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Page B I • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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o0.0 o, Jenny Koogan 1 0.0 2, Anno

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ColegiiW
Uondlly'r Scorer

WofMn•l

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Now Hami'Ohlro 82, Bol1on U. 411
POM 64, Al&gt;any, N.Y. 51
Rk:fer 71, Princeton 63
Stony Brcol&lt; 82. Comeil 73

80UTH

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.Wagnar 81,

76
lOUTH .
Alcorn St. 108, GrombUng St 105
Ct111anlry 94, Mary Hordfn-BIVIOr 62
ChtlllroOOIII 83, Goorgle SOuthem 78
Coif. of Che-on 58, Wo"ord 55
ETSU 59. O.Yidlon 65
Flor1&lt;11AIIantlc 102. Jacklon'lllo St 89
Gao&lt;gil St 93. JlektonYIIIt 62
Hamplon 81, Coppin St 80
,_,rd 64, Dollware St 63
MVSU 78, A1aboma 51. 70
MeN- St 96, -•11om Sl. n
N. Carolina A&amp; T 58, Balhuni-Co&lt;tleman 58
Nlchol1o 81. 88, SW Texao 63
Norfolk St. 63, MorQin St. n
S. Carolina St. 82, Florida A&amp;M 74
SE lotJiolana 54, TOKII.San Anlonlo 45
Slmford 76. UCF 62 '
Southam u. 89, JaekiOn St.
Statoon 88, Camoball59
The Cl1adol56, W. Cllrolno 60, OT
UNC-Groenoboro 78, Ailc&gt;alachlan St 82

n

MIDWII'I'

Cleveland St 10. Stonr Brook 53
lllnola St. 75. Crolah10n 63 · ,
Olio 67, Kant s.: 65

'A&amp;~~ Bluff 58

Alabama
Lamar M,

St;h'o.fF~A~I11o 52

otdlhoma St 88, IOwa 81. 80, OT
. Teat·PJn

Arne"'-"' 98, LeTourneau 33
FAII'W!I'I'

Naw Melllco 76, S.. Dlago 81. 67
Ben Froncllco 76, Humboldl St. 71
,
Taxao A&amp;M.C:Orpuo Chr1ati 113, Cal Poly·
SLO 108, OT
·:w,
UNLV 65, A~ Fon:l'llll
Ufllll3. WV&lt;&gt;rnlng_11

FAR WEST
Portland 85, UC Riverside 72
S. Utah 7?, Chicago St. 60
The WorMn'r AP Top 21

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'Offm tnd Ftbruorr 11, 2001 and oro 1Ubjoc11o opprowd crtdn on John
niCrtd~ RovoMng Plan, !01 noncommercial uso only. Q'!1 down poymont roqulrtd. Aftor promodonGI period, ft~ charge wW begin 10 1IWW 13.9% APR, wi111o
$0.50 per mon11t minimum. 01lter ~I ratttand ttrmo may be avolloblt, Including ln11ollment flnonclng and flnonclng for commtrclol uso. Ta..,, fr.tght, Htup,
dolrWry not Included. Prlaoo a!ld·mov vory. ,o...,llablt at pd~lelpo1lng doolon.

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Pntnl'l ny, Ohin

_ g~vemment

Bv CHAIUNE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF ·

POMEROY - The first
showing of the video, "The
Ohio Bicentennial/A Timo of
Celeb~tion .. will .be presented
at a public meeting to be held
March 1 . in the comm4nity
room of the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights.
Tentative plans for Meigs
County's
observance
of Ohio's
bicentennial
will also be
presented
and refreshments will
be served.
The event will qe hosted by
the Meigs County/Ohio
Bicentennial Committee. of
which Margaret Parker is chairman. Door prizes provided by
the state commi\tee will be
'awarded.
The 22-minute video will be
available for loan to local groups
afi:or the initial presentation.
Plans for the video viewing
were made Monday night at a
meeting of the local committee
held at the Meigs Museum. ·
Meeting with th~ membl:~ was .
Nichola Moretti, cobttlinatot of'•!
the , 'Qhio Bitentennial . for
So'uthe.lsterfi, Ohio.
·
Moretti discussed grant
monies available including
Longaberger grants for historical matkers-. She noted that a
marker has been approved for
Brewster HisJey to be placed in
Rutland, but that the text for
the marker has ·not been
authenticated yet.
A-marlier for another prominent Meigs countian was discussed and will be pursued by
the committee. A SSOO local
match is required for grants
obtained
through
the
Longal:ierger program, it was
noted.
·
· Moretti also discussed with
i:he group $500,000 which will
bo available, soon on a 50/50
matching grant basis to . communities. The markers ' which
cost about SI,SOO ea9h are similar t~ some already in place
which mark entrances to vi].

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FOR SAFIT'(- Tim Kin&amp; of Ace Hardware In Middleport keeps a ready stock of carbon monoxide detectors on his shelves,
for aboUt $30. The Ohio Are Marshal susgests that any detector purchased be approved by 8 testlng lab. (Brian J. Reed
photo)
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BY BRIAN J.'

-~:: \JJ,Ilj~:; :,J Ca;b;-~ ntilloxide is an

SENTINEL NEWS

STAFF

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POMEROY - It's the season
to be careful of carbon monoxide,
a . silent killer which claimed the
liv~- of 37 Ohioans in 1998.

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replaces o~tygen in the
bloodstream.

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According to Ohio Fire Marshal
11
arl pn mohin'OXIh
an· IIIVISI _e. · Robert R. Rielage, the two most wmodor ess. gas w c rep1aces oxygen· 10
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Mild ""-'d mon causes of carbon monoxide poi.I he bl oo tream.
cau.wn monDX.l e
· · fi ·t lik h fl · b
.soning are vehicles running in an
po~so~~g ee s. e t e adu, "!t more .
,
.senous p01sorung can 1e 19 severe et~olose(\ garage, al)d fauley home heat•
breathing dif!iculti~s or de~~· ·
'·ing and cooking e~uipment.

tar, (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

~~~i:arm

"If you need
up a vehicle,
remove it from the garage immediately
after starting the ignition;' Rielage said.
"Do not run a ve~icle, even if the garage
doors al't' open. Carbon monoxide from
a ru~ning vehicle inside the garage can
get mstde the home 1f the garage 1s
attached·, even with the door open." .
"N
al · 1 · d
orm . ctrcu at1on oes not pro'd
1 fi h ·
1· bl
v1 e enoug 1 res atr to re 1a y prevent
dangerous accumulations," he added.

PIHI~ IH 1hre1t. Pllll A:S

BY .JERIMY

Bv TONY M. Luctt
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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. Boyer ·concluded with how
the Ittternet i1 cha,iglng
4
advertiling as we ·know •
it and what we can expect
from advertising ln
the f~tlfre.

MIDQLEPORT
.The
importance of newspaper advertising was discussed d1,1ring the Meigs
County Chamber of Commetce's
meoting Tuesday at Ovorbi'Qok
Nursing Centor in Middleport.
Larry Boyer, advertiSing dit«tor ·
for Ohio Valley 'Publishing Co., . by each other's success.
discUssed the importance of neWsBoyer concluded with.how the
paper advertising and how business lntemet is changing adverJising as
owners can benefit from its use. · we know it and what we can
B~r gave ·the "ins and outs" of _expect from advertising in the
neW,papor advertising, froni its his- • future.
tory to today'{ general terminoioOhio Valley Publishing CQ. pubay, and discussed how . both busi- lishes The Daily Se11tinel, Gallipolis
De$Ses and new!jlapen are alrocted" Daily':fribun.e, Spnday-Times Se11.,

OINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -The classification of IS beds - that's what stands
between Pleasant Valley Hospital and a
potential payback of$ t. 7 million to the
U.S. government.
.
On Jan. 4 , PVH officials met with federal government' representatives at Charles~on's United
Government Services, which serves as the fiscal
intermediary for Medicare. UGS is administered
by the Health Care Financing Administration .
Tho purpose was to discuss the rationale of a
Medicare audit ~he hospital that was conducted in December.
During the audit, it was determined t3 sameday surgery beds, which are registered and
licensed as inpatient. beds, would no longer be
counted as inpatient beds by Medicare for disproportionate share-(DSH) payments.
DSH payments are additional paynient
amounts for hospitals that serve "a significantly
disproportionate · number of low-income
patients." The DSH paymonts are 'made possible
by Section l886(d) of the Social Security Act.
Urban hospitals with 100 beds or more must
meet a 15-percent low-income patient iate to
qualify for the DSH payments. PVH is a 101-bed
acute care hospital that has qualified for disproportional&lt; payments from Medi'care for several
years. If the number of beds at PVH that qualifies ...
under the certifi~~!i?J!~!f. •.~~··~~e&gt;,'• leis than
100, tqen the lf9spual' must reac~ a 40-percent
low-income rate in order td qualify for the
money.
During the audit. it was determined the hospital only had 86 qualified beds. The reduction
'from 101 beds to 86 was based on the fact two
beds were used for dbse.rvation purposes and 13
beds were used lor same-day surgery recovery.
These same beds in a february 1999 Medicare
audit were approved as inpatient 'beds.
If it is decided PVH is not a 100-bed acute care
facility, DSH payments from 1997-2000 will have
to be repaid to the federal government. The total

PluM ... PVH, Ptlp Al
_..., ADVERTISING
DISCUSSION Larry Boyer,
advertising direc·
tor for Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.,
spoke at the
Msigs County
Chamber of Com·
merce on the
Importance or
newspaper advertising and how we
as a society are ·
affected by its . ·
use. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

tine!, Point Pleasant Register a(\d
'Ih-County News.
·
In other matters, Steve Story
spent his -last meeting as chamb.er
ptesidimt updating members on
the _progress of various construction projects in Meigs County,
n31J1ely the Ravenswood Connecter and the U.S. 33 Project.
According to Story, both projects are "moving forward" and
construction bids and even ground
bteaking ceremonies are being discussed.
Debra McBride, representative
for the Small Business Develop-

PIMH ....ChaMber, Pip A:S ·

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Pick 3: 8-4-8; Pick 4: 5-8-1-5

Buch.,-• 5:4-9-17-18-21

'EVA,
Dally 3: 3-4-4 Dally 4: l-5-9-5
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c· 2001 Ohio V.~ey Publi!hinlt Co.

Chavez withdrawS bid for the
good of president-elect. Bush
WASHINGTON (AP)
Linda Chavez withdrew 'her bid
to be labor _.secretary Tuesday.
saying that controversy over an
illegal immigrant who once
livod with hof had become a
distroiction for President-elect
Bush. She called herself a victim
of "search-and-tfestroy" politics.
· ·Bush said he was saddened
by the news and sti11 believes
she would have been a strong
addition to his Cabinet. Calling
hot a friend, he added: "I
u'nderstand her reluctance to
movo forward."
Chavez told a news conference the docision to bow. out
just a week after being named
was entirely her own, and Bu$h

said, "She made that decision
hors~lf." But three Republican
officials involvod said she reluctantly stepped aside -under pressure from Bush's politi cal team,
who made it clear their willingness to fight for hor nomination
bad waned amid questions
about her credibility.
Chavoz allowed that she
should havo been more candid
. about the circumstances surrounding Marta Morcado, the
Guatomalan woman who lived
with her for about two years in
the early 1990s. But sho said it
was "the politics of personal
destruction" that brought down
her nomination.

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w. 5cHNEID£R

OVP NEWS STAFF . ·

Chamber-teams lesson in advertising

Me!ii·Senlor ee~· ~
proWam. T)JB clestan Inch~
building blooks fe~urlrc differ· .
ent actMtles of the nr1N fttnsss
center at the ~lp Senior Center. C&amp;pehart wa pre1111111ed a
$2!5 Check from the
tttness/Wellnen coordlrwor,
»! Bentley. 1he contest . .'
open to hlih school a111Uder1ts enrolled at Matas. East·
em 111111 Southern and wtH ba
U88d on T..ahlrts for the fltnela
prCJil'll11 which Is fUnded by tile
Ohio Holpltal ~soclatlon Foun-

dation for Healtl'ller Commun~
. tlet thiOIJi('t Holzer Medklal can.

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Blacks for Health," w8yne Cape-.
hart, under 1ha direction of
Meigs Hlih School art Instructor
'Geor&amp;e NB&amp;I~I~kl. rwn, created
the wlmlng deelfl for tile

• 15 hp • 42-inch Convertible mower deck

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PVHin
standoff
with U.S.

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A GT2Z5 Lawn and Garden 7hJc:tor

Hometown Newspaper

Video will
get first
showing
locally

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lages.
They are in the s)laj&gt;e of Ohio
·, · and are in the col9rs of navy
blue and white. Motetti said
that Pomeroy already has two,
maybe three, but Middleport
may not have any.
·
Once the money actually

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Melp County's

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1. Conne&lt;:llcut(41) ............... 11·0 1,025 .J
2. Tennessee ................. 10 .... 14·1 975 · -2 .
3. No1r• Dame ..................... 14·0 952
3
4. Georgla ............................ 1H 8911
5.0uke ................................ t3·1 887
·
6. Purdue ............................. 14·3 787
7. 1owaSt... .......................... 1H 783
1
e. Louisiana Tach ................. 12-4 718
9. LSU ..................................10.4 619 1
10. Flork11 ........... ,...... ........... 1J.1 818 14
11 . TexaoTech ...................... 11·2 615 11
12. RU1Qars .............................84 558
J
13. Ptm St .......................... 11.. 617 1P
14. Texao ......, ....................... 13·3 405 1'
15. SW M~oourt St. ...............,9-3 394 15
' 18. Clemaon .......................... 11-3 344 18
. 17. Oirllhonta ..........................v-4 341 ' 11
18. Vandorbllt ........................ 1:1-2 306 2&gt;
19. N.C. S1att.,..................... 10-4 243 18
20. Oregon .......................... ,...8·3 227 24
21 . Mlooi~lppl ' $1, ...................&amp;.. 202 17
22. Artzon~~ ............ ,............... 12-2 148 ~
23. 8arf&lt;&gt;r ..............................13-&lt;l 141
24. S,.nlord ............................7-5 101 21
25. Aubum............................. 1J.3
94 2D'
01he11 recaMng : U1ah 93, Xavitr 82.
Virginia 81. Indiana 50, lnlnolo 28. Flor1&lt;11' St
21, l.tllllalppl ·19, Ml11100n 18, Wlor:onoin 1'1",
Teua A&amp;M 14, UAB 12, Coiorldo St 7, Mem.
plio 7, Washington 7. OePaul 4, Virginia Tecl)
4. San1a Clara 3, Butlalo 2, St. Mary's, Cll1.' 2.
Geofllll Wuhlngloo 1, 51. Joseph's 1.
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The top 25 teams In The Associated Pr~s·
woman's cotlege basketball poll, wtth nrst ·ptilQ~
votes In parenth81tS, records through Jan ....7,
total points baaed on 25 points lor a flrst ·pl~
vote through one point tor.a 25th-place v2fe
and last week's ranking:
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January 10, 2001

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AlAbama St. 80, MVSU 49 ·
,,.
Bf11\uoe.Coolcn1an 78, N. CoroNno A&amp;T 0.
Char1oa10n Bou111em 89, RaGford 62
Cllalfa~ 89. w. Carolina 57
..
Coppin St 79. Homplon 76
~
Ouke 73, Flor1&lt;1a 51. 60
~
ETSU 101. AppiiiChiln 51.78
Fta. lntematl0nal.80, Arbnt.aa St. 52
.;.
Grambling St 74, Alcom St 63
·~
Howard 78, Deiawaro St 66
Llbooy 61, Coa1111 Carolina 44
Lipscomb 83, Mun-.y Sl 55
Middle Tenneuee 93, Ark..uttle Rock Set
Norfolk 51 . 70, Morgan 51. 59
'~
Nonh Carolina 7t , Clemson 70
....,.
S. Carolina St. 71, FIOrldl A&amp;M 63
.f
Southam u. 59, Jackson St. 55
""~
Winthrop 90, Nev.t:Jerry 55
•
MIDWEST
•• ;
OePIUI 81, UA.B 60
- 11
lnd.-Pur.-lndpts. 77, Valparaiso 70
',
Mart~uel!e 69, Memphis.80
-•
N. Iowa 83, S. Illinois 74
....
.,
Youngstown St. 74, UMKC 80
.. 11
SOUTHWEST
•,
Alabama A&amp;M 74, Ark.-Pine Bluft 71, OT .. •
Orol Robens 85, OaklAnd, Mich. 53
•
Texas·A!'IIngton 57, Prairie View 45

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Mon'a Coli'-"' In-all
MonMy aloarea
EAIT
American U. 53, N.C.·WIImlng1on 39
Am1y 113~~ny.W.Va. 88
Falnelgl1 .
son 66, 51. FranciS, Pa. 54
HeNard 9t,•llitwHl"1)1hifl 58
lona 67, . . , 11&lt;1. 61
Long Isla , • 80, UMBC 72
Maine 79,
72
Monmou111, J. 78, Robart t,4orna 58
Srton Hall 78.. Notre 01rn8 78
St Fran_cla, NV 58, Mount St. Mary'~· Md.

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Brown 80, Secred Heart....

8. Cen1tlt&gt;Utg (2) ......................7·1
111
9. Bnll~ Bn1101 (1) ............8·1
89
10. Cedor.1ile ................. :..........9·1
56
' Othtll receiving 12 Ot more poln11: 11 . Tlpp
8a1hel~ . 12. Slnln Hiland 51 . 13. Card·
I
Uncilln 44. 14. Spnng11ekl Co111. Cant
3 . 15. Worthington Christian 31 . 16. Van Wert
Llncolrwlew 27. 17. Stbnng t.lcKlr)ler (1) 26.
1 Fort
. 19. Rullfa 15. 20. St.
S1. John'i 13. 22.

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81

10
11 . (1s;)
Bolpro, . 13. Cln. Moclolro 51 . 14,
Colo. Roady 49. 15. Onllrlo 47. 15. Wheelers·
borg (t) 31. 17. Venoalllel 34. 15. (11ol Akron
Sprlngllokl, 8arlllo'lt11o Shenandoah 28. 20.
Campbell Mtmorlll 23. 21. Bucrrua Wynfotd
Sloom.Carrol 20. 23. Clovo. Vlllt
JoHph 19. 24. Now MlddiOIOwn
-18. 25. lucltiilllt Valley 17. 28.
1ulflw 11. 27. M-wn Fonwlclc
(111&amp;.
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1. Lanca11or Floher Ca111. (4) ...6· 1
171
2- Cln. HUla Chr. Aood.(S) .........II-0
167
3. Mlnatar) (-4~ ............................ 9-o
155
4. S. Chl~llloo SE (4) ............ 9-&lt;1
153'
5. Cln. Country Dar (2l ............7-&lt;l
128

56

Details, A3

Wednesday

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C9mmunity.news and notes, As
Eagles top Marauders, Bl

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Hlp: 40s: Low: 101

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48, New ,...,..
Cln. Landmark Cllril1lln 61, Cln. Slvon HIU
moras FraMer •1
55, OT
1 0.0 2. Ktlill Bor.U 2 0.0 5, Court·
Cln. McNicholas 54, Cln. Purto11 Marian 46
saaman Nof1h Adamo !0, Fav-- 48
nov Breaux o 0-&lt;1 o, SOmmor Kephart 8 3·5 15.
Sootrwlew 55, LI&gt;IOin Caltoollc 43
Cln. Nor1h ~lege Hll47, Cln. H1114 Chr111·
Tollll 249·13 61 .
S!&gt;Mg. S. 69. Piqua 51
ian HillS 37
Rivet Valley (:HI, SEOAL 1-5) - l&lt;on Tar·
Spf1ngt&gt;OtO 67, Lebanon 51
Cln. St. samaoU1, New Milml36
loof21).() 4, Juiii'Moflohan 1 0•0 2, Anne AOOI·
Stewart Federal Hocking 72, Hemlock Miller
Cin. Summit COunb'Y Oay 43, Loeklalnd 30
llgar 0 0.() 0. Cynlhll Ward 5 1-2 14, Chr1111n
,
Mtl\lO (7·3. ,TVC
Cln. TaylOr 46, Cln. Walnut Hilts 40
32
Baird 10-&lt;1 3, Nlr:ola Watk~l 5 4·5 &lt;5. Chalaea
~ o 13. Amber~
T~.Bowaher63, n&gt;. ~er37
Circleville 60, Bainbridge Paint vaney 42
DeGarmo 1 0-&lt;1 2, Lindsay Nlda 1 0·2 2, Cnl·
2·2 4. Al~ll Worry 1
Tol. Cent Cath. 65, Bascom HopewellClayton Nortnmont 52, New Car11tle Tecum1any McDade 0 2-2 2. TOIIIIS 18 7·11 44.
2 8, Aahler Tnomoa
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:J.poln1 goaii-Marlat1a 4 (Gwln 3, Btrontz).
seh 40
. LoUdOn 43
0 2, Undoay Bolin 0 .c,;.,n;;,;.; ~···:··-..
Tol. Maumee Valley 56, Oregon Strttoh .41
Cols. karttey 51, Zanesville Aoucrans 33
River Valley 5 {War&lt;f 3, Baird, Welkins).
Hoover 1 0.0 2, s'
Tol . Rogert 76, Tot Ubbor 60
Cots. Watterson 50, Cols. DeSalel47
Rtboonds-Manotta 23 (Kephart 7), River Yal·
8, T01all 27 13·15 75.
Columbiana Crestview 65, S&amp;llnevHie South·
Wahama 58, Gallj)Ollt OhlO ValleY CMI11an
W..llon (2·10, TVC 0•7) - AleK Maule 0 ley 33 (OaGarmo 10. Walkins 10). Aooloii51
em46
Marletta
15
(Gwln
7),
AfVer
Valley
5
(Wai"CI
2.
o-2 Amanda
o-&lt;1 AbbV Thomas 3
Cortland Lakevtew 51, Leavlnsburg U8f'ea
Warren Cl'lamt:~lon 3-t, klnlmln .&amp;adoer 33
Mollohan 2). Steala-Manetta 11 (Gwln 51.
H 7, KknCremMntOO.OO, ouatv Cremeana
Warren Harding .t9, Warren JFk 38
·•.
28
River Valier 7 (Ward 2. M&lt;Dodo 2) .
~ 0·2 9, Valerie Fnob!' 0.0 o. Hilary Pa1r1Ck 1
~ Warrensville 83, Cleve. E11t ~
Danbury 49, Emmanuel Baptist 37
().() 2. Jollie King 4 0-&lt;1 8, Roell"• Tnbby 4 3· Turnovers-Marietta 12, Alver Vllley 16.
Day. Chaminade.JuUenne 51, Germantown
Wave"V 43, Ponamou111 w. 39
311, RaChel Fultz &lt;4 3-6 11, Brooke UniOn 0 0.
Weir (W.Va.) 'lo. S1euben'lt11elllg flod 21
Valley View 19
Jac:kaon
74,
0.1111
Acldemy
S1
00. Totals 198-1348.
We11avilto 55, S1eubenllllle Cll111. Cent 50
Day. Dunbar 101, Cay. Stlvell 21
16 23 t9 16 74
3-pojn1 goo1o-Molgo 8 (VIning 5, Pnee 3), Jao.son
Young. Boardman 72, Young. Chanev 21
Day. Meadowdale 56, cay. ColOnel Wt\lle 54
tt 51
Wellston 4 (Maule, D. Cremeans 2). GaHia Academy t7 12 11
Day.
OakwoOd
55,
Dar.
NonMage
29
Jackson
(8·3.
SEOAL
HI
Holly
Evans
0
~ebounai-Molgs 22 tWerry 4), Wo1111on 22
oay. Patterson 57, Day. B&amp;lmonJ: 32
4Ful1z 8). ASSI111-Melgs 20 (Vk1lng 6, Price 5) , 0·0 0. JoaRie White t O·O3, Betn Howe 13 1·2.
Defiance 65, Wauseon 50
Ohla Hlih Schaollaro Btokllbtl1
30. Hannah Evani 1 2·3 4, Billie Partin 4 2·2
WeKston 9 (Futtz, D. Cremeans 2). SrealsMonUy'.. A11UIW
E. Pelestlne 49, Columb~na 34
10..Jenny Bragg 0 2·2 2, Megan Exline 1 0.0 2,
'Melgs 11 (VIning, J. Davis 2), Wellston 3
Cln.
Christian 63, Cln. Royall 44
Fairview 73, Open Door 25
Brooke
Walters2
1-1
5,
Brandy
Caldwell6
4·6
)'urnovera-Me!Qa 8, Wellston 23.
Franklin Furnace Green 52, Symmes Valley
Grove City Christian 54, Excel Academy 17
16, wnilney Haness t 0..0 2. to1a1s 2912·16
35 '
LlbenyChrisdan 65, Powell Vlllf!ge Acadamy
74.
Soulhtrn ..2. Trlmblt 38
61
Georgetown 47, Blanchester 4~
Gallla Academy (5·5, SEOAL 2·4) - Je&amp;si·
Trilft)le
7
8 14 tO 39
Mt. Gllaed 80, Merion Cath. 81
.Green11eld
McClain
44,
Lynd'burg
34
ca
BOdlmer
5
0·0
10,
Brlanna
Johnson
3
2·2
9,
Southern
a 13 4 17 - 42 Stephani Johnson 0 0·0 o. Eva Lyon 1 1.'/ 3,
Heritage Christian 41 , Mansfield Temple 24
Upper Arlington 73, Olentangy it , OT
Trimble- 8randv HOdgson 0 0·0 0, Jessica
Hillsboro 60, Bethel·T8te 3~
e,runton 0 0.0 0, Lacv Non 0 0·0 0, Kelly Six 1 Tlffany 0/d(son o 0·0.0, Courtney Sprlegel 0 0·
Hubbard SS, Young. Liberty 46
0
o.
Marissa
Oev
3
5·6
11
,
Sarah
RusseY
1
0.()
0·0 2, Shawna Judson 6 1·2 13, Jessica
Ohio AP Soya latkatb•ll Polls '
lnterdivislon Southeast 5.4, Mogadore 42
2. Brittanv Franklin 1 0·0 2, Meredith Addington
Grandy 0 0·0 o, Altory Hooper 4 5-6 1S, Emily
• Flrtt A•nklng
Ironton 75, Coat Grove 40
70·214. Totats 21B·1251 .
Giffin 4 1-3 9. Totals 15 7-11 39.
Ironton Roclc Hill 49, South Point 3a
3-polnt
goals-Jackson
4
(Howe
3,
Whhe
1
),
• Southern - Katl Cummlna 9 0·1 ta, Tammy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)· - Hovt a 11a1o
Jackson'74, Gallipolis.51
Gallla A.cademv 1 (B. JoMson 1). ReboundsFryar 1 0~ 2. Rachel Chapman 2 0-0 4, Tara
Leetonia 75, ~ring ' 49
.
panel ol sports writers and broadcasters rales
Pickens 0 1-2 1, Brigette Barnes 4 0·0 9, Amy . JackSOn 40 (Cakjwett 13), Gallla Academv 34
Lewis Center Olentangy e2, Upper Arlington
Ohio high school boys basketb•ll teama In the
(A&lt;kllngton 11 ~ - Assists-Jackson 11 (Howe 6),
lee 2 1·4 5, Deana Pullins 0 0·0 0, Kali Sayre
llrst of seven weekly regular-s eraon 200().2001
48
Gattis
Acadamv
7
(B.
Johnson
4).
Steals1 0..0 3 Totals 19 2-7 42.
JacksOn
8
{Caldwell,
Howe
3),
Gallla
·Academy
liberty
Chrlslian
59,
Powell
V~lage Academy
polls
for The Associated Pres• (recordl through
3·polnt goals-Trimble 2 (Hooper 2) , South·
24
8 (Russell 2). Tumovers-Jackson 23, GaUia
games of Jan. 7):
ern 2 (Sayre,' Barnes 2). Rebounds- Trimble
Lima Cent, Calh. 84, Mctomb 66
SIONI
Academv 22.
22, Southam 31 (lea, Pickens, Fryar 7).
W-1.
Pto
Lisbon
51,
Hanoverton
United
48
Assists-Trimble rVa, Soulhern 13 {Cummins
1. Cin. St. Xavier (9) ............. 11D-O
225
lisbon
Beaver
Local
72,
·Toronto
41
Athena
eo,
Point
Plaaa•nt
31
~ ). Steals- Trimble 5, Southern 1 (Chapman,
2. Clave. 51. lgna11us (7) :.........8-&lt;l
193
17 14 15 14 SO
Logan 54, Warren 42
Cummins, Barnes 2). Turnovers-Trimble 10, Athens
3. Cols. Broolchavan (2l ...........11-0
172
lorain Southviuw 65, Tal. Start 57
Point
11
8 11
10 38
Southern 15.
4. e. Llvarpool(4) ..................... 9·0
129
AIMilS (7·2, SEOAL 5-1) - Crlsty Carbone .
lucasville Valley 55, Wheel~rsburg (W.Va. ~
5. Mentor(2) .......................... 10.0
119
49
t
0·0
2,
Uz
Howert:h
11
0.0
22.
Mary
Vanity
7
1·
Eastern 41, W11ertord 23
6. Tel. Soon (2) ................ :........ 7•1
113
Mantua Crestwood 55, Streetsboro 39
2 17, Chelsea Monroe 0 1·2 1, Jenna Kostlval
Walerlo(d
9
3 6
5 23
7. Mansfield Sr. (1 ) ...................9·0
98 ·
Marlena
61
,
Cheshire
Rlv.
e
r
valley
44
1
4-4
6,
Lindsay
Marx
4
0-0
8,
Marissa
Monrey
.
Easte·rn I
1t 14 2 14 41
8. Cln. Winton Wooos (1) .........9·0
90
McGuffey
Upper
Scioto
Valley
48,
Convoy
2
0·0
4.
To1a1s
26
6·10
60
Wa1orlora (4·8, TVC 3·3) - Jantzen King 2
9. SprlngHald SOulh .................. 8•1
85
Creslvlew
41
P~n1
(3·8,
SEOAL
1-5)
Brld~e1
Nibert
5
1·2 6, Jolanna Burchett 1 0.0 2, ·Stevie Wain·
10. Tol. Llbbay ............................8·1
69
Miami Trace 71, Peebles 32
Wright 1 b-0 2, Alana MUiar 2 2-2 8, Heather · 4·6 14, Krlsdn Drain 2 2·2 6, Jamlfar Adkins .,
Othere receiving 12 or more pOints: 11.
Miami Valley 33, Spring Valley 23
0.0
2,
Miranda
Durst1
0-0
2,
Ashley
Thomas 0
Fulmer 2 1·2 5. Tracl Huck 0 2-2 2. Totals 8 6·
Logan 42. 12. Toi. StJohn's 40. 13. Massillon
Miamisburg 79, Day. Stebbins 24
1·2 1, Arntler Keeler 2 0..0 -4, Jennie Wilson 0 0·
823.
Perry 32. 14. Lal&lt;ewoo&lt;l St Edward (1) 31 . 15.
Mineral
Rktge
45,
loweltvllla
40
o
o,
Kim
Olivero
2·2
2,
Regina
Bing
3
1-t
7.
Eastern (9-2. TVC 5-0) - Whitney Karr 3 2Troy 25. 16. Lancattor 21. 17. Plckorina1on 19.
N. lima S. Range 62, N. Jackson Jackson·
4 8, Oanielle Spencer 3 4 -4 10, Jufl Bailey 0 1· ,lb1tls14 10·13 38.
18, Cfn. We11em Hills (1) 16. 19, Be&lt;J!ord 14.
Milton
48
J.poin1
goals-A1hena
2
(Vanity
2),
Polnr
0.
2 1, Sara Mansfield 1 0-Q 2, Amber Baker 1 A20 .. (111) Dublin C-an, Lartln Aamiral King
Napolean
63,
Bryan
44
8 10, Stacie Watson 5 O..t 10. Totals f3 15·19
13. 22. Youngs. Aua11n1own Filch 12.
National OivlsiQn Woodridge 65, Rootstown
41.
I DIVI&amp;K)N"
40
Ohio
High
School
Ql~l
Bto-11
3-point goals-Waterford 1 (King), Eastern
1. Ot1lwa-Giandort (3) .............9·0
191
Monday'l
RtiUttl
New
Mld&lt;11a1own
Spnng11ekl
56,
McDonald
0.
2. Kanenng Aller (6) .................8-&lt;1
175
AkrOn CentraHiower 56, Akron Eifel 45
24
3. WooS1er Tnwav (7) ............... 9-0
169
Newark Catholic 46, Cols. Tree ol Life 30
Akron Garfield 54, Akron Kenmore 30
Wrhrm._ 51, Ohkt Vrllty 51
4. Willard (1) ............................. 9.()
12~
Akron
Hoban
61,
Akron
Manchester
45
Newcomerstown
62,
Bowers10n
Co"notton.
Ohio Valier
12 10 16 13 51
5. Lima Shawnee (3) ................9·1
124'
Vallay 48
Albany Alexander 93 , Netao,..vme·Yorll: 32
Wahama
9 15 12 22 58
6. Wa"anovll1e Helgh1f (8) ....... 9-0
113
Athens 00, Point Pleasant 38
Newlon Falls 50, Girard 45
1. Tallmadge (1) ,...................... 9.0
77 .
Ohio Valley (5·1) - Kelsey Salllbu,Y 1 0.0
Atwater
Waterloo
58,
Windham
46
Nortll
Lewisburg
Triad
66,
Spnng.
Cath.
. 76
8. Painesville Harvey ............... 8.()
2, HaRie Carter Q o-o o, Hannah Beaver 4 o.o
Beallsvllle
64,
Caldwell
50
Cent.
80,
OT
9. Washlng1oo Court Houoe ..'... 9·0
71
e. Tessa Haggerty 7 0.() 17, Mlnra eamaelll1 O·
Be!lefonlafne Ben Logan 62, DeGraff RiverOak Hlll75. !AeOOffllott sc1o10 ~w 37
10. Camb0dge ....... ,. ............. .,...6·1
68
0 3, Aly'ssa Zlrllle3 1·5 7, Sarah Jenkins 0 1·2
side 158
Olmsted Falls 48, Buckeye 47
Others receiving 12 or more polnt1: 11.
t, Chelsea Gooch 4 5·8 13. Totals 120 7·15 51.
Belmont Union local 78, Wlntaravltle Indian
Orwell Grand Valor 58, Aahtabula 45
Conneaut (1) 64. 12. Aaven01 Southeut 152.
Wahama (9·2) - Katie Hendrickson o O·O o.
Creak 34
PambaMIIa Eaalwooa 67, Northwooa 26
13. Cln. Purcell Mariah 48. 14. Cola. DeSrl81
Julia Hoffman 6 5·517, Karr Sayre 13-8 5, Kim
8elpie 47, McArthur Vinton County 38
Pettisville 50, Tol. Chrlatlan 40
•. 46. 15. Avon Lake 45. 16. Cln1 McNicholu2D. 1
Thomas o o-o o. Jennifer Flowers 0 o-o o,
Serlin Center Western Reserve 48, Vlanna
Pomeroy Mtllgs 75, Wellston 48
17; Greenfield McClain 24. 18. Hunting V1II1Y
Natalie Roustl 2 0·1 4, O.J. Blessing 7 7·14 21,
Mathews 30
Portage County Amencan Division Flekl
Unlvarolly Sci'Ooi 19. 19. Ull) Akron Buehlat,
Jeoslca Young o 0-&lt;1 o, Ka1hy Shl11z o 1·3 1,
Berlin Hiland 83, Zoarville Tuscarawas Va,lGarrettsville 38
Springboro t8. 21. f.Aaryavllle 17. 22. Vrn Wert
Michele Stliltz 4 2·5 10. Totals 20 18·343 58.
ler 1e
PortJmotJ111 Clay 57, Eaa1em Pika 49
16. 23. (111) Can1on Cent Ca1h., Belmont Unioo
3·poln1 goai&amp;-Ohlo Valier 4 (Haggeoy 3,
Beva"V Fl Frye 63, McConnelavllle Morgan
Ponsmou1h E. 46, S. Gallla 33
Local 14. 25. Akron Eu113.
'
Esmaem 1), Wahama o.
411
Preble Shawnee 65, Bradlord 34
DMIIDN.
Campbell 65, Young. CllrioUan 34
Proc1oMia Falnand 47, Cheoapoake 42
1. Akron 51. Vln.·St Mary-(22).9-&lt;1
264
Marlolla 81, ftlvor Yalfor 44
Canton Heritage ~ 1, Mansfield Temple
Racine Sou.them 42, Glouster Trtmble 39
2. Caoa10wn Miami East (4)'.....9-&lt;1
153
Mane11a
15 20 17
9 81
Chriallln 24
Ravenna SOutheast 54, Mogar:tore 42
3. Findlay Ubeoy.flenton .........6-&lt;1
100
RlvarValley
18 6 12 .10 44
Carrt!lnoo 53, Otd Waahlng1on Buckeye Trsll
Rayland Buckeye LOcal 54. Richmond Edl·
4. Haviland Wayone Trace ......... 7·1
99
Ma~ena (10·2, SEOAL 5·1)- Jon Gwin 11
son 37
·
42
5. JlfOmeo&gt;liHe'Hinodlle (1) ... 10-&lt;1
&amp;I
3-3 28, l&lt;onle Laual 1 3·S 5, Chalaea lhomp·
Cln. Colerain 37, We11 Choi1er Lak01f Well
AeedoYIIIt Eo11tm 41, Wa1enord 23
e. Cleve. Cent. Colh .................8•1
85
son 2 ().() 4, Katie ~- 0 0.() 0, COurtney
32
.
S. W-r 59. Mlnlonl45
7.1.1o&lt;ral R~ ..................&amp;-&lt;1
7f

o,

TuHCiay, January I, 2001

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P8!f A 2 • TM Dally Sentinel

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DAYTON {AP)- An obsttetician who has
beefi performing abortions since 1973 hastestified that a late-term procedure the state is
trying to ban is Slfer than other techniques
because it reduces the time' a woman is under
anesthesia.
·
.
Dr. Rein Siiner of Akron said he has been
performing the late-term proe&lt;dure since
1985. He testified Tuesday that it is safer than
o~her techniques at that stage of· pregnancy
because when a ventilator is required during
anesthesia, there is a risk that a patient will not
get enough oxygen.

HAMILTON {AP) - International Paper Co. has found a buyer for
the paper mill it acquired in June through its purcluse of the rival .
Champion International Corp.
An agreement has been n:ached to sell the former Champion facility known as the B Street Mill to Sun Capital Partners Inc., Internation.J Paper officials said Tuesday. The purchase price was not disclo1cd.
The sal~ is part oflriternational Paper's previously announced pbn to
~ divest S5 billion in asSets by the end of 2001, International Paper
·spokeswoman Jenny Boardman said Tuesday.
· The mill will operate as an indep_endent affiliate of Sun -Capital and
will operate as Snurt Papers LLC, Sun Capital spokesman M. Steven
' Lilf said.
.
"We expect to complete the transaction on or about the end ofJanuary,'.' Lilf said Tuesday. "The intent of Smart Papers is to operate the
mill if it is economically viable and to save jobs."
' He said Snutt Papers intends to work: with d1c community, mill
'employees and their representatives.The mill has about 800 employees.
· Sun Capital, based in Boca Raton, Fb., is a merchant banking firm

WASHINGTON (AP) - On really making a difference.: '
his first trip to Serbia, the only
The mission, which ran from
U.S. senator of Serbian descent Dec. 28 through last Thursday,
broke bread with a cousin he'd also took the two senators to the
neve r met and said he was Middle East, where Voinovich
encouraged by the intelligence . had another emotional day
and dedication of Yug,lavia's because of another family cie.
new lenders.
In Israel, he visited a park
"For me, it was kind of an named for his daughter Molly,
emotional experience," Sen. who died as a child.
George ~?inovich, R -Ohio, satd
The Jewish National Fund
Tuesday. I met
first coustn created the Molly Agnes
for the first tnne.·
Voinovich Recreotion Area in
Voinovi ch said he learned Hazore'a 20 years ago as part of
about 18 months ago that when a gesture initiated by former
hts grandfather enugrated ' from Ohioans. Voinovich said he was
what now is Croatia, other close touched to see the swings and
fanuly members &lt;tayed behmd, other playground ·equipment in
mcludmg hts grandmother and the Israeli park.

' focuses especially on underperforming lmsincsscs, Liff said.
' "Coming in as an operationally focused leveraged buyout firm , we
. think we can do some very good things at the mill and intend to grow
the mill's customer base and product lines," he said.
'
· City Manager Steve Sorrell said Tuesday that cny officials were
encouraged by news of the planned sale bnt do not b1ow any of the
details.
.. ''We plan to do all we can to hdp a~d look forward to working with
·

Mill employee Roy Howell said there is un certainty among employ-

::'Y

ees about their future.

"The general feeling is that there will be a reduced labor force;' he
said.
·
International Paper also is in the process of closing; 540-employee
administrative complex and selling atlother paper mill. obtained
·
through the Champion purchase.
International Paper is based in Purchase, N.Y , but is moving its headquarters to Stamford, Conn.

aunt.

Natural gas pricing~ sought

A son of his Aunt Petra met
with che senator in Belgrade.
':I&gt;Jext time I go back, I'll meet
the rest of the family," he said. ·
Voinovich had refused to go
to Serbia -as long as it was controlled by Slobodan Milosevic.
After his first trip there, as
part of an official mission organi~ed by Sen. Arlen Specter, RPa ., Voinovich said he wa~
impressed with the people who
stepped fon.Vard to lead the eastern European nation's first
democratic government.
"The quality of the individuals. that they have in their governm ent is just . fantastic ," he
said. "They're all PhD's, they're
all rule-of-law constitutional
pcoplc that ·ate dedicated to

i\h .

COLUMBUS (AP) . - Bombarded ,..
complaints from constituents and shocked by his own natural ;;~ill, a state lawmaker says
'he will call for formation of a select committee to study natural gas.
'pricing in Ohio.
Rep. Kirk Schuring, R-Canton, said Tuesday he will sponsor a mea·. sure asking House and Senate leaders to form a joint ad hoc commit·
·
• tee to examine the natural gas industry
"It's an issue that resonates with everyone, including myself," Schuring said, citing a doubling of his own· gas bill.
·
Schuring said he·wants to know why: ·
• There are rate increases in the winter months.

. . • Natural gas wells are capped and not used.
• Meters are not read regularly. sometimes not for two to three
months. Bills are based on estimates.
• How often are rates increased. ,
, • How often c:in a consumer select alternative suppliers.
, Schuri.ng said the committee should issue its report by next fall,
before the start of next winter's peak h~ating season.

Cleveland
State names .provost
.
Cleveland State President Claire A.Van Ummersen said the appointment of Chin Y Kuo would go before the university trustees next
month for approval. The provost serves as a university's chief academic ·
efficer. '
Kuo becam~ dean of the engineering college at \lhy11c St.ac in 1996.
'Befo~ that, he was head of the civil and ~nvit'Otllllc ll!il l &lt;'llginecring
department at Penn s~1!C University.
" He is an expert in hydrolob'Y· hydraulics a11d water l'&lt;'stJLil:,es eng•.. neering.
Lot month the univenity Faculty,Senate had n~ked that the provost
search be postponed until a new Ullivetsity presidc111 is 11nn1cd. Van
, , .Un1menen said in November that she would quit by the sum met·.

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, . . C~EVEtAND {AP)·..:... A tearful mother was sentenced to 20 yean
; In pr110n m the beatmg death of her 4-year-old daughter.
Lashon SaY.I)II:r, 26, was sentenced Tuesday fot child encilngering at!d
murder in the death of her daughter, Sydney.
~·1 miss my rll\lght~r;• Sawyer told Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Jud~ Ann T.' M:lnnen. ".[ think about he~ every day. If there was anything I could .do to change it, I would. I love my daughter."
, • • The girl djed April 29 from a punch to the stomach that caused her
!small inteJtine to bunt. She ~ceived no n1edical attention and had scars
:from abuse that prosecutors say was inflicted over time.
::· Sawyer blamed her boyfriend for the abuse and the fatal blow. He
; • pleaded guilty to involuntary nunsbughter before Sawyer's trial for fail~ng to get medical help fo~ the girl
testified against Sawyyr.

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Prosecutor: fileS were deleted
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COLUMBUS {AP) -:Two 'top officials of
the Ohio Civil Rights Commission put on
paid administrative leave amid accusations of
spending irregularities have done nothing
wrong but will c;onsider leaving their posts,
their attorney said Tuesday.
"It's qot a spending issue. It's amanagement
style issue," said Larry James, who represents
Melanie ). Mitch~ll, the executive di~ctor,
and Mackenzie Milo, the deputy director and
chief of human resources in the fiscal office.
The five-member commission placed
Mitchell on.,leave Thursday, shordy after she
placed Milo oh leave.The comnussion's investigation was fueled by employee. complaints

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about how the two were ··paying for hotel . commission. ·
CQmmission Chairman John H. Burlew
suites, car rentals and out-of-town trips.
State Insp~ctor G~nerai:Thomas P. Charles declined to comment on the claim; saying
launched a separate mvesagaaon a few weeks · only that Mitchell and Milo "serve at the
ago :or several reaso'!s, including the commis- pleasure of the commission" and it can ahoose
S!On S fin311ces.
h h
'
b ·
1
· · fi
'al
ds J
w et er to contmue t eu emp oyment.
U,pon ·rev•ewmg
manct ~cor , omes
· .
. .
· .
.
·'d
M'tch
ll's
d
Mil
·
•
di
p
.
Mitchell
and
Milo
have
had
no
discuSStons
S~
1
e .an
os spen ng rae 11ces . . .
. .
, · .
· ,
. were in line with the commission's policies. ·. With the comnuss1&lt;m smce bemg tol~ to leave .
"They've done nothing that w~uld wurant . th~ office on Thurs'!"y, but James saad that he
disciplinary actions of atiy 'type," he said.
Will contact Charles and Burlew to try to
James said he believes that the spending resolve the matter.
accusation.s came from disgrunded employees
One ogreement could see both Mitchell
and that the investigation stems from person- and Milo leaving their posts to ~ollify the si.t ality conflicts between his clients ·and the uation,James said.

Local Service.

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AKRON {AP) -A man who \VOn a four-year fight against -a 50ce_nt p.~r page c;_hargeJQr pftblic c!ocument copies has 'vp11a ~~co 11d ba.tde for $53,719 in attorney fees.
.
'·
Th.. ,SuUU\Ut Coullty Council's finallCC comnuttee voted Monday
night to approve paying att~&gt;nwy fees fc&gt;r the fight waged by Ke11ncth
: I~ Barth.
·
He sued after the COllllty f.ufcd to con\ ply with .111 'lht" Supreme
Court ruling that 50 CL'11t\ pet p.lg~ W;J\ toci much 1o t l1.1rgL' t'i1r C'opil..'"j
of official docllmcnts !~t ch ,., trcttfic JCCidcnt rcp&lt;Ht&gt;.
T\VO years after he compl.un ed ab.out th,· co&lt;r, he .u&gt;tl K.ty (;,lUI(,
owner of Record Research of Akron, filed a das~·.ictloll l.IW,u&gt;t "b"'inst
the ~.ounty.
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It's Our
Polley.
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Obituaries

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Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER

·PVH
f1omP1pA1

busine~s

Chamber

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ically reviewed the pbns and the
unit and indicated their acceptance of it as an inpatient unit;•
said Michael G. Sellards, former
PVH executive director and current· executive director of St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington .
Thomas E. Schauer, assistant
exe~utive director of financial se rvices at PVI:]I, also attended the
Charleston meeting and said,
"during the February 1999 ~udit, ·
I pers011ally asked if the 13 beds
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.~

met mpat1ent acute care cntena

&lt;nd was told that they, in fa ct,
did."
"Pleasant Valley Hospital is
licensed by the state of West Vir- ·
ginia for 101 acute care beds.
Not at any point did we certify or
license those 13 beds in question
as outpatient same-day surgery
unit beds. Accordingly, those beds
should be counted as inpatient
beds."
"What a coincidence," said
Colf~ck, '"on the same day we
met with the Fiscal Intermediary
folks in Charleston. our censm
peaked and we had to use the
sa me 13-bt•d unit for inpatients as
all our other beds were full."
. For now, the position of PVH
will be presented to the HCFA
for a ruling and no further
demands will be made for repayment of disprop 9rtionate share
payments for fiscal years 1998 and
1999 until there is a resolution.
"PVH is the largest employer in
Mason County. If a ruling is
made against the hospital and a
demand for repayment is made,
we will be in a disastrous state of
affairs," Colfack said.
11

This issue is of vital economic

importance to everyone concerned. First of all, 'PVH does not
have the money on-hand to· give
the federal government, and secondly, we don't have a line of .
credit large enough for complete
repayment.
"I encourage everyone in their
community to contact their congressional representatives and
voice thej.r concerns over this
particular issue. We must work as
a team to get t.his ruling made in
the favor of PleasantValley Hospital and the patients we serve."
ty Heights,April24.
Moretti announced plans for a
major Civil War re-enactment to
be held in Meigs County in 2003,
one of 12 statewide projects. It \vill
feature a re-enactment of 38 miles
of Morgan's Raid using riders on
126 horses with three skirmishes
along the way.
One \Vill occur in Dexter while
other large events will take place in
Chester and Bashan. She emphasized that th'e route to be taken will
not be the actual route the soldiers
took.
'Participants will begin · the
three-day event in Vinton County
at a farm in Wilkesville and make
their way through country roads
and fields to Bashan. Plans also
include a memorial service to be
held at Buffingt"a Island after the
reenaclmeQt ride.

\Pfll llf,

~'I', II f 1 ( 11.11'~1.'1

lOX Ofll(£ WIU OPEN AT
6:SO PI fOIIVENING SHOWS
12:30 PIIOI SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-42~

Arcll Coal- 13'/,
Akzo ~52\
AmToctl/SBC - 51'·
Athland Inc. - 35),

AT&amp;T-22'•
Bank One - 37'l.
Bob Evans - 20'1,
BorgWamar - 40
Champion- 2~
Charming ShOps - sl;
City Holding - 6
Federal Mogul - 3',
Flrstar:.... 241,

Gannett - 63~
General Elacll'lc- ""''
Ha~ey DavidiOn - 36lo
Kma~-6\
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Kroger -

23'/o

Lands End - 24~.

Ltd.- 16\

· Oak Hill Financial- 15'o

OVB-25
BBT-35l.
Peoples- 16

Premier:.... S'l,..
ROGkwoll.,.. 461•.

Rocky Boots - 3"'•

Ra Shell -

sal.

Seara-36l. ·
Shonay's -~
Wai·Man Wendy'a- 24'~..
Worthington - all ·
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quota• of
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided by. Smith
Partners at Advast Inc. ot

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446·452 4
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WED 1/10/01 • fHUR 1/11101

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18.70

week. NO subscr1ptlon by mall permitted In
8ftal where home earner aervlce Ia avail·

Other aentlces

lnllnnce&amp;

992-54n

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amount of the payback is $1.7
BIDWELL -' Kathryn Lynn Campbell, 26, 3381 Mount Olive Ro:K\,
COLUMBUS - Eugene M. Harris, 78, of Columbus, died on million.
. . . The .government is wasting no
Monday, January 8, 2001 at Mount Carmel Medical Center.
Gallipolis, died Monday. Jan. 8, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center.
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,Janet
Hecox
Harris;
six
children,
Kenneth
ttme on collectmg the money.
She was the daughter of Mike and Rita bisfelder Hager of Bidwell, and
A demand for $165,000- the
was born on Sept. 13, 1974 in Gallipolis. She was a n:gistered nurse at Holz• . {Nanci) 1-iarris, Maljorie Oohn) Blake, Nancy {Rick) Toth, Pat. Oohn)
Mayer,
Robert
(Peggy)
Harris
and
Kathy
(Riccardo)
Rigoli;
grandpayments
for fiscal year 2000 er Medical Center, and was a member of the St. Louis Catholic Church
. children, Cammy, Lizzy and Emmy Har.ris, Frank and Abby Blake, Cara was requested from PVH less than
and the Ohio Nurses AssoCiation .
She is survived by her husband, Michael). Campbell of Gallipolis; three and Jake Mayer, Robbie, Erin and Ryan Horris,Anita, Lisa and Carlo . 10 days after the December audit
children,Joshua Michael, Abby Nicole and Jacob Matthew Campbell, all of Rigoli; twO brothers, Robert W. and Gordon K. {Mary) Harris; and a was complete.
What does th~ future look like
the home; her maternal grandmother, Aon:nce Eisfelder of Pinckneyville:. niece and two nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded ,in death by his sister, for'the hospital?
ill., her paternal grandmother, Laura). Hager of Bidwell; her father-in-law
Harris.
If the full S1.7 nullion is not
Maljorie
and mother-in-law, Michael W. and Mary A. Chapman Campbell .o f BidHe was a 1940 graduate of Middleport High School, and was a repaid after a demand has officialwell; her sister-in-bw and brother-in-law,-Carey ~nd David Dodrill o£Vin.member
of the Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport, ly been made by the feds, then
ton; three brothers-in-law and sister-in-law, Christopher and Nichole WalMedicare will cease all payments
lis ofWellston, Steven and Ainber Campbell of Crown City, and Timothy where he served as a Sunday School teacher.
·
As
a
member
of
Middleport
Village
Council,
he
was
involved
in
varto PVH for patients who are curand Stephanie Campbell of Cheshire; and a number of 11unts, uncles and
rendy receiving hcalthcare serious municipal activities and concerns.
COUSinS .
An Engineering graduate ofThe Ohio State University, he yrai a vices.
She was preceded in death by her n1aternal grandfather, Francis Eisfelder;
member
of the Sign1a Phi Epsilon fraternity an'd the OSU Marching
The hosp ital also will be
and paternal grandfather,John M. Hager.
·
·
charged
14-percent interest in the
Band
(TBDBITL).
Mass of Christian Burial will be II a.m. Friday in St. Louis CathoHc
He served as Lieutenant G.g.) i~ the United· States Navy and as balance until the entire amount
· Church, with Monsignor William R . Myers officiating. Burial will follow
.
Commanding
Officer of the U.S.S. L.S.T. 636 in the South Pacific. He has bee n repaid. Hospital officials
at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the Cremeens funeral Chapel in Gallipolis from 4-8 retired after 37 years from the Morton Salt Company and Kaiser Alu- said this would make it impossible
millum, working in the United States, Wales, United Kingdom, Sar- . to meet payroll and pay unlities,
p.m. Thursday. ·
supplies and vendors an d other
A prayer service will be condu cted at 8 p.1i1.Thursday in the chapel, with di11ia : Italy and Ghana, West Africa .
he
was
Past
Master
and
a
50-year
member
of
the
bills associated with the day-toAdditiono\ly,
the Rev. Denny Coburn officiating.
day cost of running a business.
Memorial contributions niay be made to a fund for the future education Rittman, Ohio Masonic Lodge No. 715.
A
memorial
service
will
be
held
on
Saturday,
January
\3,
2001
at
I
PVH Exec&lt;~tive Direcwr Brian
for her children, in care of Ohio Valley Bank. 420 Third Ave. , Gallipolis,
p.m. at the Heath United Methodist Ch&lt;~rch, 349 South Third Avenue, Colfack said , "it . is incredulous
Ohio 45631 . Memorial envelopes are available at the funeral home.
I
· Middleport,.Ohio 45760. In lieu .o f flowers, the family requests dona- that Medicare could e&lt;ount beds
tions be given to the Heath United Methodist Church.
in February 1999, then return in
·There will be no calling hours.
2000 and not allow them."
Arrangements are under the dir~ction of the Fisher-Acree Funeral
"No one did. anything Wl'\&gt;ng.
LETART, W.Va. - Roberta Jane Roush, 73, Letart, died Monday, Jan. 8,
Home
in
Middleport.
,
We
tried to play by the rules, have
-. 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·played by the rules, and the federShe was born on Nov. 6, 1927 in Weston, W.Va., daughter of the late
al government is using a myriad
Richard and Virgie Mae Frances Roush. She was a homemaker.
ide detector is no substitute for of often conflicting and confusing
Surviving ate a son and daughter-in-law, Robert Lee and Brenda Kay
rules and ,regulations in their
Roush, Letart; a brother, John W. Roush of San Diego, Calif.; a grandthe safe use and maintenance of a attempt to deny us DSH paydaughter; and several nieces and nephews.
Smoke detector on every level of a ments that PVH rightfully
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Omter Lee Roush.
framPageA1
home. Smoke detectors react to Qeserves .''
Services will be I :30 p.m. Thursday in Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason,
According to hospital records,
fire byproducts and provide an
W.Va., with the Rev. Marlin Campbell officiating. Burial will be inYonker- ·
In the home itself, fuel burning
in
1996 a total of 13 acute care
Lieving Cemetery in Letart. Friends may call at the funeral ho111e from 6- household heating. equipment early· worning of a fire, providing
beds were constructed as an
more tin1e to escape.
8 totlight.
{furnaces, water heaters and sp&lt;~Ce
Household carbon monoxide impatient unit in an area that had
heaters) should be checked every
previously housed inpatient beds
detectors measure how much CO
year
by
·a
qualified
heating
c'
o
nand an .lntensive Care Unit. The
registering your
name,
has accumulated, sounding an architectural firm of HBE from
tractor
or
service
technician.
The
licensing, tax requiremen , types of
alarm when a low-level concen- St. Louis, Mo., designed the layownership, planning you business, best time to check this equipment
would be prior to the heating sea- !ration of CQ exists in the air. It out and PVH wos assured these
~nd sources of financing.
fromPapAi
The SBDC provides free busi- son but it can be done an any may sound before people feel par- beds would be accepted by
Medicare as inpatient beds.
ticularly sick. ·
ment Center of Southeast .Ohio, ness assistance to both new and time.
"The issue had been thoroughSymptoms of carbon monox"If your CO alarm sounds, do
· informed chomber members about existing businesses ih Athens,
the presentation of upcoming Hocking, Meigs and Perry coun- ide poisoning are similar to those not waste any time in the build- ly discussed · and exhaustedly
workshops aimed at individuals ties and is funded thltlugh the U.S. of the flu, and include headache, ing;' Rielage said. "Don't trust reviewed. The state orchitect and·
Small Business Administration and dizziness; drowsiness, ringing ill your sense of smell, taste or sight. the state facility planners all physwho are starting a new business.
The workshops are ·designed to the ,Ohio De.,a,r~~?,l ofDevelop- 1he ears, · seeing spots, nausea, Trust your, d~tector, evacuate the
irregular brea,thing and · uncon- structure ond call your local fire
·
answer specific questions ana tb ment.
The workshops will take place sciousness.
. help make the process of business
department."
Rielage strongly advised that
on
Jan. 25, Feb. 22 and March 22
development much easier.
Detectors are widely ovailable,
• Topics that will be discussed are: from ,3-6 p.m. at the*oigs Coun- all homes have a carbon monoxflom Pip A1
ide detector to provide early and Rielage advised that the
assessing your goals and strengths, ty Library in Pomeroy.
warning of accumulating carbon detector should be approved by a
recognized testing lab. They becomes available, she said she
mon~ide .
·
would notify the committee so
He noted that a carbon monox- should be tested once a month.
that applications can be made since
I•
it
will be given out on a "first
Hawk, vice president, of the Bedford
come, first si:rvt: basis, and once it's
Township tnist~es at a .recent Ofb'3·
gone, it's gone."
POMEROY - Meigs County 1uzational meeting.
The state committee member
David Brickles is the third trustee.
Historical Society Board ofTrustees
also announced a regional meeting
will meet Thursday 7 p.m. at the It was decid~ to hold monthly
with granting agencies to take
meetings on the second Tuesday of
Meigs Count}' Museum.
place on April 6 at the Meigs
each month at 7 p.nvat•-the town
County
Senior Citizens Center.
Thursday night ... Cloudy. A 30
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
hall
Here's your chance to wash all percent chance of rain showers Presentations will be made on how
that salt and grime off your car. A late... Possibly mixed with some. to access services of the agencies.
RACINE - Sonshine Circle of
As a 'part of the local obserwet sriow. Low in the lower 30s.
warmup is on the way.
the Dorcas Church will meet at 7
vance, ·Becky Baer, Meigs County
Extended forecast:
Temperatures on Thursday will
MIDDLEPORT - A . prayer
p.m. Thursday in the church annex.
Friday. .. Cloudy. A chance of Extension agent, will present a
meeting for the Power Team, to be rise to I 0 degrees or more ahove
held at Ash Street Church, will be freezing, the National Weather snow or rain showers in the workshop on clothing, .1800 to
1870, in the community room of
held from 9:30 to 10 a.m. ori Friday. Service said. Highs will be near morning. High in the mid 40s.
the
1
Saturday
...
Pardy
cloudy.
Low
Meigs County annex, MulberPOMEROY - Ehner Bailey The date and time were repotted 50 degrees in the extreme south.
The warmer temperatures are in the upper 20s and high in the
was elected president, and Robert incorrecdy in The Daily Sentinel.
·
the result of a shift to southerly upper 40s.
'
Sunda'y... Mostly cloudy with a
breezes as a high pressure cell
chance of showers. Low in the
slides off to the east. ' .
Lows tonight will be in •the mid 30s and high in the upper
lOs.
' ·
40s.
(USPS 211-110)
Manday... Mosdy cloudy with
Sunset tonight will be at 5:26
Ohio V.lloy Publlohlng Co. .
Published
afternoon, Monday
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:53 a chance of showers during the
thteugll Friclay, 11 Coun Sl., Pomeroy,
day, then a chance of snow showa.m.
Ohio. Second·CIIII pootego paid, ol
Correction Polley
Pomeroy.
ers
during the night. Low in the
Our main concem In all sto~es Is to
,Weather forecast:
be accurate. II you know of an error In lllemllor: Tho A»oclatod Preas and 1/10
Tonight ... Clear. Low 18 to 24. lower 40s and high in the upper
N e - AaoodaUon.
. a story, call lhe newsroom at (740) Ohio
Palltmuter: Send acklrtts corrections to
40s.
Light and variable wind,
992·21 56.
Tho · Dally Sonllnel, 111 Coun. Sl. , .
Tuesday. .. Partly cloudy. Low in
Thursday.. .Increasing cloudiPomeroy, Ohio 45788.
News Departments
the
upper 30s and high in the
ness. High 44 to 49. West wind 5
Subscription rlltls
The main number Is 992·2156.
lower 40s . .
. . By urrter or motor route
to 10 mph.
Department extentlons are:
.,

Nationwide'

113W.2nd~

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Eupne M. Hants

Kall•'tft Lynn Clmpbel

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Polfleroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Wt'ra In your ~hi,.,&gt;Ofll-.tQOdo-thollt&lt;l whon ""' ..a uo.
We're a otngli!' oourco ror ALl. y o u r - - :
I Auto
• Home • Anlnclll PJoc1late . . . . .
Cal mo ... Siop by..rr. your cholotl

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- ~heering.

mailings.
t'
Ney's appointment came one day after
The local influence of that committee is so Ohioans increased their clout on the Senate
great that when former Ohio Rep. Mary Rose side with the addition of Republican Mike
Oakar headed two of its subcommittees, she De Wine to the Senate AP,propriations Com·
·
boasted that a newspaper article referred to her mittee.
ns "the mayor of Capitol Hill." I'
In oddition to Ney, on the House side, Ohio
The panel also handles legislation dealing has:
\vith campaigns and elections. 1 t
-One elected .leader: Republican Vice
"We go arouhd the World and oversee elec- Chair Deborah Pryce of Columbm.
tions. All of a sudden \VI: have 'the Florida sit.;_One appointed. leader: leadership chairuation and the sarcasm of Castro," Ney said. man Rob Portnun of Cincinnati. •
"We will have an involvement in looking at
-Financial Service Committee ·Chairman
how· we modernize the eleca"on process. And Mike Oxley of Findlay.
campaign finance reform is b~ing pushed like
-Education and the Workforce Conmtita hot bullet and we handle that.".
·
.tee Chairman John Boehner ofWest Chester.
Ney is the second congt:essman: from his
· -Rep. Ralph Regula of Navarre as chairarea .to be in charge of the Administrotion man of the subcommittee that, handles all
C9mmittee; the late Wayne Hays, a Democrat,. · ~ealth, education and welfan: spending deciwas choirman. of the panel ~uring the .1970s.
saons.

IN SU RANCE FOR YOUFl NHI&gt;'&gt;

Man wins copy fight again

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using excessive force. The two
officers are white.
' Jorg, Caton and three other
officers involved in the arrest
were placed on paid admi nistrative leave. The city is considering whether to continue paying
Jorg while thecharges are pend- .
ing.
Greg Baker, assistant city safe:
ty director, will make .• the decision within 10 days, said aide
Laura Green .
Jorg's friends said the city ·is
, punishing·him before trial.
"They're treating him like a
sacrificial lamb," said Cindy
Korte, a member of Concordia
Lutheran Church where Jorg is
a member.
Jorg's wife, Kristen, cried and .
hugged her husband. "They're
treating him like he's guilty," shl'
said.
Jorg declined to comment
after the hearing.
If convicted as .ch~rgcd, Jorg
could get up to 5 l/2 years irl
prison, and Caton could get six
months.
·
Keith Fangman, president of
the . local Fraternal Order of
Police chapter, said Jorg has
never been accused of using
excessive force during. his five
years with the city.
·Owensby's mother, Brenda
Owensby, quietly watched the

Civil rights officials Says·they'll consider stepping down .

. • , S'l'EUBENVILLE (AP)-The new county. prosecutor said data was
;~;deleted from office computen ,before he took office this month and .
; • p:K!·to be rec~ated with a backup computer tape.
·
' •
: : Jell'erson ·County commissioners have agreed to hire a Columbus law
::firm to try to recover from 'former Prosecutor Stephen Sfern 'the
:;-eXpense qfrestoring·the computers. The paper folders for the criminal
; case,~ retm.ined at the prosecutor's ol!ice:
·
:: . Stern denied doing anything wrong and told The Herald-Star that
:::the back.up upe was made out of suspicion that s01f1cthing would hap- ·
:;pen to the network. He said he did tell his sralfto remove perso nal files
·.: :On the computer system.
·
:. : Stern blamed the new prosecutor, Brjran felmet, for not ·calling to'
::;arrange a transition of the office. Feltner said he sent a letter ro ,Stern in
;. November asking for halp.
•.: I· Feltner, a Republi can, defeated 'Stern, :i Democrat, in the' Novembor
'••• •'generaI eIectlon.
.
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provided new insights into the
difficulties involved with putting
together a peace plan. Thos~
calks also led Voinovich to .;,onelude IPre~ide'f!t Clintpn probably was premature in .convening
. recent Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
"I think it set the process
back," he said. "It's a very, very
incendiary situation that's going
to require a great deal of work.
What bothers me more than
anything else is that the trust
level on botl1 li.cl~s has dimini&gt;hed."
'
If''

WASHINGTON (AL') -Another Ohioan
joined the ranks of congressional leaders Tuesday when Rep. Bob Ney was chosen as chairlhan of the House Admini1tration Comnuttee.
Ney's appointment by House Speaker Dennis Hastert bomted Ohio's clout 011 Capitol
Hill . .
· The stntc already had two ntembers of
Congress in Rcpubllcan leadership posts, two
major cqmmittee ch~irmen, two powerful
appropriations leaders and some minority
·
Democrats in high places.
In his new position, Ney, a Republican
from St. Clairsville. will lead a committee whci
has authority over areas dealing with the quality of life on Capitol Hill, such u operating·
parking facilities, assigning office space, running House restaurants, overseeing official
travel and handling the rules for congressional

Mols1r aMJ 2D-yelr sentefK'e ~

fi

Voinovich . and Specter met
·with Israeli officials in Jerusalem
:~nd with Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak in Cairo.
The senator said the talks

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CINCINNATI {AP) -Supporte!s and critics of a police
officer charged with kiQing a
m~n in his custody ·argued Tuesday outside a · hearing on
whether the officer should lose
his pay.
Uniformed officers and
friends and relativ~s of officer
Robert Jorg applauded and
che~red him in a packed hallway
in City Hall. Supporters called
out, "Keep your head up, Bob"
and "Thanks for doing your job;
Bob."
·
. Some clashed briefly with
William Kirkland, a black con\munity activist who criticized
them for applauding an· officer
charged with killing someone.
"No one is above the law,"
said Kirkland; a member of the
grlmp the Black United Front.
'''For all these officers to come
down here and applaud ail officer who's ' been indicted, that's
reprehensible,."
. .
Jo~g was indicted on charges
ofinvoluntary manslal)ghter and
misde,meanor assault in the
, death Nov. 7 of Roger Owensby Jr., 29, of Cincinnati. Officer
Patrick Caton was indicted on a
charge of misdemeanor assault.
Both l!ave pleaded innocent.
. Th~. ,death of Owensby, who
was b)ack, has angeri!d black
a~tivis~, who allege that Cincinnati police· ha\re a history of

Ohio Republicans gain anothe'r House chairmanship

,ty.

,

It is Ohio's second attempt to bon the procedure. Rice in 1995 rejected the first lateterm abortion law as unconstitutional.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
upheld that ruling, and the U.S. Supreme
Court declined ro hear the case.
·
The state says, the new law was changed to
avoid criticisi)IS frpm federal co":rts that similar bans were too vague. For example, the new
law describes only the procedure in question
ond makes it clear that it does not attempt to
ban other forms of abortions, state officials say.

•

CLEVELAND {AP) -The engineering 'dea11 arWayne·State Uriiversity in Detroit has been named provost at Cleveland State U11iversi-

..

The quicker abortion procedure also keeps
blood loss to a minimum, Siiner told U.S. District Judge Walter Rice.
Rice is hearing a challenge to a state ban
against the procedure, which involves draining
and collapsing the sk.ull of a fetus before it is
fully removed from the uterus. Opponents call .
it partial-bihh abortion.
Dr. Martin Hask.ell, who operates clinics in
Cincinnati, Dayton and Akron, pioneered the
procedure. He argues tlpt the ban is unconstitutional because it would restrict a woman's
right to an abortion.

Critics of indicted·policem.an
Voinovich meets family dash
outside heanng ·

~ specializing in lev~raged buyout.;; ~nd venture c;lpital invcstmc1.1ts and

the new owners," he said.

- Wedneaday, January 10, 2001

·Doctor testifies that abortion procedure is safer ,

·BUCKEYE BRIEFS

I'

Wednetday, January 10,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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P8!f A 2 • TM Dally Sentinel

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DAYTON {AP)- An obsttetician who has
beefi performing abortions since 1973 hastestified that a late-term procedure the state is
trying to ban is Slfer than other techniques
because it reduces the time' a woman is under
anesthesia.
·
.
Dr. Rein Siiner of Akron said he has been
performing the late-term proe&lt;dure since
1985. He testified Tuesday that it is safer than
o~her techniques at that stage of· pregnancy
because when a ventilator is required during
anesthesia, there is a risk that a patient will not
get enough oxygen.

HAMILTON {AP) - International Paper Co. has found a buyer for
the paper mill it acquired in June through its purcluse of the rival .
Champion International Corp.
An agreement has been n:ached to sell the former Champion facility known as the B Street Mill to Sun Capital Partners Inc., Internation.J Paper officials said Tuesday. The purchase price was not disclo1cd.
The sal~ is part oflriternational Paper's previously announced pbn to
~ divest S5 billion in asSets by the end of 2001, International Paper
·spokeswoman Jenny Boardman said Tuesday.
· The mill will operate as an indep_endent affiliate of Sun -Capital and
will operate as Snurt Papers LLC, Sun Capital spokesman M. Steven
' Lilf said.
.
"We expect to complete the transaction on or about the end ofJanuary,'.' Lilf said Tuesday. "The intent of Smart Papers is to operate the
mill if it is economically viable and to save jobs."
' He said Snutt Papers intends to work: with d1c community, mill
'employees and their representatives.The mill has about 800 employees.
· Sun Capital, based in Boca Raton, Fb., is a merchant banking firm

WASHINGTON (AP) - On really making a difference.: '
his first trip to Serbia, the only
The mission, which ran from
U.S. senator of Serbian descent Dec. 28 through last Thursday,
broke bread with a cousin he'd also took the two senators to the
neve r met and said he was Middle East, where Voinovich
encouraged by the intelligence . had another emotional day
and dedication of Yug,lavia's because of another family cie.
new lenders.
In Israel, he visited a park
"For me, it was kind of an named for his daughter Molly,
emotional experience," Sen. who died as a child.
George ~?inovich, R -Ohio, satd
The Jewish National Fund
Tuesday. I met
first coustn created the Molly Agnes
for the first tnne.·
Voinovich Recreotion Area in
Voinovi ch said he learned Hazore'a 20 years ago as part of
about 18 months ago that when a gesture initiated by former
hts grandfather enugrated ' from Ohioans. Voinovich said he was
what now is Croatia, other close touched to see the swings and
fanuly members &lt;tayed behmd, other playground ·equipment in
mcludmg hts grandmother and the Israeli park.

' focuses especially on underperforming lmsincsscs, Liff said.
' "Coming in as an operationally focused leveraged buyout firm , we
. think we can do some very good things at the mill and intend to grow
the mill's customer base and product lines," he said.
'
· City Manager Steve Sorrell said Tuesday that cny officials were
encouraged by news of the planned sale bnt do not b1ow any of the
details.
.. ''We plan to do all we can to hdp a~d look forward to working with
·

Mill employee Roy Howell said there is un certainty among employ-

::'Y

ees about their future.

"The general feeling is that there will be a reduced labor force;' he
said.
·
International Paper also is in the process of closing; 540-employee
administrative complex and selling atlother paper mill. obtained
·
through the Champion purchase.
International Paper is based in Purchase, N.Y , but is moving its headquarters to Stamford, Conn.

aunt.

Natural gas pricing~ sought

A son of his Aunt Petra met
with che senator in Belgrade.
':I&gt;Jext time I go back, I'll meet
the rest of the family," he said. ·
Voinovich had refused to go
to Serbia -as long as it was controlled by Slobodan Milosevic.
After his first trip there, as
part of an official mission organi~ed by Sen. Arlen Specter, RPa ., Voinovich said he wa~
impressed with the people who
stepped fon.Vard to lead the eastern European nation's first
democratic government.
"The quality of the individuals. that they have in their governm ent is just . fantastic ," he
said. "They're all PhD's, they're
all rule-of-law constitutional
pcoplc that ·ate dedicated to

i\h .

COLUMBUS (AP) . - Bombarded ,..
complaints from constituents and shocked by his own natural ;;~ill, a state lawmaker says
'he will call for formation of a select committee to study natural gas.
'pricing in Ohio.
Rep. Kirk Schuring, R-Canton, said Tuesday he will sponsor a mea·. sure asking House and Senate leaders to form a joint ad hoc commit·
·
• tee to examine the natural gas industry
"It's an issue that resonates with everyone, including myself," Schuring said, citing a doubling of his own· gas bill.
·
Schuring said he·wants to know why: ·
• There are rate increases in the winter months.

. . • Natural gas wells are capped and not used.
• Meters are not read regularly. sometimes not for two to three
months. Bills are based on estimates.
• How often are rates increased. ,
, • How often c:in a consumer select alternative suppliers.
, Schuri.ng said the committee should issue its report by next fall,
before the start of next winter's peak h~ating season.

Cleveland
State names .provost
.
Cleveland State President Claire A.Van Ummersen said the appointment of Chin Y Kuo would go before the university trustees next
month for approval. The provost serves as a university's chief academic ·
efficer. '
Kuo becam~ dean of the engineering college at \lhy11c St.ac in 1996.
'Befo~ that, he was head of the civil and ~nvit'Otllllc ll!il l &lt;'llginecring
department at Penn s~1!C University.
" He is an expert in hydrolob'Y· hydraulics a11d water l'&lt;'stJLil:,es eng•.. neering.
Lot month the univenity Faculty,Senate had n~ked that the provost
search be postponed until a new Ullivetsity presidc111 is 11nn1cd. Van
, , .Un1menen said in November that she would quit by the sum met·.

.

I

, . . C~EVEtAND {AP)·..:... A tearful mother was sentenced to 20 yean
; In pr110n m the beatmg death of her 4-year-old daughter.
Lashon SaY.I)II:r, 26, was sentenced Tuesday fot child encilngering at!d
murder in the death of her daughter, Sydney.
~·1 miss my rll\lght~r;• Sawyer told Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Jud~ Ann T.' M:lnnen. ".[ think about he~ every day. If there was anything I could .do to change it, I would. I love my daughter."
, • • The girl djed April 29 from a punch to the stomach that caused her
!small inteJtine to bunt. She ~ceived no n1edical attention and had scars
:from abuse that prosecutors say was inflicted over time.
::· Sawyer blamed her boyfriend for the abuse and the fatal blow. He
; • pleaded guilty to involuntary nunsbughter before Sawyer's trial for fail~ng to get medical help fo~ the girl
testified against Sawyyr.

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Prosecutor: fileS were deleted
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COLUMBUS {AP) -:Two 'top officials of
the Ohio Civil Rights Commission put on
paid administrative leave amid accusations of
spending irregularities have done nothing
wrong but will c;onsider leaving their posts,
their attorney said Tuesday.
"It's qot a spending issue. It's amanagement
style issue," said Larry James, who represents
Melanie ). Mitch~ll, the executive di~ctor,
and Mackenzie Milo, the deputy director and
chief of human resources in the fiscal office.
The five-member commission placed
Mitchell on.,leave Thursday, shordy after she
placed Milo oh leave.The comnussion's investigation was fueled by employee. complaints

'

..

about how the two were ··paying for hotel . commission. ·
CQmmission Chairman John H. Burlew
suites, car rentals and out-of-town trips.
State Insp~ctor G~nerai:Thomas P. Charles declined to comment on the claim; saying
launched a separate mvesagaaon a few weeks · only that Mitchell and Milo "serve at the
ago :or several reaso'!s, including the commis- pleasure of the commission" and it can ahoose
S!On S fin311ces.
h h
'
b ·
1
· · fi
'al
ds J
w et er to contmue t eu emp oyment.
U,pon ·rev•ewmg
manct ~cor , omes
· .
. .
· .
.
·'d
M'tch
ll's
d
Mil
·
•
di
p
.
Mitchell
and
Milo
have
had
no
discuSStons
S~
1
e .an
os spen ng rae 11ces . . .
. .
, · .
· ,
. were in line with the commission's policies. ·. With the comnuss1&lt;m smce bemg tol~ to leave .
"They've done nothing that w~uld wurant . th~ office on Thurs'!"y, but James saad that he
disciplinary actions of atiy 'type," he said.
Will contact Charles and Burlew to try to
James said he believes that the spending resolve the matter.
accusation.s came from disgrunded employees
One ogreement could see both Mitchell
and that the investigation stems from person- and Milo leaving their posts to ~ollify the si.t ality conflicts between his clients ·and the uation,James said.

Local Service.

.

AKRON {AP) -A man who \VOn a four-year fight against -a 50ce_nt p.~r page c;_hargeJQr pftblic c!ocument copies has 'vp11a ~~co 11d ba.tde for $53,719 in attorney fees.
.
'·
Th.. ,SuUU\Ut Coullty Council's finallCC comnuttee voted Monday
night to approve paying att~&gt;nwy fees fc&gt;r the fight waged by Ke11ncth
: I~ Barth.
·
He sued after the COllllty f.ufcd to con\ ply with .111 'lht" Supreme
Court ruling that 50 CL'11t\ pet p.lg~ W;J\ toci much 1o t l1.1rgL' t'i1r C'opil..'"j
of official docllmcnts !~t ch ,., trcttfic JCCidcnt rcp&lt;Ht&gt;.
T\VO years after he compl.un ed ab.out th,· co&lt;r, he .u&gt;tl K.ty (;,lUI(,
owner of Record Research of Akron, filed a das~·.ictloll l.IW,u&gt;t "b"'inst
the ~.ounty.
·

It's Our
Polley.
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Obituaries

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Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER

·PVH
f1omP1pA1

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Chamber

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LOCAL BRIEFS

VALLEY WEATHER

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ically reviewed the pbns and the
unit and indicated their acceptance of it as an inpatient unit;•
said Michael G. Sellards, former
PVH executive director and current· executive director of St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington .
Thomas E. Schauer, assistant
exe~utive director of financial se rvices at PVI:]I, also attended the
Charleston meeting and said,
"during the February 1999 ~udit, ·
I pers011ally asked if the 13 beds
'
. .
.~

met mpat1ent acute care cntena

&lt;nd was told that they, in fa ct,
did."
"Pleasant Valley Hospital is
licensed by the state of West Vir- ·
ginia for 101 acute care beds.
Not at any point did we certify or
license those 13 beds in question
as outpatient same-day surgery
unit beds. Accordingly, those beds
should be counted as inpatient
beds."
"What a coincidence," said
Colf~ck, '"on the same day we
met with the Fiscal Intermediary
folks in Charleston. our censm
peaked and we had to use the
sa me 13-bt•d unit for inpatients as
all our other beds were full."
. For now, the position of PVH
will be presented to the HCFA
for a ruling and no further
demands will be made for repayment of disprop 9rtionate share
payments for fiscal years 1998 and
1999 until there is a resolution.
"PVH is the largest employer in
Mason County. If a ruling is
made against the hospital and a
demand for repayment is made,
we will be in a disastrous state of
affairs," Colfack said.
11

This issue is of vital economic

importance to everyone concerned. First of all, 'PVH does not
have the money on-hand to· give
the federal government, and secondly, we don't have a line of .
credit large enough for complete
repayment.
"I encourage everyone in their
community to contact their congressional representatives and
voice thej.r concerns over this
particular issue. We must work as
a team to get t.his ruling made in
the favor of PleasantValley Hospital and the patients we serve."
ty Heights,April24.
Moretti announced plans for a
major Civil War re-enactment to
be held in Meigs County in 2003,
one of 12 statewide projects. It \vill
feature a re-enactment of 38 miles
of Morgan's Raid using riders on
126 horses with three skirmishes
along the way.
One \Vill occur in Dexter while
other large events will take place in
Chester and Bashan. She emphasized that th'e route to be taken will
not be the actual route the soldiers
took.
'Participants will begin · the
three-day event in Vinton County
at a farm in Wilkesville and make
their way through country roads
and fields to Bashan. Plans also
include a memorial service to be
held at Buffingt"a Island after the
reenaclmeQt ride.

\Pfll llf,

~'I', II f 1 ( 11.11'~1.'1

lOX Ofll(£ WIU OPEN AT
6:SO PI fOIIVENING SHOWS
12:30 PIIOI SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-42~

Arcll Coal- 13'/,
Akzo ~52\
AmToctl/SBC - 51'·
Athland Inc. - 35),

AT&amp;T-22'•
Bank One - 37'l.
Bob Evans - 20'1,
BorgWamar - 40
Champion- 2~
Charming ShOps - sl;
City Holding - 6
Federal Mogul - 3',
Flrstar:.... 241,

Gannett - 63~
General Elacll'lc- ""''
Ha~ey DavidiOn - 36lo
Kma~-6\
•

Kroger -

23'/o

Lands End - 24~.

Ltd.- 16\

· Oak Hill Financial- 15'o

OVB-25
BBT-35l.
Peoples- 16

Premier:.... S'l,..
ROGkwoll.,.. 461•.

Rocky Boots - 3"'•

Ra Shell -

sal.

Seara-36l. ·
Shonay's -~
Wai·Man Wendy'a- 24'~..
Worthington - all ·
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quota• of
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided by. Smith
Partners at Advast Inc. ot

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446·452 4
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WED 1/10/01 • fHUR 1/11101

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18.70

week. NO subscr1ptlon by mall permitted In
8ftal where home earner aervlce Ia avail·

Other aentlces

lnllnnce&amp;

992-54n

•

amount of the payback is $1.7
BIDWELL -' Kathryn Lynn Campbell, 26, 3381 Mount Olive Ro:K\,
COLUMBUS - Eugene M. Harris, 78, of Columbus, died on million.
. . . The .government is wasting no
Monday, January 8, 2001 at Mount Carmel Medical Center.
Gallipolis, died Monday. Jan. 8, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center.
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,Janet
Hecox
Harris;
six
children,
Kenneth
ttme on collectmg the money.
She was the daughter of Mike and Rita bisfelder Hager of Bidwell, and
A demand for $165,000- the
was born on Sept. 13, 1974 in Gallipolis. She was a n:gistered nurse at Holz• . {Nanci) 1-iarris, Maljorie Oohn) Blake, Nancy {Rick) Toth, Pat. Oohn)
Mayer,
Robert
(Peggy)
Harris
and
Kathy
(Riccardo)
Rigoli;
grandpayments
for fiscal year 2000 er Medical Center, and was a member of the St. Louis Catholic Church
. children, Cammy, Lizzy and Emmy Har.ris, Frank and Abby Blake, Cara was requested from PVH less than
and the Ohio Nurses AssoCiation .
She is survived by her husband, Michael). Campbell of Gallipolis; three and Jake Mayer, Robbie, Erin and Ryan Horris,Anita, Lisa and Carlo . 10 days after the December audit
children,Joshua Michael, Abby Nicole and Jacob Matthew Campbell, all of Rigoli; twO brothers, Robert W. and Gordon K. {Mary) Harris; and a was complete.
What does th~ future look like
the home; her maternal grandmother, Aon:nce Eisfelder of Pinckneyville:. niece and two nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded ,in death by his sister, for'the hospital?
ill., her paternal grandmother, Laura). Hager of Bidwell; her father-in-law
Harris.
If the full S1.7 nullion is not
Maljorie
and mother-in-law, Michael W. and Mary A. Chapman Campbell .o f BidHe was a 1940 graduate of Middleport High School, and was a repaid after a demand has officialwell; her sister-in-bw and brother-in-law,-Carey ~nd David Dodrill o£Vin.member
of the Heath United Methodist Church in Middleport, ly been made by the feds, then
ton; three brothers-in-law and sister-in-law, Christopher and Nichole WalMedicare will cease all payments
lis ofWellston, Steven and Ainber Campbell of Crown City, and Timothy where he served as a Sunday School teacher.
·
As
a
member
of
Middleport
Village
Council,
he
was
involved
in
varto PVH for patients who are curand Stephanie Campbell of Cheshire; and a number of 11unts, uncles and
rendy receiving hcalthcare serious municipal activities and concerns.
COUSinS .
An Engineering graduate ofThe Ohio State University, he yrai a vices.
She was preceded in death by her n1aternal grandfather, Francis Eisfelder;
member
of the Sign1a Phi Epsilon fraternity an'd the OSU Marching
The hosp ital also will be
and paternal grandfather,John M. Hager.
·
·
charged
14-percent interest in the
Band
(TBDBITL).
Mass of Christian Burial will be II a.m. Friday in St. Louis CathoHc
He served as Lieutenant G.g.) i~ the United· States Navy and as balance until the entire amount
· Church, with Monsignor William R . Myers officiating. Burial will follow
.
Commanding
Officer of the U.S.S. L.S.T. 636 in the South Pacific. He has bee n repaid. Hospital officials
at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the Cremeens funeral Chapel in Gallipolis from 4-8 retired after 37 years from the Morton Salt Company and Kaiser Alu- said this would make it impossible
millum, working in the United States, Wales, United Kingdom, Sar- . to meet payroll and pay unlities,
p.m. Thursday. ·
supplies and vendors an d other
A prayer service will be condu cted at 8 p.1i1.Thursday in the chapel, with di11ia : Italy and Ghana, West Africa .
he
was
Past
Master
and
a
50-year
member
of
the
bills associated with the day-toAdditiono\ly,
the Rev. Denny Coburn officiating.
day cost of running a business.
Memorial contributions niay be made to a fund for the future education Rittman, Ohio Masonic Lodge No. 715.
A
memorial
service
will
be
held
on
Saturday,
January
\3,
2001
at
I
PVH Exec&lt;~tive Direcwr Brian
for her children, in care of Ohio Valley Bank. 420 Third Ave. , Gallipolis,
p.m. at the Heath United Methodist Ch&lt;~rch, 349 South Third Avenue, Colfack said , "it . is incredulous
Ohio 45631 . Memorial envelopes are available at the funeral home.
I
· Middleport,.Ohio 45760. In lieu .o f flowers, the family requests dona- that Medicare could e&lt;ount beds
tions be given to the Heath United Methodist Church.
in February 1999, then return in
·There will be no calling hours.
2000 and not allow them."
Arrangements are under the dir~ction of the Fisher-Acree Funeral
"No one did. anything Wl'\&gt;ng.
LETART, W.Va. - Roberta Jane Roush, 73, Letart, died Monday, Jan. 8,
Home
in
Middleport.
,
We
tried to play by the rules, have
-. 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·played by the rules, and the federShe was born on Nov. 6, 1927 in Weston, W.Va., daughter of the late
al government is using a myriad
Richard and Virgie Mae Frances Roush. She was a homemaker.
ide detector is no substitute for of often conflicting and confusing
Surviving ate a son and daughter-in-law, Robert Lee and Brenda Kay
rules and ,regulations in their
Roush, Letart; a brother, John W. Roush of San Diego, Calif.; a grandthe safe use and maintenance of a attempt to deny us DSH paydaughter; and several nieces and nephews.
Smoke detector on every level of a ments that PVH rightfully
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Omter Lee Roush.
framPageA1
home. Smoke detectors react to Qeserves .''
Services will be I :30 p.m. Thursday in Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason,
According to hospital records,
fire byproducts and provide an
W.Va., with the Rev. Marlin Campbell officiating. Burial will be inYonker- ·
In the home itself, fuel burning
in
1996 a total of 13 acute care
Lieving Cemetery in Letart. Friends may call at the funeral ho111e from 6- household heating. equipment early· worning of a fire, providing
beds were constructed as an
more tin1e to escape.
8 totlight.
{furnaces, water heaters and sp&lt;~Ce
Household carbon monoxide impatient unit in an area that had
heaters) should be checked every
previously housed inpatient beds
detectors measure how much CO
year
by
·a
qualified
heating
c'
o
nand an .lntensive Care Unit. The
registering your
name,
has accumulated, sounding an architectural firm of HBE from
tractor
or
service
technician.
The
licensing, tax requiremen , types of
alarm when a low-level concen- St. Louis, Mo., designed the layownership, planning you business, best time to check this equipment
would be prior to the heating sea- !ration of CQ exists in the air. It out and PVH wos assured these
~nd sources of financing.
fromPapAi
The SBDC provides free busi- son but it can be done an any may sound before people feel par- beds would be accepted by
Medicare as inpatient beds.
ticularly sick. ·
ment Center of Southeast .Ohio, ness assistance to both new and time.
"The issue had been thoroughSymptoms of carbon monox"If your CO alarm sounds, do
· informed chomber members about existing businesses ih Athens,
the presentation of upcoming Hocking, Meigs and Perry coun- ide poisoning are similar to those not waste any time in the build- ly discussed · and exhaustedly
workshops aimed at individuals ties and is funded thltlugh the U.S. of the flu, and include headache, ing;' Rielage said. "Don't trust reviewed. The state orchitect and·
Small Business Administration and dizziness; drowsiness, ringing ill your sense of smell, taste or sight. the state facility planners all physwho are starting a new business.
The workshops are ·designed to the ,Ohio De.,a,r~~?,l ofDevelop- 1he ears, · seeing spots, nausea, Trust your, d~tector, evacuate the
irregular brea,thing and · uncon- structure ond call your local fire
·
answer specific questions ana tb ment.
The workshops will take place sciousness.
. help make the process of business
department."
Rielage strongly advised that
on
Jan. 25, Feb. 22 and March 22
development much easier.
Detectors are widely ovailable,
• Topics that will be discussed are: from ,3-6 p.m. at the*oigs Coun- all homes have a carbon monoxflom Pip A1
ide detector to provide early and Rielage advised that the
assessing your goals and strengths, ty Library in Pomeroy.
warning of accumulating carbon detector should be approved by a
recognized testing lab. They becomes available, she said she
mon~ide .
·
would notify the committee so
He noted that a carbon monox- should be tested once a month.
that applications can be made since
I•
it
will be given out on a "first
Hawk, vice president, of the Bedford
come, first si:rvt: basis, and once it's
Township tnist~es at a .recent Ofb'3·
gone, it's gone."
POMEROY - Meigs County 1uzational meeting.
The state committee member
David Brickles is the third trustee.
Historical Society Board ofTrustees
also announced a regional meeting
will meet Thursday 7 p.m. at the It was decid~ to hold monthly
with granting agencies to take
meetings on the second Tuesday of
Meigs Count}' Museum.
place on April 6 at the Meigs
each month at 7 p.nvat•-the town
County
Senior Citizens Center.
Thursday night ... Cloudy. A 30
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
hall
Here's your chance to wash all percent chance of rain showers Presentations will be made on how
that salt and grime off your car. A late... Possibly mixed with some. to access services of the agencies.
RACINE - Sonshine Circle of
As a 'part of the local obserwet sriow. Low in the lower 30s.
warmup is on the way.
the Dorcas Church will meet at 7
vance, ·Becky Baer, Meigs County
Extended forecast:
Temperatures on Thursday will
MIDDLEPORT - A . prayer
p.m. Thursday in the church annex.
Friday. .. Cloudy. A chance of Extension agent, will present a
meeting for the Power Team, to be rise to I 0 degrees or more ahove
held at Ash Street Church, will be freezing, the National Weather snow or rain showers in the workshop on clothing, .1800 to
1870, in the community room of
held from 9:30 to 10 a.m. ori Friday. Service said. Highs will be near morning. High in the mid 40s.
the
1
Saturday
...
Pardy
cloudy.
Low
Meigs County annex, MulberPOMEROY - Ehner Bailey The date and time were repotted 50 degrees in the extreme south.
The warmer temperatures are in the upper 20s and high in the
was elected president, and Robert incorrecdy in The Daily Sentinel.
·
the result of a shift to southerly upper 40s.
'
Sunda'y... Mostly cloudy with a
breezes as a high pressure cell
chance of showers. Low in the
slides off to the east. ' .
Lows tonight will be in •the mid 30s and high in the upper
lOs.
' ·
40s.
(USPS 211-110)
Manday... Mosdy cloudy with
Sunset tonight will be at 5:26
Ohio V.lloy Publlohlng Co. .
Published
afternoon, Monday
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:53 a chance of showers during the
thteugll Friclay, 11 Coun Sl., Pomeroy,
day, then a chance of snow showa.m.
Ohio. Second·CIIII pootego paid, ol
Correction Polley
Pomeroy.
ers
during the night. Low in the
Our main concem In all sto~es Is to
,Weather forecast:
be accurate. II you know of an error In lllemllor: Tho A»oclatod Preas and 1/10
Tonight ... Clear. Low 18 to 24. lower 40s and high in the upper
N e - AaoodaUon.
. a story, call lhe newsroom at (740) Ohio
Palltmuter: Send acklrtts corrections to
40s.
Light and variable wind,
992·21 56.
Tho · Dally Sonllnel, 111 Coun. Sl. , .
Tuesday. .. Partly cloudy. Low in
Thursday.. .Increasing cloudiPomeroy, Ohio 45788.
News Departments
the
upper 30s and high in the
ness. High 44 to 49. West wind 5
Subscription rlltls
The main number Is 992·2156.
lower 40s . .
. . By urrter or motor route
to 10 mph.
Department extentlons are:
.,

Nationwide'

113W.2nd~

'

Eupne M. Hants

Kall•'tft Lynn Clmpbel

-·····tn ·

I '

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Polfleroy, Middleport, Ohio

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.. .

Wt'ra In your ~hi,.,&gt;Ofll-.tQOdo-thollt&lt;l whon ""' ..a uo.
We're a otngli!' oourco ror ALl. y o u r - - :
I Auto
• Home • Anlnclll PJoc1late . . . . .
Cal mo ... Siop by..rr. your cholotl

•

•

- ~heering.

mailings.
t'
Ney's appointment came one day after
The local influence of that committee is so Ohioans increased their clout on the Senate
great that when former Ohio Rep. Mary Rose side with the addition of Republican Mike
Oakar headed two of its subcommittees, she De Wine to the Senate AP,propriations Com·
·
boasted that a newspaper article referred to her mittee.
ns "the mayor of Capitol Hill." I'
In oddition to Ney, on the House side, Ohio
The panel also handles legislation dealing has:
\vith campaigns and elections. 1 t
-One elected .leader: Republican Vice
"We go arouhd the World and oversee elec- Chair Deborah Pryce of Columbm.
tions. All of a sudden \VI: have 'the Florida sit.;_One appointed. leader: leadership chairuation and the sarcasm of Castro," Ney said. man Rob Portnun of Cincinnati. •
"We will have an involvement in looking at
-Financial Service Committee ·Chairman
how· we modernize the eleca"on process. And Mike Oxley of Findlay.
campaign finance reform is b~ing pushed like
-Education and the Workforce Conmtita hot bullet and we handle that.".
·
.tee Chairman John Boehner ofWest Chester.
Ney is the second congt:essman: from his
· -Rep. Ralph Regula of Navarre as chairarea .to be in charge of the Administrotion man of the subcommittee that, handles all
C9mmittee; the late Wayne Hays, a Democrat,. · ~ealth, education and welfan: spending deciwas choirman. of the panel ~uring the .1970s.
saons.

IN SU RANCE FOR YOUFl NHI&gt;'&gt;

Man wins copy fight again

•

using excessive force. The two
officers are white.
' Jorg, Caton and three other
officers involved in the arrest
were placed on paid admi nistrative leave. The city is considering whether to continue paying
Jorg while thecharges are pend- .
ing.
Greg Baker, assistant city safe:
ty director, will make .• the decision within 10 days, said aide
Laura Green .
Jorg's friends said the city ·is
, punishing·him before trial.
"They're treating him like a
sacrificial lamb," said Cindy
Korte, a member of Concordia
Lutheran Church where Jorg is
a member.
Jorg's wife, Kristen, cried and .
hugged her husband. "They're
treating him like he's guilty," shl'
said.
Jorg declined to comment
after the hearing.
If convicted as .ch~rgcd, Jorg
could get up to 5 l/2 years irl
prison, and Caton could get six
months.
·
Keith Fangman, president of
the . local Fraternal Order of
Police chapter, said Jorg has
never been accused of using
excessive force during. his five
years with the city.
·Owensby's mother, Brenda
Owensby, quietly watched the

Civil rights officials Says·they'll consider stepping down .

. • , S'l'EUBENVILLE (AP)-The new county. prosecutor said data was
;~;deleted from office computen ,before he took office this month and .
; • p:K!·to be rec~ated with a backup computer tape.
·
' •
: : Jell'erson ·County commissioners have agreed to hire a Columbus law
::firm to try to recover from 'former Prosecutor Stephen Sfern 'the
:;-eXpense qfrestoring·the computers. The paper folders for the criminal
; case,~ retm.ined at the prosecutor's ol!ice:
·
:: . Stern denied doing anything wrong and told The Herald-Star that
:::the back.up upe was made out of suspicion that s01f1cthing would hap- ·
:;pen to the network. He said he did tell his sralfto remove perso nal files
·.: :On the computer system.
·
:. : Stern blamed the new prosecutor, Brjran felmet, for not ·calling to'
::;arrange a transition of the office. Feltner said he sent a letter ro ,Stern in
;. November asking for halp.
•.: I· Feltner, a Republi can, defeated 'Stern, :i Democrat, in the' Novembor
'••• •'generaI eIectlon.
.
.
.

."".
...

provided new insights into the
difficulties involved with putting
together a peace plan. Thos~
calks also led Voinovich to .;,onelude IPre~ide'f!t Clintpn probably was premature in .convening
. recent Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
"I think it set the process
back," he said. "It's a very, very
incendiary situation that's going
to require a great deal of work.
What bothers me more than
anything else is that the trust
level on botl1 li.cl~s has dimini&gt;hed."
'
If''

WASHINGTON (AL') -Another Ohioan
joined the ranks of congressional leaders Tuesday when Rep. Bob Ney was chosen as chairlhan of the House Admini1tration Comnuttee.
Ney's appointment by House Speaker Dennis Hastert bomted Ohio's clout 011 Capitol
Hill . .
· The stntc already had two ntembers of
Congress in Rcpubllcan leadership posts, two
major cqmmittee ch~irmen, two powerful
appropriations leaders and some minority
·
Democrats in high places.
In his new position, Ney, a Republican
from St. Clairsville. will lead a committee whci
has authority over areas dealing with the quality of life on Capitol Hill, such u operating·
parking facilities, assigning office space, running House restaurants, overseeing official
travel and handling the rules for congressional

Mols1r aMJ 2D-yelr sentefK'e ~

fi

Voinovich . and Specter met
·with Israeli officials in Jerusalem
:~nd with Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak in Cairo.
The senator said the talks

•

CINCINNATI {AP) -Supporte!s and critics of a police
officer charged with kiQing a
m~n in his custody ·argued Tuesday outside a · hearing on
whether the officer should lose
his pay.
Uniformed officers and
friends and relativ~s of officer
Robert Jorg applauded and
che~red him in a packed hallway
in City Hall. Supporters called
out, "Keep your head up, Bob"
and "Thanks for doing your job;
Bob."
·
. Some clashed briefly with
William Kirkland, a black con\munity activist who criticized
them for applauding an· officer
charged with killing someone.
"No one is above the law,"
said Kirkland; a member of the
grlmp the Black United Front.
'''For all these officers to come
down here and applaud ail officer who's ' been indicted, that's
reprehensible,."
. .
Jo~g was indicted on charges
ofinvoluntary manslal)ghter and
misde,meanor assault in the
, death Nov. 7 of Roger Owensby Jr., 29, of Cincinnati. Officer
Patrick Caton was indicted on a
charge of misdemeanor assault.
Both l!ave pleaded innocent.
. Th~. ,death of Owensby, who
was b)ack, has angeri!d black
a~tivis~, who allege that Cincinnati police· ha\re a history of

Ohio Republicans gain anothe'r House chairmanship

,ty.

,

It is Ohio's second attempt to bon the procedure. Rice in 1995 rejected the first lateterm abortion law as unconstitutional.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
upheld that ruling, and the U.S. Supreme
Court declined ro hear the case.
·
The state says, the new law was changed to
avoid criticisi)IS frpm federal co":rts that similar bans were too vague. For example, the new
law describes only the procedure in question
ond makes it clear that it does not attempt to
ban other forms of abortions, state officials say.

•

CLEVELAND {AP) -The engineering 'dea11 arWayne·State Uriiversity in Detroit has been named provost at Cleveland State U11iversi-

..

The quicker abortion procedure also keeps
blood loss to a minimum, Siiner told U.S. District Judge Walter Rice.
Rice is hearing a challenge to a state ban
against the procedure, which involves draining
and collapsing the sk.ull of a fetus before it is
fully removed from the uterus. Opponents call .
it partial-bihh abortion.
Dr. Martin Hask.ell, who operates clinics in
Cincinnati, Dayton and Akron, pioneered the
procedure. He argues tlpt the ban is unconstitutional because it would restrict a woman's
right to an abortion.

Critics of indicted·policem.an
Voinovich meets family dash
outside heanng ·

~ specializing in lev~raged buyout.;; ~nd venture c;lpital invcstmc1.1ts and

the new owners," he said.

- Wedneaday, January 10, 2001

·Doctor testifies that abortion procedure is safer ,

·BUCKEYE BRIEFS

I'

Wednetday, January 10,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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PageA4

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The

...

Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Dlene Kay Hill
Controller

Ltttm m 1M 111bor .n nkiM'If, Th11 rhould H l#rt rluut. J(I(J word.1. A.U ktttn an 1ubjftt
111 tdlll"f •nd ,.,, H tirn~d •lUI JnciW tldlln•• ,.,w trltphoM rramhr. No
J.tt1n will
- • • IH flllblhiHfl. UltmlhOMid IJf be pod wu, addiWilll'lf luull, not prnoiUIUtlu.
,
Thl 01irdmt1 uprwrlld In thl column 64/.ow 11rv tltl coJUIIUIII ofthr Ohio V.uty I'NbUthlnt

.,,.,,,g

.,...

Co.'• tdlrorlill lwud., unkn otlw,.,hl not1d.

NATIONAL VIEWS

nee
'

.. • Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram, on race and college admis·
sions: In the four years since the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled against using most considerations of race in admissions decisions at Texas' public universities, the state has struggled with other
ways of getting more minority students into higher education.
. The debate·about affirmation action has not disappeared. Instead,
jc )las gotten murkier. A series of court rulinS' last month make the
issue ripe for clarification.by the U.S. Supreme Court....
The Supreme Court.has not tackled this difficult area of college
admissions since ... But this is precisely the kind of vexatious problem that ~quires specific guidance amid conflicting .lower-court
opinions ....
What the court does need to do is define for the states, universities and prospective students consistent rules under the Constitutiofl.
.This is not about quotas vs. bigotry but about fundamental concepts of equality and ;jecess to higher education and how to be
inclusive without being exclusionary.
Under the current case law, a clear voice from the Supreme
&lt;;ourt is cruciaL

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,~

tariders

,

..

who treated him like a king, and lets me
know I should treat him better. He is a
slob, and doesn't like to bathe regularly.
He is also not particularly affectiO'nate.
I love Alfred, but I don't really like
him anymore. I am about ready to move
out, but decided to write for your advice
bero're I made such a ,bold move. Please
tell me what you think.-- Undecided in
Florida
Dear Florida: Let me get this
straight. Alfred barely S&gt;ys a kind word to
you, but praises other women in your
presence.You pay all your own bills and
half of everything else. He is not particularly affectionate, is a slob, and doesn't
bathe regularly. My question to you is,
what do you need him for' 'Dump that
loser :rnd move on. You can surely do
better. And no man at all might be a bi'g
ilnprovement.

Dear Ann Landers: A recent inhouse survey showt"d that men tend to
leave hotel rooms in better condition

than women. Why do you think this is
so' -· B. B. in Decatur, IU.
Dear Decatur: Probably because
women, when they are away from home,

want a REAL vacation. And who can
blame them?
'
That first kiss, that first embrace ...
Remember all those things tliat brought
you and your loved one together? Ann
Landers' new booklet, "How We Met," is
now available. This collection. of sentimental love stories wilJ make a terrific ·
gift for that special someone. For a co py,
please send a self-addressed, long, business-size enve lope and a check or

money order for $5.50 (this includes
postage and handling) to: How We Met,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562,
Chicago. IL 6061 1-0562 ·(in Canada,
S6.50). To find. om more about Ann Landers and read her past columns. visit rh~
~yndi ca te

Creators

www.cn:ators. con1.

web

page

at

.;

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1.·'-

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RUSHER'S VIEW
.

'

Harry Hopkins: American icon or Soviet agent?
As a law student in the late 1940s, 1became
fascinated with the revelations of Communist
penetJ!ltion of American society, including
Soviet espionage against the U.S. government.
The sworn testimony of former spy couriers
Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley
made it plain - at least to me - that hundreds of highly placed American citizens had
betrayed their country to advance the cause
and ultimate victory of the Soviet Union.
That conviction, which was shared by millions of myi'f.llow Americans, J;'I'SUlt~d in the
ferocious · cont~rsy that divided the coun•
try for more dfan a decade after the end of
World War II, as the Cold War began. A~ the
situation escalated with the conviction of
Alger Hiss; president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, for peljury in
denying that he had been a Soviet spy, the battle seemed to swaiin our favor. But the liber- .
al~. dreading the charge that they had ignored
the peril, counterattacked, turning Wi,consin
Senator Joseph McCarthy into an all-purpose
villain' who allegedly smeared ,innocent victims with groundless charges of Communism
or pro-Communism, and gradually the tide
turned. By the end of the 1950s the battle was
over, and it seemed clear that the "and-antiConullunists'' had won.
What no one but a few Intelligence professionals knew was that in the early 1940s our
government had recorded thousands of coded
messages from· Soviet · agents in Washington
and New York to their Moscow superjors,and
in the eluuing years they had managed to
decode many of them. These messages clearly
demonstrated that our side in the g~at cot1troversy was right. Alger Hiss had indeed been
a Soviet spy, as charged. So had Julius Rosen-

,.."'

.

William .

'

Rusher

NEA COLU~Nist
; ' J/(l

aitd

And they will be understandably astonished to
learn that in a message dated May 29, 1943,.
Iskhak Akhmerov, the chief Soviet "illegal"
agent in the United States at the time, ~ferred
to an Agent 19 who had reported on discussions between Roosevelt and Churchill in
Wasiungt~ri at which the agent had been present'. Only Harry Hopkins meets the require.:.
ments for this agent's identity. ~mall wonder
that Akhmcrov, in a lecture in Moscow in the
early 1960s1 id~ntitied Hopkins by name as
"the most important of :4! Soviet wartime
agents in the United States."
It took 50 years to bludgeon Alger Hiss's
defenders into admitting that this suave
bureaucrat, ·who rose to be chi'e f of the State
Department's Office of Special Political
Affairs, had actually been a Soviet agent all
along. And it will probably take another 50 t~
force FDR's admirers to concede that their
hero's closest con1idant and advisor was yet
another Soviet agent. .
But the documents and the testimony are
no~ on the public record, and they make it
plain that those of us who sounded the warning about Soviet espionage and policy 'subversion 50 years ago didn'~ know the half of it.
"The Venona Secrets" contains much else
that will shock those too young to remember
·these ancient battles. And for those of us who
do remember, it is comforting evidence that
the truth, however ' belatedly, has way of
comu1g out.·

berg
scores of others.
,, ,,,
Yet for ~asons still not explained, this
enormously important information was witHheld from the -American public until a few
short yeats ago, when Sen. Daniel Moynihan
insisted that the. damning ·documents be
declassified. Under their code name, "The
Venona Papers" are now available to everyone
through the Library of Congress.
.
~
To read th):se dispatches from MoscoW"
top spies is to glimpse the scope and success of
their efforts, and the priceless help they
1r~ceivcd from hundreds of Am~rican traitors.
As a guide to them, one cannot do better thim
t~ read "'the Venona Secrets" (Regnery'
2000), a rlew book by Herbert Romerstein
and the late Eric' Breindel.
Nearly 50 yea"s have passed since this controversy was at a boil, and at least 60 since
·Soviet espionage was at its peak,-so it is hardly sljrpri.sing that there are many millions of
Americans to whom even the name Alger
Hiss is utterly meaningless: But tthere are still
. many people alive ~ho can remember when ' (William Rl{sher is a Distinguished Fellow of
the 'chief confidant of President franklin the Claremont Instit11te for the Smdy of StatesRoosevelt was a man named Harry Hopkins. manship and Political Philosophy.) ·

a

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Some thoughts on approaching.the.age of wisdom

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.

'

amilp
edicine

health care field qualify to apply for one of three SI ,OlliJ Leo D.
Carsncr Memorial Scholarships ·sponsored by the Auxiliary of Cam-·
den-Clark Memorial· Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
To be eligible, students' m'\.st live in. the area served by. Camdenqark Memorial Hospital which includes 11 counties in West Vir·
ginia ·and Ohio. Applica.nts must have completed one year of college
at an accred!ted,·school or be in the final weeks of their first year.
Applications are available in the Volunteer Services Department
located on the third floor of the hospital, at the Information Desk in
the main lobby, or by calling 304-424-2847.All applications must be
-completed and returned by March 15.
Applications will be judged on their scholasti~ ability, leadership
attributes, potential contribution to the health care field 1 and financial need. The scholarship is paid dir&lt;:!:dy to the school.
Winners of the scholarships will be announced du~ing the Awciliary's annual luncheon to be held April 20 at t~e Holiday Inn. Funding fonl;ie scholarships was made available by a variety of auxiliary
projects.

'

· · Today is Wednesday, jan. I 0, the 1Oth. day of 2001. There are 355
daY' lefr in the year.
'
•
. Today's Highlight in History:
, On Jan. 10,_.1776, Thomas Paine published his influential pamphlet, "Common Sense."
.On this date:
.·
. hi 18(;1, Florida seceded from the Union.
• In 1870,John D. Rockefellr.:lncorporated Standard Oil.
.In 1920, the League of N:ltions was cstablisl)ed as the Treaty 'o f
V~tsailles went into effect.
: In 1928, the Soviet Union ordered the exile of Leon Trotsky.
•.
In 1946, the first General Assembly of the United Nations con. .
vened in London.
.
' ' In 1957, Harold Macmillan became prime minister of Britain,
fqllowing the resign~~tion of Anthony Eden.
',In 1967, Massachusetts Republican Edward W. Brpoke, the first
'
black elected to the U.S. Se'!_ate by popular vote, took his seat.
8Y RaD GIIIIH
,, In 1971, "Masterpiece Theatre'' premiered on PBS with host AlisI remember when I was 19 the legal
~ir Cooke inttoducing a drama series, "The First Churchills."
',
drinking
age was 21,so my ti:ien&lt;h and I had
.. In 1978, the Soviet Union launclled ·two cosmonauts aboard a
io · get fake IDs from wherever, just so we
SPYlu: capsule for a rendezvbus with the Salyut 6 space laboratory.
could get into the bars. I never had any 14C•
:In 1980, former AFL-CIO president George Meany died in .
cess with that approach, ~!nee my fake ID
• WJShington, D.C. at age 85.
·
'
said
I was a 27 -year-old Asian woman.
·
'' Ten years ago: Five days before a U.N. deadline for Iraq to withNext week I'll be having my 55th birthdraw from Kuwait, peace efforts intensified, with UN. Secretary.day. It's nothing special, and when I look at
Gen~ral Javier Perez -de Cuellar setting off on a mission ajmed at
my life, I'm a pretty average 55-year-old. 1
averting war.
lopk my age. I have about as many of my
Five years ago: "Russian troops allO\Ved a convoy of Chechen
faculties left as an average guy my age. And I
tebeb and 160 hostages to head for Chechnya, then surrounded
know a lot of 55-year-old guys; so I'm aware
~em in the village of Pervomayskaya. (After a five-day standoff,
of just how deptt11ing those statements a~.
Russian troops launched a massive military assault that tes,ulted in
So I'm tliinking about using a fake ID
the deaths of most of the rebels and some of the hostages.) ·
again. You' may look at me and not· be
. ; Ooe year ago: America Online announced it was buying Time
imprdaed that I'm 55, but what if I could
Warner for S162 billion. Peace talks between Israel and Syria
prove ,to you thit I'm 13? You'd think that
tedessed in West Virginia without agreement on riew b.or4er&amp; or any
was pretty &amp;ptcial -:- all the enerer. the not
· ot•er ~or eleinents of a land-for-peace treaty.
·
completely aC!d!ed brain, the sijplificartt hair
• :Today's Birthdays: Singer Gijele MacKenzie ·is 74. Opera singer
retention. I'd be the most amazing 73-yearsbkriU Milnes is 66: Rock singer-musician Ronni~ Hawkins is 66.
old you'd ever seen, other chan Tina Turner.
·Baseball Hall-of-Farner Willie McC&lt;&gt;Vey is 63. Movie direcror.WalI'd feel gi:&gt;od about your compliments, and
te~ Hill is 59. Singer Prank Sinatra Jr. js 57. Singer Rod Stewart is
you'd feel good thinking you have head56: Rock sinier-musician Donald Fagen (Steely DaJ;~) is 53. Boxer
room.
George Foreman is 52. Singer ·Pat Benatar is .48. Rock musician
Job sharlna
Michel Schenker (The Scorpions) is 46. Singer Shawn Colvin is 43.
.Yesterday, I saw a middle-~ged couple step
up to an information booth to ask for direcRock singer-musician Curt Kirkwood (Meat Puppets) is 42. Actor
tions.
The wife asked all the questions. The
Evan Handler is 40. Rock singer Brad Roberts (Crash 'lest Dum- ·
11\ies) is 37. Actress Trini Alvarado is 34. Rapper Chris Smith (Kris , husband itood quietly staring at the person
behind the countet. When they 'Were· don,e,
~) i.~ 22.Acror Josh Ryan Evans is 19.
the wife tllrned around and stared blankly ar
Thought forToday:"Sex is the tabasco sauce which an adole!cent
the husband. He then told her what th
national palate sprinkles on every course in the menu."- Mary Day
lnfoqnation
pers.?n h&amp;d said, and they left.
Winn,American writer (1888-1965).

•

-

Honored for service

~-

1I

this difficulr time in your life. Their
behavior is reprehensible. Make sure you
. .~...-.
h~~ some reputable character witness's
J
lined up in case the custody suit goes
forward. Good luck.
.,
An~ ·
Dear Ann Landers : I'm in ' my .late
60s, and have been living with "Alfred"
for. tour years. Alfred has a heart of gold,
··we~·
I IfF .
but :)le has some faults I, can no longer
ADVI!?E ,
;
tolerate.
.
When we are in a group, Alfred's
my ex-husband is plahning to sue f6r voice is the loudest. He loves being the
custody, even though the children have center of attention. He rarely says a kind
corroborated my acc"ia'tions of abuse. word to me, but never fails tci compliMy ex says my pare.n\(!.) nd siblings will ment other won1cn in my presence. He
tesuty on h1s beh:ilf,;1n court, and I tells them how lovely they look, what
1'
believe him.
pretty hair they have, how nicely they
What should I do? q &lt;lon't want to cut are dressed, and so on. He always opens
1i1yself off from my fajllily, nor do I want their car doors, but never Opens a door
to create ill will behwen my children for nte.
and their grandparepts . .I woult;l . never
I :nn in good physical condition, dress
forgive my pareni~ i.!r they helped n\y well, and keep a clean house. I pay all my
abusiw ex-husband gain custody. Any own bills and half of uverything else. He
suggestions? c· Wosupport you need at tells me about the women in his past

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

• Star 'fiibune, Minneapolis, on U.S. and global health programs:
Just over a dime doesn't buy much in the United States anymo~ ....
Yet a pittance by U.S. standards can prevent malaria and save a life
in much of the world.
It only takes 12 cents to purchase the drug ~atment needed to
stop malaria. That is why a much-needed, multimillion allocation
~from America will go a long way to combat the disease. Last week,
President Clinton signed the International Malaria Conttol Act,
under which the United States will spend $50 million to p=ent
and treat malaria in developing tp~jons.
. ,· It's a relatively small investmoo'-\vith huge returns, according to
a, recent U.N. report. ... The United States has made an important
&lt;;pntribution to the cause, but even more needs to be done to erad- ·
icate preventable disease. The new U.S. Congress must strive to
increase the current. $1.4 billion it spends on. global health pro-

'&gt;

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More US. investment can
stem global health problems

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Dear Ann Lenders: I was married
for 12 years to a man who was extremely abusive to me and 'our children. It
took me three years before I could find
the courage and financial stability to take
the kids and leave him. The children and
I are now very happy. .
•
·
The problem is that no one fron1 my
family believes my ex-husband ~as abusive. He has made a great effort to incor- .
porate himself into their lives, and can be
very charming and persuasive. He sees
my parents every weekend, and takes our
children •along. •T he children have told
me my parents say terrible things about
me, and have accused me of leaving my
husband for another man. This · is
absolutely not true. I had been planning
to leave my ex for thr~e years: My new
boyfriend came into the picture long
after I had made my de cision.
.
. ·
Now my children are in the difficult
position of defending me to my parents,
and I think this is awfuL What's worse is

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

larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

"Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Family ofabused woman doesn't b~lieve her story

$st418slid 1111948

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

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10.2001

_The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

•

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

'Arthritic Knee'
cften repaired
by surgery

Scout program grows strong

· 'M~dern Woodme~ of America, Camp 10900, recenl\ly hono,e!f
G~~f!~ K~s~~;,i}then~C?\'"t~ dog ~ar~~n, .and Lana Plani~ek,Athens
C•cy and county dog 'Warde,.; (&amp; "iheir conscientious and dedicated
community service" which centers around ~heir positions at the
Atliens :County "Artimal Shelter· and·• throughout Athelis Courlty.
Koska has served 19 years, and Planicek 17 years.
i ii

Bailey birthday celebrated
•

RACINE - · Savannah Rose
Bailey celebrated her third birthday with ' party at the home of
her parents, Boyd and l'ol)i .Bailey,
Dec. 15. A Barbie theme was carried out. \-A.
Attending were James, Crystal,
J.O. and St&lt;lven Sellers; Roy and
Dorotl)y Bailey, Roy lee, Crystal,
Sabra.. and Alyson Bailey, Tom,
Crystal and Braxton·Bailey, St..w,
Angel, Nikki and Vikki Young,
Carnie · a11d Courtn~y Callicoat,
Daphne Young, Jack and Rhonda
Lyons, Tommy VanMeter, Mark
and Heather Allen, Scott Nease,
Misty Hayman, Zach Carpenter,
Dawo, Cody and ~ar~t Jones,
S.V1n111h Rote Bailey
Brent, Wendy and · Elizabeth
Shuler, Joni Fisher and Jacob Dixen and Jamie Jones.
Sending gifts were Margaret McCoy, Marilyn and Christie Coop. er, and Kimberly Jenkins. ·
I
.

ScholarshJps offered .

POMEROY -

I

Meigs County students obtaining a degree in the

POMEROY - The Girl Scouts Appalachian Service Center in
Athens will now will Serve ·10,000 girls and 3,500 adult volunteers
from 12 counties in Ohio and'WestVirginia.
.
Girl Scouts of Black Diamond Council, Inc. , Cbarleston, W.Va.; ·
Heart
qf Ohio'
Girl
Scout Council located in Zanesville·I and Girl
·.
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,
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Scti11ts'-Seal of Ohio based in Columbus, an; the ·cow1cils that have
jhined forces to · com~ine .resources and strengths; striving tpwards
Girl Scouts of the USA's goal of-serving eyeey, girl, ,ever.ywhere.• ,,
Athens \':a~ selected as-the site for the regional service center due
, t_o i!s cel)tta\ (pq\\on amo!\g t\le counties;s~rved ~nd good accessi.
bility via state m~intained highways. and of its proximity to Ohio
· University. The ~aciliry will offer program and training spate· ~s well
as a retail shop feat~ ring uniforms, educational items, resources, etc.
'The grand openings of the Girl Scouts Appalachian Regional Service Center are scheduled for Sunday,Jan. 21 from 2 to 4 p.m. for Girl
Scout volu'nteers, and again on Thursday, jan. 25 from 5 to 7:30p.m.
for the community.
·
The facility is located at 1005 E State Street in Athens.
. Appalachia is a region stretching along the Appalachia11 Mountains
fro111 somhern New York to northern Mississippi. ·It includes all of
West Virginia and nin~ · counties in Ohio. Of the counries in the
strategic allialt~e servic.e areas, several an: considered by the Department of Labor ,to be "highly distressed."
A portion of the funding for this set-vice center was possible
through a grant from the Gpvemor's Office of Appalachia. Combined
funding from other alliance partners will brini Appalachian tradirions
to the already diverse Girl Scout programs offered.
"We are excited to be an integral part of this •kind of strategic
Alliance which is a first for Girl Scouts of the USA. This endeavor is
a living example of how our organization is adapting to reach every .
girl, everywhere. We a~ proud to be combining strengths to better
serve the Appalachian community," commented Heart of Ohio Girl
Scout Council Executive Director,Jo Taylor.
.
Taylor said that as the largest organization in the world commit·
ted to girls, Girl Scouts is the leading authority on girls. "Nationally,
o_ne in every nine girls is a Girl Scout, so Girl Scouting is truly everywhere.
The Appalachia'\ Resource Center is an exciting alliance and
· opportunity to serve the special nee~s of this region," she concluded.
For more information on the sirategic alliance or how to become
a part of Girl Scouts, tall 740-592-9490.

'

It struck me that they were acting as a
team. She focused on the questions and paid
no attention to the answers. &lt;He did just the
opposite. That's because marriage is the ulti•
mate in job sharing. Yesi ,yoI\ could feed, ·
shelter ·and clothe yoursel( all on your own,
but isn't it better to share those responsibilities with another person, 'bringing us closer
to zero _unemployment and . giving yo\'
someone else ·to blame?
· ·
Marriage as job sharing is a perfectly natural phenomenon. It starts with conception.
·That's job sharing at its best - pleasant
working c9nditions and extref!lely short
shifts.
.
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Am I gettln&amp; oldP
· If you're·the kind of person who tends to
live in ~ (antasy WOI'ld, you piay not be aware
that you are old.This ,i:an lead to agreat de~ ·
of ~tnbarrassment for you ' and all the other
memben of you~ motorcycle club, So here it
a brief lbt of ways to' t~ll that you arc old:
• The oldies radio jtation u playins sonp
froin your children's fra.
• When you're at a nude beach, people
think you still have ypur clothes on.
• You comb your hair with the palm of
your hand.
· • If anybody wants you to stand for the
national anthem, th,ey have to !live you lO
minute!' notice. ,
• 'Evel'}'body ' pass.es you on the highway,
and most of them honk and wave their filu,
•Your life insurance salesman stopped call-

"

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'•

ing 10 years ago.
Tip of the icebe~g
I know you're expected to tjp every time
you go to a restaurant or any time somebody
carries your suitcase, but I have a few prob.::
len:u with that.
Now I don't want you to think I'm just
cheap. (I am, but I' don't want you to think
it.) No, this has more to do with unfair business practices than parsimony. I don't like to
tip when 1 have no choice. It reminds me of
when I was a kid being forced to kiss my
aunt. Tipping at a restaurant when you got
poor service i~ like taking your wont .
employee arid giving him a raise.instead of a
pink slip. And the bellman who wrestles ,the
auit~ase out -of your hand doesn't deserve a
tip; he should be charged with theft.
•
And this standard 15 percent thing is
hutting everybody. I'd rather not tip at · all
when I get bad service, and then tip like the
Sultan of Brunei when I g_et looked alter :
properly.
· Quote of the Day: "I wish someone would
invept a better mirror. The ones they have
now seem to get worse every .year.'' - Red
Green
(Red Green is the star f.[ "Tire Red Green
Shoar.'' a telev!sion series seen In tl.e U.S. 0 n,

PBS and in Canada on the CBC Network, and.
tltr dlltlior of"Tht R.ed Green Book" and "Red
Gmn'lllllu Can: A Love Story,'') '

.C OMMUNITY CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY
.
Middleport Lit·
erary club, 2 ·p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Public: Libr,ry. Frankie
Hunnel to review "Victoria's Oaugh·
tera' by Jerrold M. Packard. Annual
business meeting to Include elec·
lion ol officers.
·
·
MID[)L~PORT-

''"'
. RACINE - Southern Hlgtl
School A!hl11tic Booaters,"Thuradliy,
7:30 p.rn In the high school cafete·_,,
ria. Parenti, boosters, and commu- .
nity member Invited. Wort&lt;ere need
for varsity and reaerve basketball '
concesaion strand&amp;. .

olficers will be elected.

Tho Community Coltndor Ia pubRACINE - Soult)ern .versus llohod 11 I frn 11rv1.. to non-profit
Meigs !lOY•' junior high game ·origi· · groupe wishing to announce moet·
nally •IICI)eduled to be played at lnga and apeelol oventa. Tho colon·
Southern High School has been dar I• not dHignod to promote utaa
moved to Southern Junior, High
School with the game to start at or lund rliaoro of any JYP&lt;I· ltoma oro
printed only •• oppe, perm ita' and
·
•
!:!• noon. The girls' team will play at
con
not be guoro""'d to be printed 1
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern . ATHENS - Governing Board, 11 Meigs Junior High' School in Middle·
opeelftc number of doyo. '
Local Board ol Education, organiza- Alhene-Melg&amp; Educational Service , port at noon aa Dlanhed&gt;
tional meeting Wednesday, 6 p.m. Center, 200t organizational meetfollowed by regular meeting, Tup· ing, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Athens
l'lanninl,! lor·' ottr l'ttlltt'l' hl'l,!in~ loda1 ~
pars Plaine administrative offices, . office, 507 Richland Ave. January
regular meeting will follow organiZe· I
'

Question: I'm 61-year-old
man, and I've been having trouble with my knees for the past
year ·or so. My family doctor says
I have arthritis and wants me, to
see a specialist for an arthroscopic exam and possible surgery.
She told me that she thought I
might be a good candidate for
this type of surgery. Can you
explain to me what arthroscopic
surgery is?
Answer: Thirty years ago
arthrosc,opy was developed as a
tool · to diagnose joint problems
particularly those in the
· knee. Today it can be used to
diagnose and .repair injuries in

virtually any of the body's major
joints.
An arthroscope is a slender,
tube-shaped surgical ii1Strument
that uses fiber optics to capture a
TV image. The surgeo11 passes it
thrt&gt;ugh a small skin incision
·then deeper· into the joi111 iu.Jf
I&lt;&gt; actually look for the cause of
the joim problem. Then other
specially designed instruments
are imerted through additional
small incisions to complete the
operation.
· An advantage of arthroscopic
surgery is that the small incisions
usually heal very quickly, often
allowing ciaily activities to be
resumed within a few days or
weeks. This is beneficial for
those with arthritis, like you, but
also for people suffering sports
injuries.

Arthritis, as in your case, ri!Ost
comi:nonly affects the · knee
joint. This deg~nerative disorder
involves damage to the bones
and changes in the protective
layer of cartilage that covers the
joint surfaces. While 100 percent
of those over age 60 have damage to the knee cartilage, you. are
in the unlucky two percent that
actually have clinical problems
with their knees. For these folks,
arthroscopy is often very helpful

IIIIo

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in both diagnosing and treating
their sore joints.
Arthroscopic surgery for knee
problems caused by injury ·to
cartilage can involve removing
loose fragments of bone or c~"­
tilage from the joint .as well :is
trimming away or reshaping
damaged areas of cartilage. This
can help reduce the pain and
decreased range of motion that
are typical of arthritis. Unfortunately, it docs not permanently
cure the underlying arthritic
condition.
A more curative approach is
possible in some cases where the
damage is not too severe - bUt
usually only in those under 30.
In this procedure the surgeon,
during arthroscopy, transplants
cells into the joint that grow
new cartilage. These cells called chondrocytes - can then
set about the task of rep airing
the damaged areas.
Unfortunately, arthroscopic
surgery isn't appropriate for aiL
types of arthritic joint damage .
Occasionally benefit ,·an be pwvided by the more traditional
joint surgery ilwolving bigger
incisions and larger surgical
tools. Hopefully, your family
doctor is correct,and you are a
good candidate for arthroscopic
surgery.
One final word about knee
· surgery. Though it doesn't sound
likely in your case, many people
with arthritic knees have to
eventually
undergo
knee
replacement surgery, in which
the damaged joint is replaced
with an artificial one . Bone,
metal, ceramic and plastic parts
have all been used. Metal parts
for knee replacement are currently the most popular. thougli
. this surgery is quite dramati c in
its approach, it is also usually
quite successful.
•

11

Family Medicine." is a weekly

colum1·1. To submit questiom, write
ro jolm C. w,,y; D. 0., Olrio Uni,

versify College of Osteopathic Med'
icilu, Grosvc11or Hall, Atlrcns, 0/riQ
45701. Past colrm"'s arc availdvle
otrli11c at www.fllradio.orglfill. '

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MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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Best Prices in the Areal

'

lionel mfetlng.
. .' ,
THURSDAY
know It's time , to start
'
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
llnanclalluture, but
TUPPEflS PLAINS - VFW :
water Conservation District Board
to start... oall
at SuperviSors, special session, 90~ Tuppe!' ~Iaine hall, _7:30 p,m. · ·,'
review your
,.
ThurSday, ·11 a.m. al the Meigs Thursday. D1nner at 6:30 p,,n.
consider your
SWCD office, 33191 Hiland ROI!d.
~~~~~~nt
~~~:~:~~~~~:;u!~ poaslble
FRIDAY
Purpqae to review annual work plan . ~
lr
you, and
REEDSVILLE
-8pectal
meeting
.and' discuss watershed projects.
otthe Olive Township Trustees 6:30
p.m.
Frtday, township garage.
POMEROY - Pr'!Ceplor Bela
Beta Chapter, 'Beta Sigma Phi Inventory.
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran
SATURDAY
311 Fourth St., Marietta, ·ou: 45750
Church. Donene Dugan to be guest
POMEROY - Burlingham Mod·
speaker. Ruth Riffle and Clarice
740-376-~H86
em Woodmen, 4:30 SI\Urdey, acup
Krautter. hostesses.
aupper. c;amp wiA provide acupa,
800·726-8412
'
CHESTER - Shade River crackers and bev!!rage~ and those
Lodge 453, regular meeting, Thure· . attending , a~e to taka eomathln{j
which will complement soup. New
day, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
'

'

Ro1W1ne Groll,
Jane Ann Karr Aanestlld
and Sarah Kunn,
Audioltlgists

Cutting Edge Hearing Technology

408 Rlchl1nd Avenue, Athens, OH • 592·2863 • $00·4S 1-!1806

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PageA4

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The

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Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Dlene Kay Hill
Controller

Ltttm m 1M 111bor .n nkiM'If, Th11 rhould H l#rt rluut. J(I(J word.1. A.U ktttn an 1ubjftt
111 tdlll"f •nd ,.,, H tirn~d •lUI JnciW tldlln•• ,.,w trltphoM rramhr. No
J.tt1n will
- • • IH flllblhiHfl. UltmlhOMid IJf be pod wu, addiWilll'lf luull, not prnoiUIUtlu.
,
Thl 01irdmt1 uprwrlld In thl column 64/.ow 11rv tltl coJUIIUIII ofthr Ohio V.uty I'NbUthlnt

.,,.,,,g

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Co.'• tdlrorlill lwud., unkn otlw,.,hl not1d.

NATIONAL VIEWS

nee
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.. • Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram, on race and college admis·
sions: In the four years since the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled against using most considerations of race in admissions decisions at Texas' public universities, the state has struggled with other
ways of getting more minority students into higher education.
. The debate·about affirmation action has not disappeared. Instead,
jc )las gotten murkier. A series of court rulinS' last month make the
issue ripe for clarification.by the U.S. Supreme Court....
The Supreme Court.has not tackled this difficult area of college
admissions since ... But this is precisely the kind of vexatious problem that ~quires specific guidance amid conflicting .lower-court
opinions ....
What the court does need to do is define for the states, universities and prospective students consistent rules under the Constitutiofl.
.This is not about quotas vs. bigotry but about fundamental concepts of equality and ;jecess to higher education and how to be
inclusive without being exclusionary.
Under the current case law, a clear voice from the Supreme
&lt;;ourt is cruciaL

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,~

tariders

,

..

who treated him like a king, and lets me
know I should treat him better. He is a
slob, and doesn't like to bathe regularly.
He is also not particularly affectiO'nate.
I love Alfred, but I don't really like
him anymore. I am about ready to move
out, but decided to write for your advice
bero're I made such a ,bold move. Please
tell me what you think.-- Undecided in
Florida
Dear Florida: Let me get this
straight. Alfred barely S&gt;ys a kind word to
you, but praises other women in your
presence.You pay all your own bills and
half of everything else. He is not particularly affectionate, is a slob, and doesn't
bathe regularly. My question to you is,
what do you need him for' 'Dump that
loser :rnd move on. You can surely do
better. And no man at all might be a bi'g
ilnprovement.

Dear Ann Landers: A recent inhouse survey showt"d that men tend to
leave hotel rooms in better condition

than women. Why do you think this is
so' -· B. B. in Decatur, IU.
Dear Decatur: Probably because
women, when they are away from home,

want a REAL vacation. And who can
blame them?
'
That first kiss, that first embrace ...
Remember all those things tliat brought
you and your loved one together? Ann
Landers' new booklet, "How We Met," is
now available. This collection. of sentimental love stories wilJ make a terrific ·
gift for that special someone. For a co py,
please send a self-addressed, long, business-size enve lope and a check or

money order for $5.50 (this includes
postage and handling) to: How We Met,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562,
Chicago. IL 6061 1-0562 ·(in Canada,
S6.50). To find. om more about Ann Landers and read her past columns. visit rh~
~yndi ca te

Creators

www.cn:ators. con1.

web

page

at

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RUSHER'S VIEW
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Harry Hopkins: American icon or Soviet agent?
As a law student in the late 1940s, 1became
fascinated with the revelations of Communist
penetJ!ltion of American society, including
Soviet espionage against the U.S. government.
The sworn testimony of former spy couriers
Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley
made it plain - at least to me - that hundreds of highly placed American citizens had
betrayed their country to advance the cause
and ultimate victory of the Soviet Union.
That conviction, which was shared by millions of myi'f.llow Americans, J;'I'SUlt~d in the
ferocious · cont~rsy that divided the coun•
try for more dfan a decade after the end of
World War II, as the Cold War began. A~ the
situation escalated with the conviction of
Alger Hiss; president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, for peljury in
denying that he had been a Soviet spy, the battle seemed to swaiin our favor. But the liber- .
al~. dreading the charge that they had ignored
the peril, counterattacked, turning Wi,consin
Senator Joseph McCarthy into an all-purpose
villain' who allegedly smeared ,innocent victims with groundless charges of Communism
or pro-Communism, and gradually the tide
turned. By the end of the 1950s the battle was
over, and it seemed clear that the "and-antiConullunists'' had won.
What no one but a few Intelligence professionals knew was that in the early 1940s our
government had recorded thousands of coded
messages from· Soviet · agents in Washington
and New York to their Moscow superjors,and
in the eluuing years they had managed to
decode many of them. These messages clearly
demonstrated that our side in the g~at cot1troversy was right. Alger Hiss had indeed been
a Soviet spy, as charged. So had Julius Rosen-

,.."'

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William .

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Rusher

NEA COLU~Nist
; ' J/(l

aitd

And they will be understandably astonished to
learn that in a message dated May 29, 1943,.
Iskhak Akhmerov, the chief Soviet "illegal"
agent in the United States at the time, ~ferred
to an Agent 19 who had reported on discussions between Roosevelt and Churchill in
Wasiungt~ri at which the agent had been present'. Only Harry Hopkins meets the require.:.
ments for this agent's identity. ~mall wonder
that Akhmcrov, in a lecture in Moscow in the
early 1960s1 id~ntitied Hopkins by name as
"the most important of :4! Soviet wartime
agents in the United States."
It took 50 years to bludgeon Alger Hiss's
defenders into admitting that this suave
bureaucrat, ·who rose to be chi'e f of the State
Department's Office of Special Political
Affairs, had actually been a Soviet agent all
along. And it will probably take another 50 t~
force FDR's admirers to concede that their
hero's closest con1idant and advisor was yet
another Soviet agent. .
But the documents and the testimony are
no~ on the public record, and they make it
plain that those of us who sounded the warning about Soviet espionage and policy 'subversion 50 years ago didn'~ know the half of it.
"The Venona Secrets" contains much else
that will shock those too young to remember
·these ancient battles. And for those of us who
do remember, it is comforting evidence that
the truth, however ' belatedly, has way of
comu1g out.·

berg
scores of others.
,, ,,,
Yet for ~asons still not explained, this
enormously important information was witHheld from the -American public until a few
short yeats ago, when Sen. Daniel Moynihan
insisted that the. damning ·documents be
declassified. Under their code name, "The
Venona Papers" are now available to everyone
through the Library of Congress.
.
~
To read th):se dispatches from MoscoW"
top spies is to glimpse the scope and success of
their efforts, and the priceless help they
1r~ceivcd from hundreds of Am~rican traitors.
As a guide to them, one cannot do better thim
t~ read "'the Venona Secrets" (Regnery'
2000), a rlew book by Herbert Romerstein
and the late Eric' Breindel.
Nearly 50 yea"s have passed since this controversy was at a boil, and at least 60 since
·Soviet espionage was at its peak,-so it is hardly sljrpri.sing that there are many millions of
Americans to whom even the name Alger
Hiss is utterly meaningless: But tthere are still
. many people alive ~ho can remember when ' (William Rl{sher is a Distinguished Fellow of
the 'chief confidant of President franklin the Claremont Instit11te for the Smdy of StatesRoosevelt was a man named Harry Hopkins. manship and Political Philosophy.) ·

a

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Some thoughts on approaching.the.age of wisdom

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amilp
edicine

health care field qualify to apply for one of three SI ,OlliJ Leo D.
Carsncr Memorial Scholarships ·sponsored by the Auxiliary of Cam-·
den-Clark Memorial· Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
To be eligible, students' m'\.st live in. the area served by. Camdenqark Memorial Hospital which includes 11 counties in West Vir·
ginia ·and Ohio. Applica.nts must have completed one year of college
at an accred!ted,·school or be in the final weeks of their first year.
Applications are available in the Volunteer Services Department
located on the third floor of the hospital, at the Information Desk in
the main lobby, or by calling 304-424-2847.All applications must be
-completed and returned by March 15.
Applications will be judged on their scholasti~ ability, leadership
attributes, potential contribution to the health care field 1 and financial need. The scholarship is paid dir&lt;:!:dy to the school.
Winners of the scholarships will be announced du~ing the Awciliary's annual luncheon to be held April 20 at t~e Holiday Inn. Funding fonl;ie scholarships was made available by a variety of auxiliary
projects.

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· · Today is Wednesday, jan. I 0, the 1Oth. day of 2001. There are 355
daY' lefr in the year.
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. Today's Highlight in History:
, On Jan. 10,_.1776, Thomas Paine published his influential pamphlet, "Common Sense."
.On this date:
.·
. hi 18(;1, Florida seceded from the Union.
• In 1870,John D. Rockefellr.:lncorporated Standard Oil.
.In 1920, the League of N:ltions was cstablisl)ed as the Treaty 'o f
V~tsailles went into effect.
: In 1928, the Soviet Union ordered the exile of Leon Trotsky.
•.
In 1946, the first General Assembly of the United Nations con. .
vened in London.
.
' ' In 1957, Harold Macmillan became prime minister of Britain,
fqllowing the resign~~tion of Anthony Eden.
',In 1967, Massachusetts Republican Edward W. Brpoke, the first
'
black elected to the U.S. Se'!_ate by popular vote, took his seat.
8Y RaD GIIIIH
,, In 1971, "Masterpiece Theatre'' premiered on PBS with host AlisI remember when I was 19 the legal
~ir Cooke inttoducing a drama series, "The First Churchills."
',
drinking
age was 21,so my ti:ien&lt;h and I had
.. In 1978, the Soviet Union launclled ·two cosmonauts aboard a
io · get fake IDs from wherever, just so we
SPYlu: capsule for a rendezvbus with the Salyut 6 space laboratory.
could get into the bars. I never had any 14C•
:In 1980, former AFL-CIO president George Meany died in .
cess with that approach, ~!nee my fake ID
• WJShington, D.C. at age 85.
·
'
said
I was a 27 -year-old Asian woman.
·
'' Ten years ago: Five days before a U.N. deadline for Iraq to withNext week I'll be having my 55th birthdraw from Kuwait, peace efforts intensified, with UN. Secretary.day. It's nothing special, and when I look at
Gen~ral Javier Perez -de Cuellar setting off on a mission ajmed at
my life, I'm a pretty average 55-year-old. 1
averting war.
lopk my age. I have about as many of my
Five years ago: "Russian troops allO\Ved a convoy of Chechen
faculties left as an average guy my age. And I
tebeb and 160 hostages to head for Chechnya, then surrounded
know a lot of 55-year-old guys; so I'm aware
~em in the village of Pervomayskaya. (After a five-day standoff,
of just how deptt11ing those statements a~.
Russian troops launched a massive military assault that tes,ulted in
So I'm tliinking about using a fake ID
the deaths of most of the rebels and some of the hostages.) ·
again. You' may look at me and not· be
. ; Ooe year ago: America Online announced it was buying Time
imprdaed that I'm 55, but what if I could
Warner for S162 billion. Peace talks between Israel and Syria
prove ,to you thit I'm 13? You'd think that
tedessed in West Virginia without agreement on riew b.or4er&amp; or any
was pretty &amp;ptcial -:- all the enerer. the not
· ot•er ~or eleinents of a land-for-peace treaty.
·
completely aC!d!ed brain, the sijplificartt hair
• :Today's Birthdays: Singer Gijele MacKenzie ·is 74. Opera singer
retention. I'd be the most amazing 73-yearsbkriU Milnes is 66: Rock singer-musician Ronni~ Hawkins is 66.
old you'd ever seen, other chan Tina Turner.
·Baseball Hall-of-Farner Willie McC&lt;&gt;Vey is 63. Movie direcror.WalI'd feel gi:&gt;od about your compliments, and
te~ Hill is 59. Singer Prank Sinatra Jr. js 57. Singer Rod Stewart is
you'd feel good thinking you have head56: Rock sinier-musician Donald Fagen (Steely DaJ;~) is 53. Boxer
room.
George Foreman is 52. Singer ·Pat Benatar is .48. Rock musician
Job sharlna
Michel Schenker (The Scorpions) is 46. Singer Shawn Colvin is 43.
.Yesterday, I saw a middle-~ged couple step
up to an information booth to ask for direcRock singer-musician Curt Kirkwood (Meat Puppets) is 42. Actor
tions.
The wife asked all the questions. The
Evan Handler is 40. Rock singer Brad Roberts (Crash 'lest Dum- ·
11\ies) is 37. Actress Trini Alvarado is 34. Rapper Chris Smith (Kris , husband itood quietly staring at the person
behind the countet. When they 'Were· don,e,
~) i.~ 22.Acror Josh Ryan Evans is 19.
the wife tllrned around and stared blankly ar
Thought forToday:"Sex is the tabasco sauce which an adole!cent
the husband. He then told her what th
national palate sprinkles on every course in the menu."- Mary Day
lnfoqnation
pers.?n h&amp;d said, and they left.
Winn,American writer (1888-1965).

•

-

Honored for service

~-

1I

this difficulr time in your life. Their
behavior is reprehensible. Make sure you
. .~...-.
h~~ some reputable character witness's
J
lined up in case the custody suit goes
forward. Good luck.
.,
An~ ·
Dear Ann Landers : I'm in ' my .late
60s, and have been living with "Alfred"
for. tour years. Alfred has a heart of gold,
··we~·
I IfF .
but :)le has some faults I, can no longer
ADVI!?E ,
;
tolerate.
.
When we are in a group, Alfred's
my ex-husband is plahning to sue f6r voice is the loudest. He loves being the
custody, even though the children have center of attention. He rarely says a kind
corroborated my acc"ia'tions of abuse. word to me, but never fails tci compliMy ex says my pare.n\(!.) nd siblings will ment other won1cn in my presence. He
tesuty on h1s beh:ilf,;1n court, and I tells them how lovely they look, what
1'
believe him.
pretty hair they have, how nicely they
What should I do? q &lt;lon't want to cut are dressed, and so on. He always opens
1i1yself off from my fajllily, nor do I want their car doors, but never Opens a door
to create ill will behwen my children for nte.
and their grandparepts . .I woult;l . never
I :nn in good physical condition, dress
forgive my pareni~ i.!r they helped n\y well, and keep a clean house. I pay all my
abusiw ex-husband gain custody. Any own bills and half of uverything else. He
suggestions? c· Wosupport you need at tells me about the women in his past

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

• Star 'fiibune, Minneapolis, on U.S. and global health programs:
Just over a dime doesn't buy much in the United States anymo~ ....
Yet a pittance by U.S. standards can prevent malaria and save a life
in much of the world.
It only takes 12 cents to purchase the drug ~atment needed to
stop malaria. That is why a much-needed, multimillion allocation
~from America will go a long way to combat the disease. Last week,
President Clinton signed the International Malaria Conttol Act,
under which the United States will spend $50 million to p=ent
and treat malaria in developing tp~jons.
. ,· It's a relatively small investmoo'-\vith huge returns, according to
a, recent U.N. report. ... The United States has made an important
&lt;;pntribution to the cause, but even more needs to be done to erad- ·
icate preventable disease. The new U.S. Congress must strive to
increase the current. $1.4 billion it spends on. global health pro-

'&gt;

,.,._..

. ~

,.

More US. investment can
stem global health problems

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..n. 10,1001

•

Dear Ann Lenders: I was married
for 12 years to a man who was extremely abusive to me and 'our children. It
took me three years before I could find
the courage and financial stability to take
the kids and leave him. The children and
I are now very happy. .
•
·
The problem is that no one fron1 my
family believes my ex-husband ~as abusive. He has made a great effort to incor- .
porate himself into their lives, and can be
very charming and persuasive. He sees
my parents every weekend, and takes our
children •along. •T he children have told
me my parents say terrible things about
me, and have accused me of leaving my
husband for another man. This · is
absolutely not true. I had been planning
to leave my ex for thr~e years: My new
boyfriend came into the picture long
after I had made my de cision.
.
. ·
Now my children are in the difficult
position of defending me to my parents,
and I think this is awfuL What's worse is

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

larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

"Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Family ofabused woman doesn't b~lieve her story

$st418slid 1111948

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

•

10.2001

_The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

•

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

'Arthritic Knee'
cften repaired
by surgery

Scout program grows strong

· 'M~dern Woodme~ of America, Camp 10900, recenl\ly hono,e!f
G~~f!~ K~s~~;,i}then~C?\'"t~ dog ~ar~~n, .and Lana Plani~ek,Athens
C•cy and county dog 'Warde,.; (&amp; "iheir conscientious and dedicated
community service" which centers around ~heir positions at the
Atliens :County "Artimal Shelter· and·• throughout Athelis Courlty.
Koska has served 19 years, and Planicek 17 years.
i ii

Bailey birthday celebrated
•

RACINE - · Savannah Rose
Bailey celebrated her third birthday with ' party at the home of
her parents, Boyd and l'ol)i .Bailey,
Dec. 15. A Barbie theme was carried out. \-A.
Attending were James, Crystal,
J.O. and St&lt;lven Sellers; Roy and
Dorotl)y Bailey, Roy lee, Crystal,
Sabra.. and Alyson Bailey, Tom,
Crystal and Braxton·Bailey, St..w,
Angel, Nikki and Vikki Young,
Carnie · a11d Courtn~y Callicoat,
Daphne Young, Jack and Rhonda
Lyons, Tommy VanMeter, Mark
and Heather Allen, Scott Nease,
Misty Hayman, Zach Carpenter,
Dawo, Cody and ~ar~t Jones,
S.V1n111h Rote Bailey
Brent, Wendy and · Elizabeth
Shuler, Joni Fisher and Jacob Dixen and Jamie Jones.
Sending gifts were Margaret McCoy, Marilyn and Christie Coop. er, and Kimberly Jenkins. ·
I
.

ScholarshJps offered .

POMEROY -

I

Meigs County students obtaining a degree in the

POMEROY - The Girl Scouts Appalachian Service Center in
Athens will now will Serve ·10,000 girls and 3,500 adult volunteers
from 12 counties in Ohio and'WestVirginia.
.
Girl Scouts of Black Diamond Council, Inc. , Cbarleston, W.Va.; ·
Heart
qf Ohio'
Girl
Scout Council located in Zanesville·I and Girl
·.
.
,
'
Scti11ts'-Seal of Ohio based in Columbus, an; the ·cow1cils that have
jhined forces to · com~ine .resources and strengths; striving tpwards
Girl Scouts of the USA's goal of-serving eyeey, girl, ,ever.ywhere.• ,,
Athens \':a~ selected as-the site for the regional service center due
, t_o i!s cel)tta\ (pq\\on amo!\g t\le counties;s~rved ~nd good accessi.
bility via state m~intained highways. and of its proximity to Ohio
· University. The ~aciliry will offer program and training spate· ~s well
as a retail shop feat~ ring uniforms, educational items, resources, etc.
'The grand openings of the Girl Scouts Appalachian Regional Service Center are scheduled for Sunday,Jan. 21 from 2 to 4 p.m. for Girl
Scout volu'nteers, and again on Thursday, jan. 25 from 5 to 7:30p.m.
for the community.
·
The facility is located at 1005 E State Street in Athens.
. Appalachia is a region stretching along the Appalachia11 Mountains
fro111 somhern New York to northern Mississippi. ·It includes all of
West Virginia and nin~ · counties in Ohio. Of the counries in the
strategic allialt~e servic.e areas, several an: considered by the Department of Labor ,to be "highly distressed."
A portion of the funding for this set-vice center was possible
through a grant from the Gpvemor's Office of Appalachia. Combined
funding from other alliance partners will brini Appalachian tradirions
to the already diverse Girl Scout programs offered.
"We are excited to be an integral part of this •kind of strategic
Alliance which is a first for Girl Scouts of the USA. This endeavor is
a living example of how our organization is adapting to reach every .
girl, everywhere. We a~ proud to be combining strengths to better
serve the Appalachian community," commented Heart of Ohio Girl
Scout Council Executive Director,Jo Taylor.
.
Taylor said that as the largest organization in the world commit·
ted to girls, Girl Scouts is the leading authority on girls. "Nationally,
o_ne in every nine girls is a Girl Scout, so Girl Scouting is truly everywhere.
The Appalachia'\ Resource Center is an exciting alliance and
· opportunity to serve the special nee~s of this region," she concluded.
For more information on the sirategic alliance or how to become
a part of Girl Scouts, tall 740-592-9490.

'

It struck me that they were acting as a
team. She focused on the questions and paid
no attention to the answers. &lt;He did just the
opposite. That's because marriage is the ulti•
mate in job sharing. Yesi ,yoI\ could feed, ·
shelter ·and clothe yoursel( all on your own,
but isn't it better to share those responsibilities with another person, 'bringing us closer
to zero _unemployment and . giving yo\'
someone else ·to blame?
· ·
Marriage as job sharing is a perfectly natural phenomenon. It starts with conception.
·That's job sharing at its best - pleasant
working c9nditions and extref!lely short
shifts.
.
'
'
Am I gettln&amp; oldP
· If you're·the kind of person who tends to
live in ~ (antasy WOI'ld, you piay not be aware
that you are old.This ,i:an lead to agreat de~ ·
of ~tnbarrassment for you ' and all the other
memben of you~ motorcycle club, So here it
a brief lbt of ways to' t~ll that you arc old:
• The oldies radio jtation u playins sonp
froin your children's fra.
• When you're at a nude beach, people
think you still have ypur clothes on.
• You comb your hair with the palm of
your hand.
· • If anybody wants you to stand for the
national anthem, th,ey have to !live you lO
minute!' notice. ,
• 'Evel'}'body ' pass.es you on the highway,
and most of them honk and wave their filu,
•Your life insurance salesman stopped call-

"

'

'•

ing 10 years ago.
Tip of the icebe~g
I know you're expected to tjp every time
you go to a restaurant or any time somebody
carries your suitcase, but I have a few prob.::
len:u with that.
Now I don't want you to think I'm just
cheap. (I am, but I' don't want you to think
it.) No, this has more to do with unfair business practices than parsimony. I don't like to
tip when 1 have no choice. It reminds me of
when I was a kid being forced to kiss my
aunt. Tipping at a restaurant when you got
poor service i~ like taking your wont .
employee arid giving him a raise.instead of a
pink slip. And the bellman who wrestles ,the
auit~ase out -of your hand doesn't deserve a
tip; he should be charged with theft.
•
And this standard 15 percent thing is
hutting everybody. I'd rather not tip at · all
when I get bad service, and then tip like the
Sultan of Brunei when I g_et looked alter :
properly.
· Quote of the Day: "I wish someone would
invept a better mirror. The ones they have
now seem to get worse every .year.'' - Red
Green
(Red Green is the star f.[ "Tire Red Green
Shoar.'' a telev!sion series seen In tl.e U.S. 0 n,

PBS and in Canada on the CBC Network, and.
tltr dlltlior of"Tht R.ed Green Book" and "Red
Gmn'lllllu Can: A Love Story,'') '

.C OMMUNITY CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY
.
Middleport Lit·
erary club, 2 ·p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Public: Libr,ry. Frankie
Hunnel to review "Victoria's Oaugh·
tera' by Jerrold M. Packard. Annual
business meeting to Include elec·
lion ol officers.
·
·
MID[)L~PORT-

''"'
. RACINE - Southern Hlgtl
School A!hl11tic Booaters,"Thuradliy,
7:30 p.rn In the high school cafete·_,,
ria. Parenti, boosters, and commu- .
nity member Invited. Wort&lt;ere need
for varsity and reaerve basketball '
concesaion strand&amp;. .

olficers will be elected.

Tho Community Coltndor Ia pubRACINE - Soult)ern .versus llohod 11 I frn 11rv1.. to non-profit
Meigs !lOY•' junior high game ·origi· · groupe wishing to announce moet·
nally •IICI)eduled to be played at lnga and apeelol oventa. Tho colon·
Southern High School has been dar I• not dHignod to promote utaa
moved to Southern Junior, High
School with the game to start at or lund rliaoro of any JYP&lt;I· ltoma oro
printed only •• oppe, perm ita' and
·
•
!:!• noon. The girls' team will play at
con
not be guoro""'d to be printed 1
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern . ATHENS - Governing Board, 11 Meigs Junior High' School in Middle·
opeelftc number of doyo. '
Local Board ol Education, organiza- Alhene-Melg&amp; Educational Service , port at noon aa Dlanhed&gt;
tional meeting Wednesday, 6 p.m. Center, 200t organizational meetfollowed by regular meeting, Tup· ing, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Athens
l'lanninl,! lor·' ottr l'ttlltt'l' hl'l,!in~ loda1 ~
pars Plaine administrative offices, . office, 507 Richland Ave. January
regular meeting will follow organiZe· I
'

Question: I'm 61-year-old
man, and I've been having trouble with my knees for the past
year ·or so. My family doctor says
I have arthritis and wants me, to
see a specialist for an arthroscopic exam and possible surgery.
She told me that she thought I
might be a good candidate for
this type of surgery. Can you
explain to me what arthroscopic
surgery is?
Answer: Thirty years ago
arthrosc,opy was developed as a
tool · to diagnose joint problems
particularly those in the
· knee. Today it can be used to
diagnose and .repair injuries in

virtually any of the body's major
joints.
An arthroscope is a slender,
tube-shaped surgical ii1Strument
that uses fiber optics to capture a
TV image. The surgeo11 passes it
thrt&gt;ugh a small skin incision
·then deeper· into the joi111 iu.Jf
I&lt;&gt; actually look for the cause of
the joim problem. Then other
specially designed instruments
are imerted through additional
small incisions to complete the
operation.
· An advantage of arthroscopic
surgery is that the small incisions
usually heal very quickly, often
allowing ciaily activities to be
resumed within a few days or
weeks. This is beneficial for
those with arthritis, like you, but
also for people suffering sports
injuries.

Arthritis, as in your case, ri!Ost
comi:nonly affects the · knee
joint. This deg~nerative disorder
involves damage to the bones
and changes in the protective
layer of cartilage that covers the
joint surfaces. While 100 percent
of those over age 60 have damage to the knee cartilage, you. are
in the unlucky two percent that
actually have clinical problems
with their knees. For these folks,
arthroscopy is often very helpful

IIIIo

=:.'*J
0

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'11f:IM

in both diagnosing and treating
their sore joints.
Arthroscopic surgery for knee
problems caused by injury ·to
cartilage can involve removing
loose fragments of bone or c~"­
tilage from the joint .as well :is
trimming away or reshaping
damaged areas of cartilage. This
can help reduce the pain and
decreased range of motion that
are typical of arthritis. Unfortunately, it docs not permanently
cure the underlying arthritic
condition.
A more curative approach is
possible in some cases where the
damage is not too severe - bUt
usually only in those under 30.
In this procedure the surgeon,
during arthroscopy, transplants
cells into the joint that grow
new cartilage. These cells called chondrocytes - can then
set about the task of rep airing
the damaged areas.
Unfortunately, arthroscopic
surgery isn't appropriate for aiL
types of arthritic joint damage .
Occasionally benefit ,·an be pwvided by the more traditional
joint surgery ilwolving bigger
incisions and larger surgical
tools. Hopefully, your family
doctor is correct,and you are a
good candidate for arthroscopic
surgery.
One final word about knee
· surgery. Though it doesn't sound
likely in your case, many people
with arthritic knees have to
eventually
undergo
knee
replacement surgery, in which
the damaged joint is replaced
with an artificial one . Bone,
metal, ceramic and plastic parts
have all been used. Metal parts
for knee replacement are currently the most popular. thougli
. this surgery is quite dramati c in
its approach, it is also usually
quite successful.
•

11

Family Medicine." is a weekly

colum1·1. To submit questiom, write
ro jolm C. w,,y; D. 0., Olrio Uni,

versify College of Osteopathic Med'
icilu, Grosvc11or Hall, Atlrcns, 0/riQ
45701. Past colrm"'s arc availdvle
otrli11c at www.fllradio.orglfill. '

•

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

•

Best Prices in the Areal

'

lionel mfetlng.
. .' ,
THURSDAY
know It's time , to start
'
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
llnanclalluture, but
TUPPEflS PLAINS - VFW :
water Conservation District Board
to start... oall
at SuperviSors, special session, 90~ Tuppe!' ~Iaine hall, _7:30 p,m. · ·,'
review your
,.
ThurSday, ·11 a.m. al the Meigs Thursday. D1nner at 6:30 p,,n.
consider your
SWCD office, 33191 Hiland ROI!d.
~~~~~~nt
~~~:~:~~~~~:;u!~ poaslble
FRIDAY
Purpqae to review annual work plan . ~
lr
you, and
REEDSVILLE
-8pectal
meeting
.and' discuss watershed projects.
otthe Olive Township Trustees 6:30
p.m.
Frtday, township garage.
POMEROY - Pr'!Ceplor Bela
Beta Chapter, 'Beta Sigma Phi Inventory.
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran
SATURDAY
311 Fourth St., Marietta, ·ou: 45750
Church. Donene Dugan to be guest
POMEROY - Burlingham Mod·
speaker. Ruth Riffle and Clarice
740-376-~H86
em Woodmen, 4:30 SI\Urdey, acup
Krautter. hostesses.
aupper. c;amp wiA provide acupa,
800·726-8412
'
CHESTER - Shade River crackers and bev!!rage~ and those
Lodge 453, regular meeting, Thure· . attending , a~e to taka eomathln{j
which will complement soup. New
day, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
'

'

Ro1W1ne Groll,
Jane Ann Karr Aanestlld
and Sarah Kunn,
Audioltlgists

Cutting Edge Hearing Technology

408 Rlchl1nd Avenue, Athens, OH • 592·2863 • $00·4S 1-!1806

'

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,.

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Pllgi A I ~ The Dally San-'nel
•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Lace togles spur rec1ll
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Florida company is recalling nearly 38,000 pairs of toddler boots with the Crayola brand name
because a toggle on the laces poses a choking hazard to children .
BBC International Ltd. of Boca Raton, Fla. distributed the
boot.! - manufactured by Rallye footwear ·Inc . of Canada- and
recalled them Tuesday in cooperation with the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission.
The boots - sold in sizes six through 10 - ·come in girls and
boys styles. The toggles are meant for tightening the laces , but are
dangerous if they become detached, the company said in a statement ..
The boys' boots are blue and blade with a toggle on each boot.
The girls' boots are white with pink and lavender tri~'· and also
have a toggle on the laces.
No injuries involving the toggl« have been r&lt;ported, the
C PSC said.
Consumers can return the boots to the store where they were
purchased for a 11&gt;fund. The company advises consumers to
remove the-toggles immediately and throw them away. For more
information, consumers can call BBC. International at 1-800•
632- 4450 between 9 a.m . and 5 p.m. EST Monday through Friday.
'

Online toy store settles

!.

Wednelday, January 10, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a case that could affect other
fledgling dot-cams. a defunct online toy store will be paid
$50,000 and have its customer database destroyed rather than
being sold off to pay creditors, federal regulallolrs said Tuesday.
Toysmart.com assurt:d its customers that their personal infor-;
motion would never be shared with a third par.ty, but the company took out an advertisement in The Wall Street Journ~l to sell
the database after going out of business last May.
Internet priv~cy activists protested, claiming that if the sale .o f
that information were allowed, it could encourage a wave of
other failing dot-coms to abandon privacy assurances in return
for cash.
"This is • landmark case because it tells other companies that
the privacy promises you make while you're in business must be
kept 9-n you go out of business," said Dave Steer, spokesman
fl&gt;( priva 'y seal-of-approval group TRUSTe, which was. a party to
them· . 'If you don't keep them;there ate third parties that will
stop you.",
The federal Trade Commission and the attorneys general of 42
states, the District of Columbia, U.S. Virgin Islands and the
Northern Mariana Islands sued Toysmart to keep it from
' divulging the data, which included names, addresses, and credit
card numbers.
. In the settlement, which is. to be filed by Wednesday, a Walt Disney Co. Internet subsidiary wilf pay•Toysmart $50,000, and the
toy company will destroy its own records. Toysmart is majorityowned by Disney.
·
"We're very pleased with the resolution, and ·it does exactly
what we wanted to be done with this information and pro.tects
consumers' rights under the original privacy policy," said FTC
spokesman Eric London. "It was wo~th 6'ghtirtg this out for as
long as we did."
Lawyers for Toysmart did not immediately return. a call for
comment Tuesday.

llle1al search suit settled
NEW YORK (AP) - The city has agreed to pay as much as
SSO million to settle a la\vsuit on behalf of thousands of people
who were illegally strip-searched, attorneys for the plaintiffs said
Wednesday.
The victims of the searches, conducted by jail guards in Queens
and Manhattan over the course of 10 months in 1996 and 1997;
were often first-time offenders arrested for minor infractions like
loitering and disorderly conduct. .
Strip searches of people charged with misdemeapors and other
minor offenses are prohibited unless there is reasonabl~ suspicion
that weapons or other contraband are being concealed.
The settlement, the result of two years of negotiations, will disburse the money to as many as 50,000 people arrested for misde~
meanors during the tO-month stretch. The minimum award' will
be $250, the maximum S22,500.
·
·.The deal includes a formula to determine awards based on the
circumstances of the individual searches, taking ioto account their
emotional impact on the victims.
Lead plaintiffs'la~er Richard D. Emery. called it a preced~nt­
setting settlement "because it recognizes the degrading and dehumanizing aspects of a strip-search."
The city's corporation counsel, Michael D. Hesi, said his office
had tried to address the· case "in a way that is fair to the class of
p,laintiffs as well as to the city."
· The settlement is subject to approval by a federal judge. . ,

GOP takes over lepslature
, ' COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -The Republicans, in charge of the '
South Carolina Legislature for the first time since Reconstruction, opened the Senate session Tuesday by ousting the Democ~ts from their committee chairmanships.
. Lawmakers took a series of votes scrapping a decades-old
seniority system that h~d allowed both Democrats and Republicans to lead Senate committees. ·
The change could be problematic for Democratic Gov. Jim
Hodges, who is trying to carry out an agenda that includes crea!ing a lo~tery, increasing teachers' salaries and cutting a half-bil. lion dollars in spending.
Republican Glenn McConnell was elected Senate president
pro tem Tuesday by a vote of 23-20, unseating Democrat John
Drummond.
"It would grieve me enormously to see partisanship divide this
Senate down the middle," said Drummond, Senate president
since 1996.
The Republicans· ·already control the state House. Last week,
they gained their first majority in the Senate since 1876 when
Democratic Sen. Vern.e Smith switched to the GOP, giving the
party a 24-22 advantage. After years in which the Democrats held
· the majority, the GOP had picked up enough scats for~ 23-23 tic
in November's elections.
$mith sn.id his switch to the GOP earned him a call of con,gratulation! Sa!urday from President-elect Bush.
.. · ~ It was jusi a real, nice, friendly convcrsatioi1," Smith told 'the
Greenville News. I told him I was happy to hear from him and
he glve me-great encouragement. That's abm•r all there was."
I.
Florida and Virginia arc the only other Southeastern states
where the GOP controls the legislature. Nationally, the Republicans control 18 legislatures and the Democrats have 16, according to the National Conference of State. Legislatures. The' others
arc split, and one, Nebraska, is nonpartisan.
,

•

"t:w-

'

.

lniide:

'

Blazer, Jimmy worst in federal rollover ratings
'
be better able to choose a safe
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government risks, they "will
rated rollover risks for passenger vehicles for vehicle for thenuelves and their family," Transthe first time Tuesday, giving its worst giade to portation Secretary Rodney Slater said in
two General Moton sport utility vehicles.The releasing the ratin8'.
"By providing consumers with additional
highest rating went to the Honda Accord.
information,
we can motivate manufacturers
Auto industry repmentatives were quick
to criticize the new system, describing it as to respond wit)! safer, more stable vehicles;· he
simplistic. And consumer advocates, too, said . said.
The rating system does not predict the
actual driving tests should be used, not just
likelihood of a crash. Rather, it estimates the
vehicle measurements.
Harry Pearce, vice chairman of General risk of rolling ·over in a single-vehicle crash, ·
Motors Corp., called the five-star system usually when the vehicle runs off the road and
"misleading to consumers." He said the eat- is tripped by a curb, ditch or soft soil.
The ratin8' could be especially important
ings fail to account for such factors as a vehicle's suspension and tires and driver behavior. to prospective buyers of SUVs. M,ore than 60
If consumers check comparative rollover percent of SUV occupant.! killed in 1999 died

-,.

man was e!Xecuted by injection

for the beating death and rape
of an 84-year-old woman during a $500 robbery. It was the
first of eight execqtions planned
in the state over the next four
weeks.
The :fexas execution put to
death Jack Wade Clark, 37, who
was the first inmate put to die
under the watch of Gov. Rick
; Perry, who succeeded President-elect Bush. Perry rejected
a clemency request, clearing the
way for the state's first execution of 2001 after carrying out
a record 40 l:ist year.
." I would like to say to the
family that I ~m sorry and I do
ask their forgiveness," Clark
said as five members of his victim's family stood a few feet
away watching through a win"
dow. He recited a short prayer,
closing with the words "peace
and goodness" before he died.
"He did say he was sorry,"
Mary Jane Gar&lt;:ia, whose
daughter was killed, said after
watching the execution. "I f~ssed .
Joner' 63-year-old retarded
don't think he meant it. To see
him take his last breath . made son,
E1nanuel·
Jones,
was also
•.'
...
..
jll.!t
me feel better."
..
severely beaten' alter ~!tempting
Clark confessed to ·killing to con\e ib h'is mother4 aid,i

WFDNFSDAY''s

·HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

1

'IVC

ALL

ALL

Trimble
4-j 5-4
Southern
3-2 7-3
Waterford
3-2 4-5
Eastern
2·3 6-3
Federal Hocking 2-3 6-4
Miller
1-4 4-7
Tullday'a Ga1111111
Alexander 73, Trimble 63
East~rn 57, Meigs 46
Miller 68, Nelsonville-York 53
Federal Hocking 74, VInton County 59
Shenandoah 72, Waterford 56
·
Frlday'a Oamn
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Belpre at Vinton County
Eastern at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Miller
Southam at Trimble
Sllturday'a 011111111
Miller at South Gallla
NelsonVille-York at A!hens
Symmes Valley at Southern
Wellston at National Hoops Classic

vances:

. Public Agenda President Deborah Wadsworth said the mults
show Americans "beli~e religion
has enormous power to elevate
peoples' behavior and address
many societal problems." But, she
said, they have "an almost'instinctive wariness of injecting religion
dii'ecdy into politics."
Religious themes were unusually prominent during the 2000
campaign, in part because Democratic vi&lt;e presidential. candidate
Joseph Lieberman, an Orthodox
Jew, spoke openly of his faith.
Seventy-four percent in the
poll tho.ught politicians who talk

SEOAL
.

SEO

~Wiman

ALL .

5-0 5·4
~·Logan .
5·1 6-1
Marietta
3-2 5·3
Gallla Academy 3·2 . 5-4
River Valley · 2·3 5-4
Athens
2-3 4-4
Point ·Pleasant 1·4 1-7
Jackson
0·6 2-7
Tueldey'a Ga1111111
Galli a Academy 57, Jackson 40
Marietta 88, River Valley 49
Athens 73, Point Pleasant 55
Warren 52, logan 48
· Frlday'a Oamw
Gallla Academy at Warren
. Jabli&amp;On at RIV$r Valley ·
logan at Polnt Pleaeant
Athens Itt Marietta
SelUrdly'a 011111111 .
Fairland at .Rivllr Valley
Po!!'ll Pleasant at Ravanawood
Nelsonville-York at Athens
~an at National Hoops Clasalc

about their faith "are just saying
what people want to hear." Only
261£Eent said they would be
m
'kely to vote for a candidat
ho always decides on the.
basis of religjous convictions.
Most said compromise is necessaty for government officials.

ALL

escape . .

HOUSTON (AP) - Failuro of
a prison guard to check identification of an .inmate purporQng to
be a worker helped lead to che
escape of seven convicts, ,a report
said.
~
The inmates, who remain at
large, took 16 weapons· and more
than 200 rounds of anmtunition
after overpowering ·~ards during
the escape from the the maxi' mum-security Conn~lly Unit
near San Antonio Dec. 13.
They amassed dozens more
weapons in a sporting goods store
robbery on Christmas Eve, during
which ·, Irving police officer
Aubrey Hawkins was shot to
death.
A $200,000 ·reward has been
offered for the capture of the
escapees, who authorities believe
are hiding in the Dallas-Fort
Worth area .
Accprding to a report by the
Texas Board 9f Criminal Justice,
which is set to be released Thurs~
day, a guard allowed an inmate
clad in street clothes into the
guard tower. The inmate, who
represented hilljSClf as a wo~ker,
overpowered the guard and
opened an exterior ·gate fleeing
the other six prisoners.
Tile street clothes came from a
maintenance worker who had
been overpowered 'by prisor\en in
an inmate lunch ar&lt;a, the report
said.
The report cites the prison
guard's failure m follow procedure
as the most sib'ltificant f.1~tor in
the escape, board chaitnian Mac
Stringfellow told the Houston
Chronicle in Tuesday's editions.
If the guard had fullmved pmcedurc, th~ . inmates would have
r&lt;mained confined in the prison
yard, Stringfellow said.
"If they fail m follow procedures and guidelini!S, then this sort
of thing can happen. That's where
the problem lies," he said.

'•

'

Ohio Valley Christian 5·2
Hannan
·
44
South Gallla
2-8
· :Wahama
1-7
Tullday'a Ga1111111
Hannan 64, South Gallla 67 .
Calhoun County 83, Wahama 67
·
Frld1y'• GamM ·
.Wahama ,at Ohio Valley Christian
· Wlrt County at Hannan ·
,
South Galll.a.ai Portsmouth East
Saturdlly'a Game
Miller at South Gallla
Glrl1
TVC
Olllo Dlvtelon
'IVC

ALL

Alexander
7-a 11·2
Meigs
5-1 7-4
Belpre
4-2 5-6
Vinton County 2-4 5-8
Ne,lsonville-York 1·.5 ' 4-7
Wellston
0.7 2•10
Hocking Dlvlelon ·
'

'

'IVC

AU

SEOAL
ALL

Marietta
5-1 10•2
Athens
. 5-1 7·2
Jackson
4-2 6-3
W1rran
3-3 5-5
Logan
3-3 5-6
Gallla Academy 2-4 5-5
Point Pleasant 1·-5 3-8 1
River Valley
1·5 3-8
Thul'ldly'e GamM
·Warren at Gallla Academy
River v,lley at Jackson
Point Pleasant at Logan
Marietta at Athene
. Slturday'l Game
Jackson v. Mllftln at Pickerington
T91!f118Y
.
. • , Sunday'• Game
Gallia Academy v. Clyde at Pick·
erington Tourney

.
I

,,

Are~

non-l11gue
• '

ALL

Ohio Valley Chrtitlan 5-1
Wehama
9·2
South Gallla
H
Hannafl ·
0.5
'
·Ttlurtdey'e GamM
~ Wahal'(la at South Gallla •
Teays Valley Chriflian at Hannan

'

.

..._ ._ ..,.. ... ....
~

~··

Wahama
.falls to
Calhoun

e1

JoN WIU.

EAST MEIGS In the
first of two meetings this season, Eastern got the better o(
Meigs, 57-46.
The Eagles now move to 63 on the season and Meigs .
drops to 0-9. The Maraud~
put up a tough fight but fohl
trouble impaired thei~ of!l;&amp;sive potential extensivel'y. .,,j
' The Eagl.es · (6-3) jumped.
o.u t to an early S-2 lead off a
· Matt Simp~on 3-point, ~lay
and a Joe Brown put b~ck.
Travis Siders answered with a
razzle-dazzle lay up, followed .
by a Nick Bolin 3 pointer' to
tie the game at 7-7. The Ea~es
took two consecutive ch~rges
along with a pair of bucket.!
from Chad Nelson and Biown
gave them an U -7 lead. ..' 1
Mter a Meigs timemll:· the
Eagles again went on a.cllluge
ahead breaking the game' open
at 15-7. Marauder Nick•&lt;Bolin
was fouled at the end of the
first quarter, both his attempts
were good, raising the s~€ire to
15-9 at the e!)d of the first
period.
'n
• The Eagles began the seco,nd . quarter with a ,7-point
stint to jump way out dn front
· , 22-.11. Meigs got' back ,in the ·
game with a 3-4 effort from
. the foul line and a field-goal by
J:P. Staats.
1
At the 4:00 mark, the
Marauders still traileg, 22-14.

...__ .......

Bv GARY ClARK
OVP CORRESPOND£NT

.~~.,..,

SAY Wlf,4T?- Eastern's Brad Brannon (22) and Buzzy Fackler (32) of Meigs react to the referee's whis-

',,'

tle during Tue$day's TVC interdiyislon game. Eastern won, 57-46. (Jon Will photo)

'

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Gallipolis runs·pastJackson, 57-42
ANI)i
..

··f

'
•
BY
CAwmt
..
. . 53 win. '
.
Jackson to just four point.!.
0
Five different Bhte Devils scored in· the
· , J c·· KS ·
~ SPO EDIT~·,; ·~
~:I.·,'l Recipe for dis~ster or inspiration for sue. AI
ON -. G . Acaa~i:hy~boun':"' ~s; pick your poison.
second quarter with sophomore Travis
eti from a disappm~ung loss to Marietta and' . Fortunately for the Gallipolitans, the dub Mcl&lt;imiiss sparking a 5-0·run ori a 3-pointtecent off-court distractions ~o ..d~eaq~~~- ·
~eemingly galvanized in its rosolve and er with 6:36 to play. Junior David Finney
son 57-42 Tues~y.
· ,
. ' ·,
·" ,, · · rq~ to the occasiOn, espec1ally. m the second followed with a layup at the 5:11 mark that
The Blue J?e~ls (S-4, SEOO .3-2) .saw a quarter when seniors Dustin Deckard and gave the Blue Devib a 14-7 lead.
four-game wmnmg streak go ·by the boards T.J. Hill were forced to the bench with two
Following back-to-back buckets by Jacklast Friday when ·Marietta - stormed back fouls each.
·
son's Bryan Wilson and Ryan Tipton, fresh' from a ,seveg-point d~cit ~f regulation to
"I thought our second team played very men Andre Geiger and Cody Caldwell
ptck 1;1p ~ 57-52 overtune wm.
well:' Osborne sai&lt;;l. "We had three guys in: closed out the half with baskets 28 seconds
. In t1i~ wake of that set~a~k. tlte Blue Dev- there in the second quarter with very little apart.
~ suff~red another bloW'&lt;when head coach experience with Dustin sitting there (due to
"In the third quarter, we got the starting
J1m Osborne s~~:spended second-),eadmg foul "?uble).In fact, we djdn't have a letter- group back in there and got a little sems~Qre~ and top ass1st ma'!}'ony Moore for. a man on the floor in that second quarter. The blance of order," he added. "I think the
VJolatton team ·rules, which lett the Devils key was only giving up 11 points (in the defensive effort·was the key. We played realshort-han&lt;l~d heading in~f last night's game. first halQ."
.
ly solid defensively and didn't let them into
Me~n:-"hile! Jackson ~21.;_7 ; SE'?J\L 0-6) . Gallia Academy .pulled away from a 7-7 much of what they wanted to do."
· was nding .high folloW!!)$ a solid perfor- tie in the first quarter and led 18-11 at the
Deckard and Hill returned to action at
mance aga~nst league-leading Lo!lan last · half. The Blue Devils forced seven Ironmen
Ftiday, as the Chieftains esca~ed with a 58- turnovers in t!te ¥cond period and held

GRANTSVIL!;.E, W.Va.
Despite placing four players In
dou,ble-digit scoring, Wahama
waited much too long before getting its offense in gear as Calhoun
County sprinted past the White
Falcons by an 87-67 score Tuesday.
The Red Devils forced a number of early WHS miscues in
springing to a 38-15 halftime lead
and were never really challenged.
Wahama got its offense untracked
with a 52 point outburst in the
final two quarters but for th e second consecutive outing, its sluggish beginning proved to be too
much for coach Lewis Hall's
cagers to overcome.
"They were much quicker than
we were and that rriggered some
problems fur us early," Hall stated.
"They essentially started five
guards and forced us Into committirig numerous turnovers.
They penetrated our defense and
took the ball to the basket. We
couldn't. stay in front of them
which led to several fouls on our
part and we never recovereil after
falling behind in the first half"
, The setback was the seventh
straight loss for the Mason County cagers following a season
opening win over Hamlin.
Wahama dropped to 1- 7 on the·
season, while Calhoun County
improved to 3-6 on the year.
for the second time in as many
games, the White Falcons allowed
the 'opposition to 'march to the
free throw line for an astounding
number of scoring opportunities.
Mter Hannan shot an amazing 40
free throws on Friday ~gainst the
Bend Area team, WHS afforded
the Red Devils 39 foul shooting
possibilities with Calhoun County converting 23. of those
prospects.
The host team led by an 18-7
margin after one period and
incre.Sed Its advantage to 38-15
at the halfWay ·mark. The Red
Devils enjoyed a 56-30 edge after
three quarters before Wahama put
up 37 points in thell. fina] eight
minutes to surpass its point production of 30 tallies during the
first 24 minutes of the hardwood
contest.
Senior Nathan Connolly came
• off the bench to pace the WHS

I.

Eastern
6-0 9-2
Waterlord ·
3-3 4-8
Federal HOcking 4-2 .4-5
Southam
3-3 7-5
Trimble
2·4 2-9
Miller
'().6 0·11
Thul'ldlly'a 0.1111111
Meigs at .Belpre
Eaetem at Trimble
Federal Hooking at Waterford
• Southern at MHier
.VInton County at Nelllilnyille-York
·
Frlday'a Game
Wellston at Amanda Clearcreek
81!0

ast

•

w?f,

Are1 non-league
'

W.dne1d.y, ..nuary 10, 2001

'

Ea
BY

Belpre
5-0 9-1
Alexander
3-2 6-5
Nelsonville-York 3-2 5-5
Vinton County 3-2 5·6
Wellston
1-4 5·4
Meigs
0-5 0·10
Hocking Dlvl1lon ·

Report: Lack of
10 check led to

•

•

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Boy•
TVC
Ohio Dlvlalon

~:n~r;~~,~:~~~:~~:~~~~~ ~~J;~~s o~~o;:;~tl;u~i:~::r~

materiali·sm and crime, increasing ·
volunteering · and ·charity work,
and better child-rearing are likely
if''many more Americans were to
become deeply religious," partieipants pid by majorities ranging
from 69 percent to 87 percent.
'The November poll of 1,507
U.S. adults was conducted Public
Agenda, a nonpartisan New
York-based policy research
ageney founded by former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and ·
pollster Daniel Yankelovich. The
. nwgin of error was plus or minus
3 percentage points. A report on
the . poll; was being released
Wednesday at a Brookings lqstitution forum in Washington.
· fully 74 percent agreed that
"it's a bad idea for families to raise
, cbiklren ..Ynthout ,any religion."
Seventy-fqur percent said school
pr:lyer teac)tes children that belief
in God.i;' jmpo~nf, and.56 percent. cti9sider it .an effective
n1ean5 of in!proving. youn8'ters'

•

'

NEWYORK (AP) -A post, behavior.
campaign poll from a secular
Bm majoritic1 said school
think tank found that Americans prayer can be unfair to some fam,
•re wary of r&lt;ligion in the politi- ilies and students, \vhich app arcal arona but \vant more of it in ently explained why ther&lt; was far
public schools and tbink U.S. ·more support for • ·nonsectarian
society would benefit if mor&lt; "moment of silence" in classpeople became devout.
rooms (53 percent) than prayers
Religion is tile best \vay to addressed..to God (20 percent) or

.

The Daily Sentinel

Page 81

in rollover crashes, according to the government.1\venty-three percent of car occupants
who were killed died in rollovers.
Rollover crashes kill an estimated 10,000
people each year. .
•
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Adminiftration rated 42 model- year 200 I
vehicles: 19 SUVs, 11 light trucks, nine passenger cars and three vans.
·
The ChevroletfBiazer and GMC
Jimmy/ Envoy four-joor 4X2 SUVs drew the
lowest scote, a one-star rating. Those vehicles'
4x4 versions and the Ford Explorer 4X4, target of dozens of lawsuits as a r&lt;sult of rollover
accidents, were among th~se rated two stars.

Man executed by injectiQn .Americans wary of religion
the political arena
·
Melisa Ann Garcia of Slaton
and DNA .tests link&lt;d him 'to
the crime scene. He later insisted he was innocent, saying he
signed his confession out of
frustration and that evidence
was planted.
Garda was making a telephone call outside a convenience store the early hours of
Oct. 15, 1989, when Clark
approached her and asked if she
· had a light for a cigarette. When
she finished her call, testimony
showed he stabbed her in the
shoulder, forced her into her
own car, drove away and repeatedly raped her before fatally
stabbing her in the heart.
Clark was arrested following
a brief highway police chase a
few weeks after he told officers
he spotted the body.
While in 'the county jail,
Clark bragged about the rape
and murder to another inmate,
who testified against him at hi!
trial.
·
In McAlester, Olda., Eddie
Leroy Trice, 48, was executed
for fatally beating · Ernestine
Jones in 1987 after breaking
into her home. Trice was arrested four days after the slaying
and police said. .lJe )ater . ,con- .

;

I

AP girls polls out, Page BJ
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

TVC

HUNTSVILLE , Texas (AP)
-A man convicted ·of kidnapping, raping and fatally stabbing
a 23-year-old woman 11 years
ago was executed by injection
Tuesday.
In Oklahoma , a ·4R-year-old

I

... ···· .. ...
~

·Athens
~
·
West~
Virginia
buries · ::·~ .
'

·.River ValleJ~....
'

BY

BurcH COOPIR

OVP SPORTS STAFF

MARIETTA ' - ·
someone ,has a hot . hal!d&gt;;\
there's usually nothing you can
do about, no ~tter who it
On Thesday, River V&gt;ll~;,. -~·1
found that out as the Rai~rs•
fell to Marietta 88-49 in ..pro::.p.•"'!
boys basketball play.
Marietta big man John Farr,
a 6-foot-6 center, missed Tuesday's game with a sprain,ed
• ankle. l'arr has been a big r:ime
player for the 1igen as the
team's le~ding scorer.
.• ,
Enter Farr's backup, , C_hris .'
Fennell. . · .
· .
. Fennell, who only had two
'points in Marietta's 57-52 ·
o~rtime wip over Gallia
Academy Friday, stepped in to
make .'five ;3-pointers on his
way to a 38-poinf perfor-

mance,
"We knew that they' had
some kids who could shoot
the bait very well, artd they
did:' said River Valley head
coach Gene Layton. "We did-

Pioma,..-llldln.Pep•s ·

. --

_
~

... ...._._ .....

.........

'.

tops Marsha 73-67
.

Mountaineers whip Herd for
fifth straight season

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The game was close only in
the end. It was the opening
minutes that told the tale of
West Virginia's fifth-;&lt;;traight· victory over Marshall.
·
Marshall (nissed its first eight
shots'; The Mountaineers made
10 of their first 15.
For th&amp;game, the Thundering
Herd shot a season-low 31 percent from the floor yet some-.
how nearly overcame a 14-point
deficit.
'the . inside play of Calvin
Bowman and 'the dutch shooting of Lionel Armstead and Josh·
Yeager down the str&lt;tch secured
West Virginia's 73-67 victory
Tuesday night at th e Charleston
Civic Center.
Marshall'~ 26 points in the first
half marked the ' second straight
. game it was held u·nder 30. It
made just nine field goals in the
first· 20 minutes in which it
made just 27 percent ofits shots.
.' "The key to the game was our
defense:• said West Virginia
coach Gale Catlett.·"As offenBRACING FOR IMPACT - Marshall's Tamar Slay (1) feels the heat sive-minded as they are, to hold
them to what · we did is phefrom WV~'s Jay H!!Wltt In the Capitol Classic Tuesday. (AP)

___ __
.,.

t

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•.
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nomenal because they have a lot
of great players."
The only Marshall starter who
was immune from a bad shooting nightwasJ.R.VanHoose. He
went 7-of-11 from the floor and
finished with 18 point~. Most of
·his baskets came off rebounds .
Teammates Tamar Slay, Joda
Burge~&lt;. Cornelius Jackson and
Latece Williams shot a combined 13-of-54 for 24 percent.
for Slay, the first half was a far
cry from last year's gathe, when
he scored 23 points against West
Virginia before halftime. On
Tuesday he was just 2~of-9
shooting in· the first halffor nine
points.
"Tonight was just not our
night," VanHoose said. "With
missed free throws and easy
jumpers not being made, it's
tough · to pull out a win. We
should be able to play a lot better. Guys like Tamar and Joda are
a lot better players and hopefully they'll get back to that." ·
• It was Bowman who made his
presence known early. He used

PleaH ... WVU,Pip8J

�•

'

•
;

•

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Pllgi A I ~ The Dally San-'nel
•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Lace togles spur rec1ll
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Florida company is recalling nearly 38,000 pairs of toddler boots with the Crayola brand name
because a toggle on the laces poses a choking hazard to children .
BBC International Ltd. of Boca Raton, Fla. distributed the
boot.! - manufactured by Rallye footwear ·Inc . of Canada- and
recalled them Tuesday in cooperation with the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission.
The boots - sold in sizes six through 10 - ·come in girls and
boys styles. The toggles are meant for tightening the laces , but are
dangerous if they become detached, the company said in a statement ..
The boys' boots are blue and blade with a toggle on each boot.
The girls' boots are white with pink and lavender tri~'· and also
have a toggle on the laces.
No injuries involving the toggl« have been r&lt;ported, the
C PSC said.
Consumers can return the boots to the store where they were
purchased for a 11&gt;fund. The company advises consumers to
remove the-toggles immediately and throw them away. For more
information, consumers can call BBC. International at 1-800•
632- 4450 between 9 a.m . and 5 p.m. EST Monday through Friday.
'

Online toy store settles

!.

Wednelday, January 10, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a case that could affect other
fledgling dot-cams. a defunct online toy store will be paid
$50,000 and have its customer database destroyed rather than
being sold off to pay creditors, federal regulallolrs said Tuesday.
Toysmart.com assurt:d its customers that their personal infor-;
motion would never be shared with a third par.ty, but the company took out an advertisement in The Wall Street Journ~l to sell
the database after going out of business last May.
Internet priv~cy activists protested, claiming that if the sale .o f
that information were allowed, it could encourage a wave of
other failing dot-coms to abandon privacy assurances in return
for cash.
"This is • landmark case because it tells other companies that
the privacy promises you make while you're in business must be
kept 9-n you go out of business," said Dave Steer, spokesman
fl&gt;( priva 'y seal-of-approval group TRUSTe, which was. a party to
them· . 'If you don't keep them;there ate third parties that will
stop you.",
The federal Trade Commission and the attorneys general of 42
states, the District of Columbia, U.S. Virgin Islands and the
Northern Mariana Islands sued Toysmart to keep it from
' divulging the data, which included names, addresses, and credit
card numbers.
. In the settlement, which is. to be filed by Wednesday, a Walt Disney Co. Internet subsidiary wilf pay•Toysmart $50,000, and the
toy company will destroy its own records. Toysmart is majorityowned by Disney.
·
"We're very pleased with the resolution, and ·it does exactly
what we wanted to be done with this information and pro.tects
consumers' rights under the original privacy policy," said FTC
spokesman Eric London. "It was wo~th 6'ghtirtg this out for as
long as we did."
Lawyers for Toysmart did not immediately return. a call for
comment Tuesday.

llle1al search suit settled
NEW YORK (AP) - The city has agreed to pay as much as
SSO million to settle a la\vsuit on behalf of thousands of people
who were illegally strip-searched, attorneys for the plaintiffs said
Wednesday.
The victims of the searches, conducted by jail guards in Queens
and Manhattan over the course of 10 months in 1996 and 1997;
were often first-time offenders arrested for minor infractions like
loitering and disorderly conduct. .
Strip searches of people charged with misdemeapors and other
minor offenses are prohibited unless there is reasonabl~ suspicion
that weapons or other contraband are being concealed.
The settlement, the result of two years of negotiations, will disburse the money to as many as 50,000 people arrested for misde~
meanors during the tO-month stretch. The minimum award' will
be $250, the maximum S22,500.
·
·.The deal includes a formula to determine awards based on the
circumstances of the individual searches, taking ioto account their
emotional impact on the victims.
Lead plaintiffs'la~er Richard D. Emery. called it a preced~nt­
setting settlement "because it recognizes the degrading and dehumanizing aspects of a strip-search."
The city's corporation counsel, Michael D. Hesi, said his office
had tried to address the· case "in a way that is fair to the class of
p,laintiffs as well as to the city."
· The settlement is subject to approval by a federal judge. . ,

GOP takes over lepslature
, ' COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -The Republicans, in charge of the '
South Carolina Legislature for the first time since Reconstruction, opened the Senate session Tuesday by ousting the Democ~ts from their committee chairmanships.
. Lawmakers took a series of votes scrapping a decades-old
seniority system that h~d allowed both Democrats and Republicans to lead Senate committees. ·
The change could be problematic for Democratic Gov. Jim
Hodges, who is trying to carry out an agenda that includes crea!ing a lo~tery, increasing teachers' salaries and cutting a half-bil. lion dollars in spending.
Republican Glenn McConnell was elected Senate president
pro tem Tuesday by a vote of 23-20, unseating Democrat John
Drummond.
"It would grieve me enormously to see partisanship divide this
Senate down the middle," said Drummond, Senate president
since 1996.
The Republicans· ·already control the state House. Last week,
they gained their first majority in the Senate since 1876 when
Democratic Sen. Vern.e Smith switched to the GOP, giving the
party a 24-22 advantage. After years in which the Democrats held
· the majority, the GOP had picked up enough scats for~ 23-23 tic
in November's elections.
$mith sn.id his switch to the GOP earned him a call of con,gratulation! Sa!urday from President-elect Bush.
.. · ~ It was jusi a real, nice, friendly convcrsatioi1," Smith told 'the
Greenville News. I told him I was happy to hear from him and
he glve me-great encouragement. That's abm•r all there was."
I.
Florida and Virginia arc the only other Southeastern states
where the GOP controls the legislature. Nationally, the Republicans control 18 legislatures and the Democrats have 16, according to the National Conference of State. Legislatures. The' others
arc split, and one, Nebraska, is nonpartisan.
,

•

"t:w-

'

.

lniide:

'

Blazer, Jimmy worst in federal rollover ratings
'
be better able to choose a safe
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government risks, they "will
rated rollover risks for passenger vehicles for vehicle for thenuelves and their family," Transthe first time Tuesday, giving its worst giade to portation Secretary Rodney Slater said in
two General Moton sport utility vehicles.The releasing the ratin8'.
"By providing consumers with additional
highest rating went to the Honda Accord.
information,
we can motivate manufacturers
Auto industry repmentatives were quick
to criticize the new system, describing it as to respond wit)! safer, more stable vehicles;· he
simplistic. And consumer advocates, too, said . said.
The rating system does not predict the
actual driving tests should be used, not just
likelihood of a crash. Rather, it estimates the
vehicle measurements.
Harry Pearce, vice chairman of General risk of rolling ·over in a single-vehicle crash, ·
Motors Corp., called the five-star system usually when the vehicle runs off the road and
"misleading to consumers." He said the eat- is tripped by a curb, ditch or soft soil.
The ratin8' could be especially important
ings fail to account for such factors as a vehicle's suspension and tires and driver behavior. to prospective buyers of SUVs. M,ore than 60
If consumers check comparative rollover percent of SUV occupant.! killed in 1999 died

-,.

man was e!Xecuted by injection

for the beating death and rape
of an 84-year-old woman during a $500 robbery. It was the
first of eight execqtions planned
in the state over the next four
weeks.
The :fexas execution put to
death Jack Wade Clark, 37, who
was the first inmate put to die
under the watch of Gov. Rick
; Perry, who succeeded President-elect Bush. Perry rejected
a clemency request, clearing the
way for the state's first execution of 2001 after carrying out
a record 40 l:ist year.
." I would like to say to the
family that I ~m sorry and I do
ask their forgiveness," Clark
said as five members of his victim's family stood a few feet
away watching through a win"
dow. He recited a short prayer,
closing with the words "peace
and goodness" before he died.
"He did say he was sorry,"
Mary Jane Gar&lt;:ia, whose
daughter was killed, said after
watching the execution. "I f~ssed .
Joner' 63-year-old retarded
don't think he meant it. To see
him take his last breath . made son,
E1nanuel·
Jones,
was also
•.'
...
..
jll.!t
me feel better."
..
severely beaten' alter ~!tempting
Clark confessed to ·killing to con\e ib h'is mother4 aid,i

WFDNFSDAY''s

·HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

1

'IVC

ALL

ALL

Trimble
4-j 5-4
Southern
3-2 7-3
Waterford
3-2 4-5
Eastern
2·3 6-3
Federal Hocking 2-3 6-4
Miller
1-4 4-7
Tullday'a Ga1111111
Alexander 73, Trimble 63
East~rn 57, Meigs 46
Miller 68, Nelsonville-York 53
Federal Hocking 74, VInton County 59
Shenandoah 72, Waterford 56
·
Frlday'a Oamn
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Belpre at Vinton County
Eastern at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Miller
Southam at Trimble
Sllturday'a 011111111
Miller at South Gallla
NelsonVille-York at A!hens
Symmes Valley at Southern
Wellston at National Hoops Classic

vances:

. Public Agenda President Deborah Wadsworth said the mults
show Americans "beli~e religion
has enormous power to elevate
peoples' behavior and address
many societal problems." But, she
said, they have "an almost'instinctive wariness of injecting religion
dii'ecdy into politics."
Religious themes were unusually prominent during the 2000
campaign, in part because Democratic vi&lt;e presidential. candidate
Joseph Lieberman, an Orthodox
Jew, spoke openly of his faith.
Seventy-four percent in the
poll tho.ught politicians who talk

SEOAL
.

SEO

~Wiman

ALL .

5-0 5·4
~·Logan .
5·1 6-1
Marietta
3-2 5·3
Gallla Academy 3·2 . 5-4
River Valley · 2·3 5-4
Athens
2-3 4-4
Point ·Pleasant 1·4 1-7
Jackson
0·6 2-7
Tueldey'a Ga1111111
Galli a Academy 57, Jackson 40
Marietta 88, River Valley 49
Athens 73, Point Pleasant 55
Warren 52, logan 48
· Frlday'a Oamw
Gallla Academy at Warren
. Jabli&amp;On at RIV$r Valley ·
logan at Polnt Pleaeant
Athens Itt Marietta
SelUrdly'a 011111111 .
Fairland at .Rivllr Valley
Po!!'ll Pleasant at Ravanawood
Nelsonville-York at Athens
~an at National Hoops Clasalc

about their faith "are just saying
what people want to hear." Only
261£Eent said they would be
m
'kely to vote for a candidat
ho always decides on the.
basis of religjous convictions.
Most said compromise is necessaty for government officials.

ALL

escape . .

HOUSTON (AP) - Failuro of
a prison guard to check identification of an .inmate purporQng to
be a worker helped lead to che
escape of seven convicts, ,a report
said.
~
The inmates, who remain at
large, took 16 weapons· and more
than 200 rounds of anmtunition
after overpowering ·~ards during
the escape from the the maxi' mum-security Conn~lly Unit
near San Antonio Dec. 13.
They amassed dozens more
weapons in a sporting goods store
robbery on Christmas Eve, during
which ·, Irving police officer
Aubrey Hawkins was shot to
death.
A $200,000 ·reward has been
offered for the capture of the
escapees, who authorities believe
are hiding in the Dallas-Fort
Worth area .
Accprding to a report by the
Texas Board 9f Criminal Justice,
which is set to be released Thurs~
day, a guard allowed an inmate
clad in street clothes into the
guard tower. The inmate, who
represented hilljSClf as a wo~ker,
overpowered the guard and
opened an exterior ·gate fleeing
the other six prisoners.
Tile street clothes came from a
maintenance worker who had
been overpowered 'by prisor\en in
an inmate lunch ar&lt;a, the report
said.
The report cites the prison
guard's failure m follow procedure
as the most sib'ltificant f.1~tor in
the escape, board chaitnian Mac
Stringfellow told the Houston
Chronicle in Tuesday's editions.
If the guard had fullmved pmcedurc, th~ . inmates would have
r&lt;mained confined in the prison
yard, Stringfellow said.
"If they fail m follow procedures and guidelini!S, then this sort
of thing can happen. That's where
the problem lies," he said.

'•

'

Ohio Valley Christian 5·2
Hannan
·
44
South Gallla
2-8
· :Wahama
1-7
Tullday'a Ga1111111
Hannan 64, South Gallla 67 .
Calhoun County 83, Wahama 67
·
Frld1y'• GamM ·
.Wahama ,at Ohio Valley Christian
· Wlrt County at Hannan ·
,
South Galll.a.ai Portsmouth East
Saturdlly'a Game
Miller at South Gallla
Glrl1
TVC
Olllo Dlvtelon
'IVC

ALL

Alexander
7-a 11·2
Meigs
5-1 7-4
Belpre
4-2 5-6
Vinton County 2-4 5-8
Ne,lsonville-York 1·.5 ' 4-7
Wellston
0.7 2•10
Hocking Dlvlelon ·
'

'

'IVC

AU

SEOAL
ALL

Marietta
5-1 10•2
Athens
. 5-1 7·2
Jackson
4-2 6-3
W1rran
3-3 5-5
Logan
3-3 5-6
Gallla Academy 2-4 5-5
Point Pleasant 1·-5 3-8 1
River Valley
1·5 3-8
Thul'ldly'e GamM
·Warren at Gallla Academy
River v,lley at Jackson
Point Pleasant at Logan
Marietta at Athene
. Slturday'l Game
Jackson v. Mllftln at Pickerington
T91!f118Y
.
. • , Sunday'• Game
Gallia Academy v. Clyde at Pick·
erington Tourney

.
I

,,

Are~

non-l11gue
• '

ALL

Ohio Valley Chrtitlan 5-1
Wehama
9·2
South Gallla
H
Hannafl ·
0.5
'
·Ttlurtdey'e GamM
~ Wahal'(la at South Gallla •
Teays Valley Chriflian at Hannan

'

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..._ ._ ..,.. ... ....
~

~··

Wahama
.falls to
Calhoun

e1

JoN WIU.

EAST MEIGS In the
first of two meetings this season, Eastern got the better o(
Meigs, 57-46.
The Eagles now move to 63 on the season and Meigs .
drops to 0-9. The Maraud~
put up a tough fight but fohl
trouble impaired thei~ of!l;&amp;sive potential extensivel'y. .,,j
' The Eagl.es · (6-3) jumped.
o.u t to an early S-2 lead off a
· Matt Simp~on 3-point, ~lay
and a Joe Brown put b~ck.
Travis Siders answered with a
razzle-dazzle lay up, followed .
by a Nick Bolin 3 pointer' to
tie the game at 7-7. The Ea~es
took two consecutive ch~rges
along with a pair of bucket.!
from Chad Nelson and Biown
gave them an U -7 lead. ..' 1
Mter a Meigs timemll:· the
Eagles again went on a.cllluge
ahead breaking the game' open
at 15-7. Marauder Nick•&lt;Bolin
was fouled at the end of the
first quarter, both his attempts
were good, raising the s~€ire to
15-9 at the e!)d of the first
period.
'n
• The Eagles began the seco,nd . quarter with a ,7-point
stint to jump way out dn front
· , 22-.11. Meigs got' back ,in the ·
game with a 3-4 effort from
. the foul line and a field-goal by
J:P. Staats.
1
At the 4:00 mark, the
Marauders still traileg, 22-14.

...__ .......

Bv GARY ClARK
OVP CORRESPOND£NT

.~~.,..,

SAY Wlf,4T?- Eastern's Brad Brannon (22) and Buzzy Fackler (32) of Meigs react to the referee's whis-

',,'

tle during Tue$day's TVC interdiyislon game. Eastern won, 57-46. (Jon Will photo)

'

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Gallipolis runs·pastJackson, 57-42
ANI)i
..

··f

'
•
BY
CAwmt
..
. . 53 win. '
.
Jackson to just four point.!.
0
Five different Bhte Devils scored in· the
· , J c·· KS ·
~ SPO EDIT~·,; ·~
~:I.·,'l Recipe for dis~ster or inspiration for sue. AI
ON -. G . Acaa~i:hy~boun':"' ~s; pick your poison.
second quarter with sophomore Travis
eti from a disappm~ung loss to Marietta and' . Fortunately for the Gallipolitans, the dub Mcl&lt;imiiss sparking a 5-0·run ori a 3-pointtecent off-court distractions ~o ..d~eaq~~~- ·
~eemingly galvanized in its rosolve and er with 6:36 to play. Junior David Finney
son 57-42 Tues~y.
· ,
. ' ·,
·" ,, · · rq~ to the occasiOn, espec1ally. m the second followed with a layup at the 5:11 mark that
The Blue J?e~ls (S-4, SEOO .3-2) .saw a quarter when seniors Dustin Deckard and gave the Blue Devib a 14-7 lead.
four-game wmnmg streak go ·by the boards T.J. Hill were forced to the bench with two
Following back-to-back buckets by Jacklast Friday when ·Marietta - stormed back fouls each.
·
son's Bryan Wilson and Ryan Tipton, fresh' from a ,seveg-point d~cit ~f regulation to
"I thought our second team played very men Andre Geiger and Cody Caldwell
ptck 1;1p ~ 57-52 overtune wm.
well:' Osborne sai&lt;;l. "We had three guys in: closed out the half with baskets 28 seconds
. In t1i~ wake of that set~a~k. tlte Blue Dev- there in the second quarter with very little apart.
~ suff~red another bloW'&lt;when head coach experience with Dustin sitting there (due to
"In the third quarter, we got the starting
J1m Osborne s~~:spended second-),eadmg foul "?uble).In fact, we djdn't have a letter- group back in there and got a little sems~Qre~ and top ass1st ma'!}'ony Moore for. a man on the floor in that second quarter. The blance of order," he added. "I think the
VJolatton team ·rules, which lett the Devils key was only giving up 11 points (in the defensive effort·was the key. We played realshort-han&lt;l~d heading in~f last night's game. first halQ."
.
ly solid defensively and didn't let them into
Me~n:-"hile! Jackson ~21.;_7 ; SE'?J\L 0-6) . Gallia Academy .pulled away from a 7-7 much of what they wanted to do."
· was nding .high folloW!!)$ a solid perfor- tie in the first quarter and led 18-11 at the
Deckard and Hill returned to action at
mance aga~nst league-leading Lo!lan last · half. The Blue Devils forced seven Ironmen
Ftiday, as the Chieftains esca~ed with a 58- turnovers in t!te ¥cond period and held

GRANTSVIL!;.E, W.Va.
Despite placing four players In
dou,ble-digit scoring, Wahama
waited much too long before getting its offense in gear as Calhoun
County sprinted past the White
Falcons by an 87-67 score Tuesday.
The Red Devils forced a number of early WHS miscues in
springing to a 38-15 halftime lead
and were never really challenged.
Wahama got its offense untracked
with a 52 point outburst in the
final two quarters but for th e second consecutive outing, its sluggish beginning proved to be too
much for coach Lewis Hall's
cagers to overcome.
"They were much quicker than
we were and that rriggered some
problems fur us early," Hall stated.
"They essentially started five
guards and forced us Into committirig numerous turnovers.
They penetrated our defense and
took the ball to the basket. We
couldn't. stay in front of them
which led to several fouls on our
part and we never recovereil after
falling behind in the first half"
, The setback was the seventh
straight loss for the Mason County cagers following a season
opening win over Hamlin.
Wahama dropped to 1- 7 on the·
season, while Calhoun County
improved to 3-6 on the year.
for the second time in as many
games, the White Falcons allowed
the 'opposition to 'march to the
free throw line for an astounding
number of scoring opportunities.
Mter Hannan shot an amazing 40
free throws on Friday ~gainst the
Bend Area team, WHS afforded
the Red Devils 39 foul shooting
possibilities with Calhoun County converting 23. of those
prospects.
The host team led by an 18-7
margin after one period and
incre.Sed Its advantage to 38-15
at the halfWay ·mark. The Red
Devils enjoyed a 56-30 edge after
three quarters before Wahama put
up 37 points in thell. fina] eight
minutes to surpass its point production of 30 tallies during the
first 24 minutes of the hardwood
contest.
Senior Nathan Connolly came
• off the bench to pace the WHS

I.

Eastern
6-0 9-2
Waterlord ·
3-3 4-8
Federal HOcking 4-2 .4-5
Southam
3-3 7-5
Trimble
2·4 2-9
Miller
'().6 0·11
Thul'ldlly'a 0.1111111
Meigs at .Belpre
Eaetem at Trimble
Federal Hooking at Waterford
• Southern at MHier
.VInton County at Nelllilnyille-York
·
Frlday'a Game
Wellston at Amanda Clearcreek
81!0

ast

•

w?f,

Are1 non-league
'

W.dne1d.y, ..nuary 10, 2001

'

Ea
BY

Belpre
5-0 9-1
Alexander
3-2 6-5
Nelsonville-York 3-2 5-5
Vinton County 3-2 5·6
Wellston
1-4 5·4
Meigs
0-5 0·10
Hocking Dlvl1lon ·

Report: Lack of
10 check led to

•

•

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Boy•
TVC
Ohio Dlvlalon

~:n~r;~~,~:~~~:~~:~~~~~ ~~J;~~s o~~o;:;~tl;u~i:~::r~

materiali·sm and crime, increasing ·
volunteering · and ·charity work,
and better child-rearing are likely
if''many more Americans were to
become deeply religious," partieipants pid by majorities ranging
from 69 percent to 87 percent.
'The November poll of 1,507
U.S. adults was conducted Public
Agenda, a nonpartisan New
York-based policy research
ageney founded by former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and ·
pollster Daniel Yankelovich. The
. nwgin of error was plus or minus
3 percentage points. A report on
the . poll; was being released
Wednesday at a Brookings lqstitution forum in Washington.
· fully 74 percent agreed that
"it's a bad idea for families to raise
, cbiklren ..Ynthout ,any religion."
Seventy-fqur percent said school
pr:lyer teac)tes children that belief
in God.i;' jmpo~nf, and.56 percent. cti9sider it .an effective
n1ean5 of in!proving. youn8'ters'

•

'

NEWYORK (AP) -A post, behavior.
campaign poll from a secular
Bm majoritic1 said school
think tank found that Americans prayer can be unfair to some fam,
•re wary of r&lt;ligion in the politi- ilies and students, \vhich app arcal arona but \vant more of it in ently explained why ther&lt; was far
public schools and tbink U.S. ·more support for • ·nonsectarian
society would benefit if mor&lt; "moment of silence" in classpeople became devout.
rooms (53 percent) than prayers
Religion is tile best \vay to addressed..to God (20 percent) or

.

The Daily Sentinel

Page 81

in rollover crashes, according to the government.1\venty-three percent of car occupants
who were killed died in rollovers.
Rollover crashes kill an estimated 10,000
people each year. .
•
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Adminiftration rated 42 model- year 200 I
vehicles: 19 SUVs, 11 light trucks, nine passenger cars and three vans.
·
The ChevroletfBiazer and GMC
Jimmy/ Envoy four-joor 4X2 SUVs drew the
lowest scote, a one-star rating. Those vehicles'
4x4 versions and the Ford Explorer 4X4, target of dozens of lawsuits as a r&lt;sult of rollover
accidents, were among th~se rated two stars.

Man executed by injectiQn .Americans wary of religion
the political arena
·
Melisa Ann Garcia of Slaton
and DNA .tests link&lt;d him 'to
the crime scene. He later insisted he was innocent, saying he
signed his confession out of
frustration and that evidence
was planted.
Garda was making a telephone call outside a convenience store the early hours of
Oct. 15, 1989, when Clark
approached her and asked if she
· had a light for a cigarette. When
she finished her call, testimony
showed he stabbed her in the
shoulder, forced her into her
own car, drove away and repeatedly raped her before fatally
stabbing her in the heart.
Clark was arrested following
a brief highway police chase a
few weeks after he told officers
he spotted the body.
While in 'the county jail,
Clark bragged about the rape
and murder to another inmate,
who testified against him at hi!
trial.
·
In McAlester, Olda., Eddie
Leroy Trice, 48, was executed
for fatally beating · Ernestine
Jones in 1987 after breaking
into her home. Trice was arrested four days after the slaying
and police said. .lJe )ater . ,con- .

;

I

AP girls polls out, Page BJ
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

TVC

HUNTSVILLE , Texas (AP)
-A man convicted ·of kidnapping, raping and fatally stabbing
a 23-year-old woman 11 years
ago was executed by injection
Tuesday.
In Oklahoma , a ·4R-year-old

I

... ···· .. ...
~

·Athens
~
·
West~
Virginia
buries · ::·~ .
'

·.River ValleJ~....
'

BY

BurcH COOPIR

OVP SPORTS STAFF

MARIETTA ' - ·
someone ,has a hot . hal!d&gt;;\
there's usually nothing you can
do about, no ~tter who it
On Thesday, River V&gt;ll~;,. -~·1
found that out as the Rai~rs•
fell to Marietta 88-49 in ..pro::.p.•"'!
boys basketball play.
Marietta big man John Farr,
a 6-foot-6 center, missed Tuesday's game with a sprain,ed
• ankle. l'arr has been a big r:ime
player for the 1igen as the
team's le~ding scorer.
.• ,
Enter Farr's backup, , C_hris .'
Fennell. . · .
· .
. Fennell, who only had two
'points in Marietta's 57-52 ·
o~rtime wip over Gallia
Academy Friday, stepped in to
make .'five ;3-pointers on his
way to a 38-poinf perfor-

mance,
"We knew that they' had
some kids who could shoot
the bait very well, artd they
did:' said River Valley head
coach Gene Layton. "We did-

Pioma,..-llldln.Pep•s ·

. --

_
~

... ...._._ .....

.........

'.

tops Marsha 73-67
.

Mountaineers whip Herd for
fifth straight season

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The game was close only in
the end. It was the opening
minutes that told the tale of
West Virginia's fifth-;&lt;;traight· victory over Marshall.
·
Marshall (nissed its first eight
shots'; The Mountaineers made
10 of their first 15.
For th&amp;game, the Thundering
Herd shot a season-low 31 percent from the floor yet some-.
how nearly overcame a 14-point
deficit.
'the . inside play of Calvin
Bowman and 'the dutch shooting of Lionel Armstead and Josh·
Yeager down the str&lt;tch secured
West Virginia's 73-67 victory
Tuesday night at th e Charleston
Civic Center.
Marshall'~ 26 points in the first
half marked the ' second straight
. game it was held u·nder 30. It
made just nine field goals in the
first· 20 minutes in which it
made just 27 percent ofits shots.
.' "The key to the game was our
defense:• said West Virginia
coach Gale Catlett.·"As offenBRACING FOR IMPACT - Marshall's Tamar Slay (1) feels the heat sive-minded as they are, to hold
them to what · we did is phefrom WV~'s Jay H!!Wltt In the Capitol Classic Tuesday. (AP)

___ __
.,.

t

.

•.
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nomenal because they have a lot
of great players."
The only Marshall starter who
was immune from a bad shooting nightwasJ.R.VanHoose. He
went 7-of-11 from the floor and
finished with 18 point~. Most of
·his baskets came off rebounds .
Teammates Tamar Slay, Joda
Burge~&lt;. Cornelius Jackson and
Latece Williams shot a combined 13-of-54 for 24 percent.
for Slay, the first half was a far
cry from last year's gathe, when
he scored 23 points against West
Virginia before halftime. On
Tuesday he was just 2~of-9
shooting in· the first halffor nine
points.
"Tonight was just not our
night," VanHoose said. "With
missed free throws and easy
jumpers not being made, it's
tough · to pull out a win. We
should be able to play a lot better. Guys like Tamar and Joda are
a lot better players and hopefully they'll get back to that." ·
• It was Bowman who made his
presence known early. He used

PleaH ... WVU,Pip8J

�-

•
Page a 2 • The Deily Sentinel

Wedneeday, January 10,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..

Wednaeday, January 10I 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
v

•

:.ohio girls AP polls released
f
OtvNwey
LC1et. , _ Yard ......
and W.,..... To Do Alit
lluel a. P81dln AllvlniCe

TBP'HI D'ADUNE

2 00 p m 1M dey to.1orw
111e .ella 10 run -Sunclly •
llonday- 2 oo p.m
Frldly

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110

Business
Opportunity

210

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ASSEMBLV AT HOME! C at 1
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795.Q380 Ex 20 !24hfS)

IS Yea Old Ranch 3 Bed ooms 2
c,.r Allached Garage L11 ge

One bed oom house In Rae ne

Rooms Wa k n C osets Cen at

~7--

Htat And A

P us Ext a Sep c

System And wa er Tap Fo 1i a
61 Hoole Up 3/Hc 11 ~ n Of

Gal po so
4 Nea Aaba
Symmes Va ey Schoo 0 st c
$58 000 !H0)319-2567

Ceda aooh th ee bed oom two
bath one and 1/2 ca ga age un

HMJJNib P''QYNE,
1 00 p m the dey before
lhe.clletorun
SundiiJ • Mondrt .clition
1 00 p m Friday

denlea h Ia ge outbuilding. 6x.32

AIPIITJA peeDt!NE
MED CAl BILLING Un m ad n
come polenl a No expe ence
necessa 'I F ee n o mellon &amp;
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F nanc ng ava ac e BOO) 322
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1100 In RICint 74M49-2204
Th ee bedroom a e ect c ranch

IOnWARI IIC~ITill
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100 221 ~183 h
71131 U II Pa Mlnuto Mull Bo
18 ...... lllrv.U (811)848-6434
GIRLI ~lVIII 24 HOURI A
DAYII 1 QOO 221 ~384 E" 70&amp;7
$3 Sl9 Per Mlnutt Mutl Bt 18
Years lllrv.U {8t9 84&amp;-&amp;434

Home a Garden Pa ty G tat
HolfOII Btnlnfl To Book A
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Now TO You Tll nShOpf&gt;e
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000 $38 000

800 448 8689 EKpe enced d v
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to Mage Yea .s Dayea e Cente

2 0 Hgl'l S
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FOUND- Long HolrOCI Malt Dog
W lh Choln And Col a n
Konauga {740)448 3648 0
1740)446-3800

Auction
end Flu Market
Ptar~on

Auct on Company

full t mt auot onet comple e
auct on H vice
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till Ohio &amp; Wool V glnla 304
773-5785 ar 30'-na-5447

R vert dt Aucuon Barn Sale
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Auc loneer AaymonCI JoMton

(740)2S8 15981

90

140

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Business
Training

Wanted to Buy

Go d A ng1

U 6 Cur ency

800-29t 4683 Dept. t09

150

OFFER

•Ful Bene Is
•Weekly Paycheck

85f08K 29

Corponitlon
II Cunenl~ Add ng To Ou Stoff
Come Wo k Wth The BEST
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t..Jal.475-7223 Ext 1901

f "M'I CY&gt;.H t&lt;T
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EARN 'lOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
OUICKLY Bachelo s Mas e s

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Gua anteed Wo k W th Fabu ous
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TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TV ISS 1
No Fee Unlt&amp;s We W nl

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ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
PL/1 n o work S25/hr $75/h FT
P~ PREE nlo 800 871 8045 ox!
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Up to $1815 hou Hlrng to
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Up 10 IIIII hOUI Hlr no lOr
1001 lrtt 0111 till lflPIICifloit/IX
em nauon !nlormlllon Fouret
Hlrt Pu t lent! 11 t 100 111
4104 llltftllon tIt I (tam lpm

CIT)

F om Gall po
{740)2e6-8449

1

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Ll!nG? Wo Doll! Hurry
ONy o Lo aLoft 304-738 7295

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t

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992 523t

GOVT POSTAL JOBS UP 10
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STATUS FREE CALL FOR AP
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Strv Cll Acctp no App ca ons
Por L'N Po !limo ~001 Cover

101 Aroo Floxlb o Schodu o
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wtlchloln-oth

law Our_ ... ....,
hltoiiUid ..... cMtlt!IQI
tldvwrtiMd In thll n&amp;4UI;t41•
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ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! No h
ng down Estab shed Yo k M nts
oute w h 22 oca ona EZ e a
hou 1 weekly no sell ng Net

S52K vel! v M n mum Inns man!
$4000 866 2!50 26 0

ALL CASH CANDY

RO~TE

Do

you ea n $800 day? GO mach nea

anG candy $9
~END
FL
SO Reg684

9~5

1 800 998
A N2000 033

C&gt;ppCJriiJNty -

310 Homee for Sale
SO OOWN HOMES! QOV T &amp;
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2 Toy PooG I Pupplll 8 Wllkl
01~ hi~ tit Sholl AnG wormt~
Col (7o!O)'W&amp;-33Q8

Aptrtmenta

lncludea

Sewage Tra1h $325 Mo

Water

740

448-0008

Pita tor Sale

Uncond I onal

C&amp;C

bul,_ tocauon No Pets Rotor
encea equ red 1350 mo g ua

Sporting
Good1

t2 G1ugo Bolli um Brown ng Automltle 80 n Fu Choko
(304)e7!HI33

AKC Wt ma antr Pup1 Ftmalt
til Shotl Olw Clow1 Aornl&gt;vtd &amp;
~ Doclctd ]740)448-4412
97 Honda C v c HX 2Coor ~

Antique~

Speed Loaded One Owne \/e

C ean

A

Majo

v

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Ma n enance Jus comp eted 40
50 mpg H gh l.lllos {740)446

93 Oodgt Ca avan Good Run
n ng Cond 1on $3000 OBO 740)
44-9511

Auto Parte a.
Accessories

760

3Be4 $7500 Exee lent Cond Uon

dlf)Oift {304)675-171!4
2 14 Mon oa Ave 3 Bod oom tull
cent a al htat s•oo

mon111&gt;dlpolil !304)e78-3230
3 Bedroom Houu 8 Ho 1e S a
Ba n &amp; Puture Oepoa 1 At
qu rod {740)448-3292 (304 670..

05 4
3BR Quill No g~borhOOcl County
0 C 1y Schoo I A•fllllb I FIOru
a y Itt Pill Wtleomt Flt trtnc
.. {740)2se-8t71
4

bo~room

llouae n11 Pomeroy

Grto~

Now AC

ceptlng App eat ona for 1 Bed
room Apartmen 1 App lncts ln.

Ro twel~e Pupa 8 Week a t st

Sho a &amp; Wormed
{740)388-839

Merchandlae

$ 25

10

94 Bu ek Regal 4 door 87 Chevy p ckup pa ts to 82 Toyota
p ckup 740 992 5880
~OOH~

ALL
STEEL
BUILDING
ClEARANCE 24x28 was S7290
1011 $3375 30X48 WOI $ 0 380
111 $e6SO SOxtOO wao $32 540
M $18 875 New Muat ee Tom
1-eoo-3927803
AMAZING META81LIIM B eak
lioughl Loao tO 200 Lbs Easy
Quick Fast D amalia Flesul s
100% Na ~ra Oocto Recom
mended

Fre•

guarantee 14y a on ob expe
once (304)e95 3887

strollt

ca

f''

In Memory of

Les e

d osslng table playpen {304)
67$-280

f Af1M ~,IJPPLIEo,
&amp; LIVt STOCK

610 F.•rm Equipment
Jol'ln Deere Ba ers AnCI
Mowe Cond t one 1
U1 JD

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w lh
tal than perfect crt&lt;llt 1 BOO

1111

477 i0t6 Codo.-c2 www omcsoUIIoot.com

lawn
ndtr

w

You are not rorgotten
Loved one
nor will you ever be
Sadly mlooed by
Wife Faye Son Jim
Sloter WUma
Brothen BID Carl

T actor 3 Cy
OIIHI Water 't:oo td n

And Garden

Gopon~onl

B lkU Low ~ange

AnCJ tfigh Range Ttansm sston 3

o

Point H loh 2 Spood P
FLORIDA MARCO ISLAND En
joy the troplca pa a&lt;1111 of
bttohll and rela~eat on Beach
f ont condoa o homtl Fo rtnV
1111 Century 21 111 Southt n

T ull

1 800 255 9487

o

www e21marco conr

$150

Inch

Be y

Mowe

fromPip81

wlto puaed away
30 yean Rf!O today
Jan 10, 1971

Ends January 261 0% F nanc ng

985-3374

{740)441 t893
Sk d Stee &amp; AUachmtnl Demo

Day Be Su o To Como To Sloe
ng In The ~ ght 0 ftC! on Janu

Card pf Thanka

60

Lost and Found

a y 31 At

ROPJ On Hond Special F nandng

Avalablel Mid Way Batwun Ga

!!polio Ancl

~

o G ando On Jack

aon Pike Your Local John Deere

Dolllor {740)448 24 2 Or
594-1111

800

Wordl
ClnDOt
exPrell whet we feel

•••••••••••••••••••

ID our hnru to

evtr~one for all the
love arid klndneu
and urtna that ~ou

ll1 lhawed to all of
u• durlna the life and
PIIIIU

Magic Chef gu ango good con
Gillon $75 7ol0-992 4228

Ch ldrena Pony Fo Sa e Other
Horus Avllllblt (740)388-9t30

Mogle Chit h11vy duty woshe
Wh II $ JOO Mig C Chol heavy

640

earth!~

Hay a. Grain

father Rota

fllhlr
forever We will m.. t
IUln
IOml
dU
Think ~ou 111 for

whll ~ou ell~ tor u1,
Tb1 ltewart f1mll~

lh pplng So y no HMO a Co
800 758 7880 or vow &amp; pu

www bt

Male German Wirehaired Pointer
L.:ong Bottom Vicinity

REWAADt&amp;OOI
740-H5-4308

~

110

Tara Townhoull Apartment•
Ve )' Specious 2 Bedrooms 2
FIOor1 CA 1 t~ Bot~ Fully Clr

8onnotlo Hoo1 ng
8(10 572 81111

1

Htlp Wanted

Our oflloe Ia currently
H&amp;klrl; fA p/1, and
llmporary workert to
flll lhrH 1h 1111 dally

TfiAW,I'OH 1J\T ION

710 Autoa tor Sit•

Cuualenvtronment
hsnda on training

SO DOWN CARS! POL CE M
POUNDS &amp; R!POS HONOA S
CHEVV S JEEPS &amp; SPORT
UTIL TV LOW AS U9 MO 14
MO S 1111'!1. FOil LISTING
C~LL t 100 451 0050 lXI C
H12

e~oellent

bentflll

a.

man111•m•nt
oppol'!unHitl make thle
en excHing choice for
ltudentl houaewlvn
eonlort or snyone
looking tor extra
money Pick up the
phone now to HI up
your pereonal
Interview
We 1re Wilting to hire
YOU I
CALLTODA'l

10 OQWN CARSI AI lOW 11 1211
mo Po ce lmpounGo 1nd opo1
111111&gt;'11 14 mot e11 t% Fo
llotlngo c11 100 71t 3001 111
AOtO
84 lutolt ~1011 4 ctoor 17 Cho
V! PIOkup plriiiOr II Toyoll

I ~oom Uottllfl API One Ita
toom AI ... ltOOfli AVIftUI
OaUIDo111 Daoolit lllqulred II•
M~l Lilli Yllllllll Not tn
01
IIOIPI Willi Cli DIIIOit
or M! AI (7401441•1IU ~~
lltlf!) to IIi Up An Appo nl

1·800·929·5753
Civic O.Vtlopmtlllt
Group/ml!lannlum

mont

i

front the foullme to pump som~
hope back mto the fadmg
Marauders but as Me1gs began co
foul m att~mpt to regam posses
s1o 1 of the ball they sealed the r
fate Joe Brow t was able to cap
tahze of a J ~ Staats foul ncr~as
11g the Eagle l~ad by a 2 f&lt;&gt;r 1
effort fro 11 the !me Matt S111p
sot mad~ a qmck steal pam1g co
Chns Lyons who dramed a 1
NBA rang~ 3 p011t bucket at the
buzzer to make the fi tal score '7
46

Lasr v~ek so 11eone told 11e
that there 1s 110 such thmg as a 1
ugly w1n 1f that 1s true th1s wm
was very unattracuve Eastern
coach How1e Caldwell sa1d On
the posit ve Slde our defense has
held our last three opponents to
44 52 and 46 ~omts respectively
That shows some very tough
defense the only problem IS we
have not had the offense to go
along With 1t The bottom hne IS
we have won our last three
games all of wh1ch were 1mpor
tant
The Marauders were led n
sconng by Saders With 17 pomts
followed by N1ck Bolin Wlth 12
pomts
For the Eagles lt was Chad
Nelson leading the charge with
20 pomts followed by Joe Brown
w1th 16 pomts

.,

the start of the th1rd quarter
and pa1d tilvldcnds unmed10tdy
help1 1g the Blue Devils counter a
4 0 ru 1 by Jackson
D ckard had c ght pmnts a1 d
H1ll a 1d G •gcr added s x po tts
etch n the clurd as the D v1ls
blc v the game open Galha Ac d
e 1y o tscor d Jackson 22 17 111
the p uod a td held a ~() ?I{
adva 1tage I eadi1 g mto the fi al
quarter
The Bit c Dcvlls extended the If
lead to as many as 23 po m the
fourth qt arter en ro te co the
cructal w n
I thmk 1t s very m porta 1t for
us Osborne md of TL esday s
v1ctory The k1ds came m wah a
lot of confidence the day or so we
practiCed after that game We sa1d
you ve got to beheve m your
selves you can accomplish th1s
You re good basketball players

Lets go out and play the way we rebounds
Caldwell F1nney and JUmor
can play
Parncdarly on the road and Ryan Matura e ch fin shed w1th
Jackson had played so wdl agamst four pomts McKinmss had three
pomts vh1le semors Allen Sk n
Loga1 I thought ch t was 1mpor
tant Osborne sa d But our 11er and N1ck Dressel added t a
pomts each Dressel led the Blue
g tys have pl1yed c mugl basket
Devlls With SIX rebou 1ds
ball chat they co 1 c o t w ch th
W !so 1 led Jackso 1 v th 10
heaqs tp They real ze t sa a1 th
po
nts and s x re~m 1ds as Gall a
cr day We r&lt;ally pr ach thats 1ts
r&lt;ally 20 s so 1&lt; of ga n s 1d Acade ny bottl d up 1ro 1
senors Rya1 T pt&gt; ad Er
yo take o
t
n1 ,
Eva 1s th cit b s t p sco cr a 1d
Gc ger fi 1 shed
th
ga 1
h1gh 17 pm cs SIX f vh ch ca 1, reb u 1d&lt;r resp ctl\ ly
T1ptm had s ven pmltS 1 1d
Jn a pmr 1f k y 1 p t g&lt; Is 1
three
reb
ds Ev 1&lt; sc r d 1 1 e
the th1rd per d Ge1get s scc01 d
tr y gave th Dev Is a 40 ?3 po lts d h d four reba~ 1 ds
The Blue De' Is lOW tur 1 th 1
cush1 1 v th 1 44 left 111 the
s1ghcs toward 1 v SEOAL I ader
per oi
Warren (5 4 SEOAL , 0) The
G g r 1lso d sl ed o t a career
Warr ors upset Logan o 1 the
h1gh seven assiSts
D.ckard pumped n 13 po 1 ts Cl eftallS ho 1 e floor last n ght
marking hiS fourth stra1ghc game 5? 48
The Galha Academy Warr
m double figures The semor s
now averagmg 14 9 pomts per matchup IS sec for Fnday m V1
game He had four rebou 1ds four cent Wlth JV ga 11et1111e slated for
(, p l
steals and thre ~ssl!ts
Hlll added e1ghc pomts all n
the second half and grabbed four

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

Wahama
from Pllp81
offense w1tli IS markers Ryan
Roush dropped m 14 talliea whale
Eddie McKlnney added 12 and
John Sn11th 10 for the Wh1te Falconi Goff led allacorers With 24

p01nts for Calhoun County w1th
Boshett addmg 23 for the Red
Dev1ls
In the prelmunary affa~r the
Wh1te Falcon JUmor vamty saw
m season record dap to 2-2 on the
year follow1ng a 48-38 loss to the
JUmor Red Devals
•
Stephen Roach and Gabe
Lambert led the Lmle falcons

Wlth 10 pomts ap ece w th Chr s
Samson sconng 10 to lead Cal
houn County
Wahama wall return to acuon
on Fnday mght Wlth a pm of
games at Oluo Valley Chnst1an
w1th JUmor varmy acuon to
begm at 6 00 p m and the vars1ty
tllt to follow at 7 30 p m

Ctrd ot Thtnkl

I

NMCI Work to Par
olf HoUdaJ IMJiet

t,tobllo Homo Supp y 740 446
9i 18 """orvt c:orM&gt;onnon

non

LOST OR
STOLEN

arormed

Fu nactt Otl Fumaces 12 Seer
Htlt Pump I Air Condition ng
Sy111m1 fre* I
Warranty

well Nelson was agam called
upon to add an extra bucket to
the growmg Eagle score
At the 6 20 1 ark the Eagles
vete mil on top 38 15 Sf npso 1
stole the ball from the Mara• ders
and took 1t 111 for the score but
J I' Staats answered w th a lay up
of hu ow t A goal te11dmg V!Ola
t10n o 1 the Eagl&lt;s bro 1ght Me1gs
w thm t 3 agam as the Marauders
were stagmg a co 1 cback
S1ders went ? far ? fro 11 the
foul !me followed by a Buzzy
Fackler JUmper cumng the
Marauder defie1t to 9 pomts Nel
son was aga 1 able t connect off
an amst by S1mpson to mcrease
the lead to 4? 36 S1ders was not
about to be outdone by the
Smtpson Nelson duo S1ders san
gle ha 1dedly beat the Eagle press
and took the ball all the way 11
for the final score of the quarter
bnngmg hiS team Wlthm 8
pomts
Joe Brown took control m the
fourth quarter by pounng m 10
of the 15 Eagle pomts for the
final frame The Eagles attempted
to build on the1r lead but to no
avali as the Marauders pulled
w1thm s1x p01nts at the 3 30
mark Brown helped h1s comrades
out by blocking a key shot and
then taking the ball to the other
end for two g1vmg the Eagles an
e1ght pomt edge
Buzzy Fackler h1t a JUmper

OUr

HIIVInl~

Med Cl 1 m1y cove you nhaled
medications ~matt td dose n
ha t I) Save mon~~yl F ee home
ch111 at

Of

E Stewart Sr He 11
now with our

pt01111p 1:10-IN -

;::lui

AC man a
Happy 60th
Birthday

48

630

T1ppon H Ellie oncy 90% Gao

Ntw s lodroom Hollfl Clo11 1b
11111 polll P'lrl y Purn oho~ lm
macllolo Opltling (7:101118-4814

Call &amp; wish th

14 800

o ooam At Car
michie • Fa ma Lawn Co'"IJIII1Y

Howewr thnt lead was about
to dra!tlcally 1ncrease as Eastor 1s
Matt Sunpso t and Chad Ndson
read1ed their guns S mpson mde
a huge block stole the ball a 1d
scored tWICe m transmon to add
four more poutts to the Eagle
cause Ch~d Nelson dec1ded 1t
was h1s turn to earn h1s keep by
drauung a shot well beyond the
3 poult !me
Adam Bullmgton shordy mter
rupted the Eagle barrage but red
hot Nelson reloaded and hll
another 3 pomt goal from down
town to double the Marauders
score 16-32
The Marauders (0 9) had thm
opportumty to get back mto the
game as the Eagles comnutted
three straight fouls m the final
nunute of the first half Derek
Johnson hat 2 for 2 J P. Staats 0
for 2 and N1ck Bolm 1 for 2 end
mg the first half The Marauders
tmled 13 po1nts at the half 32
19
The th1rd quarter proved the
most phySical on the mght w1th
the Marauders loosmg key player
N1ck Bohn to h1s fifth foul early
m the third quarter Joe Brown
and Matt S1mpson both comnut
ted the~r thad personal fouls as

Gallia

Orvllle E
Wateon

seat

tf'lt Y Located W h n 1 M e 01
Ho zt Cun c G oclfy Sto ••

ll3aO plijo dlpoln 740 112 7111

l!lfll llodtOOm MOUII n
luttkl No ,. 1 ~tlo11noo ~·
qultld 1:100 ,., Monlh ' u1 01
alter CIOpm !UOI

teams problems on th'lt
Our bench JUst ISO t thot
strong nght now Wh te md
Joda went 3 of. 13 and that s not
good enough to wm the game
Tomght had nothmg to do with
Trav1s not playmg
Armstead and Bowman each
fimshed w1th 20 pomts while
Yeager had t 5
Slay had 16 pomts three below
hiS average Jackson had 14 pomts
and VanHoose led Marshall wtth
15 rebounds
Marshall plays at home agamst
Akron Saturda~ while WVU (9
3) heads to No 11 Syracuse m
B•g East play

In Mamory

apeakor $1500 cal 740 992
6443 or 7o!0-387 7170

(740)44 ·~
Baby btd

B2 organ

one T ansre

Don 1 SttMtf by high p kes
Shop the dastlfltd I&lt;CIIon

570
Hammond

ooo T ans!TI ss

Caaos. 740 245 5677 Co 339
3765

AWD H gh M " Sha p
$9500 B ue aook $8700 OBO
(740)44 -o 35

Samples

REIIOINTIAL HOME OWNERS

poltd Ad~ t Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PI o Slott $388 Mo NO Pitt
LIISO P Ul Soeur ty Dlpoll ~I
qulrod Oaye 740 441 3411
Even ng1 740 387 0502 740
441-0101

L v ngs on a Baaemen Wate
P ootlng a I baaemtnl epa s
dona rree ea ma es 111 mt

Priced Trenaml11lona
"]Yj:jt&amp; Aeceaa To Over

A

991 Dodge Stea th flfT Turco

c u~OCI Swimming Poo Convon
AnG . . , . _ (740)&lt;W&amp;-t591

ng

Budg~t

niCII a Heat Pumps Benne ts

Sp lng Valey

Home Man

Ina v nyl ad

ca pent v doo 1 wlnCIOwa ba ha
mob 1 homt epa and mo 1 For
fee as mate call Ctlet 740 992
6323

Hugt lnvtnto y 0 &amp;count P oea
On V nyl Sklrllng Coors w nd
ow1 Ancho 1 Wale Heart a
Plumb ng I Elect ca Pa tt Fu

2 Story t I 2 bath Excellent

Gent a

tent net Pan

530

re me gua anttt

985 ChiVY 4x4 V 8 4 apood Local eft aneta ru n lhtd Et
bed nt manv ex as 33 ad a a ablohad 978 Cal 24 Hra {740)
nice rel abe uck btl offe 740- 448 0870 1 800 287 0878 Aog
992 7458
1 sWae p oofng

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS
2 Bedroom Rtnl • Depoe t Ret

Home
lmprovamenta
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF N(l

730 Vans lo 4·WDI

cal com for more Informal on

orencoo No Ptlo {740)448-9249

SU1VICES

810

duty dyer almond $1QO da k

Http Wlnllll In lcluft gtOup homo
:bind nfGht lh II Clll 740 Ill

n Qh ••m dtUud 11n11 No
IOUOh Ire gh 0 111 btnoU 1
Ill' drOP/hOOk 100.100 1111 ~~
gl0nll6 looll ,... ono

Southwtst Bar I Hutch And
Th 11 Bor Bloo 1
$400
{740)248-8008

port From $27~ $338 Call 740
9112 5084 Equ~l Housing Oppo
IUnltfeo

Now Taking Appl cat ont 36
Wea 2 Bedroom Townhouse

baHmen

REAL ESTArE

996 Dodge lnt IP d ES Candy
Applt ReG Leo he LoaGeG
99 ooo M Its Sharp $9 8&amp;5 B uo
Book 19 400 oao (740)441
Ot35

580

Grac ous vlng 1 and 2 bed oom
apa mtnts at VI age Mano and
R Yl 11 de Apa tmen s In M ddle

Tlla -per will not
knowingly ICCifll

I 888 674 9t50 ext 3234

Building
Suppllea

troml;.a1

94 Dodpo Rs.m 500 5 Sp11G
v 8 {740)21!8-8224

wood hutch $100 740-992 S502

.,. flmllalllaiUI or origin or ony lntenllon 10
mako ony IUdt p._terence
llml!tllon or dlocrlmiNIIJon

Government Joba $ I 00
$3300 pe hou Pad anng u
benelha For mo e lnforma on ca

550

Now I UM&lt;l Fum urt
N1w 2 P tct Llv ngroom Su 111
S39e BU)' Stl ltldl

P.-mo? NoOCITunod? Ca The
P~no D 7ol0-448 4525

nENlAI •,

MW'IJitll* ..
1D
Houllng Ad

-or
-lcr--

II nt St eel Ca 740 448 7398
888 818.0128

Grubb 1 P ano Tuning &amp; Rapa rs

n Coun ry On 1 8 Acrol -"0
Fow Repairs {740)446-2317

Comptny d lve • l'lomt tvtry

--,.,, 11111..,

eaa"nt Are~ Ca 1 Aher

$85 000 OBO

HtCUIIIX,~III

ADio!l1111y 11111 lnlol Internet ue
Ill WI"IIG 11000 11000/mo

t"

80 54 Ac 11 FlaV Aolllng, Teena
Aun App oxlma 1 y 5 M nutes

-.....~on
-on race color r1111g1on

UOI WEU~Y CIUARANTEEO
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUIRED 1 800 748 5718 Exl
x10t {24hrll

76

Cr,G t Approvol Call 0 Slop In
At Carmlchae a Fa m &amp; Lawn
(740)448-24 2 0
I 800 594

of 111M- lllflgli
to ld¥ertlae "any pi.... MICI

TENSION 22 (24 hro)

• ., 1300

homo lots for ron bOiulfut
country 11011"0 740-992 2187

the,_ ,. .

Bu1lna11
Opportunity

ances

EaPies

720 Truckl for Sale

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio I 800 537 9528

2 BR n Polnl Pltaunl Rttflrenc
eo Roqulrod (740)44&amp;-l!200

Have Loan NIOCI SodiJdld Ho!nt

FINANCIA L

$4!50 $1000 WEEKLY Mal ng Ill

E.1pt ence Aequ red ~or FREE
Info mellon c• 1 IQQ 501 8832

eetwetn Poma oy end Athena

360

$45 000/YA potonl Ill Dfs rtl8d

App

$37 oo Pe too A Bass com

pression F tt ngs In Stock

On

2588 Equal Houi. . Opporlurity

You Memoriel art ou Butintt1

brochurasl Sat atacllon Gua
an eed Postage &amp; Supp 11 p o
vldtdl Rush Se 1 Add eased

LtM I MIIIIQI

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDCIET P~lCEI AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wellwood
Drhol t om $2119 lo 1370 WI k 10
shop &amp; moves Co 740 448

180 Wanted To Do

12 DOO WEULYI llollln1 4DO

1117 85 WEEKLY P OCOIIIng
HUDIFHA Mortgor. RoJuMo No

Holze~_E_cono"'

Spm (740)44&amp;-0041

MAN STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
5 MAIN SI PI PLEASANT
304-875-7279

Skaggs

3 4 200 PSI

100 1 200 PSI

mo Col !740)288-tt35

Pont

SA OGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
800 984 83 6

HolpW•ntscl

h ICO dlcl m~IIOQI) 1 800
440 '125!11. 5700

00111 Noo

2BA ~•ferences &amp; Oepo• t In

study cou se Fo FAEE n

Cat {304)675 4()4()Today

anges

Wa e I ne Spec a

$21 95 Pt

r•o

2 BR Apa tmenl In Cpntenary
App lances Furn ahed Utll t aa
Plld Exctpt Eloe1tlc Cltan $l!851

800 826-9228 wn e PO llox
70 449 Da as TX 75370 NA o
h tp:/ www blackstone law com

sho

USED APPLIANCES
Washe 1 d ye a 1 ge a o s

540 Mlacelleneoua

1 BR Apl On V and Shill! Po nl
P ouant S275 Utility Paid Call
{304)675-31114 Or {304)738-3SS4

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD es Home s udy app oved

o ma on book' phone CAM

Wentod To Buy UHd Mob t
Homo Cllf 7~175 Or 3()4.
875-SM5

mtnl Aelunds r:rae Data 1 (24

a~

(304)6~75

•Pa d Vacahon
•P otessiona A mosphe e
lntoCI1 on Management

$121 WIIK~YI Make Monoy
Helping Poopll R1911ve Gave n

Apartments
tor Rent

(740)245-5565

Schools
Instruction

•Re ement Plan

CARS FROM $28/MO Impound"'
repoa Fee SO OownJ 2• moa
0 ti9% For Ill ng1 800 318
3323' 2 e6

DeLong s Groom Shop G oom ng
~Dog Breeds 740 441 1602

1 Beet oom upatal • very clean
S t 9e plua at cur tV plus utll t ea

Oocto a e by co espondence
based upon p lo tduca on and

• 994 ChJYy serena 3 t V8
Aulo GooG Cond on C1 !304
875 8(),

520

1 Bed oom Apa ment Ulll tlea &amp;
App lances ncluded $375/mo

1 soo 328

log

WE ARE H RINGII
Elm Up To $7/Hr And Wookly

Fo Sa e Recondl oned wash
es d,yes and e gttaos
TllOmpsona App ance 3407

C1mper11o
Motor Home•

Attl 'II&gt;U Pay DIPOil I Ul till
Role once AoQulrod {740)38S1182

depos t equl ed no p~ta

al o dab e comp ehtns ve lega
I a n ng s nee 890 FREE Cata

M TS Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue G s; ... 7~2&amp;C2

110

3 BR Mobllt Homo In Portor

992 2218

e SGOm

mmed a ely Home compu e
netdtd get FAEE n e net

710 AUIOI tor Bile

GCCC

POll $300 mon111 {304) 576 31 17
0 {304)578-2649 (304)562 9303

1

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YR
Med cal nsu anee B ng Needed

71 0 Auto• tor Sale

1 and 2 bed oom apartrntnta fur
n lhtd and unlu n ahtcl ucurUy

FREE DEBT CONSOL OAT ON

www debtccs o g Ca

Couch GooG Con'1lftlon $85 00
Ro of uaed blue ca pe S40
phone {304)e75 1515

Jad&lt;lon A\1811Ut {304)875-7388

2 Bed oom n country $200 De

440

App ca on w It v ce ~educe
paymen s lo 65'o/.
CASH IN

noned 1n the final D1vmon IV champ1onsh•ps last year behmd
poll last spnng but chmbed Ms Basketball MIChelle Munoz
Munoz who Signed to play
through the postseason before
losmg to Berlm H1land 46 30 m next year at Tennessee IS back for
the state final Hiland IS No ? m her seruor season
N me t1me poll champ1on
the first poll tra~hng Manon
P1ckermgton was No 6 and last
Local by four p01nts
Thts 1s the 17th annual All garls years DIVISIOn II poll wmner
Chammade Juhcnne
Dayton
poll of sports wnters and broad
chmbed up m class to place sev
casters from across the state
enth
Tmhng Beavercreek m D1v1
West Holmes wh1ch h•s won
s1on I were several famil1ar names
mcluding No 2 Rocky River five poll ndes was an S3 pomt
Magn1ficat No 3 Columbus cho1ce over Trotwood Madison
m D1vmon II State champ1on
Brookhaven and No 4 Mason wh1ch won the poll and state Columbus Hordey was fourth

score off a rebound. for a four
pomt lead w1th 3 12 left
Yeager h1t a 3 po nter a nunute
later-and Armstead scored WVU s
fromPipl1
final three pomts on free throws
h15 leapmg ab1hty to score four to secure the VIctory
Brooks Berry sa~d the Moun
mSide baskets 1n the games first
tameers showed Signs of a veteran
five nunutcs
club when Marshall closed the
A lot of h1s moves are mmnc
t1ve stuff Cadett sa~d He 1S hard gap
On a couple of possemons
to stop one on one
Desp1te the ternblc shoot ng they had the chance 10 tie It up
Marsh•ll (8 3) mal:ie the game Berry sa1d We held the ball and
mterestlng VanHoose s free throw got good lopks mstead of hurry
cut the deficit to 65 63 wath 4 37 mg the shot
Travu Young mmed hu fourth
left but Bowman made sure that
str:ught game for Marshall wtth a
was as close as Marshall got
Playmg w1th four fouls Bow stra1ned nght foot but coach
man leaped over VanHoose to Greg Wh1te refused to blante hiS

•

740-44e n95

Unlu n~hld 2 BR City 0 County
School Gordin SPite Pall WI~
come Rott enc11 {740)2588t71

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EX~ERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 90 t80 DAYS 1 888
811 0902

CENT VE

90 Days Gua

wvu

The Dally Sent1"1• Page a 3

pl aneta F tncl'l C ty May ag

lc~l Gu hoallng WilT lfookup
$278 00 PIUI Ullllll. LillO &amp;
Deposit Aaql.irod {740)HII 2967

Bonu~e~!

AbiOIUII Top Dollar U S S lver
Gold Colnl ProoiMII Olamor4s

I

wv

ro

Two bedroom mobile home an 1
1/2 IC I M lol Ill 1 - 0 $300
dlj)ooll $300 monlh pluo ut 1111
740 812-eo!12or740-w.l 2772

Yard Sale

80
R ck

Pon Peasant

URGENTLY NEEDED p a&amp;ma
donos ean$35 oS451o 20 3
hou &amp; week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 6851

Lo1t end Found

70

SUBST TUTE TEACHER I,IDE
FOR CH ~DCARE CENTER
Must have an n e es and des e
o work w h vou~ ch dfen Rep y

oned

SOnw 1 0 ve 9uffa o NY 14225
FREE nlo mat on
800 578
363 E)(T 200 U

aniHd we Se New Maytag Ap-

Moblll Home For Ron! (740)
44&amp;-t279

$FREE CASH NOW$ t om
weahhlf ram 611 unloldlng m ona
otdo at tohtpmnmzt ht
IIXta W It mmtd Illy W nd
Ia! o 30 0 WILSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANQELS CALIFOR
NIA 900 0

&lt;401 K L. e T me Job P acemen
4 day COL Tia n ng Tu on Re
mbu Semen f Qua I ed Call 1

Aecond

o 1 ora Up

3 ••~room In Counlry uoo
Month 1300 DIPOI t No Potl
{740)1ee-e711 Or {740)441-oeB3

D lve 1 NO EXPERI~NCE S38K
111 yea Fu Benef Is Mtd ca

9 00-530

60

0 000 Oil

e

Quality c olhing and houuho d
lema SI 00 bag •• e ave y
Thu aday Monday lh u Sa u day

l

v Goal 32x80 •

Yll No IIIPI tnce .ntCI518 y
I DIY COL 18 n ng TIJ don em-

bu ltmtnt I qualllltd Btntl tli
40t k Ca
877 955 8424 Ex
Pt tnetd d vert ca 1 800 260
02&amp;4 .-c 0219

anctt

App

t eco.e8t 87n

•

NORWOOD NOUSTR ES 252
Watht • orve s Ranges Ae

count on y 11000 00 Down Dt
llv.ry tnd IIIUP PI d by Fectory
I

sawm a edger' and sk dde a

{304)e75- 422
5 8ManStoot PontPuwu

1500 Fu Take Dv• Paymtnte
{800)89t 8777

D VI

arge capac es

mo e opllona manulaclu e of

Men S rtel ~urnhur1

Doub 1 W de 3 Bedroom 2 lath

P~ll

be ma e 2000

IM dopes~ 304 824 2&lt;180

2 bedroom 1 Iller In Tuppo 1
Pl1 no S278 on1 pluo dopoo t
740 8e7 3487

tT A~LI Roll Conltllionol
t 800 228 1127 Ext n3 $2 91
Po M nuto Mull BJ 8 Ytt 1
Btrv-U {8t 8)845-1434

Sawm I S3 795 New Supe L.um

home with attached ga age
fenced b'lck ya d Ia ge lol at
Meadow Lal)d Estates Pt Peas
an $600 month pus refe encea

E)(T 203

IA~I

SAVEl SAVE &amp;AVEI Heal
Ftumps L P &amp; Na u at Gas Fu
nacea r You Don 1 Ca Ua We
Bo h Losol {740)446 6308 &amp;
800-291-D098

Good•

1777 txt

12x50 Mob e Home New K tch

en

Pei'IOrlala

Houaehold

510

One btdroom nouM one car g•

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
Low o $0 down Tax Repo1 &amp;
Bank up c tsl HUO VA FHA
Low o no money OK Credit! For

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

$3115 por mon h plua $300 ...,.,..

ngroond pool manv ~w faakl'es
on one ac e Joca ed be wten
Da w n &amp; A bany $95 000 Call
740-698-3307

2 deyl to.forw the .clll to
run by 4 3D p m Sllurdlly
• llondlly odltlon- 4 3D

540 Mlacellaneoua
Men:handlae

MERCHANDISE

310 Homes for Sale

, COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) • Beavercreek Millersburg West
Holmes South Euclid Regma
and Mana Stem Manon Local
lead the pack m the first weekly
ballonng of The AssoCiated Press
gtrls state h1gh school basketball
poll released Tuesday
Reg na captured the regular
season poll and state tournament
tides last year m DIVISIOn Ill The
Royals had the most pomts (212)
the most first place votes (17) and
the w1dest margm (1 03 pomts) of
any of the poll leaders
Manon Local wam t men

-

T

TIIIHIVICH

To 111 o~t family, ftlandt
ln4 nel&amp;hbatll wllo
ahDWIId tholt love an4
•ump1thu towltd ~~ In
the loti of O~t cftlt
h~lbln4,
flthot an4
&amp;~•ndflthet Luttt D
(B~ok) I&lt;..ton, we ..tend

out hMiffllt thankl end
IPPrtcl.rlon
~ood

and flowm weto

&amp;lvon In ab~ndtlll!l. £ach
vlalt, telephone 01111, llllld
pteyet, an4 offot11 of help
m11nt 10 m~eh and wlll
eomfott ~~ In 111 the
lonalu tky1 to eoma
hno&amp;one Kltlon wilt
Sob and Pat
DOh and dtllihta~ln law
8obbu Matt &amp; l&lt;evln

Raiders
lnHIIPIIpl1
know Fennell could
The Rn1ders JUmped out to a
4-2lead on baskets by Enc Nolan
~nd Scott Payne
The Tagers then began to tak~
over gmng on ~n t 1 0 run b~fore
takmg a 20 10 lead at the ond of
the first quart~r
Fennell had 13 of h1s 38 pomts
111 the openmg p.r1od 1tdl d11g
throe 3-pmnt goals
Wo wid llllr k1ds not to
&lt;Xt&lt;nd out pose the foul hm 1'
fcot nn {Fe lllell) M lkc hun
prove that he can lut 1t s~1d Lay
ton He hn the fitSt olo 11d I
told them lets n tko lut h t
a 1oth&lt;r 1 nc The l ho &lt;hd o I
Sl) OK now we'" g&lt; tr. go

and Je J'OillY l'~c k each scored 11
pmntl
W1th Farr out of the game the
Ra1ders looked on paper as 1f
they could control the T1gers
ms1do gam~
• In fact they d1d matchmg
Manetta n rebound• w1th 14
comparod to the T1gers 27
bo trds
We knew With (Farr) 111 th
lmCL p tl cy Wert g llllg to look t
get the b 11 11Sldc to hnn SOld
Ll) ton We " rke:ltll th lt 11
practlcc nd W&lt; talked ob ll t that
W th hun &lt;lllt \\e ddt t lu•g•
&lt; r j, fe llSlV&lt; pJa IS 31 y
R.1vcr Volley Ml rns h lC F •
day !P 1 st Ja k!O l The lro 1 ne 1
lm t (II Acadmy ,7~1
r 1C da)
Sl!C&lt;Ilt
M, 1 \ h1l M r etta ploys h l&lt;t
F &gt;r the R 1 kr (o 4 SEOAL
2 :\) N I fin h d " ch 11 t&lt; Ath I '
p mts dul T 1 R d ni&lt; 11

guard hun
R1ver Valley attempted to get
back mto the game 1111dway
through the second quarter as
Nolan notched three stral~ht 3
pomters
Manetta though was able to
match the Ra)ders on the
peruncter Th&lt; T gcrs mad• t 1 ~
pmnters on the n ght comparod
to RIVer Valleys five
At ron S 1tt 111 sc &gt;red 16 pmnts
1tell dmg fo tr 3 po ntcrs for th&lt;
Ttgors (5 :\ SEOAL :\ 2) wh to
Brandon Bmke lt&lt;ttcd 15 po lt&gt;
Th,y ha\ e a r&lt; 1lly mcc teal 1
th&lt;'Y shot the hghts Ol t sa d Lay
ton
They sh t the ball r&lt; ll)
\ 11 We I v t 1 b 1 trc conm
tout We li 1\e to 1! y 10r&lt; n

�-

•
Page a 2 • The Deily Sentinel

Wedneeday, January 10,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..

Wednaeday, January 10I 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
v

•

:.ohio girls AP polls released
f
OtvNwey
LC1et. , _ Yard ......
and W.,..... To Do Alit
lluel a. P81dln AllvlniCe

TBP'HI D'ADUNE

2 00 p m 1M dey to.1orw
111e .ella 10 run -Sunclly •
llonday- 2 oo p.m
Frldly

Help Wanted

110

Business
Opportunity

210

APPL CAT ON AND EXAM N
FORMAT ON
Poa1a
obs
$ 35 nou
888 726 9083

COMPUTER NTERNET PER
SONS Ea n $25 $75/ll from yOu

a

K170 7am 7pm CST

PC

bonusu n
certvn
ul
anng
www pcwo kooline com

ASSEMBLV AT HOME! C at 1
Toya Jewt y Wood Sew ng
Typ ng G ea Pay CALL 800

Vaca ons

795.Q380 Ex 20 !24hfS)

IS Yea Old Ranch 3 Bed ooms 2
c,.r Allached Garage L11 ge

One bed oom house In Rae ne

Rooms Wa k n C osets Cen at

~7--

Htat And A

P us Ext a Sep c

System And wa er Tap Fo 1i a
61 Hoole Up 3/Hc 11 ~ n Of

Gal po so
4 Nea Aaba
Symmes Va ey Schoo 0 st c
$58 000 !H0)319-2567

Ceda aooh th ee bed oom two
bath one and 1/2 ca ga age un

HMJJNib P''QYNE,
1 00 p m the dey before
lhe.clletorun
SundiiJ • Mondrt .clition
1 00 p m Friday

denlea h Ia ge outbuilding. 6x.32

AIPIITJA peeDt!NE
MED CAl BILLING Un m ad n
come polenl a No expe ence
necessa 'I F ee n o mellon &amp;
CO ROM nvestmen o $2495
F nanc ng ava ac e BOO) 322
39 EXT 050 www bus ness

to

&amp;ta upcom

800

L sl ng&amp; Cal
983

~0 t

FREEDATNG
www S NGLES com

PEPS COKE FRITO
LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$ALL CASH BUS NESS$$ N
CREASE YOUR NCOME NOW
SMALL NVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROF TS 1 800 731 7~33

CLA MS PROCESSOR 120 140/
h potent a P ocess ng c a ms s
eaay Tan ng p av ded MUST

own PC CALL NOW I 888 585
5 97 ll 642

~ew

Ba h oom New F oo s
t 6x8 Cove td Porch Cent a A
$S 000 {740)441-8388

1100 In RICint 74M49-2204
Th ee bedroom a e ect c ranch

IOnWARI IIC~ITill
Down oad I tOOK In F II
Sonwa t And 0vtr 30 In 1 net
SIC Ill
100 221 ~183 h
71131 U II Pa Mlnuto Mull Bo
18 ...... lllrv.U (811)848-6434
GIRLI ~lVIII 24 HOURI A
DAYII 1 QOO 221 ~384 E" 70&amp;7
$3 Sl9 Per Mlnutt Mutl Bt 18
Years lllrv.U {8t9 84&amp;-&amp;434

Home a Garden Pa ty G tat
HolfOII Btnlnfl To Book A
Porty C1 ToGiy {304)875-8937
Now TO You Tll nShOpf&gt;e
9 Wnt St m1011 Athena
7ol0-592 1842

Foolo

$3~

000 $38 000

800 448 8689 EKpe enced d v
1 a hodng Ca&amp;s A ca 800 9~8

2353

to Mage Yea .s Dayea e Cente

2 0 Hgl'l S
25550

FOUND- Long HolrOCI Malt Dog
W lh Choln And Col a n
Konauga {740)448 3648 0
1740)446-3800

Auction
end Flu Market
Ptar~on

Auct on Company

full t mt auot onet comple e
auct on H vice
L censed
till Ohio &amp; Wool V glnla 304
773-5785 ar 30'-na-5447

R vert dt Aucuon Barn Sale
Evo y Soturday N gnt al 8p m
Auc loneer AaymonCI JoMton

(740)2S8 15981

90

140

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Business
Training

Wanted to Buy

Go d A ng1

U 6 Cur ency

800-29t 4683 Dept. t09

150

OFFER

•Ful Bene Is
•Weekly Paycheck

85f08K 29

Corponitlon
II Cunenl~ Add ng To Ou Stoff
Come Wo k Wth The BEST
CaH Today For An nlervtew
t..Jal.475-7223 Ext 1901

f "M'I CY&gt;.H t&lt;T
SLHJIC.l:,

EARN 'lOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
OUICKLY Bachelo s Mas e s

Cerpel • Uphol1tery Cleaning
Gua anteed Wo k W th Fabu ous
Resu ts For a Fee Es ma e

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TV ISS 1
No Fee Unlt&amp;s We W nl

t 896-582 3345

Slamptd ~nve ope GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370tt 438 StortiiiV110dlltety
people to proctaa c a ma Must
own computer modtm We t a n

Cll I 888-S87-caatl Ill US
t1 1 from home No expa ence
naceaaery FT PT Help nHdld
mmed a ely Can Sundance 0 a
tr bu ora 1 800 889 3449 ex

210

All'""'-.....
,.
IUbllet

-

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
PL/1 n o work S25/hr $75/h FT
P~ PREE nlo 800 871 8045 ox!
eo 1 www llhomol&gt;lz com
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Up to $1815 hou Hlrng to
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PIDI~A~ 'OITA~ JOII

Up 10 IIIII hOUI Hlr no lOr
1001 lrtt 0111 till lflPIICifloit/IX
em nauon !nlormlllon Fouret
Hlrt Pu t lent! 11 t 100 111
4104 llltftllon tIt I (tam lpm

CIT)

F om Gall po
{740)2e6-8449

1

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Ll!nG? Wo Doll! Hurry
ONy o Lo aLoft 304-738 7295

Rea' Eetate
Wanted

t

Fo ent one bed oom fu ntshlcl
apartment In Middleport caH 740-

992 523t

GOVT POSTAL JOBS UP 10
$38 748 YR NOW H A NG fOR
X MAS AND 200 PERMANENT
STATUS FREE CALL FOR AP
PLICATION EXAMINAT ON IN
FORMATION FEDERAL H RE
FUlL BENEF TS
800 4 I 6
07t2 42 000 RET R NG AS OF
JANUARY
200 AL' L NES
OPEN 24 HOURS WWW GOV
ERNMENTPOSTAUOBS ORG
lJROW NG BUS NESS NEEDS
I:IELP Wo k 1 om home Ma o
dt ECOmme ce 5522+ week part
t me $1000 14000/week tu t me
8CIO 821 1538
www d eam

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Metlth Management Nura ng
Strv Cll Acctp no App ca ons
Por L'N Po !limo ~001 Cover

101 Aroo Floxlb o Schodu o
MliiiQI Ionon I ,ICkiQI AVII
lbll App)y AI 782 In~ Avtnul
(Ia Jlpo.. (t40,.w&amp;-380110!

wtlchloln-oth

law Our_ ... ....,
hltoiiUid ..... cMtlt!IQI
tldvwrtiMd In thll n&amp;4UI;t41•
~r~...-ononlqUII

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! No h
ng down Estab shed Yo k M nts
oute w h 22 oca ona EZ e a
hou 1 weekly no sell ng Net

S52K vel! v M n mum Inns man!
$4000 866 2!50 26 0

ALL CASH CANDY

RO~TE

Do

you ea n $800 day? GO mach nea

anG candy $9
~END
FL
SO Reg684

9~5

1 800 998
A N2000 033

C&gt;ppCJriiJNty -

310 Homee for Sale
SO OOWN HOMES! QOV T &amp;
BANK FOAECLOSURESI HUD
VA FHA LOI'J OA NO MONEY
OOWN OK CREDl~ FOA L sr
lNGSI CALL I 800 331 0020 IX
Ill

2 Toy PooG I Pupplll 8 Wllkl
01~ hi~ tit Sholl AnG wormt~
Col (7o!O)'W&amp;-33Q8

Aptrtmenta

lncludea

Sewage Tra1h $325 Mo

Water

740

448-0008

Pita tor Sale

Uncond I onal

C&amp;C

bul,_ tocauon No Pets Rotor
encea equ red 1350 mo g ua

Sporting
Good1

t2 G1ugo Bolli um Brown ng Automltle 80 n Fu Choko
(304)e7!HI33

AKC Wt ma antr Pup1 Ftmalt
til Shotl Olw Clow1 Aornl&gt;vtd &amp;
~ Doclctd ]740)448-4412
97 Honda C v c HX 2Coor ~

Antique~

Speed Loaded One Owne \/e

C ean

A

Majo

v

Wa. anty&amp;

Ma n enance Jus comp eted 40
50 mpg H gh l.lllos {740)446

93 Oodgt Ca avan Good Run
n ng Cond 1on $3000 OBO 740)
44-9511

Auto Parte a.
Accessories

760

3Be4 $7500 Exee lent Cond Uon

dlf)Oift {304)675-171!4
2 14 Mon oa Ave 3 Bod oom tull
cent a al htat s•oo

mon111&gt;dlpolil !304)e78-3230
3 Bedroom Houu 8 Ho 1e S a
Ba n &amp; Puture Oepoa 1 At
qu rod {740)448-3292 (304 670..

05 4
3BR Quill No g~borhOOcl County
0 C 1y Schoo I A•fllllb I FIOru
a y Itt Pill Wtleomt Flt trtnc
.. {740)2se-8t71
4

bo~room

llouae n11 Pomeroy

Grto~

Now AC

ceptlng App eat ona for 1 Bed
room Apartmen 1 App lncts ln.

Ro twel~e Pupa 8 Week a t st

Sho a &amp; Wormed
{740)388-839

Merchandlae

$ 25

10

94 Bu ek Regal 4 door 87 Chevy p ckup pa ts to 82 Toyota
p ckup 740 992 5880
~OOH~

ALL
STEEL
BUILDING
ClEARANCE 24x28 was S7290
1011 $3375 30X48 WOI $ 0 380
111 $e6SO SOxtOO wao $32 540
M $18 875 New Muat ee Tom
1-eoo-3927803
AMAZING META81LIIM B eak
lioughl Loao tO 200 Lbs Easy
Quick Fast D amalia Flesul s
100% Na ~ra Oocto Recom
mended

Fre•

guarantee 14y a on ob expe
once (304)e95 3887

strollt

ca

f''

In Memory of

Les e

d osslng table playpen {304)
67$-280

f Af1M ~,IJPPLIEo,
&amp; LIVt STOCK

610 F.•rm Equipment
Jol'ln Deere Ba ers AnCI
Mowe Cond t one 1
U1 JD

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS Even w lh
tal than perfect crt&lt;llt 1 BOO

1111

477 i0t6 Codo.-c2 www omcsoUIIoot.com

lawn
ndtr

w

You are not rorgotten
Loved one
nor will you ever be
Sadly mlooed by
Wife Faye Son Jim
Sloter WUma
Brothen BID Carl

T actor 3 Cy
OIIHI Water 't:oo td n

And Garden

Gopon~onl

B lkU Low ~ange

AnCJ tfigh Range Ttansm sston 3

o

Point H loh 2 Spood P
FLORIDA MARCO ISLAND En
joy the troplca pa a&lt;1111 of
bttohll and rela~eat on Beach
f ont condoa o homtl Fo rtnV
1111 Century 21 111 Southt n

T ull

1 800 255 9487

o

www e21marco conr

$150

Inch

Be y

Mowe

fromPip81

wlto puaed away
30 yean Rf!O today
Jan 10, 1971

Ends January 261 0% F nanc ng

985-3374

{740)441 t893
Sk d Stee &amp; AUachmtnl Demo

Day Be Su o To Como To Sloe
ng In The ~ ght 0 ftC! on Janu

Card pf Thanka

60

Lost and Found

a y 31 At

ROPJ On Hond Special F nandng

Avalablel Mid Way Batwun Ga

!!polio Ancl

~

o G ando On Jack

aon Pike Your Local John Deere

Dolllor {740)448 24 2 Or
594-1111

800

Wordl
ClnDOt
exPrell whet we feel

•••••••••••••••••••

ID our hnru to

evtr~one for all the
love arid klndneu
and urtna that ~ou

ll1 lhawed to all of
u• durlna the life and
PIIIIU

Magic Chef gu ango good con
Gillon $75 7ol0-992 4228

Ch ldrena Pony Fo Sa e Other
Horus Avllllblt (740)388-9t30

Mogle Chit h11vy duty woshe
Wh II $ JOO Mig C Chol heavy

640

earth!~

Hay a. Grain

father Rota

fllhlr
forever We will m.. t
IUln
IOml
dU
Think ~ou 111 for

whll ~ou ell~ tor u1,
Tb1 ltewart f1mll~

lh pplng So y no HMO a Co
800 758 7880 or vow &amp; pu

www bt

Male German Wirehaired Pointer
L.:ong Bottom Vicinity

REWAADt&amp;OOI
740-H5-4308

~

110

Tara Townhoull Apartment•
Ve )' Specious 2 Bedrooms 2
FIOor1 CA 1 t~ Bot~ Fully Clr

8onnotlo Hoo1 ng
8(10 572 81111

1

Htlp Wanted

Our oflloe Ia currently
H&amp;klrl; fA p/1, and
llmporary workert to
flll lhrH 1h 1111 dally

TfiAW,I'OH 1J\T ION

710 Autoa tor Sit•

Cuualenvtronment
hsnda on training

SO DOWN CARS! POL CE M
POUNDS &amp; R!POS HONOA S
CHEVV S JEEPS &amp; SPORT
UTIL TV LOW AS U9 MO 14
MO S 1111'!1. FOil LISTING
C~LL t 100 451 0050 lXI C
H12

e~oellent

bentflll

a.

man111•m•nt
oppol'!unHitl make thle
en excHing choice for
ltudentl houaewlvn
eonlort or snyone
looking tor extra
money Pick up the
phone now to HI up
your pereonal
Interview
We 1re Wilting to hire
YOU I
CALLTODA'l

10 OQWN CARSI AI lOW 11 1211
mo Po ce lmpounGo 1nd opo1
111111&gt;'11 14 mot e11 t% Fo
llotlngo c11 100 71t 3001 111
AOtO
84 lutolt ~1011 4 ctoor 17 Cho
V! PIOkup plriiiOr II Toyoll

I ~oom Uottllfl API One Ita
toom AI ... ltOOfli AVIftUI
OaUIDo111 Daoolit lllqulred II•
M~l Lilli Yllllllll Not tn
01
IIOIPI Willi Cli DIIIOit
or M! AI (7401441•1IU ~~
lltlf!) to IIi Up An Appo nl

1·800·929·5753
Civic O.Vtlopmtlllt
Group/ml!lannlum

mont

i

front the foullme to pump som~
hope back mto the fadmg
Marauders but as Me1gs began co
foul m att~mpt to regam posses
s1o 1 of the ball they sealed the r
fate Joe Brow t was able to cap
tahze of a J ~ Staats foul ncr~as
11g the Eagle l~ad by a 2 f&lt;&gt;r 1
effort fro 11 the !me Matt S111p
sot mad~ a qmck steal pam1g co
Chns Lyons who dramed a 1
NBA rang~ 3 p011t bucket at the
buzzer to make the fi tal score '7
46

Lasr v~ek so 11eone told 11e
that there 1s 110 such thmg as a 1
ugly w1n 1f that 1s true th1s wm
was very unattracuve Eastern
coach How1e Caldwell sa1d On
the posit ve Slde our defense has
held our last three opponents to
44 52 and 46 ~omts respectively
That shows some very tough
defense the only problem IS we
have not had the offense to go
along With 1t The bottom hne IS
we have won our last three
games all of wh1ch were 1mpor
tant
The Marauders were led n
sconng by Saders With 17 pomts
followed by N1ck Bolin Wlth 12
pomts
For the Eagles lt was Chad
Nelson leading the charge with
20 pomts followed by Joe Brown
w1th 16 pomts

.,

the start of the th1rd quarter
and pa1d tilvldcnds unmed10tdy
help1 1g the Blue Devils counter a
4 0 ru 1 by Jackson
D ckard had c ght pmnts a1 d
H1ll a 1d G •gcr added s x po tts
etch n the clurd as the D v1ls
blc v the game open Galha Ac d
e 1y o tscor d Jackson 22 17 111
the p uod a td held a ~() ?I{
adva 1tage I eadi1 g mto the fi al
quarter
The Bit c Dcvlls extended the If
lead to as many as 23 po m the
fourth qt arter en ro te co the
cructal w n
I thmk 1t s very m porta 1t for
us Osborne md of TL esday s
v1ctory The k1ds came m wah a
lot of confidence the day or so we
practiCed after that game We sa1d
you ve got to beheve m your
selves you can accomplish th1s
You re good basketball players

Lets go out and play the way we rebounds
Caldwell F1nney and JUmor
can play
Parncdarly on the road and Ryan Matura e ch fin shed w1th
Jackson had played so wdl agamst four pomts McKinmss had three
pomts vh1le semors Allen Sk n
Loga1 I thought ch t was 1mpor
tant Osborne sa d But our 11er and N1ck Dressel added t a
pomts each Dressel led the Blue
g tys have pl1yed c mugl basket
Devlls With SIX rebou 1ds
ball chat they co 1 c o t w ch th
W !so 1 led Jackso 1 v th 10
heaqs tp They real ze t sa a1 th
po
nts and s x re~m 1ds as Gall a
cr day We r&lt;ally pr ach thats 1ts
r&lt;ally 20 s so 1&lt; of ga n s 1d Acade ny bottl d up 1ro 1
senors Rya1 T pt&gt; ad Er
yo take o
t
n1 ,
Eva 1s th cit b s t p sco cr a 1d
Gc ger fi 1 shed
th
ga 1
h1gh 17 pm cs SIX f vh ch ca 1, reb u 1d&lt;r resp ctl\ ly
T1ptm had s ven pmltS 1 1d
Jn a pmr 1f k y 1 p t g&lt; Is 1
three
reb
ds Ev 1&lt; sc r d 1 1 e
the th1rd per d Ge1get s scc01 d
tr y gave th Dev Is a 40 ?3 po lts d h d four reba~ 1 ds
The Blue De' Is lOW tur 1 th 1
cush1 1 v th 1 44 left 111 the
s1ghcs toward 1 v SEOAL I ader
per oi
Warren (5 4 SEOAL , 0) The
G g r 1lso d sl ed o t a career
Warr ors upset Logan o 1 the
h1gh seven assiSts
D.ckard pumped n 13 po 1 ts Cl eftallS ho 1 e floor last n ght
marking hiS fourth stra1ghc game 5? 48
The Galha Academy Warr
m double figures The semor s
now averagmg 14 9 pomts per matchup IS sec for Fnday m V1
game He had four rebou 1ds four cent Wlth JV ga 11et1111e slated for
(, p l
steals and thre ~ssl!ts
Hlll added e1ghc pomts all n
the second half and grabbed four

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

Wahama
from Pllp81
offense w1tli IS markers Ryan
Roush dropped m 14 talliea whale
Eddie McKlnney added 12 and
John Sn11th 10 for the Wh1te Falconi Goff led allacorers With 24

p01nts for Calhoun County w1th
Boshett addmg 23 for the Red
Dev1ls
In the prelmunary affa~r the
Wh1te Falcon JUmor vamty saw
m season record dap to 2-2 on the
year follow1ng a 48-38 loss to the
JUmor Red Devals
•
Stephen Roach and Gabe
Lambert led the Lmle falcons

Wlth 10 pomts ap ece w th Chr s
Samson sconng 10 to lead Cal
houn County
Wahama wall return to acuon
on Fnday mght Wlth a pm of
games at Oluo Valley Chnst1an
w1th JUmor varmy acuon to
begm at 6 00 p m and the vars1ty
tllt to follow at 7 30 p m

Ctrd ot Thtnkl

I

NMCI Work to Par
olf HoUdaJ IMJiet

t,tobllo Homo Supp y 740 446
9i 18 """orvt c:orM&gt;onnon

non

LOST OR
STOLEN

arormed

Fu nactt Otl Fumaces 12 Seer
Htlt Pump I Air Condition ng
Sy111m1 fre* I
Warranty

well Nelson was agam called
upon to add an extra bucket to
the growmg Eagle score
At the 6 20 1 ark the Eagles
vete mil on top 38 15 Sf npso 1
stole the ball from the Mara• ders
and took 1t 111 for the score but
J I' Staats answered w th a lay up
of hu ow t A goal te11dmg V!Ola
t10n o 1 the Eagl&lt;s bro 1ght Me1gs
w thm t 3 agam as the Marauders
were stagmg a co 1 cback
S1ders went ? far ? fro 11 the
foul !me followed by a Buzzy
Fackler JUmper cumng the
Marauder defie1t to 9 pomts Nel
son was aga 1 able t connect off
an amst by S1mpson to mcrease
the lead to 4? 36 S1ders was not
about to be outdone by the
Smtpson Nelson duo S1ders san
gle ha 1dedly beat the Eagle press
and took the ball all the way 11
for the final score of the quarter
bnngmg hiS team Wlthm 8
pomts
Joe Brown took control m the
fourth quarter by pounng m 10
of the 15 Eagle pomts for the
final frame The Eagles attempted
to build on the1r lead but to no
avali as the Marauders pulled
w1thm s1x p01nts at the 3 30
mark Brown helped h1s comrades
out by blocking a key shot and
then taking the ball to the other
end for two g1vmg the Eagles an
e1ght pomt edge
Buzzy Fackler h1t a JUmper

OUr

HIIVInl~

Med Cl 1 m1y cove you nhaled
medications ~matt td dose n
ha t I) Save mon~~yl F ee home
ch111 at

Of

E Stewart Sr He 11
now with our

pt01111p 1:10-IN -

;::lui

AC man a
Happy 60th
Birthday

48

630

T1ppon H Ellie oncy 90% Gao

Ntw s lodroom Hollfl Clo11 1b
11111 polll P'lrl y Purn oho~ lm
macllolo Opltling (7:101118-4814

Call &amp; wish th

14 800

o ooam At Car
michie • Fa ma Lawn Co'"IJIII1Y

Howewr thnt lead was about
to dra!tlcally 1ncrease as Eastor 1s
Matt Sunpso t and Chad Ndson
read1ed their guns S mpson mde
a huge block stole the ball a 1d
scored tWICe m transmon to add
four more poutts to the Eagle
cause Ch~d Nelson dec1ded 1t
was h1s turn to earn h1s keep by
drauung a shot well beyond the
3 poult !me
Adam Bullmgton shordy mter
rupted the Eagle barrage but red
hot Nelson reloaded and hll
another 3 pomt goal from down
town to double the Marauders
score 16-32
The Marauders (0 9) had thm
opportumty to get back mto the
game as the Eagles comnutted
three straight fouls m the final
nunute of the first half Derek
Johnson hat 2 for 2 J P. Staats 0
for 2 and N1ck Bolm 1 for 2 end
mg the first half The Marauders
tmled 13 po1nts at the half 32
19
The th1rd quarter proved the
most phySical on the mght w1th
the Marauders loosmg key player
N1ck Bohn to h1s fifth foul early
m the third quarter Joe Brown
and Matt S1mpson both comnut
ted the~r thad personal fouls as

Gallia

Orvllle E
Wateon

seat

tf'lt Y Located W h n 1 M e 01
Ho zt Cun c G oclfy Sto ••

ll3aO plijo dlpoln 740 112 7111

l!lfll llodtOOm MOUII n
luttkl No ,. 1 ~tlo11noo ~·
qultld 1:100 ,., Monlh ' u1 01
alter CIOpm !UOI

teams problems on th'lt
Our bench JUst ISO t thot
strong nght now Wh te md
Joda went 3 of. 13 and that s not
good enough to wm the game
Tomght had nothmg to do with
Trav1s not playmg
Armstead and Bowman each
fimshed w1th 20 pomts while
Yeager had t 5
Slay had 16 pomts three below
hiS average Jackson had 14 pomts
and VanHoose led Marshall wtth
15 rebounds
Marshall plays at home agamst
Akron Saturda~ while WVU (9
3) heads to No 11 Syracuse m
B•g East play

In Mamory

apeakor $1500 cal 740 992
6443 or 7o!0-387 7170

(740)44 ·~
Baby btd

B2 organ

one T ansre

Don 1 SttMtf by high p kes
Shop the dastlfltd I&lt;CIIon

570
Hammond

ooo T ans!TI ss

Caaos. 740 245 5677 Co 339
3765

AWD H gh M " Sha p
$9500 B ue aook $8700 OBO
(740)44 -o 35

Samples

REIIOINTIAL HOME OWNERS

poltd Ad~ t Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PI o Slott $388 Mo NO Pitt
LIISO P Ul Soeur ty Dlpoll ~I
qulrod Oaye 740 441 3411
Even ng1 740 387 0502 740
441-0101

L v ngs on a Baaemen Wate
P ootlng a I baaemtnl epa s
dona rree ea ma es 111 mt

Priced Trenaml11lona
"]Yj:jt&amp; Aeceaa To Over

A

991 Dodge Stea th flfT Turco

c u~OCI Swimming Poo Convon
AnG . . , . _ (740)&lt;W&amp;-t591

ng

Budg~t

niCII a Heat Pumps Benne ts

Sp lng Valey

Home Man

Ina v nyl ad

ca pent v doo 1 wlnCIOwa ba ha
mob 1 homt epa and mo 1 For
fee as mate call Ctlet 740 992
6323

Hugt lnvtnto y 0 &amp;count P oea
On V nyl Sklrllng Coors w nd
ow1 Ancho 1 Wale Heart a
Plumb ng I Elect ca Pa tt Fu

2 Story t I 2 bath Excellent

Gent a

tent net Pan

530

re me gua anttt

985 ChiVY 4x4 V 8 4 apood Local eft aneta ru n lhtd Et
bed nt manv ex as 33 ad a a ablohad 978 Cal 24 Hra {740)
nice rel abe uck btl offe 740- 448 0870 1 800 287 0878 Aog
992 7458
1 sWae p oofng

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS
2 Bedroom Rtnl • Depoe t Ret

Home
lmprovamenta
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF N(l

730 Vans lo 4·WDI

cal com for more Informal on

orencoo No Ptlo {740)448-9249

SU1VICES

810

duty dyer almond $1QO da k

Http Wlnllll In lcluft gtOup homo
:bind nfGht lh II Clll 740 Ill

n Qh ••m dtUud 11n11 No
IOUOh Ire gh 0 111 btnoU 1
Ill' drOP/hOOk 100.100 1111 ~~
gl0nll6 looll ,... ono

Southwtst Bar I Hutch And
Th 11 Bor Bloo 1
$400
{740)248-8008

port From $27~ $338 Call 740
9112 5084 Equ~l Housing Oppo
IUnltfeo

Now Taking Appl cat ont 36
Wea 2 Bedroom Townhouse

baHmen

REAL ESTArE

996 Dodge lnt IP d ES Candy
Applt ReG Leo he LoaGeG
99 ooo M Its Sharp $9 8&amp;5 B uo
Book 19 400 oao (740)441
Ot35

580

Grac ous vlng 1 and 2 bed oom
apa mtnts at VI age Mano and
R Yl 11 de Apa tmen s In M ddle

Tlla -per will not
knowingly ICCifll

I 888 674 9t50 ext 3234

Building
Suppllea

troml;.a1

94 Dodpo Rs.m 500 5 Sp11G
v 8 {740)21!8-8224

wood hutch $100 740-992 S502

.,. flmllalllaiUI or origin or ony lntenllon 10
mako ony IUdt p._terence
llml!tllon or dlocrlmiNIIJon

Government Joba $ I 00
$3300 pe hou Pad anng u
benelha For mo e lnforma on ca

550

Now I UM&lt;l Fum urt
N1w 2 P tct Llv ngroom Su 111
S39e BU)' Stl ltldl

P.-mo? NoOCITunod? Ca The
P~no D 7ol0-448 4525

nENlAI •,

MW'IJitll* ..
1D
Houllng Ad

-or
-lcr--

II nt St eel Ca 740 448 7398
888 818.0128

Grubb 1 P ano Tuning &amp; Rapa rs

n Coun ry On 1 8 Acrol -"0
Fow Repairs {740)446-2317

Comptny d lve • l'lomt tvtry

--,.,, 11111..,

eaa"nt Are~ Ca 1 Aher

$85 000 OBO

HtCUIIIX,~III

ADio!l1111y 11111 lnlol Internet ue
Ill WI"IIG 11000 11000/mo

t"

80 54 Ac 11 FlaV Aolllng, Teena
Aun App oxlma 1 y 5 M nutes

-.....~on
-on race color r1111g1on

UOI WEU~Y CIUARANTEEO
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUIRED 1 800 748 5718 Exl
x10t {24hrll

76

Cr,G t Approvol Call 0 Slop In
At Carmlchae a Fa m &amp; Lawn
(740)448-24 2 0
I 800 594

of 111M- lllflgli
to ld¥ertlae "any pi.... MICI

TENSION 22 (24 hro)

• ., 1300

homo lots for ron bOiulfut
country 11011"0 740-992 2187

the,_ ,. .

Bu1lna11
Opportunity

ances

EaPies

720 Truckl for Sale

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio I 800 537 9528

2 BR n Polnl Pltaunl Rttflrenc
eo Roqulrod (740)44&amp;-l!200

Have Loan NIOCI SodiJdld Ho!nt

FINANCIA L

$4!50 $1000 WEEKLY Mal ng Ill

E.1pt ence Aequ red ~or FREE
Info mellon c• 1 IQQ 501 8832

eetwetn Poma oy end Athena

360

$45 000/YA potonl Ill Dfs rtl8d

App

$37 oo Pe too A Bass com

pression F tt ngs In Stock

On

2588 Equal Houi. . Opporlurity

You Memoriel art ou Butintt1

brochurasl Sat atacllon Gua
an eed Postage &amp; Supp 11 p o
vldtdl Rush Se 1 Add eased

LtM I MIIIIQI

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDCIET P~lCEI AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wellwood
Drhol t om $2119 lo 1370 WI k 10
shop &amp; moves Co 740 448

180 Wanted To Do

12 DOO WEULYI llollln1 4DO

1117 85 WEEKLY P OCOIIIng
HUDIFHA Mortgor. RoJuMo No

Holze~_E_cono"'

Spm (740)44&amp;-0041

MAN STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
5 MAIN SI PI PLEASANT
304-875-7279

Skaggs

3 4 200 PSI

100 1 200 PSI

mo Col !740)288-tt35

Pont

SA OGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
800 984 83 6

HolpW•ntscl

h ICO dlcl m~IIOQI) 1 800
440 '125!11. 5700

00111 Noo

2BA ~•ferences &amp; Oepo• t In

study cou se Fo FAEE n

Cat {304)675 4()4()Today

anges

Wa e I ne Spec a

$21 95 Pt

r•o

2 BR Apa tmenl In Cpntenary
App lances Furn ahed Utll t aa
Plld Exctpt Eloe1tlc Cltan $l!851

800 826-9228 wn e PO llox
70 449 Da as TX 75370 NA o
h tp:/ www blackstone law com

sho

USED APPLIANCES
Washe 1 d ye a 1 ge a o s

540 Mlacelleneoua

1 BR Apl On V and Shill! Po nl
P ouant S275 Utility Paid Call
{304)675-31114 Or {304)738-3SS4

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD es Home s udy app oved

o ma on book' phone CAM

Wentod To Buy UHd Mob t
Homo Cllf 7~175 Or 3()4.
875-SM5

mtnl Aelunds r:rae Data 1 (24

a~

(304)6~75

•Pa d Vacahon
•P otessiona A mosphe e
lntoCI1 on Management

$121 WIIK~YI Make Monoy
Helping Poopll R1911ve Gave n

Apartments
tor Rent

(740)245-5565

Schools
Instruction

•Re ement Plan

CARS FROM $28/MO Impound"'
repoa Fee SO OownJ 2• moa
0 ti9% For Ill ng1 800 318
3323' 2 e6

DeLong s Groom Shop G oom ng
~Dog Breeds 740 441 1602

1 Beet oom upatal • very clean
S t 9e plua at cur tV plus utll t ea

Oocto a e by co espondence
based upon p lo tduca on and

• 994 ChJYy serena 3 t V8
Aulo GooG Cond on C1 !304
875 8(),

520

1 Bed oom Apa ment Ulll tlea &amp;
App lances ncluded $375/mo

1 soo 328

log

WE ARE H RINGII
Elm Up To $7/Hr And Wookly

Fo Sa e Recondl oned wash
es d,yes and e gttaos
TllOmpsona App ance 3407

C1mper11o
Motor Home•

Attl 'II&gt;U Pay DIPOil I Ul till
Role once AoQulrod {740)38S1182

depos t equl ed no p~ta

al o dab e comp ehtns ve lega
I a n ng s nee 890 FREE Cata

M TS Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue G s; ... 7~2&amp;C2

110

3 BR Mobllt Homo In Portor

992 2218

e SGOm

mmed a ely Home compu e
netdtd get FAEE n e net

710 AUIOI tor Bile

GCCC

POll $300 mon111 {304) 576 31 17
0 {304)578-2649 (304)562 9303

1

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YR
Med cal nsu anee B ng Needed

71 0 Auto• tor Sale

1 and 2 bed oom apartrntnta fur
n lhtd and unlu n ahtcl ucurUy

FREE DEBT CONSOL OAT ON

www debtccs o g Ca

Couch GooG Con'1lftlon $85 00
Ro of uaed blue ca pe S40
phone {304)e75 1515

Jad&lt;lon A\1811Ut {304)875-7388

2 Bed oom n country $200 De

440

App ca on w It v ce ~educe
paymen s lo 65'o/.
CASH IN

noned 1n the final D1vmon IV champ1onsh•ps last year behmd
poll last spnng but chmbed Ms Basketball MIChelle Munoz
Munoz who Signed to play
through the postseason before
losmg to Berlm H1land 46 30 m next year at Tennessee IS back for
the state final Hiland IS No ? m her seruor season
N me t1me poll champ1on
the first poll tra~hng Manon
P1ckermgton was No 6 and last
Local by four p01nts
Thts 1s the 17th annual All garls years DIVISIOn II poll wmner
Chammade Juhcnne
Dayton
poll of sports wnters and broad
chmbed up m class to place sev
casters from across the state
enth
Tmhng Beavercreek m D1v1
West Holmes wh1ch h•s won
s1on I were several famil1ar names
mcluding No 2 Rocky River five poll ndes was an S3 pomt
Magn1ficat No 3 Columbus cho1ce over Trotwood Madison
m D1vmon II State champ1on
Brookhaven and No 4 Mason wh1ch won the poll and state Columbus Hordey was fourth

score off a rebound. for a four
pomt lead w1th 3 12 left
Yeager h1t a 3 po nter a nunute
later-and Armstead scored WVU s
fromPipl1
final three pomts on free throws
h15 leapmg ab1hty to score four to secure the VIctory
Brooks Berry sa~d the Moun
mSide baskets 1n the games first
tameers showed Signs of a veteran
five nunutcs
club when Marshall closed the
A lot of h1s moves are mmnc
t1ve stuff Cadett sa~d He 1S hard gap
On a couple of possemons
to stop one on one
Desp1te the ternblc shoot ng they had the chance 10 tie It up
Marsh•ll (8 3) mal:ie the game Berry sa1d We held the ball and
mterestlng VanHoose s free throw got good lopks mstead of hurry
cut the deficit to 65 63 wath 4 37 mg the shot
Travu Young mmed hu fourth
left but Bowman made sure that
str:ught game for Marshall wtth a
was as close as Marshall got
Playmg w1th four fouls Bow stra1ned nght foot but coach
man leaped over VanHoose to Greg Wh1te refused to blante hiS

•

740-44e n95

Unlu n~hld 2 BR City 0 County
School Gordin SPite Pall WI~
come Rott enc11 {740)2588t71

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EX~ERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 90 t80 DAYS 1 888
811 0902

CENT VE

90 Days Gua

wvu

The Dally Sent1"1• Page a 3

pl aneta F tncl'l C ty May ag

lc~l Gu hoallng WilT lfookup
$278 00 PIUI Ullllll. LillO &amp;
Deposit Aaql.irod {740)HII 2967

Bonu~e~!

AbiOIUII Top Dollar U S S lver
Gold Colnl ProoiMII Olamor4s

I

wv

ro

Two bedroom mobile home an 1
1/2 IC I M lol Ill 1 - 0 $300
dlj)ooll $300 monlh pluo ut 1111
740 812-eo!12or740-w.l 2772

Yard Sale

80
R ck

Pon Peasant

URGENTLY NEEDED p a&amp;ma
donos ean$35 oS451o 20 3
hou &amp; week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 6851

Lo1t end Found

70

SUBST TUTE TEACHER I,IDE
FOR CH ~DCARE CENTER
Must have an n e es and des e
o work w h vou~ ch dfen Rep y

oned

SOnw 1 0 ve 9uffa o NY 14225
FREE nlo mat on
800 578
363 E)(T 200 U

aniHd we Se New Maytag Ap-

Moblll Home For Ron! (740)
44&amp;-t279

$FREE CASH NOW$ t om
weahhlf ram 611 unloldlng m ona
otdo at tohtpmnmzt ht
IIXta W It mmtd Illy W nd
Ia! o 30 0 WILSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANQELS CALIFOR
NIA 900 0

&lt;401 K L. e T me Job P acemen
4 day COL Tia n ng Tu on Re
mbu Semen f Qua I ed Call 1

Aecond

o 1 ora Up

3 ••~room In Counlry uoo
Month 1300 DIPOI t No Potl
{740)1ee-e711 Or {740)441-oeB3

D lve 1 NO EXPERI~NCE S38K
111 yea Fu Benef Is Mtd ca

9 00-530

60

0 000 Oil

e

Quality c olhing and houuho d
lema SI 00 bag •• e ave y
Thu aday Monday lh u Sa u day

l

v Goal 32x80 •

Yll No IIIPI tnce .ntCI518 y
I DIY COL 18 n ng TIJ don em-

bu ltmtnt I qualllltd Btntl tli
40t k Ca
877 955 8424 Ex
Pt tnetd d vert ca 1 800 260
02&amp;4 .-c 0219

anctt

App

t eco.e8t 87n

•

NORWOOD NOUSTR ES 252
Watht • orve s Ranges Ae

count on y 11000 00 Down Dt
llv.ry tnd IIIUP PI d by Fectory
I

sawm a edger' and sk dde a

{304)e75- 422
5 8ManStoot PontPuwu

1500 Fu Take Dv• Paymtnte
{800)89t 8777

D VI

arge capac es

mo e opllona manulaclu e of

Men S rtel ~urnhur1

Doub 1 W de 3 Bedroom 2 lath

P~ll

be ma e 2000

IM dopes~ 304 824 2&lt;180

2 bedroom 1 Iller In Tuppo 1
Pl1 no S278 on1 pluo dopoo t
740 8e7 3487

tT A~LI Roll Conltllionol
t 800 228 1127 Ext n3 $2 91
Po M nuto Mull BJ 8 Ytt 1
Btrv-U {8t 8)845-1434

Sawm I S3 795 New Supe L.um

home with attached ga age
fenced b'lck ya d Ia ge lol at
Meadow Lal)d Estates Pt Peas
an $600 month pus refe encea

E)(T 203

IA~I

SAVEl SAVE &amp;AVEI Heal
Ftumps L P &amp; Na u at Gas Fu
nacea r You Don 1 Ca Ua We
Bo h Losol {740)446 6308 &amp;
800-291-D098

Good•

1777 txt

12x50 Mob e Home New K tch

en

Pei'IOrlala

Houaehold

510

One btdroom nouM one car g•

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES
Low o $0 down Tax Repo1 &amp;
Bank up c tsl HUO VA FHA
Low o no money OK Credit! For

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

$3115 por mon h plua $300 ...,.,..

ngroond pool manv ~w faakl'es
on one ac e Joca ed be wten
Da w n &amp; A bany $95 000 Call
740-698-3307

2 deyl to.forw the .clll to
run by 4 3D p m Sllurdlly
• llondlly odltlon- 4 3D

540 Mlacellaneoua
Men:handlae

MERCHANDISE

310 Homes for Sale

, COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) • Beavercreek Millersburg West
Holmes South Euclid Regma
and Mana Stem Manon Local
lead the pack m the first weekly
ballonng of The AssoCiated Press
gtrls state h1gh school basketball
poll released Tuesday
Reg na captured the regular
season poll and state tournament
tides last year m DIVISIOn Ill The
Royals had the most pomts (212)
the most first place votes (17) and
the w1dest margm (1 03 pomts) of
any of the poll leaders
Manon Local wam t men

-

T

TIIIHIVICH

To 111 o~t family, ftlandt
ln4 nel&amp;hbatll wllo
ahDWIId tholt love an4
•ump1thu towltd ~~ In
the loti of O~t cftlt
h~lbln4,
flthot an4
&amp;~•ndflthet Luttt D
(B~ok) I&lt;..ton, we ..tend

out hMiffllt thankl end
IPPrtcl.rlon
~ood

and flowm weto

&amp;lvon In ab~ndtlll!l. £ach
vlalt, telephone 01111, llllld
pteyet, an4 offot11 of help
m11nt 10 m~eh and wlll
eomfott ~~ In 111 the
lonalu tky1 to eoma
hno&amp;one Kltlon wilt
Sob and Pat
DOh and dtllihta~ln law
8obbu Matt &amp; l&lt;evln

Raiders
lnHIIPIIpl1
know Fennell could
The Rn1ders JUmped out to a
4-2lead on baskets by Enc Nolan
~nd Scott Payne
The Tagers then began to tak~
over gmng on ~n t 1 0 run b~fore
takmg a 20 10 lead at the ond of
the first quart~r
Fennell had 13 of h1s 38 pomts
111 the openmg p.r1od 1tdl d11g
throe 3-pmnt goals
Wo wid llllr k1ds not to
&lt;Xt&lt;nd out pose the foul hm 1'
fcot nn {Fe lllell) M lkc hun
prove that he can lut 1t s~1d Lay
ton He hn the fitSt olo 11d I
told them lets n tko lut h t
a 1oth&lt;r 1 nc The l ho &lt;hd o I
Sl) OK now we'" g&lt; tr. go

and Je J'OillY l'~c k each scored 11
pmntl
W1th Farr out of the game the
Ra1ders looked on paper as 1f
they could control the T1gers
ms1do gam~
• In fact they d1d matchmg
Manetta n rebound• w1th 14
comparod to the T1gers 27
bo trds
We knew With (Farr) 111 th
lmCL p tl cy Wert g llllg to look t
get the b 11 11Sldc to hnn SOld
Ll) ton We " rke:ltll th lt 11
practlcc nd W&lt; talked ob ll t that
W th hun &lt;lllt \\e ddt t lu•g•
&lt; r j, fe llSlV&lt; pJa IS 31 y
R.1vcr Volley Ml rns h lC F •
day !P 1 st Ja k!O l The lro 1 ne 1
lm t (II Acadmy ,7~1
r 1C da)
Sl!C&lt;Ilt
M, 1 \ h1l M r etta ploys h l&lt;t
F &gt;r the R 1 kr (o 4 SEOAL
2 :\) N I fin h d " ch 11 t&lt; Ath I '
p mts dul T 1 R d ni&lt; 11

guard hun
R1ver Valley attempted to get
back mto the game 1111dway
through the second quarter as
Nolan notched three stral~ht 3
pomters
Manetta though was able to
match the Ra)ders on the
peruncter Th&lt; T gcrs mad• t 1 ~
pmnters on the n ght comparod
to RIVer Valleys five
At ron S 1tt 111 sc &gt;red 16 pmnts
1tell dmg fo tr 3 po ntcrs for th&lt;
Ttgors (5 :\ SEOAL :\ 2) wh to
Brandon Bmke lt&lt;ttcd 15 po lt&gt;
Th,y ha\ e a r&lt; 1lly mcc teal 1
th&lt;'Y shot the hghts Ol t sa d Lay
ton
They sh t the ball r&lt; ll)
\ 11 We I v t 1 b 1 trc conm
tout We li 1\e to 1! y 10r&lt; n

�r
\

...
.
'

Wednesday, January 1o, 2001

WeclneadiY, January 1O, 2001

Pile 8 4 • The o.Jiy Ientine!

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

..

BRIDOII:

PHILLIP
ALDER

NEA Crossword Puzzle

' 1 Hltry'l
IUCCIIIOf

The CRAFTY, BliND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
.
All vertical blind• are made to order at

~ ~"""9
SECURITY·

UP TO 70% OFF
• Verticala • Wood • .Minil • Etc

144 Third Ave.
ToU frH 1

PRODUCTS

High 81. Dry
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
I Prc:rttiCI your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
Self-Storage
legal papers, Investment records. photo

. . New HOII1H • VInyl
Siding • New Garaget

our location
Largest Delivery Area
Ask about our specials
Open 4 pm Dally 99~!·9~!00 I
Closed Mnr'"'"'Q

7~1

IIISILL MILDIIS
IIC. · '
• Replacement Wlndowl
• Room Addltlone.
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ltld R!SIDE~

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio •

FREii ESTIMATES

740..992·7199

cameras, household Inventory . and
laentln,Ant•lltems will be safe.
For more lnformatlo.n call

ROBOTMAN
w•• ,

IIUMLUDII
1'1'. 11'1'. 148
caana

740-9'92-5232

(NO BUNOAY CALLS)

• A J '8 3
• 10 y 6 3

·-

'

PUaUC NOTICE
NOTICE II htreby gtven
that on 81turday, Jenuory
13, 200t, It 10:00 a.m.. o
public 1111 wilt be hold at
211 W111 locond Strttt,
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Former• .Bonk and S1v1ng1
com,.ny ext.ndld parking
tot (bftldl Powell'l Super
V.lu), to Mil lor c1oh the
follOwing oollotorol:
2000 HONDA
300
FOURTIIAX 4X4 ATV,·

and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to 1111.
FUI'1her, Tho F1rmere Bonk
1nd Savlngl Compeny
reoorv11 tho right to ,.lect
any or ell bldt lubmlned.
The 1bovo deoorlbed
collateral will be oold "at
ll .. where .le", with no

II ILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Baehan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

47t1'E11107YA107073

uprened or Implied
warr1nty glvtn. Pl1111 call- .
for 1n 1ppolntmontto view
HOUfl
or lnopecl the colllterel
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
prior to day of ule.
For lurthor lnformltton,
contact ShaUl Buchanan 11

Pomeroy, Ohio, re1erve1

(1) 10, 11 012

The F1rmoro Bank and 9112·2138.
llvtng1
Comp1ny,

the rtght to bid at lhlo toll,

Fret Etllm1111

.,_ Morrlsei/RI!Ifte, Ollie

• Garagaa
• Complata
Remodeling

stop &amp;compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1871

•1s·o per'~

(7 riO) qgr,. 'l'I1B

MlddlepOI'1, Ohio 45780
-740-8112-4514

Houttkooptro...Gardnlrt•..
JonltOrt...LIWn en ...

• Naw Hoinaa

sp~ce ·,for

Fully lnturld

UVINQ
204 North Second Ave.

310

ROIIIT IISSILL
COIISYRUCYION

Adve·r. tise
·in thi$ _

Flllfdtntlal, COmmtrclal ' ·

"

;

..,

'

7/U/TFN

.. . ..

I'IAEWOOD
FOR SALE

Dump Truck Delivery Meigs
and Glilla Counties Call &amp;
LeavoM-ge
992·6142or
Toii·Free 1·877-604·7350
Dal1 LoiiQinC II.
,
firewood
35215 Ball Run Road

South

BARNEY
WA~OO-- YO'RE I'M ALSO GITTIN'
GITTIN' A RIGHT TH' liST COOK IN
· PURTY aAL
TH' HOLLER

Pomeroy, Ohto 45TH

.._.a Glellle coumiM

HI!AP-~

fDr

.. .·...

H

IMP

.

.

•,

Pos--

ON THe APPLf.

Nurth
1•
3t
Pa~Js

(2 wde.)
23 Tantalizes

24 Obtain by
.coercion

25 Practice

26

boXIng
Reopond to

the alarm
27 .._
.

'·' ·,

.,
. ·.30 Six (Span.) ·
31 Small
· .,
emounts
..
37 Madrid Mro. , ,
• 38 CMplly
Brockovl~h''

East

29- of Wight

Pu ss

Pass ·
Pass

40 Yellow-lever ;
mosquito

41 Operetlc role
42 South Atrlcen ·
Dutch ·
43 TYpo of
•
cherry
45 Contented · ·· •
eound
·
48 Adoloocent
47 RICIIriCk - .
term
41 Comic
. Cootello
••··•
80 Pertol1n
.-

..

More

THE..BORN
'
. LOSER

I'HOO&amp;u.u.f'Oia.Yoo oo r - - - - : - - - - - ,
Uf.lt: TWO,

Dream A Reality!

'740-741-3411
FREE ESTIMATES/

' '·
•.

-.

KN'I~K.yl

::::

I fl . 111

;"J

"

0

•

•' I

..

0

•

•

•-.~

I
l. I I 1· I .

l/40) 367 0766
1 800-950·3359

month.

r: I' I I I I

I'

vett1s8
,
•
us1ness·

e

• m~lRfY~ M~~RES I'

..

•

Wl-!'1' DON'T YOU WRITE TO
'!'OUR BROTI~ER SPIKE WHO
LIVES Ito! TI-lE DESERT?

..•,.

,

To ·get a current weather
report, check t~e,

Sentinel

~

~

-~~

I

1\i

stones at

Army ordor : · -:

22

....

lW! Can Mike lflur

. )~

11 Autumn
19 Above (poet.)
21 Th,.w

12 Type of terrier

0 '

Sldm,Deckl,

space .for
$50 per

51 PublloiMd
55 Cotto aidelong glance
56 Oebotn
57 Longo (fot)
DOWN
1 WWII..,.,t .
2 UNdo loom
3 "By the time- to Phoonlx"
4 Nelghbol: of Fr.
58. High-pitched
7 Actor
Roberta Mlofortune
t MOo' group
10 Mo. Hayworth
54 Signify

...

IUtehel)ll, Deyw;h II.

•100 per

"' .......
Cl..tthe

BY PHILLIP ALDER
After a delicious dinner ·
washed down with some yummy .l.r+--1-New Zealand red wine at the van
der Peel's house, where I was· la-+-+-1-+-+Milan
,.
stilying in Rotorua, we headed
sa
v~
:
. back to the club for an advanced
Ullrgaooo, ..
•·I·
...
Class on the defensive target
.,
When you are defending, and
•
the dummy has 'appeared, ask
CELEBRITY CIPHER
:r.
yourself where you hope to find
••
by Lula Campoe
'.
the tricks you need to defeat the
Colobnty Cipher CI'/Ptogramo lrt Crtattcl from quotltlona by IIITIOIJI ~. put and
preunt. Elch lener_ln the clphlr Mandl for lnolhet'.
,.••••
.contract: your target,. Often the
Too•r·• clut: J tql!lll v
.answer to that one question will
••
point you in the right direction.
N 0 Z D 0'
NT
NR8 CT Y
'JUDRCZU8H
Take this deal as an example.
•••
•
OLC
YZYS'C,
OXTTY,
CU
ILPH 'L T,
Cover the West and South hands.
Against three no-trump, your part·
X Z A.T
0 UXUP H ,
U S C 0 T N 0 U XT
ner (West) leads the club queen.
·How would you hope to defeat the
Ul
ULP
TWZHCTSDT."ORXYAD , '
contract?
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Women never use their intalllgence- except when
..
Americans have high standards
they need to prop up their lntuHion."- Jacq- Oovol
for that three-diamond rebid. Yet
as tbe .hand has eight playing·
.
tricks (two hearts and six dia· ·
'::!:~.~, S©~cl\1A-J&amp;t.~s·
lolltM
~r CLAT L POllAN__;;__ __
monds), it is well worth the bid.
' ...
..
"...
If you, sitting East, ,win with
O Rearrange
'-ttera of the
.'
tour ocromblad word• be·
the club ace and return a club;
."
low to form four 1]1"~'- woo~'·
,,.· r
1 )iow many tricks can d~clarer
cash? Obviously, at least .I0: tw·o
I '•I
DALLGY
hearts, seven diamonds (even if
2
.. '
South is void). and one club .(the
.
king). · ,
· '
The defense must cash four a
l ELPUS
spade tricks now. The best chance
to do that is to lead the spade I 0
(or queen). Wit!l this layout, you·
net four spade tricks and defeat
NYA ND
. -tile contract. Here, switching to a
5 1~ 1
-~
My husband knew when our ···
low spade at trick two is no good:
. .I 1
. . .
son had ni.a tured when he ·
declarer just plays low from hand.
. . - - - - - - - - stopped asking for an allowance , :::
The only time it is better to lead
.....,G;;,..;U,.....R...;.E:...;;D,.....T.,.,.-11 and requested a· · ·· · .. · loan . ; .
the spade four is when West. has
p
Complete rho chuckle quoted
.
. specifically the tripleton ace-king.....J.-J.
.
.....J.L.....L.
J
.
.
....1
by
filling
In
the
mlulng
word•
•
:
L.
you d1¥1lop from 1tep No. 3 below.
jack of spades and thinks of winning the first spade with the king.
2
8
He should, but would he?

Pot. Dvndllll&amp;l,

.

Weal
Pass
·Pass
Pass

0

'

Opening leKd: • Q

MAY'f wf S~OU&amp;.P tMVf
PUT A WA~NING LA,fL.

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION
N-H-,Room
AddltloM, Gatape,

Advertise In
this space for

South

•

The bull's eye

740 188 3831

' your clai•lftatl ad.

2

A 9

13Tu.....-.-n
cornor
14 Ell&lt;lmo_,
15 Dt.lncllned
18 Tidily
17 So for
18 Fur piece
20.Malt blvorago
21 Artlot't point
holdor
25. Mo,. oug•ry ·
28 Llvo
32 "lei on Franca!•"
33 Bowlldared
(2 Wdo.)
34 Japonetodog
35 Financially
IOUnd
36 Clair and
Magrltto
37 Forno..
prophet

•

39 MIJt beloved
41 Won4
44 HNrlng orpn
45 Turn tile -

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

"Ahead In arvl~"
·11 .6% Protein Uvestock/catlle Feed $5.751100
·21% Hunters PrJde Dog Food $6.75te0
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.75/50
$1 .00 of! Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Sa~ Blockt $4.75150 lb:
SHADE RIVER AQ, SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

Mlkii ... Malntenonct/HOme

· 1lntlefstul. . •t .....••
w•lla, ................. ,.. ....
I• the Ct.ulfletiL
Call 740.992·2155 to pll.!ca

• as3

•

• K 6 2
•QJ85
• QJ
• K74 2

WHY ORIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

.month.
.
•"

" 7 4 2

•QJI085

. v'

P/B CONTRI\CTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

North
OJ.IO.QI
• 97
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• 6 3
East
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FOR ANSWER

1 I' I• I' I' I' I' I ;.~

I 11111111

SC:RAMJ..US ANSWERS
Aghast- Ruler · Bevel· Wallet- Average

'

A motivational speaker got my attention when he informed his audience that if at first you don't succeed
you 're running abo~t AVERAGE.

,.,

.

'

' .

JANUARY 10 1 ·.: ~.

I

~r ~ ;----------------

'Birthday

'

Thursday, Jan. II , 2001
· Even if you ·are severely tested
in tile year ahead, .your chanc.es
for fulfilling your hopes and
expectations are better than usu.
al. Don't let a Httle Slll;SS deter
you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Be e~tra careful IO&lt;!I!y,
because the temptation to take a
financial Oyer may be rather pro·
nounced. Lady Luck will not be
around to back up your play at
this time. Know where to look for
romance and you' II find it. The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker instant·
ly reveals which sigt:ts are roman·
tically perfect for you. Mail $2.75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New YoriC, NY IOIS6.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Be open-minded 115 to what others
have to say todAy, but don't be
unduly lnnuenced by those who
only know how to ·~e the dark
side of thinl•· Call your own
shots.
•
,
PISCES (Feb. 20·Murch 201
SubordlnateKwill perform beucr
· and produce mot·~ tod~y If you

HfiGUnG
EXCfiVfiTING
Hauh1111• Umestone •
Grovel• Sand it Topsoil•
~Ill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldozer Services

-·
'0

'
,.

•

••
I

'

''

•

•

Advertise .In
•

·this space tor
•100 per

one
'

•'

l .

I
"

-

·'

mi1nirr1ize your supervision . Sub· the contest appear too challenging
due any tendencies to be too for your blood today, instead of
:.J&lt;:. strengthening your resolve, you
demandihg of them. ·
. A~!ES (March 21 -April 19,&amp;~f may be too easily incli~ not to
y0 u are unr~asonable an.fl stid~ try at all. A loss is guaranteed.
today with a person who treated
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
you generously in the past, you It's difficult for a Virgo to refuSt\
will be cutting yourself off from assistance to pals when asked, but
any further assistance. Be fair and today you could take on far more
reciprocal . ·
th~n you can handle . Be cognizant
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) of yqur own needs and limitalt's ve·ry unlike you, but today you tions.
could have a tendency to drag
LIBRA (Sept. 23-.0ct. 23)
your feet and continually put off Unanticipated problems could
doing what is expected of you. pop up today if you g.o pekin~
It'll cause you problems.
,
your nose mto places 11 doesn .t
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ' belong .. By probi~g too d~eply,
The way you anticipate the out· · you may learn th1~gs you d be
come of events will be the way .better off not knowmg.
~
the end result will be detennined
S~ORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
today. If. you don't want negative You re on e.sp~c!ully shaky
elements in your life, you'd bet· · ground today, so 11 ts parur;nount ,
ter stan tblnklnl positively.
~hat . you temom tuctfu! m ull
· CANCER (June lt-July 22 ) .~ahngs you may have w1th asso·
Today maybetheda 0 'II ha e ·mte~ who ore important to you.
aay 'I u
v
SAOITIAR!US (Nov: 23·Dec.
to .~willow your medicine from
Althouah you may not be ublt
put lqUinderlna. You could have
k f dl
f
k
• hard tlma maklna ~nell meet 111 . 1n
~~u~te u.1toM Ku~ ~a~~
0
becauM or poor tpendlna hablta
you NfuMd to break. ·
., . ,
LBO (July 23·AIII 221 Should compound your problems wllh a
·
•
'
ne11t1 ve all itucle.
,

..

~~~~~ · ·

•••
'Y

~;;,~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~;==t~~ ·

..

.

0

'

'

•·'"'
J

~~~~ · ·••·
••o\

•·1 ·'

°

:~Into0 ~~:~ !H ~cc~~:!~' J~~~:

,.

.. ~ ­
:....:::...-....L..-----....I.::::..;._---1 ...
' 0..,
' •\

.... .
'

0

�r
\

...
.
'

Wednesday, January 1o, 2001

WeclneadiY, January 1O, 2001

Pile 8 4 • The o.Jiy Ientine!

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

..

BRIDOII:

PHILLIP
ALDER

NEA Crossword Puzzle

' 1 Hltry'l
IUCCIIIOf

The CRAFTY, BliND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
.
All vertical blind• are made to order at

~ ~"""9
SECURITY·

UP TO 70% OFF
• Verticala • Wood • .Minil • Etc

144 Third Ave.
ToU frH 1

PRODUCTS

High 81. Dry
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
I Prc:rttiCI your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
Self-Storage
legal papers, Investment records. photo

. . New HOII1H • VInyl
Siding • New Garaget

our location
Largest Delivery Area
Ask about our specials
Open 4 pm Dally 99~!·9~!00 I
Closed Mnr'"'"'Q

7~1

IIISILL MILDIIS
IIC. · '
• Replacement Wlndowl
• Room Addltlone.
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ltld R!SIDE~

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio •

FREii ESTIMATES

740..992·7199

cameras, household Inventory . and
laentln,Ant•lltems will be safe.
For more lnformatlo.n call

ROBOTMAN
w•• ,

IIUMLUDII
1'1'. 11'1'. 148
caana

740-9'92-5232

(NO BUNOAY CALLS)

• A J '8 3
• 10 y 6 3

·-

'

PUaUC NOTICE
NOTICE II htreby gtven
that on 81turday, Jenuory
13, 200t, It 10:00 a.m.. o
public 1111 wilt be hold at
211 W111 locond Strttt,
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Former• .Bonk and S1v1ng1
com,.ny ext.ndld parking
tot (bftldl Powell'l Super
V.lu), to Mil lor c1oh the
follOwing oollotorol:
2000 HONDA
300
FOURTIIAX 4X4 ATV,·

and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to 1111.
FUI'1her, Tho F1rmere Bonk
1nd Savlngl Compeny
reoorv11 tho right to ,.lect
any or ell bldt lubmlned.
The 1bovo deoorlbed
collateral will be oold "at
ll .. where .le", with no

II ILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Baehan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

47t1'E11107YA107073

uprened or Implied
warr1nty glvtn. Pl1111 call- .
for 1n 1ppolntmontto view
HOUfl
or lnopecl the colllterel
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
prior to day of ule.
For lurthor lnformltton,
contact ShaUl Buchanan 11

Pomeroy, Ohio, re1erve1

(1) 10, 11 012

The F1rmoro Bank and 9112·2138.
llvtng1
Comp1ny,

the rtght to bid at lhlo toll,

Fret Etllm1111

.,_ Morrlsei/RI!Ifte, Ollie

• Garagaa
• Complata
Remodeling

stop &amp;compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1871

•1s·o per'~

(7 riO) qgr,. 'l'I1B

MlddlepOI'1, Ohio 45780
-740-8112-4514

Houttkooptro...Gardnlrt•..
JonltOrt...LIWn en ...

• Naw Hoinaa

sp~ce ·,for

Fully lnturld

UVINQ
204 North Second Ave.

310

ROIIIT IISSILL
COIISYRUCYION

Adve·r. tise
·in thi$ _

Flllfdtntlal, COmmtrclal ' ·

"

;

..,

'

7/U/TFN

.. . ..

I'IAEWOOD
FOR SALE

Dump Truck Delivery Meigs
and Glilla Counties Call &amp;
LeavoM-ge
992·6142or
Toii·Free 1·877-604·7350
Dal1 LoiiQinC II.
,
firewood
35215 Ball Run Road

South

BARNEY
WA~OO-- YO'RE I'M ALSO GITTIN'
GITTIN' A RIGHT TH' liST COOK IN
· PURTY aAL
TH' HOLLER

Pomeroy, Ohto 45TH

.._.a Glellle coumiM

HI!AP-~

fDr

.. .·...

H

IMP

.

.

•,

Pos--

ON THe APPLf.

Nurth
1•
3t
Pa~Js

(2 wde.)
23 Tantalizes

24 Obtain by
.coercion

25 Practice

26

boXIng
Reopond to

the alarm
27 .._
.

'·' ·,

.,
. ·.30 Six (Span.) ·
31 Small
· .,
emounts
..
37 Madrid Mro. , ,
• 38 CMplly
Brockovl~h''

East

29- of Wight

Pu ss

Pass ·
Pass

40 Yellow-lever ;
mosquito

41 Operetlc role
42 South Atrlcen ·
Dutch ·
43 TYpo of
•
cherry
45 Contented · ·· •
eound
·
48 Adoloocent
47 RICIIriCk - .
term
41 Comic
. Cootello
••··•
80 Pertol1n
.-

..

More

THE..BORN
'
. LOSER

I'HOO&amp;u.u.f'Oia.Yoo oo r - - - - : - - - - - ,
Uf.lt: TWO,

Dream A Reality!

'740-741-3411
FREE ESTIMATES/

' '·
•.

-.

KN'I~K.yl

::::

I fl . 111

;"J

"

0

•

•' I

..

0

•

•

•-.~

I
l. I I 1· I .

l/40) 367 0766
1 800-950·3359

month.

r: I' I I I I

I'

vett1s8
,
•
us1ness·

e

• m~lRfY~ M~~RES I'

..

•

Wl-!'1' DON'T YOU WRITE TO
'!'OUR BROTI~ER SPIKE WHO
LIVES Ito! TI-lE DESERT?

..•,.

,

To ·get a current weather
report, check t~e,

Sentinel

~

~

-~~

I

1\i

stones at

Army ordor : · -:

22

....

lW! Can Mike lflur

. )~

11 Autumn
19 Above (poet.)
21 Th,.w

12 Type of terrier

0 '

Sldm,Deckl,

space .for
$50 per

51 PublloiMd
55 Cotto aidelong glance
56 Oebotn
57 Longo (fot)
DOWN
1 WWII..,.,t .
2 UNdo loom
3 "By the time- to Phoonlx"
4 Nelghbol: of Fr.
58. High-pitched
7 Actor
Roberta Mlofortune
t MOo' group
10 Mo. Hayworth
54 Signify

...

IUtehel)ll, Deyw;h II.

•100 per

"' .......
Cl..tthe

BY PHILLIP ALDER
After a delicious dinner ·
washed down with some yummy .l.r+--1-New Zealand red wine at the van
der Peel's house, where I was· la-+-+-1-+-+Milan
,.
stilying in Rotorua, we headed
sa
v~
:
. back to the club for an advanced
Ullrgaooo, ..
•·I·
...
Class on the defensive target
.,
When you are defending, and
•
the dummy has 'appeared, ask
CELEBRITY CIPHER
:r.
yourself where you hope to find
••
by Lula Campoe
'.
the tricks you need to defeat the
Colobnty Cipher CI'/Ptogramo lrt Crtattcl from quotltlona by IIITIOIJI ~. put and
preunt. Elch lener_ln the clphlr Mandl for lnolhet'.
,.••••
.contract: your target,. Often the
Too•r·• clut: J tql!lll v
.answer to that one question will
••
point you in the right direction.
N 0 Z D 0'
NT
NR8 CT Y
'JUDRCZU8H
Take this deal as an example.
•••
•
OLC
YZYS'C,
OXTTY,
CU
ILPH 'L T,
Cover the West and South hands.
Against three no-trump, your part·
X Z A.T
0 UXUP H ,
U S C 0 T N 0 U XT
ner (West) leads the club queen.
·How would you hope to defeat the
Ul
ULP
TWZHCTSDT."ORXYAD , '
contract?
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Women never use their intalllgence- except when
..
Americans have high standards
they need to prop up their lntuHion."- Jacq- Oovol
for that three-diamond rebid. Yet
as tbe .hand has eight playing·
.
tricks (two hearts and six dia· ·
'::!:~.~, S©~cl\1A-J&amp;t.~s·
lolltM
~r CLAT L POllAN__;;__ __
monds), it is well worth the bid.
' ...
..
"...
If you, sitting East, ,win with
O Rearrange
'-ttera of the
.'
tour ocromblad word• be·
the club ace and return a club;
."
low to form four 1]1"~'- woo~'·
,,.· r
1 )iow many tricks can d~clarer
cash? Obviously, at least .I0: tw·o
I '•I
DALLGY
hearts, seven diamonds (even if
2
.. '
South is void). and one club .(the
.
king). · ,
· '
The defense must cash four a
l ELPUS
spade tricks now. The best chance
to do that is to lead the spade I 0
(or queen). Wit!l this layout, you·
net four spade tricks and defeat
NYA ND
. -tile contract. Here, switching to a
5 1~ 1
-~
My husband knew when our ···
low spade at trick two is no good:
. .I 1
. . .
son had ni.a tured when he ·
declarer just plays low from hand.
. . - - - - - - - - stopped asking for an allowance , :::
The only time it is better to lead
.....,G;;,..;U,.....R...;.E:...;;D,.....T.,.,.-11 and requested a· · ·· · .. · loan . ; .
the spade four is when West. has
p
Complete rho chuckle quoted
.
. specifically the tripleton ace-king.....J.-J.
.
.....J.L.....L.
J
.
.
....1
by
filling
In
the
mlulng
word•
•
:
L.
you d1¥1lop from 1tep No. 3 below.
jack of spades and thinks of winning the first spade with the king.
2
8
He should, but would he?

Pot. Dvndllll&amp;l,

.

Weal
Pass
·Pass
Pass

0

'

Opening leKd: • Q

MAY'f wf S~OU&amp;.P tMVf
PUT A WA~NING LA,fL.

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION
N-H-,Room
AddltloM, Gatape,

Advertise In
this space for

South

•

The bull's eye

740 188 3831

' your clai•lftatl ad.

2

A 9

13Tu.....-.-n
cornor
14 Ell&lt;lmo_,
15 Dt.lncllned
18 Tidily
17 So for
18 Fur piece
20.Malt blvorago
21 Artlot't point
holdor
25. Mo,. oug•ry ·
28 Llvo
32 "lei on Franca!•"
33 Bowlldared
(2 Wdo.)
34 Japonetodog
35 Financially
IOUnd
36 Clair and
Magrltto
37 Forno..
prophet

•

39 MIJt beloved
41 Won4
44 HNrlng orpn
45 Turn tile -

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

"Ahead In arvl~"
·11 .6% Protein Uvestock/catlle Feed $5.751100
·21% Hunters PrJde Dog Food $6.75te0
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.75/50
$1 .00 of! Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Sa~ Blockt $4.75150 lb:
SHADE RIVER AQ, SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

Mlkii ... Malntenonct/HOme

· 1lntlefstul. . •t .....••
w•lla, ................. ,.. ....
I• the Ct.ulfletiL
Call 740.992·2155 to pll.!ca

• as3

•

• K 6 2
•QJ85
• QJ
• K74 2

WHY ORIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

.month.
.
•"

" 7 4 2

•QJI085

. v'

P/B CONTRI\CTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

North
OJ.IO.QI
• 97
•AK
tAK109? 6 4
• 6 3
East
•Qt1154

,

'

ACROSS

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS

FOR ANSWER

1 I' I• I' I' I' I' I ;.~

I 11111111

SC:RAMJ..US ANSWERS
Aghast- Ruler · Bevel· Wallet- Average

'

A motivational speaker got my attention when he informed his audience that if at first you don't succeed
you 're running abo~t AVERAGE.

,.,

.

'

' .

JANUARY 10 1 ·.: ~.

I

~r ~ ;----------------

'Birthday

'

Thursday, Jan. II , 2001
· Even if you ·are severely tested
in tile year ahead, .your chanc.es
for fulfilling your hopes and
expectations are better than usu.
al. Don't let a Httle Slll;SS deter
you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Be e~tra careful IO&lt;!I!y,
because the temptation to take a
financial Oyer may be rather pro·
nounced. Lady Luck will not be
around to back up your play at
this time. Know where to look for
romance and you' II find it. The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker instant·
ly reveals which sigt:ts are roman·
tically perfect for you. Mail $2.75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New YoriC, NY IOIS6.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Be open-minded 115 to what others
have to say todAy, but don't be
unduly lnnuenced by those who
only know how to ·~e the dark
side of thinl•· Call your own
shots.
•
,
PISCES (Feb. 20·Murch 201
SubordlnateKwill perform beucr
· and produce mot·~ tod~y If you

HfiGUnG
EXCfiVfiTING
Hauh1111• Umestone •
Grovel• Sand it Topsoil•
~Ill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldozer Services

-·
'0

'
,.

•

••
I

'

''

•

•

Advertise .In
•

·this space tor
•100 per

one
'

•'

l .

I
"

-

·'

mi1nirr1ize your supervision . Sub· the contest appear too challenging
due any tendencies to be too for your blood today, instead of
:.J&lt;:. strengthening your resolve, you
demandihg of them. ·
. A~!ES (March 21 -April 19,&amp;~f may be too easily incli~ not to
y0 u are unr~asonable an.fl stid~ try at all. A loss is guaranteed.
today with a person who treated
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
you generously in the past, you It's difficult for a Virgo to refuSt\
will be cutting yourself off from assistance to pals when asked, but
any further assistance. Be fair and today you could take on far more
reciprocal . ·
th~n you can handle . Be cognizant
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) of yqur own needs and limitalt's ve·ry unlike you, but today you tions.
could have a tendency to drag
LIBRA (Sept. 23-.0ct. 23)
your feet and continually put off Unanticipated problems could
doing what is expected of you. pop up today if you g.o pekin~
It'll cause you problems.
,
your nose mto places 11 doesn .t
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ' belong .. By probi~g too d~eply,
The way you anticipate the out· · you may learn th1~gs you d be
come of events will be the way .better off not knowmg.
~
the end result will be detennined
S~ORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
today. If. you don't want negative You re on e.sp~c!ully shaky
elements in your life, you'd bet· · ground today, so 11 ts parur;nount ,
ter stan tblnklnl positively.
~hat . you temom tuctfu! m ull
· CANCER (June lt-July 22 ) .~ahngs you may have w1th asso·
Today maybetheda 0 'II ha e ·mte~ who ore important to you.
aay 'I u
v
SAOITIAR!US (Nov: 23·Dec.
to .~willow your medicine from
Althouah you may not be ublt
put lqUinderlna. You could have
k f dl
f
k
• hard tlma maklna ~nell meet 111 . 1n
~~u~te u.1toM Ku~ ~a~~
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becauM or poor tpendlna hablta
you NfuMd to break. ·
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Pelle B I• The Deily Sentinel

..

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

' Wedneadlly; January 1o, 2001

Community news and notes,
N.ittany lions edge ·Buckeyes,

•

s

Details, A3

I

. _ OIIIJ!I45. Willi lltlt Soul1 38
- . ! 5 8, \VIrNn ~53
HudiOn W. AlUM 73. CUVBiiOIII Yd. IIO
HlltlniJ Vlloy I.Jrll....ny 57. SOlOn 51
t!Cf'JIOn Sl JoMpl1 110, Frankln Fumoco

l.ltigl

G'""~

"""'""

Konolon 55, Chaodon 43
Klrtllnd 52, Clltoo Mltlll H0wktf1 48
Bul=
LoClrongo Koyotono 58, Fltolondll 55
TroY!t Sldtrt
Lolcawood85, W~Sooth 110
Nlct&lt; 8olln 3 5-812.
Lancuter Fllrfleld -Union 88, CifciiVIII
"""'"" (11-3) t._.
Elm lfl, OT
'aro"" 8 ~~ 18, Brom
H 1. Man
U - Fllhof Ceth. 78, Summit Sllltlon
SIITC&gt;fGII 5 3-3 13, Clla&lt;l N - II ()oil 20. 22
l.lclcinO Hto. 28
IQ-13 57.
i..oa\11-.g Lallru 41, Boootdtold 42
3-polnt goeii-MtlgO 2 (Sidtrt, 8olln ., ),
L_,.,.,88,Noowood28
· Eutem 3 (Nollon 2, Lyono 1). R-.ndiLoolltown Indian Loko 71 , Ridgeway Ridge·
Molgo 40 (Staotl 1~). l:tlllm 27 (Lyono
ANIIto-Molgl 11 (Otrrtck Jol\nto&lt;&gt; 3). l:tlt· mont 52
Lliorty caror 59, oono 43
oon 10 (KoN, Lyono 3). ~~~ t1olgo II (Dtf·
Lima Cani.·Coth. 85, Spor&lt;:trvlllo 45
rick Johnto&lt;&gt; 2. Focidor 2Y. Eootem 11 (SimpLima Sr. 84, Ooy. Col. W111to 81
to&lt;&gt;~) . Tumo•oro-Molgl 15. l:totom 18.
LouiiVHia 86, Nos. Sprlng. 20
Lowoltvlll 87, Mineral Ftldgo 88
c.tho&lt;on Co. 13,
17
Magnolia Sllndy Vlllty 71, Bowerston
Wahama
7
6 15 37 87
Conotton Valley 58
Celnoun Co.
16 20 16 26 63
Mancllaltor 78, Lynchburli Ctay 69
Wohama (1 ·7) - Smllh 3 2·~ 10. Roullh 3 6·
M.1111natno CMotian so, l•ongot CMotlon
7 14, Hudnall 0 0·1 0, HllnklntOn 2 1·2 S, Par·
44
sono 3 1·3 7, Slmc&gt;~no 2 o-o 4, Connol~ 5 5-7
Mltletta 88, Cheshire River Valley 49
15, McKinney 5 2·3 12, Totals 23 17-27 67
Mar11ogton 61, Minerva 50
Calhoun Co. (9·3)- Davis 1 •·7 e. Goll8 4MaiO&lt;&gt; 88, Hon180n 50
4 24, eosnett 9 ..s 23, Houchin o 1-2 1
MaylltkiiiO, Gartlltd Htl. 211
$1eyensS 2 1· 2 5, Fl!rwater ,0 a..- 3, McKown 2
McComb 82, 11ffln Calverl 55 ·
2..t 6, Samson o 2·2 2: Grovts o 3"" 3, CarMcOennott SCioto NW 78, Lucasville VaHey
Ptnter 4 0-1 8. Parle 1 0·2 2, R, Fltzwarer o 0·2
58
.
o. Tooall 27 23-39 83.
MIChanlclburg
n,
N. Lowllburg Triad 37
3·polnl goals-Wahamo 4 (Smith 2, Roush
Metamora Et.Jergreen 49, Swinton 29
2) , Calhoun Co. 5 (Goff 4, Boohatt 1).
Miami Valley 47, Trov ChriJtlan 46
M~tleld Cardinal 53 , Blrksnire 52
1 Ollila Academy 57, JICklon '2
Minford 78, WoYOrty 4 7
Qalllo Academy
7 11 22 17 57
N. r.Jmo S. Ronga 57, Jactcoon·Milion 55
Jllcklon
1
4 11 14 42
N. Otmotod 44, Root&lt;v Roor 41
Ollila Academy (5'4, SEOAL 3·2) - Andre
Now
Sp~ng. 63, Mcllonald 41
Qolgeo6 3·3 17, Travio McKimlso t 0.0 3, Nick
Now Phllodotpllio 77, Bytlvlllo MooGow·
Ore11et 1 0.0 2, Donnie Johnson 0 0.0 0,
Ouootln Oodcaod 6 1·3 13, T.J. Hlll4 0.0 8, Cody brook 51
Ntwbury,IIO, Grind Valloy 75
Caktt.Yell 2 0·0 4, Ryan Matura 2 0..1 4, David
Newton Falls 08, Youngo. Llbtny 38
'
Finney 2 0.0 4, Allen Skinner 1 0·1 2. Totlla 25
Nlln Mqt&lt;inloy 87. Qlraod 58
4-8 57.
,
Olmlled FoliO 75, Fairview Poot&lt; 81
JacJqon 12-7, SEOAL 0~)- Rooblo Pugh I ·
Orange 58. Perry 52
2'J2 4, Ryan Tipton 3 1-4 7, Chris Jones 0 0..0 0,
Palnooville•RIYO- 59, Maple Hto. 58
Bryan Wilson 5 o-o 10, Jamie Callahan 2 0-0 6,
Panna Valoy Forgo 58, Parma Normandy
Ryan Whltesktt 0 O.Q 0, Braxton JeNdns 0 0:0
0, Eric Evan• 4 1·2 9, Kelson Mavte 1 2-4 4, 58.20T
Pollllklla WoUdno Momortot 88, Wh!llhll·
K~o Loftus 0 ~ 0, Cory Shejlpood 0 2-2 2.
Yoorttng
83
Totall16 8·18 ~2 .
76, Fayottavilll 54
•
3-polnt goaio-Gallla Academy 3 (Qolglr 2,
Penlnoulll w~ 73, Gorrottovilta 84,
McKinnlas t), Jackson 2 (Callahan 2).
OT
Rebounds-GoNia Academy 30 (Or- 8),
PNIO 65, Orlldtf1 Trl·YIIIoy 4~
Jocklon 22 (Wilson 8). Aaslsos-CloltiO-.
Pootomouth Cloy 72, Wllow Wood Symmoo
my 19 (Geiger 7, HIQ I), JacldOn 1. SIOIIO-Qallla Academy 16 (Ood&lt;Ood I), Joetcoon 8 Valley 84
Pottamouth E. 74, Portsmouth Notre Dime
(Tipton, Wilson 2). Tumovoi1-Gsllla Academy
·47
14, JackiOn 18.
Ravenna~ U, Wlncllam 56 ·
Alldlvtlle Eaaten'l 57, POI'I'MKQy Meigs 41
Marltlla till, fllvtr VIlli!' 4t
Rtplay Rlpllly-UniOn-Lowii-Huntlngton 82,
River Valley
10 II 13 12 Of
Seaman N. Adamo 53
Mo~etta
20 19 21 t8 - ·86
Rioooll 59, Anna !58
River Valley (H, SEOAL 2-3) - Crolg
S. Chorluton SE 78, Scoring. NW 48
Payne ao-1 o, Ouotln Ql&gt;bl o 1·2 1. Erto Nolan
SOrahollila Slooonandoah 72, Wotooford 58
5 o-o 13, Jon Mollohan 1 o-o :1, Blllndon
Sardinia l:tatorl) Brown 89, Hlllll&gt;oro 59
Mitchem 3 0·1 6, Blake Marcum a 1-2 I, SOon
Sobnng 89, Leetonia 45
Payne 2 o-o 4, 11m Rlctoanlaon 4 1-2 11, Jaro·
Shodyoldo 51, Woodaflltd Mon""' Cont. :rr
my· PO&lt;Ic ~ 3·10 11 . Totalo 19 8·18 19.
Maototla (5·3, SEOAL 3-2) - Brodin Amigo 57 South Poinl 59, Coal Gll&gt;Yt OaWIOI1-Bryon
.
o o-o o, Aaron Sullon 8 ()oil 16, Brondon Burl&lt;e
Sl
Clolrsvtllll
93,
Bameovttlo
58
·
6 3·3 IS, Stopnen Rooo 2 o-o 5, Oooron Swartz
·- . 88, Martino Fony 37
oo-o o, Kevin StoauK 2 o-o ~. Tyler Lough ooStoubonvllle Coni. Ceth. 70, Bollolro St.
0 0, Tad Goodaod 1 ()o(l3, CMo Foomell 18 1-2
John's 45
38, Chilo Palmer t ()o(l2, Bryan HOIUOIIy 1 1·2
Stralbu~~tFranklln 80, NowoomorotOWil 57
3. Tolala 38 5·7 86.
S~41, Wotortoo34
3·polnt goaii--Rivor Valley 5 (Nolan 3,
Strortgovtllo
78,lorlln Admiral King 58
RlchaodiOO 2), Ma.- 11 (Fennool 5, SutiDn I,
- 5 5 , Warren JfK 49
Rooo, Goddood 1). Robounda-RiverVallll' 24, ·
&amp;roar GrtMI Same Un101147, M•orlpoll40
Mao1eno 27. Allllls-River Valoy I 0, Thomu Worthington &amp;4, Chllllcotho 41
28. Steai.-River Valley 4, Marietta 8.
"lllomvlto Sholtdon 75, McCoMallvlle Mor·
TulllO'Ior&amp;-Rivel Valley 17, Marl""" 8.
QOII73
.
Tol. ~n 53, Tol. Emmanuai Bapti0152
Attter.71, Petmllltii£nt •
Tol. MotJmoo YIII/Oy 81, Oonbuoy 110
Polnl
14 15 18 10 55
1bntogony Otoogo 811, Woo&lt;1mora 83
Alheno
13 17 25 18 73
VIncent W.rron 52, Logon 48
Point (1·7, SEOAL 1-4)- NIC Dalton 2 0:0
W. L.olayeno Ridgewood 49, TuiCiriWII
6, CaoeyVIHaro3H 10, Stl()lltf1 Hondty 1 o0 2. T.J. lilnlluk4 o-o e. J.P. Slmc&gt;ldno ~()oil tO, Cont. Coth. 47
W. U!orty·Saiom 58, MIIIO\'d Canter Fair·
Joe Loomis 7 ll-2 14. Jeny Sto..,. 1 3-3 5.
bo.nkiSO
To411o 22 7·13 ss.
Waruw River VIOW 80, New Lo-n 58 .
Athono (4-4, SEOAL 2·3)- Wade Mallin 8
14·18 34, Kun Conkey as~ s. Nate PoNz 3 , W.yneefleld-Goonen 75, CtGran RIY~rsldo
4-5 10, Jaoon Sporhawk 11-2 ~.B. A. IIIIey 2 2· 45
welll'lttlo 58, Toronto 54
3 B, Oavlo Fulks 1 1·3 3, Leo Champlin 4 3'4
Wntllko 110, Bay Vlttago 08
11. Totalo 19 Jo-39 73.
Whoolorlt&gt;urg73, Ponomouth w. 58
3-polnl goalo-Polnl 4 (Sionpklno 2, Calion
Wlcldlllo 71, W. Qeouga 52
2), Athens 5 (Martin 4, Spamawk). Robound&amp;Wlmlngton 110, Goohon 58 .
.
Polnl 20, Atllens 23. Tumovert-Polnt 14,
' WinloiiVillt Indian Crook 52, Richmond E~·
Athtna12. - I
oon 17, OT
Xenia 77, Falrllom 50
Ohio Hlall School Boyo BallkYltlow Spnngs 67, Xonla CMotlan 43
Tuftday'a Aelt.tlta
·
Young&amp;. Chanty 58, Llot&gt;on BNYit LOCBI45
Akr. Centrai·Hower 108, Akr. Nonh 48
Younge. Wltoon 52. Younge. Raytn 49
Akr. Eell e8, Akr. Kenmore 88
.
zaneavtllt 81. Hllllood Oavldoon 49
Albany Alexander 73, Glouster Trimble 83 ,
lanolvlllo Mayovlllo 84, Crooklvlllo 41
Alll1nce Marllngton 81, Minerva 50
lanelvltlt Rooocrono 57, Colo. Woaoroon
Amandi-Ciearcreek 82, Alhvlle Tdl.ya Val·
53
loy 52
lanoovHio W. Mu~ngurn 58, Jotm Qlonn 411
M:hbotd &amp;4, Stryker 49
,
ZOOrvllto TUICIIIIWII Valloy 81, UMCil"llle
Athono 73, Point Ploount (W. Vo.) 55
Claymont 52
Aurora 54. Chagnn Fallll ~9
Boolll- 78, Cameron (W. Va.) 38
Oltlo -.P Glito Poltt
Beever Eaotom 7a, Now Bolton 52
Flllt Rating ·
BooYOrCftlok 57. Kottootng FBilmon4 45
llodfood 58, Lyrdlurot IINoh 58
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .How a ltota
Bodtold 1111. Chanot 85, Parma Padua 58
Bltmonl Union Local 8I , COGiz Harrilon
panot ol wrlloro and -~~ ratn
Ohio high octtoot gtno bolkotblll toonw In tho
Cont. 54
ltrst ol IlK wooldy rogulllr·ouoon :illOo-2001
BeloH W. Branch 114, Ce!W Fulton NW 49
polo tor T h o - Pron (rocoraa through
Baroa 73, Lorain Sooth.taw 81
gamaa ot Jon. 7):
·
Berlin Center Weltem R...f\'1 .t5, Vltnna

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Boverty Fl. Frye 34, Old WU11111(11on 8u11&lt;·
eyo TroN24
.- [1011 n, Colo.58
Coklwtll87, NI*Moiarnofu F - ~
Conrtc~gt 52, Dover 4t
~9.
17
, .
Clf'llt Wtttchlsa.r 15, ~50
Ctdorvllo 115,
38
CI'M f IIIIo 55,
(W. Yo.) Sl

rwp:

eon. s.

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llp('\t=

Joooph~

Cinl Andall0!155, AmiNo 53
Cln. o.r Pool&lt; 89, -~~ 81
Cln. Oteri EIUI83, Cin. Hoithwelt 32
Cln. _,.., 93, Wl..ombuog 81
Cln. La Solie 57, Cln. A1Un 51
Cln. L.owolend 84, KJngo Millo KJngo 110
Cln. Sl Bamaod 54, LDc:ldand 10
. Cln. Summit Country Oty 110, Cln. Hllo47
~· Wlntoil -114. Cln. Turpin 37
Ctt. Col,_ n, Cie. Maw~ 58
Cia. EaltiiO, Clll. Hay 110
¢to. Qllf!VIIIe 55, Clo. Ealt Toch 51
(lla. Hoollago 73, Faith Cl'r. IIO
Clo. Koronod'i 82, Clo. 8out11 57
Colo. - - 70, Colo.-~~~~
• Colo. 75, Colo. Hartley 51
, Coil. Eut 86, Colo. MM!11n 71
Colo. tndopooidouc:e 84, Colo. hllmOOr 55
• Colo. - n d 58, Coto. ~57
Colo. Soulh!l2, Colo. T'" a~ uta 73
Colo, St, Chartoo 81 , WOihlngiOII C.H.

· MilnJ1 TIICI 58

Cola. W.lnul Ridge

ee,

..

Colo. Marion-

F-BI
Colo. W01t 58. Colo. lktaaa fi

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1. M..
W . - (11)10.1
1114
2. TICII- 1&amp;'1(4) ..........11-2
111
3. - r d (4): ..........................10.0
110
4. Coli. Hlltley f.!) ...................11-2
831111
s.c~
IHl
Spttng.ICif1!on Rklga 111 .....1-2
52
7. Potand Sor!lnary ..................7·1
110
8.AktonHcl)tn ...................... to-t
49
v.
to-t
u
10. Cin. 'uroa11Marlen .•.......... l1·2
37
Oil*l_..,ng 12 or IliON po1n11; 11. Clr·
38. 12. l.onCion 36. \3. (Ito) Conrttaut.
Modlna Hilll*ond :M. ·15. Cln. McNicholu 33.
11. Upjlollontalllky 31. 17. A- Lo1to 31. 18.
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(1) 20. 23.... Claltlvtllo 19.
24, P.,.Y II. H. Conlolt Cont. Cd\, (I) 13. H.

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CoPtiY 12.

1

' Coluo1'l&gt;llna 59, E. P.otlno 52
, Colu- C - 5 8 ... _SOilthem38.
.
, COnnuut 91 , Palrioivllo HIIIVIY 78
Cortlend Lo~o&gt;iow 15, ~l{loman ll!ldlll!' 40
Collhodon 51, Q - l l l n lndlon Va!oy
4.4
•
Crntwood 74, Ftoqtlcown 54
bay. Chrtotlan 79, Homltton llocln till
Coy. Jotloooon 571 Mid. CMitlln 38
Cay. St1Y01184, W. C o - 110
Otlowara 711, Coil. Fronlclln Hit. 4.4
Cubln
Ft~ 47
-ko 72, Garttotd Htl. Tnnity 311
Elvlla Opon Ooor 70, Fuct&gt;o Mlzroclll 33
Plirfowro 81, Jackson Ceot1t&lt; 41
1
Flrday Harllogo Chrtootlon 49, Lima Chllot·
len Academy 48
Qallpollo 57, Jactcson 42
Clonoo 49, N011111000d 48
~ Chllootlln 72, TanJ910 lllpiltt

1. 8.1udlcl ~~~ (17) ...........11-1
212
2. "--llee ( ........................1-0
102
3. ~ fl, rye (I) •...••.•.•.•10.0 .
1111
4. 8Partolllglill.td ...................t-o
ts
5. - - . (1) ................... 11-o
72
e. etava. vA&amp;J ..•.........,.........1•.11-2
11
t..ovdoo\viii ............................II.O
71
I. CUtallll M&amp;Oiilrollll .....•... c.... l·3
85
~. Mollt11011 Evorg'"" (1) ......1-0
.81
10. Kl'llll ~ ....................7.0
. 45
Otharo-"Ma 12 ormoro poln": 11. Cln.
M.l-10. 12. 8l1mont Unton LOcal (I) 31.
13. (8o) LIIICUtlr Fallflttd llnlon. Now LO•Ing·
ion $7, II$. Ookllll (I) 34. 18. Cin. M - H.
17. Sa~lnle Eao.tom 28. 18. Jontootown
Gro•II\-IHI, 19.
22. 20. 001pt1oo
Jolltflon 18. 21. Albony Alo-1 14. 22.
.
Chlllootht Un1oio 12.

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4. OtloVIIe ... ........................... to-o
5. Jo-Contll' ...........:.....".to-1
8.~ ....................... ....1·1
7. Niw~n(t) ................. to-o .
8. zanoav111 floucrana .... .......l·2
9. f'IO(th LIWIIburg Trlld (I) .. 12·0 ,

.....-ss.

Gr-Id McCIIIn 58, Balnblidg&amp;PBintVIt·
.
Hllnnlbll River 81, ,lllldgopoft 44
Hlttn 58, Ba~moro Llblrty Union ee
Hlm!Ock MINor 58, Notoonviu..Yoot&lt; 53

lay 35

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IIMIIOHIV

1. Marta Stlin Monon Local (8)1-0

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'

184
1110
103
91

"n
84

110
53

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8ool&gt;ootooll0,

I

Bolmont 84, W. VIrginia Toch45
Col. ol Chortoolon 58. Gooollll8outhom 83
Fa~ St. 83, VIrginia tJniOII 58
Fomorn 74, AYOratl 84
F--71,Cumborllnd, TOM.42
Furman 81, OavtdoOn 53
Qulforr:t 53, Brldgowttar. VI. 43
High Point 78, N.C.· -70
Loka Erie 84, Womor Southorn 81
Lynchburg 75, E. MIMonlll 51
Morahalt 74, Wilt VIrginia 72 .
Morymount. Va.·ti7,.Cotby-Sa"YYO' ~5

OhloH~t Oklo laoltollotlt
urg 37
Boochwood 53, Richmond Htl. 51
_,,. 63, SOrahtvlllo Shonandooh 53
BrootMito &amp;4, Now Porto Notional Troll 311
can. McKinley 73, Allllnoa 20
Cotina.IIO, Greonvtlto 55, OT
C h i - HuntingtOn Ron 08, Bllt1bo1dge
Paint Valtay 39
C h - Un1oto 72, Rlclvnond Oalo SE 3~
ChHIIootho Zona Traco 71, Franlclort Adona
58
Cln. Madotoa 53, Cln. Seven Hillo 15
Cln. NOI1hwOSI 45, Roodlng II
Cln. Seton 51 , Cln. St. Uraula48
Cln. Urwllne 82, Cln. Maunl Notre Dame 52
Cln. Walnut Htllto 51, Cln. Aiken 28
Cin. WOSiem Hilt 08, Mount Hoalltoy 41
Cie. C&lt;;lin\OOOd 88, Cle. Miooohall 39
Clo. E. Tech 59, Cle. Glonvlllo 24
Cia. Hay 59, Cle. Easl 58, OT
Clo . Htl. 55, Modlno 4~
Cle. Ht1. BeBumont 97, Sh•ker Hts.
Andrews·18
Cle . K.ennedy 90, Cle. South .(1
Cle . Ahodes 33, Cle. Unooln-Weat 32
Clo . VASJ 52, M-. 35
Cola. Acadlmy 4.4, Jol\nltOWil 32
Coil. IIHchcroft 85, Colo. CantoMIIII38
Cola. 8rookhawn 83, Coil. Whetstone 42
Coil. I...._......,. 51, Coil. Eostmoor 31
Cola. Maranalhl. Christian 60, COli. Ev1ngtl
Chrlatlan 32
Coli. Merion·FrankHn 52, Colt. Walnut
Ridge 41
·
Cola. Mlff1in 88, Coli. E11t 8
Colo. Northland 80. Coil. Lindon 57
Colo. Roady 110, Nlw Al&gt;ony 55
Cola. Wellington 83, Call. WOrtd Harvest 38
C&lt;;o. Welt 10, Cols. Brtgga 9
C&lt;;umbla 48, Cuyahoga Hta. 43
Cortland Maplewood 48, Lordstown 25
Co•entoy lfl, Akr. North 43
Crullna ~5. MI. Gilead 37
Cuyahog• F1ll1 48, Lyndhurst Brush 415
Qelowaro 71, eoto. Franklin Htl. 20
Delaware Chrlstlln 82, Mlnlfllld Temple
Chriotlon 23
Oolphoa Jof!oo&gt;on 57, Rockfood Parkway 39
E. Clinton 80, Waohfngton C.H. 48
Elmwood 71, Cola Hardin Northom 34
Findlay Uberty-llonlon 49, Koneoo Lakota
41
Frodortotdown SO, Botlvltte Cloor Foot&lt; 48
F111mont St. Joooph 61, Santlulky St. M.lry'o
51
Ft. Recovery 70•.Anoonta 58
Ganonna81, Coli. Sooth 43
Galton Northmor 40, Monoftold CMIIIon 39
Glloonburg73, NorthWoodiO
· Qrove City Ch11111an 24, Modtlon Chrtadan
1II
.
,
Haviland Wayno Trac:e 64, Sherwood
Falrvlow4B
Hlltop 48, Montpotlor 35
Hudoon 821Chogiin Falla Konllon 43
Kolldo 53, Van Wo~ Llncolnvtaw 34
Kont -..vaft Bl, Mayfield 33
Lokowood St. Augualne 73, Loko Rklgl I~
~ 71, Marton River IIIIey 24
Lima !r. 82, St. Henry 81
Limo TIITI&gt;II CMIIlan 40, Ft. Wayne (Ind.)
Blockhowk28
Manoflelrl Sonlor 41, Monon HOoding ~
Morton Coth. 34, CeodiVon 32
Manltton Chrtootlon 48, Omlllle KlngoWIIy 14
M,_rg W. Hot- 35, Loudonvlle 34
MI. Vomon 7~, Sunbury Big Walnut 30
Now 1NIIIhlnolon Buckeyo Cant 48 ' MI.
Blonohood F!l-a.le48
•
Paulding 55, ~Wort 110
·
· Plllh (Auotnolll) 115, Cln. SCPA 40
P1Bin City Jonathan Alder &amp;4, Nowaot&lt; Lick·
lng Valay44
Plymouth 59, AoHand Mapleton 10
R~urgSO, Dublin Scioto 30
Rlc:hllold Ftavora 55, Lodl CIOvonool 39
Rocky Rhlor Luthtron Woot 49, "/ntlopon·
dence 44
•
·~
Shadyoldo &amp;4, WhloUng (W. I'll.) Com. ~7
Southington Chalker 51, Bnllotvllo Bnoto~
39
Sparta H,...nd 72, Centerburg 47
Stow 113, !Aacodonla Noodonlll23
Syivonla Noolhvlew 42, Penyoburg 38
Sylvonla Southview 48, Holland Spnng. 32
Tallmadge 52, Groan 27 .
Ttlomoo WorthingtOn 41, ChUIICotho 35
Upf)or Banduottv eo, Btlilwo 53
Van Buron 85, Old Fon 43
Vanlue 75, BottoviUo 34
Watklno Momortal55, Whltohall 45, OT
Wolto.rvltlo S. M, Hllllat&lt;l OaiiiY 46
Whlollrlg (W. VI.) Pall&lt; 77, E.llv.orpoot 41
Whltohouoo Anll1ony Wayne 63, llowtlng
GOMn211
Wlllon:t 65, ll«ln CoiiJII'Oian 38
Wtl~n Wollld 45, PlltoiOn 35
Worthington CMtilan 73, CQII ... School for
Glrlo 35
·
Worthlngt0f1 ~mo 53. MaryavllaiO
Younge. Rayon 73, Younge. Wlton 26

Mothodlll73, G - " ' 52

-St.

N.C. Contral71,
40
Nichoilll St 87, c - r y till ·
Pl-73, KnOlCVIII ~
flondolllh-Macon Wonton'O 71, Show 54, Eltzoboth City St. 58
Soo1111m Mill. 67, NOW Ortoonl53
UNC.Clr-ot&gt;oro
WOIIon!IIO
union, Tenn. 71, Lombuth 85

84

NFC va. AFC, 5:30 p,m. II HonotuiU (ABC)

l

a1

and OF Cl'rio A1rH1r I&lt;&gt; IIPolniJ training.
CLEVELAND n'!~s-Agrotd to tormo
with OF Juan Qo
a one-ytOt oontracl.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Nam"!l Stump
Mtn111 manager of NorMch of thti Elsllm
Lioguo.
0~0 ATHLETtC$-Agrood to tenno
Vlltth RHP Jason lsdnghaunn on 1 one-year.

Men'•

Col!!!....

-

-IT

Bonoalctlno,IU. 11, Aull&gt;rl 63
Bowling GrHn 62, Coni. Michigan 83
Buono 11111183. Cant. 62
Carrol. Wll. 72. Beloit 58 .
Codlrvlllo 80. Geneva ~
CoellO, Luthtr 58
CoH. of tho Ouot&lt;o 61, Mloooun Baptlll 5'1
Concordia, Nob. 79, Hoootlngo 74
ooane eo. Dona 55
Oomlnlcln, IH. 53, Euroko 52
INinoll 118, No-om 115
Loras 73, Upper IOWI 58
Monln Lu1111r 87, P•Obury 38
MIHikln 79, North Pall&lt; 45
Mount Vemon Naurene 74, PO.nt Paltt 43
N. Ullnolo 88, E. Micl&lt;lgon 58
NobrUkl Woo~ 70, M~nd Luttooron 85
Olivet NIZir~ 72, Purdue-CIIumet .a
Peno St. 69, St. Mary, Nob. 51
Rio Glllndo &amp;4, Woloh 61
Ripon 59, SL Nool&gt;on 58
Slmc&gt;oon, lowtl 100, llubuquo 58
Sootnwellom, Kart. 88, Cont. CMIIiln 34
St. Xllvior 93, Totntty Clirtotllln M
Stoning 77, St. Mary, Kon. 48
Temc&gt;te 89, peyton 85
Tennonoo Tech 80, SE Mlooou~ 711, OT
TNnity,IU. r.,llllnofo Toch71, 0T
Wortburg87, Comol; lowaiiO
FAll WilT
Cl&amp;romoni·Mu&lt;fd 87, LIVomo 52
eonoo1111. ora. 58.1!lota 51
OCCidtntll83, Cal Toch30
PIICiftc. Oro. 63. Whitman 47
UC- Bartllrl 74, CIISL.fllloriOn 51
Wl'llltllr-89, Pornona·P-83

Natlotlli Llaguo
ARIZONA OIAMONDBACKs--E&lt;oreloed
Gl
thtlr option on tne 2003 contract of OF Lult
Gonutez. lnvltl&lt;f RHP Bobby Witt, P Tony
3 1/2
Chlwoz, P Cavo Rovonlg, P ROb E~s . P
5 1/2·
SNyne Bennett, P Kenny Steenstra, P Troy
II 112
- · P Chrto Capuano, C Mot.yn Ro11rlo,
~~
C Brod Croooo and OF Chip Soli to IJlring train·
15
lng.
Ill 1/2
CHICAGO CUB$-Agrotd I&lt;&gt; torma With OF
Todd DunWOOdy on a minor league contract.
......
Gl
CINCINNATI REC5-Agrotd to terms wlth
UkoiJ ••. .... ,... .... ,••••••. 19 15 .559
2
C Kelty· StJmett and INF Wilton Guerrero on
lond ... ... .. , ......••..•.... 17 15 .531
3
one-year contracts. Released LHP Justin Atc:h·
1l!ronto ............................ 18 18 .471 . 5 ley. Dulgnai!KI 1BO.T. Cromer lor asllgnment.
8
tndllna .. ..................... .... .18 20 .444
NEW YORK MET5-Agrotd 10 tormo IIIIth
Ottrall ........ .. .... .. ..... ........ 14 20 . .412
7
RH Mart Leiter and OF Darren Bragg on minor
Adanlll ... .... .................. .. .12 22 .353
9
league contracts.
Chlclgo ........... ..... ......... ... 8 28 .178
IS
PITT$BURGH PIRATE5-Agreed to tenns
woatomconr.......
with c Keith Oslk on a two-var contract.
MlclwootOMolon
Agreed"' terms with INF Lao Gomez, INF John
W L Pel ClB
· Wehner, OF Thomas Howard, OF Adam Hyzdu
San Antonio ... .................. 22 11 .867
Callao .....................••..•.... 23 13 .639
1/2
and OF Reggie JeHeraon on minor league con·
Utah ... • .......... .. .............. .22 13 .529
I
tracts.
3
oen~er .......... )"'""··-·-·· .. .20 15 .571
BASKETBALL
MIMllota .......... ..... ........ 20 16 .5511 3 112
Nltlonal Baeketbtll Aeeoelltlon
Houlton ...... ..... .... ........ ... 17 17 .500 5112
HOUSTON ROCKET$-Piaced C Hakeem
vancouver ....................... 10 24 .2H 12 112
Olajuwon on the Injured nat. Activated C Jason
Poclllc Dtvlolon
CoMier from rhe lniured list.
· W L Pel Gl
LOS ANGELES LAKERS-Piaced Q Mike
Ponlar'Jt1, .... .............••.••.... 25 to . 71~
Penbll1hy on the Injured list. Actl\lated G
Soerorolfl1lo ................... .22 9 .710
I
Tyronn Lue from rhe lnjur&amp;d Ust.
L.A. Lokora .... ... ...............23 11 .678 I 112
SAN ANTONIO SPURs-Activated G Jaren
Ptloonl• .......................... 20 12 .625 3 1/2
Soortlem
. .. .. .... .... ............ 18 16 .500 7 112
Jackson from the Injured Ill!:. Plac&amp;d F Stari
L.A. C
10 .................... 12 24 .333 13 112
~Ilion on the Injured llat.
Qotdon toto .................... II 23 .324 13 1/2
FOOTBAU.
Monday'• Oam11
National Football Looguo
Pon
98, Booton 80
ARIZONA CAROINAL$-Announced con·
Cia. nd 92, Now Jolll)' 90
· tracts will not be offered Ia PR-WA Mac Cody
Mlllnt•. Cloldon State 78
,
and OL Ethan Brooks.
'
Oalai'Kil, Chklogo 91
DETROIT LtON5-Announcad tho resigns·
Slcramonto 100, Mlnnoaotl 97
tlon ol Chuck Schmldl, exacuUve vice presl·
lndJanUti, L.A. Cllpptrs 82
dent. Named Men Mllen pre~dont and chief
HrMillrll(110,
.
Tbronto 91
executt~• otflcer aoct IIQned tUrn to a ftve.year
Chartoltl 102, ChlcoOO 115, 30T
contract.
-ti5.A-ad
GREEN BAY PACKER5-Signed lB Lon·
dOll Dunlap and TE Jaoon Freeman.
P111~ 104, Now Jorooy 87
NEW YOFIK JET5-Ant1011nr:ed 1111 migMl
"· IYIIohlngton 95
Ban
112, OrtlndO 115
nation of Bill Parcels, ~ractor of rootban opeo·
Utah I , nclonlll8
allonl,
Oanver 112, Voncower 108
SAN OIEClO CHARGERS-fired (loop
' ..... fl dl(l
Chrylt.
offenaNa coordlnalor. Named NoiV
Mamlllllooton,7p.m. ·
Tumor olfonalvo coot&lt;llnoi&lt;&gt;r.'
f:..~.A~~n.
7 pm,
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Fired Loa
, 7:30p.m.
Stockel, olfonolvo ooonllnltor.
Dallal It MlrtriiOOIII, 8 p.m.
WASHINGTON RE08KtNS-AMOIIncad
. Portlllnd1~hlllldolphle, 8 p.m.
SociJntonto, 10:30 p.m.
•Clevoll
1111 r~tl6n ol Din Rloy, otrongth coooh.
Donvar
'· Ciippolll, 10:30 p.,m.
. . . HOCKEY

22 jurors excused in
Gillilan murder trial
BY BRIAN J. REED
.SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

JUROR WMINA110N - Janice Young and Chris Wolfe, Meigs County jury commissioner$, and Nancy Clark of the Common Pleas Court
reviewed jury questionnaires Wednesday In preparation for the Feb.
!20 murder trial of Tony Gilman. Twenty-two jurors were excused for
medical reasons. (Brian J. Reed photo)

•

24, Ttnno- 10
Now York Gllnta 20, PN~ 10

Ba~moro

'

-

;E'*-•

Mlnnooooa 34, Now Orteano 18
Oakland 27, Mlami.O

luntJar, Jen, 7

Uf'ICMr'• GllMI

• Qoldon State at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Houlton at Now Yolk, 7:30 p.m.
Ortlnrlo
7:30p.m.
Ponllrid
rtoltl, Y:30 p.m.
._,.,
bt,8/.m.
Oolfull MllwoiDa, p.m.

-.-y.Jin.f

'·

·

Coni-~

.

luntJar, Jill. 14

NFC~p

Mlnnooola 11 Now Vorl&lt; Gitlrrta, 12:30 p.m.
(FOX)

....

AFC ChamJIIottohlp

.

Baltimore at Oalda,nd. 41p.m. (CBS) '

..,. ~ .

.

;

olilmpton, 8 p.m.
',.

'

-~

.......

~llMQflliJ)F\IOLI!-med BiolH ill·
lay pitching QOoch lor Bluaflold of tho

AppriiOChllnLMIJIUI.

~

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(CBS)
. '

·

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY -A twoday garden tour was
lanned for early June
hen .the Pomeroy
erchants Association
met Wednesday in the conference
room of Peoples Bank.

HOcP!r IAIOtJII

BOSTON BRUIN$-Aaalgnod LW Joe Hul·
big to Provldonoo o1 tne AHI..
DALLAS STARs-Rotnltlted, G Ed BaiJour
to tho rcatll'. Anigrtld Q Rick Tablrtloci to
utah of tho IHL.
FLORIDA PANTHEFt$-Roctn.rf 0 Van
GoluboVoky from Loullvllo ol tne AHJ.,
MINN~SOTA
WILD-Announced RW
Maxim Suohlnoky wll racum to Avongord Omsk
lnRullla.
.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF5-Rror:alled RW
Afoxot Ponlkarovoky 11&lt;11!1 St. John of tht AHL.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-flocallod C ·
Tony Yalcolrom Porttorid ol tho AHL.

CHICAGO \lti4ITE IIO~·DH Harold
lalnn; OF JoollBotCtoord, RHP Jon Aauell,
IIHP Atcltle Corloln, RHP Gary Ma)owalcl, RHP
Brion \VIol, RllP. Gan Wright, LHP Qan Mozln·
VI'· LHP 8tovo $inclelr, C Moot&lt; Caioolndro, C
Tolly Garolll. C Ml{luol Olvo, tNF 11m Hummo1

.,

\

,c oOKIU, ANYOI!l.l ?- .Aihiey Romlnea, Joyce Romines and st~·nh••nl" Shamblin, pictured here, promoted the sales In a
·b!&amp; Wflll, drasalld 11111 S11n1011, li Thin Mlht and en
cookie. (Brian J. Reed photo)

lfs crt~nch time again
·Cookie sale$ ~rive · to begin Saturdqy

oo~o1

..

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ltheerJ.eaden
•

,;,.

•

111&lt;&amp;·

sweets.

·

'

,. ·'.J'#fh •n ad In the TuHdey, Jenuery 30,
O.lly. $entlnel

- 8 5 , CormniA

..~

'•

-IT

Aluon71, w. Mk:Ngon 84
M-75,1Covior84
MloNgan 70,1ndlontl 84

ICIUntftiT

f.IIIWUT
Po- 81. 8 5 , - St. 80 .'

With

__,...._

w-·a
Colloto • - 1 1
.

Picture
''

Amorloonlnlornotlonal 71, Manlmocl&lt; 89
Amlllrst 110,- 24

w.v..

.

·

El:town 88, Wldonor 153
Fol
1111, Nilgrlro 58
Cloorgo 'f!&lt;IAIIIIICIIO!t A , II, Jonph'a 74
aoo""r c ..n ll, N.J. Tech 153
Hartwick 11' Mlnhotlonvllle 48
Holy Croao 86, COlgate 114
,Klntll, Pa. 71, Orow 45
Mi'f 58, Bra.- 53
Manhatton 87, ionl63
M-71,
lltlnd till
Mesttan 72. Junlala 58 •
NY Cffy Tooh 57, Banoch 31
NYU 81, Elmlro 31
Ntw PIIU 85, OsweGo St. 55
Notro Olmo M. Sl Joltri'o 41

"hodt

Por:al53, s. cor.liCtk:ut ~

SL JOOOph'a, Maine II, Now England 82
Stovono Tooh 81, Cantonory, N.J. 58
SuoquoNJnno 81, Lobonon YIIHey 81
Tnnlty, Conn. ee, ~ 11
W. Conn- 81, K - St. 5a
w. Ma')'land 71. Haverford 48
w. Now !nalond 71, Nazo,..,. 38
Wall= II, Cor.- Col. 14
Woo
8t 85,11oidgowator, Mau. 81
WIHiom Sm1111 84, Coaot Quat&lt;l ~~
Worcoltlr St, 81, Filchburg St. 84

e.

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ctdalloma "l'l, , _ AW 1111
ra... Tooh u, Baylor H

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$5:

$10

1x2

Hiab School
.JR. High
Grade School

...---_,___ . ;. __

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Pie•• Pll Out n---Wlm
To:

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COI,-UMBUS (AP) A
.freeze on tuition at Ohio's
branch camp,uses :md community 'colleges should be continued
when the LeSislature considers
' th~ state's budget for the next
tVJio years, Gov. Bob Taft said
W,:dnesday.
.
•"That wil1 certainty be ·our
goal;' Tali said. "We need . to
. work very hard to try to keep
~ the cost of those two-year. cam- .
puses affordable to Ohio families
and studena."
' Tali .. discussed higher educ~­
tion after an appearance at East
High School, where he featured
a bus sponsored by the Ohio
Board·pf Regents. The bUt will
cour the state with education

.

,....,...

Terti H1ynea
Approval was given to the purchase of
heavy duty soaker hose to be installed in
the planting area beneath mulch to cut
down on the hours required to water
the beds.
Wright said it would
require about 400 feet
ofhose.
Also discussed was the
possibility of purchasing
Christmas decorations
from
the
welding
department o( Meigs
High School.
Annie Chapman said
that the department
makes and sells lighted
Christmas designs, and
she proposed getting an
order in for enough
Christmas trees to decorate the parking lot wall.
Wright volunteered to check with the
school about placing an order now so
that they will be ready well in advance
of the holidays.
' It was voted to change the membership fees from $75 for full membership
and $35 for associate membership, to
$50 for membership. Nancy Thoene,
secretary, will send out letters to the
merchants and others who are members
of the g"?up. . '

. Terri Haynes, new
president, said a
jazz and blues
ftstival will be held
this summer, along
with another bass
tournament
scheduled for
Aug. 26.

i

·Meigs Local Board
moves on bus purchases
.
.

Sentinel

25····-12'-1•

officials aboard, spreading ·the
Calender
A5
word about the value of collegt.
ClanjfiedJ
82-4
The board is leasing the bus
Comjg
BS
$80,000 a year.
·
EJiitgrjM
•· "I:he governor will outline ~~
Obltuari11
A3
priorities for the coming budget
year, wilich begins July I, ir\ 1\il
Bt.3.. 4.6
Spgm
State of tlte State speech on Jan.
A3
24. five days later, he will introduce his budget for the .next twiJ
fiscal 'years.
Gi~n · Ohiq Supreme Court
OIDO
l'lllinjj; that the state's formula
Pick
3: ~;Pick 4: ()..()..9-1
for funding primary-secondary _
Sapor.Lollo: 5-1()..15-27-4(}..49
education is unconstitutional.
Kldoor: ~74-3-8-9
and the "explosion of Medicaid
\'tVA.
costs," finding more money for
. Dally 3: 1-2-2 Dally 4: 8-2-7-~
other programs - jncluding·
hi&amp;her educadon- will'~'- !llf-.,
Fl Ohlo1/allcy Publlohin8 co.
ficult, Taft saia.
.._......._ _ _ _ _ _ _.....

1.

lotte ries

.
c

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"

June 2 and 3 has been set tentatively
for the all-clay event which will include
not only private J!ardens but also greenhouses in various areas of the county
and a luncheon.
Discussed was the possibility of using
l;?,usd f.IP· tritt¥port residents tl:om one
Jm:atiqn ··t~ ..:lbother, almtg '.w:ith getting
outside touring groups to participate.
Terri · Haynes, new president, said a
jazz and blues festival will be held this
summer, along with another bass tournament scheduled for Aug. 26. Danny
Brown is the local contact.
Discussed at len!lth ·was the planting
and maintenance of flower beds
between the street
and parking lot. For
the ·past several years,
that work has been
handled by Sarah
· Fisher, the downtown
beautification chairman. She resigned
from the position" in
November.
George Wright said
he has been in contact with Tim Siinp·
son, who heads up
the FFA program . at
Meigs High School
about . getting in
plants for use in beds and pots downtown, and also about enlisting students
to help with the planting and maintenance during the. summer months.
It was also reported that Aaron Sayre
of Southe.rn Local Schools has been
contacted about similar help.
Members decided that March 1
would be a good time to start getfing
the downtown beautification work
started. Wright said trees lining the area
need trimming and that Hal Kneen has
volunteered to assist.

;i

t•

. picture
0fiiY

1x4
For Only
'

·

·: To kick off the 'annual campaiSn; Big B~nd ,Service' Unit h9sted,
its an~ual "Cookie Crunclt'~'Thesday, with cookie-e~~ contes\!,for
girls and adwts. C~a Hubbard, ·Brandon Hill and J~qn Rl&gt;tiion
were among the •10\Yn-upa invited to participate .· in ··.the. cfunchathon, left, whjc~ ~ held ,at Middle~ort Chu'"'li •,of ,Cljtist's
F.amily Life Center. ·
"
· ''
,
· Winnen we~: Samantha Shontz,-jessann Steiqmetz, :md Ericka
Cogar, and Brittany Fraizer, Megan Dunfee and Kaylee Terry, ~ith
adult winnen Justin Robson, Derrick Miller and Brandon Hill. ~
• The event allowed the Scouts to unveil a new variety of co~J2.e.
4nd a new style ~f box ,for the entire line. Along "1\'i~~ , ''~ fa~t
."nsafongs, Do-S1-Dos ali~~ Trefoils will ~ . ¥bh~'f ~~ps With

•

.

RIID .

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDJ..EPORT - It's tim,e once again to order Girl&amp;out cbokies, an~ S..turday has been declared "Girl Scout D~y:, ~ . day when
lqcal Sco~ts hit their neighb.o rhood streets .til 's't.l t theit famo11s

· ·Show your appreciation to your Favorite team Member:
'
Volleyball, Basketball, Pootblll, Wtestling, Band Members a
,!

IY 1M J.

i

Shlute
· ·,

and defense presented arguments in favor of,
and against, the use of an audiotape which
allegedly records the incident leading to the
death of 2-year-old Thomas Mathew Parker
II .
Doctors say the child, the son of Gillilan's
girlfriend, died in August as the result of
"shaken baby syndrome," and the audiotape,
which was played in full during a preliminary
hearing prior to Gillilan's indictment, is a key
part of the state's case against Gillilan.

Pomeroy .to host
l-day garden tour

"f •

llll

c~.
85, Cllrlo!Onl89
~ut"l'I,S~o83

POMEROY - Arguments relating to the
suppression of a potentially incriminating
audiotape, and discussions with the Meigs ·Michael A. "Tony" Gillilan.
County Jury Commission regarding potential " The case, held in the Meigs County Com·
jurors were held during a hearing Wednesday mon Pleas Court before Judge Fred W. Crow
in the death-penalty mur&lt;ler case against Ill, took up most of the day, a1 the prosecution

... ~··­

' -

Dlvlolonltl'larolll

TtiV'IMIH . . ,AIM IPM . ..
W.kl FONII 78, 81. 53

Clldwelaa, ..'M)o P'altiO

The difense argued the recording
should not be admissible as
evidence, because Parker's mother,
Amber J.H!ll, placed the recorder
in a kitchen cupboard without
Gillilan's or Parker~ knowledge •

.

Battlmore 21·,
PNiadelphla 21, To- BIIV~

SO Cents

Defense wants tape banned

;t,

lOUTH
"""'Corollnll •• llfclvnandiiO
Qoorgta Toch 73, vq~n~a Ill!

AnNMorlolfi,Jivt«H
Army77,Colu-55
-lonloy 78, ~ 42

Middleport • Pomeroy• Ohio

Volu me 51 , Number 158

a...

~·'""'

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Ho..town Newspaper

contract.

_Coo...,•ooo
I
AllanllcDMolon
1
WLPcl.
,Phllorlotplllo .•............•..... 25 6 .788
Now Yolk ... .... .................. 22 It .Sf7
·~ ............... ............... 21 15 .583
,Oilando ........................... 14 20 .412
Jl!laton ...........................,12 23 .343
NjiW Jeooey ...................... 11 24 .314
~ ................... .... 7 211 .1H

~0 ~.::r;~ .:r,

n.

F9rdhlm 78, lit. Bonavanturo 87
Meritt 81, St. 1'-. 84
,
Md•.£aotorn 8l'oOrt 102, Abr!y, N.Y. 1111,
30T
,
P - 7 8 , VIHanova 87
BYIICU~~t 84, RUigorl 13
Wall Vlrglrtil 73, Mallllaill7

.

Melp County's

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2. Rbclly flJV. Magnificat (2) ... 1o-1
184
3. ~. B!Ookhlvtn (2) ...........1-0
• 148
4. , . _ (3) ............................. 8-3
139
5. Ciwe. E. Toch ...................... e-1
1111
8.P--(2) .................... 11-2
83
7. Otyton Cltani ..Jullonnt ...... 11-1 .
71
8. Hudoon ..........:...................... ll-0
41
9. Col!lon !!oKJrtlay ..................11-2
~
10, 0..... City ......................... 10.1
31
Otharo-~ 12ormoropcirtta: 11. (111)
lonJin ~I King, Tol. Notrt Cerna 28. 13.
(tie) Colina, Cln. Mothtr . of Mon:y 20.
IS.Youngo. lloaodmon 17. 18. )(anll 18. 17.
llaynoldobuog 15. 18. - n d 14. 19.
C..itlwwtlll13. 20:Fa•"• North 12.

IOUTII

10. -Chonal ..........•.... ....7·1
81
Othorlrocolilng 12 Of IliON polntl: ll . lltl11"- St. John 58. 12. Oorwtlo so. 13. Fon
R - 31. 1~. 'Northll9101'1 ChriiHan 27. 15.
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Janu•ry 11, 2001

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Thursday

A5
81 .

BY CHARLENE HOIFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Steps toward purchasing three
new school buses were taken, :md se.veral personnel issues were addressed a,t Wednesday night's
meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Edutation.
The board authorized the treasurer to advertise
for bids for the purchase of three 71 -passenger
diesel buses. ·
It was voted to establish the positio;m of EM IS
coordinator. whose role would be to collect data
on students and teachers in all schools of the district.
Superintendent William Buckley reported that
the job had been posted .in anticipation of the
board's approval, and that three' applications had
been received.
Interviewing will begin soon, with Buckley to
return to the board with a recommendation .
Mark Thomas was hired as i~erim technology
coordinator for the remainder ol the school year
at a salary of St,OOO a month, effective J~n. 1.
Added to the substitute teachers' list for 200.0-

0 I were Kimberly Householder, Deborah Hutchison, Catherine Simpson
and Abigail Cauthorn.
Hired as tutors for health
handicapped students at a
rate of$15 an hour, not to
exceed five hours a week,
were Judy McCarthy and ·
David Ramey.
A resolution of urgent
necessity to rebid the
brick package for the district's new elementary and
middle school buildings was readopted by the
board.
A resolution passed at the last meeting was not
considered · valid by the board's legal advisor.
Errors in the original bidding instructions resulted in having to rebid the brick purchase.
The board approved the 2001 renewal of leak
insurance with Leading Cree~ Conservancy Dis-

PI- HI laird. Pllp AJ
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