Olft 8)
Turnovers - SoUthem 13; Eutem 21 ,
Aaellll- Southein 11 (A- 3, .J. Hill,
Martin 3);Eootern t 2 (Karr 4, Brinnon 3,
dolph 2. Dallu

Lyons 3)

Stealo ~ Southam t1 (A- 3); Eeat·
em 8 (Karr 4)

Gun Shoot
fortletl Run

lrtle~· ·

"""JJ•st lll'tJUIUI
th• IIOmlf.
Uls 'weU.
Sadly missed by
wife, Eileen Clark
and ·children, Sisters
&amp; Brother

Thanks to all my
. customers for the gifts
given In 2001.
Bernice Durst &amp; Helper

;

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5
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makes it even wone. W e :
weren 't good enough to over- '•

come that."
•
inator job.
Polian acknowledged that :
But Mon , who defended he was also at fault for not :
F
• ..... h ' fi al
ang10 ;uu:r IS n game as providing Mora and Fangio
Colts coach, didn't think Fan- with more impact p~yen, but ,
·
th
bl
'd
th
•
gto was e pro em.
saJ
he believes
e system •
." Vic said, ' I(it comes down
I
I fior I di •
was oo comp ex
n - •
to you or me, don't sacrifice anapolis' young players.
~
your post·a·on "~or me,"' Mo~
Th
C
I
h
d
.
first
ttm'
'
••
e o ts a stx
e ,
said. "II came down to, in my starters on defense this year '
. d • w hat was ng
. h t an d . and Polian' said Tues da. y there j
nun
what was wrong."
could be four or five more ;
Fangio, reached at his home new starters next season. •
' declined com- some
. coming out of the NFL :&gt;
by telepho ne,
ment Tuesday night.
draJt.
•
· just about everything went
Mon said Fangio wasn't the :
wrong for the Colts this sea- only assisra nt Po !ian askep i
son.
him to fire. but would not
Indt' anapolis was const' dered eJa b onte on w h o e1se ~· ~
a preseason Super Bowl con- involved. Polian said the
tender, but finished 6- 10. The tants are under Aontract an" •
'" for now. ,.
Colts were just 3. 5 at home Will be " retained,"
! :
d h
.
an
ad losing strealcs of three
After the firing, Modi. :
and five games.
.
thanked many within the :
While some blame could be organization - ·team oWner
placed on the offense, which Jim lrsay for the opportunity '
had a conference- high 38 to coach the Colts. the players ;
giveaways, much of the blame for their effort and everyone :
was placed on a defense th~t from vi ce preside11ts to custo- :
finished 29th overall and last dians for their support.
.
in points allowed.
However, he did not men• •.
Mora defended the num- . tion Polian or chancterize ·
bers.
their relationsl'tip.
"Our guys fought hard,
''I'm not going to get into
Ja
d
h
d
d
b
d
h
p ye
a~ an uste t eir that," he said.
ta'l
·
d
Th e searc h "tOr M ora.s.
'
Is an I J'k
1 e our guys,"
•
Mon said. "But you take an replacement begins jmmedi·inferior defense and add that ately. . ·
•

I
asslsi- •

Rio
fNm'Pap 5
us,'' said Smalley.
This time, Rio Gnnde
woujdn"t be blinded-sided as
the Redwomen rolled . over
· the Blue Falcons, 90-68.
"That Notre Dame team,
they're pretty athletic," said
Smalley. "They're not a bad
team. They just ' haven't
learned how to · win, and
they're just a couple of players
away from probably being
c~mpctitivc,''

The Redwomen (15-5. 7-2
American Mideast Conference) were led in scoring by
Renee Turley·with 17 points,
13 of which came in the second ru.Jf, helping the Redwomen pull away from a
seven point halftime advan~
tage.
She also had six assists.
"Renee's a type of player,
she'll get you two or' three
steals, she'll get you some
assists; some key rebounds,"
said Smalley. "She makes
other teams guard her and
that opened it up for somebody else.''
Alkia Fountain had a dominating performance with 15
points and 16 rebounds.
"Alicia Fountain was very
solid on the inside," said
Smalley
Amanda Blazetic · also had
15 points, along with · nine
boards, while Angel Allen
added 13 points, including a
three 3- point goals, two early
in the second half.
Karen Battle led the Falcons (1-13, 1-6 AMC) with
19. points, while Mandy

Felice added 18 and Nichole
Blade 11.
"I felt we did some things
extremely well at various
· times,'" said Smalley. "We
looked good. We defended it
well. We were scoring out of
our defense. We scored in
transition. We scored in halfcourt,"
The Redwomen took a 100 advantage to open the game
before the Falcons made it a
three point game. Rio Grandt .
also had other sizable leads in
the first half, but Notre Dame
fought back.
.
"We'd put up, 14, 15 points
and it was almost like we
decided, 'well, we'd better
slow down and let them bade
in it' . And they would make a
run back," said Smalley.
By late in the second half,
though, Rio Grande had
taken complete control of the
contest.
.
"It was a good win in a lot
of ways, because everybody
got to play," said Smalley. "At
this time of the year. that's
extremely important.'"
The Redwomen received
some, good news prior to the
game. When the first regular
seas.on NAIA Division II ratings' came out the Rio
Grande was No. 20.
Meanwhile, other AMC
schools in the .top 25 were
No. 7 Shawnee State and No.
8 Malone. Urbana also
received a couple of votes.
"I think •that 's good,'; said
Smalley. "I think it's a very
tough conference right now." .
The Redwomen hit the
road for a pair of games this
weekend, at C arlow, Pa. Friday and St. Vincent, Pa. Satur· day.

Southaril 14 15 12 1t - 52
EASTEIIH -Jason Klmot 3 1-2 7,

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end of three sal vaged some
hope for Southern, but East- .
ern led 56-41 after three
rounds. The fourth and final
round was academic. Southern C oach Jonat h an Rees
· pulled out all the stops
strategically, b,ut Southern's
shooting went South far .
b
d h
·
h
eyon t e equator m t e
third round. SHS did salvage

unbrokflt

s

•

. .

-::::::::::::::=,

. tolllinuity.
Wlult Is this dtatlt
•
but God'~eaU.to
flory?
WhJ should I be out
of mi111J.IHctJuu I
""'out ~/&amp;lfltl?
""' iHit walllltf for
JOII,/Orall

Lw-·

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Eastem
·

Buy, ~';!.T~C!'

0

~ 231$,!0 1C~.edule
an Interview.

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D aIIY Hill d riIIed a three
to put Southern up 17-12,
Residential or commercial b th
wiring. ,_ service or re- ut en Eastern went on a
pa... Muter l..lcaneod oiOC· 10-0 run on goals by Karr,
trlclan. Ridenour Eloctrlcal, G bb D'll
d
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WV000306,304.s7s-1786.
ru , 1 , an two uc ley J. umpers, making the

amend-nlrfPts.
Careerorlealed penons
needed for alfOwln&amp;

·~!:;;!'7.'"534c;"

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8.}.~448
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•
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C&amp;C General Home Malntl&gt;19824Ford
- V • aU· """""' Palnllng, vinyl sld10
wdD
~~m"Ziha;;'k:alty
lng, -try, doonl, .,.,.
'
•
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baths,more.
m- · ..ry lltUo rust, came repair and
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tree
~~= V::::·~· ·estimate call Chat ·74Q.992·
(31i4)87s-311s2
ays 63!3·
'

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I

IIAIIEMENT

;r'

•
MIAMI (AP) "-- It rums out lhe Miami Fwion's best season was also their last
•
•
•
• •
The Fusion, who had the best record m Major League Soccerlastseasonbutstruggledattheboxoffice.
folded Tuesday along with their cross-state
rival the Tampa Bay Muri~
MLS . ed
'
". -·r
at poorsupportturtheFustonandthelackofan
owner fot' the Mutiny as reasom for the deeisiom The
.
'-- .
Mutmy hive u=n opented by the leaglle since their inception in 1996.
The Fuston,
·
· · d MLS
..
·
w h o JOme
.
as an exparmon
team m
1998, reached the semifinals last year but also had the lowest
. mcluding
.
.
.
revenue,
corporate support. Attendance
improved
nearly 50 percent to 11 ,1n per game in 2001, but that was
still below the league average of 14,%1.
' a very difficult sports market;'
' Fusion
'
."Sou th A on'da IS
owner Ken Horowitz said. "Even the established teams'- the
Marlins, the Heat, the Panthers - are suffering. The fan base
is very diverse. Many people simply don'tluve IOC2l ties to the
area and. have trouble identifYing with the IOC2l sports team."
Houn
- · HudsOn
h. dafter the hannouncement,
fD
. Miami. coach n•~1
was Ire as coac
Umted. A dispenal draft will be
held thiS month to assign Tampa and Miami players to other
teams.
"Th d
·
e ecision to leave both cities for the 2002 MLS season
was extremely difficult," commissioner Don Garber said. "I
can assure all of our fans that we worked tire
_ lessly to find a
plan that would have allowed us to remam 10 both markets.
We _simply could not find solution that was economically
feas1ble at this ttme, and we hope to rerum to the state of
Aorida when the league expands in future yean."
The announcement, which was expected for several weelcs,
followed an unanimous vote Friday by the MLS board of
governors. The league has spent more than $250 million and
has yet to tum an annuaJ .pro fi t .
·

a

WATERPROOfiNG

8888

81
GMc
4x4 • Runs m11oa,
t98S ~S.IO Blazer, $90,000
Good
. Jimmy
$3000
No Rust, Good eon.
080
(1(7~40~)~~
- ~~6~1!044~---· dltlon. S2,BDO (304)882·
_
2221
91 Plymouth Acclaim, 4.nr-------,
Door, 56,000 mlloa. $2000
OBO. (740)446-8044
IDH WANll!D
~~~~~~~
Galli&amp;· Meigs Community
Action will ollor tor ..11 the

$)::.:'4

r

~

wheels, $4,Boo oryOBO,
1740)982·2489
t998 Chevy Lumlno, - ·
pwlpb.
Greet
·- or nao
Car.
Rooa good.
$2500

It_,......._s.,;l!n'ort
tiMIIII . . ,.,..... on tM t1ra11
.. enc1 oney .. flt'tlllnlll'lkML

..

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cavalier

20 WordS 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commer cial Ads

I

~~~~~."·,:;-!(,i2~~ ~::" ~~~=

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u....,.

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h-ull~
Private Party Ads Under $100

6

POUCIU: ONo v...y,. t r .,.. .. ,_.,.. tt. rllflltD-. ...-.or ..... .,. Ml
Trlbun• • ~tt~llll n a'
M
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101 I'

Your Ads Wlth A. keyword • Include Complete
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~~~----~------

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

I

S:,: ::

992·2157

f/aJI'dcfo.IM

/}ear/lil(e,r

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE A.ti AD.

or Fax To

'*""

="""
r

350

~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, ·· (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
·

PW,

Tamp. $800. 1114 Oodge
S..250 Von, 1150. 11180 Goo
000&lt;1 homa(740)1115-31110 T -. 1860. 11115 Oldl
Cutiua ~. saoo. Z-2001 , 15P
..,.v...
&amp; llri&lt;lht wn T10 1988 llulrlklb•••114011·
' - - c. Yoor'Roundllohwy 1118 Oldl Colalo, $800
CIIIAmpc.tor
&amp; VoUno Dlooount ,_,. 1980 P-I' t.urrn. saoo:
ble.
Hontage
Form. 1918 Chevy ca.- Z-24,
(7--11'1
(304)675-5724.
$800. 1985 Ford F·t60·
•
l'lo*up, s750. 1988 ~
Marollcva.E'i
;p;;;;;:;.
Flroblrd, $1200. 1989 R&gt;«t
ii
-~··~ Exon
~
Au0 os
Plc:twli. $600
seoo'. 1989
Mule
1969 OOdgl 18118
550
FOR SAtE
Oynaaty, 11000. 1980 For&lt;! Bar. t i
1"'"'!'..~saoo
· 1985.!~~ lhlotd,
New,
1114
Buick
Regel
113
000
••••
'
~u
$4500
original mileO. toxceillnt F·t50 l'lo*up, S1200' 1980
·
. . . - , (31).4)675-2359
~~:,:ll'1
Unooln
Town
car
Oodge ea-.., $560. 1980
1987
VOty ~- Condition: ~s~
Are you looking tor engines
f:~~01 • $3IOO. Man:ury Topol, $1100. 1989 or u••• llol:oll'l Give ma
.
Ford -.ng, $1000. Call acalal(740)448.()5l9
1988"-+"·Old-Ie
08lta (740)3811-11303
E~iy Eight. Nloe Interior,
'I'IIIJcKs
=:-All~ --·~~.r,
~ 145·000, -·
FOR., •• _
0var 1 o.~ran:;,
1•500 ~
~)8
.,....,. · • Coli
Rabuld
Kl1s. 740-2-45-5677,
C30 ~7car.
3311-3765
Am eek 1878 Ford F·150, Autarnal·
'
·
1994 Grand·
$3795.
1997 carand. Am: ic, v~. 113,000 actual mlloa,

l\egt~ter

446-3008

-

~g. 11200. 11117

Cluolty hay · lor-· ., ,50
bale; tree mixed dOg 1o

· In one week With us
To Place

-

Ford .. 1

~:2;.,;. -~eeoCU: 2114 - "

-7«HHI2-5533

Else .Canl

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

fOUf'll

r:t'"~«t~l~ir~:-'~3CH~e:_'_""'_"'_·_S20_:,
~

Meigs; Gallla,
And Mason
Counties like
No One

o~ Fax To

'
The ..._lly S ntl-' P. '. A 7

· llldd...._.. Ohio
Pomerov,

I ...~· ·;=::;~;::=;:::=;:;:::::;::=:::;--::--:-:-_;:.:::::::;;:::•.:.:
· :=::-:::.:.,:.::~~-=-----------.!!!=.!-:=!.!:1:=:•-~•:.:::=;~~~
ru ~ tr" · ~~ It"' rw.: I Florida pro soccer folds
Mora ~~~r~~ ~~:ldru:=:"a~~1 i

C LA rs1 PIED

Cal• ~day...
Offiee 1/o«J~-tf

•

Chllrles &amp; Opal Ohllnflr
MarrNd ]aniUU'J 9, 1931
nank God for looklna down on our wondorilil
Mother &amp; Flltber over the yean. We an ~try
thankr.llo itiU baye the both of yoo Ia 2001.
~'+~M&gt; 6Setl '1tl•ttt~~., Aoo.-..ouup.
Whh Lol'e· Your chUdnn -Donna Jean. Bub,

Reelmen
from PapS

around a little bit. The nice
thing was we had 15 offensive
rebounds, so the guys were
going to the offensive glass a
little harder."
Dave Hilborn led the Blue
Falcons with 19 points, wt\ile
Jason Polak added I 0.
"Dave Hilborn is a legit
college player," said Thomas.

Beller each scored 15 points
to lead the Redmen (12- 8, 7·
0 American . Mideast Conference), while Joe Martin
scored 13, Sean Plummer 11,
Joe Delaney 10 and Matt ·".He's a ni ce freshman ."
Simpson nine. ·
Notre Dame (2 - 14, 0- 8
Beller was 5-for- 10 shoot- AM C) s}Jould be a solid addiing 3 - pointers.
tion to the conferen ce in the
"We accomplished really next few years . Not only do
what we needed · to accom- the Falcons dress 12 freshplish," said Thomas. "We got a men, but their location in the
relatively easy win. We got Cleveland . area gives them a
some guys some minutes who. strong recruiting base.
"If you're talking about
needed to play. We got some
geography, they're probably in
guy~ some rest who need to
get off their legs a little bit."
the best location of anybody
Delaney, Barlow, Simpson in ·our conference," said
and Martin each had six Thomas. " He (Notre Dame
rebounds as Rio Grande con- coach Chuck Cangelosi) can
trolled the game in the paint, fall . out of bed ·and land on
. "We should have an advan- more playen than we can find
tage under the boards with in an hour driving period.'' .
The Redmen are on the
our size advantage," said
Thomas. "Matt· Simpson was road six out of th e next seven
good this evening ... Joe Mar· games, the first coming Satur· tin continued to rebound day at St.Vince nt, Pa .
Their lone home game IS
well. Delaney and Barlow
each · ~ot six. It was spread against Tiffin Jan . 17.

�-.

'

'

-~.

Jan.9,2002

I•The
•

OOP

Gonzalez coming home to·Texas

•mas

1. Cnlp unlll

...

97 BeediSt.
mlddlepllt, OH

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

COLUMBUS (AP) - Beavercreek Sardinia Eastern Brown in the title
and South Euclid Regina are picking up game, has lost three games this season
while playing a powerhouse schedule of
where they left off.
Both teams are ranked No. I in the teams from around the nation.The Royfirst Associated Press als, 'who also ·won the 1999 state chamgirls basketball poll of .:pionship, ,,received 13 first-place votes
the 2001-2002 season and 152 points for a 49-point edge on
after winning state . second plac.e, Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph.
·
·
·
championships last March.
Dayton Chaminade-Julienne is the
Chaminade-Julienne, off to a 13-0
top team in Division II and Worthington start, outpaced five other unbeaten teams
Christian is No. 1 in DivisiOn IV in the in Division II: Clewland East Tech, Ketinitial media voting, announced Tuesday tering Alter and Willard (tied for third),
night.
.
Pemberville Eastwood and Springboro.
Beavercreek, which also won last year's
The Divi.sion IV race for the top spot
Division I poll title, received 18 first· was the tightest. Worthington Christian,
place votes and 212 points in the ballot- which lost in overtime in the state semiing. Columbus Brookhaven, which was finals last spring, holds a 16-point lead
second in the poll a year ago, is again . over No. 2 Jackson Center, with Hamler
No, 2, with another school from the Patrick Henry a dose third.
state capital, Independence, ranked third.
The poll continues for six weeks, with
Regina, which was second in last sea- the champions declared at the end of the
.son's Division Ill poll but a victor over regular se~son.

prep

otato ponol of~
Ohio high ICI'&lt;&gt;ol gi111

ccit.uMIIUS, Ol1lo (API- How •

(tlo),

Co9lol'. Vlnoont -

-

-

12.

and -

-

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IMII'IIIn the ftlll of llx ~ ~~~·2001-2002 pcllo lor Tho Aaoclotod P- ( lhiough gameo of Jan. 8) :
·
DIVIIION I

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9, Ml!insf~ St. Pater'•

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~
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11.0
10.1

178
163
147
114
101
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10.1
53
Otnoro recalvlng 12 or mora·polnto: 11. Hicl&lt;avllla 35. 12,
Cin. seven .Hilla 17, 13 (Uo), Beallavlllo, Ft. Aocovory,
Shadyolde 18. 18, ·S. Cha- - . , a m 14. 17,
Arcadla13.

•

FACTORY DIRECT

12% s-t Hor• feed ................ $5.00150
Swei1Stuff

P..-.yfagtes

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12% SMtl HorN ftelt ................ $4.40/50
Huntera Prlcje 21% dog food .........$8.95150
Economy Bill 12% lllock feed ..... $8.75/50
.......,., Jtockt .................... l4.751100

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city

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47 At I Ieil8d
41 Dola'l II.
48 MrtAal1

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'I'HAT MIGHT GWE
ME . PAU~E

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21 l!en1M810ii

PRICING

or Coatncton Pi..

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CONSTRUCTIO~

t~Homn

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

by Lull Campo•

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Ce4lbrtty Cipher cryptogl'llmt are created from quot.lllona by famous
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•Complete .

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Stop &amp; Compa~

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IZUO

THIZTO

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month

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Construction

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Box 189
M•ddh·port . Ohto 45 760

B S X

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WELL,I
WOUL.DN'T

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PUULII

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Rearrange fetters of
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the

be-

low to form four slrnple words.

·.

ABOUT' '(01.) R

I'R.E!: Tt&gt;tMW
SHOOTING'

1M TRVING TO SAVE UP '·
MONE'f FOR COLLE6E ... ..

M'( 6ADMINTON
SCIIOLARSiliP
FELL TJ.IROU6H

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fuertlllundeg
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217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio l

. '
(7-10) 992-5tJOS
P/1
COII'IUCTOIS, Ill(.
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hot~~ebold aooc~a. You should direct any
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740-992·7599

Feeder· Threw· Fetal- Tawdry· AFTERWARD

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more original a discovery, " my friend said "the more
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c

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papt·r. 1'.0 . ~Jox 175M. Mur .. '

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for
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one month for as low as $25
992-5479,'
Phone 992·2155

ust~ al

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C AI'ItiCllllN (llcc 22J•tll. liJ) -- Yuu 'rc ~~ d~' \.' \'1"
~tratl'gi~t w lwl{in wuh ..111d
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my Hill Staltull, New Yurk ,
NY 1111;r•.
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~uod ~a l ~.·s~'crson ttahy ir.
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f oltL' ,11) dCIIII.'IIt of myHery 111
yt.Hl r pn'H'ntatinn . .P\'''PI,,·
can't n·~i ~l ha v\11~ th,•tr ~· un­
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PiSCES (Fd&gt;. ~II..M.ud• 211)
-- Evl'J I tltm1~h yuu 111~y ta k~.•

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till ,111 U\l:t S~ l ,l\111 1~ J'U~hUl' tU•

ti.ty t" dc.·al with

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imt .tt~· dri n · to li.lti~ly y~.,ur
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tt•rrt•ti oulll willlu..• ft.'oll.'lll'd.

Tl HHSlb y. Jan. 1!1. ..!(llJ.2
hnmuLttL' a ~l'Od g.nnc ptm

I

' AlliES (M"rd• 21-April I'&gt;)
-- If rou hopl.' to p:ll.:ify )'(JUT
Tl\lltlt•s.o; uaturl' cudav. ~ L'&lt;-'k iuvolvl'\Jll'llh tll .u tl ll"cr mmL'
:~d\'L'tltun: aml , J:tl.n \tuu r. T hl'
t\111 .md l'XL' itL'IIIl'tlt will ex hilarate.• ymn .ntitud.:: and ou t-

look .

TAUIWS (Apri l 211-M:oy
2fl) -- Even thou~h ro u n1.1y
' not pl.Jce tuq much dl'~lcnd­

cncr On othcu

t oc.l~ '' · \'ou

'ould luck out wht'll til ~.· ri.,_ht
pt"nph• llll C'X pcctc4ly come
LhrouHh fnr you

rittht

;It

j ulit the

lllll111~·nt .

&lt;a:MINI (M:oy 21-june 211)
-- When it l'U lll l'~ w lim·ial in vnlvl'lliL'ItU tmla)', sl.'h.•rt in~
;~1\ ic~ l 'll :m
prct~·rmc~ ~ ~ O K.

your

l'lnoth,n;&lt;t]

ht1t chtHm.:
ynur husinL'Sli associates ou

lup;ico!l 'ctm~idl• rarium.

CANCE l\ Um•c 21-July
2:!) -- Yull mi~TH b~ awarl' of
the.• t:.ct that U'\'c.•r:ll of yom
~.·u-wmke~

o1re vulncrabk to

bcin~ t.lkl'll ,\dv:~m,lj.tt' uf

wd.ly, hut you ' ll havt.• nunc of

~i de ~· ou ld

/

'

)

he

t·~p~·~.: i.1 ll y

dt.1wn

fu )'OIIf (h. 1 ri~m 1t k . 1 11~1 ~t itml ­
];Hin g p t·r~o JJ :dity hHI:iy. A'i
tllt•y ~t· t•k \'tl\.I T fun but \:tfc
~ hl·l t n.

vma'll pr(ltcct them

~md1.:r. yo~tr witif.i.
VIRC O (A\1 ~ . :!J- Sl'pl. 22)
-- ThL' ~l'(~t·t 1~1 vmlr ~ ucTc ~~

to tby i ~ )'om pm~·l'ffui. pmit i\· ~

.n tiii H.k Till~ dyn!\lll lr
t•m· r~r a lw.1y~ kH .yotl accnmpl i ~h ynm ,lilll\ wnh or wuh m •t tin: hL· lp o f otht-r~ .'

Lllm.A (S&lt;-pl. 1J-lM. 1.1) ·
- Th.1t wonderful lln· -aml kt-li\'l' dt'l llt':lllOT )'0\1 po~~t·~~
will serve ytHI \\'t•\1 tod.1y. Not
so mc nnc who h il\ a
ll;'l~ty di'ip}~Sitinn will IIC)-;.1-

C\'t'll

ti vcly intltlt'lln'

y~.na ~~md n~ ­

mrt•.
SCORPIO {Oc t ::!·~-NM .
22) -- ChomCc'i nrt• ytm'll hL• a
pr'e tty ~t'l l L'flHI S pc.:fC()Il tod,\y,
hut yet \\ 1tlwm p~tttin~ ,111)'
'tr.1i11 ~ m1 Y•1ur pudn•thot,k .

What ynu d11 fur u til l'l'' '' dl
in th•· ~' L'IIl ui' 1-.itHl ~

l h.' llhln'

Il L'~~ l11.111

dull.u·.. .
TAI\IU&gt; (Nm·. 2.1l h·r . 21 ) ~~ l'l•,,pll' \\.1111 to
la•lp ·vou .td11L'\"l' your pt·r~Mil'!

~~~t l .tl. d~..-~ 1 1''''

t\ld.ly, .

11()1

protL' C~

tl trt)lll!;h ,111\ ' itLt 1111td,l\ttJII Ill!

LEO Unly 2J-Au~. 22) ·-

~ mtr 1\.H t. b~n l&gt;l·r,Ju''' 11t' YlHtr
.lhili rv t•l rl',ll'h out to u tl wr~
.111d ~:ui ,t)· dwu· tlt'l'tk

th:1t o111 d will rL'S(,t'l: lld

tiwl v.

Thn~c whu an• .on the tim id

I

lj

I'
I

nicJ the he;a'rt queen .
So, d'Ovidio knew
East didn't have tlut
queen . And, yes,
West should have

Now Available ·. Tiger Sharp 'Knives ;

cu relieve a ilebcar of financial obliaati0111 and
IITIIIp a fair dlatrlbutlon ot uaeu amona
creditors. A penon aotna throuah bankruptcy
lila)l t;ellln cenain property, knCiwn u
"exempt" propettj., for hla or her penotlal uoe.
·'Thlt may i111:ludc a w, a houoe, clothu, llld

1Equllnl12

,_
1·=··
r:::.
- -

14. 20, Ravonn1 Soulh-

DIVISION IV
t, Worlhlng&amp;on Chrlttlan (7)
2: Jockaon Cenlor (5)
3, Hamlar Palrlok Henry (8)
4, Cola. Acad. f1) ·
5. Holgate (1)
.6, Norwoll&lt; St. Paul(2)
7. New Madloon Tn·Village 111
e. Minster

35537 St Rt 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720

'

• Q •• S2
• A J I

.

4 ..
5•

IIVIIION II

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service•

.
.....

Vulnerable: Uoth

w--.

••

s

15 Kln'a

l&gt;.calcr: Nnl'th

ao.

.•

10

QPIIDIIII

141'11155W-

140ddfllcla

S4,

.. Q

6

a.

1, Daylon Chamlnad•Jullenne (12)13.()
208
2, CIIMI. E. Tech (4)
6.0
136
3, Kotlfnng Alter (1)
10.0
106
Wllllrd (3)
12·0
106
5, P-rvllle Eastwood
11-0
90
8, $prlngboro
IHl
•74
7, Mfllorlburg
Hol.... l1)
Ill-!
72
8, Uma Beth (I)
IHl
59
8, Clotllpalla Qolllo Acod.
11).0
42
1o. Q'""lleld MCclain
12-o
39
Spf1nglleld Kenton Rklge
I 2·2
39
Othenl racelvlng 12 or more polnta: 12. AAron Hoban 38.
13. DaytOn Dunbar 31. 14, COla. Mlntln 28. 15, Cl,.teviUe
Logan Elm 28. 18, Warren Howland 21 . 17, Pony 16. ttl

....

A AJ I I
'I K !I I It

1, S. Euclid Aeglna f13)
7-3
Ifill
2, Cleve. V/ISJ (2)
11-1
103
3, WaynoovHia
11·1
88
I'll
4, Richwood N. Un~ (3) ·
11·1
er
1 , -(18)
10.0
212
·5, Cln. MaOII,. (1)
10.0
· 75
2, Colo. - - (1)
8-1
128 . 8, Bllcyruo W)'nlord
10.0
88
3, Colo. lndtpondenca (2)
10.0
125
7, Sardinia Eutem Brown
12.0
112
4, Tal. cant. Colh.
7· 1
88
Bn&gt;OI&lt;vlllo
a-t
11
5, Cln. Ook Hlllo (1)
10.0
79
8, VO!NIIIos
li-Z
11&gt;1
8, Picl&lt;eringlon
8-2
78
10, Now Albany
10.1
. 44
7, Manoflllkl Sr.
IHl
75
Othero riiCelvlng 12 or moro polnta: n (tlo), E. canton,
8. Mt. Varnon
11.0
71
Gl,.rd 35. 13, Olk Hln fl) 32. 14, N. Limo 8. Rango 31 .
9, Youngo. Boordman f1)
8-1
88
15 (Uo), Flndloy t.lborty·Btnton, Marton Elgin, llel10.8.0
52
-•fii•Yort&lt;
18 ~Ia). Mor,.t.~, Plaln.Citv
011*1 - n g 12 or mcnt pofnta: II , 4tnca11er 47. 12, Jonalhln Alder (I), Young&amp;. U18ollno :18. 21 (tlo), Chilli·
N. ConlOn Ho&lt;r;er 38. 13, Elyria 33. 14, Conton McKinlay cothe HuntlnQton, lloy!olllown Chippewa 22. 23 (Ill),
32. 15, Panno Hit. Holy Name 20. 16, Hudlon 17. 17 Beverly Ft. Fr;o (fl. Elmore
14. 25 (lie), N.
(lie), Cola. DeSalee •.Tof. llowsher 15. 18, Grotnvllle14. Acblnson Col. Crawfon:t, Smithville 12.

DIVISION II

~

12 Iori
13.....

.ICQti4

....
•

10• POll
llonde rivol 53 -Vein

9 A 111
A K 'f 4

A II f 't!
'I 'Q J4J

-

•

4e ' ~IFill
50 ....

I ......... U• 52 Elhlclly

. ...

e

.....

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.

ACROSS

ALO!II

MLB

Beavercreek, Regina·start
·where they ended last year ·

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

PHILLIP

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)- Maybe it helps lew~ the bi&lt;k.
was just a coitlcidenc:e that the Tex:.s
"It's hard to imagine
~ 6nished last in . we 121\Sft a ~of this
Hill'' Sdf
the AL West the two magnitude tO.r these kind
Stor~gr
)an they without of dollars;' Hart said. "It\
Juan Gonmlez.
.
part of juan buying into
New gener:al ~John Han isn't what we're doing heft. I
liling any chances in finding out.
take my hat off to him. It
Despite a late entry into the bidding w.1r was important for hiril to
for ·Gonzalez, Hart still landed the grand come back."
prize Tuesday night when the slugging
Gonzalez, who also
GolaiM
outfielder agreed to a $24 million,I\W-year rejected a two-year offer
deal that includes 110.5 million in deferred from Baltiinore, was. the AL MVP in 1996 ·
Jl2YIRenB. ·
·
.
and '98, then went to Detroit in a nine-Presuming Gonzalez passes a phyUcal, p~ trade after the 1999 season. Then. he'D return to the team he helped win . GM Doug Melvin made the move a year
division titles in three ofhis bst four seasons before Gonzalez could become a nee agent
and tr1 adding to his &amp;.mchise-best totals in to avoid losing him for nothing.
Makes TlliCIOr &amp;
homers, RBis, total bases and extra-base
Gonzalez had an off-year with the
Equipment Parts
him.
Tigers, then signed a S10 million, one-year
He'll also find himself in the middle of a contract with Oeveland last season. He
Factory Authorized
TeJW lineup that's even better than when rewanled the Indians' faith by hitting .325
· Case-IH Parts
he left.
with 35 homers and a ' team-high 140
Dealers
Alex Rodriguez and recently acquired fl.Bis.The GM whC) gave him that chance
/(}()()St. Rt. 7 South
Carl Everett have joined longtime Rangers was Hart.
1.~10/vil'lt. OH 45723
Rafael Palmeiro and Ivan Rodriguez,
Now in"TeJW, where he was hired after
ensuring Gonzalez of seeing lots ofhirtable Melvin was fired, Hart has undone his pre-pitcheS.
.
decessor's boldest move.
"This gives us a wry strong club that
"We're very excited that a former
should compete every day against any R,an~ u coming home;• Hart .aid "hi a
pitching," Hart said.
good thing for our club:'
.
.
"We've got four potential first-ballot
AgentJ~ffMoorad was well mto negonHall of Famers on this club, so he doesn't ations with other · teams when Texas
have to come in here and carry the load, be became a serious player.
the guy. But being in the middle of the
The deal ucontingent on Gonzalez passorder, he'D be a key component to our ing a phy.ical, which Hart doesn't see as (trill I' &amp;10'120')
offense."
much of an obstacle despite the slugger's
The New York Mets were hoping Gon- history of back irouble. A more pressing ·
zalez would do that for them and offered obstaCle is an inner-ear infection that will
him a $25 million, two-year deal that prevent GonZalez from traveling. Hart .said
included a $12 million signing bonus paid the exan! likely will take place in Puerto
over the two years with no deferred Rico.
L \\1\I'S
moriey.
"We don't need to bring him in," Hart
lt)\,IIH( 11&lt;1\
But Gonzalez· preferred the American said. "Everyone here knows him:'
591"""''" lg·
League, where he's spent his entire career,
Hart is quickly making a name for himRooftng, Decks
and Texas, which he still considers home. ielfhere, having followed up his acqooition
· Remodeling,
So he took a deal that included a $2 mil- of potential troublemakers Everett and
Drywall, and
Additions
lion signing bonus and salaries of $10 mil- Jol]n Rocker with high-'dollar deals for
lion and $12 million, with S10.5 million pitcher Chan Ho Park ($65 million for five ·
deferred. No state income tax in Texas also years) and Gonzalez.

Sentinel • Page A9

The

Ohio

.

�\_...
J

.-fhe.Dail~tffiel

•

Page 10

II

•

C~ild~~ seek mo~er after 30 years, AS·

•••••••.,......ry •• 2102

c·lemson beats a big name; . MSU upset
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESJ'

Now that Clemson has those late
nonconference games out of the
way, it can get down to winning in
theACC.
The Tigers, who lost to Winthrop
and Yale at home
during the past
two weeks, beat
No. 7 Virginia
68-52 Tuesday night for their second Atlantic Coast Conference victory this week.
"We took those teams lightly,"
Jamar McKnight, who scored a
career-high 25 points against the
Cavaliers, said ofWinthrop and Yale.
04
We knew if we could play together we could do better things."
As Clemson (11-5, 2-1) has start~d to come together beginning
with the win at Georgia Tech, the
Cavaliers (9-2, 0·2) haven't seemed
much like the team that rose to No.
4 in the poll before losing to North
Carolina State at home in the conference opener.
"Maybe we think we're a little bit
better than we are," Virginia '· coach
Pete Gillen said.
The Cavaliers were 2-of-24 from
3-point range and were held to
their lowest point total of the season, more than 30 points below
their 84.8 ave(age..
Edward Scott added 17 points . on
7-for-1 2 shooting, includinf.( 3~for4 on 3s for Clemson. He was 0-for9 in the loss to Yale.
"Against Yale, I just didn't do my
. job," Scott said. "But at the same
time, nobody ever panicked me
about my shooting. They let me go
and play out of it."
The Tigers were 26-of.64 from
the field, but 16-for-30 in the second half.
"We have separated ourselves the
hist two games by making ·shots,"
Clemson coach Larry Shyatt said.
Roger Masori had 19 points and
12 rebounds for the Cavaliers, while
Travis Watson, the team's high scorer the past three games, was held to
' six points. Chris Williams, averaging
. nearly 16 points a game, missed all
seven shots ·and did not score.
"I tdld the team that this is not
the worst it can get for us," Mason
said. "It's bad right now and we feel
terrible, but there's a long way
ahead. I just told everybody they
have to look in the mirror.
Changes."

NCAA

No. tO Cincinnati 71,
·opening the season 14-0.
Charlotte 58
Arbnsas 75,
Leonard Stokes scored 19 points
and the Bearws (14-1, 2-0 ConferNo. 22 Mininippi St. 64
ence USA) extended the nation's
Jannero Pargo had 18 points and
longest winning streak to 14. All the Brandon Dean had 16 for the Ra)!orwins since the season-opening loss to backs (10-4, 2-0 Southeastern ConOklahoma State have been by double · ference), who led the entire second
figures.
half
Jobey Thomas had 13 points for the
Derrick Zimmerman had 17 points
49ers (7-6, 1-1). who are 0-7 at for the Bulldogs (14-2, 1-1), who
moved into the Top 25 (or the first
Cincinnati's Shoemaker Center.
time since 1996 on Monday following
.their upset of Kentucky.
No. 12 Syracuse 85',
I Seton HaU 70
· .
No. 23 Pittsburgh 66,
Preston Shump ~rt scored 19 points
Rutgers 58
and DeShaun Williams had 18 as the
Orangemen (14-2, 3-0 Big East) won
Jaron Brown had 14 points for the
Panthers
(15-1, 3-0 Big East), who
their fifth straight as Jim Boeheim
won their 1Oth straight game, their
coached against a former player longest winning streak since 1973-7 4.
Louis Orr - for the first time.
Jerome Coleman had 16 points for
Andre Barrett had 18 points for the
the Scarlet Knights (10-5, 1-2), who
visiting Pirates (8-7. 1-2).
won their first eight home games this
St. John's 71, No. 21 Miami 60 season.
Marcus Hatten had 25 points, nine
Indiana 83,
rebounds, six assists and three steals for
the Red Storm (11 -3, 2-1 Big East),
No. 22 Michigan St. 65
who won for the seventh time in · Tom Coverdale scored 21 of his 22
points in the first half as the Hoosiers
eight games.
.
Marcus Barnes had all 16 of his (10-5, 3-0 Big Ten) built a 24-point
points in the first half for the Hurri- lead.
Marcus Taylor and Aloysius
canes (14-2, 1~2), who were just 3for-30 from the field in the second Anagonye each scored 17 points for
half. Miami lost its second straight the visiting Spartans (9-6, 0-2), who
game - both on the road - after. have l\)st three straight.

No: 6 Oklahoma St. 68,
Baylor 57
Melvin Sanders had 15 points and
Maurice Baker, still gimpy from a
groin injury, added 12 as the Cowboys (14-1, 1- 1 Big 12) bounced
back from their first loss of the sea-

sOn.
'Lawrence Roberts had 12 points
for. the Bears (11 -4, i-1), who won
their first nine home games.

CRRRRRRUNCH - Cincinnati's
Donald Little dunks the ball as Char·
lotte's Jermaine Williams, left, and .
Cam Stephens defend In the first
half In Cincinnati Tuesday. (AP)

Todd Benzinger is best
known for catching the
final out

Prep ~~9o

the

World
Series for the Cincinnati
Reds.
He · might soon · be
.known for. something else.
The former fiirst baseman, who caught a foul
P.OP to end the Reds'
Series-clinching victory
over the Oakland A's,
coaches the girls basketball
team at Seven Hills High
School near Cincinnati.
. In his third year as the
coach, Benzinger's Stingers
-. how about that for a
tongue-twister? - are 9-0.
Benzinger, who started
coaching at the junior-high
level for the private school,
k&lt;;!eps busy when he's not
coaching: He's attending
classes to get his teaching
certificate.
THREE'S A
CHARM:
Rob Young hit a schoolrecord 11 3-pointers in 13
attempts as Findlay lost to
defending big-school state
champion Cleveland St.
Ignatius 65-63; New fuemen's boys I set a school

I

record with 15 3-pointers
in a 69-41 rout of Allen
East; Fort Recovery's Greg
Snyder hit a 3-pointer with
less than 2 seconds left in a
75-72 overtime victory
over St. Henry; and the

i'

'

••

•

.

•

at
Whlfslftslde .

MEIGS

SCHOOLS

STOP RIGHT
...... Lakers fOrward Samakl Walker Is st.~rrounded by
Pistons' Zeljko Rebraca, left, end Jerry Stackhouse (42) while trying to
go to the basket Tuesday. (AP)

Jordan helps Wiz beat ·clips

BYTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
6-of-1 0 on free throws.
With Michael Jordan on the
Rockets 88, Knickt 86 court instead ofin' the owners' box,
MoochieNorris made a 3-pointhis Washington er from the corner at the buzzer,
Wizatds looked . and Houston dealt visiting New ·
much
better York its ~ird straight loss.
against the Los
Kenny Thomas scored 24 points,
..
Angeles Clippers this season than and Steve Francis 19 for the Rocklast.
ets. Allan Houston led the Knicks
The two-time . defending cham- with 28 points, but Latrell Sprewell
pion Los Angeles Lakers, mean- scored only eight on 4-of-15
while, are playing so well right now shooting.
that they didn't need their top two
Mavericks 95, Nuggets 94
stars on the floor in the fourth
Dirk Nowitzki scored 27 points,
quarter against the Detroit Pistons. and his three-point play with 6.9
In a rare visit to the MCI Center seconds left gave Dallas its 10th
last season,Jotdan - then Washing- straight home victory. over Denver. .
ton's president of basketball operaNick Van Exel had 31 points for
tions - threw a tantrum while Denver, which has lost five in a
watching the Wizards blow a 21- row.
point lead and lose its annual home
Bucks 113, Warriors 97
game against the Clippers.
Sam Cassell had 23 points, 10
That game was fr~h in Jotdan's · assists and eight rebounds as roadmind when the Clippers returned weary .,. Milwaukee emphatically
to Washmgton on . Tuesday rught. ended a four-game losing streak.
The Bucks, on the road for 20 of
Back in uniform, Jo!dan had 18
points, 10 rebounds and eight assists their first 32 games, moved ahead
to lead the Wizards to a %-88 vic- of Indiana atop the Central Divitory.
sion. .
,
"The thing that I didn't like
Hawks 101, 'trail Blazen ·9 t
about that ga!fle was the attitude
Shareef Abdur-Rahim scored 30
that the players had, an attitude not points, and Jason Terry added 24 as
to l?se instead of going out and .host Atlanta ended a two-game
winning the game;' Jotdan said, losing slide. The Hawks shot 50
r~ferring }O his team's loss .~o th~ percent (37-of-74) from the field,
Chppers m December 2000. Thats the first time in 19 games they
the first time I really got angry with made at least half of their shots.
Bonzi Wells · scored 26 for the
the attitude With this team. I felt the
attitude was not proper for the fran- Trail Blazers~
chise to turn itself around."
Nets 104, Heat 95
With ,a .rewrd of 18-14 after
Keith Van H;,rn scored eigltt of
Tuesdays tnumph, the W•·zards his 19 points down the stretch,
already are just one win shy of last leading $even Net~. in double figseason's total
ures .
,'
The Lakers improved to an
Visiting Mia'm i 's th~ee-game
NBA-best 25-6 by beating Detroit winning streak ended despite
121-92 for their fifth straight victo- Alonzo Mourning's season bests
ry. Shaquille O 'Neal had 28 point&lt; of 26 points and 14 rebounds.
,G rizzlies 84, Raptors 81
and 10 rebounds, and Kobe Bryant
scored 20 - then both sat out the
Stromile , Swift scored . Memfinal 15 minutes of the lopsided phis' final six points as the host
game.
Grizzlies ended a four-game losJotdan's supporting cast included ing streak. Swift and Pau Gasol
Popeye Jones (season-high 16 both had 20 points and 10
points), Chris Whitney (18) and rebounds.
Vince Carter led the Raptors
Hubert I)avis (16).
Jeff Mcinnis scored a season-high with 31 points.
aptly named Trey . Misen- 33 regular-season games in ·
27
pohts for the Clippers.
.
Jazz 98, Suna 84
heimer had six 3-pointers a row; Findlay Libertyand 23 points in Rich- Benton's boys had a 29Lakers 121, Pistons 92 ,
Scott Padgett scored a careerO'Neal played 25 minutes in his high 17 points as Utah, at home,
mond Heigh ts' 84-68 win game Blanchard Valley
over Independence.
third
game after missing the previ- dealt · Phoenix its season-worst
Confererce winning streak ·
STREAKERS:
ous iive with an arthritic toe. He fourth straight loss. Karl Malone
snapped when th ey lost 47went
11-of-17 from the field and
Willard's girls have won 32 to Pandora-Gilboa.

NBA

•

'Development of Pam ida site is
a priority for economic office.

Deaths
•

BY ~RIAN J. REED
· SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

Gordon Harris
Yhereon A. Johnson, 87
Orlando Andreoni
James S. Rees Sr., 82
Ruby Kelley,, 86
Details, A3

TAKING 'OATH - Ron Logan, left, new to the Meigs Local Board of Education, and Scott Walton, re-elected for a third term, were given the oath of office by Mark Rhonemus, treasurer, at
Wednesday's meeting. (Charlene Hoeflich)

HIP: • • Low: 20.
Details, A2

Phillip Monts·
allldzes states
WASHINGTON (AP) The nations largm cigarette
manufactun:r is criticizing
state gQm1Utlenl5 fur fulling
to use tobacco settlement
mon.:y to cwb . ~uth smoking,J)ut heatdl
.~
Philip Morris USA is being
disingenuous.
,
Philip Morris Rleased a
statement to coincide with
the next round of paymenl5
to 46 states as part of a $206
billion settlement teached in
1998 . for tobacco-related
health cosl5. The . industry.
makes such paymenl5 twice a
year.
Philip Morris cited a
National Conference ofState
Legislaton study that found
only 5 pm:ent of the settlement funds are being spent·
on tobacco prevention.

s-vota'tes '

OHIO
Pick J: 4-4-2
Pick 4: 6-1-7-2 .
51' 111 «*c &amp;-14-24-:25-434

8onut a.II: 40
Klcbr; 1-4-7-3-7-D
Pick J l!aY: 1-7-o

Pick 4.tlaY: 2-0-5-2

Board sets deadline
for building intent
BY ClwuNE HOUI.ICH
SENT!I'EL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Public entities have until April 1 to decide
whether they w:mt to apply to
the M~~ Local Board of Education · fur transfer of title to
sdiOOI building, in their respec.. tive areas once the buiklirl&amp;' have
been abandoned at the ccinclusion of the current building program.
Board members voted at
. Wednesday's meeting to send
letters to villages, township
trustees and· fire depattments
requeSting that they advise the
board before the deadline of any
interest in· acquiring buildingl,
and·also state their plan for use as
required by the staie.
AJ explained by Superintendent Bill Bucld~ then: is S1.2
million 'in the construction project fund for demolition of the
building! in the district once students have moved into the new
schools in 2003.
' 'The state aliOWJ the district to

retain a portion of the demolition funds to be put back into
the project if the buildings are
sold.
Buckley stressed the importance of making decisions about
th~ ,disposition of the buildings
early.so that plans for using that
portion of · the demolition
money can be' made.
The board has already signed
an agreement with Middlepon
to transfer the middle and elementary buildiQgs to the village
once they are vacated. The cost
to public entities is Sl.
Buckley said individual
trustees, village officials and 6remen have expressed interest, but
no group, . intent has been
brought tle'fun: the boaril.
He also indicated ·that there is
a possibility that · the property
could be transferred to a public
entity after the building has been
torn down, or either way it
could be sold at a public auction.
The board also:
• heard financial reports fiom

We'll have·you
feeling better about
your health.

Mark E. Rhonemus on the
annual .tax budget and the cone
struction )Jroject for which quarterly reports instead of monthly
ones were approved;
• accepted the resignation for
· n:tirement purposes of bus drivers, Mirmie Thornton, effective
•feb. 28; and Dorwa Daniels,
March I;
·
• approved a 6eld trip for
VICA lo attend a regional officers leadership training institute
in Columbus Jan. 21-24;
• hin:d Maria D. Fn:cker and
Melissa Wilfong as !Ul.stitute
teachers for lhe remainder of the
&lt;chool year.
Attending were Buckley.
Rhonemus, Roger Abbott, Norman Humphreys, Scott Walton,
John Hood and Ron Logan.
An organizational meeting
was held preceding the regular meeting, with Scott Walton . and Ron Logan being
given the oath of office by

WWII vet among degree recipients

Sheena Gilmore, Kristen
TUPPERS · PLAINS "7', .ljoffinan and Adam Moore
Dlllly :s: 9-3-6
.
. r n Local Board 0f'Edllcat 1: ~" a¥ 1apl!ioved a! graduDIIIIJ 4: 9-5-2-4
..
tion, approved four ·~ilateS, at~: · ··, ' .~•
·. '
, ........: 7-39-40-42~ (4) . including a Wllr .veteran,d.uring ·' In othet. bu!i~e;s, the .board
its recent regular meeting.
.approved postin~ ·for an interNathan Bil!ll', a veteran of .vent;io~ teacher and two educaWc;&gt;rld War II, was aW..*d an ·tiona! ai11es for special educaEastern High School diploma tion · classes· on an as-needed
::a Iidia - 12 ,....
last month..Biggs let! sch911l to basis. :&lt;
•
'~
Cl.ifieds · ·
824
enter .the armed ·fctces du~mg · . Robm Cranston was hired as
the war, and · through a :new an educational attendant for a
eoniicS '.
85
law, was awarded · his srudent. Amanda Milhoan and
Ohio
Dear~by
AS .
diploma.
Cass Cleland were approved as
Editorials
A4
The new law allows local subsiitute teacher!, pending
Movies
A3 . school . distric'ts to proyide .proper certification. Susie Fran"
.
A3
. diplomas for any World War II cis Was 4pproved as play direc. . Ql, 3, 4,"6
vet~~s · unabl~ to graJuate tor, and Robin Eastman and
.
.•.
".
,.
.
A2
I:Vith th~ir class due to their Robert Zeigler wen: hired as
\ . '" '"~ "11\ '
military.service.
substitute cook ~d substitute
viiiOr f!ublhhlnJ.Co.
FROM STAFF REI'ORTS

W.VA.

out there."

·

The 15 year-old store, vacated in early 200.1, is owned by
.....H-ECIIIIOIII)',JAJ

POMEROY MERCHANTS

cu~todian,

respectively. .
A·supplemental contr.~:~ .was ·
approved with Lisa Rite
as
. Title treasurer.
J.·.
Bethany and Jacob
were approved as tuition
dents.for January and FebruafW
The board also:
• Approved membership with
the Ohio School Boatds Assodation;
. • Approved financiai ieporis
for November 2001, and a budget revision for the Class of
2001.
~
• Approved a two~year con-"
tract with the Eastern Local
Educat1o~ · Association from
·
PIH.H ... E..t8m. AJ

hi:

Lerhlt'
•tit

*

Musser to lead Pomeroy
merchants this year
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS· STAFF

POr.,iEROY - John Musser, who has been involved
· with numewus village improvement projects as weU as
beautification of down!own Pomeroy, has been elrcted
president of the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
Meeting Wednesday at Peoples Bank, the association also •
elected Geotge Wright, vice president; Nancy Thoene, secretary.; and Peggy Barton, treasurer.
Ways of incn:asipg attendance at the meetings ·and
recruiting members were discussed at length.
li was·decided that lettets will go out to every. business in
Poll)eroy, fro·m Minetsville tq,. the Middleport corporation
line, in an effort to boost membership. Annual dues will
remain · at SSO. Eloise Orenner. was named membership
chairman .
The time and locations of m-eetings were again discussed

Plu•• IH Merdlllnll, AJ

Expect the, latest technology, with a human touch.

·The Holzer
Oiobetes Support Group will meet
. Medical Center.
.
.

Medical Excellence.

Loca! Caring:

HOLZER
CLINIC

This

Galli~olis

Jackson
Pomeroy

All

December 9 from 2:00 • 4:00 pm
Hospital's .French 500 Room.
Feature: Annual Holiday Dinner
ffelcornel For more information, call

(740) 446·5080
•

r...

POMEROY - Retail sales are up, and with local merchants claiming their best Christmas season in years , 2002
could be bode well for Meigs County's retailers.
.
The last quarter's retail sales showed an increase, said
Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry Var. nadoe, who anticipates that the trend will likely continue,
either in spite of, or because of, the Sept. 11 terroris} attacks.
"There's no doubt that the Sept. 11 events h'ave given
people a new appreciation of 'home,"' Varnadoe said, "and
people seem to feel a need to stay closer at home to do business.
"Many local store owners claimed their best holiday season ever, and there's no reason to believe that won't continue into this year." •
.
The events of Sept. 11, however, have also resulted in economic uncertainty nationwide, and some potential retailers
have put ~n hold plans to \;On~ider Meigs County as a place
to do buSint;ss, ~ ·
•· . ,,
How~~~iita,nla~oe said, while fourth-quarter figures have
not yet i, n completely rep 0rted, a steady rise of sales tax
and a helljthy holiday season for retailers indicate mon:
good things to come.
Varnadoe said the redevelopment of the Pamida store on
Ohio 7 near Pomeroy will be a priority for the local eco,
nomic development office.
"We've had some interest in the building, but most plans
for retail development have bee·n curtailed since Sept. 11,"
Varnadoe said last week. "It's still a priority to get something

NEW OFFICERS - Elected to lead the Pomeroy Merchants ·
Association through 2002 were, from left, Peggy Barton,
treasurer; George Wright, vice president; and John Musser,
president. Nancy Thoene, not pictured, will continue as sec·
retary for the group. (Sentinel staff)

PIHH-Melp,AJ

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOLS

Index ..

Holzer Ctinic offers
the area's only open
MRl along with
our closed MRJ,
expanding our
abilities to make
patients more
comfortable.

··ECONOMY
•

Area merchants
hope for good ·
times in 2002

Ex-Red making a name for himself as coach
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

•

I

I

...

---------'-'··
. ' ----·------,,-------

...

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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