<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7290" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7290?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T11:51:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17699">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9debbdec935ec61d12a8760fa7af9d99.pdf</src>
      <authentication>09213e9d2cb980fb6a28e50699b3f6be</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23814">
                  <text>•

'••
•

.

Sunda~Jinuary14,200t

Pomeroy • Middleport • O.IHpolla, Ohio • Point Plleunt, WV

LIVESTOCK
United Producers Inc. nwket
report liom Gallipolis for sales
condutted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Higher
200-300# St. S100-S123 Hf.
$94-$97, 325-450# .St. $90-$120
Hf. $87-$93 475-625# St. $885101 Hf. S81-S92 650-800# .St.
S74-S88 Hf. $70-$84.
Fed Cattle (second Wednesday
of each month)
Choice - Steen, $75-$79.95;
Heifers, $73-$78
Steers, $68-$72;
Select Heifers, $65-$70
Holsteins- Steers, $57-$64.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $43-

$47.25; Medium/Lean 538-$42;
Thin/Light S28-S36; Bulls $44$49.
·Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pain 1525-11,150;
Bred Cows $475-1825; Baby
Calves $35-$230; Goats 520$100.
Upcoming specials:
Graded feeder calf sale, Monday
.
at 7 p.m.
There will be 30 good black
and BWF bred cows to sell Jan.
17.
.
Herd bull leasing program
available. High quality Angus
bulls.
Call the office at 446-9696.

..

Brown &amp;Williamson introduces
new, filtered line of Pall Malls
BY BIIUCI SHIIIINIR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
I.

LOUISVILLE, Ky.- Brown &amp;
Williamson Tobacco Corp. is reintrod~cing the once dominant Pall
Mall brand of cigarettes, adding a
filter, a few modern touches and a
discount price.
The nation's third-largest tobacco manufacturer on Thursday
introduced the new Pall Malls as
the centerpiece of its campaign to
reverse B&amp;W's declining share of
the U.S. market in xecent yean.
B&amp;W. the maker ofKOOL and
Lucky Strike, has seen its market
shaie fall to about 12 percent liom
15 percent since 1998, when
major tobacco makers signed a
$206 billion settlement with the
states.
"We intend to fight, and fight
eft'ectively. for our share of this
market;' said Susan lvey, who took
over as the new Year began as
.Brown &amp; Williamson's president
and chief executive officer.
. Brown &amp; Williamson is dipping
into a rich piece of tobacco histoJY to uy to rejuvenate sales despite
he~ competition from tobacco
giants Philip Morris Cos. and RJ.
Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc.
Pall-Mall was inttoduced in 1899
by Butler &amp; ButlerTobaeco·Co. in
New York. In 1907, American
.Thbacco purchased Butler &amp; Butler and acquired the Pall Mall
brand. .
Pall Mall 'became the first kingsize cigarette in 1939.lts popularity peaked in the 1960s, when it
·was. the nation's top-selling brand
:&amp;om 1960 to 1966, capturing
:nearly 15 petcent of the market in
•1964.
• Its success waned as filtered cig: arettes gained in popularity. Brown
":&amp; Williamson acquired American
• .

.

Tobacco and the Pall Mall brand in
1994. Last year, the traditional
non-filtexed brand claimed about
0.7 percent of the U.S. market, best
among non-filtered brands, B&amp;W
said.
B&amp;W executives trumpeted the
new Pall Malls as a premium, slower burning cigarette, offering
smokers more puffi at a discount
price.
·
. Tobacco analysts gave B&amp;W
points for initiative, but said the
company faced obstacles in pitching remade Pall Malls in a highly
competitive indwuy hamstrung
by marketing constnints.
"The only way for them to survive in the long run is to stabilize
their premium brand portfolio, and
this will be part of their effort:' said
Bill Pecoriello of the investment
6nn of Sanford C. Bernstein.
Pecoriello said that trying to
jump-start a dormant premium
brand makes sense for B&amp;W. but
repositioning any brand is difficult,
especially in today's eilvironment
which limits marketing by cigarette makers.
"It's probably the right strategy,
but it's going to rake av;hile;•
Pecoriello said.
· David Adelman, a tobacco analyst with Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter, said B&amp;W~ biggest obstacle is fierce brand loyalty among
smokers. One advantage in this
instance is price, he said, as Brown
&amp; Williamson tries to lure another
generation of smokers to Pall

Malls.
Filtered Pall Malls will carry a
515.89 per carton wholesale price,
the same as B&amp;W's GPC discount
brand, Wessel said. The price paid
by smokers will vary, however,
depending on excise wres and
retail markups.

7

No rest for.man who·developed
·disease-resistant peanut
BYEwonMrASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

J'IFTON, Ga. -:-:- Bill Branch
developed a peanut· that helped
Southeastern farmers overcome
three yean of drought and a viruJent plant disease. Just 6ve yean
;after its inttoduction, the Georgia
&lt;Otten is the dominant variety
:grown in the region.
But Branch has no time to rest
on his laurels. He's competing
against diseases and other plant
killen that most farmers won't
notice for decades.
Betause it rakes 10 to 20 yean to
develqp a .new variety of most
crops, plant breeders have to look
far into the future, anticipating the
needs of farmers, manufacturers
and consumers.
"You build on what you've got:'
said Branch, who has been breeding peanuts for more than 20 yean.
"You're constantly aware of new
problems and potential problems.
There are always opportunities to
improve on whats ou.t there."
Branch visits his heated greenhouse ar the University, of Georgia's Coasial Pla.in Experimenr Station in Tifton twice a day to pollinate plants that may provide ~n
better varieties.
"It's a numbers game," he said.
"You go through thousands of
plants. The chances of finding the
right combidation of attributes is
slim."
I
'·
.
· lnttoduced in 1995, the Georgia
Green produces nearly half of the
.nations peanut supply. Much of
the Southeastern crop is used to
make peanut butter, candy and
mated nuts.
Georilia Green · resists tomato

..

)

Community news and notes, As
NFL roundups; Southern wins, 11

Tuesd~

HIP: 401; ~: 101

Dian
fNIBPIIpD1
that we rake a dual approach to
investing," says Gipson, who comanages the fund with Mike
Cohen. "Mike takes a long-term
strategic view and tries to find
companies that he thinks will be
long-term buys.And I take a shortterm tactical view using a quantitative model that tries to determine.
when it's a good time to get in and
out of companies:•
One reason Gipson gives for the
fund's good performance centers
around the model he uses - it
looks at what the market is valuing
now. "At the start · of last year, the
model kept us out of large-cap
stocks like Microsoft. Intel and
Texas Instruments. And at that
time, the stocks that we.e doing
well were smaller companies with
earnings, growth and good pric~
appreciation. Now the model is
favoring companies with solid
earnings and capital. So fundamental factors are more important.".
His suggestion to the reader who
entered the tech market in June
2000 is the same as what he'd have
for his private account clients."We
advise something like 15 to 20 percent be in technology and the rest
in something more conservative."
Around since 1984, INVESCO's
Technology Fund (800-525-8085)
has served many of its investo"
well. Down 22.7 percent last year,
over the past 10 yean (from 11-3090 through 11-30-00) its average
annual total return was a plus 29
petcent. William Keithler has been
the fund's portfolio manager since
1999.
"What the markets have been
saying for a.while is that the economy is slowing and it's sl~ng
pretty dramatically:• says Keithler.
"We saw quite a bit of that slowdown reflected in technology
stocks. But stotl\! tend ·to move in
advance of what's happening.
Much like the recession in 1991.
We saw stocks actually reflect that
· in 1990 and bottom before we
were even swe we were in a recession.'•
.....
With the Federal Reserve's lowering of interest P,tes, on Jan. ·3,

Keithler thinks the wont is behind
us.
This growth-oriented fund
keeps about 100 stocks in ia portfolio, most large- and mid-cap.
inVesting its assets in the leading
companies within technology's different subsectors. "We carve it up
pretty finely:• he says.
!
Keiihler doesn' gi~ advice to
individual inVestors with respect to
how they invest, but his thougl;la
on the future of technology is a
positive one, believing that the sector still offers great opportunities.
."The thing is, in !ethnology there
are alwaY' new oppomui.itie~ beipg
created because things are always
changing. But it\ nor ~' the
same companies that' are leading
the charge. In fact, it\ rare diat
'&amp;om one technology generation to
another that the same companiei
lead in both:'
He said those investing in technology last year found out that it\
a sector that comes with a lot 'q(.
risk and isn't for the taint of hearf.
"When you see the NASDAQ ,
index drop 50 petcent in eight
months from peak to ttough, that's' ·
pretty tough to rake. So we recommend a diversified approach to
investing. We think ~chnology, for
'people seeking capital appxeciation, is a great place to be, but it's
not for everyone. It's going to
depend very much on an individual's situation and their willingness
and .ability to take risk:'
The Munder NetNet Fund was
down over 54 percent in 2000.
Steven Appledorn is its senior
portfolio manager.
"The fact thit 2000 could happen is what allowed '98 and '99 to
happen. Which were obviowly
pre!t),' dramatic on the other side
of !he ledger:' he says. "But the
interesting thing is, the whole
incredible revolution of not just
information ptocessing, but communications technology, which ·
allows infoniution to be shared
instantaneously on a world-wide
basis, is still an incredible concept
with a lot of·life lett in it."
· With . about 80 percent of the ·
portfolio, on a doiJar..weighted
basis, invested in profitable companies,Appledom says what hurt the
fund's perfortlWICC the most last
~ was the shift in investor senti•·~:

'

ment. "The moq)entum side of the
market is a dan&amp;erous place to be
and 6:ankly scared w a little bit all
along."
And there you have it, JK. The
best you - or any investor - can
do is learn what you can from the
pros, invest sensibly and stay in

tune with your nature, remember- ,
ing all along that the market, and
all of its sectors, is an unpredictabl~
place to play.
Diatt Hljol'itlt's boolu i~~eludt "tO I
Mutual Fund FAQs" and " 1().

Melp County's

spotted wilt virus, a disease that
became a serious threat to the
Southeastern peanut crop in the
early 1990s. Spread by tiny, flying
insects·known as thrips, the disease
infects dozens of agricultural crops
and causes millions of doll:in
worth of damage.
In 1997, before most Georgia
peanut growers made the transition
to Georgia Green, they suffi:ted
$43 million in crop losses because
of the disease. They cut their losses
in half the next two yean by
fuwnPIIpDI
changing some planting practices
1
and growing Georgia Green.
. lmprovem~nt Foundation.
"It's been a lifesaver for us as far
At 3: 30 p.m., th ere will bea
as tomato spotted wilt;' ~ Milic Kentucky Thbacco Settlement
Newberry, an hrlington peanut Trust ·corporation public heargrower. "I think it has the highest ing. .
Due to rising lease prices, Kenyield potential of anything we've
ever grown."
tucky is considering a change in
Newberry . noted that Georgia its Phase II distribution policies,
Green has never been grown which will be addressed during .
under normal conditions. By the . the hearing.
time it was planted heavily. the · This portion, as well as the
South was in the midst of a three- morning seminar on lowyear drought.
nittosamine tobacco, will make
Georgia Green has not only this year's Expo particularly interresisted spotted wilt, it also has pro- esting. Nittosamines have been
vided farmers with high yields identified to cause cancer when.
during the hot, dry growing sea- consumed in excessive amounts.
sons. Average yields for last year's
The nittosamine level in tradii:mp are estimated at 2,800 pounds · tiona! cured tobacco is high
·
eqough to identify it ·:is the canpet acre in Georgia.
During a similar drought in cer-causing agent in tobacc;o. The
1980, yields awragecl only 1,935 Star Project is the Star Co.'s
pounds per acre with Florunn'er, approach to minimizing the presthe dominant variety in the 1970s ence of nitrosamines in tobacco
and 1980s.
through some alternative curing
"It's helped growers in these processes.
three advene yean, but it hasn't
The effect that this cutting edge
had a good, productive growing research will have on the tobacco
season yeC:' Branch said.
induitry is still unknown; howev"I'm hopeful this year will be a er, if the Star Co. is successful, the
bumper crop year for all growers." impact could be significant.

Bymes

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 1nO

91.1 comm·
Bv BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - A consultant will be
hired and a local . advi~ory committee
formed as Meigs County's next step
toward 911 emergency service.
County commissioners have agreed to
·hire BiU Stanton of Coshocton as a consultant to evaluate the county's emergency dispatching equipment and to recommend what is needed in order to

implement the service.
l ast . year, the Governor's Office of
. Appalachia :illocated grant funds for the
eigh\ Ohio counties which now operate
without 911 service, so those counties
can begin implementation. Meigs has
received $2,500, ·and the commissioners
said friday they w;ill use those funds to
retain Stanton as a first step in implementing the service.

Stanton, who met with the commissioners a year ago, was recommended by
Joy Padgett, director qf the Governor's
Office of Appalachia.
In addition to retaining Stanton , the
'commissioners plan to appoint a local
advisory committee to help them in
evaluating what is needed. Gene lyons,
administrator of the Emergency Medical
Services, Bob Byer, coordinator of the

county's local Emergency Plan ning and when the ~ II serv1ccs beco mes a
Commission, and County Engineer ft!:t lity in the county.
Gene Triplett will be asked to serve. as
"The loca l committee will luve sign ifwill one of the county's mayors, and rep- ic;:tnt input onn· thl:'y begin their work,"
resentatives from the sheriff's department Commissioner Mick Davenport said Fri day.
and local police departments.
While Stanton\ services will be
That committee should be in ploce
within two weeks, s~ id Jeff Thonllou, hn .mccd through the state grant, local
county commission president, and wi ll fi.mds wi ll be required to purchase any
likely play a major role in determining if
Please see 911, Pllce A:J

King .
holida
mode
for
•
serv1ce

I

· or

50 Cents

consultant to begin work

I

$13;1100 Caah

Rice
reappointed
as Eastem
president

...
"

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. or
'S 7,800Caah

.

$11,800 Calli ·

lisn!fi-

Producen who are interested in
attending the Expo and would ·
like to car-pool or caravan to
Lexington should call the Extension Office on Monday at ~
7007.
•
As llewl
Annual lamb lnliQ. . .mtllt
program is schedUled for Jan. 2~ at .
the Hank Forgey Farm on COiinty Road 77. Re&amp;cshments Will: be
ierved at .6:30 p.m. and the program will run liom 7-9 p.m.' ·
.
The Ohio Pow.r Sho9' is ·
schedwled for Jan. 26728 ~! the
Ohio Expo Center in Col\lll}bus.
Agricultural,. constructioq,.and
outdoor power equipment will be
on display. The Extension 0ftice
has a limited number of free. tickets available to the public. '
2000 Corn/Soyb..n/Alfalfa
Variety Triall are available at no
charge from the Extension Office.
fu pldea are also available at
no charge fiom the Extension
1
·
Office.
Farm account booka are
available at the office for minimal
charge.
(jtnnifor L. ByrntS i1 G•llla .

s I.

Volume

or

employer sponsored · ~tirement
plans, giving ·you money you
would not otherwise have.
· The one drawback is that )IOU
fnNn ..... D1
may have to pay a 10 percent
you can take steps to increase penalty, plus current . income
your benefits. Work as long as taxes, if you 'withdraw money out
possible. You can start cqllecting . of a retirement before you're 59Social Security at age 62, but your 112.
benefits may be decreased by 20
What should you do? A compercent. I~. on the other ~nd, you fortable retirement requires lookwork uno! age 70, you ll rece1ve ing the facts squarely. in the face
even IIJOre. ·
,
..:.. creating a reW.tic plan ·that
Myth No.5: I C41n t 11.8'~ to put works for you.
monq 1111111}'
Of coune,uJ.D
·'"- bn'ef ar a·ce11no
1·
· whtrt I"'"
. rtotU:h It,
Jtw
flll"· The truth u, you can t
b .
fi
fu1 a.na1~1 ; f
afford not . to participate in tax su satute or a care.
r- o
deferred retirement. Contribu- your personal _cueums~nc_es.
tiom to 401 (k) and similar Before unplementm~ any
employer sponsored plans may cant tax or financial pl~g
reduce your current wcation.
stra!egy, contact .your finan~:~al
In addition, ' taxes are also adVIsor as appropnate.
Oar Caldwrll is a cnti.fitdf/nt~mial
deferred on earnings, so ·retirement saVjngs have the potential to phmntr ~th RJJymond}llntts Finangrow faster ihan others do. Best of aal Servi«S, 441 Stcond Avt., Galall, many employers . match all or · lipolis, 446-21:25 or 1-800:487·part of your contribution to 2129, mtmbtr NASD and SIPC.)

January 15, lOO 1

Minult Guidt to the Stoclt Matlttr"
(Macmillan).
·

'f,

·caldwell .

Details, A3

Monday

or
$11,800CIIh .

The slain Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., wh&lt;;&gt;se holiday
is Monday, has gained wider
acceptance as a model for service and for ~he theology
underpinning his civil rights
work.
The Rev. Mark D. Ford,
pastor of the Cuyahoga Falls
Assembly of God church near
Akron, said people need to
.understand the importance of
King and the universality of his
message of love:
. ·
· •. "He .1~ basically seerr· as ·. ~:
agent of social change but we
· don't understand· his spiritual
side," Ford said.
It has been 18 years since
then-President Ronald , Reagan signed the bill creating a
national holiday to honor
King.
Before the first national
observance of the day in 1986,
King's widow, Caretta .Scott
King, suggested that Americans
fly the flag on the holiday, try
to heal a relationship or ask for
forgiveness for wrongdoing.
Last year, Dexter .Scott
King, King's son, urged Americans to honor his father by
doing something to serve others.
"Nothing would have frustrated Dr. King more than
people sitting at home. watching TV, sleeping· late or shopping on the day designed to
honor him," he said.
Growing acceptance of the
holiday in the Akron· area is
reflected in the busy King holiday schedule of events compiled into a poster by the
Coming Together Project promoting racial harmony.
·
"We had originally wanted
to reduce.the size of the poster
but we couldn't because we

or

PleiiM_KI..,.,_pAJ

$13,800 Calli

'

.

·Toclay's

.Sentinel

2 •• Ill••- 12 ......

Calepder
C]a11i6tda
Comjca
Bditoriala
Obitparita

or
$1,810Calh

BS
M
Al
Bt.l-4.6

Sporq

Al

W••th•r

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 3-7-7; Pldc 4: 0-5-9-5
Super~·

1-4-8-17-2l-38

Kldor. U+2-7-8

w;yA.

County's Exrtmion •gent for Dgricultu~ and natur~~l mourcts, Ohio Stall .
l!ni,.rsity.)

,

Dolly 3: 0-1-7 Dally 4: 5-8-9-8
C.lOOt Ohio Volley Pololiahlfll Co.

'
(

'

·"'

'

..". ... . .

.....' ' '
~~

I-;'' ' ._ I '\

'

\

T

'

\'~

FROM STAFF REPORTS

UPPER,S PLAINS - John Rice was
reel ected p~sidcnt of th e Easten1 Local
·13oard of Education and Greg Uailey
vice president during the board:s regular meeting last week.
SheliaTaylor was appointed to "-rve as legislative ·

'

'.

liaison and Greg Uailt.:y "" 'ltudcnt achievtment

liaison.
lt ice was recognized for
being selected as the Ohio

CONTRIBUTING- Contributions totaling $1,250 were made at last week's meeting by area groups toward the expense of
bringing In the Power Team, !'&gt;larch· 28 ttirough April 1. The team will be doing Inspirational and motivational programs at
Meigs High School each ever,lll&amp; ·at 7 p.m. Presenting checks to Tim Thoren, coordinator, were from the lett, Patricia Wade
for Agape Life Center, Maso~~, \N, VI!., the Rev. Kris Robinson for Middleport Ministerial Association; · and Oscar Smith for
Laurel Cliff Free Methodls~ Cl:lar~. (Charlene Hoeflich photo) .
'

Power Team'Ministry to come this spring·
'

·

'

Bv CHARLINE HOt:FUCH -

. The team consists of
world-class athletes who
are world-class speakers
who perform feats 1?1; strength
to enthuse, astound·and get .
the attention of today's
.. young people.

and alcohol abuse as well as respect for
wi,
.•
authority.
. MIDDLEPORT - Planning For th'e
One of the top-ranxed public school
Power Team Ministry which will come · ·
assembly programs in America, the
tp the tri-county region this· ·spring
Power Team has been featured on
continued last week as representatives of
"Walker, Texas Ranger," CNN News,
.
'
area churches gathered at Middleport
People magazine and in USA Today.
Chutch of Ghrist.
7'
The Power Team bills itself as "the
The team will be presenti!!!J ·proworld's greatest exhibition of power,
grams at Meigs High School M~:tch 28 .
strength, speed, inspiration and m&lt;;&gt;tivathrough April 1 at 7 p.m. DuWll! the
The team consists of world-class ath- tion."
Tirri Thoren of Racine is chairman of
te~m·s time here, it will be doing non- letes who are world"class speakers who
1
th
e
Power Team committee, having
religious motivational progrJtl)s in perform feats of strength to enthuse,
schools in Meigs, Mason and,'Gallia astound and get the attention of today's worked with the group who brought
the Team t&lt;i Parkersburg North -last
Counties.
'
young people.
Described as an inspiratiori:':p and
Team members then deliver a moti- year. He is working closely with the
motivational program geared to acade- vating message of hope, relevant to Rev. Mark Morrow, who heads up the
Ohio Valley Crusade for Christ, a group
mic and personal achievement, th~ ' to&lt;jay's young people.
·
POwer Team program was founded by
jacobs,said the team takes a positive
Jo~n Ja~obs inore than 20 years ago. ·
approach to confront the issues of drugs
PIIIH- Power, Pill• A:J
SENTINEL NEWS STAFI=

'\!!"~ ,-.,

The board
approved ~~~
amendment for
· the removal qf
a underground
slarge tank, at
a cost of

School Board Association's
. South~ast Reg¥.'1' ~ewtivc
COhlllllttee member. . He
will serve a two-yea 1· term
ending Dec. 3 I, 2002.
Th e board hired Gw&lt;:n
H all and·Kaleen Hayman as
$11,000. . .
substitu te secre tary for the
remainder of th e school ·
year, and Grant Newland was hired as a fu ll-time
bus dr iver, on a one-year colltr.H.. t .

Rick Edwards was appfOved .t, Continuous
Improvement Plan coordinator 011 .r &gt;u pplemental
salary to be paid !Tom gran t funds.
The board disc u&gt;&lt;ed a ventilation r•r,,bJem in th e
elementary school t.'Y mnaswm. and direc ted
Superintendem Deryl Well to cont.lct th e district's
attorn ey to begin proceedings in tbt· matter.
· The board approved an amendnwnt to pmmnent appropriation rcsolllti on for the remova l of a
underground starge tank, at a cost of $1 1,000, and
approved th e instalbtion of 1,315 feet of fencing
around the perime ter of the football field by
Hockin g Fence.
The donation uf $4,012 for · paving ti-om the
ticket gate to the handicapped parking area was
approved.
The board also:
• Approved the annual tax budget for Fiscal Year
2001-2002;
• Held executive .;;ession for evaluations ofTrea-

surer Lisa Ritchie and Superintendent Dcryl Well;
• Set bond fo r the treasurer at S2ll,lliJ(l and
authorized her to proviJ e bond to the boJrd;
• Established regular mectint.&gt;s on the third
Wednesday of each month at 6:.10 p.m., and set the
next meeting tor Feb. 21 at (&gt;:30 p.m . in the high
school cafeteria.
Present were Well , Ritchie, Rice, taylor, Rick
Sanders and Roger Wi llford.

Fiist Baby ·Of 1001 winner
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The winners in the
first Baby of 2001 contest spans d by
The Daily Sentinel and Meigs Oi&gt;unty
merchants were Debra Lavada and David
Allen Edwards·o04376 Ohio 7, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Edwards gave birth to N(cholas
Allen at 5:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 2001 atf
' hio
State University Hospitals, Columb' .
·
The infant weighed 2 pounds; · . 3/4
ounces and was 14 1/2 inches Ion•• He
will remain at the hospital until he -M:lghs
.. pounds, according to the p~rents, who
travel regularly back and forth to Columbus to visit their tiny infant.
· They are also the parents of a daughter,
..
Katelyn, 20 months.
Grandparents are Roger and Nancy
Snyder of Cheshire and Pearl and Linda
Eliwards of Long Bottom. Cora Folmer of
Pomeroy and Blanche Edwards of Mid-,,
dleport are great-grandmothers to the

The infant weighed 2 pounds,
5 314 ounces and WIU 14 112
inches long. He will remain at the
hospital until. he weighs 4 pounds.
infant.
As winners, the parents will receive a
$25 gift certificate from Vaughan's Supermarket, a $5 gilt certificate from.The Fabric Shop; a S15 gift certificate frolll the
Shoe Place in Middleport, a free meal at ·
Crow's family Restaurant, a SIO gift certificate from Swisher Lohse. Pharmacy, a
$20 gift certificate from Powell's SuperValu, a S50 savings bond from farmers
Bank, a baby arrangement from Francis
Florist, a free case of Pampers diapers
FIRST BABY_:_ Nicholas Allen Edwards was Me igs County's fir~t baby of 2001. Son
from Fruth Pharmacy; a stainless steel
of
Debra Laveda and David Allen Edwards of Pomeroy, he was born at 5:01a.m. on
two-piece baby set from Acquisitions; and
Jan. 1 at the Ohio State University Hospitals, Columbus . (Contributed photo)
$25 worth of baby formula from Kt'?ger.

,,

�-

,

.

~~

•

.,.. AI• The Deily Ientine!

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Mollz1r, three d:lldiWL die

...

ROSEVILLE (AP) -A mother and her tluee small children died
in a house fire in this eastern Ohio village early Monday morning,
~ officiah said.
The victims were identified as Rebecca Metcalf and children,
J~f!!es Jr., 5, Kyle, 4, and Alexis, 3.
The husband and father, James Metcalf, survived tho blaze.
Officials with the RosevilleVolunteer Fire Department said other
details, such as the cause of the fire, were not available immediately.

TWo Injured at talent show
CANTON (AP) - Organizer&gt; of a high school talent show
blame troublenukers for fights and reported gunfire that left two
people injured.
" The show Saturday night at Timken High School was meant to
.honor the memory of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Witnesses said a fight erupted in the back of the auditorium at the
end of a talent show and spilled outside tbe school, where multiple
gunshots reportedly were fired.
Two people were injured in the fights. No one was wounded by
gunlire. .
·
·
Police Capt. Robert Vega said a 17-year-old was charged with disorderly co nduct and was released to a parent. The teen, whose name
was withheld because of his age, isn't a Timken student, Vega said.
Terrance Jones, the organizer of the event, said troublemakers
started a fight and were ordered out. Jones said he heard three gunShots outside the building, but investigaton haven't confirmed the
gunfire,Vega said.
·
:Jones said he didn't know what started the fight, but a young person told him that two of the same people also had fought the night
before.
·

Chamber sues to blOck review of ads
Chamb,~r

.. COLUMBUS (AP) - 'The U.S.
of Commerce has filed
a lawsuit to prevent the Ohio Elections Commission from reviewing the legality of campaign commercials the chamber sponsored in
November's state Supreme Court election.
The suit was filed Friday before U.S. District Judge Edmund Sargus Jr.. who scheduled a hearing Feb. 22 to listen to arguments in the
case.
The chamber said the ads, which contained hanh criticism of
Supreme Court Justice Alice Robie Resnick, were protected free
speech and shouldn't be the target of a state investigation.
· The ads were financed through a $5 million fund of a pro-business
group known as Citizens for a Strong Ohio, which received money
from the chamber.
' In previous hearings before the eleations commission; attorneys
for the group said it did not have to disclose the names of contributors because the commercials were educational and issue-oriented
and did not explicidy call for Resnick's defeat.
::.They based their arguments on a 1976 ruling by the U.~. Supreme
Court and federal appeals court opinions.
- The ads implied that Resnick traded favorable decisions in
exchange for contributions from trial lawyen.
Resnick captured 57 percent of the vote in the election, defeating
Republican Terrence O'Donnell, a former state appeals court judge
from Cleveland.
''
·
'

..

·:.: State to probe tu~er short91::':·:, ""

'

TOLEDO (AP) - The Ohio Departtnent ~f Education · said ir
will investigate a shortage of certifiod special education teacher&gt; in
Toledo public schools.
lhe investigation results from a .request by Advocates for Basic
!-esal Equality. Inc.. a nonprofit public interest law firm, to examin~
the credentials of 40 long-term substitute ·special education teachen
who don '(have certification for that subject.
'
The firm wants the department to ·order the replacement of those
teachers with certified teachers.
..,~;Ed Kapel, interim director of the departlvent's office for excep:rlonal children, said federal law requires complaints involving special
.education to be investigated within 60 days.
"' Leonard Crawford of the department's certification office said the
:lju"stions about Toledo'! teachers can be answered jn two weeks.
.City school Superintendent Eugene Sanden said he hasn't heard
J'rom the state.
. . He ack1towledged th~t his district has a shortage·of special educa•Gion teachers, saying it's cauaed in part by low pay for Toledo teach'iis compared with salaries at other clistrict.t in the state and region.
He said 1'oledo it working on programs with the \.lniveraity of
::.toledo and aowling Green State University co encourage tpeclal
~a~cac!on teachers.
,
:scate law requihll that special education ela11e1 be tauaht by certl·
~d lnteiVention speglallstl, a new term for special education teach-

.

~b-

~ ' If a specialist Ia not available, a l'll'llar education teacher who
•~plies for temporary certification can 1111 in u a Ions-term aubati·
(iitc.
·
;:crawford nid some oiToledo\ 40 uncertified special education
-teachers probably have some kind ofceachina cert!ficace, but haven't
S;,ne through the proCCII of obtaihing the temporary license for spe;..t,( education.

.-...

~!~ Students like home PlaySqtlons .

..

.

..

· ..r:TOLEDO (AP) - Forget the readiqa assignments and math
Problems, students at a Toledo elementary school .Will soon be getOris homework assignments more to their liking - playing video
·; ames.
·
,
.
::With the .help of a 1$67,000 stare gra_nt;,McGregor Elemen~ry
~¢hool willmue 50 PIJ.yStatJons to "at-mk' lint, second, and thi.d- ·
$!ilders to help them with th~ir school Work.'
. "
. !The students also will get to bor·row 40
that focus on .var~s. education:il skills using the popular interactive toy. .
,
: McGregor is the first Toledo-area school. to begin the Lightspan
~c.hieve Now effort, which is used in Ckveland and Port Clinton.
'The program is in about 3,000 schools nationwide, said Curt
Brautigan. director of Lightspan, a San Diego-based educational
·
·
· ·
provider.
l'aren.ts will sign a contract for the PlayStations and ·the children
got GO-ROMs from teachers with hoinework assignments.
Students are expected to use the program for 30 minutes three
ifays a week and complete Wl}rksheets.
. . . i~· . . . .
1\vo teachers from each grade level at the school are asSlstmg w1th
t~e program and will help parents and students.
"I believe it's an amazing ptogram to get the parents involved ln
their children's education. The program incorporates our quricullll)l," said Stacey Kessler, a first grade teacher.
The school will stress to parents that· the PlayS~1cions are to be
us~d as a learning tool and not a free gift for playing games.
t&gt;rintit&gt;al Cecil Martin said he hopes the new program will h~lp
•mprove tesr scores, especially in re~ding .
. "It's a real flexible program ond th~t 's what we like," Martin said.
"It has beautiful state"of-the-art graphics and sounds."

"games"

,,
I

I .

•

member joint legislative committee appointed
reported Saturday.
The Senate's Republican majority proba- to review the school-funding formula.
Lawmakers are trying to fix Ohio's financbly wouldn't have been able to get a bill written before that date anyway, one senator said. ing system for primary and secondary educ~­
"I don't think we can put it together. Prac- tion by a June 15 deadline set by the Oh1o
tically speaking, I think he's (the governor) Supreme Court, which last year declared the
going to be deferred to," said Sen. Louis W. current setup unconstitutional.
Senate Republicans believe they have a
Blessing Jr., R-Cincinnati.
The Legislative Services Commission is well-researched proposal that responds ,to the
writing the bill and basing it on 59 pages of court ruling and can win approval in both the
•
recommendations issued last month by a six- House and Senate.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Senate President
Richard Finan has decided to let Gov. Bob
Taft p~sent his plan to fix the state's school
funding problems before legislator&gt; offer their
version.
Finan, R-Cincinnati, had indicated earlier
that he might offer a funding plan before Taft
delivers his State of the Sta~e address Jan. 24.
Finan decided Thunday to back down from
that plan at the urging of members of Taft's
administration, The Columbus Dispatch

Professor unsure of cause Adopted teen dies in
for school leukemia cases acdCient during pursuit
MARION (AP) - An Ohio
State Umversity professor said
scientists are unable to determine whether exposure to pollutants at the River Valley school
complex caused a high incidence of leukemia cases in the
I
.
area.
"We don't know and we can't
definitively rule out whether
any of those exposures might
have in some way contributed to
the development," said Deborah
L Gray, a clinical associate professor at Ohio State's School of

WARREN (AP) Even
though both were paralyzed in
separate car crashes, John and
Joette Robertson did . not let
their handicaps deter them
from adopting, a son II years
ago and lovingly raising him.
On Thursday they identified
his body following a car crash.
Joseph Robertson, 18, of
Warren but originally from Sao
Paolo, Brazil, died on ·impact in
. ,t):te 2 a.m. car crash, doctors
told his mother.
, If· State Highway Patrol
cruiser involved in a ch~se .
smashed direcdy into the driver's side door of Joseph
R,obertson's car. Robertson was
not otherwise involved in the
chase.
Trooper Lee Sredniiwa. was
treated .at . St. Joseph Health
~Fnter. He is on paid a~s­
trative leave at least until the
iqyestigation is complete, said
·e~trol Capt. William Costas.
' · 'oette Roberts!)n is worried
' .abeut the troope~.
'
"I just want h1m to feel bettet," she said. "I want him to
know I forgive him. He can't
let this hang over him." .
· The Robertsons got a call
abouc 4 a.m. Thunday from
Forum
Health
Trumbull
Memorial Hospital. The caller
said only that Joseph had been
in a car accident and they had
~. ,.t ou;,ome, t? .~he. hospitai !~!!iht
away.
·
·
· ·' ' %ince'both were paralyzed in
separate car accidents, hen in

Public Health.
River Valley's ptiddle school
and high school were built in
1962 on 78 acres wher~ the military used to burn or bury tons
of highly toxic chemicals.
A federal and state investigation of the · schools began in
I 997 because of concerns about
an unusually high number of
graduates with leukemia, which
has not been linked to chemical
contaminatiOn found at the
school site.

Construction of regioAal
jails may be ending
MECHANICSBURG (AP)A jail that opened in December .in
this west-central Ohio communi. ty may be the last facility in Ohio
that se.- more than on county.
During the 1990s, the state
encouraged counties to get rid of
their old jails and, in several cases,
to build regional jails to serve several counties at one site.
The state agreed to fund
regional jails at $42,000 per bed,
compa~d ,~o ,$~5.~~ .per be'\ ~or
Single-county· facillnes.
. . . ..
But alter yean of pnelsUre from
the).~ \)c~e. S~ate. ~heri!fi' Ass9ciati~n;- tl)e ~~pgislatup: adjusteE! the
funding in Its mo5t recent .budget,

giving all jails $35,00() per bed.
Three regional jails were bullt
under the 1990s formula. The
most recent is the Tri:c.o unty
Regional Jail .i n Mechamcsbu~,
which setves Champaign, Union
and Madison counties. Also built
were the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Jail in NelsOnville and
the Multi-County Correctional
Center in Marion.
They were modeled after tjle
c&amp;rrectiods :~enter pf ~ortli\Yes!
d\uo which· opened in Stryker in
1,990t :J~ I. was .~uilr rich, ~tate

moneY., ~~~ us~.1 ~ &lt;fl,!f'e~.P~ &amp;\nd~

ing formUla.

·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1964 and his in 1972, they
knew how severe injuries could
.be.
.
"It was the worst. I k'new he
was going to be dead," Mrs.
Robertson said. "I prayed he
didn't suffer."
The Robertsons told The
(Warren) Tribune Chronicle ·
that before they adopted the 7-. ·
year-old boy, they sent him pictures so he cou ld see they were
paralyzed. They wanted him to .
knowingly choose whether ,
they should become his par-,
ents.
John Robertson, an admi~is~
ttator at Kent State Umvemty s
Trumbull Campus, said Joseph
only spoke Portugese when he
came to the states.
"I'll never forget the image
of him coming off the plane
onto the ramp," he said. "He
ran up and gave my wife a hug
and me a hug and he never
looked back. He was a sponge.
My wife put little labels with
the English word on everything
in the house."
Joseph picked up English so
fast that within six months he
had forgotten his native tongue.
Joseph graduated from Warren
G. Harding High School . in
June 2000 and was planning to
study architecture.
He was in his second semester of college at Kent Trumbull.
"This is jus~ a tragic, ~r~g!c•
incident and our hearts go oOt
to the families;' the patrol's
Costas said.

EMS lop 11 a.lls
Selma M. Cross

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - U.S.
Rep. james A.Traficant Jr., D-Ohio,
threatened a development agency
with a cutoff offederal money if it
didn't steer a contract to his friend,
The Vindicator ~ported Sunday. .
Thticant.told a 'demolition eontractor that he would "do all he
could" to make sure the
Younptown Certtnl Area Community Improvement Corp. clidn 't
set more !ederal funda if the lowest
local bidder didn't pt the contract,
said the piper, which quoted
sourcea who weren't identified.
The agency, which promoce,
in
downcqwn
development
Younptown, depends on federal
tundis for its operatiom.
The lowest Joe~ bidder, Hqney
Creek ConllilctinJ of Petenbura, it
9WOOi by a Traficant friend, !1..
David Sugar, He is awaiting sentencing on his Oct 24 plea to perJury, obstruction ofjustice and wit.ness tampering in connection with
an FBI ,investigJ~tion ofTraficant.
contract ·· to
'T he
demolish a department store iJi
YoungstOWn was awarded by the
agency last April to the lowest bidder, Mainline Contracting of Buffalo, N.Y.
The_ FBI has seized records rela\ed to the demolition project and
has talked with at least five people
involved in the project, the newspaper said, .
. Trafican1 could not be reached
for COlllllJen,t Sund1y. A message
seeking conunent was left Sunday
night for his spokesman. Charles
Straub; who told the newspaper
earlier that Traficant would not
comment on the nutter.
Contacted
Sunday
· by
Younptown television station
WKBN, Traficant said, "I &lt;&gt;-'J&gt;eCt to
get to court. I will be facing a powerful group of undefeated federal
prosecutors tlta\ have an impressive
list of successful victories."

Grange plans
potluck

JameS R. ·aob· VanMeter

King,

ft'OIII Pap

911

from

AI

L0 CAL STOCKS
82.,.

h
Save t e Last Dance

·snows off No~ ·1 moves

Correction Polley
Our main .concern In all &amp;lOri eo Is 10
be accurale. If you knOW of 1111 error In

a ato&lt;y.

S9oo:ooo

.

New• Department•
The mahi number Ia 992·2158.
Oapar1ment extentione ara:

Gentrlll"11111ger

Ext. 12
Ext. 13

mUch lloYe you. Marla.

.

ar

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERRJL UFE

I

Ext. 14

Other eervlcee

TOGEI'HERI

...

.....:...,

~

~~

Write your Message Below:

'

cal lhe newaroom at (740)

ii92·215B. .

f'

Advertlelng

Ext. 3

ClrculoUan·

Ext. 4

CI111KiedAd1

Ext. 5

To 1ende-mell
dallyaenUneiOyilhoo.oom

,1'

,

Mlil·Your Love Meuaae and Total Amount Due To:

'

The Dally Sentinel

WASIIl

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

F~FrN

14 Cu. Ft.

Adjll8taiM Shelvw

$43~
..
I

FIOCICWell-«~.

Flooky llootl- 4\

Partners al Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Reagan fine after hip surgery

Reader Services
llrlllht MCI true.

Federal Mogul - 3~.
Al'ltar - 23).

among the items discussed d~ring
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
"Double Take," a crime caper
the meeting. Bulletin insert!, fly- desert island gave · way to a starring Orlando Jones and Eddie
en, cards for distribution ~ well crowded dance floor as the hip- Griffin; overcame its bad reviews
as the use of the media tcii pro- hop flick "Save the Last Dance" to premiere at No. 7 with $10
mote the program was discussed. bumped "Cast Away" from the million. Playing in 1,631 theaten,
It was also reportca a bill~ard top spot at the mov1e box .office.
"Double Take" averag~d a decent
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
1
will be going up on the 0 o 7
"Save the Last Dance;" starring . $6,131 a cinema.
(AP) - Former President Rea"The audience for thi• movie gan was' able to sit up in a chair
bypass near the Ohio 124 i ter- Julia Stiles as ·an aspiring ballerina
and Sean Patrick Thomas as her is one that's typically just going the day after surgery to repair a
section.
Prayer ~s a key component in hip-hop· dancing boyfriend, took out for a good time," said Chuck broken a broken hip, a good
the success of the Power Team in $24 million in its opening Viane, head of distribution for sign, one of his doctors said
visit was discussed, and it : was weekend, according to studio Dis~ey, which released "Double 'Monday.
.
.
decided in addition to the cBily estimates Sunday.
'
Take." "It's a feel-good, funny
"He remarkably was up in a
prayer groups at churches, ptayer
Tllat was a record debut for movie. h's probably not. a critics' chair yesterday, the first day
will be held Monday through the Martin Luther King Jr. Day favorite."
post-op," Dr. Kevin Ehrhart, his
Friday at Meigs High Schoof for weekend, beating th'C previous
"Antitrust," a cyber thriller orthopedic surgeon, told ABC's
30 minutes each day. A prayer ' mark of$15.2 million. for "Varsi- starring Tim Robbins and Ryan "Good Morning America."
march and prayer \valks also ~re ·. ty Blues" in 1999.
Phillippe, tanked with $5.2 mil- "That's a goal you obtain about
planned.
"CastAway," the No.1 film the lion, finishing out of the top 10. half the time .. He did ·it on the
~
previous three weekends, slipped The movie averaged a dismal first try."
to second place with S 17.1 mil- $2,138 in 2,432 theaters.
He said the former president
lion. The movie, which stan Tom
It was continued bad news for also was eating.
Reagan,
suffering
from
Hanks as a man itranded on an "Antitrust" distributor MGM,
island, has taken in $165.1 million which has had a woeful film slate Alzheimer's disease and nearing
in just over three weeks and over the &gt;· past year. But next his 90th birthday Feb. 6, fell Fri(U8PIIIWIO)
. Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
, passed "Meet the Parents" to month, MGM has "Hannibal," day at his Bel-Air home. DocPublished ·ever; afternoon, Monday ,. ·
become the fifth-highest-grossing the highly anticipated sequel to tors used a pin, plate and screws
~ Frida~ 111 COU~ Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio. seeond·elau pooll'g• paid 11
movie released in 2000.
"The Silence of the Lambs."
to .repair the joint Saturday in a
Pomeroy.
!
.. "Save the Last Dance" was
Overall, the top 12 movi~s
Mol11..... lllt Auoclaltd . PIIU and 11101 ·'
Ohio N o - r Auoelallon.
produced by Paramount m asso- grossed S127.6 million, up 52
Poo-wr: Stnd lOci..,. eoriiCIIOnl to • ciation with MTV and was heav- percent from the same weekend
The Dally Sentlntl, 111 Cou~. St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768.
'
·iJy promoted on the music chan- . last year. It .was the 14th straight
nel.
weekend that Hollywood revSub1crlptlon r11te1
•r 01rrter or motor route
The movie's audience was 78 enues. were up after a long period
Ono12
Ono monlll .
$8.70 . •. percent female 'and mostly of decline last summer and fall.
OnoyNr
$104
·· younger than. 21, according to •
Dilly
·
50 conll
Paramount. Playing in 2,230 Cit)SubocrtbOrs nol daslrlng to poy lhiCirrt·
er may remit In advance direct to The Dally
Meigs County
' emas, the movie averaged an
Sentinel. Credit will be given corrler eacll
;. impressive S\0,762 a cinema.
Karate Club winter
week. No subac~n ill' moll ponnltltd In
areal where nome c.rrtar aeMoe 11 aval·
"It
hit
the
nerve
of
that
young
quarter bagii;H1lng
abla. •
:;female audience. MTV was a
classes starting
huge factor because it has a
Mdsu~llon
Tuesday, January
lnlldo Molgt
niY
: tremendous' reach to that audi13 Weeks
$27.00
16th at Carleton
26 Weaks
$53.82
~nce," said Wayne ·Lewellen, Para52 Waoks
$105.511 •
School,
Syracuse.
.· mount's head of distribution.
!lotH oullldo Molgt county
For .more
Two new movies largely
13 WOikl
$29.25
26 Wteks
$511.88
Information call.
mshed by critics had mixed
52 weaka
·
$109.72
992-6839.
openings.
r

.The Daily·Sentinel
In bri111Tns thll thou8ht
ofloYe to you.
I'm sorry abOut the
othlir niaht.
When -hid that
terrible flsht.
A Sentinel love men '8'~
was a good Idea.
To show you just how

VALLEY WEATHER

Falling temps, snow forecast

lllter,ancl

'Oipld'l lmiN II

Saturday, 6: II p.m., Higley
Road, Linda Zegler, PVH;
Sunday, I :56 p.m ., Jacks Road,
Julia Mitchell, HMC:
·
4:01 p.m., State Route 325,
Vada Smith, HMC.
'

Trustees to iiieet

of ministers and church leaders.
In preparation for the Pow~r
Team's program, daily prayer
gatherings are taking, place in area
churches. The importance of the
role of pastors as "head coaches"
in their churches to motivate and
inspire their own congregations
was stressed in a video shown
during last week's meeting.
· Funding, making arrangements
for presentation materials to be
used by the Power Team, and promotion of the ministry were

Day

RUTLAND

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered 16 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Unio responded ·as follows:

.'

fnwnPapA1

~ Vlllntlne'a

Pleasant Valley HospitaL

COLUMBUS - Selma M . Cross, 82, Columbus, died Saturday, Jan.
POMEROY - Bertha F. Smith, 95, Pomeroy. died Sunday Jan. 14,
' 2001. at Veterans Memorial Hospital's Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy
' 13, ~001, at Karrington Care Center in Columbus.
• She was a longtime Racine ' resident and was a graduate and teacher '''after a lengthy illness.
at Southern Local High School.
Born September 16, 1905, she was the daughter of the late AnthoCENTRAL DISP.A.TCH
She was also a former longtime member of Fairmoor Presbyterian ny and Elnu Moore Fell and was a school teacher with Meigs ConnSaturday, 9:38 a.m ., State Route
nrPPERS PLAINS
Church and was retired from Grant Hospital as a therapeutic dietician ty Schools. ·
7, Willie Jones, Camden-Clark
Sunday, 2:06 p.m., Naylors Run
after 30 years of service.
She was also member of Chester United Methodist Church, Chester Memorial Hospital;
!toad, Donald Pierce, PVH;
United Methodist Women, Ohio State Retired Teachers, and Meigs
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clyde E. Cross.
9:17 p.m., State Route 143,
3:16 p.m., East Main, Emily
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Lynn and John Nichols Counry Retired Teachers.
Pam Hanson, treated;
Payne,HMC;
of Aurora, Ill.; a son and daughter-in-law, Raymond Howard and JenAlong with her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
Sunday, 12:08 a.m., South Third
4:50 p.m .. Stories Run Road,
nifer Cross of Hilliard; a brother, George Neigler of Racine; several Fred B. Smith; an infantson;.sisten, Freda Ritchie and Edna Wolfe; and ~venue, Mae Christian, Holzer William Frasier, HMC.
grandchildren; and one great-gran&lt;ichild.
a brother, Dana Fell.
Medical Center;
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Letart Falls · She is survived by two daughten and sons-in-law, Kathryn and VirI :52 a.m ., Carpenter Hill
Cemetery Chapel in Letart Falls. Officiating will be Rev. Rick Rule. gil Windon, and Barbar~ and Alvin Tripp. all of Pomeroy; two listen- Road, Harold Oxley, treated;
Friends may call Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at Woodyard in-law, Betty Fell Davisson of Mechanicsburg and Sybil Ban' of
10:25 a.m., Flood Road, KirkBEDFORD - Organizational
East Chapel in Columbus.
Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Debra Chevalier, Brian (Wendy) Windon, land Rose, treated;
meeting for the Bedford Town- .
An additional memorial service will be held .on Thursday in Lane Becky (James) Cotterill. Blair (Diana) Windon, Rodney Tripp, Todd
3:56 p.m., Beech Street, Violet ship Trustees will held Tuesday, 7
Avenue Baptist Church in Columbus at 7 p.m . Officiating will be Rev. (Diane) Tripp, aU of Pomeroy; 13 great-grandchildren,Adam and Abbie Lee,HMC;
p.m. :u the town hall.
Wayne Nicholson.
Chevalier, Amanda. and Morgan Windon, juscin Cotterill, Mega!),
7:51 p.m., Second Street,
Amber and Haley Tripp, Ryan and Tiffany Tripp, Gabe and Beth Far- Danny Merinar, HMC;
·
9:44 p.m., Dye Road, Cassanley, and Kayla Spaun.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. orf Wednesday, Jan. 17, at Ewing dra Trolls, St. Josep,h Memorial
POMEROY - James R. "Bob "VanMeter, 76,' of Deer Creek Town- Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Jane Beattie.
·
Hospital.
ship, Sandy Lake. form.erly of Racine, died Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2000 at his
Burial will follow in Meigs Memory Gardens. ·
SALEM CENTER Star
MIDDLEPORT
residence.
·
Friends may visit on Tuesday from 4-8 p.m. at rhe funeral home.
Saturday, 3:09 p.m.,Jesse Creek Grange 7768 and Star Junior
Born on March, 31, 1924 in East Liverpool, he was the son of the
Memorial contributions may be made to the charity of your choice. Road, brush fire, no injuries.
Grange 878 will meet Saturday,
late of Okey Ralph and Hanl)ah Mae (Ours) VanMeter. He attended
with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY
Racine schools, served in the U.· S. Navy during World War II. and
Sunday, 11:47 p.m., Lincoln followed by second-degree pracretired from Joy Man~facturing of Franklin, where he was a ~elder.
"I really saw him as someone Heights, Lenore McKnight, tice.
He is survived by his wife, Doris Ann; two sons, Timothy VanMeter
who is able to articulate God's
of Bailey, Colo.,.and J. Alan VanMeter of Sandy Lake, a daughter, Deblove for hum~nity in a way that
orah Lee Consiglio of Sheakleyville; four sisters, Ruby VanMeter qf .
A1
encompasses both economic and
Long Bottom, Doris Hupenthal of Sewickley, Pal., Lucille Ridenour of
social justice, and moral justice," ,
Tuppers Plains, and Merle Evans of Portland; and five grandchildren.
had so many organizations that said the Rev. Donald Taylor, pasBesides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Ross Van- wanted to be included," said Dr.
tor of St. Paul United Methodist
Meter of Long Bottom. ·
·
Fannie Brown, executive director Church and president ofToledo's
Funeral services were held at Robert L. Snyder Funeral Home, L!d., of the nonprofit group.
Interracial Religious Coalitio.&gt;.
Sheakleyville, · Pa. The Rev. Doug Etter officiated and burial was iri
Brown would like to see the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Forecast
The Rev. Robert Alexander,
Fairfield Cemetery in New Vernon Township.
King tributes go more in the
Temperatures
will
faU
across
the
Today: Cloudy. High 4 7, low
pastor ofToledo's Monroe Street
direction of public service.
region
today,
possibly
producing
28.
United Methodist Church and a
The Rev. Knute Larson, pastor
snow showers, the National
Tuesday: Cloudy. High 35, low
The commissioners have said in of The Chapel in Akron, was the former coalition president, said he · Weather Service said.
26.
the past that a gteat deal of the King day featured speaker at has high regard for the ministry
Highs will be in the lower 30s
skills
of
King.
Wednesday: Cloudy. High 35,
dispatching equipment now in &lt;;:uyahoga Falls General Hospital.
today and Tuesday, ·with lows i,n
"He
knew
the
Bible
and
was
.
Pip
place at the EMS office would be
"Racial intolerance is one of
the 20s. The anow should last into low 25.
right-on
with
it.
He
was
a
student
Thunday: Mosdy cloudy. High
suffici~nt
for 911 seryice, the ·great sins, one of this counWednesday as a low pressure sysneeded equipment, as we~ as to although the evaluation of that try's greatest .illnesses. King of theology and of the traditions tem passes south of the region .
33,low 23.
I
meet other financial requirements equipment will be a significant · shocked us into recognizing the of the faith and of the church, and . .
to implement 911 in the county.
part of Stanton's study, a~•. will wrongs of racial intolerance;• Lar- a student of human behavior. And
1
"We're not aware of any outside
because of that, he undentood
son
said.
funding options.
funding source for those needs;'
"A lot of wh~t comes out of
Cler,gy can tap ~nto King's the- how the word . of God spoke to
Bannltt AEP-&gt;10~
RD Shell- 60%
Davenport said, noting toptions
the human condition."
ology to promote justice i!Sues.
M:h Call-14~
a.-11 Eltctrtc - 45').
this
study
will
etermine
where
Soars35~
including a telephone silrcharge
AkZa-51~.
Hlrloy Dtvldaon - 3;.,.
Shoneys
-l.
are available to communities · for we go with it," Davenport said. ·
AmTtch/SBC - 50'1'.
Kman-o'l'.
Wai·Mart52'1'.
Kroger- m.
Ashland Inc. - 35~
Last summer, Lyons said a care- I
.
I
911 funding.
Wendy's
·25
AT&amp;T -24'1•
L.anc11 End- 28'1.
Gov.Bob Taft, in Sept~mber, ful evaluation of the county's
Worthington - ·a••
Ltd. -17'1'.
.
Bank One - 35\1
Ollt Hill FinanCIIll- 14'1.
Bab E'111na - 18'1.
Dally stack reports ara lha
signed a 'taw that allows counties house numbering system also ·
Bo111Wamor -: ae'l'• ..• • . OVB-25 N
4 p.m. closing quotes of
'tp pJa~e : a tax ini~?ve. !=Jn.,t,~eir must be made 'before a 91 f sys~
~-ft
•) f., . 81!1'1'- -~ '
lhe
previous day's trans·
tern can be seriously considered.
)ocal ballots for 911 funding.·
PIOjllu- 18),
Charrtllng Shl!pa - I
actions.
provided by Smllh
City HOlding - 8'o
·PI'Ifl!ltr - 8'-

Power

threatened
loss of money

Tht Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Congressma~

.,
•

Monday, January 15, 2001

Taft to get flnt chance at funding proposal

'

I

Mondtly, January 11, 2001

PomtrOY, Middleport, Ohio ·

65-minuce operation . .
·He still faced months of difllcult physical therapy but was
taking very little pain medication, another g,ood sign, said
Joanne Drake, his chief of staff.
Ehrhart said after the opera1ion that Reagan's tissue and
bone were remarkably like that
of a "much younger man, which
obviously help s subStantially
with his recovery.a

�-

,

.

~~

•

.,.. AI• The Deily Ientine!

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Mollz1r, three d:lldiWL die

...

ROSEVILLE (AP) -A mother and her tluee small children died
in a house fire in this eastern Ohio village early Monday morning,
~ officiah said.
The victims were identified as Rebecca Metcalf and children,
J~f!!es Jr., 5, Kyle, 4, and Alexis, 3.
The husband and father, James Metcalf, survived tho blaze.
Officials with the RosevilleVolunteer Fire Department said other
details, such as the cause of the fire, were not available immediately.

TWo Injured at talent show
CANTON (AP) - Organizer&gt; of a high school talent show
blame troublenukers for fights and reported gunfire that left two
people injured.
" The show Saturday night at Timken High School was meant to
.honor the memory of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Witnesses said a fight erupted in the back of the auditorium at the
end of a talent show and spilled outside tbe school, where multiple
gunshots reportedly were fired.
Two people were injured in the fights. No one was wounded by
gunlire. .
·
·
Police Capt. Robert Vega said a 17-year-old was charged with disorderly co nduct and was released to a parent. The teen, whose name
was withheld because of his age, isn't a Timken student, Vega said.
Terrance Jones, the organizer of the event, said troublemakers
started a fight and were ordered out. Jones said he heard three gunShots outside the building, but investigaton haven't confirmed the
gunfire,Vega said.
·
:Jones said he didn't know what started the fight, but a young person told him that two of the same people also had fought the night
before.
·

Chamber sues to blOck review of ads
Chamb,~r

.. COLUMBUS (AP) - 'The U.S.
of Commerce has filed
a lawsuit to prevent the Ohio Elections Commission from reviewing the legality of campaign commercials the chamber sponsored in
November's state Supreme Court election.
The suit was filed Friday before U.S. District Judge Edmund Sargus Jr.. who scheduled a hearing Feb. 22 to listen to arguments in the
case.
The chamber said the ads, which contained hanh criticism of
Supreme Court Justice Alice Robie Resnick, were protected free
speech and shouldn't be the target of a state investigation.
· The ads were financed through a $5 million fund of a pro-business
group known as Citizens for a Strong Ohio, which received money
from the chamber.
' In previous hearings before the eleations commission; attorneys
for the group said it did not have to disclose the names of contributors because the commercials were educational and issue-oriented
and did not explicidy call for Resnick's defeat.
::.They based their arguments on a 1976 ruling by the U.~. Supreme
Court and federal appeals court opinions.
- The ads implied that Resnick traded favorable decisions in
exchange for contributions from trial lawyen.
Resnick captured 57 percent of the vote in the election, defeating
Republican Terrence O'Donnell, a former state appeals court judge
from Cleveland.
''
·
'

..

·:.: State to probe tu~er short91::':·:, ""

'

TOLEDO (AP) - The Ohio Departtnent ~f Education · said ir
will investigate a shortage of certifiod special education teacher&gt; in
Toledo public schools.
lhe investigation results from a .request by Advocates for Basic
!-esal Equality. Inc.. a nonprofit public interest law firm, to examin~
the credentials of 40 long-term substitute ·special education teachen
who don '(have certification for that subject.
'
The firm wants the department to ·order the replacement of those
teachers with certified teachers.
..,~;Ed Kapel, interim director of the departlvent's office for excep:rlonal children, said federal law requires complaints involving special
.education to be investigated within 60 days.
"' Leonard Crawford of the department's certification office said the
:lju"stions about Toledo'! teachers can be answered jn two weeks.
.City school Superintendent Eugene Sanden said he hasn't heard
J'rom the state.
. . He ack1towledged th~t his district has a shortage·of special educa•Gion teachers, saying it's cauaed in part by low pay for Toledo teach'iis compared with salaries at other clistrict.t in the state and region.
He said 1'oledo it working on programs with the \.lniveraity of
::.toledo and aowling Green State University co encourage tpeclal
~a~cac!on teachers.
,
:scate law requihll that special education ela11e1 be tauaht by certl·
~d lnteiVention speglallstl, a new term for special education teach-

.

~b-

~ ' If a specialist Ia not available, a l'll'llar education teacher who
•~plies for temporary certification can 1111 in u a Ions-term aubati·
(iitc.
·
;:crawford nid some oiToledo\ 40 uncertified special education
-teachers probably have some kind ofceachina cert!ficace, but haven't
S;,ne through the proCCII of obtaihing the temporary license for spe;..t,( education.

.-...

~!~ Students like home PlaySqtlons .

..

.

..

· ..r:TOLEDO (AP) - Forget the readiqa assignments and math
Problems, students at a Toledo elementary school .Will soon be getOris homework assignments more to their liking - playing video
·; ames.
·
,
.
::With the .help of a 1$67,000 stare gra_nt;,McGregor Elemen~ry
~¢hool willmue 50 PIJ.yStatJons to "at-mk' lint, second, and thi.d- ·
$!ilders to help them with th~ir school Work.'
. "
. !The students also will get to bor·row 40
that focus on .var~s. education:il skills using the popular interactive toy. .
,
: McGregor is the first Toledo-area school. to begin the Lightspan
~c.hieve Now effort, which is used in Ckveland and Port Clinton.
'The program is in about 3,000 schools nationwide, said Curt
Brautigan. director of Lightspan, a San Diego-based educational
·
·
· ·
provider.
l'aren.ts will sign a contract for the PlayStations and ·the children
got GO-ROMs from teachers with hoinework assignments.
Students are expected to use the program for 30 minutes three
ifays a week and complete Wl}rksheets.
. . . i~· . . . .
1\vo teachers from each grade level at the school are asSlstmg w1th
t~e program and will help parents and students.
"I believe it's an amazing ptogram to get the parents involved ln
their children's education. The program incorporates our quricullll)l," said Stacey Kessler, a first grade teacher.
The school will stress to parents that· the PlayS~1cions are to be
us~d as a learning tool and not a free gift for playing games.
t&gt;rintit&gt;al Cecil Martin said he hopes the new program will h~lp
•mprove tesr scores, especially in re~ding .
. "It's a real flexible program ond th~t 's what we like," Martin said.
"It has beautiful state"of-the-art graphics and sounds."

"games"

,,
I

I .

•

member joint legislative committee appointed
reported Saturday.
The Senate's Republican majority proba- to review the school-funding formula.
Lawmakers are trying to fix Ohio's financbly wouldn't have been able to get a bill written before that date anyway, one senator said. ing system for primary and secondary educ~­
"I don't think we can put it together. Prac- tion by a June 15 deadline set by the Oh1o
tically speaking, I think he's (the governor) Supreme Court, which last year declared the
going to be deferred to," said Sen. Louis W. current setup unconstitutional.
Senate Republicans believe they have a
Blessing Jr., R-Cincinnati.
The Legislative Services Commission is well-researched proposal that responds ,to the
writing the bill and basing it on 59 pages of court ruling and can win approval in both the
•
recommendations issued last month by a six- House and Senate.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Senate President
Richard Finan has decided to let Gov. Bob
Taft p~sent his plan to fix the state's school
funding problems before legislator&gt; offer their
version.
Finan, R-Cincinnati, had indicated earlier
that he might offer a funding plan before Taft
delivers his State of the Sta~e address Jan. 24.
Finan decided Thunday to back down from
that plan at the urging of members of Taft's
administration, The Columbus Dispatch

Professor unsure of cause Adopted teen dies in
for school leukemia cases acdCient during pursuit
MARION (AP) - An Ohio
State Umversity professor said
scientists are unable to determine whether exposure to pollutants at the River Valley school
complex caused a high incidence of leukemia cases in the
I
.
area.
"We don't know and we can't
definitively rule out whether
any of those exposures might
have in some way contributed to
the development," said Deborah
L Gray, a clinical associate professor at Ohio State's School of

WARREN (AP) Even
though both were paralyzed in
separate car crashes, John and
Joette Robertson did . not let
their handicaps deter them
from adopting, a son II years
ago and lovingly raising him.
On Thursday they identified
his body following a car crash.
Joseph Robertson, 18, of
Warren but originally from Sao
Paolo, Brazil, died on ·impact in
. ,t):te 2 a.m. car crash, doctors
told his mother.
, If· State Highway Patrol
cruiser involved in a ch~se .
smashed direcdy into the driver's side door of Joseph
R,obertson's car. Robertson was
not otherwise involved in the
chase.
Trooper Lee Sredniiwa. was
treated .at . St. Joseph Health
~Fnter. He is on paid a~s­
trative leave at least until the
iqyestigation is complete, said
·e~trol Capt. William Costas.
' · 'oette Roberts!)n is worried
' .abeut the troope~.
'
"I just want h1m to feel bettet," she said. "I want him to
know I forgive him. He can't
let this hang over him." .
· The Robertsons got a call
abouc 4 a.m. Thunday from
Forum
Health
Trumbull
Memorial Hospital. The caller
said only that Joseph had been
in a car accident and they had
~. ,.t ou;,ome, t? .~he. hospitai !~!!iht
away.
·
·
· ·' ' %ince'both were paralyzed in
separate car accidents, hen in

Public Health.
River Valley's ptiddle school
and high school were built in
1962 on 78 acres wher~ the military used to burn or bury tons
of highly toxic chemicals.
A federal and state investigation of the · schools began in
I 997 because of concerns about
an unusually high number of
graduates with leukemia, which
has not been linked to chemical
contaminatiOn found at the
school site.

Construction of regioAal
jails may be ending
MECHANICSBURG (AP)A jail that opened in December .in
this west-central Ohio communi. ty may be the last facility in Ohio
that se.- more than on county.
During the 1990s, the state
encouraged counties to get rid of
their old jails and, in several cases,
to build regional jails to serve several counties at one site.
The state agreed to fund
regional jails at $42,000 per bed,
compa~d ,~o ,$~5.~~ .per be'\ ~or
Single-county· facillnes.
. . . ..
But alter yean of pnelsUre from
the).~ \)c~e. S~ate. ~heri!fi' Ass9ciati~n;- tl)e ~~pgislatup: adjusteE! the
funding in Its mo5t recent .budget,

giving all jails $35,00() per bed.
Three regional jails were bullt
under the 1990s formula. The
most recent is the Tri:c.o unty
Regional Jail .i n Mechamcsbu~,
which setves Champaign, Union
and Madison counties. Also built
were the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Jail in NelsOnville and
the Multi-County Correctional
Center in Marion.
They were modeled after tjle
c&amp;rrectiods :~enter pf ~ortli\Yes!
d\uo which· opened in Stryker in
1,990t :J~ I. was .~uilr rich, ~tate

moneY., ~~~ us~.1 ~ &lt;fl,!f'e~.P~ &amp;\nd~

ing formUla.

·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1964 and his in 1972, they
knew how severe injuries could
.be.
.
"It was the worst. I k'new he
was going to be dead," Mrs.
Robertson said. "I prayed he
didn't suffer."
The Robertsons told The
(Warren) Tribune Chronicle ·
that before they adopted the 7-. ·
year-old boy, they sent him pictures so he cou ld see they were
paralyzed. They wanted him to .
knowingly choose whether ,
they should become his par-,
ents.
John Robertson, an admi~is~
ttator at Kent State Umvemty s
Trumbull Campus, said Joseph
only spoke Portugese when he
came to the states.
"I'll never forget the image
of him coming off the plane
onto the ramp," he said. "He
ran up and gave my wife a hug
and me a hug and he never
looked back. He was a sponge.
My wife put little labels with
the English word on everything
in the house."
Joseph picked up English so
fast that within six months he
had forgotten his native tongue.
Joseph graduated from Warren
G. Harding High School . in
June 2000 and was planning to
study architecture.
He was in his second semester of college at Kent Trumbull.
"This is jus~ a tragic, ~r~g!c•
incident and our hearts go oOt
to the families;' the patrol's
Costas said.

EMS lop 11 a.lls
Selma M. Cross

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - U.S.
Rep. james A.Traficant Jr., D-Ohio,
threatened a development agency
with a cutoff offederal money if it
didn't steer a contract to his friend,
The Vindicator ~ported Sunday. .
Thticant.told a 'demolition eontractor that he would "do all he
could" to make sure the
Younptown Certtnl Area Community Improvement Corp. clidn 't
set more !ederal funda if the lowest
local bidder didn't pt the contract,
said the piper, which quoted
sourcea who weren't identified.
The agency, which promoce,
in
downcqwn
development
Younptown, depends on federal
tundis for its operatiom.
The lowest Joe~ bidder, Hqney
Creek ConllilctinJ of Petenbura, it
9WOOi by a Traficant friend, !1..
David Sugar, He is awaiting sentencing on his Oct 24 plea to perJury, obstruction ofjustice and wit.ness tampering in connection with
an FBI ,investigJ~tion ofTraficant.
contract ·· to
'T he
demolish a department store iJi
YoungstOWn was awarded by the
agency last April to the lowest bidder, Mainline Contracting of Buffalo, N.Y.
The_ FBI has seized records rela\ed to the demolition project and
has talked with at least five people
involved in the project, the newspaper said, .
. Trafican1 could not be reached
for COlllllJen,t Sund1y. A message
seeking conunent was left Sunday
night for his spokesman. Charles
Straub; who told the newspaper
earlier that Traficant would not
comment on the nutter.
Contacted
Sunday
· by
Younptown television station
WKBN, Traficant said, "I &lt;&gt;-'J&gt;eCt to
get to court. I will be facing a powerful group of undefeated federal
prosecutors tlta\ have an impressive
list of successful victories."

Grange plans
potluck

JameS R. ·aob· VanMeter

King,

ft'OIII Pap

911

from

AI

L0 CAL STOCKS
82.,.

h
Save t e Last Dance

·snows off No~ ·1 moves

Correction Polley
Our main .concern In all &amp;lOri eo Is 10
be accurale. If you knOW of 1111 error In

a ato&lt;y.

S9oo:ooo

.

New• Department•
The mahi number Ia 992·2158.
Oapar1ment extentione ara:

Gentrlll"11111ger

Ext. 12
Ext. 13

mUch lloYe you. Marla.

.

ar

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERRJL UFE

I

Ext. 14

Other eervlcee

TOGEI'HERI

...

.....:...,

~

~~

Write your Message Below:

'

cal lhe newaroom at (740)

ii92·215B. .

f'

Advertlelng

Ext. 3

ClrculoUan·

Ext. 4

CI111KiedAd1

Ext. 5

To 1ende-mell
dallyaenUneiOyilhoo.oom

,1'

,

Mlil·Your Love Meuaae and Total Amount Due To:

'

The Dally Sentinel

WASIIl

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

F~FrN

14 Cu. Ft.

Adjll8taiM Shelvw

$43~
..
I

FIOCICWell-«~.

Flooky llootl- 4\

Partners al Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Reagan fine after hip surgery

Reader Services
llrlllht MCI true.

Federal Mogul - 3~.
Al'ltar - 23).

among the items discussed d~ring
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
"Double Take," a crime caper
the meeting. Bulletin insert!, fly- desert island gave · way to a starring Orlando Jones and Eddie
en, cards for distribution ~ well crowded dance floor as the hip- Griffin; overcame its bad reviews
as the use of the media tcii pro- hop flick "Save the Last Dance" to premiere at No. 7 with $10
mote the program was discussed. bumped "Cast Away" from the million. Playing in 1,631 theaten,
It was also reportca a bill~ard top spot at the mov1e box .office.
"Double Take" averag~d a decent
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
1
will be going up on the 0 o 7
"Save the Last Dance;" starring . $6,131 a cinema.
(AP) - Former President Rea"The audience for thi• movie gan was' able to sit up in a chair
bypass near the Ohio 124 i ter- Julia Stiles as ·an aspiring ballerina
and Sean Patrick Thomas as her is one that's typically just going the day after surgery to repair a
section.
Prayer ~s a key component in hip-hop· dancing boyfriend, took out for a good time," said Chuck broken a broken hip, a good
the success of the Power Team in $24 million in its opening Viane, head of distribution for sign, one of his doctors said
visit was discussed, and it : was weekend, according to studio Dis~ey, which released "Double 'Monday.
.
.
decided in addition to the cBily estimates Sunday.
'
Take." "It's a feel-good, funny
"He remarkably was up in a
prayer groups at churches, ptayer
Tllat was a record debut for movie. h's probably not. a critics' chair yesterday, the first day
will be held Monday through the Martin Luther King Jr. Day favorite."
post-op," Dr. Kevin Ehrhart, his
Friday at Meigs High Schoof for weekend, beating th'C previous
"Antitrust," a cyber thriller orthopedic surgeon, told ABC's
30 minutes each day. A prayer ' mark of$15.2 million. for "Varsi- starring Tim Robbins and Ryan "Good Morning America."
march and prayer \valks also ~re ·. ty Blues" in 1999.
Phillippe, tanked with $5.2 mil- "That's a goal you obtain about
planned.
"CastAway," the No.1 film the lion, finishing out of the top 10. half the time .. He did ·it on the
~
previous three weekends, slipped The movie averaged a dismal first try."
to second place with S 17.1 mil- $2,138 in 2,432 theaters.
He said the former president
lion. The movie, which stan Tom
It was continued bad news for also was eating.
Reagan,
suffering
from
Hanks as a man itranded on an "Antitrust" distributor MGM,
island, has taken in $165.1 million which has had a woeful film slate Alzheimer's disease and nearing
in just over three weeks and over the &gt;· past year. But next his 90th birthday Feb. 6, fell Fri(U8PIIIWIO)
. Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
, passed "Meet the Parents" to month, MGM has "Hannibal," day at his Bel-Air home. DocPublished ·ever; afternoon, Monday ,. ·
become the fifth-highest-grossing the highly anticipated sequel to tors used a pin, plate and screws
~ Frida~ 111 COU~ Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio. seeond·elau pooll'g• paid 11
movie released in 2000.
"The Silence of the Lambs."
to .repair the joint Saturday in a
Pomeroy.
!
.. "Save the Last Dance" was
Overall, the top 12 movi~s
Mol11..... lllt Auoclaltd . PIIU and 11101 ·'
Ohio N o - r Auoelallon.
produced by Paramount m asso- grossed S127.6 million, up 52
Poo-wr: Stnd lOci..,. eoriiCIIOnl to • ciation with MTV and was heav- percent from the same weekend
The Dally Sentlntl, 111 Cou~. St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768.
'
·iJy promoted on the music chan- . last year. It .was the 14th straight
nel.
weekend that Hollywood revSub1crlptlon r11te1
•r 01rrter or motor route
The movie's audience was 78 enues. were up after a long period
Ono12
Ono monlll .
$8.70 . •. percent female 'and mostly of decline last summer and fall.
OnoyNr
$104
·· younger than. 21, according to •
Dilly
·
50 conll
Paramount. Playing in 2,230 Cit)SubocrtbOrs nol daslrlng to poy lhiCirrt·
er may remit In advance direct to The Dally
Meigs County
' emas, the movie averaged an
Sentinel. Credit will be given corrler eacll
;. impressive S\0,762 a cinema.
Karate Club winter
week. No subac~n ill' moll ponnltltd In
areal where nome c.rrtar aeMoe 11 aval·
"It
hit
the
nerve
of
that
young
quarter bagii;H1lng
abla. •
:;female audience. MTV was a
classes starting
huge factor because it has a
Mdsu~llon
Tuesday, January
lnlldo Molgt
niY
: tremendous' reach to that audi13 Weeks
$27.00
16th at Carleton
26 Weaks
$53.82
~nce," said Wayne ·Lewellen, Para52 Waoks
$105.511 •
School,
Syracuse.
.· mount's head of distribution.
!lotH oullldo Molgt county
For .more
Two new movies largely
13 WOikl
$29.25
26 Wteks
$511.88
Information call.
mshed by critics had mixed
52 weaka
·
$109.72
992-6839.
openings.
r

.The Daily·Sentinel
In bri111Tns thll thou8ht
ofloYe to you.
I'm sorry abOut the
othlir niaht.
When -hid that
terrible flsht.
A Sentinel love men '8'~
was a good Idea.
To show you just how

VALLEY WEATHER

Falling temps, snow forecast

lllter,ancl

'Oipld'l lmiN II

Saturday, 6: II p.m., Higley
Road, Linda Zegler, PVH;
Sunday, I :56 p.m ., Jacks Road,
Julia Mitchell, HMC:
·
4:01 p.m., State Route 325,
Vada Smith, HMC.
'

Trustees to iiieet

of ministers and church leaders.
In preparation for the Pow~r
Team's program, daily prayer
gatherings are taking, place in area
churches. The importance of the
role of pastors as "head coaches"
in their churches to motivate and
inspire their own congregations
was stressed in a video shown
during last week's meeting.
· Funding, making arrangements
for presentation materials to be
used by the Power Team, and promotion of the ministry were

Day

RUTLAND

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered 16 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Unio responded ·as follows:

.'

fnwnPapA1

~ Vlllntlne'a

Pleasant Valley HospitaL

COLUMBUS - Selma M . Cross, 82, Columbus, died Saturday, Jan.
POMEROY - Bertha F. Smith, 95, Pomeroy. died Sunday Jan. 14,
' 2001. at Veterans Memorial Hospital's Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy
' 13, ~001, at Karrington Care Center in Columbus.
• She was a longtime Racine ' resident and was a graduate and teacher '''after a lengthy illness.
at Southern Local High School.
Born September 16, 1905, she was the daughter of the late AnthoCENTRAL DISP.A.TCH
She was also a former longtime member of Fairmoor Presbyterian ny and Elnu Moore Fell and was a school teacher with Meigs ConnSaturday, 9:38 a.m ., State Route
nrPPERS PLAINS
Church and was retired from Grant Hospital as a therapeutic dietician ty Schools. ·
7, Willie Jones, Camden-Clark
Sunday, 2:06 p.m., Naylors Run
after 30 years of service.
She was also member of Chester United Methodist Church, Chester Memorial Hospital;
!toad, Donald Pierce, PVH;
United Methodist Women, Ohio State Retired Teachers, and Meigs
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clyde E. Cross.
9:17 p.m., State Route 143,
3:16 p.m., East Main, Emily
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Lynn and John Nichols Counry Retired Teachers.
Pam Hanson, treated;
Payne,HMC;
of Aurora, Ill.; a son and daughter-in-law, Raymond Howard and JenAlong with her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
Sunday, 12:08 a.m., South Third
4:50 p.m .. Stories Run Road,
nifer Cross of Hilliard; a brother, George Neigler of Racine; several Fred B. Smith; an infantson;.sisten, Freda Ritchie and Edna Wolfe; and ~venue, Mae Christian, Holzer William Frasier, HMC.
grandchildren; and one great-gran&lt;ichild.
a brother, Dana Fell.
Medical Center;
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Letart Falls · She is survived by two daughten and sons-in-law, Kathryn and VirI :52 a.m ., Carpenter Hill
Cemetery Chapel in Letart Falls. Officiating will be Rev. Rick Rule. gil Windon, and Barbar~ and Alvin Tripp. all of Pomeroy; two listen- Road, Harold Oxley, treated;
Friends may call Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at Woodyard in-law, Betty Fell Davisson of Mechanicsburg and Sybil Ban' of
10:25 a.m., Flood Road, KirkBEDFORD - Organizational
East Chapel in Columbus.
Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Debra Chevalier, Brian (Wendy) Windon, land Rose, treated;
meeting for the Bedford Town- .
An additional memorial service will be held .on Thursday in Lane Becky (James) Cotterill. Blair (Diana) Windon, Rodney Tripp, Todd
3:56 p.m., Beech Street, Violet ship Trustees will held Tuesday, 7
Avenue Baptist Church in Columbus at 7 p.m . Officiating will be Rev. (Diane) Tripp, aU of Pomeroy; 13 great-grandchildren,Adam and Abbie Lee,HMC;
p.m. :u the town hall.
Wayne Nicholson.
Chevalier, Amanda. and Morgan Windon, juscin Cotterill, Mega!),
7:51 p.m., Second Street,
Amber and Haley Tripp, Ryan and Tiffany Tripp, Gabe and Beth Far- Danny Merinar, HMC;
·
9:44 p.m., Dye Road, Cassanley, and Kayla Spaun.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. orf Wednesday, Jan. 17, at Ewing dra Trolls, St. Josep,h Memorial
POMEROY - James R. "Bob "VanMeter, 76,' of Deer Creek Town- Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Jane Beattie.
·
Hospital.
ship, Sandy Lake. form.erly of Racine, died Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2000 at his
Burial will follow in Meigs Memory Gardens. ·
SALEM CENTER Star
MIDDLEPORT
residence.
·
Friends may visit on Tuesday from 4-8 p.m. at rhe funeral home.
Saturday, 3:09 p.m.,Jesse Creek Grange 7768 and Star Junior
Born on March, 31, 1924 in East Liverpool, he was the son of the
Memorial contributions may be made to the charity of your choice. Road, brush fire, no injuries.
Grange 878 will meet Saturday,
late of Okey Ralph and Hanl)ah Mae (Ours) VanMeter. He attended
with potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY
Racine schools, served in the U.· S. Navy during World War II. and
Sunday, 11:47 p.m., Lincoln followed by second-degree pracretired from Joy Man~facturing of Franklin, where he was a ~elder.
"I really saw him as someone Heights, Lenore McKnight, tice.
He is survived by his wife, Doris Ann; two sons, Timothy VanMeter
who is able to articulate God's
of Bailey, Colo.,.and J. Alan VanMeter of Sandy Lake, a daughter, Deblove for hum~nity in a way that
orah Lee Consiglio of Sheakleyville; four sisters, Ruby VanMeter qf .
A1
encompasses both economic and
Long Bottom, Doris Hupenthal of Sewickley, Pal., Lucille Ridenour of
social justice, and moral justice," ,
Tuppers Plains, and Merle Evans of Portland; and five grandchildren.
had so many organizations that said the Rev. Donald Taylor, pasBesides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Ross Van- wanted to be included," said Dr.
tor of St. Paul United Methodist
Meter of Long Bottom. ·
·
Fannie Brown, executive director Church and president ofToledo's
Funeral services were held at Robert L. Snyder Funeral Home, L!d., of the nonprofit group.
Interracial Religious Coalitio.&gt;.
Sheakleyville, · Pa. The Rev. Doug Etter officiated and burial was iri
Brown would like to see the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Forecast
The Rev. Robert Alexander,
Fairfield Cemetery in New Vernon Township.
King tributes go more in the
Temperatures
will
faU
across
the
Today: Cloudy. High 4 7, low
pastor ofToledo's Monroe Street
direction of public service.
region
today,
possibly
producing
28.
United Methodist Church and a
The Rev. Knute Larson, pastor
snow showers, the National
Tuesday: Cloudy. High 35, low
The commissioners have said in of The Chapel in Akron, was the former coalition president, said he · Weather Service said.
26.
the past that a gteat deal of the King day featured speaker at has high regard for the ministry
Highs will be in the lower 30s
skills
of
King.
Wednesday: Cloudy. High 35,
dispatching equipment now in &lt;;:uyahoga Falls General Hospital.
today and Tuesday, ·with lows i,n
"He
knew
the
Bible
and
was
.
Pip
place at the EMS office would be
"Racial intolerance is one of
the 20s. The anow should last into low 25.
right-on
with
it.
He
was
a
student
Thunday: Mosdy cloudy. High
suffici~nt
for 911 seryice, the ·great sins, one of this counWednesday as a low pressure sysneeded equipment, as we~ as to although the evaluation of that try's greatest .illnesses. King of theology and of the traditions tem passes south of the region .
33,low 23.
I
meet other financial requirements equipment will be a significant · shocked us into recognizing the of the faith and of the church, and . .
to implement 911 in the county.
part of Stanton's study, a~•. will wrongs of racial intolerance;• Lar- a student of human behavior. And
1
"We're not aware of any outside
because of that, he undentood
son
said.
funding options.
funding source for those needs;'
"A lot of wh~t comes out of
Cler,gy can tap ~nto King's the- how the word . of God spoke to
Bannltt AEP-&gt;10~
RD Shell- 60%
Davenport said, noting toptions
the human condition."
ology to promote justice i!Sues.
M:h Call-14~
a.-11 Eltctrtc - 45').
this
study
will
etermine
where
Soars35~
including a telephone silrcharge
AkZa-51~.
Hlrloy Dtvldaon - 3;.,.
Shoneys
-l.
are available to communities · for we go with it," Davenport said. ·
AmTtch/SBC - 50'1'.
Kman-o'l'.
Wai·Mart52'1'.
Kroger- m.
Ashland Inc. - 35~
Last summer, Lyons said a care- I
.
I
911 funding.
Wendy's
·25
AT&amp;T -24'1•
L.anc11 End- 28'1.
Gov.Bob Taft, in Sept~mber, ful evaluation of the county's
Worthington - ·a••
Ltd. -17'1'.
.
Bank One - 35\1
Ollt Hill FinanCIIll- 14'1.
Bab E'111na - 18'1.
Dally stack reports ara lha
signed a 'taw that allows counties house numbering system also ·
Bo111Wamor -: ae'l'• ..• • . OVB-25 N
4 p.m. closing quotes of
'tp pJa~e : a tax ini~?ve. !=Jn.,t,~eir must be made 'before a 91 f sys~
~-ft
•) f., . 81!1'1'- -~ '
lhe
previous day's trans·
tern can be seriously considered.
)ocal ballots for 911 funding.·
PIOjllu- 18),
Charrtllng Shl!pa - I
actions.
provided by Smllh
City HOlding - 8'o
·PI'Ifl!ltr - 8'-

Power

threatened
loss of money

Tht Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Congressma~

.,
•

Monday, January 15, 2001

Taft to get flnt chance at funding proposal

'

I

Mondtly, January 11, 2001

PomtrOY, Middleport, Ohio ·

65-minuce operation . .
·He still faced months of difllcult physical therapy but was
taking very little pain medication, another g,ood sign, said
Joanne Drake, his chief of staff.
Ehrhart said after the opera1ion that Reagan's tissue and
bone were remarkably like that
of a "much younger man, which
obviously help s subStantially
with his recovery.a

�•

~Th~e~o~ai~Iy~~~n~M_e_I________________()~~~~~

PageA4,

~e

15. 201f

£-Wrfir. JMI

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Managing Editor

.

..........•

"

...

....

I~

'

•

Cia

==-;:. '"

~·

.1'!!1/t.----

~~ ·. ·~~
·o

NATIONAL VIEWS

== .......· ' .
'"

)

~i

.

......... •

\
I

.

.

• Fort Worth (Texas) Star-'Ielegram, on roce and college admis-

·.

'

'

sivns: In the four years since the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1bday is Monday, Jan. 15, the 15th day of 2001. There are 350
dQys,left in the year. This is the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Jan. .15, 1929, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was
btirt1 i11 Atlanta.
'
·
·
On this date:
·
In '1559, England's Queen Elizabeth I was crowned in Westminsttir AI:)bey.
·
In '1844, the Univenity of Notre Da!Jle received its charter from
the state of Indiana.
In 1870, the Democratic party was represented as a donkey for
the first time in a cartoon by Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly.
In 1892, the rul~ of basketball were published for the fint time,
in Springfield, Man., where the game originated.
In 1919, pianist and statesman lgruceJan Paderewsk.i becap~e the
first ptemier of the newly created republic of Poland.
&gt;. In 1943, work was ~ompleted on !he Pentagon, now the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense.
In ·1947, a grisly, still-unsolved murder case came to light in Los
Angeles as the mutilated remains of 22~year-old aspiring actress
Eltzabeth Short, known as the "Black Dahlia" for the dark outfits she
woie, W\."''e £o11nd dumped in a vacant lot.
.
In 1%7, the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League
defeated the ~nsas City Chiefs of the American Football League in
the first Super Bowl, 35-10.
·
In 1973, President Nixon announced the suspension of all U.S.
offensive action in Nqrth Vietnam, citing progreu in peace negotia·dom.
·
111 t 992, the Yugoslav federation, founded in 1918, effectively col-'
lnpscd a! the European Community recognlzed the republics of
Cro"tia and Slovenia.
·
Tell yem ago: With hours remaining before a United Nations.
deadline for Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait, U.N. Secretaty·Gener. al Javier l!erez de Cuellar 1)Ude a finill·appeal tp Saddam Huisein to
rCitlOVC hh troops.
Five ~an ago: Risking the lives of more !han 100 hostages in an
effort to wipe out their Chechen rebel capton, the Russian military
hurled rockets and.shells at the tiny irillage ofPervomayskaya.Ailing
.
, Gteel, Premier Andreas Papandreou rt.~isncd .
One ~ ago: Masked gunmen opened !Ire in a hotel lobby in
llclgrade,. killing Serbian warlord Zeljko Runatovic, better known
:1.&lt; Atk an, w ho ' h"d been i11dicted by .the IJ.N. war crime~ tribunal
fvr &lt;lllegcd alrocities in Bosnia and Croatia .
'lbday't Birthdays: Nudear physitist Edward Teller is 93. Singer
lkn Van Vliet (aka "Captain Hedheart';} is 60. Actre~ Andrea Martin is 54. Actl'e!Hingcr C haro is 50.

·,

.,.

..

---'------------------------------'-~----:

HENTOFF'S VIEW

tn 100 years?·
'

Peace in the Middle East
Almost as soon as I could wa lk, I was senr
up the street in my Jewish neighborhood, c\Irrying a blue and white tin box, collecting
coins to plant trees in Paksti nc. At our family 's
seders every Passover, we chanted, "N ext year

in Jerusalem!''
When the Six Day War broke out, bedsheets were placed on the streets in New York
C ity, · into which passersby - including me
and my wife - threw money to support the
Israeli armed forces.
But as a reporter, I cam e- to know Palestini ans in America, and 1 also met them during a
trip to Israel. Some ruefully told m,c, "We are
now the wandering Jhvs/' O th ers, speaki ng of
their zeal for education and their literature,
said with bitterness, "We u&lt;ed to be called the
Jews of the Middle East."
·
Researching the embattl ed history of th e
still-new Jewish state, I came across a· question
by then-Prime Minister Golda Mei r, who was
born in Russia and worked as a .teacher in
Milwaukee before moving to the homeland.
She asked: "Who are th e Palestinians?.Th:ere is
no such nation."
. But David Ben-Gurion knew who the
Palestinians were. A founder of the Jewish state
. and its prime minister before Golda M.;ir, h(
came out of his retirement in the desert after
the 1967 Six Day War and told a Labor Pa~ty
convention - as Howard Kaplan reported in
the Baltimore Jewish times - that Israel, even
without peace, must immediately ·return the
conquered territories. Otherwise, Ben-Guriori
predicted, that land, with its huge Arab population, "would'eat Israel alive from the inside."
Unheeded, Ben-Gurion returned to the
d~ert. The violence, inside and outside Israel;
continued. Amnesty International and other
human rights groups charged Israel with torturing and otherwise abusing its Palestinian
prisoners and razing the homes of their families. Simultaneously, Palestinian terrorists mur-

I talked to colonels in that movement w:hO':
had fought in every one of th e nation's wan ;"
T hey were convin ced, as th ey kept repeating,"
that "a fi:ee nation cannot continue to be free
and democratic if it rules over another peopl~~,.
in its borders." I agreed with them . .
""
In 1986, I spoke to Hanna Sini ora, editor of
Al Fajr ("The Dawn"), in ,East Jerusalem. I~"
anti-Israel stories and editorials were often;,
fiery; but, in hi s nffice, Hanna Siniora saw the
po&lt;Sibility, however chimerical, of a time when
NEA COLUMNIST
bradis an d 1'&lt;1lcstin ians togeth er could make
the Middl e Easi bloom as it has never don
de red Israel is.
before.
In Israel, I spoke to a men~ber of a historic
"We Palestinjans,". h,c told me,. ::~ · .
Israeli tcr:urist . group, the Stern Gang. [n
close to Israel in our thinking, even in our c\11 "" ·
1948, she aSS'lS&lt;inated Co unt Hernadotte, who,
'\V l
.
"
d
. •. .
with th •· SwedishRcd Cross, had saved thou- ture an roots . we are cousms.
But now, Palestinian n1others proudly sacri.:_
sands of]ews fi'O m Nazi co nccntratioll camps.
When he became United N ations ni ediator in fice their som as martyrs. And Yasir Arafat .:..;:
Palestine, the Stern Gang targeted him because whose way of negotiating is to continual!,i:l:
escalate the intifada - · sacrifices hundreds ~!:{
he wanted to internationalize Jerusalem.
His assassin had no regrets. "It was a war," • Palestinian youngsters whom he ·has ' neVI:i
, :::
she told me. "They killed us and we gave them see n, and will never be able to see.
an answer." But Count Bernadette had killed
As Israeli settlers kill Palestinians, and Pain.#
no one.
tini ans murder settlers, Imad Falouji, the Pales-00
¥ean while, as Palestinians developed their tinian Authority's communications ministert:_
own hum an rights organizations to document tells Newsday that murderous resistance is ,.~
lsrae)i oppression, there were also Israeli Palrstinian ·right."
·
. , .~
human right• groupj that paitistakingly reJl'ortLooking into the same future, Rabbi ZaJ.:
ed'abuses by their OW!l government~- and still man Melamed, a rabbinical council leader, calls
do, Lawyers on both 'sides, with whom I spoke, . for jews to start "a chain of activities so that
cooperated with each other.
the co~ntry burns with fires from hilltop to
And in 1978, 350 Israeli combat soldiers hilltop."
'
.
and reserve officers sent "The Officers' Letter''
Abba Eban, an architect of the Jewish state
to Prime Minister Menachem Begin. They said in . 1969: "Unless you understand
declared that holding on .to the occupied ter- memories, ,you cannot undeQtand our po~ ·
ritories would undermine· - not strengthen ci~." The Palestinians say the same
- Israel. Eventually, there were 250,000 sig- · There was once, in Europe, a Hundred Yea"~
natures on "The Oflicen' Letter"; and what War.1Jlere could well be another.
. .:
came to be called the Peace Now movement - (Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authori~ ·

Nat
Hentoff

-

~ :r

it: borrowing is here to stay

_____ ______
__;_

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
,.

Older Americans atcn't the 'o nly ones
faVored ' by the current state · of afl'ain. T~ 1
national home 'o wnership tate, now roushlt '
68 percent, has risen by about 4 perce!ltali\'
poin,ts since 1990, with..the highest owne(l
ship rates, more than 8Q..percent, ahtong those
age 55 and older.
. .
,~ :.
It used to be that a person intent on buyr•
ing a house had af!Iy a. handful of mortga¢ :
options and r.ates, take them or leave them. :
Today, they have dozens of each.
•
·!
The borrowing flexibility which h~ :
· developed over th,e past couple of decacM ~
thus ~!most assures that borrowing versus sa"",
ing will continue for a whil ~ - "a while1' ::
being to the point where unemployment ;'
begins rising.
.
..J
· :
.Well, probably even beyond. But if and !•
when the' housing mark~t begins to deterio- :·
rate at a faster pace than now, would-be bot- ;:
rowers might find that in spite of all thl: :
changes, they have no choice but to cut bacli. '

.1--

·I

',.

111 Court II., P - otr1o
74Q.Itiii-11H

:100 fillln St., Point PlHIInl, W.W. ;
304·875-1333

' •

..

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

::.., MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
I

We want your phOtos! ·

--:-----''-------:---------··,.·

82!1 Third AVo., G:olllpol]o, Ohio

Retirement is one of the most
important milestones in anyone's
life. And it's not a decision that
should be made without giving
careful thought to all the factors
involved .
These factors can be as different as each individual. Circumstances such as health, financial
needs, family responsibilities and
Did you know?
income from work and other
Poverty Level
sources need to be considered. ·
The U.S. Ce nsus Bureau
Choosing when to •etire,is not reports that the percentage of
an easy decision. But Social Secu- people 65 and over who were livrity is making it easier by provid- ing in poverty reached a meaing an important new toql to sured low of9.7 percent in 1999.
help people make an info~med However, th e number of women
decision on when to reqre.
over the; age of 65 living below
Beginning Oct. 1, everyone the poverty line was 11 .8 pe rcent
age 55 or older found " a special compared to 6. 9 percent for men .
insert" in his or her annual Social
Security Statement. This insert
Maximunt
· lays out · some options people
Taxable Earnings
need to consider as they approach
For Social Security purposes,
the age when they can begin the maximum taxable earning&gt;
receiving Social Security. .
for 2001 'will be $80,400, up from
!'or example, the insert lists the S76 ,200. The"" is no limit for
full retirement ages and the Medicare. ·
reduc!ion amounts for retiring

•

Oolm Cunniff is a ~usifless a.talysr for T1w :.
Associated Press.)
;

I

apply for Social Security retirement benefits on the In ternet, by
callin g th e 800 nuinb er or by visiting any Social Security office.
So, be on the lookout for your .
Social Security Statement', and if
yo u're 55 or over, let the new
insert help plan and guide your
decisio n o n when to retire.

..

.

qn the First Atfletldrnflll and tf!e Bill '!fRights.) ~::

BY JoliN Cllfllllt'F
percent.
. ..
NEW YORK It's not what · yp'u'd
While borrowing rates are down, market
expect y.'hen the economic traffic lights tunl prices have yet to till qff appreciably, despite
amber, but for at least a while, borrowen and having risen strongly d'(cr the past decade.
spenden may continue their wayward ways.
The median price' 6f an existing home in
The latest credit figures show the rate of 1989 was $89,500, ~Wnu~ nearly $140,000
consumer borrowing actually rose late .last now. A typical new •.home in . 1989 cost
year at the very time it became obvious the $120,000, but would probably have a market
eJ&lt;pansion was turning sluggish, even to the value close to $170,000 today.
point o( raising recel!ion fears.
. In short, there's plenw ,of money in the
The persistently low unemployment rate attic, ready to be dusted off and U&lt;ed. And
has much to do With it. The residual habit of experience sh ows refinancer&lt; often add to the
having lived beyopd incomes for several years size of their loan. The lower rates aren't the
explains some more. And home ownership only indu cement; ~the prospect of having
.explains a good deal more.
·
· money io use is eHu:llly tempting .
The explanation fo,r the latter lies in th e
In fact, n!tired homeowners on· lim ited
sharp rise lri marke~ value of homes during .incomes can easily . rationalize using their
the great expansion, the ease with . which · home' equity while simultaneously lowering .
lendm make money available on home equi~ their monthly paym¢n.ts. In effect, the liouse
ty, and the recent decline in mortgage rates.
as ,an investment becomes their 'pension too.
The cost ofborrowing to buy or to tap the
More elderly homeowners seem to be
equity in a home has fallen at an unusually buying intn the idea. Eve-ry year since 1985
sharp rate since last May, when a 30-year the percentage of homeowners age 75 or
fixed rate mortgage, cost 8.64 percent. Last older has either risen or remained th e same,
week, some eager lenders were down ro 7 a1td the latest percentage, for \ 999, was 77.1.

t mp~rtant to

BY VALREA THOMPSON

POMEROY - Lane Ashton
Cullums observed her l;&gt;irthday
on Dec. 10 with a party at the
home of his parents, Decker and
Rhonda Cullums.
A football theme was carried
out for the party, served with ice
cream.
Attending were maternal
grandmother Mildred Hudson ,
and paternal grandparents, Don
and Kay Cullums, great grandmother, Sara Cullums, sister
Ashley Hannahs, Mark and
Cathy 1;-ludson, Trevor Harrison
and Rainy Walker..
Sending gifts were lseah Ash,
Phil and Paulette Harrison and
Bonnie and Debbie Krautter. '

.

Bt.JSINES'S MIRROR

Let~ face

bctw~l.'n

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
. POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the East- · Board of Elections, regular
em Star, Monday
· monthly meeting. 9 a.m.
..
, at the hall with a potluck at
Llna Culluma
6:30 following by meeting at 7:30
POMEROY Childhood
·
I
·r
p.m.
Immunization clinic, Tuesday,
.
Meigs County Health Depart·
'
MIDDLEPORT- Sisters Fel- ment, 9 to 11 a.m . and 1 to 3 p.m.
POMEROY _ The fint ·
Jowahlp, Monday, 6:30 p.m. Aah Also available at · the Health
Stteet Church. Take covered Department are flu shots. Chitbirthday of Devon Hawley, aon
.dleh. Layette ehbwtr for Stave dren'sshot recorda are to be preof Shawn and Heather Hawley
, and Tertii Pulllna' daug_htar.
aented and children must be
wa1 celebrated with a party held ,,
~.
accompanied by a parent or Ieg1l
at the home Qf hia 1ran,~parenc., · tt ~
. TUIIDIOT
guardian.
Randy and · Darla H'awley on
POMEROY - State ~ep.
December 16.
', '; Johh1Carey, open door eiaalon,
RACINE - Raolne Board of
A'l/eme'I)l' ~•me waa car- l· ' llto10 ,a .m., MelgaCountyOOur· Public Affall'l, Tueeday, 10:30
1
ricd out ana pfti were preaent- '
thO~a·;
,
a.m. 11 lhl municipal building.
ed to Devon by thoae hit pan· POMEROY _ CHOICE homa
enta, paternal .gnndparentt(
. eduoatora, Tueedly, 1 to 3 p.m., .
The Community Calendar Ia
Randy and Darla . Hawley;
. Pomeroy Library. Dena Jon•• to publlahad •• 1 frll 11rvlce to
maternal grandparent!, Henry '.. ,;) b.• ·.IPI.I ker. For more Inform•non-profit group• wla~lng to
H h K:yla
J
,,., 2
announce mHtlngl and epeM
H
d
an
ary ogpe; eat 1
_.
tlon, call Tammy onee, "" •
clal eventa. The calend•r 11
and Kelsfy Huciion, . R.a!ldy,
~,8743.
not dlllgnad to promote
Kim, Hannah and Abbie Haw-" ...
18111 or fund rllllrl of 1 ny
ley, Jennifer Fink . and Olivi~
. ALFRED - Orange township
.
Woods, Heather and Peyton
' Trustees, organizational and type. Item• lrl printed only a1
·
Dlvon
Hawlly
Humphreys,
Danielle
and
Bailey
•appropriations meeting, rues1p1ca parmlt~ end cannot be
..
k.i J k d Sh
, day, 7;30 p.m at the home of
guaranteed to be printed a
C.aruthe~s. Mate and Dylan Haynes, Cindy Haw ·ns, ac an
erClerk Osle Follrod.
apeclflc number of daya.
!'¥'Ritchie, Morgan Roush and Tracy and Matthew Wood.
.,..· -------------------'----~
· Sending gifts were. Chris, April, Brock and ~ylee Stewart of
W~useon, Oh.
·

thi"f""

.

to

First birthday observed

all&lt;:

grew.

:1

POMEROY - Individuals who are learning to cope with a significant loss in their lives will benefit from a three- part grief series
to be · offered at the Meigs' Co unty Senior Citizens Center in .
Pomeroy. ·
Sessions will be offered Feb. 6, l3 and 20 frQm 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Tl;e series is being provided cooperatively by.Worthington Center of Belpre and Appalachian Community Hospice. There is no
charge to participate to any of the three loca tions where the series
will be .given.
In addition to the Meigs Center the series will be presented at
O'Bleness Memo rial Hospital in Athens on March 6, 13 and 20, an~
at the Hocking Valley Community Hospital in Logan, April 3, 10
and 17.
Licensed counselors from Worthington Center will conduct the
s~ssions. Worthingto'l Center is a licensed, non-profit behavioral
' he:ilth center. Its multidisciplina.ty staff includes psychiatrists, psych,ologists, social workers, case managers and ~urses. .
· The. Center provides a wide range of psychotherapy and counsd!ing offerings, including a parenting group, relapse prevention, crisiS 'i ntervention and prevention, a children's group and family and
c.o uples counseling.
·
·
'"Since enrollment for the grief sessions is limited, those interested ~re asked to call 1-800-793- 4673 to register with Kathy Jacobsoli, R. N . coordinator.

•'

..

.,

The Sentinel weiCOfT18&amp; your photographs. Here are .a few guidelines
for submissiOns:
d
. • • Color ·photoSJ'BPhs are accepted, provided they are In locus an
. ·• have gooli 'contrast. Nepljves also are accepted; however, please
Include a print alone with the neptlve.
.
• Blaek-an~otographs 1n accepted, provided they are In focus
, and have good contrast. Neptlves alsO are accepted; however, please
''·'Include a print along with the n~ve .
.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and
I
. have good contrast.
··
d rd -'let 1
' • Submltted photos shOUld be no smaller than atan a w.. s ze
• 1111d no larger than 8 ~ 10.
·
• Polarlootype photos ~ discouraged since they dO 110t ~prgduce
weH on newsprint.
·
_ _.
' • When submitting dlgjtal photos. be sure the Image~ n a..... ••
hlgJ'HeSOiutlon, hi&amp;IHIUallty JPEG files .
·
• Adven~K-type photo.,.aphs are discouraged due to their uniqUe
sizes, whiCh dO not trllllslate well to newspaper columne. AIMntl~-type
negatives are not accepted. ·
• Laserwrlter prlntl of dlllftallmages are discouraged since they dO
not reproduce well on fiiWsprlnt.
. !fled
• Please be sure ells~ In photograph• are clell1y ldllnt
· on the back !)I the photOIVJiph or on an attached sheet of paper.

·'

Subscribe today.
992-2156

lmiUUil ElECTIDNIC FlUNG
II I IUD1ll IF Dill DR IIIII
II 111 IIDICEI Yll lUll
TII .. IUTIIII TIE 1110 CIDICE

. 1-

•.

••

"

i •

•

••

opposition, and his eloquent pleas for
social justice. His principles for nonviolen ce were based on the teachings of
Christianity.
In 1964, he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize. H is words of wisdom are as
true today as when they were uttered
during hi s acceptance speec h:
" N o nviolence is the answer to the
crucial political md moral questions of
our time: the need for man to ove rcome
o ppre ssion and vio1ence without resorting to oppression and violence.
"Man must evolve fo r alJ human conflict a method which rejects revenge,
aggressiOn and re tali ation . The fo undation of such a meth od is love."
God bless America. May we as Amer' ic J IH learn from hi s example.

SOCIAL SECURITY COLUMN
ple ment;l Sec urity In come recipIt explains how delaying
Choosing your early.
ien ts will re ceive a 3.5 perce nt
Wage Gap
benefits ca n increase
person's
mo nthly benefit amount. There's
Accord ing
the U.S. Cen&lt;u&lt; CO LA for 200 1.
retirement date: also
an explanatlon of how a pt!r- Bu rea u, the wage gap
Sociat Security and Women
son ca n work and receive be nefits the earnings of women and m en
Social Security 'is particularly
has widened to 28 percent.
not an easy task at the same rime .
women. Wo men
And th e ·insert tells how to Wotncn ear n 72 pnce nt co m-

SOCIETY NEWS
Grief sessions offered
at Meigs Senior Center

Dljiniton will relieve
ad'!lissions cotifusion
sions at Texas' public universitiesj the state has struggled with other
ways of S"tting more minority students into higher education .
The debate about affirmation action has not disappeared. lrutead,
it h:~s f,'Otren murkier. A series of court rulings last month make the
issue ripe for clarification by the U.S. Supreme Court ....
'fhe Supreme Court ·has not tackled this diffi cult area of college
;~dmiss ions since ... But this is precisely the kind of vexatious problem tim requires specifi c guidance amid conflicting lpw~r-co urt
opi11iohs. ...
.
·
What the court does need to do is define for the states, universities and f&gt;l'ospective students consistent rules under the Constitu- .
tiott.
·r t.is is not about quotas vs. bigotry but about fundamental concepts of equality · and access to higher education and how to be
indusive without being exclusionary.
Under th e current case law, a clear voice from the Supreme
C ourt is crucial.
•
The Herald, Everett, Wash. , on ll etV orgm•icfood standards:
You don't ha ve to be a "granola" to be pleased with the USDA's
recent anno uncement of new standards for organic foods.
In an era in which genetically modified foo ds and cloning seems
to be well on their way to becoming the norm , the USDA's standard&lt; offer people the choice to 1&lt;.now exactly what they're eati~1g.
And if it catches on, it just might get more people to pay attention
to what they put in their mouths . ...
The organic foods farm ers and othen in rhe industry deserve
prai•c for their hard work in making sure the standards were high.
"fhis must be the only industry that has actually dem anded to be
governed by higher, stricter standards....
What is still at issue is the exploration and production of genetically modilied foods. The USDA'&lt; new o rganic ,standards fail to
address that important matter. Many are concerned that these moditied food crops could " drift" and cross-pollinate nearby orgamc
crops, johnson said.
'the USDA has done an excellent job of listening to consumers
ami developing strong guidelines for the organic foods industry.
Now it's time to take a hard look at genetically modified food.

Van Buren

'",

D11ne Kly Hill
Controller

ruled against using most consideratidns of race in admissions deci-

Abigail

·
~
"~,..:·
.
'
"
i~~~:::=i~·:--~·...
...

A. ShiiWII Llwle

lovely gift, along with your regrets. If
the do ctor is indeed a friend, he will
understand why you couldn't be there.
Sinct the award for w hi ch you r
granddaughter is eligible is "prestigious,'' beitlg a c~ndidate is an hono r i11
itself. That you sacrificed to see her
honored may be more meaningful to
her and her parents than whether she
a~tuaUy wins. Listen co your co nsc ience.
It's trying to give you an important
message .
DEAR READERS: On Mo nd ay we
pay tribute .to the life of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., a great American and
martyr of th e civil rights movt"ment,
who was shot to death 111 1968 at the
age of 39.
Dr. King rose to proh1inence because
of his p ~ rsi ste n ce in the face of viokn t

,"stranger's" wedding over my grandchild's ceremony, which may very well
DEAR ABBY: My granddaughter, .
be a once-in-a-lifetime event.
who is in elementary school, has been
This' doctor saved my life and I feel
.........R..
nominated to receive a prestigious
like I owe my life to him . My husband
award. Beca use of this, she has been feaagrees with me, and so do my friends.
tured in the newspaper and is a celebriBu~ my conscience is bothering me, and
ty of sorts in her town. My. da11ghter
my daughter is so hurt. She is a sensitive
wants us to attend the awards ceremony.
girl, loyal to her family and dependable.
ADVICE
She mentioned more than six months
I don't want to damage our relations hip.
ago that my granddaughter is up for this
What do you advise? I have nine weeks
award and stands a great chance of win- had cancer. He referred me to a special- to decide. TORN BETWEEN
ning it.
ist who discovered it. Since then, I have FAMILY AND FRIENDS
Unfortunately, a physician with become social friends with this man. I
DEAR TORN : When the doctor
whom I am friendly invited me to his do not know his son, but many people made the referral, he was doing his job.
son's wedding on that same date. I told from my social circle wiD be attending He "saved your life" so you could attend
the doctor tliat I may be attending an this out-of-state wedding, and I want t~ important family events - like your
granddaughte r's awa rd ceremony. In this
• award ceremony for my granddaught.e r go.
My daughter is very upset. She can't instance, your faniily should take preceon the same day. 1-lere is my dilemma: I
credit this doctor with saving my life. I believe I would chods.e .~ attend a dence. Send the bride and groon1 .a

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 M2·2158 • Fu: M2·2157

ct..1111• tto.nlch
Geiiii .. Minllglf

.'

Daily Sentinel

ltbmarl weighs obligations tofamily

The Daily Sentinel

ChariM W. Govey
Publlaher

Bend

•

"

"

pared to th eir male counterparts.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment
(COLA)
Based on the in'crcase in the
Co nsumer Pri ce Index from· the
third quarter of 1999 through the
third quart er of 2000, Social
Securi ty beneficiaries and Sup-

ea rn less, are more likely to work
in jobs Without pension coverage
and are .more likely to take tune
out of the work forc e for relatives·
than n~cn . Wh en you co nsider
that women Jive longer than men,
Social Security's guaranteed lifetime benefit that is adjusted for
inflation is even more important.

'

�•

~Th~e~o~ai~Iy~~~n~M_e_I________________()~~~~~

PageA4,

~e

15. 201f

£-Wrfir. JMI

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Managing Editor

.

..........•

"

...

....

I~

'

•

Cia

==-;:. '"

~·

.1'!!1/t.----

~~ ·. ·~~
·o

NATIONAL VIEWS

== .......· ' .
'"

)

~i

.

......... •

\
I

.

.

• Fort Worth (Texas) Star-'Ielegram, on roce and college admis-

·.

'

'

sivns: In the four years since the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1bday is Monday, Jan. 15, the 15th day of 2001. There are 350
dQys,left in the year. This is the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Jan. .15, 1929, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was
btirt1 i11 Atlanta.
'
·
·
On this date:
·
In '1559, England's Queen Elizabeth I was crowned in Westminsttir AI:)bey.
·
In '1844, the Univenity of Notre Da!Jle received its charter from
the state of Indiana.
In 1870, the Democratic party was represented as a donkey for
the first time in a cartoon by Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly.
In 1892, the rul~ of basketball were published for the fint time,
in Springfield, Man., where the game originated.
In 1919, pianist and statesman lgruceJan Paderewsk.i becap~e the
first ptemier of the newly created republic of Poland.
&gt;. In 1943, work was ~ompleted on !he Pentagon, now the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense.
In ·1947, a grisly, still-unsolved murder case came to light in Los
Angeles as the mutilated remains of 22~year-old aspiring actress
Eltzabeth Short, known as the "Black Dahlia" for the dark outfits she
woie, W\."''e £o11nd dumped in a vacant lot.
.
In 1%7, the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League
defeated the ~nsas City Chiefs of the American Football League in
the first Super Bowl, 35-10.
·
In 1973, President Nixon announced the suspension of all U.S.
offensive action in Nqrth Vietnam, citing progreu in peace negotia·dom.
·
111 t 992, the Yugoslav federation, founded in 1918, effectively col-'
lnpscd a! the European Community recognlzed the republics of
Cro"tia and Slovenia.
·
Tell yem ago: With hours remaining before a United Nations.
deadline for Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait, U.N. Secretaty·Gener. al Javier l!erez de Cuellar 1)Ude a finill·appeal tp Saddam Huisein to
rCitlOVC hh troops.
Five ~an ago: Risking the lives of more !han 100 hostages in an
effort to wipe out their Chechen rebel capton, the Russian military
hurled rockets and.shells at the tiny irillage ofPervomayskaya.Ailing
.
, Gteel, Premier Andreas Papandreou rt.~isncd .
One ~ ago: Masked gunmen opened !Ire in a hotel lobby in
llclgrade,. killing Serbian warlord Zeljko Runatovic, better known
:1.&lt; Atk an, w ho ' h"d been i11dicted by .the IJ.N. war crime~ tribunal
fvr &lt;lllegcd alrocities in Bosnia and Croatia .
'lbday't Birthdays: Nudear physitist Edward Teller is 93. Singer
lkn Van Vliet (aka "Captain Hedheart';} is 60. Actre~ Andrea Martin is 54. Actl'e!Hingcr C haro is 50.

·,

.,.

..

---'------------------------------'-~----:

HENTOFF'S VIEW

tn 100 years?·
'

Peace in the Middle East
Almost as soon as I could wa lk, I was senr
up the street in my Jewish neighborhood, c\Irrying a blue and white tin box, collecting
coins to plant trees in Paksti nc. At our family 's
seders every Passover, we chanted, "N ext year

in Jerusalem!''
When the Six Day War broke out, bedsheets were placed on the streets in New York
C ity, · into which passersby - including me
and my wife - threw money to support the
Israeli armed forces.
But as a reporter, I cam e- to know Palestini ans in America, and 1 also met them during a
trip to Israel. Some ruefully told m,c, "We are
now the wandering Jhvs/' O th ers, speaki ng of
their zeal for education and their literature,
said with bitterness, "We u&lt;ed to be called the
Jews of the Middle East."
·
Researching the embattl ed history of th e
still-new Jewish state, I came across a· question
by then-Prime Minister Golda Mei r, who was
born in Russia and worked as a .teacher in
Milwaukee before moving to the homeland.
She asked: "Who are th e Palestinians?.Th:ere is
no such nation."
. But David Ben-Gurion knew who the
Palestinians were. A founder of the Jewish state
. and its prime minister before Golda M.;ir, h(
came out of his retirement in the desert after
the 1967 Six Day War and told a Labor Pa~ty
convention - as Howard Kaplan reported in
the Baltimore Jewish times - that Israel, even
without peace, must immediately ·return the
conquered territories. Otherwise, Ben-Guriori
predicted, that land, with its huge Arab population, "would'eat Israel alive from the inside."
Unheeded, Ben-Gurion returned to the
d~ert. The violence, inside and outside Israel;
continued. Amnesty International and other
human rights groups charged Israel with torturing and otherwise abusing its Palestinian
prisoners and razing the homes of their families. Simultaneously, Palestinian terrorists mur-

I talked to colonels in that movement w:hO':
had fought in every one of th e nation's wan ;"
T hey were convin ced, as th ey kept repeating,"
that "a fi:ee nation cannot continue to be free
and democratic if it rules over another peopl~~,.
in its borders." I agreed with them . .
""
In 1986, I spoke to Hanna Sini ora, editor of
Al Fajr ("The Dawn"), in ,East Jerusalem. I~"
anti-Israel stories and editorials were often;,
fiery; but, in hi s nffice, Hanna Siniora saw the
po&lt;Sibility, however chimerical, of a time when
NEA COLUMNIST
bradis an d 1'&lt;1lcstin ians togeth er could make
the Middl e Easi bloom as it has never don
de red Israel is.
before.
In Israel, I spoke to a men~ber of a historic
"We Palestinjans,". h,c told me,. ::~ · .
Israeli tcr:urist . group, the Stern Gang. [n
close to Israel in our thinking, even in our c\11 "" ·
1948, she aSS'lS&lt;inated Co unt Hernadotte, who,
'\V l
.
"
d
. •. .
with th •· SwedishRcd Cross, had saved thou- ture an roots . we are cousms.
But now, Palestinian n1others proudly sacri.:_
sands of]ews fi'O m Nazi co nccntratioll camps.
When he became United N ations ni ediator in fice their som as martyrs. And Yasir Arafat .:..;:
Palestine, the Stern Gang targeted him because whose way of negotiating is to continual!,i:l:
escalate the intifada - · sacrifices hundreds ~!:{
he wanted to internationalize Jerusalem.
His assassin had no regrets. "It was a war," • Palestinian youngsters whom he ·has ' neVI:i
, :::
she told me. "They killed us and we gave them see n, and will never be able to see.
an answer." But Count Bernadette had killed
As Israeli settlers kill Palestinians, and Pain.#
no one.
tini ans murder settlers, Imad Falouji, the Pales-00
¥ean while, as Palestinians developed their tinian Authority's communications ministert:_
own hum an rights organizations to document tells Newsday that murderous resistance is ,.~
lsrae)i oppression, there were also Israeli Palrstinian ·right."
·
. , .~
human right• groupj that paitistakingly reJl'ortLooking into the same future, Rabbi ZaJ.:
ed'abuses by their OW!l government~- and still man Melamed, a rabbinical council leader, calls
do, Lawyers on both 'sides, with whom I spoke, . for jews to start "a chain of activities so that
cooperated with each other.
the co~ntry burns with fires from hilltop to
And in 1978, 350 Israeli combat soldiers hilltop."
'
.
and reserve officers sent "The Officers' Letter''
Abba Eban, an architect of the Jewish state
to Prime Minister Menachem Begin. They said in . 1969: "Unless you understand
declared that holding on .to the occupied ter- memories, ,you cannot undeQtand our po~ ·
ritories would undermine· - not strengthen ci~." The Palestinians say the same
- Israel. Eventually, there were 250,000 sig- · There was once, in Europe, a Hundred Yea"~
natures on "The Oflicen' Letter"; and what War.1Jlere could well be another.
. .:
came to be called the Peace Now movement - (Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authori~ ·

Nat
Hentoff

-

~ :r

it: borrowing is here to stay

_____ ______
__;_

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
,.

Older Americans atcn't the 'o nly ones
faVored ' by the current state · of afl'ain. T~ 1
national home 'o wnership tate, now roushlt '
68 percent, has risen by about 4 perce!ltali\'
poin,ts since 1990, with..the highest owne(l
ship rates, more than 8Q..percent, ahtong those
age 55 and older.
. .
,~ :.
It used to be that a person intent on buyr•
ing a house had af!Iy a. handful of mortga¢ :
options and r.ates, take them or leave them. :
Today, they have dozens of each.
•
·!
The borrowing flexibility which h~ :
· developed over th,e past couple of decacM ~
thus ~!most assures that borrowing versus sa"",
ing will continue for a whil ~ - "a while1' ::
being to the point where unemployment ;'
begins rising.
.
..J
· :
.Well, probably even beyond. But if and !•
when the' housing mark~t begins to deterio- :·
rate at a faster pace than now, would-be bot- ;:
rowers might find that in spite of all thl: :
changes, they have no choice but to cut bacli. '

.1--

·I

',.

111 Court II., P - otr1o
74Q.Itiii-11H

:100 fillln St., Point PlHIInl, W.W. ;
304·875-1333

' •

..

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

::.., MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
I

We want your phOtos! ·

--:-----''-------:---------··,.·

82!1 Third AVo., G:olllpol]o, Ohio

Retirement is one of the most
important milestones in anyone's
life. And it's not a decision that
should be made without giving
careful thought to all the factors
involved .
These factors can be as different as each individual. Circumstances such as health, financial
needs, family responsibilities and
Did you know?
income from work and other
Poverty Level
sources need to be considered. ·
The U.S. Ce nsus Bureau
Choosing when to •etire,is not reports that the percentage of
an easy decision. But Social Secu- people 65 and over who were livrity is making it easier by provid- ing in poverty reached a meaing an important new toql to sured low of9.7 percent in 1999.
help people make an info~med However, th e number of women
decision on when to reqre.
over the; age of 65 living below
Beginning Oct. 1, everyone the poverty line was 11 .8 pe rcent
age 55 or older found " a special compared to 6. 9 percent for men .
insert" in his or her annual Social
Security Statement. This insert
Maximunt
· lays out · some options people
Taxable Earnings
need to consider as they approach
For Social Security purposes,
the age when they can begin the maximum taxable earning&gt;
receiving Social Security. .
for 2001 'will be $80,400, up from
!'or example, the insert lists the S76 ,200. The"" is no limit for
full retirement ages and the Medicare. ·
reduc!ion amounts for retiring

•

Oolm Cunniff is a ~usifless a.talysr for T1w :.
Associated Press.)
;

I

apply for Social Security retirement benefits on the In ternet, by
callin g th e 800 nuinb er or by visiting any Social Security office.
So, be on the lookout for your .
Social Security Statement', and if
yo u're 55 or over, let the new
insert help plan and guide your
decisio n o n when to retire.

..

.

qn the First Atfletldrnflll and tf!e Bill '!fRights.) ~::

BY JoliN Cllfllllt'F
percent.
. ..
NEW YORK It's not what · yp'u'd
While borrowing rates are down, market
expect y.'hen the economic traffic lights tunl prices have yet to till qff appreciably, despite
amber, but for at least a while, borrowen and having risen strongly d'(cr the past decade.
spenden may continue their wayward ways.
The median price' 6f an existing home in
The latest credit figures show the rate of 1989 was $89,500, ~Wnu~ nearly $140,000
consumer borrowing actually rose late .last now. A typical new •.home in . 1989 cost
year at the very time it became obvious the $120,000, but would probably have a market
eJ&lt;pansion was turning sluggish, even to the value close to $170,000 today.
point o( raising recel!ion fears.
. In short, there's plenw ,of money in the
The persistently low unemployment rate attic, ready to be dusted off and U&lt;ed. And
has much to do With it. The residual habit of experience sh ows refinancer&lt; often add to the
having lived beyopd incomes for several years size of their loan. The lower rates aren't the
explains some more. And home ownership only indu cement; ~the prospect of having
.explains a good deal more.
·
· money io use is eHu:llly tempting .
The explanation fo,r the latter lies in th e
In fact, n!tired homeowners on· lim ited
sharp rise lri marke~ value of homes during .incomes can easily . rationalize using their
the great expansion, the ease with . which · home' equity while simultaneously lowering .
lendm make money available on home equi~ their monthly paym¢n.ts. In effect, the liouse
ty, and the recent decline in mortgage rates.
as ,an investment becomes their 'pension too.
The cost ofborrowing to buy or to tap the
More elderly homeowners seem to be
equity in a home has fallen at an unusually buying intn the idea. Eve-ry year since 1985
sharp rate since last May, when a 30-year the percentage of homeowners age 75 or
fixed rate mortgage, cost 8.64 percent. Last older has either risen or remained th e same,
week, some eager lenders were down ro 7 a1td the latest percentage, for \ 999, was 77.1.

t mp~rtant to

BY VALREA THOMPSON

POMEROY - Lane Ashton
Cullums observed her l;&gt;irthday
on Dec. 10 with a party at the
home of his parents, Decker and
Rhonda Cullums.
A football theme was carried
out for the party, served with ice
cream.
Attending were maternal
grandmother Mildred Hudson ,
and paternal grandparents, Don
and Kay Cullums, great grandmother, Sara Cullums, sister
Ashley Hannahs, Mark and
Cathy 1;-ludson, Trevor Harrison
and Rainy Walker..
Sending gifts were lseah Ash,
Phil and Paulette Harrison and
Bonnie and Debbie Krautter. '

.

Bt.JSINES'S MIRROR

Let~ face

bctw~l.'n

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
. POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the East- · Board of Elections, regular
em Star, Monday
· monthly meeting. 9 a.m.
..
, at the hall with a potluck at
Llna Culluma
6:30 following by meeting at 7:30
POMEROY Childhood
·
I
·r
p.m.
Immunization clinic, Tuesday,
.
Meigs County Health Depart·
'
MIDDLEPORT- Sisters Fel- ment, 9 to 11 a.m . and 1 to 3 p.m.
POMEROY _ The fint ·
Jowahlp, Monday, 6:30 p.m. Aah Also available at · the Health
Stteet Church. Take covered Department are flu shots. Chitbirthday of Devon Hawley, aon
.dleh. Layette ehbwtr for Stave dren'sshot recorda are to be preof Shawn and Heather Hawley
, and Tertii Pulllna' daug_htar.
aented and children must be
wa1 celebrated with a party held ,,
~.
accompanied by a parent or Ieg1l
at the home Qf hia 1ran,~parenc., · tt ~
. TUIIDIOT
guardian.
Randy and · Darla H'awley on
POMEROY - State ~ep.
December 16.
', '; Johh1Carey, open door eiaalon,
RACINE - Raolne Board of
A'l/eme'I)l' ~•me waa car- l· ' llto10 ,a .m., MelgaCountyOOur· Public Affall'l, Tueeday, 10:30
1
ricd out ana pfti were preaent- '
thO~a·;
,
a.m. 11 lhl municipal building.
ed to Devon by thoae hit pan· POMEROY _ CHOICE homa
enta, paternal .gnndparentt(
. eduoatora, Tueedly, 1 to 3 p.m., .
The Community Calendar Ia
Randy and Darla . Hawley;
. Pomeroy Library. Dena Jon•• to publlahad •• 1 frll 11rvlce to
maternal grandparent!, Henry '.. ,;) b.• ·.IPI.I ker. For more Inform•non-profit group• wla~lng to
H h K:yla
J
,,., 2
announce mHtlngl and epeM
H
d
an
ary ogpe; eat 1
_.
tlon, call Tammy onee, "" •
clal eventa. The calend•r 11
and Kelsfy Huciion, . R.a!ldy,
~,8743.
not dlllgnad to promote
Kim, Hannah and Abbie Haw-" ...
18111 or fund rllllrl of 1 ny
ley, Jennifer Fink . and Olivi~
. ALFRED - Orange township
.
Woods, Heather and Peyton
' Trustees, organizational and type. Item• lrl printed only a1
·
Dlvon
Hawlly
Humphreys,
Danielle
and
Bailey
•appropriations meeting, rues1p1ca parmlt~ end cannot be
..
k.i J k d Sh
, day, 7;30 p.m at the home of
guaranteed to be printed a
C.aruthe~s. Mate and Dylan Haynes, Cindy Haw ·ns, ac an
erClerk Osle Follrod.
apeclflc number of daya.
!'¥'Ritchie, Morgan Roush and Tracy and Matthew Wood.
.,..· -------------------'----~
· Sending gifts were. Chris, April, Brock and ~ylee Stewart of
W~useon, Oh.
·

thi"f""

.

to

First birthday observed

all&lt;:

grew.

:1

POMEROY - Individuals who are learning to cope with a significant loss in their lives will benefit from a three- part grief series
to be · offered at the Meigs' Co unty Senior Citizens Center in .
Pomeroy. ·
Sessions will be offered Feb. 6, l3 and 20 frQm 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Tl;e series is being provided cooperatively by.Worthington Center of Belpre and Appalachian Community Hospice. There is no
charge to participate to any of the three loca tions where the series
will be .given.
In addition to the Meigs Center the series will be presented at
O'Bleness Memo rial Hospital in Athens on March 6, 13 and 20, an~
at the Hocking Valley Community Hospital in Logan, April 3, 10
and 17.
Licensed counselors from Worthington Center will conduct the
s~ssions. Worthingto'l Center is a licensed, non-profit behavioral
' he:ilth center. Its multidisciplina.ty staff includes psychiatrists, psych,ologists, social workers, case managers and ~urses. .
· The. Center provides a wide range of psychotherapy and counsd!ing offerings, including a parenting group, relapse prevention, crisiS 'i ntervention and prevention, a children's group and family and
c.o uples counseling.
·
·
'"Since enrollment for the grief sessions is limited, those interested ~re asked to call 1-800-793- 4673 to register with Kathy Jacobsoli, R. N . coordinator.

•'

..

.,

The Sentinel weiCOfT18&amp; your photographs. Here are .a few guidelines
for submissiOns:
d
. • • Color ·photoSJ'BPhs are accepted, provided they are In locus an
. ·• have gooli 'contrast. Nepljves also are accepted; however, please
Include a print alone with the neptlve.
.
• Blaek-an~otographs 1n accepted, provided they are In focus
, and have good contrast. Neptlves alsO are accepted; however, please
''·'Include a print along with the n~ve .
.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and
I
. have good contrast.
··
d rd -'let 1
' • Submltted photos shOUld be no smaller than atan a w.. s ze
• 1111d no larger than 8 ~ 10.
·
• Polarlootype photos ~ discouraged since they dO 110t ~prgduce
weH on newsprint.
·
_ _.
' • When submitting dlgjtal photos. be sure the Image~ n a..... ••
hlgJ'HeSOiutlon, hi&amp;IHIUallty JPEG files .
·
• Adven~K-type photo.,.aphs are discouraged due to their uniqUe
sizes, whiCh dO not trllllslate well to newspaper columne. AIMntl~-type
negatives are not accepted. ·
• Laserwrlter prlntl of dlllftallmages are discouraged since they dO
not reproduce well on fiiWsprlnt.
. !fled
• Please be sure ells~ In photograph• are clell1y ldllnt
· on the back !)I the photOIVJiph or on an attached sheet of paper.

·'

Subscribe today.
992-2156

lmiUUil ElECTIDNIC FlUNG
II I IUD1ll IF Dill DR IIIII
II 111 IIDICEI Yll lUll
TII .. IUTIIII TIE 1110 CIDICE

. 1-

•.

••

"

i •

•

••

opposition, and his eloquent pleas for
social justice. His principles for nonviolen ce were based on the teachings of
Christianity.
In 1964, he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize. H is words of wisdom are as
true today as when they were uttered
during hi s acceptance speec h:
" N o nviolence is the answer to the
crucial political md moral questions of
our time: the need for man to ove rcome
o ppre ssion and vio1ence without resorting to oppression and violence.
"Man must evolve fo r alJ human conflict a method which rejects revenge,
aggressiOn and re tali ation . The fo undation of such a meth od is love."
God bless America. May we as Amer' ic J IH learn from hi s example.

SOCIAL SECURITY COLUMN
ple ment;l Sec urity In come recipIt explains how delaying
Choosing your early.
ien ts will re ceive a 3.5 perce nt
Wage Gap
benefits ca n increase
person's
mo nthly benefit amount. There's
Accord ing
the U.S. Cen&lt;u&lt; CO LA for 200 1.
retirement date: also
an explanatlon of how a pt!r- Bu rea u, the wage gap
Sociat Security and Women
son ca n work and receive be nefits the earnings of women and m en
Social Security 'is particularly
has widened to 28 percent.
not an easy task at the same rime .
women. Wo men
And th e ·insert tells how to Wotncn ear n 72 pnce nt co m-

SOCIETY NEWS
Grief sessions offered
at Meigs Senior Center

Dljiniton will relieve
ad'!lissions cotifusion
sions at Texas' public universitiesj the state has struggled with other
ways of S"tting more minority students into higher education .
The debate about affirmation action has not disappeared. lrutead,
it h:~s f,'Otren murkier. A series of court rulings last month make the
issue ripe for clarification by the U.S. Supreme Court ....
'fhe Supreme Court ·has not tackled this diffi cult area of college
;~dmiss ions since ... But this is precisely the kind of vexatious problem tim requires specifi c guidance amid conflicting lpw~r-co urt
opi11iohs. ...
.
·
What the court does need to do is define for the states, universities and f&gt;l'ospective students consistent rules under the Constitu- .
tiott.
·r t.is is not about quotas vs. bigotry but about fundamental concepts of equality · and access to higher education and how to be
indusive without being exclusionary.
Under th e current case law, a clear voice from the Supreme
C ourt is crucial.
•
The Herald, Everett, Wash. , on ll etV orgm•icfood standards:
You don't ha ve to be a "granola" to be pleased with the USDA's
recent anno uncement of new standards for organic foods.
In an era in which genetically modified foo ds and cloning seems
to be well on their way to becoming the norm , the USDA's standard&lt; offer people the choice to 1&lt;.now exactly what they're eati~1g.
And if it catches on, it just might get more people to pay attention
to what they put in their mouths . ...
The organic foods farm ers and othen in rhe industry deserve
prai•c for their hard work in making sure the standards were high.
"fhis must be the only industry that has actually dem anded to be
governed by higher, stricter standards....
What is still at issue is the exploration and production of genetically modilied foods. The USDA'&lt; new o rganic ,standards fail to
address that important matter. Many are concerned that these moditied food crops could " drift" and cross-pollinate nearby orgamc
crops, johnson said.
'the USDA has done an excellent job of listening to consumers
ami developing strong guidelines for the organic foods industry.
Now it's time to take a hard look at genetically modified food.

Van Buren

'",

D11ne Kly Hill
Controller

ruled against using most consideratidns of race in admissions deci-

Abigail

·
~
"~,..:·
.
'
"
i~~~:::=i~·:--~·...
...

A. ShiiWII Llwle

lovely gift, along with your regrets. If
the do ctor is indeed a friend, he will
understand why you couldn't be there.
Sinct the award for w hi ch you r
granddaughter is eligible is "prestigious,'' beitlg a c~ndidate is an hono r i11
itself. That you sacrificed to see her
honored may be more meaningful to
her and her parents than whether she
a~tuaUy wins. Listen co your co nsc ience.
It's trying to give you an important
message .
DEAR READERS: On Mo nd ay we
pay tribute .to the life of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., a great American and
martyr of th e civil rights movt"ment,
who was shot to death 111 1968 at the
age of 39.
Dr. King rose to proh1inence because
of his p ~ rsi ste n ce in the face of viokn t

,"stranger's" wedding over my grandchild's ceremony, which may very well
DEAR ABBY: My granddaughter, .
be a once-in-a-lifetime event.
who is in elementary school, has been
This' doctor saved my life and I feel
.........R..
nominated to receive a prestigious
like I owe my life to him . My husband
award. Beca use of this, she has been feaagrees with me, and so do my friends.
tured in the newspaper and is a celebriBu~ my conscience is bothering me, and
ty of sorts in her town. My. da11ghter
my daughter is so hurt. She is a sensitive
wants us to attend the awards ceremony.
girl, loyal to her family and dependable.
ADVICE
She mentioned more than six months
I don't want to damage our relations hip.
ago that my granddaughter is up for this
What do you advise? I have nine weeks
award and stands a great chance of win- had cancer. He referred me to a special- to decide. TORN BETWEEN
ning it.
ist who discovered it. Since then, I have FAMILY AND FRIENDS
Unfortunately, a physician with become social friends with this man. I
DEAR TORN : When the doctor
whom I am friendly invited me to his do not know his son, but many people made the referral, he was doing his job.
son's wedding on that same date. I told from my social circle wiD be attending He "saved your life" so you could attend
the doctor tliat I may be attending an this out-of-state wedding, and I want t~ important family events - like your
granddaughte r's awa rd ceremony. In this
• award ceremony for my granddaught.e r go.
My daughter is very upset. She can't instance, your faniily should take preceon the same day. 1-lere is my dilemma: I
credit this doctor with saving my life. I believe I would chods.e .~ attend a dence. Send the bride and groon1 .a

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 M2·2158 • Fu: M2·2157

ct..1111• tto.nlch
Geiiii .. Minllglf

.'

Daily Sentinel

ltbmarl weighs obligations tofamily

The Daily Sentinel

ChariM W. Govey
Publlaher

Bend

•

"

"

pared to th eir male counterparts.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment
(COLA)
Based on the in'crcase in the
Co nsumer Pri ce Index from· the
third quarter of 1999 through the
third quart er of 2000, Social
Securi ty beneficiaries and Sup-

ea rn less, are more likely to work
in jobs Without pension coverage
and are .more likely to take tune
out of the work forc e for relatives·
than n~cn . Wh en you co nsider
that women Jive longer than men,
Social Security's guaranteed lifetime benefit that is adjusted for
inflation is even more important.

'

�Monday, Jenuary 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor"., Ohio

Page AS • The Dilly Sentinel

Jerrv

Inside:
Meigs Co. sports notes, Page BJ
Old friends meet in Super Bowl, Page B4
Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

In
carpet

B

The Daily Sentinel

Page Bl
Monday, J•nu•ry J5, 1001

MoNDAY's

·es:blow away Vikings,

HIGHLIGHTS
Bv Scon WoLFE

Chad Hubbard tossed in nine and junior
Matt Ash added eight . .
RACINE- Senior ;harp~ter GarJustin Myers led the Vikings with 16
rei Kiser broke , out .\)f th~ ]!ite for 26 points, while Drew Hunt added eight, and
points while lea&lt;ling the Souijlern Torna- 'Travis Wilson and J.D. Miller each added
.does to an important 53-39 td11mph over four. At times the 6-foot-6 Myen w.1s
the Symmes Valley Vikings ·S~y.
almost unstoppable, but at other times,
Southern (8-4) broke a two-game skid Southern held him at bay.
in taking a key win and an important step
"We give up 39 points and we give our
in securing a seed in the upcoming se~- defense heck," said Southern coach Jay
tiona! tournament.
Rees. "Some of the buckets we gave up
Symmes Valley (6-3) ,J oi! it third, in a· were. just so easy, it seemed like they
row and third g:lme -this week . (Symmes) scored· every possession. When
(Portsmoutl11. Clay, Gree.n, S?t;lt~ern) after we gel our defensive rotation down we
a 6-0·s~rt:, 1!. ·
. 1 \,~ · . .
can be tough defensively. Thatis what hapBehmd Kiser's 26~potnt"'Tun,
seruor
pened
the fourth quarter."
.
...,
OVP CORRESPONDENt,

Prep Hoops
461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-2196
1-an-322-&amp;720
www.jerrybibbee.com

rniture
Plus ·
Good Luck
This Season!
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, OH

667-7388
1-Boo-200-4005 .

Good Luck To
All Area Teams!
We recognize your
efforts to be the beat
. you can be, and wleh
you the best this
season!

Middleport
Ohio

"The aree•a beat aelectlon ot
.'

Middleport

INGEL'S
ELECTRONICS
.. Radio Shack Deal...

106 N. Sec~ Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-2635
Mon, Tuea, Wed, FriN
Thura g.12, Sat e-a:30

Crow's Family
.
.

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

•

Ohio Dlvlelon

Eastern
"Eai!les•• -BOYS
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb.,2
Feb. 3
Feb. 9
Feb. 1o
Feb. 13

Southern
••tornados•• - Bo~s
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 12
Jan. 13
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb. 9
feb. 13

UINTON COUNTY
SOUTHERN .
MEIGS
at Waterford
at Wahama
TRIMBLE
at Miller
at Wellston
at South Gallia
FEDERAL HOCKING
CHESAPEAKE
at Southern
WAH AMA
at Meiis

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan

:228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Bo~s

at GalliPolis
at ·Alexander
at Eastern
at Trimble
BELPRE
at Nelsonville-York
IRONTO~

WELLSTON
at Ulnton CountY
RIUER UALLEY
at Waterford
ALEXANDER
EASTERN

feb. 5
Feb. 8

Dec. 29-30
Dec. 29
Dec. 30
Jan. 3
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
Jan. t 1
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 21
Ja.n. 31 .
Feb. 3
Feb.1
Feb. to
feb. t 4
feb. 11
·feb. 21
Feb. 24
Fe~. 26
feb~

28

Mar. 5

at River Ualle,
at Wellston
at BelPre
EASTERN
NEL$0NUILLE·YORK
UINT·ON COUNTY·
at Eastern
WATERFORD
TRIMBLE
. at Alexander

•

3rd Street, Rac1ne

TVC

949-2210

Belpre
Alexander ·
Nelsonville· York
VInton County
Wellston
Meigs

6-0 10·1
3·2 6·5
3·2 5-6
3·3 5·7
1·4 5·5
0·5 0·1 0
Hocking Dlvlllon

Syracuse

992-6333

TVC

Norris
Northup~,

Do,dge, ::
Inc.. -

.•

Our
· Quality .Way

cit Doing Bu•lneu"

I

'

616 Eastern Avenue
(740)446-3672
W.uM

~J¥:1 l,alllllll

; '

Eastern ~. Wahllma
·
Crooksville at Federal Hopking
Meigs at Trimble
Nelsonville-York at Berne Union

I

252 Upper .River Road '
Galllpolla, OH

~You'll Uke

ALL

Trimble
5·1 6·4
Southern
3-3 8·4
Waterford
3-3 4·6
Eastern
3·3 ·7·3
Federal Hocking 2·4 6·5
Miller
2·4 6· 7
saturday'• 0111111
Miller 60, South Gallla 50 .
Athens 60, Nelsonville-York' 50
Southern 53, Symmes Valley 39
Bonner Academy, N.C. 66, Wellston 37
.
!

.

'

ALL

Furyk wins
.Mercedes
Championship ·
KAl&gt;ALUA, Hawaii (AP) · Jim Furyk completed a fourstroke comeback by holing a 10- ,
foot birdie putt on the 18th to
· win the Mercedes Championships by one stroke over Rory
Sabbaiini (72).
Furyk, playing for the first ti~e
since a freak wrist injury, closed
with a 6-under 67 to finish at 18under 274. He earned $630,000
and a 2001 Mercedes-Benz
SLSOO Sport for his sixth PGA
Tour title,
South Afrita's Ernie Els (69)
and Fiji'sVijay Singh (71) tied for
third at 276. ·Tiger Woods, the
2000 winner, shot a 69 to tie for ·
eighth at 280.

.

.

Pak C.~res Your
Life Classk

I
au

11 , _ _ . _

Call Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Se
Ri Pak birdied 1even of the last
11 holes and shot an S-under-par
64 to win the season-opening
YourLife Vitamins LPGA Classic.
The 23-year-old South Korean
star had a 13-under 203 total on
the Grand Cypress Resort course.
That was four strokes ·ahead of
Sweden's Carin Koch (70) and
Penny Hammel (68).

CHICAGO (AP) David
Wells ' a 20-oome
winner who
o·
'
recerttly ripped :torontoi front
office and fans, was traded by the
Blue Jays to the Chicago 'White ·
·. Sox in a six-player deal. .
The AL Central-champion
White Sox sent pitchers Mike
Sirotka, Kevin Beirne and M~e
Williams and ouW-e!sier Bmn
Simmons to Toro~to for Welh and
pitcher Matt DeWitt.
Wells was 20-8 last season With
a 4. ~I ERA and anAL-best nine
, complete g:lmes. Wells is also 8-1
in 19 career ·postseason g:lmes.

992·5432
•

.

Wells trecled .
to ChiSox

Drive-Thru Window

•'

f/6

Boy•
TVC
Boye
Ohio Dlvl1lon

446.0842 or
Toii•Free
.1..SOG-446-0842.

at ASU (HolidaY GlassicJ
Arizona State
Conso,atlon/ChamPion.sbiP
at Ball State
KENT STATE
MIAMI
at Central MlchiQan
AKRON
NOR'J',HERN ILLINOIS
at Buffalo
at Toledo
MARSHALL
'BOWLING GREEN
EASTERN MICHIGAN
at Akron
at Ma~shall
BUFFALO.·
at Kent State
CENTRAL MICHIGAN
at Miami
MAC ChamP. fist RoiJndJ

ALL

Eastern
HJ 10·2
Waterford
4·3 5·6
Federal Hocking 4·3 4·6
Southern
4·3 8·5
Trimble
2·5 2·10
Miller
0·7 0·12
S.turday'e Garntt
Nelsonville-York 53, South Gallia

.

·~··' ·

'

Moclelrs
Ravens
Win
AFC
Title
J

Tod1y'1 G1111111
Eastern al Meigs
Wahama at Southern
Federal Hocking at VInton County
Barna Union .at Miller
Fort Frye at Waterford
Ohio Valley Christian at Wellston

Ohio

Meies
"Marauders•• - Girls
Jan. 6·
Jan. 8
Jan. I I
Jan. t 5
Jan. t 8
Jan. 25
Jan. 31
feb. 1 ·

50

.··so beats••

·Meias
••Marauders••Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 21
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
feb. 3
feb. 6
Feb. 9
Feb. 13

ALEXANDER
at Eastern
. at Trimble
SYMMES UALLEV
MILLER
WAHAMA
FEDERAL HOCKING
at South Gallla
BELPRE
at Waterford
EASTERN
~t s,mmes Ualle,

6
8
11
I5

WAHAMA (Reserve OniYJ
at South Gallia
SO.UTHERN

'

TVC

Ja·p:

o.u.c. ruarslt~ Oni~J

-.

ALL

Alexander.
7·0 11·2
Meigs
6-1 8·4
Belpre
4·3 · 5· 7
Vinton County 3·4 8·8
Nelsonville-York 1-6 5·8
Wellslo'n
· 0-7 2·1 0
. Hocking Dlvlelon

SVMMS UALLEV .
TRIMBLE
at Miller
WAHAMA
18
at federal Hocklhll
22
MEIGS
zl :. , WATEIFORD
.,
' Ja!h. 3'1'""' ·- ar 'Welhton .
~~.~ Fib~4 '1 "'·· · at BelPre
feb. 8
at Eastern

WATERFORD
at Trimble
at Meiss
MILLER
at federal Hocklp.r
SOUTH GALUA
MEIGS
.

TVC

''

992-7028 '.

Southern
••tornados·· - Girls

Eastern
··Easles··- Girls
Jan. 8
Jan .. 11
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29
Jan .. 3 t
Feb. I
Feb. I
feb. 5
feb. 8

189 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

'

Athletic footwNr"

219 N. Second Ave.

Glrl1
TVC

,.

•·

Southern called a time out. Southern
licked its wounds and came out fighting.
Chad Hubbard drove the paint and
drew a fou l, thl'll ste pped to the line
where he canned two safeties and Garret
Kiser mn off the 'H.:reen to drai11 co nsecutive three pointers, resulting in a 28-27
Southern revival. Myers hit a jumper
from the block to give Symmes Valley
what proved to be its last l~ad, then Brandon Hill drove baseline to !Give South ern
a 30-2Y lead at the buzzer.
Sym1n es Valley tiel! the score on the first
possession of the fou rth frame, . when
Please see Southern. Page 83

Ravens beat·
Oakland

OAKLAND, Calif . (A iJ)
Even Shannon Sharpe acknowledges that the Baltimore R avens
don 't have the typi cal Super
Bowl oflensc.
"We're not that good, but
we're effective," the Ra'ven s
tight end said after Baltimore
beat the Oakland Raiders 16-3
Sunday to reach the first Super
Bowl in the history of the fran ·chisc that, until 1996, was the
Cleveland Browns.
In truth, the offense needed
to make just one play, a 96-yard
pass to Sharpe from Trent Dilfer
on a third-and-18 from their
own 4-yard line in the second
quarter. It was the longest pass
pi;ly jt\ NFL ,pqstseason.history,
·' · ' g,jvf:th~ RaVells a 710 lead atid
' Baltimore turned the rest of the
work over to th e defense.
They now face a similar team
in the New York Ghlnts, a team
whose strength is its defense.
New York 's defense isn't quite as
good as Baltimore's, but its
offense is better - it beat Minnesota 41-0 in the NFC title
game on Sunday.
.
Nonetheless, the Ravens were
installed as· 2 to 2 1/2-point
favorites, pri marily because the
AFC is a bit stronger than the
NfC and because Baltimore's
offense might have scored 41
points against Minn esota the
way the Vikings' defei1se played
Sunday.
The Super Bowl also brings
together two of the NFL's most
venerable owners, 75-year-old
Art Modell of the Ravens, and
83-year-old Wellington Mara of
·,THE CAT 'rHAT.ATE THE .C~l\RY ...:. Saltlmore owner Art Modell has a look of satisfaction on his face
the Giants, who combined have
following the Ravens win ov~r'Oakland In the AFC Championship Game. (AP) ·
·
more than a century uf NFL
'

.

.!!&gt; f.·

.I

•'

.

•'

.

"service.
" He will be my closest friend
until 6: 18p.m. two weeks from
today," said Modell, wh o was
born in Broo klyn and still holds
a large block of Giants season
ti ckets.
T here will be more synchron icity in th e Tampa Super
llowl, including ·a reunion
between Mo dell and Giants
general manage r ,Ernie Acco rsi.
Accorsi not only wa.1 Modell's
general manager for a decade in
C leveland, but also worked for .
th e Colts when they were in
Baltimore.
Ray Lewis, the NFL's defensive player of the year Jives only
20 minutes from ·the site. He's
' -:~iso likely to spend a lot of his
time asking qu esti ons about the
murder charges lodged agai nst
him in Atlanta after last year's
Super Bowl - he pleaded
guilty to obstructing justice and
got probation .
"What l went through this
o!Eea.&lt;on was like pure hell,"
said Lewis, who had 10 tackles
and recove red a fumble. "My
teammates didn 't care about
that. My teammates listened to
me and said, ' It's over now Forget that distraction , wear it
down . It's a closed chapter."'
It also will be a hom ecoming
of_sorts for Dilfer, who started
for six years for the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers
before
being
replaced late last season by
· Shaun King and let go in the
offseason. He became Haitimore's starter at midsc;tmn during a stretch in which the
Please see AFC, Page B3

\

1..

Buckeyes ·hold off.
MinnesOfl by three
~ o£~ ~ickerstaff's

Giants stuff Minnesota
.

.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Ho-hum. AnOiher NFC
championship g:lme at the Meadow1ands, another shutout for the
New York Giants.
Yet it wasn't the defense, which
held high-powered Minnesota to
114 yards and had five takeaways,
that drew the loudest praise in
Sunday's 41-0 rout. The Giants
are h~ading for their third Super
Bowl because their offense was
unstoppable and quarterback
Kerry Collins was a record-setter.
"It's reaffirming, when you get
to this point, of the things that
you're doing and the things that
you're trying to do the right way,"
Collins said after he threw for five
touchdowns and 381 yards in the
·Giants' most convincing win of a
stunningly successful season, "I've
had so much help since I've ·gotten here. No man does it alone."
No man since Sid Luckman of
the Bears in 1943 had thrown for
five TDs in an NFC playoff game.
Few men have gone through the
off-field problems Collins has
endured- alcoholism, charges of 1 - - " - - - - - - - '

1

COLUMB4S (AP)
shot inside was
State nearly gave one .away, btl - blocked by Ohio State's Ken
Minnesota refused to 'take it.' )j .John~o~ wi'th 14 ~econds
Brian Brown hit two late fre~ , ~ma1mng. After an Ohio State
throws· and Minnesota misse'd :alfJ turnover, Dusty Rychart's 3'pair of 3-point shots in the fi~~ point attempt from the top of
seconds as Ohio State, which;, key bounced off the lett s1de of
nearly blew a 23-point lead\) I the rim · but Bickerstaff
'ibeld on to beat the Golden rebounded and passed back to
Gophers 75-72 on Saturday.
Rychart, who had moved over
"The failure iri the second to the left wmg. He agatn
half was more us than it was missed, with Johnson grabbing
them," Ohio State coach Jim the rebound as time expired.
O'Brien said. "We played tenta"I don't think any coach in
tive. We didn't w.~nt to put it on. ·\ America is going to draw up a
ice."
play for his 4-man who is 2-forOhio State (11-5, 2-2 Big ~ 'JJ'IY._hateve~ .on 3s, but I'm not cerTen) led 48-25 with just over ts' Bn'you can be real picky," Minminutes lett and was still on top
coach Dan Monson said.
'by 12 vyith ., U(lder 3 minutes . , :was pretty mdch a free-forremaining. I&lt;e\lip. Burleson and
the. last IS seconds. But we.
Michael Bauer ~h hit 3-pointtWO good looks and I don't
ers to draw Minnewta (H-3, 1you~ 110ing to get much
2) to n-72 with, 33.9 seconds •
looks by design:•
lett.
.
. ·,.
listed u Minnesota's
Brown, who scored 11 points
actually came into the
and made all seven of his free game 3-of-14 behind the art
throws, hit two foul shots· with, this season.
24.1 seconds lett.
"My percentage isn't that
The Gophers brought the ball
down court and john-Blair
PIIIM ' " OIU, Ptlp IS

. PluM'" NFC. Ptlp 83
j

•

Southern's defense at key points in the
game forced poor Viking shot selection.
The 13 turnovers committed by the Vikes
countered an otherwise dominant edge
on the boards, where the visitors claimed
a 37-17 edge.
Rees cited a more patient offense in th e
second half as a key factor in the game.
Southern stumbled through the first half
with no inside game and a fiat 2-16 from
the perimeter behind the arc.
With 4:18 left in the third quarter, it
appeared that Southern was on the ropes
and Symmes Valley was going for th e
knock-out punch. Laying flat on the mat
after a 7-0 Viking run to start the frame,

53-39

YEAH, BABY - Michael Strahan (left) and head coach Jim Fassell
celebrate the Giants win In the NFC ChampionshiP Game. (AP)
I

�Monday, Jenuary 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor"., Ohio

Page AS • The Dilly Sentinel

Jerrv

Inside:
Meigs Co. sports notes, Page BJ
Old friends meet in Super Bowl, Page B4
Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

In
carpet

B

The Daily Sentinel

Page Bl
Monday, J•nu•ry J5, 1001

MoNDAY's

·es:blow away Vikings,

HIGHLIGHTS
Bv Scon WoLFE

Chad Hubbard tossed in nine and junior
Matt Ash added eight . .
RACINE- Senior ;harp~ter GarJustin Myers led the Vikings with 16
rei Kiser broke , out .\)f th~ ]!ite for 26 points, while Drew Hunt added eight, and
points while lea&lt;ling the Souijlern Torna- 'Travis Wilson and J.D. Miller each added
.does to an important 53-39 td11mph over four. At times the 6-foot-6 Myen w.1s
the Symmes Valley Vikings ·S~y.
almost unstoppable, but at other times,
Southern (8-4) broke a two-game skid Southern held him at bay.
in taking a key win and an important step
"We give up 39 points and we give our
in securing a seed in the upcoming se~- defense heck," said Southern coach Jay
tiona! tournament.
Rees. "Some of the buckets we gave up
Symmes Valley (6-3) ,J oi! it third, in a· were. just so easy, it seemed like they
row and third g:lme -this week . (Symmes) scored· every possession. When
(Portsmoutl11. Clay, Gree.n, S?t;lt~ern) after we gel our defensive rotation down we
a 6-0·s~rt:, 1!. ·
. 1 \,~ · . .
can be tough defensively. Thatis what hapBehmd Kiser's 26~potnt"'Tun,
seruor
pened
the fourth quarter."
.
...,
OVP CORRESPONDENt,

Prep Hoops
461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-2196
1-an-322-&amp;720
www.jerrybibbee.com

rniture
Plus ·
Good Luck
This Season!
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, OH

667-7388
1-Boo-200-4005 .

Good Luck To
All Area Teams!
We recognize your
efforts to be the beat
. you can be, and wleh
you the best this
season!

Middleport
Ohio

"The aree•a beat aelectlon ot
.'

Middleport

INGEL'S
ELECTRONICS
.. Radio Shack Deal...

106 N. Sec~ Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-2635
Mon, Tuea, Wed, FriN
Thura g.12, Sat e-a:30

Crow's Family
.
.

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

•

Ohio Dlvlelon

Eastern
"Eai!les•• -BOYS
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb.,2
Feb. 3
Feb. 9
Feb. 1o
Feb. 13

Southern
••tornados•• - Bo~s
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 12
Jan. 13
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb. 9
feb. 13

UINTON COUNTY
SOUTHERN .
MEIGS
at Waterford
at Wahama
TRIMBLE
at Miller
at Wellston
at South Gallia
FEDERAL HOCKING
CHESAPEAKE
at Southern
WAH AMA
at Meiis

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan

:228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Bo~s

at GalliPolis
at ·Alexander
at Eastern
at Trimble
BELPRE
at Nelsonville-York
IRONTO~

WELLSTON
at Ulnton CountY
RIUER UALLEY
at Waterford
ALEXANDER
EASTERN

feb. 5
Feb. 8

Dec. 29-30
Dec. 29
Dec. 30
Jan. 3
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
Jan. t 1
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 21
Ja.n. 31 .
Feb. 3
Feb.1
Feb. to
feb. t 4
feb. 11
·feb. 21
Feb. 24
Fe~. 26
feb~

28

Mar. 5

at River Ualle,
at Wellston
at BelPre
EASTERN
NEL$0NUILLE·YORK
UINT·ON COUNTY·
at Eastern
WATERFORD
TRIMBLE
. at Alexander

•

3rd Street, Rac1ne

TVC

949-2210

Belpre
Alexander ·
Nelsonville· York
VInton County
Wellston
Meigs

6-0 10·1
3·2 6·5
3·2 5-6
3·3 5·7
1·4 5·5
0·5 0·1 0
Hocking Dlvlllon

Syracuse

992-6333

TVC

Norris
Northup~,

Do,dge, ::
Inc.. -

.•

Our
· Quality .Way

cit Doing Bu•lneu"

I

'

616 Eastern Avenue
(740)446-3672
W.uM

~J¥:1 l,alllllll

; '

Eastern ~. Wahllma
·
Crooksville at Federal Hopking
Meigs at Trimble
Nelsonville-York at Berne Union

I

252 Upper .River Road '
Galllpolla, OH

~You'll Uke

ALL

Trimble
5·1 6·4
Southern
3-3 8·4
Waterford
3-3 4·6
Eastern
3·3 ·7·3
Federal Hocking 2·4 6·5
Miller
2·4 6· 7
saturday'• 0111111
Miller 60, South Gallla 50 .
Athens 60, Nelsonville-York' 50
Southern 53, Symmes Valley 39
Bonner Academy, N.C. 66, Wellston 37
.
!

.

'

ALL

Furyk wins
.Mercedes
Championship ·
KAl&gt;ALUA, Hawaii (AP) · Jim Furyk completed a fourstroke comeback by holing a 10- ,
foot birdie putt on the 18th to
· win the Mercedes Championships by one stroke over Rory
Sabbaiini (72).
Furyk, playing for the first ti~e
since a freak wrist injury, closed
with a 6-under 67 to finish at 18under 274. He earned $630,000
and a 2001 Mercedes-Benz
SLSOO Sport for his sixth PGA
Tour title,
South Afrita's Ernie Els (69)
and Fiji'sVijay Singh (71) tied for
third at 276. ·Tiger Woods, the
2000 winner, shot a 69 to tie for ·
eighth at 280.

.

.

Pak C.~res Your
Life Classk

I
au

11 , _ _ . _

Call Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Se
Ri Pak birdied 1even of the last
11 holes and shot an S-under-par
64 to win the season-opening
YourLife Vitamins LPGA Classic.
The 23-year-old South Korean
star had a 13-under 203 total on
the Grand Cypress Resort course.
That was four strokes ·ahead of
Sweden's Carin Koch (70) and
Penny Hammel (68).

CHICAGO (AP) David
Wells ' a 20-oome
winner who
o·
'
recerttly ripped :torontoi front
office and fans, was traded by the
Blue Jays to the Chicago 'White ·
·. Sox in a six-player deal. .
The AL Central-champion
White Sox sent pitchers Mike
Sirotka, Kevin Beirne and M~e
Williams and ouW-e!sier Bmn
Simmons to Toro~to for Welh and
pitcher Matt DeWitt.
Wells was 20-8 last season With
a 4. ~I ERA and anAL-best nine
, complete g:lmes. Wells is also 8-1
in 19 career ·postseason g:lmes.

992·5432
•

.

Wells trecled .
to ChiSox

Drive-Thru Window

•'

f/6

Boy•
TVC
Boye
Ohio Dlvl1lon

446.0842 or
Toii•Free
.1..SOG-446-0842.

at ASU (HolidaY GlassicJ
Arizona State
Conso,atlon/ChamPion.sbiP
at Ball State
KENT STATE
MIAMI
at Central MlchiQan
AKRON
NOR'J',HERN ILLINOIS
at Buffalo
at Toledo
MARSHALL
'BOWLING GREEN
EASTERN MICHIGAN
at Akron
at Ma~shall
BUFFALO.·
at Kent State
CENTRAL MICHIGAN
at Miami
MAC ChamP. fist RoiJndJ

ALL

Eastern
HJ 10·2
Waterford
4·3 5·6
Federal Hocking 4·3 4·6
Southern
4·3 8·5
Trimble
2·5 2·10
Miller
0·7 0·12
S.turday'e Garntt
Nelsonville-York 53, South Gallia

.

·~··' ·

'

Moclelrs
Ravens
Win
AFC
Title
J

Tod1y'1 G1111111
Eastern al Meigs
Wahama at Southern
Federal Hocking at VInton County
Barna Union .at Miller
Fort Frye at Waterford
Ohio Valley Christian at Wellston

Ohio

Meies
"Marauders•• - Girls
Jan. 6·
Jan. 8
Jan. I I
Jan. t 5
Jan. t 8
Jan. 25
Jan. 31
feb. 1 ·

50

.··so beats••

·Meias
••Marauders••Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 21
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
feb. 3
feb. 6
Feb. 9
Feb. 13

ALEXANDER
at Eastern
. at Trimble
SYMMES UALLEV
MILLER
WAHAMA
FEDERAL HOCKING
at South Gallla
BELPRE
at Waterford
EASTERN
~t s,mmes Ualle,

6
8
11
I5

WAHAMA (Reserve OniYJ
at South Gallia
SO.UTHERN

'

TVC

Ja·p:

o.u.c. ruarslt~ Oni~J

-.

ALL

Alexander.
7·0 11·2
Meigs
6-1 8·4
Belpre
4·3 · 5· 7
Vinton County 3·4 8·8
Nelsonville-York 1-6 5·8
Wellslo'n
· 0-7 2·1 0
. Hocking Dlvlelon

SVMMS UALLEV .
TRIMBLE
at Miller
WAHAMA
18
at federal Hocklhll
22
MEIGS
zl :. , WATEIFORD
.,
' Ja!h. 3'1'""' ·- ar 'Welhton .
~~.~ Fib~4 '1 "'·· · at BelPre
feb. 8
at Eastern

WATERFORD
at Trimble
at Meiss
MILLER
at federal Hocklp.r
SOUTH GALUA
MEIGS
.

TVC

''

992-7028 '.

Southern
••tornados·· - Girls

Eastern
··Easles··- Girls
Jan. 8
Jan .. 11
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29
Jan .. 3 t
Feb. I
Feb. I
feb. 5
feb. 8

189 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

'

Athletic footwNr"

219 N. Second Ave.

Glrl1
TVC

,.

•·

Southern called a time out. Southern
licked its wounds and came out fighting.
Chad Hubbard drove the paint and
drew a fou l, thl'll ste pped to the line
where he canned two safeties and Garret
Kiser mn off the 'H.:reen to drai11 co nsecutive three pointers, resulting in a 28-27
Southern revival. Myers hit a jumper
from the block to give Symmes Valley
what proved to be its last l~ad, then Brandon Hill drove baseline to !Give South ern
a 30-2Y lead at the buzzer.
Sym1n es Valley tiel! the score on the first
possession of the fou rth frame, . when
Please see Southern. Page 83

Ravens beat·
Oakland

OAKLAND, Calif . (A iJ)
Even Shannon Sharpe acknowledges that the Baltimore R avens
don 't have the typi cal Super
Bowl oflensc.
"We're not that good, but
we're effective," the Ra'ven s
tight end said after Baltimore
beat the Oakland Raiders 16-3
Sunday to reach the first Super
Bowl in the history of the fran ·chisc that, until 1996, was the
Cleveland Browns.
In truth, the offense needed
to make just one play, a 96-yard
pass to Sharpe from Trent Dilfer
on a third-and-18 from their
own 4-yard line in the second
quarter. It was the longest pass
pi;ly jt\ NFL ,pqstseason.history,
·' · ' g,jvf:th~ RaVells a 710 lead atid
' Baltimore turned the rest of the
work over to th e defense.
They now face a similar team
in the New York Ghlnts, a team
whose strength is its defense.
New York 's defense isn't quite as
good as Baltimore's, but its
offense is better - it beat Minnesota 41-0 in the NFC title
game on Sunday.
.
Nonetheless, the Ravens were
installed as· 2 to 2 1/2-point
favorites, pri marily because the
AFC is a bit stronger than the
NfC and because Baltimore's
offense might have scored 41
points against Minn esota the
way the Vikings' defei1se played
Sunday.
The Super Bowl also brings
together two of the NFL's most
venerable owners, 75-year-old
Art Modell of the Ravens, and
83-year-old Wellington Mara of
·,THE CAT 'rHAT.ATE THE .C~l\RY ...:. Saltlmore owner Art Modell has a look of satisfaction on his face
the Giants, who combined have
following the Ravens win ov~r'Oakland In the AFC Championship Game. (AP) ·
·
more than a century uf NFL
'

.

.!!&gt; f.·

.I

•'

.

•'

.

"service.
" He will be my closest friend
until 6: 18p.m. two weeks from
today," said Modell, wh o was
born in Broo klyn and still holds
a large block of Giants season
ti ckets.
T here will be more synchron icity in th e Tampa Super
llowl, including ·a reunion
between Mo dell and Giants
general manage r ,Ernie Acco rsi.
Accorsi not only wa.1 Modell's
general manager for a decade in
C leveland, but also worked for .
th e Colts when they were in
Baltimore.
Ray Lewis, the NFL's defensive player of the year Jives only
20 minutes from ·the site. He's
' -:~iso likely to spend a lot of his
time asking qu esti ons about the
murder charges lodged agai nst
him in Atlanta after last year's
Super Bowl - he pleaded
guilty to obstructing justice and
got probation .
"What l went through this
o!Eea.&lt;on was like pure hell,"
said Lewis, who had 10 tackles
and recove red a fumble. "My
teammates didn 't care about
that. My teammates listened to
me and said, ' It's over now Forget that distraction , wear it
down . It's a closed chapter."'
It also will be a hom ecoming
of_sorts for Dilfer, who started
for six years for the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers
before
being
replaced late last season by
· Shaun King and let go in the
offseason. He became Haitimore's starter at midsc;tmn during a stretch in which the
Please see AFC, Page B3

\

1..

Buckeyes ·hold off.
MinnesOfl by three
~ o£~ ~ickerstaff's

Giants stuff Minnesota
.

.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Ho-hum. AnOiher NFC
championship g:lme at the Meadow1ands, another shutout for the
New York Giants.
Yet it wasn't the defense, which
held high-powered Minnesota to
114 yards and had five takeaways,
that drew the loudest praise in
Sunday's 41-0 rout. The Giants
are h~ading for their third Super
Bowl because their offense was
unstoppable and quarterback
Kerry Collins was a record-setter.
"It's reaffirming, when you get
to this point, of the things that
you're doing and the things that
you're trying to do the right way,"
Collins said after he threw for five
touchdowns and 381 yards in the
·Giants' most convincing win of a
stunningly successful season, "I've
had so much help since I've ·gotten here. No man does it alone."
No man since Sid Luckman of
the Bears in 1943 had thrown for
five TDs in an NFC playoff game.
Few men have gone through the
off-field problems Collins has
endured- alcoholism, charges of 1 - - " - - - - - - - '

1

COLUMB4S (AP)
shot inside was
State nearly gave one .away, btl - blocked by Ohio State's Ken
Minnesota refused to 'take it.' )j .John~o~ wi'th 14 ~econds
Brian Brown hit two late fre~ , ~ma1mng. After an Ohio State
throws· and Minnesota misse'd :alfJ turnover, Dusty Rychart's 3'pair of 3-point shots in the fi~~ point attempt from the top of
seconds as Ohio State, which;, key bounced off the lett s1de of
nearly blew a 23-point lead\) I the rim · but Bickerstaff
'ibeld on to beat the Golden rebounded and passed back to
Gophers 75-72 on Saturday.
Rychart, who had moved over
"The failure iri the second to the left wmg. He agatn
half was more us than it was missed, with Johnson grabbing
them," Ohio State coach Jim the rebound as time expired.
O'Brien said. "We played tenta"I don't think any coach in
tive. We didn't w.~nt to put it on. ·\ America is going to draw up a
ice."
play for his 4-man who is 2-forOhio State (11-5, 2-2 Big ~ 'JJ'IY._hateve~ .on 3s, but I'm not cerTen) led 48-25 with just over ts' Bn'you can be real picky," Minminutes lett and was still on top
coach Dan Monson said.
'by 12 vyith ., U(lder 3 minutes . , :was pretty mdch a free-forremaining. I&lt;e\lip. Burleson and
the. last IS seconds. But we.
Michael Bauer ~h hit 3-pointtWO good looks and I don't
ers to draw Minnewta (H-3, 1you~ 110ing to get much
2) to n-72 with, 33.9 seconds •
looks by design:•
lett.
.
. ·,.
listed u Minnesota's
Brown, who scored 11 points
actually came into the
and made all seven of his free game 3-of-14 behind the art
throws, hit two foul shots· with, this season.
24.1 seconds lett.
"My percentage isn't that
The Gophers brought the ball
down court and john-Blair
PIIIM ' " OIU, Ptlp IS

. PluM'" NFC. Ptlp 83
j

•

Southern's defense at key points in the
game forced poor Viking shot selection.
The 13 turnovers committed by the Vikes
countered an otherwise dominant edge
on the boards, where the visitors claimed
a 37-17 edge.
Rees cited a more patient offense in th e
second half as a key factor in the game.
Southern stumbled through the first half
with no inside game and a fiat 2-16 from
the perimeter behind the arc.
With 4:18 left in the third quarter, it
appeared that Southern was on the ropes
and Symmes Valley was going for th e
knock-out punch. Laying flat on the mat
after a 7-0 Viking run to start the frame,

53-39

YEAH, BABY - Michael Strahan (left) and head coach Jim Fassell
celebrate the Giants win In the NFC ChampionshiP Game. (AP)
I

�•
Monday, January 15,2001

Monday, January 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Home National

Bank to sponsor
Soutlaea 11 p •
Jan. 19
GI'IIIWIYJ
LMI&amp; l"ound Yllt'd .....
1nd W.m.t To Do Adt
Mul'l S. Ptlclln AclvIAIBYNE QEADUNI!.

2 00 p.m 11M dly beiON
11M 1d 11 to run Sundly &amp;
Mondoy -.!Ilion 2 00 p m
Friday
SENTINEL QfAPUNE.

1 00 p m the dty IM!ore
the -.1 Ia to run
Sundoy &amp; Mondoy -.!Hion
1 00 p m Frldoy
AEG!mA QfADUNE

2 dlye before the od lo to
run by 4 30 p m SI'IUrcloy
A Mondly ..thlon- 4 30
Thuraday
O.adllnee oubjoct to

Help Wanted
FEDERAL POSTAL JOU
UP o $1885 hou H ng lo

200
H ca I for IPC&gt;IICIIIonltx
amlnat on nfo mat on FeCit 1

Help Wanted

__,

110

Bualneu
Opportunity

WE ARE -110111
Elm U!&gt;To fTIHr -

WHidy

H o Fu sono111 1 800 598

•Fu18ono1111

4504 txttnt on !i t1 (7tm 9pm

•WIIk~Paycho&lt;l&lt;

CST)
ABSOlUTELY FREE NFO

•Paid Vacallon
•Retirement Plan
•ProlotiiOnaJ A

AFTER HOLIDAY CASH S ay
home 1 uff ng &amp; ma ng enve
opes Make up to $938 00 weak
y Eltl)tr ence unntcuaa v
Stnel SASE o Rae Bar 01 Box
lie I A Jopln M0 &amp;1902

410 HOUIM for Rent

12K50 MOO o Homl New KICh
en Ntw Bath oom New F oo 1
16xl Covo td Porch Ctntrll A
·~ 000 (740)«1 930

1 2 'ull 8111mtnt W h natu 1
gal Fu nace Non Smoke • No

38R -

UR

DR Ktlchon Balli

Sunday Co 1 (304 87~ 2066
$375 Mo + Dopoll 304 875
2068

38R Oulll NOighl&gt;ori'IOO&lt;I Counl)'
0 Cly SChoo I. AYII IIlii Fobltr

"""'*"'o

tnte net Ulllfl Wanted

$2000-$5000/mo
www •oo~Mt»~z ne

320 Mobile HomM
for Sale

ery 1$1 Pert Welcome Rete tnc

REGARDLESS OF PAST CREDIT
HSTORY Gan ng a mollgal)l n

lntoelalon.... 8 ......
Coi poeltlon
II Currently Adding To Our Staff!

II

(740)~

76

(304)812-3121

Oday s ma ktl 1 no o~y poll
ble ra easy Fo t 11 nforma
on &amp; app ca on ca Jtnn ftr
4 9-738-7623

Cor!w Work Willi Tho BESTI
Coli Today For An ""'""""

1-IH-4711-7223 Ext. 1t11

Ava Bend Place NQW Accap ng
App ca 01'18 to
Bed oom Hud
Subs dtd .(pa tme" o Hand
capped and 0 aao ed EOE

New 3 8odroom Home Clolt To
Ga po 1 Pa yFunlhtd m
Opanlng (740)25&amp;-11~74

APPL CAT ON AND EXAM N
FORMAT ON Polla JODI
$ 8 35 h
1 888 726 9083
xll'il 7an-7pmCST

510

005

Personal•
AMAZ NG PHVSIC SOLUTIONS

Halp

1898 o e ma
maUa181kln com

START

95.t 202
m a ~I a 0 m~

DATING TONIGHT

Have fun m..t ng t glb t 1 ng1t1

n you a •• C1ll ro mort nfo

mo on

800 ROMANCE "'

1'/35

CLA MS PROCESSOR UO SolO!
hr polenlol Proo011 ng c11m1 1
lily Trl n ng p OY dod MUST
own PC CALL NOW Ill otl8117.0 &amp;12
CLA MS PROC!880RI U0-140/
lw polanllal Pro-• ng ofllmo 1
lily Tro n ng p OY dod MUST
own PC CALL NOW 188 823-

CLAIIItOOM AtDI
Tho Molgo LOCI Schoo DII lei

cur tnt 'I till en optn "G for 1
C 111raom A Cit n 1111 Severt

JfMOVAH S
WITNESSES BohiY or Hind CIPPid Cl111 II
E .-&lt;11 am ly F nd OUI IICII lhl MIIQI MIICI e SChOO Th I I I
society doean wan you o know lu dmo poohlon (n no monlh/182
Pt'et 1 conf den a J w FACTS deyl II 7 hOUII PI dly) Wllh I
t~~o~ 454 Me a ne Fa 1 WA
111n ng 111ry ol It 7t po hou
~-9153 www macg ego m n 1
w th lui bentr tl ana ttlrtment
Roqu emon11 lor lhl polhlon n

lea erg

New To 'feu Thrift 611oppt
9 Weal S 1moon Alheno
740-592 &amp;12
Qua ty c oth ng and househo d
ema $ oo bag aa e every
Thu Idly Monday h u Sa u day
9 ll0-5 30

GlvMway

70"

tht medications uted n the t ut
men ol behavior handicaps able
o ead and w lte o perfo m du
dea and txplrltnce working with
ado eacen 1 who nave a be
hor.or• hand cap Per.one nte
O! od n fiiJPiy ne for ttl I 1)91 on
ehou d 11nd 1 ler t of lnte ••
1nd 1 raeume lo Wltlam L Buck
ley Superlntenden Me gs LOCI
School Dlotrlc M Box m Po

moroy OH 45788 Tho doaclllne
to accept ng appuca ona 1
January 9 2001 Tho antlclpllod
ata t no da • to ttlt pos t on •
ftbrUIIy 2001
CNA C11111 To So Olio od AI

Yard Sale

80

c udll Hgn Schoo Dp omo o
GED kMWIIdgo OIIHCnlng lUll
ogltl lo -tnll n 1 opoelol
"'""" ootl ng l&gt;lolc knowlodgo ol

Lak n hoap Ia P ojecttd Sta 1
Dale 1 Fobrua y 12 2001 Fo 8

Auction
and Flea Market

WHkl 8 OOam 4:00pm Monday

Rick Pea san Auc on Company
tu
me aucl onee comp ele
auction
aerv ce
Licensed

t660ho&amp; Wos V gna 31J.4
l73-5765 Or 304-773-5447

F lday Pltlll App )' n Ptr10n
At Lak n Hotp ta Monday F
day 8am .tpm App y To Ann

VonMollr AN App cal on diad
111 January 16 200 AI Appllc
lnll Mull HIYe A H gh Schoo
Diploma Or OED
Compute ntt net Ptr10n Need
od 17111111 Part 111M $ 25/hr Fu
lme Bonu111 Paid 'IJacatlont
www wea lhwfthiiM com
1 688-281-4&amp;11

wan ed To Buy Ulld Mob le
Homo ca 740-4-48.0175 Or 304-

675-5985

Qie!eN Omls
Appl c1t on• 1 • now bt ng ac
coplld lor 1 lUI limo I 9 p m Dlo1 y Cook Expe lonco p olo odl
tftrenc11 rtqu rtd App cants
may opp y do ly Mon Sun e 4
p m Come )0 n our teamll You
be g 1«1 you d dl Ravtnlwood

Ca o Con I 1 3 Wllh nglon
Slrloi.RMnowoociWV

110

Help Wanted
U 000 WEEKLY I Moiling. eoO
Poo ogo &amp;

Supp oo p o

$45 000/YR po tnll 0 I nHd
p,op I 0 p OCIII Cl m1 Muat
own compull modem We 111n
Clll 1 688-~7-48116 lXI 11115

hou

DriYoro

Tranoport No ox
po~onco n01cled 2 wook ~· a
COl. Ill nlng Groll pay S:Jol 000
yr yoo p uo u l&gt;lnollo a po d
~AM

1m nation nfo m11 on Ftdtrl

Nro Fu lonolll 1 100 511
411).4 oOionolon 1518 (71m 1pm

can

' FIDIRAL POITAL JOII
Up o t18 II hour HI ng lor
200 I lroo COl for IIIOIIcl!lonltx
am nil on nro motion Fodtrll
Hilt Fu lonor 11 1 100 oee
4504 oxlono on 1111 (7om tpm

Cat)

••

•

~~~Ill

www-. com

EARN 125 000 TO 150 000/YR
Mtcl 01

neu anct a

III'CI N -

F.IOERAL POITAL JOII
Up o 111 85 hou H lng lo
:100 I I 10 co lor opp lootloN..

I

temporary workers to
fill three shlfiB dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;
management
opportunities make th s
an excHing choice for
students housewives
seniors or anyone
looking for extra
money Pick up the
phone now to set up
your personal
Interview
We ara waiting to hire
YOU I
CALL TODAY

no Aaa a

mmtd~

Homo

compultr , _ FREE lnlornol
I 800-281- Dopl I 11»

Eo n Up 1b 3!10 In One Otly li'IUI
Fr11 P ctu 1 nv tt You Frlendl
To '!bu Homo For AProiHo 0111
P cturt Party Fem ly Plcturt
Po I Spec I lr P CIUIII Wf

PIOYidt C10tnlna: J--, E..ry

lnlng Cd 101&gt;411) 1313

EASY WOftKI

Q

oal payl Eo n

1500 p u1 1 week 1111mb ng

procfuoll 11 IIOmo No - ntollllly 01 10 lr•• 1 1100
at? -•1:11

Ooub • Wide 3 Bed oom 2 Bath
$!00 Fee Take ove Pa~mtn a

nlo no

ona G adua e Schoo 35 Cen
er St Unit 8 Wo feboro Fa 1

IOCIAL IICUttm' 1111'1
No FlO Unlela Wo Will

1 886-582·3308

blmoOI&gt;Irno odu

Corpot • Upllolotory Cloonlng

Gua an ttd Wo k With Febu out
Reau a Fo a F •• Eat mate
Colf(304)8711-4001 TQ&lt;Ioyl

NEEDEDI Paople o loll up 10 30
poundt n 30 Clay ntxptnl vt
eau 11 QUI antted a natura

----..-......... _
our_.,....,
tolll:htnlll ar1VIIIfli¥WM

-on-.- rwllglon,
""""' or II¥ lrMnllor! .,
,.,... qawc:t1jil. . . .

•ar 'ut.mt r •

-·ln-oi1M

~ow

~ltoinied ... al d II Ill
ICIVMI111Un INI na '" P

.,. ........,_on onoquol
-""'"YREAl ESTATE

Bualneaa
Opportunity
OOOe WEEKLYII MAL NG

$1
b ochu 11 FREE Pol age S a
mmad a 1 yl Ruah ae t ad
d eased stamped enve ope to
HSE Inc Depart 20 PO flo&gt; 573

AmoiO dam NV 12010
$3qoo woek y MA LNG 400
b otllu aa AT HOME NO Olll ga
lion 10 nYol I 800 283 3880
ol&lt;l 1386 (241\ra

INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends that ~ou do bus
neaa w h peop e you know and
NOT o aend money h ough he
ma unt you have Invest ga ed
lhrl olllflng

A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE EIIID

shed vend ng oute W 11 b~
1129 Undt $9K minimum nvtt
ment equ ed E~tce en month 'I
prot poten 18 Flnanet avtlab 1
QOOCI croon -aaa 270-21-

3 IR Mobile Homa In Po 1
A01 \l&gt;u Pay Dopoo l U UIOB

Wlnte B1rgaln Th 1 Peyment
111 than l'lnt Loan may be as
tumeb • Approx mate 3 veara
paymonll lOft I lake 1111 loll on

Mobile Home For Ren

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T l
BANK FORECLOSURES HUD
VA FHA LOW OR NO MONEY
DOWNI OK CRED T FOR LIST
NGSI CALL I 8()().335.()1)20 OXI
961

dopooll equl od no pels 700
11112 2218

1 8odroom Aponmonl n Go ~
1 Ul 01 &amp; App ancu Inc ud
td 1371!/mo (7401245-6155

and

1 Bedroom Ga agt Apa menl
Konoguo $21501 Mon h Ulll 11

Chu ch 8u d ng wllh P111onogo
hallOO (304)87&amp;-18 •

Vlnlon Ohio Pilei Irick
lullellng 8omil Equlpmonl Mlln

s''"' unoo ·oliO. (740)288e.wulllrapm
Betwetn Pomiroy and Athen1
mol&gt;llo IIOmo Iiiio lor ronl, bOIUIIIU
oounlry lllllng 740 1192 2187

4 Bodroom Fo m Ho1110 8 Acroo
0 lond (740~172
FORECLOSED OOV T HOMESI
Low or $0 downl Tu Ropoo 1
E1 n $500 10 UOO po WIOM n Btnk UPICIIII HUD VA FHA
you bo h obo a 11 ppo 1 o u I.Ow o no monay OK Crodlll ~o
oppo un ly o IICUI you lulu 1 LloUngo CoN 1 800 1101 1717 "'
Low nvoo mon 1 100 272 Olt3 t83.
•weeomu n ng com Membt

to say

560

Merchandlee

Petl for Sale

640

Hay

a Grain
Dodgo 150LE 2 WO Au o
13 000 M11 Good Cond&gt;
Aak ng ••~oo (304)882

ROund Ba 81 4x4 N~ Wat n

710 Autoa for Sale
1-DadllhunciMix- F
1-Terrier- F

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

ERS -A moal eve yone approved

w th $0 down low mon hly pay
men a

540 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandise
9 HP Slaro Snow Blowlr Etclrlc
Slarl So r P ope eo 1300
(740)446-4496 alllr 6
ALL STEEL BU LD NGS New up

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
Ape monlo $265 And $328 Ot DELL COMPUTERS Even wlh
poa t &amp; Rete encea Aequ ed
1111 han l)t feet c ed t
soo(740)8811-4531
477 90 8 Coda AC2 www omc
IOiutlonl com
IIAUTIPUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PAICEB AT JACK
ION EIITATEI 52 Willwood
DriYI lrom 128t 10 1370 wa k o
lhOP a mOVIOI Ca 740 448
410 F 11 Avanue 1&amp;2 Bed oom

BIIUNIR LAND
(7~1 14e2

Kerr Rd. NicaAIM 1.M 5 All'
• Homo Sllollloglnnlng AI
$22 000 Or Buy Thll 3-2 Homo
On 5 Acroo Now M5 0001 nRio
~

• -

$80

2719
94 Dodge Rom 1~00 5 SpHd
v 8 740)2118-11224
88 Dodge Rom 1100 Low Mlo
ogo AuiG' AC (740)388-0182

Raveru went five games with
out a touchdown
He IS now 10 1 as a starter
Obvtously I m exc1ted sa1d
011fer who limshed 9 of. 1B for
190 yards
The greatest lesson I ve
learned m life IS that you have to
apprectate the moments that are
hard You cant go runnmg from
adverstty I m very thankful for
my yean m Tampa That expen
ence helped develop the man that
Sits here today
Dlifer did what he had to do
Sunday, notably the one btg play
and ball securtty He was mter
cepted early m the third quarter
With the Ravens leading 10-0
But the defense did Its work
afterward- wtth a tint and-goal
at the Balumore 2 the defense

1886 CIMIYy Bflu 4•4 Now RII NIPI Eng ne Good Cond
I on Aok ng S290D (304)29~

1-BalllfHounci-M
1- Golden Rlfriover F
1- Blond Lab- M
1-LobMix-F
1- Golden Retriever- M
1-Biocklab-F
1- GennCin Shophord

$540 58 pt reel cond I on lake
$200aloh 740 9925107
RUIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

SO
'!10 DOWN
Po et 0~hAo
llrii&gt;oundl lndfl1)01
eeaeona 24 mo1 019 9% Fo

~ron~,..,

1a1 nga ca 800 719 300 eXI
AO 0
1500 SCARS FROM $~001 Tax

makmg raciSt comments to
teammates and wound up
gu1ding a team to a Super Bowl
The Gtants w1ll play AFC
champmn Balun Oft! wh ch won
at Oakl01 d 16 3
And fe v nen have made guar
antees the vay coach Jim Fassel
d1d then seen that prcd1ct1on
blossom mto somethmg far more
unpreSSive After the G1ants then
7 4 lost to Detrmt Fassel
prom1sed hiS team would make
the playoffs The G1ants have won
seven stmght and are headed to
Tampa where I 0 years ago they
won the~r second Super Bowl

epotaesa on&amp; &amp; pol ce m
pounds Hoodu Forda Chevv 1
1i ucks Boats RV 1 &amp; mo e For

sl ngo co

x4357

1 800 3 9 3323

570

Muelcal
lnatrumenta
Ham01ond B2 orgon Loolo
apolkll $1500 Cl I 740 i82
6443 or 741l-3e7 7170
FARM ~lJPPL I~ S
&amp; LIVES TOC: K

SAVEl SAVEl SAVE

1991 DodQo Sl~~ h RIT Turbo
AWO ~jgh Mos Sharp
$9500 Blue Boo~ $8700 080
(740)14 .0135
300H~

Heal

Pumps LP &amp;Naua QaaFu
nacea f You Don Ca I Ua We
Bolh LOll (740)446 8306 &amp;
1 &amp;oo-291-oo96
Sawm I $3 795 New Super L.um
be ma1e 2000 a ge capac tea
mo e op ons manufac u e of
aawm a edge s and sk dde s

NORWOOD NDUSTR ES 252
Sonw I Or ve Buffalo NY 422!
FREE n ormal on I BOO !76
1383 Ext 200 U

ludftl Priced Traneml11lone
A Types ACCIII To Ovt

610

Farm Equipment
Ends Janua :y 26 0'11 F no~clng

On

o ooo Tranem 11 on a T an1 e

John Oet 1 Ba era And

Mowo Cond 1ono s \i'lllh JD
C ad I App ove Call 0 Slop In
Al Ca m chaeta Fa m &amp; lawn

(740)448 2412 0

I 800594

1888 S 10 V8 Aulo AIC
$6485 1985 So~oma $428~
893 99 1986 S 0 T ucko

1811 Chev o 11 Extended C1b

4x4 $5495 1990 GMC SLE 4x4
15898 111118 Co'"' er • Doo
37K I5498T OINt In 6 ock
COCK ~0 ORI (740)448
0103

C0111 740 24~ 5877 Co 339
3765
T II Almoll Now (UIId 1 000
m101) Goodyoa Tacke 1 238
75 R1 8 M~lch ng Btl 01 4 Cool
$300 I I I IIi $200 (700)44
938~

zaaa Equal-.g Opponun11y

FREE Maa ectomy p oduc cata
log Look and loa billa In IIMI 1111
eat new b as I fa Ice to m1 and
tashlona Save money Med cere
4 nsu ance accepted 800

SlRV ICES

550
810

755 7860 www De a 0 IOih
lonocom

lllllialltd 97~ Co 24 Hrs (710)
448 0170 ; 800 217.0578 Rog
oro WotorproO lng

apertmtntt at V " ' Mano and

RIYolllciO Apl lmtnll n Mldd o
pon From 1273-1330 Ca 740
992 5084 Equo Houo ng Oppo

1\l-

One Bed oom Ape tmtnt For

41 o tlouMe for Rent

Ron1 71 Vne S 111 Go po 1
Ohio (740)387 7886

JET
AERATION I-IOTORS
Repallld New &amp; RobtJ ft In S1oc1&lt;
Cll Rorl Evano 1 80().537 lle28

L vlnaa on a Ba11m1n1 Watt

Proofing 1 bailment epa re

Proofing 1 btllmonl opo ro
done lree 11t ma111 lilt me
gtlaral\ •• 14)' 1 on lob exper

-

1t78 Qhovy Pickup Good llldy
Flun1 Qood Ext a F am.lb

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

lt'PIIclllono lor 1IR
HUO -~~~~ tpl for olllorly

Cl.ASSIFIED81

..,.

and cllllblld IOH (304)171

\t

lroo 111 ma 1 ca Che 740 1192
63113

L v naaton 1 B•llment Watt

Twtn AtYirTowll'l now ec: apting

3411

Wormed $2!50 (740)448-47!9

done rtt 11t m1t11 lfet me
guaran 11 t•yrl on )Ob exper
II'CI (304)8115-3887

1 3 Bodrooma Fo oc1o11d
F om $1118/Mo. 4'11 Down
Fo Llll •no• &amp;Paymonl Dill • Tara Townttouae Apa tm1n11
Very Spac oua 2 Bldrooma .2
1100-31.3323 Ell !Ill
Floorl CA 1 112 Balh Filly COl
2 Slory 1 1 2 bolh Excollenl pelod Adu 1 Poo a BoDy Poo
. . _ _ Hof'IIIRtlof P11 o Sllrl 1385/Mo No Poll
oncpJ oqu od $3110 mo p uo l.Oul PUl SICUNiy Dopoo I Ro...... (304)87$-1724
qu ld Dar• 740 ••a 3411
lYOn ngl 740 317 0502 740
...0101

IIA uniurn oMd hOulo 1107 Ill
2~d II NIW HIVIn (304)175

C&amp;C Gene 1 Home Man
tanenct Pain ng v ny I d ng
Cl penlry doo I WndoWI betht
mob 10 110mo ropa and more For

AkC Black Lab Pupa 3 Ftma 18
9 Wllkl 0 Cl Had Sho I And

HEN TAl'-,

Home
lmprovamenta
IAIIMINT
WATIRPftOOFING

Uncond ona Jet me .gu1 ant11
LOCI efe encll u nflhld El

GICioUI lYing 1 lnd 2 l&gt;od oom

Look ng Fo 5 10 Acrea or Land
n Oa Ia To Pul AHomo On WI
Pay RIIIOntb o P Cl (31).4)875
188ol

I

NFC

324~

P o ro m C oaa Wa k use~ very
lttll best one sea s makes gave

plans
40x80• 0 $9990
!lOxiOOx 4 $17990
60X1 25114 $34 000 800 248

L.ompo "8&lt;) (?oiO).WB-2791

000 080

Toe

to 50% of Peangneaedwth

leg o 2600 Walls 230 Vo 1 26

11448

800-8 7 3476 ewt 330

N~w Oak
Ha
(3041882 2ol38

Commerc a Tann ng Bad Son-

10 54 Atrll F IV RoiHng, T10n1
18~

come you
cannot fi1de
'Do not pretend or stay Inside
'I'Iiere art liiose wlio want

(304)871-4133

100% Na u a Docto Aacom
mended
F 11
Samp 11
(740)« 982

350 Loti a Acruge

From Go pOIII

f1omPapBl

12 Gauge Beg urn B own ng Au
om•l c !SO n Ful Choke

(740)818-7102
9640
1 Bodroom Nea HoiZII E!X&gt;nom
co Goo hlo ng WD Hoo~up AMAZING METABILISM 8 tok
.278 00 PIUI U II LillO a Tough I Loot 10 200 LDs Easy
Quick Fast D am• c Resu ta
~ Roqulrod (740)446-2957
Ani~

lri Polnll'llaianl

llood NolghDOrhood Ilk ng

Solnlo + PIIVIIO 8/&gt;o
Poncl-.000 Or tAll'
.. S23 ooo c-. aAcrOI
2 homtt 11 uated on one lot In $1800 20 A!!rotl1t !500 Or 37
Mddlopo I Oh 4 Dod oom 2 AcrOI 137 0001 City TOWftllllp
31 AcrOI !Ilium • Blm
Dolh 1 Did oom 158 ooo ca
133 000 Or 13 Aero Homolll
741l-892-61 !54 no land conb'aela
$18.500 1'ycoon LlkiAIII. I0
Acrll $12.0001 Clll Now For
MIIPI CwMJ Flnli1Cing Wllh
s l!hl Propoi~ Mlrlwp LMid
A'lllllalllt In 42 Ohio Counllo
Looking To Buy A Naw Homo?
Don I Hll'l!l Lend? W. Dolll HIWry
3 Bodroom on Rodmond Rldgo on 0n1y 10 loll Lon 304736-72115
1 ac o or Lind Qa ogo&amp;Ap
380 Real Eatate
pllancoa 185 000 304)875-7 &amp;I
Wanted
3 BR B ck Home 1092 Sunn
DIYI Newly Remo dod Ca po I Havo I.Din Hood Secl.- Homo
Fu Basement Exct tnt Condl
n Counlry On 1 8 Acrea Nlodlng
lion (740)448-4 IS
Few RIPIIrl (740).we-23 7

3056

540 Mlscellaneoua

(740)

lur
n shed end unfurn lhad 11cu ty

~740)21511

AFC

Sa n (7401388-9703 740)446
3230

-1279
llnfiX'nllnod 2 BR Clly Or Counly
S.llool Gildon Sptco Pell We
como Aolo o~coa 1740)256
6178

v

lor 1111 -

na1led the free throw the
score 38 32
Syn nes Valley took hasty

TeiNarv~

Role en .. Requ ad (740)388

340

a

Jlappy Gotfi· 'Btrtnday

9162

310 Home1for Sale

3BR 2Bah8 ckHomoWih2
Car Ga age In Ga po a Fo ry
ABSOLUTE GOLD MNE SO $119 500 Reallor (304)8711-30!58
down Nolo S50K Wo k 7 h s
Candy VEND NO r o n 3 BR 281111 1 1/2 S ory Secluded
a oa To r aa 877 4114 869! Homo Sandh I Rd WHh 5 Ac 10
AldUOod for Sail I 9 000 Aloo
24 hrB
37 ACIOI Roiducod To $55 000
Ru for (304)&amp;71-30118
3 BR 2Baltl I 12 Story Homo A
Sou h Side- 9 10 M1 Off ROUIO
35 "7 900 Roa o (304)571-

llllllor Bu~l1jlhBuroau

Now And Vltd Furn u • Sloro

B1 ow Ho day nn KlniQUI We
81 G •~• Monumen 1 And VII

Happy Ad

I
..

On the next Southern pos
semon the Tornadoes ran
nearly a m1nute off the clo&lt;k
before Matt Ne1gler went
back door htt the buck&lt;t and

I&gt;U

Run App OK marty 15 M nutea

210

a

Ntw Ulld Fu nll\lro
New 2 P tel LIV ngroom Bu tee
S3t8 lluy.lltl -

..-----:--.J

TRANSPORTATION

••w

..,__.

FINANCIAL

CMc Development
Group/m I ennlum

u()w '10 I'E::Ef' Y~&gt;~Jfl... C::AT OFF "TifE
,
l"ltctifl/11 :fAStS"

198~ Chovy 414 V I 4 IPIId
bed no 1111111Y OX1111 33 rodll I
nlct 11llabll lruck 1&gt;11 olio 74011112 74811

Ml'lll--.,gln
papr IIIUIIjlet to
1M F - I'M HoullngAI:I
U.

Myers htt the second of two
chanty tosses the score 30
30
Kuer druned another
three potnter from deep tn
the corner then after a
Southern stop the Tornadoes
pulled the ball out toto a
spread offense
The V1k1ngs were forced out
of thetr zone defense and tnto
a man to man
Kuer 1mmedurely went
back door off a Jonathan
Evans feed to g1ve SHS a 35

32

730 Yana &amp; 4-WDa

Apartmenta
tor Rent
1 onc1 2 bedroom ope 1m1n11

knc: :b!Qir amp~

NOWHIRNO
EAIIN UPTO •10.00 AN HOUR
18 80 An HourTo IIIII

EOE

nroo bodroom 2 a bllhl
homo ololl lo Mo go GoH
Cou 11 SUO monlh $850 do
flO!/!. no p11o 740-?&lt;la-8103
420 Mobile Homo
lor Rant

1-800-929-5753

440

TNI ftlltiPIPP WI nol

~717t

Non-RIIU-

bedroom hOuoo n Chhllr
ttllonoC I rtnl diPOII tnd rtl
erono11 1 814 801 1338 oven
lngltnd--

OU CKLY Bache o 1 Mule 1

BA DGE STATE UNIVERSITY 1

Rt a ence Fie

Thllf

EARN '10\JA COLLEGE DEGREE

Doc o a 1 by co upondence
baaed upon p o educat on and
aho I study courte Fo FREE n
to ma on book et phone CAM

1

314-2!80

h I ono 14x70 NO II 2 Bllhl
So Solow Appra lid Vo ut
(740)379-i011

~~mttara

Conlaol Ohio Opera ng
Enal.-.'1111 nlng Conlar
Poono 888 38~ ~!587

Eu tka No Pe

qu od $300 Po Monlh P ua Dt
pooH Co a«o • 30pm (740)

TUitiiiD DOWN ON

NH 03886 USA To 803 508
88ol8 Fax 1 803-!588-4052 E ma1

180 WlntedTo Do
Man 10 milk. 740-94i-2~7B

Small2 Bodroom Ho... n

~Utm;)j;I$JMoWf~~

olllll which- Klllgll

24 And Foi&gt;Nory
From 8 OOim To 3 OOpm
Appllcallon FlO $10 00

tra n ng D vt 1 baaed n M d
wool f 177 230 8002 Sundoy
lam 4pm Mondey eam $pm
Tue Fr17arn '"m 'IJ ah our wtb

801www-com

Wr o BERNE UNIV

80().9&amp;1-83 8

23
2 3 2001

$121

j

Roglonal l Loca Pool k&gt;ne

AnOCrono~
~ Dolll JII1UII)' 22

~8&lt;)7 2411our .....""""

" ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
~u
lo wo k 128/n S7eihl FT/
1'1: FREE 11110 80().871 81J.45 PI

80'11 drop hook BOO 200 2823

APPitiNTICEatiiP

Any

.W!He2tl Exl. 5700

H CUBE EXPRESS
d 1¥1 1 Home evt y
n gl'l Stm did catld antt No
touch r e ght Great benefits

Compan~

IN CONITIIUCTION
Mtn And WOmlrl Agio 8 And
0.. lMm 1b CporoiO And
Ropelr Earth r.lovlng Machlntl

Co US Dg1111 817

WEEKLY Mlkl Monoy
Holplng Ploplo Aoctlvt Gow nllli~ Atlundo Ftoo Doll ol (24
iii oco dod mo11ogo) I 800

!!023.

I-IIIII LOCAL 11

011111

Eta~

wenlocl n adun group home
day ond ngh ah ft ca 740 1192

OHIO OPIIIATING

home Fu o pan mt No
1

He~

s~~~=:at:
J..~v
All&lt; For Mr

WEEKLY GUAftANTIID
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OOIRED 1 800 748 8716 Exl
x o (24hro)

expe ence nece111ry

lbfl App y AI 762 2nd AvlnUI

oa 1po111 740)446-3808 eoe

Polni-WV
llondoy,......., 111111
........ ......., 18th

11)1

WEEKLY mo ng

Flax D1 Schodu 1

TIWNINGPROGAAM
COU.EGE &amp; HS STUOENTS
WELCOME
Apply In Porion At
303MalnS._

S ampod Enve opol OICO DEPT
5 Box U38 ANTIOCH TN
370 1 1ol38 Slln mmoclllllly

11129

ago Au

Mleage BtntHII Ptckage Aval

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED-

v tltdl Rush St f Add .lltd

f(Oin

Strvtcea Accep no Appl catiOns
For LPN Par me LOCI Cove

to a rea dancy 2 week mas e a
• dency US Gov t app oved fo
atuderi oana r qua hd Bua
nea1 Educa on Soc a Servlctt

FULL AND PAII'HIM&amp;
OPEIIINOI

brochureal Satlatac on Gua

on ood

kee th Managemtnr Nu 11na

(Guo..-llolory)
-andW...n-ToDo
T-noOporolorWork Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOTIONS
Homlmlkl 1'1011&lt; whllt
chiiCiron nICI1oOI
'OAY AND &amp;VENINQ 11111'1'
AVAILAILE

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry WrJaht

olf Holiday Billa?
Our office Is curren tlY
seeking fit p/t and

(600)89 ~777
FoCIOry Oool 3:11180 110 000 D•
Ttrrllory To Ca On Coacl1lo.
ISSNEED A LOAN? ConooDdlll count on y t1 000 00 Down 0.
Sd'&lt;&gt;oll And '!buill Groupo
DIDio Do~ C td I OKI NO AP IIYiry lnd I I 1jP PI d by Foelory
$43 500/Y B 3 779--7 5
PL CAT ON FEES 1 100 163 I 800-811 -6777
9008 Exl 938 www hi p pay
Fno Dayl. NlllonWidl IIWIIIIOry
bl a com
IUSITITUTI TIACHU AIDI
RldiJOIIonl (304)~
POR CHILDCARI CINTIR CASH LOANS $2000 UOOO
Mutt havt an ntt eat and dtl 1 Conoo Idol on o UOO 000 Bid
FuiiTmoWoleiiAppy In Po 10
work wlll1 young oh dron Roply Crodl No Crodl To Foolor n
oon Holklly nn 0! Goll~fl
to Mag c Ytlrl DI)'CI I Ctn1tr lormollon 1888-IOol 1444
GOVERNMENT JOBS Ill 00 210Hgh8 PoniP-niWV
CASH LOANS UOOO tiOOO
133 00 per hou polonl 1 Po d 28880
Conoolldo on 10 $200 000 Bod
Tra n no fl'ul Benet 1 For mort
nlorrnll on co eel 1 118 174 URGENTLY NEEDED p umo Crod I No Crodlt TOI Frot lor In
donoll 11 n 138 10 143 lor 2 or 3 lormlllon I-N8-t04-1444
tl8&lt;lOICI. lll:lol
hOIWI - k y Co Soro Too 740
CREDIT PROBLEM8! CALl. THE
8e2-te61
CREDIT E~PERTS LICENIIDI
BONDED CORRECT RIMOVI
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JVDGMENTI AAA Nltd To R-11 Mull Btl Mo
RATING tO 110 DAY&amp; f Ill b • Home a IR 1 lllh
(304)871-41131""ingl
811-olell
FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
Bueln••
App cat on w 11 viet A1duct
Training
poymon 1 o 88'11 CASH IN
CENTIVE
OFFER
llolllpolo Col'llr Collltt
www dob coo or; Col I 800 3ae
(CI'!fll Clooo'Tb Homo)
15101111 IIi
Ce~ay740-4411-o1387
I 800 210 0482
Froe gttnl rnonoy a ltdero lund NIW 18 ft WldW ...8t per mon
Rag tQ0.05-12746
no Bus nell. Educat on Home on y 1270 ptr mon co now 1
Pun:hlllli Ropo Deb I Ttl.. -1-6777
150
School•
Rttta ch W ttrl A I Ill P Ul
mo • Gua antetd 1 Ill 511
New daub 1 wide 3 br 2 ba
lnatructlon
2775 o www grants-mt-oom com
Uti oo down on y •298 po
mon coli- 1-eooGI~m
P H-0-f.O.Q.II A P .. Y
HIGH 8CIIOOL IENIOIII
Now FIH- 14x70 $181189 00
SENIOR PORTRAITS COST
GROWING BUS NESS NEEDS
3 B•droom 2 Bill\ 1 877 777
TOO MUCH..?
HELP Wo k rom home Ma o
4170
WE ARE THE ALTEIINATI¥1 I
111/ECommarce $522 lwoak pan
1mo $1000 $.1000/Wttk ru 11mo
MA N STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
800 82 8838
www d eam
511 MAIN ST P1: PLEASANT
DOCTORAL/MASTER S DE
iii*H.corn
30&lt;1-e711-7271
GREES Aco od lod 1 mon h dOc
&amp;PORTS MINDED
lndMdul Need For lDcll

.W 7 lXI 88ol

30 Announcement•

mmed ate
NObOdy bla • ou prlc
11 Na ona Coni ac Buvt 1
eoo 490 0731 ex 0 www na
110na1ContractbWt a.com

ftomPIIpll

basel ne dnve and drew the
foul advantage
but mused Myens
the scorehn35 a

Need ~0 rk to "'"'··

ea Set tmen a

Ouo es

p oblem•

Southem

~~~~~~~~~~ffi~ij~ij~~i~~~=~===~~~~~~~=~~---l30
. ~110

Houeehold
Goode

897 141&lt;&amp;1 28R I Bs h On Renl
Profeaalonal
eel Lot
G eat Cond on
Services
1304)875 2820 Co AftOf 4 30 Or
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay Leave MtiiiQt
cash o ema n ng paymen 1 on 3 b 2 bl on cho ce 10 304 136P ope ry Sod Mo gag08 Annu
7295

Gua an eed o he p

RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters will be senmg
Southern Tornado Jackets m
either deep purple or khaki

"'""'¥

ANNOUNCEMENTS

o es a

Southern Jackets
on sale

CQmb1ru1tlons
The Jackets wdl be a hooded
4esign 11milar to those purdwcd
liter the past couple yean
The nylon exter1or makes
f'em durable for daily wear and
also makes them su1table for
e~ther Winter or early spnngnme
.comfort
The cost of the Jacket whtch
sports a Tornado logo lettered m
Southern gold ts $51
Proceeds w1ll go to the
schools athletic programs To
place arden restdents may con
tact any athleuc booster athlete
Sharon Hall 949-2627 or the
school 949 261 1

MERCHANDISE

230

by N eo e Rea

RACINE The Home
Nat anal Bank tn Racme has
announced that Fnday, Jan 19
will be Home Nattonal Bank
mght at Southern H1gh School
The Tornadoes will host the
Miller Falcons m a boys vamty
basketball contest at 6 30 p m
Adm1ss10n to the game IS free
compbments of Home Nat10nal

Bank
Add1t10nally the bank w11l
sponsor a money scramble for
S300 an event that hu been very
popular over the past several
years T1cket numbers will be
drawn gtvmg five fans :lll oppor
tumty to part1c1pate m the
scramble

lnd Porll $3800 (304)8711-

(304)H5'3887

840 l!lectrtcaland
Refrlg1r1tlon

crown
It was the match and the fire
has been burmng smce then
Fassel satd I thmk we shocked a
lot of people but we didn t shock
ourselves
They definttely shocked the
Vtkings (12-6) by taking a 14 0
lead before Mmnesotas vaunted
offense got onto the field Collins
found Ike Htlhard spnntmg
behtnd che depleted secondary
for a 46 yard touchdown w1th
JUSt 1 57 gone
The V1kings nushandled the
ensumg kickoff and Lyle West
recovered at the Mtnnesota 18
On tile next play, Collins hit Greg
Comella for the fitnback s first
career touchdown
The rout was on
We were gomg to throw 1t up
and expose their defenSive backs

osua:s

from Pllp

good thiS year but I m com
fortable taking 3s Rychart sa1d
Sull he sa d when he got the
ball on the penmeter pr10r to hiS
first attempt he cotldn t find
anyo 1e to pass to so he thl'l!w
one up there
Sean Connolly scort!d 15
pomts - all on 3 pomters - to
lead Oh10 State whtch had lost
1ts last two games Bohan Savovtc
had 14 pomts Johnson 13 and
Zach Wtltiams 10
We wcrcn t tough enough
down the stretch Connolly satd
Johnson added We had smnc

The Dally Sentinel • Page B3
shots on the next two posaesstons and the SHS defense
forced two stratght turnovers
Southern then went 7 for-8
at the hne the rest of the
game to put the game away
Three break away lay ups
from Hubbard and Ash (2)
then added the ic1ng on the
vtctory cake the final bemg a
convmcmg 53 39 wm
In the first quarter South
ern made several turnovers
and began a three po1nt
shooting spree as Symmes
forced SHS to a penmeter
game
The V1kes took an 11 6 first
penod lead then con! nued
the trend throughout the sec
ond frame
Mmed shots by both clubs
kept the other 111 the game
Symmes gomg 8-30 from the
fitld and Southern gmng 5
for 26 both under 30 per
cent
The game was ned at the
half '0 ?O
Southern lut 18 of ?5 at
the I ne wh1le hmmg 14 for

45 from the field Southern
was 7 for 22 oa three
The Tornadoes had 17
rebounds (Kuer 6 F1sher 4
Evans 4) four assuts (B Hftl
2 Evans 2) 13 turnovers i2
steals (Fuher 4 K1ser 3) three
blocks (FISher 3) and 12
fouls
Symmes Valley hot 17 of. 49
overall wnh 2 of 8 threes and
a 3-for 7 ntght at the hne
The Vtkes had 37 rebounds
(Myers 9 W Is on 11) (lad
three assiSts ( Carpenter 7) 14
turnovers four steals and 24
fouls
Southern won the reserve
game 41-35 led by Justin
Connolly wah a game h1gh
21 po1nts Ty H1ll w th s x and
Jordan H1ll w th four
Symmes was led by T J
Grubl)e with 12 J D M ller
With ten and Kyle Gd 1 ore
Vlth tight
Southern
hosts M llcr m
Home Natlo ul Bank N ght
Fnday m Rac1ne Adnumon
to the game s free

held Oalcland to a field goal by
Sebastian Jamkowski
Then Dlifer took the offense
down the field for 51 yards and
Matt Stovers field goal boosted
the lead back to 10 That was all
the Ravens needed althougJt,rthc:
defense played loosely n the
fourth quarter and Oakland
almost scored - a TO pass from
Bobby Hoymg to Andre Rison
was nullified by pass Interference
on Rison
Hoymg was m because Rich
Gannon was hit m the shoulder
tn the second quarter by Tony
Stragusa He went out of the
game returned m the thud quar
ter but then left agam
I don t know tf tt would have
made a difference 1f I had been
100 percent healthy m the 1econd
half Gannon satd They were
the better team today
The Ravens were too elated
about th1s Win to talk about the
team they 11 face tn two weeks -

the G~ants
Moden and Mara are fr ends
and so are Balnn ore coach Bna0
B1llick and New Yorks J m Fassel
one of my Best fnends tn
football IS what Btlhck satd pf
the G1ants coach
The Ravens 15 4 on a 10
game wmnmg streak w ll play a
team that s 14 4 and on a seven
game wmnmg streak
And 11 will be two defenses that
stoJ&gt; the run - the Ravens were
lint and the G1ants second tn
rushtng defense thiS season
Right now both teams are
savonng the moment
We ve always had to say, Watt
unul tomorrow say to next year
Moden sa~d But I knew that
somehow some way, we were
gomg to get It done I sa1d to
Bnan B1llick I will see you
when we accept the trophy .on
Sunday If we don t I want to
thank you for a great year
Now 11 can get even greater

sa1d Amano Toomer who had a 7
yard TO catch m the thoro! quar
t~~ to end 1h~ scormg l'hey
can t play Witb us
Partteularly Without regulars
Orlando Thomas and Kenny
Wnght wh1ch made New Yorks
deciSion to throw - and throw
often - an easy one
We felt It became con tag ous
otfens ve coordmator Sean Pay
ton sa d We couldn t get the ball
out there enough
The defense was grateful and
showed It by completely befud
dhng
q11arterback
Daunte
Culpepper the first year starter
who looked It The Gtants also
made star rece1vers Randy Moss
(two catches 18 yards) and Cns
Carter (three for 24) VIrtually
mvlSible
We ve been very fortunate
these two playoff games where
the pf!'ssure IS off us sa1d defen
Slve end M1chael Strahan Every
touchdown on the board the
defense thmks 11 has enough to
wm
The touchdown receptions
kept conung Joe Jurev1c1us had
an 8 yarder and Hilliard had a 7
yarder Brad Dalut5o added field
goals of 21 and 22 yards
Hilliard made 10 catches for
155 yards and Toomer SIX for 81
NewYork gamed 380 yards m the
atr and 518 overall agamst the
V1kings desptte beong underdogs
Monnesota whtch rarely plays
well outdoon was a 2 potnt
favome
Its gomg to be hard for us to
wm a Super Bowltn Mmnesota
Moss satd I don t want to say

Mmnesota will never w n a Super
Bowl but 1t ts gomg to be hard
The V1kings became the first
NFC champ1onsh1p shutout VIC
tlm smce the G ants beat Wash
mgton 17-0 en route to vmmng
the Super Bo vi fono vmg tl e
1986 season It vas the r first
shutout loss m 158 gan es s 1 ce
Denms Green beca 1 e oach n
1992
I thought v d o e o t v th
a lot of fil'l! sa d Robe t Sm th
vho led the NFC v h 1 5?
yards rushmg but managed only
44 Sunday The guys to 1 e
seemed as ready as 1y 1 e th s
year
But even before the se ond h If
began the V1k ngs kne v they hod
no answers By then 1t vas 344!
the largest such nargm n NFC
champ10nsh1p game h story
How mpressed were the odds
n akers1
Baltimore was establ shed as an
early favonte for the Super Bo'!{l
even though It d dn t w!n ts dt\'1
SIOn But the wild card Ravens
were 12 4 and have won three
t1mes n the postseason behmd ~
record setting defense
Th11 team was referred to as
the worst team ever to wm the
home field advantage n the
National Football League G1ants
co owner Well ngton Mara sa1d
And today, on our field of pamt
ed mud we proved we re the
worst team ever to wm the NFC
champ1onsh1p In two weeks
we re gomg to try to becm 1e the
worst team ever to w n the Super
Bowl

bad mental breakdowns
We played bad at the end
Brown sa1d Mmncsota had
nothmg to lose and they made us
play poorly We made some bad
deCISions We had careless nus
takes and turned the ban over way
too n any t1 nes
Terrance S111111ons had 'I of
hiS ?7 pmnts m the s.c ' d half
for the Goph&lt;f! who had won
mne of their last 10 games Dau.:r
had 15 poultS and Burleson 12
Oh1o State led 39 22 at the
half forcmg I~ Minnesota
turnovers and out!\! bound ng the
Gophers 16 11
That was as disgusted as I ve
been with this team all year
Monson sa1d Then I was as
proud of the u as I have been all

year
Down 10 7 at the 14 Q? mark
of the first half ~e Buckeyes
took command with a ? 1 7 run
Johnson Savov c and Connolly
each scored SIX pomts 111 the run
Connolly almost bookendcd tl e
spurt "th 3 po 1 t rs I tttng a
shot beh 1 d the a c to g1v 01 o
State the lead fo good t 1 ~ 10
a 1d the capp 1g 1t v th a tl r
3 wtth 5 31 left for a ?8 Plead
We vcre 11 for a long 11ght
Ulltd we vere finally abl to start
playmg Monso 1 sa1d
0 Bnen sa~d he was thnlled
that t~e Buckeyes von But even
he conceded Its d1sappo ntmg
the way IW n s 01 aged the sec
ond half

�•
Monday, January 15,2001

Monday, January 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Home National

Bank to sponsor
Soutlaea 11 p •
Jan. 19
GI'IIIWIYJ
LMI&amp; l"ound Yllt'd .....
1nd W.m.t To Do Adt
Mul'l S. Ptlclln AclvIAIBYNE QEADUNI!.

2 00 p.m 11M dly beiON
11M 1d 11 to run Sundly &amp;
Mondoy -.!Ilion 2 00 p m
Friday
SENTINEL QfAPUNE.

1 00 p m the dty IM!ore
the -.1 Ia to run
Sundoy &amp; Mondoy -.!Hion
1 00 p m Frldoy
AEG!mA QfADUNE

2 dlye before the od lo to
run by 4 30 p m SI'IUrcloy
A Mondly ..thlon- 4 30
Thuraday
O.adllnee oubjoct to

Help Wanted
FEDERAL POSTAL JOU
UP o $1885 hou H ng lo

200
H ca I for IPC&gt;IICIIIonltx
amlnat on nfo mat on FeCit 1

Help Wanted

__,

110

Bualneu
Opportunity

WE ARE -110111
Elm U!&gt;To fTIHr -

WHidy

H o Fu sono111 1 800 598

•Fu18ono1111

4504 txttnt on !i t1 (7tm 9pm

•WIIk~Paycho&lt;l&lt;

CST)
ABSOlUTELY FREE NFO

•Paid Vacallon
•Retirement Plan
•ProlotiiOnaJ A

AFTER HOLIDAY CASH S ay
home 1 uff ng &amp; ma ng enve
opes Make up to $938 00 weak
y Eltl)tr ence unntcuaa v
Stnel SASE o Rae Bar 01 Box
lie I A Jopln M0 &amp;1902

410 HOUIM for Rent

12K50 MOO o Homl New KICh
en Ntw Bath oom New F oo 1
16xl Covo td Porch Ctntrll A
·~ 000 (740)«1 930

1 2 'ull 8111mtnt W h natu 1
gal Fu nace Non Smoke • No

38R -

UR

DR Ktlchon Balli

Sunday Co 1 (304 87~ 2066
$375 Mo + Dopoll 304 875
2068

38R Oulll NOighl&gt;ori'IOO&lt;I Counl)'
0 Cly SChoo I. AYII IIlii Fobltr

"""'*"'o

tnte net Ulllfl Wanted

$2000-$5000/mo
www •oo~Mt»~z ne

320 Mobile HomM
for Sale

ery 1$1 Pert Welcome Rete tnc

REGARDLESS OF PAST CREDIT
HSTORY Gan ng a mollgal)l n

lntoelalon.... 8 ......
Coi poeltlon
II Currently Adding To Our Staff!

II

(740)~

76

(304)812-3121

Oday s ma ktl 1 no o~y poll
ble ra easy Fo t 11 nforma
on &amp; app ca on ca Jtnn ftr
4 9-738-7623

Cor!w Work Willi Tho BESTI
Coli Today For An ""'""""

1-IH-4711-7223 Ext. 1t11

Ava Bend Place NQW Accap ng
App ca 01'18 to
Bed oom Hud
Subs dtd .(pa tme" o Hand
capped and 0 aao ed EOE

New 3 8odroom Home Clolt To
Ga po 1 Pa yFunlhtd m
Opanlng (740)25&amp;-11~74

APPL CAT ON AND EXAM N
FORMAT ON Polla JODI
$ 8 35 h
1 888 726 9083
xll'il 7an-7pmCST

510

005

Personal•
AMAZ NG PHVSIC SOLUTIONS

Halp

1898 o e ma
maUa181kln com

START

95.t 202
m a ~I a 0 m~

DATING TONIGHT

Have fun m..t ng t glb t 1 ng1t1

n you a •• C1ll ro mort nfo

mo on

800 ROMANCE "'

1'/35

CLA MS PROCESSOR UO SolO!
hr polenlol Proo011 ng c11m1 1
lily Trl n ng p OY dod MUST
own PC CALL NOW Ill otl8117.0 &amp;12
CLA MS PROC!880RI U0-140/
lw polanllal Pro-• ng ofllmo 1
lily Tro n ng p OY dod MUST
own PC CALL NOW 188 823-

CLAIIItOOM AtDI
Tho Molgo LOCI Schoo DII lei

cur tnt 'I till en optn "G for 1
C 111raom A Cit n 1111 Severt

JfMOVAH S
WITNESSES BohiY or Hind CIPPid Cl111 II
E .-&lt;11 am ly F nd OUI IICII lhl MIIQI MIICI e SChOO Th I I I
society doean wan you o know lu dmo poohlon (n no monlh/182
Pt'et 1 conf den a J w FACTS deyl II 7 hOUII PI dly) Wllh I
t~~o~ 454 Me a ne Fa 1 WA
111n ng 111ry ol It 7t po hou
~-9153 www macg ego m n 1
w th lui bentr tl ana ttlrtment
Roqu emon11 lor lhl polhlon n

lea erg

New To 'feu Thrift 611oppt
9 Weal S 1moon Alheno
740-592 &amp;12
Qua ty c oth ng and househo d
ema $ oo bag aa e every
Thu Idly Monday h u Sa u day
9 ll0-5 30

GlvMway

70"

tht medications uted n the t ut
men ol behavior handicaps able
o ead and w lte o perfo m du
dea and txplrltnce working with
ado eacen 1 who nave a be
hor.or• hand cap Per.one nte
O! od n fiiJPiy ne for ttl I 1)91 on
ehou d 11nd 1 ler t of lnte ••
1nd 1 raeume lo Wltlam L Buck
ley Superlntenden Me gs LOCI
School Dlotrlc M Box m Po

moroy OH 45788 Tho doaclllne
to accept ng appuca ona 1
January 9 2001 Tho antlclpllod
ata t no da • to ttlt pos t on •
ftbrUIIy 2001
CNA C11111 To So Olio od AI

Yard Sale

80

c udll Hgn Schoo Dp omo o
GED kMWIIdgo OIIHCnlng lUll
ogltl lo -tnll n 1 opoelol
"'""" ootl ng l&gt;lolc knowlodgo ol

Lak n hoap Ia P ojecttd Sta 1
Dale 1 Fobrua y 12 2001 Fo 8

Auction
and Flea Market

WHkl 8 OOam 4:00pm Monday

Rick Pea san Auc on Company
tu
me aucl onee comp ele
auction
aerv ce
Licensed

t660ho&amp; Wos V gna 31J.4
l73-5765 Or 304-773-5447

F lday Pltlll App )' n Ptr10n
At Lak n Hotp ta Monday F
day 8am .tpm App y To Ann

VonMollr AN App cal on diad
111 January 16 200 AI Appllc
lnll Mull HIYe A H gh Schoo
Diploma Or OED
Compute ntt net Ptr10n Need
od 17111111 Part 111M $ 25/hr Fu
lme Bonu111 Paid 'IJacatlont
www wea lhwfthiiM com
1 688-281-4&amp;11

wan ed To Buy Ulld Mob le
Homo ca 740-4-48.0175 Or 304-

675-5985

Qie!eN Omls
Appl c1t on• 1 • now bt ng ac
coplld lor 1 lUI limo I 9 p m Dlo1 y Cook Expe lonco p olo odl
tftrenc11 rtqu rtd App cants
may opp y do ly Mon Sun e 4
p m Come )0 n our teamll You
be g 1«1 you d dl Ravtnlwood

Ca o Con I 1 3 Wllh nglon
Slrloi.RMnowoociWV

110

Help Wanted
U 000 WEEKLY I Moiling. eoO
Poo ogo &amp;

Supp oo p o

$45 000/YR po tnll 0 I nHd
p,op I 0 p OCIII Cl m1 Muat
own compull modem We 111n
Clll 1 688-~7-48116 lXI 11115

hou

DriYoro

Tranoport No ox
po~onco n01cled 2 wook ~· a
COl. Ill nlng Groll pay S:Jol 000
yr yoo p uo u l&gt;lnollo a po d
~AM

1m nation nfo m11 on Ftdtrl

Nro Fu lonolll 1 100 511
411).4 oOionolon 1518 (71m 1pm

can

' FIDIRAL POITAL JOII
Up o t18 II hour HI ng lor
200 I lroo COl for IIIOIIcl!lonltx
am nil on nro motion Fodtrll
Hilt Fu lonor 11 1 100 oee
4504 oxlono on 1111 (7om tpm

Cat)

••

•

~~~Ill

www-. com

EARN 125 000 TO 150 000/YR
Mtcl 01

neu anct a

III'CI N -

F.IOERAL POITAL JOII
Up o 111 85 hou H lng lo
:100 I I 10 co lor opp lootloN..

I

temporary workers to
fill three shlfiB dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;
management
opportunities make th s
an excHing choice for
students housewives
seniors or anyone
looking for extra
money Pick up the
phone now to set up
your personal
Interview
We ara waiting to hire
YOU I
CALL TODAY

no Aaa a

mmtd~

Homo

compultr , _ FREE lnlornol
I 800-281- Dopl I 11»

Eo n Up 1b 3!10 In One Otly li'IUI
Fr11 P ctu 1 nv tt You Frlendl
To '!bu Homo For AProiHo 0111
P cturt Party Fem ly Plcturt
Po I Spec I lr P CIUIII Wf

PIOYidt C10tnlna: J--, E..ry

lnlng Cd 101&gt;411) 1313

EASY WOftKI

Q

oal payl Eo n

1500 p u1 1 week 1111mb ng

procfuoll 11 IIOmo No - ntollllly 01 10 lr•• 1 1100
at? -•1:11

Ooub • Wide 3 Bed oom 2 Bath
$!00 Fee Take ove Pa~mtn a

nlo no

ona G adua e Schoo 35 Cen
er St Unit 8 Wo feboro Fa 1

IOCIAL IICUttm' 1111'1
No FlO Unlela Wo Will

1 886-582·3308

blmoOI&gt;Irno odu

Corpot • Upllolotory Cloonlng

Gua an ttd Wo k With Febu out
Reau a Fo a F •• Eat mate
Colf(304)8711-4001 TQ&lt;Ioyl

NEEDEDI Paople o loll up 10 30
poundt n 30 Clay ntxptnl vt
eau 11 QUI antted a natura

----..-......... _
our_.,....,
tolll:htnlll ar1VIIIfli¥WM

-on-.- rwllglon,
""""' or II¥ lrMnllor! .,
,.,... qawc:t1jil. . . .

•ar 'ut.mt r •

-·ln-oi1M

~ow

~ltoinied ... al d II Ill
ICIVMI111Un INI na '" P

.,. ........,_on onoquol
-""'"YREAl ESTATE

Bualneaa
Opportunity
OOOe WEEKLYII MAL NG

$1
b ochu 11 FREE Pol age S a
mmad a 1 yl Ruah ae t ad
d eased stamped enve ope to
HSE Inc Depart 20 PO flo&gt; 573

AmoiO dam NV 12010
$3qoo woek y MA LNG 400
b otllu aa AT HOME NO Olll ga
lion 10 nYol I 800 283 3880
ol&lt;l 1386 (241\ra

INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends that ~ou do bus
neaa w h peop e you know and
NOT o aend money h ough he
ma unt you have Invest ga ed
lhrl olllflng

A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE EIIID

shed vend ng oute W 11 b~
1129 Undt $9K minimum nvtt
ment equ ed E~tce en month 'I
prot poten 18 Flnanet avtlab 1
QOOCI croon -aaa 270-21-

3 IR Mobile Homa In Po 1
A01 \l&gt;u Pay Dopoo l U UIOB

Wlnte B1rgaln Th 1 Peyment
111 than l'lnt Loan may be as
tumeb • Approx mate 3 veara
paymonll lOft I lake 1111 loll on

Mobile Home For Ren

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T l
BANK FORECLOSURES HUD
VA FHA LOW OR NO MONEY
DOWNI OK CRED T FOR LIST
NGSI CALL I 8()().335.()1)20 OXI
961

dopooll equl od no pels 700
11112 2218

1 8odroom Aponmonl n Go ~
1 Ul 01 &amp; App ancu Inc ud
td 1371!/mo (7401245-6155

and

1 Bedroom Ga agt Apa menl
Konoguo $21501 Mon h Ulll 11

Chu ch 8u d ng wllh P111onogo
hallOO (304)87&amp;-18 •

Vlnlon Ohio Pilei Irick
lullellng 8omil Equlpmonl Mlln

s''"' unoo ·oliO. (740)288e.wulllrapm
Betwetn Pomiroy and Athen1
mol&gt;llo IIOmo Iiiio lor ronl, bOIUIIIU
oounlry lllllng 740 1192 2187

4 Bodroom Fo m Ho1110 8 Acroo
0 lond (740~172
FORECLOSED OOV T HOMESI
Low or $0 downl Tu Ropoo 1
E1 n $500 10 UOO po WIOM n Btnk UPICIIII HUD VA FHA
you bo h obo a 11 ppo 1 o u I.Ow o no monay OK Crodlll ~o
oppo un ly o IICUI you lulu 1 LloUngo CoN 1 800 1101 1717 "'
Low nvoo mon 1 100 272 Olt3 t83.
•weeomu n ng com Membt

to say

560

Merchandlee

Petl for Sale

640

Hay

a Grain
Dodgo 150LE 2 WO Au o
13 000 M11 Good Cond&gt;
Aak ng ••~oo (304)882

ROund Ba 81 4x4 N~ Wat n

710 Autoa for Sale
1-DadllhunciMix- F
1-Terrier- F

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

ERS -A moal eve yone approved

w th $0 down low mon hly pay
men a

540 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandise
9 HP Slaro Snow Blowlr Etclrlc
Slarl So r P ope eo 1300
(740)446-4496 alllr 6
ALL STEEL BU LD NGS New up

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
Ape monlo $265 And $328 Ot DELL COMPUTERS Even wlh
poa t &amp; Rete encea Aequ ed
1111 han l)t feet c ed t
soo(740)8811-4531
477 90 8 Coda AC2 www omc
IOiutlonl com
IIAUTIPUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PAICEB AT JACK
ION EIITATEI 52 Willwood
DriYI lrom 128t 10 1370 wa k o
lhOP a mOVIOI Ca 740 448
410 F 11 Avanue 1&amp;2 Bed oom

BIIUNIR LAND
(7~1 14e2

Kerr Rd. NicaAIM 1.M 5 All'
• Homo Sllollloglnnlng AI
$22 000 Or Buy Thll 3-2 Homo
On 5 Acroo Now M5 0001 nRio
~

• -

$80

2719
94 Dodge Rom 1~00 5 SpHd
v 8 740)2118-11224
88 Dodge Rom 1100 Low Mlo
ogo AuiG' AC (740)388-0182

Raveru went five games with
out a touchdown
He IS now 10 1 as a starter
Obvtously I m exc1ted sa1d
011fer who limshed 9 of. 1B for
190 yards
The greatest lesson I ve
learned m life IS that you have to
apprectate the moments that are
hard You cant go runnmg from
adverstty I m very thankful for
my yean m Tampa That expen
ence helped develop the man that
Sits here today
Dlifer did what he had to do
Sunday, notably the one btg play
and ball securtty He was mter
cepted early m the third quarter
With the Ravens leading 10-0
But the defense did Its work
afterward- wtth a tint and-goal
at the Balumore 2 the defense

1886 CIMIYy Bflu 4•4 Now RII NIPI Eng ne Good Cond
I on Aok ng S290D (304)29~

1-BalllfHounci-M
1- Golden Rlfriover F
1- Blond Lab- M
1-LobMix-F
1- Golden Retriever- M
1-Biocklab-F
1- GennCin Shophord

$540 58 pt reel cond I on lake
$200aloh 740 9925107
RUIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

SO
'!10 DOWN
Po et 0~hAo
llrii&gt;oundl lndfl1)01
eeaeona 24 mo1 019 9% Fo

~ron~,..,

1a1 nga ca 800 719 300 eXI
AO 0
1500 SCARS FROM $~001 Tax

makmg raciSt comments to
teammates and wound up
gu1ding a team to a Super Bowl
The Gtants w1ll play AFC
champmn Balun Oft! wh ch won
at Oakl01 d 16 3
And fe v nen have made guar
antees the vay coach Jim Fassel
d1d then seen that prcd1ct1on
blossom mto somethmg far more
unpreSSive After the G1ants then
7 4 lost to Detrmt Fassel
prom1sed hiS team would make
the playoffs The G1ants have won
seven stmght and are headed to
Tampa where I 0 years ago they
won the~r second Super Bowl

epotaesa on&amp; &amp; pol ce m
pounds Hoodu Forda Chevv 1
1i ucks Boats RV 1 &amp; mo e For

sl ngo co

x4357

1 800 3 9 3323

570

Muelcal
lnatrumenta
Ham01ond B2 orgon Loolo
apolkll $1500 Cl I 740 i82
6443 or 741l-3e7 7170
FARM ~lJPPL I~ S
&amp; LIVES TOC: K

SAVEl SAVEl SAVE

1991 DodQo Sl~~ h RIT Turbo
AWO ~jgh Mos Sharp
$9500 Blue Boo~ $8700 080
(740)14 .0135
300H~

Heal

Pumps LP &amp;Naua QaaFu
nacea f You Don Ca I Ua We
Bolh LOll (740)446 8306 &amp;
1 &amp;oo-291-oo96
Sawm I $3 795 New Super L.um
be ma1e 2000 a ge capac tea
mo e op ons manufac u e of
aawm a edge s and sk dde s

NORWOOD NDUSTR ES 252
Sonw I Or ve Buffalo NY 422!
FREE n ormal on I BOO !76
1383 Ext 200 U

ludftl Priced Traneml11lone
A Types ACCIII To Ovt

610

Farm Equipment
Ends Janua :y 26 0'11 F no~clng

On

o ooo Tranem 11 on a T an1 e

John Oet 1 Ba era And

Mowo Cond 1ono s \i'lllh JD
C ad I App ove Call 0 Slop In
Al Ca m chaeta Fa m &amp; lawn

(740)448 2412 0

I 800594

1888 S 10 V8 Aulo AIC
$6485 1985 So~oma $428~
893 99 1986 S 0 T ucko

1811 Chev o 11 Extended C1b

4x4 $5495 1990 GMC SLE 4x4
15898 111118 Co'"' er • Doo
37K I5498T OINt In 6 ock
COCK ~0 ORI (740)448
0103

C0111 740 24~ 5877 Co 339
3765
T II Almoll Now (UIId 1 000
m101) Goodyoa Tacke 1 238
75 R1 8 M~lch ng Btl 01 4 Cool
$300 I I I IIi $200 (700)44
938~

zaaa Equal-.g Opponun11y

FREE Maa ectomy p oduc cata
log Look and loa billa In IIMI 1111
eat new b as I fa Ice to m1 and
tashlona Save money Med cere
4 nsu ance accepted 800

SlRV ICES

550
810

755 7860 www De a 0 IOih
lonocom

lllllialltd 97~ Co 24 Hrs (710)
448 0170 ; 800 217.0578 Rog
oro WotorproO lng

apertmtntt at V " ' Mano and

RIYolllciO Apl lmtnll n Mldd o
pon From 1273-1330 Ca 740
992 5084 Equo Houo ng Oppo

1\l-

One Bed oom Ape tmtnt For

41 o tlouMe for Rent

Ron1 71 Vne S 111 Go po 1
Ohio (740)387 7886

JET
AERATION I-IOTORS
Repallld New &amp; RobtJ ft In S1oc1&lt;
Cll Rorl Evano 1 80().537 lle28

L vlnaa on a Ba11m1n1 Watt

Proofing 1 bailment epa re

Proofing 1 btllmonl opo ro
done lree 11t ma111 lilt me
gtlaral\ •• 14)' 1 on lob exper

-

1t78 Qhovy Pickup Good llldy
Flun1 Qood Ext a F am.lb

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

lt'PIIclllono lor 1IR
HUO -~~~~ tpl for olllorly

Cl.ASSIFIED81

..,.

and cllllblld IOH (304)171

\t

lroo 111 ma 1 ca Che 740 1192
63113

L v naaton 1 B•llment Watt

Twtn AtYirTowll'l now ec: apting

3411

Wormed $2!50 (740)448-47!9

done rtt 11t m1t11 lfet me
guaran 11 t•yrl on )Ob exper
II'CI (304)8115-3887

1 3 Bodrooma Fo oc1o11d
F om $1118/Mo. 4'11 Down
Fo Llll •no• &amp;Paymonl Dill • Tara Townttouae Apa tm1n11
Very Spac oua 2 Bldrooma .2
1100-31.3323 Ell !Ill
Floorl CA 1 112 Balh Filly COl
2 Slory 1 1 2 bolh Excollenl pelod Adu 1 Poo a BoDy Poo
. . _ _ Hof'IIIRtlof P11 o Sllrl 1385/Mo No Poll
oncpJ oqu od $3110 mo p uo l.Oul PUl SICUNiy Dopoo I Ro...... (304)87$-1724
qu ld Dar• 740 ••a 3411
lYOn ngl 740 317 0502 740
...0101

IIA uniurn oMd hOulo 1107 Ill
2~d II NIW HIVIn (304)175

C&amp;C Gene 1 Home Man
tanenct Pain ng v ny I d ng
Cl penlry doo I WndoWI betht
mob 10 110mo ropa and more For

AkC Black Lab Pupa 3 Ftma 18
9 Wllkl 0 Cl Had Sho I And

HEN TAl'-,

Home
lmprovamenta
IAIIMINT
WATIRPftOOFING

Uncond ona Jet me .gu1 ant11
LOCI efe encll u nflhld El

GICioUI lYing 1 lnd 2 l&gt;od oom

Look ng Fo 5 10 Acrea or Land
n Oa Ia To Pul AHomo On WI
Pay RIIIOntb o P Cl (31).4)875
188ol

I

NFC

324~

P o ro m C oaa Wa k use~ very
lttll best one sea s makes gave

plans
40x80• 0 $9990
!lOxiOOx 4 $17990
60X1 25114 $34 000 800 248

L.ompo "8&lt;) (?oiO).WB-2791

000 080

Toe

to 50% of Peangneaedwth

leg o 2600 Walls 230 Vo 1 26

11448

800-8 7 3476 ewt 330

N~w Oak
Ha
(3041882 2ol38

Commerc a Tann ng Bad Son-

10 54 Atrll F IV RoiHng, T10n1
18~

come you
cannot fi1de
'Do not pretend or stay Inside
'I'Iiere art liiose wlio want

(304)871-4133

100% Na u a Docto Aacom
mended
F 11
Samp 11
(740)« 982

350 Loti a Acruge

From Go pOIII

f1omPapBl

12 Gauge Beg urn B own ng Au
om•l c !SO n Ful Choke

(740)818-7102
9640
1 Bodroom Nea HoiZII E!X&gt;nom
co Goo hlo ng WD Hoo~up AMAZING METABILISM 8 tok
.278 00 PIUI U II LillO a Tough I Loot 10 200 LDs Easy
Quick Fast D am• c Resu ta
~ Roqulrod (740)446-2957
Ani~

lri Polnll'llaianl

llood NolghDOrhood Ilk ng

Solnlo + PIIVIIO 8/&gt;o
Poncl-.000 Or tAll'
.. S23 ooo c-. aAcrOI
2 homtt 11 uated on one lot In $1800 20 A!!rotl1t !500 Or 37
Mddlopo I Oh 4 Dod oom 2 AcrOI 137 0001 City TOWftllllp
31 AcrOI !Ilium • Blm
Dolh 1 Did oom 158 ooo ca
133 000 Or 13 Aero Homolll
741l-892-61 !54 no land conb'aela
$18.500 1'ycoon LlkiAIII. I0
Acrll $12.0001 Clll Now For
MIIPI CwMJ Flnli1Cing Wllh
s l!hl Propoi~ Mlrlwp LMid
A'lllllalllt In 42 Ohio Counllo
Looking To Buy A Naw Homo?
Don I Hll'l!l Lend? W. Dolll HIWry
3 Bodroom on Rodmond Rldgo on 0n1y 10 loll Lon 304736-72115
1 ac o or Lind Qa ogo&amp;Ap
380 Real Eatate
pllancoa 185 000 304)875-7 &amp;I
Wanted
3 BR B ck Home 1092 Sunn
DIYI Newly Remo dod Ca po I Havo I.Din Hood Secl.- Homo
Fu Basement Exct tnt Condl
n Counlry On 1 8 Acrea Nlodlng
lion (740)448-4 IS
Few RIPIIrl (740).we-23 7

3056

540 Mlscellaneoua

(740)

lur
n shed end unfurn lhad 11cu ty

~740)21511

AFC

Sa n (7401388-9703 740)446
3230

-1279
llnfiX'nllnod 2 BR Clly Or Counly
S.llool Gildon Sptco Pell We
como Aolo o~coa 1740)256
6178

v

lor 1111 -

na1led the free throw the
score 38 32
Syn nes Valley took hasty

TeiNarv~

Role en .. Requ ad (740)388

340

a

Jlappy Gotfi· 'Btrtnday

9162

310 Home1for Sale

3BR 2Bah8 ckHomoWih2
Car Ga age In Ga po a Fo ry
ABSOLUTE GOLD MNE SO $119 500 Reallor (304)8711-30!58
down Nolo S50K Wo k 7 h s
Candy VEND NO r o n 3 BR 281111 1 1/2 S ory Secluded
a oa To r aa 877 4114 869! Homo Sandh I Rd WHh 5 Ac 10
AldUOod for Sail I 9 000 Aloo
24 hrB
37 ACIOI Roiducod To $55 000
Ru for (304)&amp;71-30118
3 BR 2Baltl I 12 Story Homo A
Sou h Side- 9 10 M1 Off ROUIO
35 "7 900 Roa o (304)571-

llllllor Bu~l1jlhBuroau

Now And Vltd Furn u • Sloro

B1 ow Ho day nn KlniQUI We
81 G •~• Monumen 1 And VII

Happy Ad

I
..

On the next Southern pos
semon the Tornadoes ran
nearly a m1nute off the clo&lt;k
before Matt Ne1gler went
back door htt the buck&lt;t and

I&gt;U

Run App OK marty 15 M nutea

210

a

Ntw Ulld Fu nll\lro
New 2 P tel LIV ngroom Bu tee
S3t8 lluy.lltl -

..-----:--.J

TRANSPORTATION

••w

..,__.

FINANCIAL

CMc Development
Group/m I ennlum

u()w '10 I'E::Ef' Y~&gt;~Jfl... C::AT OFF "TifE
,
l"ltctifl/11 :fAStS"

198~ Chovy 414 V I 4 IPIId
bed no 1111111Y OX1111 33 rodll I
nlct 11llabll lruck 1&gt;11 olio 74011112 74811

Ml'lll--.,gln
papr IIIUIIjlet to
1M F - I'M HoullngAI:I
U.

Myers htt the second of two
chanty tosses the score 30
30
Kuer druned another
three potnter from deep tn
the corner then after a
Southern stop the Tornadoes
pulled the ball out toto a
spread offense
The V1k1ngs were forced out
of thetr zone defense and tnto
a man to man
Kuer 1mmedurely went
back door off a Jonathan
Evans feed to g1ve SHS a 35

32

730 Yana &amp; 4-WDa

Apartmenta
tor Rent
1 onc1 2 bedroom ope 1m1n11

knc: :b!Qir amp~

NOWHIRNO
EAIIN UPTO •10.00 AN HOUR
18 80 An HourTo IIIII

EOE

nroo bodroom 2 a bllhl
homo ololl lo Mo go GoH
Cou 11 SUO monlh $850 do
flO!/!. no p11o 740-?&lt;la-8103
420 Mobile Homo
lor Rant

1-800-929-5753

440

TNI ftlltiPIPP WI nol

~717t

Non-RIIU-

bedroom hOuoo n Chhllr
ttllonoC I rtnl diPOII tnd rtl
erono11 1 814 801 1338 oven
lngltnd--

OU CKLY Bache o 1 Mule 1

BA DGE STATE UNIVERSITY 1

Rt a ence Fie

Thllf

EARN '10\JA COLLEGE DEGREE

Doc o a 1 by co upondence
baaed upon p o educat on and
aho I study courte Fo FREE n
to ma on book et phone CAM

1

314-2!80

h I ono 14x70 NO II 2 Bllhl
So Solow Appra lid Vo ut
(740)379-i011

~~mttara

Conlaol Ohio Opera ng
Enal.-.'1111 nlng Conlar
Poono 888 38~ ~!587

Eu tka No Pe

qu od $300 Po Monlh P ua Dt
pooH Co a«o • 30pm (740)

TUitiiiD DOWN ON

NH 03886 USA To 803 508
88ol8 Fax 1 803-!588-4052 E ma1

180 WlntedTo Do
Man 10 milk. 740-94i-2~7B

Small2 Bodroom Ho... n

~Utm;)j;I$JMoWf~~

olllll which- Klllgll

24 And Foi&gt;Nory
From 8 OOim To 3 OOpm
Appllcallon FlO $10 00

tra n ng D vt 1 baaed n M d
wool f 177 230 8002 Sundoy
lam 4pm Mondey eam $pm
Tue Fr17arn '"m 'IJ ah our wtb

801www-com

Wr o BERNE UNIV

80().9&amp;1-83 8

23
2 3 2001

$121

j

Roglonal l Loca Pool k&gt;ne

AnOCrono~
~ Dolll JII1UII)' 22

~8&lt;)7 2411our .....""""

" ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
~u
lo wo k 128/n S7eihl FT/
1'1: FREE 11110 80().871 81J.45 PI

80'11 drop hook BOO 200 2823

APPitiNTICEatiiP

Any

.W!He2tl Exl. 5700

H CUBE EXPRESS
d 1¥1 1 Home evt y
n gl'l Stm did catld antt No
touch r e ght Great benefits

Compan~

IN CONITIIUCTION
Mtn And WOmlrl Agio 8 And
0.. lMm 1b CporoiO And
Ropelr Earth r.lovlng Machlntl

Co US Dg1111 817

WEEKLY Mlkl Monoy
Holplng Ploplo Aoctlvt Gow nllli~ Atlundo Ftoo Doll ol (24
iii oco dod mo11ogo) I 800

!!023.

I-IIIII LOCAL 11

011111

Eta~

wenlocl n adun group home
day ond ngh ah ft ca 740 1192

OHIO OPIIIATING

home Fu o pan mt No
1

He~

s~~~=:at:
J..~v
All&lt; For Mr

WEEKLY GUAftANTIID
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OOIRED 1 800 748 8716 Exl
x o (24hro)

expe ence nece111ry

lbfl App y AI 762 2nd AvlnUI

oa 1po111 740)446-3808 eoe

Polni-WV
llondoy,......., 111111
........ ......., 18th

11)1

WEEKLY mo ng

Flax D1 Schodu 1

TIWNINGPROGAAM
COU.EGE &amp; HS STUOENTS
WELCOME
Apply In Porion At
303MalnS._

S ampod Enve opol OICO DEPT
5 Box U38 ANTIOCH TN
370 1 1ol38 Slln mmoclllllly

11129

ago Au

Mleage BtntHII Ptckage Aval

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED-

v tltdl Rush St f Add .lltd

f(Oin

Strvtcea Accep no Appl catiOns
For LPN Par me LOCI Cove

to a rea dancy 2 week mas e a
• dency US Gov t app oved fo
atuderi oana r qua hd Bua
nea1 Educa on Soc a Servlctt

FULL AND PAII'HIM&amp;
OPEIIINOI

brochureal Satlatac on Gua

on ood

kee th Managemtnr Nu 11na

(Guo..-llolory)
-andW...n-ToDo
T-noOporolorWork Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOTIONS
Homlmlkl 1'1011&lt; whllt
chiiCiron nICI1oOI
'OAY AND &amp;VENINQ 11111'1'
AVAILAILE

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry WrJaht

olf Holiday Billa?
Our office Is curren tlY
seeking fit p/t and

(600)89 ~777
FoCIOry Oool 3:11180 110 000 D•
Ttrrllory To Ca On Coacl1lo.
ISSNEED A LOAN? ConooDdlll count on y t1 000 00 Down 0.
Sd'&lt;&gt;oll And '!buill Groupo
DIDio Do~ C td I OKI NO AP IIYiry lnd I I 1jP PI d by Foelory
$43 500/Y B 3 779--7 5
PL CAT ON FEES 1 100 163 I 800-811 -6777
9008 Exl 938 www hi p pay
Fno Dayl. NlllonWidl IIWIIIIOry
bl a com
IUSITITUTI TIACHU AIDI
RldiJOIIonl (304)~
POR CHILDCARI CINTIR CASH LOANS $2000 UOOO
Mutt havt an ntt eat and dtl 1 Conoo Idol on o UOO 000 Bid
FuiiTmoWoleiiAppy In Po 10
work wlll1 young oh dron Roply Crodl No Crodl To Foolor n
oon Holklly nn 0! Goll~fl
to Mag c Ytlrl DI)'CI I Ctn1tr lormollon 1888-IOol 1444
GOVERNMENT JOBS Ill 00 210Hgh8 PoniP-niWV
CASH LOANS UOOO tiOOO
133 00 per hou polonl 1 Po d 28880
Conoolldo on 10 $200 000 Bod
Tra n no fl'ul Benet 1 For mort
nlorrnll on co eel 1 118 174 URGENTLY NEEDED p umo Crod I No Crodlt TOI Frot lor In
donoll 11 n 138 10 143 lor 2 or 3 lormlllon I-N8-t04-1444
tl8&lt;lOICI. lll:lol
hOIWI - k y Co Soro Too 740
CREDIT PROBLEM8! CALl. THE
8e2-te61
CREDIT E~PERTS LICENIIDI
BONDED CORRECT RIMOVI
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JVDGMENTI AAA Nltd To R-11 Mull Btl Mo
RATING tO 110 DAY&amp; f Ill b • Home a IR 1 lllh
(304)871-41131""ingl
811-olell
FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
Bueln••
App cat on w 11 viet A1duct
Training
poymon 1 o 88'11 CASH IN
CENTIVE
OFFER
llolllpolo Col'llr Collltt
www dob coo or; Col I 800 3ae
(CI'!fll Clooo'Tb Homo)
15101111 IIi
Ce~ay740-4411-o1387
I 800 210 0482
Froe gttnl rnonoy a ltdero lund NIW 18 ft WldW ...8t per mon
Rag tQ0.05-12746
no Bus nell. Educat on Home on y 1270 ptr mon co now 1
Pun:hlllli Ropo Deb I Ttl.. -1-6777
150
School•
Rttta ch W ttrl A I Ill P Ul
mo • Gua antetd 1 Ill 511
New daub 1 wide 3 br 2 ba
lnatructlon
2775 o www grants-mt-oom com
Uti oo down on y •298 po
mon coli- 1-eooGI~m
P H-0-f.O.Q.II A P .. Y
HIGH 8CIIOOL IENIOIII
Now FIH- 14x70 $181189 00
SENIOR PORTRAITS COST
GROWING BUS NESS NEEDS
3 B•droom 2 Bill\ 1 877 777
TOO MUCH..?
HELP Wo k rom home Ma o
4170
WE ARE THE ALTEIINATI¥1 I
111/ECommarce $522 lwoak pan
1mo $1000 $.1000/Wttk ru 11mo
MA N STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
800 82 8838
www d eam
511 MAIN ST P1: PLEASANT
DOCTORAL/MASTER S DE
iii*H.corn
30&lt;1-e711-7271
GREES Aco od lod 1 mon h dOc
&amp;PORTS MINDED
lndMdul Need For lDcll

.W 7 lXI 88ol

30 Announcement•

mmed ate
NObOdy bla • ou prlc
11 Na ona Coni ac Buvt 1
eoo 490 0731 ex 0 www na
110na1ContractbWt a.com

ftomPIIpll

basel ne dnve and drew the
foul advantage
but mused Myens
the scorehn35 a

Need ~0 rk to "'"'··

ea Set tmen a

Ouo es

p oblem•

Southem

~~~~~~~~~~ffi~ij~ij~~i~~~=~===~~~~~~~=~~---l30
. ~110

Houeehold
Goode

897 141&lt;&amp;1 28R I Bs h On Renl
Profeaalonal
eel Lot
G eat Cond on
Services
1304)875 2820 Co AftOf 4 30 Or
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay Leave MtiiiQt
cash o ema n ng paymen 1 on 3 b 2 bl on cho ce 10 304 136P ope ry Sod Mo gag08 Annu
7295

Gua an eed o he p

RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters will be senmg
Southern Tornado Jackets m
either deep purple or khaki

"'""'¥

ANNOUNCEMENTS

o es a

Southern Jackets
on sale

CQmb1ru1tlons
The Jackets wdl be a hooded
4esign 11milar to those purdwcd
liter the past couple yean
The nylon exter1or makes
f'em durable for daily wear and
also makes them su1table for
e~ther Winter or early spnngnme
.comfort
The cost of the Jacket whtch
sports a Tornado logo lettered m
Southern gold ts $51
Proceeds w1ll go to the
schools athletic programs To
place arden restdents may con
tact any athleuc booster athlete
Sharon Hall 949-2627 or the
school 949 261 1

MERCHANDISE

230

by N eo e Rea

RACINE The Home
Nat anal Bank tn Racme has
announced that Fnday, Jan 19
will be Home Nattonal Bank
mght at Southern H1gh School
The Tornadoes will host the
Miller Falcons m a boys vamty
basketball contest at 6 30 p m
Adm1ss10n to the game IS free
compbments of Home Nat10nal

Bank
Add1t10nally the bank w11l
sponsor a money scramble for
S300 an event that hu been very
popular over the past several
years T1cket numbers will be
drawn gtvmg five fans :lll oppor
tumty to part1c1pate m the
scramble

lnd Porll $3800 (304)8711-

(304)H5'3887

840 l!lectrtcaland
Refrlg1r1tlon

crown
It was the match and the fire
has been burmng smce then
Fassel satd I thmk we shocked a
lot of people but we didn t shock
ourselves
They definttely shocked the
Vtkings (12-6) by taking a 14 0
lead before Mmnesotas vaunted
offense got onto the field Collins
found Ike Htlhard spnntmg
behtnd che depleted secondary
for a 46 yard touchdown w1th
JUSt 1 57 gone
The V1kings nushandled the
ensumg kickoff and Lyle West
recovered at the Mtnnesota 18
On tile next play, Collins hit Greg
Comella for the fitnback s first
career touchdown
The rout was on
We were gomg to throw 1t up
and expose their defenSive backs

osua:s

from Pllp

good thiS year but I m com
fortable taking 3s Rychart sa1d
Sull he sa d when he got the
ball on the penmeter pr10r to hiS
first attempt he cotldn t find
anyo 1e to pass to so he thl'l!w
one up there
Sean Connolly scort!d 15
pomts - all on 3 pomters - to
lead Oh10 State whtch had lost
1ts last two games Bohan Savovtc
had 14 pomts Johnson 13 and
Zach Wtltiams 10
We wcrcn t tough enough
down the stretch Connolly satd
Johnson added We had smnc

The Dally Sentinel • Page B3
shots on the next two posaesstons and the SHS defense
forced two stratght turnovers
Southern then went 7 for-8
at the hne the rest of the
game to put the game away
Three break away lay ups
from Hubbard and Ash (2)
then added the ic1ng on the
vtctory cake the final bemg a
convmcmg 53 39 wm
In the first quarter South
ern made several turnovers
and began a three po1nt
shooting spree as Symmes
forced SHS to a penmeter
game
The V1kes took an 11 6 first
penod lead then con! nued
the trend throughout the sec
ond frame
Mmed shots by both clubs
kept the other 111 the game
Symmes gomg 8-30 from the
fitld and Southern gmng 5
for 26 both under 30 per
cent
The game was ned at the
half '0 ?O
Southern lut 18 of ?5 at
the I ne wh1le hmmg 14 for

45 from the field Southern
was 7 for 22 oa three
The Tornadoes had 17
rebounds (Kuer 6 F1sher 4
Evans 4) four assuts (B Hftl
2 Evans 2) 13 turnovers i2
steals (Fuher 4 K1ser 3) three
blocks (FISher 3) and 12
fouls
Symmes Valley hot 17 of. 49
overall wnh 2 of 8 threes and
a 3-for 7 ntght at the hne
The Vtkes had 37 rebounds
(Myers 9 W Is on 11) (lad
three assiSts ( Carpenter 7) 14
turnovers four steals and 24
fouls
Southern won the reserve
game 41-35 led by Justin
Connolly wah a game h1gh
21 po1nts Ty H1ll w th s x and
Jordan H1ll w th four
Symmes was led by T J
Grubl)e with 12 J D M ller
With ten and Kyle Gd 1 ore
Vlth tight
Southern
hosts M llcr m
Home Natlo ul Bank N ght
Fnday m Rac1ne Adnumon
to the game s free

held Oalcland to a field goal by
Sebastian Jamkowski
Then Dlifer took the offense
down the field for 51 yards and
Matt Stovers field goal boosted
the lead back to 10 That was all
the Ravens needed althougJt,rthc:
defense played loosely n the
fourth quarter and Oakland
almost scored - a TO pass from
Bobby Hoymg to Andre Rison
was nullified by pass Interference
on Rison
Hoymg was m because Rich
Gannon was hit m the shoulder
tn the second quarter by Tony
Stragusa He went out of the
game returned m the thud quar
ter but then left agam
I don t know tf tt would have
made a difference 1f I had been
100 percent healthy m the 1econd
half Gannon satd They were
the better team today
The Ravens were too elated
about th1s Win to talk about the
team they 11 face tn two weeks -

the G~ants
Moden and Mara are fr ends
and so are Balnn ore coach Bna0
B1llick and New Yorks J m Fassel
one of my Best fnends tn
football IS what Btlhck satd pf
the G1ants coach
The Ravens 15 4 on a 10
game wmnmg streak w ll play a
team that s 14 4 and on a seven
game wmnmg streak
And 11 will be two defenses that
stoJ&gt; the run - the Ravens were
lint and the G1ants second tn
rushtng defense thiS season
Right now both teams are
savonng the moment
We ve always had to say, Watt
unul tomorrow say to next year
Moden sa~d But I knew that
somehow some way, we were
gomg to get It done I sa1d to
Bnan B1llick I will see you
when we accept the trophy .on
Sunday If we don t I want to
thank you for a great year
Now 11 can get even greater

sa1d Amano Toomer who had a 7
yard TO catch m the thoro! quar
t~~ to end 1h~ scormg l'hey
can t play Witb us
Partteularly Without regulars
Orlando Thomas and Kenny
Wnght wh1ch made New Yorks
deciSion to throw - and throw
often - an easy one
We felt It became con tag ous
otfens ve coordmator Sean Pay
ton sa d We couldn t get the ball
out there enough
The defense was grateful and
showed It by completely befud
dhng
q11arterback
Daunte
Culpepper the first year starter
who looked It The Gtants also
made star rece1vers Randy Moss
(two catches 18 yards) and Cns
Carter (three for 24) VIrtually
mvlSible
We ve been very fortunate
these two playoff games where
the pf!'ssure IS off us sa1d defen
Slve end M1chael Strahan Every
touchdown on the board the
defense thmks 11 has enough to
wm
The touchdown receptions
kept conung Joe Jurev1c1us had
an 8 yarder and Hilliard had a 7
yarder Brad Dalut5o added field
goals of 21 and 22 yards
Hilliard made 10 catches for
155 yards and Toomer SIX for 81
NewYork gamed 380 yards m the
atr and 518 overall agamst the
V1kings desptte beong underdogs
Monnesota whtch rarely plays
well outdoon was a 2 potnt
favome
Its gomg to be hard for us to
wm a Super Bowltn Mmnesota
Moss satd I don t want to say

Mmnesota will never w n a Super
Bowl but 1t ts gomg to be hard
The V1kings became the first
NFC champ1onsh1p shutout VIC
tlm smce the G ants beat Wash
mgton 17-0 en route to vmmng
the Super Bo vi fono vmg tl e
1986 season It vas the r first
shutout loss m 158 gan es s 1 ce
Denms Green beca 1 e oach n
1992
I thought v d o e o t v th
a lot of fil'l! sa d Robe t Sm th
vho led the NFC v h 1 5?
yards rushmg but managed only
44 Sunday The guys to 1 e
seemed as ready as 1y 1 e th s
year
But even before the se ond h If
began the V1k ngs kne v they hod
no answers By then 1t vas 344!
the largest such nargm n NFC
champ10nsh1p game h story
How mpressed were the odds
n akers1
Baltimore was establ shed as an
early favonte for the Super Bo'!{l
even though It d dn t w!n ts dt\'1
SIOn But the wild card Ravens
were 12 4 and have won three
t1mes n the postseason behmd ~
record setting defense
Th11 team was referred to as
the worst team ever to wm the
home field advantage n the
National Football League G1ants
co owner Well ngton Mara sa1d
And today, on our field of pamt
ed mud we proved we re the
worst team ever to wm the NFC
champ1onsh1p In two weeks
we re gomg to try to becm 1e the
worst team ever to w n the Super
Bowl

bad mental breakdowns
We played bad at the end
Brown sa1d Mmncsota had
nothmg to lose and they made us
play poorly We made some bad
deCISions We had careless nus
takes and turned the ban over way
too n any t1 nes
Terrance S111111ons had 'I of
hiS ?7 pmnts m the s.c ' d half
for the Goph&lt;f! who had won
mne of their last 10 games Dau.:r
had 15 poultS and Burleson 12
Oh1o State led 39 22 at the
half forcmg I~ Minnesota
turnovers and out!\! bound ng the
Gophers 16 11
That was as disgusted as I ve
been with this team all year
Monson sa1d Then I was as
proud of the u as I have been all

year
Down 10 7 at the 14 Q? mark
of the first half ~e Buckeyes
took command with a ? 1 7 run
Johnson Savov c and Connolly
each scored SIX pomts 111 the run
Connolly almost bookendcd tl e
spurt "th 3 po 1 t rs I tttng a
shot beh 1 d the a c to g1v 01 o
State the lead fo good t 1 ~ 10
a 1d the capp 1g 1t v th a tl r
3 wtth 5 31 left for a ?8 Plead
We vcre 11 for a long 11ght
Ulltd we vere finally abl to start
playmg Monso 1 sa1d
0 Bnen sa~d he was thnlled
that t~e Buckeyes von But even
he conceded Its d1sappo ntmg
the way IW n s 01 aged the sec
ond half

�Pill' . . • The Deily Sentinel

Monday, January 15,2001

t

~onday, January 15,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

--------------------------

PHn.LIP

IISSILL IUI....IS
II C.

ThE CRAFTY, BUND SPOT
(l"Htory Outlet)

.

AD vertical blmd1 are lllllde to order at
our loeadon
.;

UPTO 70% OFF

Yin

me

Yin
Yin

MlltiOPOU'fAN HOUSING

Ath'tiOfiiTY HAl BEEN
1117 Chevy Cawller, Yin .
~ jiiiPLEtiD.
THE t101.tC1248V720:1711

ORT II AVAILABLE AT The larme of 1111 are
E tJFFICE OF THE
~;tiJisiln H0 U81 N0
HoiiMI National Bank
It
AT 117 EAST ,....,.,.. lhl rtghl to NJICI
DAIYE • any or all 11!41 or to NIIIOYI
II~IN"i .:J~s ~~~~~: any
unit from lha ula It
any UIIMI.
A. . H U 11:00 P.M. · Arrangement• .may be
MONDI\Y THRU
made to 1napect any ol the
" FRIDAY.
.,._aaLL
abc&gt;M named vehiOIM flrlor
JEAN t ""to the Hie by calling (740)

=

In this

11115, 11.:

PIIIUC NOTICE
LEGAl. NOTICE ·

ft¥0
TW08DAY
2 CHIUIIURGIRI Fot TMI 'h!cl Of 0NI

Slzll 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Hours

WICKED

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

.25¢ WIN8S '

Pu bile: Notl ce
PUBUD AUCTION

On Saltll'tlllr, January 20,
20Q1 ot to• a.m. tho Homo
Nllflanol ._.. will of141r lor
edll .al
auction on
lht Ball titirklng lot the
ldllctwlrig wthlcteo:
11180 Cldllap, Vlri

tubllo

t1~11141t435999D

tlfitl C11it¥y S·14, Vln

11GctS14ial!151561

Street •

Nj)lll'8

OualfiY WC&lt;I&lt; and Pr.-al
SeNice OUr
.,.

GALLIPOLIS

Tha annual flnancllt
repot1 for lha Alhe-lhlp
Edl!caUonal S.rvlca Contar
lor tho flaoal yaar ondiOd
June 30, 2000 Ia complete
and available ·ror , review.
Tho ropot1 can 1M obtain~
at tha olflco or lha
Treaaurar from 8:.00 a.m. .to ·
4 :30 p.m. locaiiOd at 507
RlchlaiNI Avonut, Sullo 108,
Athena, Ohio. ' .
CllrQIO J. Ollkoy,
Traaeurar
Alhane-Melgo E.S.C.

Special Finance
Bankruptcy? Credit

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per

": :

a

Call Us First Or We Both l.osel
Aak For Mr. FOrd
Over 30 -~~· !=~;rq:1crl~Lc:e

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-982·1871

Plrewood

--

38215 Ball Run RDICI
Pomeroy, Ohio 411711

..•
•

I.

·,.,-,.'
•,.•
1,

'.:

We Can Make lOur
DreamAReality! ·

..

992·5479

.,.,

740-742-341 t

Now maybe these friends can agree that the first
tc.1111 tu score wins:Points figure to be at a premi"'" with bmh teams coming into the big game
w1th unpreSSive defenses.
Balti m.m is favored by 2 1/2 points with Las
Vegas bookmakers s~tting the over-under at 34
~c: i ~1ts, 01~e of the lowest in Super Bowl history.
I here ts good reason for that.
The Ravens set an NFL record, allowing just 165
pumts Ill 16 games . They had four regular-season
slnttc1uts and have allowed just 16 points in playoff
vtctutJes ~r Denver, Tennessee and Oakland.
The Giants· shut out Minnesota for the NFC ·
title, :~llowin~ the Vikings just 114 yards, tying the
rccotd for third-fewest yards allowed in a postsea""' game. No_team has allowed fewer yards in a
playoll game smce I 959, when the Giants allowed
the Cleveland Browns just 86 yards.
lloth teams had stretches during the reS\'Iar season when 11 seemed the only way they'd reach the
. Sltpct llowl would be to buy a ticket. The Ravens
went ~ve games without scoring a touchdown and
the Gtanu went five months witho.ut impressing .
anybody.
.
Baltimore survived its offensive dry spell wiih a
recotd-setllng defense. The Giants overcame their
anonymity, with Fassel's playoff guarantee at a time
.whch the team was struggling at 7.4.
Fasscl ,was still expressing confidence in his team
aftc'r it mauled Minnesota.
"I feel good about my team because I got a sense
after today's g:ome ..that they feel like they have
uu,fimshed busmess, the Giants coach said. "We ·
blVe one more g:ome to win."
'
It will not be easy against the Ravens' defense.
1Jahimore did not score a touchdown in Octobcr bllt managed to win two of five g:omes, ~eating
Cleveland 12-0 and jacksonville 15-1 O, both on the
road.
.

I

,

:_ £.fT Mf IJ&amp;T TtfiS ST~AIIJ~T···
~ YOV wANT Mi TO ItT ~ll&gt; OF
~L£. IVT TwO OF Ttcf TfltMITf$ , . -

'1
..

Slit

I

...!"
~-

BORN LOSER
~,..............., r---.· OCf',R!

'

OAI~~IF'OLIS,

• f'111'11o"al

I

OHiO 4Se:lt• CHE$FIIAE, OHIO

(740) 367·0266
1·800·950-3359

l
I

• 'Tf\1'1\

.........

• sw~rl\9

Gt\1\

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.

' .,

.""

r----------------------------------~----------------~--------~----~ ....0 ·;-··"'

Stop In ~nd See
'
Steve Riffle
Sales Represenl'a tive

&amp;EARNEST

JDN£S' Discounl
i

..

GOODSYE,
HARR'I'

f'OTTEP. .

II

~~

.,_.,"

..," j

"

.• •'j

l.arry Schu

'I

''(" J '

" '
I

... tl

' ...."

: -;---t

'.
us1ness

'
(

'

I I·

/

•FrH elllmllel wllh

,''·
...
,.
,.,.•'•'

.

THE ONE WE .SIIOOLD INVITE
TO THE 'U6LV Po6" CONTEST!

(' '

~V6LV OLAF":
n!AT'5 WHAT
THE~ U!iED TO
CALL HIM ..

For the final stop in the north
island of New Zealand, I headed
farther west •• and a little north .
• to New Plymouth. This coastal
town is out on a limb, close to the
major milk-producing area of
Taranaki, but the bridge players
are enthusiastic. We had nine
tables for my lesson on improving ·
your bridge memory.
Primarily, remembering the
bids and plays only requires good
concentration. If you keep your
mind on the game, you will win
more often .
How should the play go in
three no·lrump after West leads
the heart two?
In America, South should open
with a strong no-trump, even if
using a 16-18 range. The eKcellent
controls (aces and kings) and
good five-card sui! make lhe hand
worth nearer 18 points than 15.
However, as my studenls were
using Ihe weak no-trump, they all
opened one club and had the given auction .
Firs!, South should nole hi s
eight top trick s: one s pade, one
heart, one diamond and five clubs.
The eKtra trick can come from
diamonds, but the finesse will
probably fail , given Easl's lakeoul
double.
Should declarer duck the first
Irick? Well, what does the heart··
two opening lead tell him ? Right
•• thai West has only four hearts.
So, if Soulh win s trick one and
lakes the diamond finesse, he will •
lose at most four tricks: three
hearts and one diamond .
What happens if declarer ducks
trick one? A concentrating East
will switch 10 the spade king.
Then the contract would almost
certainly faiL So, that well-known
firsl-lrick duck isn't such a good
idea here.

To get a current weather
· report, check the,

.Sentinel

•'
••

. .. ..,I

appolntmenllll you(
.. convenience, · .
• Financing available, 110
dayl

,f l

J

.

MOLLOHAN CARPET
....... Clrpet It lN
Prtal

·'-' ,,
~

V.C. YOUNG lit
992-6215

lOl

Pom.o~Ohlo

'1 '1,
. '!:"':..

•.. 1(

HfiQ
UNG
IXCfiYfiTING
Haulint • limestone • ~
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch o

'

lAlii

Mli-

..."'.

Tnteto~: 1:

.fAtaJJ.-m p... '

Faeto.,:Y Aatbo~
Cue-IH Pam

Bulldozer Services

"

N ,

~J~(7~4=0~):9;9;;2:·34~7~0!.!::~~~~~~J
,.

.!.Jj ,J'

Advertise in
this space for
$1.00 per
m

·-

H "(

t

r••,

' • Jil
.

'

one

.

'

•

.()
ow

"'
"'

..

"

.- '

I
\

beforehand
Remove by
melting
' '
24 Rented
25 Pour
. --, •.
28 Cel•tlal bear
•,
27 Clover
saying a
·.' '29 Region In
'
Germany
3D Elm or oak
31 Dlfflc:ull
.
37 North or 111.
38 Elk fiiiUN
23

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll Cempol

·

Celtbf11y Cifllltrcryptogram• ora craolld 11om q-llonl by ltmouo peape, putllld
p-1. Eooh - I n lilt~- toi l/lOtlltr.
Toay~ Clut:

WNKMXW

' N
WXK

GaXHFVYI
MK

G equllll P

BYRYNCI

BE

XWCE

SFK

ZXWXBI.'-

KZY

MKIYCD
JYW

MK

NCIX

BE

KZY

TXZW

D.

LYWWV .HE .

J

v·w,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : -1 don't mind autograph hunters at the tlah and chip
shop . As long as I get my chips." - David Hemmings

'

..,
,.. •

,

'::~~~;~' S©~(\1A-~t.!fs·
::::.
CLAY I. POLLAN------'
I~IIH ~r

O Rearrange
letters of the
lour scrornbled wcrdJ be·
lew to form tour simple words.

I

K NR A T E
1

I I 1 I I
L UELT

I

--.'~;~,
I I ~

r --0_R_H_A__
Y

.I

4

'

While sitting watching the snow
fall, 'one fellow asked the other,
r--=--:-.,.--.,.----, "How do they know that no two
ZAL R 10
snowflake are ·-·· -?"
f---.,ns,.....,-,..,--.,-..-,----l G) Complete tho chuckle quoted
_

1.

.

_

I

I

.
.
•
•
•
• .
by lUling In the mluing words
L-..1--L-1-..1--L--1 you develop lrorn 1tep No. 3 below.

.8

PRINT NUMIIERED LEII!RS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBlE
A80VE !EllERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCJtAM.UT~

ANSWERS

Mirage . Uncut. Growl · Sleepy · PRICE TAG

1was so embarrassed at a bridal shower. I found that
a gift never seemed so cheap as when I forgot to remove the PRICE TAG!

'ijlllSlbty, Jan. 16, 2001 · ·.
but yO\I,Cself and life wif! bill% up a loyal friehd or a fami·
ly""ember. You '11 need Ihe wis·
· increased income is start to
snioolhly again.
a
probability for you in the
ARIES (March 21·Aprill9) If. ~ of Solomon.
'VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
ahead, if you allow you're smart enough today to put
extqvagant urges to take'control, to good . use a valuable lesson Even !hough you may not look
you:may not have much to show you've learned. from experience upon it as a pleasurable task, you
for $ings atlhe·close of the year. about human nature, it could give might get the opportunity today to
qAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. yoq the, edge over your compeli· finalize a matter that's been hang~
19) ' What goes around comes ·· tors . Know led~ is power.
' ing fire . Hold your nose and get
around. Should someone take
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) It it over with.
LIBRA (SepL 23-0cl. 23)
soniething 1hat is rightfully yours, will be to your advantage today to
Only
gentle words and tender
dontt respond in kind . Even be more supportive than assertive
though you didn't start it, to retal- in a joint effort. Lay personal directives will work today in sit·
iate :could end up hurting you. ambitions aside for lhe moment uations where you' re required to
Try¥tg to patch up a broken and it'll encourage your leam- manage or conlrol others. Don't
auempt to be dictaioriaL
~omance? The Astro-~raph mates to do likewise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Mat!;hmaker can help Y.OU ynderGEMINI (May 21-Ju.ne 20)
stand what to do to make 1he rela. An alliance important to your · Feeling sofT)' for yourself today
tionship work. Mail $2;75 to cause could be put to a test today will. accomplis~ nothing eKcept
Matbhmaker, c/o this newspaper, over philosophical issues. Unfor· cause depression. Get a hold of
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta· tunately, you have to work togeth· yourself and live within lhe con·
. er, so don't let ideology interfere. fines of the situation that's frus·
tion, New York, NY 10156.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. l9)
CANCER (June 21-July 22) traling you.
Only realistic hopefulness today ·Keep business relationships sep· . SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
will aqvance your career or repu- arated from your social ones 21) Pretentiousness could be one
tatiQn . If you fail to see things as today. If you attempt to mix the of your biggesl enemies today, but
they really are, it will inhibit you two, you could lose the support of what is worse is that it will all be
·so unnecessary. Be honest, be
one or the other.
from seeing what could be.
·PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
LBO (July 23-Aua. 22) Unfor· compassionate, and just be your· ·
Should you find yourself down in . tunately, you miaht.find yourself self.
the dumps today, don't settle for in the unenviable position today
it Get out and get your mind on where you may have to either

••

.

IIIII .

•,

'

18 Pl. ol USMA
21 PNOCc:upy
22 Adhialed

......
1
IIC.U.to

'Birthday '

l:qo-5:00

.2:11"'; loO&lt;al

•

'
'
I

112 lvd.

'lbur

Po,l'ltr,Ohlo.
(Mondly 111N l'rlday

.

'

or plckll
Tennla player .
NaltaH
43 Walk llllflh a
heavy pace
4$ CUll- (ahlr1
laotener)
48 - upon o
tlrne
47 Mollow.d
41 Actreal
Merkal '
eo Barta• of '

~

am. Cbapat Road,

'

.'
•
' .

42

• We exeepl Vlu or

Frt~Eitlm.ttl

'.

s}star

,• ·I,

MuterC.d.
Give UBI 011111
140 Ul7....,.or
1-877-830-1112 or
YllltUI.t

'

41 Tyflll

/'"":~

aeme .. cuh

'

.
..

Obi.
All pass

Bv PHILLIP ALDER·

l&gt;enior Cillzen

TREE SERVICE

1•

3 NT

Farther west

~e, (!:Uo.Dt.:'l! ~ 't'OU TONI6t\ii" ,.1-\~VE. ,.,_ CoOOD 01"\Y '-:1' WO({K,C'I
'

Pass
Pass

•

40 frad Altalre'o

,.

'00

years.

fY

.•
'

, TAMPA, Fla .. (AP) -:- This will be an old pal~
Super Howl, Wtth two coaches who are longtime
buddies !eliding tea ms operated by the two of the
NFL's uiosl venerable owners.
.
Jim Passel of the New York Giants and Brian Billick of the Baltimore Ravens are close friends who
· steered a pair of unlikely teams into the NFL cham"
pimlship g&gt;lhle. Giants cocowner Wellington Mara
aud Art Modell of the Ravens have held key roles
un vanous league committees during the last 40

Tlte
Ravens
beat
Denver
home
in the to
'wildcntd
round
of the
playoffs
andatthen
advanced
the
cham11ionship game
defeating Thnnessee on the
road.Th.r sent them to Oakland, where they eliminated the Raiders on Sunday, 16-3.
· The Giants won five straight following Passel's
playo!T guarantee, theri beat Philadelphia and Min~
. ncsotn handily in the playo!fs.
. The defensiVe loaders of the RavJ"ns are linebacker Ray Lcwi&lt;, who average-d •hnqst nine tackIrs anti def&lt;mivc cnJ Rob Hurnett, who had ,11
1/2 sacks. Ji .dtimorc'&lt; olfcnsc includes w t~ra n
rccciwrs like' Sh.11111on Sharpe, Ben Coates ,;;d
Qatlry Ismail, Wll h Trent Dilfc·r at quartcrb01ck.

'•r .

••

New Homes, Room
Additions, G&amp;.r&amp;~~es,
Pole BuUdlftCs,
Sidlnal, Decka,
IUtehena, Drywall 81.
More

'fl'UCk

.

'

...

Opening lead: " 2

•
'
,••

(1) 15, 11c

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

tNT

H!AP Vouchtra 1D01pted ., ,
I Gall.. Countlle • '

A

Advertise
in this
space .for
$50 per
month.

I olo

''

tor

Hanka'
45 Meuna - .
movie, "- 13" 48 MI-t
15 Playwright
51 Doing 1
·
O'Neill
alevedoN'alol&gt;
16 Hymn ol
54 A e.rrymon
thanklvMng 55 Show plainly
' (2 wdo.)
56 Plfllll
17 Intermediate
,.,,._tallve
(prel.)
57 Smelled
18 Unit ol maaa
atrongly
20 Actor Ron 21 Moatlavorabll
DOWN
25 1\No-wheeiiOd
farm carl
28Bed, ona
ateeper train
32 Uneven, tiki
I Divine being
notched llavea
10 High apltfta
33 M..,. euah
11 Hebrew month
34 Colorado flllrk
12 Actntu
35 Jac:ob'a eon
Schneider
36 En- (Ill

Vulnerable: Neithj!r
Dealer: South
West Norlh Easl
Soulh

~~

· FREE ESTIM,ATES!

..4W:R

• 10 9
oloAK109 4

-Free 1·877-1!04-7350 :.. ~
Ball LoUb~C II
::"' !

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

"W.elp~

• A 6 &amp;

" A 10 9

' i

-~ ~

"' 8 5 3

South

:·

992-6142 Or

tK S

"' 6 2

FOR SA'I!:
' ~·
Dump True!&lt; Dei'-Y Melgl '• ::
and GatHa Counllel ca11
leaYII MNIIQI ·

• K QJ 7
., K J 6 4

• 7 5 4 2

r-~~~~~--. vo

FIREWOOD

East

West
• 10 9 •
•Q532

•

~.

-

OF

Old buddies ·meet
·in Super.Bowl

.

112

" 8 7
• A qJ 8 6
"' Q J 7

·-·

1'1

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
... v-•
SHADE RIVER AG. SIRVICE
•I
"Aheld In HrYice"
•I
·11 .6% Protein Uveslock/callle Feed $5.75/100
I
0'
·21% Huilters Prkl6 Dog Food $6.75/50
. I
·12% WIStem pride horse teed $5.75/50
•••·
$1.00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4,25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
TJ\A, Salt Blocks $4,75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
~· :
35537 St. Rt, 7 NOi'lh , . . Pomeroy, Ohio 411788'
t
t
740-8811 3831
'

•u• IMI!"P flw • '""' .

• 8 3 2

."..

-

7/11/TFH

FISH FRIDAY
Au. DAI' •Au You CAli l.v"

r----==-'"::7=::--t
North
OI-IHI

IAUIILUUA
•~ar.ltl
c•-.~aNa•
• I ...;_____"" 1M :
. ' ' ..
,, '

• Complete

740-t4f.2217

Peaceful

to Prevtoue Puzzle

14 Tom

legal papers, lnvestmenl records, """''"I
albums, · cemeras, household lnvenlory and
aenllmenlalllems will be sale.
For mere Information call

• Gll'llgel

Hourty.. Dally..Wukly... Rotu

ad (7411! 888318!

PRODUCTS

101111 IISSILL
COISIIUCTIOI

1

An awer

37 UHda hou
39 Dloc'*"-&lt;1

7 Polm.d urnp Cl!n 41 S&amp;»&gt;k back to,
13 Turned down
ofanglly
comer
44 Aug. time

"THE MOST TRUSTED "fAME IN SECURITY'
I P1roted your guns, family heirlooms, coin and

•NewHome1

Riclnt, Ohio
45771

homt Gf the cleric, Oale 1

(I) 18, Ito

992-6524

UYINQ
204 North Second Ave.
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760
740 882-41114
Hauool&lt;...,... ... Clard.......
Jlllltori ...Lawn Cite .. .
Mlldt...MII~anca/HCIIM

.Col'-cllon Ollloer

ALDER

740-992-5232

HILL'S
SELF STORAIE

Q10nth • .

OLJdm
bratllf T.wnahlp Annual (1) .I. 12, 111, 111/01, 411!
Flrlanolll · Report Ia
· •s:l•w
comple..byand
avagable for
ljlpolntmant
11 :=!!!i!~~i!!!!i:
I
F

Pomeroy, Ohio

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

space tor .
$50 per

Thank you,
Blnaeraty,
Home Natton.l llllnk
Ooorge Lawranoe .

Pubtlc Notice

83795 Hiland Rd.

211170 Bllhlln R01d

Mt-2210.

:Jf:'I1YE DIRECTOR

• Roofing

740·992·7599

T.Fnt

PuiiUC NOTICE
AIBRIAL
"IWICIAL IIEPORT Of
THE
MEIOI

Self-Storage

'

144 Tlllnllvt.

Advertise

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gar~ges
• Replacement WI.'KIDM
• Room Addttlont.

COMIIOCW. and I!SIDEIITlM.
FREii ESTIMATES'
.

• Vertlcalt • Wood • MiDil • Etc

l'ubllo NotiCI

1/..~effirl,
High 8l Dry

logelher)

ACROSS

/

..
.

J

'

�Pill' . . • The Deily Sentinel

Monday, January 15,2001

t

~onday, January 15,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

--------------------------

PHn.LIP

IISSILL IUI....IS
II C.

ThE CRAFTY, BUND SPOT
(l"Htory Outlet)

.

AD vertical blmd1 are lllllde to order at
our loeadon
.;

UPTO 70% OFF

Yin

me

Yin
Yin

MlltiOPOU'fAN HOUSING

Ath'tiOfiiTY HAl BEEN
1117 Chevy Cawller, Yin .
~ jiiiPLEtiD.
THE t101.tC1248V720:1711

ORT II AVAILABLE AT The larme of 1111 are
E tJFFICE OF THE
~;tiJisiln H0 U81 N0
HoiiMI National Bank
It
AT 117 EAST ,....,.,.. lhl rtghl to NJICI
DAIYE • any or all 11!41 or to NIIIOYI
II~IN"i .:J~s ~~~~~: any
unit from lha ula It
any UIIMI.
A. . H U 11:00 P.M. · Arrangement• .may be
MONDI\Y THRU
made to 1napect any ol the
" FRIDAY.
.,._aaLL
abc&gt;M named vehiOIM flrlor
JEAN t ""to the Hie by calling (740)

=

In this

11115, 11.:

PIIIUC NOTICE
LEGAl. NOTICE ·

ft¥0
TW08DAY
2 CHIUIIURGIRI Fot TMI 'h!cl Of 0NI

Slzll 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Hours

WICKED

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

.25¢ WIN8S '

Pu bile: Notl ce
PUBUD AUCTION

On Saltll'tlllr, January 20,
20Q1 ot to• a.m. tho Homo
Nllflanol ._.. will of141r lor
edll .al
auction on
lht Ball titirklng lot the
ldllctwlrig wthlcteo:
11180 Cldllap, Vlri

tubllo

t1~11141t435999D

tlfitl C11it¥y S·14, Vln

11GctS14ial!151561

Street •

Nj)lll'8

OualfiY WC&lt;I&lt; and Pr.-al
SeNice OUr
.,.

GALLIPOLIS

Tha annual flnancllt
repot1 for lha Alhe-lhlp
Edl!caUonal S.rvlca Contar
lor tho flaoal yaar ondiOd
June 30, 2000 Ia complete
and available ·ror , review.
Tho ropot1 can 1M obtain~
at tha olflco or lha
Treaaurar from 8:.00 a.m. .to ·
4 :30 p.m. locaiiOd at 507
RlchlaiNI Avonut, Sullo 108,
Athena, Ohio. ' .
CllrQIO J. Ollkoy,
Traaeurar
Alhane-Melgo E.S.C.

Special Finance
Bankruptcy? Credit

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per

": :

a

Call Us First Or We Both l.osel
Aak For Mr. FOrd
Over 30 -~~· !=~;rq:1crl~Lc:e

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-982·1871

Plrewood

--

38215 Ball Run RDICI
Pomeroy, Ohio 411711

..•
•

I.

·,.,-,.'
•,.•
1,

'.:

We Can Make lOur
DreamAReality! ·

..

992·5479

.,.,

740-742-341 t

Now maybe these friends can agree that the first
tc.1111 tu score wins:Points figure to be at a premi"'" with bmh teams coming into the big game
w1th unpreSSive defenses.
Balti m.m is favored by 2 1/2 points with Las
Vegas bookmakers s~tting the over-under at 34
~c: i ~1ts, 01~e of the lowest in Super Bowl history.
I here ts good reason for that.
The Ravens set an NFL record, allowing just 165
pumts Ill 16 games . They had four regular-season
slnttc1uts and have allowed just 16 points in playoff
vtctutJes ~r Denver, Tennessee and Oakland.
The Giants· shut out Minnesota for the NFC ·
title, :~llowin~ the Vikings just 114 yards, tying the
rccotd for third-fewest yards allowed in a postsea""' game. No_team has allowed fewer yards in a
playoll game smce I 959, when the Giants allowed
the Cleveland Browns just 86 yards.
lloth teams had stretches during the reS\'Iar season when 11 seemed the only way they'd reach the
. Sltpct llowl would be to buy a ticket. The Ravens
went ~ve games without scoring a touchdown and
the Gtanu went five months witho.ut impressing .
anybody.
.
Baltimore survived its offensive dry spell wiih a
recotd-setllng defense. The Giants overcame their
anonymity, with Fassel's playoff guarantee at a time
.whch the team was struggling at 7.4.
Fasscl ,was still expressing confidence in his team
aftc'r it mauled Minnesota.
"I feel good about my team because I got a sense
after today's g:ome ..that they feel like they have
uu,fimshed busmess, the Giants coach said. "We ·
blVe one more g:ome to win."
'
It will not be easy against the Ravens' defense.
1Jahimore did not score a touchdown in Octobcr bllt managed to win two of five g:omes, ~eating
Cleveland 12-0 and jacksonville 15-1 O, both on the
road.
.

I

,

:_ £.fT Mf IJ&amp;T TtfiS ST~AIIJ~T···
~ YOV wANT Mi TO ItT ~ll&gt; OF
~L£. IVT TwO OF Ttcf TfltMITf$ , . -

'1
..

Slit

I

...!"
~-

BORN LOSER
~,..............., r---.· OCf',R!

'

OAI~~IF'OLIS,

• f'111'11o"al

I

OHiO 4Se:lt• CHE$FIIAE, OHIO

(740) 367·0266
1·800·950-3359

l
I

• 'Tf\1'1\

.........

• sw~rl\9

Gt\1\

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.

' .,

.""

r----------------------------------~----------------~--------~----~ ....0 ·;-··"'

Stop In ~nd See
'
Steve Riffle
Sales Represenl'a tive

&amp;EARNEST

JDN£S' Discounl
i

..

GOODSYE,
HARR'I'

f'OTTEP. .

II

~~

.,_.,"

..," j

"

.• •'j

l.arry Schu

'I

''(" J '

" '
I

... tl

' ...."

: -;---t

'.
us1ness

'
(

'

I I·

/

•FrH elllmllel wllh

,''·
...
,.
,.,.•'•'

.

THE ONE WE .SIIOOLD INVITE
TO THE 'U6LV Po6" CONTEST!

(' '

~V6LV OLAF":
n!AT'5 WHAT
THE~ U!iED TO
CALL HIM ..

For the final stop in the north
island of New Zealand, I headed
farther west •• and a little north .
• to New Plymouth. This coastal
town is out on a limb, close to the
major milk-producing area of
Taranaki, but the bridge players
are enthusiastic. We had nine
tables for my lesson on improving ·
your bridge memory.
Primarily, remembering the
bids and plays only requires good
concentration. If you keep your
mind on the game, you will win
more often .
How should the play go in
three no·lrump after West leads
the heart two?
In America, South should open
with a strong no-trump, even if
using a 16-18 range. The eKcellent
controls (aces and kings) and
good five-card sui! make lhe hand
worth nearer 18 points than 15.
However, as my studenls were
using Ihe weak no-trump, they all
opened one club and had the given auction .
Firs!, South should nole hi s
eight top trick s: one s pade, one
heart, one diamond and five clubs.
The eKtra trick can come from
diamonds, but the finesse will
probably fail , given Easl's lakeoul
double.
Should declarer duck the first
Irick? Well, what does the heart··
two opening lead tell him ? Right
•• thai West has only four hearts.
So, if Soulh win s trick one and
lakes the diamond finesse, he will •
lose at most four tricks: three
hearts and one diamond .
What happens if declarer ducks
trick one? A concentrating East
will switch 10 the spade king.
Then the contract would almost
certainly faiL So, that well-known
firsl-lrick duck isn't such a good
idea here.

To get a current weather
· report, check the,

.Sentinel

•'
••

. .. ..,I

appolntmenllll you(
.. convenience, · .
• Financing available, 110
dayl

,f l

J

.

MOLLOHAN CARPET
....... Clrpet It lN
Prtal

·'-' ,,
~

V.C. YOUNG lit
992-6215

lOl

Pom.o~Ohlo

'1 '1,
. '!:"':..

•.. 1(

HfiQ
UNG
IXCfiYfiTING
Haulint • limestone • ~
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch o

'

lAlii

Mli-

..."'.

Tnteto~: 1:

.fAtaJJ.-m p... '

Faeto.,:Y Aatbo~
Cue-IH Pam

Bulldozer Services

"

N ,

~J~(7~4=0~):9;9;;2:·34~7~0!.!::~~~~~~J
,.

.!.Jj ,J'

Advertise in
this space for
$1.00 per
m

·-

H "(

t

r••,

' • Jil
.

'

one

.

'

•

.()
ow

"'
"'

..

"

.- '

I
\

beforehand
Remove by
melting
' '
24 Rented
25 Pour
. --, •.
28 Cel•tlal bear
•,
27 Clover
saying a
·.' '29 Region In
'
Germany
3D Elm or oak
31 Dlfflc:ull
.
37 North or 111.
38 Elk fiiiUN
23

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll Cempol

·

Celtbf11y Cifllltrcryptogram• ora craolld 11om q-llonl by ltmouo peape, putllld
p-1. Eooh - I n lilt~- toi l/lOtlltr.
Toay~ Clut:

WNKMXW

' N
WXK

GaXHFVYI
MK

G equllll P

BYRYNCI

BE

XWCE

SFK

ZXWXBI.'-

KZY

MKIYCD
JYW

MK

NCIX

BE

KZY

TXZW

D.

LYWWV .HE .

J

v·w,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : -1 don't mind autograph hunters at the tlah and chip
shop . As long as I get my chips." - David Hemmings

'

..,
,.. •

,

'::~~~;~' S©~(\1A-~t.!fs·
::::.
CLAY I. POLLAN------'
I~IIH ~r

O Rearrange
letters of the
lour scrornbled wcrdJ be·
lew to form tour simple words.

I

K NR A T E
1

I I 1 I I
L UELT

I

--.'~;~,
I I ~

r --0_R_H_A__
Y

.I

4

'

While sitting watching the snow
fall, 'one fellow asked the other,
r--=--:-.,.--.,.----, "How do they know that no two
ZAL R 10
snowflake are ·-·· -?"
f---.,ns,.....,-,..,--.,-..-,----l G) Complete tho chuckle quoted
_

1.

.

_

I

I

.
.
•
•
•
• .
by lUling In the mluing words
L-..1--L-1-..1--L--1 you develop lrorn 1tep No. 3 below.

.8

PRINT NUMIIERED LEII!RS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBlE
A80VE !EllERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCJtAM.UT~

ANSWERS

Mirage . Uncut. Growl · Sleepy · PRICE TAG

1was so embarrassed at a bridal shower. I found that
a gift never seemed so cheap as when I forgot to remove the PRICE TAG!

'ijlllSlbty, Jan. 16, 2001 · ·.
but yO\I,Cself and life wif! bill% up a loyal friehd or a fami·
ly""ember. You '11 need Ihe wis·
· increased income is start to
snioolhly again.
a
probability for you in the
ARIES (March 21·Aprill9) If. ~ of Solomon.
'VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
ahead, if you allow you're smart enough today to put
extqvagant urges to take'control, to good . use a valuable lesson Even !hough you may not look
you:may not have much to show you've learned. from experience upon it as a pleasurable task, you
for $ings atlhe·close of the year. about human nature, it could give might get the opportunity today to
qAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. yoq the, edge over your compeli· finalize a matter that's been hang~
19) ' What goes around comes ·· tors . Know led~ is power.
' ing fire . Hold your nose and get
around. Should someone take
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) It it over with.
LIBRA (SepL 23-0cl. 23)
soniething 1hat is rightfully yours, will be to your advantage today to
Only
gentle words and tender
dontt respond in kind . Even be more supportive than assertive
though you didn't start it, to retal- in a joint effort. Lay personal directives will work today in sit·
iate :could end up hurting you. ambitions aside for lhe moment uations where you' re required to
Try¥tg to patch up a broken and it'll encourage your leam- manage or conlrol others. Don't
auempt to be dictaioriaL
~omance? The Astro-~raph mates to do likewise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Mat!;hmaker can help Y.OU ynderGEMINI (May 21-Ju.ne 20)
stand what to do to make 1he rela. An alliance important to your · Feeling sofT)' for yourself today
tionship work. Mail $2;75 to cause could be put to a test today will. accomplis~ nothing eKcept
Matbhmaker, c/o this newspaper, over philosophical issues. Unfor· cause depression. Get a hold of
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta· tunately, you have to work togeth· yourself and live within lhe con·
. er, so don't let ideology interfere. fines of the situation that's frus·
tion, New York, NY 10156.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. l9)
CANCER (June 21-July 22) traling you.
Only realistic hopefulness today ·Keep business relationships sep· . SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
will aqvance your career or repu- arated from your social ones 21) Pretentiousness could be one
tatiQn . If you fail to see things as today. If you attempt to mix the of your biggesl enemies today, but
they really are, it will inhibit you two, you could lose the support of what is worse is that it will all be
·so unnecessary. Be honest, be
one or the other.
from seeing what could be.
·PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
LBO (July 23-Aua. 22) Unfor· compassionate, and just be your· ·
Should you find yourself down in . tunately, you miaht.find yourself self.
the dumps today, don't settle for in the unenviable position today
it Get out and get your mind on where you may have to either

••

.

IIIII .

•,

'

18 Pl. ol USMA
21 PNOCc:upy
22 Adhialed

......
1
IIC.U.to

'Birthday '

l:qo-5:00

.2:11"'; loO&lt;al

•

'
'
I

112 lvd.

'lbur

Po,l'ltr,Ohlo.
(Mondly 111N l'rlday

.

'

or plckll
Tennla player .
NaltaH
43 Walk llllflh a
heavy pace
4$ CUll- (ahlr1
laotener)
48 - upon o
tlrne
47 Mollow.d
41 Actreal
Merkal '
eo Barta• of '

~

am. Cbapat Road,

'

.'
•
' .

42

• We exeepl Vlu or

Frt~Eitlm.ttl

'.

s}star

,• ·I,

MuterC.d.
Give UBI 011111
140 Ul7....,.or
1-877-830-1112 or
YllltUI.t

'

41 Tyflll

/'"":~

aeme .. cuh

'

.
..

Obi.
All pass

Bv PHILLIP ALDER·

l&gt;enior Cillzen

TREE SERVICE

1•

3 NT

Farther west

~e, (!:Uo.Dt.:'l! ~ 't'OU TONI6t\ii" ,.1-\~VE. ,.,_ CoOOD 01"\Y '-:1' WO({K,C'I
'

Pass
Pass

•

40 frad Altalre'o

,.

'00

years.

fY

.•
'

, TAMPA, Fla .. (AP) -:- This will be an old pal~
Super Howl, Wtth two coaches who are longtime
buddies !eliding tea ms operated by the two of the
NFL's uiosl venerable owners.
.
Jim Passel of the New York Giants and Brian Billick of the Baltimore Ravens are close friends who
· steered a pair of unlikely teams into the NFL cham"
pimlship g&gt;lhle. Giants cocowner Wellington Mara
aud Art Modell of the Ravens have held key roles
un vanous league committees during the last 40

Tlte
Ravens
beat
Denver
home
in the to
'wildcntd
round
of the
playoffs
andatthen
advanced
the
cham11ionship game
defeating Thnnessee on the
road.Th.r sent them to Oakland, where they eliminated the Raiders on Sunday, 16-3.
· The Giants won five straight following Passel's
playo!T guarantee, theri beat Philadelphia and Min~
. ncsotn handily in the playo!fs.
. The defensiVe loaders of the RavJ"ns are linebacker Ray Lcwi&lt;, who average-d •hnqst nine tackIrs anti def&lt;mivc cnJ Rob Hurnett, who had ,11
1/2 sacks. Ji .dtimorc'&lt; olfcnsc includes w t~ra n
rccciwrs like' Sh.11111on Sharpe, Ben Coates ,;;d
Qatlry Ismail, Wll h Trent Dilfc·r at quartcrb01ck.

'•r .

••

New Homes, Room
Additions, G&amp;.r&amp;~~es,
Pole BuUdlftCs,
Sidlnal, Decka,
IUtehena, Drywall 81.
More

'fl'UCk

.

'

...

Opening lead: " 2

•
'
,••

(1) 15, 11c

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

tNT

H!AP Vouchtra 1D01pted ., ,
I Gall.. Countlle • '

A

Advertise
in this
space .for
$50 per
month.

I olo

''

tor

Hanka'
45 Meuna - .
movie, "- 13" 48 MI-t
15 Playwright
51 Doing 1
·
O'Neill
alevedoN'alol&gt;
16 Hymn ol
54 A e.rrymon
thanklvMng 55 Show plainly
' (2 wdo.)
56 Plfllll
17 Intermediate
,.,,._tallve
(prel.)
57 Smelled
18 Unit ol maaa
atrongly
20 Actor Ron 21 Moatlavorabll
DOWN
25 1\No-wheeiiOd
farm carl
28Bed, ona
ateeper train
32 Uneven, tiki
I Divine being
notched llavea
10 High apltfta
33 M..,. euah
11 Hebrew month
34 Colorado flllrk
12 Actntu
35 Jac:ob'a eon
Schneider
36 En- (Ill

Vulnerable: Neithj!r
Dealer: South
West Norlh Easl
Soulh

~~

· FREE ESTIM,ATES!

..4W:R

• 10 9
oloAK109 4

-Free 1·877-1!04-7350 :.. ~
Ball LoUb~C II
::"' !

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

"W.elp~

• A 6 &amp;

" A 10 9

' i

-~ ~

"' 8 5 3

South

:·

992-6142 Or

tK S

"' 6 2

FOR SA'I!:
' ~·
Dump True!&lt; Dei'-Y Melgl '• ::
and GatHa Counllel ca11
leaYII MNIIQI ·

• K QJ 7
., K J 6 4

• 7 5 4 2

r-~~~~~--. vo

FIREWOOD

East

West
• 10 9 •
•Q532

•

~.

-

OF

Old buddies ·meet
·in Super.Bowl

.

112

" 8 7
• A qJ 8 6
"' Q J 7

·-·

1'1

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
... v-•
SHADE RIVER AG. SIRVICE
•I
"Aheld In HrYice"
•I
·11 .6% Protein Uveslock/callle Feed $5.75/100
I
0'
·21% Huilters Prkl6 Dog Food $6.75/50
. I
·12% WIStem pride horse teed $5.75/50
•••·
$1.00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4,25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
TJ\A, Salt Blocks $4,75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
~· :
35537 St. Rt, 7 NOi'lh , . . Pomeroy, Ohio 411788'
t
t
740-8811 3831
'

•u• IMI!"P flw • '""' .

• 8 3 2

."..

-

7/11/TFH

FISH FRIDAY
Au. DAI' •Au You CAli l.v"

r----==-'"::7=::--t
North
OI-IHI

IAUIILUUA
•~ar.ltl
c•-.~aNa•
• I ...;_____"" 1M :
. ' ' ..
,, '

• Complete

740-t4f.2217

Peaceful

to Prevtoue Puzzle

14 Tom

legal papers, lnvestmenl records, """''"I
albums, · cemeras, household lnvenlory and
aenllmenlalllems will be sale.
For mere Information call

• Gll'llgel

Hourty.. Dally..Wukly... Rotu

ad (7411! 888318!

PRODUCTS

101111 IISSILL
COISIIUCTIOI

1

An awer

37 UHda hou
39 Dloc'*"-&lt;1

7 Polm.d urnp Cl!n 41 S&amp;»&gt;k back to,
13 Turned down
ofanglly
comer
44 Aug. time

"THE MOST TRUSTED "fAME IN SECURITY'
I P1roted your guns, family heirlooms, coin and

•NewHome1

Riclnt, Ohio
45771

homt Gf the cleric, Oale 1

(I) 18, Ito

992-6524

UYINQ
204 North Second Ave.
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760
740 882-41114
Hauool&lt;...,... ... Clard.......
Jlllltori ...Lawn Cite .. .
Mlldt...MII~anca/HCIIM

.Col'-cllon Ollloer

ALDER

740-992-5232

HILL'S
SELF STORAIE

Q10nth • .

OLJdm
bratllf T.wnahlp Annual (1) .I. 12, 111, 111/01, 411!
Flrlanolll · Report Ia
· •s:l•w
comple..byand
avagable for
ljlpolntmant
11 :=!!!i!~~i!!!!i:
I
F

Pomeroy, Ohio

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

space tor .
$50 per

Thank you,
Blnaeraty,
Home Natton.l llllnk
Ooorge Lawranoe .

Pubtlc Notice

83795 Hiland Rd.

211170 Bllhlln R01d

Mt-2210.

:Jf:'I1YE DIRECTOR

• Roofing

740·992·7599

T.Fnt

PuiiUC NOTICE
AIBRIAL
"IWICIAL IIEPORT Of
THE
MEIOI

Self-Storage

'

144 Tlllnllvt.

Advertise

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gar~ges
• Replacement WI.'KIDM
• Room Addttlont.

COMIIOCW. and I!SIDEIITlM.
FREii ESTIMATES'
.

• Vertlcalt • Wood • MiDil • Etc

l'ubllo NotiCI

1/..~effirl,
High 8l Dry

logelher)

ACROSS

/

..
.

J

'

�'
•

Monday, Janu.ry 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Details, A3

'

IJIIpar- \/allay 50, -

RldgiUICM~

33
Mogadonl Flold 51, Nu. -

32

l/lnWt1181.~r49

Symmto 'ldoy
S0011Mm

8
11

,. 10

23 83
~
9 10 - 311
Symmes Valley (8-31 - J.T. Pienl41 O.O.C,
11.-d Ca!J)tnlor o 1·2 1, o- Hun1 3 0.0 8,
Adam Com 2 o.o 4, Jull!n Myeta 7 2·5 18,
Travll WHaon 2 OoO 4, J.D. Mlltet 2 0.0 4, Brandon Runyon 1 0.0 2. TOUIII 17 :H 311.
SOuthem (B.. ) - Nallwl Mlntn 0 2·2 2,
Bra.- HIH 1 1-2 3, Chad Hullba!O 2 4·6 9,
Man Netglar 1 1·1 3, Jeremy Flallor 0 0·3 o.
Dalas HNI o 0.0 o. Man Alii 3 2·2 8 , Garren
KtHr76·8 26, JonathanE¥ana02·22. To1all
1. 18-25 53.
3-polnl goall-5Y!Ml"l Valley 2 (Hunt 21.
SOulhtm 7 (Kiser 8, Hullbi!O 1).

.

Ohio High School 8oyo Balk-!

' S.turdly'a Atautta
AAI. Coventry 68. E. Can. 59
Anna 81 , Sidney Lehman 68
Ansonia 82, Xenia ChrlsUan 37
Alhland 83, Mansfield Madison 45
Atwaler watertoo 58, Ravenna 41
Beacom Hopewell-LOudon 58, Old Fon 57
Bedlorct 67, Warrensville 52
Bellbrook 69, Franklin 61
Bellevue 65, Lexington 61 , OT
Berlin Hilan&lt;l 59, Toron1o 30
Bexley 63, Hebron Lakewood ••
Bonner (N.C.} Academy 86, Wellslon :rr
Brentwood (Tenn.) Academy 47, Zanesville

46
Brlstoi~Jille Bristol 89, Bloomfield 38
Brooldvn 51, Gilmour 35

Brunswick 92, Cle. John Marshall 63
Bucyrus Wyntord 52, New Washington

Buckeye Cent. 34
Caldwell 48, Buckeye Trail 40
Can. Cent Catn. 62, Massillon Washlngtoo

55
Can. Heritage Christian 45, Cia. Orange
Christian 37
Canal Winchester 64, Uberty UniOn 51
Cardington 78, Manon CatholiC 53
C•rdlngton Lincoln 78, Marlon Clth . 53
Cautown Mfaml E. 73, Pitsburg Franklin·
Monroe 46
Celina 78, Sklney 61
Chesapeake 59, RunnyMede (Toronto) 41
Cln. Coleraln 81, Mount Healthy 52
Cln. St. XaVIer 00, WISI Sidney Blues 46
Cln. Sycamore 48, Cln. Walnut HNIS 39
Cte. Glenville 91, E. Cle. Shlw 68
ere. His. 89, Tol. St. Francis 54
Cte. St. Ignatius 70, Mentor 65
Cie. VASJ 57, Painesville Rlv~ 38
Collfns Wes1em Reserve 64, Plymouth 61
Cots. Academy 72, Cols. South 87
· Cols. Beechcroft 85, Franklin Heights 55
Cols. Brookhaven 66, Westerville North 56
Cols. OeSales 72, Grove City 53
Cols. Tree of Ufe 89, Berne Union 73
Continental 72, Defiance Ayei"svllle 56
Cornerstone Chr. n, Thompson Ledgemont
71
Crestview 61, Mapleton 53
Cuyahoga Hts. 59, Columbia 51
Day. Christian 72, Oay. Stebbins !8
Day. Jefferson 65, Day: Meadowdala 63
Defiance 53, Wauseon 52
Delaware Chrfstlan 72, Worid HarVeet 49
Oola Hardin Northam 85, AMen E. 54
Dublin SdOIO 59, Mount Vernon 34
Eaton 63, New Parts National Trail 53
Edgerton 11, Fayette 64 ·
Elyria 87, Parma 33
Elyna FBCS 54, Fucl1s Mlvaclll 52
Fatnawn 83, Bradlo!O 55
Fai!J)Ort Halt&gt;or HalOing 70, Co111and Maplowood 40
Fetl~ty 78, Doer Pe11&lt; 74, 30T
Findlay Uberty·Benton 69, Woodmore 47
Footona 82, Port ClintOn 110
Fo11011a St. - I n 70, Klnaa&amp; U-47
Ft. JannlnQI87, 57
F1. Recover,- eo, Nawton49
Galloway Wesdand 81, Tol. Walta 59
Georgetown 59, Ctn. SUmmit Coum-ry Day
57
Grandview 50, Jonathan Alder 40
Granville 58, New Albany 55, OT
Green 45, Can. S. 43 •
GreenUeld McCta\n 72, Richmond Date SE
49
Greenwich S . Cent. 56, Norwalk St. Paul 47
HHisboro 58, Leesburg Fairfield 55
Hn~op 65, Hicksville 53
Holgate 39, Tol. Christian 34
Hunting Valley University 85, Llnaly (W.Va.)
57
Independence 65, Rocity River Lutheran W.
51

_A_...

\/an Wtll l.lncollwlew 75, Anlwol!&gt; 48
Va-.155, Onvllla 52
W.
1Win \/alley S. 88, Garmon·

Ale-

"""'
\/allay
58Hudlon WR~ 64
Watah
JOIUK
86,

32

w-.- s.

Now Al&gt;ony 59, Cle. VASJ 58
New London 54, Norw11k St. Paul .U
Now Ma-.. Tri·VIIIage !7, BrodiOid 28 ·
New Waahlngton Buckeye Cent. 64;
Sycamore Mohawk 49
Newart( •2, Mt. V1mon 32
Nonon 56, lodl CloYOrleal 45
Oak Halt&gt;or 83, Mlan Edlaon 43
Olmlttd Folia S7, Boy VIllage Bay 32
OntariO 73, Sanaca ~ .
Oregon Clay 56, Loroln -lnll King 48
Ottawa-Giando~ 49, Llbeny-Btnton 33
Palneavlle Rlwnkie 51. Jeffti"IOO 37
Pandola-GifJoo 50, F1. Jomtnaa 41
Parma H11. Holy Name 58, Cliardon NDCL
31
Parma Nohnandy
Panna 27
Parma Padua 50, M.mor Laka Cath. 38
Parma Vllley Forga 61, Clevtllnd Hll. 50
Perry 84, Chagrin Fala 3fl
Plckerington 73, Trotwood·Madiaon 54
Aavenna SE 34. Newton Faltl 30
Reynoldsburg 112, ~olwlllo Tooys \Iaiiey 39
Sandusky 58, Fostoria 50
Sardinia Eastern Brown 66, Hillaboro Ji
Seaman N. Adams 38, Lucasville Vllley 27
Spring. S. 51 , Kenla ~~ .
·
Springboro 66, O&gt;&lt;lord Talawancll 32
Stras6urg·Franklln 44, Newcomtrstown 35
Streetsboro 48, Elyria FBCS 40
Sugar Grove Bema Union 40, Ubeny CIVil·
lian 36
Tallmadge 82, Madlna Highland 42
Thornville Sheridan 38, Ntw Lt&gt;llngton 34
• Tol. Cent. Ctth. 65, Rocky River Magntflcll
55
Tal."Maumee Valley 55, Uma Temple Chrllt·
ian 35
Tot Notre Dame 78, Toi. Llbqly 6,3
Troy Chrlallln 87, Ye!ow Spnnga 15
Upper Antngton 83, DubNn Cottman 37
Upper Sandusky 52, Norwilk 27 ·
VBn Wert 49, Nopolaon 48
Vanlu.e 81, New Riegel 46
Vermilion 47, Or!VIIIe41, DT
Versailles 44, Marla Sttln Marton Locai41
W. Lallyone Ridgewood •2, Uncallor Fllh·
er Ctlll. 40
W. Liberty Salem 51, N. Lawllburg Trlld 40
wadlworth 64, Green 40
WIJih Jeautt 68, Alcr. E11t 38
Wloen -.ond 49, Poland 48
Worrenovlllt 67, E. Cit. Shaw 88, OT
Woroaw River VIew 51, John Glenn 35
Wlahlng!Qn C.H. Mllml T111Ct 57, Logan
Elm45
Wlynaallaki-Golhen 52, MeclllniCICurg 32
WtaUako 48, Roolc)' River ~2
Wlcldllle 87, Drangt 55
Wllla!O 47, Bucyrua 35
WOOatar 51, Mlllllton Pony 33
Youngs. Mooney 65, CtRIIJI&gt;all 2~
Young1. Uroullne 83, Loui&amp;VIIa Aqulnu 51
Zanesvllo 82, Gl-le (W. VB.) John Mar·
shall 52
Zaneavllle Roaecrane 61, NeWill&lt; Cath. 55

ss

Ohio High 8chool Glfla Bllk01blll

-1"·
"""""'
.. .
't\'11Und FIMuttl

Cln. Marq. 66, N . Ctn. -

83
Cln. Wyoming 78, Plain City Jonalhan Alder

•s.

C1y&lt;10 71, Gallipolis oama 55
s. Euclid Roglna 49, Mason 43
SltURIIY'I Rtaulta
"kr. C011entry 76, Akr. Buchtel 61
Akr. Hoban 6,, Akr. Centrat·Hower 31
Amelia 59, Loveland 34
Anaonla 57, W. Alexandria Twin ValleyS. 52
Avon Lake 60, N. Olmsted 50
Balnbrklge Paint Valley 51, Piketon: 36
Baltimore Liberty Unkln 58, Canal Winches·

ter 26
Battenon 68, Alliance :M
Bascom Hopewell-LoudOn 54, Old Fon 34
Beavercreek 75, Huber Hts. Wayne 36
Bedford Chanel 56, Berlin Hiland 51
Be•a.tre 66, Hannibal River 58
Belaire SL John's 92, Bowerstoo Cononon
Valley 58
Bellefontaine Benjamin. Logan 64, Uma
~5

Bellevue 64, Gallon 26
Belmont Union Local68, Beverty Ft Frye 39
Bololl w. Branch 54, ~kr. Spnng. 33
Berea 55, Brecksville 53
Bridgepon 56, Woodafltkl Monroe Cent. 49
Brunswick 56. North Ridgeville 47
.
Buckeve Trail 52, Byesvl"e Meadowbrook
49

Burton Berkllhtre 31. Kirtland 22
Cadiz Hamson Cent. 54, Aaytand Buckeye
Loal 42
Cambridge 81, Uhrichsville Claymont 59
Can. Cent. Cath. 53, Wooster Trlway •1
Can. McKinley 66,
GlonOak 36
Can. S. 45, Alliance Mantngton 38
Can. nmken 52, Al&lt;r. Elmo 30
Canfield 58, Struthers 50
Carrollton 51, Minerva 37
caatalta Margaretta eo, Polt Clinton 55
Cha11erllnd w. Geauga 60, Auroro 50
CNIIoolha Huntington Roee 58, Wllllamoport
Westfal 31
ChiHioolha Unkllo 56, ChNIIoolho Zane Trace
50
Cin. Anderson 88, Milford "67
Cln. Hill&amp; Chrl&amp;llan Academy 64, Cln. MeN!·
cholaa 51
Cln. Indian Hlll73, Norwood 21
Cln. Oak HIUa 85, Harnoon 46
Cln. Purcell Marian 70, Cln. Flnneytown 20
Cln. SCPA 63, New Mlaml36
·
Cln. St. Ursula 52, Batavia 47
Cln. Ursuline 47, Cln. McAuley 32
Cln. Winton Woods 59, West Cheater L.ako11 Eoll 56, OT
Clotltvllle 53, Granvlle 51, 20T
Clarkevilte Cllnton·Massle 66, Cln. Oaar
Pa11&lt; ~o
Colo. Academy 63, MIHeropon 32
Colo. Bll&gt;Oi&lt;haven 45, Cln. Mothor ol Morey
35
Coil. DaSates 61, Colo. Lindon 43
Coil. Har11ty 41, Ptmbetvllla Elllwood 39
Cola. Mlftlln 118, Jocklon 24
Cola. RMdv 81, Colo. Wantraon 54
Colo. w011d Harvell 64, Manon Cathol~ 47
COnvoy Craatvlew 53, Haviland wavne
Trr.ce 41
Copley 72, Alenfield Revere 56
Danville 87, Mlranathe CMatlan 26
Day. Carroll 53, Lemon-Monroe 32
Day. Chr1otlan 56, Day. Colonel While 39
Day. Dunbar 81, Uma Bath 39
Ot~hol St. John's 59, Miller City 45
Dover 44, Coshocton 26
Dublin Scioto 46, Maryavllle 32
eaolllke N. 85, Char&lt;ton 41
Edgtnon 81, Oregon Ca!Oinel 51rllch 22
Elyna 56, Shaker HIS. 43
Etyrts Open Door 52, Cit. MLK 17
Euclkl 56, Lakewood 37
Fairview Park Fairview 63, Amherst 49
Rnljjay 6&amp;, Lorain Southview 54
Frankfort Adona 55, Rlcl1"10nd Dale SE 33
·j~~~!~:~.~~~~:~.sg ~:~?:~ktown 54
Franklin 34, W. Carrollton 23
Kalida 51 , Oelianc:e linora 44
Fremont Ross 48, Tot. Whltmer'36
Kennedy {Pa.) Cl'lristran 69, Warren JFK 42
Ft. Loramie 57, Houston 40
Kent Roosevelt 57, Cuyahoga Falls 51
GallOway WeSiiand 82, Tol. Rodgers 49
Kettering Aller 61, Can. McKinley 59
Garllold HIS. 57, Maple HIS. 26
'
Leipsic 67, Columbus Grove 50
Gate• MUla Hawken 51, Newbury .a
Ucklng Vatlay 64, London 53
Gnaclenhutteft Indian Valley 33, New
Lima Bath 50, St. Henf")l 44
Phlladolphla 23
Lima Sr. 78, Logan 68
Goollen 64, Cln. Tu!J)In 46
Logan em 58, Bainbridge Paint Valley 45
Groenlletd MCClain 44, Chllloollle 23
London Madison Plalr)s ,66, Washington
Grove City 81, Benet Academy (1!1.) 81
C.H. 43
Hamilton Badin 85, Cln. Withrow 33
Lordstown 56, Ashtabula Sts. J&amp;P 54, OT
Haalh 63, Utica 31
·
Loudonville 72, Cle . E. Tech. 69
Hebron
Laktoood
38,
Bf•ley
28
Lucas 61, Col. Crawford 47
Ho!Oate 73, Penlsvltle •2
Madison Plains 66, Washington C.H. 43
Hudson 88, Voungs. Boardman 39
Mansfield ChriS1ian 97, Fremont St. Joseph
Indian Lake 67, DeGraff Atveralde 59
89
.
Jlckaon Cantil 73, Bot~no 45
Manattekl Sr. 75, Manon HalOing M
Kalida 43, AUen 'E. 31
Marla Stein Marion L~l 81, Veru.lllel 40
Kent
~oosevett 59, Crestwood 50
Manon Elgin 72, Richwood N. Union 83
Kenton 57, Ada 39
Mallflillon Jackson 72, Uniontown Laka 40
Kollaring Al"r 71, St. S.metO Roger Bacon
Masstllon Perry 57, Wooster 48
59
McOuHoy Upper Scioto \/alley 50, \lanluo 30
Kenenng Falnnont ~7. Spnng. N. 24
Metamora EVergreen 65, Edon 37
LaGronge Keyatont 44, Columbia 36
Miami Valley 87, Ridgeville Chltallln 118
Lolpalc 64, C9lumbus Grove 61
M~ord Center Falrbenkl78, Welt Jefter10n
Ltwllburg Tri&lt;lounty N. 50, ~roanum 48
64
Llbeny Centar 72, Bryan 68
t.ll~on-Unton 70, Northridge 81
London 41, Nawal1&lt; Ucldng \Iaiiey 39
Monroe Cont. 40, Ft Frya 3tl
Lonclon Madllon Pltlna 48, Waahlng1on
Monroeville 73, London 43
C.H.48
Mooal Rldgedllt 60, Marton Pleasent 53
Lo1111n Ctt11. 56, Brookside 48
Mt Gilead 75, Gallon Northmor 14
Loulavllle
50, Canal Fuhon NW 31
N. Bend Taylor 50, Cln. Hilla Chrlatl4m Aca&lt;lMl&lt;lloon 112, WHioughby 5outll81
omy4V
Mltvem 64, SaiiMY!IIe Boulham 42
N. Can. Hoover 63, ~Planet 48
Marion Elgin 38, Marton River Valley 17
Napoleon. 57, Bryan 55
Marton PI-nt 39, MI. G - 31
New Bremen 81, St. Mar;t Memorial &amp;a
Mlrlllla Ferry ~D. TuiiCira- Ctlh. Ctnl.
New KnoiCVIIe 57, Jac:Qon Center 41
3~
New Lebanon Dixie 88, Aroanum 73
Malllllon Jaoklon 62, Untoo-.1 Llkl 37
Now Mlddle1own Spring. 38, Poland 32
McComb !ill, Uma Perry 35
Nawal1&lt; 57, .Wor1hlnglon l&lt;llbOumo 48
Nowal1&lt; U~klng VBIIoy 64, London 63
Newcomeratown 7t Welsv~le 58
Newport (M~.) Prop 88, Chllioothe Huntington Rosa 41
Norton 70, Akr. Sprlngflold 47
Oak Harbor 50, Lakeside Danbury ~2
Oak HIK (Va.) 79, Akr. SVSM 78
Ottawa·Giandorl 84, Hamler Patrick Manry
49
Pandora·GIIboe 83, OttovllleiiO
Plckeringtoo 53, Aavnoldlburg 50
Richmond His..M, Beachwood 39
Rocky River Lutheran E. 58, Southington
.Chalker 42 ·
•
S. Charleslon SE 81 , C i a - Cllntor&gt;
Massie 43
Wonderful

can.

(

!
I

'

S. Point 78, 'New Bolton Glenwood 67
Senduoky 51. Mary's 82, Milan Edison 64
Sherwood Fairview 70, Paulding_69
Smithville 41 , ~ansfield Temple Chrlstilln 39
Sparta Highland 83, Marion Alver Vallay 44
Sprlpg. Cath. Cent. 81, Bellafonlllne Ben·
jamln Logan 44
.
'
Sprlng. Kenton Rldgets4, Mechanlcabllrg 52
Sprlng. N. 79, Now Cartlola Tocumaelt33
Spnng . s. 70, Trolwood·Medlaon 85
St. Parla Groham 56, Spnng. ShawnH 50
Stow 52, Chane! 50
·
Slryllff !8, Montpelier 51
Sugarcreek Garl}'t'IY
Kidron Cent.
CMotlan 43
Sullivan Black River 50, Rtn1111n 47
Sycamore Mohawf&lt; 47, Arcadia 35
Teaya Valley 73, Unloto 8t
11ffln Calvert 69, Po'!l(ltrvlllt Eollwood 86
11pp City Sothtl 89, Day. OakWOOd 57
Tlpp City TippiiCinoa 58. Groan••• 57, o.r
Tol. Cant. Cath. 63, Elmwo0&lt;161
To&lt;Wog~ny O..ago 75, Dtl1148
Tn·Courny North 84. Brookvllla 39
Tri-VIIIIgt 62: Cantslt 35 .
Upper Arlington 81 , HilMa tO Davkloon IS4

•1.

_,.._

Miami 23, lndtanopollo17,
New Orleana 31, St Lou+a
Sunday, Dao.
Saftlmora 21, Denver 3
Phllallelpl\11 21 , Tampa Bay 3

I.

t.111m1 oo, c"'- "

SN1111 .1011, PhotrillB7
lllaudly'a Mlwaukao at Wuhlnglan, 1 p.m.
San AniDnlolll New Yulk. 1 p.m.·
CheiiOIIe 11 f'hlladllpllia, 2 p.m.
Naw Jtfll\l atAUanla, UO p.m.
Sacramtntoll Dalal, 3p.m.
Bolton 11
3:30 p.m.
Cltvtland atGoldlll Stall, ~ p.m.
L.A. Cllpptra II
7 p.m.
Chicago 11 0 - . 7:30 p.m.
VlncouYer at LA. Lakerw, 8 p.m.
Houlton II Ulall, 0 p.m.
SN111t a t - . V p.m.

Cont.,_ Chlmplonahlpa
Bundav, Jan. 14

NFC Chlllnlllonal11p

·-lowl

Bundav,J.,.U
AI Tampa, I'll.
Balllmoro vs. Now York Giants, e p.m. (CBS!
Pro Bowl
lunda\', fall, 4
NFC va. AFC, 5:30 p.m. a1 Honolulu (ABC)

p-

.,

'

~~.

CJ &lt;
~f ll

. J~·

-no.

_llnll..,...

The lOp 251Nmtln T h e womtn'l oollega -.tpoll,
"**In Pll'lllif'IIIM, rtOOrdl UWOUgh Jan. 14,

-

palnla buod on u points lot a ftral.piiOt
vota through ono polnl lor 1 211111-i*Ct -

ond ~~~~-· ronklng:
IH. ..........
·~
1. ~ (41) ...............13-&lt;l 1,026
1
2.
1~·1 &amp;74
2
:It
3. NOCtl Dame ................ ...... 1U 113
3
4. Gtorgte ........................ ..... 15·2 8911
4
5. Dukt .................................. 11·1 843
6
DotooR II Miami, 7:30 p.m.
11. Purdul ......................... ..... 15-3 1N
8
Toronto at Houlton, 8 p.m.
7. 81.. .. ..........................13·1 7118
7
L.A. Cllppllt II Milwaukie, 8 p.m.
e. L.oulllana TICh .:................14,. 712 8
Cllvellnd II Portland, 10 p.m.
v. Taw TICh ........................13·2 857 11
'.
10, Ftol1dl .................. ... ,.. ..... 13-2 6V1
10
11 . Rutgaro .. .... ......... .. ...........10.. tile 12
~.'\;t;.,:
. 'J
'
12. LSU ................................. 11-6 674
0
13. Ol&lt;lahoma ........................ ll-4 472 17
Hlllonal-koy Llltut
1~. BW Mleeoun Sl ........... ... 11-3 441
15
Eat- Coni15. Voncteoi&gt;IR ........................ 14-2 ~18 18
A111nUa Dlvlllon
18. PaM 81........................... 12-6 3~7 13
W L T 01. I'll, Ill' QA
17. Toaa ............................... 14.. 3BD r.
NewJoroay .........22 11 9 .o 83144 , 101
18.er-............................ 10-3 334 20
Phllallel&gt;nla .......21 1~ 8 0 511211 11f
1D. Arl10111 ............................ 14-2 2118 12
P1111burg11 ...........20 17 8 1 ., 136 131
20. Ctemoon ..................... ..... 12.. 2e.t 1e
N.Y. Rlngtfa .......17 24 2 1 31141 112
21. Mlllllllppi 81.......... .. ...... 10-4 235 21
N.Y. 1 -......12 28 ~ 2 30 102 142
22. N.C. Blata ....................... 11·5 124 19
0123. xavter ..............................11 -a 122
W L T 01. I'll Ill' QA
24. U1al1 ................................ 14-2 106
Ottawa ............... 2~ 13 6 0 e.t 138 103
25. 81)1or.............................. 13·2
46 23
Toronto ............... 21 14 7 3 52140 115 ,•, 26. Vlrglnll ............................ 12-5
48
lluftato ............. ...22 15 5 1 50 117 102 ·
Olhars rooo1v1ng _
, Aubum 38, North
Bolton ................ 17 11 6 ~ 44 111 132 ~ Coraline a, Stanlonl 22, Atobama 1D, lndana
Monlrael .............
1~ 25 • 2 3' 112 1110 .·. 1••• - 8 t 1.6 j w.
...........
1.v, ~.uu
A-•-~16•
·~Dhillon
.. _
..........
W L T 01. I'll Cll' CIA .,' M1111JHa 13, Wlloonlln 13, Cl4orgt Wlahlng·
•
• •
. ton 12, ~ Ill. 11, 811 St. ~. IIHnola 7,
Wa ahlng1on ........ 20 1• 8 1 4• 11 • 113
'DtPtul 8 VH- B. Mtaiourt 4 Santa Clara
Caroline .............18 18 8 2 44 1011 112
4, St. Mliy-1, Cal. 4, Gtorgla Toc:i13. Houlton
~llanta ................15 20 8 1 31121 1411
2 orogan Sl 1
Tampa Bty ..........13 23 6 2 · ,33 111 14t
'
· '
Florida ..................8 22 8 8 30 H . 135

--- _

women·•~•ukLtt:all

Wllllm-

I'll Cll'

QA

68134
41 120
•2101
. 32 100

....

8
13
1V
18

8 1 85 140
4 4 6e 146
6 1 40 1211
8 ~ 42105
6 2 38 83

20
PaoltlcDIYialon

101
127
12D
128
108

W L T 01. I'll Ill' QA

San JoH .............28
Dalla .. .... .. .. ....... 25
Phoenix ............. .18
LoaAngatti ........ 19
Ana~lm ............. 14

,
6 0 51124 07
13 ~ 1 51122 83
13 11 1 48 1011 D7
17 .7 . 1 48147 134
22 8 4 38 108 142
Two polnlllor a win, ono paint lor a lie and
ovllftlmelou.

U. 71, N.C.·WIImlrtgiDn 83

-~~~73. Edl1- 83
- 5 6 , COIIy-Sawyor ...

118
124
120
143

Hartlonl74,- 86

lone 86, CaniiU 7a
~

c"'-

Johnl Hopldna 70,
62
Johnion St. ... _
..
Kutztown 74, Clarion 11
Lock Hovan 84, Eoll,.,_rg H
L~ 11, Data- \lllllay 73
Moina Mllftlmt 47, -ldl40
Mlllemlllle 74. lndlona Pa. e7
NYU 86, Clllll(llt Miiikiri 158, OT '
Naw Hampaliro 711, 1Aolnl7a
Nlagaro 8 6 , - e7
lloMIIIItme7, T_,48

Pamlln.-•

Ma-

Shlppanlbu11188, Waat C111111r 73

Bollon ~.N.Y. Rlngtfa 1
Monlroal5, Pftotnlx 2
Wllhlnglon ~. Alllnta 1
Toronto 4, NIW Jaraey 4, 1lt
N.Y. lllandtrl 6, Plllaburgh 5
Pliladoip1111 ~. FlOrida 1

8llppary !look 14,
,...77,,_12
IOUTII

OttaWI 6, Calgary 2
Naolwllle 5, san J - 3

(!oorgt 1.1-.158, VI. c:.rnmonw..ill &amp;1
!1ooo11ie 14, LBU 86
HouttDn 10, Tulana 10
!lao rPt ·II;·UAI 71
N.C. Chatlalla 4V, Balnt Loula 4&amp;

cerouna~.=~o~.
Dalaa 3, Tompa Bay 2
N.Y. Alngarw 4, Mlnno- 2
Edmon1on .&amp;, Ottawa 1
Colorado 2, Chloago 2, Ua
1/ancouvor 6, Ctlglry 1

. .....,..caarn.

at Pllllburgh, 2 p.m.
Dalila at Florida, 7 p.m.
Mtnnal&lt;lll at Cclumbul, 7 p.m.
oatrollat san Jolt, 1 p.m.
St. LOUII II PholniX, ~ p.m.
1\raadty'tTampa Bay II Bu"ato, 7 p.m.

M

FARWEBT
~ 118, Mllloun 10

Long BNcl1 St 82, Cal St.·Fullerton 118
Paclfte 81, uc lrvlna 46
UCIJ, 85, Sou111em Cal 83

'"

'

How the top 25 team&amp; In The Alaoci...O
Prtll' men'a balketball poll fared thl• weekf ,
1. Sllnfo!O (15-&lt;l) beal Dragon SISIO 73·49•
beat Oregon 100o76.
·
r •
2. Ouko (15·1) bell North Caroline Stale 84~
78; but No. 10 VIrginia 103·61 .
.. •
3. M~htgan State (14·11 belt Nonhwosllm
84·83; bell No. 17 Wlloonlln e9·59, OT. •
4. Tennessee (18·1) belt No. HI AlabalJ'a
BS-80; baal SOIIIh Carolina 7t·71 .
5. ~ensas (13·~) beat No. 22 Oklahoma 89·
81 .
6. Wake Forest (13·2) beat Florida State 76·
53; loll to Georgia Tacl195·69, OT.
7. llllnolo (13-4) loll to Iowa 78-62; beat.
•
Mlchlgln 8Qo51 .
8. Flol1dl (11-21 bell Mlaolsalppl 51&amp;10 81·

80.,

Ncd1 Carolina 83, N.C. Stall n, OT

Pld DomlniQn 8,3, HliifiGI 81

,._ldolph IIICM Wornan'a 64, Lyncl1burQ

.

_....,._ 158, N.c. Wllleyan a1
CtfOIIna 82, Alalllml 17

-

8otllhtm Mill. 83, laulll !'IOnda 37
.It Paura ee, Col.onble Union 41
,\landlll&gt;lll 74, Aubum te
,w. Kt.-v n, Ari&lt;.-Liillollock 48
Watca Foraat 7 t , - St. 81
IIDWitT

lllan'l
Cotltgt · · 8undi\"1ScIA8T
Matno1011, Naw Hampahlro D3
Rkltr 92, St. Pllor'a 80
St. John"•
Rutgara 71
St. Jcuph'o ~· = 1

..
' '•

eo,

Maryland 78, Florida St. 55
N. Carolina ~&amp;T 65, N.C. Cenlf8159
IIIIOWEIT
Cre~hton 80, N. Iowa 56
lftlnoll St. 68, s. !~inola 74
1-ne St. 92, W~hlll St. 68
Wla.-MIIwaukaall4, Loyola, HI. 93, 20T

-·.

'•

,,'·
""

...
'

~·-

•
. '

.

I

2-whHI
4-whHI
I
1 Check a ldJutl c.m~~~r n ~ae. ~~~~
1
1
n ..,.,.11111Y .,. ,.qulred on - Vlhlolll. 1

L---·-------------~
----~-----~------,

'4995 ::....... .·

I

Wt...,.ai.-:GccJ_,,_,

I Gtnlntf, ........,, lrldg

It, C..llloMilll, UNII'IOVAL,

I

1
.1

I
.
II, Servlcl ~ucla \IP . 10 5 qUBrtl of
Mololllllfl allllld new MoiOrcraft oil fl~1r •
IPerform Multi-Paint Vihlcle Inspection .1
Check IJld til
ftulde • All In 29 1
;;
Iiiii (ot .l ea • Pltul vahlciBB may bB I

I

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

WORK AT THE #1 DEALIIIIBHIP

Clll To Sgbtdylt An !nttrv!n;

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822-G417. (304) 34&lt;4 5847
471 . _ .ChUI'IIII IINel • lllpltJ, WV

...
•'

....--· ---=--·· -

.

~ H~· . Dlstric~ Chi~f J!'~ ·Walter H. Rice
... This isn'tjust ... a holiday for'Afric.an--Aplericans;' said Eric tl:oy,.who attend one of several spoke of the Dayton,Dialogue on Race RelaMondayI in ColumbUs, ''ThiS is a tions that w.ts Jaunchi:s\ in .Octobe~.
ceremonies
•
' "This initiative Wifi succeed where others
holiday for America ... and the worl&amp;.~ is a
.
.
''
'
'
· have failed:' Rice said. "By working together,
uruque opporturuty. .
· Organizen of a Dayton l2lly estimated that we will achieve our~of reconciliation across
· will succeed on this
15,000. people were at Courthouse Square to the raci:al . divide.
endeavor because we ' not fail."
conunemonte King's legacy.
.In Cincinnati, about;1,000 people listened to
"I thought it was imPortant , t6 march
because I feel we · need to keep Martin Luther speakers and i&gt;raye&lt;j ~un~n Square d?wn· King Jr:s dream alive ... for everybpdy to live town for,.al).qut?.·20'
before marching a
tbgether in peace;' said She:ma POwell, 15, a stu· ·half"n1J!e to Music H ·•
· .
"As we march witli ·ur feet and sing with
dent at Meadowdale Higlt School.

.

ST. MARYS (AP) - · Virgil
Hudson is a longtiln~ grain and
livestock ~mer. He's now a pio-

-•ry

I

' . '

love.
"He is basically seen as an agent of social
change but we don't underst;tnd his spiritual
side;• Ford said.
. Clergy membets said they seek to tap into
King's theology to promote justice issues.
"I really saw him as someone who is able to
articulate God's love for humanity in .a way that
encompasses both economic and social justice,
and moral justice;· said the Rev. Donald Taylor,
president of Toledo's .Interracial Religious
C:oalition.

.

approved the purchase of the
insurance package from the
Ironton firm on a multiyear
price. Council passed a resolution authorizing the clerk to
transfer funds from the fire
department fund into the debt
service fund to pay the princi~
pal and interest on the fir~
house construction note at the
· Home National Bank . •
Vitlage funds were discussed
and H\11 and Lyons cautioned
cftmcil about·beilig prudent iJ?
spending. Council authorized
the clerk to pay the bills after
she received the certificate
from the County Auditor's
Office.
Fire Chief Neigler gave the
2000 report of 70 runs, which
showed 892 man hours, with
22 motor vehicle accidents, 14'
brush fires, five hazardous conditions, 11 structure fires, four
service runs, two water rescues,
two auto fires, five calls canceled while trucks were
enroute, one rescue, and one
mutual aid call.
N eigler said the department
is going to start drawing up
specs for a new fire truck to
replace the 1972 Foro. He said
that while it may be several
months before specs are finalized, he wanted council to be
aware of the need to replace
the vehicle. The mayor reported the village's ~hare of fines
and costs for December totaled
$542.10.
It :was reported landfill rates
are going up and fuel costs are
up, al9ng with labor expense
and that . more refuse willundoubted have to be handled
once the new elementary ·
school opens in the fall. Also
discussed was the need to stari

Pl·r• -1001, Pllp AJ
.

Farmer moves tcfset aside . Today's '
Wdh Ashcroft hearing looming, ~
prop~rty for State program Sentinel Bush .pays tribute to Dr. King · :.
. 2s.dla-12...,..

.------.
------------.,
1$1995

ExCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
GREAT 8ENEI"IT8 {INCLUDING DEMO PROGRAM)

·- ~Troy_

' .-~------~.,

L..!'.IJJ!!I~~.:&amp;-:=.z.=.~-a_,_t:.~.I

Motorcratt
FaatLubt

.,

our voices, let's use our hands," Mayor Charlie
Luker) said. "Not to pat ourselves on the back,
but to roD up our sleeves. This city, this community, has a long way to go."
The Rev. Mark D. Ford, pastor of the Cuyahoga Falls Assembly of God church near Akron, ·
said people need to understand the importance
of King and the universality of his message of

RACINE - An ordinance
authorizing 2001 appropriations of$410,864 was approved
last week by Racine Village
Council.
·
The tot'l,l appropnatwn
includes genera\ $108,109;
street maint,~pance and repair,
''$48, 9$·.3:67; state highway,
$4,300; cemetery, $6,000; trust
fund, $59.06; fire department
debt fund, $16,746.58; fire
department
operation,
. $33,820; water department
$128,144.77; leak insurance,
$1,000; water deposit, $1,000;
refuse fund, $39,6298 and
endowment, $23,101.
Mayor Scott Hill presided at
the meeting with council
selecting Robert Beegle to
serve as president pro tempore
for '2001. Douglas Little was
retained as village solicitor.
Council approved John Hoiman
as
street
commissioner/water supervisor and David Neigler as fire
chief. Hill said he would
appoint various committees as
needed . .
In other action, there was a
discussion on. the need to raise
water and refuse rates, and it
was noted action is. expected to
be taken on both matters at 7
p.m. Jan. 22. Clerk Karen Lyons
reminded members the . leak
insurance is due Jan. 15. The
insurance pays up to $200 on
the water bill due to a leak, but
does not pay for the repair.
Ray
McComas, Kinder
Insurance, IrontOn, reviewed
the village insurance with
council, after which, council

~

1 advertised price on the same tire. 1

'*"

..

.,

..

r-~----f•irtiii

.

"This isn't j(ut ... a holiday for
African-Americans. This i1 a holiday for AmeriC4 •.• and the world.
Thb is a uni~ue op~ortunity." .

it¢!'

_____l
I·We wll meet or beat any competitor's I·

.----------.,
" •. wt~ 11 e~ au8nment - 1
l•2495 •499·5· I

n citi!!s across . Ohio, people

·marched and held rallies to honor
slain dvil _rights lea4er Martin
Luther King Jr. and to rekindle his
message.

•

.500
.683
112
.614
3
.488
~
...7 5112
.389 7 1/2
.378
8
30 .167161/2

ee

I

•

16
15
18
18
21
22
23

are avilllable In Tom
Peden Country. We are expending our t•cllltlaa
and n-.ct more aalea people. No experle!1~ le
required, only a wllllngne.. to "am, work ae a
team, and have atrong Initiative.

~

Marchers recall' the vision . of.slain civil rights advocate
BY THI AIIOCIATID PRill

w..t.m eo.n .....
MI-Diwlaloft
WLPatGI

Photnlx 1.03, o.-

FROM STAFF REPORTS

~~·---------._----------------~ •••:

Dlvlllon
WLPatGI

.867
.63D 112
.815
1"
.11411
3
.553 3112
.1100 5112
.301 12112

Water, refuse rates
may be going up

' '

Eollam Conl-ot
A1111111c Dlvtalon
W L Pot. 08
Philadelphia .................... 27 9 .750
New Yol1&lt; .........................23 13 .639
4
Miami ..............................22 17 .584 6 112
Oriando .........:.........., ...... 18 20 .444
11
Boston ............................ 13 2~ .3611~ 112
NawJersey ...................... 11 26 .297 161/2
Wao!&gt;ng1on .......................7 31 .184
21

12
13
16
18
17
18
25

Racine Council
approves2001
appropriations ·

••

,,•"

Renovation work was performed by
Proffitt and several volunteers.
In other matters, council approved
the first reading of an ordinance that
would allow for a 3 percent raise for
village personnel who currently receive
an hourly wage.
In open discussion, council deliberated on various street repairs and projects currently being performed
throughout the village.

Proffitt informed (IJu·ncil about
recent renovations that have been completed inside the police department.
A wooden enclosure was consttucted
that surrounds the dispatcher's ·work
area and isolates them, as well as expensive equipment, fiom ' the general public.

(Tony M. 'Leach
photo)

Na11on11 ... lralbaU AI-11-

Btn AntoriO ..................... 23
U1al1 .........................,...... 23
Dallal ..............................2~
Da"""' ............................ 21
........................ 21
Houlton .......................... 18
~r ....................... 11

would be deducted from the law
enforcement trust fund, Proffitt said.
Council approved the request and
informed Proffitt to purchase the radio
as soon as possible. Council also
approved $250 to be spent on repairing
two broken police radios that are currently out of service.

·enowy we~M . •

••

Cllarlotlt .........................23
Milwaukee .......................21
Toronto ............................ 18
CleYBiand ........._............... 17
Indiana ............................ 17
Atlanta ............................ 14
Detroit ............................. 14
Chicago ............................&amp;

POMEROY A request was
approved for a new hand-held police
radio. during Monday's Pomeroy Village
Council meeting.
.
Council listened to a request fiom
Police Chief Mark Proffitt fOr a new
Motorola hand-held radio officers
would use while on patrol.
Cost of the r2dio would be $718, and

Pomeroy Mayor
John Blaettnar,
left, and Jack
Krautter,. street
superintendent,
took a moment
Monday to lOok
over Pomeroy's
new tailgate
salt spreader.
The spreader,
which holds
600 pounds of
salt, cost
around ~1,300
an,d will be
used to help
the street
·department
clear narrow
streets and
alleys, places
where much bigger tru~ks cannot maneuver,
during cold end

••

c-••

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

New salt spreader

.,
.

Council also approved $250 to be spent on repairing two
broken police radios that are currtntly out of service.

BY TONY M. LEACH

·.1

9. North Carolina (13-21 bell No. 14 Mary·
land 88-83; bea1 Marquette 84·54.
10. VIrginia (11·3) Iosito GOOfVIa Tech 73i
88; tost to No. 2 Duke 103·61.
1
11 . Syracuoo (15-11 beat Rutgers 64-83;'
baa1 WtS1 VIrginia 88·80..
' '
12. GeorgiiO'Ml (15-&lt;ll beat Morgan Sla1e
66-68; biOI VIrginia Tacl1118-88.
'
13. COnntdlcul (13·3) bell Plllllburgh 73·;
83; loll to Prollklanct 81-68.
.
14. Maryland (1N)Iol1to No. 9 North Car·
ol1no 88-83; beat Ftorldt Stato 76·55.
15. SOlon Hal (11 -4) baa! No. 25 Noire
Dtmo 78·78; Iosito P1111burgh 7H5.
:
16.
(13-2) loll to No. 4 Tanneuao
88-69; bell MIIIIIIIA&gt;I Stale 72·59.
17. W - (10-4)1oot IO Pu!O~e 73-87;,
loll to No. 3 Michigan SISto 68·59, OT.
•
18. Iowa Stato (13-3)1oatto Oklehome Stale
88·80, 01: loll to Mllooun 112·109, 40T.
1~. Boulham CaiWomla (12-3) loll to UCL'.
80-75.
.
20. Mlaolollppl (1~·2) bell Ar1&lt;anaaa 83-48'
·l oll 1r&gt; Gfllllllla 70-68.
,
21. Arizona (111·51 baa! Wuhlng!Qn SISto
84·51; baa! WllhlnQion 811-114.
·
22. Oldohoma (12-3) bell TeaaA&amp;M 78-615;
Iosito N o . 5 - 6H1.
23. Teaa (12-31 beat- 51110 63.. 1;"
loll to Nlbrllkl 80-87.
•
24. Bollon Colllgo (12· 1) toatto 51. Jotm'o·
73-71; baa! Mlam18'1·73.
•
25. Notre Dame (ll-5)lollto No. 15 Seton
Hall78·75; loll to Kantuclcy 82·71 .

Cenh

Police radio purchase gets council's nod
NEW COUNCILMAN Recently appointed council·
man, Jackie Welker, lis-·
tened Intently during open
.discussion at Monday's
regular meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.
Welker was appointed to
the post after former council member Dave Ballard
reslgne\lln December.
(Tony M. Leach photo).

. Thtllllan"a AP Top 25
How Thla Waal&lt;'a Top U Fartd

I

'•

...

so

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume Sl, Number 161

-·

ow. 76, Malyllnd 14

Ellt ~ 10. Rlcl'lrnollll78
Fort \/alley St. 73, Allany, Cia. 41

Hometown Newspaper

'

Conu. II. MllllpiM

51 r

Melp County's

Ale-

Dlllwlre72.-U.H
DrllCII 77, Vlrmont 81
Emory Bl, -liZ

W L T 01. I'll Cll' QA

Colorado ............ 28
Voncouvar ..........2~
Edmonton .......... 21
Ctlglry ..............15
Mlnneooll .......... 14

~-

-

83 148 8D

'•

eo.

r o -.........................

,_,,_

~nahalm

New Yol1&lt; Gllnta ~1. Minntsoll 0
AFC Chllmplona111p
Balltmore 16, Oakland 3

a,

•l'l-".

Mio•-·

T 01.
4 1
4 ~
4· 2
7 1
4 2

L - 78, MotqUIIII 81
Loyola, Ill. 87, Wright St. 58
Mallochuae111611, Dayton 57
N. Mlchlgln 89, Mtrcyhnl 57
Ohio St. 78, Michigan 88
PUidUI 84, N o - m 37
Trtnlly, Tow 75, Rolt-Hutman 66
xavter 73, Rholle llland51
IIOU'IHWEBT
ArklnJ11189, Kantucky 50
Hawal 83. UTEP 42
SMU68,Neuadl65
San Jolt St.
Tutu IS4
TCU 88, F r -,61. 55

...

-107,c.-llt
Pon1and 100, Dotoollllt

W L
St. Lo\lla ..............2V 8
DatiOII ................ 25 13
Ch!Cigo ..........,... 18 20
Nalfflllte ............ 11 21
Columbul ........... 13 28

7~. Wllconlln •

-

St. Loull ~. Lot Analltl 2

DIYiatonat Playolfa
8a1Urdey,Jan.e
Minnesota 34, Naw Orllane 18
Oakland 27, Miami 0
·
SUJMIIy,Jin, 7
Baltimore 24, TonMIIeo 10
New Yol1&lt; Glanta 20. Phlledolphla 10

c-. 77, 1-St &amp;I

1-72, Mlclllgln St H

lalunlay'I-

8

·''

Falr1esa 53, Kidron Clfll Chrtltlln

37

Wlyt- 61 , Bianel\t,..r 50
Welnon Madonna 71, BfKalro St. John'o 83
67, Dalaware 58
WMahouU Anthony Wayne 55, Swanton 43
Wlntert'IIIJt Indian Creek ff!, Cadit Hamson
Cant. 45
woo11or TI1Way 85, LOdl c-nut 52
Worthington Christian 711, Ullcl 41
ZIMI'IIIo Rooecrana 72. Crooklvlllo 39

-84.-81
M-115, JM111i 81
U11h 111, L.A.~ 100
-118,a.-107

January 1&amp;, 1001

'

DaPMIW 87, 5W To- 58

1

0

Nava~

Willi- 52, Piqua 36

Shawnee

41
Mon-42,
.a
Montpoller ~ 1, Edon 20
Mona! Rldgadalo 11 , Ctrdnglon Llro*1 ~~
N. Jacbon Jacbon.M- 85, l.oi-..,

Tutasday

•

•
•

DaPalll 71. 0-.oll 83

Or1ltndo 111' Goltlln .... 15
Pill l¢jl 100, loiiAniOnlo 83

Society news and notes, As
Meigs defeats Eastern, Bl

Wednesd~
~:301;~:101

'

...•

'\

••
••·

accordiilg to department statistics.
Under a pending program, the
state will have S25 million,
approved by voters in November as
neer, toO~
. . . ;. ~
,
Hudson of rural Auglaize part of the Issue tl proposal, with
CountY is one of Ohio's first which to putt:hase the easemen~.
Howard Wise, director of the
landowners to take Pat'\ ih ~ ney
stlte program aimed at presetving ' 4epartmeni's Ojlice pf .Farmland
P~servapon, said th~ program
farmland.
·. Hudson and his daughter, Con- properly balances concerns over
rtie Backlund,. have donated an property rights with the desire to
easement to his 100 acres of prop- preserve rural areas,
"I think the best thing about
erty to the Ohio Department of
purchasing
agricultural, easements
Agriculture. Under temu of, the
easement, the land must be used is that it reo.:ogniz.., the farmers'
for agricultural purposes by future cash equity is in his land," Wile
said
landownen.
·
"Fanners don't normally have
The state iS losing approximate,
retirement
.ly 200 acres of farmland per· day.
, programs like nonmostly to residential development,
,........... IW,PIIpAJ

- _..,_•

•

.._ • .r

· Ca1epdjr

AS

Standing at Bush's side w..; Rod Paige, his designated education secretary and a product of segregat·
AUSTIN, Texas - Presidel)t-elect Bush honored ed schools in Mississippi.
· ,
Martin Luther King Jr. with a promise to advance
Bush held up school desegregation efforts by
. King's work by improving public schools, as civil King's generation as "one of the great victories o{
righis questions loomed over the confirmation of our nation."
~
"Today the challenge is different, but there's still a
his attorney general nominee, John Ashcroft.
As Ashc;roft faced those · questions Tuesday on challenge," the president-elect said. "See, every child
Capitol Hill, Bush was spending his last day at home can go to school now. The fundamental question is,
,
in Texas 'before changing his address to Washington, is every child learning?
"Access is equal, but not opportunity when not all
D.C. He and his wife, Laura, will take up residence
children
are learning in America," he said.
,
at the White House foUowing Saturday's inauguraSegregation was among the issues critics have
tion.
"America does not always live up to our ideals," pointed to in assailing Ashcroft's nomination.!
Bush said at a predominantly black . Houston ele- Ashcroft also has criticized desegregation lawsuiiS in
mentary school. "The hopes of too many children Kansas City, Mo., and in St. Louis.
Ashcroft opposes affirmative action programs
are frustrated by deep poverty and unequal schools,"
be said. "And when this happens, our whole coun- based on racial preferences, and as a Missouri sena-,.
,...........h.PIIpAJ
try feels the loss of their gifts."
' .
. BY

Scon

LINDLAW

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Comic•

B5

EditOrjele

M
A3

Ohituarie•

BloM

W.ltber

Lotteries
OWQ
Pick 3: 4-7-4; Plek 4: 9..()..9-9

Baeloe,. ~: 1-12-21-22-37
\'leyA.
Dally 3: 5-2-0 Dilly 4: 5-S-7-3
0 .2001 Ohio VJlJcy Poblwting Co,

,

--- -------·-·...

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="448">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9890">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23816">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23815">
              <text>January 15, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1274">
      <name>cross</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3874">
      <name>fell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
